HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-25 - Orange Coast PilotCarpenter. Sees· Asse•bly Fight
W oolwor.th Deir
' ·•
Lan~e· Reven1low·
Dies. • Air Crash 1·-11
··e,·w .. · ' I '
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, .!UL V: 25, .1972 (). VOL. fl.. NO. :111. I s1n;1aNL".*PMU•
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f • D.. . c h 1~s. :1a: ... ·ras · ··'•
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ASPEN, Colo. <liPI> La n c •
RevenUow, heir to the Woolworth five-
and-dime fortune ·an(i son of Barbara
Huton, cine 'Of the world's richest
women; has been killed >(lfh tltne other
persons in the \Crash' Mond8y of 8 ~all
plane in the 1 eo'iorado Rockie.s,. 18w -of-
ficers disclosed today. ,,
RevenUow, 36, a.sports car racer who
was 'given the UUe of "the world!s ric~
baby" at birth, was killed in the crash
during a, heavy thunderstonn about 10
miles north of this Colorado resort.
ReyenUow .had been sur:vem.a .tr-ct . . . . . . . '
, ; • ' , ' ' -,. I ' ' ' ., .: ' '; ' '~ '
Hinsliaw .Slate8
' . I .-• l '-
IrVine Addresi
" 'Orange ~.unty '~ssessor FA'ndre_W)
Blhsliaw, Reeublican c~te .for the
39th Congrt~I aeat wJll ~·f.rlday a~ ll,!dlMer ·il)ieting'·or~i\>(~l!t~\
lteiJUblican )'ofllm in tjie ~ ~
Jrvlne.
The South <loasl GOP group draws
members front ·~ ~·~ ·llad'
dleback V.Uey.. " , . A ~host reception at 7 p.m. will be
followed by dh\ner at 8. p.m. Tickets are
''5 per person and reservations moy be
made by calliilg 833-Zl8Z. • •
.......
' More sunshine m the agenda for
Wednetday along the Orange Coast,
with temperaturea: IJ]ce again near
90 Inland.' Beacb highs on arolUld
70 are expected. Lows llM5.
~ INSID~~D~X .•
ObHrvtri, toho art bi Vie*
know, sau there b "no c~ncc"
that o Vietnam «~•·fir• Wiii be
reathed before Ille Noveml><r
presidential elli:flona. Ste llDry,
Page 4. , . = ti . -.. .... --. 14 ~c..tr M 1• ...... ... '' ............ ,.,, ' T.......... ti 15 TllM*t ii
1!·1J ...... 4 11 ............ .,.,,
17 ...... """ •
' . ' .. ' ,., .
. or land 11e .. wameil to .buy,. ~c1a1s 11\a.
Killed wlth;hJin were ,the 'pi!ot and two, -. ' other paasenprs, all unidelltlfled. ,
. The •crllfl llamiMd ·Into" a weoded
~jainajde . eighl nilles · froal ~
'neareat' ,road. Sheriff cirou Wbltniire
. ~d the • wreckige was spotted ;, by
another plane. A,reacue·crew.reacbed the
site Monday nlgbt and confumed that· all
aboard Were dead.
lteventlow married actr.ss Jill SL
John on March 21, 1960, In San Francisco.
ThW were divon:ed ln.IJll3. " . -·Of!. Nqv, ·Bi · 111$1,,,be,marrle!I ·starlet
'H~e ·l!Olctridl!e; tbeq dt •. The • on1Y
rei#ke who attended· the wedcfilig ,,. ..
~an~, a ·formu ·liiiahand\or, Mila
Huttbu's.
Mvl';"Uow was an . avid sports ._car
enthusiast and polo •player.,lle bulll and
drove Grand · Prtr 'racing tan ·and
developed bis .owaraclni engine, • • 1<L1n D l'•Ja • 'BU..~'~'wu esliI!!li.t al · .,, .... ,. e .,, t
.beiween'* Duluin ati¢•iotmllllciiL When it's summer on the Or·
On bis ISlb birthday, hla mother gave ange Coast, it's chilly in Syd· _))Jm' '50!l;O()ll'~'Al:WY Hitbc ........ ~-y· .. ).-...._ .... u ... ;. u•-~i.•~Iy Ht! wai·<flle\~~C< ·auuiiW?nar.. r-r ... ,,,....~"f~ , , ~
rlage 1 to Dantslr Count. Curt von Carol Wood braves the goose
Baugwltz.lteventlow. pimples during an outing in ·
"So you were born with brown eyes," Centennial Park.
be would tell ~ "I WU born with : moMy. It' just IDuill life eoDYlllleltt."
Hlsmotber"the~ol·F.'W.
