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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-14 - Orange Coast Pilotr ... , --..... ~.-...--------------------~--~ ·-. l\EC . Set!qri~y _ B~ad ' .,,,._.... " -t -• -~hysi~ian Clear.ed ..,. . .. -- ... Pla~~-~~ol~~Lea~-e; Of~ Wife ~s Death-------1 . ... . .. ' . . ' -----------, . -.. -. -. ----· ~ _ ~~tliuattee,_~Oted -- . ------··---..... - • . I , JncConniy Trial --·-· -~- . ·i ., f . t ~ ERIDA'Y ArnRNOO~. JULY I~. ·19n . . . . V&. & lfO. ... 4 lltnOMS. • P;O~ . ' .. ' . .. ~Otllttf~f ';'~ ... fD.octor . .illiiocent · Miss Mercouri Leaves AT8NS (AP) -Acll9 Mo.Ina ~l left for Parll ,,....,. -"""* to bir nottve lllld ~ aUe le ...,. liineral • .-b' lllr -· ... .....,..i •• -,. ........ !Ito ,... -· ol bor ........ lpillll .. mllllary-l>lcbd O r • • t ........... .. ' . ' ew . . . ' Del,Ztes to tile Democratic Na(lond· Convention la mi· Beach toot the accepladte speech of the nolninee, Sen. George S. McGovh, as cause for ..elebnlUon and dancing in the afsles; Though the traditional demonatrations and 'fliifare In the con-.. • --··------~-------- ' . .: I J • I • . . • t" .. , W'ITlllll ... ventlon--hall had been baned under the. new con• vention ndel of•tbe party; the jubilation wu.ipoa. taneoua for -.ral minutes Iller the newly chosen nominee spoke. . . ·-~ire Dang~ Envisioned Iii ~Research By L. PETER KllillG .... ~ .......... · There II llDI eoough capaclty In tho Newport -·water 1y1tem to fight a major lire ID a large apartment or com- mercial buildlq, lire departmeot ol· ficllll wamod 11iunday. "U Pll'I< Newport .. Oakwood · (apartmeall) eolflld llnt' ..i -fllllJ lnvolted, ·we'd ..... .,.. fire .. _loo 1tandlng there watcblng Ir bum to tho grqµnd," Battalion Chief Jam .. Reed · said In an Interview. Reed ls Uie man lo charga ol preporJna a report for city COWlcilmen -thlt will detall the need for a change In the building code requlring sprinkler sysleml In all large buUdlnp built In the luture. Reed npl•hwd that sprJnklera wooldn't help capacity at all, but they wwld put out or control most all miaIJ firea belon! Ibey became big fires. "'lbey'll bold ~ In check, keep them llllall," Reod uld. "It would bo lite havlnl • fireman Oil doty 24 houri • day." t Tbe Proi-c1 bulldlng code cbqe II -' ( ... ~~!1£!1,.Pi!h.ll. .. .. ,. .. -\ c. ... Mootly 11111)' lllnluib 8atinq Is what tbe weatborledJ ...-., witb .._ .. _ In tbe 1111 lnllad, aod around 70 at Crap CoMl bNcbes. INSIDE TODAY r~. futlval titiw aga1it ta i.o. gvna BtGCll. Todav 11 IM - ing of tllf """"°' Fnliool of Arta and l'agemll of IAI lfuwrs, .SmodUlt Fflffoal nd IAI Afl·A· 'Fair.' SH _,-, W ......... ... LM. ..,. t -. ._ I ·-.... -11 cruauf 11 ......... 11 --. ·-.... ............ 11 , ..... Ill w _.__ M -. -... --. __ .. --" 5 ... ---.. - ----'hll•.... • ---. _.. .......... --I - ' ' ! DAILY PILOT · 5, F'rldey, July 14, 1972 Salinger No. 2 Fr-P••l CLEARED .•• Utah Woman have come from an injection since it y,·ould have been lmpossjble for her to orall.y administer the dole that left substantial levels of an unidentified dlU( in her remains. Democrat Chief Mexican physicllns wbo elhumed t~ remains of Mrs. O'Doonell IS clays aftC< her death detennlned that she bad died from a massive <f9.s:e of barbi~uratc.s, They idenlilied the .solution as ·luminol, a highly potent liquid barbiturate. : MIAM! BEACH (UPI) -Jean Westwood, 47, a Utah businesswoman, was ulected by George S. McGovern to- clay to succeed Lawrence O'Brien as * * * George .Wallace's Mother-in-Law ' Offered a 'Joint' MIAMI BtACH (UPll -Gov. George C. Wallace's mother-in-law was curious so she went to watch the hippies and Yip. piea: ln Flamlpgo Park. She wat offered a joint of marijuana but refused. ~· Ruby Austin, a deep--voiced woman standing over si:1: feet tall, said stie .and a few friends ~ent to t~e park bl\cause they were bor<d ln !hell' hotol room1 dutinf the Democratic National Convention. "When we got there, there was a Goy 1tandtng up there strumming a guitar but there were no wordl·or music coming out," she said. ''I kept thinking about what be would look like ti he pulJed lbe hair out <1f his eyes. "We-went walking along and one long· haired young man came along and asked tul, 1Do you older folks want to smoke a joint?' II Deity CUrlee, wile of ..,. of WallJce's ~1osest friends, Glen CUrlee o f Wetumpka, Ala .. told him •he did not want to try ·it, "because I might like it." From Pqe l McGOVERN. • • volunleen wHh the reguler Democratic ' ' porty apporolul while striving to reach an accommodOUon with big labor - which opposed McGovern's pominatlon and bu threatened to sit out the election. This was much the same kind of -· be cave to the de!egatu lhemaelvea early today in a speech climaxing tbe c:oovenlioc -endU>g near JJ: 30 a.m. PDT Iller a lqthy aession that alao featured a dramatic In- troduction lpeeCb by Edward M. Ken- nedy llld -ranees on the jmpacked rwtrum by moet of McGovern's major foes ln the battle for the nomination. McGovern plana to spend atioot two .....a -u.ainc ·in hla l!tlovtd Dll[l!ta Blaclc Hlllr, lllOpplng off hi Wlllllnlton later today for an overnight stay before heacllng to bis home stale. As MeGovern movell lntp Jiis party uni- f ylng etrort, with the "unity breakfarf," members or the Democratic con- gressloaal establishment introduced the Jiew teiin at the tireak.fasts ond vowed their rupgirt to them. House Speaker Cari Albert noted McGovern's previous service in the Houte and aaid 0 You are a ,colleague of all of us." Albert'told the South DakOtan that he' had already "confounded" the pundlta , and poll!lclan1 by capturing the nomlna· tion. . 'The financial straits of the Democrats was underscored ·by the breakfast menu · -an "infonnat".fare limited to juice, coffee and bltNlu pastries. -\ The affair was sponsored by the Senate end HOUie campaign Committees, both of which help raise money f o r DemocraUc candidates running for Congress. At the convention, McGovern con- tended that America's discontent with Nixon's Vietnam and economic Policies would win the White House for the Democrats. OltAffl COAST • ' IT DAILY PILOT 'nit ar.... c .. 1 DAILY ,ILOT, \lilth wtiktl Is ~lr!ed tt.. Ntwt',,.._ .. PUblllhtd tty 1M OtMtt Ctnt PWlllhlnl ~. """ r11t edit-. •"* PVOIWttd. Mtnill•r '""°"'" Frld1y, for Coal• Mnt, N...,...I BeKtt. Htnl"-ton luchlFOIMll•ln V1Jlty, ~ llMdl. lrl'IM/S.ddltNd! end $111 Cltmenl•/ S"' JNn C.pl1lrMl9. A 1111111• reglonll NllJorl ls P\lbllslled .. hlrdlft "4 S111nd1r1. Tiit prllKllM'l Pllblltfllllt plent 11 •t ~• wur ll't' Slrecl, CO.It IMM, C.llfoornll, "624. kol.•rt N. W.H ,/'t11G.nl •l'ld P11bll.W J1ck R. C11rl1r Viet Prnkltnl 111\d ~•I Mtlllttr Thomtt kt•vil Elfltor Tiiom•t A. M11r.,lii11e M1n1glng £4110r Chtrltt H. loot Richard P, Nill AMltlant Ma11t1lnt Elfltort --: Coll• M"': J» Wttl Bly Strwt N"""'" lffdl: am ~"""rt 1outtwrd l...-BMd'I: tt2 l" .... t AWtWt ............ ... ( .. ! 17115 hK1I ·~l...eH ... C""""": at Norttl II Cll'l'llftt llttl < ,.,., ... tn4J '41-4111 Cl•11'IM .. "'" 11 I 641·5611 ,,... a.• ....... ...,.. .. i...,... ·~It '"""" Prlllt ...,. ..._ c..ty hmnwriltl" _,"' chalrman of the Democratic Camntittee. NaUonal Pierre Salinger, White House press secretary for PresWent John F. Ke,,.. nedy, waa tapped as rodlainnan. Both Mn. Westwood and Salinger were actlv.e in McGovern's successful c~ palgn to win the.Democratic presidenUal nomination. McGovern abo picked Don Petrie, an Avis Corp. executive, to he the Democratic party'1 trea&urer, sue. ceedlng Robe.rt Strauss who wound up his duties today. · Mrs, Westwood will be the first woman "to assume the top leadership pOst in the hlatory •o/ the Party. She hal been CO> , chalnnan of the McGovern campaign committee since i~ beginning ·two years ago. Of the chainnanship of the party, she said, 1'l'm very excited about it :" She added !hat hOr husband Richard Westwood, a businW executixe, 'also Was enthusiastic about her laklng the fuiltime political job. ' McGovern trled lo get O'Brien to stay out but said O'Brien was determined to resign after . serving two term.a in the post .. K . "I .know he's exhaust~,'' said McGovern. Mrs. Westwood is a national com· mltteewoman from Utah and said she hat been In polities 0 all my life." A husky~voiced, alender woman with short blond hair, Mrs. Westwood was on the podium at convention hall in the ear· ly mornipg houra lollay when McGovern delivered his acceptAnce speech. · A veteran of 12 years on the Political scene, O'Brien during the past four days smoothly-led a convention where blacks, women and Cblcanos added a new dimension to the party coalition. Barbor at Sunset \ Rays of summer sunset cut swath through gather- ing evening gloom of Newport Harbor. Photo was taken from Ocean Boulevard In Corona del Mar lookin' up main channel. Balboa Peninsula is at left, with Balboa Island at right. From Pagel WATER ..• likely to draw opposition from developers -as it bas in other cqmmunities that have cooslde!'ed It-when It goes befou a council public hearing July 24. Reed is-even getting another k.irrd of opposition -from homeowners on Balboa Peninsula. C"lemente 10-year Old Confesses to Burglaries What .tarted as a rouilfie juvenile m. vestlgatJon "by San Clemente pallce Thursday turned into a case for the books -a 10..year-old burglar who, or. ficers said, admitted more than a dozen crimes in rttent month.!!. ' th~ boy decld;.i to hit a 'hardware oiore, where he found some. . Oilier cases, which might be onJy the beglnnlnc, included bniten windows at the H!eguard tonr ~I the city pier, mall tampering on numeroui occasions,· small thefta from private residencea and A Beverly Jiills pathologist who t>r• amined the deteriorated remains of Mrs .. O'Dbnnell nearly a year after her death testified be could find no trace of luminol ln the limited !issues left to him, but he confirmed that the victim must have received a lethal dose of barbiturates. , The defense's A!cCray built hi! llnal argument on testimony that Mrs. O'Don~ nell had attempted suicide h'OD'te years ~Uer, was known to use barblt~es to a considerable degree and had in fact taken drugs Crom her husband's office at 18782 :h.fain St.1 Huntington Beach, on several occasions. McCray argued as Bridges did before him that the t.estimony of physician! '<:·n both sides on the issue of ,the quantitv <'f barbiturat~s absorbed by Mrs. 01DorineU .,varied greatly" and "in some cases waa not much more than speculation. · "You can't Jabet Dr. O'DoMeU as a murderer on the basis or .specu.latio::i, • · McCray argued. 11Tbere his been' absolutely no motive o1fered, here or J· should say any motive that this courl could accept." · " Remer, the plaintiffs' attom.?y sajd he: read motive into O'Donnell's concern: about the divorce action filed against him. ' Mn. O'Donnell moved out of th\'. couple's home at 420 Kings Road,.., Newport Beach, and into a Santa Ana · apartment some months before hei~· · death. • O'DOnnell, who practiced at the time at 2011 Westcliff Driye and 3111 Placentia Ave. ln that city, retained control of tho Newport .home. ~ Remer reminded Judge lllltter thaf O'Donnell sent his wife's parents a telegram received throe clays after her death ln which he stated that she hsd died ln an auto aCcldent while alGllO oa a alg!Jtoe<in1 trip to l\layon rolna. 1.: '- He has aleered the Democrats through trou~led times, particularly since the 1968 convenUon in Chicago which Jeft the party ln a shambles and heavily debi- ridden. It seems he's been conducting what the department calls water system "flow" tests to determine exactly how much water could be pumped on a fire at a liven location. He tested the old Rendezvous Ballroom aite, where a 24-unit condOm.iniwn soon will rise, and that high-speed usage churned up ail lhe rust and sediment in those crusty, uncoated cast iron pipes Police 11.id the youngster admitted l\:· lenses which included breaking Into one man's apartment . and . ateailng a ISO revolver. bustneas breaking. ' · It· Didn't Pay Detective Sgt. Frank Yerger · aald ·the ·' · ... ., From Pagel JAIL •.• that were installed throughout most older sections of Newport Beach. '1My water came out looking like ice the report charges. • tea," complalne<! Mrs .. Donald Novak of Finding no ammunition for the pistol, Raquel Welch Loses a Pair "Accurate records of confiscated drugs 1217 W. Bay Si. are not malntelned," ii conl{nues. The looks ao unsetUed Mrs. Novak that. LOS ANGELES (UPi) -Raquel . Short of closing the facility, the Grand after calling· the city to complain, she Welch has had her tonsils and Jury reco!"mends tighter screening of II d the Or ColDlty Health Depart· adenoids removed. ' proposed mmates and that no person ca e ange MGM studi ced Th convicted of felony narcotics violations ment which promised to come out at oa announ urs. he sent there Al urged it the ISl!g,,. tod to et specimen. day that the bosomy actress would . . · .'° . noon ay g 8 · have to change the schedule ol a ment ol two addiUonal of£1cers to the 4 City o!Ocials said water should he i:mru>lional t 0 u r tor Ji er latest p.lJI. to rnldnl&!!t, I h •II to olk>w !_9.L__ cleared long bef...,.tben,.Jiowever. __ ·--movle·-uv --···-DWv-BcmherM. to perimeter control. I nGlliMU 'J••~ I other --Include constructlon The com•li from Mrs. Novak and recuperate from Wednesday'• of a I~ block wall lnelde the exiallng others did result In one thing. Reed .was eurgery. fence that r a n d om skl1 and body ordered to stop testlni. ,;;.;;;,i..; he conducted "llU]arly and tho! "\Ve W'llted to -do a couple more visiting facllitiea be re.designed to pre-(tests)~»Re;;<i Pid-:''but we could g•t ~: !'::i... ~.:;:::,, ":1.1: · To Advertise boy DI interv!en with friends .or lb. y<JUDgller ~ 1111 talea of burglarlei Alter &nticth;g the boy: Yerber aald, detectives listened to confessions of the crimes. "He would forget some, t b-e n remember new ones later in the day. Right now we know he's good for at least 12 incidents, but there probably were many more,'' Yerger said. Officers said they recovered the pistol and ammunitlon, but somr cash and other ifems taken in some of the tn-cid~ are still missing. The boy was taken into custody for a short time then released to hi! parenta until the cases are reviewed by juvenile authorities. .. DETROIT (AP) -All Bob ·Jagi<lakf raid be wantod to do wu "make a buck." .. The ~year-old cab driver had eigQt . · $5.50 ticketa to Thuraday's RoUing Stones rock concert in Detroit which he waa . willing to sell /or $100 each. But, because unemployment is hiib and money is tight -Jagielski wu wUI. ing to cut rates.- Thursday, he aold two of the Ucketa for? $75 -to two undercover Detroit police ·· officers. " He bas been charged with ticket acair. . lng, an offense which carries a poaib e ' 90-day jaU aentence and $100 fine. _,. "It wasn1 very l!lllart of him to ad· verti11e the tickets in the newspapef,11 u / arresting officer aaid, ·' v~t contact between ~s an d b w he •h '" make our ~tnt to v1s1ton. Y· e :ve enou&"<"' •- Shertlf James Musick was n o t councllmen." < available for comment today, but 1idef'. -Tlie pomt;-Rieil' says, it that tests by ' said outllttlng of the fourth floor ol the the oakwood Garden ~ta near · CLEAR·ANCE s·ALE CONTINUES. main jall acbeduled to begin this fall NeWJlO<! Harbor High School found the would aid In overcoming the crowded water aupply to produce 2,800 galloRll pei condillons. minute. SECURITY ••. ,farOiµig empire, stretching from Wa>)itngton, D.C. to Eniwetok ond from Brookheven, N.Y. to the Aleutian Islands. Tbe job also Includes responsibility for .. persoMeJ security,"· including clearances of prospective employes and protection agam,st sabotage, the AEC spokesman said ln answer to quostionl. But the spokesman volunteered the comment that "there is no indication that any security matters are involved" in the case Involving the security chief. "There haven't been any formal charges brought," said the opokesman. "We're trying to figure out .what's what." Asked why the matter had not been made public before, the spokeaman said : "We were trylng to awalt'completion of the investigation." ~ Y The commission made the disclosure after the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, Colo., published a story saying Riley had been relieved of his job. He is married and bas one son. "We would need 5,000 to stand a chance, 11 Reed said. Dlaclosure of the fire aervice in-Odequ.cy flrll came three weeks ago wben Building Officer Bobby Fowler told councllmen of the proposed sprinkler re- quirement and raid the threat of a !Dlljor holocaust hangs over the city. "Some of our larger apartp>ent com- plexes provide opportunity for one of Llie most catastrophic loa.ses of life in this cj.. ty," Fowler said. Reed said while sprlnldlng systema• may cost buildera more money, If.the ci- ty doesn't require them it'll cost everybody more money." . · "We're due for a · new fire inSJ.11"81)Ce rating," he 111d, predicting that if tt l:::.owii:~...!i~/l'5 ~t'~~~ I for insurance. 1'Tbe rate on a $401000 house would go 'from !&2 to ~." Reed said, explaining !hit wblle Newport Beach hal a Cla.u 4 rating now, that would jUmp ·to Class e because of the Rment level of aervi,,., Reed said the 'iiliiCtinent of a sprinkler ordinance "would go a long way to L.eJ>'· ing the rating the way it is." . "We cou1d either get sprlnklen or ckJu. ble the size of tbe fire department,'' he said.. ---· Cliff Victim in Cleveland · For~st ResCued by ·Copter Rescuers from several county agencies and a Marino Corps beUcopler worked rnosl of the night and eerly morning to. day and flnolly BAved a 20-yeaMld man who l<ll 150 feet down a cliff ln Cleveland NaUonal Forest. The Incident began at about 11 p.m. Thursday ' and /inelly resulted In the rescue of Alan Larson ol Beaiµnont at about 7:30 a.m. today. State forestry crews were summoned, but found tllat Ibey could nol reach the man aulfering from back injurlea • They, ln turn, 13ked oherllf's clepuUea for htlp. · The dglulies brought Jn a searcb..and· rescue squa~ from the S.. Juan ond Doheny volunteer /Ire c!epartmenta. ( • • ' [arge selection of outstandin? quality· uP,holsfe')' available at reClucecl prr~ •. es. Such w.11 known names !IS Woodmark, Sherrill, Henredon , Marge Carson · and many more, now on sale. · · ' ' • HENREDON'S "Alvera'do Colle dion'" now on sale. HERITAGE'S "Cameo", "Grand .Tour"· bedroom and occasional. DREXEL'S "t,.iarchesa "; "V elaro" "Esperanto," • LAMP5-e1CTURES-ACCESSORIES·-: •• ALL REDUCED DREXEl;-HERITA66-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN-' ---------- • • ~. 1f7t, °"""'" Cott:! l'vtndl!ftt ~. ... -• .,.,.. """1nit1o11 .... .. ...,... mt• • ~ .._..., ........ .. 1-~ WlfM¥' • tPt<lll ...,. "lllilllll .. CllflYl'flltt ...... Sherll!'1 O!!lce spokesmen 11id Lanon had aet 1llrt lrom a church FOUP ln the late evening boors to 8ffrdl tor-. f.yeor-• . old girl who bed become lost. All the crews worked untU doWll to reocut the lallen mM ond Iller brlniln& Laroon up the clill the volunteers sum- moned a Marine Corpe heUcoplor for evacuation. INTIRIORS WBIDAYI & SATUlllAYS, t:OO re l:Jt RlllAT 'Tl. t:OO ...... -. ...._ NN Ill Ctltt Mtte, c.......... '*""""'"" w urfltr SJM "*"1Nfl 8" ,.... It.II "*llllr' mlllttrr ......., ... l:tM IMflltltr. The )'OUngsltr was found, but u Laraon and the oearch party returned to camp nMr the Lazy W Ranch, the man lost hil footing and t.11. Lanon, who suffered cuts, acrapea and beck hurts , was reported In saUdadory condition this morning 11 Mlaaion Com- munity Hoapltal. • ' • A w ' • M F in Oil th re ha bu for T Ae Th t a To 'Hi! • F s w cau Ba dis ~ aut dd 'A N!a spo !lo "l cri dls .. par Fo ya fire ed • ; Frldl)', Ju~ 14, 1m . s • DAILY PILOT 3 : . Nixon Readies Policy Briefing f o'r McGovern I' • According to cuatom, tile N'11on Administration Thursday announced it will offer a series of briefings on security and foreign policy to Sen. George McGovern in conUng weeks -if the Democrat will accept. .. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler said Foreign Affairs Adviser Dr. Henry Kiss· inger would set up a meeting with the Democratic Presidential candidate tO outline a aeries of background sessions. ; Kissinger, bowever,,would probably·not ! 3 Years' Work I be In charie f/l· lbe llClual oeaaloos, Ziegler added. Tbe -PJ'tlidenl's chief apo....,... empba&IJed that It was '1CUIC.omlry" lot tile administration In powor to lllllu! the offer of briellnp and lhat the lrldltion started In tile El..-)'ell1-la I'"' · wheo t!Jeo.Presldeat Lyndaa Jobnaoa., made the offer, Sen Barry Goldnt.r declined. It Is n~. immediately known whether Sen. McGovern will a«ept the lnvltallon El Toro to Have ·New Public Park • A~er six yeafs of thinking about it and three years of working out the project, residents of the El Toro area will soon' have a public park in their community. County officials are now negotiating to buy 32 acres of land along Aliso Creek !or tilt park, which will shared by El Toro and Bart Spendlov of the Aegean Aegean Hills across the creek channel. The park me reality largely thtough the efforts o homeowners'· associations headed by Bill Millan of El Toro and Bart Spendlove of lite Aegean 'Hii(s. However, it bas not yet been decided Autopsy Slated After Boy,5, .Fonnd in SF Bay SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An autopsy was to be perfonned to determine the cause of death of a 5-year~ld boy whose body was found floating in San Francisco Bay Thursday' -nine days after he disappeared during a family outing. ~ police spokesman said results of the autopsy would probably be released to- dtly or Saturday. 'An !off-duty fireman jogging on the N!'.iich across from Fleishbacker Zoo spotted the body of Christopher Dove floating in shallow water. The coroner's office -said the child probably drowned, but two homicide in· spectors were assigned to investigate the case. .£hris1Dpher's ste pfather, LIODei A. Curtis, identified the body, sobbing, ••it's hJrn ." ~I want to see my baby," his mother cried ·,outside the morgue, but was dlssuaded by two juvenile inspectors •. Christopher's parents said they last saw their child talking to a stranger in a parking lot near the Cliff House on tile Fourth of July. They said they were standing about 200 yards 1,iway and tum~ to .. walch firewOl'la on tile l\each. When they tum· ed back, they said, Christopher was gone. . what kind of p~rk the homeowners ·~ill have. The land runs along A1iso Creek and has been flooded many times in the past. Millan explains that many residents want to have a qatural park and creek bed, wlth very Jew developments such as playgrounds and ball fields. On the other side, some homeowners favor a plan proposed by county flood control officials of channelizing ~ creek to prevent future floods. This would allow some development of the natural acreage without danger of destruction during the flood season. The matter finally will be settled by the county Board of SupeT11lsors within the Dext few weeks following completion of an environmental impact study for the creek modifications. The money to purchase the acreage has already been set aside through the efforts 9f the homeownen' associations. Funds have been saved from the two county service area assessments during the past few years until .a combined total of $50,000 was reached, according to county parks official Bob· Yablonski. In addition, $50,000 In park lees paid by developers are available for the purchase of the 'l.creage. Recreation Gift Goes to Elderly President Ni.I.on Thursday signed a bill which essentially meana a recreation gift to Americans over 61 years old. The routine signing in San Clemente Of the legislation glves·persons over 62 free use o( all' public campgrounds and other recreation areas Which were subject to the "Goldeo Eagle'' $10 annual Pass· The new systim will mean issuance of a "Golden Age Passport" which allowa the recipient the free use of the recrea- tion areas. The Goldden Eagle version is a $10 an- nual · pass which allows the holdtt unlimited use of public campgrounds and the like. . ' ·.) l'iest ~e~ ~!Wn Ziegler said thal• the ·Golden Age card will also cover all guJ!sts accoritpanying 'tbe regular bearer. . BJJte .. Jl9ute . Posted Motorists using Campus and Culver Drives and Michelson Avenue in the city of lrvfne will soon be confronted with new white lines at tbe side of the road. Signs like this one being installed along the 3.8 mile on-street bicycle route should eliminate any possible confusion. UC Irvine student and cyclist Jon Bull watches as County Road Depart· ment crew places Culver Drive bike crossing sign. "Bike Route" 1ignl will line the two-way trails linking University Park with UC!. to meet with re_..,tatlva of the CIA, State Department and others In tile ad- mlnlltratloa. Asked If the Democrat woUld be brief- ed as welt on any aecret meetings al- fectlng foreign pollcy, Ziegler said lhat the Admlnlalratloo does not recoplze "aecret meetlnp" ln its lexicon. "As a matter of form we never refer to 'secret meetlnls'," he slid. ·- "But Senator McGevere would be kept abreall o1 COlll!oulnc negoUations," Ziegler added. President Nixon, Ziegler added, did watcch McGovern'a lormal oominltion In ~naml Beach Weilneoday night on a television set at LI Casa Pacifica, and appareolly·lonook dlnn<r with the Soviet /.mbtlsadQI' to watcL the proceedings In Florida. While the Praldenl and his wila, Pat, dined alooe 1t the residence, Dr. Kil&- inger played !"fl one< ..... .. Ambassador . Anlloly Dobcynin and his ' '-, . Lending a Hand wlfe at the El Adobe Restaurant In San Juan Capistrano, where the three dined on Mexlcao food . Tbe President and several guests dined at the same restaurant earlier this week. Several days ago Ziegler, who at that time had little -U anything -ID say publicly about the Democratic Con- vention, said the l'reaident would prol>- abl )tune In from time-tcHime, "but he didn't plan to lose any sleep watching the proceedings." · Tom "Le.ue, president of the Sawdust Festival, IQ- day lent N>and with a pnsthole digger as the Saw· dust exhibiters rus.hed the last of the construction before today's OJ>'lning of the Si.llth Annual Sawdust Festival. Created on a hillside grove at 935 Laguna I Canyon Road, it features works of 160 artists and craftsmen and will run daily from 10 a.m. to mid· night through Aug. 27. Sk •. '~ o· 1nny~ 1ppers Until this week, the San Juan Hot Springs about 13 miles east of San Juan Capistrano was a quiet, secluded retreat shielded from the nearby Ortega Highway by a few ~IU'<ls of thick brush. Young men and women came here to enjoy the sun and warm water. They shed their clothes, sank into the 110- degree mineral water· and relaxed -in the nude. ThiJ week county fire protection crews, acting ·on orders from the Board of supervisors, began cleating: away the ~ 1 derbrush. Tbe n:::~ who now could be seen from ~ IP , , bad to leave. Cut Ba~k E" Conner, "and'" we know these people have..Jleen building campfires, smoking cig~s and everything else." Sheriff James A. Musick said be get! compllints of <1(ug abuse, homosnuality, violence, and wanton nudity, as well u trespassing. 2 Die in Plail~Crash From the 1890s to the 1930s the hot springs served aa a fashionable spa for the wealthy. But since then it has gone unused. "This has got to be the prettiest place in Orange County," said one young man this week at the hot springs. "But nobody's really enjoying the place. It's fenced off, and all this is just going to waste. And what's wrong wiUt being naked? out here?" The Bjlard of Superyisors is examln!ng a propolal lo purchase the land around tile bol "Jlrinl• for • puhlic park. The Pr .. Jdent, however, witched last night's edlilon with keen Interest, it was hinted. Ziegler added lhat repOrto circulallnf at the convention 11ylng the Prealdent called McGovern alter the nomlnltion we.re inaccurate . "No such call was place<f,'' be aald. Ziegler ended questloll! Thursday on lbe race for the presidency by lnslsllnf ·.- there would be nothing fllrther said unlll . · arter the Republican convenUon lo • · Auguat. • . • $5.3 Million Aid Discussed By Trustees . · Legislation that could provide SS.3 million to the San Joaquin Elementary School District-ranked at the head of a Jist Thursday as trustees considered the recommendations of a· task force on gro\vth. The measu re is now pending in the Assembly and trustee Dennis Smith issued a plea fer district residents to write their representatives urging . passage of the legislation, Senate Bill 176. Authored by Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R· . Newport Beach), tile bill would raise the allowable bonded indebtedness of school · districts from five to seven percent of the totaJ assessed valuation. The increase would be subject to a vote of the district residents and a two thirds plurality would be required for passage. The recommendation for such legisla- tion was one of several recommendations ' of the volunteer task force , whieh W1s headed by Irvine attorney Pa u I Tonkovich. Tbe report wu released in March. With the news that such a bUI wu nearing passage -it has already been approved by the senate -the board • began discussing the posslblllty of • holding an election within the next few. months. A successful elecUon would allow the d~trict to sell bonds which have already been passed by \voters, but which may not be sold under present Jaw. The bond- ed lndebtednesa of the district now stands at some $1S mUlion, roughly five percent of ill $280 million asseued valuation. Opera Singer Dies WALNUT CREEK (AP) -Bllrilont Robert Weede, et, '1111n -with botll the Meiropolltan And San· Franclleo opera componiel clurlnl a ...,..,. Cll'lll', dlid -,.. w-tDUiftd -• operatic ro1 .. and allo otamd In .....i · "The fire 61W1rd Jil 1llll C"1YDD is ex· tremeii 1i!Jgli," UJd Battalloii Chlel Torn MARTINEZ (AP) -Two men,, killed In the crash of ,a small plane nea(,_ San Rmnon In Contra Costa County ~ brothers, the coroner's offict says. They: were identifiedt Monday 81 Henry DavJd , Gribbon, .30; OU)"1<), and Robert AIU· ander Grlb\Jon, 17, G""nlield, MUI. "' Ibo --. ollldll9-,_ the c~ ·away of · the br1llh will dllc:i!ur• trel)JUSerl. bit mualcal --•• ' • • • • • buy a Mercury. • • TODAY! ."Car of the Year" Mercury MONTEGO !Jome or The. New Car •• , "Golflea l'ONClt" the elegant MERCURY MARQUIS '1 ---- Everything you buy a small car for! Mercury ~OMET the "Sexy" little IMPORT! Mercury CAPRI sleek and sophisticated MERCURY COUGAR "()nmgo c .... .,.. 1-0p of 1ln• em• . S On . Home or Tho New Cu •• , "Golllea TONell" 2829 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • ll«Mil30 \ I .. . • . • . • • ' ' •---··- frtd1;, Juf1 l•, l9'n ' Bremer Moved From H os11ital 34,000% Return: Proxmire Blasts UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (UPI) -Arthur ll Bremer, accUled -Jlant Of Alabama Gov. ~- Wallact, wu lrlOlf«r«i Thursday aliht """' • Jeuup, Md., hospital lo Iba Prloco Ge«ges Coonty Jail •. Firm's 'Profit' Aboot 15 deputy ah"iUs armed with rlfles surrounded the jail as tbt 21-year-old Bremer was taken Into the tw°'story brick buildlng at aboot 5:15 p.m. (PDT). Bremer Js accused or shooting 'Wallace and three others at a LaW"el, Md .. 1hopplng center May 15. 11e la BCbedufed to be tried on otala <barges be8Jnning July 31, in the circuit court In U p p e r Marlbele. :Neat Ball, a Wb1te House press secretary, uld Pres.Ident Nixon pe(IOnaily approved B re m e r ' 1 lrllllller to Maryland authorities. BaO said Nixon followed the recom- mendations ol the FBI. Chess Panel Turns Down Fischer Bid REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) -The committee In charge ol the !250,000 in· temational chess cbampiooahip today lumed clown Bobby FIJCher'a reqllfft to ... !Tiiie Ref .... Lotblr 8chmid and take any the ,farfelt point awarded to ilumm Boria Spwky. Tbe cmnadtlot, aimposed of Schmid, hla ....,., ......-.U-!or the two playOn llld the organl2ro, said it wauld meet again ~r tn the day to -. F"llCber's complaints about condiliOl)I mr dar wblcb the malcb Is being pla;.d. SPASSIY, mE reigning world cham- pion, wu awarded one point Tbunday Wbeft Filcher reluaed In play the ·oecond game of the malcb, &lvlog him 12-l!JeBd. Tbe tempel'llllllllal American .,icl be wwld DOI play unUl four cloaed circllit t•'riliaa cameru were removed from Iba -ball. Tbe c:ommltlot llllllOllDced its ruling folJowlnc I -Jooor meeting, Deputy Referee Gudmwrdur Amlaugsson 38.id both Fildler and Spusky woold be in- vited to the """""' meeting to diacllls Fitfber'1 Clllllplalnts. WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. William Proxmlre (l).Wll.), a......i the Delenae Depertment today of letting the taxpayer be "played tor· a sucker" by allowing Sperry Rand Corp. to reep a 34,000 per- cent return on 1 '50,000 investment. The contract involves the company's pn>dllClion ol 116 mm arllllery shell cas- inp -the bnaa<:Olored portion -at itJ Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant, Shreveport, Le. The 171-mlllion plant WU built With taxpayer money hut Sperry Rand in- vested only $50,000, 18.id Proxmlte, cbainnan of the Joint Economic Com· miuee. In the »year apan from 1951 to 19'71, Sperry Rand made 117 million prollt, maintained ProIIDlre. • According to a General Accounting Of. fice investigation, Proxmire said, Sperry Rand ])l"Oduced each casing at a claimed cost of $29.31 under a coe:t·plus contract. Pia Bm Colll1lon e Bus Coll,Jaion CAPLEVILLE, Tenn. (UPI),-· A wild- ly swerving car with a Oat tire crashed into a Greyhound bus early today killing three persona and injwing 20. 11>e dead included the driver and sole occupant of the car and two passengers aboard the Memphl»-to-Atlanta bul. Identities of the dead and injured "''ere not immediately avallable. The collision on U.S. Highway 78 near 11118 small Memphls auburb forced the Belfast Battles Termed 'Worst' In Three Years EBLFAST (UPI) -British troops seiz. ed 1 former Pn>teatant ho11Blng develoj> ment from lrlsh .Republlcan Army (IRA) gumnen today in what a British officer called Northern Ireland's worst gunbatUe In three years. Six men -three civilians and three sokliEn-dled In Belfast overnight, bring· iDg to nine the deatll toll In the post 26 hours, Including five soldiers. The army • bus Into a utility pole, through a loubed wire fence and lnlo 1 puture. e ·Agnete Beghu MANCHESTER, N.ll (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew opeoed his campaign against the Democrats bJ aH· log local media to of&et I llbenJ biaa ol W•sbinllon reportm and ~ ,\gnelf told 1,7!0 Repuhllcalll 11 I $50- Hicket dinner 'll>uraday nidJI, thll WU "Ille opening ....ion ol the real stop. McGovern movement." But Agnew only m-.i the Domocrallc prooldenlill IJOll11-, Sen. G..,... S. McGovern, in an aside. (. IN SHORT ••. · ) After the nomination, Agnew said. McGovern was "at the awlmm~ pool practicing his new stroke -the Hanoi crawl." e Kickback Charge " WASlllNGTON (AP) -Tera 1 Congressman James M. Collins has ·denied any knowledge of an $18,000 kickback scheme for which his former chief aide was convicted Thursday. The aide, George A. Haag, contended throughollt his lollNiay trial that be car- r ied out the. kickbac k: scbem.? at the direction of Collins, a millionaire Reooblican from Dallas. Haag, 33, stood tight·lipped and erect as the jury foreman repeated "guilty, your honor," to 20 couots of mail fraud, two counts of using fal sified House payroll fQl"llls and one count of obstruc· ting justice. His wife cried softly. e Nota-tphite Ban ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elles ect a proposal Thursday to admit n-ites as members. De ates to the Elk! convention voted 1,798 to 921 to reject a resolution to dele a Hwhites only" clau.9e from the ·~'"''"'. "f'on of the 1.5 million member group, ' Similar resolutions were defeated in 1968, 1969 and 1971. In 1970 the resolution was bottled up in committee. WbUe Filcber'1 ' main comp1aint was agalnll the '"levtslon cameras, be baa also protalad the lighting In the ball, the 117.e of the chess pieces, the thickness of the drapes and the conduct of the apec- claimed l'I gunmen wounded. A J 'led An army opo~esman aaid · more than ttomey ai 5,000 blJlle,. were fired In fighting whlch gton. · raged eround the Lenadoon Avenue aree. p C The gunbattle subsided wllh dawn but . L' or· ontempt • -11!EJllG <i~e<Lol!e lhJll_nared again briefly. at aOO.t I a.m. An has haunted the championship almost hour later It-was 1JUJt;hg&1n.. -. ---~,~-n=----,~--c f the be inning· would Fischer walk The spokesman sa>d the, !1ghtmg was U uggi1ig aSe ~1.;' g ' · the wont since British troops arrived m oul~land.ic grandmaster F r t d r i k th~ province in August, 1969, to pu~ do!"1 Olaf old friend of Fischer strife between Protestants and m1nor1ty SIOD, an ' Roman C8tbolics managed to get into t~ suite ~f ~ins In reVised figu.res the army said the where the cballqer is . staying m a deaths brougbt. the r~ta.Iity toll in almost downtown hotel. · three f · I · Northe "He &alked to me about anything else years o. V>O.ence m rn 1>111 the I h " Olatsaon aald . "He loSl··-h'eland to-432, mcludiDg 109 aoldlers, 300 . ma c • ,, c1vihans and 23 polJcemen. ~ -In ll •Ix m-111'1·1 . Shortly alter the ootbreak of lighting in Fiscbtr dropped the first 0 the poss!· Lenadoon, the bodies of three men were hie 24 Camtl to 8-J<Y, who needs 12 • taken to tile Mater hoepitai Royal Vic- polnt&-o win cowru one Point, 1 draw to • H ·1a1 d 'tied f ' d · '"6.. int_ to ta· his title t ime na. osp1. a mi our men urmg OD~nam po re m · · the mgbt with gunshot wounds . for the second game ca!M and ~ent An army spokesman said 600 troops Thlll'Sday and Fischer dtd not amve. ---,-mt the Le doo ~ Aid 'd be sta·--' in bed to prote$t the moveu o . na n "venue area . es Sil 1~ Thursday rugbt aft~ gunmen of the television ca~ras. . tRA 's Provisional winz, operating from At ~be appointed hme, S p.m .• Spass~y their stronghold there, attempted to was in the h~ll. Promptly at 5, SChm1d overrun an anny ootpost ln the district. started the time clock. There \Vere 60 minutes of hushed silence w ~ i ! e everybody waited for Fischer. ANDREW DAVIS, one of Fischer's lawyers in New York, put through a caU at 5:30 p.m. -when there was 5till SO minutes till Fischer's deadline --to ruchard C. Stein, lawyer for the owner of the TV and lilm rights iind asked Stein lo remove all c8ll]eras for Thursday's game Md_cin .Davis time_to_fuj~ @~ discuss the matter in detail. Stein said he agreed and even made out a written agreement backstage in the ball. Fischer was told via telephone that such an agreement-existed, but lbe American did not respond , Stein <mid. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dellwry of the Dally Piiot Is guaranteed MondlY·P'rtdey1 Ir 'fOU tlo not Nvt yoUI' PtPtl' by J:JO p.m., Clll Ind '/'Oii!' COpY w1!1 be brought .., .,..,_ Ctlll 1r. ..it.. untM 1:JO p.m. Sltvfday Ind Sund1y1 II you do not rKlfvt rvvr copy by f 1.m. Slfurdly, or I 1.m. ........ .,, c&ll Ind I ceoy Wiit be llr'OUgtll .., · ~Yoij.-Cllll art lit'"""t11 unlll 11 1.m. Ttltphonts Molt Ot'9rllt COl#r!IY ,t,reu ........ '4Mlll'I Nortllwst Hwitrnvton ltldt and 'WbtmlMlff ..................... Int '"' Clfn•1etlf•, c•tr-IMCll! • Sin J\llft c;.,11tr1no, Dint Po1111, lovth .........,., LavllM NllW ..•• ft2.4GI WASlilNGTON -Attorney M. Dou,qlas Caddy baa beeo Jailed lOllf houro for con- (empt of court for refusing to clnswer q11estions belore a grand ilD'Y in- vestigating the break·in and atte.mptt11 b11gging ol Democratic party bead- quarters here May 15. -Caddy was released from jail Tlrursday -the same day be was put in -by two judges of the U.S. Co1lrl of Appeals who aald they wanted to review the con'"mpt nilb)g by U.S. D"trict Coor! Judge John J. Sirica. A bearing WU Rt for Tuesday. Caddy has relused to anawer such quesUona ol the grand jury u how he knew five men were arrested inside U.e Democ;ratic offices before the in-- ronnatioo was generally known, He alao bas declined to answer questions about telephone calls he received the night the five were arrested. One of those arrested was James W. Mce0rd Jr., security chief for the O>m- mitttee for Re.election. of the PP-sident and !or the Republican National C'.om- mitlot. The hreak·in prompted a $1 million damage sllit liled against the Committee !or Jle.election ol the President by Lawrence F. O'Brien, Democratic Na· tional Comm1ttee chairman. ·r h e Republican group asked for postpone- ment of the suit until after the Nov. 7 election because It could cause urn. caJculable" da.mage to the re-electio:t campaign ol President Nlron. California Has High, Low \ ( • ... ' UPIT....._.. ,, • , I BLACK STltlAKS OF RUBllElt L-E'AD TO H.IJACKED 727 JETLINER "Piiot Forced to land on Tax11 Runway-Meant for Smaller Plmo1 CripPled let , ' Skyjacking Drama Ends With Surrender of Pair. FREEPORT, Tex. (UPI) -The two hijackers in a crippled jet stranded on a small South Tei:as airfield weren't ready to concede defeat. The airplane was surrounded by police, it was out of fuel and had four blown tires, and the hijackers were weary from the 22-hour orde81. But they still had $600,000 ransom-money and parachutes they traded for 112 passengers in Philadelphia, and were holding three stewardesses hostage. JT WAS FBI agent Louis \Vhite of Baltimore, who convinei!d them they U,.IT ........ GRIMACING WITH PAIN Pistol Whipped Co-pilot Boise Cascade May Quit Land Saks in Swte ' should surrender after talking to them about 30 minutes. T:he agent, like the ffi.. jackers, ii black. "White told them the three people who were injtll'ed in the ordeal were not hurt serlooaly. He said the only thing for tU.m to do was give up," said Houston FBI chief Thomas Jordon. 11He made them realize they were 1n an untenable position." 1be three stewarddses walked out first, followed seconds 1ater by the hi· jackers, walking out of the rear door of the airplane with their bands held high. wJirrE SNAPPED on the bandC1lfls and the men, later identified as Stanley Green, 34, of Washington, D.C., and Lulseyd Tesla, 2Z, a native of Ethiopia, were charged with air piracy' and neld in lieu of $I ,million hond each, The. hijacldog began Wednesday night as them jetliner approac:Md New York on a fllght from Philadelphia. ':be hi· jackers were anned with a sawed-of! ll· gauge sbotgwi hidden in a fate Mm c:ist, a pistol and a-~ grenade. "''' .......... SUSPECT LED AWAY LulHyd Totfa, 22 '100% Effective' Video Bomh Usecf Over North Viet They for<od the plane to 'tttum and land In Philadelphia and demanded the SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Navy ID> ransom and parachutes. nounced today the introduction of a new,, Capt. Elliott M. Adams, 55, escaped hy oa..ton video bomb called "Fat Albert , diving through· a_ cockpit window. "Ht wu--inl~ th;-air war against North Vietnam hospitalized In fair con41Uon Crom in-' jwies suffered In the !all. Adams jumped and termed it highly eUectlve. because the hijackers bad ordered him to The weapon is an , improved version of take off before the plane was refueled, a the "Walleye'' television bomb and bas move offl&ls said would have caused been in use for the past menth the Navy the aircraft to crsah right afler liftoff. sai~. ' THE IIlJACKERS fmally •e<'elved their ransom, released the passengers, swllched to another Tri jetliner and took oil for Teus, still holding three 1tewardes1es and two male crewmembers -the copilot and the engineer. The gunmen forced the jet to land on a small airstrip near Freeport, designed only for propeller alrplanes, It blew four tires on landing and was stranded. Tbe airport bad no facilities for repairing or refueling jets. During negotlallonl between the FBI and the hljackera, the copilot and engineer escaped the same way pilot Adams bad. Engineer Gerald L. Se1tver, ~. of Houston, was shot in the leg as t.e scrambled through the cockpit window, and then alightly lnjllred in the !all. COPILOT NORMAN W. Reagan, :14, of Mlaml, -hll wrlsl, pelvis and rih wben he hit the ground. lie lay .,..,. tlool-cm the .,..md and 'llad to be car- ried away Oii a stretcher. The hijackers made cme laat bid !or victory belore aurrooclerinl to Agent. While. Thoy uiled for I mnaJler airpl:me piloted by ID FBI qeol wearing only •wlmmlna trunks. * * * 2 U.S. Airlines ' 'Cracking Down~ On Hijack Tries · • ClllCAGO (AP) -Twv ...iar U.S. airtlw .bl .. I·--lloppod-up itCGiltJ m .. 11• In m Gtempt to thnrlllljac .... --aid 'l1landly tbal ~ ....... -bolml lnopocted II ----·~211 .... -.... lo .... Ill O'llln J--..a Airport. ' Uallld All U.., b d •1 llrpll c:mrilr, ·-·-j will _,.,, ,..... nol lo llllpK'l Ill lolllll ~-.., Jiii-boil 111 m n ldded tbll It wlll .::. Ila ol mat1,. opol doocb ol .......... holrdlnr ill ott.rfUclU, ' ·An --.,.._... llald tllo ........ 1-!Ion -not be Jtmltod t. .,._. boardlac Ille 7l'11, 1be 1Dcrrr11d M:Urlty meuaretcame ln Ille .-., the .,_, bl- Jacklnc cl ID American jolJlns betoMO Okl*na C1t1 anti Jlollaa. ,,,. hijacker loter IUn'mlerecl. t Capt. Marland W. Townsend, com- manding officer of the carrier Kitti Hawk, sald the first six Fat AlbeN released scored direct hit.! against their targets and -the risk that American pilots woold be hit by growici fire. 1 NEWS ANALYSIS r Townsend said four bridges were OOWn- ed and two military supply buildings , were destroyed by the bombs. i·you can't beat 100 percent," he said. The Fat Albert, named by rueno ahoanl the Kitty Hawk, 18 twice u powerful 11 the Walleye and baa a televlalon camera In the --to direct the homh lo Iba target. "The primary advant.qeg ol the Tai Albert' over the earlier Walleyed oerles are increaaed elp!Ollive Impact, better reUabillty and greater otaOOoll .._ - or the ability to hit largeta from btPft' altitudes, the moot popular featw. far combat air crews upnoed lo - l10lllld lire," the Navr said. On the other hand Hanol'1 lntroductloa ol a heat-oeeklng Soviet antlaln:rall mlsalle Into the Vietnam war ii pneraUng considerable concern """"" U.S. and Soutll Vie-COlllllllDdlrl and has bniught aboot -drollie' changes In lhelr Olen' tacllca • The -ii !loot SA7, or "StnJa• - I Soviet ~ whlch the Nortb Yi. -lire from theJ dlouldor lb • -.. II la much IDte Ille U.S. lledQe mlalle. The lllnla la equipped '!lib .. w.- llonq -tbal la lllrlcled lo .. hoot li1m oft by .. ·~ llld -.................. lthu proved nry ellocttve, ...,..iany qa1net the comparaltttly ..... llelloopterl and propeller l!Wm, o1-. aay, -ol!Jcen -tt lbe moot .,.. locttve of the .......i -Pona llled !or the lint llllle by the Nprlh Vielnameae la the current of/ensm -the Olben lJ>o dude ionl-r .... artillery, med111111 t.nb and •ir.tulded mlalles. Mllltary """"'"' ellimala Iha! -· than I -U.S. •ln:ralt and It leul that "'""1 8oath ~ bellcoi>tera and plms have been downlll bJ Strtia flllssllee llnce they ~ Ill Iba ""' U.field In eariy May. .01 De c1i the Mi A Cou at to gov to I y on H -cea adv H and writ pa Hou con volv E mill p F M Rep. nom day fro Eag GI Uon "Ir'· wer ta ti Am F WO op [rr elf nom Sen. liing ... poll pla did • . ' • ' frid'1, Ju~ 14, 1972 DAILY PILOT $ • Eagleto:D P.olitieal Career l'leteorie \ Missourian Carries Liberal Record· Mrs. -Eagleton Bubbles JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) -The o(electlon of Thomas F. Eagleton al the l)emocratic vice Presldentla1 candidate climaxed a meteoric rise in politics for the C.year-old junior senator from Missouri. knocking out the MB'l'70 tonk u a wasteful expense. He advocatod wage and ll'lct controlt to slow illIJation. When Pn.ldtat Nllion announced Phuo I of hil economic coo- trols, Eagletoo pralaed the action but told Mlasourlanl be hoped II nm't "too little too late." Eagleton prealded over the slate Senate with a Dair. Qutck·wltted, ht often broke terisloos with a quip. He served u cocbalrman of the Governor's Qmference oli Ji;ducatlon and waa bead of the ~·s ComoUssioo on Crime and At Idea of Campaign At rl, Eagleton was elected St. Louis County circuit attorney: at 31, Missouri's attorney general; at 35, lieutenant governor: and at 38 Missourians sent hlm to the U.S. Senate. Youthful in appearance, Eagleton sometimes has been called a Kennedy· type Democrat, but he disli kes beln& labeled either a conservative or a liberal. He says ~ views depend on the issue in· volved. Associates regard him as Uberal . on most mattCrs. He called in 1968 for an immediate cias6 fire in Vietnam, and was an early advocate of stopping lhe bombing there . He joined Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.), and Sen. John Stennis, (D-Miss.), in writing a new war powers act which has passed the Senate and is pending in the House. lt would more clearly define the congressional role in U.S. foreign in· votv.ements. Eagleton also tried to whittle down itary spending and succeeded in Woman Solon Polls 407 For VP Post MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Tezas state Rep. Frances "Sissy" 'Farenthold was nominated for the vice presidency Thurs-- day night with a plea to Democratic Na· tional Convention delegates to vote in- dependently and elect lier "to show this is a different convention.'' ·she polled 407.4 and made the motion from the podium to have Sen. Thomas Eagleton nominated by acclamation. Eagleton ba.o worked on labor and con- sumer iaues in the Senate. He got the Senate ., adopt a clear labeling act. Ho 8pc>Dllll<d an aJ1l<lldmeat, later adopted, that allowed use or lederal funds to .... the financial strain on scbool dislrlcta caused by public housing projecla. >.. vice chairman of the Senato'• air and water pollution 111bcommittee, be has counted envinnmeotal problems as one of his main coocerm in recent months. Eagleton waa a principal sponsor of the Clean Air.Act of 1970 and wu an author 'ol the Wat.er PolluUon Mt oll971, which is still pending in a conference com- mittee ~ is scheduled !or action alter the curr~t summer recess. As chairman of the Senate committee on the Disti'lct ol Columbia, be pushed through a coiiSumer protection act and got the. Senate '°'adopt a home rule bill lot the di!ti'ict. As lieutenant govelnor of Missouri, • ' ' Wicks • <"" <> ·-• • • ; \Wt111"lliel ' ~ ·l ,....--- 'Me?. •• Oh I like the little blonde standing behind McGuvem!' Juvenile Delinquency.. "· He alJo beaded a study ol vocational and technical education, setlng IL! ex· pansion u one of the solutions to growing educattooal problems. At 15, Eagleton was the targtt or a kid· naplng t b r e a t while bis father wu representing Ibo Missouri senate In an ouster case against a senator accused of soliciting a bribe on a cosmetology bill. He later became an honor graduate of Amherst College and Harvard Law School and attended o.ford Untv.ralty. He served two years in the Navy befor8 opening law practice in St. Louis. Eagleton ts married , to the · former Barbara Smith, 36, a childhood plaYm&te. They have ~two children, Terry, 12, and Christin, 8, who is called Christy. Mrs. Eagleton is a_yjvaclous cam- paigner, but-she puts her husband In the spotlight and defers to his political opln· tons. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of .Maine was Eagleton'• first choice for t b e UPI T...,._ .. STAR ON RISE? Thoma• E111leton DemocraUc presidential nomination, but after Muskie withdrew, the Missourian joined the lorcos of Sen. George McGovern. MIA~I! BEACH (UPI) -It's a twin biU for I.he wives ot the Democrat'\c can- didates for president and vice president. Just like Eleanor McGovern, Barbara Eagleton ls a twin. Mrs. McGovern, wide of sen. George McGovern, the presidentlal nominee, has her twin Ila with her in liliaml Beach for the national convention. Mrs. Eagleton's twin, Donna, live! in Palm Beach, Fla. Mn. Eagleton's husband, Thomas, a Missouri senator, wash a nd-picked Thursday by McGovern for the No. 2 spot on the ticket and early today the delegates nominated him by acclamation. The Eagleton& have two childreni Terence, 13, and Christin, 10, who flew in from Washington to be with lheir parents for the final session of the convention. Mrs. Eagleton, a blue-eyed blonde, has been campaigning for her husband since he made his first successful bid for elec- tive office by running for district at· McGovern Sets State Visit California Split Faced by Democratic Hopeful ' :MIAMI BEACH (AP) -George McGovern will go ID Califomia In August In a personal effort to uolte the state'• splintered Democratic party hthlnd ·his quest for the presidency, a McGovern spokesman says. Miles Rubin of Los Angeles, a member of the national campaign team, said califomia, with its 4S electoral votes, will be as much a pivotal state in November as it was in the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination. 11We welcome aboard everyone-In tbe party ln California," Rubin told a news coofereoce Thursday . alter cooferriog with spokesmen for several factions of the Califomia party. 11It would be very difficult to conctive of winning in November without winning in California." The aemon, called by State Party Cbalrmao Chari .. Manatt, waa billed as a unity conference. But most of the 20 people present were McGovern sup- porters although several of them -such as Sen. Alan Cranston -didn't ~me abpa.rd until a(ter . McGovern won the June 8 California primary. Rubln said there will be room -ond a need -for nm·McGovernites in the South Dakota aeoator's California cam- paign. '.'This ls a job Iha! cannot be done by the people wbo have been active in the McGovern campaign alone," be said. And Rubin emphasized 1 1 S e n • McGovern ls amious that everyone understand that hls campaign is l!ot The delegation took no caucus position on the vice presidential matter. "We're urging Eagle ton," s a t d >..semblyman John L. Burton (!).Sao Francisco} co-chalnnan of the delega- tion , but there was no apparent anntwisting among the delegates. Mao Didn't Get Vote for Office MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Just for Ibo record; the Colorado delegation to the Democratic National Convention did not ' lorney In St. Loois In 11156, the aame year they were married. She told UPI it wu "fantastic" to be part of the ticket, but the nomination certaln1 y would change the family's plans for the summer. "We had planned to visit St. Louis and Delaware Beach but that is changed now," she said. The children's reaction was typical. .. Neat," said Terence of' his ralher's nomination. Did thU mean that the fami· ly would be ge tting its picture:i: Jn "all the papers," Christin want ed to kno"'· Mrs. Eagleton b an a c t I v e sportswoman, an av.id read.er, and a chic dresser. • She attended \Vashington University in St. Louis and ~1arymount CoUege in Tar- rytown, N.Y. Like her husband, she is a Roman Catholic. 1t1rs. Eagleton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Smith. live in Ladue , a fashion· able suburb of St. Louis. elitist or exclusionary in any way ." cast one of it:i: vice presidential AmFa.,.1'liurecansto. vot-,for the l1'beral Texas Troops Se· nt to M.:nmi· The last Jll'lior official act of the con· oominatingvotoslorMao Ts .. tung. ' ....... Oil 0 · ~ , venlloll • !Or Iha 2'11·vote Calilomta Wbeo the voto was called back lrom NAP TIME -A weary CbrlJty woman, said Steinem, "would waste an . · J delegation wu to cast Its votes for the the l'Oltrum early~ •Jut QI.ml WQ Eagleton, 9, resta her head on opportunity to tell the country what Is ~ , vl~.:)=~ninecan-prooouoced "MIO T...tllll(." The her mother'• lap 11 Barbara Gloria Steinem, a leader of the Na- tional Women's Political Caucus, was Mrs. Farenthold's nominator and there Were four seconders, including represen- tatives of blacks and Mexican- _.dl!1ertnlabo.aUhl$~11J1elllion.'.'..S!tUU:ttuei-' at: · B kffl ~----__ dldates,JJvlPD~..l!!!lkLtbem, 198, Colorado delegates did _not c,at~h_ the Eagleto~,_ wife of ~eorg:!fe- ed the delegates to 11make history" by ue 0 , , Q ac· -ome to McGovern'• handpicked running mate, name and a few minutes later the chair ---Governs runninl mate, ap---- oomin ating Mrs. Farenthold Instead of • . · · Sen. Tbomu Eqletoa o1 Missouri._ again asked the delegation.to explain ii! plauds in Miami. Sen. George McGovern's choice for nu~ Frances Farmtbold of Tens wai run· vote Ji1ng mate, Sen. Eagleton (!).Mo.). WASHINGTON (UPI) .. -·Barr;•• last oerup with 2'I vo~ aod tbeo cm Sen. B.;U!!I.~ "'"""eel and the f' _ J .J_ --. 8 •"She changed the lace of Texas minute trouble-which 00 ..,. ,.;Dy... !":'tro1~;i:~ .::::::: -Ml~~: ~~~:rathe Celifor· one vote cut for Lt. c:."'~rt-M~;,_-'7tlw:wttterees----··-·--"I politics. Texas will nevt>r be the aame peel> -the 2,500 federal troops sent to at the,baae tbrougbout the convention. nians for weeks.' Ooe of his top dragon of Colorado the first time wu not :igain," Ms. Steinem said a boot Mrs. Miami Beach for the rle\nocrauc Na· .1. ·k baa •ec1 be li~teoants in bis vice. pmidenUal cam-mentioned again. . = ew aa. that t y be returned paign wu Callfoml8 A!oembl)'lnaD End to Viet War Farentbold's recent narrow defeat in the tional Cqnvention will be bllck at their to the Miami Beach area for the Wallor Karablan of Montorey Part. The first time, Mondragon had been llemocratic prima~ gube matcrial race. •---In "'orth Carolina Saturdav. Todav ·~ delega"·-plus alternates pronounct!d In Spanish and came out SAN DIEGO (AP ) -sen. "·-· M . • , ~ 1• , Republican Convention, which beginl " ~ ~. .' sounding like the chair and many In the _,, Among her seconders were Mississippi ·Plans called for the Army and Marine there Aug. 2!. Pentagoo officials aaid the party officials and newsmen packed their udlence tboligbt "Mao Tfe.tuog" Goldwa ter, a member of the senate ''ack civil rights leader Fannie Loo Corps troops to'lllarl -.m •• oot of their baas for the chartered Jet lligbl! back to ~ ' · Armed Forces Committee, says flatly be ;; ,......... tent city at Homestead would be left in Callfomta later In the day. namer and Allard K. Lowenstein, na· tent city at .H~mestead Air Force Base place, and that the troops would 10 back Soule used Miami as a jumping off tbillks the Vlelnam war will end wltbio 60 lional chairman or Americans for today boarding ·transport planes for the to Florida about Aug. 19• point for vacatklllS in the Bahamas or Bunker Gets 1 Vote clays. Democratic Action. alrlil,t ho. me. Defense Department ol· ebewhae In the Caribbean. "I predlct that In the next month or 60 , Some 2,000 of the troops belong lo the ~--• •·•-tlon -•n nn CH 'R t . Spanish aking ficials said the airlift waa acbeduled to be The ·-;_,.a caucus was rnurs-m~ BEA (UPI) -Archie days Iha war'wtll be tonnally over," tbt , e Pr e s en 1 n g -spe Army's crack 82nd 4'jrborne Division, day.afternoon when the delegates beard Bunker, the bigoted character of the dJ,1egates was Da vid Lopez, delegate completed Saturday. based at Fort Bragg, N. C. The re-former Maaaacbuaetls Gov. Endicott television stria "All In the Family," got Arizona lle1'!bllcan told some 600 pel'IOlll !tom Houston . "Viva Sissy," he aaid. 1be specially trained riot troops have malnlng 500 were Marines from Camp Ptellcdy· and Sen; Ml k e Gravel one vote from South Carolina early Fri· atteodlog a 'lllll+plate Republican fWld· Mrs. Farenthold was the only woman been on Standby at the air be1e;:i5 miles Lejeune, N. c. All are mtmbel'll of the make a pltch}or vice presidential SUI>' clay during bolloting for the vice r:eg dlnoer 1bunday. placed in nomination among eight can-from the convention site, for the past Defense Department's East Coast civil port deM>lto McGov~'s aelectlon ol Sen. presidential nominee of the Democntlc ldwater refuled to elaborate on bis dldates. week at the request of Florida Gov. disturbance control force. lr'l'bomu•••Ea•gl•etoo•;;;of;;; ~M!s-sourt;;;;;;;;;·----•N;;;a;;;llo;;;nal;;;;;;;;;Co;;;nv;;;;;;en;;;Uon;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'la;;;;;;;;;;;;en;;;t;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-o 'UPI,.._.... UNITY PLEA -Sen. Edwird Kennedy with his wile Joan at his side, addressed delegates in Miami Thursday in a plea fo r party unity. Kennedy, wllo • turned dowo an ol!er for the vice·presldency, drew thunderous applause. Keitnedy Sparks Tumult With Party Unity Plea MIAMI BEACH (AP) - Seo, Edward M. Kennedr -before a tired anil tumuJtuoua Democratic Na- llonal Convention early today and brought It to its feet in a roaring oencloff for a tlcl:et he bad declined to join. .• KeDnedy, for ,many, was the mllslng part of the dream which nominated George S. McGover. a night earlier. But he bad the delegates !Cream- lng and 1lolllplng their al>' prom when he told them Ibey had "met the test of great· Ma" wilh the selection of McGovern and Sen. '11lomas · With that, the band played, 0 Hail, Hail, the G-ng's All Here," and McGovern , Eqlelon and lllOll o f lf c G ovem11 preconvention contenders Docked to Ken- nedy's side a1 the delegates shook the hall with crleo of suwort. Georp W a II a c e., ootably, was mlaalng. Farm Strike Gets· Backers F. Eagleton of Missouri. . MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) ''We are united," said Ken--"Mr. CbaJrman, delegates nedy, 11by heritage, con-and fellow lettuce-boycotten," ~ictlODI and by unyielding op. sen. Edward Kermedy began, poolUca" to an admlolstration and the Democratic Natlooal w h I c h h a 1 p r o v o k e d Convention crowd roan! ln II[> Americans lntc being "more preciatt- apprebetllive about the futuro For letlll<e -or the boycott than excltod by It." of aoy oot harvested by untcm Republicans , be said, have fannworken -had become "had their chance and they've """ of the lide tbemel uol~ laQed. And their falluro of the convention. · .. ~P will be rewarded Led bJ Deloreo lluertl., a IG!I wilh their !allure at the polll aide to Fann Worltm Union this November." · founder Cesar Cb av 11 _.1bat brougbt another lnlge "boyC9lt lettuce" 1 I 1 n i cnorus of cheel'll and l ed lo a sprouted In more than a dolm Keooedy cracendo '!' h I c h • ...._4elegptiona, .. .. The most fantastic selection of the choicesl .domestic and imported fabrics available.-New- eat patlei;ns, up to date model~ and our usual expert tailoring. }.fanufacturers allow:us to mention their names in our advertising at these prices once a year .. at ~P to •/2 off I GINO SALVAGGI $J' ,19 Regularly 1~.00 lo 220.00 it HART6AFFNER&MARX $JO' 9 Regularly 150.00 to 175.0Q . EAGLE AND KUPPENHEIMER Regularly 150.00 to 200.00 SPECIAL GROUP A"'orted branda.includi ~g Eagle, SedgeW)ICk, $ t::9 Hart Schalfner &: Marx, Michaels/Stern U SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 South Bristol Street Costa Mesa • 50-4611 LAKEWOOD PLAZA 6412 Eut Spring Street Long Beach • ~1-4611 ROTATING CHARGE ACCOl'NTS began with, "There ls a new Eapecially durJna lhe voting wind rialng over the 1and • • . on the contested Callfomla startln& with the plaioa and. delqates MoodaJ nilhl. It roctJ ldila of Sooth bokota," became the ..... !or afates to and eaded with hta In-preface tbelr votes with a troducllon of "the nm pres~ . rtrnar\ about their leyalty ID d<nt of the United Statea ••• " Chaves' lannworken. .. ____________ ,._ ________________________ _. ' • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE -• • Ignoring Public Opinion TKE' MOST l>l~UPTIVE EL1MEWTS AT THE (otMl\IT'ION SO FM ARE.' THE Mll.l'rM'f <'HOPPE.'R.S •• ~. ~~:J The sleadlasl disregard oi public opinion man!· fested by the three-member 111ajority Oft the Laguna Be•ch school board reached a climax of sorU this week. .. id he bad visited the hllll<>p school twice, Linke, three limes, and Mrs. Gillette, once! Toward the end of a four-hour meeting, without a word of advance warning, board President William Tbom2" blandly offered a motion to scrap the innovative program at Top o! the World Elementary School and re- place ii with a more traditional program. Urged by curriculum director Robert Reeves not to "throw the ·baby out with the bath wa ter," Thomas • agreed l<> defer his motion l<> give fellow trustees lime to think it over. . But the fact remains that, by a 3·2 vote, the Top of the. World program can indeed be scrapped. l'O~ 1HE RRST TIME IN ANY COlllVENTION YOU <AN TiLI.. _&Y l.QOl(IN~ wt!O'.S FOR WHOM. The fact that ' the item was not even on the agenda for discussion, that the school principal happens lo be out of town on vacation. and that there might be some problems In dumping a program built up over six years, mere weeks before the new school year open~. apparent· ly did not concern the board president. Thomas announced he had given "a lot of thought" to the mailer. Pressed for an explanation . of hls con· cems, he cited complaints about discipline, decorum and the math an d reading programs -al~ well known to .the school staff which, as the trustees are aware, is working toward imj>rovement in these areas. T!iomas and the other two majority board members, Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke, have previously made ft clear that national recognition of Top of the World's educational accomplishments means nothing to them. Equally meaningless to them , it seems, are results o! a recent poll which showed that 93 percent of persons Interviewed support the school program and 94 percent reported their child's attitude toward the school as ex· cellen\ or good. Or that letters tn the board on the pro- gram tallied 142 positive and Z ne gative. In response to a question from the floor, Thomas .. Topnotch Entertainment Afore than a million persons are in for some good entertainment along the South Coast. In Laguna Beach the spectacular Festival of Arts opene·d its doors today for a six·week run. Its companion attraction, the Pageant o! the Masters, will run nightly. It's a sellout, as always. Laguna also will offer the more rustic and increas- ingly popular Sawdust Festival and Arl·A·Fair, both artistic showcases. They also started today. San Clemente'~ chief community celebration, Fiesta la Christianita, is under way. The papular annual event celebrates the first Christian baptism in California. Its highlights occ~r tomorrow.' They include a parade, a carnival and !be colorful national cha'm.pion· shlp dory races at the municipal pier. It is noteworthy that two small communities con· sistenlly produce thls l<>pnplch entertainment. ' I . / s · 'Progress' _Has Replaced 'Salvatio11' Dear Gloomy ' Gus St1pport Laguna Schools by Removitag Two Board Meuabers I. ,'· , 'Wh~:· Do They Pref er to. Destroy?' Does Laguna's regressive school board majority really want a re- turn to the lltUe red schoolhouse and fl.fcGuUey1s Reader? -W.L.T. Tiii• fNtwn rellKtl ttMln' 'fttWt, Mt To the Editor: Many school boards these days are confronted with a variety of serious prob- lems-rising costs, dropouts, vandalism, over-crowded classrooms, p o o r 1 y motivated s t u d e n t s and low Following a college commencement ad· '*""',.." -.. e1 ,,.. -..-. s... achievement ratings. dreu I gave Jut month, one or the ,_. "' "'" " 0...,.,,. 011" D&llY PU•'· Our present school board presides over graduates asked me a question I had oqe of the best school systems in the never been asked before -he wanted to state, and possibly the nation. Parents. know : "What, in your opinion, is the by an overwhelming majority, have in-main dilference be-ed that of "Providence;" the idea of the dicated by poll after pall, their en-Just Society, the Stable Society, the Good h tween people llvlng Society,' or even the Improving Society, t usiasm and suppon for our schools. today a9d those wh• has replaced "Salvation" as the ultimate Our cJilldren are highly-motivated,-eager Jived in past ages?" goal for many, Jf not most, people. This to learn, and by state and nafional tests I. coWdn't answer is not to say that they may not still are achieving .on an extremely ~igh level. hil ' question ade-believe in Heaven, but they a1so believe . . '--!~ ---· qualely at the~ time, we can create some1bJng·-of--a-Hea-ven--on--OUR-COMMUNITY-1nclud1ng-our bot I have been pon-earth if we really care enough and try school board -shouJd be tremendously dering on ft for a few enough. ···~-eudr of our schools and lavish praise on weeb, and am con-This js a distinctly new idea in the long ~em. To be sure,' there are problems MAILBOX Letters fr6m readers are welcome .. Normallt1 writers should .convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condeme letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. AU let- ter& must include signatures and mail· ing address, but names ma11 be with· held on reque st if 1sufficient ?'ea.son is apparent. Poetru wiU tiot be pulr lished. therefore, is: To whom are they listen· ing? Who is really pulling the strings? The answer may be partially found in a newspaper account of a meeting held in Laguna Beach just after the mun icipal elections two years ago, when ooe prom· inent citizen was heard to say, "Well - we've got the town. Now let's go after the schools." I HA VE A VESTED interest in thi§ community. I own my home, have a businesa here In Laguna, pay my fair share of taxes, do volunteer work and send my children to its schools. I have been involved in one of ils schools as a tour guide,· volunteer helper and worker. I have seen my children blossom under a caring and intelligent staff and I feel ·im-. ........ mense ptide-ih the ir achievements. cilman Boyd and Councilman Holm, for two years, have been the minority vole. They have had liltle or no saY in matter1 of imponance, savings and spendings! They have been powerless against thi s self-named "majority of the city coun- cil"-GoldberJ:!, Ostrander and Lorr. Citizens of Laguna are nol so easily deceived! Councilman Lorr's continued attempt to perpetuate disbelief, disrespect and division at the expense '!"' his fellow Councilmen Boyd and Holm is shabby behavior and most deplorable for a city councilman. We can \Yell do without this sort of waspish unfounded attack and self-justifying disruption. 'MAR'rV:LOIJll!IERY ~--~~-¥~- • · See Tl1e1n ha Action I WILL FIGHT lo maintaib the high . standards of our .schools.J3ut more than To the Editor: tt-:=:----.:'vlnced~'.!.''!:.l;'ls:'cna'!'n:-1'!''in,,;·""""===-=:---"istor.Y--Of..m.anklnd.-C.ompto-ll!,..past w:ithi'!_!.ur schools, for no ~hool system portant ques Ion with a meuingfuJ an-civillzaliona were i>a11s.lve, accepting, en-yet Clev1seais peffect-:-But t~ese prob- proposal for change has been made fn the field of economics and history. And among books he -prol*fd-was one published..by. an affiliate of the John BirCb Society. ~ J .wJU ft~bt.l1>t-tbe~ol-tbe.people----·J..sloongi)Cw:ge_uecy person..jl3re111.0l'.------ to have a voice -and to Jiave their voice not, to attend next Tuesday's school awer that may explain a 1ot. during, and relatively uncomplaining. l!!"s can only . be so~ved Jn an at- The order of ·things below was like the n:i:osphere ~f honest dtSCussi9n and a ·: IN ALL PAST AG.ES, up to a century order of things above _not to be ques· smcere desU'e to help. 'or two ago, the Western world, at least, tioned or changed unless by divine hr For what purpo.se, then, do three or our wu motivated by the hope and promise spiration. school board members choose to create 'of happiness in another world to come. an atmosphere of suspicion, mistrust and For most people living tod::iy, this has NOW WE REIJEVE somehow in the Jack of confidence? Why do they prefer been replaced by the hope -if not the perrecti.bility or man, If not ln his to tear down and destroy rather than profor ml!u se -of a happy ~~le tn1 this world, ultimate perf~ion. we look upon build and e.ocourage? ~ lure generations il not or us. ourselves as a creative factor in the People in the past were able (if not evolutionary process, aJ f u 11 y. en· altogether ,villing) to ezist among a com-franchised citizens of the universe.· We ·plexity ol J)hysical and social evils, want life lo be better Jn every w~y, for believing 'these to be ordained by God, our children if not for ourselves. And we and ~ing that by vlrtuous action they will take any feasible measures to make would Ile .,_transported unto ·bliss in the it so. world beyond. Mundane file wu largely Thus, the chaos, the conflict, the con-- regarded as a prelude -necessary tradicUons in rnpdern society. The though uncomfortable -to Par8dise. secularization of He aven into a Utopian Todaf, these eschatological notions goal on earth gives us both our vitality bave been transferred , In great part1 to and our frictions, both our wild hopes and the secular fields of politics, econorrucs, our bleak fears. 'nUngs never looked so and society. bad before because people never wanted them to look so good. Our discontents are TUE IDEA OF "Progress" has replac-the measure of our dreams. 'The Devasta ting Boys' The fiction ,,)f Elizabeth Taylor, one or ( • ) Britain's most popular aulhors, is a delt blend of a subtle, perceptive and witty THE BOOKMAN' style and a strong characterization _ . delicately cast and controlled Within a - skillfully construct~d setting. Parisian hotel sees each other in a new She centers on the foibles and light upon hearing a bitter marital Ml!S: GILt.ETl'E SEEKS to impose her will upon the ~hools which my · children attend, an,d lb which they are happy and productive_.. while she sends her own child to a school in another district. On wha t, then, does she base her criti~isms? Since she 1a'OOt now, and has never been, dir_ecU~ involved with Laguna Beach schooJI, her motives in ~lindly criticizing theni are open to ques- tion. A3 for Capl Linke,· the only spe<ific Too Much Power PRESS ~OMMENTS · CAPT. UNKE obviously does not speak for himsell. Time and again; when asked for direct answers or exp~tions of bis action or vote, be has either not responded at all "or bas resP.Onded by saying, "I agree with whatever be (Pres. Thomas) said." · Neither Mrs. Gille!te nor Capt. 'Linke has offered any .constructive idea's, Instead, lbey ·have acted · by innuendo, veiled hints about . undisclosed • com- plaints, '1)d unsubstantiated references to intimidation· of critics. ' THEY HA VE concUrred on , issues broujht-befor-8 the board by one,of-them for vote; they have never asked each other for inform'alion or facts on matters which one of them may propose for ac- tion; while ~ remaining two board members have bad·no prior knowledge of the 1ubject to loo votOd upon. U would &JI' pear, therefore, tbat these three board members consult privately . with each other jjlnd with who else, one might uk) which is not only unfair to the entire board, but which is illegal under the Brown (anti-aecrecy) Act. TO MY MIND, .. ithtr Capt. Unko nor Mrs. Gillette 11 motivated by a sincere; honest desire to improve our · echools. They have been preoented with opinions and statementa from a great majority of parents, teacben and students In 1upport . of our schooll. 'l'liey do not listen .to us. ~he question which OCCW'I to me, . heard -in a matter which so deeply af-board meeting. fects their children's lives today and as Everyone should see first hand what b future citizens in a democratic society. happening to our schools. Linke, Gillette 1 therefore urge all citizens of this arid Thomas are not spending a leisurely commuajty, parents and non--parents ~urnmer. By the time the recall election alike, to support our schools by removing is held, so much damage will already Patricia Gillette and Capt. Gerald Linke have been done that it will shock you. from their governing body, GAIL GASTON Vice President Concerned Citizens.for Schools Vindictive '.l'lrade To the Editor : I am appalled at the latest vindictive tirade of Councilman Lorr against Coun· cilman Boyd and Councilman HOim in the matter of city financing. Councilman Lorr undoubtedly Jacks in· sight, hindsight, and foresight on money maUers. Moneywise or otherwise, budget factl must be put into tile framework of all other facts that rela~ to it, thus giv- ing a practical perspective to our .state of affairs. It ls unfortunate that Councilman Lorr appears to be double-taltlng: AJ Jato as February II of this year Coancilman Lorr bragged that be ls largel1 responsi- ble l<H' a balanced budget, with deplered reserves re3tored ! NOW be ecrea!US foul! He blames his two UIOCiates, Councilmen BoJd and Holm, for a "black day" and '1babkruptcy" for Lapna. 111111 BMOKEflCllEBN llWll!a•er -not oblcure tho ·scone'at city ball. Coan: . ~ -· SEE TJJnl JN action -you wilt no longer question a recall action. Don't go v1ith the idea of expressing an opinion. Freedom of speech is ignored. n is an ezperience no American should deny himself. I. M. LONGLESS The Captah1's Douse To the Editor: I \\'Ould like to add my voice to those who would preserve the Captainfs House (563 South Coast Highway) a• a algnlf~ cant and irreplaceable piece of Laguna's past. 1 have painted it many times and .have bad my landscape cla.ss (f£ll.;, the Laglma School of Ari) paint it. lt iS ODO of the truly line moms locally. I feel strongly that its preservatiott, •• part of the open are'a to the sea perhaps as f mini-park with public acteSs, ~ lJn. portant to Lasuna's atmosphece. PERHAPS IT could be •'museum full of photos and other historical material with a very small admission charge, say ll o~ 25 cents. . M"ontere'.y and Mtndocino have been very sensible and Jdccessful in preserv· ing historically important structures. Why can't we? lingularities of hum anity. Frequently her 59uabble in the next room. A lonely West subjects are mature, over ly kind women Jndlan deliberately seeks to live in the who lack a sense or direction, or couples 'W1akistani neighborhood of London rather Jost In their everyday s j t u a ti o n s • than where his people gather for the lllJls?>oro, Ore., Argus: "No grQup, large or small or no matter how powerful, should have the power to tie up the economy, cause ecoliornic di saster to any segment of the population, bring about loss of markets and cause suffe.'ring to counUess others. That is the way we feel about the .•.. Pacliic Coast dock tje· up. It. is incumbent upon th~ Congress and the Administration to take whatever ·Meeting Power Demand W~ fe~ow artists, t and my students strongly urge that it be preserved as a link w!!h the past and as a structure !bat ls totally unique and lovely. Whatever their ages, their frailties;' or distinction of having the area all to their frmtraUons, Miss Taylor coo-himself. centrates on lhe framework of the novel to dramatize the stories of their quietly confUsed lives. HOWEVER, among her many books are a few collect1on.s of short stories. Now a new volume, "The Devastating Boy1," hu been p\ibllshed, containing u &torles, each a poignantly revealing glimpse o! the fragile llltle worlds o! a colorful, but disconcerling cast or characters. . At rlrst reading, these &lories seem to be entlrtly unrelated; each Is a hmorous or tragic entity in itself. But in evaluating the book a1 a whole ther< ' tmerges a unlty. Th.ls she achieves by utWrJng contr .. t In each tale, pilling her lllbjtctr against opposing personalities, , plldng lhlm In unlamiliar backgrounds, : or jarring them wlth unlor<.... en· : -.n, to define more sharply !hi true bdnp ., freqU<nlly Iii~ from themldves. \ .i A hon<ymoon couplo in a chtap I , IN 11IE TITLE story, a r'5tralned middleaged couple is abruptly delivered ·from a dreadlul self.absorpUon by the arrival of two underprivileged London boys, ope a half-caste, on a summer holi- day. Afld in a miniature masterpiece, a little girl, vislllng from kli<hep to kit· ·Chen, 'jspreadlng light Ind SUCtOr around the parish" according to the town vk:ar, actually is dropping bits of village gossip that ingeniously change the day in the lives of all the famlUea lhe visits. Miu Taylor is an enterta ining storyieller. She has many noveh ol wide acclaim to her credit. But, u this delightful collection maktt spparen~ ahe also posse..., a flair for the writing ol the short atory. In her caoe the form Is a \'ery a-pcclal vehicle for her unusual 1blli- ty to take a fragmenlll aspect cl W• and concbefy dramathe It lhroagh a masterfully c' a It. d cbaraderlutlon (Viking; 15.95). Helt .. Rlvus steps are necessary to prevent organized ladutrlal Nen RtView · labor or management from work sto~ pages or strikes against the public in-How many people in these United terest. • • .Legislation should be Stales would... actuall1 desire the en- !orthcomlng to bring soru means o! vtrorunent or yesterday ii it W... bend«! bringing setUementa: wllenever strikes are • to them? 'l'1le odds are excellent thlt if threatened in the transportation Industry there ...,. lllddfDfy 1 reveraion to so vital to the public interest. Certainly yesterday environment, the ..,.mm from the outrageous losses r'5ultlng to are.. where a -..,_ment !armers and others dependent on shill' is. In part, tbe product cl eoergy would ping, rall, rur and olher pebll< and the be a nalfooal diwter fn lllell. 'lbll is Iha economtc,Jnterests ol tho eotlr._.....,tcy -Jogtcol COl1cluolon to.11e drawn f1'l!I! in- •.. Important overseas marketl, .... n. formation contained In the Annual Report Ila!. lo the economy and weUare of the of a large Florida electric utlllty -a nation and region, have already been losl utlllty that, Uke many otben, bu bad l!a .•. There ls "' rhyme er realOll for JI'!'· fll")blem with environmental obitroo- mlltmg a relatively small number o1 !M!O' lfonlsm and the conoeq-threat o1 an pie to cripple the _majortly and the ....,. _ ....... _ omy cl the reaion aod ~ naliaa." ·--~ --.·· U. S. Non _. -"-'' "The total value of 11vlng1 account• In U.S. banks and other ........ ......,... went up seven fold In~ It billion dollars to 448.3 • The -~ catll and checking account• bu doubled from . 59 bWion dollars to Ill billion." \- --· there wa1 only a I percent generating reserve -too clOle, literal.IJ, for com· fort. An edllorlal In tho Miami Herald ROGER KUNTZ -ICOAIT DAILY PILOT commenting on ti\e situatioo sakl, "South Flortcfa'• welMlelng rides ooi electrical energy. It must bave IUfficlent power DOI limply f<H' creature comforl.I bul for bolpltall, food presemilioo, public 'saf .. ty, communications and industrtOI which Rob<rt N. Weed, l'Mbliihtr ~ °:.~ on aopbllticated eloc> Thom., Ktnil, Editor AlbarlJl',JIGU• THE EDITOIµAL olioiYes w lb an 7 Editorlol Page Editor evident ........, cl relief that tbe local " power company is preparll1g to place Th• odlt..W ).,.,. or the o.t~ oubolantlal additional I • D er •J f n g Pltol -to -. and atltn; factllU. 410D the line" to take eere of ... 1'tMkn 1'y Pl'••ttnc this !ulure demand -lncludlng a nuclear _..,., nptnlono and ...,.. _.tor. It also took nole cl the !ac:I =~ \;':'~~a"i' an« tblt the compuy wlll '1• • • .have to ror the tJl'PN'Ulon o1 our ~ opend about fl m!lllon dally between now ::l!"lono,.!~ by ,,._,unc ... and J171 lar .,. more .capacll.a .i.a mid-Vft'l4!I v ... -• ..,,nu of lnfonnod ob. ~." This mllllon dallan a lfay ls to · :i'::~~ -., • "'*" be spent to prevent a l'tll1l'1I lo yesterday's envlm\ment whlcb many people would !ll1d Intolerable. I Friday, July 14, 1972 '· .. • ·" t I . ! ' " .-. • ears ( #22201 $189.9 5 5-Cycle, 2-Temperature Washer SAVE•21! •Select pre·soak, normal or short 4-minute cycle, depend- . ingon load • 2 pre-set temperarures, 2 water levels •Straight-vane asiiator. Mod~ 22201 ALL-FROSTLESS 17.1 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator Regular $359.95 SAVE '30 ! • 17.l cu. ft. model has 12.~ cu. ft. fresh food section with 4 half-width aluminum shelves ,.. • 15.3 qt. adjustable humidrawer compartmenc r~ •.'• " '· ~ • ..! .. ~· '!ii~ Price• Etrectl•e thro SaL,Jaly 15 • ' . (. '149.95 Kenmore Electric Dryer $.123 ' • • Cool-down period dries per-" manent press fabrics to help prevent wrinkles • Regular setting dries fabrics quickly; "AirOnly" fluf&.drie< rainwear • " . - ·- 15.8 Cu. Ft. Cqldspot Upright Freezer Sean Regulor$219 Low-Price! ' " • \ Frld!ly, Jul1 14, 1972 • DAILY PILOT T ******* ..41llAbou1Seor• Coatte"ielt:r Credit Pia ... Moot Item• Al Reduced Prices #41221 Color TV wi th 18-In. Diagonal ~lem;ure l'icturP Regular $354.95 •Just push the buccon.and the automatic runingcon trol Jocks 1n signals for the best possible picture and sound •No · more fidgeting with dials. It also has easy runi ng ~!iJ('. rype tint and color controls • Srop adjusting and start watching!_ •A. walnut-grained _plastic cabinet gives u a handso me ill'· pea.ranee. Model 412 2l Rol)1bout TV Slln~ Option a 19.95 .4'AVE '55! 2 9995 ·To Motors Are Better Than One ·. Handy Hand Vac or Kwik·Sweep" Vac Your Choice 17so Sl 9.95 Hand Voe is ju.strighc for upholstery in home or car. #6111 -I-HP Canister Vacuum with Powermatc Sears Regular Low Price! •Powerful suction cleaner offers so much value at this price. Ea.sy to move where needed. •-t---·-1_3.0 qr. liaJf.width _!l?rcelain-fioish cr~r •Freezer section has one removable shelf. #62721 Grille-type shcltts, cold air cir· culatcs freely around food on three fast,freete shelves. Inside lighr. Builtilluafety~y_Ejeet" lock. Holds ))3-lbs. S25.95. Kwik-Sweep• is ideal foc...fast pkk-ups of. crumbs;-lint:- # 6310 • Comes with attachments for mos borne vacuuming and dust.- lng,-Uses illsposa61e dust bags:- f I I . • • • AlHAMllA S7,•4J21 INGtlWOOD '71°0f6t IUINA P.blc 121-44o0, Jlto4JIO lONG llACH •25-0111 CANOGA ,A.ti( :140·ff61 NOlfHIUOGI llS·7272 CllllTOS 160-0511 NO~WAlK 164-7761 COM"ON 6J1-S761 OlTM,IC 'SOTO 261·5211 COVINA tK-ffl I ,, OlANGI 6)7°1100 .,. ll MONTI 4•>·:1911 PA.SA.DINA •t1•J111, :151·4211 GLINOAll 24S·1004, 244·4•11 ,.CO 9ll·•1•t HOUYWOOO 469°5941 ""'"''°'MONA t19-S1~6,l ~· I SAN PllNANOO :161·712.1 SANTA ANA 547-1171 SANTA Pl ININGS t4 .... l01 I SANTA MONICA :194 .. 711 .._. JOUTH COAST P\AZA S•o.JJSS TMOUSANO OAKS 4t7-4SM, 522·11:11 TOIU.NCI J 42·1S11 VAlllY 1tl·f461, tl4·2221 \II.MONT 7Jf.ltt ~l "~"!ti" Stort Hovrs Shown ltlow Do Nol Apply To Appl iance and Catalog Ordet Stofts JAONTtllllO 714.Jl10 MONt t Oll 141·11)0 OHTA .. 0 t"-2011 PAl O) VltOll J17·•tOI PANOIAMA cnr nl-'711 PAl ""'OUNT J)J.1100 '*.ACINllA 116..0110 •IOONOO llACM »1•J47J 11$10.t. l44·S1 11 ' .. $AHOIMUS.,1ml IOWV.HO MU4Hfl "6S·))ll J.t,H PlOIO S•'·44JI Jliltw.H OAMl .. 1-ll• tUHt.\HO lJJ .... S\ UPlAHO tu-1tl7 WllT COVINA M1A .... IH1 WllT(Hll1111 •'-'702t WtlTJ1UNtT• n)..&MI 'WHl1flll •ti ..... '1'1Uifl1Mf10ft ,....,S Polg P•tael UC Regents Plan Growth 'Revise' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The UC Regents educational policy committee haJ voted to revise next decade'• growth plan of the nlne<tmpus University of California sys\em. The full boon! wu elJ>ecied to approvt the plan today. on the closlna day ol lte assumptions which underlie the 1860 and 1966 growth plans an still approprlatt and are *ined in Ulil plan/' said a report by UC l'raldenl Clllrlll Hltch. Sex Couraei ' Get Scrutiny From Board SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sex educatioo in caiifornia clai111'001111 could be in for tighter controll £.cause of complaint& about lectures by homoeexuals in a San Francisco school. Henry lloydt, a Statt Department of Education ltaff member, recommended Thunday that the State Board of Educa- tJon consider addlUonai guidelines for IG oourses. ' ' tw<><lay mouthly meeting bell\ toc•lhlr wilh an eiperiroentll four--yell' pnlll" .. under which llludent& from community colleges would find lt easier to transfer to the un1vtnity. Ht 11141 till -lliplllolnl d1enals hllvt _... In Ille "'*'11 ol the ual1'111111'• ..... la -"'""1ty Hit and ' In io-""1'\lllment proopeclo. , Undergraduate ""1'1lllmeol prvjectlolll now have been Sowered from a maxlmwn of 107,000 to lllZ,000 for the 1-.1 acbool year, said Hll<h, and for graduate atUdenta from • muJmum of 32,000 to 29,000. The recommendatloo was made lo tbe " boanf•a Programs and Policy Committee, headed by Eugene Ragle of Roseville. "The buic philooopby and many ol the Defense · Eyes . Jury Choice For Ellsberg LOS ANGELES (AP) -A di!mayed delenoe team in tbe Pentagon Papers trial aays that unleoa a/current potential jury of moatly mliltary .. rienled peroona II oosted, Daniel Ellaberg and Anthony RUS90 will receive "a court martlal, not a civilian trial." Ellsberg•s chief attorney, Leonard Boudin, said he ,... preparing 1111ent motions for presentation today uk.ing that tbe entire firat jury pool -• originally numberina 11111 -be dllmisaed and a new lo( drawn. l!oodln said he'll allo p-lot .. torneys, nol the judge, to queotioe panelist& -a poinl tbe defenae bu \'ellemently contested since U.S. Dlltrlct Court Judge Matt Byrne decided to ut all questlOllll bimaelf. In the fall of· 1971 the totala were 78,516 and 24,176 respectively, he said . ~ repon alao urged that Mure eoroU!nent lncreuea he dlY<tted from crowded cam-to -whero fewer atudent.I have appllecl. Two committee memben oppooecl the proposal to make commUl)lty collqe transfero Miler. DeWltl A. HJa1 llld Glenn C.mpbell arlUed lt would erode, unlventty ltaodarda and the quality of educatiOD. · Phone Company Rebate Denied SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -'11ie slate Supreme Court has denied Pacific Telephone O>.'s claim to a rtlll!J on whal It claiml waa a fl.S mllllon ovll'Clwp on IMO taxes. · Tllo callforala Jodiciai Council, 'llblch IMmdl• Information re1 ..... f<r•lhe blgb oourt, said Tbunday aucb tu que1tlona were larJely e11mlnated by ltrl tu Jawa. Earlier this -k, the blgh court onlered Pacific Telephone to refund 1143 million to it! customers from rate in- ........, the Public Utilities OJmmlssion granted in 1971. Heydt's recommendation contained DO 1pecllics, aaylnc only that the board should "consider tbe development of guidellnea to expand upon those already adopted by the board." Ragle bad demanded an Investigation of aez education in calilornia schools at the boord'a June meetlnc. He aald he bad rec<lved complaints about two homooex- ual IJ)takers in a sex CXlW'le a~ Roosevelt Junior Hlgh School in San Francisco. Ragle also chargad al the June meetlnc thel another coune at Redwood Hlgh School in ·tbe Marin County com- . munlty of Larkspur aflpeared w be "a do-il·YOU('ell courae In copulation." School oUicialt denied the charge. After hearing H I y d l ' a .-., mendallona Tltunday, hagie asked him to check on whether there 11 statistical correlation between "'lbe increasing pace and tempo" of sei education In California and the rate of illegitimacy and v1Dtre1l d!Hase. . Tbe board issued general guide!ines for aeJ: education classes several years ago. In addition, state law requires that parent.a be notified of seJ: educatioD courses, be allowed to withdraw their child ll they wish and be given tbe right to hupect material used. Heydt reported his investigation show- ed tbe San Francisco and Larkspur districts had oomplied ~ith legaJ re- quirements. But he made no judgment on the <lpropr.iety'' of the material. Boudin, a vetel'lll defender of political actlvllta includlnc the "l!arr!Jburg Seven," said be. wu also considering a late filing for a change of venue, assertirlg he was unaware Southern Cailromla bad ao many defense relattd lndustrieo wllicl! employ potential jui;on. The defense complaints came after an Initial round of juror challenges, when the judge called 1 ... 16 more paneillta for AntUlrug Plan Approved questioning, and the group turned out to SACRAMENTO (AP) _ A Rugail ad- be almost a 11 government-related ministration antidrug plan giving some employes. flnt offenders treatment instead of Two have already indicated ttiat bias punishment has cleared the California might prevent them from aerving; two mere excused tbemaelves for prejudice Senate without dissent or debate. aod were replaced by others. The bill by· Sen. G<orge Deukn\ejian Ellsberg, 41, and Ruseo, SS, both won approval 'nlursday on a 30-0 vote __ lmner Rand Qo!p. employe1 who worked and went to the Allembiy, wbere ii laces on secret ~projects, ere arruncertahr-tuture -while lawmakers charged with eoplnnage, conspiracy and press towanl a hoped-for July 28 ad· theft in connectioo with the !eat of tbe journment date. lop secret Pentagon Papers. The II would allow perao111 arrested '"1 a clocumenta detailed origins of U.S. In-drug offt1111 for the llrsl time to be r.~-'•'"'o vementliilbe--vietliiin War. wolied bra local anUdrug prosram ln- The defenae, which aeekl to ahow no steed of lll1iDI a line er 1oinc to. jail. crime was involved alnce the papers The 11dl'-*'n'' Jll'Oll'&m would anly -.;ere note used to bann the United apply to -without bislory of States, says government employes or -VioieDce and · fequlres agreemmt from tl10l9e close to the milllary would be preJ-the judgt! and dlstrlol. attorney. lldlced agaimt thl defendants from the 11We should not ·contlnue to ~log our start. criminal jW!ltlce system nor 11ddle our young with a criminal record if there is a legitimate alternative," Gov. Reagan said when he unveiled the program last April. Replacement of punishment by treat- ment would art down court cases "subotanUally," Deukmejtan said Thurs- day. The-l.<lng Beach-Republlcan'a bill would create an ll·member Drug Advisory Board appointed by the governor and gives the State Department of Mental Hygiene responsibility for rldinc herd on statewide antidrug efforts. Thi department would license private liitldrua: programs and c o n t r o l methadone maintenance program! for heroin addict.I. The bill appropriates $8.35 million for the 1tate11 autldrug efforts and for state aid to local Pl'Oll'am&. W ~m~ Suing Over Battery EUGENE <ft, (AP) -Oil of C.lifomla, do 1 n g She purcbaaed a new balttly A Eugene woman who business as Standard Oil Co., from the 1tation at a COit of clalma tbe wu IOld a car Western Operations, Inc., and $34.25, the suit aaya. battery she did not nolly need a John Doe empioye. The auit cites provltiona of a II suing Standard OD Co. of '11ie ault contend& Mrs. Jef· ·1omey's lees, $34.25 for the Calllonila for daml(es total-11111 stopped to buy 111 at a baltery and $250,000 I n Ing $252,!M. Standard stallon in Woodburn pun!Uve damqes. Fay JeU..U, and her r.. when the e\l)ploye told her The 1ult cites provisions of band, A. L. JelferiM, filed the car'1 motcr ~he ruined II attomey•a lea, $34.15 for the civil auit in Lane County ahe continued to use the eel . by the 1971 O re go n Circuit Court againat itandanl pr_,i battery. Lell!la!uro. z a: ~ -.. 3 • r I IT~ , We will pay You 10~ a pound for empty all-aluminum cans. plus special Uniori76 bonus offer.* Now it really pays to fight litter. Reynolds Aluminum will pay you' 10¢ a pound-or about 1),,¢ each'--for every empty all-aluminum beverage can you collect. In fact, we'll go even further. In addition to paying you for empty all-aluminum cans, 've'll also pay for frozen aluminum dinner trays 'and Containers, alu- minum margarine tubs, ·aluminum cans for dips, meat products, pudding!, custards and. other snacks. We'll pay you 10¢ a pound for al! the clean household scrap aluminum you bring in. ing to keep our city clean. All-aluminum cans are easy to spot. Many of them\ say ''all-aluminum'' right on the can. They have rounded bottoms and . they are non-magnetic. A magnet will ·not stick to the oides. Don't be fooled though, by some easy..open cans that say ''a1uminum191 on top. This does not mean they are all-aluminum. To help you collect, Reynolds aluminum-<llld the1 other companies listed here-have established collec· t ion centers throughout the metropolitan area. Bring your empty all-aluminum cans and other clean house- 'bold scrap aluminum to the one most convenient to you. And start collecting. today. So stop throwing money away. Start collecting toaay. You'll be making monfy for yourself, your club or orlianization-and at the same time, you'll be help.. ' Look for these and other.brands in-all~aluminum cans. r:l-?t!l.!~~!'~ piey're worth money! ~ALUMINUM ' ' ® (I ~Reynolds Aluminum ~Can Recycling Plant i.."caltr: MtelQPt v1n.y Dlltrfbutlng Co., N. altrra Hlgllwty Ph11n1 8(15.M2-0441 ' Reynolds Aluminum Can Reclamation Center 6446 E. Washington Boulevard, Los Angeles Los Angeles Area Reclamation Centers ' l•l'!tln l'art: SOuthl111d 81.,..111119 Dl1trlbutlno1 130911 T1m11i.• Avenue, Phorte 213-a62.3555 latttow: W. A. lhomptOn, Inc.. 25522 W. M1ln St!Mt. PhOne 71~11 • •• 0..1rt Dl1trlbull1111 Company, 25511 W. Hlgl!wtY ti, Phorte 714-f22·2435 lu1n1 Pllt: H l L Dl1lrlbUUnt Cornpltly, '405 Attllfl A'M!Ut, Phone 71~21~2 Cerrt101: Trl1ngle Dl1trlbutlng Company, t7720 ttud9blt.r ROlir; Phon1 21~ CoMpto11: Sho19llM B~1 DlattfbuUng, 1te11 I. lulMa RMI. Phone 213.637 ... 940 H1mr Ol11f11Mltil'Q, 111722 .. Nam.di. Pl'IOn9 t1M3..., Co,1111: Pr:-'"kml Dl1lr1bullnf Col!IPWIY, 251 E. Fnint Sllltt., Phon9 21~31.0115 C11C1111on11: S1nlolucllo Broe., Inc., tt!3 Nlfllh 8lf9lt, 714-117-3017 C11I'" CllJ': S11nut 81ven1Q1 COl!lplny, '500 Slllllt Dft¥1, Pllone 213-t3J.75,53 'El Monti: St.ndard Bl¥lf11111, Inc., 4207 No. BaldWln Awnue, 21:M4U&ll Gllftd•lrl: AnlleUMr-BUtdl, lno., 11QO GtMd Ctntr•l Avtnu .. Phono 213-244-11&7 fftwtllorllt: 8011111 BllY Iller Olttrltxltort, 1:)000 s. W•blr W1Y, Phone 21U7M 7117 Hol!ywood: COntln1ntll Ster Dl1trlbllting, Inc., 1111 M. OOJdcMI """"'• Pl!one 21M66-110f -' . . w. A. Tl'lompton Olmlbutlna Co., or MoJIYlt o45St0 Dlvltlon Str11t. Phone I05.f42-440t Loftt IN ch: Somerset Dltlrlbutorl. loo., 3DOD'Pacttlo Awnu" Phone 213-435-0101 callfOmla Cold s~ a DI......,. Company, 125 w. Ma/'111m, Pllorie 21~1 Markt ltln Oltlflbllt!l'lll Company, 111 W.171h, l'flont; 11S-775"117SI LOI Anll•lf•: Ac• S.YWa;e COfnPll!Y, 138 South Mllllon Ao.d Phon1 213-29MXITT • Garrett OltlrlbuUng COmplny, 14D E. llHI Dt1¥t,, Phont 21Wl7 ... 247 Golden Dlttributlnf Corp'., 7IO I. Al.rn.de, Phone 21M246Se4 Mid-C ity ...,...,. Dlltrllllltor, mo.. 3201 w. 1711 SlrMI. PtlOnt t1:1-751-6171 Sant. Monica Bay DlltrlbutlrlG, lno.. 40T1 Rtcfwuocl A'NIU.. Phont 213-170-2553 V & M. Dl1tr!butlno COmpany, 114C1 W. Ulh StrMt Phone 213-295-e519 vn11ntH¥1 9,....,.,, Colnpanf, lllC.o 138 Al!IO ltrht,. Pl'lone 213.c+.2201 ·w11bld9 Dllltlbillinl ~1 t12l & Ctlnlhlw, p~ 21S-76W13' • ar-t1: Stravb DJt:trndnt1 Cemplnf, "10 W. Grow AYllflUeo · Pflon• 714-437-7333 . Anl'ltr.111,..._,., Inc.. flll No. ,.,.., Ption. 71oM3W'TJO ,.._. FOOllllll .._.... ~. 10«! Mot httt,, Pllone 71....-.uM 1e11, ... 11111_ ..... '!' .. ..,..._, • .,n.,:h. .-..1a11 f1llt SUMt. ...... ........,, •. 1M1ii .... ...._ lertlm. Dlltrlblltlnt C...-8* 0..rJIMI Ao.d, "'--...1.en1 "l.ll(IClll'ln.-1171, W. Mtfn S1rMt. Phont IOMeM171 TM-: Cortaro DJttr\bUU,. Co.. 2740 Cllflomla flfwe. Phone 21WZM41$ T111tln: RIY9tl COtnp#lf, 16'71 Dll AM A""'*-. Phone 71+131 4S~ Y.n NllJI: ll1rra Cktb DltlrlllutMg, ICm Hlllbll A¥MUe, Phone 213.,73-21133 Blll·W•Y D1•tr1buUno, 7538 Woodnwl PllOI, P?lont tt,.1200 Y111h1r•: ""'° Olllb1butlng COmPll!Y, S. Kllortfnl, l'hwt I05 ''' '°'" Ml-30111 La110111-lno' .. 1711 W. M11ft Str8lt. l'hoM IOl544W11t Reyrioid1.Center Open 9 A.M. -4:30 P.M., T~ Thru Sat Ca1ro1her Centeri For Curnnt OPlll!ing Scl!1dul1S • * ~f;91AL U~N OIL BONUS OFFER. For evBTY 15 pounds ohlumimim (1pprex. 300 cons) you bring to 1ny of tlte listed can collection ctntert, you get 1 sp1cial bo~r cortifocatt good for one (1) fiw golfon of new low·loatl R..,1117& with 1ny fill·apl Plus 1/2~ Cash You aet a fre1 Union 76 bonus certiR· cate -and the cuht l/2c for •very an. aluminum can you brint in. Look for t.lle cana wilh the rounded bo\toma. f JtttWed or eqquhed1 •ttpped-on or dtnted .... empi;y all-aium1num cau arw wonhtnoney-and morel Brint in 30 pourlds ot alumln11m-,.t 2 fru bonus cer\i!icalu. The clean hou.- bold -aluminum IC?IP or alt..Jumin\Ull caDt-mut\ be in incttmtr1MI of 15 pound• to quality fol' ybur bonu.t. Bonu coupon• ut J~od at all Union 16 st.aUoM thn>u1hOu.t G&JlfotniJ from now throurh •AD c:arw W't ........ Tht OM- llocombor 81, 1972. half cent la •-t.. ~ ' • QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi "Take a folk song memo to the young people in the organization,'' L. M. Boyd IQ Over 140? You're a Genius What's your IQ? If 100, you're average. If from· 120 to 140; you 're tenned very superior. If from 140 to 150, you're some sort of minor genius. There are about a mil· lion of those. Scholars say about 100,000 citizens have IQs of around 150. And only about 5,000 have IQs of around 160. l\taybe 300 have JQs of 170. And probably no more than a dozen have JQs of 180. They say it's not likely there's anyone alive in this country today with an IQ of 190. Such an intelligent soul is thought to tum up worldwide only about once every 500 years. NATIVES of tropical Trinidad catch cold just as frequently as the rest of us, scientists nQw report. IF YOU read in the bathtub, mis- ter, count yoursell among the three out ol every 20 grownups who do likewise. EVERY filth bottle shipped to the lood packers wind.! up with baby food in it. • QUERIES -Q. "Statistically, which ~ the more apt to get breast cancer, a married or an unmarried woman?" A. The unmarried. Q. 11WBAT'S the average man's hat size?'' A. Just 7¥o . Q. uWHAT'S a 'trigger dog'?" A. That's a guard dog trained to attack when it hears a secret trigger lvord known only to itself and its master. Supposedly, it will never attack unless it hears that word. JOKE -"How would you Jike me to cut your hair?" Inquired the talkative barber. "In silence," replied King Archelaus. No, don't believe this bit of dialogue from the ancient Greek is noteworthy as humor. Merely mention Jt because it's said to be the oldest joke in the records of western civilization. A!\1 asked to name the windiest big town in the coun. try. It's Atlantic City, evidently. Over the years, say the weathermen, wind velocities there have averaged 15.2 m.p.h. In the windy city of Chicago, they've only run 9.8 m.p.b. Already reported that Phoenix is said to be the least breezy of such sizable toWM. LET IT be noted, al!O, hospital records show that time of day when yQU're mo.I apt to burl yourself by walking smack into a glass doOr is 5:10 p.m. Address moil to L. M. BoJ/(l, P. 0, Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Men in Service Marine Ffc. John S. Prusa, ""' of Mr. and Mn. Frank J. Prusa of 938Z Daytona Circle, Huntington Beach, graduated from the Navy's Aviation Electrician's Mate A School, Jacksonville, Fla. Airman Joba A. Douthitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Douthitt of 11342 Bowen St., Westminster, has completed his U.S. Air Force basic training at the Air Trainiilg Command's Lackland AFB, Tex. He Is remaining at Lackland for training in the security police field. His wile, Francesca, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bennett of • 14982 Stengal S t • , We!Jtmlnster. WESTERN STATE ,UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY now acc.,tl,.. men alMI wemen wfle .,. titMr: e ....., 11 wflti, 2 J'Nfl •' 1u .,1.W. ...... """' 16011 ~ • ..,... 2S aM ~ ........ hi 1,,1,.m 111· t.11tdw1I .WMtr" .. ~·""' •f ....,, (tit IN 4'1ttftlllt!M '°' '"ti TM J,0, Gf lll. d99l'ff CM be •-'"" Ill 4 )'HA •f p.t•Mftw d11W11 :I dllMI ptr -ks 3 .. hilvr1 pet cktl. 14. $fltdtl "'°9r•m •I 1111" cl11M1 on StNrdrt 1• -l11blti fot flnl·yett tludtnh. Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes wan• oa PHONI •o• INl'OlM.t.TtON OI CAfMOGUr IOO South lrookhurst An1holm 92804 17141 63~3453 GrtWM '" tlltlW. lit ttl• fh• C•llf.mt1 S11i. ltr b'ttl'llM!ion. Pto"WN&LLY &CCllllTID IY THI CALIPOINI& eo••ma Of l&l DAlllNllS &mlOftD POI vnn&NS • •~~~~~~~~~~ \ WHITE LADIES' ANGORA PULLOVERS 'OUR REG .' DISCOUNT PRIC!·l .97 s I L11scio11sly soft angora wtiol .liJlit's ,in Jong . . aitd short sleeve sf'yfes. Solids and stri~s ; 'larious fashion c~Jlars. Sizes 36 'Ill 42. EA Not •t lon1 81•ch or Jorr•nct • LEATHER THONGS FROM ITALY SPECIAL PURCHASE Soft, s11pp{e tan leather uppers for a beau. 11fu\ly bare look afoot. Sling back !.!lap wrth brass buckle. Siles to 10. Not •f L•fl t l •och er Terr•nce WMlli QIANTlin:s \AST. tfUlll! 294 friday, J~y 14, 1972 DAILV PILOT f SHOP SATURDAY 11L 9 PM-PRICES GOOD SATURDAY, JULY 15 ONLY ' BOLD PRICE SLASHING ON MOST WANTED ITEMS THAT EVERYONE NEEDS ••• DON1 MISS OUT ON THESE SPECTACULAR WHIIl FRONT VALUES! 20· PC. MELMAC" DINNER SET OUR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE S.97 Good !Poking, practical melamine in 4 dif- 11'rent patter11S. Service 1or 4 with dinners, .alads, bowls, rups and saur,er . ·3s s REMINGTON MOHAWK .22 AMMO PREMIER RECTRIC DEEP FRYER OUR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE 7.97 I 78 81~ j~2 qt. coo~nr ma•PS mea,I prep:irJI. 11 QlltCk ?.nd t:J <.y. lr~rmo ~talic h··Jl crint· I & 'llgnal li~nl: rhromr 1in1·,r. gla\li cov1 r. M :o OUR REG. Di'SCOUNT PRICE 74c Box of 50 high velocity .21 caliber long rifle shells. Stock up now 1or all your !il.lln· mPrl1me sport shooting need'\, 59c OUR REG. DISCOUNT PRICE 99c 4 I c R1)'. ~right pla!>.lic tumb!rr~ tor :Prvin~ roul !>.Ummtff dr1nhc:. Durable rr.ough 13 1e- 1J,r, pricPd low cnoug~ 10 b~ d1)po Jble. AE SPARK-PLO~ YOUR CAR SPECIAL LOW DISCOUNT PRICE Puf new pep in your car and increase gasoline mileage. Sizes for most cars under 11ormal driving 'conditions. Sold in main store. RESISTOR !LUGS .. ·" ........... 69c 54~ 3088 BRISTOL ST. 3-PACK-80-MINUTf CASSmES SPECIAL LOW DISCOUNT PRICE aac Blank recording cassette tapes for use in • all cassette recorders. Eath cassette re- c3rds one full hour. AK OFJ SOLID COLOR TERRY OR JACQUARD TOWR SETS ' BATH SIZE OUR llG. PRICl f9c ~u~~~;.~~~~·L·~ ...... 5JC ~~~~. ~.~~~~.~ ..... 2JC Fi~t quality towels frotn· the famou.P~uot mill. Thie~ ab'1<>1bent and lint.free t3tfo n terries in choice of fashion solids tir exquiSite 2.tOQ\ jo:quards. Mix or match·many·a·set for Y"' own ba~ and rift giving. Don't miss this one day special! Sin bi190 FrttWIY •• Bristol I ., • , .. ., • I I• ,, . . . .( ,, •• 1 ' .• : L r I • ·' ,l(TITIOUI IU11NIS' NAM'I STATCMl•T NOTJClr O• HOM·•llHNSll lL.IT'I' NOTICI 0, NON•l.llHNSllllln' l'ICTITIOUl IUSIHIQ NOTl(I INVlTIN• 1101 TM tollll'WIM 8'f"Mlfl ll fOlnl b\llllltlS NotlOJ ll ... , ..... •Iv.ii JIMI 1~ -Not~ I• llttt!rt 11¥tfl tl'l•I tl'le ~ TM ~ """'' ITAT1MIHT ..... NolJe. fl Nrflllf --....... toer.t tf ••. w .i.....o -IN "" De fflPOll'l~ "" '"' Mrt!tftM will "" .. Mll.-.1111• "' .,, ... I lowlflf PltlOllt Mt ,,.,,,.. ... -' .... C...f ~ty (el.... 'PADS &. l"A.,HIOH 11'3 'I '' P'.nt delltt t11 11.cilllflft <Oftlrl<ltd b¥ 1n~-Ott:lh ot 11abllltlt• Ufllr-.C9" DY l tiyOtat ..,.,:Q'H ''iiot:. 711 ,,,, 1.,. $1,. Coll• Olltrkt tlf °'"-Co!IMY, C.wt.wtill. w\lt ,. .... Cott• Mfw, t»n olhef' ~ '""""''· tn ., •f1•' ttil• d11t. ..w ""'" m'tMJf, on ot ,,..,. "'1• •tt .. ""*'' C•llfOnllot reaM .... ..,.. ...... J1'6 •.m .. MOii-hgfy L Mt.C.y, ·~· M•\ldt L Meo D•lltd ftl l• 1%!11 •• , of J11lv, 1t72. Dlltd !hit 11th ••v of J111,y, ltn. Jotofl'll WI.Ill•,.; °""""' ,..1 °"""" tin. Nb'"• H'7t. .... ""'°'"IM o.t. kiy, .m fllVr-Of .. lliltN ''rlt G•rv R. Ford 0 1v1t1 O'lrl.,, • C of .... KMlf el1lrld IKlllHI et lVt Tlll9 but! I.a Ptllll ~Ito 91 fl/I 410 lltl SI,, AP!. D. _, !trl119lltl0 Sir~ ''" •It fMM. (1111, AoillMM A,,_., C•t9 Mesa, (tlllof'flll, 11 -· Hilnlllll'fOfl ltKll. Cl1\1. Cotll MfN, Ctlff0f1'111 Violet °''°"" Offntl\, ,,., Or•-..... Teti ,.,,,,. .... Oidt Wiii bt ,...ll<lf llMllVjdlltl, • .... l"~l.lolltcl Or•• eo.11 Diolly •nor. P\IOllthecl Or-, .. ,, Otlly l"l)lt • ....... c..11Mn1.Ctllt. .... .... ,... .... ,.UltHI SH '""" ......... , J ,, I Im \ n Jiit• llUtilWU •• (OIWfu(1IHI .,.. •I'll VIII"' TfLt:VlllO/lf MASTl1t' c 0" l • 0 I. T~lt 1lllttMl'll fl!.O wlltl "" Collllf'f "''' U, , ' • "8-Jlll't' 1.a. 14. It, 1m 1m-n: -.11111J J,uod1lloll ethtr tl\ll'I I lltOADC.UT fWITCHllt Cltrti of Ort""' (C!'Jl'ltY Ofl: Jilflf », lf11. PMlf!lll'-'llP. AH llldl ,,, "' ._ 111 ;curd.lflti Wltll •v •nwtv J, Mlddoll. «HPYt'f '-1>' LEGAL NOTICE ;J LEGAL N<n'ICE ~= Dw·C:~ "'-,,..~~--,..'""' c.N1t1"'1 anc1 Cleft. ,. 11111,l---,Piilc•T'-i•Tii10C.0i:,"i,0;,1;;1~.:;.~.,,...;--1----=:-==c,.,,-c==,,--- Tllt. 1t11-i wt• fllfld •lftl #le (-fftl't' :: .::i lilt If~~: I: ;: ,WlllM4 Dr1r1tt C .. 11 01!1)' Piiot, NAM• STATaMIHT •'f:.',:.~:.:.:~~·.N::s '" (i.n: of OrttlM COi.in•~ .... ~..,,,. n. Pllf'dltlll'lll A."'11 ...... tchtol dli!rlrf. Jlilllt .. tflll J11W 1. 14. tl. trn 11'111·72 TM folloWlflt .,,_ ,. c!olllt tlUllMP Tiit toiloW"lnt .. ,,_ I• OOillt bullM» 1tl?, Etdl -~mud -.lllolrltl wttll lllt Md• M; ' a1 : "1t111 cttlllff'I (ll«k, <.tf"flllld dltc:k. ., bid· LEGAL NQ'nCE WHE&LOEX OP OIA.NGE COUNTY, FATH 0 M «.ECltl!ATIOHAL IH· l'Vbll9hld Ot•llM COIJf DllJIY •llift, ott't Donel 1'1'11tde HYtblt tt 1"111 MW If °'° Citt'ltul Dtl..,., Ho. M , Ntw-1 ITRUCTIOH, •lv. Mllf(\lt, HtwPOrt <IUfle ~. •!'Ill ~"'" " ,., 11. ,,,, 111~n 1tit eo.1t com11111rilt'I ca1 .... ---o11111tt -. ~ L11"4---~•udl.-'&llt. nwo 8udL. CtJJf .f.2'60. l'Olltd ol Trvtl•I 111 "' M'l6Ufd Mt ... IU•l•IOI C'OUllT Oii CAll,OllNIA Ctrl J. l!ffll1r, 1).1) G••llnllklfd SI, Sltpllttl Gr11111..Y Melitllf, 3'0!\'I IPllfl 11\lt ttKtftl IK J "ttlt ''"" bid.. COUHT'Y Of< Olt.ANG• COlll M•••· (•HI. 11'1' M1rc11 .. """'-' 8..0., LEGAL NOTICE 1 euatant" 11111 ,,_ b1ddet' will.,.,.., 11111 c-Hvrnw IHIU l Pllt bu1!1111• It bfll111 cond!Klld bf "" Tlllt bllsll'llW 11 conclll('IM 1ty M 1 ... ---------.,,.-=--tne P<..... (Ol'llrtcl If llll .,._ I SUMMONS lndlvlCIUt l dlvldutl COU•T •w•rded to him. itl ""eYtnf of flll\ll't ,• Pl1Jflo!lllJ1 W,ll.t.IAM E. ,l(l(ING •lld CARI. J, EGEnER SlEPHlN MllTCALF ·~HTEH:T~~:e::~0~LIP01tN:i" fl\ .... 11111 lllClt antttd ..... f'l'OClildl ~WALTER JOAOUIN VI. OtNrod•nt1: Thi• ""'""'nl llltd Wlltl "" C1111Mv Tiii• tllle/l\tl'll ••• nit<! Wiii!"" (GVI!• l"Olt THI COUHTY o~ OlAHO• ""dlltdc wt• k forltltl4i • ., NI"" U• WIL9Ulit G. STANLJV. Ja •• MICHAEL (1trk of o~ C.tllftfY "": JW. !1, lf12. " Cleft ff OfUlfif COi.intl' .. J-21. NO. .... "' • llotid. "" ft;)I """ ....,... Will .. v. MATTHEWS. ll'MI OOEI I 1tvoullh )C, By e.~trlr J. M"4oll, o.wtY (OUl\ty rt1'I ffOTICE 01" •>c&CUTot.'S IAl.I: 0" ~ .. MW tdotl .irlrid, ~'Olfefldantn Clerk. , , p).SS4 -n "1teA l'EltSOHAL NOl'&tn AT Pll'YAT• N• MHt;-""" •Ullff'-"" .... .... • A CWll (*!'IJl1ll11t bit~ fllld w tlll l'ubll-Or•• Coa•I 0.1~ '!lot J ""'kiltltd .0r .... ~at D•llr l"lll!llf. SA.LE l*lod .. ~ (tJ) 4trt .,..,. ....... ll!flHI •tliuf -,.. •• If VW wltll to No Jllf'lf n,~ Ind Jl,oly 1, ·l4. l'7'J; 1._.1,,; -•a, i nd J111Y , 14, 1f11 lUl-11 Ill In! Mtlfl( trf tbe fllt'-ef N.11 ... iOr ... ..,.ipa ...,..,.., lfllCI 1ftlt llJWtlllt, YOU lftltlllt fl .... \;Jti--------'---,,;_,,;_ __ WILLIAM M. ITEWAltT. O.C..Mll. The .. , ., l,,,.... ,.......,.. .. OOCHf • Wl'llltll ,ltldlM '" ~ifo LEGAL NOTICE NO"l•C-E 11 HElitY GIVEN lhlt ..,,...1 .... fll ttlldlftt •wt Sllill •1 ..._ ., 1119 c-it1n1 (or 1 wrl'11fl or w•• ~ 1.EGAL NOTICE IC---,,,,-==,-.,===--c.AOCKElt N1'TIONAL aANK •• thl e,;. "' ....... ..., It',. .... ,.. ., ... ,,..,lllf, It • }utllu court• WI.In 30 PIC'TITIOUS IUllN•U ..cutor al llMi' Will ef WILLIAM M. f«Wltlllltt ff!. lltt WW /I\ 1111: ......._ dl't'I et• 1'111 tu"""°"-' IJ Ml'Vld .. you. ,ICTtTIOUI tUllHIU t ~ •AMS ITAT•MINT STEWART , O.UIMCI. Will .. 11, SlllllKt to OpM: Jvf'f Jf• lf'PWiOt •. m. OtrlfrWI-. vwr dtftult w111 bt ll'lt.rff on HAMI 11'AT1MaNT TM ... IOWll\f ... _. tt doltlf "'°"'"'*' <OflllrmallOll bV t111 ""*"' C~, 11 • NOIUU>N e,,WA'TIQH •-'JW!Oll 1W lllf -1111\lltfs tlld llll:0to11rl The toUO\ll'htl Hrtoft If OOllW blllln111 M: ' 11rTvttt "'''· le thl lllllhel lllddilr, lllldtr S«IY ....... .,, T,,,...., IM'I' """'1 lud9/lltnf te1ln.at l'OU for !ht 11' llfLIAll.f I U IL DIN 0 MAIN· tM tu"'' •nd (Ot'ldltlent llll'tlll 11'111\-Jliidt.n.d °"'""' CNtl Oily ,u ... "'°""' or otlltr ,.net fllllut•ltd *" ~ COSTA MEt.A •EP'O"TCll. 21! VlCo T£NA.NCE. 000 ,tr Av ... S..I ••ld'I. flolltel. 011 Jvl'f 24, ,,,,, II f :OO 1.m. •' JUiy ''· ,,, 1m 1~ c:cinw1tlllf, lor1•. S11it• 122, Co.11 ~·· C.Uf. l '-30 Mortn MtU1 Slr .. t, St11t1 A111, It "" whll .. "* 1111 ~ et tt' ,1. J~ t -ntkl FttlS. "' SOUtll llobert Jll'tmlllo. 000 F'fr Avt .. Siii ,,._,0,_D:_lc.lt:_Y_P_cllO::..:..._T _______ --.,.,': .. ~,.;_;;.:~ .1111~14, 1972 ' 1.EOAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'llCB LEGAL NOTICE b11 BU Kea11e " ..Aren't you coming in, too, Mommy?" C•llfort1!,, •II of 1111 rl_fllll, fllll, lllllfffl """Y i• !Ms m.ttt.f, yff WlwN ... " Wnleffll Avtnut, AMMJm, C1llforlll1, 9ttdl. C~llf. _,.., «•lltf II fllf elhlle Cit Wll.t.IA.M M. LEGAL NO'l'ICB ......,." " 111e1 ,_ pllM/ff, II ""'' TPll• but!ntt• 11 btll!V c:ondll(t.d bt ,,. Thi• bu•hu 11 btll'lt cotldlK'lld bv '"' ---------------------------STl:WAAT, *'"""" Ill tlld lo tllt follo't'rti· IM'f M fllll .. !11711, 1/ldlVldu•I llldl'l'kl1,11I. flt• clftcribtd ""°"'I 11tOP<trtv1 O.tw J111. 11, ltn. JO.Sll'H I FAltlES ROIERT JAllAMll.LO I, lnl«r'"t 111 I ttal lllfoiifml lftM HOTl;(8 IM" TRUIY•l'I IAf.8 WILLIAM E .. St JOHH, Clt!'~ Tiils 1ftttm111t-illlld. wltb thl County ~It 1t1l1l!llflf flltd wllh Ille COIJllfY dal.0 Swltmber IS, , .... ....,....,, Ctl· ~•ntN IY Wiiii•"' Pe!ltk. OIPlllY Clerk,, Of'f..tlOe COU11ty ()ft; J-2'. 1tn. Clerk ot Or111H '°"""" Ofl! J\/11t 21. 1m. Growlh. Inc: ... C:1tlfotl'lll c:orw•llOl'I. On Jl/IY 21, 1m •• , f :OO AM. PlltlT SCMULLIR • TlllAO•llMAN Bv Bevtrtr J. Mtdckllr DIPlllY Counlv av &tvtrlr J , Mlddo .. Otputy COUlllY flt leuort. ind Wit.LIAM M. STl!WAR'T FEDIAAL ISCltOW CORPORATION, 11 Nrt Wllllllre ltwl., NI IM Clerk Cltr1t. 611d ISABELLE STEWART, 111nbtnd tt'ld dulr .•-lnlRd TP'\IJIM ulldtr lt'ld '""All"'"" C•Uf. ~ ' " 117Sf FUnl wlN, II ··-· . P\ll"IUllll to Deed of Tr111J1 rtcot'clld Mtrcll Ull) •ii.nu PtibllJl\td Or111ge Coat! 01!1y Pllol, Publ11hfd Otllllllf Ce>11$I Olllr Pllo!, '· Tn,a, ttr11l" llClllW er frtnctl1" 2. 1f11, 11 l11st, NI, 1111', I" bool( tSSI, AHltMl'• ftf •1t+iilflf1 J11111 Jlf illncl Jiiiy 7, ll, 21, 1972 l:X.·n Ju"e 23, 30,-111\d JUIY 7, U, ltn 1'5l·n '''""""'' 111ec11ttd October 30. 1Ni. "" m , of Olftdil .._._. lt1 tll• ottlc:t PubHallld Or11191 C0111t D1l1r Pllot.:1------------- be!Wten WllLIAM M. ITEWAltT. 11 ef tM Count'( ltteef'dlr of ortntt c-tv June n. ~ ¥ICl'J uty 7, ll, 1m 16'3-12 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NcrrlCE li<tlltee tlld $1Ul.Et(S, INC., IJ Sr1t1 of C.Ufon!I• WIU. SILi. AT pu.:1 -----;;-;;~~~;;;;;;;;;----1 _ __c _ __'.:'.:'.:=..'..'.::.:.:::_ ___ i·------------- llctnMl11 1or ~ _,,,loll ~ • c:•~•111 LIC AUCTION TO TH! HtGHIST 110. LEGAL NOTICE lllCfiTious ausiHlfSS ITAT•M•NT o, A9ANDONMaHT Slu1tr ltntwrlfll loc:tltd 2'f nt Dl!!lt FOfl CASH ""-el tlmt ef 0, USIE O~ ,.ICTITIOUS S1ventffnlh Sir ... , Cotll M 11 t , lllt ltl t~· ... • ~ ... U-'IM St _ I NAMI STAT'IM&HT Ctllklfllll, lt'ld it-ti ti l lnltr No, $1 ... ,,.. mGllf1''"" "' 1, .. 1 SU,11110111 COUltT OF THI T~ fOllowllll per$f!'lf tre dOlflll IUSIHISS NAMI llld thl't ctrlafn-'trttlCJllM .. rrllon-II tlle 11111111 UrOfll) ltllrtflel Jo tlw Old ITATa 01' CAl.lfOlllHIA ,Oil Wtlnnt "" TIM f01IOW l"f Plflllft llts tNl'ldOl'lld !ht lltl(rlbed ltitrtlll, TI!. tttmt tPld c-Ortnte 'COU/lfy' Cwrtllovte, Cltv et Stl'lll TMI COUNTY 0" ORAH91 CHOCOLATE TltEE, 12'27 Seil Beac.11 ~~l:'T 111JtNfldCTltl ... O: ,";'',l'i"o ·.~mh •:,,•_T101T0 d!lkwls of slit Prt itlWI II\ 11wf\rl montY All" (tllfOMJ .. tU r'lfllt, ttflt lfllll In,.,.. NI, A·1'M4 I l tv<t . S1•l &etch, C1Hf. ""' " ol 1111' Unlltd 1111 .. of Afneflct. 10 ,._,. ftt convl)'ld le 111d flOW lltld lrt' H vnOtt NOTIC• 0,. HIAltlHO 0"' PITITION Bev,rly Jtin Otl•, 12200 Monled !o Oil t.t E1tr111t, San (1"1!ttltl, C.Uf. '2612 cell! of !Ill lll'llllll'll llfd to ICCOl'tlll111V 111d Otfd of Trvtl In tM Pl'(lllll:tfy llluo-l'Olt PltOIATI 0,. WILL AHO I.IT· Road, A 201, ltOltmOot, Se•I Beacfl, Tiit fl<lltl1111s bu~lneu 11tm1 tlfft"(ld lo lhl oiler •nd ftle tMllM(.I. flO bt Nie"' 1lld 11'1 •Id Ctt.ll'ltv ""' ,,.,. 6ncrlbtd T•ltl o• ADMIHISTRAT.ON WITH· CtUI. l boVI ...... tlttd In Or•nt• County on MllY .. C , -TMa·Wll.I. AHHIXaD .... ' 0.1 1-.,_t_., R A 12, lt71. C:Ol'1!Jrm1ll1t1 of NII ll'f wrt. 11• Eitlll of MJ.YME MYERS Otc1t11d. ...,.. . t. .,..... ,_., .... to O.td, M1r11l't'I Irene Sf1,11'9ftt, 3230! AllPtZ. All bldt Ind <lfltrs mini 111111 wrlt\flf Lot fofTrtct Nt. ntf, II JlltcWll !)fl~ NOTICE II HEltflY GIVll<N 11111 l.1y '°1• Aosimoar, Se.i Bea(h, Ctllf. Sin JUlll C1pl1tr1no, (1111. I nd wlU 111 rKll ..... ti !flt olllet .. A. Mtp ,..,... lt1 11oo11 10 ,_. 3:J of Wllllc:t 1111 fllld htr•lfl 1 "I pl!Mon fol' Tlll1 l>u1ln.11 II bllnt <:Oflducled bv In Thlt l>uslntll Wtt c:ondudtd OV tn LEE ADAllt, t!IOl'Mf for E•tcutor, 11)1 MllCllllNotll Map .. ~dt (If Ortfllf •rOblllt el Wiii trod tor 1Util'9 tf I.ti· lt'ldlvld11il, l!Kllvldull. Wttl(llft Orlvt, 111111120. Newport INcll, County, c.!lfwn11, ltrs et Admllllilrtllotl wl!ll-f!il-Wlll .. fl. Bob F. 01le MA.AGAA.ET lltfNll!: STUlllGESS C1Uf0tnll '2640. 11 1"1' t1me '"..,. lhl M-eef'Nl'IOflly kf!OWll .. ! 2UI ,,. 111xld rtfft'tl\Ct to which 11 ~dt for 0~vft'I¥ JHn Otlt l'Tml Ori! PUbUc.atloll DI ff'IJI llClllU I nd blfor• l'llOfMI AYt., Cotti Mftl. C1llfoml1. further P1r1l(Ultr1, 1f'ICI 11111 lhl llmt 1nCI Tiii' itatemenl llrlCI wltll !he Countv Publllhed Or11111 CIMl$1 OlllY Piiot, Hw! mtklf!O DI Mild 1111. $t1CI .. 11 Wll M l'll9dt b\11 wllhollt fll(e of hMtlf!O lllt Slmt 1111 bttn iel Cllrk of Or1nM County on: July 11. itn. June %1, 30, •nd July 7, 1~. lf12 14111·72 For f\orttitr inl0tmltl1orl tl'O b1d fOtml, cowntM W Wln'lflf'(, _,,.;. W lmplled, for A\IOllSI 1, lf?Z, al f ::JO 1,m., In 1111 !IV BtvtrlY J. MlddOll OtPUt'f C1111nlv 1pply ti IM offlct1 « Nld •''°""'*' ot IM ,.,.,di~• ttlle, Hll"°'"'• er -c;our1roorn el O.p1rtP1tnt Ne. 3 of salO Cltrk. L A NOTICE e 111o:utor, CltOCkER N~TIONAL IANK, e"""bttll(fl, ·to,.., tlll ,_1111"' ll(ffl< (Ol.lrt, •t 700 Cl'rlc:,C•nltr Or.,.. West, Jn " 11ts1 EG L Alltl'll!Ol'I Joh" M, MJllnlfl, 12Jt Horii! el!Mf Wl'I'! of thl Nhl .--...... W Uld Ille Clfy .tt lt11I• Al'll, C..Uki,lol'• Publllhld Orll!Q~ Cot.t Olll't' Pllol, PICTITtOUS IUSINEH .M1!n Sl•ttl, 111111 Alli, Ctlllor1111. .......... Otttd. JlllY 11, 1rn. J111v U, 21 , 21 •IKI A1J011St ~. 1912 11ll·12 TM tlllM 11 tlMrvM It ffltd ll'IV 11'1d Dffd of TrvlJI, tOoWll $f3,2f1, •• .wt}tll 11'1-W I II JOHN , . NAME STATEMEHT ,11 blcls, ttrfft ,...,._, ff "rrlfllld 111 ltld flottt. ~,,N Cllrt LEGAL NC1J'ICE Tiit follo'#lfll ptrson Is Clolnt bu1l1111s 011«1 July u. 1m "1¥•11«1· If.,..,, uflllet ttie ttrmt of 1tkl aov a JUil• ••: CAOCKl!R NATIONAi. tANK DIM ef Tnnt; Ifft, <Ni,... •nd e11P'!l,.I Alltmt.; ti LIW SIR SPEEDY PRINTING CENTfilt, ElllCUl(H'"" ~ Wlll of of ""Trwtlt ""' "' h ""'" crMttd 1• "'"'"Av.. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ~6«1 E, Coast Hwv, COIOl'll dtl Mir, wn111m M. St1w1rt. ..... 