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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-17 - Orange Coast PilotI • • ' . , .. • I• • • • ~wo Doetors . Ter_,01'!'!':..--.-I GunJDa De1Qa11d.11 " ' • , . •IJncoDve·ntional!). . ' ' ~ ' MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 17, .19n VOL & NO. '"' I SICTKHll. M PMU Cutest Nudie Gun~alf-. Holas 5 ior Ransom • • I • ' ' ~ ' ·Virgin!an ' . . . . . . . Cops · Top Nude Title I -• • 6 Held in Morro Bay MORRO BAY (Al') -.. •-Ill o1 tl1IJ S.n Lull Obllpt CGunlJ -morl have been amoted In a mlrljaana raid. Tbe Saturday Dlcbl raJd -marijuana valued at fll,llt, m.tft'a deputlol llUI 111111 -• '"" "' • niontl>looc ibt••lpUaa -• - tywldo .... """ • Daky. Support • • To Democrat. CHICAGO (UPI) -llayor -J. llllq ... ...., lie wtll '"""°" tbt --Ille tlcill al .. levol • '11911 • at111a .... ,, 1'lm•DNMO'lll,"lbl .. 11111&mil1&aMW1• w'nrm llllllJ -..... "''lb• .,.,_ 1111o ol • do! I I• -,,.,,.... ldm lrolll tlle -.lie lll"ool _.. .... Ho Wd, 11o ........ -w ....... . wt~ lbe . llate led .., ~,..,.. WIJJlam Slnpr H 9-'1 auppor1.td De•NJQ• It lle"'il.....:1/ leval • 1"11 • al tllnllll • ' • 1500~000~ 'Holds ' ' •ostages i 11 Ba:Dk • \I 'Ahtlni''i • • ciJai'I oYertUined tedml<i1117. Xlla~ !'!"' Limde,' wbo it· tacbd alalo -Jaws In an artlele . pbl!I ..... la .._ 11.D.," aid the Klmo7 ~ -..... thin.,... c!nt ol'mm ba .. at -time_.... ill --prolliblted by crliulliaJ laws. , .. TbeJ~arjied_repea! ol ... IJJll ....... bll>lllns acllritltl betft'!! ........ ailulta. bal· favored ""'"""""""'' Jaws . · ni>e, child moltlllric and ...,. ...... lnvol .... -. .... Jaws· -bcCh Ibo rinol~bebarior npl!\oductlte In' ...... and Ille lbe -.. ol ADC»- -=1oc1e1yC"' that ... la nil,. I!- Bomb Rips ~~da Forum ' . ·eosting 'Sto~es' ·Coneert _ .. • • :•····· '.,. .• • ... • ' • \ DAILY PILOT ti ' ~g~i~. {·,:· ~·-~" .rn Death of ··Ki11g~ \!, \ ' Fr-.-P.,el ' STONES· .. tried to crull Ille aellDUl event I!!! Jaae a.,. Filto<n ps,oili wrro .,...ted. ' ,,, ·· • 'tl ·A.~:·r~'l\. • '*' SANTIAGO, Chile (llPI) -Aa He,;n~hj'~· pvedlqn shoveled dirt .. the areen hla ·'des! -lluco •• ---...Ulo ol Spiro CIJllomlo, l'levlng ~ -• ' ~. "~ -.....-cl "LltU. falher, tab m dilldlta and IO arandclOUdl'"lll lltlh you!" Some wen Hllnined from Delegatlo111 ol gypllea I Argentina, leaPlnC Into hla -"•v•. Brull, Peru, ParoruaY and Uruguay ar· It wu ,the boslll ol the kine ol the rived for the funeral, a•··••• and wee~ ~ llonianl' 81P"ea ol Latin -ea· "'6",. r California Ill died laat eek <I bolri Ing under 1'11 1klr1 and chilly wlndl .-a. Re•.,..; the lead~ ol 1 • l)'JlfY thAI are part ol winter In the Southern empire lbal stretched from Mexi«t IO the Hemisphere. IClilberu ,tJp ol South America and bad C4lifomla 11 body lay in state under a boon kins lllJce hla lathet died J5 years wom clrt111 tent Jn an encampment of IF· · l)'Jlflel oullide Santla10, hla cottln open ¥ acation Enditlfl Nixon Winds Up . CClemente Visit , . '· By JOHN VALTEllZA Of .. o.lr ,1 ... ''" President NIIOn plana to leave the liouth Or-Coaat Tllelday lo r Wuhington, D.C., -endlnc 1 twe>-week _, YICltlon -WU marked by a . i..t did not ltlJ lilat "8Y· Tho -· blllldlns work with reluatJao ..,ery day ol bis vlalt-hardly ever -an Bite.-al the beach during hill stay at La cua Paclflca. R WU hJa flnl trip weal 111Jce the start ol lllil year. Thia pal wekend -the last ol the workln1 vaeatlon -wu marked by a · very aCUve dwtnle. On Saturday the PrOlldenl left home eatlJ lo attond momarlal MrVlce1 for hill late Aunt, Mn. Edllb Timberlake, In lllv<nlde. Mii. Tlmborlalre WU the ........ wllo helped launcll t b e Prealdent'• .caner Jn law before be aoulht public office. to another American President. · But The Rev. Alan Vernon wasn't about to be disappointed this time around. Ju the President sat In the front row, he aod the JOO other wcirshipera llslened as"Rev, Vernon preached on "How Well do you Hear?" Ill the JO.minute m .... ge, the mlnlater told the congregation that God spealu lhrcullh nature, the Holy Scripture, and the Holy Communion. Rev. Vernon decided to make the preaenlatloo lnstead of fellow Mlnlster ·Jlm>. Mulleld, "beca111e I didn't want to be a born loter."· The mlni1ler uplalned thAl 20 yem •So, wblle he aerved as a Navy chaplain at the Rhode JalJnd Naval "llnlpllal, he qreed to allow' a fellow mlnlster to deliver tile ..,,.,. one Stmdoy. He and a friend, lnatead, took a crulae on a deatroyer. ~ a tronalucelll lbroud ol>ocurlni hla lace. Baralooi.ct chlldreo llartil at the body and relaUvea lhooed away packa ol stray clop tzyin/( to 1e1 into tbe teot. Buminl candlea were jabbed Into the dirt noor ·to provide a cordon ol llJlbt around the colnn. The coffin wu driven lo Santlago'a Genml Cemetery in a battered stall•• wq:on and. followed by more than 35 truckloadl of tbe king'• followers, their cbeeka atreated with tear• u lhl motoreade palled throucll the Qlllean capital. Callfarnll'a colflh wu -..i Into a ,,.... ol h1I famlly'1 plot, • - space between the plota ol Jtrangm. Huso Calllornta and one ol the dead CYPIY -it's dauahien directed the burial. ,,. the collln dtacended, IOllleOllO pused • bottle of brandy arnonr the mournen~ Aa the fltlll spadefuls of dirt otruck the coffin, aeveral l)'pl5)' women sobbed and beian screaming. Several p I u 01 e d lonrud aod lrled to jump Into the srave. Tbelr busbandl pulled ibem be~ 1'-He wu a simple man who liked to tall: to cbildrtD/' aald one JOO)ly. "He liked to •inc and to dance and ~to laugh. Theno waa nothing proud about him." The burial over, Hugo California leaned against a bric~ wall of the cemetery, a cigarette hanllng from hla mouth. His face wu unshaven. 0 Long Jive the ting!" came a shout from the departing mourners. Hugo dropped the cigarette, covered his eyes and aobbed. GAILY PILCIT Pllet9 n Affllt11 Lldl:•Mt Ill Sen Diego, .. .....i -....... ! arrested Juoe l4 when rlot1ng -out • after holders ol counter!eit tlckels to a StOnea' concert -wtre turned away. .. The next nlsht, police In Tuclon, Arif., '. used tear gas to disperse a crowd ol aoo : to 300 window·bttak1ng youths who tried .. to era.sh a concert. When the Stones appeared at the Metropolitan Sports Center in Bloom-.1, ington, Minn., June 18, several hundred .. g.a~rashers c;:aused $1,000 to $1,500 ~ damage to the facility. Eight persons •· were arrested snd several policemen " were injurtd. 'llle Stonea' concert tour covers 30 '•. cities. It marks the first time they have ., . visited the United states in 21h years. • An appearance at the Altamont · Speedway 35 miles east of San Franci.sco , on Dec. &, 1969, during their last concert · tour produced a day·lonl traffic jam along Interstate 200, and four deat~. in-.. eluding one stabbing, in the crowd of 1 300,000. . The chaotic scene at Altamont wu ~ recorded partly in the film, "Gilnme' , • Shelter," which was used as evidence Jn • the murder trial of a Hell'& Angel 1• motorcycle gang member accused ol the t stabbing. He was acquitted. Hell 's Angels 1 were acting as security guards at Alta-' • mont. The Stones returned to San Francl&co in early June. There were no incident.a ' and the group gros!ed $90,000 in four con-" certs there. • Peeper Seized Near Exclusive . -'· Newport Complex ; A ~ of men watching each other ~ with blnoculars from vantage polnll Jn an exclusive Newport Beach apartment · complex: and a brushy gully below didn't.; exactly see eye to eye Sunday on proper :attire. , Only hours after the services, the ·President held meell!JP with Secretary of State William Rojjm and dilCulled till ca.blnel member'! recent world trip. It was only after he returned from the jaunt, Rev. Vernon aald, that he learned tbal tben-Pr,.ldenl D w I g h I D. Ellenbowec, bad been a surprise sueat al the servlces. Kites Fly Downwind The lndlgnenl Park Newport.i Apartments tenant called police to com· plain that the gully skulker 100 yar<b •. away was Interfering with the scenic · view by exposing himaeU. · : Thea cm Sunday, the President ,..., to .-. Altedlng ritea Jn the m O d e I t aenctuarJ Of San Clemeate'• Finl Cbril- tlan aturcb, the Prelident beard a llm!ICll lnlm the,...... wllo two decadea qo mimed out cm the dlance to inacb Laird lntimat,es McGovern Dem .. , . ' Over New Plane:· WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of DO!ense Melvin R. Lalrd'auggeated today the Democratic prealdentlal nominee, ~ge McGovern, a&reed to oupport the Air Force'• new 1'15 airplane u the prtoe t<t lllllnl Seo. Thomu Sqleton u .bis rumlns male. Eagleton b from Miaaourl where the Fii II being buUt by McDonnell DOuglu eor,i. of st. ·Louil. ' .M Jinoldant, McGovern bu lllld be -.Id acrop the ·Fii la favor of development ol 1 . leu • c:mtly lllbtwe!ibt Dlhter. I At a Pen\liOn new1 (oaferenoe, Laird · aaid: "I ani led to belle¥e, llowever,' tliat · perllapa the YICe presldtatlal candldate lo port of his qreemen& Ill run waa able ·. to get a modlficalloo of that poaltlon." The delenoe .aecretvy did not aay where be got 11111 lnlormatloo .. ..., wbat It WU baaed. Laird noted that the F15 la the lfnlt -"" ~)'Item developecLunder..J>eW cootracllng procedurea lMlltuted during hls admlnlstrallon for wlllch be claimed "compleie a n d Iola! reaponolbllity u secretazy of defense." "St. Louis Is known .. pliantomtown, . U.S.A., and ti will be known u Eaglelown U.S.A.," Laird quipped with a play on worda and Eagleton'• name. The Fil, dubbed the Eagle by the Atr Force at ila rollout fut month, II In· tended lo replace the F4 Phentom which is also built by McDoMell Douglas In St. Louis. OJIANN co.ur ST DAILY PILOT ' • 'TM Orl"'ft CMlt DAILY PILOT. Wttfl Whkft b cflfMll'lltl ..... H...,,,.._ 61 PUWbllcd W Ille Or•"9t CNlf "*111111111 ClnlHrW. ~ I nle «llllons '"" tMllllMcJ. ~ "'"'°"" Ftld1y, for Coll• M1t11, H"""9rt 8wtfl. ' Huntington l1KIVl'ount1Jn \l•lllY, LltVnll 9Mdl, l,_.lne /Slcldltllldl Ind SM C""*"ltl S1t1 J11ari C.pbltlnt. A alll(lll ntloMf lldffltn k PUblla.llilil Slhlnlty& Miii Swid1.,... Tiie prll\Clptl PUblltlllnt "9nl 11 at ,. Wnl a.y srt .. t, c.11 "''"• Clllfwnll, t2i». Ro\.trl N. WoM Prnlflll! Md ,ub,....., J1t~ •· C11rl•v Vkt Pm!Otnl 1n11 G1Nr1I ~ no"''' K•o•il ·-11.oMll A. Mwr,hiA1 MAMtJril UI• C~1rl11 H. L... •ith1'4 p, Nall ~ IMNt"9 l[dl*'t -c.e. Mout,. w..t..., • .,. ....,.,.. hldll DD ""'"" lovlftl1' "----..a.: m ,_.., ""'"" ' ....... a.mi ,,.,. lkldl ..., .... ,.. .1111 °""""'9s • ...,_ II C.tnN "..C , ...... en•• '4J..e111 Cl Mu4 .W.1ttlall1 '4M171 ,,......., ........... If """"' ••• • 4fl-4flt ,,.. ... .,.._ c-itr' C1M111_,.lel . _,.,. J"' 0...,.. C.I ,....., .... .. -.... .......... ~,.,!Mt. ....... .. ...... ~ .... fMY .. ·-t , ..,.., _... ... ..... .,..,,. ....... ____ .. ._._ c........ . .. Ci...... " .. ,.,... ..... ·==-··-· ,;;' ,,::,,i:--~1 .. . ., Veinon pve that uplanatJao to the -allon lrom the pulpit SUnday, and alter the oervicel be joined the President Portion oUQO:b.<t•I f)eei In the Inaugural FlighLof- the Kites In Newport Harbor fight for position as they, tun past east end of Lido lale on downwind leg. Flight of the Kites hu replaced old Flight of the Snowbirds because there ;onm!t-~nough of the old wooden Snowbirds around anymore. To see how the flnt Kite flight came out, see Page 18. Dispatched to the scene, Officer Lmy Gabriel peered lhroullh Ille complaining .. party'• 7x50 power binoculars and claim-i· ed his initial complaint wu corr<et. · { tor brief convenaUon.-. Preatdent wu accompanied by San Clemente City Councllman and Mn. Paul Presley to the aervlces In the 1mall cburcll at 702 Avenlda Eitttlia. After the service,, the President returned to hiJ residence and spent the rtst of the day relaxing. He walked alons the beach south of hla residence, then too~ one' Jast drive lhrough San Mateo Canyon-ounoeylng' the ,2..,,ac...._ pf ll»landl ·which once were· part of Camp l'endlet.n, bot now will. become· public reoreatJon areas, ac-cordlns to a Pmldentlal declarallon. ·r > F,._P.,el • SURFERS .•• ..... Navy Discovered 43 Major Flaws In .New Plane WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy found l.1 major flaw• in test mode1' Ot Ill new Fl! fighter plane dming a J)l":liminary evaluation Jate last year, ac· cordjngil<! ~ testimony made pllblie today. Sixteen of those deficiencies related to safety. The Navy told a llouae appropriations Capt. i>•AmaU. · IUbcpmm.lttee that "corrective actJon is "A few people atarted throwing things, under way" and tbat a majority of the and pr,ttY aoon more people Jumped on repaired aircraft would be ready for the bal!dwqort, D'Aniall aald. "I don't !eating this summer. tblnl: moil ol them knew what the sflua-Thia 'teotfmony, wlllch elso reported 75 lion , wu, except lbal police and m1nor .problems w It b Grumann'1 FH, llleguanla1 were ·1nw1ved." • came· during closed-door budget bearings Cfptaln D'Arnall llid thllt moat ol the J~ A~ crubed Into Chesapeake Bay objeof, thrown .,..e simply "aand-June 30, killJn• I'-a·villan ·~ pilot. bombt" -8*nd paclied lntO paper drlnk • ~ =• cupa -,but , lhat 1<>me harder objects Navy SOUfC<S aald dtvera still are were burled as well. recovering pl...,, of the plane and !hat The situation was conlrolled by e: 15 cause of the ere.sh has not been i.. dete~ed. _p.m . ....,.vesUgatoruaJd. The m---'l"~ "Some •ur!ero teemed to be under the . -.. ~ i!llll aet<eted d)lrlllg lmpresaloo that antl .. ur!Jns lawa are un-evall\liUon fllshta by Navy plloll last oonsUtutlonal or diJcrim1natory 0 r Nov~ber and De_cember were referred somelblng," according to Capt. D'Amall. to 1only sketchily m. the AprO report to "They're ""' " be~-~·' "Whe tJi\o House subcommittee. . . _, • ....,. n j But testimony by semor admirals llJe,. "~len are I with bathen • under questioning Indicated deOclencles '!"''\""rda present a hazard. It'• thay' involved •"'"-~-"'·• ciit"-•"'•' Jo 1unp1e " --"'~· u.. .... ,, He .;,led lbal a boy was killed .,~1 a =~':l:),,is'°'• and fllght range, surfboard struck him In the neck •. pus· In addition the ..;ng,....,,,, .. were told log lntemal bleeding which led 'f' IUI-lbat 10 deOclencies were found In the focatloo about two montba 110. / system cootrolllns the Pboenlx mlaslle "We )11't ean'I allow luriery In the the FH'a prlnclpeI weapoo. Most of in...; water when there are bathers tpere," be problems, too, will be draigbtened out, explained. ' the Navy ""5Ured the aubcommlllee. Huge Brush Fires Nearly Contained in California By Tbe AIHtlated Prell Two arool><Oa\lled Orea that hive burn- ed %,060 acres In northeasl•m Calllomla counties have been contained, and another man-set blaze should be con- tained by tonight, alter blackening lG,1100 """"• the state Division of-Foreatry aald, today. - A division spokesman aald the big brush fire west of Rumaey In Yolo CoUJ>. 11 Jna.....lble undergrowth. containment expected . by I p.m. Some SSO men fought the blaze In near· ly lna<cesslbleundergrowth • ' A 111).acre fire about a mile to the west was controlled early today, the. ')lokesman aaid. !ind a blate 15 mll., weal ol Arbuckle In Cl>luaa County 1'U conlalned at 2,000 acres today. One of the 250 men llghtlng that llre WU y for heat --• the apolte aald . e aald flrefigbtero allO utlngutahed a atrlnl of small lrlOl><allled flrea In ~e County belay nlgjll. Meanwbll., 'roO men workJnl with llulJdour crews contained a 500-o<re fin , • \ Sunday In the Sierra foothills, lour miles norti"8st of Tuolumne In the Stanislaus NaUonal Forest. AlJO contained SUnCiay was a 1,500-acre. brush and timber lire near Mokelumne Hllls in Calaveras County. Some homes ~ thnetened briefly but the lire burn- ed away from the town, a forestry division spokesman said. Fire llghtm also were puU1n1 oul a few r<Illllninl hot spota in a lightning· cauoecl fire Jn the Inyo Natiooal Foreat today. The blue 1n belvy bnltb zs mn .. north of Bbhop, WU conlained early to. day. "The wind died down kind ol unex- pectedly," uld a tp0kt1m111 Sunday, "and ti wu a Utile eaaler to cet 1nto tt." About 1,000 acres ol bruab .and Umber had been consumed as about 200 flremen fought flamoa on the -alope ol lbe Slerra nor Crowlq Lake. The llDOll '1llaie of ll1Jton Creek WU •ved from any damqe when - turned the fire. No other reaidmca were u.r.tened, the spotieaman aald. _ Shootings, Stabbing End 3 Li-yes in Bre~ La Habra Sbootinp and a lllbblac ended the llvea of a ~rea co0ple'and a La Habra husband over the weekend ln three v}I). lent deaths initialJy blamed on marital dispute& aod despondency. Tile violent dealba of lllr. and lllrs. Clrland C. Black were listed as a ~~~. ;,~ to ' .<P- County Coroner'• Olllce lnveat11aton. Autbor!Ueo said Black apparently klll- ed his wile Frances Claire, 11; with a single abot from a .38 callber revolver Saturday night. Black, 73, then called. a .... in.law In La Mirada, accordln1 to lnveat11atora, He crept up for a cloeer look and ·~ subsequently amsted the 24-year-<>ld. , peering out of the bulhes with his OWD ,. binoculars on suaplcloo of lndecent ex· porure. The defendant, poll<e sald, ldmltted · while being booked that be bad ' two iri« arrsu for ti. eame olf..,., adding that • psychiatrist he comalted. told him he WU normal. ·'. · He a1so a11e.ec117 c1alri>ed to be ~ • dent oyer tM' death of hill employ•, • ll)'iDg the clandestlne nudity l.......t hit .,. lrief and despalr. La Habra Cycle Riders Killed ' Article Ignored saylnl be had just kllled hla wife and Two youlbful La Habra motol'c)lcllsta . · By Government wu going to &hoot him.sell, too. Jost their llve1 over the weekend Jn col- The rtlatlve, Identified 11 Jamea IWODI with automobU.,, the Oranga , Whaley, told Brta police who were County coroner's office reported. John Redrall, 22, of 170 Cburcblll Road, SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Government dispatched to the couple's trailer home at La Habra, died Sunday Digllt alter a c:ol· . officials have reacted mffh silence to a JOSI Site Drive, that be arrived to find lilloo with a car oo Euclld Straet at Ill ;; "''" both vlclfma dead. A venue In that dty. Ramparts magazine wblcb says U.S. In-Michael Beamon, 19, of 1!40 Brookdale telllgence can .pinpoint the location of Coroner'• deputlea identified the third Ave., La Habra died early Sunday lllOl'I>-: Soviet military and space craft and slaylns victim U Orville Neilan, 39, ol ing alter a crub with a statJao wagon at · monitor every transatlantic telephone 441 E. Parkwood Ave., La Habra. Hacienda Boulevard and Sllllker Avenue, call. He -dead oo arrival al La Habra also in La Habra. The arllcle entitled "U.S. Eapiooage: A Community Hoapltal of a knife wound In , . Memolr"_appears.Jn.tho-Ausust illue of--.lbe chest,.JCCOldJni.Jo.bomlclde det-Minute_____.___---'hed ' the magulne, which went on newsstands tlvea. ;111uu .14l:IUIIC. • today. II is based on an Interview with a Investlgaton queatlnned Neilan'• wife VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE . man purported to be a former National Barbara, 38, and 1ublequenlly arrested (AP) -The Atr Force Space and Mlsalle· Security Agency analyst. and booked her oo 111SJ>iclon of murder. Test center here aald Satmday night It The w .. tem White House In San A complaint cbarrlns the woman will launched a modHled Minuteman 1 m111uo ;: Clemente, the Department of Deleme In be sought from the Oranse County down ·the Wealem Test Range. The·· Wa.shlngton and a apokeaman for NSA at District Altorney'1 Office after she Is launc.~. termed succellful, wu to teat a FL Mead~ Md., declined comment on questioned further about the Sunday reentry vehicle but no other details were ·· the article. night stabbing. released. ' o~< ~~ GUA:N11E ,o · "Lti!Jcosta Mes:~ • • • .. PAWN SHOPS ARE FUNI • SOLITAIRE 2F0•1 STEREO , . . FREE PIARL .... llRTHSTONI ITrodcS-"""'"" YOUR CHOICI Pl._ o.ckJ -RINGS e 20ft.coR ~4 PACOGE ...... for guitar OI' 4 P:NLIGHT ~· • lladl DYrnond Val-lo $49.95 I nlRllS PIUCI' A-le Guttor Your Choice Sill AA. Strl .... Ne.N754 .... "" '""" • e MORSI ........ ·~ ---'1511 ... $IS.ts .. $44.95 e IC • ... .,.,. ,,,,.,. .:.nn tlWa .... "" ''""''' 646-7741 • • • r: • • . . . 'Dry ~nn' • For Amtrak . ' . . --In Kansas TOPEKA, Kin. (UPI} -Attorney C.ner~ Vern Miller has decided that the •ale o( liquor oo trains l'l1Ming in Kansas is illegal aod ordered Amtrak to stop the practice.· Miller. sent a telegram to the railroad company to "cease and desist activities rela!lng • to ..ie. dispensing . aod con- 11nnptl9n of alcoholic beverages im· mediatiely within the state of Kansas." He • aaid in his opinion the Rall Pasoenger Service Act of 1970 doel not exetript-tra~ from Karisas JlquOr laws. 'lbe attorney general informed Amtrak that failure to C9mply with the cease order' w 111 result in. mests aod pros- ecution ol anyone violating Kan.su U. quor laws. . "!Iller said If Amtrak fails to comply ..• Iha\ hio office will. put. agen!s.aboord the • trains and niake .arrests. • , . ' DAILY PILOT Staff ...... s DAILY pll.Of I •elpingJland • Retarded Get Chance in Toro By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. OllJJ ,.... ..... '!be boy posed himself earefully -and lhen dbve oU the llde of the pool, ~ his friends splashing about In · the =- degree water. "It ls warm," the man walkhlg by aakl of the water's temperature. -"But we have many Mongolold or Down's Syn- drome children .here and they are suscep- tible to colds." "Iii. Joe." a number or lhe pool .. lde residents at Holiday House in El Toro yelled at once. Joe LaCognata, social worker at the 94· resident school for the mentally retard .. ed, acknowledged their waves. Swimming is only one of lhe things the adults living at Holiday House are taught in an effort to make tliem more seU~uf· ficient. Vocational training. in lawn and garden, laundry, kitchen, printshop and manu1acturing jobs, is emphasized and residents apply their work to the school itself. Amtra.~ officials Said Kansas Will have to take the case to court to stop it from selling ,alcoholic beverages. Sale of liquor in Kansas Is prohibited except in licensed clubs. Anitrak could not obtain a license because it has no SUMMER COURSE AT LA PAZ SCHOOL AIMEO AT PRODUCING SAFE HOME MECHANICS Diano Poottgln• u-Metal Crushing Device; Current Pr<>loct Is Barbecue Flippor·fork Holiday House, formerly in Anaheim, ls occupying a 7.8·acre site on El Toro Road where Parklane School operated until February. permanent 'address .. , 1 A Kan.su organization working f..-' legalization of liquor by the drink In Kansas called the state's stand against :Amtrak liquor sales on ~ins '4absurd." Hank Parkinson, campaign coordinator for Kansas for Modem Alcoholic Beverage Control, aald Miller's ruling "is • oymbol or !\Ow out of step wilh the times our llguor laws are." "We're COl'Jtemed about what the Amtrak' thing is doing to our st8.te im· •ge," Parkinson said. Bloody Battling Leaves 5 Hurt, 11 Facing Raps ELDERSB\JRG, Md. (AP) -State police said three persons received gunshot wound& and two others were ltabbed in what officials described as a "bloody confrontation" at a rally 'lf Hime 2,500 cyclists and 1ans near here. Authorities charged 11 persons with violations ranging from carrying a con- cealed weapon to assault with intent to rnunler in the Sunday afternoon ~ee. The disturbance erupted as cyclists, in· eluding a Mid-AUanUc group called lhe Pagans, were told by rally organiurs ~ • scheduled races .were canceled because ol lhe crowd's rowdiness, police said. About 30 riot-equipped state troopers were' called to the rally slte, seven miles west of Randallstown in Cerroll County, to quell lhe disturbance. Ope ol lhe arrested, Eugene L. Johnson Jr., rl, ol \Yllmington, Del .. was charged with assault with attempt to murder, 11ate police reported. The 10 others were charged with car- rying concealed weapons, police Jaid. The Flying Eagles, an East Coast Club, wu host at the rally which police said is an annual event In Eldersburg. Rogers Slates Bay City Speech SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Secretary ol State~William P. Rogers, who reported to -J!r~~ideot NiJOD,-Saturday afID:.j\ogers' tour ol world capital•. will address lhe Commonwelatb Club Tuesday at lhe St. Fl'!lllCis Hotel. A traditional question-and-answer periOd ·will follow the special noon meeting. l\08el'I told newsmen, following the meeting wllh the President a; San Clemmte, ~at be saw "90Dle slight nu- ances ·of encouragement" over the ·Paris peace talks. • I • DAILY "ILOT 119ff PM• HOLIDAY HOUSE WORKER Viejo Students Learning How to, Be Safe at Home Little Leaguers To Pl.ay Tourney . . For Loop· Title That school wasn't filling fa st enough with students to continue, Lac ognata said. The residents, all of them \8 years old or older, spend their mornings going to classes, learning arts and crafts, music, physical education and completing their jobs on the grounds. Warm afternoons bring swimming and inside activity in the game room. Joo Lacognata · clumps or grass behind the school, where . students play baseball and run track. Social Ufe,ts active, LaCognata said. . A dance takes -place every Friday nigllt ., and once a month everyone wttb a birtlr t. day in that month is honored at one largec· party. At Christmas, service organizl.· > lions bring Santa Clauses and trees. ••aorne, sweet,-home," may not· be as safe as' it setmS1 acconling to it! ac· cident stat}stics, but teacher Dick Nieble wsnis. to change lhat. Nieble doesn't blame the home, wilh all !is electrical wirings aod necessary repairs, for causing accidents. He blames careless people. Aod he's trying to teach IS girls and five boys at La Paz Intermediate School this summer to become careful "home mechanics," able to cope with everyday jobs. . He would like to see the course. which he calls Horne Safety, offered during the · regular school year. B.ut Nieble doubts there will be room in the 'schedule because e!r<Ody-established classes jn welding and power meclianics are in greater demand. . The home mechanics learn how to do riveting, soldering, spot wetding, drilling and cOnnecting electric circuits. Summer school ends July 21, but Ne!· ble i;tilJ hopes to touch on auto mechan- ics. QimnUy the class is making 1 barbecue fiippe<·f,..~ from wire eod sheet metal ... fiDal project. '!be opecial 'cla.'8 -dealing with buics in electricity aod hand tools -was of· Frasier's Cubs Sent to Safari Unit in Atl.arita ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Two of the 35 cubs aired by lhe proliflc lion Frasier. Whose mating feats stirred nationwide admiration, bave b e e n sent to the new Lion Country Safari in Henry COUnty near AUanta. Jerry, Kobrin, vice president ol Safari, said SUndoy the two 6-~d cubs among FraSier's most recent litter-, will hopefully start families of lheir own. The move was part of an effort to peropejuate the memory and tradition· of Frasier, who was buried on a grassy Laguna Hills hillside after be died Thurs- day of pneumonia. Orie of the cubs is named Angie, after actn!s Angie Dickinson. The other was aamed Atianta by Kobrin. The Safari people have established 1 Frasier F:oundation to collect and distribute fuods to worlhy animal charity orga¢zali'"18, Korbin said; fettd to accommoda\e girls at La Paz, where the industrial arts classes are oonnally onJy open to boya. Nieble said the clus bas ••turned out beautifully. The girls ore interested, very fine ;workers and in some" cases ere more meticulous than the boys." , If home safety. is not offered during lhe year, Nieble is going to recommend that girls be included in regular industrial arts classes. AU of Niebles' classes strictly observe safety precautions. students wear gog· gles while soldenng aod handle machines with care. So far the summer class has been free of accidents -not counting an occasional hammered thumb. Tournament play to decide the 1972 The sch90I, which has a capacity for champion team of the South Coast qtUe 135 students, has a print shop where league· district is under way this even-students produce menus. stationery and other items contracted for by area hlg. businesses. At 5 p.m. at Crown VaJley School, the Another group of students manufac· San Clemente All Star team went against tures. projectiles, the lead part of the the Laguna Niguel All Stars. The winner bullet, to be used at pistol cJub firing of that game will meet tile Laguna Beach ranges. The school's administrator, F,d .. ward Ireland, is a pistol expert. All Stars Tuesday at 5 p.m. aho at The money made from these projects Crown VaJley School. The tournament goes to the school's special Olympics Winner will represent Area 1 (Laguna fund to send qualilied students to com· Beach, Laguna Nlgµel and s a n pete with other handicapPed chi)ldren in Clemente) in the district play off. track and .field and swimming events every year. In Area 2 (San Juan C8pistrano, The residents are enrolled by their "We've found it stimulates the children,'' Lacognata said. ' • So everything ii colorful." The school was founded by Elite Holi· day in 1965 because of her own Jntmst Jn · working with relart\ed people, 'be aafd. ·• She is still active In direcling Ibo ICbool'•,: policy. Nixon Leading In Vote Tally , Mission Viejo 1SaddJeback and ~) families and most are funded by' Aid to tournament play, 5addleback All Stars the Totally Disabled (ATD) from lhe NEW YORK (UPI) -President Nixon will meet the Mission Viejo All Stars at 5 federal government. Tuition is $237 a would have 236 certain electoral votes • S a p.m. Thursday at the San Juan month. ·and Sen. George S. McGovern Only seven an emente's Capistrano Little League Field. There is no average length of stay, if lhe election were held now, Newsweek On Friday at S p.m. at the field San LaCognata said. Most common is Juan Capistrano All stars Will meet pennanent placement. magazine has reported. Boys CJub Open Irvine AH stars. The winner ol. that game 1be rooms, where students bunk in In addiUon, voters in states with a total/ will play the winner of the Mission Viejo-o· twos or threes, are like college dorms, of 64 vOtes are leaning toward · Nixon · SaddJeback tilt to decide the Area 2 win-only the colo~s are brighter. Walls are while only 39 electoral voteai are reported After Revamp~g ne~ district thtmpionahip game will be ::;~;: ~eo:::~;:~ and doors •re ~~rn:go1towi:.= ~.:·:i~~e'°;. played July 29 at I p.m. at .Crown Valley A llttle pony, lhe mascot for the Holl· \Ota! of 300, Ill VI""' titan -tor vio- Tbe Soutb Coul Boys' Cltub iJ open lor School. day·-.. ·--· ... -·f14-tory.,_, i 1 '· ; 1 business agllin l)ld woartng a !reah new .. ;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;i;;;il·~~~;iiiiii;l;i:;i;ii;iii;;;-5;!;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;;i;i;~..:,,;;;;;i;;;;ii;;i;;;;;;;~;ii;;im1 coat of paint, inside and out, thanks to volunteer efforts. '!be club is openlrom I to 5 p.m. Tu.,. daythrougb·Frklay aod from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. The club, l30l Calle Valle, San Clemente1 is closed SUnday and Monday. "For the ~ month, we've been pain- ting lhe inside of lhe club In prepsration for opening. Last 5aturday, lhe San Clemente Optimist Club painted tbe outside/' Mik4 Brady, Boys' Club cfirec. tor said. Club activities Include volleyball, bad- minton, flag football, mckey, labte ten- nis, pool and a 1ummer basketball league. Also, sign-ups are now being taken for T-ball for boys between seven eod JO years of age. Boys' Club memberships are open to boys o1 between seven and· 18 yean of age and cosl.$1 for-lhe remainder of the year. Wa1dheim in USSR MOSCOW (AP) - U.N. Secretary· G.neral Kurt Waldheim paid his first visit to the Soviet Union today 1btce bOcOmmg U.N •. chief last Decembe!'. He is aclleduled f..-a series ol wide-rallging talb wilh Soviet offictais. • fl'-!~ Se ... i Annual ' F.URTHER REDUCTIONS • Discontinued Style • Broken S~es • All Sales Anal SPECTACULAR ,...;;~WWOMEN's:;;.." ...;;;~~- " • ' • . • • VALLEY e PENAUD e LADY FLORSHEIM e VITALITY e DeLISO e HILL & DALE e RISQUE e ENNA JETTICKS e ·WOMEN'S SANDALS tl 'I>: TR~D~RirE ' I SHOE) q e COBBLERS \. -, . • I VALUES TO $17.00 .~. PRICE MIN'S FLORSIJllMS $16 ~90 M $21.90 ' ' . ' VALUES TO $36.95 VALUES TO $30. WINTHROP E.' T. WRIGHT Si ... to 11 AAAA to C,. -$12.90 _$29~90 • ...... tu. • ... to $46. ' ' . ' OPEN MON .. & FRI. NITE Till 9:30 P.M. '; .. ., . ' ' USE YOUR BAIUflRICARD, MASTER CHARGE;. HEMPHILL CHARGE. • J .. I ' . • ! \ ~ l Ten bot air balloons took off from a sboppil)g cen· ter Ill Onnge Sunday as port of the city'• conte11- 11W celebration. The international competition was won by Kai Paam'and of Denmark with Reber Cham· bers o( Anaheim. placing second. " -, 54 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORlT CENTEI 644 4zz3 ,., r • I • • l .. , - 4 DAILY PA•· Mond.IJ, .Mr 17, 1'. - 'MladRf' GI Lt. Calley Case -· " . To Be Reopened? SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -LL WllllOm Callq'a dd..,. team 11'1 It wlD -• De!' trial baaed .. the fladlng et a "'"'"'"'" GI wl-lo the M1 Lil --( • IN SHORT •.•• ) "We 111111 have wort lo do on putting qethor the ..ida1oe and worklll( out men 1-ck," aid George t.Umer, cbltf ....... -clluiJ18 the mllltary trial ll!at llllled with CIDey'I eonvlctloo 16 -·· A l«me< Army private, ldentUled u O...W. Dean "Butcbu Gruver of _.,.,,,., Mo., WU located · Wt -· --under caDey when more dlou 100 UlllmlOd eMIWll were killed In Ille -hlmltt d MY. I.el. eae.,.Attaek CIMARRON, N.M. (UPI) - A 251). pow)d brown bear ripped down tents and attacked four teen-age campers early Sonday at the Philmont Seoul Ranch In nortbtNtem New Mtxleo. Two ol the ICOUll were bolpltallud. The othen were treated and releued. e r..-JcJteelJ AW1 WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Rep. La Alpln (D-Wll.), a lormer Penlagoo eooaoml!t, believes ~ adminlstrlUon IDlY be uslllg Ill lllpplemenlll Vietnam war funds request for a new 0 ball out" of the Lockheed Corp. Alpln uld Sunday . President Nlxcn'I J,... ID ~ IV!' 12.2 blllloo ln ~ plmental Vietnam war funds Include flJD mllJlolJ for C30 wao j<ll built by Lockheed. 9-Wite!hes Br.med TACOMA, Wuh. (UPI) -A IUlpeel In the stabbing of five persons at a Greyhound bua depot uld be bad been cbaaed out of Portland, Oro., by wllcba, police reported SUnday. "He must have been brooding about something,'' a poUce tpOkemian aaJd of Alexander Murphy, 13, the suspect, Murphy wu lhot twice by bus driver Harold Fa1green, 47, Aubum, Calif., after the "stabbing and s I a s h I n g in· discrimioanlly" With a 21h inch blade knlle M Friday night. e Spiritual Leader ISTANBUL (UP[) -Tbe Orthodox patriadlate of Ooostantinople (lslan!iul) chose a litlle-known, mild-mannered and -above all -a political man to be the new spiritual leader of 250 million Orthodox Christians. Metropolitan Dlmltrlos Papadopoulos, koown among his fellow• u "the quiet metropolitan," received 12 votes to three in balloting Sunday by the patriarchal synod. e Tiger Bunt NEW DELIU (UPI) -Troopers of tbe lndo-Tibel.an Border Police Force have been ~ Into -lo hunt down a ~ling Uger that bas ldll!d 33 peno!ll in lbe Kwnaon HiUJ of north.em India. Tbe regional conunissloner of the area !old report.rs In the district head- quart<n et Nainl .Tall last W1!el< that besides the police force, hundreds of villagers along -with two v e t e r a n sportsmen are involved in the bunt. Ul'f T ......... In the Swim As a heat wave swept over the western states, hitting Las Ve- gas with 115 degree tempera- tures, many hotels extended their swimming pool hours un- til late at night. Here guests like Sharon White could keep their cool cool. Mafia 'Rubout' Investigated By NY Experts Israeli Court Finds Lod NEW YOK (AP) -Silting theories and evidence. police experts loday sought lo fit the slaying ol top Malla figure Thomas ••Tommy Ryan" Eboll into the complex pattern of a continuing gangland war. Airport Terrorist Guilty Eboli, 61, was found sprawled on a sidewalk early Sunday in the quiet O'own Heights section of Brooklyn, far from his usual haunts in New Jersey and Manbat4 tan. There were five bullet hoJes in his face and neck. . LOD, Israel (AP) -An Israeli army court convl~ Japeneae radical K .. o Obmota today for his part in lbe Loci Airport m•nacre and aentenced him to Ille ln prilon. Tbe 14-year-old defendant lfoocl and lillelled lmpaulvely u tbe •erdl<l,of tbe -lleulenanl colonels was read. Alter II wu translated into J._, be algb- ed deeply. He was found guilty of all four cbargea fOed agalnlt blm. Deatb II tbe mulmwn penalty I« three of them, but Israel bas esecuetd lxlt one perlOll, Nazi war criminal Moll l!)lcbmann. And the pro- !leCUUOO uked for a IUe aentence. Okamoto bad pleaded guilty In court -' TERRORIST GUil TY Kuo Okamoto, 24 and before the trial signed a conleselon admitting that be and two other Japantse attacked tbe crowd in 1 Israel' a U.. ternatlonal airport on May 30 wtth machine gum and grenades, acting on beball of a Palesllne guerrilla organ!Z&- tlon. Twenty .. lgbl per10111 were ldlled, Including the otbu two terrorlats, and 7D ..... wounded. In a slate'l'ent Tbursday at tbe end ol tbe four-day trial, Okamolo aaid his organization In Japan, the United Red Army, would continue its attacks ~n the cause of world revolution. Tbe president of the court, Lt. Col. Abraham Frisch, uld Ok a mot o '1 declaration w11 "a miJ:ture of unripened fdeu • • • concerning bl! and his frieOO.' lruatrallon" with the modem world, 11.t aoclal lltuclure and regimes. He uld Okamoto had taken m the muaacre "willingf1 and In lull con-lclousnea.,, 0 1be deeds attributed to the accused have been proven beyond an reuonable doubt/' the judge added. • ' Th e y ,.~t tbe offenltS wltb which be hu been charged. We therefore find tbe ac- cuaed guilty of these offenses." The illling was at least tbe 15th gangland slaying since the June 28, 1971 woWlding of Joseph A. Colombo Sr., iden- tUied by authorities as the head of the Profacl Cou Nostra family in Brooklyn. Included tn that siring of ldlllngs WRJ the Little Italy clam bar rubout of Joseph "Crazy Joe" Gallo last April. But where EOOU's death flt in this complex web was the question. lovestigators aiocluded that Eboli was shot as he sat in a car, probably his own fate-model Cadillac, then struggled out and collapsed on the sidewalk. "He must have been lured over here," said one detective. Witnesses lold police they heard shots and saw Dashes r.ear a truck that went by at the time. Tbe truck, apparently stolen, was found about a block away abandoned with its eJ)gine running . Police also f,ound a stolen car with a machine gun In Its rear seal. The gun had not been fired and detectives tbeoriz- ed that It had been a backup weapon. The car Eboll had been in was gone when police arrived and they broadcast an alarm for the vehicle. In the right hand pocket of Eboll's jacket was more than $2,000 in cash. mostly in $100 bills. 8 Greeks Indicted Despite the strong indications that --Ebo.., u1 u111-tieen "bit" by mob gunmen, ATHENS (UP[) -Eight Greeks ar-dele!:Uvea uld there was no evidence rested for allegedly planning lo kidnap that he bad been feuding lately witb the IOn of the late President John F. fellow members of bis Genovese un· Kennedy have been Indicted for con-derworld family . •piracy and will soon be brought lo trial, a government 1pokesman said today. The eight, ln1ludlng a baker and a profeaoor of literature, were arrested "about" a mootb ago and are being held In Korydallos prison in Piraeus, the spokesman .a.id. ·Morphine 'Coasting' Tom Murpbine's "Just Coasting" col· umn will not appear this week while he is on vacation. Busing Suit Backed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice !Jepatlment joined the state of Michigan today in an effort lo block the school bus- ing pl'Ol!l'am onltr IV!' tbe Delroit metropolitan area by a U.S. di.strict court judge. The department's Civil Rights Dlvllloo filed a frlend-o(-tbe-courl briel in tbe U.S. Court of Appeals for tbe 6th Circuit Jn Cincinnati, requesting a stay of the district court order. Scattered Storms Hit U.S. • \ ' \ Qu~ng Tri Under Fir·e ,.. ~" ~ . , -. .._ Jets, Ships Bombard Red-held Province SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. warplanes and and 111 ammunition dump In their ltO Navy fW1lb4>o teamed up 5unday and to-~ . C11 Norlll Vie-poelllon.s day for the vltll bombardmenf ·of · ~ Qiwlg Tri city, spokesmen uld. Communfll. nR Tri Slncf Soulb Vietnamese I bOd an opmttlon -NA VY OFFICERS said the six-Inch to recapture ce June 'II, gUM of tbe light cruiser Oldaboma City mllltary spok . said. • .and the five-lnchera of nine destroy era Military IOUn1el said at 6D 1152 "accounted for nearly 30 e n • m Y bombers, 190 convenllMll fighters ~!'1."''-.;e~m;::placemenll (bunkers) destroyed and cruisers and destroyers bit Quang Tri lo e 10 secondary explosions" during clear the Communists from around the · e ml.tsiOOI Sunday. province capital and to prevent rem. The U.S. command also ordered forcements from reaching battered another fOlD' waves of B52 bombers north Quang Tri cily. of the Demilitariud 1.one (DMZ), the U.S. command said, to bit supply caches Jllll'EWGENCE officers last week and Communl.rt troop camps in Nortb said that at least 2,500 memben Of a Vietnam. "We (South Vietnamese forces) fresh North Vietnamese div!Slon bad are moving inch by inch, foot by foot and been spotted in northwestern Quang Tri house by house," U.S. paratroop adviser province, moving lowar<! the capital to Capt. Gail Furrow told UPI cor- Quang Tri Cil)' about 35 miles away. respcindent Donal~ A. Davis at a field At least five other regiments are base south of the city, "We are moving believed to have been-pulled from the nearly two blocU' a day, but we are mov· batUeflelds in La011 to North Vietnam. irJg forward." Allied officen fear they too will be !brown into the battle for Quang Tri. South Vietnamese paratroopers pushed to within 200 yards of the Inner fortress, caJled the Citadel, in Quang Tri City S\Jno day, military spokesmen said today. A U.S. adviser described their push through the province capital as 111nch by inch, foot by foot." Belfast Protest FURROW SAID NO government troops bad yet entered the Clladel, a IOO-yard- 1quare fortrese that occupies the norti> eastern two-thlrd3 of Quang Tri City. The city and the province of the same name were overrun by the North Vietnamese army May I and the ~gon command three weeks ago launched a 3,5QO.man drive to retake the capital. UPI reporter Ed Swett said • U.S. Huey helicopter gunship wu shot down Sunday near Qui Nhon, 250 miles northeast of Saigon. One of the two American crewmen was injured but both we.re rescued, he said, Davis said field officers told him the Communist& appeared to be slowly puJJ. ing back in the fighting irulide Quang Trl City. Government troops beat back a North Vietnamese counterattack ln th !;) city center Sunday and reported knocking out a Soviet-built tank. President Nguyen Van Thieu vowed last month that all of Quang Tri Province would be recaptured by Sept. 19. Bia troops so far have retaken less than 10 percent of the northernmost province. Children Abandon Homes Mil;ITARY SPOKESMEN reported no fighting within Quang Tri City ii.tell Sun· day, but said both paratroop and marine units fought within hall a mile of tbe province capital. The spokesmen said 194 North Viet· namese were slain around the city, 435 miles north of Saigon, at a cost of 29 government troops killed and 84 others wounded. Spokesmen said 20 waves of B52 strategic bombers hit througbout Quaog Tri, with 13 formations or the huge jets bitting within 10 miles of the city and the other seven aiming at the suspected North Vietnamese reinforcements up to 25 miles west of the capital. Results of the . B52 strikes, which dumped about 1,500 tons of bombs, were unknown, the U.S. command said. PJJ~ or Air Force and Navy jets knocked out a tank, two Soviet built guns U'ITt......,_ AFTER 41 MOVES fiKher His. Ed91 BELFAST (AP) -Nearly 4,000 Roman catholic women and children camped overnight in a football field after leaving their homes in a Belfast battle zone to protest the British Army's occupation of the area. Five more deaths Sunday pushed Northern Ireland's toll this year to 236 killed, already the worst since 2.12 died in sectarian battling in 1922. A land mine killed two British soldiers a t Crossmaglen; a policeman and a civilian were shot in Belfast, and an 18-year~ld youth died in a riot in Strabane. The Catholic women-and children followed their priest, Faiher Jack Fitzsimmons, out of the Lenadoon Avenue area Sunday claiming the army's show of force was "endanj:ering their lives." T he troops and gunmen of the Irish Republican Army have been squared off in the area since last Thursday. Despite army fears that the exodus was planned to clear the ground for a masStve IRA at· tack, there were only sporadic incidents. Father Fitzsimmons and other com. munity Jeaders negotiated until after midnight with British officlalJ in an at- tempt to gel the troops pulled out. Meanwhile, the women and children bed· ded down in the open or in tents at nearby Casement Park. They left their men behind lo guar<! their homes agai.n.!t looters. The British govenunent said it was considering the families' plea for the army to withdraw. The Lenadoon area ls a modern how:· Wttlc• >{11> 'Which parts. still like 1111ch other r illg development where the IRA's UGy cease-Cue broke down last week ln a row over housing allocations. Tbe army moved 700 troops Into the district after-the IRA launched a massive attack in an attempt to destroy a military post. Early today, troops claimed they bad shot two gunmen in a squad of four that traded shots for two hours with the army across the Andersonstown area, of which Lenadoon Avenue is part. McGovern Back in Hills For Rest, Batt"le Plans Bobby Has Edge WASHINGTON <UPn _ Sen. George I Third G S. McGovern flew lo the Black Hills of B ame--bl!-native Souih Dakota today for -two weeks of rest and lftll8Nllioo for his difficult to beat and be will be re-elected, but r, for «le, never underestimate the enemy;" Dole-said. Of Chess Match ~nderdog effurt to Ullle81 President Nix- McGovern's chartered Eastern Tristar m jet took off from NaUonal Airport at 7:33 a.m. (P!Yl') for tlae approximately three.flour flight to Rapid City, S.D. MCGOVERN will spend two weeks at Sylvan Lodge, not far from the Mt. Rushmore carvings of four Presidents. Aides said be would speod this week resting, perliaps witb a visit from his naming mate, Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, and next week In """llooing bis planning for the campaign. Eagleton will remain In W8'!1lin«ton for an attempt to pursuade dl.taldent labor leaden to support tile Oemocr.11• preeldentlll ticket. II WU generally agreed that the South DakA>U oenalor wu a decided underdog at this early stage ol the 1m campaign. . A NEWSWEEK magazine wrvey In- dicated tl18I II tile elecllon were beld to- day McGovern. could be certain of Cllly the lcur electoral votes of ht.I home stall and the three of tbe Dfltrlcl of Col!Dllbll. Tbe wrvey gave NlxM 231 cortaln eleo- tonl votes at this stage. • Roplbllcan Natlooal a.Jrman -Dole wwned hi.t party'• reeutara of "over confidence." He did eay, howeW:r, be felt Nixon was In "• very stroog poot. lien." " ••• We.1hlnt that he Is g.U. to be DOLE WAS interviewed &mday on the NBC program ~'Meet the Press. 11 McGovern spent tbe w.ekend at his W ashinglon home resting from the gruel- ing primary campaign that saw blm move from the rear of the pack. to cap- ture Ill s party's mmination at Miami Beach last week. .Easleton said Sunday he hoped Jo meet . this week with AFUIO President G<orge Meany in nn effort to clooe tile rill between the labo< leeder and tile McGovErn ticket. Eagleton said be believed be could persuade Meany that the McGovern-Eagleton tick<! would be P!'"ferable to that of Nixon and his run-nmg mate. "HE JUST HAS lo write down the two .tickets and look at them," F.oglelon eatd. Tbe AFL-<:10 will con...,. Ila SS. member ExecuUve Council Wedneoday to consid<r the 13.5 million member federa-tion'• campolgn courae. Eagi.ton also predicted tbot <JilcJl{O Mayor Rlchonl J. Daley woold not·~• • wallt" ond refuoe to -k for the •Jee. lion of McGovern. But, be added, "I've ~:..~the Mallclon. .. Faca the Nation. U!t«vlewed Cll CBS' Dole llicl M~ lhould quell hla ant1war ~ 1o moke certain the ClOt!Vllllioo ~ wlll hold In Mlaml 8-oext month II held Iii peece, Clark MaeG_., Nixon's coni-1:: d!lel, Aid JIOi4nllll clemcntri- DAIL Y PILO'l ""':' a maUer :•f coocem. . : DELl~RY SERVICE "~ REAID underJrwiid "0.11, .. , of ti. 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'· - -..,...--·-------...---' II the ~ aJm.." 1. :· I f ... .. l ' Menaberslaip Wanes ,,, Sierra Club Suffering By RICHARD M. llARNETJ' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Tho Sierra Club, vanguard of the environmental boom, is Josing members and races other new roadblocks , including oppo5ition from some of its fellow ,en, vironmentallsts. Although still mounting Vigorous legal and public opinion campaigns in its cause, the club is being forced to retrench and assume a more defensive posture. Ralph Nader said recently the Sierra Club was aligned with big bUJiness in- terests. A group of timber Cilmpanies is suing it for $10 million. Worrying the club's officials most, hov•ever, is a dramatic reversal of its growth trend. The dropouts have zoomed to more than 3,000 a month. dropped to 8 percent. Sall> ...,.. frlm. med. Starr wu cut from 100 to IO. Several offices were closed and 10me projects cul J>ack. Last month, 3,100 people joined tho Sierra Club or renewed membenhlp. "n>e same number dropped out. "If tee had been able to ffntlaue potolftfJ Hhe tee 11lere, tee ffUld haN tak· en on the tllOrld,'' ••t1• ltla% Linn, a maaagement ex-,ert called fn to do something about the dropout problem." br.lng canst"ative as well as con· HrV•tionlst. TUE SIERRA CLUB la becoming "old, wealtJJ.y, big and inclined to w or k • 1 through proper channels," said the magazine, noting also that, mtlike founder Pohn Muer, EJ:ecutive Director Michael McCloskey wears no bee.rd and has short hair, In an attempt to find out what ls turn· ing matiy of jts memben away, the club engaged Don H. Coombs of Stanford University to analyze !be membership rolls. Mon<kJ, J•lr 17, 1972 DAILY l'tlOT ' 2ndMurtkr Rap Jails Teenager LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A teenager who confessed killing a pollctman almost three years ago, but was freed by a legal 1talemate, was back behind bar• tod.I.)', awaiting a rralgnment for a n o t h e r slaying. 1be case of Alfredo Bryan. 19, earlier thls year angered Police Chief Edward Ptf. Davis, who coinplained that It wu an eJ:ampJe of what is wrong with the criminal justice system. Although Bry~ admitted killing the of ricer, he was still on the streets because of .. yo-yo justice," the chief said. The Sierra Club was founded in 1892 by John Muir, primarily as a hiking orga nization. lt took 15 years for it to grow to 1,000 membe~. and another 58 ~ars lo grow to 15,000 in 1960. . "If we had been able to continue grow. ing like we were, we could have taken on the world," says ' A1ax Linn, a . fnlnage-- ment expert called into do something about the dropout problem. He round that an astonishing 56 percent of the members have graduated from college and taken graduate studies; 30 percent are students; 14 percent are teachers ; 11 percent have Ph.D.s. In contrast with this overpowering "academic" tilt, only 7.4 percent of Sier· ra Club members are clerical or blue col· West Poitat to West Bryan was arrested late S8turda9 with Ulree other youth! in connection with the killing of J avier Medina , 23 . . WITH THE RISE o! ecology as a na· tional Issue during the pasL few years, the club's membershifi multiplied to its current peak of 141.000. Its self· designated tas k ,.... "to protect and con· serve the natural resources of the Sierra Nevada, the United States and the \\'orld" -Was endorsed by thousands of ,Americans who sent in unsolicited $20 memberships. ALONG WITH ITS membership and financial difficulties, the Sierra ti.ub is facing othet' new obstacles, · lar workers . Fewer than one in a hun- dred wh4;t ioins is an engineer. A very small percehtage are blacks or or other minority groups. CLUB OFFICIALS are not gravely concerned, feeling that conditions in the general economy and the very rapid growth of the club during the past t\YO years are responsible for the slump in growth, rather than any waning of in- terest in the environment cause. Currying the 22,000-pound Rodman Gun, a historic cannon moved from the United State Military Academy at West Poi nt to Fl. Poi nt Museum at San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, are th ree bridge paint· ers. The Civil War relic cast in 1866, which fired a lO·inch, 128-pound ball three miles, is being shined up for permanent display at the his· tori c western fortress. Medina was killed by three shots from a passing car. Police thought it might be a youth gang killing, connected to a bat· tie between the Flats Street gang, to \\'hich Medina belonged, and the rival Third Street gang. Police broadcast a description o[ the assailants' car, provided by wrtnesses, and an auto matching the description was ha lted a few minutes later !everal blocks away, resulting in the arrest of Bryan, Cesar Perez, 19, John Nunez, 18, and Ri cardo Ortiz, 18. The Supreme c.ourt recently rejected the club's claim that it represented all the people in a suit against a Walt Disney project at Mineral King in the Sierra. . Hippies Denied Inheritance , SACRAMENTO (AP) -Harold P. Last summer the club was growing at the rate of 30 percent a year. Assuming this would continue, the orficers laid out an ambitious program ~ environmental battles. During the recent California election campaign. Nader crjticized the Sierra Club for not backing a strong an- tipollution measure on the ballot. The "Bay Guardian," a liberal bi week· Jy newspaper, said the club was becom· Ing "pabey wal!ey" with big business. In the July issue of San Francisco Magazine, the club is taken to task for Half of those who qi.tit have been members for only one year. Club con· ser.ratlon apecialist Cbarlq Clausen believes lflOlt of the qa!tten dO ftOt abPn. don environmental activism bu~ tur.i their attention to "'the many local organizations which have 1prung up." Bowhay Jert Sl,999 in his will for each of his 16 grandchildren and great-nieces and nephews, but they will lose it all, Bowhay decreed, if they become hippies or hang around with drug users. Bowhay's will was probated last week in Sacramento Superior Court. .. Bowhay, who died Sept. 7, 1970 et age 62 shortly after making out the will, left an estate valued at about $70,000. If any of the youngsters becomes a hip- pie, the will says, he is to receive only $1 instead of the $1 ,999. They were expe.:ted to be arraigned Tuesday. Bryan, then 16, allegedly fought with officer Jerry Maddox during a disturbance in the East Los Angeles l\texican-American distrid in August of 1969. By February, the growth rate had Tehachapi 'T·ense, Quiet' BAKERSFIELD (AP) -or. ricials at the California C-Or· rectional Institution in nearby 'Mud' Loss At $25,000 LOS ANGELES (UPI) Mud four feet deep flooded the Gome or actor Red Buttons iuring the weekend. Tehachapi say they a r e hopeful a racial confrontation which rocked the facility and left 11 men injured during the weekend is over. The prison was termed "quiet but tense" SUnday as authorities transferred 7 1 "troublemakers" to o t be r facilities. No .incidents were reported. Tear· gas and shots fired in the air stopped the outburst. One inmate was seriously injured, officials aaid, and 17 others were Injured enough lo require medical treatment. Twenty-one men w e r e transferred to the caJifornia A1en's Colony in San Luis Obisjio and 50 taken to the California Training Facility at Soledad. , .- r. A water main broke on a hillside above the home, caus- ing the cascade of mud, which blocked !be driveway, ripped Jlf an air conditioning unit and Oowed into the house, causing m estimated $25,000 damage, police said. The disturbance erupted late Friday night in a housing unit after a white and a black in- mate had fought over a seat in the dining hall About JS in- mates joined ln the fray, which authorities called a racial and "gang type" fight. Two bousine: units wen damaged In the d1'1urbance, said the apokeaman. He aid extra guards were on duty and visiting privileges have been lll!pellded pending a hss •Ing oltemiona. We could run short of electricity. 2 Cliicago Runs Set By TWA SA N FRANOSCO (AP) -Trans W o r I d Airlinea has inaugurated twice-daily service between here and Chicago with the Lockheed LlOtt, billed as the world's quietest jetliner. The passenger p 1 a n e _mad first commercial flight une 15 from Los An !es to SI. I.oob. jet carried 117 on lb first flight from here to · Oticago. Jts takeoff noise on · departure was approximately 96 decibel>, compared with the maximum or 105.6 the FFA allows for new planes, TWA said. Nat Wood Wed Again LOS ANGELES (UPI) - · Actor Robert Wagner and ac- tress Natalie Wood are off on · a week-long sailing honey- . moon, the second time aNlund. • They were remarried Sun.. , , day on their newly purchased • yacht off the coast of Southern C&lifornia. They married the first time 14 years ago, when be-was a, 29-year-old matinee idol and she was a 19-yeaMld child star. Four yean later they divorced, and married ' others, each later being di- . 'vorced again. " llrs Bf; FRIENDLY ll you have new hCl&ltbcn or know or· •nyono movlni to our area, tJlcue tell Ut so that "'e may ~--ten« • , trlcndl,v welcome and h<lp them to bOcomo •CQualntfd In their ""'" ll\llTOUn4inp. l sa. cast rm 4M em <IM-Hll HDr ris1tar '4M174 178 PAIRS MEN'S TRADITIONAL PANTS REG. 1.50 ta 16.00 NOW 50% OFF 352 PAIRS MEN'S FLARED PANTS lEW. 12.00 ta 15.00 NOW 50% OFF 205 PAIRS MEN'S FLARED JEANS REG, 7.00 t• 11.00 NOW 50%. OFF Also 50%, • variety of Men's Snirt< end Jackets, Boys' Snirls and Boys' Rared Permanent Press Jeans. Please be sure of sizes , , , ,._II Soles Must Be Final. Looking Forward to Serving You. llAHUMtllCA•• ' MAJTI• CMAJ:•I 1Cli'at ___ Cdfomt•"'"80,l'honoe42'7081 STllU HOUlS1 MON. THlU fll. 10100 A.M ...... •.M, SAT. 1.0:00 .. 6100 a.osm SU NOA t ' ' '1Rememberthat record· breakingheatwavelastyear? Youweren'ttheonlyone . sweating it out. SO were we. The demand for electricity hit an all-time peak on Sept.ember 13,1971. It was 13% higher than the 1970peak. We met all demands, but our syst.em was.severely strained. ·H-But what about the ye1a.I'l>, -- ahead? Eachyearthe demand for electricity keeps right on growing. New homes , keep going up. And schools. Office buildings. Fact.cries. All will require additional electricity. So will the new equipment needed to clean up the enVironment. Unless Edison is pennitt.ed to build additional power plants and transmission l.4tes, itmaybecomenecessaryto blackout blocks of customers on a rotational basis within two or three years. Yet permits necessary to build any new major plants have been delayed or bloc~ed for the past four years. Conservation is vital. While I power shortage did not become I raOIJ· in 1971, the thrnl of one did: Edison ls.woninc with lndus1ti1I ind business firms to consen1 electricity In offices and factories. I • That's an immediate problem. We're working bard to resolve it. The long-range problem requires finding more ways to conserve energy and to use our nation's t.otal energy resources wisely. That involves all of us. In Edison's fossil-fueled plants, for example, we're now able to produce 30o/'o . more electricity from a unit -of-fuelthan-in-1948t- That helps. And by using higher-voltage transmission lines, we're also able t.o deliver electricity more efficiently. Perhaps you can conserve energy, too. Have you COl\Sidered ways t.o make every kilo'l;Vatt count at home? We'll be bappyt.o send yo~ a list of practical suggestions. Write: Conservation, Edison, P.O. Box•800, Ros,emead, Califqmia 91770. I I , ·) I .. • DAILY PILOT EDITOIUAL PAGE Re cycling Solid W a·stes --..;....---,' Orange County's solid waste dl$J>Osal system has been praised by experts as one ot tho best In .the na- tion. The county ts also said to have the lowest disposal cost in the United States. Volume continues to grow, however, with predic- tions of a doubling of trash and garbage output by 1980 and quadrupling by the year 2000. This means the county must not only acquire more landfill sites but also test out recycling methods for solid wastes. The court ruled that immunity from revealing con· fidential sources is not constitutionally protected, that newsmen can be forced to reveal their sources to federal grand juries and in states where conlidentiallty L! not protected by law. 'CJ[J ' The Board ol Supervisors last Thursday approved a budget Item of $!.! million for a proposed disposal site north ot San Juan Capistrano. And recycling at couilty disposal stations may be tried, especially if federal funds are made available. The recycling wa:uld involve a process which, at the fi rst step, would salvage ferrous metal, paper, glass and other products. A secon d step would involve production of gas, oil and charcoal. The pt6ject may or may not prove to be feasible and economic. If it is successful, it will be' a fine adjunct to a disposal program which sees fill dump sites ending up as regional parks. . Protecting Ne~s So~ces A way out from a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court which would seriously have crippled the people's right to know about corruption and cnminality in pub- lic and private domains was left by the wording of that decision. This left the way open for the 'congress to follow the lead of Calilornia and 13 other states where news reporters• right Dot to reveal their sources of informa· tion is protected by statute. This give·s newsmen the legal protection they need to rrieet their responsibilities in a free and open society. California's senior Senator, Alan Cranston, becau~ of his pre·political life as a foreign correspondent for a major U.S. wire service, thoroughly understands the blow to law enforcement the court decision represents. He has introduced a bill which would protect by statute at the federal level newsmen's right to confidentiality. The Supreme Court ruling, and especially its com· J>Qser, Justice 'Byron R. While, disappointed many ad· mirers of "Whizzer'! White. He totaJJy missed the point that immunity from compelled testimony is not an ef· fort to gain special privilege for news reporters': It is simply a protection of their function in behalf of a free society . He and a court majority apparently have yet to learn that the function ol a free press in a free nation is to inform the people who put their representatives into office. Indispensable to that function obviously is the protection ol news sources. Without a protective shield, t hose sources dry up -and the people are the losers. Cranston's bill should have strong pubjic support. New Democratic Profile's Fali.rcles Surprise: Quota Idea Doe_sn't Work M I A M I BEACH-The d!sconteoted Democrats are in a mood now to reex· amine once again the way they present their presidential nominee to the general \'oting public. The old way did not work too well and the new way i~;not much bet- ter. At the root of the problem, so far as the national conven- tion is concerned, is the idealistic but fal- lacious concept that quotas of blacks. the you ng and the poor produce a Democratic profile represen~ tative of the nation at large. Like most sociological formulae, the new Democratic profile is found wanting in many im portant respects. In the first place. it is not democratic. In the second place. it fails to develop the leadershi p qualities essential in pollUc.s. PICKING A DELEGATE because she ls a 19-year-{)ld, black girl from a family on relief ·lo the exclusion of a white boy whose family is not on relief illustrates the fallacy. Neither, in fact, represents anything except adherence to the faulty idea that certain fixed percentages of sociological groups in the proper mix represent the will of the people. There were some delegations to the na· tional c<1nvention with higher than their proportionate share of women and (rucHARD WILSO~ blacks. Theoretically, under the quota system, their numbers should have been trimmed down to make room for more males or more whites. - THE QUOTA SYSTEM doesn't work any better in poJltics than it does in education llr employment in the building trades. Realization of this evident fact at the Democratic National ConventiOn ought to help clear tbe air of the sociological fog interfering with vision on such issues as busing and equal employ~ ment opportunities, as well as politics. But that isn't all that is bothering di5:00ntented Democrats. They all know that the state-by-state primary system is not only unrepresentative, but productive of potentially disastrous results in pick· ing a presidential candidate. A "front runner" for t~e flllm.}nation it is Uscovered. may, as II result of the prjo8\y system, ba p-ojected into hit leading position by small fractions of the electorate. TIIlS WAS THE CASE with Sen. George McGovern, the resul t of whose nomination for Presiden t was being oon· templated with the gravest misgivings by elected Democratic officials who would have to run on the same ticket. The Democratic N,alional Convention thus found itsell faced with choosing from a list of candidates a nominee, whomever he was, who probably could not command popular support from as much as one-third of the party, acc<1n!ing to the Gallup poll. Reform has thus proved to be an im- perfect instrument for the selection of a candidate who would represent the will of the whole Democralic party. In the end, power politics had to reassert itself in the nominating process if complete chaos was to be avoided. THE RESULT is that the reforms \Viii have to be reformed before the Democratic party can approach a state of perfection, if there is one. in the selec- tion of its nominee in the future . In perspective, the old ways of organiz~ ed politics were better suited to picking a nominee who could enthusiastically be supported by the broad· spectrum of Democrats. Even Hubert Humphrey after the debacle of 1968 retained a more solid base of support than is ·ia:ety to under pin the Democratic nominee of 1972. The success of politics is betteG measured in terms of . results than methods. In this respect, the old politics has a fairly good record in bringing to the top leaders who were generally recognized as the best or strongest.their party had to offer. The old politicians had one sure guide. They tried to find a candidate who could win. On-Becomin-g-a W ester-ner Like most of the grown-up folk ln California I CAME here. I'm one of that considera ble army of people born outside !he state borders whom former Governor Goodwin Kn ight called Elsewhereians. When you re·settle, it's important to try to sound like the people you are now living \vilh rather than the people you left Like e\cry oth- er Elsc\\•hcreian. l had to learn bow to sound like a CalifOr· nian, or a Western· · er anyhO\\', shorily after taking up resi- d<!nrc here. You mµy be s aid to hri v e begun y o Ur process of \Ves~rnizin,i::. espec ially if you come lrom the East Coast, when you find out that Frontage Road is NOT the longest high":ay in California . i\1~ FIRST EXPERIENCE of living in the ~ ar West ~·as in Nevada, in tbe Reoo ORANGE COAST DAll Y PILOT! Robert N. \\'ced, I'uhlishcr Tho1'1as Kccvil, Erl itor Albrrt \\I, Bates .. Edi torial Page Erlllor . Monday, July 11, 1972 \ (cHARLES McCABE) and Lake Tahoe area. I learned life was difrerent in Tahoe when a comp,lete stranger entered my cabin at 2 a.m. and started beating on the soles of 'my naked sleeping feet with a tennis racket. This was notice that I was to get off my can and assist in fighting a forest fire, and with no damned pay either. I went along with this curious native custom, on .account I would have had the bejabbers beaten out of me if I didn't. Since 1 knew as much about fighting flres · as I knew aOOurhlstology, it was agreed that I would represent and act for the group, f e e d i n g bWletins to the Reno wire service desks about the. prog~ ress ol the fire , and l!s control. This episode made me feel pretty Western, jn e hurry. SOON AFTER Tms I d~covered the pass word in western Nevada. You met some dude somewhere, in the Safeway or Jn the bar of the Riverside-Hotel in Reno, and what you said was: "Truckee's nm· nin' kinda high, ain't It?'' And you nod· ded , pleased with your sagacity. The Truckee's always running higb1 in the view of somebody. After 25 years, I still find the sentence the simplest way to reach the heart of a citizen of the area. lt i!J,..,a complete arid final cooverution. You a~e one of the boys, quick as a Dash and 1'1tcy too .. I also learned in Nevada lbot your true Westerner never aslrl anybody where he cai;ne from . Or even u JnUch as his name. This form ol courtesy Impressed me greatly: It was a frontier survival, a ritual from ·a time when you clidn' know whether the man wol'klng the vein hesi~ you may not have once walkld away with h.alf the assets ol lha Firal NaUonal Bank qf SI0111 City. Or bl wanted tor rape in Count7 Cork. or a song which was popular with the troops during the Spanish American War. "Oh, What was your name in the States? Was it Johnson or Thompson or Bates? Did you murder your wife? Qjd you flee for your life? Oh, What was your name in the States?" In San Fra{lcisco, my first contact with transcendent wisdom was learning that you don't get drunk. You get a heat on. This charming expression, so far as I know, is seldom il ever used outs'de the Golden State. I cannot ima~ine Where the phrase came from, or what 1t is supposed/ to mean. It c<1uld be from drinking the contents of a can of Sterno, a popular' fuel of the Depression day!. A can of the stuff, taken internally. had the effect o( about sit. fingers o( bourbon. It cost a dµne: IF YOU REALLY wanted to show class in 'l''rlsco, 1 Jearned, you looked up at the summer fog as it lay over the city of a morning, and informed one and all, .,Hot- tening up in the valley, eh?" Thls query showed a sound grasp of meteorological principles, of the subUe geography of the state, and hinted at extensive experience as a weathet·beaten rancher. It-still works good. Dear Gloomy Gus U T. J.'1 ESP Is so good about predicting an earthquake a6out July 17, (Gui; July II) WbY didn't he give u.s the lime, too so ..-we could all brace ourselvC1! · -A.F.IJ. Thft fHtv,.. nfltC'lt ,...,.,.. vl....... Mt '*4'1Mr]ly tl'IOM tf fM' ~..,.. ...,. t<Our .et -.. Gio.nr Gut. 0.Jlf P'llllt TllI8 BIT OF MANNERS reminded IM.--L---------...J • I Hospital Beds In Surplus EDITORIAL RESEARCH Who would have thought hospit als might someday be complaining about a shortage of patients? Well, that someday has arrived. The average occupancy Tate of hospital beds dropped last year to 75,9 percent, the lowest point in a decade, the · AmerJcan Hospital Association reports. This means that almost one bed in every four was emply. Only ihrtk years ago it was one in five. The figures seem to be continuing downward again this year, indicating that they are not a fluke . Hospital fiscal managers think they see a trend -and view it with alarm. According to Medical World News, a bed that is vacant costs the hospital from two-thirds to three- fourths as much as· one ~t is occupied. MAN'.. .. E~U...~ATroNS are being of- fered fo r the tarnab!lut. The number of hospital beds has increased over the past decade at a faster pace than has popula- tion. Thfre baa been a tfghtenin,.g of ~!~~~~e :r~~ft~i:~ef!:i~~~ =~: up and on their feel as .soon as possible. Although hosj>ilal<adliliSsion! rosl> slight· ly last year, lo a total of 30,126;844, the increase 'was more than o fr s e t staiisticaJJy by a shortening or the · average_stay. "A recession doesn't neceSsarily mean that admissions go down, but It does put pressure on doctors to get patients out quickjy," explains Richard W. Foster, assistant director of the American Hospital Assocla tiori1s research division. Charges for hospitalizatioD frequently run in excess of '$100 a day in metropolitan ·areas. · •1 A woman who spent two nights and a day in a Washingtoo, D.C. hospital re. ceived a bill for $550C. It Included charges for a semi·private room, laboratory tests, and the use of an operating room lot the resetting or a broken bone in her wrist. The\doctor's fee was an additional $150. ' FEW ITEMS . IN the government's Consumer Price Index .have risen faster in the past three years than those for hospital care. Between May 1969 and May 1912, the . latest monthly' index figurea reported, charges for semi· private hospital, roorris rose by 36 per- cent. Operating-room charges Wtjnt up by SO percent. In the same· period of time, the average for all medical ,Costs went up only about hall u la•t (17 perceqt ), _and th~ were going up faster than the en- tire ind& (II percent) for all things that· Americans buyr Hospital salarjes have IOI\• up for nurses, jailifors abd Qther eniployes -~ often maki'ng up for years of un· dc,rpayment. Complex and cosUy equii>- ment must be added to keep abrea•t of medical technology. But more than that, Fortune wrttcr Edmund K. Faltennayer has d1$cemed, "Cost controla havo alwoys · be<!n l'{OAk hf many hospitals. partly be<:luse many of the doctors havo no stake In proinotlng hospital ef· 'IE ... -if the doctor hat tllo l>t&t or m~t )'t!s' ·end a conaelence about >rasting money, •Faltermayer added, ''the crow• Ing menace of ma\practieo llllta..., In- duce him to pile on precautionory tw and treatment -which he Cu do without rattalot.'' Can nothing he done? 'l'he ·10vernment and )lealth ll>lurance companlos together have enough rtportr a n d recom· meoclaUooa to.lillJ. mdlng abell. .. ( ' ' \\ ' / 1 ' ,, \ ,, _...., ? ,, ''WHICH WAY TO THE MS. ROOM . Living Standard: Real or Illusory? I sent my boy to the country store to buy some poker chips, and he return ed with "the best ones they had ." They v.·eren't cheap in price, but they were cheap in everything else: in composition, texture, c<1lor, and Jack of stacking abili- ty. And I remembered the chips we use in the city, which are maybe 50 years old: solid.and impressive, richly c<1lored and well-stacking. I don 't supose we paid as much thea as we did for the new-type chips. What 1 don't under· stand is that as we get wealthier, every- thing we buy seems to get tattier. You would think that one of the indices of a "rising standard of liv- ing'' would be a rise in the quality of goods; but almost the reverse seems to be ti'ue. THIS MAY BE explained by one of Parkinson 's Laws, but 1 have never heard of it. My father had an Essex (and later a Graham-Paige) that lasted a decade and was still going strong; I feel , compelled to trade in ·my car every two year~, before it falls apart and costs more to repair than I would get tor it. When We came to this country from England, 'he mailed back an umbrella that he ~d used for 15 Years, and had crackcif. The London store sent him a new one free, apologizing for the "defect." I SUPPOSE PART of it ls what is ~YD NEY J. HARRl0 called "planned obsolescence." nm 11, il the economy is going to continue to churn furiously, we must make things that will not last, so that people will keep buying new ones at freqi.:.ent intervals. But I can't believe that is a sound principle OD. which to base a long.term economy. Almost everything seems to be ~ dily made these days, and I don't think it's fair to blame all of it on negligc.n& workmanship. It 's certainly as simple (.i) grind out soli d poker chips as flimay_ ones, · but I suppose it's not ~ remunerative, and people have bee!!; trained to accept whatever they get apd shrug it off. "You shaft me, and I'll sha.ft you," seems to be the credo of the day. MUST QUALITY deteriorate a.s q&:::;-to tity rises? Is there any necessary inverse relationship between the two? Should .. $10 umbrella be expected to bust after' year, when my father 's was faulted afte1 15? Or should a $25,000 house fall apa~ at the seams after a few years, whGL some log cabins standing near my sumo mer house are still-snug and tight an' immensely liveable after 100 years " lierte winters? We have scarcely begun to as;, ourselves tM_se questions, so infatuate& hav~ '!le been ~ith our zooming standar4 of ltv1ng. But 1s that standard real or i{. lusory when the extra money we make can only purchase products that crumble in our hands overnight? A Faithful Companion Metnory Is man's most faithful com· panion. No sultan ever had a more loyal servitor, no soldier a more he}pful com· rade. Without memory to sustain and console him, man would be unable to' bear the troubled midnight& ef the sour that every human being muat confront at. times. You've come a pretty far piece. down life1s hlghway if you can look back and remember when • .. n: ll' AS ~ to find a large family tbat haan•t lost at least one of its members to tuberculosis. • No matter how many gius marbles you had, you didn't amount to muc~ In the schoolyai\I gang unless you owned · °"'" or two made of agate. A real "ag. gie, 11 as they were called, seemed to juvenile eyes more lustrous than the Hope diamond. There :Still were more outdoor than In- door toilets in tile nation, and only !be very rich had homes wltb twO or inore batllrooms. A man !elf completely ac- ceptable eodally If he remmnllend '"'°"' !y to lai& !be ,...1ar .._.. .... k batb on Sabrd.