Woolworth, bdlli'llOd •· five and dime store foduno a le lllll lopnied u , tho
world's rlcbeol woaVai, Mila Hutton was
llWl'ied lix '"-' ' • . ii
' When RmilltJolr --·-h • motbOI', aD 'lld\liuld U1 was, "I admire
.my molber." . \ r •
·'Mike' Was Too
Hot ro ·Ha.ndle
If the dispatcher ralloed: "Car
1412,1 where are you?/' Monday
afternoon, the reply could have
crackled back over the aid like this.
"Car 4112 ts in the padting IOI
behind the staUoo, crsshed Into car
4411," or words to that effect. ·
Dlapatched to a silent burglar
alann, Costa Mesa Patrolman John • c:1 OUey ·leaped" liitO ear 4112,
started the encme,' shilled' Into
drive and grabbed the microphone.
Tbe mike tumec1·out le be red hol
!tom litlillg In the clooed patrol car
u the -IUft -through the wlndltdtld. ' ''The beat was sufll<lent to
dttlrlcl tbla officer's atwotlon,"
Patrohnall C..., wrote In • report
esplalnl"i Car 4112 crubecl Into
car 411J, accldel!tall)'.
The 11tent alann call ''"s ac-·
cidental, too.
' '
. . . -.
•
'. ·uo1· Mike Sparks
Poli~e Car Crash
In l;osta ltlesa
or
,.·e ·
,ts ••• ' . ', .. P i I '' ' ,
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·ucJ· Hospital ·Fund OK;
·1. •
·Fight i:n Assembly Seen
By GBORGB LEIDAL
Of .. ~....,.""".,.,,
A )Ill acidlaC '9.11,000 to the state
bud(et to pnmde plamin( fllnds for a
350,bed teaolllDi bospltal .II UC Jrvine a~ bea'ded for . trouble· in thO
~11 today •ren thoulh It wm
UD8Dlmous ·a~ in the' Senate Mon· day •.
• State Senator Demlls E. caipenter Ot-
. Newport llelcb). dialled the linal·bour
'SB.•1qis· 1tter lbe lleglslature had cut the
· alloc.iUon from the budget •.
A CarPenter aide 'today said the bill is
htjided for a ~·strong fight'" in the
Assembly Ways and Mean Committee.
Its dwi<es of clearing that committee
are uuncertain," the aide said, due to the
I
Police :Raiders . .
Led to House
By Gal on Trip
i '' ,N~bon' ~~.:::::0J·~1 'la .. womm-
acresming"lOcl Lacuna Beacb police to a
,Griffith Way addresa at 4:30 a.m. today
ond resultedJn )be armt of five penons
on narcoUCJ charges.
Po~ce lald they' found' Mlnka 'Ellan
Dysinger, 28, of Sin Dlqo, on an ap-
parent LSD "trip," ~. kicking
and tearinl down drapes ID the reaidenca
at 13$ Griffith Way.
She -lakeo to South Cout Com· munlty llolpltal for emergency treat-
ment. lllen lranafemd to the jail waid of
· Oralll!t County Madlcal Center.
AllO amated "'fl her aister, Susan ·o.rua, :rl, who poUce said la the owner of
the ·bouae; two bn>lben, Felix Marcel
Doboez, ZI, and · Maurice · Dobon, wfl!I
said they· live al the GrUfith W•J a4•
dl'ela; Olld William Jlufut Yancy Jr., :rl,
wbo gave • Palm Dew! address.
• Selull .... vMenct ·~ ~ ocene;_po11oe .sald,,...,..117....,.. of morljuana, found
ln>1 plutlc bag, two lbopplnc bags and •
clgar,boi; 72 pllla known to narcoUCI of·
ficets as 11mlni-beaniel ;" 2 doses of
LSD: 11 auorted colortd pUts, u yel
• unldenllfied; and s !lypoclermlc needles.,
• Tbe five were booted Oil IUl]>iclm . of
poQeSSIOD ol marijuana, P!> ..... lm 'f 'di-.... and'poMtllioll of druP with Intent te .n.
The CUrlil woman ' WU addltlonallJ
charged wllll lUtcaJ poaaeaslon of 11\e
hypodermic needla •nd her sister with
being 1lllder the IDflllellCI of ......
tolicanL
oppoeiUon of Auemb\yman Willie Brown
([).San Frll!cilco).
Brown has said he'll ~ any· future
funding of university medical faclllt~s
untu facilities to serve Jnner..ity areas
are proV]ded. .
UC! Vice Clumcelqr I. E .• Co~ said
today, the whole future of the medical
· acbool depends on Assembly approval of
the planning mOnelf and "1!ter approval
next fsU of a $155.t million statewide
health sclences bond Issue.