11'1111d Oted "Tr111t. c"'' M .... Ctlll>inl&I NAME STATEMl!HT mu. bY: Johll M. M!Mllt Tiie bltltfl(llry ulld« 1tlif Deed of Til: 1114) S4t-tfSO Tht IOllOWll!ll Pl!rwn Is doin1 busil!t$S H1rold P11Yl11, 1601 Shedfltion P1tct, A Ll!I ADAIR Tru1I lltr,ltfert IQC\lllld J>fWI dlllwlrld ""'""" ftr Pet111tntr as: / NewPGrf 811ch, C1, P'U60. 0,. Olff«i fo TM uncle,., ... t wtln.i CH<t1r1tl0ft of Publllhlel Ortnoe .(oa'I Dlll't' Piiot July OUAt.ITY MULCH ANO TOP SOi i., Tiils bull MU Is bllnt condu(led bV 111 AOAI., '"NO, McCU.a'W', Oetlll'N 1nif Otrnlfld fw l111t, tnd 1 wr1t-lJ. 14, 1f, 1'72 1 ... 1.72 $41 Va~ 8 urtn, Ptiittllll•, (1111. llKllVldllaHl0•10,. Pl-I-..., ltfl Notlca of o.t " f11f l!llC!tOfl to s.11 J1mtt P•ul Hut1011, 1"51 Aodtrlck .., w• ,, HAJtltlMAH & ORllNI Ml 1 ' l.11\f, H1111tl11ttOl'I Bitch, Ctllf. 921.0 TlllJ st1teme11t fllld Wllh 1111 C1111nty Alltl'Mys 11 l.tw Tiii ufldenlff!OW c•• 111~ Nollet! el LEGAL NOTICE Tlll1 bll1tt1e1s 11 belnt c.o!Klucll'd DV 1n Cltrk of Ort ""I C011n"': Julv '· 1971. - Nitltl'lltl liH ... klllll Defllift 11111 l_leetlorl to Siii IO bt ~rf· I ,. " lHl Woot<lltt ._1,, Id In 1111 CO\ll'lty 1"llttt lilt re11 "'°"'" l'ldlvldu1t. 8v 8Werty J. Mldc!Oll Deputy C1111ntv ...,. II IOClttd. I fUlt J1m1s P1ul Hutloll Clerk. N.....,. IMdl, """'11111 '*' Dlftl Jilfle ''· 111". SUPllllOlt cou•T OP THI Tlll• •t•litmllll ffl«I wlltt "" C1111n1Y p IUll '"" .. 2.n• F't•ST ,eoe:1tAL ESCltOW STATI Of CTYALIPOlllo'!.I~.·.·.· Cl•rk ,, Or1r111• C1111nty '": J 11ty 11. 1'72. Publlshld °''~ Cot•f Dilly l'llot, Atlwllelll • ., lllMliltlr COltPOltATION !d T ' THI COUN 0" -By 8•v••lr J . Mtddox. D11>111Y COllnt'f July '· ll, 21, 2' lt72 11111-n Pllbllllwd °''"" (OISf Otllr Pllel. •v Ger•lll IC. N1~!.:.t,. rut"· NI. A·7M)4o• PETITION Clerk, JI/Iv 14, 1$, 20, 1f72 IUl·n A111t. Vici l'retldtnl MOTICI Oii HIAlllNO FlttSl -------------'lllllllll'lld °'""' c .. tt Dilly l'llol, ,.OR PROIATE 0, WILL AHO l'Olt l"ublltlltd Or•l!fl Co•ll Dilly PUo!, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE JuM • efld Jilly 1. 1•, 1t7f IMl-12 ~~t~'!t' l~J:~~~:Tt_•~'ANCHl$E, July I•, 21, 21 •IKI J,uiau1t •·Im 1&14·721---=======,,--- NOTICI[ D,. T•UST•t'S IAl.9 •k:o~~g:e~;e ~E:'E~";)~1~:c:''::a1 LEGAL NOTICE '1~!;J~0~:A:~:,:."::1 'T,D. NO. 1172 LEGAL NOTICE ELll.A&ETH HALL 1111 flltd 11erel11 • TIMi' foflowlll'll 1>9r1011 11 Clolnt bu•l11e•• 011 Mo!ldtv, Allllill 7, 1'12. ti 11H,0 petlllOft fat Problte o1 Wiil tl'ICI tor ,ICTITIOUS •USINISI 11; A,M., ENCINAi. MOltTGAGE TRUSTEE I •'of litterl Ttsl1mllll1rv IO ™' HAM• ITATEMEMT HAt.F MOON BAY LI.NO ANO CO. IJ dutv 11U~lllU1t4 Tr1111H 11flcltr ltld HOT~· :" T .... lt~:i,·:~11':Al.I ;!tti1':.tr refllrtf'IU to wti1dl It mtde tor Tile lollo'lllln11 ptrfont ert dolnt OEVELOPMENT COMPANY, lU\'2 "4Jr•11et1I le Ot1C1 o1 Tru1t d11td Junt 1, UT 1•· 1 turlhir P1rtlcu11rs, 1nd 11111 I~ t!m• end bllsJnns '': M••lne Av111111, ltfllol l•l•lld, 9'l:662. '"' 11xec:utld lly WILLIAM MEltltELI. •• Ne.1 ... 11 of 111trl111 the ••m• h•s bffrl 111 SUNDIAL, 2069 Ntw$1Cr1 l lvd., Cotti (htlltr F. Sllilbur';' 11, m AmtlPl)'lt, llnd rtcorclld J11M 12. 1941, ffll look m•. s AL IND A F 1 NAN (I AL I tf. Pll(I II t l 1tn •I t ·» • m 111 "'' Mna. C•lll. 9262, 81lbOll ltlt nd, n..2. Plff 1'1, of ONlcltl ltKOrda In lht otfltt C'Qllll'OllAT•O II duty IPll'Ol"'ed Tn11t1t ~~:,,: of' [>ep~rtmini Ne.' 3" of Mid BIYtrly Lff B1U, 311 E, lfl~ Pl1(1, TPlll bu1lt1t1s ls belnt condudfd by 111 of ttlf ltKOtder of Ort,... Cwnfy, 11111 Urldtf ll'lt foltewlM dttc,lbf!d dtiMI of court II 7CD (IYIC Ctllltr OrlVI W.,1, Ill 8 Co1t1 Mela, Ctllf. '2627 ll'ldfYldl/11. of CtlllDf11l1. tru$1 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION 11'1 c'itv ol Slllll AM, Ctlllornl1, WIU11rn Robtrl 8111 111, 3n E. 16111 Clltlltr F, Sall..txlry 11 Wiii Mii 1t 1>11b1J¢ tlil(tlOfl lo lllafllsl blcf. TO TH!! Hlr.H!ST llODElt ,Olt CASH ~IH J 1't' la 1m P!l(f, 8, Costa Mis•, Call!. '2621 1'1111 llltf!T\1111 fUtCI wllfl !l!tt COllrlfV d•t tor Clll'I IPl)'llllt 1t tlPM o1 st1t ln lPIYlbtl It tlmt of Slit In l1wful rnoMV wttL1AM··r. SI JOHN, Tiit bll1lntJS II Nina cond1,1(teCI bY I Clll'rk et Ortfl!le COllnl'f on: Jutv 5, ltM:. ''"''1111 met1tv of 11>1 Ulllleel ltt .. 1} In lht of, tlll U11!1td Sltlflll) tll rll!hl, llllt 11111 COU IV Cllrk Hulb1l!CI •IKI wilt. llY 8tvtrtv J, MICICIOll 0.lll.llY (OUflfY lobbf ot tt>e OttrlH Cll.lfllY CourtPlou11, lntlrttt ~lo ll!CI "°""' 1111111 llv II WALTe:lt .~ 9AltANGElll IEVERl.V LEE IAt.L Clerk. c :vlt C111t1r Drive lftm11rl'f tth St.) Cl· und<'r '•Id Otld 111' Trvrt In t111 1rOP•rtv \Stl Wnttllff Dtl.,., 11111• 3711 This 1!1temlfll lllect wl!h tne CO!Jntv ' 1U14 ty ot S1nt1 "-"'• C01J11tv of Or•""· St1te lltr<'ln•fl•• Cletc:rlblld: New"'1 INcl'I, Clllfttl'll• "'.. Clerk of Or1n;e Count~ on: Junt 21. 1t1'2. Publlsnea 0••~• Cwn D11lv Piiot. ot Ctllt0tnl1 •II rlent, 11111 •rid 111t1rtsl TRUSTOlt: Oontld It, '''"" tM Ttl en•> '4S.•ut Rv 8tv1•lv J , M•Cldoll. 011111rv Co11n1v July 1, 14, 21. :n, 19n ITT:J.n co11v..,ed lo 1rod !!OW Mid ff It ul'ldtr 11IC1 Lll!dt E. 8ttt11s, ll111ll111d tl'ICI wlft A~ lw Hlilltnlf C!erk. Deld of Ttu•I In tne Pf'oPlrtv 111111141111 !ft !!ENl,..ICIARY: Mlllltfld Morthtt Ce.. l"u:i':11111 Orlf\Clfi C0tsl 01Uy ,Hot, "1155Cll-------------11idl.;~~~ e~:'11.•:11!t~\:' "•;,,bot ""::;;,.., J1111111ry t. 11n '' '""'· Nt. JiMr 14. IJ. 21. 1,72 ll!f.72 JJ'i:!b~";:, .~'':i'iv f°t:.' 1,~:nv ,!'.~~~ LEGAL NOO'JCE h1tnd, •• "' M•' recotdld In look 1, au I" book fSl3 ••" ta of Offlcl11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE F'IC'TITIOUI IUllMESI P1p1 J7 of Mltc1UtfllOU• Mlfft tt(Orfl lll~t '" Ill• efflct ol fll.I RleOrdH of NAMI ITAT9Ml!NT San Diego Area Gets A Complete Facelift SAN DIEGO IAP) -The ugliest portion of do.,ntown San Diego-14 blocks below Broadway-is going to be torn down in what Mayor Pete Wilson calls "revitalization and preven_Jion of decay." At least $190 million in new construction is expected to result. Already authorized is a new $40-million f e d e r a I courthouse. WIUt a few landowners olr jecting, city councilmen gave preliminary approval by an 8-1 vote Wednesday but final adoption of the Horton Plaza Redevelopment Project in two weeks is considered routine. The property owners will be asked to rebuild voluntarily in the area bounded by 4th A venue, G Street and Union Street south of Broadway. If they refuse, city officials plan to acquire the prop erty, }X>Ssibly by condemnation, and sell or lease it to a developer who will build according to a general plan. At least 70 owne rs of land and buiJdlngs are involved . An attorney for the San Diego Union and the Evening Tribune told councilmen that the two newspapers which own property in five blocks of the 14·block area \Yill 1nove in about 13 months to a new plant being built in Mission Valley . The downtown plant is no\11 in escrow and all of the newspapers' property in the redevelopment area is for sale, the attorney said. 6 Pacts Awarded SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Department o f Public Works has awarded six contracts for work in San Bernardino and R i v e r s i d e Counties, including one for $5,179.230 worth of work in Need.Jes. The announcemerrt said the work near Needles would he on CaUiorni~ 40 a t in· terchanges of River Road, J Street and California 95. The other projects were for salt storage bunkers near Big Bear Lake and Mountain Pass, signpost modificatior. near Barstow, landscaping in Vic- torville. traffic signals in Riverside, and SO miles of various r~surfacing. Catholic 'Confess' Rule Told VATICAN CITY iUPI J-The Vatican bas banned group absolution of $lns except under extraordinary circu1nstanccs and ruled Roman Cathollc.• must continue to confe.~s trangressions in private with a priest. Vatican SOUtCts said a new document on U1e subject reflects of ficial concern that Catholics are becqhUng in- creasingly more reiuctant to rccitetbeirw r on g doings pr ivately to a pr iest. The document condemned the "recent custom " of giving group absolutions, w h i c h church officials said has taken root particularly in North Ame rica and some European count ries. Tr called instead for a com· plete retw·n to the leaclµngs or the 16th century Council of Trent that Catholics must con· fess mortal or grave sins lo a priest in private. receive absolution and do some pen- ance. According lo the Roman Catholic church, a mortal sin is one which separates a person from God and which causes death of the soul unless absolved. The Vatican did, however. confi rin a wartime ruling of March 1944, that priests can give a collective absolution to persons in imminent danger of death. lt also said co llective absolution vl'ill be allowed in mission and other areas where there are large numbers of priests to hear confessions. In both these cases, the docum ent said, Catholics who receive a general absolution are "strictly obliged" to make a private confession within a year unless this is absolutely impossi ble. And they cannot rece ive a collective absolution for a second time unless they have privately confessed . The Vatican instruction said priests may not give a general absolution "merely because of a great concourse of penitents as can for example occur on a great feast of pilgrimage." In sucll cases it is the duty of the bishops to see that enou g h· priests are availab le to hear private CQTJfessions, it said. of Otlllff CC!'J,,.,., C1lllor11lt, Ortnl• (()llnly1 ••Id dtld of '"'" l'ICTITIOUS •U.SINISS The followl" -·-I• ·-1 .. ""•I·••• c;:~---,2!'.',"~'flSLld:dl.IU...llld...otlt..tCl'l'IJl'IC .dfl(rlM:'.-JM.followln• prooartv: -su•a1t101t COURT 0" 'THE ...... e ....... MEN ......... .... .... " ;-; d111ltn1ll011 II '""· .. ffle •••• •r-rtv lot lf iii TrKrNo.!r77;-nlliOWl'I en T;tl."T•,,..---cAtl~R"IA-~Ott-..-~........ _Tr ___ _J ""'==== dncrlbtd tlloYI, 11 "'POfltd to bl tt• • Mto nc-ordld. In book &:I, Pitt• C , 4 TMI COUNTY 0,. ORAHGI ,,"'. ' follow Int Pf''°" 11 dolnt btiJlnets Z ET ET E K MAM AGE MEN T 18TH ANNIVERSARY STOREWIDE I Ml M d N A JUfl SERVICES CORPOltATION, 711 0(Nll M1rlne Avt"IJIO llltlol . •I 1 flld ' tnd ff of i!n!ltnt!IMI 1•••• rteor t I.... OP PETITION RAHO'W' TAlt YACHT $ALES, 1.400 W. -'"'·'Ho. 122, Hul'llllllton leldl, Ctlltorn!1. el Or1Mll (OU111'f', C1llf0f'11 ~. HOTICI 0~ NaA I 0 c .. .i HllhWlf No. p, NtWPllt'I 1!1e1eh, E Tiit under1l1ntd Trull" dlK!tlrn• tnY .,, Vlclotlt ltr"'; COi!• "'""· ,Olt PltOIAT• 0, Wlt.L AHD ,Olt C.111. '2660 No~'122: H::it::;:"a.~'J.. Oc:l•n Avt •• l'lebl111y IOI" tny !1KorrKlt11•1 ol lhl Callfomlt L•TT•ltl TllTAMaHTAltY J1mtt J,r1'1'111r Mcltre11, 9 171 Tiii• buslneis 11 btlnt it0nd!Klld 1w an strltt 1d<tft1s lt'ld O~t common (If I slrHt Hclrttt er ~ E1t11t of f_ltNEST H. WEI.KE. HeatlMT"IOl'I Cr,. H11flll111IQI\ !111(11, C1lll. llldlvldUll. Wsh1r.all-If lll'f ~ ... rtlll. 11'1111 dlflf111t11111 11 ltlow11 •llOW, Ill 0tc11Md. Thi "·01 I .. 1"9 --• --• o St1d 1111 Wiii bt m•dt, but without warrtfllly b tlWll ts to ltl comp!• NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN Tl'l1I 1 1111 ness J ,..,,..u~,.., V '" M. E, YOUNGltEEN <ovtn1nl et w1r1111!f'(, •llPl'eb Ot lmllilld 111ot1 or ftrl'WCIMn). Htltn M. W11k• II•• fllld ll1r1ln • petlllon llldlvldual. 'Thlt lltftmt11I filed wltll flll CC!'Jllly Ill _... .... ... ~, of Jtmtt Arthur Mcl.1ren (!erk of Or1"'11 Ct11111 ... on July 5, ltn. '' reo1rdl1111 11111, PGMIMIOI\, er ,.,. Tiit bttlel'lcltl'Y 11nd1t ltld O...S of for prdltt• DI w 1'"' "" ••tua.... Thi• 1t1litmtnt flltd wttll ttJt c n ., cumbtt/ICt .. to PIV !Pit r1m1!11l11t ptlflo TrvJt, bV rttson of 1 bt11ch or deftuft 111 Llttttl T .. t1m111tel"'f le Ptl\llontr, Clerk DI Orl"I' Counlv 011. June 28 °rn'l lltverlY J, Mtllclox, DIPlllY CO!Jnt't' Clerk. t lPtl 1um ol 11\e not. 11~rte1 llY .. Id n. o11111111of11 11CUred 1111rt9Y, ,.,.,'"''lo whk:h Is midi for urlhel 8 8 1 J Mllcldeic Dtp IY C 1· Pl .. ltl----------------------------------------Ott!I_,. io:w11: su~Of) ~ Jllltl'.tft_from lltl'lto,,... •1111CUl9d •lld dtllvtrlcf fo ,,,. partlc:ultn, ind t111f ll1f' time end piece cr,, ,.,.., ' • ' u °"" v P11bllll11d ort1111e Co.II 0111y Piiot. Jun• 1, lt.11, 11 II\ stfd nolt Pf"\'lffd, \ll'ldtnlOflllf • written ·o.ctirttlM of of lieer11'1e ll'le 11mt 1111' been set for Julr It. Fll1l! July 7, ll, 21,_21. 1'72 1n 4·7J 1d'Yt11ett. If 1ny, undft' "'!'(It If llld Deft111f trod Dlm1nd tor 1•11• tfld wrltMn 2!.1972, ef f :30 '·'""In l"' courtroom7~ Pub!llhld Oranff Coast Oallv P!lot,,1--------------1 dNd, 1~. t111r1111 tl'ld --of t111 l>llllCI Ill brudl ind of 11tctlo11 to c111111 01111,tment No. 3 °'w Pt '1 "t"o."' c~!.. •• J!Jfl• 30 arid Jul, 1, T•, 21. 1972 1713-n LEGAL NOTICE Tnnltl 1nd of tlMi' trllftl "91fed ~ ••kl ''" -.,.•l•Mcl It 1111 111c1 prOPtrfY tel Civic: C111ltt' Drlv• n. " " '" °"'4l. 11f1JfV Hid llllll••flOll•, 1fld tllert~fttr tll• S1nl• An1, C11lfor11l1. Tiit prefff!t btnefkllt'I' ¥nlflt Mkl ul!Clenfsnld u111td 1tld !loll(• o1 bnl•ch D1tld J11lv 1, 1m. LEGAL NOTICE 'ICTITIOUI IUllN!IS OtlCI, by tlllO" of. brlltd\ ...... tull In ,.M of *1tdlo" .. bf ltlCCll'dld M•rdl "· w. £, II JOHN, NAM• ST«T•MINT 'lie oD!lttll,.,. M«Jrtd I 11 • , ••• y. 1m It I""''· No, 25710 111 """" IOOSt PIH C()llnt'f Cltrk. ... ,.ICTITIOUI IUSIN•ll 1'!11 f(IUowlnt pt:rlOrlS .,. dol1111 h•retofor9 t~ll(U'fecf tfld __... lo 1111 f4A, of 11td Otl'lclal AKorcl1. CllHO!I., RAllfO,F', IHA,lllO HAM• ITATIM&NT busln111 H: tindl1"11tned • wrltttft Ottllrllloll el' S11d "" wlll bl mid•. llut Wlll'lout .... ou1nHe11t. Tb• fo1Lowl111 llet'IOll• .,. dolnt OAANGE AUTO WltECKING, 27lD s. Oel.~ull 11'111 o..,,,.nd fol' S11f, Ind wtlll1n COVllllllll or w•rr11\l'l, •~tretl or 1mpU•d, UM Wlft11tr1 a111111tv1rd. bu1l11td 1s: Or•ll9t. S1nt1 An1, 92702 notlcf'Of' ~1df n ··liif 't1~·1~ .. t'11J1·.-i'ffirilllit -· tll'ii, -·pe.iis1lOn, or -ti,.: nine·N•ll'lblf 1'°'' AltCOt.,·~:J7t "k"·l:ON11, Ceslt Nits• Jot1th Ooml11lc: Ttoncllt, 1&» Port lilt 11ndtr11t1ned to Mlt .. Id """rly to cumbrtl!Ctt, le ,.V fllf r1m1!"1M •tl"· Lit Allfllff, Ctrl!wllll '°"' Frll!Cllc:e 'VIKl!oY1ky, $2091/t Uvt Sltnhopt Plt(f, Newport ltldl t •ll1fy lllCI obl1t1110ftt, llld ll'letfffltr, Oii dNI """' of th• Mt•• 11e11rld bV ••Id Ttl: Ctlll .u.. Ott St .. CudM!y, Qollf .. f0201 Klttlllttn N1ncv Tronctlf , ltlO Port A•,.1110, 912, IM unClllrsteMd c1tusld 11ld Offd of Trust, wlfll 1111,,,_st 11 111 ••Id AtltrMYI lor: l"tllll1ner A1tl1ttl E. 80"11111, '212 VIiii lonfll, St1n HOH Pltct, Nlwpor1 lltldl Mlle• et 1>re1c11 •nd of tlfl('llM le bl not• prev1dld, 1dv111ct1t. If 111'1', ullder ti!• P11bll1111C1 Or111gt Coat! Dilly Piiot, Cvpr11s1, Ctl!t. fOf,JO Th!1 bllslneis Is bel111 cotldudlCI by t n •IH:O•ded ln Bock 10075, 11101 ;no, of 111d ttrm1 of said [)+l!ed ot TMJfl, f111, cll•rott Jiiiy 13, 14, lf, 19n 1835·72 This bu11ness Is belnt col!dudfd br 1 lndlv!Clu•I. Offl (ll l l«otC11, of Or1not C111111lf, S!tll tfld fllllfllllll of 1hll Trusle• lfld of 1111 Pllfltltr'&h!p. Ktttilfffl N. TtOllC:ale .,, (11!1fd-n11. wllt r• "'' R.111 Prooerty II lru•I~ (fltfld bY ••!d Offd of Ttvlt. LEGAL NOTICE R11f1et E. e on11•1 Joffllll o, Treine:••• loceled. Stld 111• wlll Ill lltld Ofl MoN11v. J ulv Thi• 1t111m1nl t 11 t cl with the Thl1 •l•lement filed wltll !he Cwnty Det1: JulV l7, lm ,,, 1m 11 ll:Oll A.M., al the oftk•• of T,i------,c.c,c-..,.------lcou11ty c11rk ot 0t1"" Cou"t' on: June Cltrk ol Ori"" Coul!IY en: J11111 ~•. 1911. ENCINAL MORTGAG! D. S.rvlct ComHl!Y, ltllk of Amtl'ICI SUl'&ltlOlt. COUIT 0' TME 28, lt72. IV 81v1rly J. Mlddoll, Dtputv 8Y ltvttlY J, Mlddoll. 0.Plll't' C1111nrv TRUSTEE CO. Tower, O!ll Clll' IOUllYll'd WHI, 0rlflllt, STATE Oii CALll'OIHIA 1'011. CoUl\tV Cltr1t. Cletk. 8v M. c. ll!ANAlllD C1Ufttnl1. TY 0 ANGI , 11n1 p 11n4 l"u~l1lled Ntwl)Orl H1t'Vor NIWI ,.,..,. Data: JUllf so. 1m. THE co~:. AD·~Jlt Published OrtnD• Ce.st D•Hv Pllol, Publlslltd o,.. ..... Cot•! Dilly Piiot, tomll nld WltPI DiiUr •lie! NI~ S1llnd• ,.,lltncltl lllCOfflOttltd CITATION J11na l0, Ind J11IY 7. 14, 71, 1,n 17°'-12 Jut" :JO. t lld JuJv 7, 1(, 21, 1912 1111.n Baacn, c.111orrll1, Julv I•. 21, 21. ltn •1 '"Id TruJ!t"r, '" 1~, mtlttr of Int tdOf)t!on p111uon of: ------------'-'_.,._n_1 IY T. O. Stt'VI<• Cemp1ny, Aoent CAii.OLE I.EE HATHWEt.L. AdoPtl1111 LEGAL NOTICE ev w 11do It. ~,~.,1. Vl(e •rtsldenl Partfll, 1----;;;cm;D;iSIU;;;ns--l---_.'.LE~G~AL~~N~OTl:'..'..~CJl.'.;~·::_ __ LEGAL NOTICE ITA<2t2 Pl!.OPLE OF lHE ST A TE OF PICTITIOUI IUStNast 1'11b1l1hld OrtnM Cotti Otlly •lief, (#1.LIFOllNIA· HAM• ITAT•MINT F'ICTITIOUI aus1Has1 IN THE IUl'l!ll:IOI COUlt_T J\llY '· 14. 2t, 1t72 t 7ro.n TO: Miit$, GllACE HATHWELL: 1'1111 1011owlng Pfflll'IS INI do1119 NAMI ITAT•MaHT OF THI! ITATt: 0" CALl,OltNI-BY ordtr of tnl1 CCMl•t YOI! 1r1 htrlbV bllslntll 11: The followlllt Ptflllftl .,. dolrtll ,0 .. TH'I! COUNTY 0, OlllAHOa cl!ICI 10 •011t1r lfl OtperlrMl'll • et the Ill HERITAGE INTER10AS, 12) buslnn1 11: NO. A4'St1 LEGAL NOTICE ~bovt enlllltd COllrt loc1ll'd '' 100 Civic KAED PltOOUCTIONS, 3015 Se. lt•ne WILSONS CYCLE. 310 N. Euclld, S111o foll"ITl(I' 0' EXECUTOlt'S SA&.• OJI Cemer Or!ve Weit, S•n!a AN, C1llfer11l1, Or., Sll\ll A111, C1llf. n10ot. fl A111, Ce. PEltSONAL l'IOl'llllTY AT •1tlVATI •Alt.., en lhl 17111 deY of Au9uSI, 1972, 11 f:lJ Eitw•rd Thoml• JlllMll\, 301$ SO. Rtne WUllll'n J , Wll•Ollt 10031 Ku K11I j At.E NOTICE 0, 01,AUl.T A.M., of lhftt Clt v, lhtn el>CI ltler1 to sllow Dr., Sll'lll Ant, (lllf, tt70l. Dtlvt, HuMln•h:i11 Bt•Cll, Ct. t2144. tn ll'le Miller of !ht Ellt1t1 ef ""'" (!l.aCTIDN i'O Sl!l.L c111n, ii anv vo11 1'11v1, whV 1n1 11tlltlon Ktll'll'Yll Hty" JllJjO!I, 3015 SO. It-$111rOt1 WUJon, 10032 K11 Kul Drl'lt, IS#l.8ELLE STEWAltT, e1ece11R . UHDI• DllD 0' TRUST cf CAROLE LEE HATHWEl.L, tor !hi Dt,, S.nll A111, C1ll_f, '27'0.t. Htintlntton 8t1d'I, Ct . n..-. NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN ll'ltl T,I , Nt, 1449 •llDlltlen of SE.AN • E Y NA l D 0 This llu1illftS ff blfl'ltl c:ondu(fld b't' t Thi• bu1l11tt• 11 btlt'll' CondlK'ltd by I CllOC KER NATIONAL BANK •• +111 Et· NOTICE '' HEJll'IY OIV!N: 'Thal HATH w Et. L. EA IN co R""O'A';Y Gtnlr•I P1rtt1t!W!le. l"trtne,..,,lp, <PCUIOt ot tne Wilt of 1511.!IELLE ~Ecu•1tv TITLE INIUltANCE COM· HATHWE LL, al\d HEATHER CAMILLI! l!O Jll.UON SP11ron WlllOl'I !ITEWAltT, C1Ke1,ed, wU! ,~11. subl«tl lo PAHY, 'coroorttlon, I• Tfvlf91 Unlltr I HATHWELL, vour mll!Of (PlllClren, lllO!Jlcl Thi• lltlemtnl flied Wltt'I It'll C0\11\W TPlls st1tam111t fllld wllll t!lt COl!"ly \-onllrm1U011 by tnt S11etrlor (1111r1, 11 died of INsf 11~1"<1 Mirr.II 1•. Ifft, ex· t111t Ill gr1nlrd. Cttr1t ot Ort"" ~~en: JuM 21, ltn. Cltrk of Or•11tt CCMinlV c.11: J1111e 21, lt72. 1lrlv1t1 sale, 10 Ille h!gh4111 b!ddtr, 1111C1tr f<Vfl'lf bY ANTHONY D. COtl.D 1fld O•ltd: Jul!!! 16, ltn. Ir 8.....,l't' J, Dtp1,11y COUl'lt'f B't' 81,,..rlY J. Mlddo• ~ Cou11ty tilt terms trod (OfldillOfll f\111111 """" THE l.l!SA M. COIRO, HUllllrod tfllf Wllr. WILLIAM E, Sl JOHN, Cl.,-k. Cltrk. lloned, 011 JUI¥ 24, 1f12, 11 t :OO 1.m. 11 Tru!lor, to llCUte (lbl!1ttl0flt Ill f•Vlll' of County (l1rk; P IQSt fl !UIS 1230 N0111! Mtln S!rtH, Santi AN, J, W, ·1.£NN£Y, I mtttlf41 l'Mllt 11 1111 By ,&.rt~ur E, Kreger. PUb11sttld Ol't* 1Cot1t Gilly •llDI, P UbllSl'ltd Ottlltl COlll 01ll'f Piiot, Cftlltornie. •ti 01 th1 rt~hl, 11111, 1~ttr111 sol• •I'll tt-•r1t• pro11trtv, •llllfkltr'f, or1111y J u1>e n. 30 1rod Julr ·7, 14, 1t72 IU>-n J uM is, :JO, 1fld Jurv 1. ll. 1tn 1~12 11nd t sl1!1 ot JM e1l1t1 of ISABELLE •«Udtd Mttd'I U. ltd ti dlcU1!'ltlll no. !SEAll STE.WAAT , llectesld, Ill tt'ld le tt.t 15311 In tll>ok W2. Hf' n7, of Official DAHiii. Jt. IUCKNUM tollowlflt ll«K •lbld per.!oQll&! -•OMrfY: PKotdJ, 111 11\t otflct ot "" Rtc0rdlf of ,. NIWllOl'f Ctnltr Drhfr 1. '"'ere" In 1 •t•I prOPttlf ll•~t'd Or11111 (()llnty, Ctltfernlt, •ttcr191M llt'ld l1llN U$ dilled !.rpt1mblr 1S, lf"' i.twttn C.1-lhen!lfll IPlli Nt-1 •••ch, c11,, nWt Growth, Ille .. 1 C1lllot11!1 (O"f!Or1t1011, l.Ot n ef Tr'l(t '°32 111 ttie CllV of """'' 111 '41·1lll •I 111$01~. trld WILLIAM M. STl!WAltT G1rde" Gro~« t i UIOw'f\ OP1 I ll'llO AllOrlllY !er PtlillOlltr •lld 15A8ELl.E STEWAIT, h~1b1nd Ind NKCll'dtd '"' boOk 17'. Plftf ... " t nd Publl•hld Dfill"')I Co.•I Otily Pilot, wilt, .. 1111"•· 50 cl Ml1cet1-11t0u1 M11>1. rtcOrd• ol M r 1• 21 ,, 11111 Aug111r • 1•n U~J.72 2. Tt111t c:trltln !i(ente er l•tnc;ll!ie t1ld Or•ntt C01Jn11'1 ' ' ' •or1tm1nt I XKllllCI Ocloblr JO, 19'3, tt!ll Obll•1!10M IJKltldll'lf '"' nolt for fM LEGAL NOTICE bttlw11n 15AIELl.E ITl!WAllt, a• JllP!I ol l.J..of.51. ll(ln-'"° 51Z1LElt$. INC., •• Th" Int beMflt lll 11111f'Mt l,lrodPI' tuclli-------------U(tnlOI'. to<" 111<' 001rtl11111 el I cerlll" dtlld 11111 Tiit obll1atloP11 lk\lt'td tlltftllY NOTICE 01' IULK Tlil"HSFll S!tiltr Rtst1ur111! loc;lhd ti 1tl E ntl 11• ownld by ll'lt 11ncltt1lellld1 (lffl. flt1.f117, U.C.C.J Stvtnittnftl Strtf't, CeJI• M ~ i 1 , T~11 1 br11cPI of, 111d detaurt 111. fllt NOiie• Is herebv 11w" le 1111 Crld!h:irs C11Uorn11, •lld kllOWl'll •1 Slnl1r No, 51 cb!IG•ll61'1 ~ w~kh tlldl dttd 11 ttc:urlty of H~nll11tloll i&ficl'I Food S~r.1ctt. 1 •fld !hilt cert1!n lr~r.thll• tt rrltorv ~·• ~rrtd In lhll fllVl'tlll'lt Ill• nol Ctllfl:lrnlt <ft'l>Or~llOl'I. Trtn1t1ror1. ""°'' e1eso:rlblld lhtrttn. Tiit llrm• 1rld COPI· be~" Pllldf' ot1 Tiie ln&t1llrn1nl of llM'lfl< ll\lllllffl flddrtH 11 llSS:I st 1 c Pl dlllon1 flf 1111 "' ct11> 111 lawful monty <IHI lflllf tnltrtJI wllldl btc:•~ M •till t..l~trd. HunlilWllClll 811Kn, Cou11lf of of 1n, Vnlflll lllttl of An'<ttlc1, 10 11tr· ••r1bl1 Ju11• 1. 1t72, •lld 1ubH«lfl'tl lit< °''"''' Slllt el C1lllor11!1, 11111 1 Wl-t~I ol n. •l'llOIJlll bid le fl(tomfl•"' llllll'Mfllt of flfTll(Jflll •lld lf'ltlrtltt .. trt111flr 11 tlloul lo IM ml!C!t lo SIUltt Int of!IJ -.... b1llJICI ,, bt Plld Gfl lf'IW '*°'"' di.It •1'4 Hl'lblel 1111 l'MlllY llffk Hw1t1, Trtnllff"S. ~ (Oflfltrntllclll o1 NII II\' lllfl (111jrl. '> chi"" Jilftutl!t M 1'11 """' .t llMI iM.lllftl Ncllittt 11 12ti1 W•I Jlfttrtllfl AU bldl ,,.. lffen mwt • In Wl'll!T1f l'IOl•i ldYtnc• mid• '9 ffll holdtr tf • 9"1Mtf"4, l.u Anttlq, '°°"' (GUflly o1 I ncl will Ill l'KllWd at thl effft4 II A. "'111' ll'llf MJ"'lor ..... ef lt'\111 ef ,....i, l.il Afltlln, Sllll If C11lf0tlllt. I See by Todays Want Ads e THE BESl' PORTABLE StlELTER II this Nimrod tent traller • St 1letP1 6, ha..-a •love, "'* and Jll&ll)I Wru, 1'h• -· ia 10 x u. trud( !alp, Jll x lO' ... '-_ .. l !E J,OAllll • .ttoriwr tor' C11tc:Vlt1, ISO! l!\> ''" llMllM of l lAOf,,.,, •l'Mll .~ TM ffOMflY It Ill l!'llltlerld II h1e11..i WMt<:lltf Otl'f'I, k llt tto, Ntwtol'I letch, .,..,f\Ctt .,mt4 ... 'IAA"tlllffl ti tlM ..,.,. "' II llW t .. dl hl.lllv1rd, Huntlfl9toll t.1lllot11lt. ,,.._ti 1nv lime .1tt.r 11'11 ~~t" WV '-'"°""""....'..flM· -IMCh. ~nf'f et Ora"tl. Sttll OI • l'OR •••.-• ..... -""'*, '''" llllllflittfloll ol tlll• flOll<• 11111 bttore '"" ,..... • """....,. • (1llflrnlt. """" IUU At, lllll( ...... t1ie 1111klt11 ef Nlilt ..... Pf'lll~I llttltfkltl'Y llflftr Ml¢ll fftcl, 11H .. Id .,._.rty 11 dtltrlbld In .. ,..,.. hftntDI An:tlqutl Ind r. For lul't1111t 111torm1llofl •nlf •lit fotm1 llftclltM 11111 dtl""'" .. ··••1Trvrttt • If! Ml •!Ml Ill tr11f11. lllll•lf"· ecv!Jfllllll -eiolY ,1 1111 ofllot of u ld •ttorfllY tor ~ wrltltl\ Dlc!•t•tloll ef Oef•uH •fllf D•• ..... ..., WI" et tlllt "'''"''"' bullt1tts pmducdont, pewter lamPJt (•IClllM, CltOCKIR NATIONAi. IANI(, Mtnd fw ltlt; •Ml !\ti lfl~llM Wllll kNWn •• llnl1t ,, • .,,1i. ,flffk HWst No. tarvtd delk chair, 6' Atttfllloft Jot'lll M. Mlnnoft, Ua Hortll Hid Trvt ... tlld'I Cllld t l'llCI th ~It ff ll'ICI loc:lllcl 11 1US2 81HJI kllltvtrCI, 1 M•l11 Sir .. !, $tl'llt AN, C1lllornl1, ~n!~":.c:":!l:r ..:.~ .. 7.::r!7~ HUn!IPltlOfl l1ldl, COV111V o1 Or1r19t, J0nc oJl ,.tl1\1nf, 4' bronze Sealy's Mid-Year Sleep Sale on Now SEALY MID-YEAR SLEEP SALE ON NOW same firm innerspring :found at $10 to•20 n1ore! SEALY GOLDEN GUARD ' 59~ You could r/rt much more for this kind of firm >Jpport. Hundreds of tplC!lli~ Our•Flex coils plus Sealy's exclusive torsion bar foun - dlclan. quilted decorator cover. Take advantage of this Special value! (\U.., 's.., ~O" 2-pc. set $179.95 King Size 76x80" J.pc. set $249.95 FROM THE MAKERS OF FAMOUS SEALY POSTUREPEDIC° "No morning blckacht from ~eeping on 1 too-soft mattress" from $99.96 •·pc. Tl'M ''ttrt b ,...,..,.. It rt!ICI .,.., IM •II IUtTI• Mtllrtd """*' lmf'llWltttlr iflHI , .... of C1U1or1111. 'mirror .• pair ot coun- '" l;lldt. l lld H't'•b1I •rid htl tletltd ltlll doll Tiii 111/lk lr1nfltr WHI bl itOMUl!llllltM f""' --ch .......... ll'aM-ea.nkAmeric.trd D1tech J1,11, u. im. llwtllr tltct to,,.,.."" truat P'°"''' to on or 1111r J111r !~. itn. '' Cttdlet '# "1c11 .,. .... u;:>~ CltOCttER NATIONAL •ANK. lit tole " Hll•ff 11'11 obU111\0lii JK11rld N111onfl ll t "t. 12'30 Hortll M1!11 love teal•, pa.Ir oCBomb.ly • U-••• , Ch•--fJo;l<lllOI' ot ""' t111t1 of ll'llrfllY, 11 .. Strrt• Allt. County et o rintt. $1flt of nw ·-.- llAISLlE STS:WART, dtlCMMd. Dl!tdt Jul'll l'-1,11 cil!lornle, cht'lll and triple drtaetl 0 O R l•lnn ... : John ,.,., MJnnen $TEV£ VIOH 11 tar "kllOWl'll to !!It T1111111r'"" tll I .n-...l 1-1 ur Wn IVO • 't 1.•• .t.o"'" tJttteftt 1-ne11,.,1 1111.i111•• ""'"'• •nd '°''""" .,..... w w th JtaJJao-.-""' nc lU Chirve IW Office 'Tiit Ol"lll"'l If !hi lol'tt0r11t e"" ti TtlJUftroN tor !he 11\rtt V•t ri l1t1 ~st, panJUtl ftnlah IJ'fi 00 •ale. AltAll, .. LONG. Mt<UllY, "Htliel" Wit r11:onlld M JllM ,,, 1m. If lllltt rllll from ltlt 1bov1, trt ; NOM. 1865 HARIOR ILYD • .._ .. •••MAM a •••Ml 11 dltalm1n1""' 11m. 111 t11t .tnu ot ltlt 0.1 .. : J\lnl 1, 1•n. \l!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j F• tt ...._, eow.tr RtWW o1 or1111t C01Jntv. 11111.!R l'IAMl\.V 11 c A K Downtown Costa M ... 11...._, Mllll •vM.... J llCUlllT'\' Tint IMlURAMCE HOU5lS .... Ori.. COMPANY, • Cllll, corw•lk.n •• 541·5131 ,,...., I'*"-c.tl#Wllit ,_. I t TMI"' 'Tftnll"" Ki.]_ Lik t Ask And ~": •...w ::,=."v,~..-~ ::',i:~ M. "'tu wt _ C 0 y YOUR FULL SERVICE fURNrTURI! STORE -J\.~ OnMI: Cotll DlllY Pllft, J\I• Pllbl!llllCI Or•t111 (otsl D•llr PllD!. 'ubfhl'!e\1 °''"" Cotti Diii'!' p11o1., ______ _: ________________ .:_ ___ , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·· ,_ ,., '" ., 1m ttn.n J11114 n. » .,... """' 1, '" 1m 1w-11 Jl/IY 14, '"' ,.,...n • I • J J J J J; c .. VI M ; ' Colorful Ceremonies ORANGE COUNTY For The Record Dissolutio1as Of Marriage f'llMI J1,1M1 It W•rd, Su11nnt EUltbelh Ind Olton Le-~~enez, ROH Mtrlt:fl Pt~r k, Geor1111tt R. 1 tc.k on•. JCN1n Al • ..,, •rv ltr Jon11, R:ow Ml~t •nd owfJ\'1rl11 Aoue-rs. 811r blir1 J and Robert 'li.. , Proctor, Doro/1'1¥ iirtct tnd J1m-. Jay Ptlrtn, 8Nlr ct 11\d CharLet Ptyl S.n110n, Howtrd Or1vo 1nd EYthn Merv C1se:v1 Mtrlr, Strr11no tnd Bord ,\lien lltrtk , Chr st!ne L 11\d Mtrtln P. Quilts M.lr\I •nd~o G. nlei'. Lor• 1 R:ontl Vance ~ Va~lrnothv rltn 1~ Betty Sue J;tendoit, S.m M. i nd K11hl«n John•"r lur11tt, hlr11JY M. 11\d Robert C. 11lres, Mllf'Y Louin ind P1rrv LH "'I Evt+vn Mlly tnd Uwrenct All111 McAI Jltr. Cindy L •rid Bobby R•r Stvltf'SOl'l~Ol'lnll Jtne tnd JQl'ln Sl9:llrd AUltfl. o ,,. GI arid Mart111 wun1m H11ndMY, 1mel1 J11n ind W11 ev EllO-Fhed J1,1n1 :lit Feonlon, Gtorte V •. llnd S.r1h I. Jone1. Kl'IS!lne Marie I nd GHWrt """''" Donohoo. Clifford Lvl1 Ind Mt.1r1ll Jotn Brlna'l:ll Nttl H. Ind Clllfotd N. 81111 , Chlr1otltii Ind Hormln F, 1rr ll(V MM I 14 Et.11 ~ost1, Mary •!Id tr~ Fr1nr" J~ ltotimll'Y Ind Wllltrd "'"~ KlnlM'Y, Cllhlf'N Arll'l Ind JI~ A. E111ulv1t M.try E. llld Wllll1m E.1 olef.Ot i4'c •• RlchlrC11 Ind Chari.-L. l.>OflfWL Allllll 0 . lrld Rt.1Hlll W •. I "' Fr1ns. Jr .. H1rold J. llld J1'j1\M J. Monty, P111I J, 1nd Kllhlffn 1 1 BllhOP, Emm:ii l . Ind Edw1 L. M1uko, Vumlko Ind Ecfw1rd Jo1tpl'I RlddlH'", PlllP!'. B, and L.vnn1 E Colins, Cl.1111dl1. Lv nn Ind Robert WIV~ Ger11, Brtnd• Jciyc:1 1nd M1nuel AnttwnY 0'Brl'111 NMfe1n ICtrfoot Ind Jotln J°'tPn Htrd, Huthtr JI,,. ind SllY~ ICtnl V1l1nc11 Jotin Af111 1nd Roberti Georiun1 (1Ul1, Dlnlttll Ind J1mH WUDUr Henry, Lor1111 M. 1nd Ronald G. I.Iller Ronlld J . Ind J\ldv G. Heuef. P1trlcl1 LoulM 1rd Chlr\11 Edwtrd fioud, Oenn!1 M. 111d Alol1l1 A. , Jr., John Gllblf'l Ind ICelltV K. ,'r,,1 J1m1s Mien.II Ind Miry Leont HIU~ ck, J1me1 F. Ind 1-•llV M. R7:,;, B1rl)tr1 Jun1 F1 n and Robert $1mons G~ Emt.f" Ind M1ry Jotmit C~H, lllne T. Ind Cr1l1 C. $mlll'I Jr., Rtvmond Riv 1ild EYelvn El1l11e Trtvtrttten. J1ck P, Ind 81MY J Prlelt{ Clltllon EUMne Ind Get1kllne C~M Z1ntrUU. ShlrltV C. Ind J~Ph ~' Ttf'rll'll, Mk l'lffl I(, •r.: Lindi m. Wiiii, Jr .. J1m11 Wiii lln Ind Jtl'Wllllf 0e HIUtn JOOM. JltlrlY M. Ind Dtllll T~ Me11ner, Lindi G. Ind 0.Yld .... C11rrlco OOl'ln• and J1rne1 R. Stine, 1trrv L• Ray Ind Nancy Jo Bl1nco, Mar11 1nd Alfon90 Morllff, INbi'I •nd Jot R. Clay, NlllCY 1/ld (Jlrtncl L. i orrn, M1rl1 Ind Jost Rl<1;ew1y, SylYi. I/Id Wllltf' C!tlbtrt Holllf&. L1ver111 11141 Chl(le1 J, M.nnlnt, C\lnlhl• S. ind Ern11t R Edclln11, Rlcf\1rd LH and Lfl!da Mon· ll_fl Mlc1rtn1v, Lt11nd c. ind Lvnn1 ~~lc:alhrvn M. 1/ld J1rrv FOiier i 1>11rkn. T•rrv Lynne Ind D!Hltllll -~~ M;ru1 Florine. Ind Cl1rll'ICI ~:'av Curtl Incl Ella L. !'=;,,.,bird, An11f1n C. 1/ld ROiier 0 . 1 '(, Frnn1v1, ""-r111r1t A. •!Id Wiii 1m G~ee, Judl1'11 Ann and JOMPh MICl'lltl Alblll1r, Htnrv L~ 111d Kathy Lee Powtrl $1hler, w11111m H1mlllon Ind A.111 Mtrv •' Ward, Frtnk H. and B1rblr1 J, Fllld J•nt I }l1r1&n. P1ul1 Jotn Ind Htdrk.k How1rd M•r\tl!, Sharon Gill Ind Gtr1ld ,.;:::;:ff, (lrlllt """ and 01¥1d Irv· '"' 1 5nvoer, Q11rl 01rl1n1 and W11111m Thom IS Groo;1, Mire A.ltn 1nd S1ndt'1 KIV H11Lt, F1rrls Ind Ellllbllh N. • Tltc11t., W1lter L-~~ OOl'otl'IW1' A Nroo<1, v111rlt 11111 J.,..n 0. tt Death Notices qALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL DOME Corona del Mar m-NM Costa Mesa -• BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa IJ W4SS McCORMI& LAGUNA BEACH 1AORTUARY 1715 Lapna CUyon R4. -u PACD':i VIEtl MEMORUL PARK Ceme"'Y Morlnll'J UGO Pocl<;l'."~,. Drive Newport Jleacb, C•Ufanll '*"'°' P11EK 'AMIL Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7"1 Bolll Me. Weahobilller •·Im SMITRI' loaTUARY en Mm Ill. Dontlnstw Booch .,.._ .- 50 New Americans LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! Fomous U.S. Women Ski TNm Dlot During the noo-snow off season the U.S. Women's Al- pine Ski Team members go on the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20 pounds In two weeks. That's rlgbf -20 pounds In !( days! The basis of tile diet Is cbemical-food·actlolranll w .. devised by a famous·Colorado physician especlally for lhe U.S. Ski T~m. Normal energy is maintained (very Important) while reducing that way. It's a diet that Is easy to follow whether you work, travel or stay at home. This Is hon<!Uy a ·fantastically successful dlel II It weren't.· the U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn't be permltted to use Jt! Right? So, give yourseU the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose welgbt the scientific, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other diets, you owe it to your.ieU to try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That Is, U you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. Send only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Servlce)--Cash Is O.K. -to: Information Resources C.O., Dept. 19, P.O. Box 173, Encinitas Callf. 92024. Don't order unless you expect to lose 20 pc;unds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do! ANNOUNCEMENT FASHION J ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER SUNDAY SHOPPING The following stores ore now OPEN SUNDAYS for your shopping c:onvenlenc:e: 15. MANDEL'S SHOES I . AT·EASE 2. APROPOS 16. MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTS 3. BACK STREET 4. BATH SHOP 5. THE BROADWAY 6. BOB BURNS RESTAURANT 7. WALTAH CLARKE'S 8. COCO'S 9. B. DALTON 10. EL POCO 11. HAIR. HUNTERS 12. HATCH'S HALLMARK 13. KARLS TOYS 14. LANZ • 17. MUSIC HALL 18. NEAL'S SPORTING GOODS 19. C. PENNEYS 20. PHELPS MEAGER. ,21 . PAUL ALLAN SHOES 22. THE RIGGER. 23. RUSSO'S 24. SEE'S CANOIES 25. THE SHOW.OFF 26. SILVERWOOD'S 27. THE TOBACCONIST 21. VIKINGS FOUR. 29. YAMAT0'5 RISTAURANT SHOP THE OP&N·AIR, OCEAN-VIEW MALL " ' • ) ·" -- ' Frld<l)', Jury.14, 1Q72 ay sa e. • r1 Sale. 20o/o off all canvas shoes. Rugged cotton duck snollce!s with skid-resistant molded rubber sole and cushion Insole. Completely machine washable. White and colors. • Floor care sale. 15%off. Now'• a great time to clean up on savings. Choose from a great selection of upright ol-ra-that-beat,sweep-, - and clean all at one time. All- purpoae cannister cleaners with easy to store attachments. Shampooers, too. At 15% off, they're all just waiting to be sweptawayl t Select Penney Stor••· • Sale.Save.on ' ay. 111Gn's cotton knit polo. Now 21ors3 . Rog. 1.19. Stock-up! Al this price, you'll want one in every co lor. Combed cotton, Penn-Set• treated lo prevent shrinkage. Mach ine washable. S, M, L, XL · JCPenney ' The values are here every day. DAILY PILOT J J ' Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at th• following 1tore1: !FASHION ISLAND, Ntwport Buch. !HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntin~ton looch. •HARBOR CENTER, Co•i• M11• l•CloHd Sundoy). • - • , • .f. .. .- • ' • • ' JZ O~lV PILOT Frld11, J,ly 14, 1'712 \ Hughes Boys· Sto~k Biliionaire Acq uires 25% of Airlines Character f In Movie t. Wins Bail From Wire S<rvlces Ball has been aet' al !20,000 for a prison inmate wh01Se criminal career was the basis • for the Jl!Ovle "He W a1ked by Night." ' Solano County S u p e rl o r Court Judge Raymond J . Sherwin set the bail for Erwln M. ''Machine Gaa'' WJlker, 55, who was sentenced to ( PEOPLE ) death in 1947 for the June 1946 slaying of a Ca l ifornia Highway Patrolman In Los Angeles. Walker was granted a reprieve on the day of his scheduled execution, Aprll 15, 1949, after being declared in- BaJ'le. Subsequently, then Gov. Edmund G. Brown commuted the sentence to life Im· prisonment. Last August, Judge Sherwin ordered a new trial because Walker had made In· 1 criminaUng statements againat himself involuntarily at 1tbe time of his arrest. * Actor Eddie Alber! has been appointed conservator of his 11 mollier, Julia Heimberger, 86, ~· hospitalized. after a series of strokes this year. 1 Superior Court J u d g e :1 Norman R·. Dowds a1SQ agreed in Los Angeles to allow AJbert, ~' to sell his mother's house. "" Albert estimated-cost cor-ner " care at $6,000 monthly.· lJ Mrs. ,Heimberger's estate, ~. lncludink that of her late hus- r. band, Frank, is valued at more than f!00,000. * 'l Sevent~ear-old Kathy St. 6 J ohns of Uos Angeles was · .. crowned "Miss World Teen il Princess or 1972" in West Berlin. -· Roya Reuhanl Mogaddam, MANAGUA.NI car a cu a (AP) -Honnl Hu;hm bu acquired offlel•Dy :II percent of the stock In Nicaraguan Airlines in exchange for two Coovair 880 plane$. Hughes Tool Co.· reprtteJ>< taUves negotiated w1lli the airDne for several ' montlJI before reaching an agreement, Guillermo Sevilla So m o 1 a , Adnrttted arelal• f::f thnl Julr Jt.1m lhea tll• au••••• - o:r9 llCfomhled up .mD --- general manyer of the con> pany, anDOUfctd, Earner 11111 year, Hughes -to MallagtU. to dl!cu.u the mat!« personally wtth Gen. An:maslo So mo z a Deboyle, then prtsidenl ol ,Ndragua, and a ma j o r shanhoider In the airline. The airline will utend Ill routes to .Panama, Puerto MAKE ROOM PALLY! SPACE SA'fii TORMTABLES 44c A boon. truly til a boon. (Lon dat fµnny wotd). Makes it ao you can bring things up to the front without dumping the cupboard. Twm · TORI TABLES And this d0.1 double what tho othor dooo. Nie• for little spice cans, a nd things. . GUDUWAY STORAGE DRAWER .. They always build deep cupboards no one can get to the .back of. Thia is to outwit that weird builder. . 1sa ·······16;·-of·-Jran-··was-·second····and ·-··· · Emmi Hoder, 16, of Israel 1------------..;.. ____ ;.;j third in a field of 29 finalists from as many countries. * Actress Rhonda Fleming and her former husband, producer H"ll Bartlett, were sued for $J35,000 by a Florida millionaire who said he was defrauded of money he in- vested in BarUett's movie "The Sandpit Generals." The suit filed at Santa Monica by GleM W; Turner said he had been talked out of his rights to the film after a disagreement with Bartlett over Turner's objection!' to "VU;Igar and profane,' language in th: script. \ Kurl Waldheim, Jbe U.N. secretary-general, has found a home. ' A wealthy New Yorker, Arthur A. Houghton Jr., 65, Is donating his town house in fashionable Sutton Place for Waldheim's use, informed sources said. Houghton, president o I Steuben Glass in New York Ci- ty and a director of Corning Glass Works In Corning, N.Y., will give the property to the U.N. Association of the U.S.A. The Asaoclation then will sell It to the United NaUons, the -reported. *' Rfct Behan, at 24, I h e youngest grand juror in Marin Gewlty history, has been ar- rested .. ner tbe state Supreme Coor!· rel used to hear bis ap- peal from a contempt of court citation. Beban was cited for co~ tempt by a Marin County superior Court judge after be failed to return bl& copy ol. a speolal grond jury report ea an alleged irolfic arrest qoiola system In Sausal ito. • ~ •• 4119 --~ -·- .lltl 409 CLEANER Works on some pretty tough wall marks. Works on almost anything. but Uncle Herky's red nose. ' 55c ' LOMllAPKll . . . Dl$PEJISER , . Hoerl for tho tablo. Now the wlnd can~t blo"' thom all aniund •tJWroom. ·39c T.S.P •. Wallo i hould bo washed down with it first before painting. ·Insure you don't waste good paint. 18~01. J\ICO, and Cautornta, I ewntually to Europe, Sevilla &lmoza lald. It now 1'J po-and frelgbt rouie1 from Managua to Millfll, . Mcxlco City, San Salvador ind 1;;;. ... San1'eclro it1"• Honduras. ! ,!""pony )tock la owned by J -illaiobolders, but the ...... _ So-family ancr the ~ gove-have the majority "lll£V Ntvll 1AE/11101d1ii>-T - lnteresi. ~ lllE'te NOT l>ll!TV·MINDEP 1 • UTIQUE cm.DIG BEAMS SFT. 5.97 ' 8 FT. 7.97 · So·nallatk,.but IO light and oa1y to , work '!'Ith. No nailing or big cioaJ •• lnatallatlpn. BWS ANODJzED ALBMIJIUM MAIL SLOT • If it's nicer looking does it mean you'll get more mail? (yeh. more bills). I llEWt PLAIK ROSEWOOD J77 Thia 11 er special purchase and It i1 beeyoooteeful. The· grain is fa ntastic. we don't know how much of it we'll get. so come in thi s week. • SPECIAL PURCHASE ASTRO HAMMOCK Th• whole world should h«Y• one and we could let th• politicia ns try to talk us out of th•"" bah. 9'' \· l . 8x24 •• 99 8x36 .1.33 8x48 . l .66 COLORED SBEL'911G Jn A voca:do. Orange, or Yellow. 10x36 1.66 10x48 .1.99 12x36 1.77 12x48 ·· 2.33 mEGOOD lxl2 PUIE SHELYUIG -17c You lmow our store Is 90% quality and about 10% junk. ao we'd rather run the boat, okay? • CO.RD 0 MATIC UIDY UfiBT REEL ' Always roadr t~ g~.;Ju1t rool lt out and switch it On: No more . tangled Of cul c9rd on th• floor. 5'7 r ,.,,.,_ MATEX LAMPS P.O .... 371 ......... prit't ,.. , ..... , ....... ,,.,." _ l"TA. S-k• ci.M. (Wdlll. ,...,.. """ Gl ...... 'I ""'ti IC.., ,_. ,,.. ...a · c-•-c.t. mu TAMPICO UTJQUE BWSEmY LOCK SET Fancy finish. with tho dead-bolt. Safe and purty. 29°~ 'METRIC TAP & DIE SET ·· 6'' Star! thl.nking. "Lit~r. Meter. and Ello.'' It' a the war .and ao easy to· do the math. ("A min la as good as a lllomotro '1. CUS'J'.OM SPORT 'WHEEL GRIP 2s1 Very sporty. I put one on my '39 Lasalle. painted tho car candy apple red, with twice pipes. and "La Bomba'' • on the aide. Fantaltico. AUTO BIKE CARRIER 711 Hook lt on in sec:onds, can carry two bikes. And you can toaa it in the trunk whe11 yQa..get the ... IO·lt doun't get ripped otf. _ TIRE PUMP Chooplo. but It works (wow, It works, It works}. For the kids bike or if you want to tackle the car llaL good Jue.It MIANWHILI ••• J Back at Bellflower we keep a'building I , • • • • • • Andy, 14 months, le«rn s t~ keep his bal<1nce with the help of Ulla Holmes ~ (at leff). -7'.1>ove, sne makeS"'him ~ola ' his head up to maintain the proper pos it ion for crawling.' Pushing and Shoving By LAURIE KASPER they don't make it. But sometimes, with her legs out from under her without fall· °' "'-0.1" 1"11tt st•H professional and family guidance, they~do 1ng. AU of a sudden from .nowhere, it catch up. • · • i Seeing, is, a inaJOr p&rt of a child's seems, 1comes a jingling sound against Four infants, who range in age· ~m developmental • ~ience. Sight .ahow\ the ears, a shove at the sbopl!Jers or a six to 20 months, are participating in a the noMnat childtwhat sitting up i! .•. but tug on the ann. program just begun at the center. in May the blind child, lacldng the ability to be It couldn't be explained because it to aid the visuaJly impaired Infant from shown, must be -placed in the Witioo. wasn't comprehended Oeyond the simple birth to three years old . t0 'catch up ao • r-.., . aensation of hearing or feeling. he can enjoy a more normal 1ife. The blind child won't' crawl because he What happene<I wasn't expected No other place in Orange County pr<>-· doesn't know. where he's going. : :if be because it wasn't see!J. vides in-depth rehabilitation· se~i~s for t knows there's.somewhere~to· . It was frightful. And this was told to these infants, Mrs. Hershman said. He also bas a Poor idea body im- everyone else out there with a baby's "Since learning and development sta'rt age'. Mrs. Hen:hman ~· . Wbil~ 1o·~r scream. Very soon, tears would flow in at birth, and sight nonnally p}ay~ ~n ba~1es are ~b!Dg, pu1bing ~ pmchmg union with the hollering. essential role in these p~sses. 1t 1s thell' own bodies as well as things around Although the reaction Is a natural one, vital to the sight-leprived child that he them, the blind child doesh't. It's not considered "nonnal" simply experience other averlues Of learning as He doesn't socialize wPll either since he because the infants being shoved and early as possible." ls not aware ep00gh yet to sort out all tugged at are blind. 'nlese children have 00 retardation, the sounds be hears. Such disturbance$ in these children's deafness or physical .handicap to com-Pt.Ir!. Hershman and Ulla Holmes work dark worlds are needed to help them with the children individually twice a develop as normal children. plicate their lack of sight. week, once in..the pool, sometimes inside All children have certain milestones at But Andy, 1' months, just Je~med to the center and .other times on the grau . -·--· · ~~'-''"J····-·H'~~""'"" -sinm b• himself and sUll does not crawl or sand. · · a certa111 age, exp1dU.lcu ean tmmnU:U1, • .. r ,, . · director of occupatiooal therapy at the , ~unna. 8 months, doesn 't hold her head They givf the children the different en· Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center. Up and so when she attempts to sit up, vironmental expefienctS' "to see bow But, she said, if a disability is superim-She topples over. they react to them and let them get an posed on them, they usually ate delayed Connie, 2, sits on her knees by herself idea of as many things in nature as there in meeting these mile.stones. Sometimes b~t she hasn't figured out yet how, to pull are." · -· Blind babies must be guided through developmental stages. Shaunna, 8 months, is helped by Jean Hershman. ,, BEA ANDERSON, Editor All ·Part of · the Game \I ' ' . ' As Ibey g.t older,. they will begin to associate with thest differing en- viromnentl and underaand the concepts .of the. Jan1uale\ r-1be1 .will eventually · Jeam. Finger llllll~,J"""h·k "Ibis JitUe piggy went to tbe D11fkett'~ are to assist the children in ·deVelopifig a better image of their bodies.' ' ; . Motion is imJ.rtani:m ~therapy. If a child bas falld. several Umes before, he wlll be ·afraid of it. Gentle lugs and shoves are meant ·to unbalance the children so they will Jwn lo rqain jl themselves. They are put in precarious positions because "they need to. know what they can do 'with It," Mrs., Hershman said. This is starte<.f at an early age because 0 the Jater you start, more fear bas been bulll around things which are unfamiliar to them." When they attempt ·to crawl, their heads are held up or' irms straightened even though they resist: Bells are put around ,their wrists or maybe.I-heir feet to call their attention to these parts of their bodie1. . J ' Doily Pilot Photos by LH Payno ( The .jarring jingle bells are meant to sharpen ~Jia~nna'a ~11ri.n9..· Actually, most of the therapeutic \vork ls '1just normal play behavior," the department head said. Parents, however, are hesi~nt to "'·ork with Uieir children thJs way, afraid tha t jhey wlll push them loo far. Three of the blind infants are their parents' first child. All their parents arc young. Most, having no experience raisin~ olberchildren, don't know what to expect at•wbat age, Mrs. Hershman explained. And any parent, she pointed out, would be protective against the child 's natural explorations and natural ,,..rltlmber of bwn)>s and bruises. Parents, tiowever, are included as a basic factor in the program. They orten watch the therapists so they know how to continue working with their child at home.1 Sometimes, they work with the child at the center while the therapists watch . Parents are encouraged to let the child do as much self-care as possible, like pull off his shoes and pull down his pants while dressing or wash his hands. Monthly evening meetings are held so • p<irents can talk with each other or the psychologist, obtain inforrilation about blindness and resources which are available 1n the community and plan for the future. · After the children become three yean old, there is a Braille Institute preschool program available tor them. Another important part of the pro- gram . Mrs. Hershman said, Is for the mothers just to sit out in the lobby and talk with each oth er while thei r children are with the therapists. Often they get together fdr coffeecr This, she said, ser\'es as ''emotional reinforcement" for the mothers. It's not by chance that each or the children in the program have the sam• doctor. He actually sta rted it by calling the center· and asking if there were such a program available for his patients. The staff discovered there was none in the area so t4'ey decided to start one. Others may join the program, for which there is no charge although parentl are asked to donate what they can, but the infant must be referred b)l ~ doctor and undergo the in.iUal lntakt i(l- te rv1ew and audiological testing . ' ' - - W . DAIL V PILOT ' rrtdif, Jul1l4.1972 1 Lured to Luau : A Polynesian dinner, dancing and entertainment ls the three-course bill of fare '·l being prepared by the Huntington Beach Chapter, American Association of Re· \ired Persons. The luau is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. Saturday, Jul y 22 in lhe Huntington Beach Moose Hall. Jn an Island mood for the party are J~rry ,.Nordquist and Mrs. George Kirchoff. :i. " 'GOP Press Assistant i :Reveals Inside Story By JO OLSON Of lh1 0.llY ~Hot Slfff The inside story of politlcs is Often more interesting than the parts told by the media. •• Zan Thompson, pres,, assis- lant for the Republican Na- ;tional Committee. offered a 1ew "fop level party secrets" .durh;ig her t.11lk on Women in ;Politics for the Irvine Coast :Republican Women's Club. Federated, in the Pa r k Newport •pa. . For instance: There's a special gate at Los 'Angeles International Airport where she sneaka in to pick up visiting politicians and govern· ment figures, circumventing traffic and confusion. She can borrow a helicopter (undisclosed 1 our c e ) if necessary to move dlgnltarle1 from meeting to meeting. Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. B. Morton, 6 feet 8 inches tall, has his own special limousine when he's i n Southern Cali!omla. other cabinet memb er t and • .,,,~,] presidential aides drive their own cars while vis!Ung, and sometimes she has to drive and excerpt speeches at the same time. BRIGHT BRIEFCASE Zan, 1 A vivacious redhead who w•ara, chunky rings and carries a brightly striped briefcase, and whose purse is jammed with large botUea 91 perfume and hand lotion, seema an unlikely person to be taking top-level politicians to television appearances and planting publicitr releases. but htr qualificetio~ it:e sterling. She earned a bachelors degree In English from Mount St. Mary 's College, wrote for Mademol<;elle magazine for 15 years ("until I wes over age for the market"), authored a newspaper column for 12 years and did publicity for motion pictures. "Public relations is half horse sense and hall good manners," she demurred . ~'It's knowing somettllng about deadlines and liking people." She also kidded that sbe ma· jored in English to "make up for my low grades in the life sciences." Zan Thompson picks up 'top level secrets' as GOP National Committee press woman. done her 1 favor by waiting so long to call. If a government ()fficlal is making a West Coast visit, &he will talk to his aide, find out what times he will be available for meetings and press conferences and arrange to pick him up at the airport. Then she will calJ television or radio stations or newspapers, trying to take best advantage of his time. the day and are very relaxed with cocktail• and h o r s d'oeuvres. T h e actreS&-lurned-pres.s assistant, whose flair for the stage ts still evident in her manner of speaking, said her job Is "Jots of fun.'' "I love politics a n d 'journalism. and I have the best of both worlds ," 11he Ctlf\o- cluded. ;'I've been terribly lucky." Dear Mom: Thanks for Home Peering Around DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am wrllln& this letter becawe I can't llleep. I'm loav!n& bclna to111011ow and wtl1 pn>I> ebly bo ,..,. • loo& time. &tJddoal7 I realiud whit home me&n1 to me and what it means to have a mot.her. lo lllMll ll10pl lo buy cllU and IOUV.nin. U...Uy they arrive in droves just u the tun 1oes down. or whtn It be:ginl to rain. ••-•••-••_, Thi1 creates 1 bottJeneck bec1111t peo- ple don't uH: common aense. Here are 10me almple rules to help e11e, U not e.llmlnate, some problems: In 1plte of the hard time abe iul• pven me (and thooe I have rtven my1elf ) I know that one day Mom will not be here. Until tonight I 11<•'( flopped to coDJlder that -iblllty. I hope every :routh out there who will be leaving home IOOll, whether It'• cou.,e, a job, the wvtce, or Jull to spilt -wUI let his mother know bdore ht 1ot1 what 1be means to him. By th< Ume thl• appears In th< popel (tl it dOOI) l will have hlt tht road to get "')' head tot..i.er. If l had not written 1h111 letter my mother would Uke to thJnt that l did, 10 I'll buu olr without algnln1 it. A few thouund other mother• would like tn think their ..., or daUfbt« wrote it, too. So call me -LOVE AND PEACE P.S. J U&ed to read your column and snicker bec1uae I w1s sure tbOle Jetter• w.ere phonY.~ .H~e·1 O(le Ann Lander• didn't make up. DEAR LOVE AND PEACE: U yoa "' this In tM PIP"' -w~re\fer YOll are - . plea1e drop • "llae 1ad let me know if you 1ot yoar head · tocetMr and lie• you're mlkhl11t. DEAR ANN LANDERS : l know you are buay with aerioul problema but mine .. 11 belJ!nninl to 1et to me. It'• m1 mother. ~·· a wondertul penon and •veryooe lo•ea her, but 1be can't set a name straight. Whtn the kids come ovtr (the .. me tlda 1he'1 been aeein& for yeara), ah< calls them by th< WN>nl names. Arthur 11 "Arnold,'' Larry i1 "LtMie" and Vernon ii "Bernle." Then 1ht calla me by my 1lster'1 n.ame even though 1he 11 looting ltrai&ht 1t me. Mom •• 45, too Youns to be tenile. The lddJ never HY an)'tblna but 1t'1 em,. barrwing. Any au11eationa! RE!l- FACED IN REDLANDS DEAR RED: Wiit tall YOll're 45 aad let's lff ffw weU YOU do. hi tbe meu- dme, .make Hp& of it wt.ea 11N calls Artluir "Anlolcl." Say, "Mom, AnMtld jut left -this It Arti.ur." DEAR ANN LANDERS : The vacation ieason ii here a11i.n. Nearly half of Atl\erica will ht packing up to 10 someplace this month and nut. After 20 years of operating a beaCh reaort I've decided we are rapidly becomin1 a na- tion of 1lobo. l refer apecillcally to people who 10 In- J. Hive your money ready. Don't wait lo be served ind then start digging 1round In the bottom of your handbag. You know you're 1oin1 to hive to pay for . the merchandise eventually. 2. Decide what you want be.fore you 11k the 1alesperaon to ht.Ip you. Moet ltem1 ire on diaplay tor thi11 purpo!e. 3. Return merchAndlse to the proper bin, hook or shelf. 4. Readln1 m1terial i! taped lo the out· aide for a reason. Don't brtak open pack· aged articles. 5. Don't jam the l..ialea wtllle aocializ· Ing. 8. Report dirty bathrooms to the mana1ement We'd Hke to enjoy your vacation. too. Please help us, -KURE BEACH, N.C. DEAR BEACH: ThanU for the Sure Kure. I hope U works. Even If drinking is the "in" thing In your crowd, It needn't crowd you out. Learn the fact! from Ann Landers' booklet. "Booze and You -·For Teenagers Only." Send 35 cents in coin and a long self·addreeed, stamped envelope to the DAILY PILOT with your request. Easy-to-tote Menu Ideas Free Hostess To avoid clluppa!Dtment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedtllng atones with black and white flossy r.boto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT ~omen 1 De- partment one week before tho wedding. A ..nea of IUl1Ul1ef pro- l"am& pared to e.,y~ menu ideas wtl1 be preoenl<d by Ms. Can>! Heini, bome economist for Southern Call. fomia Edison Co. p.m.: WedJleoday, Aug. t. lO :l> a.m., ·and Thursday, Au1. 3, 10:30 a.m. We1tmin1ter Council Chambers: Wednesday, Aug. 9. 7:30 p.m. and Thursday, .Aug. t, 10:30 a.m. Pictures received after that ttme will nol be used. For engagement announcements It II tmperative that the ltory, also accompanied by a black and white glony picture, be sub- mitted si:r weeks or more before the weddbtg date. II deadline Is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed-din~ and engagement stories, forms art available Ill all of the DAILY PILOT cttices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section stall members at MU321. Your Horoscope Tomorrow · Recipes are prepared in ad· vance -;o the bosteu can enjoy 1n outing, too . Schedule of free pro1rams include Costa Mesa Council Chambers, Tuesday. July 18, 7:30 p.m. and Wednesday, Ju· ly 19, 10:30 a.m.: Island Houae, Fashion I s t a n d , Wedne!day, July 26, 7:30 p.m. and Thursday, July 7:1, 10:30 Lm. Sul Beach Great Watem Sav1n&s: Tuelday. Aug. l, 7,30 Fountain V1Uey Community Center: Monday, Aug. 14, 7:30 p.m. and Tuesday, Aug. 15, 10:30 a.m. El Toro Edison Office: Wed· nesday, Aug. 16, 7:30 p.m. and Thursday, Aug. 17. 10:30 .a .m. Murdy Park Community c.nw: Tuesday, Aug. 22 . 7o30 p.m. and Wednesday, Aug 23, 10:30 a.m. Capricorn: Concessions Given SATUli.OAY JULY 15 dele1ate dutie1. Cooperate concerning yourself now with w' I t h caprloore Individual. detaila. A clo~-door meeting Build on aolld blse. Shortcut concems you. lltsult.. wlll ht By SYDNEY OMAllll metOOi will not auHico. Be favorable. -·~~edperto11116~~joy .. btin~ observant, aware of details. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): •w•~N 1iY -· Don t CANCER (June it.July 21): Friends may be Involved tn practical m e valuating character and potential. Some lndlviduals simply cannot live up to your standards. Know it -plan accordingly. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcll 20 \: ROXANNE Riggins. daugh· ter of ·~1r. and Mrf. Earl F. Rigg in!! ot Corona del Mar, graduated rrom Conline11tal Airlines hostes~ I r a I n I n g 8chool. She Is based out of Los Angeles tn1ernational Airport. WHILE oo e trip with fellow members or &chelors, a charitable organi1.ation o ( 11ingle people from Newport Beach. Mrs. Jean Reeve of Brentwood and William D. l\1urdock of Bel Air were mar· ried In Honolulu. They will tour the F'iji Islands, New Guinea. New Zea I a n d , Australia and Acapulco before returning home. September Date Set Carole Essrcs will become the bride of Roger Hatlen dur· ing Sept. 2.1 nuptia~ in the Trinity Lutheran Church, San- ta Ana. Their parent!! are l\1r. and Mrs. Han")' Essre.s of Hun- tington Beach and Mr . and Mrs. Ordean Hatlen -e,! Santa Ana . ' The future bride Studied et Golden West College and her fiance is a graduate of Sad· dleback High School. Pesticide Warning NEW YORK (UPl\-Read labels carefully before using any peslicide. Even if it's a brand you've used for years. check the l11bel because proclucl f o r m u I as change and improvt'. If any is spilled accidentally on skin or clothing , wa s h sk i n thoroughly 1vilh "'arm water and soap and remo ve clothing. The Soap and Detergent Association savs if I h e clothing is w<1Shable, irs a good idea to launder it im· mediately itnd apart rrom other clolhing. Fence Me In''\"is apt to be the. Hold oil on journey. Attend to dispute. Steer clear. maintain th~e IO~ for ~·~Ives of this matten at hand. Ont who neutral 1tanct. Feeling of todiaca.111,n. Jt snot eaay to made promise may not be in being "closed in" is tem· 16110 Getfl•rtl St. ~: J:cew:· t'b~ ~t ):!°!1~ position to keep it. Arle1 is in . porary. You will soon have ~~.N~~':t·~.~l~t ~~;~ •• c ... ~ .... .,,_-l A nu me re1poru:ibility. Outline policy. Sight goal. Give at· tention to mate, partner. picturt. Pl1y cards close to greater freedom of expression. 1,.0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0iii.i~ Taurus ia generally con-chest. Don't tell all you know. Know it 1nd ad like you know II terVative, attractive to op-Put puule piects together. it. pooite ae1. determined and LEO (July 2J.Au•. :t2)o Take SAGITTAlllUS (Nov. 21-1t.eadfasl Taurus enjoys the -Check uir buica of life, pref en practical new steps in new directions. Dec. 21 ): req ementa . arrangements and lovea deep-Maintain stance o f in-What appean an obstacle ty. Some rimous penons born dependence. Avoid tendency to could be fine opportunity. Be under Taurus include .William be utravagant. Have fun but analytical. Dig deep (or Don RI I --..1 ,__ don't break recent resolutions. reason 1. Re 1 e ct t he :~er. ck es aiN ,flol1ue Mnsa1e will become m. su~rliciaJ. Someone may be cre1sinsly clear. Another Leo trym1 to se~l you proverbial AlUES (March 2l·Aptll l9)o Buie i.mles dominate. Home, family and·· security 1 re spotlighted. Check tendency to be tense. Means relax. You need change or pace. Get coopention from loved one. You can do work you enjoy. Do so! Taan11 and Ubra are involved . ~ TAURUS (April :ZO.May 201 : Is involved. Brooklyn Bndge. VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 21): CAPRICORN IDec. 21.Jan. You asked for certain op-19\: Tread lightly. Avoid ex- portunitles. Now, you receive tremes. You gain most now them. Key is to be: unhurried. through diplomacy. Negotiate Analyze and evaluate. Give differences. There is common full play to intuitive. intellect. ground. ·vou won't have it all One bom undei' Aqaarl111 your way. Howevu, you will could play significant role. make progreaa and be granted LlllllA (Sept. 13-0ct. 21): con<:e!llons. Be verulile. Sodalbe and AQUAJUUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. diJplay aenae of humor. See II): Avoid aeeinl peroons on\y ~jed u a whole rather than in ldeoliatlc Up t. Be realiatic, You are now able to pull in reins of bud&et. Do so .volun- tarily. Pl1ca individuaf is in· volved. Be a comptri.son lhop- pu. Don't jump at first offer. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii!ijll Protect. asset&. Don't .ell yoursell short. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Be ready for •dded pressure, reaponsibillty. Doo't negltct or ~tANNERY WATERFRONT omcE SPACE DAILY PILOT Snapshot Contest leading to Kodak lnternetional Newspaper Snapshot Awards IKINSA '72) Competition Rules: 1, The confe1t i1 •frictly ••r '"'•+tor sihoto9r1ph1rs (A11 ll'l'lt• *'"" I• lllefinM ti '"' wh.o11 hoibv or 1voc1tio11 i1 siicf11rt ·l1kin9 11'MI who 111011 1101 m1ke tny 111b1t111ti1I si1rt of hi1 livi119 thro119h t1kl119 pictvre1 I. J, l leck.1nlll·wftit1 er color piclur11 liken 1fter July I, 1971 •t• eli9lbl1. No picluttl ll'llY b1 111terecl by 111y 1rnploy1 cf the DAILY l'ILOT or by 111y i11cl ivicl u1I who pe11on1lly i1 1nlf1t1cl i11 011 "''nufechire, 11le, CIM1t1e rci1I fin i1hi119 or prof111 io111l 1111 ef phefo9r1phic 9oecl1. J, S111111heh ll'lly be t1k1n with 111y m1k1 of c•m•rt, 011 111., ~rtntl of fi.111'1. Ne 1rtwork er r1touchi119 i1 p1 rmitt1cl 011 11191· t1ve1 It prtnh -ne compo1!te plctvrtt, mull iplt tJpo1ur11 er multiple prh1t in9. 4. Any nuMber •f pictures ll'llY bt 111l1recl . Co11lttl1nt'1 n1rne, atltlre11 i nti pho11e\ nu,..btr """' b1 writt111 cl11rly on the btck of etch l'icfure. Meil or tleliwer pri11h er tr1n1p1r111ci1t to: The La Habra resident star· red in "The Drunkard" while she was in college and af- terwards, when her husband was overseas in World War II. playing the \earl the last five . years and understudying the '.first seven. EARLY CALU! If he is in Los Angeles early, he can be on the Ralph Story show. From 10 a.m. to noon "Tempo'' is available. and at 5:40 p.m. a live, seven·minute spot Is open on a new1 pro- gram . vmGINIA'S SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE A cemfortahle ·Cape Ced office \,ulldin t ever .. 1••~~"9 small-boat sailing scheol. Ent•r thru •i9llt foet doers to herrln9bone pat- tern fey•r, vi•w ep•n truss Hams and funky old cell· ln9 fan. Up 2 st•ps a th• plush carpet, air cenelltien·' lnt I \,1ck9reund music relax the sen•••· DAILY PILOT Sn1p1het Cont11t Editor, II. 0 . 101 15110, Cotti M111, CA, 92626. ( E11tri11 c111 bt h111cl -deliwer1cl te 111y DAIL y PILOT effic1, but mu1t be phy1ic1lly in h111d !11 thott offic1t by tla1lllH110 e1ch wee .. I Conl11t offiti1l1 r111 rv1 !ht rlthl lo c1rry over late 1nlrle1 for Jud9i119 frot11 0111 w11k It the n11! 111d to a1clutl1 fram jutlt inf 1lto91th1r 1ny 111trl11 rectived lilt i11 the f!n 1I weok. • Zan's typical day begins at 6 ;a.m. "if the boys (I n 1 Washington) have shown any '.restraint." It's 9 a.m. there :and she said they're ready to ;do business and figure they've If the man bas enough stature. an editorial board meeting of the Los Angeles Times may be called. These. she noted, are at the end of """" .1~ 1~1-1 t 1 PM • 10 ~ ............. JR ........ .lu4y 11 L.-t 0..,, N09ft • I 1tM . ...a .... , ........ K. ........... .. Din, Door,._• MllllllllOll IL71 • ~ ..... 11 ,.- I 3334 E1st Coast Hwy. • Coron• dal Mer Phone 6 73-8050 SALE Fashions By The Yarcl ' ON SAVE i TO -l QUALITY NOVEL TY FABRICS • llASTll CHA"' T 1n1nts I cll•nts will enjey vlewlrt t the French ,orceleln fir1pl1c:1 a h1ncl1om• can'acl Au1trl1n Wet lar, set am id _the live potted 1reen1ry. Rare eld c:ellin9 plates, heevy woH moulcllnt• I 1t•ln 9l1ss blended with a nti~ue cemmode1, old mlrren Ir. palntin11 e4d up te 1 relaxin9 waterfront work environment. All 1m1ll effices furnishecf In 11usa~le" vlnt11e decor lrell l,.•p• etc.). From $110 (•I utir.tlea lnclutl.dj UNION WHARF &: PLANK WALK COMPANY 2114 Lofoyette A.., 675-1210 ,, I, No bl1ck01Ml•white pichir11 will be r1furn1d. Conl11finf 1P1111t ~ 1ltle lo furnhh th1 eri9in1I llttlffYe, If r1qu11ltcl by the Conf•tl Etll .. r. Tlle DAILY 'ILOT ••tu"''' no r11,ontl\,lliy fir ""'tivtt a, l'tintt. COLOJI: P•IHTS Ort SLIDES WILL IE RE. TUJl:NED ONLY If ACCOMPAN IED IY A STAM,ED SELf. ADDRESSED ENVEL01L ' 6. Cont11t1ntt t t• permltt.111 ta 1110mll pict11r11 lo enlv ona 1e•t1'1pot ,,,titi1'1ti111 ltt th e K1d1k l11tern1!10111I S~ipihot Awortlt. 1. 11 111 •litlllle for t loc1I t t111tl ptltt, 1 cont11f111! P!luit 1i91t 1 tf1foP111nt th1t the plclur•. ar 1n1lh1r clottly tlP11i11r 11ic• tvre 1f the ''"'' tubjec.t or 1il"1tl1n, hit 111! Me11, inti will •of l>o 111ter.tl It., hiM in 1ny 1th1r co11t11t i nti will nat be offerttl far ,11lllic1tia11 ta lflY 1"UOllctti1n 110! co11n1ctotl with thit C.n .. il I. IMPOftANTt le ""' you ~now ih1 "'"''' tl'lcl •Jd,,,,,; of •llY r•totttit1bl1 p1r1ont •l"P••rint ln your 1"lclvr1, Thl1 Ii 111u111ry Hc1111e, i11 1rtltr f1r it te bo '"''''' In lht n1tlonel iu•tlnf , yau Mutt k 1llle f1 t •I tht written con11nl of 111ch pat•011 or ,.,.•n1 lor #lair 10911 tu•rtll1111, In th e c1111 of Mltta"l +. ltOrMlt uta of tht ,.lctur• fat th1 purpott 1f lll111h•· flo11, 1CYorfhi111 •r pulillc.1tl1n f11 111y ""'""''· • • Enter Every Week , July 2 Through Aug. 26 DeaclRne Weclnesclay Noon ' • DICK TO"CY TUMBLEWEEDS HOW MANY MEMl1fll5 . PO VOU HAVE IN YOUR NEW TRl~E TO PAn:, L01SA LUCK? l.t .. 5Cftl68lr.. Scft!88Lf t ' . ... .. .... MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY MY UNCLE OPENED A Ml'5 TRVINO TO R£Ml!MNR TMeHI WE +lAVE COM& "Tt> SHOW YOU +loW"Tb SERVE YoURFELLOW MAN/ FJ/£:1!5:;•:,_-.:: .. I VllAll, Ml! SAID I llUCJGIO MIM. Iv Al Smitli By Dale H• by Emie Bushmiller ' I SIGN ~-,,,,_--...._ TERRl9LE-·- HE CAN'T UNDERSTAND IT HIS PRICES ARE .LOWER THAN ALL THE OTHER 5 /IJN SHOPS SHOP HOW,15 BUSINESS'? ACROSS 1 Cain's brothtr 5 Exc:tllenct 10"' 14 Atrlw 15 Urgency 16 Noted esSl)'lsl 17 Ottply absarbtd' • 18 Ont who p1;tyS a rolt 19 -lndi!s 20 Prayer 22 Unproductive 24 English country ftsllval 2.5 R!duces lo • bankruptcy 27 Follow a wind· Ing COUrH 29 Groups of three of ant killd 32 Box office s~: Abbr. 33 l'9f'lda.oy bl~ 34· SIU119lshorss J6 """' .40 Arab sulllnatt 42 Track of M anlmal 44 -Wolf•: Flcllon31 dtlfctivt 45 Claw of prtdatory animal '47 Undtrsll'faces of lttl 49 Douglas - 50 Kr?OCk SZ In stilt of drclll!ll .54 Head Aloi Cir1.:llan "'°''"" 58 Lns lllOlsl .59 ~· l"Cluct 110 Shflltttd ' .... '2 hssa}t 115 hnHatlon: .... '7 Hotd tmployee 6'9 Kind of fabric 70 Gan;stt1'1 • f1male companion: """' 71 Frtneh schoct 72 Outside: Prtfht 73 Prnldtnt: .. ~. 74 St•!ks 75 Sltualtd far in DOWN l Tip: Codi. f«m 2 Wiid hog .) Relylng ig>an obslfVltlon 4 Slacktns: ,_, S TV st1tlons: lnlCl'llll ""'" 100,000 In Inell& 7 Dog in "The Thin Man" ''""" outbsl 9 World-: Annual spurts .. ~. 10 Mab with ntt'dle ind ..... 11 llr11t 1$ I defense 12 Part of a ....... ,,,.,.,......,. 21 lJibrlatts 23 lord lndlcat.1119 .,,,,., .. 26 Causn to · ..... 28 l..u!ch bcur, generally 29 Glilt bttwffn • ftlkMllM 30.,_., c•pltal Jl Rriaalned '""'' JS-out: Sri one's putt 37 --'''''" 38 Eller11d Isle 3,-ot: -d 41 f'attm tepdtdas typl"I 43 Puls Into • dtffertnt cortalntr .. """"""'' necwssity ... Lmntln. '""' ,51 Gtlmnc:ts 5) Knocked daft 54 Neattn ant's Appflllnc:I 55 Hin" S6 -Grifflt~: • •lddltwtlghl -· . 57 Be illfttted ........ 61 P"hnl lkt """ 'lPlact~ soiwtblng '111'11 64 DrtM control b6 Colltplillfl!t., tllllfks of a sort: 1;;to;i.11 68 • ..., PEANUTS . ' JUDGE PARKER . ' 1HAT'5~ WHATI-~- 1lUNKIN5 NO! DON'T FORGET I'M GOING FOR. ·A CUP TO COME BACK! OF COFFEE, TANYA! YOU'VE GOT A NEW WANT ANYTMING? CLIENT IN TEN MINUTfS,'-!,a,;;:i MISS PEACH WH!Rf I~ ARTHW<? HE WENT OUT , lli"l>-WAT<:HING', Ml« PIACH , GASOUNE AWY ( GORDO " ~~JIO IT! . MOON MUWNS ® 'Mlol/tlt ')t>U CAN'T RE·WRITEi HISTORY! AAW! Iv Charle$ ~. Schull ·ly Harold Le Doux .,IY Mel rT'li ~~MOST TIMI I'll .. PINNijr, MAY J: 1iO HOME, N'OW? l HE SAID Meib Ill! 1'AGK 11<1 TIM!': FOR OINNEll .• ' Nearly Ev«!ryone Listens to Landers I 11 --1 11-I PERKINS -. . ' .... . : .: : . ':' :" . . ·. . .. •' \ \ I 1 ,,\ ~: 11 I~ \\ti.,\\I~. I \l~/h\\1 ··. ' . : 0 0 M . . . ' ~ . . : .. .. . . .. .· ly John Miies J " . ·.-.,: r. ' '. ' "" . : . . . ~. .:-~· .;·· . : ~:·::. i ·~:· ,, : ·.1 '• .: ' ~ .. "·': ... ': . . . ·-··· .. • . . ... . . ~ ( Frid.,, Ju~ 14, 1m DAILY PILOT J 5 ly Didi W- By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson MULLINS ! · f,J No ONE·· ~,,,..."'"" , ~ 8UT NO ONI' •• • · -WILL EIE ALLOWEiP 'IOU LOOKIN' FORA ta -RUMSI E'. , 1'0 SEE MY MEMOIJlS UNTIL 'THEY'RE: PUEILISHEP .' THE GIRLS •1 l••I ,., .... IHe-)ackd tlrfDs-yoa feel .. Ilda ..... )'M toke Ille JllCkel olf." DENNIS THE MENACE • - ' O~LY PILOT Co-leaders • " lJnderGun t ' Jly Heavies ' ... :.'MUIRFIELD. Scotland (AP) -Wise- j:tacldng Lee Trevino, shi!rilig the lead Mter two rounds jn his defense of the ~ti!b Open golf championship, said to-ua~, 'HJ'm not too happy, I like to be way out in front." Trevino, revelling in h1I role as the se)f .. tyled Super Mex of golf, bad a 36- hole total of 141 aJong with Britaiil'a bI:eezy yoW1g Tony Jacklin over this lttrrand ~urse which has taken on a lli:ile look in unUIWll sunshine. ,uoth Trevino and Jacklin were one Wider par. Brealhlng down lheir neckl Only one stroke back were auch golfing llloV)"ftighla as Jack Nicklaus the ~out favorite, veteran Doug safiders, Sluth Africa'• always-hungry Gary l!ioyer and Johnny Miller, a. promising •year~Jd American pro who set a course record of 66 in the second round. ~ OD 142, 'level par over fl.1uirfield's "82-yard· links, were three young Jiioglislunen -Peter Tupling, John 4iimer and Peter Townsend. ~er shooting a one-under par 70 in his leCODd round, Trevino aaid, "The -hine caught everyone by ourprise. ~ry guy thought that every other guy .., burning up the course. But none of them was prepared for these conditions oo:ithey all bad been thinking how to play tbe link:& Jn wind and rain." ~.ii.. isaued this warning to the rMt of lloe field, cut·frorn 153 •larters to the 88 Mil &corers for the last two rounds: "No -tter wbat,the weather does, the score1 won't get much lower because we're all lifting closer to that ttophy' •1Nerves play a big part in how It all wurlts out. "I think the coune will be one stroke harder to play tomorrow and two shots harder on the final day." ;rfrevino announced he was using a 40- ljar-old ladies' wedge that he picked up li ·an American golf shop'• bargain bar· ilJ( for SOlllettling like $4. ~'It's jdeal for pitching out of these ~P bunkers and hard. fairways," he ih;I. "But I'd never us! .it in American fndilions." r Nicklaus gunning for the British Open <town 1x> complete the third leg of ffver- p mplished p~fesslonal Grand Slam -ii four major titles in a single year - jjid; "I'm not playing as well as I can Cid I feel a bit frustrated. IJ"But I have the notioo there's rome lt!od golf abead of me." ~ders, who Jed the notion there's l!Pme good golf coming up to the !!th in second round , took a horrendous tri· beige)' 7 at the home hole but declared rfully afterwards, "You've a:ot to take the bitter with the sweet. "I'm not in bad shape. I just went to sleep out there. · "And in British championships tf you BnOOZe you lose." * * * Ailing Pahner Gets Off in 69 MUfRFIELD, Scotlaod (AP) -Arnold Palmer, though hampered by a painful neck <\ilment, made a charge at the leaders early in the third round of the BriUsb 0peo Golf Championship today. l{e shot a 69. 1'he 42-year.old Palmer, four strokes over par when play started on the bright and sunny day, had the huge Scottish gallery buzzing when he went birdie, par, eagle, birding on a string of holes starting with the third. · Palmer then faltered in the unusually wann weattH:r, however, and bogeyed the next two holes, making the turn in 34, two under par on the 6,892-yard, par ~ 35-71 Muirrield Links. That put the 42·year-old Palmer two oxer par ror the' tournament and just thtee strokes off the leading pace of defending champion Lee Trevino and England's Tony Jacklin. Frld1y, July 14, l fi72 Dodgers to Pass -Million Ma,rk LOS ANGELES (APJ -Advance Ucket sales for tonight'• cont.at between the Dodgers and Montreal have assured that attendance at Dodger Stodiwn this teaaon will p~ the one mllllon mark, club officials say. Claude Osteen will be on the mound for the first of the three-game seriea, going for his 10th victory of the oeaon. Osteen, M , will be oppooed by Balol' Moore, who will be aeeting bis f1nt vlctorr a11er three losses. . The Dodgen wUl be baodins out baJeball helme!a this weekend to boya Dodgers Slate All ··~ 9'I IC,I t•) 7:" •. l'l'I, •iss •·'"· l:J! p,fl'I. 1:U llJI\. under 15 end girls under 17 attending the games. . Because of 'that gimmick crowds or ' between 40,000 and 50,000 are expeci.d will be behind pitcher Al Downine Satur- tor each contest. , . day night, as he goes against Mike Tor. Manoy"Molll;'Whoft"llattlllg-awrag~ Is -~es;-The Dodgers' Don Sutton-ts pitted .345, will be trying to stretch his fiv e-again.st Bill Stoneman Sunday. game hltting streak. He has hlt safely 11 Los Angeles is in third place in Na· times la the last 19 at bats. • tlooal League West standin gs, six games Newcomer Lee Lacy, 24, baa broken a behind first·place Cincinnati. The team road trip 11.game safe bitting record. has won 42 and lost 38. The second baseman ii tbe ,custodian of a Following the series with the Expos, .413 battlng average, getting 19 hits in 46 the Dodgers will be at home against the at bala. Mets and Phillies before the All.Star The L<s Angeles team's sizzling bat break . ~int Bo11to11 Finds Nicl1e In Politics MIAMI BEACH (AP) The radicalization of Jim Bouton from a win· ning right-hander to a left-leaning Democrat began, nnturally enough, on the baseball field . "It v.•as a combination of things like -~---·-·· .... ···--·------·-·------·----··-----'--Ne-w-·YorlrYank~manager-Ralph-l~ollk--·­ Giving It His All Houston's Bob Watson dives for the Cubs' Glenn Beckert's hit (upper half), but all he got for the , effort was a collision with the Wrigley Field bricks. Houston and Watson recovered and went on to pdst a 7·2 victory ill National League basebaJI play. N'ewRams Owner Sees Title Not1iing Less Than Championship Will Do LOS ANGELES. (AP) -Carroll Rosenbloom had owned the Los Angeles Rams less than 24 hours when he declared, "We have as good or better chance as anyone to take it all." - Thus came the Indication that the man wl::> swapped the Baltimore Colts !or the Rams in a razzle-dazz.le deal 'Won't 6e satisfied with less than a champion. Rosenbloom didn't say he was unhappy ln Baltimore, although the pre-season at- tendance there had bothered him, but he di.: say the challenge was greater in Los Angeles. The $19 million deal was more than a little complicated. Robert Irsay of Skokie, Ill., and Willard Keland of Racine,, Wis., bought the Rams. Then they traded them to Ros;:nbloom for the Colts since the Midwesterners wanted an Eastern team. The multimillionaire Rosenbloom had business interests in Southern californitJ such as Warner Brothen mo"ie studio an ; after all, the Colts already bad won a Super Bowl title. Rosenbloom said Tommy Prothro would remain as the Rams' coach, saying, "One of the reasons I wanted the Rams is because he 's tied up fi>r five years." Prothro, former Oregon State tind UCLA coach, was head man of the Rams last year, the first of his five-year pact He led the club to an 3-5-1 record. National Football Le a g u e Com· missioner Pete Rozelle called the trade princip<ils on Wednesday ~lght and said approval had been given for the swap. lrsay and Keland must pay the $19 tnillion cash within seven days and they alttady have swapped the Rams for tht" Colts. /.. The Los ngeles franchise has been tcor sa!':l sin~\ the death la st year tlf Dan Ree\les , tne man who brought the club West froml Cleveland in 1946. Rosenbloom who admitted the trade sav· ed him capital gains tax and intimated he thought the challenges were greater in Los Angeles. He didn't mention the troubles of , Baltimore where be had hoped to have a new stadium. Rosenbloom estimated the value of the Rams and the Colts were about equal, but declared, "This is not the kind of in- vestment a prudent businessman would make to make money. They had better be rich when they come in." In other words, it would be difficult to realize a $1 million annual return oo an invesbnent of $19 million. Rosenbloom indicated there would be no swift change in the front office opera- tion of the Rams. Don Klestennan, general manager at Baltimore, a~ companied the n~ owner to Los Aoge1es and appears destined to become the No. l aide. However, Jack Teele, assiSt:mt to the president of the Rams, remaips ai.d is one of those Reeves put under three-- year revolving contraCts. Those pacts cannot be broken without a three-year notice. HYou can assume absentee management,'' said Rosenbloom, who flew all night from Miami to meet newsmen in IA:ls Angeles with the announcement of his takeover. Angels at Milwaukee Ryan Going for No. 12 MILWAUKEE (AP) -The C.lifornia Angels open a 12.game road trip today with Halo hurler Nolan Ryan 11-5 facing the Brewers' Jim Lonborg 7--4. The hard-throwing Ryan has won nine of his last 10 starts and pitched five con- Angels Slate All G•mtii tll kMPC (7111 J1.1l't' 14 Ang1l1 ti MUw1ulte. Jut~ 15 ~llllfll It MllWIUkff Juh< 11 OPlfl 01te .k11~ It Anteh •t Mllw•!Jkft (2) Jlll't' 17 Antell 11 801fllfl 5:15 11.m, II :25 p ,m.. 10:55 1.m. 4!25 P.m. secutive complete-game victories, allow· ing just five nins and 17 walks . He struck out 57 in, those games and leads the AmerJcen:League with 138 strikeouts. ' the season while the rest of the stall Is 16-35. The Angels are .In filth place in the American League West, 13 games behind Oakland. · In an exhibition gtme Thursday night, the Angels beat their lialt Lake Triple-A club, 4-1. After six close Innings, the Angel's pitching took hold and sbut out Salt Lake for the rest-of the game. · Salt . Lake scored lirst, but. calilornia tied it up in the sixth as Jim Spencer singled, went to ~ on an error and ;;cored on a single by Leroy Stanton. C.lifomia picked up another run· in the seventh on a walk to Curt Motton and a triple by Vada Pinson. Competitio,n Do es Nothing For Epstein OAKLAND (AP) -Mike Epstein's ba t has contradicted his baseball self- enalysis. "I don't like competition aJld it <loes~·t make me a better player. All ~t does is worry me," the Oakland A's firs t baseman said after the team acquired Orlando Cepeda in a trade June 29. The 29-year-old Epstein, who has shared his position with veteran stars through most of bis major league career, went out and slammed three hits the night the trade was announced. One Of the hits was his 13th home run of the season. He admitted be was mad, as well as worried. "I busted my tail for this team and then I read in the paper where we got another player to platoon with me " he said. ' Epstein went 13-for-20 at the plate in the five days following the trade and joined the· American League's ba tting Jeaders _ _with a .297 average. Manager Dick Williams' thoughts of platooning the right-llanded swinging Cepeda with lefty Epstein were temporarily forgotten . "I've got a first baseman who's hitting a ·ton," Williams said. .. Qepeda, the $90,000-a-year player who ,won the National League 's Most Valuable Player award with Atlanta in 1967, '· und~nt ~ee.surgery early this week -tiefore ever making a starting aP'" pearanc;:e for the A's. Epstein is enjoying job security again, and says, "One reason I'm having a relatively good season is because I'm playing every day." Tbe Bronx·born Epstein, who played baseba.ll ~ football for the University of California, reached the majors after two sensational seasons for Baltimore Orioles farm clubs. But the Orioles had Boog Powell to play first base, so they traded Epstein early in his rookie season, 1967, to the Washington Senators -who listed Frank Hoiard am.Ong their first baseinen. With Howara in the OOtiield ~t ot lhe time, Epstein totaled 50 homers and 141 runs batted in for the 1969 and 1970 seasons. Then Senators manager Ted Williams decided to return Howard to first base. Epstein was traded to the A's in May cf 1971 and spent the rest of the year sharing first base with veteran Tommy Davis. arguing on my contract that radicalized 1ne on ho\v people do business," Bouton said Thursday as he contemplated the victory of Sen. George McGovern for the Democrotic Presidential nomination. The 33-year-olcl Bouton, author of the controversial book, "Ball Four," and its successor. "I'm Glad You Didn't Take It Personalty," became a Mcp o vern delegate last spring at lhc Bergen C.Oun- ty. N.J .. Democratic caucus. But he says his interest in politics began \l'hen he was a fireballing right- hander \Vit h the Yankees. l\.1any of the New York sports \Vrilers. he said. proved to be politically av.•are and "I was like a sponge, waiting to soak up what was going on around me." Bouton believes he got a place on the McGovern ticket because backers of the South Dakota Senator believed even one \Vell-kno\vn nan1c would boost their chances for victory. But he admits t,i! first reaction to becomiog... a delegate was "Who am I, Jim the Jock, to como in and be a delegate?" Bouton said he likes being in politics now that he's got his feet ,J'et. "." , "There4s a fee ling or really hav-411g in- fluence. You feel like you have 'some measure of control. ln baseball, there \Vfls no influence. ''In baseball. they throw you out without a caucus." Bouton, a native of Newark 1vho no'v Jives in \V yckoff, N.J., is . no\v a TV sportscaster in Nr\v York. And he says he is shooting a movie that \Vill star Elliot Gould. His major league career struck a high point in 1963 when he posted a 21·7 record with the Yankees and, he proudly recall- ed. had an earned run average of 2.'.>4. In 1964, he won 18 regular season games and then pitched t11•0 World Series victories. After that, it v.'as dovmhill until he finally was shipped out of the major leagues in 1969. Bouton voted for most of the more liberal positions in the parly platfonn debate. He favored the defea ted mino ity reports calling for stronger language on abortion and gay liberation and for the successful majority busing plank. And he voted against seating Chicagtl Mayo r Richard Daley as a delegate. "Whatever you would have gained in the Chicago organization, you v•ou ld have Jost in grass roots support," he said. The former pitcher believes if 1\1cGovern compromises his positions, "he will lose in the grass roots what he gained at the organizational level." Bouton doesn't th ink McGovern is a weak candidate destined to bring disaster to the Democrats in November. "The press is still using the same barometers that failed them in the primaries," he sa id. "They're still talk· ing to their old political contacts but the people just aren't listening to them (the . old pros) any more. · Trevino and Jacklin bad 3&-hole lotals or·141, one under pat, and were still in tl!O clubhouse when Palmer and playing pwf.nfr Frank Beard made the turn lrito \b! back nine. But tlie rest of the Angels pitching stalf, except for Clyde~Wright, isn't far· iJc " well! Ryao and;Wrlght are 20-9 on The final two Csli!ornia J'W1S were scored in the eighth as pinch-hitter Ken Berry drove in Stanton and Jeff Torborg, who 1eoched base with sinsles. · "I loved Dan Reeves and we both thought i same • , , winning," said Wells Gdes From Jail lo famp ' <&ANTA ROSA. Calif. (AP) -Wide ~ver Warren Well• returned lo tj>e <J¥1and Raiders training camp Thursday ellht and said he felt tt-woaJd take a COU• pit of months to return to top playing c:ollliUoo. 1'ella, 21, one of the National Footbell ~·· best pass catcherl until ht Wll JiDiiI r.r-rovocati<ln of pnlbaijon last --r, Mid 'bt'd had HU!e op- ' " portwlity to work out during his 10 month.; in lllld out of Jaji. Cooch John llflddeo said Wella' cor>- dltioning program would be one of "1et• ting ready to go to ti"aining camp." "We'll walk•before we run," sa id Mad· den. "That's the approach we'll have to take, fundamental tl!inga flr•t. You can't put a Ume Uruit or sa y that somelhlng'a going to hlppen Jaat like that." ( . • Wells will hit the iractice field here to-City late In the 1971 ...,.n, day w1UJ rookies ~nd 90me of the Of Wells' return, Madden said, "In the veterans w110 made h through the first end, tile. Raid!"'•' part ln tllis is ~.ne ~! t ct! I f the _ ••... ..<00jletali90 w1tlt .tl!~~ballan.nfucer. -····-·- WO pra ce $CSS ons o 11"'"" season He said Wells bad met wilh NFL com-A ll i L F ii Thursday In 109 degree heat. f) missioner Pete Rozelle earlier !his week. n t.1e. Qfll 1J • Wells aaid he wa!ched about five Wells foined the loom 1n 1167 and dur• ' Raider gamea on television during bis Ing ihe nett tbiee yearS snagged . !IS Jeanne Evert, si ster oC Wimbledon semliinalist Chris, sends an over- aboeo\l• and "It wam't much fun" when passes for i,332 yards and 31 touchdowno. head smash back to ~ami's Janet Haa s in the National Amateur he .. w them 1ooe !he American · Col>' He has 1 lifetime ·•V<rage of 23.3 ,yanla Clay Courts tennis championship Thursday. Miss Evert, the tour ney .f,.ence wtstern division t!U. lo Kansas gained per receptiQn. . favorite,. eased to a 6-3, 6-0 win for a senlis berth. t l • / triday, Jut11•. 1m .D,\JLY .PILOT .I( SPORTS Sports in Brief ms Investigates Hollywo od Park LOS ANGELES -Possible Westhampton, N.Y. ' tax law violations at the Modell, taken to Eastern Hollywood Park Race Track Long Island Hoopltal after the mutuel ticket payoff windows mishap Wednesday, was tn hedul surgery for nearly three houJ'I are ac ed to be In· and was e'P<Cled bl remain vestlgated by a federal grand bospU.allzed for at Just _five jury July 25, officials say. days. Mi!niliers of t6e track's Modell's wUe, wOO Said - • Laf1.1111a· League • Colle~ Sinks 1,7 In Artists' Win Laguna Beach lllgh's Artists allowed signs <l returning bl basketball promlnence last year when they put together a 13-13 !eruJOnal mark. And Wedneoday night the ong a>meback"trair was ac- , \ :.Gold Cup :Favoriie - parimutuel service are among 1bursday that he bad •1many, ~~~~~:-~~~~~di't~ .. centuated by a significant flG. 56 victoll_OVer San Clemente · · in· the t.aguna Beach summer league citcles, Draws 119 Droll Role, who has been : making nothing but money : lately for owner John M. : Schill, will take a crack at : fi rst pr iz"e of $100,000 Saturday : In lhe Hollywood Gold Cup '. which is an invitational with a 'guaranteed purse of $175,000. One of. the possible viola· shards, at the home wbel'9' tions being investigated by they had spent the past month. fedual agents include persons She said he had been .pack· who are not winners using lng the car for a hip to false identification to sign Cleveland and had retum:<f to Internal Revenue s e r v i c e lthe house for more belongmgs, form s so those who have woo leaving the doer o~, but ,thl~ over $600 can avoid paying one of their children ap; taies. The signer's r e e ~ntly had closed it without reportedly runs about 10 per-his knowing It. cent. J" '-' NEWPORT. Wales -Top- GREENPORT, N.Y. _ Art seeded Clark Graebner of New . The 4-year-old Droll Role, who boosted hi! earnlrigs over -the-$220,000 mark by-winning the Grey Lag Handicap, Hawthorne' Gold Cup and Massachusetts Handicap, was entered Thursday under high weight of 119 pounds for the 1 Y4.-mile race at Hollywood Park. Model!, owner of the Cleveland York reached the semifinals of n· k w d i A ti Browns of the National Foot· the Welsh Lawn Tennis Cham· IC 00 If ft C Oft · ball League, was hospitalized p1~hlJ:!S Thursday with a , • with severe cuts on bis right convmcmg M, 1-1 vicblry over Costa Mesa's Riclt: Woods is compeling at Orange County Fairgrounds Friday hand-and1e1Her1ollowlng-an --English-t.enager.. S.Le.p.h.0.11-._,enings -in--tbe-weekl)'-races.-The-lor-mer-Huntington--Beacb ace captured the accident at a summer home in W!!'.~ys. d En lish bo SRA National championship in 1968 and '70 and is a threat on any size track. "~ 17-yur-ol g y -----------'----"-------------=-----offered p1enty-of-resislanct,,---------------------------- A field of 16 3-year-<>lds and 'Up were entered, with the two low weights, Carven Ill, 107, and Balcony's Babe, 108, listed as also eligible. They will not 11tlrt unless there are scratches. Tie-breaker For Marina By Ho1-m~ll but the experienced Graebller always had something. in reserve. Graebner now m e et s England's John de Mendoza in Friday's semifinal. Mendoza beat India's Jaidip Muketjea 6-2, l~. &-3. Co-waders Beat,en; Blackies Alone in 1st Among Droll Role 's o~ ponents will be the 3-year-<>lds Bicker, 109, and Quack, 115; the mare Manta, 110, and Ken- nedy Road, 118, and Bu2.haskl and Panzer Chief, 115 each. In his last start Bicker finished a close second to Riva Ridge in the Hollywood Derby. Calumet Farm's Eastern Fleet is espected bl try and make the $100,000-added, I!/•- mile Amory L. Haskell Han- dicap at Monmouth Park his fourth straight victory. The winner oC the Fincracker Handicap will carry 117 pounds and probably will meet seven or eight rivals. Marina's Rod Hormell whip- ped In a goal in the last four second! of a summer water polo thriller with Fountain Valley at Estancia H i g h School Wednesday night to breok a tie and credit Marina with a 7-6 win. Hotmell wound up with two goals for the game as did team mate Doug Fabian and Fountain V a 11 e y's Skip Ochsner. In the same division Wilson downed Westminster 7-4 with Greg Cogbill doing bell the scor~ f<r the losers. Buena Park ousted Loa Amigos 12-3 and Chaffey nearly blanked Miiiikan 13-1. Costa Mesa was the only area school which fared well in Santa Ana summer water polo action as Mike Hollister, Allen Loogston and Chris McAneney l<8med up fur two goals iach. ~ - Australia's Kerry )felville A J\Qir of teams which defeated Scotland's Winnie r- Shaw 6-1, 6-3 and England's shared the circuit lead In !lie C.OSta Mesa open smnmer b)l>kethell league' went down to defeat Wednesday night at Orange Coast College, leaving Blacldes alone at the top with a 3-1 mark. Virginia Wade beat -Joyce Williams of Scotland 3-3, "-2, 6- 1 in women's semifinal play. PEBBLE BEACH -Laura Baugh and Maryanne stangeland, both of t;ong Beach, headed for a showdown for the California junior girls golf chamoion.ship by scoring ' victories Thursdav at Mon- ter'ey Peninsula Country Club . Miss Stangeland Js the daughter or California State (Lon,I! Beach ) football coach Jim Stangeland, a m-aduate or Huntington Beach t:ligh. Miss Baugh, the defending champion and also U . S , women's amateur tiUe bolder, defeated Marilyn :llartyniak of Walnut Creek, 7 and 6. while Miss Stangeland downed Pam Flickinger, Pebble Beach, 6 and 4. Southern California College receipted fO!' its second loss of the season when Wilson Ford came up with 23 free tbn>w! en route to a &S-65 win. And Laemmle lost its second when it was unable to put five players on the floor and forfeited to the Jets. Races Bae).{ At El Toro Saturday I F~I Costa Mesa High and °""" Ooost·CoUege alar Buee ~ led ti. Wilson five In llcioring with 21 while mat. Jollp Hatchett lidded 19, Including ps from the gratis slrlpe. Other Haskell probables ln- c::luded Peter Klssel's Ex- ecutioner, the Metropolitan Handicap winner who drew high weight of 121, and West CO.st Scout, 117. 1be Newport Hari!or JVs Jost bl Anaheim 4-11. Rancho Alamitos defeated Jordan 10-2 and Giiden Grove oulsccred La llebra, 16-10. .. _ -·-.... --------~fu'}l<i~~.!111~ ··········------ INGLEWOOD -S t a h I e • s"""""' In USRC main events owner Rex E 1 J s w o r t h ' s when be vies in Saturday's tralneHon-in-law Bob Crall eight-event program at El fractured his right hip In ·a Toro Speedway. T ............. .. R~tlers Wm,· 83-82 freak riding accident a t Time trials begin at 7 p.m. Hollywood Park and doctors and the troplly dash drivers say he wtD be helanclng m get the green fiag at 8:30. WHITTIER -Golden West College swept to Its third win in five starts in the Rio Hondo College summer· basketball league Wednesday night with an 83-82 triumph over East Los Angeles. Golden West returns to ac- tion blnight (I) at th• Cerritos College tourney against LA Southwest. one leg and crutches for the It's the flf'St action at El next three months . Toro since June 17. "It was ooe of those weird McKnight's ma In com- tbingz," Craft eIPlalned from petition is expect<d bl come his hospital bed 'lbursday. "I ·from 1971 USRC champion, rode up bl the r a c t n g Bobby Olivero, who has len secretary'• office and In~· featwe · wins In -his career. ing up, my saddle broke. Rowland Height's Ke n n Y .... 1 • Former La Quinta High standout Jeff St. Clair was !1¢1 point man for the Rusllers with 26 polnls while 'Mark Dekker added 16 to the cause. j l1 t ! I . ' J "My pony didn't spook until Gidney, tint time USRC king the saddle slipped back on her L<iwell Sachs and Jerry Weeka flanks and then it was a buck-of C2lino are also considered Ing saddle and I was still tn it prime contenders for the No. 1 when I hit the ground." prize. Baseball Star,ulings I NATIONAL LEAGUE Pitlsburgh New York ~t. Louis Easl Dfmloo W L 48 30 4S 33 42 36 Chicago 42 39 Montreal 34 44 Philadelphia 28 52 Cincinnati Jlouston Dodger• Atlanla West Dlvlskla 48 31 48 34 42 38 San Francisco San Diego 37 44 36 49 30 50 Tllll,,...,.I lleffltl Houlton 7, CllkffO t Cl11Clnn1!1 t, L'tlhbvrvll I St. LOUii J, All1nt1 t OnlV llfl'MS ICl!ldUled. T9'IW'I t1- Pct. GB .II~ .571 3 .532 6 .519 1* .436 14 . 350 21 .6tlll .585 l 'A .525 61iii .457 12 .424 15 .375 18* At11n'1 IMtttlln Ml 11 ClllcHO IL'-H ..,-, Houlfoft !OMrtlr Ml 11 L'lltUvr1ll flr11es 741 Clnt"-" (GrlmtM t-41 11 $1, l.o\llt !WIN! .... Ntw Yotlr (SMftr 11.J) '' $In Dltlll (Arlln ,., Mon1'9tl (Morlor'I ..... , ., ln ....... 10.1111'1 .... l'lll11cte!Ptll1 (llrrneld1 M l ~ s.n Frttld.- (!MrkNI ).10) AMERICAN LEAGUE Eaal Dlvlatoe Detroit Baltimore Boston New York Cleveland Milwaukee ' W L Pct. GB 44 M .564 11 36 .• sn 2* 3137 .500 5 37 37 f500 5 32 45 .416 II* 30 45 .400 121> I oakland , West DMalH Chicago J • Minnesota Kanl)8f (:liy Angel• I Texas 48 30 4534 4037 4039 3644 344& I "'"'"""' .""" MlllMMtt 10. lottoft I Tt111t ~Clt~IM'ld I Detroit •· ktni..t City • OnfY I ldlttdV)9d, .615 .5711 3* .519 7,* .508 ·'* .450 13 .!25 15 DEAN LEWIS .. 1 ' 1966 HARIOR ILVD.,LCOSTA MESA-· -. 646-9303- S.rvlH and Parta for. All ,..,..., ... c.,. Mocltm Body Shop for All Co,. Orange County'• Lorant and Most Modern T010ta and Volvo Dealer OYIUllAI DILIYIRY INCIAl.lhS I DEAN LEWIS BOB SEVERSON De1n l twis Imports in Costa Mesa happily announc•s th• 1ttiv1I of its new strvlce m1n- 1g•r Bob Severson of Corona dt l Mar. Bob hes taken over the 1trvic1 ftcility for both Toyota and Volvos. lob h11 twenty·stvtn v••r• txptrit nct in import and domestic 1uto- mobil1 11rtic1. Over twenty m1ch1ni«. wlll bt under his cli .. rec,,t control. end his 1xp1ri1nct will" bon•lit 'both doalonhiprand 'cUitOmers.-,ob ii·-m1;ri1d ;incf . . . h11. two childrtn. Ht lik11 to fiih and travel in hi1 .,,,,time. Cycles Run At OCIR Motorcycle rood racing.is on tap 'at Orange County Interna- tional· Ra<tway-Sllljday under . the banner .or the Tastee-Pro- Am Classic. Among the pros e'P<Cled bl compete is the Daytona 200 winner, Don Emde, on a Yamaha. , The ~am consists or amateur racing for 15 classes In .both producu.,,i and Grand- Prlx romu wltll the' addition of a lightweight a n d heavyweight class for the pro- fesslooals. 'Ibe pros will be racing for a ll,200 pur8t. Triala begin at ! a.m. and races begin at 12,30 p.m. Leading the Artists was Dan Collen, who scored 27 points with 10 field goals and seven tree throws. He tallied 29 l\1onday. Bob Yoder stood out for San Clemente, scoring 20 from outside. ln othe!' tests l\1ission. V-~jo continued unbeaten in the loop with a 95-38 rout of youthful Dana !~ills; University lost a 61 -58 uphill battle \Vi t h Oceanside ; and htissio., Vie- jo's No. 2 team dealt Laguna Beach's No. 2 quintet a 52-49 setback. · Miss ion Viejo's scoring at- tack. was impressive against Uie_ oulmanned Dolphins of Dana Hills with five players in Couble figures. Gil Normandie (21 ) and Steve Rudisell -(20) were the major scorers for the winntrs. l\1ike·~Scott (19 ) and Paul Simon (15) led University's upset bid against second place Qceanside, loser only t o 'Pi.lission Viejo in firs t round hostilities. Olf 1• Slmo11 Scotl Wiii Honcod1 Hea10f1 Tolllt u11111.,.11y J:' " . ' l I l ! 1 1 " " scor• •r 011•rt1r. Ul\l'lff\llV 11 11 15 OCffntldli 10 1• 11 .... 1 • I ll I • ,} J ,,_.. ...... Dana Point Ocean Swint Scneaurea - .~ .. Swimmers of all •res wtll splash into the water of Dana Point Harbor Beach at 2 p.m. July 23 for the inaugural Quiet Cannon Dana Point Harbor Swim. ~~l~~-~~-- 11 yeara and under will ...Iii approximately 150 yards wl!lli older swimmers will take Gil on a :ZOO.yard course. •v A apeclal event will be hl1d just for lifeguards in honor"" Rudolph W. Casp<ra, the - ond ll!eguard in C8Ufornia. ·, AU interested swlrruntn who . have current AAU or masters cards should contact Toni Oehler through the Quilt Lt1vn.1 II l4tl ~ " • 0 ' 0 ~. Ip cannon Restaurant, 3 4 3 4-4 1! Street of the Green LattcD l 1i Dana point, 92829. . •• i : The final entry date ls Juli ' 1 • ' 0 ' . , ' ' . ' ' ' ~ 20. ... j •• ' ' " • f' ' f' • , •• ' • • • ' • -------~--------''--------------------------------------------------~--------------=-~ ) 11 041l V PILOT Fl1day, July 14, 19n Alamitos Area Baselta I )lacing .£ntri~ CdM Wins, 6-4; ~,.; 'L .. All"111 .. 1i11tt1tt fof' l"tllll'I' .IJr4I 11!1ht t4 1'-fll1hl sum!Mr mMtln1. Tars Roll,12-1 , (INr 11141 ll•f, ""-' "'' 7lU-~---:•, Jl •.-eta Oft 111 r1c• Co d I M ' t :t u •liac:111 " ''"u\'"' '"" racn rona e ar s pacesc • ,. .bl:,1 ~lTup~A,:~r1\ft-a INr:~·c.~iJi:~ ting Sea Kings maintained Punt $2IXIO. C: 1lm/no prl« 1.2500. n.~ I ' '-' • ,.__ C!oiv tt'• G•mblf t.4.111.ot>I 111 ui.:ir wo-game margiu IJl uit: ,FIJ1lll Pl1n (Pa") 117 bo · g ' '""'&.ff"',_.,, Js11111111 111 Har r-Huntington each '!c;;rn,• J.~::11c<1a~~~., 11: sunl.mtr basebaU league intact '~m'1 "'-"t ilt 111119 {8-1 llt ~~.~~ ~::'lknrihtl I'll Wednesday with a 6..f decision 1' (Wtrd) 19 e Co ta M I Cost •• unn nt Musi( ll.1!"-1'1'11 17 OV r S esa 8 a ·~· A1.. 111111'11 M p k • ,_, Pllnk c•d• ri 11s esa ar . "ii. Pef'llHM IKnluh!l ll1 , r•nk Altmllol !&•nkt) 111 The evening clash at Costa '1419" •I (l.lph•ml 117 _ •, • • i i I 8 i I ' i 1 8 i • ! • l ' ' ' ! ' f ' ' 8 I ' 11 l I 111nl11tt • C•~• 6tl Mar It) ·r .. !Sl!:C:OHO ••c• -.xi vardt 2 VH• Mesa ·Park resulted in a 12·1 'r•=':i:· ~~~u1r~ 111 romp' 'fOr Newport 's Sailors ' Moonllliner jsmlthl 10 . ~ or M• on1v tA1 1¥0n1 111 over the Estancia Eagles. 013 ,170-12 000 001-I \Minx Skotl IB•rik1) 117 , l;~i.oJ:."8~ 'li.•J:1~j'1 l l~ Ho~t Edison was upended ~y J •hns, 11 ~• Don Gu.rro (P1rn&r/ 117 llunt1ngton Harbour, 5-4, 1n ~it~:. lb .. ' ' • ' ' 3 • ""' Ch!(t lLIPMm 110 • • • I th th Keollflh, st UOllVS Gold tH•rO 11s nine 1nn1ngs n e o er Pell'l'ler. ""' l f I ' • I l THIRD lltACI!: ~150 v•rd$. 1 ye•r circuit test. ~~\:~: ~ • • "'k c=1ne. Purst S'2300. Bob Palmer was •Estancia 's Andraws, 2b ' I ' I • '""'1\1"" "C' · 1 • ' , Noo•we, 2b ··-.... -···"· '-' .v01.1Bru!1... .. ·-···---·,~·· -brgges'~-0blem ..... he~lcbed-M~ .... " fi ikY tiky fW•i'd 1 1 • • "¥'-. . r• . Pono. r1 3 ' ' l i 1 1 l i I 1 lol•1 c i,1111.,. !Kn lo 11 ,,', six hitless 1nn1ngs before John Behrens. rl .,_Go M n& rotOyJ • , R.evnoldt. cl .~ur11ru M ss Jot Wllsonl 111 Brown got to him with a Moore, c .,,,..atch !!II tAdflr) 121.1 ,. M"llorr,. o ' l j ' i,~ltdv L.OVM <"(rr1h11 ~~ lcadoff single 10 the seventh . To••• ..,o ..,.. ctttrue w~i Mesa added three more ' ' ,j ,, • ' 1 J'"OUltTtt 111.AC'I'. -170 v•rd1. 3 Ye•r . , tfi ~ .1111. c1.1m1no. Purse S'2IOO. singles and rour runs agamst · • ~~ ~·t~~htl 111 relief pitching to make it &rokp] "'~!" tS•nkl) ,'" close .. Mont •I !All SOI'!) 17 · '8r•~• l'ld 1a-1 1111 9 7 Earlier th·e winners got of! 'j •Y•kr.t tH•rtl ·~ /· Per.o11t1Uy <srnuhJ 111 to a subst.antial lead with a a •llfol'nl'r StflSlt'tPtrnet) 117 . . ... ~ ldw•Y om ... r~er,\,1111t 119 thwo-run ndstnglnde ~~ Al Ja~ Ill • ~ency w111ow 111:n11hll ln t e seco a single-run pro-.a~."n 't";:~~r1 11• ducing base rae._s by Steve 1r rvn CountY c~ml 119 Behrens (in the first), Bob ' "P:lfTH lll:AClf -* _y•rdl. 3 Vf" p I d B b M (" '..ic1t. c111m1nt. Purse s:zu:io. c1e1m nu a mer an O eyers 1n 1 «~ !•r \S mllhl . 115 lhCl .lii'fil . · W11tw111w1r Pao•l 11'177 ... -.Newport's easy win was led • 1'f'l•sh Altrt !i,W•rdl ~f:'i':nd~1~~.~~r-'rd11 111 by pitcher ~arl Tahti, who ;1RubY e"°"'' (T re11urtl 11114 struck out nine and allowed ... W•r Prlncn" (Wtllllll) 1 nl nd · • · I • 'tvfL• R.'C!~' <H•rtt li8 o y a seco inning sing e by rulv 0 Lloh•m , Jon Hartley to spoil hi s no-hit SIXTH ltAC'I'. -«IQ Y•rd1. Ytar b"d •• eldl ·~ ltJI, Purse SIOOO. l • kewN ••r To» lJamfl Dr•vtrl 116 Sr"ngles by ·M1"ke Folsom. , §•we• Ber (ll:obert A~lrl 12~ ;.;Gr;i ~1!r1}i,~n1t%'~:rcf!1 ll; Morgan Abbott and Curt ~~k=:t/ft~.~~Jm,~ __ J'll_~!!~r~rts gave Newport an -d} s•v•HTN 1tAC"'i'=' 440 v•rdi. , vear ea~y 3-0 b~lge and .!hen the_ f ':~v:'i!~=IJtrl"f Nlcodemu1I 115 ~Hors put 1n away with seven i.'t11 v09ue <Kt11Mth Hern 117 Jn the six.th frame. ~~~:ri!.':1 'fgt;;,.~,e~;/,1 Hi Larry Duket's dou~l~ was a« 11, L.ltt•• Bia tc11rtis P•rnerJ 111 the only extra base hit in the '' •Got Tr!;• '"'·-*y Llph•m) 111 • • , • · eountl' Ft (Jann wardl 1111 s1xth-1nn1ng fireworks f O r ;.i~lptys MoOM Cherin Smlfh) 11 Newport. . ~ 11.•~ IAC• -400 v•rds. 4 year Huntington's 0 o u g Man-!·1.~thfc'Jj\ffil::t ~~~} lll solino go t the Oilers even )~:,.,e~'m'\!oo cre~~w. sr,~~,, H~ in the bottom of the seventh .n.ir:~ •,a;.1~J1'bTn11~rr,fJ0i•l lll with a three-run homer an d ~~·rr;,teJ~~ t'~f:~1 HJ then Bob Stimmler put Edison .}~Ml Jin11 /J.,r~twiro11 115 away in the ninth with a two- f~ .. IHTN 11tAc• -JSO v•ro.ts. 3 v•ar run double. !1~•11'1'11~ 11~fc:1 Cl:Js"lno. Pur•• lleoo. Edison had retaken the lead t ~r:J01 00 1l°?!J~..::rk•> • H; in the top of the ninth inning 4 nie-.:~~~ lY¥fc?~~~~~rtV.'1bVJ H~ on Rick Hibbard 's run-pro-g::r1~~ ~·J:1i~°P.:~rlAll sonl 1,'11~ ducing single. ~Ill~ Soy <Rlcherd v1uo11n1 1 k• r. (Frank Bone\ 111 NtwPGrl H•rbor p e 8&r ~Rober! Adllr) 121 lb (12) ': ' _Slltnl Ground Oa.,ny C&rdOlll 117 L.Hse r ' A 1C1 IElrtlblt c 111rd', 2b 1 fest Eddie (John WeltMJ 119 Fr11m. 2b 7 Lt Piii• J&o (C1,1rtl1 Perner! 119 Hook, rt 2 Duker. rl ? r 1 Fol.som, et ~ AIMloll, lb S ' ? Htrbtrlt. IS ,• e . ROl>fl'l11on, ~s ·ll'M•~·tos---<!il.'lf.':''· " j ~------Racing "'' . ?-:·Results t!I" ;i• Thursd1'1', July \J,\1172 • Cle•r &. F•JI ~'\ ll'IRST RACE -.tOO l'&rd1. 2 ye,Jr t f91d•. Cl•lmlno. Purse $1800. 'l"''-uekv Shlloh Cl.lPhlm) J.00 2.40 ?.10 f'l lll:oblnll !Ad•lrl ~.'40 J.40 t ir:lcaiw LI.I (\leuohnl 3.«> ~ r Time -.20 2/10. fl') Scrllfched -Frontier Town, Wh11t1 ~-f1et11rn. .. • St l!:K~I•, 7 -Lucky Shlltfl &. f - lloblnll, P•kl tlt.1111. , .• SECOND RACE -«)() Yl r<ls. 3 Year ,.Ids & UP. Cll!mlng, Pur!le 11900. . 'T1juna Taxi (Per11&rl 1.60 4.80 3.10 !"C ltl' CoK (5mHll) 4.60 3.60 Sorce, lb 4 : " Tot&li I' Ell•ncl1 lJ Barnell ll·lb 1b2 r 0 Boosters Set Buffet Dance, Huntington Beach's Oilers Booster Club is holding a bur~ fet and dance Saturday at 8 p.m. with the public invited. It will be held at Garpenter's Hall, 8302 Atlanta in Hun- tington and tickets are priced at $7.50 per couple. Tickets will not be available at the door but may be reserved by calling Ralph Brown (598-3024) or Jack Fiskness (9624167). c,,1<1wefJ· rl F1rrell. rl Glasov. ss Oel1nev, c 8row11, 3b·p Crand .. n, lb BiJUITlf!. IJ ... Schrupp, cf SMJl4.Jleltl TO'.lfon, 2b Fr"'°'I' p \lal•"'l"e, Jt>.p TOlllls Milt (4) .. ' i 8 ' • 3 i ' l 0 ! ... 1 ' 3 1 3 ' I • ' • ! 1 ' 8 Score bv ln nlnts Coron~ del M•r Cusie Mew C3l 100 000 000 Edison to McCoy, p ~otter$, 2b Nlc~ls. ct MM'hen, Ph SelwOOCI, Jb Hibbard, fl Terr11nt, rf M. Albl, rt M•cY, e C&1Hll1, lb Hl_[les, st Tot111 Hvnllntron M11nsoll110, l l Kennt'dy, cl Moll, o Stlmmler. II E;ng11rom, ?b C•nnon rl Vlonaroll, c Terry, lb Klmball, lb Totals .. • 3 • ' • ' ' ' l • " Mlifbovr .. • ' ' • • ' • • • " ' l ' • • ' 8 • ' ' ' ' ' ' 3 l ' ' l ' ' • " "' ' l • ' ' ' l ' l ' ' Scar• bv lnnl111s Edison Hun1. H1rbo1,1r 0 H E OIC 010 101-15 2 000 000 302-S ~ 0 Deep Sea Fish Report DANA WHARF -2()1 angler,: 268 ti.ii'si, 2J barrat11da. 2 halib11I, IS rock coa, •3 m&ekerel, I while u-abass. SAN PEDRO -62 anglers; 12() CMk<l b"ss, 12 sand b.tss, 525 rock cod. !22nd St. L•ndlnoJ -62 anglers: J l)<rrra. r-c11d1, 4H cerico bass, 20 m•clrer1r. L.ONG flE ACH CPitrPGlnl L;11nding) - Jl-4ruller.s;_.2_J(L_u.Uco bass ao..uia. tod. l tleUbul. !Belmont Pl1r) -11 anglers: 822 roc:k ~auoa.--­ ariglers: 14 iand b.tn. 1 hallbu1. NEWPO RT (DIYOI''• Locked -131 anoleri.: 27 b11rrac1.1da, J bonl!o, 196 c11llco bllss. 9~rock coq, I halibut, lG4 mackerel. CAl'l'I Lendlnl) -59 afl!llers: 111 :wind bess, 25 rock cod, TB mackerel, S barr&cud11. SAN DIEGO (Municipal Pitr) -811 11n.,1ers·: rvellOW'111ll, 511 alb11core. 7 whf!1 see bess, 51 c11nco ban, 2 bar- r1c11de, 54 rDCk cod. REDONDO -155 a"glers: 661 c1111!co bass, 1 ll1Ubur. 988 rock cod. Barwe - 152 ar1111ers: 11 11ne1 bass, 111 mae~erel. 61.S rock cod. SANTA BARBARA -82 11ng1ers: :n c11Hco Wis, lO l'tal lbul. !Btl sar\d b"ss, ()2 rock cod, 9 li ng cod . OCEANSIDE -110 an11<1rs : 9 bar- r&eude, 5\ bonllo, 110 b111. 1 wnlte subllss. O h•llllul, 6 rock ,od, 16 mackerel. SEAL IEACH 130 englers: 9$0 rock cod, 17 ta!lco bass, 8 m"ckerel. e1r1t -1"6 •11gltrs: J.I sand Wss. • ll•llbut, I( mackerel. •J'm Eerly <Richerds) f ,40 \ Time -.20 6111110. l 'ii;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I • ~• SCralcMd -Llohtnlno Watch, Roc ke•ll · l11i1.1n, Willow Gold. '· ~. THIRD R•CE -~ vaf"ds. 2 veer olds. Clafmlriv. P11rs• S1800. 'f'Je111& Continue !Crosby) 1.60 4.80 3.60 , R11n Slol>bv Run (Llpheml 3.60 l .611 Go Deer Go CP1rner) 3.40 I• Time -.20 6110, 1•~ Also r•n -Top's Gel, Fl•rM JH!tr, k lc&che11. Sedevl led. Mama MOIJ~. <l"11"retty lndlen, Miss Depth B•rs. i ·• No 1Cralch15. _;.: FOUR TH RACE -549 y&rd~. ~ year l/P'd• & up. Cl•lmfng, Pl.lrff S2COO. Come On Deck (Sl'l'lhh) 2.80 2.60 2.20 "rB•rtombl CCerdor•l 7.60 l .IG 4,Kluiou Too (Wrlghl) 1.eo • Tlmt -.28 1/10. ~f Also r11n -G~wln, El Ar11!1, . ,t.pollo Rocket. No lCl"lltches. FIFTH RACE -JSO y•rds. 2 year folds, Allowance. PurM SUOO. TI'lt U.S. 1-Coa1t Guerd CPO Astoclatlon. Hlllh Gross (\r•u1tinl 13.60 7.:IO 4.40 '1 Green Co1011no Cl<nl111111 30.10 12.80 " scent 01 Lime CB&nk1) 3.90 Time -, 18 6110. t; r Al5CI ren -Ol•mond D'Arln, •iVOlden Hen, I'm An An9el Tcio, Go .Snook Go, Rt'!! Machine, When Y1.1rhol ""'Yurhot, Go 8&rman Go. Scr•IChed -Trutv Hot Panb, Chi( '·Pet Go. Acctler1te, Rt'dlherobblr. •• SIXTH ltACE -ol(lO vards. 3 vtat lli:,tds. AllOW•l'ICt. P11rse $1900. I -volar• (WalS011) 5.to 3.40 3.40 Lynn Cee (Adalrl 9.60 4.IO ; DH-Tio Vino (Perner) J.70 • DH--.-S•ssv M•leKle<k (Richards) 3.20 Time -.20 6/10. Also r•n -G1t11m 8rtt1e. PromlMt 1 f'romlae" Crlvln' Man, Trulv J•t, ~ Ct11r11Jno Tiny, • " SS IEJ•ct• ' -\11l1r1 a ! -LYllll (H, 11•ld IU2 ••. h -" SE\IEHTM RACE -UO Y•r<ls, l ye•r ~l«"&--atr:-Ctatmlnr.-P11nl-rnoo. Tiit •()rder of AHEPA. Dividend'• B•r 1Crolllvl ,,AO •.eo S.ilO Lightning, !Id (Smith) 3.«I l.00 Rocket S•r Bo'I' l8•nltt) •.80 Tim. -.11 2/10, • Alla r•n -MIU Dl•mond 811-.. ~~· B•r•. B•rnin e1d, H•r.lr.'• V•nouef9, Mtfl'IOll• 1 .. 11. " Scr•tclltiel -~ P•uum. .. ' IE IOHTM ft AC• -17' "'"''· 3 ve•r JO!d• & UP, Cl•lmlflfl, Putw 12600. Oetll •rid Otrride Club of Lon• fletch, ·~urtt'• PISTOi (M•ttvO•Jt .GO 3.60 ~.ao ; Ml Pit l Dt~ltl') 5.00 :l,«I ltllQILml Chlek (l"tr,..r) 2.ilO 'Timi -.4t J /10, • Alto r•n -Dftl Gey, Lullnk•, lll'Od. h NO Kr•td'IM, - ,, HIHTH uc• -400 v•rOI. l .,...,. , ekls. Allow•nu. l"urw 11900. .R oY •I $11Ytr •• , JAKn11t11) 10.* s . .io uo ltttt ll'Ullf!I ($Mllh) t.IO l .60 ~rulY TrlUlc IDr..,•r) 1.IO "" Jlm4I -,JU/10. AJMI re11~_ 8t ~ Chl<.k, Dttlld'f Ed'lo. ltO(~tt To Mt. Renevecle ll:otk•t, • IS ce. Whit tO\lld bf_ \t'orM lhtfl • Wlnnfnt •mlle followed b' • b•HJ' belllttd1 11ottllftf. Et11«1tll, II the behind d0t.sn'l ~ng to'°"' b\lt lo the p111t1 you're •e•rlnt, So 'llfl•l c•n ,ou do) The next tlmt you 111.1, e p1lr 11' 1t•11t, siklld • Uttll lu•. 811)' e ptlr ofC4"iepJt1n1. Wt'°"' fOrget '°"'bod' •htn..,. m•ke Ol.lr Jdtlt: Our bot· tom1 conform to ,Cl!Jr bottom. CNr thlght flt ywr thighs. 01.1{ le9s •r• thepe:4 •IWI b•l•rtted the••~ ,our ll111•rt 1h1ped •nd b•l•nced. So tilt Miit Um•'°" bu)'• ptlt ot k•na. P\11 on • p•lr of Cht•P Jt•ns. And II the fl(t lit.,..,.., It. $flnlenMll. I ICl'IOW TM! Girt, {AJ10 A Mut11•I T1c1Ctt Ag•ncy) •. K,...... IOARDWALK CENTER-HUNTINCOTON HARBOUR N ••Rf•,_ lttt•I 111\illf' l•t & 1 Jutt Off W.tntr on Algonquin OPIN SUNDAY-446-2026 -..... ,llfflt, .. ~ llJ't.M, ··--------------------------:! ( I ( ' ' UNIROYAL -ZEJA-40M .. STEEL RA DIAL Tire Guaranteed 40,000 Miles . . " ,. UNIROYAL ZETA JOM INTERSJEEL Tire Guaranteed 30,000 Miles znA 40M .. ZETA J OM TIRf WARRANTY If.,.. do"'' .. , lh• .. 11..,,. '10!..! o" th• 11doi,.o11 !M-•hauld"d) '" "'" foil• lfir ooy l'fflOot olM1 r~a" wi!llul otw .. Of co!llol••. '""' '~"'''"'.d 2 .... d•oi.t •Ill ti•• Y•U 0 <rodil ........ lh• New '72 Whitewall Design GLAS-BELT Polyester -Cord Plies -r Glass Belt NO TRADE-IN NEEDED • WHITEWALL FASFllAK C78-14 $ Only . Tubeless ! . . Blackwall! Plus Fed, Ex. Tax of $1.98 per tire ea. NO TRADE-IN NEEDED: WHII!WAUS.ADD .. $2.95-MO!L; 775-15 $ O ~LY ea. 7.75-14/7.50-14 $ ••«h4 .. of a o.-w l•ta !if• ol >O.,. typa ., ,.polr """''•,.. •I "" <hart•. C.odlt -..;11 "'l••I ...... yo• paid ,.oltiol l•d ~' par- •••lot• ot 1101..i .,;i.01• you did ool obtoift, Cr.di! •ill M 0.,pll•d 0901011 lh• l••o Guo•o•l...i loM fric. (0011 • ...,1 odiuor- .,.M boo• ou!>fo•l,.otint ocluol p<i .. 1). 0.ol•r _, Md •-II <hort• i•r .. ,..l<h ho pa1I•''"' I" ,.plod•• llr•. Ti••• oM , .. lo r•d .. hlcl• , ... o1rn...,, °'"'' t-P"•l"l•IJ ... o!nl•IMd oM 11 ... bn>"fhl lot 10< fr-,,000 ,,.Jle r•hrll••• and dt•dl·UP r.r .,;J- portl.,., of guo•••'" 10 opplJ. E78-14, E-78·15, F78-14 !nl~ ·•7.59s G78-14, G78· 1 s ONLY SJ J _9S ____ _ ONLY s29's Plu1 ftd. h. Tot $2.31 Only $3195 L78°15 TIRES for VW's $13 95 560-15 Blac kwnffs LIMITED 9FFER MAG WHEELS & TIGER rAW 60 SS FOR VANS 825-14/800· 14/710-15/815-15 $ 560.14 Blackwoll $11595 Only II ,,1111 $1 .95 f.E.T . ...... ,,.. .... ,,,., HAUlllU H t Slcwity TIN lth'NI fill• .... M\' ,.._ ••• C.,. N'tiftfllt ,.Mlvrll H tlMiiH wflilt lt 161tr ti lft """ ef "'" ,_hll, C . "' e .... "'"" , ONLY 4 (F60-15 or F60-14) Tiger Paw 60 SS 4 (15 /7 or 14/n U.S. INDY MAGS ea. Plv• ftd. b, T11• S2J5 to $2.tO ,., tlrt dt,.11din9 Oii •i1e Total P1chgt Including Cops, lug Nuts ind Mounllftf All merchandise firsts , · no blems t'\NLY or seconds. ,_. GFI QUICIC·STOP ACTION THAD DfSIGN Of JlJlf.CUJiJ ANY · SIZE! Tubeless Whitewall or Black $240°0 .. ~'.": .. OH TllU 3 WAYS TO CHARGE 11 Ba 'g::::2·Q95I ~~\!2395 / ~:ti1:2695 171-14 f7 .. 1S ff71-1S G7 .. 1S J71-1S ·, ... " ........ 635-1170 WISTM111Sn1 7t IS w" .. """' -... ff>.3521 GAIOIN llOVI 1601 w"-."' II ....... m..ists HAWAIIAN GA.r>!NS 11tn c.n. St. 165-0227 'HUNTINGTOft IUCK tt41t ....,, II! .... 536-7571 SAllTA AllA ltSN.-............... m.3700 l .. ,. Pl111 fff. !le. l o• of $1 .92 .. $2.N per tir9, . WH111WALL ONl.T $2.tl MORI .. SAllTA AM 1111 W. w-a.._ ........ 5401141 TVSTlll U1 t ld -.................. ~1 COSTA MISA- NIWPOU llAOI mt 1111JS1 ........ 14M111 CO«OllA 1M W .... If ................... nuGll 'SAM C1IMlllTf !ti N. a <.-hll I • I • Slie Eyes Dolphin Activity SAN DIEGO tAP} -The Soviet Union clalnll dolphins are a U.S. weapon of war, despite denials, a sort or bottle-nosed aquautlc com- mando trained to blow up enemy submarines or rescue divers. Gloria Patton concedes only this "You have to remem6er never to make an aggreuive move around them. ''111.ese animals have a unique metabolism ,'' says Mrs. Patton. "They are active con· stantly, but they don 't fetd constantly. They go for long periods without eating. UPI Ttl1,..tre Heavy Slitittle Lond DAl\Y.PILOT JI Timepiece ' -Industry In .Change NEW YORK (UPI) -The notion j1 spreading In the timepiece lndu3try that by the end ol this decade all bet(er grade watches will have no moving parts. 11 "They eat fish, and fish · Art is.t co.ncept shows a Lock heed Agena with a .com munication:ii; pai•lo ad . both h11 ve no carbohydrates "'hlch d carr~e into space by the orbi ting Space Shuttle vehicle at lo\\·er left. Rece nt If th.et turns out to be t.rue, the centers or the work111 watchmAking lnduatry w01 cross the oceans fr o..m Switterh1nd and Japan to th• United Sta tes. The technology for lhe all solid-state quartz crystal wa tches has betn de veloped in the United Stale.a and since their manufacture and assembly will requlre relalively little hand labor . Che great incentive to making good watches in Switzerland and Japan will end . is the source · of energy for S!-Ud1es show that the Agena in its present form. could perform most of the mis- land animals. So we don't sions envisioned for the Orbit Transfer Stctge or spare tug. HOWEVER, all solid-state watches will cost at least $7!lO initially. The . fi rst one. the liamilton 'Pulsar was In~ troduced at $2,100 in 1970-and nobody expects to be able to sell them for less then ISO even seve ral years from now. Therefore. a big market for low cost jeweJed and pin-leVtr watches is available for lhe Swiss. Japanese .and the know yet ha.w they do it .'' ~-'---'-'-'-'.:....::::_:.:.:::::....:.:..:::::::::..::.:~:..:.:...:;::::.::...'.'.'.''.:.... ______ _ AS A NAVY biochemist, she is the only woman among 80 male scientists engaged Jn biological and psychological studies. with marine mammals at the Naval Undersea Center. lnd~stry Solving Problem The sea lioris and dolphins or porpoises are being trained as undersea retrievers, able t1> Of Sewage, Waste Disposal Russians. ' The fir st $250 all sol id-state watch is promised for this fall by Wyler Watch Co. ol N~ York. It "'ill ha ve a , quartz crystal osci llator. an ~­ ~egrated solid·state circuit, a. liquid crystal digital readout and will be battery powered. ' .· • • • ' • . • • • . .. I h ~ By !.EROY POPE rep ace uman divers anu de-u~• 1111111111 wrlttr scend even ·farther to do work NE\Y ,YORK_ Little by lit- which man cannot. tie, American ind ustrial in- How the mammals can ~ genuity is solving the prob- maintained in good h,ealth !Or Jems or se\\•age and waste military work also is a disposal,• primary research chore. Sanitary engi neer's h a v e The divorced mother of a 14-known for years that solutions , __ Y.W..il.1.4 ... $9.n .. J.jnlba)'.. Mrs._.~uld ~. f~nd in-incineration, Patton drives a speedy British compacting, chem ical treat-. ment, landfill, conversion into sports car ~o miles to work soil fill~rs and even building and back daily. materials. IN HER FREE lime, she is THE hucK IS to do It at working toward a doctorate at costs the ta xpayers and in- the University of Southern dustry can afford. T t's easy California and rides dlrt bikes, to . do in fuel-poor Eltrope, which can burn mu ch waste to but "I have a real love affair n1ake steam to ge nerate elec- with these an imals," she con-tricity. Ft1el is too c~p in the fided in an interview. United States for tOat as a She said she is the only rule, but more and more ~womaq research biochemist in Amer ican C-Ompanies are find· the Navy in her specialized ing ways to make refuse work, devoted to learning why disposal pay for itself, or sea mammals are unique. nearl y so. The marine animals seem to The city of Houston has just have all tlie physical problems that plague humans, she said, organic disfunctions such as liver trouble and muscular ~i..,;....4-111-.w.asling-like ..... nuu_cJIJ.a_ distrophy. They come in from the sea filled with parasites and "the only way they can tell an animal Is sick is when he stops ea ling. Earni11gs , Up· _f!t _S_ateiqa_y. Safeway St or ~ s-Inc. reported increases ' in both sales and earnings for the first 24 weeks of 1972. According lo Safewa y Presi- "l'J'.-IS IN DrvING to ex-dent Willian\ S. Mitchell, sales treme depths and chasing fish for the 24 weeb erided July 17 that they are most active and were $2,700,428,QOO, ao in- are utilizing energy and crease of 13 percent over sales needing oxygen ," says the of $2,390,01 8,000 in the com- vivacious, tousel-haired scien-parable period of 1971. tist. Income belore pro\Tision for ordered 20 units of an in- cinera tor called the l'onsun1- mat from Sanitas Service Corp. of Hartford . r:tcven of these units, each or 1\'h1ch can~ ~handle the refuse output or about 5.000 people daily and costs $72,000, ha ve been used around the coun,try for the last year or so. Sanitas also operates flee~ of Aa·rbage tru cks to service some units . The most rigorous test of the Consum1nat has been made in South Houston, a town of 12,000 inhabitAnts. GEORGE CH R I STY , recently ·retired as South ffouston's mayor at the age of 82 . said the Consummal sol ved his town 's garbage and S(llid waste disposal.1Using oxy~en and any fossi l fuel , the Consum mat burns garbage, "'ood, glass, plastics, fa brics, old tires and even some meLals, leaving virtually no residue and creating no odor or air polluting effluent. An after-burner takes care of chimney effluent. Another solid waste ex- periment is planned by the cl· ~v of Nashville, Tenn., for whom Carrier Cor:L o f Syracuse is building an In- cinerating plant that will pro- duce steam for heating as a byproduct in winter and chilled water for air-conditioning in summer. Steam and the chilled water will be piped into buildings in m i d t o w n Nash_yille. The plant will solve much of Nashville's waste dispogal and air pollution prob- lem and give the city something to sell to help pay for it. "We can't explain bow they income ta1rs amounted to do this. Everything is the op.. $71,520,000 for the first 24 posite or what you would ex-weeks of th is year,· an in-O PER AT I 0 NA LL Y, pect. They are unusual and orease of 6.8 percent over a Nashville Mayor Bever I y unique." year earlie~ BrUey, I. C. Thomasson & Dealing with them takes -'---...l..-------_:.'-------- strength, and "l am a very strong woman," she aays, ad- ding: .;: Kiss, Kiss, Kiss, Kiss Kissi1iger HYOU HAVE TO remember never to make an aggressive move. A wild animal is nevef really tame. I gel in lo fed the sea lions, and they crowd me and maybe nip at me a lit· U~ and they like it. But if I make one quick aggressive move they 'll bite." .. Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissin ge r is a handsome devil. sure. Ur· bane, sensuous, witty and cuddleso me, yes. But ho\v does he get all those girls? He's shown with (from lop) NBC's Bar bara Wa lters. CBS producer By way of preparation, Mrs Patton says, "Luckily I was ...... _ :· 1'-1a.rgaret Qsmer, ij.gckefell~I".+~i_4.e .~~ncy M~jinnes and actress Ali ?11ac- Graw. Photos were taken from UPI files over several years. born a toi;nboy. ll.iy brothers used to say I couldn't do things because I was a glrl, so I showed them I could ." . . . ~ ... . . ••• • ••• ::::= H ' ;~~~~-e s Frank Abo ut Words .. . ·. ... Madrid Novelist Writes Dictio11ary of Dirty Words : MADRID (AP) -An entire dictionary ·dtY.oted to dirty words? In Catholic, .