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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-20 - Orange Coast Pilot•• ena • ' . • . . - • Girl ~-IO~ Pleads With Judge: Stop ,, Parents.~ Divor~e .. .. • DAILY PI LOT * 1c-* 1o c * * * ' ' THIJRSOA Y AffiRNOOlll, JULY 20, 1972 VOL U. llO. IG, 11 l lCTIONS, M PAGES Hooping ·It tip . . • UPI Te!.-..1 Patricia M~J'(on 12 shows how -sli1> became the 1972 winner of tlie Chicago Park ni..trict's annual hula hoop· competition in the t2·years llld older division. Patricia can .now ~ompete.1JLfurther contests lead· ine toward the national championship. • Death PefU!;lty Not De~,-. . ' . . ' , Says County -Depu~y,D.A · ' ' The death penalty ts not dead. Beacom said a ca5e-by-case battle with That's what Rlclard Bea?Jlll.-<lepul}< •• II\" U.S .. ~ryn>e Col!l'I )'ould•!ie-foollsh Orange County ~t\icl attorney,• who 1 ml im(Jl)ICtlcal, ,. . ' • ts tO be ., Jud(<;, told memb<n of "I ·bdl.ve In .<:aPltaJ ~hment, I e !1lmtlngton-VallliT Yoll!li Republicans . llon't believe this soc~ty. ha',evol ved to a ,edjl<sday night. .i.__ ': polnt,wb«e It Is no·lbnger acceptable or "Only1two U.S. Su~me-Court Jusllce.s 'needed/' •he 86ld. Bald flat o\ll the death penalty viola~ Instead Beacom au_ggested lbat .the the Eighth Am~! 'of the Consllbi· '\atate Legislature should write new death lion/' Beocom 6platned. "The othttthe ;. penalty rules; makinll1\ expllcll when the tbtte m"'11Y ruled It Invalid u to • penalty abould be applled, rather than case.s be£ore them."• leaving It to theAiocrellon of Jud!ea •or ~'~ said the ellll:l of the U.S. , Jurlea. ! . , di<li ' wu to /eave 1 •le of coofUEDF ·-. 'llllo is ...ldi1c a J~ellilp In over death penally In 'moat sta~ (II& DEATH B.IN,' Pqe II "Wbal m..t of the jualce.s were real11 - • Father Vows Long Search For Killer SAN' FAN CISCO (UPI) -Someone picked up a hammer Mary Jane Kravitt used In her leatherwork and crushed ber skull with il. Police rushed her to a '-ilal--bul-there --sbe died from the wounds Jan. 24, · The killer escaped, not-lo be found. BuJ !he 21-year-old g\rl '_s father would not let ll go al that, be would not lel l~e killing become· "just another statistical unsolved murder.,. Samuel Kravitl said Wednesday that as long as he lives, the person who bludgt:0ned his daughter and left her lo die in a Sln Francisco apartment would be hunted and haunted. Kravitt, a New Haven, Conn. television photographer, returned, from a worldwide trip where be visited police bead~era in major and minor countr1e.s with a composite skelpb, o! the auspecled tiller. "Perhaps it was a futile thing to do ," he laid. "But' 'perhajls it will l'eep this guy oo the run. ·Perhaps, eventually, he'll just break and give up. 11 Police niade the sketch from witnea.~s' descriptions of a young, loog·halred male who entered Miss Kravtll's apart· mtnt the evening before her body was found. . . Homiclde h\speclor AI Pndesta, said the person sought wa! six feet tall , about 25 years old and "someorie she knew.'' Her father said the killer 11must live with something worse than death." "How can be escape the thought, the memory of that brulal bludgeoning and leaving her to die?" be asked. Ktavltt said hts world hunl for the killer look blm to places where rootless young Americans often -congregate - Sydney, London, Rome, Hong Kong, New Deihl, Grenada. 111 saw the police 1n all tbeae places, asking them lo be oo lhe lookout for the man on the chance be had joined one of tfie:se cOlonies. 'Ibey were 1ympathetlc, - • ? • Grieving Father • Vows •LifetiJD e.~ Sear~h for Kill e r ' •stop Divoree~· Girl, 10, Sends Lett,er to Judge VISALIA (AP) -A IO.year-old girf bu pleaded in a letter lo a· judge that her parents be refu.sed a divorce. The child, who was not identified, wrote: "Honorable Sir, My mom and dad is getting a divorce •.. please don't let them get a divorce. My momma loves my dad ; ii you could put blm In the bospilal he could quit drinking. "I've beard my mom say to my dad many times, 'Please_ sl!?W ~-wn on your dinking,' but he just .waUts-out the door. "Sir, you are a judge and this .is your job, to divorce people. · "only where do ones go that still love the husbands? And how do you divorce a 10.year~ld? Can you cut out my heart and stop :: from hurting?" The girl pleaded, "Please, please, please help a 10-year-old keep a mom and dad. I know U mom tryed you prob- ably wouldn't listen ••• "God bless you and lei God be on lhls day the Judge beside you." Superior Court Judge Jay Ballantyne said Wednesday ha aent coplea of the Jet. ler to the attorneys repreaentin( the girf's parents and replted to lier. "l am well aware of the tragedy which Js Involved every time parents ~parate where small children are involved ••. I can apure you that U either of yoor parepts pelhion the court ·ror an attempted recx>nclliaUon I will do all I can to help rfsolve their differences." Under siaie Jaw granUng divorces where irreconcilable differences exist, that is all he can do. Man Surprises Intruders, Marches Them to Police Two drifters from the Florida area thought they bad an easy meal waiting for them after entering an apartment in San Clemente wilh nobody home •. Bul they never flgllred they would meet the likes of Jerry Asher and his long pistol. Police loid the story this way: The pair began raiding Asher's refrigerator, apparenUy caring little about the mess their dinner was making. Asher, a deputy sheriff from AJpine County and reUred Marine Corps officer, surprised the pair In hts apartment and In hts band be carried 1 auperlong·hal' reled revolver. Thal ended the dinner abruplly, but Asher wasn't satisfied. He ordered· the Intruders oulside and made lhem wait· in front of the apart· menl In the 400-block of Avenlda Vic- toria. Asher bopped In bis car then made the two freeloaders march Up ~ police ~ad-­ quarters. The weapon was 1Ull visible. After the mile-long, uphill trek, the pair walked Into police headquarters with Asher close behind. , After a conlereoce with the resident, police agreed thal the scare and the lone walk at gunpoint waa jus!k:e enough. ~ lwo were released alter spending 1 few houn In custody. I Aide Says More Talks To Be Held From Wire Services WASllINGTON -The While HOllSe aciPlowledged today It agreed lo consult further with organized labor - a seg- ment with Which President Nixon hopet to make major progres.s Jn November - before punulng long-pending legblation aimed at avoiding crippling national strikes. One labor organization lhat has slrong· ly opposed compulsory a r b It rat Io u features of lhe bill, ·which would apply throughout lhe transportation Industry, II the Teamsters Union. The Teamsters en- dorsed Nlxon for re.election on Monday. Explaining why a decision had been made to set the measure aside, although Nixon had'called for it repeatedly and on occasion denounced Qingress for failure to pass it, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said, "It has no chance of passing this year." He aald the Admlnlstrallon, accepting that reality, fell it afforded a good op. . portunity to J<tvJew the bill and to " •'consult with representatives of organiz.. ed labor more fully." The 1poke1man aaid some AdmlnlstraUon officials fell there were troubling provisions In the bill . Asked U the Administration had made (See STIUn:, Page l) .... .. ,. Don't let those low clouds and lo- cal drizzle fool yoo . ll'll allll be sunny today aner tbe usual mid- morning cltarfng and temperatures of &rOWld 75 will prevail ovtr tho COWlty, l.A>v.·s tonight~. 18~ wu that the atate would have lo 1'gitlale the death pena)ly. Thal the . alalea would have to beltet;delini cap1la! Crimes.'' -...ii >/er'/-ntce,•uuavtlt..iald...._ __ Dese rt Heat Kills Wom an .,.._All!fr ba<l m..i nol to press clw-ges._ . -INSIDB-'l'ODAY. Beacom. who beads the district al· torner'• office In Wot Otange County, 11id the Cllifomia Siipreme Court ruling on the death penalty would ;i!lpe It off the . books Jor this atate, bu the death penalty !nttlaUve could relnalale It. • "JI the people vote for the death llODllty Ihm the alale l.ellalature bu lhrte cbolcea. II can leova tlio penalty u -It ......... baltle each .... up lo the ~Court. rt con a~ the death penalty by lqlalaUve acllon,; Or, It can modlly and define more apeclllcally when the death penally lllouf4 be IP' plied." '• Some Pasta!! ' . CORONAOO (AP)· -Actress ·· Sophia Loren hu been named '1Macaroni Woman of the Year;" • Robert M. Greeo, e:roculive eecietary of the National Macaroni ManQfaclurora AuociBllon, told the group'• tltb annual convention here Wedoeaday thal thr lllilan acltw la 1 duzlinC .-.eaenlallve ol women who eat IDICll'Onl. Police said a man was admitted to the beautiful dark-haired Miss Kravltt's apartment early the morning of Jan. 21 and wilne""' beard the pair lalklng. Aliout two liours later, the horrified oc- capant of a lower apartment found blood drioplng on hts kitchen floor from the ceiling. When police arrived and broke Into MJM Kravill's room, they found lhe woman dying. KraviU said he often ataru al the drawln& of the auspect and repeats the quotslion, "ll I had created IOlll I'd be aWmtd to call myself God." BAKER (AP) -A Marylaod woman who started to walk for belp after her ear gol stuck In desert s a n d apparently died of heal exhausllon, authorities say. Gloria Roberti, 48, of Forestville, died en l'!IUle lo a hospital Tuesday, aulhorlUea 1ald. She and 1 passenger, Nallie Lindman. Wublngtoo, D.C., wtre drt vlng lo Lu V egao, wben they mlstaW.ly toot 1 freeway txil that led them down an unpaved road. Government Resigns HELSINKI .(AP) -F'lnl•nd's minority government of Social Democrats rtalg"' ed Wednesday, declaring "only a m•· jorily government can take I b e responsibility" of algnlng a free trade agreement wllh tho European Co~ Market. The agreement was to have ~ signed Saturday In Bruaaels. Negollallona on the pact were flnisbed "in prlocJp~" Monday, bul the Finns are aeeling further talks with Britain. Funtral for Lion Countrv Sa- fari'• famed Frmier spar~ an irate opfnfon from DAILY Pll.OT icribe Bill SohreU>er. See ttorv on Page 11. \..M. ...... ., c.llftMTll S CIMtlH" ..,. Clfllkt It ere"""' tt DH~ll Ntttc" 1• Sf!IWlll I"... ' 111,....1-.1 •u '""""' tt-11 Ptr tllt t-C 11 "........ 11 AM U.-. 11 • ... -·--·----·-- • J DAILY PILOT • • lhursdiJ, J11l1 20, 1972 MCGovern Names O'Brien as Campaign Chief WASHINGTON (AP) -O.mocrallc -1dentW -Georae s lllcGoftm todly named former Domocratlc Nallonal C h a I Hn a n !Awrcoce F. O'Brien lo be his nallonal .,._tgn chairman, a post Jn additkln tq McGovern'• exllt1na campalan slnicture. O'Brien will be given a role concerned '!Ith unifying the support of Democrats flbd other "concerned Arnerlcan1." McGovern aaJd O'Brien will be his na· tionll campaign chairman and in that role "will be a foremoll consultanl on the overriding goal which will be to unUy the 5Upport ol uy Democrats ac""' t h e coontry.l• • In a brief lntervie~re publlcly IC· ceptlng McGovun'a offer, 0 ' B r 1 e n emphasized that whllt be wW hold the 11- tle of ruitlonal campaign chairman his role wlll be esaentla!ly separate from the existing McGovern political or1i:anlutlon. McGovern said O'Brien will be his liaison with Democrats In Congress, Democratic governors, mayors , and state leglalative leaders. He said O'Brien will 1llo be hi.a: chief contact with offlclall or the Democratic Party llld orDllUMi labor. "Larry O'Bmn w111 be pmona11y and directly Involved in all majo< campalgd d~ions between now and Nov. 71" McGovern said. "lie wW be a principal spokesman for this campaign and 1 am urging h1m to travel to every section of the country to speak In support bf my candidacy." At a news conference, McGovern and O'Brien empbuized several times that • 2 More Stones Aides Held Chauffeur, Girlfriend Seiz~d ori Drug Charge BOSTON (UPI) -Two more 111embers of the Rq_lling Stones entourage have been arrested and released on ba[. James P. CUl)le, 25, identified by police u tho rock group'• cbauUeur, and Rita Redmcnd, 231 hll ,prlrfiend, were ar- rested Wedneaday afternoon Io r pouesaicm of narcoUct. Both of Denver, Colo., Ibey wore released In 15,000 ball each. : '!be previous nlaht In Warwick, R.I., where the Stones' plane wu forc<d to land becauae Boolon wu logged In, lead alnger MlcK Jagger and four otbel'll were arrested after an argument with news ' photographer Andy Dickennan. Boston Mayor Kevin H. White in - tervened with Warwick officials to get the Stones released on bail so they could appear for their first concert. The St«les held the concert early Wednesday morning -four hours later than planned -and held their ,.cond Wednesday night. Sellout crowds attended b o t h perfonnances at the Boston Garden and pollce said the fans remained relatively orderly although About 50 arrests were made on various charges, mostly in- volving disorderly conduct. • • The Providence Journal Bulletin Co. said Wednesday it would file a civil damage suit agaiJ\St Jagger and Keith Richard -another performing member of the Ster.es ~ as a result of the Tues· day night incident involving Dickennan. a Journal employe. Dickerman said the Stones assaulted him while be was taking their pictures at Theodore Gree~ Airport In Warwick. Paris Peace Talks Bog Jagger and Marshall Qess, a record producer, were charged with obatluctlng police. Richard and Stanley Moore, who police said was a Stones' bodyguard, were charged with assaulting Dickerman, Robert Frank, also identified as a bodyguard, was charged with assaulting a policeman. Frank was released in 1100 bail, the others in $50 bail each, for an Aui. 23 bearing in Warwicl District c.ourt. Again-Despite Pleas The n~t appearance for the Stones is tn Philadelphia and their tour ends tater this month. Police in Philadelphia took precautions to prevent violence when the Stones ar, rive tonight for the flnt of three sell-out concerts at the Spectrum. PARIS (UPI) -The Par!J peace talks baaed down again today despite U.S. pleas for a calm dl8cus1don of the issues and a secret meeting Wednesday between American Henry A. Kissinger and the two top North Vietnamese ..,.U.ton. Tiie North Vietnamese tll'ongly de- llOllJIClcl U.S. ltlemoio to lffk I ...... fire llnl 111111 a polltlca! setUement later. In ,tum, tbe South V let n a m es o viproully rejected the Viet eon, d .. man4 f0< a coalition government,. 'hdly'• --the lllst •Ince the talb -· It luted about four hours and the -11atora agreed to meet again -Tltttnday. Arson Strikes Bllilding Where Oswald Took Aim DAUAS (UPI) -Arsonists today spread gallooa of gasoline across five !loon ol the T...., School Book Depository Building, where Lee Harvey Oswald fired the allots that l!llled Presi- dent John F. K<tmedy, and aet the 63- yeaMlld brick structure on lire. '!'be lire WU conflned to third, fourth and lllth floors of the building and was utiquishod In 24 minutes alter it was ~a• definitely ll'IOn," assistant Fire Cblef L. R. McCowan said_ "We found guollne cana on every floor and the amen of guollne was all tbrouah the building." Damages were estimated at $5,000. But there· were no injuries and McCowan said ii was thought no one was In the buildJng at the time. '!be buildlna, which was supposedly being turned Into a muaeum, Is empty. Aubrey Mayhew of Nash.We, Tenn., who claims be owns the largest collection of Kennedy memorabllta in the world, l>ouiht the building laat year for $850,000. AsUd at the time wbat his plana were, Mayhew repUed, "Nooe." A&ked why he bought It, he aaid. "It was cheap,'' OIANH COAST n DAILY PILOT 1't °"'"" c.t DAILY PIL.O'T. Mlft w11k11 .. cembiMlf tM New.rr.:,, II ,wl!Mlf W ttw or.,.. co.at '°""'"""" ~. S.S.· nt1 ldUIWll •rt INbllahtt. MfnlillY ""'°""" ll'rtUy, fN' Cltl1 Mn1, N..-,.,t l e9dl, H11ntlnQlln l1ldlfFoun11ln \111111, L..ttUN a.di, 1,..IM/s.odltbtdt Ind S.n Cllmt!ll•f 1M """" Capl1tr11111. A al1111r. NllloNI .rltlM II pWI~ S1U1rd1~ Mii lltll'IHn.. TM prll'ICiflll PUDllthlno pllnl 11 II »O Weil 8ay ftr .. 1, C..11 MtM, C1rt10rnll, f»:lf, lloh1rt N. W114 Prnlclll!t Mid f'11t1n111.,. J1r.k II. C11rl•v Yie:t l'rnld .. t Md ~11 Mtlllttt TllotR1t k11yif 1 l!dllor Tho""" A. Mvr11hin1 M•n-.lnl Ultor Q1rl11 H. loN -.Jr.l.1r• '· Nall Altl•iff'll Ml"'llnl E.d111n ........ Otafl M ... : DI w-::.:r Slrttt .......,, ~t nu M aoutntrd utw11i llK'll: m 111r111 ,,,_ t+MtlflltM IHcll: 17171 BMdl llllllf'fttd 1M ClemMll: '* Nlr1tl a1 C1m1r1t ""' ,. ....... 11 1714) '4J-4111 • Qr NW ..,.,,,., 642·1671 ,,.. """"' ....... ...,. .. u,... ... ,... 4'1-4420 f f'N9 .......... CwlltJ c:..w..i111t -1111 ..... Hn. °'.... C.t Mlltlllftl ~. tit """ ""*• lltvltr1111M, ............. ,,, .,_,........ tltrlll\ _, ........ ......,, lfldll .... ...... ..,.... ...... .................. c.t.MHI. Cltllfllnlta. It• ICJ """"' ... CAl"l'W U.4.1 ,,..lflfp, llt' -11 11.11 """"'"'' ~ .., ..... ...,. .,,., ,,_...,,,., "There was perhaps a slight Im· provement in the tone of exchanges but nothing discernible on substance," a U.S. negotiator said. "I explained to them we don't demand their acceptance or everything we p~ pose, but I couldn't evoke froµi them any kind of statement which indicated their propo.sal!: are negotiable," be added. "We still are waiting for new American proposals," the Communista said. "We are ready to discuss these but today they brought nothing new." Neither side referred to the Wednesday secr!t session by Kissinger, Nixon's top adviser, and the top Hanoi negotiators, Xuan Thuy and Le Due Tho. U.S. negotiator William J. Porter ap- pealed to bolb sides for a calm discussion of th! issues: Soon afterwards, South Vietnamese negotiator Pham Dang Lam !aid the Qlmmunists: did not want a truce. "You would agree to end the killing on, ty if your own political solution is ac· cepted « only if you are assured of reaching the same aims ," Lim said. "It did not take us tong to discover that your sjJeecbes do not conlain any new elements susceptible af provoking a breakthrough in th;e negotiations. as you wanted to make WI believe. Neither your position nor your objectlveJ . have varied," he said. . The chief Viet Qlng negoliator, Madame Nguyen Thl Blnh, stated Dally that the U.S. demand for separate political and military agreementa "is ob- viowily one-sided and does not lead to a ~tlement of the South Vietnamese prob- lem." Kissinger has said that the political settlement or the war -who should rule South Vietnam -remained the thorn in the negotiations. It is his stated con· tention that the Viet Cong's proposed coalition government is a thinly veiled device to install a Communist-controlled regime. Martha Mitchell Said 'Restless' WASffiNGTON (UPI ) -A friend says Atartba fl.1itchell is eager to sell her apartment overlooking tbe Potomac River and leave Washington. Mrs. Clark MacGregor, whose husband replaced John N. Atitchell as President Ni.J:on's campaign director, said Wed, nesday Mrs. Mitchell was anxious to get ' back to her 20-room colonial home in Rye, N.Y., a subur b of New York City. "She seemed fine , but she is a little restless," Mrs. MacGregor said in reporting she talked by telephone with Mrs. Mitchell. Police Commissioner Joseph F_ O'Neill ordered regular and mounted police to patrol the perimeter of the Spectrum to make certain that only persons holding tickets are permitted near entrances. O'NeW appealed to other fans who do not have tickets to stay away from all three pedormances. He said close<k:ircuit television has been Installed to control the expected crowds of 17,300 persons at ~cb perfonnance -ooe tonight and two Fri- day. Senate Rejects Nixon Minimum Wage Proposal · WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate to- day rejected 47 to 46 President Nixon's proposal that the $1 .60 an hour minimum wage be raised to $2 rather than the $2.20 supported by Democrats. The defeated Republican substitute for the Democratic bill also would have eliminated provisions extending coverage ol the wages and houn law to 8.4 million new workers. Sen. George McGovern, the Democratic presidential nominee, flew back to Washington from South Dakota to vote against the N"11on measure. His presence conbibuted to the one-vote margin. Even though the substitute was re· jected, senators opposed to \larious sec- tions of the bill piaMed to o!fer in· divldual amendment& to elimlnate them or cut them back. Voting for the Administration-backed substitute were 16 Democrats, mostly from the South, and 30 Republicans. Voting to reject it were 34 Democrats and 13 Republicans. Among the GOP senators who voted agaih.St the substitute was Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, the Senate Republican leader. Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri, McGovern's vice presidential running mate, backed the Democratic-sponsored blll. Wallace Makes Plans BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) '-Gov. George Wallace, who underwent surgery Wedneaday to help drain an abdominal abscess, plans to resume fullscale physical therapy next week. Dr. George HallenbeCk, the surgeon, said the opera· tlon, the second of its kind on Wallace, was "the last one that II planned." Speedy Chase Nets Suspect In Motorist Stri_p Heist An Ontario man woo allegedly forced 1 Seal Belch Naval Weapons StaUon employo to strip after pulling what lawmen call the old "wounded bird;' trick was Jailed Wedneaday after a high speed chase by California !Ughway patrolmen. OrBDie County Shorilr1 olltc.rs chars· ed John Richard Dabney, 21, with anned robbery after ldenllCytng him u the 111111 who got Charles Templetoo Howard, 40, to stop on Coal Call)'Oll Road by ptt!tn- ding he hid vehlcle trouble. Howard, a planner at the Seal Buch bue. told ollloen be was oo hla way home to Corona when he spotted Dlbney and his apparently broken down ear at -• the side of the road. Howard told olllccra Dabney appuled for help and then shoved a .12 e1Uber pistol Into his benefactor's back u ht stopped to examine the ear'• Ure. Howard asld be wu then lon:td to un- dress In the middle of the n>ad. Re told olllotrs that Dlboey then picked up his bllllold,musers and the apare tin from his ear and then toolt oU at high l(lffd. Patrol111111 alerted by 1 radio cloocrli>' tlon of Dabney'• ear spoiled tho 9llllclt on the Newport Freewoy ud -.i Dlbney down. They recovertd cull, pants and tire , restored them to Howard Ind jailed Dabaey. ti -· ~ 'I the former naUonal cbalnnan's new role wW not preempt that of other members of the McGovern eamplJin. , McGovern said Frank ~et wlll travel with him u his politlt:al director eel that esmpalp ,....,... GU)' ·llart will senerally remain Jn Wuhiact .. to nm the iiaY·to-day strategy and tactics ol I.ho campaign. O'Brien sald he will establish a Stparate headquarters for h1s operation In Washington within the next 41 boun. ..... McGovern made the O'Brien an- nouncement after bis arrival bere from South Dakota whero he has -..... tlonlnc1 to cast a pro-labor vote in the Senate following bis njectlao by t op AFLCIO laad!"'· McGovern accepted O'Brien'• realgna· Uon as chatiman "of the national com· mlttee at \be nallona.I convention in . Miami Beach. The acceptance, n was learned, was laraely the result of the fact that neither , was able to meet the other's conditions, unstated publlclY. O'Brien, ~·hlle •t•tlni publicly "" -led to llltp down, i. dlcated privately he would stay ll he had a majo< say In runntnc the campalp. McGovern was already committed to running the campaign throu&h his own ora:anizalion headed by Hart that hu been so successful In winning the nomination but was apparently unwilling to make this clear to O'Brlen, who didn't want to 1tay ln a lesser 1tatus. From Pfllfle J DEATH BAN • • • the West Orange County Judicial District in the November election, criticized the U.S. and state Supreme Court judges for legislating r~ther than Judging . '"nle effect of their d e c I s I o as (abolishing the death penalty) was to legislate what the law ought to be, not wb4t it is,'.' he said. · "I'm more olfl!lldtd by.the..., Cl)ltal ·JJUniahment ,... done In, !ban bf Ill elimination. If the people don't want It, then I CQU!d live with that." lie said tbat when the majority of the atate supreme Court ruled the Cleath penalty vtll '•cruel or UDU1U&1" p.mlabo mcnt, the JUsllcea ..... '-ilir other sectiQnl of the llate Cotlllitullon wblc:h apeeilleally refer to eapllal puni!hmmt. !'JUd«a 'Ml ineant to apply tbll law, not mab I," he said. "'Mao! lay poopll 1 think there II too much bloody legl.!latton in courts." .. "'' ,...,..... A Lot of Bull Cowgirl Janis Berry, 22, a WAC medical specialist from Fort Sill, Okla., was thrown by a bucking brahma bull Wednesday during a practice session at the All·Gir1 Rodep in Colorado. She landed under a camera that was filming her ride. Neither she nor the camera was damaged in the fall. ' • Beach Couple Sue .. Film Franchise for 'Fraud' A Huntington Beach couple who claim the names of Agnes Moorehead, Debbie ~yno1ds and Glenn Ford were used as endonements in a sales pitch that led them to invest more than $23,000 in a revolutionary mini-theater specializing in family films today ~ed the companies -lved for nearly 12 million. _ Riley N. and Donna J. Keith of 16531 Greenwood Lane, claim in their Orange County Superior Court fraud action that prom,ises made by the United General Theaters organization led him to give up his job and cost him $60,000 in earnings. The Keiths claim they were falsely promised prompt installation of the mini· theater of their choice at a locale that would be found hy the organizers of the "Scene 2, Take 3" operation. 'Ibey state they were promised that the mini·theater could be quickly Installed with the kind of "nickelodeon" project.ion that would r..trict its operating peraon- net to just one person. . The couple claim that the promises were made at the time Ibey purchased the franchise in May, 1971. lt is alleged lhat the companies named in the lawsuit have not met the terms ol that in, vestment. · The Keitha also allege that the defen-- dants -United General Productions Jnc.1 Franchise Marketing Services Inc. and Whale of a Tale Inc. are alJo named -made improper use of the names of Miss Moor0belld, Mias Reynolds and Ford In salea llti!rltwe. . It la alleged that the Keitha were told by the delcndants that all three stara had big investments in the mlnl·tbeater operation and that their services would be available to operators taklng out franchises. The KeiUu state that the stars had on- ly a very minor inveJtmeot in the opera· lion. Alleged Boss Quiet ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The alleged New England underworld boss and the owner of a defunct Mwacbusetts race · track linked •wiQ! crime money took the Fifth Amendment 71 times Wednesday at a congressional crime investigation. Joseph PhWipa, counsel for the House Crime Committee. said the substance of the questions he posed for alleged Mafia members Raymond Patrlarca a n d Salvatore "Sam" Rizzo was based on FBI wiretaps. lie a1'o Pointed nut that In 1968 the state Supreme Court held the death penalty valld, but three of those. jUJtlce. reversed them5tlves tn the most recent ruling. Beacom quoted Ju stice Stanley Mosk_, who said after the 1968 decision : "As a judge I am bound by the law as I find It to be, not as I wish it to be." Mosk was a member of the majority which abollsbed the deoth penalty this time. ·Beacom coocluded by predicting the death penalty lnlUaUve would cer- lalnly pass 1n 0ranae c.un17, Fl'OlltP .. eJ STRIKE .•. a deal to ,temper its poaiUoo In return for a Teamster endorsement, Ziegler uid. ''there was no deel." Asked il the Admlnlalrltlon'1 chanle of heart could be looked upon as a reward to the Teamsten, he aald, "I would not IO Characterize it." Zieflet' eoneeded "there bas never been much enthusiasm" for the Jeglsla· lion In Congress. It has been peodinc more than two years. The bW ·would have establlahed 1 new procedure in major tran11portaUon industry labor disputes. 8otJ> sides -.Id have been required to submit their final oiler to an lmparUal panel which would select one or the other as 1 compubory settlement. Ziegler's views conflicted with an usessmenl by Sen. Robert Packwood (R· Ore.), conaresatonal •ponsor ol the Administration bill Re bas said lie bcliives he has the vol" to push through the Senate the bW to head oil strikes In trucking, railroad and airline lndustrieL Ziegler said he did oot know ll Nixon discussed his plans ·for the legislation with Frank Fitzsimmons before the Teamster president announced his en- dorsement of the Pre.sldent'a rHlecUon. "No unlon organization would make a determlnaUon of their au_.t of tbe President based on Just one piece of Jegislatlon1" Ziegler said. ''There wu no deal." .JJ. J. (}arrell Pre:Jenb • •• • .. a collection of HERITAGE ztpholstered pieces at 20% OFF during ozt1· 20th Semi ·Annnal Furniture Sale. ~~ ;>T"'--W."htv. I 0 Sof• Styles-. ,, I 0 Gh1ir- Stres •nd. over 500 fal:irics to choose from. H.J.GARRFfT fURNflURE PROFUSIONAL tNTEAIO~ DUIGNERS '\ • 2211 HARIOl ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. • I • SAVE-20% . Duri~g this ovtnl are In la of th Th 23 a wron info vest An the t is DO jwy Du d repu dam Sc with be • level for a pub Ii has 1970. ~1u Anah has H A R one o equal Coun $.0214 prope Or tage with of Eq Tw 14.8 value lower a gen able by nl creas R charg kill testili nev er Wol Tlmo statio Statio dete out w Bou that pay anoth Vera Bo told J Di tan lOl Activities Of Anaheim Aides ·Eyed Accusations that two Anaheim city of- ficials engaged In speculative land purchases based on information not available to the general public are being Investigated by the Orange County Grand Jury, foreman Otto Schmldlen said to- day. In a two paragraph statement. Schmld.len said, 11the jury, responding to requests by many concerned citizens and organizations ls investigating the alleged misconduct of Anaheim officials; ., "The jury ls working in cooperation with the Orange County District Attorney and County Counsel to determine whether criminal or civil violations have oo- curred," Schmidlen said. City Manager Keith Murdoch and Thornton Piersall , public works direc tor. are alleged to have profited substantially in land transactions in the northern part of the city. • FtldJy, J11tJ 21, 1972 s • DAILY PtLor II "Noise T oo High Supervisors Nix Apartment Plan Orange County supervisors have denied an appeal by a developer who wished to build a ~unit apartment complex in the ''sound Impact area" of the Orange County Airport. Bill Spiller assured supervisors that his deve.lopment would be soundproofed to reduce the high noise levels generated in the areas by jet aircraft landings and take-offs . Splller's application for a change or zone for the area from single family residentia l tR-1 l to Group Dwellings (R· 2) zoning had' been previously denied by the County Planning Commission. Costa l\.fesa has oppos~ the develop- ment. Supervisors rulCd on lhe appeal \Vednesday. could help block the noise from the airport when the aircralt reversed thelr engines on landing. Supervisor Ronald Caspers in moving denial of the appeal observed that he was tired of the encroachment of develop- ment on the airport and then having peo. pie complain about the airport being there. The development \\'ou\d "put people v.•here I don't think they should be," Caspers said. Co11ple Collect After Operation Curbs Sex Life The allegations were made public June 23 and both officials strongly denied any wrongdoing and said they hacl no Inside information which led to their i~ vestments. IF A HOUSE COULO TELL STORIES, RAMSHACKLE EL TORO STRUCTURE WOULD HAVE MANY Tom and Bridget Boyl• Were Able to Stop the Thefts But Not the Termite• i nd Mice The property in\·oivctl is in the Santa Ana lleight s area on the .southwesterly corner or ri.tesa Drive and Ir vine Avenue. FORT LAUDERDALE . Fla. tAPl An elderly couple who claimed a tral'l.'ifuslon of the wrong type of blood ruint>d their love life hav e been awarded $27 .500 in damages. Part of Past Dying Anaheim Mayor Jack Dutton backed the two city official! today saying, "lhere is no question in my mind that the grand jury will find them innocent." Dutton deplored the fact that, "the damage has already been done with the reputations of two fine men irreparably damaged.'' El Toro Relic Will Fall Spiller told supervisors that under the present zoning he would be permitted to build 22 houses on the land, and that would mean 22 laild O\\'ners mad at the county airport because of the noise. The apartinenis. he CQnlended. v.·oulct be inhabited by young married couples who valued the convenience of the com· plex's location above the annoyance of the noise. A Circuit Court jury deliberated four hours before returning the judgment in favor of Paul and Lena Piccirillo of Dania. Schrnidlen concluded his statement with a call for "definitive legislation to be enacted at city, county and state levels. The jury is convinced of the need for a strong code or elhics governing all public officials and employes." Anaheim has a code of ethics, adopted Feb. 24, 1970. l\.1urdoch, 54, h3 s been city manager or Anaheim for 22 years and Piersall, 49, has held his public works post since 1961. Hinshaw Reports Assessment Ratio Better Orange County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw had more good news for COWlty taxpayers Wednesday. He reported that the county's ratio of assessed tD full cash (market) value of property as determined by the State Board or Equalization was 25 percent. "This means that county tupaye.rs will pay more than two cents less on their property tax rate this year as compared with last year," the assessor stated. He explained that the 25.5 percent a .. sessed value figure is used to determine the SCHalled "Collier Factors." If the factor for a given county ls at a ratio of one or less there is no countywide school equalization tax. This year's Orange County factor ls 957 thus elminating the $.0214 equalization rate wh.ich county property owners paid last year. Orange County's 15.5 ratio of percen- tage to actual market value compares wilh a statewide 24.4 percent, the Board of Equalization report revealed. Two weeks ago Hinshaw announced a 14.8 percent increase in total assessed values in the county which will result in lower tax rates by most government agencies. By PATRICK BOYLE Of "'9 0.llr l'llol S!ttf There probably aren't any ghosts in the old ramshackle house. perched atop a dusty hill in El Toro, but there are a Jot of stones about it that would bring a twinkle to any old timer's eye. Like the one about Mrs. Josephine Whistler, its last lady, hiding her money in the walls and a dJamond ring in her cold cream jar. And the tale about the four desperados who hid out in the room ()f the kitchen until they fled with lawmen bot on their trail. Or the one about the long, weather·worn timber, salvaged from the beach, that now serves as a workbench, covered with clutter across from where the black- smith shop stood. The Prothero Ranch House like a fading memory. is decaying. rusting. falling apart, and it will soon be ripped down to make room for a 359--unit trailer park. Dr. Merv Watltins 0£ Laguna Beach has negotiated to lease the land from owner Ray Prothero, a citrus rancher. "We have been taxed out of the pie· lure," the 74-year-old Prothero said. "We can't even gross the taxes, we hated to sell the land, so It bas been leased to at least keep it in the estate." Protbero"s family moved jnto the old house -which is actually five houses pieced together -in 1908 and he grew up there. It is located in a grove of trees atop a knoll a half-mile south of El Toro Road. Prothero said it was built In the 1880's -on the site of the original adobe house in El Toro. Next to the house is the site of an old water well. A rancher's prize, imported bull once fell in and died. The com- munity, up to that time called Aliso City, was changed to El Toro (The Bull) in honor of the anima1, Prothero said. Prothero's son once suggested that the Mme be turned into a museum, but county building officials put a damper on the Jdea. The structure would have to be remodeled and brou ght up to the specifications of the building safety code. For the past year, the home has been occupied by Tom aod Bridget Boyle, who both attend Cal State Long Beach. Prothero asked Tom, the brother of his daughter-in-Jaw, to move into the house as protection against prowlers after an anvil was stolen from the blacksmith shop. Tom and Bridget -along with their huge dog -have staved off more thefts. But they have been unable to halt the mice and the termites and the days that eat away at the old place. The trailer park developer wants to start work on his project within the next month, and the Boyles are moving to Orange. "We \vish it wasn't happeni ng," Tom, a graduate student in history, says as he takes a visitor through the 12 rooms o{ the place. He explains that, because it is five houses put together, there are 25 doors .:.... three of which go no place. In the pantry off the kitchen there is an old ice-box built into the wall. The kit· chen has a pot-bellied stove. Each room has a brass cha ndelier and the hardwood floors are worn smooth. On a wall of the dirling room hangs a painting of a farmer removing tree stumps with a team of horses. Ray Prothero bought It at the general store in 1910 as a gift for bis parents. He says it is one of the many artifacts be will salvage from the home when It is finally leveled. In a closet , Bridget picked up a hang- ing light bulb by its socket and displayed its winding filaments . It was installed with the electricity in 1927, she said, and it sti ll works. Out the back door, the dusty ground is shaded by a tangle of grape vines draped over a rotting arbor. There is a brick- The Board of Supervisors expects to be able to reduce the $2.04 county tax rate by nine to 12 cents because of the in- creased assessment. Harbor Investors Win Suspect Denies Hiring Marine To Kill Wife Delay in Land Hearing RIVERSIDE (AP) -Louis Wolshin, charged with hiring a Marine private to kill his wife and mother-in-law, has testified in his own defense that he never hired anyone to commit murder. Wolshln said Wednesday be did hire Timothy Boudette, a 22-ye&Mld Merine stationed at El Toro Marine Corps Alr Station, to fiy to MlamJ last April and determine whether his wife was going out with other men. Boudette testified earlier in the trial that Wolshln, 58, o( Elsinore agreed to pay him $1,000 to kl! his wife Olga and another $500 to kill> bis mother.in-law, Vera S. AJexandra. 1 Boudette oaid he fle\v to Miami and told the women of the plot. James Lee Woodward, a 2$-year-old man who once Jived ln.i.~.-commune near Aguanga, testuted Weone!day Wolshln approached him about hiring 1<>meone "that would snuff somebody." Wolshln also denied W o o d w a r d ' s testimony. Flllal-.rguments In the Superior Court trial were to begin today. District Installs · Three Harbor Area investors including Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman, father-in-law of Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. (R-Cali!.), have won a new delay in their San Bernardino CoWity land case. Preliminary hearll'll: for Dr. Gherman, John A "Pat " Patterson and James Moreland was set to begin Monday in San Bernardino County Superior Court. Another new continuance was granted unUl Aug. 7, however, but prosecuting dl!puty district attorney Charles Wolfe could not be reached today for comment on the reason. The three principals in Mountain View Estates, a 135-jot cabinsite project are accused of a totaJ of 69 cou nts in con- nection with subdivision, promo£1on and sales ot the development. They include 10 count.s or grand theft, 49 counts of false advertis ing and 19 charges of failure to obey a California Sex Bias Case Gets Court Date NEW ORLEANS . (IJP!l -A federal appeals court has ordered a lower court hearing into complaints by a New Orleans man that United Airlines disc riminated against him and other S males by advertising for stewardeM~ Answering ervice only In ttie "Help Wanted -Female" column of the newspaper want adl. The C&plstrano Unllied Scbool Dlltrlct Clarence H. Hailes brought ault against has put a new, 24-bour answtling oervlce United tn 1971, accusing the company of to use In handling olf·hour emergency violating the Equal Employment Op- calls. portunlty Act by tu lill9"rllslng. The ""'Ice wut be Uled to co•or all Rallea had not sought employment with ..,,ergency situations affecting any the alrlinea but claimed In hla sull he ap- ochool facility within the dlstrtct. Citizens . plied at another airline company and was "'1o might wish to report lncldenls of turned down because of hla l<X. He llltd vandalllm, fire• or Other emergencies he bod 1'UIOIJ to belle .. the ... me would oan call 41S-Z74', 11ld a 11 I 1 t 1 n t ·have oc:aartd bid be applied with IOlp<rlntendult Sam Qliua. r United. I Real Estate C.Ommisslon order to cease lot sales. A probe Into Mountain View Estates handling was launched by state and San Bernardino County officials a ! t e r numerous lot.buyers complained. Investigation of complaints t h a t utilities had not been installed although purchasers were told otherwise l~ to the criminal charges. Sales of lots in the 33-acre Big Bear area project occurred between 1969 and 1971 but have since been suspended and the firm 's San Bernardino office closed. Locally, Dr. Gherman, a psychiatrist and drug consultant with numerous business interests, lives at the Balboa. Bay Club and has offices on Westcliff Drive. State Will Stop Getting P er sonal On W elfare Quiz SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The state of California has agreed to end its drlve to force wellare mother5 to answer district at torneys' questions abou t their sex lives and the wbe~bouta of absent fathers. The agreement was contained in a stipulation signed by Deputy Attorney General Eli...abelh Palmer and filed in U.S. District Court. As a result of the stpulatlon some 750 women and 2,250 children will be retained on the weltare roles . They were cut from welfnre but reinstated lBSt Sept~mber when Peckham Issued a temporafy restraining order prohibiting district atlome)'s lrom re- qutrtnr answers to questions about sex• ual mat~rs. lined root cellar and in the tool shed - "Something lives back in that corner." Tom said -there is an old woodi;;i ice box. In the garage, a buckboard and a bug- gy with one wheel missing sit rusting in the corner and old fishing poles hang on the back wall. The place looks abandoned, with weeds and trees and animals closing in on the house. Tom said that occasional visitors \vill walk right up to the front door and look in, thinking no one lives there. Soon, no one wW . \Vith the sound-proofing steps taken in the construction of the structures, Spiller said that the noise would be brought down to "a level where it would livable," although sounO'in the outside recreation area could be di sturbing. The city of Costa ritesa reco mmended against app roving the developme nt due to increased popul:ition densities. The deve loper said that many local residents supported the a part m·e n t development plans. nnd resident Fred Scott told supervisors thnt the complex The Piccirillos' suit against ri.tcmorial Hospital in Hollywood claimed that Pic- cirillo was given the wrong type of blood in June 1969, sending hlm into shock and requiring a month of hospitalization. Mn. Piccirillo, 62, testified that Ille and her 114-year-old husband had sexual relations four or five times a week prior to his operatlon. Since the operation, she said, her husband goes to bed early and they have relations on ly once every five or six weeks. The couple have been married for 3S years. '"I~ook, Ma, ('ID Swi111111ing' "Look it! I'm swiinming without my kick-board--elmost, n the 4-year-old boy squealed with happiness as he paddled around in the tiny tots class at the \WvqJay High School pool. Of the fJve children in that afternoon class, onl y two occasionally would cry out of fear. The rest were voluntarily swimming underwater, blowing bubbles, and prac- ticing kicks. All, said coach and pool director Chuck Morris, are gaining con- fidence in water and learning safety rules. Tinty tots classe! for 4, 5 and 6-year- olds (under four-feet tall) are only one offering In the high school ·summer aquatics program. U the children do really well, they can be promoted to beginners classes. One 4- year-old boy can almost swim the length of the 25-yard-long by 25-meter-wide pool, Morris said. "We take each child as far as he can go," he added. He smiled at a crying boy who finally agreed to blow bubbles -as long as he could still bang onto the edge of the pool. "1bey learn to scream ," Morris joked about the noise. Ten 30-minutc tiny tots lessons are $8, as are llfesaving classes. AU other lessons are $6. They include beginners. Mommy and Me (children at least two-years-old ), ad- vanced beginners, intennediate, adults, diving and advanced. Ol.ILV PILOT 1Wt ..... TINY TOTS TAKE TO THE WATER AT UNIVERSITY HlliH Cooch Chuck Morris Encourages Jeff Sudokow During Leuon Classes are still open in the second and third sessions, which run weekdays from July 24 to Aug. 4 and from Aug. 7 to Aug. 18. A BIG NAME SINCE t925 Registration can be made weekda)'I from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the pool. Call Morris at 833-2720 for more in- formation, JI.RfRJll~f~lr~ * CUSTOM DRAPERIES * J\T LIVINGSTON'S Wr C0"1/ the laTQUt and /intst Carptt & Drape~ selection allallablc ~od1y's Clesire for self-expre,,. sion hH brought with it 1 need for creotive imagination and ex .. pertise, Our skiTied experts wnl be hi ppy to cre1te now ld11s for you or carry out your own. Best of 111, they c1n work these lr1nsform1t ions for you, with pin money or big budget f1brics . fRll U TIMATI S PHONE 547.JHJ Open Dally '111 6:30 -Fridaya 'tn 11.1'0 ... 1.4a.a.s.o .• MA_r.N•a•t ~din.ier·S~TA~547-3~ • .. • . , • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Government Gigantism Taxpayers complaining of costiy gigantism <'in government will not be surprised, only concerned, by the lnlonnation that nearly one of every five wage- earners in California works lor government -federal, at.ale or local. The exact figure is 18.7 out o! every 100, the total being l,455,500 out o! the 8,004,400 employed persons in the st.ate. In 1950 the ratio was one o! seven. By 1960 it had Increased to about one o! six. And over the past 10 years, the total number of California workers on govern- ment payrolls bas been growing at an average rate of 6.9 percent a year. U the trend continues at that rate, about one out of every four workers, or some 2,340,000, will be on govern· ment payrolls by 1980. Oµr demands for more public services are only part o! the cause o! the proli!eration. Housekeeping looms large, for the more a bureaucracy grows, the more employes it requires just to deal with reef tape and inter· nal record·keeping. Big government grows increasingly complex and inevitably more waste!ul.. · Add in the effects of inflation on all costs and it's easier to understand our tax bills, even ii the pain is not lessened. Now It's Ralph's Regiment Ptiblic and private reactions to Ralph Nader's Raiders have run the gam.ut from cheers to jeers, with some indifference thrown in. colony of hungry ants, swarming Into nooks and cran· nies everywhere. Congress is now being swarmed over and a good many congressmen are unhappy about iL All Senators and Representatives have been handed a questionnaire running to 96 pages and Including 833 questions. They cover more than two dozen subjects, such as !oreign policy, taxation, lobbying, evaluations of co-members, office payroll and even opponents' cam· palgn financing. The investigation doesn't stop In Congress. It reaches into almost every congressional district, all st.ate capitals and the city halls of some 300 cities. More than 1,000 persons are involved in the massive e!!ort -enough to suggest Nader's Raiders be changed to Ralph's Regiment. Twenty full-time staf!ers in Wash· ington have been augmented by 500 volunteers elseo w6ere, several hundred advisers and 150 or so lawyefSt professors, student-s and journalists. First product o! the investigation will be a 30-to-40 page profile of each Senator and Representative, for pre·election release. After that will come a 12-chapter study of congressional committees and a 3,000 word re- port on various topics ranging !rom handling of appr<>- priations to such social influences as a member's gin rummy partners. The profiles worry congressmen, especially the li· berals. One liberal, explained: "It doesn't matter to most conservatives what Nader says about them, but some liberals couldn't afford to be attacked by Nader." A Senate employe said, "A lot of congressmen are all !or Nader when be's getting General Motors to re- call unsafe cars. But now some are worried he might be getting them recalled." r~ • .. () Nader, as the self-appointed guardian o! consumer interests, has drawn deserved cheers for pricking con· sciences and exposing wrongdoing in some areas of business and in,dustry. And he has drawn jeers !or some sloppy, inaccurate or misleading reports such as the one his team produced on Cali!ornia. The very vastness and nature of the project l;l".@'lles the strong danger of serious errorli, misjudgments or bias in some reports and add up to <I serious public dis· service. But if the investigations are careful, thorough and objective, the results could be a valuable public service. ~~~ •weLL) llfE ~ors AT THE GATE LOOI(~~ HAPPY. THEY All tb.e while the Nader forces have grown like a A Different Kind of Word Quiz ·(SrnNEY J.HARRI~ I'm IOll>a to do a little something dif· ferent 1n the way of • word-quiz tOday. Here are 1IJ pain of words that are simll~ in meaning; but some pairs are identical, while others have a real dif· ference. can 'you tell the identical twinll troaj the twbla that are only fraternal? I. A camel and a dromedary. 2. A donkey and a mule. 3. Assault and ·battery. 4. Flotsam ·and jet- sam. 5 .. All abode and a residence .. · 6. A • paradox and a cootradictlon. 7. A fatCllll and a hawk. B. A maze and a labyrinth. 9. Prose and pro- sody. 10. A BUTLER and a footman . 11. A bobcat and a puma. J.Z. Masterly and masterful. IS. A toad and a frog. 11. A town and a township. 15. A hue and a cry. 16. A moose and M elk. 17. Ki1h and Kin. 18. Might and main. Dear Gloomy Gus U J.G.A. (the everyon .. should-fiy. th .. flag clown-Gus, July 4) had his way, America would be a free-- domless dictatorship. -G,F.M. Tlll• ft;1tur1 M1tdt rt.adfri' vlnr•, not llfCQWrllY tr.ow ol ft111 newJHPff'. Send fOllr pet rieev• • Gtoomr GU$, OIUY Piiot. 19,peprecale ;md depreciate. 20.' A spruce tree and a pine tree. ANSWERS: J. A camel bas two hllnips, a dromedary on]y _one. 2. A mule is the offspring of a donkey and a female horse. 3. Assault is attem,pt to injure, battery is a successfUJ attempt. 4. Flotsam is wreckage from a sunken ship, jetsam is cargo thrown overboard to lighten a distressed ship. 5. Abode and tesidence are identical. 6. A paradox is a seemingly co~ tradictory statement that may be true. 7. · All falcons are hawks. 8. Maze and labyrinth are jdentical. 9. Prosody is the study of poetic meters and versification. ' JO. A footman ls to a butler as a waiter is to a maitre d' hotel. ll. A BOBCAT Is a lynx, a puma is a cougar. 12. Masterly is skillful, masterful is domineering. 13. Frogs are moll aquatic, toads are more terrestrial. 14:. IdenUcal. 15. Identical. 16. Moose are called elk in Europe. 17. ]{jth are friends and neighbors, kin are relatives. 18. Identical. 19. Deprecate is to curse, depreciate to disvalue. 20. Spruce is a Prussian pine. A Spanking for l(athleen WAS!UNGTON -Kathleen Kennedy, oldest daughter of the late Sen. "Bobby" Kennedy and an early McGovern ,adherent , held royal court at the South Dakotan's extensive headquarters -at Miami Beach -ingratiatingly welcoming all comers,.J>3rlicularly youths, the darf. ings of the McGovern camp. The 20.year-old, Jong tressed, mod.at- tired miss was numerously interviewed, photographed, hoop- lahed. and whoop- lahed for the glory of the Kennedys and McGovern. It was all most chummy and yummy and so pleasant and congenial. K at h y loved every minute of it. It was far dlf· fereot from "that jolUng experience at a political m~ting in Brooklyn during the New York prim~ry last month. . KATHLEEN WAS stwnplng for McGovern and on tbls occasion put in a plug for former Rep. Allard Lowenstein, militant dove ancl.bead of the ew..Left Americans for Democratic Action, who was trying In stall' a Congressional come- back. Lowenstein and McGovern were Isn't It the Truth! BJ CARL RIBLET J1I. It ii not enUreQl..truo. Iha~ QmarOI$ Is an usocillUoo of hypocrites. ()ply some of the members of the s p e c I • s Potomacu1 Exotlcus ssy ono thillg aod do another. Tht rett .or them say 11 and don 't do • thing . "God llaa q!l>Cfl ,... °"" fa«, mul UO!t5 ~ rou.11elou anothn." -WiWoll& S~• -1ai'-~ nf ~OBERT S.AILEN)· strongly supporting one another. , The meeting, in an upstairs hall, was sparsely attended, with only about 25 present. Kathleen had not proved much • of a crowd-g.tter. Further, after she hsd wannly acclaimed IA>wenstein, she was suddenly interrupted by a woman with the demand: "Do you know that Rep. Rooney;• (whom Lowenstein was trying to unseat) "was a close personal friend of your father?" NO, KATllLliEN didn't know that. "Well, for your lnrormatlon, be was. Mr. Rooney is chairman of the Ap- propriations subcommittee that handles the Justice Department's budget, and your father, as Attorney General, worked very closely with Mr. Rooney. Did you know that? Again, Kathleen admitted Ignorance. "And do you know," continued the perststenrnemesls, "that on on~ ocCision Mr. and Mrs. Rooney were guest.a in your home and that your lather took them upstairs to see you and your brothers and sisters say your prayers before going to sleep?" NO, KATHLEEN dldnl ~all that girlhood Incident. "\Veil, it's true/' was the indignant rcfurl, "and It Is ilso true that you hove your nerve com"1g here and telling ua to. VOie against a penonal !riend o! your fathel' and for a carpetbager whom you don't know and who woold be oppos"1g 1"Jr father If he were alive and la J>Oll· tics.'' That verbal spanking ended the ~and !Catbleen:+ campalplaf la EiRAJIJE~ TWO POTHEAl>S ANl> A ~T ~NER • ., Mylai Almost Insignificant by Cmnparison Communism's-Cost in Human Terms By ROBERT THOMPSON la The New York Times LONDON -The present invasion of south Vietnam and the intense fighting of the last few weeks draw attention once again to the human sufrering caused, on an almost unprecedented scale. to the Vietnamese people by t h e continuing war. I am not here considering the battle casualties which, although on each side they have prob~bly reached 500,CXX>, can at least be regarded as "legitimate'' in war. Nor am I considering the refugees who, although their plight may be tragic, are at least still alive. -· What should most concern us is the number of civilians who have been killed in both balves of Vietnam, and those who may yet die in the future, as part of the human cost of Communism. THE W E S T E R N conscience is im- mediately pricked by an American.com- mitted atrocity, such as Mylai, and by the civilian casualties caused by the bombing of the North, (although such casualties are now likely to be far Jess than during 196>-QI because of the development of ·the extremely accurate "smart" bomb). (GUEST REPORT) Little or no attention, however, and certainly no equivalent reporting, has been given to similar Vietcong or North Vietnamese atrocities which have OC· curred on a scale that makes Mylai almost insignificant. These have not oc~ curred beca~ of some aberration, ac~ cident or inaccuracy of bombing. They have occurred, both selectively and in· discriminately, as a matter of deliberate policy. At the time Hanoi complained of six civilian casualties, as a result of the first American raid on the North after the invasion began, sbe was firing 122- mm. rockets indiscriminately into Saig9n and Pnompenh, killing more than ten times that number. HER RUSSIAN 130-mm. guns have JM)unded Anloc and Quangtri to rubble. They will do the same to Kontum and Hut if they get within range without any consideration whatsoever for the civilian populatioo. Everyone bas heard of Mylal, hut who has heard of Oaibe where the Vietcong, after its capture, lingered only to murder the wives and cbUdren of all the local militia? Or of the Montagnard village of Dakson, where they moved from hut to but w i t b flame-throwers incinerating more than 250 villagers, two-thirds of them women and children? Most people have heard of the ·massacres of Hue in 1968 where the Viet· cong and North Vi'etnamese, after its capture, executed 5,700 people . (as assessed from the mass graves found afterwards) but who-knows that in cap- tured documents they gloated over these figures and ooly complained that they had not killed enough? These were not aberrations, nor savagery for savagery's sake, nor the work or undisciplined soldiers acting in violation or in· structions, but part or a ruthless deliberate policy designed to break a people who would not otherwise bend to their will THE WORLD CANNOT plead ig· norance because it bas all been well d~umented. The evidence has been authoritatively put together in a com· ·pendium prepared, surprisingly, for the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary (the meat was obviously too red for _Senator Fulbright and the Foreign · Affairs Committee). There are distressing implications for the future. If the Invasion succee:ds and the North takes over the South what will the bloodbath be? Four years ago I estimated that it would be several bun· dred thousands. I now wish to amend that figure to well over one million (out of eighteen million peo~le). THE CRmcs OF THE war may claim that the forecast~ are exaggerated. But Colonel Tran Van Dae, a North Viet- namese officer who defected after twenty-four years in the C.Ommunist party, stated that the Commilnists, If flley win, would slaughter up to three million South ·Vietnamese, and another colonel, Le Xuan Cbuyen, who detected after twenty-Gne years, stated that five million people in South Vietnam were on tjle Conununisl "blood d.ebt" !is\ and that 10-15 percent of these would pay with their lives. When asked in an interview U the possibility of a bloodbath had been exaggerated he replied: "it could not he exaggerated. It will happen." Sir Robert Thompson is the British i expert on guer.riJZa warfare who hal 1 undertaken secret missions for Presf.. dent Nixon to 1'eport on events in Vietnam. '72 Convention May B~ a Landmark Rare is the national convention that is genuinely exciting. Rarer still are those which mark turning points in the nation'• political development. Over the past cen· tury, landmark e-0nventions have taken place roughly once every 40 years -in 1860, 1896, and 1932. Now, four decades after Franklin D. Roosevelt first won the Democratic presidential nomination, it appears that the party 's 1972 convention may achieve landmark status. Several of the conditions that gave rise to earlier landmark e-0nventions are present today. Then as now, the country was deeply divided on fundamental issues which seemed to resist pOlltical solution, In each case, one of the major parties broke sharply with established. policy. And au or the previous landmark conventions changed the character of the party involved and Jed to widespread shifts in political loyalties. IN 1860, OF COURSE, the problem was slavery. The newly formed Republican Party bad campaigned almost e•· elusively on the anti-sla\'ery issue in 1856 and lost. The 1860 GOP plallorm dealt with the slavery question, but it also ap- proved of free farm homesteads, a pr~ gram of internal improvements, and tariff adjustments 11to encourage the in- dustrial Interests." JiS appeal thus broadened, t h e Republican ticket swept to victory. And tho party soon became closely ldentUied 1"ith the .. Industrial interests/' Jn assoclaUon tbst helped to mske the GOP ·the country's dominant political fm<e for almost three-quarteri of a century. Tho Democrala in 1898 were sharply ,..,...--Bg George --...., ' CONFIDENTIAL TO T HE AMEIUCAN CIVIL LfBERl'lES UNION: Hold cff on trying to gfl m1 kangaroo on the 747 for ·Washington. I got• .... of selae- Uve harassment 111•1 will rt1ll1 llrn you onl a, \ EDITORIAL RESEARCH split on monetary policy. _ P.rcsldent Cleveland was tmder bitter attack, even from many fellow democrats, for his resolute defense of the gold standard during a time of· severe depression. The Republican position on the gold question was virtuallf identical. BUT THE DEMOCRATIC convention of 1896 saw to it that the voters bad a ! choice, not an echo. 1'Sllverites" seized ' control of the meeting and pushed through a platform tbal repudisted CJeveland's policies all along the line and advocated the unlimited coinage oC silver as a depression remedy. A 36-year-old silverite, William Jennings Bryan, was picked to head the presidential ticket .. Although the Democrats lost ilie election, they became identl{ied as the party more amenable to social change. ' ' A Pair of Ba"loney Books~ I submit a couple of examples of what's wrong with the ailing publishing Industry, New York branch. First, Oasby, expensive iin\lhick cookbooks, like 0 In the Kitchen-With Love," by Sophia Loren (Doubleday; 17.95). Sophia Loren? She has a movie in release c a tl e d "Mortadella" (translate 0 8aloney"), and that's what I think "In the Kitcben With Love" ls. Miss Lortn in-epares air these dishes In her own kitchen, her pub!lshers assure us -parmesan pie with truffles, mushrooms with vine lelives, BOme 300 others, motUY Italian. But where you start not to believe it la In the color photographs oot o! ''Boecaclo 70" or "LadY L." 'lllis alone, I should think, would Irritate any serious ladY cook who is not goJnc to be looking at the reek lcbster with port In these picbres hut at the green eyes. the cleavage and ilaw less hairdo, •I Sophil, hand on chin aulldst clusters of ""'*• cantaloupe, rucclnl, asparaps, tomotoes, the whole thing a painting by T!Um, and a very iood Tl· Uan too. • Would Julia Chtld agree "'Mortadell1'1? EXHIBIT D: Sexual autobiographies by ladles who ore old eoough to know better, u wltnw "A State ol Rut," by Shella Gra)lam (Groosel: $&,95), which pull utlr CID Ille Holl7wold Ille to (THE: }l00KMAN') sh8J)le, Gavin Lambert to the ,late Nathanael West This, the lady tells us in effect, ls the real tinsel. • The former Hollywood columnist wrole an honest memoir of her love affalr with F. Scott Fiti:geratd, .,,Beloved Infidel," In 1958.. 11Tbe poor: son of a bitch," as Dorothy Parker 'tearfully remarked al his bier, died in Miss Grah8J)l's apart. ment 32 years ago. But ip this book he emerges Just one 'ol the attractln Miss Grahim's seemingly endless list of male playmates in this preposterous and heroically tasteless memolr by a classic egomanlic, if not a nymphomaniac. At one point she writes: ''I AM NO LONGER young, hut I am .WI told I nm attrocti.,. ... l have had -and sUll have -all !lje .men I ever wanted, all the au e1perleiloe I have ever desired, succeu in my caeer, mcne1, fame, great love, p~ by the score and hundreds of proposlllon11." At anotber point she cl'1ms to believe that many of today's Yollag people have misplaced \h1h' morala. Uh Sopbia't picture, •1MortadeUa1" "' -lllCll ,.1 From all outward appearances, the Democrat ct1nvention of 1932 was nothing extraordinary. 11le platform it adopted stressed economy in government and it& nomihee, Roosevelt, gave nq indication of being a great ,innovator. qnce in cfflce, though, FDR lost .little timt in unveiling the New Deal. As . a1 m.ult, the Democrats won the lasting allegiance of many fonnerly R,.,oublicQn voters and thus displ~ the GOP as the majority party. I ' IT IS TOO EARLY to tell whether detailed comparisons ol the Democratic convention of 1972 with t~ of 1896 and 1932 are in 'order. Some1elements of the great coaUUon tbatlloollevelt built clear- ly afe wibappy with Seo, George McGov1'11! u , their party's presidential nominee and have in~cated they wlU give him perfunctory sappm at 'be!I. For his part, M<\l"•irn sees bimsel! u the architect of a ne~coalitlon more at.- tuned to the tilllfS. It would only be natural, thoug~. !or the Republicans to believe that theillemocrais have juit staged a replay~ir 1898 convention and that McGov m is \be Wllliam Je<>- nings Bryan ol . Dl1ILY PILOT Thursday, July 20, 1972 • 'l I p d a c co In F • L. 1'1. Bo,,d Most Playmates ~eAnge~os ' All hwnln .belnp are female In tjle first aix weeks of lile.',Jlellet~ I mentioned 'that. _Said e· ery WU made ' m the iate ,llliOs. At IOIY nte, arillDg m. the moY .. ment oontinues lo grow amonc. the n's lib g~ls lo prove 1<ientHicaliy 111At Eve preceded Adam: When such proof ls absO!ut•, It wiD be printed In this space. WllAT'Srw:the pi<>pet way ~ eat a lamb cbop? None other 'tb"I t greal statesman of · · yeste11eer1 1 !nston Churcblll sald,' "Se~ it l>Qldly in hand and chew upon ' Jt:",. : A RECENT sludy of 2,000 mar- rlilges ,proves that In 21 out of 100 the · wife is b<"S. fin 35 out ol 100 the bu.s- ban<I is boss, and la il7 out of 100 both ' are bou, MASTER musicians live longer. 1 Stravinsky, Casals, Stokowsld, Mon-h . tew:, Sjbeli.U, CharpenUer, all paued .,, QUEENIE By Phll lnt.rlandi , ' Thursd>y, July 20, 1972 DAIL V PILOT 1 Shortages Predleted , Big Power Failures Seen Th-is Year ' WASffiNGTON (UPI) -sldered necessary for pro-We had hoped Iha! New curtailment o I unessential Some residents in the East, tection In eme.-gerdes. England could erport power power loads because electric Southeast and Midwest can "As a result of HWTlcane ••. if needed, but two nuclear requirements already are eipect power blackouts and Agnes, the major uUllty serv· plants that were expected to slightly higher t h a n the brownouts this sumn;ier, ac-ing Virginia suffered damage be in operation this summer forecast peaks for the 1972 cording to John N. Nassikas, to two generating plants and will not be ready. One Is the summer season. chainnan of the Federal its computerized system -Vermont Yankee facility just "Stilt more severe weather. Power Commission. control center," Nassikas said, south of Brattleboro on the conditions may reasonably be Power shortages will be ex· In other areas where power-Connecticut River. The other expected -raising a serious peri~ in Florida, Virginia, problems are expected 1 ls the Pilgrim plant at question as to the continuing the Carolinas, New York City Nassikas said: Plymouth, in ~fassachusetts." capability of tbe Florida and the Illinois-Iowa area of facilities to meet electric the Midwest, Nassikas said in -New York City: "Reserve -Florida: Public appeals power loads over the .rest of a copyrighted interview in generating capacity is thin. have been made fur voluntary the swnmer." U.S. News and Wcrld Report . ----=---'--'-----------·-''-.C...:.-=:.;c..::__ ____ _ &ieton ~ 100 different words to 1 average twlli~s 60 .. 'TWINS -Sclentittc researche~aim the average rds, But lljose loquacious· twins, Landers and Ab~ "A word·to the wise-that should read ''Patling··At· t ' .. He said the nfost serious problems would p r o b a b I y come in the Southeast , particularly southern Florida and I b e Virginia-Carolinas area where the reserve margin is currently "the lowest of any region'' -less than 10 percen!.J Reserve generating capacity of at leoSI 20 percent is oon· J lan Buien, have not y.t discoveNd this fasclnaUng f -1 gather, r I ·KNOW anybody with a Dock of geese? If so, ask aald· try projll"ietor how to tell a male goose from a female. AJ_~bscriber says-it's easy-the male always bas blue erieli, the female brown. l THAT THE height of the average centerfold playmate ln~".Playboy" 1"9aguine i,s 5-foot-1 has b!en reported . It is true that four out of five of those young ladies Uve in Angele:;. 1 QUERIES -. Q, "Come on, U>uie, name the one horse ever to win the Kentucky Derby twice. 0J •"-!111poasibl"t How can any horse Win a race ooly for thrte-ye8r~lds more than once? l Q. "WHO wu the first pro U..ball catcher to crouch right behind the bat instead o! standing 15 feet back of the plate?" A. Connie Ma k was that revolution*1. NOTHING much attracted more attention years ag() in any southern town than a distilling apparatus set up for display on a courthouse lawn. The sheriff, who confiscated it from some white lightning art~ in the woods, put it there usually. To wam wrong doel!S, tut tut. Why did it attract so much attention? Sir, it announced one more lo- cal bootlegger bad been put out of business, leaving an open ~rket. And Jt served 1s a pattern for enterprising souls\wbo wanted to aet up ~ own apparatus, but there- tofore didn't know bow. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port 8each, CaUf. 92660. orney 1 ••• Profs Study In Europe For Sl_!,mmer Two social science teachers from the Coast Commuriity College District are in Yugoslavia this summer study· ing that nation's political system, economic develop- • ment, and church-state re la· Uons. Participating in an eight· week course are Mike Mase, a history· teacher at Golden West College ln Hunllngton Beach, and Dr. Herrick Arnold, a poUUcal science in· structor at Orange ...-Coast College la Costa Mesa. Purpose of the trip, which is funded through a federal grant, is to help teachers gen.erat«; new instructional packages for their students, college !)fficials said. when you gently place this necldeca end pendant round her lovely·neck7 Five beautiful and weft.matched brilliant-cut diamonds in e pendant of 14 fcarat yellow gold on a chain of the same pr81;ious metal. What win -she-say? Find outl $160. Do Soinething Beautiful.,. All of A TI A's singularly distinctive furniture is marked down. This means quality sofas, chairs, dining tables, wall units, and every imaginable · design accessory , including an ex· tremely large selection of drapes and wall· paper. Now is your time to save. Open Mon· day thru Saturday. Art Slww Scheduled On Catalina Island Yugoslavia was eh o s en because it has two-year col- leges similar in structure to those in the United States, and becauSe it bas friendly rela· tions with major world powers but is not comm.iUed to MY power block, college officials said. Chirp Aeto911t1 hl'lttwf Amtriuft ExPraS llnllAllMl"k.lrcl ft M11tw a..,... .... SLAVICK'S 11 11 Iii\ err i • Amaleur and proleeaional artisis 'and cn!tsmm will compete' fer more tllan $2,ooil In "'!Sh ~wards duriqi the 141h annual catalina Is I a n d FesUval of Arts Sept. 15-17, The C&lalina Ari AlsoclaUon sponsors tbe Don-profit event I and outdoor elhibit areas will emnd the length of the wa~t street bord<ring Avalon Bay. The croft show will center ln t !(e adjoining Spanish.type market place. • Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-13 80 Farming Drops Open Mon. ond Fr;. 10 •.m. lo 9:30 p.m. VIENNA (AP) - A study With 1oc1t10111 ot: Ton1n<.9, Or•no.. L• Cttrltos, La H•br•. shows that the number of A"": s.n Dl'90 1nc1 Les v., ... !arms in Austria declined by J'==================:!I 34,300 or 8.5 percent between !:Oce ~e statislical Read the DAILY PILOT STORE HOURS: MQN.·TUES. 10 A.M.·7:00 P.M. WED.·THURS.·FRI. 10 A.M.-9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 10 A.M.-5:30 P:M • . SUNDAY 12 A.M.·5:00 PM. COLOR TELEVISION 20 YEARS IN ORANGE COUNTY SAW AND SQVICE 9021 • ATLANTA at MAGNOLIA HUNTINGTON llACH '61·332' ZENITH $398 e JY•r Picture Tubo Warranty e 1 YNr Part1 • 1 Yur Sarvlc• act. 16''o;agonal color TV • FREE Color Ant .. na lnllalled with AH RCA & Zenith Coosotes Purchased. IMtalled With Any Tablo Modtl or Partablt at $39.95. UHF VHF FM .,,......,. --· n. DEQAI • C4110W Grlined American Walnut cotor. 18"' deg. suPer-sere.n f-4andcr1fted 11tan Chanls. aupe." Vldlo Range Tuning System. Automatic Fin.tuning control. Automltlc Tlnt THIS SET IS A WINNER This Slim·Une 19'" diagonal Portable is Ideal • I ,.... ,.m • 1 ,..., lllttM -·-· .... Guard ecintrol HURRY! SUPPlJ UMll .... ED .... 1 AVAii.Ai~• WITH lt&MOT• CONT IOI. Zenith 25" Diagonal Handcrafted Maple 'l1lk Is • ...,. • loiiotllirPloct of "'"'it11rt 25" Diagonal GX·726 $598 • ch ..... <0lorTulle • Autenwltlc Fine Tuning e AutcltMtk Tint Control e Tit1n lOI Chattl1 CONTEMPORARY WALNUT $529 ..... lnclYCIH Ant.nM ' Prict lachMln FrH .bt-lnhlllM • • ln1t1lled WHY BUY FROM AIC? e No Fl-Ct "C ..... H Paid It !O Day> or Na D°"" anti J6 Mootlis le hy 1-1 e 1 Y-Frn P-e 1 Y-FrH s..lco e 3 Y-Picture T'obt W•ruwly • "" Dtllvory anti Sot Up e ....... trlcanl/M-Cliartt e Wt Smlct Wllat Wt Stft • Wt Koow Our Pradact lnlde ...i o.t I .......................................... , For Shelf Units e Aot..-lc Color Cootrol • ""'-le Tlot • Au-le Fino T"'lot Close Out Price $3·9·9 1973 RCA SETS IN SJOCK AND ON DISPLAY " ' • ' • ' \ I \ ' • • • • • , • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE -, Government Taxpayers complaining of costly giganlism In government will not be surprised, only concerned, by the information that nearly one of every five wage- tarners in Caillornia works for government -federal, 1tate or local. The exact figure is 18.7 out or every 100, the total being 1,455,500 out of the 8,004,400 employed persons In the state. In 19~0 tho ratio was one of seven. By 1960 it bad Increased to about one of six. And over the past 10 years the total number of California workers on govern- ment' payrolls has been growing at an average rate of 6.9 pereent a year. U the trend continues at that rate, about one out of every four workers, or some 2,340,000, will be on govern· ment payrolls by 1980. Our demands for more public services are only part of tbe cause of . the proliferation. Housekeeping looms large, for the n.iore a bureau~acy grows, the .more employes It requires iust to deal with redlape and mter· nal record-keeping. Big government grows increaaingly complex and ineVitably more wastefuL Add in the effects of inflation on all costs and it's easier to understand our tax bills, even if the pain is not lessened. Now It's Ralph's Regiment Public and private reactions to Ralph Nader's Raiders have run the gamut from cheers to jeers, with some indifference thrown in. · Nader, as the sell-appointed guardian of consumer Interests, bas drawn deserved cheers for pricking con· aciences and exposing wrongdoing in some areas cf business and iJ\dustry. And be bas drawn jeers for some &oppy, inaccurate or misleading reports such as the one his team produced on California. All the while the Nader forces.Jiave grown like a A Different Kind of Word Quiz (SYDNEY J.HARRI~ I'm llOkla to do a Utile 101Dething dif. ferellt lo tile way of a wor<H1ulz today. Here are 1t) pairs or words that are similar in meaning; but some pairs are identical, whlle others have a real dif- ference. Can you tell the Identical twins fro.Dl the twins that are only fraternal? I. A camel and a dromedary. Z. A dookey and a mule. 3. AJsault and battery. 4. Flotsam and jet- &am. 5. An abode and a residence. 6. A paradox and a cmtradictlon. 7. A lalcoo and a hawk. !. A 1!11t7A! and a labyrinth. 9. Prooe and pro- sody. 10. A BtlTLER and a footm an. 11. A bobcat and a puma. U. Masterly and masterful. IS. A toad and a frog. 14. A town and a towoshlp. 15. A hue and a cry. 16. A moose and an elk. 17. Klth and Kin. 18. Might and main. Dear Gloomy Gus H J.G.A. (the everyone-should-fly· the-flag clown-Gus, July 4) had his way, America would be a free- domless dictatorship. --G.F.M. Tllll lutur1 rftlKl1 reMl•n' ¥11Wt. nof MCHUrllY thctte of tht new-. Stnd r01.1r ll9f PHV• i. Gloom!' Gus. 0.llY ,.lklt, 19, Deprecate and depreciate. 20. A spruce tree and a pine tree. ANSWERS: 1. A camel has two humps, a dromedary onJy one. 2. A mule is the offspring of a donkey and a female horse. 3. Assault is attell\pt to injure, battery is a successful attempt. f . Flotsam ii wreckage from a sunken ship, jetsam iA cargo thrown overboard to iJShten a distressed ship. 5. Abode and residence are identical. 6. A paradox is a seemingly con- tradictory statement that may be true. 7. All falcons are hawks. 8. Maze and labyrinth are identical. 9. Prosody is the study of poetic meters and versification. 10. A foobnan is to a butler as a waiter is to a maitre d' hotel. 11. A BOBCAT Is a l}'llll, a puma Is a cougar. 12. Masterly Is skillful, masterful is domineering. 13. Frogs are more aquatic, toads are more terrestrial. 14. ldenUcal. 15. Identical. 16. Moose are called elk in EW'Ope. 17. Kit.h are friends and neighbors, kin are relatives. ta. Identical. 19. Deprecate is to curse, depreciate to disvalue. 20. Spruce is a Prussian pine. A Spanking for l(athleen WASHINGTON -Kathleen Kennedy, oldest daughter of the late Sen. "Bobby" Kennedy and an early McGovern adherent , held royal court at the South Dakotan's extensive headquarters -at Miami Beach -ingratiatingly welcoming all comers, particularly youths, the darl· ings of the McGovern camp. The 20-year~ld, long tressed, mod-al· tired miss was numerously interviewed, photographed, hoop- lahed and whoop- lahed for the glory or the Kennedys and McGovern. It was all most chummy and ywnmy and so pleasant and congenial. K a t h y loved every minute of it. It was far dlf· ferent from that jolUng experlcrice at a political meeting in Brookl)il during the New York primary Jut mohth. . KATllLEEN WAS !lumping fo r t.!cGovem and on this occasion put In a plug for former Rep. Allard Lowenstein. militant dove and head ol the New Left Americans for Democratic Action, who was trying ID stall' a Ccngreal"18l come- back. Lowenstein and McGovern were Isn't It the Truth! _ By CARL RIBLET JR. lt 11 not enUrely true that Coniirw Is an assodatloo of hypocrita Ot1fy &Ome of the mcmben of the 1 p • c I e s Potomacus Exotlcus aay one thine Md do another. The r.11 .of !hem aay it and doo 't do a -· "God 1141 11i..,. -OM foot, cnid ~ "°" make ~011.ruloc• onothn." , -w""""' s ""'""' , llt Ill I GOBERT S.AII.EN) strongly supporting one another. , The meeting, in an upstairs hall , was sparsely attended, with only aboul 25 , present. Kathleen had not proved much ol a crowd·ge!tet. Further, after she had warmly acclaimed IA>wenstein, she was suddenly interrupted by a woman with the demand: "Do you know that Rep. Rooney" (whom Lowenstein was trying to unseat) "was a close personal friend of your father?" NO, KATllLliEN didn't know that. "Well, for yOW' Wormation, he was. Mt. Rooney 11 chairman of the Ap- propriations subcommittee that handles the Justice Department's budget, and your father, as Attorney GeneraJ, worked very closely with Mr. Rooney. Did you know that? Again, KathJeen admitted Ignorance. "And do you know," continued the pttSistent nemesl•, "that on one occasion Mr. and Mrs. Rooney were gue.N In your home and that your lather took them upstairs to see you and your brothers and sisters say your prayers beJore going to sleep?" NO, KATHLEEN dldn' rl!<all that girlhood incident. uWell, It's true,'' was the indignant retort, "811d it I• also true that you have )"llllr nerve coming here and telling us to vote against 1 J>ll"IOOal lrimd of your falher and for 1 carpet~r whom you doo't l:now and who wuuld be OP!""lng your father U be were aUve and 1Jo poll- tlet." Thal verbal spanking ended the ~and JCathleent campalgnfn( la Giganti·sm colony or hungry ants, swarming illto nooks and cran· nles everywhere. Congress 11 now being swarmed over and a good many congressmen are unhappy about It. All Senators and Representatives have been handed a questionnaire running to 96 paget and !ncludin• 633 questions. They cover more than two dozen sub1ects, such as foreign policy, taxation, lobbying. evaluations of ~members, office payroll and even opponents' cam- paign financing. The investigation doesn't stop in Congress. it reaches Into almost every congressional district, all state capitals and the city halls of some 300 cities. A1ore than 1,000 persons are involved in the massive effort -enou~b to suggest Nader's Raiders be changed to Ralph's Regunent. Twenty full-time staffers In Wash- ington have been augmented by 500 volunteers els .. where, several hundred advisers and 150 or so lawyers. professors, students and journallsts. First product of the investigation will be a 30-to-40 page ~rofile of each Senator and Representative, for pre-election release. After that will come a 12-chapter study of congressional committees and a 3,000 word , .. port on various topics ranging from handling of appro- priations to such social influences as a member's gin rummy partners. The profiles worry congressmen, especially the Ji. berals. One liberal, explained: "It doesn't matter to most conservatives what Nader says about them, but some liberals couldn't afford to be attacked by Nader." A Senate employe said, "A lot of congressmen are all for Nader when he's getting General Motors to re- call unsafe cars. But now some are worried he might be getting them recalled." The very vastness and nature of the project creates the strcng danger or serious errors, misjudgments or bias in some reports and add up to a serious public dis- service. But if the investigations are careful, thorough and objective, the results could be a valuable public service. .. '" .. () ~~~ •wf LlJ THE ~OPS AT THE GATE LOOl<~l> lfAPPY. 'fHEV 6RAf JEI> TWO P6THEA~S AN~ A ~T ~NER. ~ Mylai Almost Insignificant by Comparison ' Communism's Cost in Human Terms By ROBERT THOMPSON la The New York 11.mes LONDON -The present invasion of South Vietnam and the intense fighting of the last few weeks draw attention once again to the human suffering caused, on an almost unprecedented scale, to the Vietnamese people by t h e continuing war. r· am not here considering lhe battle casualties which, although on each side they have probably reached 500,000, can at least be regarded as 11legithnate" in war. Nor am I considering the refugees who, a1thougb their plight may be tragic, are at least still alive. What should most concern us i! the number of civilians who have been killed in both halves of Vietnam, and those who may yet die in the future, as part of the human co.st of Communism. THE W E S T E R N conscience is im- mediately pricked by an American-com- mitted atrocity, such as Mylai, and by the civilian casualties caused by the bombing of the North, (although such casualties are now likely to be far less than during 1965-61 because of the development of ·the extremely accurate ••smart" bomb), (GUEST REPORT) Little or no attention, however, and certainly no equivalent reporting, bas been given to similar Vietcong or North Vietnamese atrocities which have oc· curred on a scale that makes Mylai almost insignificant. These have not oc- curred because of some aberration, ac- cident or inaccuracy of bombing .. They have occurred, both selectively an~ in· discriminately, as a matter of deliberate policy. At the time Hanoi complained of six civilian casualties, as a result of the first American raid on the North after the Invasion began, she was firing 122-- mm. rockets indiscriminately into Saig90 and Pnompenh, killing more than ten times that number. HER RUSSIAN 13kun. gum have pounded Anloc and Quangtrl to rubble. '!'bey will do the aame to Kontum and Hut if they get within range without any consideration whatsoever for the civilian population. Everyone has heard of Mylal, but who has heard of Claibe where the Vietcong, '72 Convention Rare is the national convention that is genuinely exciting. Rarer still are those \vhich mark turning Points in the nation'• political development. Over the past cen- tury, landmark conventions have taken place roughJy once every 40 years -in 1860, 1896, and 1932. Now, four decades after Franklin D. Roosevelt first won the Democr?lic presidential nomination, !t appears· f!:ia t the party's 1972 convention may achieve landmark status. EDITORIAL RESEARCH split on monetary policy. !'resident Cleveland was under bitter attack, even from many fellow democrats, for bis resolute defeo1e of the gold standard during a time of severe depressl.oq. The Republican pasiUon on the gold question was virtually identical. . ' after its capture, lingered only to murder the wives and childwt of all the local militia? Or of the Montagnard village oC Dakson, where they moved from hut to hut w i t h flame-throwers incinerati.og more than 250 villagers, two-thirds of them women and children? Most people have heard or the . ·massacres of Hue in 1968 where the Viet· cong and North Vietnamese, after its capture, executed 5,700 people . (as assessed from the mass graves found afterwards) but who knows that in cap- tured docwnents they gloated over these figures and ooly complained that they had not killed enough? These were not aberrations, nor savagery for savagery's sake, nor the work of undisciplined soldiers acting in violation of in· structions, but part of a ruthless deliberate policy designed to break a people who would not otherwise bend to their will. THE WORLD CANNOT plead ig- norance because tt has all been well documented. The evidence has been authoritatively put together · in a com. ·pendium prepared, surprisingly, for the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary (the meat was obviously too red for Senator Fulbright and the Foreign Affairs Committee). There are distressing implications for the future. II the jnvasioo succee;dl and the North takes over the South what will the bloodbath be? Four years ago I estimal«I that it would be several hun- dred thousands. I now wish to amend that figure to well over one million (out of eighteen million peoqle). THE CRITICS OF THE war may claim that the forecasts are exaggerated. But Qllonel Tran Van Dae, a Nortb Viet· namese officer who defected after twenty-four years in the Communl!t party, stated that the QlmmJnists, lf tliey win, would slaughter up ta tbtte million south Vietnamese, and another colonel, Le Xuan Chuyen, who defected after twenty-one years, stated that five million people in South Vietnam were on the Communist "blood debt" Ii!\ and that UHS percent of theae would pay with their lives. When asked lo an interview if the possibility ol a bloodbath had bee! exaggerated he replied: "It could not be exaggerated. It will happen." Sir Robert Thompson i& the Britisfl J expert on guerrilla warfare who has undertaken secret mi!sioru for Prerio dent Nixon to report on events in Vietnam. Be a Landmark BUT THE DEMOCRATIC convention of 1896 saw to it that the voters had a I choice, not an echo. "Silverttes" seized , control of the meeting and pushed through a platform that repudiated Cleveland's policies all along the line and advocated the unlimited coinage of silver as a depression remedy. A 36-year~ld silverite, William Jennings Bryan, was picked to head the presidential ticket •. Allbough lhe Democrats lost the election, they became idtntilied as the party more amenable to JOCia1 change. From all outward appearances, the Democrat convention of 1932 was nothing extraordinary. The platfonn it adopted stressed economy in government and its nominee, Roosevelt, gave no indication of being a great innovator. Once in office, though, FDR lost little limo in unveiling the New Deal. Aa _a1 result, the Democrats woo the luting allegiance of many fonnerly Rroublicqn voters and thus displ~ the GOP as the majority party. I - Several of the conditions that gave rise to earlier landmark conventions are present today. Then as now, the country was deeply divided on fundamental issues which seemed to resist political solution. In each case, one ol the major parties broke sharply with established policy. And all of the previoua landmark conventions changed the character of the party involved and led to widespread shifts in political loyalties. A Pair of Balnney Books!: IT IS TOO EARLY ta teU whether detailed com_parisons of the Democratic conventioo of 1972 with ~ of 1896 and 1932 are in 'order. Soine1eteme.nts of the gr_eal coaliUon that Roosevelt bulll clear- ly ale unhappy with Sen. George McGovern as , their party's presidential nominee and haV~ Inflcated they will give him perlunctory olipport at best. IN 1860, OF COURSE, the problem WI" slavery. The newly formed RepubUcan Party had campaigned almost ex- clusively on the anti-slavery Issue In 1856 and lost. The 1860 GOP platfonn dealt with the slavery question, but it also ap. proved ol frtt farm homesteadl, a pro. gram of internal improvemenu, an4 tariff adjustmenta Hto encourage the in- dustrial interests." lls oppeal thus broadened, t b e Republican ticket 1wept to victory. And the party soon tecame closely identified with the "industrial interests," ~ association that helped ta make the GOP the country's dominant political lon:e !or almost thrte-quarteni of a century. The Democrats in 1896 were sharply Br George ---. • CONFIDENTIAL TO T HE AMERICAN CML LIBERnES UNION: Hold off on trying to ~el my kangaroo on the 747 for Waslilngtoa. l got a case of aelec- Uve harassment tbat w111 rullJ hrn )'1111 OG I .l. ' l submit a couple of examples of what's wrong with the ailing publishing industry, New York branch. First, flashy, expensive gimmick cookbooks, like "In the Kilcbeo With Love," by Sophia Loren (Doubleday; 11.95). Sophia Loren! She bu a movie in re1ule called "Mortadella" (translate "Baloney"), and that's what I think "In the JGtcbeo Wilb Love" ls. Miss Loren pttp&JU all these dishes In her own kitchen, her publlsbers assure us -parmesan pte with truffles, mushrooms with vine leaves, 10me 300 other1, mO.Uy Italian. But where you start not ta believe It Is in the color nhotographl out of "Boccaclo 70" or r,LOdy L." 'l'h1I alone. I lhould think, would trrtlate aey .. rtous lady cook who Is not golr11 ta be looking at the rock lobster with port In these pictures, but.at the green eyea, the cleavage and nawless hairdo, at Sophia, band on chin amidst dusters of lflPOI, cantaloupe, zuccini, asporagus, tomatoes, the whole thing a painuni by 'llllan, and a very good Tl· uan too. Would Julia Child agree '1Mortadel1111? . EXllilllT ll: SeJUal autobiographies by ladies who are old enough ta know better, u witntA 0 A State of Heat/' by Sbt1la Graham (GrOSStt: 15.1$), which pull ~Clll the Hol!Jw* Ille to (THE BOOKMAN J shame, Gavin Lambert to the late Nathanael West. 'lllis, the lady tells us in effect, Is the real t!nsel. 'Ille !onner HoUywood columnist wrote an honest memoir-oJ her love affair with F. Scott Fitz.gera1d, "Beloved Infidel," in 1968. '"Ibo poor SOD of a bitch," as Dorothy Parlcer tearfully remarked at his bier, died lo MW Graham's apart. ment 32 years •go. But in thls book he emerges Just one ol the attrscU•e Miss Graham's seemingly endlesa list of male playmate. In this preposterous and heroically tasteless memoir by a clwilc qomanlac, Jf not a nym,phomaniac. At one point ahe wrlt'9: . "I AM NO LONGER young, but I am still told 1 am alb-active .•• I have bad -and sun have -all the men l ever wanted, ali the aa: esperlence I have evtr dtsirtd, $lC'CtS9' in my career, money, fame, great Jove, pfdposlls by the ""°"' aod bundredo of propoalllona." At another point ahe ctaJma ta believe that many of lodoy'a )"Olllll -1• have misplaced !helr morals. J.J.ke Sophia'1 pk:tare. "MortldeQ.I'" "*1 Wlllaa Hopi For his part, Mc(lovern aeea himself u the architect of a hewfooalltlon more at- tuned ta the timet. , It would only be natural, though. for the RepubUcans to believe that~lbo Democrats have just staged a replay~ir 11198 convention and that M Is the William Jen- ning> Bryan of Dl1ILY PILOT Rol>ert iff· Wffd, hl>IUMr Thomu Ki,,.1, UU« Albm w. Balta Edilorlal Page Editor F • - i f,;-w;--Boyd Most Playmates ~e Angelinos ,, All b~ .belnp ano female In 111< first six weeks of , llle. llelleve I mentioned that, Said ~ery wu made m theJatt,llios .. At any rate, arialng jberelrom, th~ mov .. menf ~tlnues to ~w amoog , the women's lib girls to prov~ scientifically that Eve preceded Adim.' When such proof ls absdlute, It will be printed In this space. , WBAT'Si the jllq>er, way to eat a lamb chop? N<lrle other ltilJ\ Jhat. great stat~sman of ' yesttl'.'1'8ri Winston Cbun:hill said,• "5el¢ it Iialilly In band and chew upon • lt:",; - ,: A RECENT study · el 2,000 ma,.. , rlages .provea that in 28 oul of 100 the ~ Ill 00.S,'lin 15 Out of 100 the hU>- baM is boss.'and In 37 out of 100 both j are boss.. l• MASTER muaicians live longer. · Stravinsky, casals, Stokowsid, Mon. .1 .. teui, Sibelius, Charpentier, all passed 11. . QUEENIE By Phll lnlerlandl • ThU<ld'1, July 20, 1972 DAILY PILOT f Shortages Predicted Big Power Failures Seen This Year W ASfilNGTON (UPI) -sideml nectSS311 for pro-We had boped that New Somei.resJ.dents in the East, tectioo in emergencies. England could export power Southeast and Midwest can "As a mull of Hurricane • , .if needed, bul two nuclear expect power blackouts and Agnes, the major utility serv· plants that wen expected to brownouts th.ls SUIDQ)er, ac-ing Virginia suffer'!d damage be in operation this summer cording · to John N. Nassikas, to two generating plants and will not be ready. One is the curtailment o I unessential power loads because ele<tr!c requirements already a r e· slightly higher t b a n the forecast t'O'ks for the 1172 summer season. chainnan ol the Federal its computerized system -Vennont Yankee facility just "Still more severe weather Power Commission. control center," Nassikas said. south of Brattleboro on the conditions may reasonably bf: J>oW« shortages will be e.x4 In other areas where power Connecticut River. The other expected -raising a serious perieoced in Florida, Virginia, problems are expected, is the Pilgrim plant at question as to the continuing the C8rollnas, New York City Nassikas said: Plymouth, in Massachusetts." capability of the Florida and the Dlinois-Iowa area of facilities to meet electric the Midwest, Nassikas said in -New York City: hReserve -Florida : Public appeals power loads over the mt of a copyrighted interview in generating capacity is thin. have been made for voluntary the summer." U.S. News and W<rld Report. -------------------='--------- j ·' TWINS -Sclenutic researchers claim the average 5'1$ieton UHi 109 diff~rent words to ~1 ~verage twih's 60 rds, But t1jose loquac!Ous twins, ~ Landers and Ab~ g Q':Yu Bui<n, ill!'