While the 'budget addition would pay
for working drawings and detailed plans
and specillcstlons for the bospital, the
building can't be built wllbout the bond
moneys.
Coi explained that about half of the
total 135 nillion cost of the llOspltal 'would
come from the state bonds wlth the re-
. malnder expected to come from federal
aources.
If the Assembly approves the planning
money and 1he . bonds are approved in
November, the hospital could be com·
pleted in-early 1976, Coi said.
The facility would allow the UC!·
California College of Medicine to double
lts.,~ter!!>t.~MS .. fize from M 10 128 liil:\Ucal ltuddlts1 ' • ' •
Tbat increase id.. ts dependent °" ad·
dltlonal clasaroom· and I a b o r 1 t o r y
buildings to be built with the llate bond
•moneys; Projects supported by the bond
·funds amount to about $65 million in-
cluding the $17.5 million· state. share of
the teacbing hospital. The remainder ol
the bond money would provide a medical
' (Ste HOSPITAL, Pap I)
'If It Cackles,
Arrest It'
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla; (AP) -'
Police in Daytona Beach today .
issued an all-polnla bull~Un for a
, cblckep. . ' • ."A dlapal<her for the 'i>ouC. '
De)>artment .id' a 'loUrtlt, Samuel
Morris of Denver, Colo., reported
that hla pet chicken broke away
from a pool to wlllcb he 'l\'81 Ued al
an ocean~ hamburger .ltand.
The poUet buDelhl delcrlbed the
runaway chlclten as a white ·
leghorn, wtarlng a flea collar with ,
a .Unr tac attached. Morris said
the bird wu worth f3 and was not
!Mired.
The chicken answers to the name .. Sam."
:naie S.et
For Hearing
By Council
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of Hie ~IJY '°llet 11•11
Newport Beacb's police helicopters, the
subject of controversy since they took to
the air nearly two years ago, are going to
get cloae lcrutlny at a special city COllQo
di public bearing in September •.
. Before ' then the1 cowtcll'1 Intercity
Liaison Committee will meet with
nelgbboring communlues that h~ve
helicopters to investigate the possibility
of a ·coast saving cooperative patrol.
Councilman Paul Ryckoff proposed the
Sept. 11 bearing citing a letter signed by
15 residents urging that helicopters be
kept out· of the skies et:cept in emergen4
cies.
· "I'm concerned about the patrol
aspecta," RyckoU said this mo ming,
"wbether they ahould be on the ground
on caJI or up in the air cruising all the
time."
Ryckoff said In no way Is be proposing
lellmlilatl<lii"of the belicoptera.
"I'm not suggesting we do away with
them," be ..said. "But they're really one
of our DlO!t controversial things and they
should be aired publicly."
Ryckofl said the police department
should keep more of a log• of belicopter
activities.
"Maybe this will come out of it (the
hearing) -it would be more Of a
justification," be lald.
"U It acoompllsbes Its purpose this
ought to be made known," he said .
Police Chief B. James Glavas · lh.1'
morning replied by polnUng out that the
department does keep a daily log of
helicopter activities.
"He (RyciO!f) perhaps bas never seen
it/' Glavas said. •
GlavH also defended the need for' the
helicopters.
"It would be regrettable If those people
who · VNue safety and security In the
corqmunlty don't come out for this....,
cil meeting to voice tbe.ir, approval/' be
said.
Slgnaturu on the letter that trlqered
,Ryckoff's proposal came mainly froio
residents in the Barbor View Hlllto
Corona del Mar .,,,. altboltcb two n
,l!alboa resldenta.
"I """'llJliW there are -,.... .. the community who are. dlabulied ir Ibo
noise ol the bellcopter," Gina ..... •1
recognhe also that the ~ • a
pollco patrol vehicle bu fomd .......
ceptance In law enlolt'tmml c:lldll
(See llBUCOPS, .... I)
I
l 2 DAILY PILOT s
Burke Opposes Plan
Batt"les Riles Over Childhood Education
87 JORN ZAU.11\
Of -°"""'" .......... H~ ""8cb A11e mbl yma n
-Burice bu Jocbd bnl wilh
SUte Supuintmdent ol Public lnstni<>
tlon Wilson IUJes over a $25 million Early
ChUdhood Education Plan now pending
before the Lqislatur..
1be COllSUYatlV< West Otani• CGuoty
n.piblk!ln .. ,. u. swe tebool ....,.,
pWI ii too cootly, too 1-atlvt, and
pos.s!blf bannlul, and ........ lhoraugb
lludy btlore ...., limlled fundlog II ap-
proved.