\y nigh( !bat CUiiom dictated. A TOP Illll'AUIAHI' was one tblll chorged 10 cenb IM!ud o1 five 1<ir a cup of coffee. • Practlcally "ll"lllCIO lllou16l.lhat the nickel glass ol beer and !be two-bit haircut were U.S. lnsUtutlons tllot would last u IGnc as Ille liq fttw. Many 1 home k'!>I , one or (...__H_AL __ BO_YLE _ __,) grandmother'~ bust!~ 3mong j t 1 treasured attic souventrs. Can you im· agine a . little granddaughter in the future primp~ up In her grandmotller's miniskirt? A MAN WAS IN the height of las~ If his wardrobe contained at least one pair of Spais with pearl gray buttons. Spelt became quite COllU'oversial. Realists said they were even more useless than cravala. lle(endtrs replied that spats helped keep a man's feet warm but eventually they went the way of ~ bus· tie, too. , Children" bedrooms wero so cold. at night !bat lhlllghtlu! mothers would sometimes warm the sheet with a fire--heated brick. Tboee were the daY, -rtmember. • ,. . .---,B11 Geo,..e ---. Deor George: My husband Is an ePP11anoo repairman Who spenda hli d•YI mald!lfl house calls and SOJDetlmCI I get pretty Jealous. He aw .. ra ht never paya any attenUon to Iha "omen be ,..,, Can I believe tbisT Dw Jealous: JEALOUS Cerlain17. AD repoirmeo al...,. Ianor• ....... -they •• 1111 .... ty. (Now maJbe I..., If\ my drier find even (f tllo _,iol, 11!1 .. plred.) \ " ~Kloc f-.. ~ J.t.. 191t. w .. w dslltt __..... • "I realized I had too much party when I found out I bad · put flash cubes in everybody'a drinks.'' • L. M. Boyd Salesmen Ache In Left Shoulder A CIDCKEN1S fat is right under the skin. Even as yours and mine. Dieters please note .. lie! your poultry. IN JUST about 18 out of every till divorces, the hus- band deserts before the wife calls a lawyer. IF YOU want to know how far a mile is, young lady, take 2,437 steps. That's average for a grown girl. ACCIDENTALLY turned up in a study of medical rec- ords nationwide was the curious fact that a disproportionate number of tJ:av- eling salesmen complained to their doctors about pain in the left shoulder. Diagnoses varied widely, But finally a · bright medical fellow in St. Louis got -it. While driving, they lean on the left elbow overlong, fixing that shoul- der in an awkward position. This il- luminating discovery led to further statistical research which proved bur· sitis occurs far more often in the left shoulder than in the right. QUEJ!Y -Is it a fact a duck's quack never has an echo? THIGHS or all reptiles are horizontal. Thighs or all manuna ls are vertical. This is a dandy generality. Let's not clutter it up with a lot of small talk about whales and porpoises. They don't coWlt. A TINT, a shade, a tone. Do you know the difference? Take red. Mixed with white. it makes a tint. Pink. Mixed with bl ack, it makes a shade. Maroon. Mixed with black and white, it makes a tone. Rose. REPORTS Fred \Villiams : "Laboratory e~ h~ve determined that 10 average cows, burp enOllih piethane gas each day to keep a stove, a water 11$ter and a furna ce burning in a small house." /. BONES -The much discussed tape measurements of the ideal woman do not correspond· with Uie n\easurements or the average fashion model. Said angular model stands 5-foot-8 in her socks. weighs 124 pounds and tapes 33-24-34. All bones. Fa lJing downstairs, it's said, she is thought to sound like a dice cup. AMONG those successful gentlemen who earn more than $100,000 a year, surveys show, 14 percent never eat any breakfast. HOW, PRAY, did these towns get their names? Bat· tiest, OkJa. Dames Quarter, Md. Froth Proof, Fla. Nine Times, S.C. Smoky Ordinary, Va. Afysterious. · A SA D statistical study shows most suicides iJ'e ar· ran ged so the person the victim wants to hurt will find the body. . . Address mail to L. 111. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1!75, New-- port Beach, Calif. 92680. TWA Fined $87,000 For Flight Oversales WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Civil Aeronautics Board has fined Trans World Airlines $87 ,000, the largest fine ever levied against an airline, for overbookjng passeRger flikhts. The fine was the result of an investigation by the CAB's of. fk:e of consumer a f f a I r 1 covering the period between 1971 and 1972. According to the CBA, TWA oversold reservations on hun- dreds of flights and was unable to provide passengers wif.h seats at departure ·time. The procedure known as "oversale," is-done with the expectation that not a 11 passehgers who made reserva. tions on a particular flight will arrive to claim their seats. Develop your powers of concentrfo tion, your intuition (ESI') learn to meditate, learn mind control. Only Yooa Center offers you the great com~ion of Rafa Yoga for developil'\g mind-control, 1nd Hatha Yoga for building.. a healthier bodv. Break old h1biu, feel • • energy su(ging throughout your body~ Be successful. 811 hippy. Be healthy. You will bl! 1m1zed at what our eight Wetk ~our• will do for you . Don't miss·~ Free demon1tration tomorrow at BPM ·YOGA CENTER 445 E. qth St .. ~ta Mesa · Ph. 641H1281 Monday, Ju~ 17, 1972 DAILY PILG: rged • SACRAMENTO (AP) .o. F.d dw!c.,, 1be ~ wtll H.-II• yeon old, u ... flow," saya Assemblyman Leo aloae ID 1 droory downtown McClrtby, 1 San Francisco hole! -.., eots II cheap Democrat who Is chairman of ""tauranto and (eta •bl>u1 1be -legislatures n e ,.1 y '1D a moolh in Social Socurl· ,.tabll!hed Joint Committee ty ind vderln benefits from on Aging. Commluton M Aging, heod.s receive 1be mort 1 t a t t ·tho only state 1gency that uslstance are property tax devotes lt,.ll on a full-time relief for elderly homeowners baala to the problema ol the. and health care and welfare elderly. 11 has a budget this paymeilts for llnanciaUy year ol $U61000 -up from needy elderly. point wbeJ't the llate pleb up lour pen:en1 ol the homeowntr tax up to 97 percent. __,,,,, llale'r Medl.caJ"btalth care plan for 1be needy pays hospilal and medical c:osla for these elderly and o t h e r persons who cannot afford to do 90 themselves. Under Med~ Cal reforms enacted last year, a patient ts limited to two doc- tor visits and 1wo .....,. 1lona per JllOl\lh unJfto ~ Cal olllcl1ls 1 u t b o r l 1 I othtrwl!e. 'Ib6 state welfare the fovtrnment. "lo 1be society and In Its ad-$25,000 last year -and a nine-The properly tax relief for member staff,.. elderly homeowners g 1 v e ' provld,. monthly granls of .. to $2118 which elcluly ~ can apply for, 1nd they cm also enroll in 1 food 1tamp program provldlng up to Ill worth of food a month. "It's rough. You simply eat vertlaements. the whole ac- a1 the cheapest mtauranla cent Is 6b 'youth -look at and aleep al the cheape>1 tbooe counlless ads of sun- hotei. -only I (Uell tllere bronzed )'(lllllg people. All· this aren't any cheap boteb aJ'J,1 denegrates older people," adds tnoft, ''be said as be rested on McCarthy. He says his 11prin. a ahaded park bench. . ctpal goal Is to eliminate, or at Set up ln 19SS, the com-t~ financial aMlstance on a mission devotes most of its sliding scale based on income tJme lo matchl.ng up 1ocal ~ level. 'lbe scale goes from a grams with federal money. It - "All tlte ettler Pll• a cround nit· 1119 ~ Ifie '111t I 90 to tlte park ctul talk te ·~ •t tN fello;ies I Jc.totc." • Rent gobbl.1 up 171 a month leas1 reduce, the Isolation ol and almo8t all the rest of his old age." money goq. li!f., food, be l,D recent times, polltlclans related. ~than~ waste• have bad one powerful factor money on .,igazfjil!s or prodding them to pass bills to · newspipers,.' he goe8 to 1be help old people: tbe shift" In downtown llbrary .. and reads population patterns that has them there. · 'He considers sent the number of pe~ 6S hl"""'ll lucky 11\at he doesn'1 and older 908rlng by 63 per- smoke or drink, because that cent in the last two decades . wouldn't leave enough money "Senior Citizens are 17 per· for food . 1 , , cent of the vote nationwide, Hubbard Is one of 1.8 mJllion and the politicians are aware people 65 years of.age. or older of thiJ," pointed out one leg· in California -the state many islative observer. is currently overseeing about 50 federal grants totaling clooe to 1700,000. Traditionally, Baxter says, federal monies have been-run- neted into programs !or 1be elderly -Sudl 85 Jeisure aC· Uvltied, health counseling and employment referral services -in a very disorganized way . But be thinks the situation may improve in the future. "Preslden1 Nixon signed the Nutrition Act In March," Bax· ter said, uand that is going to give California $8.5 million - with an emphasis on spending for better coordination of pro- grams for the elderly.11 The three general areas where senior citizens now Funds Flow Like Water people lilt• to uitnk of as a Even lho6e who support ef· sun-and-fun paradl.se -who forts to help the elderly poor often plod tlrougb their last say Caltlornla •a w e l! a re , years in bleak poverty and home.owner property 1 a x loneliness. . relief and health care pro-WASHINGTON (UPI) - C1ooe to 00..lhird of the grams &re' generally way The drinking habits o f state's senior cltiuns live bY · ahead Of ~ states. But they Americans b r o u g h t the themselves -many of them BtW grumble • . • government nearly $1.% billion in drab, dirty hotels in ''Generally, 'the whole con-in revenue in the first three downtown areas d. big cities cem for the most vulnerable months of this year, the from Sacramento to San segments of our\ society -the Internal Revenue Service has Diego. • poor, disabled and aged -bas reported. · "All the other guys just sit degenerated during Gov. Federal purchase price tax. around the hotel waiting to Re a g a n's administration," es Lotalled $1.18 billion in the die, but I go to the park-and said ooe critic close to the period -about $130 million talk to some ol the fellows I legislative process. more than the government know. I put in some good· .. David Baxter, who Is ex· collected in the same quarter mileage every day," said Hui> ecuUve director of the State of 1971. ~rd,whodurlnghlsworldnglP",..,..,..-,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.. .... life held joba: ranging from Now Open Mondiy-CIOMd sund1y handyman to cannery work. About one.fourth of ,i PARIS INN California's elderly -in· cludifW Hubbard -IJve below what stale and federal o1. CONTINENT AL CUISINE ficials all "the poverty line" of $2,400 annual Income. Now Open For LUNCHEON 11 :JO to J:J~MH. tt.111 Fri, Ask For Our 'Culloary M .. t .. piece' c ... ,t ... $3 95 Din nor • From 6 p.m. • Mon. thru Thur. HORS D'OEUVRES AT TIIE BAR Since tbe late 116 O s , California legislalors h a v e heen Wklng more about help. ing the aged. But tbe experts concede there is a lot more ground to be covered -even if the state's health care and welfare programa for the elderly are some ~ the most advanced in 1he nation. "By habit, we neglect t1der· ly people, and tbe leglslalure mirrors the public attitude in this respect. Once the attitude Han Yw Hur4 Altovt M9mltlp. Only Danclnt-Lato Sup,.r • 'CLUB DE PARIS SOI 30t~ ST .. NEWPORT IEACH 675-0300 A lot of people, watching .oor new , building going up on Ne\'poit Center OINe in Newport, how commented, 'Very impressive looking ... butwhot ore \hey going 1D 112 in there all day?" . --. Well, fer one thing; we11 be wrtting a lot of checks. last year. fot,iinstonce, PotjficMutuol paid its pollt)'OWlle!Sand their beneficiaries mote than $175 , million in benefits. This money helps peqile f1JY doctorl' and hospital bills, funeral expenses, and tax obligations. It replaces incxxne lost throogh retire- ment, sickness Of disablement. It helps kids go to <Xlllege. Pays food, clothing and housing expenses for surviving dependents. And helps people cope with finonciol emergencies in. other ways. I Color portrait of your child, 1.49. Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5 x 7" size photo ..• 1.49-each • Set of 4 wallet size ...... 1.49 set ,,._..,_..,,...,_. __ _,,,, __ ~,,_..-. ' Two children photographed together ••• 2.98. A Ptnnty IXClutlYtl Full color • portrall1 In a 1lze 1ull1bl• !qr fromlng ••• perfect for gifl1. All portraits delivered to you at our store by Penney associates. .._ _____________ _,,_ _ _,Age llmi1: 12 years. JCPenney 24 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH JULY 18·19·20-21·22 T11tt4ay, WH""'9y, Tti•rMloy A frlffy: 10 A.M.-1 P.M.: n .M_. P.M. Soturdoy: 10 A.M.-1 P.M.; 2 P.M.-l:JO P.M. Because, first and foremost, we're a life and health insurance company: our career ogenl> sij down with individuols, fumilies one! businesses and help them pion for their finoncial security. Notion- olly, we're ranked 32nd in asset> OiJI of the 1,800 and some insurance com- panies peqile hove to choose from. Our cusltimers currently own nearly $6 billion worth of life insurance. Pacific Mutuol is licensed to sell ii> insurance products in 49 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. And our customers ore served locally by more than o hundred individuol and groop insuro11C2, claims ond mortgoge loon offices throughout the United Stoles. The ossels of Pacific Mutuol life Insur· once Company exceed S 1 billion. So many of the BOO people Working in oor new bu ilding will be watching over the investmentof hun9re<fsof millions of dollars. Strength and safety ore the most important crifeno when we select the investments thot will stand behind oor customers' insurance policies. They might be investments in new commercial ot housing construction. Or utility and indu!triol bonds tho! help create new services for people, like a water system in Florido°' a telephone netv.Mc in Illinois. to capitalize on short-term development opportunities. Redevco purchases and resells improved properties. PACIFIC LAKE PARK DEVELOPITlEnT comPAny This company builds ond owns apart- ment complexes wh ich offer great ~ places to live. like lake PorkAportmen!s in la Meso,.neor Son.Di!l90. 254 a~ tectvrolly interesting opartment hon.- are set amid toll pines, meandering wolkwoys and ponds stocked with fish. More projects along 1hese lines are planned. ® l'W:IAC CDl'ISUlnnG CORPORATIOl1 PCC provides sophisticated marketing services to agent> all aver the country. It concentrates on creative finonciol planning for individuols and businesses and lorge estafes. Often combining extensive research with oompu19r anolysis, PCC provides unique soluttor. to complex financial planning problems. ® PACIFIC EOUfTY SALES COITlPMy But these days Pacific t,lul\JOI is more tho n on insura nce company. It's a fomily of finonciol companies all reloled to a -· single purpose: providing finonciol servioes f°' individuols, fomilies and business. Aoompanyof registered~ licensed to offer mutual funds. Norrf ' ore life insurance agents tco, ond1W men hove a portfolio of products to- meet the finonciol needs of individuols, families ond business. ·® REDEVCO. lllC. • As its nnme suggests, this is our real estate development company. lls role is ' .. , .• ' ® PACIAC ffiUTUAL • I • - I • ... For The Record JfJarriage Licenses J11• 1t 1m HO,.FMAN, JR, JONES -Robtrf, »·" 9'tt Ac!Klt, ""'· .. Glrcftll G...w 111\d Jllf L~M, )t, of tllf Molllerh' Clrc:lt, W1tmthwllr GWALTHNEY.COLLINS .-&tr11erd Jowcrft, :M. Of 160 Wtlt WUIOll ....... 13, Co1l1> Mtu •nd Mtrthf A""'• II, fl# 1111 R1ymo!ld, C:O.I• Mttt : I RO'Mrt·Dfl.ANO -111 f'r•.,.11/1, 11, , of 10:W2 L1 HK1tnc11, Apt, c,.J, ,._ ' l•ln V•ilfq,I ~ l••"-r• W•vot. 13, • Of U4 H. CU111>0t1. °''""" ' klNG·MOOlllE -Tflonl.N ICf'Ylfl, JI, et : IA'J:Jl $prlnod1\a, WfttmlMltr Md • ICtffy, 10, 01 '°'1 ROMn'tOl'lt Drlw, • H\IO'lllllOIOO'I a...cJ>.. • kALANOER·l"OWl!:LL -Jlolllrl Gtflt, ' 11. of 10.31 Oorotll~. G•rllen o,..,.,, •14. L.lndt l1Vort, It~ qt ffl! MffdflOOlllrk Of'!ve, H11rtllntl011 Bt•cll; • (OOICE•PETEA:SON -G•r-... Edw!11, ,,, • ol "31 Ctnlr1J, All'I, 21, G•rd•ll : ~~':.' l~t L1%:l'w~.~~l~:jerof 10200 • EGGl!BA:E(HT-dl IA:OEICERT AnTrtonY M•nu•I, 31. of 1'6t1·1 Sll'Ht, • T1111!11 •1111 Dl111, n. of 72' Cltlltf : o1J;:~£~ot•LI~~" -Ml~HI Alltn. • 21 , Of 1'101 W1ll•ll'ltlt1 Slrfff, · w,,,,,.,,.,.r.r •llCI Ell11bttti ,,...,., 16. • of 1101 • 2ht Strtt!. Wttlmintllr • l tREllCA·HIRT -llll\lwi, tt, of "1 ' E11t 11th .StrHI, AP!, ,, Coll• Mfu •1111 S.ndr• ICU, 20, of ., 1!111 lltll Street, Allf. F, Cc.t• MHI MARSHALL·WASHICO -Ro• fr t Mle11t.i, ti. ol 4" lltostblld L1rw, Apt. C, L• Mff• •M Olbr• Arl111t. 70. o1 10t E1sl B•Y Aw., lllbOI $MITH·Pln1LLO -lltlcll•rll °"' to. of 1'31 P•mJ:>fl, AP!. 71, An&toellTI • •f'td Sl•rl• "'"' 17, ol Sltl Mttnll1r111, Wttlmlntttt •GONZALEZ.OAllCIA -JKk CNrltl, • 73, of 1om Ctrito llt Mtyo. Fou11111111 , \1111.., '"° Yo\arld1, n. of 1:m s. A:o.ewood, 111111 AN $111.EY, JR,.EAGLOSK I -JH1• • O•nltl. 25, of !Oil Ot11ldl•11 Dli..,., ' Wfftmlllllftr Incl lllMn fdrllt 2A, fl# : "'2 llootevetl, M1llw11 (llV • KRAFT.ftARIC -Jtfrrto; Cr•ft, 23. ot • 1110 lfltl Strett, At11, L.403, Newport • ... di Mid J111l1 LY""" 22, of Im • Vktorl• Drl~, F11lltr'lllt'I :MELLINGEll-HEGOEM -Rldl•r,d 01Yld, 21, of t2CI ICllltl l"lK•• NtwPOrt ... Cl! llld K•tltryn J .... , It, of DO 1Cl"91 P .. tt, NIWHl'I l ll<ft •ICHl!:Pl'EL·IC~RICH D•lrt ' C1rl, U. of 7n W••I WJllOll, Aptl IC, : (OJI• ~ •rid Grtc:• Wl11lfrM, •• , of 227• F•d•r•l 1'v1,, Corl• Mt" • lODO-&OOTH -Mltll••l Gr1lf. n, of • 214'1 S. Brookllurll, AIJ'f. 7.[4, Hun· ' l!fltl~ llffdo •!Id J•11nlftr JM11nt, ; , 22. of HJO El Rw Ave .. °"'I. ,, F111,111· , tll"' Vtllf'I' •IOAENSEN·GOCHENOUR DIM • St....,., 20, of 202 Eldtft Strtfl, ' Cotti Mtll •NI llollli't G.IU, 11, ., ~ 15151 C1lllorn!I Sir.ti. T111lln .IEMM-JEWETT -JtrOIM NtllOn, 20. of wen CGrl• Crttf .. El TOfO •nd Sh1reo1 Ellttn. 20, of 1• kn J11111, ~. F, Tutlllt JOCIC·ELLIS -WUU1111 Ar11Wr, », .r 21Ul Ntwlll'lll St .. 1Hc:1 JI, Hti1t- llll!llOll lit.ch •nd H11tl ~rft, A:l. ., JlUI NtwtW ltl'tllt, SPKt U. Hll"" lllllfOO'I lit.ell CUPEE, JR . ..-.U.RCOlf -Evtr1M JOM1>11, 29, of #1$2 0Ct111 Hiii Orlvt, Dlfll Pol"'t •1111 ROM f1blol•, :Ill, of 21712 c ...... 1no l.lnlo Doml1'1110.S•11 J111n C1pl1tr-. l'AIZ.AM8URGEY -I t " I• m 1 n Fr1Ml111, 33, of !Mlt S•n J•clnto Sir"', F01111l•ln Y1Ut'( incl M•rll~n LOlllM. It, Of $2S Vlclorl .. AP!. 31,. ~ .. ,. iv..t• Mc:ICENZIE·PETTIT -ROllf/1 Jo..pll, • ,,, of 17131 St1'111 Rlla. Fount•ln • Y•l!itv •nd IC•llllMn Ml;r1t, If, ol tf7U C•Ptf!W.Slrltt, Fourol•ln Y•lltv REEl·BRAY -RO(ltf' llontlll. Al, tf • 1•102 Wll'llldll•, /Ulf, t. H11fl'lll1tlon &Mdt Mid IVtl J\IM, ,,,, of ;sit Wtlhll'llllOl't Aw .. O•r<1111 GroYt IPRIGGS·SPEIA: -Jt,1,.. ,, M\cll11\ S., 21, •ncl J\111• A .. 20, both o1 F01111!1ln V•Ut'I'. SMALLEY-OLSON -Jllflt t, l111J1mt11 How1rd', 21. of w..rm1n11tr. 11111 Lol• J••n, 22, fl# H\l'rTllMton lludl. AGUIRlltE.SHWAllTZ -J11M ,, RO'I' H., A1, of H111'1flnttOl'I 81Ktt, •l'ICI • Pflrt E. a .• 21, of WHtmln1tlff. ~UCIC-HOPICINS -Junt t, EOW1rcf Mondq, J•l1 17, 1972 Anaheim Murder _!!ate _High Bi• Pet, Pancho Frasier Successor? Equine Tax Set in LA • i1w STATSMPT 0, AIAMOOlf.MIWT .. OTIC• 0, TIUIT.l'I IAIA ., 1111 # '·'· Ne. *n I PtmTMMll IVlllf•ll HI.Ml Oft J\HV' v ttn. •I 11 1to A,"-·• Tin.I 'Ttw ............... Ml • .,..,_,, #It tNSUllANC( AHD TltUIT COMl'ANY, •• 1 11M "' tltt fktttloiill .......... Mme ty •l)POlntecl Tnitl.. l>llHI' aNI LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTIC!i I u.H DllTIUIUTOU •I mt Jltrt :,.u41nl to o.fd tf TfVll ttCOl'llM July ! '"" '•"GEi.ES (UPT) -C•rflff, N"'flOl'f tMdl. Ctllfoml1, I. lNt • JnM No. totS. In llooll '°'''t ~ Al, Tiit flril"°"' lliltlMM Mll'lt ttltn'M to I 77' ~ Offkl•I ltKOnh Ill !ht Offlc:• The pound may baye to lel •bM w•1 fllrM hi Or.,.._ Ctvllt'f tfl J11111 ~ (1111111o; 11.cor'dtf of OflnH (Ollllt'f, By RUDI NlEl)Zlm..sxt: or curiosity that got the cat. becamt. a busiMwtnln. ·~ Jaraer clgea • and the dog 1" ~~rd ••rt "~· .,, '"' C•ll'""ra. L AT pueLic AUCTION TO 1 °' tM o.ur 'u. '''" "there ls an aparbnent· pean to be playin& a waiting catcher iDa1 hive to learn ctn11H. ,,.~ """· c.111. tt:'.~Li1~1~1ooEll ,Oil CASH t'•v•ti!•~ GARDEN GROVE 11 ma ba •·-.,_ tl •-to 1. • IUWN Evl H11f'Mf 111 1 111 iawM monw ol t11o11 ·-Y motel that Cr.& up ~ec 'I gam~.b 4&11' wte a uiSIO. ,..,.nUIH Ort•-c~ o.11V 1011a1. at i:9st•tt~ !1 tM •01.1"" tront •~trtnc•l ANAHE1M-1be home or be tough lo flnd a worthy SUC• against my yard and there "I'rtf Just aoing to nit .oo ,Effectl:ve this month, the J-9'.tndJIAY" 11, 11.1m 1'11·72 ~I'll the Old Ot•M• Coullf'f "';"::Ur.I Disneyland, the Angels and cessor to the venerable ki11g of were some hippies Jiving in see if they want to come get estlm.ated 11,000 b 9 r s·e 1 • LEGAL NOTICE 1oc11-;1~" t;:,!':1.,.•=1 ~"' w:: .. s.~1•1 llon1, but Costa M e s a the re. One night they had a him. Why go to them until pooles, donkey1; burroa and !:. ,.11.;r,.11, .u ,1,111, 1a••1~::..J::':.'f' Convention Center, fun capital r e s t a u r a t e u r A I tr ed narcotics rald there and the they call you?" asked mule.a 1n tht c!tY must have '~!l~~A:=::Tu ~yty: T1:11:-:11 n:, ':,':...~ 111u~1t11 1,..1 ol Orance County. abo has the Kllnzmann believes b!a pet Police put them in jail," K 11 0 z m 1 n n , r 0 u g h I y license tags -juat like dogs. TM ,..iew1111 ,.,_ 11 c1o1111 w.1 ..... , wro '"'"''., ,,.,. s11:i 11~tt~~'r. .~~r1t1te• dUblous dlsUnction of being lion ''Pancho" could 1111 Kllnzmann explained. "There translating a German proverb. 'Jbe $10 equlne llooue t~, M: HUDSON ENGINIEftlNG AND cZ.~r1~'': ,°'i:•ld :.11tt <r"''!'1:1 the county's 1m murder Frasier's pawprints. was a Jot of commotion going "I think uon Country would approved by the City Council, 01110N s1Rv1c11. 21m l••u11t "''' c1rt1111 i.••• dffc,:;:r;:,,i; ~Ji'111 1"" capital. lie may have hls ctu\nce Aug. on, so Pancho put hls paws be a better placy for him than ta expected to raise $110,000 L~:..=1111~~11C1':;.~· 2':,'t· s..,,..11 :~.~ 1~n .': ,!0 ,:;, 11 p0r1ior1 of ~01 L ~. 20 because city officials have o ver the fence for a better any other bt1f1 think the best annualJy, with• portion of the 1.-, H11m1ns1o11 ••m '-'"'· , Tr•c:t No. ,,,, •11,.1M0r~~':. ot 51:;:w°'1 During the Clnl quarter, at • °"ID. " t 0 ward Tll!• W•ln•N •• Mlllf cond\ltttd .,. •n aff(h. countv 'c1ec1 1 11001t least It led the Gr' Ree • named that day as tbe last one look." place is right here at home rev~ue e" • • ...1 .... ll'ldlvr111.1t1. c.utor111" •• ittr m• r:~11tlu•l~t 0, aeoP-aphlc roster 1~ith :V~~ Pancho will be allowed to Pancho's sudden appearance with me. If they would let me ma.1ntenanct ot equesw.uwi T~~,!!;.!'tllCll:i wut1 t11t covnl'f :i.:~r1•~ :;:_th,.c«111 of 0r•11t• slayings, compared to only one roam the .spacious backyard of caused as much eicitement as keep him I would promiae to trail1. Cl.,11 ot °'•"" to\lnlY °" J\IM 2), 1,1~. (ou!llV. C•llfotn!•, 1Yl11• r;,:~r:v o:'1i!· in the tame so.day period last Kllnzmann's home here. the raid among policemen have him declawed." LEGAL NO'nCE ~tt'k.a.wri~ J, Mlddoil. Otpiity cov"tv !:,i:~/~1:'1~ ~~1~'11L: L.1 ':.!!1ct1 ••' But rl""t now 1•-221).pound who was led no tun' e m· lell1·11g p ho ho ~, at the P um '°"''"' .... 11tr1Y a..so '"' 111'"'"'.,.• I year. 6.. ' ·~ anc • w a\IU • ,ICTITIOUS IUSIMllS P'*llMM °''"" , .... O•llY Piiot. c:tnlr•I •nOI• of 2' ~· Al"' from ' 1be f l rs t • q u a r t er com· lion is having too much run to him that he was violating a Ci· head of the Costa Mesa Fish MAMI ITAT•MINT JuN ,., 11W1 Jul'f ,,, 10. 11. 1tn 1us-n .our111,11,r1'1' c:orl'M ti 1 •t~, ~ ; . parative staUstic.s were worry about romance. ty ordinance that prohibits the Fry Parade Jast month as of. Tht to11C11W1111 "'ton 11 do1111 M l,.... NOTICE tti.ne-•111=•~',: .:, ![~"' c:vrvt ": released by the Just ice Strengthened by dally ra-keeping of wild animals, ac· f1cial mascot, is about 13 ••: lllYtNE WAL.LCOYERINOS. 1...U LEGAL :~: S:.r. Hl•hw•v due.['~";;:~"::'.' Department Wednesday, in-tioru: ot tacos and other cording lo Kllnzrnann. months old and came to c~ve;e'1":i,i;l~C•3':'°~·,1t• st., PICTITtous au11N1~s ~or=1.~u~ec!:rJ:?'~,nco11Civ• 10 '"'' dicaUng an overall ioorease de1ieacies from Klinzma nn's ''The city told me I had to KlinzmaM through a friend 1r11:, ci.111. wqs. ' Tiit 111:,r,: •T~~=•N •r• 111o1111 1ou1h .... st 11111 ~v1~•1:4 ~4)~1" 1~·00 in seri'oUJ ~· Mexican res laura n l • he get rid or him by Aug. 20 and wbo works for the Ringling T1111s bu0•1"'" 1• "'"' C;Otldl.lcttd "" •n bU•I"'" .. : ,, .;::,1 f::'e.~ 1!0:r,1: •rod' 01111r · corru""'", • prefers to romp around the I rod '1d11• · E. o. l"RMEllTIES. '°'3 V•"' r· of tl\t' re•I pr-riv 1 Garden ove's homicide I 'v e talked to Lion Country Brothers Circus. Kf!ll v. H1nw111u11 c l• Hu11111111on 111<11, c1n1 n..,1 c1e1r1""'1°". 11 '"'' '" ,0 bt· 3111 . tennis court with his German Safari· about ,·t. They said I The sign that hung on T1111 '"''"""' llt'd with 1111 ,'"'"'"' O,r,..11 o. counllf'll. 40lt V•nt cirtll, 11ncrlbtd 11tov• 11 PUr:; i-c NtwPOit . rate doublecJ,, rising from one 1. .. h d Id k' k J nd c1trk of or.,... <:ount'f on Jlllv"' '"by tlun111191on effd'I. c.111. n..11 we11 cet't Hltthw•'· · • ·In 1-1 to two between Jan. 1 · &u~p er S e IC " ose" a could donate him," he ex-Pancho's small cage as he Arthur e. Kr"•'•°'"""' County c11r11. RMotrt M. '"'~"· 112 v1111. '"· Bt1c11. c1111orn1•. ~"°·," llltc\•1..,,1 1n., .,, to drag his owner into the pool · ed the da I t"A '1"" \lto11a c1u1 ti02t1 Tiit' und•rtl1n..:1 ru• 1111 1, r • and March 31"' this year. plained. view para rom 11"' l"ubll•Md OrlflP COltt D•lly l"llof, lor.:i. H Cout111f'11 .. ,, So. ~II Ttr• lllbltll~ for 1nv lncorr.ctnm ~ II~ ~f for a game of water polo. But Kiinzmann, a German back of a pickup truck had Jiiiy 10. 11. u.. ~,. 1t12 1771-72 r1et. om1ii•, Nebr. 6.111 •ddreM,•"'ll ot~•r common dts ~in• · • Santa Ana's went up from P@llcho's trouble with city lmmi'grant who had 3 sue-'--An prophetic Matlt o. H1uPt, 23175 v111 ow.in s1 .. 1n .... ,1: wi" 11!!~1";,. ,.,..d,, bo.11 .. u11ou1 no · th t _,,_, f JMJ to h 11 -•arted bo t I h Ue"C • ~"°'• P•rlt. C•11'· tl:JQ.I "' or 1mp111<1. ne IQ a ,..... • ...,.. 0 111 a M a u re e cessful career as professional • "Possible successor to LEGAL NO"nCE 01v111 L. ic111"". vn wl!N 11., M•r coven•fl'I or ... rr.niv. '11""~ or '". • one thla year, while Hunt-months ago in a cl ss·c ca . ,, · · v111., c1111. '°°" r11•rdlnt iuie. pOt.••-" • 1 """'-Be-~·, •---', wtth a 1 se motorcycle racer before he Frasier, it said. PICTITIOOS auttlf•ts Ftt111rrci1t l. Kr111tt."" DK•11• io1 .. c:\lll'lllr•nc:•" 10 ,,.,. "" rtm~l: ':.id ... _.., oll\.-U .... ..,..~ • NAM• ITATaM•MT Vin N11.,i, C•llf. clptl tum of tllf nol• HC\lr 1"' I ~ ooJy C111e in )972'1 flnt thfee AllVtrflM-1 Tr.. followlfl:'I ,e'SOl'I Is OOlnt IMIMU GlrY I , Kt.UM,"'° O.Cell1•PI., Vin ()ffd of Tn11t, lo-wll: $6,lll.A:t, ~ . .,. 1"'°! Ed t • E d 11: Nlrl'lo C•tll. • tere1t th11eori, •s orovllled In 11 "'° jd-months compared to three the uca lOll ye T ting Rectal Itch' WEITMINITIR l"LUMltNO. 711'l Olvkl L Sctlll. IA161 Golcl•"' Wtsl. •dvance1. II '"'· 1111df'r 11\t t•r:r• ~:.. Year before. Orm.en Wftfmlnsllr Ave, W"lmlmttr, CtRf. No. 5, Wtdml,.tttr, C1!1!. '2613 D.U or Trusr. teet, d'l•roe• •11 tJ. UC lrvlne's e"xperimental Jim•• G. Qu!M. 7tl1 1Jttt 11., Elmer P. lttPlltns. t•~ s.,.,, Yn1• of 1h1 Tru•'" •ncl of the trusts cr••ttd I No other Orange County ungraded elementary school Of H ho'dal Tissues' w .. tm1n1ttr. c.111. st .. F011n1.111 v.u..,., c.111. J'llOI tll' ••Id Offd of Tr1111. id Oetd "'1 Cltl'•s -·· ])'Jted 'ID ,._ emorr 1 Tll!1 llvt!MU It (Ollllucttd b'f •n In-Miiton Ullntr, 2't Rt•I• Aw., Vtn-Th• btn•llCl•rY ul'ldtr ".~ .,11 e td f • "~ "~ plans tWO meelJngS On<>n t • J I t lur•, C•tll. ')1)113 Tr111t l\t'rt«ilore tlltculed tlnu y ' YariouJ communities cotn• .-~ O Reli ed cl v 1111'. G Qui Mike Ft1tr, :iotS1 A~1Uc L•llf• H11n-to flit 1,1ndtr1lgMd • wrlll.n Dtcltr•llor1 Of • parents interested in enrolling Promptly ev . Thlt ,1::111 .,,.,1 "':ittd wllll t11f COUii· Tlntlon ltKll. C1!!f. Oefiult •1111 o.m1!1d tor $•It, and I ¥1rlt• pared by rate Of homicide. their 4• to J2•year-OJd cbj!dren ty Cltrk of Orlntt (Olltlf'f Ol'I Jiiiy f, 1'11. Th11 b\lllMM I• belMI cond11c:ttd bv • ttll Nollet of O.l•ull •nd Eltcl1on lo S•ILf ,1•" P•l1Mrllllp. Tiit ul'ldtrl1fntd c•llled ttlll Nollet of ! Government ltatisilciana US• in the pro~am this fall. , .... ~ .. --l"ublllllld °'",,. COltt Dilly Piiot, O•tttll D. Cellrt!llY C IY Def1ult 11111 EIK!lon to Stll to bt rtc0rll• I lng Loe Atweles u a guide The sessio•s will be held at In many cases Preparation H dreda of patients~ 1199 Julo; 10, 11, 2A, 31, 1tn 11u.12 Th!• 11•1t:mtn1 t1t111 w1111 tt1t1 oun td '"' lh• c:ounfY wll•r• 111t r••• ,,.,riv ~ec1 the ov-" rate of giveoprompt,lemporaryrelief to be true in many ~ ID Cit,.., Or•• (Ollntv Ol'I : J111v •. 1J7:t. I• loc•ltd . 111"""' a:a.u ':3Q p.m. today and 1:30 p .m . from such -•n --• 1.,_.,__ 1----,,-,--,-...,--,,---·1e.,. Arttlwr •· Kr"'r• 0tP111Y Coufl'IY D•1t: J11rw 21. 1m. eerJowi cr1me rose only one Saturday, in the v er an 0 ,......._ nnu .......... 15 fact, many docton, them· LEGAL NOTICE C1tl'k. P *' TITLE 1NSUllANC!' percent there. D-·ea"on Center located m' and actually helpe shrink aelvee, ueePreparatiMB9or ••CTITIOUI •••••••• l"lilbltlhld Onnte COHI Dilly ~not, ...... ~ •• T,•y•,•.•,,"COMPANY nc:u u swelling of bemorrboidaJ ti&-realltUDmld it for tbefr fam. NAMI ITATIMIMT July IO, 17• "'-ll, l'12 l7"-n Iv i1mer W. H~11m The Clle percent r a t e , the graduate student housing • ii. n---ticn H ointm.mt feint Allltiortitct s1o111t11r. however, appears better when complex on Verano Place at 8\lE8 cauaed by inflammation. UB." ... .,_..ra= b\1~11 ~~~1"" Pll'10lll .,.. LEGAL N<Yl'JCE Pllblt•~..:I Newp0rt H•rbor N"" Press. 1 reDectf.d ag&inst a s!r rwo.ctnt UCI. · i.ii Teeta by doctors on hun-or auppoaitorim. JEAN'S erAUTY !ALON, 2SM 11111 combl~ .. 1th O•llV Piiot, N.wpo•t 1 ~ ,1-1jiiiiiijjiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiilii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,---1 $1rttt, Cost1 MfN, C•tllornl•. aAR.... l111cll, C1Utomt1, July i. 10, 17, lf12 rise d~ 1971'• first three O•vld !IHllM WlllOn, u1• Alltl!n SUPIRIOR COURT o~ ™' 111~n . month,, and a Wboppina 13 StrHt, S•11I• "'"''' C1llloml• n704 _ ITATll 01' CALll'ORNIA l'OR -ltnOH1'19 wn'°"' 121A Au•tln ltreet, TH• COUNJT OP OU.Nel LEGAL N011CE percent in the first quarter PHARMACY S•nl1 Anl, C•ll!Orn!• '210ol. "" A·1)Wf of 1970. . . Tiii• b111l111t1 I• bt!"' <ond11cled l:IY • NOTIC• 01' NIARlfllO ON l'I TITION I Jl:»4' Joint 0-.nhlp. l'OR PROIA.Tl 01' WILL A.NO FOR NOTICE 0 , TRUlTEI" SALi No reuon for the J u..... Otvlll E Wlltor! L•TTIRI TllTAMINTARY T I ... •7·12 Off trend ....... lllllJOA ... _!V. e..... Tllll ft1ttmt11i filed wltll 1111 cou ... fy EHllt °',REI) ITEN, JR .. Dtc119ld. °" July 27, 1m . 1i 11 :00 A.M. TITLE .. _ ... __,~u:u Cltrll: of Oft .... Co\lnty Oii J\lflt n, Im NOTICE 1$ HEREIY GIVEN fh•I INIURANC£ AND TRUST COMl"AHY. II Justice~ officlala icv11r~u.r1Y J, MHclolc, OtPlffY cw"'"' ~!1:-'11l:!'111~~~~:'!i':~11'"~;! 1111tv •PPOlnllll Tru•'" 111'111« •nd aid the '"'•' by -*..... The 1tore that brought lawtT prices to the .Beach Area ,.1 .. n tor t.wtfQ of Llff•r• T .. 1_,,11ry to iwr1111~1 10 Ottd of Tr11•t rtc:CN'dtd t;,"' ~ ---riory of WE 0 u OT E p RI c· ES l"ubll .... Or• ... COlsf Dlll'f l"Uot. petlt!Mw, r«..-.rice '" Whldl h mM kw u. 1 "'· • 1 1 "' 1 · No. f(lf.2, '" bOOll ofll ,, ao-called eerious ollerwte In -. · J11M 3'. t...O J11IY a. 10. 11, 1'72 l"'"n fv11htr J•l1icllllr1, •!Id ""'' 1111 ::' •i:; :;:_ ~"'°!i~'~~J!r~r!':i.~oun~~ Los Angeles, includes:' 105 r~~llll.lff~rl~IM•t";'.j, ':! i: :.._. C1lltor"'l•, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC• murders 502 ranoo• 3 602 J'Ob.. ---LE·.-G·AL--N-OTl-~CE,,.----1 t.Ollrtt-of. DeNl1nw"' No. i' of wkl TION TO HIGHEST BIOOEll FOil CASH '---' t ....... , t CO\lrt, •I 100 Civic Cltlttr Orlw W•t, 111 fPIYllllt •t time of .. It In l•wful lrlOM'f ua,es, 3,8.fO I g I l 8 V 8 t e d --------=,----I 111t CllY fl# S.nt• AM, C•llfornl•. of 1!1t1 U11llllll Slllftl 11 Ille SOlllh front .... ults lo•-bur larl OVER THE PHONE ANYTIME l.IOAL MOTICI 0.ltd J\llY lJ 1'11 9nlr•M• to rllt Oki O!'•nlt Covnl'f • ;r,_ g es, • ..... NOTICE 1$ HIEA:EllY GIVEN tNI l!ltl WILLIAM t II JOHN CourtllouM IC!U!fd In lM 200 BIOtk 0, 10,711 larceries over $50 in 1o11ow1rt111ttrnt of fO\lnd or.,_.,....,.,., CO\l!lly Clt rti • wt11 s1 ... 11 to"' Blvd., '°"""''Y w11t •111 loss and 9086 auto tbeti--CHICI THIS! SU,ER SALi SPICIALS-S1191, lt•t,, 011r lltt. Prlct Slit Prlu llav• bt.n hlld by flit Polle• 0191rtment aARNes, sCM.t.e, JONHIDM St .. S•t1I• An1, c.111ornl1, •II r!ohr, 111111 ,.. 59 o f IM CllY ot (0$!• Mn• tor • period 111 lo K•NNIDY •nd 1"1trtsl COtlYIYtd lo Incl ,_ 111111 lrt reported. NEUTROGENA SOAP ••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • $1.00 l)C C •J1<t11 of 11lnffl 00! dtn: ti Yi •RNIST J , SCNAG, JR .I 11 u!ld•r Mid Olld of Tru11 I"' tile o•OP- Fed .... I fl·m,.es can be COD• WELLA BALSAM Htir Ccndifion•r 111 or.· $3 45 $2 99 $1 99 OM 10111 blkt. OM P11rple bl•• 4SU MICAl1tnlr 11"141 trf'f 11tu11ec1 In Miii Cou11f'f •1'111 51•1• .,_ • • •• • • • • • • . • NOTICE IS FUlltTHEA: GIVEN thott It N..,.,. ••.O. c111t.",,... ll11crlbld •S: !using when compared t Murin, ''CLEAR EYES'' •••••••••••••••••••••••• $1.50 $1.19 19c no OWMr fPPfftl •nd •ro'olfl 1111 Ttl• ,.,.,,.. The 111\d d"crlbld '" thll •II•••"' ... lif I I 9 $1 09 ow11erllllp of t~• preptrly wllhl11 MVttt A~niw• '-: 1"'1115-c:an1!1t1 of • lt•HhOld tll•I• cr•tlad Ca. ornia Statistics in certain SCOPE Mcuthwt1h, 24 or, •••• • •• • · • • • • ••• • •• • • • 2.05 1.6 • 171 dtl'I tonow1119 !ht p11bllc:ttlorl fl# 1111• Publlihtd Or•noe coast Dillv Piiot, by ltllt certiln .. ,,. dflC•lblcl 1"' ••· crime cat-ies. Nollet, lhl llllt ttlertlo WU Yell I"' lhf July 17, 23, 2A, l'n 1&61·72 <•Pilon No. l 111 •rod lo 1n \IN!Jvldtd -~ 2700 E. Coast H1· ""way, at Fem leaf. Corona del Mar .... H. • '""' " -· • " "" "" " "'"" '"'Hn• " ... " ..... '""'~ .. The U.S. ltudies ~ ~II ~!'!',', .. M~ ... 111, ""'-"'• c~~ ... "' ,"..,•rty LEGAL NOI'ICE Lot L of Tr1d No. '19, 111 1111 Cll't o' I itt:n .... _, • c: '""' • • me N.wport &11ch, C011ntv of Or1111•, St1•• &rceny over ..,..,, W i 1 e ,,.. ll•t• to bt '""''"'ctd. of c1111orn11, •• 1>tr "'"' recordtd In oalifonda ltatutM elau IUCh • D1ttd Jul'f 11, 1972 •AR..,. fl.oak 29 P•"' 11 tllf'tl\lt>ll 1' rnc;11111w"' theft IOMeS ditlerently. ~ 644 7 5 7 5 ~:,· ;1!:;1a ~¥:;:':: ~~::_:r ... ;~~ ~~~~"::'""''1:.'·1.,.;r::r1~~~~ Grand theft for uample, Is iiiii -PllblllMd Oftnfll COllrl Dally Pllof, THI COUMTT 011 OU.Ne• ""' ...,,ktl M91nt •t Ille mldPOI"'' °" "'' .. M,LI ,.·•1N~ IN ..... J11lo; 11, 1rn llMl-72 Mt. A-7>641 ..... ._,.,. llrw of Mld Lot L w1't1cll II anything over ' $200 in .. .. .. NOTICI Off "•ARlfllO ON l"l!TITIOfll loc•ttd Mlltrt'f M.JD fttl tll!'Olltth • CaUlonu .• ~ ... ~tty theft 1~ Ho111-9:J0·6:00 Dollr ----,..,,-----,---1 POii l"ROIATI! OP WILL AMO ,o. CM!r1I ..... i. of 20 lS' Al" from, .... wU11 -~ LEGAL NOTICE Lana111 TllTAMINTAlt'I' -"'"'''r1.,. c:or11tt of .,.1c1 Lot Li everything below, thus CIONd s • ..,,. OINI Hellffp E.t•ff « PUNK MEEllJ.MAN , 1fl•l!Ot nortfttrlv Oii I 1rr.toht llM 19 resulting in an OVetJap in IUNS Dt=ir'E IS H!'R11V . GIVEN r1!1l ' IM mlll..o!"'t of !flt ire of HI• curve °" PICTITIOUS IUllNllS ROaERT MEl!RIMAN I'll• flltd Mr11... • tile Sl•l• Hlfh'W•Y dlkrfbtd '"' 1111 statistical classillcation. NAMI! ITAT•Ml!MT Ptllfltn for Probtl• of Wiii •!Id fl)f' dittd r.cordtll Julr t. lt2t '" l oolC m .·Let . .)f, 1NI Vlrvlnl1 $noolol, AJ, boll!'-------------------------------------------''« c.or-di! /'Mr. -fMOMl"SON-MARJ!iO -J111'11 10, Otrt· :•#tit 0.1 31, •nd NltlCY Lff, 21, bM!l 111 Tiit tollo..1119 l>frtont •r• llolnl luu•M• of L.tller• T"l•rntlllll'Y to "1I· Ptge 2"5, olflct•I rKOrll•. •• conc:•v• blltlntu '" tl-f. rlltrvi« 19 w1'tldl It ..,,.... tot lo !ht s.oulhwtsl •!Id ll•vlnt • rtdlus of .•COii• MHI. ~ORIUSON·El.llANIC -J-10, • R-111 J,. )I, of Huntt"'ton ll•Kh. · •rod Ell•n Vlrtlnl1, 21, °' LOM Btldl. )cu CALA-ILES ._ Jurw IS. Atowt M.. 37, of Coif• Mifwl, 11111 Loll J1, .. Of °''"'"· GAJAACHE·EHRLICH JIJT'tl 10. Allltrt, 42. of A~lm, •l'ld VJol•, 11, Of Hll"'ll"ti!IOl'I ll••c!I. MtLLEll·PRENTICE: -Junt 10. J11'1'1f1 W., !5, Ind Mll!IM E., :'9, bofh of Hunll"'ton INcll. ,LAHTE-WHfTTLE J11nt I I , , Mkh•tt All•"'• 2:1, of Mktw•Y City, , •nd Lindi JtwtU. It, of WHtmlM11t. MARSHALL-MANGANO -J11nt 10, • Jdlll Ptltr, U. fl# T11Jtt11, 11'111 ; ll1rbtr1 Ami, 17, of Hunllngton • 8t•cll. ' ,RAINIOLT""'IN -JllN 10, Joll11 E,. • II, 22. of S•rol• A111, •l'ld Jotnnt s,. · n, of W"lml1111tr. IONYNGE.OAROHEll -J11M 11, JtrNS S., ll, 1nll OenN1 Lii, 25, bo111 of L•llUnl .INch. lUNCICH·HIC.LS -J-11, IC\111 frtlllcll11, 25, tf South 1..te11na, •l'MI l(lf'l"fl, Jl, Ill Coe.I• MtN. HIPPE-A:OSSlTIEll -J1111t 11, J 1nw1. .50, 11'111 JOY, )J, 1lolh of H111tll/lll011 1. BNCll, rETERSON-GIFFORO -J11M 11, SllVttt 0111, U, •fld Shirt• A., lf, · bottl Of WH11"1nsttr. 'LANEY·HARR!S -J\IM l'L J•dt EllWlrd, "111•1 •Ot,"' ll'td J-1• LN "1111111 IQt," both OI Ntw00Jt ltlCll. CHAVEZ-BAEZA -J\lflt lt, J1rnn A .. 22, « We1tmlllfftf, •1111 R•Chtl. 21, ol G•rdena. tlEAO·DORSTEN -J\IM 1%. Jllf\n Hilt~. 41, of N,.._, hldl, •1111 Ptfrl,lt Kill~. 3:1, of 111/l'lllllflort ""'· Death )Votfees QAL'ra BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona def Mar f73.!M.St Costs Mesa 14&-ZIU BELL uloADWA y MORWARY ).10 Broadway, Coats &le,. LIUISI McCORMI<l LAGUNA BEACH idORTUARY 1715 La": lie.a,.. Rd. t IS " PACIFlt VIE\\ MEMORIAL PARK . Cemete-ry ~1ortuary Chapel : 3500 Pacific View Drive !'•wport Beach, caJUomla '44-!700 PEEK ,AMILY ! COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '8'1 :S.Ua A.._ W-tunum ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT Polyeste~/Glass Belted TIRE SALE • ·JUMeo•.1ao •Glass/Belted for mileage • Strong i>olyester cord body ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT HURRY ... Offer Ends July 22 SALE PRICES E7&-14 . 4 for s94•. 2 lor $48• F7&-14 & 15 4 for s100·. 2 for s52· G7&-14 & 15 4 for $110' • 2 ror ssr Charge it at General Tire These are the tires that are original equipment on new 1CJ1 • ~ 1972 cars in every division of Detroit's big 3 auto makers. ·r11betess bl.c:kwalt• ph11 s1.1e lo ~ . iiiiiii WHITEWALLS ONLY $3 MORE PER TIRE !~.:!,:,'~ 'i;';}"' •" 1"• ... Mii tllCCJ ...... • *'fPff., .-tir• Mtft 0 •""" rw dlert •Ille tti/1 nt11t, .. will ltMot _, on1eri pltc:itll.,,.. ._ M.wt dellftf'J' tt 1llt "''""*"" .,tt.. VWSPECIAL General Dura.Jet• WHITE.WALL.: <I-PLY NYLON, CORD BODY ·$1695 LOWPAICESONSIZESTO ONLY Sltt5.eo.15 frT t OUT OF 10 IMPO~ ~ :\~~·;:r.=. l•i1 General JATO .SUPER 100 GOLF BALLS ' Tough Our•lon culless COV9ff El'ltfglzed P8 cenlerl High lenoion winding Jor m••lmt.1tn ltlghll a't~1 33 P•lc.d •• ahown It Gtnttat Tire 510111. Competltlwly prictd at lndt~nU•nt dftle,. dl1p$aying the Gener.I a9'. DON SWEDLUND COAST GENERAL TIRE 585 West 19tft, Cosro Mesa Phone 540·5710 or 646-5033 C I. M ENTERPRISES, Ill .flit fllrtlwr PlrtlC:Vl•rt. •!'Id lflll 1111 11 .... •1111 1U0.00 fHI •!Id• i.ntlll Gf 194.4'. Slrttt, Ntwporl 8t•d!, C•llt '2660. IJl•ct f11 llffr\M fht MrM htl btell Ml Tiit flrHI &dd•HI •nd otlltr c:ommon J1mt1 A. Cl•rk, 111 Ahl Slrffl, tor ,t,11"'11 '· 1tn. ,, ,:30 •·'"·• 111 1111 de1l9to1nont, If 1no;, of "" re•I p,_rty N.wi>0rl Betel\. courtroom of O.•""""'t No. > of Mid dfl(rlbld •llovt 11 purporltd to bt: P•lrldl W. McGlllre, 111 lld llrHI. cou/1, •I J'OO Civic Cf111tr D'I"' Wat, In 3121 W"t C111t Hl9hw•y, Apt, 2·D, N1Wport B11c:1t. ll'lt Cltv of S•ll1• ... ,... C•lllllr ... 1.. Newport Be•dt. C•tllor ... 11 '2660 This bt.lslntu 11 btlnt COllllllCllll by • Offtd Julv ll, ''n Tht 11nc!M'1ltl'ttd Trv1'" 1111c:t1lm1 '"" ttner11 ptrllltnllfP. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, 11•blll1Y for •nY lncorrtdnttl of lhl lll'ttl l"llrlt.11: w, McGulrt COunlY Cltrll. 111drt11 11\d olll•r c:OtnlTIOfl dttl9n1tlot1, If Tiiis •l11tme"'t Wit flltd W1111 tt1t COii"' a, H. STOMI 111~, tlwwll Mr.111, t'f Cit,_ of Or•llft CO\lntY 011 J11M 20, 4141 Ca.11111,. Drift Stlll ltlt will blo '"*• but ¥1llhout 1t71 N"""'1 111cfl,. C•lll. Nf.J covtn1nl or w•rr•"""· t11pr111 or lmplll'd, OIMI I . OORNl'I" T•h ...... retlrlllllf t!!Jt, poJMUIOO'I, or -16 I, Llkt S111M M AlltrM7 ,..1 l"lfttlMlt' cvmllr•ncH, to JleV 11111 rem•l,.!n• prl..,.. ...... IMI. Ctllftnlt tnn l"ublltlled ClrlflOI (Ollf Dilly Piiot. CIPll IU1" of "" !IOI•(•) ltCVfld .,., ••hi T ......... (IUI m-44H July lt, 17, 23, 1J72 1M7·72 Detd of Tni•I, to-wit: S1,1t7.n, Wiii! I..,.. ~ 1Ul2 ltrHI ttltrfOO'I, •s pro\ik!M 111 u fd l"IM....., Or•• Collt Dtlly Piiot. .,..,.,.,.. NOTICE r!Oft{IJ, •o:.lv•Mn. if lllY. 111'111•r 1111 ttnn• F':"'::_~:_':'~· ~"~·~":·:..::'m.'.:.,,...--~':,,.::'.n'.j----~--... ;;;;,-------!of 1trc1 t>etd 01 Tr11•t. tHt. dt•r"' •"" t•Pllnttl of lht Tl'lnlH 11111 of 1'ht lnitll • 2IOJ C:l'Hlecl by ••Id Dttd of Tru1t. LEGAL NOTICE HOTlCI TO CRIDITORI Thi btM!lcl•ry lmder wld Otlll' tit SLIPllllO• COURT 0, THI Trurl h1rtlotort ntc:ltltd 111(1 dtffwrecl ,ICTITIOU$ 8UllNlll STATI 0, CALIPORMIA llOll to Ille 11nder1l1flfd • wrl"en 0e<i.r11fgn , NAMI nATllMINT THI COUNTY 0' OllAM81 of Otl•11lt •nll Dtm•M tor Slit, "'4 • Tht foohowlns Mnotl II doll'lt bU1l"9u Me. A•71141 ¥1rltltn Nolle• of O•l•ull 11\d ElecilOll I• u: Eslt l• Of fl:UTH E. COURTOIS, AICA S.11. TM \lfldlnl;ntd c:•~ M1d Holle• Al!RO ADS, ~.O. loic 316', Or1"1' MllS. JOHN L. COURTOtl, AKA llUTH of Det•vll •nd ElecllOtl to Siii to ~ C1lltom111 21207 ...... Ctrwu. s.,. I''. HAUCIC, AKA MRI. LESLIE F. rtcordtd 111 !ht county Wlllr• fht rt1I J111n-C.P11tr•""· C1llf0f'nl1. -"Au_CK Otc••Hd. .pr-rtY 11 ICIClll'd. G1n"Wlntlort Zllbtrtll, »201 P•1eo NOTICE 1$ HEAEIY GIVEN lo lilt 0111: Jun. 27, 1•72. CerveJt, S..11 Jutn c. -1•Ir.II0 ' Uldl!ors of ll'lt •bow fllmld dfttdrttt TITLE INSURANCE C•Ufor,.1• t!\.11 •H MrlOIU llaVI"' Cl1lm• •Nlntl !fie ANO TRUS' COMPANY Tlllt Mlflth 11 btJ11111 CO!lduc:ttd ~y 1"' u ld dlc:ldirnt •r• r..wlrld to !lit lhfm, •s stld TruitH lnlllvtllwll with 111t '*"""' vwefMr1. 111 111t ol'fkt av Elm1r w Ht!N1r G1ry W. Zltblrtll of tM <lttk tlf th• •lloYt 111H11t1111 CO\lrl, or 1\1111\or\1~ sitni!ure Tiil• 1l•l11T1tnl tlttd wflll !tot Coullly to Prtst"'I tl'ttm, ¥111h tl\t' MCff11ry PubRll'tecl Newport H•rbof' Ntwt·Prffs Cltrk of Or•n• COl.lnlY on Juf\t 23. 1972 'l'llldlttl, ~I ll'lt llftcl«tltfltd ft fllt ol'flCt COIT'tblntd will! O•llV PllOI, NIWPO•t ,,., ..... rty J. MIOdox, OtPlltY CClllflt'( of hi• •tlomtY, L. CHRISTIAN HAUCIC. a..m. C•lllornl1, July ,.. 10. 17. lf11 Cltrt. U.U Wlll'lt.lt G~ Aw1111t. Rte1rt111ll, 170f.1J p 1NZ1 C11lfotl'll• t1710. wllfcll I• "" Pl1<1 ofl-------------' ltuttUIMd °""" Cotlt Ollllv Piiot, lliulll'llU #1# IM 11'*'•l1Md hi •!1 m111tr1 LEGAL NOTICE J11111 u. tnd JutY i. 10. 11. 1m ,,,..12 =i!":..t::.::;.":;::. 0:.."ri:.::_~~: ---.,,-~--------LEGAL N011CE tlCWI of 11111 flOltet. NOTIVI IMVITINO llDS DttlMI J111V ti. 1'72. NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN 111'1 ltll-,ICTITIDUI aus1M•t1 JOHN L. COORTOtt; ed prOllONllS Wiit be rec1IYld by"" Ctl'f MAMI ITATIMl:MT Admlnl1trtlor "'"" of Co111 Miii •t "'' office of lh• en.,. 'Th• foollowll'!I .,.... '* dt!M bUllM:n "''" Of ""' •bovf 11•mlll Clttlt •' 11111 ClfY H.rr. 77 F11r Orlv•. 11: dlttftllt Colt• Mttl, C•lllornl1 11,.t!I ll'lt l!Ollr of HYLAND l.AllOllATOIUES DONOR L CHRISTIAN HAUCK 11 :00 '·'"• on A11tu9! 1, 1t72, •I w1'tldt CEHTER. »00 HVl•nd Awnua. Ctsl• UM ............... ·-time thtf WUI be -Md PUtlllcty •net M .... , C•Rfornl•, R.........,. Cll.._... '1'11 rttd •loud 1n tilt Council Ch•mbvs tor Hyland L.•bor•torltt OIYl•lolt Tr•~nol AllWMY .............. ,..... STREET CONSTRUCTION ON PLACEH· ltbor1forlls. Inc., P» HYl•nd Avtnlll. 1"11bl/111td °'"""' Cotfl Dilly Jl'llot, TIA. AVENUE FA:OM 261» FT. NORTH COii• MHI, C•Uftn1t•. Jllf'f 11, 2l, 311 •...0 AUIVsf f, 1'72 1"5·72 Or: WILSON AVENUE TO 160CI FT. Tiii• butl""* .. hllll COl'lltuclM _,. • $0UTH OF ADA.MS AVE NUE. '°'"'''I°"' <C•lllor,.111. LEGAL NOTICE A '" Of Pl•n1, 1PKll!c1llot11 •nd oltltr Hvll!ld Ubor.torJn DIYltlon C'Olllr11<t llot\lrfl1n11 m•Y be obl•lntd 1t Tr•v.nol l.1tlortlorles. Inc. 1111 ottl« ol 111• Cltv Cltrk. 77 F•!r Orlv1. Ylc:tor Sf'IMkltf' llf ™• SU,IRIOR COURT 0, Cc.t• MtM. c1111or ... 1 •• \IPOll • dlPOSlt of All'I, S.Cttl•l'Y for: THI STATI Of' CAl.IPOllNIA lfll AND SU.00 rtlllndtblt 1190f1 rthim of Ill•"'• .kmllll T, Pltltt!, P0tt THR COUNTY D, OllMOI 11111 •PKIHe&ll-11 bid ~Inoa, A P'"ldlfrlt .... A7"71 cllllru• of SI.co wn1 be ml'dt II l't111dltd by Tiii• •t•ltrntrlt fUICf wltll "" COl.lht'f NOTtca Oft l"RIVATI IA.LI milt. PLEASE MAIL s E p AR AT IE Cl•rll fl# Ortntt CoulllV "" J11M 23. ''n OP RIAL l"ROl'laTY CHECKS. bY •ewrb' J, ~ Dt~I'( CM!llt'f In IM MaMtr fl# 1111 Eat•ft " HENllT E•th tld lh•ll be mlCll (Ill tl'te prOJIOt•I c1n. ~ c:. SMITH, Dltt•Hd, ~ f(INll •llCI In "" IMll(lfT IH'OYklld in 1'lle " tl&M Ndk'I It MrtbY •lvtn flllf ff'll \Ill-canttkl docuintnlt. Ind l.h&ll bt tc:· P\ltlllsl'!tO Ottllff '°''' Dtnv Piiot, ~•ltMd. •• Admlnl1lr1lrh1 of !flt ttl•I• cotnDllllecl by 1 Ctl11flef ,.,~ J " ~ ' 11 11 tm 1 ... 12 fl H.nry C. lmltll, etc ... , wlN .. 11 11'1 """-k °" C• '"' I -'"" Jllb' • ' • ,..1v1lt wll to tht Ill~ 1...0 blollf blcldtr ........ Of • bid boncl tor 1'tOt ~I lll•n 10 • ~ ,.... ..,,,,. Ind Ufli'lllt!lt !1-llllfttr Ptr«nt fl# tM *"'°""t Of ti.. b14, miff LEGAL NOO'ICE IMftOorltd. 11111 111b1K1 " tot1f1rm111M 11Y "~~~re~ ~ FcJ':T~i:'~1~•·,"-' tt.. 1---:::=::::-:::==:::-:::::---J "Id $t,1Hf'lor Court, en Frllll'f. J uly .. (Jty COl.lncfl of Id (I... ... .. • •• NonCI 1NVITINO •tDI 1'72. ., 101• o'clOlll:, A.M,, ., lll•rfffttr erlttllltl'ltd • .. Ill ,, , .. _. Ntflca 1,,,.,., 'llV911•1htt ttit lolrd t1f wlt!'ll"' ""ti'"' •llowed b'I' ,.w, .. ll'lt tf. w-In ~ .. w~ ... 1'11_,1•,•1tt: •ltd te•ll of T of tM c.st Col'MW!lltf Col"91 !kl of I'"'" & lt'(l)!Ol't, tt dDt (flf't'IM ·-IW, .. lit NI• D1"3:t3 fl Or_... C......., C•ltfoml .. will Df'I,,., Svllt W, N.w,ort a•• c 11. :::, !flt <OO'lltrvctlOll of tM •tiow '"'ll!ltll ,...,.,. ... lld bldl .._ .; t:• 11.m., Fri-CtHf<ll'l'lll. •II rltfll', !Jilt, llltlf'HI t11C1 wi:"':'C:.i:S• ~·~~~1:;itt •lld tellt fly: Jllt'f 2t IJ7t .t 119 l'Vfdllllf'41 ONif, •I ... Clf Mid Htttr'I' C. lm1tll, cllcMMd, fl:Mutloft Ht. 7t C:OllritU bY of ... , .-• .Trtct "'''" ., t:UO M · M ... flmt of lllt dt•lll -Ill ,....,,, tlllt J•nvtrv 1'72. fld ~ "' :' 3rd d., of •m• AWfMlti to.M Mnt, CMlt., .t wtlldl 1N1 ll'!ltffll ftl•t 111d tlftlt llff t«UlnMI, _, "" (lty Cit~ Of'"), c"i.!." ~-OHi<• • Id Mdl UI M M!kf'f....,.. 111111 IW °"''tltfl of .. w tr olf'lll'Wllt, o1119r ti ••• ,.,.., Mkl n'll .. w tW 1"1n or In tddltlon M llttl « Mid tMcMs-flt• ...,.. talto 11 htrt:ln rtftfrtd .. llld rMd f<ll'I ' ldopttcl In 11111 l'IClt\c:t M lllottllh fllll nil FurnlN!: T•"'l•IOll .•re 1dc•1 t t'!I tt lfllf time of Ills dtlltl, Jn It'( to !ht Qfftllltttl'f .,. fortll llll'•l ..., r I Tl'Mlrl'lttfr R.mott C..ll'OI Snttm. '"I """"" •• 1't lM lftth!N ••It tt !MloDfl>ll w ~ "'" .. i.I All bid•"' to M,ln KeerHMe wllll IAlllf> Hwllffll'f(ln llleft. Ctlfftrnla. mldf 1 Hf't Ill ihtt l!ol'kt1:iVRetolllllon It IM IMll'\lc'lloM Mid COM1111oN Mid llnalbld H follclws1 Thi Contr tor ttltrWl(f, Sptclflclfl-wfllc!I 11"1 MW on t111 and Lor '51), Tu1ct1 "1'-It lltf Mlt ,.,...lll<e : lllt w:;. In 111 I mw .. •llttd 11• "" lllfflOI ot tne ~dtd '"' '* n. '""" •· " Ind .....wmen11. c:oriform to ~"' L '"' 1m. ff"'!d>•1l"9 AHnf of U141 ldlool dl1triC'I. • ol Mltffll1-.. Mlllt. ~ ot' « 1111 $1.it of Ctllfar"'ll ll'lll :::::;. ~ 1EKtt bktltlt mwr Wllmlt W!ll'I 111s bhl • tttt cov...t'f ot er.,... ••te of tf !tit ''''' ., C•lllornl• •1cN1t-c..,...,.1 cMcll. drlllltllll c:llldt. ., ~· .Qllforttla. ._.. ~o. wJ~ l!ltl nmt!o11 only of -.n ltOfld "*" ,.,. ... te fM .,.... tof !lift « ..,.,.. aN '""'ltd tor .. Id ,,..,. W1rt1tloM t i m.., Ill t I td n.. c...t ~IY C.,llfel Olttfld ll1Y *"" 1!'1111111 ... lrt Wl'fllllf anti Win Ill lllllCl•I 11111/ttt ~"" {. w'{1i''::r Jfltre lolnll fl T'?v'*' lrl Ill ~ ftOI ,... rtot!W!ll ft ._ ofttOI ef llW«lft & INtC• C...,_. l'lffll.l!ldtl' 1 ttll( °': W1tn ftYe pwant Cl'-1 er fM tum W. •• fl\-artoftlln for .... Mlftlnltilr•ltltt, tt Nw not ,btfn Wiit::.,,._ 111try ":, ~ • ......... 1Mt"" ..._ _.II fftftl' fflte ~ bit fllM Wfltl "" on " .. Id ~"°"' -' ,,,. L..,. Ctde l"rfftl"fntt "'; t1t1 ~ Conft'aet If "" -11 WJl'«'lor Ctuft tr ft0Yft'ld to tald _,, "-WU bl Ol'ml Ofll' 'In .... ... ,....,. i. lllm. 111 1tw lf¥ft f/11 ftlllll"t to lnlnllf'*"1r ""'°"'"~" It anY """ •lllf "'°"kttd 'Y: i.w "'' ma"'*' lfl'llW kit. M.ldl Cll!'lf'ICI. "" ll"IC ..... ., ""' l\lltllc.llOll "' 1111• ..ia w ..,... No ~ trill! lit Ofllldwed ""''"' It " lf'll cMdl Wiii fie finllltorl. flt II' Ille OW mMllM ~ Mt.. , fl'\llft Of! f blMtlt '°"" f\ltllllltld tlY ... cf • '*"•"" fllll 111tr1 tMffOI WIM H 1119 M19<Wlll "1 fl'ltdl •Wtn fhl fo...,_ Cit¥ fl# C•l1 Mth, •llcl t. ll'l:lotlt 11'1 kio '°',,.'!':,.:. M,.:, -=-~~ bW tw • i::;'J11't:';'i: 1t7'. =-~~~ IM'9'1111Mt ff lltt ,,.._ pirlod f/11 ,.,,,.-nv. IASI dl'f$ .,,., IM l.f:HA I. COTf:, l.ot ...., llMt b>t ~ "' fltt .-.: ,... fJlt ...,tne tlltrtol. Alfrftl~"'fli'hl of ltte "'"' ti ..-utllfllt a ~lllrtd_ bt' ,_. ll'ld • Tiii SO.NI cf TMlltt ""'"4 Wit 1 HtmY C. S#lltll, ......_ Tllt °"' C'!WftCb ., "'9 cJtY _, C.... 1rlvttlw Gt rsi.dlttt aJ'l'f •...O 111 111111 "' ,....., & tft_... Mttt ,......... lltt rllf!f t. rtllC'f ....., -to 1ft!Ye MY ltrteuWIH.. w lft. .. .......,. !II UW tll Wt. .. ! SMITBS' iloRTUAllY "'1 Mahl St. 8Uttlhlgl0t1 llelcli J:lll 1111 '-----The saj!-driver tire eotnpflllJJ.--· _ __.. JontteUtllt In lllY 11N or )n llw lllftfllll. ._ C...... °""' tiilt ... iY THI ORDI• °' Ttll: CITY ' NOl'Nll •.IW•hOll ............. ~ .... COl.INC!L 011 THf crrr CHI: Sectv. IOl'rd ol Trv..... T.,._.. '*'** COSTA MISA. (ALllJQjl.Hj4. 0..11: Jiii'( JI. lm.J:OO 11.m. ..........,. frW A ....... JltrtttU OATI01 Junt f, ltn . ..., l'ull'laflld 0rl"89 (.Int Otllf l"Ctrot, "'*'""' Or.,.. (IMI DtltJ Plitt, 1"11111/lllfC 0r.,._ C..11 'Dill., '"" JfAY "' ''· M 11'4-n Mt 11, -. u.. 1m 1..wa J..iy 11. 11, 1m Jt-lwi l ' • \ I I Stnart Bo1nb Shown Ch imps Adapting to Wild On Georgia Island Refuge ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - · Jlggs, rea1Wng the wlldHt dream of many a male - being set free oo a n uninhabited Island with three ltmales -should have been happy enough to awing from the trees. , He wasn't though. The ISO. pound chimpanzee, whim· pering, crawled back into h.is cage, longing for a human companionship he'd been used to. Joni, Girlie and Saki, his female companions, w e r e more adventuresome -they began exploring in the th.lck foliage on tiny Bear Island off the Georgia coast. The chimps were set free nearly a moo.th ago by Emory University's Yerkes Regional Primate <:enter in Atlanta in an ex]ieriment designed to see how well apes can breed and adapt in a wild environment in the temperate zone. "At first," said a Yerkes were placed there primarily for use during rainy and cold weather. "No heat will be provided, to see Jf the chimps can tolerate the cUmate this winter 1" said Dr. Geoffrey H. Bourqe, dire<· tor of Yerkes Center, which is supported by the National lnsUtutes of Health. Bear Island is private and warning signs are posted to discourage vi!:itors . "These animals are dangerous -especially the male," said the Ye ~ k es spokesman ... One of them has the strength of about three men. If disturbed, they're capable or killing a man ." The uper!ment could lut as long as three years --depending on how t h • chimps get along. If it's suc- cessful. Yerkes hopes to put crangutans on the 100-acre island. Orangutans are much larger t h a n chimpanzees, weighing up to 450 pound! as adults, and live Jn trees. Chimpanzees, like o t h e r great apes, are threatened with extinction in their native hab i tat s. The Island homesteading erperi.ment with J iggs and the other I hree chimps will give scientists clues as to whether they can breed and sust8in themselve.s on a Georgia coastal island . Southern Pacific Cleared in Wr eck spokesman who was present SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -a nine-month trial. when the chlmps were freed, Southern Pacific Co. was not The train was traveling "they seemed confused. Then, liable in a freak 1969 San with Jlggs leading the way' Bruno commuter accident in through. San Bruno \\•hen a 50- and the females fo1lowlng, which four were killed and 18 foot length of pipe ram med they walked aJong the beach. injured, a Superior Court jury through a windo\v. . "Before Jong, b o w e v e r • has ruled. Authorities said a small 4 .s. who'd lived in a cage The jury dismissed the tractor with a rork lift, most of his 12 years, returned railroad as a defendant in a operated by an employe or the to it, making crying sounds. $4.7·milliM lawsuit but voted construction company, was "Joni sat down nearby, to hold Southern Pacific raising the pipe into position swaying, while Girlie and Saki Pipelines Co., a subsidiary, for a jet.fuel oil line. scampered away and di!ap-and Alex R o b e rt s o n -1be line was being la id by peared," he said. Bakersfield Construction Co., the subsidiary. The plaintiffs "'111e next day, when Mark liable. included relatives of three of Wilson, an Emory graduate The seven-man, five-woman the dead and five of those who student working on the ex-jury deliberated 10 hours after were injured. periment, returned to the:-'F;;;;;;~~~~~;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;w-island to visit the animals and I bring food, Jjggs came ffO· ·NG i<.ONG screaming out of the woods to . greet him," the spokesman •aid "He got back into his cage and stuck. out his ann to be scratched, then turned his back to the bars, ao Wi!Jon could scratch his back." CUSTOM TAllOIS IN OIANGE COUNTY ..... J1lltrH (lltM Ml!IJ SAYE UP ro 5Cl'!li' 2 sums135 Mlftll 11111 "' Mlll4 talllnd ClllTll'll Mtdt -,"~,~ .. ="~.-.-,-~-.-... -! Sliit1, '$ptrltffh, Sllcb, llllrll. n..w. r..11 , ••• Stl .... •WI m ANT 1111 Siik -.Mir ••••• 11 •S •ANT anu co.tm c..•-•···•••ti St ~· ...... u •~ • na A&.TDATIONI Slllt Wetif ••••·• 12 I t Slllrta •••• , ••••• 10 6 • IAIY 'ATMBf1'1 ,l1H 1111.,.11 I "'4r 1000 PllllST IMllOllEI WOOl.OIS & IOUILI Pltl, Now, Jiggs and the other chimps seem to be thriving, though no offspring are in evidence. They eat foliage , boga, crabs and small rodents, ~pplementing the diet Wilson ,.. .. ,.1.,, .. _ ........ UM211 MondlJ, Jil!J 17, 1972 Snapshot Contest Leading to Kodak lnttmotional Nollspa per Snapshot Award• (KINSA '721 Competition Rules: 1. n. col'lt••• is 1trlc:tly ~or •m•f•ur phol1t9r.tpltet• (All •m•· +.vr /1 d•fined •• on• who1• hobby o' .t¥ocatio11 It itlcture·f.tlo.111' e!'ld who do•• l'lof 1n1k• eny tub1fa11tial pert of hl1 li•l•t thr•ittlil teklnt ptchnetl. J, lleck·.tnd-while or c:olor piclur11 11 ~•11 efter July I, lf71 ore elit ible. No piclure1 rn•v bt e11t1r1d by e11y •1t1ploy• of the DAI LY PILOT or by 111v indi~id 111I who ptrtonallv It •nt•1•1' 111 the rna11uf1ctu rt, 1e lt, cornrnt rc.i1I fi11ithi119 or profe11ional U•• of photogrephic 9ood1 . l . Snep1hot1 m•y be l1ktn witli eny meke of c:erntr.t. 011 e11y br111d of Jilm. No t rfwork or rtlouchin9 i1 pt rrn iHtd on n19.t• ti"'' or pri nlt -110 cornpotil• pictur11, rn ultipl o ••P0111r•1 er fflulti pl.t pri111i119. 4. Any 11urnb1r of piclure1 rn•v be enfer•d. Co11fetf.t11I'• 11ern•, eddreu i nd phone nurnber rnu1I be wrlfte11 cleerly on tht b.tclt of ••ch pichirt. M1 il or del1¥1r prl11f1 or tre11tp•r•ncitt to: DAILY PILOT Sn.tp1hot Conte1t Editor, P. 0 . lox 1560, Coit• M•'•· CA. 92626. fEnhit1 c111 be h•11d-d1l i¥e r•d to eny DAILY PILOT offict, but rnutf bt phytic elly in ha11d in tho•• officet by . cl11dline ••ch w11k.I Conletf olficleh rttt r¥• th• ri ght to cerry o¥er lite enhitt for jud9in9 frorn 0110 week to th• 111xt •nd to excludt frorn iud9i119 tlto.91!ht{ eny ontr le1 rtcti¥td l1to In tho fi ntl wetk. S. No bl11ck-1nd-whift picfur•t w111 be r•lurntd. Conl•tl•llf mini b• 1blt lo fur11i1 h ih1 ori 9l11•I ne9etiwe, if requ•1ted bv tli1 Cont11 t Editor. The DAILY "PILOT .t11 11me1 110 re1pon1lbiliy for n191tiw11 or prinh. COLOR PRINTS OR SLIDES WILL IE RE. TURN ED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED IY A STAMPED, SELF· ADD RESSED ENVELOPE. 6. Conletl.t nlt •r• permiH1d to 1ubrna piclure1 to 011ly 011• n1w1p1p1r p11rtic ip1tin9 in tli1 Kod.tk l11!1r11 tfio11el S11ep1hot Aw1rd1. 7. To be eli9ibl1 for • Ioctl 9r•Mf prh:e, a co11 .. 1!.t11f mutt 1i1Jn • 1t1!1rn111t th1 t th1 pic:lurt, or •nolhtr c.lotely tlrnllar ,1c •• fur• of th1 t•m• tubitcf or 1itu1tlo11, het not betll, •ftd will not b• tnf•rtd by hlrn in anv othtr co11t11t 011d will flOt 0. off•rM for publicetiofl to eny public1tio11 not co1111tcled with th it Con .. tt. I . IMPORTANT: Be turt yow know th• nernet end eddr•11et of 111y r1co911it1b!t ptr1ot11 1pp•1ri119 111 VOii~ plctu,... Tl\11 it n1c111•rv b1 c1u1e, in order for It to be e11tered 111 the 11etlonal j11d9i,,9, you "'u1t bt 1bl1 to 9et the written co11.1e11t of 111ch p111on or p.t1Jo11t !or th eir lt91I 9uardlanJ, 111 tho c.11•1 of minor•) Jo ptrrnit 1111 of the pict11r.t for the purpo•• of lllvrire- tio", ed.,•rti1i119 or public:ttio11 in •ny ma11rier. Enter Every Week July 2 Through Aug. 26 Deadline Wednesday Noon Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers North American Rockwell at Columbils, Ohio displayed its "smart" bomb for the first time last week. The TV·guided, $13,000 bomb has been used with uncanny accuracy in Vietnam. Don A. Smith, In lowe.r photo, points out camera eye that guides the payload to its target. brings them daily. 2tH hf'91tt Dr. Svh 12 "-w,.rt leech WUsonbringsthemaspecial l~~=°"=·~-=="'=·""==··=,.="=-==~-~=-=-==="=·~~~=~:h======================: monkey chow made of cereal, r.:;.ugraiD. milk end cod ·;.r ~ KJOCM ste 1031"M The apes oleep Jn two small ~ ~frame houses on stilts which ~ thesoitndsoftheharbor ' ' Chinese Problem Eyed S. A fri ca Taxi Drivers Un.s ure of Status Missiw Will Go ~~~~724 hours· a day SAN BERNARDINO (AP) - A symbol of military might lot of iron ore from South The firm consulted the Road standing in 8 small park will Africa and enjoy a privileged TransportaUon Board, which be replaced by the olive PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa (AP )-When a Chinese calls a taxi here he creates a dilemma for a cab company. In line with apartheid in transportation. taxicabs ha ve signs designating their use Whites are not supposed to ride in nonwhite c a b s . Nonwhites are supposed to stay out of those reserved for whites. Chinese are u·sually designated "other Asiatic," unlike the Japanese who buy a -~' .. bl 1 11 '"A · branch of peace. •:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; position as "hooocary wuites. was una e to c ar Y = pos1· Bowing to public objecUons, 11 B. D. Terblanche says hi! · tion. •'-· U.S. Air Fo-will remove • I, has •~ ~-Jness by 1 • wi:: •..,.;; (ADYlll:TlllMINT) 1l'lll aw• LIWI 'We 1uat can't take a a Minuteman missile and shJp dispatching l10llwhtte tu1s for chance ol transporting Chinese it to a military museum. Maoy Chinese customers. · hi'· tu! til ••-·1ua CJ"'""ns ob'~-' to t be "Imagine bow embarrassing 1!1 1 w u: tD1 u111:. s1 ,; ..._, ~- it is for a punese who has just tion has ~n 11clar1fied, missile's presence because left a cinema or an opera at Te.rblanche said. U we do nearby Norton Air Force Bue the theater, where he has been and we are caught, it could no Jong er has mia!lle arma· sitting with whites, to have to 1!1ean ,,that we Jose our ment, said Mayor Robert h.............. Holcomb. climb into a taxi for ._.· .. ~-... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nonwhites," said Terblanche. rll "It is quite ridiculous." BASKETBALL SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED T ight Se curity Set For B ea uty Pageant YOUll NEWSPAPERBOY 15 A CREDIT MANAGER SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - Authorities, dctennined not to allow a repetition of bombings that almost disrupted the Miss U.S.A. pageant finals, are setting up a tight security scheme for another beauty contes t. The plans include virtual Isolation of the seaside hotel where the Miss Universe con· test is lo be held July ll!-29. Only authorized persons, con· nected with the hole!. the government or the contest will be allowed on the premises of the Cerromar Beach Hotel, sources cormected with the ac· · tivity told a reporter. Accordlng to an Informant, the orgaolzers of the pageant, Miss Universe Inc., of New York, have served notice that tf there la violence the contest t<lll no longer be staged In Puerto Rico. The Miu U.S.A. and Miss Universe pageants, formerly held in Miami Beach, were brought to Puerto Rico this year under a five-year con· tract with the island govern- ment. The Miss U.S.A. !lnals May 29 were matTed by two bomb explosions that caused serious damage to a hotel end wrecked several cars In a parking lot. Pickets of separatist groups -lhoae seeking to split Puerto Rico away from the United States -had marched in.Iron! of the hotel and siaged a M·ln at the beach, During the M!Ss Unlverae activities no picketing on hotel grounds will be allowed. The Puerto Rican govern· mwt conskle.rt the beauty cootests excellent publicity for its tourist Industry because of television coverage:. M.,M ..... ,...._ .. ''"''" ... , ...... ,,,._. te Yff .._ '" ,., .., ,.,... -., ............ ,..,. -n. ......., .. fw .rt..,. el f'H' ....,,,.,,,. a.t tedl DAILT. PILOT um. II. 11 ....... fer M .... f. He tnllfl JM tti pey W. _, ...... ,.,. fer tlle ••1p.,:1n i. ......, N Yff· • c:.nMrt .. _..... " ltllrt c.n.ctt.t • .._,, ,..._ • ..., • ' ' ... 1 ... efMdi ...... er ""91itfy k th JM M tlley c• M _., .......... ~ ....... ., ... --.... -.. ,., -Miio. ., ,.. .. ,., --""' .... & ....... wll ..., , ... --· ... & wtlt ASSURE PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE DAILY PILOT CIRCULAT ION DEPARTMENT • Or. Gary L. Couture, of tho C....turo Chiro- pr1ctic Office in Newport Boo ch presents Or. Doniel Ald rich, ChanceHor of U.C.I. 1 ba sket- Lan schol.rship check. Looking on ore (loft to right) Al Irwin, 1thletic . director, t nd UCI ba.ketball coach, nm Tift. ·aa D CO CERT TO IGHT , 9:15 P. • AT FASHIO ·ISLAND \ ) • . , --. lf DAILY PILOT S Mood,u, Jufy 17, 1972 : How 'Far Will Japan Go? . . U.S. Trade Balance Future Penw on Tallis-- TOKYO (UPI) - T h e "-kall eoooomilt, " t h e Unlltd 8tatei wlll have o flnl dangtr of 'protectlonllm' hand dlool:e ,Jaltt this month bt<omes C>" e 1 I er and to 1ewn ~-¥her Japan'i' new greeter." prtmler, Klkuel T o n a k a , Being • pro-American pollt~ really wants to help America cian, Tanaka ls aware of the Im I ad . Importance or keeping Japan prove la tr e balance. closely al)&ntd wlih the United The occasion will be olflclal States. Reliltlooo between the U.S...Japan talks on trade two countriu. he a a Id ICheduled ror July is in recently, are '1ike air and Hakone mountain resort west water. Without them we will of To' ""-all die.• Tanaka aaya U.S.· .yo. w~m Eberlee, the ' Japan friendship takes priori· U.S. presidential en v o Y, ty over all ~ i:salea, i{J- already baa aenl Japan a list cludi~ the lmprovemqit or of ltenu America wants Japan relations with China. to wy to close the gap in the However, despite I UC h .slatementa the new 54-year-okt t~way trade. premier has proved hirmell to TANAKA, WHO formally became premier on July 8, ln- djcatod he V{OU)d help but refralned from saying just how far he wu willing to go. Tl"! U.S. had a deficit of $3.2 billion last year and 11 ex- Jitcted to reg:.1cr another $3.6 lo It billion deficit this year if the present altuatlon con- tinues. AJ Minister of IntemaUonal Trade and lndUJtry In the cabinet of hi! predecessor, Eisaku Sato, Tanaka said Japan ahould apent at least 18 billion, half of !II foreign tx· change ......-ves, In wylng riw materlali and investment abroad. If he act:: ou what he ..,ivocated, his admlnistrttlon "l&Ddoubtedly will encourage Imports fri>m America. Government 90W'cta say la)>an will attend the trade :lalks with tentative plans call· 'Ing for the purchase of llfanium, livestock feed and alrcrafl worth about $1 billion. '!Ills would be designed to ease growing inssure Oil Japan to open Ill doors to more AmerlcaJ>.mad• goods. • :'· •1JF THE TRADE deficit persists," explained an ... be a tough negotiator. Japan budged very llUle until the Unltod States In e ff e c I devalued the dollar last year which w .. followed by • 16.!3 revaluation of t:ie yen. The Smitb>nian agreement was, from the Japanese standpoint, designed to make Japanese producta less attractive on the u.s. rnarket.and.foreign goods more attractive in Japan. DESPITE 'Vff8, Japan sold $2.1 billion worth of goods In America and bought only $1.% billion -1n American goods In the nm three months of 1m, according to U.S. governmont statistics. Japanese import., oonsisted chiefly of wheat, coal, "'Y and jet airliners. Ex- ports of automobllea and color television sets were heavy. 11\e Nixon administration obviously want!: Japan to purchase technology-intensive products such as cbemicab. machinery and transportation equipment. J a p a n e s e in- ~ustrlalists woUld prefer to buy technical know-how to produce goods of their own TaMka is caught in the mid· dle, but the aqueeze is not too great. J a p a n e s e manufac- tw-ers realize that some ad- justments are needed. Denture Invention ForPMplewfth ~''1ppen'' •nd ''lewll'S'' ~ marst thinf to havin1 your om teeth it JQlible now with a plutic cream ditc.o\-ery that acta.-&Hi' boldt both "uppers'" and • 91<irten" • newr bl!f~ pollibl~. • 'Jt'1 a dilcovay caUed FIIOOE,..,. for daily bom• use (U.S. Pat. 13,003.988) and it baa revolu· ~ileddenturaweuin1.FlxooaNt forTl'll an ela!tie membrane that hel1>1 abeorh the ahocb of bitin.i and chewin1. With F1XOD£HT many denture 'ftllftR may eat. 1peak, lau&h. with littJewonyol dl!lltLftlcominJ IOOle. One 11pplic:ation may la1t for houn. Dentures that fit ate .... ti1 l to health. See your denti1t recularly.Cetea1y-to-me.Fu.oo&NT Denture Adbaive. Cm.m..- PANTERA 0by deTomaso , .. imported for Uncoln-Mercury. Italian coacbwor)c created by the brilllant Ghia Studios ot TUr:ln. Ford designed the 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel ln- depenent 1u.spen1lon and mid-ship engine placement. Five speed a:ear box. fully synchronized ••• •Pantera ..• Itallan for Panthtr ..• o,~. c u•lf 1·r .. J'1 "' ;,,, "'". ohnson & son 1-tt--1 212' HARBOR ILYD .. COSTA MESA • MNl30 TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efflc:ient "We relied too much on the American market,'' ~iald Junjt lto, prelldent of Kanebo, ona of Japan's top five textile ~ ducin( companies. "From now on, J1paa hu to reduce Its ex· porta to the United Stalel and diversif Its forei&D markets." e settie-.t Rotary E ngine Gets General Motors E ye FINANCE New Tires Now Made Of 'Glass' LOS ANGELES Shareholders Capital Corp. aayo It h8' reacbed a $1.15 million settlement of five Qvil suits broug(lt by shareholders ·of three mutual !unda It owns. The ault, brought b y shareholders ol three funds, alleged t ha t Shareholders Capital suMidiaries overstated the value of unregistered shares in their investment portlolios, received excess fees and failed to reduce brokerage commission costs. LOS ANGELES (AP) - General Motors Corp. ia work- ing on a "third generation" design of a Wankel rotary engine but ts aUll undecided about producing the powerplant, a top GM official says. Frank J. Winehell, vice president in charge of GM's engineering start, also told a press conference in surburban Van Nuys recently that the company ii unconvinced that the rotary englne has any ad- vantage over piston engines in terms of meeting t o u g h federal antipoUution standards for 1975 and 1978 autos. SOME AUTOMOTIVE ex- perts have claimed that the Wankel, which now powers Japanese Mazda automobiles, would be easier to "clean up" than the conventional en~tne. However, the auto official did say that GM was in- te~ In the engine -it is spending '50 milli011 to acquire manutacturing and marketing rights from German com- panies that own the Wankel - because of its simplicity, mtall size and lower weight compared to that of the pison engine. - Winchell's rem arks coin- cided with 1 GM denial in coini_ded with a GM denial in Detroit of a Chicago Tribune story that the company'• hoard of directors had ap- proved production and public sales of rotary-powered cars In the fall of 1973 and also authoriz.ed machine t o o I purchasing programs a n d volume production of several models or cars with Wankel engines for 1975. nlE STORY "is entirely speculative on their part and has no basis in fact," GM said. Asked when a decision on the rotary was likely, Winchell said he could not l!lay. He did note though that several GM units are working on the Wankel engine and that the company's Hydra-Matlc division has hand-built about 50 test engines. He said GM1s Wankel project reports go directly to Edward N. Cote, company president. Winchell was in Van Nuys for ·the opening of a com- puterized t.sUng station that GM wltl use to comply with California requirements that every 1973 and later model car sold in the state must be emission tested at the end of the assembly line. CUrrenUy, only 1 portion of all cars is tested. • B' RUDY CERNKOVIC Ul"I llltl-W'111r PITTSBURGH -A glass slipper led Cinderella to her Prince Charming, and PPG Industries hopes to woo tire producers with its fiber glass tire cord. John A. Sanguignl, product Manager of PPG's flber glass division, said his firm is "ag. gressively pursuing such a development in close coopera· tion with major tire com- panies." THE ALL-GLASS tire con- cept must compete with steel beked radial tires. At present glaSJ cord reinforces belts in more than half the tires in- stalled on new cars. Such bias- belted casings have polyester sidewalls. e Dett1111'• Chief LA MIRADA-Verne H. Win- chell, chairman of the board of Denny's Restaurants Inc. bas been named chief.. ex- ecutive o!flctr. He replaces Robert W. Eberle, 41, who has resigned . Eberle will remain as a paid consultant eBre...ery. ST. LOlnS-Purchase of t h e Schlitz • Burgenneister brewery in San Francisco from the Bergermeister Brew- ing Corp., was announced lly the Falstafi Brewing Corp. for terms undisclosed. A spokesman s a I d tho transaction resulted fr o m greatly lncreued F a I s t a f I sales on the West Coast this year, with the firm's San Jose brewery incapable of meeting the volume demand. The San Francisco facility has capacit)!' to prOOuce beer in excess of 20 million cases annually. Fal!laff will alao produce Ballantine beer and ale ati Ute San Francisco brewery. Money's Worth PPG, the nati~'s leading producer of the glass tire cord, said an all·glass radial now in the test stages is a distinct possibility. The alJ. glaM tire incorporates the cord In hoth the belt and eKaber Los• NEW YORK -Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. reported 1972 second-quarter earnings fell to $8.52 million or Buying Beef in Bulk?. Scrutiny Is A Must carcass. 41 cents a share. ' Sanguignl, who holds a doc-ln the second quarter of torate in chemistry, said the ,_ 1971, the company's earnings radial belted ply keeps the were $15.35 million or Tl cents tread straight and open The a .s~. Sales rose to ~6.51 By SYLVIA PORTER No matter what additional moves will be made in coming months to hold down heel prices -and more moves are on the way - beef prices are eertaln to con- tinue climbing over the long- !enn. Thus, no matter how :asual a shop- per~ you are, it's increasing.. ly likely that l"Olln-• you will try to curb your bulk and storing it in your home freezer. Okay, It's a good way to go -U you are on guard agaimt the estimated 300 or so "bait and switch" beef swindlers in the U.S. today ... if you in- stead patronize one of the 7,500 entirely ethioal freezer meat operators situated all over the. country. Ai.o If you know and ocrupulo111ly obey the rules when you buy beef or other types ol meat via the wholesale route. To .gtve you specific guides: ' DO NOT BUY a side or beef Jn hasty rtspoDH to a tempt!~ ad. II you really want and need cas much beef as this and If you can arrange to store It properly, plan your purchase ahead, then shop ln- t.lllgently for the meat. • Before you buy, deci d e whether you wtll want a large quanUty of &teaks er whether your famlly .. w he happy with 1 ... fancy cuts or whether you woold prefer to have a wiclt variety of cuts, inc;luding pl& ty or stew meat and haa>- blrger. · •To help younelf r .e a c h these declslona, study the heel-cut charts pooled In your butdler sbop or available from the U.S. Department of Agriculture In Wuhlngtoo. percent steak.s, 2S percent .roasts, %5 percent ground beef and stew, 25 percent wBste . ' WHEN BUYING In bull< fi~e not only what you ar~ pa1Uli per ~ for the BC· tual meat minus fat, bones, etc., but also what price you are paying for cutting, packaging and quick-freezing. These procedures can easily add a to 10 .,..,ts a pound to the net C06I or your meat l! _they .... ni>I ·Included in the basic price. • If the ads include such ter.ms as "!teak package" or "steak bundle," find out precisely wbat these terms ~andcover. • U unbelievably low·priced eJtras or "steak bundle " find . ' out precisely what these terms mean and cover. II !f unbelievably low-priced extras or "bonilaes" are thrown In to sweeten the deal -aay, 10 pounds of fcylng chickens for 50 Centa or five pounds of hot dogs !or $1 or 30 pork chops for free -use your bea<I,. No butcher could afford gi"veaways such as these. • AND NEVER forget for a minute that the bait-and· switch racketeers use this sort of hue -tor instance, ads for sides or qiiarltts of heel at such fantastically IOlf prlc<s as 33 cents a pound -in order to bait you and then switch you to a mucll h!gber-prlced carcass. •Uthe deal involves payments by you on time, check whether the terms are belt ht the . · . milhon from $274.62 million a ena es tire to rtCle year ago. easier on road surfaces and During the first ball of the extends the life of the tire. year Kaiser's profits slumped The radial tire is 1n limited to $10.86 million or 49 cent!: 1 I but Sa · · ·d share from $20.!M million or supp y, nguigm Sil pro-$1.02 a share in 1971. Sales duction will step up. rose to $504.78 million from "Pound for pound glass fiber $496.83 million a yeai ago. Is stronger than s t e e I , ' • Sanguigni said. "But to the e Earnings Do11m consumer steel imp Ii es LOS ANGELES -Pacific strength and glass is ccn-Lighting Corp. reports ea~ sldered fragile . We think on a ings ,are down for the six· cost perfonhance b a s i s , month period ended June 30. nothing can beat fiber glass· Board chairman Paul A. tires." Miller compared this year's 111ERE WERE some prob- lems in the development of the !!her glass Ure. Tbere were breakages in the tire, but re9elrchers say they solved this by Improving the level or filament. Tests with fiber glass l'l!dial tires indicated tread wear and high speed perfonnance equal the steel cord, Sanguigni said, and the ride quality was com- parable to rayon. "Fiber ghw cord la also Jlghter and cheaper than steel, and in fact, at equivalent design strengths, is the lowest cost cord now avaijable. This economic advantate Ls ex- pected to continue," be said. Banks Hike Interest Prime Rate figure of $22,736,000 with the 1971 total of $26,373,000 for the same period. eommon stock equivalents -w e r e $1.20 per share ror 1972, and $1.4S last year. e Tax Ded11ctll>le LOS ANGELES -United Cal~ornla Bank aaid that the Internal Revenue Service has confirmed that payments to depositors and creditors of the bank's Swiss subsidiary in Basel are tax deductible. The Basel bank in August 1970 Jost an estimated $30 million , primarily because of unauthorized trading in cocoa futures by officials of the subsidiary, the bank aaid. UCB said the IRS ruling confirms the deductibility of payments to depositors and creditors as well as the loss of UCB's investment and ll· quldaUon expenses. e Clorox Deal spelled out .., required under NEW YORK (UPl)--S.venl the Truth In Lending law -100re major banks have joined the total finance charge, the the current round of Increases yearly percentage interest in the prime interest rate to rate, the runber and schedule 4'h percent. of peymenll. Also, wlllch bank Latest to announce boosts In or fmanct company will ac-the rate, which is accorded a tually .hold the paper you sign? bank's top c or p o r a le OAKLAND -The Clorox Co. h., acquired the business and assets of the Martin- Brower Corp. of Cblcago through an exchange of stock, Cloroi president Robert B. Shetterly baa announeed. The exchange was on the bas'is of .675 of a share of Clorox common stock for each • Learn well the key guides · customers, were Chemical to fresh, good quallty ~-Bank, Irving Trust ·Co, and For example, the bone should Finl National City Bank. ' of i,220,010 shar-. of Martin· il<>""'r stock outslaDding. 9Settlement .. Ordtr For Your11l f or a Frl....t M•y b1 used on envelopes 11 r1turn eddress l1.b1!J. Also v1ry h•ndy •• identificetion lt btls for marking p1rson1I items such e s books, rtc.ords, photos, etc. lebtls stick on gle11 .end may b1 used for marking home c~nned ~oe;d items. All l1b1l1 •r• printed with stylish Vo9u1 typ1 an fin• quality ""hit .. gummed p•p•r. ' • AS AN ADDITIONAL guide on cull, In general U you want more stew and roasta, yotl'!I probably want a hind quarter. A typicol, trtmmod heel hind quarter originally weighing about 200 pounds consi.ts of 53 percent mats and oven roasta, II percent stew, ground meat and pot roaota and 21 percent-waste. be Ivory white, the sign of 1 Baken Trust Co. announced young steer, not yellowed; the a slmllar move, whch wu ln- f1t 'sllould be white u against auguraled tteenlly by lllellon yell<>W and then ahouldn't ba National Bani & Ttual Co. of an excessive Amount of fati Pltllburgh. LOS ANGELES -ThO West Coast Commodity Exchange .. .