~pain, where censorship has become a ,roblem. books on dirty \\'Ords have just l>e<n publl&hed. ~ No, not one volume , but two, both best ,1ellers, a tmid ·1o tlie makfiii a nil Iwo ·lnore scheduled. ': sOld cla ndestinely then, by furtive :pornographer1? :: Wrong again. Available tn bookstores :and compiled by the couotry's !coding . ells!. camno Jose Ccla, author of the ~-selling "Family of Pascual puartc" :.tl!Ich hu bee~ translated mto 19 :lilcguages, plus Braille. i :In-paperback alone, Ccla'1 first "Secret .IS\ctionary,'' 11bout tcstlcles1 htts ·sold __ m~rJ than too ®O cop1es.t,.. a roaring sue· :Cen by Spanish standards. llardoacli sales are tstlmatcd at 11bout 30,000. ; Hls tee0nd v<Hume, nearly twJce the • •lze ol tht first, Is derotcd to slreet ·Jinau•ie !or words thot mean urine. •:•CurrtnUy he Is at W(l("k on a volume ellplit lhc female 1e1 ori••· • He Is undecided where to focus volumes presented his dlctionarles to the Ministry four and five. of Information and Tourism for approval The books ha ve a limited circulation before publication . His "Family of outside SpAln , because they cannot be Pascual Duarte" was presented in 1~3 translated. They have yet to be widely and held up two years. published-ln South-America. .But if you want to know the equivalent ould thelOVe1'nm·e:ntTisk suppressing of a dirty word In CUban, Puerto Rican, the dictionaries of the coun try's leading Ecuadorean or Chilean Spanlsh, it Is tn philologist and member of the Royal the dictionary. · Academy of the Spanish Language? Most eeta. 55, does not asrce that the words of Ce.la's friends think not. are dirty. He bolds lbe:y have certain The dictionaries are lull of hl st.ory, timf's and places where they can be uM!d . literature and explanation. Ccltt sets ''The fact that a word exists does not m~t of his information from his library harness It with the supposition that its of l~,000 books, and says it ta kes him use should be or must be extoll~ but, yean of reading to produce a volume. simply, indicates the evidence. that It ex· Once 1 150ldltr In Franco's army, Ctla ists as such a word, that Is: lt ls there, had his antiwar novel "San Camilo 1936u perlonfilng a ffinttlon-n~mlng an object, . published In !9111. lie ski rt ! talking an action, a sensation or bl.ending Its . publicly of politics 1tnd avoids ~1adrld 11 qualities. · .'' Ce.la writes of his first . months of the yea.r by stayil'llt on the volume. Island ol Majorca . ln person, he Ill mort lo th e point: "lt A journalist who knows hun well uys: absolutely Is not por"°iraphy." "He Is 1 brllliant man. And If you want to But 1!e aclmowledgu he has nevtr ta lk frankly , he !mow• the words." ' I I U'I TtlWIM19 Jffode1•1a Paul Bti1aga1a? An employe al t~e Westinghouse apparatus service r l1 nt in Richmond. Va .• lightens t~e top of a con- denser bushing !or a large power transforme r. Tbe b"'hing provides insulation to carry 115,000·vol t current from the power transformer without short· circuiting. I • A~sociates. the firm which designed the system. and Car· ric r ex!X'f'I lhtt plant to be self-supporting . Still another interesting" e.x- p<'riment. this one concerning the disposa l of sludize from sewage plants. hns just been started by tbe Federal Depart· ment of Agriculture on a 75- acre plot at Beltsville, Md . The aim of this experimt!nt Is: to determine the economics of enriching soils with sewage sludge. Tank trucks bring the sludge from the District of Columbia se"•age treatment p I a n t s . F.Rrth machines will mix: it '>''il h the existing soil in ratios as high RS 500 tons to the acre. 1'he experiment will be co n- lin11ed fnr several years. UHiTnately it ma y be determined that sew a g e sludgl' can hf used beneficially on a big scale. IT WILL be called the Com· putime. President V i ct Cl1' -- Wyler makes no claim that the 1 Computime wlll be more a.. curate than Bulova'• Ac· cuquart1, introduced I a t t Christme!f, which employs 'a quart7. crystal. 11 tuning fork and moving hands. But b6th Wyler and George Thiel!, the Inventor or the 30Jid-state move1nent in H a mi I I on : I Pulsar. say the Accuquartz and other quarti crystal watches with movlnR'. parts-those ·of Timex and the Japanese Seiko comp11.ny for example-are .still hybrid s. that the real future Is in all solid-stita watches with liquid crystal readouts. • Money's Worth Does Market Indicate Next -rrs--Presi-ent?- By SYLVIA PORTER If the stock market is lower at election time than at the start of 1972. the Democra_, will most likely win the White House . But. if-the market, 11 measured by the Dow Jonu Industrial average, is higher than on New Year's Day, President Nixon will most likely be reelected. Since 1900-almost three. quarters of a century-this remarkable indicator ha s usually foretold the Presiden- tial winner. according to Yale Hirsch, p·resident o[ the Hirsch 0 r gB.niza- tloo of Old Tappan, N. J., and sulh- or of the an· nual "Stock f>OllT•• Trader's Almanae4 Th ere have been only 11\rff exceptions: 19121 1940 tnd in 1968 when, says HlflCh. "The marvelous Indicator n e v er really had a chance due to John~n·s withdrawal 1s a candidate and the bombing halt." W i t h extraordinary fre- . quency during thi.s Democratic convention wttk, I tiave· been asked questioM about the stock market and where It might be heading. Here are aon1e fascinating Mswer.s I obtained from Hirsch, wtiich will be included in his 1973 Almanac. to be publilhed in late September ($7.45). Q. Does the market react more favorably to Republican or Democratic viclories? A. The Republicans win b§nds down on this category, report! Hirsch. Since JllOO, tht market as measured by tbt Dow Jones. has risen on eljht of the nine occ&Sion1 a Republican ha1 won and ·on only four of the nine occaslOD9 a Democrat hu won. RESEARCH BY the (n. vestment firm ol Niederhof. fer, Cross & Zeckhauser alpo found that the average ch.top the -~after Republican vjo- tory w11 : up 1.08 percent • Following Democratic v1c· tones it was: dowr 0.23 per- cent . But there11 a c~tch betel The market tends to discount the victory of an incumbent President. Since 1944, the Dow Jones industrial stock averaae has declined the day, W6'k and month following tht reelections or all the tn- cumbent candidAte.s during the period : Roosevelt ( 1 9 4 4 } 1 Truman (1948 1. Eisenhower (195e) 1nd Johnoon (19641 .,. • cept for a tiny 0.89 percent gain the month after Franklin Roosevelt 1s last victory .. -·· Since 1900, only two of the 12 Incumbents have been ousted, by the way : Hoover. 40 ye1r1 ago. and Taft in 1912. And no party during this en ti r. century has remained tn power for only four years. Q. Under which porty 1141 the stock mar.ket fared best? A. ''This will &hock people,'• Q. WHAT HAPPENS (Q the Hirsch cautioned me. •t stoc~ .rn~rket between con-wasn't aware of it myself.'' ventt0n times and elecilon? The following flgures show A. In tht first 40 y,.ears of Uuit Investors have ~ the-20t.h..<:entury, the muktl. -more..than lwtce..u w.U~uAlllr rose 10 out of 11 ttmet, usually D e m o c r a t 1 u undlr spectacul~rly, between the end RepubUcans. , of the Republican convention In Jun~ and November. There were fractional losses Jn lt44. liMS, 1952, t95e and 1900. Since then. the market has been a winner bet·.veen the encl of the GOP convention and election day (up 2.8 percent lrom July 17, 1964, and up !.! percent from Aug. t , 1968). The 1narket has become much less volatile tn the last 11ii: eled ion ytar11 with t h e a vtrl~t ch nse 7 ptrctnt q1lnst •n •vtr•I• II ptrttnt In lhe prevlola 11 election yean. REPUBLICAN ERAS: In lbe II-year perlod rrom 11111 lo 191%, the ft:toc.k market roee 36.$ pef'Cenl; in the 12·)'Mt' period from 1121 to 1931, theN WU no OVt.rAU chlflMe in tM stock market: in thf! 1-ye•r period from 1953 to 1960, tho stock market rDM 111. l ,,.... cenli In the 31ii·year perkld from 1969 lo mld·l97'1. !ht atock msrket roee U ~ Over the comblnod em of !&II yean. the total rill lo U. •tock marktl wu 116.1 lift' cent '· ' - • JO DAIL V PILOT S • FrldU, lit, 14, 1'72 Finance OVER THE COUNTER • Briefs • NASO l lsll"P for Thursc!•Y· July 13, 1t n • • ' e .4e4uilltlon • • • 'PHILADELPHIA INA l!orp., the hugt Phllld•lplu•· based financial complex with more than 60 suM4diarlts, an· ~need an agreement in prin· atple to acquir' Lawrenre Systems Inc. 'I'he Lawrence firm. head· qu.arterM in San Francisco, rjfert Inventory, accounting Ind documentary c o n t r o I atrvicts and unllormed guard 8'[Vlet:s acrost tht country. ' • iffGiff Riie •CULVER CITY N<I qperaUng Jncome rose 49 per- ~nt il1. the third quarter, Jlretrn-Goldwyn-Mayer J n c , ••led. The entert1Jnment rirm said net income bef or e ex· ltat0rdinary gains was St .OS tn lllion or 18 cents a share. up from 1706.000 or i I cents a abare In the aame quarter last year. e S&L fneome !'BEVERLY HILLS -Great ·yute~n Pi!)incial Corp., l~ ·1t1on 1 largest publicly held vlngs and loan auociation lding company, reported in- q r e a s e d 1 e cond-quarter dperattng Income •nd net in· 9'mt· ·1'he firm , which operates Great Western Savings & Loan ~ -Fir9l City Savings & Lean. alao htld more than .. billion in asseta for the first t.i.m~ . • tJNl'.l;ED STATES ;,N ATlON AL , BANK ~OUTH COAST PLAZA f) .IRANCH '°'If ONN ! SATURDAYS ) 9 ta 1 P.M. ON.•THUU. 1 .. 1 P.M. fQllDATS 10·6 P.M. .. 714} Mf.1111. "'ot.4 I•= ... c... ,,... C-te ,. .. •' """ vie. '"~ • •' D. DEAN HEISER FINANCE Ht ll'llltlltlit. Clltl'ftl (ALL ,Olt 1111,.0ltMATIOH SIA COAST ALARM SYITIMI DtmlN Of IH CN1t aNn. ..,,,,., 1'51 ,lacentl......C .. ta Meu .. ,. .... • •' • Do You or Will You N••d Tax Sheltar? • .. • •• .. l • • • • I • • • • ' • • ' • ' • HOW MUC H? $7·10-50·100 ,000 or moro7 TAKLA-HAU. LONCO LOOK AT CATTLE WHIRi THIH'S UP TO 30 % PROFIT Oftd UP TO 100% TAX WllTl·OFI' HALLI DAY'S • CLASSIC NAVY BL.AZER The Fabric Is a Crisp Blend of Dacron and Wool In a Tightly \Voven Hopsack. ps.oo A Perfttl Pairing with Our New Cavalry Twill Trouser in British T1tn or Blazer Grey. ps.oo MEN'S TRADmONAI. CLOTHING 17tll ' llYINI Aft. -WI STCll,, PLAIA NIWP'OlT IUCH -PH. 641.07tl MUTUAL FUNDS • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST I • • . · .. ,•, .. . . •: c; • .-,nd " o.<dPI I"' ()(,ldPI OI I Qc(Pttil ).M Dl'tPf1'1 ] " Oodt.,Co 60 Oct<:!" Ill I I I Olll& Ed 1 J.i OflE11IJ9Q Oh e Ill 1.10 O~l1GE I H 0 -Gf11f Ill O~l1NG 1 11 OJtn<orp q Oi\'lart l'>d\ °"'9lC11L 10 O~!lk1 M I 01',llc~t r ,o Olli "ft Co ] Ol'lo•ll M I Q!ii .. , c _t.j Q'(efT•" flJ =f ,: OWnll pl ... OJITCllnd .60 ·• • I ., 9All.'f I'll.OT .· -Finance Briefs \ 1 I I ,, ~ILY PILO'I' I frldll, Jul1 14, 1'71 C:.Wslon Rz'issian Traw1.er Aids Cat Racer N!Wl'ORT, R.I. (AP) -Cout Guard station broql>I Bill Rowell, who wu on hil Tallltt Bill to the main dock. way to becoming one ot. the RoWell, an A u 1 tr 111 an • BOATING became the filth sldppor to top llnlslien In the tingle-complete the 3,, 0 O o. m 11 o banded TranJatlantlc boat voyage, bUt it won't count in '--------J race, now says he feels lucky the standings. Pen Duict IV. lo bo ·alive. -··-··--.. ·---with Alain Colu ol Prance at His Tohill Biii, with 1 the helm, won the ,.... In a 1muhed port hull partially reoord time ol 21 day1, filled with water, madt It Into rea<hing the flnlail al llftnlon Newport Thursday night, with Reel Light Tower lul Friday. the aid ol a RUS!ian Inspection , The rolllsion balthaad ol :.hip, a Coas\ Guard cutter and Talllti Bill, some U feet a smaller patrol ve•sel. • behind the point of Impact, Tall!U Bill, a 4.1-foot sloop-kept the yacht ofloat. rigged catamaran, was knock· 111 caa thank my bloody ed. out of the race !rom Jucky stars I wa1 in a cata· Plymouth, En&lud, Wedntt-maran," Howell said, 11becaU1e day night when she collided if I'd been In a monobun I with a Ruselaa trawler in would have sunk like a atone." thlck lo& ne0r the Nantucket "It look that Ru 11 I 1 n Ljght!blp. trawler half an hourto 1et hil · The Inspection vessel look trawl up and by the time he the dlabled catamM'&n In t'"' came ' back he mightn't have early Thunda~ and brought it found me with tile tidt and to withJ:i S5 miles of Newport, ·.all," the skipper added. ''Jf it where it wu relieved by the hadn't been for that colll!lon 83-foot Coast Guard cutter, bulkhead, I would have been Point Turner. r~." The cutter brought 1he crip-Howell said be hadn't seen pled boat into Ne w p o r t the Russian ship before the Harbor, where the patrol collision and the Russian ahip Veuel !i:om the C.stle HID hadn't seen him. Championship Regattas Set for Alamitos Bav lnl<metlollal-14 I k I p p e r I ahd crews have a week QI championship competKlon ehead of them starting today at Alamitos Bay. The first three day~ -to- day, Salurday and Sunday - will be the Weot COl!ot Cl!am- pionslllp regatta. Aller two daya of mt, ~ qualifying for tho national championship wtll be -In their cocl<plll next Wednotclay for three days of duellng at Marina del Rey. The West Coast cham- plonllllpa wlD be under the IUldance ol Alamitos Bay Yacht Club and the naUonala will be nmrodded by South Cout Cortnlhlln Ya<hl Club, Co..i.d prlus are up for phi In bol'1 repltas. The Wett Coll! Plaque wiH bo awarded lo the series winner 11 Alamitos Bay. Take-home tropbJot wlll bo given, to tho Albrecht Will Be President . Paul Albrecht bas been elected president of I h • Southern California Morin• Association, the west's leading .marine trado organlution. SCMA annually pruenll the Loog, Beach Sailboat Show-to be held Oct. :Z0.21, and the Southem-CaUfornla ·Boat Show at the Los Angeles Convention Celiler' ln February. Albrecht hat been In the marine industry nearly all of his adult Ufe. He hu lll(IVed up · through the leadership ranks of SCMA, formerly serving as chairman of the Southern Calllornla B o a t Show. He has been a member Albrecht I! president or Unlflile Yachll In Long Beach. or the board or dlrectora for eight yeen. •' 50 Nations In Olympic Yacht Races Yachtsmen from over 50 COWltries will compete In the Olympic ya<hling games al Klei, Germany, starling Aug. 28 and cootlnuing through Sept. I. -lbla_lope the p r e v I o u 1 recoro or-te tyUntrles com= peling In the 1960 Olymplca at Naples, Italy, when the sum. mer OlympiQ were held at Rome. Forty-one cowitrles were represented at Acapulco In 1968. Some 210 boats in six cluaes wtll compete for the Olympic medals In the three racing areas in the Kiel outer Fjonle. Olympic classes are Dragon, Sotlrig, Star, Tempe!~ Flylnl Dutchman and Finn. Weekend Calendar Airplane To Locat;e 46 Yachts Seal Beach, Se\ Aug. 5 The fow1h annual Seal Beach to Dana Point race scheduled for Aug. 5 I! being C<Hponsored by the Seal l1eadi Yacht Club and Dana Point Yacht Club. The nee ii a downwind af- fair with a run or reach for the participants. In past races cooditklns .heye varied .from a drifting match to strong winds that have sent boa'ts surfing down the face of following seas. . While a atrong oortingent of ocean ra<m I! expected, the bulk of the 11,.t will bo made up of medium •i2ed yachts capable of a one-day ra'ce. , Special trophies will be awarded to winning boats in such claues u ketches , 1Choonen1 and ocean racing catarnararui. Seal Beach Yacht Club will o!!er the Huasey PerpetuaJ for ketches ind' Dana Point Yacht Club ha! put up the Clyde Beagle Perpetual for schooners. A buffet supper will bo !trv- ed for the participants at Dana Point Yacht Club's new clubhouse. A Jarge number of boats from the San Diego area are also e1pected to be in Dana Harbor. Slips will be available for smaller boats, bul most of the yachts wlD ralt up in the marina. Kites Set for First Fligh .t The first edition of the F1tgbt o( the Kites on Newport Harbor will doubtless draw the most spectator interest this weekend as the sporty little cat~ts compete Sunday over the old Flight of the Snowbirds course. The Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce has been looking !or s o m e yacbting event to take the place or the defunct Snowbird ntr1vapnza ever slnte the demiao of the sudden-death r1et a few yun ago. For tine -.11ie Flight of the 5oowbJrda Jn late July WU onO or the l!lc -allractioos for toariltl. In 111 heyday the Flight or the Snowblrds drew more than 110 boall. 'The Chamber or Comrner<e ii boplng the Flight or the Kil .. will hold Ille aame attraction. In other local Y•chlinl lftllll: Balboa Ya<ht Club wm .... Ill Drtlllng llWlds race ... yachll -In tho • • Serles, on Saturday. Also on Saturday, the distaff sailors will participate In Lklo Isle Yacht Club's annual All· Girl Regatta. The Midget Ocean Racing Fleet yachts (under 311 feet ) will compete Saturday in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Inslee Challenge Series. Los Angeles-Loll( lluc~ ALAMITOS BAY YACHT CLUB -YRU Smsll Boat Regalll, Saturday and Sun- day. LONG BEACH YACHT CLUB -Point Fermin Ra<e, !OR, MORF, PHRF, Setunlay. ___ llay KING HARBOR YACHT CLUB -Spinnaker Serles No. 4, Salurday, SOUTH C 0 A ST COR· INrnlAN YACIIT CLUB - Junior-Senior Regatta, Juntora at the belm, Satunlay and Sunday;-• -- • SU lllt1t CORONAbo YACHT CLUB -Junior SUnuner Serles; Rorick Serlu, PHRF, Salur- • day and SUnday. SILVER.GATE YACHT CLUB -Rorison Series, ban-. dicap fleet, SUnday. Nortli ud Inland ANACAPA YACHT CLUB- Sldpperelte Race, SUnday. SANTA BARBARA SAIL- ING CLUB -Summer Serie!, Sunday. Hirt tvnltllllt toNy, LI.iit Varllbft wtllOt "'IM ..wi momi119 "°"" •-1,. -ltfly I t. 11 1tno11 Ill 111~ ...._., Ml Sll'"'*'1. Hltll tedfl~. 10. CMNI """*"''-r911it r,._ .. to It. /nl1nd ltmper1t11rn r1ntt fNm .a ._ .. W11wt Nfnper1twt ff. S•11, /ff._, Tlde1 ,RIDAT karld 111111 ....... " .. 12:'6 t.m. SKllllll kJw ""' ,.,.,, l :•p.m. IATU•DAT •lr11 l'llllt .............. 11~11.m. Plr•l l(DW .............. 7;111.m. Stcri ............... 7:"'111.l'I. su•OAT 'Im N ... ~·· .. ····~···--l +lJ t ;fft. 4.1 •lrtt '" .............. 1:40 .. "I. '·' SKond l'lltlli ............ t:asp.m. 4.7 lecW kw ............ till p.m. t.t 11111 IUttt 1:11 t.m. Sth l;CN .. ,..., MIOft RIMI t :Q '·""' Ith IO:ll .._m. I ()11t· of Reach? -· J Compare aod decide G-Hd SIHpoble f'OR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENT CALL- 642·17tl '. ': ' ·: :· .............. ~.2129 .... Harbor .. Blvd.-..................... C05ta .. Meso··· ·642-1781 .... ;: ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT SUPER WlDE! Polyester/Glass Belted BEL TED-RAISED WHITE LETTERS "60 SERIES" F&0-14 or 15 .. $35.95 •.I!. T .-2.ll.J.• G&0-14or15 $~9.95 P.l .T .-2.9$-111 CAMPER OWNERS We F11tur1 TIRE SALE - JUMeo·1ao • Glass/Belted for mileage • Strong polyester cord body ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT HURRY ... Offer Ends July 22 SALE PRICES E7&-14 4 lor $94' • 2 !or $48' F7S-14 & 15 -4 for $10Q'• 2 lor s52•: G7S-14 & 15 · HI-SPEED WHEEL BALANCING Charge it at General Tire B .•m These are lhe tires that are original equipment on new 1972 cars In every divtsloo of Detroit's big 3 auto makers. 4 for $110' • 2 for s57• "Tut>eleu blacllwatt. pl111 $1.71 '9 $2.78 Fed. Ex.. T•r per W• er.. ON YOUR TRUCK WHITEWALLS ONLY $3 MORE PER TIRE pending Ofl size ! I, tllltall NIW hNYJ" Wtr llRllll M •114 .... 111 l. ...... 11111 Q"lll!Hn M I ll • _,, I. ..... ., ... -'""'" """' .. ,, ., .. , .. .... .. ~ .... Nfllnl ........... I . Tl'll 11ii1 1n1 11t 4 Wllrl fnlll'lt. .. 11.,.U '*' .... llNtlfltl, 1. Mfnl W... •11111 cllldl tm.,.. ltMYllllUfrt. .. ............... ~ ... MOlt U.S. ComPtct Clrt OIK Br•kes Sll;htly Higher, USED TIRES $5'5 EACH plu. •l•lt' •nd ioc.1 ,._ l:s of no id tr••d FRONT END ALIGNMENT ONLY f ' TUBELESS BLACKWALL POLYESTER BELTED TIRES A78x13 $14.95 •.•.•.• _,; B78x13 $15, 951 .•. r. 1.7t. C78x13 $16.95 •.•. t.1.H • C78x14 $17.95 ...... 1.11 E78x14 $18. 95 ..... 2.J4 Crookad wh .. 11 rob your car of maximum performance, rich, stM.-- lng 11nd tire we11r-. We correct c11 ... ter, c11mber, to.in, toe-out to your car manvf1cturer's specific11tions, •ncl safety chock and adjust your •'"ring. $850 "' •, .~'"'::.: ::-= !:.",.,. ~~l ,~~ ..,..... ... " ...r utre.I ~ • , • • \ . COMPLETE CAR CARI! Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Dally PHONE: -' :: " • ,. • ---.. • : Ill .... ~ It's Festival· Tinie · Aga i~ -: Bl ck1t1ge volunt~r F r .1 n Knott, abov• r'9ht, 1tudl•· ~ · production of Andr-Wyotli'1 ''Christina's World" 1h 'She makes up Rosa Huerta· of L .. guna Beach for her "Starring role." Thia 11 the firlf time the famous Wyeth canvas, or- iginal Lin the MUHum of Mod- ern Art, New York, hu been preHnted 11 e PegHnl llvlnt picture. At right, RoN on 11190 in the Wy•th work. County Artists Exhibit • Two outgrowths of the famed Festival of Arts opened today In Laguna Beach - the Art-A·Fair and the Sawdust Festival . Art·A·Fair, located along N. Coast ··---------··-···-·····~'!!~Y.t .. !~.~ ... ~!~ .... ~.~.~.~,.•_, ..... . primarily . watercolors, oils and acrylic • DISPLAY AT SAWDUST FISTIVAL I works by nu artists. The Sawdust· Festival, localed at 135 Laguna canyon ~d, offen wattrcolon, pastels, lk:etches, drawincs, leather, ceramics, macrame, metal sculpture, furniture and clothing daily from 11 1.m. to midnight. The sixth annual show of the SawdU!t Festival features 190 painten, sculptors, 00·....aftsme1rand artisans displaylng·their wares in free-form booths that defy description. The first Sawdust Festival WU held in 196& on what was then a vacant Jot at the comer o[ Park Avenue and Glenneyre Street. In 1967, the group laid its sawdust on property now used hy Arl-A·Fair along N. Coast Highway. Before the third show in 111611, tho Sawdllll group split, with the iraditional artists remaining at 0the N. Cout Highway 1ite1 and the more avant &.vde artists moving to the ~ Clnfm property. - over the past three years, Ille IMllval bu attempted to maintain an .. ..,_ -lured" approaCh·-alloWliig IM ellllbllif-·· to do pretty much u he pleuet. 1lul u the demand from exhibitors for apoce "" creased as the sbow..J>ecame. mon popular has come the ""-91117 for 1trictu grounds regulations. DAit. Y rlLOT ....... fltr Patrick O'DoMI• . : The v.'Orld·rarnous Festival of Arts at 5:30. 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. and Pageant or the .Masters opened to-Night ly at 8:30 p.m. during the ·~· day for 8 six·week run in Laguna Beach. \\'eek run, art masterpieces are re- created on stage in the Irvine Bowl~ an The midsummer opening of the 31th outdoor amphitheater. Living models presentation has transformed the seaside pose. costumed against pain ted comffiunity into a frenzy or activity. backgrounds in faithful reproductions of Some 175 of the area's finest ?J'tists and the original works. This year's "Pageant craftsmen have prepare<t their \vorks and of the ri1astcr" includes 12 paintings, 11 exhibits to be viewed by some 25o,ooo scu lptui;es •. a tapestrY. drawing, mural, lithograp h, pos ta·ge stamp, ivory carving ~pie on the Festival grounds tod ay and Oriental screen. thro11gh August 27. Daily from noon to Artists to be honored Include Claude midnight, many of them \Viii be on band P.ionte , Norman Rockwell , Edgar Degas, to demonstrate thei r skills and sell their Michelangelo, Andrew \Vyeth , Johannes works. Vermeer, August Rodin and Leonardo da About 70 of these talented Orange Vinci. Countians create such items as je\velry, The presentation, utilizing two co~ / handwoven stoics. leat her g ood s , plete casts on alternate weeks, is made furnit ure, Y.'OOCI bowls, model ships, w ssible with the 500 volunteers. This aculptured pieces, ceramic pati, collages. year's total is 3'J) participants in the mosaics and silk screen prints. Others ca!ts alone. are masters \\'ith brushes, pens, pencils, Although the pageant tickets have Crayons and palette kniv es. already been sold out for the 1972 season, Puppeteer Tony Urbano 1and his crew daily cancellations are received, making will! present "Peter Rabbi(," a musical some tickets available at the box office-. comedy for children daily at 1: 30 and 4 Entrance tickets to the fes tival grouhtt! p.m. "Mediterranean rtoliday," a are 50 cents for adults and 10 cents for __ mar i.ooette-r.evue · for· adult&,· -eao ·be ·&een .... chUdr-en --under".U.~ .. ·· · · · .. · · ..... · ~ .. ·· ·· ··· ·~·~· ·• "' l' -· ··· ·~ .. .. ' ' ' . 'ORPHEUS/·:A STEUBEN GLASS REPLICA IS A FAVORITE ---· ' CRAFTSMEN AND ARTISTS EXHIBIT AT FESTIVAL OF ARTS • . I • I rridJJ, July 14, 1972 CAKY PILOT Huntington Children'• Sla.-v 'Pooh' Play .Popular Bill Ll"k, left, end Dick Levinson ere creators of "Columbo," popular detective series. Crime ,and , Its Detection Qo Pay ( By GENE HAN DSA KER HOLLYWOOD (A P ) - "Columbo is p u re fan- tasy," says poUcemll,_n·aut hor Joseph Wambaugh. "Nothlrfa's technk:ally oorrect about the show. But what difference does. that make? It's fun to watch." 'l'he sarhe goes, he says, for other police shows o n teleyision where the revised ·--.··max1m··-~a<fs·:··--··-·-···-···- 250-pound but a g i 1 e In- vestigator Frank C a n n o n . "But no, basically it's the same thing. You play a h)lm&n _heiog, beca use detectives are human being!!. ~James Fraqciscus, u bli nd insurance invelligator Michael I.oogstreet, stands orf ag- gressors and .solves swindles with the hele or his guide dog and an occ a s i o nal sym- palfiiZtt: .. -. •·· Not loo many communlly theaters can come up with consistent standing room only crowds ror 1hejr various ~ ducUons, but the Huntington Beach PlaytioUse contends with that fortunate 1ituation just about every sum1ner. That's when the youngsters take over lhe horseshoe stage of the "Barn" for the annual children's show. an event that generally brings the sandbox set out in dro ves. Jt certainly did las l weekend, w the latest such e.ffort. .. inni the Pooh," opend to turnaway throngs at its first 1hrce performance!'! Friday ni ht and Saturday and Sunday afternoon!'!. Fortunately, for those little ones who ar.ived too late to~be seated at the first three performances, the show con- tinues this weekend and next. This is true childre n 's ·theater-the kids put it on themselves, gaining some valuable exi)erience 1n the process. But if one glances at the bottom half of the pro- gram, he'll find that a good ma'ny adults -most of them communlly theater actors i nd actresses -have pooled their ·talents backstage to give the youngsters a good show. The director, for instance, is Carol Faulstick, oile of the county's more familia r leading ladies who's taking her first staging assignmen t in local theater. Producer Ron Albertsen h8s a good many directorial miles on hi s speedometer. while technical dirac tor Ron Fillan ls an actor TOM TITUS Intermission who'1 rearely out of rehearsal. tough one which few grownup Barbara Garlich, another actors would ca re to well·known actress who takes tackle-playing lo aa audience regular turns at backst3ge of tots, toddlers, terrors and assignments. adds 11 new teen s. At close range this can credit lo her list as mu sical become unner\'ing, especially \\•hen you elicit youthful.,.tears director. Act res s Rita instead of the antici pated ap. Liedags, a recent award win-plause. \Vhere, you might won· ner at Westminster, is der, have you railed? choreographer, w hi 1 e Pali r~ortunately, the "Winnie the Tambellini, Costa Mesa Civic Pooh" cast doesn't "fall'' too Playhouse resident dlreclor o(ten .-and the Uny troupers whose Q.WO junior _group put on keep up quite nicely' with the ir the "Pooh'.:._elay a few seasons older, more s ea s o n e d ag o, lends a ha,od as costume bre1hcm. one o{ whoril is par· coordi~tor. ' ·• ticipating In his fourth con· Costumes · most of · wtiich sccutive chlldrtn's show al the were sewn' by ·mothers aod Huntington Beach Playhouse. , friends of the ca'st members, 1'he ultimate rew;u·d for share high billing with the set-these h ea vi I y costumed ting, designed by Garia Trick youngslers --representing and constructed by a~ anny bears, rabbit;, pigs, donkeys (){ vo l unteers , an the and kangaroos -comes not transformation of the Hunt-with the traditional curtain ineton Beach Playhouse into call, but a few momerlrNiter a junior version of Fan-when the pint-sized audience___ tasyland. Eye appeal is all·im· troops out of the , theater to portant if you want to hold the meet the _ _;inimal actors in attention of children for an person. 'l hour and a half, and· the Hunt: The admiration in those tiny ington prod uction has that in eye!! says it allt for the young abundance. cast and the hard-working For the kids, ages 8 through crew who made it all possible. middle teens, who comprise You ca~·.t mea sure that at the the cast, the mission is a box ofCJce. ' ..... " .................. ·' ......... , ............. " ...... '"'" .. . Ctime and il.s detection do lnde<d pay. Dennis We aver, once Marshal Dillon's limping depu- ty, now prowls the big city in a crimp.brimmed Stetson. From the Mark VII police- drama factory where Jack Webb and Harry Morgan once portrayed actual thou K h disguised Los Angeles Police cases on 1'Dragnet" conles "Adam-12." For a fourth seasoo Martin Milner and Kent McCord ride their patrol car in similarly Io w -k ey "stories adapted from true in- Animals Take Over Library 1;ro1n his wheelchair, Ray- mond Burr helps Sa n FraD- cisco police solve crimes tor a fifth i;eason. Glenn Ford 7.ips about in a Jeep as grim Sherifr Sam Cade. Cannon, 11.fannix , McMillan , Longstreet. O'Hara, "Adam- 12.'' "The Mod Squad," "The Persuaders" -are theY. dif- ferent rrom TV policemen and private eyes of, say, 15 years ago? cidents. Twn young men and a girl are swift-footed undercover agents for police, also for a fourth season, in '"Ille Mod Squad." Jack Lord heads a special investigative unit in the "llawaii ~,ive--0" dramas filmed In lhe Ha w a i ian Islands. THE REAL CANNON "t ice and whales' teeth are unlikely neighbors ln a new display at the Corona del Mar Branch Library. ' The mice (not live ones!) are a cha rming colleCtlon lent by Terry Shannon, Corona del Mar author of books for young readers. Crouped around an itmusing painting of a trio of musical n1ice (by Cha rles Payz.ant . the other half of the author-artist team or Shannon·Payzant). is • a mouse audience f r o m "Then they were s u b - human," say!! Wambau gh. "Now they're super-human." Until Oley were canceled, Actor William Conrad James Garner was a Mterlfi ----------- various lands, SOOle in cos- tume. A large chunk or "cheese" labeled • • C a s a Camembert (No cats allow-ROCK HUDSON TEAMS WITH SUSAN ST. JAMES ''MacMlll1n ind Wif•" i1 private •r• theme v1ri1tion "Acting It y I e s change,'' says WUliam Conrad, CBS' who didn \ waot to be• "1eriff. I What to Do, Where to Go Monday Concerts Open to Public THROUGH AUG. !I ' !~!t'!:~:i~~~!~ Ne~i~r;,~~~ !~~s ~~: d1y night 1t 9:15 p.m. through Aug. 28. Under the direction of H•nry Brandon, concerts will feature show tunes and old favorites. or Japanese, 1''ilipino, Samoan Snd Thai communities, Ad- mission free. JULY 15. II FESTIVAL OF THE BEJ..U -Mission San Diego de Alcala, rrom noon until 10 p.m., in commemoration of it! 203rd blrOtday. J ULY 16 ,-THROUGH JtJtY DUNE BUGGY RACE _ Southern California Independent STAT~ PIC~IC -:---Oregon-Washington natives to attend an- Driver'a Auoclation s~nsors dune bugg_x sedan racins: on nual picnic m Bixby Park, Broadway and Ch~rry Stree ts, the.~first, "third and' fitifi'-SiliiiiISYS' .. Of. me ... iiiOrilfi . .,..ar ·u1c· .. ·····toog "8each;···Juty ···u1:·-Lunch'·-a_t· .. 12:30, enterta1nmentl p~ Corona Raceway, Buchanan Street and the Rive rside Free-grams follow. way. Hot laps are at 6 p.m. with qualiCying laps from 6:30 JULY 19 -%3 ~ ...._ ed)" is home to half a dozen Lido. ni bblers. A lone parader car· ries a sign "Mice are Nice." Galerie Offers View Of Kansas An antique tin wind-up toy mouse combo -piano1 drums, fiddle, trul y' a collecto r's ite m, "'-was a child's delig ht forty William Har rison, a leading Mid-Continent water colorlst, will present his first California one-man show at Galerie Lido, 3375 Via Lido, Newport Beach, starting July 18. The Wichita, Kansas, artist who .specializes in character portraiture and rural scenes also wi ll exhibit several paint- ings in egg tempera. Harr ison i!'I a fou nder and years ago a!'I the performers jiggled1 sawed and thumped SpMMi ... 11 Snuff llottl" · AnclMtt Porcelains Precious Stone Carvl"I• 3355 Via Lido, Suite '1C'1 Newport leach 611·6711 their instruments. the \\'haling industry. "Mice are nice," says Terry But "Skip" Richardson, a Shannon -"but I confess I young and t11lented Newport prefer these to real ilve Beach artist, came across ones!" Strangely enough she some whBles' teeth and was has yet to write a book about inspired to perpetrate the old a mouse, though her books folk art. Using a needle point cover subje cts frorn to incise lhe ivory, he creates Archaeology to 7..oology, the intricate scenes in minute latest being ''Zoo Safari." detail on a somewhat unsym- which won the U.C.I. Friends pathetic surface. of the Li brary A""·ard and Fifteen to twenty hours o[ "New At The zoo (Animal conccntralicin and supreme. Offspring from Aard \'ark lo manual control are necessary Zebraf' to be published in to produce one of these "'OTk9 September. of art "'hich are most worthy Whales' teeth inscribed with of any collector's attention. seafaring scenes in most Library hours are ~1onday meticulous detail (known as through Wednesday 1 p.m. to scrimshaw work) compromise 9 p,m., and Thur·"~" lo Sat· the other half of this display. •::u=r=d=ay=9=p=.m=·=t=o=5:-...::=::::; Scrimshsw is a tr u 1 Yl r American art form that has practically died oot. Once a spa re time activity of whaling crews to while away the monotony of a Jong voyage, ii waned with the shrinking of FREE TURTLE Witt. p11rchcru •f turtl• bowl . 'Jhe QUALITY SHIRTS FOR MEN $4 Shirt Sale 20, Marine Ave. Bo I boa Island lf:lO A.M.•11 l".M. 1 dlt• I WH., 673-0897 333 E. 17th St. Co5ta MeMI ....... P111c1•t HOllM Mon .. s11. 1•s Fri. 'Ill I 11.m. 642°8788 to 7:30 p.m. Spectator tickets, adults, $2.50; juniors, 1$1.50, SUN 'N SEA f'ESTJVA l.r-Jmperial Beach.in S11n Dle~o cele- chlldren, $1 and under eight, free. 545-1 566. bratcs the summer season with a nautical festival Carnival forn1cr president of the 1•~·•ij•~·~·'~''·~·~~~·~'i·"~·;i'i"'~"iiMii""'~'ii'~~=~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in exposition tent, a Flea Market. ro ugh water swim and Kansas Water Color Society. A -"""' THROUGH JULY • Pa"tldleboard races. Yacht races and parade at 11 a.m., Sun-former commerc1·a1 art1.st he OBSERV 'TORY SHOWS -"New D1"scover1·es from the • ~ day : fireworks at dusk. Sponsored by Imperial Chamber of t di d t ti K c·t Art ~.foon " ls lhe current show at the Gri ffith Observatory. Commerce. s u e a ie ansas I Y Shows presented seven day!! a week, admission $1 for adults, Inslitute and' the Hollywood 50 cents under 18. (213) 844-1191. JULY 14 -AUGUST 27 Art Center. , 1 ' ART FESTIVAL AND PAGEANT OF THE MASTERS -650 He has exhibited paintings JULY 14 · 16 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Annual arts festiva l, at the Philbrook Art Museum, ORANGE CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION -On the Mall at daily II a.m. to midnight: includes lhe works or 175 area Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the The City, Garden Grove and Santa Ana Freeways. Openins artists, children and adult puppet shows. Admission to Wichita Art Museum. aalute at 7 p.m. Friday with Kingston Drum and Bugle , grounds is 50 cents for adults. 10 cents for t hildren . Pageant The artist informed Galerie Corps. Paper ballpon competition al 10 a.m., Saturday. In-of the A.fasters. nightly at 8:30 p.m. Tickets availa ble only Lido that he would donate ·a temational Balloon Race at 10 a.m. Sunday. Long Beach upon cancellation. Box office 494-1145, percentage of the opening day J unior Concert Bancf and Pageantry Corps. JULY 14-AUG UST !7 proceeds to the Newport SHOPPING HERE, . IS LIKE HAVING YOUR· OWN GARDEN! W• get our toma toes ev•ry morn in g from G•orge Tana ka, famous Orange County tomato grower! We get our corn from Blair Smith, famous Orange Count y corn grower. "Wait 'til you tast e these." We get ou r oranges & 9rapefruit from Vill a Park groves, famous Orange County citrus grower. Water- melons from Tony Bellinis. Finest wat•rmelons you ever tasted. Many , many mOJ• too num erous to men tion. That's why we 're nationally accl aimed "The World'• f ine1t Produc e Hou1e "l and look at these low prices! -~··-···"·········-··t··~~·~;~N~·~··~~~·;·~~u~~~;:~-R-0~.~--S~~~·&~b~~~:······ ~~~00~s~:;:·;~~:£:1;:;~~;s~~~1:t!3~~d·~~~~S:,"!!~···r··.~·.11~ar:bor~ .. ~Ar.~.t~~·M~use~um;j ... ~,·[j· -~ Las Positas Rd., and Highway IOI. Horse show, 7:30 p.m. Open 'daily from 10 a.m. to midnight. Gall ery Garden and ~--· '·., ;. ·. ~ DOUILE HIADIR • DOUILE HIADER DOUBLE HEADER COME. SH, COME SAYE! ' . • • daily and Saturday afi'~ "'Sifuday matinee at I p.m. Flower stroUin& minstrels. Ite ms on display include fine arts, water· CrL.-.-..!i1"_1ilR. .... •,. Show hours are JO a.)Tl. to 10 p.m. Adults 75 cents and pre-colors, oils, pastels, drawings, leathereralt, jewelry, cer-J ~~am~ ?ti school children free. amics, glass and plastic. mosaics, macra~e, silkscreen !'> uiiuas ;::..r-==--~= JULY 14 _ AUGUST 27 prints, rugs and clothing. One week's admission Is 25 cents. l wu11•= ;:.::.:.~.~.;,:.. ART·A-J.~A lll 7% -Laguna Brach Sixth Annual cithibilion of JULY %t-AUGUST I · "'"""'"'--Jt.A--.c..mo1" 60 talen ted local painters and craftsmen, 346 N. Coast Hwy, CIRCUS -Ringling Bro!! ind Barnum an d Bailey al The Hours lJ 11.m. to 10_ P:m. daily. Open to midn ight on Friday F'oruin. Performances at 8 p.m. Mondays: 2:30 and 8 p.m. snd Saturday. Adm1ss1on 25 cent;. Tuesdays through Fridays; 10:30 a.m., 2:30 and 8 p.m. Sat- J ULV 15 urdays; and 2 and 6 p.m, Sundays. ORIENTA ~ l'ESTI V~~ :.. ""Day ·or Ifie Lotus" ·si><Vts-Ored· 'i-~-jijjiij--jijji-jjjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiijjjiijjij~f l by the Lo! Angeles Parks and Recreation Dtpt., will be July L 15, 10 a.m. • 10 p.m., north end of Echo Park, Los Angeles. Varied program!!, dRnces. exhiblt.5 to promite understanding &"""" Latte Ottt Ladiu .Lt'-e SupuWr. • , • 1n!I 'fllhJ nol? Yi't'• • Mvt.r J t l l•kt11 ~ltlh .. llf t Mlvt a.tll•I WM\-dldfl'l l'ffltl.t th• ,&JIH ol •h•lr 1to11111 coll«tion, •••'~! b!rn ln 1tu1l11f'H lor fl""' fort' J•tn 8Ul'INO 1m11n. or w11rld h Mft\11 eolltrUfln1. 'll't l.tCtlll lb& w11fll """-"'"'" !or h '• )1-1tl plal11 bid""""-• I• Pl.l' lllW pftt •• 1nd 11\flllPl to "11~11" 111•Ull111, "•!JAY t11ll, wt do11'1 011\llblt !rift priC't , l'or•fllll llaln o•·rr eo11"'t11111. 0 11• •Mt• h P•l'>'llPI 11111 eour- i,('u1. Y.'t w1Wlll t11htr bt ll\101)" of JH1rl111 "IM "''t h" 111111 "1101 tllO\!fh" , ... 711\lt t.C)tlfftl1'11, Thl.J help• Dllf f<IP\11'11101'1 11111 •preatb tllt •otd th1t S11ptrior 11 t111 -t:G1!1Pllls.J11•Ulo... _ ---· N11l till'lt J't>U'N hi D11r •Ill~ 11111kt.&llr \IUJ1 Old littlu, , , 1 '"" 11111 0111 l11pn111r'I ll11r pricr1 an lnll)' l\ljWl'h:W. IUf'llllOlll I TAM' & COIN CO .. INC. 111 W1u ?ttl lttt•1. L.m AFlfttl11, Ctlilorn11 9001 4 1213) 121·2&2 0 1. . ' HUNTER'S BOOKS #8 FASHION SQUARE SANTA ANA (714) 543.9343 * Hard backs • Paper backt Gr11ting C1rd1 OPEN EVININGS MON. I FRI. * .... 111 lntrly Hlltt • sw ..... o.ll• • ... ..... . • "'"''' • s. ..... .... The W1st'1 Old~st A: finelt Jooklt.ota Servtni C&Jifornhl Since tllSl CULTURED PEARLS ARE OUR EXCLUSIVE CON.CERN AND ART MURATA PEARL-CO.- OF CALI FORNIA, INC. • MARlNEllS Y!LLAGE D•M Harllier Dtl l'rHe A"'"" 7 I 4-4tWaJ'I • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • SEE IT MADI! • LARCOEl THAN EYER • FOR HEALTH . SAKE • : FRESH SQUEEZED : ICEBERG : ZUCCINI : : ORANGE JUICE : LETTUCE : I oc POU'ND : : 3~r. : 1·oc1A. .:. ;1~~~~~~:;: •: a • 8 •••• a a a a lAllG! SIZI • • s9u1m TOUR OWN. • • • • • • • • • • CAULIFLOWER • • ORANGES • Leu! T ... •t-• • 12 LIS. 1.00 • Uc l11kot • 2 SC IA. : • Limit y1 Gii. Limit S Limit 12 Lk • Or 2 la1keh 8 W Limit 2 a a With This C.u!Mft • With This CGUittn a Ith Thl1 Couopn I ·············~················ COUPONS IXPIH JULT 1', 1'72 These resta urants demand the finest for their customers, th1t'1 why they fet• turt Newport ProdDCeJ Pe tronin them! HewM'a. Newport; SpcHJh t ttf l t flJder, Newport: Aley Wnt, Newport; CMrfln Chi•, 2 Locati on1, Newport ; Pfritte1 lftn\ Corona del Mar, and over 300 other•. How about your c1IJin9 us? "0ra'1QI Countv'• ra.tu1t Grm.ofng Produc. and Flower OroanfzationH NEWPORT PROD UCE Phone •7l-1715 •7l"'111 671•6tt1 0,.. 7 hyt e WHli 7 ...,. ,. I ,.m. 2'U New,_t 11111 ... 4 "" ltlo P .. lnsulo :r "35 y,.,., of Produce Knot1 H011" "Wh•rt QUlllllY I.! lh< Order of th• Hoiu1H eOfllDtD ,lUIT SI0,,11 , 'OJI U YI A•S. • I I r r rl di1y, JUfY 14, 1'171 DAil y PllOT II 'L. IZ Taylor' on Onion· Roll. ·-Ill llurtllg gaturday visitrwitb ·frle~~s -tn Los Angeles over the Past few years - St at Aeast three or four afternoons - we've galloped all the' way to Pasadena with everybody 's taste buds making speellic demands. The destination whlch fulfilled the needs of all our palates was a remarkable food establishment by the name of Stottlemyer's. When first introduced to the place there wu an instant awareness of having· found one of the very best deli sandwich take-out operations anywhere. The food provided ample cause for succ·cedlng trips but another factor entered the pic- ture to make such outings doubly rewarding. This delightful feature was an op- Lure of Asolo pOrtunity to scan StotUemyet's menu and laugh with a gusto equivalent to that ex· pended on consumption of the wares. Because the monikers given to the sandwich bill of fare revealed a phenomenal sense of humor by someo(\e in the department of designations. No, to our great g00<1 tortune as well as all other residents of the Soutl't Coast, it's no longer necessary to make the trek to Pasadena to enjoy these pleasures. A full-fledged edition of Stottlemyer'• has opened its doors to the public in Laguna· Beach. For the most part, we \f.3rned, it ,carries just about the. same line of bakery goods , fancy meats, gourm~t ·goodies and other Items found m Pasadena. I For all the allure these delicacies hold. however, It's still the step-uj>-and-order and take-out sand.wich bar that leads the way In Stottlemyer's. And the Laguna Beach spot offers evei:y delicious and whimsically named combination sold in the city of roses . Actually all sandwiches -uniform!y priced St 89 cents-fall under 14 general categories. These are ·corned beef, ham, roast beef, chopped liver, pastrami, smoked salmon, turkey, tongue, tuna salad, Portuguese sardine, beef salami. Genoa salami, liverwurst and odds and ends. lt1s the handles that .have been-hung on · the sandwiches falling under these headings wherein the humor arises. In. the odds and ends offerings, for example, the L.8 .J. consists of bologna on white. Drama Thrive§ on Florida Stnge By WILUAf\1 GLOVER Richard G. Fallon. chie f of the ''is that nothini;t has been impo6ed complex project. "We've got stabili· from outside. We have a group of SAJ\ASOTA, Fla. (AP) -Tigers ty at last, at least as far as that is people fo;-whom just the idea o! and c!Owns \vere once ttie big lure. ever theatrically possible." creating Asolo has been sufficient NoW.,.people list Asolo as a prime Cautious optimism at the top is, stimulus to working together." · nf course, relative. Further down Howard J. r-.1illman, the adroit. r.~n !_.or ~topping .!>1 and coming the----chaln. of-command. wotkers. soft..spo ken---inanaging._clire<.:to.r_whJ) back. still pursue fuhds as "a most grew up in a tough slum of New As almost everyone from the distressing plight.'! York's Brooklyn, stresses another Keys to Pensa"cola knows, Asolo But while endeavor in the aspect of how to make theater sue. (say AHS-Olo) is Florida's official performing a rt I' occasionally cessful. state theater, and an exceptional surges, and more frequently ebbs "I'm always telling people that exampJe of regional dramatic elsewhere, Asolo currently may they should treat Asolo the same as enterprise. boas -its 13th consecutive season. a library. lf you don't like a The na~ is borrowed from an the only long-sustained professional particular book, you go and j!et Italian v11lag eir Venice where repertory in the southeastern another one. So if you do h't like one Napoleon's troopNaw plays in the United States. play, come back and see another. Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY The Martha Raye is 11 combination of her- ring, cucumber. lettuce 11nd blackbread, and the Richard Nixon indicates "on this one you never know just what you'll get.'' AmonE!'. nearly 100 othe.r passibilities. a few of the combinations offered are the Liz Taylor, turkey breast, tongue , cranberry, onionroll; John \Va y n e, roastbee(. swiss cheese, mayonnaise, Jewish rye, and John Birch, red peppers, white tuna , blue c,beese, rye. Still others are the Moshe Dayan, smoked salmon, creamc.heese, black olives, bagel; Marlene Dietrich, Berliner, ham, liverwurst, swiss b«igel; S{lncho Panza, sardines, gorgonzola, cucumber, pumpernickel; Le GrAn Charles, roast beef~ s~·eet peppers, lettuce, French roll, and l\.1arquis de Sade, headcheese, pe~ pers, munster, lettuce, bagel. Be certain, too, to check out the in· gredients .that go into sandwiches like the Miok•Y Mouse, Marie Antolnetlt, 11 Duce, Barb a r a Streisand, Brigitte Bardot, Karl MAr>t, Hubert Humphrey, Bonnie and Clyde. Fidel Castro, Mrs. Onassis, Max Sch melllng, Tom Jones and Isadora Duncan. , . A few special sandwiches are o!fered at higher prices ranging from 99 cents to $1.39. These include the Spiro, Cllrol·Bob- Ted-Alice, Al Capone, Tiny Tim, Alcindor and Cyrano. ' Catered party trays such as the Jack Benny, Princess Grace and Greer Garson range from $1.50 to $1.95 per pefson . Side orders of co le slaw, macaroni salad and potato salad can also be purchased to tt1ke out \vith your sand~·iches. Don't n1iss all the good fun and food now aVailable at Stottlemyer's in Laguna Beach. The address is 328 Glenneyre, just around 1he corner of Forest Ave. elegant little audito1iu~ that now Along with local pride and state Don1t write a nasty letter.'' ............ : .... ~:~f~~~~~~.g~~~·-........ =~m;nfu~ir~itre~~~s~~~J·········t~~~aso~·l'h~,t;~ffi~~~r, ...... ,, .......... . paintings and all , the 1ntcr1or of ~e project has develo.ped without an y troupe presents 10 plays, of which • playhouse was transrlanted here m of Ule big foundation support th~t six can be seen in a usual week. 1949 in a rare burio;t of cultural spurred troupes into ~xistence in The 1972 display ranges from a new enthusiasm by the St ate many ther areas during the past dramatization of ' ' o .r a c u I a '' Legisl~ture. decade. . through such familiars as "Hay Asolo's transformation into the Isola tion hasn't been without Fever" and "The Front Page" to headquarters for broad theatrical 15ome value, however. "The House Of Blue Leaves," )ast 11. endeavor happened by accident. "The driving inspiration." ~ays year's New York Drama Critics IT'S A PACKED HOUSE AT THE ASOLO THEATER IN SARA.SOTA, FLORIDA "We are at a turn ing point,'' says Bettilu Lewis, a key 'f~-raiser, Circle wiMer. 300.seat Italian theater transplanted to Ringling Museum grounds ii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~.~,::::::::::::::::::.::::::::=:::::.::::::::::::::::::=~.~~~~~~~=======1 =,,,for the best Food -Cocktalls -Entertainment -Danclnt Now Appearing "GOOD CO. PLUS ONE" . Sund•y thtu S1turd1y -1:45 • 1 :30 OPEN DAILY lroakfast -Lunch -Dinner -Sunday lrundl Early Dinner 3.95 Children under 12-2..SO I Sunday Th.rough Thursday 31106 COAST HWY .. SOUTH LAGUNA -4H·266l - Ampl• Parlll119 MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Room DINNER SPECIALS Choic1 of So~p or S1l•d B1lt1d Pot1to or Rici Pil •f e G•rlic Br11d 81v1r191 e D1111tl WEDNESDAY -Top Sirloin Stuk ··-----------$2.'5 THURSDAY -Prim o Rib :--------·•---------·-------------$3.40 FRIDAY -Braised Sirloin Tiis ····-···················-$2.95 SATURDAY -Tou,.odos o Beel .... ---------------· $3.25 SUNDAY -Lobslor hi\ ---------------·---............... $4.35 Orange County'• Top Entertainment BUDDY AND H~LEN 81nq111t f1ciliti1t up te 450J1opl1 c 11712 •RAHAM AVINUI (At W....-1 tt~.NTINGTON IU.CH 17141·141·1116 (2111192·1914 EVERY MONDAY IS PARTY NIGHT Startl•t' At 4:00 p.m. Sp..;lal Priced Drinks e ChamflOI•• SOc COMPLETE DINNER $2.50 DANCING-I p.m. to 1 1.m. with Clay Christopher Aod Tllo c ....... NOW APPEARING "SASSY CLASS" Show Timi W11~l'li9ht1 10 P.M. Show Tirn1t Fri. & S•t. 10 a 12 ,.M, AND NIGHTLY DANCING Open Daily For Lunch SUNDAY _ CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 11 ta, LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS e DANCING UooNKSlUJ w. COAST HWY. '°ftAl"4 NIWPORT HACH VY'-' 642-4291 --• THE"llACK KNIGHT Sun 'Downer 'Dinners Real RESTAURANT SERVED .,oo TD"'"' P.M. MONDAY THAU SATURDAY Cantonese F11od SOUP • ENTREE •BEVERAGE eat here or INTIMATE DINING 2 95 tak• ham•. COCKTAILS ., DANCING ___ • ___ __,. s TAG SEAFOOD BAR SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH ENTERTAINMENT DINNER. PRIVATE PARTIES CHINESE CASINO Open Daily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Lunch 11 :30 to 3 NOW APPEARING MATT LEWIS & CO. 330 EAST 17TH STREET -COSTA ME,SA 548-7791 OYSTER BAR ENTERTAINMENT Tu11d1y th ru S1turcl•y, 1:30 to I :30 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO Th•rsdoy Fcnhlo• Show 12:11 Open Sovtn Cl•y• LUNCH e DINNER e SUNDAY IRUNCH 1 t •·'"· 4 p.m. 9:30 o.m •• 4 p.m, 32802 COAST HWY. flt Cl'IWll V1lley 1"1rtiw1y) LAGUNA NIGUEL TEMPLE GARDENS • QMNe:S:SR~staurant RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~~E IUfPET LUNCH 11:30.l:SO M•nd•y thru Friday "'·.Set .... 1 Featuring Exotic Tropical Drink.a 1500 AC'AMS (at Harbor) COSTA MESA 540·1937 540·1923 del Mar Fltte Italian Cubine Coekiatlr 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY -673-8267 R ... rvttlons Open Delly -5 p.m. to 2 1.m. CLOS!D MONDAY \ OANCIN:! FROM ROCK TO BACH 111 21st pl., Newport Be1ch ORiol• 3-9560 SAMBO:S DOES IT AGAIN BREAKFAST SPECIAL 2 FOR THE 1 PRICE OF $2.30 VALUE FOR $1.15 The Fun Place for F1mily Foodl Sa112]os llt&TAUllANT ·Y15, WI m1•" it! Two of ou' "'"b1•tebl1 br11ltf1sfs •r• vour for th1 prit1 of on1. START THI DAY OFF RIGHT WITH A SAMBO'S SPECIAL Shi Sambo P•nc•~M, 0111 Frt1h R•llth Egg, Two StrlpS of L .. n 811(on, Jule• ot your d1ake, Tlg,r Butttr & yCJoUr cho!t• ol Svru11. \ 545,4479 3001 S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA Offtr Good S11. & Sun. Only a A.M. IO t ,,M, ••nqvet 1'1tlllll11 Yalld 011ly Cit Sa"'bo'1, 5a11to A11...-Eirpln J11ly 31 COUPON THE BERLINER ' RESTAURANT 11111 llACH ILYD. HUNTIN8'TON llACH A COMPLETE CONTINENTAL DELI SECTION 0'1N ,0 .. LUNCH M•11. "'" $It, -111• "tr• OINNllt ,ltOM I '.M, l •c• MIMIY DANCINe TO VAltlOUI OlltMAN IANOI 'rltl1y ..-'411Wtfy 0'1N IUNOAYI Sun., July 16 BROATWURST FESTIVAL .... "flit H•DOY Wllldll'1r1" On1 Of Eurooe'• Finni Trlo1. Mek1 Reservelionll How, · · Rt1l•u••nt 0Pl"lt Al S P.M. M1tSI¢ Slerts At S P.M, l'rl, Accordl111 Minic Sit. Oln1 & D•ntl Tl Ti.. Atr1tTlt11t OUR MENU Slllkl • G1r1Nn Style SIUfl'llr•ftll wi.ntr Sdlnlflll llOlillld ... '"' ltrttlflt'ff Ptrk Cllt" Nlllltlill Si.Ill: ,.,. l1,1nd!ft: WI lervt Klftt lt1c l 1Mwkl!tt 1101nw111111'• L.,1t11 -·~ Otll•r a l11tri. sc11•irm•1111 o,.. Y .. tr .. "41Delly12·12 -Ftl. -41 s.t. 'Ill J e.-. Food· Spirits SERVING LUNCH Mon. thru Frl.-11 :30 ta 4:30 BRUNCH Sat. & Sun.-10 o.m. to 3:30 DINNER Mon. limo Thur. S to 11 Fri. & Sat. S to 12--Sun. 4 lo 10 ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTlY 34344 STREET of the GREEN LANTERN (Overlooking D1n1 Point Harbor) 496 • 6146 DANA POINT • I , :'.:_JI .OAILV l'ILD\. •.• 'a;: ::c: I tt1t YllA• 1 AHA ·s UST Steve-Stills-Plays . in Buwl Live Theater 2111 r. c .. tt •11,11-.., Ctrff. Otl ""°'• Ctl!ft,..W •7J.tJK · · "lt41(tt•• •· }'MtfM4 ..... , .... FRESH FROM STUNNING SUCCESSES IN : ·HOLLYWOOD AND BEVERLY HILLS, OLD · WORLD RESTAURANTS . • . • . . • • .,. .... , .. ' " ~ " " ·' ; I !• I· .• ,. OPENS ITS JHIRD·AND NEWEST· RISTAURANT IN CORONA DEL MAR .. Extra-Ordinary · Stealc & Lobster IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE JUDY .. and JIM OF MERY GRIFFIN FAME accompanied hy ralCnted and accompli~hird musicians. will tnttrrain you ni«htly PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS ·voLCANO ·'DOlTSE PRESENTS THE POPULAR AND SENSATIONA,L ENZO AND HIS GROUP DANCING & . ENTERT.AINMENT FR~M 9 to 2, Tues. thru Sun. JOIN US FOR TIKI TIME HAPPY . HOURS Mo:.~,::.~;,., WITH JOHN GLORIA & HIS GUITAR DINNER HOURS 6-ll P.M. 1400 PALISADES ROAD COSTA MESA (Briston 557-7057 tire Extraordinary c!Jvfark_"IJAVIIJSO!{ ., Nleup0rt 17 ...,,., Now thru Aug. 12th ~\ ~IDITLfl. Mll)(t<.1'N ~kuaiil; "fjnest 1vrexican Food in Orange Co." Ch1rbrollt rr-Food to Go Op•" 7 D1yt Cockt1il1 S47 W. ltlh SI, e '42·J7J4 Co111 M•u ~111 1m•1111ttt e Jl4·'3M .,a ., Glrdtn GtoYI r. Contin1nt1I Cui1in1 Cocktails Serving L uncheon and Dinner Monday through Sa turdaf, Closed Sundays We ere located next to the Mey Co, in South Coast Plate. JJJJ I, irhtot COIN M... · 140-3140 :: :OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO . . DINEIN A PLEASANT HACIENDA MICllSll THE FINEST f AMIL Y MEXICAN JlESlAURANT ATMOSPHERE • 296 E. 17th STREET • ~ HILLGREN SQ. COSTA MESA PHONE 645·7626 OPEN • Sund4y thru Thurid1y J J.JO p.m. Frfd1y 1nd SaturtlllJI I J.J I p.m. I Stephtn SUUo appears In coftcert wilb Manaasu Sunday et a p.m. in tilt Hollywood Bowl, his first Southern Cali- fomla appearance this season, ''Happy Birthday, Wanda June" HiJ latest album, on Atlantic Records, is also e n t i t I e d "Manassas/' and features the group. Jt is bullt around pure country music and rock'n'roll . Manawis consist of ·Chris Hillman on mandolin, Dallas Taylor on drums, Paul Harris on keyboard, Al Perkins on ste~I guitar, Fuzzy Samuels on bass and Jo Lala o n percussion. Continuing Its six·weelc run at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, is the West Coast premiere of the Kurt Vonnegut Jr. com·; edy. Performances Wednesday; through Sunday at "'• p.m. Reservations 646-1363. 0 Wlnnte the Pooh" Besides the album, suns and ~ the group have C<>me up with a hit single, "Rock and Roll Crazies." The children's production wit h n1usic will be staged tonight al 7 p.m., SAturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St.. Huntington l. Beach. Reservations 536-4446. Conceit Associates of Beverly Hills is promoting the show . .Stills is the founder Qf the Buffalo Springfield, and later helped form .Crosby, Stills, Nash Bnd Young. His first album "Stephen Stills" contained the works of . 642·829J Bl'Hkftst ,~. Din,..,. COc-11 11~ En!lf"ll lnmtnt Try ·THE GOOD PROVIDERS! Our daily features tor the family on a budget. Only_ $1.39 - Monday Salisbury s1eak · Tuesday Meat Loaf and Brown Gtavy · Wednesday Chuck Wagon Steak, Barbeque Sauce Thursday Spaghetti and Meatball•, Parmesan 1 Cheese, Garll~ B.read Friday Halibut Nuggets, TaitarSauce & Lemon . Saturday Veal Parmesan, Spaghetti Sunday Roast Turkey with Otesslng end Fixings Monday Sweet & sour Shrimp Tuesday Fried Chicken (Regula~y $1.95) Wednesday Baked Swiss Sleak Thursday Beef Stew Friday Chicken Fried Steak, Counlry Gravy Saturday Broiled Ham Steak, Sweet & Soursauca Sunday Baked swiss steak All entrees Include choice of soup or salad1 bread A butter, potatoes or rice, and fresh vegetable. ' Complete Dinners: add 50¢ and Include choice of beverage; ple {Includes cream pie), cake, Ice cream or small sundaes. Seived Dally 11 a.m •. • 9 p.m. As k your waitress about our dally Breakt'5t Features. Van de Kamps. AVAILABLE AT ALL FAMILY RESTAURANTS \ • With A View From the Terracj Overlooking Beautiful Newport Hirbor Every Sunday, 9 am to 2 pm ............................ , ,,, . . .. "'"'"" .............. , ................ . PARIS INN Commenci ng Mon .. July 17 LUNCHEON 11 :30-2:30 Mon. thril Fri. Introducing- ' A Culinary Masterpltct' Compl"• $3 95 Dinner • From 6 p.m. -1t1on. thru Thur. COCKTAILS e CLOSED MONDAY 501 W. 30th ST. NEWPORT BEACH 675·0300 ~~~ RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS SEA FOOP-STEAKS-PRIME RI B INTERN ATIONAL ENTREES iROM $2.IS JILL SAYS: "YOU ONLY HAVE TO TRY IT TO LIKE IT." STEAK AND LOBSTER $5.BS RON SHY & DON KENDRICK r.Ion. thru Sat. In the Lounge Lunc h-Mon. thru Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Dinner-Mon. t~ru Sat. 5 to 10 p.m. Com pli"1 •nt1ry 81k1d Al11k1 for tll llirthd•v1 & An11iv1r11ri •1 2645 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 545.9471 COCKTAILS ENTERT ATNMENT Bir/ta• QUIJIUy Nail .. Mulcan FOodl -W ... D9YI: 11 :Jo A.M. te 12:J O "t. OIMll Sot. 11 :JO A.M. te l:JO Open 1 Days ..... ~~ NOW APPEARING RUBEN ORTEGA Internationally Known Sulld-rs: 4:00·12 MIDNl_GH't Lat in Gu itarist 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962.791 1 1 \ r-.. -------., I HOME OF WORLD FAMOUS I I SHISH. KABOB : TIM MORGON I . NIDNllDAY THOU MONDAY I I GINO LANZI ' ' ' TUEIDAYS ONLY I I COMPLETE DINNERS FO~ TWO I llTWltlf I AND 1 P.M. 1 TOP SIRLOIN sso 1 DOCK·A·IOI ' I MAHI MAHI .. 1 r.. I I SATUlDAY & SUNDAY PATIO HUNCH I CHOICE OF 11. HUIYOS HNCHIROS $1.)75 : J. STIAI & t•GS ' J, IGGS llNIDICT .i I ,,. m1Ns1n 11uNCH MINU I WAYNE VINCENT TRIO 'I 2-6 P.M. F~IDAY. SATURDAY I SUNDAY l '--~~~~~~-'1 Clll l'OI 1aroYATIONS-Ul·11M ' 2601 W. COAST HIGHWAT -NIWrOIT llACH I _________ .. • • - • \ , Art Museum Tell,s- • New Officer Slate The Newport Harbor Art Beach, wbote company pve a Museum announcM 1 new major collectkm o f Con- , alate of officers for the 1972· temporary painting a n d 1t73 1t1son. sculpture to the museum la!l T. Phillips Morgan. Newp0rl -ye a r ana lfeilry T. Seg- S.ach, a long time friend and erstrom. Both Guggenheim museum trustee and last and Segerstrom are benefae- year 's treasurer, has been tors of the museum. elect!d the museum'• new Other officers include : Mrt. president. Robert J. Marshall, f«mer Serving as vice presidenta mayor ot Newport Beach, aloog with Morgan a r e secretary; and Newport Beach Messrs: Ben C. De 111 n e, attorney, David S. Robertson, Newport Beach land treasurer. developer; Robert Gug-Jack Glenn, director Jack genheim: H. Wallace Mer· Glenn Gallery, c.orooa del ryman. president of A veo Mar, are serving as board Financial Services, Newport .memben. ......... .. ~ .. -· h--l t ••llfJ .. INlldMl•Lndl ~·C'Adle.11$ ROAST PRIME Rll OF IHF AU JUS .~~, ~. ~~~~~-too AMONG 20 SILICT DINNll INTRID VINA HARM El DUO E11tert1 inh1.f TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ••• Every Saturday . . . . '!/;, ~ SUN. JULY 16 ~· u OUR FABULOUS ~~ r .. cHAMPAGNE ~ Iii suF,~~rT~3R,~~cH i: 'I -'I I "'''"' (tfttftrtUIJ-AI ,,, Art" I I 1 COLD llLICTIONI HOT llLlmONI I I Mi114 Y111teblt s.11• Scr111blt4 t11s I I lr•ll• rr11it ''"'"'' <Hie• tf llc111 I I fi91, Prv1111 U1k S..1111 .r H1• I Mtlt11 Wt4tts friH CJti(kM II f Gr1pefr11it Mtl't'tl en• letf M11Jt I : Or•1111, Ttm•t• It' Oltktt1 li'f'trs, ''''''" , r I "'''' J11lct i11 let O'lrl111 tr A1 6nti1 I I I NOT IUTTllMllK lllCUITI, ILUlllllT MU"1NS :1 · . <OFFll, TIA 01 Mill • CKAMPA&lll IOI ADULTS j ; ,I, 1auLTS $3.25 nl«1!$2.75 ·1! 1y llSRVATIOflS llCOMMfMDID I ' A IUl,,lllNG11 $HOIT Hin llOll All llllYIArr !i STUfTS~IR[ i Jj[ R.EmT AURANT l j i ... '--.::~ NIW,OIT llACH .i ::-.. 1241 W, COAST NWT, ~ ._ __ 171 4) H6·SOS 7 'Z, M ~ 1>-4 ~ >-ol >-ol l>4 NOW APPEARING BILL SELF DUO We4 .... ,.s ... SUNDAY IRUNCH I 0 A.M. te J P.M. IAN9UIT PACILITIU l17 P.ACIPIC COAIT HWY. HUNTINaTON II.ACK OPEN 1 DAYS 536-2555 \\~M~ ANCHOR INN HOUSI OF SIAl'OOD . NOW Ol'l!N FOR L"NCH 11 :30 le 2:10 ,_ "'"' .... Nightly Dinnor-Cocktoil• 4 to 11 p.m. Sunday 2 lo 9:30 pm-Clostd Mondty• 1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Camino RealJ SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571 .. !!!srE~KE~~o~s~~ANT ITALIAN SPECIAL TIES ENTl!RTAINMl!NT ·DANCING Note Appe•rltlf GERMAINE AND THI! , alLL MALO TltlO · l New hnl1t LRcll lo I -0. N .. O.t~•• ,.... . 12'2 HISTOWAIJSADIS IOAD COSTA MISA 146-PM ' • D~l V l'ILOT - In the Galleries All-state Sho.w . TV DAILY LOG Duo In Dena.and Miss Didi Wilson and Leslie Jon Martinez are hostess and host o! KCET's special "Close Enough for Jazz" Lo be broadcast Thursday, July 20, at 8 p.m. on Channel 28. Residents of Los Angeles, they are past winners of the city's Battle of the Bands contest. Gold~ in Umel{fiht In Laguna Beach LAGUNA BEAOll ART GALLERY -IOI CIHf Driva, Lquna ljeach. All caJifornia Show Includes palnUn1s and aculp- tures. Open daily from tt :30 to 4:30 p.m. through AIJiUll fl. MESA VERDE Lf8RARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive , Cocta Mesa. 011 paintings by Herschel Yeager. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS i\ND LOAN -500 New- port Center Drive, Newport Beach. \Vatercolora by Marilyn Millar through July. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona del Mar .• Hours: 11 a.m . ..S p.m. daily. Oil paintings and acryllca by Ned Evans and Gary Beydler through July fl. · · COSTA MESA·LIBRARY .-566 Center St., Costa Mesa. Oil paintings by Marian Ries. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Watercolors by Beulah Treadway. DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa, Oil paintings by Gertrude Mattacks and Joanne Bone. Oils and Acrylic> by Virginia B. Kling. . FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -llilO Adams 'st., Costa Mesa. Oil p~lntings by Clara Miller. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mes. Vefde Dr .. Costa Mesa. Oil paintings by Millie Win¥;1er. TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Oil paintings by Merle calhoun. CHALLIS-GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy.. Laguna Beach. Hours : 11 a.m. -5 p.m. daily. Painting by A. G. Fleming. ~ . MUCKENTALER CULTURAL CENTER -119 Buena C Vista Drive., Fullerton. "West Coast American Realists" through July 15. / . BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main St ., Santa Ana . Hours: Tues., Sat. 10 a.m.·4:30 p.m. Sunday, 1·5 p.m. Wednesday and Thu.rsday evenings, 7·9 p.m. closed Monday. On exhibit through July, jurried show by Orange County Art Asso- ciation. · Walk-on Actress Now a Big Star ED I TOR'S NOTE - ''Laugh·ln'1 former dumb blonde still l1 11ellow-haired -but never ha& been dumb. Goldie Hawn proved that after leaving the TV comed11 series to go into movies -and winning on· Oscar for her efforts. Now, 1he'1 starring in the movie "Butter/lit& A.re Free." By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK CAP ) -The original "Laugh-In" crowd, whole uninhibited a n t i c s surprised an unprepared television audience almost five years ago, is pretty well broken up and scattered now. By September, only four of the originals will be left: Dan Rowan and Dick Martin, of course, plus Gary Owen, im· ltating an old·line radio an- nouncer, and Ruth Buzzi, the series' alJ·purpose singer, dan· cer and clown. 1 But. amon1 all the talent that has come and gone, only Goldie Hawn, who quit alter three memc;>rable 1 ea sons playing a dumb bunny, has gone .qn to real star status - and that in motion plcturea. Maybe it was luck, more likely It was long preparation and a built-in sense of timing, but Goldie left "Laugh-In" right after she had finished STAil STATUS Goldie Hawn Ing, confused introductions of 'Laugh-In' shows Just walking Dan and Dick and of sketches. on and introducing people "I had a three-year contract and things like that. Suddenly I with 'Laugh-In' she ex· was messing up lines honestly plained. "At the end .of the and the studio audience third year, I didn 't want to laughed. That's how the thing slick around. And George started." Schlatter, then creator and ex· Goldie's third film was ''S" ecutive producer of the series in which she costarred with and the others dJdn't want to Warren Beatty. She says she hold me back . ., tinds motion picture work The public missed earlier challenging and satisfying. opportunities to d iscover ''The joys come because it's Goldie.· The writers-producers a totally _different experience of a series called "Good Morn-from television; all the values ing World" had seen her and are different," she said. "In they wrote in a role for her, television I had the most fun the bubble-headed girl friend working in my own special. In of a disc jockey in the comedy a series you lose the ex- aeries. , citement when you are. doing .Nothing much happened to It every week." Goldie or to the Rrles, except Her Iateiit movie Is the film that Schlatter, whipping up version of "Butterflies Are 'Laugh-In' shows just walking Free," and she ·recently cut make a crazy, new form of TV her first album , "Goldie," entertainment work, saw her "I'm grateful to television," and liked her. she said. "It did a lot for me. "! was lypecast by the And I hope l'il be able to situation comedy series," she make more. 1pec11I1 . said, "and while George liked Meanwhile,. I'm particularly the character, be really didn't enjoying working with actor1 her role in the film adaptation know what to do with me. and actresses -and Jear~ of "Cactus Flower," the role "I spent the first three ing." that later won her an Oscar. r--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;:::--1 A slight girl with enormous eyes, tousled hair and a dancer 's body, Go Id I e deligbled the public with a dumb blonde act and fumbl· THE INVISIBLE VAPOR CAPER of the l'•r! Belly Dancer on Skates The~ckJMI gets•~ -ii the LAB ... Helena Kallianiotes is co-. slarrtng with Haquel Welch and Kevin Mccarthy in "The Kansas City Bomber," In MGM presentation pro- duced by Martin Elfand and directed by Jerrold Freedman. The actress will portray a key member of a roller games team In the new action-drama, according to executive pro-. ducers, Jules Levy and Arthur Gardner. Miss Kallianiotes ... w h o played the tough talking hitchhiker in "Five Easy Pieces," was formerly one of America's most prominent belly dancers and is now a top teacher or the ancient art with studios in Los Angeles. some book. some movie. • and the laughs tr-;r<Q ~I WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' -~ CESAR XE JM RUSSELL ROMERO FLYNN BACKUS WLlWA ~-J.EtUS~BN<Al'o.N ...,.Af()A(WS WINDOM -·......,"''""' -......... "-oa _.,IQllllLL8I ....... ~~ -·-.. ·--·-·!9-L-\.\)$ A TRUlllfl ADVINTUU l' ... "PERRY" COllTINUOUllROM "'" \ ' TONIGHT'S INCIAL NBC D 8:30 p.m. NBC Friday Ni&Jit Movies is a triple pl•r "Call Home" stars Arte Johnson ., a delective; 'Wednesday Night Out" 1tar1 Jim Hut. ton and Kathleen Haven and "Keepln& Up· With the Joneses" stars Wanen Berliner, Pat Finley, John Amos and Teresa Graves aa a blaclrand white couple living in the iame building with tbe same last name. Friday Evening JULY 14 Saturday Moming JULY 19 1:00 I) 0 0 !II ID Ill Nm t-00 8 .._ .. , s.-. CD o N•ws Cll TY 1 a .... 0 Tho 111 Volloy t:!O 8 - CIJ ComboU I" ... """'"" m Tllt Altrtstonts S£lllllltl' Sttltlllr I!) Ot11lel 8oofM Let's Rip Qj) E'ftllln& It r. 7:00 8 Muds lip EE Alt.I T1nslo1 1• m OI' Dollttlt ED Hoc11epodp Ledp CD llny ~ - 0 M1yblny RFD , Cl) TY I Cl1nreo111 ml To It AnllOunced · 811111' 1114 Mb lllddks m Tllrtl Stoo1es fD SU.mt strMt 1:30 0 MO't'lt: (C) {90) "Serp111t RJk· 7:30 8 Dwty's Trttltoull er" (dr1) '&8 -L" M1rvln, D Deputy Dn1 (I) CBS News 8 C.111pus Pnifllt t1j Mm Gritflft -0 CD11)"" lu"n m The flti111 Ntrll I U11dt ll:trss EID H1tll1,011 l rtttltr lua m Trtvel lite World 1:00 (I) lup lunny Q! Green Auu 8 @! WDOdy Woodpediat CI:) To It An!IOUnud I Pepeye 1nd fritllds Q] Vldori1 J1mu Show (I) (j) funlly Pllflttetl F.E KeedWp Elliot Mintz A.M. Mtwlts: "TM St111t.r Wt! 7:00 II mo m Nm lldilUttt" (c.om) '47-£111 ll1!w. 0 8owli111 for Ottll1n WU!Jtm Powt!I. "Spider 1M ttl4 (i} Trutti or Couequences flJ" (MYS) '52-Erlc Portm1n, Ntdil (I) Dr1inet GriJ. 0 W111t's Mr U11tP II) Cetrntry Nit1lc Tl1111 m I L"' lu<J t!O I) 11) Scoobr·Dol Q) I Dre1111 of H111111t D 9 m Pint l'tntlltr aJ) Th1 City C11111 • G111t Autry Ell""'" I CI> 11) low" "" fD E't'lflllll It '* HO M1tte• Cltbtbettll'I QIRlto: ...... ,.,. [W~ Ddi&lltlt- 7:30. c1 .... 1 a_, -(d~) ••• - 8 Ht1""'4 l(!utre& · Rldl1rd TrlYl1. M"": (CJ (lh~ ·~p· (l<l· I Cl) 11) ........... -... f!) '61-Micheer Goua:h. C.rtolft Cfrfi't'1I (J) To Ttll till trutll M0¥11: (C) "'11CQJ1U1111 ti Cl) I Drtlrn ef Jt111nle 0.11111"' (mys) '43-Gtorp ll•t\ D Miiiion $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "All Peltr Lorri. Hinch tn Deel" (mm) '61 -Pt! II Morie: ~ Pail' (Wit) Boone. B1rb1r1 Eden. 'S4 -Dent Cltrtl, Andy t1ev111 .. t10l Lift Ar&und Us g) Cine 111 SU CINI m Ho11n's Heroes t.JI 8 The H1lr le1r l lllltfl mm"""" o 111 m '""'' .... @ World l'rw (i) Tlju111: WlnM to UM SovUI t:ll Los 8e¥trt, l'trtlvlllo 8 Cl) Udwtne €S Unb11M World 10:00 8 ([) Pebltln 11111 111111 14u CD MJ&fl Ptrfonw1nct I «Im T•U • Ci111t St1111 ffi MO't'lt: "Cri1111 Sdlotl" (dr1) '3' ())(I) ~rlost9 a., -Humphrey Bo11 rt. Gile Part. Mlwle: 'Ultqt .,.kltl. 1:00 1J ()) O'Hm, U.S. Ttta111 l•.JO fJ (I) Ardtlt'1 TY f111nln 0 0 m S.11lord tnd Soll (R) IJ Movie: "atln1" (dfl) '43-laf. 0 !I) (I} CD Tiit l rldy luntJt (II) 1tt1 YounL A11n l1dd. m n. Moth1n-l11-LI• D Mwlt: (C) "fM 11, Shot" (dr•) C!) l'tny MISOll '42-f!Ull!Jlhrlf loplt EE Hen111nos Cor•I• , ...,.. 1111..., J1M11t I (Ill W111!Jniten Welk 111 Rmew 11:00 ()) MN1111 ---.. _._ ...... hlldel Ctlllraf HOlllbM Alffll ... ""*""' Pim. l:lO 11 1111!! NIC llldly -: <Cl M - -(2ht) Triple l'llJ -"'till Htl•" tm • .... 1ttr1 Arte Johnson 1s • detectlvt ...._ tlrlll who dons v1riou1 dlsrulsas to atdl Lldll LM the erook.t; ''WednadlJ Nlsflt Ovt" ll:ll ()) Jllll .i 91 Pmrcats ll1rs Jim HuttOll, Ktthleen Nol1t1 (]) LllClllt Ud ind GIOl'lt OeHaven; ind "Kt1phi1 U111t ht "Tht F1mlty end tlll Up With Ult JoneMS" stars Wtr· County Museum of Alf' ten Berlin1er, Pat Finley, John Amos. m Mom: "lltrtytd Wt•11" (df') ind Temt Gtms as 1 bl1U couple '55-Tom Dr1ke, Clrolt M•tlll'l't'S. l ftd I wfl!lt coupJt who $h1rt' tlll 9 Ovtdtor WtfW 11m1 1Plr1~nt bul!dlnt Ind tllt (!) l ll)'lfnt same list n1m1. O CD 11> m "' h!Otdp F-Afternoon I~ (R) I Mtrf lrlffi1 SJtow U:00 IJ ())'Al MOll•w @Tiit""' - -O JoM w.,.. ,..,., 1:00 (I) CIS Flldly -: (C) (10) 11) Mo¥il: "Mu Jilt" (mys) ·~- "Fact If Fur" (susp) •n-Rltlrrki Georie BrMt, Dl1n1 Om. Mont1lb1n, Ellz1b11th A.\hley, 0 (])0) 118<141 POPI 01'11 (I) Ci) 9) bt• 222 (R) Jonts Pll)'S llo&t for this: hour ol ~ musk:: ind , corntdr. Sptt11I lUllll UM Vtnnt Pt11 hcordar lncludt Tiit Osmonds, th• t.emld) TY Mml t11m of H'udsof\ end l.lndry, Sun· TM Ylr&l11l111 dty't Chlld, 11M1 th1 MIU Cu~ JtMlt Con1r11etlon. ~ t :!O llp.t Look Iii """' (C) .,_ -(wa) CJ) (I) aJ TIM Odd Coupl1 (R) '50 -Georp MontlOlltfry. DIDNns . mHus! Gil III DEIUr DMut Yount a Linter OJ Amtvr1 u.JO 8 Cl) You Are Tllert (R) l!) bcinr ftOlll """'"'°' P11t QI Mr f1VOrltt M1rt1111 \G:OO B m ,.._ Ill f1nf1tr11 f11C111 0 CD11) Ill LM Alortc>o 11!to 1:00 8 (I) CIS CMWro•'• nl• r.-\ D llletlt: (C) (Zllr) "nit I.Illy" e Mlwlt: "Tiii Wutlr111r" (WU) (dre) '55--0IMI de Hnl\lfnd. '40--01ry toop1r, D1n1 Andr.W,. ID """"" """ 0 "°'"' .., s.111y AMed" Cctnl IJI) 111A7111• TtlftlllM T1IMft '57 -Jtmu Kennedy, IB Ptlf...-AWtt • um. .. Wlfld IT!lt - --11-NkkC.rtu "'"""._ ti C* •It T1rdt LI Lt,tttd• .. ..... I Lllwl If .... , .... 11:!0 (1)-WU (R) -ltltp ,_ l:JO ---a T••·tltck , -: -1111" (woo) '»-t1) Amllq WlrV-11 K"*" C~ MOlll10mt1Y, T1~ H1111t1r. ID"' c.o, -... --eta s.ta.1a -<Cl -...i l!llold' Ill ttu .. Dl ... sill (llM 'l2-4uy WllH1m1. . a--tool_,,_ II C11d111dl c.i,tblt tftall eM1 WIW 11:00e111eeai•... _,_i_c...i I (J) .._ ' 'St-Jer17 ColoM1, Jiit Jllrttr. °"' ... ..,... • "":t!'_: .. (C) ........ II" <4h> '51 Mtni.I Dlllel -Jotl lllCtlrN, S"""r tftfllln. Tnrtll • C.-~•1e1t 111111'1111111 JIMr 11 ... twTMIHI 111,._,, W g Tiit Jou ... . .... TM. ........ ...,_ ll:IS.-l4 n.tT- ll:IO Cll La -"l>I I--..... ..,.. (dro) 1~ -· tlO Tllo-k ... l llll!llllllllf-·--: .,,...,.... (ctn) '4$-- --lube ll:tl111r. WUlltnl lendll l.llClllit Ult I (1)11) 11 llcl -1:11 .. --filllJitl•• AellllCas IM Tt Tll .. Tnitlt ...... lt-00 -: (C) "IAcl II "" Cill" f• °" -(d11) '57 -Sld11ey ltol!ler, llltllle: lllJllll ltW' ffte) •q,.... m Mtwlt: ~ lJ" (hot) '13 Jofl11 WIJM, .IM11• Dna. -Wlllllm C.mpbtll, lu1M Anders. GI td-R T'llMn i·--. _, ""' -r.ow 1Z:30 Ct• ..ic n.. (d~1) 'S&-U11ttia Htrvw. 1:00 DD.Cl)-IF-.to""' Mfltt: Tt It ..,_. · ,,..: ....... If twt ..... 1:15 """' (C) '.'Vl11iolt" (~•• '" t..I to --'Mtd1ltl11t C.rroll, Fttd MttMI#' -CW.,. •"1· 1,.1_,_ l:JO • ...,, (C) .,,.,,.. (oft) '14-Oo ~ ftrntndO ltm1s. lrill lltltll, .... "Ult.If ......... llU II Nl""1tfll -"!-r-(WIS) 'll--1111• •'-tfloctloil,""Nllt ·----•WtbllM" .,.....1hll .... I ••• , l:OO 8 <Cl .,,,_. Ch«l 'It-Joli• GI-- ·"'1r, M1r1 C«dlJ. e,.. tf astcznau . ~, •• . . DAILY PILOT I F•ldit, Ju~ l~, 1972 I :Goes Greek Karan Armstrong aond Frank Guarrera o( the ~1et­ ropo1itan Opera appear in Rossini 's great comic Qpera "The Barber of Seville" appearing at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles for three perform· ances Thursday, July 20, and Saturday and Sunday. July 22-23. ~ ., . { ' ' ' ! ····-····-····-· : .' • . • ' • • • , 3ACADEMY'AWA·~ds 1 ,~-· 1' "· "'·· ~ e .. · r· "' .... ,,,l'•P~., i ·'·~·~t O ; I~ .J1.11·i;t >(~''~f ~ ·. ,"t iddler onthe RPof" •• • on the Screen il111k•m1rit•rd e m11f•r ch1r9• 7 f11hio11 ill1ncf, 111wporl c1~t•r 444·5070 • • •••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••• •• euc:11 •L¥D "' •L1.•• • • ••• , C•••~ _..., • Pit GllOG ~ ••?•HO• • MUNTINOTON • A.G11 r Umlld Artnlll llitlvJ£EY. ~~ BOOKSHOPS Ifl1 TH' CITY • Orc1"!J9 (71 ~) '639·7100 SOUTH COAST •LAZA o.- Ca1!0 M•o" • 171 ~) $40·21tl f·•~l~t• ~~~.~~~ ,, ' "M.A~S.1-!." 7:00 l'.M .. "PATTON" 9:00 l'.M. frldoy I Saturday 011lf "MASH" 7 & 11 :54 ACAD.f~Y AWAlD WINNERS l •n John1on & Clori1 L11•thr,111n "THE LAST PICTURE SHOW" AH G•or9• S•9•I "WHERE'S POPPA?" l!!llCll J ul II ~ • ''THI ·OTHll" CPG) AND IPGJ "WAIT UNTIL DAlK" 2BIG ORANGE COUNTY E"'CLUSIVES ·~ ..... ALSO ~-llllll STARS: IOAlUPJND BtN JOH NSON • ROBT. PRESTON r 2NO EXCL.US IVE RUN WO ODY ALLEN '" Rock Gt ou·p 'America'On WayUp B MARY CAMPBELL {API -America is swee~ ing the country. "America," the LP, is on the best-selling charts. America. I he three-man group whose first LP it is, has been surrounded with a bit of colifllSion as well as sudden JlO!l<llarity. They're just finishing a six· wee.Ii: tour of the states where they "'ere , booked I a s l December when they were unknown here, as an English group, under the theory that wiknown groups go O\!'er better ···········-· ........... .., ................... ~····-·········· ···~-· .. ···-· .... ········---·····.. .. ....... ···~· in America if they1re English. The group is American but wat" arraid to tour in ~mer!ca. because of all that crime and violence one hears about in England. SINGLE A single, ••A Horse with No Name," ls No. 9 on the chart and climbing. writing songs, ' w r i t I n I To clear the contusion, separately. In fact that is the A.nerica consists of Dan Peek, \\'ay it still \\·orks. one of us g 20 bor · Fl ·q Gerry bring! a skeleton song to the ~~kle'y, 1~1 In bor:r\na; Texas,' rest of the guys and we kick it and Dewey BunneU. 18. born around and stuff and see ~·hat in Yorkshire, En r: 1 and . happens. Finally we thought Beckley'• and Bunncll's moth· rs are British; Peek's mother we were somewhere near is American. ready to meet a guy ' Gerry Como Out of 'Retirement' They · all three are sons of had met. American Air Force men and This was Jeff Dexter, age met in 1968 in a high school 25 who became America's for Air Force dependents in m~nager. Beckley ca\ls him Perry Como 1rill fill his first live ene1a:;:ement in nearly a year when he rel urns to the nuin Showroom of ' the Las Vei;as J·lllton Hotel J 111y 18 to open a shQr t t1,·o·\veek engage- Perry's temporary "retirement" from the en· lerta inment scene v.•as im· posed by a broken leg suffered · while taping a televlJion special last fall. For this.' his fourth headline appearance at the Hilton, . cOmo "·111 bring with him the ultra·smooth sounds of the Ray Ch.,.rleis Sin'.;ers and the ' antics or veteran comic Foster Brooks. Th~ show folltHvs Liberac'e Into the Showroom England . . ."ttn~ key fig~re in ex?,)Sing us Internationale. They aren't strongly opin-to the "·orld." • lonatcd about . .the military, Bunnell' says. "H~ _put on • It v1as al the .Hilton just two pro or con, and aren't int() Jot of sho\vs at the Roundhouse · years ago that Perry returned politics, though the:y think in London. He put us ·on his to the nightclub stare ffter an most people their age are. Christmas show in 1970 with abs"n"!e o! 2J ~cars. HP im-h w IT'edialelv eslahl isherl h!m'ie!f They are strongly into muslc. Elton John and the W o. e as Qre or L'ls Vc!tRS' greatest Bunnell says, ''\Ve didn't played with Pink Floyd three . scn"~rtar altracl;ons. record or anything in high times. Jn the London area we: school. We played high school were always on the bottom ~t · \V''lilc litr'itinr: his pub\ic ap-dances. We gra~u,11tt'd from the bill, ,v\t h T. Rex-. Traffic P'":'l .. r!"r"P.S to a few clull rlatr'! high school in 1969 and Dan -a lot of people." . czch yea r arid an ncca~ipnal went' to college for fl vear and B kJ "A lr! told te\eviSion special, Como 1 s · ec ey say.s, g.,. Gerry and I worke'i in ·a me if she went to see a good reco-rdin!! oare~r has con· '"archouse. · 1 ~rl·n• til'!ue-i to blr'1'i"m. H.is RCA " act we were a ways sup.,... .1 ... recefrding or "It's Impossible" Ji';'lnith;e;miea=Q~ti;mie:, =w='=";'';'';;;;them_.'_' __ · \vas (lne of last ye~r's biggest \ Hollywood 'Bowl ' Adds Parking Lot Si"t'!Je h'ts. Perry will br back'!"! by the 35-rrr::.-mb"r Hilt'ln Orches tra lr1r''?.r the t>aton of his personal con''uctor, N i ck H:illywood Bo"'I has changed the location of its ratelllte parking. For its 50th Birthd ay S:::as')n, Bo\vl patrons may park at Universa l Studio's lot on the corner of Barham Boulevard and F'orest La \\•n Crivc, localed dl rcctl y up the st··cet frrn1 W<trrcr Brr,th~rs. T:1is all::nvs. for the fir:::t time in the Bowl's 50 year history, access f r o in bot.b the Hol\y"·ood and \1 en tu r a Pcri to . He will arrpcar twice Frce"·ays. r i~htly throuf:lh Aur-usl 3 when l fl~t ye;;ir's Bov. l satellite: 1 __ E_lv_is_P_r_c_sl..:cy:..__rc_tu_r_n_s. __ parking was provided by Uriversa l Stud io's Lankershim eo~NE• 'At1Jie coAst H•GlflfA'+'' ''" tt Boulevard lot. ~ The new lot hol ds-more.-than 1,000 cars and is only a tv.•o rrinut~ drive front either the ~lol!.v,vood or Ven tu r a Freeway. and less than a ten minute ride by shuttle bus to the Bov•I. LAST WEEK ! 2:id Big Hit "THE GRAD UATE" STARTS n ic..,_===-' TOMORROW ~====~c · ''Wllt BETWEEN MEN ANO WOMEN " AT4 THEATRES FASH ION SQUAlll THIATRl .J lfrtwrial H<woy & ldohci loHobto 691-0633 "SKYJACKED" AND AND ''THE Clltl'.Y TREATMENT" ~a: ASAM SPl!GEl· . HWfQffl.J. SCllAfFN!~ ""NI cha las ..... Alexandra , STARTSWED.JULY~9 U'/ALT D l$1\1EY'S "HOW YOU Sii HIM. '/vo u C~NOS~! ''THE GRADUATE" AGAIN ,/ '\OR FOR THE /. \~RST TIME. \..., \, ·(RI ,, . ..... \ •. \ ~ KATHERINE ROSS DUSTIN HOFFMAN ANNE BANCROFT ACADEMY AWAMI WllllIU "'' DlllfCf°""Mllfl MQtOU '--~-Li'' ;c~,,--• EllZAllfTH TAYLOR AlSO ·RIC HARO !!URTON "HAMMllSMITH IS OllT" STARTS WED. JULY 19TH ''THUAST OF THI RID NOUOYHS" '"TH£ TEAR'S FIRST REALLY SATISFYING , llC COMMERCIAL AM!RICU FILM. ONE OF THPMOST BRUTAL ANO MOVING ,CHRONICLES ~! AME RICAN LIFE EVER DESIGNEO WITHIN THE LIMITS OF POPUlAR ENTERTAINMENT."" -Vif)Cent Can_b_.Y, New York Times '\'THE &ODFATHER ' IS A ll'lCTACULAR MOVIE, ONE OF THE FINEST GAHITER MOVIES EYER MADEi'" -ne,Sl'ialil.NBC·TV NOW SHOWING NOW YOU DON'T -SPICIAL llMITID ENGAGEMENT START~S.._....,.,,~ WED. 7/19 ••• • • • COASt HW'+' tt M•C••11•11, •lYO • NEWPORT BEACH • 644·0760 ., \ , .. ,,~.,. Juli 14, 1922 DAILY PILOT 21) B~lls .Ring at San Diego Mission Medical Center To Host Devane Willlom O.vanel, W b o " --- MiJSion San Diego de and dinner beU1 to ship's bells Alcala, finl of the 21 that have been brought by California missions. w l I 1 parishioners and visitors also celebrate lts annual 'Te$tival will be ble!Sl!!d after the bless- of the Bells" with fiesta ae· ing of the mission bells. livlties from noon to 10 p.m. 'A 41blessing of animals" tomorrow and Sunday in com· also will follow with tbe.- memoration of its 2o.1rd birth· pries t.s -b I es s Ing a day.._ , "menagerie" .that in past HighlighJi:ng the "'eekend years has ranged from fiesta will be the traditional canaries, homed toads, and processional i.nd "blessing o{ turtles to dogs. cats and ~the bells" at 4 p.m. SUnday In horses. which the rive bells in the.., The \fi;>!t Rev. Lto T. historic mission bell tower ••ill Maher, bishop or San Diego, be rung. after being reblessed will say mass in the mls.~1on by the 1nission priests. church at noon Sunday -also The missioJl campanil~ or as one of the religious bell tower. restored in 1930, highlights of the festival. houses l'ive bells. The upper tier contains a mission bell of SPANISH FIESTA unknown origin. One of the The R~v. Msgr. 1. Brent bells In the second tier ls an E~ge.n ui pastor at the original mission bell and the m1ss1on. Ttte. Rev. t.au.rence other a duplicate cast in San McLaughhn ts a s s o c 1 a t e Diego pa,stor. · Spanish dancing. mariachis, BEU.S BLESSED and "ther entertainment has One bell in the lower tier is been planned for the fiesta by a ' oyal Crown Bell of Spain" the mission· church families . A donated by King Don Carlos cantina type of foqd ·seh1p will 111 and ~ought to &an Diefl'.o provide traditiohat Sp(l;nish !: . ~ ~!ltlaking :Music The 1 ab u l o.u s Roy ' by the FraQciscan fathe·rs at luntheons and dinner's -along r · f • ctark, cdn').ediam vocal-{ i the lime of ?a.,ther Serra. The with hot dogs, sofj.,_!(rinks , pop. . ist and. inu.sic.iant, ap-other was recaSt-{n San Dei.R:o corn , ~nd i~ cream. ! pears at Knott's Berry • in 1894 from 'tQ.ree 1796 There will be game booths. farm Friday night, July mission bells from SM!_n that a "country store", and "whif.e 21 . Shows times are at cracked when the tow~was elephant" and goldfish booths. 6:30, 8:30 and 10:80 destroyed in an earthquak~ndian jewelry, rugs, and . • 1&61). needlework will be sold and ________ _::::_ _ _,_p_.m_. ___ _:____ B!tts ranging fro1n toy bells "cake walks" are scheduled. 'f.V Drama Put~ Hawaii in Despair : ·: "· ::By Terreace 01Fl1herty :~yone who loves t b e islin'd~ of Hawaii as 1 do can· not· avoid a feeling of disgust . at' ,the manner in which lhe HOllywood haoles degrade them wjlh their s I e a z y television crime dramas. 1 would·find thtm less oUensJve· if their 1tais weren't '°' hypociltjcal about il all. If all Ille .l!Dries printed about how Jack Lord and Rithard Boone ad[llire th~ isl;inds were collected and the paper reprocessed, they would ma ke enough paper leis to strangle every ' convenUoneer to visit the place in the next so years. On the other hand, their television shows have jone little but cloud the Ha'waiian sunset with human despair. I have yet to see an episode of "Hawaii Five-o~· that didn 't leave a vaguely unpleasant taste In the mouth. ._ . weren't for the heavy overlay showdown it i5 difficult for of sadism. The vUlain was a viewers to c'hoose between a rich . playbo"y who g i\i" e·s rich s3dist and a poor bully. psychedelic parties and turns I am aware that this silly island beauties into dope ad-dish of' viciousness is just diets. If they become play·acting-as are the weekly. troublesome, he mu rd er s episodes of ';Hawaii Five-0" tberp . One of -them ·was the , -apd"DOt to be taken serious- teenagJ! 'd, • ~ I ,h le r ~r a Jy. ~ ~o~er-all impression Honolulu fWung boat captalJl of 11 ~l11~Y. F e m a i n 1 -the latler played"by B<?o••. ~ on th• 'melnory at a with such vulgarity a n d , r brut11lily that it was dt!ficltlt , til'n.8 ~~ otfost of us are to take sides. . ~, 1t,rylng· despe.rytely to love our The native Hawajians \\'ere fellow man, portrayed as the w i 11 i n g These comments will attract vassals -of the captain. Their letters from reader! who will unfailing kindness towara him claim that such productions is unrewarded by even a nod. bring prosperity to the Indeed, he treats them like isl anders, 'Mli.s -could be more dogs. W h a t e v e r charac· teristics made such a man ac· ceptable to his crew remained · uni!e!intd .. In the fl n a'I ' • , ... ., Nel on to Stall -Niven Next? HOL!\VWOOD (UPI) {>ayicfNtve·n is the frontrunner to star in the movie version of Neville Shute's novel, "The Pied Piper," scheduled 'to be filmed in France this summer. gracefully accomplished by showing some human sensitivity in the s to .r y material. If those who are behind such ventures · would admit they're out there to squeeze the last--dime out of the locale, at least I could respect them for t h e i r frankness. · lH Marvin Gene H1_c.l<m1n "' In "PRIME CUT" Also (R) Dustin Hoffman In "STRAW DOGS" I wa s reminded of ~ after watching the CBS movie "Kon a, Co11st" with Boone in the leading role 11nd also playing an important rue\ Ne!srul has been signed by executive ptoducer Glen Larson for a special guest role f-._ _ __,,, ckStage..parLln.the..lwD-Jlll production as well. Frori'i any in the NBC series "M ()U ' , standjXlint it would be difficult · segment "~e Ne~ Mex,ic~ to find a more distatte{ul ~Mectlon1 st.arrmg Dennis drama set in such )Plendld Weaver. (;!en La~n 'Wrote surrouoclings. ,. the telepl~y to be directed by ' 'I'he plot was j O phony , tt Hy · A.ver.back. MI c h a e I could. i, l~ughed at if It GleaSC1n produces. , ONLY ORANGE <:OllNTY SHOWING! I ,,. 1972 • 18th Annue/ SOUTHLAND HOME&~ GARDEN~ SHOW JULY 14-23 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER (a ir conditioned) SHOW HOURS: $-11 p.m. Weekdays Noon· 11 p.m. Saturdays Noon • 9 p.m. Sundoy• ADULTS •••••••• '2.00 .IUNIOR• ••••••• 1.00 uiw-_...n_.,.,_. A GEORGE, COLOURIS PROOllCTION tc9!!! ~NY .cAMEJ-~,wuiE.~Wl1U:: • " • • . ployed John f . Kmnec(y in BroadWay's sotlrlcal play "MacB1rd." ha s been ligned by executive producer Jl'rank Glicksman to f(Uest..i... in "The Gladiator" episode o( MGM-TV's "Medical Center" stirring· Chad Everett and I Prlu1 In a raffle will in- clude a Thelma Bruner palJl .. ting of the mllsions, 1 10. speed bike, and 3 a1lver serv- ing tray with an lnla!d picture of the mJsslon . FIRST CHURCH Al Sesn\1 ls fiesta chairman with Fred Miller in char~e of general arrange.ments. Mission San Diego de Alcal3 w35 founded July 16, 1769 by FrancLscan Padre Junipero Serra on Presidio h i 11 overlooking Mission Valfey. It was moved about six mlles east to Its present location in 1774 to be niarer the Indian rancherias and a reliable water source. The first church at the new • aite wu burned in An Indian records at the. mlutoo-1igned auact Nov. 4. 1n1, m whlcb by Father Serra -can he Padre Luls Jayme wu killed. seen by vl!itors In the (His remains are buried under museum at the mlMion. the sanctuiry floor at a loca.. ~fiuioo s.an Diego d e I lion marked by a marble Alcala. ean be reached by tum· cross.) When reconstruction ln1 north on P..iisslon Gorge began in in&. ·the padres flos_d from Interstate a and covettd the walls and that~ then turning Jt:ft on Twain cQed roofs with adobe to make str .. t and ldl on San Diego the.m fire resistant. T h1e MiMJ:on Road. present mission church was,-----------1 rebuilt In 1808-13 and restored in 19.'l~I . U.S. ~my caJvary uJUl.; a<> cupied the mission during the P.fexican War -from !Mil to' ' 1858. President Abraharii Lin· 'COln restored the mission and its landt to the church. In 1862. Copies of the first bap- tismal, marriage and death WEEKDAYS CROMWELL 7 Only LAWRENCE 9: 1 S ON. y SAT & SUN Lawrence 1:15-7 P.M. Cromwell 4:35-10:1 5 ...:...--.. ·----· ~~<t'~ Cowboys in Rodeo From South of the Border, at full gallop , comes an in- ternationally-famous s h o w , Tony ·Aguilar's National Mex- ican Festival and ~ Rodeo. performing July 28, 29 and :w In the Los ."Jlgeles Sports Arena. Patrons of past shows will remember the colorful pageantry, music and the daredevil riding of Mexico's famed charros and the skillful individual and famil y acts of the renowned Aguilar Fanuly. An all-new program. with several novel and surprising acts, will greet patrons of the three evening shows, and the ' beautiful Wife1 Flor Silvestre, expert eqltt!strit:nne a n d singer; their sons. Tonito. l:t, also a singer and rider, and Jesus, known 15 ''Pepito." on· ly 4, but a ]lorseback sitter at seven months! . MW ELL. is a BIG ONE!" •o;>•• ..... ,,.' ... Saturday and S u n d 3 y matinees. J----==::~~'.'..'.'.'.::_ _ __11__:::::::=,;~'.'..'.'.:~:'.:::--Aguilar again will be ac- companied by his talented and ' . "'°"1E RATJNOS FDR IWIENT8 AND \'OU~ PEOPLE . --------------------'[jj ' llfSTllmD R .....,, 11 ,..,1,. auo: •Plllrlit hnnt tl'Aal!t lilmdllfl ' - ········~··················· ••a m1 •111-------__ "' ___ _ TWIN DISNEY HIT.S "NO;ji~~i· HIM NOW YOU DONT' ' Aho W•lt Oi1ney's . . '.'PERRY". Continue~ Sh,w D1il from 2 m. ---CINEDDME 20 '.'. .... ~J".:'.: :1--:t.::i --CIN!OOME 21 '' .. _.'::::;:-"'._1'-1··~ ---.;~-. S!HOIUM "/ ,,· .. ~ ... ~~ - ----=r• $!HOIUM 2 Iii t..-?:~'•'l'.r_~ ---.r• SMDIUM·J ' .. --".C::."'11 ---- _.._ -I• SMDIUM J .. -.' .... " ·--- .m:JCO..c;< MWMIO'' ••clrni" OrMfl CNl!ty •-rv• INt •11Pt•nwnt H1mlrM1tecll fer I Ac.Ulfl'IY Aw•ml "l'IODLEa OH THE RODI'". ''THE CAHOIDAT!" !GPI ••• "COOL MANO LUICI" (OP) "SHAPTS 110 SC0k1E" • "GET CAkTEk" "PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT" (It) "CANDY" IX) ........... l111nd-~ ' 1a1~~-1 e MGM Fri ., Sat .. Sun, Mon. EXTRA SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOWING ,...,.,., LILA ZALi BALLn CENTER (Official School of the LagunJl Beach Civic Ballet Company} . . proudly an nounc:es +hat Mr. Zbigniew -Cichocki (Former 11oloiSt ot the New York City Ballet) has joined the te1,hin9 staff. FOR INFORMATION , C4LL 494-7271 1163 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY,' l:AGUNA llACH \ James Dal y. , The actor recen\JI' 1tarred oPPOSJte Sopftla Lottn in tinlted ArUata' ''Lady Llber· ty." ._ .... -·-·~­.. , o•Allff(OllllnHIVf.M "GODFATlffR" (I) = ·-_.. .. , .... "'' ,u'~'.cmu:r :Jlsttt,,., Pl•l/C•I.,. "' ' " . : I -~~~~~~---·;! Sydney SJm~!~, one of . , ! the WQrld's creat utrolo-- g_era. His column ts ohe ot the DAILY PILO'I'.'S crut features . ..... . ,. ·~ ... ' ~. .,. ~ R~C~C\E • ~IK£ v . • I ' . NEW '72 NEW YORKER BROUGHAM II I Sl:IJ II If 'I' WHY WAIT 'TIL SIPI'. WHEN YOU CAN MAKI THE SAME II~ CASH , . • · SAVIN~S NOW! ' .1972 DUSTER NEW '72 Ser. VL2fl-B2B.J17424 '70 PLYMOUTH WAGON 2495 VI, eutomatic, radio, he1t1r, $ · pow•r iteerin9 & br1lc11, white side wi ll tires, 1ir con~itioning. f PM4 5LOO 135862 l 196504Cl '69 FORD WAGQN 1895-va, 111tom~ic, r1dio, h11t1r, $ powi r 1t11rl11g & br1k11, whit• i idi will tir11, 1ir conditio11in9. . l 0 ) ( 0 "1 \ ) '-------"'' OfF MJ.NF •. sncm PRICI ' . . ' ?.~,.~o~~.,w~.~~~·~·"··$)895 radio h11t1r, power 1t.1r1119 & br•••'•, white 1id1 well ti~11, 1ir conditioning. Very low m11••91 • · . 120745111761 '69 DATSUN WAGON Rtdio, h11ter, whit. 1ide will tir11. f250AFXJ ALL PRICES PLUS TAX AND LICENSE. ALL.PRICES VALID UNTIL SOLD SUNDAY, J~LY 1 ... • • • A•••• Servlee De- ll•rt•e•t Wei. ,ee•n •iilll ·H••on. all C•ryaler Cer. ·pe ... ,a.. Ve•te1e• Be41•lrlag Servlee a all Warraaty Werk, Regartlleu 01 W•ere.c:ar Waa . ...... ,..... .. •. ...... . .... ,.. C:•arge, Baak• .A•erlear•, Carte Blaae•e, A.•erl• eaa ·Ex1treea A.ail DlmenC:la• •••• I ' r;youR WEWLY~PPOI!vT-ED ! --·· • • • ' • ' • • "- • ' 8''DILUXI CAB OYER . • (#213597) IMMEDl~TE DEllYERY $· ' . - FULL PRICE · BRAND NEW with a COURIE R . PICK.UP PERRI S VALL EY SHELL CAMP ER Cruiseomatic Trans. • fully factory Equipped . . (2A25L295610) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' " E $299 $5995 DOWN PIRMO. $2541.40 is lotol CG~ ptic1 intluding lox & li- censt.Dtftrrtd pormen• ,ri:r 53176.60 iticlud'"9. la• & li:tmt & oll ei1rryiroqch11r91s for'' n'>omh1 on OllPl'Dl'lll tf credit AIHJAL l'ER<(NTAGE RAU 12.71 • . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' l TON CHASSIS CAMPER SPECIAL • V-8 engine ..-~ . t• A~o.•,t.ons ., *-?-8'-okes · · r. :. t P~ \teeri'!9 • 12 Ply roted fires * Fully self conrolned * Sleeps.4, ~ •Toil et •Shower • Range & Oven •Etc. • Friday, July, 14, 1912 DAILY PILOT :JJ. U.SEl>'RECREATION. VEHIC LE·S FOR YOUR VACATION TRAVEL ' ----..., -- ----- -------. --,._ ,I' •, . CHEV. Pickup 0 long Bed Fleetside Full factory equipment. License ~768G •••••• , •••••••••• MUSTANG V-8, auto. "trans .. fac.tory oir condilionlng, poww tfttril;'lg. U.. -cens·e No. UUL-337 , • , •• , , ••• , ••• , •• , ••••• , , • ~, , , •• . CHEV.Novo tu11<'~. Auto. tro~s., factory air conditioning, power steering; radio .. • heater. L1tense YWR-362 , ,. , • , • , , • , ••••• , • , • , ••• , b::J ~.W. S9UAREIACK 4 1pe1d, r•dio, h1•f1r. IRRY4061 - DATSUN SEDAN 1Radio, heater, bucket 111h, IZDR8561 CAPRI COUPE. . . Bucket S~ts, Sport Shee;ls1 R&H (71 SBl.Z) . . FORD Pickup . . . · _ ' ' . FACTORY AIR·COHD~ V4, .... W ,i)io rl4o.·U.:-111." -,,_6t50~J ····~························': •••••. ' ... loll .. CHRYSLER Newport. 2 Door Hirdtoil '· V-8, outo. Irons., factory oir conditioni(ID. power steerflg. ~ radio, heoter. License No. R Y742 ••••••••••••••• : •• TORINO 2 Door Hardto'P:"""*1t ' ..:' . V-8, auto. fn1ns., factory air con4i.fio"i~;~ ·sf.t,;ng. -Brougham intt.jor. License No. ZAE-860 ••• t' .. ~, .'. .!. , • ' .. DATSUN PICKUP**** • 1600 4 speed, radio, · . --:-heoter,No.418-CAX ••••••••• _. ••••••••••••••••• ".}" -1 • -.JI. GALAXIESOOSPORTR99'***-, .. •' V-8, Crviso-P/Sleer.. '~· · ' · · · • • foci. oir, rodio & heattr.148-AVC : ~ •••• , ; , , •• ·, , • .. GALAXIE 500 2 Door Hardtop**** V-8, Cruiso-P /Steer., fact; air, Land01{top, R & Heater~ brown metalic, 613-AEU • , •••••••• , , , • , •••• , , , , • COMET G.T. Coup•**** , Auto. trans., radio, · • heater, No. 6SS CPI , •••• , ••• , • , , , , , , • ~ •• , , • , •• .-'· ' \• . . 8RAND JEW '72 THUNDERBIR D I Power steerillQ, power brakes, auto. trans., flow-thru ventilation Sistem, radial Michelin tires, vinyl roof, con- sole. · 2J87Nl87515 'IMMEDIATE DELIVERY e·RAN D NEW '72 ' ~ltJ>ER YOURS •N_OW . ' . ' . ' " FULL PRICE 4 Speed Transmission, 1600cc En gine. Bucke t seats, Emission Con trol. BRAND '72 MUSTANG NEW #2f01Ll6 7484 :1MMEDlAIE ;~.E}IV,~Y . ~. '""' ~ ... 250 C1D ENG. Cruis-o-mol· c, Radio, Heater, Bucket Seats All Vinyl Interior. :~ND '72 CO.UNTRY SEDAN lO PASSENGER WAGON ' . Loodod wiltl ·-FoctO<Y Air. v.a Engine, Cruise-o-motic, WSW Tires. Rodia Tinted gloss, Power Sttering, Oise brokea. Whlel Covers. · .1=~~::;E DELIVERY , ' Fnd.11, Ju~ 14, 1972 :Jf DAILY PILOT .,,_--------...~---~--------------------~I . . Everyone Has Something Thet Someone Else Wants General CHM rel 1' Pele /Jarrell 'Je~/t'I fH66nfif I ; SHARP-NEAT.CLEAN. Large rear yard fea· " tures builUn B-B-Q, fruit trees, nice landscap- ing, pool size lot, 2, bedrooms and den, FA heat, features electronic air cleaner.· FHA • • ' . assumable loan ............ '. ....... '25,950. ' . MARVELOUS FAMILY HOME. Tri-level view living with . Back Bay location. New listing ~ 3 bedrooms and 3 baths. Entire middle level consists of family room with brick fireplace and sliding doors to garden . filled with fruit trees. Only ........ $35,000 BUILD YOUR WATERFRONT DREAM HOUSE on thlB rare fee simple lot on the canal of Newport Shores, Just ...... $20,000 ~ HARD-TO.FIND, a better, cleaner 4 bedroom home for .... '43,900. A large tree and lovely garden invites you to enter lhlJ newly dec- orated home. Don•t miss this one ! ; FIXER-UPPER. R·2. Great potential. 3 Bed· • room horn~,~ lob of room for more units. ' ........•..•.•..........•.••... ' . . . . ,18,500 Terrific ToW9laolMS we-hav• 2 and J bedroom beautle1 1n two oC the but 1Ubdlv1'ions lo NeWJIOI'! Beach. They lll'e' ln areu with be1.1Jutul gardens and pools, Joadl a( o t h e r reer,.tlonal tae!utl.., and low monthly mabltenance. ftts. Some are split Jew! and others are all on cne floor. With convenient loca· Uoni, eood terms and prieet trom $28,500 to $34,COO, what 'more could you. want! W...7225. COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS TAKE YOUR PICK Thtte bedrooms, two bl,thl faml!Y room, Octa.n view ~.9!0 Three bedroo°"•· two baths family room, Valley View. $35.000 Three bedroom., two bathl, tam1Jy room. )&. lewl Jot ' $31,500 Three bedroamJ, two baths, family room, Spack>U!, exten- Offlce Open Sotu.Uyt a Sundeyt slve lan&capmg .... $37,500 ! PETE BARRITT REA,l""' Drop by" l•t us show you! I ' 1 One 11 sure to fi! your needs. : 1605 Wlllcllff Dr~ N.B. FITZPATRICK'S I. 642_5200 CAPISTRANO VALLEY •.= >i.-REALTY ~· 31501 Camino Capilt:rano ; O..r•I San Ju9-0 Capistrano :i-..;..-------G-•no_r_•'----~ -~-.:49~~~1~1~24::__~1 ' • . . . . 4LNCU:tou: Huge Master Bedroom Slparate Famffy Roo11 Formal DlnlllCJ Room You'll be proud to live ln this 3 bedroom pride o f ownership home and . IA YSHORl!S Complelely redecorated I bedroom borne; fresh & clean. On 1 ... Ioli OPEN FOR IN· SPECTION S1JNDAY from 1 to 5. See 2592 Circle Drive. Lar1e yard. Formil dining room . $79, 700 · VIEW IUILDIN~ SITE Btautlful Ht of Pl.an• for an exceptional home Included with lhlJ lovely view lot, lor only $23,987. THE BLUFFS S~aclous condornlnlum on wide greenbelt, With I bedrooms, 2... bathJ, .family room, 11parate patios; exceptional value tor a most popular'plan . $53,000 16 UNrTS Centrally located, close to freeway. 8'4 Times gross. F\111 price $156,SOO. . HARBOR COMPANY RIALTORS 2141 I . Coal! Hwy., CoNlllt del Mor "Selling R11I E1lal1 in Newport Horbor SJnct 1944" 673·4400 General $30,500 s,.nlsh Desi ... Authentle arch ways. huge entry way, 4 Bedroom.I, xtra baths, Roman t.th ott mas- ter bedroom 111DOU1 "Gar- dert" kltCh.\ le~ eµ- tranoo, hup family room, dlnlnc ...... bier. 540-1731 • TARBELL General BUILD A YACHT like the owner did in the Back Yard (a 68 tooter). 3 Bdrm, 2 Baths. Bright and Olffr:tnl, Sprinklen. Comer Home. Close to all schools. $32,500. Call 646-0555, Even- iDp -. CO LWEL L PROPE:Rrl~"> INC RF /\L TU~S TENSION RWEVER! ·ONE OF PENINSULA ' .POINTS FINER HOMES. Thi.I ta ttul)' an n:eeutJve's retreat from the beetle &. demandlflg buslneu world. Strol). to Newport Harbon: finest views, only blockJ from Bay, Jetty, Ocean. Park Ir Tenni. Coqrta, Close the mauive double door behind you, and shut out your v;orries, You will be overwhelmed by walla of 1tau owrlookinl a 1park- Jlng Polenesian water tall and stream. WITOW1ded by professional 0 r 1 e n t a I landscaping at its finest. The quieting eUect. of this home's harmonlrlnl blend of wood, glua le marble has to be expetieneed to be believed. 2 living rooms, formal di.nini room. i"n- door-outdoor den. 1ecluded Jn&&tu suite with toaWy private .un deck, 3 car aarag.. Only $96,500, !Jnan- ctng available. Call 54fi-2313. * '0 1 THE RCAL \• )l ESTATJ::RS * Carol Malek 224 Collins Ava., Balboa lslond You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Southlond Homo & Gonion Show . at tht ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 1uly 14 • July 23 * * "IT'$ DILLY • DON'T DALL y u Enchanting TWO STORY 5 bedroom 3 bath, 2 fireplaces. FAMILY ROOM, formal din· ing room, NEW · carpets and drapes, island ldtchen, SOMERSET model on FEE land in HARBOR VIEW HOMES .......... $72,500. IT'S A KNOW, KNOW THIS CDM, TRIPLEX ONEOF·A·K!ND; 2·2 Bedroom, l-'1 Bedroom. Clear. OIVner may carry. Close to 'shopping. This will go in a hurry ...... .' ... $71,500. BUZZ-BUZI.-BUZZ OVER TO THIS ONE Let us s h o w you this enchanting home. Atrium entry, spacious living room with fire- place. 3 Large bedrooms, 2 baths. LOVELY DINING ROOM + room to store your tniler or boat. .. .. .. .. .... ;. .. . . .. .. $62,500. BABY, WE FOUND IT , ON· THE WATER POOL, PIER and SLIP available too. New carpeta and drapes, 2 Bedroom•, 2~ baths WET BAR, marble fU,eplace, Overlook M WATER fromsour patio11~d lnjoy. $85,000. M·M·M-M·M NICE CONDOMINIUM IN BACK BAY AREA· 3 Bedroom, 2'•> bath, builtln kitchen, stone fireplace, FAJllJLY ROOM, community pool & REC. ROOMS in· eluding billiards. Fee land and close to every· thing. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $32,500 You Can Sell It, Fincl lt,.Tracle It With a Want Ad - * OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN 1·5 1'B21 Pt. Stanhope N.B. Come lo see this beautiful executive home only 1 month old! Owner wu trlrwteJ'l'l!d and now must ll@ll, DtH«bUu.lly deconlted with plWiih carpeting . custom drapes, mirrored wardrobe doors, l ~ S landscaping plu.s & ~ o Fash.ion Island! ~led t , Harbor View Holnb ne community parkt, -poob and clubhouse. Most deslrabl Por1&fim model I with 4 bedrooms, tlnlshed bonus room, family room and formal dining room. I1' you. can't make the open house, call for appointment to see. 54&-2313. -..:>/THE RE AL : ,. )l ES'.rA,,TE~;> i UNl9UE HARBO VIEW HOME Two bedroom and convert:i- Alle den on spacious pool size. lot. F.ru.lt bearing trees and panoramlc view. •Thia home: features TWo . Double caJ. Garages .. pie1ty ot extra storage for boat, camper; truck or a fleet of can. BeauutuJ shag carpeting am custom drapes through- out. A res.l find at $52,500. · C. F. Colesworthi: & Company : EASTBLUFF OFFICE '. 2545 Eoatbluff Drive 640-0020 ' NESTLED IN between all the big trees, Is this two story f bedroom borne, complete with real hardwood floors, ~ b' LUFl'S E·PLAN -New 3 bedrm. and din· liig room, pool alu family .,,.,m oyerlooking )Qvely greenbelt studed with olive trees. A bit 'Of old Spain· in Newport Beach. Lease/ leaae-<>ption or buy. Just listed at $53,SOO. nelghborllood. You'll atao 0.Mrol O-rol 1 =---,-----Pleue call 642-5571, ext. 314 between 9 and 5 pm to claim your tickets. (North County toll-he number ts 540-1220) enjoy a wy comfortable I--------.;..;;.;;;;;;.;;;_ ___ _ A~-S#dfJ lfolU#U .... _ REALTORS 644·7270 baths, oversized kitchen • f'HONI UNffUI HOMll. C:OIONA DIL ii.Al 6754000 . . REALTOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE and spacioua livlng room. A large kitchen with Iota: of cacbineta and I o r I e o u 1 landscapmg with ,sprinklers front and baclc. At a truly realistic price' ot $34,950. 1-:----,-----~---,-----1 Call 842-2535. : General General . • " .. • . f l. t l .. • . :: .. l:i • •·' • • •' • , • . ' l I I IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Lusk H.V.H., never lived in 4 BR., 2 ba., 2 frplcs., 3 car gar. Poolsize lot. Bay/ocean view OPEN SUN. 1·5. 1621 CASTLE COVE. $96,500. Howard Wells. SPARKLING VIEW Architect designed split level 4 BR., Irv ine Terr. You must see this! OPEN SUN. 1·5. 711 K·THANGA. This has everything! Paul Quick ' MONARCH BAY . OPEN SUN. 2. S Panoramic view. 3 BR. + Lge. rms. Walled villa features 10' cell's., serene courtyard, cul de sac privacy. 181 MONARCH BAY. $82,500. Bob Yorke LIDO ISLE ON VIA ORVIETO Enior resort living or family oriented Lido. Spacious 4 BR., huge F.R. Near private beaches, club & tennis. 45' Lol l $89,500. Charlene Whyte / TEN THOUSAND $ REDUCTION On these 2 units, side by side, in Carona del Mar. Walk to the beach or the store from this fashion~ Avo~ado address. Now $65,000 & $73,~Marcta Bents. · FEEL AT HOME When yuu walk in the door of this charming 4 bdrm. with a super bay view! It's in Har- bor View Hills, for only $65,000. Jim Muller 4 BEDROOM TOWNHOlJSE Univ. Pk., bright • light. che'erful • clean; on park w/pine trees; steps !o pool & jacuzzi; DO% FIN. AVAIL. Just listed. $34,900. 11Chuck" Lewis. BAYFRONT JEWEL 3 Bdrms. plus den plus formal dining rm.; located on a choice street in Dover Shores. IIDIJlaculate condition. $125,000. Eileen Hudson CAMEO SHORES VIEW ESTATE Nearly I> ac., perfect for entertaining; lge. rooms, pool , cabana, terrific bar; 4 BR., 51,1 baths. Call for pies. $175,000. George Grupe CORONA DEL MAR R·2 Sharp doll house· So. of Hwy. 4 BR., 2 ba., ~ fireplace. Hu~e kitchen . Large covered patio. Ready to build a unit. Walk to beach. 'Trlona Bergin _...... Coktlwl,anc.~ 644-mtl ~ $50 NEWPORT CINTER DR., N.B. ' •O ': THE REAL ·"-". ESTATERS '' . . ... .SPANKING NEW LISTING IN MESA HIGHLANDS Three big bedrooms (1.2" x 14' each) 2 tiatbJ. double f!REPLACES pt., all the EXTRAS. Close to all scbOols and shopping. Priced right to sell QUICK at $33,500. co: rs WALL.ACE REALTORS _ _,,54146>44141- (0,.•n Evonlntsl . SWEEPING OCEAN VIEW / The flavor and atmosphere cl mountain living is cap- tured in this unique 3 Bedroom, encompaulng a cool pool to splash away the time in. Walls ot ilau open to a 1BO deeree view of ocenn, bay and mountains. Elgeant muter bedroom with private bath. BJl·m kitchen plUJ an informal room. This truly eleeant home at sm,<m is today's top value. Call 573-855(1. O i THE REAL \: )l ESTATE,~S 1GIANT TWO STORY On lcilllt size lot In North O>sta Mesa. f bedrooma upstairs and a 3bt24 fini.m. ed separate famUy room downstaln. 3 bath!, country kitchen and dlnlns arta, plush carpebl • draP't In every room. At $39.SOO - better aee It now! New on market. C wA1111: I'. 111 $24,000 Auumo 5 .. % L- 1-monlhly-11. -than rent S Bedrml + dell, or can be •th b@dl oom, 2 hi.th~ dlnq rqom. l1ullt-10 ranee A own, b1cr. 51).112). TARBELL M5 -· ClJlta M• A aood wont od It a aood rn. \'Mtmenl. , MACNAB 'IRVINE AMER HOMES COME BY LAND OR SEA . SO' boatsllp NOW! 5 BR., 4 ... ·bath "Hacien- da Home". 3 fireplaces + gas BBQ on wind sheltered deck. •16 Linda Isle •-OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 p.m. Dona Chichester. FASCINATING DOVER SHORES For enterlalnlng & family living, A 'beauti- ful Ivan Well• liome w/expansive VIEW. 4 BR., 3 bath. Tom Queen 644-8200 .. SOFT TOUCH of elegant gla!tlOUr in lhlJ smartly decol'- ated 3 BR., FR. on a quiet ~e lined Bay· cre!I road. '84,950. Lois Miller 642-8235. A QUEEN'S TASTE Without paying a King's ranson. 3 BR., 2 bath, formal DR., secluded patio, comer location -pool & view! THE LAST OF THE BESTI FINAL opPortunlty to ,choose from 2 mar· velous 3 BR. and one 6 BR. newly com· pleted Ivan Wells custom homes w/swee11- ing view of bay & mountains. From sn o .. 200 to $122.900. An unusual opportunitv to share in Newport's fantastic anpreciation. Furnished model OPEN DAILY at 2018 Galaxy, Dover Shores. VIEW LOTS-SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 3 beautiful view homesites. See Catalina to Mt. Baldv. ·Ideal ·for ··the Geittlelnan Rincher. $2!.'000 and $25,000 per acre. Tom Queen 644-620([ BALBOA PENINSULA POINT 3 BR. channinglieme· w/deoorator's louch. . CO!llP)elely fUrp!shed & . Immaculate In our exclusive reoort area. Only a few houses from surfinir & boating. Launching prlvil· eges up to 16' ~at . .. LIDO llLI l.AYFRONT 45' ol sandv bellCh -beautllul mister suite on upper floor -plus 2 BR. -2 blths - den -DR. a: terrific kitchen w/l/reakfast area. Valid rblClll tor sale -asltlng $275,~ 000 -call Mn. Fay MU235. TWO TURTLlllOCK VIEW HOMES! 4 BR. & FR. Top condition! Puoramlc VIEW! Great location on quiet cul-d•sac ! You select your backyard-beautiful lawn or super pool. Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. PRIME BUILDING SITE On quiet cul-d•sac street of beautiful home s. 2135 Bonalre Way. Jack Howell 644-e200 • [lrvtrial II -•Issa MN • 1111 .............. * * * ' lots of fru it trees. Room lnr boat ot traller. Owner' moving aoon and wants of- fer. Priced only $31,9$. With all terma. Hurry. Lovely Gardens Both tbe front and back ,.,.is., 'ot tbia .,..at , 2'21 EAST COAST HIGHWAY bedroom lush Harbor View CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF, Call 546-Slm Open eves} .' ... HERITAGE REALTORS home have outstanding * * *" * * * ·* '* features., 'vith po o Is, ;---';---"---"'---!.~~!!!....-~-~I waterWls, lush tropical General Ueneral '""""""""'"""""'""""""""1 plants and lawns. The ------""----------FORMAL bHmed coilings m both the 1---------------lamlly room and Uving DINING ROOM room are hlghllghts. The Rendezvous Condominiums Plus h ... lamily room with owners have bouabt a new 600 E Ocean.front, Balboa massive fireplace. Large home, they are motivated! Fantastic view of Pacific Ocean & Catalina kitchen has eating are 675-:7225. Select few residences -3 bedroom or 2 & looking onto lovely rear CO LWELL PROPERTIES INC REALTORS HORSE RANCH ONLY $29,950! den. Luxury appointments. Security build· yard with covered patio. ing and subterranean garages. Ready for OC· Queen shed bedrooms, 2 tll- cupancy September. ed batht, lovely strfft ot Price $44,450-S68,450. Excellent terms. channlng homes in magnifi- Hazel Jones Associate cent Bayettst. Priced righ Louis w. Bri991, Realtor I at 159.500. 714 E. Bolboo Blvd .• Bolboo 673·1110 ALl!IOsr II ACRE plus k>* '!"'"""~""""""""""""~~""""""""""""""""""""' Realtors 6411-7711 Jy RED RANCH STYLE General General 2043 Westclilf Drive H~! Giant abide tree1 Open till 9 PM galor.. Knotty pine livlnc FOR 1'aae, Sale o• Trado A UTTLE room and kitchen. Ranch GREENBROOK resa:Ies (for Beach prop.), Nr. 11ew LOVE · ki~en with beam celllne. TIB~ON Townhouu resale Htg. 0 Bch Home. f Br., & WOW,1! n.1~1-room. Giant covered • larwln realty e cryt Lr r -~ rd N ...,>UM• g, g eu"o;u ya · r Haw. you bee drc · I pe.Uo. BARGAIN -call now 968 "4405 (24 hr .. ) BChooli, beech A l1tftl. ·" n am mg o. 645-0303. · 54>2Ml Aft 1 PM. large-bedrooms, separate. family room, mature I !IHI\ I I OJ \0\ '"COUNTRY SCENE" $27,950! Beauutul rear )'ll'd, prlvacy unllmlted, lovely fruit 6 shade trees, colorful carpet. in&. large covered pa.tio - re1aX after a hard day's work! 3 bedrooml, 2 baths, ·deluxe builttn kitchen, di.sh· wuhe:r •. Elegant flttplace lends added chfnl\ to hos- pitable living room. Prime location • walk to every- thing, 540-mo. TAR Bl LL • Harbor, Costa Mesa ' Falltastlc luy e OPEN DAILY • ltS Monte Vlsto, C.M. ASSUME VA LOAN . "1ltom. built 3 Bdrm, 2 bath Eutmdlo, .sparkllnc clean Hvtnt + dinlnc a r e a tlttp~. FA ht., bltns, nu shag crptg + drpo, patio, dbl pr, fenced yd. CALL ANYTIMI ~or En. SU.:Mh General General landscaping, comer privacy jj;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii location w I t h protective block wall fencing? This l!X• - Newport Beach condominium homes with boat sli~. You oWn the land.water and sliP. .. From$64,950. 7% financing. Newport a.ct. ~Lid. 4401 · Wini. eo..i ·Hwy- (714) 1~ tremely well built home wilt more than fill the picture dQ: jwtlce to your o w it decorator touches. The low $28,IXXI price will help you to stop dreaming and start liv..'. Ing. Call 8'7"'110. O THE Rf.AL "\.. f.STi\TI :Rs COTTAGE NEAR OCEAN . 1 Fanta.Uc one year old ho with vaulted celling &: SWed-· 1sh fireplace. Hard-to.find 2 bedroom home with elrden. kitchen. $27,500. Only 11400 -.. , ~ CO.An ,: ~wA&!.c1 lll.ALTOU Open Evenings • 962-4454" • ASSUMABLE vl Anyone can aaume thl• high balance VA Joan. No qtlall,ty.. tog and no loan point>. ~Unr 3 bedroom ho"'f' Mture1 all bUlllin gard" klttben, a l&rse boous room and enclosed patio, -· $33,500. Fo• detaltJ -t Call 540-USI (Open Ewa-) • HERITAGE R£AlTORS !.I, 1 ' ' • •• . ; ' ' • • '' ' • frld'f, July J4, 1972 ·PERFORMANCE, RESULTS, SERVICE AND INTEGRITY Immediate . Action WE Will SELL YOUlr HOME! What you're interested in is 11 satisfying sale of your property in the shortest poss1ble time, This takes action and the Elmore Company is a n ac- tion oriented Compa~y. '' Dedicated Sales-team Our sales-team is made up of professionals who are dedicated t~ your service and satisfaction. • RUSH WIWAMS Yk• Pretldemt, ...... ., • EDWARD JOFFE • • RICK ROEGNER • HERSH McMULLEN • ALBERT ANTHONY MARTELL '' •· ROBERT BROOKS • LLOYD GUICHON • DeANNA POTTS • HELEN BALL • TOM COX • LEN MILLER • CHUCK LOOKABILL • FRED POFAHL • JOE· STANCZYK • COL JAMES BROOME • CHRIS BARR • BRENDA PARIS • LOIS CROMMm • LEE McFARLAND • WILLIAM STRACK WE DO WORK HARDER y~~s:~~~TY WE WILL HELP YOU FIND '· ' EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT ' . OVER 500 HOMES TO CHOOSE FROM NEW LICENSEES ATTENTION • We have 11 special train- ing progr~m which will assure yo u r success in selling Real Estate. 645-~040 · FINE RESIDENTIAL HOMES IAYFRONT ON IAUOA PENINSULA 3 bed., 2 ha., 2 story home on the water with pier and slip and private beach. Vacant, and zoned R-2 so that you may now rent this home as a family. Full price $147,500. IA YCREST EXECUTIVE On exclusive Santiago Drive. Entrance thru iron gate and a ttractive walled yard. A fine home with 4 bd., 3 ba., formal din. rm., den, large family room, 2 fireplaces. Lvg. rm opens onto well-planted rear yard and pooL Excellent kitchen, large laundry room. An outstanding home for only $96,000. ESTATE SALE Prime Balboa Peninsula area -2 hr. older home huge sleeping area oU garage. l block to Bay & beach. Good rental unit $42,900. COSTA MESA Dandy Ha.lecrest. vacant move right in. 3 bd. 2 ba. new paint in and out., brand new green' Sh8.g carpets. $29,950 90% loan available. NEW EN~LAND SPECIAL Charming 4 bedroom 2 story home in choice eastside location near Santa Ana Country Club. 2 full baths, beautiful tile, bar style kitchen with electric builtins. Raised fire- place, nJce carpets, detached double garage. Full price $37,500 -owner has moved to Montana. Make oiler. Zoned for horses. LIKE IT 9UIET7 Try this 4 bedroom home on small Cu1-de-Sac In beautiful hardwood floors. Fireplace, F.A. Heat, Electric bulltin kitchen, large double garage with builtln 1torage and work bench. Raised patio deck overlooking tree shaded rear yard. All this for only $33,000 , -90% loan available. FOR NEWLY WEDS This lovely Huntington Beach Condomlnlum, " blk to pool, with washer, dryer, stoVA and Dishwasher included In total price of only $21,950. Try 5% down, 2 IRAND NEW DUPLEXES O~NINSULA Va~t and ready for occupancy during the rental " ." 3 br. up and 2 br down, 2 ba. tn each unit, room to park 8 cars. Full price $79,500 each. 10% down and owner will carry lOo/o 2nd T.D. First u~ depreciation will apply to the new owner. VACANT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Dutch girl clean -large back yard with lovely patio back and front J bedroom, 2 ba. Builtln stove and refrigerator. All this and more for only $28,500. 6 UNITS · Great tUllM'lte off with good income. Prime location 2 story building newly painted 6000 sq. ft. can be convected to offices. Excellent financing available, WE TRY HARDER PLEASE CALL US TODAY , . . · Real Estate Professional Salesmen & Brokers! The opportunity is here! You are needed immed .. iately for our rapidly ex- panding Real Estate di- vision. Positive oppor- tunity for advancem'i nt. OPEN HOUSE DIRECTORY SATURDAY & SUNDAY J bedrooms, Den, 2 bath, 2696 Sant.a Ana Ave., Costa Mesa. $73,500. Open House Sal Ir: Sun. 1-5. SATURDAY 4 or 3/dcn, 1 ~ baths. 2()J Susan- nah Pl., C.M. $33,000. Open House Sat. 1-5. SATURDAY & SUNDAY 3 bedroom1, 1 bath. 1514 Balboa Bl., Balboa. $28,500. • SUNDAY 4 bedrooms., 1 %, bath. 2517 West~ minster, C. M. $31,000. Open House Sun. 1-5. 645-~040 Commercial W e have highly quali- fied buyers who need . good commercial in- vestments. If you wish to market such a property please contact our com- me rcial department. We Have Customers ' For The Following Properties 3-Homes with rental on the rear' of the property • 2-3 bedrooms with a pool, good area around SCl·M 1-3 bedroom with a pool, Eastbluff ' . 1-Clean 3 bedroom, Costa Mesa. $27,000 1-8 units, Good cash flow 1-4 bedroom, family rpom, pool 1-Duplex, Orange area, to $45,100 DOES YOUR PROPERTY filT? DO YOU WISH TO SELL? CALL TODAY ' ..---------------: "THE PROFESSIONAL REALTORS" Servl119 Greater Newport Harbor Area Member Multiple Ustlng Sel'Ylce ': ' .: • .. .. .. . ' .. ' . . • A Division of IDmorc Company , : Ltsttr P. Elmore, Pruident. : ~~~~~:!::!!~~~~~~~~~~~!::!!!!!~~~~~ ., -~. , I I . DAILY l'!LOT Frld<f, J~~ 14, 1972 I -·-I~ I -.... I~ l -·.. l~I -·-I~ I -·w. I~ I -·.. I~ I -·-I~ I -·--·-le Gener•I Gtntr1I EASY WALK TO BEACH 4 Bdrm. 3 bath home, )usl a •bort block .to Ocean Blvd. Handy to 'Big ~rona" beach. Large cdtner lot -(lee simple. -nol leas6' bold). $79,500 THE ILU--$39,500 No'v you can own a 4 bdrm ., 2 bath, car~ free condo. at a price you can easil y afford. Quiet street. Handy to pool. Low down pay· ment. Conv~nlent parkin.a: -e•sy to be a "'DROP~IN" at Bay &: Beach Realty 675-3000 1 --,~BAV~ ~[AC.W _1u:~1.Tv J ----- HOME+ UNIT- .EXECUTIVE $26,500! SPECIAL tar this .uperb 3 bedroom • home nestled among ~ oilnda J~fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 5l Linda lilt Drive Eleganl 5 bdrm., 4~ baths; on lagoon. New i•~:!~ s~f:P•~ ."'. ~allp~per .L<>~el.y ~~ 3 Lindil Isle Drive Open Sund•v Beautiful new 5 BR., 4~ lla. home. Water- front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled fam. rm., frplc, wet bar. Lorge master suite bas !rplc. & cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains ..... $179 ,500. 11 Linda Isle Drive -Opon Sunday Completely furn. 5 Bdrm., 4 ~ bath home. Lge. waterfront living rm. with floor to ceil. marble frplC'. Formal dining rm., family rm., maid's rm., Pier· & slip ......... $195,000. 57 Linde l1le Drive Custom 4 Bil, 3'h ba. home on Lagoon. Mslr. BR. has sitting area & !rplc. Waterfropt family rm w/conversation pit around the frplc.: lovely garden, lge. slip ..... $189,500. 101 Linda Isle Drive Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs waterfront mstr. suite & lge. game rm. or study. Me.xican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction, slip . . . . . ... $155,000. For COMplete Information On All Hcmos & Lots, PIHH Coll : WO\V! Immaculate thnHM.tt. INCOME PROPERTY TOO! Giant livfng room. Lush I h a g everywhere. Queen ~bedrooms . Gourmet kitchen. Natural BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Gener•I Gener•• * * * * * * BALBOA ISLAND JUST LISTED 3 Bdrm., 3~ baths, lge. family rm. Dbl. garage, enclosed paUo. . . . . . . ... $82,500. OPEN SUNDAY l·S 213 SAPPHIBE * * * * * * * BALBOA ISLAND NEW DUPLEX UNDER CONSTRUCTION Two 3 bdrm., 2 bath luxury apts. Upstairs unit a dream ! Come see the plans & choose your colors! CLARK SOMERS, REALTOR 306 Marino, Balboa Island 675-4000 '* * * * * * General General EXCLUSIVE BA YFRONT HOMES OPEN SAT & .SUN 1-5 P.M. * 103 LINDA ISLE DR., N.B . 3 BR., 2\j, BA., 66' lot. Imported tile entry, Cathedral ""ilings. 55' boat slip. $149,500. * 2430 BAYSHORES DR., N.8. 4 BR ., 3 BA . 55' lot. $149,600 KENNETH L: HARTMAN, Real Estate In· vestments. 