!< DOI yit dlllcoverld this fascinating f I gathe!', "A woi:d·to the wise-that should read 'Patting· At- t ' . ,, He said the rriost serious problems would p r o b • b I y come in the Southeast , particularly southern Florida and t b e Virginia-Carolinas area where the reserve margin is CWTently .. the lowest of any region" -less than 10 percent, Reserve generating capacity of et least 20 pet'OOS .Is con- 1KNOW anybody with a flock of geese? If so, ask said • try Foprietor . to tell a male goose from a female. e i:, the female brown. THAT THE height of the average centerfold playmate ln111PJayboy" f93iuine is S..foot-1 has ~n reported. It is !JI'° true that four out of five of those young ladies live in Lof Angeles. > QUERIES -Q. "Come on, lAuie, nbe the one horse ever to win the Kentucky Derby twict. 0 1A. lmpossl~Je, How can any horse win a race only for threei-year..oldl mbre than once? • Q. t•wao was the first pro baseball catcher to crouch right behind the bat instead of itanding 15 feet back of the plate?'~ r - A. Connie Madk was:'that revolution~. NOTHING much attracted more attention years ago in any southern town than a distilling apparatus set up for display on a courthouse lawn. The sheriff, who confiscated it from some white lightning artist in the woods, put it there usually. To warn wrong doers, tut tut. Why did it altract so much attention? Sir, it announced one more lo- cal bootlegger had been put out of business, leaving an open µnarket. And lt served as a pattern for enterprising soulslwho wanted ~ set up their own apparatus, but there- tofore didn 't know how. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Boz 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Art Show Scheduled On Catalina· Island • • Amattllr and pto!essional artists ·and crsflllmen will compete' foe more than $2,000 In cub ,wards duriJW the Hlb annual C.tallna I s I a n d Featival of Arts Sept. 15-17. 'Ille Catalina Art Alaociation sponsors the non-profit event I and outdoor ·exhibit areas will mend the length of the watenront otreet bordering Avalon Bay. 'Ille craft llhow wlll center In I ne adjoining Spanish-type market place. • orney .••• Profs Study In Europe For S1Jimmer Two social science teachers from the COast Community College District are In Yugoslavia this summer study- ing that nation's political system, economic devel~ ~ ment, and church-state rela- tions. Participating in .an eight- week course are Mike Mase, a history teacher at Golderl West College in Huntington Beach, and Dr. Herrick Arnold, a political science in- structor at Orange Coast College in Costa Meaa. Purpose of the trip, which is funded through a federal grant, Is to help teachers generat~ new instructional packages for their students, college officials said. Yugoslavia was c b o s e n because it has two-year col- leges similar in structure to those in the United States, and because it has friendly rela- tions with major world powers but is not comm1tted to any power block, college officials said. when you genUy piece this necklace and pendant round her lovely neck? rwe beautiful and welJ.rnatched brilliant-cut diamonds In a pendant of 14 karat yellow gold on a chain of the aame p~s metal, What will .she.say? rind outl $150. Do Soinethlng Beautiful.,. thl11• """"" lllYlttil Alnlficen Exllfftl aant!Arnttklrd 11111 M11t.r Chirp, J1t. SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 · 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Farming Drops Open Mon. and Fri. 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. VIENNA (AP) - A study Wl11'1 loclllont Of; Torrence, Or•nt•, LI Cttrllot, u H1br1, shows that the number of Ai.o: s." °'"° •nd w Vf(ll-. farms in Austria declined byl'==================::!I' 34,300 or 8.5 percent between !:O ~~ed~e statistical Read the DAILY PILOT .• STORE HOURS: MQN.·TUES. 10 A.M.-7:00 P.M. WED.·THURS.-FRI. 10 AM.-9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 10 AM.-5:30 P.M. . SIJNDAY 12 A.M.-5:00 P.M. All of ATTA's singularly distinctive fumitu111 is marked down. This means quality sofas, chairs, dining tables, wall units, and every imaginable design accessory, including an ex- tremely large selection of drapes and wall· paper. Now is your time to save. Open Mon· day thru Saturday, !I 11 &I\ ill COLOR TELEVISION :::..._ ___________ \.,, 20 YEARS IN ORANGE COUNTY SALES AND SUYICE 9021 ATLANTf\ at MAGNOLIA HUNnNGTON llACH 968-332' SPECIAL .VA.LUE .. t 41it RCA . 2 7 5 ALL fAMOUS ell' QUALITY • 3 YNr Picture Tube Warranty e 1 Y•er Parts • 1 Year S•rvlc• 1tCJ. 16''o;agonal color TV FREE \ Color Antlftna ln1talled w~h AA RCA & Zenith Consoles Purchased. lnshlllod Wllft Any Table Model or Portable at $39.95. k, UHF VHF FM / ' ' ' ' I i ; n.tDEGM•CtDllW Gralntd AtMrlcan Walnut COior. 19"' diag.S~ ttandcratted Titan Chllllis. SUper VldeO Ran0t Tuning ..L-------~--"E~R..162;:::::_-'s~ta~oo~i~~~lu~~· ~----------------_J X.L.100 SOLID STATE I • ' ...... '*"""' ..... .,.rNflty, • I yelr "'"' • I )'9tr 11t1N -·-· .... System. Automatic Fine-tuning Control. Automatic Tlnt Gu1rd COntrol. C-4730X From Zenllft THIS SET IS A WINNER IRJRRY! SUPPlY UM'"li ... E ... D! AYAIU.ILE WITH llMOTS CONTlltOL Zenith 25" Diagonal Handcrafted Maple Tllfs •• ...., • 9-lful Pltc• of Fumllllr• 25" Diagonal GX-726 $5 9 8 • ·Chromacolor Tube • Automaitlc Fine T.mlno . ' • Autem1tlc Tint Control • r11 .. 100 chnols CONTEMPORARY WALNUT $529 Price lncludtt AnttnM IMtalled Price llldtod11 frff Alt-I•....,. WHY BUY FROM ABC? • No. Fl-•• Cflmtes If .P.W lo 90 Day> or No Do!fw ...r 36 MOllfts hi Pay 1-1 e I y-Frn p-• 1 y-"'" Stnlco • J Y-Plet11re Tilbe w., .. ty • Free Delivery aH Sat Up e ilclllcAM.,lcard/Mast., CMrgt e Wo Smlco What .Wo Sell e We how O.r ,,....., IMldo ...i Oat ... ~~~~~~~~~~~....1 This Slim·Line 19" diagonal Portable is Ideal For Shelf Units e A1-lc Color C0111ro1 1972 CLOSEOUT PRICE INCLUDES AIOYE ANTENNA INSTALLID 1973 RCA SETS • A'lltoMatlc Tlftt • All-le Fino T1nl09 CloM Out Price IN STOCK AND ON DISPLAY $399 ' ( • .,-, . . . . .-. . . ~ . . ... ~ • Daugh ter f11 B eauty Show Minister Told to Resign l£T'S BE FRIENDLY If )'OU hevt> 1'1l'W neighbors or know or anyonl' moving to our ere11, plcUQ trll us 10 that "''" may extend a friendly vt'elconic and hel11 them to bci=omc acquainted. In their new surroundings. ATHENS, Ala. (AP) -Four elders have asked t h e i r minister to resign because hls pretty dau ghter wore a swimsuit in a beauty pageant which she won. Your Other members of the West Hobbl Street Churcll of Christ are clrculating a petition seek- ing the-ouster of the four men. Both the minister, Char !es Marshall, and his daughter, Move Political Cliess Played CHICAGO (AP) -President Nixon and Sen . George McGovern are the kings, Henry A. lGssinger and Eugene J. McCarthy the queens and llubert H. Humphrey wears the bishop's robes in the newest gimmick or th~ political year-Chess '72. 17·year-old Becky, declined to the 400 members bet ore comment. demanding that the Rev. Mr. Miss Marshall, a 5-foot-7 Marshall resign from the blonde, was named Miss Spirit pastorate he has held for nine [ Am j years. " o erlca uly 4 at a If more than hall the pageant in Decatur, Ala. members sign, the foul will be so. Coast Yi$ltor She also was named Miss asked to give up their posts. Photogenic and Ironically the Miss Marshall will be a 4~9 494-9UI photograph of her used in the drum majorette this !all for Harbor YilSl'tor judging waa taken by one of the third year at Athens High the four elden, Charles Bain School. The majorette cos-..._..174 a professional photographer. ' _jtu~m~es~ar~eino:t:as~br~ie~!:u:the~~~~~~~~~~~ Herbert Chittam rtad a one-piece swimsuit she wore in statement to the church Sun· the pageant. day saying he and the other * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * three had asked 'f.farshall to y AV I N If'! S resign because o! the "Image MER CU R S "1' that has been cast upon the church recently." and loan association RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN SCHOOL MOVES TO NEW 22-ACRE IRVINE FACILITY Principal John DolMonaco Looks Over Suppllo1 Sticked In Mul ll·pur-Room itarc Howard or Detroit said the idea came to him as he slept fast November. The political lineup behind the Nixun and McGovern kings includes Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy on McGovern's side and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and former Atty. Gen. John W. Mitchell on President Nixon 's. Marshall was not allowed to preach Sunday a n d a substitute minister conducted serv ices. • One or the elders said they have agreed not to comment Big Step lJpward Rancho School Moves To 'Dreamy' Locale Rancho San Joaquin lntennedlate School Is in Its new building at 486 Mlcbtl5on Avenue In Irvine, and prtn. clpalJglm DelMona<Q thinks it i.. ao ·mu~h like a dream, he'll wak~ UR to find Jt "taken away.N 'lbe 22-acre site will be open for students in Septentber.--!fhe- differences between , lt &na forrD.er ll·acre quarters on Sand Canyon Avenue in East Irvine are great, DelMonaco Pointe out. t1Jt11 strange walking where there's carpeting,'' he en- thuses as he takes a tour or the classroorna. "I'm going out of my mind." Deaks, boo\I, files, chair•, supplies and other , ltemS bekqing lo Rancho San Joe· quln and Ill peraonnel were moved in lw than a month durlni June and July. Room had lo be made lo Mislabelin g_ Of Sausage Under Study WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Agriculture Department would like to find out U you agree there is a single style of sausage w h i c h cOnsumers •enerally would recogniu as '°Italian Sausage.'" Department o!!lclat. is!Ued the appeal because a meat packer filed a petition for authority to label one of his prod uctl as "Italian Style Sausage." Under Federal law, a meat product using a place name - but not made in that place - must add the word "style" to its tlUe. And furthermore , or- ficials said, "when the word 'style' is used, there must be a recognized . . . product Iden tlfied with and peculiar to the area represented by t h e geographic term ." Before ruling on the petition, officials decided to get vtew5 from consumers to find out if they agree there actual.,, is a "dislinc tive style or type of prod uct recog nized as 'Italian Sausage.' " Spokesmen said comments on the proposal should be sent t o th e Ag riculture Department's hearing clerk in. roo m 112 -A of the de partmen1's headquarters here. • allow pmonnel and students at the 45-15 achoo!, El Camino Real, move into the former Rancho quarters by July 10. A beginning enrollment of 988 and an ending enrollment In June of 1,100 are predicted for Rancho. 1be San Joaquin School Di>\rlct is hoping lo get funda to add sit classrooms to 'R.anchoi where classe11 in the library and on the stege are already being planned because space is tight. The Jecture room of the Jibrary will have reading classes in it. The library has a unique feature: students will be able to don wireless earphones and tuue In lo FM radio stations or tapes thanks lo winless transmitting equip- ment beneeth C?e ru g. Only the physical education, woodshop, electronics, cooking and arts and cralU c1 ..... aren~ carpeted. All clasarooma hive sliding accordion doon end e111. open up-to-each-other fo..........!.1n~ JbJlUy, ,, DelMOD,!;CO says. DelMonaeo wu joined ·on part ol hia tour by cooking teacher Sharon Ludwig, who guped when abe aow the apace in her oew room. In the old one, two peop:e couldn't walk down one aisle at the same time, she commented. The school bas a quarter- mile track, 12 basketball courb, a tennis court and four handball courts, equipment !or an obstacle -course, o n e pennanent baseball backstop. five portable bacGtops and showers and lockers for both boys and girls. A central titcllen is being installed at the l!<'.bool but won't be ready by September. A snack bar will. It opens onto a quad areR !ealuring brick planters In which students last spring put geraniums and trees i n preparation for next Sep- tember. Graduating eighth graders last June donated $400 lo put tile, benches and a tree in a small square in front of the school, DelMooaco notes. The school is equipped to receive and broadcast closed circuit television. Moat of the supplies are still in boxes staked in the multi· purpose room. DelMonaco and many of his teacbers will be spending August p u t t I n g everything in ils place and "'aiting ror September to use their new school. • WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF OlANGE COUNTY now 1cceptin1 mon ind womon who ,.,. eithor: • • .,., 1 I with 2 1''"' .t aue,1...ie ull .. • ,,...111 lt O): •r e ..,., 2J •"41 11.•t 1MtlM<I !,. 'llll•f9flf I,._ .. n.n..i .i111y it.. "l~hlaltftt ti aMvt l'- M iMttmilMll •r '-'11 n.. J.D. • ll.I. dtgrn can h. etmtd ln A y.111 of plM't·t:IM cl•IMll 3 dHMI per -~; 3.4 "'°"'" ptt' (ltn. A !p.Kl1I "°O"-of '~"" d 1nel on S.l\ltdlP')' r, av1ilabl1 for fl"t•y.tr 1tvdtfi'1. Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes Wl)TI 01 '"°"' fOI IMfOIMATIOH Ot CATAlOCUI 100 South Brookhurst Anaheim 92104 17141 635-3453 All Tied Up ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) -Twenty Boy Scouts at St. Peter's College tied 76,505 knots in 36 hours. Chicago merchants carrying the game say it 's b.een selling well. It was a $25,000 risk when the game went on the market in May, but it has paid off in brisk sales which have been spurred by the w or I d championship chess matches. Electra...._ DELUXE HOME-STEREO ,,,.., ENTERTAINMENT CENTER ~-~-;, , . • FM/AM/FM/AFC/MPX Stereo radio receiver 1 • I-track stereo !ape player • Bullt·ln deluxe BSA 4-speed reeord changer • Oust cover • '45 RPM Adaptor • MulU·speaker aulo gyslem • Headj>hone Jack receptacle • Slide-rule lever controls • Black-out dlal • Automallc/manual channel selector •Cabinet size: ~9Y.z"' x 8Yi."' x SlZ" 91 OUR RES. 139.95 on the matter. Meanwhile, 13 copies of a petition began circulating among the church members. It says that the signers no longer recognize the rour as elders, claiming they acted in haste and without consulting I I t,I f CRAIG ' . creAl'3 PORTABLE CASSETTE AM RADIO RECORDER INSTANT REPLAY CAPABILITY D.C. oitcf A.C. powff. Note: a.tNr- wh•• tho .A.C. cerd k •IH. CRAIG MODEL 2607 CRAIG MODEL 2611 LARGE SELECTION PRE-RECORDED I TRACK oocl CASSETTE TAPES $3.63 I I •,1 . f ' ' . NORR CO FLASH CUllS SUNSET C0 60 CASSmE TAPES 66' 39' SMALL AM BROADCAST RADIO SPECIAL MODEL 1106 ' . •. 1 .• ~. f GAF COLT 84 SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA I . I ' ANSCOMATIC SC/91 SU PER 8 MOVIE CAMERA GAF ST/104 SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA ...... r JMft'I at la MOMm"f prtco , , , 4 ft I ,..., utn1 !till 11M fltcfriC I" • "' perltct UllMll~ untm. r I -IJIHI _...._ mtinl II :W. • • ., aitfril Urtrlftt ,...,..., OUR HG. $7695 $119.95 Open Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.~ p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., V1lleyView al Lincoln HUNTINGTO N BEACH Mercury Savings Bldg., Edin&er at Beach TUSTI N Mercury Savings Bldg., Irvine Blvd. it Newport Ave. ***************** INSTANT LOAD argus 345X CAMERA KIT e HANDY W RIST STR AP e CARTRIDGE OF COLOR FILM 1.695 e FLASHCUBE (4 fl1shes) OUR . $2387 REG. ~ m1eeo m Slide Projector 4795 Forwm'd, rnerse, foc•s controls on remote c:ord and at pro(tcto , • , f /l.5 focusl119 lens , •• 500 watt brllinc:e • • 11ff c:ot1taJntcl carrying c:aM • , , GAF 100 slldo Y1rtlcal tray. • ' ' 0 1 t I f ' -I I ' I ...J,, 1 i e -l-ie MODIL 101 AM CLOCK RADIO ----. - Jllil I· q I ~ I .. -~ $1995 ' m e m ti a in d of I b a fi • d 4 f t •• PILL MACHINE MAKES WORK EASY Technlcl1n Ken McC1uley Filla Order 'Pill Popper' OK'd For Vse by HDspital A mechanized pill-popper Is making things easier for everyone at Soutl) c:oast Com- munity Hospital. After a year of trial opera- tion at the hospital an automated system of dispens- ing and distributing 55,000 doses, has received approval of doctors, nurses a n d pharmacists at the hospital. Called the "Unit D o s e Medication System," the proj· ect has saved many hours for phannaclsts, e I i m l n a t e d possibility of errors in filing prescriptions a n d relieved nurses f r o m Individually measuring out tablets and medications for patients. A machine automatically ?..>raps, and label.a medications with the name, strength and dosage . After a physician writes a prescription, a copy ia sent directly to the pharmacy where a profile card is made for each patient showing all the medicine be will receive during a 12-bour period. The card also provides the pharmacy with an on-going record of rnecfications for reference, safety and possible incompatibilities. A special drawer maintained Jn-the pharmacy Is dlvided in- to four to six lime slots. Each of the time slots are filled with patients' medications a t prescribed times and then delivered immediately to the respective nursing stations for use distribution to patients. Grand Canyon May Fall Prey to Smog-Report DENVER (UPI) -A federal agency says the Grand Canyon could fill up with haze, and aspen groves on Colorado hillsides could be stripped of their Jeaves unless restrictions are placed on power·plant development in the West. The report, revealed Tues- day by the Denver Post, was issued by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in connection '\lith a Southwest energy study commissioned by the Interior Department. The Denver newspaper said the EPA bas tried to keep it• comments out of public view by squelching a proposed news release on the report. The comments were sub- mitted to Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton June 2S by Robert Fri, EPA deputy administrator, the newspaper said. The report warned that fisheries in a four .state study area (Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah) could be destroyed by sulphate deposits which will find their way from Waste Savers TOKYO (AP) -A factory In Nanking, China, recovered 46,000 tons of useful industrial material worth $2'h tnil1ion from waste over the past three years, declared a report published tn the o 111 c la I Chinese journal P e k I n g Review. the power plants to streams and wateroheds. The visibility or vistas across unspoiled distances of more than 50 miles will be reduced to a hall-mile and the Grand Canyon and other can- yons along the Colorado River below Lake Powell could fill up with hazy particuJates, the report added. It also warned that aspen groves in Colorado could be defoliated to meet growing water needs of large industrial plants. In addition , dangerous heavy metals such a s poisonous arsenic, selenium and mercury can be expected to find their way into soil and wate r. Although the report focused on coal.fired power plants being developed in Arizona. Nevada, New Mei:iro and utab, the EPA indicated its conclwiorui also could apply to Colorado, Montana, Wyoming and North Dakota where other power plants are being con- templated. In his letter to Morton, Fri said t h e Interior Depart- ment had failed to take en- vironmental factors into ac- count when composing the draft of the Southwest energy study summary. He wrote: "In particular, we conclude that the Issues of meeting environmental air standards; degradation of visibility; water salinity and supply; poWer plant siting and evaluations of alternatives to coal-fired power plants have not been adequately examined and analyzed ." , I See by Today's Want Ads e IF YOU'RE LOOl<ING FOR A TERRIFIC car, here It la: thl1 '72 Audi 100 LS, 6000 mil°' SJ>ec. metaUlc red with alt ~ ditioalng, AM/FM radio and leath('rclte interior. e YOU'IL BE ON THE MOVE in lhll 19' 5-· cn.tt power boo.I. It'• an lnboord/outboord with 120 HP. Plus &!ilk, Ice box, head, bait llnk, S/S radio, lki. and a V1n101t trall('I' • -Thursday, July 20, 1m DAILY l'ILOI' I) Draft Call to Hit 75 in September 1st & 2nd R.E. LOANS WASHINGTON (AP) - Selective Service announced Wednesday that 4,!00 men will be drafted in September with lottery numbers no higher than 75, the wne callup ·celJ. Ing u in August. This Is tho m1alleit callup of the year since drifting resum- ed in April after a three-month halt. MARK C. BLOOME . WORLD'S LEADING Tiii DEALE '!be April, May, June call wu lumped toge~r at 15,000 Ind 7,200 were drafted ... July Ind 8,9tl0 in August The 4,800 callup for September will raise the year's total to SS,900 of the 50,000 the Defense Department has asked for this year. All draft.., are going into the Army this year, which meanwhile h., pushed It\ June wu !Is best over-alt recruiting drive with such male ehlistment month in IW'fs as a $1,500 bonus for nearly three years, with 18,175 those joining the combat 1rm1 •lgnlng up. for lour yean. '!be uoual Actlng draft director Byron enlistment period Is three V. Pepltoa. llld the callup years while draftees serve two ceiling is remalnlng at 75 years. because sufficient men will be< The Arrny Recruiting Com-available in tbie manpower l!llDd al llamptoo, V1 .,.Wd pool . with that •WJlber Ind lower ones. Mosl of these are men classified IA and !AO who rt<ently lost deferments or whose inhlal postponements of Induction uplre during September. A 1A is a man available for e SI ,000 t. SS0,000 .......... • ,., a.L a.celf. e ,...q.,14 ....... CALL 847-5200 RELIABLE mllitary service. A lAO is con-0n"" ca. ~ m•t nWM> seientious objector willing to 1u• eMltct • w11 go Into the military for non·i••ti'ii•i'iii11'1i"ii-...iiiiiiiii'iii"'iit'ii'"'ii11• combat duty. 1- 1JUSES-DIBECT~TO YOU! ••• & r.BEE'INSl'.111.l./ll'ION ••• OPEN Nll'ES 'I'll. 9 BRAND NEW r..1>e1e .. 5.60a:l5 5.60a:l3 1.00 .. 13 DATSUN12~§ 10"''0.,.'A .. , ........ ,. • ~~ t.$1.95faod. IL T•• 5.00 .. 1 s s.20,.15 5.20,.14 s.20,.13 6 .50xl 3 7 .75xl;; *1295 ea eh OR ••• The fam;,:• Un iroyal larede Multi lib tire also ·~·Jl".P.;i;il ... col led the "loin Ti,.. ... Thistir• has been purchased by 1ttillion• of 1Gti1fied cu1tomers thruovt the nation. 7,75,.14 (E78/14) 7.35,.14 (F78/I 4) 7.75,.15 (F78/I S) 1395 a.s5,.J 4 <H1"i'/14> 8.55,.15 (H78/JS) .1995 95 S.60"'15 6.50rl3 RI•: (871/13) AJi11•tt,enice wi~2Tirt hrcUs1. fill Sizt U.S. Cars iKl•fts ciect 11• c1rr1ct casttr, c1•itr, tie i1, wiere 1ec1ssary. Air c11fitl11ef cm 1.15 dfiti11al. Now Only ~adial · B .el.ted. Tubeless Whitewalls LOW PRICED! TIRES for PICKUPS. VANS CAMPERS & TRUCKS LOW PRICES! DISC BRAKE.JOB llZI rlKI f.LT, 8.00-16.5 .. 134" .... 8.75·16.5 .. 136 .. •.7• 10.00-16.5 .. '44" .... ALL 4 WHEELS REGlJLAR DR.VMTYPE 1. HISTM.L •EW 4 llSC PUS llf fllll' 1. llfSTALL MEI ... n.-Kt WllULS ,.,c,,. UJllMC ott Ml' NnS t Tltlf AU FIOl'J ltSt ll"lllS =-t IE•fll M.l 4 Wll8. tn.•IS 1 MSPlCT Ill F111t ISC CM.I'm •-S. PACI fltlflll((l UlllS 4.1£PACI flOlfTWllUL IEAllMCS 4. Tll:lf I IES•FACEML 4 t•S S. &It IUU fllll & IUII UlllS 5. AOO IWE fUlll l llEll LIMES I. tWSHCT IWTtl mtJIDU l llfSPltf IUl( •nv•• • .. I"•-~ 'r--,,,,,...J._, NWlllrtllllSlllSU ' .triCTM.l1W.ClSSAIT ... ,,. J.MCCllJlllALLlllU.SllO IUllUE & SH:llCS t.JMsrtCTfltflTllW[ SW.S I. ClllCl IUIE MUSES -.. •-'•• L llll l"~-s I• I 1 _ I, IWSPECTCIEASE SW.S •J"'l#t• 6 UMllC SN~••uu IF vr llltillffSTfHSAFm ~"--··" 1llllMTUTFllWm 8 29!~:. .._ ..... .hW ............ ,.. ............................. ...... Balancing •is• Per Jf'M-el + Jf eigh.t1 2. STRONG BELTS 165xl3 .•29es fi11: IS.90/6.001 13)" · !..~~;;,!, •.34 95 • • 205xl4 •37115 1i1J: IG78/1.fl 215xl4 ,3911s lit1: !Hi8/14) r.~! ,~.~~~. • 3911s ~!,;!;.~,s ,44 ss The NEW 7 Rib tubel.i11 2+2 tires which mean 2 ply cord plus 2 ply BELT for your greot•r prot•clion. Known for ih p•rformo1tt:e & handling, this outstctnd ing tire is no'w O'l'oiloble of these low prices , , • the new Loredo • "BELT!D 78 · seri•s WHIT!WALLSI I~~ 95 F78n4 f•ch. + .$2.Sl ta Sl.12 fH. (a. To• depend. 1,.. wpe11 th1 1i1e. Blacktcafb 82.95 Le••! J78/14 J78/IS low fi'ric1il , , • Uniro0yol otiginal •qulpment on millions of new cars •• , double Qfais·b.lted for your safetyll Hurryll F78/14 • F78/1S GlB/14 G78/t5 HlH/14 Hi8/15 * ~OR ALL FIJLL SIZE lJ.S. CARS, Except tel( .. dj. br•keti Sl .i5 per wheel add'1l Mark C. •••••e triilf tt•t d• •~•• , •• ,. • A78/l3 C78/13 C78/14 E78/14 * SAFE 811AKE 1081 INSTALLATION AYAILAIU CMdl1M,.,.;111.,.t11.,.,.;.1 htr• • nu !11"' lllilt 11 • .., .. ....,. ...., ., &ti All •I IM *" ftcll , .. IM9 '-1"• ti 1 '*'' 11 lfl. "k• 1--- •1r• '2l95 '2295 '2395 L78/15 '2695 '2995 •3395 '3695 C.11 ,_ ~114 -qrM1111-. 4"'-. • .... ,. .. -...,...,. ""'°'"" "'-'' 11t.t1! '•Jtti 2 .AIOCD 111111 ma ,, ·~ ,,,, 11 ...... ""·•llffvtte~ _1...,.qll11M11r, ....... ~-~~:.::-.:::.~::' :=:i::~ l•l•M•' ... '"'! ... , •• ,SU.IS o•r11111r CMl!llld"" I ...... ~ .,.,"1 ~. '"'· ,,_.1,_111 .. ....._u. •• .;;.~ LllJS Mfltitul. ••t• "•1111..., wit• •IM"''"· 1 t------.---;;;.;;~;;;.---...... ;.;,;;;;;;,:;:,:::.;:=:..1 --- - ---- -• llTII TIS C... ., ----~ Costa Mesa Garden Grove La Habra Buena Park Fullerton 3005 14040 ' 2000 2962 1321 H1rbor Ill. Brookhunt Whlttl1r Ill. Llnatln Ill. lo. Euclid ·-·el laktr, (car.elW_I_ (ctr. tf Whittler & HarW) ·--) & -h) (cor. el UM ... &K-) JI Ilk. N. ti -·Fwy.) (714t557-IOOO (714) 530-3200 ff4.3666 (714) 126-5550 17141170.0100 . O.t-••••f,.,itrl1 .. ......,...,..,..,ff,_Mw..,,..._ .... ._, .. ~ ... ~-~ .. ,....,.._ ... , -9'...-llf C-Mt.ln.Mr• I.~ (11 JJ 1,.._.717 ... at1..t.ief.." -.... ._ ..n "'"' ,_ _..., • ...... a...tc" ............... -.t .................................. ....... .. Si11ee 11.J.4" Jf DAILY PILOT ·-· '. Fo1· The Record Births Marriage Lkenses •• l'hursd.\y, Jul)' 20, }<,, .. Attorney's Appeal Scheduled SANTA ANA -Newport Beach attorney Evuett Eldon Stone's appeal of hi 1 municipal court conviction o~ lewd conduct charges has been scheduled for bearing Aug. 31 by the Orange County Superior Courts appellate division. At Issue before the three- Judge panel will be a Santa Ana munlciptil court jury's guilty verdict on charges filed by a city police officer who testified that St.one made im- prOJ>er advances In the rest room of a public park. Jud ge Mast :suspended a $SCIO fine and CC'.!Unty jail term and placed stone on probation. The lawyer has since engaged Los Angeles attorney Barry Tarlow to handle his appeal. stone. fl, has since been charged with bribing a witness who testified for tum in the municipal 'court trial. It is alleged that he paid the witness $500 of an allegedly promised $1 ,000 fee in return for his fal se testimony. Stone who lives in Newport Beach and praclices Jaw in Santa Ana, has been ordered to face arraignment July 2S in Superior Court. He is free on hi> promise to appear. He faces four felony counts of subornation of perjury and one count of bribing a witness. Stone also faces an inoui.ry into his conduct by the State Bar of Callfomia. Tarlow is handling his defense in that issue. ORANGE COUNTY 6 Women Seek Raises SANT.A ANA-Six women employes who claim they're doing the work of men but get- ting inferior pay want an Orange County Su perior court judge to order a halt to what they claim 15 discrimination practised by a Los Ai}amitos finn. Betty F. Burke, Maxine A. Thompson , ~1arion A. West, Winona M. Lambert, Vera McCall and Ruth E. Morgan name Arrowhead Products, 4411 Katella Ave., in their ac· ti on. The six laminators claim the firm has refused to raise them from "B" status to the "A" Jevel enjoyed by male workers despite the provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act cited ln their complaint. All six women ask for im· ID'!diate correction of their working status and for back pay dating from Feb. 1, 1971. Rapid Transit Passes 'On Sale' for August night. The fares are effective all day on weekends and holidays. :,-.... '' *! ·i!;N·RICKLES -Devtd, 11, of .,, , » SIJt.,.,111 St,1.. APt. M-302. • •. • '"ct\~nd ~h11r011 Ann.· 11; •.t fll' l Gteenbr"' ll:l'llld, lent• .-,.,, ·.<HR ~!SEN;Vl ·A.TEL -Gl--nl'I SANTA ANA -Rapid Tranait Districl's-regular and senior passes for Orange County Citizens f o r the month of August will go on sale Tuesday. Monthly passes in Orange County, as well as tickets, will be on sale at RTD offices at 130 East Commonwealth, Fullerton Md 201 N o r t h Sycamore. Santa Ana. '•Jw, 41, of 25117 Ar.f> Drlv•, '•'~ "'"'--•nd Oorcmly le""l1n1111, '••• , el U2 --E,,......., 1y, l.alllllfl ::• iroc.ti.Y.Jl!NS\N -We~ Clltrl" :•: .. l'.:_!! =' ~r• u~n4:"''k~~1 ·:•··E"Rm UM, Huntington !!each. • .. ·tE~Rl(E.ORLISkl -Mn k oll, ~ ·,.•, Ill fi'•1rt a.1:r h lend 'IM ;::: i••ue111~~~V' ~· ... c~1t1 1nt.r ·.~ .OUHHAM -G•or•• .... ~ • of ... .,. '~"' •"'" •.•, flifo ttind Linde Arle«I. 17, ·~ .o MtlftnOll• Av•. ....,. 211. ·:'tt H -WALklll -,. r •~" • ,., , of 3IO'Jll Wall~I • 'or' J. , • Mllll lf'd Lindi •rt, ~ • WtU.c. $1n91, Apt, o, ~LA!j~NKLE -Otnl• Roy, 21. .. ~, .. '"· D. ""'"""' V ·~ Kit Olel!IM, 11, fll' ff52 , •~i,l 1;1,,11ntlrttl011 lt1Cl'I. '• flAK ·~R ~fl -Jofln Rlci'lerd ~;! ~ ofO I 9~IVI Jiet'~g]l'I J'''at ,. g,·~"'" "' 11· ....... l ••. '• RTI H·O.C.\I -Jemn "' ""'' ''-•• Mir• Mer AW.~ ADI. •:...••11. ·~·· -r. .mt Kelttryl'l "'nd""s. ,,.1., ~· -Mir• MM ,,..... NI s. •n ...... a-i.. ,,., ,_ ,, , ?--'~~·"g>'(. -M~~-Hr.:::. ,, _ I r: L.ell1 Jo, U, of f2f 1A ~, • .~r•d•. ll!llM llea(hl , 33 , u e.su NS -Aon.e d o.wa"' .... , • ~A lt:i'fJ Or~~· 01nio P1>l11f ell(ll '.t &~:. 01n~1'Po1nf.' of Kit( "Mio :•°t.l~ISENO, JR. -LOPEZ -Mert1111 • 11t!TWI, 21, of l3lS2 M•l•1• Orlve1 ·., • "" PolnT arid MtrlJI et-, 21 o ;.; 1/r.J: P•-Ot+ Valle. i...1110. •:•)rl~"~·STU£TTGl!N -A us tel l :-,;. ·~ 21. of 12101 s11"' une1 '• • Grov! •nd Shlrlc~ Ann, !9. o ;..•. S6 _.,. rH L1ne').';;Cml1 M1w. •' EAFFEA, Jll.·WHIT -Robert -c:•.Fr•nklln.1" of 2031 Mlrn, Ap1. , ,' ·14~11 MMe •nd o.brl Lvn, It, of ,• • • 11¥!'1'11 $t_ Coslt ~W. .• • G NE.&MI 1 H -Olllne Robert. 20, ~ .' ~~ Slit RCl!.llel Hime! el'ld Al'ln ,•.· !' "I or ntO O.t ,,,.,,, ,•, ·1>1!11 1 n Ve'''· The exact !are p I a n eliminates the need !or ready cash: The plan offers one-zone riding passes for $12; two-zone peS!:es for $15.50; three-zone passes for $19; four-zone passe1-tor $22.50 and five-1.0ne passes for $'l6 . • Single zone senior citizen monthly passes sell !or $9 . App!Jcation for senior citizen reduced · fare permits are available from the L o s AngeJes County Deoartment of Senior Citizen Affairs, 60J South Kingsley Drive, Los An~eles 90005 or at local senior clubs and centers. The new dime fare for seniors -reduced from 20 cents -is available on weekdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and from 7 p.m. to mid- Population Conference Set at UCI They also can be ordered by mail from the RTD Ticket Of· lice, 1060 South Broadway Los Angeles 90015. Auction Set For 20-acre Border Land SANTA ANA -Twenty acres of Jand once designated by Orange attorney Samuel Hurwitz as the site of a $5.1 million, IS..story office building will be sold at public auction Aug. 2 to satisfy the lawyer's $271,313 debt to architect William Pereira. The marshal's a u c t I o n , ordered following O r a n g e County SUperior Court Judge Raymond Thompsoi,'s ruling in favor of Perelra. is schedu1· ed for 10:30 a.m. in the main lobby of the county ···f'NSELL·ANOERSON -Anthon' Pobln .. towt.MI, 2t1 of !mt Siii.,, Apt. 3-::: r:~"'W~t·A'.~1 ~:n~":t.~ ~'t:.!:: .,,,_ 1 LL·MYE s -si.•Mn wa,n., Effects of Orange County's •, , offOI ell ROid H1111t1,,.lfJI\ · pl . courthouse . Pereira successfu11y sued Hurwitz for non-payment of substantial architects' fees Jn.. volved in tbe designing of a high rise building adjacent to Fashion Square and the Town and Country complex on the Santa Ana-Orange border. •, · :ff and Me~• Jean. 21, of "°' ex osive population growth : • • 1 RNd, Himt 1r11ton B•Kh rate will be discussed at a :·. Death Notices • • ~ALTZ BERGERON •• • FUNERAL HOME •Corona de! MJlr 613-MSO Colla Mesa 146-IU4 • • • BELL BROADWAY :· MORTUARY • lll Broadway, Costa Mesa • lJ s.3m •• '.( McCORMlc\ LAGUNA ·, BEACH •AORTUARV :· 17'5 Lapna canyon Rd. fff.1115 :; •• • • PACIPIC VIE?. MEMORIAL PARK Cemeler7 Mortuary ~ ....__. ,'. v""'"'• : INt Plldlle .VleW Drive Newpo!t -, caJJlonlla ffl.ml PEEK 'AMILY •• COLONIAL FUNERAL BO~ "IOI Boin Aw. W•tlllluiet snn llll1Tlll' afonroAJIY 11111111181. a .. ....,.._. ·- conference Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at UC Irvine. The p u b I I c conference, "Population Growth : What Policy for Orange County," is sponsored by the Orange County Citizens Direction Finding Commission and UCI Project 21 . The UCI project study team , headed by James Workm an, former mayor of Villa Park, has published a report on county population goals. Participants in the con- ference will receive copies of that report as well as excerpts from the county planning de pa rtment's "Population Growth a n d Development Strategy Study." Registration fee is $5, in- cluding lunch. For addilional information, call UCI Ex- tension at 833-5414. Hurwitz has filed an appeal against Judge Thompson's rul- ing after the jurist denied a motion for a new trial No date has been set for the hear- ing of the appeal. Car W q,rning Light Bill Past Pan.el A bill authored by Assemblyman Kenneth Cory, (0-Garden Grove ), to authorize deceleration warning lights on the rear o f Inmate Dies automobile•. ha• passed th• Senate Finance Committee. Such lights would be op- 1 Stabb• tional to motorists. }} mg The Lights, either red or am- ber, would relay pulses that CHINO (AP) -At lea!lt would vary with the speed or seven persons have been held deceleration. These would in- for queslioninc in the stabbing form following motorists thf! death of an inmate at the rate tbe vehicle waa slowing California Institution for Men down. here , a spokesman says. .--'----------1 Robert E. Zapala. 25. o1 Duarte, died Monday about two hours aller being stabbed several times jn the chest in the educatkl n area of the prison's minimum $ecuTity section, the !pOkesman said. Zapata Wat serving a Ont a ANTHONY SCHOOU year-to-lire sentence for a 1972 HAltOI CINm robbery conviction in Orange uoo "'""' c'"'i.r County. lie was tratl!ferred to Cott• Mm, c.tr,.mi. the facility here last February Pio. 17141 f1t·2111 after serving three month> 11' '"' ~ •-"· a . eoaaervaUon camp. Jb,t ,., ~ ;-.:;:. opoltomlan aald. 1-.... -----• ' Dies of ln.j11ries Boat· Crash Fatal To County Woman IHONGN•"i(ONGI A VERY SPECIAL OFFER NEWPORT BEACH 2 SUITS ONLY REDDING (AP) -A 23- year-old Garden Grove woman died Wednesday from injuries suffered in a boat collision on Whiskeytown Lake Sunday. Folker, 29, of 5902 San Soucie Drive, Huntington Be a ch , driver ol the boat Mis.! Gil- lette was in. Hospital authori~ ties described her as "recover- ing" from multiple leg and rib fractures. Ml•'S k•<T $6& 00 NO CUSTOM DUTY $9900 SUITS OflllY 1 With PurchaSI of Z Suits U.S. Park Service officers said Eileen Gillette suffered a fractured skull when tbe boat she was riding in collided with another boat Sunday evening . She died in Memorial Hospi tal here. Also injured was Marcia Park Service investigators said the driver or the oUler boat, Lisa McElmurry, 17, of Lompoc, was not hurl. The collision is still under in- vestigation, officers said, and no charges have been brought. SILICT ,l:OM OVllt 1.oot IMl"OITIO JAM,Llil S.. fllfleY 9f ~ k•nt I •a• I II Sweai.n, ltldtll l~l1MMHllllll .... ........ 011'1 ... •1111 IMftV 9tW llttM. T W• lft 1111 1lr• -Dtllftry 3 "• Wffkl •Y Air. SATISFACTION GUARAHTllDI M•11'1 Silk Wool Suit , • SSZ.00 M•n'• Sharktki11 S11it , • Sl8.00 M.,.., P11r• Silk S11it •• s•s.oo C•1hm•r• Top Coal• •• S71.00 M•n'1 SiJl.Wool S11ih •• Sl6.SO Cathm•r• Sport Coaft S35.00 Cathm•r• Ov•reoah •• 558.50 Shirt• !Monogramm•dl $5.SO Din11•r Jee~•h •• , , , • $45.00 - All the time to take advantage of ' tremendous savings on beautiful floor S!Jmples, one of a .kinds, d/sconUnued models, plus the outstanding value.s listed below ••• SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $ . •• .every way to sleep! Queen Size Twin or Full Elegant is the word for this superb Ortho bed. Loaded with all the features of Ortho's finest beds. Now at fabulous savings. 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The nation's largest chain of mattress specialists S~NTA ANA and ANAHEIM FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1111 Wall Lincoln Avenue ,16131 Harbor Blvd l1twnl'I Euclid 111d l tool h11t1t A••n111• Ccor11er of Ul1t91r) N1xt to Zffy'1 Jurt •••t 1f F.d M•rt Phol'l11 IJt.-4570 , ....... 774-16t0 ORlNGE 720 No. Tustin A••· • On• ll•ck So•th tf Collin• ln1ri t• Mich•1l'1 Merk•tf Pho..11 6)J.St02 LlKEWOOD , 4433 Candl1wood Avanua Candlawood Shops Phori11 tl4-4JJ.4 l1crott ftofll L1l1woocl C111f111 "Mommy just wa shed my ha ir and Jeffy touched it with his dirty hands." Frasier Phenomenon- When Will It All End? BY WILLIAM SCHJIEIBEJI The Frasier phenomenon -at least the tangible part or It -has mercifully come to an end. But if the magnificent magnates of African fauna in American flora have their way, the intangible part of that lucrative happening may never die. It began with a moth-eaten relic or a lion taken in after what must have been many long, hard years with a circua. Out of kindness -perhaps a bit mis- dJrected -the outdoor zookeepers of Laguna Hills turned the old boy loose l amidst a pride of oversexed femal~. WITH NO END in sight, Frasier produced a string of offspring that would make an Arabian sheik stand up and cheer. Unfortunately, as it turned out, the old king of beasts literally mated himself to death. It seemed that as long as he was able to do so, Lion Country was going to keep him in action. There was no rest for the weary though many thought this a fine way for Frasier to live out hi! last days, As each cub was born at Lion Country, J thought back on the recent story out of the San Francisco Zoo. The di- rector there has said so many lion cu~ were being born that many had to be destroyed. 1'11.e paradox Js astounding. WHILE LION Country used the last energies of a tired old stud to prod uce a boom of cubs, the San Francisco Zoo began puttlng away the surplus cubs forever. Now that Frasier is gone -along with a corporate asset that may have meant millions to Lion Country - one might hope the beast couJd rest in peace. But Lion Country apparently feels that wouJdn't be fitting for such an important attraction. Already, people have sent flowers and we can prob- ably assume that donations have also been sent to help fund an inane new publicity gimmick called the "Frasier Foundation." THOUGH rr IS doubtful the new foundation will do very well financially, It would be a shame for anyone to give to a "charity" benefitting no one who really needs the help. The final blow to my already staggering sensibilities came on the Saturday morning when Frasier was laid to rest on a sun scorched knoll above the park under ·a white cross-the symbol or a Christian burial. Millions saw it on TV and in the papers. It is unknown to me whether or not the early Christian martyrs in the arenas of ancient Rome converted any of the lions -Frasier's ancestors -which were released to devour them. One would tend to doubt it. I AM FAR from being a fanatic, but I do go to church and I am a Christian . There is Uttle doubt that Jews would have been offended had a Star or David been erected over the grave. The erection of a Christian cross over the grave of a humble animal is tantamount to idiocy and disgusts me to the core. I am surprised that a prelate or one or the large churches ln Southern California did not conduct the service. The 1i1ormon Tabernacle Choir would have been a nice touch, too. At least Roy Rogers onlf stuffed Trigger and Bullet for his Apple Valley museum. It behooves Llon Country to replace the Christian sym. bol with a more suitable marker and write an end to the Frasier phenomenon once and for all. Guru Maharaj Ji, 14 Readies Denver Fest · MONTROSE, Colo. (APl - Guru Maharj JI, whose followers say he can impart divine light, 11 waiting in Denver as hls organizers make nnal aJT1ngement.1 for a rellgloua festival noar this soulhw..t Colorado town later this moolh. The guru. wbo Is 14, visited the 32Q.acre festival site last week. ' Organlzera expect anywhere from 8,000 to 25,000 persons at the July ~17 featlval, In· eluding 51000 devotee• of the guru. The reat, '3ld orgonizer David llumphnoy of Denver, will be the curious and pe?'IOns aetking religious truth. The Div!M Light Mission, which ls 1tlting up the fes1Jval, said the gatl!crins wlll be rtllgioua fesUval - nothlnf more. t•wa wtll not allow •QJ smoking -including tobacco. There won't be any drinking and we don 't expect people running around doing what they interpret as their own thing," Humphrey said. o't'lbe purpose or this festival ls a single purpose -to celebrate the truth that we have obtained through the Guru Maharaj Ji," he said. The Divine Light mission claims some four millJon devotees around the world and has htadquarters, c a 11 e d Ashrams, In 60 U.S. citioa. Followers be.Ueve G u r u Marahaj Ji has been given the power to impart divine light to others, hence the rnl.sslon'11 name. The rriisslon has annual festivals but lhe one our MootrooeJ members "Y· will be the um In the Western llemlspbere. Tbe JW11 Is from ThursdaJ, July 20, 1'12 DAILY PILOT 11 Spread Some Whale Meat on Your Face CHICAGO I UPI I -Htt• Is 1 list or lnlr<dlenta: paraffin. alcohol, iron oxide, lats, castor oU, shellac. For a chemical factory? No. For feminine beauty. These, according to Encyclopedia Britannica, are among the ingredients used in manufacturing cosmetics. The subject of cosmetic irr gredients was brought up this month by the Food and Drug Administration, which called for disclosure as to what it is precisely that America n women are spreading on theif' skins. '!be FDA request dld no! stimulate spontaneous agree-- mtnt by the cosmetic manufacturera. But while thf. issue simmers, curiosity may be soothed somewhat Vt'lth infonnatlon previous I y assembled by Britannica researchers. FOR EXAMPLE, A stand- ard formula ror cold cream calls for rose water, sodlum borate., expres.!ed oil of al- mond, spermaceti and white paraffin waz . Spermaceti is a w a z y substance obtained from the head of a sperm whale. It's also used to manufacture lipstick. A surprisingly wide assort· ment of other waxes and fats and oils and pigments also go into lipsticks. The pigments are a com- bination of skin-staining dyes called bromo acids. Although undetected in kiss- ing, castor oil aOO is used in lipstick -as a solvent for the bromo acids. Its viscosity helps the color stay on the lip!. FU JI THE JI, POLYETHY· LENE glycolJ help Upsllrk so~ ubllity and 1ta1nlng and cocoa buUer and lanolln 1re employ· ed a! soothtng emolllents. Among the m a j o r In- gredients of face powQer are talc and kaolin. Talc (s a soft mineral, hydrous magnesium ~ticate. Kaolin is an absorbent proces,,ed China clay. Also used in race powder are magnesium carbonate, zinc oxide or titaniwn dioxide. Skin tonics or toning lotions are primarily perfumed alcohol and water. Rouge, accord ing to Britan· nica, containa talc, kaolin , red pi(Jllent and a gum aolullon which acts 11 a binder . Paste roug~ pigmenla are ground with waxff, lanolin, mineral oil and petrolatum, a pelroleum product. MASCAJIA CONSISTS of carbon black, brvwo iron cox- ide or ultramarine blue pig· ment -combined with a mild soap, triethanolamlne sterate. and mixtures of carnauba "'ax, beeswax, spermaceti or shellac. Eyebro'v p e n c i I s and eyeliners are a mixture of pigments, petrolatum. lanolin and waxes. Eyeshadow ls made from pigments conr blned wllh petrolatum and lanolin. Special pearly elfectl are achieved by adding fish- scale essence. llalr spray may contain modified shellac, a t a r c h derivaUves or other resins. Among the foam Ing detergents Jn bubble bath. according to Britannica, are alkylolamldes. suUated fatty alcohols or sulfated fatty acid glycerldes -hardly any of "'hich are words one would find near a girl's bathtub. But perhaps they soon will be. Sunny •ight Savings Useful Redwood End Bench ~~~~~~~~· Provide1 ••tr• 1eeting Fit1 neatly at end of table e ldeel a1 • drinlr or 1naclr or sna(.lr table 111 e ElllUltf· 011(.CO~!.,., HOUSf ,.,.., IMPERIAi Wllllf 'Glidden' Endurance or Spred-House Spred·House Sefin l atex End11ranc• 'one coat' exterior him 688 Gal. Tru-Test 19-lnch Econo Mower • Con.,,enl•nt, easy•1tor• hartdle • ldgg• ' Stratton J H.P. •ngin• -• 6" •a1y-rollin9 wh•al1 Moel.I No. 151·92 Brass 'Oval Fixture Chain • Attractive bfet1 ch•in for hen9in9 1wa9 lamp1, oth•r cl1coratiY• fixtur11 • Un11111al o•al lln•• add •decorator to11ch I"· 39' In The Middle Of Summer! • \\ \ \ American Made PVC . '~ ~r!~~~~~ .r.~~ \ pip•in IO foot len9th1 e El[(.eptionelly clurebl• • won't ru1t or i:orrocle 1/a" 10 ft. I\:~~ 'l'!!I .. ,. \'4" 10 ft. .. ,. Heavy Duty Pipe :'C Wrench In 3 Sizes e Reinlori:ed for m•~im um 1tren9th • Slip end locc~ pro of e Sp1in9 action Prlc• eff.ctlff thrv. Wedltl'Sdoy, July 26. SPECIAL! SUNGLASSES! • All the latest fremes and 1tyle1 • Protect your eyes from 9la re • Pic k a frame for every mood 69c Tru Test 20-lnch Powerful Tru-Test Time Saver Mower Easy Cut Mower • Heltdle folds • 7" indi .. idually down for 1tor· ad j11Jlin9 ••• wheel1 • J.5 H.P'. lrig91 • Powerful ).!5 I Stratton H.P. llS en9ine en9 ine • 7" rubb•r easy • Oil g1u9• edju1tin9 • Ea1y 1tore wheah handle Decorative Brass Compact, Folding Swag Hooks Sat ety Ladder • Ornamental e Fold1 lo a tllm hoolr• to hold 2" for 1tor•9• •w•g let11p i:haint • Glae111in9 • lra11 fin i1h a\11mlnmw"I • Addt im· • Sllp0 proof avocado 1tep1 riorfaflce to emp effa(.f • Sturdy, t{I' proof 39' rKG, 5aa -0, • Conv1n;1ntly Locat1d ••• Eo1y Ta Rtacht 2666 HARBOR BLVD. ·IN COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7010 HOURS: WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 TO 6 PM ·- COlll Miil Black & Decker 714 " Circular Saw • • • e l111proved, burnout pro· tect1d l-hor1e · power 111olor e level and depth edju1t· ment1 • Mod1I No. 7301 'Gfrdden' Spred Satin Latex Wall Paint leeves no lep m•rks E•sy to cleen . , , just wash Gives lastin9 beauty 5'7 Gal. • Top 9rede ptO• pane for your • pane torch • Soldeu or ioften1 • Slendard 1i1~ sac ... Dim-A-lite Dimmer Switch • DJm1 1!9htt fro"' 600 to 0 ..... tt. • 'u•h·on, pu1h-off • ln1t•ll1 lilr• •r4inary wall • 0 ••itch 0 IWl.V PILOT U,I Ttlt~ : MAKES SPLASH -Miss Colorado, Sally Jo Ander· :son of Longmont, holds poolside press conference =at Denver and frolics in water at same time. She ~will compete in Miss .\merica pageant next month ; in Atlantic City. I . ~:Mayor Recesses; .· ~!Reason Childish From Wire Services • The mayor's office is closed 111 South Bend, Wash. Her IJonor ls on maternity leave. • Mayor Katy Klmara, 24, iave birth to an eight-pound. three-ounce boy the past Weekend. ; Mrs. Kimura said she would 6e back al her desk soon and, ti the meantime, would check tiJth her ltafI by telephone, .: * : Singer Jack Jones obtained i restraining order in Los ~eles pre:veA,Ung his former ( PEOPLE ) l>Ullness manager r r o m tramferring or dlsposlng of 1111 ol bis Interests, said to be Worth fl million. · • • SUperlor Court Judge Robert ~. Wenke t' sued the arder in Connection ith Jones' suit iligainst R rt Prince, his former business manager. at· 1<1meys Joseph Wolf and Allan R:. Liebert and accountant Sid· jJey Bash. . ~ Jones, who fired :Prince this Jhonth, contends in the suit <hat be refused to give h im in· -t>rmation about his holdings Clnce 1960. The suit also asks lor an accounting or Aspen .ftecords, Carillon Productions, Inc., the Westwood and :A.edwood Music companies ind Jones' other holdings. . * • The Rev. Paltlck Boyle. 36, pleaded guilty to s i m p I e JIS!aull al Cherry Hill, N. J. in ~Meclion with the slugging or a police officer in an argu· inent over a restaurant c heck. : Mr. Boyle, of St. Anthony of Padua Church in Cam.den. briginally had been charged with assault and battery by patrOl.IJlan J oseph Cinimo, who claimed he was attacked when he responded to a call from a restaurant claiming that the priest refused to pay a check. The court accepted the guilty plea to the lesser charge. * MarabaU S. Hall of Saratoga says there are reasons why he w on't fill out a questionnaire he received about his eligibili· ty for jury duty. First. of all, he's hardly eligible. H e's presiding judge of the Santa Clara County j SUperior Court. Jury Commissioner, Paul Steeling explained that. H a ll's name had been picked with sever.al thousand others by a computer, at random. ' * Je11le S1earns , a Washington newspaper and te levision correspondent. filed a suit to compel the Veterans of Foreign Wars to accept women as members. She served in the Women's Army Corps for 14 months in the Far East. and contended in her suit that the all-male VFW excludes women in viola· tion of civil rights laws. * A young Democratic can· didate for Congress in the 28th D istrict bas been ordered to change his job designa tion on the ballot from ' ' U . S • senatorial assistant." Superior C.ourt Judge Robert A. Wenke ruled at Los Angeles in a suit contending the can· d idate, Mlcbael Sbaplro, 24, claimed too lofty a title. The suit was filed by Alan P. MacQuoid, a supporter of Shapiro's opponen •, Republican incumbent Al· pbonzo Bell. ~1,100 at College ~On Dean's List • Eleven hundred Golden West S:;ouege studentS earned a spot 1>n the Dean"s list ! or llcademic achievement during_ lbe spring semester, officials Pt lhe Huntington Beach office Ji.ave announced. :; To make the Dean's list, day itudents must maintain a 3.0 , ~veN1ge <>r ';B" in 12 units o( 1'ork. and evening students in ieven units. DoMld 'T. Hoovtr. Jo L. Hut111111 Ger•ld A. L•Fr•~· Anne E. Lem.ritlt , Har<ild F. P1rl5h. Robert J , Ult!. GarOtri GroYt! Robtrl t... 81lt11m. CMrvl A. ~ ... RO!lllcl K. Cffm, Gltnn B. JKk1on. Letlll M. MlrtlJ'I. Se!ldr• '1 MCLtu;hltn. Ktnl'Mllll J . MIUft', Vlnctll R. Motl!KlllYO. Olene E. O.borne, °'"' nl1 F. Summ.rs. Larry L.-trC1Xtl, Muri H, W!l$Cll'I. Hunlflllllofl hKll; Glt!'t 8, 1'1!1m1n, Cl'trr1tlne f.· Al!drlWS. H«m11 j ' loom. t..o 1 A. Br-n, P1.,,.!1 , !arrle, Ot11!tl W, Cl1r1';, S.011\1191 • 6th Graduation 621 · G:et Degrees In GWC Rites Colden West College in Hunt· lngton Beach graduated 621 students this year who com- pleted the requirements for an. associate in arts degrte. At the college's sixth conr mencement exerclsea I a s t month, the foUowlng students were awarded diplomas: (Students who earned a 3.4 average out of a possible 4:0 were graduated with honors. They are designated by an asterisk fo llowing t h e i r names.) AMM-lm: Jtll'lff I.vie Hiil, Jtmt• Atltl'I MIYef'J. a.1111-r: c11tm Mlri. wl,.. ' CO.II MH1; EJlflll I. n d I t Y lef11ofl•, S11win L.t::/\.11 Bov1r, CllrlS!ll'lll Ann er111••1•1"1!1 J Wltll1m Dffllln, ROStlff G. ie!l, tty J. Fr•l'lltfft. lilldl1rd R. Goldtn, Ctrol J Kleter, Rhonda I.ff Kn!ghl Cyntllll (10 Lovll, GtrtldlM v111ri. /Hvllon) M1rtd1th•, GllY Em" Motrl1011&-.:Cr1kl Brl•11 Nomur1, ChtrYI ~ ,y, (ylld1 K. Pttll'. TllofN1 •WUI m Po 11 I I 11 Ktttllffn BtrlM Sait~rv. MldlMI R. Sh•UOhnttlY, 1.lnci. o.. $11rlnTllll, WIYln ~ k lllYtn. Joi-M. W•ll•c:1. HtJmvt Wtll'lr1uch. Founltln VtJllY : Oll v1 Jt11111lte Abl .... tn, Phll p l(eoit B 0 111 n •• Ctlheflllt l.GOJltt Ci!lrle, CY!J.lblt Antt C•rwll, l.lvrl!fle C1,... Ptlrlcla 71 Conklln Etrl Br-i.r D1111hv, DIYIG L1 01Lf11e" Herold D1tn Englt, Andrea Cn•rltne ic:vln!IOll•, Geor11e Frtdtrlc:k Fr•Y• 8rltn Rlthtrd G1Drvdl. Mtrla Chrl• Htddtn, K1tn1ffn Ann Hendtlln•" SYl'ldll• Thtrfll Hertkel, DMir1 A. Hvlthf$0t'I, Jeffrey JtY Jtnll$, Elllll A;1t K01lon. D1vld E•rl l.•11e, Btvtrl• Jea11 lesstev•. Melvin Rtv Llmbtrl. Fred Gfft l.ov1. Trnt K•Y M••ch•, t.1wr11Ke I.ff Mc;A~m1•, Veldll w. McCotlum, 1.orrt10 Ruth McC11tclMoon, M•ro•r•I Su11n Ol/101f1r, ROO.rl Edw1rd Plalle, Al'lll• Mirto Reilly, Robert A:lch1rd RemlU1rd. Dol'ln., LYnl'I Rke, Mlrv J.°'n S...miison. John Wtr· ren Sllllw, oe11 E1111111 Smllh. G11Yle L1Jt1e Syndtt". Ji>Ann Lind• SPtro. 1(1nntlfl EdWlrd 5119!11, Tom Andrtw T.-otu1f11tr, Gerald E•rl Utlderwood, Andrea V1cc11•. MletiMI JO$~ Vt1111ru1l1•, Michail I.~ wnm .. n. G .. rdtn Grow: 1.vnl'I N. AtMr1, M•ry Jo ll1rto!, CYnll'll• Ar1n1 B1lan, I.eon Sltrllflll lleu, BIUv Ev1r1!l llro1dbln1. l(ennelfl G. Brott, Therlw M'"rle 81,1rn1, Joh" Doual11 Bvetll, Jun M11•1e C11n1w1U, A:Ot11ti Kenntlfl Clem, Frfd Del.~ Jr .. Davld Ltwl• Diieo, Ellen l.ud1 DeVrle1, J1cqul1 Lvn Dorr, Donald GJll'I Ec:k1r1e11, Vlolt M'"e 1'1ulk1, B11r1>er11 Jtan Fi,her•, Otnnl1 Wllll•m Fletcher, Edward Jeflrev l'lorer, A:lcl'l•rd Lewis G11rci., Oenn!t Dt!• Gereml, Janc!ce L y 11 n HerKOYllch, Robert L~ Hiii. D•vid 1(111 Hofwilh, J11citle Thtreu Hoolte•, Maflf A:lchtrd Jochim. Dl1ne Christine Johnson, Garv Willer K11n, Phy!Ut Ileen l(l1111r, Slev111 Br11dltY Lennon, H1rold 1., M11tock~, Bonni• Sue McK111rl1• Terry Frtnk MeQv11rd. An" Marf1 P11lmt. Judith Arl/111 Pen1t1, Jlmei Cr1lg A:lcloardl, J0ttllh l.1wrenc:e ll:lcherdson, Marl1Y11 A1111 Rf)dotf'I. Dcn1ld Everen Rogers, J im Albert A:oaert, L11wrence Richard A:octr1, J1""1 Rowan, Rkh1rd 0 . S11bln. Gtr1ld JOllPh Sebo!•, Keri111ll'I WUll•m kltteraDOcl, Kennell! .Paul Shit , John cotton SlttY. Wini.Im GlfOt!>e Sl11111t1, Phlllll W•vne Slmp10n, Dtrl-Rl1Ntre1tl Smllh•. Dol'ltld Ro11 Sl'\OW, Lton1rd A:, Str11vhorn, l(aren Noraen Sundqultt. Jelfr" J1me1 S11l1y. Carolyn H•tnflton T11nny, L1rry l . Tro,..i, Janie:• Darlene W•oner, Ronald W. WtllMM. T•rrv Jeck Weller, M11rr Nt!ms Wfl1011•. HUnlinvton Beldl: Netdil MllY Alvartclo, Richard Ltrcy AndtrlOl'I.~ Ch•bllllf Fran~ Mdrewt. l(atherlne 1(1!ko ADii.i, Pamela M•• Ax, Cynlhi• Anfl Bellew. Don.id Edwerd Barry•. ~rv Fr1nces B1rtoo. It I ch• rd Fr.cltrkll. 81uer, Cfl•r~t I.rifer 8Nma11, J1mtl Berntrd B1Uhot/1t, C.rotyn M•ri. Berrv, Jull• Anne 11111lr. Allen J. a11n111 wu111m Edw1rd Blatv. 8t¥trlv l.vlldtt Bonnev. Palrick Bovd 80Mtr, 1.ou11 Henrv B•e-llsc:hOPf, StltYel'! BlllM Brown. ROlaJlnd Jt1n Browne, Dl11111 KaYI 8uckmayrt, 01vt1 ROblrl 81,1r11a, Tiffy Lv11n But11. H11en Al'lfl 811_1tkel, Sh•rort Etlltllelh C1Dlf, JoP!n -Edw1rd Cllbo. John Ch11rJes C1nac1Y, 81rl UOn Capps, WIUlflm Jatnu CtfllOl'I, l(ath•tll'll TrullUo C11rlt11, Chrbltn Give C1sntr, Sl'ltryl 1.vnn C11vtn•uoh•1 Cheryl I. v n Chrl1tooner Gf-•1la Ktnn1th Cltck, Joan S'llntlttd Coale. c111re Beran!e1 Collortl'I. Blekt Monroe Co•, Ila Marie D1l1t1, J•mn Henrv Oavrw, Dontld Wiison dfCtrll Loretta Jene Ottw, J Ohl'I Wltll1m b1r11Jhs, ~ll>e l.ouhe D J11111ma11 , Thomlls Richard Dolltt.um•, P1mtl1 Lynne Oo111111s1, T'tlTll'rllnt WDOcls Oownlng, Allall M-t D1111an, C1rol EU1abtlh EIY, 011111 Emmer, Carole Lt'I Esv11. Wen- dY lyn11 F11y, Donlld Joseph Ffderleln Jr .• Ell!Hlne H1rl1Y l'lelds. Kr.vs!IJ LR Flalldtrs, Efrlll'Y Lave,.n Fr1nI"'1 Jr., Roll! Merle Gtt'. Edw••d Gibson. Rct>ln A:'"' Grttn, Roblrt Wlll1tm H1ckworth, Atlee H1ddodt•, Llllda Rull! tfaa111, J1mes Btnltmln Hanni, Rooer Alltl'I HarrlnotOI'!, A:onatd w. H1rrlJI , Raocl11! 0 , Hartvlgi.en, David Carl HtrlderlOf'lf, TllOm~s Edward Htrl'ldon, SllnltY G. H1ttlno1, Klt1 Pfllllp HltltlMn, A:uswl Olin Hiii. Me-r-rill G11Y Hinton Ill, John Oouqt11 HodQI, SU$11'1 LYl'ln Holm, J\11 Oline ln..,els. Donne J. Jac:obson•, l(enl'll!h J iromt Jtl'l$Gn, 011vld Aid/I John)On•, Eric Gent Johnson, How1rd Alex•nder JOlll'llOl'I Jr., 1•1'1'11• Allen /"''-Jlldlth I.. Jonr1i.on. A:Ul'loll JOM K•ltnotr•, Kt11114111'1 M I J; h 1 1 I ••rn, ™'" LVM K110WIJl.I. Ttr· r)I . l(qi., Jahn Htrbotrl Kell.,, Clltr A:obtl'I KtlOWles. Ctrol L ICO!h", David trvlrol 1(1,1rtt, C1'11rl11 W1rd L1Fl1mme, S1ndr• A"" L1Flam. me. J•ne An11 Uveri, S111111 ElllilNlh Lae•. Rlch•rd Albtrt l.lndlken1, Lor-••lne E. L1f!dr"brr0tr. How1rd Edw1ro l.lltl•, P1lrlc:l1 Ann l.u11I, CarolYfl Jfll'llle l.upe, Joh11 Delmar M1cWMlll Jr .. l.•rrv 0.11 Mllrl111l, C1rrol DlaM M1uro, Sltlllltn Ronald Mc01nnold, K•reri Atll'I McOow.... M1r911r11 Ann Mer1ndl, Wtlltl' JOW'f Mic:h•IUl.I. B•verlv J'an Mlll1rt, Trov D. Mlllerl , Alison M1r_111rtl Ml1'helt, M1rv LOii Moore, Dtnroit lt !ci11rd Mo'll, Fr•rlli: It. Obtort, Ctro4 Ann P•tr)dt, l(lmberly C•rll11 P111Ton, "aTrfct• Lvnn Petrct. Prlclll;rd P. ~aret. lH11btlfl P1lrlcl1 Punon, Btrblrl LYM Pt llill, l(JllflY Lynn Ptuov••ofl, M11rv 1(1mrvn Phllbln, A:oe>ert KtnMll'I Pollock. I.Isl• w. Pol!orll, K1r111 Ftllce Poul11n, A:oblrl C. Pow1tj, Vlrg!nl• W•u-P11¥11r1•. August11 J. PrOl'ptt, J-t P1lrlcl1 Quinn. Rtul ltlmtll Jr., O•lt WtYne Rid. D•te Evoent Rel!lhllf, 1<1r111 I.. ltllllhardt, George Rerlele. Monie• B. Rtftl'!CI, Jerrv Ala11 Rllkl'ltl, Mldl1et W11y111 Robfrtl0ft1 R-ld Sh-111 f!Ols•, John Rlelllrll' Rowe, Morr!1 G. A:11s.-11, Brl1n RoMrt ~nc11t1,. Oo1ores An!Olflllll San<Ml, Suun1 Mlllld•Y $all(h<tl, Jtmtl M. S.lll!Hnt . Jottph Robert Strockt, 01vtd Edward S1.....,1r, l.tl111d Vol'I scnauer. 1>11111 D1vfd !khmhtfbauer, Chrldlnt w. Sd!OMITlll'I, Oollnt M. Sh1lft1'. Mtr!h1 J. ShtcklllOtl. Rlcl'ltrd R, Sl'ltolltrd, J111el I(. Shiro, Robclrt J, S•tnsell Jr., 0 t v Id Fred1rlck Si.lnkraus, ~rv Jo Sterkel•. RObtrl D11r~ $11111,.tlllnd, LI,,..,. F11y,. S.•l•!e, P1m1t• Joy T•llm1"•· Frink C. T1rr, Maraar11 Lnren1 T11vlor, D11n~I Rotwrt Trembl,.v, Ol1n1 L. Tvt1r, O~vld Glen" V11'1derllnde, Vl1'9l111• A. v .. ~ornum, Mlch1e1 Edw1rd Wldl, Wllli1m D. W1lk•r, Ellll'll Al'lnt1llt W1rd. David I'. Wtl~•, Llrld1 Jt•n Weronko, Jimmie Del Wiid. Beth Ann WUll1m1. Jeltrev Paul Winier. D11ne Gr1vu Woc!en. P11rlc!1 Joy Y1m1~1kl. l.V11d1 Sut Yoon<1. L1oun11 811ch: Sustn Merle Zwart. l• Hat>r1 : S.ut Humbtrto Pr•cne1. l onQ Bueti: P11ul l.ou!1 Ch11t1ln, JOhn A. Shelfl\lrne. . 1.ot Al'\ll1l11: A:111'1dlrl Gerwocd H11rk1r, Manh111!1" Btlch: Phll!p E. l.v/ICI, M!ctw1v City: Jimmie C1lmer B!'\lllt, tr•kl Mfclllel fl11tt1rs t, Rick 1t1tpti BYtrs, P<mr o. Culler, Mtllnd1 J•v11t M111C11t~on, Lolllt Nunez. I. e I I 1 EU~belh SMW. Melcolm A:. Whalen, Dorothy Lee Wil ton. Mlulon Vlt!o: Rulll l<t1htrlnt Nor· tis. NtWPOrl B11dl: !1rb.lra JeaJlf North•, Christine Jtan Pt1r10n. Or11noe: N111Kv LOOIW Adams. S11nte Ana; lont LarlOft Ashur1t, lrmag111e M•rle Blthoo, Joh11 c. v. 8rown, Jo Elltn Dlldrlcl'I, Aahtr D. 1-ttrtrlit, John Paul H1rt1r, J1me1 Tl'leOdort Klan, M"rtfn Sc:Oll Lund, Oen ChrlstophH McCt111n, Carol Joen Pike•, 6arbart 0 . Rilchlt . Ann l.oolse S!ernlllkt•. Julie Ann Thom••"• M1rle Francis Zlt01I•. Sa11 J11•n C11plstr1no: K11lhlfl!n Mtrv O'H11rn. St•J Beach: Shan11on Loretta BH$ltv, ShfllY lone Bover•. 8•rrv w. Groff, Meroo Janine Harttr, O!•k SleV1!n Holcomb, Su.wi" l.ouls.. Hutk, Mlchttt N, l.eddVf Evelyn A:•Cl'lel Mtnn•, H1zel Ntl MC:Cown, Robert An<:trt• Otwttd, CVl'l!hlt Ale~is llulr, RICl'llrd Dena Sw1rf*, G•rv David Tr1cy, Wiiiiam Jtmn WIVQll. ST•ntOI'!: Cflarlrs F. M190011. Suflffl Beach: A:oti.n s. T1Ylor. Westm~ltr: Robert Wllll1m AbtU, .Allero w. Alvll Jr .• !;vtll• Cor Bl!lty, KathV Eiieen 8ertitr•. ll•IPh )(Irk 81rnert, P11trlcla Lv11n1 Barton, Devld L. Bowmtn, Rodgfr I.. Bradford, P11mtll Anl'I Br111r, Lind• K1lhl"n C11n, JotMI Cir", Tonr• EJlabell'I Cudmore, Grllctien Elir11t>eth Cu1v111,-J1me1 Davidson~, JowPh G1rry D•vl1t, Craig A:lch••d Ounllo,_ G11rv Brent Edw1rd1, ToDv Joe t:ldert, Rtndlt Glitnn Ell11, Diane El•!ne Ep-oerllOl'I, 8tlh Merit ftile•, Grra!d Let Freeman, W11ter l.loyd Fvnrm1n. Frink Yullkt Furvv1, M1rv EtlUbelfl Galnev, Kereri Ann Grntrv•, l.ll'ldt Merle Gl•soow. Fred FraM:ls Glover, Edw1rd L" G dlll1n, A:u•Hll Anthony Greenwoe<1, rrly Al\111! Greum1n Brend1 G111d1 pe · Grll11tv1, Mlc:hMI A:oOerl H111, 0 L. H1skln1, Jovct Ltt Horn•, Gr olrt L.tu•llr Hooll•. A:obert Loval oward, How11r.d 1.oul• horn, Christi"' There11 J91'11el'I•, Dtvld &urdl•m Kin.as.., C1rcl 1.vnn l<l'!lpp, Al1x11nder JGHdl Kov1l1lltt, Steohen S. L11ssrgaro, Allan F. I.orig•, Edw11rd J1mes 1.ooer•, 1(1r111 """ l.OYe, M11'1t W. M1rcnu1, GU Marllner. JNnPlerr1 CYrlce Masson. A:edmolld Pe!tr McAntny, 1(1thw Ltt Mc:l'l cJ. den•, J ohn A:. McF1r11111, Vtrll Jtro Marv McF1vdt!11 Su11nfll E. McGrew, Rick I.et MCl\IY M!dl1et Thoml• MelPhan•, Phlllp F, Merc:lrr, Deborth Jtan Mey1r, Eleanor G. Moum•n•, Clllr1 A. Nepi:il, G1rv Al1n NlebJ1, D11vld Jo Owch, Sttttord George Pllmtr. Rov J. P~rrelr•, k111neln Leroy Pitrc1, Melvin Rey Plett, 01nlt1 Alfred Preblt Jr., lllcntro Oon1ld Prl11t, Gary Allen Pur~r, Glorll Ann Relnev, Mlchff! Burgen A:oberts, I.In. da Rothenburg~r. Cllllon Suto S.1111. Richard B. Sch1fer. Wtrren H-ard SlmP$0fl. D1vid Michael Sm1Hwood, Sheron Loul11 Smltn•, Stevr11 Mlcllllet Spiegel, M11rll: Alti!'n Sw1Jn, John R, r:,1uere, SUmlt Tomlla. D11vld Ral'ldalJ Vigil Sr .• Met E. W111oner, Vicki 1.Yn" W11ldtn, 811rt Arthur w11ton, Garv Russell Welic lty, Joy MurlH11 Weldl, Ev111'1gf"llne Wl'lttler. Thomas E. Whl!tlldes, C h r I 1 I f 11 e Dl1n111 Wllllttnl*. Clroll WCOd. Roger Gr1dY Wocds. Yorbil l ln<:ta: Themas M. 81roldl, AlbuQUtrq111, New 0Mewico: Mnen TaYltr Lewis IV. Scheme Utilizing Mill{men Cited SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A for car dealers said it would complaint from the state At· hurt their business. torney General'~~ has been filed against a Venice • Fire Guard firm alleging that a statewide SACRAMENTO (AP) sales scheme violates con-Recreational vehicles w ith sumer protection laws. cooking or heating equipment The San Francisco Superior would h ave to be equipped Court complaint charges that with a fire extinguisher under Darimetics Ltd., distributor of a bill signed into Jaw by Lt. (CONSUMER) soap an4 beauty products, ar· ranged to have dishwashing Ii· quid d elivered by milkmen to rou te cu:!ltomers. The complaint said some 140,000 families were billed the purchase price for t h e unordered product, unless the dishwasher liquid was return· ed. to the milkmen within 10 d ays of delivery. Gov. Ed Reinecke . The law applies to new recreational vehicles including c ampers and used vehicles sold by a dealer. Operators of the recrea· tional vehicles would be r~ quired to keep the fire ex· tinguisher in operating con- d ition. The measure : In .addition, 61 day and ~ 'tyenlng students r e c e i v e d ftralgbt uA" averages. They ColUn1. S.l'ldr• L. CO!l!\OI". Robtrl ~ CrOH1man11. II.Iron M. Ev1n1, Oo!le J, Fe0trltl11, lr., Cat!ltrltlt' L. FtllWI , Miry G. Fotlitr. Rot!itrt £. Glt<llt Ill Jemn \I, Hlrpff, An a 1 I• t Ht1!$1nlc.,,..ld. Garv C. HIU, Jtrrl' V. Hafttl'\111 C 11ttI11 HolllnpW«ftl, R~11c1 I;, H"""are, Bruce Jl'"'.'"" 01vld L. Jt1ntt, Loulwl A. .1tcllfwcl, Gary R. lff. 9en E. LtBau, JU<lttll C. Love. Clifford M•l~W$, Joan L. Mlckltort, Btr"'' J, M«llnlkar, Brl•n J. Murhttlllrtd 01!1_ E. M11lll1, Rlefl.llrd J , O!-. RGMld R, P•lfll'lkll\, Metvl11 0 · R..,.,111110!!, SY I Y I • khoni.ldi.. Ann• j · Sfn'\ITll, SMrltY M. by Assemblyman Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grove) tUes effect 60 days after adjournment or the Legislature. e Warranty Bill SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A • Serial Lbtln9 fi~e: "'" M1<>~0 C..!> ~ ""'!. ,'\.~ 0A!o'l.~; • ·~.f.:;oo.i.:. r. i'l•-·· 1J>irector Fined : INDEPENDENCE (AP) - Pcrmtt Inyo County Welfare illrtctor Marie Lene bas been &lid. '5,000 and placed on nv .. ;.,, probation lor embmlina ciJuo(y lllndt. Mra. L a n e ~ 1UUIJ' lo <11!hmlinC 0.017 lat month, and rectlv· -her ......... l'rolll fJll'O ~oaaty Saperlor Court JildCf • "11t Summm. I 11 .. ~bt. >1on•ld • Sw.etlY1_!"t_Mri.tt B. !ti.•. D!Cl P. Vl"Trf,...,, Olttl• Wt11i., Bitty J. WllJ¥d, LMIWOOdl Oline Alf*f'I', '-""' /<. ...... tOl!I &Hc:h: lltWll Iii. KIM, cl AIMl'lllM: R•l'ldtll 0 . H•rktr. Mldw•Y City:: ~f"I' C. V•n N h : l(tl A . ~I~ KttlW , Mll(tlf,, Alft S, ,it'Ona.ld C .Thoma•. rt rtnl R•lpti F. H•rrnon. llOMld F. "'11111, ' S.11t1 l\NI: MllUl'Ml'I (, 8o',nflfr, Plwllll Iii. Ci.tit, Sfllf1r"ltt ~ Gooll1r. M, Go11<1c11I, M1'1tr , Hlll'tll, '" l(lll'f1 o.""' . i\:',' Ol 1tl,11wh/11t, M•rle I:,~. 1.lncSI S. It""-''°"• A1W1 I.. llt~·· Kini ·w. '1'11'1. S.tl 8tKll: l..effy W. P111l«, Yvlllt> flt D.~. ••-, kfth1 cr11t It, T1y1or, -1 . T""'· W" m!"J!«t Vtlfrit I\, Irey, ltoNt'f r=r· rp~ "·ti::r~·,vt!I!.~:; t '"rri. o. itorU:.-:., ~.;"' t: ! • ,0o_.... .Jtahl.,, !dw11'11 • 1dl Ir. -•r 11, Al'l<w . =r-... ,.. r ..... '-.'lld1:..''•'"" ~· l:~(t':W' Tim ;~ 'tikl>•tl w111T"'kkt1~m 'I. WllllMl'll. l'l:m:: y- bill to require 30-day war·· SACRAMENTO (AP) -A ranties on all used cars cost· measure making It a misde- ing m ore t h a n $200 has meanor for a retailer to fail to broken down fn Its first com-affix a 11erlal number onto miltee test. electrical opplilllCeS 11 k e But Sen. George Deukmejlan dishwashers and lawnmowers (R·L<ng Beach) said after has died in an Assembly com· • voling aga inst ii he would ap-mlttee. point a subcommittee to write The bill was by Sen. John a bill more accoptable to aulo NeJedly (R-Walnut Creek). dealer!. NeJedly'lold the committee "Somethlng's got to be the bill w a s necessary because done," Oeukmejian said. la• enforcement a g en c I e s The blll, by Sen. David were laced with a mammouth Roberti (l>-Los Angeles), drew task of disposing of stol!ll 1 2-S vole In the Senate goodt they confiscated that Business a n d Professions W.re not marked with aerial Ctmmhtee after · !l>Okes111en numbers. .\ ' ' I Racy Sus ie Grim, 22, of In· d ianapolis mirrors ex· citement of A!ichigan 200 at a Cambridge Ji.:.nction spee d w a¥· llressed coolly in pair of pants slit to hip, s he watches from atop truck in track infield. • ,. 1 5 Students LF.GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE HOTIC:• INYITINO SIOS NOTIC• INVITI~= Go'ler~ G H H~ Is t!trWll •lwn 11'11t ttM ... td of Notfc:t It htrt'OY "'"'"c 1 COfM'llHlllY t 0 S T""IMI et 1ht CO..! ~llY Col .... hit lolnl of ttlt °'' e nor Dl1trld d Oouw1 Count~. C.Jlfornlt, wlU ClllMM Dlstrkl of Ort:• ,.J:rt.• IWlllW tNJitd b10f w to 11:00 ,,,,.,, Frl+ "-retMflff rettrrtd lo 11 111 t111n , . .; dlY. Julv a . ttn. •I ""'PllfcMllnt ~ wUI rec.ivt "" 10, but ,llfj1m,tfH11etiJ bict. Five Orange <:oast students ot,.,,;: A=, t.!:s~~e:.'i:r1~~1.~ ,, :,;,Mjj.,. "'::!:;· :=~~.(. 1or P11Mt1r1i,om are I o c I u de d on the whlctl ''"" Mid 11Jcb wn1 '" tublklv 1temodtn"' . O••"" Ct,!!! ~i.r~ ~ .... l'Hd tor: 1.'f.A$E WITH OP• C)r1f\H Cou111Y, t1llffll'flll, 1""' President's Honors List for 110N ro l"V1t C:HA$E COMPVTllt c:OM-dlldt• Iha addition 10 111~1111 "''"'"rlum f'ONENTI ON A $EVEN OJI: EIGHT· and v1rlW1 lllt ln'IOl'~v•fl'Mlllll. CS\.Poly State University, San YiAlt Pl.AN. . suc11~·1111•11 tit rKtlvfd-1n1:,,~:z: , • All bleh ••• fo bl In accordll'ICI will'! of till JJwrM• IA mt Lws Obt!po. !ht 1mlnldl0111 .nc1 Condition• Mil 11111c11nt, 1vo Ad""'1 Av•nu•. ,.tot!!!fi":t . . SPIC111Utlol'll wtlldl trl now on lilt Ind Orll'IM (ou111Y, C11t10rnlf, I •' Eligible 1 tudents must earn rntY bl *'"" i. "" ~lc:t of "'' °""'" •"" 11111111c:tv r••d 11,.ood11:~ ": • la In l"vrdltlllllt ......,., or w1c1 KhoOI dlltrlcl. ...,.... •l1tflf 11m1 '" 1111 IOI grada point averages p c g E.U tllddtr 1'1'11111 tllbmH w1111111t flld • tr1t Mm111111r1t1on a u11dh1t. ,,. " th the •-15 c11111l1r'• Clltdl, wtlfled Cl'lldl. or 1114-Eldl bid mull conlorm • em among ....,., per-der'i bclfld m.ec1t HYMilt '° w Cll'Ofr crf l'ttP!l'"'IYll 1" 1111i t11v11111011, t11e 1111n1, nl f d g d U a I e "" COllf CllrlWl'll,li'llly 1Collt1t Ol1lrlct JP1Cltlc1lklrl$ 1nol 111 otti•r clowmtlll• ce O U n e r r a &oerd of Truil"1 rn 11'1 imoul'll "°' lft• C"rl'llll'lllflll "'• Hrtlntnt c • n 1 r act student! enrolled in t h e tt11t1 nw ''rctrit l~'ltl 01 lhl 1111'1'1 bid •• doclln'llllll. c-1" ot 1 "",. c:on~~ 1 tu•rtl'llM 1t11t l"-bldOtr wilt lflltf lnlO Oocu1Mnt1 tr• nOW OI'! 111 • 11111 university's seven major in· t"' proPOMd C011lr•ct u 1M um. I• P'Jbllc 1nlPldlol'I 1" n.. 11ld ottk1 " "• "': 1w1rdld to him. 111 lhl "'"' ol t•lk.I,. lo OWPtr, 1nd ot wu1111m 8 utoc: SlruCtiOn&J schools. Mlttr Into Midi (Ol'lltlct, "" Pf'OCeadl of P1rt"'r1, AfChllKll, USO B1Ytldl Drlvbo•• Ille check wJll bl !Offtfltd, or 11'1 !ht CIM c"rOM dtl M1Jr, C1lltor11l1, •nd n'llV Area students ate I S of 1 l:lol'ld.. 11'1<1 IUll wm lhtrlff wUI bl obltll'lld •I 11\e Office of !hf ArCll!llCI b~ forllli.d to Nld tCtlool dl•lrld. OtPollllnt l10.CIG lot I tch Sii of ~ .... ~ follows: No blddtr !'Nv wlll'ldr1w "'' bid tor 1 Dl•nt 11111 1..ecr11c1tl0M. TWO en "" ta Elizabeth R' Sever .... '""I Htlod of forty•flYt 14'1 odav1 .11 ... flll bl 'l••ufd IO G•Mrll Contte<lorl onlv, >7V W"M; dell Mf for th' -11111 lfle1eof. Thll dto0all Wiii bl l't'lul!Oed' O"IY If !tit C, J H l' gto The ewrd of Trusl"' r1Mrvtt 1111 •II ••• ••turlltd com~1111 •nd In toOd Florence lfC e, un UI n orlvllet1 of rtlectll'lf •"'Y ""' •II ttldl or condition wtthln 11ve din atter• 11\t bld Bea h• Larry Dean Smyt& lo w11IY1 1nv lrl't9ul1rltttt or In-ap1nln;. ,.. C • ' 1otm1llllff I~ 1nv bid or In !ht lllddJnt, · PtYmuit 80lld Ind P•rform1nc1 I 208 Fem St., Newport Beach; =~~d :AT~~-"::::'·111d tl\111 M mlde out on lht ForTest J Hunt 909 Salvador, oiwn• J\lff 21. 1972 • 11:00 1.m. "Form a1 PrOl>O'll" llO\lnd 111 •Kii 111 01 ' ' . Publllhtd Ort"91 COIJI Otlly ,It.at, l'l'$IKI ~nutl. San Clemente· Ertc Peter July 1:s. 20, 1t12 1m-n E•ch Did Vi•ll bf 1ccornP1n1ec1 w • ' certified or aiVller't CMCk NYlblt to !tit TuUeners 256n Chrisanta, LEGAL NarJCE OWM!', or 11tltl1Klory 81d 8ond 111 llYOr ' -of flll OWtier executed bV 11'11 biddtr •• Mission Viejo and Penny Lew prfncl NI 11'\d' 1 1111111e1orv 111r11v c:cwn· ' Court TO IOITOOJ Pl 11Y IS .ur•tr, 11'1 In 1mounl llOt Ins Parsons, 30411 Mirador. • NOllCI Cit 11111'1 111'1 Ptrcenl UO'Jlol ol tM bid, Thi . ...--. SU,911:101; COUltT O' TNI dMdt ot bld bond U'llll DI 1!vtn t l 1 Laguna Niguel. STATE 0' CAl.IFOltNIA t'Olt , .. artl'ltff 11'111 thl lllcldlf' wrll 1xtc:~ thol; THI: COUNTY Ot' ORANOI -NO. A·nln (onlr•Ct II It bl 1w1rdld Ill lllm Ill c:on-LEGAL NOTICE l!lltll of LESLIE H 81.ANCHARO, lotml!Y Wlltl lh• Conlntel OOC:Umfflh •Mi Dec r.td ' w111 P/'O'lldl lh• a<ir11Y bol'ld or bond• ,. N~;1cE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tllt MICICllll!d thtrtl" with!" 11¥1 daY• at11r NOTICE INVITINO llbt crtdltors of Ille tboYt 111med c!Kfdefll no!lllc:11l1on ol tt.. IWIJnl of Itta conlrtct NOTICf. IS HEREBY GIVEfol THAT th•I •II PlflOflli h•Ylnt cl1lm1 •ulmt the ':..~~ ~'iSc THE eo.rd of Trusletl of tilt CO.II Com-11ld dtcederil are r111ulred to Ill• lhrm, Pvrsull'lt lo,,,. lallor Codt of tl!e Sttlt mul'lllY ColllP Dlllrtct al Ora"" County, with the fll(l!IWf"I" voucMrs. In "" office of Ctlllort1l1 Soullltrfl c1ntornl• 8ulldlnt CllHonlll, wlll rtta1¥1 selled bldl UP to ol !hi dtrtl of flll •bOYt •ntllltd c:ourt, or IMI CONtrUctJOl'I Ttlldt• Co u n c 111 , t!:OO ,.tl'I., .frldtY, AllflUll •• 1t12. •t !ht ID Pl'tttnl thtffl, with 11'141 lllCl»lfY 8ulldln1 •nd Conllrvellon Ttadtl CouM:ll Plltchislne Oepl. ol u ld school dl1trlC1 \IO\ldlers, to 1111 underil;lllld 11 the olflet of Or•nsi• County me tl!d OWl'ltr h•• l«:alfd ti 1370 Adtml AYfnul, COlll of l'ltr 11torneys. BUA:TON, GAUi.DiN, tsctrta1ntd 1111 ..;,..II prtvallllll rill of Mtll. C11florn!1, at wlllch time 111d bldt THOMSON •l'ld NELSON, AttOl'l'llYl II Pit' dlrm WltlJ tor laCll crtfl ot h'l>t of Wiii bl pWllCIY OPlntd '""' l'tld tor: L•W, 76M Soulti ,Ptl11t1r A¥t., Wlllltltr. Wotkmtn l'!lldld to tlllCOlt "" contr1C11 I.EASE W1TH 01':TION TO PURCHASE C•lllornl1 ~. wlllch 11 !ht pl1ce ol which will bf IWtrded !ht 111«,ISfut bid· ELECTA:IC TYPEWRITEA:S. bu1ln1tl of 1111 UndetJ!tntd 11'1 Ill m•lf•rl dtrll Ind thlll pttv1Ulno rtttt 1re c°"" All Did$ 11re lo bl In 1ceord1nc:t wltll ptrt•lnll'l(I to lhl n 1111 ot ..Cd clleedenl, !tined In Mld 111«iflulklnf adofllld ff "" Instructions 1M Condll'lon1 •nd Within tour "'°"'"' 1flw t"-flnt puDllct-tllt OW-ntr, •nd ,,.. 11 tilled below: S1>1tlflc:1tlont which 1rt -01'1 ~ ~ !Ion of lflls l'IOllct. Arrr d11llflc111on not 1nllc:lpa\flf ind m1y bt peured 11'1 the otl~ Dli.d JulV 1!, ltn. b1fow 1111.cr s111U ~ p1\d •I !ht current Purcha,lng A111nt Of 1tld Khcol dlslrlc:I. EDITH HOl.T, WIM rittl fot thl IJIPl!tabll lrlOt 1nd E•dl bldcllt must 11.1bmlt with hi• b~/ l!xtcvtrb: of lhl Wiii of cias~lf1Wlon In ttlect wllfl tne 1bove call'i•tr'• c!'leCk, ctrlllled cl'llck. ordt of lht ebove 111med dletodtnt 111i.ci Trldll Councils, If tl'IY r1la ·111tld dtr't 'Oolld midi NYtbll lo flll Ol'PI ir1 I IUltfON, GAULDIN, bllOW •r• root current or 1rt revlltd 1w lflt Cotti Commul'llly ColltOt 1 c TNO(,\SON Ii NELSON llbor ••~II durll!I tht bldCllllf llmt 80lrd of TruslHS In 111 •ll'IOIJl'lf not It" AnortltYI It l.1w or (Ol'l'tructlon tlm1, tuch r1Yllla111 ll'lllt then llV~ P1rcent (5""1 of Ille lllll'I llld ti 7't4 Slulll P1h1ter Ave. be conslcMrtd 1 Plrl of !hi bllOW Utlld 1 ouer1nt" llllll 11'11 Dldder wlll,enltr Into Wtllfttlr, C1lllor11ll ,.... r111a. AllY htalth. wett1r1. vacl'llcn, pro. the prcpOMd Con1r11ct If "" """t 11 T•f: (2lJ) '"-Mil, 723·JNI mollol'I or olller ben1l!t1 ah11I bt 111 ado awarded to h!m. In thl event of ftll!,N'I '° AMrlltYI fM" llltclllrlx dlllon to 1111 below llaled w1oe Kilts. A~ enter ln!o such C011tr1ct, the prOCffd• of l'11bU11>fd Ortno• COol•I Dilly Piiot, prtntlcn 111•11 bl ern111~td In conformi!Y 1111 dltck win DI totltlleod, or Jn the tilt Jvly 13. 20. 27 •nd Avou1t ~. 1972 1'31-n wllfl Stcilon 1m.s of 11'1<1 c1111orn11 Labol' of • bond, lht lull 1um lherlllf "Wiii tMI Codt lorl•lted lo seld actiool dl1tr!C1. LEGAL NarJCE ovtrlime 1111111 bl otld for work No bidder m1Y ... 1111<:1raw h11 bid tor a ptrforrnecl 11'1 ex"'4 of !ht retul•r U y'$ period of fortw.flv• C.01 dlYI •lttr t1'1<t work •nd at fht r11e tot overtlmt or tilt fUlf Ml lor !hi _...1n11 !hereat. t'l(TITIOU1 IUSINESI cr11t 11'1\'0fvtd. Thi Boerd of Trustt11 rtstrVtl the NAM! STATIM•NT HclldtY• ~II be •II hoHOIYt rMIOl~Jttd prlYllf!tt of r•l~dh"' II"' •NI all blds or Tiil! fo{lowll'!I HfSon 11 dol11t bln!ntu 11'1 !he c:olledlYI blr••l"l"ll 11rttrnenl lo w1l¥1 1nw lrr1911J1r!tll• or 11'1-,1. · 1~k•blt 10 the Nfllcul•r c:r1tt, lormal!tltt In 11nY bld or In 1111 blddll'lfl. • GEQllGE WEEl<S COMPANY, Gt c:ltulflc1llon or tyN of worllmtl'I NORMAN E. WATSON fullll'I -... .... NrwPGrl 8'1Kh. """'°'ed on Ille ..-011e1. Sec:ty. 80trd of Trus~ees Glorllt M. Wtfkl, .Qt Tustin Avt .. II 111111 tit mtndltof'I' UPCl'I fl'lf C- Optlu: Auou~l 4, l9n-11.00 1.m. Newport at.ch. tr1ctor to whorl'! 1 c:ot1lr1C1 11 1w•rdtd l'uDllt.hed Or1ng1 C011! D1Hy Pilot, Tiils bulllie" II blll'lll COl'ICl\lded bY 11'1 •nd upon ell lllllc:ontr1dor1 under him la July 20, 27• lt72 l9Q2·7:1 lf\dlvlclwl. PIY nof Ills 11'111'1 11ld ..,_11 pr1v11i1nt GICrM M. Wllkl rlt•t of per diem W"'1 lo Ill WOl'krn111 Th11 tt1tement flied with lht (OUl'llY emolovtd In 11\e •1tlellllon of the contr•ct • Clerll: cf OrtMt CounlY on: Ju111 •· ttn. Attention !1 dtrteled lo lht p'"'tl°"" ti 1---------------IBv Bl\ltrly J. Mldcfo:I: D1P111Y COUnty LaDOt Codi Stcllon im..s c:onctml'ltl NOTIC& O, ,UISl.IC Sl\L'I: Clerk. am11lov1Mnl ef •PPrtntlc:ff. II rt11ulrH LEGAL NOTICE Ot' 'ERSONAI. ,ltOP'EATY t' 112Sa conlrtclon ot sut1conlr1C10t1 ""P'°Yll'lll (Ul'll•wl11l Det•lnlfl P11bfl1t>lcl Oranot Cotti Cl1ll y Piiot. tr1delmfl'I 11'1 •nw ll>Pt'tntltnlo/1 oe- ln '"' mttt•r ot Anl'lllll M. Elltrtlrcff. July '· 13, 20, 27. 1t72 11iW-72 CUPlllon ta IPPIY 10 Ille •PPlkabt• lolnl Pl1lntflf, vs. JtueDln l'rlldm•n. Dtftn-tplll'entlc:nhlp commltt" for • urllflc1!9 dtnt, Ct1t No, 15'15, Munlc:IP•I 'Court, LEGAL NOTICE of approv•I Ind ll1tlng !ht r111lo ol IP' C1111n1Y ol Or1nee, Sl111• of Ctlllornl1. prenlkH lo iourfl1Yrn111 11Hd Oii Ille ~ NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 11'11! lr1ct. COnlraetor m1y DI req~lrfd lo 111/0Ulnl to Stcllon 111~ of !ht Codi ol t'ICTITIOUS IUSIN!5S malr.t contrl~llol1f to IPPrtnlk:esh!p .,.,. Clvll Procedt.ort. Slllt of C1llfornl1, tht NAME STATIMINT eraml. Contrecklr llnd 1ubcontr•cTon uncltr$ltned wlll aeu •' Pl/bile ••I• by The tollowlng Hrsons •rt dot"' 11'1•11 •ha comply wllh Sldlon l mA .,. competlllv• blddlnt (ltl Ille 26111 ,,., ot bu1 lnn1 111: 11'1<1 emPIOvmtnt ol ApprMlllCH. For Jn. July. 1971. 11 10:00 o'clock A.M. on !he WITNESS POTTE A:Y, 3001 Red HUI fomlttlon rt1•11¥t lo llf)Pl'el'll'lctlhlp ltt"' pram\11t wl'llrl lllld .,°"""' ,,.. bleri AYI., Cost• Men, C•llf. d1rds, c:onlKI DlrrclW ol lnd111!rl1I slortd, Ind which ,,.. loctted .t 114-1 Jtmts E. Wlllemi. lot Gr•nd C1,,.al, RelatlOl'lll, Sen Fr1ndlco, Ctfllornl•. ot Newport 8o111tV11rd, Cl~ of Costl MIM, Btlball ltt11'\d, C1Ut. Dlvtllon of Apprenllcnlll, Sltndlr.U County of Or1ntt. St111 ot Ct lllornl•, the Don Wl11ton, 110 N1rcl11u.. COl'Ol'll H J br•l'ldl otHc:a. 1balldoned llGl!dt, cNffelf.. or Nl'IOl'lal Mtr. pr_,IY ~rlbed Mi-: Thl1 bll1lnt" 11 IMll'lf C:OllOucled lw I •AICKLAYllt lltml: I.IMP$ """ l1m11 llllldes. l.lmlled P1rlnerllllp. . l'ortmtn Ct to 7 1711111 l'IOI IHI thin .soc: Olftd fllll 11111 dlY of Jutv. 1972 JAMES E. WILLEMS Hf hollt lboW Jour11tvm1n r1t1, ANNETTA M. ELLEA:8A:OEK Thl1 tlllemtnl filed wlttl !fie COllnlY 8rkld1y1r &. S1-M-............ 7.'» fNOMAI A. IE•NAUlll: Citric of Or•l'IOI Covnly on: J uly 17. 1'7'1. •AICICllNOIA """""" 111 uw Bv 8tvtrly J. MaddoJt Depvtf COlll'lty BrlctUeMer .......................... , .J.11> SJt Ntwpll'f CtnMr brlv. Citric. CAA,INTIRS SYIN UI PI"" C•rPIMtr . .., ..................... ,,.75 "'°"'"" INdl, C:.'119rflll t2UJ Plltlflthtd Orll'IOI Coal! D1Hy Pllol, T1bt1 POWtt .. w op1r1tor , ........ 6.IS PubU1htd Otllrtgl Coed D•JIY Piiot, July 20. 27 111\d Al/llUSI 3, 10.1972 1an.n Mlllwrl!lhl . . ............... •ts Jul)' 20, 1972 ltoa-n Ntllfr IPl'lfllrn•tl<I ................... 7.CIO LEGAL NOTICE Fortm~n 6Cc per hour mot~ t111n hlthtll LEGAL NarJCE C:ltQ/llC~lcn IUPf('Y!Jld, f • CI 11 pneum1 c 11tller. LIOAL N01'1CI CEMENT SONS NIW,.OltT-MESA UNIPIEO Ctmtnt Mt;$Ot1, llolllf\11 Ind trow1UM NOTICE 01" MARSHAL'S SAi.i SCHOOL 01sr1t,CT m•dllne,oprr1lor ..................... 0 lt,ela!I Mrrt111nts Credll "ssoc. Plftlrollff N"lc1 lflYlllnt •~ Cement MHDn Journevm•n ......... 6.16 vs. J1me1 E. HollSClf\, ttc .• et ti Oeftn-NOTICE IS 11EA:E8Y GIVEN 11'111 thl Fortmln 60c Hr IMM!r 1Dov• J011r11tvm1n dent No. A1Al6. &card ot Edlle1tlon ol IM NewPOrt·M•n rel•. lly virtue of '" 11trcutlo11 l111.11d on Uni fied SC/'IOOI Dl1trJcl of Ort"°' Coul'\IY. 11.ICTltlCIANI June n. 1972, Judgment Otle. JuM l•, Ctl!lotnl1, will rrcelw -tH bl<h UP to Gener•I For~1n .................... 10.'1 1961, Dy tllt Munlclptt Court, Cel'lltll 11 :00 A.M. o~ the 1111 d•V of AllflUll ltn Forln\I" .......................... ,.t.91 Ortnllt CounlY Judlcl11l Dl'llrfct, (oun!Y of •t !ht olllu of Miid Sct>ocl Ordrlct, Jowl'lt'(lll•l'I ...... , ................... I.to Or1nve, Sl•t1 ot Ctlflornl11, upon I lud• loca!Ref 11 1&57 Pl.Ktn!I• AYtnue, Co.11 lll:ON WOltKIRS rM"nl tnltred In favor ct Rtttll Mt...,, C11tltornl1, 11 Whldt llm• wild bld1 Refnforclnt Iron Worktr ..... , ........ 1.)1 Merchln!I Crtdlf "1soc11tlan 1s Jud11m1nt will Df Pllbllcly OPll'lld 11nd rttd !Or: l'oremftn 75c Plr hour mot1 11'111'1 hlDl'lltt crtdllor1 11nd 11et!nsl J1mes E. Hopson, TIRES cl1"lllc1llan aori.rvllld. tndlvldu11lly 11'\d dbl Coror.. dll M•r All bids 11'1 lo DI 11'1 tccordl11et wltl'I UISOREltS \ CMlstmas Treoe1. Mrs, J1me1 E. Haplon, Conditions, I n I Ir 11c:11 a" I' Ind L1borer1, llflllt•I \or con1!Ncflon ... l.AtJ •1 luclorntnl dtlllor, shcwlno 1 net SP1<fllc11lons. wlllch ar. l'IOW on ffly In OP1ril!or1 •nd ttrillers of PfltVmlllC end b•lanc1 or $2.20$,11 •cluallv due on uld ltlt office of 11'141 Purch••ll'lf AQ"'l"(lf tllld electtlc: foals, Ylbr11lon mlChlnal 1nd hidem"" on tilt dlM of '"' ls11111'1C1 of 5chool Dlslrld. t&S7 Pltcentl• A¥tfllll, •lmllM mlCl'l•nlc1t tooi. not Ml)1tr1telv lllfd 'xrcullon, I "'Vt levied llPCM'I •II the COii• Mell, C1Ufornl1. <lHlltftd hlrtffl ................... 5.111$ right, 11111 111'\d lnt1rn1 of 11ld ludoment Eld! bldcltr m1111 Mibmll I bid dtllOlll Concr111 Clll'll' • l1nP1rvlout mtmbrel'll dl!btors tn tilt pr-rtv In th• County of In tllt form of 11 artllled or ushl•rs end form ollff , .................... J.MI Or111111, S!1l1 of Ctlllornl1, descrlbtcl 11 chotc*. Of I bkl bond IQUll lo fl¥t PtrCll'll W1tchm1n ..... .,.'! ............... 4.'35 follaws: CS'ltol ol 11'141 tl'IKlllnt of l!M bid, ITlldt Fortrntl'I SOC H r h~ more lll•n hltMlt I.of 212 Tr11cl 41Sl ln tht County of P•Ylble to the order of 11'141 Nl'lfll'P(ll'l-MeM cJ11sf!Jctllon ,,1cefvl!e<I. Or1n11e. St111e of C1!1fcrnl1 11tr m•o Unified Sd'tool Ols!rlct. A Prrlorrntll(I «>"•AATINI INOIMlllltS rtc:ardtd In book 191. Ntfl l to' Incl. Bond m1v M rtQUireod 11 lllt dl1<rllfC111 of Graup 1 ............ .' ................ •.Sl of Mls.c. M11Pt of said County. Commonly 1111 Ol1 lrlcl. 11'1 the 1v1m of f1llur1 lo GrOUP 2 .............................. 1.77 k110W11 ••: Wl2 Bill Grffl'I Orlv1, El 1n1er tnlo 1udl cOt1trtc1, 11'141 Proc:etdl of Grouo J ............................ 1.01 Toro, C•. 11'11 dltck Wiii be forftlte<f, or Jn ttie ol 1 Group • ............................ 7.12 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th•t Oii bond, 1111 furl IUIYI tl'llrlOI win '" GrOl,lp s .............................. 7,31 Thl!Dd1y, Auo1111110, l9n, 1110:00 o•c:locJI: fortelltd lo 11ld Scilool D11lrlc:t of Or•nM GrOUJI' ..... ,................. ..1.41 A.M .•• M1rll'11I'• Ofltu. Cour!ho\111, Coul'lty. Group 7 ............................ 7.Jl Xl14 Crown VttllY P11rkwty, City of No bt4der m1v wltl'lllr1w hie b!.d for • Forern111 SOC per hour more lhll'I hilfldl I.nun• Nle1111, County ol Or•nM, Sltlt of Ptrlod of torh'-flV• (451 d•vt •fltr tht cllHlflc111on WJlt'f'vfltd. Cllllfor"i•, I Wiii atH 11 11Ubllc l llC'llon lo dllt Ml tor !flt OPtnl"ll therecl'. ,AINTlltS lf'lt, hlthest bidder, tor cash In lliwfvl ·Tiii ea.rd of Educ:•llon ol lhl NIWllOrl· l'otam1n C4 men or 11111 • JOc •boV• monlY of 1111 United s.tet11, 111 the r!tl'll. Mt1t Unllltd kllaol Dlilrld r•ttrvn lh• Jollrrwvm1n rite. 1111• Ind lnltt'tlt ol "'d tudOfftlfll debfar rlthl to ...itct •11Y ot 111 bld1, tnd not 11:.JIUlar brush p1lnt1r , .......... ,. , .. •.n 111 !ht lbovl clelcr1btcl Pfoptr!y, or '° tlfUtWlrUY KCeM 1he klwHI bid, 11nd lo &rush l'#lnt '''" ........ ·· .......... 7.11 muc:h th•rtol 1s may M necttNrv Mo w1l¥t •"Y tMormtllll't' or lrffflll•rlly ltt J01.1rnevma11 SPray .. , .. , . , ...•...•••.. 7.lt 111l1fY nld tXICllllon, 11'1111 •«rued 11'1-111r bid rec1lvte1. Journey1n1111, Spr1r twtne 1llM ••.••. 7.a ~rest ll'!d cosls. O•ltd July 20. lt72 Shttl'1J!;ock T-111 0.led July \1, 1m. NIEWPOAT·MESA Shttt 'Rad( IUtll'lt ,.ncl(.,j"'•" .. '·in Oii.LARO 0 . Wlll(IASON UNIFIED SCHOOL OISTR1CT Shfft Rodi; IU1lnt Skim Box)······"'1'n MllrWr, Ortl'l9t Counlv of Or111H Cou11ty, C1lltorn!1 ROO,EltS ........ · ~1;1:i~l. ~~l'I Ho. ~~~~i~''j.":n~lslllr ~~"':n ............................ :6.ft D a>, '4.S<-1100 b 0rtm1n ........................... n ltOllltT ':.~CKl.lllt Pllblllhl<I Or11nae C011t Dilly PHot. ~~~MET4L.W0itKlii '''''''••··'·" '°' s. Ollv1, L.A. fltlt July 20, 21. 1972 l~n Sl'lltt Metal Warker ................. t.2' •11111111'1'• At!«NY l'°""1•n • 11% 1bove J1111rn1Yfl'lln ,,,., Pvbllslled Or•noe Coelf D11ty Piiot, LEGAL N<Yl'ICE Gtrwr•I 1'or...,1n 1K 1 b 0 "1 July 20, V end A\lllVll 3, 1972 1ff7-72 JOUNM!Yn'ltl'I riff, ,ICTITIOUS IUSINESI flAMST&ltS HAMI STATIMENT F«tl'nll'I jl)t (tor motl Tttmltln llndlr LEllAL NOTICE Tllt tcllowlnt Ptnon lt dolnt bulll'ltlt lurlldlctlon of THtn1ter1 Union. tit· 1---------------1 ••: c:hldlne •l'IY eoulpmflll lt•1 1!'111'1' font MONOTltACK ENGIHEE•ING, fJ9.A 11111 m1tl'lllnlnc• -l11mtntl, "OflC• OF SHE•lt','S U.LI Na.O...._.. W. 1111'1 St,, Cotll Mffa, C1llt, A·Fr""' or SWtdllft Cr11111, or 4lmll1r D111l•I E. Htnebrlnk. 111• Vlol1, CP:lf• type HUlpmtl'll ... ' •... ' ...... ' . 6.U Mt1o1, Call!, f Dl'IYer ol VtlllClt « (Ol'ftbfflllllort tlf This bulll'ltll 11 btll'lt coildudtd -.,. '" Vlll1cln ol: SU! K. XIA.OS, Pltll'lllft YI, NICHOLAS H. XIA:OS. Ot!lndtl'll BY vlrt111 of •n ex1C11llol'I •••utd Oft lndlvld!Jtl. 2 ••t••-· V1tlldtt Ifft "*'•Iona s.ts J11n1 22. lt72 by 1111 Suotrlar Court, COUit-OANl!I. fl, HANE81t1NK Trvde Mounltd Powtr 80Dm ......•. $.'1 "' of LOI AllttllS. Sl•l• ol C111torrir1; This •l•ltmlnt tlltd w1ffl IM COUl'll't' WIMh lnick Drtver • 12he "' llovf ..,.. upon • ludlitfl'll'nf tl'litftid ll'I favor of SUE Clttk of °''"" COlll'lty oni JulY 11. 19n, dlllOMI Wht11 OPtrlllnt "°"' Winch « I(. XiltOS fPIOW Sue I(. Alldl'rsonl 1$ BY 8ewrJy J. Mlddm<. DIPulY Counly 1Jmll1r IHCltl lllldlmenh. ludrlrnrnt creditor •nd •1>1111$1 NICHOLAS Cttrk. Drt111r1 of Tr1Mll·ml1t trl,Kk• undff 1 H, JOROS •• ludomtnl dtlbtor, IMwfng 1 ,,,.,.. Y•rds ........ " ••••••.• ,,. ............ ., Ml btl•-of llAJl',00 tctu.lly di.lit Ol'I PuDllshtd or.. Cont Diiiy 'Ila!, llOS: uld 1uc111m1111 on ttlt r11t of IM ltwtra July 20. t1 w AUlllll 3, 10. tm 1176'12 Tiit OW'Mt-A'Mf'WI tilt llflrll'" et ,... of •• d •xtevtlon. I "''"' ltvled upall •II flctli!t ll'IY and ... bldt or lo WllYll ~ tr.. r10111, 1111• Mid lnlrrt1t o1 .. 14 IUdt-LEGAL NOTICE lrr911\111rllln or tl'llorlN11tl" '" •l'IY bid '"""'debtor'""" Jll'OIMl'IV '"tilt Covftfy•-----~---=---+or 111 ,,.,. blddlt1t, lilt contr.ei0r rntV "°' r wf!Mf .. 1111 bid for 1 Pf'{od or 11 dt)1 of °'•""· St111t of C.Hlorl'lt .. dtlulbtd ,,CflTtOUS IUllNISf fatlowlne 11'11 dtlt ol OHllll'll of llOI Ill followl• NAMI STATIMJNf IOAltD OF TauSTllil . 1.o1 u' of Trtcl No. "'2 •• u-cw11 on 'Ttlt follOWll'll ...,.... II dolrtt lllltlflfU coan commul'llty • ,...._ llltNof recorded In book 1•1, u : Colllff 1>'11tlct p1te1 4 lo .. lnctu1l'lf, M1Kellll'llO\tt FANTAlN 1.AIO!tATO!tY, 2.U3 . t1t1 of °''"" ~IY MIP•· rKotdl ctf Mid er ..... COlnfl't, Cotti Hlthw•Y· COl'1)111 del M1r. mu. Coll• MtM. Ctiifon\1• The "'9Jlt1'1y 11 CClf!l~Y •l'IOWft I I MDll'll M. 8Rlm•l'I• J2«) Ptrk Slllned NOit.MAN ll. WAT10N 2*1 Clntdor, Mluton VI t Io, NtwpOrl No. 21t, N""""°'1 hacPI, two, Stcnit.,.,, 9olnl fl l Mttet (\'!::; wltll Ill •nd tl!'llulllr tM 1J"J.!.!:~1-II IMllll COllduClltd bY •n r: t ldt 'MOl'ldtY AVMI '· Jm !:OI ttl'lt!Ylffll1, htredllttM!l!J end .. MAXIN€ M. llUMAN ftubllttltd °'""" Coelf D•IJY l'lfoid, Pl.lrtftlll'IC•• lhlr111nfo btlolltll'lt «" In 1lit1 111i-1 flltd with *'t CGllMt J\lfY 20 t1 tm '*'n ltl'IVWlte 1POC1rf~lllll'I•. Cttrll of Oferlff CGUlllY on : Julv 17, 1•n.o_.;.._;'--' ----------NOTICE IS HEltEIY GIViN ttl•I Clfl ·~ ttwrlY J. ~ C1t1M11Y CGU!ltyl-Prldt)I, AUii/ti 11, lf7t-•I 11:00 o'tloU Clt1't. A.M.. It Mlll'I l.obbr, County CollrflloV11. , ltlM LEGAL NOTICI: 10t Civic ClfllW orlvt Wiil. City of $tfllll ,utlllll'lld °''"" Cotll O•lf'f ,not. Ant, COufllY et Orel'llt, 1t1ht of JUiy 20. 21w Allll'ltf a.1., 1m 1w1-121---~,01Cor=1T=,~ou°""•"•"•"•7.••=o=u""'-- c.11tonir1, I Wiit Mii -' Pllblk tllCllM IO MAMa ITATIMlllfT 1111 11111t1tt blOllM', '°' ca.ti 1n 1Mu1 I p~" Ncm-l'l'IOl'lf'J' f/t fflt Uflltd $11*-•II lflt t!lfll, o£Niw. \.i:t The foWWtl'lt IWIOl'll ,,.. doTl'll I .....__ IWlll)IU II? I ttt •l!d ...,....t of Mid lucltmtl'lt Mtar ,ICllftOU• IUStMllS WHI" IHVllSlOlt.S, D0t l"r'lvttt It- h! llie ltboft dtKrlbtd '"°"""' ot '° llAMI lfATIMl"T HtwPOrf .._ '*°" mud'I ltllrmf 11 "'"' tit ~ ._ Ml • f I -1 MtittY' Mid -..tcll!Joro, Wllfl eccl'Vld kt-Tiit fot!Mlllt t'lnlft It dMll MIJ ('Atr orlll'"-1 • "'' ~ IJr. """' •nc1 Cotti. n ; Cerldltd. C•IN ..... 'D•Mt at &«It• Alll Clllfornl .. Jiiiy 14 YE °'-DI ,ltlNT •HOI'. ~ti w.mr-rtoblrl s. Httl'Jll!; -,,,..,. Jl..,, • • ,, Pllce, """"°" tNdlr caftl. N"""'°" IMdl, c.1 ftMI. ltn. J.,.. T. Jllfltt, P.O. lot IM2. Wltll1m Y'. Wll.':oll, ntl P'riv.t. ..... JAM!S A, MUSICK, °'"'"' ClllfOtl'lll nw' .....,,, IMdl nNf, ShlrlfKtl'Ontr lhh llu•iMH I• .... !I'll ~ W lfl 'nllf IMl'*I II """' COl'MIUCIM W • Ccllfity ol °''""'' C.tltotfll• 1ndlvtdUt1. f'1111'1tn;hl1h l l' C. A. ltandtrr, JAMI• T. JONla Mtrlo '"'"men Dl!IM.fY ' ' 11111 1~ nltd wttlt ... Coul'ltr Tllft ,,....,....., fllfd wllfl h (Mlt'f M. oaLYN Clltl., or ... Cot111ll' 1)(1; Jllh' 11. 1tn. Clml of°'',.,.. c..111v •: J\ll'lt ». lt7'&, """'11ff'I AftenltT IY U;trlr J. MtOdMo DtluTt' CtlmlY .., Al'fflw -.,_, .0.U., (WfllJ 1Mf ........ '""' Alllt-llM C'WIL Cltrfl, "" ........ , ... , .. ,.,. ,,.... ,..., l"VblltflM l.lf\IN IMdl Dtllr Piiot, Pvb!lll'IW Orll'IOll Ctflf Ollft' "'°'' ~ltlltd Or•11111 C-... Dflt1 Ill"!! J"'J •· 11 w Al.IMt 1. 1m 1u1.n Jiiiy •· v fl\llf ._.,., J. 'It; 1111 t111.:n JtAl' •· • ...,. """*., 11. 1m 1-.., .. I I p d gi u $ s I ! a Ii w s B p ~ T a I b w b w c ta s ol m • w I .• DAILY "LOT J 3 • Pr~posal Pinpoints Fleet Vehicles Freeway Job · Due Sept. 21 '. , . •• ·: ' • ·:: SACRAMEN'IO (AP) - rleel ~ In I wide lttl ol SoutborJ\ Cllilornla would have to lie equlwed f0< 1111urll •• .. pn>paoe \llldtr I bill OD the Semite floor. 'l1le antl.,.Uullon blll, by Sen. Antl)ooy BeU.DIOll (!). Btverly Hllil) J>UOed the l"llllnce Committee lhil .,, .. k. 'l'be .,.;..,. would affect Oeet v.blcl~ bulll from 11rro on, but '!ould exempt diesel trucl<a or )>peralors of 10 vehlcln or lu1. Vehiclea could be equipped with a dual system enabling ( ECOLOGY) them to burn either guollne, propane or natural gu. ~ The bill .. 11 a Dec. II, t911, deadline for co1Dpllance, and gives natural gas or propane users a five-year exemption from fuel taxes. e Publle Aeee•• \ SACRAMENTO (API -A $166,000 lawsuit to help the state batUe for public acteSS to 27 miles of south San Fran- cisco Bay has won1 approval from the Senate 1 Judiciary Committee. . ·westbay CommunHy Associates, • prihte firm, Is attemplhJs to utabllah private title to IOIDe 11,000 acres that would jeopardize' publl< ae<ess to the fl ml1et of aboreline, said Assediblyman Wllllam. Baglev, iutbof or the a1> propriation. e Dlal·ll·bus OA~D .(AP I -General manager Alan L., Bipgham .of the Alameda-O>ntra Co 1 t a Transit District has ·been authorized to a~ply for funds to study the posslbilllies or a bus people would summon by telephooe. Such buses would operate within 1 definite · area, Jinked co~tly with headquarters by radio, aJ\d riding them would ~t more than schedul· ed busu but less than taxis. e Cyele Plates ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Senate thinks vin- tage motorcycles should have special license platei just as old "horseleu carriages" do . A bill to provide th@! !or motorcycles built in lla or earlier . passed tbe senate without dissent. M o t o r c ye I e enthul!llt& which pn>blblls takeolrs from would pay i1s !or tbe special Hollywood · Burbank Airport plates and all Nvenue above between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. ln aetuil COii ol lssuinl them 1970. would be deposited hi the ca I lf om1a Env!Munenlal e Report ~ue1' Pi""°Uon Program Fund. SACRAMENTO. (AP The Tbet fund llready geta money l -Cafllornla A!aembly baa voted from I p e c I 1 I perlODlllsed to nqulre an eovlrorunenlal llcerlse plates f'!" cars. impact statement !or the pro. e: B1trb,[nk Aided. posed shuttle transport system . between Los Angeles and the LOS ·ANGELES (AP ) _ San Fernando Valley. pollution, according to a state olrlctal. Calllornia'• "biUeat prob- lem" ii "I.be fact that automobiles are s t i 11 j~ creasing here, I I IDd there may havet to be a ceilinl Imposed on \heir numbers, • a I d Nonnan B. Livermore. secretary of the s t a t e !lesources Ageney. Uvennore was 'ooe of 35 U.S. delegates to the United Na· t i o n s environmtntal con- f erence in Stocthohn. · • Medi• vr,ed SACRAMENTO (AP) -A $5-nnillion bill to encourage ' SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Th< iargest blgbway bid call in California history was issue.~ for a Pasadena area freeway project ei:pected to cost nearl) $36 million. The call covers eight-and 10- laoe construction of 5.3 miles of the Foothill Freeway -Interstate 210 -a n d .8-mile of eight-lane Long Be a c h Freeway-California 7-all on new alignments. Bids will be opened Sept . 21 and completion ls scheduled for early 197$. Five ~traclt under way on the Foothill F r e e w a y represent approxJmately eight miles of construction costing seven-mile s t r e t c h oC Interstate I in San Die&O: County. . .' Dayap Backed: nearly flO million, a II.a.mile JERUSALEM (AP) , stretch of tho freeway is com-Eighty -nine per cent o{ tbe-' plcled and future contracts tsraells responding to a public; will cover about 10 more opinion Poll said Defen.ae: miles. Minister Moshe Da y1111 .,,..: T~ State Department of doing a good job, but only 31; Publlr Works s.i.ld the largest pereent approved of the ao.