Riles, who bu made reform ol IChool-
lng from klndtrgarttn through third
grade a majo< thrust ol his ad-
miniltratlon, clalma the plan i 1
.,.......,. to cut dOwn the "appalllnc
Securities, Papers Found
From Laguna Niguel Heist
An undetmnintd amount of stcttrlllts
and · personal papers -apparenUy
discarded by thieves who blasted their
way u\to the Laguna Nlioel bl'&l)Ch ol the
Ualted California Banlt Ill Merch -were
found Mouday altmoon.
Orange County Sherill'• Investigators
and Fedtral Bureau of Investigation
•IOnls wm summoned to the tnd of Sea
IJland Drive in Lquna Niguel'• Pacttle
IJland V!Uage by ..-in the 11tt
who found • llN1 llCI: stuffed with the
--bonds and Other docllmenlf.
No cub or jewelry was included in the
loot, aald LI. Charlts Conaway of the
sberlff'• department. Many of the papers
-. strewn on the ground alongside the
llCI:, be added.
A doU!n investigators were fm.
modlately dispatched to the scene when
Ibo aurveying cr.w called the aberill's
department arowid 1:30 p.m.
~ crew worked for seven hours comb-
ing lbe area for more loot , but wn--
co'o'ered nothing more than the original
aack.
oc we•re convinced we Io u n d
evtrylhing," LL Conaway commented.
"Anyone going up there today would bo
wasting his time."
FBI agents along with the shttlJl's ln-
vtstliators today began an lllventory of
the recovered loot. No dollar figure bas
Y<t bten placed ft the find.
"I doubt the atuff was worth very
much,'' Conaway said. "I guess it was
llltlff they didn't want. •·or course, that'• just speculation," he
added.
Five men -three of whhom are In
custody -have been indicted in con-
nection with the March 24--27 robbery
which left United C.llfornla Bank $50,000
abort Ill caah and 458 boxholders out an
estimated 12 mlllkon to '3 million in caab
and securities.
Held at Loo Angeles County Jan is
Charles A. Mulligan, 38, of Y0W1g!town,
Ohio. In custody in Ohio are Amil A.
Dimlo, 36, ol Boardman, and Philip B.
Christopher, 29, of Cleveland.
Two brothers. Ronald and Harry Bar-
ber of South Gate are still at large and
subject to a nationwide aearch by the
FBI.
] ohnson Put in Hospital
I
For Chest Pains, Nausea
SAN ANTONIO (UPI) -Former
Preilldent L;ndon B. Johllaon bu !>ten
~ because of chest Mini a!ld
nausea. But doctors saJd there wu no in-
dl"'Uon he+bad •1Ufletedl+another hlart
nttack.
"It may be aeveral daya before ~ny
definite' coneiiiatoni can~ dra\lp'l;l!lk1
the nature ol his present illneu," a
Brooke· Anny Hospital bulletin uld.
''Howev~, at JO p.m. .he was ,c;orq..
fortable, in excellent 1plrits and bis
aeoeral eondltlon w11 quite aatlala~.
•:niere have bien no ttregttlarlties in
the heart rhythm or blood pr.saure."
Johol!>n hu auUered two htart atltcks
-a ·severe one 1n 1955 and a second one
last Aprll during a visit to .his daughter
Lynda and her husband Charles Robb Jn
Charlottesville, Va .
He waa hospitalized three weeks for
treatment of bis second heart attack, and
had been scheduled to travel 60 miles
from iM·LBJ 'Raiich iodey for a routine
checkup. Instead, the • boopltal said
Johllaon was flown to t!>e •hoepljal abea~
of achedulo when the' palna and nauoea
occurred Monday nigh!.
"He was Oown to ·San Antonio by a
private pline baaed al bis ranch and was
F rom Pqe I
HOSPITAL •..
1clenco building, a clinkal aclence
building and possibly a achoo! of nursing.
Co• noted that a delay in the Assem~ly
paaaage of the boopital planning bill would
hold up construction, perhaps for a year.
Once all funds are avallable the projecl
Will take at leasf 3Q rnon~hs. Co:x saJtf.
OUNfl COAST' ' IT
DAILY PILOT
1'lf Ori"°' C011t DAILY PO.OT, WltPI Mlcfl
• cornDinM IM N..,..Preu. • ~lltl!rd fir
1'!. Oflllllfc Cotti PWll.tllnl ~NJ'. ....
nirt tdtllont •rt ~~ MW1V Jflrovgft
Frlcl•v. fW COlll "'-· NtwPl!'t ... ell.
t4111111no1M 1111:htPoun1•" v1111T. Utun9
IMCll, ll"'IMISHdltNdl Mil Sin Cllmitnll/
IMt '""' C.plltr-. A llnglt r-elMll
edlllen ls publllMd S.tvrdt ... '"' knll•ys.