642·5760 or 646-2681. Gener•I c ...... tie! Mar CoslaMoM TROPICAL PARADISE OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5 SllARI'! Bycwner, N • .,.,. tot IRIS Vm!e .,.., 1 BR. f4ln rm, Dupl .. ; 3 BR., l·Bll. ()vor-JI< ba, 2 fpl, "°"" petic, Jooklni iunke:n garden. On CU!ltom drp1, fully c.rptd. "'"'O n .2 k>ti. Ful1ttt build· ~7. Open hOuse Sat. 6/15. :rJl9 COOraOO Pl. lng pott!ntlal, m.cm. Priced for qu1ck llaie! DON V. FRANKLIN REAL TOR $33,000. • 67i.2222 e BY OWNER cha.rmlna ROOM TO BUILD ,,__ 2 BR. den tae. r . P. FOUlll•ln Valley GI-NO.DOWN $25,SOQ. This 3 Bil. home i;et& on Ira ~'x130' '°' with chalnUnk ftnce at0uod tront for pri- vacy. hu covd patio 6. bi& workshop, rm lor tools A. pwr equip back of h~. The price 111 rlaht, the nrbhood good -E·Z tf:rms. I' 111.w" n~.11 r · ·:1 5Jl·5111 ( ::::J 5Jl·5111 Redec. in &. out. Crpt.1, drpg If you like "'OOd, )'OU'll k>ve thNOUt. Pvt patio, t-ncl )'ftf'd this charm~ 3 bdnn., 2 \\•/fruit tren. 3 car p.r. bath home.; used brick $27,950. &e2-8156 or &G-1738 frplc.1 priv, enclosed patio. Prifl. only! OWNER anxloWJ, Tran1fer- On a corner R·2 lot, Priced right at $5l,500. Ji'OR sale by owner -t BR. 2 red, circular driveway eoe1 Scenic Properties 675-5726 BA frplc, dining rm, lie 2 to lhlll, home, 4 bedrooms, car' garage w Is tor are, den. built-ins, dliibwasher, Lusk Harbor Vu Ridge spa.ciouA fenced yd, on n<..'\\•ly decoratf'd, park like Largest 4 BR, 3 BA, 2:lrplc, cu I-de -sa c . Ul.000. yard, brk, $30,950. 962-5566. corner Jot, w/10me view. 833-2317. 1 YEAR new 5 BR. Cree~ Brand new. $76,000 on BY O\VNER _ P.tesa del P.1a.r. brook n?SaJe. Spacemaker J Jeue. $8.2,350 fee-simple, By 4 BR, 2 BA, tamily rm. New model. Swim club. Avail owner. 675-2770. shaa crpts. Corner. Ready immed. $45.995. Trans f, TRl-PLEX to Mov~Inl S3 5,50o .1 ...:o_w_ner_._96S--0_~187J, ____ 1 Near beach 4 bly 54&--0660. Huntlntton Boitdt Larae lot, 111>me view l BDR.n.t. patio, double 2 2·BR .. 1 J.BR. gara... large yard, new HAVE $87 ,500 paint & crpt. C-2 lot. 186' University Rea tty Wells Place. $27.~. Owner, Something to offer you 3001 E. Cst. llwy. 673-6.510 =54'='8-0981='-'~·,,-.,-..,,-.,,.--~ YOU NEED: Costa Metil BEST Coll~ Park area. 3 • Your own deak Br.,. 2 Ba, encl. paUo, block •Clean air-cond ofr. \\'all, near tchools, $28,750. • hi-comm. (to 80%1 A WARD WINNER! on •pecial torrn• .• Principles • Adv'"""' program Thia awpous .family .borne is only. Call 833-1103, &U-2312. • trainin&, in depth V·~·-3 ~ 1" ba dbl • Guar. a.dvertlsement . juat waitin& for you! From A0.,.1\..1, i • Y>, n . th • -yd .,~ ~ 883 We have it all plus some. e warm I: coiy living gar. ' ..... · .-,iJUV. room to the spacious master Tov.tt. Owner, ~9767 CaJJ Jim Graves at 962·5523. suite, this beauty is fresh, \vkdas a rter 3; anytime COLLINS & WATTS · • and ahruba:. Sparklin& qUal· lty for fine entertaining. l4@b (Jeep pile car.Qetin& 'with cuslom match.in& drapes, all electric kitchen with all th:! trfmmlngl, fan- tastic tJrePlace. What a 1how place for $39,500! Seller ls Jftpared for Gr and Fl·IA tenn.s. now's the time, Cati wood cabinets. Laundry 341 Bilyside Or., Suite 1, N.8. 675-6161 porci>. Large kit. PLUS1 ............................................................ ~1'-------..... RENTAL! Steol at l>i,500. c;. I General FOREVER VIEW clean and ready! 4 BR."1 _•.c.·knd=''=-~==~--INC. FOUR BEDROOM beamed family room. IOft • CALL 546-1139 * C & W = ',\1\11\1 ii P. I I I Realton 54.>9491 Open Eve1. BARGAIN I Call now 645-030.1. __ no_r_• ________________ 1 eus1om bit. 4 bdrm., 3 baths, plus • plus . plus. Your once in a lifetime oppor1ttn· ily, on ftt land in Newport Beach. $99,500. I 01!1 \I I. 01 \0 \ *'* * * * * .,, r < ' l I> TAYLOR CO. HAPPY HACIENDA NEWPORT HEIGHTS CHERRY LAKE AREA-$72,500 --REPO-"'ater, scads of storqe, Sharp -vacant 3 I: 4 BR I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!l!~j lush ahar, and, would you Repo~. in area. W i 11 s OWNER desperate, swim EASTSIDE believe, much more? J ust Realty. pool, 3 ba:lrooms, 2~~ baths; $1 000 DN li•ted.flurry! Cati 979-1000. bulit-lns, d I, h w a ah er, , , OO!LEGE ,!'ark, 4 Br., 2 ba. Ontu t •1any ~.-1 tree• wall ...... ,,_. aeccnt:i, mirrored Counlry size kitchen, tormal am rm • ., uul . ..-..-- dining, cozy fireplace and ~~21 Sll,950, Priocipal1 only, 396 wall, new thick sh a 1 .,,_, ___ n Dr. 545-1168. caii:ieting, central t I o o r huge yard. Only $239 per rruA.'l'<u I b k 124 n= ~ o""':. CORNER '· ul .. .. p an, r , ,;JJll. ~ • mo. includes Plz.l. wt c ·•1e-sac st. .., * BR. 2 BA, trpl & bonus rm. LOWER than RENT pwner really anxious lo inovc 'to the desert, I: wants to 11ell his Eastside 3 BR, 2 'ba. home. Bll•lnl 6: new car- pet. Priced to sell for $27,250 MORGAN REAL TY BY-OWNER· $43,500. 401 Klng1 Pl. CUSTOM 3 BR. 2 BA, B·I elec kitchen, .lrg panel'd irplc, shutters thru-out. New crpt, ace<1UJ. cell., fOrccd air, paint. On a Jrge IOI + boat storage, MUOI MORE! 6'12·1889. A great home for teenagers -they'll Jove this one! View of Cherry Lake. Split.level 5 bdrm. home w/den (coul d be 6th bdrm.), DR. & rumpus room . Extra Jarge Jiving rm. -spacious thruout. Good vaJue. By appt. CORONA DEL MAR "OWN YOUR OWN" On the water! Fantastic view & pride of own- ership bldg. Private marina, pool. jacuzzi & security guard. Adult occupied. 2 Bedroom, 2 baths. lmmaculate ! . . . .. $89,950. A deluxe, custom 3 Bdrm. home in the shadow -Of our most romantic minion. Ja. -cun:l·therapy pool otf·mstr. bdnn. plus sparkling Jge . pool in secluded walled gar- dens, Ali this Ir heaven, too! 118.000. ~'r»t:~ S L S rN N ~~!IJ!!!!!!!!l'!\!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!il!!!!!!['I •K 500 ""17"" Asswne thi.s 5~%_ VA loan A EM~ EEDED-____ ..:-~· ~·~~=~~='"'='=---w/payrnts o( only $139/mo * PARK AND SCHOOLS V. A. REPO. 4 BR. 2 Ba. including principal, interest. (Open Eves) Popular 4 bedroom 2 slory $33,500 SHlOO ON. S300 ~to. Best Hurry! Call 545-8424. with formal dining, separalt Authorized Broker 5'8-6510 taxes &: insurance. 3 BR,, crpt!l & drps. $26,900. danden, falnmily ~m, .a11 bltins MESA VEllDE ~autifully KASABIAN R. E. . x t res1dentlal area. decorattd &: landscaped. 847-961J..1 Eves ~ Owner otrerin1 au terms. 4 BR. $4.8,900. Ownr rx>7-3794 \outh ., {. oast 6n.4642 67>6459 ..., tMI HMfy tfhcmy wl .. P• thh weeti•IMI • ,.. .......................... , ......... ... .. ..._,._ i. .,-., -.n i,y .....,,..,., afN- wNN hi...., .. DAILY PILOT WANT A.OS. ,.,,... .t.awhlt .,.. H-s ht H .. ar ta Nftt ara .,... ta hit ••• l•f•t•arin a. tt.11 cal••• eac• hid.,.. Sat· ...... -.. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedrooms! **4401 W. Coast Hwy., N'pt. Beach -· Ms.6820 (Sat & Sun 10 to Dusk) 1324 Seacrest Dr. (H .V. Hills) CdM 644-2430 $82,500 (Sun (3 81droom1 & F•mily Rm or Den) **103 Llnda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) NB 642·5760 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **2430 Bayshores Dr. (Bayshores) NB 646-2681 (Sat & Sun 1·51 2030 Galaxy, Dr .. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 , $100,200 (Daily 10·5) 4372 Brookside (Greentree Homes) Irvine 642-8235 $37,850 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 315 Millard Rd. (Cameo Shores) CdM 644-2430 $85,000 (Sun 2·5) (4 Bedrooms) 1436 Galaxy Dr., (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 $125,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *4521 Brighton Rd., (Cameo Shores) CdM 644-6200 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedrooms & F•mily Rm or Den) 1924 Port Bristol Circle, N'pt Bch 644-4648 (Harbor Vu Homes) (Sal 124, Sun 12·5) +2018 Galaxy Dr., "(Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Daily 10-51 **1657 Bayside Dr., (Ychtmns Cov) CdM 675·1935 (Dally) 711 K-Thanga Orvine Terr.) CdM 644-2430 $98,750 (Sun 1·5) 1621 Castle Cove Dr. 01.V. Hills) CdM ~44-2430 $96,500 (Sun 1·5) (5 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Den) 1521 Antigua, (Baycresl) NB · ···642·8230 (Sat & Sun 1·5) ** #46 Linda Isle. (Li nda Isle) NB 642·8235 (Sal & Sun 1·5) tt309 Evening Stat (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) ** #16 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB · · 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1416 Sandcastle (11 .V. Hills) CdM 644-2430 $95,000 (Su n 1·5) {6 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Oen) 1924 Galaxy Dr., !Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 $122,900 (Daily 10-5) LOTS FOR SALE ** 1657 Bayside Dr., (Ychtms Cove) CdM 875-1935 (Dally) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (2 & 3 BR/Waterfrcntl * * 4401 W. Coast Hwy .. N'pt. Beach 675-6820 !Sat : Sun 10 to dusk) • DUPLEXES FOR SALE un lO to Dusk) • ' • -- 3629 E. eo .. t Hwy., CdM -....,.H'"'O"'T"""C"'A.,.K"°E°'S"!-* 675-5930 * Why not come and see this \VHERE else can you buy a outstandlne borne, ottered at OA~~:i;;Av~i;:;r4 w~.::· $38,500 hm. for $1500 dn? NO' "2 500 ....,..... -qualifying. Assume VA Joan.. ~ ' · dwn. 3280 Michia;an. ~7 HARBOR VIEW HOMES-$47,500 Bright & gay with colorful shag carpeting. The hard-to-find Monaco model w/3 bed· rooms or 2 & den. Quiet street. And you own the land. I1nmediate possession. SPANISH PLUS POOL! Call 545-8424 IOpvi Eves.) BY Owner-2ln Rural Pl. 3 Choice 11.B. location. 4 BR, YES! This beautiful end unit, 2 BA. 2 sty, stp dn tam r m. 4 bdrm, overlooking POOL BR. l BA, $26,500. Low 2 yrs old. 8J3..1103 or should sell like hot cilkea! down. 714: 524-2511. 96Z-mo. VACANT and can as•ume a Dana Point GOV'T, OWNED . ~IAJESTIC Spanish archway 6" ~ loan 7'l ,,, ' to double door entry! Dou· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii! Capistrano He ights Homes Repossessed homes. Low ble brick firer}lacc. Sunken ****• GINNY Vtilley & H"l Views down, Government payi "Our 27th Year" formal living room and din. *l'.M* MORRISON POOL TABLE ' Deluxe cu•rom built closing roafl. Call 96M«L WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors ing room. Sfep down frunily ~ w:.t: REAL TORS \Vil! fit \vith room to sn...... new l'lorMs. l &: 2 atories * C~t Realty room. Garden oriented ..-~ 3, 4, 5 BDR.i\1 S. You nu18t 2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro•d "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-1910 kitchen. R@d"'OO<i covered *'••** 557""4130 in 15' x 30' den. 3 Bedrm 2 Stt to appreciate them. UNDER $200. patio opens to sparkling kid-bath, fireplace, bltins. Xlnt Priced from $32,<MXI. Total paymlJI -Of only $196/ ney shaped pool. Sundeck • HEW LISTING in " -Ouf. 1 mi 1rom Dane Pt l-o1arina mo. for this lovely J Bed:nn, NEW LISTING Ocean side ot Hwy., Corona del Mar. Beautifully lurn., plus carptg .. decorator drapes; lgl'. family rm .. worksawr kitch. !luge covd. patio. Custom thnlout! Walk up the hrick \Vnlk to this beauty, YoU'll never want to le&.vc! Absentee -0wner says sell at $75,000. : CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TOR!_ 644-7662 1 Lovely corner lot, 3 large bedrooms. bu i i t · ins, separate utility r o o m , fireplace in huge living roon1, shake roof, loti; ot brick work and a lovely counrry atmosphere. Only $20,000. CAll 847-0010 for more lnformnti-011. General balcony. PRICED TO SELL Near Newp-0r1 Hghts. 3 BR. $32,950 Del Obilpo·A Dana Meaa Or. 1%. bath home. Near schls, FASI'! Call oow 645-()l)J. & 2 ba. Lge. fam. rm., Alpine Realty 493-3701 shopping &: beach. As11ume CLASSlf"I EDK h CL 100 Corona Del Mar Duplex I OHi\ I I 01 \0 \ ..., .: 4 ' 0 ~ W•tl c~ndilionod 2 bedroom EASY LIVING 1luplcx so of the hia:h1vay. Freshly' painted 3 BR home Larg7 bcd~i:"s, 2 bnths. w/near new drpa o\ shag + SpacK>Us hv1ng ro o m . l-0ts -Of paneling. Fre"'b •hu1te" thruout. $22 950 Bit-in kitchen, retrigerat-0r. , • Forced air heat. Wall to wall carpets. Plus a fine 2 bedroom unit over 1arage. Ov.•ner arudous. A s k l n g 163,500. Calt 613-8500. 1-0 THE REAL ~ ESTATI:RS ' ' ' . ' ' Now port at Fairview 6"46-8811 (1nytime) ktch. bltns. 2 Dbl garages Roy Mccardle Realtor El Toro 6~% VA loan. Call \Vayne on alley, one stressed for 541-7729 .Fong. another unit-plus boat 1810 Newport Blvd., C.i\r. 3 BR., 2 BA., cptl, m,,s, l~ KASABIAN R. E. storqe. Asking $42,COO. patio, I&~· pool.mt lot 847-9604 Eves. 962-5319 CALL -:> "'"'" SI/,% FHA enclooed by block wall, REPOSSESSIONS. '1:1' ~ cloee to xlnt achoo Ir;, d"41#c. POOL HOME markets, ne\Y ma 11. For 1n1-0rmation and locaUon REAL~ 3 BR. 2 BA, crpts, drps, Rea!Onable. 83 7-1753, ottheseFRA&VAhomea. Ne•r Ne ... porc Po11 Office block walls, heated pool, 494-2116 aft 5:30 &: wk.ends. contacl - $27,900 4 Bdrm.,+ Don Charming exterior with 90me rock work that sets otf the home. 4 Bedrooms, fireplace, built-In range &: oven, dish· waaher, patio, bkr, 541).1720. TARBELL doS< to schools, !rwys, K '"SAllAN shoppg. L-Ondonderry La. Fount11in '/alley " Asking $33,!m. G46.8661 or SEYMOUR AAAA RATED Real Estate 147.9604 830-4992. buy ot the week. Im· OWNER SAYS "SELL," and . MESA VERDE niaculate 4: bedroom 2 bath he'll help buyer with costa. Large 3 bdrm, 2 bath, den, home Fea~s bright 'n Lg, 4 BR, huge yard compl din rmlfam nn surrounding cheery kitchen, overlookina; fenced, In nicest area. OnJ.y a Cali(. patio. Deluxe crpts luscious pool size yard with $31,950. Hun-y, call Bkr. & tile. ~love-In cond. 3260 double patio, extraorinary 962-MZJ, 537-5642. ~flchigan. O"'ner 549·2688. st-Orage 11pace, cu 11 om FOUR BEDROOltt . :IURF· ,, drapea and carpetina;. con-SIDE Huntington Beach. ej 2955 Harbor, Costa ~Iesa " BR .• just paintl!d. Lg. liv. *BUILD INCOME* nn., fnm. rm. in Jritch. 11,~ veniently located 1n pride of OY.-ner. $23,500. New carptt. ~ioo R 2 1 t Ba. W/W cpt. thruout. N.B. ownership area. A ~lust Fittplace. AU electric. POOL PERFECT I""'!!!!"""'""'"""'"""'""'"""'~ I N'pt Beach, ~· -0 • High & Woodland Sehl" ,..._ priced right at $33,250. 536-4243 .• Opeo HOU!e Fri., 4 Bedrm + Pool room to build. 2 BR. home, close to parochial schl. SEYMOUR will take your ..:Sc:•c..t ..:•:....:Su:;:"~~·~~--- Jump in and enjoy the swim, 2 car gar., ronted at $210 U),000 53&-332l home In trade. ca 11 $23,500. the ~eather's ,fine! This $33 SQQ! month.OnlyS26.900. 1---..M"'ESA=•VE==,---SEY~IOUR REALTY NEAR BEAOl-4BR. 2~{i BA beauhlully appointed 3 bed· . 1 CAYWOOD REAL TY RDE room and family is a must S1vun you s_wlmrners all sum-4 br, huge fam. rm, f-Orm din 847~1221 or 546-4212 CONDO. Crpts, drpis, tpl, to see, plus freshly painted •~-cdr k>ngf d '"•·the lovtio~ly pool, * 548-1290 * rm. Beaut lndscpd. Cul de OWNER, leaving. You can elec k.Jt, 2 car encl pr. interior Iha! \\'Ould make Am so . ec ing, pa areas, Balbo11 l1l1nd sac. $4.'l,500. 1940 Killdeer \\'alk to the beach. Ne"•ly Vacant Bkr-Chvnr. 1'...Ve: Lhr besl artist jcalous. All !-01v maintenance landscap-------,,.....--·Cir. Shown by appt. decorated, 4 bedrooms, _ll68-=11=18~.~~===-I th' . I d. h pool ·s ing. 4 bedrooms, 2 bath, elc-* DELUXE * 546-9745. built-in range, oven' PRIDE OF OWNER is inc u ing uge 1 gant fireplacr, all electric Entertaining? ThlJO; custom '°CO"'°LI°',E"G'-E°"P"ar"k,:-::pool=."'s"°harp= dllhwuher, huge fireplace, Sharp 4 BR, 2 BA. man offPred at -Only $33 ,T.,O. sh b 11 b Lilt' kitch bit. 3 bdrm., J bath home . h 6 1 CALL us today. ~ h u'Mon ~ inal d' ~n, 40 f1 3 br, tam nn, new paint & yard 1v1t maturt tru t xtras, lmmac. comer Jot 5.fil-1151 f0pt'n Eves.J ro:.:~lu~h ci°i:: !fOft ~:: ~:"~~,.:nw7~ ma~ cDalptsly,. "!3~900.:, _ _?J>e11ngn GHour,.'"n tree.., cokniul setting, brk, 19.m' Carmania t..an4 ~ -$33,000. 842-2.ltil. Pricrd al only $33,000. B B "d Th rl 4il~~-~~HDIT~~A~GE~]I peting, <!rapes, An add11!'!a house I:: charming 2 bdrm. Drive. fi46..0068, OWNER muil sell. Large er 547-6834 or 5'6-6l61. n CJ• e I• of distincti-On, ltiq'. 540-lW. rental, plus l-bdnn., 2 bath BY O"·ner, 3 BR. 2 BA, rooms, -4 bedrooms, xtra PARK flunt1 ........... n 1 ~ - G • G • 11111. llTAlt guest qtrs. Lge. dble, ga· "'6'v J• .... •nerat1on ap ra.ae' pl1Ja guesi parking -0n patio. new crpt, $26,500 bat ha, ma an If Ice n t 4BR 2BA, self clean dbl Own 3 cuslrlm doll houses -0n --th!' oversized Jot. Beaut. assume rnA dn. Lo dwn. tirei>J;ace, new d r a p e s • ovn, skn Uv rm, ca th ceil, a lot. Prime ea.st Costa * OCEANFRONT * property for Sl30,000. Will carry 2nd. Prine Only, ~:allpaper accenta, naural 1ml din rm 6. 1am, Xtru. J\te~ area. A three llon1r. 4 B<lrms., 2 baths, * WANTED * $42-0076. wood paneling, bkr, $29,950. $14,500. Ownt:r _ !l68--0182 bedroom for parents. A lv.'O l\·ith 40 ft. !:ronta1e. Thia FIXER UPPER \Ve have a qualified buyer 1 ~B~Y~O.....~-, ~,~b-r.~l,~,;~ba. 8'2-6691. ., Any day i111 the B~ DA y to bedroom l-0r S-On &: \vile. A older home has Jie. living BEST MESA VERDE LOCA· for a nice 2 bdrm, home Save: 6Ai $25.000. 2993 Sell the old atu.u Buy the new run 11n ad! Don't delay , . T • one betlroon1 for grandma. rn1., f'rplr.: dining nn., ex· TION! -la: Jamily, Needs (not a tear-down). Short Crottdon, Costa ~1eu.. tluff. call today 6f1f6'78· Price is $52,500 with 10% tra Jge. kltch. Dbl. 1ara.re lots -0! work but make oller escrow. U you have thought ! ..;=:=:;:;:====:::;;;:..;========;;...:.;:::;;:;;;;;:=:::;,;~;:;;;;:;;:;;-j down. Exclu.!>ive with pluis f'~lra ptuidng. Belt now and save! Vacant, cul-o! selllll&', give Ull a catl for 11re11, nr. Ne'-"'P-Ort llarbor de-sac, walk to schools. a qulclc salf', YArhl Club. Easy lo show. 546-5880 fOpt'.n l'VeJ.) MORGAN REAL TY 545--0l6S J.t~·:.3(,63 642-2253 Ewa. 67""42 675-6459 •. HERITAGE 2X3 2 titparalc 11111!1 on I lot -l ruiages: Tllke ' your pick! Commt"n':l:i.J "'1111 ~ BR home. 2 re11. lncomc unill or U3t b-Oth units con1mcrclal. Only $34,500. Newport •• F1irview 646-1111 (anytime) 1-~~--1 3 ~rooma. 2 b a t II 1 , ttl)arate famU,, r o o m , buuUtul kitchen •ntl dlnlna ..... All laml. IC.z!S. associated BROKERS-REA L TQQS ZOZS W Salb"" 67l-l66J TAKE YOUR SHOES OFF when you walk on thla Brand Nt\V Carpeting. · Cleami~ Ctrn.mlc Tile KUrhc.-n w!Ut Bil DIMlwaim~r. Thia Lt a One of a Kind Condition. -4 Bedrooms. 2 Baths, Covertd Pat~. Fenced. $26,500. Call 646-0.55li, Evenine• 645-+W. COLWELL Pf?Cl~>( RT IFS !fl.If' Hl Al.l trns REALTORS EAmlDE OPEN DAILY t iarae BdrtM • 3 bath" Fonnal dli11ng + )fl tam.lb' nn. A ldt. tmm~. occl 383 XLN'T LOCATIDN- 0.:siic lat.and home, 3 Br + . bunk hou11e. Di.91inctivt!' ex. ter. Many unique fratu~s. Quality construction. Patio, Sundk, lrg 2 Cftr ip1r. 11! Public -0ffering or this home. 8)' OwrM!r -sn,500. 613-324~ Santa Iubtl, C.Af, ·LOVELY d\lplex. -all tor $8!1,~. 3 br up, 2 down. Each ... 2 baths. Bay view, 100' from waler. LO\:!'l)' patio • "!nde<k ,,, .. 11 h panoramic vlt'W ol ""e°"-pcrt • H's W.ltdo. 0..-. llayfront Condo m-sm. I Br, 2 Ba, pool, pt.r A allp, l"'a.'"'l"'be-c1-.P''"..,-,,in"tu1=a-- DellcJ>lliJJ • $19.500 EMERALD IAY llACH HAVEN Immaculate 3 Br ..., tam nn. Ideal 2 lilt A famil.y rm., =F=R"E"'C"'L"'os=u"'R"'E..-.-.-.' Ocean side of hll'J. vi.w. ~ :'.P~~a;,.ii.:vacio. Pendin&. 3 BR. 2 bl. Comer Mint ... 1 11111.0llO GEJM . k>I, M-Verdt. Scm'd. Tod Hubort a At-. ptllo, nn,,111< boot; OW!let 3411 Via Llclo fn-800011610 W. Ooul Hwy., II.Ii. netda cfftr. $12,500. Uloe IO 1rade? Our ~ REALTOllS I0-4623 * 60·7491 * Patodllt coluJM ii for )<II! S<ll kll• ltfml nowt Call llA(BOA BAY ROI', 51irrJ.jdoylfor5bucli>. Llli.lll'!ll llow! • S@MllJ.-1££~s· The Puu/e willi the Bui/f./11 C!t1ck/e SC!FAM-1.ETS ANSWllS IN CLASSIACATION IOO 0 I t I I 3 I ' • ' I TI ' I h w . • • QI 5 t 0 jl(' A Ci " " 12· R ' t " ' ll 'PW }' !t D H LR 11 l"' ·~ ,. C< y th 11 011 • • - -.... I~! -.... I~ I --I~ I ---l~ [ I~ I -.... I~ I "-"'-1~11 -·-1 .:....~;;;; .iunllnlllW! ... .,., Newport ....,, e SELLING!! Sell direct to Mobllo Homn 1-p,_rty 1'6 BullM11 • Oonoral -Unlum. 305 H-• Unfum. For Solo 12J ~...;......;..;;;.;...~--o-rtunl1Y 20t 1-------~;;;.;;;,,;;.;;.;..;;;..~-;.;.; • .Bkr, ?lo long_ llstina per-...;...;.;.,..;;;;;.;____ 42 UNITS 1-==='---lMMED. OCCllPANCY Humlngton lle•ch N-port BNch MOUNTAIN livlnc lOxU Btlt.,... for .... 1111 In Los e UNIQUE GIFT U..Ut. 2 BR Condo.1200 Ill· ~ mod S b<, 2 ba. EAST BLUIT beutllul f • b:I, lmmcd. S$ to you even • H bt!hlnd in paymts or • hive notes Uue. PU9Gnal, To Serve Y 011 Columbia mob.De h 0 me • AnpleJ-Wl1'htre and Wm-SHOP • ft. Pool, •· C.J.S. Ml-ll6i8. Frplc. f)l(d yd, child/pet BR. 2 BA. aiep. lamlly rm, E"321 deck, 1P"t ·~ at t:m • complttt\y ttnted • FOR SALE-Speclalty sbOp ln £ves 83Mi:Wl. 8151 Taylor 847~169. Jae lot. $475. ltt. Avail. ~unn "'e s,~,~~lh &...~~ &cod invatment . S:iSO.<m.. exChu.lve cent,r, Qranre, j:;Bo;l;;bo;;;•;;;l;';s;l•;;nd;;;;;;;;;;:;, 2 BR, S135. Kld1/pet1. AJ.90 3 Alll\lll 10th. ~1411 ew . • contid, allentlon-962.55%), "The lest of T-Worlds" .. teJ)I • ~ .,. • --µ:\I call lnvrstmuit divl1lon Santa Ana atta. Many ~X· oc o B • •· Omtu a.Ir heat, ff:?)' clean, nleely ,._1600 clua:lYe ftaturft. Owntr's BR. Sln Kkis/~ll. EANl''R NT-1 r, • oa., • 5.17-5642, Eve., !JG3.1062. C&W REAL I '""ed. •• -"--· --••-1 CHARMING Ront-A-HouH t7U430 ev.n ""' ••r. Yearly. urn-· ~ .. ~. =.. r<lated U.ter"t demNN•' DUTCH FARMHOUSE ~21 ESTATE Cashen 714/5'7-8941 or more time. Call Rob s... CAPE COD Irvine Ronl·A-Hou10 9794430 l\1ilh heavy, heavy shakt _,>10j834;;~:=;;·_,°"'.,.,--,-,;;;,-;; ford , GRUBB & ELLIS 4300 Yclltl.y n.·ntal. 2 BR., den, l ~=======;;;; HARD to ftnd Bl u If 1 'LIKE • • a• Ca P"" ~ NB ... ~1 .......,. bath ho1nP. ~~ Bloc-k fr01n • .. .. A'•la", .• ·-. 2 Ba. ~ roor, i>hutterg aa.lore plus new, ., mo1., ~ ... \f,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! m ..... jJI.-, • • <N -,.......,, btach, $325 niolllh, 3 BR, 2 Ba.; tam. nn .•• ,$325 ..w Qjl. ...,. ~pa.rate pl nyroom for kids Re1ldentl1l & Income Propertln BA, lndlcpd, btaut pu.rk. •Jtlf lN 1'-t&x.lne WUllanii 642_8235 4 BR., 2~' bl., ram. rm, $375 _I::•:: ... :::..· 13=T5:..m=•·_6_f_I _<31_9_·_ 1 °' craft" 3 Bir b<drooma. VISIT OUR EXCELLENT LOCATION ml to beach. pools, ctubhx, DANA HARBOR Apt. Bldg. for Louo 3 BR, 2 Ba, Ab'lum .... $3l5 HARBOR vtF.W HOMES-2 & $700, 1010.1 co111& to move in 1 ff D N B h clae to &boPPI"· Lie $85 mo. INCOME llOMES INE\V) I units In Carden Grove. \VE HAVE OTHERS Den or J BR. $395. LR. or lor' Any veteran. Bkr. 733 Westen r., ewport eac $11,900. H n t g n Bch. 4-Pltox •••••• $66,"° lo sn,950 c.u Division of lllahwl)'s. mo. lu mo. fHS-2502. ~'55ll. 645·7221 675-$t7. Duplex .............. $52,500 :;.. ~~~Jo~~{.~; 642~~;11y Compn~20I HA RBOR Vu lllr. 2Ba, Fam OWNER, must move, den 1:.1!!!!!!11!!!!!!!..,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 1 eReJ)Ofil5Hllion. low do'Y.TI. 8 Unit.a •••••••••••• $132,500 & 18 only. Rm, Din Rm. O ub/pool. "J :r, Ir I 11· II ii. 1 -- -"I l 1·11ilur family room large enoua:h l: »c57 Lancer, 1970. Oeen. Alcau.r and at La Cl'Hta 1---.:.---~-= SJOO mo. 640-1768. for a ruu iiud PoOl tahle. 4 Laguna Buch Newport hach Corner lot. r.1w.t se 11. \VEBB (Bkr.) Gt2-4900 Bu1lne11 WantMI 210 81lboa Penln1ul1 1"·in sized bedrooms, xtra YOU NAME IT BLUFFS 71417'!&-241 6; after 6 Pffi<liiiiiiiiir.iiiiii!liiii~ji;;I :..,.~~.t~a~Uo~o~be:.a;u.,,;;°;salo~;.n.";VVkic Sl-IARP~ Clerui! 2 Br, 2 Ba. bslh•. & "1 firo_plact, din-This Cullom 4 BR. bome bu "CARMELITA" PLAN n 4119:1-f;&3 SEVEN HOUSES Htg Sch, Fnln Vy, Wuhn. i'riy ...... Imme.I. -· No 1 1ng room, built-ins, prune it lluie comer lot w/l&e •• Bdrm 3 '"'"· _, 11 45' • 2 yrs old. Kine Sz BR. 5-2 BR It: 2-1 BR lndlvtdual Write: Classified Ad No. , ~"'-"-·-R_e_r~·,,_rn-..,:,.:.3944_. __ iome area, brk:. $31,000. · . . ,, _ ., ua..__..: el.Ill un , 1,.. ba ~uA-· sliding • P , · 96Z-l373 cx:posed a,aregate patio, -nbelt. U-"ed A attr. • .. :..-... V3~ homes on large corner lot. 459. Dt'lly Pilot, . o . Bo:< Coroni del Mir · dyn 1 · SJ t ... ~~ ......... gla51, awrunr, pauo, shed. N-~, '°m• TLC and 1·~ ~--1 '' ,. Calif =. $100 -AL CASH. am c ·ocean Vlews. a e decor $54 000 100' ba L'do =u ;JUU, ........, a e ' ·• ---------•~ » •v• •-· I --1 k -1c · ' ' to y. 1 area. general cleanup N t v e r 92626. ** DUPLF.X BR AND "SINCE!~" 1st We1tem Bank Bldg. Univ~lty Park, Itvilll' Ooy1 552-7000 Nights Hou1e1 Furn. Or' Unfurn. Corona del Mir 310 Xlnt n.·-4 bdrm In x!nt tll .. .,, vo ca.w e roe ,..., ·• Ad It $7500 67:1-3816 · _.c,;. ______ ~ ........ cenlrnl vac., huge LV &:: _._~ u s. · 1~ vacancy. $875. month in-Money to l.oan 240 NE\V. lllli!:e dl:c owner'• fl.B. area ne11r Dooglai, family rms. AUto. wate:r 4~ Sx42, 2 BR, patio, • come $10,000 dn. A&kine I---------unit. 3 BR., 3 BA ., tlo!W tr> schls & slqipinr. IM)ftener, W/WCarp, Shown c:. t ~)!:1{ 1'f'C ttJOm & pool, \\'alk to $'19.500. CALL 642-lm. 1st TD loans Fireplace, bltlna, 1800 8(1. ft. A\'AIL Sepl l.sl, hoUM: l BR . trplc, Sl50. 6 7 3-O 9 3 '1 e~s/y.•~k It; R70--0500 d&Y'J. 4 llR., 2 1 ~ ba, ..... , $365/375 i;.;'..:":..:·_:M:.::_i:::c::,·/L ____ _ 4 BR., 2 baths .......... $310 Condom 1um1 ~A~~1,'."';;'.U'."'ilu~ by •pp't, only. You'll want urs w,y u ~=·· $65 mo. $2700 ~ "--"-""'21 2n6d''%1""""'0 L~~Tns ~!n~·~·wu:'."~~~::o b~; 3 BR., 2 bath!'! .......... S340 Ut)fur'!. 3 BR, 2 Bath~ , ......... $400 320 "011't lasCr. 96&2-5523W, 537·$12. 11.t $62l.~E IT UP ~~: rcu ly · 24x43 New 1m. Beaut adult \...l'JDU.,, 7 ' "'""'q & shopping. l yr l!!e. $395. 3 l.ge. BR., 2',i ba'•·· frplc. po.rk in Laguna Hillt . C8.n Refs. required. 675-6900, • I · t · Sp 2414 Vista de1 Oro be purchased with 25% I~=~-'-~-~~-LUXURY HOME K wute wa er"'''" ac· WALK to oclhl BR, '"" '-us lnd.,pd. yanls. \Ve Newport Beach 00\\11. Call 830-4976. Lowest rates n-.... e Co. ....._k h h 1 -... E .., ..... '6 ~ s, ase v f!ry l n&:. '111ls cxecuUve home has 4 have they key, $57,500, vn-lll3 ANYTIM '35x8 KIT Tm-Her, w/l2'x25' --s:ruNITS .. $65,000 "WE BUY TD'S" kids/~tl. &padous bdrms, big family CATALINA SUNSETS NEWPORT cabona in •••:tlonB. MU<! be L>w Down • 7%% 1n1.,,.,, S I M C Ronl·A-Hou10 rnt, In1macula te! This tri· Ocean view1 thru towering pulled out. Exccl. Cond. To Lee Pereyda Rltr. 546-1698 1tt Ir tg. o. (ired hill REALTY 979-1430 \cvf'I features Pamuet entry, ._es. •·-·tar -m• built HEIGHTS-~..-u ~-< 67" _,,,, '42·2171 545-0611 3 BR. 2 BA, Harbor View h rd I fl ... I U .. .., n.IJ.bU '""' Lio ""' e "'"'"' e. r•~• lndu1trl1I Property 161 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. Homes-A1onaoo. Pool prh•il, !"!!'"""'"~""'""'"""'"''"' a WOO< oors, gC" pa o, around a Frank yd ] BEDROOM 10.SO. w/caba.Da, 2 br, 11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil --"-----~-137 Logun• Booch Univ. Park Centl"r, Ir.tine Call Anytime 83.1-0820 Office hourt 8 Al\t to 8 P~f te ft th · II \VE mak loans ty 5. Avail. Aug. 15th. ;aha::'xt=~~~ede~o~7i :~~trp~~l.ec~!~; J:t!~:fe~=e7t~~;h: a!~e~~:~.~1t21 , ~-11.0NE Also i:Y TD':.n:°~~:r,..;833-J894"'-=cc·~~--~= !,.ACUNA Niguel. 4 Rn, 2 al only $41,9fl0. Call & see, kitch. &:: unusuaJ baths. 3 home with 3 Bedrooms, 2 l0x55, 1 Br Mobile home 82'iii x 300 lot, hu dwel.lina Bkr. 492-3332 or ~-0424. Hou111 Unfurn, 305 RA, Uv rm k dining areA. 962-7637. BR. &: lge, dining rm. Move 2 1oc ed in NB $3 500 Out and garage Money Winted 250 Coati Mei• ramlly rm, frpl, built1n~. TIME'S l('astin' •. tb~ VA· rl.i"ht In 11,t $59,500, Baths, I~ yard, car at • . ' • $34 500 carpet11, drape~. ft-'ne«I & detached garage with alley of town owner anxious. ' •• 1 CANT 3 bedroom 2 bath HIU.IE !.1cCORMACK entrance. Priced to sell at ~9926• managt'?' Roy Mccardle Realtor NEED SSO.COJ .111t tnu FREEl l isprinkle:rs, 2-car garn.ge. home ts yearning for a REALTOR 494-7551 $34,SOO. can 6'6-nn. * '1U BILTMORE 12x62, ~772t mor1gage from priv party l•ndlords~Owners tmmac. $315 mo .. l.st, lru;t & lan1ily. Early move in lo CUSTOM BUILT furn. l~) ba, ~ .up nice lSlO Newpo1i Blvd., C.M. :;'n: :;~~er~ial !n:e:p~i \Ve will l'l"fer tenanlR to you ~~~~4.~\vallable Aug. 24th. ·bualilicd buyers. Asking Just listed! Big ocean vitw adult perk. 839-'l955. Huntgn Bch. Purchase price FREE ot chargf" ... Y..1any ,.c:;~=~~~--- $Z7.COO. NO DOWN GI's er home in beaut. garden set· •n SKYLINE ~'". 2 br, 2 Lots for Sale 170 desirable tenant:< on our $170-Lrg l BR, blt.ns, crpt1, I 0 \V D 0 W N T 0 · 3 ·~ 3 "·!h ~ $87,000. 536--6666 aft 6 pm. waiting Ii.st. drp11, niCf' private psl!o. ' ting; Uluuas., ua •: ba, shag, 2 sheds, nu court, Cl101CE subdivision Joi , % tlON·VE'TS. Call SEYMOUR spacioo.111 dining & living TH~ POINT xtras, S.A. 5.57-4507. hr Las Vegas, $500. Sell or ALA R9n~1l1 e 645-3900 $210-Walk to beach A town. 2 Coat• Me11 2 story CMdo. ~nx mn. 2SA, Dbl gar fll'ft.P. Patl:n1 O ubhle & pool. Unturn. sm mo. Cpls only. Cnll -9. ~10NTECELLO condo. -4 Bl', or 3 plus den, S250 mo. 17&-2466. Huntlntton lleoch Z BR condo, Adults only. Incl. refria", y,•uher, dryer. Years lease $200/mo . Adams & Brookhunt. Call Joan KenlPn, 644-5996, 4 Br, 1\i ba, pstio Ir carport. $225/0M>. • G45-457! Duploxo• Unfurn. Bolboo POftlft1ulo ' RF.At~TY. 847-12'11 a?'f!a. Well planned kitchen. Exclt11ive Balboa Penlnsula. l iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill ~tm!d~e'.'.!.054'4:1~--0220~!c· ------1 [ Houses for"*C lf ~I e MISUNDERSTOOD? Spl\e. $::2 h~~ ~':: ~==! tri)U, 0\VNER trarrs. A s 1 um e 4!'.e view deck 1': patio IU'!a. turn B h All ti! · SR:t OLX duplex 2 Br., 1" Ba, • .,% 1 " 1 Many extras Wet bar Impressive -4 BR., 3 bath, 1 1 ~ Mountain, Desert, ac · u 1ne · · ch·p:<, bHn5, No t•nd. ""' o3n, paymen eu -' extralarpliv.rm.Huge18 R••l'Ettat•. Resort 174 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 NU-VIEW RENTALS bltlns, nu cptt , crp11, trpl, than rent. 3 bedroom!!, den, tinted glas1, door opener, 40 lamil Ith be GenltaA encl gar, yn lse . cnty. xtra cabinets and ahelves In self-cleaning oven, etc. Very -~Uings, Ym1:~v: frp~ ';;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;1 i6o.Ac. FOR RESALE Houae1 Fumlahed 300 e RARE INDEED! 'l RR, 673-4030 or 494-3248 G15-47SS. HL modern kitchen, bulltins, functional, well planned large ti ONLY $7S 500 I 160 acre 1 surveye<I and fnod yrd, encl gar, kids/ok. NO. E nd charming l Br. din ~H'-'u"n"'tl;.:n"g-lon-~B~.-.-c~h--1 expensive wallpnper, many home. A jewel for entertain-pa o. . ' · Acreage for sale 150 recorded Into (4) 40 acre Be1cen B1y llJO, rm , frp\, gar, terrace "'' red I CALL ~. ••1-2•14 ALAR I e 645 3900 b k "ttlstom features, cove nr. Pl't(td at $89,500. 9\;I' .I 140 Acres, beaut, Oregon lots for resale, In La.ben Rent Baytront Beacon Bay. enta 1 -ocean vie1\•, 11fi I lll DELUXE l BR, cov pe.Uo. patio "'Ith natural brick * 499-2800 * ~AtJlfllllL.. land. Valued $400 an acre, ~ty. Nr. pa~ rood, Na· Furn. 10 mo. Avail Sept. 1. 3 • HARD TO FIND! 2 Br. bea c h/ 1 ho P ·I· Adlta. New drp1, crpts, bltns, dbl fi'replnce, bric., S 2 6 • 0 0 0 · ... ft: ~ REAL TY hunting & fishina: rights. t'?"al Forest, pine tre 129 cs;_!-Br,~ Ba, Boat slip ava~!o encl pr, kids/pets ok, $l!$. 494-1836, 494--7256 1ar., lovely private grounds. 84G--OfJ0.1. ~ ~~ Ne•r Ncwperl P••• Offlr• Assume contrac• owner v1ew1 of Mt. Shasta. .~. pett, No children. ......,.,,, ALA Rontols e 64S.3900 Ligun• Niguel Water & gardener pd, MR . Executive -1-lere It i1! ~._.~ 2-CHANNELFRONT needs ca.sh or "tr 1 d. c. $2,gtj) dn. &: $249 per mo. & ~•::.:7;;.3-3855=.::·~~~---I Retponsible ~ couple 5 Big bdnns. 2 fpl:, family tKMH ~CM£ Ne\\-er 3 Br, & den, 3 ba, 833-9595. can give 4 deed1. Rich Corona del Mar e FRESH &: Clenn-2 Br. NE\V i-lomr, 3 BR. 2 BA, {Adullll $165 no pell. rm, dining, sunken !iv nn, · ....,._....,.c-with tri)t'd pier Ii: slip for A fo I lS2 Prouty, LANDWAY. 714: rncd yrd, encl g" r ., fan1 rm, bltns, crpt.s, drps, r ...:~~~·•;,·~~-~=-I Roman tb. Ne"'' paint ln & Room to< Grow 21, boat Overk>oks N'pt l'1. partment1 rs• e 627-1815. LOVELY 2 bedroorn and kids/pet.I. $1S5. ~~:·. 4 ~~~ ~~ne~ ~i'::' DUPLEX ror rent, $13$. out. Walk 10 beach ed• G-at family home wilh S Park. $8'7,500. ' FOR Sale hy Owner, 10 delx INVESTMENT-DI' BI v d den. Good location. sn5. a ALA Rentals e 645-3900 """ ..,...4 2 Br, cptl, drpa. 624 Geneva.· schools. Seller is moti vat . .-.: Ml!"ITT, DUPLEX · · h f N wport ~--9 month. Available for one ...,.,..."u" Apt A, HB Call Ma--. Ali t•rms and only "3.~. bdrmr. plus h•u•e family ¥ un11s m eart o e .. ·~" $4 ,co:t N " 11 ·~-" ~· ~ -Modern duplex • • 2 ' den Beach. 1oor,~ Occun11"""'. fNCQ.).fE..M-=a i..t..e Got f year or more. 0 pe~ or LEASE 4 BR, 1 yr o 1, 536-0430 C.11 962-... -. "'7·"." 7, room. over 3,000 sq. ft, ot • .1"' "' • ..... -.. ....... "'6 11 hild A e t LEASE -3 BR .. 2 BA ., · 1 t•••••••••i C~&~ w'~ li'v!ng spa•e enhanced by 8 Pier & slip. 3 We:t water Xlnl inves\ment &. tax Course Triple"X-Ski slope 1 sma C ren. g n J>{IOOramic view O l . .... -I view on N'pt Isl $99 500 11helter. 646-5169. blk $49,500 I ~6:.:7>-:.. . .::72'l5~·...:C::c.P:_·.::'·----fam. rm., East side. mf'Tllbenhip to N'<' fac ility spectacular ocean Vlew. A 67"1972 •·•nt. G~J B I p l54 LAKEFRONT Alpine Ree.h y Costa Mesa $325. per mo. Agent. w/pool incl. $32:i .• rt'f r(l\I, OWNER top vaJur. $48,950. <>-,.. u1 ne11 roperty • r---------64~3928. TRANSFERRED PANORAMIC VIEW 1.:::=:.:E::LE::Vc.:Ec.:CN:;:i:A::.CR:.:EJ...s_;:;. Bi< a.:: ~~~!i"-1'511 2 BR, """' 1 re!rl<, :9'-1~3. Hiii 3 Bedrm, l '.& bath, boat or rAO/ia.:n Beaut. malntaintd home n-....-, ., _ _.,mot crpt/drpe:. Some turn.3 --"------,---bl--HUM I h & 2 Bedrooms & I•""• fam1Jy ......... ._ ... county a u.i"""~ or 2 Lots .ecluded $2,-450 r..-rt. All util _. "''""" ...--, 2 ba, cpt•, ... ..., tnl, camper gate near besc p L .,,. 500• . home or canper -'es toca.. Moonrtdge cabln $15 750 ---r • ,......,, «.THned patio dbl aange 4 BR 2• ])Aw b1t.fD1o kneed school. 5% ilown. Only 1'E~. ~ ES'['",..E nn. oo _., • tion for lease SE comer , adult only. Nr. West.dill lmmed. ocCupa' ncy. I~ yt'.ro, patio, excellent loca· 0 500 Call ~ .,_., "'' Goor•o WllllomSO\'I · • Lakeside cabin '35,00'.I p•---11~ •~ ~•• s,.i. · ~•' •.i.. • Garden Grove Blvd &. :..-=:..:.;:;.;~.;,·.:.~::...:=-·--I Mesa North, ~7-U43, Rich. Uon-immed occup, $250, per RED CARPET REALTORS R •• ltor Call 86M6C1 or write: ~ 1190 Glenneyre St. Hartior Blvd • ;"""ted Im-Newport Beach mo. Call agent 546-4141, VA.NO DOWN 494.9473 50-0316 54MS70 64S.1564 cd • 00 ·M Spencer Real Eatate, P. O. $110-2 BR, ..,., real deon, m occup. r • Box 2828. Bir Bear Lake, Sl15-B ALB o A ISLAND fncd for kkl1/pell. Lido Isle ;: Bdrm 2 bath, cenrral en-OCEANFRONT WATERFRONT Udo Iaie, Porteous, Barrett Ree.lty. eaut. Rent·A·House t79..a430 try leads lo lar&e family nn OPEN J{OUSE Via Udo Soud. Priced for 642-5.D>. -==--~----Charming 1 Br. over ga· · h 1· I --->-kit qui•'--•· by owner. Prin-~:...::=-~-"'---LOT in tamous Lake Havasu. rage. Lrg le: private. u•1t cozy 1~P , """""m • Sat A: Sun, 1-5 pm \;A ........,. 1 Commercial home Gt: the warld famoul S185-0ianne1 front 1 Br. fh<>n. $31.950. Pl-I: 9G2-tm 2 BR, 2 BA OWN.YOUR-OWN clpals only. Info. 6'll-f OO; Property 151 London Bridge. Located duplex, lrg patio A carport. }lED CAR PET REALTORS. apt #58, 31(23 Coast Hwy, l-684-4706• -close to 811 9Chool1 Ir city. $200-Util pd. Huge Siudio, 'PWO BEDROOM SHACK S. Laguna. Fabulous ocean HARBOR Vu home1, Bee.ut . * FOR SALE * $900) or will -trade tor Costa right en pool Beaut. ""1rn- 2 BR w/garage. Oilldftn, a'Wlol. no pct1. Inquire at 381 Ne. t, E. lBth St. W-4163. $210-Vcry Ir& 1 BR over ga. rage, Stove, retrig, crpt1, drp1, gar. Avail Yearly, $366-Waterfront 3 BR w/ trplc, Btaut. view, bltn1, :roR SALE c HEAP ! view, breakers, rocks: It lndscp. decorated, 2 sty, 5,650 Sq, ft. lot -Laguna Mesa or Newport Beach in-ished. Sl50/mo. Jump to ocean. beach, elevator, pool, secul'· Fee lnd, 4BR, 3Ba, Fam Near Forest It Third St. come prop, 644--4687. NU-VIEW RENTALS NYCE 2 BR houle. Garap, c:rpts, drpl, gar. Yellrly, lcnctd Yl'd. Sl!iO mo. 2029 NU-VIEW RENTALS llkr. ~..>2-5:111 . ity, excellent condition, furn. Rm, Form Din, $69,500. Ideal Jar 494-l24B ished, at reduced price Owner, 644-4648 professional er retail bldg. U-finish mt cabin, low u 673-4000 or Wallace, CM. 873-4030 or 494-3248 Huntington Harbour $52 ·-r· Bkr n• REALONOMJCS, BROKER $4,295. Chotce lots avail at WINTER rental. Npt Penin. LRG Family home.". Hun-~~. ~":'ior appi. .,.. Newport Hellftts * 675-6700 * BIG BEAR LAKE. Cal ~ blk from bay, 2 br, Uv E/SIDE 2 br, ftK cpl, pvt Lindo Isle pd, i""'f'· quiet. Avall i-"=;:....:=----- ~-to -;;;;;;~;";;i,-;~;;;;;;.m;;L~-~~c!for~inf~o::_. ___ nn, Ige kit, frplc, nice patio tington H~bour. """""" 3 BR. & Den $36,950 4 BR. VICTORIAN 6 Comm'! unit.s; gross $770 schls, tenni_s ('O\lrts & water. Uni,., ... , white bri·" ~-. Yoo must see thLs customiz.. per mo: Sl,Ol-4 taxes: util Real E1t1te Wint.cf 114 & guest house w-Br,%.ba, ··-•1=1"' 1607 .. M~ """ ., .... ,.,,. ed ,_ 3 old • serv rm w-wshr Ii: dryer. 1/1, SlGS. Adults. Sf.8..o715, * * 3 BR, 2 BA. 1250/Mo. Nl<e Dov Id pt. Popp patio. Double 1 a r 1 1 c . 6142 Loyol1 Drive t""IO-O lo:> "'":.-• ~ted entry. 2 Ba., bit-ins, masterp1n.--... )Tl ' .I $50_ • Make offer. Owner anx· EXECUTIVE I · blks to Harbor H I g h. to u "4 Old N WJ>Ort $285 mo. 675-2804; SU--0671, I 9rv;;1;,;n,;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I trplc., carp. Yard needs r...-.-.a..,. ollera •·nn1 & ious se . e TRANSFERS -":::.:'::.394:.::... ------2 Br, range, a:ange, fenced. 546-1093 or 89Ul93. Huntington lleoch I• work, but a real buy for the vw•oc·-~· '"' Blvd. NB 64~. Need 3 and-4 bedroom home., Adltl only, ''$145 mo, :· INCOMPARABLE handyman. Call' •• -= poss. S 4 9' s oo. C-2, 2068 NEWPORT a11 areu of Oranae County. 2,~:".::.~~.1~: .:::::.~~ 1_54&-...:._75.:.500:.:;_. 1:...76:..::E.:...Wccll;,;aoc.n:...._ You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Southlond Homo & Gordon Show , VALUE MISSION REALTY •~•.u . Blvd. 100' x 315'. Principal.! Immediate cash, Call our pt11, $250 incl utlJ. 2'13/CR. ro University Pnrk. 3 Mnn'1, 180 view, 3 bed, 2 ba, SPANISH Contemp by Owner· only. Ph. 642-1121. agent, KATELLA llEA'.LTY 4_3692 or ~!15.'J. _F_o_u_nt_•_ln_V_•_l_l•_.Y __ _ 21 ~ hn1J1~. family room. 2 frplc1, decks, bltins. BuUdct'. 4BR, 2BA, Huge · 837·9400. -=-"-'-C...:C:.C--= VERY ~ 3 -. lam rm, at the & Master BR" many cun ex Condominium• HoulOI Unfurn. 305 ~ ANAHEIM Com plclely bricked front $59.500. Owner, 497-1256 • for lolo l60 LADY ,_ 1 d 1 3 ~--------walk to F. v. HI Sehl. Afl 7 Y""r yards, tile roof, Buy lrU. Must !!ff to l!loppl"eC. wan.,. cean upex ... 83 CONVENTION '" K> 900 Call ,,._.,,._ 9169 for _,;,;,,_;,;.:.;.. ____ ;.;.; & .C BR. at N.B. AIJO General pm, 7-911.5. this for only $33.500. &:: en· L1gun1 Nlguel -· t • V'IV" Private Penthouse smaller rentaJ. 675-0!J22. _________ 1 ~~-4..-;B~R•.-, ~2-B"'A..-. --CENTER • joy our unique planned com· ~a"pp"-. -----~= Lu.xurk>t11 2 Bdrm on exclu· 7 mo old 83_3-.llOJ, 675--20JB July 14 • July 23 ntunity, 4 swimming pooL<i, BR 0 ADM 0 0 R, Niguel O\VNER, must sell, 4 BR sive beach, Pool, •undeck & 1 Pleo.1e ca.II 642-5678, ext. 31-4 1cnnis (.'Ourls, ld!urne board, Shores. oceanview, -4 Br, den. 2 BA. htdwd llnr, beaut 90. private veranda. Lots of Huntington S.1cft . between 9 and 5 pm. lo claim paddle tennis, lot 10!1 ga. ~Uy nn, :. Ba,1 2d yrs °!td. iieduded yant. Reduced to privacy. $65,00'.I. By appt *WE bavt a larp telection )'OUr tickets, (No1~.~~ty) lnrf'. & mi les or bicycle ~ / 5:1 ~i, ~..! . $39,900. 548-4033. only. 529-598S. HouMI * Apt1. of S and ' bedroom homes toll-he number 1 .,..,.,,_,, puth1t. rps cp ' car •-.. ~· Santa An• * 145 0111 * "·-t -.. ... IDO\'td mto * + * Beautiful family home, fine ;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;; 2 story, 2BR 1% BA. Perfect Bu1lnn1 • .... _., u. area y,i.th easy, ufe beach i'or n!lirement, in adults on-Opportunity 20CI I almott tnunedlattl1 on our Ml11lon Viejo acces1, $67,500. Call owner. 2 BDRM., 2 BATH Jy complex. 80% Conven-Rent.Option plan. '.-.-.,.2-B"'R...;..l_",...·°'B"'A_,,EI * * * SHE;l\WOOD REALTY, ' " ' .!JG.<;Jl4 . $11,500. CONDO. tlonal finanoln& available H d L nd $BS-LAGUNA B&ohelor pad. ... ··ss Dorado. Comp!. Cfl>t'd " READY to mow into, 3 BR. Thi.I condo Is 1poUe11ly SZl.900. Principals only. owir I 2 blka to ocean. Vacant. ~=~__....,:....~~~I drp'd, Bltnl. Fncd yrd • 2% BA. By owner. Walk to clean. Only 50 yds. to big 963-2187. 171412 Ml ann l{URRYI 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. patio. $225/mo. 830-5891. "SINCE 1946" tlChool, clo&e to tree .... '&)'. pool area with aauna. Adults -4 BDRM 2 bl,. w/w crptl, You are ';:e ':trow. ol ~VLPRIV''TE* home w/ 2 Xlnt condition. Fruit NewDOrt le1ch 'll11\1 ·1 11'1id' ----, \1'11 ll1 1r ..,,._,Pum. lold N-Concept FURNITURE ~~AL • Month to Month * 100~ Purchue Option * Wide Selection. Style-Color. * 24 Hour Oelivet}' 517 W. 19th, CM :mtl N. Moln, SA -------- * DOCK t. PIER * Charmlnr 1 br. rum apt, nn N. Baytront. 1 ear gar. $350 mo. Jeue. 673-4099. Bolboo Peninsula PENIN Pt. lrg I br, wlw apt, pvt pa.Ho. Yrly hie. UtU lncld, No pets, Single or cpl only. $195.. Avail 711. 1500 Miramar. Balbaft, Oown- lt.airs unit, 67J.O?l).. • ,.5 WK A Up-On Octan l.oYely Bacb-1 Br. • Roomt Mald Servl«--Pool-UUI Pd • Call 67Hll0 • .1.111 \Vestern Bl\l\k Bldg. $31,00'.I. 830-2812, 893-2424 only -no chlldten under W/D, extru, patio, pool, 2 ticket t the • ...._.... ""-trees and· gardener in. 16. All elec. kit incl d&h\vshr,, rec. clubhse. near shopping 8 0 · Br, cpts, drp1, pr, kids ok. eluded. Only $200. per B Unlvel"'1'11y Park, Irvinr • Lido 1110 encl petio area. With $900. & school, ·~.800. ~3722 or Southland * ACH tum &arden apt S105 D 5527000 Nights -••r H & G d mo.-No pets-Agent. "CARMELITA" PLAN w tutll,bu1lne11man, BLUFt=S c.,_ dol Mor ,.,,.,•Y;,,'...,...,.,·...,...,...,...,.., dn. & pymls nt $185, mo. 963-4051. ome •r •n Sl.fO.COzy Cottaae 1 Br. 96i.44?l r ~103 f Bd 3 "-I d 11 noM k 1 1• Now is the time • • • covers an. Show encl petio, gar. pet con-O • nn., u..t i1: en un , mo er, Pr v a c '/I . ROOMS FOR To "'' your property, We Duplox11/Unlls •\ the lldered. l BR" don, 2 ha, cpl, drpo. ll'ttnbelt, up,...ded " atlr. I ;;6;,;'15-1859:,.;;:~· ~-.,.=~=cl ANYTHING have quallflod cu!lomer1 lf ulo 162 ANAHEIM * bltn8, V<ry i.., lncd }'<].Play dooor. $54,000. FURN 1 BR apt, CdM, $170. I di w&itlnR'. 'l H C-J ••t ""II CONVENTION $1~F'RESHLY decorat<'d. 2 equip. Nr. 4 IC'hl1. c~. , •• •f'.. Near beach. 1 Yr 1ae ,.;,., big bderoona Inc u ng LIDO REAL TY 5. •51 -.. ·.. 10 Unit• cs h" + s Ap'4l CENTER Br, blm., Ir& yrd for lcid•" P<'I weleome. 1192-8526 att 7 ~~ deolred. Call "42-1210 da¥· :i huge ma11er bedroom. 3.177 Via Lido, N.B: E/slde, C.M. Priced to July 14 • July 23 pet. '-'p"m".=,,-,--.,,...,,,...,,..,.~ C: f ~·1 ¥.' time: ew1. 536--4622. · Loi. of walk-In closeff !Jhe, --'*"-.:.6.:c7l-:..7:..:300=....t:.*'--Wostmlnslor rt<U·Alki... $92,500. wiU Plwe call W-5678 ext 314 * LOVELY, lmmac 3 br, 2 b<, U(S i FURN. Apt. 1145 Utll lfd, l..'\rge ramt1y room o t tak~ orter. Crou $1,050 per between 9 and 5 ~to ci.Jm I Sl'l5-DOUJ_t0USE. nc.'W 2 Ism nn, sunken llv nn I. ~' blk: to octa.n. No pets. rnoclcm kitchen. Big llvlDa: ELEGANT SUPER mo. By Owner. 6'2-8520. ...... ... UclcetJ. (Norlh County Br. mc1 Ktlr, bltns. WffrJ)fr ~ec kitchen. Nr f P: rea ly 2500 Seaview cdM room with a fireplace and -4 bedroom A famlly room ... --. , • Sf'f>llrtllc dining area. Thll home with -4 baths A 2 fire-FAMILY ROOM 'IWO duplexe$, top grade, toll·frte h~be.r b 540-12Xl) crptJ/d:rpg, pet ok , elem ICbl, jr ~t' I: lits. 2414 Villa dt1 Oro n&.chtkil' apl, n.n tri1. pl.-, 192 ~ pri. patios. moo. down. T. * * * LANDLORDS I Mall. 1275 ""'· 847-am. Annuol i.,.. 1115 mo. 2500 squart foot Irvine .... · ,.....,,,, Leadt to • lqe acreened p K'7 000 Call Newport Beach beauty is only $41 .900 In. ~ lowsonJa. porch. 4 Bednn1, a "-oman'1 . ,..,,, • ror appt, LEARN the Wood Finish Do you have a vacancy! Wa LEASE $310. Brand new 3 _;64f.~1133~!_,AN~YT~IME~'.__/28ifUt~U;.;'pdc::;. ~--~4-:...71Vl~;;:;;,J cludins:-!ht lnnd! Call ...,._ ldtclM!n, formal dining rm, 96l-51'll By owntr. removing bu.slnep, A 11 ean fill It. Many de1lrablt1 br, 2 ba. cpts, drpe, cov ~ 2 BR apt, avtll Sept lll .,._ type• of .,,'OOd rinb lx.'d trom tenant. on our waiting list. P1Uo. Nr ICblt A: ocean. HARBOR View, Carmel. $7l0. 673-0934 tvta/wlmd.J; 646-n n . 1416 Via Lido 675-1562 Ir& muter bedrm, 1604 sq Income Propo'!l 166 Modern & AnUque furnllure. Ab.,lut•ly. NO CHARGES. Rell. No P<t&. MZ-7993; beout. carpl'd • draped; I 870-0500, Mt. Mi<en. Ill' LOT • Stnda ...,,.., 11 In au. $3900. down I Al., mttrm k I 1 ch en . BEACON RENTALS IJ63.2212 BR., 2 ba. Paneled tam. l '"'-'--==:....:.~---1 \&,THE REAL ESTATERS ltJF pd Al leut s Br, 3 poymla of $224. + toxet or •eati8ftlf1 c.blnoto, panolUno. dona. * 64S.0111 * LEASE. l:lSO. 3 + 2 + Fom rm., trpl.; valloy view. 14~C .;.°";.;.;..t•:....:.Mo=N;;._ __ _ Ba. hfakll qutrtera. Q\dtt me your c;r loln. ~-Mo leue No pets. 1.::::::::::::::::::::;::::;:::=iiiiiiiil -c -privoey. lorwln rulty Inc. INCOME HOMES Bit! money makor, iota of LANDLORDS! Rm. ~·,..., dn.J>e•. 1 mile c.rbio.Mariin ruo. 64f.l662 LOW WEIKLY RATES · :, CH OOSE YOUR Owner -.-1r,·.~o·o --·--------<:U-nlll;.f ~~~-=---~;: ·~\v~~~'!ri~~~ 'l'l'e·"~litlfiO"lii"i<eWjioii ·&'t~.:~~:0;·~~~~1 ·nldnn,2 bsth, Harbor View ..... ~~:!;:,~,;:-· , r· • ·,·. : COLORS dear. Bunltlu Qoffly Act &-aut. new 2 & 3 BR unitt. ]7ttmlAf.1 or lhop. WUl slve Stach • Corona dt'I litlr • m..346-54.00 Owner. Homt, near Pool It: Cotta MeNI ~ncr wU I pre.int the t.nttr-6*-6338. 1~ E. Bay st., Colla Meaa. 10 hrl or pro rt_. 1 Ion al It Lagun!· Our Rental Stt-CLEAN l Bdrm, w/w Cf1K1, cnubhOu.se $4.10 mo, leue-, '4J.2'lt "' ol thll J bdm>., family I I~ Gomple, 811, Ph' 642-4905. training. $1000. required. -la !REE ro You! Try "'""'' fenctd yard,~ blkl Gardener Included, AK<nl SPACIOUS 1 BDRMS. -m •-·-bouse. It's ,_ Mi111on Vlolo --~ E&rn whlle trslnb1g. n4-NU·Vlewl t " 3l3 -· St l'" I~" MQ.003), ,--~" ';;;;;;;;;;;~;;; 17 Unlt>-2 bll<o from bl& 689-2000 ext <! , •• M,.e NU-Vll!W RENTALS 0 p~r. .,N . ~ -===~~--~ e l'Rll Wneni standing wltl) a Jovel.y vtew Nl.ARL Y NEW 1 C.Orona. 3Q8...312 CArnaHon. 1 • ' "'' • 96U4J2 or 538--81187. WESTCLII'F, E :i 1 cul Ive.-• FREE Utilities of U>< park. SAtl,900. TiiREE BEDRM. , Mobllo Hemoi CdM. Crou 12700 per mo. l'ISH & CHIPS 673-40JOS R or DR&IOO.JM24B 3 BR, 2 &, crpt1, m,t, home. 4 BR, 3 Rs. Beaul e Full Kltchtn i eel h·11 HOME For Solo l2S All on loe. Aaldng $26.5,000. (Ct.EA." AND BUSYl HA P 4 BE . bltno, 1233 per mo. Nr atrium Ytarly. Call: e H"led Pool r I ~ OnlyMISSl2!:,ltlOV!EJ .• u~. ___ ...;..____ By 0-r -· LIQUOR STORES ALL BUILTIN KITCH. DouKla•. Avail Aur. J. IVIN'roN, Reoltor 615-33SI e Laundty FadUUa -... ~ 10x40 Pilll1m $2700 .. s~ BY owntr duplex 1 yr old 5 LOCATIONS QUIET CUL-DE-SAC 841-71l2S. EXECUTIVE borne SBR. lit e TV l maid 1<rv avail • • '!'ELLA REi'LTY 1!7-9IOO. Falr!U I>rfve, C..la Mesa. C.p~trano U.ach, SS0,000. Holland Bus. s.1.. ~70. PHONE AGENT I BR, 2 ha, b It In I' ba. Avail Aua 1. Clee.n, Nr • Phone SeNk'e REALTY y-1 cool moneyl R<ht :~;;-'-:_,1bf;;,-«::...:&ls.00f;:;_;=9·:__-:: or trsdo for lot.'536--0346. ln& OrMI!• Av, C.M. ~170 54().1151 JACK dllh.,.,her, patio. Gd ocltl "hit Yr I y. H 0 0 mo. NEWPORT Hats. l BR, ft1n1. Onlv. Parle Cen ..... Irvine --· apL. lbw 16' In.lier wM1! oabana, T (10) 2 BR·O.lwte !licit .. 8 FOR Salo, W11f Sw>p •1111 FREE Rentl Ml yr.+ Inc, 2 dltl Avail SepL L 1713. M&-31132. Quiel adult. No pell. $110. Coll Aeyllme, -.w. ...... thN • DdJ< Piiot window, ..., -· .. need moo old E/sld< C.M. Pri... good -' tor a -11 Jn. Br. Kids I pels ok. -Fut .. 1111 .. "' ...... -Sltl\l !:. 16Ch Sc • al OfO.:e Hoon I AM to 8 PM dwllled Ad. lo"1I. llfllll. 6ft1 V>L clpa!J only. 642-UJl. '"""'ent. --. Ronl-A-HouH t7'-l430 Nttd a "Pad'1? Plooe UI ad l oall any ~ 6U-3m or lfl art. • .. ' , Fridal, Ja~ 14, 197? I~[•-"'-ll!J [ -·~ J[!J [ •~-..,-Jl!J1;;;[ .... ;;~;;;"'"""'~'~~. [ ~-"1""""' i I ,. ,,,_ ..... _ ,~j .:;[ ~R-.. _.~,~~I KSApl. Unfvrn. • KSApl. Unlvrn. 3'S Apt. Unlum. MS Apt. Unfum. US Apt. Unr-165 llftl. u-. A,t. UnfUm. 3'S v ... 1i0n Rtnl•lt 425 Coot• Mna Cott• Me.. Cotto Me.. Hunttnpon h•dl I :";;;"";;;';;;'"';;;'"";,;;;";;;"ch;;;;;;; ~i._.~~~~l~or~dl~=~:1~No~wpo1!~rt~j1o~-~:~~~~~~lo~odl~::~ ~: ;r =y;;: ~ ( .i===~=;;;:;;;;s=ee~;A=L;a;;;k;e=~====1·,-,7-5...::.. __ _._ ,01 BEACH'. ~tae~.'Jdt~.,::wHY PARK NEWPORTERs ~i\17•5'·1Ne~ (%13) ;_,, ChildrenWelcome mrw. BA, Iae wndeek, STAY HOME ON L!P0-1 BR mobile home, 2 BR 2 BA Uni. ~ _.. W/w Cllll, dpt, fr\ll,. mom-avail to 1/31 also Sept &: New Family Apts. 2 BR Furn ;.;:: i3(,8 lain view, port ~ weJk WEEKENDS. Oct. "'pool. s 5 7-6 4 7 6; . se·1ng Born 2 Bdrm. Color Coord. ADULTS ONI.Y ochools, ....... llS blk U? 548-56115. Furclture Available beod!. No pell. IZ» mo. WOULDN'T YO • Rentals to Shore k I TENNIS CRT., P1JI"J1NG C arpei.drapes<lllbwU. -=494-3'177==,..aft=7ft'pm'=<="'°'=:::-I Th .IS Wee end. GREEN, POOL, BAR-8-Q'• heated poo1 ........... nn11 DELUXE 2 BR view dupi.x. It's all here for you to enjoy Saturdays and ROOMMATE wan(ed to ClllLD PLAY AREA rec room-ocean views gar. walk to beach. $335 Sundays and all week long, too. aha.re Ye a r I Y beach DAY CAR£ CENTER patio.ample parldnc $275 mo. Good Real Estate. Muse. Must be neat &ft 5, • t' I I~ ( Spoclal occ11lon1 llko this cauld only happen 11 •• , •••••• Vista ·del Lago STUDIOS, I, 2, 2,& Don vm .. .for thost who wouldn't stttle for anythl11f Ion. MESA VERDE DRIVE & ADAMS AVE. 546-8912 3 Sl'ORY REC. Bl.DC., INC. Security -494-1518. $750,000 health spa, 7 swimming pools, 7 light· ~G. GYM A PARTY RMS. HUNTINGTON PARK Newport l Br ~pt. ed tennis courts, bicycle trails, putting green, SHARE my waterrnmt home DESIGNED FOR THE l!ACIFIC Bay view overlooking te..m. shuffleboard, croquet. Spacious junior l's · wtdock, man ~ ,.,,. GROWING FAMILY -· !mined. occup. from $174.50 monthly, plus 1 or 2-bedroom 1150/mo. Slralght. 61S-4331. SEE FURN. MODELS 7ll OCEAN A VE., H.B. 645-0600 M : 30, 640-m ~ 5. plans and 2-story town houses with 2 or 3 bed· • SHARE c.M. home with tmt. MO I WARNER AVE. <714) 536-l4BI N. end, 2 Bit. 2 BA., nr rooms. All with electric kitchens, private bal· Bt"'n 45-55, college grad. (COrner Warner 6 Edward!) Ofe open 10 am-8 pm Dally beach & market. Adults, no cony or patio, carpeting, draperJes. Subler-545-4449 btwn 7.9 pm Project of Urbenetics WILLIAM WALTERS 00. pets. $160 mo. 494-6912. · · ranean parking, elevators, optional maid set-NEAT, responsible jndivldual _ e _ B It AN o n e w 2 B.R. * NEW .2 BR., blk to beach. vice. Gourmet food market, dry cleaner, wanted to share h>use' in $235 Townhou'l'· wtw crpt, Spectaeu1ar4:~noo up. beauty salon on grounds. See beautifully fur· LaJ!UM. 4!1h5Zi!Jeves. drapes, poo1 " Re< Rm. All 494-3383 or • Dished models today, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Other STUDENT 0, employed ,..i ·Jl!""!""'ll"'""'""'""'""''!'!'!~"'!""!"!''!"!!!!!!!""'""'""lw~"l.Apt~.~u:"nlll!!""rn.~""'""'"lw~I CHILDREN IVELCOME bltins, Incl. wshtdry. Lrg l BR apt. "'" do\mlDwn. times by •spointment. Jµst north of Fashion ID share condo. Poot, Nr !"'il~Apl,.:_,•-·_F'"'u_m_. ___ *,...; Apt. Ullfum. BRAND NEW FAMILY sundeek/patk>, 1!388 EI Ar-, Bit.ins, erpt'd. No petll. Island at amboree and San Joaquin Hills oa:. 187. uUt incl, 5'5-6477. ta Me.. Gtntral G.,,.rol TOWNHOUSE APTS. royo. Ott Newland. Ea•t of·· $1111/mo. Call 842-4904. Road, iiiill aBEDRMS. +FAMILY, ~:~. bf;~n4 1~~~6~ Lido Isle Telephone (714) 644-1900 for rental inform1tion. Garages for Rent 435 ,;-* $3S WEEK & UP -If ·i. e Studio Ir: 1 BR Apta . • TV & Maid Sorvl<e Avan • Phone -Pool A e Cblldron & Pet oection 1 2376 Newport Blvd, CM 1'i • 54&-8755 or 66-3967 This Ad Worth SS on Rent :; •; Unbelievably BHullful !1 _ YAL D'ISERE Garden Apts. 1• Adults -no pets. Flowers ;. .:l Mrywhere. Stream • ~ ,Waterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm. t Samta, Sgls 1·2 Bdrm, Furn· VJLLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. Furnishld & Unfurnished Adult Living Dishwasher color coordinated appliances Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardrobe doors- indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge private fenced paUo • plush landscap- ing • brick Bar-be-Ques -large heated pools & ·1anai. Air col\lfiUonln~. 3101 So. Bristol' St., S1nta Ana 557-1200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT 2 TENNIS CT NTS GARAGE for cp.r or storage. BA. " 2W~786 LIDO bayfront 1ge l bdr PARK NEWPORT APARTME . sro. per mo .. 918 Palm St. PIJTTl!NG GREEN, guage apt, """i'Y d<e., h POOL, BARD no, 2 BR, dupl ... stove, retrig, on t e bay H.B. 536-4618, 5.1S-19el. -~ · dsh/··-• h/dry crpts drps, crptl, dlsp, gar. .. CHILD PLAY AREA ,..,.,,, ws ' ' 67>1060. SINGLE CAR GARAGE, DAY CARE CENTER drps, $165. Couple prt!f, 1508 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apts., Huntington Bch·area.- 3 STORY REC. Bill. INCL. Olive. 535-8523. Mesa Verde Newport S.•ch Furn. or Unfum. 370 $20 Mo. ~2687 GYM &: ,PARTY RMS. WALK to Beach DELUXE 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba, Newpart Beach CLEAN, dbte garage for DESIGNED FOR TJ-IE 2 Br., cpts, drps, dshw11hr encl pr $155 up. Rental EASTBLUFF i,.· "-"='------storage. $50 month. Costa CROWING FAMILY 125 & 30!r16th, 847--3957 Ofc., !l03s Mace Aye . Villa Grenda Apts. MOsr converrient loc. ln Mesa. 545-3137 SEE FURN. MODELS LARGE 2 BR 1 story 4-plex. 546--1034. e TOWNHOUSE-Spacious 4 ffewport, Private party will -Off"--l""co-'-R.Ct-'n""ta_l ___ 440~t MO I WARNER AVE. Cp\J, drps, r/o, gar, !ned, BR., 2\1 Ba., balconies, lease lrg. beaut. l BR. Apt --~--..... ---·I chUd OK. $135. 847-0245. Mission Vieio frplc, wet bar, attached 2 on bay across from Lldo in ** STORE/OFF1CE ** (Comer \Varner & Edwards) car garage. $400f1t10. Newport's most exclu.-,i.ve 500 sq. ft. nr. ocean, prk'g. Project of Urbanelics CLASSIFIED ADS • NEW J Br. 1\1 Ba st•p dn • EXECUTIVE Townho"'°" condommium. Beaut. erpt'g, St:5. Negotiate. 536-al07. 1!1 · '\Jnlurn: from $138. SEE IT: "!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I • -.. ' 2000 Parsont1, 642-8670. !!! -, •,. Apt, Unfurn.. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Unfurn 1 BR. apt. $95/mo. .• 646-2687 * FOR ACTION liv rm, ~~ et:"Pts, drps, Spacious 5 BR, den, 3 ba:, drps, cryetal cMWclier!I, MEDICAL Suite, re"ady tn • • • bltm, patio, pool & rec tac. lrplc. wot bar, attached 2 lrg cov'd lanai, pool & '""' go. Helt •I Jlolsa Chlea, CALL 642~5678 1231!. 831J.a!n. car garag•. $515/MO. · I•"k'g. Walle to Rkmrd's & H.B. $275/mo. S4&-ll23. : ~ BR.' Furn. 2 lrg. closets, ;..;,;.;.;...;;.;.....:;.c ____ _ .:"-queen 1lie ~priv ~ ! ~ tng rm. :xtra Ir& rooms, encl Coron• clal Mar Jgar w/storage. Adults only, --------- no pets. $150/mo. " 2035 Fullerton, C.M: Colla Me .. · LIVE IN A GA·RDEN P· .AVAn.. Aug. I. $90. Studio , 11.·w/kit. Attached to garage, ...... --on Broe.dway. Util pd. ~ . Mature 1oroman pret No ;. pets. Reis. 648-4316. ""°" ..y ~ ON TEN ACRES and enjoy privacy, luxury and security at a price you can atlord. * 1500 sq. ft. of living • 2 <lr 3 bedrooms, 2 baths * Fireplace, patio, garage * Pool and putting 1 Br by 1150 & $140. S/pool. ' 548-9633. . - AptJ. turn./unturn; Leau Firepla«s I priv. patios. Pools Te.nnla Contnt'l Bldsl 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 MacArthur nr• COilst 1lwy) Yours now, from $195. Come see! f Adlts only, ideal for bachelors, 1993 Churtb, CM I;:' BEAUT. FURN. 2 BR. $115. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 I THE VEN DOME Up Incl. UUI. Htd. pool. Costa Mesa 1845 Anaheim Avenue l + Adult&, no pell. 642·953> Call Mrs. Phillips, 642·2824 t! BACHELOR Ill> per mo. Utn DELUXE : j• ,,.id. Good area. No c:ook'g HARBOR GREENS APARTMENTS ,l• • !aclt. lib otudent.. 642-Jllll. Air Cond • f'<plc'• • 3 Swim· t _ QUIET turn. s1ngte ap~ Fumlshtd & mmg Pools • Health Spa • i;_,.j. yard, no pet!, $110. Util pd. Unfurnished Tennis Courts -Game· and I· • 645-1'16'1. Bi!Hard Room. I "H 1 BR. From $160 t untlnfton leach From $120 to $215 mo 1 BR._& Den From $llltl :.J LaQUINTA HERMOSA Bachelors e I ldrm1 MEDITERRANEAN "jiPlniob Country Estate Liv-2 Bdrm• e 3 ldrms VILLAGE I r Si.::J ~~ ~! 1; JJ.2 or 2 Full Batta, !WOO ~~~"ss~:n C.M. ·, :SBQ. Unbelievable Living .. Master aize bedrooms w/ RENTAL OFFICE ~ . OnJ.y high be.am ceilings, large OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM 1 ., l~R~ Pw; ~:J' =.g w{~~I.;. Park·Llkt Surrounding I _ Convenient laundry a1'ea QUIET • DELUXE oft kitchen. Enclosed pa· 2 • B · lw ff blk:J S. of San Dieco Frw1 tlos. 7 swimming pools, "' 3 R API'S ...,. .. ·on Beach, l blk W. on Holt aauna. recreatl<ln tacW-Prv. patios * Htd Poola ~ to 16211 Parkside Lane.) tJes. Security guard.· Nt !illo"'g t_ Adult.II Only : <11•1 su-5441 Mortiniq· ue Apts. 1--Models Open 'tll 9 pm. , $1<5 _ •1-. W M l'm Santa Ana Ave .. C.M. ' tor 1 .BR~ . 2700 Ptltnon ay, c Mgr. Apt. Il3 646-5542 :·Bache &. • pattoS, nr Harbor Blvd & : .. , trplc's, priv. garage a. Adams * •BEAt.rrIFUL l & 2 BR. ~,. .J)lvided ' bath &: lots ()f Contemporary Garden Apts. !'<> , rJo<.... ~c hall, pool & 546·5025 Patlo5, !rplc., pool. $1.55- f J>O"l tables, sauna baths. $170. Call 546-5163. ~ ~ for yourself I 17301 1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! * OVERSIZED sunken liv f --tceeJllClb Ln. (l _blk W. o! DELUX R 2Ba Owne .rm. w/w crpts, 2 BR, 2 BA, Beach, 1 blk N. Of Slater). 't . : 1• Ad~t & ~ frplc, blnts. patio, encl gar. I,~ . "42--7848 un1 tn p ex. s $175/mo. 673-5629. , .. 1raEE ~s lBR child OK. $27'5 m 0 NE\V 2 BR. 2 BA. dbl 1 ~ •• .,,. Ba-• 1-$85 w/gardener. $265 without. t : , apt, •"'N up .....,e or · 359 Woodlawn Pt. Do not garage. $200 mcmth. Bl tins, ~. ·.Nr beach. Pool. disturb tmants. Avail Aug crpts, drapes. 645-4203, i: '5.16-3Tn/5.16-7282. 1-IL 612-5872. 833-8447 f-:roNTINGTON Gard.en's * * $ll0~--*-*-l '3'"B=R=,..,2'"B=a-,°"E'°l8=th..,S"t.-,°"Sp-a-e, ~ • Apts. Heil at Bolsa. Chica. . ----t Adi-'$115 : ••~ 1",,.,· Com .. ;.. • See 3 Br, llit Ba, newly painted """' garage, .a, • --~-Bill Vd J 546-37761540-4431. ~· what you're missing. Fr. .ns, Cl'P rps. e n ~ 1 11204240 patK>. Nr schls &. shop g. 1 BR unrurn w I s to v e . ;--· Children ok, no pets, 880 Convenient location. $135 f APT. Poolside • Spacious · Center St., CM. 64.Z-834{) <lr per mo. 557-7768 I Bungalow. Pvt. patio, $150. 548-2682. 1..:.-~~~~---rno. 10 right ad u 1 ts, ..:..:.:....:c=--~--~ $160-Clean 3 br, 2 ba, upper. ,_.,_MG-1323. MODERN .2 Br. w/glass Crpts, drps, bltns, Kids ok. walled liv rm., beam cell· 962.-3894. • :9 LRG, 2 BR, Bungalow lngs, lrg patio. $160 On E. 2 BR unfurn Crpt drp "j' A t 4 Gard 6 t • • 8• s, P · ens, poo s. 16th St. See 1t1gr, at 437 refri N •· Sa H J · T range/oven, , g. o peu .. unas. <lt acuul9. en-Princeton Dr. (nr Harbor $140/mo. 968-1455. nis courts. $190. 846-0259 Blvd). * \VINTER RENT.1\1.S * DELUXE 1 &: 2 BR. * I 2 3 4 BR R N , 1 & 2 BR apt, .garages. Quiet Bltm, dshwshr, gar., nr So. • • • · eserve ow. garden setting. $135 up. Util Coast Pl e 545-2321 •: \BBEY REALTY 6(2-3850 tree. Furn avail Manager-aza. ' DELUXE 1 BR, gar, aduJta, 531--8508. no pet.s,.$139. Nr shopping. _,,, 2 BR. T<lwnhouse, 1% Ba. 1cn E M t .,, =16 Ntwport Beach 1,, & 3 BR apts, oceanfront or .MJU • •.i!I · ~ • ' ·-h 'th Bltns, crpts, drps. NG pets. near """ac , some "·• Dana Point I'• f:ri>'lc, summer <lr annual. Nr Bake-&: Fairview. 1 Prvt party. 67l-7684 "'knds $155/mo. 994 Mission Dr., NEW 2 BR,. 2 Ba duplex. : · « 646--0525 _CM __ 54_5-_1882 __ • -----Cpts, drps, d s b w sh r , I UPPER 3 BR. 'ri: blk beach. SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up, gatage, $200., 493-0li'ffi, 33966 1 Yearly. New crpts & drps. Pook I,. cpUdrp, bltns, kids Silver Lantern. ' ~' •'llM/ N "A" ""'"" 0 • -LARG-~E~de~,-ux-2~Br-2~Ba ! ..,.,.,, mo. () pets ..... ~~. l996 Maple No. 1 ••. 642-3813 ' e ' ' ocean view, Sl9S. Adults t ,YEARLY rental, l BR, l BA, 2206 College No. S •• , 642-'f0.15 .(96-3738 I ',~:: 2 BA. $250 & t100. CLEAN 2 BR Studk>, l l! Ba, ~2Ml::B::;~:..· .;c2:,:;B.:A.=;.-.. -,-,drp~,-. -... • d r P s I c r p t I bltns/gar, pliances. $200/mo. C a J I -~Apt. Unfurn. 365 Adults, no pets. $155. t96-7058evesorwknds.. ' General ,,543-6357~~~· =~~~~ f.ll(), NEW luxury 2 br, 2 bo. E/skle 2 BR. 1% Ba adult ~. 3 br. Bltim, view. 1<l~'nhouk. Encl pati<l. $16.'S. 34108 Amber La.ntem, '< ' 136 Me.l<ldy Ln. 548-9695 or I ~F~o-un-1~1~1n~V~a~1~1tY--- I l BR. Furn. It Unfum. 548-5986 alt 6 pm. ON mE BEACH! •, FROM ONLY $195 Spac Townhouse. 2BR. 4 BR, 2\1 Ba, enel garage, OCEAN QUEEN 'ZBA, Vaulted ceiling, pool & recreation. Nope~. 2 1830 E. Ocean rJvd. g•,...., poo1., &ir/cond. cltildren. $250. 5117-1044. 1-Beocll (%13) G&45 $210. 540-4179/540-:11'.MS Muntinrton load> I ..... d by Wllllam Wal..,. Co.1-...;.,.2 :..B_r.,.:Ad;:.:ul...:....tll.c, ..,--'t"'-'l!'-.'-- 1 lalbot ..... lnwl• BAY MEADOWS APTS. 387 IV. Bay St. CM 646-0073 2 BR. lli bl.. Pttio, btleony, 2 BR unlurn apt, $145. No · 3U E. 'Bay. $225. monthly-on ehlldm>, 00 peta. 820 Center )'J"ly !< .... Inquire at Apt. St. CM -' c r;n.1521 .. 1141-7771. , ..,...,·,.,,,'~·-..,,...,.,· =-~,.. { I 1600 oq. n. 3 Br. 3 Ba. 1-•C;;°';;.;°';;; .. ~""'=-Ma=;..r ___ .' Children Ok, m pet&. sno. '190 2 BR. "'"'' dpii<. trpi 54~ or 833-J540, Gold shag, no pol/child. 1 BR. stove, r<f\1g, garage. pr al! cltan nc. no frolt Adult Slto/rno. 2'0 AtlOcado. r .. r. Cll lda, -f0.3ISI 544-41230. • All -2 BA; 1 BA, aunny ~J""'BR=-, ""'2~Ba-,..,b~l<llt,~-crp-tll, • ...... 191\i ---<lrpt, -·· 1673 Corlond<f IU -Dr. No. A. CM 5!7-6459 NEW beaut 2 BR, •hie crptll, linll>'•, bltlm, hAI !rplc. Ntar beach. 0,,.. -Sat U-4:30. 673 9th St. or call 847--0140. 38R, 2BA, !rplc. d&h/wah, Bltint, nearly nt!W crpQ, drapes. Spacious! Lawn. Nr pork & oc:hl. Ohlldrtn Wtlcomt. 96&-8633 Su Air Apt•· $I ii l.rr 2 BR; Crptt, drapes, bit· ins, 1 btk N, o< Ad"1ll. oU &ach, '729-6 Ul1c1. 5.18-1070. Apt. Unfurn. • 365 Near CdM High School all stores. Also feel safe to 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unturn.. , 835 Amigos Way, NB 644-2991 evening strolls. Yearly lease Offic• Rent1I 440 Newport Beach Newport 11aach Newport looch * BAYFRONT * !500/mo. Wlth alt utit. pd. DESK apace available $S0 iiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiamiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiamiiimmiiiiii.iijjl Condo home w/boat slip. NO children <lr pets. Ph. mo. Will provide ftzrnlture • rs EXECUTIVE APARTMENTS Newport Beach's Most Prestigious Address The Coast's finest. This one statement says it all. High. on Newport·~ western-most bluffs overlooking Lido Isle, the Ocean and Newport .Harbor has been createtl the Southland's most exquisite homes in a matchless setting of luxuriantly land- scaped lakes, winding, drives, fountains and formal gardens •.. all inspired by the renowned gardens and elegant architecture of famed paJace at Versailles. We can't tell you here of all of the wonders that await you at Ver~ailles. You must see for yourself. The full glass walls to the incomparable views. Fireplaces, Built-in bars. Spacious mirrored dressing areas. The provisions for your comfort and safety with gate house to the enclosed community. Parking within your building. Elevator to your floor. The Versailles Club, your own exclusive club with its sumptuous· ly club with its sumptuously furnished lounges, billiard room, exercise and sauna~ rooms, ·heated pool, sun deck and our unique 11Acapulco type" aqua bar. Everything to contribute to luxurious living in an unparalleled atmosphere of prestige and privacy. Just the finest there is ••• that's all. . . One Bed Room.Studios from : Two Bed Room from: Furnished Units Avallablt !Small potl wtlcomol I • Four beautiful fiir$hed models open froin 9 to 8. · From Newport Bouleyard turn at Hospital Road (one block north of Pacific Coo.st Hlg)!way), • • DONALD J . SCHOLZ & COMPANY 901 Cagney Lano, Newport Inell, C1lllornlt 926'0 1714) 645-6242 · Brand new • for lease ~ or 6~Z!92 at $5 mo. Amwering aervice Furn. $650; untum. $550 nu W. Oceanfront, lg l BR. available. 222 -;Forest Ave, 4401 w. Coast Hwy. Ask for summer & winter rentals, Lnguna Beach. <494-9466 Bud Meyer fi75..6820 I i•:..vall=:J;,u:::ly:..I-'-,"~:--7-. __ -=""'~Sq""."f~t."'R~. ~E~. -o,~f,-ee--~600" 1 BEACH area apartments San Clemente Sq. fl available, on prime fro $115 th Yrl Harbor Blvd 1 o catio n. m per m<ln y. SPACIOUS twnhse 2 BR + 2 AGT ~ 0 = M Lar Steider Real E s t ate , • tu.ro.iw. r. son ba, dswshr, shag thruout, nr 642-6598. BAL. Penin Deluxe 2 & 3 bch/pier/shc:>ps, 492--1313. ---------t BR. Frplc. Bar. Brand new. DESK !Paet: available $50 Nr. Pavillion. y r 1 y • mo. WUl provide furniture I~ at $5 mo.~ eenice 842--8148. Ren~ ,a available, 17815 Beach Blvd. LIDO ISLE • 3 BR., 2 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiil Huntington Beach. 64Mm BATH. Adults, least. I 2 ADJOINING offices 714:753-0719. Appt. to Rooms 400 available. 2 different loca- '"· Apts., Furn. or Unfum. Costa Mes• e SP.ACIOUS e \Vell-Designed Apts. 370 1 & 2 BR. 'vtreITaces. From $140 • $275/m<l. Shag cpts., drps, saunas, pool, jacuzzi, encl. gar. Quiet Adult living. ROOMS ~ wk up w-kit: $35 wk Up Apts. 2376 Newport B 1 v d , CM. S<S-9155. QUIET Neighborhood' Kitchen priv. Employed nlan $65 mo. 548-0516 aft. 5PAf. LARGE room & bath--oo ~· $75/mo. Cost a ]l.fesa 820 Center S I • -.. tions. $150. &. $100./m<>. 6'2-0560. OFF1CE for secretariaJ bookkeeping senrlcc. Reaii. Nr 17th St. Shoppg, CM S18-8l18. OFFICE Space, 444 Old Newixirt Blvd., 3 blks No. <lf HWy l . 300 sq. fl $95/m<l. S<S-5300 MERRIMAC WOODS 425 Merrimac Way, C.M. 545-6300 ROOM in pri, hc>me. Mature employed or retired lady. _F_A_B_U~L~O~U~S~2~BR~.-t Kitch prlv. No smoking, "' drinking. ~29'll H.B. $130 Up. Furn/Unfurn * SINGLE Room for N!nt, You won't find a larger, loc middle age man only. BAY VIEW OFFICES Deluxe. air:eonditioned Redecorated. Lido area Realonomics, Bkr. 675-6700 OFFICE $60 month, crptd, utll pd, in !!hopping center. 33.l E. 17th St., C.M. 673..()140. Business Rental 44S nicer apt for less. Beaut. 1502 Orange Ave, CM. OFFICE, store Df!ar N'pt. dgardden dare~, 1pa~o!'s.Quiet1 J;46-5310. ~ Pol:!t Ofc. & Greyhound ea -en suee , JU~, . <l BEDRM I Depot. 537 Ft. $150: 736 Ft N•wport Ave. Adults, no. • · w w c r Pt•• -~~. -•---• hare ... _ $225 Month. Agent ~2414. pets. 2020 Fullerton Ave., ~-'"uiu.....,, ~ ... s I.Ill. E f Bay! wfl $75 mo. Eves/wknds * OFFICE-600 sq ft avl C.M. (Just . o 642-8690. &JG.:»12. now. 800 Sq. Ft. IN- ROOM in well l u r n • DUSTRIAL SHOP avt Aug. meali.B.llU 20 Sparkling New Adult Ap\L e 1 BR-Unfum $lii0. e l BR-furn $190. e 2 BR 2 Ba·furn $245, e 2 BR 2 Ba-furn $245. Private patios, lush f<>rest setting. Carports, gas paid. 114 E. 1llth St., C.M. 548--0'137 CdM house, single person, _64_6-_2130 __ . ------ no smoker. SUJ, 673-41~., STORE & office f<l1' rent: 2 ROOMS-priv home, C.M. Bolsa Chica at Heil, H.B. .AIL . p.rlvi!eges ••... 2 ... older.1.,."'~""'"1323~,....,_-~=-~I women only. 642-5902 eves. EXC location. E. 17th St. Sum~r Rent1l1 420 CM.. TJ> 1q. ft Fine bldg &: 2BR-UJO week. 3Br-$300 prking.._'5'8-:6ll or 548-6562. week. New furn&: color TV. lndustriat Rental 450 Bllc to ba.y & Bch. on Perun.11...;.._...;;... ____ 1 1 & 2 BR. fUrn. or untutn. U4 E. Balboa B 1 v d . * Pool. $140 Up. Children's 673--0526. section. ELM GARDENS I 'BA""'Y~~V1EW=""°°'2,..-bedroo~. ~m,­ APTS. 177 E. 22nd St, C.M. aleeps 4 completely 1urnish· * Don Moyer * 1_642_..1645 __ • ------I ed. Avail June ID Sept. $150 pr month. Adults only agent. 675-4930. 3403 Finley Newport Beach You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Southland Homo & Gordon Show Huntington ltodl 2 BR FROM $139 MOVE IN TOOAYI Kids Ii pets OK. Pool. All extras, 3 Br, $199, 17392-A Keelson Lane. (Nr, Slater le Beach Bl.) 847-3669. Newport Beach OAKWOOD BA YFRONT 3 BR. avail all or· part of-August· $500/wk. Outstanding view &: location nr jetty. Responsible family only. 673-4303 for appt. 3 BDRM house No. 37 Beacon Bay, Newport Beach. Avail Aug. Acee!!s to pvt beach on bay. 61:)-()781. J BR apt. furnished. Cineramtc view. 3 blks to CdM main beach. $150 per wk. Includes util. 6~. BALBOA Furn. Beach. $95 wk. 3 1*>cks to Fun Zone. 302 E. Balboa B I v d • 67""'"54TI. , a.t the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER, July 11 • July 23 Please call 6f2..5678, ext, 314 betweeo 9 and 5 pm to claim your tickets. (North County t<lll·fl'ee number is 540-1220) * * ' * COSTA MESA 1440 & 2880 Sq ft. CABINET MAKERS- FmERGLASS Nr. NwPt Frwy &: S.D. FrWy. 2D31 Grace Ln. The Last Word In Great Apartments! BALBOA Penln. Aug/Sept $1ll0 wit 2 br, 2 ba, 311 Lin· What more can you ,say ,do;;;.. ;;.675-401ll~'ii:i..,==:.;;= about an apartment CQm· CORONA i:!e1 Mar--2 lrg BR's, munlty that comes with Sl 1 blk ocean. Adttltl. 2 wkl (So, ot Baker, E. ot Fairview % MJ) Reprete.ntative there 9 am-12 noon. (TI4) 979-4434 or 87M7ll million worth ol recreation? .iuly-Aug. $200 wk. m.-0252. Stor190 455 Or a tennl& pro &: activjtles di.rector plus grea~ fun times! Roni• from $14S Sorry, No Pots Or O>lldren,., Modela Open Dally From 10 am to 1 pm OAKWOOD GARDEN APTS I BLK .ID ocean. Baehl •pt. 630 ... ft. Crp4 drpa, alnk. $200 mo. Ideal tor garment, catalog 673-0731 stock or photoaraptien dark BALBOA ISLAND 2 bedrm rm. Secure downtown Joet. funllShed. July A Aug. tfon, II. B. .$100 per .., $165. Ph: ~1361 ews. le.ate. 536-13t6. CORONA de! Mar, S>. of Rtintal1 W•nlitl • lfwy, 1 BR, $'15 • ""ek. ·• * 673-4929 * lJVE -_,,.., by va .. tlon Rental• 4B -executive, 33 yrs BIG BEAR LAKE old, 88 o< l/1172. Send price, Joe., & ~ ..,, .. 350' lakesbore, exec. vacation wm. Sobrtto, Jt., 81 home w/prt. boat slip. M~ Or., ·a.e. Q47. Completely turn. Liv. mr. & n.-~ 'th 2 Br. Alttpt &-e. Children It ~""'or WI two arn,_aU doga Newport Btach South pets ftlcome. i acres of dfflres 1 bdrm. aet. or 1700 lSth Str<et plivsey Among tuwering houao un!um, Fil. - 6'Ul'l0 pint. 4 tea!OOI: 1!fffkend•:~a!t=6="'p._m~·~~=~- Newport Beaeb North or wetk ms<!) Con!Aet Dr. RESP t&ml(y, 1 child, Nt!ed ~ 880 Jrvtne Avenue " Ralph Bell, owner o f br uni hit, fit Meta Vttdt. l "BeU)'OOd Slioros" !'llA) level. Yr lel0t:. By ~ 1...,_!!!!!~!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' ~~-~~· ----lClrit ..... (213) &»-1 • ' • ' ' ' ' ' i .•. :· • • ' l 1< • ' . l .. .. :, :· ,, ., ., '-' : ' ' :· ' • • ,: " I I L_ __ , • FrldlY, J'IY I~, 1972 DAILY PIL01 ()7 ·1~~~1 ~~~1~~~ i·: ..... J~ ~I ------~1@;:11:; ;;IMl;;;..,;;r"""';;;::;.:; !~ Rtnl1l1 Wanted 4'0 F....t (fNe .. , SM LGlt 55S Child C1,. HouHCIHnlng ' l(fi] I ml! Jbb Wldtd, ftm1lo 702 l[Il] ;;ml ;;m ..... iiiiiii:ii ..... ..:.:l(lf~•t1 Help W1nttd, M & F 710 Htlp Wanttd, Ml F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 GENERAL 'CLERK •• i.-. WANTED: 4·S BR home ln -rotmo . .TIU mnaJ1 white i..0$T··&.. tma1i bla~YO ·-UNG-~SE-:r-&un-~mer-~c-am-p :~\ ~lgrl~bor lU dlctrict. male Poodlit, vicinity pqocllt/tenitt. "Muttill$," agts 6-10, ucitlnc field GOOD TYPIST Wiii do " your typlnt 11 htr homo, Wiii rlckup ind deliver loca H.B., F.V., W111, 75c per Pl• or will work by hour coll 147-3095. BARTP:NDm ~'lllted. Ex- ptt , local rers. Apply 1n OEUVERY BOY. Caeyon per s 0 ~. ~ e 11 etano's Auto Supply, 84.3 Broadv.'f.Y, ftlostaurant, 1617 \Veatcll!t ..J..a(un& Beach. ,t•. a gn nill.St. 642-5313. -Bu.shard ' w Jlutlbrook. w?whste vttt. appro,:1.._10 yn trlPt, rwtmmlng, bt-ach. ! BY SEPT 1 or sooner at NB llunlin&Otl ae.m, Wellinc CIW. ftlceDJ balr cut.. Orona. skating, bowling, arts Ir E X P E R I E N C E D tn PoliUon ope:n In our ~ COUJ>tlni dept !or U9tf. P'"'°~ 10 key by tou>;h. Call personnel for •Pft 842-77Sl. ! UNIGARD INSURANC!l 'i·. unrurn 2 Br or ! By older blue collar wttb bells and. del Mar ma. f15..l.35T. crafts. 64W106, Housekttpin1. Beach area. 1• working man 675-0922. flea oolllr. Goad rwww ON NewpQrt 'Beacb, 10 wk1. Contrectcw 2 di.YI a' \\'tek. 50-1530. Dr, Newport Beach. DENTAL Receptiooiat -Ex· BEAUTICIAN. 2 Leavinf, ecut1ve SecretaTy. nef!d one to fill in. C.ll Ma n a & er t a 1 position betwn 8 & G· ~ available with progrtsslW! 968-1329. lem., bll<Jbln, ~ L1ncllc1plnt -....,. lore black 11a1r vlclnl1y ' -7. · ttmod., addlt JI ,,.. up. • ll 1ii14 J FOUNO 11111111 P1WY with Sllep. "Catalloa". -J AC K Tau I a .,.ll<pair * : •/ 1-liiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiii~iii~ I Harbor It Moms, !5411-5648 1 -· Neutered black n.u. Ue'd. My Way Co. Mt-'I0.16. 7~°"Mo Zon:t.'r,llW * LADY would like live-in BEAUTY ' t • ... ,1 ._ dental cittke. Salaey limited opera ors • iw .. only by ability to assume a!I compank>n, It hskpg I: p a r t t l m e • Co n1. responsibilities. f00..37XI. cookl.nf, tot eldt>rl:y lad)', m I 1 s Ions/guaranty. Nooi.<,""';;;=;=,:::.:;::'ci:::..:;::~ GENERAL OFFICE \Voman to aoswtr pbonel, tigure a: type t nvol cet le shipping order$. Mult be able to \\'otk under pressure. r.fln. 2 yrs prior ofc ex~. ; •. It.__ or 968--U «'Vfl. c.osta tat. l'1tt. coler. Can't 4;1')'. Driveway• Co-• "·r :-: ..,.nouncement1 500 Mesa. VlcA...,.St.,l.qunolkh, ___ ._____ ·--'"" vie. Ci.Kuna Be a ch . following n e c e 1 s a r y, DENTAL chairslde &S!!stant, 494-2821. 645--!050 expu. So. Lagun& ottlce STANDARI>Udog,crearn ec-1M6. QUAIJTY' Ital coating. Youatethewinntrof DON'T tou: out those empty W tber oil ftl1ltant 2 tidms to the aluminum beer & aott drink . cokftd Plw( creem • 81.0ND, bloe eyed Cito short ea • Pit • • Southland SPANISH 11~ .. 1-..,..,m&n • Mon.-Fri. Send rtsume P.O. y<;i1lJU..,. ,._ 8eeuty Optrator Box 722, Dana Pt. : ·.. caw! Recycle them at tht white colored face, O"fY 1BI San JUIQ\ HlQJ Sm St~ blact.. H awl e' ' : , Ecology Center, 1000 Glen-back, Iound on Mesa Vf:rde Juan ~ !-ew~rd, 5&&95.. -Home & Ge,... =· li;;,~b ~u ~~ Wig Stylist. \Vith or without DENTAL ai;Jislant. Rcl>eP. pericnced. Reb. av a 11 . following, &t2·1241 or eves· tionist. 1 girl o(r. Exper Apply ncctss. ; :' neYtt st, 1-na Bead!. odlool .,.....i., W....U. 493-l8111 Eltctrlcol Show · : : flelp the environment & fr'* FNDblack ~·-~~· . ed Ptean Cell Agtiin ~E~L-ECTRl_.....,CIAN __ • ----. ~~IM 549-2847 Fff. 67l ... 'U$3. only. Npt Bch. &l.'\..2167. * Orange Coast Pl11stic¥ * "NEED"~.=~bo~lp-a_l_bO_me_T_l~V"e 1 BEAUTY operator. exper. DE NTAL Rec ep. 850 West 18th St. ~ · .your trash cans for less bl-• ,._ ...... u••u Al% Burmese cat mlsslng from bonded.· Small jOba, ma.int. CONVENTION ~rs1n:~ies ~~Sop~ ~kin~!~~:: ~ =·~~.';_ffl:: 4: repairs, 548-5203. CENTER , have Aldea e Nunes e female. Gwen'• Be 111 t Y tionlst-Assish1nt. Must takt" Costa ?tfeAA, CaUt Houaelcpn e Companions e ~P. 240 Beach St •• Laguna X-rays & 001ne ch<ail'llide '!"'!!!!!""""'""'""'""'""'!!el Ho me malt er I• Upjohn Beach. 494--3294. t>xper. 5 days a wk. Call im· GENERAL office. Mature _, ~ la ELECTRICAL wonu. All J"'" l' Ju'" M accepted. ..._ ..... or ,;ui:=lJ\o paws, ce. ~ thin white/beige ,...,. uv .. -v ..,. " I~~~~~!!~~!! C.M. tchooi 1 round . lemale poodJe, ( G 01 d 1 e ) kiocls. Big or small Llc'd A: Please call M2-S18, ext. 314 541-*L BEAUTY operator. female. nled iately 646--4911. wonian. Lite bookkeeping. Busy abop LQum Deb. DENTAL I' · New gn:J\vuig c o m p a n y , I: $7-8795. 113, Nr Cout Hwy, CdM. Ins. Free est. 54G--02U. between 9 and 5 pm to claim 11•1 LAB/Sheph erd rob:! Rn'&l'd.675-4616. Fumiture your tickets. (North County :· ~ •t.bydt your home. 49'-: \C'C('pl10111s1, <"ap-Cd~! M4-84St :Refined \\'OmlJ1, EX. Refs. ~ able & expcr. in all Oen-=~~~~~~-- Sl.'r.li ht « Wkl)t rate. BEAUTIClAS WANTED t81 oJe p~ureis including GENERf\L offi<:e c I e r k, " ---------toll·frte number ls 540-1220) Female. Vic. between GREY Cockatiel. Lost on ATl'N: Home & Boat * * * 530 McFadden It FA:li n I' e r • Lido IIJe. Ansv.·e:r1 to Jo-Jo. Owneni. Don't re u p ho 1 • 645-0700: 'l03 E. Balbqa Blvrl.1 Balboa chairslde & X-ray. Ne\\'port pleasant }rorkln~ oondit~ns. * 673-5778 *' Centt'T, 644-0922. fUll co1nf)al'(y bt'lnefits. Fo:r 540-6721. Reward! 613-612 5 or Have vinyl furn. repaired. Painting & I·.----.----. FND. black 8haaY doe.. 646-«!23. 536-M'IS. Peperhjlnging Joseph Carro fa!rly small. Vic. CdM area. ~ARD. Irish setter. fem. 'G'"o-rd°'"e-n"l_nt_____ "'"""=""°,....,--,......- Help Wanted,.M,I F 710 1,80"'°A"'T-"'ci-Ai=R~P;>E"NT.T°'E""R"s·l-D::'.ENT:'.::::'..A'-L::.::::Rece::::::.::p_t1o_n~is-1.~0~f. lntervie\\', call 4 9 4 -8 s 9 5 Must bavt ~ bullc:Ung ~ lice Mana~r. exper. Snhu-y _1.aguc;;::cn;_a'-TBe""a;_c;_h. __ ~- )'l.Cbtl. L<ina: range pro-open. Some eves A: Sat.;, General Supe1·1ntendent Accountant/Cons tr $800 10234 Vireo Clrc19 Tag reeds 3883· Plee.se call · Under medication. Lost 7/7. · AIRLESS 700 Wagner hose & GH-7978. Vic: NB. 64~5143. AL'S GARDENJNG gun. % Spray, 2 gal pot, Secy's-Omstr to $800 F /C Bkkpr·Esm)W1 $750 eNm.. Top wages & 646-9672. Outstanding OpJlOri-unity '"Ith benefits. Apply \\'.illard Boatl·17-"':'D::i,.:.:h::..w_us"°h_e>_', ~tu~u-u'"m-c. growth-orlentt'd hon1c build· Fountain Vi1llty ! -~ · 1 t ~ ~1 · 28"-SML mixed Terrier. y .... L-Cairn Tern"•r mal• or g&1-uen111g & 1m a • ,..,ses, vi:: vis gun, ui:=avy Gen'J OfC.COnstr $500 Works, 1300 Logan Ave, ma! ing company. Cb8ta Mesa. .,/ Pa~;tl'y, f('nlale, part tin"" h-tust be experienced in IBA B01:'1'1QUE gbop. Sharp, 3_g prn J\ltlly. 49-t-4S98 coMtnlclion & C'Spable ot You are the winner of ... v.,, I nd I rvl call du~ · al l d-2 tickets to the ~· grievi!W' :for owner. dark" brown. Vicinity' Golde~ a scap ng ae ces. "' magnesium um. a V'IC. Food K Market. West, Ed 1 n g er near 540-5198 eves. Ser v t n g der, 24' lite alum. ladder. Dispatcher $800+ Exec. Sec'y $625 Southland MS-4S22. St()newood, H.B. Re\.\•ard! Newport, CdM, Costa Mesa. 16' plank-<a.lum. Bargain Homt & Garden 0 .,. ,,., Dover Shores, Westclltt. priced, $750. 968-4065. reliable .WQman, 30 or over. Laguna Beach. maoo.gi.ng field opt"l-atioruc ht 5 5ct~ 67~6 aft~ Start $2. DISH \I/ AS HER·f\fonnngs Send resun1t lo Standard· A/P Clerk $550 Secretary to $550 Show FOUND: river-grey & white O'U-il104. at the maJe Poodle with Aea col·"L"'o'°s;;;Tcc: c.R~.-w-ard-,~s;---,-e PROFESSIONAL tree work, EXT. painting, Free est. Reas! Lic'd. Guar. vou pick colur • we'll do rot 642-8521. NEWPORT Personnel Agency 133 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3870 · . Apply in person, 2305 F:. c.~t Patilif' Corp., 1565 ~V. A'NAHEIM lar, Hoag HOSJ>. area Sealpolnt cat. Bluffs area. pruning,trimmi ng, MS-7078. 509 Vista Flora, NB. spraying, s pr ink I er s. $ BOYS WANTED $ Hwy, CdM. Equal Oppor. 1t!ac,\rthur Blvd.. Co!Cl..'\ Ages 1.2-15 Employer. Mesa, Calif. 92626. Attn: CONVENTION Landscaping, c 1 ea nu p. MUST BE: l ,D,;RAF'l';:::;:=,Slo,:;:IA~N-:-~0-.--,-,-,-e Glen Jfohnei:. CENTER GERMAN Shepherd found Reward. Gray striped George 640-M93. July 14 • July 23 near Slop and Go Market, tabby cat w/b.-wn collar * LANDSCAPING * =· 1. Neat and honest. ------Counties fastest' gl'i\ving GIRL FRIDAY PAINTING & R•palr 35 yra.1 !!!~'l'!~~~~'""'" • ·.1 Pff':ue call 642·5678, ext. n4 Balboa Blvd le: Pacl6c Coast Male. ~7728. NB area N la S 1 _,_ L clal Hwy 842-SlSO B!K & ew wns , pr n,._..,, decks, Exp. Avg. room Ir ~ ALTERATIONIST $15. Inter &-exter. ~tnt .LI.do Area. worlr. Call Farris St&-15336 Call ~ aft 6 pm 2. Able lo "'Ork fron1 approx. civil cnginCi'ring & al'chit>t· Girl llf'Cdl'd to ·perform 3 PM to 8 PM and 8 hours tw-al finn has ou"'•"ndin• •, • ~tween 9 and 5 pm to m • • wh puppy -retriever cleanup, State llc'd, 536-1225. _ your tickets. (North County FOUND: Keys at Heller mix "Tux" -N. end. Lag B. Sal rd " varie-l y of d u I I e 11 for .on u · ay. o1innr, fo1· l'Xpcr. dr:iftsn1nn. 3 E · " · d .~ m obile/modular home toll.free number is 540-1220) Park in Costa Mesa. 11 Reward. 494-6177. EXPERT J a Panes e : ; * * * Keys in all 548-5360 Gardener • Complete Yard No Wasting • OJOYS p1:ci.a par11es an Xhi't pav .~ Ir•·,.,.,,.. '--aelits. .~ D. I .1 · ·~" '"' · · manurac:turer. Pr Im a r y 1sncy an.... Raub, Bien & Frost, l:lfi Ref. ASSEMBLY '• FND c. She ~rd S.rvico• • Cl•anupo. Fr<e * WALLPAPER • :~: Selling or Buying •PP~~ moa. ~em. b.~'. I Instruction If 1¥] es.t. 548-2661~ When )'OU call "Macfi' PC Boards Touch-Up $2.65 hr $1.SO hr 4. \.\'ould like to make $15 to Rochester, C\f S48-77'l'i. responsibility "'ill be a!I a .$40 per "'eek. receptionist and \\•Ill entail This job is gelling new DRAITSMAN TRAIN E E, 8i1S"-'e1ing the phones and customers for souther n full tin1e. $2.75/hr. Variety greeting customers and ven· Orange County'!! favorite of dutii;s lor utility t'Qm· don. Olher responsibilities newspaper. No collectl.ng, pany: . ExceUent .working will include typing, at Jeut no delivery. Transportation coDd •UOnt &: . benel1lll. Ex-50 w.p.m., h&Ddling group i!I furnished fron1 your perlence ries1red but not ins., vark>us clerical persoir house. If interested call n e cc s s a r Y . For ap. ne:l functions & mi g e , ,,, • Cer1 FAi-..1 ... S\m. 893-2822. . _ AL S Landscaping. Tree 5«8-14+t &IS-17U l · Befor .. seeing • dealer au5-1uwa movaJ Yard -...1 .. 11-j.. C•ll 645 .6lll FND. male -wirey-halred re · , • .,~,.. SIDING & Overhang, 1 slot')' type puppy. WhJte w/brn. Schools & Trash hauling, lot cleanup. $115, 2 story $275. Lee's ;11 We hive private C Repair spribklers. 6'B-llfil!i. Painting & Decoratinc. ; .. Buyers & Sollers Red collar. .M. 548-l17S. lnilructloni 575 LAWN SERVICE , 558-7497. Alt. 6 p.m. Great local company Top Benefits. . BASENn dog fOOnd In th< : . *'F11Ll.Y UCENSED* vicinity ot Newp;rt Isla.net: Cut -Edge· Trim De~ '* PAINTING_. PAPERING ; • Renowned Hindu Spiritualist. Call l!"J!: Ancn INTERESTED IN A Eves aft. 6. 545-3766 557-8585 rlnteriot _ Exterior P.P.S. NO FEES Poclflc Personnel Services 112 No. Tower Union Bank Square Orange, CalU. 547-6446 between 9 A.f.1. and 2 P.l\t. pointn1ent, 837--066{). clerical duties. :· • Spiritual Readings given I ---' _ .. _~ __ ' ----REAL ESTATE CAREER! JoneA Lawn 'Service Lie. Insured Guara.nlted ,, dolly. 10 AM·lOPM. Advlce MALE shaggy grey dog. (714) 548-1192 M ~-Small Call Harris 642-4658 daily, DH.JU. press operator 1.rnee, Levitt Construction Costa Mesa area • $2.25 per hr. Apply at 18170 Systems, Inc. · Academy Real ..,. .... _.... ow, ~"· vacuum. . ' , "· given on all matters. I can Fnd. JWy 4, wearing btk LAuu . ., 1 .. -clean-up ••• ~., :~ • help you. collar. 962-5985. Contract le Ins. School .... 6"' • ~~ JNTElt/Exter P a I n t i n g • Llc'd/ Ins. Ref.a. Reas. Frte est. Chuclr, 645--08:)9. phone 675-52'12 Euclid, 1'~ountain Vly. 962-7776 :·· 312 N. El Camino Real FOUND~ cat vicinity 325 Old No. Nwpt. Bl., NB COMPLETE Lawn & : t San Clemente R.E., Education Since 1964 Gardening service. Hauling Huntington Beach area -DRUG store sales girl, ex-Equal Oppor. Employer 968-9641 elusive Laguna Re a c h GIRL !"K'erled for pharmat:y 492-9136 or 492-9004 Hart>or and Adams, Costal•-;.,.'!!'!!!"'!'!'!""'--& clean-up. Jlm'548--0400, ·Mesa, 540-8427. BE AN JAPANESE Gardener Ask for Rachel :r.tay Profes!:klnal Painting Inter/exter. Quality '\\'Ork I "'""'""""'""'"""""'""'""" BOYS pharmacy. ~1ust be ex. c~cal position. Nf'\vport Age 1().14 to dehver papers perien~d. Apply In person. Beach aren. Gbori salary + in the Dana Point, San Cle-Bu.shard's Pharniacy, 244 beneflts, 642-80'J7 · ' PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con- fident, sympathetic pregnancy counseling. Abor· :., · tion &: Adopti:>n r e f • APCARE. 642-4436. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. POOne 542-7717 or write ,' P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. ",. Soclol Clubs 535 :• FIND YOURSELF IN SOMEONE ELSE, • . ' DISCOVER DISCOVERY "•; ' ' 714/835-6885 2131387-3393 -;~ Travel 540 WINDJAMMER •" TAHITI • ~' Sailing wyage -South Seas. · Share v.11rk & costs. 213/ 371-1239 * * * FND. "' o! keys vie. INVESTIGATOR Comp. Yardwork & Clean-up. R•as 557-7455 ATTRACTIVE GIRL Forest Ave., Laguna Bch. =~-=~'-"-=--~ Newport Beach Cat the Recwded MeS$8Se Tells How Free estimates, 64Z-3102 PROF. Painting, also roofs, .,/ Occasional work accous. ceil., tnter/eder . ./ Hi pay, short hours Lie/Ins. Frtt est. 645-5191. I General cleaning PAINTER. EXPERIENCED .,/ No heavy work mente areas. DAILY PILOT 492-l420 GIRL Friday: Type. gt-n'l beach) 548-1715. Call Toll Free · FOUND, little brown •yed (l) IOCM2'-0232 EXP. Hawaiian Gardener Complete gardening service ore. sules, phones, good yellow dog; Beach Blvd. _ . vie. Edinger. Call & tden-PIANO I~: Beg., ln- tify. 673-246S. tenn., advanced & pop. JOHNSONS' GARDENING EXCLUSIVELY personali ty. 642-8400. Greellng Card Sal" Omni<'' CLERICAL County. F'uU time only. ca:r POS ITIONS FOR nee. Salary & c 0 mm . Kamalanl, 646-4676. . -RE AL Is TI c PRICES Must drive, Apply 11·1 CLEAN WORK 642·1255" RENTAL READIER FEMALE s· t, References. 642-51'1. Yard Maintenance, Planting Edinger =e~f:en:: CERTIFIED Cal. teacher Cleanups 962-2035 PAINTING-Prof. Int. & Ext. Hunllnglon Beach 842-8113.' will tutor in your home. Mr. JIM'S Gcrdening, complete Free Est. Work guaranteed. Antho P -la 645-8098 after 6 PM. GENTLE orange male cat -_ ny erone,.4.-7106. :""&-yard ct.re, cleanups. Turtle Rocle. Irvlne. VIOLIN & Piano Lessons:, 545-3fi62aft5pm. WALLPAPER HUNG 833-8867. Beg. student.I: F.V. Reas. GARDENING ~rvice. Ric-Carl Rebko ·64$.2449 GERMAN Shephmi, black & Rates. 847-7900. . . J>e!'.ience & Reliable. Free DISCOUNT on banging if tan. Vic. c.M. 642-603'1. ORG{-N Lessons -Beguuung estimates 963-1072. buy on \V.C. Lie/Ins. call BLACK and tan female pu~ Students Only, Reuonahle Gener•I hrvlcn· The H~n 547-5846. py, Msea Verde area. Rates S5T..o502. PAlNTING & PAPERING, 548-62Gt after 1 PM. JACKSON -The Magician 45 19 yrs in Harbor area. Lie & I I~ min. of spell binding m""""' bonded ae· r ! '"2356 MALE gray & white kitten s.mcis atd __._ for childrens parties, "'$8: · s urn. ~ ' found at O>Sta Mesa High . ....-• . · · 494-3009. PAINTING'~ Honert, clean, School. 546-8301. . guaranteed \\'Ork. Licensed BABYSITTING, houseclean· & itlru::red. 675J5740. ing, cooking, gs:rdening job -INTER-'-"-@d-'-'--'.,-.'-.Qual'-'-ily--wor-k wanted. ~SM9. & Reasonable. --- * * . * Add-A-R°'"l' 569 W, 19lh, cOsta Mesa Front desk receptionist, heavy switchboard back· ground, good typing, some ~ aptitude, pleasing InteIVicwing for \vork in Los RESTAURANT PERSONNEL 8 8 2 -16 9 8 (week e 11 cl Angeles until move lo NC \V· nJ..887..o.5&1} or l'I e n d Port 'T.!. FREE daily bus And Only In Orange Cou nty t es um e to RI b at k transportation provided. EnterpriseJl-9719 Ma 5 0 n •PACIFIC :-~'*"~'"'5.:.pp!icalion• Ave .. Chall--Otllt. MUTUAL • •All Eotab!JAhments HEALTH FOOD aalea elm. penionallty and excellent ap-Apply Monday thru Friday Permanent &: Temporary 40 hour week. Coa:ta Meta. pearance required for ~ 9.12 pm, corner of Santa • Mature, penonable woman, AUTO ••• interesting job in our bcaU" Cruz. & Newport Centerior. ioyal with experience pre;ttm!d. ti!ul dealership. PhOne 548-95.17. Bauer Bu.ick 979-2500 ext HELP. ltlve-ln hskpr-Ught #19 "'lw"" 10-4 p.m. CARPEN-g,,l'''Ut'rr ?.!Jl'U...,. cwking, small family. Ex· AUTO SALES r;t. 4 .l'\ , ;;r eel living con cl i t i on 8 . 6T.I-OO!J8. Would like experienced man. ·iy· ERS 3848 Campus or., Suite 119 -"""~~=~=-I Join one of the most 111.1c-HOME MANA~ER Newport Beach. Calif • cess.ful Ford Dealenhipa in . TOP SALARY Remodellng, PaUOs: Roofs, J_,----------------J Lie. & Bonded. Goodwin & . , Son, 846-3708 or 847-8372. Houllitg " "-can 64&-728l Qrang~ County, Top ~-Send For Full Informatkln Mature Competent \\'Oman to missions, Insurance, Demo $4 Hour Up & Free Brochure ..• , live-in & manage Oran~ GET RID OF THAT Pleater, P•tch, Re;J•fr Plan. We 1'eed a truJy ~ Urgently Needed County home for 2 adults . UNSIGHTI.Y TRASH & le.,;onaln•wc:troaleaman. P.P.S, NO FEES (714) 557•2800 To arrang• lnten>l•w •I>" Trader's Paradise Aniwtrlnt S.rvlC41 Automatic ~r Devices All features only $149.95 We 11ell for less. 492-4313 DEBRIS. FREE ESTIMATE * PATCH PLASTERING Apply in penon to Don Pacific poinlment, call { 21 3 l REASONABLE 548-6428. All tYPes. Free estimates Crevier. Tht!(Jdore Rd>ins Personnel Services 8G7-S36l. YOUNG Veteran ___ .. _ work. ~-.,..;;.Call'--'-"-540-6825..:...;=--Ford, 2060 Barbor Blvd., 1l2 No. Tower EXP d lAl · d HOME MANAGER ' ' " ' ' .. ' . . COMM't Prop • 2068 New· port Bl., CM. C·2 zone, lOOX: 315. Owner wlU carry TD. Prine only. For tree & clear imprvd prop or sub. 642·1121 27' DRAK&Cra.tt Express Cruiser, 715 hp. Chrysler Hem!, 6 whl tr!~ value $3500. Want truck of equal value or ?!? (714) 889-0504 1962 Ford Sta Wag • good transportation. A pp r o x value $250. Will trade for i motor mike, freezer; 10 spd .. bike or ?! 644-7438. 16 UnHs. exchange lor de· preciable property Carlsbad to San Diego area. FORTIN, REALTOR '. 642·5000 l=~~~~-..,.-,;-2}ii Ac, ~· elev. overlo6k· " ing Lake Elsinore. 50 mi'• 11)1 from HB. Trade $3500 tct ' for motor hffl, truck A: • camper or?T 892-0528. : "I--'------~- !:• Have $48,000 lit TD. ... Want unite or mobile Park. ~ .. 11 Any beach area. ' Agent. ; •• ,. $41"5901 ' . 7 ll.nfts + tam dwell.. lse, 1 S)'.),CMXI 1nc., ocean trt. st. j Lag Bch $198,000 value. Tr. : • tor clear hie, Lag. Bdt. ; • House of Stuart, '94.3m. '"''°' Senior Cl~ S&crl1' MW ; •"" 2 BR rnoblie home n-~• IL'• Meadows, lq$1 Jtl!t'ey 114. ' . • ~ ln'lne Ranch. For bcb Jll"OP• : •1 or! Owner JU: HA 9-4809. ' • l ;o;;i;~:>."n;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;; : ; 2 Silt Lake.Oii' "-'1!0I ~-one clatr 6 one lt 1%% i " " int., $5750. bel. ~ l " tor Orange OD. 'ballnell ! ~-prop. or mu.It. uni._ -..c .. ' !• * * * lines times dollars Baby1ltllng YOUNG SET SCHOOL-ages 2-6 open 1 days, 6am-7: 30 pm. Professional teachers l20 weekly 1!41h'l706. ., Corptl S.rviC41 ·~ -= Costa Me . . en exec sec t nee . Will haul trash or clippings-. Plumbing Union. Bank Square ed for busy N.B. gen prac-Competent -woman to Ive-In Re as on ab 1 e . 548--0286 ___ ...;..._.____ AUTO • -. • 1 Oranie, Calif. tice. Top consideration A manage Ot'ange County anytime. PLUMBING General bookk..,..r •"l<d • ~7,.6416 , glv•n stabUity1 maturity It homtf tor 2 adulu. To ar- SKIPLOAOER & dump truck lnstall-Remodel·Repair. due to promotion aqd ex•, .,..,Allc..,,.lor,.";,,l\t,;,,,ch!!e!!l !!May!!!!!!!!•I ability to ~t public:. ranp inter v 1 e W a~ work. Concrete & asphalt Free Estimates, Uc. pansion. A good background 1 ! Should be f&millar wUli pobrbueutt ~ ( 213 ) sawing &: b re a kt n g • 548-8172--in the aut-Omodw field quaJJ; * * * app't m a n \" e m..1 a t , 1 =·="=Ill=' =-..,.,.---- 846-ruo. Drains unclogged • $1.50 fies for this diversified spot Mr. Jack Plotkin pegboard 'cc 0 8 ft t In I HOrr'ESSICabltr, p/tlme. YARD, garage cleanups. Sewer. line to 100' -$15. Phone Bauer Buick 979-2500 2871 Miguel L•ne system,. insurance A-bank· No Sun or ii o 11 da ys. Remove trees, dirt, ivy, •· 5«9-2502 * ext. #19 between 10-4 p.m. Costa Mesa ing procedures, etc,. Sa1Ny Kromer'• Cok>nial Kitchen, Or" di 847 ~·· y th " 1 open. 646-2481 for lniervtew. 19th & Harbor, CM. HA VE '69 Dateun atation JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery iveways, gra ng, ·6QIJIU PLUMBING REP AIR A U TOMOTIVE seJesman. OU are e wrnnc.r O , ~.. N job ~ all 2 tickets to the EXPER Cooks or Cook Ins Gal F"~ wagon, Trade 1or small Dri-Sbarnpoo free Scotch-~Moves. Exp college o ....., sm Want a good exp -......... urnnce -.... ay. * 64""128 * •-----~ Southlond Trainees & Wa1tresse1. A~ 5 '! OOuse, lot and stock, what guard . (Soll Retardants). student. Lrg truck, Rtu. _, c~·. Ct.I., Jon s.Jt..••. · yrs comm agcy exp. " • .. ... 10A<' '"" {!Ml\ £'~ ,_ Home • o.~ .... -ply ln person. c 0 I 0 n y 1700 tn4J ~ ·~o bavo you. DegreU<rl & all color ~-. COLE PLUMBING -·~ ~·-Gott \l'N, ,_, Kit·•· n. ,..,.. ....... " ............... ~~· .... ,., n.~. Sho-., .. ;.ucn '-""'staurant, San 646-7320 brlgb!eners & 10 minute YARD le. Garage a-~-. 24 hr. service. 64>1161 .D'IA:'llt\ Park. J "··•---s _, • al the • .UM -~~~N• •• ID\m.11: IJCD~~"'-lt'I HA VE oceantront duplex, bleach for white carpelll, Free est. 7 daya. Call R mod I • R I BABYSITl'ER. wl:ntai, MQn, ANAH EI'~ Mantll'f, 11\..Y II ,..I: 1 Ll\.A.l'! ,..I ~C:L Save your money by saving anftime, .54l--503L e e • .,,. r Wed F · M 1,;;;;;;;_::;;:,==-~-~ 5ERY1 N'pt. Bch. Want Mm:od.,, . WW cl ' n, my home. N.B: 'CONVENTION EXPE!llENCED ol1loe l1ii CfS&>AGENCY Jaguar, trust deeds. or :1~ exrta tri~:·, ean He1ti~ ' Alr. CUSTOM Remod/ Alteratiom. Own t r a n I • Reference. c ENTER for/1afp drua stott. ma Free Ir Fee Positions 'rad• up. THE IRW1N CO. v OL rm., n ng nn. & Cond llonlng What have you. David ~7592. Bch --a ·-2561 I · • hall $15 A • $7 50 Ju•·· 14. July 23 -... ., · O"t•-· mmediate Optni~1 R alt 644-6111 · ny rm. · • Stewart, 1en'l contractor, BABYSITTER needed bn-v ... e ors ·· • couch .$10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. AIR COND. co~ 'CTOR "'"284!. ~·-1 Please call GtZ-5678, ext. 314 EXPERIENCED med I cal Acctn111/Secret1ri1I 40 "' •1 ._._...... .,...,.. mo:uw.te Y thru Aug. My !lo ·-Call 9 ~ 5 I • 1 Acres, aul Oregon exp. is what counts, not OalJ tor·estima.te _ 64J..oo1S CdM home. Own.transp. l\t betw~n 9 and 5 pm to claim recep n .. " w • C erlcal/Gen. Ofc. land, Valued $400 an acre, method. I do work myaeH RR Rnvlrin...W: NPWl'VW't NB Roofinv 1 ~ Wk. 675-814f aft 5 pm, 10U1' fjlcQts. (North County Mo~Fri. "'-103.5. 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM bunting &: fishing rights. Good rtf.-531-0101. . :=:;c: ~··r .. ·• 1 '£0"1:' o.....a.....: ~ tolWrte n'lllllber fr'54o.122(U MJ-1410 Assume contract. Want STEAM Carpel a....... HounclHnlng ..,,_ Roofo>g Co. ·--all BABYSJITiA"' illi! hsed * * .. EXPEDITOR auto, R.E. or I 833·9595. prol. at lowest prices. ooci ' ... 'f.i'OUSE OF ::0 i!::,co:,.'ti.p,"'C t8= ~! ·~~48.111¥ COOK r/iiJlle, 5 AM·l:!IO'PM. H&ve 32M equity in 30 acre1 i<I· ft. $29.95. 972.--0672. & color. LJclbonded, al.net Hllh school grad. Exper. Ex~enctd In ma t er I a I J"ANrl'ORlA.L wwlr tor male 3) or over. Part time on wlrends. 830-8.192. al Salton Sea. Will trade !or Corptnltr CLEAN 1947. :r,.. •st. 642-1222. BAKERY • Xln't bonefita. Costa Mella handling & oriler prnc•'8lng. boat, cars, jewels. fine Ft.OORS, CARPETS, e T. Guy Roofing. Deal PERSONNE Memorial Hospital, 301 Vic· KITCHEN Helpers. APPlY paintings or submit. LARGE OR SMALL WINDOWS & WALLS. DU.Ct. 1 do my own work. L torla. Conroe! Mrs. Duruap. Xln'l benefits & retiremenl Mesa Vmle Conv. HoOP. 661 673-0802 All Types Work! Cut doors, 6 YEARS AREA. 645-2780. MS-~. COOK plan Center St. CM. 548-55&i. * * Will Trade 8%' Open pane], remodel, ft n i a h, 642 6824 Sewlnt11/Alteraiionl Bakers & Baker's Helper M · ·;'::·c:ratu~. Apply .Apply Jn Person LADIES over 2S assembly Road Camper with Tie-frame, repair& etc. 962-1961. .;. _ .. ..!. .. _ Willing to learn the trade. Ceen~ ~t, CM ~~~:· 661 SHURPLOK CORP. shipping tor amt manuta~ Downs, l!ounc•wa,y~ Boot A CARPENTRY SEWING • DESIGNING Good !uture & "'""ma. COSMETOUJGJST, llceMed, 1300 E. Normandy Pl. !ring comp. Full or part Awning for fiShlng boat. Rough A Finish Patio-Tops. Men -Women. ReUonable work as assistant to styliat S11nt1 Ana time. Sl .'15 hr, Apply mom. Call 5315607 alt 6 PM • MESA Clearo'ng. Carpe•• rates. Ten dOllar minimum. Apply in Person Only Equal ~ !h• E ~ lna$-~ll. Golden's M11aic • · • Cement. 548-1594/ ._.., & 80me desk work. 499-J\65. VVVJ• .un • ., mpivyer Wand.••• w. llth, CM. -windows, t loo r 1 etc. Estimates. Call 84&--7t50. ~ Like to trad•T OUrTrad•r'a :elllne1 Resld/com'I. 55 7-6 74 2, Alttratlont-642-5845 To CRE MANAGER F ~MALE tor pet ahop LAUNDROMAT Attendant, Paradise column is for )'OU.! M3-41ll Ntat, accurate, II -an txp. \Ve need 2 me1n over 18 that I 1'. o om I n I bualDUI, pftiple help. Partlcultu'ty . 5 line Acoolllcal C'"1np blown · ,. Rolltrt Aiiderson (llll handle• small group ol · c; Int 5 <lay• machine epplled. Free .. Dtcllcoltcl ClHnlng Slfn1 •-wU! ...in. "' lllld<ntt-no .-ted io coupl ... Re~ly ~ 5 '"""f. llmateo. Guar. 644·7183. * WE DO,EVERlITHING * ,._. I l 11 A.M, boys ll'llllls now custo .,... Ulldor It '*'1 opply. lo JI$ T. Cox, 2232 Dupont, ~ ~ Rel Free w Mqnrtlc 91po Mon. thru Sot, tor SOUlhem Orange C<>un. MUii low petg It wllllnc to l>v1DI, Calil. 92664. IIAVE • 3 Br view hoWle, Ctment, CMCrt:te s. est. 846..2839 •c 95 h •-... ty'a favorite newsPl'.PG'· lnrn. U3 Broe.a..---. C.M, Hol.lywd ltllls, Ul,000 eq. Excellent Housedeanin&: ·~· eac • up. At ?wfen CUI cam $200.00 tol ===~~.;;"",.....:"'.:_c_;_ WANT -Locs.t lncome or JOHN'S Patio, pool decks Ii: by de,y. Own trans. Call 96i.osrio MYUme $400.00 ~r wt<'k depending FISERG.LASS fore~'" n land,, Will usume. Btoker, block. Free C?st. 833--0291 tor * 83G-<WU8 * Tile Far West on numbr:r of boyt you can needed. mUAt be exp d A 61Ml"' appt. d8,)'s or alt. 5. BAY & B<ach Janitorla!. • --------corry, Thia ts a dianUied htvt becl<rn>und In tool "' -~ Crpll/.......,,.••/lloo CERAMIC tlle ,,... & Services career oommandlni high moklng. Apply 837 w. ISt11 CodttaD bar A rwtaurant. P~·~ :nlbt drtw, Jnstall .. ....,...... rs, etc. remodel. Free en. Small wager. No txPtrlenee ls St., COila. Me1a. Odee Ona9e Comll:J k>e MW ta'""' aw, treat. Rakl/Qomm'l. 646-l40l. Job!!: wclcomt. 536-2426. nece!IW')' but must be able FREE rent, Furn 1 Bdr tront -..... lor Ille It ~ -Sii 111111 t>r eot. P"". Carpel Cloanlne Bakery & tn "' alone with boys. u to. apt-exc malnt•nance o! Olmm ftldta/l\a. -• CUSl'OM CEMENT WORK Aloo windows I< l!oor Clft. [ Pie Plant terrsted and can lblrt now, down!°"" court. 548-'570. Cll' lat TO. i\ant 5CT-llfl. Oriol~ walla, patloo, CaB Dutch 5$-l.11)9, H tin. -I . caU 1197-UlO 1"'m 9 A.JI. GEL<XJAT TOUCH-UP Uh lo tradtT Oar Tndtr's pool clecltL Doll, 64WS14 1APANESE lady -lllto " A unlll 2 P.M, Colla McH nBl!:RCLASS MOLDERS Partdlst oolmno II...,,.., PATl05-SID'CWA!KS -leaning. 1672 s'!:r.":, ... lilt& rn-6222. lluntlnaton Coolll Re<:roalion. Inc, 5 u.. CDIDIT CONTRAC!Wt • 146-4!41 • Jolt W1nlt<I, Mali 111 <MacArthur & Redhill! Beach ma-· 9111 West 11th s-t 11"" CaD Mn *** 6M-.Ql5l7 WE dtan oll1cta. aplll, AUTO. Mech. wants to DANCE lnttNcton: Tap, &U-.O:t'42 Irr I budm. i5CPiiiENCZD cont' f • tr&ilm. ttc. beo;>me workinf partDcr 1n Equal Oppor. EmPloYtr ballet le Btll.y dtnclrc. C4U The tutest draw In dJt Wt'Al. • Pallo<, walltL cir!..,, brk:k 64>-4500 •mb. auto Mrv bu•'!!'"""!!!!!!!~!!!!"""!!!!'""!!! 64&-7286. ~786 * It llump clone wk. 894-3SJ3, Sell id'" 11,_ nowt Call 1 · • • •• .., Dally Pilot Cbl"ilied II:'" .... HB/YV ma. CtD Jack Fast·ftlU1tt are Just a phone For that it~m under $50, try White Elephonl Dime.A-Uni m.o678 Now! · 9!&-<!US. call awa,y • 642-$78. !be P•nl\Y Plocher. Ad. MZ-5678. * LEGAL TRAINEE Work in ~ewport Cmter Start $425 mo, Re((Ultta tec- retarlal ll(l)cr, typo 69 wpm. llt~ SlL Roland S. Barcume 644.(JQ23 your houst, -.pt., atnre- bldr., •le Jlvu • Delly p Clusl!led Ad. ~ -----------------------.. I ' ·- ' . -. ' ' • ' . • ' • . • . ' . . . • • . • • . • . . . . . . . . • • .. : \ • • . . . • . • I Be Ready • ·--~ like Teddy BANKAMERI CARD For Hills or Bills \ ' CHARGE Your Classified Advertising at the • Even by Phone 642-5678 · · DAILY PILOT • I • " ' ' . : ' .· .· .. . · .. .. . · . . . . . . . . . • :· -: : : :: . ' : : . . " ·. ;~ :: .. .. • ·. .. \ .. _ _,,, .... _. -... • . ~ ~ ~ : : : . : ' ... ... :-: :; • • . • . .. . . : : . . . ... .•, ·= . ~ :: • • " . ... .. . . . "' : :: :·' ... . • ·: • . • • ~ ::· . . . :: :: ·; • ' • f: :: :· • • • • • • • • • • ol • < , • .. •• ii· ... .. ~ ; .. ~ , •• ·: ' •! '· '· ~I ';.l ,. :.-: •• l • • • ' . ' ., .•' ... , .. ::, .~ ' " •• • I 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! I. Stovo 29. Blcyclo 57. Eloctrlc Train 2. Guitar 30. Typowrltor 58, Kiiton 3. Baby Crib 31 . Bar Stools 59. Clanlc Auto 4. Eloctrlc Saw 32. Encyclopedia 60. Coffoo Tablo 5. Camera 3:i, Vacuum Clnnar 61 . Motorcycle 6. W11har 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordion 7. Outboard Motor 35. Hot Rod Equlprn'I 63. Skis 8. Stereo Sat 36. Fiio Cabinet 64. TV Sot 9. Couch 37. Goll Clubs 65. Workbonch 10. Clarinet 38. Sterling Silver 66. Diamond Watch 11. Refrigerator 39. Vidorl1n Mirror 67, Go-Kart 12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Sat 68. Ironer 13. Sawing Machine 41. Slide Profoctor 69. Camping Trailor 14. Surll!oard 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antique Fumlturo 15. Mach ine Tools 43. Peol Table 71. Tape R-rdar 16. Dl1hw11har 44. Tlroo 72. Sa II boat 17. Puppy 45. Plano 73. Sports Car 18. Cabin Crul11r 46. Fur Coal 74. Maltron Box Spg1 19. Golf Cart 47. Drapes 75. Inboard Speedboat 20. B1rometer 41. Linens 76. Shotgun 21. Stamp Colloctlon 49. Hor,. . 77. Ssddlo 22. Dlnollo Sot SO. Airplane 78. Dart Game 23. Play Pon 51. Orvin 79. Punching Bag 24. Bowl ing Ball 52. Exorcyclo IO. Baby Carriage 25. Water Skis 53. Raro Books 11. Drums 26. FrHxor 54. Ski Boots 12. Rifle 27. Sultca,. 55. High Chair 13. Desk 28. Clock 56. Coins .14. SCUBA Goer ' These or any other extra things around th• hoaM can be tum•d into cash with a ' ' DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit There! • DIAL DIRECT 642-.56 Frldlr, Ju~ 14, 1972 DAil Y l'ILOT l19 I ll: fl£) L I l[Il] I .. ..., 2 l[Il] .._I r...,_, .... __.l[il] I -I~ ~I --~-1~~1 14olp We.,..._ Ma F 711 Help W...W. M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Antiques IOO Furniture 110 Log•I Soc'y $to00 l'HARMACf l!rl -"" s p ;.S_C...;..R_A_M_L_E_T_S I •1-9-. -1-.,--. ---Fee N-. trff'A Fee Jobi. dtrical .....tt1on. N-tcretary er1onnel • .. . -anUqpe gld veivft '"•"' ~ ~ .. _. ~1 h quUt couc::Ms, v&JU(' $1500, Eatabllsbed firm jllltmovtd Be-acb. aru. Good ..iary + ust ave Sood lt'Cl'ttarial t • noo. 2'8'' IC? cmr lb!, $50. to new otfScf9 wanta aecre-bent.ti.ta. ~7. •kills, pltuant pttsonalJty, . ANSWERS 4'3'' lamp.-cld &: avoe. $60. tary wbo wW do oame. POLICY TYPIST be able to a" u m • 9x6 multi colo< •Id. tone GttU co Can Sharon Wall ,.,ponalbllltles with little • 833-JTOO, • Dennll A ~ lmmed. openl.na, will tn.tn. slU)ervllion, Type 6S. IBM Turrld -Villa -Uthe -~b:iu~ 1~k ~~Y~!~ ~ Penonnel •-'-· 2182 5S w.p,m. ll\ln. Gd ..i & •loc (ExecJ. Sllrthnd 100. l'roilc -FEU. OUT. 1 •• ~ _ .... ...__ Dr-~-. benefit" Can Penonne1 for Start1J11 salary !107 mo. Ub<Oncerned mothero "Sh• '°~·· -ea. 6' blond ~ . ., MT-bureau-9 drawer & minor, ~ •npt. 83-T751. ~ Send ttaume to San Joaquln ktpt the baby in a hiah crib LICENSED shampoo cb'I iINtcARD INSURANCE S<:hool Diltrlct, 14600 S. \V. !IO ahe could hear him if he i·xl~'~ede!~~2~"~ ~ apply Wecl lhrtl S.t ---·p a•~-female Sand Canyon, E. Irvine,F -7.E=LL=O=lfl'.,_.C,"--~c--appt, .,, ~". aJlft.'ftDl)n bdof'e f pr'Q" & •w,1' _,,,.., .,.....,~-' C&l. 92650 -: ·--~--·~----·! -. Q>llat!ng, tr f mm t n.&. · ANTIQUES -1< ...,.-oductioos, atftchlnc exper. Wllltrit fo Sec'y Boyer Tme to l600 $S0 to $l00. ~\\1:er lamp1, ~ ~ nunt work 2nd ah1ft.. l:xaeptJouJ No th. Key rpot for advance-. carved dti;k chair. 6' long w-Ute *I• dutitt, oppor. w/KfQW!Dg hat1 co. ment In dynamic erowina >oil painting, 4' brom:e mlr- . SEX:RETARY -.Girl Frkiay, Immed. OPt-l'ltna&,XJ n \. Irvineareaelectf'l)fticsfirm. ror, pr country French varied ot~. dutlea. Lite R)itd working ~& . .-1.outitand. WW train to but IOtt hems. uphol lovt'· ~ats, pr Bon1boy exper req d. illf ~ ~fitl, NO. BeautifUl tuture.. ToO. bene-chests, trip~ d res Ii e r s , TECHNOLOGtsr "" .Cal.U Amtricah . ei>rre~nee tits. Abigail ~t Ptnonnel Italian Prov, parquet finish, llct!med, w-over all dinical School .. 4«>l B.ircb ·st., NB. Agency, 230 1V, Warner, ~7919. ~~~RY a I I I It. MD. Miles; ~?6:11-·. Suite ~. s •. A. si,:1-6122. .l-·AN"O""'=""Q°'u=Es~~.-co~u .... -.H~b,~ .. -1 --. VUioul lab runo,. PRINT SJiop: Folder' Opr, S E C RETA lt(Y-Famll~ for the serious collector. ;;;,rm · - ' 'male. CUhlng & toldin& ex,· w I WOf'kbw: ~ l classl!Jed' Tnmks, ~lass, hand painted Mr Snyder 644-2343 tPf!r.. Willing ,to work" 2n\f U)t.terlll •. Take dictation, ip (11ahf!s, silver, & jt:'\\'elry. No · ' . i'•iblit l mmed. open.lngs. Ex· ~.1.J>/tim~.' reg. hn ! ·~uctions, no J>tr!Klnal UVE-In , Housekeeper, 5~ captiona.I oppor. wfif'OWlnl pret'd. Will cortslder after cheeks,pleu~l S45-3417, days. ~~ exper. Sal. nat'l co. Xln't ~g hri. (ll.3) '31-2255. SEE mt at Ne"'1port Inn Optn. · eonds. w/outstandlng. binge SHOE SaJeiMan ecper. By Antique Show July t,3-Hi. LIVE-In housekeeper A: C'8ft benefits. No. f.mtri?n Cor· a,pp( Ask •tor . M r, 'Cut glass, Art glass, Brass. for 3 children ages 11 tO 4. n;spondence Sc~. ~ ~r. Phone 64-M223 Blue pand Cosmos from t\l.'O Must have car. S«>-4828. Bll'ch St., NB. Mn. Mile~. ·or 54M54L prlv~te collections, Alma's LOCKER ll.IAU 546-7360 . A ,. ~ · SER.VICE Statio Sare n iquei;. Exper. locker man to· take Re•I Estate C•r•er (2) F/itme d~ & 57V: Lrg unusual cupboard MOD EL HOME FURNI SHINGS P1rking Lot Sale Office of John D, Lusk It Son. 17550 Clllette. Irvine tl\lnc Arthur to Redhill, l block east to Reynolds, l block 80Uth to Gillette) SAT /SUN e JULY 15/16 10 AM TO 5 Plt1' CASI{ & CARRY MUST Sell: Slate Top Pool table. Cost $700. $325. $900 Decorator couch $2RO. Game tablt. t llping rm table, uphol chairs, seaUI 12. 1-lamilt~Balrhvln p i a n o , cost $1895, $750. ~lany other Items of furn & lumber. S<ll-8040. charze of locker room in pvt New or experl~nced, ~in the shifts. Min. i yr~·f/time ex-Oak lll Boy. Pine countrY club. Apply in O>mpany that 1 gro"".mg· U per. req'd, Desire t'Op shelves. Trunk. t?nusunl RARE modem c a b i n e t , peraon, Big Canyon Country you do oot have a license, salesman. Lite mechnn. hand carved chair and massive 7' long, with space Oub, No. l Big Canyon Dr, tjleck on our knowledge, Neat tn appear. 1tlORE. ~TnS. for hlfi componl'nts, has NB. $49 A bookshelftop,beautlful · pply m or n ings , 2590 Appl lanc11 802 ,vooc1, g• round area rug. MACHINE operator. Exper N~. Bl., c.~r. - in small machine shop prtt Real Estate SERVICE Station H•lp, ·--VACUUM BARGA INS \\'OOI, blue-green, Ca I I Call 6f6.-0000 tor pt " '<'A anytime 644-6913. CdM. ap · Licensing Course per. M & P/Time. 990 E. Used Vacuums $5 & up. Re-1 -,.0.~~~-~-~-1 MAIDS WANTED · F.uD aales training program Coast Hwy., N.B. built Kirbys $50 Ir up. Guar· FOR ~LE: Refrig, :: Jamaica IM -no coll Va'nagen\ent o~ SERVICE station at1o~,,1 anteed. RrM. Repairs-All new; or TV. king -~ E ~~Hwy NB ·~ C I g S bal, hide-a-bed, b ab y 4.W.L • ..._... • portunltles. Ask for Mn. full &: part time, top \vagcs f\.1'akes. al Rfty · . MAIDS WANTED Jones for Information al & in«. Apply Che·~n Sta-548·5179. furniture & furnishings & ''" .:;.:..:c-7..-.--o=---lots more~ 9'.3, Thurs, Fl'i & Mature, Must be exper. F / '42-558:L tion, rot ~uth Coast llwy, Rent W•1htrs/Dryer1 Sat. 645-JOT.l or 673-3421. time. see Penonnel Mgr, Tarbell Realton 1.agu,.. Beach. -~~-n-!i~~-~-~: I I ......... SHARP .. GAL.. . 12 .. ~~:i m~"t. _ ~~~-::D , R11 Estate Se es Looking tor a career tn ERA'IO MAID work in exchange fO? Licensed real e a t a t e b 0 u t 1 q u e 1 a 1 e 1 & REFRIG R, v ~ r Y Need at least four fin ot un- apartment. 2376 Newport salespersons wanted im· mana&ement. Mu.st have clean, inside Ir out. $60. 7130 fin Bentwood chafi... ~ ~vd., C.M. 548-9755. mediatt!!:y for Hunttngton display & sales exp. If you We1tmlnrter A'Yf!., Westm. ~not important, but MAINTENANCE Be a ch are a , phone qualify le are looking for & 11AYTAG repairman ha.I must ~ in good cond. No 714/493--4739. lasting porltkln, call for ap-washers S35. to $100. can antiques. Free or reu . MECHANIC pointment. deliver w/I yr. KUatn. price, Mike, 897·1'191 aft. 5 Top Pay-NO FEES RECEPTIONIST THE LOOK ·~lTl'l. LADDERBACK CH AI R S . OUr client ta teeldne .a SEC' RETARY 644-6500 G. E. An1ericana Electric Need at le11.st four matching mechahtcally inclined. tn. 30" double oven range. hlgh, ladderback chain. dividu:al w/a good work Openings now for people SINGLE Needle operators • Yellow. $100. 675-U29. Fln. or unfin. Must be reCord to learn mlintenance w/good skills. Both short Ir Overlock, special Exper OVER 200 washers, dryers, llturdy. No antlquel'I. Frte or of ,bydraulic · machinery. long term assignm ents. on]y. Top pay • steady, Pd. refrigerators from $39.95. reaJOnable pri~. Ph. Mike Xln't benefit!, including Irvine 540-4450 vac. Ask tor Jan, 642-3472. 545-0780. at 897-7791 after 5. ~'t ·•·~··. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO ~RE ~erk, ~-•·, part S . h fr! I l''""' ........ '6 "'v u u;·u~ ML uprtg t re g, 1m gM CONTEMPORARY 1t)'le dln-p .P .S. T TEMPOH 1 time poss. tull 2 time. neat range, tank vacuum. Elect lnr room table, six chain, Pactflc •mpor•ry t p appearance, dBys/wk. heater w/fan. 646-8436. walnut tinillb $250. Matching Personnel Servic•s R EC E P T I ONISJ': Fee 494-99'75. KENMORE we.sher $45. Ken China c a bi n e t S250. 1U No. Tower Pa.id/ Also Fee Jobs. How STYLISfS tor B e e • L i n e mO'l'e washer $65. Reooond. & Complete set $400. 54~. Union Bank Square \\'OUld you like to work 1ar Fashions. No collect. no Guar. Free Del. ~86'f2. SOLD home , everything Orange Cal·r fast growing real estate & deliv, will train. Ca 11 FRIGIDAIRE crou top f~z-goes! Complete hoU!ehold of 547.6,446 invesmtent co.? Young 538-6172. er refrig.13cu.ft.Likenew. fine turnlture. G reat tnocrern CO-\\ttkers. $500 TAILOR wanted, Mr D $95, Call fi75.6611. bargains! Sat. 7/15. 2581 215 E. Commonwealth Call Helen Hayes, 540-6055 Tailor Slop, :m c -Tustin Vll:ta. N.B. MS ao. Suite F, Merton O:lut8l Agency, 2790 Ave, N.B. 548-0l4G. Cam1r a1 • 3 pc 9tCllonal bel.p 'J'ta<li. 870-1833 . -m .... -.. CM. TELEPHONE Sue.: .tlelJ •• ·!!~'!'!!----. m. -• deytr. "'M.AN=-'wan-1«1,_.,.._..,.10-r-re-:tail-::. RECEPr. new Jaw ofc. Southern Orange County'• .Rontol Dark Room·1 !!CA. fth<pool. Win'. ad· health foods, sales and branch Laguna Hilll. 7117, Favorite Newspaper from Air Cond. S2 per hr, $100. &t&-39Cl6. merchandising. Must have Typing, per90llable. ( 2 13) your home. Make u much Daves Camera FURNrnJRE t.actory teUbW ~alth food or retail food 277-5951. 88 you need. Generoua ~ 474 E. 17th Ct., CM out at COit, all floor ll!liplet clerk experience. 979-9495. Receptionst • Secretary. ~~.on each aaJf1 .... Can 646-2136 or while ttock lutl. 145 Baker, MANAGEMENT Trainees, Small O.C. firm wants xtra 64.2-1012 ~eo.t"-,:.;;;ra...;M.,-e;..:11."'------I muat be ovtt 21 yrs .. Apply &tarp tir1. ~9425. TV TEOl, -Qutikte. E:xp'd. SUPER-8 Sank)'O Camera. FOR sale, king slu: maple Thurs J uly 13th, l0am-6pm RECEPTIONIST trainee for Miuion 'V,J(jo 'ate:&. Almost new. 6X 1.oom, bookcate headboard. 1 yr at Me 'n Ed,t Pizza Parlour, doctor's ottice. Type SO • 831-1l80 Auto. $170. Polaroid fullsiz.e, old. Good cond. $ 8 5 . 12731 G&taen cme·BI, GG. wpm, SH 80 wpm. 548-0076. -~ exp onl y, auto, B A W or color, lla.sh.1 =646-=1862=--·.,,._,~~~~i MANAGER TRAINEE RECEPnONISI'' Typing """!'"°'over n, day or $35. 644-IS67. PECAN cottee & end tablos Fee Paid.~~ Fee Jobs. tiling, gen'I ~ l er 1 c,aJ ~~1 1hitts open. 4gs...c341, K~A 471 Super 8 tl'IClvie $275. i:>ecorator dinette set Xln't career training with b a c k g r o u n d • ~ '3T•U52. camera, Instant cartridge $135. 557-3Ul. modem ~ far.sighted corp. desirable, but ~;ne~. WANTED: Bright , im· loe.dfllC. Power telephoto TV, end tables, coffee table, ~l-co:·'6enetits for ag-Apply Hybridyneo~./·nso aginative girl to do ieneraJ wlde aflCW lem. Almost dbl bed, dressers, misc. & gres51ve thinkipg individual. Pullman St, C.M:''.~. ofc work, Gd typing A: fillne new. $75 or make offer. brio.a-brae. 646-1456. Call JoM c;6u, 833-2700, SADDLEBACK .• COU.EGE req'd. SH or dlctapbone 512-1734 eves A-weekends G $ I Denni& i 'Denru1 Personnel a ccepting appllcationsforlO helpful. Exp not req. Start PETRI Fr camera. Sel~m arqe 1 • 112 •--Mich-' Dr mo's secre. tatial po' stt1-l ~ mo. Cout. Catamaran, • , · • • x ' ..... · ~.ncy, -~s>n " __ ,. wo' -Ing ~ '33012 r .n -.i. C. C. auto. 1,u !<ti it SUP.I~ SALE .... Irvine. 81arting -ary $590 per Q>b. p .,,_., , <;:"" ''San -• mm. No. 306666. With ....., , ~. · ~ j--". • "l)lin.~3. yrsexper.require .. d. ,,_t;-r .,,_ec,..o•'.. Jti&n, :u...chm ~00 r .::r.;: __._, ...-lo ~~ • MANICURisr part time. \AL ..... _ .amt ent. .,, :.~ .. ~ ~~· .. 3.tf#,: ~. tum .. Xlnt loc. Newoort l/<Rcb : 'Call Mrs. Radner <~ .. olfor. Mi-1734 ~ ~. ~···~·"""':*'" area. Call 54&-417'9~ 4 837-9700 or 495-4950 W~ Uve-ln hskpr/com-weekerkb:. • • ~ 1 ~~.:~ ~c e Marine Ca:· te·r SALES clerk, stationery. paruon, btwn S0.55 yrs, must Furniture .. i, ... , . ~~"t : M or part time. No eves. drive, !18.lary open, 492-7593. = • • Hel J.arc We · · r Apply in person, c.osta Mesa WIOOWER wl'l girls agei 1 MODERN walnut ~~ 1 lti".ti-.. .:.~ j::: Will pay . top ~agee for 2 Stationers, 270 E. 17th *· & 4 needs live-.ln Nanny. bednn 1et A Jarnp1. ~.,. ~ ~-res) "-'-... · ye&n ~nee. C.M. Younger 'WOman pre t. * 962-2137 * <J<IV n n. ISLA~DER YACHTS s ALE SMAN, aggressive, ~.. !jP.ANISH atyle --4100. URGENT! Seta. chair. pie- .. mW. 17th St, neat. S t e r e o equipment, vr.N'?' Oppor N t1 ,._ ___ t reeier/Frigidajre $50. tures, 3 tables only $60 Costa Mesa oommiak>n plus'. Must Jw.w ~·· · a ""' .... ~ &H-ll42• Alum. ladder, garden hose, MECHANIC-Se Sta CdM previous exp selltng iwbe. BU openings i)r ~ tool!, tape recorder, lamp, ..... Top pay":'To Jiooo A Mu.rt also be williiie fu do oalel)llen .fn CM. -6. Bf;AUTIFUL blrcf) ~ ~ ,tc. Burglar ala(m. up. Must know alignment & lite cleanup. Apply betwn set, 4 ~· opertl·1o l9llt 3109 Mosevelt .Wf.1;-•C.'AI. ir -• Ph ~ -s llam A ~m -•·. USA 10, Mkq ~«; .. « ..... o~ ........... a OOnu. · u•.roo• • '"1' "'"'J' fer 642-4446 ... ..' 1 ~ , MEDICAL OB GYN office Stereo Equip Wm!house, I · ' : .~' ' ,.,. '·GARAGE' Sall: Diftette' set, req exp. back ottice girl & 179 E. 17th st., Costa Mesa 5 PIEX:E kirc Btu Mf!dit Br antlq rocker, washer; ml'IC f ront off ice g irl or ,call for appt. 645-2442. tet. '°!conct. ~·, " · dilhes, mtBC Avon. early w/insurance exp. sen d ~us.L_~ able to work full 642-44 1r • Amer. chair, crib, chest ot mume to P.O. BOX 3991., · tim<r. • -A~tlquoo. IOO .• ~OG <!in rm IOI •. ROilJid , .ir.., 4 mud! mor<· ;357 Long Beach. " 1. ' SALESf!IAN --,...1-21' -ri.il dllln; ~CIL-~. ,.:::,;~==:;.,---,..--,,. YoungCo.Gd l'o!entlal ORNATE •lnaie !nu bod, ,..teond.•l!Q.MM64T, ' !l.\BY llili . ' ~~;_;~· 1Ca11 Mn. Schmkl1 :;',';~f-=t;~.:·~ &~FA 41Mlfa~ _,, ...inut~t~°':i:·i: Tra.,.Lodge 64U252 WESTCUFF Fri ' • Boll! -· Sewtoc len k Sattler dbl dr wall ' ' 2043 Westcliff Dr .. NB & Sat only,· 644-8>79. mach $25. Pvt pty 968-7910. unit. Oi!lhwruiher. Steel 5• NIGHT hostess • cashier 64S-2nO ANTIQUE Round Oak table, 11' angle couch (8' x 3') Or1r tub. Misc 2412 \Vlndward ~in== 30:'. SF£RETARY·general office. Amtque ~~bed. J $900 now SUS. Ln., ?ff Tu!tin Ave., N. 8. 35 )Tl or older The Derby Yacht dealer. Brokerage. 675-038'1 6f6-3541. Restaurant, 1262. S. E. Marina on Bay. Yachting Brlalol, Costa Meaa. As!ocie.te Corp. 646-ffi51. NOTE TEWR Exriorloncod -UNITED- Collfomlo Ionic •i Monarch llay'Pllz& . . S!Nlb I.of"!'* .uh .. :' Equal Oppor. Employf!r S!X:REI'ARY, part time, salary $600 mo., pro-~ed. Needed by ho!lpltal con- lulting firm, 2 Years · o:p ttq' d. SH 90 + typing 70 +, Weik 2 ' to 3 d&11 a wee~. 4 : occufonally Sat mornl.Dsc. Fa1h'°n Isl11.n8 I J.oc.,..__ Send ~f! to ; Henfiin S'intth Assoc., 359 ' "' San Mlf!l"'I Dr., Suite ~. Newport Beach. NURSES, pvt. duty, all j•------•f types, all ablll>. LelCOUlle Nune'• Re1 i1try, 351 llolpllal Rd., N.B. 642-9955 or 54M954 lntmiewt &-6 MIF NURSES Ml>ES 'Bi,View Conv. Hosp. ·-· • T - • 48 DAILY PllOI rrklay, J•)• ~ .. 1~1? • SEE IT FREE Find Your Name. ' Everything For Your Home If y .. ._. It lhta4 la • 1pacW ..i -lf.c..W .,,_ .. dar .. y ,..,.,_ flc.tlN, M looll 9t tf11,. ol -,.... '4Z·5'71, Ext .. doo 314, IMtw- f ..... ...i 1 ,...... ta ...... ---,. pick op yoor tlckefl ., MY COOYaol•t DAILY PILOT office. Even Traveling 'H.onaes' lti Reerea(ion Vehicle Exhibits Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT -- Gar•e• Sal• 112 Garage Sale · I-..;... ___ _ 111 .HJ\ND. A poW<'r tools, Hand SAT & Sun 10 am-41)m. 7' blk CRN dolly, adllll &. baby & wht tuxedo style-sofa-bed, clothing & I u r i;i i tut e . gas bl.xi, ping pong tbl, Kitchen ware, applianceL other furn & toys. 2731 Peb- Ga~•s• Sele SAT & Sun. July 1:-M & 16th, Furnilurt. ~orage nn, A~ boott, IO)"S, ·Ir. m isc, 'l62'J Nancy Dr, H.B. 847·523~. .... --JIB I ....:m~ Jg] I ....:m...=.... I~ 906 Boats, Spfftl & Ski tn; GERMAN shepherd, AKC, 15' Glass Flat 14' GLASSPAR hull w/trlt; 1\l<le, 1 mo old. lllk, rilVO!'. · >.; h.p. Evinrude e1ec; Su~ dkJl9sition. 100% sturting motOr, many xtru, ~ bred-Top American & Bottoin Ski Hull rig like"""'· l1075. - DOORS OPEN Wfflt-• 12 .Noon LJOO Isle Garage Sale. Gerin6n blood lines. (Il'4) 15' Giastron Tri-hull, bow NEIGHBORHOOD garage Furn. bedspreads, baby's 800 w..t Ketel'9 cai Weekdlya .. 5 p.m. 567~2915.• \Vhite/metal!lake red, 65 hp rider. 100 HP JohnlKln. sale: All desirable Items. nd!. More. l2l V'ia Fermo ' 'Anahebn, ilornia GERMAN Sborthaired£oint· Mere O/B, tilt trailer sm. Amer. trlr. $1995. 548-8750,, Mik. Odds &: ends. 287 ~hi~•~Dr:;::,·~OTh:::::l~-~----Ha:nover Or, C.lo.f. .,. Sat&: Sun July 15th & 16lll. Sat S-4 Sol! 9-l2 675-0058. er. 2 yrs. old. Xlnt ihow 0836-"""lll54~.===~,,--~.69 COUGAR 15' 125 hp ' U to 4 pm. 590, 594, 59j, 598 Tearing down hse on potential. Both P a I'. e n t s 15' PERFORMER Ha\1X:, trailer & many extras. $ ~ Dr. C.M. 546-0036. BeJboa J!le. Misc. Objects Mtrchanc:lile Mtrehlndlse JI I I ehampiOns. Some field trng. white &: blue me1tal .tlake, or best~· otter. 1\1'.ASSIVE 5 • p'iece Walnut 214 Grand CanaJ. LU 'I Frff to You ' -I Days, 646--0600: Aft 6, m;iw upholstery, all gauges. I ~~~~~~~~~~ more. dining set $50 Reel power Isle. 673-3838 '--------' 4~2568. 15 b.p. Chry_sler eng. Brake-I' REF $50-Ladder, prden mower $35. Misc. Sat.sun. Jewelry 815 ••••••••• 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 * Dog Obed ience * away trlr. All in xlnt cond. T~titiort J- SAT·SUn. 1023 .Presidio Dr. C'l UH; _..Pool table , Camera, 'JV. Hand.mowers, bO\VJing 001J, \\'asher, youth bed. clsJ(he!, 10)'1, f\fu<t . toots. ,tiurglar ·aJa.nn:.tape ~1817. 2225 ·.Santa Ana, ':'O".':"=,,-,:-,...---..,.-,.IM·:.;l;;•.;.<•;;l...;I•;;•;;-~"';:....--':.;'..:.'· Pi1nos/Org1ns 826 Try this proven love method $1295. ~1285 after 7. I i;;mmmmm;;;~ .. ~~ .recorder, sofa, chair, plci ·CM. · DIAMOND Sol. approx. I ct. * AUCT.ION * STORE PARTY FREE-Cute, loving kittens. O.ass starting Laguna-'72 Enterprise. ]70 HP Volvo, tures, dog & runway. Sl09 l c.,;;;L;;E;..,A~N=l ~N~G~hou-se-~F.~;iirn-. $3$. The Diamond Broker, FRIDAY 7 3 M Mon, July l?, 7-9 pm Need good homes. 6 tabby San Clemente area. 6 cyl. Chry. 'outdrive. 40 Ao'rcraft fl$ Roosevelt Way. 979-8958. clothing, misc. galore, 1228 638-0533 2-1 pm. : O P . • with Tim Storrs.. coloMI, 1 white w/ blk tail Days 49'1-4401; eves 54~3931 MPH. Seats 12. Good Buy & FUR NJTURE, paintings, Marian Ln, NB (Westdiff). COCKTAU. RING TOTAL 1 July 14 ou~landing organist from "'°&='ea='crs_,,,,,c"all~S.:.31~-500~3:.,·=-l.:.Joh:::::•..=M::.rtin:.::' ::.•.;:Pro:..::::ct'lc..:Tra=me::::r Ocean boat. Loaded \vilh ·Ll-ST-EN-.