· I! Y.., want 1 lot ol slew heel and hamburger, you'll ~ly he best off .. itli • Ion ~· A typical, Uin>- med quarter, orlginolly welghln« 215 to ml pounds, !ftlks down Into :t5 percent stub and oven roam, 32 ~ cent pot roosts, 37 percent lllew and~nd m""t-.nd"ll percent ........ the moot tender beef i. well All of the banks -havt a "marbled," meaning It bu prime rate ol. 511,percent, with llr<lkl of lat througtloul the the move by Irving Tra and meot. wt marbllng alao CIUhank effective today. They means ca Io rie1 and had been either at the" level of cholesterol; the best meat ta 5V• percent or 511 porcent. cben-y red In color u against All tiul Chemical ha.. a the darker colared meal ol an 11Doetlng'' prime rate, which older animal. la pegged to · move..m of • FINAU.Y, TllERE'I • guide IA> typical costs or varlous cub. Assume, juat for lllllllnti"'!. Iha! a ..,1ng rote 116 -pet pound for • whole"' tllde of beef, huod 911 ..,_. wetabt· The poice per pound -be: blnci querier, Ill <tlltl: Ion quorter, • -<en!$; round, 116 ""'1ta; loin, 1111 ll10ll07 markat ntea. has reached a 1etUemeot with oiie of lour men It aued In t 15 m1llioo defamation -.ult, 1 apokeaman llfl. Temm of the settlement were not dlacloood. David Callahan, president of the exchange1 aald the agree· ment WU reached " I t h William E. Henner of Chicago, 1 former '"vernor of the ex· change. e Pi..t Cle•e • LEWISTOWN, Pa. -Cel>- tral Pennsylvania -Jolied with tlle loa of one ol Ita l' targoot employen heca,.. of ........ from the reeent flood. FMC Corp, whlcil ta hncf.i quorterod In Sin ..... .... llOUnced It WIS clOl!JIC the n)'Oll yam ...,11on of Ill plant •• • 1st ens To Landers? • SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INflUE-N1'1AL WOMEN IN {/ AMERICA ••• • •• Just About Everyone • You Can 'Uaten' to A~n Landers Daily in The 01\ILY PILOT I! you want • wide variety ol. cuts, a ha If carcoa 'lrilJ probably be the pu:dlaae ror you. 'nte usable meat from 1 wbole heel care... breakl -Into.,.,..._, 25 -1:J.:1:.· '° cellll; ... ~ cut ·- Manet lntereot rate flclll'll released last week by the Ftderal Re,.... Bank of New Ycrk hod made It appear Uke-'1 more banks WOUid mike tho -to 511 percent. Mall)' anaiyito end money marbt ~ hava predicted In r.eent weeks Ume the prime rate would rtae to 511 perc<Dt er f percent within the next aix- here because mpenlng It wu aot "ecallaal'icwU, IMiible." "'--":"'--""'":;;....;'_,;,,_, _______ J I I 1 • •• '• • • t I , I • ' \------- ----~~--------- • 0 ' .I j • I • r . . . . . 1 I .J .. .,, . . ' . ' • I .. . -.. • ·- I • JJ DAILY l'ILOT MOftd11, Julr 17, 1972 F 11111.. Cfreas lt1r Bil Kea11e ~-~ Curvy Cowgirls a Hit _Rodeo Getting New Bumps· and Grinds in Texas BY RENA PEDERSON• oald Mrs. DlsbtnJn, the ~ed, pttlC. hold co," the said. "I've beettiln>lfD arid , BtmNET, Tn. (UPI) _ "You ain't wife of a een\rai Te>:as rancher. stepped on, llut l can't quit II gets In Your blood.'• .... nochln' tu! yoo see t5 J>OW1dl of Sbe trains hones arid joins tile rodeo 'hooky ""1l< angel' come ddlnJ out ol tbe circuit on weekends. "It'• a challenge to Pl'O't aomtlhlnB to ob~ en t,200 J>OW1dl of bllckJng Brahma yourself," explalned l~yeor-<>ld' Debbie bllll," aald 1n old cowboy, losing Juilf of "WE RODEO PJWrfY near year Allen, of Axtel~ Te<., who Iida btooct cbaw of tobao<o down tM COrM" of his '"'"nd," she said. "Some people really and bulls bareback. She balled be< lll!lllth. work at it -they can make two or three Gidget-blue eyes (no makeup) and aald: 0 Looldt her rtde," he whooped. ''She'• in one weekend it they haul." "It Mowa you're ali'le and yOu ain't scared.'' got her bottom plant..i on that one." Burnet -rhymes with d-lt -Is a '1be "honky tonk enget." are rodeo cenfraJ Te:ras town with 31000 populatk>n Sally Pressman, 25, of Portales, cowi!rll, and they !Jave added a new abd and no otbtt claim to lame than an N.M., got "runner-up Beot AU·Around daring lwill to women's liberation by armadillo 1arm and "The World's Cowgirl" ii this mr's Burnet todee ~-..llll'llli-UP-the-&porl-ol-rid!ngr10pln"'l .. •"'nd"---'S"ma"""U"es"t_:_C"'it:!.y_:_P_:_ar:_:k~.'-' _ and wu once a natfonal collegiate ·cbaJn. barre racing across the southwest. Yet, 8,000 perlOllS have tumedlijftfiet'o"o-1'P·i?,.,');lt;:,,-;;Uk;:e::-a::n::ythin=· ::~::e"'Ise-:-,-;;,.-,5be;-s-ald,""'""'I"t's~ the past five years to watch ·tbe ""honky-the hrill I Inn II llVNDJ\EDS OF WOMEN have traded tonk angels" perform. This year it rained t c w g, the cha enge of compeUtJon." . thelt detks and homes for hor5es and steadily throughout the second night's saddles -traveling betweeo Texa., performance, but 600 fans sat two hours LAST =. e inndo 0 •1·""-• N M ' W . d ' th t od d beered th 'I hil · ,~,MRS.SALLY I>' rf,of .._.._..~~ ew wco, yommg an up in e s a s an c as e g1r a Potlatch, ldaho, was gored by a bull in "Get dow~ lower, Doddy-1 con't pitch lo Idaho and out lo Callfornla. !be mud. Burnet. lt took 35 stitches to sew up the thot high.". Wearing blue jeans so tight they can't "Every year I aay I'm not going to do it Jett side of her face. She won the "Hard -------------------bend ..., to dust their boots, tbey rope again, but l do," said Nancy U..Well, an Luck Cowgirl" award for !bat. and ride a horse like Date Evans never 18-year old cowgirl from Killeen, Texas. "I just love it," the 3~year-<1ld dreamed of doing. Al5-2 and 96 pounds, she looks like she housewife said, "My mother thinks I'm "The cowgirls are tough and yet they should pack up her freckles ancf go back Crazy but my husband backs-me 100 per· are quite feminine," said Sally Dishman, to grade school. But she calmly swings cent." 1 Fig Virginia • Space Citi~~ Booming As U.S. Effort Wanes · president of tbe Texas Barrel Racing over the lence, pats down her hat and Bow-legged boyfriends and husbands AslOclation and the organizer of the comes roaring out 90 a bull they call who usually compete -in rodeos · Burnet Afl.Girl Rodeo, the largest of its "Moby Dick." · themselves, fill up the stands or cluster kind in Texas. around the chutes. 'Ibey offer advice and "0Ur1youngest contestant is 8 and our "YOU'RE SO SCARED you can't really eventually a handkerchief to dust off bad By PAUL RECEB AP ,,.,.... Writer ·"We J;w' have 8 diversified oldest would admit to being •over 60,' " think about what you're ,doing. You just falls and ~ipe away tears. Worlling as a "line girl" at the Cape Girardeau Alr-J>Ort 'in Missouri is a unique summer job for Virginia Fowlk~. She parks planes and takes orders for gu. oline and service from pilots like Ron Roddy of T~~- SPACE CENTER, Houston The netioo.'a !plCe program llrdecllnina-and astr--qulelly . Jeaviog !be -11pacecran Center beN. a. the surrounding area, Ill aunott moc&ang cOntrast. • DOOmlllg as never oeiu1•. job base for the home buyers,., be said. Pence and others mlmat..i !bat about 85 percent of · the area'• job holders are in noaaerospace fields. Th ls represents a !w'nar<lUod from earlier years. And the cape Aeme<IJ . PENCE SAID T D AT dlltrlct In Florida 11 -Oleoir Lol:e City a n d a )llnel1Clog a new pros_, nearby deep water port fn. too, after an e co n om I c dustrlal dlsrtict were alrt:idy .. ~ression resultliii frolll • on the drawing boards when • lbarp reduction in the ~ the space center was located · orlent..i work !oroe there ·111 here. . • 1970. . At that Ume, 11 years ago, . In the last five years, 1lal cattle grazed where mission munher of workers at Ille control now stands. A ·bat· ·llouslon space cent<r, home cl lered, two-hine rural road was ·'~erica's astronaut!, baa .an there was to what is noW ·i!e'cllned by about 5,000, llut NASA Road One, the avenue tbe merchants, banks and of the astronauts. ho'!le builders in the area The only maj9r develop-cla~ they have hardly been ments nearby were Ellington fe!! by the Impact. Air Force Base, a dying W hy Mercedes-Benz .Diesel owners i nsist that it's allthos~ other people who are out of step. It beats m~ ~w we could military base 10 miles away, ~any busier, said a grocery and Webster 1 sleepy Texas store manager. town. ' · '. "WE CAN'T GET ENOUGH houses tQ sen:~ c I a i m e d .,Oiaries Wyaot of Space City Development, a real estate firm. : _Webb Sharp, manager of the pear Lake Chamber of Com- merce, said that although the MaMed Spacecraft cent<r and the torrjd pace of the •pace Pr<Jll'8ID helped the growth ol the ares, there would probably have been a boom here anyway. "The space program gave us the Immediate base. n said Sham. Down the road the other way waa a fading resort area on Clear Lake, a sweet water lake that -offered boaters a path to Galveston Bay and Gulf of Mexico beyond. Bur FRIENl>SWOOI> ANll other developers were ex- f)ect.ing the rapid expansion of Houlton to affii:t.tbe area. ·The company designed Clear Lake City and Bayport and planned a long orderly development. Jtow strange: a .little lamp on the instrument panel glows ruby red when the 220 Diesel is ready to start. How unonhodo.: you start it up by pulling out a knob. -· How odd: th~ ;engine makes a "pockeia-pockcta" sound when idling. The 220 Diesel is no onlinaty auto- mobile. It is almost c:coentric. What saves il i&'I pCD<l!llit'f6t' pUmi aown. running costs~ For instance, Diesel owners sidestep all these e.pemes: L Tanking up on gasoline-a fµcl that can cost 49 cents a fallon for the more exotic ''premium'' blends. 2. Tanking up often ' above premium pso!lnes. I'll maD1 areas it is .lower ciien than J<gulat grades. Finally,1note this: Most of the 'World's trains run on Diesel power. The UJ11e bolds for huge traIISport trui:ks. Such industries depcnd'forsurvivalon .· low rimning , ... , and rock-solid rtli·· . ability-sttange; isn't it, that where ccoilomy ud reliability really C:OUll& you usually find a Diesel engine? Perhaps it isn't so strange .rrer all. Pertiaps the 220 Diesel isn't such ail "oddball". after .all It well may be the most ratitmal automobile yet devised. But it was. the nearness of Houston, '¥1 miles by freeway, and that city's immense growth that rocketed the area's economy upward, saya The sudden hnpact of the Manned Spacecraft Center comtrucilon accelerated the development by about five years or more, according to most estimate!. . -Diesels seldom drop ,,,..-------...... Where the econolll)' stops Sharp. II also led 'to the establfs ment of other communities Jn the area and a rapid growth of --such neitrby towns~ -CLEAR~ LAKE1 I CJTYther, ha Seabrook, Kemah, La Porte, commuru.•1 pu oge 'I Dickinson and Friendswood, a Fr l endsw~ . Development onetime Quaker community ~ .. a su~d1ary of Humble _popular with a e r o s p ace --Gil Ir Ref11ll11g Co-ls-the · ~ --· largest new devetoPment in engmeers. below 20 miles per gal· Ion in averago driving : jf properly tuned. And . with a light foot on t e throtllc·, you'll1 -e amazed how much bet· ter than this you can do. Enjoying Diesel economy means no comedown · in your s tanaard of driving oomfort In· fact, jf you· have never owned a Mercedes-llellz. it 11J!1.Y mean a step up. !be area with a population ol SBARP ANll o TH E R s about 14,500. · · believe even if the space pro- Charles Pence, a vice Prest· d'ed the dent of Friendswood, said that gram 1 out completely boom in the area wouJd con-even w I I b the declining tin 3. Jleplac:ing spm plags...;or adjusting car-- buretors, or fiddling with distributors and condensers, or installing new points. Costs that mount in a year's 97 ,..,. ol e.PMtrlar -n&Mmnt au.it4 behbtd dw Me~n-Bad 220 Diesel e111;... 0..rbud camth.aft. hd h1jecliotto ud •·2LO:I comprH>o aio11 ratio D1Uk die latclt Ytni.on. Try spotting this ''economy'' sedan in a showroom full of Mer· cedes·Benz cars. It won't be easy; from the ue. amount of activity at the Bayport has 16 industrial space center, home sales in firms operating there, six Clear Lake City reached a I ...... and II record level in 1971, and a bet. :ror$:°:1'n~. ,,!~81:e ter Yea!' Is predicted for 1972. predictions of 22,000 jobs and a "We're ahead of last year In •ts billion payroll by 1980. sales already and expect by Ellington AFB, now busier tht end. of the year to have than ever, is expanding. sold 660 new homes," he said. Additionally, the University Apartment buildings and of Houston has established a • townhouaes are going up also. branch in Clear Lake City with 15,000 students expected to enroll by 1981. TWO NEW HOSPITALS are expected to create 600 new jobs. Most of the astronauts boil! homes near the !pace center and many of these are now up for sale. Bu~ accordlng to Wyant, the astronauts and others selling tbeir homes art having little dllliculty finding buyers. Home values increased from ~ to 50 percent in the last six years,· and are sUll going up, be Aid. "It's definitely a 1ellers' market," said Wyant. driving. No wonder Diesel owners sa~ it's everybody else who's out of step. WhJ Diesd ownas have the last laDgb Pop open the hood of the 220 'Diesel. ¥ou'Jl ... an engine mmus car- buretors, minus spark pJugs, minus points or-condenser ordistributor. A Diesel engine simply doesn't need these often irksome items. It dnes away with the.~ ditional, delicate eJcctric system; and it exchanges oarburetors for direct injection as a means of feed• ing fuel 10 the cylindcts,. Pans that · aren't there will never have to be repaired or teplaced. Next, start the engine up. That Cdd olick and clatter at idle is·the sound of fuel being cl11ilpresstd ill the combustion chambers, rather than ignited by.spark:pl114'asitl ordinary cars. - The Diesel uses a ''compm. siot>-ignition" system. lt means an •na.ine compression ratio or Jaffe Heads 21.0:1 (a powerful Cadillac V-& · has a compression ratio of 8.~:I). And that m~ans .more horse- ... ,_ reu.·s,..,, . Traffic Vnit po~ersqueezedfromeverydrop -+--offuel.- Newport Beach Tr a11'1 e Now, rub a blob of cliese!fuel Engineer Roborl L. Jelle has between ~our fingertips. It's • been elected prulden! of !be crude oil, cheaply refined. Not ·Orange Ootlnly T,r,a If I c even sti1f taxes C1J1 raise its CCU Enginoerinf Council for 1972- '13. The council, .....,ized In 11!8, Is compooed of tralflc encloeen, trwportatJoe plaJ>. nen and others wortln( In ftiated fields In !ht eounty. engine compartment rearward, the 220 Diesel is: almost identical to several sist!:t modclS. This means that the money-saving 220 Diesel measures S feet Wide inside. The . seats, designed .with the aid, of orthopedic physicians, utilize not cheap foam· rubber but hand-woven· coil springs and natural fiber padding. This sturdy maclilne'·weighs over one-and-a-half tons. It is wdded more than 6,000 times, painted 4 times, sealed beneath with 24 lbs. or undercoating. "Impeccable" is a feeble wOrd to describe ,that traditional Mcrcedcs- Bcnz finish. Tenminntes' browsing and you will coin your own 8Uperlativcs.. ' I SaYe51DODCy-andnenea People often enthuse about tlie J>leasurc of driving their 220 Diesels. It is t!ie pleasure of driving •i~ en8i· ncertd. up to a standard, not l10Wtl to a price. Each wheel on your 220 Diesel is sprung indeptndcntly on its axle.Only a test drive can show the difference this makes on bad roads and sharp curves. The car behaves with masterful <aim. As a result, so do you. You stop ·squarely, because u<h wheel-not only the front ones-car·· des its own disc brake. The engineers even tucked a shock absorbCr into the steering aY,tem to block iciui·thumps from reaching yout lwids on.the wbceL S111!l!cstion: Bring your wife along . when yon test drive the 220 DieseL She'll be delighted at how easy and re- laxing this machine is· to drive. Shc'Jl dis<over that this roomy 5-passenger sedan actuaUY turnS in a tighUr ciidc thali the littleVW 1100 "Beetle!' Buryin& those Diesel myths Over two decades, Mercedes-Benz· has refined Diesel engine performance toa point where manyfamiliarold c:rili• ciarm an: nothing more thalimyths. "Diesels me noisy!" trm ·,.,cr heard a Diesel lately? Due to thatt(>m-1 bustion process, it docs click and clat• ter at idle...,.especially when. cold. Bui once it's under way the sound fades.BJ the time you hit 30 mph, it~ ~ hard to·ltll by the t>Oise that yotl'fO riding in a Diesel. "Diesel fuel ii scarce!" .IUve Y1it1 'talked with a Diesel owner lately? The! fact is, clitsel fut! ii IC8ttU thin sa"'" line. But it's available whermr Di=' trtJclts Stop, and that's thousands an4 thousands of places across the U.S.A:. "Diesels don't go fast enooslil" : Not fast enough to win a draa ~ true. But fast enough to cruise comfort• ably on any highway (and fasta' thatl, the posted limits in 48 of·tbeSO IUICS). Mercedet-Bmz motor can: from $37,928• to $6.117• -----"Meicedes-Bau: oft'en a vast ranae of- models. Hae arc suggested retail pric:a for 7 of the mo1tpopu.lar types: 350SLR01ds1cr $10,61. 280SE 4.5 Sedan $J0,170 210SB Seduo $ 9,sn; • 2SO Coupe $ l,16J 250 Seit.a. $ 7..315 220 Sedan S 6.42' 2ZODinetSed .. 11 S 6.117 •••• , c-,... ti nfl'T, ......... ti •_,.rion,, ......... 11. (<-) ....... ..,.;..., ....... local ...... ii ,..,. c.,,.;p ltU, ~--ol Nwlli """'*' ""' A Diesel is undeniably ''different." But not as different as many people think-and not different enough to pre- vent more than 35,000 Americans from buying Mcrced.S-Bcnz Diesel sedans ill the past 10 years. A $6,117 investment The Diesel comes fully equipped at a basic price or $6,117. You can order extra equip- ment, e.g. automatic uansmissioa and air conditioning and a •liclina sun roOf,'tQ suit your special needs. See your authorized Mer- cedes-Benz des!er soon. He will 1Jadly arrange a thorough 'test drive in the 220 Diesel. Fnr a frce ,c:nlor brochure.full of details on the Diesel and oilier Mcrcedel-Bcnz models, clip and ICl1d th< c:oupon below !Odiy. ' ® JIM SUMONS . IMPOR'IS, fNC.- 11t W,..., A¥L ......... c.•. ""' rte.trndl'lieJ'(llU'fulkolot ...... ., ........... llcDJIDOCOfGD. ....,,~---~~~ ... , ___ __,,._ __ 7'"""------- Jim Slemons Imports, Inc i20w.wamuAvmue,Sm1aAna,Ca1lfom1a92101Phone:n~& .. U.S. Commlsaioller Ed· ward P. Swlllll, father of six children, lelti- fled before the House Select Comlill!l4e on drup recenUy and told them be thought he WU the greatesf uperl on druf abuse unUI he f®nd tlllt his 15-yell' old ton wu booked on cocal.lae. Other new olflc:mr Include Jack Wilmer, Fllllerton traffic qlnw, ·secretary and Ro'!'rt Volen, Orange County •llimeer,treasuier. '---------------------~--------..,-.~-~~------~--~-~~--~-~---~ I • ( r I , Lo D when regul ... ·lie Ii DE llu make 3211. trsck the We It's lt's .l!m :it's ·tt's :~l might Bae Hes 'l'Oo . ' ' Love Match Losses Tallied • DEAR ANN LANDERS : This morning when my neighbor came over for our regular 10 o'clock cup of coffee she had ID. ·lier band a letter her husband had brought bmne from work. He thought it was pretty tunny. We wonder bow much kidding oo the square was involved. Here's the letter, Ann. Please decide. DEAR LOVING WIFE: During the past year I bave tried to make love to )'OU 365 UmeL I reoonled :m m:uses and J6 succesaes. I kepi .. ti:ack of the reasons which acoompanied the refusal!. Here they are: We11 wake the children 17 It's too bot 10 lt's too cold 5 . J!m too tired 32 :It's too early 15 . lt's too late 23 :~lease, dear, I'm asleep 35 . WJndows open, neighbors mJ&ht hear 9 'I. Backache ·Headache IS 'l'oothache z Drank too much 4 Ate too much 14 Not in the mood Z1 Mud pack 2 New Hair-do 17 Company in next room 11 Wouldn't you rather watch th8:1ate TV show? 40 Ia that all you men think about? 29 'riianks, dear. Your Loving Husband (il!it Not Enough) :aow about it, Ann. Is it funnyt - P~ISE :JjEAR PARADISE: Ytt, It's fllDDJ, bat UM a CRa1 deal lllal _. for ~amtr, I N;se a lot GI klddlq • tk .....,.. "DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since your cohonn appears in the Rapid City J!>l!mal we feel· that you are a member of,0ur community. Will you pl...., give u(.a band? :~ you know, the people in Rapid City ai;e trying hahl to recover . from the Worst disaster ever experienced in this 1ti.ttate area. Almost every family in io.in bas Josi telatives, Jriends, property mid possesstons, not · covered by in- 1W'811ce. The major Industry in the Blacl: Hills ts "!he tourist business. Almost all our =i people are clepeodeol, either ' y ot indirecttYi1 en the tourist.a Vtho vt.ilt Molint RUJbmo,. and the Black lGlls ID July alld August. U the touri•ts sf4y away, the linaDcla1 Impact of the lliiod will be muJUp\ied mauy times. . "The people of western SOU th Dakota ar0 more Interested in having ID op- portunity lo continue earning a llvlng thin· in receiving ria1v< doses of f.4"rsl ajd. Please, Ann,.ten Ille world tliat the Blaa Hills are as bUUUlul as tftl'. .• • NOD<! of the. major tourist atliactlolll .~ damaged by the Oood, Fewer thin 'one pei:cent of the motels, ruorta and ~ were in the flood area. To9risll alto will !ind the local -1e u ~ and helpful •• in the past - J.W.H., PRESIDENT, NATIONAL COL- LEGE OF BUSINESS • \ DEAR J.W.H.: I un 'fllll<d lo~ OIJudltft<lll.llenll __ _ __ ,.... __ ... .,,..- .... __ ..... Gt •• 00: I JW -'I-. Y•'I -tllo .... .. J'W .. _ ....... "'-.. _. . ' .,, . . . . P.r~t~clrig_ .Own :· ·Theory • • ~ ii .. ~ CA '" EE Rs ·· By JO OLSON Of ... Dll~ ,.lllt Stiff, Alice Lou Anderson's new title at UCI can be described as multi-Iaceted, and so can she. The Newport Beach resident bas been appointed director of continuing educa- tion in education and liberal arts for UCI ~~'l'--c. Extension;-contlnulng--lnvoivement-ip a fiel4 she "fell into" six years ago when Ille was looking for a job. Her new position also Is compatible with her current PhD program at the University of Southern CAiifornia, which bas occupied all of her spare lime during the past three semes\erS. She will ·compJete the coursework in her field of educational philosophy and higher educatiori after . one m o r a semester of driving to the USC p.mpus several nights a week &nd-then may have ·some spare time to camp, hike, sew, play . the plallo aod potter at pottery. THIRD TRIP Traveling, eating, entertaining, col· lecting-81'1, reading and having a good. conversation also are prime interests of -' the Michigan native, who is anticipating her third trip to Europe at ·., end of summer with her husband, Glen. They enjoy travel, she explaW. because "it's exciting to see bow other people live." "There are POme very gracious Customs and places in foreign countries that we enjoy, We've had splendid lu<:k ea~ our way through various coun- tries, • she added. Their travels also have taken them to ~fexico and Central America, where her brother . was working as the director of the U.S. AID program in Nicfil-agua. In their own entertaining. t h e Andersons like to include a variety of pfople who do not know each other but who have interests in common. One of t.be discussion ·topics which Mrs. Anderson encourages at her parties is the women's movement, with which she Is deeply concerned. • • EXTENDED A woman who practices whet she believes is Alice Lou Anderson, newly appointed director of continuing education for UCI Extension. She fills the position while completing her PhD program. She relaxes with "Apricot" (above)·, • BEA ANDERSON, Editor She established UCI's Women's Op- portunity Center and served as chairman or the Chancellor's Committee on the status of Women, and her goals for the womeri's movement are ·equal pay and equal social, economic and political rights for women, and more involvement of ethnic minority women. supporter of growth and development for women," she said. As ln her own Ure, continuing education . is a key to second careers for many adults, and Loo Anderson Is committed to the development of extension pro- graw on a wider scale. "We can look forward te> lncreued leisure time. We need Increased educa- tion to make, more felicitlOU3 use of our leisure time." ,....,, Jttr v, 1rn '"' u • (· \_ •• CHANGE NEEDED "To biing about equality for women there will have to be a change in at .. titudes," she said. ••'l.'llif(e's no reason why we have to have a superior· subO'rdinate sitaation for women in our society." Fortunately for her, her husband shares her views. "He Blways has been a Indians and their culture also bold a fascl!Xltm for Lou Alldersoo, who ·col· ]eds Indian art objects from north and cenlral America. "The problem ol the modem Indian Is very pressing,'' 1be noted. ''Heel keenly • that they should achieve equalily and justice. We've done grave injury to ~be Indian." Art Museu.m Ster of the show is this 18th century Queen Anne doll that stands two feet high. The 19th century doll (right l. hes 11 clay-pipe head. Christian Sc:Unce Monitor Servke If you lild bought a paper doll to call your own in 1830 you would I1MS likely have gotten a handmade 'W!ltercolor cutout. Original wa1m:olor dolls like this have ' • "Continuing education has enormous potent1al for the future ," sbe explained. "EvenlJ In the wot\d are movin( I!> ta,st that skills become oboolete. •It II necessary to keep refreshing and learn- ing new things, With -auch as AIJca Loa . ' . \ Anderson belplnc. turn the llde of -. ·' tlnulitg educaUoa uteuon cl•rt, are . ' ' ' sure lo make blger, aild belier nvt1 ill the future. · · All Dolled Up been rescued from a bureau drawer and now are on display at the New York Historical Society. An exhibition called "200 Years of Toys" featurea dolts ol !~17th and 18th ceniury placed In setlinp of miniature Americana. Mary Black, curator of painting and sculpture and an expert on folk art, said: '1Theme1 like the small stage aets are imsglnalive Ideas asaociated with the dolts and the period from which they came." Paraphernalia of the· time, lncludlnc paP.,.welghts, Staffordshire china, JetJn1 Lind memorabilla, textiles aod paintlnp help oet tile smalier-tha!>llle ..._. for tJJe dolll. Girls 1tlll love. dolts, according lo the society'• staff. Youngsters prove that every day by responding eagerly lo a tour of the museum. Domestic life depicted in Umea gone by still appeala to the older glrll, too, wilb inc:reaalnc -from students in col- lege, according to Mrs. Blacl:. The Queen Anne doll reicno u mlllress of the exhibition In a 4lphtnnua sea- green drea, a reaJ.halr wlJ, ClaU eyes. She's a . stately lady, atbll'll two feel tall. Thll doll, mOde alW lilt ....... of Qosml Anne, It tile ... -tnd flnolt ... ""'" lectioo. Dolli GI l1iil tne - -!a qu111Uty In the ~ Alpo, ~ Italy; soutbem G arm a DJ' Sid hitJerland. '1beae 1ltt1e ladill of tile 1'1111 ... - century are wooden, jointed, and 1111 tt (covered with 1 thin IHellb pt-. ... for akin textlft). , ' Dolls in u-· ;Ima ........ -- than toys. They were UMd lo err di fuhiom mm p1ace .. p1aca. ,,,.,. -. dressmaktn' sampleo and ,,... of p..i beiufY with ~ ..... of real wbite kid, emulatina ...,__ IDexpenaive play II re_.ted bJ lllt .,..,,,-. or pegwood clolll In Ibo col1ectlon. MJda In Holland, tlrly ... stmpty jointed bodia with p10tn --and alcetclly featuno. '111eir prlrnlllv9 quality makea them all t1ie mon • _, clearing. • • • niea. ~ are lot In • Hawtbcrne'1 "HOUie ot Seven Gabla'' atmooplleH mldat Helllibalr P)>Dcllaa'a Penny Sbap. Pmiywoodo allo V-Ibo declls ol & tlu "toy" Rclltrl ..._ .. ateamboal • • I • .. ·Festival's Thirst-quenching Brigade • For the 14th year, members of the South Coast Com· munity Hospital Auxiliary are manning the soft drink booth at the Festival of Arts. More than 50 volunteers will work in three shifts from noon to Your Horoscope Tomorrow 11 p.m. daily throughout the 45-day run . Accepting a new delivery from George Jahneke are Qeft to right) Mrs. Bert Kamper! and Mrs. Colin Timmons. Taurus: Accent on Marriage TUESDAY JULY 18 • By SYDNEY OMARR c Scorpio!eelsintensely. i There sel<!om Is. anything r lukewarm or hallway where ~ native• of thls zodiacal sign I · are COl)Cmled. Scorpio bolds ~·lively dlscusslon1 with 1:Capricorp,"can have love al· ., f1ir with Pisces, often marries , Taurus, enjoys dining with i Aquarius, has aml>ltlon s I ( fulfilled with Leo and entecs r secret agreements with Libra. IC ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): t Spotlight b on legaCies, leases, 1 ! specli.li accounta, re~w of financial rta!U.. Mate, partner has pioney question. Frank (discussion now beIPi-clear the : ail-:Do yow-plrl-lnaist that LEO quJy 23-Aug. 22): Ac- cent is oq practical issues, in- cluding hOme repairs. Solldily plana. ·Check values. Get prop- erty appraisaJ. Aquarlua and Scorpio are likely to be in pic· ture. Focus on basic ob- Jectlv.,. Study fine print. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep!. 22): Accent on activity, change, dealings with neighbors and relatives. Develop ideas. Ask questions -answers are ob- tainable. Give full play to in- tellectual curiosity. S t r e s s humor, versatility. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Guard valuables. Search for genuine bargain. You can prof- itably add to posses.sions. Improve home surroundings. Treat yourself to luxury item. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Take lead. Stress personality, individuality. Pisces can play key role. Wear bright colors. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): What occurs is meaningful Means don't play games. Stakes are high -and for keeps. Know it and act ac- cordingly. Some areas that were secret now are revealed. Skeletons could rattle. Do some soul searching. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Wishes are fulfilled il you get rid of outmoded concepts. Look to future. stop brooding about what "might have been." Aries can set example. In professional area, add to advertising budget. AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Study Capricorn message. Find out where you want to go -and why .. Then do something about it. Be aware, sensitive. There is room for you at top . Push forth ideas. Articulate aspirations. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20:) Good lunar aspect now co- incides with journeys, higher education, alignment of am- bitions with reality. Sense of maturity is heightened. Inner feelings can serve as reliable guide. Be true to yourself. To find out who's lucky for you ln money 1nd -love, order Sydney Omarr'1 booklet, "Sec;r1t' Hints for Men 1nd Womt1n.'' S.nd blrlhd•I• 1nd 15 ctnll to Omarr Astrology $Kreb, fti. OAIL '( ~ILOT, 8 c111 3240, Grind C1nlr1I Sl1· tlon, Ntw York, N.Y. 10017, ~~~live up to th~ obliga·Jr";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ; TAVRVS (APriJ 20-May 201 : I New methods are <equlred. : YOIL galn . more public at- • tenllon. Outmoded procedures : will not suffice. Accent is.on ' contract, joint efforts, mar· riage. You get chance to I display original concepts. Leo 1; is involved. : GEMINI (Ma1 21-June 20): ; Avoid bn>oding, Conditions are ... duo fo Improve. Applies especially In areas of employ- ment, health, relationshtps wllh those who share ln- teresta. Maintain steady pace. Keel_ recent ·resolutions. Deal -w!lll Xquanu1. CANCER (/une 21.July 22): streaa abHlty to use 1a1ternatlve plans. You need _not"leel~confined. Show that you are willlng to exchana:e i~. Soclallr.e. ~er c e i v e potential. Bring forth creative resources. Sagittarius child needs Attention. SUMMER FABRICS SAVE UP TO $1.19 YD. VALUES TO $1.69 YD. DAN RIVER HOY-A-PRINTS COTTON DUCK PRINTS EMBOSSED COTTON PRINTS PETTI POINT PIQUE PRINTS SHEER PRINTED VOILES ASST'D SHEER PRINTS SPORTSWEAR PRINTS Cottons, R•yons, Acetates, Blends. 36"/45" Widths. All Washable. THERESA .SHERRILL Sherri/ls Tell Troth Mr. and tifrs. Stephen Sher· ' rill of San Marino hosted a ~ g1rden party to announce the ~ _,__,,,en&,. agement of llleir Jlaughtor, : Tbereaa Lynn Sherrill to ' Richard BranUey Eason ·or Huntington Beach. ; He is the son of Mr. and , ' Mrs. NathaJ\ Eason of Hun-lln&ton Be..ii and a groduato of UCI where he was a member of the chancellor's YD$. FOR HAWAIIAN PRINTS colorful cotton ·be1uties! Rog. 98c Yd. Savo 31c Yd. 35" /36" Wldo. Machine W11habl1. If BUTCHER WEAVES good r1n9• of 1olid colors Values to $1.59 Yd. Savoto91cYd. Rayons, Actt1tt1, Blends. 44"/45" Wldt. All Aro Woshoblo. 18 YO. YD. llHOUSE OF FllBAICS 9Jways first quality fabrics f C$1blnet for athleUcs, the water polo team and All·Am•rican s.trttt C..t Plcno -lrlttol •f 5,~11 Di•t• Fwy. H-,._ -17th •t lrhfol c .... Mtte -141°11'6 ..._ .._ -141·1111 • awimmlng teaf!l. 'l. ~ 'Ibe future bridt graduated Q,....,_,r Mon -Or11191tllorpo •114 Htrliior ..... ,.,.. C.....-t.. '''"'' •• St111t011 ! 11')1'1 San .Marino Hiiti School """.,.., -126-2J14 -..,. -u ... 121 Ind now atttnds T~xas Chrit-G.,.. 0..0ft-12111 lrookhur•f fno•t to Ve11'•) -IJ0.114% tiu University, Fort Worth.· "•----" ..... -"'.'.""·----E'.1.;'';,.".'.'.••.·.'~.•.1•.;'";,.' ."--.;....,•;,,••.•.-...;•,;.'7;,,4;;0,;.11;.. __ _ \ I Vows Repeated In Ce rem on ies BARTLETT-MARANTZ Wllllams and Mr. and Mrs. Max Leupp of Switzerland. The Newport Beach home of Mtss Mary Moriarty served Mr. and Mrs. c. E. Marantz as maid of honor; Miss Linda waa the setting for the ·wed-Sorenson was lhe bridesmaid; ding of their daughter, Sandy Heinz Stoewer served as best Marantz and Richard Bartlett, 'Jn8n, and ushers were Peter son of W. G. Bariletl of C:O..la stadler, Ed Hum and Willi Mesa. Kotyzcka . Mrs. Betty Petros \Yas th~ The bride earned a BA at matron of honor and other at-the University of California, tendants were the Misses Santa Barbara and h er Coleen Werkhiesee, Nancy teaching credential at UCLA. Levitt. Susan HolZer, Patti ·She teaches in F o u 11 ta in Campion, Regan Duffy and Valley. Llnda Abdun-Nur. Her husband received ·his MRS. BARTLETT MRS. MACKIN Pat Morrissey served as BS, MS and PhD from Swiss best man; .ushers were Jack Federal Inst It u t e of l~---------,,..,,,,,-.,:--::S::-AL.,.-::-E=--- Stevens. Tony Petros. Ernie Technology. They will reside PERSIAN RUG LaBreck, Gordon Davis, Ray in Newport Beach:· 20· 01/ OFF JULY lltfl,. J11t Abdun-Nur, Lou Petros and . /0 OUR ll•llLAI STOCK l Craig Hampton. MACKIN-HUFFMAN •-lot .... SIOO .... sz.100. The b!lde is stl)\lying at the Queen of Angels School of Nursing and the newlyweds \\•ill reside in Los Angeles. MRS. LEUPP Shari Huffman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Huffman of Costa Mesa, now J.s Mrs. Bruce Mackin. The. couple exchanged \'OWS before the Rev. George Kouri in the First Southern Baptist Church, C:O..la Mesa. Attending the newlyweds were Miss Susan Huffman, maid of honor; Miss Marti Matthews, Mrs. R i c h a rd Henderson and Mrs. Jeffrey Manchester, bridesmaids; HaJ Mackin-Jr.;best man, and Jim Flynn, Curt Welch a n d Manchester, ushers. Following a honeymoon in Oregon the couple will reside in San Diego. She Is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and attended Orange Coast College and San Diego 1 State University. Her husband is a graduate or Oregon State Ur.iliersily and was a member of Phi Gamma Delta. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. 1-Iarold A. Mackin of Portland, Ore. MON., THURS., FRI. 10:00 9:00 KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS & IMPORTS Z16S I. Comt Hwy. (AT HELIOTROPE) Coro ... dtl M• '71·7340 TUES., WED.,· SAT. . ·l 0:00 -6:00 'NOW ON! Westcliff Plaza • . 17th and Irvine • Newport r . I ' DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS .· MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY _,,__ By Chest.r Gould _ VE5, IN MV OPINION. • WIUIT TMIS OEl'MTMejf NEEDS IS YOUNG BLOOD.· By Al Smith By Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller GASOLINE AWY • • MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS Fiqqmd th!lt ol' ledij'd pap up eq'in! -~ ... -. 'THERE'S NOBODY I HATE "TO AROUND TO WASTE IT . . . ,· ; !DAILY CROSSWORD.~.;., ... "'w"l ACROSS .... ~ ; . i...-1--1-'-+-+-· ·: " . • • L.l-...L.....L....L-· ! · UI >; .... . . Sl .. ~ . '' " . .. " ,_ " "--~ - . Tlllnt ·------------------- .• ' • I ' l Nearly Everyo~e Listens to Landers USE IT ON PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER WE'RE 60IN010 CUMS llUS TREE, AW ANP OUT llll0'.5 lk . WClOPSTOCK'S NEST. By Charles M. Schulz ....... ------..... WE .\IAOE IT! l'M AT 1llE 1llP Of 1HE TREE! By Harold Le DolllC NO ... AND , YOU SA.Y 50MEl50l>Y llY THE llEVERLY NA.ME OF liJ.AN' WOULD PHONE NEVER MEANWHILE, OTHER POLICE AAE CHECKING ------ llEVERLY HERE A.T THE RES· MENTION· TAU RANT FROM TIME TO TIME.? ED IT! DI D YOU EVER HEAR HIS LA.ST NA.ME ? MISS PEACH PERKINS .J'V'~ ':'t4 t J, P'>a... By Men ... -"" ... "' c:;::·: ~ ilv J&ltn Mllff = = f.'~:i 1 \' July 17, 1'72 _______ ..;;o,;.;All...;;Y,;.;,;.;Pl.:.LO;.;T_.),,,_5 - ly Dick Mo.,.. • l qave her a'twel'lti;.- dollsr bill bo.i mistlikel ~ran al\ thi~ way to return \ti ~ By Gus Anlola . SO,WE C,AN C>o 0Ult81T7 100 ... . 1 Iv Ferd Jahnson By Roqer Bollen THE GIRLS "Im liome! l bet you're radJ It p • ... ac aome uerclle." · ' ; I ) • • • Jf 11.111.Y PILOT Monda!, J,~ 17, 1,72 ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;;.;::=:::...:::!...:::.:...:..:.;;; . ~ ·· LA's Walton Sutton's 11th Win No Artistic Success' Sp~es 1n ·scrum I.ONG BEACH -Jobn Walton, wbi ha -t the last two sea,.., on the Los ~-Rams' tall squad, threw two luNowa paues Sunday in a scrh:n- IDlll between mosUy fif'St.year players ol 0. llllns and the San Diego Chargers. Wiilen, 1 quart<rback from Elizaheth Cil1 Stole, N.C .. and the Conlinent.i' l.oque~pwed 12 yatdJ for a Scot< to Joo Sweet «Tennessee State and threw' a 1ll-Ylnl tpucbdown pus to Jobn Love, a Mcoftd.year man from North Texas State """ was with lhe Washington Redsldns lut y.,.r. rrhe Rams were on orrense ror the ~­ tire bout and ~minute, 93-play scrim- mage, as the ~rgers only brought a defensive team. Los Angeles sco1·f'•I a third touchdown on a 27.yard pls.l from Buddy Lee of Cincinnati to Tom Graham or, Baldwin-Wallace. Walton, 'who a>mpleted 10 of )9 JlOS."" for 133 yarda, and lpve, who led re- celveni with eilht catcllu for Ill yards, both drew praise from coach TOQlmy Prothro. who added, "I wasn't di,.ppointed with anything we did esceyt for a few penalties." j;< PEBBLE BEACH -Mac Hunter, a JS.year-old high 1ebool aenlor from Pacific Palisades, became the youngest thampion in the 61-year blstory of the California Amateur golf tournament Sun· day wben he defeated Robert A. Roos Jr. o!l!illsbon>ugh 2 up In the 36-bole final•. .LOS ANGELES !AP) -Don. Sutton .. vored his 11th victory of the aeaaon, a f.2 decllion over the Montreal~ and lb<ll the Lot Anleles r1ghtbander lauah- ed and remarbd: "It wun't exact.Jy an anillic succ.. Hoel<, lhe out< 11m hlt harder than tbe hit!." It made little dlllemice to the Dodgm, who •lvaged ooe gamt from the three-game seriea with the Erpos and wound up with a splll in their 12-game aeason serltJ which concluded with Sun- day's game-before 31,823 fans at Dodger Stadium. llotb clubs ore Idle today then the Dodgfl'I open • lhr""Plll" ....r .. here 'l'uetday nJf11t with New Yot!L On SUnday a flnt-lnnin( IW<HUD triple by Bill Bllckner sparlld • four·nm in- Doflflers Sr.te .,. ........ ,,, U.J Jiii¥ It ~ ""· Nrw 'l'ott J ulY • °"""" VJ. Now YOl'I( Jul\' t1 DodlWs .,. Nf'W 'rtflc 7:$$ '·"'· 1;55 ,,,.., l:U 11.tn, ning: and SUtton made them stand up as he unproved hit won-loet record to 11-$ with hls aevmth complet.e came. · Buctner. thougb,1will be back on the bench Tuesday night againat the Mets. Frank R<lbinaon wiU return to right field and WfS Puter, •1-bat ts beginnin& to produce, wUI be at fint bale. '1 IMlfd be playing evuy day," Buc:W. sald. W. battin1 avtrage is .308 alllwgb be'• usually only spelled Robinlol\ in the ootlltld or P>rker at flr!it. 'ii don't ever worry about the st.aftd- dings," SUtton said when asked about the Cincinnati Reds wtme lead <JVer the 1hird-place Dodgers oow ls 8~ games. "I can only worry about what I'm dolna: and Jet the rest take care .of itself. Jt'1, pretty bard for a pitcher to control what happens anyway . All he can do is try to pitch well." · UPI Tll ... lloM Sutton. whole ~med run averaae against the Expos Is a minute 0.16 (two earned nw in 27 inoin(J), was fa irly weU .in comm.and of Sunday's gime ex· cepl in the tblrd Inning when Mootreal scored its two n.1.M, one -or them unearn- ed. After that be allowed only three more singles and no one got past second base. 'l'he Dodgers got to lostr Bill Stoneman, 3-7, in the first inning for singles by ?.-faMy Mota. \Villie Davis, a throwing error by rightfielder Ron Falfly which enabled Mota to score, a walk to Parker and then Buckner's three-base bit. Bobby Valentine then scored Buckner with a sacrifice fly , Mini,.., (t) Lfl -'11t•1-(41 _. ' a,_. .. , .. ,., McC1rvor, » • 1 l ,. LIC"f', 211 -' t I t H11nr,io 4 t21MOSl,ll •llt JOf9fnttn, 111 • • 1 1 w .o.w11, er • 1 a o F1lrty 11 4 O O O W.P1rttr, tll 2 1 I 0 •• llillltlon. ., ' • 0 0 6ucklW ,rt Diii', rl ' 0 I 0 Vlleflllllf, tl Foll, $$ ' 0 0 0 $1tnt, c H11...,.,,r1y, c 3 I I 0 G11rwy, lib $klMllWfl, 11 2 I I 0 $UllOll, 0 ' ' ' 2 3 I I I 3 0 I 0 3 0 I • 0 a • o o F1lroy,ph ltOt T.W1 .. lf", p t o 0 O • To11f1 :M 2 1 1 To11lt 30 4 I , I MOfllro&l 002 000 000 -1 Los .t.11ootn «IO 000 toll -• .1. E -Folrly, 'J1tt11tl111. OP -MOn!rtal 1. Lvll -Man!rffl 5, LO. Mu.it~ 6. 28 -f:.'1'· ~8 - 1111ckne<. S5 -JOl"'1tn11~ $~ -•"'a.• ''71 so St-~ (L,J.7) • 1 • 4 2 0 TWtlk.,. 2 t O 'O I 0 $Urton 1W,ll·Jl t 1 1 I I 4 WP -Sulton. Tlnw -2<11. Alltndtnco -31.123, A1igels, Brewers Split . B·arher Gets Nod' Against Red So x : ill.LWAUKEE (AP) -Baseball rans with pitchers ror he.roes got an eyeful Sunday when the Milwaukee Brewers and caJifornia Angels split a doubleheader. the Angels winning tb.e opener (1-0 ) and Milwaukee the nightcap, 2·1. The split evened the weekend series at two games each. Tonight the Angels open a three-game series with Boston '\'ilh the Halos' Steve ' Barber (2-t) scheduled to oppase John Curtis (5-3). • both Brewers' runs in the eighth as Milwaukee gained the split. The Angel~took the lead in the fifth in· ning tWtlen Sandy Alomar singled, ad· vanced to second on a sacrifice bunt. stole third, and scored on a si ngle by Berry. The lead stood up, and Milwaukee's string or scoreless innnings off Ange~' pitching extended to 18, before the Brewers finally pushed something besides dirt across home plate. Hunter, whose father won the state tlt)e lo 11149 by defeating Gene Littler in a 39-hole match, was f up on the 54-year- old Roos after the morning 18 hole s. He increased his ltad to-5-up after-fiix boles In ' the afternoon, but then saw his ad· vantage trimmed to 1 up at the 16th. MONTREAL'S RON-HUNT (33) TAK ES LA'S BOB VALENTll'I E OUT ON DOUBLE PLAY BALL. California's Rudf !i.1ay was awesome. in the first game. completing a start for the Ron Theobald pinch hit for Parsons to lead off the eighth and singled, and ·a pitcher, Skip Lock"'ood, was inserted as a pinch runner for Theobald. (\It.er narrqwly missing a 30-foot birdie putt at the 17th that would have ended the match,· Hunter won on the final holo wlib a conceded birdi e lour when Roos ovenliot the sreen o! his third .riot, pliched back w .. kly •nd theo mi!sed his putt for a par. ,,, GSTAAD. SwUierland -Andres Gimeno of Spain beat Adriano Panatta of lt41Y 7·5, M , M, in the men's singles finals of the Swiss International tenpis champlonshlps Sunday. j;< BAASTAD, Sweden -Manuel Orantes oC ,Spain won his first Swedish Intema· tional tennil champiomhip by defeating Wimbledon runner-up Die Nastase o( Romania 6-4, 6-3, 6-1 Sunday. j;< Pl'ITSBURGH 'l'he Pittsburgh Pirates said rightfielder R o b e r t o Clemente was expected to be back In uniform tonight after a one-week bout with an Intestinal virus. Clemente, 37, needJ 40 more hita to reich the exclusive S,000-hit plateau. Eleven more and he'll surpass Honus W~gner as the all-time PJrate leader. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. -Athletes from throughout the nation headed lot the lir· int.range today for t~ third event of the ~l~ern !'entathlon Olympic 'l'rials, with a ffew-York-physica1 education instructor ~ding the lead. • Paul K. Pestby, 34, of Binghamton, N.:Y., placed stcond Sunday in fencing - a iport be learned in hit native Budapest, Hiaogary -to retoin his IMd In the five- 1pOrt tournament. Army Capt. Wllltam A. Matheson, 31, « Los Angel .. , jumped lrom ninth place to :sea>nd in total polnta SUndly, wlnnln& ZJ:to 30 bou!J for top honore in fencing. Ul'I TllHhtM Holding the No. 3 •pot In over.all pointa after a Ul1rd place finish in fencing was Army Capt. Scott 'l'aylor of Portland, who is competing in his llrst Olympic trials. GAR Y BETTENHAUSEN HEARS NEWS ABOUT INJURED BROTHER. • Leonard Picks Up Marbles . i Betten liause n. Loses Arin l 1i Micliigan. 200 Accident CAMBRIDGE JUNCTION, Mich. (AP) -: Joe l.A!Onard, tbe 1971 national driving cltlmplon, led leis tha1 two laps in SID!· dl\Y'• 200-mlle r~ce for Indianapolis-type ClfS, ,.but it was enough for a Sl&1602 vie· toty. i.eonant. a 37·year-<lld fonne i\ two-time U.6. motorcycle champ from San Jose, had never threatened his speedier op- .J>OPent.s durlng a race twice delayed by aOcidents at Michigan International Sp;,.dway. But when Mel Kenyon . another driver \\it» hat! started the too-lap grind with litlJe prospects or winning, ran out of gas ,.,,jtjle leading In the 99th lap, Leonard -w•s there lo ake advantage or his mWortune. ,JC~yon had moved to the front 20 mtles back when Marlo Andrctti's Vfen>Y Special dropped out. He inherited • margin of almost a lap over Leonard only lo see It vanish when his Gllmo(O Rfcing-OUy <OUghed .... ra1 timea and gift up, though the batUe-scamd mran managed lo salvage thin! place. JVall1 Dellenba<h of Eall Brimswlck. N.J~, driving a:n STP·Lola. was the only- 1ttvlvor to finish In the same lap wllh Lamard, and be mimed second place. Sim Sessions of Nashville, Mich .. was lotrth in A. J. Foyrs Coyote·Fonl while rookie Lt< Kununan o! Gultt.nhurc, Jowa, "" fifth in a compenion car to Keeyon's. • • Ramo Stotts,' twice a champion of t~e rival Auto Racing Club of America (ARCA), drove· a Dodge to victory in a ~200-mile stock car race that formed the second hall ol the Michigan Twin 200s. Stotts, 11, of Keoltuk, lowa, ceme home about a second ahead of three-time USAC stock car champ Roger McCluskey of Tuscon, driving a Plymouth. Stotts average speed was 131 .57 m.p.h. despjte three yellow light slow-downs that consumed 29 laps. His payoff was $7,750, LA VEK ATTEMPTS ~ . - TO BOUNCE BACK WASHING TON -Corona dcl Mar's Rod Laver was acbeduled to meet Steve Krulevi!J of Baltimore ti>dly ID the open. log round of the Washington SW' rnternatlonal tennis tournament. · Top seeded John ·Newcombe of Australia, who won !he St. Louis Holland Tennis Classic two wttkt 110, WU to meet F. D. l!obbins or Salt Lake City. 'l'l>cr• are n cntrl.. In the w ashington tyurney, whlcb Is the second or the 26' tournament World Olamp\oMhJp of Ttn- nis toir. Leonard, who won in excess or $200,000 in prize money last year, admitted before the race that his only hope to win was to keep the leaders in sight and hope he would be around at the finish. Ahead of him at the start were the faster machines of polesitter Bobby Unser whose 199.778 m.p.b. qualifying speed was the fastest ever recorded m auto racing; Gordon Johncock, .i\ndrclti, Swede Savage and Gary Bettenhausen nu of whom had clocked 190-plus m.p.h, in time trials. Unser paced the field for 46 laps before a malfunction in the engine Jl....his Olsonite-Eagle sidelined him after 124 miles. , The ra cie ground to a halt twice -once when Merle Bettenhausen, a rookie mak- ing his first champlon.!hlp stort, wrecked on the back stretch 0!1lY three laps into the nee. Blttenba,u.seh, 29, lost l\J1 arm 1n the -t ond suHertd third desree burns about bis lac:e as well as laC<.ra· Uons lo the pelvic region. lie was listed ID crlt!Cal condJUon at an Ann Arbor hospital. The oecond slop came when the engine lo Jimmy Caruthen, car exploded spil· line oil on an already atlcky track. Laguna Beach's Rick Muthtr flnlsbed 20th In his Vivttor-.Eal]e wjth 36 oompleted laps In the 200 mile cham• pionships race here. He won '617 • I, Johnson's Bid For No. I Spot Fails by Stroke MILWAUKEE (AP) -Jim Colbert said he played the best pressure golf of his life in posting his skond victory in seven years on the pro tour , but the Greater Milwaukee Open nearly J3sted one hole too Joog Sunday for the 31-year- old Kansan. Colbert was Jt-wider par for the meeting and nursing a two-stroke lead tvhen he bogeyed the 72.nd hole. Then he watched under beartstopping tension while charging George Johnson and steady Bud Allin, the final twosome. each barely missed birdies which would have forced 'a sudden~eath playoff. Colbert's final 69 on the par 71 Tripoli Golf Club course earned him $25,000 with a 13-under total of 271. JohnSon, who had shared the second and third round leads with Colbert, finished a stroke behind along with Allin~ Grier JOnes and Chuck Courtney. Courtney's 64 Sunday was t he tournament's best single round, but it was Johnson, one of seven blacks on the tour, who electrified the crowd of 13,250 with a spectacular finishing klcK. Johnson, whose only pro victory was in the 1971 Azalea satallite meet, fell to seven-under with a double bogey on the third hole and bogeys on each of the next three. But he started the back nine with a birdie, eagled No. 11, and birdied 12 and 13 to close to within two strokes. Johnson missed the birdie he needed on No. 18 when his 12-loot putt hlt the right or the cup and spun out. Allin, who had been two strokes down after lhree rounds, almost birdied 18 with a 20-foot chip shot that rolled over the hole. Angels Slate •ii tl•1nn •n KMPC Olfl July !I Aneth •t 11011'0fl JU!l' 1t A119tlS -.t llo$llln July 20 A"9tl1 .t New York J uly 21 Angel$ 11 Ntw York ~:25 p,m, 10:25 P.tn. ~;ts P.tn, ~:25 P.m, first time this season and lifting his record to 3·7. Only one Brewers' batter got to second base, only six balls were hit out of the in- field and May gave up just two hits, struck out seven and walked only two in the shutout performance. Milwaukee hurler Jim Colborn was almost aS" effective, giving up just three hits, walking two and striking out four in the loss, \vhich dropped his record to 2· I. The only run of the game scored in the third when Ken Berry walked, took third on a single by Leo Cardenas that just cleared the outstretched glove of Brewers' third baseman Mike Ferraro. and scored on Vada Pinson's sacrifice fly. Tommy Reynolds had Mil\\'aukee's hits -both were singles -in the fourth and seventh innings. The Brewers only scoring threat came when May issued both his walks in the first inning. But one of the runners was retired attempting to steal second and Reynolds was called out on strikes to end the uprising. Bill Parsons (7·7) was the winner for the Brewers in the nightcap with a save from Frank Linzy. Angels' starter Lloyd Allen , who has yet to go nine innings in the majors, was relieved by Ri ck Clark in the seventh after he gave up a walk and a single. But Clark , 4·9, gave up four hits and Rick Auerbach beat out a bunt, and Bob Heise \Vas inserted as a pinch runner for pinch runner Lockwood. Brock Davis beat •out another bunt, loading the bases and sending the pinch· pinch runner to third . and George Scott singled, driving in l\\'O runs. The pinch batter-pinch runner-pinch runner strategy was the plan of Brewera' 1nanager Del Crandall. . ''When the first guy up .in the Inning singled, I didn't want to .use a °player we might need later so I sent i.n Lockwood." Crandall said. "But then we got men on first and second and this is our chance to win the ball game. so I sacrifice a Httle speed at SeQPnd base for experience by sending in He ise to run for Lockwood." "It worked pretty good , that's all 1 know." • SECOND GAME C11Ntrni1 t1) lbrl'lrlll MflWIUkff 12) 1br ll r•I 8errv. er ' O J 1 Auerblcll, Sl Carden.u. ss 3 O 2 a IB.O.vls, II Pinson, rf l O O O Scott, lb R.Ollver. lb J o o o o.wv. er SPM'Cer, JI J o I O L1hlll,id, rl Sl•n1on, rf 1 o o o CW.rk, 2b McMuli.t, lb • O 2 o R1tllff, r O'Brien, pr D O O O Ferr1ro, lb Ku~nver, c J o o o Pari.ons, p Alol'r\llr, 21:1 l t I 0 Ttltoblld, ph SltPt\tnson, ph 1 o o o LocllWCIOd, pr L.Alltn, p 2 O O O Hel$e, p.r R.Clark, p o o o o Llnzv, p E.Flstler. o O O O O • l 2 I • o 1 'o • 0 2 '2 3 0 0 0 j 0 I 0 • 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 ' 0 1 0 O 0 II O 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ll"'1a1ph 1000 Tora{, J1 1 9 l Totals 32 ' I f Calllornl1 000 010 000 -1 MUWIUkff 00C 000 02>1 -1 E -Alorntr. OP -MllWlvkff !. LOB -Cillo forni1 t, Mllw111ke1 1. Se -ti. 01vi,, Alom•r. o. May. S -L. Alltn. C1rden1$, l(usnyer. IP H It lllt II SO Lil)en •ll:J 4 (I 0 I I II.Clark CL.•·tl 2/3 ~ 7 7 O 1 E.Fl1her l o o o o 1 P1rsa.n• 1w,1.11 « I 1 1 ? 1 Llnzv 110000· Save -Llnrv li), Time -1.n. Al!end1nce T" 10.7ff. Posey Poc kets $12,950 Capistrano Beach Dr iver 2nd in Tr ans-am Se ries "I never played as well as I did this week with the heat on," Colbert said. "I didn't fee.I llke 1 was going to win -I "ex· ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (AP) -lie can't beat me oul over.all. Why take i pected to win. Coming down the last few Graham McRae, the New 1.ealander wh0i . chance. I like the money." holes, I kept telling myseU to ju.st keep had built up a comfortable lead in the Jn Saturday's feature race, Warren doing the same things I've been doing." L&.M Continental Series for Formula 5000 Tope, driving a Ford Mustang, captured Co~bert, who had won only $18,574 cars, added to it SuOday with a victory in the 2()0..mile Sports Car Club of America previously this year, said he was aware the Road American Continental event. Trans-American series race a I t e r of Johnson's charge, "but I knew he had McRae, driving his Lelbr.Chevrolet. favorite George FoUmer blew an. engine . a long way to come." won the first heat by 12 seconds over A No. 5 finish in the final heat of Sun-"! d1'do 't wo~ about anybod else Capistrano Beach's Sam Posey, then set· .1 · ' •• ,, Y un-day's Continental even gave Posey sec· til the last green," he said. "I thought a tied for second place in ttle 96-mile heat, ood over-all and also moved him into s~ four there would end the ball game." finishing 15 seconds behind Skip Barber's OOd place in the series. But after a good wood shot on 18, he March-Ford. , · McRae won $22,100 for flri;t in the tw~ chose to use an eight-iron from 170 yards "I was going to pass him later in the race series, and Posey $12,950. away instead of the seven ~is caddy sug-race," McRae said after the second·place Dave Hobbs of England, series cham: gested. He pulled the ball into a left finish, "but 1 figured 1 hid one win and pion the last two years abd second ll>. ui,, bunker, then bad lthat be called a series before thll race, failed to collec~ fl "pathetic" shot that left him 20 feet polht a/ten the engine !ailed ·m bl& to~ away from a par. lllJ putt touched the Anteaters Win Chevy. ·" bole bu! twisted out. Barber' won the pole pcll!Uon IDd t1'6i Courtney. who hid lipisbed much second heat. but milled the overall ti~ earliel than Colbert, Johnson and Tw.o Crew Events ,. when lie stop~ ~u~ .. on Urie, ·Allin . birely missed a 12·foot birdie on 18. -. leading to the pressure gaug~ t>ecam,.,: Colbert's closing bogey was only his PJ~lLADELPHlA _Two of coach Bo'b disconnected while he was leadlng ~ fifth in 72 boles. He'lllso bogeyed the par first heat. _ · :4 3 third hole Sunday, but birdied Nos. 8! 9 Ernsti1 UC Irvine crew teams captured Third, in a ?,tcLaren-cbevy, )Y8S Derdi and u . ___ _,,li;ctl•,,,•"='Sunday in the_ NaU~o.~w,,.ln,._-llell; fourth was.Robert Muir in'11 Lolt= Johnson , 33-year-old Atlantan, said he c mplonahlps at tbe lotb aruuversary Chevy, at1d filth was Brett Lunger .in '1' f•just coJJapsed" with his disastrous tlou-regat~ of the National AuoclaUon or Lola-Pontiac. Posey was driving ' bl• bogel and three bogeys. Amateur Oarsmen on tbe SChoylklll Surtee..Chevrolol., , , River. Irl a companion ract Sunday !or ....i.IJ. siit="' cn:r., lt!dMtr':tr" "''=' 1~ ,'f'; The UCJ Intermediate pair Without col-runnln& ~ 2.5 Cballtn&e Mirits; J._ ~~=:. w.ooo ""'ill§l" swain and the senior pain, filth cox· Morton of Turranee belt Mike'. °""111 i& °""' 'i'!"'!l'l;',',;""" n swain,.,.. to victory to llve CaJJIGmla a 1 hour, II mlnule ract. llolll •--' !~~ ~ \'$i'lsii 1 n four Of tba 11 titlet. Datsum. -.,~ r~·" ... .~,f \' Two o( the victor!.. Involved John Follmer, who tOtllt over at ~ i.':,e"' . 11,:..1'1 ~· i~l Van Blum, 1981 u.s. Olympic oartrnf11, driver tor American Motors wt. )!t~ ' "' .,.., .,.,. ..,...,,. who captured the sln&lea quarter mile Donohue was Injured, had allffd1 di-"' ";' ,.,Nf~'l~°°' ... tt:ft. ,:: sprint, and then paired with Tom McKJb-ed the driven' aod manufaetwera' ~ :tJi: r,..,;,'m'11,., !Hi·ttg1'-boll ol t.cnc Btach to win tbe elile before Saturday's :IOQ.mller alone Roa~ :t:~ "9::1.:."lf;n., Hlm ,. doubles and become ravorites for the Amtrlca'~ billy, wlnctrng, rour-mni ~:-,:,:.•i1SJ• .tt,:S.' doubles position on the u.s. Olympic course. ! ~ c= :11.1: !t~~tf;:$: teBtn. F9llmer11 car blew it.ii ~glnt afttr 1 ,... """· •·"' 'Ii " The Olympic leam wlU be picked II strobg ti.rt, and Tope haltl '"' d.,p;i. f:::.. 'U:mj J:~f1,111 :lif;S:H! Lake Waramau9, Conn. beginning Thurs· fading brakes for 1 five--teCOnd victory :: \':;.'li~3, u4,, · :a=i;; day. O\'er MIJt Mloter 'a Pontiac Ftrebird. ( ( ' • • M...i.,, July 17, 19n DAILY PILOT J f. ' Brewn Optimistic Do nna Still Invents 1 Gymnastics Tricks Tempo Steps Up In Grid Camps . '-By LAURIE BECKLUND Of .. o.My ,.. lteft ' Buch) er Golden Wut this fall, -Donna la working out throulh the 1wnmer with WtltmJnster 'a team 3eVeraJ hours a week. By tbe Auoclated Prw The tempo began stopping up over the weekend around the training campuo of the Na- tional Football League and ·1rom the lalr of the CindMatl ,Bengals coach Paul Brown aaid 11112 could be a cham- pionship year for hi> team. "Jt doem't mean I'm ass~ l!>i tbe public "°l' !hit we'll be In the Super 'Bowl," aald Brown. "But lt does mean we have tbe borses end tbe depth to compete for It." He recalled his pledge when the francbJae was granted to Cincinnati in 1968 Hthat in five years we could compete for any ~~plonship." Returning veterans joined rookies at the Bengal camp in Wilmington, Ohio on Sunday. Discussing 'the B e n g a I s • division title in 1970 in the old American Football League, Brown sald tils ieam probably ''overachieved, but it was an important step. It meant we were doing something right." · But 1971 was different. ' 11We had a string . of giv~ aways and mental lapses last ·year," Brown continued. "It was ridiculous. I can no longer accept this. We are grown up now." Brown, in talking to his pl.ayers, repeated his Jong- eandlng edict that politics, -ttllgion and social issues have "oo place in our football." But lJe said he was making one ad· dition : . "This is an election year. Cast your votes as citizens, for what you believe in. But don't bring your poliUcal beliefs into our football ." There were two weekend· trades. The NeW York Jets sent tight end Pete LammOM to the Phlladelphla Eagles for future conslderatiom. That meons that the Jet. '11'111 either gd a draft choice or a player Jn the other deal, defensive .end Ike Lassiter was obtained by tbe Washington Redskins from the New England Patrk>ts for an undisclosed draft pick. Cornerback Mark Washinglon l]lrained a kneo In the Dallas Cowboy camp and a team spokesmen said he'd be out for at least two days. The PalliOts went tllroogh still physical evalution tests In bot, humid weather at Amherst, Mass., and several pl,ayers failed to complete the mile run in the required eight minutes. · Veteran wide Baseball's Top Ten receiver Reggie l\ueker col- lapsed from beat e:dlaustlon whlle running the mile but wu revived and appeared to be la good shape later. Quarterback Jim Plunltett, starting his second season. turned Jn one of the fastest .Patriot times !or the mile - 6:09. Phlladelphia Eatl6 rootleo with No. 1 draft pick John lleavee passing 11-yanls for one ~wn, beat tbe Wa'1ltngtoo rookieo t w o touchdowns to one In a con- trolled crimmage. The Mialli!LlOlphlns held .an Intra.quad scrimmage Io r rookies iOO free agenla and quarterback Craig C u r r y completed 7 ol t5 posses tor 93 yards, including a 4.l·yard scoring toss to John Stewart. Allison Finally Nabs Title , TRENTON (AP) -Bobby Allison, after coming close to winning ttie Northern 300 In four of bis five tries, got the elusive win Sunday, albeit by a namJW margin. Allison, of Hueytown, Ala .. drove his 1972 Chevrolet across the ·finish line at the Trenton Speedway 1.4 second.! aheed of Bobby Isaac's 1972 Dodge for his fifth major win of tbe NASCAR grand national season. The victory was made even sweeter for Allison by tbe 16,160 he received of the '41,000 in purses. Isaac, of Catawba, N.C., led the race for 117 of the 200 laps around the 11\·mile asphalt track. Allison's time far the race Donna Freier has il'Jll· ...Uca fordwert. The dark-haired, spearmint green-eyed '72 graduate of Westminster High S<:bool in- dulg .. In cartwheels and back walk..overs after dinner in- stead of cake or ice cream in order to keep in shape for ne1t year's compeUUon. Not that she's ever been out of shape -the trim, flve-foot, elgh~in<:h 17-year-old took ...,. ond all·round In the Southern California championships this year ~ has been performing gymnastics around the house since she was smalt. 11She was an aci-obat when we used to have circuses in our backyard when we were little," recalls Donna's older sister, Denise. "She's an ex· hibltlonlst at heart". It WU Denise who taught Donna her first cartwheel. 111 used to make up my own tricks in the backyard," Don- na says . "One was called a "bend-back with a kick-your- leg-over. But then I got to school and found out it was a back walk..over." And Donna is still Inventing new tricks. One, where she shjf'ta: directions one-hAnded on the balance beam while walk- DONNA FREIER ing on her hands, is called a "Freier." Currently she is perfecting a three-quarter pirouette hand· stand on the beam , a trick taught to her by cat State Fullerton's coach, Dick Wolfe, who said she was the only one to manage the difficult stunt the first time. Anticipating continuing with gymnastics at Cal St.ate ([.(Ing Dodgers' Lacy I nstnnt Success LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lee Lacy talk.! the way you'd ex· pect a major .!•ague rookie to t.alk -Intense and a little nervous. imPossible to get out. He has hit safely in 14 of his 16 major league games, was named the league's co-Player of the Week 111've just gotta bear down," for his first full week in the he says repeatedly. "It's tou gh majors, has fielded ade- up here. You see tough pit· quatel y, and is batting .343. cberi every night." In New York 10 days ago, "She realcy stick• with it, I can't believe It," Miu Holey uy1. "Moll kids kind of fall by the wayside after they. araduate. H ~ ~, The 1 o u n g Westm inster coach, wOO-lias-a-national judges' rating and h a s , developed ber team Into a traditional top contender over her seven years at the school, · lists Ooma as her top com- peUtor. The "12 graduate studied gymnastlca only the four yea.rs she was in hJgh school and. unlike many other top gymnult, she baa never stud.led under a private coach. Donna lists her best events as the balance beam and noor exercilt. She placed third In ' floor exercise at the Southern CaUfornJa meet after earning a strong 8.05 and fourth Oil the beam with a 7.25 rating. She also tGot fourth on the bars of the more than 90 girls com- peting in each event. "Asked why she does ao well In gymnastics and la rarely del .. ted by anyone except girls who have studied for. yean with groups like the SCATS of Long Beach, Donna say1: ''I guess lt'a becall!e I really . ~ like gymnastla. It's a good w ay to express yoorsell' . . . I'm sure I'll be doing back walk-overs and tumbling around the Jiving room when l'm an old lady." / Donna h I S acnun1al1tecf • dozens of rlbboal and jrophles '. naming her Westmlnller'1 outstanding junior gymnast of 1972 and of 1971. But she also bu awardl for compllshme.,t-mll!I~. ~ A member of the school Chorateera, she alngs "anywhere from alto to soprano'' with the group and frequently entertains frJend! by singing and playing on the guitar wistfully beautiful folk songs she wrote herself. was two hours, 38 miootes, 25 DONNA FREIER ·GOES; THROUGH HER PACES. seconds for an average speed----------------"-----------:-~----­ of 114.03 ncoro· for the race But if Lacy ls nervous he's the rookie got his first look at fooled a lot of people in the Tom Seaver. Seaver's first last two weeks, including some pitch ol the game was a curve. of the best pitchers in the Na-and Lacy stroked it into center tional League as well as his field for the first of three hi ts own manager, Walter Alston. that night. "I'd seen him "Moat or them are sad, songs," explains DoMa, who : taught herself g u I t a r • "'lbey're easier to write." set in 1969. 'Ibe win also allow· ed him to keep his lead for the oecmd phase of . the Winston Cup, tbe NASCAR driver point champlomhip. In the previous r i v e Northern 300 races, Allison finished second twice and third twice. His victory tbis year was unusual because it came in a car he'd never driven. 'lbe car is owned by Richard Howard of th e Charlotte Motor Speedway and Wa! built in.Allison's shop. Third place went to three-time Northern 300 win· ner Richard Petty wbo held the lead from lap 110 through Jap 135. lt was on lap 136 that a pit stop proved disastrous for him. NIMAA Bags Polo Tourney . Coach Ed Newland's NIMA A summer water polo outfit blitzed PhilliPll A with a fast break In the finals of tbe. SPAAAU senior men's outdoor championship Sunday a I Newport Barbor High. Tim Cruse was the main eunner In NIMA's trimnph, cashing in four goals in leading Newland's troops to an 11-5 root of the Long Beach based Phillips team. Alamitos Entries Alston, who's aeen plt!nty of before on television ," Lacy rookies in his l&years with the said later. Brooklyn and LO. Angeles A few nights U,ter In Dodgers, llYlo HJ C I n t t Philadelphia, Lacy r~ Steve ...,,,.,,,.,... -who got off Carlton, tbe top left-hander In to a better start/' the lee(ue, and , once agJln .......... lldlin .... MtlMll'f' »ttl """' ., Jt.Mltht ,....,_, Mletl119 Clllr AM l'Ht. l'lnl ,_. 71U •• m. n blld• .. 1 tt aau Oiu 01U 9ob CCllf'llt ht'!Mrl KIClllU Too tl1rry Wrloht) POP'• Trouble !Donlld Kn\91111 Grnwln (Henry ''"' Sleflrlna (Robert Ad•lr} ,,, The 2._yeaM>ld · 1 e c on d nailed tbe first pltcl! up the "' baseman from Qaltland, an middle on his way to a tbree- 115 all-st.er in each of h1a three bit night. 111 minor league seasons. started With his success has come llt this sea800, his fourth u 1 attention of a kind he isn't us-- 11• pro, m: the Class AA Texas ed to, and it makes him a bit • Ind" .. '"' 11141 '"' lllCft JllllST aACl-«lO y1rdt. 1.,.ar oldl. c111m1119. Plll'M 11IOO, Cl1!mt1111 price Go Ml1tY" Joe (Slew Tre1surtJ 1av1NTM llACl--W yardl. J ye•r League for the second straight jumpy. "Everylxldy's been ""'· 8111'1 Hutlty CC>ol'llld Kl'llghl) O«ktblr (Fr•'* B-J Ooubll't Dud (Dolllld AllltonJ S.ntUrl'it'1-Jtt«JoflirK1nhJ Arlllet'1 Klu ITtrl'Y Ll-pNml wtllsfl'en Miu IKiirlrf Cl'Ollll¥) MltnrnY Bir !Curtb Ptrnerl 5-w'l't o.tllW !Eddie G8n11 WYn 01 Go IR!c:Nnl Veuwhnl sun. On Dede IRalltrt U.lrt 117 "' olda. Al1ow1nai. PurM 12100. year 'because the Dodgen were cutting into me," he says, then ~.:v.T,~ \~\:. Ks'!~l ~:: overflowing with young in-lets his face fall into a grin. K111Ch8r .. (Stwl Tmwre) 11' fielders. But Ort the field the pressure 117 Jet A Vin !Robert Mair) 111 IA d"f I kind nd · 117 51111,Mlft Pool! 111ona1d Brill 111 But by the end of June, the 1e a 11 eren a easier 111 Tr1.1Ckll N' win ccurtl• Ptl'ntrl 111 n...r .. ers inflelCI was IPfini1ng to with!tand. Hl've always 117 WNthen'lln (Tem' LIPhM!'ll 11' UUYfj tried to keep calm," be says. 111 leaks in several places, and 111 e10MTM iu.c• -AGO y.nls.. J .,.,r when Bill Russell left for two "I'm being selective, and· I'm 111 old• • up, Cl1lmlng, PurM S2:JOO, ._... to bit the bell here 't's 111 Clelmlllll IN'lc. MOD. weeks in the m 11 j t IT Y "'.I'~ W I SICOND ltACI -1111 y8f"dl. 'J YMf' ~ & up. Clliml'M. Pvl'M S2DOO. Cl81ml ... Pfloo pcm ..ymOnd Btr 8oY 1u11Nml 112 reserves, the team summoried pitched." :::;1:J:3.:!~~r ·i • ~~~ Lacy, who was hitting .min 'lbe formula ha! been heard soi&LMKAMn IP_8(ntl'I _ ,',','· El Paso before, OOt it's working well Don Kur (Herley "°*YI .l>fcX•rww Ill-Id B1nbJ 120 ~11 I! .... (ANlrJ ' .....,..,,.., ..._ Lacy •· -e a 11J Blobb¥ OIMttl' (11n1u1 l22 "I was surpriJed, ., he aays. ~ ius-...., r- 111 NINTH lAC• -* vim. ' .,."' "I had no idea I would make · problem fOr Ahion -what to :?; ~1:m1~ 'Zic.'='."'· PWM tltoG. the club this yut:. I just do when the injured players A deeply-lanned, avid beach- goer In the llUlllDler, ll>e 11 in • quandry u lo w-to ' major tn music or pbJllcal educ1Uon Jn the fall. q A recent lnvitaUcm lo lr7 i prolt11lonally , recordlnc lier aonp pulls her toward lllllllc, but gymnutlcs and PE 11111 have tbe upper hand. Her aoluUon? Doona pl1n1 to have . her " cake and eat 11 too. She'lf Just· supplement her daily diet of gymnastics with a little more ... music In the fall . •) GEN ERA L SUPERINTENDENT 01t1te•tll•,! 'T-,.., .. 11•.t!HN~k -..... ....... CllftlllftY, Mwt .... ,........ "' """ ftlMfnlctlttt .... Cl,ull If fMNt'ilt ,..... .......""" • t ctt'". ' ., Petty, driving a ST P Plymouth, pulled In for fuel and two tries, but as he was starting onto the track, his engine stalled. '!be delay due to repairs put him one full lap behind, Ille same margin by whicl! he loot the ...... Othera scoring for NIMA were Bret Bernard and Jay Brower With two apiece and .._ Jim Bradburn, Jack Diclailan and Bruce Black w,ltb one Bit O' 81.r IJCll'ln W1Dolll O."'ln (.aunty (Ttrry Ll!lflaitl) Trve Keti. IC"8rln Smllll) Rewanl Recu.intw:I (JQ! Wlllll'lt Sl1t1r Gii !Robert Adair) SPetd'l' Seven IC11rti. Ptr11tr) 11' 1uc1 I!'.,. cup111m) ',',', •"'-·""'• l'd have the best year heal and Rus~ comes back 117 SIMlt Gil (W1bclll) '°"""6'"' 120 Wlllt Luck (l'lft) 117 I could and hope to make it mm the reserves. T•••D •AC•_.. ,,rd•. 2 ,. old•. crwinu At CKnlehtl ,",', next year." The manager, who'd love to Lotldoe (Ad1lr) ha -·~ ............. Clalm1ng, Purse lllOO. Cl•lml119 ptlce Fr1nldeAl1mltos IB1nkl) l17 Alston wasn't pl.aMIDg to Vt Jld'e ::IUUI Y'""'"'"-• ~=• Vllentlne (John Wetwnl 117 Rein 0111 (Vll!llhn) 117 use him regularly at,flrat, flut says, 0 We'Jl face that when Grind Dfdl Too !Terry Uphlm) 111 S•llor's CIWlrt111 (Mlhud8J l20 in the p..-.... Lacy proved We come to it." Mimi Mouw IJolln W1rdl 111 , .::•:"::'"'.:'''...:"'.'.'.:'~''.'.'."'~'"'~''.__ __ _:•~10'......:'.once::'.'..:..:'.:.:'.":::....,.?.:=:'!..!.::.:::~·....::::..:::::::..::..::.. __ p;;;;;;;;;;;;; IWNMl'Mft StlMllN-Ll'Kllk C8fil. 1NI W. MKA ............. C.j,,,...,ca• . ...., ATTN1 e "9 ....... • 'I " Deep Sea Fish Report HUNTINGTON llACH -M antltrl: 2 IWlllbut, 156.r,nd bl•. ' blrT"Klld• l" rock COd mtd:trel. NEWPOlll' Art't W!ldflll) -I'll •nt1len: s btrT"Klldt, 11 ilt'fllto, 1M btu, Tll rodt COd, , lwlllbl.lt. 1' ll'llJCkn, CDwrr'I LKllwJ -211 ~•H;r•· 14 blrr•cucll t llOl'llto. 3tJ bl)t, ~k «Id. ' "'llblll. DAN WHAll .. -1'1 •"91"1: t1 blrT"IKUdl, 2J bonito. 27 l'llObVf, ttl ullco b.li1. SIAL ll!ACH -204 ~ltr1: ~.JOO rode cod, 'U ctilco .._, .. 2 U• cod, 1 ~ cod. h l'l'I -1» '"Cllen: t3 ~ blSlt J w!llle ttt btlt< 1 ri.111>111. LDNO l•ACH C .. IMMI rltrl -IO ~~et'~-1 f#~'l.J.~11~ tt~ Ji ~ ' ~rrK\IGI, ~ c;iko Mis. •• .m. ·-"· .._, -.. •ntltr1: I whftt '" b.IN, It btr• rKud8, 151 f'llC:O blJ.S, I IWlllblll. ,a l'.'l•CIC,.r.tl.-11 blue blM. ,, rocll: Old. (5"rffttl!fM) -124 a!!Oltl'I: :l btr• r.evdl, Sii Clllco blU, J1t l'OCll (Od, each. P1!19CI Mike (Cll1rW:. Smith) 1111• Earlier it was Dickman who spearlleaded the attack In an 11·2 triumph over NIMA B. Dickman scored. fiv~ times while Jim Bradburn added rOur goals. Single tallies were n<:Ol'ded by Tim Cruse and Sl(JPdidt Dool 10.""'l' Mltchell) 117 Slllklnt Moon IW (Joe M1ttud1l 117 Joelle Slttn 81r (W. MllM!lbtCll) 117 Jllllblrb (Donlld Knight! 11A Our Genie (Jtrl'Y lllclllrdtl 117 MDl'lllN18 (J-Ortvtr) 117 Baseball S'tandings POUll:TH IACI -'50 y1rtt.. 2 yHf' otft.~ Allowence. Catlt-llred. PUrM SllOO. NATIONAL LEAGUE Terry Sales. NIMA B's scoring consisted of single tallles from Boyd Philpot and Tim Quinn. NIMA B took third place In the tourney with a 6-1 win over Phillips B. Phllpot and Tom Boughey scored twice and Chip Rowe and Tim Quinn each bad one goal. Coach Bill Barnett's NIMA P•fT Molly !John W1ttonl Air S1-1Don811:1 Knllfll) Holdy VM kt lllobert Adllrl Tin¥ SCOOe (HlfW"t' PINI Tr!Pllai. CIP'I' (Leny Wrlltltl Cllou C1101.1 (II-Id lankl) Tln'l' ~ (Terry LIPMml P1r OM Quett (H1rlrf Ctotlw) Ll'I Am'9o !Rim.rel Vwefln 117 '" "' "' Pltt.sburgh 117 117 New Yorlt ;:~ Olicago 111 St. Louis ............. cOJ.., W•ktl !JOl'ln w1tton1 111 Montreal Mi• Strew ''"' 101nny CMdDI•l 111 Philadelphia ~ ~ Glfl lDIMY C1rd01:1) lU Nnhll'• Llz IJllMI Bl'Ollkll 114 Pl"" ••c•--.wt y1nh. J .,.,, old• CincinnaU & UP. ,,_ l5000. Houston Reerth {RObert UJMl'\'I IU • ltttte l.8d'f Roer (Al1t1rdo ,.lnlCI•) 121 Dodgers Mlrble Min !Alt!! MMtt) no AU t EDI! Dlvllloo W L Pct. 52 30 .SM fl 34 .580 44 40 .521 42 39 -.519 36 4s· .444 29 54 .349 Weot Dlvlalon SI 31 48 38 43 40 .622 GB 4\\ I I\\ 15\\ 2311 C crew throttled Mt. San Antonio In the morning opener, 6-3. Charles Glazier and Greg Horman had two goals each In pacing tbe Pr1n11 "'""" (Miit v11en1~111 111 an a ll:OO!n Tonto IL•rry G11111enJ 117 San Francisco llold Adventure IHOWlfcf Gflnd) Ill San Diego 3840 38 50 31 52 .S56 5 .S18 8\\ .452 14 .432. 18 .373 20\\ SOUf' City (RllCIY C1~tl 11& Vl.-11'1 (Ftrl\lndo Ttro) 1lf BW!to Roc:klt (Wl'f'IMI Hlf"l'ltl It.I Short Rocket (WUll1m Mlllor'lllYI llS Newport-H a r b or High dominated C team. ' llKTH ltACIJ.....6.ff Ylrds. :l 't'llr 9ld1 Keith Wall and ~om Searles • 1111. Atiow.nce. '°",.. s1t00. •· Du1ter Bir -ICMrlet Smlllll each contributed one goal each °"'"° 1Fr1ri11. s-1 to the NIMA c ca111e. Grll!CIH·HotJ'I IRlcNl'lf VllllMI i~;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii8,_,. AcClllll'lt ITtnT LHinlml Meet the Man the Safeco Smile. · ID "' 115 '" AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit BaJUmore -New York Cleveland Milwaukee Qakland Chicago Minnesota Kansas City Angels Texas Eall Dlvllloo W L Pct. 40 35 .568 45 36 .S56 38 39 .494 -rl 41 .474 34 40 .425 32 47 .40S West Division 52 30 45 38 42 38 41 41 38 46 35 48 .SM .!142 .!142 .500 .452 .422 e AUTO e HOMI e YACHT e INDUSTRIAL e COMMlllCIAL e IONOS DEAN LEWIS GB 1 8 7\\ 11~ 13 7\\ 7\\ 11 IS 1711 1t66 HAUOR ILY.D., COSTA MESA Servt!.,~nd Porto for All lmportacl Cars 646-9303 . rn lody Shop for All Cara Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer DEAN LEWIS 808 smRSOll Deen Lewi• lmporh in Coste M.••• h1ppily 1nnouncff the 1r'riv1I of its n•w 1ervtce. m•n- 191r Bob Severson of CoroM del Mer. Bob h11 toke• .. ., th, 11rvic1 facility far both T oyot1 1nd Volvos. l ob h11 tw1nty.1even yt1r1-.--xp-.rl ence in import ind domestic auto-.. mobile service. Over tw...+y 1 mech1nic1 will be urtder his cli .. rect control and his eJ1ptrienct will b1•1fit both dHlanhlp ••d customers. lob ls married i ncl \11 two childro•. Ha llk11 lo f~h ••d ,,. .. , 1. hi• .,. .. 1\111 .. ., ., ,, ., I ., .. ·I • .. • • ·. .. ' .. • 474 I. 17TH 5TUIT COSTA MISA MUIOO -54"3205 , ..................... av ..... ....,•.~."'-.D•l•Ltv"""1•1v...,•.'•.c.1a.L.1.11.• ...................................................... .,,,1 . ' , !1 • • •• . . ,Mood.,, Ju~ 17, 1972 Id Pro Wins BYC Flight of .Kites 87 ALMON L0CKABEY 'l'be A. B. RouaeU. Trophy ji.. ... ,.., .... for the youngest girt to llnlah point that ocarce1y 50 mtrleo Forty-<wo )'<Or old Rowland went to Jody Morley of NHYC. <Ollid be mllllend for the Lohman of Balboa Yacht Club Mike WalU, IS won the Har-Fllg!