Th. prlnclNI M ll.tllnt plant It t t ,_ Wt1I
l•Y Slf .. I, CO.It ' Miii, CA!ifllilll:, ntH.
Ro\trt N. Wttd
P rflklent ll'ld Pv&lllll«
J1ck R. Curl1y
Viti Pmldtnt Ind Gtr«1I Manl .. r
Tho"''' K1evll EdJIOI'
ihom11 A, ~urphln•
Mtl'llllnl l411«
Cli1rl1& H. Loot RichtHI P. Ntll
Altlflll'll MIMllnl EdlloB -C..11 MN: )31 Wflt ltf S!PMI
H...,.,i lttdl: JlU H"""1 IOUtl'llrd
Lt$\IM lttetl: 212 htftl A~
Hllflllln01CM IM.Cflr 17'1J hKtl hul-f'C kn ClvNtM1 JU Hortll II C.mlnt "-Ml
, .. _ 11141 &4l .. J11
Ci..lflo4 """""'°' &4J.1'71 ,,.. eta•• ... ,.. ....... " ~ tllldll 4t2 ... 4lt
,,_..,. ~ c..,.,., ~-
114f.121t
~. ,.,,,. ~ Cwt """"'"" °""'*'"' No lll'Wt .... QIUllPtflent, tltl•i.t .... ,,., ~ HWrtlMl'nllltf lltftlrl
fftll1' • ~ •ttlltllt ..... 1 '"" "'iulM .. .,, ... """""·
a.CMf $t1 ....... M N et c.t• MfM,
C..llWn&t. .....,..~ bf um.r .ll.8
..-1t111r " NII a ,u '"9fltPllr1 m11n11t ...,.., ...... "*""tW.
admitted to Brooke Hospital at 9: 15 p.m.
for observation," the atatemeot said.
Dr. Robert L. North, chief of medicine
at Brooke, was placed In charge of the
case. John!on has a hospital penthouse
suite permanenUy at bis disposal,
The 36th president was released from
Brooke April 25 after recovering from
lbe heart attack be suffered In Virginia,
and has made several public ap-
pearances since then.
The most recent was Jast Saturday
nlgbt when Johnson, tanned and sporting
longish hair, attended a play at the LBJ
State Park Auditorium in Stonewall,
Tex., not far from bis ranch. The play,
"A Ralsln in the SUn" was presented in
bis honor by the speech department ol
Johnson's alma mater, Southwest Texas
State University of San Marcos.
Johnson suffered a near fatal heart at-
tack in 1955 when he was Senate majority
leader. For years after that attack he
gave up bis habit of smoking three packs
of cigareUes' day, but resumed smoking
in 1971.
Johnson was also hospitalized brleOy in
N.arcb of llml for a related heart all-
ment, angina pectorls, or a hardening of
the heart'• arlfl'i ...
Armed Airplane
Crewmen So~ght
By H ero Pilot
SCO'ITSDALE, Ari%. (UPI) -A Pan
American Airlines pilot who thwarted an
attempted hijacking July 3 believes
·airline crew members should be trained
in the uae of firearms to discourage
possible skyjackings.
"U blgbjackera knew pilolf were armed
and would shoot, there probably would be
a big decrease in the number of these
screwball attempts," said capt. Gene
Vaughn of Scottsdale.
Vaughn was pllotlng a 747 !rom San
Francisco to Saigon when a hijacker took
a stewardess hostage and· threatened to
blow up the plane unless ft was Oown to
HanoL
The hijacker, later Identified as
Nyruen Thal Blnh. an antiwar protest.or,
was shot and killed during a struggle
with V11ughn. a Marine Corps. ser~eant
and a former poUce officer.
In an Interview with the Scottsdale
DaUy Progress, Vaughn said he belleved
that •1many hijackers would have second
thoughts if they knew they wm risking
their lives.
"Evtry crey .Jiould be properly anned
and instructed in the use of flrtarms," ht
said. "If we teach them to shoot to kill,
we will provide the world with a deter·
rent to hJjacldng that makes sense."
From Page I
HELICOPS ...
across the nation. ;•it 11 both economlcal and effective ,•
be said.
"Newport Qeach has found tbe
helicopter even more effecUva than most
dUes by reason of lit atypica l
topography," the chitf added. ,
...