· construction contract in prog-lions of Finance Minister · rcss is $29.8 nlillion for a Penham Saptr. ~~~-'--~"-"'~~~- P • d hlitKll "'d\lfftlHmtat ,,.._ __ Elect to Laguna Beach City Council Ju~ 25th.---: Slate .'Attt. Gen. Evelle J . The bill passed 484 and Younge'r filed a friend of the rttumed to the Senate for co"" court brief with the U.S. currence on amendments. Supreme Court, asking It to The author of the bill; Sen. uphold a Burbank ordinance Anthony Beilenson ( D ·Lo s barring jet takeoffs at night Angeles) bas for two years op. lvilh!n the city limits. posed the project, wbich would "This case is an importa nt involve air cushion cars on the precedent," 1atd Younger, center strip of the San Diego "because. we hope to establish, Freeway. pedestrian malls in C i t f U~I ,.._..... Wayne Raglin . • centers has won endorsement Pl!J!J!l•H"k of the Senate Finance Com· mittee. A young refugee girl oot on1y in the area of noise • C C Ill pollution but In the en· •r e ng '11>e blll, by Sen. Ni<holas carries her little broth· Petris CO.Oakland ), was sent er on her back-to safe-- vlronment generally, that federal action does n o t preclude states from taking more stringent measures." Burbank eiiacted the ban, • LOS ANGELES (UPI) California m a y eventuaUy limit the nu m.b er of automobiles in the state as the only way to cope with air to the floor. ty as Quang Tri resi· lt wOUld allow cities of dents flee the city dur-" 150,000 population or more to ing the South Vietnam· apply for state funda for crea-ese counteroffensiv.e, to lion of downtown t'nalls. recapture the city_ Off And More! FAMOUS BRANDS DRASTICALLY REDUCED! ' FOR WOMEN NATURALIZER FOOTSAVER MISS AMERICA LIFE STRIDE COBBLERS Orig. to $24 FLORSHEIM Orig. to $17 FANFARE .Orig. to $30 Orig. to $19 Orig. to $19 513 s11 .. s19 59 511 s5,. s9 FOR MEN BALLY PEDWIN & CLARKS ACME Orig. to. $54 ROBLEE Orig. to $27 Orig. to $30 Orig. to $30 ' s26 .. s32 55 .. 513 510 .. s15 -511,.514 WETHERBY -~ KAYSER #4 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH IAN~~.El_IC.A:RD e MASTEl CHA~GE e AMERICAN EXf'lESS ' ' ' • I The '°9IIM. Wllltney, Y(ayne, Rynn, Faye "If I hove not hod o chonce lo meet with you personally, moy I simply say my goal is to be an energetic, dedicated and honest councilman. My allegiance is to the av er ag e citizen, not to a highly discip ined political machine. If you are tired of bitter, disruptive government and recall campoigns, I encourage you lo VOTE for me on JULY 2_5. l~e candidate who has gone out to me'et the resi den ts of Laguna." \\'nyue Bnl(Un f'•!f.flf" ~ Cltlltf" ,.r •qlln, II'. J. J•l1r.w1 ClltirlMn,.241 C""-11111 Avt .. UfllM ltldl. . . ' • Picture Durself Tl1ls actio11 shot ot ttoo tee11agers surfilt!J wo11 the f;rst plu"e award, a trip aro1u1d tl1e world tor tlllo, ' J 1000 richer. Or even $50001 • I lere's how ea$y it is: 1. Th• co11te1t 11 strictly for 1m1t1ur photo9r1pher1 fA11 1m•· t•Ut i1 d•fl11ed 11 on• who1• hobby 01.1voc1tio11 it plctur1-t1•i119 and who do11 not 11111k1 •ny 1uittt11tli•I p1rt of hit lirint throuth t1ki119 pictvr11 I. 2. ll1ck·•11d0whit• or color pictur11 t1ken tftet Jufy I, 1971 •t• oll9Jbl1. No pictures m1y be 1nt•rtd by 111y 1mploy1 of th• DAILY f'ILOT or by eny i!Nlividutl wlio p1f1ohiny it 1119t9.d In th1 m•nuf1ctur1, 11le, commtr(J,J fi11 i1hln9 or p1of111lor11I 1111 ef phote-gr•phic 9ood1. J. S111p1hoh m1y b• teken with •ny m1k1 of c1mer1, on tny ltf1Mf •f film . No 1rtwork or r1 touchlnt 11 ptrMIHM 011 11191• ti••• ot pril~I• -ne compo1it. pichrr11, m..iltipl1 •1po111r11 or Multlpl1 pri11tin9. 4. A"'t' 111mber of plct11111 m•v b. 1nter1d. Conl11lt nl'1 111m1, t1ddr111 •"' pho111 1111mbor 1111111 b1 w'lt1111 cle1r/y on th• b1ck of ••Ch pich1r.. Mill or d•liYer prinlt Of' htft1p11111cie1 to: DAILY PILOT St11p1hot Cont11t Editor, P. 0. lot 1160, Co1f1 Mt11, CA. t2•26. IEl'lhi•t c111 be h111tl-dtll•fl"til I• eny OA.ILY PILOT offico, but n11ut b• phy1ic;1lly 111 hind 111 tho11 offic11 by ~11dli111 01c!. •t•k.I Cont11t oflicitl1 r111rve th1 right to c111y .,,,, leto •11tri11 for Judging from or.. w11k to th• 11ell"t end to e1ch1do froll'I j!Hlgi119 •lto9ether 111y e11fT;•• r1c.t,ff !tit i11 th1 fl1•I ••ek. I. No bl1ck·•11d.wltife pictur11 will b1 r1tur11td. Co11!1tt1nt "II.tit b• tbl1 t• fur11i1lt tft1 ori9i111I 1'1191tl,1, If r•ci11•1!1d by •h• Co11te1t Editor. Th• DAILY f'llOJ "t111111et "' r•tpo111lbilly for n•t•tlv•t ,, prl11t•. COLOR PRtNTS Ol SLIDES Will I E RE· TURNED ONLY IF ACCOMPANl lD IY A STAMPED. SELF· ADDRISSlb ENVELOP!. / 6, Conlt 1t1nt1 tfl ptrmitt•d to 1u"mH pictu1tt to only on• fltw1p1p1r p1rticlp1tin9 .in th1 Kodtk lnt1rfl1lion1I Sn1p1hol Aw1rd1. 7. To b1 11i9ibl• for • Ioctl 9r1nd pri1t , • coflf11t111I m111f 1i911 • 1t•l1m111t that th1 plctu11, or 111oth1r clo11ly 1imil11 pie· turf of th1 1tm• u1bj•ct or situ1tion, ht1 !'IOI bttn, ind wlll not h1 1nt•r1d by him ht 1ny oth11 co11t11t tfld will 11ot l.1 offe11d for public1tlo11 to 111y publicttlon not connect1d with thl1 Co11t11t. . I. IM'°lTANT: I• sure you lrnow the n1m11 ind 11fdrtt1•1 of t11y t1cognlt1bl1 p1r10111 1pp1trifl9 i11 your picture. TI.it it 111c111trv b1c•1111, 111 ord•r for it fo be e11t111d in th• t11f i011t l j11d9i119, you m111t be 1ble lo git th1 writte11 con11nt of 111ch pe11011 or p1r10111 lor th1lr l1g•I gu1rdl1n1, 111 th1 c1111 of mi11or1I to pt rrnil ..-11 of th• picl11r• f•r the p11rpo11 •f lll111lr1- tio11, td,,rfi1i119 or publictlio11 i11 1ny fl'l1n111r. tor Clare11"e 'Ma"' Maki at ~onoltdu h1 the blflf!k•and· lllllite "ategof'fl at· the 1971 Kodak International Nellls• paper Snapshot Award•. It · vou take pi"ture1 you "011ld . win traoel or "ash this year.": Check this list of <Ner 200 fabulous prizes: Ten greet calh/tnvel prlze1 (One lor black-and-white, one tor color) Fiii! Prtzr. 30-day around-th&-world trip for iwo. plus $1,opq.or $5,000 in cash. Secon4 Prize: 2t-day lour of Europe for IWo, plus $500 or $4,000 In cash. Third firize: 14-day trip to Mexico for IWo, plus $250 or $2,500 In cash. Foullh Prllt: 7-day trip to Hawaii for-IWo, plus $100 or $800 In cash. Filth Prize: 7-day t~p to West Indies fo r two, pluo.$100 or $800 In cash. Plu1 1 o honor awards of $500 each. 200 merit awards 'of $100 each. Plus local competition prizes, ' DAILY PILOT • Snapshot Contest. • Enter Every Week-Deadline Wed. Noon -Now thru Aug. 26 , • f I I ' ' • 14 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Jvly 20. 1972 • Real-life Politics Interwoven • Ill 'Candidate' II)' 1AlUJ8E SWEENEY of !bill country II COllMC!ed wltb who lloals up the leaaf-of. lcnslve balloon. Now to me, bal!ooo-!loating and I m I ge • making shouldn't have a thing to do witb getllng the rlghl man to lead us." hero, Bill McKay, ti o new· politics condidale wbooe Ideals melt like lC\i cream before the medta "image mot,iers," who are delermined to make him wiator from California. tJonal candidate McKay) ti bigger than any candidate drew h<!~ !or the Florida primaries.'' "We b ave star-making machinery instead of pollUco- maklng machinery,'' 11y1 Jeremy Larner. Rllcltle ski film "Dowahill Racer ... , co~tive former educaUon • o!lldal, and Gov. Ronald Reagan, says Lamer. C..WIM ~ Mtllll., .. me. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Down in tbe crowd, Mnr. The 10 a.m. sun glided the railmd tracks, lighting up tbe campai&n lrain. the pelted palms on the cross ties, the rock group, and lhe restless crowd waiting for the can- didate to speak. He loped out on tbe plal· lonn, giving off kilowatts of charisma as Jacksonville Mayor Hans Tanzler in- troduced him. Yellow bajr, tan face, and white teeth gleam- ing, he launched into the speech: 'I'1le crowd clapped, savoring tbe parody o! poliUca ~· Robert Jtedford, star of "The Candidate." gave a live, col· orful Jessoo ln what his film ls about : the show·biz process by which today's politicianJ are sold to tbe people. To underline the message from the film, Redford and,, hls entourage made a whistle.stop train tour from Jacksonville to Miami. complete with balloons, speeches, b r a s s bands, buttons, press people, and posters bearing the slogan "McKay -the better way." CBrmen Young ot Jacksonville ... allowed as bow that was ao - she'd seen it working for Sen. Edmund Muskie in th e primaries. AL mouGH THE Redlon!· McKay campajgn train ad- mittedly plugged W a r n e r Brothers ho! new film. ~ also spotlighted the steadily blur- ring line between t h e glamorous image and tbe political reality. Larntr Ls the former Eugene McCarthy speed!wrlt..-who wrote tbe script ror "The can- didate" and ll<dlonl'1 whisUe- stop speech. The rUm's dlrector, Michael Ritchie, was a media man for Sen. John Tunney in bis California race. The original idea for lhe film, a Redtord- Ritchie producUon, was Red- ford's. He saw it as cne of a quartet of films on the au .. American obse&&lon wttb win- ning (tbe ftrst, tbe Redforll· TALKS WITH THE people Involved in making "The can- didate" suggest It la plaited wttb rtal-llle polillcs. Facels of the handsome, volaUie, idealistic McKay r e m I n d many people of a composite of any or all ci the Kemiedys, New Ycrk Mayor J 0 h D Lindsay, and Twmey. McKay's Ii I m opponent, Crocker Jarmon (Doll Porter), a conservative incumbent senator named for two famous California famJlies, was in- spjred by Max Rafferty, arclr "LbtejliDg to Reagan I got a 16£ of Ideas for Crocker Jarmon -Reagan is a master ot. rigbt..wing rhetoric." · 1 r.rner noted that • vote. getting 1~1 speech In tbe film WU plred by Qlle of Reagan's. 1 ' REDFORD, EYES veil· ed by sung1a..e., talks about the rum: ··rt•s 'hot 8 movie about the pcllllcal lysttm, 11'1 about .tbe process by which Poliliclans are elected. "II could be lhal the future ••THE CANDIDATE'' could have been titled "The Selling of the Senator." Its Looking at the crowd of a couple hundred people In Jacksonville, Redford noted : ~'Today's crowd (£or the fie· 0 0 0 THE CANDIDATE Robert Radford JUST 4 M~RE DAYS! TijURSDAY, 1 FRIDAY, SATURDAY ~MONDAY ASTERISKED • ITEMS fN AU STORES EXCEPT MARIN+, \ FUR SALON• ' Cyed Rabbit cools., short, med. lenglh 111.00• Naf\lral mink gill & leather ~ coots 399.00• Noturol mink/leather ~ Mio Miiii coCits 599.oo• Noturol & dye added ¥4 mink coots • 699.00• fur Garment Home ond T rovel 8ogs1 11.95, Full lgth, 9.95; 9.95 Stroller lgth • 7.95 luffurru.' regvlor fur lkKk. molly .-.duced 50% All fur1 labeled lo 1how counlf)' ol origin of impaned fvrt DESIGNERS' CIRCLE Mc.Mullen Dr••••• • • • 1 /3 off. The complete group fottons. linens, blends; 8- 16. Oda. 46 .()().66.00, • • 30.99-43.99 COATS I 00.00 Imported suede, leaiher cools •• 69. 99 74.00 Pure cashmere coots, nude or blu111 59.99 DRISSSHOP Speclol values in 1ummer c:lresses, cottons, Ar. nel® jerseys. polyt:stor kn:if1 19. 99 WOMlll'S WORLD .C0.00.80.00 Dresses, co Siu mes 19. 99-53. 99 w-'1 WOt{Q', Long S-h, lo Hobta SU•CllARM SPORUWIAR '14.00.1 5.00 Ribbed boucle knit tops ,,,, 9.99 13.00..14_.00 Bon-Lon® nylon top , 7.99-8.99 )4.()().26.00 s.;,,.,ed tops, ...... 9.99-14.99 14.00-18.00 Polyester pull on penis 9 .99-11.99 8.00.16,00 Cotton coordinates • , , 4.99-9.99 '19.00-16.00Summer1hifts •••• 11 .99-16.99 'YOUN• CALIFORNIA SHOP Junior summer sportswear, 5-111 orig, 9.00. 15.00, oow . 3.99; 12.()().18.00, 4.99;15.00· 20.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6.99 18.00 Jersey print dres$eS ••••••••• , , , 9, 99 "'8.00 Corduroy cool, sheorllng, 5-15 •• 29.99 aUDOIT DRISSIS* Seersuclcer iocket costume, entirely wo.hoble, reg. 24.00 now • , , • , • 16. 99 ~"' Dreun. 0!1110•~• e11<ept Morino • ' 26100LOngdresses,8.J8 ...••••••• 19.99• Jersey dresses, regular, holf sizes • , , • 10.99• 26.00 vol. long cotton voile dresses ••• 17.99 ·20.00-28.00 vol. Group, misses' dresses 12.99 18.00 GJ'("up Avril® royon/cotto,n dresses 14.99 Budget OreJM'" oil ll0fe1 111cep1 Morll'IO aODY FASHIONS 5.0Q..7.50 Scooped Radiant bros • 3.99°5,99 · 10.00-18:00 Bodyshirt• for summer ,, ,, .4,991 5.50 Olgo ,Wunde(ponls for body clothes 2 .991 14.00 Under.cover slimmer pantygird/e , 8.99"' Holter newt! Body Briefer In light-- weight Lycra® spondex. Strop1 convert to tiolter neckline, Trkot cups contoured for noturol $hoping. Nude, 8,C, , • , • , .-5 .99 Body h:nllion" oil >tott11 eacept Morino : LINGIRll 6 .00 famous maker lace opplique slip • , 3 . 99 44Xl0 late edged half slips , • , , , , ••• • •, :2.99 loce trimmed petti-slip, nylon trKof •, • •• 2 .59 Slotic free Antron® nylon sl ip , ••••,,,, 3 .99 ROBES AND LOUNGIWIAit 12.00-1600 Classic model cools, 1()..20 , 8 .99 12.00-20.00 famous summer shifts 6 .99-12.99 25.00 Value long fleecy robe, S·M·l , • 15.99 24.00 Value Wor1h ny lon gown, robe, set 14.99 15.00 Don River 's 100°1~ cotton terry robe 7.99 12.00·14 .00 Sufl'lmer sh;lts ·····•·•••• 6.99 • Dotted Swiss Robes, permopress col• ton, 10-18, long 11 .99; short , , , , 6. 99 Fo mous maker .Jr. Ro bes, polyester/collon, cottons; 7· 13. Reg, 27.00. 29.00, ............... 17.99-19.99 Robe\ ol"d l011"9"'""''· olt alortl SLllPWIAR 7.00..10.00 Brushed nylon sleepwe-or 3.99·5.99 La d y Weldon finds! All co11on/ ~yester; long gowns, reg, 10.00, 5.99; 1hi~ gowns, reg, 7.00, 3.99; dus-.rs, 10.00, 5.99; dusie,,_ reg. 13.00, 5.99 Slffpweor, ol llloree 7.00..8.00 Ny1011 lt'icot sliih gowris , • , ••• 4.99 10.00 Lon9 n~n rricot gowns , ••• , , , , • 4, 99 Lody Weld~ polyester/co~on shift -gown, 8,00 YOIU~llOW'~.99; motthlng duater, 10.00, S.99 LIG FASHIONS Buffum•' own pantyhose so vinlils: Sheer lo woiSI 1-size fits oil •• , , •• 6/pr. S.00 Opaques, 5 pr,/5.00 Xtro sz fig. , , 4 pr./S.00 Control lop, 3 pr./5.00 Support , , , 2 pr./S.00 Values to 7,00 Slippers, wndols , , 2.99-3.99 BRABAR 4.00·6.00 Magic lody briefs •••• , 3.19-4.79 4.00 sports briefs ; . , ; , , •.••••••••• 2/6.49 1.00 Loce briefs, bikinis, nylon • , •.•. 6/S.29 8ro llar, long 6toch, Sonia A~o, Pomo~<J. l<J Hobra HANDBAGS 9.CO Secretory purse ••..•..•.• , , •• , S. 99 7.00 Super choice of shoulder bogs , • , , 4, 99 I 1 .00-2 1.00 Super lrovel toles ••••• , • , 6. 99 13.00-16.00 Summer great bogs, styles •• 9.99 7.00..60.00 Super bog group • , •• ·1/3-1/2 off GLOVES 10.00-29.95 leather gloves , , • , ,, 5.99-7.99 PASHION JEWELRY 5.00 Fashion choins , , , •• , , ,";, 2.99, 2 /S.00. 3.00.12.00 Hand aofted {ewol.y 1.-99, 3/3.99 3.00 Bongle bracelets ••• ; •••• l .99,_3/S.49 · 3.00..6.00 Antique design rings •• , 99, 3/2. 79 3.00. I S.00. famous jewelry , • , , , • • , 99. 7.50 3.00-6.00 fashion C~t?lk while beads , , 2/S.00 ACCISSORY SHOP 13.00-15.00 Acrylic cardigans, 36-42 ••• ·9_99 8.00-13.00 Famous coordinates • •• 4.99-7.99 3.50.6.00 fashion scarves , • , , ••• ,, , •• 2 .99 4.00..8.00 Cho in, leather belt , •• , , , • , • , 2. 99 10.00 Pull-on pants, machine wo~, 1()..18 6.99 Ladies Orlon® ocrylk knit ~oat ••••••• 12.99 HATS a"d liAIR • 20.00-25.00 modocryllc cop free wig •• 14.99 Hol1 & Hair, oil slolWI e•tep! Moril'IO, Pol04 y.,dft COSMETICS Regime Emul sified Moisture From Gennoln• Monteil reg. 8.00 •• , . 5.00 Revlon 'Et•ma' "i.7 Nililht Cream 6-oz. 15.00, 10.00; 12-oz. 25.00, 15,00 Nino Ricci'• Modemoiselle Spray L'Air di.i Temps, Coeur-Joie , , , .... 4.50 Copricci ••• , • , •.• ~ •.•••••••• , S.00 CoNen Mo Griffe Mis-s-slifier, powder 6.00 Chorle1 of the Ritz liquid Revenesc- ence oil day moisturizer, untin!ed no!ura l or moisture glow. Reg. 15.00, , , •• 8 .50 10.00 Instant Endocreme •••• , , , , S.00 Ja cqUelin9 Cochran Flowing Velvet moisture lotion or Hin cream. Reg. 9 .50, ea. 5.75 alAUTY SALON 27,00 Permanent wove special • , ,, , , , 17.SO Eyelashes applied. Jost tip to 8 wks. • , , 20.00" HOUSIWARIS Special! Osterizer 10-speed blender •• 19.99• 29.95 vol. Solton hotroys ••••·••••·• 19.95• 75.00 "VOi. Mayfair hotable, serving cort 42.95* 10.95 s·olton bunwormer •••••••••••• 6 .99• .60-2.50 Royal kitchen terries ••• , • , .49-1. 99 16.00-17.00 Enamel, copper teakettles ·• 9.99* 23.00 3-pc. Gollop Gourmet cutlery set 14.95• 19.50 val, Comlngwcre Trio set , , , • , • , 9.99 11.00 Revere teakettles •• , • , •• , •• , •• 8. 99• 18.50.24.50 Revere soucepots , • 15 .99-21 .99 14.00 Revere covered 10" skillet •• , , . , , 9.99 Westinghouse Gallery Collec!ion Appliance~ ~ev. !6.95-32.95 ........ 1'2.69-24.6Y 16.95 Ekco 7 pc. ~itchen tool set, roc,k 13,99• 6.00 Steok si:azler plott~;troys 4 .99, 2/8.99• 9.95 Insulated beverage server, 32 OL • 6.99• Tivoli 2.C gloss drink set, Special! •••••• 7.99 .79 ea. Twist·pop kt cube troys , •••• , • 2/.99 8 pc. set of crystol clear porfoil glosses .• 4.99 Hovwworn, o-tGwn LO!llil Beoc:~. Santo Ano: Pomona. lo "'"" ·This coupon i1 good for 20.00 off on Gny Hoov•r Dia l·A-Matic vacuum Includes dHp..cleaning Power Driv.. Cou-. pon mutt be presentoad ot lime of purchose. HOWNAOIW. lOl'lf leodl, Sonfo Jvro, ~QllQ, lo Hobni CAMIRASHOP 4.49 Poloroid 108 Colorpok • , , • , ••,,, 4.09 l.59 Kodak CXl26-20 color prints ••• , , 1.36 1.39 lrislomolic flo5h cubes , , , , , • , ••• ~ 1.09 .J7.50.45.50 Bushnell binoculars 24.99·29.99 24.00 Men's converse leather oxfords •• 15.99 Come•a Shop long Beach. Pomor>a, lo Hobra NIEDLICRAFT SHOP 4.00 Kit 'Croc het o Shrink' •••••••• , •• 1.99 famous yarn sole: Bernal, Berello, BuciUo etc. 7.00·22.00 Popular ofghon kits •• 5.99-12.99 Needlttroft Shop, Downtown lO!lg Beach, Sonia Ano. Po -PIO, la Habra · FASHION FABRICS 8.00.10.00 famous delu)(e doubleknits 4.99 yd. 4.50 fomous mill wool fabri cs, plaids 2.99 yd. 4.00 Dreumoker pattern cutting board , , 1.99 Special Keen-edge scissors collection , • • • 2.29 l.20..5.00 Ez core summer fabrics .99-2.99 yd. 1.50 Mlnl-eore cotton/poly polkodots , .99 yd. 5.00·7.50 famous mill dO\lblekniti • , : 3.99 yd. fa~Non fobrica. Downtown lOllQ ~ ·Sol*J Ana. '°"'°"°' ti Hahto • CANDY SHOP ,85 Buffums' ~n 'hord candies, lb. bog , • , .59 Specia/J Coconut toosled manhmollows, bog ,59 So lt waler taffy special, lb. , •• 79, 1/2 lb •• 39 Condy, Oowntow11 long 8eoch. Sollkt Ana, Pomono, Lo Hoo bro · STATIONIRY SHOP Stationery .99 •••• , • , • ••••. ••• 2/1.49• 4.00 Magnetic photo album • •••••,,,,, 2.99 photo cube ••• , • , •• , , , • , , • , , , , , 2/1.39• 2.00-5.00 Boxed Christmas co rds , , , , 1/2 off LUGG A GI Skyway Luggage sale: Apollo Series: 25.00 Tote ••••••••••. 17.00 45.00 24" Pullman ••• , , •••••••• , • , 30.00 38.50 Cosmetic. ••••••••••• , • , ••• , , 26.oo· 38.50 Corry-on ,, , • , • , , ,, ,, ,, , ,'. ,, 26.00 55.00 26'' Pullman •••••• , ,, ••• •• , , 37,00 47.50 Carry-on •••••••••• , • , •• , • , , 32.00 60.00 2-suiter 40.00 65.00 3-suiter , • , 44.00 Skywoy trvnks -40.00 airliner , • , • , , , , 29.99 52.00 Dormitory ••.•••• , , • , •• , ••• , 39.99 15.00 Dopp kit, top groin leather , • , • , • 9 .99 luggoge, oll JfOrn ucepl Morino, Polos Ve1de1 TOTS First Sale -Creative Playthings: 1 /3 off 2.00·26.95 Jumbo dump true~ Sosho, Gregor dolts, disguise kit, etc.. • •••• 99· 17,99 4.00-24.00 Sruffed onlmols ••••• T .9·9-11.99 7.95 Raggedy Ann & Andy •• , • , , , •••• 5.49 15.00.20.00 Juvenile rockers •••• 9.99·12.99 Toy,, o!I $1Qfes eKlpf Marilla, Polo. V•rclel SPORTSMAN'S SHOP 10.00 Men's, women's windbr90ker, nylon 5.95 25.00 Nylon backpack. 7 pocket•••••• 17.95 30.00 Nylon 2-mon backpack tent , •• , , 20.95 18.00 Waffle stumper hiking boob·•••• 13.99 24.00 Slumberjock Delu)(e sleep bag , .' 15!99 153.60 MacGregor golf set ·.,, .. ,.,. 109.99 .5.ctl Arnold Palmer distance golf bolls • 8.99 13.00 Wilson tennis rocket • , , • , •• , •• , 7.99 10.00.12.00 Famous tennis shirts, shorta , 5.99' 19.95 Tensor prosl&el tennis rocke! , • , , 14.99 Ja ck Nicklous Golden Bear golf set 3 woods/8 irons, putter, heod coven, right or left. 164.50 value : •••••••• 109. 99 Spottlmon'i Sllap, Downl-L<111g hodl, 'Of!IOl'IQ, lo Hobro, Nt'#Jlotl, So11 Oisgo NOMI INTIRTAINM.1111' Z•nlth: 649.95 23" Chromocolor deluxe contol• TV 499.88 699,95 23H Cliromoco!or Mediterronton console TV •••••••• , •• , •••• , , ••• , • , • • .549.88 7.S0.00 25'' Chromocolor Med. c:onsolt TV Pono sonic: 599.88 129.95 Solid Stole TV , •• , • , . , , , , , , 99.95 159.95 Stereo AM-FM. :2 •peok.,.1 ,, 118.88 4.C.95 AM-FM digital clock rad io •..•.• 39.~~ ~OGftGYOJl; 11.4.95 AM-fM 1191',o radio, speoker •• 49.95 Sove 80.00 on 25" coJor console , ,, -499.95 final reduction: 25H color console with doors Now 558.00 Hoio!e E,._inment, Downtown l.ottg e.och, Sonlo Arto. Pomona, Lo Hobro SHOE SALON 15.00-38.00 Designer shoe sole • 8.99·24.99 32.00 Andrew Geller ltolimi pumps , , •• 24.99 Shoe Solon, all $lores RID CROSS SHOE STORE 19.00-23.00 Red Cross*, Socialites •••• 14.99 16.00-19.00 Casual, walking Cobbies •• 13.9 9• 23.00-26.00 Selby shoes al savings •••• 16.9 9 Shoe Solon, Sanlo Ar>a, f'Ol'llOftO, l oHobro, Lakewood. 11ed C1015• Shoe SIMe. long Beoch •u1ese 1r.ci.s /..ave"° (OMf!dion .. ~with the Amt< (On led Croi6 MIN'S SHOIS 20.00-65.00 Bally, Freemon, elc. 9.99-34.99* •Sorry, llOI oil bronds. !tyles Ori oll llloret M~N'S CLOTHING 27.50 Men'S doubleknit pants 19.99, 2/39.00 35.00 Ooublekott olocks •••• 24.99 2/49.00 7,5.00 Double knit blazers , • , ••• , , • 54.00 8.5.00 Polyester Doobleknlt sport coots , 64.00 115.00.125.00 Doubleknit suifs 84.00.94.0041 135.()(). t75.00 So;1 oole • , l p4 .00.124.00• MIN'S SPORTIWIAR 18.00.20.00 Machine wosh cardigans , , • 9.99 8.00-15.00 Mix/molch swim tops. ttllnks 1 /3 off 19.00 Terry lined print robes, I SL ••• , 10, 99 I I .00-15.00 famous short slv. knit shirts • 6. 99 25.00 Polyes!er double kn it trousers , , , 15. 99 MIN'S FURNISHINGS 6.50-7.50 No-iron short stv. dress shirts 2/9.50 Meil'• fvrnislM119s. long Beoch, Santo AJtO, Poniono. le Ht:> boo 6 . .50.S.50 Buy in ties, stripes, patterns , 2/9.00 7.50-8.50 long sleeve dress shirts, 15-17 5.99• 1.50 Slretch Orlon• ocryl. crew hose • 3/3.00 YARSITYIHOP 45.00 Corduroy sport coot, suede trim , 34.99 17.50-18.00 Imported stretch lerry knits , 7.99 18.00 Action double knit slacks, JO.JS , 10,99 .55.Q0.60.00 Double l:nit sport coots • , , 44. 99 12.00 long sleeve 1port shirts , • , • , ,, , , 6.99 80.00 Dacron® poly doubleknit suits ,•• 64.99 10.00 Short sleeve spo;t shirts •••• , , •• , 5.99 CHILDRIN'S SHOES, BOOTS Semi-annual cleoronce famous brands: Jumping jocks, Pocos, etc. 9.00-22.00 • , •• 2,99· 12.99 Children'• Shoes. oll lfoel •~t11Pt MoriPIO, lokewood .. "'-9orl INFANTS AND TODDLERS 3.50.9.00 Terry swim/ployweor , •• 2.19-3.79 Curity diapers; 4.25 stretch 3.29; 4.59 fold 3.49 5.50-9.50 lnfonl dresses, ploy • , 3.79, 2/6.60 .C.50-6.00 Toddler girl pctnts, shorts 2.49-3.49 'r ocldler boy. shorts, no iron blends •., , , • · • 99 Toddler bo k ·1 h' . 1 y n1 s rrts , •• , , , • , •••• , , • .49 Infant, toddler glrlS summer i:lloyweo r 20% off 8.00.t5.00 o ............... 5.99, 2/1 0.99 INPANTS FURNITURE Town & Ttovel Peterson Daisy Moe Sole; 25.00 .stroller , .17.99 19.00 hi-<:hoir :. 14.99 ~0.00 ploy yo rd • , • •••• , , •• , • , , , , • 23. 99 9.00 wolket/iumper , , • , •••••••••• : ,, 6.99 18.00 cor seat 12.99, 10.00 bock pock 6.99 . GIRLS' SHOP Spring summer girls playwear group • ~0% off 8.00.15.00 Girl&' dreu~group , 5.99, 2/10.99 18.00-21 .00 leather look coot , 11 .99-12.99 8.00 Brush denim 10.0f. jeans • 4.?9, 2/9.00 9.50 Ribless corduroy }eons, 7-1.C •••••. 5.99 9.()().10.00 Robes ••••••••••• , • · S.49-6.49 ,3.50-5.00 No-iron blouses, om. • • 1.99-2.99 . STORI FOR BOYS 8.00 vol. Knit sportahirts, S-M-L.Xl • 0 •• , • 5. 99 5IOl9 for~ oll ~•. ,~ Sonto AnQ, • MciriMt, lokewood, ~ · '3.00.4.00 Ccinon linil pullover shirt;, +7. 1.99 5.00 Polyester/Colton V0neck PJ's. S..18 • 3.49• 17.00 Corduroy, hoocl«:<J porko, 4-7 • • l 2. 99• 4.00.7.00 Cotton knir pullover, 8·10 • , , • 2. 99 5.00-6.SO Sport, dreu shirt$. 8·20 , •••• 2 .99• 24.00 Old We~ cord jockot, pile IToiog • 15.99 FINI .llWILRY Special Loose Oiomond Event: a speck.: purchase from our primary lmpotteri t/4 ct. 99.00, 1/2 ct. 295.00, 3/4" ct. 589.00, ""' "· ................. 945.00 Pi. .......,rY, lOllg e.oc11. ~lo Ana. ~""°"" lo Hobro. ........ Shop These & Many Othtr Unodvertiaed Speclols. Where Merchond lM Is Reduced, Qvonlities lfmlted. Not oll Slie1 In All Colon; Com-rotive Prices Reoresent first-Time Reductions; "Ortn." il'ldkotes further Reductions from Orrolnol Prices. NC) Man, Phone Ordtr:s. aOOKSHOP , 10.00 Pocific Coostol liners •• •••••••• 3.95 10.00 Hoivord Dictionary" of Music •• ••. 3.98 Special! For Eastern Cooking •• , , , • , • , • 3. 98 Import! Larousse Science of Life , , • , • • 14. 95 27.50 History of Mexican Mural Pointing 17.SO 12.95 French Art, 1350-1850 ••••••• ,, 5.95 5.95 Creative Needle-Work. S. Hedrin • .. 0 1.00. 5.95 Decorating ldeos for Every Room •• 1.00 2.95 lnsplroliono l gift books , •• , , ,, e o. 1.00 7.50 House & Gorde" Cook Book ••.,. 3.95 Jewish Cooking for Pleasure , •• , , , , , , • 3. 95 5.00 Vol. Italian Cooking for Pleasure • • 3.95 7.95 The Greol Persuader, Huntington ••• 1.98 6.95 ~oil Four, Jim Bouton ••••••• ,, ,, , 1.98 27.50 la Cuisine .•, •••• ••••,,·,.,, •• 12.95 Book SI.op, long Beoc~ Sorrlo Allo. POlllOllCI, lo Hobro ' GOURMU SHOP 1.85 Buffums own vocuum pocked tokes 1.49• 1.60 lb. Buffums' own whole bean toffee 1.40• Govr111et Shop. on ~ txCepl Jer1111l ' . \ ' Buffum•' Select Uquo.rs: . 1/2 90\. qt. ftg. ac.~• no. '°'• ScoJch 86 proof , 13.50 12.40· 7.00 6 .20 Bo"'bon 86 proof 11.95 10.80 6.15 ,5.45 Gin (domestic) · 90 .... r •••••• 10.00 . 9.35" s .004.90 Vodko (domestic) 80 p•oof ......... 9.15 8.50 4.80 4.25 •10% COi• dbcovnt -fih~ •-UoW. Co-.. S)iop, Downtown Long hocll only GIRSHOP 1.00 eo: Stainless flatware, 5 pieces. • • • • 3. 99 ,80 12·0L tumbler11 reg .• 70 8 O:r.. • , .S9 eac. 17.50 Walnut soled bowl, serwrs ••••• 12.99 17.SO 6 individuals ,, , •••••·••••••• 12.99 14.00 Gotd florentine wood woll plaques 9 .99 6.00 Pewter finbh ca ndle holders , , , • , , ... 99 7.Q0.9.00 Old Foohlooed, H;ghbon1 S .. /8 4.99 9.00 Solod Seti 3·pc.·of bowl, fo rk/spoon.· Servers hove teak handles , • , , •••• , •• .5.99• 15.00 Stoinless steel fondue • , •••• , , , , 9 ,99• CHINA& GLASS '70.00-80.00 Mikoso dinnerware. set/8 59.95• 30.00.35.00 SeNlce for o4 • , , , , , • •, • 23.95• 2.50 Imported blown stemwore •• , , 1.99 ea.• 34.99 Klngstone dinnerware. 45 pc. a.Nice for 8, 19.971 Stoneware, orig. 59.9.$ ,, •• , •• , 39.97 2.85-4.50 Stemware, tumblet1 •• , • , 20% OFF Poppytrall .Sculptured Doity, 3-pc.. pl~ 5'ttings., 12.20 open Jtock value •••••• • ••• • •• 7.32 20% off open 1te»ek 69.95 Norif.oke fronstone, dinnetwor•, 4.S-pc. Mr• vice far 8, 1erving pieces ·,,, •••• •••••• .59.95 Oil'IO otid Gloss, oll ll'Ora ftC9P' Mot1no, floiot Vwdft. Lakewood, NiJwpott • . \ TAaLI LINlllS ~ound print loblec:loths, o~ iii 7o-tOund size, 7.99; ond 90" round '\' ••• <t ••• 11.99 1.25 Wonder looper ploc:t colap ••• 99 1.00 Motthi~g occeuories .,, • , •• • 4• • .89 ;.o. 1.25 1973 linen calendar •••••••• ,99 Christmas toblec.loths: \ , 6 .50 51 •70 4. 99; I 0..SO 59,90 oblong , 8. 99. 11.50 59x90 ovol •••••••••••••••••• ·9 ,99 l . 12.50 59xl0.4 oblong • , , • , , , • \.,, •, 10.99' 10.50 66' round 8.99 1.00 napkin• 0 :., •• 79 Custom table pods. leaves to order •• 10% off Tobie LJ_,, elf tlol'fl nctpl Morll'IO Do-il-yoursell 10ble pods: Arte11 Green. embossed foom botk1 5.00 541t$4 , ••••• 3.99 6.00 54,72 ••• 4.99 8.00 54•108 •••• 6 .99 7.00 54,90 ••• 5.99 5.50 52" round •• 4.99 Clearonte; cloth-. plocemots. nopkins. to 1/3 off Tobi. UntM. oll" 11ort1 ~ MorWa. hloe v~ Lok.wood. Ntwport . \ SILffRWARI 60.00·70.00 wl. houtiful •rvin; pite91 \•9.95 Glost & silvtrplote, 3 pt. aolad Mt , ; • , • 5.99 English coke pedestal & Wyer Mt •••• , , 6. 99 Htirl?Om Sttrling, 8 tfrlree p<.. ploce .rtlngs, / Dainosk Rost, ..-g. 497.85 • •·••••••, 299.91 "1';c~tlo"9tlo, ''V· 510.25 ,.,. •• •••• 329.~S Heirloom, Raphael stolnleu S.Nfce for 8, five Mrvint pieces o o,, • )~.91 SeM<e for 12. f\vo HtVil.J pi«os ••• , • 18$.00 Sl,.rplole tobte oa....,,.. • 10.99 & 13 99 Sit..,.,... olt tlot"tt ._.., Mot1M NEWPORT • #I FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER e M4-2200 e MONDAY & FRIDAY 10:00-9:30 e OTHER DAYS 10:00 -5:30 1 • • • ' I I • r 7 • c ' Divo~ced 1dads must concentrate time with their children into weekends and holiday' doing the things children normally do with their fathers. are • s I BEA ANDERSON, Editor ,..,,....,., '1111 ., 1m Pin 11 Stepmothers Chan.ging Image Ever since Cinderella, stepmothen. have been fighting a bad image. Depending on ihe age of the children, the attitude of the father and who has custody, her role may vary. When Mama has custody of the children and Daddy has remarried, wife number two is in limbo. According to an a¥:Ortment of "part- lime stepmothers," when their husband brings his children borne to visit she can be many things. HJ learned early in the game," said one second wife, "that I can be everything llUt -molller.' 'llley have ooe. They live with her most of the time. I have to be someone else. NEW WIFE "I'm Daddy's new wife, a confusing ti- tle for children to understand. But I can be a good friend, a good listener, a playmate. I can solve problems. I can do motherly things like cooking and cleaning and tucking them into bed, but I'm still not their mother." Second wives interviewed I i s t e d discipline, cmnpetition with wife number one, alimony and child 1 up port I payments, as some of their problems. All at one time or another heard, 111 don't have to do what you say. You're not my mothei." In this case, .they noted, father is the key. "If his children love and respect him, they will obey him -and bis new wife. If father finds it hard to discipline his children, weekends can be a 'living Hell ' for everyone involved." WIN RESPECT How do you win the love, respect and trust of your husband'& children by his first marriage? "You work at lt. And yOu work hard,'' explained another second wife. "My husband's teenage c b 11 d re n resented me, resented the loss of their father to 'that other woman' and blamed me for the fact 'he doesn't love lhem anymore.' After a lot of work we con· vinced them he does and I do. Now we have a great time together." Another key, several added, Is main· taining amiable relations with wife nwnber one. "That,'' a wife said of her predecessor, "isn't always possible. But you have to { 1 I set up ru1 .. for yourself. Number one lJ Illa! l'llll' hu&l>ond· and l'llll' marriage come first. N\lllber two lJ DOI lo c:r1Udte his first wife. MAY REMARllY "U you're nice to wife one, especially about taking the kids on weekends and holidays, she may find · husband number two and oolve omne al ,..a-flnoDClal problems." What do children call their part-lime mother ? A few are comfortable with 1'Mom11 or "Mother.0 Most settle on a first-name basis. "After an, we're sup- posed to be friends aren't we?" "'!bat's not the way m Mother does It." y This statement, part..fune stepmothers testify, has started more batUes than any other. . "I told the children," a new second wife explained, "that in my house we do things my way, In her btlwe &be does things hers. While in my house, they have to follow my house ru1es. You have to establish yourseH as an individual, set a good example of bow you feel Ibey .should behave." One -upre .... COllCttll Ofer Ille chJJdren's predlcamenL "They want to love me, but they don't want lo hurt thelr mother. Tbey want lo blame. oomeoae for Ille fact Ibey elm'! have a mother and father under one roof. "But your. number one concem ii YOUr hull>and and ~ mama,.. Your job hi lo);«p hlln i.ppy. 'lbat·lncl-winnlnl tbe respect 11111 tlUll of bis cbildren. CllllD'S FEELINGS "You bave lo be. loving even If you don' feel loving. And many times, ofter awblle, '.Yooi come lo love them and Ibey to love you." Another ground rule lJ not lo complain about bis allmony and cblld support paymenlJ. "That's the price you paid for marryJna him. When you ll1lllT)' a man who's been married be!= you commit yourself Co OOFlng with llnanciat problems and eveiythlng else !bat comes with Ibo man. "Most of us think It's worth IL "It's not euy, But how tbe marriage 1'0rlls, bow. bia childmi react, can de- peiid oo tbe new wife. "If It wOrka, Ille desema & lot of credit." Modem stepmothers ere changing traditional• image from 'Cinderella' which · Loretta Farley reads to Beth Hartung. J Weekend stepmothers learn they can do motherly things like tucking in end cooking but not take over Mom's job. it Storl<I by AWSON DEERR Of lfle 0.Uf N+ot Sflff He's Aeltber Santa Claus nor an ogre. He's dlvorced and his 1·wile itas custody of tbe children. On weekends, some holldays, pArt of swnmer vacation he takes on the role of father. It's a lough job filled with doubts and Indecision for some, inconvenience and anger for othen. But most try to make the. most of this time with their children. "Too many fathers pick up the kids, take them to the park or the beach or the movies, fill them with stuff they shouldn't eat and at the end or the day dump them back at their mother's house. ' l.()ST WEEKEND uThe kids scream and yell . Why not? wm wouldn't want to be spoiled ? The ex .. ~Jfe is angry because the children won't behave. The .husband blames their behavior on his ex·wife. Somehow it doesn't make for \Vonderful, loving weekends." This Is the way one father of three \'iews other divorced males who aren't willing to be responsible fathers when they are allowed visitation rights. One father of two preschool hoys ex- plained, "\Vhen I was married to their mother, I saw them every night. Now, however, I feel I am closer to them because the quality of time spent with them is better. ''l see them for an intense, continuous period. From the Mme I pick them up to the tbne I drop them off we do everything together. We're really com· mWilCiUng; something we never did when I lived with my ex-wife.,. BE PREPARED This same father suggested that every father be able to do str<:alled "woman's work" -cooking, cleaning, feeding and bathing the kids -in case the marriage goes sour. "In the American home, if you don't watch it, the woman runs the whole thing. I don't think that's good for children. Father only becomes important when his son is old enough to play baseball. "I feel it is import.ant to have them in your home -not just out for the day. lt shows the children you do have a home and ' that tt Js also their home. 1 feel it helps to understand your father if you know ·w~ be comes from and where be uv ... "I try to bave tbem do tbe kind of things Ibey would nonnally do with • a father -wash the car, help with the yard, things boys enjoy doing with their lather. DISCIPLINE "That's the crucial thing. Discipline should be more than telling tbem lo get off the swings." Fat er This ftither, and several others, voiced one common fear. "Always, in the back of your mind, is this constant fear that you might lose them entirely. Their mother might remarry. Her new husband's job might take him to another state and they're gone." llow do you explain to a small child ·Why his parents-aren't living togetbet? One man's solution wa.s simple. ' He told his sons, "Mother and Daddy are happier apart than together." The kids are happy because their parents ar.e happy and it gives them a sense of sacrifice, he added. Another thing the divorced. couple have to fight, several men brought out, is competing with each other for the love and attention of the children. COMPETITION ··eoth "'·ant to prove they love the children best, lbat it was not their fault the marriage had to be dissolvt:cL Children often feel things before they learn to express them . "They team quickly how to play ooe parent against the other." A £3ther of teenagers felt that these years are the time children, male and female, need a father as well as a motlier. "Communication is as important as discipline," he expl ained. "My childttn want to be treated as adults. Their mother and I have had to agree on what they can and cannot do. Sometimes it is better to stand together, although you are no longer marrled1 than let the cblldren suffer. n Establishing and maintaining a father image on weekends and scattered vai:a- tions is no easy job, several admit ted, "but it is the only way I can be ~ p&r.. or th eir family, watch and help them grow." "I feel a father should provide more than financial suppart ," asserted the father of several daughters. "Girls nr~ a father. I think it Is passible to love and respect their father even though he lives elsewhere. "We do family things together. They come to me for advice about thPlr boyfriends, school, jobfl. I don't criticize their mo1!1m;, Sbe doesn't crlllclze me. It works out won.• · ' . 1n homes where Dad 11111 Kolber hate remarried comei the addltlonal pn>l!lem of "hb" cbllh· 1'ftlnc alone Wltb ''our" chlldren: .,They are all my cblldttn," said one. "! try to spend u much lime during the week with my second family so lhat I can spend weekend time with my first And we try lo do things wllh both set<: of kids when we can, We have no troubla findini eJlOll8b love lo go around." ( ' > • l'· DAILY '!LOT Thutld1y, July 20, 1972 Horoscope New Members Wanted :Adelines Sing Birthday -Song Pisces: Make : Twenty-five years ago World :!War ll endtd and women ~began singitlg: loge the r, ~ barbersho~1tyle in orgarl.lied ~;choruses. : Today, they're still singing -' ;end tbelr-organliatlon, Sweet .1'1lillfief," rnc:nas grown 0 an .~JntemaUon,.I socipty with :22,485 members in 5 4 3 ~chapters. ~ Barbershop harmony for : women bad its inspiration dut· ; Ing World War D when women :were asked to take over rotes I formerly occupied by men, a ... 1cotdtng to a Sweet Adellnes .spokesman. · ' '• : Thef.irstprofessional ~-=.women's singing group to en· ·croach on men's territory was ,: the Chordettes, an ensemble .:which appea.red on· radio l)nd :television with such numbers · :as "Mr. Sandman."' The 1 :melody was in °"second part :In their music, which was ~barber shop in style. Soon joining them on slage ~were the Johnson Sisters, who ~ began to sing in the Chicago ~area. i NEWS STORY i: Next to eome were the :· Keystone Barberettes, who at· ; tracted the attenUon .of the ; news media In Peoria, DI. A l news story there caused many I wnme1r to call ' the 'head· l, quarters of tile Society lor tbe Preservation and , Encouragement of B a f b e r r Sliop , Quartet Singing I n J Americi, ·asking f o r ad· . mission. ' They were told by society ; official! tha\ there were no · plans to admit women any r time' fn the ' future, IO women ~ began to form their own ' barbetahop • choruses. These 1 often bad SPEBSQA members : as directors. ! The flrit formal Sweet < Adeline cbapt<r was cbartered l wllh 41 members Nov. 5, 1945, ! ill Tulaa, by Edna Mae i Anderson. ~ Less than two years tater. ; ~ charter .chapter organized ta MorUca Ortmann. by Georgia· Rapid growth af~r that and took place forced the I a ilational convention in Tulsa, fod wilh 1..,. than a thousand : ;member! from. ~pters ~ist \ 'iif tile Rockies, ·sweet Adehnes "*as named · ,and ,lormapy . !lunched. • f DsmtN CHAPTER : ~ ,IR l~ the first western ! Cliapter WIS organized in San- ~ . organization out or Us garage home into a new bi.lilding, with Executi ve Secretary Nancy Bergman at the hel~ Members ~re a'nuc pa'ting the first international com- petition in Salt Lake City this fall. to take place in con- junction with a silver an- ' i . Po ints FRIDAY JULY 21 By SYDNEY OMARR Libra surprises by outward appearances of gentleness. But Libra can-also be strong, insistent, detennined and one who can bring togell!er tboae of opposing views. It would be foolish to take lJbra !OJ' granted or to underestimate 1nembers of this zodiacal aign. There have been three U.S. Presidents born u'nder IJbra: Hayes , Arthur ~nd Eisenhower. \ ARIES (Marth 21·Aprll 19): You may be,.living now in a world of illusion. )leans some- one is not telling the. exact truth. Key is to discipline 1 creative forces . Write. Get · thougl:ts, concepts on .paper: COLORFUL PAST -Sweet Adelines Chapter mem·· bers weir COiorful costumes frOfi'\ the past 25 years of performances. Comparing styles are Oeft to right) the Mmes. Frank Dominguez, Tom McKerlie, Ed· ward Rosen, William Recht and Alfred Broward. niversary celebration and the burning of the mortgage on Sweet Adeline headquart ers. Orange Coast has two Sweet Adeline chapters and its Harbcirlites group will be welcoining new members dur· ing a party Monday , July 31, at 8 p.m. in College Park SChool, Cosla Mesa. · 'Harborlite s Chapter rehearses every Monday from 8 to 11 p.m. at College Park School, and the Mission Viejo Chapter meets Mondays from 8 to 11 p.m. in. the Downey Savings and LOan building, Mi ssion Viejo. Mrs. G a i I Ranallo is llarborlite~ director and Mrs. Sbaron Gordon leads the Mission Viejo Chapter. Women w~ enjoy singing aod are able to c8rry a tune are invited to attend the Harborlites mem bership party or attend rehearsals or either group. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Money decisions might best be postponed. One who is a sup- posed ally Is not thinking loo clearly. Know this and act ac- cordingly. Check details. Legal procedures require review. GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ): Be ready for change of scenery. Start dialogue with Virgo. Partnership ar- .rangement, including mar· riage, may require special at· tention. Not wise to take situa- tions, persons for granted. Get • to heart of matters. KORRAL SITE -Come Sept. 11, the yard o! Grace Lulheran Church, Hunting· ton Beach \vill be transfOrmed into a Kiddie Korral Child Achievement Center. Exploring the site are Mrs. Claudia Balch, one of the s~udents instrum~ntal in its establishment, and her daughter, Lynne, 2. · CANCER (June 21-July 22 l: Improve image. Make amends to one you recently neglected. Ne w Day Care Center Build reservoir of goodwill. Keep health resolutions. Make conciliatory gesture to family member. Gift purchase now would work wonders. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): See Kiddies 'Korraled' truth .Where romance is con-cerned. Don't be misled by one After more than six months who nashes glamour. Seek of work and planning, Golden quality. Avoid wishful think-West College's first day care ing. If you insist on deceiving center will open Sept. 11 at yourself, you will suffer con-Grace Lutheran C h u r ch , sequences. Act accordingly. across from the Huntington Beach campus. vmGO (Alig .. 23-Sepl 22): ,-The idea was conceived What , appeared solid maY be when a student, Mrs. Claudia partly illusion. Oaprlcorn Balch, found that she couldn't. figures prominenUy. Build for afford to pay a baby-sitter and security. Correct s afe t Y continue her education. hazards at home. Give al· She began tallti.Qg with other tention to · older Individual. students and found that man y Show that you care -but also faced the same obstacle. said. College psychology a n d nursing instructors plan to use the center as a learning situa- tion for their students. ~1embers or the advisory board will be Mrs. Connie McCausland, coordinator of college affairs ; Mrs. Torbert, James Long, RI ch a r d Ridenour and Mrs. Dianne Lopatin, all instructors, and six parents. GWC students with six or more units will be eligible to use the center and children must be 2-& years old and toilet trained. Fees \Viii be $6 per child per session, with each session limited to 24 children. Parents must make I u n c h ar- rangements for their children away from the center. Applications are nO\V being accepted in the college affairs o f f i c e or administration building. Jive your own 1ife. With the ,help of Mrs. Catht LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22): Mathews, a fellow student.,-------------------- ' ' I Men Join Feminist Group You fmish short-range project. and Mrs. Joyce Torbert, GWC Don't try to stretch minor anthropology teacher, s he point to major proportions. began to explore the possibili· Message should become irr ty of establishing a day care creasingly clear. One who center near the campu s. usually is prompt may be The three wrote a proposal upset and tardy. Have and presented it to student alternative plan ready. government officials and the PERSIAN RUG · SALE 20°/o OFF JULY 15tlli .. Jiit OUlt ltlG:ULAI STOCK l•1t1., fro• SIOO. to $2,500. ;i • ~ By THOMAS D. ELIAS and 1 ARNOLD FRIEDMAN :: , An eHort Is under way in . Southem Calllornla to usher : males into 1 nc>man's land - : the bee.rt of the women's liberation movement. ·· Leading tile bid are married ELLEN HEGWER Se pte mbe r Rites Set women within the half-dozen Southland chapters or the Na~ tional OrganizaUon for Women (NOW) who want to share !he core of the feminist cause with their husba'nds. But 'the idea of making the inner sanctum of women's lib coed has aroused the op- position of some feminists who say they're willing to let men into this area only if the sexes remain segregated there. The highly sensitive issue in- volves the "consciousness- raiser rap groups" central to tbe movement. Called CRs. they are discussion groups aimed at making members aware· of the vari ous roadblock.! feminists claim are thrown up in the face of all women, indiv idually and col· lecUvely. Jt is in these groups th at the issues ~ movement will later pursue are first identified, the feminists say. While Southland N O W leaders note that men are being· .infused into the move- ment in increasing proportions and in various ways. they have been excluded from the rap groups because many feminists have feared they wnuid take over tbe CRs and thus the movement. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS. Traditional feminist rears have been based on the con· tention that females are con· ditioned from early childhood tO be submissive in the presence of men. Conse- quenUy, sin'ce CRs seek to make women less submissive, men have been kept out. "You're J.i.mply not going to get people to talk honestly about the other sex in the presence rJ. the other sex ," contends one leader o r Southern California's largest feminist group, the L o s Angeles chapter or NO\V. Until re c.entl y, men themselves have been reluc· tant to break the sex barrier in these groups, N 0 W members say. The new phase of the women's movement actua lly began in New York City, where special groups for men only have been started. The controversy in the Southern California chapters centers on whether n1 c n should be 1•sexregated'1 into their own CRs or taken in to coed groups. Ivy Bottini, former presi- dent of NOW1s large. New York chapter and currently the chief organizer or the Los Angeles chapter's CRs, says she believes men's .and women's grou'ps should be kept separate. "Jt just doesn't work coed at this stage," she ,said in an in- terview. "Women have been so brainwashed that there'd be a real stickiness in the coed groups. "1 believe women have to get their heads together by themselves and so do men." But several married women within the Southfahd chapters -scattered from Orange County to \Vhittier to the San Fernando Valley -disagree and are already making ef- forts to dra\v male sym.' pathizers into CRs with them. An attempt is under way in the 400-member Los Angeles chapter to start a coed CR· group that would meet weekly. But even if the men don't get into CRs, the male membership in the entire feminist movement is becom- ing more active. Most males who cOme to NOW and other women's rights groups still tend to ar~ rive after their wives. For the first lime, though, some men are joining on their own. NOW leaders report. · SCORPIO (Oct. ·~Nov. 21): okay was given for the center. KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS & 'MPORTS 2115 I. CMlt Hwy. 1.t.T ~ELIOTROPE) c .,...41el M• . 111on40 Be sure promises are· made in Named the Kiddie Korral \vriting. pr 0 t e ct assets. Child Achievement Center, the Tighten budg_et. Qet money's facility will be open from 8 worth _count change. Assert a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday U Rel through Friday in I w o 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:::;:~iiiiii;i~ yourse · use to s e 11 sessions, coinciding with the1 yourself short. You have collegO's new bl<>!'k scheduling YOU CAN FIND IT AT snmelhing of value to offer. · of cla.,.s. Orange Co unty's Act like you know it. A trained director with a SAGmARrus (Nov. 22-nursery school certificate will Largest & Fine s• Dec. 21 ): You may find • in be in charge, assisted by six ov1a 1s.ooo yours.ell involved situation student aides from the college. sa. n Of UJIE which defies description. Mrs. Balch· and the other ~~~~~..,a y·~E , ~ Maintain sense of balance -planners are hopeful that the =· .. TOOM • e and huioor. Don't' jump to corr center will be more than a c I us i 0 n s . Unorthodox pro-baby-sitting service. 11We want :~ .. ,;"JL:.. SHOP cedure is necessary. Follow the child to learn and not let -$AMDAT through on hunch. these hours go to waste," she '1'° "11 '"' 1960 Knott An. (at Uncoln) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. ="~o 1 n1 IU!NA PAik • 121-3120 19): Clandestine conference'.----------~~~;,;,;,~==~~============~ could be · oo agenda. Be discreet. Play can!s close to chest. l\eveal!hg all you know would be error. Sqlltllrlu Is involved. Broaden borizoba. Recognize potential. You do bold 1'11mp card. AQUAllll!S (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Friend niay not be'Wlini entire story. Dig <leOP for m. formallon. Check details. Put together puzzle pieces. Leo and S..rpio penons ·could figure prominentl y, Don't mil ·money and friendship. PISCES (Feb. 19-lllan:h 20): Natural a b 1111 le 1 an higb'lighted. one In aulhorlty may be indecisive. ,.Get dialogue going. Put ocross pertinent poinls. Deal lfncerlJ with one who propow . pt. rich-quick scheme. lleocl your own couruiel. Singer invites you to our · 121st birthday party Th• p•rty's on us-throu9h • Mr. and Mrs. Raymond R. : Hegwer of Costa Mesa have j announced the engagement of ! their daughter, Ellen Ruth : Hegwer to Frederick Randall : Lean, son of Mr. and ~trs. ~ FrederJck D. Lean of Arcadia. In facl, olher smaller, more militant women's liberatioq groups bar men fr o m membership outright an d resen t NO\'/ ror having male members, ev en in limilcdlj :iii:=====::;;:=:::;;;:-11f';;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;,;;;~;;;;;;,;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~~;;,;;;;:~;;;;;;~I roles. Au9. 5. Come ctltbrtte tht 121 st AnniYersary of• Grttt Amtr• ictn invention! ISAAC SINGER'S MACHINE THAT SEWS! We'll 9ive you ·sptcial buysf We heve • Credit Pltn to fit your bud9tt! : 1be betrothal w a s an-1-;;;;;;;;;:=====:::;-;; I : nounced at a buffet dinner. i Planl are being made ror a : ~ I nddini in Newport !Bea. : Jlllll llojiN and her foanct :-.-·"'~High : &ctmol and are now seriiOrs at : 8an Dill• StatA! Uillversi ty ; wbonl abe fJ tlllliated with : c_.. Phi Beta IOtOl'llY and ~Ill wkll Siem• Pi fralemi!y. 1 Hand Thrown POTS · ............... ....... , ........ '"' H•IN""" 8f IWdllrl ............. ff(ll ...... ' We're havlnt a SALE Don't MIM It I 225 E. 17th ST. -COSTA MESA 541 -2771 e l&IOCAMlllCAIO. e MASTll UIAJOI e 1 SINCER sewing centers COITA MllA-lrlHOI & 141nf'llww, .. CMll , .. ,. ..... ; , S4f."2l COSTA Ml.,,_ DID HarbOr' IMf., Ha"'°' C«!ter ........... JU ,.IUI NUNTIMeTOil llACN-ld""°' 1t ltKll, Hlll'lll"flttl hOdl C1nm .. tf7·1041 otlMll- 21 lllltlflOl'I ·····"""""' (JI)"' (ft\!ft, •.••.••.. MWHf ••••• ••ova-"'' CN~. Ol'Oftft County ,lat.a ............. 11 •4 T,1~1ri OI THI t lNOllrCOM,ANY • • 0 • , . • . They Just Want Facts, Ma'am Peering Around DEAR ANN LANDERS: We .,. normal , decent lltll, 15 and I! years of age who have been friends since kj.floo dergarten. None of our parents ever menUoo sex becaU$0 they believe people Jhouldn't tbtnk 1boot ... until they get married. kids in our rec room at..,. time. lie mllle II cloor, -· IUt Ille This souncls tpUt, but Is bu Its -wlll ,..bably llol 1Ut moro tliu drawbacks. Tbe moCh« ol ooe cl. the boys ' nva ar lb< yean bat 111eJ ~ bnpertant wbo WU here Jut ~ II IUrtous with y .... lo Ille dental klltO<y GI u adole• mt. • ... ~ Ud lt'• ·-Ille trolble. HONORED during a mJro. Aogelea wen. the Mlnu. menl dinner ·l.D Sir Mlcbael's Bruna Bravo, Alna Mlnhlll, -ta'urant, Los Angeles was Elsie Torrey and C.therlne • ~ Svendsen. Mrs. Kenneth B. Sill ol Danat---------, Point wbo has retired !tom the Pacific Telephone Co. after 21 years of service. , DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have 1 beautilul 19-year-old slsler. Everyone tells her bow pretty she Is and she eats it up. She has a super boyfriend. I'm 17, a DELEGATES to the 21st pimple-faced ~i:, mlsenlble 1 n d· summer confermee of the CULTURED PEARLS ARE unhappy. -Bustn... 1 o d Professional . . We gel most of our information from each other. Naturtilly some of it is wrong because the "facts" come from aummy magazlnes. We need answers to two questions. ""'"c•·t (11 11 it paatble to ·get pregnant tbe first time? (%) Do you know of a birth control method that ia 100 percent hannle.s.s and foolproof? Thanks, Ann. You are more of a mother to us than our own mothers. -TENNESSEE FIVE II aeems ber IOO JimmY wao boning f around in our backyard, and ho ran Into a post and knocked out a Iron! tooth. Jimmy Is 11 years old and tho tooth was, unfortunately, a permanent one. I lelt awful about it, put Dot cold compresses on tbe boy's mouth and sent him borne. -His-mother called me a few-hours· later, wild with anger. '~Where's Jim- my's toolb?" she asked. "How do I tnow?"·l replied. "Go out and find It," she screamed. "It can be transplanted .'' We have half an acre, Ann. Hunting for a kid'• tooth out there was ridiculous. But I said I'd try, and I did. Of course I didn' have any luck. 1-Used fOliive a darling sleaay but he -Women's ..ctubl, Inc. in Los. told someone my complexion was sol~~~~~~~~~ sickening be was embarrassed to be aeen I.: with me. The friend who repeated tbl!: to me was not trying to be mean. She just wanted me to know I lost the guy becaUse of•my skin and not hoclU$0 I was dumb or boring. OUR EXCLUSIVE CONCERN AND ART Married · at Sea Married at sea aboard the ketch, Destiny were Re- nee Huey and Jerry Hornbeak. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray Huey of La Canada and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hornbeak of Newport Beach. The newly· weds are motoring through New Zealand and Au- stralia. Hostess Runs Afoul Family S~uawks At Cheap Meals By ERMA DOMBECK During the war there was a cartoon in which a woman wu standing in front of the meat counter with a roast in her hand and the butcher was saying, "How do you want to handle the financing?" Our !amity stopped laughing at that joke six months ago and are now working on a car· toon family perched in a line on a chicken house J'OOlt and the mother ls saying, "U you're sick or chicken, just say so.'' I've done everything with · chicken that la legal. I've barbecued, roasted, basted, broa:sted, fried, boiled, broiled, steamed, baked, g r i 11 e d , fricasseed and burnt it. We've bad it tn salads, casseroles, skillets, pots, roasters and buckets. My youngest came Into the kitchen the other day (ls it my imagination or is he beginning to stretch his neck in and out when he walks?) and asked, "How come we have so much chicken?" "Because it is cheap," I said. "What was that we had for dinner last night?" "Mock beef Cilets." ''What's that ?" "Chicken." "Didn't we have that the night before last?" "No, that was a dinner or chamJ)lons called, 'F ow 1 Ball.' "It tasted like chicken meal· balls." "Well, tonight we are hav~ng company and I am preparing something very special." He picked up a leg. "It loob like chicken." "Chicken isn't the only animal with legs, you know." "I've never seen a steak with one." .. Look," I said patiently, "just because we are tired or , AT WIT'S END eating chicken doesn't mean that everyone has It as often as we do. These people will probably sit down and say, 'Wow, wou1d you look at this. We haven't bad chicken in weeks. nus is a real treat, isn't it, Fred?''" "You really think t b Is chicken U going to turn 'em on?" "I really do," I said em- phatically. At dinner, as we passed the platter around, one of the guests sniffed and said, "It smells wonderful." Aitother piped in, "It looks delicious." A third one offered, "It's so crispy." A small voice said clearly, "It's also very cheap!'' I am inclined to agree with the Southerner who said, "Children are like grits. They should be brought out and served three times a day and then returned." CUSTOM BIKINIS mix 'n' match Styltt A •Ifft llf'lllh & ..+Ill• c .... , .... ltK~ AttlN l llllllll-Hltl Ct'ltt•ll' -·-.,.clflcalllM ISLANDER BEACH FASHIONS 12l·Jlr'll Sh'M't Newpert a.di, 67!·1111 IMPORTANT CONSIGNMENT UNSOLD CONTRACTED MERCHANDISE IMMEDIATE AUCTION Carofloly Seltcttd l'IH · l Valuable PERSIAN RUGS AMI atller Orleotal rwp ~ of -ol t11o f1101t pts of KEIMAN, IOYAL llOKHAllA. ISR· HAN, TAIRIZ. llLOUCHESTAN, NATUllAI. SILK 9UML HUNTING SCENE CAlll'IT, IOYAL KESHAN, KAZVIN, SHIRAZ. HAIN, KURDISTAN, IAKHTIAll, PIAYEI auc;, AIDEllL, INDO SAYONNEllL HAME. DAN. A -plete .w....-ol flM ..i ..i..i.11 .... m.1y Hlecttd , ...... --Orlllltal cspets -..., • ... .... 1tortd lo ......... -............. , .. torlon -., ........... ...a1tt .. _, .. , .. ~ Tff ............. -...... -1op1e4 ..i tllole fl•••lolf -"' """ ordered • 1,.. m..n.t• Gld floal d-• ~ ..cttoo. tMt .. 1, ....... .-..c ..... .,, ...... --Hl1 NEWPORTER INN 1107 ............ load Niwpo.t .-, c.tlf. SUNDAY, JULY 23, 2 P.M. Vlewtna I: In1perctlon from U noon until Umt of auctlort Auctioneer: Col. L•ib Rosenblu"' Ttnftll C11h w Check { DEAR FIVE: (I) It II bolted paalble f,.. 1 girt to become pregnant Ille ftnt Ume. AborUoa. clhtln' records Indicate tbal Ille lllupe-P,.I nw Ille cm1e11 rill: ti pre-. (l) Tbere II ,. tnon hlrlll coalrGI method tll>I II t• pel'<tllt barmles1 and foolpr.01. Tbe closest Is Tbe PW -U lbe girl bolda It belweea lier kneel al all times. DEAR ANN LANDERS: We have lour SOll.!I Wlder 11 years of age and our place is headquarters for all the boys in the neighborhood. We've had as many as 20 I'd like to know il I HAD found the tooth, could lt bave been successfully transplanted? I've never heard of such a thing. -(X)RNING, N.Y. DEAR , CORN: Dr. Pul Goldhaber, Dean of Ille Harvard School of Dental ~fedlcine uy1 a knoeted-eat tootll can be succtafully "re-plantfd" U tile roet is kepi moist and l.Dtaet ID 1 weak aall Hlu· tlo• and tbe tooth and the pollen! are l.D the dentist'• office wttbln 14 lloun. What can I do? J'Ve sent away for every 11cure" under the sun. I'Ve 9CNbbed my face raw with alcohol , laundr.y soap -you nome tt, Ann, I've ti:ied it. Mom says I'll gnY>O ool ol K. I can~ wait that long. Please selp me. - A MESS . DEAR FRIEND: See a skin 1peclallst and stop foollttg around. Thousands of kids wUb acnt have been helped ind you can be amoni tbem. Get yourself an ap- ,tolntment at oace. ' @BRASS .RIN(J blttl ....... S..rt w ....... ,..,.. ~ • Norman Wi•tt • Blayle Al10 Gtlf W•r 2711 Eat C...t Hwy • c., ••• ..., ,.., 67lo4740 t.AURATA PEARL CO. OF CALIFORNIA, INC. MARINERS VJu.AGB Dlin• H1rbor 0.1 Prado Aw•nue 714-4ff.ll32 WORLD's LARGEST NEEDLEART & CREATIVE CRAFT CENTE READY -TO-MAKE & READY ·MADE• NEEDLEWORK• CRAFTS• DECORATIONS • 14 days of savings for fun!! • SALE ENDS AUG. 2 Thousand-ovnt 'em-tfiousands of items ot1 sale • Shop wt.lie selections are complete • Some quantities limited • Every department repre1e11ted • Drastic price cuts in every department • Many items priced below cost • Special bargain tables throughout the store • Balloons for the kiddies • Only a few of the items are shown below-many, m~ny more on sale! Assorted Feathers Were$1 Now 34c a Pl<g. Speedy Bow Ribbon Makes25Bows for6¢Each 25Yd& Was$2.29 . Now S1.54 Cmrel MagnoR1 Tree Handbag Kit Was$5.49 Pearl Bead Strings Sizes 3mm to 16mm s2.94 Crewel Topiary Picture Was $6.99KJt Now s2.94 Snowflake Ornmnenta l<l1Wasll9- N<:!N 69C 'h"' Molded Pearl Strings 10 FL Strings Reg;$1.49 Now44c Crochet Pelll'I Rings Reg. $2.79 (~ each) 'h"' Half Be~s Reg, 89¢ ' Now44c Round Sequins Pkg, of 100 Reg. 69¢ Now14c ! C1'9wel Star Piiiow Kit Waa$2.99 Now S1.66 I ~ ........ ··-.... ---E ' Now S1.99 Kllol12 (Only 18~-·ach ring) Crenl M1rfgold Piiiow Was $4.25 IOI NowS1.94 Br.,.,_. Llc.m1ker Knitting Mechlne Ml>del No. 585 Mir. Uat Price $239 NowOnly ~29 ' f M--c.m.. .............. l ,ORE HOURS loMIY lnn1 Frlday: 10:00-9:00 Saturday: t:oo-t:OO <iund1y: 12:CICM:OO lt4-Jl14 H-JWllgtil DuPont OrlonllJal ... Knitting Woni.d 69eolo,. EJMWhetl$1.48 0n1184c AunlLydl1'1 Rug Yarn 70Yd. Skein Reg.~ Now29c Many Other Ysn Prk:le Sluhed For This Sale . I ---------------__ _Jc_ _____________________________________________________ _ • JI OAllY PllOT s Package Bids Irvine Studies Fringe Benefits AppfOval of a fringe benefit package for Jrvine employes has been delayed to the Aug. 3 meeting of Irvine city coun· cilmen who want to see all the bids received by the city staff. Tuesday night objected to the council considering only the few bids screened by staff, when others had come in after the closing date, but were available to staff, Assistant City Manager Paul Brady told councilmen only four of the several companies nottfied for health package in· formal bids responded in time. .Allhoug!i four otlier lirrns bid on the city contract, his reooznmendaUon was based THE BEST Readenhlp po I I 1 prove ''Peanuts'' ii one ot the world'• mott poS:11; comic strips. Read It In th• DAILY PILOT. only on the estimates of firms who met the deadline. Brady suggested councilmen adopt the Prudential Insurance Company -health package at a cost or '41 a month per eligible employe. That program Includes $15,000 of life Insurance for depart· ment heads and .-,ooo for other employes. Metropolitan We Insurance Company bid a similar package with !Orne ex· tras induding maternity coverage at $43 a month. A third bid by Blue Cross and Safeco Life would have cost the city $48 for each employe. Brady's recommendation to choose Incentive .Industries retirement plan was n o t discussed by councilmen. That : employe contribution program was selected from seven plana reviewed by staff, including social security and a com- bination program involving the Public Employes Retirement Syslem (PERS). BOUTIQUE Cl"EANERS Film in Laguna JOaMALS & WlbDfN6 GOWNS llAUTl.VU Y CUANIO • PIUllVID Warner-Dale Center Corner of Warner I Springdale, Huntington Beach 842-2050 GUYS & GALS-AVAILABLE • FOR DATING ? • IF YOU ARE, YOU SHOULD PHONE THIS NUMBER -434-09 !il Lo1111 •Hdl •x<llli~UUI 1r11 ceN AND LISTEN TO THE 24 HOUR RECORDING Carpenters Coiffeurs 847-9164 3 day frosting special! Com• in Mond1y, Tuesday or Wednesday for your f1shion frosting value ••.• only 13.95 COMPLETE WITH TONER 3 day perm special! 15.00 Wonder Curl ........ only 9.95 20.00 Mogi< Curl ............ only 12.95 0 0 Drivers who dont smoke may save as much as 25°1° with Farmers Non-Smoker Auto Policy. JIM PORIER -DICK ANDREWS 11705 EDINGER, FOUNTAIN VALLEY 839-9500 • ' - OR 171 71hoch11.,d., S11"9 'K' H.I. 142-8111 17911 Mog•oUci, F, 'I, 962·2411 ., 541·1'401 6411 ldl1190f, H. I. lfJ ... 111 The Banzai Pipeline in Hawaii is the most dangerous surfin.g location in the world ·Here in a scene from the new film "Five Summer Stones'1 , Orange ~ou~­ ty surling champion Corky Carroll rides down a ten-foot monster. The film is showing this week at Laguna Beach High School, beginning at 8:~0 p.m. S. Laguna Garage Sale Aids Plan Trustees, Councilmen To Meet in Basketball A stiff challenge w a s Any predictions A garage sate to help raise funds -including legal fees - to support the South Laguna General Plan, is planned by the South Laguna C i v i c Association. delivered Tuesday night to game? Fountain Valley city ~un-''We'll wipe 'em cilmen and municipal ad· declared Scott. ministralors. 1-----------ll They were dared by pro-l----------.,11 clamation to meet the Foun- The two-day event, slated for Saturday and Sunday, July 28 and 29, will be held in the now vacant Third Hand Shop, 31746 S. Coast Highway, South Laguna. tain Valley School District trustees and administration on a basketball court ol honor. REFLECTIONS by Reyn [" Sheffer ! Members of the association, bent on stemming o v e r • development of the area by application of a carefully zon- ed General Plan. urge sup- porters of the plan to con· tribute household , recreatirinat and any usable items for the fund-raising sale. "Now I want you all to be ready for this," said Councilman Gror~e Scott as he seriously read the challenge from a piece of torn notebook 1·----~ paper signed by D a v e· 1~----., The South Laguna plan cur· renU~r is under study at county plaMing levels. Donors wishing p i c k ~ u p service for their sale con· tributions may call Laura Wantz, s u b comm i t t e e chairman, 499-3Ei06, or Lorell Long, association president, 49!!-3870. 'Softball' For Girls Still Open Jsrealski and Fred Voss, member.i or the Fountain Valley School Board. "I move that we postpone this until a new form of recreation is agreed upan," quipped Mayor Al Hollioden. After several minutes of discussion , Hollinden reversed his pasition. "The city's honor must be upheld ," said the mayor. "I make a motion to accept the challenge.'' Negotiations on a play!ng si te will begin soon, according to Scott. Information Program Set An information program for new Mission Viejo High School A softball league for south students is being conducted county women and high school this summer by h e a d girls still has openings, ac-counselor Robert WaJlace. cording to officials of the The purpose of the service is Capistrano Unified S c h o o I to acquaint students from District. families just moving into the The games are played at 6 Mission Viejo area with the p.m. and are held at Palisades programs offered at the high School in capislrano Beach on school, class registration and Tuesday, San Juan School in the schooJ calendar. San Juan Capistrano o n student! may contact Dr. Wednesdays and Ole Hanson WaUace at 837-3127 to set up School in San Clemente on an appointment or for further Thursdays. information. Women wishing t o 1 ,;;iii;;i;i;i;;i;i;; ______ _ "The rung of • IHtlff Wiii never. mMnt to rllt upon. but only to hold a m•n'• foot long enough to enable him to Jut the other ..,,.. whet hlih•r . • • ." Thom•• Huxl11 Life Is a little like an end- less ladder, up which we are constantly trying to move. Each new skill we acquire, each new job, each major accomplishment, is another rung on the ladder. Huxley reminds us that the rungs of our ladder are not intended as resting places but are rather to be used as a support from which we can move to a still more ad· vanced position. When we find ourself content to rest on the current rung, we should take steps to find new motivation.. We fully reaJize our ~pon­ sibillty to offer help 1~ the true spirit of friendship ~o those who come to us in grief. Our service is mea· sured not by gold but by the Golden Rule. ~H€FF€R nlOllTU.l.llY LAGUNA BEACH 967 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY 414-1535 SAN CLEMENTE 11533 NORTH EL CAMINO REAL 492.0100 participate should c o n t a c t Mrs. Ruth McMlchael at game time at any of the locations for assignment to a team. LOCAL EDITORIALS . The DAILY PILOT Quite O~en Fights City Hell Smile, you're with Safeco. VISIT US AT "'"'-'~Old MacDonald's Farm WHERE YOU CAN SEE, PET & TALK TO THE ANIMALS ... Old MtcOontld1s Firm ht1 horses, pig1, chickens, goaf1, ducks, turtles, mules, doves, ro?ster1, sheep cow1, boars, longhorn c..attle, turkeys, rebb1t1, tnd lots of fun. Old MaeOonald11 Farm has coniinuous Treined Bernyard Anl· ~ mtl Adt & • Petting Aree, Pony & Burro Rides and 1 Mule· ~· .,. Powered Merry·Go..Rouncl. 8ernyerd adrnis1ion: SOc for Chll· drtn, $1 •dulls. '""° Rid11 50<. Pony Ridu 25<. For lnlor· ~ • motion coll 49MUJ or Ul-1810. 'J:!...1 Oo flk~~. ~ (\j~ .. el'"'-... '.....-<.::::·~ ,..-.• ·G!).. Crown Valley Pkwy. /' )/ . .. 't:.;) MISSION V!FJO 11; \ 1 ~ W\• DANIEL D. GORMAN, C.L.U. Personal and Commercial @ Speclallzl119 In Yacht Policies ~ DAN GORMAN INSURANCE DANA POINT MARINA, BLDG. '1 34551 CASIT AS PLACE 496-2114 541-5317 CP YOUR LIFE CALL 494-1025 580 Broadway Breothtoling views of the sunsets on the oceon are thoroughly enioyed by the patients. Very few sites in the United States can match the beauty of Beverly Manor at Capistrano Beach. Visitors Alw~ys Welcome BEVERLY MANOR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL Sart Di190 Frwy. to Cimino E•tr1l11, turn South Ort 35410 Camino Capistreno, Cepistreno Beech 496-578b • • • Challenge the News Quiz on Saturday's Family Page In last year's Kodak International Newspaper Snapshot Awards, Clarence "Mac'' Maki, of Honolul u, Hawaii, won the black-and-whtte category First Place Award of a trip d around the world for tw~with this shot of two surters CO competing in the junior • OU championships .. Hls camera WI n y ;;:. enclosed in a waterproof a trip around the world. If you take pictures, you have a chance to win. Follow these simple rules: t. Tiie c:o11te1t ii strictly for am1feur pho. togr1ph•r1 IAn •m•t1ur i• dofin.d •• one who•• hobby or IYOcation h pich1r1-t1king and who dot• not m1k1 any 1ub1t1nti1I p1rt of hi1 li•in9 through taking pictur11l. 2. ll1ck-1nd-whit1 or color pictur1t t1k11t 1fttr July I, 1971 ara 1ligibl1. No picfur11 m1y ba 1rtter1d by 1ny tlTlployo of th• DAILY PILOT or by anv indlvid111I who p•r· 1onally is 1nga91d in th1 manuf1cfure, 11lt, com111orcial fini1hing or prof1•1ion1I ut• of photographic 9ood1. J. Snap1hot1 may be tak111 with any mtka of c1m1r1, on 1rty br1nd of film, No .trt- work or r1touchin9 is parrnitt1~ 011 1119•• fi'ltl or prinh -no compodt1 pictvr.1, mul· tlplo axpou1r11 or multlpl1 printing. 4. Atty n11mb1r of picturt1 M•Y bt tttftNd, Cottt.1t•nt'1 tttm1, tddr111 tncl phon• num· btr mint b1 wrift1n cl11rly on th• b•cl cif '''" ·plchlrt. Mtil or d1li••r prlntt or frtlll· P•Nncltt to: DA I!. Y PILOT Sne,p1hot Con• tt1f Eclltor, P.O. lo• 1560, Coit• Mei• CA. 92626. IEntri11 c•n h• h•nd.d1liverH to t11y. DAI LY PILOT offict, but mu1t be phyilc•tly in h111cl In thot• ofnc•• fi;y cl1tdlltt• ••ch w•1k. I Cenf•tf officl•ft r•t•rv• th• rl1ht to ctny ovt f l•t• entrl•t for fv4tlnt froM 111• •••It to th 1t•xt tnd ff eulud• from j11d9. 1119 •lhi91thtr •llY 1ntri11 rec1iv1cl l1t1 lit th1 fi111I w1eif. I. No hl1ck-•nd0whlte plcf1,1re1 will be r•· turnN . Conte1f•nt mutt b• tble to fur11 i1 h th1 orl9in•I 11e11tlv1, if req1,111t•d by th1 Contt1t Editor. Thi DAILY PILOT •1•um11 no r11pontibility for net•tlve1 or print•. COLOR PAINTS Olt SLIDES WILL IE RE· TURN ED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED I Y A STAMPED, SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE. 6. Conl11t1nh ,,.. p1rtnlH-4 to submit pic- ture• to only on1 fl l Wtp1p11 p1rticip1flnt in th1 Kodek l11t1rnetionel Snershot Aw•rd1. 7. To be eli9!blt for e loct trtlltl prl••• • co11t11t1nt 1111111 1i911 • 1t•ttm1nt thtt fhe pie• t11r1, or 111oth1r clo11ly tlmll•r plchlr• of th• 11m1 111bj1ct or 1lt11•tlo11, het flOf 11>..,n, ind will not b1 int.rid by him i11 tny oth1r con• t11t tnd wltl not h1 off•rM for'J11bllc1tl1n to •nv publlcttlon 1tot conn1ct with thit Co11t11t. I. IMPORTANT: le 11.1,.. you k11ow th1 fltm11 •nd •ddr111t1 of 111y r1co911ltebl• p1t101t1 1pp11ri111 Tit your pietur1. This ia n1c1•11ry "•c•u11, i11 cirdtt for It to he 1nfet1d in th• 1'11tlo111I jl!d9Tn9, you l'tllltf b• 1bl• to got ft11 written con11nt of tuch p•r• 1011 or p111on1 I or tfit lr l•t•I t••nli· •111 ,in the c•••• of ftlinor1J to ftl""lt 111• of the pietur• for the p11rpo1• •f llfuttf•• tlo"' •"••rflti•t or pUbllcttl•n i• •ny Jftjlt• "''· Snapshot Con~est ' • • ' ' ' • ] • . ·, • I I DICK TRACY TUMILEWEEDS FIGMENTS NANCY IT W~ A .-NICE 'COSTUME PARTY 1 I DAILY CROSSWORD .... ~a; .. POWU I Yestft'dly'' Pimle 5omd: ACROSS l """' .5 F aslfniftf dt¥1Ct 10 f1tlM fetfln· 14 k'lsb I m !;l!llllon '}5 fnntlS &l'l-: U.S. Uher 16 ltlisll't 17 lnfarfl: 2 -l'l TIMS ZO Soclal staldlng n e.m1n food SllftS ZJ llnlwnllJ faculty 25 Eqial: f'trlil a----" ail Ult oUMr: , .... ....... 34 EJ:ploils l5 M.Wt-: Y19JS1rt '. dlctltllt ,., ll•klllclrft '"'" 39 "Md t.o for --'':2 .... .,..., ... 11idd1t 4' Ent«: 2 lfOldS 45 fU\'fl' of ..... 1 • ,. 17 ,. "'Occupied: 2 .... 41 Uwt und« ....... 50 P1111la'I I llrW , ... 52: St1t1 lAl:ibl'J 54 Vo1cn of Slcil)' 55 Evldlnc't Ollll refutn ,., lore wel" •l Lllzy M Cllnldl• rlttf: Z wcrdS" """""*"' .. .,..., .. Shtlttred -,, Ht.S comings 70 1orli:ed w\111 .... ,. 71 l'rlC't DOIN • l l ldllnt 2 r.r 1111t1I - -1":2 .... , .. ,,.-" INOPlt of lr1n • 4 Thtow lnkl --: Put In ,.,,,, ..... ··-• Sotl•I otdrr 7 IChldtf~ ,.....,_ ""' . 'I Chlkhn'S ~ 1~~=1ni f"11Yll U'"loe-~ , .... U Robert Sixt "'' 11 FltMSt 22 Btfor e 24 S•lsnrs to tKrlS 26 OM resm- """ "°""' r1 US PrHldftll 21 Otrlftd ,.... '" 2' One lflltlng llf 31 lllh thl 'IOiCt 3Z .... pe."SOft! ,,.., S 6 7 I 9 I . " I • I 26 u 21 .. 3S II .. " .. Ul Nearly Everyone f ( Listens to !1,nders ' WE WONT &E •Bt..E \TO TRAIL ~E TFtlO ANVMORE? .(;t-~ ,-r.~- ly Cliester Gould ., SINCE RELEASE OF= 'TME SK~MES . YES~ERD•V, TMEYVE EVAPORATED.'" By Dale Hale by Emie BushmiUer '::~-.:.-:.:,....-::. AUNT FR1T.ZI, I'M HOME PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH PERKINS HE'S HERE IN lHE l.l&RAR.Y ! GO RIGHT ON IN! GASOLINE ALLEY SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS I ® ANIMAL CRACKERS • !! i! !i I "THIS LITTLE ):¥\RLIN<O HELPEC> ME SINK .A 30· fooT ?UTT· l>O qOO 50PPOSE. ·. Tlll!CJ llJTEIJD 10 . IC!l!P 1).ll!M (';' I DAILY PILDT -19 By Dick Moores ~­ By Charles Barsotti °*"'H~ ®#!*§! By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnso• 11,1.1 GOJNCO''lt,.Sfli" A LAWY6R!! I \ By Raqer Bollen THE GIRLS By Charles M. Schulz W/'6 IT ~nee THIS, A R:n~l.11~ ? JUDGE. 00 YOU KNOW A YOUNG WOMAN ev THE NAME OF BEVERl.Y BARSTOW? By MeD PFlETTV M~, liXC!PT THAT 'TMl!Rli w~ FEW!RTnES 1>ND MO!tt: COUNTERS •.• r , .. , I/ I"!°"'"", ""'-.' .._ • ''" Moo-"'"'"" 1•>" \ ((,, \, ,,f 11 .. lht Jolin Miles -• • • • " ~ •· ~~ 7-20 110b, I always ltave my car ln 1 1arage-it'1 so alee Uvtac 1 man who'• eoncerned about wbtn yo1're comLDt bJCt.,. DENNIS THE MENACE l~''t •. "' ,,-~ I I -©. ' I ' 20 DAILY PILOT Thursd;oy, Jul1 20, 1972 TONIGHT'S TV IDGlillGHTS ' KijJ fJ 7:30 -"Two Rode Together." James Stewart and Richard WidlllJJ"k team up in thi$ 1931 western about a pair of lawmen hunting the bad guys. NBC 0 8:00 -"War or Nerves." Stephen Boyd and Louts Jourdan star on NBC Adventure Theater in a drama about a "secret army" in Paris during the Algerian crisis. ·---KCET flll 8:DO -"Cl°"" Enough .for Jm,!! The Winners of the 13th annual young people's bat· • l'ienua St.ate Banet Sw~n lly TOM BARLEY Of .... O.tl)t •111t ''"' . lt bas been this aiUc'a ex· perience .that the concertgoer tend! to make allowances for the summer offering that may faU below the level he .would expect to see attained during the concert season. ake' Soggy far bdwOM In a ballet that of the ma1iclan over the merely demonst~ated just bow maldenJ be has converted Into much these Viennese have to swans in what often appeared learn. to be his rendition of an Dustin HolfrMn In "THE GRADUATE" Helmut Re!Jchutz "1s a agitated rooster locked out of case in point. He had the role his pen by 1 careleM chicken SMw 1...a 7:00 P·•· of Von Rothbart, the magician farmer. lb:;;::i•~~:;;:-::-wboile omihotis broo·d-lnf Let's leave lf-\at tfiat. Youl preseoce is at the very heart won't get the chance to see the mwm: u 7.mot1.r KtWS of the ballet and whose winged Vienna group ror yourself .IWNIDM.l:il Dll.Y SAT.& 11N.1uus e.vil is _carefully _emphui.zed..-_ because.Jhey__w.et~ _ 211s. 7·,15 ltMJ N s:~~ _. _ • tie of the bands competition in Los Angeles are featured. '!'h;is _i_s _ .!. v e r y u~ d erst and able latitude, .especially for the onlooker seated in Uie open a i r audJtorium; lulled by the balmy evening zephyrs, be tends to shed a lazy smile in the dJrection of a wrong note or a non-Nureyev stumble and readily forgives a wobbly tenor or a colorless col- by any ~allet director worthy for two nights. 1· ~ of the title. , A parting shot, though, for a · The R o Y a I Ballet s Fred-hall-strength orchestra which • ~ erick Ashton did the kind provided the most atrocious Wll\ll\IERI CBS IJ 9:00 -"The Comic." Dick Van Dyke stars in tlijs comedy-drama of the revival of the career of a vaudeville clown. lrlichele Lee, Mickey Rooney. . ABC U 10:00 -"Owen Marshall." Marshall defends a young police officer (Stephen Brooks/ charged with the murder of his wife's boyfriend. oratura. of Von Rothbart that had accompaniment to • ' S w a n nervous occupant& of the first Lake" that this critic bas ever ..... :' ~~ few rows in the theater .sat through. It brought back wishing they were in the last vivid memories of four elderly dozen or so rows or, better ladies who many years ago still, watching a movie some comprised the string quartet place. that entertained equally elder-. ' The critic cap pennit no such lapses which observation allows us to back into our analysis of a Vienna State Opera Ballet performance that produced its full share of below-par ballet for a Greek Theater audience that, ad· mittedly, didn't really seem to Reiscbutz had all t h • ly patrons of a London tea malignancy and evil of a room. .. .. ' . ,. ' TV DAILY LOG . Thursday Evening JULY 20 ~•11oammm11ns rn~""' en..,,,..., oo-..r tDnt .. _ 111--(!J)t.Dt-pt f»Alla ·-fDtlMl•••• l.Mp Q!l-llD mi.T- IJ)Tlno- ~30DCIJ11y 111nt s... (R) Dodie lll'l'Olm th• Do111la1 f•mlly In 1 wortltr ca~ -totstin1 ptanua for charity. mMtrVCritrl11 Sltow (ill The Jazz Set "Rq Or aper 1n• ltlt New lslsnd Soc11I Club" t.00 1J C1J CIS n....., "'"" CC) (211r) "TIM Cowilc" (c:om) '69--0la Yan Dyllf, Michele LH, Mickey Rooney_ Tht movlt Clftfir of a VIU- d9'1ille clown foea into a decline for msny ytar1. Ht Is reditc.owired 1nd makrr111pstlck TV commer· tills Ind f1111Uy diU While Wlfth· ln1 1 TV mival of his bl11est si· lent cl1ssic. Pals Reunited Thirty·five years ago Huntz Hall, Billy Halop and Gabriel Dell (top, from left) posed at the premiere of the movie "Dead End." In the bottom photo for- mer Dead End Kids. East Side Kids and Bowery Boys Hall (left) and Dell go over a script for Hall's guest shot on Dell's TV show~ "The Corner Bar." 016 THE INVISIBLE VAPOR CAPER! m~ulting barn owl. He utterly The 'good old summertime? failed to convey the mastery Not in the concert hall. TV Networks Curtail mind. ) Production of Films Mo.st of the swans flushed on stage by the vi.siting Viennese in the Nureyev version or "Swan Lake" were very quickly categorized as geese HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Four Cinema Center Films opera- by a critic who was vividly years ago, CBS .and ABC tion, particularly with Tefer- reminded of the summer launched ambitious programs ence to economies and future ballets put on in the London to produee feature movies for projects." Several executives parks by hard working but not theaters. Today both networks have left Cinema Center, but really artistic amateur artists. have drastically cu r t a i I e d operations continue as the There has always been a their film su bsidiaries and are network's venture into theater tremendous division in ballet: evaluating future Activities. movies. we ha_ve the Royal Ballet of Recently Leon a rd H. 11CBS couldn't have picked a London and the Bolshoi Ballet Golden.son, President of worse time to etJter the field," or Moscow at the pinnacle American Broadcasting C.O., declared Gorden L. Stulberg, with such companies as the admitted the curtailment of who headed Cinema Center Ballet Russe of Monte Carlo, ABC Pictures and said future and js now president of 20th the Kirov and Leningrad filming proposals "are being Century-Fox. groups and the Royal Danish carefully reviewed." Martin ensemble a little lower down Baum. who headed the feature ''The operation .started just th I at the time that top sta·rs e sea e. operation, left the co1npany in Then there is a tremendous February to pr 0 duce in· started getting a million dol- d t t th k. d of 1·1 Jars a rwicture and when some escen o e m qua 1 y dependently, Y' offered in the Greek f\.1onday CBS some directors were going Id Nicholas ..... Alexandra AllONZat RM '-COlllM91A"ICTURU lfJUtl ..... -.. ,.W.tDAfFlll -~......... ~iii -~ "" HlllYDWl\f..,',~"''"Tllr G!NI llACltllAN MB.~IH~ l:ltl D _, (tO) •• Jt.sllla 1t "" Sul" Concl (drt) '61 -Sidney Poitier, Cltudlt MeN1l1, Ruby Dte, Dl•n• Sanda. .Cl)CIS- 91 ..,lonto- 0 la! m ffOllside ~His fiddlers Three" (R) Chief lrt1nsid• lmoesti· rates lh1 murder of a musician wh• prtditled his own death on l•P• months earlier. fJ @Ill EE lo1111tr•tl "Tll• Sound Of Money Talkina" (R) Mike tries to solve 1 hint robbery 111 which one of the 1uspects Is ro· manlie1lty /Inked with Nikki. night. About the be.st that can has announced that it is and doubling their pictures' be said for this kind of ballet __ ta_kin_· _g_"a_ha_rd_loo_k_a_t_our __ bu_d.:g_et_s. _______ 1 ___ ..::::==~=:..:::._ __ _ enterprise is that now anii again it proves to be a. breeding ground for the artist GJ n. flJlq llu11 Qj) Ml!" It "Jm With Dous C1rn" m-mT-ttiow..w tl!l•--m1•1tott1toMakat m--.... &J........, Stm Allen tues!S and Dnid Clm41nt ii l11turltd. Elllol Mintz hosb. 7:0011 tDD Ill Nm e _, "'"""' 00 Trill tr c.s.i-. CIJ- fJ Wlott'1 lfy ""'' tD f "" '"' 1111-11-~ !Iii-'""' ·--.,.,..u.. # fi) U1 V111111 Plrl Recotdar fID @ Hallywood Televlsion Theatre "'ltmon1de" (R) Eleen He rll1 ind M1rtht Scott star n two mttronly ladles who apend a Memori1I Dar weettnd sellin1 lemonade at 1djoin· in1 totdsid• stands. €D Noella T1patiu a Tiii Vlrflnil11 e""'~ ~" ....•• ~1 who can go on to a higher ,~... ~ level of ballet. ~ -·' · · '' If any talent scout present ",:> i•·· KURTRUSSELL·CESARROMERO ~rfor~~ncev~~~1is :P~~t~ JOE FlYNN·JIM BACKUS·WIWAM WINOOM whetted by an individual co.-ALAHHOMT·ma:lllOOES·ROWIDBNW..'M·WllWmNUl!EYG performer than he saw much TECHNICOLOR' mPHLMvrrn·=.:~.oMful·mii'eimB more than we did. He would _.,,.__,__,_,...., • .,..___ certainly have to' go beY<>nd ALSO -A TRUE LIFE ADVElllURE-''PIRRY'' the efforts mouted by Karl Musil as Prince Siegfried and t:lOQSKtnd Loft MATI•~::.oDAYll Susanne Krinbauer as Odette- 0 Nm Wltdt kh11 Fullmer 1tUT1AT1• Odile -to name just two prin-€E AW111t11r1 rou11t1h1 Valley cipal.s -in his search for Ef) lbd~f froa Hollywood Patl ltUllATlllll anything worth boosting to a 10:00 o ®I !!!"" 1brt1o -Sud· GATES OPEN higher grade of ballet. ;y Hactett ind Don Rice 111 iuesL ·~ Both had moments when O Nm Geora:e Putnam AT 7 PM they actually resembled prin- U CIJ@ m O••• M•r•ll•ll cipals in an acceptable prc>- ........ lfolf"""' IA•w1 ... ._ F1111flfolt IMll;ilat9&111. c:..i1 '714) 6n-SUS For Jlun11Gtlon1, I:"' Shi Pltprla • ti Ca11I• .... _ ·--''Tlle Tri1nfle" Owen Marshall ind duction of. "Swan Lake." But Jess Brandon defend Frint Danzl1-______________________ th_ose_:__:mo.:_:_m.::en=ts_:_:w.::ere_:_f_:e.::w_:a::::ndl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiil 7:JO. m ........ the Rlwr •r (Stephen Broob), I yoonr police II B.,,.. "Round·Up" Lissie 1lds offictr charaed wllll the murder of ~ Ron and Diie In tflt ennu1I Garth hiswift's boyfriend. Donna Mlll11nd ~ Holden R1ncb round·UP of stray cat· Mlchul Larr•ln 1lt0 1uest. ,,.---; :=--- tit, and helps avtrt 1 11ear-lrapdy 0 Motle: (2hr) "'An111 111d Ille ·x.J.• • whea • Jacknbblt seb off a chiin Kint ti S111!" (dra) '40 -lra111 ., cf l't'tnts le1dln1 to 1 st1mptdt. Dunnt, Rex Harrison. "THE OTHER" 0 Mowtt: (Z!w) "Datroy M "8111· m Nns llen Jones, Ron Fortner fb" (sd·fl) '69-Kuri Cr1n1, Peter ID Nftrl Hulh Willllms WiUllma. fB Cose JmrNa @ To Toi De Tnitto flll l!ll Wo<td - (JJ I DrN• ti Jeannie (ID llCM Libre 0 Mlllllo , _, (t) ~ "T., (fl " -do lllomtt Rode T..,eMf" (•es) '6l-J1mes 10.30 II 7 .. lld: Sttw1rt,. Rk:h1rd Wldrnart ' Q) IHI c..&, Show ®I H_Sq_ m Hitpt's Heron fll) "Qlrty Mlnllhl Wlltt , •• m rn -!Iii" -la G'i) Tt It An......i 6 Mwlt: "hrls Aftlt' Dirt" !!)--.,. (flCllldooelt Culpobtt (fl -(2111) "tltl for"" """ 11:00 IJ 0 D !Iii!!! Ill Nm of ChlN" (drt) '35-ftt O'Brien, (I) (JJ QJ Ntn Josephlnt Hutchln90n. U Ole Stap lt)'CI"' @ Mli*I Dilloll 1:00 U C1J lfJ -llld -It I ID Trill " """°''"'~' A new mild who's terrllltd of mod· tm 1ppll1ncn ltkes owr the flouae· l!J bn fer lour Ult hold in Ell•n Montot's 1bM11C1L Qj} ChieeM1 tn tbt Mow O ®i!l!lllC --(fl-tRl "W1r ol Nel'Ytl'" (R) Stephen Boyd I• ind Louis Jourd1n stir In this drt· l .l5 I& lfli CIM dtl JllMS ma abolll t ''secrtt trmy" In Paris 11:30 II (I) CIS l..ta Morit: (C) (Zllr) durina: the Alprlan ullb. -iN Appollmlltftt" (rom) Omar fJ CV@ EE Alld S•IO lld Sh1rif, Anouk Almte. Jonu "What's In It For Ml•f' (R) D lli m John111 ""°" Heyes. tnd Curry lrt vlctfmlztcl by a g Mfrit: "(q• (rom) '65-Jelnlll be1ubful blll: ruthless woma11 wh Moreau Vlma Lisi. a~ns ind runs Kint Clly, Ida Lu· U nn' 17'1 ~ N .. •· tt p1no ruests as Mia. I.JV w w-...... """ fD The Molhtrt-il-Llw fD Tt Till UM Trultl ID lollnt Frt• the Olpiplc 1%:00 fD Mtwll: "'Aabusl at CllltffOI (iJ Jt11 Sllephlld's Alltrka Pm" (wei) '53 -Scott Br1dy, fl) Ktnninos Cor1}1 M1rfl• De1n, Clint Eastwood, t'D I lf((1lL I Clow lno•lll for I) W1Htrhat Im A spotlieht on the winners of 12:30 OJ CountiJ Mltic TIMI tl1t 13!h 1nnual }'011n1 ptople's Battle cf !ht Binds compell!lon 1:00 Cil DD()) Qi Mm aponsored by U's Department of P1rb 1nd Rtcrtation ind taped 11 UO II Mtwlt: "'Wo.. "' Pier 13" KCET. Co-hosts 111 r.a of last year' · (drl) '50 -Robert Ryan, llralne winners, Didi Wilson 1nd Les Mar-Da,. tinez. Speelal futurt is b!1 bsnd m All-Nlrllt Slllow: "Tiie MIA It- leader/composer Gerald Wllsion as hmlo" "Dlw"9 Ufe" .,.. "'CllCt he prese11ti Btttl1 of tflt Btlld lid" alumni performln1 as 1 combo. ID D Sllow de ltco Vt1dlz e-c.n .. 1 1:00 D .... ,., "'Yoko to .. Ml ..... (dr•) '~ldllrd [1111, Julit Lon· ""'· Friday m "Sllttttt• """"'"'" Cd111 • ., -A1111 Lldd, V1mnlcl ltkl. IPG) . AND IPO) "WAIT UNTIL DAii" "llLLY JACK'' {PG) "ILESS TME IEASTS AND CHILDREN" , • THE BIGGEST SHOW OF ITS KIND ·,'"'., WEST Of THE MISSISSIPPI! 1•·-1972 """' 18th Annual SOUTHLAND HOME& GARDEN. SHOW JULY 14·23 ANAHEIM CONVENTION (air conditlonedJ CENTER SHOW HOURS: 5-11 p.m. Weekd~ Noon· 11 p.m. Saturd~s Noon· 9 p.m. Sundays "SKTJACUD" AND 'UK• WOODSTOCK ONA WAVE' ---PGcific Viblutio.v ~.,-... ____ ,1 tlll7:1 AMtran ""--....,.,,.._ 1 .... SURF THEATRE-121 5th St.-Huntlngton Beach I r.rfoni•c• l:tlO I 10:oo-Ad•. $1 .7.._,.. 136·flt6 SHOWING NOW! CUNI I IWOOD l ··-cJOEiKl•ID R~PIPJ IXNAll ·Jltl &WlN IX)! SJllU) SIO!A(Wlll·MS Wllll\OOll ....... IOOE ll!1•11Hl•"•lll<MIH1Alulo!l!fl-llO<•IAO!lfllll· c., .... r..o.. m1wn·1,_,/,..,c..,.y_ IDMilll .. ft'.W)JI'" ~~ • u . . "Ml""'--...... •••aa• Mt.,,. ourOP.....-ss •.. • ~IOffilMl'fNIW.UfOMOl.On' --·--la.ml·---··· -- - 1 Sometimes o GreM !{otion . --, --· ...... illlfllllS ..._.. _____ . __ ,. __ . -· .-~...,.~PO- .. , ...... , ... "NfWl·ll . "GODFATHER" (R) S...-Tt..t>.l r:llP.M.. Fri. & S.t.1:15 & 11:>0 PJI. ' . l:ltlO "Sloo tt lmbtt" (•dvl 'SC-- DAYTIME MOVIES Pouletto Codd><d, ""'1• Nld1<. J:OO (() (C) "'lf1 ft111 Mt'l'I" (com) '51 t:tl ....... _, ~ (mul) '43 -&lw•rd G. RobilllOll. _,.,.,. Slflltrt, Mlthtlt Mor1111. a.QI (C) '°M)'rtery bl•ntt (1dV) '&I t:a 8 (C) ....., tel'"' I•" (rom) -SIM Form~ Sue Lloyd. 'IO 11111 -. How•d llHL 4:30 fJ tC) "£NIYltill lot 1tM Trill" . . l.,.(Jl.,..,, <-I 'lO -..., ldrtl •57 -M'"'"" cr111,., Joli• ""' --fOft)lho. U:.•"1arlmd'-' lllJ *,-(Myl.) (J}S.Mt n IMM Mst111 .. '!~ ..... • 1,00 0 (C) 'Col Mo Mldtr (..., 1"90 (C) ..,_ -l"'·ftli 11-0'" O~ltr. llottJ G11blo, Don· 11 --·-Ctttoo. " - f ADULTS •••••••• '2.00 JUNIORS ••••••• 1.00 QU ..... ....,11"-wleti,..... • , , llGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER BEFORE I A GEORGE COLOURIS PRODUCTION 1 ,.. ......... '·"•-·-·---· t._;:i ........... .., • • -. ' • ! I ' ' • • ' t . , • t ' • . • . -' . • .. -, ' I , ' t . ! ' l ' ' i • -. , . I DAILY PILOT !J Cast Ustetl ••••ie••~llf • 1JGCs C-ame t -Cutting Through Cliches of Sport cast Tickets Go Fast cwi,. cYnltll• L-V-• vK1llor1, tt1t wort?" No chance. he's going Cardinals, 1 reporter asked ctr\11'1\11 '-1111111 wrinei. tw 111v1tt11 to -v, "Well, -·-the me. uWbat WL~ your --tem ........ Mell. of \llll'lol'l'I .. , Mbd ~ .. v 0""''" ' ..-.......,. ~ 1111.,.. of... btMQ. We"Ye had our backs tbrU1 ln bueball!" ~ ......... ,..,......., ,..,_. 1111' .. .1-------------------.-0rangt Coast College's ~ auditorium wttb an 8:!0 CUI' -_, ...... "" ..... • to Uie ...U before and loug)lt So doo't 4et !hf ljlea the sports g\l)'l h1tv1 tbe clicbe market cbrnered • ·d·-t'"-of "ca--i...11• i. •• at· taln. ' -ny dlrtet"'" ,.,., frw4 '""" -t ... ....1. ..... • .,. ..... IUU I~ • ....., ....ul•r Clft HIC'• ''Todly SMW.. our way OU • 1uu.ay, "'" JU~~ tracted the heavie.st mail Alu Goboo, a 22-year-old .. -..now ""' 11t111 ,._,,..,,w :ru. Dll.lof lime.''· -order. sales oL any-tom--tormer <XlC---drama..-atudtnt --~ -*•IN"" ...,._ ... "" ~ 1111: i· parative summer show since now attending Su Joae State ruTrnl .. flJff TV ru.-1. N 1rnervtewer can eome "My Fair Lady" was staged University, will .... the cul '"'"'',.. . By JC)E OARAtlot.A u;wjlb some dandy questions. ':::=;~~~~'."""'.~-II-at the Costa Mesa college In In the role of Kill( Arthur. ..., __ .;. ____ _,(.._<1'1;;;;;-;--l\i,111 alter Don Lmen-plteb:" · -1966 --~re-Ann-'l'llolnl! r-" Q. '!'lie sport! intervi.W so eel~ perfect pme in the 1956 "'Ill 'IUll'S filST IEAUY UTISfYlll, Ill COlllllllAL AlllUCAI Fill. 011 If THE lltll llUTAL AMO lltlll CHllOlltClES Gf AIERICAl llfl !YU DHIHED WITHIN ---Ctllff!O'rll !d .. t ' l 1 •• --[lf/0/l+ff ?! 0. , r I I I, • ---' $14111!1+1 I .. -.. . - ---,, SMU/U+I .7 . .. -.! ..... , :-=- The musical -which, like Costa Mesa wilt take the role dten seems to cartalst ot World Serles, a reporter aslc- "Fair Lady," was written by of Queen· Guenivere, wblle ~ qutltions t6 '!'f!Jcla there can ed., "Don. is that' the best Alan J. 1'rner and Frederick Stan 'llmlnebeny; a veteran 'Exi•t King' only be one blukk,y atllwer, game~· eve. pt"tched?" Loewe · -will be presented ol six OOC llU!JllDe1' muaicals, ' - AU(. U In the 0 Cc , ii cast u Meriln,. the magi· and otlldl lllll • very acOl\l'lte John llr<ldie, star San Fran. _,."' Cl.llDIMTr' fell') -MCOCll. HAND LUIC.I"· CDJ-- .,llC.YJACK•D"' trlltl CMlitN H•IM ... . "K•LL Y'I H~ll" "H•TMOY'S COMl'U.fNT" (.J ... - "CANDY" (Xt cian. S S d one. Why does it have te-be so • dsco quartertiack, was once A d v an c e llSles for . Ci-Ull ~ y Inane and predictable! au.a WhI ·be, a hl&l>priced ''Camelot" have rucbed the A. &re there .,.. a lo! of _ star, lleld Ille ball for plaee 1,500 mark Wtth two weel<s re-A opecial performan,ce ol. clicheo. The . inlervlewer and llckers. He answered, majDl1i8 before show iime. _the Pther. Side T_heatef'• P<!>" Interviewee __ oftan locked "Otherwise it will fall clowq." Mal! orden -aillt lielng ac-duclien of Eug..,. looesco'a illlo clJche situatiom. Roger .Craif, a forme.r cepted at tbe OCC &nnmer "Eslt The King" will be given Dodgers pitcher, w13 asked 1f Seulon Olflce. Examp~: "Well, skipper, he threw a spitball and !CIUTI VONNlGUTI . ;\Happy-~~'nhday,. . Wmux1a · NOW PUYIM une Suilday at SI. Paul's Epiocopal now that your team·has lost 37 replied, "Not In. Arisona; tt Qiurcb, 1321 Wass st., Tustin. ...-ullve pmes, what do dries up . holfway to home Directed by1Gor~ Yeaton, you intend to. do?" What can plate!' - 1EI1.t 'lbe Kine" stars Mark, tbe manager say? He'd like to But you don't olten get Wenzel 81 King :eetmger, say, "I've got a solution, but amwers Ilks this . 'illE UllTS Of rof'111.&l lllTHTAIHIEHT:> _... -Vincent ~'"'-b.Y N.w YOfk Times "'THf IODFATllll' 11 A llPlCTACULAI IOflE, o.~E Of Tiff fllllll UllUTlll 10'1fl mt! IAOll ' hallt NBC. TV ---Ji ---·. Deborah. Schell as Queen there is a Jaw against man-Actually, questions don't J\llrguerlte, Vickie Dedlncer slaugbter." Instead, he's going change much. Just the other a . Queen .Marie, St an to give· you a.Cliche answer. d•Y, a ~ asked me, Dodllller, aa the doctor, Diana How about Ile quarterback "What was your .bigge!it thrill Janu u Juliette, and Victor who throws the~ pass right in television?" 11le day in 1946 Rumbe11Gw 11 tbe guard. into the anDI of the opposing I joined the St. L o u i s CUrtalJ) Is at 8:!0 p:m. cornert>ack! The medie -r~~~;;==========::;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;i;;;;;:::::==1 11.50 for adulls, are there witb . hdents. For further "What ijid you " · . ey wapted women in ¢e worst way. il~'l! -lxcluslvo M • r Arn Showinv ~\ H~llr Pricul !iii' in: , call 675-3699. saw that ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST Art Dlr9ction · BEST Costume De$ign ......... -·--Nicholas . . . and 1 l!1J'J Alexandra ~ .. 6~.--ll(ST.:icruAe """ """ tercepted?" 1! '"Ibe dummy ' play in and 1 CLINT "JOE K ..... - PAUL NIWM HINIJ PON "SOMETIME • GREAT NOT! the sOunds·of the harbor J.\,llV. I And that's the way he got them. · ' . • some book. some movie. ' ~~F-7· youVe never • • it so .