-T-he-•-.. -nd--ln_tt>e_ kitchenware, wallpaper, ELEGANT coffee tbl, Ml.mps, CARAT, WHITE GOLD. Top iw.me Iumiture. new & Hammond Organ Company. EXTRAORDINARY kittens, OBEDIENCE Oass To Start equip. $4500. An Y time· wires, soft ~mer air, the. paint, clothing, shoes, paintingr, mW:. Great buY!I. N'E'\V. $250. 842-6339, used. Hear the old & new in Fr« to loving homes. 9 \Ved, July 26th 7:30 PM in "6~15-6~279~·--~--oo-c--throe.ly roar of 8 radial pur5es andCMlo~A~f~sc. 712 Sot, 104. 894-l83). Machinery 816 3 mo old Baldwin spinet Hammond Organs. \\'ks, trained, weaned . the Newport-Irvine area. 29' Century Sport Fisher, engine. Open cockpit an- Victoria, ~-SAT July lSe Boat & trier, piano, dining room sets, Refreshmants 615J.iTI5 Open to aU dogs over 5 mo's F1ying bridge: t\.\'in scwv, tique bitilane rides $5. Ph. NGHBRHD ~Power reel guitar & ampll. Mi.nl bike, ,A_L_L_E_N_S_Y_N_CR_OG_RAP--H.~I ~:1ca~~irr:~~~ HAMMOND ORGAN SMALL puppies, mother old. 546-492S. pairofZll.hpgraym.arines: 6T:i-1372. mower, boY'r bikes, inddg furn & misc i t e m 1 • MO"DEL E 1415 HD J7F, . STUDIOS Sheltie. Very friendly. 5 wks BIRD Dog Pup -Now $50. recording d~th sounder, 10 spd •. rotisserie, port. 847_785598618 El Colta. FV. DISTRIBUTOR MACHINE. comm?des, Lazy-Boy ~hn· 2154 E. Coast Hwy. old. 546-3804 AKC Champion Sitt. 9 ?o.farlin taclde. ei·c. Sac. Campers, Sile/Rent 920 dshwhr, 'misc. 006 W. Sierra GARAGE Sale: Barga.iris! 542-1734 evse &. weekends. er, d1vans, Sealy hide-a~ -Corot'la del Mar PREGNANT-Can't-kef:p my \.\<eeks -9 wee kJ ~9. [ ;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;,J Dr, ~ 546-ll29. 14th, 15th, 16th. 201~1 beds, decorators Rembrandt 644-8930 4 Dutch rabbits & 8'x2'x2' Sho\\•/Field. 962-9574, FULLY equipped 11 II. * 11/2' CAMPER * , SHOP Sliti.tb saw &: all at· • S t An Miscellaneous 818 lamps, wall cJocks, bedroom hutdi. 54g..5209 PUPPIES AKC poodle' fiberalass outboard: 75 HP OPEN ROAD Ba)'Vlew Ave.. an a 8 * * * sel!, king &: full size mat· PIANO SALEi E ~ 1 tachment1, Danish modern H~1. 54>3543. · tres•-d-"-1 . Piano used in teachers PREE heaj;thy cute kitties. 5 teacup & toys. Xtra tiny fe. v e, e ec. starter; 4 Includes Tle·dO\.\'l1S, Bounce.. sofa &: 2 chain:, clothes " U J k W H d ty OK."• t:1UU1, s ·ereos, air weeks old. cau .. -,,.,...A _., Yorkie. Stud 1 er vice, wbl. tilt/ton trlr. Many E'X· · •a . .: miscellaneous iteril.s a: toys. GAR.AGE Sale -l\'ust se ac . ar •• conditioners, appliances, lots studios; 1loor models; diS· U'Ul-0"" ou• 893 9719 ways, Awnmg, Boot. .LolMI bar, sofa, turn. misc. Rm 1691 Mesa Drive, Apt El of misc. f6r swap O'leeters. continued models; damaged 5 pm. · · . tras. 838-2358_~-~-new. $900. cash or trade lot 847~l921· Mary Cir, H.B. wkdys I<. Sat Sant• An• WINDY'S 'AllCJION cases. They're all here & on GERMAN Shep. & Lab mix· AFGHAN~. Champ. mre, 23' SOUTH Coast Ru~bout, fishin& boat. (714) 525-63511 SAT/SUN. Shag, hi·lo crptg . ..:.8-6::·~· ~~~~=~-You are the winner o! U sale at discounts lo SlOO. ed puppy, 2~ rm''! male. pt/sh. Will sell ~nably OU'ysler Crown Marlllt 110 days, OJ' 531·5601after6 PM.• Dble bed, lawlt mower, bk GARAGE SALE 2 tickets to the ••'•ll'och• Mu•lc r lt ~,.. ,. good ftr.nw> .. -·-"·< .. lo .... good . ...l\Qm~A· Mae , h.n. !2500 or makl! offer. ·cur; dfPCha.irdfyer; ·mtsc. --.-SAT 1:· SUN 1~5 SOuth.land COME'"BROWSE7iltOUND ~ ._.......,South ~t Pl """ ., .. _ ... ., · · ·:·-··i-· 0 "f\r"QJ"' 53?-4Z10. .. .......... , ' "c.bllttt "'(1f31 "·2·s·s·.:.·1r.J3 "NIMROD Tent Tr a i 1 er._ 20622 Chaucer, H • B · 'Mt JCl&On St, c.~ Home & Garden 20751,i Newport Blvd. 54()..2830 aza GOOD hunti? bl dog, W: :r..1 us T s e 11 German (Business hoursl. sleeps &Stove-Sink-Herdtop. 968-5335. GE Sal Lfv b Show Betiind Tony'.s Bldg. Mat'ls.: . . months, very ova e, m · Shepherd. Ma1e, 7 mos. 16' Boston Whaler, 100 HP Extras.-Tent, 10 x 12. Truck For that item under ;;o, try C:~. turn. ~ Ei ~m! at tl1e Costa . Me"sa . * 646-8686 G~D Pie.D?;, Ebony fif11sh; To very good home. 536-1031 Gentle. large boned. AKC. Johnsori, 3 yrs old. XInt tarp. 15" x ~· with tupe1I. the Permy _Plncbtr.. Ave, F.V. 962-3248. ANAHEIM BURGLA_R' ~arm-Going out ~~63S~ndi~on; •$") O O • 919-8958. cond. $2150. 67~ or ,~,,,;....,..9:..7 _______ 1 · •• •••• CONVENTION of Bus 1 n es s . Pinkerton [ ll'L..i J GBRMAN Shepherd pup 67~. 1970 Ford % T Camper Spc\ ••••••••••••• .•• CENTER Radar units at below tac-Piano-Mllt0n Spinet ,..,. ,... -· ~ male 4 mo. Genlie. Love• 35• Cia'8ic cruiser, $4000 or truck W-11' camper. Slp1 ii.' July 14 • July 23 tory cost. Fishco Inc. 2400 .S375 548-5662 · children & cats. l 1 0. best offer. ?t1ooring incl. Ice box, eye Jevel itove.: A CONvt:JrlOfT SHOPPING AND tlEWING GUIDE fOR THE GALON THE. GO. For en •d. In Woman's World C.11 Mory a.th 642-5671, •xi 330 Please call 642-5678, ext, 314 W. Charleston, Las Vegas Sporting Goods 830 96~?8. Very Clean. Owner may I --=-..,,,·===~~~-I between 9 and 5 pm to claim 89102 or call 979-8958 for in.I ,..,,. Pets, Gener ii 850 PUREBRED springer finance. 548-6112. '70 DODGE VAN. 6 eyl. "Out tickets. (North County :to. r uR · Sale $91. . Com)>lete ~ .. u.ls 9 wks. X I n t SHARP'. 13, WHALER With camper unit or ski d * "Sherry' " G . IO ..,_. .. " . toRofree ·number is 540-1220) POOL table $75., Chest womans n iv~ng outfit. s , rooming linage. No paPE'J'S, SlS. 33 h.p. Johnson elec. New $2300. 536-1D78 * * * freezer $50 Naugahyde ~sed only a fe~ times by a >:' kui~ al~eds. ~ 54~2031. trailer. Spec. bucket seats, e EL CAMINO CAMPER . STEREO: 1912 Garr a rd soaf-bed JOO.. Green & ormer mcrmai · MG-2$2. :~ppi!s'. 54.6-2&4~~&:, c Horses 856 S.1350. Ph 546-0831 SHELL. llOO. Model Electrophonic full white sofa & lovcseat $15., TV, Radio, HiFi, ;JG' STEPHENS Call 548-7433 size stereo changer, base Bar& ~Js54S!S7 .. 64 F 5 ishing poles Stereo 136 A\:: ~~o~~w * APPAlOOSA * Sedan Sport Fisher TEARDROP, 8V2'. Full · ref I ex spe aker 1 m1SC. ;,... · 3 year old -lding, Ev•ry ~--M•-"~ cabover. Rear side dinl!tt.e. STEREO 1972 G a r r a r d must sell $15 •• J;...1,.Lnt. u.n. .._....., AM I FM I MPX I STEREO NOW OPEN . ped 'th full Phone 84?-8ll5 register.cl. $475. $16,500 ~900) Slps 4, Xtraa. $950. ~ •. -8 track tape player. Still SARA'S MARINE SALVAGE equip Wl sizerl pro. CALL ANYTIME brand new in carton -left Yacht ,··unk. Ship stuff. fessional changer, AM/Fl\1 REG. TB Geld .. bay, 4 yrs, 540 • 3803 2'3' Chris Craft '7xln0 w;t ~:'°Pl TOP camper, : la Originall stereo receiver, :i:;caled air-16.1 hands. Cd mover. $650. ----~-----Exp Cruiser, Flanked huH 1..vi-..., aw mile~. pvt : Sew In an Hour! Pets On a Train • ... on y-a-way. Y Used Marine Equipment. suspension spc3kers. tape 5!14-6414 832-4038 145 hp eng. Runs &. kloks gd pty. $2000. 499--3021 .sold for $386.95. pay off 41.1 39th SI. NB, 615-4684 deck & head phoTIC' plug.in · : · BOARDING SI'ABLES $1450 646-00X) balance $189.47 or payments •'Look for the Lighthouse'' jacks. Brnnd ~,.,. in box &. TLC for any small caged Beaut. new. ~·Acacia · 'Cycler', Bike1, of ;9.00 ~nthly. USA REFRIG. 12 cu S35. Rcfrig 16• guaranteed. Ori~inahy prie· pets. my bon1e, exp'd, while Santa Ana Hts. 557-8414. CAlr2>. 1969, hull No .. 11, Scooters '15 ·~~~(. Stereo Equip Wareboute, ,.. .. •-"L •o" ..,..,L _ ~"" · .,_,_ you vacation. 54S.7081. 1 n'-~.old-·-HaU sparkhng cond ., bot I om __________ .. --04<--119-E:-1nnsc;· <Sfi:.Uesa, -14.U.~ ......... ..n.i ran,g~:-ed at $279.95. -DIU*nce S8'I Ul'C ,,. ··--~ ti . ~ -645-2"2 . S3T.SO. Elec ~ $40. M1n1 cash or small payments. PARAKEE'Ts=All 0010"8-;-lf ?tfors:an & -half Arabian. recen y pa.mt • 'u Per 197t Yamaha DT!.l. 250 oe " · · bike 6 hp, $65. 2114 Continen. Lay. aw 11 y o e p t, each. Cock-a-leels S20 a $250. 637-6843. dean, O\vner, 645-568'1 Dirt Bike. Rev Kno1Jb1 SONY 250, 7" reel to reel ta1, C.M. 714/893--0501. pair, Pigeons $1 each. Lllrge WOOD SHAVINGS $25 14' CAT w/jib & trailer, tire, expansQl chamber, , stereo tape recorder, $50. or , . . popd·sized goldfish $3 each. $295. compress;on reteese street · best. Panasonic 7" reel to 1435hp.Boe•\~ tral iler, Ev1nrude ZnENSOITHd &I RCA-save $50 to 968-0833. Ca!AI ATRCEUCJ;ATU>SSA1~"2 6'?3--4S51 equipment $475. Alfio' 4 cycle reel stef.eo tape recorder $60, ,. .+>-N· ' ~eel ~nch, ur ng our end of -v.n or best. Walnut console TV, 36 high. M-1 nne. 2a col· model year ~e. Most 'i3's CHARMING. b r i.11 i an t SHETLAND Pony, perfect • 16' BOAT w/trailer. Needs trailer, ramps:, tights, ad-' AM/FM. stereo $55. Holt or TV console. 540-6687. now in stock. Priced less Peach-faced Love.bird. Cage for childra'l, S\.\'eet natured painl . l17S or best offer. justabJe axle & tO\\i>ar $250 Com . • b t COLDSPOT d .___ than the discounters \\'/3 yr ~" !.,~Y. stand incl. l S. & !raj--•. $150. Full ••ddle 536-2385. or best otter over Sn>. 712 . petitor ul er, stripper eep 11~zer. ~ •~ .... Victoria. CM 548-0900. & carpet shampo oer $35. Upholste~ love seaf. picture tube warranty, 1 yr & tack, ·$50. 830-5368, 17' fibergki.s.!J outboard, twin w/discs $150. '57 lnCUan 500 $5. 178 E. Wilson, C05ta parts, 1 yr service, delivery * COCKA~l.S. pied & 6 YR Quarter horse Gelding, 20 hp. Meres bi~ whttl HELMET single eng., bored m 750, Mesa. 548-2656. & 'Ket-up. 'l'c.-Tnu; or cash 90 m~al. D1am~nd ~doves. ·Good w/children. $ 3 S 0 • trier. $1lOO. 846-8058. Bell Super Magnum U> S75. '65 Comet Cyclone, new '66 Owens 25' on Cus•-m 4 plan. i-lun-y for tuU selec-Misc broo:J equip. 54a-3973. Tack avail. 645-1045 I •e~:-"'~.:...,:.,;,;c::=c,,...,~ A.sk :for John &U-1742 "" tipn of ·12 models. ABC C 1 .,2 ~-----"'---oats, Rent/Chart'r 90I HONDA CL 350 eng., 3000 ml, $590. 2900 wh. trlr. Loaded w/extras a I -REG. TB Geld., bay, 4 yrs, C.!Alpa St East BluU 0 ·-•-· '1 t Sa Color' TV , 90'.ll Allaota, 161 hand Gd •~ 27' AUX. SLOOP Rebll. Lo. mi. Sharp! ' .. ' ' -', ,1 • • • ' • .. ' \ ' ~ ..., apprec. 1' us c HuntingtQ n BC'aCh. 958-3329. SAVE l 1·1 of · s. mover . ........,. •AM. FIRM "'A"' .... 62 644-0345. $3500. S3l-33?'4. us rom a 1 e 544-6414. 832-4038 ""'--,"""==~~""'''=-~ LEAR Jet stereO 8 ~rtable starvation! Two female kit· ' · Perfect for' weekend cru.ise.s FOR aale '68 HONDA Trail • ~ DINING Rm Sf!t. Harvest LAWNMOWR $65. 0th e..r' tape plaf er. solid stale, tens, 1 white, 1 smokey grey 2~ )T o:ld mare, l3 hands. to Cata.Jin,, Fully equipped. 90 motorcycle, like new, 500 ~ 11f ,.,;_ 11f ... -r ... ONE MAIN PART -whip up, zip up ttrlri swiftif sld:m· mer in minutes! In crlsp, cool, no-iron cottons, it's ideal Ior sun, city vacation. Printed Pattern 9119: NEW MlsSeS' Size88;10,-U;-J'4;1s; Size 12 (bust 34) takes. I 5/8 yards 45-lnch. SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents lo,r each pattern for Air ?t1ail ancl Special Handl· ing; otherwise lhird-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to .Marian Martin, the DAILY PILCYr •. 442, Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th Sl., N"ew York, N.Y, 10011. Print NAME. ADDRESS 'vith ZIP, SIZE apd 8llLE NUi\mER. SEE MORE Q u I elc Fashions and choote one pattern tree Irom our Spring-Summer Cll.talog. All sizes! Only 50c. lNSTANT SEWING BOPK eew today, "'-ear 10morrow. $1. tbl/6 chairs, Hutch, Mahog, misc. Garden toools. . Model .P-SlO. P,lug into w/wht markings. Grey one ~· Tuck ncluded. Ex· SS radio, ,RDF, 1leeps six. _miles. $250. 847_1cm. antique white. , Dry sink. * 557-llll * cigarette li1thter or uses 6 0 has had shots. 644-7201. penenced rider? 494-5206, 6'2'" headroom. complete l -"~;;,;;.~c:;,::;o.::;;:::.~-1 'Beaut., cust. made., Spinet 206 ~ steel shelving ... batteries. Hardly w;ied. Paid i'P~E~RSI~AN~~kT.tni.e;n;s,~brilacits;;;;;;,·[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii galley, Club ratel'I. l.ol"I of '70 Honda 350-Street. de1k-1i~ CQncl. Gone With "Lyon" J81'x.36" shelves· $75.• $35 -sell $al. S.11-17l4 eves· CFA reg., $100. Also persian [ I~ parking. Call for inlo. %'JOO ml. $475 ?iiust sell The Wind Lamp. Antique · 544-3417 k nd · loltS Ind ._ )f 5.57·9046 aft .. 6: ?.O. 544-l417 trays. 2 brajded .rugs 9xl2, wee e s. stud service from while or ....... Equipment 1' ""~""'..;:::..,:::::::._ __ _ 12x20. Antique 2 dra\Wr Oak USED RCA TV $25. Like new PAN AS 0 NI C A;M/F?tf black smoke proven studs. l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;.~ OWENS Cabin Cr u is er. LEATHERS chest. Antinue caster set" playpen $10. 841-4602 before 8-track S;tereo. S 1 0 0 . 892-2970 Roomy & clean. Sips 6. Moto X Waist 28", Je~ 28 ' ., ~ 3 p · ~-R · ~-d' L' $45., Ask for John 644-1742 pc. Antique ladies: chair & p.m. anasonic .... a.;):lette econJ· FREE kitlens:-Olte & loving. G.ntral 900 n.11 10. rve bait tank. rem stand & many others CABrN Furn. Mammoth Lks. er. Brand neW. $80. Or beat Weaned & trained. 6 Tabby , 642-;0808. SUZUKI 1972 250 Savage, : ~9760. Income Tax Oed. Sac. $4500. ofter.· 54Q.'.4063, oolored, 1 white w/ blk. tail 'ii6 Q\\."mS 25 on custom 4 SAIL the bay, Qi.talina? xlnt cond, 430 mile~. $675. or G. E. stereo. Garrard rec For Quick Sale. 531-3314. 21" COLOR Pack'ard BeU & ears. Call 837-5003. wh. tir. 'l.Ll6ded w/extrafli. Relax & cntise on Penney'!! best offer. 548-74TI. Co I Int nd noo See to apprec. Must Sae Boat Ch rt 642 9lA~ * '68 HONDA 4SOCB. WW changer. 6'. Imme.c. \Vahlut SURFBOARD, Corky Carrol nso e, x co • · BURMESE Kittens-Adorable $3500. sn-3374. ,.,=,:=;:a~er;;.:.. ::::.:· ::.~:.::_· -= fin. Granville mode(. $50. Space Stik 6'5" $75, 544-2412 548-8740 purebred, 9 wks. $35 ea.1.:=::..::::.:::.:.::____ Boats, Sad 909 ~ER ~~;5 S42S OR OF· Maple desk $15, large mapl:e ask for Scott. * AL'l•FM car radio, 12 volt, 968-3105 early am or eves. D!NGHY-or :fish boat• I ..:.::::ci;';;;·~,::;":::.,· ==~-~ Fascinate baby \Vith 8 chro-chest of drawers, immac. AVON products & antique pusti button, automatic. $45. Doti 854 Jiberg1ass, lO'·fl<>etation-new KITE Wlboe.t, excel cond. 197U Ma.ioo 250 MX 1 I -.i •1.o;: 646-W 545-7817 1 _________ $150. 536-Ei646, 213: 435-5419. w/lic. road IIir, boat & Plus extras. $550. ~in cboo train filled 'with pets. """1'" _.,, ' hnttles. No checks please.1~;.:::.:.c.· ==-~=~ GIRLS R -·~ USED RCA~-ADORABLE WANTED. to 12_uy -boat mast covers, harkenblk. lii· GTJ..1328 Embroider enche.'*1e' crib ' mod. B turn l9S:-640-2197, 1-6 Sat & Sun port ... ,,,..,.. TV. '4. ting sling It 3 sails ""$495. nr carriage covt?r · 0 n-6'8" sliding glass doors $45. 4 Brand new Pinto Urea yrs oid. Xlnt cond. $175. Part Cockapoo puppies trailer fof 20' boat. 646-4323 557~. HONDA • 70CC Mini Bike, xln't rond. Gd trail bike ... 1195. 494-8312. separate block!,' then join. Lennox China, "W heat". w/rims. liOO x 13 S50/Best 673-8225 aft 6. ~$5.';,,~,:.,.,_:*~---~6~44-4~1~48~j.•::;r;;™J6l;::;:i:;.;·::•;::'k::-"lo:'r,.:G~l~en~n~-l--'-'ii:;i;;=,,.o:::::;::;;- Easy sti~hetl. perfect for 833-3288. offer 54~13• OIAMPION Irish Setter pup. Boston 1Wtt_aJer, no motor. Marinc'f 31. Loaded~ GIRLS bike w I 1-r·a In lng wheels. Near new. $40, 493-49""oii. vl<lid colm. Paffern 7018: MOVING! Everjrthlng tnust PAST-EL Ink 1 1. [ ' ,~ • -py, 8 wks, $125. with papers. 12' ~ ... needs v.'Qrk. WiJ!(IVa4J, Refrig. J{.eaJiy . 8 7" -~ cot· m coa. 1nger J s · 5t8-3507 6TJ...7361 to .&O an~here. Owner. rune. x l'.a, or sug· go! Electric car 1250. 8021 tip like new Top quality. ,,... to You :-".:,,;:;:;;;;,· ~==~=~·I i,_7:'.,.,.,~-,----213/598-2963 gestions. Ebbtide Cir, HB nr Beach&: $4'15 Sla-8067 • . AFGHAN. GOLD MALE. 8o•fs, M1int./ SEVENT'1'·1'IVE CENTS Indianapolis. . . · 3 l" ~T· $" -1 YR. 1100. · Servi.. f02 32' 1Co'iumbla Sabre, sips " ~19"11.-..y=AMAll=A~2SO~MX=.-ve-ry-I' tot ea-ctf'l>attern-.=-.-:dd15 REMODELING: UStld Bldg Mit"llaneous-.... inu, 1mec, £MV ,,...,~4~93-;1559~~~~=1 ~;;;;;;;:-;;;;::;;;:;:;;:'"'';;;:: X n t "a c e . S 4 9 5 0 . clean·, has only nin 5 tanks cents for ea.ch pattern ~· materlaJ~· gle.sa shel\lbig Wanted lit CHOW CHOW PUPS, AKG MARINE Me;chanlc Free ;~-1.Jis6-6 I 71 d 8: YI, _o'-f'-'ga~•;.· Ph;;,::;·:.c·S»-::::.,:.727:.'-".8.c._ __ j: ~ir Mail and. Speci8;' Hl;!.ndl· 'hdwr, g.' tan 'paJm. 222 . FREE to gd home. AKC reg registered . estimates. Good worK. Fair 11 12 eves. 1970 Triumph cumm -" . wg; otherwise. tltlrd-clau-Orvieto Lido Isle G?>'ro9'l BE~TWOOO Gennan Shep &: 2 yr old · cn4) ~!202· prices save you money. Call 3:1' VIKING SLOOP chopper. Lo milf!!'l. delivery will take three ' · CHAIRS Terrier. 673-5472 eves. Burr Buman 675-8677. New sails/mint cont!. M lrl: sell Mo e~A I weeks or more. Send to \VANTED to buy '64 to '61 El Need at least four fin or un-JRISH Setter, 10 mo. female, ,1200 &i6-!KXlO u · ;JUCT""..r.l'J8 -~ Alice Brooks the DAILY Cantino or Ranchero truck. fin. Bentwood cbai~s. Ap. GR.EAT Dane, Male, 10 mos AKC. Sacrifice to loving Botts/Marine T\VO '10 Mini Trail Hondu, , .. PlLOT, 105, Needlecralt Must be l"t"a.sonable. Phone pearance not important, but ol~. Well trained. Loves home. SlOO. 646-4109. Equip. 904 ~ =~~w~ boot 50 CC'1. Lic'd. Xlnt cond. ) Dept., Box 16.1, Old Chelsea 642-4689. must be in good cond. No cExhildn?nH · ~~l aft &pm. SILKIEAKC 9 Ten'ier Puppies, NEw Vire 6 HP SlSO ea. S37""'350. l Station. New York, N.Y. PROFESSIONAL N. Gauge antiques. Free or reas. ce ent .... &"' guard dog. 1 , wks. ~edless, ador-New Cota 12 HP ~=: •, ~73 197U Suzuki 90, all new Git ~ 10011. Print Nan.e. Addreu, layout, 2 engines, 25 cars. 10 price, 1t1ike, 897·7791 aft, 5. Protect )"OUt property. able. Reduced. 962-8.171. sell or trade for 4 cyl dK!S<.-1. 13% ft. Lone Star sailboat kitted engine. Clf?an, S285. 1 Zip, Pattern Nun1ber. swilchts, etc. Coroplete, LADDERBACK CH A IRS e 549-2108 . 'ELEGANT AFGHANS pet & Steve 633--6745 \ with trlr. $650. 962-6026. NEEDLE c RAFT '72! $75. 548-8373. N-~ 11 l l ' • COLl!IE/MaUon mips. 8 lhow puppies & all breeding -647-6427 ·n -% SUZUKI 400 MX. C he' k ll l 'C'-... n:u a east our mate ung _,..~ Character boa.t, 21' di':.UoM.· ~· e c. r1 ·~ DRAFTING table, 4'it8', pku1 ~ laddc~ck chairs. wk~. Weaned~ with stock. All colors. ~. 4 cyl Inboard/Excel oond. 32' CoJumbia Sabre, sips 4, l'ast, reliable. Jnidant l\la 800k drawer. 3 side drewers, F1n. or unh.n. h1ust be kids. 968-9325. · 3 MO. old German Short hair Parade Favorite 833-1445 xlnt race. $4950. 21 3 : Perl cond. Aft 6, 6'15-0Q . cranie ' me.chine A-dlll1r incl'd, sturdy. No antique!. Free or WANTED-iood bome. 6 yr pup, Sml !em, Good stock. •--776-61n days: 21.l: 377-.os72 ·n Honda 350 Basic, fancy knots, pal· 548-2965 a.ft 5 pm. reasonable price. Ph. Mike fem Cennan ~rd. Gd Make otter. 646--6692 aft&. DVt1tl, P~er 906 t'ves. $475 terns. $1. OUTBOARD 3 5 h at 897 7791 aft 5 w/ .... :•..i-~ u..... 1---------CALr20 extru includina use "~ --Ea8J Art or 11 •tr pt n · JI. -• 1.."lwv~...,n. -SJ,LKY pups, 3 mos old. Sae. 14' Sea Witch, four model. ·~ ~ Crochet -over 26 dcsl;ns to SEARS, 3 YEARS OLD $56 WANT E D-Te1u1ls mem· 8 adorable puppies. 6 wks. Males, SJ.00. Fetnales, $125. Frotn $695; Sea Witch of ~ng for .ummer. MEN'S' 3 11peed Rale.igh. make, SL • 6T3-69l5 • bc"hip 1n NeWP,Orl Btach .Fat,A 19ving. 847-3498 aft 6 wkd&.)'s, Marine, &46--0060; M&-03JS $2, • G73-92M. Good condition. $«), lnslnnt Crochet Boole -F1JCHSIAS. i'.ERNS. MISC. Tenp1s Club. ~1791. 1 545-4707' ** 2 PUGS wi1:h Jltl,JM!l'1, 16' 1971 NEWPORT 9~ 32' COLUMBIA Sabre. Sleeps * Gf2.3186 * learn-by ptcl\n'cl! Patterns. 50 lnr&e cru111 5(lo41. 291 E. Mutic1l lnstrum1ntl G2 JmEl: ,KlTI'ENS: must find male & female call after 6. JohlllJOfl fully e. q u I p j, e d , 4' $40Cl0 .. S4~J 1r 1 ''"68'""Su_z...,uk"l-,X"-6~HC,..u-st_le_r_l_:I00_ •• 1 $1. • 2.1ro St...i. Oo<!a 111.... . bom<I f<lr JoW!g JritleM. * 642·3019 * fr/S. 547·9645: 67".>4808, -,==c;::,.::::...:11""-=-I Set up tor dirt. Oomplele Instant Olh Book HONDA 90, Trail bike. SUS. FENDER Jaguar Cl.tltar Pleo~ call ~2688. "==::-.,-,.,=-=~==-·1-"=c.::..:~=c.::..::..=::::.._ Si\BOT •ilhMt, No ~l; 646-7231 ' ' -· ' • • • I ~! ~ I I lNSTAN'l' FASHION l!OOK • HUlldredl o t wbion IAd>. $!. -moro than 100 gilll. -IJ. S.bot <Ompl<te $!25 -· w/cuS!om padded J>ack. ~ FREE LABRADOR PU1'. BOSTON Whaler, clec Siar!, TOP COND. J--,,,=,=:-'.C7.--.,..,.-- 00ntplefo Afchu Book _ Stu • $a> 6f6..7'132 uv~ • ltard case. $J75. 5"-34l7• FREE ,kittens. 8·wk1, Blade M.Al.E;-9 ~ OlJ). 25 hp EVl.nr\We. exctl col'ld, $2'25. 631-4943 Cirl• bike wt ttainine $1 va,y · · Off~ F &. whitt:. 741 Main, Hun-• 9'f9..3900 • tlr. $1.195. rf3...2584. 49' 8 M let Sloop wheel!. Near new. u 1lll R 3'J &al CU!tom aquarium. • umlturt/ tinrt0t1 ll<Ocb. 5.16--0230. AKC Kaeohond N""" 7 w"'. 2 * 16' KENNEDY, M 111' • ' c:onvel"ted $40. - .... otr .'!'~.~-fl!::. &h. •land " •--·l-Equip. 124 .... N·~ •. n~-,,, ~· -tor cruloboc· Xlnt ed. '1MOO ='""""""°"'~,;:;.::.___ . .. • • nME .FOI QUIC:X CASH THIOU&H 'A DAILY PILOT WANT AD ' u • _ -.----~ -· LL~ s ~~ 111/3 F. Shots. OOt M+-00'13 Evinrudc. 14f wtll trBiler. 644-«)18 • 64~MO. '11 Honda CL 100. Din .. , lOc. $lS. 54lHl373. MOVING: d .. k., 2 dra-Jyroldoltaredmol<. or&M--0517. Manytxll'u.$$9l.·6~2 streec ~ m11 ... --LEHMAN 10 Good Cond. nd Qltltt Boot 1-16 patt=1. CARPE:l' FOR SAL:!: .bor1211ntal logol !U .. elec. A REA~ .LOVER. 614-UC IRISH Setter -· AKC, 1910 MINISPORT w/¥1 b.p. lnclud" 2 ,.I! sa11a -" t ::"'=,.,· $.100'="'. "'64"'),.~1467~·--~:-.: ~·I" e ~. C578!7"1!10i Lo>;!; ~ e d~':'.:'lm, c:o1ntroi I FREE .Uvtr ru I o l 1 tu re wormed, lholl, bOrn 5/28, II.,., 1""ller, Xlnl <Ond. fnlller. IJlO. 1Ht;-'IQl8, '10 B.~A fJl!O, PERFECT. 11100 ix~" ~·" llool< t • -• ~·-~....., Pane I , ouro pcdlaree poodle, male. TO ~$1:;;00:.:;_. 6;:13-&8::,.::;~~-::;,;;::;;=~J:;;llllO::;:.,· ;;°':,;'";::ft;:,t;;_o ... 614-iiii-1195"=."=': C.t-Ex<ol Con<!. ml, $300 + !aloe °""' - • · QRUN. VIP 8' Slate ""'M'iteno W/f)ll"'1' tape, Molt hom•, 963-21117. 6{\5.SE'l'8 15&. 14' LAKE II' SEA, 3li HP. '1'14.tt lnclujlcd. 13§, ment. 49!-3840 .!I"~ ~.'J'oday•o ~ pool tab!•. Exoel c:ond. -bU,.tion Pho!O ,. diam Put uw. "loo)" I• UC, M-F. 6 w ... Sholl. elect start. trlr, new ball,• ~'19~ r..i ...wi. ... , .. t • ""'._uluw patternt. ~ c&U $46.-ll2H ('Opler, Dmt tnlllf'l('r, etc. a ywr Wonned. 838-~ pa tank. $G>., 496-31116. I FEATJiER wei&b< Singe 675-8881. Levto ·oe!I -bouble~ fol LllASA APSO PUPPIES, * U' -i,,dro, • trlr. Anyd<y I! the8£S'I" DAY lo call •way.61W61!. ••••••••••••••••••• ..wine machine, I a~ y • 1 Sell idle' 11elt now! Call "bucllll", Call a...ui.d MAU;g, AKC REO. crocity eor. $100 er beat ot-run .. ad! Don't dtiay • • • A aood want Id II a aood bu.., mi..,. 1 -.' 64U618 now! :_64_:1-$7!. ________ .:_ 1 ___ CH:::_..::STOCK:.:.:::::::.·.:;6:::7>-'.::%::1l~:IO:._ r.r. 543-n;· ~u todoy ~ , .. s1men1. \'.\ • c • '70 .. lT 18 Sl I Cl1 ·n H L Friday, July 14, Im CAIL V PILOT J f _ .... lil I l§J I . ---l§J11._I _-_ ....... __Jl~J .I Cyclos, Bibs, .Molw ...._ MO Trucks H2 /;A~u~lol,;~1.,;m~1;,.~tlll~~9~7~0 Alllol, Imported 970 lUC, lmportJ m Autos, lmportlel Scoofort -• • "" --------1--..-.-''------1-----'-,. l·--:=----1 -----ALFA RO.-EO -ALPINE . BMW BMW • • · * *Manin Paree* '72 G.M.C. 970 lutoo, ._ .. .., DATSUN 1§:1 '---;;;;--~ .. ~'~~ .. ! 9%-Autol, Imported 970 Sus•n Gr.n1 311 v. Lindo Motor Hames Balboa l1lond You are U1e winner of Sales e Rentals 2 tickets to the Southland 558-3222 Home & G1rdtn 1411 s. Village Way, S.A. ·Show •n "'-E;lq)lorer 2)'1 &Ir, stereo, at '' ~ fuHy equlpped, aleepg 6, Lo ANAHEIM mue.,., Estate •a I•. CONVENTION $11,'ISO. 1963 N~rt Blvd., Brand uew 1912 ~ ton P.U. with upPer It Iowa mould· lngs, front shocks, front atabiliu.r, rear a~ plus puges, pllll! mUcb more. Serial No. TCS1427513399. $395 DOWN $88.06 P.er Mo. CENTER CM. 646-Sm. JU.ly 14. July 23 ,~.35~.'"'ero--".,.-=eoac::...c_h_l92_Hall __ lt:I Yes, just $395.00 is the total Please call 642-e.678, ext 31~ .,._ doYm. payment and onJy " .31.vft engine. Empty and "° 06 1 h between 9 and 5 pm to claim ready for convenion $28.50 .,.,.., & t e total monthly your tickets. (North County and consider any trade pe,yment including tax, Ji. toU.free number 1,s 540-1220) S4&-32U. ch.,,.. a 1 nd 36 all finance * * * c arges or months on Roni A Motor Home app-·-• --••t Th -• Alfa Rome1 '72- 2000 NOW IN STOCK For lmrnodloto Dollvery Instant Credit BANK F~NAl'fCING COAST • IMPORTS 19'l2 Tr tum p h Bonneville •vv~ u"l!W • e ca ... , 650cc. Sspd~cel eond. for your Vac•tlon price is $3ll6.37 Including 1000-1200 w. Paclfie est. Hwy. Leu than 30lb mi. Haw * &39-4301 * tax and Jlcense. ~!erred Newport Beach (nt) 642-0tOO new LA job. Must well or '72. 20' Harvest, Under 3000 ~ment price Js ~.16 Alfa Romeo trad I miles, Call aft, 5 week-1.... which includes all fuw1ce e or p.u. truck. Sl.350. """"... h I tforn or aft 6pm-536-8492. 549-2488. c arges, sa es tax and li· YAMAI-IA 250 DTIB Enduro .• 72 UFETIME M.H., 23' & cerise. Annual percentage , rate is 9. 76. lmmac, lllll """' equip.' l5'. Air, lax •• aa!ety equip., BILL BARRY Asking $450. Best otter prior xlnt rates. Pvt. pty., 968-1397 ~ouni: V~~~· MT-UM Troilora, Travel 945 GMC PPNTIAC FIAT· SCHWINN~ Varsity JO spd. TENT TRAILER (1st St. at S.A. Fr.vy.) Boys 23''. New condition. Cyclists Will Appreciate! 2000 E. 1st St. Santa Ana $85. '65 Travel Mate 558-1000 586-0875 Sleeps T, kitchon & add on •57 Ford llz Ton ALMOST new, Honda 7fi0. cabana, Frame completely NOW ON DtsPLA Y Sa.Jes Service: Parts Body Shop COAST IMPORTS 1000.1200 W. Coast Hwy. Lots ot extnui, 5,500 mi. rebuilt to carry 3 motor· Pickup Will consider car on trade. cycles. Extra Clean. Immaculate, Must Sell, dlr Newport Beach 642-0406 5$-1704. 5411-9451 or 897-0224. 1970 BULTACO 100 dirt bike, Aft. 9 P .M., ~3894 • ·n"-'-'llodg='-.-v-.. -~-. -T-on-.-v-.s-,1 many • extras $325, 1989 18' PROWLER. Self-ron. FM Stereo &. Tape Deck. Yamaha 100, good ~ ta.ined. Like new! Many, Many extras, best offer Bkr, $2'50, 89'i'-6108aft~fp:nr. Many-Extnu.-E-a-s·y 11-f e'l,,".&16-324~~2.::::==---! Yamaha*> Tra:ilibike, hitch. Sway bar. Bike racks. '5.5 Ford %T new eng trans Cl low il Air cooler plus more $1975. tires Paint etc. Runs •--•-ean, m eage. 96, _ ~ $145 642--0762 -voo;i. new & camper ~. BSA 250 cc, rebl.t ell{. Xlnt 2U' Fireball Tandem axle, '70 Ford Econoline % ton cond, $22S self/contained trailer. Just Inrulated paneled crptd' eall 64&4629 like new &: fully equip. 673-4500. ' ' ' Hitch lncl'd. $2400. ~5169. ,68 Ch .8 rt v Del '70 250 CZ MOTOCROSS. . evy po an uxe, "READY TO RACE." tte11, NIMROD tent trailer, used 5 LWB, Exrta seat. Excellent MA .,.....,.. ~ times. $300 .or best otter. Cond $1695. 646-3242. ·~~ Call 54&-7254. . '62 Ford Utility Truck V-8, ~NT trailer, llpg 6. Stove, Auto Trans, Radio, Heater. sink. Ice box, hardtop. $795. Must Sell $695 Bkr ... •••2 * TACO MINI BIKE 1t XLNT COND. $79. 67;-5842 644-1128. ' ~ . 196'1 Honda, CL us A TRA VELEZE 26• Twins '63 Chevy 3/4 Ton Scrambler. New to P • shower, oo. tully cont'. Immaculate, Must Seti, dlr 673-1932 aft 6pm/wkends Xtras, new eond. 548-8074 897-0'124. BRA.ND new bicycle-Lady's 13' Santa Fe, sip-a 4,1"·68-Fonl'---'-.-v-s.-.-ir-oond--.-Gem- R.alelgh Sport, $70. Call porta-potty. $650. top camper. Gas tanks. &tZ-6523 after 5 or 642-4321. Call 645-2163 M·ichelJn tires. $ I 8 9 5. ext 233• OASIS '63, 1lp8 8. 3 Burner,_64_2_-_m;s_. ----- '86 Alp!no $1099.oo, """ owner !S\JG 145) rnrrz WARREN'S Sport Car Center ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGES'\' 110 E. ht, $.A. 541-0764 A"'DI -.. ., .. 'TG Aim ·~ AMiiM: Beige. Going to E\u'Ope-.rnust seU S 2 7 S 0. 644-859). AUSTIN_~ME~_CA '69 SPRITE, AM I F ~I • radials, very good cond. 962-2751 BMW * '69 BM\V 2002 * Low mileage, P,rivate party, 835-1826 call aft 5. Daily Pilot Want Ada have bargains gaJore. ALL MOOELS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '69 BMW 2002 Low Bank Financing <!~d1u:-i·30AI . Btaullful up to $2199 On 48 Mo-'-. '-'-Tenn""s"--' __ cREVIER ' on approved credit ' MOTORS :Kl8 \Y, lst SI., Santa Ana 835-3171 A M~aniea Delight '67 DATSUN SlATION WAGON (a real flxtr uppe1·l ONLY $311. CASH Call 548-34CH alter 7 p.n1. -,68 DATSUN PICKUP FIAT FIAT --·1i FIAT Brand new 1972 120 2 dr. IC!d. Serial No. :JfSA0864fiOO .. '$199 DOWN $59.39 PER MO, Ye.-, just $199.00 b the: totaJ 4own payment ana mUy $59.39 total montblY PIY" ment including tax, ltctn!M', and all tinance charsu tor 36 month• on a·pprow<J ct'Nlif. The ca$h price hi, $1834.45 including tax" •nd Jlcensc. DefeM'ed payment prlct' is $2337.04 Which in- cludes au flnance charget, ' sales tax and llcmst::. An- nuo.l percentage tfltf' is 9. 76. BILL BARRY FIAT-PON TIAC·GMC llst St. at S.A. Frwy.l 2000 E. 1st St.. Santa Ana • 558-lCXX> JAGUAR • '&I Jag, XKE. Like _new. i\1ust sell QUICK! $19'.X>. Call 495.$'9 650 BSA, many extras, 4,000 stove a: oven, 50 lb ice box. i- miles, sac:ritice, $00>. ar Elec brakes. 1(195. 557-3163. Auto Le•s1ng best offer. 2099 Placentia, Costa M.,.. Trollors, Ullllly 947 1971 1JAMAHA 125 MX Low miles and ready to race Oean! $500 2 WHEEL steel baggage trailer $100. · •s '[M' ovER s1so,ooo 1ucH C\tl DODGE"" L • • • • 10 saEct Ask for John 644-1742 '70 BSA 650, PERFECT, 6000 mi. $300 + take over payments, 494·3840. POWELL trail/dirt bike, Rugged, • exeeJ,. eon d-.. 54&-1879, KAWASAKI Mini-trail MTL 1971. $»:>. Tra\:ler included. 961-8732. Mobile ,Homes 935 PLUSH Shasta motor homl!. 18' Comp. seU contained. Alt 6-497-2384. Motor Homes 646-4~ Try our lease e."<J>erts for Auto Sorvico Paris 949 Savinp • Satlifaction ·Ser-, v:loe. GOODYEAR Poly cl••• WE LEASE ALL POPULAR Blems All sizes Hi Jack. 1972 M.\KES AT OOMPE:I"I. ' ' TIVE RATES. ers $34.:10 pr, 14xT Map Call Malcolm Reid tor Sl9·95• ---further details. Tm~ CITY THEODORE 1950 Newport, Costa Mesa ROBINS FORD A L LE N SNYCROGRAPH ~ Harbor Blvd. MODEL E 1415 HD JTF Costa Mesa 642-0010 DISTRIBUTOR MACIIlNE . . 542-1734 Eves & weekend•. Autos W1nt9CI 968 PORSCHE engine, 11'50 cc. chnn &-hand paint, 1961 vw body, m eng. ~7916. '58 Ford ;) Ton P. U. tor p.ru, ! speed, six cylinder engine. 979-4575. REWARD WILL PAY OYER ON DISPLAY M•d M• • Kelley Blue Book I as 1n1 I A.......... I~ For late, model, cloan, 1 Ton Dodge chassis. %1.eeps 6. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii low mileage domes-• tics, imports, trucks or As$71.o1w99A.• Antlquo1/Cla11lcs 953 campers. · *. * ---; Call 3.ritJ ask for Bwer Gary Lovine DA YE ROSS TIOGA MOTOR HOME DEALER 181A' 1 Ton Dodge chassis. Sleeps 4. Immediate Delivery. crevier Motor Homes • W. 1st. Santa Ana 835-3171 •n · .. ~UNER MOTOR-' HOME ••• 28' Sleeps 8, Dual roof air oondltionl~, 5000 watt power plant •• room di- vider •• , water purifier • , • root rack and ladder ••• LOAbED •• ALL EXTRAS! (14lEICl REDUCED!! BEACH CITY DODGE ' 1~ Beach Boule\'ard Huntington Beach (n<I 540-2661> OPEN ROAD ~OTORHOMES 8M1 Garden prove Blvd. Garden Grove 894-H79 Motor Homo Rentlls Available tor dally, weekly or pl01lthly bMl&. 21'.. 23', and 25' sell contained Mo- tor Homes. all tqtdpt with ~erator, root air. .and many other t:xtru. All Coadhes are 1972 .modell. We bave the all steel Amtao lho. Piel!~ call 839-9560. CONVERTED School HtJ11. must scl1 any reuonable of. ~r. hu cvtr}'thlna ~ Lllot lo tra~ Our 'l'rldtt'• l'm¥UJe cqW!o lob,...! - 3809 $, Sycamore Sant• An• PONTIAC You are the winnor of 2 tickets to the Southlond Homo & Gordon Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER July tf • July 23 Please call 642·5678, ext. 314 betwttn 9 and 5 pm to claim your tickets. <North County, 2480 Horbor Blvd. Coile Meso 546-8017 WE PAY TOP CASH tnr uaed can ~ trucl<a, lust ea11 Us fc.co free estimates. GROTH CHEYROUT toll-free number is 540-1220) A.lk for Salet Manaa:er * * * 18211 Bl!ach Blvd. JEEP ''lot a kind"!! SWTey Huntin(ton Beacb or Oalc Dat bed convert. Lots 141'.f087 KI 9-3331 ot tun-A-ooga horn. Mind WE buy all makes of clean cond. 2 whl. dr, 4 cyl. $1200. uaed spotla cars, pald for 548-8532. or not. Please drive in for 1929 Model A Roadster tree ftppr&isal., w/Rumble 11eat, f u 11 y ttstored. $2'i00/best offer. 646-5169. Dune Buggies . "' NEWPORT IMPORTS '67 Corvair e:nglne l,40 and 3100 W. c.out Hwy,. t...,,., MD<:. """"W' wide Newport BeacJ\ chrome """'111 .\ oOaa<r 642-9405 block tirtl, Tube cbusls Ir WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Nd< I< P~ II-, FOR TOP USED CARS A-enns. New-1100x15.and U )'OUI' car ls extra clean tlr.!!e: 6: mng wheels, DIR IN us first. I lights, seat & hamet11, etc. BAUER BUICK 142-2468· 2925 Harbor Blvd. MEYERS l\hruc Dune BU&· Costa Mesa 979-2500 gy. street legal. Hard top IMPORTs WANTED w/1lde curtains, 1500 eng. Oranre Counties 646-WS TOP $ BUYER 1970 MYERS Toed, street BILL MAXEY TOYOTA lepl. P.mct condition, 18181 Beach Blvd. $1200. can 53&<l269. ll lleoch. P!I. Ml-8555 T ruck1 . 962 WllL Buy Your car poid for ' lit not. 'Call Ralph Gordon 68 Van, •n& reblt Dec. 250 • '73-0ll00-415 E. Cout Hwy. 6 cyl. 2 S¢ auto. P~ A Newport Beach. 1nailated, map • tlrw. ....;.=c.cc==----l 54M093. . Autot, lmportlel 970 '70 DodCJe 314 Ton '71 TOYOTA-OPEL-DATSUN· V-3. Auto Trani, with lm!f<e WAGON SALE! (C)l68SXJ Body, Must ,.11, dlr 1191--0224 (468FVY) (499CPNI YOUR 19'72 Ii Ton. GMC Vu. CllOICE $fGSI. Thoodom $,W.B. $3. 79>i. ~ Ford., m> !lilriJor CaJJ-.-...... c-t1.t-.~o. I fROM -~ -. --. _ NEW '12 TIOGA . 18 112' MINl-MOTORHOME 2 Floor plms lo choose frotl\.. • .sleaps 4, oplional 6. 1 ton Oodl]tctm- sis with duals, 360 V-8 qllle, Automotit transmisWn, power 11w- ing, power brobi. self-containeCL A hmendous Yoh.it. ORDER YOURS HOW. S,ec5-tly hlif•lll Senk• St•llt tt Acc••••.ft JOUI IKIUTtol.U. YIHICllS IEGAHl.ISS Of SIU,• ,wt.I JUI pwdlaM t remotionol ot lloch City DollQt lQV C09 nst ossunct your p,irthose n bocbd bf tht fio'.nl end most rtli&- Wt factory lrail'led spcialists CIVG!loble. (YW'f IMChonic is~ to harde al of .. ,.,..:ial pn>blerM ~ lqlf' f9Cr.utioAol whiclts. WI wnnT MSTAU. •• ~ •STB1EOsmtMS • GBBATORS • AW·C0f«>IT10Nllri • AwteG All> UfCaCOAlllG TO mP OUT ROAD NOISE It YOUR MOT~ ~ WI SllVKI AU SYSTIMS. , .- •ELECTRICAL • ENGINE: • PiliMBlffG • TlANSMISSION • Ernm SURFACES• IITTJllOR DECOR • UPHOlSTlR'Y • AUXl.IARY POWEi Pl.ANTS • GlASS • Alt CONDITIONING • wt ALSO DO COMPtrn ClEANlNG, Rl'NEWAL ANO DEOOORIZJG OF M M'ERtOR Of YOUR HOME Off WHEltS. • WE CUSTOMIZE YAM CONYERSIOH TO SUIT YOUI VAtATION READY ••• NEW 112 rACE-ARROW MOTORHOME ................... WflatlnOIMHo ....... Wlltr wp,17 •ilh 'uiy, bbtll.~lhfllk. tiDll. .-.,., lloor, tunem. lltftljl (Obintls, :115 (~, Ill~ tlnttd tloit &-Wal it Wt1! tMU lflltrerJ. Ser. 111Al2S717SI \, NEW '12 DODGE VAN CONVERSION $· SELECT FROM FAMOUS BRANDS PACE ARIOW oMELMAI • •CHINOOK & TMIOA • P.RIDI 'II JOY• • HOUDAY & CONYIMPO • GYPSY & SIERRA• TRA VllETTE e fTC. · NEW'72 MEL MAR MOTORHOME Wifl chw1I flllMlf V·I tngine, tutomotic IMmmisW:in, poww 11Hring. pow« btokes, fully stlf·contoiMd. .slMJ15 '· beou1ifully lf'POi'ited inttriar. Ser, '318F2USS7443 30 DIFFERENT ROOR PLANS ON MO- TORHOMES AND MINI MOTORHOMES CIAn Miii MOTOIMOllt ' sa., •• Goim.rt 11'frlt-n.w.. -.rt ••• ~ "' """' ·~ . v.1,~._·,•11...w. .... f\AI .................... .,._ .... IMIAAO.U.mCS1• :i58ai $2788 '70 Van Travel Trailer 17' BORUM VOYAGER • • I • ' / . 4! DAILY PILOT • Frldlf, Jul1 14, 1972 I ~~~ ~ .. k. .. li~l l -. .... l§J I -. .... l§J [.__ ... _ .... _ ... ---']§) I'--·_ ........ _ ... __,\§] I 1.~-·-~---.·} •. '!'..;~ ..... --·-'-1! Autvs, 1-rtod 910 JA~UAR MERCEDES IENZ _Autv1_..;•_1..,,,.,......_r1_o11 __ m_ A.,._, lll!ll•rtod 970 Aue., lmp1rMtl I, / In I j I I f .I I 17111 AE ACH BLVD. H:J~OTINCTON 1-'LAC.H 1!4 Lf.+ f, POUCHE RENAULT Transmission for MGTC Xlnt'conditlon. • 546-0135 • MGB 445 E. Cout Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH im:oooo Ext 51-54 .. (Open Sunday) •0tber ·med Porsche1 now in stock '6.f..'70. 1910 PORSCHE 914-6, lo miles, 1actqry w a r T t y , AM/FM, mags. Sacrlfi~ $4700. After 6 pm call 968-80lll. Brond New •n SAAB SONm '•0585 $3595 ·--. '72 SAAB 99E .• Demo, vinyl 'roof, AM/FM # 1400 $3195 • ANDERSON 1" IMPORTS "; -• 5~ J C'132 ,. " XLNT. ~nd. 911-T Pone¥, 1969. My equipt Best of· '69 MGB w/w, RAH, dark 675-5850 suB·A-RU . grn, make oiler. (213) ~fc.Cer'=. '--.,.--=· ~-o~-· GM-Sffl Beach '68 Ponche 912, am/lm, ex----,,==-:--- •w · eelleni condition. $3600 " * . SUBARU *~ · OPEL . 83()..~. · :FREE DEMO OYERNUiHT TO TEST DRIVE '69 Opel Kadett geld w/black '6l Porsche lliOO. M Low u Sl599 M~hanic approved-$1li00 FRITZ WARREN'S BUY landau, fut wll $825. Prlv 673-8844 -962--0404. 'li6 Porache. Reblt 1750cc, Sport Car Center, or PEUGEOT reblt trana. N•w clutch, •ORANG~~ NT Y 'S ~ nd ---~-'69 p ... -t ..icoo 00 -"""' '70, 914, white/black. Appear VOLKSWAGEN l9G6, 0..n-y l'7~~K ••• cond..Attree ~t )ob-lo Luxuriou>hardtopcoupewtth • m I le........ cluteb-ftblt i......,. lilr eond lull _, • ~ .-r-Mlchelin tlr8, II lneludloc door ~ vlnyl To)totl A: jagoar Dealer ~ a BUG 1hil • it top, tilt wbtel, stereo.' multi· Autborbed &a&a 6 Servtce pJex, ltrato aeata, sport llCIJ & Cooll llllbway '68 VW BUG 4 speed, i"_~oodGI-j-m-la, etc, V•ry low, low ~ il«J.'3100 . OA'11l-'~ tleo. (lOTCPM'J. _ Throdore l\oblns Fonl. 2060 $4m ·n Toyota Land cruller baro Harbor' Bll-11,. o:..t., ii.tea top, ttve aid tire9 • 10" twi-0010. • ua1.--wkte chrome wbeet., New. --o==,..,-.,.---'l _., Tho aates, tires " rim• '65 vw Baja bua. Cadillac New eng, big bor. kit, used, 13100, IM2--. -u•nnnR "' new ~tra Wide tires. .........., ~~ ~ S;\CRIFICE-''JO Toyo ta Pert. cond. Nevtt oU the COSI'A MESA • Corolla Sta Wp. Lea:! road. $595. 8311-9821 ~9100 Open SUnday for Euro~. $50. le vw .'61 German cainper, 1500 19'1 Buick Rivlerl over. Bob, 847-3653, fac eng, reblt warranty. FuU power, factory air eo~ TRIUMPH Orig priv owner. $675 ditiohlng, vinyl root, .rtrato 632-n66 seats, sport whetlr, AM-FM * TRIUMPHS * '68 VW .BUG = : :1·1e~ ~ 71 CLOSEOUT • _.i, radlo, beeter; $915 45,00l ·mit". SPITFIRESASl.OWAS$2399 orbestoffer644-4687. SALE PRICED GT-6 S~VE $50q '111 VW Bua. Gd. Cond. • FRITZ WAIµtEN'~ W/sunroot. Stereo hookup. Spart Car Center · Best otter will not be ORANGECOU NTY'S reluaed.646-J389alt5. ' • Nabers Cadillac LARGEST '66 VW front end col-no E, ht, S.A. 547-0764 lis'°n. xlnt tor Baja Bug, bl ~~~L., '69 TR6 $2299.00. Sharp, ,65xlnYWt co~~~~n ~75000' ~~~ 540-9100 Open SUnday AM-FM, lug/rack ( 9 0 3 , 6C\ICU.I, 7'1, or,.u.,.. ETC) ml New paint, Eves, Fabulous Buick ',71 ;;. , FRITZ WARREN'S * 64U'l85 * 14,IXX> Mt. •All xtra.s! 'Pt.rf . Sport Car Center '65 vw Bug, Good condition, eond. l3390: 642-4189. ORANGE COUNTY'S must 5'11. I;>lr, $500 . "69 Rivier;a. TitliY qeuip, '57 Merced.el m s, blue, ex-brkl. $2,000. 645--M99. 'ilO E: ht St., S.A. 547...o764 LEASE terjpr •-eo •• eng ·~ mlle;,i-;..,,;'(Z,,Y560'j-·gn;u;,, Chrm whit. AM·FM. .. "'"TOYOTA · · · ·· ·-..... ···· · · ··· ' wWk. 13110, 642-2446. FRlTZ WAJUU!:N $3,000. 552-110!. '66 230 ,SL. red, both tops, 4 Sport C C t 'GS Porache SC Sunroo~ tape-_,i, lo miles idnt cond. ar eft er N ' ~. Bkr Prlv party. $3500;-&M-f521; 110 E. ht, SA --St7-0'1'64 =~· ew ell5u•e, -" '72 TOYOTA .COROLLA . ---···----LARGEST·······-· S».-1592. --I:.owmlle.$2750 110 E. !st, S.A. 54Hl764 1968 VW bus, 7 ..... w/bed, 64Ul46 - ,66 TR-4 A I R.S Good stereo · tape & xtraa, '61 Buick Sky Ler1c. 2 dr, Cond. 1§1)2. Herbs Game. $1700/best ofter Ml-8588 xlh't cond, 42.001 mi's. K.!rw • I Autos, Imported 970 'Aul'!'• Imported 970 '62 Poracbe 356, yellow, . $1966 els-SAVE • 52399 ~~AND NEW '71 SP ITFIRE ·~~~ (62JOf chrome rims. AM-FM. Xlnt eond. $2100. 962-1522 <+ T. &L.) or RENAULT ... Riii;..1i Demo s;1;' Semi Annual Domonslr1tor Cloer1nc1 Sele This Weekend Unbeatable Prices ALl nn MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAt BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS $39.30 MO. F1JLL caah price $2,096.30 in- cluding tax & lice~. Down j>ayment fs four hundrecJ· dollars. $39.30 total monthly payment including interest, tax 6 license. 35 pay plws balloon payment of $800, --Total defered pay price $2,575.50. A.P.R. ll%. On pre-8.lTanged credit , (300785), . DWtltwi4 -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64S-9303 '70 Corona Mark Il ~iq. R&H, 11.uto, $1695. 21032 · 1000-12D W. Pacltl.c Cat. Hwy. Beckwourth Cir, H.B. Newport Beach (114) 642-0406 ~96&-::=,7::;628==-==c-·-.,...., Fast results are just a phone Need a "Pad"? Place an 1ad! call away -642-5678. Call w..56?8. Autvl, lmportod 970 Auto1;lmportecl 970 Price DATSUN Then Decide! StS-9114. 'Betw. 8-5. -CLEAN '67 VW, Sparkletts Sz bed. 645-1638 . TR6 '69, excel cond. Best offer 6'13-6414 .,...,, Good eond. lS61 BUICK 4 DR. 549-1332 Runs! $30. call between 5 pm ... ~ GOOD condition &: dean, & 10 ~-549-2193. 1969 Squel'eba<k, 11400" CADILLAC ' VOLKSWAGEN Capistrano Beach 49G-&Tl3. '69 vw. $1199.00. Sharp, radio, w/walla (ZSH285} FRITZ WARREN'S Spart Car Center e ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGESI' 710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547--0764 * 70 VW Convert. * Good -· Ex. eond. $1S:ll. 546--2932. '69 VW BUS reblt engine, 4.1,000 ml. $lllll0• * 213: 592-Sm *'59VW* $250. 64'"6499 1'70 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE FAC'roRY AIR '67 BUG, .reblt eng., new CONDITIONING paint, top cond. $995. Full power, all leather inter-* &w.-OO'J7 * ior, tilt A: telescopic ateer- -~.,~1 =·vw BUS ing, stereo, door lock~ A ·Best ofter. Dotty 675-1410 local beauty that fa truly outatandin& thruout. (914-YOLYO BE1) • 1972 YOLYO L11S1 Tocloy at $4441 G7 Naberi -Caclillcic Bost Rates "ro vw Fastback, x1nt eond., $18.74 Por Mo, $1600. 644-4100 before 5 pm, o.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. trans., 2600 HARBOR BL., . COSl'A MESA uk for Janet. dl.ac brakH. 36 mo. ·ro vw. AM-FM, For L111lnt or buylnt XLNT COND. $1395. S46-563I '58 VW Bu&, Pet1ect cond. $1000/beit offer. 49C;-00.18 days. 675-38ll eves. '59 VW, needs work, $225. or best. Vince, . ~Wt lfJl!i4 -YOLYO 54().9100 <>peD &mdaJI '67 Sedon De Vlllo Vinyl top, cloth A: leather in· -· fuH power, factory air conditto nt n c, titt-tetescopic 1 t e~r1 n g -.1, AM·FM n.dlo, .... XSSl!IO). . 1972 VOtVO '69 vw :~~d~ cond. Orig owner. 644-4996 : Exeet $12llO. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '66 Volw w&gon, Rebuilt .Engine, 4-.Spd, Roqt' Racks, Sacrifice S 7 9 5, Bkr, &l6-J242. $2222 2 DR. SEDAN_ 1 °'·1o"'vw~Squattba~~ck~S~tatio~. n Wagon, air cond, xlnt oolld. 552-9617 after 6:~ s79 DWN. '70 VW bug. Xlnt cond. New point, tirel, plugs. 216 Cl!lf Dr. L.B. 497-1968; '35-3100 "63 VW, :a:lnt cond. $315. 548-"626 RED '68 Volkswagen, 46,00l AMERICAN '65 RAl\ffiLER \V a g o .n • Oaa&ic. Radio, h e a t er, autonlatic, P.S., air cond., (NNF6841 1651 ~ Rob!Jv; Ford., 2000 Harb:ir Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010. BUICK miles.' Radio. 11025. Call 1'70 BUICK • Nabers Cadillac 2600 llAIU!OR BL., COSl'A MESA 54().9100 Open SUnd11 '69 Cad Sedan de Ville 39,00l miles. Orig owner. ExCel cohd. '.AM/FM a t e r e o • 546-0101. '68 CAD Coupe de vm., 'Vlriyl top, clean, .,.,,. 1 ,good, $l600. 557·li89 58676 Por Mo, &io;oo7o. . DELUXE RMERA CPE. '61 VW Bus. Runs good. FACI'ORY AIR '66 CAD Con. de V~, 1 Reblt 1ranr;, $liOO or CONDmONING owner like new. $1295. Call $18" Den Is Totlll best 847-1427 eves Full power, strato seata; ~-=-~42~·~~-~~ DoWI ,.,_., '61 VW SQBCK. stereo, sport wheels, vinyl 1966 Blue Coupe de VlDe $8676 " ts Totol · * 546-2437 * top, local\ beauty that loolta Cadillac. Air cond. $1,Gt. ... ..oiil ;;;;"";;-;==,.OM"= [ &: runs like day It was de-096>--4:;;~150::'.''=-"""~"7-:-M-,.,_ ''t,."!; =r~': i:; livered new~'i99ASP). -'65 CADILLAC: * * * * DRIVE ONE OF OUR ECONOMY CHAMPIONS - YOU'U TAKE IT HOME! , I ..... I otter. Pvt ply, 847-7855 alt ~ Like new, lully )ciaded (M>!H. CHh prtco . I ........ P •• '69 VW wgn.Very Oean. • N be 91>) 1995 dlr,0557.-2132: flX & llconH, Deforrod Good cond. AM/F'M stereo. a rs '70 CAD S do V lull payment lncluclo1 ' bal-~ .. Call 536-4661 alt cacmicic stereo tape, xint ..':"'i loon of $1425 plus 3S pay-5:30 w-. Anytime wkend1. 2600 HARBOR BL., owner. (114) 846-7269 or BRAND NEW 1972 DATSUN "1200" 2-DOOI SEDAN· $f1ndtrcf •11uipm1r1t l11clvcf11 h11t1 r, -'efro1ter, "!'hl .. w11l tir11, ltum,.r 9111rdi. locki11! 4i• t111k, 4.,,.,.,, 11/ 1y11• chro tr1111. I much more hie uclh11 • .,,, lO mil11 p1r 911• ' l1rt. Sir. No. LBI 10ll6151. '1976 . . BRAND NEW. 1972 U'L 'HOSTLER PICKUP MODIL 121 Vo to 25 mllfl 11tr Ollllri !loll fOll COM:;lt¥, All Vf"lt lfltwfor, S-ll*d llNIW/dtfrosffr Ml WIMd "'"' & ...,..,., ........ 4111 ~ fnlns. BASE PRl~E ,. '226550 + LICGI Solll Tai(, L~ Qel, Sierva THIS NICE INC.LUDES PllU•LAS CAMPll .t ,, ment1 of $86.76.! Total ~ MUlt Sell This Week! COSTA MESA (213) 592-5353. deferred . $4$39.60. An-'66 VW Squareback Wagon.' 54().911111 Open Sunday '67 Cad Eldorado. Looks lllie .nual P1rc1nt191 Rate Good condition. R/H. Good '67 BUICK ELEC'I'RA, load-'70 w/Iate model bim & 11 .00o/o. tires $775. 962-3822. ed w I ex tr a • . IM· gold fittmist paJn_t $2900. '69 Bug, AM/FM. t.rg MACULATE! 494-5187. 673--0526. ! DE. AN LEW' IS rear wheels. Conskkr For '\bat item under iso, try Sell .thF old &t\llt Buy the. trade, 642-4610 the Pe:My Pincber. • . • ~ ~. _ . A-, Imported m Aut .. , lmperted '91i ~"'91, Imported ' 970 sOOthe''carof theyear!' Jaguar~ ' I bad Test Mafazlne lllllld' Japi' ·XI& "car of tlle ,_. 1111t's ll8fte a trfld. Tllen api, the XIS Is . ""8 a· car. It's • EplaJ in • sblwrm 111. C. see the XIS - till car of year. -lmnlmlati Delvly! ' - • . ' . . " ' ' " • . :; . •: . " • . -: ·: . I ,( . ·:-.. ,. ~ . , • . ~, . : I : Vl >~ J ; . ,. ' . .. ' ·I 'I ' I I I , I I rrldlr> .1111y tc, 1912 OAIL Y PILOT ~ 1§11.. -.w... l§J I -b .. 990 Aufol;·UMd 990 A ..... , UMd DODGE FORD ODD BALLS =..,...---...,.,.,--'66 Con~ 4 cir. Leolbor Int, 70 Townsman w--.... Low· -1......,.. ·ro eonu..nw • c1r, tu11 DODGE "66 Monaco. 11,095. '67 Ford Falcon !:cono. Club DODGE DART '68. PS. w g ' ••• . ""I"" ~ llU-391'. p<Yft<. lather int. Qlmate V-8, A-T, JntiT brks, It.I', aion. JNlll, ~ llX, wind, eeat, dr k>cks. Ft dl!lc 2 dr hdtp. Gd cond. Pvt pty. auio-.trana. RlH, Mark JV brb. tilt Whl, fact air, luq :r,m. (n4) 962-«$ alr, blue Int. & ext,. W/W • VI, Automatic, Powt.r Steer-'82 • 1'5,00t mBes. 'Excel ~. 6 way Mt.t, Radi9.l Inc. (403BllL) 11995, dlr. Cond All Ex1rat. $775. -facinry warr. Orie CORYAIR rack. pvt pi,.. CRYB986> FIREBIRD tires. ru<ch nm. - IEAlY TO-BOUNCE 136-&:i.15. °"""· -· .......... ~ -1910 Chev °"""""' Eltal<, Uave llllm<tbblr,... want ., ''6 Continental Cpo. n4/64S-2875. .,,:alt~&=-. ~~~_,...,,.,...,,.,.-,1 'Ill Dart, auto. PS, PB0posb '68 FIREBIRD 350, vinyl top,. 'Cl& GAL.XL~ hanl~4 button. Runs well. uxi. mag whls, Michelin tlrel, spd. exeel cond. Befit otter. g Pass. ' sta. wen. Pwr sell! Oasrlft«I ad• do it Immaculate, Loaded, Must Steer<ng • -·. AM-FM well. <all NOW~. Sell. dlr. 897-022f. 1964 CORVAIR Good Condition, $lll5, * 846-lllT * 5l& 8()59. 11750 firm. 673-7267. ~- '60 RENAULT DAUPHINE KWK515 $1'2.25 '61 RENAULT R-10 WIH497 ..•..... $612.16 'ff RENAULT R·IO XTU391 ........ $731.54 Stereo radio, tUt steer. whL Faciory Air, luaP&e rid<. --·-PaneJ. Ing. Alklng $3100. 557..a&I. •n CHEVY Nova 2Dr. Full factory equipment, good ....... (961CT(}) 11151 ~ Roblno Ford., 2>60 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ' '61 RENAULT R·IO WPZ823 •... , •.. $737.50 &rl-0010. . '61 RENAULT R-10 UNE856 ........ $807.71 ~~~~--/&& Nova 2 Door '61 RENAULT R-10 VIW783 ....... , $637.ff 6 eyl., automatic, tape deck (TPA906l 1795 dlr. 557·2132. '67 Corvette: 427 Hpd. Air cond. 2 Tops, ·~ 5.5,COl ml., clean I: orlglnal. Excelleiit conditioii. OUer. '70 RENAULT R-10 893BNP ........ $995.23 ,'7.1 RENAULT R-1' 609EIB ........ $2295.00 82&-1861. ' .ilim .Slemoui 1967 Olev. Caprice, V-8, auto trans, p/r., A/C, landau !Dp, good oond. lill5 or best offer! · lfll Gialer C.M. ~. 2201 So. Main St., Santa Ana 168 Matib\I El Camino with p/11 p/b, r/h, gd, cond. 17 mi's per gal. For info 549-3582, 10 AM-4.30 PM. ·' 546-4114 '67 CAMARO ·: .. • • ' CADILLAC ·: ,. 1969 CADILLAC 1 SEDAN DE VILLE , , Factory air oonditloning, full ·,P)Wer, vinyl top, plush full leather interior, tilt I: te:le- ~ ICOPIC steering, door locks & l ; ia host oJ other deluxe xtras. '.: Tndy .an exceptional value :: at this low price, ·. $3444 .· • Nabers .: : . C9dillac , ' • lOOO HARBOR BL., i COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open &mday YOUR ONLY FACJ'ORY AUTHORIZED . CADILLAC ·: , DEALER · ' sell!Ctlon of Cadll· : cs in Oran&e County. :-Salet-Leulng.. • Nabers, Cadillac :l600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA ,r 540-9100 Open Sunday l971 CADILLAC FACTORY AIR CONDinONING , Vinyl top, plush full leather ·" '"1nterior, full power, tilt A: : telescopic steering, stereo, i : door locks, new WSW tlre1. • An exttption&l value at tb.Ls low sale price (11BCQ!). $Sm Nabers Cadillac 2fiOO HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA ·: SllJ.9100 Open Sunday 1S69 Cadillac Coupe de VW.. Leather seats, ste~ all .texln.J, low mileare. Sacritlce. Must s e 1 l. 536-,1624. . '69 ·ELDORADO " l"ACTORY Air, full power (084-CPP) 13595. n..Jer. -· ' Aut.., UHitl 9iO CADLLA 1971 CADILLAC EL DORADO OONVERTIBLE Truly the fintst of the great line of automobilt's. Luxury is everywhere. Only 10,211 local ~les. Fact. air oond., full power, tilt A: tele!ICOpic steering, door locks, AM-tM stereo w/multlplex tape, trunk Jock, a sentinel that turns your ll&hts on le oU for )'OU. Plus a ho&t of features to bring the thrill of motor- ing back to )'OU. (078CXW). SALE PRICED ·Nabers Cadillac 2fiOO HARBOR BL., COSTA>~· 540-9100 Open SUnd'-Y * * * Mrs. Robert Rapp 274 Wave StrHt L1guna Beach You ,ate the!_\1.•inner of 2 tickets to the Southland Home & G1rden Show at the V8 Automatic (TSR419) $1095 dlr.~. * 1959 OIEVY * IN GOOD COND. $1.IO • 962-5206 '57, 2 Door. $200. 2468 Fairway Drlve Costa Mesa Aft. 6 '71 Chev. l.fallbu. Fully loaded. X1nt cond. Take over payments. 586-0944. '681mpala Immaculate, Sacrifice, Mlllt sell dlr, ·897~. '66 Chev. i'Caprice" radi'1 tiftL See to appreciate. $1000. 544-Ml7 '64 CHEW Impala Wagon, V-8, auto, P/S, air, R&H, $495. MZ-1593 after 5. '67 Impala 2 Dr HT, Vinyl Top, Air Cond, Auto Trans, 327 Engine $1095. 646-3242. '62 Nova Station Wagon, V-8, Auto Tnuu, exceJlent Run. nlng Cond., S395 646-3242. '63 BEL AIR $395. Clean body &: lnterior.· V-8. Auto, R/H. 54lh1023 '63 Chevy Greenbriar V a.n, window type. New brakes, radio, good tires. $295. 64W162. CHRYSLER ANAHEIM '50 O>rysler Now Yorlrer CONVENTION Re-built. $350. 613-4;536 2'll CENTER Poppy, Corona del Msr. July 14 • July j3 '60 CHRYSLER Sta Wgn, Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 power, air eond, xlnt cond, between 9 and 5 pm to claim good tires. l65(). 644--7629 :;our ticket.s. CNorth eounty. -'--=c"'O"'NTio-==N""E=NT~A~L-11 toll·free number is 541).1220) ~ cADILLA~ epe. o.vw: '69 Continental Full power, tactary air Cou~. Full power, factory cond., good mile•. (965AUJ J air co~itlo~, vinyl top, U451 nieodore R 0 b i n·s leather interior, tilt wheel, Ford., ~ Harbor Blvd., AM-FM stereo radio, power Costa Mesa 642-0010. door locks, local 1 owner. CHEVROLET '68 Impala Custom· Just an outstanding car. (ZLIQlS). $3444 • Nabers COUPE, Factory Air. cvzu. Cadillac 549) $1495, dlr. 836<i535. 2600 HARBOR BL., '67 CHEVE1LE 2 DR. U.T. COSTA MESA V-3, Automatic, Factory Air 540-9100 Open Sunday Condltioninr CVEF 710) Sell the old llufl. Buy the $1295 *dlr. 8J6.6535. new stuff. I~-~~---~~ Autos, UMd 990 Aute., IJHd 990 15°/o DISCOUNT FIOM FACTORY STICKEi( PRICE On Any 1New '72 Buicl Electra llS, Riviero or Estate Wagon In Our Stock • · 14°/o DISCOUNT · · FIOM FACTORY STICKR PRICE On Any Le · S.bre or le Sabre Custom In• Our Stock 11°/o DISCOUNT FIOM FA~T!)RY STICK9' PRICE On Any 5r(larlt or Skylark CUltoin.t In Our Stock - SPECIAL LOW ·PRIC.ES' On AD Opels In Stoel TOP VALUE USED CARS 78 SKYUlll '68 smJIK . '19 YW BUG no s,... c..,.. Air ceM., atrlti., ,..,,,., tfNt• f!rlt, ...... •ekh ..... .. ,... •'-" +.11. M111y ott.n. (l41CJTl Sl'ffi•I .w ......... ty $2497 Cu1toM h•rtl .. 11 C,.. Air c•IMI., •flt•., ,..., dfft- i~ a,'-•••· ..,._,. ..,. m•t wti .. h, etc. tXlH· 112) s,..,1.1 thlt we.• •• 01111 $1697 A1, c.M. t•4ie, 4 spied. l qlJ10t, s,.cl1I thh w.ok 1t only • sm 10W -HIAI -n 11-1m • Slfl & Waltlut 9 ~ """""""' ..... 5311511 • I I • I •• Rock Bottom Prices ·Rock Bottom Monthly Car Payments BANK OF AMIRICA AUTO·MAGIC FINANCING Car lo Drlvar Mo..,.iM lo 1olilmld •-patttloo test rated GoHral Motors, llkk Opel 1900 s.rta1 ,,.., Capri, Plitto. Y .... Toyota lo Mmcla. Brand New '72 Opel 2. Dr. Sedan s299· :~At!-ssa 12 PMNT PER MONTH an 11 t1t11 .._ "'"'*"'· ue.12 ttta1 "*'· '9r-t .., u mM1t1s & 1 1111111 "1~ " ...... lllC ...... tu. llUllM, unyifll dllf'lell • ...,.... crtcHI. Dlftrf'tld ,...,_. ,,.k• ·~ AllllMI ~ ... r•te 11.ll'lt. PrkH lllC ........... Olk lrlbs, fllw.,,. v.tlllfllll, DtlUXil C11t11le, l" .. dtd 1111""'° w ...... Vil>yt Tf'iftt, ta'""91, 4 SPffll '""'·• 9M $afely 0....,, Helvy Ovty Clllllllo • Wlr!ttw MR ..... It. ~ 0... , .... flUtvres.. Brand New '72 Opel Sport Coupe s299 :~t!-s71 43 PMNT PER MONTH aft ff ""'' .... JIYl'l*lf. sn.u "'" -· ,.,_, ,., a ,.,.,... a 1 1111111 ,.,..,... .. Sl'tt, IKL Mil: IN Ne. Mii t:•n'Ylntl dtl,,... Ill ~ er.I•. DtterNllll """· "°5cti SM47.IS, -I """"" ... reh lt.Sl'Jlt. l"rk" Inc: .......... Dltc lrlk", 1'19w Tllni v ... 111111et1, 0.111•• c-11. l"affH ..... ... Gllllnll, Vlftyl Trim, (1r"tl"', 4 s ...... Tr•n1., GM Slfelr Group, """' Dlltr Clfllllt. W ..... MM ....... & MlllJ 0...... PIM l' .. twns. Brand New• '72 Opel GT s299 :~.:-17482 PMHT PER • . • . MONTH .,,, 11 ..,.. ..,. ,.~11t.a tetat ~ ,.,.._. tw u .....,.. a 1 ••• ,.,.,._. .. " 11-. ._..,._,tu.,._. Hiii ""'"" ~ • ,,,.._. cl'Mlt. ~ "'"""" lll'ke ....... ,. ............... "" ,,...,.., ~. •,. J ' • .....,.. ....._ "-Delli! an..,' Plew nn. v ...... -. Dtilfte Cl!IM!e, ............ • ...... V ..... TrtM. c.rr-,· 4 S.... T ....... OM Slifllly .....,, Ktlvy D11tr C......, ...... ,, .. ,,. &Ml9r..................... . Brand New '72 Opel 4 Dr. s,dan s299 :~ANL s5a12 PMNT PER MONTH sm It tttll d0w11 p;ivmut, 1sa.12 lol•I mt11. P•Yll'ltnl tor u 1M111tt1 a 1 t111111 peymtflt • IMOI, lllCIV!llnt !IX, lk•llM, c1rryl1111 dl1r11•• Oii •PP""'" crtctll. Dlftrncl ply!Mllt prk• Nt54.tt. Aft111111 prrcen11,. r•I• 11.SO'M.. ' PrkH IMhldt Pewer OllC: l rlltH, Flew Tiltu V91111Ll tlon, Dthilrt C-le, PMl!ld llfltl_. Ill' CkMrft,. Vl11yt Tri'"-C11r,.i1M, 4 t,...i Tr•M., GM hltlY 0 ,.... HMYY 0111'1 CMllftt. ........ MIUIGillf• & Mllny Otlltr ,.,. PMllll!'ff. . Brand New '72 Opel Ralley s299 ~~L s7141 PMNT PER MONTH "" " .......... P*tl. '1UI ""' """"'tr ,...,_, for :as _.. a I tlNI llWIYl'llltftt .r 17M. ........_ tu. llcl9I 61 dnylllt dlAf'lll on •HA* c,.in. DtftrT'llll "1"*" ........... .-.... .... t.l ... nM11.Mt. "rtcet ._ .... ..._., Dl9c' Ir~ fl• '11111 Y...,..t!M, O...t Cl!rHlt, PMtcllll '"'""° et' 9Mnl1, VMJI Tr1rl'I, C.rpet •• ,... Tr .... ~ ..... , .,..,, HH'I)' Dvtr C..llnt. W..._ Melllflllll & ~ OIMr IN ••111r111. The Greatest Used Car Buy-A Pre-Owned Buick Opel '70 OPEL · 51695 '71 10PEL WAGON . ,, 795 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Air cond. A beauty with onIY. Immaculate 2 door. Bronze with be.lee 18,000. JJ.k.e new! (832DJD) vinyl interior, carpets. auto. trans., radio, chrome wheels. (257DQU) '72 Ol'IL s2595 'll .OPEL WA.otl 3,000 miles. ImmacuIAte with a1r British green with vinyl Interior, car- conoli, 4 speed, redlo. loctory petlng, auto. ~s., white walls, radio, warranty. •319571463 • luggage rack. ( 19DQU) '6t OPEL WA.otl 51395 71 Ol'll.. ~SIDAN Uke new. 2'door with auto. Gcqeouo gold 4 door with auto. trans.. trans., radio, nearl1 new"tires. white wa1J1. radio, only 9000 miles. A beeuty. (ZNF824) (182DQU) 51795 $1695 • 11lEMENDOUS TRADE · IN ALLOWANCE FOi YOUI USED CAR •WE HAYE A 51ANT USED CAI FACILITY Ir. WE NDD YOUR CAR . "SPECIAIJZIN5 IN 9UAUTY" • .. ' e STORI! HOURS e l:Jt A.M. rt1 t P.M. ---''"A ................. ... 11 A.M. tll I P.M. 1..., e SIRVIC:E HOURS e ,,,. ......... ,,,, ..... M---Cl-..llA01AfA..., "SERVICE TD BILllVI IN" • . . ' • BEAUTIFUL LOW MILEAGE STAEF AND EXECUTIVE CARS AT TRULY UNIQUE SAVINGS! .CHOOSE FROM CUTLASS'S-98's-88's WHILE . THEY LAST! ' WHILE THEY LAST IMMACULATE 1971 HONDA CARS YOUR · CHOICE • _ 16 TO 'CHOOSE FROM! . EXAMPLE BRAND NEW 1972 · CUTLASS HARDTOP COUPE LOADED: Factory Air Conditioning e Turbo Hydr1m1tic Trans. e Power OUTSTANDING . USED CAR VALUES! HURRY! '69 TOYOTA "· I 1 l2BXE I '69 BUICK SKYLARK 2 Or. H.T. VS, automatic, $ radio, h•ater, power steer- ing, vinyl roof, factory air conditionin9. IZDH· 2861 '70 HONDA-CAR Rad io, heater, 44 speed transmission. I l62CQRI '67 BUICK SKYLARK '72 OLDS CUTLASS '66 TORO~ADO brakes, automatic, fa ctory air. f066AZHl .. StHrin9 • Power Disc Braku • Vinyl Roof • Deluxe Radio • White- will1 • Sporty louvered Hood • Full Wheel Discs • Tinted Glass • Plus much· much moro. 13F87H2Z135514). '67 BUICK ELECTRA R&H, pow" ,,.,.;,g & $119 ' '68 VOLKSWAGEN SPECIALLY PRICED AT $ 00 ( • -- 4 Dr. H.T. Full power, fac;. $ , tory air c.onditi~ning, vinyl roof. IUDU004'1 '65 CHEVROLET 2 door. Automatic. tran5· mi5sion1 radio •nd heater. ' IWYY272l •' Fastback. Don't be last on $ l • 1 ihi• one. ( VTS754) · '67 KARMANN GHIA ' / ITQM199l • : ; • ' I.' • ' < ' t -. ' . ' • ' . .. . ' .- ,D.4ll Y PllOT 4J . l§J I [ .......... 11~i 1 _.,_ --.. A•*"'-]§] [ ---I~ l§J [ =;;;;;;;;;;;;1 /;A;;ut;; .. ;;';;""';;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.;A;;Ulo;;;;";;"';;•;;···;;·· ;;;. ;;;···;;·,.;;;;··;;A;;;......,;;;;·;;N:;"";; .. ;;;···;;;···;;;··;;·";;•;;.·j/:"::"'::..,:_;;U~11~•ii'···;r···~· .:;::"° ~ !.1!!14 .......... '-'.O. ~.~r:;ANG'.~. ·Auto-.·:"• ....... ,. 99t Autoo, · Uwl .. ··· · ··990· ll-. u-· · ·. 990 . FOltD IMPERIAL ' PONTIAC _..;.P_O_N-TIA_C_' -T' . PONTIAC Step Up To ·Luxury • • Excellent selection ·of previously l\fark Ill's and Continentals. owned ' Exquisite ebony black with burgundy leather interior and black andau~roof~Equipped··With-every-luxuryAeature~Full--power, climate control ai:t cond., individual power front seats, power door locks, tilt wheel, cruisomatic, AM/FM stereo radio. (1144-BF J) , ., SALE! · Outstanding Grbup Of Choice Cars!- 1970 Cadillac IL DORADO / • Immaculate. Emerald miat metallic/ : black Landau Ir: matcbin&' Leather In· : t.erlor. Luxury equipped. Full power incl. 6 way seat. dl~tele wheel, A1'-f· : FM stereo, power dool loeks 6: much :mott. (081AKJ) $4975 l970 Firebird CLEAN, :IJ,000 MILH ' Cool polar white with bla'ck bucket se·atS I: lrfatchlng Landau roof. VS. automatic, radio, heater, power 1teer• Ing. factory air conditlontn&. (7Z7· CCL). $2875 1969 Lincoln CONTININTAL 4 Dl. White exterior with black leather and vinyl top. Full power, air cond. and vacuum lockl.ni rroup. Near wbol.W.. CXYZ4l58i. Full price $2975 1971 Cadillac IL DO~DO CONVIRTllLI Attractive Ebony Black with White leather &: matching top, Luxury tbru-out. full power, climate C011trol air cond., tilt-tele wheel, AM/FM, power dOOt' locks, 6 way seat. (404- 00ll ' $6775 1966 Volvo' THI GOOD KIND Beautiful brleht red finish, black bucket seats. Radio. heater, 4 speed.- Drive to appreciate. (SUY605) $1475 1971 Mercedes nos1 4 DOOR 11,000 miles. Destrt bei&e with brown Landau and aaddle tone Interior. Luxury eQulpped incl. Automatic, AM-FM radio, air concL. power 1teer- inc & brakes, power windows. See and drive. C414ELU) $7175 ALWAYS A GREAT ' SELECTION OF TOP QUALITY CARS •.. 2t2i HARBOR ILVO., COSTA MaA • MO "30 Home or The Nn Car ••• ''fil•W•~ I •70 Im lal 1968 MU!tana. v..a, eoovtrt. , '71 Ford Club per Auto trans. Pl•. eood cond. -------• "" •72' 'fE .MAii. s' .. A REPOSSESSION.. Pon t. "ChatMu" LeBaro11 . SillS or best otter. an ,68 Pontiac Flrebltd '71, 2,000 orig. Waaon. v..a, P.S., Auto Trani, J~maculate Condition, Sacrl-....:cGo:ltler=·..:C;.:.M.:c·..:546--oo83:.:....;="--mlles. Exe. oond., financtna Air Cond, l25, S" w.B., Ha ta fice, Must Sell, dlr. 891-0224. '65 Mustanr 289, Reblt efli, 8on11evllle Bran4 nt\Y 19T2 Pontiac 2 dr. available, call 80-trol. "Q!Je ot • ldod". ~ qd GREMLIN new paint. $$)() or bl'&t o(-2 Dr. H.T. Vinyl top, vinyl Lt l\farui , m~t see to aJ>-.• ~68~F~i ... -b~i°"'rd"""400"',....,alt-cond.-,,.,I ave ss. fer. 61~1369 lllterior. factory air, radio, preciate. Serial No. 20'nD2-autom, vinyl too. xlht cond., '66 ~ustana, white, goOd heater;-\VS\V, powtr-s:teer:.· --P--11934i<~-----1 O\\-neT. \Vlll-edl tor Sl860•c.1 ~- oond . auto, p/s, new 1U-.1. in&" & brakes. Low n;Heage $325 DOWN 49.l-1518. Brond N•w 1'72 1 $850. Cash. 642-8799 local 1 O\viwr car tn lm· 00 PONTIAC Le M8:ne • :6sMUSTANG ,p eeeablc co nd ition. $8581P£RM0 auto.R&H,new tirttl P/S, Immaculate, SacrUice, Must <Wql\f~4SJ • • ¢ean. Firm $800. 833-: 060. aell, dlr, 897--022t Sl 999 RAMBLER Yes, jUlt $325 is uie total OLDSMOBILE jlr Naj)ers clown J>lt)'ment and . only -------..,1 C d'll $85.81 ts total monthly pay-'63 Rambler \Vfl\ in ao:>d GREMLINS '69 OLDS 98 -a t ac n1ent including ta.'". ucenst· ti.Jnnin~ rond. noo!be•t ~ 445 E. Col.st Hwy. 2600 HARBOR BL.. and all linancc charges for frr. 008-6334 er S1T...a;t3. NEWPORT BEAOI •SEDAN COSTA l\1E$A 36 month:-: en a pproved 673-0900 E:it. 5»f, 4 or. l l.T, Full pov.·er, fac-!>10-9100 Open Sunday credit The cash prict' 1:-T·BIRD (Open Sunday) tory air, vinyl tep. Mlf·F~f 7 69 Le Mins Hardtop $299:t85 including ta:< 11rld _,~°"":O:::CZ-":-"::'::::::~ I PINTO SALE! 15 to choose over 25 Gremlins In st~k radio, tilt • tele. wheeJ, new Coupe. Vinyl top, vinyl. in. license. DCferTtd pa.yment '68 T -BIRO 4 DOOR ti;om. •n & '12 models. with all models, Ir: cok>rs avail-white wall tires. Hard te tetior, r a c t o r y air , price is $3416.16 v.•l\ich in- and without air, 4 speeds " IMablMe [DforlAT£ 'DELIVERY find any cleaner. (YO'm). automatic, radio, heater. l'ludes all finance chargl"s, autome.tics, IOl'tle with vinyl 1 $2686 . (IOwcr steering, p ow e r salcl'l ta" nnd license. An· roofs, door crd•., WSW, dlx. ' brakes, white side \Vall tires. nual pel'<'entatc r11.1t• is 9,76. bub caps, plaid tnterklr. Ex: · • <xcP280) BILL BARRY fully k>adcd. Tape deck t tl~'K575) 11~ dlr. 5.51-2132. ~j6 Classic Thunde'rbmi Top l'O rid. $1800 • . 6'ffi.mo. :;.:nri::~ ~ier~~ Ward S.Lee 9 Nabers SALE f'RICED opeec1, chro.,. 1r1m. eooc1 AmmtamMalar9 n Cadlllac · m11es. <69581.T> 11451 S47-5126 2600 HARBOR BL., _ ' Nabers Theodore Robins Ford, :1060 COSTA MESA C d'll liarbor Blvd., eo.ta Me... 1234 s.. Main St. a 1 ac PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT tlst St, at S..A. Frwy) 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558-1000 •59 T-Blrd 2 dr htp. $99.00. a Full poJ. air. l-1 & H Auto -..,, Sale1, 2186 Harbor Blvd., !f · <!osta ~1esa. 642--16.16. ~,., •M ~10. Santa Ana 54~9100 Open Sunday -HARBOR BL., ~ .-...... '69 Pontiac GTO. air 1970 TORONADO GT. Excel COS'TA atESA cond., !'(Int rond. Orig cond, ~ pwr equip, vinyl 54()..9100 Open Sunday O\vncr. $1795. &14-1791 1959 Ford. Ne running, needs HORNET · ·~ T·Blid. Bltle 2 dr, Xili't ~ ed. $975 or best offtt. a 54~1947 bet. t-4pm .,, top, all' concJ, AM/FM A stereo w/tape d@Ck. $3,495. uto1, New 980 l Autos, New 980 lenders. Hood and radiator.I--,,.-...,.,.,...-,..-.-- Motor and, trans. In veey Brond New 1'72 Auloo. New · 9iO a ~ :'."-;: ~,~ri:~ HORNETS 64&-2607. '89 SHELBX GTSOOJ' Hard :W tind. 4 speed, goOd miles, radio, bet.tel::. ( 1 7·.0 A S G ) ·MAI<E-OFF'El\. TliiCdori Robins Ford, ~ Harbor Blvd., Colta Meu 642-0010. LEAVING country, must sell '66 ;FQrd ·Lto 2 dr h.t., air cond, P/S, P/B, auto, R&H, vinyl top. $675. (K' belt otter. 557-<M07 Day!, 54()-989'J; e v e s 64i.a203 1967 Cutlass, good cond. Cash $700. ~1421, Mike Greene, 536-7470 ~ve. ~· ~-1962 Oldsmob!le _ Excel Cond. $350. 67~ PLYMOUTH '69 PLYMOUTII 9 pass wng, PIS, P/B, air, new tirel & brk!. Orig, ewner. 673-8848. '.63 Sport Fury. 383. ~68 ,Tortno GT-390 ci, +spd New Available with 4 spd. Excel oond.• 1r.,,., P/S, P/d!•c brks, AIR CONDITIONING Make -otter. Tom-5J6..69!4 .... deck, new titts. Xlnt • PONTIAC cond. 536-1201 eves/wknds ' ' · FORD '68 LTD Sq wag. Air. AT NO EXTRA CHARGE -,7-2-CA-TA-Ll-NA-PS, PB. C!<on. Pvt ply. • 1972 MATADOR AIR CONDITIONED Air Cond. 4 Dr. Specially t>Quipt with heavy d uty fleet equipment. Executive demon .. i;;lrator with leslil than 2000 milf?s, CSER No. A2A157A· lOOO:lOI. DISCOUNnD ~700 Off Moouf. S1t. Retall Sticker $1450. cn4> 613-7299 Specially equipt can now * ,63 Ra.nchero 6 1 ,67 available in 2 Dr, 4 Dr, and . ~ ' cy • sportabout Wagon tncdell :· isoo. Good . "°"" IMMEDIATE DRIYERY 1972 Pentiac Catalina demen· atratcr with leas than 5,500 milu. Fully factory equip- ped including vinyl top, air .com!. p.s., p.b., stereo ra- dio, air cond. p.s., p.b., stereo radio, Rally 11 wheel!. VS, T. -1:Iasa w.1.w. tires &: much much mere. Serial Ne. 2L.57R2C312197. BRAND NEW 1972 GREMLINS * st8-00.9 * '66 FORD 10 paaa. Squire, ,11. ' power. &It cond, ""'l')'lh!n< nard S.Lee new. Come & see 673-5507 Over 25 Gremlin~ in stock. All models & colors available for '66 Countcy Squire wgn, Good .Anwlcln MoeDrs n tittt. Rum good. $500. S47-5126 . T lMMIDIATE DlLIVIRY 548-4001 1234 So. Main St, $495 DOWN NOW AVAILABLE WITH AIR CONDITIONIN• AT iio EXTRA CHAR•I · 1965 Ford Camper Van. &Iota Ana Heavy duty -end. Big 61--MA-==v:::E:c:Rl=C-K-- ene. One cwner. 646-3C'l8 '72 LTD Hordtop 4 Door fully factory equipped. Air cond. Only 8,000 miles. Fact. wat· nnty, '72 lie. paid. Thia beadtiful car priced enly $3695. (253DTAl '72 Monte Ci1rlo 6,000 miles, fact. wal'> ranty, air cond.. P.S., P .B., .show room fresh. '72· l!c. paid. (173BQA) $3895. '70 Toy•I• Hllux Pickup. 18,000 miles. Sharp! (0l6CQU) $1695 '70 l'ury 111 Fully factory equipped. Air cend. (686CBE). $1795. '71 Mork 111 18,000 miles. Almoat ~ available option. Silver wlblack leathfr lnL 1 owner. See 6 drive this lovely car. (SST· 235) • '70 Monltt0 H. T. Has hia:her mileage than normal but In e.xccllcnt cond. Sharp palnt t. btautlfi.ll interior. lBCQ· J.3l5). $1395. TllANsl'ORTATlON CARS ''5 vw Bua . $550 <NWMOOOl 'MChewlle4 Dr. $495 V8. outo. (O'PJ166) ...... ._ • $191 6 eyl., auto. Runs (lnf. (PRY 1:181 <Jort~Pm MITOLIAl- WllSc,.,. IW. c... Meu .. ,,, • ••••• '""''"" 644-2"1 SJ33.42 PER MD •. '70 · GREMUN '71 PL'Y;M. CltlCKIT Yes, just $495:00 is the total down payment an(l pnly $133.42 is the total monthly payment includill&' , tax,. Ii· Cj!D8e and all · finance charges for 36 mohthl on ' approved credit. The cash price is $4618.13 including tax and license .. Deterred payment price is $5298.U which includes all finance charges, sales tax and li· cense. Annual percentage l.7,000 original miles, ·1 owner car. See to a)Jprc~la:te. f329BB1) ?.fags, 4 spd, Good little .tteond car. (8000NT) $1595 $1 .. 95 •• '70 TOYOTA MK. II '67 CHEVY WAGON 1900 cng. Auto. trans., Air Caprice, Full 'Power. (UZV557) $1895 $1295 rate is 9. 76. , BILL BARRY . GREAT USED CARS '55 CLASSIC G.M.C. PICKUP ..... $1095 Chtrry lura-ndy-Hurry On Th is OM! -Ctll £Sl!I '65 VW DELUXE 'BUS ..... : ...... $1495 t ... • ' Sun ltollf, Custom 11\ldltt ... .,, Chr9mt Wllffb, Port H•le Wlnctows. lt.t>llUt £nglne IUQL. O.•I Tlllt Weelctnd OnlYI Blw ..v..tellk l'•lnl, '68 FIAT SPIDER .................. $1088 .... ltoom Condition, New TOP, fXEY QI), lrtoht Llltd w1111ct lflttlrlor. '56 VW BUG ..................... $795 It.Ciro C111lom Buckel SHlt. Cla11lc COlldflloll, (OPS 615) '58 VW BUG ........... I .......... $395 .1 Speed, "!dlo, H .. ltr. IHYH 6MJ • '67 VOLVO 122 S ................. $995 Automltlc, AM/FM. ("9 l!TMI '69 VW BUS ................... : .$2195 l lW, IUtllt, HMter, • $PHd, 1 #'t>t71tl '65 VW Stj)UAltEBACK ............ $795 Slly llur w/l!Ktt llltll'IOr. -At A f'rlct Mlrd To T11tn Dtwn·-jMPI" 2Cll), Only - '65 OLDS STAllFIRE .... .: ......... :$945 '71 VW CAMPEil ................ $3995 '70-CVW SEDAM ....... .'. :-:--: .••.•. $1495 01'9111 wttti .... tflt., ltldlil, ,_., ltldltl Tltet, Ill• •tEI '71 VW 411-,WA&ON ........... $2795 U... 'ICll!rr WaftlMy & ........ blilo, -Mltt'ltlln X ltMllll. 1.k. 1"'1'1)) '69 VW KOMBI BUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2J95 W/111111 '"""· ..... T ..... ..., v.it, -L• Of E•tr• -HIWt'I' CloWfl Tt Onlftet ~ ......,.. ......... OI V,W, ._,..._. Y•ldll. l.k.. tYlt.M f.WI '67 VW Stj)UAREBACK ...•• ~ ....... $995 New lttd P•lnt. $1Mrpl .. Speed. (VOX '31) '69 AUSTIN AMERICA .....•....•... $895 4 Speeo. (YXZ 2901 '67 JEEP .......... ,, ............ $1595 ' Wheel Drl'lt, CJSA -H ..... """ Tlrts -Ntw c1Mry P•lnt, Thi• Wltktnd Qft!yf I.It. 1416 OIM) • !; '69 MUSTANG MACH I ......•..•. $1795 GT ... Speed, .t28 CObrl Jtl. lol1 ot Goodin . IYRX ?IO ) '64 VW CAMPl!R BUS ............. $1295 'SOMI, ('11 IQEI '10 KARMANN GHIA ......•.. , ... $1695 11111, tlMllo, tt.lilft>, • $~111. (IN 8111 '69 VW FASTBACK .............. $1495 AUIOmljlC, ltiMllO, Hfflfr. (1)0 ll!XJ L.lkt Ntwl '61 VW WESTPHALIA CAMPEil •.••. $2395 ... TOP. Ntw Tlrn.-kaalo, Hfflfr,' $Pftd, (009 ATOJ ..;... ______ _ '62 PLY. VALIANT WAGON ....... $599 lttlllo, Po,..•r ltt•lnt. -,,.,,, ' c,j, t111. -Br!ON lttcl -'f'>tt•lltt'!t c:.w,. -LIL fl"PT 23'1 ~ '69 VW 19UAREBACK ............ $1795 A111orn1ttlc, Air C.,.lllonln(I, Low I.•• Miit!. cZOY Mii . '69 VW SEDAN ................. $1391 Grt .... Oft1119, I.Ml ft lllfrllt a.,,-Wl'IHI" 0Wnl1ed Tira. IUO ACA! __ _ '69 VW CAMPO ............... ; $2595 SWldlfl o.tuu. llM, '#/.--..-<Mrtl.rt EllllN For I.Ats Of ............. Jc. (Ml'N- '69 VW DILUXI IUS ........ • ..... $2291 •@ HAR BOUR VW -~11111! l f~/11 tll /\l:r~LlL\/U ~ILJ:\JTINCTON 13LAr:H ... ; I ;·,~•:.mrm • • ; 1 • • : ; ,f ! l • l • l l l • ' • l ~ ' 46 DAILY PILOt rridly, July 14, 197Z ~~ 'GRANDVILLES 2 Doot HAIDTOP WlllM/wfltt. vi.rt ..,, , ... <llJt • .....,,. •wt. .. .....,.. 1tHri111 I w1111-. WSW, AM·'M '""' w1' tfadt ,,,. "91W. rtmete mlrnr. cnf. I' ....... ftft"'° lint. ti1H 11, tltC. ... , Mdrt. air C9911.; "111'(1 ecc.-t • .,.,.. ...., CMn.t'f '-"'""· c1111 ...... c:intw, IW"'I*' ff'lli, il"&lt, ,..... lllilm,... st,.,., ,.nf' 4tctl NINM, \tlllly l'lllr-rw, Qllf, 119tts. tltt...,,._.,.......,,......_a • ...,. w.t, cl'WM CMtnl (IJ77) (21'"47WKmllfJ YOUR C·HOICE FOR ONLY ••• .,. OVER DLR. COST! ,. .. ,_.Uc. • ~~ CATALINAS 4 DI. H.T. llOUGHAM lllY#llll•dr vlllvt lllP/llt• vlnyr ill*ltr. ,.._ 11w1111 & ~r1kn. """""lie, WSW, AM racllo, l!Nltr, v111ltr "'lrror, blrt mtuldlllf• 11111..i 11111 •II, lamp 1ro11p, (1,111, ,. wllMI U Vll'I, .... , ..... 1111111 •• l•ctory •Ir clrldlllot1fnt. cu1i.m f<lvte clll1ter, (12.ff) ........... . (tMJtR2CHt101) •••• 4 DOOR HARDTOP HOUGHAM ,.,.... talllltfttem "lft. v1nr1 lfltertor, ,.,..., 1IMr"'9 & llnkn. ... u. •Ille Wiii tfrn, IWIOrMtk, cusi.m (........ •tMrlnt wflleC lleft. mouldl•, lir CO!lllftltlll..,. c.slom ,.... cllftllr, ""' rail.., ...... wllltl UV'"' 11111, ,..,, Ill. (lWJ (MllJnUCJlt'1U YO.UR. CHOICE FOR ONLY $ ... ··- OVER DLR. COST! P1111 Ta & Uc . DEALER ... ' ·'· PLUS TAX AND LICENSI BETIER HURRY! LIMITED OFFER! YES! Only $92 over De~ler's cost on every brand new 1972 Pontiac listed here. Your choice of .models, colors & all equipped as you want. Every car serviced and ready for immediate delivery. *Note: Dealers cost includes freight , dlr., prep., handling & de- livery, fact. hold back. Hurry!. While they last. This offer good Friday, Safurday, Sunday, Monday & Tuesday, July 14 thru July 18th. NEW '72 .BO EVILLES .• 4 DOOR HARDTOP White/bl•ck ¥inyl top/blilck vinyl inter. AM-FM.stereo radio, vanity mirror, cust. finned wheel covers, tilt wheel, power'windows, •air cond., lamp 9rp., cust. gauge cluster, remote-mirror, win~ dow seel'rnlelcjs., ti,nt. 91.lss. ell, power 6 wey seet, H.D. battery, automatic, WSW, power •IHri"g & bnikes. U 203 I I 2N57VlC3 181621 . 4 DOOR HARDTOP Adriatic bluef.blue' ihterior. Power steering -disc brakes -windows -6 wey seet, WS'fl, cust. finned wheel cov·e;s, door edge grds., ·tilt wheel, custom gauge cluster, bumper guards, AM-F gauge cluster, bumper guards, AM-FM stereo, H.D . .air cleaner, seal mldgs, body side mldgs, M stereo, H.D. eir cleener, seal mld91, body side mldgs, tint. 411.ass, elec. door locks, eir cond., lemp grn., rubber bumper strips. I 1220 I I 2N39V2Cl 19247 l 4 DOOR HARDTOP Automatic, power steering, power brekes, WSW, reer seat speaker, custom seat belts, tint. glass ell, air cond., AM radio, remote outside mirror, body side mldgs., power windows, cumber- laod bl ue/blue ;,ter;or. 112331 l2N39V2Cl19l621 YOUR CHOICE FOR ONLY $ ... .,, OVER DLR. COST! Pt• Tu &: Uc. WIN A NEW 1972 PONTIAC ! ! YOU CAN ALSO WIN FREE STEREO TAPE PLAYERS YES, YOU CAN WIN - 2 STEREO TA.Pl PLAYERS WILL IE GIVEN AWAY FREE. SIMPLY STOP' IY IMPERIAL BANK, HARBOR AT FAIR IN COSTA MISA OR DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 24IO HARIOR, COSTA Ml!,SA AND ENTl:R.. \. ~~ LE MANS' 3 SEAT WAGON f fN""'9fl', LUCI,_ ....... , ... "illfl klltritf', .... , lllltrinf • brlllts, wllll1 -111. 1u .. m1ttc, ,_~-1 IPNll•r, "'""'' mirror, CUii, Will. i'"r: *Mt4. ..... *"' '"""·· 11111. lllM •II. •Ir COlllll .. lltc. clocll, AM 1'111111, 1M11tr, v•11lty mllT'lr, cwt. ff!h, ll:•lly II -..i1, tun ... rid, tiumjllr tMrft. ll:lffl ll~IUZll»Ml LUXURY COUPE Sllaclow ttlf w/Mddll bl.lckll Mlh/bllCll Vinyl Np. ~·-''""' "" .. brtllH, Hlomltk, WSW. Vlllity "'lnw. wlrt Whtlt CIVIi'$, tint. 91111 1H, Nmp 9roup, AM rldlt, htlter, tr.nt C'OlllO!e, cvstom "tt1, titer rrMll, 1lr. clllll/tl9C. click. 11•11 11GJ7MU11»MI LE MANS COUPE LIKtfM blut/bllft illtlrlot' lltltr , ... ,.. mll"l'lf1,, -.ir1 •11111 COVtf'li, pewtr llMl'lflt, !hit. tllu Ill, llmp ...... ,, llUmper ... ntl, AM·PM 1ltr• radio, cllll. cllllllollC'll 1llerl119 wttltl, Pl-brtll11, 1u1tm1tk, hNltr, dlfro.-r, wflllt w•ll ti'"-1117•1 l?DJ7MUll7»0 YOUR C·HOICE t;OR ONLY $ ••• ~· OVER DLR. COST! Ptn Tu &: Uc. ~~ GRAND PRIX~ GIAND PRIX Sprflltfhllf '""" VlllVI ,.,, ll'ftll Inter •• P1Wtr 1IMl'illl & ... .. IK!try •Ir, AJA.FM •!trio tldil, R•llr ti .., ..... 1111. '"'" .. .... ,,...,,, btOr int11kll1191, mlf'rtf'f, P'Wft' wlndowl, ws .. m ..,... r•llr 1111911, wlllle lidt Wiii tlrtS, lulOrrMtk tr1n1ml"5M, (lmJ (2KJ1TIA 1!1621) 2 DOOR HARDTOP Ytllewl wtllte vinyl fllp/whlft "inrl klffr. AM·PM 1tort1, plWtr 1lllflll9·brllln-wh!dtws, 1111Dm1tk, huter, WSW, lltcly' ~ mlrrtn,' cu1t. btlt•, lilt whttl llmp 1roup, v1nlty mirror, rally II WhHt., tlnt. 11111 .... •Ir Plld., vln~I ICCllll 1lr1P11. (Uf41 UKS1TIA.21U7:11 GRAND PRIX ll:tlll/whllt Vlnrt ,.,.IKt VlllVI "'""· ........ ••r---k~ ....... WSW, avft~lc, AM-FM si.ro. , .. It. lllt ..... 1, •Ir Q!Mlj. IJlnll!I. c•l'Mflllol "'""' ntr nuri.r 11,,..., fttut .....,.. ~ lint. ''"' •II, tltc. llttr lldl•, ........ l•mP. (1152) (2KJ1T1A.14tt7t) YOUR CHOICE FOR ONLY * ...... $ OVER DLR. ' COST! rt• Tu & Lk. OUTSTANDING USED · CAR SPECIALS~ EXCELLENT -SELECTION ' . '69 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ·Automatic, power steer· $2599 ;ng, power w;ndow•, .;, co.nd., vinyl top, tilt wheel. Kelly 1U19flted retail $2930. (XJK 2301 .DAVE • ROSS ' '71 PiNTO . R'UMABOUT Yellow with white vinyl top, 1utom1tic, r1dio, heat· or. Kelly "'llil~•locl rol1il $2210. (176 DQCI ! \ $1699 - '68 CORTINA GT 2 DOOR '69 CORVETIE STINGRAY Low milHgo. tColly suggostocl rol•il $885. <WTE 961 ) low miloogo. IZCY 0511 $599 Autom1tic, AM/FM rodio, $3299 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive ·cbSTA MESA Ph. 546-8017 l'h MILE SOUTH OF THE' SAN DIEGO FREEWAY ' ' OPEN 7 DAY$ A WEEK 1:30 A.M. TO 10:00 PM. SUN. 11 A.M. TOf P.M. ................................ ., ...... ,. ............. ~··· ....... ~'"'"'" .......................... "'~ """""F~lb)','Jufy'l•I; 1972 ~ D41LY PILOT .f7 I ~"--"'---'--~~---.,.~~~~~~~~ 'f I PINTO I ' ' IMMEDIATE DNYllr ;· $199~0WN$~6A MONTH ~~~ iplld ...;., ' " ·~ Sit9htotaldn.pymt.$36 i1 :=:~:A~~· $11'8' 8~ ~];~~~~:; "'"l~iilt. wllitl " fULL ,ymt.prfc• $1495 ind . ta11 i llret, wtlttl C-0\'trS. J, /ic:llMI. ANNUAL PYCENTAGE FIX10W156600F Pll(I i RAT£ 11.70% '72DODGE BlOOVAN C11tomi1•• lty "COvrlety". full cilrpeting, pon~ing, satori rode, oulside tirt mount, point stripe, l ooded for fun & frolic. 2465K. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY · _BR4ND ~EW · ·' : '72DART DEMON· FACTOIY COl.01 OfTOUICMOtcf Sitt ii ll:IW .. ..,.,,._ $53 ii ldlll -pyg i1i::L -. lit-. & 41 ......... ~ ot1.,.. . ..-11ot 36 mo1, Otlwnll l'IW-tide S21D7 lod. • & 11- UllM.AlltlM PlCIHATAGE Ult 11.661' • . 4 Speed lrans .. ro· dio, hf<lter, b!Kktt seots. lull vinyl inle· rior, 326 Elr • 688 $199 DOWN $53 A MONTH ~~~s '72 DODGE POLAR4 BRAND lllWI · V-8, 011\11o. !nmS. tlot11 & vinyl interior, fully fac10ry equipped. $2. Sef 81~7~ i 199r>owN·-- $C)2 MONTH ~g:::s -FULLPllCE IMMEDIATE DBIVEIY '71 VEGA 2300 IMMEDIATE DELIVE RY $199 DOWN $36 A MONTH . ~~::s Holthback. cltrom1 whttl ri~91, radio, $1 htottr, •••YI blltktt ~ lu~ wirfft irnri- w OBICCY BRAND NEW • o10,1:r,~~uu fACTORT COlOR· OF TOUR CllOKll '72 DODGE TRUCK loodld with .,i blnr.h wan, htoltf, £7111.14 IW.S. wiildWIW Mi$hlrt. direction 1ignols. tuH '~int~ nwc:hnllth more.Ord« YMS Toclov. $2288cr3. $199DOWN ·SJ3AMONTH . s1tf;.1t111..,,.,.._,n;,,...,..,.,,,...,_.,.1n. ._a II_,....,...,.,..."""°.,» _ .............. JJ ......... .................. \ ':t:0 . '72 OliRGEI lHcltcl wllfl ~ lltMJI' llO!t, fltatlf, f7hl4 Wt5. wlndWlld wG1lltr5.. clirtclion 1itn1h, luJI ' •i11yl l11t1rior, 1t11in ion i:o111r1I 'Y'""'--"'-*'"'°"· Wl21CV.17Mn WAGON JIME '70. PLYM. Fury Ill '69 FORD Galaxie SOO ·Hdtp~ . . :!;d,~:d:~~·;,~:r~g.'~;~~w6i1\ s1188 :e,~~~~~.~~!:!·: $·ass · '69 PLYMOUTH STA. WAGON tires,6098ER . · 'wolltires.ZLA21S. · '69 CHEV. 1/2TON VAN ;:~.~~~br:~~;kd;::h~~ $12as · teverl 654120 · v:a,,,......,..,;,._,,,,,,_,...,_,, ..... $988 - -FULLPRICE · '' Jlligagerock.6pass. whitewolls. whfflcown.689EOS' fo~--~"""" ........ --------------t-------------' I , fllU PllCI $199 DOWN $30' A MONTH M'l.f.\ '66 CHEV. 2 DOOR '69 PLY,.,. Roadrunner s1tt•••,... ••••-.,-.111c1....,i.-&•fll9TYlnldlilllM••· . $3 8 s 383'V-8, 4 speed trans.,'radia, $ 98 8 2-0aor Hardtop. V-8 , auJo. trani., $ ' :':i':.t~% .-. °""""""" ,rte.t111t m. • & tc-t. »NMI. f'lllCMMI Standard trans.. mog wheels and tires heater, vinyl interior, mag wheels. power steering, landau top, full vinyl 7 B 8 '68 OLDS VISTA CRUISER plusmuth,nu:h.,...,SHF927 ZXX427. . , interior,whitewolltires,deluxewheel covers, rodio, heotej. VZE7S5. ,,.,_,......, . .,_...._..,._,..._ Sftaa· l'~!"""!~~~~~~'!"!!!~•F•U•ll•P•llC•E-T.~~~~~----...;.'m;UlijiliiiPliOICo;l-l""!~~~~!"!!!"----....;,;FU;;;ll~Pl!Oiiml-"""''~-..,....w-7. rra .W.7 '71 GREMLIN 2-D~R . '70 Pl YM. Duster '68 VW BUG ' !~?!~!~£0! .. ~~~~-i!?~. ~'.lb~1.~~I~:~~~~; :i;l os·s ~:~~::r·,i~~'~;oTI:or:~~ $11 SS Mogwhetls,rodio,heater,4speed,hi $488 ..,.il'ter" ... °"""',,.. ,.te tint ii:!.• & ldllL MINAI. l'ldnMI seot, custom exterior. tem. Much, rmich mare, bock buckl't seats. WVF430 Mn IUS% Vl.29G0833j989 . ,,. PONTIAC STA. WAGON A1F465f200472. FULLPllCI 'FULLPRICI =:;~·~=·:.=z.i.·~ $]088 70 MAVERICK 2~Door .. FU11 PIKI V-8, rodio, heater, vinyl interior, whi-$ " $ 8 s 8 $'199 ,DOWN $32 A MONT. N MflaOllT2'HS ttwoU tires, deluxe wheel covers. Auto. trans., rod io, heater, wheel WIBS80. . · 1 covers. Deluxe chrome moldings. ''"it_.-~· P2 ii tollll-. "1"".~ m. tu.._.,._,..,_ on 517ARI _,,...,fw .a.°""1'9ltl'Y"'f.pnct S11Sl M•I"--.... I ! • -.u1111.1s • FU P I '68 DODGE Coronet 440 • I . ' \ \ ) I 1 / ) I • \ NOTHING TO BUY YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT , o· W I . T . . ~.'14,. ·.\ " :, . " / .. • • • PRIZES FUN C.N i. alld help• celelirat• 51 ywa of""''" to tlN CJf9C1fer Harbor Area Ullder the sa--•l'Shlp and , . ·111e11111geme11t. We promise you ••• ' MANY HAPPY RETURNS OF"THE DAYI , . , I • .... j .. s "' l . '. ' _,, .. ., ••• 2Y2 ACRIS OF ROllNS~·Reacly Usecl Cars -. NOW AT .,5PECIAL Anniversary Discounts! NIW Im NEW 1972 GitAN TCIRINO 'GALAXIE · ' . ·~·· SPOIT " 1 ' . ' .. ~ . J '51 OVl!R~ALER . ' 'COST· , , + ·TAX.& LIC. (1085) . ' • N1W Im UYERICK · •51. , OVl~J:LER +TAX & LIC. ' (201413) •. : llG SILECTION! ; ~$5· , "1. OVERc:t'LER +TAX & LIC. :-' • go-; ,, ( (1141) I • ' ' • . ' ... . . ·'· _, . I I . ' '' ' l ' M I b .11 It I " • A ' ' 11 I - · · San Clemente ·~ . Capi.Strano • . - \ . EDITION • Teday'• Fl•al . · 1'.Y. Steek• YOt:. 65, NO. ·196, 4 SECTIONS, '18 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA •fJtrnAY, JULY 14, '.1972 , TEN CENIS. • Supervisors Add $628~27 4 o County Budget property tu f!lte. . llolrd ·Cbalrmln Rmlld ·,w. Cllperl of in Slci-~~-=-·11ten. Despite the incre...,, aupervlaora are Newport s-11 llld be would brllll .Ibo Olber -..-I •1.• for a Jaw In 1970. . " Two days of acrutlny of the pro)looed 1972-73 Orange Coonty budget by COWlly •upervlsors bu molted in additions of $628,274 to the proposed $264 million spending program. still voicing determination to cul the matter up apin .Monday w._ bucfcC ~•ler tlllilf a Bly and county's $2.0I tu rate by· eight to 12 bearinp resume. 1 llnl ol tatt,• lor 1 com- ceou, because of a JU peroent incr.... ~.and aupervloOr llalpba· . ~ for the Tbe board did lllVI in the budget a $25,000 Item which Pl"'ides for design wort for :::= Ibo.medical center. Tbe conlro Airport Land Uoq\ The change provided that ll ellber Ibo League of Cities or Ibo board favored Ibo land use group lt mllll be acUvated. Tho league took such a\cuon in 1970. but supervisor David Baker said 'l1nu1day league members are now seeking a change In !he law to aboliah Ibo ...,.. • Although during day-loog budget bear- Inga Thursday board members whacked $450,000 from the list, $615,000 in "policy" items were added. Thia, plus '165,000 in inoreases approved on Wednesday, in· cr~ed the spending program an equlvalent of one anCI a half ·cents on the in a_...i valuation. · . Ana vored Y>e •sr-belt fund,, • . ~~-col Cehler. Thnoe proposall Which woujd have ad-ed belt·coordlnator ·Rod ·Sacke!I ....., _.._ Robert ded ani>fller I!.~ million to the buc!let ·of Costa Meaa; boil ~.Baltln ol SiJ>. ~lboPI -lor lbe i ~t were eliminated for the moment '!'hurt< ta,Ana and David Bqer ol Garden Grove ,,_ polnli"I old that ill day. · · voted against It. . , . I JUI' toCol -of ._..,.tely A Ill' miilloo reserve fimd for green-.. S:upeno1Jor ·wllliam ·Phillipe · .of f'.7 mlJUon woalll ~-...it in belt acquWUOllll loot on 1 2-2 vote but • Fullerton· was aboent on ~; builnou r11et' aYinp ol IU mlllloa1to.lhe COUDly, ' . ace , .. , " Lacy Facility Bla'sted ,, Grfin:d Jury Cites Drug Usage, Absences , The Oraoge County Grand Jury today ed ·to house persons .1e111enced for non- ~iy criticized Ibo 'Operatioo of the support, alcoholic violations and other Theo Lacy branch jail and said II con· misdemeanor crimea. But the report . charges. that becauae of Ille greot ln-ditions are not drasticaUy improved It crease , in narcotics vlolatloos and lhould be ckleed. overcrowding of the main jaiJ In S..ta f. news release signed by Jury Ana, Theo ,Lacy Is now housing mauy F Otto M. Schmid! bar that persona ...,.. intended for the fadllty. W!'man en c ges It Is charged that oot enough deputiea veqt C>lDlacl -~· .1.n·d -· . . Sberlff Jame. Mlllla was , aot. · avaUable for ~ today, bu! aldea . said oulfltlinl of the ·louith floor of the main ' JaU· 'ocbeduled to ' begin this fall · wWld aid ID ove~ the aowded codditions. ' . ' t~ minimum security facility on are assigned ·to the jaiJ !or adeQuata Manchester Avenue in Orange 'Is the aupervlsion ·and that Ibo chain lint l'en<e AEC· QL.f. ;~!-.J eceoe ·of constant ·drug-smuggling and aurrounding It allows JIUllni lhroagb or J. "-'u.r;i abaeace ol ~·.!rum tile C!Jlll'mea tossing over druf: -1Jes. for two and three-hour periods. "Searcll proceilwea for. miming - The .report llld the branch .w~ design· furlough and work cmn an Inadequate . ' . :llixllmtertbo ....... ol-.i.and;" < ' • • • the ._t· """1leL . . ' • -• "Ill ' CommlJalon of ~ County got •It in the neCt ·again. ll'roquested 173,000 was cul to a.token '500.,dupllCJlling a similar action ol Ibo board WI year. Tbe • ooaunlsslori· was autborixed by atate law several years ago, but board ~ l'Ofused to acltvate ii until their band wu forced by an amendment to the . . - mission. • '. Oiher additions to the bUdget approved Include '$200,000 . for bicycle Ira~ .(Set BUDGl:r, Pa1e I) I 3rd Party May ·Offer Nomination : LEMON GROVE (UPI) -An olflcJal of the Nationel Amerlcao Party Mid to. day, there is 111 good chance'• Alabama Gov. G<orge C, Walilce would accept Ibo party's pretldentlal oomlnatioo non mooth. • . William K. llbeorer, former Califomil chainnan ol tlle allillated American IJx!epende!lt Party and a member of Iha , lil-!Jl8D· NAP 'Uicutlve committee; uid T -Bitina, F.,x . ;',. · .:; .,;~;:w~~su:',!!:t'«ru&a . ~· . · · • Short,of dilobltl ll!a fldlily, tba Gl'llld . . •. Jury ........... tlibler ~ o( Eludes Hunt ·pr.,-........ 11111 tbol ~ wASliiNGroN <AP> -· Tbo -, , :i=-~ ".: .= ...... , £noro~mol .............. todaJ- . , he , ~ lbt NAP lo -- Wallace wbell II' Wilt ........ '-~' 1i'1i' •Iii ,.._ M II · ·: '"We -a mmlnalloa tt 111m," ~ 111 llld. "Wt -... ""'-u lo wbether be wlll accept It. Ht --alaDdard heft four ,... ... aad .. will -tbet ollor lpia. : meiit of two id!ltioall offloen lo ·Ilia C Wlllllm T. llllq, ~ of li!CGilt)', In Clemen· le p.m. ID Diidnlgf!t I h If t t0 AIJow' IO r bu beeo "pllcod •• -W!IW. Jia1 Tbe IMmt for a posslbly rabid 'fox that bit threO ampers, ~ I 'JI.year-old Costa Mesa boy, continued al San Clemente State Beach today but rangers were 11D1ble to spot the wily predator. Meanwhile, Mlcbael V. Pender, 15, of Coita Mesa, Eric Lind, 15, Walnut Creek, ind WWiam R. Jollie, 22, Ontario, are reoeiVing injections at Orange · Coonly ll(edical Center )o ·prevent rabies · ln- f eclion. Aall three were bitten by the mna1I brown lo•. Wednesday night u they slept . 11>-ate ,campoltea. Mart Pender, 17-year-old brother of the Costa Mesa youth, said Ibo younger Pender was not bolpilallud and bas returned to Sao Clemente to eunp unW Salurday. · "He bas to go to the hospital !or two shots a day. They tab about 30 seconds . e.Ch and they 're pretty painful," said Mlltt Pender who accompanied his bnJlber OD tbe trip but returned early for footblll pracUce at Estancil llllh ScbooL :·-!18ld the youths were Ill lieep. Ille when one of them !IUddenly awoke, uw Ille foz, and tried lo lboo II any. ~"Then it jumped up on my brother'• b!ad and bit him. n wun't 1 big -. lt'i in his hair and you CID hardly - i\," be added. ~ties conducted 11 alkul oearcb •. (Set FO~ l'lp I) perimeter -pendlns -tlon .; -.... 1 .... Other IUQtlllom -~ ........inc his penona1 -al· iif·a !&-Coot block wall -the ui.ttng , . 1 fencel •that r 1 n do m akhl and' body fain.• ' -=es be condDcted !'fCUill11 and that An ,AEC IPJ*"l•iw\.."'1<! the aiJep. Vislting'lacWUea be rHeolgned to Pre-tlons ".relate lo Ibo·~ of -· • • • , from other AEC einploJea and htJ In- Ho:ni~ and Garden· . debtedness ••• and ; •• lndlcatlolll .,. , tmt It'• in a:oea of '10D,oeo." ' . Riley'• job paid 1:11,Gllll a.year and he'w bad ll lince Novemlior, -· Tbe !!plboman said RUey wu placed, on leave J1mt If, and bu been replaced Moduilr homes, naatlonll 'llhlcles, by Paul Geuihra. 17, I former depulJ -. appiilnces onii Dowen •• director of die dlYlsion of !llCUrlty, c1ur: 1!01DO of tho -11 lbe llanlblaNI Inc immlpllon ol·lbe aJJepllmm IJTtho -·· -" ldlpectlon. . Show Now Open Home and Gorden Sbow !!cheduled for• 5 . . Riley, u,.an llml'f 'COIDller-lnlelllgence p.m. . o'clock opening toda7 II tho man" during. World War n, joined tho Anaheim Colwentlon Center. AEC in 1947 at Loi Alamol, N.lf., u 1 The lllb annllll.abow.nms thn!agb Ju-aeculily ind lntelllamce ollleer and.- ly 23. • lhroulh varloul Jeveb. . · Sbow houri are 5 p.m. to II p.m. As chief of securllJ, be bu been , weekdays; noon to II p.m, Saturdays, respcmible for tho 'physical oecurlty of and ...., to I p.m. Slmciayl. au Ibo divoree lnataJJatlms of the AEC'• Tbe modular -· ~ced · by farfbm( empire atr<tchlng from = ~1 ~ Wuhlacloa, D.C. 'to Eniwetok and from dieaper io bDlld. ::::a-· N.Y. lo the Aleuliln :a will be -durinl Ibo -· The ioJ> allo lncludea reaponsiblllty·tar which wUl a1IO felhn -11 in&erior , ''Penoontl security," inc·tudi.':J deconted rooms.for 91ewin1.. . . ___....._ _....... The flonr -will be 1n Iba .... dearancea ol .. -.... Ni • ........ ,.. • IDd t11e home tumW• ... wtJ1 be•ln 1be prutectlan qalnat sabotap, the AEC -11111. !IJlllirooman 111!1 In -.lo~. Bui tbe apot...., -•the Clemente .O~ficer Facing COl1llllelll tbll "there ii DO Indication that any -ty maU.. an inwlved" in ilio cue bmlYtnc Ibo HClll'llJ chief, . . ...,. Trial in ·Fatal Accident . ' San Clemente Police Patrolman Gary WIS utended at ~ Tuesday: Adami wUl stand trial Sept, ' ... cbarpl Adan' --ance will be II< I of misdemeanor manalaugbier in tbe pretrial bearlna A111. • In the court of i Municipal Qiuii Jttdp Warren Knigbl.' '!l'afflc death of I , J.JUN!d boy Jut ' The eomplalnt aplnst Ibo Jotmc May. patrolltwl ID-'Clrlvlnr II 1 tllllld too • Adams, who bu been ~ Ila-> fut !or condlllonl at the time ol Ibo lion ~lea since a eamjlllllll wu -crash. ' in the cue, entered 1 plea of m.-1 lo Highway palnll roports placed Adema' the cbargea early this -In South speed <!Urine Ille punult 11 ap-of• Or"'P Cooiaty Munldpal Court. miles per hour IDd tJio unit,. rod Jlgbta Tbe cbarga atem from 1 lrlfllc erub . and alren .-...., .,.... not lcl1'ntad. m..!Ving 1 police car and 1 llllalJ -~ · Tllo dr!Yer of Ibo Inlet, ........., lo May • U Adarna WIS -.dly IOo CHP recCllll'!" ..... , I I It r led I J celenllng to lnlercepl ., errolle drlnr. vlolaled Ille t1Pl*n1 """' Ill ..... Tbe rear-end collilloa toot Ille life ol into Adw' ,.-. bal DA,. opn•w JolfreJ Brill ol LOili Beacb. Ro WIS sit• have Aid tbeJ do 1111 pla lo fUt I ...... llDC 11op camping ,_ aad mippliel In pililll aplnst lhe di!-, Dulel a., the bed of Ibo Ind. ... ........-19, .... ol LOili a.om. ..... inJured. ' Civil IClloil, ~ trom Ibo '.!Olllh'• Adamt, who WIS named In tbe com-delllb, bocbMfiJll I c:Jalm opiall tlio cllJ plaint Jut _.. bu been free on hll for llA,GllO ii doalll .....,_, 1R ai. .... recoplunee llncl. That tr.edom peniJtric in lhe ...... - I • Pravda Haili McGovern MOSCOW (AP,) -A • Sovlel uew-called Democntte ~I nomlme Geors• JlcGoftrn "a np; El I dative of ID attractlft new era" today, but c:au- u....d 11111 campa!ID inmilea 1R Diii alwayo fulllllod, Bn•1 .. id q ll-eGov-e1' opo poaltloil. to -lllnl-in Vlofnaal, ~ l'rlv· ... !Ill!! Ille -·· ~ popullrllY ii aplalnod bJ == 1111 lllllly -... llbn u Iha-Ro ........ I ..... for ... ..,.. . " ' . Pra...... Ibo Oommunllt party uewapapar, ~ McGovern'• namitlallon wltboat -· but a.Id tbe COlitwtklu "IOIDethw !tit llta I bop _, IP'"" Alllll'lelt11a1111Joa In Viet! - .. 1·4;, A" . DJ~~· -' . . . ' ~ • , • \ ,.,"".~ ..... ~#f '-7' ~ . •"' . ~ . rx.: Clancy>ofiRe.eda:JOolti<ai•lf he..can'tJielieve he·~ught the ·wbole . thing, Ir took·an Jio,u;? Clancy, 'who was fishing on a .boat..out of Dana Harbor, Th~d'f, .ialdihe felt ;m.. "it took a week.'' The blacl<•se• b'a:ss weighed '435lpount!J.ilt>was estimated that It mlgbt'lle :15 years old. ' · · . ' • , ' \, . . r ' • ' • • ConfesSes.'.:t0.1Bu·rgln~ies · . . ' . . I "We will Joi him -Ibo people want an alternatlft, ml we feel there ii 1 . very good cbance he will accept." Shearer llid be bad not tanr.d with Wallace alJa Ibo May usuainaUon al. tempt on Ibo sqvernor. ".He bu ....,. told anyone be will accept," ~said. "He has only toid us he was going to be a serious Democratic -ate at the conventioo. · No one bu any uaurances beyond that.• Wallace, lllnrted In bis Democnitle pruldenUaJ bid, !18ld ThlD'adl:;· be would . not IDllte I -try Jor:-. il!e. ~ U I tblnl party candidate, . . wan-·lloaded boine to Aillllml to- . clay with ._...11 pilna to - OD l<'<:lim.11hlng to I new lift of dlllbll- fty ralber than ........., )lnlldmUal - blllOnl. • Wallece left Ille -of tha• Democratic Notionol Convention wlllloul bltterneoa, be Aid, even though his pr<r posals for rm.ton of Ibo piltlorm for !ht presidenltal eampelgn got nowhere. Wallace left htJ hotel shortly after noon lo .retura to Montgomery for his firsl night in Alllboma alnce early May. Ht was lhot May 15 at Laurel, Md. He traveled llome in a mllJlary hoopital pi.,,.. . < On his departure, Wallace Aid that be appreciated '1nice rtmll'ka" about bhn.· . by G<orr• s. McGovern in the nominee'• accoptance.spoecb early loday. "! hive eongratulaled blm on wlnnln& but u lar It 1 political -. I hive . none et dill time,,, wan.ce told repO<ten; ...... Cle•• _Motlly -dftulh 8llwdq Is what tbe -illlllOcly predlcla, with temp&l!lai• Ill Ille 111111 inllnd, and around 79 It . ~..... Cout beachet. .......... . ........... . ~ II ..._ ..... .. ~ • .._...., 11 c ............. -... =:... ~ = ... ,..: ._. ...... ,, ............. .... -..... ,...,_ . ...... tNI ,........ .. .., ... ......... 1\ ,._. • .... 111111 1 ' M _.. ....... .. Mil~ M .......... 4 _.. 1 I Wal: 7 --.... .- I Lt Dancln' in tlae Aisles Delegate's to the Democratic NaUonal Convention In Miami Beach took the acceptance speech ot the nominee, Sen. George S. McGovern, as cause for celebration and dancing in the aisles. Though the traditional demonstrations and fanfare in the con· vention hall bad been banned under the new con· vention rules of the party, the jubilation was spon· taneous for several minutes after the ne wly chosen nomiii"ee spoke. 2 Marines Hurt In Auto Mishap Along Highway Two Marines were Injured late 'lbur&- day when their car went out of control, smashed into a hillside and rolled over, throwing one men out end pinning the other lnelde the cl!' along Paclllc Coast Highway north ol ~ino C.platrano. , Steve C. Watson, 22, and Donald A. Boycan, 21, both of camp Pendleton, were . taken to South Coast Community Hospital for emergency treatment follow• Ing the !!:54 p.m. accident. Hoapltal aldea said today that Wataon had received poaalble head lnjurlea along wlfll ~ and acrald!et. BoyC&11 was report;<! to have poaalble Internal in· jurlea. Botll mm were transferred to the camp Pendleton boapltal. c.Illornla lllibway Patrol olflcm ldentllled Wat>On ao the driver of the vehicle and Boycan ao a paoaenger. From Pagel FOX ••• all <lay Thursday and today over their concern that the fox may have been rabid. Foxea do not generally exhibit ag- gressive ~havior· toward hwnans, but they b:ave been known to be common car-- riers of rabies, along with bats and •kunb. Dr. Tom Hamilton, Orange County director of health services, hat urged campers not to panic, but stressed that anyone seeing a wild xnlmal with aggreulve behavior should Immediately ~ call authorities. Pender, who will have to take his twice-<laily injections for the next two weeks, b reportedly not worried about rabies. "He isn't worried about dying, he just thinks It'• weird having to get those ahots every day," his oldt brother said. Capo Official,s Reveal ,p . Budget; J: ax. Rate Same ' San Juan C.piltrano ' city o!ftclllls Thursday releaaed a proposed 1972-73 budget tbet would keep the tax rate at the preaent ft.20 level, the llllJle u It hat been since lncorporaUon. City manager Dnn Weidner haJ xaked Assessor Halted From · Collecting Trailer Taxes LOS ANGEi.ES (AP) -County Ass....,. Phlllp E. Watson mull abandon hls plan to collect property taxes on the county's more than 30,000 mobll9 bome1, &ays a Superior Court judge. Judge Hll'Old F. Colllna ruled Thtnday that Wataon "acted without authority, unreuonably, and beyond hll lflal rights" when his office malled property tax bW• to trailer owneri last month. The Judgment wu made In reoponJe to two clllSI action suits bl'O'!llhl I>)' mobile h om e °"""" Claire CO~elon of Whit. Ii.,., Demi! Wl1soo ol Tommce, and tbe Golden Gate Mobile Home Owners League Inc. , Mobile home ownera uld they would have been subjected to double taiatlon . under Watson's proposal because they already paid a 1972 vehicle · licenae registration fee. A tectlon of the state Revenue and Taxation Cgde says trailer license fees are 41fn Heu" of other taxes. Watson contended that the mobile homes actually were as uimmobile" as conventional houses and therefore should be assessed as real proprty. the counell to hold a study session Tue.: day night to dlacuss the document. The $2,254,113 spending program calls for $238,000 to be spent 00 the eelabliah- menl of a police de)>artment that would initially employ 16 peraonnel. In a budget message, Weidner notes that thia ex- penditure will depend on the outcome of the Aug. 22 election, it which the voters will decide If they want to establish their own police department. He noted that the amount recom- mended for the department iJ well above the $175,000 spent for police aervlcea from the Sb<rilf't Department In 1971-72, but "the savings In city pollce COiia the first alx montha will be subatantlally ollaet by anticipated lncreaaes Jn aher- lff'• costs." The proposed budget will reduce the clty'a present $182,000 reserve to $50,000, which Weidner attributes to ·antldpated lncreaaea tn retirement and Insurance coata to the dty. Fro111 Page l • FRASIER •.. ginJ hat listed the cau .. of death as old age and a kldoey malfunction. A team of 15 physicians, headed by Dr. Anthony Orlandella ol South Laguna perfonned an autopsy on the toothless: mangy lion tbla morning to determine the exact cause1 and to "find out why be was IO nmarkable" e4J a lover. Foxen ,.Id. . Frasier sired 35 cube In 18 months ·with his seven wives. The oldest cub, Jonah, has already been earmarked as Frasier's successor. The knoll in which the llon will be buried is on a hill above where Frasier's pride lives. Former Reporter Dead · James P. Rees At Saturday's ceremony, the ScottWI Glen Frasier will play a liiiteral dirge on bagpipes as Lion CountrY attendants act as pallbearers. . . SAN DIEGO (AP) -Richard E. Bowman. a reporter for the San Diego Union from 1981 to 1989, was found dead in his apartmeiit of undetermined causes Tuesday. In recent years Bowman, 39, worked al p11bllclty jobs. OllllNel COAST IC DAILY PILOT 'lllj, Ora'* C-t DAILY !'IL.OT. wltll Wflldl I• con!OlllM IN NtW1·Prn1, Is M IJW. it ftle Of"•,... CNlf l"lilbllslllnt (Ofl'IPlflY, Se,._ r•I• edl!lotll er• -'INMd, Mtone1y tt1ro119P1 l'rlffy, for COlll MtM, Htwptrt lltc:ll. Hlilll""'"" hKh/FN'llltn V1Uey, lq- e..dl, lr¥irM/kdclltNU W ·tan Cltrrltrltt/ S111 J11111 C.pi11r.,,., A 1lngt1 rttlon11 edition ll ,WIW!td S.lfJl"dl'fl Pd S\111111ys. Tiie p(lnclptl ,_tl.tll"' pl111! 11 ·1t ~ Wtll ••Y Str•t. Cfttl Mttt, Ctlltwrnlfi, fH». Robert N. W11~ f>rtildetll tnd P\IDllP!tr J1ilc R. Curley Vici Ptnldtl'lf Ind 0cf'llttl Ma~ Th1m11 .:,,,11 ~ Ec:lllol' 111111\11 A. Murphi11• Mtrwtlnl Edilor Ch1rl1• H. loo1 Rith1~ P. Nill AMl1t111I MfNlif\t Efltwt S.Clt...,. Offke 301 N.,+li 11 C1ml110 .,,1, 92•?2 --C•I• M•= lJt w .. 1 ••Y Strttt = ... di: »SI HIW!l*rl hllltvtrt H "'" hidt; 17f11 INCPI Bo\lltY1rll UtuM I~: • ~I A'tt!IW ,.,.,._ rno '42 .. 111 I --.._thlot '42·H7~ ,.. C'1 .. 1111 All ....... ; , ••• ,. ••• 4fz..MJI Clll¥rlfht, "71. ara,.e C'Mtl l"Wfllflll!I ~. No ... ,..,,. Hlrnlrtllwit, ......... hf191' ... td....,.IM!Nfttt •• ,,, ... _ ~ ,........... ......,. 9"(111 """ ~ ., _,,... "'*'• ....., ca.. ............ Cost• Mffe, ~ ~loll IW ul'rilr Jtfl ~' -, """ U,.11 MMl!llY1 mlflttrr ......... 11.U monllltr. Services Monday Funeral services for James Pennington. Rees of Capistrano Beach will be held Monday at the Fleming Funeral Home in Arthur, Illinois. Mr. Rees, who Jived at 26256 Via California, died Wednesday in Mission Viejo. He was 87 ·and wu a retired salesman. He is survived by a daughter, Marjorie BOwling, of Capistrano Beach; grandson, John Mason, of Corona; granddaughter Marjorie Puentes, of Capistrano Beach; and sister Bette Rees, of Tennessee. Arrangements have been made by Lesneski Mortuary of San Clemente. Frasier became a symbol of virility in old age and hls face adorned t·shlrts watches, fan club stationery and assorted merchandise. Lion Country business increased 22 percent when people began hearing of the lion's procreative prowess, a~rding to the park officials. ' · Foxen said the park has received phone calls, telegrams and fiower1 from all over the U.S. in regard to Frasier's death. Lion Country president Harry Schuster has announced the formation of the Frasier Foundation. It will sponsor fund- raising A:yents .with proceeds going to anima1 welfare organizations. Cliff Victim n1 Cleveland Forest Rescued by Copter Rescuer1 from several county 1gBDCie1 and a Marine Corps helicopter worked most ol the night and early Jll-O!'lllng to- day and finally· saved a 21>-yeaM>ld man who ldl 150 feet down • CIUI In Cleveland National For~t. The Incident began at about 11 p.m. Thursday and fioaUy resulted In the rescue of Alan Laraon of Beaumont at, about 7:30 a.m. today. , Sheri!!'• Oflloe spokesmen aid Laraon bad set out from I church in>uP In the !Rte evenll'lg hours to search for a f..)'HJ"-o old girl who had become lost. The youngster wu fouOO, but u Laraon and the search party relurned to camp n<0r Ille Laty W Ranch the man lost hla looting and fell. ' State forestry crews were surr.moned, but found that they could not reach the _!llan •ullering from back Jnjurlos. They, In tum, asked aberW'I depuUeo for help. The depuilet broulht Jn 'a ... r<h-and. reacue squad from tba San JUan and Doheny volunloer lire departmenta. All the crew• -~ . untU dawn to rescue the fallen man and after brlngJng Laraon up the cliff tba wluntoers awn- moned a Marine Corpe bellcOpter for "tvdcmit!on. -- Larson, who suffered cuts, ICfOpel and back hurts, waa reporled In saUlfactory condition lbls mornlll( at Mlaslon Com. munlty Hospital. • · • .. FHaP ... l . i BUDGET ••.• .S.chool for ,TMR $1!0,000 for addltlonl to the county plan· Dini stiff and a reaerva fund Of fllO,OOQ foe future mental healfll progrilJlll. AJao edded Wll ..000 for Diil 116- Gets Joaquin OK illtlonll t.adltng daya la !UVtD1le ocbDoll! l'.t'lulred by law and $10,000 !or an en- • vlronmental sludY of the Aliso Creek watershed area through El Toro and Laguna Hilla to the sea. Tha county Oood control and road By PATRICK BOYLE Of tM DtOr Plitt Slttf Tru!tees of the san Joaquin ElemeD-o tary School di.strict Thursday night laid a controversy to rest In accepting final bids for construction of a ochool for the trainable mentally retarded (TMR). The project, which bu been in the planning stages for several tn0nth!, sparked much debate and dissension on the school boaJ;d, with form'r bofrd JnSldOllC Gritllan l!idart adamanUy re- fusing to "spend one dime '' ol the dlo- trlct money .., the achoo! conslructlon. "' it turned out, the achoo! will be built entirely with state funds -al a 1avlngs of some $100,000. , At a special meeting Thursday, the llOard aw,arded the project to Near-Cal Construction o! Santa Ana with a low bid or '303,799. In preaenting 'the bids to ·the boord, facilities plenning director Dive Kine GOP Sets Drive With 500 People For Registration : About 500 people will conduct a door-to- door registration drive Jn Orenge County Saturday to try to wiri Democrats over to the Republican party, campaigners for President Nixm said today. Jane Broughton, an offlclal at the eo... mittee to Re-elect tbe Prealdent bead- quarterl in Irvine, said the statewide dfive is in response to Sen. George McGovern's candidacy for president. Called 4'Victory v~," the cam- paign to rMegi91er Democrat& u Republicans was organized two wee.ks ago, she 18.id, before McGover:n received the Democratic nc:mination. "And we've . been abaohrtely snowed with voluntoen {l<lr the drive) al!er he was nominated,'' she claimed. Gordon Luce,j vice chairman for the Calllomla Qimmltlee lo Re-elect Nixon, said that 10,000 volunteers statewide wW walk Saturday. Luce IJld other Republicans claim McGovern'• war and welfare pollciea are causing perty cn>oa0ver1. The drive tn Orange Coonty wW begin around to a.m. from the alx campaign headquarters: Irvine, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, LagUlla B tac h, Fulle<ton and Santa Ana. · Each volunteer ii being aslted to wall: lour hours. Mn. Broughton aald ohe had no Idea how many new Republlcana might reault from the effort. '!'be .... _ bu llreody ld>eduled three more drlv .. : August t, Augull H and September 9. noted fllat the bid was $17,807 below the depertmenta will each add $20,000 for Url.s study, It was agreed. maximum amount acceptable to the · Thursday's all-day budget session state {)(fice of Local Assistance froin covered four of the eight sections of the . · which the money will come. ' spending program -community safety,~ Tha fwldJ will be rl.sed .10 build the health,-educalion and home and com· . . munlty environment. IC!tool m Mission Viejo adjacent to La Approved· for inclusion In the budget Paz lnt.rmedlale School. ThC ~a · y was $1.1 million !or a propoaed nofuse WU planned for use in the f • "but dis~sal site ,north or San Juan. because of delays in acce ti ap1strano in PrlDla Oeschecha canyon. . P ng a con~ Assistant county road Cc>mmlssioner tractor, 1t probably won't ho ready until Murray Storm told board members bis Jall)lary. . department was negotiotlng with Rancho The faclllty will be used for the In-Mission Viejo on purchase of 1,000 acre& slructlon of some 60 students from !or ·the facility at a total cost . of $2 La~ Beach, Dena Point, sin Juen ::;1tTv~; .. re1:t~d i!!'• 1~ 1t1~~:":~. C.plstr"l"'• C.plstl'8ll0 Beach, S a.n facilities for truh dl.spoaal · In the Clemente, Tustin, Irvine and the Sad· southeastern part of the co!ll!!y will be dleback Valley. Until tbe facWty is com-· overloaded by tbet Ume. plete, the yOUJi8sten will :be hou.ed at a Plans call for tl1e eventual creation of· . churoh in. Tustin. !J~eglonal park as the canyon area ·is fill. The pro)ect was let out to bid three Planning's gain of $150,000 includes times ovt!r the past few months, and seven new employes and $$0,000 for a , each time, the bld! came in generally management study of the d'epartmenl'•: lower than "Ai All function5. . ~ ~ ore. were rejected the Planning Director Forest Dickason first time after atate olficialx refused to said a fiood of envlrorunental Impact . pay ov.,. $321,000 l<>r the lacWty. statements which must be proceoaed by , The first bids were tn excesa of his department had drasUcally Increased , · $400,000. When it was bid again, Near Cal the work load. / • wa.s the low bidder-, but company officials He pointe:d out that county growth was. · informed the district after the sealed not stowing and that of 58 counties in the . bids were opened that an accountant had state, 54 spend more per capita for plaJt. made a mistake. The bid was made in ning tlian Orange county. ·1 error, again pushing the total bid ~t A unique program adopted was a new the state maximum allowable amount. · dental services project for school"· "It is swprising that even the second children. Dr. John Philp, county health and third lowest bidders were some officer, said $85,803 was required by new $18,000 under their last bid without any state , law calling for en ennual ap, modlllcation In the pl&n1," King observ· plication of a decay-Inhibiting agent to, ed. \ the teeth of school children. He uld the· In addition to the low comtruction bid, cost would probably be offset by a small the boord approved a bid of $14,333 to charge of 40 to SO cents to each child. ., carpet the facility -$333 of which must come from school district funds and the remainder from the state. Trustees also approved a bid of 114,250 for installation of cabinets in the .school, ag&n having to pay $2!0 'tn district lunds. For bOth projects, the state had set a maximum ol $14,000 In stata aid. "II has been a long bard battle," aald Bldarl of the final approval, "but I think it was worth it." Trustee Dennis Snilth, who had con- stanUy argued with Bidarl about the need to get the school built as quickly u possible, agreed wifll his fellow truatee. Marjory Mann Rites Saturday .. .. ~. • •' Saturday funeral services will be held : for Mrs. Marjory Lillian Mann o! San'.· " Clemente. Mrs. Mann died Wedneaday at ._ -her home, 524 Avenida San Juan. The Rev. Cecil R. Burton, Rector of St • Clement's By.the&& Epill:copal Church·:~. of San Clemente will 'olficlata at the · 11 Calley's Father Dies ~ a.m. service In the Lesneski Mortuary . . Chapel. GAINESVILLE, Fla. {UPI) -Wllllam L. Galley, the father o! Lt. Wllllfm Calley Jr., died Thursday night juat hours alter his 11011 wu granted special . penntaslon to visit him. Lt. Cilley, lel'V• ~a :10-year sentence for DlllllCHll at My Lal In South Vietnam, spent about a hall·hour with bla lather ~Y and Mumed to his -tion quarten at n. Bepning, Ga., the aame afternoon. -.. -~ Mrs. Mann, who was 54, ls survived by '· her hu.sband, Robert T. Menn: daughter, Josephine Stubbs, of San Clemente, lhrM '" brothers. Gordon, George and Arthur: · Parker of England; and two grandchildren. Contributions may be made to ~ .; American cancer Society, Orange County Branch. · I CLEAR·ANCE ~SALE .CONTINUES ( 1f iii [arge selection, of outstanding qualify uph.olstery ay11ileble 1t rei:lucei:l prlc; es. Such well known names IS Woodmark, Sherrill, Henredon, Marge Carson 11nd-nr1ny moreonow-on,ale. • ' ' ' HENRIDON'S "Alv111r1Cfo Collection" now on sale.' · HERITAGE'S "Cameo", "Grand Tour" bedroom end occ1sionai., DREXEL'S "t.111rch1s11", "Vel1ro" "Esper~nto." LAMPS-PICTURES-AcdssORIES .... ALL REDUCED DREXE!-HERlTA&r.4iENREDON-WOODMA,.K-l(ARASTAN----""""'-..---- 'ltd. • INTERIORS WllllDATI I IAYUIDAYS. fltO te l:ff NIDAT 'TIL t• . ... .... • • NEW,ORT IEACH e T717 WllTCLI" DR. 642·2011 • · TORllANC! e 21'4f HAWTHORNI ILVD. 11f·l27t LA&UNA IEACH e Ill NORTH COAST HWY. 4t4-6111 • • • • • ' " j I ·1 ' ' .1 ' ,I ' :·1 " , .j " " ·1 " . • ., ' • ' DAJLV PILOT SC Frldol, Ju~ 14, 1972 Finance Briefs OVER THE COUNTER ' , BEYERL Y HILLS -Great Weslern Financial Corp., the nation'• largest publicly held lavings ind loan association holding company. reporttd tn- c r e a s e d 1 e cond..quarter operating income and net in· com .. The firm , which operates Great Western Savings & Llan and Fim City Savings & Loan, also held more than '4 billion in asaeta for the first time. VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA I RANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS :-----9 ta 1 P. M. MON.•THUlS. '10-J ,,M. PllDAYI 10..6 P,M. IJ14l 14f.1211. IM-.4 .. , k.C....Pl-.C.... .... ..... Viet h'H,-MtMttf' D. DEAN HE ISER NEED TAX SHELTER? .. . " l . • HOW MUCH7 $7-IQ.S0-100,000 or moro7 TAKI A HAID, LON5 LOOK AT CAT·TLE • WHlll THHl'5 UP TO JO•-' PIOPIT .... UP TO JOO% TAX WllTl·Off WRITE BOX NO: 395 -· (7141 541-2354 HALLI DAY'S • • '· CLASSIC NAVY BLAZEll • The Fabric 11 a Crisp Blend of Dacron and Wool trf & Tl1htly Wov en Hopaack • ...... A Perfect Pa.lrlni with Our New Cava.lry '\Will Trouser tn British· Tan or Bluer Grey. PIM MEN'S TRADmONAL CLOTlllNG IJllt & llYINl-ft.-wnTCLI" l'UZA NIW!'OIT llACH -PH. '41 .. 7'1 ....,.1 ,....._. ..... & n... 1M ' MUTUAL FUNDS COMPLET&NE\Vi YORK STOCK LIST . . • .. ' • , ' .• ' • Sile Ey~ Dolphin \ Acti~ty . SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tiie Sovltt Union ctalml dolphins are a U.S. weapon of war, despite denials, a IOrt of boltle-nooed aquautic com- mlMo trained to blow up enemy 1ub1Nrine1 or rescue cUvtrs. Gloria Patton «>need• only thit -''You have to remember never to make an aggreuive move around them. "Tltete animals have a unJque metaboUam, ''. says Mr~. Patton. '"Ibey are arllve con-'---. 1tantly, but they don't feed J constantly. They go tor tong Beavy Shutt•e LA6o, d periods without eating. Ii uw "They eat fish , and fish Artist roncept .shows a Lockheed Ag_ena with a rommunlcations payloail, both , hive no carbohx!!r@!eo which carried into space by the orbiting Space Shuttle vel!icle at lower left. Recent . Is the IOUJ"ce' of energy for studies show that the Agena in its present for.m, could perform most of the mis- Jand animals. So we don't sions envisioned for. the Orbit 'fran&fer _Stage or space tug. · know yet how they do It." _.c..:....::_ _ _:::.:.._..:..::_...:._::_.c..:._c_.:__.c..:..:__2 :..;;--'-.:__-':_-,.;_ ____ _ AS A NA VY blochemi•t, she is the only woman among 80 male acientistl engaged in biological and psychological studies with marine mammals at the Naval U~eraea Center. The sea lions and dolphins or porJ>Oises are being trained as undersea retrievers, able to replace human divers and df9 scend even farther to do work which man cannot. How the mammals can be maintained in good health for military work also is a . primary research chore. The divorced mother of a 14- year-o ld 80J\ Lindsay, Mrs. Patton drives a speedy British sport.! car 10 miles to work and back daily. JN HER FREE time, !he Is working toward a doct6rate at the University of Southern California and rldea dirt IHkes, but "I have a real klve affair with these animals,•• she con- fided in an interview. She said she is the only woman .research biochemist in the Navy in her specialized work, devoted to learning why tea mammal.a are unique. Industry Solving Problem Of Sewage, W tiste Disposal 'By LEROY POPE Ul"I ltnillffl Wtl-.r NEW YORI! -Little by lit· tit, American industrial in· genuity Is solving the prob- lems of sewage and waste disposal. Sanitary engineers h a v e known for years that solutions could be found in incineralion, compacting, chemical treat- ment, landfill, conversion into soil fillers and even building materials. THE TRICK IS to do It at costs the t.ax-payers and in- dustry can afford. That's easy to do in fuel-poor Europe, which can bum much waste to make steam to generate elec- tricity. Fuel is tqo cheap in the United States for that as a rule, but more a~ more American companie,, are find- Jng ways to make refuse disposal pay for itself, or nearly so. ordered 20 units of an tn- citlef'ator called the Corisum- mat from Sanitas Service Corp, of Hartford. Eleven of these units, each of which can ·handle the refuse output of about 5,000 ~e daily and cmts $72,000, have been· used around the country for the last year or so. Sanltas also operates ·fleets or garbage trucks to service some units, The most rigorous test of ·the Consummat has been made in South Houston, a town o! 12,000 inhabitants. GEORGE CHRISTY, Associates. the finn which designed the system, and Car· · rier expect the plant to be aelf-supporting. Still ·another interesting ex- periment, this one concerning the disposal of sludge from sewage plants, has just been started by the Federal Depart- ment of Agriculture on a 15- acre plot at Bell!ville, Md. The aim or this experiment Is to determine the economics of enriching soils with sewage sludge. Tant trucb bring the sludge from the Diltrk:t of Columbia sewage treatment p I a n t s . Earth machines ~11 mix it with the existing aoil in ratios as high 1s 500 tons to the acre. '1'ht experiment wi II be. con- tinued for aeveral years. Ultlm1tely It. may b e detennined that a e w 1 g e sludge can be used beneficially on a big tcale. , , DAILY PILOT ,,. T~epiece Industry In Change NEW YORK (UPI) -Tho notion i8 •Pl'f•dtna In tllo llmepltce llldustry t!laf by Ille tnd of this decode an better cr•de w1tcht8 will hive no moving parta. If that turns out to be true, the centers of the world'• watchmaking industry Wilt cross the oceans f r o m Switzerland and Japan to tht United States. The teehnoJocy for the 111 t0lid-1tate · quarlJ crystal· watches h11 been developed in the United State.s and since their manufactw:e and assembly will requir:t relatively Jillie hand lobor. 11\o great in~tJve to maktrig good w11tches in Switzerland · and Japan wilt end. HOWEVER, all solid-state watches will cost at .least aiO initially. The first one. the Hamilton Pulsar was in· trodueed at 12; 100 in 1'7~ · nobody expects to be able · io sell th~m for less han j6o even several years from no,,. Therefore, a big market tor low cost jeweled and pin-le9er w111tches is available for Ch• Swiss, Japanese and the Russians. The first l250 all solld·slaie watch Is promised for this !~I by Wyler Watch C.. of ~w York . It will have a quarts crystal oscillator·, an Jn. tegrated solid-stale circuit.; a liquid c~tal digital re1da1,1t and will be battery powertd~ ' IT WILL be called the Com- putime. President V i c to r Wyler makes no claim th1t the Computime will be more ac~ curate than Bulova'a ~ cuquartz, introduced I a 1 t Christmas, which employs a quartz crystal, a tuning fotk and moving hands.· But both Wyler and George Thieu, ttie inventor of the solid·~• movement in Ham i I ton ',1 Pulsar, say the Accuquartz ud. other quartz crystal watchtt with movin111 parts-those of Timex and the Japanese Stikn company for e1ample-ate stlll hybrids, Uuit the rul future Is in all aolid-4tatl witches with liquid CrytWI readouts. The marine animals seem to have all the physical problems that plague humans, she Wd, organic disfunctlon1 such as Uver trouble and muscular wasting li\e muacular distrophy. 'Ibe city of Houston has just ~ recently retired as South Houston's mayor al the age of 82, said the Consummat solved his town's garbage and solid~ waste disposal. Using oxygeri and any fosJ;il fuel , the Consummat burns "garbage, wood, glass, plastics, fabrics, old tires and even some metals, leaving virtually no residue and creating no odor or air polluting f:ffluent. An after-burner takes care of chimney' efnuent. Money'• W ortlt . They come ln from the sea filled with parasites and "the only way they can tell an animal ls sick is when he stops eating. ''IT IS IN DlVING to ex- treme depths and chasing fish that they are most active and are utilizing energy a n d needing oxygen," says the vivacious, tousel·haired scien- fist. ' "WeJCan't explain how they do thl!: Everything is the op- posite of what you would ex- pect. They are unusual and unique." · Dealing with them ta~s strength, and "I am a vify strong woman," she says, ad· .ding : 0 YOU HAVE TO remember never to make an aggressive move. A wild animal ls never really_tame,_Lget I~ fed Earnings Up At Safeway S8feway S to'r es Inc. rePorted \noreases in both sa.Jes and earnings for th~ first 24 weeks of 1972. According to Saf~way Presi- dent William S. Mitchell, sales for the 24 weeks ended July 17 were · $2,700,42.8,000, an in- . crease of 13 percent over sales of 12,390,018,000 in the com· parable period or 1971. Income be!ore provision for income taxes amounted to •11,520,000 for the first 24 weeks of this YNr, an in- crease of 6.8 percent over a year wlier. Another solid waste er- periment is planned by the ci- ty or Nashville, Tenn ., for whom Carrier C.Orp. o f Syracuse is building an in- cIDerating plant that will pro- duce steam for heating as a byproduct in winter and chilled water for air-conditioning in summer. Steam and the cllilled water wilt be piped into buildings in m i d to w n Nashville. The plant will solve much of Na!ltviBe's waste disposal and air pollution prob- lem: and give the. city something to sell to help pay for it. OPERATIONALLY, Nashville Mayor Be ver I y Briley, I. C. 