>.l Suad. ay establlahed hlmseU as 1"J Welch Trophy for the '!be even 100 entrlea for tho younge.t boy to finish. Jnaum•ral Flight ol "· Kl'-the "Frasier" of the salUng • · _.. "'llC ~ David ~ won_ i apecial was • pleasant surprise to ib fraternity when be outaaited award for tbe oldetl portlci· sponsors. As tale aa 'lbursday 100 yoWl(ISlen to win the in-pant in the race and Mr. snd there were only 30 -on augunl Flight of the Kites, a Mn. George Twist WeT'e hand snd by mid-morning SW.. -~th feature t h a t awarded the trophy for the day there were only 71. Last first married couple to finish. Minute entries filed on the replaces the extinct Flight of By the numbers, tbe Flight committee boot swelled the the Snowbirds. of the Kites did not come up to llat to 100 by race time; Lohman, twice flee! cham-tho be)'<lay of ill pred .... ,.,., Don Penningloo of the plOilm lJielloo:i. Clw has tlle1'llght-oHhe-Soowblrds;-Cllamber'a-<lommodore-club, been salllng Kites onl; 00• willch foe nearly tlree decades aald the 100-boat turnout wu caalonall · BYC' Twilight was a yachting spectacular Indicative that the race would . Y m • that drew tbousand.s of opec· grow to even greator numbers Series this summer. lltors to Newport Beach. The than the old Flight of the 1be 13-foot Kite lll a cat-rig· Snowbirds have drawn a1 Snowbirds. ged boot that la predominantly meny as 200 booll. The event FIRST FIVE FINISHERS - sailed by the tee1>-age sailing was cancelled by the sponsor-(I) Rowland Lohman; (2) group. ' ing Newport -Cllamber John Daigh; (3) Phil Ram· DAILY PILOT JN" ,,.,. DAILY ~IL.OT Stiff ...... OUT FRONT -Rowlan4 L<>hman peers under the sail of his Kite dinghy on his way to winning the inaugural Flifht of the Kites. Lohman, 42, was the winner over 00 entries. :. lnverne.ss Skipper ·Wins Class Regatta Steve TOIChl of Inverne.ss Yacht Club won the West Cout champlonahlp for the Intematlonal-11 Class Sunday In 1 five-race series sailed in conjunction with Alamitos Bay Yacht Clul>'a YRU Small Boat Regatta. Na ti o n 1 l championship nigatta for the class will be lll1ed ltartlng Wednesday at Marina del Roy under the direction of the South Coast Corlnlblan Yacht Club. Othero placing In the cham- plonohlp flight were Bob Reeves, Severn S a i I i n g Aaociation; Peter G a 1 e s • Balboa Yacht Club; Richard Mueller, Corinthlan YC, Seat- Ue, and Baird Bardarson, CYCM, SeaUte. Re1at1a Reanltt CAL-20 -Lloyd Powell, LBYC; (2) John Scannell; ABYC; (3) Charles Merrill, ABYC; (4) wbel Lounsberry, ABYC. -OK DINGHY -(I) Doug Halaey, GSC; (2) Ed Kimball III, ABYC. SNIPE -(I) Ron F o x , ABYC; (I) Hank Scbofield, No Bermuda Yachts Yet Near Spain BAYONE , Spain (AP) -Of. liclala of the Bayone Yacht Club in northwest Spain aaid Sunday they have not beard of the whereabouts of any of the 46 enlrants In the 2,700-mUe Bermuda-Bayone Yacht Race, now two days overdue here. '!be leading yachts were ICheduled to arrive In Bayone last Friday. '!be ofllclala aald eatenaive l!Urchea of the Atlantic Ocean by 5panJah air force planes dUl1ng the past two days proved "absolutely negative." They said windless weath<r · In the Atlantic area near Bayone during the past two da)'I might have been a major cause for delay. All the yachts ha ve wireless equipment, thOugh none have used ft. ABYC; (3) Roger stewart, SDYC. TORONADO -(1) Wayne Harvey, CBYC; (2) Rick Taylor, CBYC. LIGHTNING -(1) J . Glverink, KHYC; (2) Wendell Harter, KHYC. FINN -(1) Leeds Davis, ~c. GEARY-JS -(1) Austin Peeples, CBYC; (2) MUI Peeples, CYC; (3) John Olin, CBYC. f>-0.S -(1) D. Beck, LAYC; (2) Jelf Brauch, LAYC; (3) Leon Sh<nk, MBYC ; (4) Bob Sjostedt, CBYC. LASER -(1) Doug Rastello, ABYC; (2) Jack Batemsn, MBYC; (3) Bill Moore, ABYC. NATIONAL -. (1) Clyde Ellerman, ABYC; (2) Alban Reed, ABYC. LllJ0.14A -(1) Harry Wood, ABYC; (2) Merlin Gayman, ABYC; (!) Dale Berklblaer, ABYC. LllJ0.14B -(I) Jim Karis, ABYC; (2) Jack HaJlatt, ABYC. SENIORS SABOT-(1) Fay Humphrey, ABYC; (2) Betty Sunolsky, ABYC; (3) Sidney Jones, ABYC. SABOT A -Mark Reynolds, NDYC; (2) Mark Redenburgh, LSC; (3) Andy Ayole, LSC; (4) Jell Merrill, ABYC. SABOT B -(1) Scolt Mer· rill, AiYC; (2) Dave Black, ABYC; (3) Robert Oden, SDYC; (2) Marie Redeoburgh, Odusa Takes Race Handily LAHAJNA, Hawaii (AP) - The SJ.foot SeaWe ketch Odusa skimmed across the finish line Saturday aome 27 houri before tis nearest com- petitor was due to arrive in the 2,000-mile Vicloria{o-Maui race. Race officials here said the Nautical Il, a 42-foot sloop sailing for the Seattle Yacht Club, was due to arrive at 11 a.m. Sunday. The Co-Motion, a 37-footer, was expected at the same time. Summer Event Lohman Jed from wire-to-<JI Commerce when the Soow· ming; (4) John McClure; (S) wire oven the ~mile course in bird ec:lass dwindled to lb Hugo Sdn:nldt. LID0-14 VETERAN CAPTURES FIRST FLIGHT OF KITES Rowland LohrTt1n RMCives Trophy From Don Pennington llght airs, occasionally having to oompele wilb the spectator fleet and other summer traUic on Newport Hari>or. : He had a sl.r.able le.ad at the first mark in the South Lido Oiannel, with Phil Ramming of NHYC nearly 100 yards aatem. But at the second mark Ramming had almost OV<rtaken Lohman es lbe winds went Light In the North Lldo Channel. The two sailed wilbtn a boat length of each other until they got clear of the fluky air In the Lldo tum· ing basin where Lohman gain- ed boo! speed snd slowly pull· ed away. Ramming beld his second place until just before the finish when he got headed sail- i~ Urough the downwind fleet and was nipped by John Daigh or NHYC who was sailing a hlgherCO<rSe. In the special t r o p h y division, Martha Seaver of NHYC was the first girl to finish and win the William lnslee Trophy. 2 Balhoans Win Oass,.--+- Overall Counterpoint, sailed by Dick Deaver and Bill Headden of Balboa Yacllt Club, was the <Mnll and Clas D -of BYC'1 Drilling Islands race Saturday. The race was the fifth in the 116 Series. Second overall wu Swift, skippered by Ja ck Mallinckrodt, BYC, and third was Trend, Jim Linderman , BYC. Class results: CLASS A -(I) Tribute, Dick Blatlerman, BYC; (2) Charisma, William Power, NHYC; (3) Dorothy 0, Bob Beauchamp, NHYC. CLASS B -(1) Swift; (2) Trend; (3) Dorolby 0, Bob Beauchamp NHYC, CLASS B -(I) Swift; (2) Trend; (3 ) Bettina IV, Tom Scbock, NHYC. CLASS C -(1) Coun- terpolnl; (2) Primera, Phil Mongsn, NHYC; (S) Sea Ranger, Bob Staats, BCYC. CLASS D -(1) El Teoor, Ralph Mack, BYC; ( 2 ) Freestyle, Lippold " Cicero, NHYC; (3) Moon Shine, Bill von KlelnSmld, NHYC. Two of Five Finish Race Only two of the five starters in the bieMial Multihull Transpacific race from Los Angeles to Honolulu finished the 2,225-mUe course. First to finish was the catamaran Lani Kai in 10 days, four houn, six minutes and 31 second,,. The trimaran Bacchanal finished some six hours later Jn 10 days, 10 hours, 34 minutes and 33 aeconds. The other three entries dropped alter the first day with gear failures . DICK WILSON Says We 11re fltry pleased l o 11nno1111&t lhal we are now c11rryi11g txt/usivt/7 the complete Ge,,eral Tirt Line. WILSON FORD SALES HAS SELEaED GENERAL .TIRE PRODUCTS AND IS OFFERING THEM AT SPECIAL ''get Acquainted Pricesl'' GENERAL 4 Pl Y ·NYLON CORD JET WHITEWALLS Sire Price 65~13 $149~ ns.14 $19so •Daal Tread Design • 4 Ply Nylon Cord • Duragen ® Tread Ruii.er Fed Excise Tax. ' ~·· 775-15 855·14 $23 00 125-15 $2200 125-14 W-l·D-·E GENERAL JUMBO 780 Calibrated GLASS-BEL TED • Glass Belted For lo19MUiag1 • Polyester Cord Body Fer Strngth • Stylish Whitewall For Today's look Plus 'I" to •3u Excise Tax. Setof4 · A78X13 $88 $45 . E78x14 $94 $48 F78X14$100 $52 G1ax14SJ IO s57 nax1sSIOO s52 G1ax1s$1 IO s57 -~-~-~-----~~-------.... ------·--··----~ GENERAL'S PUNCTURE SEALING RADIALS General Calibrated SCRAMBLER GT GLASS BELTED DUALS-90 So good, wt wil replace It PRll if It fail• ,., .. , ...... WI PROMISI YOU If _, N .. DMI S.M ...... nr.. ill --' ,. ......... ., ..... hit•~ ...... ... '"'"i1.-...... ttte......, ... k•Mr, ... 111 ,.,1 •• ttn11. t.i.t• ••• ._ .... .. tM .. -wthrin( ..... Tin ..... ., ...... ,.. ... .... ...... l!Roeke. General Calibrated JETRADAN •4Pt,..,..CMW •l .... C..WWlt;. •'-OwlT ..... hslf9 •ltrti•Jll•WW ..... k IADW. TillS ,,. lll••ltMi .. p...-ri4t I ... •t. 1-. .. •'"919' & 1teWlltr ........ c11ik.tff. , ,,retltlee .. tc•M ~ Ce•petln fg f ile I _ ....... GR78xl4 GR78xl5 llR78xl5 s3ft46 ·:~$4001 .:::.. .. s43'4 ··~· 7 --la.TR. la.Ta, h.Tn. For Imports ....... SPRINT-Jn Fits 9 Out of 10 IMPORT CARS . Bids for Regatta Issued The Association or Santa Monica Yacht Clubs has tsaued bids for the Summer Regatta to be held off Marina • , . cltl )l<y • and King Harbor (R<dondo) July 22-23. '!be regatta takes tho place of the Southern California Yachting Asaocfatlon Summer Regatta which never quite got off the gound as did lbe SCYA Midwinters. Twelve yacht clubs snd sail· Jng clubs are playing host to the Allon and prodJcJed IOI racen . Clubs involved are California Yacht Club, Del Rey Yacht Club, King Harbor Yacht Club, Malibu Yacht Club, Pacific Mariners Yacht Club, Sanle Monica Yacht Cl ub, PalOI Verdes Yacht Club, Westward cruising Club. Windjammers Yanh t Club and V~lce Yacht Club. The regalia 11 open to all yachts . enrolled In clubs al· lilfated with SCYA. or clubs outside ihe area which are ar· lfllaled with the No rt h American Yacht Racing Union (NAYRU ). ASMBYC ls requesting that entrlea must be In the handa </. the various dtvislona by Ju- ly 14 to establish a .claa • Three or more boala will con- 1Utute a clua. ' Aller claaaes have been e1tabllabed, lale entrl"' mlJI be flied aa late u TllW'lday, July JO. Race !nvltatlo111 and entry fnltructi0111 have been 1eDt to au Southern California Yacht Clubs, atcordlng to general chairman W. Edga r Jessup Jr, . !> • 1 • • • TV IDGllHGHTS ~ TONIGHT'S • ' KCET till 8:00 -Video Variations. Masterworks from Bach to Schoenberg are interpreted visually by contemJl?rary artists in moving color, sbade, . ,space and bght, keyed to a performance by the , ·Booton Symphony Orchestra. : NBC 0 9:00 -"The Six Wives of Henry VIII." •"1le youngest and most beautiful of Henry's wiyes i:i• Catherin• Howard, nie ce of the Duke of Norfolk. •;.:!'art V of .a six:part series. r · ABC fJ 9:00 -"Divorce, American Style." Dick Y~n Dyke and Debbie Reynolds star in Ibis 1967 •.comedy as a couple slartlng divorce proceedin1!5 "~~!' meet a divorced couple and change !bell' Jnmds. Jason Robards Jr. · · '1 ltlLJ G ll:OO -"When My Baby Smiles at Me." ~Betty Grable and Dan Dailey are teamed in Ibis ·:iµusical comedy from 1948. ::. CBS II 11 :30 -"Take the High Ground." Rici. :!~d Widmark is a tough basic training sergeant .m !hJS 1953 drama with Karl Malden, Elaine stew· art, Russ Tamblyn and Carleton Carpenter. iTV DAILY LOG :: . ~~ Monday 'i' Evening ' ' " ... JULY 17 QOIJIJJO!!JE!INtn ;:-.. a o m ... ,., Llarut .... 11 ·~· St. Louis C1rdlntls vs. Houston Al· • : : t1os 1t Houston. ..; · 0 TIM II& Y1lley : : • @Combat "Sniper'' !·. m Tht Fllltbtonu ~: • ID DIRltl loont : : ~ ()j Thi DMut Youn1 : •: @) Alta Ttdon ••. fl!) ... _ lANlp C!!J-RfD m Pn111nt• Ustld Alu JICinto !fl """ Sloops l<lO D _, (C) (90) .... TIM ... cMnt" P1rt I (scl·IQ '60 -Rod .• Tey~. A11n Youna. Ymt1 Mllnleux. ~ fl) CIS lkwt Willer Cronkite : : . tD "'' flylq "'• ·~. ® Tiit Space lttnln Words . < fl!) ,...,.,.,. : : : Q?J lirttn Aaes . : . m '""8• ,011a.1 ::: fi)Clnllllu fHtNU : . m Hudw, Susan Get1tft 1uests. Jiao f)G)Ntn 9 """' (2111) """"" ~I PW" ets" (sci·fi) '69 -Kurt Cnne, Pt· ter Wlll i11ns. . B 1bt Six Wift1 ti ""'1. Ylll "Cltherint Howard" hrt V. Henry Is 1nch1nted w"-,n tit lllttb Cath· erine Howard, nltiet of the Dub of Norfolk, who becomes the ,011npst and most be1utif11I of Htnry's wlws. IJ F~ a.m, Cllifomlt U&trt· welaht Champ Juan Collldo vs. Sinl· dll Kod1t1 of J1p1n In 1 10-roulld bout live from the Forum. Ttnlt· tively sdleduled . O IJJ CIJ E!IAIC--(Ci (2'~ .._.., Alnrit11 Slyto" (com) '67-Dict V11t ~e, Debbie Reynolds. Jason Robards. Couplt s!Jrt divoret proctedinp. ft'lffl di· YOl'Ctd couple, and ch1n1• th1lt mindL @I Mmr. (C) "JtA Ctldl ... Pie•• Co1111 Hom" (com) '65 - Shirley MacUlne, Richard Cmtna. man .... fl) U1 Ytmt Pan l...Ur fl!) I l!IC!AI Wiiy SM flofenct? A aOC1.1ment11y study of Flofe11et, 1t11y, 1xposin1 tht commtrtlal 09- portunlsm, lncon/petent bur11ucr1· q 1nd tick of coricern for the flolJ af th• put, r1mp1nt In tht city followlnt th1 Nov. '66 flood. &JO.Rt-Ml Erl""": (C) ....... ~ 5-· (mus) ''5 -Bttty Grable, Junt Haver, John Ptyne. OJ TN Yir&inl•• Im- (I) Tri " f.lneli11111C1l t'.30 8 DW DI, Sbow (R) Doris ~::::'Mr llntt :'=..~1~1 t!a~~e: ::..~ ~ ID 11.M Luq zine, but he fells to cleli'ler. Q) I DruM If S..nnl• (() Elubtti I fll lny Dllbiillt Ill m Ntn ·:· EID Sil the Date Appe1rwnus by Dr. Ci)) 1tot: Beet Daniel Ellsber1 ind Jin• Fond•'.s fE Aftltllrl "G.I. Troupe Show" hishlitht this l!J lladft& frt111 Holl,.... hrt cover11• of the r1Hr held llSt Now. 12 at tho LA SperU ArRI to P"" l~ ....... ,..,..... "tmltel" sure C1lifornia'1 conrrusl01111 rtp. (R) Tho •torr of • Journ•llst , rtstnlltiTls to support 1 definite seekin1 to uneoftl' corrvptlon In • ·: · dtt1 for withdrtw•I from Southmt Mlcfwat citJ'. Butt Reynolds pl1y, : : Asi•. Pete lJssiler ind James M1cArthu1 :· .. cm Vtlt ,. Mwl• p1.,, po1a otrlClf Rua F1int. ::i: C!!J •n•: (C) ""'"' -'" ,,. e m -' , · TI.,.. · 0 Ceacll Dmte ' . m .... "" -"' m Stfirt "--~-_ ••• l'jj) Mntelpil11 '111Nn-Th1 Spoils 1'{1011 lbnd U, ... Cllow of -(RI :• CIJ TtT"1tMT111111 fl)Colt J.,.,. (JJ l.,_tlltlnnlt tli)lbt ---Ill .... s _, (C) "Wldl.. ...,, .... s.• ill tM ks(' (com) '61-Jack a;> lhlctll Ar11nt1111 Lemmon, Rick)' Nebo!\. &) LI l.lytnde 41 llf•ll m Hopn'I, Htfoe• ' ' m (I) Drlflllt . 10:30 0 f'r11111ti "Bltcll Di1morldt" lnsll'· : ·: @ 11 Hie Spotllsftl 1nc:t lnvuti11to1 Dtrek Simpson • • (Uo)'d Bochner) commissions Prl· •• @) Chuplrlto mus to lotlto the Wl'Kk•&e of I a;) Mil\lllitt Yaldu ShOW' plan• It the bottom of the ocen. m """' <"'> • ..,., °'" " "' e ,,. ,.... Ail" (ldv) 'JS-Jam.a CllfllY, m lftl ~ ~ !lllt -la l:OD II <Il c-• ·0n,.• <RJ " a-: "The Ollor 1.M" old t11llbl1ztr Mii out to tradi lfa Coldddl""""" down tho &l1yer of 1 wo1111n who •• "d btlrlendod .,,.. 11:00 11 a o Ill llillll - •• 0 IJJ Cil """" N;Cht Spcdtl Gl (I) Qi Ntn • "'In Se1rth of the lost World" (R) 8 IMll NNs O.mos Sh•klriln A GE Mono1r1m specl1I explorln1 ()) MmW Dilltl ti'liliz1tlons In the Ameriels bef0t1 11 llMI: (C) "Whe1t MJ 11'7 Columbus. N1rr1ted b7 E. G. Mar· S:W.lln tt Ml" (mus) ''8 -Betty ; 111111. Grablt, Din 01111)'. ·' om Nm m T,,,.. • eon.111att• CD Tho Motllflr>l1·LIW ID .... ftrY011r Uft l m PtnJ 11-Ill -(R) •• IHI,,.._, ti 111t Witk "Swsn 11:30 fJ <Il en I.tit _, <Cl "Tab I.tit" tM Hlcfo -(d~) '53 -Rich· . fE ...,,.. .. Colfit 1rd Widmark. Kirt M11Mn. • m•ap1c1At1Y1tt..Ymet11111Mn· a amloftllf c..-., ;: telWOfb from Bach to Stboenbet1 Bishop is substitult host Helen :.: •rt lnttriireted vlsu~llr ~ co_~11dm· Gurtey Brown ruesta. ponl)' artists in mov1n1 wior, Mii •, g Robert l. Dorun Shtw • • • space and llsht. keyed to I Ptt· u lll (I) m Dick CMI =-=· b7 tll1 Boston S)'mphony m Tt Ttl tllo Td Ill Lt lllWldto * ~ l1toda ll:DO m ---lw C.-.. Cl) EstlclH Ctttni (tom) '50 -Celeste Holm, Ronald Colman. ; ' :t:JOCD MllY Critfil Show Cuests are ·: carol Ch1nnln1. [WI Gabor llld :;: Cho~. ll:ltB-: "LMl Ctotl ..... (1tl·fl) :-: m'"""' ·s1 -...., -~. l>hn HOii. : ~II (I)-· Ltq (R) Twsn~·Ylll· m-. Miiie n.. ::: old Kim Carter, wtllJ of Lucy's lit-1:00CIJDD(J)llm • : slstenct tltat 1ht Is 11.UI Just 1 •: child rno¥tS ovt of Ital" tnother's 1:30 8 MW. (t) "Sllttt ft hDlp" llomt. (WIS) '55-Jofln PIJM, ···••rt• Tuesday : ; -•o"X"YT"l"M11E"M110Vl1111E111S~ \ IUNDO DUNNI Stars By VERNON SCOT!' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Greta Garbo has g i v e n birth. ~ i lPYSterious cult of invisibility with a growing number ol onetime stars becoming ever elusive to the public eye. Marlene Diftrlcb was in Hollywood for a m o n t h recently. But not a soul aside from t!te h<lp at the .Beverly Wilsltire Hotel and a few close SCOTT llNATU COLlaaT Follow Garbo" Dpt personal friends had the slightest notion that she was anywhere but in her Paris apartment. Jimmy cagney is a recluse Those stars wbo no longer work in pictures or television and who continue to live in Hollywood con be equally who speDdS most or his t1.me·in -anonymous. Martha's Vine)'8.l'd on his Now that the clamor has farm. When he returns to subsided Claudette Colbert Hollywood no one is the wiser. Jives a quiet, invisible life. She Much traveled Ava Gardner doesn't attend parties nor is rarely seen. She has drawn • premieres. the cloak of privacy about her Occasionally Irene Dunne even when making a movie. will make a political ap- pearance for a Republican friend or at a charity benefit. But these excursions into the Umeli~t grow increasingly rare. When is the last time anyone took a picture oI Frederic March? Louise Rainer, who won t Y.'O successive academy awards in 1936-37, lives in England and leads as private and un· Government Help Eyed · SAG Chief Sees Hope for· Job'less By BQB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The state of the union, the presi· dent reported , is rocky but hopeful. The wlion in this instance is the Screens Actors Guild, Cal State Operas Set The occult and a love triangle with a strange twist will be the subject of the Cal State Fullerton S u m m e r Opera Theater, Thursday through Sunday in the Recital Hall. Perfonnances of Gian Carlo Menotti's "The Medium" and "The Telephone ,'' ac- companied by a chamber orchestra, will be at 8 p.m. Reservations may be obtained by calling the Theater Box Qf. fice at 870-3371 between noon and 4 p.m. weekdays. Tickets also will be available at the box office before e a c h performance. which numbers among its 24,000 members some of the most !amou.s !aces in the world. But there are among its members a high per.centag~ of faces which never will be recongnb.ed. And !Ital's part of the guild's problems, says John Gavin, its president . ."From 1939 to 1950, the guild membership· ran the same -around 10,000," Gavin said . "After 1950, the total climbed, and it now remains steady at 21,000. "When the guild had 9,000 members, employment was mosUy in feature pictures. In 1948, the studios were making 500 a year. Now they make 200 a year, 100 of them abroad. Our members also draw a great amount of revenue from television , the majority of it from commercials. "Television employment has declined. In eari!E< years, series filmed 39 to 3 6 segments. Then the total came down to :ro, 26, 20. This season SODle Shows are shooting -0nly 17. "Theie has always been a Both operas, staged . andliij~'R~ conducted by Dr. Daniel E.Scott, associate professor of music, will be sung in English. WEEJIDAYS CROMWELL 7 Only UWRENCE9, 1S Otl.'t SAT & SUN L1wrence 1:15-7 P.M. Cromwell 4:35-10:15 ...... ---··--· ~.,,CAl!8!1l\. Lee Marvin Gen• H1ckm1n in "PRIME CUT" Also (Rl Dustin Hoffman in "STRAW DOGS" ----,,:~-• "'THI OTHO" 11"0} AND large. percentage of our ficulties," Gavin said. ''One is membership that is not thriv -in casettes, the other is cable ing. With the total number so television, or some forn1 or large the employment op-pqrtunitie~ diminishing the pay TV· situation is exacerbated." "We need a new kind of box Gavin (''Tammy ,'' office to replace the one we "Thoroughly Modern Millie"), have lost at the theaters-only sees hope for the future of the 13 million go to the movies guild and its membets. The now, compared to 90 mill ii on basis for his hope is help from in the 1930s. Television came Washington in the form of ·tax along, but its box office i:; the credits and raster amoritiza~ advertising dollar, and there is lion of film investments. a ceiling on how much can be "The present administration spent." ts aware of Hollywood's and "I hope it's not wishful think· the Screen Actors Guild's prob-Ing," he says, "but I believe !ems and is keenly eager to 1972 will be a good year.'' help," said Gavin. 1;::=========::; seeking rescindmg of the • .,, .. ,.,f Another said the guild is ~ Federal Communications Com-~•111111 mission ruling that erased a ••. half-hour of prime time from television network schedules. ~ ~i~o":A' oC:~•t,:;..-;r• The ruling cut down the number of series and hence ''M.A.S.H. 11 deprived at'tors ti. work, Gavin 7:00 r.M • .aid. . "PATION" "I think there will be a ter· rific market for a c tor s ' t:OO ,,M. ·•-•1'ces 1'n the future -if we Frldty I Seh,., O•ly """"• "MASH" 7 I 11:14 can survive the curre".'.n~t ~d~il.:!· !=:=========~! "WAit llTWllN MaN AND WOMIN• AND "A N•W L.IAI'" I ''SIYJACllD'" AND j' "Tltl Cot.Ill'( Tlt.IATMINT" " • Mondat, July 17, 19n DAIL y. mor 01na1cM ..... for Privaey publicized a life as any anomaly among stars. Their housewife. entire ral!on d'etre is abowirc Some fqnner stars-Dietrich olt, crying ''look at me!" and Garbo-travel incognito. Yet Ann Harding w.alk~ It is unnecessary for others. a\vay· from it all to Jive quieUy Deanna Durbin, a child star in Westport, Conn. George whose first screen kiss was a Brent and Randolph Scott cause celebrc, is free to come have dropped, from sight, both and go in France. her adopted wealthy on real estate in· home, without fear ()f puMic vestments. outcry. And what of Joel McCrea! Frank Sinatra, of all people. lie gUded away to his cattle has gone into hibernation since ranch and real estate holdin§s. his retirment last year. Not a Once in a great while his old peep fron1 tl)e old S\Vinging, rnovies uop up on the late, two-fisted d r i n k i n g , con· late show. troversial I e ad e r . Ex· Yet when the siren song o( traordinary. : greasepaint c a I I s , the ~1arlon Brando moves like a footUgbtS go up and the cur· shadow from continent to con-tain rises, even the most tient and into motion pictures elusive ol them cune running. on location with nary a word , AA'" R or his activities, yet hi.s career ~at udy Keeler. is far from over. As the wise man said, that's A passion for privacy is an 1_s_h_ow_blL _______ _ Cesar Romero Joe Flynn "NOW YOU SEE HIM, NOW YOU DDN'f' Also Walt Oi1ney's "PERRY" ---CtNEDOME 20 ,',' ...... ~ '.':".:Jt'".L:o --CtNEDDME 21; ''THI LAST PICTUll SHOW'' & "WHlll'S PAPA~ En11111¥1 Or•rtet C-ty fl_. ............... . ... ~ ~-· f '"':"'T:":J"f; NM111'11'91t flf I AcMtmy .... ,.. iiiiiiii••"'1'0ii0 ii'i•R ON TK• llOOI'" --• -l l SIAD/UM I .. ___. .... . ----,, SUDl/Jlrl ? . -.. . ----,, SUD/UM J .. -·-...... ---- -~. SIAD/UM ( "" -· ... -. --- "THI CUDIOATa" ,.,, -"COCH. MMD LUKr CV) .,l"OllTNOY'I ~""°' ,_, ... *Cl.No.,.. on ·--"JUfltOll JC*Nllt"' CN1 "JJllTl'UL Of'" OOUA•r ,,., "SNAl.AICO" ( ... J DIS THE INV131BLE VAPOR CAPEi! Wll.TDmY ... ,,_ -KURTRIJSSEll·CESAR ROMERO '· .KI FLYNN ·JIM BICKUS· WILLIAM WINOOM .,_MM llllflT •llYCl lllllis•IDllRO&IMIWl·E-MP!WS TECHNICOLOR' .111111il'oCMm,..=,·Dl'"iii11J.lllE!l-llllJJ ----.......-·-·----ALSO -ATltlEUftADYEllVRE-''PIRRY'' 111n1m10DAY11 ... .... l'fAl11Af1. '"•hll• v.u.,. . namar1• &ATUOPll AT7PM ~Jlt 'Wies ... Ptic?" Ill ftl" (QM(D'( ·---., ... _, ...... I I j ii ' ., 'i Mondi), JU~ 17, 1'72 j lush Bar Store Head Aids Men .... l/1lfllON (AP) -Sam M<lrrlt, 'bead ot a faabion s1ore lloi>et lo -hll U.,erle sates. -hU ...., llroai men io weak at lhe 1m-Wen they ult Jlrl aala ualstanU or underwear !or their -· So be'1 openeil a "btusb bar" atelled by mtn In one ot llla1-lltOreS. "A man can handle One woman at a time, but put him In a &hop lull Gt them and he ponies," says 4&-year-old Mcrrla. B~ilders Oppose • 'Freeze' on 1Iomes OAKLAND (AP) -The cities of Pleasanton a n d Livermore .have been sued over passage of an ecoloa i~ itiallve that clampeJ a freeze on new 'home con1truction. · The inltiaUve1 approved by voters last April, requlree that more schools, sewage facilltles and water supplies be assured large commercial and ln- dustrtal customers. If demand still exceeded supP!y, he aaid, the depatt, , ment "would interrupt service to a small seCUon of the city for a brief titne, but no longer than half an hour." • For~•t Btlls I; before new homes can be I built. SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The Senate has epproved two rival lores! pracUoes bills, sending them lo the Assembly where they Join a third one. ' A mil lo bJQCk It WU filed In Alameda Superior Court by I• ( ECOLOGY ) • the 11111-member , Assoclared Home Builders of the Greater • East,Bay. • , e JWobe Sult , ONTARIO (A\') -State A~ ty. G<n. Evelle J. Younger has 8lepped into a noiae con- trov.,.y at Ontario lntema· tional Airport. Backing the California Air National Guard and reeidents o! lhe area, Younger filed a superior ~ suit here aeek- ing to force General 'Elec~ tric'a jet engine testing facility to curb noise It produces. "The growing problem o! noise around major aU'ports requlres 1Ubstantial 1!11orts by private Industry to eliminate all tlnnei:..sary noise from such k>cationl," Y'OUD£er said. eNo'Power7': LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Jle9arlmenl' ol Watet.Jnd Power says it may have to cut- . oil elecjciclfy briefly In parts of lAlS Allieles This su.mmer to "avoid a total 1065 of power 'throughout the city!' Floyd L. Goss, chief elec- trical eng~ and assistant manager, said the department. will first ask 'fi>r voluntary curtailment ol power use by SB 1326 by Sen. Randolph Collier ((),Yreka), won 22-6 approval, and S& 381 by Sen, John Nei<li!Y (R-Wainut Creek), tamed 26-3. Coiii{l''s bill would divide the state into four logging zones regulated by the State Board olFor~, Nejediy 's, would abolish the present forestry board and replace' it with a nine-member body appointed by t b e governor. It would al.so forbid a majority of appointees to have a profit interest in lumbering, but require that three be from the forest prod- uts industry. e Claa119e Vrged SAN. lf!\ANCISCO (AP) -A Utree--monUt survey suggests major changes in the opera· tion of ttie f1iDe.cow'ty San Francisco Bay Area Pollution Control District. A preliminary i:eport receJv, ed by the board of directors from the management con- sultant finn Of C re S a P I McCormick and· Paget Inc,, said the distfict lacks specific measurable, obtainable oir jectives and has no com- prehensive long range plan- ning process , It noted there ls a rapid turnover in directors and in- sufficient Indoctrination o! newcomeni. J Entries Limited ' . . ' In Natural Area : ' ·~ . ,, I I ' ' •" ~ ,• POJ'\TERVILLE (AP) - Regulation& restricting travel in the' Rae Lakee loop trail in Kings canyon National Park to 110 persons a day have been placed Into o:/fect. Th• pennits will be issued without charge on a first· come, fifst·served basis at the Cedar Grove and Onion Valley roadheads to the 50-mlle back country trail. Travel on the Rae Lakes loop will be limited to 15,000 backpackers from J u n e through September in hopes the reduced crowd w 11 I forestaJI stream pollution and (OUTDOORS J lessen other environmental problems. A lO<iay limit bas been set !or aoy persons or party to complete the tour of the trail · ' ' which passes through an area of numerous lakes in the Sierra. e La11d Spurned EUREKA (AP) -The stale Park and Recreatipn Com- mission has reject.e! a request thatltacquire property called the "DJnosaur Caves" on the north coast of Pismo Beach. Instead, ll aJ!P'V'ed a d .. partment study recommend- ing Ille land be 8"qUiTed by • local JOvmlment tll<D<Y· e State Parft7' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The historic town of Allensworth In Tulare County would be tbt lite "' • ~·· million llate ,.... cleYllopmoftt under • blD -Ding Allembty pemae. 'Ibo vote was 64-0. The biU, authored b y Assembiymao John Miller ((), Oakland), would pave tbs way for restoration of many of the town's buildings, set up as a home for freed slaves after the Civil War. e Diving Rule SACRAMENTO (AP) Drunken parachuting w 111 henceforth be illegal I n California under a bill signed by Aeling Gov, Ed Reinecke. ''Anyone 'rho has participated in 'this sport, which bu lo be one ol the , most • exciting In the wor knows that parachuting re- quires a clear mind and quick reflexes," Reinecke said in signing the measure. A news release described him as a former skydiver. e Pilot Hunting BISHOP (UPI) -The California Fish and Game Commission, which bu placed a moratorium on the slaying of mountain lions, will allow "sporting" pursuit of the wildcats as long as they aren't killed or Injured, Tbe~ml!Sfonaftopted a rule to issue pursuit permits for the 197·73 season on a test basis. eDogs OK'd Capitol News Servi... , SACRAMENTO -In respoose to a torrent or mall and !eotimony from 1portsmen throughout the state, the Cslifornla FIJh and Game Commiulon bu decided that deer bunters can usa dop again this year. ' 6 4 2 ' -5 6 7 8 0 A I L y p I L 0 T 'l c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5' 6. 7 8 r ' ' DAILY Pll~OT WANT ADS TBB 816GEST SINGU: llfAIUCE'J'PIA£B ON TU ORANSB COAS'I' -C..tlL DJUCI' 14%·"71 . WANT TO LIVE •••• .... 41on easy street?'' Condo living offers the closest approach to it -whether you want to 'trav~l, or j ust take it easy. Also, you have all the Jnvestment advantages of owning your own property. * HERE ARE 3 EXCELLENT VALUES * * THE BL UFFS -A must see -·for the economy minded. 4 Bdrms., 2 ba., $39,950. * JUST LISTED - Choice 4 bdrm 3 ba with 2200 sq. ft. of living space. $48;500. ., * SPECTACULAR VIEW -of the entire Newport Harbor. 2 BR., 2 ba. Your own gar- age .space P.lus ample parking for guests, Pier & slip avail. $84,900. <;:onvenlent parking-easy to be 675-3000 a "t>ROP-IN" at Bay & Beach Realty Bl , /B BAY & BEACl-I HBALTY ' '!1¥•G. !~I ""010~ All,\ I •ti "' General ASSUMABLE VA Anyone-can assume this high balance VA loan: No qualify- ing and no Joan points. Spark.ling 3 bedroom bome features all· bulltin garden kitchen, a large bonus room and f?nclosed patio. Asking p:l.500. For details - Oall 540-ll51'. (Open .Eves.) '"J,!" HERITAGE REALTORS General FAMILY HOME 5 BEDROOMS See this imposing corner home in choice Baycrest location Newport Beach priced belo\v mkt at $84,500. Beautiful master Br. with own bath. Separate formal dining room . All electric hit-in ki t. Truly a home for the most discriminating buyer. Call 673-85.50. ' o-__ r_•i _____ ,.; 1 _Gen_._,_.1 __ , _____ o;;.'"';;;-~'";;.r;;.••;._ _____ 1Genor•I 4 IDRMS------wt $23,000 Newport leach Thl• will J)e -.. b .. t. Condominium Only 2 mile• to tbt bea.cb, Prime Joeation cble to the features built-in electric beach and in beaUtiful con- kltcben, w / w carpeting ditton. Unusuall,y large 3 TH R 0 U G H 0 U T . and bedroom, 3 bath trl-level abaolutely N O MAIN. model. Hiib beam ceillng TENANCE exterior. $700 living room w;th fireplace TOTAL cash moves )'OU in A UNIC>ll! tifl'tf and separate dining tlJ'ea. ot.. usume low 6% % FHA DelighUul • coyered patio, Joa" witb total payment! of CAPE coo· shingled estate OD a sandy beach double garage plus carport, $00 per month! in . classic Newport' Beatjl neighborhood. Not leasehold and priced 0 WALl<lR /I, LH Unique personifief,l! 3 bedroom and den two just a "tad" under $32,0001 story straight out of House. 'Beautiful plus Illness prompts this IP'~t R.ealton 646-771l you~never:kp.o:W it's there· 2 bdrm apt.' Look value. ·• 2043 westclllf Dri\'o at the $ ftgures on this $2\5,000 investment. C. F. Coleswortfiy ol"'n 'till 9.PM •Ho•• UN19u1 HOMES, co•ci•• ou MAI "'""' & Company FOUR 8~0_R00"'4' ON TOP OF THE REAL ESTATE MARKET 640°0020 ~!~'5~7 WITH T¥Ni'~~~ls~0J'J'~lfLLING POOL PERFECT CORONA DEL MAR, 615-0000 e MESA VERDE Jump in and •nioY the swim, $ 1,000 'ON. . 541>5990 • NEWPORT BEACH 645'6500 e ' tho weather's fine! This Country alze kitchen. formal '-=~---_:,C:'.!A_::LL~,;U~S,_~·-----beauUlully appoin ted 3 bed· dining,. cozy llrt'.:place and ;G;;•;;•;•;••;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;G;•;";••;•;I;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;; room and family is a must huge yard. Only $239 per to see. plus freshly painte(f 1 -~~ -~-~ * . of, J. 3 " the best artist jealous. AP SALESMEN NEEDED-• this including huge pool 'is * in a d e offered at only $33,750. (Open Eves) PRESTIGE WATERFRo'!llT HOMES CALL us today, Best Hurry! Call ~-540-1151 (Open Eves.} SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 101 Lii.de lslo Drive 1~~~,A~I Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba.' home with downstairs _ ~ , waterfront mastr. silite'" & lge. game rm or study. Mexican .tile floors, beam ceiiu;gs1 * OCEANFRONT * RINGf RING! quallty construction, slip . : , . "" ".,$155,000 Home, 4 BWms., 2 baths, Here goe, our. phone, rtnglng J:ot Co..mR.ltt• Information with 40 !t. frontage. This .th an On All Homes & .LOts, P.11111 Call ·. older home has Jge. llvini w1 c s on tt'is SUP~R 4 . rm., frpl c.; dining nn., .,., BeJlROOM, 2 BATH . !)OU. BIL BLE garage with room to L GRUNDY, REALTOR tra Igo, lcitch, DbL garage park a boat, c amper , 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1,, N.8. 67.5-6161 plus extra parking. Best trailer, etc. Ifs the BESI' I o;:~":'i""'""'""'"""""'""'~!!!!~,,,.,,,.,;;;;.;;,;,;.. area, nr. Newport· Harbor FOR THE LEAsr ir> Cos:tu I General I General Yacht Club, Easy to show. Mesa at ohl:y $26,5oo .. VA•--------$100,000. TE. RMS RI 1 , Call: 673-3663 642·2253 Eves. !! NG us NOW! NEW ENGLAND * TRIPLEX * COATS SPECIAL ' Prkle of ownor.;,;p, Steps to ocean. Two 4-BR. &. 1-J & Charming 4 bedroom 2 story BR., nearly new. Frplcs., · WALLACE home in choict! eastside dishwshrs., Jrlce d e c 0 r , REAL TORS locatiod near Santa Ana Priced at $125,IXXl --:-546-4141-Country Club. 2 full baths, Call: 673-3663 6J3-6688 Eves. associated BR OKERs-REALTORS Z02S W Balboa 673-166) STRATFORD MESA DEL MAR- S BR. 3 ba. Well groomaJ Only $2500 down! $41,500 CHUCK CAROTHERS REAL ESTATE (Op~n Even,ngs) beautiful tile, bar style * DUPLEX * * HOME $32,500 ·* . """""'""'""'""'""'""'"""' " kitchen . with e I e c tr i c East Balboa. 2 BR. ea. lmit. * DUPLEX $34 000 * N H •Aa.. buil tins, Raised 'f;replace, Good cond, 8 Hrs, old, 3 BR. 2 ba. Lge. ru~pU.s rni. V ewpo"s2••!!fl'•5 niei: carpe~, detached dou· Furniture included. Sell or HOME 4 bedroom, 2 bath qua:Ilty built home in Fountain • Valley. ~ubmlt now while tenns and interest rates are low. only $33,500 AU; terms. Call 847-6010 Now! Beaut. patio. Parklike yard GCGftt• 6,~50! ble garage. FuU price trade ior indu.st. prop. for the kids. A~oned Colonial! GUEST ~7·~,;;a=nerMhak~ m0offve"'r. $68,500 TREASURES 1831 WestcliU, N.B, 645-6TlO Fpr that item undtt t50. try the Penny Pincher. BALBOA BAY PROP Fj,CllJTY. Sunken family call: 673-3663 673-6688 Evea. * 642-7491 * . room w/beam coillniis. All Zoned lor "°'''"' * EXCLUSIVE * Yeneral General LOVELY HARBOR VIEW HILLS See ,this nearly new Lusk 3 BR. ho)lle. Dra- matic cathedral ceil's. Beautifully decorat- ed. Prof,ess. landscaped_ $13,500,, LaVera Burns CAMEO SHORES· NEW LISTING See this ~harming home. 3 BR., 2~ baths, formal dm. rm., large famiiy-rmo-w/frplc. & walk-m wet bar. $85,000. Carol Tatum , ENJOY LIDO WAY OF LIFE Gracious family home, completely remod.:1 on J~e. lot. 4 BR., sep. mstr.' suite. Near tenms, private beaches & clubhoose $122. 500. Eugene Vreeland , ' BEACON BAY R-2-$65 000 Private beach & tennis ct'. 2 BR'., 112 baths plus guest rm. & bath. Also, charming J. btlrD1· apartment. Immaculate! Mary Lou Marton TOP VIEW OF BAY & OCEAN Very pnv. custom bit. .home, with 3 btlrms, 412 baths, w/sep. maid 's quarters, Beauti- ful large front patio plumbed for pool. $175 • 000. Kathryn Raulston ' LIDO ISLE • Have your o,wn custom built home on now vac. Jot, adJ . to charming smaller. liome Steps to priv. bea~h & club. Excellent st: Ip st. Joe, $78,500, Edie Olson , LIDO PRIVACY ~ Lot affords great privacy, w/sunny ,~th patio & 1arge, well constructed 4 m,, lam. rm. home. 3,000 sq ft $89 500 Mary Harvey · , • · '4 BR. ~ BA. FAf>1. ,RM . + POOL $66,800 -: Still occup1e<t by ortg. owners: Clean, bright; shows like 8 model home G~eat front . & back yards plus patio s..; tlus·now t AI Fink ·. ~OUNTRY LIVING IN THE CITY , Spaoous ,5 BR., 3 ba, home. Formal din. plus large lam. rm. View of surrounding hills. Pro(. decorated &linilscaped. Fee. $9~,000, Harnett Davies , ' PRIVATE BEACHFR'Dlil Vacant lot on 60 feet of white sandy beach. Ou~tanding view of bay & boats. Now ls the thne to build yoor home! $49 750 ,M. G. Buie ' . • 833-0700 tile kitci:len w/stove & re-~ -~ Balboa Penin. I.ge. 4 BH.. 2 frigeratot ' ~included. New ~ ba. plus family 'J;'m, for paint .+ shag thnt-out. New lfllll"~ gracious entertaining. This ' I I I I drapes. 40' covered patio. __ ·property has everything the Storage room. Hurry • call average tamily needs, in· 645.o303 1 • CAR ENTHUSIASI'S • h o b . duding e a a y financing. biests-srnalt boat builder-we $69,500 I 11111 'I I. Ol \O\ have the home for :you! 1 Call: 673-3663 642-6963 Eves. ~ • A T ,11-? .' WY LIVING !'re!l\IY paJ,.i.d 3 BR home w/~ ~ .drps ,; shag + lots of paneling. $22,950. ' Newport at Fairview . 646-8811 (anyti!'le) Year new with 5 garages & 2 carports, 3 bedrooms and a S bedrooms a n d a marvelous gallery for your favorite paintings. ·Newport Beach address, Offered at $58,500, , PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642-5200 Opportunity Knocks! t.oUcllY. A real sleeper ls this ch:>lei: fneome property 4 single family 2 bedroom cottages wiht garages and private patios. B.eautifully ·"ll:=zi=====z I landscaped. Renters fight to ii occupy these fine homes. *NEW umN6* *POOL nME '* 1590 Baker, ~fesa Verde ~PEN DAILY I TO 5 large 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, tamlly -din area, fireplace, blUns, servJce rm, Choice convenient location. Rent freeze dqea not aUect this propeftY. Call for p~cuJars. Price $62, 750. EZ terms. 673--8550. •-0 THE REAL ''"" ESTATERS tropical backyard. 1-'T",;;;=::;=.~~~~ CALL ANYTIME ' ' SHORECLIFFS 646-3921,or Evo. 67U936 Lachenmyer1 Re dto TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa. ~1eu FIXER UPPER BES!' MESA VERDE LOCA· TIONI -3 lofllmity, Needi lota of worlrbartllike-oner now and savei Vacant, cW- de-aac, wait 10 ICbooll.. -(°"" ...... ) · HERITAGE Pt-f, f!lh'<...; R. Ii: Fl ,\: . ' I'"']"'', .i. " • \ • 1 \ -.., ,_ . '' .._ • • • associated BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W Bcil b<>a 1171·3661 Huge Master liClr0om Separate Family Room -Formal DlnillCJ Room You'll be proud to live ln tbis 3 bedroom pride o f ownenhip ho me and neighborhood, You'll also enjoy a vey comfortable M4 spacious living toom. A lai'ge kitchen with lots of cacbinets and cor g e o u a landscaping with aprinklen front .and back. At a truly realUtic price of $34,950. Call W.-2535, \O '.THEREAL \')l ESTATERS ' • •, ~ ; r>'.• Fut -'Ill ... ""' ........ .... ...,.- • '·-0 THC REAL \'°" ESTATERS . '• RURAL ATMOSPHERE NO OOWN to Veterans. Low Down IBA Terms. Zoned for ~ther Unit to be bullL 3 Bedroom, 1 ~ Bath Brick Fireplace. Fruit T ~ e e 1 Owner Mes Carry 2nd Tru<i Deed. VA·FHA $27,500, Cill 646'-05.55, Ev.ninp 646-4519. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC REALTORS STOP-SHARIN' THE GREEN With your landlord by owq- tng this pay-on-the-market 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. W/W carpet.I, cu It 0 rn drapes and patio. Located 2· minu1es from the beach and across from Golf course, It v.-on't last, call today. $30,500. Call Now 847--6010. ',-0 THE REAL '""ESTATERS TARBELL • ' • Everyone Hes Something Thet Someone Else Wanh Mondar, JlllJ 17, l 97Z · DAILY PILOT. IJ • . Corona dfl Mar Costa MAH Huntington BNch Huntlnghln Beech --------1 ··--·v .... · ..... _BEST College Park ar<L 3 TRANSFERRED "SPLIT LEVEL LOVELY LUSK Br .. 2 Ba. encl. pallo, block SPARKLES OWNERS all 128 LIKE NEWI CHARMER" HOMES :, ,;,.::[ t:::UP.u.ci:S Gorgeous .... urpet, ... i!sus~s~r~~~\n t. H~ Is a residence worthy ot .We have two popular four only. Call 833-1103, ~2112. qwalte custont drapes, mir-3BR 2BA homri nr beach. royalty. An elegant 1pllt bedroom models just offered rored and panell~ living Lrg lot \V/trees, boat gate level two-bedroom. two for aale. One ii a beautifully El Toro :oom, and newly tiled are to alley. $24,500. bath, tutefUlly dl"Signett in Jandscaped Mooteclto, with 3 BR., 2 BA., cpts, drps, lge Just ~ few of the .sparkles. 2.-CALil' RANCil ,v/J and around graclous garden an outJtandinC tropical or patio, lge. pooJ·size lot Beautiful park like yard . car areas. Lovely private Oriental theme. The other 11 enclosed by block wall loaded with frWt trees. gar, In executive . atta ol veranda wltp a view. Large a brand new Sa.ndpiper, in a cloae to xlnt 1 cho 0 Is', Large lovely patio for tun new homes. Liv rm pool for your convenience great location high on a hill, markets. new ma I I . and ~laxation Close to \v/ealhedral celling, firepl. j""I ste-a Com t•·•·· •-th •--'· nd ho. I ~--3BR. Only $37 ,9CXl. Low -"": way. p .,...,.., w,~., ,)'OU, e n~ owner, Reuopable. 817-1751, scuuu!.11 a a PP, ng. ~ down. air cond1tloned . thruout All can do all the things you f94-m6 aft 5: ~ & wk~nd&. 1ng-ls-beUeving! 0 N LY l . _ C O NT E ?if p O RARY Newport Btiaclt • You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With •Went Ad Newport leech · To Serve You "Th• Best of Two Worlds" 9:f21 REAL ESTATE Re11dentla1' & Income Properti .. VISIT OUR EXCELLE NT LOCATION electric built-in kitchen.. want, just YoUf own way. F $29,000. Call SEYMOUR RANCH w/atriuin pool lrg ON A SUMMER DAY??? rfect for the caroer c:ou· Call 6$-1225. , ounteln VaOtv REALTY, NOW! 847-1221 or lot, beam c<!lll.;g,, ;ha& Cameo Highlands. Arch1'tect designed-New le or the w 0 r 1 d 1 Y 546-4212. crpts aod inueh more! Must COOL POOLIJ . 1733 WestcUff Dr., Newport Beach 645~7221 aophisticate. Priced at GREENBROOK ...,~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!""!'"!"~~!!!!!!!!!!!!•I carpets & drapes, 4 Bedrooms, convertible $38 ooo = "~ • RESALE • HAVE he ... n.-149.500. 7 · ' · ··~· Juno Blao"r (714) 9••7333 L'd I I I Newport Beech den, 3 baths, cathedral ceilings and 2 .used LUSH AND LOVELY -1 0 ' • brick fireplaces, family room, built-in .kitch-• 4 Bedrm with xtra nice Somethlnt to offer you RED CARP£J', realtors ! ------.,.,-·I en & B-B-Q, PLUS MANY EXTRAS. Enter-master hedrrn suite. YOU NEED: 962-7n1 Now is tht tlmt ••• I VIEW-PLUS tain around your ·own POOL .... , . $76,500. * DELUXE * • 2300 sq ft PLUS •"'n.. • Your own desk $18 000 To list w u1· propei1y. \V~ "'~·"pe in a mountain Uke --Custom bit. duplex.~ So. or .... -& e Clean a'-__ .. o1c. • d ~ FHA .. VA Hwy. on extra-wide lot. 3 thruout .,. ..... .,,..... TOTAL PRICE have qua1ific custon1e.rs hideaway in New port N.T.S.??? No Down to Qual ified BR&: 2 ba., & a deluxe 2 e large family room • hi·comm, (to 80%l \vai!lng. Beach. High on a hill sur- NOT TOO SHABBY Vetl:Tans and Only $2100 Br. Storage cellar; priv. •formal dining room •Advance program Two bedrooms, t\\'O hatho::. LIDO REAL TY rounded by dozens of-trees. IN BACK BAY AREA .. 3 Bedroom 21h· bath Down FHA. This home Is tio 2 Laund Ex Just too many xtru to list. • training, in depth fireplace. built-ins, s1vin1· 3.177 Via Lido, N.B. here'• a deli&hUul 5 builtin kitchen, .stone fireplace ' FAMILY Very Sharp inside and out. :. bath in 1'geare~s. ~ Owner transtem:d and has • Guar. advertisement ming pool Jacilities plus * 673-7300 * bedroom charmer with a ROOM, community pool & REC. 'ROOMS in-Exterior painted last year. Good ftna' ing (iven us a "Fast sale" !)l'ice We have it all plus sbme. many extras. Ideal for EXECUT-IVE-ESTATE All cl~ding billiards. Fee land and close to every· Carpeted 2 yrs ago, 3 ~GAN REALTY of $49,500. ok for VA Or Call Jim Graves at 962-5523. ADULT LIVING, l!URRY. ON THE POINT ~t!:wq:!_u~Y :e"::n:-)'OU thing ............................... 'f $32,500 :00.c':n:"·~~~:· ~1:: 673 6642 675-645? 0J.;~h·::u;· Jnc. COLLIN~N~. WATTS 3 BR .. 3~~ baths. Game nn. would expect to find in • EURE KAI I to All Schools including OPEN HOUSE 968-4fili · I!!< HRS.) C & W l'rivate & !<>phl~icated. custom home, lncludl".11 a WE FOUND IT Orange Coast College. 2416 Bayside Drive Realtors 842->1455 GEM pool. $94,500. Call ~nn Enchanting TWO STORY 5 bedroom 3 bath FHA~VA $29,950. ca 11 (at Fernlea() New DuPlex 2 OWNER trans. Spanish styJ. OWNER must sell Spanish 1610 w. Coast Hwy .. N.B. for appointment now 2 fireplaces .. FAMILY ROOM, formal din'. 646-0055, Eveninks 646-4519. BR; 2<BAm eacl! unit. ed elegant design with • ATTENTION deslgn. No down, "rm' REALTORS 642--4623 ing. room. NEW carpets and drapes, island Great bay view! 'SAT A beautiful Spanish arChways ~ available or take over ex- kitchen . SOMERSET m0del on FEE land i'n SUN 1:.S. Agt. 548-21.21. on~ the front· ex t e r i o r ' GI no down. $33.000. 4 13r. 2 bting FHA loan w I t h ELEGANT Cost• Meg master bedroom located on BA, super lrg finished bonus monthly payments of $233. 4 f bedroom & family room HARBOR VIEW HOMES . , . , .... , , .. $72,500. _,,..,.,,.,.,..._,,,..,.,,..,~"'I far side ot the home rm, xlnt location. Out of bedrms, family rm, dining home \\'ith 4 baths & 2 fire· _::;::;::::;::;;;:::;:==""·I SPLIT LEVEL-"'SWEETIE '' CLEAN,-ClEAN featul'esitaowrtRominstep town owner.· Brick fpl, rm, built-ins, spacious places. $92.500. ~TE _PO~ON i THIS CONDOMINIUM. l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii; I down tub. The other 3 patio, lrg fam rm. compl kitchen, archway leads into bocoaR& •-·--,_ Beautiful bayfrOnf ~ on M OVE•IN CLEAN1 ·~-bltin kit 8 Yrs new. he ho Bk ·~~ ..........,,_ Llndalsle.fBR.4~U+ Contemporary studio townhouse. 3 Be«room,, • ueurws are on the other t me, r • ,._,_,, ,..,.COii maid'• qUuten.' S.atlfu, Dy 2 b h 2 X 3 Tender loving care makes side. Family rm, dining Oversized dbl gar, crpts, 8'2-2561 3416 Via Lido 615-4562 -at upstairs; dining, fireplace, powder . ..._ tllul 4 bedroo drpg, lrg 60' x 120' lot, again · • . f\tfnllbed. Oftered b Y room builtin kitchen with BREAKFAST area, thiS ~au · m rm., luxurious k 1 t ch en' xlnt location. MR. Execuhve -lien? lt is! owner, $189,500. m.TUS Cll' 1 t & d POOL d. '! h' 2 Sen<>-te um"ts on l lot. 3 home a joy to be in. lt ba.'I a BRK, $30,500, 962-8865. 5 Bio bdrms, 2 fpl, family Mesa .Verde -""2 carpe s rapes. a iacen to t IS ~-family and b. llv If ~ ·c;;;;.:..:.;.;..;·.:..:.~---··~ t b $35 000 usages; Take yout pick! room. •. Jg • OWNER desperate mu at rm, dining, sunken llv nn, -1-'-',,"===""",.,..-::--:-1 grea uy ...... -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . Commercial with 3 BR ing room with a ti.replace. leave home. 4 Bdrm + Rxlman tb. New paint in & GOLF COURSE WATERFRONT Udo Ille, MAGNIF;ICENT BAYFRONT home, 2 res. income units or Lots of storage space. Plush Family nn. Many xtra 96M47J ( => 54M103 out. Walk lo beac h & Beautiful custom built -4 Via Udo Soud. Priced for IN EXCLUSIVE WEST BAY use both wtlts commercial. easy-can; car Pett n g • featUres such as a complete , schools. Seller is motivated. bcdi'OOm single story home qu1ck 181~ by O\vnet', ~ ON THE PENINSULA -Immaculate 5 bed-Onl.Y $34,500. Be au t 1ru1 trees and 'IE.'pal'ate laundry room• YOUNG LOVERS AK terms and only $-13.9j(). designed for C{)nvenicnee clpals <>nly. Info, 87S-4100: gorgeous roses in ~ easy family room + a rumpus . Call 962-5.523, 537-5642. and c'ntertaining. Located 1-684-47_06~.~====•I room, 3l'l bath. Georgeous kitchen, formal 1 te --~ ~.. ~--· ~~ 1s11 d r 1 · g .~ ANCY .a :-· N ma n nance ,. ...... ..,,..., game room pass thru 11u"l:'C spaclOUS u=u....,,us, C & W on i green an ca urin IMMED. OCCUP u.iurng room with MARBLE FIREPLACE, ewport ping, tran.tportation and a breakfast ~ dining rm 1% baths, hardwood floors . a. ~ern kitchen, formal Harbor lllghlands 4 Br 2'11 overlooking tbe bay, where you have your at park are all near this Costa built-ins, BrJ<.° $ 3 3 5 0 0 • Garage is finished and could UNDER $200. dining, pool or rumpus Ba. own pier & slip for your boat • up to 42'. For Fiirview Meaa $15,000 beauty. CaU 842.-6691. ' ' be used for special parties. Total paymts of only $196/ room, large master bf!drm &42·8574 the discriniinating buyer ........... $195,000. ~nn. ' OWNER must sell this home. Total payments $151 per mo. for this lovely 3 Bedrm, suit!", and impreS'sivc'! 64~811 4 Bdrm + pool eleg&:nt slate month if you take over first 1%. bath home. Near sch!&, Com:Jo and see! OUcred at Newport Helghta REALTC)R 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF, Gener ii ·General ****** TArLQR CO. (anytime) PANORAMIC r ...,ASTUNE VIEW · FroJi this' ~: custom VIP hideaway. II you are looking for. something that is distinctive and far from the average or usual, better see this. Priced at $58,000. Our exclusive. Appointment only, Realtors ~7711 2043 We,tclitt Drive Open 1111 9 PM -a. THE REl\L ·....J. E6TI\ TERS entry hall opens to central T.D. existing. HURRY! shopping le beach. Assume c?:i1· ~ (Opal Eves,) --,.;....B_R._Vl_CT;::.'O_RIAN ___ , •-plan, 4 bedrooms, huge 6%% VA loan, Call Wayne 1_ ~ · You must see thil eustomw iii'ii'ii'iiiiiiiiij~!J family nn, built-in range, Fong. ed masterpiece. S )Tl old, S AWARD WINNERI oven. dishwasher, enclosed Realton 842-4455 KASABIAN R. E. hlu to 11artor H 1 g h. • patio. AISume 5% % · Joan. VFrS $100 TCYrAL CASH. 962-6644 Eves. 962-5319 Owne1'-Ar! ott.ra """' A TbispgtoU1familybome:ts: BRK., $24,900, 96i-6!i66. Xlnt . Jrlce 4 bdnn tn xtnt e SEU.ING?T Sell direct to imn1ed. p:111. $4t,IOO. just wallinJ fol: you! From TI B U R 0 N TOWNHOUSE H.B. ·-a neat' ~ .• ,.,, e -· lfo lo"I llstl".11 per-'6-2»1. ' the warm A cozy living -· ~ Mission Vltlo . , RESALES-larwin realty inc close to schls & sOOppi.ng. • iod, immed. $$ to you even ==;;.;..=='---OWN-· --1tD, f BR room to the spaClOUI master ' e " •·hind I • A ~.. ••-· suite, this heau1y ts fresh, -<24 lira.) VACANT, lmmed -·Best " ~ n paymts or NE RLY NEW den, 2 BA. Jtldwd lln. b<:OQt and dy 4 BR H ntln.._ •--~ of all only $211,000. HUITY. e have notes due. Personal, THREE BEDRM. ..cJuded 'ymt. -""'tio clean rea ! ' u ..... , U99M'l won't last. 962.5523, 537.!'6(2, • eontid, attentl<>n-962-5.523, beamed famil)' room, M>ft • • 537 U!A2 HOME $39,900. 5411 m. water, acelll 'of atorage, It lsn t Yours yet c & w -~ . Ev"5, 963~062. PRIME MISSION VIEJO lulh ~.•and, """!d yw That' a the only thins wrong C & W AREA. Only $23,500, KA· qellev~ much . more . Just with this .lovely home. Hu LUXURY HOME GREENBROOK RESALES TELLA REALTY 837-9400. llsted-~~t, Call 979-1050. everything the average Th1a exeeuttve home haa 4 larwhl realty, inc. Newport Beach , family wants. Four large spacious bdrms, big family 968....f405 (24 firs) · -• 'Ill' bedroom~ 2 bathe pl"' rm. hnmaentat•• Thls trt· • BEAUTIFUL Mobllo HomH -- JIUy-1'21 many extra& Walle to beach 1...,1 features Parquet entry, lrvtno · PALERMO · For Salt lU . ~--' -" ochoolL ONLY 127;rno. -hardwood floors, Jge patio, I.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I This "~'-·will t I t• __ ...;.....;.. ___ _..... a.. n -water-softener + other nice PARADISE FOUND new-~ "° " · GRE·ENL;EAP-·1'.~RIE NESTLED IN to have xtras. Priced to aell Be au t l f u 1 short shag The owners have spared ~ A BEAUTIFUL PRIVATE at <>nly $41.950. Call & aee, carpeting & custom drapes expense to decorate this ADULT COMMUNlTY' between aU the big trees. ts . Realtors ~ 962-7637. 1n this lovely 3 bdrm. home. lovely home. The finest Hu available a Key Wtlt 1 ~ Likelo red~~r~fe1u~e~ $P~!;,~o see this 3 :!.~com~• 'w1~ . _!OOL TABLE .Cheaper Than Rent_ owNER -"'!.ed· 4 bdrm Tempt your .,..,,. at _th• :r,;,:-,;~;;;,'1,~,:, ~ 24><52 19_10 2 I)~, 2 aa._M<>-_. L hardwood floors, 2 big '!ill f!t with room to spare TOTAL COST TO You' $750 + family nn, sum>unded dfointnnalng """"in -table-or be ~n-outs tan d Ing and the ~tie Home. Price Ii open b zdroom & family rm home! View of UCI aitd baths, OV'enized Jcltehen and m 15 x 30' den. 3 Bedrm 2 or take over eximing 1157 by beautilul 1rees, 4 ndedthe covemi patio, wallpapers are gorgeous. to otter. 1bue are alto I I , . mountains. Quiet cul de sac street, Island lots of ttult trees Room ftlr bath, fireplace, bltina. Xlnt per month payment on this bedrooms, oversized master :::;ru 1 .... by ~i;otessk>naJ The kitchen has some great aeve~al other modell ranr· Kitchen. Nicely landsCaP..ed. Hurry'! boat or trailer: Owner's 1n •out. two st<>ry c 0 n d 0 • 4 bedroom, natural b r I~ k re~c:f75QO •ce ta I additions giving it an 0~ Ing m prkea from $1» to "Our .27th Year"' maving soon and want& of· $32 950 bedrooms, 2 baths plus fireplace, fam~ly room, din-i)'. , . tional closed off capacity. $25.500. Must be IHn to WESLEY N TAYLOR Co --I& fer. Priced only $31.995. J man m extras. HUR Ing rm, built-in range, . . d h•11 See this home• Call appreciate, 1750 Whittier • •• R ...... ors With all temts. Huny. Roy McC.i.llo Roellor RY! y. any . oven, diohw .. her. Br k. ' ·re I 6'15-'1225 . A ... Cll. 6fll.-• All~ . 21 I I San Joaquin Hills Ro1d Call 546-58!!1 Opon eveo) 541-772t $26,000. 846-0604. · , ' P/L I NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 l8ID Newport"BIV)L, c.M. TIME'S wastin'. .this VA· REALTY ESl'ATI:-. --1912 General General I !~~~!"l~~i'!"!l.:.~~~J;~~= CANT 3 bedroom 2 bath Univ. Park Centre, lnrlne IOnpton. 12 w!a, II lane , 1 · RealtQn · home is yearning !or a Call Anytime 833--0820 expana1on W/&Cf'ffh porch. FOR Uase, Sa.le or Trade INVFSTORS SPECIAL! 2 *~4:k~:·\~:n.* family. Early move In lo Office hours 8 AM to· 8 PM 2 br, 2 ba, ti mo. new. Loe (for Beach prop.), Nr. new Br, East Costa Mesa, !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I Blt-ins, crpts, fpl, , lk wall y BET _ THIS WON',T quaJ.lfied buyers. ~ _ . in beaut pk in H.B. 1 mi to Htg. Beh · Home. f Br., Mluced! $18,500. Myers, MESA VERDE fence, cor lo4 ..,.. LA . Tip fop condition, in-$27,000. NO DOWN GI 1 or Legune lle1ch $50.00 DAIL y bch. A•kl"I $1l.900 Phone. ttpt'g., Lrg fonced yard. Nr. 6"13-6750 / 1 _, udes 20' x 20' family LOW D 0 W N • T 0 REDUCTION ~7. achool!, besch & stores. A good want ad a a good in-$32,000· w poo '· °"642•2221 room, covered patlO, kitchen NON-VFrS. Call SEYMOUR UNltj)UE VALUE 1 '=="""'1'"""'B'""r""'M"'o..,.b""lle....,.ho-m-e. 545-2081 Aft. 1 PM. vestment. BeautifUlly (lecora.ted 1 646-9'66 with large dining area. REALTY, 847-1221 This custom home otfen This Newport Beach home $3,2XIO. Set Sat-sun, Bay & General Gitnorol bedroom. 2 bath home in the COu.EGE Park, pool. Sharp HURRY BEFORE l T'S DUTCH FARMHOUSE spectacular ocean & city •tarted at $42,4!0. ti bu 3 Beach, 'l20I Paclflc Cout rjf~~~i.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i most p>pUlar area of Costa 3 br, fam rm, ~.,,i paint & GONE. $27,500. All terms. with heavy, heavy ahake views from every room. Ex· Bedroom&, 3 BatM, ~and Hwy, N.B., Sp. 16 . Mesa. Near schools and cpta, $33.900. Open House Call SEYMOUR REALTY roof shutters galore plu$ elusive area otters many Breakfast Nook overlookltla 2131337-8333 or 536-2350 att shopping center. Call to set!' ~ty. :.:ltng Green 847-1221 or 54&-4212. se~te playroom for klds a d va n·t a&e a tor a an easy care patlo. We bawi =-'"'pm'"""'~-· -----I this unusually sharp' home. Drive. . JUST REDUCED or crafts. 3 Big bedrooms. d Is e rt m tnatlng buyer. :;e~~~t':1 ~~ 8JC42, 2 BR, patio, lndecpd, MACNAB IRVINE A QUEEN'S TASTE Without paying a King's ransom. 3 B~.: 2 bath, formal DR., secluded patio, comer location-pool & view! LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT 45' of sandy beach -beautiful mas!er suite on upper floor -'plus 2 BR. ~·2 baths - den -DR. & terrific kitchen w /brealdast area. Valid reason for sale -askibg $275,· 000 -call Mrs. Fay 642"8236. · SOFT TOUCH 546-2313. FOR saJe by ~ 4 BR, 2 $1,000. $700. total costs to move in $82,000 until he aaya STOP..st'OP.. rec room le PoOI. walk to B~, trplc, dinmg nn, ~ 2 1Bdnn tn"'-"'--ts drapes: for any veteran. Bkr. p lhopplng. * mo. t 'MM, cargan,gew/ator•re, ·~P • • . AO sro . Call for todly'1 • ..- apaclous fenced yd on ,.frig, elec bl washer & 962-5511. O I.,, -price! 646-nn. ~~9184.~:..,.,-----1 I d lMOOO dryer. Pool l teMll court. I-WI~ MOllILE H-. 10 x 50. 2 ..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!====1 cu .• •-•ac. • . How can,... mllo for $'100. REPOSSESSIONS REAL ESTATE Bdrm. Many ...... Incl. MOVE-IN 833-2317• toW move in c:osO.? For lnlonnatlon and location Prlctd lo< Quiet CONDmON MESA VERDE d PARK GATE REALY of th ... FHA,. VA homes, 494-94731190 Gtenneyre54if-031~ --Sale -o; THE REl\L · )i' EST I\ TERS Freshly painted inside and read¥ to move in. Nice yard with gate opening o n beautiful larg& achool lawn. Cov<red patio -boat ol trailer 11•11:e. Only $26.200. Phone 546-11U. IO' THE REl\L ''"\/ t:STATERS ' Large 1 bdrm, 2 bath, en, 5371922 contact _ * "JO BILTMORE 121l62, ~~u.1f:'Uo".°== OWNER leavins, trans-KASABIAN MYSTIC HILLS CONDOMINIUM turn. 1% ho, lft !QI Dice a: tile. Move-in eond. 3260 ferred. 4 bedroom,, family Re•I Estate 962-6644 %";n ~ t.~··A~ .. ~~ Park'Lido, 2 bdnna., 2 be.th&, adult putt, 139-795$. Michigan Owner 5«9-368S room, den, dining room, -.u,. •uu•·115 fireplace, patio 6 encloetd lllllllliiiiijiiiiiiil• .. I • · huge muter ~m. rt'ar WHERE{elae can you buy a rms. Lee. level yard, room prap. Only $30,500 · BY OWNER -Mel&' del Mar. living room, e l r c u J a r $38,500 ·nm. for $1500 dn? No for pool. Xlnt neighborhood, ... 1 {f 4 8'l, 2 BA. family rm. New drWewJY. No down. Tmn.I qualifying. Assume VA loan. close t.o achooh1. $49,500. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2% Q~ . aha& crpts. Corner. Ready available. Brk, I 3 2 ,"5 o o , Choice H.B. location. f BR, 1' 49&-2800. * b&tho, $32,500 I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii 546-06611' OWNER 2 yrs old. SU-1103 or .,,;; ,-.,,....~ ~ 4-w-~ --to Move.In! IH ,500 962-1373. 28A,2 1ty,otpdnfamnn •• @ ~ CALL .• _. ".6•.2U•:' ....... ~ .... la BY OWNER Meoa Verde 3 TRANSFERRED 96Z-:mo. · -==:"~ ?t'tldlc. e 103 Linda lsle Dr .. N.B .. 3 BR. 2 BA. lam rm. 2 lrplct, ~ Bedrm. 1% bath, boat· or GOV'T. OWNED --=.':!:::""'""' N•ar N,:.~:,Lli,t 'omu ;AOFF RAMI' of elegant glamour In lliis smartly decor- ated 3 BR., Flt on a quiet tree lined Bay- ) -·crest.,.oad. '64.950. ~is Miller-642-8235. E.E.E.E. , ' BR, 2'A BA, 66' lot, 55 .. boat nnrly, painted, fWly crptd, camper &ate-near beach A ~-pptoX. 10 ACftl slip $149,500. lmmac. $32,7SO. 11'2 Iowa ochool. 5l\ .. down. Only ae_...,i homes. Low 3 BR. & Don $36,950 PANORAMIC VIEW Very prtmo........,;,, - • 2430 Bayahorft Dr., N.B. 4 St., 545-m. $24,500. Call ~Tm. . dOwn. Government pays Unlque, while brick cxter, Beaut. matntalntd home rn san ~ BR;""3 BA; !!> lot""l14t;al0 COlllJGE Plult, f Br., 2 ba. RED CARPET REAh'l'ORS-clolinlCcosts. Ca11 ll63-4441.lty gated entry. 2 Ba., bit-Ina. 2 ~ A )llfl_t famll/1 "1tJi. fl'oDtap •+ +·'-~'-" KENNETII u HARTMAN, am rm. Many lrolt -~" VA-NO DOWN rest Rea frplc., c:orp. Yard -rm. Pool. 16UOO. nta:Jor blgb -- R. E. IliV9Ctments. 642-5100, 131,950. Princ1paJ, onl/1, 396 3 Bdrm 2 bath, central ,... PRIDE OF OWNER-:!".!:2'.'!~ aCalltta! buJ! for the Gtor .. William-stmto. c1oH lo I I' Eleeant, elevated, exclusive environment. FABULOUS rot overlooking 17th "fairway at presUglous Big Canyon Country Club. M. Williams or B. Gothard, 642-823f. -· ' IDIOO..rD!lllo 14t·12ll 11144 lltlcAlthtlr ,..._ " . 64S-2GSL Princeton or. 541>-llli3.. try teacts to llll'I• family rm Sl>oro • BR, 2 BA, many MiSSi'oitiIBALTY ~ 54Mm RHltor,..U.i564 ~.::: ~ "; Bel.,.. lsl•ncl ~ ,!~~ ~i,;1: =~~f0~.:p1m~~ =· trn~c:o::"' ~'. OWNER; Split 1eve1. 2 BR" 214 c1uplexa, next _., ~ Ills Ptr Sq. rt XLN'T LOCATION Bt1ut indlcpd,, ent.dHac. REDCARPSrREAL'roRS. Prlcedafontyl33,000.Brol<· den, l~ BA, firepl•ce, sun blk lrom octan heoc:h. au.tc !Mnd hoin<, s Br + 54W?f5 $23,500. er 547-63.14 or -· :,i'·~W:,· 494-8635 .. 185.000 ea'. 'Ag! 6T.l-83.' · iotmJc -· ,Dlstlncim ... CORN'l:R lot cul..tMlc st, I NEAR BEACH-IBR, 211 BA OWNER SA)'S "SELL," anc1.1,:::;..,;:.::..;='-----COTTAG& with 28 Br. A loft 1<1» MaJt1 unique k~tures. BR, 2 BA, !11>11"1iiiiiiii nn. CONDO. Cq>ls, drps, ~. he'll help buyer with COt1U. l.otuno Hills Patio on 111.yll'on~ . 6f5.D52 Quality "'nstructlon. Piiio, 133.500,. 541-Tm elee kit 2 .., encl pr. i.,. f 8R, huge >-.rd compl OWNER tranlfemd-4 mo or (213) -a.ndk. ltf 2 car pr. 111 v. A. REPO. I BR. 2 Ba. V•ctU11--.own... El><' fenced, lo nle<tl .,.., OnlY old, 3 bt, 2 ba. c:rpt'd "drps, --::TI:=M-::E=-"~=-::R:--·I~ PubUc oUaillc of thll 133,500 $1000 ON. mo 1110. 96&-U78. 131.950. Huny, tall Bil<. wallpaper, frplc, b 11 n DAILY ILOT home. By OWif -$n,!OO. Authorlted Bn>ll<r 5'M.n01WO BEDROOM" SHACK 962'5523, 537-5612. dsbwshr It stove. XtnwU. . If J' I • 1 ' m«UJ.. OPEN. Mea Vtrde. I bdnn.. FOR SALE CHE AP I Tho falllot draw In Ill< WH! Joi on cul.de-ac. Front yard CLASSIFIED JiDS 1'w <hit Item -'90. try Aaum• FHA under $3,000 ll!iO/mo. Jump lo ..,...., •• _. llaily Pilot Olullled lndlcpd It -kin, blck 642•5671 A.,!"'4~ Ii! ts • "°" b'I the Ptnny l'tnc,,.,, dwn. 12!IO Michigan. !MM34'! Bkr. -1.L Ad. --yd hied. $29,000. 8»-905'1 ·--· \ • l • , I I 1 . . 11111.YPllOT ~ ..... l~I *FOR SALE* 5,6SO Sq, It. lot • Laguna Near Forttl A: Third St. ldoal for pro!euional or retail bid#. REALONOMICS, BROKER * '7U700 * '6 Comm'l unlts; groa.s mo IU Good _arta. one I $-V •I. ail'-<.'Ond <1pa,r1ments. Good rtnt&J areu. S73.500. Tenn5, LEADERSHIP R. E. 842-4<66 18 UNITS LAGUNA S250,(MX) 9.5x Jtl'OSI. a W~l 1\1 fl & lll pet' moo $1,0!4 Jal<elO ·util SIS.7131 $50. Make oUer. Owner anx-Joua lo sell #4 Old Newport (10) 2 BR·Deluxe Bldg .. 6 ,Blvd. NB &U..a52(l _ moft old Etsidc C.f\.1. Prin-l-"iC:;;,2,o:.;,206l~C::N;.;E;:W;;;c,;P_O_R~T-I clpals ooly, 642-ll21'. BlVd. 100' • 315'. Principals Industrial Propirty 161 ot11y. Pb. 642-1121. FOR UASE Condomfn1um1 New modern unita 1200 to fw sale 1'0 ll;OO Sq >1, A~ Cond Offices Business H-•• Unfvm. •Gonoral ~ Houoas Unfum. 305 -Unfvrn. 305 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unf\lm. Huntington Baac.to ~w;:A:;:l'l'l';:;:;;ED::--. ;::M;::a::-n-::,.:-::,0::1er~t1te::::li---------i BLUFFS P'A 'ZA """'1 finllh R<movtOK Stn>. *WE ba•o a ""P .. 1ec1lon w Rtimovt! all types ot wOOl'J ot 3 a.ad 4 bedroom homes VACANT VILLA MARSEILLES finilh<'I '""" furn. & int. that ean bo mo\'ed lnlO 4 lldrms .. 21; bolhs, 2-sty. SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. pnnelltnr. kitchen cabinets, HouHa * Aptt. a1mort immedla.td.y on our Priv. walled pa1.lo. Steps 10 Fumlshed & Unfurnl1hed tlrm, elc., 011 oor.. basts. Rent· 0 pt Ion p I an, pool. Movl>ln rc1dy. $38;') ' 1 Adult Living Can net $200. Wet'k . * 145·0111 * SHERWOOD RE A LT Y, Pu month Di.sb\vasher color coordinated appliances • guoranttt. uooo. rt'Quirt!d m w. 11th COSTAMIEBA ,..,,.,,..,~Sl::..::l).8.;.:5::55'--~ ,e Plush shag carpet. mirrored wardrobe doors· to enter 22 years of cllab. Jl~UTIL Pd. Lrg Bachelor 3 BR 4 den. 2 ba, cpt, tlrvs, ,;' : ~ indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • txa'ns. $1 ,000. On. Starting w/kitcb<:'Mllt>. Tot/pet ok. bltru1, very Jgt! tncd yd. Play C:.. f 'Y.!3!.efJtf' huge private fenced patio • plush landscap- large interior paneling job * equ~. Nr. 4 schls. chld.tt, ()TS f. · 'f ing -brick Bar-be-Ques • large heated pooh In Hawall, Aug. 10. 1972. $1$0-f"ftESH & Cle(ln. 2 BR, Pf."l welcomt". 89'l-8526 aft 7 ..,,.. & lanai. Air conditionin"'. (11., o~ -4" J I rd .\,, ·~. really ' 00 General Newport Baach · Opportunity Costa Mesa LIVE IN A GA'ROEN and enjoy pri'lacy, lux.ury and security at a ·price you ean afford * 1500 sq, it. o! llvin&: * 2 or 3 bedrooms, 2 bnlhl * Fittplace, patio, car&&e * Pool and putting Yours now, trom $195. c.ome see! _._,.,, t ><I. ,,, ov" Y ga en. encl gar. pm. -.:<" 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana S57.S2 M)'tim•. Ch>ld ok. LEASE $200, Brand •>ew 3 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. THE VENDOME LEARN the \\food Fini11h * br, 2 ba, cpt11, t.lrps, cov 24N1!_.VUitat ~I 0 1 ro MANAGING AGENT 11'.ih .... URFER'' I' 11 .... •por ucac 1 1845 Anaheim Avenue removing busineu. A J 1 • " s. 8 r >' patio. Nr sch1s -': ocean. _ _c&1~<-~H~3'l~AN~¥~T~lM~E~-lf !'!!'~~!""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~"i!!!!!!!~~!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I ~0::~~~~~~~1 lyptl ol wood 11.nl&bed from furn. l Br ¥-'f pr1v, bl'ach. Rels. No pets. 842-7993; -Call .Mts. Phillipe~ Modern & Antique furniture. So. Laguna. Avail now. 968-2212 * FOR LEASE • Apts. Furn. 360 I Apt. Unfurn. 365 NEW TRIPLEX Also interior kit ch(' n * LEASE. S250. 3 + 2 + FaJn Former Movie cabinel.'I, panelling, dens. $160--SlJPER nicr 2 Hr. Rni. Crpts, drapes, 1 rnilc Producer's Balboa Island General Sell or Rent .BlliC monty maker, lots of Stove, rcfr1i:". Crpri;, drps, from MDAC. 1 ni mac . Luxurious Eattbluff * DOCK & PIEil. * ---------Ntw 2 & 4 BR Apt1 wOrk. Can net $60 or more a chlld/sn1I pc!. Cul·de-sa.c. 893.0149/894.58371 Condo. Chnrming 1 hr, turn apt, on SNEAK PREVLE\Y of pro-}~rplc, shag crpts Ir: drps. day. Work done on customer * 21J..346-5430 (hvner. 2 BR i;pUt levt"I \v/1 Ba. 2 N. Be.yfront. 1 car gar. $350 bably the best n cw FROM $190 premises or 1'hop. \Vill give $180-FAf.11LY iiizc -.1 Br, 2 ,4:.::,B;Roc,.:..;;2.:....;b--,". :::.;,b~l 1~;-n-s , car gar. $295/mo. Avail mo. lease. 673-4099. apartments In Costa ?\-lesa. c;) ~16th P lace I: 70 hrs of prof es a: ion a I Ba. Bltns, crpts, drps. Avail d. h b . AU". ]!II. 213 : 461·8170 or Balboa Peno'nsula featuring fireplaces, 'valk in Orange Ave .. C.M. t · · 11000 is was er. patio. Gd sch! "' .. _ 1 raining. . required. 8/1. 213: 461·8179 days or 213: --..-.· ______ closet!!, exposed ""'anlCC 83'7966 E hi I . di~t. Avail Sept. 1. $275. · ~ arn w le tra nmg. 714-LANDLORDS! 962-4313 654-7084 eves & \vknds. PENIN Pt. 1rg 1 br, w/\v ct>iling. clubhouse, 1'!\\·un. ~"':':.,..,,-..;..;-'-=~T."-1 6!19--2000, l'Xt. 48. anytime. Do ydl.i l"l<tve a vacancy? \Ve ~~=-~~-~-1 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, Harbor Vieiv crpt, pvt patio. Yrly lse. miJig pool, Furnished or on· Park·Llke Surrounding can fill it. Many desirable $22.1-Lrg mod 3 br. 2 W.. Ulil incld, No pets, Slnglc or furnished, Bachelor & 1 Bed· QUIEI' • DELUXE Bu.l'-11 Want-.. 210 tenants on our wa iting JJst. .F"'rplc, !ncd yd, child/pet Home. near Pool & fro S135 2 & 3 BR APTS .... wu Absolutely. NO CHARGE. 8151 Taylor 847-{)169. Clubhouse J430 mo. lease. ~~~~1!)5~:!~ 711Do1: :11~. W~son. cosiarM;:: Prv. patios * Htd Pools 4-6 station beauty salon. Vic BEACON RENTALS 2 BR, $135. Kids/pets. Also 3 =~IK'r included, Agent stairs unit. 67l-07ll. 642·1390. Nr shop'g *Adults Only Hlg Be•. Fnt.n. Vy, wcsom. * 645-0lll * BR. 11s;. Kkhtpet,, _;;:~;c·=~----ll•w:Wi<:i:-tt.;:n;;n;=.;-1 ~=.=.-:,.-=,.,--,c-=--..,,.-;;I M rt• •que Apts Write: Oasstf1ed Ad No. Rent-A-House 979-8430 \VESTCLI.FF, Executive e $45 WK &: Up-On Ocean •VIEW & Privacy! Duplex 2 G lftl • 459, Daily Pilot, P. o. Box FREE Rent 1 tu/J yr.+ inc, 2 ~ LoYcly Bach-1 Br.~ Rooms Br, garage. Lndry lacil. 1m Santa Ana Ave .. C.M. 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif.. Br. Kid11 / pets ok. ho~c. ;, BR, 3 Ba. Beaut. r-.1aid Service-Pool-Util Pd 496-7558 or 67>3988. ~1gr. Apt. ll3 646-5542 2ttory,28R1% BA. Perteet """"". Rent-A-Hou•• 979_8430 Fountain Valley atr um early. Call: • Call 6..c: 0740 • tor ret~ment, In adulta on-""""w \VINTON. Realtor 675-3.131 C d I 'M~ Balbo4 Ptnin1ul1 "Tl-IE GABLES" ,., pl I Balboa Pe I I 4 BR., 2 BA. orona • ar 1 2 Br, 111 Ba w/gar. Adlts. centrally located 8'f9..6900. 03 com ex. 80% Conven. nvestment n nsu a EXECUTIVE home SBR, 31L • • • • • • • • • • • n 7 nlo old 833--1103. 675-2018 f,ol 2 BR ju ba ,. b lco Crpt/tlrps, bllns, fncd yrd Uon8J financing available Opportunity 220 SI-IARP! Clcan! 2 Br, 2 Ba. ba. Avail Aug l. Clt..'afl, Nr BACH furn garden apt $105 • ' n .. pa 10, a ny, $21,900. Principals only. 1 Irvine schls Y r I y. S 5 O O mo. w /u ti I , bug in essman. · 315 E. Bay. $225 .. monthly on \V/patio. Wtr pd. 636-412() 963-2187. PARTNER or i n v e s lo r s '{;: ~: 1 1;7r;_~poss. No 646-3532. non-smoker, pr iv a c )'. }Tiy lease. Jnqu1rt at Apt. 2437 Orange Ave No. C $155. THE tlneat view on the I iiMiiiiiiiiiiiii'ii / wanted-up to 50% interest. . s. . EAST BLUFF beautiful 4 675-4859. C. 673-1521 or 548-mt. SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt .$140 up. ~t. 2 Br, 2 &. °"'~' 300~·1 ZONE ~~~,~~ 1u;,~ kpark~:ap:f~ Corona del Mar ~ :~: 2 2 ~.' ~ic~·.:: .;.: BR, 2 BA. sep. family rm, FNURN l .. ~R hapt,1CdMY, 11,,10. Corona del Mar ~1• cpt/drp, bltns, kids redeconted. From $51,000. ~n x lot, has dwelling " ** DUPLEX BRAND WEHAVEOTHERS lg~ lot. $475. lse. Avail. ear 1.1t:ac. r el ;mmmmmmmm•I . NEWPORT Tow ER s, and garage. only. 54s..-5525 or 548-9710 NEW H dlx , August 10th. 833-l4ll eve. desired. Call 642-4210 day-1996 ?-.1nple No. 1 · • • &42-3813 eves. • uge owner s ........_. Coll•ge No 5 "" ~· IC-2202, $34,500 unit 3 BR., 3 BA., OCEANFRONT-2 Br, 2 Ba, time; cves. 536-4622. """vo • ''.vu-•......, PltlCEO $21,900 1tJr tmmed Roy McCardle Rteltor Money to Loan 240 Fireplace, bltins, 1800 sq. ft even has gar. Yearly, FURN. Apt. $145 Util pd, .. ~-NE\V 2 BR, 2 BA. dbl Ale, owner. l Br, 1%, ba, i ~ 548-7729 + 3 decks w/view of bay. Rent-A-House 979-8430 ~i blk lo ocean. No pets. .. garage. $190 month. Bllins. sty .Meda.II home. Nr ocean, 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. JJOMEOWNERS! ocean, & hills. \Valk to bch HARBOR VIEW HO:MES.2 &,1-2500-_Se_a_vl_e_w~, c.cd_M_. ___ I .....,. ' crpts, drapes. 6 4 5-4 20 3 • achlt, shops & pool, Patio, BORROW & shopping. 1 )'l" Jse. $395. Den or 3 BR. $395. Lse. or Bacbclor apt, man only. ON TEN ACRES 1...:833-844:::..c;..,.7-~-.,,.----I ~. shutten. ~7387. Loh for S11t 170 Reis. required. 675-6900. "SlNCE 1946.. mo. to mo. 645-2552. Annual lease $ll5 mo. J\pts. furn./unfurn. Lease SPACIOUS 2 Br av now. 4 BDRM 2 ba I .. CHOICE bcJi · · 1 t i 1 $1000 • $10,000 Up 1st Western »·-k Bl'·. iiAru!oooit\vi;;-:3Bir.'2Bi;:-F';;;;l,,.-U~til',_!pd~.~-~!:1'IO~t--Fireplaces I priv. patios. $l33. Crpt &. drps. Chldrn ., w w crp..,, · IAI v1s10n o , rr. LO. W MONTHLY S~2 BR hse w/ frplc, P<U• "'b u r, a, atn p ls T ok No ~1s 2246 Can)'On W/D, extras, patio, pool, hr Las Vegaa, $500. Sell or PAYMENTS bltns, yard, garage. University Park, Irvine Rn1. Din Rm. t::Jub/pool.C __ •_st_a_M_e_s•_____ 90000 c-A ennis Contnt'l Bkfst. 835..sl22 .. ~ • ' rec. clubhse. near abopplng 1.,:tra;.::.:d.:.e?:..541=.-.::;::.·____ $350-2 Br 2 Ba 2 frpl c's all Days 552-7000 Nights $300 mo. ~1768. *$JO WEEK & UP * .,..a Lane, Cdlo.l 644-26ll -=::.::0='-==:;-;:-:--=--;,;;: 1. L.-J •""' 800 6""'......,. LOANS on ANY HOME . ' . ' MacArthur nr Coast }{wy) * •BEAUTIF1JL 1 &: 2 BR. · &elllN • -· • ,.,....,,""'or Mount11n1 Destrt, PAID FOR or NOT ' bltns, 1 blk beach. Condominiums • Studio &: 1 BR Apts Contemporary Garden Apt s. ~I. Rttort 174 COMPARE OUR COS T S ~ :t:y Ba. [rplc. bltns_. 4 BR., 2!h ba .•••••• $365/375 Un furn. 320 e TV & MOOd Se?'\lice Avail NEW 2 BR. 2 BATII Patios, frplc., pool. $155-- Duplltxe1/Unlt1 112 160 AC FOR RESALE F!RES!FmsrDE LO! AN NU-VIEvi RENTALS 4 BR., 2 baths ••.•••.••• $310 Costa Mesa e Phone Service-Htd Pool Bayvil'w Duplex. Top loca. _S:._1_70~. ~Cal_l 546-~_51~63~·---N • • 3 BR., 2 b•ths .......... $3oJO • ChHdren & Pet section lO•~U-.-(~5----= l:oo~~ei~t:wvey(4):: a~~ GUARANTEE: 67W:l-40ALK31lt .~'., B4RM-3248 3BR,2Baths .......... $400 3 BR Condo, garage , 2;~~~wpo5 or;~~~d~M ~ny, :! ~;::~gaagsee o~.· ~e~p!.~i~~Ki~~ n1t1 hst + 5 Apts) i .... f __ , It you can get the SAME o l.tl,;J,t-J • sun d. h h o,N0-;::>1;i • ~· c A02121 "' ' _ _, County. Nr . ..,..v«I road, Na· LOAN from any OTIIER ~ ' as e v t' r y t n g . . . re $235. mo. 531-&160. s or ..., on ...,n E/side, C.M. Priced to ~ or re-..e, ln Lassen d ks h th. e· d h·11 LS w r, )XlOI, Vl'ry clean! Th; Ad w th •• n . t .-.. . !}62.3894. """l-Asking $92,500. wW .-LENDER ,·. Calt'fom'" at kids/pets. · · I 1 All new 2 BR. 1 BA, sunny 2 BR, unfurn. CrplS, drps, take u-GtoM 11 050 · tional Forest, pine trees, & " -. · · 135 mo. Deluxe. mobile / fr! N ls OlR:I". • per RATES LESS THAN \VE Rent-A·House 979-8430 · .. · H t" gt B -.. patio, 7071h HeHotro ...... S250. range oven, re g. o pe · B Owner 642-8520: view. ot ML Shasta. $29,950. un in on ea ... , home. Nice patio, Comp. ..-1455 mo. )' · • OFFER. r eturn the 3 BR, 2 BA, Harbor View f V/ (l) 433--0069. Sl40/mo. 968-• TWO duplexes, lop ..--, $2,950 dn. & $249 pe'I" mo. & REALTY 4 Br, ]lh ba. palio & carport. urn.\ \V carpets. Mature C M UXE 1 BR. dul •• ...._ can give 4 deeds. Rich MONEY within 15 days. and Homes.Monaco. Pool privil. Univ. Park Center, Irvine S22S/mo. couple, no pets. Ponderosa Otta esa DEL gar, a ts, prl. patios. $7SOO. Olwn. T. Prouty, LANDWAY. 714: YOUR UJAN with US is $375. Avail. Aug. 15th. Call Anytime 833--0820 e G4a.4s73 Mobile Esl. 19!H Newport "iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii no pets, $l~l=hopplne. ~~~~~ ~~or appt, 622·1815. FREE! R.C. WERNER • 11..13-3894. Office hours 8 Al\I to 8 PM 1--------~ _B~lv_d7. _&t_S._83~7-3.~~--' ISO E. 21st. . INVESTMENT-JOO' 6 1 v d Prcsldcot '-c-o-st_a _Ma_s_a____ ...,...,""'!l...,'!""'""""""""' [ Condo. Furn. or 1-Br lrg 1150 & 1140 S/pool HARBOR -GREENS 2 BR 2 Ba, bltns, crpts, Income Property 166 Frontage $49,000 FIRESIDE Tl1rift _r_.g;..u_n_•_Be_•_c_h ___ 1 __ u_n_1_u_rn_. ____ 32_s Adi" only, kJ..tl f 0; drps,'garage. 1623 Coriander Guarranteed INCOME-Moonrictge Col f 2328 Harbo_r Bl., C.M. 645-1000 landr!:.~ners ~1 BR. So. Laguna. Newport Beach bachetors, 1993 Church, CM Fumishtd & 2~,R~o~ ~~S=~:'59 Crpts, Income Coul'8e Triplex-Sid slope l 819 N. Mam, S.A. 547--0684 We ,.,.ill rcfer tenants lo you. Private beach. * BAY -----f>48-963J. Unfurni1htd drps, bltns, dshwhr. Patio. blk $49,500 1 TD L FREE f harg M $17s-cHARMING 1 Br hsc, FRONT * BEAUT. FURN. 2 BR. $175. 54&-93)5 U Garden units, Sale and LAKEFRONT Alpine Realty, st oans desirab~ ctena:~ • ~n =~ No. end. Quiet & secludcd. Condo home w/boat slip, Up incl. UtiJ. Hid. pool. From $120 to $215 mo Gar. $ll:>. · leue back at $200,000 Down P. O. Box 1796 waiting list. .S225-2 BR. Bltrts. N\v crpts & Brand new· for lease Adults, no pel!f, 1342-9520 2 Br.1% be.. encl. patio encl. wl.th Guaranteed 6 % % Big Bear Lake (714)866-7511 6% % INTEREST ALA R t 1 . e 64 r 1NU'I. drps, 1.."0mpl rcdec. Furn. $650; un!urn. $550 DUPLEX 1 BR furn Bachelors e 1 Bdrms ,earage, 343 Ca.brillo Apt. C. ~ndab~e plus tax benefits LOT'•f·--••LakeHava!u, 2 d TD L en a 1 ~.J7W NU-VIEW RENTALS 4401 \V. Coast 1-lwy, Ask for Qu . t N d ' ' 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms $175 mo. utl, encl 548-2933 . .,..., eqwty eross ... ............ n oa ns Bud Meyer 675-6820 ie • o ogs. cats or O • home of the world famous e MlSUNDERSI'OOD? Spac. 673-4030 or 494-3248 motorcycles. 548-ZOO. 1 y2 or 2 Full Baths 2 Br unfurn. Clean, 2 kids ok, utltand1ng London Bridge. LDcated Lowest rates Orange Co. furn Bach. All util inc $85. LAGUNA Niguel. 4 BR, 2 ~~p~exes Unfurn. 350 VERY Nice 1 Br. dplx. no pets. $140 mo. 770 24 Units close to all schools "~ity. "WE BUY TD'S" ALA Rentals • 645-3900 BA, liv rm & dining area, H;nti;,gtoo a.·a~h-•• Quiet. Sep. by gar. Adults ~~~er be~ =:m lar~~ cSh=aJ:.:;m.c"'::.:.· .:.538-4 __ ,._1_. ---1 3)..2 Bedrooms and 4-l $9(XX> or will trade for sta family rn1, frpl. builtins, over 30, no pets. 548-1021. living room w/gas or Mesa or Newport Beach in· Sattltr Mtg. Co. .. RARE INDEED! 2 BR, t d f d & DELUXE 2 BR · Dana Por'nt Bedrooms Deluxe Units, carpe s. rapes, t'tl<:e , cov patio. Huntinnton Beech wood burning fireplace. -.;;.;...;_...:;. _____ I Oloice Orange C 0 u n t y, come prop, 644-4687. 642-2171 545-0611 fncd yrd, encl gar. kids/ok. sprinklers, 2-car garagc. New drps, crpt.s, bltns. dbl'.!;;;;;;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Convenient laundry area NE\V 2 BR, 2 Ba duplex. $325,000. Income $45,T.Kl. INVESTMENT-300' BI v d Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. Alll31lA. R t I e 64, -dlmmac. $315 mo., 1st, last & gar .. lovely private grounds. L QUINTA HERMOS ~t~ ki~ch~-Enml~~ ~1,-, Cpts, dl1'S, d s h w 1 hr , Well landacaped, Motivated Frontage $49,000 WE make loans on property. en a s ~.JTIN eposit. Available Aug. 24th. Water & gardener pd. a A ..... .,,. ... faci $200 493--0676 33966 seller 1 INCOME-Moo 1 nrldge 1 G o J 1 r AlSC> buy TO's. McClure, • HARO TO FIND! 2 Br, 0·<~"'"'---'-241"'-.~~~~~~ Responsible married couple Sp~h ~u~try EAstate Liv-~':1aSec=a::rd. cili· =i.ante~. ' New Motel Under Coblk"'1"49,"~P ex·Ski s OJ>f! Bkr. 492-8332 or 492--0424. encl gar, kids/pets ok. $135. NO. end charming 2 Br, din (Adults) S165 no pets. ing pac1ous pts. Ter· LARGE, deluxe 2 Br. 2 Ba, __, ALA R I e rm, trpl. gar, terrace w/~ 842-3776. raced pool; sunken gas Models Optn 'til 9 pm. Construction LAKEFRONT hse·Need! TLC Money Wanted 250 enta I 645-3900 cean view. l~!i b 1 k s DUPLEX for rent, Sl.35. BBQ. Unbelievable Living _ . ocean view, $195. Adults 1196 Only 2700 Peterson Way, CM only 49&-3738 156 Rooms, Near Freeway Alpine Really, P.O. Box NEED $50.000 1st trust e FRESH &. Clean-2 Br. bl' a ch I s hop' g . Adlts. 2 Br, cpts, drps. 624 Geneva, · · and 'Knott's Berry Fann, Big Bear Lake (714J 86&7511 mortgage trom priv party Fncd yrd. encl gar., 494-7256 or 499--3727. Apt A. HB Call Manager. 1 BR· FURN. $175 nr Harbor Blvd & 2 BR, 2 BA, crpta, drps, ap-Pro'~ed G •-----2 '~•· eluded S2 A~ on 4 commercial & 4 apts. kids/ ..... ts. $155. SP!J l 2 536-0430 ALL UTILITIES PAID Adami pliances, $200/mo, Ca I I ~· ross .ulUllllC _u.o..., se ,._, r-T ev~I BR&. den, l ~-2 49&-7058 eVes or wknds. $471.7«. Net Spend ab J e Moonrldge cabin $15,750 xlnt cond. in center of ALA RentalSe 645-390<! BA, fireplaet>, sun deck. (4 biles S. at San Diego~... 546-5025 $133,525 on $400,000 Down Lakeside cabin $3.1,000 1-Juntgn Bch. Purchase price Sl~2 BR, gar, real dt"an, $325 mo 494.8635 I l~ ... ";, Fountain Valley call for Info Sheet No. 53 Call 866-4641 or 'vrite; $87,000. 5.16-6666 aft 6 pm. fnccl for kids/pets. . . ApartmentsfarRtnt Cl) on Beach, 1 blk \V. on Holt l79-6900 Spencer Rcl'll Estate, P. o. Laguna Hills . . . T to 16211 Parkside Lane.} I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! / 4 BR. 2% Ba, encl g~. Rent·A-House 979-8430 (114) 847-5441 I' DELUXE pool & re=ation. No peu, 2 COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC REALTORS sMA Robsis S.2 BR A 2-1 BR. Individual' homer on. large corner lot. Needs some TLC and general cleanup. N e v e T Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, 3 Br, 2 ba, bltins, carpeting cart l~ 2 BR w/garage. Children. APARTMENTS children. $250. ~7·1044. I. Housa·--e ab I no t I . t & drapes. Pool facil ities. Apts. Fu•n. 360 1145 -S165 Al Cod -so . pc s. nqutre a • . r n • Frplc's • 3 Swim-H ti "'-Ba ~ Rtal E•tate Wanted 184 Maint~anec in c Jud c d. ---------1 Ba h Jar & 1 BR tio un n....... •"° . 