< • I \ SPUY ENlMEl 12 OZ. AEllOSOl CAii •MICH moss .. •FAST DRYING •~XlREMELY TOUGH AND DURABLE FINISH .. - • 1 --• 12"X 12'" 57 c e DECORllTOR ' ••• COLORS tP••2" eSEllMS Tlt4T SEEM TO r1u SAl'l'EAR · •WN NVlON PIU I f!IEE •cWN·UI' CUSTOM WITH , MIXING WATER TO ANY ONE COMP. RETAI OF 2000 5.95' - COLORS .,_ ._.. ·OUR:PRICE. ' :~~03~ ' ' ' TllE AMATtUR · AND PllOftSSlllltJl ' ' MlTISSON <, ,. VO,UIJ CHOICE , A1111ST.OIS 2 9c 20CCTUBE • UMPRISE. ' EA. WATR cotORS ~ 30CCTUBE COMl'.fl&TAll: .... • AKE YOUR OWN CJlNDLES 11 · ie:-wix BLOCK OUR PRICE ·COMP. t99 ·COMPtETC----R~Alt2.'191 EACH CANlllE MAKING DEPARTMENT . . AlSO •DYES •MOIDS •l)lllPPINC WAX AVAllABlE: •SCOOS •WICKS · •CllYSTAl WAX HARD HICH -.CLOSS it.lERIOR ENAMEL •FOR ALL INTERIOR USE• •FAST DRYING WHITE & COLORS DAILY PILOT ;2;1 How .Rohinson ··BI-oke Baseball's Color Barri~r Ul"IT ....... BILLY PARKS SAN DIEGO'S TOP PASS RECEIVER. Injury Relieved Acupuncture T~e~tm~nts Paying Off for Parks By CRAIG SHEFF Of t1M •D1llY l"Mit It.ti Billy Parks couldn't · stand a week of fines but he did stand a few needles and as a reSU.ll the San Diego Chargers' rookie J1!Ceivlng ~nsation of a year ago is back in training at UC lrvine today. Parka, bothered by a pulled hamstring muscle all of last season, checked into the Chargers camp at UCI Sunday, then walked out an hour later, stating he didn't want to attend the camp because "I don't want to be just standing around with the other guys working their butts off." Parks instead spent the last couple of days seeing Zion Yu, a Chinese acupuncture doctor In Los Angeles. Tuesday, he checked back into the Chargers camp feeling a lot lietter. "Dr. Yu stuck three need1es in around the knee, one in the thigh and one about five inches long in the buttocks. Today it (the i\omirfui ~) feelJ ·reiieviJd, M t P t although I'ln not llnlsbed with the treat· 0 n ana U ment. But I know I'm on the right direc- tion," says Parks. On Hot Seat Acupuncture is an ancient Chinese method of treating aches and illne8sel by inserting needles into the nerve ends, although Parks is entirely not .sure of •. B G d J treatment technology himself. ~ y ran ury He does say he feels a lot .better after the two treatments, though . ~.£ MJ8roULA, Mont. (AP) -"I suppose It was Chargers head coach Harland r' J had better talk to a lawyer," said Jaci{.· Svare who sent Parks to Yu. Swarthout, University of Mo n t a a • "The pulled hamstring m u s c 1 e bothered me both mentally a n d athJetic director, after learning he had physically all last season," says Parks, been indicted by a federal grand jury for who also fractured an arm midway allegedly diverting to the athletic depart.. through the 1971 campaign alld aat out meot federal atudent-aid money. the reSt of the sea.son. The 3'2-count indictment, i s s u e 4, "During the off~season, r e g u I a r treatments weren't Improving t b e Wednesday in Billings, ch a r g e d hamstring u well u J wanted. So I tn- Swarthout, administrative vice president quired through coach Svare about new George Mitchell and three other persons treabneot and he sent me to Dr. Yu." conspired to Ulegally u~BUch money. ' · When 11\e,tlulrgers lllllll walked ool of The Indictment cooteoded among other camp Sunday, Svare ann<IUllOed r.~l!th· things that athletes were paid from work-day line, but Parks .said he could .. nd a study funds for nonexistent jobs. week of fines -which woul~ ~I fl,050. Robert T. Pantzer, university presl· Parks was the Chargers No. e draft dent could not be reached !or comment choice Jn 1rro, but was only in camp a but :i.nother official saldrthe school would -couple of d&ys ~re walking ,~, pro- .... have nothing to say until receiving of.. claiming he wasn t sure be wanted to ficlai noUlication of the Indictment. ploy football anymore. Coples of the indictment were released He returned last season and f9r seven by U.S. Atty. Otis L. Packwood in Bill· consecutive weeks led .the Natiooal Foot· ings, wllo said 1227,000 in student-aid ball League in receiving. H~ bad 41 money was siphoned oil by lbe athletic catches in the first nine games before department. aulferlng the fractured •nn ogainst Also charged were former assi&nl Oakland. football coach Joht>. Elway, assistant A ~locY major at cat Slllte: <11"'& football eo11ch W\lllam Betcher, and Btac!h), !'irks csugbf!!t ·-dutmg athletic department busineas mlllU!gel' the l• oeaaon for U1e<49trr· and 18 the Earl Mariel!. followllli yeal\ • ~~7Dodgers Scout Relates Meeting With Rickey NEW YOR1' (AP) -"I need more than a gre•t ball pioyer," said the crotchety old man with the bushy eyebrows. "I need a man who can fly the Oag for bis race, who can tum the other cheek. 1ou I get a firebrand who blows hls top and comes up swinging after a colll!lon at seco11d base, it could set the ca ... back 20 years." Jackie Robin>on looked Branch Rickey in the eye with an unwavering stare. "You'll have to decide that, Mr. Rickey," Robinson told the mabatmo of the old Brooklyn Dodgers. "I lhlnk I can play baseball in the minors. l think I can play in the major leagµes." This is bow baseball wu Integrated ... burnld doy la Augus~ 1915, in tbe unostl!iltatiO&lS upstairs offices of the Brooklyn president and precedent-setter Halos' Ryan Selected To All-stars BOSTON -· Califomla's Nolan Ryan has been selected to toll on the mound for ~ .AIPe.rican League in Tuesday's All-star. ga'm,e at AUanta by Baltlmore manage!' Earl Weaver. RYBO: (11-7) joins Detroi\'s Mickey Lolich, . Baltimore's Jim Palme!', Pat Dobson and Dave McNally, Cleveland's Gaylord Perry, Chicago's Wilbur Wood and Ken Holtzman and Jim "Catfish'· ~ter of Oakland. Hunter's teammate, Vida Blue, the Cy Young Award winner last year and a holdout-1or-more cash this year, failed to get a berth on the squad. .,. . LOS ANGELES -Alvin Haymond, the Los Angeles Rams' veteran punt and kickofr return specialist, has been traded to the Washington Redskins for an un- disclosed future draft choice. Haymond, an eight-year veteran from Southern Univen1ity, led the National Foot~ League in kickoff runbacks in 1970 wiU> 1,022 yards and a 211.2 average. The Barns also traded rookie oUensive tackle JaY Ahderson of Mayville State to Oakland WednesGay !or an 1D1dlaclosed draft choice. .,. W ASIDNGT()N -Second-seeded Nikki Pilic of Yugoslavia was upset by Australia's unranked John Alexander, 7- 5, f..2, Wednesday in the second round of the Washington Star International tennis championship, Top-seeded John Newcombe o f Australia defeated countryman Terry Addison, S.2, lh1; No. 3 Cliff Drysdale of South Africa topped Jim Corn of Sbelby, N.C., 6-1, 6-3; No. 4 Charley Pasarell of Los Angeles b e a t Hon Bohmstedt of Washington, S.l, S.2; and No. 5 Tom Ok· ker ol The Netberi.mds clowned Sherwood st.ewul O!Jl\IUllOO, S.~. ~· .,. . MINNEAPOLIS. Minn. -A national wrestling champion and t e n t a t i v e member of the U.S. Olympic team has been hospitalized in critical condition after being shot by a Minneapolis policeman. Gary Alexander, 28, was struck by t""o bullets from a .!JS..caliber revolver during a scuffle with patrolman John Resch, a morals squad officer, at an apartment in north Minneapolis, police records show, .,. ANN ARBOR, Mich. -Rookie race driver Merle Bettenhausen, who lost his right arm in a crash Sunday, was reporled in good condition Wednesday at tbe University of Michigan Hospital. Bettenhausen, 29, who was injured when his Indianapolis-type car spun into a retaining wall during a 200-mile race It Michigan International Speedway, was Said io 1"' in good splri15 and resting comloriably. .,. DOVER, England (AP) -'" A pretty teen-age Orange County girl plunged Into the fog-enshrouded English Channel to- day in a bid to set a women's record for the swim from England to France. Blonde, IO.year-old Lynne Cox or Los Alamitos set out from Dover at 8:08 a.m., in a ~ fog but with a calm sea. An. hour later. lbe was ftported swlm4 ming strongly and mUini "good P"'I· ress.'' "I've been waiting on the Kent Coast !or neadJ tir.e ...U !or fair weather," Miis On .llid•~...., the water, "but I feel I 'JllUSI malr,e the attempt to- day flecawoe the weather Is reasonable." as related bere Wednesdlly by tbe Doelger IC<IUI, Cl~ukefortb. SUkt!orlh1 onetinie Cincinnati and Bro0klyn calcher and Jilter a Dodger scout, and coach. was one of the special guesis fiowu in for a testimonial lunch- eon 1lveo by the V i r g l n Islands Government for Robinson, who broke basebaU's color barrl<r. Other old friends were there -Joe Black. the pitd>er now a bulbous 280 pounds; Sandy Amoros; pitcher Ralph Branca and the New York Giant, Bobby 'nk>mpson, who hit tbe Branca pitch that won the National League playoff game between the Giants and Dodgers in 1951. President Nixon and G o v e r n o r Rockefeller sent representatives. 0 1 have been credited with being the scout who discovered R o b i n s o n , ' ' Sukeforth, a graybaired slender man now 10 years old, explained In a tow, almost inaudible voice . "That wasn't true at all. I never saw Jackie In a game untiJ he bad already been signed. "The old man sent me to Chicago In 1945. Robinson was playing with the Kansas City Monarchs against the Lin· coin Giants at COmiskey Park on Friday night. The old man wanted me to see whether Roblnson could throw from deep short. "He said to me, 'Bring this fellow back with you. U he "''on't come. mAke an a~ pointment with him and I 'II go out and see him.' When he said that, I knew it was important. But I had no idea what t.'le old man had in mind." Sukeforth said he introduced himS(>Jf to Robinson . But Jackie had suffered a shoulder injury. two days before nod wasn't in·un ifonn. "I didn't get to see Wll<ther he could throw or not," the old scout related. ''l told him Mr. Rlc~ey wanted to talk to him . Robinson said, 'What does be want to see me for?' I didn't know but I made arrangements to meet him the oe:zt Sim-- day In Tol1.>do. "We took a train to New York, rode overnight. That rooming J took RoblnlP,D into the old man ·s offices and the old man reall y gave him a griUing. '' "Yes, he did ," Jackie acknowledged .... , think he talked to me about three hours. Afterward, if he'd asked me to jump out a window , l would have jumped. That's how much I respected the man." Robinson s.lgned for a $.1,500 bonus and ·$600 a month to play at A1001reaL ln 19'17 he broke in with the Dodgers and baseball history turned a new page. Seaver Snakebitten Again By Osteen, Dodgers, 5-0 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tom· Seaver lost a decision in Loi Angeles late in the 1967 .. ason. The Dodgers didn't beat him again in Dodger Stadium until Wednes- day nighl Now it's the New York, Mets who are wondering when ttiey'rt going to beat the Dodgers' Claude Osteen. Or even get a run off him. Wednesday night Osteen, the Dodgers' ace left-hander, hurled his third shutout Dodgers Slate All Olf!IH t ll K,1 (MCI) July 20 Oadoltt vs. lrltw Yort July 21 Dodetn vs. PhUMle~hlt JUl'I' n Dod11tr• vs. Phlltc1et..ti11 July 2l Dod1er1 ""' Phllldelphl1 7:ll P.m. 1:!$ p,m, 6;55 p.m. t:5J p.m. 0£ the season and second against the Mets, 5-0, to earn his loth victory in 17 decisions. It was just a week ago Osteen blanked the Mets in New York. And it was Seaver, who is now ls.4 lifetime against the Dodgen:, who also lost that one. The Dodgers, who've now won three straight, will try to sweep the three-game series tonight when Al Downing, s-~. starts against the Mets' Gary Gentry, 4- 6. "When you beat 5eav'er you have to be at your best," Osteen said afterward. Actually, he wasn't at his best but he was good enough. "He was fighting his control early Jn the game," said manager Walter Alston, "but he didn't make too many bad pitches. Also, he got the breaks." The biggest break was, with the ' CLAUDE OSTEEN Dodgers' leading J--0 and the ~1ets with two runners aboard in the seventh. \Villie Mays lofted a long drive that backed Manny Mpta to the wall for the catch. "J .... lbought ll was gone," Osteen said later. "'Mt heart was in my mouth when he bit that." Fortunately for Osteen, the ball we in Mote's glove. While the Mets missed several ' chances, the Dodgers, after being held hitless the first three innings by Seaver, finally got.started when Willie Davis and Frank Robinson singled. Wes Parker's infield out placed Dodgers at second and th.ird and abort stop Bobby ValenUne brought them home with a single to left Valentine later scored on Steve Garvey·~ double oil the Jertfield wall. The Dodgers added two more<r"uns in the .sev~nUl when Lee Lacy. Mola and Davis singled :successsively for one run and Robin.son's sacrifice Oy scored Ji.1ota to make it 5-0. ''To pitch a shutout you have to have good defense," Osteen said. "The lids, yalt>ntlne, Garvey nnd Lacy did a great JOb." A!ston agreed, especially with Osteen'a praise of Lacy who took over second bose: three weeks ogo aner his promotion from El Paso .of the Double A Texas League. "1 haVU't seen anyone start a double play fasfi-than he does," Alston said. '·Not anyone.'' N•• Y!Htl II) Loi •nttl•• in •b •h1bo •brllrOI ll11ntli0n, 11 ' 0 I 0 l-('f, 1b ' I 1 O MllYl,cl •OOOMolo,lt )11 1 Mllrier, lb ' 0 0 0 W.Dftvi~, ti ' I 7 l Fr*"I, lb ' 0 I 0 F ROOll\ton. •I 7 l I I C Jone1, II • o 1 o W p,.ni,.,, lb 1 o 1 o Sct1110<:k, rl J O l 0 Val•nll11e. " l 1 1 1 T Marll1111, :>ti • D I 0 S!ms, • l O O O Grolo. c 2 I 1 I G1rvoy, 3tl ' o ] I So1v.,.,p lt!OOOltftll,.p l lOO 5~1.' •• ·~· . °'*'·"" •••• ~, Tollt. » t ,4 • 1.+tls XI J t I New Ytrtl .. DOI 000 -O LOI An8M · Ct01 JDD a>x -$ I!: -V111r!llM. DI" -Now 'l'trk '· Loi AIKHffl 1. LOI -N.w . Yllfll It, Loe A1111i. t, ft -Gtrvey. SI -V11tnllnt. I -W. Ptrtlt SF -F, RoblnMlll. ' ti" H • •• 11 .0 SHW.. fl,U.6) •t/J I S S 4 2 StCIKkl 1·1/1 1 0 0 I' t OstMl'I {W,ID-71 t f 0 t l .f HIP -~ °''"" l$Chnkkl. bf '"~" csrm1). l imo -2:21, A"Mdll'ICI -tf.'21. Halo~ Drop 4th In Row Clock or No, Angels Face New York; Ali Crushes Messersmith Returns NEW YORK (AP) -Andy Messersmith goes back to the bullpen, Rudy May back to the mound and Del Rice back to prayer as the California Angels move Into New York today for an important four..garrie series before-the All-star break. Messersmith came off the injured list Wednesday as the Angels were losing an 1-2 decision to Boston's Red Sox. The big Califilrnia right-hander had un- Aageb Slate 4:tJ •.m. !:SS p.m, ll:S.S p,m., 10:55 1.m. der1one surgery on his pitching hand last month to repaiI •n injury to the middle finger~ •. . l ·May, the par!-tlme storterwbo II 3-7. has been used only in relief recently. He seeks hlJ second complete game today. May has been provided very few runs by his mates this year and has an earned run average of-3.52. Clyde Wright, 111-4, abs<irbed the Wednesday defeat when rookie catcher Carleton • Fish slammed a thr ... run homer and Tommy Harper and Doug Griffin each belted two-run doubles. The Angels acored jllSI one run In T\lesday'I (ou to the Red Sox and only a single run the day before tbal, J)rOmpting Rlct ~ lament : '"The 11&y ·wt'ro' hitting, we're not. ioinl to hurt any pitd>er. When you acore jllll loor runs In Ibis ball park, you're not going to win anY games." Messersmith, 2-4 with a 4.03 ERA, may not see much action before the All·star break starts Monday. · ""Messersmith look~ good," said Rice , "but he's still a little stale. I'll use him in two or three more relje~ jobs and get him ready to start after the All-star game." New York sends Fritz Peterson, 8-11, to the mound against lhe ·Angeis. The Yankees Wednesday belted the Minnesota Twins 13-3, socking 12 hits. CAll'O•NIA •OSTON N rkllll •llrhllll Alorn.r, 2D l I l I Hlrplf', cf J l I 2 C1rdtnlt. st 4 I I t Grlt'fl11, lb 5 0 1 2 Pl11ton, (1 I 0 1 I Y1!r"1UI, If 4 I 1 I It. OUvOf', lit ' 0 I 0 •• Smith, rf 1 2 2 O McMulttn, :Jlt ' 0 2 o •· Miil••• rf 1 0 0 O Sponctr. If ' 0 0 0 Pf,tro(:1lll, XI 3 0 1 0 81rry,cf •OOOl'lllk',c 31ll fGf'OOrg, IC 3 l , 1 t C.ttr, lit ' l I I ~11).p ' 0 0 0 t,J.k~,U 3 I I 0 kotCO. Dft I 0 0 0 McGlotlln, p ' 1 l 0 Wrlllflt, p 2 l 1 0 Tllll Jll I 11 I S!fllhns11, c 2 0 0 0 T1t1I Miii C1!1foml1 000 020 000-1 Bolton oao 012 0011 -• 1!-Wrlthl. LO~llfornl1 7, 1101ton I. 28-C .. ter, H1tHr 2, Wrlltht, GrUU11. Hlt-F1Jk IS. Sl'-Alofn1r, II" H It llt I• 10 Wrlthl L. '°"' s~ ' I • , I Mnterlfnlftl 2% 2 o o I .f McGIOll'HI W, J·2 t , I 2 2 I 1 HllP~ Wrltht It. Smith. T-2:2t, A-l4.1'1, Connors Breezes To Net Victo~y; Gonzalez Wins Foe in 11th DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -It won't 'go Into lbe record book as another famous Jong count -llke the one in the Jack Dempsey-Gene Tunney title fight in 1927 -but the Muhanuruid AU camp clAlmed today a rnixup In timing saved Al ''Blue~ Lewis from a fltth round knockout. · All, the former world heavyweight champion from Cherry Hil1, N.C., stopped Lewis of Detroit in the 11th round Wednesday night for his seventh straight victory in his comeback campaign, but the fight had looked over in the filth . A short right from Ali traveUed n() more than eight inchea and laid Lewis in a twitching heap on the canvas in outdoor Croker Park:. The bell sounded the end of the round when the count reached nine. Later All's trainer, Angelo Dundee claimed that the count actually bad lasted for 22 seconds according to bis own timepiece. · Dundee made no ronnal protest, but m.. deed the timekeeper bad found thel two of his watches had stopped during tho first round and he had to ·borrow another. Lendi ng further· credence to Dundee'I'. coneotion was that no exact time wu given when referee ~w Eskin of Ne" York stopped the light in the Utb. It,... estimated at I: 15 ol tbe round. And In 1 heavyweight prtlimlnary In which John Conteh o1 Eocland llnocked out Johnny Mac ol ChiCllO In tbe - the first rouod luted an extra 4119CO~ because of an •pparent confllsion la ttm. Ing. Pac-said from 1165 tbrougll January of this year the · university received $4.1 milllool lh -student-aid money, 1111 ~t ol k ttom the federal 1ovemmeot and tbe rtst in stole funds. He said that $131,Sll of the toW w .. allocated to llludeoto connected with he athieUe department and thet or this ~. l:IU3,'ro4 weat to tllo studi!nlJ and the balll\(O of $D'l .fll ..,.. deposited to the ... ofthe~ Athletie ·Groups a1 Odds COLUMBUS, Ohio -Jimmy Connors said he did learn one thing from Chria Ever! in the tennis teen .. gen' celebrated romance in England last month . it WU the only 'kDocitdown of !be flllll belore an estimated crowd ol n ooo as Ali overcame the affects ot a tteavf heed cold that has troubled him for dap !or bis TKO triumph In Ireland's l>ilicot boxing •how in yeara. 0 Tbls bead cold slowed me up." said a tired An afterwards. "I found It btlrd to breathe at times." Tho dtpartmllll'I baclpt bad been llashed dramadcally in .-ot yeart, largob' due to protests fnln the llUdeDI IMdy about Swarihout'1 UJO of moneJ nbcd from 1tudenl fees. An live or the delendanb_,., cbarged In the flrtt court with conspiring from January ot 111S7 to April of lm to dl>- 11-aud the United Stotel 10•tn1111m~ ' PHILADEI.PIDA (AP) -Olllciall ol the Amalellr Athletic Union, onoe again at odds with the National College Athletic As!ocl.atlon over who conlrob college lllhlelel, Plans to file IUlt 1g11nst the NCAA la federol mirt lien, the Allodated Press bu ~med. llelilbl•-In traelocirdn "'toil - Wednelday night that the IJsue came to 1 lltod over the NCAA'• atlt111pl to dilc.'ouroge coUe1e track men from . parlidpatlng in the U.S.·Russlan junior track meet, achedll1ed to be held July Zll In Sacramento. I A<COnlinC In the ....,,.., tbe AAU will :tceuae Ito componlon atbletic lfOUP of tampering with the civil rlghb of the col· leglaos u Ibey mm state lines to plrilclpate In nat><l0lltgi1lte ..., ... SUcb fll"Ullds ft!lld provide the AAU With. .mmuniUon lo lllitr tbe suit In ledtrsl oourt, sour<es sat. Tbe suit would .. k the court to enjoin the NCAA from interlering with the actlv!U.. of atbletes. The AA U action llet111 from the NCAA'11.-nctm<11t Wednesdq that tt would nol ceril(y the Sacramento meet. NrJ collqe athlole. who competes in an 1 ev .. t nol cerlilied by tbe NCAA tedllllcally Jeopa,.UUS his ellglblllty to compete 1h college <Oll1Jlelltlon. Artbut Bo~. NCAA com~ller, ssld at the ori-antzat!orflt boedquarten In Kansas City that the AAU had "dedlned to apply for a certU1cat4," and therefore the NCAA would not llDClloo the U.S.· Hulllan juoi°' meeL The meet II open to athletes up to II yean ol age. ''She'a improved my two .. handed backhand 100 p<rcent," admitted the l._ year-old Belltvllie, Ill., 1 0 u t h pa w Wednesday after his S.2, S.2 Buckeye vie. tory over Charles Owens ol Tuecllooea, Als. Ai1lo advancing were thlrd-eeeded Dick -Stocklio, tbel NCAA champl~lrom Port Washington, N.Y., and No. 4 Pancho Jonzalez, 44-year-old Malibu veteran. Stockton knocked off Steve Faull; ot Covington, La., 1-4, S.t whit• Gonzalt1 er- fortltllly brea.ed by Mike Eltep o1 DIUu, ~. S.S. ~ "! tlllok I'm fi&htlng far too much and getting a bit stale," continued the former champion who Is polntlna 1or • -..turn u. tie bout with champion Joe Fruler. "I am delighted that Lewla proved !bat he WU 400<! and I lot better than some people tllotight. He gave me 1 rotJ&her .fight that> Jerry Qiiarry tut month. I would rate Lewis No. 5 in the world.' Lewis lool<ed dazed In tbe dreastn1 room and didn't want to talk w\~ nemmen, but he ssld "I -pleued with my performance and I would llie t• lilhl All apin." • • ( 'l<J DAILY P{kQT Thursd11, July 20, 19n ( _,,ig C:an y on Golf Winners , ..... ' . -:~' ··an ,W:endt or ~tQckton (second from left) and member-g uest tournament at Big Canyon Co untry • attoer ·Bob Cu.nard of Newport Beach accept the Club last weekend. Cunard and Wendt carded a net nners• trophy from tournament chairman Donn 252 to top the field of 142 teams. mble after the pair captured the first annual ' Huntington, Vikes Clmh; ormer Bruins Benefit Tilt T·ou rney Begins TuesrJ,ay ' ' I WESTWOOD -John Vallely, former rona del Mar High and Orange Coast p>Uege start, will .be among a fof-midable contingent or ex-UCLA basketball stars • • When they take on opposition from the : NBA -and ABA in a special exhibition at ~ Pa~ Pavilion Aug. 11. . ~ FOtfner Bruins under .the hand of John . ;J\Vooden that -will participate in the ~ ben~it clash for the Dr. Ralph Bunche :-~scbQtirship fund include Lew Alcindor, ·il.AicliiS A1Jen , Henry Bibby, -Kenny Booker ; Gail :'.Goodrlch,. Steve PaUersOn. Curlis • Rowe: Terry Scofield, Fred Slaughter :,and Sidney Wicks. , :t The above is the nucleus that brought '1UCLA eight national champi6nships in ;&nlne years under the Wooden regime. Providing the opposition to the UCLA •Contingent 'will be Elgin Baylor's Pro 11St8rs. "'·J1ich include the Lakers' Jim t1rtcf\1illifln. Happy Hairston. Pat Riley, •And Flynn Robinson, the 76ers' Bob Rule , f Houston's Eric ~1cWilliams, Seattle's Lee Winfield, Portland's Ron K n i g h t, Carolina's Mack Calvin and Baylor. Incorporated into the game will be the llo~ing of the dunk and a 24-sccond ock. The first half of the doubleheader \viii feature Johnny Brown's All-Stars against ~e LA Police Department, beginning at ::. . • ~ Huntington Beach and host Marina clas h in their annual summer league basketball batlle tonight (6:30) to cap the regular season of the Huntington Beach· circuit. The two once-beaten prep contingents will ineet again, however, as a thre~ night tourney is on tap beginning Tues- day with each of the top four teams in the league slugging it out in an effort to add to their regular season records. Corona de! Mar stayed unbeaten with an 8-0 mark und is a shoo-in to make it nine in a row tOnight against Bolsa Gran- de at Edison while the hosts try Villa Park. Corona ended Marina's unbeaten dreams Tuesday with a 62-54 win at Edison while Edison stopped Bolsa Grande, 74·55. At l"lunlington Beach the Oilers came from behind to nail Garden Grove, 66--57; and La Quinta turned back Fountain Valley, 44-39. Corona's conquest came in the second half as the two battled to a· standoff at 28 at halftime. Casey Jones led in scoring wit h 23, but he had ample help from Matt Keou@:h (161, Jeff Wharton (11 ) and Joe Kozmata (JO I. The latter pair took the board play • .., :r. ~ ... .. ... " ;[. Baseball Standings ~ _1 NATIONAL LEAGUE ~ ~ ,. East Division -" ;Pit(> burgh ~New York :St.· Louis ~cago :Mqiitreal :Philadelphia w 54 47 44 45 37 JO L 31 36 40 42 46 55 West Division :cinCinnali :{J!Ollston :;Dodgers Atlanta al'( Francisco jan .. Diego 53 32 49 40 45 40 39 48 39 51 32 63 Pel. .6JS .506 .524 .51 7 .446 .353 .625 GB 6 9'o 10 16 2J .551 6 .520 8 .418 15 .433 161~ .376 21 .., ' TOd1v'• GtlT>li ..., I I. LOUIJ (Stnlorlnf •IJ ti A!l1~11 fH11n n z.n\ ,., t<ltw Yar~ (Gentry U ) 11 Dodgtn (Oown1~Q 5.5 ~• O"W 01m1s Sehtdultd .. -' tl<rlcll"f''I G1rll41 ·• (!nclnn1111 '' P1tt1burgll • St. Loul~ et Allln!I •• C.hkeoo II HOUSIO'I MOlllrUI 11 Sen 0!'90 • ., l"~ilMltlOhlt ti Dofltr5 "" N~ Yar• 11 S.n Fr1nc!Jco 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit Bi:ltimore Boston Nc1v York Cleveland fl1ih\"aukce Oakla nd Chicago Minnesota Kansas City Anp:cls Texas East Division W L 48 36 47 37 41 39 39 4t 35 48 33 49 \Vest Division 54 31 46 40 42 40 43 42 38 49 36 50 Pct. .571 .560 . 513 .488 .422 .402 .635 .535 .512 .506 .437 .419 -· _DEA N LEWIS GB I 5' • 7 121\ II 811 1011 I I 17 181,~ 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MES A 646-9303 Service ind P1 rt1 for All Imported Cirt •• _ Modern Body Shop for All C1r1 Oranfe County'• Largest and Most Modern· Toyota and Volvo lluier • qWR•IAS DILIVIRY SPICIALllTS away from Marina in vital second half si tuations. Marina's Mark Adams fouled out in the second hair, severely hampering its· chances. Adams finished with· 12 JXlints, while Rick Rosser had 14. Huntington's comeback win was trig- gered by the fine rebounding efforts of sub Jim Teel and the hot scoring hands of Dave Axelson and Wynn !Neill . I CdM (62) Men ... lf.tl ,_, krouoh Whlr!M Attlesty Kar mt It Welt Tot1r1 It H pl Ip • 1 4 r.i 1 2 J 1a l s 4 11 I 0 I 2 5 0 2 10 0 0 ] 0 24 J( ,, ,2 Swenson Ford Losner Aderns Slloelby ll:osur Helton Gr1h1I Toltli Sc•r• bt Overttrt 10 h If ti 17 • ft ft !If., "' l 3 f 2 ' 2 • t 0 0 4 4 4 s 1) I 0 2 2 ' , 0 14 I I ti 3 1 0 ' 2 21 1213$4 16 -'' II -54 H1111t1n11on l11cll f") ~ounl1ln Yt ltt-, l!tl ft II pf Ip '232DH!ll •~•••an Rtn•ln KHtan THI Cantr1r11 Ntlll . Reb* Tol1l1 Zlrbll M•n!tr Woy Tht11 Fr1•1r ' 2 2 10 M1J1n1 5 O $ 10 T. Adtms I J 1 5 _C.Ad•ms I 0 2 2 ll:obucl!; J a 2 JO S1pulvt~ 4 1 l 9 Tottll ' 2911tU Edi-170 ft " pl IP 1 9 423 Fore! 1 .t O 6 Wlrw:lllU 6 o 4 12 Tro~lil O O S O Ptwlenl!;o I 0 o 2 Tol1l1 Sctr1 lrt Guerti n ,, ft Pl tp 1 0 4 2 ' 2 1 10 3 4 2 10 2 2 1 ' I 2 2 l 3 I 5 1 1(11153' ft II ,, " ' ' 2 ' 2 0 0 ' I 0 2 ,, 2 1 2 5 21121974 Founlll<I V•Ut Y • ' 11 L• Oulnt1 10 I(· f ·~ -3' 11 -" DEAN LEWIS '72 TOYOTA COROLLA <+ T. & L.) OR $39 .30 MO, Full cash price $2,096.30 . Includ- ing tax & llcerlsc. Down payment is four hundred dollars. $39.30 total monthly payment including intl"rcst, tax &. license, $35 pay plus balloon payment of $800. Total dt'f~rred pay price $2,57!5.SO A.P.R. 11 %" On pre-arranged crt'dit. (300785) . VOLVO "Dean Lewis" We leose more Volvos in Orange County than any other dealership; tXAMPLE SA VlNGS: · S8890 MO . Four Going to IJSC Cali for nia La nds Nine Shrine Foo tball S ta rs The Univeraity of Ca.filornl_a bas landed the moat playen off the Shrine North- South game team rosters, a survey dJsclosed.--· The aame is set for a week from tonight at the Loa Angeles Coliseum. Rival players took time out from training camp -the North at USC's Mater Dei Tops Wes tminster; · Eagles Lose Estancia High'a Eagles fell into a two- way tie for the lead in the Costa Mesa prep summer league basketball lead Tuesday night as Santa Ana Valley upset the Eagles at Costa Mesa High, 45-37, Mater Dei notched its second straight win after four losses, d e l e a t i n g Westminster, 50-40. In other action Ramona upped its mark to 4-2 to share first with Estancia with a 65-56 decision over Santa Ana. Larry Page (14 ) and Mike Bokosky (1 2l were the major problems for Estan- cia Tuesday as Santa Ana Valley broke a halftime tie at 18. The Eagles went cold in the second hair, connecting on only six field at· tempts. CromweU Field Md the Sooth •l UCLA '1 Spaulding Field -to complete a ques-- tionnaire. It shows nine athletes, two from the South and seven from the North, plan to enroll at Berkeley in September. In the group are Phil Heck of Easton's Washington Union High and Jerry • Machen or Sacramento's El Camino High, both prep All-Americans. H1r1·1 Ille c:ompltt1 1111: C1lltornl1 ft) -Vinet Ferreoemo Ultl'll'llflOI, tb; sr1v1 IUv1r1 fll1nnlno! 111 Scatt Dunctn {$tn ll:11erU ob: J1ck H1rrlton lll11!;1r1fJt ldl lb1 Pnll Hick CE1.ionJ og; Jtrrv M1cl'len ($1cr1mtnlo) rb1 SC:ott Ov1rton (l.M AllOI) ot; Ed Schumenn !De~ ullle), c 1 ·c111rlM Smith CMon!1f1y) rb. Stlntord CU -T1rrv Alt>rltton CN1wpar1 H1rborl t 1 Tadd AndtrlOll V~lur1) 011 Gtb Church tW111 Covln1l 1!1 JtH SltrrltnS tWe.tmlnJltr) C1b1 O.vt T1nh CMlr1le'11) wr; An f1trld1 IMartlntrJ or. W1sh!ng1on (JI -Louis Quinn (St. ll1rn,11rdl ff: Mlkr Vlclno fll:ov•! 01k) It>; ll:on Btnnttl !L1f1y411- 11J Olli Alvin 811rl11on {SF llllboa) wr1 Den LI~ IS1n Jose LlckJ og. tlsc 141 -Scott Avtrv (Lii WlllOll) di; Ron L1k1y (T1mo11 Cltyl di; Gtnt L1wryk Clltlll oO; J im LllCIS fArcldlt) wr. UCLA (ll -fddl1 Ay1rs (Plnal1 V1ll1y) b; Tom PtlrlCk ICUPtrllnaJ Cl John Scl•rr• (llllhoo Am•IJ '" Brlgh.lm Yaung (J) -J fY Miiier {S11nnyv1l1) wr; Bob Slmmtrm1n IFr11nol ot1 Lynn Zw1hlen (Modttto) WI". N1w Mrxlco (JJ -John Net lV !Redltndll l"flO\ Sit~• R1mlr1z (Nolrt 01m1) Cl l(lm Wltst (Ctrton '· Arl1an. Sllt1 (2) -G1r!1nd fv1,,. (ll1r11ow) tb1 01rr1n F1ns11rm1krr IS•n L••ndro) ot. Coloredo IU -Miki Mt1ov ... (G1rcltM) It; Ptl Kalllm•n (S.n Jo5t Mitty) qb. 0!11tri -ll1k1r1flt!d -1(1vln Sllftcl !W11t llt ktr1ll1ldJ qb; llabt St1t1 -Vic Liies CM.en!tceJ dt; Ctl POil CSLO) -ll:lck ll11tty IS.rttoOtl If; Sen Oltga S •ft' -Tt•vls Hitt (Grossman!) fb; Sin J011 -Wiison F1umuln1 fSF ll1tbol) 011· S.nt1 Cl••• -Otnnls Frv• CFr1snoJ wr; Uteh tet1 -Brltn lofl!JU1Ytn (ll:llf.tmetd) fb1 Wesh. St111 - mlkt McClure CC1r1onJ tb. UndKldtd -Jotln Clltvtz !fl lll1nch0l wr; Ch1rln J~ (l(enntdy) tb1 Otne N1lrl91r 1w11fernl lb; Jim $1m1durof1 (f l Rtnclloj OG; Olvt Delong (ll:ldd!ng ) rb1 Greo Mills CMtreed rli; Chrl1 W~11• CChlcal ol. Blackies, Jets - Bag '\ltctories In Open Loop Blackies continues to..lef.d ita rivals tn Costa Mesa open 1ummer league basket· ball circles following its 54-44 win over Zubies Tuesday night at Orange Coast College. The companion feature -saw the Jets capture a 171-69 verdict over Wilson to keep the winners a game off the pace of Blackies. Southern California College and Laemmle also trail by One game with 4-2 reco rds. I Jeff Cunningham and Jim Sanders con· trolled the tempo for Blackies with l t and 12 points in a defensive duel with Zubies. Cunningham popped in 10 of his dozen in the second hall to lead the winners out of a 31·24 deficit. Steve Kramer scored 34 in pacing the Jets to. its two-point victofy over Wilson Ford. Jiii (11) l(rerntr Hlld1br1nd Connl1y Zeller Jolliff Mt1vornv OeFr1t11 Sp1n1 Tat1!1 Htlltlm1: 11 11 ,1 '' 1,6 53'1 ' 0 l 12 ~ o 5· a ' 2 1 n 0 1 l I 0 2 • 2 I 0 l 2 0 0 2 0 31 t 11 n WllM>n. lol-35. lt1cklt1 Cf.tl Slnde'I Cunnlneh1m S1bln1 Perker Children Pu• Gr1nt Georo1 FonllUI Tai els fl ti pl •11 ' 2 1 u s 2 1 n l l , • 2 2 2 ' I O 1 1 l 1 I 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 2 2 ' 21 12 12 54 wn-(6t) Conklln Wiii G. Thorton Holm.1 FOllll r c111om1n H1tchlll Z1bot Tol1l1 ft ft '' Ip 2 • l • ' 0 1 ' 0 2 I J 1 0 l ' I 0 1 16 ' 3 1 15 ' 5 ' 11 2 1 I j 27Ull69 tulllu (U) Rag1r1 Slonl11r Mertln v~,. ll:t•mH ,_ Toltll II ft pf Ip 5 0 5 10 3 2 0 • ' I J 13 1 • 5 2 ' l J 11 0 0 2 0 ., 620 u Scott Gaynor (14) and Todd Collins (II) scored in double figures {or Estan· cia. Rematch Set Tonight Mater Dei used five players in derail· ing Westminster. Chuck Wieland (14) and Steve Martindale and Dave Najera with a dozen points each nailed Westminster. .Top scorer of the · evening wa5 Westm inster's Dale Parker, who hit nine field goals and a pair of free throws for 20 points. Mt ttr Dtl !Ml WHlmln•l•r (41) M1rtll'>d1l1 GrotlC:l'I 0111~rv Ntl1r1 Wl~lll'lll f1 ft pl Ip ' 0 1 12 l • 4 ' l 0 , ' ' 0 2 12 3 • ' ,, Tot1ll 11 I ll 50 HtlM(mt : l .. 111. And..-ws ""' P1rktr ThOmPIOll levKMI 01vl1 WlllOtl Tatel• ••••tw.I• tin fltt pltp MtckMn I o.vr1 .. lttld J ' 2 14 e e 2 • ' 3 3 11 Tot ti• It ft pl '" ' 2 ~ • 0 0 l 0 9 2 l 20 l 2 0 • 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 ' 0 2 2 ' 16112 •0 " II pt Ip 1 2 3 ' 2 2 0 ' I 0 0 2 13 11 10 37 Mustangs, Tars Triumph Costa Mesa and Newport Harbor tuned up for their rematch tonight in Oringe League summer league b a s k e t b a 11 hostilities with victories over Troy and Lowell Tuesday at Orange High. The two Orange Coast area quintets collide at 9. Newport's Tars hold a pair of wins against Costa Mesa in Foothill League action. but Mesa's Mustangs are one up on Newport in Orange League ac· ti vity. Mesa led all the way against out· manned Troy, taking the boards and roll· ing behind the double figure scoring o( John Cummings (14) and Phil Salazar (11 ). Newport's easy triumph over Lowell was paced by Curt Spreen (11) and Jamie Holmes (10). Cos•• M••• CJll N.._..11 He.-IUI S1l11•r , Cummlnl Berry St•tr Browning Schrupp J•Cob$ Allen M~rlh Sml!h Tol•l1 19 fl pf Ip 5 I I 11 ' 2 1 u J 1 l 7 l 0 l 2 ... ' 0 l 8 0 l 0 I l 0 ' 2 l 0 0 2 2 0 ti ' 0 2 1 2 " 111" Allmen Schmidt Hl)lme1 O'Fl111trty S11mm1r1 Spreen Swick Tot1ls Scor1 llv Qui n"' Newl>Ort H•rbor 10 6 11 Lowell 12 J I ' '- ,. tt pl I, 1 0 0 ' 2 0 1 ' 5 0 1 10 2 ' 2 • l 0 1 2 ' J 1 11 l 2 ti • II f 1 U II -'5 f -ll i f • Ii l § ti ~ ~ ~ ! i . I a . ti I I i g I •• UilWtttd! ' ' I 1 Alamitos Racing Entries lM AIMnli.t llllrlts l'ft '""''*" •ttlT llACI -G 'ffrdi. t '(elr oldJ. C•lll.tweod. Ct1lmi111. PurM $1100. Clllmlne Pl"lt• uooo. P1!91.11\1s ~ ITtrry L1D111m) Joyous V'IMllM fJolln WtlllOllJ Wllf1ll'tn Miss (Htrltt Cl'Oib'fl TuU011 Btr (Stevt r,..1wr1) Sctnt 01 Lime IRobtrt Adollrl Go Oeer Go ICUrll5 PrrMr) L!!N1 Chu Chu !Oonllld AUi.en) Ftmll't' Afltlr fOontlO l(nlllhll Our Gtnl• (Joe MtlSud•l Wtr Tl• (Fttl'lk Bone! "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' SECOND llACI!' -110 'filtd1. J ve1r olds •rid UP. c1~imln1. Pun• $2200. c11lmln1 Ptice '3000. Po<.o Stmmv 58(o 10o ... 1c1 AllllOll) lit o,... Ana Only (Larry Wr111htl 117 W1Td1 Me Travel !James Or1Y1r) 121 Oldl1y !.ti' 8ar (Curll1 Ptrner> llt Top Ettie (Roatrt A.d111rl 117 ~u11 Moon Min (JOhn K1nl1I 117 MldWar Tom (Charlts Sml!hl 11f Kl111's lltSlus fJrrrv Rlchtrd~) l\J THlllD RACE -J50 v1rd1. 7· Ytlf olds. Clalmlnv. Pur!re $1Ml0. Clalml119 prlc:t SSOQO. DON'l' FllT OVEll lllJS5ED SHOTS I've ...,, . many. aoll<n. ;... dwlillg several loariN prol'es-• siontlls, ruin their cbanoes to u .. eel at golf by aecking perfection on tw:IY shot. This simply is not a realistic attitude. Golf U a game of misses. Y 011 try 10 keep them to a minimum, but you can't let a few had shots ruin a toun4. Some of rny best scores came on days when I started poorly with several mediocre shots. Even the best pbycn EX .. PECT to miss iscveral shots a round. Then, when a particuJar attempt doesn't come off, they " • Thursday, Jufy 10 19n DAIL y Pi.or 25 t Mesa Verde Woman Golf ei .. Posts Seventh .Hole-in-one Mesa Verde women's club charnpion D o r a Donaldson made her seventh bole-in-one at the Santa Ana Country Club's women's an nu a 1 member-guest toum!:y Friday. She used a seven iron to ace the 14>-yard second bole. •!>Cl In the A flight at Costn Mesa's latest women's better nine contest. She shot a 36. one stroke lower than second·place Winner Sybil Foster's 37. B flight contender Barbara Shepardson .also posted a 36, outshootlng Ann Martin (36\2) and Maxine Assmus. (37\. GiMy Stasko took the third flight prize with a 39. Nina Danielsen and camelle Ken· nedy tie<l ror second al 4011.i. l,a911nn Benc/1 Now Open M•nday...--<iosN Sund.I. ARISlNN · CONTINENTAL CUISINE Now Open For LUNCHEON ... • . ·. ·:· .. 11 :JO to J:J ... MH. tllrll Fri. • ·!· ... " Ask For Our 'Cutloary Masterpiece' Comploto $3 95 ' ... Dinner • ~ ~'rom 6 p.m. -l\1on. thru Th ur. IIORS D'OEUVRES AT THE B;W Hav• You Heard About CLUB DE PARIS M•mber1 Only I 0.tncing-l•te SU'pper ; . 501 30th ST., NEWPORT BEACH Mrr.-Donaldson also -teamed up with Allee Derby and their guests Helen Wilson of Old Rancho and Florence Keller of Santa Ana to win Mesa Verde's reci!nt .best ball of the foursome guest day tourney. The group netted a low ·59 and shQt a 73 to tie for low gross honors with t h e Ocean Swim Set Simday Ida Thomts won the La guna Beach \Vomen's Golf Club's latest eclectic tourna1nent in the top fl ight, with Evelyn lfu rlbut and ~1ag gi e Waterman taking second and third. l~ii~~~~~~~~~~1~~~-i Gene Griffin outdid Lillian ! Marks and Alice Brabyn to \Vin the B flight cohlpetition . Edith Ma rks came in first in C flight , roJJowed by H a p ~1cMullen and Catherine De foursome of J ean Hally and Swimmets or all ages· will Stella Merria1n and their Alta splash into the water or Dana Red Mtdllne flarl'V Wrlthll F •do ! Otnnv Mite.hell l War Ctlk AnN (John Wiison! H•dd• B• Yw !Curlis Perner l Green Coloollne lOon1ld 1Cnl91\1) Don Ores ICt11ries Smith) Duke's Charoer !A:O(lald B1nk1) l ots Of Bootl !Steve Tr11t1urtt) Roblnft (Robert Aclalr) 117 merely shrug jt off and conccn- 111 trate positively on the next 117 . Vi sta guests Jacki e " Abrahams and Merle Ferry. Point Harbor' Beach at 2 p.m. Sunday for the inaugural Quiet Setr~liff Long. 111 sw1ng. e.o 1mMAn.MM....,. l!il!M' "' ';::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ 117 I ~l? Lona Irons From The Roush. Plk:hini Ft0m Woods, Uphill •nd 120 Downhlll Ues-thts• and other shot. 1r• dlt'ailld for you in F•t• 2 tJa/Tlfl Drever) 117 Arnold Palmer's booklet, "Tt0uble Shots." For your copy, send 20t and a stamped, self4Cldrts:Md envelope 111 Arnold Palmer, in care of this newspaper. !'OURTH RACE -150 Ylrds. 3 Ylltr old1 •nd up, Clelmlng. Pur11e nsoo. Cl1lmlng IJl'lce UOOO. Ml11 Olemond Bull !D1rmY Cerdo11)1ll A:oval TOP Bir CSleY• Treasure) 117 Rockv Be1ch Hink (Henry Pa91) 111 • Foxy Oon (Roblfl Ad11lr) 1~2 Drew Play !Kenneth Hartl 117 Desert S1ndllorm (Ron~ld Bankd 1'/1 The Counr fRoOert B1flerl) 119 Witch Chit (Terry LIPi11m) 117 ""'™ RACE -350 yards. 2 year olds. Clalml119, Pur5e 11100. Cl1!mlng price $l000, Gol°'-n Hen fH111ry Page) 117 Ml» Rezorbedl; (Jerry A:lchl rds! 117 FIM N Finey (Curtis PerMrl 117 Area Waters Warm Up; Fishing Scene Brightens Rutt.rho SI Cannon Dana Point Harbor The H u n t i n g t o 11 Sra- Dorothy Wri ght won the swim. cliff Won1cn's C o If Club Rancho San Joaquin Women's Trophies will be given for staged a· low net tourney this Golf Club's ace day this week each of 10 categories. Children ·week and gave the top prize to after netting a 77 in a four· 11 years and under will S\Vim Cheri Thon1a s. who ncttl'd a 71 way playoff with Trudy Bone, approximately 150 yards while in the first flight. Toddy Broome and Marion older swimmers will take off The second flight \\'inner Keeler. was June Fittin 11·1th " 72 She then played a Mutt and on a 200-yd'rd course. while Pelle Croft took third Jeff tourney and won the A A special event will be held flig ht honors 11·i!l1 an 80 . flight competition with a 341h. just for lifeguards in honor or Jeannie Zach topped off the B Rudolph W. Caspers. the sec-ltJen1l111t•ft1t•I; flight with a 35 "2. ond lifeguard in California. Meadowlark 's wornen·~ han- Breaking 100 for the first All interested swimmers dicap toun1ey is going into the time with a 99 gross, Marjory who have current AAU or third round with t'ight still left Thatcher netted a 34 in the masters cards should contact in contention. lrl1oh Flre (ICe-n noth Harl) 111 Ch1nt Town !Robert Adair) 117 S20 calico bau. 12 mackerel. tourney, capt11ring C flight Toni Oehler through the Quiet They are: Betty Briley. REDONDO -1S6 an11er1: ?ll c111co honors. Geraldine Chewning's Cannon Restaurant, 3 4 3 4 4 }lelen Moult on. Fred a Mb1 Al>Ollo MOOll CRlch1rCI Vau9hn)117 Go Lloht \Larry Wr!llhl) 117 Es!rell1'1 Oldie (Ronald Banks) 111 IClcepu Lu COenny C1rdol1) 117 Fragrance (John. W1rd l 117 ~:· 10,l'1~0:r,~1·-~1:e~no?::11; f~ 39 took [irst in t~e D flight. Street of the Green Lantern Silverman, .Joyce Thi t•ln1an. mackerel, XI kelp bass. Dana Point. 92629. Cuba Curl . Florence F:ichhorn. SANTA MONICA -•1 en111ers: :is Co•ta Mesa The final entry date is Kathy Bransford and t-.lnrc~J!11 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE W4RRanty At No Extra Charge P•t ls & L•Oa• O• ~''·'~Power ,,.,~ 5lXTH R.6.CE -150 yards. 3 year olds and up. Clalmino. Purwo SUOO. Clalmlnll ~rite $1600. Warmer water temperatures ' have brighten,ed ~ scene in area sportsfishing with legal barracuda, bonito and ample bass giving patrons or half day and three-quarter boats a run. for their money. ba5s, l nallb11t. ••r•• -31 1n11ers: H bau. 200 mackerel, 1 nenbut. __ :An::::n~P~a~p~pa~s~c~Ja~i~m~ed':'.._t~h~e~t~o~p-t~od::a~y~. ---------~C~r~a~nd::aI~I.:.._ _______ .'====--=================~~ P'ARAOUE COVE -113 a"glers: 75 .·~ Chltk~oozie (JMn ICa nlsl 120 So11nlsh Love (Jerrv Rlc,,.rds) 113 Mr. L1s1r !Larry Wr!eht) 120 Nl!Oll Sl11n (ICen.,..th Harl) 111 Dtrrablt (Donald 1Cnl1ht) 120 Tom's ?COPV (Rober! Adair) !1~ O'Arcv ICay (Hilr!ev Cros.bY) 117 LI Plat& Jil l CCurth Perf\er) 120 David Jane (John Ward) 117 Tip Slleet (Robert BaUerO 116 SEVENTH llACE -400 Yards. 3 year olds and up. Fiiiies and mar~. Allowan.;e 11ur11e 13000. Rock•mgna (Robert -'dalt) Annsmear {Giibert A~od1a) 8u•om (Rol'l&ld Bank1) Pe;gv Moon (Harlno Crosbvl Mis' Jet100 (Charlts Smith) Vol1re (Joh n Wal\Onl Mlsi Barleo Go CICennt!h Har l) Ch•r1abllllv (Terry Ll~hamJ "' "' "' "' "' "' "' ·~ EIGHTH llACE -JSO yards. J year olds and up. AlloWanct. Pur5e SlOOO. Noor (h1r9e (Rebert Adair) 119 Miss Air FllQ>hl (Rkhard Vau1hnl 114 Blaster (Curtis Perner) 117 ICawe&h Bar TOP (Jem11 OreverJ 119 SuNr Lancer (Kenneth Harl) 117 Scoop's "labal CTtrry LIPh•ml 117 Jet's Ledv Luck (Dona ld "llllOll) 119 8ettl1r !Donald ICnllhll 111 Jun1le Filhler (L1rry Wr11hl ) 117 NINTH RACE -.tell Yards. l year aids. Cl1!mln1. Pur$8 lllOO. Clalmlnt1 prlct S:lSOO. Cozv K.'s G1mbll (Oon1ld Alllsan) 11' Moore Rain (Joe MalWda) 119 Mr. Allro ZlllH (SleYt TrH•ureJ 117 W•r Prlncessa {Terrv L!PhamJ 11i Ma1n1mlnous (Roberl Ada ir) 119 Dandy's Jel CHarlev Crosby) 119 Parr Clabblr CJMn ward) 117 Oal Rex Go Sar (Oanny cardoz1l 117 Mackay's Clltbber (Ronald 8anks1 119 S!eell Bar (Curtis PernerJ 11' Landing operators at Newport Beach's D a v e y 's Locker and Art 's Landing. Dana Point's Dana Wharf and Huntington Beach's Mccullah Brothers have runs leaving every morning and at noon. Davey's also reports a pickup in yellowtail o f f Catalina. Don Hansen of Dana Point reports one of the largest fish caught in area waters in some time. It was a 4~pound black sea bass caught by Resecla 's Fran- cis Clancy. · Clancy, who has reeled in several black sea bass in the 125-roond class in the past, hooked up With it last week. He landed it on 8()..pound test Gudebrod dacron line on .a Penn 6-0 reel. It required an hour to land. • Albacore continue to hover 90 miles south or San Diego. SAN PEDRO -75 ang lers : 15 bar· racuda, 322 calico "'8os. 19 Sind bass. 342 rock cod. Cttnll 5t. Landl119) -74 an11,r1: 1 white woabas1, 9 b•rrecud1, l Los Al Race Result . .; Wltlnttd•'i" J111r It, 1t7t olcl1. Clalmlng. Purs.e $2100. 5Pecl•I Nolle• ~Adair) S.IO J,en 2.IO Mr. Saleh !Lipham) 16.IO 6.IO Nasrllatlon (Col'do1el 2.IO '-11Uat. S2 f:K9Cll 7 -Spe<iil Nollet t 4 -Mr. Seid!, p1Jd MJ,611. SECOND RACE -4..o yards. 3 ~ear old1 & UP. Cl1lmln1. Purse lll'IXI. On The Beem 1Dr1vtr) 4.20 l.00 2.60 Uncle Edger (L!Ph1ml 6.8'.I l.80 Dobbr1.1ek'1 Bnt llCanld 3.to Timi - .22 1110. THIRD RACE -s.tt y1rd1. 3 year olcls & up. Starter~ 111owanct. Purse '""· Go Isle Go !Adair) 4.ro l.00 2.20 Gila Go Man (WUsonl 4,60 2.IO Judy'1 Love CPernerl 2.60 Time -.27 •110. Also ran -Slack Mood, Cordt$0n, 51r DKka. Po O«k.1. Tlmt -. .S 1110. ' 51XTH RA.Cl! -350 Ylrd~. l year Olds. "llow1nc:1. Purse S1900. Tiit Bernie Ev11n1, Jr, "prU's Cti.arge (Dreyer) 7.60 •.00 2.80 I Knew That Girl 1e1nkll 4.60 J,20 Rocket Mine (RlcharC!l) 2,,Q Time -.17 t/10. Abo ran -Jet II Lynn Cee, Mickeys ChargM, Hllalulln, Wiich Crfflc Chi<, SS ElllC'l.I 4 -A1trll's dlltt'9t • ' -I Know Tll•t Glrl, Ptld f'IJ.SO. SEVENTH RACE -'!SO Y&rd&. l year olds & up. Cl.1lmlng. Purse U600. The San Gabriel V•Uev Tavern Auocllllo". Soll! Tee (Wetsonl 13.00 7.00 3.llO He'sa Qlemond (nigh!) 9.60 4.00 Chick Doolln Vaughn) l .20 Time -.ll flat. EIGHTH ltACE --«lO Yards. 1 Ytlr olds. Allowan<e. Purse S600C. The Moon ..,. Rebel Dell (Smrthl 20.60 7.60 S.00 Llllht She Wal (W1l50n) S.110 •.40 calico bass, 894 rock cod, • hlllbut. IMPERIAL BEACH-olO angler&: 31 albacor1, l blue !111 luna, 78 barr1cuda, ~ bonito, 1'5 kelp bass, 2 whit• se&bass. i yel!owt111, 11 rock cod, 2 hellbul. LONG llEACH (8ellf'IOnl Pitt) -76 anwiers: 4 cal!co bass, 231 rock cod. l1r11 -42 •~lers: 12 sand blss, 20· mackerel. (Pilf'Nlnl Landlnt) -Ht an11rers; JC5 c1lko bas1, 37'0 rock cod, 4 hltllbuf. 5AN OIEGO CMun;c;,11 Pier} -1210 1n9lers: 1,2•7 1lbacore. NEWPORT (Art'1 Landini} -t! 1n1len: m W11, 9 rock cod, 7 b1r-r1cue1e, I l'lallbul, 1 mackerel, J vellow!all . IDIVIV'I LICktr) -137 antlers: J barracuda, ' bonito, 315 b11s, 1 yellowtall, ,, rock cod. l>U.LlllU PIEll -3.1 antl ers' 150 callco b11s, 19) rock cod, • h•Hbut. MARINA OEL REY -26 anolers~ l60 rock cod. 1 lint cod, 2 llilllbut. SEAL llEACH -UO 11111ar1: 100 ~ck cod, 122 bass, s halibut. lllrM -ISO lnt1llr1: 95 kelp bass, 1• halibut. Artists Nip Uni Poloists Laguna Beach defeate d University in a close 8-7 sum- mer water polo victory Tues-- day night at Costa Mesa High School. . Tom Redwitz hustled lour goals for ·the winners while Witt Davis managed three for the losers. , In other games, Rancho Alamitos d e ( e a t e d Kennedy, 24-7; Servite downed Tustin, 12--4: ind Santa Ana Valley beat Lowell 9-4 . Costa Mesa and Fountain Valley won by default ~ La Quinta and Long Be8cl_Poly at Orange Coast College while Newport Beach No. 2 suffered a 13-1 loss at the hands or FuJlerton. And, John Dickey scored twice for Estancia as the team went down to a 10.5 defeat to Western. l"OURTH aACE -l50 ~1rd&. 3 Year Oldt. Allowance. Purse Sll'IXI. The N1v1I A:tserve Center Pomgn1, Color Me Pink (Llpl11mJ 5.60 Tlmt -.20 l/10. _ 1-------------Rock•! To Me CCardozaJ 19.IO JO.AO 5.00 Run Moon A:un (Adair! •.oo 3.IO Dr!vln' M&n (Wiiton) 4.20 Time -.11 flit. Fll"TH RACI! -110 yards, J year oldJ & I.Ill• Cl1fmlng. Purs. $:MOil, The Twentieth Century Plumbint. A:llllmt Chkk (Pet"ntrl S.IO 3.IO 3.20 OIWH Mlulle (Smllh) 7.111 5.60 Molsh• IAllllOn) 7.00 NINTH RACI! -3511 yards. 3 ye1r olds. Clafmlng. Purse 12100. Good COPY 15m1!11) 6.IO ~.llD S.60 OH-And~ Go (Wilson) 2.60 l . .O OH-FIMl'I Alert CW1rd) 3,00 3.90 Tlmt -.11 1110. U EXACT.\ -I Good C09'1' & 4 -Anllv Gt, Pakl Mt.54. IS l!llKI• I -OMf COllV & 7 fi.* Altfl, 11119 Ut.st. OH -De&dhell fM MCOfld. OUR FABULOUS JULY ' ffll'flllCI DOUBLE KNIT $1 o· 95 ~ SLACKS FAMO.!'!:.A•n '"· NOW COLOIS 519.00 SPORTSSHIRTS 5695 IUTIOM FRONT 2 FOR $~3 00 .... FlOM Sll.00 I • --. --------- T SHIRTS CORDS & SI YALUI 495 JEANS Al 595 2 FOO St.GO ,_ l:~l'J:.. STllPIS I SOLIDS MAMJ'COLOlS frof9 SUPIEI LOW RISE JEANS 10 COLOIS let. $7.SO/SIJ.H 695 1 alcYcii :s'94·'° 95 · JACKETS !AIM AM-'l1cbl .-_,1 IOARDWALK CENTll-HUNTINIHON HAllOUI Mt OH W'""r •Al""'""' O'IN l&UMDA'1 -..._. 11..UIMl'icM I Mn"' CINlf9t .. SHOCK SALE Fiii INSTALLATION 2 :18°0 HIAYY oun lndueH UP "' I Qlflrtl ti prtm111m Oii. LUBE & OIL CHANGE 4ss Size 7.00·ll 7.35·14 7.75-14 8.25-14 8.55-14 5.60-15 7.75-15 8.25-115 B.55·115 whlt•watl sire 7.00 ·13 plus $1.95 FeCleral ~cisll Till per lire and trade S1lePriu Fedend Re1u1ar Tradl·ln Prkfl PerTlr• Eircl•• Te11. $22.00 $14.00 $1.95 23.!55 21.25 2.00 24.90 22.40 2.12 27.25 24.$5 2.29 29.90 26.90 2.41 23.35 ., ... 1.59 25.!55 ..... 2.1a 27.95 125.15 2.34 . 30.65 27.60 2A9 Offer on wti\te'Mlll• " •' .. ' ' ,. ,'!1 .... • ' ' .. • ·-'• ·;,, ' .. .' l' . ., J L' .,,. • " " 'rl ' HURRY! UMITED TIME ONLY! 't Delco & HI J1cktrs AIR SHOCKS INSTALLATIOH AVAIU.llLE 34so BRAKE RELINE U.S. CRAGAR-MAGS 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE SPOKE 4~99°0 : -'• e lxpert WortNnhlp • 9•ollty • ., ... !Mitt ·-• Spec.&.I I.ow Ptlc" WHEEL BALANCE PLUS W&IGHTS M1n,y W1y1 To Buy -WE HONOR ALL . MAIOR CREDIT · CARDS Ifill ~ WHEEL ALIGNMENT REG, VALUE $11.SO LINING & LABO R ht. YolH Sll.tS 555 Mnl Cm • OPEN 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Man. thru Fri. Saturday 8 1.m. to S p.m. 00 DISH Mott "'" M_, - TRUCK -CAMPER -MOTOR HOME TIRES SIZE llW. PRICE MOW ONLT 650·1' •••• l 0.10 J1 .t5 700.15 ··-• 36.IS J6,tS 700.16 17.JO 27.tS 750·16 4t.40 ]6.71 F.l .T. 2.14 to 4.61. • ••• NOW SIZI PilCl ONLY. 100.16.$ Sl,65 Jt,tl 11s.16.S 63.60 47.16 tSO·l6.5 73.21 s.6.71 , .. 16.S 7t.16 ...... . . ., .......... • 'I ' JONES TIR·E SERVICE •• j 2049 HARBOR BLVD. lot Bayl COSTA MESA Aeaoss ROM THIODOll aOtlHS POU Phones 646 4421 540-4343 ~ ~ ' : \.-.i-! p ;~ ... . . . . ;i• .. ' . U DAILY PILOT s ... ~\,..,,,,,,,.. . "'''''' 7 !1 1lolo~ i 1l1 ~tll . ~••port c1"i1r cJ,.•9• ll ''·S070 PANTERA rby deTomtlSO ••• lmportrd fl)r Lincoln-Mercury. ltllllln ~hwork C~$ted by tht hril\lant Ghia Studios of Turin. Ford dt1l1tntd the: 351 CID 4V V-8 tnJ:;lne. Four whetl in· depe_ntnt 1USptMlon and mld011htri eni;lne placement riv• 1pttd irear box. fu.Dy 1ynchronl:.ed , , • •Pantera •.. ltalla.n for Panthtt.,. COMPl,t'TE-NEW YORK STOCK UST . . l - July lt71 I DAILY '!LOT Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock ~xch~e List Kissinger Talks Touch Off Rally Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange Li~t ' ,, I I Weekender Advertising • ' II DAil v l'ILOT TllondiJ. "'~ 20, 1972 LEGAL NOTICE I i ; • " 1n J, Pl.lbll'1lfll Or•no• c;o.11 c1nv Pllet, July 11. '°· 21 11'1d Allfll.lll 3, nn llllol-72 LEGAL NOTICE WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 DAll,Y PILOT • ·cLASSIFIED- _,,... J~ I _,,, .... I~ I _,,, .. General * TRIPL EX * Prime oceanfront; two 3-BR. 2 Ba.; one unit.-l--BR., 1-'iii Ba. $11iO,<XXI. SUbmit, • Call: 673·3'63 673-6688 Eves. *OCEANFRONT * Home. 4 Bdmu1., 2 baths, y,•ith 40 fr. frontage, This older home bu lge, living rm., fi1:lle.; dining ml,, U· tn. lge. kltch. Dbl garage plus extra parldng. Best area, nr, Newport J{ar00r Yacht Club. Easy to ,ahow. $)00.000. Call' 6TI-3663 642·2253 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 202S W f alboa 67).]66) VACANT LOW-DOWN, ASSUME VA LOAN, NO FINANCE CflARGES! ! ! Cu~tom built 3 Bdrm, 2 bath Eastside, sparkling clean living + dining area. fireplace, FA ht., bltns, nu shag crptg + drps, patio, dbl pr., fenced yd. Ml)\le in on cred it ap- proval. $28,SCXl. General ... ·-·-·-LOTS OF ROOM t~ive bl&' bedrooms in thl~ lovely Laguna Hilla home. Beautifully decon.l!d and well maint&lntd. L<lw main- tenance bkyd with play area for kids, The while family will love it, 54&-8640, ''MRS. CLEAN." Is this sharp .C BR, 2 ba. home \Vilh bltn, R&O, rral log frplc., F.A, heat; cool brttzes under the cov'd. patio. Located in Estancia School art!&. Call fast for thi11 one, Try 5~ down. 127.500. BARGA IN I Owner really anxious to move to the desert, It wants 10 sell hi.11 East.aide 3 BR, 2 ba.. homf'. Bl!·lns &: new car· JX't. Priced tor.ell for $27.250 MORGAN REALTY 673-6642 675-6459 G eneral Gtntr1l AUNICU t™f DOVER SHO~ES WAT ERFRONT-New lls.t. ing on this elegant 4 bedroom home In New· port's fines~ Formal dining room, family room and-a spectacular patio overlooking your pier and slip. Presented at $121,000. PHONI UNIQUI HOMU, NIWr<>IT llACH, 641°6101 ON TOP OF THE REAL ESTATE MARK!lT WITH THE NICE~T PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, 675-0000 .e MESA VERDE, 546-5990 e NEWPORT BEACH, 645-6500 e CALL US Gener11 I SHORECLIFFS Local professional has .s:pent thousands of dollars to create what \\'I!! feel is one of ·the: most <lUtstantllng homes in our area; from the massive brick entry tO the General Ranch -1/2 Acre $29,950 CALL ANYTIME 646-3918 or Eve. 548-9416 Lachenmyer: Mcluded rear yard, you'll ASSUMABLE VA fall in "" wilh ii. See ii. Anyone can assume this high e~n ii yoU don'J buy It! balance VA loan. No qualify-Sff·500 Including land. Ing and no loan poinl•. CORBIN- Near NEWPORT! Pictur- esque RED RANCH HOUSE! Giant shade trees aalore! All knotty pine lnslde. R.anch kitchen "'ilh bl!!am ceiling•. Dining room, too! Big COVf'.r@d patio. BAR- GAIN . BARGAIN! Call fast 645-0303. ' Rea lto r Sparklliig 3 bedroom horn{' IOl!l.\I I. 01'10\ kilchen, large bonus room features all buillin gardt>n MARTIN JUST REDUCED anti t>nclosed patio. Asking 133,500. '"" d<1alls REAL TORS 644-7662 I,• t ' . ' u ...... Thi1 big 5 bedroom beauty Call 540-1151 fOpen Eves.) is now the ~·est prict'd 2 POOL STEP LIVELY story home in Mesa del Mar. Huge Swim Pool The 2200 sq ft of spacious Q1,11er must move. Price just reduced to $39,000. Enjoy sliding doors from 3 bedrooms in this garden home near the beach. Formal dining room off the atrium, ,;unken separate Uv- ing room '"ilh many, many extras. Call toll f r e e: 841-6010. living area will serve the $35,000 largest family. Lovely Del J !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' J Large family room, 3 bed· Pi!IO .stone entry and thick 14 X lO roon1s, xtra baths, dining shag carpets too! Now re· room , entry hall, 2 fire- duced to only $38,500. TRY FAMILY ROOM places, built·ins, dishwa.sher, IT! YOU"U. UKE IT~ Everybody -...·anti one and electric garage door opener, COATS & WALLACE REALTORS 5464141- (0pon Evonl1191) PANORAMIC COASTLINE VIEW From this unusual, custom VIP hideaway. lf you RTe looking for 11Dmething U'lnt ls distinctive and far from the average or usual, better &ee this. Priced at $58,000. Our exclusive. Appointment only. C w t.tli fR I'< l!f Realton 646-7711 204.l Westcli!t Drive Open till .9 PM $1,350. DOWN* Gov '!. repossession. You should see the "sparkle" or this dellghlful refurbished home. 3 BR, 1'~ BA, new carpels, new kit & ha boor· ing and olhl'r goodies. Large enc, rear yd. Great starter home. •plus costs &: lm· pounds approx $600. Hurry on this one. C&ll 546-8424 (Open eves.) FAMILY HOME 5 BEDROOMS See this imP91il'lg comer home in choice Baycresl location Newport Beach priced below mkt at $84,500, Beautiful muter Br. with own hath. Separate formal dining room. All electric bll-ln kit. Truly a home for the most discriminating buyc.r. Call 673-8550. I. -·THE REAL 1Rl ESTATERS -~ ' . . . " .. VETS • SEE THIS Great 3 bdrm t&mUy home with added rumpus room. Good location near ahopplng and school•. VA appraised ,, $:1!,000. Call lodty - here's one for yoo. 4 picture book yard, patio, bedroom. 3 bath, 3 car pool, brk, 540-lr.ll. garage. Very large lot near 3 Mile Squaro Puk. All !his • r.· l ;! : I"' .... for <lnly $41,500. All terms. ----.... • - - - \-1'.)'THEREAL ,~ESTATERS .. , . Call 842-2S35. 2955 Hadioi', Ol6ta.Mesa IO i THE REAL \)l ESTATER.S DIAMONDS ARE A GIRLS BEST FRIEND and this 2400 sq It, 3 Bedrm home v.·ill truly be the dia- mond in your life. Every spot a delight • from the covered patio to the spacious Roman bath, Yours for only $39,900, Try $4,IXX> down or use your GI. lerwin rt •lty inc. 54&-5411 124 hMl.J 96&-4405 FIXER UPPER BEST ?lfESA VERDE LOCA- TION! - 3 & family. Needs lots of work but make oUer now and save! Vacant, c::ul· de-sac, walk to 1Chool11. 546-58.SO {Open eves.) :. ·· HERITAGE REALTORS -.H ORfE-RANCH. e 11,i Acres, all chn link fencd. over IA ac. In lu11h green lawns c.-overed w/shade lrt"es. Fruit orchard. 3 s!all barn and tack rm. Cellar. Peacocks. duck&, etc. 3 BR home w/fam rm. Pedley area. $.tl.000. Try 909'0 loan. Call MR. ~S, 5t5-M24 South Coast Realt<ln, layfront Condo 3 Br, 2 Ba, pool, pier A: 1Un. DellghUul $79,500 EMERALD BAY Immaculate 3 Br + tam rm. Ocean .side or hwy, View, Must .see! $149.00> Tod Hubert & A11oc. 3471 Via Lido 6'i'S·B!i00 TilOME-$32,500 ' *- * DUPLEX $34,000 * 3 BR. 2 bll. Lee. nimpus1rm. Beaut. patio. Parklike )'an! for the kids. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-7491 * 3 BR, FAM. RM. Nellr Newport Hit. 3 BR., 2 blths, kitchen b I t • I n 1 , tlrepl.11ce. N'O dbl. '1tll'8.ges, one 11rtoutd lor an '6ddltional un11. $42,000. Graham Realty 616-2414 Like tD trade'!' Our Trader's Paradise column Is for )'OU! 5 lines, 5 days for 5 bucks. G1ntr•I It's a breeze. . • sell your Items with ease, UM! Daily Pilot Cla.ssitied. 642-:i678. Gen1 ral LOVELY HARBOR VIEW HILLS See this nearly new Lusk 3 BR. home. Dra- matic cathedral cell's. Beautifully decorat· ed. Profess. landscaped. $73,500. La.Vera Burns CAMEO SHORES. NE W LISTIN G See this charming home. 3 BR., 2.,,, baths, formal din . rm., large family rm. w/frplc. & walk-in wet bar. $85,000. Carol Tatum ENJOY LIDO WAY OF LIFE Gracious family home, completely remod., nn l~e. lot. 4 BR., sep. mstr. suite. Near tennis, private beaches & clubhouse. $122,· 500. Eugene Vreeland BEACON BAY R·2-$65,000 Private beach & tennis ct. 2 BR., 11> baths plus guest rm . & bath . Also, charming 1- bdrm . apartment. Immaculate! Mary Lou Marion TOP VIEW OF BAY & OCEAN /Very priv. cusll>m bit. home, with 3 bdrms · 41> baths, w/sep. maid's quarters Beauu'. lul large front patio plumbed for pool. $175,- 000. Kathryn Raulston LIDO IS LE Have your own custom built home on now vac. lot, adj. ll> charming smaller home Steps to priv. beach & club. Excellent st: to st. Joe. $78,500. Edie Olson LIDO PRIVACY ~o· Lot affords great privacy w/sunny South patio & large, wen co~structed f .bdrm ., lam. rm. home. 3,000 sq. ft. $89 500 J\fary Harvey • • l ' 4 BR . 1 BA. ,AM. RM. + POOL '66,800 ~ Still occupied by orig. ownero. Clean, bright; shows like a model home Great front & back yards p!u.. patio. Se~ this now ! Al Fink COUNTRY LIVING IN TH E CITY -. Spacious 5 BR., 3 ba. home . Formal din. plus large lam. rm. View of surrounding hills. Prof. decorated & landscaped. Fee. '95,000 . Harriett Davies , *"DOLL HOUSE " * PRIVATE BEACHFRONT 2 BR. + den, like nf\\'l Steps to bc.ch. poo\8, tcMf1 A clubhoo1e. 111.900. * THE BLUO'S * CAYWOOD 11 IAL TY Cmnbott view; 'Bt, 2!{ ba, * 5412" * mil. Bt . .> ba. on lAt i...i 1.,.,.,. .... ____ _ , + bonus rm. SM.950 OWCK CAROTHERS RI AL I STAT I T REASUR ES 1911 w ... clu, llB - V1cancloo COii -I -I ,_ """"· apt., *' blda .. etc. lllro • Dill)> Pilot • a ..... Ad. I TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROU•H A DAILY PILOT WANT AD '42·5671 Vacant lot on 60 feet o1 white aandy beach. OUtstandlng view of bay & boau. Now ii the time to bulld your home! $49, 760. M. C. Bult . ~ Colchwl,lanlmr ......... HO NIWl'ClllT CENTlll DR., N.I . , • s Gener "PLEA You' roo en, tiful scap· ELEG EXC Imm kite crim LUXU ... i born and ex tr or tr TERR I * 2·Be ing Ing Mo ti (3 B Coro Gent rl * Love Beac 5 bd DR WES NEW Gtntr1 5 \\.'ond ~mt brick fi rear Ii room. b All • DAR. V PILOT • • Everyo ne Hes So mething l het' Some one Els e Wann ,DAILY PILOT -CLASSIFIED ABS -'( ou Gen Sell It, Find It, T re de It With a Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -DiaH342·567S-for Fast Results l~I l .......... --~-l\~. ~ . I~ '.:-I -iiii"'iiii-iiiiiiil.liii~ I -·-l~I -·-I~ I I~ General General SHOWS LIK E A MODEL, . -AND IT SHOULD. Enchanting TWO STORY 5 bedroom 8 balh, 2 fireplaces. FAMILY ROOM, formal din· ing room , NEW carpets and drapes, island kitchen. SOMERSET model on FEE land in HARBOR VIEW HOMES .......... $72,500. 'P LEASURE '!'OUR TREASURE," -IN TURTLE ROCK You'll love this beauty! Atrium entry, 3 bed·. room 2 bath, FAMILY ROOM, built·in kitch-' en, SHAG carpets, CUSTOM drapes. beau· tiful covered PATIO with gorgeous land· scaping on fee land. A real love at .. $47,900. , LEGANT BAVFRONT, -PIER AND SLIP. Gene ral Over 112 Acre Custom • Pool Gor&eous custom built home on WAY OVER i,ii ACRE of choice land! Loads of ai&nt shade trees. Vaulted and beamed ceilings thru-out. Formal dlnln&: room. 25' famlly room! 19' gourmet kitchen. Giant master suite. SPARKLING 40' SUNSET POOL! HORSE COUNTRY! UNDERPRICED to Rll fut. Hurry -call 66-0303. IOlll\I I Ol\O \ • ,,. c ~ A LITTLE LOVE & WOW!! Gen•r•I * HARBOR VIEW! * ... properties on the water • or with a good view of the water • show the greatest ap- preciation in value. * CHINA. cove, CdM. 3 Bdrms .. 3 baths . Your. own elevator fo the top floor living quarters, where you enjoy a lovely harbor view. $98,000. * OCEAN BLVD., CdM. On the bluffs side. Recently listed. Fantastic. view from any point in this lovely 3 bdrm. & family rm. home. Almost like living aboard ship. $165,000. Convenient parking-easy to be a "DROP·IN'' at Bay & Beach Realty 675-3000 BAY & BEACW !(EAi.TY \10> ~~ '' ~ U l •O!A • I '' EXCLUSIVE WEST BAY on lhe PENINSULA. Immaculate 5 bedroom 3\.l balh. gorgeous kitchen, formal dining room. For the d~ Hav4!!! ~u been dreaming of II.tie bedrooms, 1eparate family room, mature landscaping, corner privacy location w i t h protective block wall Jenclng? This ex· tremely weH built hom4!!! will mot"f' than fill the pie· ture and do justice to your own decorator touches. The low $28,oo:> price will help YoU to atop dreaming and start living. Call 847.rol.0. ~G"'e"'n"'er"'a~I !!!!!!!!...,;!!!!!!!!""'!Ge!!!!ne!!r!!a!!I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,. fO/ THE RF:AL \"" ESTATERS criminating buyer ............... $195,000. . . . . UXURIOUS LIVING, -ON LIDO ISLE.I-=:======= ... in this beautiful 2 story 4-bedroom 3 bath G.I. APPRAISAL· home with many extras and builtins. Ca rpets $42,500 and drapes, fireplaclS, builtin kitchen. On Cooperative seller ha 5 extra 'vide lot, so you can store your bdat qreed to sell this spacious or trailer ........................ $79,500. 2,<XX> 1q. ft. home at the ERRIFIC BUY, DUPLEX, ~~m:P;~u: SO. OF HIGHWAY, CdM. batla. boautUul atriwn oil 2-Bedroom cottage 'vitb large patio separat· master bedroosi. 1ar1 e ing 2 bedrm unit over garage, with remodel· ••oriahop and sewing area. ing possibiliites. Build up to see the ocean. Located on quiet cul-de-sac Motivated seller asking .......... $69,500. 11trect 5 m inutes from the OPEN HOUSE. FRIDAY 10-2 P.M. boach. (3 BEDROOM.) at 723 Cameo Highlands, Coro"" del Mar. Price $69,500. , 0 WAlKfH I\ lll Re!ltow: 646-Ti\1 2043 Westclill Drive Open till 9 PM HILl AND DALE ~nJa Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Lind• 1111 Drive • Beautiful new 5 BR., 4\.l Ba . home. Water· front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled fam. rm .• frplc .. wet bar. Large master suite has frplc. & cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains . $179,500. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Plea11 Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Baysi de Dr., Suitt 1, N.B. 675-6161 Generel ...enerel G1ner1I Fountain vonev Newport-Heights · Mesa Verd....._ 4 IR-lt---1 View TRANSFER $30 900 RUMPUS RM. See CataJina from the two Ow~r movin& to !.tisslssippl. • ; A truly tin~ home tun ot bay wind<M·s In the larae Well • hla woe can be )'OW' Be 1ure tu 1ee thia. 3 B@d. many xtn feat\.ttti. Spot.- ti . . with .. _ joy! Pick-up ttus 4 bedroom rm l.l'ld b1endly family rm 1 ly 1 H 1 IV111& Throom .cozy '1ouu~, in presti&:lous ~tesa Verde w/firepl! Separate utility rm ~sg c ean. as Irle rear pace. e owner 11 anx f nl $47 001 8 'ful fo d ti yd inc block wall fence and to iell thi.!i lovely 3 bdrm 2 or o Y . . eauti , r mom. an rreat pa o patJO llab. Rumpus T1TI 11 baUt home with formaJ cUn. mature landseapln&, grac-for entertalnln.r. You c~·t 2i, x 2.4'. all &ha.g carpeted. Ing room Talkina StS 001 lous double door entry with beat the area or the price. Lri: illand kltch bright and but 10tny: Bring In ~ ot'. terrazo tile, l~e . WU'ldow1o Call for d~ails 979-1050. chm')', ~1 are crptd f Call ... __ T......i..... and fireplace In liV!Jl& room. Omtu , Pri .,. ~· O·'·· er, ~ ........,.. kine sited semi-formal din~ 100· ce ,....,...,.,. ,...,. in& atta, bar kitchen, den °' $1.700. do-.vn. CaU today. and muter suite all down· 21 If 111.l'.'P. Re.ii [,Li te 10 UNlTS EASTS I DE Individual houses on 120'x.300' lot. Xlnt tax shelter and terms, with 1:ood leverage. F'Ully rented with a consis· ten t incOme of $1660. a mo. $150,•. 1tairl, Boat Gate for \vatu ~ enlhuliaalo. Call 546-231.!. 531·5111 I::::.) 531•5110 " THE: Rf.AL ~ f.STATERS A11um1 51/c•fe Loan Payments less than ~nt. The ·rear yard has beautiful fruit trffa, covered patio, and BBQ area. 3 Bedrooms, den, built-ln rang~. oven . dishwasher. natural brick flreplac:f!. no down terms. Brk, 540--1 i20 TARBELL -------·- Roy McC•rdle Realtor S4a.7729 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. ------- e SA VE-BY OWNl:'R. moat popular m o d e I , prof lndacpd, decoralor int., 4 lg BR. 2\.i Ba. v.·attr IOftener. shq I: drpg. OVERSIZED LDT. SJ9,900 18659 Lo 1 Leonel St. 968-1397 aft 6, -i DREAM COME TRUE !'rice Includes wHh· \VESTSIDE COSTA MESA .,, dioyer, refrl1eretor Attr~ctiveo 3BR. 13'BA horn~. •nd large pool t•ble. Ml'.d firs. w/w crp~. fpl. Thll 3 BR &. rumpus rm hu lrg lot Wallnng dist to ' 2955 Harbor. Costa ~Iesa \Veglcllfl shopping Cf!nt. got to be one Of the finest Newport Walk On Beach Jugt S.'ID.000 ..... 110-0 dn. Ex-hame1 we have hid to s-ell. •t clU51~. H. 0 Johnson, Bkr. Frelhl,y painted, exceU Crptl 3BR 2BA modern home. 64&-8362 2121 Placentia Av A drpi, beaut lcbcpd front f•lrvlew Perfect beach livhia. Nicely C.M. · ·• A back lawm, blodr wall 646-1111 decorated. 5300 River. N.B. tencl.na, clote to Grade • 400 E 17• FOR ALL SHARP! By.....,.,. N. M,.. Hllh ochool. Price $37,.!00. • 1 AREAS Verde area, 3 BR .. fam J~t$3,7SO.dovin. Oon'tmlss C.M. rm. l~ 1:111. 2 fpl , covd thi.a', pa.110, custom drps, fully CALIFORNI A crptd. ~0-0447. o,,.n "°""' If Sat & Sun .• llJ9 Colorado -LIVING-Br. Eul Costa Mou , PL Pm<d for quick ulo! 531•5111 ( :J 531•5111 3 Airy bedroom• bltim fire. reduced! $18,500. r.tyers, _1_33_.ooo-=. ==-=·~=--•--!!!!l!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!'I place; dbl 1ar: with 'alley 6'7U756 F IR ST T IME OWNER deaperate' must acce11. Lot a1 big u all out· Balboa l1l•nd OF FERED leave home, 4 Bdrm +. doors. Quiet Costa Mesa , Nice corner. 4 BR. 2 BA. Family rm. Many xtra Eut,i.de cul-de-sac location. X~N T LOCATION + Shake roof. Shag cpi . E\ec:· features •ueh a• a complete Unbelievably low priced at Cla551c Island home, ~ Br m e. Forbes built. Liml\ed &eparate laundry room • only $26,000. Xlnt low down bunk houR. Diatinctlve" ex· Tune! S33.000. f.amUy room + a rumpu• term.-. Call us tor further ter. l\.'Iany unlqu~ featuT~s. BY OWNER aame room. pau thru details. Quality construction. Patio, • 642.1878 • breakfa'l bar, dinini rm. 546.ssso {Open Eves.) =~d ir:u~~ ~;-r· t~~ BY Owner. Cu!'.tom IYlme. ~~~:: Brk, S 3 3 • S 0 0 ' '· HERITAGE home. By Owner -S72.500. just redecorated. 3 Br., 2 ---------1 REALTORS A#du;,-s.)d ~ MDimUnl A coun\ry fedlol host .de. aaib@( this 3 Bedroom home. 2 Baths, Dining Room and Bil Gaa KUchen. Double Car Garage. Shake Roof. •Lots of Room for Boat Stor- age, Pos1!ilble to obtain a 95% Loan, $30,500. Call 646-mSS, Evenings 641j.3f66. 673-8241. ba., lam rm., tri>lc.. all NEW bayfront home. Pier &: elect. Extra Ira. rooms. income. Open SaUSun/Wa:i Near schools. Daya: 646-7741, LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT BUYS! !!!!!!1--!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l ,-s •v•• & wknd• 546-4568. 0v9flooking 337 E. Baytronl. Little laland MESA VERDE REALTORS 644-7270 .2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CAL.IF. * * * * * * ener1I General * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * CH ERRY LAKE AREA-$72,500 Lovely view. Country living in Newport Beach. Perfect for teenagers. Lge split level 5 bdrm home w/den (could be 6th bdrm), DR & rumpus rm. Extra lge living rm. "Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RMlton 2111 Sm Joaquin Hiiia Ro1d NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS Holecrest Best Buy '*' 4 Bedroom • 2 Bath * Assumable 6% VA Loan * QUIET Street * Easy walkina distance to all schools * Priced at only $27 ,500, * Pleaae call 546-2313 for ,!Mre infonnation, IO )THE REAL ~)l ESTA'.f£;~S $28,300 4 Bed rm. + 3 Balhs n1r1I J General Beautiful family home, entry !----------------hall opens. to spacious livi."1(1: $29,950 CAPE COD room. dining room. :atural Sharp 3 BR. & 3 BA. home wilh pier & slip. Reduced to bargain price .......... $144,500. Estate-like home wilb 6 BR's. & 5\.l BA., huge dock . Now only .............. $265.000. Ken Brittingham, Realtor 402·32nd St., Nowport Beech 675-0123 Gener1I BACHELOR P.AD YOU DON 'T NEED 'A For lhe active or retired. "GODFATHER" Maintenance ltte living ln Anyone can take over th.ii this studio type home which 61,i % loan. 4 BR, 2 BA, ser· includes c\lltom carpeting, vice nn, pool. Only $26,500. drapes, kitchen with built· ins, private patio, huge walk· GINNY MORRISON in closet. Qub house & 2 +* + -REALTORS-- heated swimmlna pools, too! ./ *• lS05 Mesa Mlnutes from all freeways •'•M •Verde Dr. East, in the heart of Costa Mesa. * ~-* Costa Mesa 22 'th ••• •* 557·"'" Just listed at $ .000 wt .....,.... tow do\\'TI. I ·G-e_n_e_re_I _____ _ Corona del Mar WINTON. 11ea11or 1~1 Larr• 3 bdrm. 2 balh, den, din rm/f&m rm •UJTOundl.n& Beal\tlful contemporary cu1-Bi1lboa Penlnsula a Calif ...... tio. Delwce c ..... ta tom 3 BR, Fam. Room1 .......... --.,......,..-,_,,.. •-., Home with serene pool. OWNER leaving for Idaho, k Hie. Move·in cond. 3260 $120,000.00. You own tht qU ick We needed! Stucco l\fichJ&an. Owner 549-2688 . land. Mmt unusuaJ home duplex, stre'5ed 1ara1eo. Nr. BEST Colltge Park ana. 3 with tall pine trees. 180 de· beach. $45,500 Agt 675--0144. Br .• 2 Ba, encl. patio. block Somethit'I to offer you eree view ot ocean. C4ll for n-ho wall. near 1ochools, 128,M . YOU NE D• -~·'··. 6~ g=. '"'Y' r• on .-iaJ tenna. Pt1nclplea . • .......... .., ,....._ ~-~ e Your own deWc: * Sale/lease-2615 Viata onJ.y. Call 833-1103, 642-2312. e Clean air-oond ofe. \0 1THEREAL "\i ESTATERS ' , • f •• ' • ' • ••• Custom 3 br, 2 ha. 4 BR, just pain~. Cpt. e hl-comm. (to 80%) Open 1-5. Bkr ~7S5S thruout. Frplc., din rm. e Advance proifam Corona def Mi1r Woodland & Harbor HI &: • traJnlnz. In depth $49, 950 clo" to porochlal "'"" 3lS e Guar. advertlaement s <Bdr. + Famlly,.Rm. Harbor View Ridge E<ther. 131l.OOO. 5.1&-3323. We have it all plua oome. Ol?'JI beamtd ceilin&:s in fam· Lovely four bedroOm Sand· BY OWNER -Meu. de! Mar. Call J im Graves at 962-SS23. ll.v nn, dining rm, wri bar, piper model well k>cated at f BR, 2 BA, family rm. New COLLINS & WATTS OYtt'lized maa:Jer bedroom, at price that will nn'er be •ha& crpta. ~· Rudy INC. 2 ti.replaces, bullt·ln range available aaain. You will to Move-In. $ 3 5 ' 5 O o C & W + oven + dishwuher, have all the fun and worklo546-<1660==;:;·==:--:c:-;-;,:;. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll oweeplng vlow. brk. 540-1720. of a new home buyer. be-TRANSFERRED · MUJt Sell YOUNG LOVERS cause thia la a brand new 4 br, 2 ba. $33,350. TARBELL ~ Harbor, Costa Mesa General borne, which has never bun ~ Mlcb.lpn. S40-934T occupltd. Call 875-7225. BY OWNER-2171 Rural Pl. COLWELL PROP£ HJ IE~. INC REALTORS 3 BR. 1 BA. $26,500 Low dovin. 714:524-2511. EHi Bluff ThM l(la<lous --. 1\i batho, -!loon. Gar ... Is !lnlahod end could be Uied for special partil'I. Total payment• $151 per month if you take over first T.D. existln&:-HURRY! OPEN DAILY \11ood cabinets, park likP 5 ledroc ·; 313 Santa Isabel yard. Brk. o«>-1120 Realtors 646-Tlll 20f3 WestcllU Drive Open till 9 PM 2 Bath good Eutsi<fe loc. Ira tam S rm, formal din, 3 lig BR 2 ~onderful family home. Con· ba up, 1 BR 1 Ba down. venient family room, natural Perfect in-law houae. brick fireplace, entry hall, rear living room, dining room. built-Ins, brk, 54().1720. TARBELL Everything Starts 21155 Harbor. Cost• Me"" With YOU e Linda Iale Dr., N.B. 3 Jmt painted a lovely Iha.de MACNAB IRVINE * $2',500 * CANYON VIEW 3 BR. !% BA. Condo. Xlnt I lh ,., ___ * del cond. Prine. only. C&ll The aat Of e ....,.VI... owner 60-J>ST for appt. Realton 842-4455 Mar eh.armtrs! RuaHc 4 --==-~~~ BR. w/beam ceil'o. • us<d El Toro LUXURY HOME brick frplc. · A woodsy Mt. --------Tb1I executive home baa 4 canyon, 40x16' Ft. lot. 3 BR., J. BA., cpta, drps. lge tp&Cioua bdnn1. big family fee.Jina. overJookin& trtts A patio, lge-. p:ioJ.lize lot rm. Immaculate! This tri· Believe it or not there's enclosed by block wall, lewl teature1 Parquet entry, TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Co&ta Mesa . Call 64U671. 2~ BA, 66' lot, 55' boat oJ ereen and set in lush •lip $149,500. land5caping a 3 bedroom, e 243ll Bayahorn Dr., N.B. 4 1% bath Dutch Haven. Own· BR, 3 BA, 55' lot $149,600 ed by a lovely YoUni' couple The faltl!st dniw in the West. KENNETH L. -HARTMAN. who are moving to River· • ••. a DI.Uy Pllot O.•ltied 'R. E. Invsetmentl. 642-5760, 1ide. Oo.,e to ahopping, Ad. 642-6678. M&-2681. AChools and beach. Call G---r-al ______ • Gitner•I 842-253.5. FINER MOMES TWO TURTLEROCK VIEW HOMESI 4 BR. & FR. Top condition! Panoramic VIEW! Great Iocationjon quiet cul-de-sac! You select your backyard -beautiful lawn or super pool. Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. ADMIRE YOUR YACHT for pool w' 500 close to xlnt 1 c h o o 1 • , room a . · ' · marfttr. new m a I J • hardwood !loan, tge patio, Scenic Properties 675-5726 R!:uonable. al T-17 5 3 , water 10ttener + othtir nice Costa Mesa 4.94--2116 att 5:30 •wk-end.I. t.o hava nu. Priced to .ell at only $(1.950. Call A aee, BY °"""' Bourht """1F ·;;;au;;;;;;n;;t1;;;ln;;;;;;V;;1;oll;;ey;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; -1162-~163=7·~~===~ I borne. mu.t ,.u. Nice 3 br.1• OUT 01' SlOHTI "°""· Reduced. 131JOO, Sha& • SPANISH YOU BET • THIS WON"T crpl. hua~ yarns. Iota of H '"CIENDA e LAST. Tip top condition, fn. ln."l!s. Cov d. patlo. Room to "' clude1 20' x ~· f.amily ·• ' • ' . .. • • • • . . • • . , .. .. • .. ~· " • . GRAND OPENING Friday, July 28tb, 5-7 P.M. r,Oj THE REAL \'"'\( LSTATERS . . ~ Enjoy the sailing activity from Ibis show· place. 2 tile. decks high above lhe bay. build. Stove, drpl, h&n~ Ltke Sp&nlab exterior? Thm room, mvtttd patio, kitchen lamp lncl'd. Assume FHA you'U love um ma &harp with llJ'lf'l dinln& area. ~,' .. loan $193. per mo. tot.al. 3 BR. home. Xt:ru inc erptJ. HURRY BEFORE l T ' S •· Honori111 our Cfients COME SEE US , we are as patriotic to our cu stomers are to our fl ag ind country I We LOVE THEM i nd will 11rve them well! GINNY lllRRISON REALTORS ,lSOI Mt11 Verde Drive E11t , Co1i1 Mesa, C1lllornle SS7-41aG as we Mem ber of Multiple llttlnt Stnlce All your real ut1l1 """'• rt1illen!Mll, c~11ne rclel, ln va1t"*'h • Price Reduction Now ttrll Meu Verde pool home ia onJy $31.950. Take advantq:e o( the price and move. in now to this lovely 3 bdnn 2 bath home. 546-8640. WOODY COTTAGE Tr.e UD<d llreet In Eutaldt Coeta -&hlnale RaOI. Brick FJrepltee: In the Fam· ly Room. 2 Bedroom., t;i.. Inc Room, u.-noori. Larae Back Yard. Allt)' Ac· -· 111.500. Call 64' 06115. i:v.ni ... 646 1405. COLWELL 'PR<>P f-f' TI f '-> IN (: REALT(IHS View from most rooms . New a French 3 BR,'.FR, all wood e<>un· ~try kitchen, beamed ceilings, wrought iron!.! crystal & beauty. $251,350 fee. OPEN uAILY -1657 Bay- side Drive. BREATHTAKINGLY MAGNIFICENT Huge LR. Thrilling view of yachts by day & lights by night. 3 BR's., 2 balbs, PR. & l \.l hath, FR .. formal DR. Pleasant sur· prise. ONLY '107,500. Wonderful value . Elaine Svedeen 642-8235. SPARKLING VIEW-BAY l OCEAN Decorator fresh 3 BR. 2 baths· formal DR • FR • lovely pool. AJklng f/6,500. Will lease $550/mo. [Irvine I -1--~-,.., I HI -~ IMl•llH. '"' ... .._ .... - -...i-.ee1-- Appointment · 548-9876 drps, Ct1V pado. water soften· GONE. $27,500. All term& *COLLEGE PARK* er . ...W. dryr, rdrlf. pool Call SEYMOUR REALTY $29.500, 3 BednnA.. ta.mJJ.y table tn tam rm, Ju.lb Jdlcpe ,'4,,'~·1JZl __ .,_·54MZ12=--· ~-I nn. Unique trplc. Encl. lo -I A ....., >d. and cul· Chea-Than Rlllt paUo. 5% % FHA ht TD. de-sac street. Il )'OU are a r--• ---GEM ru.y buyer. lhll -... u TCllAL COST 10 YOU mo be ll"U' luclcy .i.,. This 11 or take ovu <Xbllns $157 1610 W. Coast Hwy .. N.B. a nrw Uatina, 1t1d 1a listed per month payment on th.la REALTORS 642-4623 e:xclulfvt.ly wl.th VU}.qe two 1tory condo. i COLLEGE Park, p:iol. Sharp Real Eatat.. Price {a; $31,500. bedrooms. 2 hllithl plus 3 br. tam rm, new palnt & C..U todl.1 t?r appt. many, ~ atru. ffUR.. cpt.. S33.!IOO. Open House I' RY! Dslly. 328 ~ GrtCll nm ... -· 5S1 51111-J UI 51H "' 'II ~I. I f ,I fl ~ •,. BY O"'NER Meaa Verde 31~!!!·'!'!!! .... -"!'""!!!!!• ...... 1 =~R~t&l10n~~!l42~-~~,.-BR. 2 BA. tam rm. I trplo. OWNER ....._ Spaolsfl 111;y1. OWNER tranalemd, 4 bdrm _,, palnl<d, flllly """'· ed elepnt dulln wllh 4 + fatnlly no. SlllTOllllded lmmac. S33.1l0. lfC Iowa be&utilul Sp&lllah archway1 by boautilul lms. St .. 5G-20<e. on the front exterior. ~na, owntaed ""'""' CORNER lot cul-de-tac It. 3 muter btd:&oou1 locatld on bl!dromn, nabnl brlcll BR. l BA, trpl A boGUI rm. tar 1idl of the home firtplaoe, llm~y room , din- SJS,500. ~rm tu.turd ita own RomAn 1tep lnC rm, bu.lit.In niwe, ~····, . TOR saltfrtnt b)' OWfttr. down tub. 1bt othtt 3 own, d "'Ubt'r· Br k . 123,500/mJ ..,. l BR. , 1 bll!mu "" on rho olher ll&.000. llMllOI. BA. Avail now. 54D-5ll!. alt!e. Family rm . dlnln( ~MU;;,.:,sr='-'-~s.~u~.T~.o~.P~.-.. -~G~ll .i..i-nn .• Jwrurious Ir: t t ch ea , mn. tm .,_""' Nftdl Have """""""" )Oil ""' 1 to BRK. $Jl,500. -~-4 Br A I be, 1..°' > ..U Ou11fwd ads do " A """' want .&d Is a """' ll> old. lllllU G~ Ka. wall· call-NOW --L 13l-11DI • 1:-, - .. ' ' • I~ I -""-l~I --Rn· 1~ I _ ... _ I~ I··-·-I• ~~~ li I _ ..... ' _,... .. _ ...... t+untlilgkln ~och HuntlngtGn Baadl Mlulon Vlolo j.-;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, J 2 • 3 BEDROOM • Vacaot, SUPER SHARP 3 B R Com""rc"' Lots for $111 170 Hou.-Fuml1hld 300 Houtn Unr""" 305 HoutM Unfurn. "5 APts. F u m. P r-rty UI CHOICE subcllYl1~ lot, " TWO STORY nr pool. Red...,..ted. $500. HOME, NE)V PA INT . $29,srG. iBR lBA. r:lt_pnl en· . dn.-movt in. BEVERLY X·LARGE LOT. OWNER try, forml din nn, Uv rm JACK SON REALTY WlLL SELL AT VA AP· features mau:ve llrepl. all -"'='~.=:::..· ------PRAISAL -S 3 1 • 5 O 0 , u.para.ded w/w crpu I. FOR s.ie by.Owner. 4 BR. e KATEU.A REALT't' • drps, tam mr. Ir i bonwi room & tam rm. 2800 .137:.:...-94.;.:.00c..... ~-~--­ ...ror.11es. aounn<t k I t '<I· ft. 1511,000. -1. Newport Beach ~• n Lido l1r. Cute MeN Newoort lleoch * FOR SALE * hl" Los V<ga" ~. Sell or _,_ s.650 Sq. It. Jot. 1.ocun• trade! S<t-6220. * WATE RFRONT * OCEAN view 2 •'> ,,.., * FOR l.flAS£ • Bachelor apt, man v•~· Nta.r Fores! It Third SL 5 BR. 6 Ba. home. &1ut. btachel 6 Newpol't. Former Movle Annual Jeue Sill mo. JdtaJ for Mountain, Oeaert, tum. Avail. 1 to 4 months Prestige ' br 3 ha lg tam P roducer's 1 Util pd. t«-7701 prof¥&1ional or ret•ll bids. 1-;;R;;e;;'°;;".;... ____ 1;.;.7~ befinninc.. Aug. lat, at S2500 rm, bltnl. trpi, ~din, 1 Luxurious E11tl:tlvff Costa Mt•• R.£ALONOMJCS. BROKER SPECIAL Smoke Trtt VaJtey per mo. incl. pler A flip. Yf new, etc. Avail now, Condo,. __. K y a •TES * 67S-6700 * acrea,11;f!', 20 levtl acrei. B•y & Stach Realty water pd. $295. mo. {llJ) 2 BR split Jevtl w/1 Ba. 2 LOW WEE L ~ wlblUn RIO, dshwahr. k>ta TWO BEDROOM SHACK for of aiunter. ....... ftting ule cheap! lllO/mo. Jump HARBOR VIEW Condominiums for Nit Imperial Valley, Eaat of * 67.S.3000 * 4&-2858 Cit car. S29S/mo. Ava.II E xtcutlv• Sult•• Se..lton Sea. 12 ml to river. 3 B 2 ,__ Aug lat 213· *18170 or 2080 Newport Blvd. Newport Be ach r, ua, cpb, drps, bJtns. • · · · Co1t1 Mtll bar, oveniud dbl •"· lo oceao. Bkr 962-5511 PALERMO ~ block wall, ldacpd, · ' 160 Xlnt invtstmrnt. S375 .,, ··---• pa"-dbl 213: 461·81'n days or 213: ...,,..,...,...~ uu, Cant.If!. ""2 2611 THE tirM:llt view on the Ar:. or $6950 all. Will con-WINTER nntal. Npl Ptnln. Jmmed. occupa..ncy, $265. 654·7084 evts k wl(nds. -- tmytront. 2 Br. 2 Ba. aldt'r tntde tor home In Org 11' blk trom bay. 2 br, !iv Mesa North. 557-8443. Rich. e RARE Indeed ~ 2 Br, step1 SPACIOUS 1 BDRMS. ...ttdecoraltrl __fiQm..JS.1 Cty. Days, tTI4)G45-0550 rm, lge kit, frplc, nice patio 3.BJl. ~ tam mun rP-IJI to beaeh stove, rdrlg, kidi. • FREE Llnens NE\VPORT T 0 \V ER S . /\SJr-fi:Jl' Mr. Mu a , &guesl-IioUSF"'w-~'t.%1>8: drps: ato\re'. VI~. Vkt~ria sf:' -ll~.-' e FREE Utilities 39' yn -new, top location. Irvine Thl3 beautllully main13!ned I' .,;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~ homt ha-t.j_wit ~ne on the YALE mamt, and you 1oould see 161-4471 ( :J 1464103 2500 Sq. tt, charming Z.s~y, Ill The decorati.na-is of the • hOme. just stefllll II) maJOt finellt quality, all done In 642-22fl2. LOT in famous Lake Havasu, w-v rm w-w•hr & dryer. & Pomona Ave. $18 5, ALA Rt nt1l1 • 645-3900 • Full Kitchen Mme of the world f $285 mo. 6Th-2804; $48--06TI, aco vf\Ot. • Heated Pool PRICED S21.900 for immed l..(lndon Bridge. 1=~ ext 394. 1 -~-'-----------1 e LIDO Lovely. 2 Br, 2 Ba, e Laundry Facilities aale, owner. 3 Br, 11,i ba. 2 close to aU achoola le city. 3 BDRM 2 tri'JI bar 2 BR w/ga.raee. Ch!ldttn, frplc, crpts, drpa, encl car. e TV A maid serv avail sty Medall home. Nr ocean. . ,_ 0, will trade 10, Co•ta • cs, ' ab.sol. no pets. lnquitt at 1-e ~-0 ·tvlce i""""'~s!P!!!A!!!R!"K"L'"E'!!'!"S""'""'' I srttnbelt. 4 Bdmu., incl. sort blun and greens. Lovl'ly LIKE NEWI huge m~tr/ suite w/trplc.; light Ji.xtures, ex c e 11en1 ~ ha lfp. dlnina nn., family rm. drape• and shades done by qulslte cu:to! =~·me;: Let \II make .an •pp't, tor thf! Cuatom Shade and Drap- rored and panelled llvin& you to see this home now . ery Shop of Comna del Mar, room, and newly tiled An INCLUDING THE LAND. and great garden pl8ntlngs ~ bltns, auto gar. door opener, 381 No. 2, E. •M St. 4 101• ..-uune .:>e \ achls, shops k pool. Patio, Mesa or Newport Beach In· u~ h ~•• ALA Rtnlal • "S.3900 EK & UP * f J h 1 5.16-1381 '°" water. ~ moot • 642-4163. 1 -* $30 WE rp c, 1 ut Prs. · come prop. 644-4687. avail. Se pt. 15th. 646-5291 Sl85 • Util pd. 2 Br. Oplx 1,i • Studio .t: 1 BR Apta 4 BDRM 2 ha .. w/.w crpts, INVESTMENT-300' Blvd 3 OR t Br, 2 Ba, xtra lr8: bay, l~ ocean. e TV 6: Maid Service Avail W/D, extras, patio, pool, Frontage 149.IXXJ Houses Unfurn. 305 fam rm. fncd, pets ok. Nr $2lO. u.oqi ,,1~. Very Ire 1 e Phone Strvice--Hld Pool rec. clubbM". ~ar shopping INOOME-Moonridge Go 1 f ---------schols & hwy, $270 IE'lse. Br·over gar, All redK. •Children A Pet !t!Ction & school, S23,800. 67>3722 or Course Trlplex·Ski s!o~ 1. General 645-6456 S~ • 3 BR, 2 Ba. Newport 2376 Newport Blvd, CM Juat • few of the sparklft. SM.900. with outdoor lighting. It witJ BetuUtul park like yard sell quickly • see ii! Call loaded. wilh fruit · tttts. 675-7225• ("' / 1 I · 11 Ill I 1•1lil 963-4051. blk S49.500 PVT. &: Clean 2 Br .• lncd. H~s:'~ G~r. Yrrl. Oeck. 548-9755 or 64s..396T !Arp, lovely pallo lor tun and relax8li0n. Close to IChoot. and shopping. See- ~i>-bell<vlna!, 0 N LY $29,000. eau . SEYMOUR REALTY, NOW! .847-1221 or 5j6-42!2. It Isn't Youn Yet Tb&t'' the only thin& wrone with th1a lovely home. Hu everything the a v e r a c e family watit&. Four l&tge bedrooms, 2 batha plus many extra1. Walk to beach & llcboob. ONLY 127.'150. =::.11 ff'~ :ii $18,000 TOTAL PRICE Two bedrooms, two baths, 1 fireoJAce, buUt..fns, rwim- mln& pool lacllitlts plus . . . Ii 1·1 ill 11r ~ "SINCE 1946" lit WMem BanlC Bldg, University Park,. tr.ine Deys 552·7000 N ights FAMILY KITCHEN Room for Mom, Dad le aU the klddie1 in t.hia epacious 5 Bdrm., 2~ bll, home. For· mal dinina room, t&mily room, loU of patios It, .a poolsized lot. $68,900 IncJtxf. in&, land. ired hill REALTY Univ. Parle Center, Irvine Call Anytime, &13-0820 Office Hours 8 AM to ·8 PM COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC REALTORS PANORAMIC VIEW Beaut. maintained home 2 Bedroom• A: lara:e family rm. Pool. $64.500. Geor91 Wllll1m1on R11ltor 543-6570 645-1564 EASTBLUFF. 1paciou1 split level, xlnt cond. 5 Lg Br, 3 BA. lovely p81io. Xtra lge yard, room for pool. Spec· tacular view. Wal k 'to achools. parks. For sale by owner. $58,500. 644-0485 3 BR. & Den $36,950 Unilfue, white brick exter, gated entry. 2 Ba., bit-ins, frplc., carp. Yard need• work, but • real buy for the handyman. Call: Duplexes/Units LAKEFRONT hse-Needs TLC yard, crpt/drps, breakfst. NU-VIEW RENTALS This Ad Worth $.l on Rent tile 162 Alpine Really, P.O. Box 1796 bar, gar. Ideal for chlld . 633-4030 or 494-:1248 $135 mo. Deluxe. mobile ---------Big Bear Lake (TI4) 866-7511 • Houna * Apta. 642-3289. 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, Harbor View home. Nice patio. Comp. 10 Units (5 bse +' .s Apts) 2 Lots, secluded S2,450 3 BR. 2 Ba, crpts, dtps, Homt, near Pool & furn. W/W ~arpet!. Mature E/stde. C.M. Priced to Moonridge cabin S157!i0 *-145-0111 * frplc, Conv. N. side loc. No Clubhouse $430 mo. lease, couple, no pets, PondetOI• sell-Asking $92,500. will Lakeside r:abln $35:000 m w. 1111'1 COSTA MESA pets. $250, 549-3532. ('~enetr included, Agent Mobile Es!. 1991 Newport take;"~ Gros;.:10: per Call 8664641 or write; $135 • Vacant 2 Br. Ha..s aar-640-0020. Blvd. 646-8373. mo. Y •ner. · Spencer Real Estate. P. 0. ""5 • GROOVY Bea<b Pad. age. Kids pets ok. ~ AT THE BEACH I I Br lrg 1150. nw. Slpool, Income Property 166 ~~.2.828, Big Bear Lake, Patio, BBQ, great for Rent-A-House 979-8430 t BR, stove, refri~. Sl50. Adlts only, ideal foi &ingJes. HOUSE in oourt-2 Br. I Ba. 2 BR, kids ok. $175. bache!onr, 1993 Church, CM OWNER LIQUIDATES! VJE\V cabin, fabulous loc. e 6 ,.:Omm 'I Un iti; • Gross Running Sprgs. 4 BR. newly $770 pe~ mo. Taxes $1014. dee. SZ2.900. 646-~13_5.'i_~= tJtil SSO/mo. Asking S72.500. Out of State Prop. 178 #I Old Newport Blvd., NB I :-oc-"'"'.----'--- e 17 Unit • 2 blks from Big FOR salt'. 4 Ac Ranchette: Corona. Gross S2700 pt"r mo. (If 6-JOO front ft residential All on Jses. Taxeli $3600 per Jots. 1 mile hi view prop, yr, Asking $265.000. Prescott, Ariz. $17,000 or 308·312 Carnation CdM will trade $5500 tqly for e 10 Units (5 hses & 5 apts) housf' in beach areas. E/&ide, C.M. Gross S1050,l=968-6-~9~36~·--,,,---= per mo. Taxes $1400. Hses Rfl"l E!'lt1te Wanted 184 all leased. Asking $88.500. * Carport. 980 w. 17th St. No. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 c548-:c:_--,!163:cc3c.. __ ~--- $l45 · BRANU NEW~ 1 BR. B. C.M. 548-2839. 1648 Newport Blvd, CM VERY Nice 1 Br. dpl.x. Crpts, drps, stove, refrig. 4 BR 1 C t d Quiet. Sep. by "&r. Adulll Avail now' • nr rwys. P s, rps, Ocean View . settin'l'. on bay ., · * frplr:. Avail . $280. 549 Mar-2 BR. z BA. Gar, VAC'iint. over :!O, no pets. 548-1031 . $l75 • DOLLHOUSE! 2 Br, quette Circle. 549-1507 Rent-A-House 979-8430 $89.50 -Furn. Trail f! r encl gar. Bltns, .crpt, drps. Fountain Valley HARBOR VTEW HOMES-2 & w/cabana. Util. Pd. AdultJ. Pel ok. ~n or 3 BR. $395. LM. or No pets. Call 544-1539. ' * 3 BR & fam rm, close to mo. m mo. 64!>-T;>52. * NICE 1 & 2 Br. Trln. $85 $185. SPOTLESS! .z Br, huge :~.';:.1t7_;iriP:·0 :n ht~~~ -Y-EAIU. ___ Y_2_BR:.~,,..,ro~yrd~.~d~b.l & up. Mature adults. Child lncd yard. G*ar, Kids/pet ok. _v,..a_ll~e,_y·--~-~--gar. No pets. $260/Mo. ok. No pets. 642-1265. 673-0957 Evl!'s & wknds. 2 BR. util paid. $170 mo. $220. SPACIOUS? 3 Br. 2 Ba, Huntln£tOn Beech No pol$. 2211 Maple St. HARBOR Vu 3Br, 2Ba, Fam bltns. gar, fncd for kids. Rm, I;>in Rm. aub/pooJ. 548-5913 tnal)f extru. Ideal for 1 • ..,..,..,..,..,..,,...,..,.., ADULT LIVING, HURRY. MISSION REALTY 494-0731 2 LE duplexs, next door, '1' blk from ocean beach. $85,000 ea. A.gt ~. 2636 Elden Ave., C.M. • PVT pty wants 3 or -4 BR e 2 Duplexes. first blk from home. Call Harry. 8l1-1129 ocean. Gron $600 per mo. wkdys; eves . & wknds LANDbORDSI 3 BR-2 BA·bltins-Xlnt 1390 mo. 64<).1768. Do yo~ ha.ve a vacancy.'! \Ve cond. Only $229. per .;...-~-"'-""'---- 'JI M d bl San Juen Capistrano 1 BR, new. S150. 2220 Elden. Adults. 644-5544 or Inquire Turtlerock 4 BR. family room & atrium. Nr gchools, park, poola. Prine only. per unit. On yrly rents. G42-Z3l2. can 1 tt'. .any ~sira. e mo. Agent 962-4471 or •• • · -• :r····· tenants on our walling list . 546-Bl03 2 BR, new, ln Ci:Jndo devel· \within. Ntwport Htlghta Real.ton 8C2-f455 $39,500. Ownf'!'. 833-1467 C '.VFil l<I H ~ 111 $85.000 per duplex. 124 & 126 '5th St., N.B. I e 11 Uriits · 181 1 BR. !3) 2 Absolutely. NO CHARGE. • opment. Community pool. Fina.11elal BEACON RENTALS 1245. ** 4!16-1 506 * 645--011 l * 2 Br, brand new. Huge back $115 & Up. Nice 1 BR. trailers, 1 adult only, 132 W. Wilson, Costa Mesa. OWNER muat sell Spanlah _L_•,;g_u_n_e_a_e_ac_h_.;... __ desiKD. No down, term• available or take over ex-tsu.D, ntA loan w I t h monthly pa.ymtmts ot $235. 4 bedmll. family rm, dining rm, bullt-ina, s p a c I o u 1 kitchen. archway leads into the home, Brk. · $28,500, 842-2561. 4 BR. VICTORIAN Br. Zoned for 14 units. Gross °liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiii ~-------~~ 1 yd. $2.15 mo. incl wtr. Day•. Santa .Ana Huntington Beach OWNER leaving, tr a n a· terred, 4 bedrooms, family room, den. dinlnl room, huge master bedroom. ttar Uvll'\f room, ci r cular driveway. No down. Ternu •vaJJa.bt., Brk. $3 " 5 0 0 • 1162-1313. . RE.POSSESSIONS For. tntormation and location oltheaen!A 6 VA -ea, cmtaot - KASAllAN Rt0I Estate 962-6644 GOV'T• OWNED- Repoa~ homes. Low dOMl. • Government pays c!ootnr cooti .. can 968M4I. * e,.t Realty PRIDE OF OWNER- $ba.rp 4 BR. 2 BA, tnany xtru, lmmac. corner lot •I 19822 C&nnania. Lane. Priced at only $32,500. Brok· er 547-6334 or 54&:6261. OWNER TRANSFERRED 3 Bedrm, 1'4 bath, boat or camper gate near beach &: achoo!. 5% down. Only $24,500. Call 96l-mt. REO CARPET 'REALTORS VA·NO DOWN BUILT TO LAST This custom built Terra.ce home offen 4 large bdrm1., 3 baths It many built-in ex- tras. Poolslze lot, $79,500. You mmt eee this customiz· ed masterpiece. 3 yrs old, 3 blks to Harbor H i g h . Owner-Agt otters terms &: immed. pos.s. $49 ,500 . AO/an 1 ~64,.~255'~· ~~ 1!!iE!~!yr~l~TE [ Mooll•Homu l[11PJ 494-9473 $49-0316 Moblla Homes For Sile 125 $1 .760 per mo, taxes $2700 • yrly. Asking $180,000. Businffl 187 E. 2ist St., C.f\.1. , Opportunitv 200 • 1 Duplex • Newport Shore;;. w ANTED. Man to entl'r the Gross $560 per mo. Frplc s wood fini~h Removing Strv in both . units. 3 Br, 2 Ba's Remove ·all types of wood ea. Asking $66,500. finish~ from furn. & Int. ZlO Fern, Newport Bch panelling, kitr:hen cabinets, • Duplex · Newport Bear:h dens, etc., on 60% basi•. on water. 7000 sq. ft. Sub-Can net $200. week • terranean prk'g, 3 sty. Ask-guarantee. $1500. required ing $260,000. to enter 22 years of estab. 4401 Seashore Dr., N.B. bus'ns. $1.000. On. Starting Ph. 642-8520 for Info. large interior paneling job LANDLORDS! m<l64>-o550. Ask tor M•. M h ** 4 BR., 2 BA. 7 mos. old. We Specialize 1n Nt-wport 1 __ u_rr_•_· ------1010 W. Altqn. S265/mo. Beach e Corona del Mar e $135 2 Br, bike to beach. Va-8.13-1103, 67>2{U8 &: Laguna. Our Rtntal Ser· cant. Kids ok, vice is FREE to You! Try Rent-A-House 979-8430 Condominiums N V. , Unfurn. u-ie\v · ~Lrg mod 3 b 2 ba NU.VIEW RENTALS Frplc fncd yd rdhild/pej 673-4030 or 494-3'.!48 8151 Taylor R47-5l69. SHARP 4 BEDROOM 4 Br, 1'1r ba, patio & carport. · I.vino $225/mo. ALL BUIL TIN KITCH· J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J e 645-4513 ~¥JE~tt5r¥if ~~~~~ 3 BR. 2 Ba., tam."['· .. 1325 I ·c=o-n-d'"o~. F~u..:r..:n:.. •• =,::... __ 54().1151 JACK 2 8~ ~~~~$300 Unfurn. 320 Huntington Beacti 325 -MYSTIC HILLS Ocean vleW! 4 Bdrm.a., 2 boa. Ocean view living & dining rma. Lge, level yard, room for pooJ. Xlnl neighborhood, close to schools. $49,500. Contempo Mohilehome Expo in Hawaii. Aug. 10, 1972. JMMED. OCCUPANCY * Grand Opening * UNUSUAL m<> 689-2000. ext. <8, Beaut. 2 BR Coodo. 1:m ... Newport Beach "I l11 li"/ \,lid ==-- Stt Orange County'1 newest OPPORTUNITY an.vtime. ~~~oo~l~.J.S, 548-1168, '72 furnished model mobile e UNIQUE GIFT This stylish buildin'g com-home display. Open daily, 9 SHOP e Balboa Island bines a chance for an owner . J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' • 4~2800 .. ---·1I1'1illur am-duak. Take San Diel':') to Jive in a modem 2 bed· FOR ~LE-Specialty shop in F~ to Avery Pk-Ivy exit. room apartment abovt his exclusive r:enter, Orange, 28282 Camino Capistrano, business, and have addition-Sa.n~a Ana area. Many e~­ Laguna Niguel, 831-1900. al rentAI income as well. The elusive features. Own~r s OWNER; Split level. 2 BR A I2XS5 I Br Mobile home. property is on a good cor· related . Interest demanding den, 1% BA, fireplace, sun S3,2000. Sf'e Sat-Sun, Bay & ner in Costa Mesa the zon. more time, Call Rob San· d k S~" ~ M\~ ·~-Beach, 7204 Pacific Coast i"" is A-P, and the.potential ford, GRUBB & ELLIS, 4300 ec · u ,<llJIJ. ._......._. or • ..,, C D NB 557 7900 ru: ,665--1073. ~;337.;:·~r ~23501 !ri Is unlimited. CaU 675-722.'j. 1 =~u:ldgr .. ~n~ p~f. · "SINCE ••••" CHARMING -CAPE COO _lst.Wes!etn ~ank Bl~. Yearly rental. z BR .. den, 1 Un1vers1ty Park, IN!ne br,.th home. ;J Block from Days 552-7000 N1ght1 beach. $325 month. Maxine Williams 642-8235 4 BR .• 2JA. ba. • , , •••• , •• $365 3 BR., 2 batN • .. .. .. .. 1340 3 BR. 2% baths ........ $350 Macnab-Irvine * BAYFRONT * Condo home w/boa.t &lip. · Brand new • for lease Furn. $650; unfum. $550 4401 W. Coast Hwy, Aak for Bud Meyer 675-6820 Townhouse Unfurn. 335 General Laguna Nlgutl 4 pm (across from Post Ofc.) BROADMOOR, NI g u e I NO Down, Lido Waterfront FISH & CHIPS Sbo~s. ocean view, 4 BR, Park. $.l995. Dbl. wide, fwell established) family nn. 2 Ba, 2 yrs old. ts.995. 22' Sail b oat . Holland But. S1lt1 81lbo1 Penlntula Realty Company 642-1235 644-6200 3 Br., 2 B1th1 Crpts, drps, w-patio & frplc. \Vshr-drycr & refrig incl. Nr schls & shopping. Accts5 ~. : red hill ~~~'.""~_'.;;_;m;·-'ve~urt-•._$2!2 9 Dupltxes Unfurn. 350 2200 11q fl, ldacpd, drps/cptd, ~=-,,,~~7·~-~..,..~~ I iiiii!i!ii!iiii!iii!iiiiii!iiiiiii!iil:I w;;;;-=;64'.!'S-4;;,;1~7~0=:--:::;:; REALTY Huntington Baich 3 car garage. Be•ut'1'tl fam· 8x42,. 2 BR, patio. lnd9cpd. SEVEN HOUSES FOR Sale, Wig Shop with 2 BR. 2 :SA, oceanf~nt. Has Univ. Park Center, Irvine ily home, fine area with rec room & pool, walk to good income, for a small in-everything. Gar, Kidit Call Anytime 833-0820 DELUXE 2 BR, cov patio. easy, u.fe beach aceets. shopping, S65 mo. sm. 5-2 BR & 2·1 BR. Individual vestment. 492-2552. Rtnt·A-Hou•• 979-8430 Office houri s AM to 8 PM New drps, crpU, bltns. dbl $07,500. Call owner, 496-6334. 646-8464. homes on large corner lot. M -SHARP Cl , 2 8 2 & I 1 Needs some TLC and oney to Loin 240 ! ean. r, · gar., ove Y private grounds. Lido Isle MOBILE Homf!': lO x 50. 2 Yrly Lse. Immed. poss. No La9un1 Btach Water & gardener pd. L•QUINTA HERMOSA Spanish Country Estate lJy. ing &: Spa..clous Apt.. Tefl. racM pool : sunken ru BBQ. Unbelievable Llvln& • Only I BR· FURN. $175 ALL UTILITIES PAID (4 blks S. of San Diego Fnvy on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside La.ne.) {n4l 847-5«1 S145 -$165 Bachelor & I BR. patios, trplc's, prlv. 1 a r age•. Divided bath & klt! (If clo.!lets. Rec haU, pool & pool tables, sauna betha. See ·for yourself! I7301 KeelM>n Ln. n blk W. (If Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). 842-7848 UPPER front 2 Br. overlook· Ing lake park & beaut. enclosed patio & pool. Mature cpl, no chldm or pets. $159. 1035 12th St. SJ&.2692. HUNTINGTON G a rd r n • s Apts. Heil at Bolsa. Chica. 846-132.l Compare • See. what you're mi•sing. Fr. l12G;l240. ________ general cleanup. Never 1 t TD L --Bdrm. Many extras incl. $815 h · s oa ns pets. Ref's. 673--3944. Sl50 • l BR. So. Responsible m&JTiep couple Now it tht t ime • • • Pr,·--• lor Qui·'· Sale vacancy. • mont in-C d M Laguna. (Adult•1 11•• .. --------= To list your property We '-~ CA come Sl0,000 dn. Asking oron1 al •r ~ .Erivate beach. · "" no pe~. • LRG, 2 BR. Bungalow have qualified cust~men: 839w560C. $79,500. CALL 642-1771. 63A % INTE REST ** DUPLEX BR AND $175 • CHARMING 1 Br hse, 842-3276· Apt. 4 Gardens, 6 pools; $125 -$135. Lge. modem 1 Br .. redec. Cpts., drpa, Nr. ocean. 210 Chica10 . SJ&.2268: 847-5169. waittn... Omtu 2 d TD L NEW. Huge dlx O\vner's No. end, Quiet & se.cluded. DUPLEX for rent, $135. 2 Saunas. Hot Jacuzzis. Ten- LIDO REAL TY ~ "' n 08 ns ""'' 3 BR.. 3 BA .• $Zl5 • LRG 2 BR m 4 plex B" 'P1'· drps. 624 Geoeva, "'' rourt•. $190. 846--0259 ltttl lttat, . , .11111111 d b I . Apt A, H.B. Call Manager 3 Bdnn 2 bath, central en- try leads to large family nn with cozy fittpl, modem kit- chen, $31,950. PH: 962-T77I RED CARPET REALTORS. CUSTOM HOME 4 blocks &elm ocean. 3 small BA 2 BA, shake roof & used brick fpl, 811 bllins in re· modeled kltch, Bkr; 962·5511. 3377 Vi-'\ Li"'\ N.B. Gentttl .m 21 Lowes! Ml.lea Orange Co. 'Fireplace, bltins, 1800 sq. rt, ne\v crpt~ rps. a · View. 894-5208 APT. Pool~de -Spacious * 673-7300 * ~ "WE BUY TD'S" + 3 <i<<ks wtview 0, bay. NU-VIEW RENTALS "'!~~~~~~~'.I Bungalow. PYI. patio. SI.Ill. ELEGANT ~ J J ocean, & hills. Walk to heh 673-4030 or 494-3248 r mo. to right ad u It 1 . 4 bedroom It famlly room 8u1fnu1 Property 154 l !!!!!!!!iiiiiiiii!!il!!!i!ii!!!i~I Sattler Mtg. Co. 8c shopping. 1 yr lse. $395. LAGU?:"A Niguel'.~ BR. 21 Apwtmentsfwlllrlt ll•l MS-l323. home with 2 4 baths & 2 fi~· FOR sal~Bttr tavern, Ja;I. 20' UNITS ~;;~karbor ar!4~~. Rels, requittd. 67S-6900. BA, hv rm ~ d1rung area, 1 ~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-;;;i * WINTER RENTALS , place•. S9 .500. ly bar, by owner. ca.JI Owner would like to exchange ,,,.~::,.:'7.:.:.:..=.:.:.:..=..'-'.= 1220 •. 2 BR over gar, Stove, :!~Yts, r~.:...,",•,1•1_'!~edillin~ A1·B2B·EY3· 4RBEAR.LReTY~ ... N38ow50!,. ~ ......... _ 962-4911. do1., .. n • This is in a good WE make loans on property. f C I C f ....... l"" wa "'"" .,. uu-•..............vr.c& loweon J& rootal area. No VB"""""'· Also buy TD's. McClure, re ng. rpt drps, an urn. sprinklers. 2-car garage. Apts. Furn. 360 L ___ ,,__ Co I I •-··, B $225 • 2 BR hse w/frpk, lmma·. 131• mo., !st, Jut•-..;. __ ,....._____ eguna Beach --mmtrc 1 Price $22l.500. Call the In· kr. 492·8332 or 492-0424. .. ,} ... = 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 __ P_ro;;pe;..;.rty._:. ____ 1:;5:;1 vestment Division, 546-1600. CASH FO R TD'S .r11ns. yard, garage. deposit Ava.ilable Aug 24th \;enffal 1 BR, gis/water paid. TWO US l Mese Verde "'. .w95 · 3 Br. 3 Ba, trplc, bltns, 495-4244. · ' iii![iiiiiiii-jj Rede•. North eod, 2 bl·'-ot HO ES on l ot. Live CANNERY VILLAGE Le•tt Private Party, 644·2M9 view or b11.y, be ... . ... Kl! in one. re'nt the other to pay 4 ·-8-R-.-,-,-12-,.24-.a-m_e ___ m_, 2 BR. house S300 mo. + util M NU-VIEW RENTALS NO. end charming 2 :Sr, din A ach A town. $16 0 . your rent. Shake roof, lpl. " • ...., ortg1ge1, rm. frpl, gar, terrace w/o. "4--5298. all bltlns. $58,000. Blcr: 1%,ba, blfttn kit.,lncrplta~,~rps100' WIEST, Agent 675-2723 Trust Dnd1 260 673-4030 or 494-3248 cean view, 1% bl ks Bold New Concept New~rt Beach 962-5511. WA er so ener c · _..,, V•cancies cost money! Rent .,,.n Singlts/Familir:s. 2 BR, furn b e a c h Is h o·p ' g . Adfll!. -""-=.;._=;;.;;:c;... __ 55'r-9194 westiBll1J .,..,,ooo -2nd T.D. 10-m Int. 3 1 c • FURNITU £-RENT L 2 BR w· t -M COTrAGE FOR SALE at ... ---------your hiuse, apt., &tore d d I 12000 Bo l'lr un . ar. Fncd. -t94-7250 (Ir 4~727. R A . in f!r .• ~./ o.. "~ n... Pil W yr ue 11 e. nus Renl·A·Houso 979 "30 ---------3 BR WI t •-fM beach. White frame \~lith IJ<Uly ot ant Adt have bldg .. etc. thru a Da ily Pilot INCOME HOMES weU secured. 640--1515. ·-SPLIT leVel 2 BR A: den, 1~~ • n er. _,.,. 0 • •--· -•--I B Summer dates open now. ahutters. Bkr: 962-5511. l./Ngama g-..1~. Cluai.lled.Ad. 6U-$73. 6-NEW DUPLEXES $4.~.9&> Costa Mts1 A, fireplace. sun deck. "'J~ An~ a~'"' See at 50ClO Neptune', NB . 4-NEW TRIPLEXES 167.950 -mo. -· S@\\Jl}A.-~£!ftS" Tlte Purzle wif!t ffte Buiff.fn C!t~cHe O Rtorrol'lg• ltttm of th• fo1Jr 1erct1nbl9d wordt be low to form four timple words. I T OLBA I f . I I I 11 . j I N I G G A I I Walfron 11au ip11 "Buslneu ' e ls '° bod in t his rQtouro nt I j I I that o <ustomtr offartd o $20 ._..__._-L.-L...J bill to Wiit his tl<ket and the I R E p H' x,R Iba" :-anted lo make h im a ' l' I I I 1i" c.m.i... .,.. "'w.+.J~ . I bv lilll.,. I• "" mi.,.. -d -- -. you d•v.lop from Jl*P No. S below. ! :~~~~~;~~,~1"u1 l1 r I' r I' r I' I 1 ~A~i~lfllflSTO1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 SCRAM·L!TS ANSWERS IN CWSIFICATION 700 .. 2 · l ]~ MESA VE ft D,E • 3 L H 'll BACHELOR apt. II blk from Beaut. new I: 3 BR uruta:. Houaes f« Rent ...... Bedrooms, family room, 2 19una 1 • 151 E. Bay St .. Costa Meaa. n:::::r ha ocean. $135 mo. Co I 8/1 6,,,005 ths, .carpeting, draperies, 3 Br, 2 ba, blt1ns. .... -...t.!,,,, 675-0098 after f pm mp e, , Ph: ...:-. • h ho I 11 t ""'"""'~ • ...,, __ c arming me n exce en & drapes. Pool facilities. * "' block BBJ' .t: Bach. DANA HARBOR Houses Furnished 300 neighborhood. Available 1 Maintenance Inc 1 u de d, Ba.cbelor apt, ms, J, BR INCOME HOMES (f\!EW) ,_...;.;.;.;:._:._._:._.;;......;._;,.;;; Aug. 1972. One.year lease 551-3954 t $275 64!).0123 4-Plexes •• $66,950 to sn.950 Balbo11 Island preferred at $ 3 5 0 Im 0 . ~--· ------1 ·--•!!:!:~.,._.. •P . ' • -' BR 2 BA bltin f ---• ilPPER 3 BR. " blk be'-•. Duplex •••..••••••••• $52,500 CHARMIN(.; 3 B R / d e n Including w a t e r and " , 1, e111..~ n ~· 8 Units ............ $132.~ waterfront ho A gardE!ntr. Dri~ by 28U ya.rd, palk>. excellent loca· 517 W. l 9th. CM 54S..a.ut Yearly. New crpta A: drps. Al cazar at La Cresta, Dana me, u g 1.erang tind pleue phone Uon·immed occup. $250. per 2™" N. Main SA $300/mo. No pets. 64~ Pt. \\'EBB (Bkr.l 642-i905 lst-lSth. $500. Wlnt~r _S275. 545-2219, evenings for more mo. Call agent 546-4141. l !i!!!l!!jj!i!!l!~l!!!!!54!!!7--0!!!!!1i'I Sa~n~C~l~e~m~tnt~!e==:::=1 ---· mo. AvaJJ. 9/8, 646--1355. info I: *NEWPORT BEAC"* Coron• def M•r _ • N•wporl lla•ch Belboe blend 1135.00 FURN OCEAN Vu l.u><urlou• om"' Bldg. SUPER SHARP 3 Bad-THE BLUFFS * DOCK" PIER * APJ'. 3 LG RMS. PARRlNG $200,000 Down. Prlmt loca· SllS util pajd, gar unit, Also fOOM , 2 &.th, ,,.,,lly Channing 1 br, turn a.pt, on * ADULTS '92·U>9 * lion. 30,000 Sq. ft .. stet.I & $85 N'pt Bch. rm., c•rpet1, dr•pe1. ONE STORY • N. Baytront. 1 c1tr car. $.150 A U f 36S masonary C0'1$lrt1cUon. Rtnt-A-Houn 979"'430 Ne at & clt1n thr uout. Like new 3 BR .. 2 b&'s.; priv. pt. ft urn. ?i1en-IU Propcrtle11 ~ Coste M esa $250. per. i mo. C•JI ptUo. Move-in read)', SJ75 h;'°::;;.CH;;.·.;;1~:."";;:;,· ,;,67;;;'°99.;2;::Br;:._'.~y~,-ar~ly-1 Gentral- lIAVE buym for 4 or 6 plex D 1 v •, nERITAGE Per month. I ;::.,,,,.,,,_.,,,==°""--I bldp in Huntington Beach 2 Br. stove A re.fri.c, REAL TORS, $40..1151 . rtnta.I. Latte. SNEAK PREVIEW of pro. or Seal Beach. Need lge 3 crpt/drps, 1c>me t u r n , CaJJ Fem at 673-G9(XI bably the be 1 t new • TINY, O>ttage • Pert. for B IL--p I In Co BR, 2 BA owner's unit. carport, All util pd, qutet f:1t' a -1t1ln1u a &parlmtnts . ala Mt .... Broker. fn4) T58-'l714. adlt only. Nr Wtstcliff tLJ!e,r.;:j~ s:· 645-3'00 PENlN Pt. Ira 1 hr, w/w featurtna fittplt.c~ in SY cwner du,pltx 1 yr old Plaza.. $1SO. 64.2-0538. crpt, pvt PfltlO. Yrly Ju. closet.a, ex:poaed beamed Ca ·~-•-ch •~ooo e 11••n lo Find'" B· •--• r •• ly cellillf, clublloutt, swim· PJ .... auu """'"'" • ..,.,, . Laguna Be1dl """"" • ~ ~. -U.K.-u """ Util lncld. No peU, Sfn&le or mine poo~ or w,. or trade for lot. 5.1&-()346. Yrd, encl aar. Kids A: pets. WC Vista Del Oro cpl only. $195. Av.U Tlr.1500 Jurnbhtd. B&ch'1or A: l Bed- (lOJ 2 BR·Dtluxe Bldg, • 6 S400 mo. 2 BR. l..S mo1. lm· f.14$. Newport heh '-firlUnar, &JOO.. .Down-room ~ $13$ per mo. moo old E/s!de C.M. PM-med. occupancy C/ K . ALA Re nt1ls e 645-3900 "'•J.Ll3 '-•-•£ ataln ll1llL 673-0711. 1_ 'V • Fabulous vlow liS8 Alta •~ "'" uITT w ' • WU'°"• Costa M<llj cipals only, 642-U2l. Vista W•v Qul;t ._ prt•-te % B1 R. ~~· drps, gange, LIDO We 2 Br 2 n.. 0 .... , • $43 \VIC A: Up-On Ocean 642-1300, 'P,J• • •• • qu el • ...,..... onJ.v. No pell. • • .. J:H'· QfV Lcivdy Bach-I Br. -Room s lndustrlal Property 161 Telephone owner ln $170/mo. s.wz1. 543-lfOi>. vtew. 6~~~ Ot,11 &C-1194. Maid Serv~Pool-Ulil Pd Put a little "loot" In )'CRd S~ , ~·-Hollywood %13 : 656-6300. """· •~•w· • Call -~-• Lovla • aeU 1~-•·ubles ~· ~or u--)'OUr vacant * 2 BR hnme, l"tdecoraltd. , '"'""''w ,_,. ..,._ 1W M·l on-l•olied M~ tildts. Lift ti> lnlder 0Ur Tn.dar'1 Oldtt """"'•· $1.15. Seil Ui ... lra!ult llu1 ,__,Need a "Ptld"T P1S1C1 an tldf "bucQ''. Cll1 Clla!flod S\llllvan, Broker -P ---".--'collunl>-.__1a_1or.....:~-'----*-"'-u.;.1_01_*___ '""' ~ ..;Qllc..;..;.w.sm,_;.;..;;____ IWU67!. I ' t 1· J t I . ·o :Pl in :bu ing "" ' 3 1 ' ~pts. Ftrepl f'txil5. IOO ¥acA l'!EW flayvi t~ 14s.ZJ All ,,. rono. (1) 4 :2 ~ Ql1t1 irk-• Q :Prv. :Nr s ~a 1m ~1J<r. A * 3.Br. 1 tultns, Oalio. (:hild f:~te Sf'AC! r;::b 5454!. !• & 2 ~uief 'f,· u t 1..-na~ ~- I • " 2:ar • CfPt/d ttpati 2f37 o. sPAC 2 Pool, ok. 1996 ~f'll 2206 Co 2:f!r. T ltpts. pet~. 11s:;1 546-l D'EL StUalo Bltns, ~hUdo ·Sjlac ~ :111.n1 I $211J. E/slde lownh 134 M j;g. 1(45. D decora .\0 rTiin E.16 41 TRO G,aiai per.ni St.. CLEAN 1120. R,t>f.ri,ll'. 14· 5Ji.A~ " . !57-77 2 ~BB. l•lll!•i ll401m i,u. WP< l~•E .. 2113R, 4tP•. D,r;N 21BR. dni•. (lot. , • . . . ~ ·-· ..... ---· ..... y-. 'I • 1-I ·-~:: _,., __ .:iil~~l -~;;·-~;;,.,_;;;;ll!J~• f ~·-l!tl L ... ,1 -" 1 "'"' I~ I ]~ [ DAILY '!LOT llSJI L-.. '°"_ ... -;;;;;;Jal [ -........ J~ I~ I ... ] ;~ !-Jnlurn: :165 Apt. Un~'.'." .... __ 34.1 A_p_t_: _u_n_iu_m. ____ 3_65_ Apt. Unlum. 34.1 Summer Rentals 420 R•ntels Wanr.d -CJ.afd1nint 460 Found (f,.. edsl 5541 Lot! JS ---------.>;.:AL'S UndACaping. Tr•e Gitn•r•I General VILLA MARSEILLES , , SPACIOUS l & 2 BEDROOM APT. · Furnls~od & Unfurnlshod : Adult Living Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • Plush shag carpet· mirrored wardrobe doors- : indirect li ghting ln kitchen • breakfast bar • : huge private fenced patio • plush landscap- , lng • brick Bar-be-Ques • large healed pools ; & lanai. Air conditioning. 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 1 557-8200 COLDWELL, BANK~R & CO. MANAGING AGENT 211. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. d;-i1!'-n>n--•-· -do_l_M_o_r___ Costa Mesa 34.1 01n1 Point Newport 6e1Ch BAY VIEW 2 bedroom, ---------1,.,,,..,.,=..,..-.....,..,.,.~.....,. I aleeps 4 complttfiy fumWl- 2 BR. 2 BA. '-'fPll. drps, ap. DE\..uxt Condo. 2.000 *I· fl. ed. Avail June to Sept. $750 pli.rn..'l's. $200/mo, Ca I I 3 Br. 2 Ra, 2 1tory. ~ltns, pr month. AduJtJ only dM1\no 4 Br, 2 Ba, ~pprox. 49fr1058 evt.11 or Y"knd5. crplJ>, drp."I, pool , ch1ldl'\'n ,.,01, IJ15'~~. 2 000 1 id · H I t 8 h ok, $360/mo. Year lca:ro.1,,.'o===~:--:-:--;-;-;c.; · .ti(J , 1• l'ffl Cfll"f' in unt ng on eac Avall 7/'15. 2430 Univ,~lly BACl-IELOR Apt., ~~ blk N<'"'por1 ·lluntl.ng1on or Seal Dr. iSho\Vll by 11.ppointnieutl . from OC.'l'an. sips 4, $1 00 v.·k. Bf>$.C:h arra. Occupancy AUJ. $175 O"•ner 96l-1674. Aiso 2 BR. •; Blk fro1n 11$, for l yr, ll'ut'. Prtrl'r Child re n Welcome ~~~~-----·I O<'t"an $175 v.·erk. N<'"·port <'U$ton1 built "'/Nim'g pool, San Clemente Bl'ac·h aft 6 caU &7",,.009.'l. hu! not t'sst'ntial. Reliable New Family Apts. l11mlly being tran.4'f. from 2 BR, 2 Ila, n<'W shai, pain!. NEWLY da.'Or 2 Ur lurn. &in Dit>go, Rt't1l1tl nmouni 2 Bdrm. Color Coard. drp~. f'Tplr, f'f'tr\g, range, slpit fi...8, 1~ blk heh , Npl O!"t'n. Plta!W call !\1r. Owf'ns. TENNIS CRT., PU'ITINC ba!L"On)'. Ocean view nr Bch. 673-9142, 832-Qi3.l2 ask GREEN, POOL., BAR·B·Q's bf.al'h & shopping, Sl90, 117 for Gayle. rrs. 714:270-Z'iSS or ort·. Al '· N 492~19 714;279-4474. ClllLD PLAY AREA gouun , , .. 1. ...,.. • , V t" R I T 4 .. ir I ·===~--.,,c-cc---DAY CARF. CENTER aca 1on en a ' ~ PllYSICIAN, \\'!fr, Hi yr 10n 3 STORY REC. BL[X; .• lNC. l ,nn. on Buena Vista lOCl.1----------\1·!sh lo ft"nt/li;e 3-4 br. 2 b& a I ulllilles + laundry m1. * OCF..ANFRONT • on the houM"", lurn/unturn. llarbor GY?i1 & PARTY RMS. SU0 0 por mo 492 ~--··" ~·nlo • '"g B ·h '"'· · ·~. ""'"'· uu"' w .. ""' · l · lligh Dist ., Prt'f. Nl'~'JIOrt D;~0~~ ~~1r~E Furn. or Unfurn. 370 By Wk or "10· 494·4012· llgL<i. about S.-p1. 1. 2479 SEE FURN. J\10DEL.S Apt1., 833-2848· AnK'r ican River Dr, W RNER VE UNIV. Park, t>:<N'. 3 BR. SaC'ramC'nfQ. Calif 95825 640 I A A . Co rona d•I Mar $150 Per W"k FOUND amall m Ix e d 1hepherd. Vlt·inily Santa Ana Avenue I-22nd St., Costa Mtu, 7/T/72, 642-8444. FOUND at Jaml>ol"ff Road A COltsl Hwy .. f t n1 a I ti Shepherd ty~ do1. golden color, about 1 year old. 497-2098. S1'ANDARD 11ixe 00,, black "'IL•r•a.m pa"·• l IC>&• Wl&f't'y m1trkinp. V I c. 1'tesa Vrnlt Sehl &rf'a. S.C.7-87%. Jo'OUND : German Shorthlllrt'd Pointf'r, ff'malf' in \'IC'. ol Harbor lo Hamilton. C.t.1'. ldenllty col· l&r. 646-4335. l.OST In Dana Point, nr. Bia Sur St., Colden Re-lriewr "Anpl." Vtmoll Edl•r, 6T3-T7t6 or 673-&148 Rl!l'>''Ud. BEAU'S (Oflf'. Mlnlnc since 1'1'1day night. Mlasion Vltjo arta. Lat'll!l bluel&n'Y male cal wllh broken hind ltK· f'lt'IMJ phone 837-968~. 1nttruet!M I~ ~~. Yard remodellne. Traah haullf'I(, lot c.l•'llnup. Rf'P';lr sprinklt·rs. 613-116'. COMPI..F.Tt; l. a w n A Gantenlng wrvl~. llaulinl & clran-up. Jim S48--0400. JAPANESE G&l'dl'ner Comp. Ya.mwork & Clean.up. Frff t!ltlmales. 642.-..1101 General Services ---~~~----BAHYSITIJNG, hou.seclf'8,11-Schools & Instruct ton• 575 1 111g, f'OOk tni;:, gardenlnrr job ----------\lo'iln!~tl . f1:i.&-85JCJ. INTERE.~'F.D IN A REAL •:STATE CAREER~ Hauling --~-------1 FOUND on 7J1A-Pu11py, ap. · ri1•1 ~is-1191 I c;r.r Rtll or TH AT Ac1ulrrny R<'al f,slatt> UNSIGl!TI.\' TRASH ~ prox 4 mo. 111n "'f1\ hl!e bib I ~ HARBOR.GREENS Furnished & Unfurnished From $120 to $21S mo Bachelors • 1 Bdrms 2 Bdrm1 • 3 Bdrms 1 V2 or 2 Full Baths (Corner \Yarnf'r &. Edv.-a~sl BACll apt, 2 bUts Big Corona, Cantrell Really 833-2224 Proiect of Urbanet1cs 1 adult, no pets. \'early. ~entals to Shar• 430 _ e -$125. Util pd. 642-85~. & paw.1 Uook.1 llkp Colllf'!, ('cin1r111rr &· In~. Schoo ll Jo: BR 1 S. r R r; r. 1['1 vie C.?it lllah. No JD. ~2a Old No. N"'·pt. BL NR I!: ST I l\1 '' T F: S , l 'O LL. R.Jo: f:du c--11tion ~in<'f' l9G4 STUDENT !'~1~2!1. I "41).-0876. BE AN --~ J\.!AN ovf'r 30 1\'81ll<'d tn ';mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii; FOUNn. I · h Sf' Sh.1PLOAIJEl't & clun1p truck Costa Mese I ~ r.is tftr puppy INVESTIGATOR ,,·ork. Concrrte J.. a~pMlt . Personals ON l'EN ACRES t\pts. turn./uniurn. Ltas@ Fb'eplaces I priv. patios. f'ools. Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. flO Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 :ttacArlhur nr Coast l-h\•y) $235 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! share 2 BR, furn. apt. Personals 530 7118 vlc1n1ty Port Thf'ntrr. Recordrl\ J.1 .. ~4'1&ll:C. 1'rlls llow uw!ng & hr ea kin a:. CJ-IILDREN \\'EL.COME I• Swin1's: pool t.: ja,..u1..zi. Park ~onma drl ~l11r. Call f.t I Coll Toll FN'r 8~7UO. BRAND NEW FAMILY NEW Nr11·port. Call aft 7 pm. Just a letter of Thank~: identity. 6 7 .1-O 9 3 5 or I (1) 800-426-0232 --------- 2 bci<lrooin wi1h lanai 6'1o-o874. 1 want 10 thank all the pn.>tl)' ~3886. YARD, glU'Ri'e clf'anupl'I. TOWNHOUSE APTS. ovrrlooking pool \VANTED uncrowded dc'luxe nul'Sf's, Doctors & staff at FOUND, 1na.lt' lovnbh· 11tulr RernoVP lr~s. dirl, Ivy, 3 BEDRMS. + FAMILY, cal'pf'ts & drapes, bll·lns aceomn1odallons. \Vldo11,•cr lloag (don't ,::t>I nit> 11,TOngl ( killl'n w dl"rp a ii 1· 1, 0 1 ][5J DrlVt\\'11.Y~. );'rnd inJl. R~7·~ I ---~-2 BA. TE:NNIS CT.. cnt• OSru garage !"JO \V/ycun~ son & cat. I had a \VOman Dr, too, (or ' ma rking!I wfp•'r:r.orutli1y . . \"ARD & Gnrage Cltanup. NEW 2 BR . 2 BATH :P..1astcr size bcdroorrui w/ PU1''I'lNG GREEN, • Really neat Davi~. I 21 3) 7 2 4 -6 4 11 pulling up with me 3 week!!. Abt. 6 1no. oltl. fiT.1-4.'l!l~. Frtt rsr. 7 rl11ys. Call !Jayvie\V Duplex. Top loca. h~gh beam ceilin~s. large POOL, BAR·B-Q's $205 & $190 11,·k-days. "Okit>'' Bill. P. s. There at'f' •1'1,Ytlmr. 543-fiOJI. fion. S400 ml9."lrase only. livlrig: room w/cas er CHJL'> PLAY AH.EA Dr1vr by: 2311 Eld£'n Ave. loSH=A~R~Eo-m-y-,-.,~1-.,~,.,,-,~, ~,,.,-m-f! lot11 of Bills, I know, cause I SPOTTED a 1 11111<' h 1 ~ (" Add-A-Room Hoallnn & Al-r ----1 aA .. f\l ,.1 rt Co ood b · fir l ce pa_ra.ktt1 '1'/\l'h ,,. hf'Rd ,·1r. ., Uft.1 e5.ll o gage ·• w urruna: ep a · DAY CARE CENTER or l"all ; 645-5780 11,•/clock, man 3().-00 yn. got them. Thank."! again. \VII-· & <:"Hit• A,•., C.'I. Rrnioclrhni:. PnHn~. Roofl', C·-'ltl I k~n21. Convcni£'nt laundry area 3 STORY REC. BLD. INCL. -" • " ______ o_n_n-'g'----· I off kitchen. Enclosed PB· $1501mo. Straight. 675-4331. HAPPY BIRTHDAY 646-4387. All . ~. I.I<'. & fklndt'(I, (;OO<J"·in & - A:l new 2 BR . .I BA, sunny tin~. 2 s11,imming pools, GYJ\I & PARTY Rf.1S. FE~1ALE roomma!e to .!iharc llOUSf & C'11r kry~ round in ~n. 846 .. liOS nr S47·R17~. pati:I. 1U71' Heliotrope. $250. sauna. rf'Creation fac.iU-DESIGNED FOR THE 2 2 I 1 (ll 433.-0069. ties. Security guard. GRO\VJNG FAMJLY BR., Ba. apt. F1rc>p 11.ee, JO ANNE paper!! for Boy Sl.'Our·~ p11prr Carpet Servica AIR COND. CONTRACTOR Call fer t'stim111~ -642-00l5 RR llugg;tn11·486 Ne\vport. NB HouseclNnlng '2 BR. Pool. SomE" vit\lo'S. SEE FURN. MODELS pool. rwar bC'ach, 968-0286. '!!_v.e .. 1.uly 15, Laguna Ni51:url I JOllN'S C11rpt't & Upholslt'f)' : . Near beach. $2.10 Models Open 'til 9 pm. 6'40 I WARNER A VE. REALTORS Garages for Rent 435 ..............,, . • Dri·~ampoo fr" e S<"Oh·h· ' AGENT 644-4848 2700 Peterson Way, CM (Comf'r \Varn£'r & Edwards) SINCE l9« GARAGF. for storagr, $20. THE VERY BESJ FND. Mrod1u1n (,,.rm 11 n I a:uard 1Sol1 Rrlardanl~l. rNTRODUC INr.· 1't <'Co)' I Q:>sta Mesa nr Harbor Blvd & f U b . 6 l month. Shepherd lt>rrie:r mix. Jo'ml., Df'(T'f'llM'ts & all color home & yaf'hl clt'anir11 , Adams Pro ject O r anet1cs 7 -4400 5'18-04i9 aftC'r 6 pm EVERI ehain roller. V1r. 1'~111t of \V, hri11:hirnPr.!i &. 10 minute aervlct. Lie. RPM, nlr1. ~~rk-Llke Surr~~~dlng Office Rental 440 • I 19th St., C.!\1'. 548-.'\:lR.ll_. -hltRc'h for "'·h!te carpel~. "67~1..~1~_51_.~~--,,--,- ' QUIET -DELUXE 546·5025 ON BEACH' •eBliB"U <»o ............. ~-. ._,,,,,. --~==~-----FOUND: Small salt A pep-Save )'Ollr money by 1aving ME--1\A Cle1nint. Ca.rpet."I. : 2 &: 3 BR APTS • S kl . N ~d 11 A""I Deluxe Offices, $140/ Mo. CLAakRINET ~JayC'~ wants 10 per Poodle IPrrirr mix. Vie. me extra trll)ll, \\'Ill clran \ndowl, t I o o r 1 etc. 'Prv ·par ini::: e" " " P s. A. d I I b m e music. ivilh. 90me· Mesa Verd• o,., ~!''' llvln< nn:, dininK rm: • Rtold/com'I. 5 5 7. S 7 4 J, 1 • patios * lltd Pools 2 BR, 2 BA Unf. Fr. $251 e I BR-U"fu'• SIOO. 1r:-ro 1 n . ieate<. pvl a, h "· ~ ~ 1N' I 1 • I o I " " 1 I I r 1 IC 'l I one--<.' a.m .... ·r music, .1".•1 Adam•: '.'d;>--7'':,9: hall Sl!i. Any rm. fl.~iO. it•• "J U . • r s ,o~ g * A"u t~ n y z BR. 1'~urn r~r. $308 e l BH.-futn Sl90. u. 1 sf". ,;.n ra ·" . oca· 1 A cd ro .....,....., ~ • • A New e New • New ADULTS ONLY !Inn ~1s-0~9 <lays or eves !I. in interest In jo1n1ng LABRADOlt 10 I c'Ourh SIO. ('hair S~1. 15 yrs. ---·--1-1--.. -1 -1-1ou-,,-c~1.-,-.-,.-. GrfJnlqUe ptS. e 2 Bl{, 114 BA Unfurn $210. . ' ' \\'OOCh\•ind quintet, pt,y;ng ' mos. n111 '" £.1'""' .-.. "uia F .1 A ii bl 645--0263 bl f'xp . 1~ \1•hnt "ounts, not a. 1 0 t lm Sa C VILLA CORDOVA urru ure vru.a e e 2 BR, 1BA1'"um $225. '°""1 ~-· ---,..,.:-= wlth l'larlncl pl•yer or in pure ack. Vir. Npt Rrh _.,y 1 ay. "'" n.ns. nta Ana Ave.. .~f. C ts-d pes-rl sh h r 1. $50 T . Cl b 6 2 6 1nt·ll101I. I do \\'nrk mysC'lf * '"8--0648 * ?!-~.Apt. 11.1 646-5542 arp e ra I Wiiii e Private patios, lush fcl'\'st DF--SK space avallable band or orchestra 54(>-2279 enn11 u. 4 -5.'il all C. I I !'i~l-0101 ·• -~-~cl ---. COOL. rnESH heated pool-saunas-tennis St'lling. Carports, gas paid. mo, Will provide furniture art 5PM. 4:30. ·~ 1-··-· I !-~~--BAY &: Reach Janitorial • .L * $180 * * QUIET -SAFE rec room-ocean views 114 E. ~lh SI:, C:'l: ,,0 "137 ot SS mo. An<wer\ng servl-STEAM Carprt Clr1tnf"r~. / 111 !'Ii. w " "''~ '"" •FULI .y IJCENSED• LARGE Black puppy, ""'I", Crpls 11·lndo\\·11 oor11. etc. 3.Br. 111 Ba1 newly painted (Near Bark, Bay) patios-ample ...., .. klna: available. 222 F'Qrest Ave, • prof. at lo1vl.'st prlN'~. 300 .,... ~ ~ R -·•Hi~ Sp1 • 1· 4 whit!' paws, &ige collllr. Rtrsld/Con1m 'I. 646-1....,,. Qlitns, crpt/drps, enc I 40 Unit Adult' Complex Security Guard."I. FABULOUS 2 BR. Lr,guna Be11.ch. 494-9466 eno\\'•~ LuuU 1r1tua l."lt. ~q. It. $29,95. 972-0672. NTINGTON Spiritual Readings given 645--0147. Prof. Carpe;t Cleantnt jatio. Nr schts & shop'it. Only (1) 2 Br. Left! HU $130 Up. Furn/Unfurn DESK space ~va.nable $50 Carpent•r (:hildren ok, no pe:t11, 880 Entertaining will be a pleas· PACIFIC ·you l\'Cn't lind a largor. mo. Will pl'OVlde. furniture daUy. 10 AM-lOPM. Advice FND. 14th. Men's f'ye~hl~Sf'!I. _ ... ____ .. Al90 winti01\'!'I & • f\002'4 cah .... (:enter St CM 642--8340 or urC'. Decorating will be a t S5 A rvl given on all matters. I can Vic. Pile.aim, Mesa Vrrde. LARGE OR SMALL Call Dulr-h 5.'16-1.iOll, n. k! ·· · ni cer apt for Jes.<;. Beaut. • . mo. ns"'~ se ce hcln you. 545-3995 I T \\ k ~2882. joh. ru OCT-AN AVE .. H.B. garden area. patios. Quiet avail?-ble. 11875 Beach, Blvd. 312 N. El Camino Real . , . i /\I )flf'l' 'or ·? l'l~! c~•ni. \Ironing sPACIOUS Studio 2 Br. w/iv e Spreial cabinet space (714) 53&-1487 dead·£'nd slr('e!. i'usl So. of llunhnt1on Rt>ar-h 64--43Zl FND. item at K Mnrt . ('n<i!A 11an1·I. n•n101irl, r 1 n 1 sh . ---'-------0 Lock garoges ii·llg s!or Ole open JD a,m-6 pm Dally --SS\n Clcmenlf' Ml'AA . Call k rlrsr-ritx-lr:ull•'. r1•1l/1U'!, rh•. !l6'l·1!l61 tron1111: dnnf' in my hnme. filts. ncwdrps, f'lrr. hl!n<i, \VILLIA?>.1 "!ALTERS co. Ne\1•por1 A\'e. Adults, no BAY VIEW OFFICES 492-9136or492-9034 "iS-'25& ---Rrh:-h\r. Rrfrrrnrr5 ba. Priv. p;ilio. ~r. e Bm cril • Lndry e Patics pels. 2020 Fullerton A1·c.. Df'IUX<'. air·l-Ollrlilioned \\!ANT to meel an Old Bald ;>' .i . --:\o!I NOH ho111~· rrp~lrit. J>lun1h-• ;,:lR-lf\M • 'Yll & shop'g. No pet11. • Dr\\', disposal LARGE 3 Br, 1 ~ Ba. Crots, C.M. IJu.!it E. of Bay) Rt'decora1ed. Lido area '-'~ F Do , 11 F'ND: Shephrrd-Col11f' 1111' 1n1: · t·:1t·nrn1ry · 1}alnt1ng ~ e Spet·iRI soundproofing , 61" -r. I · Bk 67"6700 .,.,uan.> og~y! n t ca hlk-hrn•n & wht 1 1· i r., • rool1n\,!. rail :~~1!'Fil. Janitorial ~~!=~~~~--ilrps. redecorated. Blt-1n~. ~"'-'· ,ea onoinics, r. "' me. II you al"I.' cute, pt"tite ----------1 t • & 2 BR Apts. Garage~. • Deep 2 color shag crpts 1v s hr/dryr, oven/ran~. 1 & 2 BR. furn. or unfurn. OFFICE Space, 444 Old and want to mcel a recently Newport Bf'aC'h. 1171-24:1.1. 1 -\Vnrhl '~ Bl'~I C11rpro~1-;r-COMM~RCLAL Ir. Tit"11\rlf'n· kui~t garden setting. $1 35 & • DraJ>('s dsh~1hr, (ncd yrd, patio. Dbl Pool. $140 Up. Children's Newport Blvd.,! blks No. cf dl\.'Crl.'ed, niCt! \ o o kin< 2 Df>Ks. 1 Minim. Do°bi'rman. l, ~n1nll Joh~ Rrlrrenc•s tial. free Ell. 14 hr ll!TV. By 1' GAS k \\1ATER PAID c II u o7·.o• lp .... Utll. rrtt. rum. avail. carport &. storage. "Must section. ELJ\-1 GARDENS }lwy 1. l'.lO sq. ft. $95/mo, siflCC're bachelor 38 wi lh 1 Blk CockRpoo. N"''P' .a U'l.r ,,....,.. w~k or mo. 133-&898 or 1111niltr>r, S 3 1-8 5 O 8 or SlJO Mo. to Mo, 5ee to a ppr e c i ate i ' ' APTS. 177 E. 22nd St., C.M. 54S-5300 own l'Jome, call 546-205o4 Shol'f'11. 642-3162. ':el lings 75M'1!2. •As-8992 2323 1'~!dr.rl Avt!., CM .,~·'1.cl:.l 642 3645 · :-~===~-,07-n l l3Jl ' ______ .._ __ _ ~ · · 646-0032 ~-· · · ' 2 ADJOINING cf f ice a morns.or a er , · FNO 7-t;. Orange It wl\Ue 1 • • ·"THE GABLES" 1'!!!!!1!!!!!!!111'!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!11!1!!!!!!l2 .i\:Jt .... apartrrl&nt, drape'.s. * QUIET APT.· QUIET available. 2 different loca~ WANT 1o meet an Old Bald feml Spaniel.· Springdale I' Aooustleal Cel!Jngs blown 2'.Br. 11h Ba w/gar. Adllo;. 11 w1.w carpets, c.lo8et &Pace. TENANT ONLY.1 BR. lions. $150. & $100./mo. Square Fog-y! Don't call J~eil, }I. B. &4&-1050. machine applied. "Fre• ,._. .~ -L-IVE IN A GAR-OEN .. ~ f"!!fin1nlt'~. Cuar. 64-4-718.1 . .... .,ttdrps. bltns, fnc.d .Y•'-' E~cellent cond. $150/mo. 548-3927 IHZ-6560. me. If ycu al'e cute, petite FND. white Peke-ii-poo. Vic. 1-'lpatio. Wtr pd. 636-4120 Ca~ ~1. Huntington Beach TW=~0-A~DJ~o=r=N~IN~G=.-0=,=,=1~c=ES and 1vant to mE'f'I a recently Costa Mf!'ll.t H 0 • P 11 11 1• Cement, Concrete 2-f37 Orange Ave No. C S155· and enjoy privaey, luxury 2 BR. duplex, stove, r~ busy corn('r, Costa Mesa. divcrccd, nice I o o k I ng 67~17. SfiAC 2 & 3 Br apt $140 up. and gecurily at a pricf' you frig ., dshwhr/w ash/ 2 BR FROM $139 $100, util's pd. 642-6!'JOO sincere bachelor 38 wit h Pool, cpt/drp, bltns, kids can afford. dry, crpts., drps., $165. MOVE IN TODAYI MEDICAL Suite, rt'!ldy to Ol~·n home, call 546-204S · FOUND Sun. PAlr n t p r r a criptlon eyf'glassts. Identi fy. 494-1569. Ok 1500 I I I. · moms or after 8:30. · * sq. I. c iving Couple pref. 1501 Ollvt. Kids & pets OK. Pool. All go. J.lcil at Bolsa Chica, 1995 ~f11.ple No. 1 . · · 642-3813 * 2 or 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 536-8523. e>ctrRs. 3 Br. $199. l7392-A H.B. SZ75/n10. 846-1323. 2206 Cotlegr No. 5 ... 642-7005 * F'irt'p!ace, patio, garage -Sea Air ,Apts-$115 KeC'lscn Lane. <Nr Slater & Business Rental q; 2,Bf. TQWTlhouse 1~ Ba. new *Pool and putting Lrg 2 BR Crpts drape1 bit· Beach Bl.) 847-3669, •' ~~·Nr~.!:; & b~~~ie~·~ ~~~~·TIO\\', from $195. Corne ins, 1 bik N. of Adam~. off \YJ\:LK t'l bC'ach &-,-1,-,..-s, o;FICEQf sto~ ~~ N'';!i Sl6.5 'mQ. 994 ~fission Dr. Beach, 729-6 Utica. 536-iOiO. n('W luxury 1 BR. 2 BA. 3 ~~t. S:::,· Ft. $!50: r,;uFt. PALM & CARD READINGS Advice &. help In many ma1. ten1. 1 free que1tio11 ans, STINGRAY type blcyclfl. Call to ldent1ty. 847-3916. over phonf', Receive full life 1 FOUND femal!' lft'Y cat, ~dl'1i' for $3. w/ad. t2l31 East Bluff are1. 644-a.355. 694·1350. Fully lie.. La Lott 555 liabt-a. Call !or appt. FRF:E ld~1111, advlcit 11nd f"sllmale11. All J charl(f! tor i.~ a lx.'llulirul job a! a reas. priCf'. 64.">-51)73. PATIOS, lvalk.11, drive, IMtRll new lawnic, 98.W, break, ttm0w.. 5'3--ai68 tor est. e CUSTOM CEMENT \\UiU( Drlve1, walks, pAtiof;, pool dttkl. Don, 64z..&114 LOST July 14th Pomeranian PATIOS.SJDF.\VALKS 5t5-1882. THE VEN DOME V.RGE 2 BR t.story 4-plex. ::;~~~~ & up. 53&-74'12· $225 ;'lfonth. Agent 64&-2414. 11l n-Cpt.<;, drps, r/o, gar, fncd, oc·F1cE I N' t D£1.VXE 2 BR. ~ un., 1845 Anaheim Avenue hild OK Sl l5 847-0245 N 1 Ba cit ,. . sere, nr. P · Studio. Crpt/drps, pool. Ca.II ;\fr.;. Phillips, 642·2824 c 1 • · · ewpor a Post Olli('('. •50 sq. ft. Good Bltns. p.t patios. $150. 1 DELUXE WALK to B•ach m4 w. Oceanfront lg 1 BR park ing. S120 month malP, approx. 4 pound1, CEMENT CONTRACT'OR Jong golden fur, wh ile paw1 Call Mu *** 644-0681 &. veil. Santa Ana JtghlJI, Child Care Masonry BlllcK, BLOCK A STONE \VOl!I< 6'6-.S{19 or 54G-0929 Palntlnt a P•porh•ntlng ~o w"~ri.,i: * WALLPAPER * Wh"n )'OU ca.IJ. "M11.c '' 543-1444 646.Inl s1DrNG 1. Ovt"rhani:, 1 story $175, 2 alory $275. Lee's Painting & Decorallng, S58-7497. Aft. 6 p.m. * PAINTING • PAPERING Interior Exterior Uc. Jnaurtd Guaranteed Call HllJTiA 642--4558 ehildok, no pel11. 646-04!16 APARTMENTS 2~Br., cpts, drps, dshwshr summer & winte~ rentals: Grahan1 Really 646-2414 'Spac TO\\'nhouse. 2BR. Air Cond • Frplc's • 3 Swim-12=» & 308 lGth, 847·3957 avail July l. 644-5307. * OFFICE-&:XI 1q fl avl ~A. Vaulted ceUing, ming Pools • Health Spa . 2 BR., 2 ba., deluxe. Single now. 800 Sq. Ft. JN: PROJLEM Prl'gnancy. Con- fident, 1ympathetlc pn>fM.ncy ooun~ing. Abor- tion &. Adoption r ~ f . APCARE. 642-4436. PALM CARDS & SPIRITUAL REJl.DINGS. Bring ad tor re- duction, 10831 Beach Blvd., Slanlon. l mi !tOU!h of Knott's Faim, 527-3406, AI£0J~OLICS Anonymous. Phone 542-7217 or write P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. are~. Reward! r,45-3812. 1----------OflLD cart, area up to 5 PROFESSIONAL Painter. GERMAN Shepherd, hlk &: tan. 5 mos old, malt!'. Lealher collar w -name "Chilo", Reward. O&y1, ~143; fVe~ 497-1491 , 1 Wkd• Fncd artl H o n e 1 t work, re:a1. lr a.nige, pools. alr/eond. Tennis Courts • Game and stcry. Pvt. patio & garage. DUSfRIAL SHOP av! Aug. $210. 540-4179/~2048 Billiard Room. Sl85. 536-8659. 11~1 646-2130· B h Rentals ~=~~~-~--E/1lde 2 Br, 111 Ba. adult 1 BR. From Sl60 L•guna er,c STORE & office for rr.nt: townhouse. Encl patio. $1 65. 1 BR. & Den From $1M Bclsa Chica at Heil, H.B. 134 Melndy Ln, 54g..,.;95 or MEDITERRANEAN * 2 BR • New: I blk to 400 846-1323. ~. beach. V!e1\•! $240 & up Rooms ~8-5986 aft 6 pm. VILLAGE 494-3.W or 494--2339. . Rentals Wanted fl.45. DELUXE 2BR newly lido Isl• LAR~E, cool .room. nicely IM,.,1AC. lamily, 1 child, decorated. ha! everythin~. 2400 ·~~;~r55~~;~ C.l\I. furnished, pr1v. ba .. Nr. C.~f. 3 BR .. unfurn hou~ lO iTtinutes from beach. 207 RENTAL OFFICE LIDO Bayfront Jge. 1 Bdrm. be11ch & every th 1 n g. wfpool. Yr. lsc. Aug. 11 IC t:. 16th Place. 548-4245. apt. CplJ!., drps, llt'wly rlec. 673-1304. ·~""! ""ll6l. OPEN 10 Al\f to 6 PM ...,..... ;,..,,,.. e TROPICAL POOL. 1 Br., l i0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0iiiiiiiiiii With garage. sno. 6Th-1060. LUXURIOUS priv entrancl" ~~-~. ~--~~ G · I & w I $1'5 ~-~~-----' . . Bachelor w1U1 two small dogs atage ater urn. ., · * NEW * Mesa Verd• I: bath, kit . pnv, hO desires 1 bdnn. apt. or pfr .rno. No. 15, 145 E. 18th 11mokers, mR1d sf' r v . hou f Ph 64fi...233S ,S:;.11 ;..• MS-~1~168~. =~-==-VILLA PEDRO DELUXE 2 & 3 BR, 2 Bo. 548-TI91 67"--0310 " un ""'! · ,_ 2 R ~ 11"'" RC'nta.t alt 6 p.m. * * B~AtrrIFUL 1 I: B · en~-·· gar. ...,., up. ROOMS n8 wk up w-kit: 1~--------~- Con.tea;iporary Garden Ap!s. 2 BR., 2 BA APTS. Ole., 3005 J\1ace Ave., SJO wk up Apts. 2376 2 8Adults ~ l sm~ dog r;eed ~ P8tios, fr PI c · • pool. SuJlf'r-Comfortable-Quiet 5'1&-l034. NP"rport BI v d, CM. r.. un.urn me or n55-$170. Call 546-5163. Nt>at Ne"1port Back Bay. Newport Be•ch 548-9755. ~::h:,ur.'n84~7.nr. Htg. CLEAN 2 RR. nr. shoJ>ll. Gas & \Vater paid. Mo. to ROO!vt $ 2 5. Overlookingl ~=~~-~~---Wo. Adults over 35. ~to. Jo'rom $185, PARK NEWPORT llarbor & Ocean. % blk LADY, 50. \\IOUld like to rent ~~fr!~~.rangr. drps. crpts, Children Welcome. APARTMENTS ocean. 2500 SeaviC'w, CdM. ~: i:t~~t,";s. V. V"t...-.vvu Zi32 Elden Ave •-5@-8224 * Nice Br, kitchen prt\111. Sf!ARP unfurn. l BR. & 2 Oft the bay optional. Pvt adult home. 460 Social Clubs 535 •FIND YOURSELF IN SOMEONE ELSE. DISCOVER DISCOVERY TI4/8JS.6885 7131387·3393 Tr1v•I SET SAIL , TAHITI Grlnd 3 Muted Schooner, Cl'l!W Ir i'\lt'slll illh, costa. " (213) 371-lUt LOST tmall Se alpo ln t Sia~se cal, fm1ale, vicini- ty 19th &: Santa Ana St1. COl!ta Mel!a, reward ! 642-5102. aft 6. RED Dllchahund, male, 12 yrs old. "CUpu", Vic lftK AVP &: Atlanta, H. B . 536-6416. P 0 0 D LE-Chihuahua, F , "\Vrinkles" 9 moa. Vic 19th It Sallta Ana. Red collar, l bell 256 E. Uth CM. yr · Y•· )' ' Uc/ln1., Int/Ext. Frtt Call ~'19f7. eit. Refs. S48-zr.i9. Contractor JNTER/Exter Pa i nt Ins. EXPERrENCEO c on t' r . Lie' di In1. Rtfa. ~u. Patlrui, walks, drivt~. brick Free e11t. Chuck, 645-0809. A slump •lcn~ v.·k. 894-3533. Profeiusional Palntlnt J Ac K Tau J a ne·Repalr Intcrlcxter, Quality work Reas 557-7455 remod .. addll~ 20 yn:. exp. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547-0036. PROF. Painting, al90 roofa, accou11. ('('ii., lnterfe:irter, Oraftlnt Llc/ln1. Frtt est, 64>5191. DRAFTING WALLPAPER HUNG Any 1lie job. 557-9695 Carl R.ebko 646-2449 Electrlc•I FOR clean I: neat palntlna:. fnttrN>r , rea~. rRles, Call EL ECT'RIClAN, Jleenstd, Dick. 968-4065. LOST cat Jl.l.ly 15th, am11.ll bonded. SmaJJ jobs, m.al.nL DISCOUNT on hAnglng t1 brown Burme11e, ye l Io w 11 1'P.pall"8. 5f3.$203, buy on W.C. L!r-/ln!. call eye11, "Coco". 7321 Siena, ELECl'RICAL WORK. All 'I'hfl Hangm<'n 547-5846. Wf'1mln1ter, 894-3903. kind1. Bir or smtl!l Llc'd • PAINTING &: PAPERING, DOG: Ktt1honrl, malf', 91 _r_,._._n... __ •_•1_· -~---·--19 )'fl In tlarbor a!'f'a. Lie II MM. CdM. Gray, loni hair, Gardening bonded . Rf!f'1 lum. 642-n'i&. choke chain. Aft S:30. INTF.R/Exter. Quality work * 675-6243. AL'S GARDENING le ReaMnf!lble. SMALL, thin belff:/apriCOI for 1ardmlna: A I m a I I Call 64:;..7283 Br~ w/•love: Cl°'' 10 OCC NEW TRIPLEX Luxury oparlment llvlng OV· Nr. all, &-CM: 54s..tm. * ~ · IJCJ. $135 & $165. Sell or Rent e.rlooking lhe waltr, Enjoy * * * * ~7-7i68. New 2 & 4 BR Apts ST::tO,IXIO health spa, 7 swim· Guest Home 415 2,BR. unfurn. Cil>li:, drps, r~rplc·.5hai;;:c!'pts&drps. mltli pools, 1 Ugh!~ ten· Tl-IE GUEST HOU SE ·l;o------------------... ••-IOVC'll, refrig, Ne pet5. lo'ROM St!lO nls courts, plus miles of " · ··"'~ · biC')(Cle trails, putting, &huf· Elegant llv1na fo~ t~ clder- n«J/mo. 968-1455. CD 16th Place &: flehoard croquet Junior l'.!i ly, pr!. & M!m1-pr1.. now I tiEJ,UXE 1 BR, gar, adults, OraJ111e Ave., C.M, from Sli4.50 nlOnihly; also 1 ~~n. 544--0756 N. Tuslin l ~ pel."I, $139. Nr shoppl.nz. 835-7966 and 2-bl'droom plan• and 1 ,..~_•0_1 -------11 1 _.1JO~·E_._21_•~L_646-al-~1£_. --I -N•w Vill•-P•ull 2-story town hou~. Elec· Summer. Rent1l1 2t·sn. 2 Ba, bltns, c.rpts, 2 Br .. 2 Full Ba. tric kitchena, private palios dfp!, garage. 1623 Coriander Famille1 Welcon1e or balconlc1, carpetlna:, dra· NEWPOR'l' Bch. Oceanfn>nl t>r, No. A, CM S57-S4;;9 ShllK cpt/drps, patio, peries, SubtcmtD!:!&n park· beach hie. 3 hr, eabana, 21BR. 2 BA. Studio. Ctpl11, beam Cf"ll., garages. ing with clevtton, OpUona.l itlps 6-8. Avail wkly July dft>A, bltns, dshwhr. Patio. f'rom $180 maid savice. Just north of 22-AUJt 26. f21Jl923-6'212: ('ftu', $175. 546-9n>. 622 Hamilton, C.l\i. Fashion Island at Jamboree (71416T:>-Sl55. 420 Trader's Paradise lines times dollars 2&Hnturn. Clean, 2 kids ok, 5':-e Mgr, :P..1r. 6 ~1rs. llob:ut and San Joaquin llllls Roa.d.1 ·oc~EA-N--v,-1.w-----w-ee-kl_y_, 11 rio pCts. S140 mo. 770 $48-2062 Telephone (TI4) 644·1900 tnonlhly ntcs. Octa.n Ttr· '-------------------' iii:.~ .,...,,.,... A r,,.,..,==~,_,~...,...,-for n'!nlal 1nron11t1Uon A 1 -c l<ll Dr .xialimar. ~741. CllAFUoflNG 1 Br. rluplcx. ------TRC" ,.p A., l.£3 ov 11 "JUD£AWAY -Ntarly Al'I ltBR.. w/Stovt. refrigf!t&tor. new crpls, df'P'J, & paint. VERSAILLES Ln.1ttinR lkttch. 4'4-1719· at·~ plumbf'<t wired le Water & lighls pd $145. 2515-Lovely 1•ntrn 1urroundiogs. Executive Apartments BAl..BOA Fum. Bach. $95 ronl'd for 3 ~bilt homes. ~ Elden. 842-5192. $12$. Mature aduil!I onty. Ovrrlooklna Ntio.'port ~ach. \1·k. 3 block8 to i·un ?.one. $8000 eq. for nwtor home or 54~. SpN:tacular views. Luxury. 302 E. Bti.Jboa BI v d . gubmlt. 640-1515, 'l j SPACIOUS 2 BR Apt. Modtls open 9 to 8. On ll<ll· 67~5471. $1351mo. 0.rport. CLEAN 2 Br atudio, 1}1 Ba, pttnl Rd.__ off Newport Blvd. I----------TnAOE UP: Your dean '68- !Q.ldrr prere!Ted. fi73..8145 bllns, gBr-1 Adil~. no-pt:_lS. S rln A BALBOA-l Ir. ~ BR. Nr. 'GS.'70 (.'()mj>lct or wagon t ,.-._ Adulu " Sl5.1. Nr 19th le: Pomoaa. or upe r "'"· benches A: !hnp'a:. $150-$175 tor my ·72 Coun'""" P..•!n-, !t oA'Ul'. • no pt • .. •• '""7 LIDO ISLE • BR 2 k •• -•Mo .. , ·~· "1\Y. MEADOWS APTS. ~ • -• '' w Jy. Aug/.,.,pt. vi;rani · CK ml., 429 en1W. air, full ~.w. Boy St. CM~ 2 "'· ]Ii !lo, potlo, 1""'1"· BA TH. Adullt, 1 ..... BALBOA ISLAND 2 ""1rnl pwr, 'ITP. !145-21';1;. 2;JiR unlllm ap~ $145. No N• sh>oo. Adull>. $115. 296 714 :7»-0719, Appl. to furnllhod. July l Aug. i'>' Opon Road c.m,,..,.. ~' no ptll. p) Cenltt E. 161h Pl. '"· $165. wk. Ph: &44-ll6l evts. sips 4, beaut. interior, incl. ~.,;.(:Id, .• ~. LARGE Y&J"d.-2 BR. 1 8.A. e '2 Br, 2 bl 1tut1io, View. ON Canal Sips I, outbrd tie d11,·ru;, bouDCt"·1·way1, YapndU coct mont)'I ~ nu paint, c:rpts. drps, stove, Lutbhtft Trrr. $215. Call dock. Lrs prkng. Aug >19. boot '-a1vnirc !or f1."lhirl£ >!4ur be d15pl. S150/mo. S46-04t9. 640-¢149 for 1piit. S450 or ~ wk. ~. bolt. SJL~7 aft 6. • ........ °!: •. """'Pllol S BR, 2 BA, .... 00C. NEW View Apt. Ki. llood. NEAR BEACH ~ STORES 1*11 .. etc. lhnl. _, Upl1aln. l/dr c:rpu a drps. Avail. Aua. lit SJnale ldull 2 BR. $125 w. 5i.-.le 1100 * * * '63 Bonn, Pont, convt. r pwr, 6 way pwr u1t1, lit str whl, nu trar111, gd ~nc. 2 nu tiff'!!, AM.rM. PB It wndws. ~val. Td IQr PU. 542-5936 5-80 Actf's dcatrt land, nr Banllow. $250 Valu• peor ac: Trade for T.O., •irplane l\lC, C.11 545-<818 TRADE M·l lot w/4 hou1t1 & c&fe In No. Lons ~h fQf' hif·vacanl or wl comm'I bklr. er '!' In Cosla M,..., For Into call local $45-3857. * * * 0-u!floj Ad. Slll/ptr mo, en w.m1. 642Mll!!. WIEST. 1 .. nt 6'>-2123 ----------------- • female poodlf'. 1 Go Id Ir. \ landJ(apln& aerv1ce1, c&Jl 1----.,.------M()..St!lft f'Yts. Servin• Pl••t•r, P•tch, ft•.,1lr 7/3. Nr Cout llwy, Cd.M. • Reward. 575-4616. Ne~·porl. CdM, C'osta >.Itta, * P,ATCH PLASTERING * BLK It whl!e nu.Je' Clll. Rrd collar. llArbor View Hlll11, CdM. 64.ws.16. IRISH Setler puppy. 4% nlOI old, teml, flf'a coll. Vk' Hf'liotm~. CdM. 67~714'1 . WARD'S Hunt Bch. Blk lona haired 4 yr puuy l:'al. Reward. 531-6956. LOST Sun. Sn1&\I t8n ftm&lf' 6oe. Vic FRirvit"W ' ~ la, CO!rta Mesa. !.46-1489. LOii; Bri~fcaM', Bh1t•k1 lnl· tial t..M.S, Vi<-, Gulav•ni parkina: lot. Re\vllrd 5G7·7900 LO!rr: Blk le Whl Terrif'r. An." to name "Skeeter". Rt'Ward! 557-8690. NEMROD dlvlnc ,m a 1 k , pr!acrlption Im.ea. near occ. ~ward! 97t-3SC2. QUICI< CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Do\'cr Shores. We1tclltl. All typea. FN'<' eitlmalu PROFESSIONAL. ltte: work. CaJI ()40.....6825 pruntn1.trlmmtn1. 1pnt,ylnr, 1 pr Ink I er 1 . Plumbing · IA1nd1taplntr. cl eanup . PLUMBING Ct"Ors:re ~-* LANDSCA=P~IN~G~.-1n;::·~~~:-..Rt~~· New lav.'nl, Sprlnklmi, dttka, S48-lTT2 cltanup. State He'd. 536-1225. Ort.Int unclog:td _ fl'.51) EXPERT Japan e • e Sewer llne to 100' -ns. Gnnltner -Cornplrte Yard • 549-2502 * ~·rviCf's • C'lt>iuiupa. Frtt P1.UMUING REPAIR esr. 5-1~2661. No job too 1m11ll 0AR1>F.N ING~k-c. Ex-• &IW128 * ptri4"Tl<'f' & Rcllnble. F'J'ff -=~! --=~-I .. 11mn1ra 96.'1-1012. COLE PLUMBING SPIUNKLER SERVICE ~ hr. ,.rvlce. 645-ll6l Repair&: JnstAll . ~25.lS SAVL On Plumbing. Patnllns, lMlallatlona. Free f'&tlmalu. EXP. llawallan Camtner Good ~. I _J I rtftt, 839--0372. '-"mp ete ...... el\ nc service Karnatanl, -. R•modal a Repair JOHNSONS' GARDENING CUSTOM Rt modi Alltratlool. Y1rd Mal.ntenanot, P1antfns What have you. O..vtd Cle1nups 962--2015 Stewart, 1en·1 contractor, Jonn Ltlwn Stmct M6-2M7. >-fow, tdJt, vacuum. Sln&D, 1.,---------· I IJf't', clH.IHIP. --Roof Int L AWN-SER ICI-e T. G"Y ~. o.t CUt • Ed .. • Trim Dtpondtltl• Dind. I tlo 1111 .... ..._ [VP• ah, f ~ 5$7~ ~2710. ~. n ' 11 \ I' • , .. f. . ~2 OAILY PILOT T""'1dol, Ju~ ;29, 1912. 1---1~1 J[Il] I l[ll] [ l[Il] [ J[Il] I l[ll] ........... 1 . ~_, ... , ..... ___Jl(il] I ltnJ[ -· ® liF iiiiltuiiroiiiiiiii ll 0 ~lpWonttcl,.M&F710 _um-------I Roofing Help W•nltcl, M It F 710 twlp Wonttcl, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M It F 110 LEE Roofing Cn. Roofing all AUTO SALES typa Reco\'Clf, ~a!N, \VouJd 1lkt ('Xper:itnctd man. l,hcnno rwf coo~s. "·bite Join one ot the mott JUO. I\ Mlor. Lle/bonded si.nce: ceufu1 Ford Dcalersblpc 1n Help Wonttcl, M & F 7IO MAINTENANCE MECHANIC Plutic Mic. Plant 2nd Shilt • 4,30-1 1941. Fl'ff ~t. &0-'1222. Orange County; Top com Sewing/Alt1ratlon1 mllllons, lMurance, ~ Ple,n, We need a truly J>l'O- -~ .--.. ---. --SEWING-DESIGNING feulonal new car alet1>nan. f.fcn/Womt.o. RtllJI. R.atH Apply ln J)Cl'tOD to Don $10 rtijn~ Cl.II 846-74!R'.I Crevier. 'nicodore Robins Ford. ~ llarbor Blvd., Alteratlon~2-5845 CoAta ?i-ltsa. Neal, accurate. 20 ~.a.rs exp. ~;:..:A""u-to:::M:_e_ch~a-n-l~c-- TJle Foreian Car F.xperience, CAN'T FIND THE JOB YOU WANT? TRY OURS! IMAlEDIATE PLACE.t.tENT FOR• GELCOAT 1'0UCR-UP FIBERGLASS MOU>ERS Coa.t1t Rccrt'aUon. Jne. 9'IO West 17th Strttt M2..<ll42 Req's exper, maintaining & GENERAL OFFICE: Would repqtrin& indU!trial planl you. like lo be the helping production machinery I-fa· ti.and in this pleasant offi(.'("? cllities.' Prefer exper. w/ This lnveatment nrm need.JI injection It compreasion you · 1oday. Co. Pay• molding. Buie knowledge of Fee/Al50, FC<l Jobs. $450. plunt clectrical helpful. Cam· Call Nani..')' A1ay, 54Q..6Cl55, bro Manulacturing Co. 1601 Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 0 Clay, Hunt. Bch. 841·3531. Harbor Bl. at Ada1ns, C.M. Equal Oppor. Employer. · ·CERAM ___ rc-· -m-.--ne-w--& Musi Bo.Jiccmed. Ple1Jl)J..ot remodel, Free est. Sm.nll work "'1lh Good Company jobs wtlc:onle. SJ&..2426. Benefits. See Setvlce Ma.n-• FIGURE CLERK GENERAL OFTICE: Figt.1Te MANICURIST part • time. your way to the top. Gn:"J.t Xlnt loc. Nev•Port Beach ro. moving to Jrvl.ne. Fee area. Call 548-4179. agtr al CERMUC TUe, Kitchen!. CREVIER Baths, Entry11, C u 1 t o m These Jobs a~ varied&: chal-Paid/Al~. Fee Jobs. $475. MEDICAL 08 GYN o(fice Jcnging! Call Helen Haye11, 540-6055. req eJfp. back office girl & lf you're good w/numbtr11 & Coa1taJ Agency, 2 7 9 0 can type a little you tnay H'.arhor Bl. at Adams. C.M. fr 0 n t 0 f t 1 ce g i r l 208 \-\1• 1st St.~ Sa,nta Ann ·1y w/insurance exp. Send work. ~Reas. Glen, 548-7"'3. MOTORS qual1 -GtRL FRIDAY, for oc-w resume to P,,O. BOX 3992, I (,..-0 lfiilf I A U TOMOTJVE Salesman. dermatologist: medic a 1 tpng ~acb. l'~iiiiiiiiiiiii,,,iii-iiiiii~Jl!.!jiiti l w .. r •,,..., expor. s''""" • TYPIST CLER~ '"''' .. assi<t. bkkpg., •YP-1"'""""'""'.,...,...,...,..., II cl05C'r. Call Jon Saltus, fl) Good skilll nccess. Insurance jng. Posilion \Viii be tallored Job W •. nted M I 700 521-<0j(), Cntton ()of/ vW, exper. helpful, but not C!· foe yo" whrn praclice ex· MILLION DOLLAR · , • •Bu ·=•;;;na:;..:.P;;;k';_____ panels. Call Dr. Stee!f!, -sential. 1 Position requires M L S AVAILABLE NOW.CALI.' lite stem. 640-1611. or •Tile Or. PROGRAM OPENS IN SCRA • ET 4 Constructk>n Sec'yli lo $650 Steele, Suite 710. 1401 F'/Charge Bookkettptr $00) INTERVTEWING Avocado Ave., Newport ANSWERS 7 Sco""4rleo to $650 Mon thru Fri 9 am-12•30 pm l=Be=nc_h.'-C"-aJ-ir.____ ORANGE COUNTY 4 StenoR. no ~h to $600 GIRL Friday, young Banner -Bloat -Aging -~Lsooiz Rec inder'sDrAgeNncyB ON w/personality, Ute typing & TNE .. ampus .. · • SITE OF OUR bkkpg, like to w or k Prim.er -PAR lt . Fee Paid By C.O. 546--2118 NE\V BUILDING w/pcople. 540-9681. W&.1tress gosslpe: "Bu11ness . ls 90 bad in this ~staurant BABYSITTER, Jive m. Ille GROCERY Clerk -full tln1e lhAI a cuslomeroffered a S20 ho~keeping, must lovt' PACIFIC MUTUAL da)'I, married man prel'd. bill to settle 1tt11 flcket and the ctuldren, Room. board & FASHION ISLAND Contact Mr. Adams at The 00.s wMted to n1ake him a salary. Pri~r. room. Must rCorol'r Santa Cru1. Ir Coa111 Super Aiarket, 3347 E. PARTNER.'' speak Engh&h. 968-4840. Newport Center Drive) Cmu1t Hwy., .Corona dc1 NEED Home Improvement? BANK ~LLER: U yuu·re a Mar. • Account Executives e District Managers Exceptional opportunity for age groups 18 to 28 to make good money NO\V! llave fun and be \Vhere it's hap. pe-ning! It's permanent em- ployment and fast promo- tions. " Call 2 Industrious young whiz with money &. have * FREE daily bus transpor-HOUSEKEEPER _ live in, men experienced tn pain· some lite ~per. thi! plush tation for work In Loll An· nice home. 25 to 50 yrs, ting, plumbing, plastering, bank wants you. Young boss geles until move to Newport, Costa Mesa. 545-839a after landscaping etc. 642-0)22. & nice co-workers. To $444. 1 '!!Se!!!!p"t". ,,·n!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!/ ·.:'·c.,.;n;,.;,;;cc;c;;;c;o-213: 433-67ll v:eekdays ' Call Helen Haye11, 5-10-6055, 1 · (collect) Holp Wonttcl, M It F'llO PRODUCTION hi .. 2nd 5111111 Plus Ht1vy Ov•rtlmt lmmedi1t• op1nln91 ex- ist in the following areas: MACHINISTS (Experimental) Will perform high precision machin- ing work from blue- prints, sketches & specifications. Ad· apts & improvises simple to moderate· ly complex tooling & fixtures to com· plete el;Perimental machiniflg ·assign- ments. Recent ex· perience on milling machine or tracer mills required. PRECISION MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS Job W•nted, F1mal1 702 Coastal Agency. 2 7 9 o COOK, exper. only, lunches. HOUSEKEEPER 714:838-2893 eves/\\1knds, Harbor Bl. at Adams. C.M. ]0 AM-2 PJ\.1. Apply aft 3 Lovely CdM hOme. 2 adults. J l'!~~""""!!!!""""""~ J GOOD TYPIST BEAUTICIAN. 2 Leaving. PJ\.r. LIITLE BAVARIA 5 day week. Must have car. ~fODEL-part time, fitting. Will perform close tolerance assembly 'vork on missile re-- lated hardware. M u s t be able to work fr om blue- prints, sketches & specification s. Will do your typing at need one to Iii! In. Call HOFBRAU. 2052 Nt'Wport Good salary. 644-2709. Jr size 9. for Jr swim\\'Car her home, Will rlckup betwn 8 & 6: 5-18-8520. Blvd .. C.I\1. fl 0 USE KEE PER/child mfg co· 35~;-24~36~, d d II I H B care L' ·n must lo e 5'6"-5'7". 3 am's or pm's an e ver oca • ., BEAUTY o~rator. feonal•. CONSTRUCTION Superin· . · ive-1 • v ... ~ childn>n 2 Bo"" 1 & 3 per wk. 2020 \V. Chestnut F .• V.; West, 75c: per pg. Bwy ·shop Laguna Belt.. tendent w/sing\e unit dwel-· .,-· or w111 work by l!oul' 494-2720. ling, hillside & Fl-IJ\ exper. 675--7718 S300 month. Ave. S.A. 5-13-3043. call 847-3095. 1.9..:EA:..:...U:cT.:cY:;,,_o_pe_r_a_to-rs---1-WJ-& Xlnt oppor. Call Ken MeITilt, HOUSEKEEPER, live in or NURSES, pvt duty, all types NEED help at home? \Ve p art 1 i me_ C 0 m-(714) 979-3900. not. Small family, lite cook· all shifts. Lescoulie Nurse's ing 673-9098· 546-5441 Registry, 351 Hospital Rd., have Aides • Nurse• • ·miss J ons/guarant,y. No COOK & food service direc-· ' · Housekpn e Companklns e following n e c ea s a r y. tor, residential retiremdnt & I NS UR AN CE RATER N.B642-995.5 or !>W-99S4 H cm erg a k e r 1 _ Upjohn 645-1050. t'Onv. hospital. Mr. Geo. TRAINEE: For the gal who Intefviews 9-S M/F !;C7..Q;81. , __ B_E_A_UTY--CO_N_S_UL_T_A_NT_ Sigler, 847-3515. 1 8 8 I l wants to learn & grow with °"'""""""'_:,~:....,:::.:....,,... -Florida, H.B. a fine co. in Irvine. Some NURSING assistant care for CHILD Care, my Irvine Teach skin care & make-uit r rd k semi-invalid lady, must be home off Culver Dr. Full We train, 544.25;)4 for appt. CXX>K-Prefer expcr. Ove1· acl.'Oun ing or reco eep. 'd r ho k Ii Ex th 18. Apply lx'l\\'n 2pm & ing expcr. Start $476. Call exp . 1lc use eeping. P t nH?. P· mo er · BEAUTY OPERATOR LI I H 5 O 'O 5 5 ~1onday & n•li("f \\'Ork: Must "°l ~·98 5PM, Snack Shop, 2305 E . • e en ayes, 4 -. 00 •",); • Neetled lmmediately c "·I 2 7 9 o be able to work son1e nites. Coast llwy, CdM. ons..., Agency, . DAY\VORK. Gen. cleaning. 830-1010 For Appointment COO. F' 1_1_1n_'-"°-'-B_1_. _•t_A_d_o_m_'.c· _c_.M_.ci:_:'"·23::,",oh:=o'·:..::.67'.lC:.~.C351:::.:7 ___ _ Full pt time ReliablE' K • rench Restnurant. :-: • · . · · BEAUTY operator,· exper. Apply ln ""rson. C'i '·"th IN.SURAN. CE Brokerage of-NURSES Airle~. r. x per . Tr a nsportat1on 543-7006, female; Gwen's B pa u t y .~ "' "" prcf'd. All shifts. Park Lido 54}..g330, 541--0467. .. ... -p, 2'" B·-ch St., Laguna St., Newport Beach. !~Ct' trainee needed for part C II 400 ;xiu ....., """ time work, some bkkpg. & onv. osp., "" }~lagship HOUSEWORK by 1he hour Beach. 494--3294. COOK. exp. 18 or over. Ap. typing exp. needed. Rd., N.B. &12-804<l. $3. N.B., Lag. & Cd~t Exp. BEAUTICIANS \\'ANTED ply • Van De Kamps, 3099 646-8836. OFFICE girl, f/time, perm & Ref. ~l after 10 AM 103 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Bristol, C.M. See Mr.liiii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0i0i position. Hunt. Bch area. 547--0225. • * 613-5770 * Trudo. Exper. pref'd. 847-2561. CONVALESCENT ~e in BODY & fender man needed COOK, exper. Park Lido IRVJNE PERSONN£l Rboyan~~.· ~13'!'~~~std.·tayNa'· .. v . must own sma11 tools. V\V Conv. Hosp, ~ Flagship SE.RYICES .. AGENCY "°""' ........ u 'siU-iallst. O"ays '979-2100, .Rd, NS.. 642-JIC»4, i.,,. COUPLES • A 1 •1 , d G.O./Comm'l Ins to ~700 :-Jolp Wanted, M & F 710 eves 548-3154. P 'y g · g Exec Secretary $650 salary, Anahein1. No exper. Bookk t TB to S600 ACCOUNTING CLERK BOOKKEEPER NO FEES Our growing client is seeking a highly qualified F IC Book- keeper. Successful applicant will have several yn exper. Opening for. dependable In-In a small 10 medium size divldual who la a good typist. co.. will be thoroughly operates 10 key adder accur-versed Jn accruals, journal ately and has had acooun1-entrys &: all osperts of credit ing office experience. Will & debits. Exposure to data v.•ork directly for credll man-input very helpful. Very ager. This position ofJ~rs ~high salary ran,i::e, good salary and benel1ls. p p S For an interview please call • • • ?i.lr1. Margaret Greenman, Pacific personnel offlct-, 6424321 at Personne l Se rvices the DAILY PILOT, 330 West U2 No. TO\ver Bay Street, Cmita Mesa. Union Bank Square OranRe. Calif. req'd. CaJI all 5 pm, Payro'11e~~kko · ' 541-2859. uuu ttpcr lo SOOO ..:.:~~~==-:o=~-IA IP Bkkpr/Manuf. toS550 CREW MANAGER Clerk Typist/Purchas. S475 We need 2 men over 18 that 488 E. 17th (al Irvine) CM can handle a small group of 642-1470 boys getting ne\v customenol :==========:: for Southern Orange Coun.l1 ty's favorite newspaper. Men can earn $200.W to $400.00 per week depending on number of boys you can carry. This is a d ignified career commanding high ·wages. No experience is necessary but must be able to get along with boys. If in- terested and can start OO\v, call 891-1310 from 9 A.M. until 2 P .M. Costa Mesa area 67~5222. Huntington Beach area 96S-964l. JANITOR Permanent-P/tim(' 6-10 AM, 5 day \veek Minimum age 71 years Xln'I entployee benefits Apply Personnel Ofc 3rd Floor Interviewing 2-4 PJl.t THE BROADWAY 7'f77 Edinger, H.B. Equal Oppor, Employer 547°6446 Accountant $800 Ask f R h i M Cust Serv &. Installation JOBS . PAINTER/ CUSTODIAN Professional pain1er needed for our large apt complex. Exterior, Interior & finish exper ience necessary, Cus- todial work experience help- ful. $2.60 Per hour. Apply In Person OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS l 700 16th St. Newport Beach, Calif. Equal Oppor, Employer PBX. Amwering service. Exper prt'f. Relief shift. Steady work. 536-8881. PIANO player. Apply in person. Carole's Lounge, 810 \V. 19th St., Costa Mesa. The above positions require high school education or com~ pletion of recogniz· ed apprenticeship + 5-8 y ear s of shop experience in manufacturing pre- cision p a r ts. Job shop experience helpful. \Veckend interviC'\VS by appt. Apply In Person Employme nt Office 3333 Harbor Bl., C.M. Ph0no 546-8030 Extension 153 CELESCO INDUSTRIES A Div. of the Susquehanna Corp. Equal Oppor. Employer Real Estate Career Ne\v or experienced, join the Company that's growing. U you do not have a license, check on our $49 Real Estate Licensing Course Full sales trainlng program -no cost. Management op- portunities. Ask for Mrs. Jones for Information at 842-5581. Tarbell Realtors Holp Wentod, MI. F 710 SALESMAN l'ounr Co. Gd Potenllal Call Mn. Schmidt WESTCLlFF 20tl WestcUff Or., NB 64S.2n0 SALESGIRLS & auiatant n\gr. Qoeative la 1 h Ion woman's wear. Top salary. 3· SOFA & low sca1. never YOUNG mAn to work cwap Usl'tl. BolflSl.50. Sto*hig metb Sat &: Sun. M'Ull ba\'e mach US. Pvt Pty. 968-1910 vo.n or pick up. Salary + commlasion. Local Ref's. PECAN coffee & end ·table!! Fo t 963--1614. $215. oeeorator dinette lll!t r app • Sl.35-$7~:nu, XLNT Oppor. N'at'l Concem ft Pc Fruitwood br set in Ra.a openings t;ir route . · · __ ,_ in CM 01:'>J1J11: xln t cond, Qtll 9 am-5 pm., _....,men -~· fi7;;..{)200. !';,' ,.. .•. -untu u 1 -. I[~] Secretaries I '·;;;;;;;;;;;;~· ;; -9'-PCC.C..'-=BASS~~h"M'=~,..,..,.-,i-twtl-.,.. din. nn. set. 2 Pc. Otlk br. set. 7' pool th!. 557..ss.5.). RUGS, love seat, TV. cof. fee tbl, end tbls, dbl bEid. dressers. MU<:. ~l"5ti Typists I• Antlquu 800 Are you between jobs looking SACRIFICE! El~gnnl Louis GARAGE Sale. Sat & su·n. for work close to home? XV Rose\\ood, Satln...,·ood J.lousehold goods & clothing, Want to choose hours & tnlay, brol'\7.11! onnulu. Bed 303 EsUicr St., C.M. · Clerks time? Sl.2.5. 642-6889. Garage Salt IJ2 Call t.Ja • NO FEES EVER! ANTI hog I P P S QUE ma ea cart, FRI. 2lilt to Sun, 23rd. 9,5. . • • • glass lray, rubber tires, $75. Hotpoint refrigerator-Philto P•clflc .. * ~ll3I * color TV. Drtectron, (met'ILI Personnel Services Appl lances 802 detector) T\\'in st r o I J e f · ll2 No. Tower \.Vntcr softc .. ner ' clothin,g' • Union Bank Square I\lAYTAG repairman has Toys· !\1lsc. 60V\V 36 ho~. Orange, Calli. \Vashel'I $35. to $100. Can 2318 \Vestnlinstcr, Chi. 547°6446 deliver w/1 YI'· guru-n. '61 4 DR. C.d. $200. Air AJJk for Rachel May • 839-l778. wrf'llch $65. 1'.00I chest $35. Sficreta"" Personnel REFRIGERATOR • freezer, Chev. 6 Head $30. ~ • 1 2 dr. Foodarama upright, Corvair doors SlS. 25" RqA Must have good secretarial 40~" wide. Good cond. $155. color, ne"' lube S 16 ~. skills, pleasant personality, 557-6149. 646-5740 or 641H!313. ..,, be able tO ass u me responsibilities with little 2 YEAR old Frigidaire gas MOVING-Yard Sale Sat &. tlupervislon. Type 65, lBM dryer, xlnt. $75. or trade for Sun. 413 Delaware, HB. All elec (Exec). Shrthnd 100. elect. 592-2527 sorts of household goodies, Starting salary $707 mo. OVER 200 washers, dryers, Truck lil'es, 3 \Vhec'l bike, Send resume to San Joaquin refrigerators from $39.95. aqu11.l'lun1s, Avon's. Can School District, 14600 s. w. 545-0780. shO\\' earlier. 531H.1335. Sand Canyon, E. Irvine, ALl\fOST new GE electric SUPER antique garaglt sale. Cal. ~. clothes dryer. S9:i. Call Antiques & goodies from 5 SECRETARY • for 1 girl 67~7326. families. F'ri & Sat, S.? 1930 reg. sales oUice, computer 1..cc::..;;;,~==--,---.,. Port Ramsgate, N. B . * ANTIQUE oak curio 644-1210. type products, major com-cabinet, misc. furniture, pany, Want mature girl etc. &44-4l55. MOVING sale: Sn1all china looking for responslbility & & glass items, some an· challenge. Prior sales off. Rent Washers/Dryers tiques. buffet&: other ilen)S. exp, desirable. 835-7335, S2. Wk. Full maint. 2505 AHamar Dr. Irvif!e SECRETARY * 639-l202 * Cove, Laguna. Thurs-Fri· PVT secretary to company KENMORE \Vas h c r & Sat, 10 to 4 pni. executive, Ne\vport Beach Westinghouse dryer, good ·N=E~W'-cF=R-.=p"°ro-v-co-t~f,,.,-ta-b~le, area, heavy dictation, typ. _co_nd_ . .:.17::0'-. .:c84:::>-M4~=9___ freezer, trunks, S\Vivel u.phol ing required. Salary open. Cameras & chairs. Sirnrnons hide-a-bed. Call for appt. 644--0511 Needs recovering, 5464253. Equipment 808 SECRETARY, construction __ _;:,.... ______ MOVING • dishes, odds &: work. Call between 9 & 4:30 Rental Dark Rooms ends, power mower. 25272 pm. 962-{i683; 540-4200. Air Cond; S2 per hr. Tasman Rd., Laguna HiJJs SERVICE Station, pump Daves Camera PATIO rummage sale Sat., island salesman. CdM area. 474 E. 17th Ct., Of July 22, 10-4. G.O.P., 335 Exper. l"E'qd. Top Wages. 646-2136 or fl'lagnolia, Laguna Bch. Phone 675-3648 or 675-0353 642-1012 5 FAMILIES • SAT &. SUN for appt. KOBENA 421 Super 8 movie 1567 Orange, Cos!a Mesa SHOE Salesman, exper. SY camera. Instant cartridge Tires. furniture. sleteo. appt. Ask for ~1 r, loading. Pov.·er !eler.:~to * 7.21 , 22. 23. at 19842 Shoemakt>r, Phone 644-4223 Wide angle lens. Almost Chesaf)E'ake Lanl", H . B, or 548-6541. nei\". $75 or make offer, ~fisccllanrous. Conitr>' sec! SITTER needed immed. my f>-12-1734 eves & 1v«>kends. home, days, 2 pre schl PETRI F"I' can1erA,.]ikldom J ewelry 815 children, own trans. M0-9251 used. C. C. auto. 1: 1.8 f-55 DIA. SOL. Ring. Approx 1 ct. SKILLED TYPIST mm. No. 300066. With nash A·l quaJ. $295. Dia. Sol. ear- attachment. $100 or make r ings $15. Dia tie tac $10. 1:0 leamMitttheL',?lortgageMbus· ofier. 542-1734 eves , & 638-0533, 2·7 pm. 1ness. . vu w.p.m, w t \\o-eekends. be able to learn. Irvine -,--"'"'-------1 Machinery Indus. Dist. Tbe Meain Co, FUrniture 110 116 833-8340. STORE clerk. fcmlale, pa.11 tin1e pos&. full time, neat appearance, 2 days/\\'k . 494-9975. ---,,:=E~CH-N~l~C-IA_N __ Experienced tape deck &: stereo equipment, take over operation Of entire repair & installation center. Salary plus. U.S.A. Stereo Equip. Warehouse, 179 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 645-2442, open lI AM, TELEPHONE solicitors. Top salary & comm. Pt. time eves. Exp. pref. Call aft 5 pm only. Ask lor Sue. 557-2781. TELEPHONE Sales: Sell Southern Orange County's Favorite Newspaper from your home. Make as much ~~~-~----MOVING: Rattan barstls f4) $1 ea. Maple bunk beds con1pl $75. Tu•in while canopy bed, match. dressing tbl $75. 9 Drwr \\•alnut dresser w/milTor S 7 5. \Y~and comer desk & 2 match. dressers w/formica tops S60 group. Kng bed w/match bxsprngs S 5 0. 546-3451 . UNBELIEVABLY REASONABLE Thomasville klngsize bdrm set, 9· \'elvet sofa & l oveseat, lu xurious naugahyde sofa & iove!*"nt. 6' cocktail tbl, 2 end com· modes, bunk beds, Spanish game set \V/matchlng bar, hide-a-bed. ~9339 BENTWOOD CHAIRS -~--~---·~ USED Hydraulic lift. 5-CFJ\1. A-C. Valve GR, racer Benches. Shrives, counter GX·OO Dist. Coke & Ciga- rette vendors, \Vhsli.' price. Deniers v.•elcome. 536-4257. Miscellaneous 818 STEREO: i.inclaimed 1972 Garrard System. A u to turntable, air suspension speakers W/crossov~r sys le m A?i.1/FM/MPX radio & tape deck. Still brand new & gunr. Sold tor $39S.85. Pay oil bat .. of $195.47 or take over small pymts of S9.00 mo. u :s.A. Stereo Equip WarehOuse, 179 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa, 645-2442. F/C Bkkpr-R.E. SSOO or nc e ay Sec'y/Comm'l Ins 1100 $ BOYS WANTE[)$ NEW OPENINGS JOBS PLASTICS MATERIAL HANDLER TRAINEE as you need. Generous rom- REC E PT 10N IS T • mission on each sale. Call Need at least tour fin_ or Wl· fin, Bentwood chairs_ Ap- pearance not important, but must be in good cond, No antiques. Free or reas. price, Mike. 897-7791 aft, 5 MOVING Sale! 6 yr, crib, mattress $30. 2 chair dinette set $20. 6' Mople &tereo con- sole $225. 3 pc. pine bedroom set $250. 2 love STEPLADDERS -assortt"d sizes -WOODEN ONLY - also 2-28' EXTENSION LADDERS -had been used by retired painting con- tractor. Priced for QUICK SALE. Only $2.00 and up, 1212 South Ross St., Santa Ann, 542-3120. Girl Friday $650 Agea 12-15 MEN 21 & UP JOBS TYPIST. Corporate offices. 557-6739. 50-60 WPM. No agencies. '·TUR--RET--1-a_th_e_o_pe_ra_to_r_fo_rJ For appt. call Dick Beau· 2nd operation, exp nee. Tap. champ, 546-0.~70 weekdays. Exec. Secretary $625 MUST BE: ·Div of U.S. Safety & Corp. Secretary $500 t. Neat and honest. Engineering Co. expanding Urgently Needed R~pt/G. Ofc $500 2. Able to work fron1 approx. facilities in Orange e Secretaries ·roung man interested ln learning plastic p a r t s Steno $475 3 PM to 8 PM and 8 hours County. Starting salary: e Receptionists Clerk Typl•I 1450 on Saturday. $ I b8 WK. e Keypunch Oprs. NEWPORT 3· .Enjoys pi.ua parties and NO EXPERIENCE e Industrial P I A Disneyland. ersonne gency 4. Would like to make $l5 10 NECESSARY Irvine 5404450 833 Dover Dr., N.B. s4o per week. 547-0913 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO manufacturing, Must be RECEPI'IONIST: P/time. neat, dependable with stable Handle phones, typing, etc \\'Ork record. Pennanent for manufacturing concern full lime \VOrk $2.25 hour 10 in So. S.A. Call betwn 3:30 642""3870 This job is getting Jle\V DELIVERY: Ne\\'Spapers to TEMPO start, -& 5:30 PM, 835-9323. customcn for Southern racks & stores, 3 alterns, 1 Temporary Help AC C 0 UN TS PAYABLE: Orange County's favorite E p Bri .. ht OO\V firni \\'anls morn, oonomy .U. or KJTOIEN Helpers. Apply "' newspaper. No collecting, wagon Is bt'St t:rt. 962-2396. ~1esa Verde Conv. Ho11p. 6'1 niaturc gal with some ac-d 1· rra tio no e 1very. nsporta n DENTAL Exec. S • c, Y Center St., C.M. 548-5585, cnun1!1 P<lYable background. is furnished from your To i:-i00. Ca11 Pat Hall, house. If inlerested call needed. 'Ex-per. lor busy LAUNDROMAT Attendant, Apply 1 PM to 4 PM * Orange Coast Pla.<.Jtics * 850 West 18th SI. Costa Mc'l8, Calif. PRESSMAN :140-6055, Coastal Agency, ... _ 9 A •1 nd 2 p M N.B. gen'! practice. Top p/time help. Particularly 211\n U\:tween .1•. a . . . d . l Year minimum exper. ;;111 Harbor Bl at Adams, dally. co ns l er at 1 on given inle:rested In couples. Reply on A. B. Dick 300 &: Itek Ci\1. Costa Mesa area • stability, maturity & ability to Jack T. Cox, 2212 Dupont, Camera. Salary _ Incentive. ACCOUNTS [Xlyal:>le clerk. phone 675_5222 to mel'I: public. Should be Irvine, CaJif, 92664. Call &42-!H70 Fa.st J::i'Owing Irvine Co. Huntington &ach area. fa mi I I a r with · appt LEGAL SEC'Y $550 Darrell Murphy ncro~ rh'rk with heavy l'xp. 968·9641 mana.gement. pegboard ac· Plush office or group of young Up In $j(X), fX'r mo. CaJI BOYS coonhn~ system, Jnsurance )3\Vyers located in nlost d~ P~FESSIONAl. Mrg. Linds~y ;)ill)...~, 8:30 & banking pl'OC<!dures. e.tc. sirable spor In the area. RESTA N'I' & HOTEL 10 5. Age 10-14' to del1wr papen Salary open. 646-2481 for m-So .red EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ln the Dana P<lint. Sa.n Oe-tervil'W me rucper. reqtu as Managen ..•••.••• , ...• Open ADMIN . JI.I~. fQr privalt' mente areas. OE · well as 'villingness to learn. Asst. Mgr. Trainee •• $500-$150 community assoc. l\110\\' DAILY PILOT NTAL ~1ist. Expanded Call llelen Hay4!s. 540{i055, (Some ttstaurant exper) budgets, accounting, 11rop 49 ~:ies in H~. Bch. ofc. Coastal Agency, 2790 Harbor Chef ••••••••••••••••••• Open manageml'nt. maint t PR.1 _____ 241,cc20.;____ 979-~open. tra. benefits. Bl. at Adams. Cl-1. Cook •••••••••••••••. ~ shltt Start $700 plus car allow. BRIGHT mature gir1 or coo-~~:::,~~~~~--ILEGAL Secretary w/litiga· Fry Cooks •••••••• $2-$2.75 hr Resumt.' by Aug. 10 to Sel!:'t-pit: i.n need or extra income. DENTAL Rceept ./back up tion experle~. Waltre!n1es, tion Cpmmhtt>c. 202 Vb1 \Vork from own home in girl for dental ti;peeinlh1t. 645-1.550 over Zl, exper. lJ,.65 hr + HPi PaJenno N.B. Ca. !12660. spa~ tim~. 96S-37G4. FIT. exp. nee. H, B . Hostess ••••.••• ,, .•••.• $2 hr ALTLR.ATION Lady NN'tled. CAMPER MFGR. n e <! d s ~71. L. V.~... reliable for steady Bookkeeper, re•t. exp. $3:50 hr Ku.s:ler'J Quality OP.aflf'rs, f!:<p'd. ht!lp. Apply, 353 \\r. DISH WAS HER·Alonu:ngs =~u~:iso 1 lor parl '.PEE 1534 Newport Blvd .. C.Jl.1 . lllth St. Cosla Mesa. Apply In pcnon. 2305 E. Cit ' . ROYAL SERVICE AGENCY A~~mLERS ot small 11.ll'C· CLEAi~ING "-'Oman, nl!e Hwy, Cd~J. Equal Oppor. MAID \\'Otk In tXChange for 3848 Ounpua Drive tro niechanicaJ devicr11. No work, 10 J-lra:. wk. In ore. Emplo>"r. apartml"nt. 23i6 .. ~f?\vpc>rt Suite 199. Newport Beach VI • • • 1 DRAPERY • Blvd., C.M. 54~75/i. SST-2800 exper. O('t:l'U. 11ion vC'X->ldg.. Nwpt. Centrt". Pd. w o r .a r o o m , 3 Pwnp Jgland Saleamtm w/!IOme lube exper. 40 hr wk, rd pay. 490 E. 17th (Cntosroad lnllne,) CM. Real Estate Sllea RECEPTIONIST ror doctor's office. Type 60 w.p.m. Call S48--00'IS. RETAIL clerking & part time kitchen work i n hospital store. Full time, 5 da.vs, 8 to 4. 522-2819. RETIREE NEEDING OC· CASIONAL WORK. Vaca· tions-fill in Stpt, Dec., etc. Greyhol.Dld Shipping It tickets, H.B. 536-8145. RN'a & LVN's, 11-1 & 3-11 shifUi. Hunt. Bch. area. Call IM2-555!. SALES Cltrks, exper. for sewing, notion!I It toiletries. HousewattS &: hardwares. 40 hr., 5 day wk. Must be 18. Apply Mgr.. 9 a.m-6 pm, Glllt<l1 '1, 237 E. 17th C.M. SALES Perma.nent Potlt ions Full & p/Um~ Schedules LINENS COSMETICS STATIONERY & CHILDREN'S Exper. prtferred Xln't Elnployee Benelita. terity 1mportant. No 11mok· VtlC. & trui. Xlnt \\W~ cxp'd. tabltr. will considt'r MAINTENANCE MAN -Ore Ing permitted. Clean &: conds. Send rtlume ot tral.IX't. Paid vacation & bldJl, Nwpl Ctr. Gen'I pleuant iimaU co. Call Cla.111\tlcd 8d no. 465 e/o holJdays. Beach Drapery, kno.,•lcdge of plumbina A MZ-8."81 -tor appt. S.R. Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, ;,llllll~W:;,·:;,l;.:.7:;:0';,,:::CM;;;:_. ---I <lcctrical rt:q'd. A"1o, lite En&ineering, su ProductiOn Costa '-1esn. c.. 92626. Ji'm.ERCLASS 10 r 41 m a n janitorial dutift. Pleuant Pl N B. --:::,. __ .J. I wot.king conda. Pd IN & " ' COCKTAIL WAITRESS netldetl, mu.t be expd It vt1c. Write 1pot:ifyin< .ii. ASSISTANT MANAGER. FOOD WAITRESS havt background in tool tx!><'rAr•l<toCla1&1fiod1~ SW'tloti '6lary $450. Mu.I 1'nl' Scrvii:e. Elcp<r., 21-33 mak~. Apply 83'1 W. 1811> No. 46ii clo DaUy PUot, =-~ ne,::. •PJ)e31ah0t A Yl'S old:" Niteg, Perm:inent. ~S"t::."..:CON.=::..:;M:.:•:.:"::.·----1 P.O. Box 1560, Cotta Mesa, AP!>b'PmonntlOlo 3t'1 ,,_, Jntttviewlog M PM• Lilot -king In Lquna Beach? Immediate opening • for qUAlitied 11 c e n 1 • d person. A8k for Rita Myel'I THE IROADWAY t 8 r f! er op. Appl}' 4-6 d11lly Vacanclea cqal moneyi Rent Cn 921326 ponunlty tn J • 't f~ Don The Bea~hc~mbtr i--------- miaur1al tl95 S. c....t Corona d 1 M )'Ollt houlo, •Jft., •-like to tnde? Our Trader'1 u.., .. r..p. Beach. t.lr. • •r ti~ .. et" thlv a Daily Piiot Pe.l'ldlte column ts tor YoUl Pl<11<nbrlltlc. Neotl' "Pad"? Pl ... an adt CIU1lff<d Ad. &ll-W/8. 5 Uoo, 5 ~tor 5 b\lcltt, - at S.ndcutlc' Rtal Ella,.., 118S S. C.Ut Hwy., Lac\IM eta& 494-8025, Stll the old stll!I. Biil' the new atutt. r 77'17 Ed~r, 11.B. Equal o,,,.... Elnplo)'<r Need a ''Pad"? Plr.ct. an tdl matic Corp., 845 w. 16th, Newport Beach 548·34G4. TYPIS\r must be accurate. Westminster area. * 893-8529 • This Is the job for tht gal seats, gaJd·bro\vn plaid .$60 who is starting out on a ,.::•a:;c::;h:.,· M:;:;iac::·:.,64&-::,:::;llil::"::·:....,~~ career. It is with a fine com· LADDERBACK CH A IRS . pany in Irvine. Some reci?P-Need at lenst rour mntching tionist & phone duties for high, ladderback chairs. you. Start J360, Call Pat 1'~in. or un!in. Must be Hall, 540-6055, C 0 as ta I sturdy. ?'to antiques. Free or Agenc;y, 2790 ~bor Bl. at reasonable price. Pb. Mike d ,..,., at 891-7791 after 5. A ams, ........ TYPIST SINGER st\\·ing inachlne $45. GE washer, like new $75. Beautiful coffee table, like new. basket weave cabinet centt.ir $50. Xlnt cond. Many others~ .. -Entire houseful must go! 182 Cecil Pl, Chf Slit-Sun 22nd&. 23rd. TV. eil'C. berl. c:hnlrs. ·drps .. cxi,Tcycle. bedspreods, P.ic- tw:r frames. .vinyl wall pafM!r (6 rolls). Sand tire$. Various '!iskpg, &c collcetor Items. 9521 Smokey Cir. H.B. 968-8763 or 968-9079. WAITRESS, EXPER, Not under 21. No Phone Calla. Apply in person, Surf ll Sirloin, 59.10 W. Coast Hwy, Newporl Bch. ' SURPLUS SA.LE 6 breakfast tbb & 4 chrs. 1.0 FR. Prov. Couch, S35: Di- Danish arm chi's. 10 coffee netle set, -4 cbrs. $25,' Studio tbls.8endtbls.Canbe!'.een bed.s, brown f1t,ied between g & 12 wkday.s. COVtm:l/bol!l1er $25, 8 ' Unit c, 2941 Grace Ln, O'Day boat. 2 oan $50; Hi· WAITRESS. EXPER. Costa Mesa. chair, $7.50. Misc.· Items. e BLUE DOLPHIN e CHAMP="-:.,:,;c;A:;;:GNEo=-_.tbl,,...,&,...,,hu_.lch"'"". =833-07=,,,',.,2·==-~--1 1155 Via Udo. NB Solld Blrc:h matching chrs. BOOR'Sl-IELVES and 2 small WAITRESSESi bu 1 b 0 1 8 , Hulch J)oors of concave desks Suitable for txlnt Waiters, Kltchen H e 1 p , glass. 1603 % E. Balboa Rlorage space In yOUr Dishwashers Apply In Blvd. NB. i:f:!te oro:orQ~~~n~: pcrtan atttt 12PM, 696 So. MUST isell: Hlde-a·bed $50.. UU South Rou St .. Sarita Coast HWY. Lllg. Bch. dinette at:t $35, men's 10 spd Ana 542-31.3), • * Warehousemen/DriV1!:rt • bike $25, ladies Stingray NO\V Oti'EN • Good opening, men ro to 40; bll«t i:ll. baby f1U111sltings .l SARA'S MARINE SALV,ACE several jobli open with 8f.l'.Od misc .. 673-34.21. Yacht junk, Ship stu~ · chance for advancement for FURNITURE Ex e cu t i v e U~ Matino Equlgrrten~· ~pmply~n ~~-I~ wor,S:: irMllferred. Selling 2 sofu, 411~ Sf. NB. ~ ..... a bedroom. is·cu. tt. Amann ''Look rot the l.lghtHouJJe'' Halladay, 8anta Ana See id< b 'd plu> a d 8 y 11 e, m ny a • SUMMER SALE Mr. VtrnOY bet. &AM. 2 PM dilloD&l. Items. 8-46-1127. We need a Grandmothtt at GOOD clean double box· PERSIAN RUGS • Our ltotlte lam to 5,30: 20% off.July 13th thru llsl spring &: mattress, f.lrm. Call ,,,_ • 10 30 '·"'' Mon thru FrL for .lt:U a . n.l'.l"IUBn s : to .N "f" Caroline, 10 m &. 17 moa. iJ). Call m.5$'75. Coron" del ?1-fp.r, 675-7341} 141>/wfl. IOpaldboUd!IYt. U MATCHING KITCllEN MEMBERSHIP•N•wpott Rntan. Belch, ~ OIA11tS ':n~~ , • Bch. TeMis Club. ~r WIDOWER w/2 girl.c egos l' ttlocallng. O..ltts , 1'1 ,.P. " 4 need.c llY<t-io Nanny. GARAGE toy .l Rrunt • ..i.. lJ3S..3252.. P.O. Box l(J, Ron· Younier woman pref. Qlri,ltmas In July. i/19-cbo Santa F~ .. c.i, • , MM123. 7/'Zl. llti Via Lorca (Lido!. POWER""""'°""'· po- S.ll Idle '""" _, c.JI HIDE a bod, gold Hert:\tlon, ..q.r, both 171'. llleyqo $12.50. 5.' l'OIACb. SU.SO. Bolh witb motor, u la, a 612'i611..,.,l !Utt new. 61Uln. 548-5H& ; l - -~ ' • . ' ,_ ' N d n A ' ' ; t s ~ E ~ I ~ M c ' di ~ H . ,J DI N m 54 -'6' w s I' ,_ BR ~ -LO m ,_ C! In F• -OD '" M ,_ PO SI 0 ,_ us 8 : I~ ti . I~ .. I ~ -- L Chin gow ..... .. ., s.; 'Mis 18. talre g foe een Air . tlli• doll .... Mo Pl 232 Yo ~ Fa .:,t 11• JN . -:: ·~ ',_ ,Liu :· p~ • ' 511 • C&I ' - •• ., ... -. - DAILY "lOT I~ .._I _ ........ _,,. ___ ,~I PMI-~ I~ I -... ...... ;fq.?MRt l~I ..___ ----!~ I Mlsc1l1...-1 Pm, Genorol l50 Booll, p.,.., '°' C1mpert, Silo/Roni '20 liJ ,. ---1§) ;ml _ ........ _ .. _)~--.1 K2 Autoe. 1"-1"' '11 ALFA ROMEO W 1nled 120 .....;,,,_._.,,.....,....,,,..--\ ;;:-;;;;:;;.;;;;;;;;;;,:::;;:::::;.:; Nav Jo~ ~i.: io ,,.:10% """"*,.....A"'u,-:c=y""10,,_N,...*,.... Tho Tropic z:ono 1~~ 1:~0~. eath~~ --.. -1-T_O_N_4_0_0_"_ di<coW>t on all clotb<t. ot BENTWOOD ~ S. lllaln e Opon Now ~ ~~ Southom Call!. Collti• Gym. FRIDAY 7:30 P .M. CHAIRS s.ni. Ana's..., .. , l •·-ost bull, CUJtom tarp, • lil• '72 GMC Long Wldo 111 Motor Hom" S1l1/Rent 940 Trucko NEAL MOTORS BONDEO DEALER '11 SUwr Alts -· Stett0, map. JULY 21 ...... jacket&, 4 ufety cushlons, p• k nulum. Wtd·S.t, 9 am-6 pm. Need at Jtaat four tin, or un-Tropical Fish St0tt. Un-lire extinaui!her, sea an· IC up A truck load of T·shlrts. From Buntain'• quality IUr· lln, •--• .. ood c•·•·s. A"-believable 4,, Jong Clown 400 V8, turbo, radkl, heater • . , 1 Tho _..:. ... 11 DCJn.. ,....... r cbor, born, oompa.-• all 1 ~--di rever5iblf's, football Je--,, ru ure I ore. m-.vwf, ............ ,.not lmpo-·nt, but Loches SS.95 . La.st time thll !)O\''er ll tt ... ,., power SC: ·-, B hill bin ... ,__ .... , .,....... .... •... appro\'td by Coa.~t Guard. b k . d s· \YlU buy your pickup • For 1 ~--*~'""~'l'JO&~~·--~ cash today • No we.l ting, '64 Alfa Sp)l(kr. Xlnt m.cb1 mu11cle ahh1s, lube socks. roy c a Cl.wHc:ta, ""'' mll$t be in eood cond, No ~ar . Clo\\'D Loches for 59c. Xlnt oond. $2650. Moored on ra es, air con ., terra jackets, scrimmage vests, feta, dinin& ~ts, cdckta.il .ntiques. Free or reu. 2 oz:. tilter wool 69c wf rrtt Balboa cab, H.0 . springs .l shOcks. sweats, CYn1 shorts, girls tables, commodt1, Rembnnl price. Mike, 897.ng1 aft. 5. air atone. EUttka pump. l --=-l&-·~m.5118-=7,:.·___ 950xl6J 8 ply tires wide '68 Chevy 1/2 Tn cond. $690. 0.,. -: evea 6'2-06C'M. AUDI P.E. suits, etc, s izes 2-ex-lamps, dorkt, picture•. mir· $1.49. 5 ga.I. tank wlhood 15' GlaSS Flat bast, with bfautiful 9 loot OPEN ROAD tra 1 .... , for kids & adults. rors, divans, love 1eau, hide-PILOT interested in_,Jo0inlnr1 S3 99 JO gal ·--•-w ....__.. cab o,·er camper, toliet.. > 1.fOTOR HOMES '6" · Ne..,.....rt Beach Tenrus u •. · • uum · uvuu Some shirt• plain, or wit h abed.1, OCf. chain, rockers, call.,.... f t ~1791 $6.99. Call 979-Fish. Bottom Ski' HUii pressure water, stove, retrig. 8081 .Gardrn Grove Blvd. Pickup 1 ·12 Audi Joo LS. • *· eooo Sacrifice, ~lust Seit, $1388 or I ml. Spec metallic red. best otter 100~ Financing lr.111heret1e, air, AMtrM. college names, etc. Sample: lazy boy recllnC"r, repolllE'sS· me Jn· · Ca.n sleep 6. Mu.st saerifice Garden Grove 894-4479 Shorts, 50e, T-shirts, 90c. . ed like-new. Curti1 Mathes. Mu11c•I Instruments t22 * ''~fTY's" · Groomina; 10 this btautifuJ combo. 511431 Enter front door, Southern T.V, R.C.A. color combilla· Y!" in all breeds. (Frt>e \\lhite/metalflake r~. 65 hp $6995 Avail O.A'.c. 897-0224 $.w:Al 962--941! Calif. College Gymnasium, lion, lots ot m11ple tumltutt, FENDER S~toeaster. Futz. picku.p). Boardln.r, poodle Mere O/B, tilt trailer $1200. 2525 Newport Blvd., C.M. bedroom & dining sets, sew-\Vah , &: Te11co amp/speak· pupp1es. 546-2848. 836_1954. or 36 months lease fer only 545-1178. ing machine, nice ollice er. Xlnt cond, $250. Alt, 5 PARROT; Green v.•/lot.s o!1 _4_'_R_U_N_ABO_UT __ P_e_rl_l!<_t_for $165.97BloL"'L" BAondR. RY Motor Homes Sales • Rentals Auto L•a11ng ~~~--.:...--~- 964 DATSUN 240Z 1972 I BMW ALL MODELS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MUST sac. 2-5 drawer furnit~. exec. desk &: PM &: wknds 536-5011 . character. Plus cages & Couple or Guy & Gal. is hp. chests, 2 bookcases, hide ft chair, secretary chairs & FE NDER Jaguar Guitar food. $25. 673-0670 or Engine Steel Traller Cover bed, blk Spani5h couch, rm desks & much, much .more. w/custom padded back. 673-2310. Lilting' Sling, Na~ahyd~ dlviden, d"k & chr. 9207 WINDY' AUCTION Haro ca ... IJ7S. ~)7 .. , C11I 1.52 Uoholst•rio ts25.oo. 646-801!1 Ponti1c·GMC·C1mpers Fiat 558-3222 Auto. -air r!lll\!'.S. ( •Zl9Z• I $108 LBW Bank Fillancini La C.Olonia. Ftn Vy. * ACOUSTIC GUITAR. good evl"S. ANNUAL Rummage .sal~ COME BROWSE AROUND co~Jtion. $25. 673-6552 or FOR Sale People Kitties cl6~.-Bos~-, .. -~IV~ha-t~e-,.-JOO_H_P !lsl St. at S.A. Frwy.) 2000 E, 1st St., Santa Ana. 558·1000 Halecresl Club, at 3107 2075~ Newport Blvd. 67J.:.6ZYJ. Siamese &: Manx (bob tail) Johnson. 3 yrs. old. Xlnt Killybrook, C.Osta Mesa, Behind Tony's Bldg. Mafls. P l1no1/0rg1ns 826 10 wks old .. 492-1626 cond. S257> TerTiftc Buy. 841' Open Road Camper. Sleeps 4. Avocado green l ee Box & Butanl" stO\'e, !hag carpeting. Everything in ex· ceUenl condition. Beautilul large interior, designed tor 4. but have slept 6. Price in. clude1> Tle·do\1rns (the good ones), Bouncf'·a·ways, Boot. a\1·n!ng. \VU! trade for lishtng boai or $900. cash. Call 52:Hi359 d11.y11, or 531-5607 eves alter 6 Pl\!. Sat., July 22, 10 am.J pm. Costa Mesa * ~-8686 FREE Dogs &S4 Must sell! 673-6220 or DIAAIONDS, ·not my style. STANDARD size pool table, 673-6.55_2_. ------ Ne\v engagflnent r in 1 , table saw, model boats, & * Dog Obedience * 19' Sportcraft. FC, I/O. 12() matching band $285/oUer. misc. 540-1839. Starting week ot August 7 Try Utis proven love method HP, head, sink, ice box, bait 548--9721. AVON Sale, lg. stock, very ORANGE COAST Class starting Laguna. tank, SIS radio, skis. reas. 1(}.5 ·Thur/Sat/Sun., HAMMOND STUDIOS San Clemente area. Vanson trlr. !J.42-3130 '66 Owens 25' ·on Custom 4 wh. trlr, Loaded w/&tras See to apprec. Must SaC" no checks, 2474 Santa Ana, offers Days 492-4401; eves 549.3931 35' Classic Cruiser, $4000. or C.fl.f. ( Adult Evening Classes John Martin, Prof'! Trainer Ix-st otter. Mooring incl. $3500. 531-3374. GIANT Designer Raggedy BRICKS, bricks, bricks! Sc Ann 'N Andys, 4 ft. $15. 14" each. 31916-9th Ave .• South _do_ll_s_l_S._64_2-688 __ 9. __ _ Laguna. 4~™1. Miscellaneous LOWNMOWER $65. 0th er Wanted misc. Garden toools. * 557-3111 * CABIN Furn. Mammoth I.ks. Income Tax Ded. Sac. $4500. For Quick Sale. 531-3374. ODDS and ENDS sale inc. gas outdoor h e a t e r . 161 ~fcKnight, L.B. 497-2280. PO\VER mo\\•er $25. Gas Stove $25. 642-561i6, 1513 Orane Ave. C.l\f. USED furniture -complE'l:e BR, living room, fam ily rm. patio. Appliances. 968·2977. 820 OLD·BATH·TUB? in fairly good rondition, with 4 legs, cheap! C.M. area. Wanted for yard decorator dip pool for kids. in hi· des.ert. After 5: 30. Call 645-2142. LADDERBACK CH A I R S • Nem at least four matching high, ladderback chairs. F in. or unfin. Must be sturdy, No antiques. Free or reasonable price. Ph. ~like at 897-7791 alt 5. A CONVENroo &oloPP!NG ANO SEWING CUIOE f'OR THE CAL ON THE CO. For en ad In Woman's World Call Mary B1th 642-5678, exl 330 Long on Allure! Fashion Crochet! • Beginners V cl o • Secondary AKC Pups-9 wk old Gennan . ery ean. wner may • Theory shorlhair show & field, 5 wk hnance. 548-6772. • \Vorkshop old g:rtat dane11, best in 17' . figerglass outtio:ard \\'/ CaU !or information temperament & show . twin 20 hp Mettfi, big wheel ''DISCOUNT "'8930 M a r t I n c r r! a t Kennels trier. $UOO. 846-8058. -CAMPERS" 2854 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 546--0989. 25' Fairliner, $2.999. CHER· PIANO SALEI OBEDIENCE Class To Start RY! 100 ~ financing by 8 foot HAVASU sleeps 4, Piano used In teachers Wed. July 26th 7:30 PM in O\\·ner. $99 mo. 557-33?.6 stove, refrigerators, cabovpr studios; noo~ models; dis-the Newport.Irvine area. 16' 1971 NEWPORT, 9~ in beautilul gold trim. Serial continued models; damaged Open ID all dogs over 5 mo's Johnson fully e q u t pp e d, 951. cases. They're all here & on t1ld. 546-4928. $775, 547-9645; 675-4808. WAS $1195. wo at dlsrounts to noo. STUD SERVICE-9· BOSTON Whale• typo $795 FULL PRICE Walllch1 Music City Black Lab, AKC ,,.. dinghy, new oond. Without BILL BARRY South Coast Plata Thoroughbred background. motor. $295, ~5-0904. 540-2830 979-3341 , ** 15' Glasspar w/50 HP SPINET Piano. Like new! BIRD Dog PUP -Now $50. Mere., Trailer, Ski rope, With bench $400. U65 Boise AKC Champ. Sire. 10 wks. etc. $825. 494--0395. - Way. C.M. 545-6319. Top Show/Field. 962-9574 . Bo.ts, Rent/Chart'r 908 TV, Radio, HIFi, 131 MIN POODLES, 6 wks, Stereo 836 wormod. usortod colon;, .J'O 27' AUX, SLOOP STEREO 1.972 Garra rd pepers, $15. 968--2559 alt <. Perfect for wttkeild cnrlses IRISH SetlE'r female, 10 to Catatilla. Fully equipped. equipped with full sized pro. SS fessional changer. AM/FM months, AKC, Io vi n i radio, RDF, sleeps six. stereo receiver. sealed all'· disposition. 646-41119. 6'2" headroom. complete suspension speakers, tape * Italian Greyhounds, -AKC galley, Club rate1. Lota of deck & head phone plug.in sho1v, 10 wks, sac to r ight parking. Call for Info. jacks. Brand new in box & party. 837-9680 eves & 557·9046 aft. 6:30. guaranteed. Originally prlc· wknds. Boats, S•ll 909 ed at 1279.95. Balance $87 OLD English Sheep Dog. · cash or small payments. nA 1 al ll AKC P-Cat, very fut, 15 races, 13 .,,.,au , m e. mos. . 1· t Tri · nak 2 PONTIAC·FIAT·GMC tlst St, al S.A. Fr.vy. l 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana 5.58-IOOO "Va~ation Ready" '72 8 Fl. Cab Ovtr Camptr Sleeps 4, stove, refrlg, lite wood with turquoisl!! trim on '72 Chev % ton custom camper, leaf fiprings, H.D. shocks, radio, 350 VB, po'>l·er disc brakes. # 172022. $3995 BILL BARRY La y-away Dept, $350 S45-6588 ll"SS. r .. 1p1n er, 714/893--0501 . . saUs, Extras. S2470/oUer, F '1al·GMC-Pont1'ac ' AFGHANS, Champ. sire, 548-1!17 alt 5. ZENITH & RCA ~olor TVs pt/sh. Will sell reasonably 32, Columbia Sab s1v 4 (1st St. at S.A. Fnvy.} at less than the dU1COW1ten. to good -homes. Mae, X 1 re, 1 ' 200ltE. ht St., Santa Ana Most '73 models in stock. 5.17-421.0 nt race. $4950 . 558-1000 14U S. VIUag~ \\'ay, S.A. Motor Home Rentals Available for dally, weekly or monUtly basis. Zl', 23', and 25' self containerl !\lo· tor Homes, all equipt \l'iih generator, roo f air, t11rl many othrr extras. All Coaches are 1972 mQdrls. \\'e havt> the a!l slrf'l Am lh(> also. Please call ~3'.l-9560. '69 DODGE SPORTSillA'\ \rAN ... PPrma 1op 111!h full \\'1nrio1r~. :'llakr your n11 n c11mr>er rP:..l'lfl> S7ill~ BEACH CITY DODGE 16555 Af'ach Bnulf'\';trd Hunnngton Br<"ch (il4 I 540-2Wl ---Rent A Motor Home for your Vacation ~ 839-4301 * PLUSH Shasta mtr hm for rent. 18', r;lps 6. Self cont . Pvt pty. All 6, 497-1184 a 72 LlFETJME 11.H., 23' & 25'. Air, lux, & saft>ty equip., xlnt rate11. Pvt. ply., !'16~-1297 PACE Arro\v, slt>cps 6, fully eaulpf)l'(I, Best ratf!' in 1011·4 . 968-2750. Trailers, Travel 945 TENT TRAILER Cyclists \Viii Appreciate! '65 Travel M a te Sleeps 7, kitchen & adrl on I + Ta.~ per mo. ~ in~. nrwn l'nd Southern California 1st National Bank . Leasing ' 2022 Busine~s Ctntrr Drive lr'\'1111•. Ca!if 92'll)~ TI4 ~.3.3·~1i20 21:1 627-0367 I LEASING! 1'cy our lea~e f')(perts for Sav1nis • Sanslactian . Ser- vice. \VE LEASE ALL POPtn.AR 1972 ~lAKES AT CO~IPETI· TI\'E RATES. Cali Malrolm Reld tor further detaiJ1. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 209l Hubor Blvd. Costa Mesa 6f2-001(1 Autos Wanted 968 REWARD WILL PAY OVER Kelley Blue Book cabana. FramP. complrt!"ly For late modti clean rebuilt to carrv 3 motor· 1 low mileage 'domeS: cycles. F.:-:trri C!rnn . tics, Imports, trucks or 540-9458 or campers. Aft. 9 P .M., 540.3894 Call and ask for Buyer 1969-17' Northweio.t C ~t Travel Trailer. Slf'rp~ 6_ low and \vlde. &-ll·('(ln\ainf'rl Brakes. U!\f"rl very little l llOO. 549-1325. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Up To 48 Ma. Terms on approver! credt~ SE!: US ABOUT Overseas Delivery CREVIER MOTORS 8 W. l~I St .. ~nta Alla 135-3171 Visit our ne'v homt-1 llOY CA' lllC. 234 E. 17th St C.Osta Mesa ~ BORG WAID 1960 emr-i °""""' 1 ., • kind. Colltt ........... Good body, tirN. • •It a e • Sacri!iC"I!! S250 Of' bnl eftl!r. M412 Ospn!y, El T'm) GI' call 58&.o!Di alter fiPll. CAl'll '71 1'»11 4 Spd, Air O:mditillnilll,. Radio, P.tan. ,?84Bli,1. $1995 COAST IMPORTS '72's at drastic savings! .' 213-7?6-6171 day 1, 1----=='---- Free color antenna installed AKC Spnnger Spaniel puppies 213-.371..()872 eves. '7D VW POP TOP camper. with all console• thru July Champ field llne. 8 !'ks. CORONAOO 15 & trailer. 19,000 mi. Cleanest · avail 31st. 3 yr ... picMe.tube,.l. yr. ······-~· !~~~.-~~.·.'.~· -··· lmmac! Kept in garage'. =~~~~-With tent. $2900. 22: TRAILER 1971 Roadliner, like new, sleeps 8, self con- tained, many extras. !x14 room att. S2995. 84&-.3163 KENSKfLL 18' trailer, lil<e new cond. St'lf cont. $950 JllO)ll]O w. Pldllc Cit. U.,. 1«wport Boedo me -24IO Horbor Blvd. - 9207 SIZES e.1e . r, 11f ,..;,_ 11f .... 1' ... LONG ON ALLURE b the Chlnese-lnspittd h o s t e 1 s gown wilh optional, leg:. reveallna: slits. Note also, easy-sew dreu, tunic, pants. Send! PMnted Pattern 9207: NEW Misses' Sia 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 12 <bust 34) gown ll,kes 2'1t yards 60-inch. 8EVENTY'FIVE CENTS for tach pt11ttern -add 25 ttnt. for each pattern for Air MAii and Special Han- dUna; olherwise third-class d<llvtty will !alt< tbrft "-'ttks or more. Send h> Marien Martin, tllf! DAILY PILOT. 442, Pattttn Dept.. 232 Wett 18th St., New YOTk, N.Y. 10011 . Print NA.,lE, t..DDJl.EM with ZIP. SIZE and !TYLI: NVMRll. SEE MORE Qu ick Fuh!ont and choo&e one palttm frte from our 'Sl>rfrc.SUmm'1' Ca1*1oi. All 81ze1! Only tiOc. INSTANT SEWING BOOK MW todt,y, ~'e:IJ' tomorrow. n. •' _'IJISTANT FASHION ~' )k>OK -Hundreds o t latll10n IAcla. $1. ' Like to tndl? CNr irt.der'• P""'1ilt column la lot ,...1 • • ' u .... , s dl)I lot 5 buclao. • CallMWm. Cost• Ml•• 54U017 . ClnlOlft WE PAY TOP parts &: service. Cash 90 ELEGANT AFGHANS pet & Used very little. $1050. plan or term•. ABC Colo• showpuppi.,~all bl"ttdi11i 84&-1950. 101/2' HAVASU i:v. 9021 Atlanta, Hun-stC1Ck. All colon:. 96'J-6956. l·32=· co=L-UMB~~IA_Sa_b-... -.-S-le_e_p' hngton Beach, 968-3329. AKC Keeshond pups. 7: wks. 2 4. $4900. LEAR Jet stereo 8 portable ~f/3 F. Shots. Call 644-00'l3 * 846-3445 * tape player, &Olid state, or 644-0517. LIDO 14 & trailer. ~odel P7SIO. Plug into POODLE:· Pedigreed, illver Sharp condition. cigarette lighter or uses 6 D gray, miniature. Female'. $800. 84&-0363 ba:teries. Hardly used. Paki Call 673-6238. 14' HOBIE cat. 4 mos old. $35 -sell $a'.>. 54.2-1734 f!Vf!S.-WEJMARANER PUP Racing rigget:l . $1000. weekends. REASONABLE Call 646-1432 CUSTOl\1 built s p e a k e r \Viii trade 548-4804 enclosures, 2% 'x3% • tall MUST sell Lido 14 with Cabover sleeps 6, inc. kitchen cash. 548-4391 afl 4 Thurs, waler pump, stove & oven, Fri It Sat. All day Sun. side dinette with loveseat & -~'-'---'--"":...:=-­ toilet room. a beautiful home * 24' Airstream, AC, cpts, •""'8.Y from home. Serial 159, couch, Breakaway brks., WAS $2 ~ 95 clean. Bal'<alo prire al $1700. fiS&..8260 Hemet. NOW $1495 16' Can!inat ·n. Dual J&nko, FULL PRICE gas elec. '"'" porta-pottl. $1450. 962-9645. BILL BARRY lJ' Sant4 Fo, dps 4, with 12" speakers lncld. AOORABLE trailer, xlnt cond. $875 or 548-845C. Poodle Puppies. best offer. n4/737-3650. PONTIAC-GMC·FIAT iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $15-$30 54&-7335 SNYPE ... like new, with porta-potly. $650 Call ~2163 (1st St. at S.A, Frwy.} Horstl 856 £lip. Sacrifice. Phone 200) E. 1st St .. Santa Ana 1 11 693-9388. 558 IOOO ''"to You * APPAlOOS~ * HOBIE H . vory good con-Cyclll, Blk~I, 925 18' 1969 Santa Fe. seU oont. Sips 6. Perl cond. $1$50. 557-9642. 26' Kencraft, used 3 times. Many extrap incl air cond. CASH ,,., UR<] ""' • truclcs, lUll call Ill f<.c' free est:lmatu. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask tor Sales Manqer tm1 Beach Blvd. HunUncton Beach MT.111187 Kl 9-3'31 WE bl)' all makes of clean used aporu ears. paid tor or nol Please drive ln for ,,.. appralaal. NEWPORT · IMPORTS 3 LI ~Tl $2 00 3 year old gelding, d111on. $825. Scooters nes, mes, • regist1rflf. $475. Call 673-3872. 673-4395 CALL ANYTIME • LIDO 14. 1550. includ" -------- Eves aft 1, 545--2088. a:J.00 W. Cout' Hwy .. 11 Mo, Labrador Retriever, 540 • 3803 sails & unused Schock can-450 HONDA Chopper 8" ex· Auto Service, Part1 949 Newport Beach 642-9405 tended chrome tubes, cobra male. All shots, licensed. ... vas cover. ~3819. seat. cu•tom painted Friendly. To gd. home. GENT.LE horse, s~w train-Boats Slips/Oor.:k1 910 fi"'-lau tank. tn the 1959 Cadillac Parts • Make -,==;,:;""~""'°"",-WE PA.Y TOP DOLLAR 541-8309. ed. 1dea1 for child &:lor1--..o.'-"-'-------• ·~ s bll.!lket now, will £ell cheap. Ofter for quick sale 1212 FOR TOP USED CARS South Hou St., Santa Ana \\1ANT home for lovable beginning rider. ~$1..N. anta * NEED slip after August 645-5093 mate white/apricot kitten Ana Hgls, 549-3255 1st. 3o· PoWf:T Cruiser. ~=-------PORSCHE · 11!"() 542-3120 U your car la extra clean, see us first. w/personality. Abt 6 mo J3LUE ia an excellent riding * ~2979 * MUST stll or take over el1(ll'N!, cc. old. 673-4393. horse for adults' or children, 26' slip avail, $2.25 fl. 233 payments Honda 100, like C"hrm 4 hand paint, 1961 V\V See Bill Will' • new, 500 mi, insurance & _bod_oy_. "°-'-""-=--· 55_2-_79_J_6_. __ BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor 81vd. Costa Meaa 979-2300 6 Wk. old kiltens. Weaned & $250: . at tam 1 19th St., Apt C, Newport helmet incl. 673-3421 '6ll MERCURY &: '63 FORD trained. (5) Tabby Wiped. Stables, 1n H.B. 847-9167 Beach. 675--0236. ---------Country Squire parta for IMPORTS WANTED c~hetre~;t;hlo1~vltende~ew~~ fl) \Vhlte w/blk tail. Need ENGLISH saddle, 18'', like 8011t1, Speed & Ski 911 3:Ju Ho~N~!m~s~:S.P~~~ _,,,_1e_._M_2-_28ti3_._____ ~Ii~:~• r homes desperately, 837-5003. new. Equestrian brand, $75. • -pe:rf! See to appreciate! HYDRAULIC j k C SD.L MAXEY roYOTA s.un. B' •CJ< 1 Rawhide reins, Engl bridle, 18' Century, 175 •HP Gr. ac s, amper, Instant-Crochet tunil and ~ 111aUY puppy, ma e, ~5-4038 1'1m. Hull, eng. good cond. $600, 968-2558. hand&: floor. Special l i,\ T. 18881 Beach Blvd. jumper that'& also a dte$S. 3 mos old. Must have fenced Now pao'nt upho'· co•-r BRANO new bo'cycle-Lady'• floor. $105 + tax, 96Ul845. H. Beach. Ph. 847-ISrSS U1e BIG hook. novt:lty yam_ yard. 534-1031 betwn 12 &: 7. PERFECT wefitf!t'n leather 67J.085l ' <&, . ., lntelt!lting texture la top VERY 1 bl kilt . led saddle, $75. 67$-646( after 5,1__________ Raleigh Sport. $70. Call VW ENGINE \VllL Buy your car paid for ova e en. evic. pm 8011fl Storage 912 642-652.1 alter 5 or 642-4.121, 40 H.P. SlSO. ~2587 or not. Call Ralph Gordon fashion. Pattl'l"n 7384; aizes by landlord, must find ' ext. 233. 673-0900 -445 E. CO&st fhlr1. lG-16 includ~. Size 12 (butt home. (ll 571-2281 DRY atorage t1n bay, 1gn YAMAHA 125 MX Newport Beach. 341. -FREE---.. -good--ho-m-.. -cu-te.1,[.--.... --,-,..---.JI· .JP) u.~boats trom 12 to 19', 2 Low mUea' •andan1 r;:!; to race [ A&itolfw.. II ~_]A --"-".,°'.,•,..1.,.m_.po.,,.md,,..,,_,,,,.,,..w_o SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS. ,:sm:all~nux;·~od~b~re~od~pu:p;,p~l•:L~l ~~-~~(iqtMprn~~*'~ti.~· ~l(.~·~1~~ho~1£~JI~,~~~!~-~! -"" • · -ll>r oach pattern • add 25 * 962-0462 * -1 =,...:;A::.•k:,.:f.::or..:J:.:ohn::::.:6#-::.:..::11.::42'-;;;;;;;;;;;~~ ALFA llO~EO cents for ea.ch pattern for GENTLE German Shepherd I II•) '70 Rickman Zundapp Moto 953 Air Mail and Special HandJ. Dteds good home, male 4 General 900 TrtnlpOftrtion Cross. $550 or bf!st. '70, SOcc _A_n_1_1q;..u_•_•f_c_1_1 _11_i• ... '--AHa Romeo '72- lng; otherwise third-class yean old. 673-5458. ••66-0-w-,-.,-25-.-.. --c-u-,.-om-4 Indian Boy racer, $150. FOR Sale: 1913 Model T delivery will take three =THR'="E"E:'""K.,.lt"'te-ns-,°'1-=o-w°'i<o-o"""Jd. wh, Ur. Loaded w/txtras. I•••••••••• 536-2127. Ford, restored to original 2000 weeks or more. Send tll H broke l Mal 2 f c_.._ M t Sa Al ft 915 1 __ BO_Y_'_S_l_O_S_P_E:_E:_O_B_I_KE_.-cond. Lather upholste.-.., Alice Brooks the DAILY ouse n. e, em. ~ tll appree. us c __ r_•_,._______ ., 54<).5m ........ Mesa .,~ 53J 337• $25 brass head lights, sh1e PILOT, 105, Needlecraft UIO.. ..........,. • "· ANTIQUE Bi-plane rides * S43-i945 * lamps & tail light. Bttlh (}(!pt., Box 163, Old Chelsea 8 Wk old kitten_s 1 white. 1 8' Arthur Marine dinghy. open IXlCk pit. $5. for 1, $8. -.,~==~~=~--horn. Showroom Condition. Station, New York, N.Y. black & white. 5'6-5392 F/G Lapestrake designed, for 2. Cn4) 675-1372. YAMAHA .. 7'2, 360 MX C&ll for appt. 84S-S482 or lOOU . Print Name. Addrea•, Afternoon $195. 3 HP Johnson outbd., C ~ ,_1 /R 1 _ used twice 615-4858. Zip, Pt.tttt. Numbf!r.. SMALL BREED PUPPIES. S75. 644-5836. lntperl, ~ • tn .,_ call 557"'6649 N EE 0 LE c R A FT '72! • Mo.. All shots_ 8' FffiERGI.ASS dl11illy 1970 "Camper Tru-L" HELMET Jaep su .. oy Offtr ' ~-•·t knit r 96• ~• 6 "" •·u SU M S30 Attention Geller M8·8i32 d;o~s. 50c' etc, ... f'f!e • V'UlnO aft pm* double--bottom unsinkable, 'n GMC ~ L Wh .. I ~k r:~ohn~742 KITI'ENS, ! wko old, male !90-2U 33rd. St .. N.B. •~ 2 1.0l'O. h" Duno Buggl11 956 N!:\VI but.ant J\lacrame. &nd f aJ CO.ta M , uwo, tone, o IVf! • w .,e. LEATIIERS Basie, f&ncy knot1. pat· em f , esa 11 Rubber raft wtth 3 HP •QPtT custom 1nlerior alr Moto X Waist 28", length 28 VW Baja bug w-new 1300 cc terns. $1 . area. 546-4413 engjne •• Xlnt condition. $135. cond •• power atttrtns. Power $45. A1k for John 644-1742 eng .. '66 trans., wide tire•. t:••Y Ari ·(If R •Ir,. In t FREE Kn'TEN, nutty, 962--964a. diM: brake!, 950x1i5 8 ply etc. Street l4'gal. $450 firm . " t t ~ ho Co ta I /M BSA 250 cc, reblt erv. Xlnt Alt 5 .,. -crochet-over '6 designs to cu f!, o """" me. " oat1 1rfM tir!'s, dual camper mirror!!, 225 pm. o..ior;J(I••· mU.. $1. Meu. 645-4710. Equip. 