•lllltlber of cbildr.n wbo ""'' read ode-.,ueJJ at tbe tnd al Ille third irade, and
•are already doomed to scbooJ failure."
i '!'be Early Cblldhood 'Edu<ailoo Plan Lt
now before the state Senate as part of a
$1.2 billion tu reform and acbool linance
measure that hu the backing of both
Democratic Aaaembly Speaker Bob
MoretU and lltpubllcan Governor RooaJd
Beagan.
The educatiOJt plan, wblch could cost
$350 million over five years, ,bu two
main parts:
-It would brlllg a gradual bul fun-
damental rtstntcturing of seboollnc in_
the prlmar)' grade> by lowertoc the
adult.(o.ftudeilt ratio from SO.I<>! to lll-
t1>l with the use of parent volunlttrs and
paid aides. The aim would be to
.. guarantee" that every child mastered
baale reading and math akllls by the end
o! the third grade.
-The proposal alto calls for enrolling
looir-yeaMlds in acbool on f voluntary
basi.a in order to take advantage of what
educators believe ii 1 much greater
learning ability tban they will· have later
in life. Funding for this part of the Early
Childhood program, however, is not in-
cluded in the $25 million now under con-
sideration.
Burke has lambasted the plan as an
•1untrled, untested propo1al that could
reault in harm to our children."
He says the plan "can only be in-
. terpreted as an attempt by the
superintendent of public instruction to
build his image and satisfy the 'hang the
expense' education innovators w h o
elected him."
Burke is especially opposed to the pro-
posal for bringing four-year~lds into the
school system. He says Uli! opens the
door for "ruthless planners" to mold the
personalities of the students at an early
age, and says pre-school education should
be left to church and private operations.
He further attacks the inclusion of the
early childhood plan in a tu refonn and
school finance package. ''I don't believe
that add!ni the financial burdtn of an u-
perimental program that could cost $350
million over the next few years has
anything to do with ta:r relief." Instead
he would like to see the education reform
considered as a separate issue and
debated in the regular education com-
mittees of the Legislature. Burke is a
member of the Aasembly Education
Committee.
"It is obviously untrue that this pro-
gram ls unproven.'' Riles counters. "The
things we want to do have been around
for years. We just want a chance to put
\them into practice."
On brlllging lour-year .. lds into scllools,
Riles says, "I think parents have sense
enough to decide whether their child Lt
ready for school or not. Snice it will be
voluntary, the choice will be theirs. The
very rich have always bad preschools for
their children, and more recenUy, the
poor and ,.-elfare families ·have had
them. I think it's time for the majority of
people who are in the middle to have lhe
opportlmity."
Riles aaid that Including the education
measure 1n a tax package ts legitimate
because "you need money to have a pro.
gram, and Ibis Lt the way you get the
money."
Riles contends that the r(fotina con-
tained in the Early Childhood Plan are
guarentted to be succesaful becauae
"each district will have to aet acceptable
.goals and objectives for Itself in order to
qua!Jfy for funding, and U It doesn' meet
those markS, it won't be refunded. Thia if
the £nt time in Callfomla that we bave
.ever done thia on a mas, scale. n .
The total $1.2 billion pack1ge -wblcb
would in one fell swoop lower acbool j>ro~
erty ta1.e.s, increase the level or acbool
support, and increase the state Wes tax
by one ctnt -passed the state Senllte
Committee of Tax and Revenue lut
week and is now before the Senate
Finance C.Ommittee.
Firemen Control ·
Riverside, LA
County Blazf',s
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two brush
Ores fanned by brisk winds threatened ~
homes in Los Angeles and Riverside
countleJ befono being stemmed by
firefighters.
A brush fire that charred 150 acres of
scrub brush and scattered timber aouth
ol Idyllwlld Ill the S8n Bernardino Na-
tional Forest and forced the evacuatl6n
of 250 peraont:w&1 rated 70 per<tDt con-
tained early today. .
Fire lnlonnatlon officer· Jack
McCumln 11ld 25 cabina in the area wm
threatened. the evacueta from the 7th
Day Adventtst camp at Pine Sprlnp
were O%pected to return loday, ho said. _
In Eagle !lock. a flno 'Wblcb broke out
east of Occidental Coll .. e Monday WU
stopped after IWeeplng clolo to 25 bomea
on brush-Covered jllll& 'I'be fire burned 25
to 30 acres and dlmage wu estimated at
12.000.
Meanwhile, in Bishop, flrefiCbtera ,..,..
"mopping up" Ill the •Iii• of two fires
that destroyed mono· than 650 acres in the
Sierra, the U.S.Foreat Service sakl.