381 No. 2, E. 18th St. -c e • pa s, ming Pools • Health Spa • ECUTIVE S42-4l6J 551-3954. General frplc's, priv. garages, Tennis Courts • Game and $175 EX Houses Fu•n1"sh-• 300 3 BR 2.B 4 BR 2 BA, bltlns, fc""ed lijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii/ Divided bath & lots or Billiard Room. Need3and4=~~~~~ ----·------1 pati~. ~b1~:~:·a~i~ yard. patio, excellent ;;;,_a.!' A closets. Rec hall, pool&: 1BR.From$160 Children Welcome General 54&-1093 or 892--0793. tion·immed occup. $250. per pool tables, sauna baths. 1 BR. &: Oen From $180 New Family Apts. au areas or Orang• County. mo. cau agent 54&-4141. 'Bold New Concept Sec for ,......,u, 17301 Immediate cash. Call our S175-BALBOA tsland-lrg 1 2 Br, range. garage, fenced. Keelson Ln. (1 blk w. Clf MEDITERRANEAN 2 Bdrm. Color Coor~. agent, KATEll.A REALTY Br \v/privacy & charm. Adlt.s only. $1~5 mo. Lido Isle Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). VILLAGE 837·9!00. $200-Eutblulf, util pd. huge S<S-7500. 116 E. WHson. FURNITURE RENTAL 842-1848 TENNIS CRT., PU1T!NG vaC8l\C)'. $875. month in-• PVT pty wants 3 or 4 B.R come $10,000 dn. Asking home. Call Harry, 833-ll29 d SZJ~VERY Lrg 1 BR owr 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. GREEN, POOL. BAR-B-Q't stu kl. Right on pri pool. f-IOUSE in court-2 Br, 1 Ba. garage. Stove, refrtg crpts, LRG. Bacht . walk to shops. (714) 557.8020 CHILD PLAY AREA $350-LAGUNA 3 ·Fam rm , Carport. 980 \V. 17th St. No. drps, gar. Avail Yeatly. *Month to Month Sngl mature adult only. Rc1 RENTAL OFFICE DAY CARE CENTER ~~~~'Ii~~ ARk0~~AL$ 1 ~B .... _c_.M~·~54_S-_2839=·---$36.S..WATERFRONT 3 Br ! ~~!~=~:.Option ~2~:g dep. SlOO + util. OPEN 10 A?-.l to 6 PM 3 STORY REC. BLDG., INC. $79,500. CALL 642-1771. wkdys; e~s & wknds Orw 642-:1312. -mJ211 r.-~ 673-4030 or 494-.1248 D __ •_n_a_P;..0_1 ... nt_____ wl frpl. Beaut vie1v, bltns, Style.COior~ -~"-==~~---1 * * $lSO * * GYM &. PARTY RMS. crpts, drps, gar. Yearly. * 24 Hour Dell•-ry * WINTER RENTALS DESIGNED FOR THE Corona del Mar $200-2 BR, 2 BA. bltns. crpt NU VIEW RENTALS "' I 2 3 4 BR R N 3 Br, l% Ba, newly painted GRO G • , , , . eserve ow! Blilns, crpt/drps, enc I WIN FAMILY drps, gar, patio. 673-4030 or 494-3248 • ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 patio. Nr schls &. shop'g. SEE FURN. MODELS 3 bd~~l2N~a;,0~. J>CI' s!~)'~~i<:d~t~1· bltns, ~iss!~.Yiel~-------· @ a,:~ Laguna Beech Children Ok, no pets, 880 IAOI WA·RNERAVE. month, 644-0906. $325-3 & Family Rm. 2 ----* OCEANFRO. Center St., CM. 642.8340 or (Corner Warner le Edwards) FOUR PLEX Business Oppartunity 200 --.:..:.'='=----I frpl's all bltns xtra ··ce • ** 2 BR, 1¥.. BA, El NT -1 on the 548-2682. p • t fU b t' cl B · · • "1 · Dorado. Compl. crpt'd & 517 w. l9th, CM 548_ •• " sand. Downtown oc. By -;;;=""-=-==-=--ro1ec o r ane 1cs •guna oach NU-VIEW RENTALS ~· W DELUXE 2 BR. l" Ba Select area -quality con- struction -large rooms - beautiful!)' landscaped -:l, 2, 1, 1, bedrooms. Good in- vestment -inCC1me S1 ,680 • lOt;'ci down -price $66,500. Wlll e><ehange for 1nore unlt1. Call Inves tmrnt Oivi.sion Mfi.1600. Busin1ss Opportunity Man or Wornan Reliablr person f1Y1m !hi~ area to service and l'Ollrct from auton1atic dispensers. No ex perience needed. V.1e rstablish ae<.'Ounts for you, Car, rcft•r('nccs. and $995 lG dri>'d. Bltns. Fncd )'rd & 27!J6 N. Main SA 547-0314 ., .. ~AS.or Month. 494-4012, 711 ,, -• - $400 mo. 2 BR. 1·3 mos. im-673-4000 or 494-3248 patio. $225/mo. 830-5891. __,__.. Studio. CrpVdrps, pool. $235 n1cd. occup11.ncy o K. Bltns, p ;t patios. $150. 1 Fabulous view. 598 Alla Newport Beach chlld ok, no pets. 646-0f.)6 CHILDREN WELCOME BRAND NEW FAMILY TOWNHOUSE APTS. 3 BEDRMS. + FAMILY, Vista \Vay. Quiet .ft private. d_UQ~ A\"'1L j -f)~ ~Q.9 UPPER 3 BR.% blk beach. CLEAN 2 BR Studio. 11-' Ba, Telephone owne r in \:)~ J.'"U }..~Jo. ~ JJ(/• V Yearly. New ctpts &: drps. d r P s I c r pt I bltns/gar. Hollywood 21.>o 656-6300. The Puzzle wifh the Builf-fn C 'uc'·fe $300/mo. No pets. &12-38611. Adults. no pe.... 1155 · Newport Belch n It 548-63.57. 2 BA, TENNIS CT., PUTrlNG GREEN, POOL, BAll-8.q's O teorrano• letters of th• San Cltm•nt• E/slde 2 BR, I~ Ba adult lownhousc. Encl patio. S165. '-0'1 THE REAL "'\! ESTA TERS $1995 cash capital necessary \VINTI!.~ rental. Npt Ptnin. o1 ro 12 hour~ weekly could \~ blk from bay, 2 br, llv net good part tlm£' income. rn1, lge kit, frplc. nice patio Full time mofP, }'or IOcal k guest hOuse w-Bt,%ba, four aaombled WCtds btto ~ f\ low to form four llrnple words. ~: 1130.00 FURN OCEAN VU 136 Melody Ln. 543-9695 or APT. 3 LG RMS, PARKING, 548-59116 aft 6 pm. ClnL!> PLAY AREA DAY CARE CENTER •, ',TI '"' *NEWPORT BEACH* interview, wrl1e: I Include setv rm v.•-wshr & dryer. Luxurioua Olllce Bldg. tclephonc> number) $285 mo. 675-2804; MS--0671, $200,000 Down,' Prime loc:a· EAGLE INDUSTRI ES f'xt 394. tiOn, 30Jg> Sq. ft .. sled & DEPT BV B muonary construction. 393S ~feadowbrook Roail * ORM. 2 frplcs, bar, M nit Proprrti bl1n:s, auto gar. door opener, . e t es G40--03:ll St. Loui.s Park", Minn, 55-126 110ft waler. $425 inonth, 17 Unit.-2 bllol trom-b!i 2 Slcnderwrap w,.10nR avail. Sept 15th. 646-5291 Contna.. a.JU Carnation. Boat Rf'ntal..SUmmer fun Houses Unfum. 305 CdM. Gros! $7700 prr mo. Fi.lb Ir Oiipt-t"lean, busy ~ on i.e. Addrc $265,000. "The Broker with Empatll)'" Gener1I 111 Owner 64MS:IO. Holland Bus. Sal11 -.,.;;,~""'".,,... ____ , BY """"' duplox 1 yr old I 64.S-1170 LANDLORDS! I YAWLAS I . . I 1 I I I 12 • /.J::. . ...., l....1,M_Y.1-....1.L -I J....K -'I l _ I I' I I . 1 f-1 _,.:I G;...;U;...j ;;.L j,=.E...:,i;..•-11 ~ Golddigge(s observotion: . . . . . . nMoney ~tinks, but I don't ADULTS 492-Lm Apt. Unf\lm. Gener I I ON THE BEACH! 1-BR. Furn. Ir: Untum, FROM ONLY $195 OCEAN QUEEN 1A1tl E. Oceall rJV<I. U>ng Beach (213) 4.!$.5S45 Ml>g'd by Willlam \Vallan Co. Capiatruo Batch. S50iWl. ,!7 iiil6ii0ranaiiii;;ii;ciiAiivi;, Ci;'i;Mi;. i;64i;5-4;;ili;70i I We Specialize tn Newport or tr.de fGr kit. S3l6-034S. aeach e Corona del Mar • TIME FOR Apt. Blclg. 1°" Laoso & Logun., Our Rental Se~ QUICK CASH nu1cK CASH 3 unll•. In Gard.. Grovo. vi .. b FREE lo Yottl Try ,,--T-O_M_L_A_S __ l mind the -." ~-IT ~-,~~,-, "'""1 ;_..;.,;..:.-, -1 Q Comp~to !he ch11<llo ·- by lllJ;ng In tho "'"'"" word \ '--'-· -L. -l.-.1.-L . .....J. you dawlop from siep No. 3 btlow. ,,. Call DtvWon ol llighwayit Nu-View! THROUGH A T .. OUGH A Mr. ~ 2U/620-3549. NU-VIEW RENTALS DAILY PILOT ~":':' !:;. Uo30 AM. JUiy l7 613-4030 or <!14'3248 WANT AD FOR Sole, w1o -•<tlt a.!~:~f~it~A~,. Ct u~~'G°fr8~~~~e lEnERS [ [ I I I. J DAILY PILOT 642-56 78 :!~~ ..... u in. .... ~ ..... ~.!""' ...... -::;".:::'c=i1c_.J._s. _54<-_ 11 _ 68 _· 1_ -..:.S..:.C:..:RA:...:..:..:.:M-~UTS=:......:..A::..:N:::S.:..:WE:.=:.::RS::....::IN:.:......::C::LA=.:S.::Sl::..:Fl:.:C::A:..:T.:.:IO:.:N~7.:.00:._1 _W_A_N_T_A_D_ 8 PRINT NUMBU!O lEnERS "I I 4 J lHESE SQUARES I I Spac TownOOuse. 2BR. 2BA, Vaulted ceiling, gmtge, pools, air/cond. $210. 540-41'19/S«r2043 3 SJ'ORY REC. BU>. INCL, GYM & PARTY RMS. DESIGNED FOR THE . GROWING FAMlLY 1 BR. w/Stove, re:fr\g(!'rntor. SEE FURN. MODELS water & 1Jgh1s pd 1145. 251> .M()J WARNER AVE. , D Elden. 842-5192. 1' OVERSIZED sunke~ Uv-(C.p~ WtarnftrUAbEdwarth) . nn. w/w crpts, 2 BR. 2 BA, ro1ec o r anitiCS Jrplc, blni., patio, '°" gar. 2 BR duplex stov' $175/nio m-6629 f • , ., .... · · rig., dlhwhr/w a 1 h/ SPACIOUS 2 BR Apl dry, crpts., drps., $165. Old~1;5f!':;_~·~,. Couplofm. 15<11 Ollvt ··-.. ~·-S3"'52 • • 2 Qr. Ad1llu, no peb. NEW beaut 2 BR, Ihle Cl'llll. BAY MEADOWS Al'l'S. drapes, hltlns, bu -•- 387 W. BAY st. CM 6'6-0073 Ntar beach. Open -5;j 2 BR unturn apt, 1145. No u.4030. 623 ltll St. or cau chlldrm, oo pet•. S20 Ctnltr 147-(1140. st .. CM. 64H848. 1-o:s.:':a:"A~lr::-r•Apc-.-1,-.""$1~1~5-1 11 1111! "!· fl. 3 Br, 3 Ba. Lrs 1 2 BR, Crpu, drattet. bll· Children ok, no pal.I. $210. no, 1 bOc N. OI Adami. 0 ~or 8J3..3540, a..<lt, 7'2M Udea, SJl.10'IV.I • Mondu. Ju!>' l7. 191'2 f -:w--lrtl [ ·~:.: ....... )[~ ~I •""'• .... ~l~;.i~ I -.... - A..;P""'·-u_n_,_ ..... _. ___ 345;.;.. Apts .. l[I] ~' •"'...,_"'·~1 ~••1 IMlp W ....... ,M&F710 IMlpW•n!W,MIP710 fs,...,,. •• SSI Co,,..i S.rvlce Tii e Huntl"lllon Beech Furn. or Unlum. GARAGE f(lr -· $20. GERMAN ~ -JOHN'S Cati>tt • Uphobte..,.: 'G"ET"'"...,RID"""-::OF,,,.....,T,,H"'"'A"'T CERA.\!JC lllo ...... a Beouty Operotor I Dlahwulltr, tuJI time, Gorogu for Rent m Houllnt. ON BEACH! 2 BR., 2 BA Uni. Fr. $251 l BR. Furn Fr. $308 ADULTS ONLY J'4mfture AvaUabte C a r p eb-draf)eMJ1bwuher he• led pool ... unu.tennla: rec room«eM vlt\\'s patkMH.mple parkJna: Security Guanio. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7U OcEAN AVE .. H.B. !TUJ 53&-1<8'1 Ofc open 10 am.O pm Dally 1V1LL1AM IV ALTERS CO. LARGE 2 BR 1 story 4-plex. Cpt:s, drpa. r/o, gar, lnc<I, child OK. $135. 847-0U5. Unfum 1 BR. npl. $95/mo. • 64&-m • ---WALK lo Beach 2 Bl' .. l'pls, drps, ds(l\, shr 125 & 308 16th, g47.3957 L1gun1 Be1.c h DELUXE 2 BR view duplex. ;gar. \\'alk to lx'ach. S2fi.J $275 nw. Good Reul Eslate. 49-1-7518. . N. end, 2 BR, 2 BA .. nr bl'ach & markt't. Adults, no pets. $160 mo. 494-£912. * Nl'.."W 2 BR .. blk to beach. Spectacular vil'\\'. $2GO up. 494-3383 or 494-2339. N1wport Beech Huntington Beodl 2 BR FROM $139 MOVE IN TODAYI Kids I; pets OK. Pool, All exlraJ. 3 Br, Sl99. 1Tl92·A Keelson Lane. (Nr. Slater & Bt>ach Bl. l 841·3669. NewPOrt Beach ~~ W. Occantront. lg 1 BR, sunimer & winter rentals, avail July 1, 6#-5307. month. near Stop ud Go Market. Ori.sb&mpoo tr et Scotch· UNSIGHTLY 1'RA.SH AND mnodtl. FJt-e nt. &nail Mc St)'Uat. wtth or withOul malt, MS-<H79 ahtt t pm B&lboa 8lvd' PM:Uic O>allt euard fSoU ft.etard&nU). DEBRJS. 6'RE£ EST I · jobs ln!k'orM. m.2d6. followtnc. &U-nll or eve• I Pantry, tcznale, pairt time. H ~ lloer<...n .\ all color MA= &73-1383. 3-3 pm dolly. - GAR.AGE for car ar ~. wy. hri&hlrntn It 10 minute REASONABLE.. 548-642'. \ ;.::.::::::~-....,.--.,,._,. Laguna Beach. U>. per mo. 918 Palm St. FOUND 2 toy poocUet l/ll bleach IOr white carpet&. ml BEAUTY' optrator, eicper. """~"""'"'"""=~-- H.B. 5J6..4671, 53M9?9. I on MUDll:er Or. in lf.B. I Save your money by uvlna Hei ting & A ir r ;I > •• f 1 female. G\\·en'• Be au t y D 1 S ll WAS H£R,.Momq;s be.lee male w/tley white me extra trtp1. \YIU cltan -~C~01~-~od~f1t'.,'.lon~l~ng!..·---l;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·1iiifi Shop, 240 Bach St.. l.quna Apply in ptt90n. 2305 E. Cit Office Rental 4'8 tmr puppy. 536-&44. II 1 dlnl .._ BHch ~ Hwy, CdM. Equal Oppar. "'-"J\C nn., nc rm. • · · Employe.r ----·· 'HITE t I .... mat hall $15. ••· nn. $7.SO. AIR COND. CONTRACTOR Job Wonted, Mole 700 BEAUTY o-rator. f..W.. DRAFTSMAN. TRAINEE. Deluxe Offices, $140/Mo. " · ca· Olli....... •· """' . """ ,.~.. ..-·. Id "ty -•to • II couch SlO. Cha.tr SS.' 1$ _.., Call for etUmate • ....,......,,.,15 Bully shop 1 ... -·na Bch. Alt'Y.'Oncl, hl':ated, pvt btl, en u eye l.V r • ca ,, • ., SCRAM LETS ..... I u ,, __ .. 15/hr v-~-w toxp. Is what count•, not R R Huggins-486 Newport. NB 4'4~2720 u ...,..,. .,.. • .. I'll.., uUl's pd. Central C.M. loca·, _968-__ m_G._______ method. I do .,_.'Ork myself HouseclHnl•• • BODY ' fend .... nian neOOed or dutlet for utWty corn. Hon. 548--0259 d•.,.. or ews, FOUND·. Kt>"* at He:Uer Good 53 "'• "' ..... "'-"ny ·~-1·-1 •·-rldnr 6(5...{)263. .....,.. Park in ~i,. Mesa. 11 rtf. 1-0101. ANSWER·S inust ll\\'O im&ll tool.r. V\V ~iOO:~ "t:ncti;.': Ex· DESK •pooe avlllab,. $50 Keys bl all. 548-5360. Corpenter HOUSE OF . •p<eial~t. Days 9111-2100. peri•oc~ d••lttd bul not WW---wvnte -fllmlturw Found-July 14th-ma1e-part CLEAN-.'\hY8..Y!f M1Hcy .. Lunge tvtl ~_J~. n e c e 1 • • r Y. For-ap. at IS mo. A1tnv1ns.....,. Chihuahua, whlt•and cream LARGE OR SMALL n.ooRS, CARPETS. almosr _ s:.ELL. $ BOYS WANTED $ t<>lntmcnt. 831-0600. Rentm 11,-1 avalla~. 2Z3 1'orelt Ave, vie. U.C.I.13J.,8991-642-0545. AD Types Work! Cut doors, WINDOWS 6 WALLS. Gokkl!ner's obstrvallon· A£es 12-15 DRAPERY 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:.~ =!Aruna='"°""'Bet=.::dt.o.;:G<-:.;.;9.c.8:;:...= FND. German Shepherd pu~, ~1• ~1·1 f !..,".,11~· 6 YEARS AREA. "Mtioey atlnlar. but J don't l\lUST BE: WORKROOM • DESK tpace av.U.ble S50 approx 2\.1 mos. fem. O.C. amt', tt,....... .. t' c. -· 642 6824 mind the S..'\t.ELL." 1. Neat and honf'~I. Help NHded mo. WW provide turnlture Fairlrndl!. Sun. ~2822. CARPENTRY • NEED ~form' l niprovf'nit>nl~ 2. Ablr to "-ork lrom appro'<. Ex~r. ,,,....t'd, but not nteea. at SS mo.~ IU'V1ce MALE It 't kit Rouch 6 F\nl.sh Pa~Tops-Call 2 lndustrlou"' young 3 PM to 8 Pl\t and 8 hours Coovenlent hl"!I. Top wq:ea. Rooms 400 LARGE &. be. available. 11175 Beach Blvd. gray wru e It'll Cl'mtont. 548-1594/ n\en ex,.....ri<'nccd 111 pain-on Saturd:t). 546-1153 anytimf'. room ' th-m Hun""'-on Beach. 6G..Q2l fQUnd at Cotta Mesa Hlsh I;;;==-------. ,.... . .. E"""'' pizza r1art1C''\ and cooking. S75/mo. Cost a '°"~-""'~'=='=-";:.,.;-"'.,=~ School. 546-U>L ";1llln91 INTRODUCING: McCoy 11 ting, plumbing, plastering. J •. 'Y"J DRUG store salt's Jt:trl, 6· i\h•sa 8al Center St • 2 ADJOINING off i ct' 1 ho...... •-yacht cle• ... ;.,.,. Jandscap;ng f"ll' 642-0022 Di~neylanct I • ·-· R a ch ,,_ • --,~ ' · · 1 \\lould likr lo 111akc $1:1 to c Uil\'(' .._ .. na e 642-5848. available. 2 different loca-Lost SSS Acoustical Ceilines blown serviet". Lir. Reu. ra es. Job Wented, Female ]02 S40 p('r "'l"f'.k. pharmacy. Must be ex· H.OOl\fS Sl8 "'k up W·kil: tlon1. $150. Ir $100./mo. machine applied. ~e es-673-1357. peril'nct'd. Apply in person. S.10 Y.'k up Apts. 2376 ,G<Z-65GD~·='""'-' ------Lost: Standard We male col· tlmatH. Guar. 64f.n8J. ?.fESA Cleaning. Carpets, GOOD TYPI ST t,~:101~l'~'!I ~:r ~~1~~'\1 /~~1~ • Bushard'• Pharma<")'. 244 Newport BI v d , CM. OFFICE Spa~. 444 Old !e~A~~. S:~ w~ Cement, Concrete windo,vs. f Io ors etc. Wiii do your typ ing at Orange County'i ht\'<irite }"ores! Ave., Lagw1a Bch. 548-975.i. Nev.1port Blvd .. 3 bib No. ol tan, white chest, pa,ws, tip Reaid/com'!. 5 5 7 -6 7 4 2, her horhe, W ill r ickup til'l\'~pnpcr. No <:olll·1.:tl nA:, 'EXP£R Cook& or Cook QUIET Neighborhood· Hwy 1· 300 sq. fL $95/mo. PATIOS. walks. drive, tnrt&ll 548-illl. aind deliver loca H.B., 110 dl'livcr1, Tr11.nsportntion Trail'lt.'cs & \VaitresSf!s. Ap-548-5300 of tail. No t'Ollar, lrvine bt'-new la\\'TII, IJl.w. break, F V W 75 pl I C I Kitchen priv. Employed BAY VIEW OFFICES tween Santa labella, c.M. remove.•••_ !Or eot. Dedic1t1d Cl11nln9 .• , 11t, c per pg. t.~ rurnis ht.'<I rron1 your KIY 1 " P'R""'t"· ot oSan Y man $65 m•· sts.tSJ.6 aft. 646-2271. .._..._ * WE DO EVERYnlING * o r will wark by hou r J"10u~1· H in!ereslt'd 1•All le icn cs auran • n 5PM . Deluxe, aiM:ondltioned •CUSTOM CEMENT \VORK Rers. Free est. 646-2839 call 847·309S. t"w.•h\'et:n 9 A.ft!. and 2 P ~t Jus.11 Capistrano. See Summer Rentals 420 Redecorated. Lido area Lost: 1 yr old tan and white Drives, walks, patios, Ext'!elll'!nt HoUlf!cleanina NEED hf'lp at home? \\'I' daily. _M_•_'"~•~'-"·-------1 2BR-S200 \\'eek. 3Br-$300 \veck. Ne\v furn & <..'Olor TV. Blk to bay &: Bch. on Pen.In. 114 E. Balboa Blvd, 673-0526. Rcalonomlcs, Bkr. 675-6700 ma1e Shepherd, mixed. pool decks. Don, 642-8514 Coi;ta ri1c5a arra • EXPERIENCED m • d I c: a I "Alex'• July 12 eve. M.V. by day. Own trans. have Aides • Ntn~e1 • 67, 5222 OFFICE $fiO month, crptd, PATIOS.SIDEWALKS * 83&--0648 * Housekpn e Con1panions e phonf' "" - util pd. In shoppina: center. ~rel ~IGN. 0 collar. Reward. CEMENT CONTRACT'OR R cm e ni a kl' r 1 -Uni'ol 1n lluntlngt~ . ., ~!a,1l'h a1'rn • ;,10) ... ., BAY &c Beach Janitorial. •· ;'°".,... 33.1 E.17th St., C.M. 673-0140. Call Max *** 644-0687 Crpts/\\'indows/noon, etc. s.1..m1 . · · ~--- LOST dog, small black EXPERIENCED c: 0 n t • r . "'-'I 64•1 ~ I :;,==c:o="'"'b-,-"'I,,.-= BOYS poodle I ttorrier, "Muffins," p tk>s walks dri b . n.<.-;,id/Comm . u-"Nl. HOUSE\\' RK y t ll' hour I hi .. ·-10 a • • Vt't, nck Prof. Car~t Cleono'ng $3. N.B., Utg. & Cdi\I Exp. Ag" 10.14 to dehvl'r papen w w .. .,..,., approx Yfl &: llump stone wk. w.M-3533. r-& Rt'f. Call aftf'r JO /\i\1 ln the Dana Point. San Cle- old, recent hair cut. Corona Ch ild Core Also windows & floor care. meo•· ·-•• Business Rtntel re<.'l'plionist. Call 9 to 5, l'don-Fri. 6'14-10~. EXP'D set·rP!ary w/hook· k('(lJtni,:. lax knowledge, FHA/rral r11late exper. BAY VIE\V 2 bedroom, sleep!l 4 completcly furnish· l'd. Avail June to Sept. $750 PARK NEWPORT pr month. Aduli.. only OFFICE, store flt'ar N'pl. Post Oic>. & Greyhound Depot. 537 Ft. $150: 736 Ft. $225 Month. Agent ~2414. dcl 11far area. ~1357. CaY Dutch 536-1508. 24 hrs. 547--02"15. OAit v· PILOT JAPANESE lady "'O'Uld likt Help Wanted, M & F 710 4924"0 "Tiggno", 18 mo KttY tom cat w/blk lltripes I: )Vhile collar, miaslng in Fntn Vly/Santa Ana art' a. Reward. 839-8909. QULJ) catt, ages up to 5 yrs. Wkday11. Fncd yard. Call 548-7947. Parl t1m!" to start. Call t.t on. \Vcd. rrt 9-1 2, 613-7928. APARTMENTS agent. GT,..,930. h ba OCEAN view -weekly, Oft t e Y ' monthly rates. Ocean Ter· Luxury apartment living ov-race A11ts .. 729 Gaviota Or., erlooking the "'ater. Enjoy Laguna Beach. 494-1719. .$750,001 health spa, 7 S\Vlm-BALBOA Furn. Bach. S!l5 m''no pool•. 7 11."'hled ten-•-o "'k. J blocks to Fun ~11<'. -nis courts, plu$ mile!'i or bicycle traih;:, putting, shuf-:;..5'1~·. Balboa BI v d · Oeboard, croquet. Junior l's from $114.50 nionthJy; also 1 BALBOA Pl'nin. Aug/Sept and 2-bcdroom plans and $200 "'k. 2 hr, 2 ba. 311 Lln- 2-1tory town houses. Elec· do. £7~>-4020 tric kitchens, private patios ~CO~R'°'o"°N°'A"'d"e"t~M~ar-.~,~,,..~B~R~.~,. or balconies, carpeting, dra· l blk ocean. Adults. 2 \\·ks pcrles. SubtcnCU1ean park· J uly.Aug. UlO \\'k. 673-02a2. Ing wiU1 elevators. Optional 1 BLK to ocean. Bach! apt. maid service. Just north of $200 mo. Fa'lhion Island at Jamboree 673--0ill * omCE-600 sq ft av) now. 800 Sq. Ft. IN- DUSTRIAL SHOP avl Aug. 646-21.10. Industrial Rental 450 COSTA MESA 1440 & 2880 Sq fL. CABINET MAKERS-- r~mERGL.ASS Nr. N\vpt Frwy & S.D. F'N')'. 2931 Grace Ln. (So. of Baker. E. of Fairvle1v 1,1 111.i) Representative there 9 am·12 noon, (n4t 975-4434 or 879-4711 Rentols Wanted 460 housecleaning. CA,\lPER f\IFGR. n t'" cl s e 646-4541 e Accounting Clerica l rxp'd. help. 1\ppl)". &;3 \V. P•intlng & Fee Paid 18th St, Co!'ila t-.1ri;u. P•perh1nging General Offii'i' lo S600•1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii FROM home nr Wallace & JACK Tau 111. ne-Repair .sec·y (sh ~) $541 ContrKtor Center, CM German remod., addlt. 20 yn. up. AIRLESS 700 Wagner hose & Exec-. Sec'y {sh 100) to S700 Shfopherd, malt>. SilVl"I' & ' Llc'd. My Way Co. 547-0036. gun. % Spray, 2 gal pol, Receptionist $400 CAN'T FIND blue tags No. JOS. 645-2926. Drafting hoses, Delvil gun. 28' heavy Applicant Pt1.y.!I FN' ID.-lALL. thin while/bt'ige i ---~------duty magnesiun1 &.!um. lad-Library Clrrk U-11fK't·1 ~;.~Kl THE DRAFTING der, 24' lite alum. ladder. Back orr1~·1· lo $500 female poodle, (Gold 1 e) 16' plank-aluni. Bargain Acctng-Bkk11ng 10 SG/j() JOB YOU WANT? 7/3. Nr Q>a9t Hwy. Cd111. Any 11ize job. 557-9695 priced, ST:JO. 96S-4065. Secretary 1'ra111cr to S:l<ll.i Re\\md. 675-4616. Electric•I ,~.1111 No Wunna: Bookkeeper In _.'V c~:;Isl~~~ ~o-J~ _E_L_ECT--Rl-C-IA-N-.-"-."'-.-....,-. * WALLPAPER * 1 G.ir' Ofllt·r Hi s~ bonded. Small jobs, maint. When you call "Mac.. Sec y/Bookkeep1 r '" $100 Reward! 6 7 3 -61 2 S or Ii: ln 548-S203 548-l4« M6-l7U X~Ray :echn1c1An 6f6..0323. repa · · ===7"=-:---;--.,,,-1 Girl Fl'tday S400 ELECI'RICAL WORK. All SIDING le Overhang, l 11tory A/P-Payroll s:,41 l~tl\tEOlATE PLACi::)\ENT kinds. Bi& or rma.1..1 Lic'd & $175, 2 story $275. Lee's General Offi1·r 111 ~4'!6 F'O R TRY OURS! , FACTORY E}o((·f'lll'nl 11urnmer "'Ori<. Trn1ntt &: cxperie.nttd. Jn\• med1ulc plart!Rlf'nl. \Vcekly pay c~k. No !et:. KELLY GIRL• 2061 BuaJneas Ctr. Or. lrvlM US.1441 FIBERGLASS JOrema n needed. mu1t be t'?(p'd A- hin·f' b11ckaround in tool nlaklng. Appl y 837 W. lltb St.. Col';la Mt>.sa. and San Joaquin Hill• RMd. Telephone (714) 644-1900 for rental Information VERSAI LLES EBi°iAiiL:EeiCoi.iA:l:!SLANSUOO'D~2:bedim.( Bachelor with two 1mall @P furnished. July & Aug. desires 1 bdnn. apt. or $16.'i. Ph: 644-1361 e\1'~. house unlurn. Ph. 646-2335 L 0 ST : Reward! Siamese Sealpoint cat. Blutis area. 509 Vista Flora. NB. Reward. Gray striped tabby cat w/brwn collar Male. 6'/a-77211. 'NB area lnl. Free e1L 54S-02ll. Painting Ir Decorating, Typiit to s:iOO Furniture 558-7497. Alt. 6 p.m. P/Tlm• C<o'I °'' '2.00 hi' • FIGURE CLERK ATI'N: Home I; Boat Chvnen. Don't re up ho I , Have vinyl -,urn. repaired. 5.16-8475. * PAINTING -PAPERING F'ree & F'ec Positions • b ._, Interior Exterior RUTH RYAN AGENC Y These 10 s .ar~ varlirg GELCOA'r rouCH .. tJP l'"I BEllGl.ASS ~10LDEl\S Coslal Recreation. Inc. 91() \VCl!t 17th Street 6-12.--054 2 GENERAL OFFICE t·1aure ap & li•r typina Ca ll Lorrainf' -CORONA de:I Mar. So. of E xecutive Apa rtments ""~" I BR. SE a \\'ttk. Overlooking Nl'\\·port &!ach. * Cil-4929 * Spectacular v1e"'!t Luxury. BALBOA-I & 2 BR. Nr. !1.1odels open 9 lo 8. On Hos· heaches & shop'g. $1~$17;, pilal Rd, off NC\vporl Bl\·d. wkly. Aug/Sept 675-5810. :or Superior Avf'. LIDO ISLE _ 3 BR ., 2 Vacation Rental • 425 BATH. Adulb, lease. I BIG BEAR LAKE 714 :753-0719. Appt. to J..JO' lakeshore, exec. vacation see. honie 'v/pri. boat slip. e 2 Br, 2 ba studic.. Vir\v. Ea!tbluff Terr. $28.i. Call 6-lll-0349 for appl. Newport Shore• f BR-~nfurn. t hlk ocean. S\vim pool. $185/rno Yearly. 110 Cedar. ~7200. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Apts., Costa Mesa FABULOUS 2 BR. $130 Up. Furn/Unfurn \'ou \\•on'! lirxl it larger. ni~r apt for less. Beaut. gsrden a1'l'a, palioi;. Qu it'! dl'ad-cnd s1rC'el , just So. of Newport Ave. Adults, no pcots. 2020 t~ullerton Avt' .. C.M. (Just E. nf Buy) 64~. 1 & 2 BR. furn. or unrurn. Pool. $140 Up. Children's section. EL.\1 GARDENS APTS. 177 E. 22nd St., C.~. 642-3645. Completely furn. Liv. mr. & 2 Br. sleeps 6-9. Children & pets welcome. 2 acres of privacy anmng to"'ering pint'. 4 season!'i: weekends or "·('ek ($250) Contact Dr. Ralph Bell. owner o I "Bclhvood Shores" f7l4J 86&-4737. UNIV. Park, exec. 3 BR. $150 Per Wf!f'k CantreU Realty 813-2224 Re ntals to Sh•re 430 \VANTEO uncrowded deluxe accommodal ions. \Vido\ver 50 \v/young son & cat. Da vis, ( 2 l 3) 1 2 .f -6 4 l 1 \\ k-<lays. SlIARE my "'aterfront home "'/dock, man 3l)..6Q yrs. $150/mo. S!raight.. 6_75-4331. NEAT. responsible inrliv1dual wnnted to share hOuse in Laguna. 494-5259 eves. non·t give up the 11hip! "'List" ii in classified, Ship to Shore Rl'sults! 642-5678. an 6 p.m. RESP family, 1 child, Need 4 br unf hlle, in lttesa Vtorde'. 1 level. Yr lease. By Sept l . X1nt c~. f213) ~1850 WANTED: 4-5 BR home In Ensign-Harbor m district. Will sign leue. 642-5373. Striped Tiger cat. Grey, wht It blk w/wht paW!I. Fml. 11Jontecel.lo CM. 557-5537. Lost; Briefcase, Black. ini- tial L.M.S. Vic, Culavers parking lot. Reward 557.7900 Uc. Insured Guaranteed 1793 Newpo11 , 01 fl'16-4s.'.il & ch~ leng1ng . Call Harris ~ 17931 &Reh l-IB x~7.9617 If you re good w/num- INTE" ~.. p · 1 · ' b1r1 & can type a little •wLAlt'r a1n 1ng . ~ al'f Lic'dl Ins. Refs. Reas. A/P•yable t o $SOO you may qu 1 Y· Gardening Free esL Chuck, 645--0009. Chall•n•lng pos;tloo for the • TYPIST CLERK AL'S GARDENING Professional Painting right person. !1.1ust have (mt skills neC'C811. (r\ILLtrance ~and~ping-~;s~ ~.!J Jnter/exter. Quality work knowled1e of rrel&ht. billing, exper. helpful, but not es· S4o.&98 eves. 5 e; v 1n 1 Reu $7-7455 manufacturing I: working !ICnlial. 1 Position require• \\' 1'.:STCLI F' t' 104.1 \\'1•111t•liff Dr., NB 645-2770 I Ill•) Newport. CdM, Costa Mesa, PROF'. Painting, alBO roofs, w/vendorsp. Cpo. $benefits too! lite steno. - I~ Instruction Dover Short's, Wntclltt. acoous. cell., 1nter/eicter. • • • Li /I F t 641:! rtM 1.'l"TERVrE\\11Nl) ~mmmmmm;;;iiiii;jPROFESmONAL-...... wo...,. c ns. rce es. "'""1..::1.1. Pacific . ....... ~... i\lun lhru Fri 9 am·2:30 pm p r u n t n K, t r Imming, EXT. painting, Frtt esl Personnel Services GENERAL OFFICE: Would YoU Ukc to work Jn the front office'!' 'l'he varled dutles A friendly people keep this job fun. To S500. Call Nancy May, 54().85, Co a a taJ Aaency, 2790 Harbor 81 at Adams, CM. GENERAL oUlcti Mature, neat appearii:w woman ~r lile office work. N~u 0. C. a1rpo1·1. Alll)tolC 20 hra per mo. $2.S0 .'!1;--m-14l<. Announcements 500 DON'T ton out I.hose empty 1Lluntlnum beer & 50ft drink cana! Recyde thtm at the Ecology Cl'nter, 1060 Glen- neyre-SI. Laguna Beach. Help the environment & free your trash cans for less m. m items. No paymtonls. Coors bottles also wiU be accepted. Personals I~ P1raonel1 530 Schools I instructions 9praying, s p rt n k I er s . Reas! Llc'd. Guar. ''ou pick 112 No. Tm\'f'r 575 Landscapin1, c I ea nu p. cok;r -we'll do rest. Union Bank Square ON S!Tl: or OUH NE\V BUILDING Interested In A Real Estate Career? Nl'\V or Experienced F'ull or Part Time Li~ming Prep. For e R.E. Slllm It Bien e SaJes SUC<:Hs Training e Pla~ment Ant for vads • .Day &: Eve Claues e Tuition Reimb. Plan Geor&t> 646-S893. I 642-8520. Orangl', Calif. * LANDSCAPING * PAINTER. EXPERfENCED 547-6446 Newlawm,Sprlnkle:r1,decla, -REAL I STIC PRICES Ask for Rachel 111ay PACIF IC MUTUAL cleanup. Statelic'd. 536-122S'. CLEAN WORK 642-1255. ALTERATIONJST FASHION ISLAND EX p ER T Japan e • t' PAINTING-Prof. lnl. & Ext. Lido Area. I Corner Santa Cruz I: GENERAL office. Mature "i>man. Lite bookketJ)i,.-. NC'w growing co mpany, CdM 644--8494. Gardener -Complete Yard Frtt Est. Work_euaranlff!d. Call 675-5t05 art 6 pm Ne"•port Cent<'r Dl'iYe ) Services -Cltoanups. Free 645--0098 after 6 P11f. AUTO SALES GlltL part time 5 day11 per est. 543-2661. WALLPAPER HUNG \Vou1d like t'Xperienced man. * FREE daily bus transpor· \\eek. n1utt pott 6 file, Gardener capable 15 yr. old Carl Rebko 646-2449 Join one of the most' sue· talion for \\'Ork in Loa An· llunt 1ngton Btiac:h are a . H.S. 11!.udenl, to cut IJ'UI, FOR clean &: neat painting, cess.ful Ford DeaJershlps in ge/f!9 until 1novl' lo Newport, ;~~~. for detaila &. In- water, weed, your equip-interior. reas. ratei, Cali Orange County. Top com· Sept. ~17; ment. Rea, nlt"S. 675-1064. rn ... 1r, 96S-4065. misslon!f, Insurance, Demo!~"!"~!"!"~ ... .,..,..,..,., GI RL Friday, Young I :::r Plan. We need a truly pro-CAREERS: Not jobs. but w/ptl"SOnallty, lite typltll' & AL'S Landscapin&. Tree DISCOUNT on hangin& If feulona.I new car salesman. long tenn «areer spot! In bklrpg. like to work removal. Yard remodeling. buy on \V.C. We/Im. call Apply ln person to Don manageml'nt cngineerlni:. w/people. 540--9681. Trash hauling, lot cleanup. The Hangmen 547-5846. Crevier. Theodore Robins sales I accounting for the HEALTH FOO PALM &: Card Readi""S. Repair sprinklers. 673-1166• PAINTING -Honest. clean, Ford, 2060 Harbor Blvd., profes1ional. Gr e: at op. I D tale• clerk. ..... For Information Brochure LAWN SERVICE ..,,,,..., .. teed wor k. Licensed Co11la Me.a. portunities. From Sl0,000. 40Mahoul"_! ~. Cosfab'A ~·; Advict' It help in many mat· (7141 u•ll92 ,............ _ .. pert0ne. M:' wonw.n ten. children, marriage, -Cut -Edge. Ttlm Dependable &: inllured. fi75..5740. Bllbyaltter for working rnoth· Call Don Jackson 54()..6055 ' . • bualneM:, love. One free & Free Guest Lecture E\res art, 6· S45-371i6 557-8585 fNTER/Exter. QuaHty ·Y.'Ol'k er, must have own trans. or Coastal Agency'. 2 7 9 0 =-~~xperleince -oretened. lo 325 Old No. N'ewport Bl. NB Jooe1 Lawn Serv'·· • R•a-b'". live in. 847-0915. 1-larbor Bl al Adams, CM. ~==·===~---que11t n answered over the Edmond F. Jickson "-"" • ~·-m e J-IOUSEKEEPER want~. phone. With thl11 ad receive R.E. Educatbn stnct 1964 Mow, ettae, vacuum. Small, Call 64~728.1 Babysltltor needed itartlng in COOK, exper. Mature. AJ)J)Jy llvto-ln durin1 J nw con. full life ~adlng for $3. ta~. cleatHJp. 54>2943• Pl11ter, Pitch, Rt'.'•lr Sept ~1on thru f'rl my Mesa Verde Conv. H<MP, 661 v11.lesccnce. Hl'lp cai-c 1 213:694-13.iO Fully licensed. d COMPLETE Lawn &: hom~. N.B. 548-8348. ' Center St, CM 548-5585. Ud Aca •my * PATCH ~ • -RING COSMETOLOGIST, l>'c••••d, ch. . l\1ust dl'ive. Pv1 La 1-rabra. Ca. C&ll for appt R 1 E t t Gardening ~rvice. Hauline .-~,i:. ~'""' 1 '"' •176 el 1 1 e &. clean-up. Jim 548-0405. All f¥pes. FTtt f!:llllmales BABYSITTER .I: Ut~ h9Cwrk Y.'Qrk u uai1tant to stylist quar cri . ";n-v • * only. Contracting & Call 541)...6825 ~ days v.·cek. 9-4 pm. !\tY &:: acme desk work. 4!)9...3165. llousckeeper five days ~~IN~si~ay~t;an~sm~~ (Glln:~~-=. ~~~) C~~:~:~ ~~=-up. Plumbing 110).fE ONLY! 673--01411. CREW MANAGER ~~~ * * * * * onl'-<!hamhl'r music, thal Free to1thnales. 64W102 P[UMBING BAKER'( \Ve need 2 men over 18 that HOUSEWIVES ts. Am intertsted In joining BE AN EXP.0 Hawaiian Gardener PERSONNE can hand.le a small frOUP of \\'OOdwind qu.inlel, pla,ying INVESTIGATOR O>tnplete prdenlng ae.rvlce 1n.•lall·Remode1-Repair. L boys getUng new curtomers Want to l'l'lm txlrl\ money wilh clarinct player or in Recol'ded Mea..w.gc Tells How Kama.Ian!. 646-4676. t 'rtt Estimates, Lie. for Southern Oran~ Coon-from your home! Call for tn- band or orchc1tra ~2'119 Call Toll Free JOJUiSONS' GARDENJNG 548-8772 Bakers It Bllktt's •lelf>('r 1y·11 favorlt~ newtpaptr. formation; 540-0a28. Trader's Paradise I 6 Untt1, exchana:e for de· predable proptrty Carlabad lo San Oit"go area. l'ORTTN, REALTOR 64~5000 f~11 Ac, 2600' clrv. ovcrk>nk· ng Lake Elt1inl)re. 50 mi'll rom 1-18. TDl'l'(tc $.\""lKI rq r motor hm, 1ruck & ~amper or!T 892-05-'-'1'-'-. __ ' llave $48,000 ll'l TD. Want units or niobll~ !)ark. Any beach area. A,&ent. 1141~ seliior Cltlzens. S&Cru new BR mobile home at the !eadowt, 148SI /o~ Rd. rvlna Ranch. f'or heh prop. ? Owner 213: llA Mt'i09. Salt Lake City Propertlt11 e t"lftU' le on at ·~~i~ Int., $57SO. bal. Exchana;e fClr Ornna:r Co. buslnt'h" prop. or mull. unUt. 5680'i• * * * lines times dollars * * Will 1'rade 8lf.' Open Road Camper With Tle- Downs, Bounceways, Bootl Awning Ior .fishina: boa!. Call 531·5G07 alt. 6 P~t. afl SP111. (1) I00-426-0232 Yard Maintenance, Pla.atinr Drain! uncloggt'd • fl.50 Wiiiing to lrarn the trade. Men can eem $200.00 to Jnaura.nce _ GaJ Friday. *FULLY LICENSED* Oeanu., -. _,. Sewer line to 100' -$15. Good fulure It benefits. $-100.00 per week depe.nding $.,.,... comm'l agcy exp. PIANO Instructor: Beg., in-~ "...,."'""'" .._r of bo , •• Renowned Hindu Spiritualist. * "',,...~ * on num..,.., ys you can $700. (714) ~10 S '"I al R di gl term., advanced I: pop. J'IM'S Garde:l'lin&, complete PLUMBING REPAIR Apply In J>cnion Only carfy. This 18 a dignified i ••oilt.Oliii•miiii0.li ph·• u ea ngs wn Referen(!eS. &ti.6141. lawn & yard CIU'e, cleanups. No JO' b too -·II cal't'er commanding hl&h daily. 10 AM·lOPM. Advk:-e .56-3662 It 5 .... _ · all tt 1 CERTIFIED Cal. teacher a pm. * 64• ~28 * To wages. No experience Is eivcn on ma en. can ~~ help you. wW tutor iJl y0ur hOme. Mr. SPRINKLER SERVICE ncct'1sary but nlu11t be able 312 N. El Camino Rt'al Anthony Pero~. 492--1106. Repair 1: lnlltall. ~ COLE PLUMBING Robe rt Anderson to gel along with boys. If In. San Clemente VIOL.EN &: Piant> Le110t11: GARDEND'iG Servi~. Ex· 24 hr. service. 64.>1161 Betwn. I & 11 A.M. , tere1ted and can 11art now, !'rec A Fee Potllk>ht 4!n-9136 or 49'J.-9034 Ber-4ludent.I. F .V. Reu. periience • Reliable. ~ Save Ori Plumbing. Paintihg. Mon. thru Sat. call 897-1310 from 9 A.M. Journeyman PROBLEM o-......-.. Con. Ra:::;',:":;,·"84;;7;_·_7900"'-.-=-~~ ertlma.ttoa 963-lO'l'l. Installattons. Free t'Bti · until 2 P.M, CoAtl Mesa Mechanic/Fee Paid $7ll • ,...,. ... ..,,, ORGAN Leuona _ v ... ...1 .... 1-mates. Good ttftT. 839-0372. At '11rea 675-6222. Huntington Sttretary to t800 fident, a y mp at bet I c .,...., ........ General S.rvlCH Beach are& 988-$U. PR)TDll/Bkkpr to $800 preenancy coonselinc. A-Studenta only. Rtuonable --------Remodel & Ropolr A/P Bookk .. P<I' 10 $lllO tlon " Adoption ref. Ra"' 551-«>02. JACKllON-TbeMaglc!an45 Far West DENTAL Recoptt>n~t -Ex· PB APCARE. &t2-'4.l6. mi!I. ot rpell bind~ magic CUSI'OM Remod/ Alttta.Uons. • --f·-e c u t I v t' Se c r e t • r y • X/Recept/Type to mm ~ tor chOdn:ns partios, $8. What have you. David ~' • ......... ~1 an ag er I a I position C .O./Qlmm'J 11\1. $700 HAVE • 3 Br v"w houtc. GENT 55, paraplta;lc In I R I 6'-3869. Stewart, 1en'I contractor. 11v11lablt" with progre.1slw Oencal Po&ltloDI to~ lloll""'d Hills, s20~tm cq. whtt.~ chair. llffd! loving SerYk:es _, .,.,.... BABYSJm.NG, hOutttltoan-64&-2347. Bakery & flC"nlul oill~. Salary llmlt@d 488 £, ll'lh (at Irvine> Cll J.. undttm11.ndlng gol w h o only by abUlty to iuiume '42..1470 \\!ANT • Local incomc> or \vo.nl• aa.me 646-3360. ln,, moklrl£. &arderdn&' Job Roofirtt Pie Plant N>:l:ponslb11111es. ~mo. ~~~~!'!"~!!!!1•11!! land. Will auumc. Brokf'r, Ad,A R wanled 5.1f!.-&\'t9 • I JANITORIAL Wk 1or --1-ALCOHOUCS Anonymous. ""' • oom • ' ' LEE Roofing Co. Roofln& all bt:NTAL cbainide auiatant. " .. _ Gr.><_._H_<_. ------; Phone 542-7211 or write o-modell-. Pat~ •. •-'-. H1uling typea. Reoowr. repain. . 1672 IJ1yno ld1 Ave. cxper. So. l..nguna olfice 20 or ow.r. Plrrt Umt on Cock to.il bar &: reslaurunt. po -1-~1 :u ·~ ·• ""' .......... S ('., wkendL m-1392. • .__.. "~·"""' & ~tu. Uc C-eood~Ci:iOdwin .-YOUNG"'Wri ----rk thermo roof coafinaa. white 1nt1 Ana r-i1on.·Fti.~n11..tt1umc P.O. Choice Orange COUilty \Or. · e erar. ,,._~ \\'O • " tor Lie/bonded tnc. I'! ' t'-"hlll) "-m. Do Pt Soclol Clubs 535 SO., 8'6-31111 or 847-8312. WW haul lruh er c1t-1-1947 00 .rre.· 1 oo-::J.-' "acArthu• • ~ -na · KEYPUNCHIRS rxchange for tree I: clear "" ·•-e1 7'U'.l 8.by.1111... Re a 1 on ab I e. .... .. -· • • DENTAL aniltanl Recep.. "f<etlv Clt'ls" are 1-..1.1 Com m Indus/Rea, lnoornc FIND YOURSELF . _,....,_ 'IO'-·-' n... Em I ' .-.-"'~ uw. M,ytlme. • T. Cuy Rooft111. Deal CAfU<U ..,.,po:r. P oytr Uonilt. 1 girl ofc. Exper atria. Work tor the top com-or lot TD. Aaent. ~1~1· IN SOMEONE ELSE. o~~ 1 do k. .... N I Bel ... ~·1 I In Or Co Bab)'lltttt capable U yr. S'KIPL.OADER dum ..,.._,"' tnY own wor o .. ..,.. P 1 . .....,...,., . pan et a.np • WCl'k Trsde '61 VW, rtbullt '6S DISCOVER hip Sch. Student, hr, open wwlc. eoncr.: .l :.::i~ 64$4'JIO. 548--SeiO. BEAUTICIANS WANTED DENTAL R • e ep. where you Ilk•, when )'!Ill moto•, lllJllrOOI. IOOd inn. DISCOVERY Mon./Sst. 1175-106!. ...,,,. 6 briaktoc. S.Wt1111/AtltroilOM ~ E. Balboo mw,, Balboo tlonlo1-A11l1tanl. Must tAkc llko. for u Iona: aa you lll••· poT~ttlona P.·ulo. '.. °' • ..!!""ot :':_ nl/135.68115 %13/JIT~B ·-u-sl_ ... _•_S.._rv __ fce_____ -TUD. -SEWIN· -G INSTRUCT• I-ON BE UT*ICIA6T3N·5Tl32 *,_ I X-nys .t. IOme chalnlde Excellent earnlria1. Woddy v1w UJ .. ~ -~Travel ~ A . LAl'lVng. ex-per.Sda)'sawk.Ca.UJm-p&.y dltekJ. No teea . potr. 642-4689. --------FREELANCE W1llTER _ YARI>, ...... deamtp1. ADULT, TEEN, CHILD. nt<d one !O 1111 In .• Call medlately 646-49U. lntttvlews MCll<tay tbl;Olllh P.im °""""' 2 br condo, WINDJAMMiR ADV/PR/EDITING ~~'~.:'alr.~ 543-1379 Newport Beach betwn 8 & 6; 54~. OENTAL Ree<'l>t./btlck Up l'rlday from 1-4. can or !Unt. AIC. "' Hwy Ill. TAHITI REPORTS/SPEECllES Alhlrlllons-642-5145 BEAl1TY operatcn • Ml A llrl !or deotal !pttlaIIAt. viii!. $19,fiOO, eq $4.lOO. For car, Sailina VO)'a&e -South Seu. ALL PJ.L\SES m~ LOCAL Movti. E>r:p t'Olleee Neai accuratt. 20 YttJ'I exp. part t Im e . Com-rrr. txp nee. ll . B . KELLY GIRL TO, I.a.net or !!? Share. •·ode • COii.i. C S • 1tudent. I.rs truck. Reu. SI m I 11 I oru/ruarancy. No 9&)..68TI. 2001 Hu.tilneta Ctr. Dr. ~N,Ell.~ mlil!i6 __ _:2.:.13:.:/.:;.3;.;7 .. :...1.:;.239;:.:... ____ •_.rpe __ t_e_rv_o_ce___ 534-1146. gn& lollowlns n oc •"a r y. lrvlM ml+U 64;>.i"~. '-;~~~~~~~~ * Like !O Tredo! °"' Tl'ldl:r'• STEAM Clrpet Cle•nera, YARD • aa...., a .. nup. W> ldagDfllc: Sign> ~ llon'I &iv. up the •hip! I' Pared.IM eolumn 11 for )"OUl prof. al towtid pricea. 300 J'l'M et.I. 1 days. ClJ1 S5.9.> Hrh le up. Stll idle Items now! Call "Ult" II ln cltMlf~. Ship Sf.0 •\dJ1 ht1rt "°"1 5 !Ines,~~ dl.)'I for S bu(b, .q. ft. J29,9.\. m-om. ~lmP. Sf8.l,'(l.11. • Call 9U-()9;1I) anytime 641-58711 now! to Short Results! ~2 .. »1'S. ~ Nowt * I 11 l • llm I J[Il) l.___""'°'_"·•__,llm I "'"···· Help Wanted, M&F 710 Htlp Wonted, MA F 710 Htlp Wanted, M & F 710 H~p Wonted, M & F 710 Fvmllure IJO Doti• LICENSED rlwlmpoo g~I-~ .......................... ~ --::::;;::;;::;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:'1.-;;r;;;;,;";";;:-;;--;::::;;;:::l~~-~--.._ ........ ~-to $800 ....ted, apply Wed thru Sat MAINTENANCE • 8 EC It ET AR Y-F>mU!ar BENTWOOD to $lklO afternoon before , pm, Pr•11 ()per. Tralne.1 w I working w I cla.Wfied CHAIRS Mlscell•MOUS Wentod 820 POODLE: Pedli,'l'eed, 1ilver 854 Boots, Speed & Ski · fll '69 COUGAR 15' 125 hp. trailer le: n1any extru. $2IXJO or best 675-{i621 oUer. BENTWOOD gray, minlatutt. Female. l800 67MO'IO. MECHANIC Comprouion Molding malerial. Take dlctallon, to Need at !mt 1 fin ST'101,-,=~-,,..-----=I Ti o..••-NO FEES f'C"malc ttainefs needM to work p/time, rei:. hn Lin Bentwoo:ur~ °" ~n. $100 LIVE.In Housckttper, 5~ op·-~-~tt' p~s ma k ~ VN!f'd. Wlll c.-onsidcr after · . • ~ tr.JO. days. M1n. 3 yra C!Xpcr. Sal. Our client Ii sttki111t a flt.> 1 rod· 1 0 hrs. (2l3) 83l-225r5. pcaraoce not important, but SGOO Open 675-1364 mec:han1cally Inclined in-. ra: 1" P ue '" . 4Y mWlt be in good cone!. No • · dlvtdual w/a ~ work ish1!t 8 am to 4:30 pin. Night SECRET~RY·a:cnera.I ofllc<'. antlquei Fr $625 LOCAL firm auki. men tQ •""" 1 u 4 30 1 · ee or reu. $550 !Mm au olwtM.!• ot our elee-ret'Ol'd 10 learn ntainteMnct 11 1 t : pm 10 am Yacht dcakr. 8rokt'ragf', pri~ Mike S97~7'79l alt 5 triea.l mainfenance ...... uln.. of bydnfiitfe machit>t'ry, C1mbro Mfg. Company Marilla on Bay. Yachlixl& LAD~ERBA~ CH A 1 R.S ... ., ..-Xl n't btncJit11, lncludlug 7601 Clay Avl!, lLB. Associate Corp. 646-0561. • ment bualneu. E:arn i<Xld profit ihl.rlnJ!:. 847_3531 SECRETARY, comtrucUon Need at least four matching J)ll.y while leam.ing, M'ust be p p S Ecrual Opportunity Employer work Ca.U between 9 & 4· 'N'I ~h, ladderfiback chain:. stnble, lmh1Uo11$, neat • • • • m ~-.vv ~ 11\. or un .n. Must be CHAI RS C.U ro-<238. Nttd at least four Jin. ot un-UIASA APSO PUPPIES,1 ~---·---~11•1 fin, Bentwood chairs. Ap. J\1Al.ES. AKC REG. TraNPOftJtioi. pearance not JmJ)CJrtant, but CH STOCK. 675-zr.x> must 00 in ¥OOd cond. No -.cw=E=tMA~=RA°'"N~E~R~P"'U°'P~ :sntlques. Jo~ or rtrui:. H.EASONABLE priC."\'. AfJke, 897-7791 afl. 5. \VIII trade 548-4!!04 LADDERBACK C'H A I RS. BASSC..,.S r,.,s. * 111., CAMPER * Need at least four' matching ARC, l\J-F'. 6 v.·k&. Shots. i 2 high, lndderback thairs. \Vormed. 838-9348 OPEN ROAD Fin. or untln. ~tu11t be ·----------1 Includes 'l'ie-d0\111111, Boun<» ~ --------- Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 w/car. Call for appl, Tues Pacific PRINT Shop Bindtt Coat· P .' • 540-42)). sturd.)'. No ant.1ques. Frtt.('IJ' KJTalEN Herpen. Apply ilii..j..;;piimii.iim-8522iiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiii0m Personnel Services ing 1 r I ni in Jn g stitch· Secy, Cont>troctlon $650 ft!8.80nable pnce. Pb. Mike Meu. Vtt'de O>nv. Hosp. 661 112 No. Tower ing' exper. \Vining to Statistical Typist. $450 at 891--7791aftf!l'5. sturdy. No antiques. Free or Horses 856 ways, Awnin(, Boot. Uke reasonable 1irlce. Ph. l\tike nt>w. $900. cash or trade for C.tnttt St, CM. 548-1'1585. MACHINE Union Bank Square work 2nd shift. Exeeptional Sec:etar_y-Pot~nt1a~ .. $50l'l SURPLUS SALE LAB Aalstant, (will trainJ OPERATORS Orengr, Caltr. _,ppor. \V/JO"(IWing nat'I co. ~.Y. Single-~oday SOO'.I 6 breakfast tbls Ir. 4 chr!i. 10 at 891-7'1'll alls. *APPALOOSA* fishing boat. (71<) ~9 dnys, or 531-5607 alter 6 PM. Some b'Pbia req'd, F/Hme. 547-6446 l1nntt"d. orx•nings. x Int. Se\: y, Hi-~ash1on SfiOtl Danish arm chrs. 10 coffee 6:30--3pm. $3'7S mo. 546-6961 . Zl!'; F.. Common,vtal!h work!ni;: ronds. w/outstand· ~~l~nder's ~gf'~~ this. 8 end Ibis. Can be Sttn !'ILOT interested In joining 3 year old gelding, Newport Beach T(>nnis Clut., reg istered. $475. '!'RUCK/Camper Specil~I 'Tl :i4 Ton Gi\1C -Sie.rra PU \V/12' 1\'l'Ckt'nder camper. Less lhan 11,()XI mi. $5895, 962-3:;13 wknd or alt 5 pm. '68 OODGE Can1per Van· Bubbl<' lop, auto. Sacrjlice, make offer. 212 Santa Isa!)(>!, C.M. 645-7799. LAUNDROMAT Attendant. Some cxperlent'C In mill ing Suite r . fo'ullf'rfon init fringe ben(!fjts. No. ~~~.18 ·• between 9 & 12 wkdays. p/time help. Particularly machint'!I, lathes & drill 870 l Bll Am('r\('On Corr('11pond<'ntt Unit C, 2941 Grace Ln. CaU me fi..,t. 64J>.179t. CALL ANYTIME Musical Instrument. 8l2 540 • 3803 lnttrested in couples. Reply preq desirable, • School. 4401 Birch SI., NB. SHOE Salesman, e'Xpcr. By Costa Mesa. to Jack T. Cox, 2212 Dupoiit, MAN wanted for 1'E'tall JI.in;, Mlle11, 546-7300. appt. Ask for Mr .1co'=NT=E~M"ro=RA=.R'°'y,-,1y,..,.1,-d°'i~n. 1'~ENDER Stratocaster, 1'~uzz-SHETLAND Pony, perfect \Vah , & Tel~co a.nip/speak· for children, S\\.'CCt nuJured er, Xlnt cond. $450. Aft. 5 & trained. ·$1.'iO. Full saddle Irvine. CaJit 9215&t, Cal l For Appt heaHh fixw:is, s a J es and PJUNT Shop Folder Opr Shoemaker, Phone 644-4223 ing room table, 11ix chairs, lndu,trl~l Relations merchandlsin;. Must have C utt i 11 g & folding t'X· or 548-6.S41. \\1alnut tinish ~.Matching LEGAL TRAINEE I health food OI" retail food f)('r. \Villlng to "''Ork 2nd Service Station Se.Jc11 man China cabinet $250. (714)1 494-9401 clerk t>xperience. 979-9495. ~hilt. Jmmcd. openings. Ex· fuU time, eve. t}Xperlenced Complete .set $400. 54M283. MANAGEM&.'\IT Tra.inee!I, rtplional oppor. w/growing neat in appearance apply PECAN coilee 4 end tables must be over: 21 yrs. Apply nat'I co. Xln't working mornings 2590 Nev.rport Blvd. $275. Decorator dinette .set Thur&: July 13th, l03m-6pn1 cunds'. w/~utstandi~g fringi! Service ~ ii;tation attendant $135. 567-31ll. P~f & 'vknds 5.16-5011. & tack. $50. 830-5.168. FENDER J aguar GuiLar · 2~ yr old mare. 13 hand!!. w/custom padded b;ick. $300. Tack included. Ex- Hard case. $175. 544-3417. perienced rider. 494·5~. Pianos/Organs 826 CUS'I'Oi\1 dsl JSLANDER-32, xtra nic~$15 M. 27' lnbrd cruising sloop \Vork in Newport Center st.art $425 mo, Requires se<:· marlal txJ>tr, type 60 wpm, lite SIJ. TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach Equal Oppor. Employer at ?de 'n Eds Pizza Parlour, bcne!its. No. Amencan Cor-part time, eve. and week DESK, coffee/end tabJe set, 1Z131 Garden Grove Bl, GG. :;;s.~~enc~B Sc~ls. ~401 ends experienced, apply 2590 glass top table, lamps, etc. MANAGER TRAINEE 541;:.7~~·· . n. Miles, Newport Blvd. 54~ or 645-6068. Fee Paid. AUlo f'ee Jobs. Real Estate C ret SERVICE Station llelp, ex· 8' SOFA & love 11eat, never Xln 't carter training 'vilh New or expet1en ed • jo' rth per. Full & P/Time. 990 E. used. Bolh $150. ~wing modem far·sigtifed corp. Company tbat'scgr;,W:. ~ Coast Hwy., N.B. mach $25. Pvt Pty 963-7910. Good co. benefits tor ag· you do not have a lic:nse SMALL consumer producti> ll' angle couch {8' x 3') Orig Piano-Milton Spinet $375 548·5662 STORE PARTY Mon, July 17, 7-9 pn1 I Boo1'and l[•)f ] $4500.A,<Ty.675-89911. ~iiiiiMRiiiii. ii•iiEQii"9iiiiimiieniitiiiii~;"-~ -H7y~d-ra-a1~,-,~c"a_m_pe_r~J.-l..,ka­ $139.50 plus tax. General 900 • 968-0845 . Roland S. Barcume 644-0023 MACHINISf A, milling, must have O\\'n tools, ex. \vilh Tim Sto?TS- CR.ttstanding organist from 1-lammond Organ Company. Hear the old & ne1v in llammond Organs. \VAI\'TED to buy -bont tr.i.iler lor 20' boat. 646--4323 or oos.3361 ask ror Glenn '66 0\Vt'llS 25' on CUston1 4 wh. tlr. Loaded w/extrns. ~ to apprcc. '!\'lust Sac SJ.500, 5ll·3.l74. Cycles, Bl'kes, Scooters 925 per., • daya-10 hr day. Mon L .. al Sec'y $9000 thru Thurs. Interviews 7 to Fee.Nego. Free It: Fee Jobs. 5:30 pm. Vought Dlvisio11 or Established firm just moved Com1>uter Equipment, 290 to new offices wants ~re-Fischer Ave, Costa Mesa, tary who wUJ do same. 540-10'l4. gressive lhinking inWvidual. cbeck on our ' 1nanufacturing requ i re s $000 now $115. Call John Goss, 833-2700. $49. matw-e female. Typing SH, 675"0387 Dennis & Dennis Personnel billing exp. N. B, area. RUGS, love SNt!, TV, cof- Agency, 2IB2 MichellJOn Dr., Good salary, working concis fee tbl, end tbls, dbl bed, Irvine. • Rea! Estate & fringe benefits, Phone dressers, Misc. 64&-1456 L1cens1n9 Course 64&-m«- Refreshm€'ntl'I HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS 2854 E. Coast Hwy. l 9i l Ya n1e.ha DT -1. ?.'JO ('(! Dirt Rike. Rear Knobby tire, c:ocpan&ion chamber, coinpression release street equipment $475. Also14 cycle' t1'ai ler, ramps, lights, ad~ ju;;tablc axle & to'vbar ~ or best offer over $:n:I. ~ Victoria, CM 548-0900. Great co. Call Sharon Wall, MAIDS WANTED 833-2700, Dtnnla & Dtnnls Jamaica Inn l\1ANICURisr part Xlnt kic. Newport area. Call 548-4179. time. Beach Full sales training program ==,-,-..,-,-~--1SPANlSH style Sota~lOO. -no cost. Management op. ~RE clerk. fm.iaie, Pflrl Lrg bottom. 644·ll42. Corona del Mar Boats, Maint./ Service Personnel Agency, 2082 2101 E. Coast Hwy, NB llflchetaon Di-.. '"'in•. 1--.MA="1D"'S'"W"A"N"T"-E"'Dc-e Marine Carpenter • HeJi-arc Welder . . lime poss. full time, neat ~--~----= portunities. Ask for Mrs. appearanct' 2 days/wk Garage Sale 112 644-8930 -"'Pl-=cANO SALEI Piano used in teachers studios: floor models; dis· continued nlOdels; damaged cases. They're all .here & on saJe at Wscounts to $100. Wallichs Music City 902 hTARINE ft1 echanlc F'n >c estimates. Good \\'Ork. :Fair prices save you money. Call Burr Buman 6T:>-8677. QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY .PILOT WANT AD Mature. Must be exper. F/ time. See PeMJOnnel Mgr, Balboa Bay Club, 1221 \IJ. Coast Hwy, NB. Fast rcsulta are just a pbone call away 642-5678. Will pay lop wages for 2 years cxperi(>nce. ISLANDER YACHTS n1 \V. 17th St. Costa cMf'sa ;~~.~!.,.,fur iniorma tion at 494-.99?5. ' • -----------= -~ l :::====-~---I REF $50-Ladder, garden Tarbell Realtors TELEPHONE s.i.,,, s.n tools. burglai-aJarm..tapc Boats/ Marine Equip. South Coast Plaza Character boat, 21' ---------· 1972 T r i u m p h BonnevillC: 904 ••••••••••••••••••• MECllANlC·Serv. Sta. Cdi'1 area. Top pay. To $1000 & up. Musi know alignment & air cond. Ph. 673-8818. ;;-;===70==-~-I Southern Orange County's recorder, l!IOfa. chall', p1c- RECEPTIONIST: Fee 1'~avorite Ne\vspaper from tures, dog & runway. 3109 Paid/Also Fee Jobs. Ho\I/ YoUr home. Make as much Roosevelt Way. 979-8958. would yau like to work for as. ~u rx:ed. Generoll8 coin-v ASES, dishes, pans, -lamps, fast growing real estate & mlSilJOn on each sale. Call b t a n k e 1 s , g I a s s e s . investment ro.? Y o u n g 557-6739. Tues-Wed. 9 A M • 9'l6 modern co-workers. $:~ TOOL A1aker, re ti r c d, Capital, oU National, CM. Call 1-lelen Hayes, 540-605.5 p/time. 3 hrs/per day. Call GARAGE Sale: Liv, nn, br 540.2830 4 cyl inboard/Exc1?l rond . S"'t:-o-re-,-=R:-e-s7ta_u_r_a_n7t,---I Parade Favorite 833-1445 G:'JOec. 5spd. Excel cond~ Less than 300l mi. Havf!' ne'" LA job. Must sell or tl'ade for p.u. truck. $1350. J\'lorn or aft flpm-536-8492. , LADY'S 10-spt.'Cd French im- port (MotolX'l'ane) bicyclf'. 20" Crame. Red. Ridden 1 mile. $.SS. 548-4337. Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 0 after 5PM, 542-2859. & kit f 9388 El earn· Harbor Bl at Ada1ns. CM. TRAINEE Ave, 'F.~1:°9s2-l248~ 100 INSIDE SALES Machinery 816 Bar 832 Boats, Power 906 ---------1!' DELI CASE 5'18-2524 A CONVENIENT SHOPPINC AND SEWING GUIDE fOR THE MEDICAL OB GYN oUiet!: req exp. back oUice girl & J ron t o ff ice gir l W/insurance exp. Sc n d resume to P.O. BOX 3992, Long Beach. RECEPTIONIST • PIST. Corporate offices. 50-60 WPM. No agencies. For app!. call Dick Beau- champ, 546-0370 weekdays. 350 HONDA, custom paint· lots of chrome, xtras, run perf! Sef' to appreciate! $600. 968-2558. Fine growing co. needs man ---------to learn sales from the in· A L L E N SYNCROGRAPH, side. Lite typing r equired. MODEL E 1415 HD J7F, BRAND new bicycltt-Lady', 15' Glass Flat Bottom Ski Hull TV, Radio, HiFi, Stereo 136 CAt. ON THE GO. Call Don Jackoon 540-6055 DISTRIBUTOR l\!ACHJNE. SfEREO 1972 Ga r r a rd Whitc/n1etalfla.ke red, 6.'i hp Rale.igh Sport, $70. Coastal ;\gency: 219 O 542-1734 evse & weekends. equipped with full sized pro-l\.1crc O/B, till trailer $1200. &l2..(i523 alter S or 6f2-4321.· For an •d in Wom•n's World Coll Mory Beth 641-5478, oxt 330 MEDfCAL Receptionist, will train. Swing shirt. Personnel Hoag 1-Iosp, NB. 1-Iarbor Bl at Adams. Cl\1. Mi5cellaneous 818 tessional changer, AM/FM 836-1954. ~xt. 233. · RREECCEEPPTTIUOJiNiil"ii"'o1o;;,c;dkoc;:tt;;o;;,.:;,l""iiiiiii;~.;;;,~~:i;i~i.I~:;;;;;::::;:::::::-~= stereo receiver, sl!aled air-36. STEPHENS 1971 YA.i\UJIA 1za MX MEN & \VOMEN -Company ff "'""' "" TRAINEE DINING Rm set, 1-farvest suspension speakers, tape 1 Low n1iles and ready to race rod · 0 ice .• ,, ... '" w.p.m. Call tbl/6 chairs, llutch, Mahog, deck & head phooo plug-i" Sedan Sport Fisher Cl •~ p uc1ng medic a I pro-548-0076. Good f " Every Extra Mint Concl ean! ~ grams is interviewing all o c skills \\'ith some sh antique white. Dry sink. jacks. Brand new in box & Ask for John 64+-1742 Pantskirt Hit Flare-Sleeve News 9188 ' 'ES -12 ;.., .4-16 l-18-20 • • • • • • • • • e • e ••• •• , • •· • • • • • I o e ...... '• .. •• • • • lnr 1lTMir... 11Te..-r ... Just ONE P AT TERN PART! Cut pants and skirt all in one piece .. sew one sciun. bir\d edges, wrap and go! It's fashion's newest §uc- cst>s. Prinll'rt Pattern 9188: NEW tflis:i;es' Siz('s 5110.12): l\i(l4- 16l: Ll18·20J. Sn1all takes 31;4 yards 4;}.inc h lahric. Sl<;Vt;NT\'.FfVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 ce11L'! for carh pattern fur Air i\'lail nnrl SpeciaJ J{andl· ing: othcrwi:sc third-class delivel'y ,\\'ill take three "'eeks or 1no1·c. !Wod to ftfarian ftfartin, the DAlLY PILOT, 1·12, Pattern Dept.. 232 \\'est 181h St., J"\e1v l'Ot'k, N.Y. 10011. Print NA:\U:, ADDU.t.;.~ \\' i th Zll', SIZl: And ST\"Lt: Nl'?UBEH. SEE l\10RE Spring Fashions and choose one pa.ttel'n (rte from f'l('W Spring·Summer Cataq. All 1fzc1! Only 50c. 1N~ANT SEWING BOOK acw today, wear tomorrow. IL IN STANT FASfllON BOOK -Hundreds o I tublon fads. $1. DAILY PILOT WANT AD FOR ACTION ••• 642-5678 7019 Wha t's on lop in fashion? This (Jaresleeve success! P e e k -a-boo pineapples combine with flare sleeves, peplum lo grace skirts, pants. Quick, easy to crochet of ~port yam. Pattern 701!1: sizes 8-18 included. Easy directions. ages who have had heart Receptionst • Secretary. \viii land right gal this legal Beaut. cust. made. Spinet guarani~. Originally pric· Sl6.~ 646-~ ---~H~EU=~iET=---1 disease of. major surgery. SmaU 0.C. firm wants >.:tra spot Xtra Jong term. desk-fine cond. Gone \Vith ed at S279.95. Balance SS7 23' Chris Craft Bell Super Magnum $30 Call 636-1682 Mon or Tues :riharp girl. ~9425. Irvine 540-4450 Tiie Wind Lamp. Antique cash or small payments. Exp Cntiser. Flanked hul! Ask for John 644-J7.12 5pm-10pm for further in-SECR~TARY !\.EVER A F'EE AT TEJ\1PO trays. 2 braided rugs 9xl2. Lay· away D e p t , 145 hp cng. Runs & Jooks gd ,70 Honda 350-Strcct. formation. --. TEMPO l:M'O. Antique 2 dra\Vet' Oak .TI4/893--0501. Sl·lSO. 646--91))) MOTEL maid, "pericnced tn:itneh ~· ~3 ks secretary Temporary Help chest. Antique caster set-6 LEAR Jet stereo 8 portable CAlr2:"1 1969, hull No. 77, 2500 mi. S<l7S Must sell 'v1 min. yrs exper. pc. An1ique lad'-. chair & kl ' !'>44-34l 7 preferred. Newport Beach Ba k d · . ,,_.,., tape player. solid state, spar 1ng c.'Ond., bot to ni c groun m accounting ·fem i;Ja nd & n1any othel's LEATHERS 1'raveLOO:gc, 642-8252. h(>Jpfu1, but not net.:css. TYPISTS S48-9?GO. . l\fodel P-510. Plug into recently painted, s uper M v 1 . 28 ,_ cigarette lighter or uses 6 D <'lean, O\vner, 64a-5682 1 oto .... Vaist ·•• renglh 28 NEED IMMEDIATELY! POS:ition requires statis~ic~l "Kelly Girls" are special STEREO: Unclaimed 1912 batteries. Hardly used. Paid $45. Ask for John 644-1742 BOOKKEEPER -accounts typing & use of 19 key. Xln 1 girls. \Vork for the top com-Garrard System. A u to $.15 -M"ll $20. 542r1734 eves. 23' SOUTH Coast Runabout. * '68 HONDA 450CB. LO\V payable, 3 10 5 years ('Xp. workl.ng conds & c 0 · panies in Orange Co. \Vork turntabll', air suspension \\'ttkends. Chrysler Crtnvn Marine liO Mt. SHARP. •A25 OR OF- F t al n good t · benefits ;;,,.-.,.,==-~~-~~ h.p. $2.j()() or n1ake ofter. '" as, e • YPISI. ·· • where you like, when you snoakers w /c<os1ov•r 2 f'ER "'"l'" I, ·1· · · o Call Mr• Sm t .... ' l" COLOR Packard Bell Collect (213) 2 5 5 . 714 3 · .... .,,.... LJ. am1 1ar1ty with . P. • 00 like, for as long as you like. system AM/FM/MPX c h · f 644-3389 onsole, xlnt cond, $11~). (Business hours), 19n YAJ\1AHA 250 MX, very tee n1ques pre ctTCd. S.1\ary I Excellent earnings. Weekly radio & tape deck. Still 548-8740 clean, bas only run 5 tanks lo $6.'iO D.O.E. Send resume pay checks. No f ees. brand new & guar. Sold for I :~~~~~~~:'!~ 16' Boslon \Vhaler, 100 HP 10 Mrs. McCLURE. SALES personnel, exper. Interviews J\.fonday through $395.85. Pay oU ha.I. of Johnson. 3 yrs old. Xlnt _o_f~g'°'a~•·~Ph~._830-__ 72_78_·~-- P. 0. Box UIIO Male & female. Salary t,riday from 1-4. Call or $195.47 or take over small Ii: cond. $2750. 673-0220 or 1970 Triumph custmn N' pt Beach. Cal. 92~ Open. Apply in person, visit. pymts of $9.00 mo. U.S.A. free to You S "6'"73-6.552-,,.-·~-----=pe~IJ~ ~~8 NEW FACTORY EXPANSION $508-$650 Per Mo. Full Time Young men-mechanic:\! ni; tltudc helpful, but not n'- quired. Must he 19 or o\•cr. Able to start \\'Ork im· mediately, if accepted. For Job Informa tion Call Tuesday 10 a.m. • 4 p.m. 776'-SSSl NURSES, pvt. duty, all types, all shifts. Lescoulie Nurse's Regi s I ry. 351 Hospital Rd., N.B. 642-995:> or 540-99~ lnteivie1vs ~5 M/F' J11URSEs, pvt. duty, all types all shifts. Lesmulie Nurse's Registry. 351 H~pilal Rd .. N.B. 642-9955 or 540-99;>4 l ntervie1vs 9-5 M/F Fashion GaUery, 660 N. _KELLY GIRL Stereo Equip \Varehouse, ~.,-------' ' 17' figerglass outboard w/ Coast 1-lwy, Laguna Bch. 2!E Business C1r. Dr. 179 E. 17th St., Cosla Mesa, 3 Lintts, 2 T imes, $2.00 hvin 20 hp l\1crcs, big v.•heel '71 Hodaka Super Rat, desert Secretary Personnel Irvine 833-1441 64_>-_2442~·~==~~~-••••••••••I trier. $1100. 846-8058. ready, fine tuned. $300 • --&16-6501 altl'r 5p1n. Must h~vc good :i;ecretarial TURRET I th · t f * AUCTION * FREE-Cute, loving kittens. 16' 19n NE\VPORT, 911~ '70 BSA 6~ PERFECT. 600) skills, pleasant personality,. ~ e ~pe1 aor or Fine Furniture Need good homes. 6 tahby Johnsonfullyequipped , be able to ass 2nd operation, exp nee. Tap· .$775. 547-9645; 67a.4808_ mi. S300 + .lake over pay- Tesponsibilltiei; with ul:;itl: matic Corp., 845 W . .16th, & Appliances rolored, 1 white w/ blk tail I ·1"'v"AN""'r"E"o:-to:-c-",.~n"t-,l-05.""-10-,,·1~c, n1cnt. 494-3840 supervision. Type 6.5, IBM Newport Beach 548-3404. Au~tions, Friday, ~:30 p.m. & ears. Call 837-fiXl3. bay runabout to Aug. 15th. cKA~WcA~ScA7K~l~90".-A-.t-co~nd. elec <Exec). Shrthnd 100. WIDOWER w/2 girls ages l Windy s Auction Barn ADORABLE C h i h ua h ua 644-8270 very low mileage. Call eves, Starting salary $707 mo. & 4 needs live-in Nanny. 20751At Newport, CM 646-8686 Purebred Pups. 4 months 9. BOSTON Whaler type 548-9584. Send resume to San Joaquin Young(>r woman pref. Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'I old. • ~ • dinghy. new cond. Without i--;Y;-:am=aha:--;;;llO;-:Tra;;--"ilb'°'i'°ke-,- School District, 14600 S. \V. 5'18-6723. CLOSING shop DISCOUNT-t S29S ,..,, """• Clean, tow mile,..-. Sa d C E I . . mo or. . onJ-\ll1V'I. -~ n anyon, · ivine, XI.NT Oppor. Nat'! Concern ED stock, metal shelves, $145 642--0762 Cal. £12650. Has openJngs for route glass cabinet counter. Craft 11 'L, I Boats, Rent/Charl'r 908 BSA r,o cc, rebll •"1· Xlnt Sec'y Buyer Trne to $600 salesmen in O T. 96~16. & Hobby Boutique, 211 W. hts and Supplies _ ~ 27' AUX. SLOOP t.'Ond. $225. ' No sh. Key spot for advance-\Vilson St, C.M. 646-~7 Call 646-4629 t · d · · 'Perfect for weekend crul,.s m(>n 1n ynamic growmg ~ SUMMER SALE Irvine area electronics firm. , Merchandisa I "'-PERSIAN RUGS Pets, General 850 to Catalina. Fully equipped. \Viii train lo buy soft ite1ns. . V 20% off-July lSth lhru Jlsl * "Sherry's". Grooming 10 SS radio, RDF. sleeps six . BeautiJu l future. Top hette-1•••••••••• Call Keiman's l0:30 to S:30 6'2" headroom, com plete !its. Abigail Abbot Personnel I" yrs in all bl'l'eds. IFree galley, Club rates. Lots of Agency, 230 W. Warner, Appliances 802 Corona del Mar. 675"7340 pickup). Boarding, poodle parking. Call for info. Suite 209, S.A, 557-612:2. ~lAYTAG -·'-ian 14' Boat & trailer. Evinrude puppies. 546-28'18. 557-9046 all. 6:30. • ash .,;-~""$100. ~~ 3.5hp $.350. 7' steel bench, REG. TB Geld., bay, 4 yrs, S w ers ..,.,, to ..... ,n 36" high. M-1 rifle. 23" col-6 1 h nd Gd Boats, Sail . ecretary del!Wr w/l yr. guarn l . a s. mover. $650. 1-----------Sh, typing, pub~1c 1;11ntact. 8.19-1778. · or TV console. 540-6687. 54~4; 832-4038. MariOC"l' 31. Loaded! 909 Mobile Homes 935 PLUSH Shasta motor home. 18' Comp. self contained. Aft 6-497-2'.lSil . Motor Homes Recept1orust '00 Owens 25' on Cuslom 4 Cats 852 WindVain, Re!rig. Ready Sale~ Dept. P/F. II v Y OVE~ .m \vashers. dryers. wh. trlr. Loaded w/extras ------------to go anywhere. Owner. phones. refrige~tors from $39.95. See to apprec. Must Sac SAVE uii from a life of ZlJ/598-2963 SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS --,N"'u"'ns=E"'S:-;A"ID°"E"-s,-- for each pattern -add 25 Bayvieiv Conv. Hosp. cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Specia.I I-Ian· * 54G-56!l0 * dling; otherwise third·class OFFICE girl. f/lime, perm delivery will take lhrc(' position. Hun!. Ikh area. weeks or nwre. Send to Ex-per. prcfd. 857-2561. Pl\RKlNG Lot l\.1aintenancc. Nights only. 512 nights. $150 per wk. CaU 557·2494 btwn 8 & 10 an1. Bookknper F /C 5'15--0780. $.1500. 5.11-.1.174. starvation! Tv.t> female kH-•32•·-,eo=1u..,m""b"i-a-cSa~b-re-.-~~P-,~,,· 1 Hvy payroll. i\1ust type 45 KENMORE \\.'8$hcr $45. Ken HYDRO plane no eng $50. tens, 1 white, 1 smokey grey X l n t r & c e . S 4 9 5 0 . n1ininiun1. more washer $65.~ Recond. & Dune cycle $75. 6 ni' un· w/wht markings. Grey one 2 I 3 -7 7 6' -6 1 71 days, Jr. Accountant Guar. Free Del. 546-8672. finished 110 layout $85.1~h=as=ha-d=•ho_ls~·'"64..,'--720~1-'+--_2_1_,:1-°'3-,.•7~--08=72=o7v'"e_•·~=-- Company benefits FRJGIDAffiE cross top freez· 548-0012 FREE kit1cns-Cute & loving. 20' VIKING SLOOP Office Supervisor er re!rig. ll"cu. ft. Like new. W-AN-TE-0-10-buy--'"-'to-·6?-EI WC!llned & trained. 6 Tabby New sails/mint cond. G 'l O ros Cal 6-x: ~""' " colored, l white w/ blk. tail si-en fc skills & ability to ., .• · I •..-...vu., Caml"" or Ranchero truck. Call 7 -61<H1000 handl I .... & ea.rs. 83 -5003. e prop e. RCA Electric "'-""r Must be n:rasonabl~. Phone 13\-2 fl. Lone Star sallboat Allee Brooks, the DAILY PILOT, 105, Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Statk>n. New York, N. Y. lOOll. Print Nan~. Addrel!lll, Zl11, Pattern Nu1nber. NEEDLECRAIT '72! Cro- chet, knil, etc. Free di rec· GI I F id .., • .,... BURMESE Kittens.Ad<lrable PBX. Answering service. • · .r r ay X1nt cond. 6 cycle. Sell or 642-4689. purebred, 9 wka. $35 ea. with trtr. $650. Ex~, pret. Relief shiJt. Xln t Typuit trade 645--'Tmc ~~O~LD~re~cl.,--c~ha~ir_ne_w~ll~OO~ -'1115 •atly am o<ev<"S. 847-6477 ... -Dictaphone · · · ' · ' ~ iiStiieiiaiidioY.,"~ .. r,.k,. . .,53&-888_,...1...., ... IKnowlcdge of IBM Com~r Rent Washers/Dryers Carved .chess setkl20. Cralg$"" bogs &S4 32' Colwnbia Sabre, slps 4, helpful. $2. \Vk. FuU maint. car stereo, sp en. 1v. xlnt race. $4950. 21 3 : t:ions, 50c, OPEN ROAD f>.!OTOR HOMES 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. Garden Grove 8944179 '69 STARCRAFT , • Te n t trailer, •. sleeps 6 wi th el~ tric retrigerator &: heater IGP2968i SIJ99. BEACH CITY DODGE NIGUEL * 6.1~00 * ,_64-=2-3771_7·--=-.,--:o--I OBEbIENCE Class To Start 77&-6171 days; 213, 377--0872 lnJ<h111t J\f1tcr1unt1 Rook. 1 ~ Wed. J I 2Glh 7 ~ PM 1 27635 Forbes Rd. Rf.TRIGERATOR, v(fTy 4 B:and new Pinto tires UY :.,.,. ' n =·~v~·~··~=~=~~~~-l{l;55 &ach Boulevard PERSONNEL SECRETARY t~':'; $~;:'·.,, ll•irpin Cro· T::cre:;;ri;;, a~f~t ~~~:!,..~ Laguna N~l clean, lnskle & out. $60. 7Ul w~nm~3 x 13 $50/Best ~n ~e:if°~~T S =~ 32' COLUMBIA Sabre. Sleeps Huntington Beach ~het • ovf'r 26 d<'sl,11:115 to representative in all areas Personnel Agency Westminster J\ve., \Vestm. 0 er · • old. S.1&-4928. 4· $4900* 846-.3445 * 1 ____ <71A_l_5'0-__ 2GG0 ____ 1 n1flke. $1 .00. I or recruilln~ & maintain 831-t4n Camtrat& LO~WER $65. Other I====~=--~-'""===c--c:--c..,.--.,,7 M • l11o;f!.1nt enx-.hel J~k -pcr!IOnnel flle11. P••-•incl I"";::::::;:::;::::;::: Equipment 808 ml8C. Garden toools. PUP'PJ'F.S AKC p 0 0 d I e. 14' HOBIE cot ... n1os old. * arv1n Pearce* I I ,,... • * 557-3111 * teacup &: toys. Xl:rn 1\ny fe. Rncing Mggt~ SJCKX> ,.(•aro by pictures! Pal-lmckground helpful, but 1l('lt Yorkie. •Stud a er v Ice , ' Call 64$..1432 . ";"'-$1.00. """'"· Typl0< 70 w.p.m. & SECRETARIES Rtnl•I Dark Rooms CABIN Furn. MammoU1 Lk•.' 893-9719. Motor Homes (;01nplclfl lrultlnt Olft~ Book ability I() ~ d.ictapho~. "Kelly Girls" are ~ Air Cond.J.tper hr. Income T~ ~.Sac. '4500. ""===-==---,,-KITE. GOOD COND. -----• -$ 1 :r& than 100 g1fff -Xln'l ("(). benefilll. glrls. \Vork for the top com· Daves Camera For Quick Sale. 531""3374. FIANS. Champ. sire, -HIWAY"TR:AILER. · · Call Mrs Smoot pan!., In Orang• Co. Work 474 E. 11.th cc, CM AVON ~uct• & .,.,...,_ pt/sh. WW rel! """"::ably S600 968-1294 Sales • Rentals Complele .,. ... llook -644-llaf wher< )'Oil like, when you 646-2136 or bottt.,.''; ebe<ks pie-;,; to good homes. lll a•• 49' 8 M<ler Sloop. convene(! 5511-3222 $1.00. ' like, for "s long as you like. 642-1012 2474 Santa Ana Ave. 1-6 537~0. for cruising. Xlnt ed. $16,500 JI .fltry 1luc BookJ • 50c. PEJlMANENT re l i ab I e Exctllent ta.rnlngs. \Yttkly KOBENA ~21 &1per 8 m:wie Sat & Sun. IRISH Setter, 10 mo. female, 644-4048 -64J..6146. la:t S. Vllla&e Way, s.A, , 'Boot Of u Prise Af&haat. cltanlng lady w Io w n pay cll('CkJ. No fees. camera. JnstAnt cartridge CARPET rol\.,sALE ARC. S&criflcti to lovlqr --c.~t-~Ell"ctl~-Co~nd~.--1 ·n Explorer ~'. air, stereo. GOc. transportation. 1 clay a wk. Jntervlewa Monday through loadin(. Powtr tel~o by Carpet Ll.).'er Call home. ;tOO. &f&.-009. Trier included. $395. fully tqulpped. tleeps t. :,ulll Book I· 16 pe.ttft'M. \\'ed. or Thura. 8:1.S-2:15. "T'·day trom 1-4. Call or wide •ogle lens. Almost • 546-5745 540.• • ELEGANT AFGHANS pet & $»-4179/MO-J>48. ~l~,1963E~~t. rt•Wle . J\l~Ml.u Quilt R Sl4. 642-2374. v sit. KEL y new. $75 or make offer. lhow puppies 4 all bl'ef.'dlna CAI.r20 f!Xtl'nl tncludl~ CM' ~ ewpo vd., 50c "' ook t -PRESSMAN ~1 Bu1t ..,.. G~~L Dr. p~~~"":.:.:.:-. ~do·m ,:~bt•~~ ~. s~~ ~"'~ ~~c. 01 moorln~ !or ••mmer. ~R.;,t A ~tor Home QH Ull r~r Tod11.)"11 l.h•lnr-Ir 1n UJ..1441 "' ~ call 5f6.U2S $2,7"'.i(I. 6'7342M. ~ f V Ion Is •·-autl!•·• ~tt<•ns. ~. 1 Year mh1im11m «'XW. v e Ulled. c. c. auto. 1:1.8 f-55 Males, $100. Females, $125. B SI ft~ or your .cat ~ ~ ~· • ~ A B D'ck 360 •-I k l""""'""'""""""""'""""""' "'7, 98 oots, lps/vt>:ks flu * 1-'301 on • · t "" le : • mm. No. 306666. \Vitti niuh Vac•DC.les cmt tnot'ley! Rent "" ...,4 Alt 6 wkt!a,y!'. .,.,.... ••••••••••••••••••• Camr"ra, SAiary -incrntive.. II Tilt fa.ltell dmw lh the \Vest attachment. flOO or make )'OUr houte, apt., store AKC KeeAAond p11pc. 7 wick. 2 DOAT Slip r11.cl1'13 Stutf I ;•.-;72:;';-LIFn;iE'1111;i:i;~IE~A'U,/L~ZI"'' "=".ti Call &ti.9470 • • .a Daily Pilot aa.ttJcd oUer. 5U-17J.t eve1 & b\cfl., etc. thru a O.ity Pilot/ M/3 F. Stw:>ts. C.U ~ Shirt, Uj) to ss· sail boat or 2J'. Alr. lux. I:: 111.ftty ~p., o.rr.11 Mlll'Plty _M_. Glz."6 __ -_7S. _____ 1 -lterxlo. Oaulli..i.,t.d. -7L _or ____ l_. ----!S' PW!' booL 673-6238. xlnt ralea. Pvt. llCJ•, fl63.L197 I ' I • Motor Home Rontola A vallable for dally, -kly ar monthl,y bu!L 21', 23', WILL PAY·OYER Kelley Blue Book U>f_25' atlf «ml&lnl!d Mo- tor Hom.., all <qUlpt with pnuator, roof air, and many other extru. AU CoachH .... 19'12 mocld.o. We have the all aced Amtio alJO. Pleaae call 839-9560. Tr•lltr1, Travel MS For 1111 mocltl, clHn, CAPRI low mile199 domes- TF.NTTRAILER C)rcll111 \Vlll Appreciate! !~~~";!".'"'·truck& or --,-71_C_A-PR_I __ '65 Travel M1t1 Sleepe; 7, kitchen A add on cabana. Fnlmc compleU!lY rebuilt to carry 3 motor· cycles. Extra Clean. Call and &U. for Bu.yer DAYE ROSS PONTIAC 540-9451 or I 2CIO Horbor Blvd. Aft. 9 P.M., 540-3894 Costa M1H 546.8017 18' PROWLER. Sell-con-WE PAY TOP tained. Like new! 1'11l1ly, CASH litany Extras. E a s y I i r e hitch. Sway bar, Bike racks. Air cooltt plus more $1975. 962-1689. 2 WHEEL ateel beuase trailer $100. -Auto Service, Parts 949 GOODYEAR Polyglass Blems. All sizes. }U Jack- •rs $34.50 pr, 14x7 lttags 119.90. TIRE CITY tor URd c.'.r. a: trucks, j\llt can tza rw-tree tatimate.. GROTH CHEVROLET NEWPORT IMPORTS !100 W. Co85I Hwy., Nev.1>0rt Beach 642-9405 WE PAY TOP DOUAR FOR TOP USED CARs 1950 Newport, Costa MHa ll )'Ollr car ls extra clean, ~~~~~==~= I lff UI first. ALLEN SNYCROGRAPH BAUER BUICK htODEL E 1415 HD J7F 2925 Harbor Blvd. DISI'RIBUTOR 1ttAOllNE. Costa Mesa 979.2500 5'1:'-1734 Eves & weekenclf1. IMPORTS WANTED , POP.SCJIE engine, 1750 cc. Orana: Counti chrm & hand ~Int, 1961 V\V TOP i B~ body, no eng. 552-7'916. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '58 Ford ~ Ton P. U. for J.8881 J3eacb Blvd. parts, 3 speed, six cylinder H. Beach. P.a. IC7..a55!5 4 Spd, Air Condillo~, Radio, !.lags, (284BUJ). $1995 COAST IMPORTS 1(0)..1200 W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. Newport Beach CTI4) 642-0406 546-4529 cnROEN Hard Top &: Soft Top, f Spd, Radio, Healer, .U,000 actual miles, (WTY584l $1095 or beat o[fer COAST IMPORTS 1000-UX> W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. Newport Beach (TI4) 642.ooq& 546-4529 '10 Datsun, 1600 Roadster, xln't cond. Best ofr. Call engine. 979-4575. HYDRAULIC Camper, hand le noor. Special 1~1 T. Door. $105 + tax. ~5. WilJ... Buy your car paid for 0•~"'-~7690=·="'"".-,== or not. Call Ralph Gordon '72 DATSUN 24(}-Z. Brown, 673-0900 -445 E. Coast Hwy. 7,000 ml. ?tfust sell. $4350. Newport Beach. Eves/v.•knds 644--0708. l-r1 1 •• , '· !ti 17331 BEACH BLVO. HUNTINGTON BEACH • • ' 8 >11·6666 MGB '69 A1GB w/w, R&fl, dark gm, make offer. (213) 430-4726 Seal Beach OPEL '70 OPEL 1900 'RALL YE KADETTE 1§) Autos, lmportld 970 --'70-DAT UN 1000-UJOW. PaciflcCst. Hwy ~~--1 Newport Beach fTI4) ~ 546-029 Dune Buniff •, 956 Wo" l'lfYERS Tolld~ atrttt : legal. .Pftfect cond!Uon. ALFA ROMEO Alfa Romeo '72- 2000 11200. eau SJ6.-0269. 962 NOW IN STOCK Trucks For lmmKl1te '72 6.M.C. Brand new 1972 %: ton P. U. with upper & lo\ver mould- ings, front shocks, front stabilizer, rear 1prtna1 plus gauges, plu1 much more. Serial l'\o. TCS14Z15l3399, $395 DOWN $88.06 Per Mo. Yes, just $395.00 is the total down payment and only SSS.06 is the tota.I monthly payn1enl includln&" tax, li- cense and all finance charges for 36 months on approved credlt. The cash price ls $3116.37 including tax and llcenlC. Deferred payment price ls $3566.16 which includes all finance charies, sales tax and ll- cen11e. Annual percentq:e rate Is 9.76. BILL BMIRY GMC PONTIAC FIAT (lst St, at S.A. Ftwy.) 2000 E. lit St. Santa Ana 558-1000 '57 Ford •/2 Ton Pickup Immaculate, ?.1ust Sell, dlr 897-0224. '70 Dodge 1/4 Ton I .a, AUlCI Trani, with lltl'Ytce llol!y, Muat ..U, dJr 897-0224 'SS Ford ~T new eng tram tires Paint etc. Runs looks new & camper 644--0268. '70 Ford Econollne, ~ ton, llllSulated, paneled, crptd. 67>-4'"..00. '63 Chevy 1/4 ton Immaculate, Must Sell, dlr 897-0ZU. l9l2 !I Ton. GMC v ... S.WJI. $3,795. .C.Ul8&--0933 '67 Clle'V)' pant!) truck. Reblt a cyl. Sprlll&' map. Good cond. !400. 646-4193. '68 Dadae Omper v ... aut>- ble top, a'uto. Slcrlfk'e, make ofitr, iu Santu Jsebrl. CM. 6'>-7m. Aute L1111nt ~ 1'11 .... 1 .... -!tr S.Yh>p • S.tldactloll • Ser- vice. WE LEAS!! AIL POPULAR 19'12 MAKES AT QIMPt"J1. TIVE RATES- Call Malcolm Reid k>r tu.rlhlt' detall1. THEODORE ROllNS FORD •-m..i. Oaota 11.. 6C2.00IQ Delivery Instant Credit BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS JLO).l.n> W. Pacific Cit. Hwy. Newport Bead! fTI4) 6(2..-0400 Alf• Romoo NOW ON DISPLAY Sa.lei Service Parl> Body Shop COAST IMPORTS IOQO.UJO W. C...t Hwy. Newport Beach 642--0400 BMW ALL MODELS IMMEDIATE OE LIVERY Low Bank Financing up 10 On 48 Mo. Tenns CID approved ettdit ' 510 SEDAN PORSCHE Auto Trans, Low Miles, Ra- dKJ, Heater, $1388 COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cit. Hwy. Newport Beach (Il4) 642-00i: -A Mechamc, Dell&ht '67 DATSUN STATION• WAGON (a re:al ftxer upper) ONLY $325. CASH Call $48-8404 after 1 p. m. 240 Z, 1970. 21,000 m~s. M .... Xlntcond. $36Stl. * 494-fil42. '71 DATSUN PICKUP W/Gem Top Camper 4 Spd, Ractio, Heattt, Low u,w Mileaae. !350CPH). $2095 COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 W. Pacific Cit. Hwy. Newport Beach <n<> W-Ol!l6 546-4529 FIAT '72 FIAT ,, 1970 PORSCHE 914-6, lo miles, factory Yo' a r rt y , AM/FM, mags. Sacrifice $4700. After 6 pm call ~- XLN-r. oond. S'Jl-T Porsche, 1969. Fully equipt Best of- fer. 675-5850. '68 Ponche 912, am/Im, ex- cellent condition. S 3 6 o o . ~2254. •n T, gold mtlc, 5-Specd, air, mags, am/frn, 19 J\.1 mi. 494-4570, 213: 391-7ros. RENAULT Ronault Domo Solo Semi Annual, Demonstrator Clearance Salo This Weekend Unbeatable Prices ALL, 1972 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAL BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS .... __ . - TOYOTA '72 TOYOTA CORO LLA $1966 1+T.&L.) " $39.30 MO. FUU. cuh price $2,096.30 in- cluding lax I: license. Dcn.\'n payment is four hundred dollars. $39.30 total monthly payment including interest, tax & license. 35 pay plus balloon pnyn1ent ot $800. Total defeITed pay price $2,575.50. A.P.R. 11%. On pre-ananged credit. (300785). DmlwiU -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. A real beauty. This line C'l'l.r must be seen to apprttiatc t\\'NS924) $1499 COAST IMPORTS *TRIUMPHS* 1000-J.alO w. Pacific Cat. Hwy. Newport Beach £714) 642-0406 5'6-4529 • l M"'401. July 11. nn OAILY 1'11.0T 100).1200 w. Pnclflc C1t. lrwy. Newport Stach (TI4J 60-0400 546-4529 '66 Conette Fastback 4 Spd, AM/FM Rodlo, Extra Clean, (YGt.i358). MAKE OFFER '70 Imperial Le Baron HORNET 19'T2 Po111ioc Catali.nu demon- irtratcr with Jess than ~.500 miles. Fully !actory equip- ~ int•ludin,g vinyl lop, alr <.'On<'. p.s., p.b., stereo ra- dk>, air cond. p.li., p.b., stereo radio, Rally 1 t wht'CIA. VB, T. class \1/,1.W. tirel & much much more. Serial No. 2L.57R2C312197. $49~ DOWN $133.42 PER MO. Yes_ l\ISI $4911.00 bt the 1Dlal c;lo\vn payment and cinly $13.1.42 is the total monthly payment lncludln& tM, li- ~nsc and all f1nance charges for 36 months on approved credlt. n. cub price is '4618.13 incl.uding tax and Ucen1e. Deferred payment price 11 $5298.l.2 which inc\urlt>S nil ftnabct ehargM, ~.le• tax and U- ccnse. Annuill Ptreentqe rate iii 9.7G. BILL BARRY PONTIAC·FIAT-GMC (lat St. at S.A. Frwy) lOOO E. i.t St., Sanl1 Ana 1151-lDOO '89 PonUae Gro, ·&Ir cond., xlnt -.00c ........ $1'11111. -1111 l\IUST 10iP6' FiNiJlrd; ldilt c0nd. Air OtlDll. Aulo 'lnm. Many extn1. $11iO. or best ofter, 557-$769. '72 LE MUS Brtllld new 1972 Pontiac 2 d'f', Le ?.1an•, muat .tee to ap- preciate. Serial No. 2Q2702.. PI79847. $325 DOWN $85.81 PER MO. Yc1, ju.1t $325 ts the total down P<Yiilenr'lliil ot'1J 185.81 Is tolal monthJy pay. ment 1ncllldln.g tttX, license ~ all fJnnnc:c charJta for 36 montht on approved credit. Tbc caab price ls i29!13.85 1nc1 ... 1ng tu .... li<enle.Der....,.._., P<lc• ll 13418.16 which Jn. eludes a.II tlnance charges, JJales tax wxl license_ An- nuat percentare rate ls 9.76. Bill BARRY PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT Oat SI , at 5.A. Frwy) 2000 E. lit St., Santa Ana 558-1000 '68 Flreblrd 400, air cond., autom, vinyl top, xlnt corxl., 1 owner. WW sell tor $18:iO. American Maftal'8 ,. -.i:-=-7518-.P0°'0'°NT"'IA""C......,Le~~~c-I 547..5126 auto, MR, ntw ~,_!IS. 1234 So. Main St. dean. Ftrnt.!!«'· ........... Sor.Ill Ana IAMILER LINCOLN $1495 COAST IMPORTS 1000.W W. Ptcillc Cst. Hwy, Newport Beach (n4) G4U406 -MERCURY '63 Rembler ..... In -ruMlne cond. Sl.OO!bMt of. fer. 968-6334 (ft" &17-0JU. I T·llRD '56 Chwlc Thundt'ft>lrd Top cond. $1800. 6is.mtl. '59 T-Blrd ,2 <Ir htp, $99.mt. Full pow. air. H le Jf Auto Sales, 2IB8 Harl>or 81"1., Costa Meta. &d-1616. YECiA '71 VEGA PANO. ' Sl>d. Air Conditioning, ll>c Wheeia, i..uu.ae Rad<, ~.ooo m11 .... <'129WJ, $1995 COAST IMPORTS lllOO-UIO w. Pl<.lllc Cit. 11..,,. Newi><>rt Beacll TI() --lt'• a breettt. • • lt1l your Ut:tn1 with el.let ue ~ PUol Oaallled. eo..!671. I • • llU.Y PILOT 17, 1912 . Kidney DonQr Drive Starts 3 Dekg'!lls · . AppDinted '' TIK!'5 71/f MOST /NSTNIT '!!2' 1'ff EVE~ l/fMP/v . N~port:.Mesa School s ·tudents Get Honor • perfonnance this spring in the S t a t e-mandated California Physical Performance Test. SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) -'riie Northwest J(\dneY Center, w b i c h developed and relined the artillcW kidney machine that J<eeps ~ llf paUentJ alive, h., begun· a massive campaJgn to sign up donors who bequeath their vital organ5 for transplantation. The general public in the Pacific Northwest is being urged ' to participate by filling out and signing "pocket wills'' which authorize the use of the organs af- ter death. These wills are wallet cards and are countersigned by two witnesses, which makes the cards legal documents under the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act. The ~ter is confining its campaign to Washington, Montana, Idaho and Alaska. In its initial effort, the center had 10,000 _cards printed. There is no way of knowing how many will be signed, but a campa!in ls nece,....Y to obtain enough partlelpantJ to make the program worthwhile. An lndlvldual 11111)' l)al'llclpate limply by-signing and carrylJii hlS card al all limes. 11 be changes hit mind , be can terminate the agreement by tearlni up the card. There l.s no record ol who signed the card! .• When a donor dies, his kidneys are removed and transferred to the penter via a portable perfusion machine. However, this ls done only with the con- currence of the next of kin or farrllly physician. Machines are at Sacred Heiiffl!Oipllaf In Spokane, Wash.; Cot um bus Hospital, Great Falls, Mont., and the Anchorage Clinic in Alaska as well as at the ceoter in Seattle. Upon arrivil at the center, the doi;iated kidneys are transferred to a larger, •la· Uonary perfu.lon machine which wm keep them alive and viable up to 48 houn. '!bat generally l.s e110U11b time to mal:e the best-pooolbie 1Wue and blood malcb with a transplant recipient. "The donor program is vitally needed,» said Dr. Cbrl.stopber Blagg, center direc- tor. "It will fill a gap in the treabnent now offered and perinit us J to offer transplantation as a mode o! treatment to everyone who could benefit from this regardless of the availability of a blood.- related donor." · In May, the center had about 50 P<J'tOM waiting lot JransplantJ. They were being kept alive, mean'tbne, with Brtificial kidney machines. Since t,l>e otcan retrieval program was Inaugurated late laSt year, 13 patients have received transplantJ from persoM . who bequeathed their kicjney's . terest Three reptt0e11lallves !'"'f ·· • the H~on Btoeb u~ High Scbool IY11lricl have bee sel 11 delegates to 4eth annual conl.reiice of tljf calllornia School ElnplQy .. Association. The three delegates are!' Betty Dabney, a Fountaill Valley lligh Sc boo I 1'1f structlonal aide and presidef!l of the district's chapter of ~ CSEA; Lucile Patterson, it Fountain Valley High School secretary, and Jean Campbel~ an accountanl cle<~ In the district office. The conference will be held July 24 to 28 at the San Jose Civic Center. ~ '•' , Twenty-three students In the Newport-Mesa Unilied School District have been selected to receive t b e Presidential Physical Performance Test. The Award l.s based on Old Oriental Laws Wiped From Books To be eligible, a sludent must score at or above the 85th percentile (based on California norrris) .on.-1ix-tests , within the California PhY,icaJ Perfonnance Test Tests include the standing long jump, knee-bend, sit-up, chair pusbups , side step, pull- up and jog walk. 6% 16 ree ervices! . ~CllAMENTO (AP)-Two old laws to exclude Orientals from California have been Wiped from the booi<.o. "Pemaps the time will ceme when people will be unable to understand why they were ever enacted," commented Sen. Allred Song (D-Mooterey Park), an at~y ol Korean ances1ry who Introduced the bill. It was signed into law by Acting Gov. Ed Reinecke. REINECKE SAID "while these provisions in the penal code may never have been ac- tuolly used, stat-classify. ing people a«Uding to nation- al origin or race have no place in today's legal process." Song ~ they '1merely serve to ·remind us of the time when the Oriental In California was is welcome as the black man in Mississippi." One 1872 law provided for a tine or a year in jail kl" any- one bringing 1A .. any person born either in the Empire of China or J apaD, or the islands adjacent to the Empire of O:li.na," without a permit. ANOTHER 1905 LAW pro- vided penaltles for importing a female from the same area with intent of forcing her to reside with someone, or "for the purpose of selling her." Reinecke and Song noted federal laws today cover both immigration and ' 1 w h i t e slavery." Song said they were the fmal vestiges ol "the ghost of California's 0 r i en ta l ex- clusion laws. 11 • Students receiVinJ ,\be award include : Ami Gorley and Allison Wood!, both of Harbor View School; Allison Grint and Can ltontgomery, both of Marines School and Micolyn MaGee, of Sonora School Dann Chambliss, Ryan Min- niharn, Brian 'Pette a n d Melanie Smith, all of Wh ittier School and Elizabeth Lynn and Alny Smallwood, both of Lin- coln Sdiool. Robin Brown, Kelly Koren', Steven !pee, Susan Roush, Susan Shively and Derry Aragami, all of TeWinkle School. Robert BombOy, Lori Lula and Douglas McCiean, all of Cosla Mesa . High School; James Staley, Estancia High School and Sue Herman and Carla Yates, both of Newport Harbor HJgh School. Norwegian Olsak Fete Scheduled Olsak or Saint Olav's Day will be celebrated by the Trygve Lie Lodge, Sons of Norway at a dinner-dance set for 7:30 p.m., July 28 at the Halecrest Club in Costa Mesa. Members and guests of the Harbor Area's Trygve Lie Lodge ?Jld other Lodges of Sons o£"Nonvay are invited to attend the affair. Tickets are $3.50 per person. St. Olav is the patron saint of Norway, the counlry's first Christian king who reigned in the early 11th century. After his death he was proclaimed a saint and 0enshrined in 1031. Cocktails and Koldt Bord or cold buffet will be served al 7:30 p.m. Jack and Ada wlli provide music. The Halecrest Club I s located al 3107 Killybrooke Lane in Costa Mesa. For reservations or further infonnation call Mrs. Gerry Mitchell at 673-24f>S or Mrs. Astrid Berglord at 1133-4774. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT I See by Todays Want Ads e SOOTH YOUR BACK with this custom made Ortho- JieQiC6'i7'--oed. lt liU a king lite boic spring. The owner is forced to Rl1. e ADD <DI.OR TO any room with th1a 8" blue couch. New condition. 'lb..-. la abo a tile top table an sale. e M 0 RE MURNITURE: cboooe between rup, a lovestat. TV, coHee ta- ble, fllCf tabl... • double bed and""-'. ome 6% Certificate Accounts Deposit $5,000 or more. Earn 6% each year for 2-to 5-year terms. 5% passbook accounts also available. FREE [!] Money Orders with $1,000 minimum balance. !ii Notary Service with $1,000 minimum balance. r.11hJst Deed Note L!J Collection with $1,000 minimum balance. [!] Photocopy Service for important documents. With $1,000 minimum balance. [] Save-by-Mail Postage .a.~ CAUFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS Tree Dedication in honor ot Judge Dodge- Sing Along with Bob Duggan. Call Lucy LI ~1505 for details. Alllll•LN•......,.. ... ,.,... ..... . ., f[DUIAI. • A TTlllTION U.DllS MISS COITA Ml,IA ,A•EANT PIHTA DI COITA MHA OCT. U 500 prizes plu. Of>POrlUnlty to pal'.tldpate In Clt;y and Chamber Gtteter AcUvltles. Mutt bt l'tlfdent of. Harbor Area -18 yean A oVtr. Call Robin Reed 9'/s.1000 for details • 1., • • • om1a • FREE §] Payroll Savings -Deduction Plan §} Check Holders for gift checks. ~ Pcirking while in our offices. @] Communicy Rooms for charitable and educational groups. Wh¢re available. [!!] Loan Counseling and litera~ on home, pool, property improvement and mobile home loans. ~ lnrerb.ranch Deposits and WJthdrawals · AlTtlT Of' THI> MONTH JISSll M. FUii J"ole M. Furr, borp I• Waco,, Texas. ii now • rest· dent ol Anaheim. California. and a ~ of three clill- dttn. She.had her Art Traln- ln1 with Isolde Phdl, ()r. lllllle. cal., and Gu,.t Gal- lery, Anoholm. cal. She llu been painting lour )'eOn UICI baa learnod to Me tht world and appredlte lb beauty. She ii venatUe In oubfect matter tnldl-1 thru conttmporary. at any of our offices. ~ On-line Rlectronic Instant Service Accounts Insured up to $20,000 by an •ncy or tht United s111ts Government. Co8ta Mesa Office: 2700 Halbor 8oul8'111d 5*2300 Anaheim Office: 800 N. Euclld Awnua -:zm . Orange 'Office: 40l!O Metropolilan Drive In Ci1y Center 63&-3033 Cf'l.772c . I ' ' ' I I I' . . · • I • I •" > 17 I • I ~ I . I .tDITiJON vot:.. 65, NO. )99, 2 S6Cf!ONS, 26 PAGES O~GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA t,AONDAY, JULY .17, '1972 TIN CENTS . . . . . President · to End ·Active Working Vacatio~ II)' JORN VALTl!llZA " .. OMtr r-.,.,. ' Preaidtol Nlloo planl to leave the South Oranc• Coul Tueoday for Wulllqton, D,C., -. endlng a t,...week work!nt vacation -,. wblcb otarted quiet- ly but did not lltay that way. The Presldent, blending work with relaxation every day of bis visit -hardly ever mlued ail aftemooo at the beach during bis atay at La Casa Pacifica. It was bis first .trip. west since the start of this year. • . Tbls past weekend -the last of the ' • J • ISC : Gunman II olds. 5 for Ransom · ' RJCllMOND, Va. (,\!') -A man 1 agned with o• lllJol8wi and a knife walked Into a branch bank near ber• today. Jockod hlmaefl In • · room ' wtlh 11.e bo8lages and ' -$1111,llGO In ramom, 1 authorities aald, . Some 50 local, s1ai., and federal officials -the Bank of ~ branch awaiting the gunman'• nezf mcwe. A 19'12 •automobile domlnded by ' the mon wu brought lo the bank. Autborltlel Id the man took e!gbl • .,..._ bolltage but releaoed three "wanen. Bo~ Sh_a~rs . ' M~ntreal Fomm {loSting Stones MONTREAL (AP) -A bomb exploded outside the Montlul FoNm early toda1 QPC!er. a llUdt loaded with equipment for g, concert la the arena kloigbt by the ~g s-.. a pollee IPO™m&D l<PorWd. • .No ........ reported hurt, but the win- -oo the north -llde ol the buJldiDI ll'fte broken, . "Pela< Rudie, manager of the Brltlsb ~--p,,sald_the -would take ),lice u llCbeduled ''rhe FJIMD building covers a block and @.~ bopie of the Montreal Cm!a~ of ree ..... ~•Uoo•J'llilc):ey League. · · building watclnilaJ!, G a• t o.n e, 51, wu alttlng by the back en· "' abwt 15 feet from the truclt. !l"Tbere wil ·a hell of a 'boUDce," be ~."All thOae wlnilowa broke, o·balJ of AIJ <ame 0ul'from uilder· the· truck, and Jben there Wis a lot of smbke, H •• J'be mlitlve for the bombinl ''!M Doi lllmedlately opparenl . '_.\ pollce·bomb squad ..... lnveat!Ptlng lhe possibility tbt -exploll .. ;" (See STOND, Pqe Z) -c -, 1 wortinc YICltlm -WU, marked by a dlJrch. very aatn acbed!ala Attendln1 rflel In the mod 1 a I On Saturday the l'rlaldmt left home unctuary "' San Clemmie'• First Orlf. early to attenil memorial aervlceo for his tian Cburdl,, Ille PrelldeOt lleard • a late Aunt, Mn. Edith Timberlake, In aermm !nm Ille i.star wbo two decodes Riverside. Mn. Timberlake wu Ille ago mlaled out m 11!9 dllnce to preach WOllllln · wbo helped launcb I h • to another' American Prealdont. Prealdent'1 tareer II> law .before be But The Rn. Alan Vernon _, IOUgbi pibllc offlc~ about to be dlsapted thil time Only ho!n oiler the. aervtca, 11* around. President held meetlnp with Secretary fol the Preslcl,enl sat In the ll'onl row, of. .Slate •William Raters and dilcuued be and the 100 other , wonbl]ien Ullened the .cabinet member's recent world trlp. a.s· Rev. VtrnaD preacbed cm 11How Well TbezrGll &mda7;.tho Prdldent wenrto ·-do you Hear!" • • e.r ' . IDS CapQ Schoolmen · To . Eye Windfall Truatee1 of the Oapistnno Unlflid ll<bool District tonlgbl . will make I final decision cm ways to use their larleat tu windfall In blalory -a $1.5 mlllioo ln- creaae broulht about by major •aluallon bikes. . Meeting In a ~ 7:3' p.m. oclloil ..-., lruileolO 1lilt will 41iP • ""' routim Jie•·-. then ·cartfuue ,their s\udfil: f 1oa1·1111.-llkm )tt Ul !ar IDdualoft lnlo the bud~ bJ' dll61ct ttlff. . The funda could be lloecl In ....... w~ya 1 -restoring ~1 · deleted budget Items, beefing up dwlndlinl rCHI m, or dec:reuln& the tu rate. The Jq Ull of budl(et. Items, ccmplled by 5alD ,Cblcas, -aOPeitntendont forbuaineaservlcell, 1D1DU111ato•1.m worth of new eipendlturea drawn !nm tlie ...... tu Income. The -would cOver ICOftl " new Item. · The catesor1ea· include lricreued atafl In di-8 '* dHfereal mu, beeiinc up the tR~11 pevadative ~lrQnaru progiij;,-~ the -"' boolth -and-pun:llulac ...iar amounts of ' equipment alid llUpplJea for-t1le ...., Dono Hiiia lllib School -a -proJ. ect ~ bas -• major drain' .. , this yeer•a pc_..i budpt at $1U mil' Hoo. . Women's Clothes Stolen in Capo 1 -Man Dies on·Highw~y u --to_uio ...,,pieie 16: mlnlstratlm ,pecbce, the .,_, .tu ..... ., fU27J ..,..iil-·ln-and diitrlci ,_...,, wwld rtae lo .. -- high of. -'500,000. . . 3 .. ,000 P:~• . Watell Clemente ·. ' . '. Beauties Sought In J)ana Cont.est Mourn • , Ml' In Ibo I.....,. mnnp, tba mlnWer destroyer. told the ~ !hot God -a It wu only after be retumtd from the throach Dllln, tho Holy Sc:rlflure, and jaunt, Rev. Vernon said, thol be learned tbe.liol1 0 ,.._ -:--. that thep-Preoidepl D w I ( h I D. RoY. v-... decided to •• tba Ebmhower, bad been a aurprtse IUlll ]ireaealallm ·-o1 lenor"'1,,...... a1 the aervtcea. Doii MadioJol. "bocoUle ~ dldli~ wllll to -Vernon gave that uplanatlon to the be I born Joler:' . ....... •• lion from the pulpit Sunday, and 'Iba rntn1ater. uplalned :thal 20 y..,. alter the services be joined Ille Pmident aao. -Ila .....i u a Nny dl&Dllla for brief converaatkll. _ . at the Rhode laland Naval Hoopltal, he The ~!dent was ac:oomponled by ·~ lo •llo!i'.. a fell°" minister 1o San Clemente City Councilman and lllrl, dolly .. Ille --· me SitldaJ'. lie and · Paul Presley to the .. rvtces In t1le ~ a frtenil, · ~ toot .cClltlae m ,a church at 702 Avenlda Eslrella. . --.. • Ir As HeaVy: Surf Hits Beach . . ' . ' repot'lad to be . on IOUlh eounty beaoliea on SUndly. . 1 Q-owcil of fl .flllO ..... .._tad. lallir- day, ~ SWblio aald coolOr -'and calmer aurf coaiblnad to~ -tncldontl. General Cushman Of Cdu 'Die8· l~I-·' Rites W em.esday , After the eervlcea the Pnaldd returned to bla noaldmce and apml tba real of the 411 relulng. He walked alone tbe beach aouth at bis resldence, then took one Jut drive through Sall .Mateo Cany~ the 2,aoo acres of uplancla wblch onco were part at· Clmp Pendleton, bul ..,... will become public ...,,.11oo area, ..,. cording lo • Presidonttal dedaratloa. Today'• 1ut' fUll 4-Y !/. -wlD Include ~ 'With coriuneree •dY!aen during the early houn of the d11-·and probably just .,. more trip to tho beach, ame Challenger Not There· To ~See It Surfing Movie Set At Clemente-Club C1 g I DAii. y l'll01 SC Loi.rd Says McGovern Made Deal ' WAsmNoToN (AP) -~ ~f ~ lleMn R. Lolrd suggeJted t<>doy the Domocratlc presidential nominee, C-.e McGoven\, agreed to support the Air tarce11 oew FU irrplane as the price fol-~ Sen. Thomu Eoaleton u bis .rWilililc 'liiate. --i'Jll._ It from. Missouri '!here the FIJ is being built by McDonnell Doqglas Corl>· pf St. Louil. As president, Mc:Go•<rn JIU aald be would ICT&p tbe li'li In IJlvor ol devtlopment ot • 1.,s ' ~ il&lrtwtlgbt nctiter. At . a Pentagon new1 conf'l!'once. Laird l&ld: "I ·am led lo believe, however. !hot Pll'hapa fbt vice presidential candidate In partof bis 88l'ff111tDI lo run wu able lo giel •a-In""tloa of tl\at llOlltlon." n.. w.... secretory did !lot aay -.lie 1ot'W. iDf<lrmatloa or on what it WU• MIN. ... ' .- Laird -;that the 'FIS II the flnl "-"" .,._ developed undtr new coniraetlns )lfOCiOClareo Instituted durlnl hi.\ odmlnlllratioil for wblch be clllmed .,complete a n d total respomlbillty as aecretary of defense." "St. Louis 11 known u phantomtown. U.S.A., and It will be known as Eaalftown U.S.A.," Laird quipped with a play • -. 11111 Eolleton'• name. '1'111 Fii, dubbed the Eacle by the Air Force al Ila rollout lut month, ts In· tendocl lo reploce the F4 PhonOlm wblcb ls llJo bullt hr McDonnell Douglas In St . Louis. , __ _, Laguna Marine' s Daughter Named To Post on FBI SUsan Lynn Roloy, 25, tbe daughter of Marine Col. William H. and Mrs, Marge Roley of Laauna Beach, became ilae ot the nation's first two female FBI agents today. Miii ROiey, a fonner student at cat Stata-IUUerloD,-ae?YecLu_a_Ma,r. -t from June 25, 19611, until her ~ llree daya0ago when she wu a Ont ll••-nl al Camp Allen, Norfolk, ~ parenlt, prominent Art Colony reoldelitt. live al 1015 Van Dyke Drive. Col. Rolty is retired. Mrs. Roley teaches -for retunilh; women studenlt al l'eDPerdlDe University. liilot Roley and Joamie E. Pierce, 31, If Nlapra Falls, New York, who holds' ""chelor of aria and a muter of arts '-fl! bllloi'y, were al>llOinled, by ktJng FBI dlrector L. Patrick Gray Ill. Mia Pime has served u a clerical elJ!Ploye of the FBI since March 23, 1970. Gny llUOC!eeded the late J, Edgar Hoover and ordered a search for P"" spectlve FBI women. Hoover bad en- courqed a policy against women agents. Misa Roley attended the UDlverslty of Mleyillld, Colleje Part, ¥al')'laiid, from 1-Ind CSF fr\>m 1~. Miss Pierce, a former nun, was a member. of the Sisters o! Mercy Rellpm ~' fl'Om 19ff.70. She ¥1- leltdod ~ College, Bulfalo, N.Y. and St. ~v,eimue University, Olean, N.Y., !le-70; 'lbe !'fa· women took the oatb of ofllce rrom Gny end ~ediately beaan the regulat \4-week tr$11Dg course !or FBI aaenll.~ Gas Heater Explodes Killing Countian, 88 Georp ~. 18, of 192 S. Tustin Ave., Orange, died Sunday morning when he apparently tried lo light an open face heater in a bedroom and accumuJated gas from a leaky hose exploded, the Orana:e County coroner's office reported. He died al II a.m. In the bum unit of the Oranae County Medical Center following the 7 a.m. fire at his home. OMN•• co,.n SC DAILY PILOT TM Ori"" C.t DAILY ,ILOT, wllll wtildl It CO!Nllntd Slit N""'ll'Nts. It Mtl.iied W tlle Or9"" c ... , """""Int c ..... ,,.,. ~ r•T• Hnklftf ,,. Mlltl'led, Mn1y ftl•ovtlt Frld•r. for CHll Mlll, Htwporl •••di. Hullll!llfM INCl'l/F...,..,t1ln VtUt'f, U.- IHdl, lrvlMISeddJ...U W ·Ja>n Cltrntfl!ll S.A Ju1n C1pJ1tr1n.. A s!ng!1 rt111onfl Miiion k P\lblltl!M llh,,..tvt trd SllllCl1~ .• TM prlft(1"1 ,wtldi~ PllM h 11 lJO Wttl lty StrMI, Colll M ... , Cfll"rnlt, fHM. ~eltert N. W••' Prftod..,I Mid P11llllSl'>lt' J•clt ~. C11rlt y Viet Pthld"'I tr.4 G-r•I Mln19cr Tho"'•• ktt•ll Etltor Tho"'•• A. M11rphin1 /Mpttltlg Etltor Ch•rlt1 tt I.••• ~lch1rt1 r. Hill Anl1l1nl Mont1l11t Edl!w• S. Cit ...... OfR&e 101 North El C111'1i rio ~.,r, t2•7l -Ofllc .. C..lt M ... : 2» w .. 1 lty Str"t ""'"" lffdl: 21JJ HtwlOtt h\llfYOrt 'Hlll'llll'lttlll •MC111 11t1J lttc!I lo\llty1rlll Ufllnt --"t m ,.,. .. , AYto\W Tll.,.._ 1714) 641-4JJ1 Ct--AM"1 .... '42-1'11 • ,.. c ................ .,.: T1l1111•11t 4fM421 °'"'""'• 1,12, Or... (If.ti Pvtlltl'llnt °'"Nrir. W. """ ,,.,... 1111111r1ll•flt. tfftwltl IN'* tr .-vortktmltm Mftlfli f'\ll' .. ~ •ltlliwt .,. .. , ,.,. ~ .. ctwrltllf OlllllMlf• ' ... c.11.. ....... NW If Clrlf1 ~ ~ lot.u._.. "" arn.r au ......,.,, ... ..,... 11.1• ftl0ftlfllr1 ll'lllhry .....,..,ltM UM fNl'!IPlir~ t - DAILY PILOT Stiff Pllol• Clowning Achievement Clownish didos, including cloud of smoke, added to bijinks at San Clemente's annual Fiesta La ·Christlanita Saturday. An estimated 30,000 persons watched the big parade. The Royal Cavaliers Youth Band from Whittier took home the sweepstakes trophy for the fourth year in a row. Huge Brush Fires Nearly Contained in California By Tbe A11oelated Prell ed away from the town, a forestry Two arson-<:aused fires that have bum-division .spokesman .said. In rtbe •·-Calli rn1a Fire fighters llJo were puttiJ!g out a ed ~.tltlO acres 00 81~" 0 few remalDina hol spots ID a ligbtnina· counties bava been contained, and caused fire In the Inyo N&tional Foreot another· nw>set blaze should be con-lod ay. talned by lonlab~ after blackeDing 10,600 'lbe blaze, In heavy brush 25 miles ""'l!!. tile lltllte Division of Forestry saJd, north of Bishop, was contained early to. todaydl. • . b' -da·y. A vision spokesman said the ig ''1be wind died down kind of unei:- bruah ~ire .west of Rumsey In Yolo Coun-pe(tedly," said a spokesman Sunday, Jy inaccealbie undergrowth. "and it was a little easier to get into it." containment expected by 8 p.m. About 1,000 acres of bnish and timber .Some SSO men fought the blaze In near-had been consumed as about 200 firemen ly lDaccesslbleuodergrowth , fought flames on the east s!ope ot the A 80-acre ftre about a mile to the west Slerra near Crowley Lake. waa controlled early today, t he The small village of Hllton Creek wu spokesman aald. saved from illy damage whoa llremm And a ,'1Ja• 16 mllea west of ¥buckle turned the lire. . In eoi.... County was contained at 2,000 No othtt reaidences were threateoed , aeftla today. tbe spokesman aakl one of tbe 250 men fi&htlng tbat fire · · was boopltalliied briefly for heal pros. -· the apotesman said . He said llreflghters also extiD&ulahed a string ol small arson-caused fires in Lake Couoly SUnday night. Meanwhile, 700 men working with bulldozer crews contained a 500-acre fire Sunday ID tbe Sierra footbllls, four mlles noitbeast.of Tuolumoe In the St>nlslaus NaUooal Forest. Also contained Sunday was a 1,500-acre bru$ and timber fire near Mokelumne Hills in caiaVera.s County. Some homes were-tbrea!ened briefly but the fire burn-, Dana Point CofC Schedules Meet At Yacht Club '!'be Dana Point Chamber of Commerce quarterly dinner and general mem- bership rpeeting will be held Thursday at lhe Dana Point Yacht Club. The meeting will feature a talk en- tiUed, "What a Progressive Chamber of commerce Can Do for the Community," by Howard A. Baker, president of Transnational Insurance Company of Los Angeles. The prime rib diMer will start at 7: 30 p.m. and is preceded by a n o - h o s t cocktail hour ln the upstairs lounge of the new Yacht Clubhouse on Dana Island. Tickef,8 for the dinner are S7 including tax and tip. Reservat ion information Is available rrom the Chamber of Com- merce. FromP"!Je J SEX •.. tacked state sex Jaws in an article published in "Stanford M.D.," said the KiDsey Report showed more thao 95 per- cent of men have at some time engaged in sexual acta prohibited by criminal laws. ( They urged repeal of sex Jaws pro- hlbltlng_actll'l!!a, between consenting adults , but favored continuance of laws governing rape, chlld molesting and cu- ual offenses involv1og violence. American sex la"' nllect both the Judeo-Cbrl!tian view of sexual behavior as solely reproductive ln nature and the belle! amoDJ the !ounden of Ang)O" American aociety that ses la evll, the doctors said . Among the specific law1 Ibey cited were an Arlzoaa statute which makes sexual Intercourse between consenting unmarried adults a felony punishable by lmorlaoriment for up to thrte years and a Caii!OmJa "seducilon laws" ,, h I c h punlsbe1 the leducer of "an unmarried female of prevloul chaste character'' with 1 mu.Jmum eentence of five year• Jn prilOll and I llJ,000 , fine. From Pagel STONES· .. device bad been placed under another truck parked nearby. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert McClellan ~aid they were sitting on their !root porch when Ibey heard tbe blast. "I went down ·to tbe sidewalk and •ll I could see was a cloud of smoke and gln~ lying all over the street." Mn. M~llan said. "I phoned a friend down the street and she said all the windows in her apartment were broken." Violence has occurred In other cities where the Stones have held concerts as part of their current six-week North American tour. During tbe Stones' first concert on the tour, more than 30 policemen were in- jured in Vancouver, B.C., in a rock-and botUe-tbrowing melee as 2,000 youngsters tried to crash the sellout event on June 3. Fifteen persons wrre arrested. ln San Diego, several persons were arrested June 14 when rioting broke out after holders of counterfeit tickets to a Stones' concert were turned away. The next night, poUce in Tucson, Ariz., used tear gas to disperse a crowd ot 200 to 300 window-breaking youths who tried to crash a concert. When the Stones appeared at the Metropolitan Sports Center in Bloom- ington, Minn ., June 18, several hundred gat.-<.Tashers caused 11,000 lo 11,500 damage to the facility. Eight persons were arrested and several policemen . were injured. Auto Runs Over Santa Ana Man; Murder Probed flomicide invesligators today were p~ bing the apparent murder of a man crushed to death In a Santa ~a vacant lot by a car which ran over hll cheJI. Gordon M. Callin, 45, of 2525 W. Borchard St., Santa Ana, waidlscovered dead at the scene, near the comer of Lacy and Third Streets early Suod~y. Tire trackl In the dirt matched those across Callin'• chest, 1ccording to in- vesUaators, ind tt appeared the victim had net been accidentally kllleci • Detective Sgt. Ralph Curlale 1aid be was not certain Callin'~ _death has been Conn.ally listed as a mut(ler at this point. 1"1.e lnveeUg1tor assigned to the case, however, was out lollowli>g potential leads and could not be reached for furthe~ coniment QI! evidence lndlcaUna murder. Callin 1Uftered muslve lntemil Jn.. I jurle1 and bemorrhll!nl .. l result or being nm over. Prisoners 'Sit-in' ••• At Attica A'M'ICA, N.Y. (AP) -About 900 In- mates at Attica sltte prison re!Used to leave their cells today but created no dimer, Supt. Ernest L. Montayoe aald. He said they were prhnarlty protesting the layoll of a temporary nurse h!red after Ital September'• riot. o!!tcltlinmnounced earll.,. !hot inmates were planning to conduct a peaceful demonstration today. Besides pro~esting the nurse's Jayoil, Montayne aald the demonstrators "also claimed aome of the demandl they made last Seplember had not been fullilled." "I think we're making a great deal of headway," be aaJ~ "but there are budge!ary problems. • Montayne said the 900 prisoner• did mt eat breakfast. "We offered them 1 chance to come out," he said, "But they refused." He said most of the other 300 priaollers were at their jobs in the metal shop or on the prison farm outside the muimum security facility 's walls . "I have no idea how long this sit-in will last," Montayne said. "There b no noise, everyt.hlng is quiet." He barred newsmen and lawyers from the prbol\ but said. relatitea and friends on the approved vlaltors' list would be allowed to enter. He said two temporary nur.ies were hired alter the September riot. One was given permanent statu~ and the other was laid off because of a shortage of funds, he added. Forty-three men -32 inmates and 11 prison employes being held as hostages -died in the uprising and in the retaking or the prison by state policemen. The four~ay disturbance was quelled Sept. 13. The nurse whose dismisial figured ln today'1 ~. Mary Klopley !If Medina, N.Y., told oewsm111 Sunday, "They (the prisoners} feel deprived now because I treated them like human beings. I'm in their corner." Deputy SUpt. Harold J. Smith said the priaoners had a blah regard !or the 47· year-dd Mrs. Klnpley and mented her dismissal. She reeeJved a notice last weeli that she woold be laid off W eclnes- da y ol_!hiS week. Workshop Slated At Rap Center In San Clemente Tbe Sao ClemJ"lle ·Rap Center 'Tbe Listening Ban, loc.) aloDI with fOID' other south county .. hotline" groups will offer a communications and awareness worbhop beainnlng Friday. Jim Corbett, Rap C e n t e r ad- ministrator, said the workshop alms to provide "a unique experience In which self-awareness can be heightened and new ski.Ila in communication can be learned." Workshop hours are from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. Fee for the c l a s s e s ts $12.50. However, scholarship aid ls available, Corbet staid. Registration ls limited to persons over 16 years of age and classes are oriented to those who wish to volunteer for hotline work. 'lbe Sao Clemente Hotline (ISU255) personnel will provide furiller reaislra' tion lnformatton. - Voter AW .Mfcecl .- Sumner Attacks Spfit of-Court By TOM BARLEY Of fllt Dally Plllt Sltff Presjdlng Judge Bruce Sumner todlly asked Orange Coonty resident& to urge state Senator• De.nnl1 Carpenter and James Whetmore to block approv11 of a b11l-UU.t -would create-a permanent Fullerton branch of the county 's Superior Court., ''They should know that this whim of a special Inter~ group will cool them a totalJy unneeeuary 4250,000 beg!Mlng in 1973," the Laguna Beach jurist told newsmen called to his chambers this morning. "Thia tax lnrease will be forced on the residents of thl! County by a bill authored by Asselnblymao John V. Brigas (Jt. Fullerton) for a apeclal Interest aroup, .. Judge Sumner said. He ldenQkd tbe principals of tbat group as ... Arnold Beckman, the Fullerton Jndustrlallst, Republlcan party executive Robert Beaver and the Fullerton News-Tribune. Judge Sumner said passage of the Briggs bill by the senate would force his court and all related county offjces to fully staff a branch cow1 that presently calls for one judge to put In 90 minutes a week in clearing its one page calendar. "For more than 10 years the Superior Court has offered to have any contested trial heard in Fullerton, but not one such request has ever been made to this court in that decade," he Said. But the Briggs bill, Judge Sumner warned, may well force his court to send cases to Fullerton to trial over the ol>- jecttooa of both litigants and lawyers. He said Senator Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) could provide a key vote in the issue since Senator Whetmore has already lndkated hll support for whit Judge Sumner, a former Assemblyman from Orange County, described as a "sweetheart bill." The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to meet Tuesday to review a bill that has already cleared the Assembjy, Judge Sumn<r aatd. He made it clear that only sustained opposition from other Orange County communities faced with raising the taxes to ~y for the Fullerton coart can pre- ventlt> paasage:---- "It is not fair to ask other county From Pagel GYPSIES •.• residents to pay the huge costs of th1s pointless court and it is not fair to us tG face a corresponding reduction o( ef- ficiency in a court that has reached an enviable stage of e!Dciency," Judge Sumner &rilled. He pointed out that county Supervlsors. the Orange County .Grand Jury, the Orange County Bar Associalion and the state Judicial Council are all opposed lo the existence of a Fullerton branch court. "Passage of the bill could mean the construction of a new building and then our $250,000 figure will prove to be an ex- tremely conservative one," J u d e e Sumner contended. I-le said judges of the Anaheim- Fullerton, Municipal Court presently pro- vide space for the hearing of the Friday morning calendars to which Judge Sumner assigns one of his Superior Court jurists. . "But the passage of the Briggs bill ·' would mean a full time judge, clerk, ' equipment , facilities for such offices as ; the district attorney and Possibly even .. marriage li cense and naturalization ·i facilities," Judge Sumner said. "The municipal court judges obvioualy • cannot provide that kind of cooperation 1 and we would be faced with a new · building and the consequent tremendous costs,'' Judge Sumner &aid. 3 Suspects In Newport Heist Held A Newport Beach armed robbery left a ., •: • liquor store clerk Maced and clubbed and ;. involved a high speed chase through the• · street& of Laguna Beach, which en~ only when the suspect vehicle plunaed . over a cliff late Sunday. : · Three persons, incl.uding an lS.year-old .: woman l'.'bo said she WM four months - pregnant , were taken into custody and' boo.ked mu:ll§_rgea of suspicion of armed .. robbery. The trio was then turned over to the Newport Beach PoUce. Arrested were: Cynthia Ann Foat, 18 :' '. Paul John Jennings, 23 ; and Gerald''1 Anthony McNutt, 19. All three gave an . address of the Hacienda Hotel, U89 s._1~ coast Highway, Laguna Beach. • Newport Beach police said , today lhot1!. ; around the coffin. Johnny's Liquors clerk Steven Warner. The coffin was driven to Santiago's 25, was sprayed in the face with t.he General Cemetery in a battered station chemical Mace and then clubbed to the , · wagon and followed by more than 35 floor of tM store, S537 E. Coast Highway'; truckloads of the king's followers, their with an 18-inch-long wooden implement. J cheeks streaked with tears as the Mace is used by police, often in riot' ~torade passed through the t'bilean situaUons. .. capital. Warner was taken to the Hoag California's coffin was: lowered ~to a Memorial Hospital and released followlng #J grave of bis family's plot, a narrow emergency treabnent. Newport Beacll r: space between the plots of 8lrangers. police said it ls not known if any money Hugo California and one of the dead or property was taken in the incident. ' gypsy monarch's daughters directed the Police said that two men were involved burial. A1, the coffin descended, someone in the liquor store activities, and were : ' passed a bottle of brandy among the seen running from the store by a passer-- mourners. i by at about 11:30 p.m. Sunday. .• As the first spadefuls of dirt struck the Newport Beach police broadcast -,_.. description or tbe suspecta and their • coffin, several gypsy women sobbed and vehicle. began ICM!aming; Several P 1 u n g e d A car meeting that a description WU-.· forward and tried to jump into the grave. observed about 20 minutes later by f Their husbands pulled them back. Laguna Beach police. "He was a simple man who liked to Attempting to stop the car, the Laguna talk to children," said one gypsy. "He patrol car WM led on a M-mile per hour -: Minuteman Launched liked to sing and to dance and to laugh. chase through town, up Center Street and,:· Ther. was nothing proud about him ." left onto Carmelita Street. : VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE Tbe burial over, Huao Calilomia leaoed Penned-In on tbe deadend street, the ;., (AP) -The Air Force Space and Mlulle against a brick wall of the cemetery, a suspect vehicle entered a resldenti~ ;· Test center here aald Saturday night it cigarette banalng !rom bis mouth. His driveway, tbe driver perhaps tbiDklng i\ Iawched a modHied Minuteman I mbslle face was unshaven. an avenue of escape, police said. ..,q down the Western Test Range. 'Ihe "Long live the king!" came a shout The car then toppled over a cll!ffn• launch, termed auccessful, wu to test a from the departing mourners. Laguna Beach officers toot three peJ"SOD4 • reentry vehicle but no other details were Hugo dropped the cigarette, covered riding in the vehicle into custody. No an1rr4 · released. hia eyes and aobbed. reported injuries, police said. ' • ~-~~~~~~~~~...;__~~-~~~~~~~~~-'---~~~-: . .r ... r---""!"------------------~·:· "'°HD "'"''• WE o'~·HGE co,,,.'t GUAllANTD d' ~~ ~ MRTTHING ci:tl Costa Mes;"" ~ Jew'elry and Lo;in PAW·N $110,PI· ARI ~UJtl SOLITAllll PEARL ind BIRTHSTONE . -~ ·RIN&S ~ • l'ttlCI ---$15.?S to '44.ff .... nrtJIM(JI 1 na lllWPOIT aw. DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA 646-7741 • ' 2 fc>1 J: STEREO I Track Storeo YOUR CHOICE Pl">"'r O.Ckl I • 2011.cell ~4 ·'cold for · 1111ter--• e .llack Dlomond v.1 .... to $49.95 A-'< OU!tor Your Choice Strlnea No. N754 e MORSE ........ e 'SKYLIHI '2.50 Ii e IYMP'HONIC , ... ,... ,,,.,.,, .... ""' 7/M/1J ·, " '~ : FRE.E WITH THIS CO-N · PACKAGE ·, OI' 4 PINLIGHf IAm1t1•r~ SIZI AA. ...,n...11ttm - I I • t I r • ' I I .I J 0 DAIL V PILOT SC llondJ/, Ju~ 17. 1972 How Far WiIJ .Japan Go? . U.S. Trade Balance Future Pends on Talks ' "IF THE TRADE deficit persists," explained an meet PANTERA bl' deTomaso • • • Imported for UncoJ.n..Mercury. Jtalian coachwork created by the brllHant Ghia StudiOI of Turin. Ford designed the 351 CID fV V-8 engine, Four wheel tn... depenmt 1uspen&lon and mid-ah.Ip fnetne placement. Five speed cear box. fully aynchrontzed ••• •Pantera ••• ltalJan for Panther ..• ORDER YOURS ' TODAY! Penonalb•d • •· ~ ....... Stlck- LAIELS Stylhh • Effld~ Ortltr For Youl'Nlf er• Fri..,.. M1y ht used on 1nv1lopH es Ntum aclclrts• lt.bels. Also very handy •• 1dentification 1abels for ,.,.,.Ing penon1I items 1uch •• ltookt, '''°rd'• thotot, ••~ Lebeh strck •" 9l1n •nd rn1y 1 •sod f., '"orlrlnt k.Mo c1nn1cl food items. All 1.~els are printed with stylis h V09uo typo Oft fioo '!""lily whit .. 9umm1d paper. . ----------·-------, ~r PIJllllJJlh~---...... 11.89" •• ' """ f'ftlltlflf Lalltl ..... , ..... .. ' Celll ..... , ..... ,.. l I . I I I I .l PILOT PRINTING I L -------------------~ ---- l • .. COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST .... ~.!W YO•K (U,1)-,,-ttle..IM ., • ..,..,.. Olll PIM H.W Y"11, $'9d1 ,.nMittt bln{l)Clfl H!-Low 1.111 Qll, I I I • Smart. BomfJ Shown North American Rockwell at Columbus, Ohio displayed Its "smart" bomb ---for the first Ume last week. The TV-guided, ~3,000 bomb has been used Chimps Adapting to Wi"ld On Georgia Island Refuge ATLANl'A. GL (AP) - Jlgp, rullzlng the wildest dream ol mll1)' a male - being aet free on an Wllnbablted Island with three females -abould have been happy enough to IWlog from tbe tre<s. He wasn't thoulh.' The 150- p o u n d chlmpamee, whlm· perlng, crawled back Into his lonlllnr !or a human orW!lp he'd tieen u!ed . r Joo!, Girlie and ,Said, hlJ .:female companions. w e r e more adventuruome -they began uplorlng In the thick foliage on tiny Bear Island of! the G<orgla cont. The chimps were Bet free nearly a month ago by Emory University's Yerkes Regional l'.tma!e Center In AUanta in 1111 ,aperlment designed to see 'bow Jl'ell ape11 can breed and adapt 1n a wild environment in the temperate zone. "At first," aald a Yerkes ...... placed there prlmarily for 111e during rainy and cold weather. 1'No beat will be provided, to aee if the chlm ps can tolerate the climate this winter," said Dr. Geoffrey H. Bourne, direc- tor of Yerkes Center, which is supported by the NaUonal IMtltWs of H,.lth. Bear Island ts private and warning 1Jgns are posted to discourage vislton ; - "These animals are dangerous -especiaUy the male," sald the Yerk e s spokesman. "One of them has the strength of about three men. If disturbed, they're capable of k:filiDi a man." The uperlment could last ~s · long u three years '-depending on how t b e chimps get along. lf it's suc· cessful, Yerkes hopes to put orangutans on the 100-acre island. Orangutans 8f9 much larger t h a n chimpanzees, weighing up to 450 pounds as adul ts, and live In tre<s. t'himj)anzees, like o t b e r great apes, are threatened with e1tinct!OD-lii their rfaUVi habitats . The island homesteading experiment with Jlggs and the other three chimps will give scientists clues as to whether they can ~reed and sustain themselves on a Georgia coastal island. Southern Pacific Ck~··ed in· Wreck spokesman who was present SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -a nine-month trial. when the chimps were freed, Southern Pacinc Co. was not The train was traveling "they seemed confused. Then, liable in a freak 1969 San with Jlggs leading the way, Bruno commuter accident in through San Bruno when a so. and the females following, which four were kilted and 18 foot length of pipe rammed they walked along the .beach. injured, a superior Court jury through a window. "Before long, o w e v e r , bas ruled. Authorities said a sinall- Jiggs, who'd lived In a cage The jury dismissed the tractor with a fork Ult, most of his 12 years, returned railroad 8.!I a defendant In a operated by an employe of the to It, making crying S<lUlld.9. $4.7-million lawsuil but voted <oru1truction company, was "Joni sat down nearby, to hold Southern Pacific raising the pipe into position 11Vaylng, while Girlie and Saki Pipelines Co., a subsidiary, for a jet-fuel oil line. acampered away and diaap-and Alex Ro b e r t s o n • '!be line was being laid by ptared," he said. Bakersfield Construction Co., the subsidiary. The plaintiffs "The ne1t day, when Mark liable. included relatives of three of Wilson, an Emory graduate The seven-man, five-woman the dead and five of those wfio student working on the ex· jury deliberated 10 hours after were injured. perlmen~ returned to the·~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;­lsland to visit the animals and I bring food, Jiggs came ff.· O· 'NG JIONG screaming out of the woods to 1 l greet him," the SJXlkesman oaid "He got back into his cage and stuck out bis arm to be acratclled. then turned his back to the bars, so Wilsoo could scratch his back." CUSTOM TAllOH IN ORANG! COUNTY ..... f1llerH c.t.. MM1 2 SUITS 5135 IOUIU bfT SftCW.NICl hf. -':: DMW. llll , ... If$ llll Melroilr ..... u c...i-w. ........ . .. SMrbklfl ••• ••• •• ., $Ilk w ......... 12 •• 5111"' ..... , .. • • 1 D • ~ ........ &""" 7'00 fllfllf llUOlfft weoi.11t1-1-1CMU um SAVE UP TO 50% 1111 IWl4 1•11"" c_, ... ,,.,.. Suits, SflMtuttt. Sl«kl, Shirts. • WI m1 ANY lal • ANY ITTU COPllD • PIB AlTllATlbNI •WY PAYMINfl =Ba .... 1D r. I Now, Jlggs and the other chimps seem to be thriving, though no offspring are in evidence. TheY. eat foliage, bUgs, crab! and sma!l rod~nts, supPlemenUng the diet Wilson ,.. ••••• • ..._ QW111 --. ,w - · · Snapshot Contest . Leading to Kodak lntometional Newspeper Snapshot · Awards (KINSA '72j Competition Rules: 1, f>ie co11t•1t i• 1trlctly lor •m•t•ur phot~r•ph•rt IA11 •~•­ t•11r b d•fln•cl •• on• who1• hobby or •¥OC•l1011 11 plcl11r•·••lin1f •11d who cloe1-11ot ,.,,1i. •ey 111b11.nH1! p1rtof ht1 liYT119-+hr•• t•lil119 ple111re1). 2. • ll•cli-l111d-whil• or color piclur•1 t1k•n •fl•r July I, 1971 •re ollglbl•, No plctur•• m•Y bo onl•ritef by •nY •mployo of th• DAIL)' PILOT or by 1ny lncllwiclu1I who peno11lly 11 •lll•ttcf ill +hf m•11vf•ch1r•, 1•le, comrn•rci•I fi11i1hi119 or proftufo11•I Ule of photo9r1phic 9oocl1. J. S11•i1hot1 m•y b• l•k111 with l llY m1k• of c1m•r1, Oii •llY br•M o fllm. No •rtwork or r•fovchin9 i1 p•rmitt•cl on 11•1•- tl¥•1 or print• -1u1 compo1lt• pictur11, multlpl• ••po1ur11 or multlpl1 pti11ti119, •· Any 1u1mb•r of pictur•s m1y b1 1nt1r1cl. Cont•1f•11t'1 n1mo, oddrt1• •ntl phone numb•r mu1t bo wrltt111 cl•1rly Oft th~ b1ck of •tch ;.ictvr•. M1 il or cl11i.,1r prints or ~r•111p•r1l'ICllS to: DA ILY Pl t;,OT S11tp1hot Conlt•+ Editor, P. 0 . 101 1560, Coate M11oi, CA. !2626. (f11tri11 c111 be h111d·cloliY1r1cl to •llY DAILY PllOT offico, b11t mv1t bo phy1ic•lly in ho11d i11 tho10 offic•• by cl1•dli111 ••ch w1ok.l Co11l11t offici1l1 r11orvo th1 ri9ht to c1rry OYor l1to •11lri11 for jud9l119 f roll't 0110 •••• to tho 11•Jt 011cl to e•cl11clo from jud9i119 •lto9•fhtr •llY t11fri11 rocoiv1cl l1to i11 the fi111I •••If. S. No block-1ncl-whito pictur11 will ho rotur11od. Conto1t111t mu1t be 1blo to f11r11hh tho originol 1119•liY•, If r1quo1tocl hy tho Cont11t Ed itor. Th• DAILY PILOT 111um11 110 r11pon1ihiliy for 1109•tivo1 or pri11tt. COlOR PRINTS OR SLIDES Will IE RE- TURNED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED l'f A STAMPED, SELf.. ADDRESSED ENVELOPE. 6. · Co11te1t111h 1ro ptrrt1itt1cl to 1vhmit picl11r•s to o,n)y 011• 11owsp1por p1rticip1tin9 in tho Kod1k lntorn•tion1I Snop1hot Aw1rd1. · 7. To bo •litlbl• for 1 loc1I 9ro11cl pri11, I co11t•1t•11t mutt 11911 1 1tot1m•11t th1t th• pict11r1, or •11oth1r clo1oly, 1111'1.il•r pie· t11r• of tho ••mo 111bj1ct or 1ituotio11, his not b1111, •11cl will 11ot be •nl1rocl by him i11 •11y othor co11to1t 111cl will "ot b• offorH for p11blic1tio11 to 111y public•tion 11ot co1111octitef wllh this Cont.it. I . IMl'OR.TANT: Bo sur• yov lc11ow tho 111rn1s oncl oclc!'r11101 of •11y roco9ni11h/1 P.orso111 opp11rin9 i11 your picturo. This i1 111c1111ry b•c•u1t, in orcl1r for it to b1 011tor•d in tho 111tio111I f11cl9l119, you mult be 1bl1 to 91t tho writto11 co11s111t of 111ch p1r1011 or p1r10111 for th1lr 11911 9u•rcll1111, !11 th• CJlll of minora) to p1nnit 1110 of th• plcturo for th• p11rpo10 of lllustr•· tion, odYorii1l119 or p11Dllc•lio11 in 111y m•11n1r. Enter Every Week July 2 Through Aug. 26 Deadline Wednesday Noon Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers with uncanny accuracy in Vietnam, Don A. Sntltb;-in lower photo, points out camera eye that guides the payload to i1' target br. them dally 2112 DvPHt Dr. S.lh 12 New,.n IMch ID.R'.S • °""· 0.-Or. Niot..........,. ""1-fW ,._. .. ...,,.tllw It. Wllaonbrlngstbemaspeclall~~====================~~~~~~~~::!:::=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=~·~:::: monkey chow made of cereal, grass, graln, milk and cod uv.g.o~p.. •"'P In two small ...t ."1'..7-jQCM ste~ 'fj03FM A-frame houses on stilts which ~ ;.a. ~ ~ · ~hinese Problem Eyed • S. Africa Taxi Drivers Unsure of Status Missile Will Go 81.N BERNARDINO (AP) -A symbol of military might the sounds of the harbor ~k.dS~L7 24 hours· a day"' ,PORT ELIZABETH, South ~lea (AP)-Wben a Chinese cllla a taxi here he create.s a dllemma for a cab company. Jot or iron ore from South The fll1ll con.sq)ted the Road standing in a small park will Africa and enjoy 1 privileged Transportation Board, Which be replaced by the olive position u "honorary w111tes." was unable to clarify the posi-branch of peace. ly;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j B. D. Terblanche say a hiJ tlon. Bowing to public objections, II In line with apartheid In ~rtation, tuicah.Lhave. ligns designating their uae Whites an1 not supposed to Jide in nonwhite c a b s • Nonwhites are supJXlsed to atay out of those -reserved for white&. "C!iineM ll'f: u s u a 11 y designated "other AaiaUc," Uhllke the Japanese who buy a firm has loot business by the U:S. Air Force will remove "We just can't take a a Minuteman missile and ship dispatching nonwhite luls for chance of transporting Cbln.,. it to a military museum. Many Chinese customers. in a white taxi unW the sltuar citizens objected to t h e "Imagine how embarrassing tlo •·-•--1 ified .. -•-~•e•s ~-~-ause I I f Chin 0 UlUll ~I C ar t llu:!lilU ra -·--l,IC\; t s or a . ese who has just Terblanche said. "U we do nearby Norton Air Force Base left a cinema or an opera at d ht It uld no longer hu mJssile arma· the theater, where he has' been an we are caug • co Ro'-sltting with whites, to have to mean tliit we Jose our ment, said Mayor U11:rt climb into a tul f o r· ;;;l;;ice;;;;;;nse;;;;;;. ••• ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;H;;ol;;co;;m;;b;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'"ill nonwhites," said Terblancbe.11 ••rt 15 quite ridiculous." Tight Security Set For Beauty Pagea·nt YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY IS A CREDIT MANAGER SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - Authorities, detennined not to allow a repetition of bombings tlaat almost disrupted the Miss U.S.A. pageant finals, .U. setting up a Ugh! security ICheme for another beauty conteaL The plans Include virtual Jiplation of the seaside hotel where the Miss Universe con- teat II to be held July 19-29. Only authorized persons, con- nected with the hotel, the government or the contes t will be allowed on the premises of tie Cerromar Beach Hotel, ~rces.COMect.ed with the ac- tivity told a reporter. ~g to an informant , ~ organJ;ers of the pageant, Miss Universe Inc., of New Yerk. have serVed notice that JI tbere la violence the contest '11111 JIO longer be staged In Ptiorto Rico. ,,,_ Miss U.S.A. and Miss Uni verse pageants, formerly held in Miami Beac h, were brought to Puerto Rico this year under a five-year con- tract with the island govern- ment. The MW U.S.A. fin als May 29 were marred by two bomb explosions that caused serious damage to a ihotel and wrecked several cars In a parking lot. Pickets of separatist groups -those seeking to !:plit Puerto RJco away from the United States -had marched In front ol the hot.I and staged a sit-in at the beach. During the Miss Universe activities no pickeUng on hotel grounds will be allowed. The Puerto Rican govern· ment considen the beauty conlests excellent pobliclty for its tourist Industry because of television coverage. M~ tlle .. ,... ..... l•w .. fH ~H't .... JJ11,.rtolt te fH ..... ,.. , .. eff ,.,. .. -., ............. ,., -......... .,. ~ fer .,,,.,, ef ,._. ....,.,_. 19' .-• DAILY PILOT c.m.r II .. ltmlMtl hr Waaeff, He fnltl '" te ,_, •I• -4 .. '-hi ,., .., ...... ., ....... llelhwn .. , ... c.rrlM .. .trhe4 ftl lt.t Ceffect19t H tllelr Nltn • ..... - th 1ltll ., Hdi ...,., .., Mff'Wlltr ~ ... JOtti • tMy •• M _ ..... _,......., ........... __ ....,_ .. .... --11,..'ll ...,,.._ ... _ ~ .......... k"' '"' ,..,.... ..,,, ht It wlll A$M'E PROMPT coillfrous: SERVICE DAILY PIL0.1' ~IRCULATION DEPARTMENT . • BASKETBALL SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED Dr. Gory L. Couture, of the Couture Chiro- practic Office in Nowport .Boach presents Dr. Daniel Aldric~, Chancellqr ·of l.J.C.I. 1 basket· ban scholarship check. Looking on ore (left to right) Al Irwin, athletic director, and UCI basketball coach, nm Tiit • • D ca CERT 1-D IGHI 1:15 P. ISL& • ' • I • • • • I I ' • 11oo<1.,, J.'1 17, 1m Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchan ge List Falls in Trading Rise on Market NEW YORK (AP)-Stoclc mll'-hl prices eroded and slipped lower alter advancing modesUy earlier. Trading w&S &low. DecUJlea held a •mall lead over advances-on the New York Stock Exch1nge. ''The market opened up firm and trled to carry through on Friday'• rally," said Bradbury K. Thlll'- low, an analy1t al Hoppin, Watson & Co. "Then it gal'~p-theghOil lietall!e tnver!Qrs are ltill wor- ried atiout the DemocraUc nomlnaUon of George McGovern and so they're stepping out of the markeL PKdt1 1.1% ,.,, l tqi lM PIC,.~rl At Pie~ 1.u P•clwlli A.Ir Pc '1'•T 1.20 Pie Jin .'411 P1!,_ Wtbb ,.lll'lt Wb of J>1lm Bl! .2'5 P1~Am WA P11\IW:ll 1i P111'91'C: ··:51· .• Pl II 1.04 ... ttl .• P1~ Inc ~m G_,J~ ,..,.,, C:tr.tr p..,..y L~ P111110lic: .12 Ptfll] Fn15 "-C!l",7 1. ~~~_,I: P P\., lff 4.40 """ .... Ptnff,i;I 1~ ·;;r:· ' P11w pf I Pim oil .IO ":~rc 1.)3 ~Et' 2:ff ~:ii" !1 :i\ Pet 1.l5 l"tt I pf 1 '"~' ... Pit I 1.20 Pttr St . .-0 ,.,., ,.. .:u Pttr 1.J7 Petr l .16d """ ..,, Pllelli D 2.le Phlla'EI 1.'4 Phil;·· "' Phi!'& 7.IO Ph!I 7\11 '"i .... Ph pf J.iD Ph u: 4,u ~~111r~ ~:,, Ph I ~" .20 ~~~~ ~.,J p, •H "' Pldl ilti: Intl '"' G \·" Piil ft ..« PIO!I s ,12 P l !II M Plrt1 .eoa Pl111 Resrch p11V!lor .It f»l~n.-... .12 ···1· "' Port .ID Por 1.•2 Pol h F 1 ~·~: -'w~-~ PPG 9d 1."6 Pr ll'MI ·'° p,.. ,pl' ·'° Pr GI 1VI P 1. .to PyS ol !·" pnlG .'2 'le p1 '·'2 P e l>f '·'° piii~ 1:: '''ij '·" Pu!) pf ) .... .. ~ '·" PSI l.Cll PS 1 1.64 Pul)llc:kr .tt .,a ..... 2111 Put R.C .40 P I P 1.14 pt'fi ~"'" 2 Pur11C11 .14 l>urotlll" .IM I ... ' I IC DAll.V I'll.OT JI 1 1 1 " 1 1 1 1 1 1 " .. ' • , ..•. ..... . .. .... ::: f. 'U :: , . .. . , • :' • :ll :ii: I : Phone M2.4321 or ' • • • .. " .• " ,. I I \ .. . . . . ~ IWLY PILOT Monda!, Jutr 17, 1'72 . Curvy f;owgirls a Hit Rodeo Getting New_ Bumps and Grinds in Texas . 11Y UNA PZDIEllSOll 11ld Mn. Dilhnwl, the tJlilalled, peUtt BURNl!T, Tu. (IJPI) ...-"Yoa-llhl • wilo of a <colrll Tnu r lffn nolhln" llll 1"11 ,.. 16 pounds of She !rains hor.., and joins the rodeo 'hooky took sngtl' come riding out of the clrtult oo weekends. dlule M 1.-pounds of bucklng Brahma bull," said an old cowboy, loling hall ol "WE RODEO pfiETry near Y.ear chaw ol IObaCQO down the corner of his 'round," she sald. "Some. people really mouth. work at it -they can meke two or_t.bree "Lookit her ride," be whooped. "~e'• in one weekend if they haul." rot her bott.m plant..i on that one." Burnet -rhymes with dum-lt -Is a The 11bonky took angels" ire rOdeo central Texas town with 3,000 population cow&lrll, ind they have added a new ~ and no other claim to fame than an hold on," she a.Id. ••1•ve been thrown and ~. bul I can' ull II getJ ill your "It's a cballeDfe to prove aomelhina to yourseU," uplained l>year-old ·De6ble · Allen, ol Axtell, Tex., who rides """""' and . bulls bareback. She batt..i her Gidget-blue eyes (no makeup) and llld: "It shows you're alive and you ain't BCared." daring twlat to women's liberation by armadillo farm and ''The World's tlldll( up tile sport of riding, ropillg and Smallest City Park." ~-.,_--.&...;1-radng"'acro~soutbwts"'t---_,,,Yel-;-l;OOO..per-aona.have..tnrned up there tbe past five years to watch lbe "hooky. tonk angels" perform. This year it rained steadily throughout Uie second night's perfonnance, but 600 fans sat two hours in the stands and cheered as the girls hit Sally Pressman, ~. ot Portalu, N.M., got "l'llM<T-llp Bell All-Around C.Owgirl" at this year's Burnet rodeo and was once a natlpnal collegiate cham- pion. "lt'rlike anything-else;''"sb<rsalcl;·"Jt'I the lhrlll of winning, the challenge of competition." HUNDIU!DI OP WOMEN have traded their desu and homes for hOrses and aaddlff -lnvellng between Texu, Oklahoma, New Mezico, Wyoming-and up "Get down lower. Daddy-I can't pitch to Idaho and out to Calif'"nia. the mud. · "Every year I say I'm not going to do It again, but I do," said Nancy Boswell, an lS-year old cowglrl from Killeen, Tes:aa. LAST YEAR, ~ms. SALLY Dlnndorl, Of PoUatch, Idaho, was gored by a bull in Burnet. ft took 35 stilohes to sew up the left side of hfl' face. She won the "Hard Luck Cowgirl" award for that. that high." Wearin( J>lue Jearu eo.Ugbt they can't -------------------bend over to dust their boots, Ibey rope Space Cities BOOming As U.S. Effort Wanes and ride ~ .borle like Dale Evani 'never dreamed of dping. · ''The CO'lfglrls ire tough and yeLllteY are quite f~." said Bally Dishman, president ,of the Texas Barrel Racing AssociaUoil . and the organizer of the Burnet All-Girl Rodeo, the largest of its kind in Texas. • At >2 and 115 polllld!, she looks like she should pack up h~ freckles and go back to grade school. But she calmly swings over the fence, pats down her hat and comes roarin;: out on a bull tbey call "Moby Dlck.'1 "I just love it," the 35-ye81'-0ld housewife said. "My mother thinks I'm ci:azy but my husband backs.me 100 per- cent.'1 ' Fl• Virginia • By PAUL RECEB "" """"" w,,... "put' youngest contestant is a and .our '1We now have a diversified oldest would admit to belna '<Wtr 60,' " job bue for ·the borne '1YOU'RE SO SCARED you can't really think about what you're doing. You just • Bow-legged boyfrlenda and husbands who ~ually compe.te .In r o d ~ o s themselves, fill up the stands or cluster around the chutes. They offer advice and eventually a handkerchief to dust off bad fal~ and wipe away-tears. Worki'!g.as a"line girl" at,the .Capt! Girardeau Ail' port ii> Missouri Is a unique suinmer job for Virginia Fowl.kes .. She parks planes and takes orders for ga"' olin., .and service from pilots like Ron Roddy _ of Texas. .... SPACE CENTER, HOUJi... The ,natioo.11 apace program .. ckcllnirui and --qui.Uy leaving the - tipaceeran center here. - the IUITOUllding area, II buyers," be said. Pence and other1 e.Umated that about-85 percent of lbe area'• job holders are in nonaerospace fields. T b I 1 represents a turnaround from earlier years. · aunosc mocklltg concrut, • aoommg as never oe1ui ... And the Cape lie....., PENCE WD T H A T dlatrid ill Florida· 11 -Oloar !Ab City a n cl a : ;Jmencmg a new prosperq, nearby d~p water . port in- •• IDO, , after an econ om I e dustrial d.isrtict were alrflRdy : ~on resulting from a on the drawing boards whfn : llolrp nduction Jn tlie·spoot..._!M_~cecenter was loc:at..i • orleat..i work force there la here. '.1'10. At that time, 11 years ago: In fhe· tasi fi,ve years, tbt cattle graied where mlslloo number of workerl at tbe control now atandr. A bat- . .Houston tpace center home of· tered, tw~Iarie rural road was _America's astronauis, b I I all there wu lo -what is now :declined by about 5.000, but NASA Road One, tlie avenue ··the merchantl, banks and of the astronauts. hoq: builder• in the am The Onty major develop.. elalm they have hardly been ments nearby were Ellinnton fe!!1~~ lrnpa~ .... u Air Force Jlase, n dying me w WI! 1.vwu military base 10 miles away be any busier," 1ald a grocery and Webster 1 sleepy Texal store manager. town. • ''WE CAN'T GET ENOUGH hooses to sell,"· c I aime d Cbarlee Wyant of Space City .Development, a real estate Why Mercedes-Benz Diesel owners insist that it's 311 those other people who are out of step. Row str.1nge: a little lamp on the instrument panel glows niby red when the 220 Diesel is ready IP start. .above premium gasolines. In many areas it is . lower "en than regular grades. This sturdy machine weighs over one-and·a·halt tons. It is welded more than 6,000 times, painted 4 times, sealed beneath wilh 24 lbs. of uudertoating. I • •• • firm. · We~b Sharp, manager of the -Down-the-road--O!e other way was a fading resort area on Clear Lake, a sweet water lake lhat offered boaters a palh lo Galveston Bay and Gull of Maico beyond. How unonbodox: you start it up by pulling out a knob. How odd: .the 1engia.c makes 2 "pccketa-pockcta".sound when idling. Finally, note this: Most of the 'world's trains run on Diesel power. The =ne ,holds for huge transport trucks. Such industrlcs depend for survival on low running cost and rock-solid reli- ability-strange, isn't it, that .where economy .and reliability really cciunt you usually find a Diesel engine? . ''Impeccable'• is a feeble word to describe that traditional Mcrcedcs- Bcnz finish. Ten minutes' browsing and you will Coin your own superlatives. •'Diesels_ :1re ---Do;syl" -Have yOd heard-a Diesel lately? Due to that Com- bustion process, it does click and clat• ier at idle-especially when cold. Bot once it's undCrwaythesound fades. By the time you bit 30 mph, itis actuallJ' bard to tell by the noise mat you'n; riding in a Diesel. ! Clear Lake Cl\llmber of Com- merce, said lhal although the Manned Spacecraft Centet and the lorrld ·pace of the spaoe program helped lhe i;rowth of the area, there would probably have been a boom hert anyway. '1The space program gave us the immediate base.'' !!!id Shar::i. But it was the nearness of Houston, "I1 miles by freeway, 'and that city's immense growth that rocketed tbe area's ec'onomy upward, says Sharp. CLEAll LAKE CITY, I Community put togelher by Fl I .endswooc;I Development Corp .. a lllbsldiary of Humble Oil & ReflnJQ! Co.. is the largest new development in the area wllh a populalloo of about 14,500. Charles Pence, a vice presl· dent of Friendswood, said that even . w I t h the declining amount of activity at the space center, home sales in Clear Lake City reached a record level in 1971, and a be~ ter year is predicted for 1972. "We're ahead of last year in sales already and erpect by tht end of the year to have sold 660 new homes," be said. Aparlrnent buildings and townbo_!2ses are going up also. Ul'I T ....... Tells Storti U.S. Commissioner Ed· ward P. Swann, father of &ix children, latl- fled before the House Select Commlltee on <!tu,P recently ud told them he thoupt he .... the greatest expert oo drug 1bule untJJ he round fh1t b!J 15-y..,. old IOD WU boolted on cocaine. BUT FRIENDSWOOD AND other develOpefS were ex· pecting the riipld expansion ot Houston to affect !be.area. 'Ibe company designed Clear Lake City ahd llayport and planned a Joni orderly development.· The sudden Impact of Ill< Manned Spacecraft Center construction accelerated the development by about five years or more, according to most estimates. It also iecU.> the..eslJbllsb, ment of other communities in the area and a rapid growth of such nearby towns a s Seabrook, Kemah, La Porte, Dickinson and Friendswood, a onetime Quaker community popular with aerospace engineers. SHARP AND OTHERS believe even if the !'(>ace pr~ gram died out completely the boom in the area would con- tinue. Bayport has 16 industrial firms operating there, six more committed and a payroll of $.100 mJllion. There are predjdlons of 22,000 jobs and a $U billion payroll by 1980. Ellington AFB, now busier than ·ever, Is expanding. Additionally, lhe University of Hou.stoD has ~stablished a branch in Clear Lake City wllh 15,000 students expecled to enroll by 1!181. TWO NEW HOSPITALS are apected to create 600 new jobs. Most of the astronauts built homes near the !pace center and many of these are now up for sale. But, according to Wyant, the astronauts and others selling ttielr homes are having Jittle difficulty flndillg buyers. Home values increased from 25 to 50 percent in the last six years, and are still going up, he sald. 11lt'1 definitely .a sellers' market," said WyanL Jaffe Heads ___ _.: ___ - Traffic Unit The 220 Diesel iJ no ordinary auto- mobile. It is almost eccenttic. What saves it is a penchant for paiing down running costs~ For instance, Diesel owncn sidestep all these expenses: L Tanking up OD gasoline-a fuel that can cost 49 cents a gallon for the more exof.ic "premium'' blends. 2. Tanking up often -Diesels seldom drop below 20 ·milea per gaJ. lon in average driving . iI properly tuned. And. with a light foot on the th.rottle, you'll be amazed how much bet- ter than this you can do. Perhaps it isn't so strange after aIL Perhaps the 220 Diesel isn't such an "oddball" alter all. It well may be the · most rational automobile yet devised. Where the econoDl)'.. stop~ Enjoying Diesel economy means no comedown in your standard of driving comfort. ln·fact, i!you. have never owned a Mcrccd ... Benz. it may mean a step up. 3. Replacing 1pad; plucs-or adju~g car- baretors, or fiddling with distributors and condensers, or installing new points. Costs that '.,.mou,nt in a year's 31 )'Un el •li-'-1 ,....._, stand IMlliH die Mtn:edff..&.a 220 DitMI c~ Onrb11d c:11111baft. fuel lajecUo., ud • 21.0:1 C:O•Pf"" Uon nlio-k dl1 l•i.11t v1r9oion. Try spotting this ''economy" sedan in a showroom full of Mer- cedes-Benz cars. It won't be easy; from the drMDg. No wonder Diekl owners say it's everybody else who's out of step. Why Diesel owners have the last laugh Pop open the hood of the 220 Diesel. You'll sec an engine lninus car· burctors, minus spark plugs, minus points or·con4cnserordistri butor. A Diesel engine simply d6csn't need these often irksome items. It docs away wilh the ua- ditionaJ, delicate electric system; .artd: ir exchanges carbuiCton for dir"l injection as a means of fecd.1 ing ~~,to the cylinders.· Parts that aren't there ;.;u never Jia~c to be Tept!red or replaced. . Next,starttheengineup.~. CM!d click and clatter at idle is the sound of fuel being..,.,,.,,.., in. the combustion chambers, 11ther than ignited byspark.pW.Sasin· ordinary can. Th• Diesel uses a "compres-·' lion•ignition" system. Jt means an engine compression r_atio or 21.0:1 (L powerful c.adillac V4 has a comprcuion ratio of 84:1).· And-that means-.mon: hon .. ~squeezed from nay drop of fuel. Now, rub a blob of diesel fuel between your fingutips. Jt'i • crude oil, cheaply refined. Not ev~ •~ tales can Ilise its coot ' engine compartment rearward, the 220 Diesel is: almost iden'tical to several sister models: This means that the money.saving 220 Diesel measures 5 feet wide inside. The scats, designed .with the aid of orthopedic physicians, utilize not cheap foam rubbe.r but band·woven· Coil springs and natural fiber padding. . . ' Saves money-and nerves People often enthuse-about the _pleasure of driving their 220 Dic5els. It is the pleasure of driving •j car engi- neered up tO a standard, not !Jown to a price. Each wheel on your 220 Diesel is sprung independently on its axle.Only a test drive can show the difference this makes on bad roads and sharp curves .. The car behaves with masterful calm.. As a result, so do you. You stop squarely, because each wheel-not only the front Qnes-car- tic:s its Own disc brake. The engineers even tucked a shock absorber .into the steering system to block road thumps from reaching yout hands on the wheel. Suggestion: Bring your wife along when yo& test drive the 220 Diesel. She'll be deligh!td at how easy and re- laxing tbjs 1111chine ino dri~e. She'll discover that. this roomy 5-passenger sedan actually turns in a tighter circle tlwl'th~littlcVW IIOO "Beetle." Burjingthose Diesel myths OvCr rwo decades, Mercedes.Benz has reflnOd Diesel engine performance to a point where many familiar old critl· cisms are nothing more than myths. ''Diesel fuel ii acarcel'' .Have )'Otl talked with a Dicscl ownct lately? The, fact is, diesel fuel is scarcer than gaso- line. But it's available wherever Diesel trucks stop,' and that's tho~sands and thousands of.Pia= across the U.S.& "Diesels .don't go wt enough!,. Not fast enough to win a dzag race. true. But fastcno!llh to cruise comfort• ably on any highway (aild fast<r ~ the postcd.liplits in 48 oC·thc 50 states) •. Mc:rcecles-Bem: motor an: fnml$37,92reo$6,117* Merccdes-Bml: offers a vast ranie o( models. Herc are auuested retail pcice:s for 7 of thr molt popular typc:I: J5~SL Roadllft' $10A16 210SE 4.S Sedan SI0,170 280SE ~n _ S 9,591 250Coupe S 1,169 l SO Sed1n S 7.,315 220 SN..n S 6,<tZ6 2ZODicwlSed•n S 6,111 ""'•" C-r """ f/f ....,,, """'"""'" el ,.,..,,.....,..,., -~11<.,.lt. (•-·~ O<her -01, "'H uJ Mc1! t01ft, ii ...,. eo,,ris/11 1911, Mi_.. ... ,.. °' N., •... -nu. ·- A Diesel is undeniably .. different." But not as different as many people think-and not different enough tO pre.- vent more than 35,000 Americans frorit buying Mercedes-Benz Diesel sedans in the past 10 years. A $6,117 investment The Diesel comes fully equipped at a basic price of $6,117. Youcanorderextraequip- ment, e.g. automatic transmission and air conditioning and a sliding ·sun roof, to suit your special needs .. s·ce' your JUthorized Mer. cedes-Benz dealer soon. He will gladly arrange a thorough test drive in the 220 Diesel . FOr a frtc'color'btochurefull of details ou the Diesel and other McrtCdes-Benz models, clip and send the coupon below today. I @' JIM SLIMONS I IMl"~RTS,• INC. 1» W.W.,_ AW. l IMf•' AM, C.llf, f17t1 . P1111ewSld.JDlllfbll<olotbroehvr9 ot lhc Mmrda-lknl mowcc:ao. ~~~~~~~~~~ ""'"'-~~~~~~­ Cl<7•~~~~~~~~ Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. UO W. Wmter Avmue, Santa Ana, Ulifomla 9.27...07 PhonJ:21'""'6-411& j t • ' .. ·'- "' . .. .. , I ' • l .,.,., ' ., "' •I ... 0 • ¥ . •·I.of 1~ .... I 11I1 ~hi' uo.1 " "'" """ ~ tb"J 111111 ,.,.. .. ~,. '"' ... ;· .. ... .,, . ,..! ' lflo:J I I • •• • l .A liq Inv to A Pa An •" . " Lag~~-·~~ ileaeh EDITION l'Hay'• ...... N.Y. St•eli• • VOL:. ~s. NO. 199, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL!FORNIA -MONDAY, JULY ·17, ·1972 . . . ' ~lsident to End ft.ctive Working Vacation ' • By JOHN VALTERZA Of Hit DtllY Plr.t St•ft President Nixon plans to Jeave the ~utb Orange Coast • Tuesday f o r Washington, D.C., -eDding a tw0:.week W<ftlng vacation -'!hlch started quiet· Jy but dld not stay ,that way, , '!'he President, blendlng work · with relaxation every day of his vlslt -hardly ever missed an afteriiOon at the beach during his stay at La Casa Pacifica. It lJU his fi{at trip west since the start of this year. _ Tbts past weekend -the last of the . . 'r working vacation -wu marted by a very acUve achedule. · On SOturday the President left bome early to •ttend memorial aervlcU for l!i.s late Aunt, Mn. .Edith Timberlake, in l\lvmide. Mn. Timberlake wu the woman Wbo helped Jaunc)t t he President'• caieer in law before be aougbt public ofllce. . · Only hours lifter the aervlcea, tbe Presidenf held meetJncs with Secretary of. Sta\e .William l!oae?J· and dlscuaaed the cabinet member'i recent World trlp1 Then on Sunday,_ the President· went to church. In the I~--· tllio lllinlNr 'Atlencling rites in the mo,de1t told the ~tlOD that 'GOd -b sanctuary Of San Clement.'• l'lrlt Clrlo-1111..P nabin, the HolY Scrlp!UR, aocl tlan Church, the· Pnalilent heint ; the Holy OommunloQ. • ..,.....1n1m the paator wbo two decades . ,lle'f. v°"""' declcled io •lie Ille ago mlased out OD the chance lo -ch. 11'-llon iDltead of ·fellow Mlntsler to another Amertcan l'r<lldent. Doi! MalfltJd, "becauae I -'t waol to Bui The Rev. Alan Vernaa ....,'t be ii born ...... " . about to be dtsafipointed tbta .. llme , '!be minister explalnec( that ~ Yearl around. . , aco, whlll be lel'Ved aa a Navy d!iaPJaln Aa the President ut in the 'lnint-mr, ' at the Rhode laland Naval Holpltal, be be ll!d the · 100 olber ,w"'i>!Jlpen ~ ..,.eed to allow a fellow Jhlnlater to .. Rev. Vernon. preached OD "How •Well deliver the --Sunday.I He aQd . do )'OU Hear?" a friend. Instead, took a. crulll ·CID a ) ··• . . • deatro1'f. . It wu only after be' returned from the ~unt, Rev. Vernon laid, that be learned !hat lfleo.Presldent D w 11 b t D. Eloeahower, had beeil a ourpn.. pe.st at the aervlc ... Vernon cave that explanation to the congrocat10D from the pulpit Sunday, and after the services he joined !Ml'realdent .1<1 brief converaatlon. The .President was accompanied by San Clemente City Councllman and Mn. Paul Presley to the urvices in the small cbllrch at 702 A ventda Estrella. er lll:S Ir ' Clerk Maced In Robbery; Three Held ~A Newport Beach armed robbery left a Jlquor store clerk· Maced and clubbed and involved a high speed chase Uuoogh the . atreets of Laguna· Beach, wbtcb ended only when the suspect vehicle plunged over a cliff J8te Sunday. Three persons, including an !&-year-old woman Who Aid lb& waa fpur months . ' . pr<gnant, were taken lqto <Ullody and booked OD cbargea '!f auaplqloli el umed l'IJl>berY. The trio waa Ihm !mned over to the Newport' Beacll · Police. by Phll lntorlandl FBI Aetion Lagunan _ Name.d -' 1st WomanA,gent ·~ susan Lynn Roley, zs, the. daUCllter·of flrstV'""'~'~. . ,t at cOmp: Alim, NorfOii; L .. ·i')I ,·,] ~· Marine Col. William H. 111<1 Mn. Marl• • ..,.. f f/ Her --'•, _ _, ·Art • ......_. \ I' Boley of Laguna Beach, became ooe of .--·-.,_. ......., 1 he ,,_, first tw ~-" FBI ts mldelitl, live at 1015 Vtin Dyke Drive. ~ 111 t ·na-1 o •a..... agen Col. Roley ts retired. Jin, Boley teodlO w today. coursestorretumlag·-ltudentsa.t 'I\• i r" •\ Miss Boley, a ,_.,.. llludent at Cal P--Unlveni!Yo. ' . , • · \ · .i 1 I-• Stste F1111arton, aervecl aa a· llWiDt ·Nlaa·~---~·31. t!,li 1· . lieutenant from Juoe 11, U., until bit-!!'liar~~~. -'"'"'--· ...:! ' , {' 1 dts!:barge1Jreedl7*aao-• .... a • ~ .-•Y ....... ,.......... •Y ~ ' ' . -• • • ~...,_ .ID JililcD. -_.... 'bJ. . • .; 1 ' \ • '~m..-L.~~P.J..-I '{· ' Miii. J'leiol, hU .......... ··~ Sponsor:s Say ~·~;,~.~~ R. -~JJ M Hoover and~,a-....rch for fllO-ecuu · ove ~·· n~ ;;.q.,,._ HoOver ·!Ujd -"!" . . c:curqeda ponorapll)I!,.....,..,.._ ' Mtsa ROiey' atlendecftiie Unlv•rlitj'Of _I • ' Arrested were: Cynthia Ami Foat, 18; Paul Joho Jennings, 23; and Gerald Anthony McNatt, 19. All three gave an addr.ss of the Hacienda Hotel, 12119 S. toast Highway, Lag1ina Beach. · Newport Beach police aald today that 'Third of Way' ~1ai:;t~t:a::riani1,1?om' "Y~re·IW • G00Q ll .. I' lltlle l'arlon, Ytu're a GREAT llHI . , ' ' ·' E1t1te Perton. '' ~ohony's-Liquors clerk Steven Warner, A total of !,!SI si~iures bu-lieen-<01-zs, was sprayed in the face with the ··-<:hemical Mace and then clu!ibeil:'tO the leclecl ori peUtions 1etilng-a recal1 el<C- Door ot the stoi:e, 3537 E. Coast Hiihway tlon apmt Laguna Beach-Boa?d of Wilh an 18'inclf.long' wciocten lmplemenL Education memberl Patricia Gillette and llUceJs USed by police, often in riot Gira)l,'t.ipke. ~1:!::· was taken to the Hoag "It puta us a Utile tf;er a tb\rd of the Memorial Hospital and releaaed following way," commented 'lbomaa Cusldy, \!!nergency treatment. Newjiorl Beach president of Coni:erned CIUAns for j!Ollce said it ts not known ·11 any. money Schools. Be · noted 2,IOI aigna!uJ:n - !I' property was tajien In the incident. verified by the county . · !lellftrar of Miu. ~ a . formei' llUll, wu' a member el Ille. Slaterl •of 1 ·lllerey IWiglowl Order fftlin !llt-70. She at- tended M'edall". Colle8•, .Buffalo, N.Y. 1llld St. Bonit-Lt!~ a.an. N.Y. ·1915-70. · • 1 • : -• ~ ~ •womm ;toOk'\he oath el, alfkit from 'G -aiid -ltlly beOn llie niuJar w .... ~-lor.'J'.81 agents. . • ' . , '' ,, ·To R·es·tiire ~ Some ·cuts . . After the •rvlcea tho · 1""'41111 returned .to !Ila ,..ldence 111<1 sifml tho mt of· the day reJaxlna. · He walked aJonr the beach ~ 9' bis residence, -toot -last -through San ¥eteo Canyon-oatveyln the Z,800 aCftl of uplancla wbleh once were part f1I Camp Pendleton, bul now will become P1llllle recreation areu, » cording to a P.nlldenUal declaration, Today'• lul 'full clay of -will. include talb with commer<e advlaera. durJnc the eafl1 boun of the day -and probably JUil -more-trip to-the belch. . ame Challenger· Not There · To See It REYKJAVIK (AP) -Worlcl - champion Borla Spasaky reslped tho \111!!1_im!f.Klinst Bob._by F_tscber today, five rnlnutea after the clock waa nrltdlecl on to NIUDll their adjourned game. Refene I.othlr Schmid o p en e d Fischer'1 lllied 41st move. It wu ..._ toqu-m.. Ftscber Waa DOI ID lllJIL,. • Spa..,. ...... ..., ....... and , knocJted aver Illa flfnl, ...._ tbe •-......... ' .'l'lla-).. Ille ............ ... atanto•• .•1-lD ..... .,,..,fawr. (lmllilf story, ~ • Pap'.f) Spaaaky 1ialkad ell lie llap u tho spectaton in the l,ltlO •I audllorlum sat in tolal allence. • The R•lan toet bta lint pme aver lo Fischer. Spaaaky had hem pla)'lng white, wblcll cave him a allgh_t advantage. Floeber'a-aeaied move had been ' ' predicted u the winning mov~ !>J an crandm'"'in watcblnJ the pme. The Alilorlcan cha!Jenier, after lreep- •-the match in llUSpellH wt th. pl'otata ;g'11n1t' TV ' iild' movie ' - tbe -"llie third.~ .. a prlt'alt """" offstage, ·Police wd that two men W.re·involved Voters -are needed to force a recall 'Absurd' Laws bi'the liquor store acUvities, aDd were election. . -~in-~be .=·!~!"~ Trualeea made the cleclalons attha Festt•v '...!1 Cr.-·:. ·..1_ -running from the store by a passer-Petitions bearing both recall charges ...,,...._ . ~ · · -~ ipeclal lludy -1on called to deal wt 1 lU UKIUIJ ~ · bo t 11 30 Sund and the two tnistees" m--are be;•• {; • S amJJ!oyU .«lvm. a bealthy"w.,.' increaat, •-ooo ...,_, wtnclfall to the .dlltrlct dUe • oy"at a u : p.m. ay. ~--· ove· mw:ng eX tnia1oes Cf the Liguna Beach Unified .,._, · .--"J;iewporl .Beach police broadcast a ci.r.c-ulated _.,to, door, at one · .• '.. °', Sch/JolDlatrl<t•--..Satunlay., to a 18 percent increaae in useased ye-. • B • description of the ·suspects and their supermarket 'and .:i other downtown Jo.. -:;:: Jo.. . . valuation. r,ewing, uying v~hicle. locatlona, cassJdy • ' . . . D • g' , A"-~k . . H .. . H H . Mab>l«llnce· 111<1 operation accounts, • .. 'l,'car·111eetlng tHat a description·wu "We have a van. marked with signs, · i:awin .i,uu.; . La · . Sch I Vlaitiits'wereoutinforceforthe- ob!erved about 20 minutes later by that•we're uslng,'"be uplilned; "We.aiao • ' . • ' · · guna . 00 . noted bullnea m-er Charlei Bea, ~a Beach police. " are collecting llpdures. almg the STANFpRD (UPI) _ Cltlng u;...eaa .. . • . . have. hem the lint .0.. •-to baI-~ ~ :i ~~··. ": · ,'Attemptbig to slop the car, tbe Lagilna ~·"1156 unCbecked a1~tures ex· of an.'ln4!~ man wbo ~t lllree ydn' 8. . ·.. Chi £. ~ the· budget in recent yean. mood, n.tJval.ofllclais report. :: ~wg~ ~:!i."!!.8 e::i~&:ti::: ceeds ~ 11115 votes which~ Linke into iii prison for illegal lovenialdng with' hil .. usmess . . ~ Aa • reruit. IChool bulldingl 'are not . "I.be -total, from the llOOll open1na left onto carmeuta sh.et. office in ~pr11; 1971. Tlie n.umber of wlllln'g w!ie, '\wo Slanlord Unl'ltl'll"7 recetvhlg Adequate custOdlal car~, npalr Frtdoy through SWtday nilhl. wu loQl4 th names colleclecl falls. llhort ol the. 1,211 __ .. _~--!ta•• -•~ •-a ..,._ in 0e~ d S . of -~ er replacemeill o•f at 12,G, about the aamo aa last yur'1 ..:;:ec1-:..;:.u:;~d<n: =~hti~ votes which elected M?-Gllletle,,aald t;u;;;;';w,..;;."; ... ';~ ',.IeD .81 . ys~~ ~ting Items. . r-w::.r~:i.:::. roporled driveway, the driver perhaps thinking It ca..tdyca••..;,, --•~ :.: .,.;.';.......:, to.-"~ , "~all'-1 ..U'fl{y· !hit.· may · _...:.. ---.-__ ~ ~~ the repolr of bultdJap In -Ion to the ._uy popular 1--. 8JlavenueofeScape,p0lice"sald. ~ NJUwe.,. ... _...,.._ ...vua;• ht....._,._... wll 1f'lth -~ .l'IUWI'.......,• °"nv~ a1 will COit '120Ml'll and ___. iterm tbe..a .. w-t..1.&... ''llbe car then !Qppled over a cliff. more tbao 3,000 lllgnatura by 1bi epd of ~ bet•-•-r:-;, -•, . ot •·--'"" · ..,. , · . ,..., recam• ......,m'9 • ·~ • -e - J'liguna Beach olficOrs took thrt!e persons the inooth. The . pOlltil>Di !heh would be Ille• ~ of ldllbff, ~ 111<1 t.aCuna Beach Unified llchool Dtstrlct mei;deci tbta COii bt tpread' C(Vtr ,a thlee---'1f !lie -elllly art ..... ts. fli!lng in the vehicle Into custody. No one forwU'ded to the lleglolrar of Voters for wginal• 'lntercoune la deflnid" aa -'Manqer Cbarlea lien Will · year' peitod. • 1 • One artlat aold llVW&I ......... in tho liported lnjurtes,pollce ,aaid. verillcatlm.' crliliJaai. in ,...,.n.'....;, atmt.; tlie fOrDJall1, i'eaJion!f. Tuesday ,nlgbl to Tl'ultees allo pat a bl&b i'<lorllT OD ~btod~~~·· acoonlllit to tho ~ • ·~~ llleptionl that hJa ICCOOllltlng l)'ltem ts __.._ 1 ;...,.,...~,_~~-----JfHYIO_•_ ~ and another foaDd ·" ~ • Dn.; ijerlD! A., K!iicb-lau ~ and'blelllcfenL . ,,_,_ •.-.-;-~ :"""'"' ~':"" I ~for a ... polnllac. S. C • • Co . ~ I . 111<1 Donald r. Luiidl dld·SllndlJ.. . . '!be _..,,or. • ~ for a ..,.. pen:ont.aa!O!Y -· "" • r7:'-:-.,.· ;-::""'--:=-===-i en, ·1•or 1tiz'en"s ·m·, ·p., e·. x· . MOii -19 are elthar '-ware"el Oedareo'wumadt:i::=ofeducA· queolad by ~-~t ·~. l-, ~ 1 -', .. : • • ' · tlio>lawsorthlnk'tberareaonnl)' .... tioa'laatWMkbY 'aNfiwila!'!Beoch'IU Educators Council·ol.tlioi ~rape! ·•S.,<i .' C.z• fOroed u · lo' be Jncopaeqaentlall , ~ CCllllllMm,· ~ T .. Pugh. tbe 'Clliall!ed Employtl ~ .of tbe • ' . ·•I• But their .--to "'lie> . J>uP, a ""'1nar PB! tpeClal -t and -.!, ·custodial llld mal-p f L . .. Pl r·s· :-llloail-.. .-iqipllc:atlia· . ......,... . .,QieNallaaal,-'Re .. ataff.,: . ; . e 1 ore . :1'~1n3 _ ~"-ne !Jlthe.llidlina-a..·pll1dl!atltlll t'~~nt~,=~ ~laol·-~~·i",... -,,·--.. -.. lllil;0 the .u.. Q.irie!Oll-her INibaM la ~·lo1lle .... --ol • '*" -. They -.,-..,11~ ' ........ . ' : . . , ·• of1t ,..,.-iild !)¥a~~ 111a dlllllct. .. .. percent m.. durinC the1f'IO.n oc:bool ' · ,lniellnalpubllcbearlngonamonere-difficult' to reach fn -slJua. agakiotldm.Slledldn'taccUoeblmoflil-\ -la ~ fo , elaboralo .on 7';[;, "'JUOll*l llllry Ina'-would • •f-= "/:7;.:'Jn.O.. ~ qi~ f'! pennlt cooatrucUon of a senior ~ ~ty ~ llaft bu rM:om-ill......, &Dcl,:befon Ille'.~• came to • (S. ll!PLY, hi• I) . , -tho dlalrlCt · -..,. ,170,ooo .and ~ the ~ .... c.aat. tupo .r iltiJens apartment complex b • 1 d • mended commluloalr'l dllly approval to trial, dtlnpd lier llliDd .and tried lo ·" · · '1IO,aatl, -told -• ,'11 are upectad beoeM<li, 111111 ,~'Laguna Beach lbe-.cl!aiwe reQileol. • r wJtbdnlw.111r-uon': • . Raaa1.:....:. .. ·ke' .&aa . .........., a111n1t aa ·-tho • to ,111t ......... ~ ""' ., ~nntngconlfuluion. ~ -..~ -~allowt!llmldolii0iiiid~111o~·-~1e LLl.'-uH . boelll'' u.cr1111 .ld llle ·dwlfW'llilJ, ,..._,..,..,., ..... -J'ollowina the 7:30p.m. belrfilg,.,..,. i.m.c anc1 take.acdolton• ._i.1o ,...,,.,.._ 111a'liaollolid .... .,..,_ • . !r=..i!. ~: 111t Job~ 11811n.u-·1 mlalloners are obllgtd lo act oo 1111 rt-reoloreJ\.!aooJnctDtheW ..... 1ndllriv'e ..... eoeoil te 'two ID .1.4 ,_. b>plllilll, 0wn· er' a•ted. .. .. ~., •. _ .. cl~ •. a;;;f0'!:""°. to · . ,...i from Jphir Elden to raone T.4 1r11, dow '"'*' 11-lA (llJht mm... and -thne JNfl before a ldcJjlr --•·· . ~.,,,. Tllroped fa 'A'"'"-.....,.., ..,... of bill•lcle land behind ctty '*8 turlng). l1>t 11111· la ~ IP" Court "averta."'4 'Ille ftrdlct . oo ll · • • .. · • .. ' Wl,Jll tbe l9ll ·"""' ~ Mgloet m ,_,., 1Drftl of ....,, , :.....,, ft.I (tow dooallY naidentlal) to~ provol. • : . . technleai1ty. ' • • ,· . I i.. 8aD -inln . WU dlad . = ==:."'lit~ ~~I '"' _, -.. ht ... '(lllahdenlltyN11dential). . lnolliir~tbeeo,nmillllonwtD ; Daldladlilrlan iild Lua, w11o ,;i;. Saturd&)'lwbulaor!O«~-""" · ~ ;o,ubd'S..·tD m;,.Wo · 'CGUfonUQ. • ""OllO MO•t ,. . • ~en requesla the "!"" cbanp to ~-the CllJ el.i:.acm.·-·1 ~ "* '*"Jawt la ID,.-:;::n,.:r1M •wllllll!tlla!-B'eadl:etty , -llilnl.OD ''I!¥ 11 would Lliraji) , afool lo brl!lg """' -ti allow .~ <L 200 ~ .coat -lollleCllJ<Clr'flnf'l><I r111 ........... 111 ·~ llD.," lllld Ille ...... --II teaolllat' l!Dllllo tUt blft ,,,-_ • ....,,... 7, .-1or-e111zen1.11e-annalmtdlatblt.-<:ll!Joa--. a.a.r.•.....,. . ...nllml•"" Tlltmhl1 -cllqlelJmtioi;lal ........ ~::a:"1alllip&11 ..,.,_ ' :;...-! at a lllllllblr ol-ly I*-are -8el a plltle Jitiialllll for lftlDRI ._el-..... at-·lllM ...... a ...... -wu Wied Oii• I two,..._ , ' -': 1 ln(drtvtnlnlmtheartallonJ*--·-It lal _....., ... la-1-'"'611i'WbJaliliilll Twi'rJNil, .... mollk!Ol"wuaJI. ·u.wllJ.PffllOllltllo~·al'!Wo C:'·il: -==,: Gt ever lncrwlne,..,,. pril:oL ~ ""-fa1IL ed ID a malil '-di l*'lmic Jal bJ I day lllCfll'a reauJlr nlMilnl, wlllll ="'""!-"' ll, - - • Opponents to Illa tnJeol, lncladlng -t\ppolnl aa """""' -ID lie T"'1 mpd ._i el .. lnr fllO-dllan. --.,a111 will tiaqm tho f'.2 _ _ , - --ft!lllY ....-of the ,IMldonable Mystic Allao lf•ter M.,..-J.amcy. lliJ>IUnl _. bet•• u1111111nt1 Pollce aalll Gat 1 ratllelnM& .,.. ac-mllllon llllolP!I-· ,. 5 I: IDlll ana, IA)' the ~ ftUld ~ I r&qlllllt. ·"" an ID< ldalll, 11111 ....... • ···-el laws od la I llamJ 'llhlcb lied ... = , . 0Uw -wbli:fo 1111J be boltla1'bJ :.1 .. -,.,, :...r?t ••o .; ~ ~-~·..:::...~'!:"! ~ D:llln lb C!riatlan ~!-11 ... ,...,~··t.,1~ ..... '!1-.:..Cnr.~""!..~·"',~ 11 ..... --.. ~~ .a.,. -.. .. ,,...., v-....... r--· ----.-r••A"' .. e11111lllw•1Da'lkn,. ,.1 ..... ai ... i:rr--m -·•....,"''' " •• • > .,~ -, • IWl.Y PILOT LB Fund ·Drive For Tennh , Progresses ' ..-) ~ .. Wl11! thi <Ollltructlon of lour new com- llllldty """I• court• 11 Its 1oa1, Leguna lWecb'a ''TeMls Now" project Is p~ ,_1og steadlly In Its fund drive, chiilrman Rm RoSI ll1llOWlCtd Jut week. no &ti few ....U of the aimpolp htvl )'llldod ,1,111111 In cash a1olli wllll 1<1~1al pledgn -said. • In addition, ,U,500 of city money eormarked in Jut y'8r'• budget 10< the deYelopmebt of public tennis facilltle5, 1)u bttn set aside by council action, delplte a dty alall ?<COmmendatlon that the •PFOPriltlon be roac:lndtd and the money placed In the pneral fUnd. "Tennll Now" II almlnc at a '30,000 fund 111!1 -. a teacher and U!nllts ;,;;;i, ~I Ji&pna Beaoh Hieb Scl>ool. Two of the •lilting lllCh achoo! courll; ht noted, are In such llOOI' coadltlon tllo1 alJ vlrhlalb' U1111Able, bul two &OOd coUrti mnaln at the ¥ acbool, ao .. .,. .... 