904 radio, H.O, •111ptnsion wilh cond. SCaJ. Trucks 962 ... tut CrooMll Book -1n YORKSHIRE T e r r I 1!! r . le.al rprinp. Will handle 1tU --....:.:::..1 .;.Mli-4629::...::::. __ 1--------- lee.m b)I plcturts! Patlerna. Puppy, Sbo~ loving with OUT80ARD 20 KP Chrysl~r. contaIMd tamper. 503560. ·n Harley DavidlOn 125 '55 Ford J.tT new ma: tran1 $1. all aiet. 83J...6927. 642--S7XI. Acou~-~!; ~_,~att. Xlnl $3795 R..pido, Street/dirt. Tl ml. tire• Paint etc, Runs looks Oompkrte lutanl Olft Book FREE health Jtl: ti 6 nu .-. --.a.w $450. M&--• new A: camper 64~. -more than 100 tuts. -$1. wka (')ld. m~ ~t~ ~ Boats, Powtir 906 Bll BARRY 2 Men's 10 speed bik~. Rid· 1968 Ford F·U. :.xi cu. in., 6 11 °"". pltte All... .... • muklnp. 642-fl04 llt 5 pm. -33-, LUHRS ,72 don twice. Both $90, o• ISO c:yl. "1ck lhl!~ 11 . J 2 5 • Fla14MC·Pootl11c ••· -JS alt 6 pm. 892--0524 11 llllJ< Sq -• !il)c, (lat St at S-A. f'rwy,) WlllTE -10.sPff(I. good con-1968 FORD Tntclr. ll Ton -e11lP7h.A!ahau.1• ,.,....,..,.... Jl~J rr.lih•'lt<rcoolt!d :JOOOE.htSl..Sant4All dltloo. good buch crui.er. RANG!:R.Air.$2500. 50c:M ' rt °'1Y~•t'll -· 111-1111) 13$. Call M6-4113 • Call 912-4422 * NOW IN STOCK For lmmodlata Dollvory ln1!1nl Crodlt BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS lO(I0.1200 W. Pacific est. HWJ • Newport Beach <nC) 6(2.Q400 All• Romeo Cit,.... Sp1111 Mt 11ratf era..,. OountJ .tor local a Ew ret•• d<ll""l'· Jim SlerMnl 11,.asll 2:10J So. Ma.In. SUia -1157~2 Opeo DATSUN '71 DATSll Pi1IP W /Gem Tap C3mpl' 4 Spd. Radio, Heater, I.ow Low Milea&:!!. <350CPHJ. $2095 COAST IMPORTS 1000-1100 W. Pacific C•t. Hwy. Newport Beach Cn4) 642-0406 ~ -~'67~DATSUN STATION WAGON $32S. 548-841}4 tttl. 7 PM '72 DATSUN 2~Z. Brown. 7.000 ml. Must aell. $4350. Eves/wknds ~108. -·10-lfATs'=uN~1 510 SEDAN Auto Trana, Low Miles, Jta. dk>, Hater, $1388 COAST IMPORTS U00.13JO W. Paclfic C1t. Hwy. Newport B .. cb <114> -~ '72 Delllln 240 Z; 5.llll mDes. Alr. Map. RA!plal&. $4lOO. 9~it24 or l'f5..C5.CO, '68 Datsun Roadstlr Han! Top • Son Top, 4 Spd, lbodio, H .. ttr, -0.,111) .-1 ..u... (Wl"l584) $1095 or belt offu COAST IMPORTS la)l). !Jlll w. Padllc Cot. IJWr. N-BOcb tn4l -Sic. ---1 -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I KETIENBUJtG "TO YW pop-top bus • Xlnl •i TRWMPll Chopper. hard • ·n FORD RANCHERO. q.w. ,_. Tld&J'• U\I ... Peta, Generil l5G Dart1 Point M1rln1 eond, Lo mJ. Utltd twict. for WI , 10 ov•r trent end, runs Pickup 500 ... Whitt. Auto. NOW ON DISPLAY 54MS19 l5 bUulilul 91H,,,,._ !10<. lc=~..,......,496..,"41,.._02,_0~~=I camp's. Btlt olr. 337~. good, lllllO. 64~1 llli(Jt), 575-MlO, !om pm. ··~················· D~C:,,!":.~ ~· ~ ~p ":~.:. :;, ~~· i:: lbd=~ c:r::.:~ >.;; .!1:.D~~~jsoo >;:, ~ ~~o!i~ ~y .~ _,,, 5J1.3815_ '°' $<25. w-1n12 e -e • 6G-IJ63 • ea11 today 64Ul6'll. = BoclY s.r.tS: 1 -""D""'A""IL"'"Y~Pl""L""O"'T- coAsT IMPORTS CLASSlflllD ADS 1000.!a!O W. Cooat HW)'. 64._.,.71 ·-~~~~~~~•-. ....... ~~~~~~ ll•wport Beaclo 84).0U .... • • . '! • ,,. 970 MG Autos, lmpo<tod 970 Autoo. lmflO' ltd 970 Autos, ,....,....... ~~T~o=Yo=T~A:---l-~~~~- ,,. Autos, UMd CORVEJIE • '72 FIAT Brand new 1972 128 2 dr. Sett, aerial No. 128A08645(W:I.._ $1~9 DOWN $59.39 PER MO. Yes, just $99.00 is the total doWn paymtnt and on1y $58.39 ls the total monthly p&yment including tax, lic- '69 MGC-GT Cpe, 1 owner, 29,000 m1Je1, Red rinllh with bl&clc, wire wheell, O\lmirlve, lrnmaeu- )ale, and near new, bkl' (164- BQC> 644-2000 3:3().7:30 pm. MGA ·12 TOYOTA COROLLA $1 966 (+T.&L.) or $39.30 MO. '62 MGA,, 1r.oo MK..II, conv. Nu 1ilft. Body ok, enc xln't. $650. 646-9278. FULL cash price $2,096.30 fn. ...::::::.c=.:,:M:,:,,._=8:---eluding tax " license. Down ~ pa~t iJ tour hundred DEAN LEWI VOLVO Oran9e County's Fastest Growing Dealer VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC '66 Corvette fastback * '65. NEW BRAKES 6 UPHOLSTERY. GO. (X)ND. $425. w.-092. 4 Spd, AM7nUtadlo, Extra '68 VW. AM/FM. Excellerit ORANGE COUNTY Oean, CYGU3!is). c.ondlllon. Ori&. o w n • r. 1971 s~:~N $5495 MAKE Off ER Sl.0!8. 536-23.37 Beautlful Inside and out. l{a• COAST '70 VW SUnrf., lots of xtras. ooly 14,000 miles. Hu lact. Must sell. 645-0222 before 5 air, padded top le a host ot pm. fact, installed acce1. Ser. ·~~in:~· =·0t~ ·~i:.m~" IMPORTS Brand Now 1m HORNETS eruie, and all finance charges 'G9 MGB-GT. Xlnt cond. for 36 monthl cm approvl!d credit. The cash prlce ls 23,000 m\'1., am/fm radio. $3)34.45 including tax and Be1t oUe.r. 842-7321 after Ueense. Deferred payment I .:.:5.:.:' 30c..:.P.:.:M~. ----~ price 11 $2337.64 which in-1967 ~tGB RoadJttt, Top dudes all finance charges, mechanicaJ condition, Low sales tax and license. An· n1ileage. Mu5t 11ell. $1095... nue.1 percenta~e T&te It 9. 76. ,53_J.1=2L!~al~f~"-'""""pm_,. == dollan. $39.30 total monthly payment including Interest, tax I: license. 35 pay plus balloon payment of $800. Total deferred pay price $2,575.50, A.P .R, 11%. On pre·ammged credit. (300785). _..,._15_1_7 _ev_es_. ____ 11970 Harbor Blvd. l<XJO.l200 w. Pacillc Cst. Hwy. FREE 1970 VW Westphalia Can1per, Cott• Mesa Newport Beach (7l4) 66-0400 $2400. Good cond. Low --~--< 'mueage. --· YOUR ON LY 548-4529 MOVING-Must ... '63 vw FACTORY '71 Corvette fastback Now Available with AIR CONDITIONING ~W.lttN W TOYOTA D' Mo van. reb!t eng. ms. 1550 AUTHORIZED Orange Ave, Apt R, CM. CADILLAC *"' VW squareback 1966. $800. DEALER 1076 Pescador Dr, Newport Power Steering, P o w e r Brakes. Auto T r a n 1 , AM/F?tf, Low Mileage ~T NO EXTRA CHA_RGE . BILL BARRY '70 MGIJ.GT. while; AM/FM radio, dr\ving Iampg. lugg F IAT-PONTIAC0 GMC (111 St, at S.A. 1'l'wy.) 2000 E, 1st St., Santa Alla 558-1000 HIUMAN IULLMAN VAN • COMMER -1962 Equipped with shelves and overhead steel rack. Priced for QUICK SALE. 1212 South Ross St., Santa Ana 54Z-3120 JAGUAR JAGUAR 1968, .11.ir, auto, stereo, xlnt. $2995. Mr. Clarie, 714: 536-142L JAGUAR Sedan 3-4-0verhaul· ed enginf;. Good upholstery $995 or otter 548-4804, JAG '65 XKE Cpe., auto, pow<.'ied by Chev. $2250. After 6, (213) 596-5.Cl26. '10 XKE, xlnt, chrome wires, air, 8000 mJ, BR Green, AM/FM radio, $4600. 492-mG rack, radial tires & road wh~Js. 114: 644-49'n. ,64 MGB, Xhtt cond. $650. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 1000 MacArthur Blvd, oU •j o Toyota Hil ux Bristol, S.A. aft 3 pm. Pickup. 18,000 miles. Sharp! OPEL '70 OPEL 1900 RALLYE KADmE 4 Spd, Radio, Heater, 28,00J miles, Bronze with white interior t307BHL). $1495 COAST IMPORTS 1000.1200 \V. Pacific Cst. 1-fwy. Newport Beach (TI4) 642--0406 54<>-4529 '70 OPEL GT Immaculate car thruout. bkr, (0l6CQU) 11695. 644-2950 3:3().7:30 pm. TRIUMPH '65 Triumph Spitfire (MQA928l $645 COAST IMPORTS 1®1200 W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. Newport Beach (TI4) 642-0406 546-4529 MAZDA Compel!Uon Orange, Black *TRIUMPHS* '71 CLOSEOUT SPITFIRES AS LOW AS $2399 GT-' SAVE $500 FRITZ WARREN'S --------•I Bucket Seat. 4 spd dlr, Ex· ROTARY'S ccllent condlUon. Can n. nance private party CIND- 204.). Call 494-6811 aft 10 am. 546-8136. PORSCHE Sport Car Center ORANGE COUNTY"S LARGEST 710 E. l!t, S.A. 547-0764 TR6 '69, excel cond. 1965 Porsche, model 356 Best otter Cabrolet. For sale by orig. 673-6414 owner. Super cond. Red.-------- New top, 52.000 actual mi. '65 Triumph 1200 convt. Chro h'· .... k Clean eng. Gd. transp, car. me w ~.. l>AI rac , AM/FM, leather seats. A $375. 962-9689. '68 TRIUMPH GT-6 clauic! $3500. 644-1852. '66, Immac 911 PorPoC!w. Black w-blk int. AM·FM, 5 A real beauty. This fine car epd. Tape deck. $3100. must be seen to appreciate 494-8357 (WNS924) XI.NT. cond. 9ll-T Porsche, 1969. Fully equlpt. Must sacrifice. Best of I e r. 6~5850. '68 Porsche 912, am/Im, ex· This luxury motor car "5 like cellent condition. S 3 6 0 0 , new in all respects. It has 8J0.2'lS4. low low mileage. ILIB745) •. ~n~.:.:.:.:--~u--­T, gold m c, 5-Speed, and can be seen at air, mags, am/bn, 19 M $1499 COAST IMPORTS OVERNIGHT . TO TEST DRIVE BUY or LEASE 1972 VOLVO 2 DR. SEDAN 1000-1200 W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. mi. 494-4510, 213, 391-1'0il. Newport Boacb (n4) 642-0406 DEAN LEWIS 1968 PORSCl.JE, new tires, 5'6-4529 OL. ~ ~) ~~e::~fi<e! VOLKSWAGEN "~o ~so '66 PORSCHE, 912 '70 YW Camper $78 .. Immaculate, Bubble Top, DWN. ~ ~ 6'Q.59S4 * atter 6 PM ' '63 Portche, conv, Reblt eng. Ready to go, 100% financing Best offer over $1500. Dr. avail O.A.C. 897-0224 445 E. Coast Hwy, Cusldy, 548-9319. . :nix~~~ RENAULT 4 ,;.!~ r'f!!. b!~~ 1995 (Open Sunday) Renault Demo Sale or best offer 6444687. MBZ '71 280 SE Semi Annual '69 VW conve". AM/FM. Xlnt cond. Original owner. Ask $1350 or best otter. 541>-2622. All exlras Incl. air (#6160) $6650 or lease Southern Calttornia Demonst rator Clearance Sale Th is Weekend Unbeatable Prices ALL 19n MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMED IATE DELIVERY INSTANT CRED IT '61 V\V. Reblt molor. New tires. Gd body. Needs int '\'Ork. $475 « best ·ofif!r. 179aa DoWll 11 Totol Dowa PqlMnt sa676 11 Toto! Mo1tthf, l'aymHt Beach, 642-3543 Largest ael~tion of Cadll· lact_ in Oranct County. '68 VW Bus, 7 pass, xlnt Sales-Leuing. cond. Very clean. Family owned. $1525. 49!-0039 ~ Nabers • ·n vw eamoer. x1n1 con-U Cadillac dition! New tires S3195. Call 2600 HARBOR BL., 673-1358 COSTA MESA '69 VW Bus. Like new. New ~9100 Open Sunday $4988 COAST IMPORTS engine. New tires. Koni '68 Sed DeVllle. Low mi. 1~1200 W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. shocks. $2000. 642-5476. Turq w/vlnyl top. New Newport Beach (714) 642-0400 -.~.-m-vw~-w-1-·10-,..,..-. -.-1 tires. Pvt ply. Be'low book. 546-4529 Perfect concl. $2695. Fin avail. 673-1499 alt COUGAR 847-1906 after 6 pm 5 pm. '61 vw Body. Damaged right WELL cared for '64 navy lront. For parts. Make of· blue Fleetwood, $ 7 0 0 • fer, 544-3417. 6T>5930. '69 Cougar XR-7 VW ENGINE '67 Cad. full pwr., air, 40 H.P. $150. 646-25.!7 low mi. Needs body work. Immaculate, V-8, Auto Trans, P.S., P. Disc Brakes, Air Cond, Vmyl Top, 100% Fin Avail 0.A.C. 89l-0224. '60 VW Bus, $500. 548-'82'1 VOLVO 1972 VOLVO Lease Today at Bost Rat11 $88.74 Por Mo. O.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. trans., disc brakes. 36 mo. For Lo11lng or bvyl"I $1200. 548-9874. CAMARO NEAL MOTORS BONDED DEALER Will buy your Camara ~ For cash today . No waiting. 2100 Harbol' BIYd Cosla Mesn 64$·7161 DODGE '71 Dodcje Charger 500 Immaculate, V-8, Auto Trans, P.S., P. Disc Brakes, Air Cond, Vinyl Top, 100% Fin Avail. O.A.C. 897-0224. '67 Dodge Sportsman VS CHEVROLET Automatic. Radio, healor, good tJres. Engine '66 Chevy II fire-""'"• work 16 5 o. 2 Dr. automatic trans, radio, _= __ 1215~aft=-5:.:.· ___ _ healor, TPA906, This h the FIREBIRD Specially eqWpt can now : available in 2 Dr, 4 Or, and sportabout Wagon modela IMMEDIATE DELIVERY · WardS.Lee . . Amlrlcm!Malarl" 547..5826 1234 So. Main St. Sanla Ana IMPERIAL '70 Imperial Le Baron Immaculate Condition, Sacrl· tlce, Must Sell, dlr. 897-02'l4. MAVERICK '70 MAVERICK .,.. Stick, Radio, Heater, Nice Ono $1495 COAST IMPORTS ·:o l . -~oL:f' popular model to find, and =_,,...,.,._,_ __ __ it's priced right al on1y '69 Firebird S50. 1 owner. Tilt , 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '70 Volvo 164 AM/FM radio, air mndition- lng, automatic trans, like new. 743BQJ. $2695 CADILLAC "BIU. WlllTUDGES" SUNSET MOTORS ORANGE COUNTY WCATION 1970 El Dorado $5195 Local low mileage car load· ed with acces. including fact. air, ·wt &: tele wheeJ, AM & FM stereo radio, leather In- terior & it's priced lo sell Lie. 768AEA Phone 64S-66n 1970 Harbor Blvd. Cost• Mesa '65 Cad Calais 4 Dr. sedan. Completely luxury equlpped, Including full power &: factory air. MMH912. $795 ANDERSON ··.IMPORTS " 5572122 $595 whl, radial ""'· elec win· 1000.1200 W, Padfle Cat. Hwy. dows. Vioyl top. $1850 fjnn. Newport Beach (71C) .60-0t05 Pvt pty. eves only, 833-1870 546-4529 ANDERSON I ~ IMPORTS ' · · \_, ) . . 5572132 . '70 NOVA S.S. Coupe, 350 V8. Vinyl top, rown w/beige vinyl bucket Automatic (Door shift) le, factory cuages, Power dise brks, e1Cterlo'r chrome. TOP SHAPE! $1950. Must Sell! Will go quick. Ca11 5.11-1718. 1970 Chev. Concoun Eitate, 8 Pas!. Sta. Wgn. Pwr. SteE.'rlng &. brakes, AM-FM Stem> radio, tilt steer. whl. Factory Air, luggage rack, new tires & brakes. Panel- ing. Asking $3100. 557-4861. '68 Impala Custom FORD '69 Ford Bronco 4 wheel drive, automatic trans, snow tltts, YY Al&I. Can be seen at 445 E. c...t Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH m-0900 Ext. 53-54 (Open Sunday) aJUPE, Factory Air, (VZU-'69 WAGON 549) ;1495, dlr, ~ LTD Country Squire. Full 1970 Chev. Monte Carlo, Afr.. pwr. One owner. ~nuine Auto-PIS. P/Disc B. P . 2f,500 mi. $2,350. 842-'1388. Win\k>w•, vinyl top. 24,000 '70 LTD ml. Best oiler. 557-65:26 aft 1 Immaculate, V-8 Auto Trans PM · ' ·' · P.S., P Disc Brakes, All' '70 Townsman Wagon eond, vmyl Top, loo% ru AvaJl 0.A.C. 897-0224. VS, Automatic, Power Sleet· ing, (403BHL) 11995, dlr. 8.'J6.6535, '71 Chevy Impala 1963 WAGON V-8, auto, ·air cond, R-1-I, Jl.5(1, Finn, 54.1·3691. If not home, call back. '69 FORD Gal. 500, 2 dr cpe, MERCURY LA TE 1970 Cougar. Private party. Full powe-Ir: atr. At low Blue Book. 494--0122. ' '68 Mercury 4 dr. hrdtp.: Under warm. Nu Urea. Call 968--0174. MUSTANG ' NEAL MOTORS r BONDED DEALER I Will buy your Mmlang • For cash today • No waiting, 2100 tt.rbol' B!vd Costa M"8 645 7161 '65 MUSTANG-289, Reblt eng, nrw paint. $600 or best oiler. 645-1369. OLDSMOBILE '69 OLDS 98 Power Windows, Po w e Steering. Power Brakes; Factory Air Cond, ~ Seat.I, Like New (YlT424). $1995 COAST IMPORTS (194CXV) Full Power, dlr, Air Cond, Low miles, Call 546-8736 alt 10 am 494-6811. v~. PIS, R&H, mu.st adl, 1000.13XI w. Paclftc est. Hwy. $925. or e>Uer 646-1656 or Newport Beach Q'l.4) 64.2-0«)6 66-8939. 548-4529 1st National Bank Leasing APPROVAL BANK FINANCING 545-3466. Cash price Is $3SSO. plus LEAVING Country ! Must tax & license. Deferred &'II! '64 VW Camper w/'69 payment Includes bail· eng. & interior $ll50. CalJ loon o f $1425 plus 35 p•y· Mike 548-7533. ments of $86.76. Total V\V Baja Bug. 16<XI eng. New deferred $4539.60. ~ paint & tires. H.igh bnck nual P erce nta ge Rate -=~====~ 1969 Chevy %T Camper Special ,...,_ Westbay self cont camper. Low mi, Ex· tras. 536-2121. '64 FORD Van Econoline, good cond. Many xtras. PLYMOUTH $1150. 646-4938 d a YI, --------seats. l\tany Ex Ir as , 2022 Business Center Drive Irvine, Calif. 92664 TI4/833-8620 213/627-0367 COAST IMPORTS 548-1853. '66 VW Convert . Low miles. l l .00°/o. Xlnl's mechanical cond. 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY NOW Lease New Mlrc9des $11 1.71 Monthly HOUSE OF IMPORTS 6862 Mancbester, Buena Pk S2l-'ll50 .. Santa Ana Flwy. 1971 MERCEDES 230 SE, fully l!Quipped, AM/Ff\f stereo, $681Xl. 498-3435 eves, f2131 435-5667 days. '67 250 S SEDAN. 4 SPEED. RADIALS Owner. $2995. 644-4325 MG New brakes. $800 or trade for larger car. 892-2624. l.IXX).1200 W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. 1970 Y\V BUS. Re bui lt Newport Beach (n4l 642-0406 engine, Michelin tires. Renault S1le1 & Service * 536-24S6 * for over a decade tn Orange ** '66 and/or '67 VW, $650 County & $7".>0. Both in excellent .SUV. Dept. Open W 8 p.m.1 ""co~n .... d_. 6'16-.:.:.:.:c..94...,95::.. ---- Monday '63 V\V bug. reblt eng., Jim Siemens Renault chrome whls.. Dare fndrs., 2Xll So. Maln, Santa Ana xtras. $450. 548-UJ5. 1 blk. north ot Warner Service Department 5'6-41l4 * DESPERATE! * Sales Department 557-5242 '69 VW, auto. $950. * SUBARU * As Low ll $1599 FRITZ WARREN'S Sport Car C enter •ORANGE COUNTY'S aft 6 pm * 673-34fi8 * '68 Squareback, new paint, engine. Xtra clean. $1Zl5. 645-45Z> or ~121L '66 V\V Bug, reblt erg .. new brakes & tires. $ 7 5 O . 64&-7'06; "61-5441. ·' :• : .. LARGEST ~'13 no E. 1Jt St., S.A. 5«7~ eMUST SDA.. Navy blue '61 MGB ........ $12'5. -TOYOTA -1969640-1 .. vw9. an 6Cloet30 11r-c .. 1-1 (465BQZ) ~ ; pm '63 Midget •... , ... $695 ~ tit • '62 VW van. New •nir. trana. IOJ'l7IO)ll "'~~\$ ~ or make otter. •W•• "62 VW. N-work. ,..~ .... Jquar ow.. 1100. Aulloorlad Sal" A sm-tce Call 536-l850 800 S. Cbalt lltahway '10 VW Fastback. Beig<. l.quno Beach 540-3100 X1nt cond. f!600. '11 MARK II Wagon. $2,1195 Must .... 54H336 Auto. t:rana, 10,000 ml, '615 VW Foti.ck. AMJFK, air. RIC k . Xlnt Cond. IU 11M. 64»113 or 5Jt-1Si9 • Y.ry AttractlY• Leasing Plan Example . 1972 VOLVO 88 .74 ~: AM ,,,1,, 4jn 'i ·,·-t1 •~· •• t-91'11 J6 "'' • Lil oua un,rs HANOLi YOUI OYIUIAS O!LIYllY l!DUC! THI WOIRY • Dean Lewis Volvo 646-9308 ORANGE aJUNTY LOCATION ~ eves. '65 Ply m o u t h Belvedere. "12 ,Chevy Vega. 12,IXX> ml. ==~:=::,-7=:--=---:--.,--Meehan. 80Und. Big Tires, Auto. Radkt, heater. Xlnt 1961 GALAXIE. 2 dr. hard mags, &Jass packs. 837-3164 lhapel 6'13-'1!51. top. Nee& work, first $125 PONTIAC t.akes. Pbooe 496-G365. 1961 Cad Cpe Dov. $2295 Loaded with a~s. including fact. air, tilt &: tele wheel, padded top, cruise control & etc. Lie. WFU783. ·~ Chevy Van, new brakes, new tires, good condition. illO) or best ofler 545-6704 MlJST sell '57 Chevy. 283 ong./good cond. 1255. Ph. JEEPS '68 Flreb!M 400, air cond .. autom, vinyl top. Xlnt Cond. '72 JEEP 1 ownor. WW ,.n fDr f!850. · Phona 64S-66n 1970 Harbor Blvd. Cost• Mesa '69 ELDORADO FACTORY Air, full power (~P) 13596. Dealer. 836-6535. 646-6094 '66 Chev. "Caprlce" radial tires. Sett to appreciate. f!OOO. 544-3417 "64 CHEVY V-1 Auto $475. Call 548--455.1 CHRYSLER 4 Wheel Drive, V·8, Power r-'~94-_TS,,..18=. ~==='-=·I Steering, Radials, Conv ToQ, '61 PONT BONNEVU.LE. off the road tire• (only Gd cond. SJOO. 3700 mllosl (566EllW) 13595. Aft 5:30, 846-11139 dlr. 8$6535. i ---'~v"OE,.,,G""A-"''-'-1 '69 Ford Bronco, 4WD, air <'ooo .. many oxtru. '71 vrPI p111n $19TS. 835-lalCI dya. ll.1111 M GREMUN '70 CAD S de V, full p)Wer, '64 OIRYSLER New Yorker. stereo tape, xlnt cond, 1 Air, many xtru-Xlnt cond. • owner. (n4) M&-T.169 or HM .e .. ., r-,a (%13) 592-5353. .,;~=·-~.:.:...,=··~--- Brand New 1'72 GREMLINS • Spd, Air Collditlonlnr. - WMe11, Luaaae Rack. 20,000 rnlln, (72964.J). $1995 '70 NY, 2 dr, HT, &lr, atere<I, "BILL WH~ ·~ES" .. ~ lull ""' • elec. Pr! p\y. SUNSET MOTORS 131~. 547·5651 "'' 261· ORANGE aJUNTY CONTINENTAL LOCATION '61 Lincoln ConUnent.l. 2 dr 1N7 El Dorado $2295 HT, new ttrea. AM/FM Full leather interior, tilt 6. 11ereo, air, xlnt oond. Sett tele-WbeeJ.,.lacL ab:,-crulae ollor. Ev ... 644-1241. control A •tc. Lie. TZX6ll4. ..::=-=::Co-=.;n.:.tlnen=tal"--- PhoM MM6n Excel conc1. Prl/pf.Y 1970 HarbOr llYd. -~.;:-o..:mcr::::..,~- Costa Mesa CORVAIR 1'811 c.dllJae Cool>" de vw •. --------Leather IN.fa, ttereo, all 1!164 CORVAIR eittu. low m 11 ea I e . Good Condition. S2l\ 5"crtfi(t. M'uat 1 e 11. * 846-t1S'l * -. CORWEii! '6' Cod s.dan de VW., !19,000 ______ _,,_ ml. Orff, own. Xlnt cond. * 'Cll aJRVE'n'E AM/FM s-U U 5 • Gooo lo lolt-ou.r. MM'nlL Ne<d Jo..-ear, 541.- COAST IMPORTS 1000.D» W. Paclllo Ctt.11'117 Newport B<acb cn4) 54B-4529 over 25 G""'""" Jn llOclc CASH .u mode)I.. co1on1 •vail· QUICK able tot IMEIATE DELIVERY TH OUGH A Ward S.Lee DAI LY PILO W NT AD 142-5171 ~ .... ,.. 547-5126 11118".-a. --• 17 • • v I d u ci • l •• $1 bu Ii h de cl! st el; pl th bu gi th he h ha bu m on pa de be th of 11 -• · ·Sail f;lemente • .. Today's Final Capistrano EDIT ION N.Y. Stoeks ... VO[. 65, NO. 202, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,' CALIFORNIA TH URSDAY, JUlY 20, '19n TEN CENTS Thorny .Clemente Building Decision Delaye d San Clemente's most thorny develop. ment issue -access · to a major project overlooking the Western Wbl~e House - sparked more long debate Wednesday night, but no solutions. Councilmen, after . a hard-fought S-Z vote, agreed to postpone a decW.oo for at least two weeks on an improvement district approval for an already accepted routing for a major access road. But several councilmen believe that using Avenlda San Pablo, u agreed upoo by the councU last year, would be a poor ctx>lce. Wednesday's postponement came amid charges from developer John Douglass Jr. that the city has had exacUy a year to make sure it preferred San Pablo as the major acceu. He said strongly that further delays in approving the asses&- ment district paying for the road to bis tract would prove an unreasonable hardship on his firm's efforts to develop the iilllmd acreage near the city of cwrse. But Mayor Arthur Holmes, 1 San Pablo resident who launched the latest round of study and debate on the access hassle, said he helleves that there might be bet· ter r.ltematlves. In lhe two-week delay period, the city stall will do yet another !ea.slbillty study on alternate routes, u:aminlng Avenida Cornelio and A venkla Ramona as posst. ble alternates. • One other aspec~ which might yield some fight during the two weeks will be a trip to Sacramento by several city • representatives who will check on the state's plaMing and estimated com. pletioo times fot a roadway now used by the Marine Corps wh.ich parallels the clly limits. That road , which will be a main access to public stretches of San Mateo Canyon, might be converted wilhln a year or so, councilme~ agreed, and could provide a major solution to the Douglass tract proir lems. Autos using that roadway would • not clog residential streets. Councilmen Tom O'Keefe and Dr. Wade Lower opposed any delay In council actlon. O'Keefe, an attorney, rtpeated.Jy In· &isled that the city's motions of l•st July offering the. San Pablo access constituted a blndlng contract. ''Now the city is being asked by the developer to uphold its part of the con- tract and it should do so,'' he ad$1ed. Douglass told councilmen that tiny further delays in adopling the boundaries of the assessment distri ct \vould cost his en1es ' City Yard Facilities •stop Divor~e~ Girl, 10, Sends Letre r to .Judge · Discu ssed By JOHN VALTERZ! Of rlle DalfJ .......... Schematic drawings for proposed new city yard facilities near San Clemente's "'aste treatment plant figured in a lengthy debate Wednesday over amrted high costJ. Councilman '.lbomu O'Keefe Insisted that the projected $U-HqUatt-loot cost of the yard project as proposed by arclli· tect Leon .Hyzen made · the project a .. monument." Hyun, wbo wu blre4 al ..o,. flO cl $16,000 11< months ago, disagreed. VISALIA (AP) - A JO.year-old girl has pleaded in a Jetter to a judge that her parents be refused a divorce. The child, who was not identified, wrote: "Honorable Sir, My mom and dad is getting a divorce ••• please don't let them get a divorce. My momma loves my dad; U )'OU could put i\im In the hospital he could quit drinking. "I°Ve beard my mom say to my dad many times, 'Please slow down on your clinking,• but he just walks out the door. "Sir, you are a judge and this is your job, to divorce people. ''Only where do ones go that still love the husbands? And how do you divorce a IO.year-old? can you cut out my heart and stop 11 from burtlng?" · 'rbe Jirl pleaded, "l'luoe, pleaae, DaupU'lo . Stain please help a 10.year-old keep a moin and dad. I know il mom !eyed. you prob- ably wouldn 't listen • , , ''God blw: you and let God be on this. , day the judge beside )'OU." Superior Court Judge Jay Ball~lyQe said Wednesday he sept copies of the IJt:. ter to the attorneys representing the gi~'s parents and replied to her, "I m we.II aware of the tragedy which is olved every time parents separ ere small children are involved ••• I can assure you that if ellher of your parents petition the court for an attempted reeonclllatlOn I will do all I can to help resolve their differences." Under state ~w granting divpr~ wtiere irnconclla~lj! ,di!feren~s exist lhal II all 11e·can iii: .' . O'K~ele argued during Wedneadiy'I council meeting that pro_.i plans !or · two large buildings and a series of five or more "carport" ltiuetures wuWd run the costs unusually high -~,000. Father Vows Lifetime Instead, the councilman Insisted, the architect could design one or two large buildings and incorporate all the fuoo- tlons or the city yards under one roof. Search for Murderer That, he said, would cut the costa In ball. other councUmen listened to the debate between th• arcbltect and coun- cilman, but reserved judgment. "Being 10mewhat familiar with con.. slructlon of this type, I believe the pioj. .Ot should be dooe for half the costs you expect," O'Keere said. Hyzen argued, however, that the city planned to build the project In stages, thus, erecting one tilt·up concrete building !or all the !unctions would cost mort than the city is ready to spend at present. "I personally think we don't need to build any more monuments in this city," 0 1Keefe replied. "I don't think what I have here con· stitutes a monument at all," Hyr.en said. The architect Insisted that h I 1 schematic drawings reflect instructions givtn hlm during long conferencea ·with the city stall, including deportment beads using city yard facilities. "Well,'' O'Keefe replied, "I thought we hired you to tell them how t.. do It, not to have them tell you how to dealgn a building." . Whatever Is decided u the replace- ment to the existing city yard complex on Avenlda Miramar, councilmen 1p- parenUy will have more time to debatl design features. · nie new yard complu Is expected to be built with proceeds from the aale of 1lle old )'In! property. And so far1 there are no buyers. SAN FANCISCO (UPI) -Someone picked up a hammer Mary Jane Kravltt used ln her leatlierwork and cruSbed ber skull with it. Police rushed her to a hospital but there she died from the wounds Jan. 24. The killer escaped, not to be found. But the 21.year-old girl 's father would not let it go at that, he would not let the killing become 0 jll!l another statistical unsolved murder." Samuel Kravltt uld Wednesday that as tong as he lives, the person who bludgeoned his daughter and left her to die in a San Francisco apartment would be hunted and haunted. Kravltt, a New Haven, CoM. television photographer, returned from a worldwide trip where he vi.sited police headquarters in major and minor countries With a compasite sketch of the suspected killer. "Perhaps.it was a futile tlµng to do," he said. "But perhaps it will keep this guy on the run. Perhaps, eventually, he'll j\l31 break and give up." Police made the sketch from witnesses' descriptions of a young, long·baired male who entered Miss Kravitt'1 apart· ment the evening before her body was found. -• Homicide Inspector Al Podest.I, said · Caught the person sought wu 11.lJ: feet tall, about 25 years old and "IODleone she knew." Her father said the killer "must llve with something worse than deaUt." "How can be escape the thought, the memory of that brutal bludgeoning and leaving her to die?" he a1ked. Kravitt said bis world bunt for the killer took him to places where rootless young AmericaM often congregate - Sydney, London, Rome, Hong Kong, New Delhi, Grenada. "! aaw the police In all the!• places, asking them to be on the lookout for the man on the chance be had joined one of these colonies. They were aympathetic, all very nice," Kravltt said. Pollce said a man was admitted to the heautilul dark-haired Miss Kravltl'• apartment early the morning of jlln. 21 and wllnesse.s heard the pair talking. About two hours later, the horrified oc- cupant ol a lower apartment found blood dripping on bis kitchen Door from the celling. When police arrived· and broke into Miss Kravltt's room, they found the · woman dying. Kravitt .said he often stares at the drawlng of the suSpect and repeats the quotation, "If I had created man I'd be a.hanted to ·call myseU God. " • ID A~i Guard Tryouts Will Be S~day Surprised Intruders 'Take Walk' ' Two driften from the Florid.• area thought they bad an easy meal waiting for them after enterJnc 1n apartment In San Clemente with nobody borne. Tryout& for the second --Ion But they never n~·""' they 'llOllld •I the San Clernenla Junior Ll!.eguard "L-•-•• L•-Prosram will be held Sunday at the city meet !h' .,... ol Jerey Asher and ,... pool !or South Coast area y<>unpten. (long pistol. Younplert betpeen the ageo of 10 and Police told the atnry Ibis way: ti ytars old are welcome to eruoll In the 'l1le pair began raiding Asher's aammer program which wtll rua lrom . . July 31 to Aug. 30, mrlgerator, appanmlly caring htlle A wide range of recrtau..al awJm-about the mess their dinner wu making. min( and l«lal acllvltles wtll be oa..d Aahu, a d<puty lberi!f from Alpine during the_..,. u wel! u lollNctlm <Jaunty and ntlftd Marine Corps officer. In flrlHld and mcue swimm&ic. -·~..., !he pair In his apartment and Speclllc la!wmatlon on= II _,.._ available bJ caUU. the San In bis hand be carried a auperlong-bar- a.meoi. LUtpard Deporimosll ... ...Jed molftr. l!IO. .., Tbal -tho dlllDer abruptly, but • \_ Asher wasn't satisfied, He ordered the Intruders outside and made them wait in front of the apart· mcnt In the 400-block of Avenlda Vic- toria. Asher hopped In bis car then made the two lrteloaden march up to police head- quarters. The weapon.was still Ylllble. Alter the mile-long, uphill trek, the pair walked Into police headquarters with Alber close behind. Aller a ooolerence With the ruldenl, police qrted that the scare and the loog will at gunpoint was justice •nou&h· The two were released all<r 1pondlng a few hours ln custody. Asher had agrted DOI to press cbar&eo. ... DAILY '!LOT lffltf ....... P u ppets Draw Fans Mrs. Joan Burl presents a puppet show !or kids· every Wednesday afternoon on the Community Clubhouse lawn. The free show~, be- ginning at 1:30 p.m., are sponsored by the San Clemente branch Ji. brary. What a break from reading. Ca po Trustee s Give Okay To 'Changeable' Budget A publication budget sbow~g a cut In the tax rate of 19 cents and $11.4 million in expenses for the Capistrano · Unified School District won approVal by school trustee! Wednesday. The docwnent, still changeable in com• Marine Killed In Ca r Aceident Camp Pendleton Marine Pvt. Michael A. Hawkins, 17, was killed In the crash o[ a car driven by Pie. Ted S. Matthews, 16, a Marine spokea:man said Wednesday. The accident occurred shortly before midnight Tuesday In the central part of the baoe, the spokesman added. The car struck an embankment and rolled several times, investigators said. Hawkins is 1urvlved by bis widow, Sue AM or San Diego. Matlhewt was • rel!Ofled In a utis!actory condition We<lnetday wllh • cut tcalp and J>OIS]ble Internal lnjurlel. Matthews' borne b In Sunland. • Ing weeks, Includes ·•bout lll00,000 worth of the It.~ million In additional laxes which will come td the district because of increases in assessed valuation. Trustees, faced with a state deadline to approve the budget document, agreed that nothing ls certain in the di.strict 's finances for this new fiscal year until public hearings and final budget approval Aug. 1. ll trustees follow their move to cut the district tax rate by 19 ·cenls the dl1trtct'1 jax rate will drop [rom about $4.82 to $4.43 per $100 assessed valuation . The public bearing al the Aug. I meeting will.begin at 7:311 p.m. • Library Has 'Votes' San Clemente's branch library this week began a new service to patrons - voter regJatratlon. During ...,gu1ar library boon, 1ald Llbrt1rlan Phyllb Rauch, citizens can he reglllered lo wte by rnemben of the "'gular Ila!! who bavo offictaJ\y been designated reglstran. firm money in high-rate Interest on Joans needed to be secured for the de\'elo~ ment . As 1he rules stale, the first tract of Douglass' 250-unit co ndo1nioium project (66 units are ln lhat fi rst phase) would be served by an extension or Avenida . ?tlagdalena acrou the city golf course. Any new tracts in the ·~residential , ifeights" development would have to wait un1il a major access route were developed. ' Arbitration In Strikes 'Set Asid e' From Wire Services WASHINGTON -'The White Rouse acknowledged today it agreed to consult further with organized labor -a seg· ment with which President Nixon hope1 to make major progress In November - before pursuing long-pending legislation aimed at avoldln& crippling national strikes. '_ One labor orpnlution thit bu strong. lyo~~~i"b;~;•n fiMm• ol tlll ti. 'ilildi a,plJ =-=-~~~~ dorsed NIJon for re-electJon oo. Mooday. Exp18lnlnl why a declf'¥.' !>Id been made to aet '"" m...W,,...,1ae, although ,_ . ' Nlxon bad called for It reptatedly and on occasion denounced Congress for fallure to pass Jt, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler aald. "It has no chance of passing this year." He said the Administration, accepttn1 that reallly, felt It a!lorded a good op. portunity lo review the bill and to .. consult with representatives of. organlz· ~ labor more fully.'' The 1pOkesman said some Adm.inlatraUon officials felt there were troubtlng provisions In the blll. Asked il the Administration had made a deal to temper Ill paaltlon in return for a Teanmer •ndorseJJ\en~ Zlegl<r uld, 1'lbere was no deaJ.'' . Asked II the Admi.nbtratioo'a change of heart could be looked upon as a reward to the Teamsters, he said, "I would not so characterize It." Ziegler conceded 11tllere has oevtt been much enthusiasm" for the legi.s(a.. lion in Congress. It has been pending more than two years. 'Mte bill would have established a new procedure in major transportation industry labor disputes. Both sides would have been required to 11ubmit thelr final offer to 1n impartial panel which would select one or the other as a compulsory aettlement, , Ziegler'• views confilcted with an asses.sment by Sen. Robert Packwood (R- Ore.), congressional aponsor of the Administration bill. He bu said he belleves be hH the votes to push through the Senate tbe blll to bead oil strikes In trucking, ralm>ad and airline lndwitrles. ..... ,. Weadter Don't let those low clouds and lo- cal drlnle loot you. lt'U atill be aunny today alter the ~I mid- morning clearing and l<mperaturea of a.round 7$ will prevail over the county. Lows tonight 61).1115. INSW E TODAY Fune ral for Lion Country Sa- fari'• famed Frosftr IJlGrkl an Irate op In Ion from DAILY PTLOT scribe Bill Schreiber. See .storu on Paae 11. ' ' " -! DAILY .PILOT SC Two More ones' Group Held BOSTON (1JPI) -Two mor• members or the Rolling Stone~s eatourage have been arretr.,d and re1'1ased on bail .ramet p/Q!llle, is, Identified bY police as the rock group'• cbaufleur, and -Rita Redmond, 23, bis girlrfiend, were ar· rested Wednesday afternOon f o t posaesllm .of nartotlCI. Both of Denver, Colo. tfiOy Wtre l"t?l•ased in $5,000 bail each. Th< prevlo\JI night In Warwick, R.I., whe~ the Stones' plane was forced to land because Botston was fogged in, lead 1Inte1 MlcK Jagger snd four olhera were arrested afiet an argument with news ,pholompbet 4'bd1. Dickerman. Bosl'on Mayol Kevin H. White in- tervened 'wi!Ji W'arwlck offlcJals to get the Sl<lnel releeOed oo ball so they oould appear for their first concert. ' Bouse Charges Denied • College Cout~tton B.egi ..... ~ ' ~-For. ·Bond Issue Orange County's four commW'lity col- lege districts wlil receive a j23.a million "cUt" if vote.rs apPtove a $160 million construetloli bond Jssue thii November. To IJISU!e Wffi!SMUI pawge of the statewide measure, a day-long strategy meeting w~ held al Orange Coast COlleie' W~dn..Oay,,lndua1rlaU.t Arnold Bee~ of Corona del Mar was in· stalled DI cbairpuui ol a Stalewlae cam- paign committee. to a higher degree than other school systems and this should help put the measure over the top. O'Brien Gets Campaign Job For McGovetn Qr. Sidl\ey B.rossmsn, clµmcellor of the Calllomta Commlll!llY .Ci>lleges, •aid jhe bond issue wotila provide funds or classropms frid .other teaching faciliiie9 WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic IQ< 80,00!l addilional students the s!ate's 94 commwiity colleges expect to enroll presidential nominee George s • dut;ing tbe ~exl .three. fears. l.icGovern today named f o r IQ, e r The a1locaflons, also to be paid out Democratic NaflonaJ C h a l r m a n over a three-year period, are as follows : Lawrence F. O'Brien to be his national Coast Community College District, $8. IS campaign chairman, a post in addition to The Stones held the concert early Wedne5day morning -four hours later than p!anbed -and held their second w~ayrught. Sellout crowds attended b 0 t h .performances a\ lhe Boston Garden and police said the rans remained reJaUvely orderly a1hh about 50 arrests were made oo VIU'IOµs chatges, mostly in- volving disorderly conduct. Flartked by attorneys and· with guards facing all di- rections, New England crime figure Raymond Pa- triarca, in dark suit with back to camera told a House crime committee he bad no investDtents in Berkshire Downs racetrack and claimed he has never met singer Frank Sinatra who once served as vice-president of the now defunct operation. million; Santiago Community College McGovern's existing campaign structure. District, $1.44 million; North Orange O'Brien will be given a role concerned County Community College District, $8.46 with unifying the support of Democratl rQ.illion, and Saddleback community ·and other ''concerned Amer~cans." College D~trict, $5.72 million. McGovern said O'Brien will be hiJ na- The Providence Journal Bulletin Co. said ·Wednesday it would file a civil damage suit against Jagger and Keith Richard -anOtber performlllg member of the BtOhQ: -as a tesult of the Tues- day nlabt Incident tnvolvlllg Dickerman, a Journal employe. Death Penalty Not Dead, • Dickerman said the Stones assaulted him while be was talUng their pictures at 'l'heodore Gf'Mn All'port Ill Warwick. Says County Deputy DA Jagger and JllarshaU Chess, a reoold producer, were charged with obstructing police. Richard and Stanley Moore, who police saltt was a Stones' bodyguard, were ch8r8fd with assaulting Dickerman, Robert Frank, also Identified as a bodyguard, was charged with assaulting a policeman .. Frank was released Iii 1100 bail, the othel'll Iii !!(I ~all eacb, for an Aug. 23 beartng in Warwick District Court. The 06t appear/Ince for the Stones Is In Phl!ail<!l~hla and tbelr t011r endS later tbl.! ~h. . Police in Philadelphia ·took precautions to prevent violence when the Stones ar-ri~e lonli!)i! for ihe first of three sell .. qt ooncefls it ihe SpeC!rum. Pollce Commissioner Joseph F. O'NeUI ordered re1illi.r and mounted JKlliCe to patrol the ~rimeter of the Spectrum to ml!ke certaln , Iha! only persons holding UckeU ai:e petrillt ed near entiances. O'Neill ~ppealed lo other fans who do not bitve tldlels ·to slay away from all tbra perfOMnanoes. ,He said . cl9sed;clrcuit televisloq has been installed to canlrol the .,peeled cri>'ltds of 17,300 P.{lrsons at each pel'lotmance -one torught and two Fri- day. Arson Strikes Building Where Oswald Took Aim DALLAS (UP!) -Arsontsls todny spread gallonS of gasoline acro!ls five floorl of tlie Tex&• School Book Dej>Osltory Building, where Lee Harvey Oswald fired the shots that killed Presi- dent Jbhn F. Kennedy, and set the 63- ye&M>ld btlck structure on fire. the fire wa; confined to third, fourth and fifth Ooors of the bolldlng and was extinguished in 24 trlinutes after It was reported. "lt waJ dellnitely arson," assistant Fire Chief L. R. McCowan said. "We found gaabline cans on every· noot and the mnell of g3"'1lne was all tbh>ugh the building ... Damages were estimated at $5,000. But thfre wert no injuries and McCowan said it was thought no one was in the buildlng Bl the time. o-.H•I COAST DAILY PILOT Tht Drl"'6 bMt tlAILT PILOT, 111111\ 1101lell It tornblnH I,.. Ntw1·1"rtu , Is 11Ubllt11• -~ flle Or111111 COllf 1"11bli1h!119 Com~ny, Se11¥- r1t1 "JtionJ 1r1 Plibllilled, Mond•Y 1llro110l'I Ftld•r. tor Cotll Met•. Ntwpori lt1tll, H~ntton et6(11/Ftunt1111 \'1111r. L1g1111.1 IH<tlo ll"l'in.IS«tllltbKk "1Jll •S1n Ci.tTltnlt/ $1,. J111ft Ctpi9'rlno. A 11111111 rtt1i0111I «llllen ii J111bll111M S.lvrCll't'I tnd SUl'ldlVJ. TM ,,lnt!Jtl Mllthlnt pi.nt It 11 ~-Wtt! lq &tr.et. (Mii Mtw, Ollk>rnr1, f1'l4. Aob1rt N. W11d "'"16tnt 1nd P..,1111111er The death penally Is not dead. That's what Rlchatd Beacoin, dep(Jty Orange County district attorney, who wants to be a judge, told members of the Huntington-Valley Young Rel>ubllcans Wednesday night. "Only two U.S. Supreme Courl justices said fl'at , out the death penalty violates the Eighth Amendment of the Constitu· tion," Beacotn explained. "-The other three mefely ruled it invalid as to the . cases before them." , Beacom said the elrec( of the U .s. declskln was to leave 1:1. state or confusltln over the death penalty in mosl states. "What most of the i·usices were really saying was that the s ate would have to legislate the death penalty. That lhe states would have to better define capital critnes." Beacom, who bends the district at- torney's o!flce in West Orange County, said the California Supreme Court ruling on the deaUt penalty would wipe it off the bookJ. for; tiff state, but the death penalty inltlaUve could reinstate it. "U the people vote for the death penalty, then the state Legislature has three choices. It can leave the penalty as it was, and battle e'ach ~ase up to the Supreme Collrt. It can abOlisb the death penalty by JegJslatlve actlor.. Or, it can modify and <Jenne more spet!tlcally when the deafb penalty should be ap- plied." Beacom said a case-by.case battle with the U.S. Supreme Court would be foolish and tmpraclical. "I l>elieve in capital plinlshment. I don't believe this society has evolved to a point where it is no longer acceptable or needed," he said. Instead Beacom suggested that the state Legislature should write new death penalty rules, making It explicit when the penalty should be applied, rather than ~eaying it to the discretion of judges or JUrlt8. Beacom. who is seeking a judgeship In the West Orange County Judicial District in the November election, criticized the U.~. and state Supreme Court judges for leg1sla ting rather than judging. "The effect ot their d e c l s I o n s {abolishing the death penalty) was to legislate what the law ought to be not what it is," he said. ' "!'m more offended by the way i;apital punishment was done in, than by Jts elimination. If the J)P.Ople tlon't want it then I ceuld live with that." ' J1e said that when the majority of the state Supreme Court ruled the death penalty was "cruel or unusu&'" punish- men_t, the justices were ignoring other sections of the state Constitution which specifically refer to capital punishment. "Judges are meant to apply · the law, Senate Rejects Nixon Mi1iimu1n Wage Proposal J1clt R. Curl•'I WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Senate to- '(kc l'r•~Mt 1n11 Gener.i M&1119tr day rejecled 47 to 46 President Niion's Thorn•• K•1,u proposal that the $1.So an boul-minimum llllt« wage be raised to $2 rather than the f2.20 not make It," he shld. "Most lay people think there is too much bloody legislation Jn courts." He also pointed out that In 1988 the state supreme Court held the death penalty valid, but thr.ee of those justices reversed themselves in the most recent ruling. Be·acom quoted Justice Stanley Mosk, who said after the 1968 decision: "As a jUdge I am boubd by the law as I find it to be, not as I wlsh it to be." rw1osk was a member of the majority wruch abolished the death penally Ibis tlrne. Beacom concluded . by predicting the death penalty initiative would cer- tainly paSs Jn Orange County. Peace Talks Bog Dow11 Despite Pleas by U.S. PARIS (UPI) -The Paris peace talks bogged down again today despite U.S. pleas for a calm discussion of the issues and a secret meeting Wednesday between American Henry A. Kissinger and the two top North Vietnamese negotiators. The North Vietnamese strongly de- nounced U.S. attempts to seek a cease- fire first and a political settlement later. In turn, the SouUi Vietnamese vigorously rejected the Vlet Cong de- mand for a coalition government. Today's session was the 1Slst since the talks started. It lasted about four hours and the negotiators agreed to meet again next Thursday. "There was perhaps a slight im- provement ·in the tone of exchanges but nothing discernible on substance," a U.S. negotiator salt!. "I explained to them we don't d~tnand their acceptance of everything we pr~ J>?Se, bill I couldn't evoke from them any kind of statement which indicated their proposals," the Communist$ said. "We "We still are waiting for new American proposals are negotiable," he added. are ready to discuss these but today they brought nothing ne''·" Neither side referred to the Wednesday secret session by Kissihger, Nixon,s top advis~r. and th'e top Hanoi negotiators, Xuan Thuy and Le Due Tho. , U.S. negotiator William J. Porter a~ pealed to both sides for a calm discussion or the issues. Soon afterwards, South Vietnamese negotiator Pham Dang Lam said the Communists did not want a lnlce. ".You \Vould agree to end the killing on- ly 1f your own Political solution iB ac- cepted or only iC you are assured of reaching the same alrhs," La:m sald. Bomb Shatters 2 Transfonners; Another Fizzles The:_:~:iW. ~;;~!";"' sufported by Democrats. Cheri•• H. L,0 , Ricllir"4 '· Nill he defeated Republican substitute for GLENDALE (AP) -A bomb shalr AU1111n1 .wit11t1nt f:d1•or1 the Democratic bill al!'Kl would hlve tered two transfOrm&rS at a UUllty ' S. d...-. Ofrk• eliminated provisions extending coverage substation early today, Md •be.riff's JOI Ntrtlt ii C•Mi11• R,,1, 'tl72: of the wages and hours law to 8.4 mllllOn deputies dismantled another bomb which OIMt' tNfkts new workers. failed to detonate, p0hce saJd • . Ot•t• M .. t ,. w:!~' '''"' Sen. George Y..1 c G o v e r n, , the The ex~OSlon of the f1rsl bomb 8P-NfWtOrt •~• * H n 1ou11.,,o Democ u Id . I ~•1 H»M.,..ltfl ltHfti 11t11 1 " l°'-1t••r• ra c Pl;ff enha nominet, fllw pa1·i.:t1\ '! tingUlsbed the fuse Otl the Me- i....-9eKll1 m 1=...w A""'" back to Washington from South Dakota ond, aaid a 1·p o k ea m' n ror the lbs , ,.,.. ...... 171'1 '41.,llt to vole againsl the Nixon measur .. IJis \. Ang~ca Collll\)' shcrllft de~rtmenl. et .... Mwrlhfot '41-1671 presence contribUled lo the one-vole The undeloriated bomb, • 30-lncb flpe ... Cll•••• d ..,., ..... : margin. filled with black po\WJer was one 0 Ute T•l•r••• 4tJ..44Jt Even thou gh the substitute was rt-largest pipe b9mb1 ev~ dbnuioUed by • 1m,. °""" c.• ,nut11i"' jecled, senators. opposed to various Sec-tho shtrltf'1 bmbb squad, the apokesmao • ... ntws ,,.,.. 111i1t1ta1i.n.. tlo{lS of the bill planned to ofter in-said. i:-.~ ':t'::..-r::i.i~~ dlvldua1 amendments to fillmlnatt them The explosion cau.sed an estimated • ---· or cul tht!m back. '5,000 lo $25,000 domage •!ld narrow!' ~ _ ...:=:..."'!:;.'.::,'::: 7t; . VnUng ror the Admlnl!tratloo-backed mi$S<d destro~Ina a 34,000-vOlt feeCftt •--iiiiiiili•• ... a .1J 111 mllfflrt 1 substitute were 16 Dtmbcra~ mol!ltty line, poUce iald. • .. -· ~ from Ille South, and 80 Rtpublican<. Power aervi'!' was not lnimupled \md '"'.,---------;---' Voting to reject II were l4 lltmocrats there were no mjurles, police oald. aod II Ref>VbliCana. Tllo blast wu 1111 llll'OSli!IAlion. I Capo Man Pleads Guilty to Theft; Brotlier Souglit One of two San Juan Capistrano brothers has pleaded guilty to grand theft charges and the other is being sought today in what police described as the bilking of .an Anaheim widow. Gregory M. J. Kiddell, 30, of 32741 Alipaz SI., pleaded guilty before Judge' James Turner in Orange County Superior Court to grand theft. Judge Tiirner suspended the state prison term that couJd have been applied arid ordered the fonner principal in K's Home Development Company, Tustin, to make restitution to his victim. It was all~ged that Klttdell was one of three company officers who persuaded the victim to release the tract deed of her Anaheim home. Investigators said she was eventU&Uy rorCed throt.igh the maneltVetlng of tb'e defendants to buy her own home ·back at·payments of$241 a moblh. Judge Turner issued $25,000 bench war- rants for the arrest of Ernest Edward Kid dell Jr., 42, also of the Alipaz Street address and Da_v~ Leon Dawson Jr., 41, of Santa Ana. • Both are former officers or the K's Company apd both are believed by in- vestigators to be in Mexico City. Folk Dance Program Slated hy Library San Clemente's P'riends ot the Llbrary will present a free folk dance program featuring two Orange County children's performing groups Friday eveblng al lhe Community ClubhOU.se. Scbttlsh danCers from the Westminster Parks and Recreation ~partment and another tro_ype from. Anaheim will pro- vide the entertainment 1tarting al 7:30 p.m. in lhe cJubhouSe aucfltorlum . Dr. Brossman, who new to Costa Mesa tional campaign chairman and in that Wednesday to meet with Dr. Beckmah, role .iwlll be a foremost consultant on the civic le:iders, college · trustees· and overriding goal which will be to unify the educators, said bond repayment ~·ould support of key Democrats across t h e t fro b Id Couhtry ... no come m property taxes ut wou be met by taxes on sales, personal in· In a brief interview before publicly ac- comei corporations, gilisi cigarettes, ceptiog McGovern's offer, 0' Brien alcoholic bevera@S and horse racing. emphasized that while he will hold the H- Orange Coast Colfege, he said, was tie of national campaign chairman his sefected as the ki,ckoff ptacl! for the cam-role will be.essentially separate lrofl\ the palP. becabse fohner trustee George existing MCGovern political organization. Rodda is actively involved. in the cam-McGovern Said O'Brien will be bi8 paign ''and to make sure it was in a liaison with Democrats in Congress, place very conveniently located for Dr. Democratic governors, mayors, and stat. Beckman." legislative leaders. Dr. Beckman, who serves as chairman He said O'Brien will also be his chief of the Cal Tech board of trustees and as contact with officials of the Democratic advisor to three other colleges and Party and organized labor. universities, said he would seek the "Larry O'Brien will be personally and volunteer support of community leaders directly involved in all major campaign all over the state for the campaign. A decisions between now and Nov. 7,'' simple majority is required for passage 11cGovern said. in the Nov. 7 elect,ion: ''He will be a principal spokesman for "I've bad an inherent interest in educa-this campaign and I am urging him to tion all my life," said Be;ckman, adding travel to every section of the country to that he was glad to see the role of com-speak in support of my candidacy." munity colleges win more recognition. At a news conference, McGovern and Dr., Brossman said the funds wou1d be O'Brien emphasized several times that matched J1y local dollars and. $3.5 million the former national chairman's new role in federal funds. will not preempt that of other memberl If lhe election fails, the o n 1 y of the McGovern camp<llgn. alternative would be for the individua1 .M~'v'.ern said Frank Mankiewicz will districts to raise more money through travel witti him as his political directot hi5her property taxes, according to the and that campaign manager Gary Hart chancellor. Ui II · · \" h' gt t "This will be a tremendous bar ain for w genera Y remain m ,,as in ?n o the State bf Califonlia since wiat the run the day-to-day strategy and tactics of publii: buys is really $350 million of coo-. __ .... t~e ,ca~palgn.. . . struction funds withJD&lchin& funds from .0 Br1~n ~~d .. he will estabh!h a the other sources1" he etplaiMd. ~arat~ .Headquarters for h1.! (lpei'atloD SbotJld \'Oters approve the measure m Washington within the next 48 hours. about 87 percent would be used for th~ M.cGovetn made_ the. O'Brien an- construcliot1 of new facilities, ,six percent nouncement after his arrival here from (or conversion of exl~tlhg bulldibgs, and s_ou~ Dakota where he has been vaca· six percent for replacement of 'old t1on1ng, to cast a pr1>-labor vote In the buildings. senate fo11owirig hl.s rejection by t o p "The great thrust of this bond election AFL-CI~ leaders. and the community colleges is career . McG<ivern. accepted O'Brien.'s re1ign&o educailon,11 said Dr. Brossman. "Iiidica· lion as chairman of the national com· tions are that no more than 15 ~rcent of ~tt~ at ihe national convention in all jobs in the future will require a bac-MiaJlll Beach. . calaureate. The community colleges ar~ · The acceptance, It was: learned, wa1· now training students for the world of Jatgely tlte result of _the fact that neither work." was able to meet. Ui:e ·other's condition!, Although he was optlml.Stlc about unstated publicly. O'Brien, while stating passage of the $160 million bond issue, publicly he )Vanted to step dqwn, in· Dr. Brossman said be did not beliCve dicated privately he would stay if he had that v6ters are past the perlbd of re-a major say in running the campaign, jecting_ school finance measures. McGovern was alteady committed to He descrlbea \ioter skeptlcisni about running tile cilmpalgn through his own school spending as "a healthy attitude" organization headeti by Hilrt that has and said "a good case will have to be been so successful in winning the made'' for the m.easute. nomination but was apparently unwillinf Community colleges, he added, have to make this clear to O'Brien, who dido' traditionally enjoyed cothmunlty support want to ~tay ih a lesser status. .JI. J. Qarroll •.. a collection of HERITAGE upholstered pieces at 20% OFF during our 20th Semi A1inual Furniture Sale. W• h1v1 10 Sofa Stylea. •• 10 Chair Stylos and over 500 f•brics to choost from. SAVE 20% During this l<ent 1'our faoorlft tn!el'tor_d.,igner tell! be h4PfJ11 Id msf.lt roll • : • PROFESSIONAL , INTERlqR DESIGNER$ I OptftMon., Th""' A Fri. Evtt. I 2215 HARIOR ILYO. COSTA ME$A. CAI.If, 2 c l'.lE ccimpl dtirab· certifi Uj>ollu niodel Motors eipect certifi or pr ,John p~esid ruear ••tam iii hi Ye ... roq plj!y pUCati thj! 'En Agl!Dcy !l'h• ~;the , .. ~· clirt>.lr be•Sjlld AMC eniissi ber. total o .. '• .' .. •Y Tl In "'Yater medical piared hfty ft fall ov ca'bl.rac1 cl9udin alters o of light with v not gr c~t.agi caused int, s movies. Amon dhwasl"S heredit atjQn. a"d ohe dikgnDsi S9me:t_i cated, gll!.sseg CMional scribed &ion. YOU cAN:P n~~a liver- charce. reiji on net;ds. toe deli c!Jllrge PARK • . 151 N•_,, ' ,. ,. ,. ' . , .. . . • • ., ' ' • -.-., r • • • ZS DAIL'/ PILOT SC ~· •••• t I. CGLLECTIDN SHYICE ': tllWPOllT 10Ut1Y""'" • Nt'WJlort 0... .. , • UO "lf Wpor:l C.nMr IM# ~htOl\C.IM,(71 •)~ WH.lT .llE C.lT.ll.lCTS7 ~ TlltltY ORA.NT. R.Ph l n Latin, cataract mee.ns "\fatt.r fall." To ancient med.i~al obflerverg this ap· peitired to best descrlbe the hl!ity film that gef"med to fall over the !Pn&. Today a. ca'bl.ract is dPfined as any cl9uding of the lens that allrrs or hlocks .the pugage of light and thus interferes \.\'ith v1sil'Jn. Cataract!> are not growths and Uf" not c<Jfltagiou~. They are. not caused or hastPned by read· in~ sew1ni or .... :1tchinC fl10\'les. Among knnwn causes •~ d1~a.ses su('h u dlabl!teg, heredi.tory influence. rad!· t.Jon. diPt&ry dtf1ciencles, and ohemical d&maae. F..arly diiagnl>sis is importAnt. 89me;times su~gPry is indi· ated. in othen: jus1 e.ye' glas5ts may do the job. Oc· 8'Sionally drops can be pTf!• CJ'ibed to control the vi'• ' •' " •' jieet the $10,000 panther* r. ~ j~ I' ' PANTERA ••• ~detomaso ... ln:lported fllr Uncoln-~lv-tury. Italian ~rk created by the brilll•nt Chia Studfos of 1'1riri. FPrd dffigtted th• 351 CD> 4V V·8 trt&lne. Four wheel In· cftpenent ailliptrulo n tnd mld .. hlp enelne pl&eemenL Five speed aear box. fully gynchronlzed ••• ¥• •Pant.e.ra ••. Italian tor Pa.nthe.r.,, ,. r· . ' • .... ... -''°"'"""''-'I )!~, t '-l )11.'j ·~ /1:: ir: «"• a ~ r:~: ~ f=. ~ -· ·-" 11\o 11'o 111,_ i! I{ tt,. ft ~ _. I ~'· H"" r;~ .... t. :~~ ~It :~-_ 1 .. '! ~ )()'lo .._ .... . •1\• .,~. l! ..... .. " ml' IP: !!II . it •'• l": i~'•-~ .. p , 1 1 -'• IH••~a:'" •• )t... to I n'o '• •I-"I<. " '!. ,,., lw: ., I 1 '• it·~ 1' • '• )! 11 '• 'I 11 • 11 I •I JOI'\ 1.,i, n • ~ l' ?l ... i lo I• ' '! I • ll'o l1'o l t t·1 ••• Jn• •••• 'l' l"' !". !" ' 1:<0. l'• ~ • •I W ~ ' t .. ' '~ 'I'" I .. • ~: I_) '. " t!,~-·: !•• '\'• r: . • jf' • •1 II )"• -,,., l"'o l :M • • '· It )11'1 tf! • .. l •• i.l '' • ,, ' • • '" ' 1••. t ". ••• "' " '" .... " " ,., I,., . ' " ,, " . ' . . ' ' . ,. • n , " ' , . . i" n ·· ,,., .. . '• ' " ' 1 • ·~ .. . '" . ' ' . .. ' 1:. .. ' " ' 10· • " ' t; ; '" "' ' '• '" " " 21::. ' ri~; : .~ !~::~I ' •• ... . ,,,, , .. 11• •. :l ' .. I I '• ·r: 1:~ ... " ' l'•o .... ' .. o-l'o ll ' loo ,. . .. . ' '• \I 1-'• "'. '" 1~·· , .. ' " ' '. 1~ -., , . .,, " in1., .. •• ' ' Alamitos Racing Entries ..... A._.._ llllr\Mi ,., .,,.,..., l'l•n IU.CI -G 1'"'11•. 2 ....., ok11. Ct ll ...... H . Clalml ... Pvnt 11900. Clllll'llllll '4"k l uoot. f'llVIUS MPof! (TtrTY LllllllmJ Jrt11111 V11tnt!M {Jol'lll W1I-) Wlll1t1'1n Min CH1rler Crosbrl Ti.IC-lier CSll'lt Tr11sur1I SelfTI Df Llll'lll Utobtrl AOllrl GP Dfff Go (C11rtl& Plf"lltl'l Llttlf Chu Cllll fODo\lld Atll-1 F•mll't Affair U>ot'ltld Knlthl) Our Gtt!I• IJ11 MlllUd•l W•r Tl' l'rMll 8-1 "' "' "' m '" '" m "' "' "' Sl!COND •ACI! -•111 1'lrd1.. 3 ftlr Pldl "!Id UP. Cl"""'"'· Purw ll200. Cl1lm l11t1 '4"kf QIOO. Poco Simm\' lace IDorllld AllllOll) lit ONI And Only lLarrY Wrlal'llJ 117 Wllth Mt Tr1v1f IJlfnl'I OrtrtrJ 1'2 Olcktr Ill' lllt !C11rtl1 Ptrlllf"I llt Too Ettie IA:oblrt A011r) 111 Full ~ M.I" !Johll K11lftl 117 Mldwl Y Tom ca...r11s Smllt'll l tt kl1111'• 11111111 (Jlf"rv Rkl\1rdl) 11' THllltD •ACE -llO r1rllh. 2 y11r oldl. Cli1lm!rM1. PurH SIMD. Cl1lmln1 Prlcl UOOG. Rid Machine (Larrv Wrllhll Fido (Danny M!lcMIO War Chic Anna IJGhn WatMJnl Hidde la '1'1111 (Curtis Ptr1'1rl C.r1111 Coloer>t fOClllatd l(nl ll'ttl Don Oris (Cl'l1rllt Sml!h) Oul<1'1 (l'larver IR°"'kl 81flll;ll Loh Of Boon ($1"'1 TrN1ur1l llof)lnlt fllObtft Adair) FIU 2 U-D~trtr) • "' "' "' "' '" "' "' "' ,. "' 'ou•nt •Ac1 -"3511 y1rd1. 3 v11r ..olds incl UP. C!1lmfng. PurH $tl00. Ct1lml1>11 prlct 15000. Min Olamond lu• (01nnr C1rdon11111 RO'l'•I TClll Bir (Sieve Tre•11ur1) 111 Rockr llKh Hink CH111ry P1") 117 FOllr OCln flloblrl Ad~lrJ l?t DrilW ,....,. lktnllllll Hart) 117 O.wrT Slnchlom> (PP~•ld 81nk1I l ?f T1'll Count (A.oblrt BaHtrll lit Wlldl Chic (Terry LIPftam) 117 'll'Tlf llAC! -~ rards. 1 year tldl.. Cl1lmlng. PUrH 11JOO:" Cl1lmlng prk1 ''°°°· Gllldfln Hiii {M1nry Pll{l•I 117 MISI R1u1•b1Ck (J1rr¥ A.lch1r1hJ 111 Fine H Flt'IC"I' {Curtis Pemerl 111 lrllh Fire IK1111111t~ H•rtl 111 Ola11t Town iRoblort Adair! 117 Ml11 APlllll'I 1N:toto CA.lcNtrd V1ulltln)IU Gii Llotll CLtrrv Wrlll'tl) 117 Ettrelll'• Oldlt IA.-ld eenkd 117 klc.epu Lii I01nnl' ClrdOJI) 117 Fr•trll'ICI (Jolt11 Wlrd) 117 ' DON'r JlllJ:r OVER MISSED SHOTS l'Yo -.JIW!, •go!!m, u.. cludiJI& tlCVali louriag prof .. sionab, ruin their chances to a~ eel at goU' by seeking perfection on every aboL This simply is not a realistic attitude. ... • • • . . .. . . . ' . . . .... . Mesa Ve1·de Woman Golf er Po sts Seventh Hole-in-one P.1esa Verde women's club champion D o r a DonaldJon made he.r seventh hole-in-ooe al the Santa Ana Country Club's women's an nu a I member-guest tourney Friday. She used a seven iron to ace the 145-yard second hole. spot In the A Olght at Cosio Mesa'• latest women's better nine cont.est. She abot a '6. one stroke lower than second-place winner Sybll Foster's 37. 8 flight contender Barbara Shepardson also posted a 36, outshootlng Ann Martin (3611 ) and Maxine Assmu.!. (37 ). Ginny taako took the third fllghl prize with 1 It. 'Mn.. Danielsen and Camelle Ken- nedy tied ror ""'°nd at 4011. Lag11na Beach Th...,.,, Ju~ 20. 19n DAILY PILOT f f; Now o,.,. ,.,...o,.....c...., Sun41r PARIS INN CONTINENTAL CUISINE Now Open For LU Ill CHEON 11 :JO te 2:J0-MM, ttw 'ffL M k For Ovr •cuUnary MmterpiK•' C•mPlete $3 95 Dinner • From 6 p.m. -?.1on. thru Thur. JlORS D'OEUVRES AT TH.E BAR H•w• You H11rll About M•mlMta Only DaMln.-Lat• Supper CLUB DE PARIS 501 30th ST., NEWPORT llEACH 675.0300 Golfisapmeofmines. You try lo keep them lo a minimum, but you can't Jct a few bad shots ruin a round. Some of my best scores came on days when I started poorly with several mediocre shotr. Mrs. Donaldson also teamed up with Alice Derby and their guests Helen Wilson of Old Rancho and FJorence Keller of Santa Ana to win Mesa Verde's recent best ball of the foursome guest day tourney. Jda Thomas won the Laguna Beach Women's Golr Club's latest eclectic tournament tn the top illght, with Evelyn Hurlbut and Maggie Watennan taking second and thjrd. !~===~=======::;::;==~ Gene Griffin outdid Lillian Even the best players EX- PECT to mW scvcral sholl a round. Then, when a particu1ac attempt doesn't come off, they merely shrug it .off and concen- trate positively oo. lhe next &wing. ••1tnM.t.n,.._.,.._ Lona: Irons From The Roush, Pltehin1 From Woods, Uphlll ind DownhUI U1s-th1st and other •hots are dttaUad tor you in Arnold Palm•r'• booltllt, "Troubl• Shots." For your tol1)', •tnd 204 and 11tam~. &elf·addrtuad tnYtlopt 1o Arnold Palmer, In care of this newspaper. • Area Waters Warm Up; Fishing Scene Brightens The -group netted a low S9 and shot a 73 to tie for low gross honors With t h e Set Sunday foursome of Jean Hally and Swimmers of all ages will Stella Merriam and their Alta splash into the water of Dana Vista guests Jackie Marks arxl. Alice Brabyn to win the B flight competition. Edith Marks came in first in C flight, followed by H a p McMullen and Catherine De Long. Abrahams and Merle Ferry, Point Harbor Beach at 2 p.m. Sunday for the in'augural Quiet Seacliff Ro11cho S.J Cannon Dana Point Harbor The H u n t I n g t o n Sea- Dorothy Wright won the swim. cliff Women's Go I f Club Rancho San Joaquin Women's Trophies will be given for staged a low net tourney this Golf Club's ace da y this week each of 10 categories. Children week and gave the top prize to after netting a 77 in a four-. 11 years and wider will swim Cheri Thomas, who netted a 71 way playoff with Trudy Bone, approximately 150 yards while In the first flight. Toddy Broome and Marion older swimmers will take off The second flight winner Keeler . was June-Fittin with a 72 Sh th I d M tt d on a 200-yard course. v .. hile Petie Croft took third e en p aye a u an A S"""ial event will be held Jeff tourney and won the A t"--flight honors with an 80. flight competition with a 34~. just for lifeguards in honor of Jeannie Zach topped off the B Rudolph W. Caspers, the sec-1'1eadotl'lark flight with a 35~. ond lifeguard in Californ ia. Meadowlark's women's han- Breaking 100 for the first All interested swimmers dicap tourney is going into the time with a 99 gross, Marjory who have current AAU or third round with eight still left Thatcher netted a 34 in the masters cards should contact in contention. 520 t1Hco ti.u. 12 m1ck1rtl. tourney, capturing C flight Toni Oehler through the Quiet They are: Betty Briley, 11 1 DONDO -1u 1ngi.rs; 11J c1nco honors. Geraldine Chewning's Cannon Restaurant, 3 4 3 4 4 Helen Moulton, Fred a ti.ii, 3 reuowl•ll. 13:1 k•!P ti.is. JJI 39 took ro·rsl m· the D flo"ght. Str-t or the Green Lantern S"l J Th" I rock cod. ,,,.,, -110 .,..1,n: 150 ..... 1 vennan, oyce te man, rMct1re1, 30 k••P 1ia1.. Dana Point, 92629. CUba Curl, Florence Eichhorn, SANTA MONICA -o ,,..11r1: » Costa ltlesa The final entry date i.! Kathy Bransford and Marcella DAVE ROSS PON11AC S EKCLUSIVE NEW CAR 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE ' Wannanty l lXTM kAC• -llO ~1rd1. 3 r tar olcb and 11P. C!1!m!ng, Pur11 lllGCI. Cl1lnil111 prlct 11600. Warmer waler temperatures have brightened the scene in area sportsfishing with legal barracuda, bonito and ample bass giving patrons of half day and three-quarter boats a run !or their money. b1ss, 3 h•llbut. l1r" -31 •n0Jtr1: 60 A l · ed h t od ""· 200 m•tk•r11, 1 h11111v1. _ _::_~nn"....'.P~a~p~p~as~c~a~un~'.'_'l~e~o~p~~t~a~y~. __________ .'.:c:ra~n~d".a~ll':.. _______ _!======================:!:= f'AllAOISE COVE -113 11>11i.r1: 15 c1lk11 bl11, "' rock cOcl, 4 h•Ubul, Olldlildllm:lt (John K1nls) Spanlsll LOlll (Jtrrr lllc~1rdsl Mt. L1wr tL.lrrv Wrlehl) Neon si.., fKtnM!h H1rt1 09f"rabll 10-ld knlll't!I Tom'1 KOPY lllabtrl Ad1lrl O'AttY k1r IM•rltv Cro1bl'l LI Plata Jell ~Curlil PtrnerJ O.vld JIM (Jol'tn W1rd) Tip ShHI (Rotltr1 81fl1rt) ,. "' ,. "' ,. '" "' ,. "' "' l •V!NTH •ACI! -400 rards. 3 Yllr oldl •nd UP. Flllll'I ll'ld m1r!'ll. Alt-lllCI l>lll"H 13000. A.PCkll!lllfll CRobtr1 Ad1lrl AnnPr1Nr (GJlberl AP0c11ca) llllCom l"-lcl lal'lkll f'elllN Moon (Hlr(tY Cr°'°VI MIH J1l11111 (Ch1rle1 Smlthl Vol1r1 IJoltn Wl1S<H!I Miii ll••lto Go (Ktnllllh H1rl) Ch•ro1b-IU1r (Ttrr/ Ll""1m1 "' "' m on "' "' "' ·~ ElOMTlf llACE -350 yard,. 3 r11r 9!d1 •nd up, Allllw1nc:1. PurM $3000, HOllf" Chirp (llo0er1 Adair ) 11t Mlll Air '119111 CRkllart:I VIVllhn) 111 l l11ler IC11rU1 Ptrner) 117 kawttlll l1r T• (Jlmfl OrlVtrl 119 SUMI' L1nc1r CICennelh M1rt) 111 SC00p'1 Alilbal (T•rl'Y L1Pi'11ml 117 Jtl't Ladr Luck CDPnlld AHlllll'I) llt ll•lll1r (0Pnald knlthtl 111 Jun1l1 Flohltr CL1rry Wrl11h1J 117 MIHTM •AC! -.00 Ytrdl. 3 Y!lr old1. Cl1lml111, f'urw 11111)0. Cl1lm lr111 Price llSOO. CCII'!' K.'1 Glmblt COClnlld AUIS<H!) 1" ~· ll1ln Uot Matludel llt Mr. Altro 1111" (Sltv1 Trt•i.urt) 111 War Prlnct1M (Terry Liliham) 111 Ma1""'"lnow (Rabtrt Adair l 119 D1ndV'I Jtl (HarltY CrosbYI lit Parr Cllbblf (Joltn Ward) 117 Del ll1x Go lier {D1nnr C1rdoi1I 111 M1ck1y'1 Cllbbtr (ll11111ld 81nkl) lit Sltfll. Ill' (Curtl1 f'•rntr) 116 Landing operators al Newport Beach's Davey 's Locker and Art's Landing, Dana Point's Dhna Wharf and Huntington Beach's Mcqullah Brothers have runs leaving every morning and at noon. Qavey·s also reports a pickup in yellowtail o f f Catalina. Don Hansen of Dana Point reports one of the largest fish caught in ere.a waters in some time. It was a 435-pound black sea bass caught by Reseda's Fran· cis Clancy. Clancy, who ha.! reeled in several black sea bass in the 125-pound class in the past, hooked up with it las t week. He landed It on 80-pound test Gudebrod dacron line on a Penn 6-0 reel. lt required an hour to land. Albacore continue to hover 90 miles south of San Diego. SAN f'EDllO -75 1nol1rs: 15 b1r- r1cvd1, m c1!Jcp b1s1, 10 1111([ bliss, ln rock clld. lttM SI. Landlntl -14 1n1ltrt; 1 whllt Hltllll, t blrr1cud1, Los Al Race Results , Wtt11111ll1 y, July 11, 1m old•. c111m1,... P11r1• inoo. SPKlll Nollet (AdalrJ 5.90 l .IO ,,ID Mr. Said• (l.lpllam) 16.90 '·'° N•srlt1llon tCordo11) 2.IO ' -11 1111. 11 I UCll 1 -IHClll NIHct I 4 - Mr. Seidt, Nkl NJM. l l COND llA"CI! -4.«f y1rd1. l YHr old• & uP. Cl1lmln1. Purse SlPOG. on Tht ll1am t DrtYtrl •.20 l .OD 2.60 Uncle Edtotr (Llpl'l•ml •.to 3.10 Dllbbruck'I '''' (IC1nll) l.IO Time -.211/10. TMIA.D •AC! -5't YlrdS. 3 Y'lr old1 lo llP. Sl1rt1rs 1llow1nc1. P~r11 ..... Gii lilt Go CA.d11r) 4.lll) l .00 2 70 G1l1 Go Min fWlli.on) 4,60 2.IO Jucty's LG,,. CP•rntrl 2.60 Time -.21 •n o. Al90 r•n -Black Nt«IO, Conl110n. Sir 01ek1, Po 01Ck1. Time -."6 1110. SIXTH RAC• -350 ~1rds. l rear oldl. AllllWlllC9. PurH 119(1(1. Tiit Btrn!I Ev1n1, Jr. Apr1t'1 Ch1rg1 (Ortytr) 7.60 4.00 ..., I know Thi! Glrl (8111111 ) '·'° 3.20 A.ocktl Mint !A.ldt1rd1) "2.olG Time - .u t /10. Aho ran -J11 II Lynn C", Mkk•r• Chargtr. Hlf1lulln, Wllth CrHk Chic, " ExKlt ' -A'rlt's dtar" & 6 -I KMW lllat Glr1, plld "8.511. SEVEMTH llACE -lSO yard1. 3 Year old1 & up. Cl1lmln9. Purw S2600. Thi S•n Gebrlet V1ll1v Tav,rn A1socl1llon, SpUI T" IWlllCll'I) n .oo 7.00 3.111 He•11 Diamond (nlllt'll) t.60 ~.00 Chick [)Clojl~ Vauohnl l .20 Time -.II Ual. llGNTM llACI! -«IO YtrOS. 2 fflr 11ld'I. Ati-anct . f'UrM UOOO. Tht MOOn Dod<. 11.tbtl Dolt csmltnl 20.60 7.60 s.oo Ll11hl She Was CW•tllll'll ~.80 4.«I IMPERIAL l l!ACH-.«f •n'91ers: 31 111ac-. 1 bl<>1 fin tu1>1, 21 ti.rr•c!J04, ~ bllnU11, 16.'i kelp ti.II, 2 Wl'lllt lflbiol l,. t y1UCIW!i1U, 11 rPdr; cOcl, 1 h•ll but. LONG BEACH (lllm111t ""'I -7i l nOltrs; 4 cllk11 bll11, 231 rPCk cod. ltrM -'2 •noler1: 11 11nd ti.IS, 21) mackerel. l,.11""11nt Ltricllntl -HO ~nolers: 305 catlco 11111, 310 rock cOcl, ' hlllbul. SAN OIEGO fMllnitltltl ,Jer} -1:1\C en'91trs: 1,W 1lb1cor1. NEW .. OllT (Art'1 L1ndl"11I -t5 ln'9lfr11 299 b111, t rock cod, 7 ti.r- r&c:11111, I hlllbul, 1 macttrt!, l Ytil0Wt1ll. (DIYIY'I LKkff") -1]1 1noler1: l ti.rrKuda, ' tlonlto, 315 bo11, 1 yetlowlall, •2 rP(k cOcl. MA LIBU .. IE ll -:U anglers: lSC c1Hco bau, 195 roc k cod, 4 h1Ubut. MAlllNA DEL lll'Y -26 t"lllel"I; 260 rock CoCI, I UM cOcl, 2 hlllbul. Sl!AL l l!ACH -UO enviers; 1(1) rock clld. 122 ti.11, 5 h1llbut. l •rt• -UG 1ngi.r1: 95 ktlp ti.11, U nallbul. Artists Nip Uni Poloists Laguna Beach de f ea t ed University in a close 8-7 sum- mer water polo victory Tues- day night at Costa Mesa High School. Tom Redwitz hustled four goals for the winners while Witt Davis managed three for the losers. In other games, Rancho Alamitos d e f e a t e d Kennedy, 24-7 ; Servite downed Tustin, 12-4; and Sant.a Ana Valley beat Lowell 9-4. Costa h1esa and Fountain Valley won by default to La Quinta and Long Beach Poly at Orange Coast College while Newpo rt Beach No. 2 suffered a 13--1 Joss at the hands of Fullerton. And, John Dickey scored twice for Estancia as the team went down to a 10-5 defeat to Western. '01.IRTl'f •t.CI: -350 r1rd1. l y1er olds. AllCIWIOCI. Pur1e $11''00. Thi Ntvl l Reserve C1nltr PomQfl1. fl:ocktl To Me Color Me Pink (Llph•ml 5.60 Time -.20 3/10. 1--"'.===========:I NINTH llACI! -"° yards. J 'l"tlr olds. Cl1lmlng. Pur11 12100. (C1rdcu11 lt .llO 10 . .0 5.00 Run M\\1111 Run !Ad1lrl •.oo l.IO Drtvin' Miin (W•llOll) 4,20 Time -.11 1111. ,t,TH It.ACE -170 Y1rd1. ) r e1r elds & Up. Clalmlng. P11r1t n..oo. Tht Tw111111rh Centurr Plumtilne. llHllme Chic~ (Ptrntrl 5.llO l .IO l.llJ OeWh Ml11fle {Smllhl 7.IO S.60 Mol111t CAllllOll) 7.00 Golld COPr CSmll!l l '·'° 4.IO J.60 OH--Andr Gii CWll111n) 2.IO 1111 DH-Flai.h Alert IW1rd ) 3.DO 3.00 Tlmt -,II 1/10. SI EXACTA -I GoCld COPY & 4 - AnllY Gt, Paid Ml.jf. U l!J1Ct1 I -ONd COi" & 1 l'La!ll Alert, 111ltl Ut.JG. OH -De1dhe1r lor w cond. OUR FABULOUS JULY rfll'flllCI DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS FAMOUS MAkll MANY NOW COLORS $1095 .... Slt.oo SPORTSSHIRTS $695 IUTTON FRONT 2 FOR $13 00 109. fROM Stl.00 • --c-------- T SHIRTS I CORDS & 2 FOR St.DO fl•ln SI YALU• 495 JEANS All 595 STRIPIS &SOLIDS MAN~~o_L_o_os_~_ •• ----~~e•I " . SUPll LOW RISE I Al Nyt ...... $14.00 JEANS 1t COLOIS 119. S7.IO/S1J .OO 695 BICYCLE 995 JACKETS tAloe A M....i Tlobt -l IOARDWALK CENTlll-HUNTINGTON HARIOUl hit Oft Wllif'IW ............. Cl,llf IUNDAY -11W1» l ..U11Wk1rtl & Mhtw CNret .... 7.00-13 7.35·1• 7.75·14 8.25·14 8.55-14 !i.60-15 7.75-15 8.25·15 8.55-15 Whit.wall sit• 7.00.13 plus $1.95 f ed•ra& Excise T•• per Ure •nd. trad• Reeui.r Sal• Prlc9 , ..... , Tnode·ln Prke P•rTlr9 EKIHT•x :122.00 ...... Sl.95 23.55 21.2!1 z oo 2•.90 22.AO 2.12 27.25 .24.!IS 2.29 29.90 21.to 2.41 23.35 2 !.00 J.59 25.55 21.00 Zl3 27.95 25.15 2.34 30.65 27.IO 2AO Off1r on wh!Uwalla HURRY! LIMITED TIME ONLY! ,..-~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~-.• Dtlco & Hi J1cktrs SHOCK SALE flfE INSTALLATION 2 ~18°0 HU.VY DUTY LUBE & OIL CHANGE lt1tlUH1 1111 ti 5 itlllrtl of premium on. 4ss AIR SHOCKS INSTALLATION AVAILAILI 34so BRAKE RELINE U.S. CRAGAR-MAGS WHEEL BALANCE f'LUS WllGHTS 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE SPOKE 4:99°0' Expet1 WM:ftMlftSl!fp 9••llty •• , ... INflt ..... Sp.cl•! Low Pricn liiLl ~ WHEEL ALIGNMENT AEG. VALUE 111.50 I LINING & LABOR 01 DISH Mnt ... M ... SI• ht· Yel• SJI. fl 555 _, c .. OPEN TRUCK -CAMPER -MOTOR HOME TIRES 8 o.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. s•turd•y lo.m.to5p.m. RIG-. NOW SIZI PllCI ONLY 650.16 10.10 21 .fl 700·15 •••• l6.ll 26.fl 700.16 •••• 17.11 27.fl 710.16 •••• 4f.41 J6.71 P.l.T. 2.14 te 4 .... RI•.· 'NOW · SID PllCI ONLY I00-16.1 •• 11.61 lf.fl 175-16.1 •• 6J.60 ,47.16 951.16.1 •• 71.21 56.71 1 .. 16.1 •• 7t.t6 Sf.II • hy IMIW ....... 2049 HAUOR ILVD. (at lay) COSTA MESA ACIOSS FIOM THIODOft IOllNS l'OH 646 4421 540 4343 • I • • ~ s ~ NO NI " NO " " N N N • No N• a A N ~· N No N• No No No N No ~o " Nw Nw Nw Nw Nw Nw N •• •• ~ "" ~~ D• m &':. ~: &::: Do ~ o• °"' °"' O• 8'" O· 8:; '"' '" '" •• '" ,, " •• .. , ... '" •• ... •• '" '" ~:· '" '" ''" ·~ ''" ''" '"' ''" pp pp pp '" ''" •• "' ... ' PM '" '" '" '"' E .. " • ;r11 '"" F'~ll Phil .. Phil .. .. Phi! P~ll Phll Phll f'~I! l>hll •in. '" '" "" "" Pitt '" '" ~~ ·~ ·~ Pot! ~it "' '" ,, ,, '"' " ~! ~f " '"' ~~b ,,, ' ·~ '" ''" " ·~ N -•• N ... ! j ll Ii n. I • • Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st Experts Puzzled By Stocks Slump NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices sank Thursday In moderately active lrad1ng Je.evlng ana· lysls shghUy puzzle<! as to the re•S-On .John Sm1lh. an analyst at f ahnestock, s~ud Lhat Lhe market has me confused 1'he economy looks good, and earnings reports are favorable, but 11\- vestor psychology 1s negative " Robert Johnson, an analyst at Pa ine \Yebber, J;,ckson & Curlis. attributed the market's recent de- ch.ne to apprehens ion especial ly among the 1nsl 1lt.""' t1ons . about the International monetary situation, which aga in depressed pri ces today l•IB NM UMl1 I Hlfll Ltw CleH Clll -... ,-----------tlllll.I Ml9fl i..w CIMll Ot-Dow lo11es DAILY PIUT n , , Phone (¥124321 For W('ek endel' Ad' erti sing Complete Closing Prices-A1nerica11 Stoel\: Exchange List O"k IM 16 0.!lkll,.Pr 10 Occdf'! iqr, O<tldPI pl I Occf'ltl>I 3 60 O«Pfpf 116 Ofd....Cp .60 ~f .. 11l~ I ~ OkltGE 1 29 OkGEol 4 4 OklaNG I !I Oll nCort • Om1r1I: tnd1 0111!d1L 10 ODttlk1 M I Or ll:c:ll;t I l'CI 0th EICo j Ovltlord M Outlet c .A5 OverTrn 60 8.,,Pn(F II """'Ill l«I Owtn/U of I C)wnl If 1'4 0.Cfnll..cl 60 P1cG11 I 12 Pac Lit l " P.tcPtlrl 40 J'1cPwr I " P.tcSwst Air PcTt.T l l'CI P c T&Tpf 6 Pie Tin 601 Ptlnr Wtt>b Ptl~ Wb t>f Ptlm 81'1 ~ Ptn Am WA P~nl>d! I I) PtPt!fC '°9 ,.,.... ·'' P1rkM11 1 N P~rlcPtn 11) P11~. Inc PtVLNI" ,, P1H Gtllon Ptftn Cl!l'llr P&nl'lt" 1 0. PtnnOIW 12 P1rt11 Fruit Poe DI 111c Peo111PL 1 60 EPLol 1 70 PL el I.AO Pl 111 I 51) Pennwl 1 l'CI ,_,I" Pnwt of "' Peltftroll IO PentlDf 1 » PeooG• 116 '~'I'" , Prrk 11EJ '' Pet I"( 1.l.S Pet tnc 111 I Ptllf'ICDI IG EtrtrPI 1 10 etrle SI .0 etrOlllt 14 PetrtC I '6d Ptl1fl' 60A Pll~ID D I " Pl\1l1FI fJ Pl\ll l!IDI au Pll!'l of 7 '' rhnl'101 N Pl\FI DI ~ •0 Plll!I Ill l llO PllllSub I :l'O PhltloM l ;, Phl!l11sf" :ti Phil I/Id of I PllllPll 1 JO S'hllVnH •0 PjtkWlk I'll! " lhhrv 1 •• P onGe' 11 f'llMV II et PlttForD IO Pn1FIW of PTl!fklll 609 Pinn llt srcll Pl1vtl<IY 'l PlfHlt'I 1 Pt1l1n1id 31 ~lee RO PorlGE l 47 Potf11lth F ! Po!EI l'wr I PPGlrwl 1 " ,.,.,,.1...i lO "''""' pf 'O Prac;tG! l 56 Pr(ldlln 10 Pus Col 1 1' PS(l)lpf 7 li PSE&G , 11 PSEGef '6l "'&" , .. P~E of I l'4 PSE ill S78 pS£Gol 7 lfl PSEG11I I Cit PuS lrld 2 1' p1,1t1$lol 1 a.I PS NH1 1 Al Publlckr ~ PIJl'blol ?ti P\M11llC -a 1"u1tSP 1 M PuUm1nl11 2 PuttxC11 -l l"urexllf 1 3S ... Ltw Clett Cl'lt New l'orlt lG Most Active IVeflll l'ork Safer Vol11me j 1clv11 Hd J1<ot11 £,,..I JlmtWI Y J1 JllMlll Jlk Jtll1r1on St JtrYl1 Cor11 Jllronlc 1.-d Jtwtlcor 111 '°"""' n11 J 5 lrwll lllC J11oft1r 1"11 S•IN Ntt !hll1) Hltl'I Ltw Cle~t Cl'lt • $tfft Ntl (l'IOs...I Hltl'I LIW Cltlt Cl'lt ... H11111 Lt• C:i.11 C~t •• L.tw CIHe n .. .. ................ w. Finance Briefs e Rate Diket EL PASO -The E1 Po .. Na tural Gas Co has aiked tht Federal Power Commbsion Ll't 1r111t ra te 1ncu1su f o t.. wboluale customers la California. I.he Southwest and lhe l'oclfic Norlhwut, ti> volvLng JI Wea tern a.Lite-. El P110 uld !ht 11\CI'-lo required lo olfoel lbe htahet coal of borro~ capllal labor, m1lerl1ls, 111ppllu ,;;;f laxes. The c:omp1n,y aid lht ,.... poo<d new nitPJt _,Id be 1i:opl al a minimum beclU.IMI ol lfM efficiency of tts new m. l•&nted plpeUot l)'lt<m. • • .. !· .. :· ... .. .. . .: • • .. • .. • ,• • • ' • " ' ' •• • :: .. • -· ' l'IMJI ru1>1!1M• Or•111• c.oe11 Di lly P'llet, JUfWI 2f, 1'111 July ,, 11, )Cl, lt1f lfft.n ••: ~·NAISSANCf P'•Tt05, f 1 I S Am1rlc11'1 N1. A,, Cot11 N111•. mn. Cll1•l• r 1w1re r1111 u,1. 2 1 1 J .\ll'l,_1rk111, C1tl1 Nlfft. Tl'll1 llu1lllftt 11 ~ t1111!1uct" llY 111 tlldhlldU411. MllS, CHAll Ll l P'\.llll ll"S Thlt t11t.,., ... 1 Ill.. wlff'I flit Ctul'lh' Cl•r> "' Ori"'' Ceu111y ""' July If, 1•11, t w l 1v1rly J . Nl•ddoll 09"-'IY C1111111Y Ctt rk. · "1tQ7 l'ul•H$1191 Or11191 C.oa•I 0 1Uy P'llll, July 11, ,'tO. t7 1...t A1111u1t l , 1tn 1to•-n LEGALNOOlCS WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! • CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS- IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c -T --· 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 I DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ( _,., .. Gener i f 1-~---...~_,,.~_,.~,~--~...,. .... ..,,."""~~ * TRIPL EX * LOTS OF ltOOM Prln1e oce11nfn'ln1; 1wo J.BR, 2 8&.; OM \lntt 2 BR., l 'i 811. $160 .000. Submll. C•dl: fi?a-366.'\ 67W63.~ ~~VI'S. * OCEAN FRONT* Honu•, 4 Bdrn14., l baths. with 40 It. lronlagr., Th ill olrter hom• hAs lg~ livio& rm ., /rplf'.; dinini: rm., l"X· trll lgP. k1tch. Ohl. garagf.! ph111 ex fra pa.rkinJ:. Bl"t1l area, nr. Nrwport Marbnr Yacht Club. Ea11y lo 1how. SlOO,OO'l. Call: 673·lf& 542.2253 h'v~ associated f'lve ' bl& bedroom• l.n this lovely Laguna l{Ul• homl".. BtautHully dtl'm'lltd and ~·t.11 malnll'iM'd. I~ main. l@nanee bkyd with play lrPI Inr ltids. Tlw wholf! family will kwt It, 546-8640. "MR S. CLEAN" Is lhl8 Marp 4 BR. 2 bil. home with hlln. R&O, re11J I~( I~ G9"t ril A U'1111a.Jf tl()M f OOVER SHORES WATERFRONT -New llst· ing oti this elegant 4 bedfootn home in New- port's finest. Formal dining room, family room and a spectacular patio overlQokina you r pier and slip. Pre<enled •l $121 ,000. rHONI UN19UI HO MIS, NIWPOIT llACH, 64S·61ot ON TOP OF 'l'HE REAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NICE!.T PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES BROKERS-REAL TORS 1025 W Oulboa 673·l~bl Jog "•" .. l'.A. hea1; '".'°1 CORONA DELMAR;-675-6000 e MESA VERDE, brfii'zrs unrier the l'<lv rt 546-5990 e NEWPORT BEACH 645-6500 e patio. Loi·ated in Estanriii 1 CALL US 1 &hool Jtrea. Call fas! for Ul\V·IXlWN, ASSUMJo: VA this one. Try 5'ii! do'.l·n. Gen1 r1I L 0 A N , NO rtNAN(~J.:: . $27 ,500. VACANT CHARGES!~: C1111lnm built BARGAIN ! 3 Bdrm, 2 h~1h. };1111.\ide, Owner really snxiou1110 n1ovt' aparkling cltan living + tn thl" dese11, & wan!5 10 rUning arl"A, /\rept.ce, FA S('ll his East~irfe 3 BR, 2 ht., bllns, nu shag erplft + bit. homr, Blt·i ns & n1:w rar- tlrpa, patio, tlbl gar., ftn~ pt>I . Prirerl ro 11Plt for $27.250 yd, Move in on t!rMH IP· ' MORGAN REAL TY proval. S2'.!JJJO. 673-6642 675-6459 CALL ANYTIME 646-3'21 or Evo. 541·9416 Lachenmyer Re lit or JUST REDUCED This hig 5 bf>flroom hf'auly i11 now lhl'l lowefll prier<! 2 slOry home in M!!111 ril'I Mar. Thi'' 2200 aq fl of spAril"lu~ living ares v.•ill 11rrve !hr ASSUMABLE VA Anyone c1111 it51!Umt th i• hiith tml11..nrf! VA loAn, No gu111ify- ing 11nd no ki11n poini5. Sp11rkl ing 3 berlmom hom,. fe11.turf'1 11.ll builtin a:ardf'l'l kilrhen, large honu11 room 1.nd t_>nclO$f'rl p!l!lo. Asking $11,500. For delalls CaU ~U 5t ioprn l':vP11.) ~. -HERITAGE REALTORS 111.tgt'sl family, 1.Avely Del 1 ~""""""~""'!''!""""""" PillO 11ton,. pntry and th irk 14 X 20 '"" "'P''' I<><>' Now '~ FAMILY ROOM durPd lo only S~.500. TRY IT: YOU'LL LIKE IT~ I Jo:v,.ryhorfy want~ on!! •nrl hrre·s one for ynu. 4 COATS beiiroom, :i bath, :l ('ar & J1:ar11g,., Vel'Y htra:e lnt nt>Ar WALL.ACE Milf' Square Park . Alt this REAL TORS tor only S4L500. All tcrn1s. --..!•006"44141-Call R4~-25.15. (Open Evenings) PANORAMIC COASTLINE VIEW 11:);THE REAL ~)£ EE!TATERS OIAMONDS-ARE A GIRLS BEST FRIEND anrt lhifl 2400 !IQ fl , 3 BWnn Ji'ron1 th is unusual, cuRlom homt ~:ill trnty >w! the dii1- VlP hide11.w.11y. Jl You arr mond in your life. Evtry looking fnr ,llOmething 1hat Jifltll a rf~light • from lhe Is di11tinctivt and h1.r trnm I rovf'rt-d p11.tio to the 11p11;cious thP "'""i-age nr u~ua.I, bettf'r Rnmilin hath. Yours fl"lr only •~ Otis. Pri~ 11t $511,000. $."19.990. Try $4,000 down or Our t'xclu11ivl'J, Appointment I usr your GI. only. larwin realty Inc. I !W&-5'111 (24 hn;i. I !16SM05 RfoaHnr11 646-7711 204.1 \lilpstclill Drive ()p~ 1\11 9 PM $1,350. DOWN* FIXER UPPER BBST MESA VERDE LOCA- i TION! -3 I. family, Ntte!s lots of W<>rk huf make offl'.'r now 11.nd save! Varant, cul- de-iiAc, walk to ~hoQli:. 546-5880 (0pl'.'n evt~.J • HERITAGE . . REALTORS Gov '!. r1:po~~Cllllion. Ynu lllhoulri !!Pe lht' ''flpllrk11'" nf 1hi11 df'llghtful refurhillhrri hnmf'. ~ BR, 1% BA, nl'w r11rpPl11, nf'w kit &. ba floor- ing 11nd other goodle111. LAr.a-r I f'll<'. r1:ar yd, Gre11.t s!artrr "!'.'"'!'!'!:!~~"'!~'!'!'!'!':""~ homP. •pJua rost11 It. !m-.-HORSE RANCH9 pnun~111 11pprox S600. Hurry 1 h Acrt"fl, all <'hn link !en~d. on th1111 onr, ovrr ~ IH'. in lu111h grrrn Call 546-84z,t <Open l"\lt"ll.) ]ll\l.'lll rnvrrl'fl w,'.11k11ttl' \outh (-oast - FAMILY HOME 5 BEDROOMS See lhi111 impol'ling Mr11er home in <'holr;e 811.ycre!llt loc11.tion Newport Be11.rh pi·ired ~JQw mkt 11.t $84,500. Re11.utirul 1n11.lllf!r Br. with O\Vn hath. S.llJlr11te formal ·dininit room, All ell"r.tric hlt-ln kif. Tnily a ht'lmt' for the most dit1criminating buyer. Call 67:\-85,r,(J, 1-0j THE REAL \")l E;~TAJE.RS VETS ·SEE THIS Gre111 3 bdrm lamlt.v hOmt. with 8ddt'd rumpu11 mnrn. Good location near shopping and ttchonl~. VA apprai•ed at $:111,00J. Cail todl)' M6-M40 • Tl-tl-; BLUFFS '*' Gnoflnbfi1t vltw; 4 Br. 2~ bl.. m.1t. Br. A. bfl, nn l11t levtl + bonul' rm. i:;4.SM CHUCK CAROTHER.1 REAL ESTATE TR EASUlllS 1931 \\'~&lelff, NB ~ trf>f'S. f'ruil nrrhlll"ri, ~ 111.8.11 ham 11nri lark rm, Cell11.r. f'e.ll('Ocki:, durk11, etc, 3 RR. hnmP "'' fam rm. Pl'rilf"y 11.rrll, $.1.1,f'IOO. Try 901a ln11.n. Cl\JI MR, HARRI~. 545-8424 South Co11iil Re11.llor111. layfront Condo ! Br, 2 Ba, pool, pier & sliR. DelighUul $79,f!OO EMERALD BAY Jmmacul11.le 3 Br + tam rm. Ocean aide ol hwy, View. Must l'!e! S149,000 Tod Hubert & Asaoe, 347L Vla Lido li75-8500 T lioME$n,soo*-* DUPLEX $34,000 * 3 BR. 2 Dll. i.,e. rumptta rm. Reat1t. p11tio. Pfll'klike yard for tt11: kids. BALBOA IAY PROP. * '42-7491 * 3 IR, FAM. ltM. Ne&r NewJ'l('lrt Hiii. 3 RR., 2 hathfl, kltchrn b 11 • I n I , l l r,.pla c t . TWO dbl. PJ''Yf"'· one 11fr1>11f'<f !or &n Additional unit $42,(WXI, Grah11m Jl('alty li-16·14-14 , * "DOLL HOUSE" * 2 Sn. + 4f!n, like nf'l""ll St~pa to he11 t.'/'\1 pnnl , Jt.nnls I <'lubhl'luM-. U'1900. CAYWOOD RIAL TY * .141.12'1 * V11.QJnckl coel IJ'M)l'll")'! Rtnl your hnutlt. tpt., rtore bld.f .. l!lt:1 thr\I I Dt.ll.)i Pilot rn, .. ,Bed Ad. I TIME FOlt QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5671 J Gener.ii -----.,.=--SHORE CLIFFS Roni:ll-1/J At:re S29 ,950 LocAl p1'0te1!fional hAs spent I Ne11.r NEWPORT! Pictur- thou.~arn11 of Mil•~• 10 I esqut RED RANCH HOUSE! cttllll! "'hat we ff!t'I is ~nt' I GiMt sh11dl! trers 1alore! or the. most n11t1taM111J A!l knotry · pine inaide. h1"1me.~ in ou.r 11.reA: h~m the Ranch kitrhen "'ith beam ma1uuvr br1r.k l!nfry to thr . . . . 1 !!Pf•lurlll"!I l'f'Ar y11.rrl. you'll e~thngs, D1n1ng room, too. f II · 1· .,, ,·1 •--1·1 Bir C'overPd patio. BAR-A in l\lf: \\'I • •""' • ' C JI f evf'n If yrtu l'lon't buy it! GAIN -_BARGAIN. a Ul $89.filfl lnC'lurfinit \And. 645-0303. CORBIN- MARTIN I Ol!I \I I. Ol \O\ "r. ',11..· · REALTORS 644-7662 1 STEP LIVELY POOL Owner musl m1Jvr. Prtc11 juat Hu9e Swim Pool "'"'"d 10 ~19.ooo. Enjoy $lS OOO slirlins: dnnrs from 3 l.i\rgr lamily 1 room, 3 bf'd· hPdroom~ in th is 1arden ff'JClm~ xtt;i. halh.\ rl inin.e; home """'r the beach. mini:· ent ry hAll.' 2 hi·r-1 Fo~mAl dining room off t.he plR•:r~. buill-in!i, rlillh1>.·a~hf'r. ~tr1um . •un~~n 1rparate hv- el f'rtrir. RllrllJ[e door OpPnr r, lnj room CWIJJ mto'J"JY. fmr'enye pirturr hook yurl, jlflHo, extrRll. 8 ponl, brk, 540-1721'1, 347.soto. TARBELL \a THE REAL "'-ESTATERS . "·. '. 29!'l."i llarhor, Co~tR Mr~ L:ke to trade? Our Trllder'a It's a bref!M', • , sell your P11radi~ column is fnr you ! 1 it~m11: with. ~11.llf!, U!lf! D.tily 5 lineti, !> dllj'8 tor 5 huck11. Ptlot C\assilif'(f. &12-5673. .G.eneral -I General LOVELY HARBOR VIEW HILLS See lhi3 nearly new Lusk 3 BR. home . Ora~ mal.ic cathedr31 ceil's. Beautifully decorat.. ed . Profess. landscaped. $731500. LaVera Burns CAMEO SHORES. NEW LISTING See this charming home . 3 BR.. 21-> balhs, formal din. rm., large family rm. w/frplc. & walk-in wel bar. $85,000. Carol Tatum E!"JOY LIDO WAY OF LIFE Gracious family home, completely remod., on Ige. 191.. 4 BR ., sep. mstr. suite. Near tennls, priv ate beaches &. clubhouse . $122,· 500. Eugene Vreeland BEACON BAY R·2-$65,000 Private beach & tenn is ct. 2 BR., 11\ balhl plus guest rm . & bath. Also. charming !- bdrm . apartment. Immaculate ~ Mary Lou Marion TOP VIEW OF BAY & OCEAN Very pri v. custom bit. home, with 3 bdrms, 41\ baths, w/sep. maid '• quarters, Beaut!· ful large front patio plumbed for pool. $175,· 000. Kathryn Raulston LIDO ISLE Havf! your ow n custom built home on now vac. lot., adj . lo ·charming smaller home. Steps to priv. beach & club, Excellent st. lo st. Joe. $78,500. Edie OISon LIDO PRIVACY 50' .Lot aHords great privacy, W/SWU!Y South patio & large, well constructed f bdrm .. tam. rm . home. 3,000 sa. It. f89,500. Mary Harvey \ 4 BR. 3 BA. FAM. RM. + POOL ~,800 -SUU occupied by on,. owners. Clean, brig hl; Showa like 8 moael home. Gr<Rt fro nt & back yards plus ·patio. See this now ! Al Fink . COUNTRY LIVING IN THE CITY Spacious S BR., 3 ba . home. Formal din. plus large lam. rm. View of 1urrounding hills. Prof. decorated & landscaped. Fee. $95,000. Harriett Davies PRIVATE BI ACHFRDNT Vacant lot on llO feet of while sandy beach. OuLst&lding view of bay & boats . Now 11 lhe t!Jne to build your hnme l m ,7l!O. M. C. Buie 133.0700 --CO!dw.11,Bank• ~ 644-2430 HO NEWl'O RT CI NTIR DR., N.I . ' ' ' I 11 I I I 17 • Lag111•a eh Today's Fl•al ..; voe. 65, NO. ·202, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES OltANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. THURSOA Y, JULY 20, 'J 972 TEN CENTS Official Looks 'Further' Into Lorr's Options ' Laguna Beach Clty Attorney Tully Seymour said Wednesday he is "doing some further research" into the 'QUtStim of whether City Councilman Edward C. Loor could, U he wished, withdraw the resignation he submitted to the councJI May 17, should the attempt to reoa1l him fall at thi polls Tuesday. The resignation, submitted In writing and accepted by the council, la·to become erfecive JuJy 31, one week after the recall election. Seymour iald he had received a number of calls from persons seeking conflr-mation of bis earlier state- ment at a council meeting that . the resignation wou1d be "irrevocable," regudleu of the outcome of the vote. '!be attorney aaid Wedoesday, "that oplnloa wu based on my rtacllon at the time of the meeting and the fact that Mr. Lorr hlmselt reafllnned it was his Jn. tentlon to resign in any even(" He told a questioner at the Wednesday nlght council meeting that the result or hb new research would be made public before the election. In . "esponse to a direct query from writer Arncild Hano, who asked at :the Council meeting, 0 F.d, have you changed your mind?" Lorr replied, "I'll keep you guessing." QuesUoned earlier Wedoesday about the possibWty be might change his mind about resigning U the recall vote ·came out tn.J!js favor, the COIJl1Cilro4o.M!d he could only refer to hl1 earlier statement that his business had been wiped Out and the security of his family threateoed. "ff some door of -1unily should open it might change the picture,•• he said,. "but I don't foresee that and I'm not about to try to rebuild this business." Seymour said, 0 Tbere la no doubt it was · a valid resignatioh, submitted in writtng' and filed wilh the clerk. At that time there seemed no question as to its possible withdrawal at a future date. "Actually there I! no statute that spells this out. There have been cases litigated involving resignation, but no th i n g directly relat.ed to this. However, I am researching the matter so I will be able to come up with the best opinion I can, for the guidance of the council, l!ihould that be requested.•• Under the Jaw, if the recall prevails, the candidate receiving the most votes on the recall-council ballot will suceeed Lorr, U the' recall fails, the council is re- quired to appoint someone, not nec.essarl· ly a candidate, to succeed him when his resignation becomes efrective. Section 27521 of the election codes specifies, 0 A person who has been recall· ed, or who has resigned from office while recall proceediogs were pe~Jng agail]st him, shall not be a candidate for, nor ap. pointed to such office within one year after his resignation or recall.'• The code makes no reference to withdrawal of such resignation. Lorr said he had spent 10-years building up his Twist 'n Pin beauty shop in Laguna Beach and business was "at a high point" at the time or his election in April, 1970. "I lost five customers just by being el: ted," he said. "and the businesis has una Laguna's Recall Candidates Speak Laguna Beach vo\ers will go to the poll!J TueSday to cast votes in tbe recall election of CowicUman · Edward Lorr. Four persons are candidates for ·Lorr'• coundl post. The DAILY PILCYr on Page 2 today has a sfury about the candidates and pictures of them. The story includes brief statements by the c~dates. • Ziegler Says No 'Deal' Made •stop Divor~e~ Girl, 10, Sends Lett.er to Judge VISALIA (AP) -A 10.year .. ld girl bas please help A 10.year .. ld keep a mom pleade<I In a letter to a judge that her and dad. I know ti mom tryed you prob- parenll be reluaed a divorce. ably wouldn'l listeo ••• The child, who wu not ldentilied, "God blesa 100 and 1'1 God he oo this wrote: "Honorable Sir, My mom and da~ daJ.,the judge beafde you." is gettlng a divorce ••• please don't lei superior Court Judge Jay Ballantyne them get a divorce. My momma loves said Wednesday be sent copies of the let· my dad; U you could put him' In the ler to the attorneys representing the girl's hospital he could quit drinking. pareoll and replied to her, "I am well 0 1've he~ my mom say to my dad aware of the tragedy which ts involved many times, 'Please slow down on your every time parents separate where small drinking,' but he just walks out the door. children are Involved ••• I can aasure ''Sir, you are a judge ·and this la your you that if either of your parents peUtion job, to divorce people. the court for an attempted reconciliation 0 T ~ 1..~r La S "Only wbero do ones 1.0 tha\-Blill Jove 1 will do all l-~ I'!~ reao ,~ thei< n ~ w llle<limbandl? Al!d:P"" )IN ... ~ a dlllerences." '·:1 '• ... r ' . ' . 10.year.okl! Can you cut out my heart uoaer •late Jaw granting divorces ~~~NWlre :"::Jr~"' ~~1":=.~~;l=:·;~·":i~m~ dJllerencel"uflt·· ·~ acknowledged ioday It """" to comull, further with organized laixii'. · -. a IOI· ment ''l'ith which Presl~eni Nixon hopes to make major progress In November - before pursuing long-peodlng legi.slailoo aimed al avoiding crippling naUooal &trikes. One labor organization that· has stroor· Jy opposed compulsory a r b i t r a t i o n featurea of the bill, which would apply throughout the traosporlation Industry, ls the Teamsters Union: The Teamaten en- dorsed Nixon for re-elecliOIJ. on Monday. Explaining why a declsloo had been made to set the measure aside, although Nixon had called for II repeatedly and on occasion denounced Congress for failure (See STRIKE, Page %) Gang's Victim Escapes, Calls Police; 3 Held TORRANCE (AP) -Kldnaped with his young son from his borne at gunpoint by members of a motorcycle gang,. a 25- year-old IM Angeles man crawled through an attic wtodow of the home where he was being held and, anmtnoned belp, police said today. They said three men have been booked for investigation of kidnap, usaull and narcotics violations. The victim, Joseph Hernandez:, said be managed to escape from the houae when a cyclist atanding guard fell asleep. Officer• went to the 1>ou1e and amslad the trio. They alao freed Hernllida' s.,,_..w son. Joseph, who ofllclill ·said wu unharmed. Hemandea said the trio appmocbod him at 7 p.m. Wednesday In ~ front yard of hla Torrance ma ~ and ordered him and hla IOll to Co !olih them. Hernandez told ollldall Ille trio, whom he had never ,..., he!on, applrelltljl mistakenly . believed he had - ldlowledge about a buJ1lary at one 11!1& member'• home. • Pollet tdeotlfled the ·trio u Gregory Palo, ~~. Seymour WioberJ, a,, and Gary Jt1Dletl, 23, of Tomnce, all memherS ol the Outian llotorqdo Club. He ........ said the three slapped 111111 Dlstol-•hll!P<d him in trying lo ellolt .. lonnaU. about Ille burglary. Ollloen said the)' lelad • .._ 111o1aUD1 and rllles. two blocl&-. * oultoees filled with an11111111lilon ·- the home and 11% marljllana pbmts .- -1wo r..i·blgb-cro"1Dc 1n •roof· top prdeD. Para-seuha Dive Councilman to Jump In Rescue Exhibition Wl!eo three parachutes pop open over the water oU tquna Beach's Maio Beach during a llleguard re I c ue demonstration Saturday morning, one of the para-scuba skydlver11 dangling under the silk will be Clty Councilman Roy Holm. Holm's participation as a member of the voluoteer para-scuba rescue unit of the Lifeguard Department was revealed Wedoesday night when Marine Safety Director Skip Conner Invited the City Council and public to atteod lht Saturday program. A highlight, he said, would be the parachute jump by a scuba-equipped 1-escue team which would land offshore and be taken in tow by a resuce boat in simulation ol procedure uaed to search for lost dlven. "One of your oim members will he jumpizli," Conner told\the llarlled COWi· cll ' . Hollli said later 11!1 '°~ venture will be 1111 nm Jump Into water. though he .bu aome 10 land jump1 to hla credit and alao ls a cerlllled dlvtt. He took up. Uydl~ a year ago, the eounc:ilman added, and finda It "The areatest aport In the world.'' He said lbe para·ICUba team wW take off from Sall Juan Caplllrano alr!