'Iborna590n & Does Market Indicate Next U.S President?· By SYLVIA· PORTER If the stock market is lower at election time than at the start of 1972, the Democrat& will most likely win the White House. But if the market, as measured by the Dow Jones industrial average, is higher than on New Year'• Day, Pr~ident Nixon will most likely be reelected. Since 1900-atmoet three· quarters of a century-this remarkable indicator h a s usually foretold tbe Presiden- tial winner, ., Q. Does the morket rue! more r.~abty to fl'PUblicU or Democratic victories? . A. The llepubtic1114 wio hands down on this catetory, reports lliliCh. Sfnet 111111, thO market I! mee......t by flit Dow Jones, has risen GO ei&ht of the nine -• Repoblican hu won and on only four of the nine occuklns a Democrat bu won. RESEARCH BY the j;,_ vestment firm of Niede<h6f. fer. Cross & Zeckhauser • found that the average chil!p the" week ofter Republican ~ tory WU: up I.Oil peretllll, FoUo"i"I Democratic vif.. lories ff WH: dowr 0.:L'I ptr• cent. But~ there's a catch bwe! t 1 ' • Ul'I T1lt11httn .. . ' . . Kiss; Kiss,. Ki~s, Kiss Kissinger l-•..--'th~e'"sea lions, and they crowd me and maybe nip at me a lit· tie and they 'like it. But if I make one quick aggressive ' move they'll bite.'' according to Yale Hirsch, president of the Hil'!Ch 0 r ganiza- tioo of Old Tappan, N. J .1 and auth- or of the an· The market tends to diacount the victory of en incumbent l'mident. Sine> 194!, the" Dolf Pr!sidential adviser Henry A. kissinger is a handsome devil, sure. Ur· bln.e. sens.uous, witty and cuddlesome, yes. But bow•does he get all those lirls? He's. shown with (from top) NBC's Barbara Walters, CBS produce,r Margaret Osme,r, Rockefeller aide Na~cy Maginnes ~d actress Ali Mac· .. By way of preparation, Mrs Patton says, "Luckily [ WU 1""•.:' ' Graw. Photos were taken from UPI files over several years. _ . ...... born a tomboy. My brothers used to say I couldn't do things 6e:cause I was a girl, IO I showed them I could." :f:;He's Frank About :Words Mtldrid Nqvelist Writ.es Dictionar y of Dirty· Words : ..MADRID (AP) -An entirf dictionary 'Hwad to dirty words? In Calholic, .jpatn. wbtre censorship has become a troblem. boOO on dirty words'have Just .... pilllisbed ~. No, not ~ ~olume, but two, both best ~. 1 third in the making and two ilplte .diedUted' : • Sold clandestinely, then, by furtive ~pllm! ' .: WJ;ll ,again. Available in bookstores .. oamPuid by tbe cnuntry's leading m• ClmUo J ... Cela, author ol the ;'r'lm:Uy of Pascual Duarte''' been tr1111lated Into II ptUI Brallte. ! "'la peperback alone, Cela's first "Secret ~," lhoul testicle.s, h~s sold tllu 11•.llClll "°""' a roanng suc-lllll Ill' ai.nish sllndanfs. Hardback '11111 1r1 -•led •l about 311,000. : 1111 ..,.. •olume, oearly twice the ·~, tllo 11n1, i8 devoted to street lor wards tl!lll mean ..-me. • Ile ta •t ...,.k oo • volumt illillttllo ............ • I He is Undecided where to focus Volumes four and five. The books have a limited' circulation outSide Spain, because they cannot be translated. They !\ave yet to be widely published in South America. But 1r you want to know the equivalent of a dirty word in CUban. Puerto Ricap_, Ecuadorean or Chilean Spanish, it ls m the dictionary. Cela, 55, does not agree that the words a.re dirty. He holds they have certain Umes and places where they can be used. ''The !act that a word e1ists does not harness. it with the supposltlon that lt& use should be or muat he extolled but, simply, indicates the evidence that It ex- ists as such a word. that is: Jt Is there, performjng a fu.nction-nami~ 1n object, an action, a sensation or blend.Ing Its qualities. • • " Cela writes of his first volume. ·' In penon, he ii more to the point: "It •bsolutely ii not pornography." But he acknowledges he has never • f prtsented his dictionarits io the Mini.my of rr.fonn•lloo and Tourism for. appront ~fore pubtic1tion....Jfi• '1'o.m1Jy of Pascual Duarte" was presented In lM3 and held up two years. Would the government ri1k suppressing the dlctlonarl" of the coontry's leadlna philologist •nd member of the Royal Academy of the Spanish Language? Molt of Cela's friends th.ink not. The dlctlonarlH ore rull of history, 'literature and e•plan•tinn . Ceia gets most or his Inlorm•llon fn)ln hil tibr•ry of 15,000 book11 and uys it i.ta him yean ol readlnc to produce a volume, once a soldier in Franco's army, Cela had his antiwar novel "Sln C.mllo 1131" published in !Me. He otdrts talking publlcly of pOlltlcs ond avoid• M•drld II months or the ynr by ttaYlnc .., the island of Majorca . A Joomall•t wbo P.,ws him well 1&ys: "He ls a brilli111t 111111. And JI you ••nl ll talk frankly, he tmow• the words." ii ·-- .,._ Modern P•al B1111gan:' I ' , An empioye 1t lhe Westinghouse 1ppartlus nrvtce plant in Richmond, V•., Uehten• the top of • con- denser bll!hin& for 1 11rge power trllldormer. The bu1hing provide! i.n1ui1tion to ctrry 115.000·fOlt current from the power transformer without short· circuiUne. · ' • Dual "Stock NllTU Trader's Almanac. T he re have · b e e n only thrff exceptions: 1112, 1'40 and In 11111 whef1, oays Hinch, "The marvelous Jndicator n e ., e r really had a choneo due to Johnson's withdrawal 11 a candidste' and 'l1e bombina halt." W i t h extraordu.r, · f,... quency during this Democratic convention week, I' filyt been uked questions ·•bout 1he atock macket and whore it might be heading .. Here •re some fascinating answers ·I obtained from Hinch, whioh will be included in his 1973 Allllllnac, to be )i<Jbllahed in lote September (17.4.1). . Q, WHAT HAPPENS to the Mock market between con- )'elltion times and ei,cllon! A. In the firll 40 yean o( the 20th cenlury, the marktt -10 out of I Uhneo, uoualb' 1pectacularfy. bel-tho end of the Repubticon - In June and November. 1'ere Wft"e fractional .._ ln 1M4, J'43. 1952, lttfl and 11111, Since then, the marktt hH been a winner bet-:Yeen the end of· the GOP conventipn and e!tttion day (Ill' 2.1 p<r<ent from July 17, 1114. •nd up U percent fn)ln AUJ. I, 1911). The nwket ha• become m11<h 1-volatilo In the 1111 six eledlon ,....., wllll th • ....... chi• 7 percent .............. llporctot In Ille .,,..... 12 eloctton )'tin. I Jones ~al stock averqe has _.deetlned the day, wtllt ~ month following llio reelectionl of all the fn- cumbent candidates durina tlie period: ~veil ( 11 H J , Truman (11411), Eisenhower (I•) and Johmton (19114) tr• c:ept for a .tiny 0.19 percent l•lll the month after Ftonldln Rooeevelt'1 last victory. Since 1900, only hro of the '.11 incumbents hove betn oulllld, by the way: Hoover, 40 )'tin ago, and Taft in 1112. And no party during this e n t I rt century ha~ remained in power for only four ye1n. Q. Under which party has the stock lllll'ket far<d belt? A. "Thi> will shock -11:• Hirsc:h ~RUtioned mt. "I wasn't awe.rt of it m)'l@lf:·" The fo!Jowine !li1ne ....,. thot invest.on li11Ve 1...i more thoo twice • well undtr Dtmocr1t1 as under Ropubllea,,.. .REPUBUCAN Ell.U: fn the IJ.year J><l'iod from 1181 lo 1112, the otock market ,.. 311.i percent: In the IJ.1'if period from 1•1 " 1111, .,... ,.., no ovmll duinge In tllo 'stock market : In the f.y•r per~ from !Iii to llllJ, Ibo stock mna -118.1 Jiii" ctnt; . in the Jl>-yeor !*1od from t• to mid-Im. 11111 stock market -U ,._, Over llle combtnod .. ., ot 1111 year1, the totll rill to 1111 stock market wu 118.1 Jiii" C!lll. . ( , • " 0 o• g g; g 0 •• • •• •• •• " •• •• " " •• •• " .. .. •• .. .. E· ~ ~,.' t· =· .. " =· ~: ~· ~: .. ~~ ~~ "' " er .. ~1· ~1· ~. • ' I • ' I II I r. ' • ' I • ... ... ' 1· DAILY l'tLOT Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertising FinQDee Briefs e Air l'•f'ee 8111 SA~A MONICA -1- Siosler. 111<.. Mid It h• ._ivec1 • '" mllllon Air P'9ttt contrld ror m1tn- letianct 1nd rtpolr of aircraft hltbpte:n ind w 1 a p o a tyttem1. Tiit compony 111d I l 1 managtmMI aorvicel divl._, headquortend In Olliahoma Clly, will uirry out lllt co"" 1roct durfJll n-r 1m at Alt For<t buot iltrouthollt Iha world. I • • ' !! DAILY PILOT Fridq, Juty 14, 1972 C:.lll81en I Russfnn Trawler . Aids Cat Racer NtlVPORT, a.I. (AP) - Bll llowoll, wbo -ca bis way lo _....,. :.,. ol the top -la the 'llDgle- llanded TrauutlanUc b o I t race, now aays be feels lucky to be alive. His TahiU Bill, with a amashed port hull partially filled with nter, made ii into Newport Tburaday night, with tbe aid ol a 8'19llb inspection ship, a Cout Guard cutter and a smaller patrol vewl. Tahiti Bill; a 43-loot sloop- rigged catamaran, was knock· ed out ol tbe raee from Plymoucti. Englond, Wedn,.. day nlJbl' when •be .collided with' a Russian traWler in lhi<k i.,. ...,. the Nantucket IJgbtabip, Tbe llispactJon vessel took the 'dllabled catamaran in tow early Tburaday and brought It to within II mlles of Newport, where II WU relieved by the 83-loot Cout Guard cutter, Point Turner. The ~ brought tbe crip- pled boat into Newport Hotbor, where the patrol •esiel from the Castle Hill Championship Regattas Set · for Alamitos Bav 1-lanel-H1 kippers and crews have a week of dwmp6oollhip competition ahead of tbem starting today II Alamltoo Bay. • first five· boats In the series, and the Wllilam Randolph Hearst Trophy goes to tbe highest placing skipper from oullide the Southern callfornta area. • • racer~. Pinole gave no indication of troubJe and said a report on the yachts' locations was ex- pected late Friday or Satur- day. Race officials said they expected the first yacht to twch Bayona Saturday or Sunday, about 43-Jo.72 houn behlnll fim predictions. T-.. Two yachts, not identifieC!, have reportedly dropped out of the race since Its start JWIO 29. '· ·--"f Out of-Reaela2' • I Holt Boosts .. Star :Lead .' Compare aRd decide Guaranteed SIHpoble . FOR INFORMATION 01 APPOINTMINT CALL- 64201781 2129 Harbor Blvd. 3132 WILINCOLN AVE. 5009 HOLL YWOOO BLVO. • • ·MAllNE HOLDING TANKS •IW SYITIUU 01 ... Ullf .. NaAO .. THI MOlDI ... C-P/IHY. ............. .._ . GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT . ~ - 0 "'' t• 11• I 111 .... f'tvllity wlltl 1r.~riflltM '"1me Wllllllll umpln~. Mwtt M Ull'l"lellc.i 'Ill PM.I. UllltnlCllN llMI Ctpllllt If llllM9lflt lltlll tHr•ti-In J citltt. Stlllll retum1 ti Slllldtl"d·f'lclllc (Ol'J'. '5'5 W. M1c.t.rt11ur ••WI. 'C"I• M ... , Ctllf. f2W. •• . ... ·: . . Costa Mesa 642-1781 -. Anaheim 827-1120 Hollywood 1213) 467-2252 .: The flnl three days -to- day, Salurday and Sunday - wtl1 be Ille W• Cool! Cloam- )Ulllllp, replla. After two days ol mt. thole qualifying for Iba -champlonohip wl1I ... bact la their codcplll nm Wednesday for three days ol duelln& at Marina de! Rey. In tbe national competition the Founder• Trophy will be the top prize, plus take-home trophies for the top five finishers. The race retraces the courae of the Spanish caravelles, La ================= The West Cout cham- pJqnshlpa will be Wider the gnldonce Of Alamltoo Biy Yocht Club and tbe nallona!J wlD be nmrndded by South Cout Cor1nthlon Yocht Club. ~ prtsa are up for ...... In boao repllal. '!be Weot Oioal Plaque wiH be owordad lo the aerleo winner II Alamltoo Bay. Take-home tropldes .wtll be given to .the Albrecht Will Be The President'• Trophy la the. prlr;e le< the Winner of tbe Ioog dlatance race acbeduled Friday, July 21. The Humphry Trophy goes to the first woman, either as skipper and crew, and the Sherwood Trophy will be awarded to the high scorer in the lint four races -!iiroWlng out the poorest-.. Well-known West Coast skip- pers expected to be on hand al Alamitos Bay include Alan Laflin, steve Toschi and t'hris Benedict from the San Fran- claco area; Balrd Barclarllon, Seattle,. and Bob Reeves, An- napolls, Md. 50 Nations Pinta and La Nina, that put into Ba}'OllG oo their back to Spain Mier the discovery of AmerJca by Cb r is top her C.olumbus in 1492. Seal Beach, Dana Race Set Aug. 5 'The · fourth annual Seal Beach to Dana Point race sdieduled !or Aug. S is being CCH)lOll!Ored by the Seal ll<acli Yacht Club and Dana Point Yacht Club. The race is a downwind af- fair. with a run or reach for the participants. In past races conditions have varied from a drifting match to strong win<b that have sent boats surfing JJJ, Olympic :.w; the face of following While a strong contingent of . President Paul Albrecht ha1 been y h R ocean racers is expected, the elected president of t he ac t aces bulk of the fleet will be made Southern c.autornla Marine up of medium sized yachts Yachtsmen from over so capable of a one-day race. AlllOClalklll, tbe west's leading countries will compete in the Spacial trophies will be marine· -orgllllizatlca. Olympic · ysehtlng games at awarded to winning boats in SCMA innuaUy presents the Kiel, Germany, starting Aug. such classes as ketch e. s, Long Beach Sailboat Show-to 28 and continuing lbrough schooners and ocean racing '1e hold ·-Oct · »It; ut1··11M! -~b•'j;;j;' ii;·;;; ;;·j ~t,;"~ · ~!f"';~;"'~:l'/:c~~~~ Soutbem California ,Boat Show record of 41 countnes com-Perpetual for ketches and •t the Loa Angeles ConvenUca petj1111: In the 111io Olympics at Dana Point Yacht Club 'has Center In February. Naples Italy when the sum. put up the Clyde Beagle . ..Albrecht bu been in the · mer Olymples were held at Perpetual for schooners. marine indtistry nearly all of Rome. Forty-one countries A buffet supper will be serv- hil adult life. He has moved were represented at Acapulco ed. for the participants at up tl;'ough the leaderahlp in 1968. Dana Point Yacht Club's new mW of SCMA, formerly Some 210 boats in six clasaes clubhouse. ~ Wvlng "Bl chairman of tbe will compete for the Olympic A large number of boats ScJ&.ltbern Cslifornia B o a t medalJ in t.lie three racing from the San Diego area are Sbo-W:. He has been a member areas in the Kiel Outer also expected to be in Dana Albrecht is president of Fjorde. Harbor. Slips will be BVJ\ilable Uoiflite Yachts In Long Beach. Olympic classes.are Dragon, for smaller boats, but most of of the board of directors for Soling, Star, Tempe3t, Flying the yachts will raft up in the eil!it yurs. Dutchman and Finn. marina. Weekend Calendar Kiws Set for First Fligh .t The first edition of the Serles, on Saturday. Flight of the Kites on Newport Also on Saturday, the dlstalr Harbbt wlll doubtless draw the sailors will participate in Lido mOst spectator interest this Isle Yacht Club's annual All· weekend as the sporty little· Girl Regatta. · catboats cooJipete Sunday over The Midget Ocean Racing the old Flight of the Snowbir<ts Fleet yachts (under 30 feet) coune. will compete-Saturday in The Newport Harbor Newport Harbor Yacht Club's OJambtr of C.ommerce has, Inslee ChaJlenge Series. been looklng for s o m e • Los Angeles-Long Beach ' day and Sunday. SILVERGATE CLUB -Rorison Series, ban-. dlcap fleet, Sunday. North and laland ANACAPA YACHT CLUB - Skipperette Race, SUnday. SANT A BARBARA SAIL- ING CLUB ...... Summer Series, Sunday. yactotq event to take the ALAMITOS BAY YACHT pl1ce of the defunct Snowbird CLUB -YRU Small Boat Coatal Weather extravaganza ever since the Regatta, Saturday and ~ H•tY WMN11t tocl•Y. Lltllt v•r'l•blt dernile of the sudden-death day. wllld• n!gllt •nd mornlno lloura *°"'" race a few years . ago. For LONG BEACH y AC HT ll'IQI wt•t•IY •to 1t k11<111·1n 1111,.._. tod1y lllCI S.tura.y. Hlell fOOly, 10. tine decadel the Flight of the CLUB -Point Fennin Ra~1 · Cot1te1 tttnPtr•turt1 r•~ trom '° Soowblrdl in late July was one JOR, MORF, PHRF, Saturday. : :-:•:,,';rn:::;'-::;nz; f1'0rTI ol the big llUllllllOI' attractions Saalo Monica .Bo,. " · for -• KING HARBOR YACHT s .... , Moon, l'fdes Ill Ill he1da1 Ille Flight of CLUB -Spinnaker Series No. ,.10., tbe8Dowbtrdldrewmorethan 41 Saturday. Second nit11 ...... ~ ... 12:M1.m.. lit bolts. The Chamber of SOUTH CQ'AST COR-s.cw '°"" SATU-.i;,.y':,,,,.m.. ~ ill hoping the INTHIAN YACHT CLUB -"'"' 111en .............. l:Sl p.m. J1llM of the KJtea wW hold Junior-Senior Regatta, juniors :~'°:w'·::::·::::::: ~;~~::: tbl lllDI attraction. 1t the helm, Slturday and IUNDAY Ill Cltbll' local yachting Sunday. • 'Im lllOll ......... .!./ ... 1:1s1.m.. "' ...a: • Saa Dleto "' :!c~~,;.·:::·::.:'.:·.::1;:::~ !:; •-~ Y-Club wm CORONADO YACHT CLllB '""" IO• ............ "" •·•· 1•1 ~ T &1111 .... s:n t.1111. ltt• 1:0i II.trio ltlp ltl Mii. Jslandt race -Junior Summtr Seri"'; MOOll 11111 t :57 1.m. sm 10:31 '·"'· 6r pddo -· la Ille el Rorick Serita, PHRF, Sat"'\ r , ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT Polyester/Glass Belted SUPER . WIDE! BELTED-RAISED I WHITE LETTERS "60 SERIES" F&0-14 or 15 $35.95 ,.E.T.-2.ll·J.• G&0-14or15 $39.95 P.S.T.~.t.S-172 CAMPER OWNERS We Feature TIRE SALE HURRY ... Offer Ends July 22 JUMeo·.1ao ... • GTass!Bellecr· .. ·· · ...... · for mileage • Strong polyester cord body Charge It at General Tire ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT These are the tires thit are original equipment on ne~ 1972 cars in every division of Detroit'• big 3 •uto makers. WHITEWALLS ONLY $3 MORE PER TIRE SALE PRICES ............. ~ ....... i;.111-14- ~ tor s94 •• 2 for $48": F711-14 l 15 • 4 for 5100'· 2 for ssr- G711-14l1~ 4 for 5110' • 2 for SST •fube+eal blackwlfl1 plua $1 .71 • $2.78 F•d. Ex. Tix per \ire-. pending ~ liz• HI-SPEED WHEn BAIANCING ON YOUR TRUCK IMIM tat:U; SllMf .. ....,., 9' -Or. '1n1 •, W..S,. alllrt #lar llil ....... -.. will .._, 111W 9*'t ,.._ -tlr hit .. Hli'#!J It tllt HMfti'" 11rica. Complete BRAKE RELINE .~ . NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE But we do all this; 1. 1~11111 HEW llNY"t flt1/. llnlllf • 111 4 Wl!Hltl t. Jtdullcl flit cyUMfl'S • •II • Wllffltl S: llHd •r•ka -lml•ll lllrty Wty llr•k• 11111c1. I. ln1Jltd brall1 r.tuni •ll'ril!IL S. Tlltll 111111 tnrt 111 4 btlllt •nilftl, ._ lt•,.at frwrt whffl ltffr111t1. 1. Allillllf •r1~11 •M d*t tfMf' ttlKY 111111111. L lltM ... , )'tllr triomtbllt. $ MOl1 U.I. CO(l'IPllCI Ctrs Olst Brak" Slightly Hither. ,. FRONT END ALIGNMENT USED TIRES $5'5 EACH ptus lf1f9 •nd lk.tl "'"' Iott of non-1kid trHd Crooked wheel• rob your car of $850 m11lmum perform1nce, rklt, stffr.. . Ing and ti,.. wear. We correct cos-'ONLY ' hr, camber, to.in, to.out to your Cir menuf•ctvrer't specifiC•tioiis, ~ and safety check and ecl)uot 'your 11Hrl119. ·Don Swedlund TUBELESS BLACKWALL POLYESTER BELTED .,,_ TIRES .A78x13 $14.95 .......... B7h13-• $15.95, ....... 7' C78'x13 ' $16.95 •.•. t.1.ll C78x14 $17.951 .•.•. 1.11 E78x14 $18.95 1 .•.• 2.14 COMPLITI CAR CARI ' Since 19S9 COAST GENERAL TIRE Houra: 7:30 to 6:00 Delly PHONE: 540-5710 : 646-5033 1 \ I I • ' Tetlay'11 Fl••I ""' VOL.. 65, NO. 196, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~!DAY, JULY 14, 1972 TEN CENTS Thomas ·Drops Plan to Scrap 'Top of World' II)' FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL Of .. .,...., '"" lfllff .. ln a statement released this morning, Lquna Beach Board of Educatioo Pres!· dent William Thomas said he bas withdrawn a controven1lal proposal to scrap the innovative Top of the World Elementary School program. Thomas' statement . reads : "After :slating my concerns !or needed . im· }kovement at Top of the World Elemen- tary School' at the last board meeting, l hove baclan opportunity to meet with the .. AEC Case admlnlstrative llafl to dlacuu the Laue In more detatl. "W:e ·have reached an aareement to make no major changes In ihe orpnisa· tion atructure at this time. "I have insisted on a heavier empbuls Oil the s l1'1, primarily In math ud English. We will alto utilize Mr. Ted Doniguian 's mllterial to help us evaluate these progor&nll. "Altboogh I beleve we bavt needed areas fer improvement at thia school, there are areas ol needed lnprovement at ac~e Security Chi~f Placed on . Leave :\VASIIlNGTON (AP) -The Atomic EDergy Commission, dloclosed today that William T. Riley, Ill director of security, ba£ been "placed on leave without .P8Y peNnng re90lution of aome allegations COOO!rning blJ peraonal financial al· fairs.'" . \ ' An f.EC spokesman slid the au.,.. tions 11relate to the borrowing of mcmey from other AEO employes ud his ia- debtedness ••• and .•• lndicatlona are that it's in a:cess of $100,000." Riley's job pmd.136,000 •a yesr and be'• had it .111nce Nomnher, 1117. · , all ocbools. We will wmt to ldeolifJ ud -ipecilic -. •on-Include dloclpllne, 1 o e I a I sciences, math and Americanllm. "Apln, I would UU to 1111 that noepl fir esamlning speeille CODCOIDI 11111 lm- plementinc improftlllellb In the next year, I want to ....., tbe 111111 and tbe people ol Laguna Beach that therw will be no'draatlc change in_-.ma al aey ol our acboola. "However,. some adjUltments will be made from time to til!>e baled 1- soond evidence. Tbe dinction al Im- provement will cOme from t b • superintendent •1 olBce · after tbol'Ollih discussion with• tbe board. 111 belieVe that a Slimmer of rol oom- munlcattons la l1na1ly i >glanlnf to be seen," the statement Concluded. The. statement, ~ aoid !Oday, was an outcrowth ol ~ boun of meeting wjtb I eh O o I Superln- teodent Wiiiiam Ullom and bis, staff followtng TueadaY nllhl'• meetinc· Lite durlntl that -.., Tbomu pi:opooed •• • --... 1n • . ... • . --- Top of the World's program bo replaced wttb one used at !:I Morro Elementary ScbooL At tbe end.of tbe board m .. tlng. II WU agreed to dtlaJ aey decision Oil< week, but It now appears that action may be halted for at 1eut a year, as the Top of the World _,am 11 monitored. Thomas pointed out that although the word ''we" ls used, be had not contacted other memben of the board regarding the statement as of the time it was released. Ht'a&ld he would contact the otber lour membe!ll later today. During the next year, Thomas, llld, the Top of the World procram will be watched carefully, a thorough lelllnc program lnltllted ud the resulll anal)'> ed by Donlguian, a local s)'Slems analyst. Doniguian has already drawn a con-- clusion that student.I entering Tbunton lntennediate School from Top of the World are pei:ftrmlng -.e In math classes than students from oilier eJemet>. tary schools, HIJ coocluslona, hoWever have been disputed by a number al ad- ministnitors within the dlstrld. 3rd Party May Offer Nomination LEMON GROVE (UPI) -An official of the National American Party aald to- day there is 111 1ood chance" Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace would accept the party's preatdentlal nomlnallon ne1i month. . William K llbeerer, lormor Catllornla chairman of the affiliated American Independent Pirty and' a member of the 13-lllaD NAP incullve ·-· aaid be ~. ... llAP .. -i. Wallace ...... JI . llDldl lb -I Conditions Hit Thi Ill '*"•••11 _.. Ble;' , .. *,ctd on ave June 14, and 1* been repliced by Pllll_ CloallnL p, • -4apltJ clindar .ot tiiO dlvliioii al -urlly, dur- ing innlllptlon ol !hi all,. ... .., !hi com.miatnn~a divlllon if ~. ' ' nomlnallnf ""''-All· H at •• ~~. nomlriallon to ldlll, ... be Aid. "Wt mab DO P'll'!-!t:'• l w-. he will .... II. Rt . -stllDllartl .bearer loui ,.,. .......... will make tbot olflr apln. At Branch Jail By Grand Jury Riley, U, an Army counter·inleUlcence man dufmg World War n, joined the AEC in l!M7' at Los Alamol, N.M.1 a1 a security and Intelligence -r· ud rose · through VariOUI levels. The Orange County Grand Jury today Al chief of aecurlty, i. baa been sharply criticl2ed the operation ol the resP!JDSible for the pbylical aecurlty of Theo Lacy branch jell and said ll con· all tbe diverae Installations ol ta AEC'a ditionl are not draatlcatly Improved it farllung empire, atretcbing fr o m abou1d be closed. , ··"'--A news release ~gned by Jury w..,.....~. D.C. to Enl...tolt and from Fo--an Otto 1'{. Sclunid.len. charges that Brookbavt11t N.Y. -to the Aleutian ·-Islands. · · -the minimum security facility on The job ·'"· incl•"'-ras~•lbility for M8ocbester Avenue in Orange is the o..-.i w'F" r-·-· 1 ' • , • • d "personnel security," inc lud ln( ' . r ' r ' • ,• T J ' ' Mft..YPtL.OT ........ si:ene of constant drug-amuggtlng an ~ PAGEANT OPENS -Orn al& rostumes anll ·even . 11e ~ ;w!J,eo, Sotrth,'tocuna:. M:ary Parter, Costa absence cl pri!oners from the c:ooflnes clearan.ces of proopective.employes and more ornate . aet, enliven "Th'! Chess•Game ~ O!Je1<if ' Men; Jtldl W.-moM!TlutlJt• Patty O'lieno . Oralige: ... J~an~~1:;~~udesi(n' .::=::, !:1:..=..1e~~ 'T' the.,coJorful-111bjects-in"the .. .lix;·weeli:' Pa~l ·m , • 'Lislie• ~ ~ WumtOo;l and Tm'y· 0Smlllr of ed ~ tenced for non-But Ille spokesman volunteered the tbe Masters. It opens towght in 1Laguna ·Beach.· • Garden'.Grove. . 1 ,. •. , • • ~ !j' 11:,ir"!·:'uona and other COIJUJ18lt that "Ihm Is no Indication that Painting ls by ·Franeisco Beda. From left rlO· right {' , illiSdem'ean~ Jme~. But the report any eecurity matters are involved" in the <liirges that because ol Ille great ill-case Involving tbe security chief. erease tn narcotics violations and "There haven't been any formal overcrowding of the main jail in ~1nta charges !nu.ght," said the spokesman. Ana, Theo Lacy is now housing n1a'uy "We're trying to figure out wbat'1 what." persons never Intended for the faclllty. It II charged that not enough deputies aro assigned to the jail for adequate 111pervllion and that the chain link fence aw'roondlng It alloWs passlnf tbrougb or tossing over drug supplies. • "Search procedures for returning work tUrtough and work crews are Inadequate and foster the smuggling of cmtraband," lite report charges. "1!'Accurate records of confiscated drugs I.re not maintained," Jt ~Unuts. ·Short of closing the. facility, the Grand Jury recommends1 tighter "!ft'Dintl of proposed Inmates and that DO perlOll cmivicted of felony narootlca vtolatloill bO aent there. Also urged II the llllgn- tneni of two addiUonal omcera to the 4 p.111. to midnight 1 bf It to allow I o" ~eter control. Pravda Hails McGovern i MOSCOW (AP) -A Soviet newspa1>« c a 11 e d llemocratic presidenUaJ nominee Geo r g e McGovern ''a representative of an attractive new era" loday, but ca u-- lloned that campaign promises "" not always Mfllled. • Emphasizing M c G 0 ' er D op- position to American lnvolvemenl In Vietnam, Komaomobkaya PraV· da said the aenalcr'I ''unnpactod • popularity Is explained by Iba fact • , that many Americans lee him u '' the man who promlaes a chl,.e for the better. 11 Pravda, the COmmunilt party ' nc'RiJ!lper, rtPOrild McGo""''' .nomination without ........,~ but I uld tha con-·~ &It 1i1le I !up moetlnc aplnot American acg-1oa In Vietnam.'' ' Frasier Service 'Short, Simple' At Lion Safari Fruier the ncin will be burled Saturday .at 10 I.ID. OD I llUIY knoll overlootlng blJ home in Lquna H1lla in what ODO Lion Country Safari olflclol .t.crlbed u • "short, limple" ce:einouy. 111 think Fruler' would have llbcl it that way," public nla-man John Foxen aald today ol Ille qed, but 'prolHlc lion who died early Thuraday momblg. He was about 211 years old, the equivalent of an 1111-year-old man. Park veterinarian Dr. William Y. Rig. gins baa llitecl the. Clllll of death u old qe ud 1 lddney.Jllllllmctlon. A twn ol lS j>llyslclans, beaded by Dr. Anthony OrlAndella al South Lquna, performed 11> autopoy on the tootbl&, mano non this momlnc to ol<tmnlne the exact CIUael ud to "find OU\ why he WIS IQ ttmatable" ... lover, FOJ:eo \ said. • Frasier aired 15 cubl In II mon1b1 with blJ amn wl-Tbe -cub. Joaah, bas already --u l'rlller'a SUCCtllCI'. The knoll In which the llon wUI be buried la Oil I bill ...... where Fruler'• pride lives. At SalunlaJ'a .ClnJllOll)I, the Scottlah Glen Fruler wW pllJ a f1msal dlfle on bagpipes u Lion Country altendanlo act u pallbemn. Frasier became I aymbol of '1rlllty In old age ud hll laeo -Hhlrta, wsidles, fan club....-,, and -..i merdllndloe. Lloa ec.m;.t:=:-lncnued D (.. .....) • • • Picture~ Draw ·~oobs,' .. 'Ahs' • Prodll(:tion Well Received· During Preview Night By· BAl\BAl\A lUIEIBICH Of tM Da'W rlltt StaH Variety Is the apice of Laguna Beach's 1972 Pqant of the Ml1$1en. The parade of "living pictures" that started '37 years ago I with · modest re- -· of a handful ol falllOU.I point· lnp, later~addbtg "'""' Gt the art world's better.-works ol aculpture to Ill· programs, bas apread Its wings to en- oompass I remarkable omnpllnc al the visual aria. ·• . The net result. Is not · only a feAI of beauty, but a program thAi hp ·W1tWly ellmlnat.d the potential boredom of look· Irie at .... lrmnecfpalniinc lftor'anotbet, however skilfully reproduced. • . • lapeltry, I ataJned ..... -· an Oriental acreen, I poolap alamp, I delicate medallion tn a velvet case, (See PAGEAHJ', Pap I) • Jn tbe latest edition I ol •tlle . -t La e Cl _,.,._ premalloa bu .. in., . timer IMU>Q trtguing tlemtnt of autjliiae, ......... to . . ~'l""' keep the _.In .. bapj>J,ata• e1.a-B . uc.Je"1n Juat u .~'.1n,111e,.._, msh Areas Off shpw, aacb ·~i·tlaal.i~..... Du n....."" · · · · e to· ...... .a}uess Planners to View Idea For Controlled GrOW.th • ·swr comment on a-proposed .,con- trolled growth" general plan-for South i.,una will be studied by Orange County planning cominisslonera Monday at I p.m. In the Engineerlntl llulldinl auditorium, 400 Qvic Center Drive Wat, Santa Ana. '· lleporta relating tbe plan will be pieseited 1rom the nre, bulldlnr uc1 rold department•~ Commialonerl ordnd the llaff reconunendatlona May 10, durltl( tile first public bearing on tbe plan. • A dlllem COllllDJU.. cl 1llannlu .... per11; ""'klic 1n conJunctiita ,.;t6 tbe tlOtlnlY planolnc tlepirtmenl atafl. baa called for lklw, -pwth tl Soulll 1-to ..... 11.-........ 'Ille pllll ... i:nmmeado ., .. tl T • • 1111 ....... o1 -bed ldllalde landa be .....i for deWopment. Tbe Mt, pro- pont11t1 claim, abould remala u open apace. MemlJerl of the dtlr.ma eamml~ and ' ..,... ... Ltau ... a1 ...... 1 11111or -. ...,.., ...... ob)f!.i lo ...... vy llllOUlll al open.,.. are eapocted to attend !hi ClOllDlllulon'• atudy --Became ol the lnlormal ._ cl the metlflll', DO ollleJaJ aclJon DllJ be taken. One apokemnan flX' the landownen Aid Ibo llfOUP may ...-nt -blfol u11tlon Ii the meetlul, t.it did not 111 wllot It ..................... ,......,. the atud:r MUlon, ..... ....._ ,,.. Ml • ......i public halrlnc ., t11a plan. n wm !be i. - to the llllrd al -...... lor IInal Moptkltl. ' "We will let him mow ille'peo!Jle want an alternative, and we feel there ii a very good clwtce be wffi acce)JI." Shearer Aid be bad oot talbd with Wallace alnc9 tbe May aasaaslnatiOll at. tempt on the 1overnor. . "He bai never toJd anyune he will accept," si.r.r sakl. "He bu only told us be wu going to ~e a serious Democratic caadkiate at the convention. No one baa any asaurancea bey1'nd that." Wallace, thwarted In blJ Democratic presidential bid, aald Thurad~ · be would not make I third try fur the 'prealdency U I third party candidate, wa11 ... beoded home to Allbemo to- day wtth ljJplttni plana to concentrai. on acclimatizing to a new life of dllabU. llY. rather than purauinf presidential ..,. bl!lon•. • . . Wallace left the acene of the Democratic National Convention without bitternesa, be aald, even though his pro- posals for revision of the platform fir the presidential campalgn got nowbett . Wallace left bis hotel shortly alter noon lo· relurn lo Montgomery for b1J first night In Alabama since early May, He was shot May 15 at Laurel, Md. He traveled home In a military boopltal plane. On blJ departure, WallaO! said that he appreciated .. nice remarks" about him by George S. McGovern In the nominee'• acceptance ~ .rly today, "I have _..._ him on winning but u far u a polltlcal atalnmt, I have none at tb1i Ume," Walllce told report«., • ....... L.M. -' ..... . ca:lflnll t ·--._ II Ci Mac,.. _,,, -·...... ,, --I -· ..... -----11 .., WW 14 ......... M = ,,J --. --.. cw-c..er 11 •:••er... .., --" -.... .. ...._.,n ~-··*-iii ,, ; ; ' 1'-': _.. .... , ... ,. --I - ' • I - J DAILY PILOT LB GOP Seeks Democrats To Switch AboUt lOO people will conducl a door-to- door r<gl.stratlon drive In Orange County Saturday to try to win Oemocr1ts over to the Republlcan l"!'Y· campaigners !or Presldeot NlxCI\ &11d Uldoy. Jane Broughton, an o!Oclal at the Con>- mlltee to Re-elect tho Prealdent litad- quartera in Irvine, aald the statewide drive b ln response to Sen. George McGovem•1 candidacy !or prHldent. Called "Victory Vanguard," tho cam- pelgn to ...,...gl!ter llo!no<mJ aa Republlcanl wu organized two weeks ago, she aaid, before McGovern received the Democratic nomlnallon. "And we've been abaolutely mowed with volunteen (!or !he drive) afte he wu nominated," she claimed. Gordoo Luce, vlce cbalnnan for the Callfornla O>mmltUe to Re~lect Nixon, 1aid that 10,000 volunteera statewide will walk Saturday. Luce and other1 Republicans claim McGovern'• war and welfare policies are c:ausing party crouovers. The drive In ar.nge County wlll begin around 10 a.m. from tho 1lx campaign lltadquarttra: Irvine, HunUngton Beach, Fountain Valley, Lacuna Be a ch, Full«toa and Sonia Ana. Each wtuni-la being asked to walk four hours. ' Mra. Broughton said abe bad no Idea how many new Republicans might reault from tho effort. The ~ baa already ICheduled three more drives : Auiuat l, Augu.rt 24 and September 9. Women's League Sponsors Lagtma Candidate Night A Clndldata' Night for' tho lortllc:om- lng Lacuna Beacb muncll recall el.ictim will be apomored by tho League of Women Volen of Oranct COUt at 3 p.m. Tbal'ldQ' at the Netgbbcrhood Coogrega- llonal Oimdl, 3IO SI. Ann'a Drive. Formot" Laguna Beacb councilwoman Helm Keeley will moderate t b e di.to•...., and mem""-tt of the audience will be lmlted to queatlon c:anclldatea Cul E. Jobi-. Jr., L1rrJ Clmpbell, w-Bqlln and Betb Leeds. Tiie few' are vyJnc for tho c:oomcll aeat to be \oac41ed by CouncJlmao Edward c. Lorr, who la the IUbject of tho July 25 recall vote and allo hu tendered his resicnotlon effective July 31. The Lea111e ol Women Voten la a non- partlxan orall\llltlGn pn11DO!lng pon11ca1 reapG111iblllty and acUve c 1111 en particlpllloo in aovemment. Home and Garden Show Now Open Modular bomel, recreational veblcles, artworks, 1ppllaocea and flowers are ""'°" of the aUraclions at the Southland Home and Garden Show acbeduled for a S p.m. openin& today at the Anabelm convention Center. Tbe 18th annual allow runa through Ju- ly 23. Show jioura are S p.m. to 11 p.m. weekHayai noon to 11 p.m, Saturdays, and noon to 9 p.m. Sundays. The modular house, produced by Modular Dtmen.sloos, Inc., Is a panelized 1tructure, which proponents claim la cheaper to build. n wilt be auctioned during the show. which will a1IO feature 18 interior decorated rooms for viewing. The llower allow wlU be in the ,,..,. and the home lurnlshlnp wlH be in the exhibition hall. DAILY PILOT TM °'Wiit C.t Ct.fl.V PILOT,_,... •kll 11 comllfMd IN N ............. k .-11.,_. by ... ar..,. CM.r Publlllllnl CorftNfrf, ,.,.... ..... .cihlens .,.. PUblllhld. M9nd1y fllre\llft Frldfy, fw' C0.11 MtH, N"""'" IMd\, Hunt,lnltM leech/ft..,11111 Ylllty', U..,... andl, lrtlM/Sffdl•dt end SJ.fl Otmerltl/ &an Jt,1111 C.pllftlllO. A tlnGle 1"19klMI Mlllorl Is publllhtll Slturd1y1 Ind Svnd1ys. Ti. prlnc!Pll PllM!lhlnll plmnf It 11 )» Wttf "1 l trltf, C..tl M .. , Clllfomll, '.wt. lol.1rt H. W1t4 Pr•lffnt Ind P11blbMr J11k l , Curl1y -Vice ,,.,..,, Ind o.i-1 MlnlfW. Thom•• k•1•i1 ..... l11•••• A. Mwpki11e M•Mlrr. EclilOI' Ch•rlH H. L.e1 . Ricktr4 r. Nill Au"*tnt Mtnltlnt lfllll'Ol'I '-_.._ nz F.r••t "••1111• M•lll .. ,..,,.,,, P.O. 1•11 •66, 91612 --c.e. ...... Wiit .., .,..... =IM<tl: »» ~ 9fulm,. a.di! 17171 "9cll '°"""'',. "91 •...,..II C.mlnl RMI Tll 1a111 (n4J 64MJ21 Cf11llnM .Uuctrhl11 '42·1671 L...-..... Al 01,a1 .... 111 , ........ 4ff.f4'6 CJJ;1'9f1I. 1'11, °"""' C.f Ml!Wltllt '*"'"'· ... ..... '""""" llMlnitiw... ~ """" ., ...,..,. ....... ~ ""' .. ..,. 1•ut111 *"'-' ...., ,... ,...,.. ., _,,""' --· ..... elm === ....... c.tl .... ta1•• tu~• ., cwrlrff ,_ ..... ,_,.,.,, W INlf U,1S. """"'"'I m AMllW"""' RM ....,,., ' - r~dQ. JLtr 1•. 1972 ACitng-Pair • Try lt Again HOLLVWOOD (AP) -Natalie Wnod and Robert Wa-plan to remany "" • yocht off the CaJUomJa -SUnday an.,_, a spokesman for the actor uld to- ~-The actress, SS, and Wagner, 42, ended their flnt marriage with divorce In 1962. fie married actress Marlon Marshall, and Miss Wood became the wile of producer Richard Gregson. Both man'iages ended In divorce last year. Biting Fox Eludes Hunt In Clemente The bunt for a poSBibly rabid 101 that bit three campers, including a 15-year-old Costa Mesa boy, continued at San Clemente State Beach today but rangers were unable to spot the wlly predator. Meanwhile, Michael V. Pender, 15, of Costa Mesa , Eric Lind, 15. Walnut Creek, and William R. Joille, 22, Ontario, are receJving injections at Orange County Medical Center to prevent rabies in· feet ion. All three were bitten by the smal1 brown fox Wednesday night as: they slept at separate campsites. Mark Pender, 17·year~ld brother of the Costa Mesa youlh, said the younger Pender was not hospitalized and bas returned to San Clemente to camp until Saturday. "He bu to go to tbe hospital !or two shots a day. They take about 30 ""°""' each and they're pretty painful," said Mart Pender who accompanied hla brother «> the trip but returned early !or football practice at Estancia Hlib School. Pender aa!d the youtha were all aleep- lng when ·me of them llUddenly awoke, oaw the fox, and tried to aboo lt away. "Then. it jumped up on my brother's head and bit him. It waan't a big wound. It's In his hair and you can banlly ,.. it," be added. Lagt1Da Trustees To Study Budget Issues Saturday Trulleea of the Laguna Beacb :Unified School District will brUlb away any cerebral cobweba and alt down at I a.m. Saturday lo dl-'Cllll prtorttles !or the 11172-'13 budgel · · The study aesslnn wu called by trusteea oo that they may decide bow to uae $350,000 in new money brought Into the district with a IS percent Increase in a~ valuatim. The money bes temporartly been atored In an undlalrtbuted reserve accowit In the $U million budget, !or accountlna purposes, In the me<tin& Saturday, lru11- tees will decide whether to increate ~ ....... mlxlre cuts made In the prelim- inary budget or loot toward a W: rate decrease. They may consider a com. binatlon of all three. The morning meeting will be held in the district Education Center, &SO Blu· moot St., and ls open to the public. • Auto Dealer. l Takes Ove1· CofC Post .. Auto center owner Larry Hunt Thur,.. day nlghl waa olflcially greet<d as the new president of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce at the annual Installation and Awards DiMer at the Festival of Arts Rtstaurant. Hwit, •4, of 608 Vista Lane, replaces insurance broker Roy ti1arcom, Jr., as president of the Chamber. Marcom will remain oo the chamber board d. direct. ors as an ex-Officio member. Al.so installed at the dinner were BW Axline, fll'st vice president; Qiarlea ·Johnson , second vice president: Mard Carkie, treaslD"er, and directors James Dilley, ~nald Hoover, Tony Lease, Tom Leslie, M)'rtb Mala by, Cy Nugeot, John Romania and BUI Wood. Plaques commending dedicated service G to the chamber were presented to Harry Bitbell, Laurence Campbell, Bernard Syfan, Shirley Rowe, Lorna Milla,' Harry ·Lawrence ID<\ Roy Marcom, Jr, A Bel of gold cull links, with pearl In- set!, also wu given to the outgotns president. FoUowing the installation. the chamber members previewed the 1972 showing of the Pageant of the Masters at Irvine Bew!. * * * Laguna Chamber Should Ask More City Aid-Chief The city of Laguna Beach should In- crease -not cut -the amount of money a.tven to the Chamber of Commerce for advertising and promoUon, outgoing chamber president Roy Marcom Jr. &aid Thursday night. Marcom made the comment just before busineuman Larry Hunt was in· stalled u the new president of the chamber for a one-year term. "If the city .increues our ~ntract, the city will benefit, In fact, all of us will benefit," Marcom told an estimated 200 pmona attending the installation dinner. •·we ·must encourage the city to keep up ~ j>romotioo program." The chamber baa requested '40,300 for advertising and promotion. The request baa been pared down to $20,300 by City Manager Lawrence Rose in a propooed budget. Councilmen have not yet acted on the matter. During the put flxcaJ year, the chamber rceelved $311,.IOO from tho city. The rellrtng presldenl Bald tho city abould regard the oupport as an "In- vestment'' and not a loss of income. Marcom noted figurea compiled by the chamber lbow tourlsta . annually •pend $30 million In tho art colony. He encouraged chamber memben to contact individual coUncllmen and rr>- qu'8l tho proposed cul be mtored. ~Pflflel FRASIER ..• percent when people began bearing of the lion's procreative prowess, acconiilliJ to the park official!. Foxen said the park has received phone calls, telegrams and flowers from all over the U.S. In regard to Frasier's death. · Lion Country president Harry Schuster has announced the fonnation of the Frasier Foundation. lt will sponsor fund-- raising events with proceeds going to animal welfare organizations. Supervisors Tack On $628,274 to Budget Two days ol scrutiny or the proposed 1972-73 Orange County budget by county supervisors has resulted in add!Uons of $628,274 to the proposed $264 mllllon spending program. Although during day-lnng budget bear- ings Thursday board members whacked $450,000 from the list, '615,000 ln "policy" it.ems were added. This, plus $165,000 In increases approved on Wednesday, in· creased the spending program an equivalent of one and a halt cents on the property tax rate. Despite the increases, supervisors are sllll voicing determination to cut the county's $2.04 tax rate by eight to 12 ctnts, because of a tC.I percent increase in assessed valuation. Three proposa!J which would have ad- ded another $1.5 million to the budget , were eliminated for the moment 'J'hurl. day. A $11 rnilllon reserve fwid for green- belt acquisitions lost on a 2-2 vote but Boan! Chainnan Ronald W. Cuper1 of Newport Beach said be would brlnr the matter up again Mooday when bud&el hearings resume. caspers and supervisor Ralph Clark ol Anaheim ravored the greenbelt fund, urg· ed by greenbelt coordinator Rod Sackett of Co.Ila Mesa, but Robert Battin ol San- ta Ana and David Baker of Garden Grove voted against it. Supervisor William Pbllllps o I Fullerton was absent on count) bu.slnea• · 1n Sacramento when the vote w11 taken. Other llcms cut include $261,000 !or a waler quaUty study In t;ewport Bay and a first year outlay of 1310,llOO for a c:om- puterlzed Information system ror the ~II> Medical Center. • Medical center administrator Robert White lougbl bard for the long-sought computer system pointing out that Jts eight year total cost of approximately $6. 'I million would eventually result In nel oavinga ol $1.% mllllon to qi. county, The board did 1eave in the budget a $25,000 item whJcb provides for design work for remodeling the medical center. The controversial Airport Land Use Commission of Orange County got it in the neck again. A requested $73,000 was cut to a token $500, duplicating a simllar action of the board last year. The commission was authorized by state law several yeani: ago, but board members refused to activate it until their hand wu forced by an amendmeot to tbe law In 1970. ' The change provided that 1£ eitber the League of Cities or the board favored the land use group It must be activated. The league tool< auch action 'In 1970, but supervisor David Baker aald Thuraday league member• are now seeking a change in the law to aboll#h the com- mission. Other additions to the budget approved Include $200,000 for bicycle traila, •JS0,000 for additions to tho county plan- ning stall and ~ reaerve fund of $180,llOO for future meotal llealth programs. Alao added was $25,llOO !or nine ad- ditional teaching days In juvenUe acbools r<qulred by law and •10,000 for an en- vironmental study of tbe Allao Creelt waterabed area through El ·Toro and LaJuna Hilla to lhe 1ea. The county flood control ind road departmenla '11'111 each add $20,000 for thls study, it waa agreed. ' NEW LAGUNA CHAMBER PRESIDENT LARRY HUNT GETS GAVEL Members Attended ln1t1ll1tion Dinner Before Pageant Clemente 10-year-old Confesses to Burglaries What started as a routine juvenile in- vestigation by San Clemente police Thursday turned into a case for the books -a 111-year-old burglar who, ~f­ ficers said, admitted more than a dozen crimes in recent months. Police Bald the youngster admitted of- fenses which included breaking into one man's apartment and stealing a $50 revolver. Findlng no ammunition for the pistol, the boy decided to hit a hardware store, Hughes Not Returning LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -l!<porta that Howard Hugbea would return to this gambling caiptal next week were denied by a Hughes aide. The Las Vegas Sun reported Hughes would appear July 18 to Ille a depositi on in a lawsuit filed by the newspaper's publisher. Dick Hanna, a c h i e f spokesman for Hughes Thursday said simply, "Nb" Hughes would not appear. where he found some. Other cases, which might be only the beginning, included broken \Vindows at the lifeguard tower at the city pier, mail' tampering on numerous oceasions, small thefts from private residences and business breaking. Detective Sgt. Frank Yerger said the case began when investigators were pro- bing a routine juvenile problem with the boy and interviews with friends -Of the youngster turned up tales of burglaries. After contacting the boy. Yerber said, detectives listened to C{)flfessions of the crimes. "He would forget some, then remember new ones later in the day. Right now we know he's good for at least 12 incidents, but there probably were many more," Yerger said. Officers said they recovered the pistol and ammunition, but 89me cash and other items taken in some of the in- cidentl are still missing. The boy was taken into custOO.y for a short time then released to his parents until the cases are reviewed by juyenile authorities. FromPageJ PAGEANT .•. pierced lvoriea, skelcbff, 11ass. and ll pieces or sculpture, in an infinite variety o! marble, bronze, silver and copper. The technical Ull~ ol the back.stage wlxarda, working amall miracles ~l•h pa1nt, muslin, makeup and the unique llgbllng effects that bring It all together have never been more Impressive. The preview night audience Thursday responded with gasps of amazement as the llghts went up on Monet 's ''Boat at Giverny " which had been constructed before lhelr eyes on lhe Irvine Bowl stage to demonstrate the complexities of creating a living picture. Jt was partlcuJarly good selection for this popular fea ture or the ~geant . Somewhat less effective was the at· tempt to demonstrate Pageant technique s Jn a dual presentation of Vermeer's .. Young Woman Standing at a Virginal," one in a simple three-dlme11siooat set, the other In the combination of painting and lighting that makes the Pageant pictures appear "Oat." The reproduction was faithful, but the curving lines of the Venneer don't lend themselves to a demonstration of 0 0atness." ·1r "oohs" and ''aaha" from th• au- dience are any criterion, the Thursday night favorites would include "The Bron· cos,'' a pair of powerful Koerner cowboy. paintings and Beda's lavish "Chess Game," both including some masterful' background paintings; a remarkable trio of sculptures "From the Sea, 11 ii· lustratlng toullly different techniques in reproducing marble, bronze and copper: a splendid stained glass window from Notre Dame; the exquisite ivory ''Bis~p's Crozier," and the unique Greek Olympic stamp. The ever-popular Gettysburg is back on the hillsides far a fint act final with some additions to previous presentations -and some admirably rigid posing by models "on stage" for minutes at a time. An early Picasso, "The Circus Fami· ly," meets a challenKe in the color department and ~ enhanced by joliJ circus-style music. Norman Rockwell is back again, this time In a sepia sketch for his popuJaP Saturday Evening Post cover, "5aying., Grace," a difficult reproduction job that comes off effectively. Another technical tour-de-force is the pageant'• flm venture into pointU1Jsm. with Fisarro'1 "The Apple Pickers." , Hap Graham's narration is happily devoid ol the corny humor that used tq be a pageant trademark and is filled with· interesting bit! of history and anecdotes about the artists and their subjects,. reflecting mtscientioos research . Vic Schoen's score is generally as> propriate, but occasionally on the loud side, at least to listeners nearer the . stage, but with some beautiful woedwl!ia; passages. A few of the pictures seem to be "l)eld" a lltUe longer than necessary to accommodate the music. · In sum, any doubts that might have arisen following major changes In b.ackstage peraonnel this year are laid 1o rest by the new pageant. It is of course, sold out for the six·wttk season, but It's worth llrying for can- cellations at the box office just before the 8:30 p.m. curtain boun. large selection of outstanding quality u.pholstery eyeileble et re'duced prlc~ es, Such :well known names es Woodmerk, Sherrill, Henredon, Merge C1non, end many more, now on sale. J HENREDON'S "Alverado Collection" now on sale. HERITAGE'S "Cameo", "Grand Tour" bedroom end occasional. DREXEL'S "Marchese", "Velero" "Esperanto." LAMPS-PICTURES:-ACCESSORIES ••• ALL REDl:JCED DREICE(;._HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN ----------- INTERIORS WHOAYS i SATURDAYS. f:OO le l :JO NIDAY 'TIL ftOO -- "· I NEWPORT IEACH e '1727 WESTCLlfF o-. 641·2010 TORRANCE e 21649 l-IAWTHOllNf ILVD, 171·127f • LAGUNA IEACH e 141 NORTH COAST HWY. ., ... 11r I I ' ' Saddlehaek Today'• Fl..t N.Y. Steeb voi:. 65, NO. '196, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUlY 1"4, ·197% TEN CENT~ • Joaquin Board Accepts Bids for ·TMR School J • • By PATRICK BOYLE ot .. o.llY P'llM Iliff Truste.s of the San Joaquln Elemen- 'lary School district Thursday nlgbt laid a coolroversy to rest in accepting final bida for construction of a scOOol for the lcalnable mentally retarded ('!'MR). The project, which has been' In the plapni.ng stages for several months, sparked much· debate and dissension on tho; school. board, with lonner board pn!Si~ Gratian Bl.dart adamantly re- fualng to ••spend one dime" d. the dis· .. . Barbor at Sunse.t ' , . . ' trict ll¥*Y en the lldlool ccnstructloo. which the mooey will come.' A3 it turned out, the acbooi will be The lundl will lie -io build ·tile built Olllirely with stole fund8 -at a school In Miiiion Viejo odj....i to Ila savinp of some 1100,llOO. Paz !Mermediate School. '!be faclllly At a special meeting Tbunda,y,, the was plamied !or ._ In ·Ille• i.u, but board awarded the project to Near-Oil because of deloys ill aceepllnc a eoo- Coostructlon of Santa Ana with a low bid trsctor, II probably -1'b: r.cly wllll o! !303,7911. • • January. In presenting the bids to the board, The facllily will lie l!8ld !or Ille Jn. facilities planning d1rect« Dave. KJng struction of 8oane to ....nta: • from noted that )he bid, was $17,807 below the -'· Laguna Beach, Dana l'olnl, San J11111 • maDJnum amount acceptable to the Capistrano, capiltrao s,.cb. S a.n state Office ' of Local A>slotance, from Clemente, ¥11, Irvioe' al the _Sod- : . ' ..--. .4 t I ' ' " ·bt.tLY PILOT )'~·~ ' . • • fl I , I _. \4 . t r • "' ,,. (I ' d I ,. ~f, ' l4.? , i '\"J Jlaya of summer aunset cut.swath through gather- ~g evening gloom of Newport Har1>9r. Photo. was ,.taken from Ocean Boulevard In CorO!)ll de! Jlflr looking up main channel. ·BalbOa Pebihsµla is at left, with, Balboa lsland at right. · -· Conditions at Branch Jail • 'Official at. AEC Placed ~n Leave; Finances· Cited {lit; Closing Threatened .. 1'>e Orange County Grand Jury jO)day lban>ly criticized the operation rl. the Tbeo Lacy branch jail and said ll con- dttions are not drastically improved it ~be closed. '.1': news release signed by Jury Fgieman Otto M. Schmidlen charges that the· minimum security facility on Mallcbester A veniie In Orange is the gcene of con!tant drug-smuggling and atitence d. prisoners from ttie confines for-two and threfrhour periods. 'Tbe report said the branch was design- ed to house persona sentenced for non-IUP!JOl'I. alcoholic violations and other mtsdemeanor crimes. But the report chaljes that because of Ille great iJ>. crMle• In narcolics violations and o-.wdlng of the main jail ill Santa ,.,.,.~ Ttieo Lacy· is now housing many "".,.. nev..-Intended !or the faclllty. It is charged thif not enough deputies an omlgned to · the jsll for adequate l\ll>ervlslon and lllal the chain Uni: fence ..nmmding It allows passing tbro"lb or toalol over drug 1Upplles. "Search procedures for retummg work. ·"llolli!i and ....t cmrs are Inadequate ~ loiter the smuggling ol cm.traband," the report charges. ''Accurate records o! confiscated drugs lri aot mairit.ained/1 it Continues. · Sllort•of closing the facility, the Grand iury r!commends tighter screening of ~ Inmates and that no per90ll °"'1vlcttd of felony narcotics violations bl·-there. Also urged is the assigo. mmt of two-addlUonal olficers. to the 4 • p.m. lo midnllhl 1 b fl t lo allow for Jll!z1nleter1 ccntrol. • , tlther suggestions Include conolnictlon of.aJG-fool block wall lnllde the exbtlng f~ that random •kio .and body . ,. . searches lie ccnducted r!gll]arly and that visiting facilities be re-<leslgned to pre- vmt contact between prisoners a n d visitors. Sheriff James Musick was n o t available for comment today, but aides aald ouUittlna o! the fourth Door of the main jail sclieduled lo begin this !all would aid in overcoming the crowded conditions. Pravda Hails McGovern WASlilNGTON (AP) -'Tbe Atomic Energy Commi>slon, disclosed today thal WillianlT. Riley, its 'clirector of security,. bas been "placed on1 leave -without pay pending resolution of r some. allegations concerning his pel'.S!>nal financial al· fairs." An AEC spokesman .asld lhe allep· tions .. relate to the .~owing of mmey from other AEC emj>loyes aod his iJ>. debtedne!.' •.• ..and .••. indications are that it's in excess of:$100,000." Riley's job· paid 136,000 a year and be'• bad it ~ince November, ltrl. The spokesman,aaid Riley was placed on leave June 14, and bas been replaced by Paul Gaugbr .. , ~7. a lwmer deputy director of the dlvllion of.security, dur· M~W (AP) -A Soviet Ing Investigation of the alleppons by the Hnpeper c a 11 e d Democratic commission's division of inspection. presidential nominee Ge 0 r g e Riley, 52, an Army counter-intelligence McGovern "a represenllltive of an man during World War ll, joined the attractive new era" today, but cau-AEC in 1947 at Los Alamos, N.M., u a llooed that campaign prom1aea are security and Intelligence offlcer and rooe not always fulfilled. through VariOU! levell. Emphulzlng M e.(l over n op-A> chief of security, be has been posillon lo Amorican lnvolmnenl · responsitile !or tbe pbyslcsl security of In Vlolnam, KomloD¥1iskaya Prav· all tbe diverse lnslallatlons of•the AEC'1 da aaJd Iba -·· ~·unnpected !arflung empire, stretchinl· · Ir o m · popularity is esplalned by the fa~I Wallhington, D.C. to Eniweto~ and from th8t many Americana see him'H Brookhaven, N.Y. .to tbe Aleutian the man who promloes a chance for , Islands. the helter." · . . Tiie job allo lnclu~ responsibility for Pravda, the Communist party ''penonnel security," inc 1.u d l n g newspaper, reported McGovern'• clearances of prospe<;tive employes. and . noi;nlnatlon wilh\>Ut commept. bul ,.... protection agalnlt 81="e, . the AEC said the • convention . "somotlmel 1potesmah •aid in to~- fell lite a hup m«ting qalnst · / 11111 ,the spokesman volul)t.eettd the American aggreooion In Vietnanl." • f COJDmelll,lhat "there lo no Indication that · at/y IOClll'ity matters are·lnvolved" In the ._ .... ..._ . ________ ....., eooe lnvolvlng •the security chief. •• . dlel>ack Valley. Until the facllllJ is ...,.. plete, the --wW ba llouaed al a churd1 In Tu.slln. • The project .... lei oal to bid-- limes over Iba put few mtmha, and each time. the bids coma Ill• _.ny lowar thu befon. All -... Iba first tlma allor -o!lldlis ...-. to pay over $111,1111 for the fadl!ly. The flnt bldl were : In -of $400,000. 't9ben 11 -bid 1pln, Neor Cal WU the loll' bidder, bul CO-·olflClais lnlilnneil Ille dlslrlc:I alter Iba aealed bldl-.-opmad lhal an aeeoomtant had -a mlllake. 'Jbe bid WU made In error, again pulnc the total bid past the Nie mulmum allow1ble amount. •1Jt i1~11Ul11'i1in« that even the aecond and third -bidderl were llO!llO tlJ.llOt· undfr their last bid wtthoul any rilodtfleatlon In the plans," King observ-ed. • ·In addition lo•the low construct!Qn bid, Iba 1-'d approved a ,bid of tl4,333 to carpet the 'faeility -$333 of which must CODll ltom acbool district fundJ and the ttmalnder from the stole. Tnmees abo appnived a bid of '14,llO for installation of cabinets in the achoo), again having to psy l2lO In dlslrlct funds. For both projecis, the state bod set a maximum of tll,000 In mte aid. "It has been a long hard batUe," said Bidart of the final approval, "bul I think it WR! worth it." ' Trustee Dennis Smith, wbo had eon- slanlly argued with Bidart about the need to get the school built as quickly as possible, agreed with his fellow trustee. '_De·al' Discounted MayorSaysNewport Talks Still Open : By GEORGE LEID,U. . Of .. Daltr Plllf lt8ff Irvine Mayor WWlam Flscllbacb today denied that recent events IUfrollndlng Douglas· Development Company.plans fa, a 50-acre commercial development near Orange County. Airport lndlcate iiVIne is ••turning Jts b'ack on Newport Buch.,. "f don't think 'the !act lbaf the city manager, planning comrniuionen. or . members of the ,clty•counclr bav1 mel wtth the Dougw 1M'9Ple ln'any w1y.is an Indication _we're turning oor baclaf on Newport," Fischbach said. •'I'm concemect about the flavor of news reports," the mayor said, noting be bellevid Iba nvetatloos lhal Irvine of· llciaII bad • met wtlh !Jouglu offlclela ID!rhl dimage 'the Uabon effort with Newport Beach. • 'OWrlday, it was learned that a series of private meetings between city officials and Douglas representatives had been beld. c.uncllman Henry Quigley admitted he'd mel wtlh officers of Utah lnlama· tloaal Corporation, Douglas partners In ~an announced development of the SO.acre parcel neor,Oronge County Airport. Further, P 11 n n l n I Commissioner Wayne Clark asid be'd had two meetings with Douglas officials, a luncheon and • dinner, linee the firm filed with lrvlne for a coodltlonal U10 permit !or """' conlonnin( uses on the property at 212i Campus Drive. That matter comes before tho planning commission next Thursday. Councilman E. Ray Quigley Jr., today joined with Mayor Fischbach in ex .. pressing concern over the reported meetings. He defended City Manager William Woollelt Jr. who also had said he had discussed development of the paiul (See DOUGLAS, Page 2) M~yor ::Defends Planner .. .. : ' · .. a .. ·:··· .. ~.uJt;~n.·ioAU .Y:ie~s'-Fischbach1 • 1~t · f ";1 .. fr · , ·~r f ~:A~~i~~, ''f:~N ;:· i~,.;f 1 :~y11 • · , · l . ~, 'Qldlllil., ·"; " • • r amioal to.return to U. West o.t. Wayne Clark. -te JWI-· a.rt , . -11: llkl .J>o illQ<Jled lul A1t11ouib Ille 1Jaaa11s llm(fiU JI! tti nwllnp_a,. .... w!lii...aula We.It wtlb Dlqld Douglu Jr. am! applyfora5•MWJ111pann11top. permit -)ll!lldlnt; -.W..Mlod to-Daaa!d . II:. 'l1\tlnU. president and coed wtlb at Illa •tire Ill' dlybyl(Qorlrwi.iiFlulibodq ' _..,. d .lbe .,...1y-lormed Douclfa acrtparalla 'lbollmll .,. "I feel ........... ~ HltllN ID ' no.:"=· 'l1la llnn is cborg-to "l'laJ!lo''. -'11 Ibo ;;;: • democralle -·-limn lo t4" *' a -parcel at Astropo...,. balldlng at 2121 cam ail views •-1811: .. _,_.that C'ampll ilrMI Alllf llaeArthlr·Boulevard DriYe ~do not conform to the pua wanta an audlelite.".Othetwloa ~'."""111 1 Deir Orl!nle'Coullly Airport. mercial zOnlnr for the property lhatC:: ""'""°nl' a ~ llmlled ljlllclel • ·Clari: uld be Ml wtlh lhl 1*" Douglas approved Jul fall by county govenunent ter8t,1t-tbe lDl)'OI' llid. . e,x11cut.JYe1 at ~ ... , .Alleqen La · He ·offered 'that' be hlmloll llu met al Pillrmaceulleal· c.p. , ~ o! · Ill st Feb. II, when the Irvine planning bn!Ufast'wtth D!>ulJu encall .. s"'ln·a Imna .lJllll!oCilaJ OmJples hfodquartm COllllDissloo WM sworn In, City Attorney plbllc reatauranl" -the Balboa Bay' !Ml· _.: l)lac!!M\m cojitered on ::f:' ~ strongly advised com. Club -and thil com.-· nnpc1 "~,"'Clari: aald. ' ionen . and councilmen to avoid from Do/ipa• 1n1eres111n ·~•· Ni'l'"lo 111e1lllilad -.er, lhl!Wle hu,bed.at :!""' wtth -~ts of a use permit penona1 matters · J4as1 --~·wtth DJaglu Ill 11 ~~!"f>llc bearing on such matters The ~ ...Ueated that the 'Jlou&Jas nc:mt •••• _,,,,. a "quasi· Judicial" pro. firm ii no dl!lemit from the Irvtaa c:.m. He· -Illa! he 6od ·i "pir-" -'llnr. '!be nature of such a 1-in& J>lllll' In lbit both own land in'tbe citJ, · nl.......,ip wtdt IJouilu iDd -....,. a11ows.,111e riallt of cross esamination. "JI I can --wilb rei.11 ol!l!l..0 · Ille .SL Lilall boaed uecut1 .. rih· Iba Dei>a\Y CllJ Attorney John Murphy of the Irvine Compsny -ll)ere II ,_ ........,_ llnn'a •plr,nt cor-::!' 1today. there is no penalty In mta nothq llnisler a&ul clln!lw wllb . Ille per--McDcimell• llllqslP •-wu -•lb or dly olflcers who meet prlvalely . w• perlOGI, or !Inns IOek1ng approval Coaventlo.D, Set 3rdParty Aith,H~peful . . . . - W allnce f:O' Accept B~ .• . --LEMON GROVE (UPI) -An olllclal. of the Natlonai American Party aald ... day there }a; "a good chance" Alatilml I Gov. <Jeor&e C. Wallace.would accepi the' psrty't presldenllal noinlnatloa -• month. . ci::= ~i S\:"!m= ~ Independent Party and a member of Iba J3.man NAP e-.Uff eammlttee. lald be ·expected the NAP to Jiomlnata Wallace when 11, boldl Ila natioaal nominat\D( COllVtllllon All(. U • at L<>uilville1 Ky\ . "We wtI1 leDder a nominatloa:to•blm," be aid. "We make no pnlCllloal u to • whether be WW llCCIOpl II. lit WU OW' -beam foor ,.... aco· aJid ... wUl mab lhal offer apln. "Wa wtll lel bJm,lmow Ibo peojllt ~ of a 111e psnnlt. Stale law does P'Ovlda, bonver, tbat the nature of such dl9CU1slor. must be s!Alted In the publlc bearing to share 1 .. formation wtlh other commissioners and allow for rebuttal by either the pro- ponenta or opponents of the matter. Mayor Flacbbaeh added today that be ~1 not feel "there are any bad boys in Irvine." ' He defended the 0 obllgation" of coun-- cllmen and oonunislloners to meet with any cilben '1.lndividual or corporate" in order to tiear "all lidea of an Issue. It "It ts unethlcal and irrational for anyone to dole bis mind about any Issue belwe the dly until all the facts are In," Fiscbbacll '-rted. He auaaa1..i that In bis opln1oo private meetings wtth l)qla• ewullvts "•re not tlllctl 1111111 the formal public bear1np (flee a.AU, Pip I) ....... . .,. ... Weadier • Frasier 'to . . . . ·.·Get :'s~lnple' Cere,mony Moatly 1111111)' thrqh Satunlay is wbat the wealller!ad)o pradlcta, wtlb temperatura Ill the IOI lnlaod, and around 'Ill al ~ Cou1 •m... l'nller tba lion wtU lie burled Saturday II 10 a.m. on a fll'lllY knoll. ·overlooklnc Ilk borne lo Laguna Hll1I 'lo what one Lion Count17 aatar1 omclal cleacrlbed as a ••Jhort, 1b111)le" ceremony. "l lhh* Presler would have fllted It that way," public rel1tlons man Jolm Foun said todaJ of the aged, bul pro!We , ... wbo died early Thunday mornflic. Bo -about Ill years old, tba aqulvalalll ol n lfl.y.....W man, Part merJnarlan Df\·Wllllam Y. Ing· ginl bu lllled tba -"' .. u oW . ' age and •tldney mailunc:tton: A l8am of II physicians, beaded by Dr. AntbtaJ Orbmdella of Sopth Laguna, ~ ml mfoplJ en the toothlaa, 11111111 ...... _..,. "' detannlno the eucl Clm9 aod to "find out Why he was to rtmll'bble" •s a kwer, roxen said. I Frasier aired II c:ubl In II monthl with hllf 10ven wives. The oldell cub, J0111h. bas already been earmarked 11 Frasier'• -· ( J The IuioiJ In 'which ·tlie 1lon wUl he burled is on a hill above•-. Fruler'a pride lives. Al Saturday's conmony, the Scoltisb Glen Fruler wtll play I fanlra\,dlrp Oii qipes as Lion Country attendants Id u pellbearera. • Fraaier became a l)'albol,.f ·vlrilltJ'ln old ... and bis fate adorned Hlllrta, -· fan club Ntlonery and •1111td mercllandise. !Joa Co1mt1J bl..,_ ·~ 11 .. percent when people begu 'bw1Dc of the lion'• procrutivt pr1>WW, ICCOrdlnc lo the part offtelais. Foxen aald tba put bu ....,.lvtd pi-calll, iei.rama and -. from all Oftl' the If.! In recard .. P'ruler'• death. Lion c.untry presldel!I Harr)' Scbullfr bas announced the f(ihnatlon o! the Prnler Foundation. It ~ llUJd. · ralaln( evsnll with ~ aoinc It ,... ~·· orpnbeilone. I J ..... _ j~ = = -.. le awcuat 1t _. ........ ,, ...... ..... ,.. . .,.., ... ,.... """' ....... ..., ... _. '' -. --.1111111 M _...__ =---.. =-. ........ ..i:·· - l 2 DAILY PILOT IS frldll, Julr 14. l9n f828,27 4 Added • County Budget Total Increased . Two dlJll ·ol •ll<r\ltlny or the proposed 117J.71 Orange County budge! by county wpuvisors ha1 resulted in additions or '628.274 to the propoaed $264 million ependlna PJ'Oiram. AlUloulh durin& day-long budget bear- ings Thuraday board membera whacked '450,llOO from the lilt, '81ll,llOO In "policy" items were added. This, plus $165,00J in increases approved on Wedne!day, in· creased the 1peodlng program an equivalent of one and a ball centa on the property tu nte. Despite the lncreaaes , supervlaors are ltlll volcin& determination to cut the <OUDly'o 12.IH tu rate by elgbl to ·12 cents, because of a 14.1 percent increase In wealed valueUoo. Thne proposala which would have ad- ded another $1.5 million to the budget · were eltcllrtated for the moment Thurs· day. A $11 mllllon "''"" fuod for green- belt 1cqulsltlons lost on a 2-2 vote but Board Cha Inn an Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach said he would bring the matter up again Monday when budget hearlnp resume. Clopera and aupervioor Ralpb ·Clark ol Anaheim favored the greenbelt fund, urg· ed by· greenbelt coordinator Rod Sackett of Costa Mesa, but Robert Battin of San· ta Ana ~d David Baker of Garden Gro ve voted against It. Supervtaor William Phillipo o I Fullerton wu ab.!ent on county butlnes1 in Sacramento when the vote was taken. Other Items cut include $261 ,000 for a water quality study in Newport Bay and a first year outlay of $310,000 for a con» puterized lnlormation system for the Orange County Medical Center. Medical ceoter administrator Robert White fought hard for the long-oougbt computer system pointing out that Jts eight year total coa:t of approzimately fe .7 mllllon would eventually resuJt in net savings of $1.2 mlUlon to the <OUDty. The board did )eave in the budget a $25,000 Item which provldea !or design work for remodeling the medical center. The controversial Airport Land Use Commission of Orange County got It in the neck again. A requested "73,000 was cut to a token $500, duplicating a aimilar action ol the board laat year. lrvine-Douglns 'Talks' Eyed by; Newport Mayor Newport Beach Mayor lloMld A. Mclnnla llld today he'a known all along that Irvine councilmen have f o r aome Ume beeo talking aboot develop- meot plana with the McDoMeli Douglas Corporation, but he couldn't aay anything becauae be couldn't prove it. lrvlae Mayor Wiiiiam Fl•chbach aod C<>uocUman Henry Quigley admitted Tburaday they've been talklna aboot high rile development ol the !Inn's 50-acre parcel !or 111011ths. 0 1'm coocemed why they have been trying lo bold back Newport Beach development while planning all along to charge ahead with Irvine," Mcinnis said tmely. "I tblnl: the quote:; from Henry Quigley hold aome clue to thlt," be said. Qulgley Thursday said be favors high intensity, high rise development in Irvine so it will be a real city, 11not another bedroom community." "The ilsue ii to lntenslfy development ln the area to Jl!ake It a logical atop of! point for a masa transit system," Quigley said. • 11U you 10 hick to the original plan lllcDonnell Douglas l\lbmltted to Oranae County," Mel~ said, 0 tbis first preaentallon allowed a great big develop- ment -with overpasses over MacArthur Boul[tV&rd with 1people-moven. • " The only control the county bu over alrllnes at lhe loeal airfield Is terminal ap1ce, Mcinnis pointed out. '0 Can you conceive of a terminal on McDoonell Douglas just moving people over MacArthur Boulevard, 11 be said rhetorically. MclMla criticized Irvine olficlal.s for statemeota Implying Newport Beach Is "the bad 1\1)' •II "I think the boller·lhan-tbou attitude presented u erpressed to the press and in their re.solution has been a litUe From Page I CLARK ... be . " gm. Al for the Allergan luncheon of last week, the mayor noted there were "from 300 to 400 people present. It takes a foregone paranoia to make something sinllter about anyone making any declsions 1n the midst of such a public gathering," be concluded. DAILY PILOT 'TtM OtM1t c..t Dt.ILV 'lLOT, llftft wtilctl It ...,_, tM N._~ i. Plltlllltl«I 11, N ar....., ON•t f'llllllMlnl com.-, . ...,.,_ nte .tltklM •re llUl!lhh«I, Morc11y tllrwgll FriMy, frlr Cotti Mbl, N.wiiort ltKll. ......... hac.ll/Fovnt1ln V1llr(, L~ llMrll. ft'Ytlt/SldlfltbKk and Si n Cltmtnlt / S.1t JUo111t C1plstn11tt. A 1lngl1 r1111one1 •lllllt II Pl*lllMll Sltunte'fl Ind Sllnd1}'1. rN lll'tnc•t ptOlltMftl ltllnt Is 11 a.JO ~l "' lll'tlt, C.tt M .. , Clllforl'IJe;, JM2'. Reffrt N. W,..J ,,...ldeft, .,.., 'Wlbher J•ck It. c.,1.y VD Pmld...i Mii Gtnt111 ~' 111•11'1•• K11•il IEdltlf Th•fll•t A. Mwphi•• MlllHllll t:crltot Clt•tl .. H. L .. , IUchtrel P. N•ll ......... MIMl"'9 ldlM Olllc• t.11• ... : -..., ..., 1"'111 ......,...,.,.,......,,~ >-=1 m ~t AVIMll ......... , I IJWS letCfl l•~l•••re IM CIMIMllU • ,..,. E CMllM. ltMI Ttl ..... tn41 MMl21 n.'M Mcast '11 '42·1671 s.. Cf p .... ..,., ... : lsllJ0 II 4f'M411 °""'6llt. ""' o..t CIMll ..wllllflrlt '*"-"r. .. -...... lllutlrttllnl. ....,.. ....., .. .....,,....,,. ~ .., .... , ....... _ ...... ..... .,,... .... . ...... dilll ~""' " c.tt ,Mt ... ~ •tw1 .., ttrrW P.U ....,.., ... ... Sl-1, ,..,,,,.,.,, ""'""' -· illw .... .......,,.. misleading, perhap1, 0 Mcinnis said. "The thing that frightens some of us Is that this has been aolng on for some time," he said. The resolution MclnnJs referred to came from Irvine councilmen last month formally requeaUng Newport Beach delay action on a $135 million develop- ment proposal on the nearby Collins Radio C<>mpany property unW the Im- pact of traffic and land use in the whole area could be aacertalned. DOUGLAS • • • with the firm. "City sla!f have got to get together with proponentl of zoning ~e perm.Its or any other matters that come before the city," Ray Quigley said. "Further, it is my understanding Woollett only talked with Douglas reprtsenattives two times, by telephone." The mayor and Cooncllman Ray Quigley agreed the Newport Beaob and Irvine llalaon planning group had been established to "share Information" on airport area development. "Irvine is to decide bow the Douglas property will be developed," Mayor Fischbach lald, noting that Information gathered from the flnn as well 11 from officials of neighboring Newport Beach woaJd bear on the final resolution of the controversy. "The committee was set up to provide a forum for interact.km, not to arrive at a binding, common agreement ," he added. Jrvine asked Newport Beach to join them in fonning a two-cities airport area study committee when It was teamed a 177-acre development by Collins Radio Company waa nearing Newport council approval . The $135 million commercial-office development by the Don Koll Construc- tion Company, Irvine spokesmen argued two weeks ago, would affect trarnc circulation in the industrial area near lhe airport. The property is across Campus Drive from the Douglas parcel. Councilman Henry Quigley said Thurs· day it was not the traffic problems that concerned him as much as the need to provide a "node of activity" of !tlgh rise office buildings in the airport area. Such a "node" wou ld support same future regional mass transit system and ~ss11re Irvine of at least one transit stop to serve the expanded commercial in- dustrial needs of the area. Henry Quigley suggested that unless the Douglas finn plaMed for at least 10- story high rise buildings with un- derground parking and open space, he would not look favorably on the firm 's use permit application. He noted that was the substance of hJs talks with t.he Utah firm nearly two months ago. A use permit -separate from the or:e fa cing the plaMlng commission next v.·eek -must be approved by Irvine of· flcia ls before Douglas can develop Its parcel. The permit requirement was placed on the property when county officials ap- proved last fall a zone change from in· dustrial to commercial use. The zone change had been oppo!ed by Irvine residents and Newport Beach officials, who at tbe time had only recentJy suc- cessfully annexed the Collins Radio parcel. Both the mayor and Councilman Ray Quigley suggested the airport area development plannlng issue Is much larger than the two properties lhal have caused lempen to flare between officials of both cities ln recent •·eeks. ''We've got a long border with them, both now and In th< future,'' Ray Quigley said. "It would be ertremely unlortuno te ii i.nltammatory commenta are allowed ' to polaon the waters and butld walls belw"n the two cities lnslrad of opening gates.'' He w-ged Irvine outclala to ·~eave dl!al.ulons of lhe •l!J>Ort parcels to the two citiea' liallOn committee" to avoid controveny thal will "loOY ltably harden both councils to lrrtlricveable posltW.11 PAGEANT OPENS -Ornate costumes and even more ornate set enliven "The Chess Game/' one of the colorful subjeds in the six-week Pageant of the Masters. It opens tonight in Laguna Beach. Painting is by Francisco Beda. From Jell to right DAIL V PILOT 1!9fl' ,...._ are Frank Wales, South Laguna; Mary Parker, Costa Mesa; Judi Wetmore, Tustin; Patty O'Leno, Orange; Leslie Marzich, Los Alamitos; and Terry Smith of Garden Grove. Pictures Draw· 'Oohs,' 'Ahs'. Production Well Received During Preview Night _fl'Ilonnell Acquitwd In Death By TOM BARLEY Of ltM Dlll't' P/111 l!tft A unique and bitterly fought Orangl' County Superior Court Civil trial ended )ate ThursdB!y with a ruling that clears Dr. Merrill C. 0 Mlke" O'Doimell 11f aUeg· ed. involvement in the death of his wae, --1ius10 O'Donnell. --- Judge J .E.T. "Ned" Rutter deliv~red his terse, one-minute dismissal of the $1 million civil action filed against the plastic surgeon by Mrs. Gertrude Barnett, 63, of Seal Beach Leisure il'orld, with the comment that Ha great deal of emotlonallilm" had evolved from the t\\'O- week. trial. · "There is only one issue left here and that is the matter:of fault ," he told plaiJl.. tiff'~ attorney Franklin Remer of New- port Beach and defense lawyers Mike McCray and Reed Bridges. "I find ii' favor of the defendant. 11 O'Donnell, 57, was not present to hcer the verdict delivered after two weeks pf trial. He refused to testify on the first morning of the action and never at any time entered the courtroom. Remer, In his final argwnenl Friday contended that the massive dose of barbiturates that allegedly killed the at- tractive 33-year<>ld artist In her C<Mumel Island bole! on March 19, 11188, could on!y . have come from an injection abice it • would have been impossible !or ber to · orally admlnlater the dose th~t left substaoUal levels of an uoldenllfled drug in her remains. Estranged Mate By BARBARA KREIBICH 'The preview night audience Thuraday lustratin~ totally different techniques In Held ut" Assault Of "• °''" ""' '"" Ith prod bl b nd "' .. responded w gasps of amazement as re uc ng mar e, ront.e a copper; Variety is the spice of Laguna Beach's the lJghts went up on Monet's "Boat at a splendid stained glass window from 1972 Pagant of the Masters. Glverny" which had been constructed ~~:Op·~~er.~':oo ~q:~ue J;~ Of Paraplegic The parade of "living pictures" that before µitlr eyes on the Irvine Bowl Olympic stamp started 37 years ago with modetit re-stage to demonstratetthe complexities of The·ever-popuiar GettysbUrg is back on The estranged husband of a paraplegJc creations of a liandluI of famous paint~ creating 1 living picture. the hlllsldes for 1 first act final with woman was arrested In Garden Grove tngs, later ~g some ot, the art world's It was p8rticu1arly good selection for some addltiou !-it nrevlous presentations early Thursday after the woman wu better-known works of sculpture to its this popular feature of the pageant. -and some adr.mbly rigid posin~ by found beeten and gasping for br,.th, • h d ·1 · to Somewcat le•• e"ecti've was the at· models "on stage" for minutes at a time. The police said Mrs. Wllladem ~ programs, as sprea I s wings en-u. ..... nt An early Picasso, "The Cl.rcu5 Fami-Menezes, 41, was found lying on the floor compass a remarkable sampllng of the tempi lo demonstrate Pa"'8D! techniques I " chall In the I J the ~oocm ol her home "-a ~-• . V isual arts. in a dual presentation of Venneer's y, meets a enge co or VI.worker~. ., ~~ "Youog Woman Standing at a Vlrglnal," department and Is enhanced by jolly The net resuJt is not only a feast of one in a ilmple ~Cll&l set, the cb'cus--~yle music. Harold K. Menezes, 39, wu aJTeSted on beauty, but a program that has virtually other In the combination of painting and Norman Rockwell Is back again, this suspicion of attempted murder. The l. · led the t tlal bored f look lighting that makes the Pageaot pictures time in a sepia sltelch for his popular beaten woman Is In Orange County e IIJllJla · po en om 0 • Medical Center with a pouible brain con-ing al One framed Painting after another appear "flat." The reproduction was Saturday Evening Post cover, "Sayin g ' cussion and severe bruises. however skilfully reproduced. faithful, but the curving lines of the Grace," a difficult reproduction job that In the latest edition of the famous Vermeer don't lend themselves to a comes off effectively. The socia1 worker1 Mrs. Shirley Com. pageant, each presentation has an in~ demonstration of "flatness." Another teclmical tour-de-force is the Ing, told police the injured woman called trlguing element of surprise, designed to Jf "oohs" and "aahs" from the au-. pageant's first venture into p:>intlllism her late Wednesday, saying that her hus· keep the audience in a happy state of an-dience are any criterion, the ThurK.-with Pisam>'s 11Tbe Apple Pickers." band was back In town and that she wu ticlpation. night favorites wouJd include "The Brt. .U., Greham's narration is happily frightened. There are just 12 paintings tn the new cos," a pair of powerful Koerner cow bay ~ .. corny humor that used to When the social worker went to the show, each admirably done. Tbere is a paintings and Beda's Javish "Chess bell pageant trademark and is filled with home she found Mrs. Menezes gasping tapestry, a stained glus window, an Game," both including some masterful interesting bits of history and anecdotes for breath with a throw rug wrapped Oriental screen, a postage stamp, a background paintings; a remarkal>le trio about the artists and their subjects, around her n~k, according to pollcl delicate medallion In a velvet case, ,_o_f_•_cul_p,_t_ur_e_s_"_Fro_m __ the __ Se_•:...''_il_-__ rellectln __ _:g:.__cmsci~-·en_u_oua __ reseatch __ ·_. ____ r_e:..po_rta_. _________ _ pierced lvm'ies, sketches, glass, and 27 pieces of sculpture, in an infinite variety of marble, bronze, tiilver and copper. The technical skills of the backstage wizards, working small miracles with paint, muslin, makeup and the uolque lighting effects that bring ii au together have never been more impressive. Hunt, for Biting Fox Contint1es; Boys Get Shots The hunt for a possibly rabid fox that blt three campers, including a 15-year-old Costa Mesa boy, continued at San Clemente State Beach today but rangers were unable to spot the wily predator. Meanwhile, Michael V. Pender, 15, of Costa Mesa, Eric Lind, 15, Walnut Creek, and William R. Jollie, 22, Ontario, are receiving injections at Orange County Medical Center to prevent rabies in· feet ion. · AU three were bi tten by the small brown fox Wednesday night as they slept at separate campsiJes. Mark Pender, 17-year-old brother of the Costa Mesa youth, said the younger Pender was not hospitalized and has returned to San Clemeqte to camp until Saturday. "He has to go to the Jwpltal for two shots a day. They take aDWut 30 seconds each and they're pretty painful," said Pt1ark Pender who accompanied his brother on the trip but returned early for football practice at Estancia Hlgh School. Pender said the youths were all sleep- tng when one of them suddenly awoke, saw the fox, and tried to shoo it away. "Then it jumped up on my brother's head and bit him. Jt wasn't a big wound. It's in bis hair and you can hardly see it." he added. Authoriti es conducted an all-out search' all day Thursday and today over their concem that the for may have been rabid. Foxes do not generally exhibit ag· gressive behavior toward humans. but they have betn known to be common car· riers of rabies, along with bata and •kuoka. Dr. Tom Hamilton, Orange C<>uoty director of heallb services, bl! urged campers nol lo ponlc. but •treased that anyone 1eein& a wild animal with aggressive behavior abould lmmedlatdy call iulborltlts. Pender. who will have to take his twice-daily lnjecUoDJ for the nut t•o weeb, 1J reportedly JlOI worried about nbles. "He Isn't worried abool c1Yin1, he Just thinks It's weird having lo git those id>ora every day," his older brother sald. ' CLEAR·ANCE SALE CONTINUES. .. f. large selection of outstanding quality upliolstery avallable af reC!uceCJ prlc~ es. Such we~ known names •• Woodmark, Sherrill, Henredon, Marge Carson, and many more, now on sale. HENREDON'S "Alvarado Collection" now on sale. HERITAGE'S "Cemeo'', "Grand Tour" bedroom end occasional. DREXEL'S "Marchese", "Velaro" "Esperanto." LAMPS-PICTURES-ACCESSORIES ••• ALL REDUCED OREXEJ.,-HERITAGE-l'iENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN---------- • INTIRIORS WDllDA YS I SA TVRDATS. t :OO te 5 :30 PllDAT '111. ttGO \ NEWPORT•HACH e il727 WISTCLIF, Dlt. 641.2010 TORRANCE e 216-49" HAWTHOltNI ILVD. J11 .12n LAGUNA IEACH e 141 NOkTH COAST HWY. ...... ,,,, ' ' -' -' • • --DAfl,Y PILOT-EDITORIAL PAGE TH& MOST t>ISIWPTIVE ELEMEMTS AT THE COtMHT SO FAR ·ARE 1'ME MILITNn' (HOl>l>ERS ... I I • • Motives The nature of development or Industrial, commer- cial and office buildings around Orange County Airport ts becoming one of the most significant issues ever to face this area. 1 Underlying the spirit of cooperation evidenced by the opening of talks between officials of Newport Beach and Irvine over the airport area planning, have been flashes of anger. Some concerns have surfaced, namely the worries over increased aif and street traffic. • • Unrevealed • Douglas representatives In recent weeks Inevitably raise a blunt question: Is the McDonnell Douglas commercial development closer to reality than Irvine oUiclals have publicly indi· cated? There ts a great deal riding on the next meeting of the Inter-city liaison committee. A whole lot of nilly gritty and bard; plain talk will have lo be gone Into. ___ O.,!!>~rs -!t~-'-•J!t...U 11 . .11>.t.Yekl~be r~vealed.motlves , of orr1cials m both cities that darken cooperative plan- ning effort skies. · Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley th.is week let It be known be favors high rise -up lo 10 stories -de- velopment of airport properties iri Irvine. .. And, even granting the best intentions on both sides, the problem orhow lo Implement and guarantee what- ever agreements might be reache.d In principle ts a trlclcy problem. l'O~ "fHE flRST TIME IN ~"( CONVENTION 'l'OU <AN TELL SY LOOl<l""4 ~'$ F~ WHOM. Hlgh rise, Quigley argues, would likely bring a re- gional mass transit system stop to the new city. Qui~ley's views became known as he noted his lack of surpnse over McDonnell Douglas Corporation's plans to launch a new development company. The new sub-- sidiarr's first task is to develop the firm's '50-acre parcel ln Irvine, directly across MacArthur Boulevard from the airport terminal. That parcel Is located just north, across Campuo Drive, from a 177-acre property Collins Radio Company hopes the city of Newport Beach will okay for a $135 million commercial-office complex. Newport Beach opposes high rise in some areas. It also fears increased flights into and out of the airport. Nevertheless, Newport councilmen swiftly approved a major development of the Emkay Corporation proper- ties near the airport 18 months ago, and until Irvine protested, appeared ready to okay a planning commission endorsement of the Collins proposal. The Collins matter has been put off to August 14, pending further meetings of the two cities liaison com- mittee. Private meetings of several Irvine city officials and Dear . 'Progress' Has Replaced 'Salvation' Gloomy . ~YDNEY J.HARRISJ Following a college commencement ad· dress I gave la.rt month, one of the graduates asked me a question I had never been asked before -he wanted to know: .. What, in your opinion, b the main difference be- tween people living today 811d those who lived in pan ages?" I couldn't answer Gus Fantastic! Hair net Jaws will now include male cooks, etc., in res-- taurant.s. I have yet to see it en- forced on waitresses in this area. -B.C. Tlll1 ........ ,..... ,..,.,... '""' "" Ne._,itf tlleM .. tM MWIHllW. ltllll ,.... "9 ..... ft G......., en, Dllrr Pli.t. : bis questioo ad.,_ RuatelY at Jhe time, but I have been P""- dering on tt for a few weeks, and am con- Vinced it i.s an im- ed that of "Providence;" the idea of the Ju..t Society, the Stable Society, 1he Good Society, or even the Improving Society, bas replaced "Salvation" as the ulUmate goal for many, if not most, people, This is not to say that they may not still believe in Heaven, but they also believe we can create something of a Heaven on earth 11 we really care enough and try enoogh. • 'Ibis Is a distinclly new Idea in the long histmy of manltind. Clompared to us, pas~ civilizations were passive, aeceptlng; -during, and relatively uncomplaining. '!be order ol things below was like the order of things above -not to he ques- tioned or changed unless by divine in- spiration. portant question with a meruiinglu1 an- SWe!' that may explain a iot. IN ALL PAST AGES, up to a cenlury or two ago, the Western world, at least, was motivated by the hope and promise of happiness in another world to come. For most people living tod>y , this has been replaced by the hope -ii not the promise-of:a1haPPY stB:te in this world, for future genetatfoiis if not for us. P"'l'le in the pall we<e able (ii nol •!together willing) to ellist among• com- pluity of pllyslcaF and social evils, believing tbe9e to -be ordained by God, and trusting tl!a~.by. virtuous action they would he tranOporled unto bibs in the world beyO(ld. Mal1Clane life was largely regarded as•. ·a prelude -necessary though uncomlortable -to Para,dise. Today, tbeae eschatological oollons have been .transferred, in great part, to the secular fields of politics, economics, and aociety. THE IDEA OF "Progress" has replac- NOW WE BELIEVE 101Dehow in the perfectibility of man, ii not in his ultimate perfection. We look upon ourselves as a creative factor Jn the evolutlonary proces>, " fU II y-en- franchiaed citizens of the universe. We want Hfe to be better m. every way. for our children 11 not for ourselv ... And we will take any feasible measurea to mate It so. ·'!bus, the chaos, the conflict, the con- tradictions in modern IOciely. '!be secularizalloo of Heaven Into a Utopian 1oal on earih 1Ives u.. both our vitality and oUr frictionl, both our wild hopes and our Neat fears. 'Jbinga never looked '° bad ~e l>ecouse people never wanted them to look so good. OUr discoolenla are the measure of our dreams. Memories, Nightmares To the Editor: Couldn't resist answering the Jetter (Mailbox, June 23) ahoul a department store chain that works its aervlce building employes in window!... areaa without ventilation. It broughl memories, and nightmares. ·I'm sure it's a place I used to work. We talked about walkoula, starting a union, demanding aborter hours without pay tou hecauae or heal fatigue, etc. Wt didn't mind tack ol air condiUonlng, hul we tbouct>t some windows could be hull!. Instead ol bo:rlng up hot stale air at nlght, guanll could have he<n hired and barred windowl left open. But that wwld have meant hiring a fe1<guarda, spendlnc a litlle money. • • A MAN WITH A FAMILY, I couldn"t lea\le unlli I found a )ob, and I wu oa the hot upper floor. The production .... poor and the turnovF and ahl<nteeiam so high It cost them more than to remedy the slluatloo. .My wire -kl fQr a company that "Cf)U]dn't afford to ventilate a room that Nd production workers, but 11 soon u It wu !urned into u office It sot air con- • dltloned. Yean qo I beard I boss say, 11We can wt the worken !hat Ire easy to replace • In I.he hot ma." • : Bui lillle 11111 c:aa't fight d1111r1rnent 1lon chains. • MAILBOX .Dbma11, Atlfler To the Editor: I 1m deeply coocerned about thla re- cent trend In our country today that I consider analagoU. to the happenlnga in Nu! Germany oo many yean ago. In spite o( the reaemblancea lo a die• tatorshlp, the United Stat .. la still aup-i-c! to be a democracy. Yet, to my dismay, and I might add, ancer, we have people of authority (and not necessartly character) wamlnr t-under their control or Jurlldlction, 11lf you're for America, write the Prealdenl il\d tell htm so" or ·•u you're a 1ood American, &el helalnd ~ President. .. WHEN a.&llGY, LA R G II: cor- poratkm h e ad a, tfJICben 1 n d • employen UM tlUCh dictatorial tacUC1 !er political 1aln, tbey BS1Ume that 1U In their "°"""ptlon, space _.m, clasa room, and bualnesa are Repuhllcana llld cooaerv1uv .. , and that la tl!IONG! But It is well worth the efforts. " Resisting Pressures Trustees. of the newly created Saddleback Unified School District began on the right foot last week in de- ciding to postpone a proposed $18 million bond election, The pressure of outside factors was intense to a point rarely faced in the first few days of office. The five trustees acted with the understanding 1and competence of veterans. \ The pressure on one side came from a need to .sus- tain a school building program in an area with a ·rapidly increasing population. The bond money is needed and an election must eventually be held. But legal requirements to meet deadlines forced a rapid -and what could have been a hasty -decision. To add to this, several trustees had misgivings about being able lo garner sufficient voter support by Sep- lem her to pass the bonds. With thts postporiment, the board should be able to mount a successful bond election campaign by Janu- ary or February. 1601 SB ON THE CONVENTION SCEN E One of Oldest Bromides in A11aerican Polities Taking From Rich, Giving to PQor WASHING TON -Senator McGovern ls shifting the emphasis of hi! economic program from $1,000-for~verybody to tax credits for working people and middle-in. come families. The program is SWl intended to "end the problem of the poor" and "end pov· erty," tbe Senator says, by sul"1ituijng direct grants for wel- fare. But it wHt also • Jift the income of workers a n d middle.income families through a tax credit S)'lllem. This appe8f:J on the. face of it to be an effort to combine the philosophies or G<!orge C. Wallace and Jobn Keooelh Galbraith in a wealth redistribution scheme of massive proportions. .TAKING FROM !he rich and giving lo the poor is one of the oldest bromides of American politics, but McGovern is ap- parenlly not satisfied that I b e ~atic plallorm as dratted says enough on the subject. Nor, it is ap- parent, wu what he ha!: previously said clear enough and plausible enough to he accepted as other than a fiighty academic pipe dream which would never be accepted in Congress. (rucH~ WILSO~ Better arithmetic will undoubtedly ac· company the new McGovern wealth distribution plan, since the addition in the old one was off by $30 or $40 billion. But one should not suppose that this Idea of wealth redislributioo, with lls flawed 'dvocacy by Seii.ator McGovern, is merely a hare.brained scheme which will go into limbo once the election is over. THERE JS MORE than a liltle academic impetus· back of· it arid' a great deal of bedrock political pressure. 1be Nixon ad.mini.Jtration bas not been im· mune from this pressure. While the semantiC3 used would be entirely dif. ferent than McGovern's, there is a lively recognition in the Nixon adminlsti::ation of the need of readjusting the tax llruc- ture. In the latter pari of 1971 and early in 1972 there was much diacussloo in the Nixon administration of. a comprehensive system of lax reform. Attention centered at that time on the value added · tax, 1 form of national Illes tax, which would provide the added revenue needed for government operations while at the same time relieving the income tax payer. TIME PROVED too short, and the election year a bad time, for the kind and scale or tax reform which was under discussion, and the subject was shelved. But in November. 197l, an interviewer found President Nixon preoccupied with "tax reform on a broader scale than previously undertaken. and intended to spread the burden more fa irly." Nixon was not cfu:pased to talk in detail of what he had in mind. He linked it to what he called a "national growth policy" and "a jobs for peace program," as part· of 1 fresh approach to restoring American economJc strength at home and com8 petlti"fe drive in the world. AJ it turned out, these ideas which Nix~ on talked ahoql in the !all or t971 did not emerge in recopi%able delail when he submllled to Coogresa the programs for !he final year of his lint term . BUT m ERE IS every reason to sup- pn!e that 1he Idea Of 1pre9dlng the tax burden more fairly, which is another name for incom5!redistrl Ion, has not fled froni Nb<on'a mind. President N" al\amedly ap- proprJales issues raised by hia opposition -revenue sharing, a national income floor in lieu of welfare payments, tn· vironm~~' eon.wner interests, and a detente with Russia and China. This is not to say that Nixon is about to appropriate McGovern's share.the-weakb program. But the clrcumstances do 1ur- gcst that Nixon may try to preempt the issue with his own version of spreading the tax burden more fairly so that UM middle-income people will realize 1 greater share in the new prosperity. IN F ACT1 McGOVEl\N'S programs, which are 90 alarming to people with property .aad invatlll<l!la. otJ<11 the way for more acceptable""' alternative pro- posals. These alternative _.. would take lllto comldenolidn ti» •-Imo pact .M .the operaliolll, ol tbe American economy of McGovern'• ldnd ol wealth redlaliibullon. ·$1 lliHi of McGovern1a ldeu bu olrudy' beei\ felt in Wall Street. A New York Times survey shows that · even the most liberal elementa there -and there are some important one.11 -shy away from McGovern, although in the past these elemenla have supported I i b e r a I Democrats. Another opportunity is thll.! given t1 Nlxon to bring forward shock-proof pro- posals for taxation which will distribute the burden in a fairer way without disrupting the operations of the ecpnomic system"and in the .11ense that he spoke of in the lall ol 1971. A Decade_ of TV ·From O~ter Space . . A decade ago, it seemed a miracle. There was Yves Montand, in Paris, singing "La Chansonette" on American television screens. So what il the pro- gram had been taped befQrehand or U the reception was less than ideal. To viewers in Europe and North America, I the first transatl&ntic telecasts relayed by the Tel.star satellite were an exciting novelty hat heralded a revolution in m. ternatio communications. hullt by the · American & Telegraph Co. and launched on J 10, 1962, by the Nalional A utics and Space Adm.fnjstratlon, e when judged by today's stan- dards. the New York Times was not far of! the mark when it said the Telstar broadcasts constituted a "feat . . . rivaling in significance the f I r .11 t telegraphed transmission by Samuel F. B. Morse." EDITORIAL RESEARCH tlon of a private corporation to own and operate an international 1ateltite com· munications network. The resulting Com-, munlcations Salellile Corp. (Comaal) joined the Int er na tlon a 1 Telecom- munications SatelUte c on 1 or t I u m (Intelsat) two years later. TODAY, OF COURSE, live telecasls in color from any part of the world are relatively commonplace. President Nix· on's trips to CIUna and the Soviet Union were seen live on American televl.11lon screens. Similar coverage is planned for the 1972 .11ummer Olympic Games tn f Munich. 1be most dramatic developments In satellite communication may well come in large, 1prawllng countries where con- struction of ground faclliUes would be too costly and llme-comuming. I-la, for example, has roughly the aarne land area 11 Alaska and consiltl ol S,000 Islands apread over thousands of square miles ol the Soulhwest Pacific. Only a satellile could efficiently link these far- ftung fragments. Similarly, Brazil ls atymled by lhouaanda or square mil .. or JUJll)e that are Jusl beginning to undergo-develop- ment, and lndla by the hrlll probtema ol size and l""'erty. "Wllhln a relaUvely short llmi," Sig MickellOll lllOrled in Salurday Review, "re&lonal er W.triby- lion aatelll~ea lhould be able to dS!vCt-- strong enough signals so that inexpenslw earth stalloos in thooe counlrlea could provide a communications system com- parable to Intelsat's worldwide seiwioe." MEANWHILE, a number of America n compenlel have been competing for 1lz: yeara for the JiChl to establish what pro- mlSel to be a lucrative domestic com- munl<1U!lna satellite system. T h 1 satellite network would transmit not onty television but alto telephone, telegraph, and computer data stcnai.. Additional s p a c e communications landmuks IOOll followed . In August 1962, Congress passed the Communicat1ons Satelllle Act, which authorized the crea-Meeting Power Demand Alter leqthy conalderallon or the ..... the Federal COmmunlcatlool Com- mlsslM voted on June II, 1972, to adopt an "open 1kie!1" poUcy. 'lbat ii, all finan. clally and teclmlcallJ qualUled apptlclnta woold be permitted to pnville - aalelllle aerri<e. Tiie tlcbl pondlnc ap- plic1Dll and any otben lntseoted In IJlo held have unUI July II to Ille new ap- . pllcallonl. Wben the -llYllenl at aysteml flaally "" laUDCb-1, pomllltJ wllhln ,,,. ywo, the -·· old cir-. ol lesa ezpe!llin and _. -teleoommualcetloos may llna11y bl ,----By George---, Dear George: There b some ridiculous local law in my community which I think is unconsUtuUonal, Wl·American 1nd a crus invasion o! privacy - It COnctnl3 peta. My pet is well- groomed , has shob, Is k•pl fenced in and always on a leash when I like It ror °"enlng walu. EucUr why am I not allowed to keep a camel? ~nd how do I go about tak- ing this to the Supreme Court? J.G. Dear J.G.: I lhllll you had better rent a truck ..•. tt'a Coing to be prao- Ucally lmpeulble to get 1 piano roaervaUon with a carnet. In !act, the airline WU even roiuclanl to lalte my kancaroo aod my lawyera to Walblngton. • lad•trlal News Review How many people in these United Statea would actually desire the eD- vlronment or yesterday if H were banded lo them? The odda are ucelienl that if there were suddenly a reversion to yesterday environment, the exOdus from are.as where a wholesome environment Ia, In part, the product or energy would be~ national disa"sler in llselt. 'lbl.s la the logical concluolon to he drawn from In- formation contained in the Annual Report of a large Florida electric utlllly -I ut!Uty that, llke many others, has had Ill problem with envln>omental obstruc- lionlsm and the consequent threat of an energy shortage there was only a I percent aenerating reserve -too close, literally, for com- fort. An editorial in the Miami Herald commenting on the situation aald, •1South Florida'• well-being ridea on electrical energy. It musl have sufficient power not simply for creature -lorta hut for hoapllala, food preservation, public aafe- ly, communlcallons and induotrlea which rely lncreasl?\llY on aophlstlcated ela<· tronlc devices. ' TIIE EDITORIAL observes with an evident measure of relfel that the local power company ls preparlna to place subst.anUal add.IUonal I e n er a l l n I lacllltlea "on the line" to tate care ol future demand -includlntl a nuclear reallaed • ••••• CQUT DAILY PILOT Robm N. Weed, Mlirllcr ' Thomu Kt<Oil, lditot .Alber! w. llolu lditorlal P* Editor The edltort.1 (111... of Ille llalb' Pilot aeeks to W«m anrt atlmq.o lato -by ...-Unc thll MYo'IPlpe!"• ..... and CDn"I• mt'nt&r)' M topk:I of Interest and o1Jmllku«. ..,, --• -for tht txl:t tdlon ot our ra6ers" <>t>lnlonl, and by ...--uno '"° dlvm.e vltwpo&nts of lnfonnd M- ar:rvm And 1pok"mtn Oft ~ O[ lbe day • Friday, July 14, 197% • BERNICE WELSH THE ELEJic company advlaed Ila 1lockholdtn that lhe mulmum .11ummer peak Ust or electric energy during 1970 wu exceeded 44 times during the IWD· mer Cl 1111. Atthou1h thla company had odded JJ gu turbines !or uae d'1rllc pea- poWtt demand perlodl lul ..,...., . generator. It alao took note Cl the flct thal !he company will ". . • .have to spend about $t million dally between now and 1171 !or even more capacity tn mld- d~do." This million dollan a day b t1 · be tptnt to prevent a return to y .. terday'a en-whlcb manJ people ""'1d find lnlolerahle. ' ' I ' • frldJJ, July 14, 1972 DAILY PILOT & -·--~- '.Eagleton Politieal C0: .. eer l'leteorie ' Musourian Carries Liberal Record JEFFlll80N CITY, Mo. (AP) -The oelectlon ol -F. Eqleton u the l;leO\OCl'itlc \'lee prmdentlal cendldale dlmi:ud • meleorlc riot In pollllcs for Ille 42-)IUN>ld , junior .... 1or from ldlssourt. lmockhll out the MBT'IO tank u a wastetuf expense. He odvocated wage and price controlo to liow lnllatlon. When President Nb:Dll announced Phase I of his economlc con- trols, Eagleton praised the action but told Mls.sourlam ne hoped It wasn't "too little too late." Eagleton prealded over the stale Senate with a Oalr. Quick-witted, he often broke tmslom with a quip. He served u cochalrman of the Governor's Conference on Education and was head of the Govemot'1 Commission on Crime and Juvenile Delinquency. Mrs. Eagleton Bubbles At Idea of Campaign At fl, Eagleton was elecltd SI. Louis County elroult ·attorney;·-at 31, Missouri's · 1ttorne)' senel'31; at 35, lieutenant govemor; ~ aUI Mlssourians aenl him to lhe U.S. s-te, ..Eagleton has worked nn labor and con- sumer Issues in the Senate. He got the Senate to adopt a cle~ labeling act. Ha sponaored an amendlrienl, later adopttd, that allowed uae of federal lunda to ease the financial strain on scbocl districts caused by public housing projects. He aiao headed a study of vocational and ieehntcal education, seeing Its ex· pansion as one of the solutions to growing educational problems. At 15, Eagleton was the target of a kid-. naping t b r e a t while his father was representing the Missouri Senate In an ouster case against a senator accused of soliciting a bribe on a cosmetology bill. MIAMl BEACH (UPI) -It's a twin bill for Ille wives of Ille Democratic can- .dJdates for· president and vice president • Just like Eleanor McGovern, Barbara Eagleton ta a twin. Mrs. McGovern, wide of Sen. George McGovern, the presidential nominee, has her twin Ila with her In Miami Beach for tbe national convention. Youtblul ill •ppoarance, Eagleton sometimes bu been called a Kennedy- type Democrat, but be dWlkes belnl labeled either a couervatlve or a UberaL He 111.\'1 hlo >ieWI depend on the Issue Jn. volved. Associates regard him u liberal on ~ matlerl. • He called In 11118 for an lmmedlate ceaae lh:e In Vleillam, and was an early odvocale of slopping the bcimblng there. He joined Sen. Jacob Javits (Jl.N.Y.). and Sen. John SlennL!, (0-Mlss.), In writing a new w• powers act which bas J1aJSe4 the Senale and ts pending In the 11ouae: II 'llOUld more clearly define the oongrwlonal role ill U,S. foreign Jn. 'lblvemenb. 'Eagldoo also tried lo wbillle down IDWlary apendlna and IUcceeded In • ' • oman Solon . olls 407 ·For VP Post ' • MLUlr BEA!$ (AP) -Tms state Rep: Frances "Slssf" Farentbold was llOD1lnllld for the vice pnsldency Thurs- day nlchl with • plea to Deii>ocraUc Nt- tlonal .Convention delegates to vole In- dependently and elect her "to show lbia k a different C()Ovention." She polled 407.f and made the motion from the podium to have Sen. Tbomaa Eagleton nominated by acclamation. Gloria Steinem, a leader of the Na- tional' Women'a Political Caucus, was N'.rt. J'.arentbold'a nominator and there were four seconders, including represen- tatives of blacks and . Mexlcan- Amerlcall!. F'aHW"e to vote for the liberal Texas 1'0man, said Steinem. "would wute an opportunity to tell the country what Is different about this convention." She urg- ed the delegates to "make history" by nominating Mrs. Farenthold instead of 8en. George McGovern's choice for run- linc mate, Sen. Eagleton (D-Mo.). t "She changed the face of Te1as politics. Texas will nev.r be the same lljiin," M!, steinem said about Mn. Farentliokl'• recent narrow defeat in the • l'lemocratlc primary gubernatorial race. •Among b., secondei-s were Mississippi ~k clvll rights leader Fallllie Lou Hamer and Allard K. L<>wenmln, na· tional chairman of American! for ~mocraUc Action. i( R e p r e s e n 11 n g Spanish-speaking. $legates was David Lopez, delegate ~Houston. "Viva Sissy," he said. Mrs. Farenthold was the only woman placed ill nomination among eighl can- djdates. M vice chairman of the Senate's air and water polluUon subcommJttee, he has counted envJronmental problems as on4 of his main concerns In recent months. Eagleton was a principal sponsor of the Clean Air Act of 1970 and was an author ot the Water Pollution Act of 1971, which is still pending in a conference com· mittee and is scheduled for action after the current summer recess. As chairman of the Senate commUtee on the District of Columbia, be puabed through a consumer protection act and got the Senate to adopt a home rule bill for the district M lieutenant governor of Missouri, He later became an honor graduate of Amherst College and Harvard Law School and attended Oxford University. He·aerved two years in the Navy before opening law practice in St. Louis. · Eagleton ls married to the fonner Barbara Smith, 36, a childhood playmate. They have two children, Terry, 12, and Christin, 8, who Is called Christy. Mrs. Eagleton is a vivacious cam- paigner, but she puts her husband in the spotlight and defers to bis political opln· ions. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine was Eagleton's first choice for t b e U,I Tll""9"' STAR ON RISE? Thomas Eagleton Democratic presidential nomination, but after Muskie withdrew, Uie Missourian joined the forces of Sen. George McGovern. Mrs. Eagletori'a twln, Donna, llvu: in Palm Beach, Fla. Mrs. Eagleton's husband, Thomu, a Missouri senator, was b an d. p 1 c k e d Thursday by McGovern for the No. 2 spot on tile ticket and early today the delegates nominated him by acclamation. The Eagletons have two children. Terence, 13, and Christin, 10, who flew in from Washington to be with their portnts for the final session of the convention. Mrs. Eagleton, a blue-eyed blonde, ha! been campaigning for her husband since he made bia first successful bid for elee- tive office by running for district at· Wk ks McGovern Sets State Visit California Split Faced by Democratic Hopeful MIAMI BEACH (AP) -George McGovern will go to califomia in August In a personal effort to unite the 1tate'1 splintered Democratic party behind bis quest tor the presidency, a McGovern spokesman says. Miles Rubin of Los Angeles, a member of the national campaign team, said Calllomia, with its 45 electoral votes, will be as much a pivotal state tn November as it was In the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination. 'Me7. •• Oh / /ilcfl the little blonde standi~ bllhind McGowm!' "We weJcome aboard everyone in the party in California, '1 Rubin told a news conference Thursday after conferring with spokesmen for several factions of the Calllomia party. "It would be very difficult to conce.Jve Troops Sent to Miami Due to Go Back Home WASHINGTON (UPI) -Barring last minute trouble -which no one really a· peels -the 2,500 federal troops sent to Miami Beach for the Democratic Na· tional Convention will be back it their bases In Norlh Carolina Salurdsy. Reubin Askew. They were never needed to control demonstrations, and remained at the base throughout the convention. Askew bas asked that they be returned to the Miami Beach area for the Republican Convention, which begiiis there Aug. 21. Pentagon officials said the tent clty at Homestead would be left in place, and that the troops would go back to Florida about Aug. 19. Plans called for the Army and 1.j>rlne Corps troops to star! pulling out ol their tent city at Homestead Air Force Base today boarding transport planes for the airlift home. Defense Department of- ficials said the airlUt was scheduled to be completed Saturday. The specially trained riot troops have been on standby at the air base, 25 miles from the convention site, for the past week at tbe request of Florida Gov. some 2,000 of tbe troops belong to the Anny's crack 82nd Airborne Division, based at Fort Bragg, N. C. 'The re. maining 500 were Marines from Camp Lejeune, N. C. All are members of the Defense Department's East Coast civil disturbance control force. U'IT ........ Kennedy Sparks Tumult .With Party Unity Plea MIAMI BEACH (AP) - Sen. Edward M. KeMedy strode before a tired and tumultuous Democratic Na- tional Convention early today and brought ti to Its feel In a roaring sendolf for a Uckel he had declined to Join. Kennedy, for many, was the missing part of the dream which nominated George S. McGovera a night earlier. But be bad the delegates scream- ing and stomping their ap- proval when he told them they had .. met the ' test of great- ness" with the selection of McGovern and Sen. Thomas . F. Eagleton of Missouri. "We are united," said Ken- nedy, "by heritage, con- vlcttoll! and by unyielding op- position" to an administration which ha1 ·provoked ~rlcans into being .. more apprehensive about the future than excited by it. 11 Republicans, he aa1di have •jhad their chance and they 've failed. And their failure of leadership will be rewarded with their failure al the polls this November!' With that, the band plsyed , 11Hall, Hail, the Gang's All Here," and McGovern , Eagleton and most o I M c G overn's preconventlon contenders flocked to Ken- nedy's side as the delegates shook the hall with cries of support. George W a 11 a c e , notably, was missing. Farm Strike Gets Backers MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -"Mr. Chairman, delegates and fellow letture:boycotters," Sen. Edward Kennedy began, and the DemocraUc National Convention crowd roard In ap- p,..clatlon. For lettuce -or Ille boycott of any not harvested by "union farmworkers -had become one of the •Ide themes unl!tng the convention. ' of winning in November without winning in California." ni.e session, called by State Party Chairman Charles Manatt, was billed as a unity conference. But most of the ZO people present were McGovern sup- porters although several of them -su:b as Sen. Alan Cranston -didn't c:>me aboard until after McGovern won the June 6 Calllomia primary. Rubin said there will be room -and a need -for non-McGovemites in the South Dakota senator's California cam- paign. "This is a job that cannot be done by the people who have been active In the McGovern campaign alone," be said. And Rubin emphasized • ' S e n • McGovern is anxious that everyone understand that his campaign is not elitist or e1clusionary in any way.'' The last piajor official act of the con- ven~ for; the 271-vote califomia delegation was to cast its votes for the vice presidential nomination. TI!.e slate split its vote among nine can- didates, but gave the bulk of them, 198, to McGovern's handpicked running mate, Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri. Frances Farentbold of Texas was run- nerup with 37 votes and then came Sen. Mitre Gravel of Alaska with 22. Gravel bad worlced bard on the Califor· nians for weeks. One of bis top lieutenants 1n his vice presidential cam· paign was CaJifornia Assemblyman Walter Karablan of Monterey Park. Today, the delegation, plus alternates, party officials and newsmen packed their bill!• for the chartered jet IDghts back to Cllifomla later in the day. Some used Miami as a jumping off point for vacations in the Bahamas or elsewhere In the Caribbean. The final delegation caucus was Thurs- day afternoon when the delegates heard former Massachusetts Gov. Endicott P<abody and Sen, Mike Gravel make a pitch for vice presidential sup- port despite McGovern's selection o"f. Sen. 'l'bomas Eagleton ol Missouri. I The delegation took no caucus position on the vice presidenUal matter • "We're urging Eagleton," a al d Assemblyman John L. BUrlon (D-San Francisco) co-chairman of the delega- tion, but there was no apparent anntwisting among the deJegates. Mao Didn't Get Vore for Office MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Just for the record, the Colorado delegation to the Democratic National Conventlon did not cast one of its vice presidential nominating votes for Mao Tse-tung. When the vote wu called back from the rostrum early today, a last name was pronounced "Mao Tse--tung." 'i' be Colorado delegates did not catch the name and a few minutes later the chair again ask~d the deJegation to explain its vote. Bui the vole had been changed and the one vote cast for LL Gov. Robert Mo1r dragon of Colorado the first time was not mentioned again. The first time , Moooragon had been pronounced in Spanish and came out sounding like, tbe chair and many In the audience thought, uMao Tse-tung.0 Bunker Gets I Vote MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Archie Bunker, the bigoted character of the television_series "All in the Family,'' go& one vote from South Carolina early Fri· day during balloting for the vice presidential nominee of the Democratic National Convention. The most fantastic selection of the choicest domestic and irnported fabrics available. New· est patterns, up to date models and oU'.It usual expert tailoring. Manufacturers allow us to mention their names in our advertising at the .. prices once a year . _. at up to V. off I ' GINO SALVAGGl $-f ,19 Regularly 185.00 to ~20.00 -1 ":I: HARTSCHAFFNER&MARX $J09 Regularly 150.00 to 176.00. ' EAGLE AND KUPPENHEIMER Regularly 150.00 to 200.00 SPECIA~ GROUP Aaaortea brands Including Eagle, Sedgewyck, $ t::9 Hart Schaffner & Marx, Michaels/Stern • , ij, UNITY Pt.IA -Sen. Edward Kenned}<, with bis wife Joon at hla side, addreued dell!gates In Miami ; 'l1lund.,-In a plea for plrty unity. Kennedy, who tumed down an offer tor the vloe-presid•ncy, drew Led by Delores Huerl•, a top aide to Fam Workers Union founder Cesar Ch ave 1, ''boycott lettuce" 1Ig,n1 sprouted in more than a dozen stat~ delegaUoll!. Especially during the voUng on tbe contested California delegates Monday night, It SOUTH COAST PLAZA LAKEWOOD PLAZA became the vogue for •Illes to .... South B.tiBtol Street ll4i2 Eut Sft""'~Street p,..face their votes with a -,,. _ •. torney In St. Louis In 19M, the same yenr they were married. She told UPI Jt was "fantastic" to bt part of the ticket , but the nomination certainly would change the family 's plans for the summer. "We had planned to visit St. Louis and Delaware Beach ool that Is changed DOW 1 11 she said. The children's reaction was typical. •1Neat, 11 sald Terence of his father 's nomination. Did th1s mean that the fami- ly would be getting Its P.lctures in "all the papers," Christin wanted to know. Mrs.. Eagleton 15 an a c t i v e 1portswoman, an avid readerj and a chic dresser. She attended Washington Univ .. ity In st. Louis and r&arymount College in Tar- rytown, N. Y. Like her husband, she is a Roman .Catholic. Mrs. Eagleton's parent!, Mr. and Mr!. Francis Smith, live in Ladue, a fashion- able suburb of St. Louis. "''' ...... NAP TIME - A weary Christy Eagleton, 9, rests her bead on ber mother's lap as Barbara Eagleton, wife of George Mo- Govem's running mate, a~ plauds in Miami. Goldwat,er Sees End to Viet War SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, a member of the Senate Armed Forces Committee, says flatly ht thinks the Vietnam war will end within &It days. 111 predict that in the ne1t moDfll or ao dayo 1he war will be fonnaily over," Iha Arizona Republican told some eoo - attending a 'IOIJ.<t-plate Republican fund- raising dinner Thursday. Goldwater refused to elaborate on bia • st.atement. ROTATING CHARGE ACC0l1NTS • ~anderoUJ appliuse. Thal brought another huge chorua of cbeen and led to a Kennedy crescendo w h I c h began with, "Tbtre it: a new wind r11ing over the land •.• otarting with the plalno and rocky hllls of South Dakota," and ended with bis Jn. troductlon <l "the next prea~ dent ol the United States ••• " ,, remark about their loyalty to Costa Mesa • 54Mell Long Beach • 1-41111 Cbavn' farmworkers. ... ............................................................................. ..... , I • ' ' I I .. . I ~ • ~ I I ~ ol HI - lie \€ " i ~ ~ ~ , " • ' , I • . ____ Bontin_gtoli. Beaek:_~ . . . Fountain \tT alle7 Today's Fbud . . r V.01:. 65, NO. 196, '4 SECTIONS, .q PA&ES ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 14, '1972 TEN CENTS ·commission Mulls Buildings on Public Parks _ By TERRY COVILLE Of 9llt .,_,., Pltft Sid The COllllnlc:tlon of private buildings In public parks bu suddenly become a ma· jor Issue before the Huntington Beach .!lettution and Parb Commission. Commissioners tussled with two such l!'Vposed projects Wednesday nlght: The Boys Club plans ,to bulld a facility on one acre In Cbrls Carr Park, while the YMCA is asking for · a two-acre site in the cen- Jral city pork. . •The commission pr,vlously sold the ·• Sc•ool District me ~ lo tho Boys Club ud Wednes- day recommended approval ol a one- year u!enlioo on the time limit for building the facility. "I think nearly everyone feels the Boys Club action wu a mlalake originally, but no one is trying to renege on it· now." Sllys Commissioner Kont MtCIWI. MCCllab; wbo lllepped down Wednesday as chalrman of the ccimmiaslon, said he would prefer to see both -the Boys Club and the YMCA bulld outside of the parks. "We're all In Ille .,.. bualneu and we . Tax Hike Nixed :: By State Help By JOHN ZALLER 01 IM Diii)' Pl•t Sl1ft A planned 14-cent propert ytax tuke has been canceled in the Huntington Beach City (elementary) Scbool Dl!trict thanks to increases in state support. ( * * * Top Officials Get Contracts · .. Ln Beach The tbree top admlnl!tralGrs In· Ille Hunllaltoo Beach City (elemeatacy) Scbool Dlllrict were 1IVta --... -s en their caotracts b)' ""'*"'" 'l'hursdl!y nlght. . . . ·superintendent S. A. Moff~tt, Deputy SUperlnlelldenl Charles Pa Im er, and Assistant Superintendent oC Instruction . Betty Funkhouser got the new contracts. Their old contracts had a year left before It expired. "We feel tbst the security of a tbree-year c:ootract will belp them to become effectively Involved in carrytnJi out the polltica of. the district," said Trustee Jack Clapp In explainjng the extension. "'The tbre< of us have been here quite a spell,'' said Moffett. ur•m very happy with the progress we've made while we've been here, and I'm kloking forward to more." Moffett 55 came to the district In 1945. a, was a kacher, usistant principal, and principal of Centr.