'oi 1111 .... pi'Oleot '"'"1d proVldl .a good coqrli 'at Ille loeatlon. DAILY PILOT ,..... W ......... LedllllltY Kites Fly Downwind Voter Aid Asked Sumner Attacks Split o By TOM BARLEY Of ... DMh' l"tM tltfl-" • Presiding Judge Bruce Sibner today Wed Orange County re1ldenla: to urge 1tate Senatora Dennll Carpenter and • Jamas Whetmore to bloCk approval' of a blil that would create a permanent Fullerton branch DI the county's Supertor Court. "They should know that this whim of a special interest ifOllP wW ,cost them a totally UMectS!lll')' ~,000 beitnnlng in 1973," the LalUDI Beach jurtst told ne"smen called to hfJ clwnbers this momtna:. "This ta1 tnrease will be forced on the ttaldtnts of this counfy by• blll authored by Asstmblymlo John V. Brtgg1 (R· Fullerton) for a special lnterut aroup," Judge Sumner saJd. He ldenUfled , the principal! of thst group as Dr. Arnold Beckman, the Fullerton Industrialist, Republlcsn party executive Robert Beaver and the Fullerton News-Tribune. ' residents to pay the huge co.sts or this p01ntless court and It Js not falr to us to face a correspon ding reduction of ef~ flciency in a court tha t has t~acbed an enviable atage or efficiency ," Judgo Sumner arcued. He pointed out that county Supervisors. the Orange County Grand Jury, the Orange County Bar Association and the state Judicial Council are all opposed to the existence of a Fullerton branch court. "Passage of the bill could mean the con.strucUon of a new buil ding and then our '250 000 figure will prove to be an ex. tremelf conservaUve one," J u d I e Sumner contended. He said judges of the Anaheim. Fullerton Municipal Court pr esentl y pro- vide space for the hearing or the Friday · morning calendars to wh ich Judge Sumner assigns one or his Superior Court jurist!!. ., · Pe_, wlshlni to makl contrlbutlonl, which are tu deductible, may contact Ross at the high school, 625 Park Ave., or by pbont at 49H546. .. . On Sept. 10, supporters of Tennis NDw" plan a bmtllt dance for the proj· ect ... tbt teonla c<llril • !be acbool. DetOUI will be annouoctd later In !be Portion of 100.boat fleet in the inaugural Flight o! the Kites in Newport Harbor fight for position as they run past east end of Lido Isle on downwind leg. ight of the Kites has replaced old Flight of the Snowbirds because there aren't enough of the pld wooden Snowbirds around anymore. To see how .,tthe first Kite flight came out, see Page 18. Judge Sumner said passage of the Briggs bill by the senate would force his court and all related county offices to fully staff a branch court that presently calls for one judge to put in 90 minutes a week in clearing ill one page calendar. "But the passage of the Briggs bill \YOUld mean a full time · jµdge. clerk, equipment, facilities for such offices a.!\ the district attorney and poSslbl~ even marriage license and naturalization facilities," Jud ge Sumner said. . IUIJllller, Lumber Under Price Control WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -'lioe Administration moved against the rising lumber prlctt today, by plac- ing vlrl\lally the enllre lumber In· dustry under wage and price con- trols. The Coat of Living Co u n c II ordered the ec6nomic controls on all manu!aClurlng, wholetale IDd · retail buslneaata wttb a n n u a I lumber 11lt1 of more than •100,000. The action brines about 12,000 lumber lndllltry llmuo, preVloualy free from ..... price 1'tllrlcllooa, -thacon~ Laguna Council Hopefuls .Get Chances to Talk Lalun• Belch City Councl1 0111dld1te1 will have two flnll opportunltie1 to air tlielr Vie,.. th1I week, prior to the July U .....u......,u election. TburadaY al I p.m. the League o! women Voten will 1pOD10r a candldate1 nl4ht at the NefCbborliood Congro11Uonal Cburch, 340 St. Ann's Drive, with fQrmer coundlwoman Holen KHleY oerv1ng •• mOclerator. · of On Friday at I o'clock the Spirit Lal\l!ll newly lonned local forum, and ~ 1-'• free un!vontt1 organization; ;will sponoor a mock city COUlld1: meelh!I In city ball council cbtmbtn. · Partldpa/ita "ii! work from a . mock agqdl of'~ concemtna ~ent local Issues. J ·. COundl candidate! Carl E. Jobnl!Oll r., Larry Campbell, Wayne Raglin and Beth Leeds have been invited to take part m both of tile publlc forums. Minuteman Launched I/ ANDENBl!lllG A1K FORCE BASE (AP) -The Air Force Space and Mlullo Tiii centar hora uld Saturday nlabt It laimcbed a modllled Minuteman I mlullo doWn the Wtttern Teat Rongo, The laanch, tenned IUcctaful, Wll to tell a r'8Dlr)I vtblcla bUt no other dotallJ nre released. OllANtl COAST U DAILY PILOT Tiii °""" C..t ~ll.Y f'IL.DT, Mitri M1k11 h CllMIMlll fM Ntwlo,,_ Ill !Mlw..I ., flle Or~ C.tt ltW!ltfllnl CM111111y, .... ,. .. tlllHlllll .,. 111•UtMlll1 MlfllftY lflNllllt Frld1r, fW CO.II Mts1, HIWP6rt B•tll. ff~l1119hln 8H1:h/F«1nt111'1 \'11lty, LltvM IHCll, INIM/Saddl•d!: ~ 111'1 Clitmtfllt/ l11t .llHl'I C.pl11r111t, A t lntl• reglol\11 lldlflon It .. !Wiid ltllltdl~ _. SUl'ld1ys. Tiit prWJptl IMtlltlltrle '*'"' It 11 UI ~t hy Slrfft, CO.ti M-. C.llftnllt, ~ R1~1rt N. W1t4 ,,.Wint.,.. f"Ull111Mr .J1ck k. Curlty Vice ,,. .. w .,.. Otn«ll Mtnlftl"' Th•"'•• IC11,lf 14111r 7"tM•t A. M 1tr,hi111 ' Mlfttllnl , ...... C~•rltt H. L..•1 •11h1f4 '· Nell ~M ...... lst .... ---2f2 h1t1t A11t11t1• , M•ili"' M.1,.. .. r.o. ••• '''· •2•11 --C.fll Mlel1 • Wiit~ ·-·=h•dU :ml H IOll!f¥lf'I ,.WI! ' ..... , 1,.,,... ""'~ IM .....,. Af ,..,_ II C•mh11 lt•I Tet 11111 rn4t '41"4111 C'n=WW M••ftlat '41·1171 '--All ..,,,,_, , .... , .......... , ... ~ '"' °"'9t' O..t ~­c..,,....,., ... ,_. ·-~ '""''"' ...... ....... """" .,. .,.,.,,'""'*"' ...... Met' ............ ,,.,, .... , ... ....,..,.,... . ....,., ..... !'-!.~If ait C.11 ..... =-·-=·--J, :.,_::,-...,:.:: ............. ......,... ' Gypsies Mourn Dead King "For more than 10 years the SUperior Court has offered to have any contetted trial beard in Fullerton, but not one such request has ever been made to this court 1n that decade," he said. But the Briggs bill, Judge Swnner warned, may well force his court to send cases to Fullerton to trial over the o~ jections of both litigants and lawyers. "The municipal court judges obviously . cannot provide that kind of cooperation and we would be faced with a new building and the coosequent tremendous : costs," Judie Sumner said. · . Gunman, Holds Spiro Californ,ia Laid to Rest in Chilean Grave 5 for Ransom SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -A> children and 60 grandchildren. gravedlggen shoveled dirt on the green steel coffin of Spiro Californla, grieving women acteamed "Little father, take UJ with you!" Some ·were restrained trom leapltJi into his open grave. Delegation1 of gypsies from Argentina, Brazil, Peru, Paraguay and Uruguay ar- rived for the funeral, singing and weep- ing under gray skies and chilly winds that are part o[ winter in the Southern Hemisphere. It w11 the burial of the king of the 30,000 Romany gypele1 of Lltln America. California's body lay in state under a worn ctrcus tent in an encampment o[ gypsies outside S&ntiago, hi• coffin open with a translucent shrolld OOscuring his face. California, 61, died last week of a heart attack. He was the leader of a gypty empire that atretcbed from Mexico to the southern tip of South America and hid been king since bit father died II ywa ajJO. He was sucoetded in IYP!Y tradition by his eldest son, Hugo, 44. The ldni bad 12 Barefooted children stared at the body and relatives shooed away packs of stray dogs trying to get Into the tent. Bomb Rips Canada Forum Hosting 'St-0nes' Concert MONTREAL (AP) - A bomb exploded , outside the Mo~treal Forum ear.ly today · under a truck loaded with equipment for a concert in the arena tonight by the Rolling Stones, a police spokesman reP.rted. No 00t wu reported hurt, but lhe win~ dows on the north side of the bullding \Vere.. broken. Peter Rudp, mllllger of tbe Brttlab roclc groop, said the concert ivould take place as scheduled. The Forum building covers a block and · Is the home of the Montreal canadleos of the National Hockey League. The building watchman, Gast., n Lesage, 56, wu sitting by the back en· trance about 16 feet from the truck. "There was a hell of a bounce," he said. "AU those window• broke, a ball of fire came out trom under the tnick, and then there wa1 a Jot of 1mbke." The motive for the bombing was not immediately apparent. A police bomb squad wH inveatlgatlng the posalblllty that another explosive device bad been placed under another truck parlced nearby. l\lr. and Mrr. Robert McClellan "'Id they wera sitting on their front l'Orch wben they hesrd the blut. "I went down to the sidewalk and •11 I could see wu a cloud of amoke and 11n~ 1y1n1 a11· over tbfi at.reet 11 Mn. McO'!llan said. "I phoned a frlind down the atreet and she said all the windows In her apartment were broken." Violence has occurred in other ciUe1 where the Stonu have held concerti u part of thtlr current 11 .. weak North American tour. During the Stones' first conce.rt on the tour; more than ~o policemen were In- jured tn V~dt.B.C., In a rock· and botUe-lllrowlng a• 3,000 young1tor1 trJtd to uaab Ulfl sellout tvent on June 3. Flfloell persons tme arrested. In Sin Diego, several perSClns were arrested June If when rioting broke out arter °IJOltl'ers of counterfeit tickell to ,a Lifeguards Busy At Laguna Beach W~atr and """' water lured peo- ple and Jellyfish to Laauna Besch'• shorea over the weekend, keeping llf"llH'rd• bUsy with 106 reacut1 ancf 2SO lint aid calll, mostly for jellyfish llfnCL Buch crowds numbered 46,000 Satur- day and IOO!lled up to 11,000 Bunday 11 the air temperatura climbed to a degrees and the ocean warmed to a com· lortable 70 de1tee1. Mounttna 1111'1 spelled minor trouble for many swlmmm but none of the raacu11 was logged 11 a serious Incident. Tho surf, and ureguard•, also wlD """ to brealt up tho jellyfish Invasion whleh II expected lo dlrnlnilh for the rut of the week. ,stones' concert were turned away. Tbt nerl night, police in Tucson, Altiz., used tear gu to disperse a crowd ot 200 to 300 window-breaking youtba who tried to crub a concert. • When the Stones appeared at the Metropolitan Spcrts Center in Bloom- ington, Minn., June 18, several hundred gate-<rashen caused $1,900 to $1,500 damage to the faclllty. El&ht plfllODS wl!re arrested and several policemen were injured. The Stones' concert tour covers 30 . cltlu. It marb the first time they bave vl!ited the United Slates ln 2~ yeara. An appearance at the Altamont Speedway 35 miles east of San Franciaco on Dec. 6, 19$9, during their Jut concert tour produced a day-long traffic jam along Interstate 205, and four deatbl, in- cluding one stabbing, In the crowd of 300.000. . The chaotic scene at Altamont was recorded pertly in the film, "Gimme Shelter," which was used as evidence In • the murdtr trial of a Hell11 Angel motorcycle gang member accused of the stabbing. He wu acqu itted. Hell'• An1111 were acting as secutJty guard:: at Alta· mont. The Stonas returned to Sao Francilco In early June. Thero were no Incidents and the IJ'OUP "°"sed $ll0,000 ID four COC> certs there. Raceway Thieves Net About $350 Burglara who broke Into the aouveolr stand at Orange County lnternation~l Raceway durinf the weekend wertn'l looking for the kind ol memontoa they cab show their 1randehlldren. Orange County Sheriff's officers said the Intruders wbo forced open a gara10 door to the premises at 15000 Sand Can- yon Ave. and then lroke through a dividing wall cnncentrated their 1ttention on the cash box they f0W1d in the carrera concession stand. Deputies said bttwtcn $300 and UOO in bills and loose change was taken by the in truders. Midnight Intruders Not Playing Golf DES MOINES, 10\fa (AP) -IDlrud•rs have been sneaklna IDlo Jtller Park Cl6lf Coul'll at n!Cb~ acratcblnf lour-lettlr words In the rraena and ua1n1 aprlnklers to bathe In the nud•, the Polk County ConlervatJoi\ Boen! WU told. COnlervaUon Dlrador Wl)llll Billi aald he racel•ed raporta twl<t from JWicera a bout younc paople dllroblnf and IUlnC bothl llnder the sprinklers. j . Burning candles were jabbed into the dirt Door to provide a cordon of light around the coffin. The coffin wu driven to Santiago's General Cemetery in a battered 1tation wagon and followed by more than 35 truckloads of the king's followeni, their cheeks streaked with tears as the motorcada passed throucJ1 the Chilean capital. Clllfomla's coffin w11 Jowered into 1 grave ol bis family's plot, a Jlarrow space between the plots of strangers. Hugo Calllomia and one of tbe dead IYPIY monarch'• daughters directed the burial. AA the coffin descended, 1emeone passed a botile of brandy among the moumm. As the l1rlt spadefu!J of dirt struck the coffin, aeveral IYPIY women eobbecf and bepn l!CftllDlDg. Several p I u D 1 e d forward and tried to jump Into the IP'•••· TbeJr husbands pulled them baclt. "lie wu a 1lmpl~ · 11114· wllf1 )tked to talk to chlldreh," laid one IYDu. ''He liked to sing and to dance aDC! "to lauab. Thel'I .., .. notbina proud about him." The burial over, Hugo California leaned against a brick wall of \he cemetery, a cigarette banflng ttom bit mouth. His face w11 Wllbaven. "Lone live the Jtinll" came a shout from Uie departing rnoumera. Hugo dropped the cigarette, covered his eytt and sobbed. Sports Worl,d New Champion A grand slam home run by Jody Lusk led Sports World to a &-3 win Friday over Laguna Federal Savings and earned the winning team the 1'71 Laguna Beach Lit- tle League championship title. A crowd ol 200 penons Jammed Riddell Field Friday tvenlnc f<»" the 1am1 and" watched as Todd Weaver pitched the win. The SPO<ll World Team w!JI move into area pfayof/I Tunday tlJibt wban It meets the winner of tonight's 1ame between Laguna Niguel All Stara and the San Clemente All Star•. He said Senator Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) could provide a key vote in the issue since Senator Whetmore has already indicated his support for what Judge Sumner, a former Assemblyman . from Orange County, described as a •1aweetheart bill." . The Senate :Judlclary Committee Is scheduled to meet Tuesday to review a bill that has already cleared the Assembly, Judge Sumner 18id. He made it clear that only sustained Clpposltion from other Orange County communiUes faced with raising the taxes to pay for the Fullerton court can pre- vent its passage. "It II not fair to ul: other county General Cushman Qf CdM Dies; Rites Wednesday Lt. Gen. Thomas CUsbman of 417 Serra Drive, Corona del Mar, one of three Marines ever to rise through the ranks from private to general, died Saturday after a long illness. He was 77. Graveside services will take place Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego. Baltz· Bergeron Mortµary in Corona del Mar is in charge of arranaements. Gen. CUsbman enlisted In the Marine Corps.-in-1917 and wu named com· mandln1 1eneral, Air Fleet, Marine Corps, Pacffic, In 1919 after serving aa an aviator through various Paclfic cam- paigns In World War ll. He later commanded the lat Marine Aircraft Wing In Korea. Gen. CUahman wu promoted to the rank or major 1eneral Jn 1950 and became a lieutenant general upoo b.l.!I retirement in 1954, when be moved to Corona de! Mar. Beeldea hfJ waretime aulgnrnento, Gen, Cushman served in botb Nicaragua and Hatti. He is survived by h1I wile, Eleanor: a son, Tboma1 J. Cushman Jr., of Ari· in1ton, Va.; a dau&hter, Mrs. ·Lyle K. London of Newport Beach; f t v a grandcbUdren and one great·grandcbUd. RICHMOND, Va. (AP ) -A man armed with a shot gun and a knife walked into a branch bank near here today, locked himself in a room with five hostages and drmanded $5001000 in ramom, authorities said. Some SO local, stale and federal officials surrounded the Bank of Chesterfield branch awaiting the gunman's nelt move. A 1972 automob ile demanded by the man was brought to the bank. Authorities Id the man too~ eight persons lmtage but released three women. From Pagel REPLY ... remarka he made lollowlng Pugh'-. report .. lie called Pugh a "neophyte" inf school accountlng and pointed out that .. accounting methods that are used comply with state Jaws relating to school flnan-. cing. Pugh was hired as a consu1tant June 30 on a motion by school Tru!tef Patrtcla1 Gillette. Employment of the fl!O-pu-day invesUgative accountant alao was sup. ported by Gerald Linke 31)d Wllllam . Thoma1. . In other matters at tht 7:30 p.m. · me:ellng at the Educa.Uon Center, 550 • Blumont St., the board wW : · -Contlnue discU:uion on the $4.1! mllllon budget for the llm-73 school year and receive several reporta from He•s..( --Olntlder for adopUon a set of atrlc parliamentary rule!! to llrnit the maMer in which persons may addrea Ule board. The rules were paaaed to second reaatng > last week, with Trustee Jane Boyd , di1sentlnf. She termed them 11 too restrle--, tive." Board president William Thomas •• maintains they are needed to koep ; decorum at board meettng1. Followina: an &Mouncement Friday •. · Thomas that he had dropped his propos/l" to chanae the program at Top of th•·· World Elementary School, an ltem re la Ung to the matter wa1 dropped from 1 • the qenda. ' " WI ctUAllANtD ' IVllYTHINct SOLl'l'AIRI .. l'UllL llMI 11 llTHITOHI .. RINGS. . Jewelry and· Loan PAWN SHOPS ARI fUN_I v,oull cHOici • 10 ft. cell ..,.,,. ... ft ... . STEREO I Trock llwM Playw Decka FRE-E WITH TMll COUPOll ;Act<'AO! OI' 4 •. PINLIOHT l I l ) I I I e llack D""-4 Aceuol,I• OuHor Strl ... ,... N7S4 Val-19 ,~f.95 IATTl'llJIS 'llZI ,U. ' PIUCI . ' ,,.... __ ' ''"" ....... ,. --- HM NIWPOIT aw . llOWllYOWN OOITA lilllA a4a.n41 Your Chelce • MOUi ' ... -$2.IOla. • llCYLINI •SYMPHONIC \ " e ALWAn-CO- e MOUll1t,.6 llON*'IAT. I ... ,,,.,,,.m ~ 7 Saddlehaek Telllry'9 Fl•el N.Y •. SCeik• voi:. 65, NO. ·199, 2 SECTIONS, 21i PAGES ORANGE COllNTY, CAUFORNll\ MONDAY, JULY ·17, 1972 • Student -Dri.,er Means Brave Teacher · By CANDACE PEARSON Of ... ""1 Plllll Sflff AJ the car 1wlnp into traffic, Its sign : "student driver" ldentiflea part of its contents. A ...and d...crlptlve sign might be 11bra.ve teacher." Be.ing a driver's education teacher ls not the easiest job In the world. the prac- tlonen i!OJ'• although aome add they've developed thick skins about it. "You develop a· real defensive view," Ken Tratat, bead of Vlver's ed and training at University High School in Irvine, said. "But lt'a safe -you have your own bnke!~ Be's only. been in a few ufender benden" with students, but admits aucl! teaching "does have ·1t.t nerve-wracking moments.• 'lboae "momenta'' took Joe ·Reid of Mission Viejo High School out iJl the can and into the cl.......,, three yoan ago. "When you tell them to atep «Ill the brake and they 1tep (Ill. the' accelerator/' Reid aatd, explaining tbe cause of his nervouslless. He now• cllnctl the program at Mbslon Viejo but nays• lnllde. Million· Viejo and Unlvenlty High Schools ahaN three lolDecl tm Bul9 Skylarb ucf a Joai' trailer which ~ a llmulator. During the acbOol:year, they' t!ade Clll equipment each quarttt. Thia llUIDIDer, each llCbool bu _the Tultin Uoklo ' High School Distrlclfl'll9d. lteml for .. month each. . Student& must take ·dtlver'a-education for eight ,.. hefon doial any drMnr. Thia includes atudylll(' the vehicle codt, car maintenance, Jiow·to buy a car, and how weather allecta drlvq. · 'llley thm complete :M lloun ol driver · tralbln(, .llall In the car aDil ball In the llllnulator, --u mnwolleve .. cci." - -iOrt of driver edncatloa It now ,_, toaotallcemeal ... 11. p,.. pl~ wl~ II must ·wall 1IDlll they are 17\lo yoan 'old, Tratar llld. · . '1bore are Giber henellu to the class, wlilch lludeou must ute to graduate tram bigb,tcbool. An "'A·" or "B" crade, Tratar aaid..-can ~ a ltudent11 m. surance ntes. • Hieb overall grodes In achoo!, can also earn a student discount. at aome auto in. Bomb Blast for Sto-nes None Injured in Explosion ·Near Montreal Forum MONTREAL (AP) -A bomb exploded ~there WU a lot of smob." out.side the Montreal Forum early today The motive for the bombing was not under a tnlck loaded with equipment for Immediately appar:ent. a amcert in the arena tonight by the A police bomb oquad wu lnv .. U.atlng Rolling Stones, a police spokesman the possibWt¥ that another explosive reported. · device had been placed under another No one was reported hurt, but the win-truck parked neerby . dows on the north side of the building Mr; and Mrs. Rabi.rt McClellan aald were broken. they were 1itting on ,their frmt· porch Peter Rudge, muager of the British when they heard the blaat. rock group, said the conCl!rt would tu. "lweul:down to the licteulk and all I place as scheduled. cOuld see waa a cloud·of smolre ml"°" The Forum building covm a block and lying all over the llreel.'' Mrs. Mca.U.. ts the home of the Montreal canadiens ol aaid. "I pboned a frlead -Ille atreet -the' National Hockey League. and she llld •all the 1rindowa in her The building watclnnan, Gast o • apartment-wee ,,,__ n l.eSlge, ll,1ta1-slltili(-by-the back ..,.-Violence bu-occuned In other-cities trance abool 15 fe.i from the truck. where the Sllmea have held coacerls u "There was a hell of a bounce," be part ,ol ,their currtnC: aiz:-week North _.id. !'All these windows broke, a ball of American tour. . fire came out from under the truck, and . lluring 1he-Stones' flnl concert Oil the toui, men ·than :io pollcemen ,.... In- jured In VllJICOQvq,Jl.!:.,.ln a roc;k· and botUe-l!fotvinl melee .. 2,000 )'OUli(lterl tried to milb the aOllout ~t Oii June 3. Fjfleen -wrre omoted. .In Sin Diego, -teVir.al :Nper~...,-• were amsted Juno 11· __ rlollng broke out after holders of 'Coqntelfelt Ucliela to a stnnes' concert were tUrned away. Tlie next nlght,·pollce·ln Tllcooll,-Arlz., u..ed -, .. to dUP<ne. crowd "of 200 to 300 window-lnatlil( ,..!ha who tried to cruh a coocert. · When. the stones · a'ppoand at tho Metropolitan llporta • Ceill<r In BlocJm. lnctoa. Minn., Juno 'II, -~ lmndAd gate.cruhen-CIUl!ld-ti;-fl,Mt damap to• the faclllty. Elibl ~ were \mated ml .....-al ~ Were bijuft<L • . . ·The Stoliel' concert tour• ..... 10 Irvine to Dela:y:_ Formal Adoption . . -Spassk~ ~~ie~--•- ' . . Of . City Motto ~Irvine city councilmen will not adopt the final city seal and motto··Tuesday night when they formally move into the completed councll chambers in Irvine Town Center. '!be finalized, official rendering of the oroposed city seal including the motto 1'Angulus.J!jdet" had been expeci¢ to be ready by the time the chambers were a>mplete. . Howe.ver, Asaislant Qty Manager Paul Brady said the commercial artist's v~sloo of the aeal la not.ready. He said 11, ts expected 1o be ready for adoption tnd viewing In mid-August. A public open house in the 3,4.00 oquare foot city offi<>:S U Rt for that time. Further, two acUon tlleetirtgs of the council are set for Aug. 1 ind 8. Couocilmen might mw lheir ·cDoice of the seal then. '. Jn mid-April, councilmen aelected three ilinning entries In both a seal and motto CBvislon of a contest sponsored by the Junior Women's Club of Irvine. ···Angulus Ridel"' a Latin phrase mean- 4>& "this little corner of the earth amlles on me" was the bands down winner in the motto contest Councilmen indicated the city motto should he worked into the C:Jty ...i. 'l'htte top entries in the aeal divisim w,,ere Rnt out for • final artistic ren- derings, including the motto. However, ..i tl)e· Ume, C®llCllmen ln- clicated It might he.possible some other aeal might result than an exact duplicale of the firll place entry by Gerri Talley' of University Park. · , Fullerton Junior College Instructor Qaude Girault, now of Mission Vle]o, -the wlmlinS Latin mouo. . . • 1;'t . t• ·.r .it.- Fischer Trails Rwaldn, :2~l REYKJA.Vllt ·(All) -World cheaa champion Boris Spaaa!<y ftSlcJ>ed the third game against Bobby Flacher today, fiVe mioutes after ·the dock wu IWitcbed oa to mume .their adjoumed game. Referee Lo!l!ar Schmid o p e n e d Fischer's aeaJod t1st move. It WU blll>op to queen six. Fischer WU nol ln alabl . Spwky walled pnfy minutes, and lincded over h1a ting, glviDg the same to Fischer. ' ' The """' ·tn the. Jt-pme. match now lla!xla at J.lJn s__,., favor. (Earllfr atog,:lJltlu!e m Page 4) Gypsies Keep Followers . . . . . . Fr.om Jmnping .Into Grave . . . . SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -AJ gravedlggm shoveled dirt on th!' green steel .coffin of Sl>iro Calllornia, grieving women ICreamed 0 LitUe father, take UI with you!'' Some were restrained fro~ leaping into h1a open grav_e.. It was the burial of tne ting of the 30,000 Romany gypsies of Lltln America. Calllornla, 13, died last weet of a heart ottacli. He WU the leader of a gypoy empire that atrelched from Mexico to the BWthem Up of Soulh America and had been tine llnoe bla father-died 15 yura ago. He wu succeeded In gypoy iradluon b7 . . . his eldest IOI!, 11uco; 44. The ting had 12 cflildren aDd 10 ~ Delegatloal of ~'from Arputina, Brull, Peru, Parasu.y all!! UfUllllY .... rived for Ille funeral,-~ aDI - Ing under gra, sties and chllty wlndl that "'-~·of winter In the Southern Hemisphere. Calllornia'• body lay In Rate under • worn circus tent In an ...._i of opsla aitalde SantJaco,.hil ---with • ~ lllrvQd acartar h1a face. . . l rvine (Scotland)-T·rio Ban!fooled .-en lland at'the body and rtltUvea shooed •W11iia<b of llny clop trying to 1et Into' the tent. The colflo wu driven to Santlap'a ~ Cemetery In • haltered ltllllon "-and foUonl by more thu 35 ' • In-of the !dos'.• -.. tlldr •· • • • • I · · Ille GJl"laii; PqtlJ- Gunman Hol.ds 5· for Ramom lllCIDIOND, 'Va. (Al') -A ma ..--• llloqpm ml • - walb4 llllo • ---hen lodaJr looUd 1im1e11 In a • """" wltll • h · • hootipo lllCI demandld •,91111 In ~ • aululllu 11111. '-·~·-lador'1 .................. ~.,; a.c.fttld lr-11 ... a11111 the • ......... mt_ : . A Im 1111-*ll ..... , ... by .. - -bnullil"' .. ....... , ... -· """ ... -.... 8l&M ,.._ ..... a.. r1le'I~~ .......... ,t cillol. II marb the flnt ume they hava vlallecl tlle Uiilled Slites In 2~ y-_._ An _.,....,. at the Altamont Speedway 35.mllea east of Son F.fanclloo on Dec. I, 1919, durih( their l,..t-concert lf/l!r produced ·• day-long -: i.m a!OOg-~ 205, and fOIB' dtalhS,.ln- cludbJg O!IO lllabb!Jw, In the crowd of J00,000. J • ' I .'Ille chaollc,-....., at . Altambllt WU ._-ded1 partlt. In· il!e filln, "Gimme Mter," wbJch wa·used u ' evidence 1n the -trial of a Hell'• ·Angel · motorcycle ...,·niembei''acicil5ed of the ltabhq He -~tted-Be11:1 Angels -actlnc u aeCuritY ~ at Alta--· -''Ille -ntwoed to:Sin·Franclaco !JI Mr)1 June. ~ """ DO h)cldenU and the ,mq,·,.. .. u JeO,llllO 1n 1oar c.n- certs~. . . ' . ' ' . llUrallCe companies. ~ In the mlnlnr ..,. and the stmulattt, ID whlcb l.tUdenls .. drJve'1 to a film, coordinated and spilt in half. Tliere ltht days of'~' Sub- jects right and left !Urns, becking and tJ.< lane chall(es, highways, freeways, city fie and night drning. 1\e alnlulator ' " have everything but a radio be driven as automallc or st' f. dependiltg on the lesson. The teacher watches from behind a penel of buttons as students follow a fltin's instructions on where to·turn, look and drive. . · . ' STANF.ORD (UPJ) -Cltlllg ·the • case of an Ji>lliau man_who:spenlihree._JW'S I,.. ( .II .• lp)it~.Igr lllegal Iovemaldng'W!th his ~-'~"twp Stanford ·=ity 1'7ctiia\dil' ha~e called for :a . 'in the·~;m.tes• '4absurd" m ·la'!I. '1,\lmoll •all·aexual·activity-!hit IDl1 oCaitl'hetween •Husband and Wife,~'liith U!e ~ of k_l&slng, caressing and · •¢>al.~ In~~. _i.1 def111~·, as . criminal. In -.Virtually ever1 .. 1tate ,in the m\!on," Dn. H~iint A. K~tCbado\lf.lan ' alld llobald•T; !lJnde aatd Sunday. . • .Mo,t• people · are either unaware •of• lheu ltwa.or11hink they ·are IO rarely ea- fotUd u, to he locomequent!aJ. Ibey aald. But their existeoce..leads .to "oc- caaional aDCI caprlcio\11 applicatim." Jn the Indiana case, lhe psychiatrtsts Aid,.lhe wile quarreJed wl\h her ~~ of 10~ and filed a -my-COIJIPlaJpt aplnst blin. She· didn't accuse'him of'U&- lng fom'opd. before the charge came 'to l<ial, .chanl!ed . her mind aDd trloid to wltlldraw·tlie·accusitlon. Bui the atste reluoed aDCI ~to proseCute. The husband wu con~ oentenced to two Id II yoan in prisOn, and served three yean before a higher court overturned . the verdlcl on a technJcality, , I ¥ Khatchadourlu and Lunde, who a~ tacked stile 1 aex laws Jn an article ~bllshed 1n ••stanford M.D.,"'aaid 'tbe Kinsey Report showed more lhan 95 peio-· cent of men have at some time engaged In oelual acts prolliblfed by criminal laws. • I ,,\ 'Jboy llr(ed, Hpea1 of sa.lalfl PIO- hlhiUnc acttvtllea , between comenlit)g adults, but fa-cmtlnllince, of Ian . .....,.q rape, clll1d molestlng a!1d oes· ~ -involving violence. Raceway · Thiev~­ Net AOOut.$350 · I/ a student almulator drl-fa DOI braking enQUlh or not algnalltns ,..... rectly, the teacher can choct I by pushing !hit car'• panel bullGD. A reading of -car'• speed. 1nbl, llgbls, steertnr and slgnab ll&IU qp on the panel and die student i. uted to ccr- rect It. Most of the taachers prefef the -k In the simulator: {t's safer. .But Tratar uid golnr In traffic wlth the Jnea~ students ''la not a. big thing anymore.'' He 11\lnkl that doing ao makes the teacher 11becorne a better driver youraelt'' - • Amerbn "" laws reflect both tho Jude.o-t]voWlan yiew_o.Laex:ual.beba.vior as soleb' reproducUwln'nature and tho . belief --g the founders of Anglo- Axriericu aociety that sex It evil, tho doctori Aid. . ' . •n; Vie]o1:.Area , • Anyo0e who says· the days jo( Ille Old West ha>le' gone ·forever had helter not say ii Iii Ille prelence .of Rmicho Vln!m 1 Viejo, ep1ployes. , • , The MlJslon Viejo catU..~·hm! ..J. a number of cows that.~ere about fo'."'11 to rustlen wbo have driven ~ tniClm on to the IOUlh county ranchlaod ·to t:arr1 off tbe:preanant 'catUe. ; .Onmp County Sherll/'s offlcen wt. lnvealipted the !belts over the w~ at Rancho Million Viejo said other .cat· Uemet1 In the area have · alJo repoited i....., most of them cows about • to deljyer calves. Jlepulles aald Ille local '!*\' could bo an olf.ohoot of -!liq deaciihed u a hlgJlly orginlzed cattle 1'lllllng rilll In aeveral llOrthem Callfomla cdulitfel. . ' . .... ,.: . . ' ..... _ ' -" c.11..... I ~ --:: =:=. : W•all If 1' ,.._ .... , r:: ......... -• .. rs M • ---It -.. .....,_ ,. --I --. E--lt!i -.. -. -----. Kites Fifi Downwind - Vettt AW Asked Sumner ;Attacks --. ~plit of Court By TOM llAIUZY Of tM Olillf Plitt ltiH PresldlJIB Jwf&e Bruce Sumner today uked Oraoce Co\!llty reaideoll to urge lt&te Senalon Dennis Clrpenter and James Wbell!>ore to .tilock approvll of 1 bill that would cnate a permanent Fullerton branch of the county's Superior Court. · "They should know tlult tblo whlm of a special Interest Jl'OUP wlll coot them a . tolally unnecesoary $2SO,OOO· beginning in 11113," the Laguna Beach jurist told newsmen called te h.ts chambers this 3_. Suspects hi Newp011 Heist Held morning. ~ '"!'his tax lnrease will be forced on the rea!dents ol lbll county by a bill autliored by Assemblyman John v, Briggs (R· Fullerton) for a seeclal interest lfOUP1 '' Jlldre Sumner aald. ' He idenUfied the prmclpals of that group as Dr. Arnold Beckman, the Fullerton industrialist, Republican party e1ecutive Robert Beaver arid the Fullerton News--Trlbune. 1 Judge· Sumner said pusa'1( of the Briggs bill by the oenate wouldJforce bis court an<\ all related COW1ty pf(.lcea to fully staff a branch court that presently calls for one judge to put in ~JrininuteS a week in clearing its ·one.~ge calendar. "For more than 10 years the Superior Court has oUered to have any contested trill heard in Fullerton, but not ooe such request bu ever been made to this court in that decade," he said. Lumber Under Price Control WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tile Ailmlnt11ratfeo movod apfnsl tho rising lumber price> t!"l•Y by pla0> ing virtually the eoUre lumber In- dustry under wage Ind price con- trols. The Cost of Living Coull c i I , ordered the economic controls on all manufacturing, wholesale and retail businesses with a n n u a I lumber sales ofJ110re than $100,000. The action brings about 62,000 lwnber industry firms, previously free from wage--price restrlctions, under the controls. Laguria Marine' s Daughter Named To Post .on FBI Susan Lynn Roley, 25, the daUghter of Marine Col. Willlam H. and Mrs. Marge' Roley of Laguna Beach, became one or·· the nation's first two female FBI agent~ today. Portlon of 100-boat fleet In the Inaugural Flil!ht of the Kites In Newport Harbor fight for po11tfon a& they run pa&t eaat end of Udo We on downwind leg. r,u,bf of the Kitea hu replaced old Flight ot the Snowbirds because there aren't enough of the old wooden Snowbirds around anymore. To see how the first Kile flight came out, see Page 18. A Newport Beach armed robbery left a liquor store c;lerk Maced and clubbed and involved a high speed chase through the streets of Laguna Beach, which ended But the Briggs blll, Judge Sumner warned, may well force his court to send cases to Fullerton to trial over the o~ jections of both litigants and lawyers. He said Senator Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) could provide a key vote in the 1saue sJnce Senator Whetmore has already indicatod hJa aupport for what .fudge Sumner, a fonner Assemblyman from Orange County, described as a ..sweetheart bill." Miss Roley, a former student at Cal·. State Fullerton, served as a Marine lieutenant from June 25, 1989, until her: discharge three days ago when she was a. first lieutenant at camp Allen, Norfolk; Virginia. r ..... P.,eJ RESOLVE ••. • NiXon to Leave Clemente only when the suspect vehicle plunged over a clUf late Sunday. Three persons, including an 18-year~ld woman who said she was four months pregnan.t, were taken into custody and booked on charges of suspicion of armed The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to meet Tuesday to review a bill that bas already cleared the Assembly, Judge Sumner olld. Her parents, prominent Art Colony· residents, live at 1015 Van Dyke Drive.' Col. Roley is retired. Mrs. Roley teaches; courses for returning women students at·· . Pepperdine University. . trus1e11 repre1d ao,ooo voters who eoald be Jnttnmiental ID Cuper1' ,.. _,i..uaa or dofeot a! the nQt ~ Coollcted b)' the DAILY PILOT, 1 JpokMman I« CUpen' office aid be -DGt 111n JI the rllOlullono would ever <OOll before the entire board. Tom -aald, notlnl the lar(e nwnber of ti111 bad been sent ·for comment to the ·countr Rood Department and the ooe coaeeniinc crowtb to the Plannlni Deportment. F!)llowing Work Vacation robbery. 'The trio was then turned over to the Newport Beach Police. Am>sted were: Cynthia Ann Foat, 18;' Paul John Jennings, 23 ; and Gerald Anthony McNutt, 19. All three gave an addreSB of the Haclehda Hotel, 1289 S. He made it clear that on1y sustained opposition from other Orange County communities faced with raising the tu.es to pay for the Fullerton court can pre-- vent its passage. Miss Roley and Joanne E. Pierce, 31 ; of Niagara Falls, New York, who holds a .. bachelor of arts and a master of arts degree in bistory, were awointed by, Acting FBI director L. Patrick Gray ill. : "Evlry¥J cranka out relOfutlono," ~ aald, 10tfD4 the lar(e number o! City -~ and &IWemb>a -of achool and lpectal dlltrlcts ID Orana• County. "llllller than put ftVUJ one of IJiem Ill the <'"'1'4'•) apnda, we often tend them out for department ..... ment." He aid, that alter the two departments have commented, tbe resolutto111 wvul~ either be ..nt to the i>f!kao of ,the m. divldull aupervlaora or placed on the 11enda. D~y ·Support To Democrats · CHICAGO (UPI) - M a y o r . ' By JOHN V AI.TERZA Of .. °'"' •Ult ·~" Praldent Nixon plana to leave the South Orange. Cout Tue&day f o r Wublqgton, p.c .• -ending a two-week -• vacation -which started qujet. ly but did D9I stay that way. The Praldent, blending wqrt with reluatloo every da7 of hJa vlait -hardly ever m1ued an afternoon at the beach durina hJa stay 11 IA CUa P1cllica. It wu hJa l1rlt trip west •Ince the &tart of thJa year. Tbla put weetend -the lul of the Capo Trustees ' .. ~ ' To Decide Fate • Of' $i.5 Million TrUltees of the C&pistrano Unified School District tonight wlll make a final decision on ways to use their largest tax windfall in history -a $1.5 million hr creue brought about by major valuation blkea. Meeting in a special 7:30 p.m: action sesalon, trustees first will dispeme with routine bullneu, then coottnue their Richard J. Deley said today be will aupport the Democratic ticket at all level u well u at the nattonll. .,_ _ _,__,.-.1 I-am-.~ Democrat;',_tht mayOI' aa!d ltm>ly at a news eonlerence. · . .D~ey IYaa criUcll of I b e alt<mate •late of 59 delqatu wblcli bumped him from the DemocraUc national convention. He aald, however; ·1"! ,!VOUld coopm-ate · wiUt the elate led by Alderman William Singer if Singer'• Jl'OUP oupportod Democrall at the locll Jeval as well aa: at the natlonaL 1 _ _,s.,,tu'!'d~.aJongJist_oUlems suggested for inclusioo Jn!o the budget by the district staff. . , . : . The funda 'could be used in several ' wayo -r .. ioring previously deleted · bud1e1 Items, beeflni' up dwindling reoervei, or decreaaln( tbe'. tax rate. Minuteman Launched : \r ANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (Al') -The Air Force Space and Mluile Test center here olld Saturday night it launched a modl!ied Minuteman I missile down the Weatern Test Range. The launch, tenned sucee1aful1 wu to test a reentry vehicle but no other details wttt released. " DAILY PILOT 'Tll9 ~ Clllt DIJL V PILOT, W1t1t wtilc\ Is ~ 1119 N.._.""91,, It JlllWllllld bY ... Or-.. C..d '""""'"'"" <""""1 . .,..,.. nit' .. ltlont •re PUtilbMd, Mllld•Y tllreuoh F11dty, fir C.la MtM, NIWllOrl lllltttlo .... llntMft ltldl/l'tollnt•ln V1IMy, ~ 8tldl. lr"tintl.stcNlebldt Md san a.n--tc/ S.n J-CIPhh"lnor. A litlvte rttloMI •HIM h "'*lb"-...... \'I Mii Sund1.,._ rtl9 ~I Nillhlflt (lllMll It 11 XIO Wt1f .., lll'tlf. Coif• M-. Ctllfomll, I»». llt1Hrt N. W1ff Pre11dttd llld flvblblltr Jtclc Ill:. C11rl1y Vice,.,. .... «IC Gtr!ml ~ T1ttn111 k11•il Edl!Gt Tt.1•11 A. Mwphi11 MINtlfte E#ltot C~1rl1t H. L.1•.,, l ldi•til P. N•ll """""' Mt•lf'll !d!lon --. , f The long lisl of budget itema, compiled by 8'm Olicas, asalatant suptrlntenclent tor busineas aervlces, amounts to $891,121 worth of new expenditures drswn from the new tu Income. The money would cover scoru of new items. The categories include increased staff Jn dozens of different areas, beefing up the distrJct'1 preventative maintenance procram, increasing the level of health servlc.es and purchu!ng major amounts of equipment 1.nd supplies for the new Dana Hills Hlgh School -a district proj- ect which has caused a major drain o• this year's propo&ed budget of $11.4 mil· lion. U trustees agree to the complete ad· ministration package, the existing tax rote .of .,U273 woald remlln in effect and district reserve• "°uld rise to an all-time high of about ~.ooo. Peeper Seized Near Exclusive Newport Complex A pair of men watclling each other . with binoelllar1 !tom vantage points in an e>:dmM »ewJMt Belch aportm•nt complex and 1 brushy gully bel.,. didn't exactly see eye to eye Sunday <in proper attire. The indJanlnt Park N e w p o r t Apartmenta tenon! cllled police to com- plain that tha ,.Uy skulker JOO yaN!s away wu lntederlng with the scenic view.by upolln(-llimllll.~ Dispalclled to the ocene Officer Larry Gabriel peered through i'iie complaining party's 7x$0 power blnocularo and claim- ed his inltlll complllnt wu correcl II• crept up for a cJoeer look and aubatquently amsted ~ 24-)'W'Old peering out or the btubet with hJa own blnocul11r1 on IUljllcloo of Indecent ex· poaure. r The defendant, pollce aa14, lldmlttod while beinC booted thllt be ba'd IM> prior meall for !be Nmt offense, addllli th1t a ptychlatrlll be COOl\llted told him ht wu normal. He alao alf...,rly claimed to be dnpon- deilt over tha death ol hl1 employer, &aYin8 !be clandesUne nudity Jr.aa<ned hJa ar1er ani1. cr,.pa1r. working vacation -was marked by a Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. very active schedule. ch li · "-.. On Saturday the President left home Newport Bea po · ce said today t-t early to atterid memorial services for his Johnny's Llquon . clerk Steven Warner, 25, was sprayed in the face with the late Aunt, Mrs. Edltb Timberlake, in chemical Mace and then clubbed to the Riverside . Mrs. Timberlake was the floor of the store, 3537 E. Coast Highway woman who helped launch l he with an 111-incl>loog wooden implement. President'• career in Jaw before be Mace is. used by police, often in riot sought public office. · situations. Only hours after the services, the Warner was taken to the Hoag Prealdent held meetlng.s with Secretary Memorial Hospilal and released following of State William Rogers and discussed emergency treab:nent. Newport Beach the cabinet member's recent world ·trip. police said Jt is not known if any money Then on Sunday, the President went to or property was taken in the incident. church. ' Police said that two men were tnwlved Attel}ding rites in the mo d e at in the liquor store activities, and were sanctuary of San Clemente's First Chris-seen running from the store by a pasaer· tian Church, the President heard a by at about 11:30 p.m. Sunday. s~on from the pastor who tW<I decades Newport Beach police broadcast a ago missed out on the chance to preach description of the suspects and their to another American President. vehicle. \ J • ·Bui The Rev. Alan Vernoo wasn't A car meeting tlull 1 &acripttoo was about to be diaappointed this time observed about 20 minuleo later by around. Laguna Beach police. As the President sat in the front row, Attempting to stop the car, the Laguna he and the 100 other worshipers listened pa.trot car was led on a 85--mlle per hour as Rev. Vernon preached on "How Well chase through town, up Center Street and do you Hear1" left onto Carmelita Street. In the 10.minute meuage, the miniater Penned-in on the deadend street, the told the congregation that God speaks suspect vehicle entered a residential through nature, the Holy Scripture, and driveway, the driver perhaps lblnking it the Holy Communion. an avenue of escape, police said. Rev. Vernon decided to make the The car then toppled over a cWf. presentation instead of fellow Minister Laguna Beach officers took three persons Don Mulleld, "because r didn't want to riding ln the vehicle into custody. No one be a ~." -~re~ported injuries, police aald. The mlnlster explained that 20 years ago, while be served as a Navy chaplain · at ~ Rhode laland Navll Hospital, be agreed to allow a fellow minlster to deliver the sennon one Sunday. He and a, friend , instead, took a cruise on a destroyer. General Cushman Of CdM Dies; Rites Wednesday La Habra Cycle Riders Killed Two youthful La Habta motorcyclists lost their lives over the weekend in col- lisions ;-with automobiles, the Orange County coroner's office reported. John Redrall, 22, of 570 Churchill Road , La Habra, died Sunday night alter 1 col· lision with a car oo Euclid Street at lit Avenue in tlult citji. Michael Beamon, 19, of IMO Brookdale Ave., La Habra died early Sunday morn- ing after a crash with a llation wagon at Hacienda Boulevard and Sllllktr Avenue, "It is not fair to ask other cotmty residents to pay the huge cosJa of this polnUess court and it ls not fair to uo to face a corresponding reduoOon of ef· ficiency in a court that has reached an enviable atage of efficiency," Judge Sumner argued. He pointed out tlult county SUpervisors, the Orange . County Grand Jury, the Orange Coqpty Bar AssoclalloQ and the state Judie~ Council are au opposed to the existence of a Fullerton branch court. "Passage of the bill could mean the construction of a new building and then our $250,000 figure will prove to be an ex. treme1y conservative one," Judge Swnner contended. He sold judges of the Anaheim· Fullerton Municipal Court presently pro-- vide space for the hearing of the Friday morning calendars to which Judge Sumner aaaigiis one of his Superio< Court jurlsta. "But .the passage of the Briggs bill would mean a full time judge, clerk, equipment, facilities tor such offices as the district attorney and possibly even marriage license and naturalization taclliUei;,'' Judge Sumner saJd. "The municipal court judges obvioual7 cannot provide that kind of cooperation and we would be -raced with a new building and the con.sequent tremendoua costs," Judge Sumner said. FromP .. el STUDENTS. • • Miss Pierce has served as a clerical employe of the FBI since March 23, 1970 •. Gray succeeded the late J. Edgar. Hoover and ordered a search for pro.· specUve FBI women. Hoover had en- couraged a policy against women agents.: Mi.ss Roley·attended the University of· Maryland, College Park, Maryland, from 1965-66 and CSF from !96Ma. Miss Pierce, a former nun, was •· member of the Sisters of Mercy Religious Order from 1959-70. She at~, tended Medaille College, Buffalo, N. Y; and St. Bonaventure University, Olean, N.Y., 1116>70. The two women took the oath of omce from Gray and immediately began ~ regular 14-week training course for FB~. agents. Fl'8tllPqeJ GYPSIES ... I \ ; cheeks streaked with tears as thf;: motorcade passed through the Chileaq capital. Cslifornla's coffin was lowered into a· grave of his family '•/ plot, a narro~: space between the plots of strangerS. Hugo Califonlia and one of the dead· gypsy monarch'• daughtera directed the burlal. Al the coffin descended, someo~ passed a bottle of brandy amonc the mourners. As the first spadefuls of dirt struck u.I ' ' Langlois, ~1 Robon Drive, m;I. Elalne coffin, 1everal gypsy women sobbed and Slnrtl, 16, daughter of Mrs. Betty began &creaming. Several p J u n g e 4 · Thomas, 1Bfl31 Norton St., to represent f -~ d tried · be r California's Irvine in the exchange. orw'°" an to Jump into t gfave. They will leave Aug. J for Irvine, Their busbanda pulJed them back. Scotland, and will be there when the "He was a eimpJe man who liked tq Scottish leelrage ambassadoro return talk to cblldren," olld one gypsy. "He home in mid·August . lilted to sing and to dance and to laug~ The Scottish girls will visit Disneyland Thero was nothing proud about him." .. Knott's Berry Farm, a Hollywood studio, The burill over, Hugo CBl~ornia leaned the Los Angeles Music Center, and make against a brick wall of the cemetery, a trips to the mounlalns and desert dw'ing cigarette banging from bis mouth. His their vbit. · face was unshaven. 1 The American teenagers will visit the "Long live the king!" came a sbouf birthplace of Robert Bums, Scottish from the departing mournera. caatleo, Edinburgh anci Irvine's folk Hugo dropped the cigarette, coveret( Lt. Gen. Thomas CUsbman of 117 Serra Drive, Corona del Mar, one of three Marines ever to rise through the ranb from private to general, died Saturday after a Jong illness. He waa 77. also in La Habra. festtvll w!llle In Scotland. his eyes and aobbed. _____________________ _:__ __ c..._ ___ __. •. Graveside services will take place Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego. Baltz· Bergeron Mortuary In Corona del Mar Is in charge of arrangements. Gen. Cushman enlisted in lhe Marine Corps in 1917 and was named com .. manding general, Air Fleet, Marine Corps, Pacil!c, iii 1949 after serving aa an aviator through various Pacific cam· paigns in World War II. He later Commanded the 1st· Marine Aircraft Wing in Korea. Oen •. Cushlnan waa promoted to the rank of majilr general In 1950 and be.came a Ueutenant general upon bis retirement in 1954, when be moved to Corona del Mar. Besides bis waretime assignments, Gen . CUshman served In both Nicaragua and Haiti. He is survived by his wife, Eleanor; a son, Thomu J. Cushman Jr., of Ari· incton, Va.; a daughter; Mn. J;)lle It. London of Newport Beach; f I• e grandchildren and one great.,randchild. Gas Heater Explodes, Killing Countian, 88 George Hall, 18, of Iii S. Tustin Ave., Orange, died Sunday mOl1ling when be apparently tried to lJlhl an open face heater In ·a bedroom' and acaunulated gu from a letk)t hole exploCled, the Orange County coroner'• ol!lce•reported. He died at ll a.m. ID the bum unit of the Orange County Medlcll Center following the 7 1.m. fire at hit lane. Jewelry WI GU.uAN111 IVUYTHING . WI SIU. Mesa and Loan ' .. ·. ..~ PAWN SHOPS Altl FUN! -' ' I . ·I . SOLITAIRE PEARL end BIRTHSTONE .. • •• -·IMNG.So- ~ PllCI ., ..._ __ $15.91 ... $44.95 .... ,...., ,,,.,,. 1111 NIWPOIT M.YD, _ DOWllTOWN COITA MllA 646-7741 '2 FORl ' I Track ster0o . YOUR CHOICI Pl1yer Deeb • !IO ft. coll --4 tull•• ~t -- e llaik Dli~ v.1-to $49.ts. ._tic Oultar Sh-1,np No. N754 Your Chelc• e MORSI --· e IKYLINI $150 ... e SYMPftONIC .... ""' 11W11 e ALWA'1-CO- • NOUll1t .. 1 llOll .... "''' .... .,....7/W71 ' . . " . • IR&E : ,, . . ' , 'tmll 1MIS ..• ~UPOM • • 1:·. ., • 7 ,.. • Huntin-gton Beaeh Fountai• "Talley -. - VO~. is, NO. '199, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALFORNIA MONDAY,.JUl:Y 't7, '1tn Beach Councilmen To Face Irate Equestri3nS By TERRY COVILLE Of fti. ~lV Plltf $1fff Another eiplO!ive hearing involving &table operaton and horse owners is ex- pected at.tonight's Hwitington Beach Ci- ty Counci( session. Councilmen will be asked to approve a new city ordinance which will place tight re•tricUons on stable .operations, and may -phase out all current stables Within five years. The council meets at 7 o'clock. City Admlnlltrator David Rowlan~ however, ha!' 'T'Orked out a compromise whicb mlgbt slow dowo the protests from horse lovers. Rowlands bos asked the city's director of environmental resources, T o m Severns, to create a list of locations for future stables. - "It's not part ·of the ordinance," Rowlands explained today. ''But we will sugges t several sites where sta'bles might be located." , "There are cne or two sites along the Santa Ana JUftr, near the 1ewage lrelt• ment plant/' be said. 11 And aome along the river near southern Ca!Uornla Ediaon right-of.way." "There is also phase m of the central park, where some stables might be built, aod we don't know yet wbot might bop- pen in the Bolsa· Chica area, ti ROwlond.s Indicated that If new stables are built, they probably would· be bigger than the current stables, and could aervice 100 or more horses. ' At p....en~ the city pl>nnfac stall estimates there are 3S stables one! 1116 borsos In HuntlnitOn Beach. The propoo<d stable law -1ld give those 1\!4bles five y • a rs lo meet the standarils WKl<i-the .. ,.. law. Some of the code proruions oppooed by equestriail Jnter<Sla Include a IOO-fool lelbaclt requirement, keeping \loraes a CIJ!lSlderable distance from any miden- tial land, even if vacant. Riders also are. upset by the mtric>-. tions on where they can take their horses becauae moet of the stablet are not loc.lted near any of the cilJ'• pr~ equestrian llalls. Rowlands takes a tcuab slaJ!d on the current stables: 11Tbe ont1.tbat are there now are golnJ( to bave to be pbased out. They're In tlie path of 'JmltVW. You can't mis horses with bouies.'• Some city counctlmen disagree with such a blunt stand and the ·ordinance llaelf Is not assur<d of victory torucbt. A resolution ordering the city at· tomey's o!flce to write the 1table ......_ .......... N-.111111 c..wn _ _, _ _,,...w -1ac-................ 1 7 But It will .... four -to -m -... two -"-·· Dould Shipley and Normo Glhl>o, ore In ~ The ord.._.. wtl1 bocmie law_., if BarUetl or Dia cfw>cel lklel. Parts of Iba 111-4 Jaw _.., with health slal!dor*. feed, nter, ad carm coostruclloa, .,.,. DOI t-J9"d -op. position. Irate Surfers Pelt Police . 15 Arrested After Huntingtnn Incident By JOHN ZALLER ' . -_Of -peltr__L ......... Angry ourfero pelted about 411 police ·and llfeguard.s with mud one! paper cups packed with sine! late SUnday afternoon as o!flcero tried to enforce a ourflng ban in crowded watero north of the Hun- tington Beach Pier. Fifteen surfers were finally arrested during the ~•lee and booked on charges Including failure to disperse, resisting arrest and Interfering with • public officer. R®ert Cirac. 20, ol 11551 W""°" Ave., disputed the offictal account. He said tbe sand throwing began only a I t e r lit~ used excessive force in mak- ing-.. arrest. lie said be WU belten on the Itga with a black stick as be was hauled oil to jail on ~barges of failure to disperse and reoistlng arrest. Clrac said be plaoned to file a fonnal ~.mplalnt. Police would not comment on hJJ charge. No effort wu made to make mesto In the estimated crowd of IOO lndlvldulla for wauitJnl polJce ·olflcen. · .-~ "Becauae ,"" bod plenty to do ·!mt ducking and trying to gel t-IUl'fers," explained City Lifeguard · Capl Dout D'ArnaU. .The Incident originated lhortly afltt I p.m., wben Jlfeguardl aonounced tbat the surfing ban whjch normally llftl at that time would continue, due to bwxlrtds of swimmers still in the water. D'Amall ald-aboal D oarf111 ...,_ the_.,, 11111 a.,... of .-am.. buddl"! ..... 111111-... IDdlmM1Po ....................... Llffiaardl ulll4 lllom .......... the """"' ""'"8d. . Authoriljt9 said at that llOlnt )lilllol were callfd la to uaJ.11" and ·U. lllfllUlll de~-bollwp~ to the UM lo help In I~ ~ of the water. (S. IURlENI, l'llo I) Fischer. Wins Third Grune Record Rescue Day for Beach Montreal Eqloslon w_r.i. at Huntington city Bomb Blast Hits Fomm Grief of War . . • Fi:~m ~passky . RJMd'AVDt , (AP), -World dim champlan •Bo& Spaa~ .resllNcl the third game qalnsll!oliby Fllcher todoy, five minulel'8fter the clock wu swltcbed UPI T.......... on to re.ume their adjoul'Qed. game. Refe~ Lothar Schinld o p e n e d beacli ·l'eCllr'ded 444 ......,, SUndaY • ~the l!efT!e!!t ~".IDI llC!ivlly of . . ~~-...... ·,. ... illll ....... ~ to llPl ' . w .............. tO. ......... captaln Dout l>'Arnarl; Um ..U. Ing the Wiler both attroclive' ll!d daogeroua.. Fischer'• sealed 4l!I move. It wu blsbop to queen six. Filcher Was not in sight. Spassky waited only minutes, and knoclted1 over hJJ king, giving the game to ' Fischer. Buddy offers a comforting hand as a South Vietnamese soldier cries over the body of another friend killed in a Communist· rocket. al· tack on th.e imperial capital of Hue. The city is the rear headquarters of an allied drive north and has come under rocket barrages for three days. The score In the 24-game matcb now --.tand.s-at :&-I in Spasaky's-favor;--(l!Jar!ier . The aJngle day rescue record II about 700. D' Arnall said. This month lo date, HuntlngtAlo 'cil7 llf .. guardl bave logged 1,203 reocues. · A total of 1111,000 persoo1 at- tended IDmtington city and state 1111(1 BolA Chica Slate beaches over tli'e weekend, accordint<' to official eotJma1es. A total of 560 ......., were ·re~~--- Attica Prisoners Stage Sympathy Bid for Nurse story, picture on Plge 4) SpasUy walked off the stage u the spectators In the 2,501Heat auditorium sat in tqtal silence. The Ruulali loll bil lint game ever to Fischer · · • ·. Spassky .bod been playing white, whicb gave film a slight· advantage. Fischer's sealed· move had been predicted u the wlnniDg move by all grandmasters watcblng the game. Store Cle.rk Mace~ Hit · . . In Robbery; Trio. ~eld AT11CA, N.Y, (AP) -About 900 Jn. mates at Attica state prison refused to leave their cells today but created no disorder, Supt. Ernest L. Monlayne said. He said they were primarily protesting the layoff of a temporary nurse . hired aft.er Jast Septerilber11 riot. Prison officials announced earlier that Inmates were planning to conduct a peaceful demonstraUoo today. Swim Safety Oass Slated by Hospital Fountain Valley Community Hospital and the city fire department will sponsor ·· a swimming pool safety class at 7 p.m.,. July fl, lp the ~pital's community room. Interested residents can sign up for the cl~ any day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.rn. at the hospital'• deportment of education, or by phoning 979-1211, e1tenslon 261 or 262. The class will feoture color slides llJOW1ng an types of pooJ rescue tecf>. niqueo. Instruction will also be given in cardi.,.pulmonary resuscilation. Besides protesting the nurse's layoff, The American challenger, •!!er keep- Montayne said the demonstrators "also Ing the matcb in SUl]JOnse with protests A Newport Beacb armed robbery left• floor of the otore, '3537 E. COUI lllgbwly · claimed some of the demands they made against TV one! movie cameras, forced .,. cl bbed .,. with an 1•·•,,• .__. wooden '-plmnent the start of the third game on Swtday lo liquor store clerk Maced -u -~~·-.. ·"" . last September had not been fulflJled." a private room offstage. ln•olved a high speed cbue througb the Mace Is Uled• by pol!ce, often.,Jn riot "I think we're making a gmt deal of Spassky threw the competition Into streela of Laguna Beach, whicb ended lltuatlonl. headway," he said, "but there are doubt early today by saying he would ooly when· the IUlpecl vehicle plu0ged Warner wu !Um to the lloq budgetary problems." refuse to play again in the private room. over a clllf late SUnday. Memorial Hospital one! releued'followlnC Monlayne said the 900 prisoners did not Three persono, Including an 111-yeaM>ld emergency treatmfal Newport Beacb eat breakfast. DA Addre '"»-woman wbo said she wu four months police Aid 1111 not lmown If 11111 _, to 88 .1. ft.!I prqnant, were laktn Into cuotody one! ~~·-"We offered them a cbance lo come bqoked on c11arga ol SUIPiciOD of armed or property, wu !Um In thi -· ou~" he said, "But they refused." robbery. n.e trio wu•tben turned over Police Aid that tn -_.. lilfflted He sald<nost of the other 300 prisoners Group on Death Ban to.. the Newport. Beach. Po~. In the liquor lllore actlvlU.,, ad ·- were at tbeir jobs In the metal lbop or on ' ..,,,.._ were: Cynthia Ann Foat, II; aeen rwmlnC from the ljon bJ l pa-' Orange County District Attorney CeclJ Piul Jobi!· Jonnlnjp; ·n; ond Gerald .__..,_, the prison Jarm oullf<le the maximum llicks will taJlt , on the death penalty •-•'--lf<Nutl, IL .All three ••ve an by 81 about 11:30 p.m. ;.....,. ' , secur•m facllity'I walls. w_._ ............... _ a ...... _ of ,., ,,__, ~ »e-ft Beacb ....... -a Q' -..... ---· ... oc!dml of the Hoclenda Hotel, 12111 s. ..... ~ .......... "I bave no idea bow long Ibis llt·in will Huntincton-Valley Young Republimo. Cout lllllnnY. Laguno Beacb, ck.crtpt1ot1 of the ompecll ""' Uiilr last," Montayna said. "There boo noise, The Young lltplbllcam meet ot 7:30 Newport, Beod! police aajd today that vehicle. ' , everything is quiet.'" • p.m., In the Whistling Oyoter Reolaurant, JobnJIY'• Uquon clerk ~-Warner, A car mooting that a desctiptloa' lfU · He ,barred ne~and lawyers from Huntington Beach. Tho meeu._ Is open 25,'.., l)ln1tCI In the '-with the o~,-~ about 20 mlnutel i.ttr ,_ he lo the putillc. chemical Mace ond then clubbed to the _,._ · "' t prison but said aUves one! friends Laguna Beacb JIOllce. . ' on the approved visitors' list would be , 'AttemptJna to iltOp the car, the 1-. allowed to enter. c I s f . petrol car wu led on a IJ.mlle per ._ 1le oaid two temporary nurses wm yft e a e'y ciwe thnll!gh town, up Center Street ... hired aft.r the September riot. One wu '--lelt onto Cormellta Stioef. Clven permanent llatus aod the other l'!llpedln on lbt clllldelid -lltW, b wu laid off because of a shortage of • IUlpecl ftblcte ealeftd a ielf+elW ·• ~~n-ss1nma1esll!du Green Paint w Designate Paths :i~:~:!;!:='°ald.~ ~..': ~m~o~~~:. =es Bicycliatl may_. Jum to appreciate wW be Allallta A...., from the river to i1;;,. ~~ C. :..= .:i ~ $~ ~ ~aj~dislurba!!co wu quelled Sept./ = ~~ Beach Publlc Coul llll!>way. ...,." • n~ ilQurill. police...._ . . , b ... ' ; H , 11111C • Lumber Vnder . .,.Price Control , of the prisoo by llate palicemen. ~ the bucltell of green point -In the =---· aoddo~-Buahardto .P~ rldlnc'll ~ ftblcle lntoaaWdJ.Mt • ~ ?! a.a. ... " . Tho,.... wtll haJp mab -cil1 -~~J1w1o_e-.:..~_i!~ . . . .. ... ft~1--11m1a,a11er 1or ddldrm....111-.. a .... -1iaac1a.s----~~per N-T __ .11 .. -~U-JIO"'!"' Huntmgt· on Pinewood ~ pedalina down tile upbaJt ~~ '°.!..~ ~.-.J~~ ~ 11 '-'VV ~·< .U:-~ IJl!p·j i 1" 11'.&Y WASHING'rON (UPI) -The Admlnlllrallon moved against the • riliac lumber prlcu today b)' plac- lng vtrtuall1 the ... ~ lumber ... dustry under wage aod price .,... . trols. : The Cool of Llvinr Council orde~ the economi~ ""'troll on all mlnulacturln(, wboleuJe and nitaJJ bualneUos wllb annu•I lumber aa1ea o1 ..... -$11111,llOIJ. . The action brinp -t 12,000 ' lumber lndu9tJy finm, pmtousty • free from Wl801Jrico reslrictlons, -the~ In•few-.d1y.....br.-;m po1nt .P~~H;.';:''"-~ ......... Of Rec, Parke; UJlit• 1· 2'111 .... lllA•tm.--Derby Ra.·ce Readied heavy gr-. mtpes •loll( k"Y. -· Whaolorlllllthe.,...llrlphlg--kft..,...., .,_.. dellpallllc -Janet u bicycle 1!1!11 .. -...... -· "it ..., ;,.... COopor "' ~ .... ~,__!! -........ .. El*!• .... -i:;;,. In the 8-1 J!odllilla Baacb -""' Deny, ICbedultd for I a.m. Sall!nlay at the ctiy gym. 'l.'Wu ... brMMa wtl1 be .... In the derby: yOOJtila llller 11, aod ,..tho IJ.14. ~ will ..... did to Ibo ,_ ... In -... !Jrdlll ond to lbe .... lootlllc -.. ~ llll1>y ... - aold "" city ~ 111 the -tloa .,.__ For Info! 11»1Jon .,._ ms-. ,., palhl. maU peopla --confldeal u... they --at ...... ..Uvtllol Ill ' -...... -·· .. n wm 11e lbe 11ort of • m11aa of in-°""" 1o i.. • • .,_ ,.. ...., .._ "* .. poaod bleycJe -In Huntington Beach. Qty ofl!ctal• plaft•-lo ... a1reo11 ~ Oollsp, Jiu ..._ _,.. . P10!llill•11&......, ,....,, • All • 1111111 -~ be morked Im-prtmort1J far 1be llleycle tnlll, thciollh cbalnnaa cl Iba Hid...... ..... ..,.. ~ mdalely, ..,. -Wheeler, city they ¥f h•D1 bope to 1M1 a 1onJ polh Rec!•llon ml Porb Co hi• ' publ1c -dlreclor. on the -for-major 11'111. • Cooper,_,,,., .KG lkOllb, a ... ''We mJ1b1 .... 1o lay u,ball on ane A ~ of fool potltl will U.O be Jn. llllnlllratl" ar 111111 w l*=wl -wbn -aod gultan ... 1 -In the -futl!n, rolylnl -In," Wbotiler Mid. "Wt plan to on cltyporb U1t111treets. 'l1ll fGo1 pat11a ..,,ic. In the 0.-ftw lldlool .......... Iba -nmld!!I -the will prol!lbl1 nqulre ~ -ir, llnct Dlalrltl. u dlalrm& 'nl _ .. _ atU111J tn11!1 Qllem.'' hikers aod '°"'" !ll8' lraibt not ...,. -.,,.mild to llll -a I 11111 .. lie Slid t11a !ht -lo lit l!!llbd ; alructad of uplto!L 1•. • .. Ul'IT......- "Arnold Miller began his cam· Pllgn for the presidency of the IJnited Mine Workers by accus- ing .union leaders of keeplnc on the payroll two olflcW. wlio are In jail in connection with . the Joseph Yablonski killing. Nixon Voices Concern on Use Of Public Beach PresideQt Nixon summoned state parks and Marine Corps officlala today to n· press. 41• .~ concern about lack of p(lbllc uae of alt innea of prime boachlron1 IOUth of San Clemente which 9'!· Pral .. nt pve to clt!Jenl lalt year. Jn a morning moetlni attended by ~uni or military, state aod federal .of. clals, the Preaideot · epipbUlud that _,eU>lna bal to be done lmme<!lately" about .tbe~dwlndllng uae o! San Onofre llulla State Park. E . And Indications were that the llrat easure 1whicb will be taken )l'lth the Ip of tlie U.S. government wlll be the stallation of water and sewerage fa· lllUe1 on 2.5 miles of beach which cur· ently ii . open to µie publlc. The re- 1-f--t'"lnlnr 3.5 mll .. of beachfront , wncout of the Western White House • ains under M a r i n e corps pew-hip, peftdilJa compleUon of a f!astar plan. . • 1 The state bad been negotiating with the city , of 1San .O.emente for water and services, ·!Jut, appareotly little Jiaa'llle91made, • , , . • llood.lt. Ju~ 17, l 'iTl V~ginian · C~es J~ _ _.._ • Nude Title ROSE LAWN, Ind. °(AP) ..,. .. C.rol. Tucker, a five-loot blonde l r om Portsmouth, Va .• WU named Mio Nude World In the pageant al Ille Naked City camp, near Jttrt. Miu Tucker, 21, who represented Cliwla In tbe pageant, walked off with the $1,000 11!•1,Prlze. She said ahe was surprised !hat she won. and that she entered the contest becau.se she considered it a cballen"ge. About 30 contestants participated, while about 4,000 speclalon • n d newsmen watched. M~ Tucker pre!eoled credeotlal.I of 36-1+35. Sbe weighs 110 pounds and has green eyes. The first runnerup wu Judy Day, :13, MUwaUJiee, who represented India In the contesL Promoter Dick Drost, who owns Naked City, said the contestants were judged on figure, beauty and poise. Drlst wUI stage the fourth annual Miss Nucje ~ca. conteot at Naked City Aug. 12. Last year's winner was Valerie Craft, a Chicago entertainer. Navy Discovered 43 Major Flaws In New Plane WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy found 43 major flaws In t ... t modeb of its new FH fighter plane during a prelimlnary evaluation late Jast year, ac· cofding to congreasional testimony made public today. Sixteen of tllose deficiencies related to safety. The Navy told a House appropriations 11.lbcommJttee that "corrective action ii under way" and !hat a majority of the repaired aircraft would be ready for testing thi.s summer. 'Ibis leltimooy, which aLilo reported 75 R!inOr problems w l th Grumann'1 F14, came during closed-door budget .bearings last April. An Fl4 crashed into Chesapeake Bay June 30; killing its civilian lest pilot. Navy, IOlU'CeS aa.ld dlvm still are recovering plecea. of the plane and lhat cauae of the cresb has not been PIONEER JUPITER • Through Asteroid Belt ~Ul'IT!ll AT LAUNCH Pioneer 10 has begun man's first exploration of the mysterious Asteroid Belt, the doughnut·shaped zone that includes chunks of rocks ranging In size from tiny dust particles to some as big as Alaska. Launched toward Jupiter last. ?,larch, the spacecraft will pass through the dangerous belt for the next six months and is scheduled to reach Jupiter in De- cember, 1973. ' Shootings, Stabbing End 3 Lives in Brea, La Habra Shootings and a stabbing eoded the Jives of a Brea couple and a La Habra husband over the weekend in three vio- lent deaUJa initially blamed on marital disputes and despondency. The violent deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Carland C. Black were listed as a murder-suicide, according to Orange County Coroner's Office investigators. Authorities said Black apparently kill- ed his wife Frances Claire, 71, with a single shot ftom a .38 caliber r~volver . saturday night . Black, 73, then called a son-in-law in La Mirada, according to investigators. saying be bad j .. t killed his wile and was going to shoot himself, too. The relative, Identified as James Whaley, told Brea police who were dispatched to the couple's trailer home at 1051 Site Drive, tbat he arrived to find both vlctinl! dead. Coroner's deputies ideotlfied lhe lblrd slaying vJctim SJ Orville Neilan, 39, of 441 E. Part*oOd Ave., La Habra. He wu dead on arrival al La Habra Community Hospital of a tnlle wound in the chest, according to homicide detec· tives. Investigators questioned Neilan's wife Barbara, 38, and subsequently arrested ;µid booked her on suspJcion of murder. A complaint charging the woman will be so~gbt from the Orange County District Attorney's Office after she is questioned further about the Sunday night stabbing. Police Hold Five On Mugging Rap Two men and u..e teenage boys were arrested early Sunday morning after they allegedly beal up and robbell a man who had been atrolllng akmg-lhepler, · I Fl'OllfP .. el SURFERS •.. "We came at them from the boat and from the 1bore and rounded up as many as we could.'' C.et. D'Amall 1akl. ''But it wasn't euy. It took .lJ.men to catch. one guy.'' , " , Meanwhile, ·about ~ spectators bad crowded around· ext ihe beacb along with another 300 on the · pier,· ace<rding to C.pt. D' Arnall. "A few peeple started throwing things, and pretty soon more peeJ!le Jumped on the bandwagon, D'Amall aa!d. ''I don't think most of them knew what the situa- tion was, except that police and lifeguards were invoJve'd. '' , : C.ptaln D'Amall '81d.tbat most of the objects thrown were , simply "sand· bombs" ~ sand packed Into paper drlnk cups -but that some harder <Objects were hurled u well. , The-situation w111 controlled ·by 8:15 p.m., lnvestlgatorscaaid.· "Some 1urfera seemed to be under the Impression that anU·surfing Jaws are on. constitutional or .discriminatory or something," accOrdlng to C.i>t-.D'Amall. "They're not," he _.~_mphasiud. "When ~~~I~.~~ l~~:.1 simple." - Two ;Arson • ";/ . ~ •· - · Fifes11eld In "Conwol By The Asooclaled Press Two araon.call.5ed fires th at have ~rn· ed 2,060 acres Jn norlheastern Californl~ c..'OUnties bavt been contained. an~ another man-set blaze should be con; tained by tonight, after blackening 101600 a~. ttie state Division otForestry said .. today. · A division spokesman said the big brush fire west of Ru msey in Yolo Coun· ly inaceess jble undergrowth. containment expected by 6 p.m. Some 350 men fought'the blaze In near· Jy tnaccessibleundergrowth . A 60-acre fire about a mile to the west was controlled early today, t he spokesman said. • And a blaze 15 miles west o( Arbuckle in Colusa County was contained at. 2,001 acres today. · One ·of the 200 men fighting that fire' was hospitalized briefly for he at pros: tration, ·the spokesman said.· He said firefighters also erUnguiabed a string of small arsdn-cau.selt' firt! in Lake County Sunday night. Meanwhile, 700 men working with bulldozer crews containf;d a 5()0.acre fire Suili:liy ln'the SlerraJoothtlls, four iniles northeast of Tuolumne in the 0Stanislaus Netlonal Forest. Also.contained Sunday was a 1,500-acre brush and llmber .. lire near Moke!Umn~ Hilla in Calaveras County. Some homes were threateoed briefly but the fire burn- ed away-from the ~wn, a forestry division spokesman said. Fire flghtera also were puttb!g out a few remaining hot spots In a lightning. caused .fire. In the Inyo i'alioo41 F«eot today. , . . .. 'The blaze, In ~avy brush 25 mllea nortli ·~1 Bishop, was c<intsined early to-' day. · · · "1be wind died down kind of unex~· pec~y/' said a spokesman Sunday, "and it.was 8 IUUe eaaler to get into it. 0 • About 1,000 acrei of biush 'apd Umber had been !'OnsUmtd ., abOut 2QO fir<men: fought ·nemes on the eest slope ol lhe Sierra near Crowley Lake. · · · · · The omaU vlllage of Hilton <:reek ,.., . saved from any damage when firemen, turned . tbe fire. • No other 'residences Weie threafeile<i the sp6keiman Salir.~ · ---· Planners Issue S~P-..d ·J!~pon· .... , rotiee ·P.roblng . ~rnie.~ Robbery fn Huniington • • deternilned. Police said Saksiri Tadlataro, 25, of Bellllower,. was aet · upon, · bealen, , ml robbed of 1 wallet containing '50 <by five suspecla who were held by puserilby un- He not~ li!al • b(>y WU kllled when • surfboard .struck him hi ~"1'fik, caua· Ing Internal bloedlng w1iich' led to suf. location about two months.ago. ~ ;!'!il!Jt~~'l!eath. i r~irn-tni Depiitliiei\t hu . bsued tts second . quar\trlf"'"11"rl···coverillg staff acilvltieJ for Apill,May •and ·June. .: 11 A poosible Ca!e of !n)slaken · Identity · •uggeojed "today by· Huntlnltoo I!!,h police .i!lveotJgaUng 1he p-edawn v-o1mam11y·a new ;iparlmen\ by~ • tJiO ~ burglars.' • . 1 O!ilr *lo cliange W1" ta!<en from the · '°Y J ., GU'llp. family .. a roou!t' Of the • lllcldenl ·at Mil Royal Oiit Drive, d~ec-·~~'.tbe ,,;..a.:..one ljlact .,,ii · ~~ ;-• ' in .~&n'Y~& ~\iii , and ~1Qft1 ov~ thMr • acibii •• though tlleY -what 'wtre after. . gunmen quickly sear<bed lhe then taped GU'llp's bonds behind aDd fOl'C«I him to lie on the fioor his wife and two small children ¥'.akened by the Intrusion. 1 o.,up•s olllec. two children, aged 6 and W. w«e asloep ln ·bed and were left un-,...,,.-1..1, according to !nvntlgatou. P·~i call anyme or you'll be shot," Ille victims qllOf<d the men aa aaylng be- f1<e they fled the aportmenl Into which i-. family moved only a woek •JO. ' 1 PU!ce sald the jntrud•ra may have '*"" seeking ~. ,tse. f OWlll COln •• DAILY PILOT ~ 'T?tl 0,..,.. Ctbt DAILY PILOT wl"-wft~ It amblMd ftlt NfWf-1',_, h llvbll91Md W , th• Ort119• Collt Publlllllne Clmpllfry, Stpe. l'lll• IOUlont .... pllbll~ ,..,.,,., ,,.,..,,.,. Frld1y, ~ C0ill1 MN, Nt'ltPOli &Hth, H11t1llnt!Qn 80.d!IFGllnlll" V1J .. y, i..ton1 ltldl,. lf'Vf!WJUdl•ct atMf Ian (ltmtfl!I/ S.11o JIMtt' C..pillrlfll, A alnolt rtlkHMll edlllon k "'bllslMd lltwd..,_ 1/ld Sund1Ys. Tiit ptinci~I Pl/bllJflfnt lllanf 'h 11 1lO Wttt ••r StrHI, Ollll MtM, Qlllfotnlt, mlf, 'k11»1rt N. W1H PrNklmt 1M Nllal'ler J1tlc R. Cvrl1y Vkl·P~I ~ Gtntr11 M•n•,1r lhttm•• K1nil ld11W n.."''' A. Murphi111 IMMllnl .Edltdr Chttltf H. 1..01 , Ai1h1rtl P. Nill Mllltnt MIMll!iw Edltn T1rry Co•lll1 W.t"°'11~.,,.,.-" ........ --17175 l11ch lo11l1,1rd: M1ill111 A44'N11: r.o .••• 7tO, tl641 .,.... __ """"" hltrl· 2:11 '9r•t AVM!t qtl1 M-l UI W:r. 11,_I t"ll'QllH't IHCh! IS» N IOUl9ftN .S.ft ~"; lM "'°"" I CllfllN .... , ........ f714) '42o4Jlt c-..i A.........,. 44l·H7a ,,.. ,..,. °"""' C._J ~1111& • Ht-1W ,..,;.,., ---· .......... '*""""1. Ne ..... -,..,.... Tlll.ltlfllllM. ..... lit( Mttw 91 .._,IHmllltl WM "'91 le ..... ....., wlll!tiM -.111 _.. ............ U/flff-lhl'M!'· ....,. c-i.t• -... MN 11\1 ceete Ntfta, ~ .....,."""" w e»rrlitr a ... flllil'dllly' .., _. ll.lf """""' .,illlWY Tbe apecjflc problems detected during evaluation fllghta by Navy pilots last Gener"-al Cushman NQYember and'Dectmber were referred. to..Jlbly •k<lchllY In the April report to t.tie. HOuae subcommlttff. . Of CdM n· But testimony . by senior admirals Ies; under questioning' indicated deficiencies Involved engine stalllng, dlfflculty in Ri W d d recoverln1 ~ splna, and flight range, tes e nes ay amol!J otbe< lhlnga. In addition, the coilgrewnen were told that IQ deficleocl., .were found-ln-lh"'e~=-"L~t.~Ge~n. Thomas C:U.hm&tof417 Serra s"ystein controlling the Phoenix missile, Drive, Corona del Mar, one of three tile FH's prlnclpol weapo11. Most <d the,. Marine• ever to ri,. tbrough the ranks problelru!I, too, will. be straightened out, from private to general, died Saturday the Navy ilsaured Ille subcommittee. alter a long illness. He wu 77. . Fretn·Pflflel STONES ... gate.crashers caused $1,000 to $1,500 damage to the fac!Uty. Eight persons were arrested and several policemen were injured. The Stones' concert tour covers ~ ciUes. It marka the first tirne they have visited the United States io 21h. years. An appearance at the Altamont Speedway 35 miles eost of San Francl!co on Dec. 6, 1989, during their last concert tour produced a day-long traffic Jam along Interstate 205, and four deaths, ~ eluding one slabbing, in the crowd of 300,000. The cbaollc scene at Altamont was lt\'Orded porlly In the film, "Gimme Shelter," which was used aa evidence in the · murder trial of a Hell'• Angel motorcycle gang member accused of the stabbfug. He was acquitted. Hell's Angels were acting a.s security gua.rdt at Alta- mont. The Stones returned to San Francisco In early June. There were no incident.I and the group grossed '90,000 in lour con- certs there. . '. SF Krishna Fest Draws Dissent SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tilt sixth annual Rathayalra International Festival drew tbousands al Golden Gate Park to observe tbe devotees of K r i s h n a Oonactous_.-at their chanting, flower: tossini rites. Three carts, carrying different forms of the sect's deity, wound through the park Sonday, pulled by peraon& - believers and non-believers -who received 0 purtnc•Uon?' from t h e "ugliness of the material world." lnceMe burned In many parts of the celebratlon, sending fragrant clo~• of smoke 1 k y w a r d, as the beUevers chanted, "Hare Krishna • . . Hare Kr1ahna • , .11 over and ovtr. Some peaoef\d dlssenlcra In the rites, which revert Ktlahna aa a god present everywhere, handed out Jeaneta d .. nounctng the seene u "an act of Idiocy Gravesldt aervices will take place Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego. Baltz~ Bergeron Mortuary in Corona del Mar is in charge of arrangements. Gen. Cushlnan enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1917 and was named com· manding genera], Air Fleet, Marine Corps, Pacific, in 1949 after serving as an aviator through various Pacific cam- paigns In World War If. He later commanded the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing in Korea. Gen. Cushman was promoted to the rank of major general In 1950 '"'1 became a lieutenant general upon bis retirement in 196', when he moved to Corona del Mar. Beeld., hb waretlme assignments, Gen. CUslunan served In both Nicaragua aod · Haiti. He 11 survived by his wife, Eleanor; 1 son, Thomas J. CU.hman Jr., of Ari· ington, Va.; a daughter, Mrs. Lyle K. London of Newport Beach; 11 v e grandchlldren and one great-grandchild. Auto Runs Over Santa Ana Man; Murder Probed Homicide lnve1Ugators today were pro- bing lhe apparent murder of a map crushed to dcalh In a Santa Ana vacant lot by a car which ran over hts chest. <IJ>_rdon M._Callln, 15, of 2525 w. Borchard St., Santa Ana. was discovered dead al the •cent, near the corner of Lacy ind Thlril Streets early Sunday. Tire tracka In the dirl matched· tJiose across C.Uln'a chest, according to ln- vesUgaton, and · 11 appeared the vlcllm had not been accldeolally ktlled • Detective Sgt. Ralp~ CUrl•le lald he waa not certain C.llln'i death has been formally !Isled aa a murder al this point. Th• invest111tor asalllled to lhe case, hoo;ev~r, waa out followlnl potential leads and could not be reached for further c:ommeol on evldenct lndlcallng rnurdtrl · ' .......... ~ "*"""'• ' _ •iainst the one I.Tue God." . '" Callin ll\lffered mwtve Internal In· Jurlea and hemorrhaging u a ruult ol bting nm over. .. til police arrived at the scene.