>orl and !Ump from -15,000 feet, olf lbe Main .Beacb. 1lolm will be .,. ol four jumpers, Behavior Film Set for Lagitna '!be ffim uEmbryOlogy of. BebaV\or" developed by the 111a Dr. Arnold ~n will he shown Monday at 10 a.m. at Iha I.aguna Beach High School allilllOrlum. The ,.....nlng of the film 11 part of 1 three ~Y workahop lot ~ by the · Ge<ll lnltltute o! Clllld De9tloprnenl and Educatl'"' for Tomorrow, Inc. GtleU Ila!! membero and local dlitrict 1epu1naUves wlD be avallable to -quoollona aJltr tlie film on child ....,.U. and developnent ls ebown. GeeeU taclllllqUfl ~ determlnil!( child ~.""' uaed In~ ·~ ..,....1ng ll'OltllN uiled 1'IWn tba -district. •• Including llleguard Dean Westgaard and a profesalooal skydiving photographer, who plans to keep his equipment dry by landing oo the sand. The jump will take place at BJ> proximately 10 l .m. Hooping Jt Vp Patricia Morton, 12, shows how she became the 1972 winner of lbe Chicago Park District'• annual hula hoop compeUUon•in the 12:Years and ol.der division. Patrfcla can now compete in.further coote~-letd• ing towaril. the. national chilmpiopship. · • · . · Other events in the lifeguard demonstration, which gets under way on the Main Beach at 9:30 a.m. Saturday are competitive races, water and cliff rescues, equipment dlsplll)' and a fireboat display by the Orange Couoty Harbor Depertment. Outside Group to Review School District's Files EXCITED BRIDE LANDS IN BED NOVI SAD, Yugoslavia (UPI) Tamara Popov, 24, got so excited during her wedding ceremony that Instead of leaving with her buahand on honeymoon, she rushed lo a hoopllal. Mrs. Popov is recover:iog from a caae of nervous shock. By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL Of thl DlllY f'+i.t Slaff The canromla Association of School Business Officials bas accepted a request to review the business operations of the• Laguna Beach Unified School District. SUp!.' Wiiiiam .L. Ullom made the re- . quest to CASBO ·in the wake of an in-- vestt,ative accountant's charges that the accounting procedures used · in the business office are inadequate, sloppy and inefficlenL Laguna Council Action Principal actlool ·talcen-by the Laguna Beach City Council were: -Exteoded lbe building moratorium In pOrtlona of Arch Beach Heights for one year, pending compleUon of sewer instatlatioos, and took first steps to lnWate an ••sament dlstrlct to pay for the sewers. -Supported the Planning Commission's recomendatlon that the dty con- tinue to lnsl!t thal all of the Lquna Canyon waterahed remain within Laguna's sphere of Influence and decllried to ace<pt a new boundary propoeal for the city of Irvine's anneutlon. -Learned from City Attorney Tully Seymour that be Is doing further , .. searclr into legal upecta ol the poulh!Uty that Councilman Edward Lorr might withdraw hlf resiinatioo II tlie pending recall vOte b. In his favor. -Ruled that all gill! tq the city from members of the public m .. t he cleared wltb the city-COW!tll, Including the Identity of donorr." but agreed names of dooors wishing to remain anonymous would not he revealed. -Completed lleps to borrow up to $500,000 to defray city expenses until lat monies ... recefved and ,..... advised by Finance Director Robert Green that a 13f7,000 balanct la anticipated In llactmber apt\ a larger amount in January, wi.. r.paym1nt ot b •loails cillll boglri. ·• · • -Authorized subltltutlon of-a new *"'1• qreeioent for the Playhouse I-on 1 )'OOt'-loryar bula unUI Plajl!Ouse ~ ))Ol'.mll drawing 1 new le9M wttli tho dlJ• . ' Charles Hess, district bu 1lD·e11 manager, answered 1 the cbargea. thll week, stating accountant Robert T. Pugh had no experience in achool district financing and that the local , accounting system has received praise from· le~al independent accountine .ruins, , Dr. Ullom lnooupced his reque~t . to CASBO In a strongly worded three-page Jtatement rigardlng evaluation Pl'9" ~edures that have been u a e d in tho district in recent weeks. Specifically, UUom's statement is critical of Pugh's emPIOYJ:llenl and the hiring of a local aystems analyst Ted Donigulan to measure the effectiveneu of programs at three elementary school5. Both men were hired with support from trustees William 'lbomas, Patricia cu .. lelle and Gerald Linke. Truotees Norman Browre and Jane Boyd stood oppoeed. •1 • , , we would point out that con-- fusion does reign when It ls reported In the Santa Ana Register that 'recall target Patricla Gillette, Who recom- mended the board hire Pugh for *llO per day, not to exceed 10 days, bu defended her acUon, claipllng It wu la' res~ to .a recommendation by a cltlxens Educa· tlonal Priorities Study eo.mm:ittee ' " the Sllperlntondtnl said. "To the principals' knowledge /' .UlloJh stated, "no such recommendation e:llsts (S.. CASBO, Page I) Budget Talks Slated' . Laguna Beach city eouncllmen and atalf will pick their way through the ro-Posed 1m.i1 tiscal year dt' budge at ?:!II o'clock tonlghl"1t dty ball In tht Jeo. ond special study seulon on the budce~ just gone down the drain In the past two years. ~fy first responsibility must be the wel fare of my f!lmi!y. I have to supfX.'11 them. I never wanted to run from the rec·au. I had faith the truth \':ould win out adn It has won out. I have been proven to be correct and honest. But I can't con· sider remaining because I can't build this business back up again.•• At a recent city council meeting when Lorr castigated fellow councilmen for "deceiving the public'' in OO~get matters, many of his applaud ing supporters in the audience vowed to "write in" bis name on the recall-council ballot. Persuasion By Irvine Ignored By BARBARA l(J!EIBICH Of tM o.nr 'u" ltalt A persuasive presentation by TTVlne ci- ty councilman Henry Quigley before the Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday nig ht failed to sway Laguna's detennlna- tlon to keep the Laguna Canyon water- r;hed withlrrthe city's sphere of lnfluence. After a lengthy discussion, the council voted unanln)ously to ,oiJpport the plan- ning commlnlop'1 recommahdatlop that control ..., tho ..un nltnbed be .re-. -.l•lnOd. llp to ..... lncll!i!!l!f •• ,..,~ toil wtlll the, Local ,,_ Formation eomij\JQJQn <Ml"Cl over tbe ..- boundart. of lbe )ll'Opooed citJ cl Irvine annexaUon. The council did .,,... . ho ........ lo ad- Vl!e I.AFC that the city ll In favor of the rest of the aMexatlon. A LAFC bearing on Irvine's proposed 9,060 acre ''Fi'asier anneXaU on•·r was delayed IO daya, until July 2tl, to permit Irvine representatives to attempt to resolve boundaries disputes w J t b neighboring communities. Quigley told the couocil, "we had a number of productive teS1ions with your plaM!nf atafl and felt we had reached mutual' agfeement, but your planning comm.Luion took a different view.'' After the consultation, Quigley aald, the boundary In the Laguna Canyon.area had been pulled hack to delete some llllO a~~ of Laguna watershed, leaving only • 40il'acre segment at the uwar end ol the· canyon tn. tbe ma where the «NDtj plans to eslabtlah a regional park. "'lilil 11 a more or less level area that could drain either way," he explained. "We are most interested In resolving this among ourselves because if It goes to LAFC, they will make the decision for us and both cities might be at a disad- vantage. "The main concern of the city of Irvine Is to have access to the proposed county regional park In the Laguna lakes region lo hook up our bicycle and hiking trails." Mayor Richard Goldberg called on Plannlnf CommiMlon Chairman Carl Johnson to outline the commission's posl .. Uon. "The planning commission,~ said Johnaon, "wu unanlmous in feeling we abould take •very meuure to protect our (See IRVINE, Pace I) 0r .. ,. Don't let those low douds and Jo. cal drlule fool you. !I'll ,uu be sunny today alter the usual mid- morning clearing and lemRtt•tures of around 75 will prevail over the county. Lowa tonight llHil. INSmE TODAY Funeral Jor Lion CountTI/ Sa. forl'• fomed Frasier IJ)Ork$ an irate op into n from DA/lY PILOT acrlb• Bill Schr•iber, Su stoTI/ on Pag• JI. l..M..... 1 MwM »l'I' Ctllt.l"lllt I MW!tal ,_.. M Cll••IW ...,. ......... """ 4 C""kt It OJ-.. CW11fJ 1t c.......... l• ...,.. l»I DNtll ....... ,. '*" ...... ».!7 ..,.,... ,,.. . ~ . .... ,..,_, •11 ~ .,, P~ M1...,_. ' l'IJ{ .. .... lt ........ ,.... if.It ...... ,... 11 ... ..... 4 Ml~ ll ' \ • l J DAILY PILOT LB !'net Approval Pro-Greenbelt i Forces 'Shocked' By JACK CHAPPELL Of flit 0.llY Plltf IMn Alarm and dismay opreld through the nnka ol the LaJIUIUI Beach G,...nbtlt i..... wllh MWI that Roumoor Corpora. -Arch Beach Building Ban Extension OK 1.a,..,. Beach city c o u n c II m e n Wednelday night voted lo exlend the cur· rent bulldln& mo~~l<>rlum In portion,. of Arcll lleach Heights for up to one year. arxl took ateps to lnltlate Assessment Dlatrlct l&-1, for lnslallallon or sanitary ,,ewers In the area. A large. crowd of Arch Beach Heights residents in the audience was assured 'that i public hearing on the diJtrict, in· eluding detailed cost esthr.alel, will be held upon rectlpt or the engineer's report and befort further action Js taken. Howevor, <;tty AUomoy Tully Seymour pointed out J!iat Iha council wtll have the -to overrule protuta lo thta [o. llance, since the sewer Installation is bting undertaken on order of the County Health omcer. A spokesman for Lowry Engineering &aid plans and speclficatiorui . for the di!trlet are ts percent complete, ap- prailll of rtght-of·w•y ts under way and the flnn expects to have a cost estimate ready for presentation within two montm. Once bonds for the district are sold, he Aid, actual oonatructlon of theJroject should take about six months a work oouJd be started late this year or early .. next year. Asked why the project, first diacuued when tbe buildln& moratorium wu bJ>. posed a year ago, had taken so Jong to get olf the ground and why it could not be .peeaea up, Seymour explained, "'lbere are a lot of regulations regarding ICQUilitloo of right-of·way and we'd pnfer lo maintain good public relationa, but U can be done In a hurry, by con· demnaUon, If necessary." Property ownen pres<nt seemed diVld· eel 11 lo Whether they preferred lo follow norJlll) acqulaltion procedures or seek the falter route~ · Councilman Edward Lorr explaloed that Aaaemnent district ls btlng done und.-a llU Act, which takes Jonaer lo ~ heeauae all costa must be e.iabllohod and bonds sold he(ore work ~~ the more cu1tomary ltll Act, the city f1111ds the lnlllal states of the project lo get It movinc but, said Lorr, 11We don't have the money to do that irf this case." Councilman Roy Holm added , "Thia is a much Iller procedure. Under the 1911 Ant the city could apend thousands of dollar on legal fees and preliminary englnoerlng and ·allll risk ha vlog the cllatrict fail to ao throu&h." llaldenta aeeklng cost estimates for lodiYiclual Iota wen assured by the mayor that these would be made aVallable at a noticed public hearing before any further action was taken by the council. It wa aareecl that a tentative achedule ahould bt prmnted at the next council meeting, that the project should be mov- ed u speedily u poaslhle and that the moratorlum would be lifted ea.,Uer if work was completed. 8136 in Tools Taken Toola worth 1138 have bten reported atolen from a wooden 1hed al 3IO Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach by Grant E. ~heldon, . 25, a trucking contractor. Police 1a1d entry to the shed wu made through an unlocked door and placed the time of the crime at between noon and 2 p.m. Wednesday. OllN•I COAST L• DAILY PILOT '1'!t Oft1119 CM1t Dl'.ILY ,IU>T, wllll Wllklt Is comblllM "" H~, i. llUbllllM!'d by tnt Oflntt Co.111 l'vbU1hlr!I CtfNll!ti¥. S.... r•t. edllloM •r• publlslMd, Mtt'ld•y tl'lrt1151h P:rld1y, 1.-COtl• MHt, Newpart a .. cfl, Hwillf\1111111 l.cKfl/"°'"'"111 V•Hf'y, U11111• 9tl'dt, lrYl~s.6111 .... ck al'ld S!n ~II/ Sin Jv1r11 Clplltr•ne.. A 1lrogl• r19lon1I lldltlon i. ,W111htd Sttvnl•Y• illllld Svn1t1ys. The 1Wlncl1>tl lllUblllflint plent 11 If 1lO W..t l•Y Sw.t, C.11 Mnt, Ctlllllr11la, ,,.)I, ltlttrt N. w,,. "relldtnt •no PW11.i- Jtck A. C11tl•y \'k• l"nlld.,t Ind °"*'"'! Mll'lltfl" 1\011111 K,,.,iJ ...... lll•flltl Ar M111r1thi111 Mlnttlnt h l!w CJ.trlH "f, Lo•• llcll1r4 I. Nill MlhW.I Mtn1tir11 l•!fltl'I &.., ...... °""• 12.J F1rt1t A"'""' Mtlllttt .....,,,, .. : r.o. ••• '''· •1•11 --Clltl '-'-l DI Wttt '''f StrMI • ~du »» Hl*OWt 11oui.....w .. .,, hmdl! 1111• "'°' ........... 111 M "" IH NtHll l!I C.mlra 111"1 , ....... 17141 ..... Jll • Cl ............... 142·1171 Li..-. ..... A• hp.t ... tt: Tot ,a 4f4.t"" fi' lf1I. ~ CM.t "'*'llllltit • ... -,... ...,.... l!Mtret~ -;;;;;;;,,;";. ---·--_... .... ~ . .,.. ...... ..... CS.. .... MW .t C..11 MtM. =.... ......... W OITtlr CUI I 'r -If D.IJ. MMWii.-1 mil""? ;;;,.;;;,;;;, ... ,... &IM ,..,,...,.. tlon has received approval for three tracts within the area claimed by the local conservallooilll. "This aatounda UJ and we are 1bocked to see the bulldo'U:n ln this vital area," Laguna Grienbell President James Dilley told the Orange County Boerd of Supervisors Wednesday. Dilley cbaraed that the county plaMlntf slalf had violated dirocllvex of the supervlson and the county planning commisslon dlrectlves in not sending of. ficlal notices to Laguna Beach ot Greenbtlt people about publlc meeUnp at whic.h the tractl were be.inf con· sidered. "U we l\ad known: we would have been tbere 1o flaht," DiUey aaid. Wednesday, Dilley called the situation puzzling and confusing." Ho had called for an invettlgaUon into the ·matter by the Orange County C.Ounsel 's office the day before. . He said then that lf actions taken ln approving the tracts could be shown to be in violation or the express wishes of the commission and the supervisors, then perhaps the approvals could be revoked. The opinion by the counsel's office Wednesday said that the approva!J were not In conflict with the adopled board pollcy - a setback for the Gr<enbtlt pro- moten. Counsel said that areas claimed by the Greenbelt people were not definite, and that a Greenbelt boarder drawn by the County Planning Department had ex· eluded the Rossmoor tracts. Further, counsel stated that even if the tracts were within an established Greenbelt, approval of the tract.I wouJd "not be inconsistent with the adopted board policy because a policy of absolute moratorium in the Greenbelt area could well amount'to lnvene condemnation and we do not believe thls Is what was In- tended. .. Dilley hit the legal opinion as "en· vironmentaljy backward" and aaked that the aupervisora hold oU on any declalon to accept the opinion until Lagwla Green· btll, Inc. could consull legal counael and the Laguna Beach Planning Commission. "It'1 a big county, Mr. Dilley," said !14nald ca.pen, board chairman. "We're wit?i you, ·but on the other band, thll board hasn't taken an extreme action such as a moratorium," he said. "We, or nobody can just go drawing lines acrou somebody else's land." Caspm said. • However, the supervisor did observe, •1m.aybe it (the Greenbelt) la being violated a Uttle bit here." From Pagel CASBO ... in the Educational Priorltie1 Study Com- mittee Report. The interpretation of theae recommendatlona , in such a fashion will destroy the report and leave the district rudderless in terms of direction.'' " ... although the real reason for hir· ing Mr. Pugh may never be known. I have taken steps to support Dr. Hess as a professional business administrator." Ullom added. The CASBO team, he sa id, will be headed by Willard Goldstein. retired chief of school finance servlcea for the Los Angeles County Schools. Ullom said the team would begin in- vestigations immediately and have a completed report delivered to board members July 27. The fin.dings will be discussed at the Aug. J meeting of board of education. The superintendent's statem ent also noted that the principals of the district have agreed to Invite representatives of the Association of California School Administrators to review the problems of the school sy'stem. "Tbe reaSOhs that the principals feel strongly that the time is appropriate for extending this invitation ls that they feel a ~ to once again reinstitute some staff morale within-the district. "Comparison or schools, questioning of the creditability of the business . of lice, and the lack of energy spent in im- plementing the · Educational Priorities Study Committee report. In their opinion has deteriora ted staff morale to auch a low degree that some type of positive ac- tion must be taken at this time," Ullom reported. Fron1 Page l STRIKE ... to paaa It, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said, "It haa no chance of paaing this year." He said the Administration, 1ccept1n1 that reality, lelt It afforded a good op- ~unlly to reVlew the blll and to 'consuJt with reprmntatlves or organlz· ed labor more lolly." The spo.tesman said some Administrat1on .ofricials felt there were troubling provisions In the bill. Asked If the Administration had made a deal to temper its positiOn in return ror a Teamster endorsement, ZJegler S81d • "lhere waa no deal." Asked If the Administration's change or heart could lie looked upon u a reward to tbt Tul\llterx, ho .. id, ''I would not 10 cbaracterlle it." Zicsler conceded •1there baa never bten much enlbuslum" for the legtala· lion In C...aress. It ha• bten pcndirtJ - WAYNE BAGLIN LAURINCf CAMPIE~L llTH LEEDS . CARL JOHNSON Jlt. r Laguna Candidates Outline Views Four w Seek Couricil Seat of Recall Target Edward Lorr On July 25, Laguna Beach voters will go to the polls in a dual recall-council election. Incumbent City Councilman Edward C. Lorr Is the target of the recall. He has submitted his resignation, effective Ju]y ~t. Vying for his seat are four candidates who briefly swnmarize their positions here. lf Lorr is recalled in the July 25 vote, the candidate with tbe most votea will replace him. If the recall is not auc- cessfuJ, the city council will be requlred to appoint someone to serve out the two remaining years of his term, but not necea:i:arily one of the candidates. Only persons who vote either "yes" or "no" on the recall question will be eligi- ble to vote for one of the four candidates on the recall-council ballot. WAYNE J. BAGLIN, 29, ol 2765 High- land. \Vay, is a personnel administrator with th~ FJuor Corporation and a relative newcomer to the Laguria political scene. He states: ·•Nine weeks · ago I saw something evolving in Laguna Beach 1 did not like, a city government disintegratine because people could no longer discuss issues in a constructive way. I saw an interest group, masquerading behind several dil- ferent names, hand pick a candidate to implement their ideas which they in· eitaustingly state to . be the 'will of the people.' I have talked to the people in Laguna and they are tired of indlvidu.ls purporting-"to-be· their representatives to secure their own sellish interests. "People are looking for an honest coun· cilman, who understands and listens to what they have to say. They don't ask for promises they know cannot be kept, nor do they ask you to agree with them on all issues, they jw:t...,,want you to be you, not someone else's man. I am Wayne Baglln, nothing more, nothing Jess and I ~ant to be the reaidenll' councilman." LAURENCE A. (LAllllY) CAMPBELL, 41, ot 145 Anita Bt., II a recently retired Marino Corpa Major, loog time Lqwia Beach resident and membtr of the Plan- nln~ Commlsslll!l. He slates: "Issues ? Will Lorr be recalled or his .resignation accepted? Will those people who prevailed in the last election repeat? Will individualt elect to vote for representations of a non-aligned but responsive candidate? JuJy 25th will tell. ''Positions on high rise, population goals, land use and open\space elements of ll\e general ·plan sbo._ the planning commissioners to be uqited in viewpoint. No half trµths should be ~ceptable to concerned voten! Eitlµlline the issues of our last election and backers of can- didates and today's Laguna Be~ch! Then vote. "H.ecrtations for year·round residents, balanced city budget, sewers and ad· vanced treatment of solids, municipal transit systems improvements f o r Laguna resldenta, mulil·level parl<lng and NO remake of downtown Laguna are parts of my election plaUorm. Active solicitation of viewpoints from all Laguna reaidents. Talk about the election witb your neighbor, then VOTE." CARL E. JOHNSON JR., 50, of 611 Mystic View St., is a chemist, senior research usi!tant with Chevron Oil Field Research Co., chalnnan of the Planning C.Ommission and former Civic League President. lie states:· "The primary issue·on-July 25 wlll-bt election of a councilman who can best i m p r o v e council-community rela· tionships, with council and citizens again working together with unit of purpose. The unanimity and public support of Plannlng C.Ommission decisions under my leadership since last August show that this goal can be aCbleved. And the restoration of unity ts vital to preaerva- .lion Of the village character we all value "' htcJ>ly. "Among specillc objectlvea, a caretul review of city finaoou ls a firli priority item. A balanced, no-frllla budget for aervloes essenUal lo healtls and safely la not only a possibility, bul a necessity. "I also favor prompt completion of a strong General Plan providing real pro- tection to residents against the con- aequenc:es of unrestrained growth and development. "The Laguna Green~t, low population land use, duijn revleW of commercial bulldlngs. !lie J&.foot hetcht limit, a non- commercial Main Beach pal'lc, and con- tinuing citizen participation in planning and declllon makln& are equally im· portant objectives I have worked for and will continue to support if elected." BETH LEEDS, 30. 2699 Solana Way, ls a volunteer coordinator and bas been a Laguna resident since childhood. abe states: "Thia la the fint election lo the history of Lquna Beach where one council seal ta -lo the public. "I would llke lo point out a few thlnp about me that you cannot say about the other candidatea. I love you and you know 1 mean it. "I want to win because of you, that'• h:iw I got into politics in the first place. "I try lo prtxerve •• much ol our 1toll)e town as possible. "We can have confidence In the people we elect. We can have confidence in the people we elect, hire and'appolnt if we elect, hire and appoint people we have confidence lo. "I can cut $2 million dollars from the budget. "Lacuna Is our home. Love ta our answer. I will represent you." flf'OlllPageJ IRVINE ANNEX ... watershed area. The Laud Use ~lement of our General Plan speclfiea: that our most advanta1eous annexati(lfl wouJd be in the watershed. "If Irvine comes lnto our sphere of in- nuerrce, Wl could have a problem. We too, feet thecouflict ahould be rexotved before It r•ta to I.AFC but we !mow from biller experience just bow llorrlble it •la to be delupd from water from the ca- nyon. Our sewer plant, power plant and the whole businesa district an right in the flood plain. We must Insist that OW' zone of lnfluenc:ee xtend lo the tops of the ridges and that we get the watershed." ·Ding commission defloltely wants all the watershed and we're not in 1 poaltion to compromise." Holm pointed out that aa:ess lo the future park should not be an ilsue. "Everyone has access to our Main Beach and to O'Neill and Irvine perks," be 11kl "I would hope we could cooperale lo building a petwork of bike trails and this could be accompllahed wlthoilt an- neraUbn." · · Fat her Vows Lil etime Councllmin Roy Holm told Quigley, "II we could be xure ·"'" will always have tM tfnd ot city coUncil you have now, there would be no coocern. We feel you are doing a beautiful job with your land but there is no guarantee it will continue lodelJnitely." "Last night we pmoned the aree for agricultural," said Quigley. "So we're certain it wlll bold until April, 1974." Councilman Cltarllon Boyd added, •·t.agwla feela we face very valid 4angers; we lived through one Oood and we don't want to live through another one. We feel neighboring c!Uex ahould be wllllng lo recognlle thll. We auggest you move away to the actual contoun: Of the · land to the point where drainage 1hlfts and goes the other way, instead of follow- ing sectional 1ineJ. II "We are wllllng to draw a line •· upper end of Sycamore Hills wbJr leave only 400 of the orlgl1 acres," said Quiiley. "We coul1' Search for Murderer "You can't even be too sure ot that !" qulpped Mayor Goldberg. "We're exciled at the poulbillty of working with the city of Laguna Beacb," said Quigley, a former Laguna resident. that if any development occun land that it wouJd have to dra •. Irvine." .City attome'/ Tully Seymour '· •.• J that this woul bt dilfic:ull to enforce. SAN FANCISCO (UP ll -Someone picked up a hammer f\.1ary Jane Kravitt used in her lea therwork and crushed her skull with it. Police rushed her to a hoapital but there she died from the wounds Jan. 24. The killer escaped . not lo be found. But the 11-year..old girl's father would not let It go at that , be would not let the killing becilme "just another statistical unsolved murder ." Samuel Kravitt said Wednesday lhat as rong as be lives. the peraoo who bludgeoned his daughter and left her to die in a San Francisco apartment would be bunled and haunted. Kravltt , a New Haven, Conn. televillon photQgrapber, returned from a worldwide trip where he visited police headqum:ter1 in major and minor countries with a composite sketch or the suspected killer. "Perhaps it was a futile thing to do," he said. "But perhaps it will keep this guy on the run. Perhaps, eventually, he'll just break aod give up." Police made the &ketch from wltnuses• descriptions of a young, lona:·haired male who entered Miss Kravitt's apart. ment the evening before her body was found. Homicide inspector Al Podesta, said the per10n sought wa.s six. feet tall, about 25 years old and "someone she kneW'." Her father said the killer "must llve with aomethlng worse tha'n death." "How Cll1 be escape the thought, the memot)I of that brutal bludgeoning and leaving her to die?" he asked. Kravilt aaid hta world hunt for the killer look him lo places where root!.., young Americana often COOil'e&•te - Sydney, London. Rome, Hona Koll(, New 0.Iht, Grenada . Sports Car T~p Taken A sports car lop valued at 111111 wu rtPOrted taken from the parked vehicle In the 700 block ol 1.a,..,. Canyll!l Rold Wednesday. Irvine resident, Frederick 0. Cappello, 17, of 11711 Via Siena, told Laguna 8eoch pollce that lbe top wu taken :temttlme "I aaw the police In all theae places, asking them to be on the lookout for the man on the chance he had joined one of these coJonlea. Tbey were , sympathetic, all very nice," Kravltt said. But JohnlOlt remained adamant. 0 Tbe planninc commtaslon ta alao baclted against the wall with Rossmoor develop- ment; we don't want the same thing from the other side," he said, "The plan- .. I don't think we'll deviate from the position that we want the watenbed within the city," concluded Mayor Goldberg. "We will support the planning commission and it we go in protest to LAFC you will undentand the D}Otlve." .JJ. J. 9arrell Pre6enb ..• I . •.. a collection of HERITAGE upholste1·ed pieces at 20% OFF during our 20th Semi Annttal Ft~rniture Sale. ........ We hive 10 Sofe Sty!. .•• IOChlir Stylea ancl -500 · falorics +o c~ fTom, SAVE 20% Dur"'9 this event Ya11r favorite. interior dt1ig,,.r 10!11 &1 lltPPlf to aoml ~°" , • • . . H.J.GARRJlT fURNfjURE PROl'ISSIONAL INlUIOR Dl$l'"9s Opto M ... 11iun: I Fri. Im. 2211 HARBOR ILYD. COSTA MISA. CAUf, more than two years. ' • between 8:30 ·and 10 p.m.- I • t I 17 I I t 17 I I I ' ' ) I Saddlehaek· • vor. 65, NO. 202, 3 SECTIONS, 3<4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 20, '1972 Fickle Fischer ~Playing Games-Also REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) American challenger Bobby Fischer changed bis mind at the last minute to-- day arwi once more ordered televlslon cilmeras out of the hall where he began • the fifth game of his $250,000 world championship chess match with Boris Spassky of Russia. Technicians were Installing t h e cameras only 15 minutes before· the con· test when Fischer announced be wouJd not play with them In the hall. 11Everything was perfect and ready to shoot," said one televl.slon cameraman as he carried out his equipment. "But then came the ·can which told us to get them out on the doµble. Nothing about this can surprise me." Spassky, playing the white pieces, ar- rived on .time for the game and started with his favorite opening -the queen pawn. Fischer fushed in four minutes late direcUy from dinner, scanned the board for a rew leooodl, then movec! bis king knight. After four quick moves, the game followed the same pattern as the firat contest which Spasslly woo. Spasslcy ap. peared to ·hold the upper hand at the Hth move. TJie 29-year .. Jd challenger forfeited the seccnd game or the mat<h to Spassky when the organizers refused for a lime to remove the cameras. . Spassky, 35, took a ooe-pclnt !ead'!nto the game. ·He won the first game, took the aecond by default and dmr the !ourth !Qr a tolal o! Z.5 pclnlt. Fl.ocher's win la the third game and the draw gave him 1.5 pclnts gcing Into the fifth ccntest. Tbe Russian champion needs 12 points to retain his title, while Fischer needs 12.5 points to win. The latest camera diJpute followed a night In which Fischer visited the playing hall for a midnight Inspection and found about 20 things he did not like. Gudmundur Thorarlnsson, president or the Icelandic Chess Federation, aald he received 11about sis or Se\'tl'l" letters from Fred Q-amer, Fischer's represen- taU ve, about things the U.S. challenger wanted changed. Fischer/ complained to the organizers abou t the polished marble chess board, saying he wanted a amaller board with Jess glare. Thorarlnsson said Fischer also wanted smaller squares on the board, but that Spassky at one point requested larger squares. Fischer also demanded a new car and TEN CENTS Chess free run of the sv.·imming pool at the Loftleider Hotel where he is st&¥ing, but met a polite rebuff. The Atnerican had some hotel guests chased from the pool and later walked up to a Spanish guest who rcfuseG to leave. tapped him on lhe shoulder and asked for a bar of soap. "Mr. Fischer is a treasured guest but he does not onwn the hotel ,'' a spokesman for the hotel said. •·tie is free to use the swimming pool during the night but we cannot reserve it for him." Complaints Aired Teachers Seeking Public Backing DAILY P,ILOT StMI ...... l\1ewp..-t 'Bod11wltompitlfJ' Two body sulf~ t.U a. left at Ne>iPort's famo$ . . "man-made" body ,orfmg .$J!OI, the Wfdge. The· lo. cal spot, named for the shape wav11 lake after bouncing off' the rock jetty, providoss· some of the 1110st ap~ai;Ular spill!· and thrills t.ltri*.'zpert 'bOay' cJ.¢e1\~lbU and guts are a ll!ua:bllhalhon:"' q1111ching waves at the W~ge. _ _ Fa th er Vows L.if etime Search for Murderer SAN FANCISCO (UPI) -Somecne picked up a nammer Mary Jane Kravitt used in her leatherwork and crushed her skull with it. Police rushed her to a hospital but there she died from the wound! Jan. 2f. The .killer escaped, not to he found. But the 21-year-oid girl's father would not let it go at that, he would not let the killing become "just another statistical uMOlved murder." Samuel Kravitt said Wednesday that as Jong as he lives, the person who bludgeoned his daughter and left her to die in a San Francisco apartment would he hunted aJ)d haunted. Kravitt, a 'New Haven, Conn. television photographer, returned from a worldwide trip where he visited police headquarters in major and minor countries with a composite sketch of the swipected killer. "Perhaps it was a futile thing to do," he said. "But perhaps it will keep this guy on the run. Perhaps, eventually1 he'll just break and give up." Police made the sketch from witnesses' Ziegler Says descriptions or a young, Jolfg-halred male who entered Miss Kravitt's apart· ment . the evening before her body was found. Homicide Inspector Al Podesta, said the person sought was six feet tall, about 25 years Old and "someone she knew." Her father said the killer "must live with something worse tbah death." "How can he escape the thought, the memory of that brutal bludgeoning and leaving her to die?" he asked. Kravitt said his world hunt for the killer took him to places where rootle53 young Americans often congregate - Sydney, London, Rome, Hong Kong, New Delhi, Grenada. "I aaw the pcllce In all these places, asking them to be on the Jookout for the man on the chance he bad joined one of these colonies. They were sympathetic, all very nice," Kravitt said, Police said a man was admitted to the beautiful dark-haired Mba Kravltt's apartment early the mcrning or Jan. 21 and witn ..... heard the -pair talking. About two'bours later, the bof.rlfied oc- tupant of a lower apartment found blood dripping OD his kitchen Door lrom the celling. When pq!lce arrived and broke Into (See HUNT, Page Z) Action Delayed On Rinker's Bid To Rezone Tract After deliberating about aircraft noise for m o r e than an hour. Irvine Cowi. cilmen have delayed until Aug. 8 action on a zoning request by Rinker Develop- ment Company for a parcel located about a mile from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, The matter came to the council Tues-- day on a~peal from the planning ccm· niisslon denial on several ground!. Councilmen established that fll'e pro- tection facilities -at Yale and Walnut Avenues -would be adequate to serve the tract, thus eliminating .one planning commission concern. Walter Fromey detailed ways water and sewage service could be provided at tl:)e Rinker firm's expense. He unrolled a tattered map -worn fr:om 15 months or hearings on the zoning be.fore first county bodies and now the cf. ty. It sbowed, he clalined; how adequate traffic access to the property could be provided. Having eliminated all lhe planning com· mission concuns except' .the jet noise pollution probl~m, Frotney spent more than an hour exp}flin.ing how present Marine Corps practices at El Ton> spare bis parcel from .excessive noise. Tlie n acres Rinker hopes to develop as a planne·d residential coinmunlty with homes on 51000 square-foot Jots lies on (See NOISE, Page Z) By CANDACE PEARSON Of flle DellJ Pll-' ll•fl Tustin Union High School District teachers will go shopping for public sup- per! or their complaints against district contract proposals tb!s weekend, a teacher's representative a n no u n c e d Wednesday. AOOut 50 teachers from Tustin, Mlss.ion Viejo and University High Schools plan to lobby in El Toro, Mission Viejo, Tustin and Irvine shopping centers Saturday and Sunday. Teachers led by Mission Viejo High School math teacher Jim Wehan or Dana Point said they "ha'lle made a valiant ef- fort to resolve this di!pute.'' but that trustees and district administrators have "refused to adhere to the spirit of the law." Contract negotiations are governed by California 's Winton Act, which sets guidelines for meet and confer sesslons. There are five basic issues. with salaries the main bone or contention. Teachers are asking for at leut a f.8 perctn across--the-OOard raise, while the district has o!!ered thrte percent, which Superintendent William Zogg said ac- tually is 3.8 percent when non-salary benefits are included. "The salary proposal we are offering,•• Zogg emphasized this morning, "ls the third highest in the county or the (13) districts serving high school students." Associate superintendent Jay Schumaker said he had determined It to be in the upper 10 percent of those offered in comparable district.!! state-wide. Teachm say it's not even near cost-of- •stop Divor~e~ '"Girl ?1.0 S'ett'dJ ·· r ;.W?r to 1 .. ,,i ae ·? ~-. ~ ' .. ~~ •. . . ~ . . -VISAi.IA (AP) ... A •IO--f'll'Old girl baa pleided Jn a letter to a Judge that her parents be refused a d!vol;'Ce. '11le child, who was not Identified, wrote: "Honorabte·Sir, My mom and dad is getting a divorce ••• please don't let them get a divorce. My momma loves my dad ; if you could put him In the hospital he cculd quit drinking. 0 I've beard my mom say to my dad many times, 'Please slow down on your drinking,' but ht just walks out the door. "Sir,. you are a judge and this is your Joh, to divorce people. "Only whert. do ones go that still love the husbands? And bow do you diVorce a 10-year-old? Can you cut out my heart. and stop !i from hurting?" The (kl pleaded, "Please, please, • ple ... ,~P '" 10........id bOp • -and dad. I know .ii iJlom tryed )'1111 prob- ably' wouldn1 listen ••• "'God blm you and Jet God he on this day the judge beside you." SUperio< Coutl Judge Jay Ballantyne aaid Wednesda~ he sent copies of the let· ter to the attorneys representing the girl's parents and replied to her, "I am well aware of the tragedy which It Involved every Ume parents separate where small children are involved· ••• I can wure you that If either or your parents peUtlon the court for an attempted reconclllaUon I will do all I can to help reaolve their differences." · Under state law granting divorces where trreconcllable dllferences elllt that ts all he can do. ·Interest-free Cash Joaquin Schools Nix Loan Of $100,000 From Firm The Mission Vlepc Company Wednes- day . of!ered a $100,000 Interest· free loan to the San Joaquin Elementary School District. School trustees turned It down. The offer, made by company spokesman Glen Mon, was to be earmarked for the lease of portable classrooms to avoid double sessions for first and second graders in the district. At present prices, the $100,000 would pay the first year'a lease and inllallation costs for about 14 portable clusrooma, according to district figures. Mon, not!ni that the Mlutoo Viejo Company has ao far given some '900,000 In outright giflt to the district, aald the ''crisis for school space" prompted this new offer. But the achoo! board and school o!· ficials pointed out that a •t00,000, one- year loan would he or Utile benefit to the district. They aald complications Include: No 'Deal' Made On Labor Laws Fn>m Wire S.rncea WASIUNGTON -The White House acknowledged today it agreed to consult lurther with organi%ed labor -a .. g. ment with which Pretident Nixon bopea to make major pn>greaa In November - he!ore purSulng long-pending legislation aimed at avoiding crippling nllUooal Douglas Item Facing Panel -The district will go out or existence in one year, meaning the money would have to he paid baclc before June 30 1973. -Portable claS11rooms must be leased for at leaat three years. In entering any such agreement, the San Joaquin district would he commilllnK the new unified districts to paying for the !acllltlea . . ' strikes. One labor organization that bas stroll(· Jy oppcsed compulaory e r b It r a t l o n features of the blll, which woi&ld apply throughout the traMpcrtatlon lndllllry, It Ibo Teamsters Union. The Tcamaten m- 4oned Nixon for ,._.lectioo OD~. bp!ahilll( JlhY a declsloo 1"d 1-1 1111de to RI the meuure uldo, lllhoqh lilson had called !Of tt repeatedlJ ml en occulon dfllOllllCed Conirm !or flllurt to pau It, preas a<cretary &oalcl ·L. Ziegler u ld, "ll has no c11ance of P1aJnc tbla yur." . Irvine ~P'lanners . ro Discuss V se of Firm's Building Irvine planning commissioners will<®- • sider four matters In pllbllc hearings toalght, Including a permit requetled by the McDonnell Douglas Corporation to allow a variety or uses In .the firm's 42,00IHquare foot huildillp at 2121 Csm· pus_Dtlve. The bther li'earing1 on tonight's-agenda include !Urthet ccDJ!deratlon of the city's wall and streetscape ordinance, tts g ... ~ service-statlOD l!SO permit law and 1t1pporting dealgn regulations and a 31 ....... Inert ... In the •lze of the Irvine lndustrlal Complex. . The ~ matter lnvolvu city ap.. P""ll of a niedlcal clinic, two archltect engineer offices, an architect planner of· flee, a travel service, realty office, publishing buslnesa of!ice, and ad· mlnlstrative and professional offices. Some of these uses already have been moved into tho two former Aatropower Labs ·buildings on the so.acre Douglas J!lll"'OI at campus Drive and MacArthur Biiiilevard. · City offtclalt °" Jtme 15 asked McDon- nell Douglas to apply for a use permit. County govemmeot -the o.itglas proiierty fnim Industrial U80 to com- merctal last ran. At the Ume the r .. qulrement for. oooditlon&I .... permit 14 cionlrol types of commercial uses was at· !ached to the zone. • With incorpcratloo, the city of Irvine assumed authority to Issue or deny tho use permits. The City planning staff recommends approval or the permll request for alt usea ••cept the administrative offices. Those should be subject to a further · review by meana of a separate use permit application, the recommendation •!ates. . 'Planning ·ld\'Jaer . Ed Haworth also recommends that 1lgna allowed on tbe largely .vacant property ahould coofonn to \lie lrvlne Industrial Parle pla~ a1mmunity l!andards and that landacap. lni ~ maintained. • ' -The only use to which the money would he put would he drawing Interest in a bank. In a year, It would bring the district about ».OOO. ''We appreciate your offer/' board Pttsldent Robert Damuon told Mon, ''but it doesn't help." Trustee Dennis Smith, calllnc It a "rather awkward lituation," thanked Mon and his company for their concern, but aald several· prlncipall preferred dou- ble sessions aa the best alternative to the proh!t111. As It aandl now, llmost an flrsl and second graden In the di11rict will he on double 1eBSion1 or modilil?d IChedullnc nut year. The final detOrnilna!lon of bow to handle the overcrowding problt111 will be made by . tndlvlduaJ. acllQ!>I , prin-· cipals. living requirements. Other issues : -Teachers want a limit on maximum class size, not just an average student· teacher ratJo of 30.S to 1 which they have now. Schumaker contends an absolute celling would he unworkable, but aald tho district is trying to avoid large classes. -Teachers want additional Ubrarians and nurses. Schumaker said the dtstfict has added a half-time librarian and more clerical staff, but couldn't jusitfy any more expense. -Teachers want coaches of one sport to get credit for that as one of their classes. The district says coaches will be given class-load credit for sports only if co~chlng at least two sports. · -Teachers want a district pollcy on extra-duty assignments and length of the workday, Zogg and Schumaker aald the educ•· tion code dictates S\lch decisions be made by Individual school Jl!lntjpals. D~tril:\ o!!lclalo coitaeted·lhts mom· Ing were Mll'p<tsed by ltie ooapbox plans of teae!fiera. ~ .... the bollrd'• -~ .... fer ...,,._.taUve, mt( "1lb ·'*\f<r ~ton uni!! ,, p.m. Morlday nliht and had aet another meetlni fllr ne.il Wetlr, He aald had no lndlcallon teachers were planning the acUon they announced Tuesday, Nelthe~ Schumaker nor r.ogg wanted to commen t on the teachers' shopping center plan.s, or on hints of more drastJc actions if that doesn't produce results. Wehan, pmldent of the local teachers assoctatJon, said, ''I don't know what my memben will decide to do next. So far there hu been no decision to withhold our professional services when school opens in Sepbnmber. '' "WitJ:tllOJding services," Wehan ex· plained in an interview, doesn't have to mean a str,ike. It could mean a cutdown ln extra-duty assignments. 'Jews for Jesus' Picket 'Godspell' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Seven h~ "jews for Jesus" picketed the opening here or the musical "Godapell," which tells the life of Christ through song and pantomine. 0 'I'hey're trying to make box office out of the Jesus revolution," said Moishe Ro!en, leader-of the convert group which leafleted the first-nighters at the Geary Theater. Rosen complained the show pcrtraya Christ lo the 11rldiculous. figure'' of a clown. ....... 1Veadaer Don't let those low clouds and 1 ... cal drlule fool you. It'll still he SUMY today alter the llSlll! mid- morning clearing and temperatures of &rOWld 75 wUl prevail ove.r the county Lows tonight tl!).e6. INSWE TODAY Funtral f01' Lion Coun!Ty So- farf1 f(Jfnea Frasi<r aparltl "" irote op f n Ion from DAILY PILOT 1crlbt Bill Schrcfber. Ste ttorv on Page J 1. ( ' • • • :; DAILY PILOT 15 Man Fl.ees To Police; Trio Caught . '!OllllANCE (AP) -Kldnaped wUb Jill ,...., IOl1 f= hb home al iunpolnl by llltlllben of a motorcydf 11111. • 2:;. yeal'Old I.GI Allleln man cnwled tmoaal> a alUc window of the home ... bm he ... betn1 held and tummoned htlp, police said l<lday. They said lhlO< meo have been booked for lt>nallpllaft of kldn.op, waull and oaroollct tlolatlooa. The vlcltm, J...,i. Hernandez, llld bo !lllllllad to acape ,_ the houle when • eyclllt llancllnfl pant fell aslotp. Olflcllt -to the bou1e and arreated the trio. '11ioy alto lnod Hernandel' :t-year-old ...,, Jooepb, who olllctlh said wu Wlbannad. lie-,.Id the trio approilched him at 7 p.m. Wedlle9d1y In the front yard of b1s Torrance area home and ordered him and his son to go with them .. Herulldez told officials the trio, whom be bM never seen before, 1prarentJy inlstalllalJ bolleved be had -e lmowJNe Uaul a IMlrglary al one Cao& membar'1 home. · Police ldentllled the trio as Gregory Pala, 2f, Seymour Winberg, 23, and Gary HibJett, 23, of Torrance, all memben of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club. Hernandez hid the three ollpped lllld plltol·whlpped him In trying IO elicit in· fonllllloll about the IJurilary. · Olllcero oald they seized a doun lbotcunt Ind rllles, two hand...,., two adtcaseo filled with ammwlilloo ltom the home Ind lb: .marljuano planll - eadl two laet blgb -crowing fn a roof· t.;pnloo. ,.,....,. .. e J HUNT •.• Mlle Kr1vlU'1 room, they fOWld the -<IY!nlr. XrlivUf aild be olten sllrea 11 the drawlnfl of the -' and ttpeall the qOolalloa, "U I bod cre•ted man I'd be uhamad to oall .,,..u God. .. Attica Inmate s' Protest Halted AmCA, N.Y. (UPI), -The If>' ~ IOO inmates who partlcfpatod In I three<lay strike II the Attlea·prllail llldad thelr pn>llll W~ clft. But a llato of emeraeocy rtm1ined In efltel loday 11 a precautlolw')' ,,_...., Tbe lmnatu •l"'td lo come out of tbetr cells after a meetiq between pri.., llloerlntondent Emul L. Mon- tnne ml the Inmate LiJlaon Com- ml\lee. Tho)' bod remained In thelr cell&. nluAI( melh, ,.,rl<" periods and U· -bttab, lo support ti demands. Irvine Trustees Plan to Confer lrvlDe Unllled Scllool Dlltrlct trustw will conduct a opeclal meeting Friday at 5 p.m. at Univtrslty Park Elementary SChool to take action on an agreement to house aome of Tuatin's high school students. The new Tuatln Unified School Board meets: put Tuesday ni1ht and will be ......,.ldering bulldlnfl loan appllcaUons by the San Joaquin SChool Dlstrict,'whlch need approval of all three new unilied dlltrlcta to 10 to the 1tale. ID 11111m.73 ochool year, there wUI be M lludtnlt 1ttendln( Univerotty High -In Irvine who live In the TuoUn cUsqlct, according IO school officials. ...... C:OAJT .. DAILY PILOT T1le ~ bllt DAllY l'ILOl, 1'1111 WlllOI " ~ .. " ..... ,.... Is Sl'lllllsl!M .., "* Of ..... CIN1I l"Wlilll~ Clln!Mll'f, .... ' ,.. .. •1111•• -llUbll~ MllllN'( lh~ ·~'(. .... C•I• M.,., NtwPOtl 81adl, tM\tt,.,_ ... dll"-l•ln V•lllY, l..-W ...... lfYhtl"dllleWdl erld SM Cllrnentt/ S.11 J11111 c;,,111........ A 1J111l1 tfO~I MlllM II •r1111 .. ll!vt .. 'I" ~ Svndt)'I. fM 1Wlnc:lpfl llUIMldl ... •llM Is •t JlO Will a.r I ..... C.• Mlle, Ctltfol'Me, 9H)6, lekrt H. WeH Pralcltlll tlMI ll'uOIW>cf' J•ck R. c.,1,, 'flCll l'rwkMlll W Gtntrtl ,.__.1 n ••• ec .... a ..... ?MM•• A. M11r1Jhi11• MIMlllitl"ll#tlr a-1..i H. t...1 lls••nl P. Nell Awlll:MI M~lnt f:cflltr'S l ' • Idea F•R Sltort'l Airport Report Draws Grumbles Summer School Hootenan ny By JACJt BROBACK OftM~PMllS'9tt County olllclals 1Nmbled tod!J that the loac·•ll'allad Squlbern Calllorllla Retloclol Aviation Syllemt lllldy made public WedMsday lolls ~ of "!lving Orange OOUnty's airport problems . They admitted prlvatel,y they would have to seek other means to reaolve their ah' trmYl'Oflatlon probltma. . 'Ille atudy released Wodntlday in a Los Joaq uin Vote On Officers Will Stand Maryann Sivak leads her class of 22 students at Cordillera School in ~lulon Viejo In a round of the "Streets of Laredo" and 66 other folk and holiday songs they've learned to play on acoustical guitarsa The fifth and sixth gradera were all be&innen but c&n now do four groups of chords, 11 strum1 and simple plucking. Miu SIYlk has advised them to "•Ing loudly and play softly." San J01quin Elementary S c ho o I District truateta Wedneaclay decided IO lei 1tand 1111 ruulll of.their officer elec- tion two w..U 1101 even thoulh it may be contrary to "board policy. At th• eltcUon, trustee R o b • r t Dameron w11 choMn 11 pret;ldent and outaolnl preoldenl Orataln Bldari named u vice prleident. The vote wu split in each cue. Ir vine Fai ls to Move Laguna on Annex Stand By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 flM otllr 'II" 1ttrt A perauasive pre1entatlon by lrvine ci- ty councilman Henry Qul1Jey before the Laguoa Beach City Council Wednesday night failed to sway La&una 's determina- tion to keep the La1una Canyoo wale~ shed within the city's sphere of tnnuence. After a lenathy dlscU!!lion, the council voted unanimously to support the plan· nin& commillioo'1 recommendation that cootrol over the entire watenhed be re- tained, up to and including llllng 1 pro- test with the Local A1ency Fonnation C.Ommission (LAFC) over the revised boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine annexation. The council did aarn however, to ad- vise LAFC that the city ls in favor of the rest of the annexation. A LAFC bearing oo Irvine's proposed 9,060 acrt 1'Fruter annexallon" was delayed 60 di)'i.-·untn July 26, to permit lrvine representatives to attempt to reJOJvt bountlatiu disputes w i t b nelghborlnl communities. Quigley told the councll, "we had a number of productive sessions w11h your planning staff and felt we hac: reached mutUll aareement, but your plaruting comnllssion took a different view." After the conaultation, Quigley said, the boundary in the Lquna Canyon area had been pulled back to delete 10me BOO ama of Laguna watershed, leaving only a too-acre aeemept at the upper end of the can,yon in the are.a where the county plans to establish a regional park. '.'This is a more or le11 level 1rea that could drain either way," he explained. "We are mo1t Interested In resolving this among ounelves becauee if it goe1 to LAFC, they will make the deci.llon lot us and both cities might be at a disad- vantage. ''The main ctlncern of the city of Irvine is to have access to the proJX>sed county regional park in the Laguna lakes region to hook up our bicycle and hiking tralls." Mayor Richard Goldb8l'g called on Planning Commission Chainnan Carl Johnson to outline the commission's posi· ti on. "The planning commission," said JohMon, "w11 unanimoue in feellna we shoUld take every measure to protect our \vatershed area. The Land Use Element of our General Plan specifies that our most advantageou.s annexation would be in the watershed. "I! Irvine comes into our sphere of ln- fluence, we could have a problem. We too, feel theconfilct should be resolved before It gets to LAFC but we know from bitter experience just how horrible It Is to be deluged from water from the ca- nyon: OUr sewer plant, power plant and the whole buelntss district are right In the flood plain. We must insist that our zone of influencee xtend to the tops of the ridges and that we get the watershed." councilman Roy Holm told Quigley, ''If we could be sure you will always have ttle kind of city council you have now. tbere would be no concern. We feel you are doing a beautiful job with your land but lh~re is no guarantee it will continue indefinitely." "Last night we preioned the iilrea for agrlcul\ural," 1aid Quigley. "So we're (:ertaln it will hold untll April , 1974 ." "You can't even be too sure of that!'' quipped Mayor Goldberg. F rona P age l NOISE ... the soothWtst side of Moulton Parkway near Sand canyon Avenue and nearly un- der a seldom-used runway at El Toro. Fromey said the chief problems oC noise result from tbe 36,000 fllght.t a year that use another runway, but circle El Toro near the Rinker parcel. Lt. Col. Ed Jans, representin& the Marines, said the tratnina flights were likely to continue. He clted a Bolt, Beranek and Newman noise study that indicated the level of noise that can be expected to continue w a s sWficient to cause "group action" complaints. While the Corps tries to be a 'jgood neighbor," Jans said he saw no im· mediate end to the tralning flights. Speculation that El Toro was about to be phased out in favor of commercial uses was denied by Col. Jans. He noted, however, that continued building of homes in the area would likely preclude co•inued use of the facility either by lhe Marines or by commercial aircraft. Budget Belt Not So Tight AsJoaquinBudgetOkaye d By PA TRICK BOYLE 01 ,~. GIUr Piiot Jl•ll The San Joaquin Elementaff School District began the fiscal year July l with a rigorous pull on its £lnanclal belt, ex· pecting an economically austere final year of existence. But after a recent series of windfalls, the atomach is startif\j to droop over the top of that hell. been scme talk among board members lllat the tax increase wouJd be cut back jn light of the wind.tails. The extra money started rolling into the district coffers aboUt 1 week after the tentative liudget was adopted. Under that lnltiaJ budael, several educational program expanSions bad been t\lt, the maintenance staff of the district had been reduced and many wished-for proj- ects had been eliminated. Buildin g Loan Plan Hinges On Senate Bill The man who boa all hll cblpo rldlna: on a bill that would aid the San Jooquln El<mentary School Dlllrlct aays he belleve1 the m11IW't baa a ING chance to make It through the llale ltglalature. Dove Kin&, laclllUu plannlna: director for the dl1irlct, believes the enUre school building ~m In the district "wlll C<Jme IO 1 terteehlnl halt" If Senate Bill 728 11 not sl1ned Into law. Tha ·bill lllell, concernlni the stale sc hool building loan procrom, would not he nearly 11 heoeflclal IO the dlslrlct 11 an ameodment. 1be amendment, pro- posed by Sen. Dennis Corpenter CR· Newport Beach), would exempt the Tuatln UnUled School District from 1ny liability for state money loaned to the San Joaquin diatrict during tbl.! fiscal year. King was in Sacramento Tuesday when the Assembly Education Committee ap- proved the amended measure. Although the blll Itself hal ·been puled by the state Senate, It mUJt aUU return there for concurrence on the Tuitln aJneDd.. ment. King expects the rutl Assembly to con- sider and pass the measure early next week, but says the Senate has indicated a desire to adjourn at the end of next \Veek, King ls not sure if the bill would be through the Assembly to tlme for Senate committee and the full Senate to pass the measure. Prison Revamp Se t ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI) -Gov. Marvin Manciel say1 medical care and rehabllltatJon progrlmS will be improved immediately for · the S,000 inmatea of the Maryland penal system disrupted by three riotl this week. Mandel intervened personally in disruptions at Jessup and Baltimore, which brought hlm face-to-- face with iMlateai who complained about prison cond1Uona. Al that Ume, Trustee Preaton Howell aald bl thouibl the board polJcy WU that the vice pruldent ohould represent the minor. vlawpolnt on the board. ID the few 1 t declalont the board makea, Howo and Denni• Smith uNall,y vote In the minority. When the m.1tter waa nconsldertd Wedneaclay, Smith pointed out that the orilln&l election bad been 1 "miltake1 • becauae· tho vice pttttdent had been choaen prior lo the -ldeot. This ellmlnalld the poutbutty or lnsurtni th•t the ....ailed minority bald the vice pttsldency, The main purpoae of the 1ptlt, under present policy, would be lo lnlure that all lltm• would be placed on the a1enda. Qn. l,y the board pre1ldent c~n ordar mattero brou1ht belora the board. "Who decldu w-phllooopby lo whlt?11 Trwittt Jotepb PtttrlGD uked. u1 · thouaht we Wlte all here for the benefit of the cblldttn." "At this polnt In time,'' President Oamerui said, "I don't feel that the dl1unlty (that ezllted earlier tbit year) still exists." ·•And if I ever fail to put anythin& on the agenda that a board member or ad- ministrator has requested," be added, "I will reslp my poeltion." Cynthia Hughe8""'" Services Friday Funeral services are sc'heduled Friday for Cynthia Dianne Hughts, 17, o{ El Toro, one or two teenaged youths discovered drowned Sunday ni&bt after a pool party in Garden Grove. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Pacific View Chapel, Newport Beach, Burial will follow at Pacific Vtew Mortuary Parle. M1s1 H111bea, of :13536 Dune Mear Road, El Toro, attended Mountain View High School In santa Ana. She i.s aurvlvod by mother, Mrt. Jeanne Gover, of El Toro; fat b e r, Fredrick Hughes, of Blue Diamond, Nev.; aistert Kathy and Carlyn pl111 brother Mlchael, all of El Toro. Grandmothers; Suole Kady and Alma Hu1bes, both of Ssnta Ana. JJ. J. 9 arrell ... a collection of HERITAGE upholstered pieces at 20% OFF during our 20th Semi Annual Fu1·niture Sale. ' Angelu meeting was conducted over the past two years by WWilm L. Pertira Associates in joint venture with Sy1teµl1 Develo_pment Corporation for t ht Southern Calilornia Asaoclltlon o I Govemmenll (SCAO). The study area covered 10 cowtties - Loa Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Imperial .and Ventura, all member• of SCAG , plus Kern, San Dle10. Ssnta Barbara and Stn Luis Obllpo eow1u ... Tbt fl00,000 report offer•. notbinc new for Oraoge County that wal DOt already olferod in the farat phase Orange County Aviation Study report completed In 1118& by the Pmtr.a !Inn. It did push the proposad International airport at Camp PendJeton, u did the. 1968 report. The only diffennct th11 Ume \Vas the term "major global" airport, a proposed des ignation for the hoped-for Pendleton facility and an expanded Palmdale Airport, after 1985. Tha Grana• County Airport w11 left In the 0 Metroport" category which llmlt1 service to a $00-mile range, Just what Is being ollertd al the facility today by Air C.IUomla and Hu1hes Alrwest. ID the Wedne!day report, Loe Angel., Internath>nal, P1lmdlfe and Miramar Naval Alr Station in San Dl910 were deaJ1nated 11 Intercontinental f1clllU11; Long Beach, Ontario and El Toro Marine Air Station In Orana:a County, Continental (l,IOD-mlle ranga) and Orana:t County. Sln Diego Llndberlh Field, Ontario and Burbaot, metroporta, with the IDD-mlle llmlt. 'nle new report dJd oner one additional element -a propoaed network of remote termtnal1 "which l!Ollld not only reduce 1urf1ce traffic congeatlon at exi.ltlng 1irports__bul would obviate the neod of public ' lermlnal1 or traUic on mlllllr)'. bases ... The report 1u11ested that ouch termtnall would he developed by local agencle1 ln 1uoclatlon with the alrllnes In auch place• 11 ahopplna or civic center•. When Oranee County s u p e r v I 1 o r Ronald W. C.1per1 of Newport Stach retumad from hl1 lll·fated trip IO San Diego several months ago, taken with the hope of a:etUng llftement with county olflclala Ibero on a joint tnternaUonal 11rport at camp Pendleton, he opoke of "going ahead with an airport to serve Orange County at Pendleton with or wlthgut the cooperation of San Dlego In- terests." It ha1 been pointed oul that San Diego County has no Jurisdiction over land use at the Marine military base, leavina: the way open fOf Ora.nae County to move into neaoUaUons with the Defense Jleptrl· mtnt. When Orlnge COUnty ofllciala met w!lh ~their counterparts to the south they presented what they considered a prac· tical site for a large airJX>rl on the ocean fide of Camp Pendleton about five miles north of Oceanalde. They pointed out that the military was not using the land between the San Diego Freeway and Santa Fe Railway lines and the ocean, ei:cept for agricultural leues. Commander Named SAN DIEGO (AP) -Vice Adm. Jomes F. Calvert, former superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy and pioneer Arctic submariner, became new commander of the Navy's 1st Fleet in ceremonte11 aboard the carrier USS Ranj:et. He relieved Vice Adm. Nels C. Johnson, who had been ruMing the Deet 1tnce May 11 when Vice Adm. Raymond E. Peel lelt for Washington. • • • District trustees \Vednesday nlgbt ep- proved a lt3J06,17t budget for lhc tm. 73 year, nearly a million doUars mort - in both income and expenditures -than had been anticipated in June, when a ten- tative budget was adopted. Tht additional money came ln many forms, with an extra $122,8 ahowlne up Wednesday after an of!lclal county Department of EducaLlon audit of the proposed budget. But with the county announcement of the 1972-73 assessed valuation figures on real property, the district picked up an additional $1131218 in tai money from local property owners. Holftver, the el· lcct or this was partlaUy mullled with a $348,333 cut in state aid beeause of lhe ln- croased assesed valuation. We hive 10 Sofe StY,fes .,. 10 .chair Stylea end over 500 f1brica to choose frpm. SAVE 20% Included In the document adopted Wed· ne!day night 11 a $894,717 •iq>eeted reserve fund . Barring any unforeseen ex· penses this year, that lo lhe 1moun1 that would be left et the end of the year wben the dlatricl Is split up Into unified districts. Trusteea have ocltedulod a public hear- ing "' the budget for their rcplar mtttlng or Aug. 2. At that lime, the district tax rate with 1 proposed U cent increase to $2.72, will be set. Th~ b:is Some money was also lost ln state 1\d for the dlotrlct'1 trainable mentally retarded educatiooal program. When the llgures were balaoced ou~ the district came out ""·OIO ahead -and ofllcl1l1 were jubllant. Then the county did tu offlclal audit ol the budget In tem11 of income the dlatrict coold erpect during the fllcal · year. In addition to reportln( that the dlstrlcl would have 167,000 mott than IX· peeled as a beginning helanoo from t11t fiscal yeor. the coonty said another !53,000 in state aid could be expected. Your favorite interior <Urlf/tl<r will be ham to ...Ut ¥°" ••• H.J .. GARRE[ f URNITtJRE PROfESSlONAL INTERIOft DESIGNW .o, .. Mo•. Tlim. I Fri, 1111. 2111 HARIOR llVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. Durin9 this tvant Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley Today's Flaal N;Y. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. 202, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUt(TY, CALll'ORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 20, '19.72 TEN CENTS • City~ School Library Vnion Idea Told By TERRY COVILLE Of tM Diii• "Jttf Sllff Huntington Beach -Librarian Walter Johnson has a plan to quadruple the book population of the city at no additional cost and with the mere llroke of a pen. It's a simple plan: join all of the local &ehool llbrari.es wilh tiJe city library 1y1tem. __ _ The Huntington Beach Union High School District has already signed such a joint powers agreement. Television Withdrawn For Bobby REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) American challenger Bobby Fischer: changed his mind at the last minute to- day and once more ()rdered television cameras out or the hall where be began the fifth game of his $2.50,000 world championship chess match with Boris Spassky ol Russia. Technicians were 'installing th e cameras only 15 minutes before the con.- test when Fischer announced be would not play with them in the hall. ''Everything was perfect and ready to shoot," said one televil!lion cameraman as be carried out his equipment. "But then came the call which told us to get them out on the double. Nothing about this can surprise me." Spasl!lky, playing the white pieces, ar· rived on time for the game and .started with tiU favorite opening -the queen pawn. Fischer rushed in four minutes late directly from dinner, scanned the board for a few seconds, then movetl bis king knight. After four quick mover, tbe game followed the l!IBme pattern as the first contest which Spassky won. Spassky ap.- peared to hold the upper band at the 14th move. The 29-year-<)Jd challenger forfeited the 1econd garpe of the match to Spassky when the organizers refused for a tlme to remove the cameras. Spas,,ky, 35, took a one-point lead into the game. He won the ftrsl game, took the second by default and drew the fourth for a total of i.s polnta. Fischer's win in the third game and the draw gave (See CHESS, Page I) Senate Spurns Nixon Wage Bill By Single Vote WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate to- day rejected -47 to 46 President Nixon's proposal that the $1.60 an hour minimum wage be raised to $2 rether than the $2.20 supported by Democrats. 1be defeated Republlcan substitute for the Democratic bill al3o would have eliminated provisions extending coverage of the wagu and hours law to 8.-4 million new workers. Stn. George McGovern, the Democratic presidential nominee. flew back to Washington from South Dakota to vote against the Nixon measure. His presence contributed to the one-vote margin. Even though the su~titute was re- jected, senators opposed to various sec.. tions of the bill planned to oiler lJ>o dlvidual amend~ents to eliminate them or cut them back. ! Voting for the Administration-backed substitute were 16 Democrata. mostly from uie South, and 30 Republicans. Voting to reject it were 34 Democrats and 13 Republicans. . Among the GOP senators who voled against the substitute was Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, the Senate Republlcao leader. Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri, McGovern'• vice pr .. ldenflaI running malA!, backed the DemocratJo.sponsored bill. Sophia Loren- Some Pasta!! CORONADO (.AP) -Actrw Sophia Loren has been named "MacaronJ Woman of the Veer." Robert M. Green, uecutt.e secretary of the Nauonil Macaroni Manufacturers Auoctallon, told the group'186tb 1nnual convenUon here Wednesday thot the Italian - b a danllng rep,....,tativo of women who eat ftla:CIJ'OdL JohJJIQll hopes Golden West College, "It could also belp us get !eden! and the. Ocean VJ~w and Huntington grants because vte would all be work.lng Bead! City llCbool dlslrlcts will also sigo. together," be explains. The objective of a joint powers libraf'1' He said some of the immediate project ts to cut out duplication oI effort, benefits tbe joint powers project might and share boob, film and other equip-have include : ment ol mutual benefit to all parties, ac· -Obtalning federal money. cording to Johnson. -Processing books at one location, Johnson's plan emphasizes sharing perhaps_.a!_ the new city central library. facilities and does not takeawiy eacn---:::o6taTDlower bOOk prices lij';itien-- distriCt'.s power to control its own library ting a larger, common buying market. system. -Tie conunon clrculatk>n procedures OAILY ·1'11,.0T Pllttl W•T.,.,. Ct'Ule' Center Going Vp Workmen labor In a maze of scaffolding on the •new Huntington Beach Civic Center on Main Street. The $10.5 million facility is scheduled to ·be in operation this fall. Paris Peace Talks Bog Again-Despite Pleas PARIS {UPI) -The Paris peace talks bogged down again today despite U.S. pleas for a calm discussion of the issues and a secret meeting Wednesday between American Henry A. Kissinger and the two top North Vietnamese negotiators. The North Vietnamese strongly de. nounced U.S. attempts to seek a cease-- fire first and a political settlement later. In turn, the South Vietnamese vigorously rejected the Viet Cong de. mand for ~ coalition government. Today's 4fSS.1on was the ISlst since the talks started. It lasted about four hours and the ne£otiators agreed to meet again next Thuraday. position nor your objectives have varied," he said. The chief Viet Cong negotiator, Madame Nguyen Thi Binb, stated Dally that the U.S. demand for separate political and military agreements "is ob- viously one-sided and does not lead to a setlement of the South Vietnamese prob- lem." Kissinger bas said that the political settlement of the war -who should rule South Vietnam -remained the thorn in the negotiations. It is his stated con· tention that the Viet Con.g's proposed coalition government is a thinly veiled device to install a Communist.Controlled regime. Into computers. -Producing local au d I o · v i s u a I materi.als for the schools and for the public. -Provide more films at lower cost for school use. "Most of the schools now lease their films, and teachers have to schedu.le them nearly a year in advance," John.son says.--- "By pooling our resources we can pro- vide more and better films, much faster. Our films could be available for school use almo!l Immediately." The audlo-vJ.sual benefits will be the fi rst felt under the joint powen system. The city library currently has 250 16mm film till~. The school districts have almDSt no nt . When the project starts, the districts would pour in the money they now spend to rent film s, and tht system should begin with 1,500 film titles, Johnson ex- plains. "We \\'ould e~t ablish selection and preview commiU~'es so teachers could help pick the f1l1n~ \\e buy," Johnson ad~ ded. "~~ilms are expens1\e, it would be almost prohi bit ive for a school dtSlrict to launch such a pro~r;un alonr." 'The city ll br11ry now h:is 11~.000 books. If all the school distrit·ts join the sy.sten,, (he book count would be about 420,000 lthat does not count school trxtbooks). One long-raqge progr<im Johnson would lSee l.JBRARY, r age 2) No Labor 'Deal' Ziegler Denies B acking 'Reward' From Wlre Services WASHINGTON -The White House acknowledged today it agreed to consult further with organized labor -a seg· ment with which President Ni.Ion hopes to make major progress i.n November - before pursuing long-pending legislation aimed at avoiding crippling national strikes. One labor. organization that has strong· ly opposed compulsory a r b i t r a t I o n features of the bill, which would apply throughout the transportation Industry, ls the Teamsters Union. The Teamsters en-- dorsed Nll:on for re-election on Monday. Explaining why a decision had been made to set the measure aside, although Ni.Ion had called for it repeatedJy and on occasion denounced Congress for failure West County Cities Seek : J :" '· l I 'I' Route Meet . Spokesmen frbm three cities went before the state Highway C.Ommlsslon In San Jose today to seek a new bearing on the proposed route of the Highway 39 (Huntington Beach) Freeway. Two mayor!:, Al Coen of Huntington Beach and Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley, are among those supporting a switch in the freeway route which would take ii out of Founlain Valley and put it in Bwitington Beach. Westminlter ts also supporting the freeway shift. The route already has been set, but the local contingent hoped to convince highway commissioners today that a rehearing on the route would help all three cities involved. The cUITent route brings the frteway to the beach on a line parallel to Beach Boulevard, but closer to Newland Street: City officials in Fountain Valley are on record opposing that route because they feel it entraps the city in a total web of freeways , it knocks out several establisfl. ed homes , and would take away part of the Fountain Valley Scbool District head· quarters. Huntington S.ach lw agreed that the freeway could be switched to a path parallel to Gothard Street which ls sur· rounded primarily by vacint land. If so, the freeway route would make 1 turn near the junction of the San Diego Freeway and Edinger Avenue, clipping a amall portion of Westminster. The freeway would continue down the Gothard line to Main Street. then edge back toward Beach BouJevard, ending at the · ocean. . to pass it, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said, "It has no chance of passing this year." He said the Administration, aef:epling that reality, felt It allorded a good op- portunity lo review the bill and to "consult with representatives of organlz. ed labor more fully." The spokesman said some Administration o£ficlab felt there were troubling provisions in the bill. Asked if the Administration had made a deal to temper its position in return for a Teamster endorsement, Ziegler. said, ''there was no deal." Asked lf the Administration's change of heart could be looked upon as a reward to the Teamsters, he said, .. 1 would not so characterize lt." Ziegler conceded 11there has never been much enthusiasm" for the legisla· Vnitg Move Seen lion In Congress. It has been pending more than two years. The bill would h.ave established a new procedure in major transportation industry labor dispu les. Both slde:i would have been required to submit their final offer to an bnparUal panel which would select one or the otber u a compulloay settlement. Zleg1er•s views conflicted with 11rt assessment by Sen. Robert Packwood (R- Ore.), congressional sponsor of the Administration bill. lie has said he believes be bas the votes to push through the Senate the bill to head off strikes in trucking, railroad and airline industrlts. Ziegler aald he did not know il Nixon discussed h1a: plans for the legislation with Frank. Fitzsimmoll! before tht Teamster president announced his e~ dorsement of the Presldent'a te-elecllon. O'Brien to Lead Drive .L - For McGovern Eleetion WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic presidential nomlnee George S • McGovern today named to r m e r Democratic NaUonal C h a i r m a n Lawrence F. O'Brien to be his national campaign chairman, 1 ~t in addition to Bomb Shatters 2 Transformers; Another Fiz7Jes GLENDALE (AP) -A bomb aha!· tered two transfonners at a utility substation early today, and sheriff:,S deputies dismantled another bomb which failed to detonate, police said. The explosion of the first bomb ap- parently extinguished the fuse on the sec- ond, said a spokesman for the IA1 Angeles County 1berill'1 department. The undetonated bomb, a »inch pipe filled with black powder, was one of the largest pipe bombs ever dismantled by the sheriU's bomb llQllld, the apobsman said. The erploslon caused an estimated $5,000 to $25,000 damage and narrowly missed destroying a :!!,~volt feeder line, police llid. Power service was not interrupted and there were no injuries, poUce 18ld. The blast wu under invesUgaUoo. McGovern'• estst1ng campaign ttructure. O'Brien will be given a role concerned with untlytng lbe support oI Democrat& and other 0 concemed Americans." McGovern said O'Brien will be his na.. ti onal campaign chairman and In that role "will be a foremost consultant on the overr!dinf goal which will be lo unify the :support . of key Democrats across the country." In a brief interview before publicly ac- ceptlnl McGovern's offer, 0' Br I en emphasized that while he will hold the ti· tie of national campaign chalnnan his role wlll be ..,.nliJIJy separate from the existing McGovern pollllcal orpnliat!Ot\. McGovern 1ald O'Brien will be bit liaison with Democrats In C.Ongress, Democratic governors, mayors, and state legislative le aders. He aald O'Brien will also be his cbJef contact with oCflcials or the DemocraUc Party and organized labor. "Larry O'Brien v.·ill be personally and directly Involved in all ma jor campaign decblom: between now and Nov. 7," McGovern said. .. He will be a principal spokeman for thiJ campaign and I am urging him lo travel to every section of the counlry to speak in IUpport of my candidacy." At a news conference, McGovern and O'Brien emphaalzed 1everal Umcs that the former national chalnnan's new role will not preempt that or otber members of the McGovern campaign. "There iwas perhaps a slight im· 1 provement,1 in the tone of exchanges but nothing discernible on substance,'' a U.S. negotiator ,said. 0 1 explailed to them we don't demand their acc:ej>tance of everything we pro- pose, but t,.couldn't evoke from them any kind oI stltement which indicated tbeir proposals,''. the Communists said. "We Crowd Jeers Los Al Plans Oruge 1'W; st,ill1are 'l'aiting for new American proposals f.e negotiable," be added. are reai:lJo ~!':"" µiese but today they bl'OU(lit JI' new." Nel!h€r~-referred to the Wednelday secre by Kissinger, Nixon's top advi5ec', d the top Hanoi negotiators, Jluan Thu~ ll>!l 'Le Due Tho. U.S.' negotialllr Willlain J. Porter ap. pealed to tioO>'sldes for a calm dlscUS!lon ol the !Nu!>; Soon · allciwards, Soulh Vlctnamcse negoUator Phill> Dang Lam aald the Communists c!ntiliot want a truce. "You would aio end the killing o .. Jy II your own llcal solution Is ac· ceptcd er only ti OU are auured of reaching the same , " Lam aald. "It did nat take~ long to di9COver that )!Ollt" 1peeChes do not contain any new elementa oSttlOqlllble of provoking a bruklhrougb In the ,,...uauons, u you .....,i.d to maliii!,us believe. Neither )'Ollr r U.S. Proposing 130,000 Flights a Year at Base By JORN ZALLER Of IM Oaltf Pii.t lflff A boisterous, .:imetimes je«lng crowd of 3-40 persons gave a lively pubUc hear· Ing Wednesday night to a Defense Department pro[)Ol>i calling for mump. lion or up to 130,000 Oighp a year at the Los Alamitos Naval Air Station. The official Army~ucted hearing, held at Golden West College In Hun· tington Beach. Included: -Angry denouncement of those o~ posing the Pentagon plan as 11un- Atnerlcan" and "fifth col u1m n I 1 t traitors." -Presentation ot pellllool 11id to. con· taln 15,000 signatures fl opposition to ,... activation ot the new vtrtua!b' unuted l>uc. --O!Oclal pleas !tom 1he. clues of Loi Alamitos and Cypl'tll to delay aC?tlOn on Pentagon plani lllllil !urUler lludlt. caJJ be made. Supporters of tbe Defense Department proposal to make Los Alamitos an air reserve training facility for Army, Navy, and Marine aircraft and helicopters had a clear majority In the audl~ Wednu- day night. They clapped en- thusiast ically for speakers favorable to their views, and jeered, beck.led, and aomellmes laughed at speaker• who ap- posed Pentagon plans or who 1poke over their five-minute time ltmJt. Al one point, Seal Beach City eou .. cllman Thomaa McKnew wu prevented from speaking for a lull hall-minute. PutpOH or the three-hour meeting was to ~ether public commentt on an En•k'omnental Impact l'tport prepared bl Anny stall. · · Ca!. RIChard 'Erienkottor, of the Ith Army Heaclquarttn in San l"rancllco. said that all L'OJilllleDla would be transcribed and zent to the President's Council on Environmental Quality, which bas authority to overrule any Pentagon plans. Speakers favoring reactivation of the base argued that it waa aale, that ool.se did oot bother them, and that It was vital to the national defen.st. "There will never be any need to Dy over any private residences unless more housing Is built.'' 18.id reserve Captain Ri chard Leonard, wlme bellcopler unit is now stationed in Van Nuys. "We don't carry exploslve1 and II I bad nn engine failure:, I could land my craft in Ila own length." Nothlg tbat the Van Nuyr airport Is dangerousJy overcrowded, Leonard con-- eluded: "We need a new home and we hope It wlll bo Lor Alamitos." Other suppoi1m or Defenae Depart· (See llEAillNG, Pap I) I We•ther Don't let !bore low clouds and lo- cal di'lttle fool you. It'll lllll be lllMY today alter the uaual mid- morning clearing and temperatwu of around 15 wll! prevail over lbe county. Lows tonight 604. INSIDE TODAY Funeral /err Lion C011nll'1/ So- fari'a famtd Fra.rltr rporkl on irate opini on from DMLY PILOT 1cribe Bill Schreiber, Ste sto'11 on Page ll. • _I O.Ul Y PILOT H Pair Suing Film Firm Over Loss A HIDltinilOO Beach couple who claim the 11111!1eS of Agnes l\IOOrehead, Debbie Reyaold& .and Glenn Ford were used as (l"lcN-11 in a sales pltcb that led ljltm to invest m~re th8l) $23,000 in. a revolution&J'Y tnin1-theater spec1ala~g '1i> family filma today sued tbe companies tnwlved for nearly $Z mlllion. Riley N. and Doona J. Keith _of 16031 Greenwood Lant, claim in their Orange E:ounly superior Court fraud action that promlstl made by the United General Theatera organization Jed him to give up bll job and cost him '81),000 in earnings. The X.Jths clalm Ibey were falsely promfltd promlJI lnslallation of the m1m- tbeater of their choice at a locale that ...Wd be found by the orgfllliers of the ''Scene 2, Take 311 operaUon. 1bey state they were promised that the mini-theater could be quickly installed with the kind.ol.,.1'nickelodeon'' projection that would restrict its operating perso~ net to just one perlOll-. 1be couple claim that the promises were made at the time they purchased the franchise In May, 1971. It is alleged that the companies named in the laws~1t have not met the t.erm& of that m· \'estment. The Keitbl al!o allege that the defen- danll -United General Production! Inc., Franchi.se Marketing Services Inc. and Whale of a Tale Inc. are also named -made impiwer ~ of the names of Mlaa Moorehead, Miss Reynolds and Ford In nles literature. LIBRARIES, UNITE H..,tlngton'• Johnaon FremPagel LIBRARY ... JDl.e to see, though it's only a dream now, ti the uae of school libraries as neighborhood libraries. "We could save 1 lot of money just by not building branch libraries," he says. The problem, however, is convincing the achooll to build or locate their own libraries in such a manner that the public c8n ue them. Under Johnson's system there would be two central library resource centers - Uae new city library and the large library at Golden West College. ·under the joint powers system, the public woold have greater access to school resources and the schools could put their money inlo a system closer lo home. If Johnson'• plan goes well, and the other. tcbool districts agree, it should be ID operation by thia fall, be says. OUN•I COAST •• DAILY PILOT ,,.,. Orll'IOI Collt DAILY '!LOT wlfti wf'llc:h k COft'IMMtl ftlt M...,_,.l'hlt Is Jll,lbllsfltd by fhl Dn111t Collf Pub11lhlng ComPfln'(. $ep.1• r1t1 •lllonl Ire Jll,lbllshed, Mon!SfV tlll'O!Jflll FfiHY, tor CO.It Mnt, Newport Bf!tdl, tflllttft.itM 8etcl'l!Jlouoooltl,, V1IM'(, Youn• 9elCll. lrvlnl/kcldltlMdc •ncf s1,, c 11me1111/ 1 SM .Jllln Clpls1f1no. A si!'PDlt reolor· .. 1 ~ ldllfM i. fM1ilhlll $atvrU)'t lr'ld SIHldtys. 11MI pirlnc,/pal JIW!bhbllf '°lint 'k •I U> Wtsl .., II,_,, Codt Mut, Ctllfoml1. •?62', R1l:iert H. W1efl ftrtsldw!I I/Id l"vllllttlfr J•clc •• c~,,1 • ., VICt·,,.kl.nt Ind Gentrl1 MINttr Thorn•• ke1'ril £clltot 11t1m11 A. Murphine Me1119~ E<llllOf' Clitrl• H. i....01 Aiclitrd r. N•ll Alolllllflt MIMG'"9 f.ditort T•rrv Covill• w.t °'""" Coun1., Editor "'"'""'· ....i. Offlco 1717S lttth louJ1.,1ul •m.. >.Ur11s: P.O. l•x 790, !2l41 °"'"'Olflc" ......,. 8•dl• 222 For .. ! A\ltfl\lt Qllfe ~ »O Wt1t a.., s1r .. 1 .._.. ... di! ml MtwpOJI !loultVll'd .. ~ Jll, Horlll £1 Ctmlllt ttttt , ........ 1714) '4Jo4JJ1 a .. ~ ,.2.1•1• .............. Cllllty (IMfl'Wllffltl -tm ""' ..... c.,, '"'*lltfllnt ... ,,... ••itl. llhlttr1ll01 .. , ~ "' ................. ""'"" ........................ , ,.,. ...... .,... ........ . ._ ..... .ehll ef. C:..ttMnt, ~ W ""ltr C2.U • ___ ... ,.. a..11 """"'"'' mllllln ... -. • ' 'lut C01tfaued' Two More ·Death Term Not In Stones' 'A Dead Issue' Group Held Tbe death penalty Js not dead. That's what Richard lleocom, deputy Oranae County ~i.obicl altom<y, w b o wants to be a judge1 ti:ild .memben of the Huntington-Valley Young Republlca.M Wednesday night. "Only two U.S. SUpreme Court justices said Rat out the death penalty violates the Eighth Amendmenl of the Constltu- tion, 0 Bearom explained. "The other three merely ruled it invalid as to tbe cases before them." Beacom said, the effect of the U.S. decision was to leave a stale of confusion over the death penalty in most states. "What most of the jusices were really saying was that the state would have to legislate lhe death penalty. That the states wouJd. llave to better define capital crimes." Beacom, who heads the district at• torney's office in· West Orange County, said the Calllomia Supreme C.Ourt ruling on the death penalty would wipe it oil the books for this state, but the death penalty initiative could reinstate ii. "lf the people vote for the death penalty, then tbe state Legislature has three choices. lt can leave the penalty as it was, and battle each case up to the Supreme COurt. It can abolish the death penalty by legislative actior.. Or, it can modify and define more specifically wben the deetb penalty should be a~ plied." Beacom said a case-by-case battle with the U.S. Supreme C.Ourt would be foolish and impractical. "I believe in capita l punishment. 1 don't believe this society has evolved to a point where it is no longer acceptable or needed," he said. lnstead Beacom suggested that the state Legislature should write new deatll Laguna Official Will Take Dive During Exercise When three parachutes pop open over the water off Laguna· Beach's Main Beach during a lifeguard r e s c u e demonstration Saturday morning, one oE the para-scuba skydivers dangling under the silk will be City C.Ouncilman Roy Holm. Holm's participation as a member or the volunteer para-scuba rescue unit of the Lifeguard Department was reveiled Wednesday night when Marine Safety Director Skip CoMer invited the City Council and public to attend the Saturday program. A highlight, he said, wouid be the parachute . jump by a scuba-equipped rescue team which would land offshore and be taken in tow by a resuce boat in simulation of procedure used to search for Jost divers. "One or your own membe rs will be jumping," Conner told the startled couo· cil. Holm said later the Saturday venture will be his first jump into water, though he has some 80 land jumps to bis credit and also is a certified diver. He took up skydiving a year ago, the councilman added, and finds it "The greatest sport in the world." He said the para-scuba team will take off from San Juan Capistrano airport and jump from about 15,000 feet , off the Main Beacll. Holm will be one of four jumpers, including lifeguard Dean WesJgi!ard and a professional skydiving photographer, who plans to keep his equipment dry by landing on the sand. The jump will take place at ap- proximately 10 a.m. other events in the lifeguard demonstration, which gets under way on the Main .Beach at 9:30 a.m. Saturday are competitive races, water and cliff rescues, equipment display and a fireboat display by the Orange County Harbor Department. Guild OKs McGovern WASHINGTON (UPI) -The president of the Newspaper Guild refuses to recaot his executive board's endorsement of Sen. George S. McGovern despite criticism from RepubUcans and e revolt in the ranks of his unioo. Charles R. Perlik Jr., who heads the 33,000-member affiliate of the 'AFL.CIO w bl c'h represents newsroom employes across the country, announc;ed the endorsement last week. Caught penalty rules. maklna i( explicit when the penally sl\OUld he applied, rather than leaving it to the di!.,,.tlon of judg,. or jurlet. Beacom. who is seeking a judgeship in the West Orange County Judicial Dls:trict In the November election, criticized the U.S. and state supreme Court Judges lbi: Jegls:laUng rather than judging. · "The effect of their de c Is 1 on I (abolishing the death penalty) wu to legislate what the law ought to be, not what it is," he said. "l'm more offended by the way capital punishmeot was done in, than by its elimlnatJon. If the people don't want it, then l could live with that." He said that when the majority of the slate Supreme Court ruled tlle death penalty was "cruel or unusu&1" punisti.. ment, the justices were ignoring otller sections or the state Constitution which specifically refer to capital punishment. "Judges are meant to apply the law, not make it," he said. "Most lay people think there is too much bloody legislation in courts." He also pointed out that in 1968 the state Supreme Court heki the death penalty valid , but three of those justices reversed themselves in the most recent ruling. Beacom quoted Justice Stanley Mosk. who said after the 1968 decision : "As a judge I am bound by_ the law a.s I find it 10 be, not as I wish it to be." Mosk was a member of the majority which abolished the death penalty this time. Beacom concluded by predicting the death penalty initiative would cer- tainly pass in Orange County. FromPa11eJ HEARING. • • Romp in the Rushes An unidentified youngster 'was spied passing the sumJl'.ler hou~s whipping the rushes wiffi one of tbtlir own kind Wednesday at Chris Carr Park, Heil Avenue and Springdale Street in Huntington Beach. . Speedy Chase Nets Suspect In M~torist Strip Heist BOSTON (UPI) -Two more members of the Rolling Stones entoura$_e have been arrested and released on ball: James P. Cullie, 25, Identified by police u the rock group's chauffeur, and Rita Redmond, 23, hia girllriend, were ar- rested Wednesday afternoon for possession of narcotic.s. Both of Denve~. Colo., they were released in $5,000 bail each. --~ The previous night In Warwick, R.I., where the Stones' plane was forced to land because Boston was fogged in, lead .singer Mick Jagger and lour others were arrested · after an argument with news photographer Andy Dickerman . Boston Mayor Kevin H. White ln· tervened wlth Warwick officials to 1et the Stones released on bail so they could appear for their first concert. The Stones held the concert early Wednesday morning -four hours later than planned -and held their second W~sday night. 'sellout crowds ~ttended b o t b performances at the Boston Garden and police said the fans remained relatively orderly although about 50 arrests were made on various charges, mostly in· volving disorderly conduct. The Providence Journal Bulletin C.O. said Wednesday it would file a civil damage suit against Jagger and Keith Richard -another performing member of the Stones -as a result of the Tues- day night incident involving Dickerman, a Journal employe. Dickennan said the Stones assaulted him while he was taking their pictures at Theodore Greeo Airport In Warwick. Jagger and Marshall Chess, a record producer, were charged with obstructing police. Richard and Stanley Moore, who police said was a Stones' bodyguard, were charged with assaulting Dickerman, Robert Frank, also identified as a bodyguard, was charged with assaulting a policeman. Frank was released in $100 bail, the others in $50 bail each, for an Aug. 23 bearing in Warwick District Court. From Pagel CHESS ... ·· ment plans said that as retired servicemen they chose their home because it was near the airbase. One man said there were 15,000 such people jn the area arowtd Los Alamitos who would be seriously inconvenienced if the base was mothbaUed. Opponents of the airbase cited two jet An Ontario man who allegedly forced 1 ed John Richard Dabney, 24, with armed crashes·m 1966 and 1967, the refusal of Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station robbery after identifying him as the man him 1.5 points going into the fifth contest. the state to build schools within two employe to strip after pulling what who got Charles Templeton Howard, 40, The Russian champion needs 12 points miles of the bases, and bothersome noise to retain his title, while Fischer needl as their reasons for seeking to block lawmen call the old "wounded bird" trick to stop on Coal Canyon Road by preten-12.5 points to win. reactivation. was jailed Wednesda,after 1 high speed ding he bad vehicle trouble. The latest camera dispute followed • Councilman Tom Schmit of Garden chase by California Highway patrolmen. HQward, a pl&Mer it the Seal Beach night in which Fischer visited the playing Grove added the need for park space to Orange County sheriff's offlctrS cbarg-base, told officers be was on 'bis way hall for a midnight inspection and found this list, and proposed converting the borne to Corona when be spotted Dabney about 20 things he djd not like. base to public parkland. Gudmundur Tborarinsson, pre~ident of He presented petitions which he .said D R and his apparenUy-broken down car at the Icelandic Chess Federation;-said be contained 15,000 signatures ga~red esign eview the side of the road. received "about siI or seven" Jettm from Seal Beach to Buena Park over the Howard told officers Dabney appealed from Fred Cramer, Fischer's represen- past two weeks in support of this p~ for help and then shoved a .22 caliber tative, about things the U.S. challenger posal. Unit Head Named pistol tnto hi! benefactor's back as he wanted changed . There were immediate cries from the stopped to examine the car's tire. Fischer complained to the organizers audience that petition circulators had Howard s•'d he was then fo-ed to un-.about the polislled marble chess board, Joseph L. Alfaoo, staff architect for ... •.. · h ted all board with been paid $2 an hour. Schmit denied this. dress in the middle of the road. He told say rng e wan a sm er There was also a, large number of the Canal-Randolph C.Orp., has been officers that Dabney then picked up his less glare. , gpeakers -including county Supervisor elected chairman of the Huntington billfold, trousers and the spare Ure from Tborarinsson said Fischer adlsobu~~~ David Baker, and representatives of Los Beach Design Review Board. his car and then took off at high speed. smaller squares on the boar ' a Alamitos and Cypress -who said that Alfano, of 711 lltb St., Huntington Patrolman alerted by a radio de!Crip-Spassky at one point requested larger they were not opposed to the base, but be I be f' tion of Dabney's car spotted the vehicle squares. felt the matter di'd need more study. Beach, has been a mem r o t 1ve--'----.. Fischer also demanded a new car and on the Newport Freeway and u~ · J t th The Army Environmental Jmpact man board for the past two years and free run of the swimming poo a e Dabney down. They recovered cash, h h · t · but Statement was ''necessarily biased," ac-was prev1·0usly vice chairman. H d Loftleider Hotel w ere e ts s aymg, pants and lire, restored them to owar ll bull · cording to Los Alamitos City Attorney Newly elected vice chainnan of the and jailed Dabney. mThet a poA te.re h.d botel sts John Parker. e mer1can a some gue He said it failed to comply with legal board is Huntington Beach architect J · chased from the pool and later walked up requirements for such a report because it Don Hartfelder. other members include B d M to a Spanish guest who refused to leave, did not consider the effects ol prolonged Mrs. Beatrice S. Cuthherllon, Mrs. Valley Oar eels tapped him on the shoulder and aaked lor . and numerous helicopter flyovers on the Carole Ann Wall and Edward SeUch. a bar of soap. nerves of local residents, and because it Secretary is Robert.Joe Vasquez. Trustees of the Fountain Valley School "Mr. Fischer is a treasured guest but did not analyze alternatives to reac-The design board, which meet! bi· District will hold a regular business he does ·not onwn tlle hotel," a spokesman tivaling Los Alamitos that might have montb1y, acts in an advisory e;apacity to meeting tonigbt at 7:30 at district offices, for the hotel said. "He is free to use the Jess serious environmental impacts. the city council in architectural design located on the corner of Newland Street swimming pool during the night but we The Defense Department says it needs matters. and Talbert A venue. cannot reserve it for him." Los Alamitos as a training center --;:=~=:;;--:::;;;;;:-;;;~;;;:;;;::;;;;:~;:;:~;;;:;;=:;;;;:;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::-----because it is located near the homes of I many reservists. Desert Heat Kills Woman BAKER (AP) - A Maryland woman who started to walk for help after her car got stuck in desert s a n d apparently died of heat exhaustion, authorities say. Gloria Robert s, 48, of Forestville, died en route to a llospital Tuesday, authorities said. .She and a passenger, Nat tie Landman, Washington, D.C., were: driving to Las Vegas, when they mistakenly took a freeway exit that led them down an unpaved road. in Aet .JJ. J. (Jarrell Pre~enb ..