-J Scbool, now Dwyer Intermediate". In 11162 be wu P~ moted to assistant suparlntendeot, and in 1i6s to superintendent His salary is '28,380. ,Palmer, 52, came to the district as a liocher ln·l95'. He was promoted to head ol the district business operation in ti63. His current salary I! $15,879. . ·Miss Funkhouser came to the city ocbool system In l~. She has been a ~cher, 1 principal and since 1965., tbe top dlslrlct-level lnlllnictlon auperv!SOr. Ber current salary 11125,098. . (;OP Sets 'Drive With 500 People For Registration • • About !00 people wlD conduct a -.to- door regiltratlon drive In Orange County Saturday to try to win Democrall over to )be Republican party, campafsners for ·President Nlxoo said today. Jana Broughton, an official at the Com- mittee to ~lect the President head- quart<n In Jnolne, sale! the lllatewldo At the same time, the district has been able to offer teacben a four percent sal~ increate whlle keeping reserve cash at an "adequate" level,.accordlng to Superintendent S. A. Moffett, So far teachen have refused to accept the district's total contract offer, though they have agreed ·to the four percent figure. But district trustees meeting Thursday night were told that a "bold the line" stance oo property t.u: seems likely. This '1roUld mean a total tu. rate for the district ol fz.93 per $100 .,....ed valua~ Earlier estimates had tnaicaled that the t.u: rate mll!bt rlle u high u $3.G7, nqt lnclpdliw.., -·Ir. tmcbori. "At the 1ut mlnutO the J'.ea!st1!urt ~,:!"'" .odjulllmeoto tbel .ilow U1 ~ for eqnaJlutlon aid,., Maftett "We -U.... -a bill pending to lhll effect, but wt loot tract ot H. But · then '111-y our ledger came back from the county office and It gave us flt per child more than we had budgeted for. "It W8I I Vfr/ nice IUll>fiee," Moffett aaid. The .Increase comes to about $210,000. Grantiiia all district employes a four per- cent poy lncreaae w1ll COii about $135,000, Moffett said. The ~Uy-.....! lncr<ase In the district's l!S!lled valuation WU 'also double what had been expected, but Mof- fett asid the effect ot this incruse will be insignlllcant ooriipared to the 1210,000 In state rlloney, The pay hassle with leacbera I! con- tinuing 'over a relatively minor item. Teachers want the roquirement for a master's degree dropped aa a qualifica- tion lot reaching column , four on the salary lchedule. Thia would pennit a teaeber wbo hid 15 graduate unils, but not a decree, to qualify for a raise on tbst -alme. Trustees are remaining firm on re-. tatntni the master's degree requirement aa contained In the emttng schedule. Teachers did agree to the four permit increase in_ salary at a negotiation seuioa conducted lut week. The previOua blgb oiler lrml the district was 175 percent. Teachen in the audience Tbunday nlgbt -they tbouPt the trustees --to both the lmr percent and tho ellmlna•ICll of the -·· .... qllh.wL Aller a -esecullve ........ oo-er, ---to ... ...... TMclten' and -beld • brief negotiation. lellion after Tburaday's .-, but Mollett said no aanement .... reacbtd. Mollett aald the lour pereent lncreue -wben added to llOp and merit tn. creases contained en the tJi111n1 salary schedule -will mean a u percenl raise nest year l<r the averap lelclter. compliment each other," he ezplalned. ."Bui we're really talking about publlc parks w!llch sre open lo all the people." No action was taken on the YMCA re- quest. It was difcussed srtictly as an In· formational item; Commissioners did decide · to restudy the current reereolion and park!' depart· ment policy On land management. The policy says park land must be declared surplus to be sold or leased to another agency. That's how the Boys Club agree- ment was reached. DAILY I'll.OT Stiff ..... Tel.edBo•rd . Louis Da 'Harb, 111 ah-line pilot, wu elected bf. · f:l)llea...,. . Thursday ni&Jii'ljj..,...e a -' ea -as 'jll't!siilent of n..-i':untli! ...... ~!"'h, City (el8f mentarY!: sclioot· }Joird. .. I • Official at· AEC Placed on Leave; Finances Cited W ASlilNGTON (AP)· -The Alomlc Energy Commistrion, dl.sclo&ed today that William T. Riley, its diiector oC security, has been "placed on leave wjtbout pay pending resQlution of some allegations concerning hi! personal financial al· fairs." An AEC spokesman said the allega. tions "f'elate to the borrowing of money from other AEC employes and his in- debtedness , •• and .•• indications are that it's in e1.cess of $100,000." · Riley's job paid $38,000 a year and be's bad lt Si.nee November, 1967. tbe spokesnian said Riley was placed on leave .June 14, and bas been replaced by Paul Goughren1 57, a former deyuty director of the divisiOn of security, dur- ing Investigation of lhe allegations by the commission's division of inspection . Riley, 52,. an Ar:ny counter·intelligence man during World War Il, joined the AEC in 1947 at Los Alamos, N.M., u a security and intelligence officer and rose thrCKlgh various levels. As chief of security, he has been responsible for the physical security ol all the itlverse installations of the AEC's farOung empire, stretching fro m Washington, D.C. to Eniwetok and from Brookhaven, N.Y. to the Aleutian Islands. The 'job al!o Includes responslbllity for "personnel security 1" 1 n c I u d l n g clearances of prospective employes and protection against sabotage, the AEC tpolleoman said In answer to questlons. Diredln ol the 8oyl Club are trying to ral!e S2111J,000 to build an 11,500-square loo( hea1quarters. It will Include a gym, exercise room, game room, library, crafts room, storage area and office space. It i. pl._ for the comer ol Spr;ng. dale Street and Hell Avenue. Direc-: tors "say there are 4,506 boys who live within a mile of the proposed facility. The Boys Club will keep open Its cur- rent facility at 319 Yorktown Ave. )'MCA leaders want to build a l,IJOO. oquare toot Clllllbinatico olfke.multl- purpoee room. It would also Include a is. yard tndooMUtdoor swimming pool, but would not Include a l)'llUUl!lum setup. · 1be YMCA currently works out of rented oUice space on Beach Boulevard. Richard Collato, executive director of the YMCA, believes the Boys Club action sets a precedent for other organizations. McCtish is afraid that might be true, •jtt could open the door for many other groups wanting sites," he says. e:<~ plaining bis retactance to allow any more. Parks comm.Jsslooers also point out the 207·acre central park ts supposed to be passi\•e in nature, not cluttered with buildings. Collato coo.tends a site next to the pro- posed $3 million central library would have little effect on the passive nature ol the park, aild ~would ideally serve the yootb of the cKy. Commis,ioner1 have not reached a final decision a. the YMCA request. \Vhen they do, Jt will be In the form of a recommendation to the city council which must make the final choice. Permits Attacl{ed Irate Businessmen Blnst Ordinance By MICHAEL GOODRIQI Of ... .,.... '"" ..... A group of dl!gruntled Hunllngton Beach businessmen Thursday night heatedly criticized the propooed police business license permit ordinance and vowed to bring their fight to the com. munity. - Meanwhile, City Administi'ator Dave Rowlands satd today that the city councll would not be considering the orilinance for another 90 to 90 days, even though ii ts on the council agenda for Monday. "We waot to clarify tbe wording of the ordinance and talk it over with represen- tatives al the busin~en affected," said Rowlands. The Thursday night businessmen'• meeting at the Sheraton Inn . tnught a . flurry Of criticism against the propooed oi1lmance .wbidi -ki to give the police tftl!llt f49.p11 .. , ' ........ • ..n.., m•..,. perliln ..S ltan. • '!tlie Iii ti; ri, Iii 11'1'-.. l ...... lePUl14ih ~~~.,::/"' Jteel I am belit ," .Sid Bonnie Hall ol the llberat.a Beacb Inn. 1 · · "Tbls isn't sometltlng we can llve wllh. It ls a police state to give one m'an power over business, L tbl.nk we lhoWd take ac- tion now to · stop Jt," ·aaJd George Rasmussen, a Costa Mesa used car salesman who ruides in Huntington ·Beach. · The police pennit cirdinonce bulcally g/ves tbe police department power to In-· vestlgate aboat ~ types of - before a business Ucense may be lsaued. In a(ldltlon, It roquires tbst employea of the busmesaes such as bartenders, tut drivers and massage techniciana be In- vestigated before they can be issued pennits to work. · The ordinance would Ii•• tho police chief power to deny a permit and also the power to close an operating buatnesa. A surfboard shop owner, .Jack W .. Hokanson, was critical of the work permit section of the ordinahce. ••When you have to pay $10 for a permit to work ft seems to me that you are penalizing a lot of kids. We hire college kids in my shop and they can't afiord to pay for work." _a.on Pomeroy represented the police department at the meeting, but was Raquel Welch ·Loses a Pair LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Raquel Welch ha>s had her • tonsils and adenoids removed. MGM studios announced Thurs-- day that the bosomy actrus would have to change _the scbedUle of a promotional to u r for he r lat .. 1 movie, "Kamas City Bomber," to recuperate l r o m Wednesday's surgery. unable to answer s,ny specific questions about the ordinance. He said he had been asked by Police Chief Earle Robllallle to attend the meeting at the last minute. "I'm really not prepared to answer any questions, but I can tell you the ordinance means nothing at this point · aince it will be reviewed by our depart- ll)ent ,and a· committee of businessmen in Drag• Cited the city,'' said Pomeroy. Two memben of the chamber of com .. merce legislative committee Uf'led the businessmen to organize and llgbl to change the ordinance. "If people really mean what they say here tonight they should be organizing to change the ordinance and take their fight (See PEl\MIT, Page 2) Conditions at Branch Jail ffi.~ Closing Threat~ned . . McGovern Meets With Cohorts, Sees Big Win A l1tWf n1-t = bJ ilary F-Olla.11."da ~11111 the mltlbam .....i17 en .._,M•1r A-m ~ Ille 1cena of eonltint tlntfamallnll and absence ol prlaooert from the eonfliles for two and tbrff.bour perloda. The report aa1d the branch wu design- ed to house persons sentenced for non- support, alcohoUc violations and other misdemeanor crimes. But the report charges that because Of the great In- crease in narcotics violations and overcrowdlng of the main jail in 3.inta Ana, Theo Lacy ts now housing many persons ....,. Intended lor the facility. MIAMI BEAQI (UPI) -Looking It I! charged tbst not enough depuliet fresh ~ · just two houri ol sleep, are asslped to the jail for adequate Ge\>111• S. ,J,lcGovern went prompUy lo supervl!ion and tbst the chain lint fence w o r t 'lodaY' try I n I . lo unify the 1WTOW1dhl'g It allows passing through or Democratic perty and predicted "a tossing over dru g supplies. dramatic, and sweeping" victory in bis "Search procedures for returnlng work c3mpo!ln 'against President l'(tson. lurloligb and work crews are tnadequste (Re!ated atoriu, pfcture1 on Page $). and foster the amuggllng ot t'Ontraband/' Juot five lloarl alter being -co the the report cbarxes. campo~Ltrall to the cheers of 3,000 "Acatrate reoords of eonllxated druCI Democrauo confenllon dtlegatee at tilt are not maintained," It caotlnuts. final gavel of ·tbO!r fOW'<lay meeting, the Short of closing the facility, the Grand South Dakota senator met "With con-Jury recommends tlghler ocreening ol gresslonal Md other1 Democratic leaders. proposed inmates and that no person At the tnadltlenaJ jjunity breakfast'' convicted of felon y narcotics violations that comes on the momlng after each be sent there. Also urged is the assJg.o.. DemocraUc Convention endJ, .the. newly ment of two addJUonal orticers to the 4 crowned .presidential nominee and bll p;m. lo midnight 1 b If I lo aUow for vice Presidential running mate, Sen. perimeter caotrol. Thomas F. Eagleton of M!slouri, IOUnded Other aaaestions lnclude constructJon upbeol themes on bow, with a united par· of a l~foof&lock wall Inside the existing ty, they could oulll Nixon from olfice. fence, that r a n d om skin and body McGoven told TepCll1e<I be got two searehes be conducted regularly and tbsl boors aleep, but both he and Eagleton visiting lacillUes be r&<lesigned lo pr .. looked alert and refreahed. vent caotact -prtsoners a n d Both messed at the breaklut gatll(r-visitors. . Ing al the Fontainebleau Hotel that only • Sherill James Muslct wu no I with all elemenls of the perty worklna avallsble for comment today but aidet logethu could Nixon be defeated. Wltli said oUtflltlng of the fourth floor of the coop«aUon, they said, lhere wu no main jail acbeduled to begin tbl! fall doubt -.t the outcome. would aid In overcomtna the crowded "We're going to win one of the most coodUJoos • swoeplng and dramatic vlct«les In the country," aakt McGovern. The new Democratic team plans to dtvote much of the Ume over the' next few days trying to heal wounds which ...... apeoed before and during the ..... venlion. ....... -ii In ,._ to sen. ~· J4aGo"'11'1 •aod~·for jnlldent. Called •:vlctolT yquarc1," the cam- .plip to ,..ncllter Democrats u tt.publicanl wu organl>ed two weeks qo, ahe said, belore McGovern recelved the: Democratic nomlnlUon~ Bites for Frasier Set DllCord enatlnued even alter the ftnal pvol of tbs convention, with some ....-.., members of the dlvldecl llllnob deltption almolll coming to blows during a CIUCUI at lheir botel early today. M..ity 11111111 lllrqlt Saturday I! what the wealberlady predicta, with temperatures in the IOI lnland, and around 70 •I Oranae Coul beache:r. "And we1ve been 1blolutely mowed with \'Olunltor> (for tlie drive) alter J>t. -ncmlnated," she claimed. • cj...ioa Luce, vice cbalrman for tbs CaMimJa Onmmltlee lo llHlecf NIJOo, ,.aid lhll 10,000 vollllllelrJ lllatewlde will "'111 Saturday. : Luce .... olber lletlublkona elalm JicGov«n'• war and wellart poUcleo ara ..... party_.,.._ Tiie drive In Or&lll• Oounly will bqln ~ 10 e.m. from the all campalp hiildquarten: Irvine, H~ llelch, FOUIUln Volley, to,... B. a e b' Yulll"'1n ond Sant• Ans. ~ vol-II btitl( .-lo wallt • ~ _,,... 161 ... bocl. .. Idea how -new llopubllcona mllllt noult hm 1111 tllart. . ' • I 'Short, Simple' Ceremony Planned for Safari King Frasier lbe lien will be burled.Satbrday al 10 a:m. en a ,.u.y lmoll overloOldng bla homo In 1-Hilb iln what one Lion ~ Sa&rl olllcial cleocrlbod .. a"~ llrQplt" CSllDllif, "l tblat ,.._ -han liked It that w1111,'' pibllo nlatlont man John Fozen aid today ol the agtd, but prollfJe lion who ........., 'lllanday morninl- He wu abolUI y8rw old, the equivalent ol an .. ,..4111 man. Park _....., Dr. William Y. !Dg· lint bu llattd the ._ ol dtath u old ... and a _, mallDaclian. A team ol 11 ~ lttadtd by Dr. Mlhony Or!mloll• " Sauth Laguna. pclDnDlt • • I 1111 ca Ibo lootllleu, mangy lion tbl! morning to determlfie the ... ct causes and to "find out why he wa1 ao remarkable" as a lovu1 Fo1en satd. Fruler llred 35 cubs In II· monlha with hiJ 1even wives. The oldest cub, .Jonah, has already been earmarked as Fruler'a aucceasor. The knoll In which the lion Will be burled b en 1 bill above where Fruler's . . pride llves. At Saturday's ctrelllOl\Y, the Scottl!h Gleit Frttaler wlD ~ a funeral dirp OD bqplpes .. Lion Country altendanll act .. pallbearera. Frallr bocame a l)'Dlbol ot vJrl!U7· In / old age and bis lace adorned Hblrtt, watch<o, fan club lllauOOery and auorled merchandise. Lion Country buslneu lncrtued n percetlt when people began bearlJll ol Ille uon:• procreatJve ~esa, accord1ng to Iba park officlab • Foxen asld the park hu rocelved phone calls, telegrams and Dowen from all 9ver Iba U.S. In regard lo Fruler't deatb. Lico Country -!dent Harry 5clallttt bu announced the formalion of tbs Fraaler Foundation. U will -fltnd. raillna tvmta will> pr..-1JOiDC to ,&lllmal ft111n orpnlqlJoaL • • • At the brtakfalll McGovern pledged to meob hll wtd,eiy praised organlullon ol volunteers with the regular Democratic party appora.tus wtllle lllrh1n& to reach an ICCOnl\1lOcfatlon with big labor - wblcb oppoaed McGovern'• nomination ond bu threatened to alt out the election. Thia was much the wne kind ol -e he gave to the delegates lhemaelves early. today In .a speech climlllng lbe con .. ntloL -ending .. at. 11:!0 a.m. PD!' after a lengthy -Ion tbst also lestured a dramatic tn. troductlon speech by Edward M. Ken- nedy and appearances on tbe jsmpecked rostrum by moot of McGovern's major foe• in the btttle for the nominlllon. McGovern plans to spend abQQI two -ka vacatlonln( In bis beloftd Dakota Black Hilla, atoppln( oil In Wul&lnlton Iller lmday.f« an ovmiJa1!t..., btlm. Cho llc'tloVlllH, .... I) INSmE TODA'\' 11'1 , .. 11,,.1 lime ao<ri• "' Lo. '""'" B•o•h. Todou Ir the opm-mg •I the 1mnoal Te1tltlGI of Arl.t and Pageant of the Mastera, Sawduil Fudval and !ht ArM· fair. Ste lodau'• Wftkcndn. "·"'· ..,,, t ... "" n C.IUWfll• t Cll.uln.I ... CMllCt ti CrttnNrl II .,.. ... Jtttlftt 11 ....... ,... ' ,..... ,,., .............. 1l ...,_.,. lt .......... -. -.... --. ................ °"""' cw.tr 11 .......... ... .,~ ...... " -,. .. . ............... ·-. -.... =-.. .i --. -• • • • • • 04!LY PILOT H r.w.r, JlllJ 14, 1972 B~clt Appeal Controversy Set Over Sidewalks? City counc:Umen will be asked Monday nlght to ellmlnate lhe requl.rement for aidewalka in the proposed 317-acre Jlun· tlngton Beach lndustrlal Park. Developer John D. Lusk 11 appealing a planning commlulon action wblch re- qu~~ the conatruction of aidewaUcs in- sloe the lndll!trlal neighborhood as the buldinga go up. dustrial land over to residential use. The council will consider lAlsk's appeal on the sldewalk.s durlng its regular 7 p.m. 1ession, Mondly. South Viets ' Smash Into DAILY PILOT SI.ti "91it O'Donnell Acquitted /nDeath By TOM BARLEY 01 1M D•ll't' •Htt t l•lt A unique and bitterly fou ght Orengu Cowlty Superior Court Civil trial ended late Tburaday with il ruling that clears Dr. Merrill C. "Mi ke" O'Donnell nf al!eg· ed involvement in the death of his wilt, Susan O'Donnell. A 1pokesman for the city planning department aald Lusk wants to elimlnate the sidewalks In order to dlllCOllJ'ago pedestrian traffic within the Industrial area. Sidewalks would still be required on major streetJ on the perimeters of the Industrial park. Quang Tri CHILDREN AT YMCA SUMMER CAMP FOR HUNTINGTON BEACH-FOUNTAIN VALLEY Youngstora Play Duck-Duck·GooM, a Populor Altornatlvt to Hlda and Go Sttk Judge J .E.T. "Ned" Rutter deliv~·red his terse, one-minute dismissal or tht $1 million civil action filed against the plastic surgeon by Mrs. G~r1rude Barnett, 83, of Seal Beach Leisure World. with the comment that "11 great deal of emoUonaHsm" had evolved from tile ti;i.·o- ~·cek trial. . The 317-acre project represents the city's largest single Industrial tract. Bill Back, the city.'1 economic develop- ment coordinator, said the tract is just beginning to move on the Industrial market. "About 10 pe'°"nt of It is developed or sold," he said. "We hope It will develop at the rate of about 40 acres per year, and be complete in eight to 10 years!' . "We're trying to diversify our in- dustrial base," Back said. ''This is a si,<nlflcont development toward that ." SAIGON (UPI) -Sooth Vietnamese marines supported by pinpoint naval IUJ!- rire and heavy U.S. bombing raids today smashed through North Vietnamese troops who surrounded them for two days on the northern rim of Quang Tri City and edged deeper IMldo the Communl.st· held provincial capital. Military sources said intense naval and air suppo rt helped the 800 marines battle through the Communist ring. George Wallace's Mother-in-Law Offered a 'Joint' MIAMI BEACH (UPI ) -Gov. George The Lusk Industrial properly, localed north of Marina High School, has been the subject of prevlom city council con- troversies. A few moolhs ago the council reversed a previoUI city council's promise to allow Lusk to build apartmentJ or homes of some 30 acres ol the Industrially zoned 181ld. Lusk contended low cost housing would bO needed for !ndUJtrlal worken, but ~ did not want to tum In· ~ : Assessor H alred From Collecting Trailer Taxes 1.06 ANGELES· (AP) -County A..-Pblllp E. Wa!Jon must abandon bis plan to collect properly taxes on , the cciunty's more than 30,000 mobile homes, says a Superior Court judge. Judge Harold F. Collini ruled Thursda1 that Wallon "acted without authority, unreasonobly, and 1 be}'Otld hie legal rights" when his Office mailed property tu bUls to trailer owners last month. ,Tbe Judgment wu made 1n response to tV(O cllD aclfon 11Ult1 brought by mobfle homo OWDOl'I Claire Colleton of Whit· tter, DeDlll Wlllon of Tomnce, and t11e GOiden Gato Mobile Home Owners League Inc. ··Mobile ho'me ownera aald they would have been 1ubjected to double taxation under Walaon'la_ proposal because they already paid i 11171 vehlcle tic,... regtstraUon fee . A aecUon of the state Revenue and Taullon Code aays trailer license-fees are 11ln lieu" ol otbtt tues. Wa-contended that the mobile homel actutlly were u "lmmoblle" as coav.,tlonal houses and therefore should be ... -u real proprty. Actress Speaks On Hanoi Radio? TOKYO (AP) -Aclren Jane Fonda has gone on Rsdlo Hanoi and denounced tho U.S. bombing of dikes In North Viet- nam, the Vletnam News Agency reported today. The agency aald tbe broadcast was dlrecttd to 11111 the U.S. aervlcemen in-- volved" in raids againat North Vietnam. Earlier, the 1gency reported lhal Miu Fonda visited an area eut of Hanoi where dlli:es bad been damaged by U.S. planes. Mill Fonda wu quoted as sylng "there are no mllJtary targets" In the area. · HI DAILY PILOT U.S. Arm y helico pters for the first time since Tuesday mana ged to land at the marine field headquarten a mile northeast of Quang Tri with supplies and reinforcements. Casualties included one Amegcan and about 40 soldiers wounded in the fighting. The chief of staff o( the paratroop dlvlsJon, Col. Nguyen Trong Bio, waa kill ed when Communist gunners shot down bis hellcopter as he was surveying the actlon, 10urces u ld. American officials considered Bao one of the more able infantry officers In the South Vietnam ... Army. Seven miles southwest of Quang Tri, "about 30" South Vietnamese rushed an American helicopter being used . to evacuate wounded and caused the craft to crash. The crew ch..ie( of a second helicopter sent in to pick up the crew of the downed craft was killed by a single bullet. U.S. officers told UPI reporter Ken Wagner In Da Nang they thought the soldler wu killed by a Vietnamese paratrooper who wu angry because he was oot evacuated. However, another of- ficer said it was possible the helicopter crewman was killed by a sniper. The bruktbrougb will enabla the marines to set up a blocklng !Ol'Ce next to the Quang Tt1 Clladel, a stono-waHed fortress that occupies the c l t y ' • northeastern 1 e c t I o n where J a r g e numbers of Communl.st.t are bell-dUf in and well forlllled, 1pokesmen 111d. The u.s: O>mmand 88ld ftro from tho big guns or one light cruiser and three destroyers off the coast of Quang Tri 435 miles north of Saigon, cleared the 'way for today•1 marine breakthrough. The Saigon command said ihe marines killed 67 Communists and U.S. naval and air attackJ killed 48 otbm, Director Named For Special Ed Mary Gene Hicks, a formeJ> teacher of the educaUonally handicapped, bu been ~ed to replace Mn:. Marjory C. 11Pep- per11 Fitts u director of 1peclaJ educa4 lion in the HunUngton Beach City (elementary) School DI.strict. , Mrs. Hick• cornea to the district froni. the Orange County operated J. P. Greeley School for the harullcapped, where she was principal. \ In her new post a1 coordinator tor the Mentally Gilled Minor, Educallonslly Handicapped, and Educable Mentally Retarded program•, Mr1. Hico wfll draw an aMual aalary of f19 ,387. Superintendent. S. A. Mollett 11ld that none of the applicants from within the district were fully quail/led for the post. Remedial Unit Director Named Elisabeth Halstetn-'was named coon!· inal6r ol~al programo for the cul· turally d Thursday night by trus· tees of tho tlngton Beach City (ele- mentary) DI.strict. Miss Halsteen will be administering a $60,000 program, fin anced e n t I r e I y through federal grant1, that reacbf!s about 120 youngsters from Smith and PetTy schools. She is a form er wlstant principal af Perry School ind coordinator of the district \Olde reading clinic. Salary for the post is $17,658. Ml11 llalsteen will he the third dlre<tor of the program In three years. Pot Smuggling Suspects Held C. Wallace's mother-in-Jaw wa1 curious so she, went to watch the hippies and Yip- pies In Flamingo Park. She was offered a joint of marijuana but refused. Mrs. Ruby Au.tin, a deep-voiced woman standing over six feet tall, said she and a few friends went to the park because they were bored in their hotel rooms dwi.ng the Democratic National Convention. "When we got there , there was a boy standing up there strumming a gu itar but there were no words or mu.sic coming out," she said. "I kept th.inking about what he would look like If he pulled the halr out of his eyes. "We went walking aJong and one long· haired young man came along and asked UI, 1Do you older folka want to smoke a joint?' " Betty CUrlee, wife of one of Walllce's closest friends, Glen CUrlee o f Wetumpka, Ala., told him she did not want lo try l~ "because I might like It." Fro-Pagel McGOVERN. • • heeding to ltls home state. Al McGovern moved into h1a party uni- fytna eflort, with the "untly breakfut," memben of the Democratic con- gressional ..tahllshment tnlroducod the new team at the breetfula and vowed their suppdrt to them. ' Hou,. Spealter Carl Albert noted McGovern'• previous service in the HOUH and said "You are a colleague of all of us." Albert told the South Dakotan that he had already "confounded" the pundits and politicians by capturing the nomina- tion. The financial straits of the Democratt wu underscored hy the broakfut menu -an °infonna1 " fare llmlted to Juice coffee Qd bite-size pastries. ' The affair was sponsored by the Sonata and House Campalin Committeu, both of which help raise money Io r · DemocraUc candldalea running for Congress. At the convention, McGovern con- tended that · Alnerica's discontent with Nixon's Vlelnam and economic pollcles would win the White ljouso for the Democrat.t. l'romPagel PERMIT •.. to the city oouncU," saJd Dave Garofalo. "Let'• get together and gel rid of the ridiculoua parts of this thing," said Dale Aleltine. "We're going to have to 10 to the homeowners and other organizations tn the city to fi&ht this," said Rasmussen. "Many people dlrecUy Involved are afraid to put their name on anything for fear of repercussions. You're looking pretty dumb if you think • bar owner is going to pul his name up front." Football Signups Slated for Saturday Slgnups for the Central Huntington Beach Jr. All American FOOlball League wlU be held Saturday and July 29 at the Huntington Beach High School Gym. The registration for boys between tl!O ages of eigh t and 14 wlll be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both days. Ali boys must brtni their parents, Proof of a •"C" average In IChool and a $5 registration fee. Bobby Sox Softball . League Sets Picnic -The Fountain Valley Bobby Sox SEPULVEDA (AP ) -Eight pe rson1 (ive of them Juveniles, are accused oi JlO!..,.lng $70,000 worth ot mar1juana and a ga&<>llne tank apeclally deslan<d to smugglo contraband •crou the Mexican border, police aay. . The marijuana, 1aiollne t a nk and small QUllntttiea of LSD and me111tdrin1 were confiscated from a homo here Wtdn ld1y, ofllcer11ald Thursday. Charlu WUllama, 21, Richard LlrMn 20, and P1u1 McClun, ti, ... , ... boolted for lnves1J11Uot1 of marfjuanl pouesalon for aaH>. The juveniles \Yett rolealed to their partnll. Softball Leqoe wUI hold Ill awarda pl<> nlc al 11 a.m. Sunday It Mile Squ1~e Park. The 1w1rda presenllllon will he at 2 p.m. preceded b)' two IO!tbaI.I pmes. The firll 1ame wUI pit the major lllJU• gtrll a1.m.t tbe umpfl'll and the - wlll ... the minor INl\ll llrll do bttU• against the ·~ Jeuue manwn. Kids Learning No Babysitters at YMCA Day Camp "There is only one issue left here and that Is the matter of fault.'' he told phun- tlff's attorney Franklin Remer ot New· port Beach and defense lawyers Mike l\fcCray and Reed Bridges. 111 find ir favor of the defendant." · · O'Donnell, 57, was not present to hei>r the verdict deUvered· after two weeks Clf trial. He refused to testify on the first morning of the action and never nt any time entered the courtroogt By MICHAEL GOODRICH 01 "'* D1nr PU•f Staff The hld,.and-g...,.k game had ju.st beaun. Flv,.year-old Paul Kendell rushed to an old trash cane and began to scale It when Ill of a sudden he fell In bead "flrat. But Paul didn't mind. It wu-a good place to hide and there wasn't too much garbage In there snyway. Paul ta one of 26 youngsters between the ages of 5 and U wbo fall over their busy feet, sing, laugh and sometimea shed a tear or two at the Hwitlngton Beach-F0W1taln Valley YMCA summer day camp. The summer day camp, held at Lake Park in Huntington Beach, began its third year of summer activities this week. Aalde from playing J;ijd .. and-go-seek, the yo11ng1ters spent the opening day making name tap from wood cblpg and macaroni lellers, running the 100.yard dash and even telling a few tall tales during story time. Sunimer day camp alms at providing the youngsters with a fun learning ex- perience, according to 22-year-old camp dtre<tor Sam WurtJbacber. "We teach the kids rather thsn babysit them," uys Wurtzbacber. "We try to make every day a new ezperlence for tbem." Strike to Continue BERKELEY (AP) -Union oflidals say they will Ignore a court order io halt a strike or some 300 Berkeley city employes. Superior Court Judge Robert Bostick lsaued a temporary restraining order Thursday after the clty filed a brief arguing that the two-day shutdown of such services as garbage collection hampers the "health, safety and weUare of the people of Berkeley." Activities o( the summer day camp range from sports to a tour of the Hun- tington Beach Police Department. "We also try to get the k1ds to let themselves go," says Wurtzbacher. "lf they want to climb a tree and it's not too dangeroua, Ulen we Jet them. But the things we do u a IJ"OUP are the most fun . They generate a lot of laughter and · enthusiasm among the kids." Among the group acUvities the youngsters participate in during the one \\'ee k summer camp sessions are a nature walk and group expnssion periods. On the nature walks around Lake Park. the summer campers are told about the trees and other plant Ille in the area. The cbaracterlsUc1 ot the leaves, branches and trunks are e1plalned to them in ad~ dilinrt to how the nora Interrelates with other spheres of life. The nature walks are followed by a contest to aee who can recognize the most types of plant life in the Lake Park area. The group expression periods give the kids a chance to alt down and talk about whatever has been happening to them. "It's a chance for the kids to 1bare their interests with others," says WurtJbacher. "They talk about what they did over the weekend or trips they've gone on recently. The counselors really try to listen to the kids and underatand them." According to Wurtzbacber, more 1than 250 youngsters from Huntlngtoo Beach and Fountain Valley will partl¢pato tn day camp thla tnlllllller. Among those )'llungstero, 75 will altend on acbolarshlpo slnce thelr families are unable to afford the camp fee. "We don't turn anyone away," 11y1 Wurtzbacher ... In fact we try to recruit kids from families who can not afford the camp fee ." Remer, in his final artument Friday contended that the massive dose of barblturoies that allegedly kllled the at- tractive ~year-old artist in her C4wmel Island holol on Marcb 19, !"8, could only have come from an Injection slnce 1t "·oul d have been impossible for her to orally administer the dose that left substantial levels of an unidentified drug in her remains. Mexican physicians who exhumed the remains of Mrs. O'Donnell 18 days aft er her death determined that she hiid died from a massive dose of bsrbi ~uretes. They identified the solution as luminol , a highl y potent liquid barbiturate. Trustees Going 'On the Road' Trustees ot the Huntlngotn &ach Union High School District have decided to hold their meetings at various high schools throughout the district rather than solely at Huntington Beach High School. The new schedule for the upcoming year is : -Huntington Beach High School - Aug . 22, Se pt. 28, Oct. 24, Nov. 28, Jan. 9, Feb. 13, March LI, Aprll 10, May 8, June 12. -Fountain .Valley Hip School -Sept. 12 and Feb. 'II, -Edison High School -Oct. 10 and March 'II. -Marina High School -Nov. 14 and Aprll 24. -Westminster High School -Dec. u and May 22. -Wlntersburg High School -Jan. 23 and June 26. CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES \ I ,1 1 [arge selection of ouhtanding quality upholstery available el reCluceCI prlc. ••· Such well known namea •• Woodmerk, Sherrill, Henredon, Marge Carson, and many more, now on sale. HENRIDON'S "Alv1redo Collection" now on sale. HERITAGE'S "Cameo", "Grand Tour" bedroom end occ111ional. LIREXEL'S "March111", "Vilaro" "Esperanto." LAMPS-PICTURES-ACCESSORIES ••• ALL REDUCED QREXE~HERITAwf.-H!NREDON-WOODMARK-KAllASTAN--------.-- INTERIORS WDKDAYI I IATUaDAYS. t:OO le l:JO . l'llDA y 'Tit t :OI .. -~ .. NEWPOU IEACH e "1711 WU!Cllf' DR. 641·2010 TORRANCE e 21'4f HAWTHORNI ILVD. J714127f L.A&UNA HACH e JO NORTH COAST HWY. 4t4-61JI ... I ' 0 " G h w st w a v w te a u N pr n as pr to ni w tr pl a b a b re Frldi11y, July 14, 1972 H DAILY PILOT ~ Nixon Readies 'Policy Briefing for McGovern" , ' Accordlnc lo custom, the NT1on Administration Thursday announced it wlll offer 1 series ol. brltflngs on security and lorel1n policy , to Sen. George McCovem in oomlng weeks: -if the Democrat w11( accept. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler said Foreign Affairs Adviser Or. Henry Kiss· Inger would set up a meeting with the Democratic PtesldentJal candldate to outline a series of background sessions. Kissinger, however, would probably not be in charge of lhe actual sessions, Ziegler added. The President's chief spokesman emphasized. that it was "customary" for the administration in power to make the offer of brle Dngs and that Ute tradit1on started in the Eisenho\\-er years. In 1964 when then-President Lyndon Johnson made the ofter, Sen Barry Goldwater declined. It is not immediately known whether Sen. ?tfcGovern will accept the invitation to meet with reprrsentallves of tht CIA, State Department and others in tht ad· ministration . Asked ti the Democrat would be brle!- ed a1 well on any secret mtetlngs af. reeling lorelJlll poltcy, Ziegler said that the AdminL!itratlon does not recognlz.e "secret mceUngs" In Its lexicon. "As a matter of fonn we never refer to 'secret meetings'," he said. "But Senator l\fcGovern would be kep.\ abreast of continuing negotiations, Ziegler added . President Nixon, Ziegler added , did "'atcch P..tcGovern'1 fonnal nomination in P..1iami Beach Wednesday night on a televl!ion set at La Casa Paci fica, and apparently forsook d.IMer with the Soviet Ambassad9r to watC.:.. the proceedings in Florida . While the President and his wife, Pat, dined alone at the residence, Dr. Kiss· inger played ho.!l once more to Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin and his wife at the El Adobe Restaurant in San Juan Clpl.ltnno. wbere the three dined on Mexican food, The Prealdcnt and ,.veral l\JOIU. dined at the same restaurant earUer th1I week. Several dayt ago Zleiiler who at that time had little -II anYliJng -to say publicly about the Democratic Con. Veiillcii. said the President would prob-- ab! ytune In from tlme-to-tJme, "but he dldn 't plan to lose any sleep watching the proceedings." The President, however, watched Jut night's edition with keen interest, it was hinted . , Ziegler added that repo rts ci rculatini • , at the convention saying the Pusldt.nt . called PtfcCove m alter !he nomination v.·ere inaccurate. "No such caU was placed ." he said. Ziegler ended questions Thursday on the race for the pre!idency by insisting there \\'Ould be nothing further said until after the Republican convention in August. Pictures Draw 'Oohs,' 'Ahs' Production Well Received During Previe'W Niglit Dancin' in the Aisles Delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach took the acceptance speech of the nominee, Sen. George S. McGovern, as cause for celebration and dancing in the aisles. Though the traditional demonstrations and fanfare in the con· vention hall had been banned under the new con· vention rules of the party, the jubilation was span· taneous !or several minutes after the newly chosen nominee spoke. Wallace As 3rd Party Candidate 'Still Possible' LEMON GROVE (UPI) -An official cf the National American Party said to- tiay there is "a good chanct" A1abama Gov. George C. Wallace would accept the party's presidential nomination next month. \Villiam K. Shearer. former Cllifornia chairman of the afliUated American Jndependent Party and a member o! tbe 13-man NAP executive committee, aatd he expected the NAP to nominate Wallace when it holds its national nominating convention Aug. 3-5 at Loubvllle, Ky. Supervisors Tack On $628,27 4 to Budget Two days of scrutiny or the proposed I!Jn.73 Orange County budget by county supervisors has resulted in additions of $628,274 to the proposed $264 million spending program. Althouglt durill& day-long oodiet hOll' ings Thursday board members whacked $450,000 from the list, $615,000 in "policy'' Items were added. Tbis, plus $165jooo in tncrea5" appkived bn Wednesday, In- creased the spendlng program an equivalent of one and a half cents on the property tax rate. Capistrano in Prima Deschecha Canyon. Assl!tant county road commissioner Murray StOnn told board members hb department was negotiating with Rancho Mission Viejo on purchase of 1,000 acres !or the !acility at a total cost o! $2 million. He saicUbe fi.11 project must be acUvated late in 1973 because other facilitles for truh disRQSal in the loutheao!ern part of the &>un!J ilill be overloaded by that time. 1 , Plans call for the eventual creation of ~ ""egional park as the canyon area is fill- ed. By BARBARA KREIBICH Of ~ D.lllY l"lllt Stiff Variety ls the spice of Laguna Beach"'s 1972 Pagant of the Masters. The parade of "living pictures" that started 37 years ago with modest re- creations of a handful of famous paint· tngs, later adding scrne Of the art worl~'s bett.er·known works of sculpture to 1t.s programs, has spread its .wings to en- oompass a remarkable sampling of the Visual arts. The net result is not only a feast of beauty, but a program that has virtually eliminated the potential boredom of look· ing at one framed painting after another, however skllfully reproduced. In the latest edition ol the famous pageant, each presentation has an Jn. triguing element of surprise, designed to keep the audience in a happy state of an- ticipation. There' are just 12 paintings in the new show, each admirably done. 'There is a tapestry, a stained glass window, an Oriental screen, a postage stamp, a delicate medalUon in a velvet case, pierced ivories, sketches, glass, and 27 pieces of sculpture, in an infinite variety of marble, bronze, silver and copper. The technical skills of the backstage wizards, working small miracles with paint, muslin, makeup and the unique lighting el!ects that bring it all together have never been more impressive. Tbe pr,evlew iyght audience Tbllf'lday responded with gasps ol amuemeot as the lights went up on MOnet11111Boat at Giverny" which had been constructed before their eyes on the Irvine Bowl stage to demonstrate the. complexities of l:reating a living picture . It was particularly good selection (or this popular fealurt of the pageant. Somewhat less effective was the at- tempt to demonstrate Pageant techniques in a dual presentation of Vermeer's "Young Woman Standing at a Virginal,'' one in a simple three-dlmemionaJ set, the other in the C<lmblnation of painting and Autopsy Slated After Boy, 5, Found in SF Bay SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An autopsy was to ,be performed to determine the cause of death of a 5-year-old boy whose body was found floatin g in San Francisco Bay Thursday -nine days after he disappeared during a fam ily outing. A police spokesman said resu lts of the autopsy would probably be released to- day or Saturday. An off-duty fire.man jogging on the beach across from Fleishhacker Z?O spotted the body or Christopher Dove fioatlng in shallow water. The coroner's office said the child probablr -· but two hon)lclde tn-1P<Ctor1 were wtgned to lnveatJaate t~e ..... Chrla_W>her's stepfather, Lionel A. eurt1::.'•U11ed the body, sobbing ... It'• him.">' ' lighting that makes the Pageant pictures appear "fla t." The reproduction was faithrul, but the cun.o ing lines or the Venneer don't lend themselves to a demonstration of ''flatness.'' If "oohs" and ''aah!" from the au· dience are any criterion, the Thursday nigh t favorites would include "The Bron- cos," a pair of powerful Koerner cowboy paintings and Beda's lavish "Ches,, Ga1ne," both including some masterful background paintings; a remarkable trio of sculptures "From the Sea/' iJ...·' lustntlng totally different technlqllel tn " reproducing marble, bronze and copper: a splendid stained glass window from Notre Dame; the cxqulc1ite ivory "Bishop's Crozier,'' and the unique Greek Olympic stamp. The ever-pc>pUlar Gettys burg is back on . the hillsides for a first act llnll with : some additions to previous presentations -and some admirably rigid posing b)' models "on stage" ror minutes at a Orne; An early Picasso, "The Circus Fami-- ly." meets a challcn11:e in the color departmem and Is enhanced by jolly · circus-style music. Norman Rock.well is back agai n, thi~ · time in a sepia sketch for his popular Saturday Evening Post cover, "Saying Grace;' a dllficul t reproduction job that comes off effectively. 1 Another technleal ~ 11 the p~geant•s flrat venture Intl> polnttJtllm· . with Pisarro'• 1'The Apple Pieters." · Hap Gralwa'1 mlnltlcia II lllppl'1 devoid of the comy hwnor lllat -to .. be a pageant trademark and 11 llDed !rltli : · interesttn1 bill of btatory and -.0;' about the arUsts and their IUbjeda. ·' relleotlng consclentlOUI rtHan:h. . " "We will tender a nomination to him," he said. "We make no pretenUons as to whether he will accept it. He was our standard bearer four years ago and we will make lhat oiler again. "We will let him know the people want an alternative, and we feel there is a very good chance be wffi accept." Despite the increases, supervisors are still voicing determination to cut the county's $2.04 tax rate by eight to 12 cents, because of a 14.8 percent increase in assessed valuation. 'lbree proposals which would have ad· ded another $1.5 million to the budget were eliminated for the moment Tbur5- day. • • • buy a Mercurv • • • TODAY! Shearer said he had not talked with Wallace since the May assassination at- tempt on the governor. "He has never told anyvne be will accept/' Shearer said. "He has only told us he was going to 1:-e a serious: Democratic candidate at the convention. No one has any assurances bey.:ind -that." Wallace, thwarted in his: Democratic presidential bid, said Thursd.:,; he would not make a third try for the presidency as a third party candidate. Wallace beaded home to Alabama to- day with apparent plans to concentrate on acclimatizing to a new Ille of di.!Jabjl~ lty rather than pursuing preltdenUal am- bitions. Wallace left the 8"eoe ol the Democratic National Convention without bitterness, he said, even though hls pro- posals for revbion of the plaUorm for the presidential campaign got nowbett. Wallace left his hotel shortly alter noon to return to Montgomery for hls fli'i& night _ln Alabama since early May. He w4s shot May 15 at Laurtl. Md. He traveled home in a military ho!pital plane. On hi! departure. Wallace S&ld that he appreciated "nice remarks" about blm by <!e«s• s. McGov.,,, to Ille nominee'• acceptaoce speech early today.· .. I have congratulated hhn on winning but as far as a political statement, I have none at this time,'' Wallace told reporters. • Pravda Hails McGovern MOSCOW (AP) -A Soviet riewspaper c a 11 e d Democratic presic!entlal nominee G e o r g e :t.tcGovern "a repraentatlve of an attractive new era" today, but cau· tloned that campaign prombts .,., not always fu!Olled. EmphasWng McGovern o~ position to American tnvolvem<nl Jn VJeLnam, Komsomols:kaya Prav· da said the senator's "unexpected popularity II explained by the fod that many Americans see him as the man who promllel a cban1e f<>r the better." Pravda. the Communl1t party newspaper, reported McGovern'• nomlnoUon without comrnen~ but uld the convention "aomtllmt.1 felt Ullo a hu1e meet1n1 a1a1J11t Amerlcon .....,.1on In Vietnam.'' • A $11 milllon reserve !und for green-- belt acquisitions lost on a 2-2 vote but Board Chairman Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach said he would bring the matter up again Monday when budget hearings resume. Caspers and supervisor Ralph Clark or Anaheim favored the greenbelt fund, urg· ed by greenbelt coordinator Rod Sackett of Costa Mesa. but Robert Battin of San- ta Ana and David Baker of Garden Grove voted against it. Supervisor William Phillips o f Fullerton was ab~ent on county business in Sacramento when the vote was taken. -other items cut Include $261,000 for a water quality study In Newport Bay and a first year outlay of $310,000 for a com- puterized information system for the Orange County Medical Center. · Medical centec.> administrator Robert White fought bard for the long-sought computer oystem pointing out that !ti eigltt year total co.st of approxlmately $6. 7 million would eventually result In net savings o! $1.2 million to the C01D1ty. The board did leave In the budget • $25,000 Item which provides for deaiga work for remodeling the medical center. The controversial Airport Land Use Commission of Orange County got it in the neck: .again. A requested $731000 was cut to a token '5Q01 duplicating a similar action of the ~board last year. The coD1Dl.i5slon was authorized by state law several years ago, but board members refused to activate it until their hand was forced by an amendment to the law In 1970. The change provided that If either the League of Cities or the board favored the Jand use group it must be acUvated. The league took such action in 1970, but superviJor David Baker said Tbunday league member• are now seeking a change In the law to aboliJh the com- mission. : Other addillons to the budget approved include $200,000 for bicycle lralls, $150,000 !or addiUOlll to the county plan- ning ltalf and a re1<rve lund of $lllO.OOO • for luturt mental health pro1ram1. Also added wu $2S,OOO ror nine ad- ditional teaching days In juvenile IChools required by law and SI0,000 for an en~ vironmental study ol the Aliso Creek waterahed aru througlt El Toro and Laauna Hills to the 1ea. The county Dood control and road departn\entl will each. add $10;000 for thil 1tudy, tt WIS aareect. Tburaday•1 all-day budget .... ion covered !our o! the el&ht 1<CUons o! the rpendlna program -commwilty lllety, health, education and home and co.,. munlty envlroMJent. Approved !or Inclusion In the budiet WU 'I.I mllllon [or a p~ refUM disposal Sile north o( j San Juan I ) "Car of the Year" • Mercury MONTEGO ~ the elegant MERCURY MARQUIS ! Everything you buy a small car for! Mercury COMET the "Sexy" little IMPORT? Mercury CAPRI sleek and sophisticated M'£RCURY COUGAR •onmoe Countv'• Famav of Fi•• Carl" Homo Of The New Car • , , "Goltlea l'ollda" ohnson &. son Home Of The New Car ••• "Gelden Touch" • , f DAil V PllOT Bremer M m:ed -From Hos11iw.l UPPER MARLBORO, Md. '(UPI) -A'rthur H. Bttmer, accused aa•Hant of Ala~ Gov. George Wallace, WU trlftJ!orred Thlll'ldly nJcht from a Jessup, Md., tmpltal to tbe Prince Georges County jaiL About 15 deputy 1herill1 anned with rlflea surrounded the jail as the 2l·ye1r~ld Bremer wu taken Into the two-st«y brick building at about 5:15 p.m. (PDT). , Bremer ti accused of shooting Wallace and three others at a 1.aurol, Md., shopping center May 15. lie ia scheduled to be tried on state charges begtnnlng July 31,-ln the circult court In U p p e r Marlboro. Neal Ball, a White House prOSI Jeetetlry, &aid President Nixon penooally approved B r e m e r ' 1 transfer to Maryland authorities. Ball said Ni.J:on followed the reeom- mendaUom of the FBI. Chess Panel Turns Dow n Fischer Bid REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) I -The <ommlttee In charge of the $250,000 In· temallonal chess cbamplooship today turned down Bobby Fiacher'1 requeJt lo ovemile Rel.,.. Lothar Scbmid and take •way ·!be lmfelt point awarde<I to lluuian Bnrll Spassky. The -.nlltee, composed of Schmid, his d..,.ty, repm81lMlvez for the two playen. and the. organizers, said it would meet apln later In the day to discuss "Fi1Cber'1 complaint& about condilions un- der which the match ia being played. SPABSJ[Y, THE relgnlnc world cham- pion, wu awarded ooe point Thunday when Fiacber refused to pby the second pme of the match, giving him • z.o lead. The temperomenlal American said ho would DOI play until lour closed circuit tele'1akm cameru were removed from the cbesl ball. The cnmmlttee announced its ruling following a two-llour meeUng. Deputy Referee Gudmundur Amlaug11S011 :;aid both Fiacber ml Spualr;y would be in- vited lo !be llOCOOd meetlni lo dlscuu Fiacber'• cmpplaints. While Filcher11 main complaint wu 1gainlt the televlskln cameru, be bu a1ao proteot.d !be lightlng In the ball, lhe 1ize of the chess pieces, the thickness of the drapes ond the cnnduct of the spec- taton. THE BIG question remained one th.at has haunted the cbamplnnsblp almost from the beginning: would Flscber walk out? Icelandic grandmaster F r i d r i t Olaiaooo, on old friend of Fischer, managed to get into the suite of rootns where the challenger ls stay!ng In a downlown hotel. "He talked to me about anything else but the match," Ol&fssoo said. "He lost iaterest: in it siJ: months ago." Fischer dropped the first of the possi· .ble Zf games to Spassky, who needs 12 poUU-a win counts one point, a draw one-ball point -to retain his U~e. 'lim~ for the second game came and went Thunday and Fischer did not arrive. Aides said",be stayed In bed to prnt.,;t the television cameras. Al the appointed time, 5 p.m., Soassky was in the .hall. Promptly at 51 Schmid started the time clock. There \Vere 60 minutes of hushed silence w .'1 i ! e everybody waited for Fischer. ANDREW DA VIS, one of Fischer's lawyers in New York, put through a call at 5:» p.m. -: when there was itill SO minutes llll Fischer's deadline -to Richard C. Stein, lawyer for the owner of the TV ond lilnµ.lghts and asked Stein to remove all cameras for Thursday's game and give Davis Ume to fly to lt'elaod and di.scuu the matter in detail. Stein said be agreed and even made out a written agreement backstage In the ball. Fischer w~ told via telephone that such an agreement existed, but the American did not respond, Stein •aid. FrldJf, Ju~ 14, 1'7> 34,000% Return? Prox mire Blasts Firm's 'Profit' WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. William Proxmire ([).Wis.), ac:cu>ed the Defense Department today of letting the t8'payer be "played for a sucker" by allowing Sperry Rand Corp. to reap a 34,000 per- cent return on a $50,000 investment. 'Ibe contract involves the company's production of 155 mm artillery &bell cas- ~ -the bnw-colored portioo -at Its loWsiana Army Ammunition Plant, Silreveport, La. The $71-million plant WaJ built with taxpayer money but Sperry Rand in- vested only $50,QOO, aaJd Proxmire, cbainnan or the Joint Ecronomic Com· mittee. In the 20-year si>an from 1951 to 1971, Sperry Rand made ft7 million profi4 maintained Proxmire. According to a General Accounting Of- fice investigation, Proxmire said, Sperry Rand produced each casing at a claimed cost of $29.36 under a cost-plus contract. Paa Bas Colllslo1 e Bus C'olllslo11 CAPLEVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -A wHd- ]y swerving car wlth a Oat tire crashed into a Greyhound bus early today killing three peraono and Injuring 20. The dead included the driver and sole occupent of the car and two pas3engers aboanl the Memphi>-to-AUanta lxls. Identities of the dead and injured were not immediately available. The collision on U.S. Highway 78 near thia small Memphis suburb forced the BeHast Battles Termed 'Worst' . ' In Three Yea1·s EBLFAST (UPI) -British troops seJ,. ed a former Protestant housing develop- ment from Irish Republican Anny (ffiA) S!"""en today In what a British officer called Northern Ireland's worst gunballle In three years. Six men -three civilians and three ~ied In Belfast overnight, bring· lng to nine the desth toll in th• past 26 hours, Including .five soldiers. 7be army claimed 'I// gunmen wounded. An army spokesman said more than 5,000 bullets were fired In fighting which raged eround the Lenadoon Avenue area. The gunbattte subsided with dawn but Oared again briefly at about fi a.m. An hour later it was quiet again. The spokesman said the fighting was the worst since British troops tlrrived in the province in August, 1969, to put down strife between Protestants and minority Roman Catholics. In revised figures, the army said the deatJu brooght the fatality toll in almost three years or violence in Northern Ireland to 432. including 109 l!IOldiers, 300 civilians and 23 policemen. Shortly alter the outbreak of fighting in Lenadoon, the bodits of three men were taken to the Mater hospital. Royal Vic- toria Hospital admitted four men during the night with gunshot wounds. An army spokesman said 600 troops moved into the Lenadoon Avenue area Thursday night tlfter gunmen of the IRA 's Provisional wing, operating from their stronghold there, altempted to overrun an anny outpost in the district. . DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellwry of the Dilly Piiot b guaranteed MOflC!a'f'-Frtdly: ff YOU do not lllw yovr P.-Ptf by 5:» p.m., ult 1nd your COPY wlll bl orouotit to ~ c.ri. •r• t.I!"' 111111 7:311 p.m. Satvrdty Ind lundly: ff YOU do llOI realve your copy by t 1.m. S.tvrdly, or I 1.m. Sund1y, UH ft I CODY Wiii lie &!'111111ht " '(Ou. C.11• .,. faktn llnlll lt •. m. Telephones Mott °"'"" County ... ,.... • ••••••• ....,,. Horttlwtst Huntington •Neb 1M Wl!JtmlMl1r ................. •n:11 lat! C'"""'tt, Ctpb;tt11111 Biid!, s.,, Jvet1 C.pl11r1no, Dllrui hlllt. lovlll l,afllrll, l.aVllM NIIMI ..•• fn-4421 bus Into a utility pole, through a barbed wire fence and into a pasture. e Ag11eui Begins MANCHESTER, N.H. (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew opened his campaign against the Democrats by ask· Ing local media to offset a llberal biu of Washington reporters end commentators. Agnew told I , 750 Republicaru at a $51). a-ticket dinner Thunday nlgh4 thla was "the opening session of the real stop. McGovern movement." But Agnew only mentioned the Democnitic pr.sideitial nomiRee, Sen. George S. McGovern, in an aside. ( IN SHORT ... ) After the nomtnation, Agnew !'laid, McGovern wu "at the swimming pool practicing bis new stroke -the Hanoi crawl." e Kickback Char ge WASHINGTON (AP) -Tex a I Congressman James M. Collin! has denied any knowledge of an f!S,000 kickback scheme for which hhl fonner chief aide wu convicted Thursday. The aide, George A. Haag, contended throughout his four~ay trial that he car· ried out the kickback schemJ at the direction of Collins, a millionaire Reoublican from Dallas. Haag, 33, stood tight·lipped and erect as the jury foreman repeated "guilty, your honor," to 20 counts of mail fraud, two counts of using falsified House payroll forms and ooe count of obstruc- ting justice. His wife cried aoltly. e N-hlte Ban ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -The Benevolent and Protective Order of Ellts rejected a proposal Thursday to admit non-whites as members. Delegates t.o the Elks convention voted l,798 to 921 to reject a resolution t.o delete a "whitts only" clause from the constitution of the 1.5 million member group. Similar resolutions were defeated in 1963, 1969 and 197L In 1970 the r ... lulion was botUed up in committee. Attorney Jailed For Contempt 111. Bugging Case WAS1l!NGTON -Attorney M. Douglas Caddy has been jailed four hours for con· tempt of court for refusing to answer questions before a grand jury in- vestigating the break-in and att!mptcd bugging of Democratic party head- quarters here May 15. caddy was released from jaU Thunday -the same day be wu put in -by two judges of the U.S. Court of Appeals who said they wanted to review the contempt ruling by U.S. District Court Judge John . J. Sirica. A hearing was set for Tuesday. caddy bas relused to answer such questions of the grand jury as hcrlf he knew five men were amsted ·inside the Democratic offices before the irr fonnatioti. was generaJly known. He a1so has declined to answer questions about telephone calls he received the night lhe five were arrested. 1 One· of those arrested was James W. Mc:Cord Jr., security chief for the Com· mJtttee for Re-election of the President and for the Republican National r.om· mittee. . The break-In prompted a II million damage suit filed against the Commlltee for Re-election of the President by Lawrence F. O'Brien, Democratic Na· Uonal Committee chairman. T h e Republican group asked for postpone- ment of the suit until after the Nov. 7 election because it could cause 11ln. calculable" damage to the re-election campaign of President Nixon. ·California Has High, Low . 1__ I BLACK STREAKS OF RUBBER LEAD TO HIJACKED 727 JETLIN!R Pilot Forced lo London T1x11 Ru nw1 y-Me1nt for Sm11lor Pl1nn Crippled let Skyjacking Drama Ends With Surrender of Pair FREEPORT, Tex. (UP!) -The two hijackers in a crippled jet stranded on a small South Texas airfield weren't ready to concede defea t. The airplane was surrounded by poliet>, it was out or fuel and bad four blown tires, and the hijackers were weary from the 22-hour ordeal. But they stilt had $600,000 ransom money and parachutes they traded for 112 passengers in Philadelpbla, and were holding three 1tewardesses hostage. IT WAS FBI agent Louis \Vhite of Baltimore, who convinced them they U"I TtllltllMtl GRIMACING WITH PAIN Pistol Whipped Co-pilot Boise Cascade May Quii Land Sales in State · BOISE, Idabe (AP) -Boise. Cascade Corp. announced today It ia considering a special charge of up lo f200 mlllion agaiMt income 0 to remove uncertainties which have been draining the company's earnings and ~louding its future." R. V. Hansberger, board chairman and chief executive officer, said if the action were taken, ii would arise principally from two major decisions undtt cog. slderation: -An acceleration of the company's withdrawal from the recreation com- munities business, including Immediate d!lcoat!nuance of retall land sales ol Bo1le CUcade'1 recreation communities ~ In Ca1Jlomla. -Add!llJI to the company's ,....,.., for LaUn American Investments because of the IncrWlna unsettled aspecll of cer- tain ol those lllvestmenlo. The msJor portion of tbe charge would involve recreation communities. A company spokesman said no def'inlle d<Cision bad been reached on the opeclal charge, whicli wouki be 1 onetime, non-- normal operation -... IOlldlfy the company's financial position. A decllioo la expecled about the end of the month. Hansberp< ea1d the accolerlllon pullout In calllomla recreatl• ...,.. munltlet wu belna considered "prlnwi- Jy due to the odvene m"flrGnmenl created by..wbot Ille compe111 ccmlden lo be WIWUTanted Janulta." He said u • ..ult, -bad lolled lo r .. cb occeptable -durlnl rocenl months ml ore not projected lo Improve. Hanlberter lald the cnmpoey'I other , prindpol oj>entlh ..... --pro1: ltable. sliould surrender alter talking to them about 30 minutes. 1be agent, like the hi· jackers, is black. "White told them the three people who were injured in the ordeal were not hurt seriously. He said the only thing for thE:m to do was give up," said Houston FBI chief Thomas Jordon. 11Ie made them reallie they were in an untenable position." . The three stewardesses walked out first, followed seconds later by the hi· jackers, walking out of the rear door of the airplane with their bands held high. WHlTE SNAPPm ... the handcuffs and the men, later identified as Stanley Green, 34, of Washington, D.C., and Lulseyd Tesfa, 22, a native of Ethiopia, were charged with air piracy and neld in lieu ol 11 million bond each. The hijacking began Wednesday night as the 7'I// jeUlner approached New York ori a flight from Pblladelpbla. 'l'be hi- jackers were anned ·with a sawed-OU U.. gauge shotgun hidden in a fake arm cnst, a pistol and • hand grensde. They forced the plaae to return and land In Philadelphia and demanded the ransom and parachutes. capt. Elliott M. Adams, 55, escaped by diving through a cockpit window. He wa! hospitalized in fair condition from in· juries suffered In tJie fall.· Adanis jumped because the hijackers bad ordered hip> to take off before the plane w.as refueled, a move offici.als said would have caused the aircraft lo crash ngbt after Ultoff. THE HIJACKERS finally ......;ved their ransom, released the passengers, switched lo another 'I'll jelliner and took off for Tau, still holding three stewardesses and two male crewmembers -the copilot and the engineer. The gunmen forced the jet to land on a small airstrip near Freeport, designed only for propeller alrplanos. It blew lour tires on landing and was stranded. The airport had no facilities for repairing or refueling jets. · During negotiatiool between the FBI and the hijackers, the cnpilot and engineer escaped the same way piltlt Adams bad. Engineer Gerald L Be11ver1 37, ol llouston, was shot ·In the leg as l.e scrambled through the cnckplt window, and then sllghUy injured In the fall. COPll.OT NORMAN W. Reagan, lf, of Miami, broke bis wrist, pelvis :md rib when be hit the ground. He lay mo- tionless on the ground ml bad to be car- ried away on a stretcher. The bljockerz made one 1ut bid !or victory before ~ to Agent White. They uked for a mnaller alrpi:me piloted by on PB! agen! wearing on1)' swimming trunks. * * * 2 U.S. Airlines 'Cracking Down~ On Hijack Tries ClllCAGO \AP) -Two major U.S. alrlinel have announced llepped<lp oecurity measureo In on attempt to thwart bljoctqs, American Airlines said Thurodoy that corry<lll boggqe -being~ 11 boonlbW ,_ u -wllbd on- to plailel at O'H.e lntemotlottal Airport. ' United Air Lines, tbe mtlon'1 lorpol ..mer, -H wll1 employ- nel to lnopect all bond lu&Pi• coniod by -boordlng tll '12'1 flllbto. II added 1hat It wDI CIOllllllll Ito pollcy of mating opot -of -boordlng 111 -ftl&llll. Aa Amlr1ean Alrllneo ~ said the 1-lnopectlon would not ho 11mltod lo Pl-CUI boarding ~ 'l'lll. Tile 1ncnued oecurity -~ came In the oflermatll of the W~oy bl· jackq of on American jetliner between Ok111bomo CHy ...t floUu. The hija<Ur loter r""'ed. UPIT ...... SUSPECT LED AWAY LulHyd T nf1, 22 '100% Effective' Video Bomb Used Over North Viet SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Navy an- nounced today the introduction of a new. one-ton video bomb called 11Fat AJbertlf. lnlo the air war agalmt North Vietnam . and termed It highly effective. The weapon is an Improved version of the 11Walleye" television bomb and ha• been in use for the pa.st month, the Navy said. capt. Marland W. Townsend, com- manding officer of the carrier Kitty Hawk, said the first" six Fat Alberto released scored direct hits aglinst their targets and reduced the risk thal, American pilots would be hit by ground lire. I NEWS ANALYSIS i Townsend said lour bridges were down.· ed and two mllltary supply bulldlnp' were destroyed by the bombs. "You can't beat 100 percent," be aaid. The Fat Albert, named by Oien •boml the Kitty Hawk, ia twice u powerful u the W~eyo and bu • television wnero in the ,_ lo direct the bomb lo the target. "The primary odvontages of the 'Fii Albert' over the earller Walleyed -1ef are lncttued esplooive lmpoct, bottw reliabllltY and ,,..1er llandofl r-..:. or the ablllty lo hll targela from blgber alUtudes, the most popull( feature tor · -bat air crews expoaed lo enem7 ground lltt," the Navy Mid. On the other band Heol's·lntroducll• or a beaHeeklng· Soviet ontlalrcroft missile lnlo the Vlllum ww ii gener•lln& C0111idera1Jie concern ._,, U.S. and Soatb Vieb= .. e commandere and bu brOQlbt llhout some clrutie changes In their fllen' tacUca. The -ii Ille 5A7, or ''Slrela" - • Soyiet m!alle wblcb the North VI& nomeso fire lrOm the shoulder like • -· I\ II mudl· like the U.S. llede,e mitlile. • ' The Stre1a ii equlppod with .. hlllc'4d bomlng dmce tho! la •ttrocted to !ht hoot flven oil by u olrenlt lllllne ond corrid • ~·· wlll'beld. n boo proved very efloctlte, eopedo1ljr ...... the comporollnly -'-811oopten llld pn)pl1ler ploneo, om.... Al· -...... ...-ii 'tho moot ... lect!ve ol the .......i --lllld lat the f1l'lll Umo by Ibo Noctll v-lta the .......,, ol/enmo -the otben tr.. elude lone·._ ortillery, medium tuQ Olld wtr.p1dod mlsolloo MDltary ....... eotimale !hot """" !hon o -. U.S. a1n:n1t ml 111 loul tbot many --bel1eoptm ond ·p1oneo hove boon downed by Strei. m1solles -they ._..... ... the ..... !<field In .. ,1y May. t ' • • , I . . • -DAD .Y. P ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE THE MOST t>IS!ltUPTIVE ELEMENTS AT TME CONVtNTION SO FAit ARE THE MlllTAAV . <'HOP.PERS •.• . .. Investment ; .. • Ill Youth • Four West Orange County rities recenUy approved a joint powers agreement in which they pledged nearly $21,000 to help find jobs for youngsters. The four cities -Huntington Beach, Fountain Val· ley, Westminster, and Garden Grove -will be allocat· ing the money to the Youth Employment Service which programs continues to subslde1 violent fluctuations In the work force are likely to be<Ome Increasingly com- mon unless Douglas can diversify. is 'located in the Huntington Center 11,lall. . The 'investment is a wise one Since the!YoU\h Em· ployment Service bas proved to be an invaluable asset to !he youth of all lour cities. In· lbe--last year the em· ploymenl service has been able to find work for 1,611 youngsters OU\• of fO<U:e than 3, 700 applicants. ·The jobs have ranged from playing Mickey M~use al Disneyland A recent proposal for joint study of ocean pollu· tion with the city of Hunllngton Beach is one step in this direction. But if Douglas is ·to provide employes with reasonable Job security, a massive effort will be needed to seek out new types of projects to which high-level engineering can be applied. Thus far , there are few signs that such. an effort is forthcoming. fO~ 1HE FIRST TIME IN A*'f CONVENTION YOU <AN TELL SY L OOl<lN~ WHO'S FOR WHOM. to babysitting. · ' The Youth Employment . Service . was originalll •founded by !he Huntington Beach Junior Womens ' Club and later partially supporte<l'.by the city of Hunting• ton 1&ach and othei: private organizations. Now all of the cities benefiting from ils services will be carrying their 'fair share. • Diversification Needed McDonnell DouJ!las Astronautics Company began laying off 750 aerospace workers last week, and it said 'it will probably have to drop another 750 by year's end. These cutbacks are the biggest since 1969 when the work force at the Huntington Beach plant dropped. by .. 2,500 in six months. Tu West Orange County, the layoffs are bad news. A significant portion of the local economy is dependent on what these aerospace workers spend on their families every week for the necessities of life. • And to the ~aid off workers themselves, the pros- pect is grimmer. Most will have families, and many may be the. only breadwinner. - As natlbnal commitment to the defense and space ' • Absent. Councilmen Two Huntington Beach City Councilmen, Donald Shipley and Norma Gibbs, currenUy are enjoying ex· tended trips to Europe which will keep them away from the city for most of the summer. Both are professors at Cal State, long Beach, and the trips also involve study related to their school work. 1 • · . Their absence, however, has been felt by the rest of !he city council. In ~t least two cases their votes might have proved (or still C!)uld prove) crucial. A tough ordinance controlling horse stables will need four votes to become law. It got three votes (3;-2) on a resolution ordering the city attorney to write it. The question now is, how would Gibbs and Shipley vote if they. were here? Their votes are quite important to stable operators and horse owners. On another occasion, Mayor Al Coen cast ~ "yes•• vote to give the necess'a.ry !Our votes to approve a four· cent oil-tax, even though he opposed the tax. Coe n said he knew Gibbs. and Shipley favored the tax so he voted uyes" rather than delay it. With two members absent for such a long time, the counCil does find itself In a bind. Future absences of such length should be carefully considered. ·, fb01 H 'Progress' One of Oldest Bromides in American Politic s ' . Has Replaced 'Salvation' ~YDNEY J.HARRIS) FoilOwing a college commencement ad· dress I gave last month, one of the graduates asked me a question I had never been asked before -he wanted to know: "What, in yOUl' opinion, is the main difference t>e. tween people livltig today alld those who lived in past ages?" _..... I couldn'.t answer ~his · queStion ade· quately at the time, but I have been pon· dering cn it for a few weeks, and a·m con· vinced it is an im· portant question with a meaningfLiJ an~· 5wer that may explain a '6t. IN ALL PAST AGES, up to a century or two ago, the \Yestern world, at least, was motivated by the hope and promise of happiness in another world to come. For mos\ people living tod'Y, this has been replaced by the hope -if not the promise -of a h8pj>y state in this world, for future generaticns if not .for us. People jn tlie past were. able (il not altogether·willi!li) to exist among a com· plexity .of~tJlhfsical and · soCial evils, believing \hese 'to be .cirdained by God, and trustirlg that bf virtuous action they would be transported untO ~IJSSIO'tlie world beyond. ·Mundane lile was largely regarded as a prelude -necessary lhough·uncomlortable -to Paradise., Today~ these eSohatological notions have1>een 'transferred, in great part, to the secular fields cf politics, economics, and society. ' · THE IDEA QF "Progress " has replac-- Dear Gtoomy Gus City Administrator Rowlands will win my undying gratitude as a taxpayer when he starts cracking dawn on use of city-owned vehicles · on personal business and pleasure, --0.T.O. Thit fMhltt refllctt reH.n' YI.... Mt '*"Mrll'f ttltM ef IM -IPIH r. ltllll rwr Ht "'" fll • .....,,. O.s. l>lllr f'I~. ed that of "Providencei" the idea of the Just Society, tt>e Stable ~ety, the Good SOciety, or even the Improving society, has replaced "Salvatioo" as the ultimate goal for many, if not most, people. This is not to say tbat they may not still believe in Heaven, but they also believe we can create something of a Heaven on earth if , we. really care eqougb and try enough. '111is is a dlstinotly new idea in the long history ol manltind. Cl>mpared to "'• pas! civilWIUms were passive, accepting, ,en- dlll'ing, and relatively uooompJillning .. '11le order ol tbings below was like the order of things above -not to be ques-• tloned or changed unless by divine in- . spiration. ._ NOW WE BELIEVE somehow in· tlfe perfectibility of man , if not in his ultimate perfection. We look upon ourselves as a creative fa'ctor in the evolutionary process, as f u 11 y • e n .. franchiJed citizens of the universe. We want Ille to be belle< in ev<ry way, !or · OW' children if not for ourselves. And we · will take an feasible measures to m;ike it so. Thus, the chaos, the conllii:I, the con- tradictions in modern society. 'lbe. secularUation. of Heaven Into a Utopian goal on earth. gives us both our vitality and our frictions, both oor wild hopes and our~ fears.· 'Ibings never looked so . bacn>efore because people never wanted them u. look so good. ·OUr discootents are the measure ol our dreams. Memories, Nightmares · To !he Edif<>r: Couldn't resist answering the lett~ (Mailbox, June 23) about a department store chain that works its service bUilding employes In windowless areas without ventllation. It brought memories, and nightmares. I'm sure it's a place I used. to work. We talked about walkouts, starting a union, demanding shorter hours without pay loss because of ))eat fatig11e, etc. We didn't mind lack of air conditioning, bul vie lhoulhl -e windows could be built. Instead of hosing up hot stale air at night, g11anls could have been hired and barred wiodowt left open. But that would )¥ve meant hiring a felV guards, spendilll • little money. A MAN wm1 A FAMILY, I couldn't ttave until I found a Job, and I was on lbc hot upper fioor. The production was poor and the lurnover and ablenteelsm eo high it cost them more than to remedy the situation. • MY wife works for a company thal couldn 't afford f<> ventilate a niom that had production worktr•,~OOt as soon as it was turned tnto an office it got air con· dltloned. Veara 1go I ~eard a bo$a say, "We can put the worker& that aro "'7 to r<place In the hot area." Bui llllle IUY• can'I fight department itore chains. NAME WtTllRELD MAILBOX A-rit:•au m A ll l'e•r To !be Editor: llunllngton Beach, the c I I y whoM mayor bas been quoted as oaylng the citizens are not knowledgeable enough to vote on pertinent iuues; where, all year round , offenslve government nibbles away at the American ideals set forth in the Constilution, as rals nibble the cheese; where the poor are threatened with eVidion on Dlrnsy charges; where private property is confiscated by the el· ly through powers of eminenl domain; wh<re free enlerprile is stilled by restricting ordinances; and multknlDlon dollar prolects are concocted by sJory· aeeking olllclais which keep the 11¥· payera burdened wllb excesllve debll and taxes, bul when the Fourth of July, the 1nnlvtraary ol the blrtll of our great nation. is celebnted Jn lanfaro llld frolicklnf. What mockery! Could we ploeae have • little more Americallllm • an 7ear rather than a gl<al show or petrlollsm "" jult thb ""' day! PAULINE F. MOEN Taking From Rich, Giving to Poor WASHING TON -Seoato~ McGovern Is shifting the emphasis cf bis economic program from $1,000-forooeverybody to ta.g credits for working people ond middle-in. come families . The program is still intended to "end the problem of lbe ppor" and "end pov~ ei'ty," the Senator says, by substituting direct grants for •el- fare. But it wiU,also, lift the income of workers a n d middle-income families through a 1ax credit system. , This appeirS'on.therace of it to be an effort to combine the) philosophies of George C. Wallace anii John Kenneth Galbraith in a wealth redistribution scheme Of massiye proportions. " TAKING FROM the rich and giving to the poor is one cf the oldest bromides of Am~ican politics, but McGovern is ap- parently ~. not satisfied that t h e Democta"lic platform as drafted says enough on the subject. Nor, it is ap- pafeqt, was what he has previously said cfear. enciugh and plausible enough to be accepted ai other than a flighty acadVni.c pipe dream which would never ~ aci:epted in ' Congr ..... ' . . ' A dec8de ·ago, it seemed a miracle. There waif Yves Montand, in Paris, singing "La Chansonette" on American teleVislorr screens. So what if the pro- gram ~had been taped beforehand or .if the receptjon was Jess than ideal . To viewers in Europe and North America, the first tranaaUantlc telecasts relayed by the Telstar satellite were an exciting novelty ·that heralded a revolution in in· temati~ communications. 'TCtstar '· built by the American 'l'elephooe & Telegraph Co. and launched on July 10, • 1982, by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, was crude when judged by today's stan· dards. But the New York Times was not fa't Off the matk when it said the Telstar broadcasts constituted a "feat . . . rivaling in significance the f i r s t telegraphed transmission by Samuel F. B. Morse." Additional s p a c e communication.s landmarks soon followed . In August 1962, Congress passed the Communications Satelllte Act, which aulhorlzed the crea· ,----By George--.., Dear O.orge: There i5 some ridiculous local law in my community which t think is unconstitutional, un-American and a a-ass lnvaslon of privacy - It conoems pets. My pcl Is w•ll· groomed, has shots, Is kept rcnced In and always on a leash when J take it for evening walks. Exactly why am I not allowed to keep a camel! And how do I go about lak· Ing this "' tbe supreme Court? J.G. Dear J.G.: 1 think you had betlcr renl • truck. • • .It's golna to be pr•<> llcatly imposslblf to gel a plone ruervalloo wllh a camd. ln loci, the 1irUne ns evtn reluctaol to take m1 llanproo lftd 1111 lawyera to Wastilngton .• J , (rucHARD WILS.O~ Better arithmetic wiJI undoubtedly ac. company the new McGovern wealth distribution plan, since the addition in the old one was olf by $30 or $40 billion. But one should not suppose that this idea <Jf wealth redistribution, with its flawed advocacy by Senator McGovern, is merely a hare-brained sctieme which will go into limbo once the election ,is over. · THERE IS MORE !ban a little academic impetus back of it and a great deal of bedrock political pressure. The Nixon administraticn has not been im~ mun,e from this pressure. While the_ semantics used would be entirely dif· rercnt than McGovern's, there Js -a lively recognition in the Nixon adm.inistraticn of the need of readjusting the tax struc· ture. In the latter part of 1971 3nd . eai'ly in 1972 there was mueh disCussion in the Nixon administration of a·comprehensive system of tax reform. Attention centered at that time on the value · ldded tax, a form of national sales tax, which would provide the added revenue needed for EDITORIAL RESEARCH - tion oJ a private corporation to own and operate an international satellite com· rnunications network. "rbe resulting Com-1 munications Satellite Corp. (Comsat) joined the J·n tern at ion a 1 Telecom· munlcations Satellite c o n 1 o r t i u m (lntebal) lwo yean later. TODAY, OF COURSE, live lelecasll in colcr from any part of tbe world are relatively commonplace. President Nix· on's trips to China and the Soviet Union were seen live on American television screens. Similar coverage is planned for government operations while at the same time relieving the income tax payer. TIME PROVED too short, and the election year a bad time, ror the kind and scale of tax reform which was under discussion, and the subject was she!Ved. But in November, 1971, an interviewer found President Nixon preoccupied \Vith "tax reform on a broader sca le than previously undertaken, and intended to spread the burden more fa irly," Nixon was not disposed to talk in detail of what he had in mind. He linked·it to what he called a ''national growth policy" and fia jobs for peace pro£ram," as part or a fresh approach to restoring American economic strength at home and com· petitive drive in the world . As it turned out, these ideas which Nix· on talked about in the fail of 1971 did not emerge in recognizable ' deiail when he subniitted to CongreJS the-programs for the final year of hls first term. BUT THERE JS every reason to sup. PoS• that the idea of spnading the tax burde~ more fairly, which is another name for income redistribution, has not fied from Nixon's mind. President Nixon , unasbamedlf ap.. propriates issues r~iatd ,by his oppo&itlon -revenue sharing, a national income floor in lieu .o!,_ welfare payment!, e~ vironmentalism, consumer interests, and the 1972 summer Olympic Games tn Munich. The most dramatic developments In satellite commUnication may well come In large t aprawllng countriea where con. ' struction of ground facilities would be too costly and time-consunitna. Indonesia for example, has roughly the same i;;;d area as Alaska and consists of 3,000 islanda spread over thousands of square miles of the Southwest Pacific. Only a aateUite could 'efficiently link these far· flung fragments. Similarly, Brazil i• lllymied by thousanda of square miles of juosJe that are julll beginning to Wldergo deve)o!>: men!, and lndla by the lwin problems of size lftd poverty. "Within a relatively short lilne," Sig Mickelson userted In Saturdeiy Review, "regional «~~ ... lion aatelllte8 should be i~le to deliver -- Meeting Power Demand lodDltrial New1 Revtew How !"any people in lhese United Stales would actually desire the en· vironment of yesterday tt lt were handed to tbem1 The odda are excellent that if there were suddenly a reversion to yesterday environment, tb6 exodus rrom areas where a wholesome environment Is, Jn part, tho product of eoergy would bee nation1! disaster in ~If. 'Ibis Is the logical oonolusion to be drawn from in- formation contained in the Annual Report of a large 111orida electric utility -a utlllty that, Uke many otben, has bad Its problem with environmental obstruc· tionlsm and the constquent threat of an energy ahortage. TIIE ELEcTRIC company advised Us stockholdera that Ille maximum summer, peak use of electric energy during 1970 wu uceeded 44 tlmea during the sum· mer of 1971 . Altholiah Ibis company bad added 12 g~ turbines for use durlnc peak power deml)ld periods lut suntmer, there was only a a percent 1eneratin1 reserve -too clOH, llterally, tor com- fort . An edliDrial in !he Miami Herald commenting on the situation said. "South Florida's well-being rtdes on electrical energy. It must have sullicient power not simply for creature comforts but for hospitals, food preservation, public ,.f .. .ty, communications and Industries whJch rely lncroulngly on soph~licated elec· tronlc devices." THE EDITORIAL observea with an evident meaaure of relief that the local power company is preperinf to place substantial •ddltlonal re n e r a I I n r facilities "on the Une" (o take care of future demand -includinf a nuclear generator. II obo took note of tbe fact that the company wlll ". . . .have to sptnd about $1 mlJIJon dally betwten now and 1975 for even more capacity in mid· decade." This mlllion dollars a dly ls 1o· be spent lo preveiil a return to yest~ay's en'rlronment wtwcb many people would flit« Intolerable. a detente with Russia and China. TI1is is not to say that Nixon is about to appropriate McGo vern's share-the.wealth program. But the circumstances d9 sug .. gest tflat Niton ·may t~ to preempt tht issue with his cwn version of spreading the tax burden more fairly so that the 1niddle·income people Will realize a greater share in the ne~ prosperity. JN F ACJ', McGQVfg\N'S programs, \vhich are ao alarming to people wUh property ·and' Jnveotmenla, open tbe way for more acceptable alternative pro- posalB. TheJe aliernaUve -11-1<1 take iiltb consideration t~ advene hno pact on th<! C)fierau ... ol. the American economy ,ol 14cGo~eri>iJ kllld;ft,wealth redistribution. ~ 1b1Ck· .. ~~ of r.itcGovc m'i lCleaS liis alrU.d'y 'Jieen felt in Wall Street. A New York Times survey shows that even the most liberal elements there -and there are some important ones -shy away from 1'1cGover:n, although In the past these elements have supported I i b e r a I Democrats. Another OpPortunity ls thus given to Nixon ltt bring forward sbock·proof pro. posals fa:r tuatlon which will diatrlbutt the burden in a fairer way without disruP,png the operations of the economic system ind tn the sense that he spoke of in th< !all of 1971. strong enough signals so that inexpensive earth slatioOI in those countries could provide a communicatk>ns system coffi<- parable' to Intelsat's worldwide service.'' tfEANWllILE, a number of American companies baVe been competing for six ye<r! for the nabt to establish what pro- mises to be 1 lucrative domestic: col'n4 municatlODI satellite system. T h 1 satellite network WouJd transmit not only television "but illo telephone, telegraph,--r and computer data signals. After 1entthY C0118lderatlon of the case, !he Federil Commuilications Com- mls8ion voted on June 19, 1m, to adopt an ''open Hies" policy. That ii, all finan- cially and teehnl~ quallfled applicants W9Uld be permitted Jo provide domellle lltdllle servlcc.· the eight pendlnf •P- plicanls and anir.others interested in tho • fie ld have until July 2$ to !Ue new ap. plie•lion.s. When the -aystem "' systems finally are launcbed, ~ witllln two ·years, the decldHld drum ol lea el'J)<Mlve and "*"' efficient telecommljl1ications may finally bl realized. ' DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. W <ed. P.blil,..,. Thomat Ke.-.il, Editor Alb•rt W. S.1<1 Editori41 Pog• £difor 1 ' ' frld11, July H, 1972 DAILY PILOT $ EagletOn Politieal Career Jtleteorie " Missourian Carries Lib~ral Record Mrs. Eagleton Bubbles JEFP'EllSON CITY, Mo. (AP) -The 'l'leollon ol Tbomu F. Eagleton u the l)emocratlc vice presldenllal candidate climaxed a meteoric rise in polities for the 42-year-o!d Junior senator from llll.,.url. At 27, Eagleton was elected SL Louis County circuit attorney; at 31, .Missouri's .attorney general j at 35, Ueutenant · governor; and al II Missourians senthlm to the u.s. senate. Youthful Jn appearance, Eagleton sometimes has been called a Kennedy- type Democrat, but he dl!llkes beinl labeled either a conaervaUve or a Uberal. H• saya his views depend on the llaue In- volved. Associates regard him u Uborll on most matters. He called in. 1911 for an tmrnectWe .. .,. ·11re In Vietnam, and was an early advocate of atopplng the bombing there. He Joined sen. Jacob Javlll (R-N.Y.), and Sen. John Stennla, (D-Mlss.), In ;I:;~ a new war powen act lvblcll bu the Senate and is pending In the iiouae. It would more clearly define the ojoncreulonll role In U.S. foreign ln- f,lvementa. Eagleton· alto tried to whittle down ;nttarJ apondln, and succeeded ln .oman Solon Polls 407 For VP Post . . " MIAMI BEA(]I (AP) -Tuu state !lop. Fnu1ce1 "Sissy'' Farenlhold wu nOminatad for the vice presidency Thur .. day nl8bl with ~ plea. to Democratic l(a- tional Convention clelegaleJ to vote ln- dependentlf and elect her "to N>ow lhla b: a d1Herent conventio:n .. " , ·She polled 407.4 and made the motion from the podium to bave Sen. Thomas Eagleton nominated by acclamation. Gloria Steinem, a leader of the Na- tional Women '! Political Caucus, was ~· Farenlho!d'• nomlnetor and !her• _.. four seconder•, including represei\- tatlve1 of blark5 and Mexlcan- Ammicam. · 1 4 . ' Failure to vote for the liberal Texas 1'0ll'lan, aaid Steinem, "would waste an opportunity to tell the country what la different about this convention." She' urg- ed the delegates to "make history" by nominating Mn. Farenlhold instead of ~ Ge<rge McGovern's choice for run- lllni male, Sen. Eagleton (D-Mo. ). ( uSbe changed the face of Texas polltl<s. Texas will never be the 1arne 1t111n,11 Ms. steinem saJd about Ml'f. Pare~lhold'1 recent ~ow defeat In the Jtemocrailc primary gubernatorial race. · Am.., lier ,,.;.,.>11dera were Mississippi Mack civil rights leader Fannie Lou Barner and · Allard K. Lowenstein, na· tlonal chairman of Americans for Qemocratlc Action. IR e p r e s e n t i n g Spanis]\·speaking 4'Jegates.. was David Lopez, delegate !fom Hou~ •1Viva Sissy," he said. · Mra. Farentbold was the only woman placed ·In nomination amone eight can-'lldotes. knocking out the MBTID lank u a wasteful upenae. He advocated wage and price controls to slow lnflalloa. When President Nixon announced P-I of his economic con- trols, Ea&laton praised the adion but told M'IS80Ul1onl be boped It wa1n'I "too little too late." Eagleton presided over the state Senato with a flair. Qulck·witted, be often broke tensions with a quip. He served u cochairman of the Governor's Conference 00 Education and was bead ol the Govqmor's Commission on Crime and Juvenile Delinqu ency. At Idea of Campaign Eagleton has worked on labor and con- . aurner Issues In the Senate. He got the Senate to adopt a clear labeling act. Ho IPOmored an amendment, later adopted, that allowed use ol federal funds to ease Ille financial strain on school dlstrict.o caused by public boll8ing project.o. Aa vice cbalrmM ol !be Senate'• air and water pollution subcommittee, he bu counted environmental problema as one of hia main concerns in recent months. Eagleton was a principal l]JOnsor ol !be Clean Air Act of 1970 arid was an author of the Water PolluUon Act of 1971, which Is stUI pending· In a conference com- mittee and ii scheduled for action after the current summer recess. As chairman of the Senate committee on the District of Columbia, he pushed through a consumer protection ·act and got the Senate to adopt ii borne rule bUI for the distr1ct. As lieutenant ·governor of Missouri, 'Me?. •• Oh I like the little blonde standing behind McGovem!' He also headed a study of vocational and technical education, seeing its ex· pansion as one of the solutions to growing educational problems. · At 15, Eagleton was the target of a kid· naping t h r e a t while his father was representing the Missouri senate in an ouster case against a senator accused of soliciting a bribe on a cosmetology bijl. He later became an honor graduate of Amherst College and Harvard Law School and attended Oxford University. He served two years in the Navy before opening law practice in st. Louis. Eagleton is married to the ronner Barbara Smith, 36, a childhood playmate. They have two children, Terry, 12, and Christin, 8, who is called Christy. Mrs. Eagleton is a vivaciOU! cam- paigner, but she puts her husband lo the spotlight and defers to his political opin- ions. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine was Eagteton's first c;hoice for t b e ll'I TtltPl'lolt STAR ON RISE? Thomas Eagleton Democratic presidential nomination, but after Muskie withdrew, the Missourian joined the forces of Sen. George McGovern. MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -It'• I twin bill for the Wives of the Democratic can- didates for president and vice president. Just like Et~anor McGovern, Barbara Eagleton is a twin. Mrs. McGovero, wide ol Sen. George McGovern, !be presidential nominee, Iiµ her twin Ila with her in Miami Beach for the national convention. Mrs. Eagleton's twin1 Donna, lives in Palm Beach, Fla. Mrs. Eagleton's husband, Thomas, a Missouri senator, was hand~ P. fc k e d Thursday by McGovern for the No. 2 spot on the ticket and early today the delegates nominated him by acclamation. The Eagletons have two children, Terence, 13, and Christin, 10, who flew in from Washington lo be with their parent.o for the final session of the convention. Mrs. Eagleton, a bluHyed blonde, haa been campaigning for her husband since he made his first successful bid for elec- tive office by running for district at· I McGovern Sets State · Visit California Split Faced by Democratic Hopeful MIAMI BEACH (AP) -George McGovern will go to California In August In a personal effort to unite the stole's Jplintered Democratic party behind his quest for the presidency, a McGovern spokesman says. Miles Rubin of Los Angeles, a member of' !be national campalgn team, said California, with it.o 45 electoral voles, will be as much a pivotal state in November as it WM in the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination. · "We welcome aboard everyone in the party in california," Rubin told a news conference Thursday after conferring wlth spokesmen for !eVeral factions of the California party. "It would be very difficult to conceJve of winning in November without winning in California." The session, called by State Party Chairman Charles Manatt, Was billed as a unity conference. But most of the 20 people present were McGovern sup- porters although several of them -su:::b as Sen. Alan Cranston -didn't ome aboard until after McGovern won the June 6 California primary. Rubin said there will be room -ruid a need -for non-McGovemites in the South Dakota senator's California cam- paign. The delegation took no caucus po~ on the vice presidential matter. "We 're urging Eaglelon/1 s a 1 d Assemblyman John L. Burton (!).San Francisco) co-chairman of the delega. tion, but there was no apparent anntwisting among the delegates. Mao Didn't Get Vote for Office . "This is a job that cannot be done by the people who have been active in the McGovern campaign alone/' he said. MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Just for the And Rubin emphasized ' ' S e n . record1 the Colorado delegation to the McGove'rh ·.is anxious that everyone Democratic National Convention did not understand that bis campaign is not Troops :Sent to Miami Due to Go Back Home eJitist or exclusionary in any way." cast <Jne of its vice presidential The last major official act of the con· nominating vo~s for Mao Tse-tung. ~ ventiot for the Zll·vote California When the vote was called, back. from delegation was to cast its vqtes for the the rostnun early today, 8 last name was vice n..-idential nomination. ~-pronounced 11Mao Tse-tung." Th e The slate split.its vote among nine can- didates, but gave lbe bulk of them, 198, Colorado delegates did not catch the to McGovern's handpicked running mate, name and a few minutes later the chair Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri. "' again asked the delegation to explain its Frances Farentbold of Texas was run- nerup with '¥/ votes and then _came Sen. vote. Reubln Askew. They were never needed Mike Gnvei ot Alaska with 22. But the vote had ~n changed and the to control demonstrations, and remained Gravel had worked hard on the Califor-one vote cast for Lt. Gov. Robert Mon- at the base throughout the convention. nians for weeks. One of his top dragon of Colorado the first time waa not lieutenants tn his vice presidential cam-mentioned again. Askew bu asked that Ibey be returned paign was California Assemblyman lorney In St. Louis In 1115&, the same year they were marrled. She told UPI It 1fU "fantastic" to bo pert of Ute ticket, but the nominati(>n certainly would change the !amity's plins for the !UJ1Uner. "We had planned lo visit St. Louis and Delaware Beach but that Is changed now," she said. The children's reaction was typical. "Neat," said Terence of bis father 's nomination. Did this mean that the fami- ly would be getting lt.o pictures In "all the papers," Christin wanted to know. Mrs. Eagleton it' an a c t 1 v e sportswoman, an avid reader, and a chic dresser. She altended Wasbington University In St. Louis and Marymount College in Tar- rytown, N.Y. Like ber husband, she Is a Roman Catholic. Mrs. Eagleton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Smith, live in Ladue, a fashion- ~ble suburb ol St. Louia. ur1~ . NAP 'l"IME - A weary Christy Eagleton, 9, resf.!I her bead on her mother's lap as Barbara Eagleton, wife of • Ge<>rge lrfo· Govem's running mate, ap. plauds in Miami. GoUlwater Sees End to Viet War WASHING TON (UPI) -Barring last minute trouble -which no one really ex- pects -the 2,51111 federal troops •ent to Miami Beach for the Democratic Na- tional Convention w:ill be back at their bases In North Carolina Saturday. tO the Miami Beach area for the Walter Karablan Qf Monterey Park. The first time, Mondragon had been Toda ••-de! U 1 all te pronounced in Spanish and came out SAN DIEGO (AP) sen ... _ M. Republican Convention, which be"'•• y, ~ ega on, Pus ema 5• d" Ilk he h -· -·1 •-rt Hiclal d eked the' soun 1ng · e, t c air and many in the Plans called for the Army and Marine Corps troops to start pu1Jlng out of tbelr tent city at Homestead Air Force Base today boarding transport planes for the airlift home. Defense Department of- ficials said the airlift was scheduled to be completed Saturday. there Aug. 21. Pentagon officials said the pa Y 0 1 5 an newsmen pa J.r audience thought, 0 Mao Tse-tung." Goldwater, a member of the Senate bap for the chartered ·jet flighll back to Armed Forces Committee, says fiaUy he tent city at Homestead would be left in California later In the day. place, and that the troops would go back Some used Miami as a jumping oll lhlnkJ the Vietnam war will end within 110 · to Florida about Aug. 19. point for vacations In the Bahamas or Bunker Gets 1 Vote days. \. So elaewbere in the Caribbean. "I predict. that In the nm monlh or llO me 2,000 of the troopa belong to lhe The final delegation .caucus was Thurs-MJAM1 BEACH (UPI) -Archie dayJ the war will be lmna1ly over," tho Army's crack 82nd Airborne Division, day afternoon when the delegates heard Bunker1 the bigoted character of the Ari7.ona Republl told 600 based at Fort Bragg, N. C. The re-former Massachu.setts Gov. Endici>tt television series "All in the Famlly,1' got attending a 1100:~ late ;:ne bli peJ'IOMfund The specially trained riot troops have been on standby at the air base, 25 miles from the convention site, for the past week at the request of Florida Gov. malnlng_511!) .•. w.elt..MariMJ_fr!im_camp_. Peobody and Sen, Mi k e Gravel one vote from South Carolina early Fri-. . P pu can • Lejeune, N. c. All are members of the m<1;U: a J?Itch for Vice, pres1d~nhfil sUp-day · i:lillifig-oilJotmg · for the V1ce----raUnng~y'o. ------ Del De rim t' E 1 r ••• 1 . il port despite McGovern s selection of Sen. presidential nominee of lbe Democratic Goldwater re!uJed to elaborate m his ense pa en s as ~ civ 'lbxnas Eagleton m Missouri National Convention. statement. disturbance Control force. jji"iiiOiiiO;;;;;ii;;;;;iiiOiii0iii0..iOi.iii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiO;iii;~;ii;;;;;iii;iiii;;iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;ii~iii;iiiii;;iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0m;, Kennedy Sparks Tumult With Party Unity Plea MIAMI BEACH (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ft.rode before a tired and fwnultuous Democratic Na· tional Convention early today ..,,d brought It to its feet In a roaring sendoff for a ticket he- bad de<lined to join. With that, the band played, tlffail, Hall, the Gang's All Heret" 1and McGovern, Eagleton and most o f Mc G ovem's preconvention contenders flocked to Ken- nedy 's side as lbe delegates shook the half with crle, of supptirt. George W a 11ace1 notably, was missing . Kennedy, for many , was the mtJSlng part of the dream which nominated George S. McGovet'I a night earlier. But he had the dele~ates scream--Farm Str:k Ing and stomping their ap. " e pro•al when be told them they had "met the test of great-· G B k · ness" with the selection of ' ets ac ers McGovern and Sen. Thomas F:Eagleton ol Missouri. "We are united " said Ken. nedy, 11bY heritage, con- victiont ·and by unyielding op. J>O$IUon" to an adminlstration wh"lcb ha1 pro voked Americans into being. "more apprehensive about the future than excited by It." Republlcaris, he said, have,. "bad their chance and they 've failed. And their failure of leaderJhip will be rewarded wiili their failure at the polls this November." MIMtl BEACH, Fla. (AP) -"Mr. Chairman, delegates and fellow lettuce-boycotiers," Sen. Edward Kennedy began, and the Democratic NaUonal Convention crowd roard in ap- preciation. For lettuce -or the boycott of any not barvested by union farmworkers -had become one of !be side lbemes unltlng the <.'ODvention. ·• . cSUi{§ The most fantastic, selection of the choicest domestic and imported fabrics available. New- est patterns, up to date models and our usual · expert tailoring. Manufacturers allow us to mention their names --in our advertising at these prices once a year .. at up to th off! GINO SALVAGGI Regularly 185.00 to 220.00 $J49 HART SCHAFFNER & MARX $109' J\egularly 1 50.00to1~5.0Q EAGLE AND KUPPENHElMER Regularly 150.00 to 200.00 SPECIAL GROUP Aasorted brand& Including Eagle, Sedgewyck, Hart :lchatfn• & Marx, Michaels/Stern • .. Ul'I TtlttMtl UNITY PLIA -Sen. Edward Kennedy, with his wife Joan at ht. side, addressed delegates in Miami ' ftarldq In a plea for party unity. Kennedy, who tune4 down an offer for the vice-presid~ncy, drew That brought another huge cborua ol cheers and led to a Ki!nnedy cresceodo w b I c h began wll.b, "There ts a new wind rl.!lng over the land ••• starting with the plains and rocky hll1a ol South l>akota," and ended with hll in- troduction ~ "!be next pres~ dent of the \"nlted States ••• " L«I by Delom lluerll., a top aide to Farm Workers Unloo founder Cesar C b a v e z , "boycott lelluce" a I g D I sprouted In more than 1 cloum state delegaUons. Especially during the voting on !be contested California TWO LOCATIONS delegaleJ MCl!diy • nlcbl, 11 SOUTH COAST PLAZA LAKEWOOD PLAZA became the vocue for mtos to prelact their voleJ with a 3333 South JJrhtol Street 6412 Eaat Spring Street remark about ~Ir Joylll)I to Costa Mesa • 540-4611 • Long Beach • 1814811 ROTATING CHARGE ACCOl'NTS • , derou• applause. Cbavei' farm~kers. 1. ...... .i. .... ~1~· ........... ,.. ............... .;. ..................................... ,11 ' ' c "' ·' aal lo ·-.Orange Coast YOL:. 65, NO. 196, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY ·14, ·19712 N JEN CENTS ) Irvine Denies · 'Turniilg Backs' on Newport By GEORGE LEIDAL Of * DAllr '"!Mt Sleff Irvin< lllayor Willlam Fischbach today ~ that recent events surrounding Douglas Oevlk>pment Company plans for a ~cr&i commerciaJ development near °"'1ie County Airport Indicate Irvine ls "turning Its baclt 'oo Newport Beach." "I don1 thtnt tbe fact lbal tbe city manager. planning commissioners or ioembel'S> of lbe · city COWlCil ·have met • 'llllb lbe Douglas peoplt Jn tny way .II an indication we're turnlnf wr bacb on Newport," Flschbach said. "I'm concerned about the flavor of news reports," the mayor said, noting be believed the revelations that Irvine of· licials bad met with Douglas . oUlclalJ mlgbt damage the· llalaoo effort with Newport Beach. 'lbllllday, ii WU lwned that a Mrlts of private moettnp between city offlcialJ and Douglu 1epz•n1ltivel hid been held. Councilman Henry Quigley admitted he'd met with officers of Utah Interna· tiMBI Corporation, Douglas partners tn an announced development of the 50-acre partd near Orange Couiity Airport. Further,· PI an n in g COmmlssloner Wayne Clark said he'd bad two meetings with Douglas officials, a luncheon and a dinner, since the firm filed with Irvine for a conditional use permtt for non- conlormtng .... OD lbe properly at SUI Campus Drive. That matter comes before the pltnning commission nut Thursday. Councilman E. Ray Quigley Jr., today jolntd with Mayor FIJchbach tn ex- pressing concern over the reported meetings. He defended City Manager Wllliam Woollett Jr. who also bad said be had dlscusaed development of the partd with the firm. "City ~tall havo got to get together with proponents of zoning -'use permits or any other matters that come before the city," Ray Quigley said. "Furlher, It is my understanding Woollett only talked with Douglas represenattives ·two times, by telephone." ' Tbe mayor and Councilman Ray Quigley agreed the Newport Beach and Irvine lialsoo planning group had been establlahed to "share information" on airport area development. "lrvfue IJ to decide how the Douglas property will be developed," Mayor Fischbach &aid, noting that lnlormation gathered from the firm· as well u from officials of neighboring Newport Beach would bear on the final resolution of the controversy. "The committee was set up to provide ;J forum for interaction, not to arrive at a binding, common agreement," he added. Irvine asked Newport Beach to join them in forming a two-cities alrpOrt area study committee wbelt it was learned a 177-acre dev~lopment by Collins Radio (See DOUGLAS, I'll• ll Water Inadequate? Fire Officials Warn Syswm May Fail ..; ~do High Rise Site Suhject To More Cries O'Donne.ll Acquitted ' In Death of His Wife ' . ·Yellow loam floating ba,yward ·lrom a 1 controvenW Lido high• rise apartment JI)' TOM llAllLEY wllh the comment that "a great deal of site promJ1ted protests from dozens of °' .. .., ,.. • emotionalism" bad evolved from the l\\'O- J1911utio&conscious Newport B e a c b A llDiqua and hltlerly lougbt Orange week trlaL l'l!iidents Tbllllday, but Ortnge County County S..,.rlor Coui1 Civil trial ended "'lbere IJ only one issue lei! here and -r lleparlment officials labeled the late 'l'bundaJ with a ruling that dean that is the matter of fault," be told plain- lilcident a falJe alarm. Dr. lllerrlll C. "Mike" O'Donnell nf alleg-. lifi's atl<>rney Franklin Relllel' of New· ilfarbonnaster Al Oberg .. id a con-ed Involvement tn the diath of bis wile, port Beach ancj,,delense lawyers Mike atluction crane moving sand .so workmen Susan O'Donnell. McCray and Reed Bridges. ''I find W. coil!d straighten the seawall kicked up Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Butter delivered favor of the delendanl" coosiderabie "gunk,'' but be aaid it was gµnk that wail already there. his terse, me-minute dislnlssal of the $1 O'Donnell, 57, was not present t:> hcer : '"The 'seawall began tipping because of million civil action filed against the· ~b~ ve~ii~t 1e!!:ited aft~r tw_o wee~ C'lf tlie· excavation," Oberg said, uand all plastic surgeon by Mrs-. Gertrude n . ·. er~ u, t~ testily on the fu"Sl 11'--""'X-w..en:JryJhgJo..do..w.a.s_str»Jgbtl.<elln~it,_."_~Barn=~ett, &3, of Sea~_Be_ac_h ~i:!~_N_o_rld~-.. -Um~e~~h:::.=i~ev~~ at any . Residents called the Orange County · · Reiper, in• his final argument Friday Health Departm·ent, besidea the Harbor conteQded that the massive dose ot Patrol, and teslJ of tbe murky water ·Act;ng Pa;., barbiturates that allegediy killed the ·•I· were taken jusrto be sure, said Mrs. Vic~ 11 w tractive 38-year-old artist in her Cotumel tor Ya~, wbose husband 11 president ol Island hotel on·March 19, 1968, could ooly tbe homeowne<S tn the adjacont Vista del T J A • have come from 81> injection since it Lido condominiums. • ry t .gain would have been impossible !or her to •Mn. Yak said she -confident the orally administer the dose that left cintract«, Trautwein Brothen, was not HOLLYWOOD (AP) _ Natalie substantial leveiJ of an unidentilied drug dOtDg "'1 more polluting. Wood and Robert •Wqner plan to in her remains. 'fnlulwoin's subterrallean excavating remarry OD a yacht . oil lbe lllexlcan physicians who elbwned tbe W.Ct wu sharply criticized earlier caJl!onda coast SUnda afternoon remains ol Mn, O'Donnell 18 days after ·beC:ause he was pllmping underground I the Y .... ' ber death determined that sbe had died water back into the bay. ~ spotennan or acter NIU to-from a massive dose of barbi:urau.s. )'Everything ts ltne now," Mn. Yak y. They Identified the solution as luminol, a• sa1d. The actr.ss, ts, and w-. a, blgbly potent liquid barbiturate. "We've had too mudl publlrf.' she ended their !Int marriage with A Beverly Hills pathologist who ex· said, "Jt'1 bad for Vista del Lido. dt;:c9 !:!ct ICtttsll Marion amined the deteriorated remains of·Mrs. 11When all that pollytion wu go on, became O'Donnell nearly a year after her death the area got a lot of bad pub)lp ," •lie Marshall, and Illa Wood testified he could find no trace of luminol said, saying that people haxe been having' the wile ol producer Jl!cbard In the limited tissues left to him, but be t~e aelling or leasing their units Gregson.· . confirmed that Ibo victim must have bOc:ause ol It. · I Both marrlaceo ended tn divorce received a lethal do5e of barbiturates. "I knoW you were printing the ruth, '' last )'HJ'• 'I1le defense's McCray built bis final • • (See GUNK, Page Z) '(Set CLEARED, Page Z} • By L. PE'l'ER KRIEG Of rM o.itr Pl.., Stan There IJ not-eoough capacily tn the Newport Beach water system to figbt a major fire tn a large apartment or com- mercial building, rue department of. flcialJ warned Thursday. "If Park Newport or Oakwood (apartments) caught fire and was fully jnvolved, we'd have two fire companies standing there watching it .burn to the ground," Battalion Chief James Reed aaid in an interview. Reed is the man ia· charge ·cl_ preparing a report for city councilmen that will detail the need for a change in the building code requiring sprinkler systems in all large bu~dings built in the future. Reed erplained that sprint 1er1 wouldn1 help capacity at all, but they wOuld put out or control most all small fifes before they became big fires. '"nley'JI hold Bret In dlect, ..... ' them ...a,• !!* said. "II.-~ ,.. 11Uhnfi11111tioi5en du~ 1 ' day," , .._ ' ' r ' • Tiit pi.....,i bajldlng code' ollal!p II likely to clJ:aw ,.,...!Ioli lroladtulat*I -.. it has tn ether wllllllUllllle'S tbol have considered lt-wtlen II ,... before a council public bearing July 14. Reed is even ~etting another kind of oppos!Uon -from homeowners m Balboa Peninsula. It seems he's been condQctlng "!'hat the department calls water system "flow" tests to determine exactly how much water could be J>Wllped on a lire at a gtven location. He tested the old Rendezvous Ballroom site, where a 24-tmit coodomlni\Dll IOOD will rise, and that ' blgb._.i ..... -up all the rust and aedimenl in those crusty, uncoated cast Iron pipes that were installed throughout most older oectioos o! Newport Beach. ' 11My water came out looking like Jr.e tea," complained Mrs. Donald Novak of 1217 W. Bay St. '!be looks so unsettled Mrs. Novak that ' after calling the city to complain, she called the Orange.County Health Depart· ment which promised to come out at noon today to get a specimen . City officials said water should be cleared Jong be.for, then, however. - The complaints from Mis. Novak and olhers did result in one thing. Reed was Raquel Welch I Loses a Pair L0s ANGELES (UPI) -Raquel Welch has had her tonsils and adenoids removed. MGM studios announced TiuJn. day that the bosomy actress would have to change the schedule of a promotional tour for her latest movje, .. Kansu City Bomber," to recuperate fro m Wednesday's surgery. Recreati-On Gifi Goes ro Ehkrly Rites. for . F.~asier Set . ' President N!Jon TbundaJ olgned a bill wblch ~1....,. a recreall,on gilt to Amlricanl..,.. a yean old. The nu11ne llCnlng 1a san C1emen1e o1 lbe Jeatalatlon gives penon1 .... a fret \lie ol all public campgrounds and other recreation ireaa which -. subject to the "Golden Eagle" fJO•IJIUll -· • '!be now system will mean llouance ol a 0 0olden Age Passport'' which iUows J!>e recipient the li'ee ,.. ol tba recrea-Kon areu. • ·'!be Goldden Eagle vmJon II a flt an-· nual -which allows the bolder anllmllod use of public caml'll'Ulldl and tk like. Preos Secn!Ary Ron Zl!Wler said that tl>e Golden Ap card wHI allo cover all cuests ~Illa ncuJar ..,. 'S~rt, Simp~' Ceremony Planned for Safari King ':.' .( -the u..i w1111Je laiad latmday at 10 a.m. on a J1rU11 ltnoll -looting · his home tn ~ 111111 In wllat one Lion Country Salari olflcial deecrlbed u a "ilborl. limple" .. ..._. "I lbtnlc Fruler wwld bovo liked It that w1y/' p,abUc relaUonl man. John Fovn aald today ol 1111 aged, but prollllc lion who died .., TllluadaJ momlac. He WU-· :roan old, Illa ..... t/.an..,.......maa. Part veterinarian Dr. Wllllam Y. 111g. stns bu HUI Illa .-ol cleoth u old age and a kldne)> mollulctlon. A team ol ll l'll7llclanl, lleaded by Dr. AnlbonJ Orlandella. cl South Laguna. pabmad ID --Oii Illa lonlllleD, • mangy lion tblJ morning to determine lbe exact causes and to "find out why be wu 10 remarkable" u a lover, Foxen llkl. . • Frasier sired 35 cubs tn 18 months with bis aeveo wives. The oldest cub, Jonah, ha1 already been earmarked as Frasier's IUCcea.jOI'. • The kDoll In whlcll thO 11on wlll be burled II on a hlll above where Frasier's pride li•es. Al S.tunlb'1 ceremony, the ScoltJsh Gia Frasier wtll play a funeral dlrga on bogplpes u Lion o/"'1'Y atttndarU act u r:=":.:me -l)'lllbol ol virililJ Ill old . age and bis lace adorned Wbirtl, watclleo, Ian club stationery and usorled ' merchandise. Lion Country business lncreued :a percent when people began hearing of the l1oo11 pf'ocreatlve prowess, according to the park officials. Foxen aald the park bas received . . phone callJ, telegrams and Oowors lrom all over the U.S. tn regard to Frasier's . death. . Lion ·eoun1ry ins1<1ent Harry Schulter has ..-lbe formation of the Frasier Foundation. It wlll sponoor fund. = evenlA wllll proceeds eolng to ' ........ tr .... • • • ordered to stop testing. "We wanted to do a couple more (tests)," Reed 1ald, 11but we could get by. We have enough to mw our ('Otnt to councilmen." · The potn~ Reed aays, 'to that tests by the oakwood Garden Apartments near Newport Harbor High School found the water supply to produce 2,800 gallons per minute. Drugs Cited "We would need 5,000 to stand a chance," Reed said. Discl°'ure ol the lire service In- adequacy first came three wee.kl ago when Buildtnl Olllcer Bobby Fowler told councilmen ol Ibo pi._.t optjDtler "" qulrement and aald the threat of a major . holocaust hangs over tbe city, "Some of our la rger apartment com· (See WATER, Page Z} Conditions at Lacy Jail Hit;. Oosing Threatened ' McGQ!vern Meets ' With Cohor.ts, Sees Big Win A DOWI --.4 llJ Jtlr1 Foreman Olio II. lclmddle 'efi that tho mlnbmnn ..,..., Ill ~A-11 ~ tllo; ..... ol Cll'lllDI ""'"'1mallnl and· •blence " prllaDln tftJm dii cU1"1d for two 8lld *'9 Uar plltadl. '!be report uld 111o bnndl w.. doalln- ed to ·11ouae penona ,..lenoed for noo- support, alcobollc vlolatlonl and other misdemeanor crimes. But the report charges that because of the great In- crease in narcotics violations and overcrowding of the main jail In .i:inta Ana, Theo Lacy IJ now housing mauy persons never Intended for the lacllltJ. 111LU1I BEACH (UPI) -Looting• It is cbarpd that oot enough deputiel. &.lb alter juat two 1wn o1 Bleep, are assiped to !bi jail for adeqdllAI 6-S. McGovein ww promptly to supervision and that the chatn ·linlc fence wort today try I n 1' to anll)' I b • aurroundlnc 11 allows passing tbrougli or Democratic party and predicted "a tossing over drug supplies. dramatic and aweeptng" vlctoty tn his "Search procodures for returning worlc campaign against Prelldenl Nixon. furlough and work crews are Inadequate (Related llorlts; p!cluno on Pllge I). and foster Illa amuggltng of contraband," . Juot Ove houri alter being aent on the lbe report charges. campeign trail to the cheers of 31000 uAccttrate records of confiscated drugs Democratic convention delegatea at the are not maintained," it continues. n'nal gavel of their !our.<Jay meeting, the Short of clOllng the llClllty, the Grand South Dilkofa ' senator met with con. Jury recommends tighter screening of (rwional and other Democratic leaders. proposed Jnmates and that no peraon At the treditional "unity breakfast" convicted of felony narcotics violations that comes on the morning after each be sent there. A1so urged is the assign~ Democratic Convention ends, the ·newly ment of two additional officers to the f crowned presidential oomlnte and bis p.m. to mldnlght • h 111 to allow Io r vice presidential running mate, Sen. ~ ..=,. Include constluction Tbomu F. Eagleton of ~. ""mded ol a IO·loof block w:all tnalde the exiJllng upbeat theme& OD how, wllh a united par• f~l that rand 0 m s~ ·and body ty, tbey·could oust Nlml lrom office. 100ronet be conducted -·'•"'•and thal McGoven told ,_ten be got two ,.,. __ •1 houri aleep, but both he and Eagleton visiting lacllitles be ....teslgned IAI -. looked alert and reln!olled. · , v<nt contact belwt!en prisoners a n ll Both illrelled al the bttaJdast gather• yJsJton I Ing at the Fontalnel>leau llole1 that only. Sllerlif James Muslcl< was no I with all elements of the party working nailable for ""'"".,! ~ bUt aides together colild Nllm be defeated. 'With said outllllinl of the fourth Oonr of the cooperatioo, they aald, there wu no matn jail l<hadl•lod to begbl this fall doubt obout 1lle outcome. would aid in overcoming the CIWded 11We're lolnl t<r win one of the most cmditJom. sweeping and drmuatlc victories in the ,.--.·----------. country," laid McGovern. The :new Democratic team plans to devote much ol the time over tbe nm few day• trying to heal wounda whlcb were opened belor. and durlntl the ...,. ventlon. Dlacord eontlnued even alter tba llnal pvel of tba convention, with aome aqua!Jbltng members of the dlvldad llllooll delegation almotl comlllg to blows during a caucu11 at their hotel earl)' today. At Iba bttatlul McGoftm pledged to meoh bis wldel1 inbed arpnlzatlaa ol volunteen wllb tlie replar lleiDOaatlc party apporalllll -atrlvlng to ·.-b en acoommodallon with big labor - which oppoaed MeGovern'• nomination and has threatened to sit out tbt tlecllon. This wu much the same kind of message be Jave to the delegates themselves early today tn a speech climastng the convenllor. -ending near U:311 a.m. PIYt alter a, lengthy aesalon that also featured a dramatic 11>- ln>ductlon 8Peecb by Edward M. K..,. nedy and appesra.-on tbe jampaclted rostrum by moot ol McGovern's m>jor I foes Jn the battle for the nomination. McGovern piano to opend about two weeks vacationing tn hll btlovC DUota Black Hills, llopplng oil In Wuhlngtoo Iller today for an o\otmlalll Illy • .... , ............ -~, ,._ ,, • \ . ' c. ... . w .. ca... INSIDE TOD.\ 'Y It'• ,.,_ -aoaltl .... Loo QUM B...i.. Todat/ ll Ille opn- tng oi tho Qllnual Ftrllt>lll of Arla O!ld fagtanl of Ille ll01terr, Sawdaoc Fe•litlOI and tilt Art.A· Fdlr. Set todav'• WHkndcr. l.,M,.... t -" a,.... ' ( .......... -" Cilosuze • 11 _....._. ,, --. ·-.... ............. 11 ....... l4 ---M -. -.... ......... --.. or-. °""' 11 ......... ..., --" ...... ... ---T........ W -.... -. :::r_-.. , - .J OAll Y PILOT N Irvine-Douglas Mcinnis Says He Knew of Plans · Newport Beach Mayor Dooald A. l\lclnnls said today he's known all along that lrvine councilmen have r o r aome time been talking about develop. ment plans with lhe McDonnell Douglas Corporation, but be couldn't say anything because he couldn't prove it. Irvine Mayor William Fischbach and Councilman Henry Quigley admi tled * * * Mayor Backs · Commisswn Hewl Clar~ Thursday they've been talking about high rlu development of the firm's 50-acre parc~l for months. "I'm concerned why they have been trying to bold back Newport Beach development while planning all along to charge ahead with Irvine," MclMis .aald tersely. "I think the quote. from Henry Quigley bold some clue to that," he aaid. Quigley Thursday said be favors high intensity, high rile development in Irvine so it will be a real city, "not another bedroom community." ''The Issue is to intensify development In the area to make It a logieal stop orr po~nt for a masa trans.It system/' Quigley said. • "II you go bact to the original plan McDonnell Dougiu submitted to Orange ·c;oul)ty/' MclnniJ said "thls first . . . ' • Fran• Pagel 1 CLEARED ... argument oil testimony that Mrs. O'Don- neJI had attempted suicide some years earlier, was known to use barbiturate& t9 a coaalderable degree and had in fact taken drugs from her husband's omce at 18782 Main St., Huntington Beach. on several occasions. McCray argued as, Bridges did betore him that the testimooy or physir:1an" r·n both sides on the issue. of the quantilv ('f barbiturates absorbed by Mrs. O'PonMll 11varied greaUy" and "in some case..s '"·as not much more than s~uJatiou. "You can't label Dr. O'Donnell as a murderer on tbe basis Of spet:.'tllati:o!l." li1cCray argued. "There ha., been ~ absolutely no motive offered here or I should sa;y any motive that this rourf could accept.'' Remer, the pJajntifrs· attorney said he read motive into O'DonneJJ's concern about the divorce action filed. against him. Mrs. O'Donnell moved out of the couple's home at 420 Kipp Road. Newport Beach, and into a 5anla Ana . apartment some months before her , . death. . • Irvine Planning Commission Chairman Wayne Clark who admits to mealUme mee~s wilh a developer who has a use permit matltr pending, wu defended to- day by ~layor William Fiachbach. • presentation showed a great big develop- ment -with overpasses over MacArthur Boulevard with 'people-movers.• " Harbor at Sunset O'Donnell, wbo pracUced 'at the Ume, •t 2011 Westelif! Drive ami ':WI 'Plac!entla Ave. in that city, retained control of the Ne,vport home. _ "I feel llrongly that representatives in a democratic govermnent must listen to all views and must talk to everyone that wants an audience. otherwise we would represent a very lirni\ed special in- . 'tirelt," the mayor said. ' He ofrered that be himseU bu met at &ea.Id~ with Douglas executives "in a J)ublic restaurant" -the Balboa Bay Club -and that t'Onversations ranged from Douglas' int«estS in .. rancbing"'to pmooal matters. 'lbe IDa)'OI' suuested that the Douglaa (11'111 is no diflerent !tom the Irvine Com· P.lllY In .ti>at both own land In the city. '1U I can breakfast with repreoentalives of the Irvine Company then lhere is nothing sinister 'bout· dining with the Douglas people." · Clark this week said he lunched last week with Donald Douglas Jr. and Donald E. Tbomas, pcesident and aecretary of the newly-formed Douglas Development Copan)'. The firm iJ charg· ..i with developing • 51Hcre parcel at C.mpus Drive and MacArthur Boulevard . cl"ar Orange Coullty Airport. · · Clark aaid Ile sat with the two Douglas t_xecutlves at the Allergan Pharmaeeutlcal Corp. opening of Ila Irvine Inudltrtal Complex headquarters last week. DilCllsslon tentered on .. bolting," Clark aald.. He added, bowever, that be bu bad at Jeut me dinner meeting with Douglas in receot ...-. .·He~ that he had 4 U~lf rtlaU<imblp with Dollglaa and waa iiware the SL Loula baaed UA!CUUve with lilt new devetoiment firm's· parent """' poratloa -)\lclJonnell Douglaa -WU anx1oua to relurn to the w~ Coast. AllboUgh the Dougtaa llnit bas yet to appiy'for a conditlonal Ille permit ·to pro- ceed with development ol;tbe entire 50- acre parcel In lrvlnt, the firm Ii seeking to "legalize'' U!e! of the f6nner Astropower building at 2121 Campus Drive that do not conform to the com- mercial zoning for the pcoperty that was aPPP>ved last fall by county gov~rnmeot. Lilt Feb. 19, when the Irvine planning commission was sworn in, City Attorney Janies Erkbon strongly advise\I com· ~ and councilmen to avoid ' meetings with pr<>ponenis of a use permit. since the public bearing on such matters ls deemed a "quasi-judicial" pro-- ceedglng. The nature. of .Uch a hearing allows the right of crosa examination. Deputy City Attorney John Murphy said today there is oo penalty In state law for city officers who meet privately with persons or firms seeking approval of a use permit. State law does pcovide, bowever, that the nature of such discussior. must be otated In the public bearing. to share in· fomtaUon wllh other' aimmissioners and allow for rebuttal by either the pro- ponents or opponents of the matter. Mayor Fiscb!>ach added today that he do!'• not feel "there are any bad boys in Irvlnt.11 • DAILY PILOT Tiii OfMlt COllt IWLY PllOT, wlftl wt1kt1 Is amblned 1M " ..... .._. " publllflld w -°"""9 (.Md Pnfllll'"9 COmslmy, s.,.. n• edlllOlll 8"9 Pllll!llfled, Mond1y 1hrovgh FrldtV, tw 0.1• MtSa_ NIWPOrl 8t•dl. ..,ii•• ltKll/l'o.,.,111n V•l)ly, U.- Btlldl. ll"f!M/Sldll~ •l'llf San CltrMnlc/ $11'1 JOllt C•pbtr-.A 11115111 r._loMI ldlllln b Pllbl llhtd Jttun11ys «llf Su11111n. flle prlnclptl PVblllllltll Pitlll Is •I JJO Wh f .... SI,.., COii. .Meu, CIHfotnit, f2il6. •oNrt N. W••' Pnsi.nt •nd Pl.M>lhhlr J•clc ft. Curley Yk9 ~iOtnt Ml Gttwtl MW!1W TIIOfllH k•eril ·~"' Tliom•• A. Mwp~in• MaM9lf'll Editor L Peter IC'.rltt .....,... ..... ChV' ~dllw ............ OMce 3Jll ............ ,, •• ,, M11G!11 AIUm1t P.O. lox 1171, t266J ,--(:.. M.: • w.J' 1.., Shtl ""-" lhldl: 19 ...... , Avtt11,11 ............. 9Wllt t1l1I ewt\ BOINYtnl MCllrmnl: •...,. ., ClmflW ~ . 1t111,l1• (TI41 '42-4JJ1 a ww .W••"*• 441.1611 c.t•• tm, ~ C..I 'Ulllltltlnl '*""""'· * -.--.. lth111r111tM, •ltWllll ... ., ......,,....,_.. MrtJn '"" .. •• •*= • ......,. ll*lel ,... ...... ,.. .,,....., ..... . ,._., dlll == .... tt C.I• AVM, ~ le";"--..: "' ~ u .u _...,, ........ ti.IS IMlllflln rnllll•ry .............. ,....,... . T~ only control the county has over a1rhnes at the local airfield is terminal space, Mcinnis pointed out. Rays of summer sunset cut swath through gather· ing evening gloom of Newport Harbor. Photo was taken from Ocean Boulevard in Corona del Mar lookin~ up main channel. Balboa Peninsula is at left, with Balboa _Island at right. Remer reminded Judge Rutter that O'Donnell sent his wile's parents a telegram received three days after her death in which be stated that she ll3d died in an auto accident while alone oo a "Can you conceive or a tenninal on t.fcDonnell Douglas just moving people over !'facArthur Boulevard," be said rhetor1cally. Mcinnis criticized Irvine officials for statements implying Newport Beach is "the bad guy." , "! think the holier-than-thou attitude presented as erpressed to the press and in their resolution has been a littJe misleading, perhaps," Mcinnis said. "1be thing that frJghtens some or us is that !hi• has ~ going Qn for some time," he said. Th~ resolution .Mclnnt! referred to came from Irvine councilmen Jast month Connally requesting Newport Beach delay action on a $135 million develop. men_t proposal on the nearby ColliM Radio Company property un til the im· pact of traffic and land use in the v.•hole area could be ascertainetl. From Page I DOUGLAS ... Company was nearina: Newport council approval. The 1135 million commerclal .. llice developmeot by the Don Kall Construc- tion Company, Irvine spoi<eameo argued two weeu ago, would 81!.& ti'allic droulaUon in the Industrial aroa near t be alrport. 'lbe property is across Campus Drive from the Douglas parcel · Councllman J!enry Quigley aaid Thurs· day It wu not lb, jrallic prob!emt that con~rned h1m as much as, the need to 1 provide a "node of activity" of !Ugh rise office buildlngs In the airport· area. SUch a "node" would support some future regional mass transit system and assure Irvine of at least one transit stop to serve . the expanded commereial in- dustrial needs of the area. Henry Quigley suggested that unless the Douglas firm planned for at least 10- story high rise buildings with un- derground parking and open space, he ·Would not look ·favorably on the firm's use· .permit application. He noted" tJwt , was the substance of his talks wllll ·u1e · Utah firm nearly two months ago .. . A use pennit -separate from · thC or.e ~ fac.ing the plinning commission next ' week -must be approved by irvine of· ficials before Douglas can develop jts pan:el. . . The. permit requirement was~aced on the property when county 'als ap. p.roved last fall a zone change rom in· dustrial to commercial use. The zone cl!ange had been -sed by Irvine residents and Newport Beach officials, who at the time had only recently suc- cessfully annexed the Collins Radio parce1. Both the mayor and Councilman Ray Quigley suggested the airport area development planning issue is much larger than the two properties that have caused tempers to Oare bety,·een officials of both cities in recent weeks. : ),We've got a long border with them, ootn QOW and in the future," Ray QWgley said. •gt would be extremely unfortunate if in081fUDalory comments are allowed to poison the waters and build walls between the two cities instead of opening gates." He urged Irvine officials to "leave discussions of the airport parcels to the two cities' liaison committee" to avoid controversy that will "inevitably harden both councils to irretrieveable positions." From Page I WATER ... plexes provide opportunity for one or t'le t most catastrophic losses of Jife in this ci· . ty/' Fowler said. Reed said while sprinkling systems may cost builders more money, if the cl· ty doeJn 't require them it'll cost everybody more money." 11We're due for a new f~ hlsuranct rating," he said, predicting 'that U it were made today the a v er :a g e homeowner would pay 15 percent tni're for insurance. "The rate on a $40,000 house would go from $52 to $601 11 l\eed said, explah1lng that while Newport Beach has a Cla<s • rating DOW, that would jllmp to Qos1 6 beca.-of the -t level of aervl"'. Official at AEC • Placed on Leave; Finances Cited WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Atomic Eoergy Commission, disclosed today that William T. Riley, its director of security, has been "placed on leave without pay pending resolution of some allfgations concerning .bis personal financial af- fa irs." An AEC spokesman said the allega· tions "relate to the borrowing of money from other AEC employes and his in- debtedness •.• and •.. indications are that it's in excess of $100,000." Riley 's job paid $36,000 a year and he's had it since November, 1967. The spokesman said Riley was placed on Jeove Jlllle If, and bu been replaced by Paut Gaughr,., 57, a former•deputy director of the division of security, dur- ing investigation of the allegations by the commission's division of inspection. Ril'ey, 52, an Army counter.intelligence man during 1 World War , II, joined the AEC m 1947 at Los Alamos, N.M., as a security and intelligence officer and rose through vario115 levels. AJ chief of security, he has been respoosible f"f the phn lcal security of all the diyerse installations of the AEC's farflung empire, stretching fro m Washington, D.C .. to Eniwe~ok and from Brookhaven, N.Y. to the Aleutian Islands. . The job also includes responsibility for "personnel security," i n c I u d i n g clearances of prospective employes and protection against sabotage, the AEC spokesman said in answer to questioris. · "There haven't been any formal , charges brought," said ·the spokesman;; "We're trying to figure out what's wbat.1i , Consultant . ' To Siudy Street Parking Ban A Newport Beach consultant may recommend a ban on parking along East Coast Highway to ease weekend traffic congestion through downtown Corona del Mar. Traffic engineer Robert JalJe Tuesday told the Citizens Transportation Plan Study Committee to mull the ancient and controversial idea because it may be one of the recommendations of the consulfmg firm of Alan M. Voorhees and Company. Any kind of street potking would pro- duce opposition, as it always has, said Jaffe, especially from many older downtown businesses where customers rely on st.reel parking. It was first proposed in a 1958 study made by tile consulting firm of Wilbur Smitll & Associates. The study indicated parking would sooner or later have to be built on several off.street sites. The weekend Coast Highway ban would foist the displaced cars onto· residential streets. which Jaffe termed unfair. Parking could be eliminated for certain hours on Saturday or Sunday, and . possibly bot h, 10 eliminate snarled weekend traffic between Newport Center Drive and OameQ Drive, Jaffe said.' The consultant's 'report is due by the~ end of th~ Year, Jaffe said. . . . Actress Speaks On Hanoi Radio? TOKYO (AP) -·Actress Jane Fonda has gone on Radio llanol and denounced the U.S. bombing of dlkts In North Vie~ nam, the Vietnam News.Agency reported today, The agency sai d the broadcast was ~lreded to "all the U.S. servicemen ln- voJved" in raid! against North Vietnam. Reed said the enactment of • sprinkler ordinante •wout4'go a long w to l.ep- ing the rating the w.J ii ls." "Wt could tither pt sprinklen or dou- ble the aiu of the lire department," he said. Earlier, the ageocy reported that l\liJ& Fond• visited an area east of Hanoi where dikes had been damaged by U.S. planes . Miss Fonda was quottd as sying "there are no military targets" in tbe are1. Newport Detectives Nab Girl Suspect ,in Theft A team of Newport Beach detectives broke down the door of a Hollywood apartment at % a.m. today, capturing a shapely, teenaged Las Vegas girl In con- nection with a local $15,000 jewel burglary. Carol W. Young, 18, reportedly offered no resis~ when tak~ into custody. "But she wou1dn't open the door," said Detective Sgt. Ed Clbbarelli. Miss Young was booked Into Orange County Jail on suspicion of burglary, pending further questioning by de!e<> tives. Site is elso held on mulUple felony ar- rest warrants ""1ed by West Orange County Judicial District Colrt and various Los Angeles County courta. Counts against her include bad checks, forge<y ml grand theft ol an auto, ac- cording to Sgt. Cibbarelli. Miss Young and a male associate have been sought for about a week, based on information linking them to a June burglary at the borne ol Mrs. Maryann SlconoUa. investigators said lntni<lers took an antique diamond Javaliere -a type of neckJace -plus watches rings and other items 1fO!D the home at 2036 Port Ramsgate Place In the llar!Jor View homes area. No criminal complaint wlll be Issued agaimt the attn.ctive brunette until Mon- day or Tuesday, after which she will be a?Taigned in Harbor Judicial District Court . Paul Griffiths Services Slated MasOnlc aervices were held Thursday af!ernoon at Peek Family Colonial ·Funeral Home for Paul L. Griffiths, longtime Laguna Beech resident, wbo died et South Coast Community Hospital Monday. He was 80. Mr. Griffiths Ii survived by bis widow, Claire; a daughter, Mrs. Robert Unger of Newport Beach; and by t wo grandcljildren. ' A retired building contractor, he was a member of tile ·Laguna Beech Masonic Lodge ml bad made bis borne in Laguna for the past 27 years. Private burial followed the Thursday rites. -. P ay3ll nuns. si~tri toM ' It ' tesUlled by member& of Mrs. O'Donnell's.family that the phyllcian told them when be returned home two days later t!Uit bis Wife-bad di.a of a heart st· tack. They said be told them be had OOC> cocted the telegnm version to IP""' them u much aboct u possible. Witnesses for O'Donnell testified that Mrs. O'Donnell told them when a returned in Janiwy that she bad been unable to leave her bed for some days but that she had paid tribute to her husband's devotion to her. A family frieod said Mrs. O'lloonell told her she believed she would have died without the doctor's constant care and attention. ~ A defense witness testified that Mrs. O'Donnell told her llhorlly befure her death that she was worried about her ·ii:\ creasing drinking problems and re1iance on drugs. A psychiatrist also described Mrs, O'Donnell as a ''psyclKHleurotiC personality" who refused to emtinue treatmeot after two hours of disc:ussiona on a condition that led her busban~ lo prescribe psychiatric counaellng. FronaP .. eI GUNK ••. •\ she said, '1but it's not our fault. 'nie prob- lem was bad before, especially the odor .but we don't have the odor anymore~.1! she said. Oberg aaid this morning the final tell reports aren't in yet, but added that he doesn't think there is any new pollution. He said Harbor Patrol boats broke up thi foam Thursday evening. C~EAR·ANCE SALE CONTINUES. . 1 I ' , "'I' 1/i i1 large selection of outstanding quality upholstery avajlable at reCluceCI pric~ ·es. Such well known names es Woodmark, Sh errill Henredon Marge Carson end ma,ny 'more, now on sale. · ' ' ' HENREDON'~ "Alverado Collection" now on sale. HERITAGE'S "Cameo", "Grand Tour" bedroom and occasional. ' . DRDEL'S "Marchese", "Velaro;, "Esperanto." LAMPS-PICTURES-~CCESSORIES ••• ALL REDUCED CREXEl.-HERITAG6-HENRECON-WOOCMARK-KARASTAN ----------- fj 7eJ• I INTERIORS . "· NEWPORT BEACH e 11727 WISTCLIFf' Ott. [ ' 642·20SO TORRANCE e 23649 HAYiTHOkNE ILVD. Wlll!DAYS • SATURDAYS, 9:00 to 5:30 lllllDA T 'TIL t:OO . .. ~ -- ) • • • . . )71·121' LAGl/NA BEACH e 141 NOkTH COAST HWY. 4'4·6111 . • • -• G DAD .Y P R OT EDITORIAL PAGE THE MOST l>l~UPTIVE REME.NTS AT TUE (ONVfNT'1"0N So FAA ARE THE MIL l1°M"( (HOl>PERS' ••• l I t Motives 1 The nature of development of Industrial, commer- cial and office buildings around Orange County Airport Js-becomiog one of the most significant issues ever to face this area. Unrevealed pending fUrther meeting• of the two cities 11.•ison com· mlttee. Private meetings of several Irvine city ofiicials and Douglas representatives in recent weeks inevitably raise a blun,t question: . Underlying the spirit of cooperation evidenced by the opening of talks between olficiw of Newport Beach and Irvine over the airport area planning, have been flashes of anger. Some concerns have surfaced, namely the worries over increased air and street traffic, Is the McDonnell Douglas commercial development closer to reality than Irvine officials have publicly indi· cated? l'O~ 1HE l=IRST TIME IN /.HY COlllVENTION YOU <AN TELL SY LOOICIW~ WHO'S FOR WHOM. Others have not. It is the yet-to-be revealed motlves ol officials in· both cities that darken cooperative plan• ning effort skies. Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley this week let it be known he favors high rise -up to 10 stories -de- velopment of airport properties in Irvine. High rise, Quigley argues, would .likely bring a re- gional mass transit system stop to the new cit.v. · Quigley's views becam! known as he noted his lack of surprise over McDonnell Douglas Corporation's plans to launch a new development company. The new sub- sicf.iary's first task is to develop the firm's 50-acre parcel In Irvine, directly across MacArthur Boulevard from the airport terminal. That parcel is located just north, across Campo• Drive, from a 177-acre property Collins Radio Company hopes the city of Newport Beach will okay for a $135 million commerciat·office complex. Newport Beach opposes high rise in some areas. It also fears increased flights into and out of the airport. Nevertheless, Newport councilmen swi!Uy approved a major development of the Emkay Corporation proper· ties near the airport ·18 months ago, ind until Irvine protested, appeared ready to okay a planning commission endorsement of the Collins proposal. The Collins matter has been put oil to August ·14, There is a great deal riding on the next l!\2eting of lhe lnter-city liaison committee. A whole lot of nitty gritty and bard, plain talk will have to be gone into. And. evfn granting the best intentions on both sides, the problem of how to implement and guarantee what· ever agreerill!nts might be reached in principle is a tricky problem. But it is well worth the efforts. _ They ~aved His Life . ' There are some folks summering do\vn at the New· port Dunes Trailer Park we hope have the time of their· lives. 1 Paul R. Snyder, 26-yeu·old Newport Beach man , is having the time of his life because of them . In fact, be has the rest of his life because ol them. Snyder and his car plunged over a 50.foot cliff be- hind the trailer court.\ast week. Police said that mom· ents before it burst into flames a number of Dunes guests rushed to the scene and pulled Snyder away. Police said whoever they were didn't stick around to get proper credit for their deed . Well, they know what they did. .. .. - . I ' lb01 N SCEN E 'Progress' Has Replaced 'Salvation' , One of Oldest · Bromides in American Politics . &YDNEY J.HARBI~ Following a college commencement ad- dress 1 gave last month, one of the graduates aske4 me a question I had never been asked before -he wanted to Dear Gloomy Gus Fantastic! Hair net laws will now include maJe cookl, etc., in res- taurants. I have yet to see it ~ forced on waitresses in this area. -B.C. Tiii• fNture "llKh rQfen' •ltWI. Mt Mc:ffMrll'I' IMM If 1111 ...... Hr. ""' .,., "' ....... ,. • .....,,. ... De lb' ., .... know: "What. in your opinioo, ii the ed that of "Providence.;" the idea of the main difference be-Jusl Society, the Stable Sociely, the Good tween people living Sociely, or even the 1-<Jving SOciely, today and those who has replaced "Salvation" as the ultimate Uved in past ages?'' goal for many, if not most, people. This I S"!'1dn'I answei is not lo say lhat they may not still ~ his · ciueSifon ·~ a"de-"' believe in Heaven, but they also believe qoatelf at the time, we can create something of a Heaven on but l have been pan. earth-.il we really care enough and try dering on it for a few enough. weekJ, and am con· This is a distinctl~new idea in the long vinced it is ~n im: . h&tory of mankind. Compared to us, past portant question wit~ a mearungfut an-L civilizatiOos were pa.utve, accepting, ~ swer that may explain a tot. dlD'ing, and relatively uncomplaining. · '!be ord..-ol thlngs below ,. .. like the IN ALL PAST AGES, up lo a century order of things above -not lo .be ques- or two ago, the \Vestern world. at least, tioned or cRanged unless by divine in- was motivated by tlhe hope and promise spiration. of happiness in another world to come. For ·most people living tod~y, this has been rei>laced by the hope -ii not lhe promise -of a happy state in this -worid, for future generatiom if not for us. People in the past we<e able (H not •Itog 1filling)-to exist among 1 CO!l\6 ...,,.,to1, physical and 90Cial evils, hellev Id be crdained by God, and b-u3tlng that by virtuous action .lhey would be tra:QSPOl'1ed unto bliss in the world beybrid: ~unda11e life was largely regarded as .a prelude -~essary thoug~ uncomfortable -lo Paradise. Today, these eschatological notions have been transrerred4 in great part, to the secular fields of politics, economics, and ~iety. THE IDEA OF "Progress" has replac- NOW WE BElJEVE IODlehow In the perfectibility of man, if not in hi< ultimate perfection. We look upon ourselves as a creative ta·ctor in the evolutionary process, u f u J I y • e n- lranchised citlzem of the unlvene. Wo want me lo he beUer In every way, for our children if not for ourselva. And we will take any feasible measures to make it so. Thus, ·the chaos, the conflict, the con- tradictions in modern society. The secularization of .Heaven into a Utopian goal on earth gives ~ both our vitality and our frictions, both our wild hope3 and our bleak fears. 'lbings never looked JO bad before because people nev• wanted !Mm-lo look so good. Our diS<ODtents are the measure of our dreams. Memories, Nightmares • To the E<ijlor: Couldn't resist answering the letter (Mailbox, June 23) aboul a department lilore chain that works , ita lel'Vice building employea in windowlea 1rw without ventilation. It brouJht memories, and nightmares. l'm sure it 's a place I used to work. We talked about walkouts, stirting a union, demanding shorter hours without pay loss because of heat fatigue, etc. W1 didn't mind lack of air conditioning, but we lbougbt oome windo,.. could be built. ' Instead ol boling up hot stale air al night, gilanll could have been hired and barred windows left open. But that would have meant hiring a few guards, speodinc a liUie money. • A MAN WITH A F~Y, I couldn't leave until I found a job, and I wu on the hot upper Door. The productloo was poor and lhe lurnover and a-t<elsm ;. high It cost them more than lo remedy the situation. My wire work• for a company that couldn't afford to ventilate 1 room tMt 'had production workers, bul ., soon as It , -WN turned Into an office It a:ot air con-. illtiCfled. • Vean 110 I heard a boll say, '1We can pul the workers lbat are ..,y IO replace • Jn tbe bot area." But lit! le CUl'I can l f1'bt department alore chalna. NAME WITHHELD l MAILBOX t"""' fr. ,....... IN WllctfM. Nw!MIW .....,. --_...., ""' .............. .,... ., ..... Tiii ,., .. aMMtt ltn.n ,. .. ... w ........... 11 ,..._.,.._ All """'9 _., i. dlfll .............. -111 ............... -...., M ......... t11 ,.._... ft wffkleat ,....,. II ....... ......., wtll ... " ......... k...., __ lf, Atlfer To:!::' I am deeply concerned about this re- cent lrend in our country loday thal I coosidtt analqoua lo the haPIJO!linl> In Nazi Germany IO many years ap. lo spite of lhe r-.nb!lllCOI lo • dic- tatonhlp, the Unlled Slalea lo lllll llUJl" i-ci 10 be a democracy. Yet, lo my dismay, and l might add, anger, we have people of authority (and nOI -ri\y character) waml111 U-under their control or jurildldlon, "If you're for America, write the President and tell him so'' or "If you're a good American, get behind tbe President." WR.EN CLERGY, LA ll GE cor· poratlon h e a d 1, teachtn a a d employen -auch dictatorial tactics for political pin, t.boJ -tOll 11111 all In their ...,....i1o1, _. J'l'Oll'llll. elm 11J01ft, IJld -IN lle!lal>'lctN and cboeervaUves, and 111a1 i; rioNG! BERNICE WEI.Sii ' Taking ·From Ric~, Giving to Poor WASfllNGTON -Senator McGovern Is shifting the emphasis of his economic program from $1 ,000.for-f:verybody to tax credits for working people and middle-in- come families. The program is still intended lo "end the problem of the poor" and "ecd pov- erty," the Senator says, by substituting direct grant& for wel- fare. But it will also lift the income of workers a n d middle-income families through a tax credit system. Ttus appears on the face of It to be an effort to combine the philosophies of· George C. Wallace and John Kenneth Galbraith in a wealth redistribution acbeme of massive proportions. ' TAKING FROM the rich and giving to the poor is one of the oldest bromides or Ameritan politics, but ·McGovern is ap- parently not satisfied that t h e Democratic platfcrm as drafted Says enough On . the subject. Nor, it is ap- parent, waa What he has previously said clear eoougb aod plausible enough to be accepted as other than a flighty academic pipe dream which would never be accepted In Congress. ; - (rucHARD WILSON) Better arithmetic will undoubtedly ac· company the new McGovern wealth distribution plan, since the addition in the old one was off by $30 or $40 blllion. But one should not suppose that this ldfa ol wealth redistribution, with its flawed advocacy by Senator McGovern, is merely a hare-brained scJ1eme which will go into lltnbo once the election is over. THERE IS MORE than , a litll<i· ac;idemic impetus back of it and a great deal ,of bedrock political pressure. The Nixon administration has not betn im· mune from this pressure. While the semantics used woi.tld be entirely dlt· ferent lhan McGovern's, there is 1 lively recognition in the Nixon a~nistratlon or the need of readjusting t& tax struc-· lure. ...... In the latter part of 1971 and early in 1972 there was much discussion in the Nixon administration ol a comprehensive system of tax reform. Attentjon centered at that time on the value: added tax, a frlrm of national aales tax, which would provide the ad<Jed revenue needed for government operations while at the same time relieving the income tax payer. 11ME PROVED too short , and the election year a bad lime, for the kind and scale of tax reform \vhich was under discussion, and the subject was shelved . But in November, 1971, an interviewer found President Nixon preoctupied \vith ''tax reform on a broader scale than previously undertaken, and intended to spread the burden more fairly ." Nixon 'vas not disposed to lalk in detail of what he had in mind. He linked it to what he caUed a "nationaJ growth policy'! an.d,!4a jobs for peace proiram," as part~ r fresh approach to restoring AmeJicai economic strength at home and com· petltive diIVe in the world. ' ' As it turned out, these Ideas ·which Nix· on talked about in the fall of J97J did not emerge · in recognizable detail when he submitted 1o Congrest the pr.igrams for the Cina! year of hJ.<· finl term. BUT THERE IS every reason to sup. pooe lhal lhe idea ol si;nading the tax burden more fairly, which is another name for income redistribution, has not fled from Nixon's mind. Pre.idenl Nimn unashamedly ap- propriates IaueLraised by Illa ....,.muon -revenue sharing, a naUOc.l&f income floor in lieu ol welfare paymentJ, fln.. vtronmentalimi;-consumer lnteresta, and • 11 detcnte with Russia and China. This is not to say that Nixon is about to appropriate McGovern's share-the-wealth program. But the circumstances do sug· gest !hat Nixon may try to preempt tbe issue with his own version of spreading the tax burden more fairly so that the 1niddlc--incoqie pOOple will realize A glietiter shar~ in the new prosperity. IN FACT, McGOVERN'S programs. which are 80 a~rmina to people with property ancl, mv~-. open the way for more acceptable • allernatffe pro- • ~. 'l'J>eae.allonJaliVI .,._is would • fa'l<e 1Ji(o conaiderltioo ·the advOl'll Im. plict o"' t~'oper11l!GM•ot the Americon ~onomy of McGo-'~:weallh redistribullon. Tbe ~. *' of ~fcGovem1s ldeu bu atready' been felt in Wall Street. A New York nmes survey sho\YS that even the most liberal elements there -and there are some import.IJlt anes -shy away from McGo...,,, although in the past these ele;nentJ have supported I i b e r 1 I D~mocritJ. Ano'tber ~pportunity is thus given to Nixon to bring forward shock-proof pro- posals for taxation which will distribute the burden in a fairer way without dlsrupUnc the operations of the economic system aiiCI In lhe sense thal he 1poke of tn thelall of 1971. A. ·Decade 'Of TV From Outer Space A decade · 1go, it seemed 1 miracle. There . wu Yves ?tfontand. in Paris, singing "La Cbansobette" on American television screens. ~ what if the pro- gram bad been taped beforehand or if the reception· was less than ideal. To viewers in Euroite and N<>Qtl America, the first transatlantic telec'ils relayed by the Telstar satellite were an exciting novelty that heralded a revolution in in- . te~tional communications. Telstar, built by the American Tel~pbone & 'l'elegrapb Co. and launched on July 10, 11162, by lbe National Aerooautict and Space Administration, was crude when judged by today's &tan- danls. ,But the New York Times was not far o[f the mark when it said the Telstar broadcut1 constituted a "feat ... rivaling in signlticance the 1 I r s t telegraphed transmission by Samuel F. B. Morse." Additional 's p a e e commul)ications landmarkJ soon followed. In August 1962, Congress passed the Communication.. Satellite Act, which authorized the cret11· ,.---Bfl Geor ge---, . EGeorge: . is some ridiculous local l my community which I think Js uooonstitutionel, un-America:n and a crua lnvui<ln of privacy - II concerns pets. My pet ls wen. groomed. has ahots, Is kept !enced in and always on 1 leash wben I take 11 for evening ·walks. Exactly why am f not aTiowed lo keep a camel! And how do I go about tak- ·lng this to tbe Supreme Court? J.G. Otar J.G.: r think you had better renl a truck. . • .ll'a lolnt lo be prac- llcally lmpooolb!e to gel a plane rese"ation with a camel. IQ fact . the alrltne woa ,,.. refucllnl to take 1111 t_,.. and 1111 lawyers lo W11hlngton. • ·' EDITORIAL RESEARCH lion of a private corporation to own and operate an international satellite com· municatlons network. The reaUlting Com- munications Satellite Corp. (Comsat) joined the In te r nat I o na I Telecom· municatlons Satellite c o n 1 o r t i u m (lnte!Jat) two yean later • TOD AY, OF COIJllSE, llve l~lecasls In color flom any part of the wwld are relatively commonplace. President Nix- on's trips to China and the Soviet Union were seen live on American television screens. Slmllar coverage is plaMed for • the 1972 swnmer Olympie Games In Munich. • . The most dramatic developments in satellite communication may well come in large, sprawllog countries where con· struclion of ground facililiel W<IU..ld be too costiy and lim~llJUllllng. !ndooeala, for example, has roucJ>ly ·the same land area as Alaska and ~ of 3,000 Islands spread over thouaanda of ~e miles of lhe Southwell Paclllc. Only a satellite could efficiently link lhese Car· flung fragmenta. Similarly, Brazil II atymled bj thousands of aquare ml1<o of J1mc1e tbat are just beginning . to ....... develop- ment, and 1ndll by the twin problen of size and poverty. "Wltllln a NlallftlJ short time," Sil Ml<;_llelaon ~ In S&lurday,_ ~. ,,,..._. ..,..,...,_. !Ion sale!Ules allOuld he able to dtltver Meeting Power Demand lndutrlal News Review llow maoy people In these United Stales would actually deaire lhe ••· vlronment of yealerday if IL were handed to them1 Tile odds are etcellenl lbal ti there ~ IUddenly a reversion to yesterday environment, tbe emd111 from areu wbere a WholMOme envtromnent is, in part, the product ol ener.,. would be• nallonal diuller In Itself. This ts lhe lotllcal conclusion lo be drawn from In- formation contained In the Annual Report /of a large Florida electric utility -a utlllty thal, like many others, haa had Its problem with envlronmental obstru~ tlonls:n end the consequent threat of an energy shortage. mE ELECTRIC company advised Ill stockholders that lhe maaimum summer peak use ol eleclric energy during 1970 wu exceeded 44 lb1les during lhe sum· mer of lf/t. Allhouch Ibis company had added 12 gas turhinel for use during peak power demand periods !all summer, ' I ' there \YU only 1 e percent generating reserve -too close, lltenJb', for com· fort. An editorial in the Miami Herald commenting oa the situation aald, "South Florida's well-being rideo on electrical energy. It muat hive aufflclent power not simply for treatu~ comforts but for hospitals, food pmervalion, public safe- ty, communleallonl and lnduslrles wblcb rely Increasingly on aophilllcated elec- tronic devices." THE EDITOIUAL observeo wllb an evident measure ol relief that lhe local power company Is preparing ,lo placo substantial additional & e n e r a t I n I facllltles "on the line" lo take care of future demand -Including a nuclear generator. It also took nolo of lhe fact that the company will ". . . .have lo spend aboul $1 million daUy between now IJld 1975 for even more ca~ty in mid- ' deCade." This m!llloo dol1an a dly II lo be apeol lo prevent a roturn lo yesterday's environment which many people would find lnlolerable. strong enough signals so that inexpeoslve earth stations in those countries could provide a communications system com. pai'able to Intelsat's worldwide service." I M£ANWlllLE, a nwnber of American compmles have been competing for six yean for Ille right lo establish what pro- m!M to be a lucrative domestic com· municitkN aafellite system. T h t salelllto nelwott would transmll nol on!J televlllon bul alJo telephone, telegraph, and .....,.Mer data sJanals. \ After letl&lb1 consideraUon of lhe cue, Ille Federal COmmunicalloos CGm- mt-voted on JIMle ti, 1972, lo ado!lt ""~!Ilda" policy. n,t ii, all -diJlr and teclWlioail1 quaU/led applkma wadd be permitted to llfOVide -Uldlte oervice. ntl eight pendlac ap. plicanls and any Ollim interellod In Illa field have until July 25 to ftle'DIW • pUcations. W1>en the new .,...,,. <It l)'llem1 finally are launched. p RJbl within two yean, the. decade-old C- ol less expemive and more .- tdecommunlc1Uons m1y ftnlllJ be rulized. ' DAILY PI LOT l!ob<tt N, Wiid, NlloAtr Th-lr<..U. Editor Albtn W. 1141« EdWJriol Pogc Uilor '• • , ' . fr(d41, JM~ 14, 1972 DAILY PILOT I ~ -~ -· ~ ' -~ -~· . . ' . Eagleton Politieal Care_er ltleteorie t ' Mi.ssaurian Carries Liberal Record • • Mrs. Eagleton Bubbles 1.IEPTERSON CITY, MO. (AP) -Tiie lllecllolf Cll 'Dlomu F. f:a&lelon 11 the Democratic 'flee pmldmtlaJ w•lldate dtmued a meteoric rlae In poUUCa for the C-year-old Junior oenator from knocking "'' the MllT/O tank .. • wasteful expel!IO. He advocated wage and price controls to slow tnllation. When President Nb<on announced Pbllt I of his economic con- trols, Eagleton praised the action bul told Mlssour1ans lie hoped It wasn't "too little too late." f:agletoo prealded over the slate Senate with 1 llalr. Quick-willed, he often broke tenslma with a quip. He served u cochaJrman of the Governor's Coafereoce . on EduCIUon and was head of the Governor's Commission on Crime and Juvenile Delinquency. At Ideµ,: of Campaign Missouri. ' At rt, Eagleton was elected St. Louis County clJ:cuit attorney; at 31, Missouri's ~rney general; at 35, lieutenant gpvemor; and at 31 Missourians sent him lo the U.S. Senate. Youthful In .appearance, Eagleton sometimes bu been called a Kennedy· l1PO Democrat, but he di!likes being labeled either a conoervatlve or a liberal. ~says his vlewa ~on the ·1uue 111- vOlved. Assoclat<s reprd him u liberal °" most matten. He called In 1918 fer an Immediate ceue fire in Vietnam, ~ WU ID eerly edvoc1te ol lloppq ~ bombing there. He Joined Sen. Jaco~ Javill (R·N.Y.), and Sen. John SteMls, (J>.Mlss.), In 1'fiting a new war powers act which has piiaaed the Senate and ii pending In the Houae. II would more clearly dellne the ..,_al role In U.S. foreign in· ".!"~ ;Eagleton also tried lo whittle down ttary •pendln« and succeeded in :oman Solon .oDs 407 tor VP ~ost ~ ~ BEACH (AP) -Teua state ~· rr.nc.. "Slls)l" Farentbold was IKJl1lnafed for the vice presidency Tburto dlt nlglll with a plea lo Democratic Na, tional Convention delegates to vote 111- ~~t'!~e:io~ uto show tb15 ·She polled 40'/.t and made the motion from the podium lo have Sen. Thomu Eagleton nomlnated by acclamation. Gloria Steinem, a leader of the Na- tlonaJ Women'• PoliUcal caucua, WU )fs, Farentho\d'• nominator and there m lour seconden, Including represen- tatives Cll blacks and Mexican- ~· I Fatlure to vote for the llberal Texas waman, said stelnem, "would Waste, an -rtunlty to tell the country what is different about thil conventlon." She urg. ell the delegates to "make history" by nomlnating Mrs. Farenthold Instead of stm. George. McGovern's choice for J1lito i1iic mate, Sen. Eagleton (J>.Mo.). 'She changed the lace of Texas politics. Texas win never be the same again," Ms. Stemem said about Mra. Farenlhold's recent .narrow defeat In the Dl!mocratic primary gubernatorial race. 'Among her aeconders were Mississippi blaCk civil rights leader Fannie Lou · Hamer . and Allard K. Lowenstein, na· tional chairman of Americans for Eratic Action. . p r e a en I i n g Spanish-epeaking !<I W.1 David Lopez, delegate fG>m Houston. "Viva Sissy," be said. 'Mrs. Farenthold was the only woman 1¥ced in nomlnetion among eight can- c!f!ates. • • Eagleton has worked on labor and con- sumer issues in the senate. He got the Senate lo adopt a clear labeling act. He sponsored an aniendment, later adopted, that allowed use of federal funds to .... the financial strain orr IChool districts cauoed by public bousing-projecll. AJ vice chainnan of the Senate's air and water pollution subcommittee, be has counted envlrlXJmental problema u one of his nia1n concems In recent months. Eagleton ..... a principal sponsor of the Clean Air Ad of IVIO and was an author of the Water Pollution Act of 1171, which , ts ltlll pendln« in a conference com· mittee and ls scheduled for action after the current llUl1Utlel' recess. As chairman of the Senate committee on the District of Columbia, he pushed through a consumer protection act and got the Senate lo adopt a home rule bill for the district. As lieutenant governor of Missouri, . He a!IO headed a study of vocsllooal and technical education, ~ing ill ex· pansion as one of the solutions to growbJ& educatlOnal problems. At 15, Eagleton was the target of a kid. naping th r·e at while his father was representing the Missouri Senate in an ouster case against a senator accused of solicitini a bribe on a cosmetology bill. He later became an honor graduate of 1 Amherst College and Harvard Law School and attended Oxford Unlv~lly. He served two years in the Navy before opening Jaw practice in st. Louis. Eagleton is married to the former Barbara Smith, 36, a childhood playmate. They have two children, Terry, 12, and Christin, 8, who ts called Christy. Mrs. Eagleton is a vivacious cam- paigner, but she puts her husband In .the spotUght and defers to biJ polltical opln· ions. sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine was Eagleton's fJtst choice for t he \ UPIT~ STAR ON RISE? Thomas Eagleton DeJTiocratic presidential nomination, but after Muskie withdrew, the Missourian joined the forces of Sen. George McGovern. ' MIAMI Bi!ACH (UPI) -It's a twin bill for the wives of the Democratic can- dldates for president and vice presldeht. Just like Eleanor McGovern, Barbara ~gleton Is a twin. · Mrs. McGovern, wide of Sen. George McGovern, the presidential nominee, bas her twin Ila with her In Miami Beach for the national C()nventlon. Mrs. Eagleton'.s twin, Dorma, lives in Palm Beach, Fla. . Mrs. Eagleton's husband, Thomas, a Missouri ,...,tor, wu band. p I ck e'd Thursday by McGovern for the No. 2 spot on the tlclttt and early today the delegates nominated him by acclamation. The Eagletons have two children, Terence, 131 and <llristin, 10, who flew in from Washibglon to be with their parents for the final session of the convention. Mrs. Eagleton, a blue-eyed blonde, has been campaigning for her husband since he made his first SUCC..Sluh bid for elec- tive office by running for district at· Wfefcs McGovern Sets State Visit . ' California Split Faced by Democratic Hopeful 'Mel .. Oh I lilal the Jittkl blonde standing btlhind McGovamr MJAMl BEACH (AP) -George McGovern will go to California In August in a personal effort to unite the 1tete's splintered Democratic party behind his quest tor the presidency, a McGovern spokesman says. Miles Rubin of IDs Angeles, a member of the national campaign team, Mid California, with its 4S electoral votes, will be as much a pivotal state in November as it was In Ille batUe for Ille Democratic pre.sldential nomination. HWe welcome aboard everyone in the party in California," Rubin told I news conference Tburlday alter conlerrilll with 1pOkesrnen for aeveral facUoos of the California party. "It would be very dllflcult to .....,ve . . - '.J,'ropps Sent t Miami Due to Go Back Home • ,-- WASHINGTON (UPI) -Barring last minute trouble -which no one really ex· peels -the 2,500 federal troops sent to Miami Beach for the Democraiic Na- tional Convention will he back at their bases In North Csrollna Saturday: Reubln Askew. They were never needed to control demonstrations, and remained at the base tbrougbout the convention. . Plans called for the.Army .and Marine Corps troops to start pulllng out of their tent city at Homestead Air Force Base today boardlhg transport plalies for the airlift home. Defense Department of- ficials said.the airlift was acbeduled to be completed Saturday. Askew has asked that they he returned to the Miami Beacb area for tbe Republican Convention, which heglna there Aug. 21. Pentagon officials said the tent city at Homestead Would be tell In place, and that the troops would go back to Florida about Aug. 19. Tbe specially trained riot troops have been on standby at the a1r base, 25 miles from the convention site, for the past 'week at the requet ol Florida Gov. .Some Z,000 of the troops belong to the Army's crBl'k 82nd Airboi'no Division, 'Lased at Fort Bragg, N. C. Tbe re- . mainlng 500 were Marines from camp Lejeune, N. C. All are members of the Defense Department's Easi c.oast civil disturbance control force. Kennedy Sparks Tumult With Party Unity . Plea µ-. MJAMl BEACH (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy lfzode before a tired and tumulluoul Democratic Na- tional Convention early today and brought 11 lo its feet In a roaring sendoll for a ticket he' bad declined lo Join. Kennedy, for many, was the missing part of the dream which nominated George S. McGoveri a night earlier. But he had the delegates scream· Ing and stomping their ap- proval when he told them they had 11met the fest of great· ness'' with the selection of McGovern and Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri. ••we' are united " said Ken-' nedy, uby heritage, COO. victlons and by omylelding op- position" tQ an administration whic h baa provoked Americana: into being '1more apprehensive abo~t the fllture than excited by lt." . Republicails, he said, have . "had their chance and they 've fa iled. And their failure of leadership will be rewarded with their !allure al the polls this November.11 . With that, the band played, "Hail, Hall, the Gang's All .Here," and McGovern,_, Eagleton and · most o I M c G ovem'1 preconvenUoo contenden llocked lo Ken- nedy'• side as the delegates abook the_ ball with cries of suppOrt'. George W a 11 a c e 1 notably, was mlllln«· . Farm Strike . . Gets Backers . MIAMI. BEACH, Fla. (AP) -'1Mr. Cbalnnan, deJeptes and fellow Jettuce..boycot," Sen. Edward Kennedy bopn, and the-Democrltlc NaUonol Conventloo crowd roard In '1" premtlon. For lalluct -or the boycolt of any not harvested by union farmworkers -hid become ... ol the side themol omlllnl the convention. Led by ~ lluerb., • top aldl to Farm Worten Union founder Cesar Cb I V II , "boyeotl lettuce" 111 D I sprouted In more than a doren of winning in November without winntng in C8lifornia. '~ 'J'he session, ·called by State Party Cbainnan Charles Manatt, was billed as a unity confereilce. But most of the 20 people present were McGovern sup- porters although several of them -su~b as Sen. Alan Cranston -didn't ome aboard until 8fter McGovern won the J~ 6 California primacy. Rubin said there will be room -3nd a need -for non-McGovemites in the South Dakota senator's California cam· paign. "This is a job that cannot be done by the people who have been active in the McGovern campaign alone," he sajd. And Rubin emphasized 1 1 S e n • llcGovem is anxious that everyone undmtand that biJ campaign is oot ,elitist or exclusionary in any way." The last major official act or the con. venUon for the 271-vo\e California ~atlOn wu. to cast its votes for the vice presidential nominatiQ.Il. Tbe slate spli\ Its vote .among: nine can- dldates, but gave the bulk of them, 198, to McGovern's handpicked ninning mate, Sen. Thomaa Eagleton of Missoµri . Frances Farenthold of Texas was run. nerup with :n votes and then came Sen. Mike Gravel of Alaska with 22. Gravel had ""rited hord oo the catilor· nians for weeks. • One or biJ top lieutenants in his vice presidential cam· paign was Califomia Assemblyman Walter Karablan of Monterey Park. Today, the delegaUon, plus alternates, party officlals and newsmen packed their bags for the chartered jet Oights back to California later in the day. Soll)e used Miami as a jwnping off point for vacations in the Bahamas or ei-h .... In the Caribbean. The final delegation caucus was Thurs-- day afternoon when the delegates heard former Massacblisetts Gov. Endicott Peol>ody and Sen. M.i k e Gravel make a pitch for vice presidential sup- port despite McGovern's selecUon of sen. 'lbomas ·Eagleton of Missouri. The delegation took no caucus position on the vice presidential matter. "We're urging Eagleton," said Assemblyman John L. Burton (J>.San Franruco)ro<llalrmanofthedeleg~ tion, but there was no apparent armtwisting among the delegates. Mao Di.dn't Get V ot,e for Office MIAMl BEACH (AP) -Just for tho record, the Colorado delegation to the Democratic National Convention dld nol cast one of its vice prtsident.ial nomlnating votes for Mao Tse-tung. Wben the vote was called back from the raotnnn early today, a.Jut nune N ' pronounced "Mao Tse-tung.• Tho Colorado delegates dld not catch the name and a few minutes later the chair again asked the delegation to explain its' . vote. Bui the vole had beeri changed and the one vote cast for Lt. Gov. Robert Mon- dragon of Colorado the first time was not mentioned again. Tbe first lime, Mondragon had been pronounced in Spanish and came out sounding like, the chair and many in the audience thought, "Mao Tae-t1DJg." Bunker ,Gets l Vote MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Archie Bunker, the bigoted character of the television series "All in the Family," got one vote from South Csrollna early Fri- day during balloting for the vice presidential nominee of the Democratic National Convention. • $Ui(§ The most fantastic selection of the choicest domestic and imported fabrics available.New- est patte~ns, up to pate model• and our usual expert tailoring. Manufacturers allow us to mention their names in our advertising at these prices once a year .. at up to !4 off t GINO SALVAGGI $1' "'9 Regularly 185.00 to 220.00 , . '::/:: HAR'I: SCHAFFNER & MARX $109 Regularly 150.PO to 1~5.0Q • . EAGLE A.NP KUPPENHEIMER $7,'fl Regularly 150.00 to 200.00 ' ~ . SP,ECIAL GROUP Assorted brands including Eagle, SednivyCk, $ 1::9 Hart Schaffner & Marx, Michaelo/S\ern • V• UlllJY PUA -Sen. Edward Kennedy, with his TWO LOCATIONS ""~i.:n;ttons· during the voting r ·-It 1lla aide, addressed delegates In Miami oa contest.I Calllomla deleplll MOlldq nllht, It SOUTH C.OAST PLAZA LAKEWOOD PLAZA = ~ vosue,.:-:\!,' ~ 3333 South Bristol street MIJ Eut Bprtn1 Stnet torney In St. Louis In 1914, the wne year they were married. She told UPI it was 11Cantastic11 to be part of the ticket, but ~ ~minallllll certainly would change the p ly's plll!lr for the summer._ 11We had planned to visit St. Uiuis and Delaware Beacb bul tbat is changed now," she said. The children's reaction was typical. '4Neat," said Terence of his father's nomination. Did this mean that the fam i· Jy would be getting its pictures in "all the papers," Christin wante4 to know. Mrs. Eagleton ii an a c t i v e sportswoman, an avid reader, and a chic drest.er. She attended Washington University In St. Louls ·and Marymoun\ College In Tar· rytown. N.Y. Like her husband, she is a Roman Catholic. Mrs. Eagteton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Smith, live in Ladue, a fashion~ able suburb of St Louis. .. ,_ NAP TIME - A weary Christy 'Eagleton, t. rests her bead on her nl'otber's lap' H Barba?• Eagleton, wile of George Me- Govern's runninl mate, ap- plauds In Miami. Goldwat,er Sees. End to Viet War SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, a member of the Senate Armed Forces Committee, says llaUy ho thinb the Vietnam war iilll end within 80, · days. .. "!·predict that In the next month or 80 · dars 1be W1r will he formally ovrr," tiil · Aruona Republican told some 600 penona · altendlng a 111»-a·plate ~blican fund-· raising dinner 'lbursday. Goldwater refused to e ate on bll Statement. ' . ROTATING CHARGE ACC0l1NTS • 1t arer la a plea for.party unity. Kennedy, who ...,.. 6IWll a offer for the vice-presidency, drew .... _appla_, · That brought another huge chonl5 of cheers and led to a Kennedy cre8Ctndo w b i c h began with, 11'lbere is a new wind riling over Ille land •.• •tarting with the plains and rocky bills of South Ddotl," and ended with his ln- lroduclion of "the nel! pm~ dent of the United States ..• " remart about their loylllJ lo Costa Mesa • MlMell Lonf .Buch • ~1-4811 aia ... • larmworten. ._ ________________ ..., ________ ...;. __________________________ ...J I ... ' • , w • • • • Orange ~oast EDITION . .... -voe. 65, NO. 1196, 4 SECTIONS, :ta PAGES ORANG& 'COUNTY, CAl!IFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY T4, 1971 • • I T .. ay's n.at I c N.Y. St.eek• • Ill Airport Security Baffle Officials By VERN HAUGLAND Of ... e.lfl' ,.li.t' Stiff . WASHINGTON -Finding 1 way to lialt airline hijackings bas balfle4. ol- flclall of the 111tton'1 airlines and the · l!e<!eral Aviation Admlnistration. Airport '~ bu tlgh·tened, mticeably llnce the beilnmDll of Ille c· ~ ~age ,lrequenUy bu Passengers have been screened for ,...pom by electronl~, metal -. •. Tlc'liet agents have kept an eye peeled !gr rusp!ciOll.I persons who fit a secret hi- jacker profile. But the hijackings continue. Six jetllnel's have been hijacked in the past six weeks alone, inclu<ling two that were coounandeered by gun.toting sky pirates Wedneaday night (See atarleo, pictures, page.{) • ' "We don' -·what .... bolel in our, aecurity ·ore," Ald•Jl'AA'.,.._..,Deo- nis Feldman 11We1 have to tab ,each'.1nst1DCW.on a casH>y-cue bull lo< __ there bu --~·' .. aaid, . • FAA adminbfralor John B. Sllllfer bas orde<ed an invtlligation of all hijackings to det<!r;mlne whether airlines · sre living up to aecurity recula1""" l"!t into effect in April. Two airlines, United and Pacific Soul!nre1t, ~ lined $1,000 each oJter the· FAA Nied that lax aecurity ...,. : trtbuted to the IUCCesS of · a psir of hi· jocl<qo !bat occurred wtlhln da,. afW the n0w reguloltans 'went\lnt• ellecL . 'Ibo regulallom require alrline -neL to obl!rve all boarding passengers to -wbetller 11J1 of Ulem motch .a -pnflJe of potaitial llijacter• _....,.,.by tha·FAA. '!be alriines also have the option of ua- ing metal-<letecting devices or searching _.,gers or their band luggage, but ~ not required to clp so. The metal dete,cting devices sre in use at many ~·· but not all. An Air Transport Asaociation spokesman said lhe airlines have spent about $1 mi1llon on the mdakleloclinc devlcea and cm- side<able IUIDI on other aecurlty measure& "Thert 11 .. ...., to --wbal pen:entag• ol pol ...... -tilrougb the· magnetunet«a,1' said AT A spokeomaa Jamee McCarthy. "At aome boarding places a II passengers go post the devi<es. At other times or places, only persons believed to match the proftle sre aenl throogh the detectors." • U the magnetometer triggers an ' alarm, the passenger .must submit to a search by law enforcement officers to gain admlasion to the plane. . According to aovernmenl statbtics, 10S ponma have bee& amsted durln1 !ht post II months for trying to board an a.irllJw with 1 wupon or for . making hi· jack or aobotage lhreats w!lile bollding a plane. . . During the aome period, a«on!ing to government figures, more than 1,100 guns, knives and other weapons have been seized. Last week the White House, concerned by lax security on the easy-boarding shuttle flights, ordered airlines with such nights to b\!gin checking all csrry .. n lug· · gage and require all passengers to show. two forms of identification. 'l1>e order came after two Pacific Southwest shuttle llights in California were hijacked Oil aia:esslve days. The. FAA also bas proposed a regula- tion that would require Iha modification of jet airliners wttll rear exits oo tllaC the exits could not be opened durtna night to permit bljackers to eacape 1iJ, parachute. An FAA spokesman sald no new sec urity .regulations are in prospect. He said the government feels thal current rules, if strictly followed, will suffice. I ail Criticized " Grand Jury Charges Lacy F~ility ,. . . • j ~ • DAn. Y PR.O't """' ..,. ltkflft IC...., I ' ' ' The Orallgl! County Grand Jury today sharply criticized the operstion of the Theo Lacy branch jail and said ti con- ditiollll are not· drastically improved it •bould he closed. A news release signed by Jury Foreman otto M. Schmidlen charges that the min.irnwn security facility .on Manchester Avenue in Orange is the scene of constant drug-smuggling and absence of prisoners from the (.'OD{ines for lwo and three-hour periods. A.EC Official ' . ' . Put 011 Lefit,e J ~ ,.. . ' ' . .,..· _. ' ""'-For Finances WASHINGTON (AP) -The Atomk! '!be report said tha branch WU dealp- ed to house pel'Dls sentenced for non· support, alcoholic violations and other misdemeanor crimes. But the report charges that beca use of the great in· crease in narcotics violations and ,overcrowding of the main jail in 3:1nta Ana, 'r.heo Lacy is now housing nmuy persons never intended for the facility. It is charged that not enough deJ?Ulies are assigned to the jail for adequate lllj>ervlsion and that the chain link fence '4¢~$ Pair ;·~It Again Barflor· at Sanset ' . Energy Commission, dtsclosed today that William T~ Riley, its director of a«urlty. has been "placed on leave without pay pefiding rbolutiOn of some alli,atims concerning hiS personal fmancial 'af .. fairs." , ·~ liOuYlJOOD (AP) -Natillt• IWood a lloberl w• plu to ~ .. a Jaelll elf ... Ca11lomla coast Sunday ~ 1 opobtman for the actor said to- day. -'Rays of summer sunset cut swath thr·ough 'glther· ing evening gloom of Newport Harbor. Photo was taken from Ocean Boulevard in Corona de! Mar ' • ' I lookin~ up main channel. Balboa Peninsul a is at left, with Balboa Island at right. • · The actress, 33, and Wagner, 42, ended their fll'!t marriage ·with divorce in 1982. He married actress Marion Marshall, and Mi8' Wood became the : wtfe ol producer ' Richard -Gregson. ' . • • Delicate Medical •' -Machine Stolen • .' From Automobile . I {.delicate ~cal machine tbougbl ·to 11' the oii!y one of its kind in Orange c,untit is being hunted today, a It er btlng stolen !rom a doctor's open corr vlrtible at C:Osta Mesa h1emorial Rospital. • ,:rhe owner, Dr. Herbert 1. Cohen, told t>Qlice he 'doubts wbOever snatched the \ritalograph medical spirometer knew what it was. · ·.A specialist' Jn pulmolllfY problems Pd disease• of the cheat, Dr. Cohen said ilia $350 inslnmlelll ta uaed to monitor ond """"'4 the volume and velaclty ol elmaled breath. • '.lie said there may ... ont olhor ~~the~wbomrllale Illa mochine uoumed .wbaleVer 11 wu 11 ..ild be valuable eDOUllb to pown fer i:oah. Just after leevlng the bolpilal, Dr. Olllen told police 'l'llllnday, he noticed die spiromete< miaalng. He sald he continued on to hll offlce at · ~1525 Superior Ave., Newport Beach, and llalled the hospital to see ii some '!'ell· · l'OeaDing citizen might have turned It in · to assure it wa sn't stolen. -~ '!be grand theft report was filed after tir. Cohen, who also practices in Laguna ·Hills learned it hadn't been found. ~ c1nke Is bllll/ 22.bY· 18 by 17 in- .. In ~ and ""' a mei.I tube ........ fer. __ _,.. .... , . . Jlecreation Gift , . ' . ·Goes to El.derly · • Dr. O'Donnell Acquitted . An AEC apo~_.. said the allep !ions "relate' to the borrowlnc ol maney ' ' from other AEC einployero and hll hlo Botli man1agea en<I<d in divorce 11!111,..... • . . . , -· ln Death of His -Wife debtedness : • ·, ahci , • ·, IMlcltlanl are :that lt's ·in ezomi of fl00,008." Rile;'• job pald-$31,tltJO a ,... and i.•1. ·!iadll llnce November, 1967. McGovern' Meetl .· . ' . . ( By TOM BARLEY Of .. o.ur ..... ltd A unique and b\Uerly fought Orange County suPerior Court Civil trial ended late Thursday with a ruling that clears Dr. Merrill c. "Mike" O'Donnell of alle~·. ed involvement. in the death of his wife, Susan O'Donnell. Judp J.E.T. "Ned" Rut1er delivered hU: lene, ClllHlllnute dimnisaal of the $1 Raq~l We.'1.Ch Loses a· Pair · · . LOS ANGELll:S·(VPI) -Raquel Welch • 1111 hlcl her -and ................ .ed. . llGa lflllllol IDDOUllCed Tbun- clay tbol tho bolonq -would have to cbanp the ICbedllle of a pronMltional t o u r for b e r latelt moVie, "Kansas C1ty Bomber," to !'ecuperate l r o m Wednelday'i surgery. . . inillioD civil action filed against <the plastic surgeon by Mrs. Gertrude Barnet~ 63, of S!!al Be•ch Leisure World. •with the comment that "a great deal of emotionalism" had evolved from !1:te l\\'0- . week ·trial. •'There ii only one issue left here and that la lpt! matter of fault," he told pl~in· tiff's atlorney Franklin Remer of New- port Beach and def.... lawyers Mlke McCray and Reed Bridlies. "I tind ir favor-of. the defendant." .. • O'llluoell, Bl, w not present to beer tha wrdlcl delnered after two weeks of lrlal. Bo refuled to testily cm the first , mciming of the octton and never at any -mtend the courtroom! :Remor, In hla llnal 11-1 Friday . .......,.... .... the massive dose .of barbtlllrates thlit allegedly 1dlled the at- -31-ye&N>ld artlsl in her Commel Island botel Oil March 19, 1118, could only have oome from an· Injection since it would have been impossible for her to orally administer the dose . that left ""'9tantial levels of an uni~tified drug in her remains. Mexican pbylicians who exhumed the remains of Mrs. O'DonneU 18 days .after her death determined that she had died \ (See CLEARED, Page I) Tiie spokesman said Rilf!Y was placed m leave June 14, and has bOen replaced by Paul Gaugbrt11, 57, a former deputy director--of the· division of leCW'ity, dur· ing investigation of thf: allegations by the crimmissioo's division of inspection. Ril~i. 52, an Araiy counter-intelligence man during World War 1 II,· joined the AEC in 1947 ·at IAS, Alamos, N,M., as a security and 1nte11igenC. officer and rose lbrougb various 'levels. • Al chief of aecurlty, be bas been respoosible f~r the pbyltcal oecurlty of an the diverse inatallatioDI of the AEC'• farflung empire, stretcblng from Wasblngloil, D.C. to Eniwetok and from Brookhaven, N.Y. to the Aleallon Islanda • The job also inciudes reaponsihlllty fer up&sonnel leCUl'ity," inc 1Ud1 n I ~ of proapective employa and protection against sabotage, the AEC · spokesman said in answer to questions. "There haven't been any format charges brought,"' aaid the spokesman. "We~re trying to figure out what's what." But the spokesman volunteered the comment that "there is no indication that any security mattm are involved" in the case involving the security chief. .With .Coho.Hs~: ·sees Big Win MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Looking fresh after just two hours of 1 sJeep, George S. McG;ovem went promptly to wo•k today trying to unify the Democratic party and predicted· "a dramatic and -Ing" victory in hU: campoiP, agaJmt ·President Nixon. (Related stories, plctufl!I cm Page 5). Juot five boars after being aent on tho cami>olcn ll'lll to the -. o1 a,oao Democratic --delqat.. at the ltaal p..t ol their four.day -.,, the .Saidh llUolA -mel with ..... ,tllWlQDal and Olbe' Demo&!iallc loadenr. ~ At i>e ~ ''anltJ ~" thal ....... Cll tho mortitnc ,aller - Democratic Convmltm ends, the newly Clowned --' nOminee and hll ..,. presidenllaJ running male," Sen. · Thomaa F. Eagleton of 11!-..1, llOUlldid upbeat themes OD how, wtth I unit.II par- ty, they could 111!31 Nixon from office. McGovera told reporteq he l!Of two houra sieep, but both he and Eagleton looked alert and rei....bed. . Both stressed al the !ftaklaal ~­ Ing al the Fontalnebluu Hotel that only with all elementa ol the party ...nJng ' tocether could N1mt be defeated. With ·Bites for ·:fr·asier Set ~~..=~ .. U:~u~ " ' .. . ' . " ~ . .,.,.., and dnunatic Yict«les lD the 'Short,. SiJNJIJj' Cefemony Planned for Safari King . "'",:?;;,,llld~-._., • • ' . . • . devote much ol 1111 llmt -the - I . ' fnt~tr,irClolloll __ ...... Water die llaD wpl lltlloiW lill!ril"1 · -Don tlill lllOl'lllng In dltcmlne old .,. ond ·his lace. 1da1111d Hblrtl, """--·belen' ond amc tho·; President Nt.m 'l'llunda1 llped a btD 11 10 a.m. • • ...., -~ the exacl .,._ and to "find oal wflir be wlldlell, fan club staUonerrand ~ YeDt1on. wbldtessentlallY-1nerMtionglfl • hll, "11111 ID.1-Jllll II wi.t·· WU• lllMlbbie'~ IS I lover, Jl'OUD men:bandlse. Diacord ~ mn after the flnaJ ~ ~ tll old -Lion Cwnlrr Safari oll1dal clolortliod u · ravel of the eonveetlon, with eome ·"' Americans over years • · "short, llmple'' •Mmt said. Lion Country buslMU incrwed D oquabbllng members of the divided 'l1le routine 11gnlng in San Clemente of a "f lblnk --111 have liked It FraaJer sired 3$ cubs In 18 monthe with percent when people began bearinl of lbe IUlnoil delept!Oo almost camlng to the leglslalion ctv• -over 111 free that Wlf," public rtlatlanl man Jolll hll aeven wives. The •Idell cub, Jonah, lion's procreative prowess, a<cordlng to blow• during a caucus 1t their botel esrly use of all public ~JICl'Nllll and other Foxen said tod8J of the aced, bul pnllllo bu alr~ been earmarked u Frasier's the part oUiclals.. today. recreaUon areaa which were subject to lion wbo died earlJ Tlllndq _,q. IUCCeSSOr. At the breakfast McGovern pleil&ed IO the "Golden Eagle" '10 annual pua. He wu alllllll 21 yem old, tbt ·-Tbe 1niol1 in Wblcb tho Don will be Foxee said the park bas received metll jJta widely pralled «gaolzatloe ol 'l1le new system wlD meon ~ of of an IO-,..,..,W -· burled Is on 1 hill above where Frasier'a pbqne cal1I, fe/t1rama and 0..... from volunteers with the recuJsr Demoorlllc 1 "Golden Age Pusport" which 1llaw1 Psrk veterinsrlan Dr. Wiiliam Y. lllg· pride Uvt& all ovw the V.S. lD regard to Fraidet'1 party apporalus while atrlville to 1'MCh the recipient the free uae ol the ,.,,... gtns bas~ tho cami.,,, -as old .. Satunla , ·~ ,.. deoltb. an accommodation with bis labor, - tloe areu. , age and a kldneJ D111func11aa. -Y 1 certlll0ft1, ·~ Scott... Lion Country pnsldent Harry ScbaMr ' which -" Mc0ovem'1 nomination • Tbe Ooidlll Eaile veniiin 11 a flO ..,. A tam of 11 ........_._ lleaded ,_Dr GllllFruler 11111 play-a funeral dlrp on bas announced the fonnatlqn ol the allll bu lllreawied lo ,lit out the e1ecllon. 1111&1 pua which -the bolder ,..,_.'" "' ' bee U Lion Country .....,.,., act Fruler FClllX!ltlan. It wW -fand. '11111 wu' much 1111 -ldDll of : unlldllj •of pullUa .._........ AlllboD1 Q!lldllla of lloalll ,..,..., M W ... L raillng -with proceodl &drll lo ••Fl' be -to Ille deloptw the like. perfolmod ID •hPJ tn tire locCN111, ...... a 11111111111 of "'1llly lo. lnimal wtllan-orcani"tlanl. (lao lkGO¥DI\,. I) , • IUn'OllDdlng It allowl poahic tllroqli er tossing over drug supplies. "Search procedures for returning wart furlough and work crews are inadequate and foster. the smuggling of contraband," the report charges. ''Accurate records of confiscated drugs are not maintained." it continues. Short of closing the facilllr, the Grand Jury recommends tighter screening of proposed inmates and that no person <See JAIL, Pase Z) Biting Fox Eludes Hmit ~ ' In Clemente . . ' The hunl fir I poootJily rabid la tlrat bit three.,._, Jncb...,.a ~ Costa M-boy, Clllllllnued at San Clemente Slate Beach today bul nnge111 were unable to apot the wily predator, Meanwblle, Michael V, Pender, 15, of Costa Mesa, Ertc Lind, 15, Walnut cnek, and William R. Jollie, 22, Ontario, are receiving injectlons at Orange County Medical Center to prevent rabies in-fection. ' All tine -e bitten by Iha am.n brown fox Wednesday night u they llepl ~t _.-ate campsites. llark -· ll'yaaM>ld brother ol the Costa IJleei 100\b. said, Iha -Pender wu not bospitalixed and bas returned to ·San Clemente to camp until Saturday, "Be bas to go to the hospital for two · shots a day. 'Ibey take about 30 seconds each .1J!Cf they're pretty palnful," said Msrk Pender who •c:<01Dpanled hla brother oo the trip but returned early .for football practice at Estancia High School. Pender said the youths were all sleep- ing when one of them suddenly awoke, saw the fos, and tried to shoo it away. "Then it Jumped up on my brother's head and blt blm. It wasn't a big wound. It'• lD hU: hair< and you can bardly 1ee lt, ". be added. ' Authorities eonducled an all-out searcll all day Tbunday and today over lbe1r concern that Iha fox may have been rabid. l'anl do not generally exhibit •&· ~ .. -toward hnmans, but theJ haft -llFIDwD to 1-common car-riers ol rlblel, alq with bats and -· Dr. Tom BamD!lfl, Oranle County director of health aervtces1 liu uried (IN 1"0X, Pap I) ....... C.1• ~ -tlnaP ...._ II what 1111 ~ pndleUo _.,.._lrathlllllllaad, and ...... " .. ~ Ql&ll baadl& ' INIDB 'NDA'f 11'1. ftllfwl lime """" fll r.. OUM Bead. Todat/ ii Ille .,,.,.. Ing of Ille GftlUllll l'Clrillal of Arts Giid l'aQeO!ll of Ille Maskrt, Satodutt 1'111fool oiid lflt Ari-A· Fair. s.. todav'• w •1kt1td<r. --. --.. l..M..... • -. "-c..r 11 ...... tl-17 --,. -,.. ---,.,... . -.... -. =.:::·' :J c....... • ="' ~ Co 0 Si l 11 -..... 11 --. -..... "" .. ._... 11 .. ; M =---'l -... • • • ' ./ ' . I :t DAil Y PILOT e GOP Seeks Democrats To Switch ' ~ About IGO people will conduct a door-lo- cloor realllratii>n drive in Or•D!!• Coonty Saturday to try to win Democrats over to the Republican party, campaigners for 'President Nixon said today. • Jane Broughton, an olflclal at the Com- mittee to ~lect the President head- quartera in Irvine, said the statewide drive is in response to Sen. George McGovern's ~andidacy for president. Called "Victory Vanguard ," the cam- Pliln to' re-reglaler Democrats as Republlcam was organized two week! qo, lbe aaid, before McGovern received 'lbe Democralic nomlnaUon. "And we,..e been ablolutely snowed wtlh ....._,.. (!or Ille drive) alter he was nominated,'' me claimed. Gonion Luce, vice chairman for the Olll!onlla Olmmlttee to l!Mlect 'Nixon, aaid that 10,000 volunteers itatewide will Wilk ·Satunlay.' • ~-.mid other "Republicans . claim ; McGovern'• war and welfare pollctes are callllng party croaovers. The drive In Orange County will begin around 10 a.m. from the silc campaign headquartera: Irvine, Huntington Beach,• Fountain Valley, Laguna Be a c Ji, Fullerton and Santa Ana. Each volunteer ii being asked to walk four hours. Mrs. Broughton laid she bad no idea ,how many new Republlcms might result from the ellort. • The commltlee '1as already scheduled • -more drives: AuguJt I, Auguat 21 • _ml September I. " DAILY ,ILOT Slaff ...... It's A Biggie ,.,.._P-.eJ ·UEARED .... :.; ..... a ~ .. -of barbi:uratu. They ldmtlfled !be aoluUon u tumlnol, a F.K. Clancy of Reseda looks as if he can't believe he oaught the whole thing. It took an hour. Clancy, who' was fi shing on a boat out of Dana Harbor Thursday, said he felt like "it too k a week." The black sea bass weighed 435 pounds. It was estimated that it might be 25 years ol~. . · - • 1IilblY potent lkjuJd barbiturate. ;· A Beverly Hilla patbolotiist who .x- • ·amlned the deteriorated n!malns or Mrs. O'Donnell nearly a year alter heN!eath ••tilled be eould find no trace of lwDlnol in tbe ltmlted tlaaues left to blm, but be conflrmed that the victim must have • received a lethal dose of barbiturates. • • Tbo -·a M,CCray built bis final ·.arsummt Cl'l tei1h•....,. that Mrs. 0•0on- • neU bad attampled aildde -years owller, --to uae barbJtumes to • a -oldonble -.. lDd bad in lact . talrlll draD -lior lllllband'• ofllco at 11711 lbfD 111., BIDltlncton Beach, on aeverslocculoruf. McCray argued u BridJel did belort • bJm that the tertlmalJJ' of physiCJRD• c-n . -lldel • the luue of the quanUty of . blrblturates absorbed by Mn. O'lloonell ''nrled giuUy" llld "ln aome caaes ,.., • llOt much more than speCulation. .. You l'8D.'t label Dr. O'Donnell at a murderer on the basis of 1peculattro, 11 MCCray argued. "There baa been abl!Jlutely no motive ollered here or' I -uy any JllC)tive· that this" court COlll<I accept ... Remer, lbe plalnUlla' attorney lftid 'he read motive into O'Donnell's concern abc>Jt the divorce action filed against blm. Jin. O'Donnell moved out of the couple's !>ome at 4211 Kings Road, Nripart Beach, and into a Sanla A"'I _.1wn1 IODle -months before be!'. death. ' O'Donnell, who practiced al u.; time •t 2011 w .. tcliff Drive and lllT1 Placentia Ave. ln that·ctty, retained control of the Newport home. Remer. ~minded Judge Rutter that O'Donnell aent his wife's parents a telegram received three days alter her death In wblch be stated that she hod died in an auto accident while alone on a 1~g trip to Mayan ruins. It wu ·testified by members or !\!rS. O'Doonell's famlly that tbe physician told them when be returned home two days later that bis wife bad died of a beart •I· tact. They said be told them be had CO<> <oc:ted the telegram version to spare them u much oboclt aa possible. DAILY PILOT T • Clemente 10-year-old Confesses to Burglaries What started as a routine juvenile lni. vestigation by "San CJement.e pal.ice Thursday turned into a CB!e for the boolis -a• IO.year-old lnlrglar who, of- ficers said, adlnltted mere ~an a do2en crimes in recent months. '-. P.olice said the youngater admitted ol· fensea, which included breaking into bne man'• apartment 8nd atealing a $50 revolver. Finding no ammunition for the pistol. the boy decided to hit a hardware store, where he found some. Other cases, which might be only the beginning, included broken windows at the, lifeguard tower atithe city pier, mail tampering on nllmerous occasions, small thefts from private residences and busi.rless breaking. Detective Sgl Fraok Yerger said the case began when investigators were pro. bing a routine juvenile problem with the boy and interviews with friends of the youngster turned up tales of burg~ri~. Alter contacting the boy, Y °'""" said, detectives listened to confessions ' of the crimes. ,. . "He would forget some, then · remember new ones later in the day. Right now we know he's good for at least 12 incidents, but there probably were many ,nore," Yerger said. Officers said they reCovered the pistol· and ammunition, but some cash and other items taken jn some of the in· cidents 'are still missing. Edison, Mesa Really Cooking ' 'Ibe Southern California Edi.son Co., in ·cooperation with 'the Costa Meaa Depart- :ment of'Le~ ~ices, baa~ program to make you a better outdoor cook. 1 Ea.sy to tote menu suggestions for barbecues, caniplng trips and picnics wlll be featured in two separate seminars at 7:30 p.m. next Tuesday and at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, · Carol iHeinz, home economist for the Edison Company. wJll conduct the Jecture-<l.emonstrations, scheduled for Costa Mesa city coun cil -chambers1 77 Fair Drive. . No rese rvations rire n e cc s s a r y . RelreshmentS wlll be served. Daring . Thie"es . Steal PlywoOd , Darinj thieves, who braved veblcle berrlcad<1 and a night securiti guai:d patrol, stole $1,00o worth or plywood sheets from a Costa' J,jesa .-!ruction site Thursday. The 110 sheets belonging to G & S Con- structlttl Company or Ga rden Grove were not insured, su petlntendcnt GleM R. carllon told police. Officer Roscoe Broad said the malerlal was MOred In a fairly visible am at 1772 Kinglet O>urt, aear the east .,trance to the -tract. The boy was taken tnto custody for a short time then released to his parents until the cases are reviewed by juvenile authorities. · Radio Operawrs Plan.~ -COnvention ' At Fairgrounds About 25,000 amaj.eur radio operators ar_e expected . al the Orsnge County Fairgrounds tonight for a "cofree break" lasting three da;'s. That is the term used by cllhen'J .ban~ radiomen for their annual campou( aefr togethers, this year 1 ~eduled fDt tht 'fair unds. . .. • ' gro . • . F;lir manager Jim Porterfield say< he expecls about 3,000 caniiiet vehicles from all over Iba nation to aqi_ye by s· p.IJ!. tonight. .. . . • · r , , ' The' il!!Bir lasts through Sunday night and will include country and western 'entertainment, come d 1 &n S, and performances by the carson's 'Raiders , a western stunt-fighting troupe from Costa fl.1esa. A:dmission is free but donations wi11 be taken to raise money for a kidney machj'ne for Orange County Children~s Hospi 81. On Sunday, the radio operators will share the fa irgroundS with the Friends of Tahili who have scheduled a Baatille Day celebration, beginrung· it noon. " • ~ ! FromPG,eJ JAIL •.. convicted of felony narcotics violations be sent there. Also urged is the assign. ment or two additional o!ficera to the I p.m. to midnight s h i ft to allow f o r perimeter control. Other suggestions include construction of a 10-foot block wall inside the existing fence. that r a n do m skin and body searches be conducted regularly and that visit ing facilities be re-designed to pre· vent contact. between . prisoners a n d visitors. Sheriff James Musick was n o t available for comment today, but aides said oullittlng o! the fourll\ floor of the main jail scheduled to begin this fall would aid in overcoming the crowded conditions. . ' " Van Hits Pole; · Driver Not Hurt A Redondo Beach man escaped Injury Thursday night In Costa Mesa, when the front axle of his JIJ.16 foreign van snapped, jerking it lo the rlghf and hcadon into a power pole. Luckily, Robert A. Moore Jr., 26, wu only traveling •bout ;io mlla per hour when the, accident occurred on Victoria Stretl at eteyon Drive. Slaclao of lumber are placed lilere each night to prevml tJl\IY of lhi evea In 1rucU, but Ibey evidmtly 1!11 aniund then). Officer Broad aaid they alao avoided a ICCllrlly guard. • The vehlcle auswned major damace and investigators wbo Inspected the broken axle agreed that. Moore couldn't ha~ avo(ded the crash. • ' So.nth Viets Edge In • . U.S. Rauu Back Push to Quang Trj City SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese marines supported by pinpoint naval gun- 1.ire llld b<avy U.S. bomb"1c ~els today smashed through North Vlelnamese troops who. surrounded them for two days on the northern rim iof Quang Tri City and edged deeper inside the Communist- held provlnclal capital. Military sources said .intense naval and air support helped the 800 marines battle through the Communist ring. U.S. Anny helicopters for the first time since Tuesday managed to land at the marine 'field headquarters 'a mile Woman, Sallllger ' northeast o! Quang Tri with supplies and reinforcements. Casualties included one Api.erlcan and about .40 soldiers wounded in the fighting. The chief or stall ol the paratroop division, CoJb Nguyen Trong Bao, was killed when Commµnist gunners shot down his helicopter as he was surveying the action, sources satd. American offrcials considered Bao one of the more able infantry officers in lhe South Vietnamese Army. Se.ven miles south\vest or Quang Tri, "about 30'' South Vietna.mese rushed an Pair Succeed O'Brwn • 111 ·In Defflocratic Posts MIA~U BEACH (UPI) -Jean Westwood. 47, a Utah businesswoman, was selected by George S. McGovern ~ day to succeed Lawrence O'Brien as chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Pierre Salinger, White Home press secretary for President John F, Ken- l'rotll P .. e J FOX ••• campers not to panic, but strwecf that anyone seeing a wild animal with aggressive behavior should immedlately call authorities. Pender, who wlll have to take his twice-dally lnjectlom for the nut two weeks, is reportedly not worried about rabies. "He isn't worried about dyi.ng, be just thinks it's weird having to get those Jhots every day," his older brother said. NBC Tour Slated By Mesa Group \ A tour of NBC -la Burbank to view the tapmg of "Sanford and Sm" la .,..,,. -at llacm lltll, Olota I'd ... Me,. Department of Leisure llervtces. The bua leaves at 2:30 p.m. frmD the Community Recmlticn Center, wat gate of the Orange County Fairgnluncfs. It returns at 9:3G p.m. ~rvatlons priced at.$4.!IO, m now beihg taken al Room 305, Costa Measa Civic Center, 77 Fair Drive. Children under 16 .,. not pemlltted. Dinner with the cast at the Hungry Peacock Commi.saary is $1.115 extra. nedy, was tapped as eo-<:hairman. Both Mrs. Westwood and Salinger were active in h!cGovem's successfuJ cam. paign to win the Democratic presidential nomlnatiop. McGoVem also picke..d Don Petrie, an 'Avia Corp. ·executive, to be the Democratic party's treasurer, suc .. ceedlng Rober! Sirausa who wound up bis duties todpy. Mrs. Westwood will be the first woman t~ UIU!lle the top leaderablp post in the bistory of the party. Sbe baa been co- chalrmcm or the McGovern campaign committee a1nce its beginning two years ago. Of the chairmanship or tbe party, she aald, "I'm very excited about it." She added l)iat her husband Richard Westwood, a business executive, also was enthusiaatlc about her taking the lulltime political job. McGovern tried to get O'Brien to stay out but said O'Brien was determined to resign after serving two terma in the post. ' "I know he's exhausted," said McGovern. Mrs. Westwood is a national cem· mitteewnman from Utah and aid She has been in poliUca "all my life." A lnmky-voi..cl, slender woman with lhort blond hair, Mrs. Westwood was on the podhnn at conventloo ball in the ear· ly mornlne houri today when McGovern delivered llla acceptance apeecjl. A veteran of 12 years on the llOlilical acene, O'Brien during tbe pas! Jour days 1mootbly led a convention where blacks, women and Chicanos added a new dimension to the party coalition. He has steered the Democrats through troubled times, particularly sitice the 1968 conventlon in Chicago which left the party in a sbamblea and heavily debt· ridden. American helicopter being used to evacuate wounded and caused the craft t9 crash. , The crew chief of a second helicopter sent in to pick up the crew ot the downed craft was killed by a single bu llet. 'U.S. o!ticers told UPI report.er Ken Wagner in Da Nang they thought the soldier was killed by a Vietnamese paratrooper who was aogry because he was not evacuated. Ho\veve r. another of· fleer said i~ tvas. possible the helicopter crewman was killed by il sniper. · The breakthrough will enable the marines to set up a b~ocking force next to the Quang Tri Citadel, a sto~walled fortress that occupies the c it y ' s northeastera s e c t i o n where 1 a r g e numbers of Communlsts are believed dug In and well forUfied, spokesmen said. ·The U.S. Command aaid lire from the . big guns of one light cruiur and three destroyers olf the coast or Quang >J;ri, ~5 }Diles )>Orth of 'Saigon, cleared tbe way tor today's marine },reakt.tiroUgb., The Saigon command ·said th~ qilrines killed 67 Communistl and U.S. naval and air aUacks killed 48 others. · From Pagel McGOVERN. •• tbemselveo early today In a speech climaxing the convention -ending near 12: 30 a.m. PDT alter a lengthy aesaion that also featured a dramatic in- troduction apeecb by Edward M. Ken- nedy and appearances oo the jampacked rurtnun by moat of McGovern's major foes In the beftle for the nomination. McGovern p\ans to spend about twO wceka vacaUonlng ln bis beloved Dakota Black Hilts, stopping oll in Wublngtoo· later today for an overnight stay before beading to bts bome state. As McGovern moved into bts party uni- fying effort, with the "unity breaklaal," members of the Democratic c:on-- gre.Sional establlshment Introduced the new team at the breakfasts and \oOl!8d their support to them. • • House Speaker Cirl Albert noted McGovern'• previous service in the House and aald 11)'ou are a colleague ·or all of us." Albert told the South Dakotan that he., bad already "confounded" the IJW'!!\11 aod politlclana by capturing the nomlJia. iton. , The flna!!Clal straits or the Democrats was undencorecr by the breakfu& menu -an "Informal" fm limited to juloe, colfee and bite-size paatrlet. The affair was sponaored by the Senate and House campaign Committee!, both of wblch help. raile money f o r Democratic candidates running for Congress. At the convention, McGovern con- tended that America's discontent with Nixon's Vietnam a® economic policies would win the White House for the Democrats. CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES . . • 1 ' 1lji1 large selection of outstanding quality upholstery available at reduced prlc. es. Such well known names 111 Woodmark, Sherrill, Henredon, Merge Canon, and many more, now on sale. • HENREDON'S "Alvarado Colle.ction" now on sale. ·'HERITAGE'S "Cameo", "Grand ·Tour" bedroom and occasional. DREXEL'S 1 'M11rche111 ", "V elaro" , .. Esperanto." LAMP~PICTURES-ACCESSORIES • DREXEL-HER.ITA6D-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN---------.'---' ALL REDUCED • • .. - ' NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLlfF D!. 642.2051 TORRANCE e 2l64f HAWTHO!NE ILVD. 37t·l27t LAGUNA BEACH e J4S NO!TH COAST HWY. .,. .. , .. • 1 • • • ' . DARY PROT ·EDITORIAL PAGE • • TH! MOST t>IS~UPTIYE ELEMEWTS AT THE (OIMN'l'fON SO FAR ARE THE M\LITMY <HOPPERS ••• Bike Trails for Mesa ' • 11 Costa Mesa's second network or "roads" will open lo traffic in less than one year. Were everyone to use it, the hue and cry raised over pollution would stop. Al once. ' be a succe8$ unle• bike riders can be encouraged to use them, Ukewise, automoblle drivers must be taught to be aware of bicyclists A(ld not to intrude into bicycle ways not separated from lraffic by physical barriers; It's a problem of education, and it is a problem that needs the special talents and energies of the -Bicycle Trails Committee as well as those of the official public The littl .. known but effective group of young people known as the Bicycle Trails Committee realizes that not everyone will use the system. To many citizens, it's still quicker and more comfortable to' drive a car. Bui their 50·mile system of bicycle trails and bicycle ways should make things considerably safer for the growing number of people who prefer .to rl~e on two wheels, whether to cut down on pollution or simply for fun and exercise. , . .. .. ' safety agencies. · Three Notable Birthdays fO~ 1\lE FIRST TIME IN ~y (ONVfNT!ON YOU <AN TEL..L S'( LOOICIN~ WHO'S FOK WHOM. Funded by a $21>,000 allocation from the.city coun· cil, the trails network will providebike riders init~y with a safe path to school and later to other points, such as sbQpping centers, within the ·sprawling city of Costa Me~a. With neighboring 'cities, such as Huntington Beach and Newport lleach and the county diligently pursuing the bike trails idea, it will one day be possible to ride from city to city in safety. • Some bicycle lanes already exist in Costa Mesa. One is on Arlington Avenue, behind 1he .Orange County Fairgrounds. A second trail is located on California Street in the ·re Winkle School neighborhood, and there are more in the Mesa Verde area. · Unfortunately, these trails are not always being ' used by the bicycle riders. even though they are plain· Jy marked . Automobiles frenquently intrude into the l.anes and bicycle riders -especially the younger ones -still seem to prefer riding anywhere except in the bike lanes. Even though there is an ever-increasing number of two-wheelers on the streets, it is clear from last year's 50 percent increase in bicycle accidents that there is Insufficient respect by J>ike riders for motorists, and vic~versa. It Is apparent !bat !be new trails network will not ---.fllne was a month of birthdays for three venerable Orange Coast institutions -the city of Costa Mesa, Orange Coast College, and the Y's Men of the Harbor Area. still a teenager, Costa Mesa turned 19, while . !be other two became young adults and celebrated their 25th anniversari ... The recent round of birthday parties could be dis- missed u .mere cel~brations of enduranc~,' were it not ' for the fact that the three Institutions ha.ve given ex· · celJent service in the governmental, educational and . spiritual-physical realm throughout !lie years.· Costa Mesa city government has consistently given ; the taxpayers a fair'. value for their 'dollars. Nun.ierous parks have been added. a new city hall has been built, and programs have been ·administered smoothly and ef· ficiently -unhampered by scandal, recall or citizen uproar. At Oran ge Coast CoUege, progress in education has been more than a platitude. Its innovative practice~ have made it the envy of' other two-year institutions throughout the nation. And the Y's Men? They have helped build the Or- ange Coast YMCA from a storefront operation into a l!Olid institution which takes its place in the vanguard of monl and physical leade~hip. Happy Birthday to all three of them! ,. c 'Progress~ Has Replaced 'Salvatio11' One of Oldest Bromides in American Politics \ €YD NEY J. HARRI~ ' Following a college commencement ad- dress I gave last month, one of the grad"'!les asked ,me a quesUon I had oever been asked before -he wanted to know: "What. in your opinion, is the main difference be-, tween people living today and those who Jived in past ages?" I copl~'t apswer his 'question. ade- . quately at the time, bu t I nave been pon- ,dering on it for a few weeks, and am con- vinced it is an im- portant question with a meaJlingfut .an· swer that may eiplain a tot. · JN AU. PAST AGES, up to a century or two ago, the Western world, at least, was motivated by' the hope and promise of happiness in another world to come. For most people . living tod•y, this has been replaced by the hope -if not the prom.ise -of. a happy state in this world, tor future generations if not for us . People in the past were able (if not altogether willing) to exist·among a com· plexity of physical and social evils, believing these to, be ordained by God, and trusting that by virtuous action they would be-transported unto bliss in the world beyOnd. Mundane life was largely regarded as a prelude -necessary though uncon\fortable -to Paradise. Today':' these esctia.tological notions have been transferred, in great part, to · the secular fields of politics, economics. and aociety. THE IDEA OF "Progreas"'has replac- ' Dear Gloomy Gus ' Fantastic! Hair net Jaws will now • include male cooks, etc., in res- taurants. I have yet to See it en· forced on waitresses in this ar.ea. -B.C. n11 "'"'" nAldl ~ 1111twa, "9f --rfh'. ,,,... ., "" ........... IMf four Ht ,..... ft 0"""'1 •n. Dlltt' PJltf, ed that of 11Providence;" the idea of the Just Society, the Stable Society, the Good Society, or even the Improving Society, has replaced "Salvation" •s the ultimate goal for many, if not most, people. This is not to say that they may not still believe in Heaven, but they also believe we can create something of a H~aven on earth if we really care enough and try enough.· This is a distinctly new idea in the long hlStOry al i'nankind. Coffipared to 11.!, pul civilizatkJns were pusive, accepting, en- during, and relaUvely unoomplainlng. The order al things below wu like the order of -· above -not to be ques• lioned or changed unlesa by divine In- spiration. NOW WE BELIEVE . llO!Debow In the perleotlbility of man, if 1..it in his ultimate perfection. We look upon ourselves as a creative factor in the evolutionary process, as f u 11 y -e n-· frandtised citizens of Jhe univene. We want life to be better in ev~ -way, for our children if not for ourseive1. And we will take any, feasible measures to make it so. . Thus, the chaos, the conflict, the co~ tradictions in modern society. The secularization of HeavPll into a Utopian g~ on earth giyes us both our vitality and our frictions, both our wild hopea and , our bleak leers. 1bings never looked 80 .bad before because people never wanted them to loot "' (IOOCI. OUr diJooalenta are the melsunt al our creams. Memo 'ries, Nightmares To the Editor: ' Couldn't resist answering the Jetter (Mailbox. Jurle 23) about a department store chain that works its service building employes In windowless areas without ventilation. It brought m'mories, and nig.htmares. I'm sure It's a place I used to work. We talked about walkollts, starting a union. demanding shorter houn without pay Joss becauat of heat fatigue, etc. We didni mlnd lack of air coodiUonlng, but we thought llOllle wtodowl could be built. Instead al bmdDc up . bol stale air at nigh~ guanll could have been hired and barred wlndorn loll open. But that -id have meant hiring a few guards, spen<llJll a little money. A l\IAN WITH A FAMILY, I couldn't leave until I found a Job, and I -on the hot upper noor. The production was ~r and the turnover and abtmlt1ei1m so high it cost them more than to remedy the 1ituation. ?i1y wiie works for a company that couldn1l -Nord to ventilate a room that had production workers, but as soon as it wa1 turned into an office il got air can- dltk>ned. - Years ago I beard a boll say, "We can " lJUt Ille worken that are ta1J to replace f. in the bot area." I lat ltttle 1!1111 can't flChl deportment stcnchalns. NAME WITHHELD MAILBOX , •-•· Anter To Ibo Editor: I llll deeply concerned oboul Qlil re- cent trmd In our country today that I CGl1llder --to the happenlnp In Nall Germany ao many yeani ap. In spite of tbe ratmblancea to a dic- tatonhlp, the United Statel ii still sup-P.O"ed to be a democracy. Ye!, to my <lismay, and I might add, anger, we have people of authortty (and not necnsarily character) warning thole under their control or jurisdiction, hJf' you're for America, write the President and tell him so" or "If you're • good American. get behind tbe President." WHEN CLERGY, LARGE cor· i'°'ltion b t a d I, . leochm I D d employen ... ouch dictatorial tactics f ... polltlcll pin, Ibey lll •• 11111 all In their~ l)ll<O=due room, m:I IMptz Ill lft .. conoeMU ... , and that ii NG! BIRNICE WELSlt . ' Taking F-rom Ric~_, Giving· to Poor WASHINGTON -Senator McGovern is shifting the emphasis of his economic program from $1,()()()..[or~verybody to tax credits for work..ing people and middle-in- come families. The program is still intended to "end the problem of the P=!Or":and "end pov~ · erty," the Senator says, by substituting ' direct grants for we!-' fare. But it will tJso lift the incoll\C of i,yorke~s a n d JJ)iddle-income families through a tax credit system. This appears on the face or it to be an erfort to combine the philosophies of George C. Wallace and John Kenneth Galbraith in a wealth redistribution &cheme of rqassive proportions. TAKING FROM the rich and giving to the poor is one. of the oldest bromides of American politics, but McGovern is ap- parently not satisfied that t h e Democratic platform as drafted says enough on the subject, Nor, it is ap- parent, wu1 what he has previously said clear enough and plausible enough to be a&,epted as other than a flighty a<;ademl~ pipe dream which wOutd never ~ ace.pied l!l .C!mgress. " (rucHARD WILSO~ Better arithmetic wlll undoubtedly ac- company the new McGovern wealth distribution plan, since the addition in the old one was off by $30 or $40 billion. .But one should not 54PJ>OSe that· this Jdea of wealth redistribution, with its flawed advocacy by Senator McGovern, is merely a hare-brained' scheme which · will go fnto limbo oncrt ~ election is 'over. THERE IS MORE. than a little academic impetus back or it and a greRt deal of bedrock political pressure. The Nixon administration has not been im- mune from this pressure. While the semantics used would be ·entirely dif •. ferent than McGovfm's, there is a Ji'Vely recognition in the Nixon administration of the need of readjusting t~ tax struc. ture. ~ In the' latter ~ 1tf 1971 and early in 1972 there was much disCuaslon In the Nixon adminiatration ol. a comprehensive system of tu refOrm. Attention centered at that time on the value added tax, a form of national aales tax, which would provide the added revenue needed, for ' government operations while at the same lime relieving the income tax payer. TIME PROVED too short, and the election year a bad time, for the kind and scale of tax reform which was under discussion, and the subject was shelved. But in November, 1971, an interviewer found President Nixon preoccupied with "tax reform on a broader scale than previously undertaken, and intended to spread the burden more fairly." Nixon was rtot disposed to talk in detail of what he had' in mind. He linked it to what he called a "national growth policy" and "a jobs for peace program," 'al part, of·a fresh approach to restoring American economic strength at home and com- petitive drlt'e'l n the world. AJ it' turned out, these ideas whjch Nix· on talked about in the fall of 1971 did not emerge in recognizable detail when he submit~ to Congr"5 the pf06ra'!" for the final year of bla first term, BUt' THERE JS every reason to sup- pose that · Ille Idea al spreading the tax burden more fairly, which ii another name for income redistribution, bu not fled from Nixon'• mind. -, President Nixon unuhamedly ap-' propriata ilsuea railed by_ bis oppoaltion -revenue sharing, a natlooal ~ floor in lieu of welfare paymenta, en- vir~_ent8Iisnr,-consumer Interests, and a dctente with Russia and China. This is not to say that Nixon is about to appropriate McGovern's share-the-wealth program. But the circumstances do sug .. gest that .. Nlxon may try'to:preempt the issue with his own version of spreading the tax burden more fairly so that the middle-i~e people will reallu a greater ·-flari in the new prosperity. IN FACT, McGOVERN•S programs, whlch are so •larmina to people with property ud --. open the way for more *eptable: ~· aUematlve pro- posals. These alternative -18 -1d tal<e ··bito cWiaentliJn t .. adveno m.. pact on . the _..~ of' the Americu ccooomy of McGovern's kind of wealth redistribution. The i1*k ' ICltct of ~lcGovem's 1deu hu aJrudr. been felt in wan Street. A New York 11met survey shows that even the most liberal elements tbere -and there are some important ones --shy away from McGovern, although in the past these elemenbl , have supported I i b e r a J Democrat-. Another opportunity is thus given te Nixon ·lo bring forward shock-proof Pro- posal! 'for tanUon which, will distribute the burden m· a fairer way without djsruptlngibe operations of the economic system 'aad in the sense that he spoke of in the fad of 1971. A Decade .of TV From Outer S,pac~ A decade -ago, it seemed a miracle. There was Yves Montand, in Paris, singing "La Cbansonette" on American television screens. So what if the pro-rram had been taped beforehand or If tbe reception was lesa than ideal. To Viewers in Europe and North America, the first tramaUanUc tel~ relayed by the Ttlstar satellite were an exciting novelty that heralded a revoluUon In in- &emationil communications. Telstar, . built by tho American Telephone & T~legraph Co. and launched on July , 10, 1962, by the Jlfational Aeronautics and Space Administration, was crude when judged by today's stan- dards. But the. New York Times \vas not far off the mark when it said the Telstar broadcasts constituted a '1feat ... ri v:!Hng in tsignifica('ICe the f i r s 1 telegraphed transmission by Samuel F. B. Morse." Additional s p a c e communications landmarks soon followed . In August 1962. Congress passed the Communication:ii: Satellite Act, which authorized the crea· • ....--.-Bfl Gl!Ol'fll! ---. Dear George : Tbere Is some ridicUious local law in my community which I think ii unconstitutional, Wl-Americ•n and a crass invasion of privacy - it concerns pets. My pet Is w•ll- groomed, has shots, Is kept fenced in and always on a leash when I take it for evening walks . Exactly why am I not allowed to keep a camel? And how do I go about tak-·rng this to tbe Supreme Court? J.G. Dear J .C.: I think you had better rent a truck. , -.it's going to be prac-• tlcally impoealble to get a plane reservation wiU. a camel. In fact, the alrUne was even relllClallt to take 1JJ1 taaproo and my ll'!)'ers to W1sh1ncton. •• • EDITORIAL RESEARCH tion of a private corporaUon to own and operate an International satelllta com· municatlons network. Tbe resulting c.m. municalions Satellite Corp. (Comsat) joined the Interna ttonat Telecom· rnunicatioos Satellite c on a o.r t i u m (Intelsat) two yeal':'I later. TODAY, OF COURSE:, live telecasts in color from any part of the world are relatively commonplace. President Nix- on's trips to China and the Soviet Union were seen live on American television screens. Similar coverage l:ii: planned £or the 1972 summer Olympic Games In Munich. The most dramatic developments In satellite communication may well come in large, sprawling C0W1tries where con· struction ol ground facilities would be too costly and Umt<OlllUDllng. lndooeala, for enmple, bas roucblY the _,land area u Alulra and -of 3,11111 'Islands spread, over thousands ol &quart miles of the; South-Pactflc. Only a satellite could efficient17 link tbeM far. flung fragment.. Similarly, Brazil ii stymied by thousands of square mileo of jungle that are just begiMing to WJ!letgo develop- ment, and India by the twin problems of size and poverty. "Within a relatively short • tfme." Sig Micktllon asserted in Saturday Review. ''rt!gjonal or distribu- tion salellites should be able to del iver Meeting Power Demand lndutrlal NeWI Review How many people In thue Uniled States would actually dt$lre the en- vironment al yesterday if It were handed to them? Tho odds are excellent that if there were suddenly a reveralon to yesterday environment, the exodus from areas. where a wbo1eaome env.ironment ia, In part, the product of energy would be·a naliooal disaster In lloeU. Tbll i• the logical conclusion to be drawn from tn- rormation contained in the Annual Report or " lar~e Florida electric utility -a utility that, like many other" has had Its problem with environmental ®struc.- tionism and the consequent threat or an energy sbortage. THE ELECTRIC company advised its stockbolden that the maximum oummer peat uae al electric energy du,ring 1970 -exceeded " times during the sum-mer of 1171. Although this company had 1dded U pa turbines for use during peak power demand periods last 11WM1er, • there WU only I & per«nt ...... ting reserve -too cl01e1 lit.ally, for com. fort. An editorial In the lllaml Benld commenting on the situation llid, "South Florida'• weJl.belnc rides on electrttll energy. JI mast have aufllclenl. if9wer not simply for creature comforll 'but for hospitals,' food preservation, public llfe. ty, communications and lndustrtea wblch rely increasingly on sophisUcated 1 elec- tronic devices." TllE EDITORIAL observes with an' evident measure of reli ef that the local power eornpnny Is preparing to place. substnntia l additional generating facllltles .ron the line'' to take care ol fut ure demand -including a nuclear generator. It also took note of lhe fact that the company will " ..•. hive to spend about It million daily bet-- and 1975 for even more capacity in mid- decade." Thil million dollm a day ii hi' be spent to prevent a return ' hi yesterday's envlronJlltllt which man1 pecp\c would find inlolerable . ' I st rong fnough signals so that inexpensive ea11h ·stations in those countries could provide a; communications system com- parable to Intelsat's worldwide service.'' MEANWIDLE, a number of Americlln ~ have been comllellnl for al& yeara ior the right to estabilab What - miles to lie a lacralive domeltlc com- . llllllllcatiaal salelllle oystem. Tb e . satelllle --1d lranlmll not only televillon but allO teiepi...e, telegraplt. and computer data 118nais· After )qtllJ constderiUon of tbe caoe, the · Federal Qmununlcatlonl Com- mission voted on June 11, 19'71, to •do!>t an "open 1lr.ie1'' policy1 That 11, all flnm!: cially and tedmlcally qualllled applk:anll would be.~ to provide -le satelilte .sel'Vlce. The eight pendinc ap- pficAntr 'lad uy others interested in the field have unlit July 2510 file new ap- plicat;ons. When the new syatem or systems finally are launclled, t>Ollibl1 within two yean, tbe decadedd - of leu expensive and more - ti lecommlmlcatlons llllJ llnallJ be reallJed. ....... C'el'IT DAILY PILOT • ' 1 I Frido!, Ju~ 14, 1972 DAILY PILOT $ ' Eagleton Politieal Care~r Meteorie • Mi.ssou r.ia n Carries Liberal Record JQf CRS()N aTY, Mo. (AP) -Thi IOloelloD of 'ftlomu P'. Eagleton u the Domocrollc vice ~I candidate cllmand 1 moteorJc rue in polltlo for Ille eyear-old Junior ,.nalor from Mluourl. =.:....tho llBT'll tant ~gl~ ~ ~th! otato -· He edwx:atad nae and prlte -th a l!.ili-. Qulck·w>lted, be often broU to slow lnflalloa. Whir> Pnlldant NISOll tenslonl with a quip. He oenld u all!lOUllCOd Pbalt I of hll -1c con-coclWrman of the Governor'• Conlennco Mrs. Eagleto n B.ub~les At f dea of Campaign ' At r!, EagletDn was elected St. Louis County circuit attorney; at 31, Missouri's atlornoy general; al 35, lieutenant eqveraor: and at 31 MIJsoorians sent him to the U.S. Seaate. Youlhful In ,_..,.,., Eagletoo .,.,,llmel bu been called a Kennedy· type Democnl, 11111 "" diallUs beinl labeled elther 1 -t1U.. « a 1ll1enl. He 11y1 hil vlnl depond on the laue ln- vqlved. Assoclllet .....,i him II liberal on mott mattm1 He called In 119 far ID Immediate 'CC. ... .fire In Vlebwn, and WU an .. rly ~ate of l!opplns the bombing there. HA! joined sen. Jacob Javlts (R·N.Y.), and sen. John Stennll, (lJ.Misl.), In wrllinl a new_ war powers act which has pbled the Senate and Is pending in the House. It would -e clearly define the ccmgresaioaal role In U.S. foreign Jn. velvementa. ~ also tried to wbltUe down mDllary spendlni end succeeded in • ' . ~oman Solon • ·Olis 407 or VP Post ' trols, Eagleton prallld the Jldlon but on Eclncati<n and was head of the told Mluourlanl Jae hoped tt wun't "too Governor'• Commission on Crime and liltle too late." JuvtJJile Delinquency. Eaglelon has worked on labor and con-He also headed a study of vocotlonal aumet lsaues In the senate. He got the · and technical education, ,..1ng Ila ta· senate to adopt a clear labeling act. HA! panslon u one ol the solutlons to lll'lwiaC .._.... an amendment, later adopled. educatlonal problems. that allond uae of federal fllllda to -At 15, Eqletoa was the tarset of 1 Jdol. the !Jnaadal llraln on acbool dlllrlell naplng t b r e 1 I while hll father - caUIOd by publlc bouamg projecle. repmenlln( Ille Missouri Senate ln a ·Al 'rial chairman ., the &male'• air ouster -aplnat a IODllor -"' and water pollullml .,...,._,Ilea, ho aollcltq 1 bribe on a coometoloa btD. baa C01111ted en•kwtel problema u He later bocame en honor srlduate of one cl hll mllD _,...,,. In receat Ambtrst College and Harvard Law monlbs. lcbool Cid attended Oxford Unlventty. Eaglelaa -a prlnelpal -cl the He aerved two yWs In the Navy "'1ore Clean Air Act cl 1l70 and wu ID aut!Jor oJl8!lintJ law pracUce in SI. Loull. of the Water Pollution Act ol lf71, which EagJelon ts married to the former ts still pending In 1 conference com· Barbara Smith, 36, a childhood pllym1te. mlttee and la acbeduled for action after They have two children, Terry, I.I, and the current llUJ1IJller receu. Christin, I, who II called Cbrilty. As cbainnan of the Senile conimlttee Mrs. Eagleton is a vivacloas cam- on the Diltrlct of Columbia, be pwhed palgner, but 1he puts her husband In the through a consumer prolactlon act and apotllght and defers to his polillcal opln- got the Senile to adopt 1 home rule bill Ions. for the district. sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine wu AJ lieutenant covemor of Missouri, Eagleton's f1tst choice· for .. th e Ull'ITtl ...... STAR ON RISE? Thomas Eagleton Democratic presidential nomination, but after Muskie withdrew, the Missourian .joined the force~ of Sen. George McGovern. . MJA¥l BEACH (UPI) -n· ••. twin bill for the wives of the Democratic can- 'd~tes for insident and Vice president. Just like Eleanor McGovern, Borbara Eagleton is 1 twin. Mrs. McGovern, wide of Sen. George McGovern, the presidenl1al nominee, baa her twin Da with her In Miami Beach for the national convention. Mrs. Eagleton'• twin, Donna, lives in Palm Beach, Fla. )Ira. Eagleton'• husbaJJcl, Thomu, a Mla30Url senator, wu band-picked, Thursday by McGov<rn for the No; 2 ,P.t on the ticket and. early today the delegates nominated him bf acclamation. The Eagletons have two children, Terence, 13, and ChrllUn, 10, who new In from Washington to be with their porenls for the final aesaion of the convention. Mrs. Eagleton, a bluHyed blonde, tW been campaigning for her husband since he made his first succealul bid for el..,. tive office by running for district at· --McGovern Sets State. Visit • • ) Ccilifornia Split Faced by Democratic Hopeful MIAMI BEACH (AP) -George of winning in November without· wiMing in CalHomla." • BEACH• (AP) -Tnu slate • Rep; J'rancee "Silly" Farentbold wu nominated for the vice presidency Thur,. day nflbl WUb a plea to Democratic Na- tional c.nventimi delegates to vote ln- dependenUy and elect her "to abow tbll · McGovern will go to Callfomla,ln August Jn I persooal effort to Ullite the slele't oplintenod ·Democratic ·party behind hll quest for the presidency, a McGovern spokesman says. Miles Rubin of Los Anaeles. a member of the national campaTgn .telDI, .lllld Califomla, with ila 45 electoral votes, will be u much I plwtal otate ID November as it wu in the ba!Ue for the Democratic presidential MJT>inafjm The ...,ion, called by State Parly Chairman Charl~ Manatt, was billed as a unity conference. But most of the 20 people present were McGovern sup- porters although several of them -such a.s Sen. Alan Cranston -didn't c:>me aboard until after McGovern won the June I Callfomla prlmmy. '!be delegation took oo caucus position on the vice ptesldentlal matter. "We're urging Eagleton," 11 i d Assemblyman John L. Burton (lJ.SID Francisco) CO:-Chairman of the delega .. tion, but there was no apparent armtwisting among the delegates. JI I dlHerent tiaavention." . ~ '!be polled 407.1 and made Ille motion from the podium to have Sen. ,,,.,_ Eagl-nominated b7 acclamation. Gloria ' stelnam, a leader cf the N• tionaJ Women'• Political Clucus, w11 Mk P'armtbold'a nomfnltor and Ibero .... 1 .... -· lncludini _,,. tau... cl blacks and Mexlcan- Amerlcul. ~ " •• , ' Failure to vote for the liberal Tew woman, said Steinem, 0 wou1d waste an opportunity to tell the COU!llrJ what ts dlfferent about this convention." She urg- ed the delegates to "make history" by nomin',ting Mrs. Farenthold Instead of Sin. 6-ge McGovern'• choice for run- nq mate, llen. Eagleton (lJ.Mo.). 'Siie chaiiced the lace of Tesas polttJai. Tens will "'"" be the aame ....., " Ml. ·Steinem llld about Mrs. Fuwitbold'1 reeent narrow defeat In the 'DlmocnUc pr!IDll'J sut>ernatortal l'ICO. ~her -..were Mlaslssippl Nick dvll rtatite leader Fannie Lou 1'mer and Allard K. Lowenstein, DI· tional chairman of Americans for mocraUc Action. e pr e son t I n g SpanillHpeaking egates was David Lopez, delegate Houston. '1Vlva Sissy/' he said. ~s. Farenthold was the only woman )114ced in nominaUon amonJ eight can- dl!Jatea. , Me?. •• Oli , ,,,. ,,,. little ' blonde mndifl bflhlntl ~r "We welcome aboard eveeyooe In the party jn califamia, II Rubin told A JleWI amlennco Thanday after COllferriDll with c:::: for -factJom ol the party. "II 1"lllld bl veey diflicuJl to CXllCOiYe Troops Serit to Miami Due to Go Back Home W ASlilNGTON (UPI) -Barring last • minute trooble ~which no me really 01· peels -the 2,ilOO federal troopo sent to Miami Beach for the Democntic Na· tional Convention will be back at their bases ID North C&rollna Saturday. Plaruo called for the Army IDd Marine · Corpl troops to start pulling out of their tent city at Homestead Air Force Baae today boarding transport planes for the airlift home. Defense Depahment of. ficlals said tbe airlifl was icheduled to be completed Saturday. '!be specially !rained riot troops have been on standby at the,alr base, 25 miles from the convention 1ite1 for the past week at the request ol Florida Gov. Reubln Askew. They were never needed to control demooatratlom, and remained at the hue throaghout the convention. Askew baa uked !bet they be returned to the Miami Beach "'"" tor' the Republican Convention, which beglna there Aug. 21. Pentagt11 oll1dala ll1d the tent city at llcmellead would ht left In place, and that the troops would IO back to Florida about Aug. 19. Some 2,000 of the troopo belong to the Anny's crack !2nd Alrbame Dlvialon, based at Fort Bragg, N. C. '!be re- maining 500 were Marines from Camp Lejeune, N. C. All are members of the Defense Department's East Coast civil disturbance control lc.-ce. Ke0nedy Sparks Tumult With Party Unity Plea Rubin said there will be 1'QOIII -3nd a need -for non-McGovemites In the South Dakota senator's caIJiornla cam- palgn. "This ls I job that cannot be dooe by the people wbo have been Jldlve In the Mc:Covem campaign ~one," he said. And ,Rubin emphasized ' ' s e n • McGovern is anxious Iha! ever)'one understand lliat his campalgn is oot elitist or exclusionary in any way ... 1be last major official act of the mn- venticJn. for tbe 271-vote California delegatlcn wu to cast Its votes for the vJce presidential nomination. 1be alate split ils vote among nine c~ dldata, but gave the bulk of them, 198, to McGovern's handpicked running mate, Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri. Frances Farenthold of Tens was nm- nerup with 37 votes and then came Sen. M1b Gravel ol Aluka with 22. Gn>tl bed worked hard oo the Oalifor· nfana for weeks. · One of his top lieutenants ln hll vice presidential cam- pa!p WU Callfomla Mse!nblyman \vafter Karablan of Monterey Park. • : Today, the delegatiOD, plus alternates, party olllclals IDd newsmen packed their hap far the chartered jet fllgbts beck to caflfomla toter in the day. Some used Miaml as e Jumping off point for vacations in the Bahamas or eJ-. In the Caribbean. The final delegation caucus was Thurs- day aftemOon when the delegates heard former Musachusetts Gov. Endicott Peabody and Sen. Mi k e Gravel makei a pitch for vice presidential sup- port despite McGovern 's selection of Sen. Thomas Eagleton ., Missouri. Mao Didn't Get Vote for Office MIAMI BEACH (AP)' -Just for the record, the Colorado deleptlon to the Democratic National Convention did not · cut one of Its vice preslclenUal nominating votes for Mao Tie-tune. When the vote WU called bock from the -early today, a Jut name wu prooounctd "Mao Tte-tung." The Colorado delegates did not catch the name and a few minutes later the chair again asked the delegation to explain Ila vote. But the vote had beeQ changed and the one vote cut lcr Lt. Gov. Robert Mon. dragon of Colorado the flnl time wu not mentioned again. The first time, Mondragon bed been pronounced In Spanish and came oul sounding like, the chair and many ID the audience thought, "Mao Tae-tung." Bunker Gets I Vote MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -An:bie Bunker, the bigoted character of the television series 11All in the Family," got one vote from South Carolina early Fri- day during balloting for the vice presidential oomlnee of the DelDOCnltic NaUonal Convenlion. • MIAMI BEACH (AP) - Sen. Edward M. llennedy llnlde before a tired and tumultnous Democratic Na- tional Convention early today and brought It to lis feet Jn 1 roaring sendoll lor a ticket he had declined to ,join. Kennedy, for many, was the missing pert of the dream which nominated George S. McGovel'Ji a 'night earlier. But be had the delegates scream- ing IDd stomping their ap- proval when he told them they had "met the test ol great- ness""' with the !election of McGovern IDd Sen. Thomas With Iha~ tbe -pra,o.1, I "Hall, Hell, the Gq'1 AD Here,11 .and McGov e rn; Eagleton and mcs1 o I Mc G ovem's preconvenUon contenders nocked to JCen. pedy's side as the clele11tes shook the ball with cries of aupport. George W 1 11 1 c e , nolably, WU mlulng, The mosr fantastic selection of the choicest . domestic and imported fabrics·available. New- est patterns, up to date models and our usual expert tailoring. Manufacturers allow us to mention their names in our advertising at these prices once a year .. at up to~ olf l F. Eagletoo cl MJsoourt. ' 1We are united," Aid Ken- nedy, "by berltage, con- victlonl and bJ 111yleldlJ>I op. pooltion" to an edmlntetration whi ch ha1 pro•oked Americans 1Dto bel.ng "more 1pprehemlve about !be future than esClted by It." Republlcana, be said, have ''had lhelr chance and they've failed. And their failure of leaderlhlp will be rewarded with their failure at the polls thiJ November." Farm Strike Gets Backers MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -"Mr. Cllalnaan, delep .. and fellow~" Sen. BdWll'd KennodJ bapn, and !be Dlll""'atic Nllloaal Coaventlla a'OWd ...cr Ja op. pndatlon. For I--or the boy<olt ol any DOI harvaled by unlcm farmworbn -bed become <ne ct the aide themes uniting the couventlon. GINO SALV AGGI Regularly 185.00 to 220.00 $J49 · HART SCHAFFNER & MARX $109 R.a"ularly .150.00to1~5.00. .1• EAGLE AND KUPPENHEJMER Regularly 150.00 to 200.00 SPECJAL GROUP • AMOrted brands including Eagle, Sedgewyck, $ /!:9 Hart Schal!ner & Marx, Michaels/Stern • u. ' illm l'LIA -5!t'· Edward Kennedy, with bis .. Jim a llll litle, lddresaed delegatu In Miami 9 t gf J II a pill I« JIU'l1 unity. Kennedy, who W I l1on u olf.r for tbe vice-presidency, drew ~ bJ Dalorel Huerll., a top Ilda to Farm Workers llnloa founder Cesar Ch I V 01 , "boycoCt lettuce" 111 DI sprouted In mare than 1 dolln 4i'rtlcno. ~tbe1o1Jac cn eonlelted Clllforn1a *Its•• llaaday llfllll. 11 -.......... far liitia to prd ?t II* ..... wltlt I ' tomey In St. LOOlls Jn llJM, the same year they were married. She told UPI It was "fantasllc" to ht port of the tlctet, but the mm!nat ion certainly would change the family'• plans for the 1WD1Der. "We bed planned to visit SI. Loull and Delaware Beach but that la changed now," lhe aald. I The children'• reectlon WU typical. ''Neat." uJd Terence of his father's IJQD\lnatlon. Did tbll mean that the fami· Jy would be getllnJ Ila plctum In "tll the pepers," Chriltln wanted to know. Mrs. Eagleton II ID I c t I v e sportswciman, an avUI reaCler, and a chic dresser. ~ altencled Washington University Jn St. Loull and Marymount College Jn Tar· rytown, N.Y. Like her husband, she Is a Roman Catholic. · ' Mrs. Eaglelon'1 parents, Mr. and Mrs. FranciJ Smith, live in Ladue,· a fashJon- able auburb of Sl Louis. · • • 3 , NAP TIME - A weary ChriJty Eagleton, 9, res!! her bead <in • her mother's lap as Barbara Eagleton, wife of George )fo. Govem's runnin1 mate, ap- plauds In Miami. --'---------.. Goldwater Sees End w Viet War SAN DIEGO (AP) ~ Sen. BarrJ M. , Goldwater, a member of. the Senate · Anned Forces Committee, 1111 fla!IJ ho . thinka the Vietnam war will end within llO · days. -. "I prodlct that In the nest month or llO · days the -wJIJ be formally over," Ibo Artzona Republican told aome IOO pel'IOlll aUending a $11111-a-plate Republican fund· raising dinner Thursday. Goldwater refused to elaborate on his statement. ROTA TUNG CHARGE ACCOl'NTS } .· r11l11W1 lfllllla1111. That brou&l>I another huge chorus of clleera and led to a Kennedy .,...ndc w h I c h becan with, "There Is a new wind rllllll ...-the land , , • •tartlnl Wltll the plainl and rocl:J llJDa ot South llolota " and endod with ~ tft. lroduclloa ., "the nut pal- dent of tho Utllled Stata ... " ,_.. lboal tbelr loJalt1 lo ai.... fann....ten. ... --------~------..-----------------------------------...... • ~ I '