· ' All five were Jalled on suspicion of armed robbery· and assault with a.deadly weapon. The three juveniles were releu- ed to the custody of relatives, and the two '1len, Jimmy R. Jamu, 22, and Aurelio Hernandez, 19, were being held this morning in Huntington Beach jail. All five are from Pico Rlvera . Reagan Arrives For London Talks LONDON (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan of California arrived bere today for lalka with British leaders, nearing the end of a seven-nation European tour on behalf of PreB!denl N!Jcon. Reagan b upecled to see Pr Im e Mlnl9ter Edward Heath and Foreign Secretary Sir Alec-Douglas-Home here before relurnlng to the United states and· reporting to Nixon on the atate of the Atlantic Alliance. He Is due to atop In Dublin Tuesday on his way back to the Uniled States. "We just can't allow · Surfers In the water wheri 'there are bathefs ther~," he explained. Article Ignored · . By Government ' ' ' . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Government· Officials have ~ ~ith. .~Dence to a Ramparts magailne which says U.S. In· telligeoce can plnpoi!il the ·location of Soviet military. and · 1pace craf' ·and monitor every tran.-Uantic tele~ call. , .. The article entitled 11U.S. Espionage: A .Memoir" ap)>ears in the August issue of the·magaz.lne, "blth~went on Dews.stan«fa today. ·It is based on an.interview with.a man purported. to .be a former NaUonal Security Agency onalysl. . The w .. tem White . HOUJe In San Clemeole, the Department of Deferuie tn W81bington and-a spokesman for NSA·•t Ft. ·Meade, 1Md., declined comment· on the artlcl" · ·· · .,... · ·~ '-. • ,. . ". ' ,. I~ disc~ in the two-page ~por( Include : tlie proposed horse · stable. . . . ordinance, a moratorium on single ~ ly planned 41velopm~nts, a listing qf ma· jor code amendments under study, :and a · chart' ·~wing 'jiopul8tion "incriases by : school dlStrl~ ove. !lie year. . : . Tl)e 'quarte:fly repari ii available at the · planning department for citizens in~· tetested in keeping up with the activties . o! 'the plannjrig stall · ... . . . ' . Gas H~ater E~plodes, KiJJing Co~tian, 88 · 'George !fall. llil, of 192 S. Tustin Ave.;. Orange, died Sunday momtni when he appareotly tried to light an open lace . heater in a bedroom Jmd acciunulated gas from a tel l<)' 'hoae exploded, the Orange County coroner's ofiice reported. He died at U a.m. in the burn unit oC the Orange COUnty· MediCal COntei following the 1 a.m. fire at bis home. • ... SOLITAIRE PEARL and llRTHSTONI ~srEREO 'FREE PRICE ---tl!.95 .. $44.95 ..... Tin ,,,.,,. lllt NIWPOIT aVIJ. . D9WJffOWN COSTA MISA 646·7741 ,. YOUR CHOICI : I Trl!Ck Sloroo · ....,.,. Docks 1 • • .... • 20 ft. tell . ..... Jilr_ 9ultar '$!4•. .. llodc Dla"*111 • Acoutllc Gutt ... ' Strl"" No. N7S4 • ..,,,_ 1.-~.9.s . ' . ' . ,y_,.(~ .. ·e ·MQRSI .... -e ·IKY<LINI $2.SO Ea. .e SYMPHONIC • . ;.__),~'·',.;· . ~eALWAft-· . ccr:a • NOnltt ... \ . llOll-tM IAT, l 't • I wtTM THIS COWOM •• ' . , PACKAGE .,., ~·I'• .... Ll(in 1 IRllS SIZl .M. .... 1'fti 1/Mlft • .. • • H DAILY 'JlM t Vu.U..-E•iHt!f Nixon Winds Up Laird Says McGovern -- Clemente Visit ·Made Deal 117 JORN VALTl!lli .... ...,, ........ Praideot NIJon plana I• leave tbe South Orqe Coul Tuelday Io r Wuhlncton. D.C., -...i1na a ---1 vacation -wlllcb -qulet-b' but did not n.1 that way. The Preeldent, .blending """' with rtloatloo every day ol his vtsit-blrdly 1ver milled an afternoon at the beach during his llay at La Cua Paclll<a. 11 •u hit lint 'trip well llnce the otart of lhia year. Thll put weekllld -the ~ of the -Idol Ya<aUOD -WU marted by a very ad.lve 1ebedule. On Saturday the Praldeot ltft. home early lo atteod _.taJ oervica lor his late Awit, Mn. Edith Tlmberllle, in Rlvmlde. Mn. 'llmberlue -the "°'"811 who belped , launch I b e Prtlldent'a career · In law before be aought public olllce. Only bwra alter the aervlct1, the PreJldent held meetlnp with SeCretary GI Stilt Wllllam llo(m and dllCuned Two Doctors Hit 'Absurd' Laws on Sex STANFORD (UPI) -Citing the caae of an Indiana man who ajlenfthne years In pr1aon for Illegal lomnatinc with his "111lnr wile, l'fO Stanlonl Unlvm!ty psychtatrllll haft called for a cbanp In the United State&' 11ablurd" ta Ian. •i~ all tmJa1 •.ctlvlt)' 'that may occur betweeo husband llld wile, with the exception of klaalng, ........, and vaginal lntercoune, ill defined u crlniinal In vlrtually every "-le In the union," Dra. llerant A. Katclwlourlan and Donald T. Lunde aald SUnctay. MOii _.. arw either unaware ol lbel! lawa or lhlillt tliey are ao ril'tly en- lorced u lo be lncooaequentlal, they aald. But tbelr exloteace leada lo . :·oe- casioaal and caprlcloul appllcatlon." In tbe lndtana caae, the poycbialrilll aald, the wile quarrelecl with ber lltlblnd of 10 yeara ml filed a -.., compllljnt Ollinll him. She dlcln't -him .,. .... Inc -and, befon the c;baral ..... to trial, chaitged her mind' ml tried to wltbdnw the accuution. .But the mte· refUsed and [11-.led to proaecute. Tbe husbend WU <Gllvlcted, ... teoced to two lo 14 .,.... In prlaon, and IUVed au.. years before a bi«ber court overturned tlit vordicl Oil a technicality. Kbatcbaclourlan and Lunde, who at· Ucted mte ... Ian In Ill article published in "Stanford M.D.," llld the Kin1eJ Reporl lhowed ·_,, than 15 per- 1-_,ceo;;;o I GI men have 11 oome t1mt eoilltd ---(XObiblled by cr1m1nal Ian. TbeJ urttd repeal ol ae1 Jan ,... bibltlng actlvltlea between """""1linl lldulta, but favored con-GI Iowa 1ovem!ng rape, child ........... and_. 1111 offems lnftlvlnc riolen!:e· .l AmerICae aes Ian nfleet both - Jucfeo.Chrlsttae view of aexual bebnlor u .,lely re[!l'Cl\!uctlff In nature and the belief amoni' 'the 'IOunden of Alicfo' Amerlean aoclety that ae1 ta evll, the doctorl aald. La Habra Cycl~ Riders Killed the cablnel member'• rt<t11I -•d trip • ,,,... .. ....,, the Pnaldmt welll to cburda. ' . AtleDdlllg rlta In the m o d t 1 I llllCluary 'Cl San Clemenlt'• Finl awlt- tlan Cllurdl, the Pral-beard a ........ -the'*""' who two decadoa ... mlued out .Oil the -to~ to uotber -Pnaldeot. But The Rev. Alao Vernen wun1 about lo bl clluppolnted thia lime arouDd. Al the Preaident U! in the front row, be and the 100 other WWlblpen llsteoed u Rev. Verncn preacbed on "How Well dO you Hear?" In the 10-minuta mea1p, the mlnlller told · the -ailon that God l[Jelka tllroqh natutt, the Hol7 Scrlplure, and the Holy Communloo. , ·11ev. Vernon · declded to man the 111..at!On lnlleod GI feDOW'· mlnbler Don Mu:lleld, "becauae I dldn1 want to be I "born )Oler," ?'II" mlnlller explained that :10 years .... whlle be aervtd u a Navy challlaln at the llbode Jlland'·Naval Hoapital, be acreed to allow a fellow mlnlater to delmr.the........, one Sunday. lie and a friend, lnllA!ad, tool: a cndae . m a clelln>yer. It WU oaly after be returned from the jaun~ Rev. v emon aald, thet be !earned lllat tben-Praldent D w 11 b I D. Elsenltoftr, bad hem a owpriJe IU<ll at tbe aervlcel. Veman pvt that uplanation lo the -·lion !rem the pulpit Sundoy, and after !hie -be joined the Praldeol for lrlef, ...,_..lion. Tbe Praident WU occompanted by Sin Clemente City Counc:llmu and Mn. Paul Praley lo the aerv1cea In tbe amaU church at '1112 Aftlllda Eatrella. After the aervlC<I tbe Praldent returned lo his nsldence and. apent the -of the day relailnc. He walked alone the beaclr aoutb ol bis ~deuce, theo toot one lut drlve through San M•teo Clll)'<lll--tllrveylng the 2,IOO acrel of aplanda which once wen part of· Comp Pendletm, but D<!W wll1 -public reeratlon areu, ac-conlinl to I l>taidentlal declaration. Today'• lut lull day of -will Inell~ talka with commeroe advfl!n durlng the early botn of the day -and probably jail ... mott trip to the beacb. WASHINGTON (API -Secretary of Defeoae Melvin R. Laird 1Uggelled loctay tilt Democratic prelldentlal _,., Geor1e.McGovtm, 811'eed to ~ !ht Air Force'I now Fii alrplane u ·the prlet ' IO<«lttllllg Sen. 1bomu Eagletoa u bis runo1ng mate . Centennial Celelwation ' . Ten liot air balloon• took off'from a shopping cen· ter in Orange Sunday as part of the city's centen· nill celebration. The intematian·al competition· was won by Kai Paamand o! Denmark with Reber Cham- bers of· Analjeim placing second. Jurist Urging Counti~ns To . Block Court Proposal Frasier's Cubs Se1it w Safari Unit iii Atlanta By TOM BAllLEV "Passage of the bill ciiuld mean the ATLANTA, Ga . (AP) -Two of the 3S . °' "'· o.itr ~ittt '"'" construction of a new building and then cubs sired by the prolific lion Frasier• Presid,ing Judge Bi'uce Stunner today our $250,IXK> figure will prove to be an ex-whose matins· feats stirrtd nationwide ..k·• ,Or•""• Co)ln'" -!dents to . urge I ti ,, J d admiration, have b 'e e n tent to the new e\I -.. •3 ..... treme y conserva ve one, u g e 1tate Senators Dennis carpenter and Sumner contended. Lion . Countr1 Safari in Henry County James Wbetmore to block approval of a He said judges of 'the Anaheim· near Atlanta . blli thht . would 'cre8ie ' i pennanent Fullerton Municipal Court presently pro-Jerry Kobrin, vice president 0£ Safari, Fullerton branch of Ult cotmty's Superior vide space for the hearing of the Friday said Sunday the two 6-month-old cubs Court. morning calendars to !hich Judge among Frasier's most recent, li tter, will 14Tbey abou1d know that this whim of a Swnner assigns one of his Superior hopefully start families of their own . special interest group will cost them a Court jurists. The move was part· of an effort to totally unneci!SSaty $250,000 beginning in "But the passage of the Briggs bill perpetuate the memory and tradition of 1973,'' . the Lapna Beach 'juri.Bt told would mean a full time judge, clerk, Frasier, who was buried on a grassy ne .. sm-en can-.11--• ..--his --cbam~-this Laguna Hills hillside after he died Thurs-cu w ~a equipment, facilities for such offices as morning. the district attorney and possibly even day of pneumonia. "1llls tu inreue will be forced oo the marriage license and naturalization One of the cubs ls named Angie, after residents of this comty by a bill authored facilities,'' Judge Sumner said. actress Angie Dickinson. The other was by Auemblyman John ,V. Briggs (R· "The municipal court judgeo obviously urned Atlanta by Kobrin. FullerlDll) for a opeclaI interest l!'<NP," cannot provide that kind of cooperation The Safari people have established a Judp liwmw llld. and, we would bl facad with a new Fruler FOWldallon to. collect and He ldenllfled the prlncl~ of that blllldlng and the conaequenf tremendous dlslrlbUte lundJ to worthy animal charily FJailelon Is from Mil30Url where Ille F15 lo beq built by McDoMeD °"'Ill• Corp. of St. Louis. Al prealdtnt, McGovem bu •lcl he ~ acrap !ht FIS In fsvor of development of a Ids costly ligtrtwdsbl lighter. At a PettlllOO news conf.....ce, Lalnt said: "I am Md to believe, however, that perhaps tile vloe preslclenlial candidale in part of h1I qreement to nm was able to get a modlllcatlon of that pooition." The def..... ...,..1ary did not llY where he got this information or on whit Jt Wa.9 based, Laird noted . that the FIS Is the llrlt weopons syatem <1<veloped ~ new contracting procedures ina:tttuted during hls administration for which be dalmed · "complete and total mpon!ll~lity u secretary of defeme." "St. Louis la know~ 11 phlnlomlown. U.S.A., and It will be lmnm u Eagletown U.S.A.," Laird quipped with a play on words and Eagleton'• name. The FIS, dubbed the Eai)e bY the Alt Force at it.I tollout last month. ii in J tended to ~ the Fl Phant<ln which is alro lxlilt by McDmnell Douclu in St. Louis. • Ml'Govem'a prns secretary, 1Ucbatd' Dougherty, denied the charge. Doo&btr· ty, In Raplcl Clly, S. D., where Mce.,.m arrived this afternoon en route .to a vaca· tion in the Black Hills, said Laird'• state- ment was unWortbY of comment. - Daley Support · To Democrats CHICAGO (UPI) -Mayor Richan! J. Daley said today be will support the Democratic ticket at all level u well as at the naUonal. "I am a Democrat," the may« said finnlY at a newa conference. Daley was cntical of t b • allernale 1lale ol iii delegatn which bumped him from tllo DemocraUc national convention. He said1 however, he would cooperate with the slate led bY Aldermlll William Singer H 5qw'1 group ouppoi'led ' -ala al the local • • leval u wall• at.t•-., Laguna Marine's Daught,er Named To Post in FBI .... p • • > Dri Arnold IBecJanan, the .;;;;c°';;;ta;;;,:;;" :;;JCi;;d&;;;•,;i-~;;;:.::0;;,;;;i~;;;;i;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;rg;_;•nl;i;za;;;tlons~;i;;;;;Kor;;;b;;;ln;;;;oaald;:;;;i,''i;;' ;;;;;;;;;;ii;;io;;;; Fullerton -· llepublican party I' esecutive Robert Beaver and· the 1 -' • -• >' Fullerton New .. Trlbune. fl; •/,AJA. Suun Lynn Role)', :15, the dalllhter of Marlneo.COL Wllllan! IL and Mn. Marge Roley of ta,.na Buch, became one of the nation'• IJnt two female FBI 01eota today. ~.:T~a=~:~%~ · ~~ .Se111. .i Annu·, a.. I fully llaff a branch court that presenily call! for one judge to put In 90 mlnutea a week In clearing Ila one page calendar. Miia Roley, a former -t at Cal "For more than 10 years the Superior FURTHER State FuDertGa, aerved u a Marine Court has offered to have any CGGtesl<d SPECTACU LA R lieutenant from Jwie :15, 19", IDltll her trW heard In Fullerton, but not one such REDUCTIONS ~daya qo n.i lhe wu a · requell boa ever hem made lo this court lint 11eateoant at Comp Allen Norfolk, in that decade;"-be-.aid.-e ---,-- Vlrglnla. ' But the Brlgp bill, Judge Swnner Discontillled Style warned, may well forte bis court lo send Her pmnta, prominenl Art Coloay ...., to Fullerton to trW over the ob-• .-ta, u .. at 1011 Vlll 0y1re Drift. .ieclJans of both lltI&anta and lawyen. Broken Sizes Ool. Roley la ra11iocL Kn. Role)' tucihes He said Senator Carpenter (R-Newport ciiunet for returning WOmen lludenta at Beach) could provide a key vote In the • Pepperdlne llniffnltr. =.i,"f:. .. ~: su'::~; w1: All Sales f mal MID Roley and J-J!:. Plerce, 31, Judge Sumner, a lonner Auemblyman ol Nlqan Falla, New York, who ho!<fs a from Oraoge ·County, delcribed as a WOMIN'S ---.. bachelor 'Of aria llld a muter GI ai'ta "aweethearl bill." deiieo In ~ were appointed by The Senate Judiciary Committee ls Acting FBI directOf L. Patriclc Gray JU. scheduled to meet Tuesday to review a • VALLEY • P£NAUO Miu Pierce hu aerved u a clerical bill . that has already cleared the employ• of tbeFBI alnce M&rch :13 1970. Auembly, Jud&e SWnner S.ld. Gray tuccteded the late J, Ed&ar _He made It c1ur that only 1U1tained H.,.... and ordered a IUl'Cb for pro-opposition from other Orange <;ounty opectlft FBI .......,_ Hoover had ..,. communities faced with ralslng'the taxes counced a~ -.... ta. lo pay for the Fullerton court can pre- -lloley the Unlverllty of vent itS pwage. Ma:ylaOd, ~ rm, ICarJland. from "It ta not fair to ask other coW1ty 1-and CSP' Inion liiMt. -ta to pay the hue• colts of this ·-~' a -mn, WU a poiniless court and 11-11 not fair lo US lo member ol tbe ' lllalora ol Mercy face a coo:upondiag redaction of ef. Reli,loal 'Oriler fltm 1•7'. She II· llciency in a court that hu reacbecl an teadld Kedallll CoDece, Ballalo, N.Y. enviable lllge of efflclelicy," Jud&• llld 111. -...-UnlftnltJ, Olean, SUmner arrued. N.Y .. 1a7'. . lie pointed Out that county Bupervlaors, 'Ibo two..,.... tocot the -ol olflee the Orange County Grand ~. the ~ GnJ and -to!J belan the . On..-County Bar Allodation. llld the ...-,u1ar 11-...et tralnlnc courit for n1 mte Judldal Council are all oppoaec1 to aceoia. the ullleoce of a Fullerton bnncb court. . e LADY FlORSHEIM e VITALITY • Deliso • HILL & DALE e RISQUE e ENtlA JffilCKS e WONEN'S SANDALS e C08-LIRS CHILDltlN'I TRIDERin: J:AZY' ... ...... ~-·---· .... ~HOf VAWIS TO $17.00 ' ~ PRICE MIN'S FLOlSHllMS • $16 90 · .. $21 .. 90 ·Gyps~e.~ · Mourn Dead King ¥11 , Spiro California LaUl to Rest • • Wft'IAGO, I Clile (UPI) -Al .......... -~ dirt'• the -11t11 ' -ti 11p1ro Co111wrn11, Plac ............. ~Uttla -· talJt .. ..,_.._ ~ ,..i• Somo .... rettralDed ,,_ -~ IaiO)I,--· . : It -' tilt 1lli1ol ., the tiac ., the ll,1111 RomanJ o[lllel of Latin -: Callfor!da, 11, ....... -ol a liWt lflla<!t. Bt -the leader of a l'fptlJ ...... that llltldled from -.. the ..,ibenl Up ol lloadt -... bod bee klnc lince his ·lather dleCl II ,_. i'il~ ---red In 1J1111 lndlllee bf llo ohlllt --· 44. fta ....... 11 dl6ldna ... ii ...... .. : 01111 ..... ".,,... _ ....... lnlll. ,.,,, ,....., .. ""•• r .. $11Ililrllll-.i. ............. '!JI -VIII -IDll dlUIJ ..... .... ""., -· ... 111111. I • in Chilean Gr(Jve Hup California and one of . the dead l1Jll1 -.ch'• daulhten directed !be burlal Al Ille collln deacended, ........ ,._ a botllt ol: braacll' -the -· Al the llnl of dirt oltuct 11111 -. l'fptlJ -and beptl ............ Several plun1ed fornnl and IJ1ed to Jump into the crave. Tllllr -pulled them bock . "He '1181 a limple man who liked lo ltlk to chlldnD;' illd one gyp11y. "Hf , liked 1o .q lllll i. dancl and to auah. Thei. WU notblnc proud about him." The bul1al "'"'· Hua• C.IHomta leaned ...... a brld< wall ol the cemeterJ, • clpnlle ...... from his mouth. HJa lam.WU anaba'(tll. °1-11" llie llincl" ~ I oboul INadia~ ......... Hap *"""" tho clprette, covered Illa -..i -........i. I YALU.ES TO $30 • s1 ... to .11 MM to C VALUES TO $36.115 WINTHROP E.T. WRIGHT $12.90 $29.90 ...... $ZZ. ....... ""' 0 EN-MON.,-& FR~. NITE.TILL 9:30 P.M. USE YOUR BANUMERIWll, MASTER CllARG~ llOfHILL C11A1CE. ' 54 FASHION IS~ND NEWPORT CENTER 644 4113 • • • Mandq, Ml 17, 1\,_ 'GI • Lt. Calley Ca se To Be Reopened? ' • IALT LAKE CITY (llP!) -LL ...... Collly'1 defeDll loam l&)'J II w111 llok • -tz1aJ ~on the llodlng If l ..,,,.....,.., GI frlbleu lo the My Lal PF I ere. ;; ( __ 1_N_s_11_o_R_T._ .. __.) .... 111111 ba .. -lo do .. putting ,......,. the nldmce Ind wcrkin( OUI mon llldl," Aid ~rge Latimer, chief .-.. -during the military trial ,..lbal -wllb Calley's convldlon II ~ .... IUO mllllon lot CIO c:arco jell bull! by Locllheed e Witek• ar.-11 TACOMA. Wub. (llP!) -A -' In the stabbln( of Ove porlOl1I al 1 Greyhomid bua depot said he bad boell chaled out al Portlln<t Ore., by wlld>et, po1k:e ttported ~. "He must hive betft broodlq •bout aomethlng," 1 pollce .......,, llld of Aleunder Murphy, ZI, the IUIPOOl Murphy was shot lwl<e by bu drl"r illrold Fllgreen. 47, Auburn, Calif., after · the "stabbln( and 1 I 1 I b Inf In- -Uy" wltll I 2\!o Inch blade knife on Friday nl(hL e Slflrltw u•ller •' A f,.,... Army prlvott, klenlllled u a.rte. Dean "Butch" Gruver of lllale.i.ay, Ko., wu localed llSI w .. k. , Onnlr .......S omder Calley when more Ilion llO uunned Qvillans we,. ltllltd In Ille ~ bam1t! al My Lei. ISTANBUL (llPI) -Tho Orthodol patrlachate al OlmCaDtlnople (lltanbul) chose 1 lltUe-tnown, mild-mmmered and -above all -a political man to be the new spiritual leader of 250 million Orthodox Cbri!llens. I ' ' I I ~· aeer A tt.ek CDWUIQN, N.M. (llP!) -A ~ poomd """"' bear ripped down tenta and .-four leelM(e C1D1ptr1 early ~ al the P!UJmool Scout Randi ln ~NewMexlco. Two ol the -..... holpltallud. ~ oUltn ..... tretted and-· ~. Loeklleell Afll1' •• WASlllNG'l'ON (llPI) -lltp. la . Alpla (0.Wll.), a fonner Pmlqm ....... 111, belltvtl tbe admlnlllrlllon -bi ..,., Ill oapplemental Vletnll!I -.r fUndl ~for 1 new "bell out" of lbe~Corp. Mpln llld Sunday Prolldoat N1Jm'1 ._ IO roqllOll for $1.2 blllJon ln aup- taf Vlmwn war fuDds Include Metropolitan DlmllrlOI P1podopou!01, known among hla fellowt u "the quiet metropolitan,'' received 12 vote! to three In belloting Sunday by the patriarchal l)'llOCI. e TlgerB•n t NEW DELHI (UPI) -Troopers ol the l.rJdl>.Tibetan Border Police Force have -pr.-d lneo -to hunt down a mll!H8ting tiger thlt bu killed 33 persons In the Kumaon Hills of northern India. The reglonal commlS1loner of the att1 lold reporlm In the district head-q-. 111 Nllnl Tall lul W«lt thll bexldex the police force, hlDldreds of vUlagers along with two v e t e r a n sporlmlen ett Involved In the hunL sraeli Court Finds Lod I ~rt Terrorist Guilty ' I LOO, llroel (AP) -An lxrllll army hurt convicted J1-ndlcll Kozo jlttmOla lcdly for hll' porl In the Lod )lrport lllOllOCl'O and aentenctd him to e ID prllon. . The ~a!"dd defendant llood and listened lmpollfvely u the -al the -lieuleDant colonels wu tt1d. After ~-tnmlatad Jnlo J•-· be 11gb. ~y. S He wu found (Dilly ol all four charges agalmt him. Death Is the mexlmum ly .... -of them, but Lsrael bu ecuet4 but one pert001 Nul war ~ Adolf Elchmlan. And the pro- ~Uon uktd for 1 Ille aentence. • Okamoto bad pleaded (Dilly lD courl ' • I and belcn the trial signed 1 confession admitting thlf be and two other Japaneee allacktd the crowd In Israel's in- ternational airport on May 30 with machine guns and grenades, acting on behalf of I Pal..U.. guerrlll1 orgenl!a· !Jon. Twenty-eight per!ODI Wett killed, including the other two tem>rlsta, Ind 70 were wounded. In 1 statement Thurlllay at the end of the four-day trial, Okamoto aald bis orgenl!aUon In Japan, the United Red Amrf, would continue its attacks In the cauae or world revolntlon. The president of the courl, Lt. Col. Abraham Frisch, sald. 0 k a mo to ' s declaratlcn WU 0 a mizture of unripened ldeU . • • concm>lng his end his friends' frustration" with the modern world. ilJ IOclal structure and rtglmes. ~ HI laid Okll!IOlo had taken m the '"'r-·•m,.•ssacre •iwilJ.ingly-and in fall----c:mF 1c1-." TERRORIST GUILTY Kom Okamoto, 24 ''The deeds attributed to the 1ccnsed b .. e betll proven beyond all reuonahle doubt," the judge added. • • Tb e y -nt the oflenaes with whlcb he has betft charged. We therefore Ond the ac- cused guilty of these offenses." 8 Greeks Indicted ATHENS (UPI) -Eighl Greeks ar· ttotod for allegedly planning lo kidnap the IDll of the late Pttsldent John F. Kennedy have been lndlcttd for con- spirlcy end will soon be brought lo trlal, a government spokesman said today. The elgh~ includin& a baker and a proleasor of llttrature, were arrested "about" a month ago and are being held in Korydallos prison Jn Piraeus, the spoUmnan Ille!. Murphine 'Coasting' Tom Murphine's "Just Coasting" ool· tmm will not appear this week while he iJ on vacation. • lntlaeSwim As a heat wave swept over the western states, hitting Las Ve- gas with 115 degree tempera· tures, many hotels extended their swimming pool hours un· ti! late at night. Here guest. like Sharon White could keep their cool cool. Mafia 'Rubout' I nves tigat,ed By NY Experts NEW YQIL.4Al!l_ -Silting theories Ind evidence, police ei!>erll loday IDllgbt to fit the alayln( of top Mafia figure Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboll into the complex pattern of a continuing gangland war. Eboli, 61 , WU found sprawled on a sidewalk early Sunday in the quiet Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, far from his usual haWlts In New Jersey Ind Manhal· tan. There were five bullet holes in hi! face Ind neck. The killing was al least the 15th gangllnd $yin( since the June 28, !!I'll wounding of Joseph A. Colombo Sr., iden- tified by authorities u the bead ol the Profaci Cosa Noslrl family In Brooklyn. Included In lbel string of llilllngs wu the Little Italy clam ber rubout of Joseph "Crazy Joe" Gallo last April But where Eboll's death fit in thiJ complex web was the question. lnvestlgalorx concluded that Eboll wu shot as be sat In a car, problbly his own late-niodel cadillac, then llru(gltd out and collapsed on the sidewalk. "He must have been lured over here," said one detective. Wilnesses told police Ibey helrd sbots and saw flashes rear a truck Uiat went by at the time. The truck, apparently stolen. was found about a block away abendooed with itJ engine running. Police also found a stolen car with a machine gun In 111 rear seal The gun had not been fired and detectivex theoriz- ed that ii bad been a blctup weapon. The car Eboll had beet In was gone when police arrived and they broadcast an alarm for tbe veblcle. lit the right hand pocket of Eboll11 jacket was more than 12,000 In cash, mostly In $100 bills. Despite the strong Indications thlt EboU had been "hit" by mob gunmen, detectives said there was no evidence that be had been feuding lately with fellow members or his Genovese un- derworld family. Busing Suit Backed WASHJNGTON (AP) -The Justi ce Department joined the state of Mlcbigan today In ID effort lo block the school ...... lng program order for the Detroit metropolitan atta by a U.S. district court judge. The department'• Civil IUgllta Division ftltd a frlend-<>l·lhe-courl brief In the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit In Cincinnati, requesting a stay of the district courl order. ' I Scattered Storms Hit U.S .' • ( ·Quang Tri Under Fire Jets, Ships Bombard R ed-hel.d Pr ovince SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. warplanel and N•Y1 gunoblpo ltlmed up Sonday and to- dl1 for the helvr..t bo!n-ol Communill-lleld ~ Tl! alnce South -f..,. lauacbed an operotlon to l'eClplure the province June %1, mllltary apot._ Aid. Military ......... &ald at leut eo ~ bombm, l90 coovenllonll flgbten and 10 crullert and destroJerl bit Q\lanf Tri lo clw' the Commuollll ftGm lll'ODnd tbe province capllll and lo prevent rein- forcemeota from reacblng battered Quang Tri city. INl'EWGENCE ollictr1 lut -k &ald that Ill leut 2.IOO memben of a frelb North VI-division had beet spotted In norllrt•••tenr Quang Tri province, moving lowlrd the capital lo Quang Tri City about 3$ miles any. At leut o ... other rtgln\entl 1tt believed lo bave been pulled from the batUefleldl In Laos lo North Vietnam. Allied ofllcero fear they too will be thrown lnlo the betUe for Quane Tri. South Vietnam ... paratrooperx pu1hed to within 200 yards of the inner fortress, called the Citadel, In Quang Tri City Sun- day, milillry spokesmen &ald today. A U.S. adviser described tbetr push through the province capital as "inch by Inch, loot by foot ." President Nguyen Van Thieu vowed lut month that all ol Quang Tri Province would be recaptured by Sept. 19. His troops so far have retaken less than 10 percent of the northernmost province. J'4Il.ITARY SPOKE.WEN reported no fighting within Quang Tri City itsell Sun- da y, but said both paratroop and marine units fought within hall a mile ol the province capital. Ti:lf: spokesmen said 194 North Viet· namese were slain around the city, 435 miles north of Saigon. at a cost of 29 government troops killed and 84 otherx wounded. Spokesmen said 20 waves of 852 strategic bombers bit throughout Quang Tri, wltb 13 formations of the huge jets hitting within 10 miles of the city and the other seven aiming at the suspected North Vietnamese reinforcements up to 25 miles west of the capital. Resulls of the 1352 strikes, which dumped about 1,500 tons of bombs, were unknown, the U.S. command said. Pilots of Air Force and Navy jets knocked out a tank, two Soviet built (llllS U~IT.._.,. AFTER 41 MOVES FiKhor Has Eclve !Jobhy Has Edge In Third Grune Of Chess Match REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) Re!me Lothar Schmid today upheld a protest from champion Boris Spassky and moved the adjourned third game ol the 12511,000 chess championships beck in· to Reykjavilt's main sports hall, despite American challeoger Bobby Fischer's esrller objections to it. The Rev. William Lombard.I, Fischer's se<:Ond, &ald the %9-yeaM>ld challenger would be at the board when the pme resumes at 5 p.m. (10 a.m. PIYr.) "WllY lhouldn't be!' Bobby Is going lo win this game," Lombardi &ald after a two-hour emergency pieeting with the match committee am! "')lrestnlaUvex for the Russian camp. Spassky bolds a 2--0 lead In the match but Fischer bad a one pawn advan tage and a stronger allacklng pooltinn when tbe thinl game adjourned SUnday after 41 moves. Most experts gave Fischer the edge lo take the game. Schmid said playing conditions In the backstage table tennis room on the lint noor of the sports hall ..... lnlerlor. "Mr. SpUlky had agreed to ploy there for ooe tessioo ooly and felt the con- dilkm Wett very poor. HI lald there wu noile from tbe street.I outllde, be could bear -play and the light ond tllo ·-boon! ...... net up .. the IJiChesl standard. . "I welcbtd lht.-lwo-playiq-Wllllf! 1plnlt eech other and decided to move Ille third pme back fDf4 tile big baD,'1 Schmid said. • The game wu moved backlbllO &Ill< d1y after Fischer protested 1111nxt the presence of clooed cln:ult televislm cameras. Schmid, cheerful and In • good mood after reoelvinc praise from both camps for h1I bandiing al the matcb, uld be ..... surprised nelth<r play... objected dUrlng the gune. ''Condlt.lonl _,, reol awflll and any minute I aplCtad -ol them to walk ouL Now wa are bid< whett we lllri<d and 1 hope we cu cet on with the 1ame," Schmid said. I and an IDlllllllllU... clump In their l90 raids oo Norjh Vlelnlm,.. positions around Quanc Tri city, epokesmen Ille!. ' NAVY OFFICERS &ald tbe lix·lnch guns of the light cruiser Oklahoml City and the flve-lncben of nine dextroYen "accounted for nearly :Ill en e my emptacomenta (bunkerx) destroyed and eome 10 secondary exploa!Olll" during gunfire mlsllona~y. The U.S. command also ordered another four wave1 of B52 bombers north ol the Demllltarlzed 7.one (DMZ), the U.S. command said, to hit 1Upply caches and Communist troop camps In North Vietnam. "We (South Vietnamese forces ) 1tt moving lncb by Inch, foot by foot 1nd boU3e by hou.e," U.S. paratroop adviser Cop!. Gail Furrow lold UPI cor- respondent Donald A. Davis al a field beee south of the city. "We ore moving nearly two blocks a day, but•we are mov· tng forward." Belfast Protest FVllROW. IAD> NO covu:ument troops had yet entettd the Cllldel, 1 600-yanl· squett fo~ that occuplex the north- eastern two-thlrdl ol Quang Tri City. The \.._ city and tbe province of the same name were overrun by the North Vletnomese army May 1 and the. Saigon comm1nd three weeks ago launched 1 l ,600-man drive to rellke the capital. UPI reporter Ed Bassett said 1 U.S. Huey helicopter gunship wu shot down Sonday near Qui Nbon, 250 mliex northeast of Saigon. One of the two American crewm en was injured but both were rescued, be said. Davts &ald field ofllcen told him the Qimmunlsta appeattd to be 1lowly pull· Ing beck lD the flghttng Inside Quang Tri City. Government troops beat beck a North Vielnlme11 counterettack ln the city ctnter SUnday and reported llnocklng out a Soviet-llulll tank. 4,000 Catholic Women, Cllildren Abandon Homes BELFAST (AP) -Neerly f,000 Roman Catholic women and children camped overnight In a footbell field after leaving tbeir homes In a Bella31 battle zone lo protest the BrlUsh Army's occupaUon of the area. Five more deaths SUnday pushed Northern Ireland's loll this year to 236 kill..i, alresdy the worst since Zl2 died In sectuien battling In 1922. A land nilne killed two BrlUsh IOldierx a I Oroimneglen; a pollcemm and a civilian were shot In Bellas!, and an il-Je1r"1d youth died In a riot lD Strabane. The Cothollc women Ind chllclren followed their prleat, Father Jacli: Fitzsimmons, out of tho l.e!lldoon Avenue area Sunday clalmlng the army's show of force wu "endangering their lives." The troops and gunmen of the Irish Republican Army have been squared off in the area since last Thursday. Despite army leers that the exodul wu planned to clear the ground for a musfve IRA at- tack, there were only sporadic incidents. Father Fitxxlmmoos and other com- munity leaden negotlatecl Until aftee midnight with BrlUsh offtclala In an at- tempt lo get the ln>opo pulled ouL Meanwhile, the wcmen and cblldren bed· ded down in the open or in tents at nearby Colemen! Park. They left tbetr men beblnd to guord their homea against loot<n. The Br!Ush government &ald It was considering the familiex' pleo for the army to withdraw. The Lenadoon area Is a modern hnus· .t,i k> Which parts. still like each other?' iag development ;where tho IRA'1 lMly ceue-flre broke down lut -ln 1 row over housing allocatloox- The umy moved 700 troopo Into the dlstriet after the IRA la\Dlcbed a musive attack In an attempt lo destroy a military post. Early today, troops claimed they bad shot t"'.Q gwunen in a squad of four that tndtd sholl for two houn with the ormy across the Anderaomtown area, of wblch Lenadooo A venue ta part. McGovern;Jirk in Hil"ls For Rest, Battle Plans W ASlllNGTON (UPI) -Seo. George S. McGov..,, flew lo the Blaclc Hilla of his neUve Sou!h Dakotl today for two weeks ol mt and preilerllioa lot his underdog effort to unaeat Preeldent Nlx· CNl. McGovern's charten!d Easf«n Trtstar Tri jet took off from Naliooal Airport at 7:33 a.m. (PIYr) for the approximately three-bour lllehl to Rapid City, S.D. MCGOVERN will -a two weeks at Sylvan Lodge, not hr from 1IJe ML Rushm«e catvings ol lour Presldenta Aides sakl he woolcl spend thla week mtlng, perhlqlo with I visit from bil ~ mote, Seo. 'lbomu F. Eegleton, ond next weet In contiruinc hit ptamlng lot the campaign. Eagleton Will remain ID Wllilincton for an attempt to purxuode cliloldenl labor leeden to 1lipporl the Democrat.' preeidenllal ticket. It WU generally agrt<d that the South Dakota senalor was a decided underdog at this early stage al the 1972 campaign. A NEWSWEEK magulne survey in- dicated that If the electlon .... held to-• day McGovern could be .ialn of 'GlliY the four electoral votes of his home state Ind the three ol the District of Columbia. The survey pve Nixon Z3e c<rtaln elec- lotll votes at tills stage. Republican National Qlolnnon RolJort Dole warned his party's resulars o1 "over confidence." He dk1 91)', l»weM, he felt Nlxoa -In "1 V"'1 ltroac pool- doG." " ••• We flllnl< 1bal be II ..,q lo be • I • •• difficult lo heel and he will be rMlecttd. but !, for one, never undereeUmate the enemy," Dole saJd. DOLE WAS interviewed Sonday on the NBC program 11Meet the Pres.!!." McGovern spent the weekend at h1I Washlnglon home resting from the grue~ Ing primary campaign that sow him move from the ..., of the pad: to cap- ture his party's nomination at Miami -last week. Eagleton aid SUnday be hoped to meet this week wllh AFL<:IO President George MllD)' In ID effort lo clOle the rift -Ille labor leooler and tile McGovern tkket. FAgietm aid he believed ~ coold penuode Meany tbet tho McGovem-Eaglelon Uclcet woo1c1 be prefnble lo·lhat of Nixon 11111 h1I run-rq mate. "BE JU8T BAS to write down the two tickets and Jook at them,'' Eagleton llkl. The AFL<:IO will convme lls 35- member Executive Qxincll Wednesday to consider the U.1 million member fed,..•· lion's cem~gn COW'lle. Eagleton allo predlct.i thet <Jilcago Mayor llic!lard J. Daley would not "lake a \nlk" Ind refuse lo -k f<I tbe elec· tiCll of McGovern. But, be added, "I've ...... ~ u Mandrollle Ille Maelcten." Eoileton wu interviewed on CBS' Face the Nation. Dole aid McGovern lhould quell bis -~lo tnUe -m the convmU... ~ will hold ID Miami -next _., 11 bold In -a.rt ~. Nixon'• ..... palgn dilel.--)IOl4llllal .._.. liolll _,,I matler of concom. "I'VE READ ....... --.paperx and otllers wldcll lndicllo thn ta a plan lo llOnlY1e 1111 "4poiblkon coavllltlad Jiiii U thore WU a plan lo )Salya tbo lederal IOV'flU1*K Jut 1 • • r • ' • 'MacGregor •Id. lit Miami Soncloy, I coavetlllon ol People'• Party IJMlllllln hm ei&tll IOUlhlrn llateo ¥Olld lo 1upp1r1 ""°"...,, ...U. lban Peaple'a Party candldato Dr. ~ .... 1. Spoclc, 1IGbett =.i. party ............ aid ... .••• ~::...ilbe~t~ (I the major ....... I 7 • • Orange · (;oast 1 ...... y's Fhud N.Y. Steeb VOL 65, NO. '199, 2 $ECTIONS, 26 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNff, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY '17, '1972 NC TEN CENTS 36 Parks EmplQyes in 4-day Week Experiment • . ~ By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. DllRr ...... Stt,ff · 'Thirty-six emplO)'es of the Ne1'Jl')rt Beach parks division have launcbeil tlie elty's experiment with a fouN!ay wor!t .-k. I 'Jbe men rtSpoDSlble (Or tbe tnaift. tenance of the city's parks, medians and ;plrlcways .are l!O,t getting an extra day olf for free. Under the program, which wU lhslltuted Tutsc!ay, they work I~ hours a day, faur days a week, in 1tag- 1ered shifts. 'Ibis means that ..,. group ol park men will work Monday tbroU&h Thursday from 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and the other group will work the aame hours Tuesday tbroU&h Friday. City manqer Robert Wynn said lbe experlement IS the result of salary package boriaininl aessions that were held this "Prine· As one of the items· souibt by emplayes, the four day -k was discuased in the m~t and confer sessions with dty management. Wynn said the sa'·monih experiment was aireed to u part ol the pocbge ap- proved by councllmen June II. "At the.end ol the trial period, the plan· will be evaluated 11 to perlormance and the employes preference,•• he said, "and It will be Clllltinued or discontinued at the discretion 9t management." · "We consulted -other cities that have : lmtituted this kind of a scbedule and read a lat about It, but we just woni know until we've used it for a while," said Frank ''""'· admlnlstr1tlve aide lor personnel. "We ·wm be making monthly checks so that we can work out any problems that come up if we feel the fout'daY .,...k will ~ of benefit," he added . The park divisiOn employes r.~re selected, be said, becaUM ol a survey taken before starting the oew scbeduJe. Park employes, as a group, lndic.lted 'the most positive attitude about the four-day - week. A couple ol ~fit. that have already been recorded a/ier only four days or operation are reduced travel Ume and more efficient use of equipment, accord- ing to Parks Director Cal Stewart. Stewart noted that under the old scheduJe, park employes would be travel- ing from the parks to lbe city yard at 3:30 p.m, the time' of heavy beach traffic. Under the new system, they don't have as much of a problem with traffic, he said. ' He estimated that emplO)'es could 8'I up to 20 houn a week more service out ol the machinery under the new schedule. "But the Pn>«nm is still ao new that I really can't make any statements that are founded In fact," Stewart cautioned. He saJd he expects to make his llr1t report on the four-day week to Wynn sometime In mid-August. "I don't blow whether it'• Ju$ the change or what, but it does seem that there has been an In- crease in efficiency," be said. Sto,re Clerli Maced Three Held in Newport Robbery • • • • • • • • • • • • ii • • ~ = • •• • A Newport Beach armed robbery left a liquor store clerk Maced and clubbed and involved a hlch speed-chase tluough the street. of Laguna Beach, which ended only when the suspect vehicle plunged over a cliff late SUnday. Three persons, including ari,13-year-old woman who said she was four mootbs pregnant, were taken into custody and booked on charges of suspicion of armed . robbery. The trio ,.., then turned over lo the Newport Beach Police. Fischer Wins ~······································ DAILY ,ILOT ..... ~ ' MAP OUTLINES TRUSTEE DISTRICTS IN NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Spocl1I E.loctlon Aut. 8 Will Mun N1w F1 cn on Boord from Dlllrlct 5 and Dlllrlct 6 . Harbor IScho.ol V~tin-g Set Thirt.een Seek Posts in Unusual Summer Electron Votera In Newport Beach and Costa Mesa will be IOinl to the polis ne>:I month In an unusual mlcHuinmer elec- tion to pick two new membel'I ol their ichoot board. ' • The Aug. I elecUon h., been called lo fUl vacanties on the seven-member lovernlng body of the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dlalrlct. The vacancies ,..,e created when IOllllime achoo! truateea Selim S. 11Bud" Franklin of ~ Mesa and Donald Strausa· ol ..Newport Beach rest,ned. · 'lblrteen · candldalel -eight from --~•1 Dlslrlcl I and [Ive from .. Strauss'• District 6 -are vying !or tbe -ai,....,, 35, of 215 Crystal vacant llchaol. board chairs. AYe., Balboa bland, an allorney. Franklin, an attorney, rtolgned alter J .... G. &islp, 40, o( %14 :itltb SI., an five yeara "'.the unllled board, when be t•-and -d~-was 1ppoinled recently to the Harbor 1 __ , ·w-aide to Republican Judicial Dlslrlci bench. Asaemblyman Craig Biddle of Riverside. Strausa, an executive with Beckman Watter Laur, 30, ol 1111 !8th st., who Instrument., was an 6r!iinal member of list. himself as 1 professional educator. Antique Takes 29 Down to Mexico the unified board wlieii It WU flnl Dr. -,....._. 45, of 61 Balboa elected In 11116. Saying be fell be had Coves, an obstetrlc:lan. EllenSANvllllDIEGON y(AP) -!.._oelthePel~._!! aerved long enough, Slrluas timed hll In 'l\:llllee Area 6 Io r m e r I y • • ·• may ~ •.......-resignation to •colnclde with l"ranklln's. ,._.led by Franklin (see map ), the 1907 Aullln motorist on the highway. He said be·wantell to aave tbe dlllrlct the eight canilldates are: He -JD other drivers o1 antique additional npeme of a seamd ojlecial Joe Cofolf, JD, ol 820 Michael Place, can b1 making II from Montreal, electloa. Newport Beech, an 1111'-for Mcllon-C8nlda, lo the Maican border In It Under elecilon in<edurea eotablisbtd nell Douclaa. days. when the unified dl.olrlcl WU formed, 1 lte Dllf1, M, ol 'm Ogle SL, Colla ~~ .~~' ~blllnlty lbeT olumr ~ are elected by all voten fn the 'Mesa, wllo II wttb the clrculalloo deport. " ___ ...,.. dlltrlcl, 'but must mide within ~ ol men& ol lhe IM Anlelel Tlrnea. wbldl -amday and was spooaored "'-lrUllee dillrlcil. '!'be dlotl'lcll -w. ---Jr., a ol 411 E. by Ibo Vet.on Motor Car Cluj> ol Blmle on B..oot __ :;::,.ani:=~:!-~~~7~.,.~~'l'iiill~America. ~ ~ ___::-· rtpl'UODlld Oii the ldlOOI boll1'd. Ave., pi\'i....., a . ....., """-0 l · · ' S•"" k 81116 leW" cumnQJ c:a11a for a spec!af at C1f ....,.,. . . n y a w::a -.-.. ........ baor4 11r. ,... =«>11, 13, _. 1a1 -ber ........ before CGmplotini bis MarlJms Drlw, 11o.,..1 Beoc:b, a deo- ... ,... lam of olllce. tlsl. · '!'be -elected Aog. I will fill the -C. ....... lf:, of ~ Cliff """'*"' partlonJ ol terms now lleld by Drive, Newport ._, 1,1 a""'11ey. Franklta ............ J'ranklln'• Dlllrlcl -J ......... ". R*ri -• W. --11'11. Slraull' Dllrict Lane, Colla-· a11••1!46-. I term 8"11 ID Im. llh. -'1111111, •,cl Ill Robin Hood In ~ illllrld I formerly ~Colla-· a i-wife and the •+ 111Ud '1 -(ue ... 1111,y_.111 .. echoolboardrace. ...,,_Inc map), the five candldatu Dlstrlc:I I ts lolally within the ctty tncludt: llmita ol 11t1pcri 8oacb. However, -111 Asllo, 11, flf 1• Via Xzllhl, lllllrld I GMll munlc!pol boomdarlta, Lido Ille. an ..,,........, 1J1iD1 M"odlrs porlltlla fJI bath llewpart Beach _,., fllr mt ... ~ ..... Roman Gab..Wl Lung Collapaes LONGBUGl(AP)~ .... Oeblt!i. it, iL the Loi ~ llaml ..,,_ a coll•paed lllJ\C dllrln& a l1'liDIDI -to-day. The VMtl'ln signal caller WU hoopltol!Jed ad taken lo turl'l'1 for 1-'lloo cl a lube into lhe lunf. Arrested were: Cynthia Ann Foat, 11; PalAl_John_Jennlngs, 23; and Gerald Anthony McNtlt~ 19. All three 11v.e an address ol the .Hacienda Hotel, 1281 S. Coast Highway, Laguna -Beach. Newport Beach police said today that Johnny's Liquors clerk Steven Warner, 25, was sprayed in the face with the chemical Mace and then clubbed to the floor of the store, 3537 E. Coast Highway with an 18-inch-long wooden implement. Mace is used by police, often in riot • Manager's P~a situatlont. Warner-wu -taken to the Holi Memorial llolpllal llld rele11ed fallowtac emerg<ney tream.t: ~ Booel! pollce Aid It It DOI -)f _, _, or property. was taken In the lnddmt. Police lald that two men were ln\OO!ve4 In the liquor store actlvltlea, and 'weri seen rwmlnc from the lllore by a p&al" by at about 11:30 p.m. SUnday. Newport Beach police broadcut a (See ROBBERY, Pare I) Raises to Be Requested ·For Mesa;s 1City·~~oyes -~ ...... --will for an Costa Mesa city emplO)'el tonight by City Manater Fred Soraabal. The salary Increase package will be presented to the Costa Mesa City Council during its regular session at 6:30 p.m. Jn the council chambers. Sorsabal said bis recommendaUon will cover about :MO emplayes, everybody .. , cept firemen who· are llllll negotiating with city olficlals. But he decilned to spell out the details until hll pmentallon before the council lolUibt. He did say, however, thet the ·iatary Iner..,.. would tolal belwMn fll0,000 and_f200,000. The poy biW are.net m. eluded in the flO.a miJllon b!Jdcel adopted tiy city councilmen. laal month and 'will have to come from reserve (unds. , a..G1111tp;all..at1111= ilolroyod .., ..... lhe dlJ le - to re<elft """' -In . valualloa. Also aclledalld fllr tmJPl'I councll session Is the IOlmy cluolllcallon fer Keith Van Roll, the city's new director o1 leisure lerVlces • Van Holt took over the new job earlier this month, 1teppin1 up !tom bla - poslllon u rtcreaUOll director. &:nollol said he would recommend a 1D011llllt Pit rllllfle ol fl.311 to $1,!M for Van Holl - -_.taes the actlvlllii .,~~ parka, recreation, and foll <OUrM departmmll. _. TonJclit'1 meeting lhlpes up 11 a buy but routine IOISIOll for mnnctlmon wllo !lave DOI held a meetlni -J-IS. The backlog of bn•lnesa Incl-.tllne publlc hearlnp and la ........... Blast Damage8 Forum Preparing for -Stones MONTREAL (AP) -A bomb aploded outside the Mootreal l'Oniln eutJ -Y under a truck lolMjed -«i1ll-' !or a coocert In the arena IOllflbt . 117 Ibo Rolling Stones, a polb ....._.." reported. No--._led lmt, bat thewln-: -on the nortb llde ol the bulldilll were brokm. Pelor ...... ._ .. "' the lrlllsb rock ....... lald the -l .... -plwu-dod '!'be ........ ·~ -l bled: and Is the -ol tlie -ClaacHlill"' the National Hoc:u, I 11p 'lbe t.atWna watefmie, Gaston lesqe, II, WU 10lllfll bJ the bid: .,_ trance lboul II feet fnm Ille tnlCk. "There WU a bell ol I bounce," Ill said. "All thole -brolre, a ball ol fire came out flVID under the truck, ml then tbere was a lot ol mote." In ,Sin Diego, 1everal peroom wen arres\Od Jitne l l when rlolini broke out alter boldors ol·counterfell tlcbttl lo a Stooa' concert were turned &Wal'· UMd tear Pl to a crvwd or 200 Tiie --$ Tucloa, ArlJ., to 1!111 -youtba who lrletr to cras11 a-. When the llkmll appoand at the MetropoUtaa 8Dorts CeDllr In BJoom. ~ MlllD., ,_ 11. -bandred (IM ITONBI, ..... , ' c. ... Tile motloe lo< the bomblaf -IOI l!!UiM'dl1lely -t. 1-~ -the :.-~~ '111-•ilq, Apollce_oquad_~ '""'""'" --:"v1ce.....:"'1':~~ -i: ~ u:.:=-~~= lnlck parted • to the low .. a -Low - Mt. and Mn. -JkClallaD uld peraturu ladlllt lD Ila .... =.s~~ --·pm.II'-!-INSDB TeD~Y- "I dowa to Ila 81ew ... and aD I TM a4lfd hi A..m-.oocfltlr cmld •was a clDad cl ... and ... ,. !low lie.,._, IM farvot ef ....... lrlnlaD_lla_"Ml'l. lkCl'!llall f<~ f!I L.> fa aal<l "I ...... a frlltld dowa the -"'l1 " ,...,., --• Md ... -aD Ila 1illldowi ID bet Collfomla, er llnms1 '"' o • c II ....-1-. ......._.. afoot to bring iMol _. to VW-. llill -•lid In .u,. -proml"'-· Slor!t Page 7. .......,u. .... 1anw-11 .. part ol theJr cur.-..._., North American tour. During the Stones' llnt ...,.... Oii the tour, more than 30 polkemen were 111-fured In VlllCOUVer, B.C., In a rock· and botlle-tbrowlng meleo as 2,llOI ~ tried to crUll lhe --~on J-I. Fifteen penam ,,.., u11Jt1~. ...... _ ' -. -I c-.. ~ ?I --. ....... ,... ' ........ .. " ....... ..,, ........... ""1111 " ... .._ . =.-., =··· .a -.... ... ...... •!J Tllli... i ~:--4 . ' NC ......... July )7, 197~ Delee Surfers Revolt; Police Attacked , By JOHN zAU.Eil Of .. I*"° ,II .. fltff ~ sutlers pelted about 40 poUce ud JUeguardl witb mud and paper cups pocked with llDd lite SW!day afternoon as ol!lttra tried to enfor<e a lllll'llng ban In crowded waters north ol the Hun- tlngtDn Beach Pier. Fifteen surfers were finally arreated during the 7~mlnule melee and booked oa charl'I Including· failure to dllperse. rtlllllng arrest and Interfering with a P!'~ (!lflcer. 1Robert Clrac, 20, of U51 Warner Ave., c!lspuled the olfiCJll aCCOl!"t. He alld the ' Police Sergeant Attacked, Mauled By Vicious Dog Dllpotcbed ·to a routine domestic dlltUrbonce, a Coeta • Meas police ..,. ... t wu atllcked and badly llUluled by ooe ol two German' abepberd auard ~ Saturday night, aa their miltrees 1..,_ht to cootrol them. Investlgatora alld Sgt. John Rqan 11111· fered three aavere puncture wouncll wben :!"~:I~ deep Into bll ~ht ,..d lhrowlni began only a ft er llfeguatd! used excessive-force in mak· ing an arrest. He aald be was beaten on the legs with a black atlck u be was hauled olf to jail on charges ol failure to dlaperse and resisting arrest. ctrac 11ld be pllnned to file a lormal complaint. Police would not comment on h!J charge. No effort was made to make arrests in the esllmaled crowd of 600 Individuals lor auaultlng pollce officers. "Because we had plenty to do just ducking a~ trying to get those surfers," explllned City !Jfeguard cap~ Doua D'Arnall. The Incident orlgbialed shortly alter ~ p,m .. when Ufegwµ-dl lllllOllllced that the lllll'llng bin which nonnally llfls at. that· tint• would conunue. due to bundreda of awtmmerl aUll In the water. D'Arnlll said about 200 surfers obe~ the order, but a group of about 30 more huddled together, then gave Indian-type war whoops and raced into the water. Ufeguitrdl asked them to leave, but the surfers refused. Aulboritlea llld at that point pollce were called In to wist llld the lileguard department rescue boat was cllspatched to the area to help in forcing surfers out of the water, "We came at them from the boat and from the shore and 'rounded up as many as we could," capt. D'Amall aatd. "But . II wun't easy. n took 12 men to catch one guy." • Kites Fly Downwind Portion ol 100-boat fleet In the inaugural Flight of the Kites in Newport Harbor fight for position as they run past east end of Lido Isle on downwind leg. Flight of the Kites has replaced old Flight of DAILY PILOT Pllttt ff AllMI l.lckiilM'f the Snowbirds because there aren't enough ·Of the-· old wooden Snowbirds around anymore. To see how the first Kite flight came cut, see Page 18. Prison Violence Moves . -,• ' " I Ef'fltn Pilfe 1 ROBBERY ••• . . . ... description ol the suspects and their vehicle. A. car meeting that I ~pti<n WU obeened lbooli 20 ininul# 1!* bf. tlguna BelCIJ (>GUct. Attempting to stop the car, the Laguna patrol car Was led on • 85-mile per hour cbaae through town, up Cenrer Street and lelt onto carmeltta Stlff!. . Pennedln m the deadend street, the suspect vehlcle entered a r~i~U~I drt•eway the driver perhapa thinking,,it an avenu~ oI escape, police said. ,.t" The c:ar then toppled over a ctiU. Laguna SUch offlcor• took three -riding In the vehicle Into custody. No one reporle• Injuries, pollce said. Pruning Shear . Burglar Loots ., C.Osta Mesa Homti A blJri]ar Wllil a penchantfor pnmiJ!( abearl 1truclc ior the aecond time In'* week in one CO.ta M... neighborhood Sunday, stealing $1,663 in Joot and thoughtfully lasrening an anti·burgll!I' latch as be left. . i. ~s in the latest College Park district burglary included three c a m e r a s , assorted photo equipment, a .22 caliber automatlc)>istol, coins fr<Jm piggy bank.!I and the customafy pair of pruning shears. VictJm Ralph T. Peet, <Jf 349 Princetdn Drive, told PatiPtman .Phil Dooohue 'e atao lost two i937 San francisco 4COIJ'l- memorative half-dollars. . The pajr of rare coins bear images ef the Bay Brid~e and the Calilornia griafy, bear stale symbol and have a $125 col- lectors' value, Peet t9ld investigators •. ~ w.il '· lreated al Coeta · Mesa Memp1jinlo,p1~ and releued after Ille "-<•--.:catlack at 3'" CoJ!tle Are., but.Will re' -qillre iilil!S outpOtielltC-, - Meanwblle, about 300 spectators bad l'!O\fded around on the beach llong with lllOlhel: 300 on lbe pier, according to Capt. D' Arnall. Virginia Gunman Gives Up Effort. To Get Money To Another Institution Peet aeld be and his wile retur® from a day of sailing to find someone\b.18 ~-by C!ulllng • bole In their ........ door·and reaching tm>ugb to uni~ It. • . Normally, s,t. Relan beads Ibo ~ent•,. narcotlca detail but waa IHlined to patrol duties <t'lf!r tbe .~ becauie of VICltlontlme penon- nel ~es. . Orqe . 90UD11 Anlmll s be 11 er 1utborltlel were notuted ol the 1U1ck by the bil auard doc Ind will keep It In cjuaralitlne. The eecood German • abepberd was restrained during the in· cldent. NY, Prisoners S.tay in Cells, • Prot.est Firing 'il:'l""tfft,l'llt~ ... ,, •. ', A'M"ICA, N.Y. (AP) -About IOO in- ~ ~.pril!ll ~~ leil'i"Vifr ctlis 'lodly lilt tieilia no ~. Supt. Emu! L. Mootayae alld. He alld they were primarily protutlng Ille layoff ol 1 l<mponly nurse · hired alttt lut Septenjbfr's riot, .. . Prbon offlcllls announced Wiler that Inmatu were . planning to conduct a peaceful de....,.!iatlon today. . -protaolfng Iha ........ layofl, Mo~ slid ihe demanatratol'J "a]ao cla!iiled aome:oUbe-clldillld1fti1l'°nfi made Jul Sepl<!mber hid nol bOen ed." . "f.tlllnlt '''"" making a sreat deal of beaclw1y," be alld, !'but tllore l:(t ............ ........, . '" ~ """"61;1 ... , .,r ~ ... ems. . . . MO!itayDe all4 the IOO pr!looerl did not eel bl'elllflit. • . " · ' · "We' olJtred lbem I cbanct to come out,'.1 he aJd. 11But they Jetused. 0 He sald mo.st of the other 300 priJOllers were at their jobs In the metal lhop or on the prison farm outside the maJ:lmwn aecurlty facillly'a walla. "I have no idea bow long thil sit-in will last," Montayne said. 0 Tbere is no noise, everything is quJel" He barred "'!lflmen and la"Ylrl IJ'O!ll the prison but alld relaUvea and friends on the approved vl.sitors1 list would be allowed to enter. , He said two temporary nur1ee were hired after Iha September riot. One WU given pemwienl status llld the other wu !aid off becluae of a sbortqe of funds, be lldded. OWIRCOAIT IT DAILY PILOT T"9 °""lllt C... DAI\. Y PILOT, wltfll WINdl .. ~ .. Ht....,, ..... "'*8IMd w ~ Ol'tnlt CNtt PW!ltlllfll ~. S... ""._ tfl!M •1'9 "'11>111111i. MotldtY tll'"lh Ftld1y, ftr Cosl1 MUI, N""Plrt a ekll, H1111tir.ttM ltlldll~nhllll VIiify, Utvn1 IMCfl. lrvlM/llddltlNlclr; .. Sift Cll!Mn!e/ SM J111" C1pt1tr1111. A 1lngt1 rtgl-1 edlllwl h pub11tlttf .. 1"'1N)'t •nd SWllllY• fl'lt fM"ln<IHI Jl'lbli.tllfll •!Int h 11 3JO W"' hY SlrMI, 0.11 Mtllf Cllllfonllt, tilH. R1\1rt H. W1M rrnlffflt •M Pultlltlltf ,J11k Jt. Cutl1y Vb PMlclll'lt -OWrtl MIMtMr 1"11111 IC11Yil . ·-,.. .... " A. Mw,W•• ...... Clltet Chrl• .!:l ..... i.:o !Ucho.4 p, Non M#llt"e IC*' qMool ...,._,,.w .. 1n•- .....,.,. ,,_, -Nt...-t •~l'f ....._. '9dll m ,_..,A"""" """'""* ~· tms '*" loulevlrt SM ~1 * Nwlll II Clmlflll ll•I Tt1.,•1as (f14t 6U-4U1 3 1 ...... Mwall 1 I &41•1'71 ,.,.... a.. ,a,.. ...... u... ..... 41JMH , .... ...,. or... c...., C....IMlll!i. J ..... ,,. ttn. 0...... C:WI ~Ill ... Nrt ... •••· lllvttr~ ........ "' H\'Wt ......... ...,.. :::... ···=· .~ -"" ............... c.--. =-. 10 J ...... W ..,... llM .,.,_ .. ,, __ ..,, ..... ......,. I "A few 'people started throwln1 things, and pretty IOOD more people jumped on lite bandwallOD. D'Amlll .. 1d. "! don't think most ol them knew whit the lltua· tlon was, acept that police and lifeguards were Involved." C.ptlln D'Arnall said that most of the objects thrown were simply "sand- bombs" -sand packed Into paper drink cups -but that some harder objects were burled as well. The 1ltuaUon wa1 controlled by 6:15 p.m .. ln•estlgaton aald. 11Some surfers seemed to be under the lmpresslqn that anti-surfing Jaws are un- conatltutlooal or dlacrlmlnatory o r something," according to capt. D' Arnall. "They're not," he emphasized. "When the waters are filled with bathers 1Urfboardl present a hazard. ll's that almpJe!' . Ho hoted that a boy was killed when a surfboard struck him in ,the neck, 1caus- Jng. interml. bleecjjng which led to SUI· 16citflin ibout two montba ago. "We just can't allow surfers 1n the water when there are bathers there." be ~lalned. --·-From Page 1 S~ONES •.• gat~ei· caused 11,000 to 11,500 dalnage--lo"-the-flclllty. Eight peraons w•e 8rrested and aever.i, policemen were Injured. 'l'be iitones' coilcert tour C!QVen 30 cltlea. t1. marb the first time they hive v!Jlted )be Untied ~~ In 211 ,,.,... An appearance at the Altiunont Speedway 35 miles eest of San Francisco on Dec. 6, 1969, during their last concert tour produced a day·long trafllc jam along Int.rotate 205, and f...-deatba, in· eluding ooe stabbing, in the crowd ol 300,000. RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -A gunman SlllTendered to FBI agent& today after holding eight persons host.age in a suburban bank and -anding IS00,000 ransom, the FBI said. All elght hostages were released. The gunman, carrylng a knife and a shotgun, first released three women hostages from a room in the back of the Bank of Chesterfield, police said. Then, three hOW's after the epi90de began, the man released the other five hostages and turned himself over to FBI agents. The FBI took the man into custody and Identified him as Everette Warner Wal· lac Jr., 22, ol Rlclunond. Wallace walked from the bank's rear door, smiling and flanked by FBf agent&, and entered a 197'l Lincoln Continental which he demanded earlier·along with tbe ransom. - Police said the man fired several shots when he enrered the bank, apparently "to let us know he would shoot,'1 but.. no ooe WU Injured. Before Wallace surrendered, some 50 local, .tare and federal officers sur- rounded the bank. While the gunman held the hostages in the bookkeeping department in the rear of the bank, police and bank officials were in the front portion <Jf the bank, three ·officers were stationed on the building's roof and state police brought up an armored car. Sweig Released LEWISBURG, fa. (AP) -Dr. Martin . Sweig, 50, an aide to former U.S. House SPl'lker John McCormack, was freed from federll prison today airer serving a year for perjury in CUllll!dion with In· nuence peddling. Swelg was an aide to the Massachussets Democrat for 24 years before he was fired in 1969 follow- ing charges of alleged use of the speaker's office to help friends and cllnets. DAll.1 P1"°1' lllff ltftelt Romance Wears Hardhat Construction worker eoes aboul business, at Newport Center building ~ •Ue. Ignoring sign holsled to its perch by fellow worker. Carpenter Bob Sproule sald be pul the sign up becau,. he hid a date w(th a waitress at reotauranl 1eross the street and simply w111ted to show bis feelings about her publicly. BALTIMORE (UPI) -Prison violence spread to the Maryland Penitentiary here today -Jess than 48 hours af\er ri<Jting inmates caused $1.5 million damage to the House if Correction at Jessup, Md. Four penitentiary guards were held .as host.ages and a fire erupted 1n a wood- working shop .. Police said about 75 inmates at the maximum security facility seized the guards when the fire broke out and took them to a yard area where they threat· ened to beat the guards with wooden clubs. Three guards and ottie inmate were reported injured. The inmates demanded a meeting With Rep. Parren J. Mitchell, (D-Md.), wbo wiai Gov. Marvin Mandel negotiated a peaceful end to Ille -ol Correction riot early Sunday. The Maryland P..U~iary, localed in Weekend SailQrs Run Into Trouble On Their Outing A pair of mariners who went down to the sea in ships Sun<l;iy might have been better orrto-trY a relaiing visit to the mountains. Rusoell Dunlop, or Indio, craabed his 4>-toOt ferro cement.llulled sailboat Veronica imo tbe Santa Ana Ri•er jetty three limes before lllrlior Department personnel took It In tow. Investigators said Dunlop -wbo .was oUered a tow twice and declined before finally accepting aid -was also issued a citation for failure to carry the required number of lifejackets. Dunlop did get as far olit to sea u the jetty, whlle Alvin Penhall, vice president of Penhall-Marine Inc., was less lucky. His 37-foot cabin cruiser "Sure Enough" sure enough had its share of problems Sunday, sinking right at ils mooring adjacent to Lido Park DriV'e while undergcilng repairs. The Sure Enough was refloated within two hours. :tAOND CE1fr~ 0~1'"-MGE COv,: "' ~,. downtown 'Baltimore, wu the scene of a .massive riot in 196e. Eal1i<t tndat, Warden Ralph M. Wil- liams of the House of. Correction ·Said a "bare bones'• budget of $6.2 million caused overtrowding, insufficient serv- ices at his facility. : "'There are insufficient funds," he said. "I have Mt been given the tunds to do the job." · A spolresman for Mandel hotly d;.,\iuted the claim and said "the IR<lley is there but it not being used." General Cushman ' Servi.ces Slated In San Diego" · LI. G.,;. Thomas CUll!madoll'17 Serra Drive, Corona del Mar, one of three Marines ever to rise lbrollP: the ranks from private to general, Wed Sa'turday after a long illness. He· wai .. 77. Graveside services will Like place Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Fort Rosecrans National •Cemetery ill San Diego. Baltz. Bergeron Mortuary hi' eol-on'a de! Mar is in charg~ of arrangerrie~ts'". -c.--:-:-c~ Gen, Cushman enlisted In the Marine Corps 1n 1917 and was nariled c;om- mandlng general, Air Fleet, Marine Corps, Pacific, in 1949 lfter serving as an aviator through various Pacific cam- paigns in World War II. He later commanded the ls't Marine Aircraft Wing in KOrea. Gen. Cushman was promoted to 'the rank of major general in 1950 and became a, lieuteQant 1&eneral upon his retirement In 11161,. when he mored to Corona del Mar. • Besides his .waretlmt assignment&, Gen. Cushman se.Ved in both Nicaragua and Haiti. ' He is survived by his wife , Eleanor: a son, Thomas J. Cushman Jr., of Ari· tngton, Va.; a daugbter .. Mia. ·Lfle K. Londoil of ijewpott . l!eBql ; II v e grandchildren· llld,O!le great-grandchild. Due to the small size of the hole and the fact the Intruder drank a bottle di ora~e juice and thumbed through whit police listed as "adult" magazines, In- vestigators theorized the burglar ii a jL1venile; , -v Officer Donohue noted In his reporJ that last week be lnv..Ugated ano!her burglary In the same block, In which .. pair of pi'unlng shears also wu taken ht the intruder, .. _. Mesa West Side Owners Uniting .. A new Coiill M-: .~ =~=~·oi!"~ ,, Wiii :~ it&. inltmi meeting• Ill 7:30 p.m. 'nlmlilay In the police deport, men\ brlelinc room. . . City ~llman Alvin Pinkley said lhj! ~, .known ae the Freedom HMieowntr'1 AS.50Ciation, "is trying to. cori'i.bat -· the general deterioration ~ about 800 houses south or Wilson Street. t The Freedom Homes tract was built 19 years ago, before Costa Mesa was ~. corPQra\ed. . "'Ibey.were selling thetnfor fl,900 ariij' $8,900 when they were new and now .. they're worth -hetween-$21,000 and. $23,000," said Pinkley. • CHART Hearsimpac# ., Of ShQpping ~enter · A ~isi:usslon .of the cultural Impact of Ji major: shopping center on the communlt)t around it will be discussed Thursdaj before the Citizens' Harbor Aret Research Team (CHART) In a breaklaat session. The 7:30 a.m. talk at the Mesa Verd~ Country Club, CO.ta Mesa, will leature South Coast Plaza Public Relations and Advertising Director Werner Escher. . He will outline ,various projects and programs arranged by the center as an ~djunct to ita commercial service to citizens. WI GUAUN111 MITIMING WI 511.L ,_~ Jewelry Mesa and Loan .. PAWN SHO'PS ARI •UNI . . SOLITAIRE PEARL ind BIRTHSTONE ~RING'S Y2 . \PRICE ---$15.95 .. $44.95 1111 ~IT ILYD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA 646-7741 • 2 FOR) STEREO I 1'rack ·Stereo YOUR CHOICE . . ,.,~ D.elJcs ' . • 20 If. coll '$24~ • cord for 9ult1r . ' . e Blick DI•"*"' , V1l-.ID '49.95 Acouatlc Gultor ' Your Choice Strings No. N7S.C., e MOlll .... -• SK'{LINI • $2.SO lo. e · SYMl'HONIC ... TIIN 7114112 e ALWA'ISPm c-· t e NOHlt f .. 6 MON .... t.AT • I ' • FREE . WITll TMll, CO~PON --'-PAC~AOI OF 4 PINLIGHT· llATTllJES . SIZE AA. • , __ ...,,, . ' , 1· • 1· ai-------~ ..... --11!11!11 .... __ ~~) UPI Telwtlo!H Smart BomfJ Shown .Chimps iidapting to Wild On Georgia Island Refuge · ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Jiggs, reallsln( the wlld .. t dream of many a male - being set !roe on a n uninhabited Island with three femalea -ahould have been happy enough to swing from the !roes. He wun't though. The !!O- P o u n d chimpanzee, whim· perlng, eraw!ed back into htJ cage, longing for a buman companionship he'd been used to. Joni, Girlie and Saki, his female companions, w @ r e more adventuresome -they began exploring in the thick foliage on tiny Bear Island olf the Georgia coast. The chimpe were set free nearly a month ago by Emory Un!V(l'Slty'• Yerkes Reglcinal Primate Center in Atlanta in an experiment deslgned to see how well apes can breed and adapt In a wild environment in tbe temperate zone. 11At first," aald a Yerke1 Wtte placed there primarily The experiment could last !or use during raliiy and COid as long as three years weather. -<lepeodlng on how t h e "No heat will he provided, to chimps get along. II It's suc- see if the chimps can tolerate cesslul, Yerkes hopes to put the climate this winter/' said orangutans on the 10!)..acre Dr. Gtolfr<)' H. Bourne, dlrec-Island. Orangutans are much tor of Yerkes Center, which is larger th an chimpanzees, supported by the Natjonal 1 weighing up to 450 pounds as Institutes of Health. adu!IJ, and live in trees. Bear Island ls private and Chimpanzees, like o t h e r warning signs are posted to great apes, are threatened discourage visitors. with extinction· in their native "These animals are habitats . The island dangerous -especially the homesteading experiment witli male," said the Y e r k e s Jiggs: and the other three spokesman. "One or them has chimps will' give scientists the strength of about three clues as to whether they can men. U disturbed, they 're breed and sustain themselves capable of killing a man." on a Georgia coastal island. Southern Pacific CIRared in W reek spoli:eaman who was pment SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - a nine-month trial. when the chimps were freed, Southern Pacific Co. wu not The train was traveling "they aeemed confuaed. Then, liable in a freak 1969 San with Jiggs leading the way, Bruno commuter accident in through San Bruno when a SO.. and the females ™-towing, which four were killed and 18 foot length of pipe rammed they walked along the beach. injured, a Superior Court jury through a window. 11Before Jong, h o w e v e r , has ruled. Authorities . said a small J'iggs, who'd lived in a cage The jury dismissed the tractor with a fork lift , moat of his 12 years, returned railroad as a defendant in a operated by an employe of the to it, making crying sounds. $4.7·million lawsuit but voted construction company, was "Joni sat down nearby, to hold Southern Pac i fi c raising the pipe into position swaying, while Girlie and Saki Pipelines Co., a subsidiary, for a jet.fuel oil line. scampered away and disap. and Alex R ob e r t s o n • The Une Wu being laid by peared," be said. Bakersfield Construction Co., the subsidiary. The plaintiffs "The next day, when Mart liable. included relatives of three of Wllaon, ·an Emory graduate The seven-man, five-woman the dead and five of those who student working on the ex-Jury deliberated 10 boun after were injured, perimen~. reblrned to tbe-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~ Island to visit the animals and I · bring Io o d, Jigga came ff: o· NG ~ONG screaming out of the woodJ to greet him ," the spokeaman said Hffe got back into his cage and stuck out his arm tO be scratched, then turned his back to the bars, so Wilson could scratch his back." CUSTOM TAllOts IN OIAHGI COUMTf IPICW NICI bt . o..w. lnlt •••• $95 Siik •llelr ..... U C..twti. ••••••••• Sherblitn ..... , IS SU• WMI ..... , 11 Sllktt .......... 10 ... ... .. .. .. .. • ~ ........... """ 70M fld1T-Ni1Hnf• - wtOltNS_& tOUlll Pin SAYEUPIOSK "' Mllll1 T1lltml Cl.Gtlm ltWt SUlll, S~•. SllW,' Slilm. • WI rrr ANY 1111 •ANY mu COPtlD • Piii Al.TllATIONI •WY PAYMINTI -~ ,:-',.'>'.,_ -~ ... , ..... Now, Jiggs and the other chimps seem to be thriving1 though no offspring are in e-Vidence. _They eatJ oliage, bugs, cram 84d small rodents, supplementing the diet WUson " .., .,.,,.,, • 1 .._ NM2tt T ( Snapshot Contest leading to Kodak International Newspaper Snapshot Awards IKINSA '721 Competition Rules: 1. The co11te1t 11 1hlctly for e1t1•ft11r phof09r1ph1r1 (A11 •M•• h 11r i1 defintd e1 ont who11 hobby or •woc•tio11 i1 plci11re·t•kint •nd who do•• 11ot m••• e11y t11b1t.11ti1I p1rl of hit Hwi119 throuth t•ldn9 pict11r11 l. J, l l1ck·1nd·whili or color piclurtt t•li:•n tfltr J11ly I, 1911 ''' 1li9ibl1. No pictur11 1111v be •nt1r1d bv 1ny 1mploy1 of tht DAILY PILOT or by 1ny indiwidu•I who p1r1on1lly 11 1n9t91d i11 tht manuf1ctur1, 1111, comm1rci1I finhhin9 or prof111io111I Ult of pholo9r1phic tood1. J. Sn1(1hoh m1y bt t1li1n with 1ny l'ltlit of c11111r1, 011 1ny brend o fill'I, No 1rtwork or r1louchin9 it p1rmitt•d on 11191 • tl .... 1 or prinh -110 compo1il1 pictur11, mu lii plt 111po1ur11 or m11ltipl1 pri11ti119. 4. Any number of pict11 r11 mty bt 111 .. r.d. Conl11t1nt'• na1111, addr111 •nd pho111 n11"'b.r must be wrltftn cl11rly on !ht hick of etch plcfurt. M1il or d1liw1r prlntt or lrtn~p1r1nci11 ~o: DAI LY PILOT Sn•p1hot Co11l1tl Editor; P. 0 . 8011 1560, Coit• M111, CA. 92626. !Entti11 ctn bt h111dodtliw1r1d to •nv DAILY PILOT offic1, but m111t b1 phy1ic1lly h1 h111d In tho11 offic11 by d11dli111 tech w11t I Co11t11t offici1l1 '''''"' !ht fi9ht to c1rry owH 11!1 111tri11 for j11d9i119 from 0111 lfftk to th .. ntrl ind to t ){clud e from jud9i11g 1lto91th1r 1ny 111trl11 r1c1iv1d lilt i11 th1 final w11lt. 5, No black·1nd-whit1 pichir11 will b1 r1turn1d. Col'!ft1f1nt mu1t b1 1blt to furn!1h th1 ori9ir11I ntftliwe, if requ11ted by th1 Co11ia1t Ed itor. Thi DAILY PILOT t 1111m11 no re1pon1iblliy for ne,1tiw11 or pr i11t1. COLOR PRINTS OR SLIDES WILL BE RE· TURNED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED I Y A STAMPED, SELF· ADDRESSED ENVELOPE. '· Con l11t111h 111 p1rmitted to tubmit picture' lo on ly on• n1w1p•p•r p1 rticipali119 in th1 Kod1li; lnt1 rn1tional Sn 1p1hot Award,, 1. To be 1li gibl1 for • Ioct l 9r1!!d pri11, 1 cor1 l11tant must 1i9n 1 il1t1m1nt th1t the piclur1 , or 1noth1r clo11ly 1i1T1iltr pie· tur1 o{ th1 11m1 ,ubi1cl or ,;1uatio1t, fritt not been, and will not be 1nl1r1d bv hi"' in any olh1r col'llt1t ind will not b1 off•rtd for p11blic1tion to 1ny public1tio11 not con111cted with thl1 Co11!1tt. I . IMPORTANT: 81 1ur1 you lt11ow tfrit 111m11 a11d 1ddr11111 ol 1ny r1co,11i11bl1 p1rio111 1pp1tri119 i11 your picture. Thit it n1c1111ry b1c1u''· in ord1r for ii to b1 •nt1red in the natlonel judgin g, you mutt be 1bl1 to 911 th• writt111 con1111t of tuch p1r1on or p1r1or11 for thtir 119~1 9111rd i1n1, 111 th1 Ctttt of '"h1or1) to p1rmit u1• of the picl11rt1 fot tlie purpot• of ilhnftt• tion, 1tlv1rti1ln9 or publlc1tio11 I" 111y 1f111111•r. Enter Every Week July 2 Through Aug. 26 Deadline Wednesday Noon Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers North American Rockwell at Columbus, Ohio displayed Its "smart" bomb for the first time last week. The TV-guided, $13,000 bomb has been used with uncanny accuracy in Vietnam. Don A. Smith, In lower photo, points out camera eye that guides the payload to its · target. brin.J!s them daily. 2112 ..,_Dr . ..,,. 11.....,.,. IMth Wllson brings them a speclall~~=.,.==°"""=="'=· ""=·=='=-==-==~·~·='':' ·=-=-=="'=~~=~:::!~=====================::: ·monkey chow made of cereal, grass, grain, milk and cod liver oil. ,..{ ~ KiOCM ste ' 103PM The apes sleep In two small ~ . ;·•--ocm-m:11C:ara:111E1_.,. __ """ ________ ..,_,mal-I . :.\·frame houses on stilts which A ,..,""' . .. .. . the sOu?Xlsof theharbot" :r-~·24 hours' a day ~===1~ ... ' . ~; ·Chinese Problem Eyed Missile . '. . Will Go SAN BERNARDINO (AP) . -A 1)'111bol ol military mig~t standing in a 1!11811 park will . . , S. Africa Taxi Drivers Un.sure of Status ,, PORT ELIZABETH, South lot ol iron ore from South The firm COl)SU!led the Road he replaced by the olive .. Africa (AP)-When a Chinese Africa and enjoy a privileged . Tra,nsportation Board, which branch ·of peace. .· t'i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-,;;;;;;;;;;;; • ... calls a taxt here he creates a positlon as 11honop.ry whites." was unable to clarify the posi· Bowing to public objections,11 dilemma for a cab compaldny. 1 B. Dh. Te~~ancbhe 1~!.:I ~~n. the U.S._Alr.l".orce-wilLmnove . In line will\ aparthe -in---" irm-as ~· usu--u, "WO-!llSt can't take a a Minuteman m!Jaile and ahlp -;;, transportation, taxicabs have dispatching nonwhite tam for chance of transporting Chinese it to 1 mi!itary~IDU5elllll. Many :~ ~s designating . their use C~ese ~mers. in a white taxi until the sltua· citizens objected to 'the •• Whites are. not supposed to Imagine ~w embarrassing lion has been clarified/' misalle'• presence became ;.. . rtde In nonwhite c a b s • It ls for ~ Chinese who baa juat · Terblanche said. "If· we do nearby Norton Air Foree Jjue : . Nonwhi~ are supposed to left a cme~a or an ~pera at and we are caught, tt could no tonger bu missile IJ'ID8oo atay out of those reserved for the theater,.where be liu been mean that we lose our ment, said Ma)rOr Robert ':" whites. sitting with whites, to have to license ,, Holcomb. Chlnese are u s u a I I y clllilb Into a taxi for -;;ii;iiii;iii';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;. deslgilated "other Asiatic,• noliwhites,". said Tert>lancbe.:1r '.. unlike the Japanese who buy ·a "It ts quite ridiculous." Tight Security Set ·-For Beauty Pageant SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - Authorities, determined not to .. allow a repetition of bombings • that almost disrupted the : Miss U.S.A. pageant finals, ";. are setting up a tight security .., acheme for another beauty .... contest. ~ . . The plans Include virtual Isolation of. the seaside hotel • where-the Miss UniVerse CQDoo , lest ,Js to be held July 19-29. Only authorised porsoos, con- nected with tbe 'hotel; , the government or the contest will t be allowed on the premises of ,_ the Cerromar Beach Hotel, BOUrces connected with the ac- tivity told a reporter. ~ According to an informant, : the organizers of the pageant, Miss Universe Inc., of New ~ York, have served notice that Universe pageants, formerly held in Miami Beach, were broqght to Puerto Rico thlJ year under a five-year con- tract with the Island govern- ment. The Miss U.S.A, finals May 29 were mamd by two bomb . explosions that caused serious damage to a hotel and wrecked several cara In a parking lot. . . . . • : Picket& of oeparatis! g01J118 -. those S..klng to , '!'lit Puerto Rico away from the United states -bad marched In lront of the hotel and siaged a slt·in at the beach. During the Miss Universe acUvlties no picketing on hotel grounds will he allowed. YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY IS A CREDIT MANAGER M.,._ tN .. ,_.. .. l..,..ftd ,_,, .... ..,..,_. te 1" .._ ,.. ,.. elf ,..,... -.. --..... -... _..., .. for .U.., .. ynr MWIPIP•'· lllt .... DAILY PILOT Mn'W k ......... hr 111...tf. H9 tr'llfl ,.. .. ,., ............ ,., ,_ ..... ., ... ,. ......... ,... c.... ............. &•••ctfllt•""" ........ ...,. ... , ..... Hdli ............... .., " 'Ii!' ...... ...., -.. _ ............. ~ ............ --.... -.. ---11,..···---11111 .............. t ..., ___ ....... t ASSURE PROMPT COURTEQUS SERVICE BASKETBALL SCHOLA.SHIP AWARDED ... • If there Is violence the contest will no longe1" be staged in Puerto Rico. The Puertb Rican gowrn· ment consider.! ~ beauty contest. excellent publicity for llJ tourisl lnd\l!ll')I hecaU!O ol teltvlllon <:avwqe. DAILY PILOT CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Or. Gary L Couture, of the Couture Chiro- practic Office in Newpori Beach pments Or. 01niel Aldrich, Chencolor of U.C.1. a baslcet· baU scholars~ip check. look ing on are !I-ft to right) Al Irwin, 1thlotic director., a.nd UCI basketball coach, Tim Tift. .. '!'be Miss' U.S.A. . and Miss ; ' • D CD CERI TQ IGHI • • • A1'FASHIQ Ill.A • • • • ' • ' ) 1 DAii. V l'ILOT SC Mon<111. July 17, 19n • ( ' . PANTERA by deTomuo • • • Imported for Llncoh>-Mercury. IWlan eof.chwork created by the brilliant Ghia Studios of Turin. Ford dellgned the 851 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel m.. drpment tulPf!n&lon and mld-shtp en&ine placement. F1ve 1peecl ,_ box, fully synchronlzed ••• ~tera .•. ltallan for Panther • , , 0rn,p C:H•tf1 "F .. U, ¥FJ11t Cm- o hn son & son I~ I ORDER YOURS TODAY! • ..... .,., Stick.on ·LABELS ·: Personalized • Stylish • Efflc:lent . ~ Order For Youroalf or a Ffhnd· 'M1y L• u11d oft envelopes•• retum •ddm1 le.Nl1o Al10 ••ry hndy OJ id .. tllicatioa IUolt for matking perJOnal ltom1 ouch •• ••b. NCord1, photos, ti<. lobtll' 1tick •'---11 9la11 and mey be used for marking home ... ...i food lltms. All labtls ore printed 'With 1tyli1h Vogu• type on /;n• qutlity whitl' gulnmtd p•per. , r--;;;;::=;:-:,:.:.:::;;;:;-;;---1 • • P'ltfl' ,rirltl"I Lalltl 1)1'1., ,,O. I M lut : I c.ta_MM.t. c111t, mu : I I : I I : I . I : I I : L ... ---~!.L.PT PRl~J!~CL __ J l DO NOT BUY a side of beef fn hasty response to a tempting ad. H you really w~t and need as much beef u -tllls and if you can arrange to store It propetly, plBlf your purobose ahead, then shop in- telll&ently for the meat. •Before you buy, decide -you will want a large quanlfl)' of ateab or whether YO!lr family will be happy with lell fancy, cuts Cl' whether )'OU woold prefer to have a wide vlrloly of eull, Including plen-· ly of llew meit and ham- burgor • • To lltlp )'OUl'ltlf r e a c b thele d«Wono, study the beef-<111 chorll polled In your butdler shop or avaUa~le from the U.S. Depor\ment o I AlJrlculture in W8"'ing!On. • AS AN ADDmONAL guide on cul$, In general U you want more 1teab and routs, )'OU'll probobly want a bind quarter. A typlcel, trimmed beef bind qlllrter originally weJshinc about IOO pounds Conlllta of $1 porceOI - tnd °"'" .-ti; II percent atew, fP'Ollnd meat and pot rcuta and 2f percent Walle. II you want a lot of llew beef IOd hamburger, you 'U ,...,..,., be bell oU with • Ion qulrter. A typical, trim. med fore quuter, ortgJnaUy wollblnl 215 to 211) poundo, breab down Into 2$ percent llub and oven roasts, 32 per· cent pol ...,.ta, 17 -t ..... and ground Dlttll and II ,.....t..-. - H you -1 wide -lety el euts, a boll ...... will prollahly be lbe purchale for you. '!be uuble meot from a whole bee! ........ brell<I ~ .... lppl'Ollmltely lll I • I f