But a spkokesman sild firemen have
canceled eUorts to Daitle a 1low burning
30-acno blau in nearly Inaccessible ter-
rain at 11,lltlO feet Ill tbe John Muir w11aeme11. ·
The hich elevation blaae wu reported
Monw on Mt. WUUamaon about 30
miles aouth of here in the Clll!omla
bighorn •beep 200loatcaJ am. The fire
wa1 burning slowly due to the altitude
and flremtn wUI "luat ltt It bum out,"
the Forts! Service said.
I
SUPERINTENDENT RILES
ASSEMBLYMAN BURKE
Mesan Escapes
With Gun Wound
In Money Row
A broke and unemployed Costa Mesan,
wbo went to tfiSQ111 money allegedly ow-
ed blm, fled from an upholatery shop
with a .38 caliber revolver wound in thll
shoulder Monday night.
Mark C. Davidson, 24, cf 2850 Santa
Ana Ave., escaped the 7 p.m. shooting
with onJy a flesh wound, police said.
Noah E. Green, 30, owner of the fll'D'I
at 1850 Superior Ave .. was subsequently
arrested and booked on suspicion of
1ssau1t wilb intent to commit murder.
Officer David Walker met the bleeding
victim at a nearby bowling alley after
Davidson called to say be bad been shot.
He was driven to Costa Mesa Me.morial
Hospital where the Oesh wo'und wa's
cleaned and stitched then taken to beatt.
quarters to tell his .llfol'J', .
Detective Wayne 'Harber, meanwhile,
contacted Green at, bis .tiphol~ery shop.
The suspect accompaaled him to head-
quarters for quesUonlng leading to book·
Ing on· the atlemptedmtlrdeabarge.
Detective Lt. Harold Flscli<r said
David!Oll told of going to the .Jiop with
two friends , where he , attempted to
dJJcuU money matters with Green.
The victim claimed he waa asked to
wait five minutes whlle Green apoke with
anOtber employe, then went lnto the
su.wect's om~ .where further discussion
occurred.
Detalll were nof revealed. b u t
Davidson told lnveatlgaipl'll Greto ended
the heated convmallon by· Jllllling the
gun and firing.
Davld!Oll fled for Ufety at that point,
ho told police,. c1ollng tho office door as
he l'llll out.
Bay Blasts to Stop
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -A 25-year
pracUce 'of dropping live grenades into
an unrestricted area of the Chesapeake
Bay dl!l'lng tralnlllg eaercises has been
discontinued by the Navy.
S. Viets Forge
Into Quang T r i
SAIGON (AP) ~ South Vietnamese
parlltroopers have battled into the night
in their drive to recapture Quang Tri's
19th century Cit•del from diehard re.m-
nants oI a North Vjetnamese occupation
force .
By eveoin(, anny apokesman Lt. Col
Do Dang Bo reported 11enemy reslttance
ls weakening." There was no word on
caaua!Ues.
Bo txpressed hope the South Viet-
namese O.g could be raised over the old
wa!Jed fortress Wednesday to symbolize
the end of enemy rule in the battered
provincial capital, occupled by North
Vietnamese forces since May 1.
"The fighting is continuing," Bo told
newsmen in Hue ... I think many North
Vietnamese were killed. I do not think
any escaped."
There were conflicting claims on the
recapture ot the Ciltdel. South Vie~
nam.,. military SP,Okesmen in Saigon
&aid it had been retaken.
An army communique issued in Hue
said government troops entered the
fortress at 10:20 a.m. But tnewsmen at
the front could not verUy Ulla: because
South Vietnamese soldiers fired warning
shots over their heads when they tried to
approach the battJe zone.
Associated Press correspandent Dennis
Neeld reported from Quang Tri that con-
tinuous machine-gun, . mortar a n d
artillery fire waa beard from the Citadel
area for most of the.day.
South Vietnamese planes dropped
napalm into the Citadel before the initial
assault by two airborne companies total~
Ing about 400 men. American p1anea
previously blasted two boles in the
Citadel's walls with laser-guided smart
bombs and spoktameo tru Saigon .. Id a
third br.acb was made ~ n1ghl by
South Vietnamese bomben.
The · parairooper• ran into withering
enemy fire as they advanced through the
nortboast wall ·of theforflw, Neeld said,
but they mana&<d to suppress aome of 1t
I
Hiker Fini.Shes
Desert Journe y;
'It Was Awful '
FURNACE CREEK RANCH (UPI) -
111 never Jan~.to ·&ee tbil place agaui.
Never again. This is terrib1:e ."
Bill Emrnerton bathed bis blistered.
bleeding feet ill alcobol toclay, wincing 1ron1 1hi! J)8ID:
Emmerton, an Australian-born health
food buff and physical endurance record-
setter, had just finished a 115-mile walk
across Death Valley late Monday night,
covering the distance in "2 days, 15 hours
and l minute,'' he said.