• ... a collection of HERITAGE upho,ste red pieces at 20% OFF during our 20th Semi Annual Fi,;rniture Sale. ......... ' Surprised lfl.truders 'Take Walk' We h1v1 10 Sof1 Styles ... 10 Ch1ir Styles 1ni over spo f1brlcs to choose from. 'SAVE 20% Two drifters from the Floridr area thought tbey had an easy meal waiUng for lhem after entering nn apartment tn San Clemente with nobody home . But they never figured they would meet the likes of Jerry Asher and hit long piJtol. Police told the story this way: The pair began raiding Asher'• refrigerator, apparenUy caring lltUe about the mesa their dinner 111'ls tnaklng. Asher, a deputy 1herilf fJOm Alpine County and rtllred Marine Corpa offlc.r, surprised the pair In hiJ apartment and In his band he carried a superlong-bar- reltd revolver • That tnded the diM<r abn1ptly. but I Asher wasn't satisfied. He ordered the tntrudera outside and mad• thorn wait in front of the apart- ment In the !Ol>block of Avenidll Vic- toria. Asher hopped in hi! car then made the two freeloaders march up to police head- quariera. The weapon was sUll vlslble. After the mU .. long, uphill trek, the, p'"' walked into police beedquartera with Asher close behind. After a conlerence with the fttidell~ police •&reed that the ocal.'I and tbe loq walk at gUnpolnl w11 jlllllce -.!>. .The two were released Iller IP"Mlni a few houn In custodY. Asher had agreed not lo P""' cltafies. • · During this event I ' Yo•r fooorlt• i•ltrior cle1igner wlU b• haPJ111 to onul l/01I • • • H.J.GARl\Eff fURNITLlRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR. DISIGN!tt I Optn Mori., Titvrs. • Fti. Evn. ,, I 211S HARIOl ILVD. COSTA MESA. CAUF. ~I ' l I 'I I ' Bond Issue Gets · Push Beckman Heath $160 Million Col~ge Bid Or&111e COunty'1 four community col· lege dlstricU wW """'Ive a $ii.I inllllon ''cut" lf voten approve a •1eo miUlbD oorustructlon bond issue this November. To in.sure successful pas.sage of the statewide measure, a day·long strategy meeting W81 held at Orange Cout College Wedn<Jd1y. lndustrlallst Arnold Beckman ol Cor'10a del Mar W81 ln- atalled as chairman of a statewide cam- paign committee. Dr. Sidney Brossman, chancellor of the catlfomla Community Colleges, said the bond Issue """1d provide funds for classrooms aod other teaching facilities for 80,000 additional studeets the state'• 94 "'mmwlity <»lleges espect to enroll during the next three years. The alloutions, also to be paid out over a three-year period, are as follows : Coast Community College District, $8.11 Ideas Foll Short? mlllloo; Senti.., °""""'onlty College llbtrlct, fl.4t inllllm; Nortb ~e C4w1ty OonulilllllJ OolJoCt District, .. 46 million, and Slddleblct Comtnunlty College District. $6.12 m111lon. Dr. Broamlll, who flew to Costa Mesa Wedoesday to 111ee1 wllh Dr. Beckman, civic leaden, ..Uqe trustees and) educators, ll1d bond repayment would not .,..,. -property taxes but would be tntt by taxes on Illes, peracnal In· CDIDe, COll"""tldos, gUts, clgareltes, alcolr>llc beverqN and borae racing. Orlnp Coal! College, be llld, was selected 81 tbe kldDll place fer the cam- patgn becl:Ule former truatee George Rodda b actively Involved Jn the cam· paJgn "and to make sure it was in a place very <»evenlenlly localed for Dr. Beckman." Dr. Beckman, who se"es as chairman Airport Report Draws Grumbles By JACK BROBACK Of Ille Oatlr ,Hit lhltt County officials grumbled today that the long-awaited Southern CaWornia Regional Aviation Systems study made public Wednesday falls short of solving Orange C.Ounty's airport problems. They admitted privately they would have to seek other meal!! to resolve their air transportation problems. The study released Wednesday in a Los Angeles meeting was conducted over the past two years by William L. Pereira Associates in joint venture wlth Systems Development Corporation · for t h e Southern California AMOciation o f Governments (SCAG). The study area covered 10 counties - Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Impuial and Ventura, all members of SCAG, plus Kem, San Diego, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. The $'100,000 report offer: nothing new for Orange County that was not already offered in the first phase Orange County A via lion Study report completed in 1968 by the Pereira firm. It did push the proposed international airport at Camp Pendleton, as did the 1968 report. The only diHerence this time was the tenn "major global" airport, a proposed designation for the hoped-for Pendleton facility and an expanded Palmdale Airport, after 1985. The Orange County Airport was left in the "Metroport" category which limits service to a 500-mile ran~e, just what is being offered at the facility today by Air California and Hughes Airwest. In the Wednesday report. Los Angeles Jnternational, Palmdale and Miramar Naval Air Station ln San Diego were designated as intercontinental facilities: Long Beach, Ontario and El '.foro Marine Air station In Oracge County, Contlnectal (2,500-mile range) and Orange Coucty, San Diego Llndbertlh Field, Ontario and Burbank, metroporta, with the 500-mlle lirnil The new report did offer one additional element -a proposed network of remote terminals "which would not only reduct surface traffic congestion at existing airpor11 but would obviate the need of public terminals or traffic on military bases." The report suggested that such terminals would be developed by local agencies in i&9oclatlon with the airlines in such places as ahopping or civic centers. When Orange County S u p e r v 11 o r Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach returned from bis ill-fated trip to San Diego several months ago, taken with the hope of getting agreement with county official.a the.re on a jolnt international airport at Camp Pendleton, he spake o[ "going ahead with an alrJXlrt to aerve Otange County at Pendleton with or without the cooperation of San Diego in- terest.I." II bas been pointed out that San Diego County has no jurisdiction over land use at the Marine mWlary base, leaving the way open for Orange C.ounty to move Into negotiations with the Defense Depart· menl When Orange County olflclal.o met with their <»Unlerparts to the IOllth they presented· what they considered a prac- tical alte for a large airport on the ocean side of Camp Pendleton about five miles north of Oceanside. They pointed out that the mllilary was not using the land between the San Diego Freeway and Santa Fe Railway lines and the ocean, except fer agricultural lea,.,, of the Cal Tech bom1 of lnllteel and u advisor to lbrte other colleges and universities, said he would seet tM volunteer support of 1:0mmunlty leaders all over the state for the campaign. A slmpl• mojerlty b required for passage In the Nov. 7 election. "I've bad M Inherent lntere.at In educa- u .. all my life," sald Beckman, adding that be was glad to see the role of com- munity colleges win more rtlC»gDltion. Dr. Brossman said the funds would be matched by local dollars and IS.~ mlJ1lco in federal funds. U the election falls, the o n I 1 alternative would be for tbe individual districts to raise more money through higher property taxes, acconlil1g J" the chancfillor. 0 Tbi!: will be a tremendous bargain for the State of California since what the publlc buys ls really l350 million of con- struction funds with malch!nJ funds from the other sources," be explained. Should voters approve the measure, obout 87 percent would be usod for the construction of new facilities, six percent for o:>nversion of existing buildings, and six percent for replacement of old buildings. "The great lbrust of this bond election and the community colleges is c1reer education," said Dr. Brossman. "lndica· tions are that no more than 15 percent of all jobs In the future will require a bec- calaureate. The community colleges are now training students for the world of work." Although be was opllmlstlc about passage of the 1160 million bond Issue, Dr. Brossman sald •be did not believe that voters are past the period of re- jecting school finance measures. He described voter skepticism about schccl speeding as "a healthy allllude" and said "a good cue will have to be made" for the measure. Community colleges, be added, have tradillonally ecjoyed oommunlty l\lpport to . a higher degree than other IChool systems and this should help put the measure over the top. State Will Stop Getting Personal On WeHare Quiz SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The slate of California has agreed to end Its drive to force weliare mothers to answer di.strict attorneys' quesUons about thelr sex lives and lbe whereabouts of ab.sent fathers. The agreement was contained In a slipulaUon signed by Deputy Attorney General Eli!abelh Palmer and filed In U.S. District Court. A> a result of the stlpulatlce acme 750 womec and 2,250 cbildren wW be relalned on the welfare roles. They were cut from wellare but reinstated last September when Peckham issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting district attorneys from re- quiring answers to questions about sex~ ual matters. Suspect Denies Hiring Ma1inc To Kill Wife Harbor Investors Win Delay in Land Hearing RIVERSIDE (AP) -Louis Wolshin, charged with hiring a Marine private to kill his .,1,.:fe and mother-in-law, has testified In his own defense that he never hired anyone to commit murder. Wolshin said Wednesday be did hire Timothy Boudette, a 22-year-old Marine stationed at El Toro Marine Corps A.it Station. to fly to Miami last April and determine whether bis wile WaJ going out with other men. Baudette testified earlier in the trial that Wolshin, 58, of Elsinore agreed to pay him 11,000 to kill his wlle 01'• and another $500 to kill bis motber-m-law, Vera S. Alexandra. Boudette said he new to Miami and told the women or the plot. James U!e Woodward, a 25-year-old man who once lived in a commune near Aguanga, testilicd Wednesday Wolshin approached him about hiring someone ••that wouJd snuff somebody." Wolshin also denied W o o d w a r d ' s testimony. Final arguments in the Superior Court trial were to begin today. Three Harbor Area investors Including Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman, father.in-law of Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. (ii-Calif.), have won a new delay in their San Bernardino County land case. Preliminary hearing for Dr. Gherman, John A. "Pat" Patterson and James Moreland was set to begin Monday In San Bernardino Coucty Superior Court. Another new continua.nee wu granted until Aug. 7, however, but prosecuUng deputy dlatrlct attorney Charle1 .Wolle could not be reached today for comment OD the reason. The three principals In Mouclaln View Estates, a !~lot cablnslte project are accused of a total of 69 counts in cos; nedion with subdivlaion, promotion and 1ales of the development. They Include 10 counb of grand theft, 49 counts of false advertising and 19 charges of fallure to obey a California Real Estate Commlaslon order to cease lot sales. A probe Into Moun!ain View Estates handling was launched by state and San Bernardino County officials a I t e r •stop Divoree~ Girl, 10, Sends Lett.er u) Judge VISALIA (AP) - A IQ.year-old girl has pleaded In a letter to a Judie that her parents be refused a divorce. The child, who was not Identified, wrote: "Honorable Sir, My mom and dad ts gcttlne a divorce •.. pltase don't let them get a divorce. My momm. loves my dod; If you could· put him In the hospllal be could quit drinking. "I've heard my mom say to Ill)' dad ~~ny times, 1Pleue slow do}'n on your drlntlD(,' but be just walu out the doer. "Sir, you are 1 judge and thb la )'OUr job, to divorce people. "Only whero do ontl go that still love the bwlbendal Md how do you divorce a 10-yelJ'-old! Can you cut oul my hurl and atop : from burtlnl!• Tba 'lirl pleaded, • Pie.... pleat, ( . please help a IO.year-old keep a mom and dad. I know If mom lryed you prob- ably wouldn'l lillea ..• "God bleu you and Jet God be on lhb day the judge be>lde you." SUperlor Court Judge Jay Ballantyne said Wednesday be .. nt copla of the It!· ter to the allomeya represenllng the girl'• parents and replied to htr, 1'( am well aware of the tragedy which LI Involved every Ume parenta oeparatt where 1rnall cbildren are Involved ... I can uauni you that If either of your perenb peUUon the court for ID attempted reconclliaUon I will do all I can to help resolve their diffennca.." l/llder atale law granlln( dlvorcea 1'bere lmooacllablo dlfw.nces exlal that la all "' COii do. • numerous Jot-buyers complained. Investigation of complaint.! t h a t utilities had not been installed allhotUJh purchasers were told otberwl.ae Jed to the crlmlnal charges. Sales of lots in the SS.acre Big Bear area project occurred between 1969 and 19'11 but have since been suspended and the firm'• San Bemardlno omoe closed. Locally, Dr. Ghermac, a psychiatrist and drug consultant with numerous business interests, lives at the Balboa Bay Clul> and bas offices on Weslcliff Drive. Campers Killed When Lightning Hits Their Tent Inyo County coroner's deputies con- firmed today that a Seal Beach man and his camping companion found dead high on Saddle Back Peak in the high Sierra were killed when lightning struck their tent. Funeral amngements are pending for William G. MUler, 39, of 3S40 Fem Circle, Seal Beach, and Robert Herlihy, 15, of Gardena. "It was a one in a million shot," aaid Inyo County Sberiff'o Deputy Bob Vaulet. InvesUgators said Miller and Herlihy had apparently taken cover from thundercloudl that awept the BOUthern Sierra last Salunf!IY when 1 belt of lightning hll their tenl They were found Jn the nigged area Tuesday by ,.archers, lying peaccfuUy on their backs, wearing metal backRact frames which apparently served 11 ~ dulle for tbe clectrldty. Heavy cloud cover was reported over the area where the men were found, about 25 mllt1 oouthwoll of Blabop near Saddle Back Lake. -Inyo County 1heri11'1 posse members and the Eastern Sierra Mountain Rescue Tt1m brought the bodlu out of tbe ll,JOQ.loot area "' llontblck alter n... dill( the 'lictlms. Hooping It llp frldo, JolJ 21, 1972 H OAJLY PILOT S Activities Of Anaheim Aides Eyed Accusations that (\VO Anaheim clty of· Ocials eng:1ged in speculative land purchases ba sed on Information not.. available to the general public are being- lnvestlgated by the Oronge County Grand' Jury, forem:in Otto Schmidlen said to-~ da y. ln .a tv.·o p:irag raph statement, Schmidlcn said, "the jury. responding to· requests by ma n) ront't•rned ri11zens and org anizations is 1 n\'e<;ti~llling lht> ::illeged mi sconduct of Annheun offic ials. "The jury is v.•ork1n~ in l'OOperalion wil h the Orange Countv l>istr ict Altorntv· and County Counsel 10 detcr1nu1e "hcther criminal or civil \'iolations have or· curred," Schm idlen said. City Manager Keith Murdoch and Thorn ton Piersnll , public works director are alleg ed to h:i ve profil ed substantlall~ in land transactions in the northern part of the city. Patricia Morton. 12, sho\VS how she became th e 197:.l \r1nner of the Chicago Pa~k. J?istrict's .a~nual hula hoo p con1pct iti on in the 12 years ~nd older d1v1s1on. Patr1c1a can DO\V compete in further contests lead· mg toward the national championship. The allegations were made public June 23 and both officials strongly denied any wrongdoing and said they ha~ no inside information which led to their in· vestments. Anaheim Mayor Jack Dutton backed the two city of!iclnls today say ing, "there is no question in my mind that the graod jury will find them innocent." Fa th .er Vows Lifetime Dutton deplored the fact that, "the damage has already been done with the reputation. ol two fi ne men irreparablY. damaged." Search for Murder er Scbmldlen concluded hlo 1laltment with a call for "definitive legislation .to be enacted at clty, county and state levels. The jury is convinced of the need for a strong code of ethics governing all public oUlclals and employes." Anaheim has a code of ethics, adopted Feb. 24, 1970. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI -Someone picked up a hammer Mary Jane Kravitt used in her leatherwork and crushed ber skull with it. Police rushed her to a hospital but tbere she died from the wounds Jan. 24. not let It go nl th nt. he would not let the: killing become "just another statistical unsol ved murder." Samuel Kravitt said \Vednesday thal as tong a! he lives, the person who bludgeoned his dau ghter and left her to die in a San F'ranciseo apartment would Murdoch, 54, has been city manager o! Anaheim for 22 years and Piersall, 49, has held his public u·orks post since 196L The killer escaped, not to be found. But the 21-year~ld girl's father would be hunted and haunted . Kra vitt, a Ne\v Haven. Conn. television photographer, returned from a worldv.·ide trip where he vis ited police headquarters in major and minor countries wilh a composite sketch of the suspected killer. Hinshaw Reports Assessm ent Ratio Better Arson Strikes Building Where Oswald Took Aim "Perha ps it '''as a futile thing to do." he said . "But perhaps it \1•i\l keep thi:os guy on the run. Perhaps, eventually, he'll just break and give up." Pollc.e made the sketch from witncsse!' Oranae Counl"y Asseuor Andre.w J. descrlpUocs of a yOW>g, long-haired llinahaw had more IOOd news fDr ~UDtJ. DAU.AS (UPI) _ Arsonists today male who entered Miss Kravllt's apart-taxpayer• Wedneldv. ,. d all I mcnt the evening before her body was Jfe reported that the county'• "ralio of sprea g ons o gasoline across five found. assessed to full c11b (market) value of nccrs of the Texas School Book property u detennlned by the Stai. Depository Building, where Lee Harvey Homicide Inspector Al Podesta, said Board of EqualluUon was 25 percenl. Oswald fired the shots that killed Presi· the person sought was six feet tall , about ''ThJs means th.at county taxpayers will dent John F. Kennedy, and set the 68-25 years old and "someone she knew.'' pay more than two cents less on their year-old brick structure on fire. Her father said the killer "must live property tax rate this year as compared The fire was confined to third, fourth with something worse than death." wit h Jut year.'' the assessor stated. and filth floors of the building and was "How can be escape the thought, the He expJa!ned that the 25.5 percent u- extingu!sbed in 24 minutes after it was Lmemory of that brutal bludgeoning and sessed value figure ls used to determine· reported. leaving her to die?" he asked. the IO-Cllled "Collier Facton." If the'. "It was definitely arson," assistant Kravitt said hJs world hunt for the factor for a given county is at a ratio of Fire Chief L. R. McCowan said. "We killer toot him to places where rootless one or less there is no countywlde school , found gasoline cans on every floor and young Americans often congregate _ equalization tax . This year's OrangtS>, ~:g~' of gasoline was all through the Sydney, London, Rome, Hong Kong, New County factor ls 957 thus elmlnating the ' Delhi, Grenada. $.02~f equallz.ation rate which county Damages were estimated at $5,000. But ~A property owners paid last year. there Were no injuries and McCowan said "I saw tu~ police ln all these plactS, Orange ColUlty·s 25.S ratio of percen--. It was thought no one was in the building as'king them to be on the lookout for the tage to actual market value compares at the time . man on the chance he had jolned one of with a atatewlde 24.4 percent, tbe Board . The building, which was supposedly these colonies. They were sympathetic, of Equallz.ation reJXlrt revealed. · being turned into a museum, is empty. all very nice," Kravltt sald. Two weeks ago Hinshaw announced a · Aubrey Mayhew of Nashville, Tenn., Police said a man wu admitted to the ]4.8 percent increase Jn total auessed..:' who claims be owns the largest collection beautiful dark-haired Mlsa Kravitt's values in the county whJch will re1ult ln of Kennedy memorabilia in the world, apartment early the morning of Jan. 11 lower tax rates by most government bought the building last year for $650,000. and witnesses heard the pair talking. agencies. • Asked at the time what his plans were, About two hours later, the horrified oc· The Board of Supervisors expects to be Mayhew replied, "None." cupant of a lower apartment found blood able to reduce tbe $2.04 county tax rate- Asked why be bought it, he said. "lt dripping on his kitchen floor from the by nll'le l.O 12 cents because of the in· was cheap." celling. creased assessment. -:;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~miiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiilliilililliililiiliii~ A BIG NAME BDroE t925 1L~TIDl~fWlll1~ * CUSTOM DRAPERIES * AT LIVINGSTON'S W• carrv th• largut and fi nest CG1l><t & Drap"l/ selection aucil<lble '( ' Today's duire for self-expres- 1ion has brought with it a need for creative imagination and ex- pertise. Our skilled exporto will be happy to create now ideas for you or carry out your own. Best of en, they can work those trensformations for you, with pin money or big budget fabrics. 'UI ISTIMATll l'HONE 547.)HJ • • • • • • • . • • • . • • . . . • . • . • l ' ' I I • t I I t i ' • ' • ' • ' • I • \ ' 4 ~lY PllOT Frid.,, July 21, 19"' !tad Off e1111ive Attack ' Marine Copters North of DMZ SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Marino l>encopler sunahlps raided the North ~i•tnamese cout Wednuday, Ibo second fime In the war that helicopters have been used ln offensive operations over Ille North, the U.S. command said today, i Military IOUtCft aald about six AHl !ea Cobras flying off tlle USS Denver tn>m the U.S. 7th Fleet olW>ore reported l:teslroying three water craft and damag- ing siI others Ill miles north ol Ibo Demilitarized 1.one (DMZ) aeparating the two VJetnams. Tbe hellcoptera lired rockell and 20mm cannon ahella. IN FIGHTING In South Vietnam, Com· '"'nist sunnen Wednesday abot down a U.S. jel fighler·bomher and two U.S. helkoptm supporting t h e South Viet· p~se·drjve to recapture Quang Tri Ct. (y'f:'J'our Americans were wounded. • ~kesmen said the on1y other time &Oppers new into North Vietnam was the November, 1971, raid on the Son Tay P.risoner of war camp, which wu fowld iiibty . ~lsewhere in the air war Wednesday, tJ.S. ,Alr Fore< Fl Phantom jets firing guided bombs dropped two of the five spans of the cao Hung railroad bridge SO llliles northeast of Hanoi and 3S mn .. touthwest of China, the U.S. command .. ld. 'Ille Denver, an amphibious traruport lhlp, b the main U.S. Marine 0 base" in Indochina, carrying ibout 900 of Ibo Htimaled 5,000 Lealhoroecka baaed In the Tonkin Gulf. ArtUlery, annored •ehicles and everything else a A!arine battalion .needs for a combat assatilt are •board It. The Marines have been on the alert offshore ev~r 1ince the early days of the current 16"Week Communist ol· tensive in South Vietnam. ' TEN U.S. helicopters ha~e been shot down ...,. North 'Vietnam, all ol them oo ....... mJssJons to pluck downed air crewmen to safety, spokesmen 1ald. Along the Tonkin Gulf coast, a Navy pilot from the carrier Kitty Hawk put a "Fat Albert" Walleye televisloo-guJded bomb right lnto a cave being used as a defense sire at the water's edge 140 miles south or Hanoi, the U.S. command said. The pilot reported that after his bomb found Its mark, explosions continued Jn.. side the cave ;'for approximately JG minutes ." AIR FORCE Phantoms set off a veritable fireworks display when they hit an ammunition dump 23 miles north of the DMZ and just 40 mlles north of em· battled Quang Tri city, the command said. The pilots reported "more than 70 secondary expk>sions and three fires." Jn ground fighting, Communist rein- forcements twice tried to drive 1,500 government p8r1troopers from . em- battled Quang Tri. But in the bloodiest encounters of the three-week-old South Vietnamese push to recapture the prlr vinclal capitaJ, the paratroopers killed at )east 198 North Vietnamese at a cost of 11 government soldiers dead and 44 wounded. SPOKF.Sl\IEN said the pilot or an air Force F4 Phantom managed t o maneuver the crippled plane out into the South China Sea where he and the other crewman parachuted to sarety and were rescued. The four Americans, two each tQ a helicopter, were injured after their craft were hit and made emergency land- ings 18 miles south of Quank Tri City. Jn the first of the two major ground battles, the paratroopers killed 163 Com· munlsts, one of the largest single action tolls in the government's coun- teroffensive to retake the city, overrun by the North Vieblamese a mooth after their offensive In the South began March 30. East Cooking Temperatures, Tempers Rising By United Prell llllemattoul For the f\nt lime 1n years, l>largaret O'Reilly of New York Ci- ty dlned by candlellghl with her bu!band. ''It was very romantic," ahe said. At Bay State 1!3<eway In Fox· boro, Mass., the horses in the sixth race had entered the borne stfetch Mien lhe llghls went off and of· ricials were unable to determine which entry was the winner. From Boston to Washington h~ dreds of thousands of persons turn- ed on their air conditioners to escape the he3t and pollution, while in the · Streets of large cities such u New York, children frolicked in the spray of fire hydrants, turned on illegally in most cases. Mrs. O'Reiliy, minus her eleo- trical power, and the others were doing what they could Wednesday, trapped as they were, by the mass of stagnant bot air along the East Coast which sent temperatures and from 1 heat wave which boosted temperaturts for the sixth straight day. The atonn blacked out most of Rhode Island for more than an hour Wednesday night. Providence, Cranston and Pawtucket were without power. A pollution alert was issued for Connecticut and the Sprlnglield, Mass., area, about 90 miles west of Boston. Residents were asked to curtail use of motor vehicles and open burning was banned in Con- necticut and in several New York counties. Electricity was restored to most of the affected arell! by midnight and power company crews worked to return service to others early to- day. At one Ume, according to state police, the entire northern half of Rhode Island -about 4SO,OOO peo- ple -were without power. - Liger Dies Shasta, the world's only known liger -hall tiger, hall lion - died Wednesday at the Salt Lake City zoo. Shasta was 24 years old which is the equiva- lent of 120 years in humans. He had been suffering from kidney problems, arthritil and a loss ot appetite. Clievy' s Corvair 'Defect-free' In U.S. Probe WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Corvair, a long time target of critic Ralph Nader who claimed it was prone to roll over even at low speeds, today was given a defect-free endorsement by a govern- ment study. "No potential safety related defect ex· lsl.!11 in the 1960-6.1 model Corvair, a t~ year investigation concluded by the Transportation Department clalmed. Nader reacted with a letter to Sen. Warren :f.!agnuson, chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, urging an immedi?te investigation of the report, which be labeled "a whitewash" of the compact rear engine car. Magnuson termed the Transportation Department's conclusions ;'startling in the light of past testimony on the Corvair's instability!' Magnuson pledged to query Douglas Toms, the ad- ministrator of t h e National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the agen- cy which conducted the investigation, at a commiltee hearing neu week. Nixon Gets Blame Fo1· Red Ouster By Ulllled Pmt Inlenultloaal The Cairo newspaper Al Abram toda7 described Soviet friendship as lr· replaceabft and blamed Pmident Nixon for Egypt'• decision to send home Sov~t mililary advlaen. The semiofficial newspaper In a front page anlysis bore the byline Cl "The Political Editor.'' which journalistic aources usually ascribe to Mohammed. Hassanein Heikal. the n e w s pa p e r ' 1 editor. · "There are only two super powers/• the article said. "The United States ls on the side of the enemy. The Soviet Union Is on our side. Therefore, the friendship of the Soviet Union is not only important to us, it is irreplaceable." President Anwar Sadat on Tuesday ordered' the ouster of some 20,000 Sovlte military advisers apparently because Moscow had falled to live up to promises to supply anns. Al Ahram said that in any future con- ferences with the Russians, "We should state frankly that the result of the Moscow conference between Nixon and Kremlin leaders last May wu the point which prompted President Sadat to take ~is decision" to send home the Soviet ad- \'isers. The article did not mention Nixon by name. . The newspaper said the ·ouster of the Soviets wu not the central issue of Arab- Soviet relations and expressed the hope "it was only a summer cloud which will pass away." In Paris, French Information Ministir Jean Lecat denied repcrt.. that France might replace the Soviet · Union as Egypt's principal supplier of armJ. Lecat said his country would stand by its ban on armJ sales to the four nations involved in the 1967 Middle East war, Israel, Egypt, Syria and Jordan. Lecat's comments were designed to scotch the reports that France might step into the role of arnu supplier for the Cairo government now that the Soviet techniciam have gone. A Jerusalem newspaper said today that Sadat contacted U.S. officials with the in- tent of seeking a reopening of the Sun Canal and effecting a politica1 settlement with Israel. Quoting diplomatic sources, t h e Jerusalem Post said Sadat told his aides to seek a top-level meeting with American officials. It aaid the request may have been conveyed to the clllef ' U.S. representatives in Cairo, ·Joseph Greene. Snowflakes in July General M~tors, whose president, Edward Cole, IS known as the "father of HELENA, Mont. (UPI) -The first Ju- the CorvaiJ"' feuded with Nader for eight ly snowflakes fell on :f.!ontana'1 capital years over the stability and handling Wednesday sillce records began 1n 1880. characteristics of the 1960-6.1 COrvair _ Up to two lncbes of snow fell in the 235,000 of which still are on the highwa y. '· mountaiq.!, bringing •.um mer tem- GM stopped production of the car in 1969 pe.ratures to near freezing. by which time sales of the Corvatr had been sharply affected by lhe controversy. Advised of the government verdict, a General 1r1otors spokesman said the study "confirms our position on the handling and stability characteristics of these cars." The publication in late 1964 of Nader's book "Unsafe at Any Speed" sparked the controversy o v e r the Corvair. Nader argued that the car was unstable to the Point where it could be easily turned over by drivers attempting to turn corners. DAIL y, PILOT DELIVERY· SERVICE De tlwry of tht Dally Piiot Is gumnteecl Mond1y.,rld•.,: If .,.u do not ..,,... .,.,.,, p.pw by l:IO (t.m .. nll ind 'l'Oltll' eopy w111 bt ~ • ~ C..llt ,,. l.lllM 1o1ntU 7:JO p.m. lllvnll'I' •nd lunll•y: It \'Oii "' not AC•IY9 yaur eop., "' f •.m.. S.turd•y, or I •.m. 511nd1y, ah •nd I UDY wlll 119 bfOWhl .. yoi,i, tall• 1r• IU:M untll 10 '·"" Telephones • KANSAS ATTORNEY GEN. VERN MILLER, RIGHT, SEIZES LIQUOR Court Battle Looms Over Leg11ity of Bor C1rs In Stitt Train Barwnders Held; Court Slwwdmvn Nears OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -George H. Bell, 49, of Chicago, was released on '500 bond Wednesday on charges he Violated Oklahoma'• liquor Jaws when the Amtrilk passenger train on which he tends bar rolled into the state. It is against the law in Oklahoma · to sell liquor by the drink. The "open saloons" in Amtrak'• club cars also run through Kansas, which has similar an- tlliquor laws. Authorities in both state1 raided the trains Tuesday night. Bel!, a bartender f~ 20 years, ltl'Ved drinks to Oklahoma liquor control agents who boarded his train In Ardmore, Ok1a., and were riding to Oklahoma City. He mixed the drinks in the crowded, Belfast Prison Ininates Riot Over Conditions BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Rioting broke out In Belfast's Crumlin Road jail today and terrorist gunftre elsewhere in the city killed one man. New bombings inflicted widespread damage and casualties at several other places 1n the province. In the jail, 20 to SO prl.sonera went on a fal\lpage, smashing furniture and win- dows and starting fires. Eight prisoners armed with Yr'OOden clubs climbed ooto Ibo prison roof and nnasbed Ibo· tiles, but descended about ~ minutes later. British troops surrounded the prison, firing rubber bullets at the· rioters. The jail was reported quiet and the fuu were extingul!bed by early aftei'noon. The jail bolds bundrods of Protestant and Roman catholic prisoners, arrested on various charges stemming from the sectarlan turmoil of the past three years. Many prisonen have protested jall con- ditions in the past. Initial reports from prison autboritles said the men who rioted objected to politlcaJ prisonerS being moved into their wing. Officials said there were no reports of injuries to prisoners or security forces. 1waying bar car, and served them with a napkin to the gentlemen dressed in dark suits. "You are under arrest for running an open saloon. 'l'he bar is closed," an agent told Bell. "What?" Bell said. ;'I've got a letter that says I can sell whisky anywhere, any time, any state, any county, seven days a week." The liquor agents, ref~ing to argue, cleared the club car and confiscated the liquor, seven sacks of two-ounce botues of scotch, rum, bourbon and vodka. State. agents said the charges against Bell were only the beginning. 'Ibey said similar chajges were being prepared against the railroad Itself and its of. ficials. The case set up a classic baWe between state and federal supremacy. In Kansas, agent3 stopped a train In Newt(ln and arrested c o n d u c t o r s , bartenders and stewards for selling li· quor by the drink to the passengers. Kansas law allows mixed drinks to be served in private clubs, but the. state at- . tomey general saidithe Amtrak club car could 110t qualify u a private club because it could not fulfill the re- quirement of a permaennt address. In Wasblngton, Amtrak officlats said Ibey would "battle Ibo case In Ibo courts, but in the meantime suspended .all bat car operations in Oklahoma and Kansas. Howard Hug1ies Expands Airli11e Firm to Canada VICTORIA, B.C. (AP) -Billionaire recluse Howard Hughes has decided to go into the airline business in British Columbia, Calvin J. Collier Jr., a senior spokesman for Hughes Tool Co., said Wednesday. Colller said Hughes will seek to expand Hughes Airwest operations 'linto Van- couver. , , tempers rising and electric ·power falling. The heat wave, called a Bennuda high, "stretches from Maine to Florida and inland to the Mississip- pi Va1Jey, although it is felt the most in the Northeast," said a weathe r service s p o k e s m a n . "Eventually we'll get a burst of cold air from Canada and it wUJ push it on out but it looks like there won 't be any change for the next couple of days." Pot lrrigatio11, Leads to Raid Mott onnoe COIH!f'I' ... ,..,, --~ .. '42-UJ1 Northwest Hvnllngton IH<ll and WMtmlnsltr .................. MO-Int kl\ Clffl'Mnte, taPls"-IMdl, In the westem part of Belfast a newspaper vendor on Springfield Road was shot dead by terrorists who planted a bomb in his store. The man's wife was "The company definitely plans to ex- pand into British Columbia," he said. "At present we have no plans to buy out ex· isting airlines. The company wants to .ex- pand operations of Hughes Airwest which operates up the West Coast u far as Seattle." No relief was In sight for at least 1 couple of days, the weather service said. An advisory by the National Weather Service and the Federal Environmental Protection Agency urging persons with respiratory ailments to stay lo air conditioned rooms created additional woe for electrical utilities already racinp, lo keep up with the tbennomelet soaring in the nineties. Some reli ef was provided for the citizenry by a major electrica1 atonn which struck much of southern New England suf{ering Smog readings hit record level~ In the Washington, D.C., area and an official air pollution alert in· ltiated Monday remained in effect. An air pollution alert also remained in effect in Baltimore and four sur· roondlng C01111tie. for the third straight day. SANTA BARBARA (AP) -An employe of the Hope Ranch Water District who noticed a hose leading from the district reservoir followed it and round a well-tended marijuana patch sherffl's deputies said. ' Authorities said they found 600 plants ranging from six inches to 10 feet tall'. each in an individual container. It was the biggest such discovery In county history, and the finished product would have had a street value of $25 000 deputies said. 1 I Showers Still Soak States Storms Cause Blackouts • ,,,,, Northeast; Twisters See11 MAtlON4$ WIA1Mlr MIVICI fOtlCAll 1• 7AM 1$t 1 ~,e .. 71 .... Uf'l 'ft1Alltlt tO'IOCol.SI. ::Qltll'I' In IN •li.t,..,... forK111«t ~'l'~ ~IM 11191.nw UOltr ._.._ r .,, -ftwr llur1e11 v.s. s ........ r, .,._. Ml ~lor!M ... -.. Sin Juan C..p111~. 0.nA Polnt, loulll 1.atune. L'9llnli NIQlllll .... ~ · wounded. About lG minutes later, the bomb exploded and wrecked t h e premises. 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 1646-1919 DUCK FEET FINS (Blemish) Medium • LarfJe DUCK FEET FINS (Regular) . • x Small .• sniaa • l.ar9• • x La119 • Super X Larfje ' • ooc 0 . I r I, Orange f;oast vor. 65, NO. 202, 3 SECTIONS, 3+.l'AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSOA Y, JULY 20, 'I 972 NC TEN CENTS Meeting May Alter Harbor Freeway Concept By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot Ille O•llY Plilt Stiff A meeting between Costa Mesa city of- ficials and top-level freeway planners Wednesday has resulted in an "un- derstanding" which could significantly alter the freeway concept in the Harbor Area. Alvin Pinkley, Costa Mesa city coun- cilman and member of the city's Freeway Commltte(:, said today Stafe Division of Highways executives are .. favorably inclined" to make the follow· Ing reeommendations to the Highway Commission: -Cooslder the leulbllity ol dr•1'ing Newport Freeway traffic onto Pacific Coast )lighway in Newport Beoch by at- taching a series of four or five finger-like projections to ita tmninw:. T h 1 s alternative could apply either to the Newport Boulevard or the Superioc Avenue Route. --complete the Newport Freeway from Bay Street aouth to the Newport Beach city liDll1.s first, and only later the sec· tion leading to Bay Street from Bristol Street-Palisades Road. ,, . . -Make construdlon of the Corona de! Mar Frteway link !rom Brbtol Strttl· Pali>ades Road to Its junction with the San Diego Freeway &be number one priority. - -Howard Alrich, deputy dln!Ctoc of public works, R. F. Blocker, ...utant district eugineer in charge of des! gn, and W, K •. Hashimoto, aulstalll d!Jtrlct engineer in charge ol problems and budgeting -were not empowered to make on the spot decbions but agreed to initiate studies on the three items. • , . • Newport 'Bod11whmh~pg' . •' Two body surfers take a Jeft. at NewPOn's famous "man-made'• body surfing spot,. the Wedge. The lo- cal spot, named for the s}iape waves take after bouncing off the rock jetty, provides some of the most speebcitlar spills and thrills to ,expert body surfer.· Swim fins and guts are a must for the booe-crunchlng waves at the Wedge. · Fischer Upsets Spassky; Chess Match Deadlocked BULLETIN REYKJAVIK (AP) -World champion Boris Spassky resigned hi his fifth title 1ame wltb Bobby Fbcber. A roar of astonbhme.at went up from the crowd in the auditorium as Spauty resigned on bis Uth' move, after 3'i2 hours play. Fischer's will leveled the &core with Spassky at 2% points eacb. REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI ) American challenger Bobby Fischer changed his mind at the Jart minute to. day and once more ordered television cameras out of the hall where he began the filth game of bis $250,000 worJd championship chess match with Boris Spassky of Russia. Technicians were btstalling t h e cameras only 15 minutes before the con- test when Fischer announced be would not play with them in the hall. the second by default and cnw the fourth for a total of 2.5 points. Fischer'• win in the third game .and the draw gave him 1.5 points going into the fifth oonle!t. The Russian champion needs 12 points to retain his title, while Flscher needs 12.5 points to win. 'I11e le test camera ~pute followed a night in which Fischer v!Jlled the playing hall for a midnight Inspection and found about 20 things he did not like. Gudmundur Thorariruu1on, president of the Icelandic Chess Federation, aaid he reCeived "about six or seven" letters from Fred Cramer, Fischer's repre9en- tative, about things the U.S. challenger wanted changed. Fischer complained to the organiws about the polished marble chess board, saying he wanted a amaller board with tw glare. Tborarizwon said FIJcber alao wanted (See CBF.SS, I'll• I) Senat,e Rejects Nixon Minimum Wage Proposal w ASHING TON (AP) -The Senate fo. day rejected 47 to 46 Pn!ident Nixon's proposal !hat the $1.!0 an hour minimum wage be raised to .$2 rather than the $2.20 auJl!>Orled by Democrats. Tlte defeated Republican subetltule for the Democratic bill also would have eliminated provision• extending coverage of the wages and hours law to 8.4 million new workers. Sen. George McGovern , the Democratic presidential nominee, flew back lo Washington from South Dakota to vole against the Nixon measure. lib presence contributed lo the one-vote margin. Even though the substitute was re-- jeeted, senators opposed to various 1ee- tlons of the bill planned to oiler In- dividual amendments· to ellminaie them or cut them back. With the 'l!kelihood o! the Pacific Coast Frffw&y being eliminated t b r o u c h legislative action, the Newport Freeway will have to come to a halt in Cott.a Mesa. The traffic-siphoning fingers, Pinkley said, "woold make sure that the trarnc wouldn't bit Pllcillc Coast lfi&bway in Newport Beach all at once." A. decl!ion on whether to favor the Newport Boulevard route over the Superior A venue route wouJd , b e predicted on the state study, he believes. But a bigger impact -at least to Costa Mesans -would be the redirection of Newport Freeway planning and con· struclion from Bay Street southward to Ne"'port Beach. "\\'e have big traflic problems right OO\Y especially at Harbor Boolevard. 19th Street and at 17th Street. If we had the freeway a little sooner a.nd shoved the project up two or three years, we could get rid of some of these tieups and shove up downto"·n redevelopment,'' Pinkley said. Similar traffic probl('ms mandate the construction of the Corona de! ~tar Free"·ay from the Costa ?-.1esa city en· trance to th<' San f)iC"t:O l''rceway at tht earlies t possible dat1•, according to Pinkley. P1nkl('y said thf' st:tll' rrprescntali\'f'S 'vere optimistic about !ht· po~1b1lity of diverting Century Frt'(''.'.ay funds for lhc local proj e<:ts. Representing Costa ?-.l r~.1 du ring \Vednesday's three-hour 1n('('t1ng 111 ad· dition to Pinki('y 11cr<' Councilman \Vil lard Jordan ; J<'rr rt $orsalw1. cit)' manager: Norman Sp1t>lman. directo r of eng ineering serv1cf'" anti J am cs Eldridge, traUic engineer. No Labor 'Deal' Ziegler Denies Backing 'Reward' From Wire Services WASHING TON -The White Hoose acknowledged today it agreed to consult further with organized labor -a .seg- ment with which President Nixon hopes to make major progress in November - before punuing long-pending legislation aimed at avol'ding crippling naUonal strikes. One labor organization that bas strong- ly opposed compulsory a r b 1 t r a t i o a features of the bill, which would apply throughout the transportation industry ~Is the Teamsters Union. 'lbe Teamsters err dorsed Nixon for rHlection m Monday. Explaining wby a decision had Ileen made to set the measure 'aside, although Ni.Ion bad called for it repeatedly and on occasion denounced Congress for failure to pass ii, preu secretary Ronald. L. Ziegler aald, "It bas no chance of passing thl4 year." , , . · Ho aiifd tho. Admlnistrattoa; ...,.b\i that ;eaJJty, fell' It afforded a good op. portilt)Jt¥ to review the bill and to "comuJI with re~latlvt1 of or1aniz· ed labor more fully," The 1pokesmal'i aald some Administration olficla!J felt there were trouhliog provision! in the bill. Asked if the AdmlnimaUoo had made a deal to temper Its position in return for a Teamster endorsement, Ziegler said, "there wu no deal." Asked ii the Administration's change of beart could be looked upon as a reward Collins Radio's Coast Facility 'Not Closing' Officials of the Collins Radio Company today emphatically denied they are plen-- ning to close their Newport Beach elec- tronics facility on Jamboree Road. "There is absolutely no foundation to the report," Joseph Brown, Collins' public relations director, said lbl! morrr ing. Speculation or a possible move from Newport Beach arose Wednesday when It wa' disclosed the company plans to sell all of its land holdings near Orange eoun. ty Airport to the Don Koll Company. 1'We will immediately lease back the 2Z acres our present facility is on," a com- pany olftcial said, adding that Collins will actually retain ownership or the building (See COWNS, Page I) to the Teamste rs, he said, "I \Yould not so characterize it." Ziegler conceded "there has never been much enthusiasm" for the leglsla· tion In Congress. It bas been pending more thnn lwo years. The bill v.·ould have established a new procedure ln major transportation industry labor disputes. Both slde.s would O'Brien Gets Campaign Job For McGovern WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic wesidenUal nominee George S. McGovern foday named r or m e t Democ:rallo Nalloaal • C· h a I r m a,n Lawrence F, ·O'Brien to be bis !l"tlanal· campaign chairman, a post In addition to McGovern's emting campaign structure. O'Brien will be given a role concerned with unllylng the support of Democrats and other j•concemed Americans." McGov~m said O'Brien will be bis na· tional campaign chairman and in that role 11will be a foremost consult.ant on the overriding goal which will be to unify the support of key Democrals acrou t h e country.'' In a brief Interview be!ore publicly ac- cepting McGovern's offer, 0 ' Brien emphasized that whlle he will hold the ti· tie of national campaign chairman bis role will be ,...nUally aeparale !rom the ul1Ung McGovern pollllcal organization. McGovern aald O'Brien will be his liaison with Democrati in Congress, Democratic governors, mayon, and state (See O'BRIEN, Page!) Peace Talks Bog Down Despire Pl.eas by U.S. ha \'C betn required lo submit their tlnat offer to an impartia l panel which would select one or the other as a compulsory 1ettlement. "No union organization would make a determination or their support of the President based on just one piece of legislation,'' Ziegler said. "There was no deal." Chutists Drill Along Coast The paramedics arc pushing up the blood pressure of Corona del ?-.1ar sea-watchers again. Scores or people who s c e parachutes fall ln1 lnto the ocean, a plane clrcling flare, and t rescue boat en rou,te 1ren't 'ltneuiog aa air aash aftermalh. . A {eserviat unit from March Alt 'Foroe BaM at Riverside IJ .,..,. ductlltf i!erlod1o p • r a m e d I c training ieulons offshore, ao- cordlng to the Orange Counly Harbor Deparlment. Cyclist Injured In Coa st Crash; Copter on Scene Striking a curb on a treacherous NeWport Beach curve , a motorcYclist from Indiana suffered major Injurie s Wednesday, when he flew over a barbed wire fence and sailed 40 reel farther down an embankment. • Costa l\!esa Police Hellcopler pilot 01· ficer Carl Jackson w1s flying In the area on the border between the two cities and set the chopper down at the scene to give first aid. Paul T. BohaMon, 20, of Beach Grove, Ind., landed about 20 reet below the roadway along Irvine Avenue at 22nd Street. Hoag Memorial tlospital officials today exprwed amazement at the vacationing youth's comeback following surgery to repair multiple bone fractures , lacera· tk>ns and internal injuries. He was liated Jn serious condition to-- day. "Everything was perfect and ready to shoot," said one television cameraman as ~e carried out his equipment. •lBut then came the call which told us to get them out on the double. Nothing about thi s can surprise me." 1 Secret . Meeti·ng Revealed PARfS (UPI) -The Paris peace talks bogged ·down again today despite U.S. pleas for a calm dlscuaslon of the issues and a secret meeting Wednesday between ,\merican Henry A. K!Jsinger and the two top North Vietnamese negotiators. The Nonh Vietnamese strongly de· nounced U.S. attempts to seek a cea.se. fire first and a political settlement later. Police said the Bohannon bike. a powerful 750 cubic centimeter machine, skidded 23 feet before hitting the curb and throwing Its rider. nte eye.le tumbled 30 feet farther and w0s ll!ted u a total toss. Spassky. playing the white pieces, ar- rived on time for the game and started with his favorite opening -lhe queen pawn. . Fischer fushed In four minutes late directly from dinner, scanned the board for a few seconds, then movtt. bis king knight. After four quick moves, the game followed the aame patlero u the first contest which Spasslly "°"' Spusky ap- peared to hold tho upper hand al the !Ith move. The 29-year~ld challenger forfeited the aeooncl game of the match to Spwky when the organlura refused for a time to mnove the camera!. Spa5'lcy, 35, took a ooe·polnt lead Into the game. He won the llrll 11ame. took Government Resigns JIELS!NKl (AP) -Finli.nd'a minority lj'lVtmmenl of Social Democnla ralgn- wt Wednesday, declaring "onty a ma- Jorlty government can lab t h e mponslblllty" of •iJnlDI a free trade a1reement with the European Common Markel. Tbe '..,...,,,.m WU to !Im 1teea slaned SaturdaJ' ill Bruuets. Mesa, Ne~port Councilmen Hold Unannounced Parl.ey By L PETER KRIEG Of ... DellY ...... '"" Three oounciltnen from Newport Beach and two O)UDd]men !rom Coela Mesa buddied Tuesday n1&hl Jn an unan- noun<ed, clooed-<loor mMtlng In Coeta Meaa City Hall, tt wu teamed wec1n ... day. According to nne « ·the partldpantl, they dlSC!IJl!ed • wtde range of ilaueJ: -Freeways and traffic. -Proposed inland harbon. -Develop-I o! land IW'lOUnding Orange County Airport. '-POnible poolln( of purdtaslng pro- ~rea and police and fire traloln& pn> grams. -'!be Q for mon coopentloa by Iba two cltla' llal!s. •·~ -Tbe need for a IO<Olld .... led buebtlt lleld lo the Harbor Ar.a. -'!be uao of revenues from the ..., -tax Oii (UOlloe for blqcle traiJo and ....... -'!be need to 1tral1hlen out the "Jal· led" bouDdaey l1oe Jo. Ute area .d. • Superior Avenue and 16th Slreel 'Ibey dllcussed all of the matlen in a meeUng !hat 1aated lw than an hour, ac· cording to Councilman Milan ,Doolal ol Newport Beach. The unannounced meeting did not •iolaie the Brown Act, catllorola'• anti· secrecy in government law, lince there was not a quorum ol either municipal hocJy pmenl, according to Dostal, a lawyer, and Newport Budt City Al· tome)' Denn!J O'Neil. Besides Dostal, Mo)'i>r Dou1d A. ,Mclnnts-Vlco.Jlayor ilol!ord llocen reprueiled ti,. beadl cttJ'• .....,. !Mmher COUllCll. Mayor Jacl< Hammell and-Couooilman..-Willanl J'b rd 1 n repmealed Ute Inland community's Ove-man bolnl. llOotal said, In keeping with the spirit of the Brown Act, no dedllonl were made. However, Doata1 u1d, the reapecllve ~lhlel'dty Llallon Commllleel" did """' to reconuo...i to their rupecllv1 counclls: ., -A Joint study on the feasi bility or creating an inland harbor, reaching all the way into Costa Mesa. -Erplorallon of the possibility of get- ting together to purchase goods and materlals collectively in an attempt to cut costs. -ExploraUon of the fe asibility of a Joint maintenance contract for the police hellcopier1 opereled individually by the two cities. -~ocaUon ol the possibility ol 1olng In w!ltt 'Nell Other Ott jOlnt training pn> l)'aml ~ pilJoe and lire penoanel: • "OD lliO 111bjecl of rreeways, we just pVe' uch otb!r a 'status report,11 la.id Dostal, who b chairman of his dty's liaison panel.- "Coala Mesa Is going to lake a look at the picture as of today assuming that the Pacific Coa•l Freeway IJ aotng to be eliminated," Dostal aaid. "They want to try to determine tho best courae of direction to aolve their transportatloa w1tb0ul It," .he said. N•lther lWruneit nor Jordan could be Ttached for comment on the meeting. ( In turn, the South Vietnamese vigorously rejected the Viet Cong cJe. mand for a coalition government. Today's session was the 151st since the talks started. 11 lasted about lour houra and the neiotlatora agreed to meet again next Thursday. "There wu perhaps a slight ltn· provement In the tone of exchanges but nothing dl.scemlble on substance," a U.S. negotiator said. 0 1 explained to them we don't demand their acctptance of everythinl we pro- pote, but I couldn't evoke from them any ldnd of alatem•nt which indicated their prOposali, '' lhe Commlmlltl aald. "We · "We IUll ara wait~ for new American propoaa!J are negotiable," ~added. are•reedy lo dlscuaa u-but today the7 brought nothing new." Neither aide referred to the Wedntsday tecret seulon by Kiastnger, Nixon's top advtser. and the top Hanoi negotiator&, Xuan Thuy and Le Due Tho. U.S. negotiator William J, Port<r ap- pealed to holh 1ide1 !or 1 calm d!Jcusslon of the issues. Soon arterwonls, South Vlelnam.,. negotiator Pham Dang Lam said the Communllta did not want a truce. • • , bruge Coast Weadler Don'! let lho8e low clouds and 1 .. cal drlale loo! yoo . It'll 1ttn be sunny today a/ler the usual mid- morning clearing and lemper•IWJS of arowid 75 will ~val! over tlio cowity. Lows tonlglll -. INSmE TODA 'Y Funeral f or Lion Counl'll So· f•rl'• fo~d F1ruit!' sparf" ·au i-ratf opinion from DAILY PILOT 1crlb< Bill Schrdber. Su 1to'l1 on Page l l . L.M. ..,.. r Mtvi.t ... Ca~ S Mvhlal '-"•II M CIHllllM •·M Na~,.._. • CMllU 1f 0...... Clwfllr 19 c,....,. ,, '""' b-21 OMl!ll fMtfetti 1t tfrkll ~l'lqb Uo1' •• ..,,.,, r... • ,,.....,.. • •111tw111...,.1 """ ,,,..... »1J ''""'• ,..,, .....,. . IJw .. ....,. '' J ............. U.11 ...,.._. 11 WlrV Mlft 4 -.~ 1r • 'lut €onft1Sed' Death Term Not 'A Dead Issue' • Tiie dealh pena~ Is nol dead. . , ;:.~• ~\yR~~~ 8:i:O!;.,d~t~ • _., to be a Judie, !Old ""Olben ot • lbe ~V.U.y YOWll 114publlclM • W-..toy lllaht. .. Only two U.S. Supreme Court justicts said flat out the death penalty violates lbe Ellbth Amendment of the Con!lllu· • tioii," Bucom uplalned. "The other · thrte mertlJ ruled It Invalid as to the aMS before them.'' lloocoln aald the effe<t of the U.S. decllloo wu to le1ve a atale of confusion ' o•er the death penalty ln most states. ••WMt most ol lht jusicea were really 1 NYl"i wu lbal tha atale would have lo Jacillate !be death penalty. That the atata would have to better define capital crlma .. ~ ~ who heada the district at· "'""1'• office In Well Orange County, aaJd lbe Calllorui.a Supreme Courl ruling . on lbe death penalty would wipe It off the "'" books for this state, but the death penalty tnlUatlve could reinstate it. "ff lbe people vote for the death ' peoalty, tben the atate Legislature 1w • three ebolcea. It can leave the penalty as It was, and battle each cue up to the l!llpreme Ccurt. It can aboltab lbe death penalty by legislative actlor .. Or, it can .. , Hunt Begins • After Theft · Of Diamonds A hunt II underway today !or a polr ol men who llole • key, 1D1locked a dlaplay cue, and smuggled fl2,"67 worth of diamond rings out of a Costa Mesa de- partment store Wednesday while a female companion bought a $17 necklace. The arand thelt at Sean and Roebuck In Souib Coast Plaza wasn 't d1'covered unUI 40 minutes later, accordina to De- tective c.pt. Ed Glassow. ~ Store Security Olflcer Richan! J. SU· llnp '"::!ed the c•m theft alter 3 p.m .• when traya of auorted wedding and engagement bandJ were discovered miuiog. Jnvatlptors aald the three IUSpecb approoehad the Jewelry department about . 3:11 p.m .. whore the woman enca1ed • saletprl In dilCll11tng what to purchase. Her companionl, one weartni a bushy Afro.style hairdo, apporently tock a key from a drawer to ~ tho rl(_ dlwlay CIH whJla lhe clerk I lllentlolj J"'I dJ• vtrtad. Normally cuea ol !hell In which sus· peels enter with the apecffic Intent to 1te1l are classified 11 burglary, which can carry stiffer criminal penalties. Inveetigaton 11id in this oase, bow· ever, It II not llrm!y ~tablllhed lbat the female 11111pect, wearing a black wtc and a loud-print shlft. was a knowing accomp- lice. "'!lley might have just seen the op- Portunlty and said 'Let's rip them off'." c.pt. Glucow explained in recanl to the tn male1. Both wett: described as 22 to %3. one weiring a red and white striped 1htrt and Ibo other a dark 1rte11 jacket and blue ,... .. Tba 1\'0lllln W81 about 26, and a pellle five feet, two inches and about 110 potmdJ, the saleaglrl told pallce. From Pagel COLLINS ... ltaeU, althoull1 Koll would get the ground tea.. Iron> tlie lrvme Company. Colllna offlcl1ls !lid they plan to meet with employaa of tho Newport Beach facllUy thla a!ttrnoon to "rt as.sure'' them of the company's Intentions to re- main at the site. OIANN COAn IT DAILY PILOT Tiii Oflf'ltl Cmt DAILY Pll.CIT, Wllfl wMr:" ll amll.... lfll NI..,.,,,_ .. Mli.Mlll .,, tM 0rttntt c• "*111111r1t CWllNnr. hPl- r•i. eitnlllllt •rt MlllMI. MlnQy ""'°"" PrWtf, fir C.11 Mae, N....,. ...wi. Hunll111IM llKll/fleun"ln V11J1y, L-.un• llldl, lrYln1/S.ddltbltll; 11'1f Sin Cltn.nle/ 1M J..-n C1Jhlr•1111. A t ll'lll• r1t~I Hltion 11 Pllblltllfd S.turd•~ 1rW Sund•v1. Tiii prlllclSYI 1ti*ll1hl119 p1~1 11 •I 3JO Writ ••v S!retr, CM!• MMI, C•1lfor11l1, t1t1i, ••~•rl N. w.,4 "r111dord •ftll P\lllllthrr J•c~ II:. C11rl1y Vl(I 1'1111!11111 11'141 Gentr•I Mtnltf:r Tito"''' K11.,il ••l• Tho11111 A. MurtthiR1 Mlllitl!W •• , .... 01rlff H, Looi a1ch1nl r. Nill At11ttMt Milllllnl lflMn ~ Cllft MM: U1 ~~'s..._. ........,. ikldlr am ""'*""' ~ •11et1: m ~ • ..,...._ "'""'"""" letclrl1 17'11 fNdt ...,....,. 1M Clim1Me1 Jll N1rt11 11 ca,,...,_ ... Ttl-17141 '41-4121 a.NW .Uumlla ... 64Wl71 PrM CNtlll A'"' S.ltl Of ...,._. IOldl 4tl-4411 P11111 Htr1ll OfYlflOt '"11ty C111111111111tlff '40-1ut c:.wllM, 1tn, °'"11111 C..11 l'V'UWllftt c.riMj,y. He lltW& 11or111, lll1111r1tlOM. ~I "'9ttlr er HYIHilll'rwlle lllttll'I ::.... .... "= .. ~ ttNCltl ...,. ...... ci. ....... Nlif .t C•l1 #HM, "........_ ..,..,,_"" ..,. u'"" "-" ~I W Mil A.II ~I M11""1 ......... QM "*"'tlr'' • -\ modlfy and define more speclftcany whep the deelb penalty should be ap- plied." Beacom said a ca.se-by~a~ betUe with !he u.~. supreme Court would be foollsb and impractical. "I beUeve In capital punlshmont. I don't believe this society has evolved to a point where it is no longer acceptable or needed." he said. Instead Beacom suueated that the state Legislature should write new death penalty rules, ~king it expltclt when the penally abould be applied, rather than leavinc It to the discretion of Judeea or juries. , Beacom. who 11 seeking a Judgeship In the Well Or~e County Judicial Dlltrlct in the November elecUon, critlctUd the U.S. alld llate Supreme Court Judgu for Jeglslatlng rather than, Judilnl· "The ellect of !heir d e c la Ion s (abollahln1 the death peoalty) was to Jegl1late what the law ought to be, not what it is," he said. "I'm more offended by the way capital punLshment was done in, than by its elimination. If the people don't want it, then I could live with that." He said that when tbe majority of the state Supreme Court ruled the death penalty was "cruel or unusuo.'" punistt.- ment, the justices were ignor ing other sections or the state Constitution which 11peciflcally refer to capital punishment. "Judges are meant to apply the law, not make it," he said. "Moll lay pecple think there is too much bloody legislation in courts." He allO pointed out .that in 1968 the slat• supreme Court held the death penalty valid. but three of those juatlces reversed themselves in the most recent ruling. Beacom quoted Justice Stenley Mosk, who said alter the 1968 decision: "As a Judge I am bound by the law ... I find it to be, not as I wish II to be." Mosk was a member of the majority which abolished the death penalty this time. Beacom concluded by predicting the death penalty initiative would cer- tainly pau In Orange County. State Finishes Year With More Than Expected SACRAMENTO (6j') -The state of Calilorllla wound up the 1971-72 fiscal Ytir with a 1urplU1 $91 mllllon ~Jgaer than expected, Controller Houaton J. Flournoy said today. Flournoy said the 1urplus wa1 '256 mil· Uon, largely attributable to the with- holding of income taxes and to a tax in- crease enacted last December. Flournoy nid it was the flnt time in three yeart the state took in more money than it spent. The Finance Department estimated the surplus would be $164 million when It prepared the budget !all year. It was also the first time in the 1tate1s history that ita revenuu topped the 15 billion mark. Receipt!: l o t a I e d $S,U6,45.1,294 while expenditures totaled $4,IM,SM,089, Flournoy said. "It's a pleasure to hive a healthy financial report,'' Flournoy said. "as compared with last year." Expendlture.1, he said, increased by $100.6 mHBon last year, but rev enues in- creased by $945.6 million. A more complete and final report on the 1971·72 fiscal year would be relea.sed in August, Flournoy said. The state does not know how much of the surplus repreaenta excess withholding of personal income tax which began Jan. I, Flournoy said. "We really won't know with any finali- ty until ne.xt April " when income tax refunds are made, he said. The Introduction of withholding ended the need for the 1t1te'1 general fund to borrow to maintain its ca.sh now, Flournoy said. Flournoy lllid he expected the state BCbool finance crt1i1 would claim much of the surplus, making it d~ficult to predict the loog-lenn surplua until alter the LesiJlature enacta pending tax reform and school finance measures. Bomb Shatters 2 Transformers; Another Fizzles GLENDALE (AP) -A bomb shat· tered two tranaformen It 1 utility aubstatlon early today, and lhcrtlf's deputlel dismantled another bomb which failed to detonate, Police aaid • Tiit aplotlon of the first bomb ap- ·-tly erttniullbed the fllle on the ...,.. ond, said a 1poke1man !or the Los An&elet ·County '11eriH'• department. 'Tlie undetonated bomb, a 1111-lnch pipe filled with black pawder, was one of the largest pipe bombe evor dilmantled by the sheriff'• bomb ll(!uad, the spakt1man said. The explosion cauaed an e1tlmated $5,000 to 121,000 dama11 and narrowly mis>ed deltroytng a S4,000-volt leeder lino, police uid . Power iervlce war not lnlerruptad and there wort no tnJurlel, police aald. The blast was under tnvesti&~tlon . . ' Frot1tP.,el O'BRIEN •.. letillatlve leaden. He aald O'Brien will alao be hil chief contact witb ofllcllls or the Democratic party a11c1 orcanized llbor. "Larry O'Brleo will be peraonally and dlnctly mvolved Ill all major campolp decisions bet~·een now and Nov. 7," McGovern said. r "He wlil be a principal ipakesman for Jhil campoign and I am urging him to travel to every section of the country to IP(!ak in support of my candidacy." At a news conferenoe, McGovtm and O'Brien emphaslied several limes that the former n1tional chalrman'a new role will DOI preempt lbat of other memben of the McOovern campalp. McGovern aald Frank Manklewlcs will travel with him as his pcllUcal director and that campaign manager Gary Hart will generally remain in Washington to nm the day-to-day strategy and tactics or the campaign. O'Brien said he will establish a separate headquarters for his operation in Washington within the next 48 hourJ. McGovern made the O'Brien an-. nouncement after his arrival here from South Dakota where he has been vaca· tioD.lng, to cut a pro-labor vote in the .. olllii(i:-..:;_;;;oilii' Senate following his rejection by to p AFLOO leadera. DAILY PILOT ltetr 'lttto Triple the Fun Triplets the first in Orange County this year, were given silver cups by the maternity staff of Hoag Hospital as they reached six months of age recently. The trio, from right, are Richard, Michael, and Steven Ayres, named for th e doctors who delivered them. They are shown with their mother, Mrs. Rob- ert Ayres of Costa Mesa and Marjorie Pyle, an ob- stetrics nursing supervisor. The boys were only the seoond set ol triplets ever born at Hoag. Police Arrest 2 Stones Aides On Drug Charges BOSTON (UPI) -Two more members cf the Rolling Stones entourage have been arrested and released on bail. James P. Cullie, 25, Identified by polictt as the rock group 's chauffeur, and Rita Redmond, 23, his girlfriend, were ar- rested Wednesday afternoon for possession of narcotics. Both or Denver. Colo., they were released in $S,000 bail each. The previous night In Warwick, R.I., where lhe Stones' plane was forced to land because Boston wa1 fogged in , lead singer Mick Jagger and four others were arrested after an argument with new5 photographer Andy Dickerman. Boston Mayor Kevin H. White in· tervened with Warwick officials to get the Stones releaaed on bail so they could appear for their first concert. The Stones held the concert early Wednesday morning -four hours Jater than planned -and held tbeir second Wednesday night. SeUout crowds attended b o t h performances at the Boston Gafden and police said the fans remained relatively orderly although about 50 arrests were made on various charges, mostly in· volving disorderly conduct. The Providence Journal Bulletin Co. said Wednesday it would Ille a clvll damage suit against Jagger and Keith Richard -another perloriniog member of the Stones -as a result of the Tues- day nlgbt incident involving Dickerman, a Journal employe. Dickennan said the Stones assaulted him while he was taking their pictures at Theodore Green Airport in Warwick. Jagger and Marshall Chess, a record producer, were charied with obstructlng police. Richard and Stanley Moore , who police said was a Stones' bodyguard, were charged with assaulting Dickerman, Robert Frank, also identified as a bodyguard, was charged with assauJtiilg a policeman. Frank was released in •100 bail, the ethers in SSO bail each, for an Aug. 23 hearing in Warwick District Court. Gang's Victim Escapes, Calls Police; 3 Held . TORRANCE (AP) -Kidnaped with his young son from hi.a home at gunpoint by members of a motorcycle gang, a 25- year-old Los Angeles man crawled through an attic window of the home where he was being held and summoned help, pallet said today. They said three men have been booked for investigation of kidnap, assa ult and narcotics violations. The victim, Joseph Hernandez, said he managed to escape from the house when a cyclist standing guard fell asleep. Officers went to the house and arrested the trio. They also freed Hernandez." 2-year~ld son, Joseph, Who oUlclals said was unharmed. Flemande1 said the trio approached him at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Iron! yard of his Torrance area hon.¥' and ordered him and his son to IO with them. Newport Unit Approves Syst,em of Bike Tr~il,s By JOANNE JIEYNOLDS Of .... a.If' ""' .... Members of the N_.-t Beach Parks, Beachel and Recreation CommlAloo have approved a plan aimed at provlcltng 50 mlle1 ol bicycle tralla Jn the clty. The recommendation now coe.s to the city councll. Arnold Parker, chalnnan ol the Citl· zen'a Bicycle Traill Committee, said the master plan approved Tuesday was drawn afttr a year's work by the nine- member committee and representatives of several city departments. Parker said today the next step for the committee will be to decide on a pri- orttY for implementation of the plan. which is dependant on the availability of funda lrom the clty council and anmts from the county, state and federal cov· emment. He listed a city limit·to-city limit trail along Paclllc Coast ffjghway as the groups' number one goal. Parker esti· mated the cost of that trail at $50,000 to I00,000 beoalloe ol the need to build a separate. route for . cycli!ts, rather than 'Masseur' Takes Watch at Club Oranae Co1.1nty Sherill's officers are on the look out today for a bogus masseur whose visit Wednesday to the Santa Ana Country Club cost a Corona del Mar man a wrlstwatch valued at '400. The white-garbed masseur, described as about 1i1-foot.five and 280 pcunds with •hort curly blond hair dilappeared from the club about the same tlme as 1 watch belonJdng to George W. Weedon, Mi Mornfng C.nyon Road, Corona de! Mar., Deputies said the phony maueur waa seen in the men's locker room shortly before the watch waa taken from the vie· tlm's locker. route them alonll the atreet. "The problem on an arterial llfchwlY Is to isolate bicycles lrom vehicular tral· lie. The uae of a painted lane 111cb u exiJb on Rlvenlde Drive tenda to al•• cycl!Jts a !Ille aenae ol security and a condition !Ike that could lead to accidents. "On arterial hllbways we need a trail like the one that lw be<n put in on Jamboree Road," he said. From Pagel CHESS ... • amaller :1quares on the board, but that Sp&Nky at one point requeated larger aquaret. Fllcher alao demanded a new car and free run of the swimming pool at lhe Loftleider Hotel where he is staying, but met a polite rebuff. 1 The Americanj;ad some hotel guests cbued lrom the jll'>ol alld later walked_up to a Spanish 1uest who refused to leave, tapped him on the shoulder and aeked !or a bar of soap. "Mr. Fischer is a treasured guest but he does not own the hotel," a spokesman for the hotel said. "He is free to use the swimming pool during the night but we cannot reserve lt for him." Moves In the filth game of the wcrld chess championship match between Spassky and Fischer: Spassky -white Fiscbier -black. t. P-Q!, ll~KB3 2. P-QB4, P-KJ 3. Kt-Q83, B-KtS 4. Kt-B3, p-84 s. P·K3, Kt·B3 !. B-Q3, BxKtch. 7. PxB, p-Q3 8. P·KI, P·KI 9. P-Q5, Kt·Kl 10. K~l\4, P·KR3 Elapsed time: Spassky white, :15 min- utes; FIJcher black, 15 mlnutal. .JJ. J. 9arrell ... a collection of HERITAGE ttpholste1·ed pieces at 20% OFF during our 20th Semi Annual Furniture Sale. McGovern accepted 01Brlen'1 resign&· tion u chairman of the national com· mlttee at d~ national convention in Mlaml Beach. The acceptance, It was learned, was largely the result of the fact µiat neither was able to meet the other'• cond1Uo1111, unstated publicly. O'Brien, while stating publlcly he yanled to atop clown, in· dlcated privalitly he would •lay if he bad 1 major say in running the campaign. McGovern was already committed to running the campaign through his own organization headed by Hart that has been so 1uccesaful in winnin& the nomination but was apparently unwilling to make this clear to O'Brien. who didn't want to stay in a lesser status. Mesan Accused As Big Dealer In Narcotics A Colta Mesa woman whom police accuse of supplementing her county wel· fare cbeck u a major drug dealer was arrested Wednesday in a raid netting a !arr• caabe of uortad pills. Barbara J. "Bobbie'' Rou, 48, of 104~ M1uioft Drive, wu taken into custody at 4:15 p.m. by narcotics agents waiting on stakeout. Deteetlves Jim Blaylock and Dick De- FranclJco bad already arrested a female acquaintance of Mn. Ross when they arrived earlier with a search warrant and found their prime suspect absent. lnvesligalOn said Mn. Ross was booked on cbarcea ol aale ol dangeroua drugs, possession of dangeroua drugs for sale, possession of dangerous drugs and also possession of marijuana. Her comJ>llllian, Mrs. Edna B. Lopez. 40, of 8903 Hewitt Place, Garden Grove. was char&ed only with possession of dangerous drugs-before both were booked into Orange County Jail. Judge Dena.Id Dungan of Harbor Judi· clal District Court Issued a oearch ... ,. rent after, investigators claim, Mrs. Ross sold a bag of amphetamine pills to an undercover agent. 'Ibe so-called nickel bag, usually 25 pllls at • $5 cost, was included u evt· dence. police aaid, along with another vial of 50 more pills, plus assorted cap- sules and tablets or uncertain ccntent. Investigators said the drugs were con- tained in a pune and ao overnight bag, while two plastic bags ol alleged mari- juana were also selzed as evidence. Criminal complainta naming the women will be soagbt from the Orange County District Attomey'1 Office this altemooa or Friday. ••• Hemandei told olllclal.I the trio, whom he had never seen before, apparenUy miltskenly believed he had JOme knowledft about a burcJary at OIJI iitnc member s borne. W • IMve I 0 Sofe Styles ., •• I 0 CMir Styles and over 500 f1brla lo choose from. SAVE 20% Police ldcntllled the trio aa Gresa11 Pain, 24, Seymour Winberg, 211, and Gary Hiblett, 23, of Torrance, all members of the OUUnws Motorcycle Club. Hemandei said the three slapped a~d plstol·whlpped him In ·trying to iltcll IJl, formation about the burglary. Officers said they oelud a dczen lbolgUnl and ril!eJ, two bandrun>. two sultcaaea lilied 'With ammunl!lon from the home and six martJuaM Dlallll - each two leet high -cn>wtna fn a IOOf· top 1arden. • Your favorite lnkrlor de1ig11cr wiU be. hapPJI lo 0111$I )I•• • • • PROFESSIONAL INTUIOR DESIGNUS I Opt• Mo..., Thurs. l FtL &es. 22fJ HA•IOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CAI.IF. During this event • .-... -- . Married at Sea Married at sea aboard the ketch, Destiny were Re- nee Huey and Jerry Hornbeak. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray Huey of La Canada and Mr. and : Mrs. Jack Hornbeak of Newport Beach. The newly· · :-. weds are motoring through New Zealand and Au· : : : stralia. Hostess Runs Afoul : Family Squawks At Cheap Meals By ERMA DOMBECK During the war there was a cartoon in which a woman was standing In front of the meat oowiter with a roast in her bs'.n<l and the butcher was saying, "How do you want to handle the financing?',.. Our family stopped laughing at that joke sll: months ago and are now working on a car· toon family perched in a line on a chicken house roost and the mother la saying, ••If you're sick of chicken, just say so." I've done everything with chlcken that is legal. I've barbecued, roasted, basted, broa:sted, fried , boiled, broiled, steamed, baked, g r i 11 e d , frJcasseed and burnt it" We've had it in salads, casseroles, •. sklllets, p O t s, roasiers and bucke~ My youngest caine into the kitchen tho other day (Is II my t_: imagination or iJ he beginning to stretch his neck in and oul f when he walks?) and asked, A "How come We have so much r. chicken?" '"· "Because it ls cheap," I ~· said. · · · "What was that we had for dinner last night?" "Mock beef filets." ••What's that?" ·. · "Qllcken." · · .. Didn't we have that the night before last?" "No, that was a dinner af champions called, 'F o w I Ball.' "It tasted like chicken meat· balls." "Well, tonight we are having company and I ~ preparing something yery special." He picked up a leg. "II looks like chicken." "<ltlcken isn't the only animal with legs , you know ... "I've never seen a steak with one." "Look," I said pa ti en Uy, "just because we are tired of AT WIT'S END eating chicken doesn't mean that everyone has it as often as we do. These people will probably sit down and say, 'Wow, would you look at this. We haven't had chicken in weeks. nns is a real treat, isn't it, Fred?' " "You really think th ts chicken is going to turn 'em on?" "I realJy do,'' I said em- phatically. Al dinner, as we passeif the platter around, one of tho guests sniffed and said, "It mnells wonderful." Another 'Piped in, "It 1oo1ts delicious." A third one offered, "lt'a ao crispy." A small voice aald clearly, 11It'1 also v er y cheap!" I am inclined to agree with tho Southerner who said, "Children are lite grila. They should be brollghl out and aerved three times a day and then •returned. n- CUSTOM BIKINIS mix 'n' rn1tch '""' .... ""'" • Mllll• ~,.. ................ ,. --"---- LANDER BEACH FASHIONS 12J·2W- N..,.., ...... 6JJ.1111 . IMPORTANT CONSIGIOlllT · UNSOLD CONTRACTm MERCHAtlDISE IMMEDIATE AUCTION Carefuly ~ ... Fl•• & v.-. PERSJAN RUGS ...... othr Ori-... 'c-'ttltot of -of ... fleest '""'" of KUMAN, IOY AL IOllHAIA. ISR· HAN, TAUIZ, •OUCHISTAN, NATURAL SILi! CjlUMI, HUNTING SCINI CAU'IT, IOYALmHAN, llAZYIN< SHIU.Z. MAIN, llUIDISTAN. U.llHTIAll, l'IAYIR 1116, AlDlllL. lllDO SAYOlfflBll. HAMii. DAN. A ...................... I I ti• .... , 11l1ctM P...a.: 9111 otltar Orlwtill .. ,... _.""' ... _ _.. ..................... ... .... fl1•1 ... e1m;•af1ewalt ... fww .. 1 • lflwtl1&,.. ......................... .... ...... ,. •••• ., ? ••• .,..~ ............. -... "!•••• _. ._. cl1au;w bf wtlol. 1"' ............... ......,.., __ ....... i NIWPORnR INN 1107 Jcal•,.. I_. "•'""" .-. c.lf. SUNDAY, JULY U, Z P.M. Viewing 6 lntpectlon lrom i2 noon until time of aUCllon Audl•n-: Col. Leib R"onbMn T-..: Cll'2i w Qeck • • ' DllLV PtLOf They Just Want Facts, Ma'am Peering Around DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are DOnllll, docent &iris. I.I and II yeus ol qe who have been lriendl lince JW>. derprten. None ol our par<nts ever mention aa beclUJe Ibey believe people lhouldn1 U>int about ,.. unW Ibey gt! morrlod. . We 1t1 IDOll ol our inlomuitlon from each other. Noturally llOl!M! ol tt Is wrong becaU1e the "facts" come from crummy magasb>el. We need answert w two questions. (I) !JI it poalble f<I get pregnant the first time! (2) Do you know ol a birth cootrol method that la 100 percent hannless and foolproof? Thanks, Ann. You are more of a mother lo us ttian our own motbers. -TENNESSEE FIVE DEAR FIVE: (I) It la Weed poulble !or a gbt to become ,...,...1 Ille ftnl llme. Aborlloa -· -ladlctle -the laexperlenced llrl """ Ille sruttst r11t o1 pnpaaey. (Z) 'l1lere Is • boW. b1rt1o ...u.t melW lllal la I• per<enl lwmleu ud leol-f. Tbe clotesl Is Tbe P1D -H Ille llrl 11e1U ll betweea ber !meet al all Umet. DEAll ANN LANDERS: We have four sons under 11 years of age and our place Is beadquartert for all lbe boys in the neighborhood. We've bad at many at 20 kldl in our rec room at one U.me. '!Ills tOUndl -~ but Is bat Ill drawllocl:s. The -o1-o1 the...,. Who WU here latt week la fwioul with me. It -her ... .runmy, .... honing m>und in our backyard. and be ran into • post and lcnocked out • front tooth. Jimmy Is 11 yous old and.the tooth ..... unfortunately, a pennanent one. I Jell awf\11 about it, put aome eold compreises on the boy's mouth and sent· blm home. His mother called me a tew how-s later, wild with anger. "Whore's Jim· my's tooth?" she asked. "How do I tnow?11 J replied. "Go out and find tt,0 she screamed. "It can be transplanted." We have half an acre, Ann. Hunting for a kid's tooth out there "as ridiculous. But I said I'd try, and I did. Of course I dido' have any luck. I'd like lo know U I HAD IOWld the tooth, could It have been auecessfully transplanted? I've never beard of such a thing. -CORNING, N.Y. DEAR CORN: Dr. Pan! Goldhaber, Ilea el t1le ·Hanan! Scllool of Dental -.. ,. • bocted«l leotlt ... be ncceuhDy ''fe..pl111ted1• If Ute root ls kepi m'!bt ud lotacl la I well aalt·solu· tlon ...i tbe tooth ...i the potlent are lo Ille denlht'1 office wttblo U !loan. lie made 11 deer, Hwe•er, lllal Ille i.otll will pnboWy ltl lul iaora tbaa live or Ill yon bat I.My are lmportaol yean la lllo dula! lllltary <I u --~ and 1!'1 wortll the lloable. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have 1 Iteautllul lt.yeaN>ld sister. Evcrr- tells her bow pretty she It and she e1t1 II up. She bat a super boyfriend. I'm 17, a plmple-fac<d freat, mlsenible a n d unhappy. I uaed lo have a darling steady but he told someolle my complexion was so sickening be was embarrassed to be seen with me. 'Ibe friend who repeated this to me was not trying to be mean. She just wanted me to know I lost the guy because of my skin and not becallD I was dumb er boring. What can I do? I've sent away for eYerf 11Clll'e'' under the sun. I've scrubbed my face raw with alcohol, laundry soap -you name H, Ann, I've tried it. Mom aays I'll grow oot of it. I can't wait that tmg. Please selp me. - A MESS DEAR FRIEND: See a stin spe<lallst ancl-atop lootlq lnlllDd. Thousands of kids with acne uye been belped and you can be amoni tbem. Get younelf an ap- Pointment at uce. HONORED during 1 reU.. An&eleo were Illa M-. ment dinner in Sir Mlcbatl'a Br11111 Bravo, Apa MarthaD. reatauran~ Los Angelu WU Elsie Torrey and C.tberlno Mn. Kenneth B. Sill Of Dana,_s_....iaen __ . -~----r Point Who bat reUred from the Pacific Telephone Co. after 2' yon of oervice. DEUGATES f<I tho list summer oonference of the Business 1 n d Pnllesaional Women's Clubl, Inc. in Los I @.allASS' RINfl Dhllo«ho- W• .. •A ..... ., • Norman Wiott • Bleylo Al»o Golf w .. , 2711 l°'t CMft HWJ. c.ro .. .., ... 67J-f741 • CULTURED PEARLS ARE OUR EXCLUSIVE CONCERN AND ART MURA TA PEARL CO. OF CALIFORNIA, INC. MARINERS VILLAGll Dan• H•rMr l>.t Prado Avenue 7 I 4-4ff-»12 WORLD's LARG~ST NEEDLEART & CREATIVE CRAFT CENTE , 4 UPTO 79°1o SAVINGS READY -TO-MAKE & READY ·MADE• NEEDLEWORK• CRAFTS• DECORATIONS •14 days of savings for fun!! • SALE ENDS AUG. 2 Thousands count 'em-thousands of items 1'n sale • Shop while selections are complete • Some cpiantities Dmitecl • Every department represented • Drastic price cuts In every .d•pcu hlWdt • Many Items priced below CO$t • Special bargain tables throughout the store • Balloons for the kiddies • Only a few of the. items are shclwn below many, many more on sale! AllOlllld Fl ... I W«e$1 Now 34c aPkg. SpeBdJ Bow Ribbon Makea25Bows for8¢Each 25 Yds. Was J2,29 Now $-i.54 Y.z" Molded Pearl Strings 10 Ft. Stringll Reg;$1.49 Now44c l!t" Half Balds Reg.89¢ 11ow44c · RCMICI Sequins Pkg.of 100 Rog.- Now14c C1'9W81 Star Piiiow Kit Was$2.99 Now $-i.66 IJ _ .. ··-.... --- Cnnrel MagnoDa Tree Handbag Kit Was$5.49 $2.94 Crewel Topiary Plc:lure ·Was $6.99 l<lt Now $2.94 Snowflake Omamenta l<llWasOO, NOW 69C Qochet Pearl Rings Reg. $2.79 (23¢ each) Now $-i.99 Kllof12 (Only16li¢each ring) Crewel Marigold Piiiow Was $4.25 Kit Now ... 94 Brothef4' Lllcemaker Knitting Machine Model No. 685 Mfr, IJal Price $239 NowOnly $-i29 STORE HOURS ' Henywllght DuPont Orlon SaJel ... Knitting Wol'lled 69eole>n Ellfthere $1 All on1184c 4oz.aklln Aunt L)'dla'• Rug Vern 70Yd.Skeln ~.~ Now29c Many Other Yim PltC9e Sl•hed For Thia Sale Mllaala;•C.... 111111:11 :e.dt Mond1y lf'tru FrfdlY: 10:00-0:00 Saturdoy: 9:00-t:Oll -:12:00-6:00 H4.Jl14 '1 • ' ' Jf DAILY PILOT N Th!.ndq, Ju~ 20, 1972 ·Narcs: Loved Only By Family They Seldo m See By ARTHUR JI. VINSEL Of -. o.iw rutt 11tff CruWna out tbt powerful aedan ride.! low, crowded with men prowUn1 for ......UO.. on the drug ICelle. The lbaggy guy driving has ~. btavy.Jldded eyes cbaracteriltic or an addict craving a fiJ:. He 11 simply Ured. ' He 11 1 narcotics detective -a nark -who worked II hours the day before, preparing for this night, the night ol 'l1ie Big One. Re will work 21 hours llralght. Silting on stakeout, he and his partnera dl!cuu the per· lllnll human matters close to men who are tired and tern- por~ly Idle. * * * "IF I DON'T GET FRIDAY oll lo take tbt kida lo Disneyland, ahe'll pro!> ably throw out my clothes and change the k>c:ka on the doors," says our wheel· . man. He describes going home from the last 18-hour mtft. "I took a nice warm shower and lay down. 'Illen the kids started running around hollering." He put on shooting 'muffs -IOUnd..<feadening ear guards used to silence · , noise on the police plltol range -to shut out the happy sound of his own kids ' al play. \ He awakened in time to report back to work, hunting famil iar races ta ... u known place•, buying dope. Nothing in th1I cat·an~mouae game between hunter and hunted is cer· taln except the mlnuteo, houn, days and dollan Invested. ''I DON'T KNOW BOW .• ~. stays marTied," remarks another nark. One little known flCt of a nark's life ls that he may work 16 hours and get paid 10< I or 12, becauio the case didn 't break as pllllllled. A -lither 1lhooe wl!e gave birth a monlh qo gets kidded by the bunch one lllbdoul, becauae the coople bun't had much time together. 11Don't fall ln love with any female prboners tonight," says 1 p11rtner. Nobody loves a nark ei:cept thoae they haven't had enough time for in re-- cent -ka. * * * STllATl!:GY FOR THE FlllST bit on a 111spect houle Is all set, but it !alls lbroulb. The narb llJll have 18 more (orma1 calls lo pay. n.. bull ahould be ciufslde -bunters jumping the hunted with a mulmum advantage -but Jt can't be done. 0 We're 1olng Jn ••• " says the Ured nark who needs Friday off to take his klda lo Dlaneyland. '!'bey bit the door taking the alleged drlug dealera by surprise -and all that'• left 11 papenrort, priloner tramportation and talk. * * * STANDING BY, KMPC ramo newsman Dave DeSoto and J watch p~ cedure we've Jeelf before. One cocky capUve slta bandculled lo a d>alr, cackling, quoting Conotitu- llonal llw back to bts capton. He bu been busied before. DeSoto -up Into the dismal log deocending on this night, lbt night of The Bil Clle, -ll)e narka ~ out lo nall lhl major dealera. " "I eaulm't laach," be says. i ··1 couldn't,lau&h." Crackdo.wn On Food Plants Seen WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The Reahh Educallon and W•Ua~ Deportment bu announced It will try lo enlill con- aumer help to crack down on widespread Ul1llll!tary condlllons found In food proc- .,.1ng plants. The departmenl advllltd Coogreaa II agreed completely with tbt llndlnp ol a G...,.al Accounting Office GAO In- vestigator's report that brought the situation to light . "This report has already been and will continue to be tl.1eru1 to FDA the Food and ri r u g Administration, HEW t h e Congr..,, tbt food lndu..trtea and con- sumen," the HEW statement said. GAO is a congrH!ional watchdog agency. HEW saJd it concurred with all nine recommendations made by the in- vestigators, including a more effective government use of consumer complaints. An automated data system for recording complaints I! being implemented on a nationwide basis to provide FDA field managers "with the information needed to follow up on complaints referred to states or other regulatory bodies for cor- rective action," HEW said. A spokesman said the system. already at work In the Baltimore area, will be e:1- panded tc other cities. The department's response to the sweeping criticism of condUkllll in food processing industries was sent by HEW Secrelary Elliot L. Richardson to Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Government Operations Com- mittee. The GAO .. pon ol lul April said that sanitary cooditiona In the food Industry are deteriorating and that FDA lacks the money and manpower to cope with the situation. Investigaton reported finding in some plants rodent excreta and u r I n e , cockroach and other insect infestatiom in or around raw materials, finished prod· ucts and processing eqWpment; im· proper u.. ol ln!ectlcid .. near food proc- essing a re a 1; use ol unsanitary equip- ment and other aimllar conditions. Food indultry representatives such as the National Canners Auociation o~ jected that the sampling of 97 plants was too lllllll to draw absolute conclusions and that the report did not specily tbt criteria for unsanitary conditions. Among the products made or processed at the plants were candy, fish. flaur, cheele, ice cream, fruits, vegetables, popcorn, jams and jellies, macaroni, spice.cs and other items. WE'VE GOT IT ALL TOGETHER ... Children at Play I Young children frolic on Espana Street, one of Ma· nila's main thoroughfares, which is flooded in the wake of devastating rains. The floods which have resulted are believed to be the Philippines' worst in 26 years. Many deaths have been reported and resi· dents of a number of villages have been evacuated from their homes. 'Immoral Experiment' Ethics of 'T est T ube' Babies A ired by Professo r ClliCAGO (UPI) -Tesl·lubt babies cannot be morally justified until all possibility of "damage" can be eliminated, says a Princeton professor or religion who is an adviser on ethics to the nation's doctors. In the June 12 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, Prof. Paul Ramsey said the "manipulation of embroyos" is not yet an exact enough science. "ARTIFICIAL FERTIUZA.TJON !ol- Jowed by implantation is an immoral ex- periment on a pos3ible future human life unless the possibility of damage can definitively be excluded," Ramsey said. "Since this condition cannot be met, at least not by the first 'successful' cases, any man or woman's venture to begin human life this way is morally forbid· den," said Ramsey. He is a member of the advisory Com· mittee on Medical Ethics of the Judicial Council of the AMA. FUnJRE JJm.tAN BEINGS could have certain advantages despite the possibility of induced damage due to artificial pro- duction, but to replace human pro- creation with the idea of manufacturing children is intolerable, Ramsey said. "ArtiDcial fertilization is not a medical procedure, it is a manufacture by biological technology, not medicine," he said. "To reduce the conjugal act lo a mere organic function for the transmission of the genn of life would be to convert the domesUc hearth, sanctuary of the family. into nolhlng more than a biological laboratory. "IT IS A FINAL Irony," Ramsey said "to realize invasions will' now be done on man after we learned slowly not to do so on other natural objects. Natural human courses of action will be disa!sembled in an age iit which we have le.arntd to deplOre strip mining. "In actual practice. minerals and vegetables may be more respected than human parenthood and mankind ushered happily into 'Brave New World,'" Ram· sey said. *That includes even San Diego and Santa . - Barba~a channels-'Total Television' Yes, now you can find out what's on San Die9o's television channels 6, 8 and 10 -and even on Santa Barbara's · Channel 3 -in the week's worih of ~listin9s you get every Saturday in TV WEEK •d in the dally lo9s in the DAILY PILOT. W'lth the help of our friends at TV WEEK, the DAILY PILOT CJOt it all to9ether. Now • we offer readers, especially those in the South Orange-Coast area and all others on community cables who can pull in all the signals there are in the Southland, "Total Television'. the most complete newspaper listing of t elevision fare available. Every Saturday in TV Week-·Every Day in Daily TV Log • • • I • , .l , • ha nin m be! flcl