He claimed a record for walking acrO!S
the storied desert, ~ lowest -and often
the hottest -place In North America. If
upheld, it can sta11d beside his record for
running 130 miles across the valley in
1968, in tbree days of running and
resting.
He made the -walking trip with onJy a
few short rest breaks.
''If anYone c8.n beat this time in this
weather they're welcome to it," groaned
the exhausted Emmerton alter be ar-
rived at the. fini.sb point, Scotty's Cutle.
"I guarantee you there's no other man
52 years of age who CllD do this.
"And if anyone else wants to try to
beat this record, let them do It in July,
not like tbe phonies wbo do It in the
winter.
"I've 'run 112,000 miles in my life, but I
bave never experienced such pain and
agony.II
with counterbattery shelling at close
qu•rters.
The thunderous artillery duel blotted
out much or the city with a pall of thick
black smoke, with shells bursting about
the 46-foot fortress walls.
Scattered clashes broke out south or
Quang Tri on both sides of Highway I
leading to Hue and shelling attacks and
firelights erupted 13 miles southwest of
the former imperial capital. A South
Vietnamese communique said Hue was
hit by five rounds of l22rru:n artillery and
one civilian was wounded.
The American Command announced
another cut in American troop strength
in Vietnam and said it was phasing out
more than 3,CXM) additional men. The
reduction Order struck 19 Anny units
from the rolls, including a combat in·
fantry battalion and an assault helicopter
battalion responsible Ior aecurity around
Saigon. A 700-man cut last week reduced
U.S. troop strength to 46,500, but about
100,000 other U.S. servicemen are
fighting from bases in Thailand and
Guam and from ships off the coast of
Vietnam.
Solon Seeks
A ntiwar Bill
S howdoivn
WASHINGTON !UPI) -Sen. Edward w,. Broo.ie (R·Mass.), a ss um inc
Je1derahip of the Senate's antiwar forces,
today pressed for another showdown on
the withdrawal of U.S. troopa !rom
Indochina in ucbange for the releue of
American pri90ners.
The Senate adopted the far-roaching
amendment Monday then nullllled the
adjon by ~ the $U billion fmign
m!Utary aid bill to which It was attached.
Brooke lmmedlaltly announced he
would offer the amendment to the $20.6
billion military procurement bill, now
pending iD the Senate.
The amendment would withdraw all
U.S. forces "land, sea, and air" from
Indochina four months after enactment if the POWs ~ released,
The +itrong coalition wblcb puf tho
amendment lnto the bUl and resisted ef-
forts to take It out, collapsed on the 48-42
vote on the foreign aid measure.
Strong supporters of antiwar legisla·
tion, including Senate Democratlc leader
Mike Mansfield and Sen. J. William
Fulbright, could not vote for the foreign
aid bill although it included the amend-
ment.
Sens. George S. McGovern and Thoma!
F. Eagleton, the Democrats' national
ticket, missed the vote.
The foreign military assistance pro-
gram appeared to be in jeopardy.
"That's the end of the biU .'' Fulbrigh~
chairman of the Senate Foreign Rela-
tions committee, said.
Mansfield said he voted against
military assistance to foreign nations,
which ht has long opposed, becauae the
bill had "too much gimmickry in it."
Fulbright said he wall not disappointed
Jhat the ..,u11ar amendmmt had to !alt.
He qid the ''maximum impact" came
wbeq the Senate passed ,tbe amendment
,and added •1it's ·c1one It's job."
It would have marked tho Orsi time
tbat tbe Senate bu wted to cut off funds
tor 'the Vietnam· war. The ·Senate has
passed policy statements, including one,
calling for withdrawal by a "date cer-
tain," which reached President Ni:ron.
THE PRICE IS . RIGHT
\
(or is it?)
.
HAVE YOU EYER GONE INTO A STORE, :4ND IEFdR~ 'A SALESMAN
AJll'ROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DmRMINE PRICES ON GOODS Not
MARKED7 • · •
MANY CARPE1' STORES DO NOJ HAYE PRICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPLES. THE THEORY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE ''WHAT THE TRAFFIC WIUIEAR."
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
. POSSIBILITY OF A L o W E R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
..... ---1fl7
•
I ALO.EN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
166J Placell'tla An.
COSTA MU A
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'
DAILY PILOT I
Sieroty Bill Killed Yugoslavia,
Irvine Firm Backers Now Pushing Coastline Initiative
Make Deal SACRAMENTO (AP) -The last con-
servationllt·backed bill to c o'n t r o I
development Blong Califomia'I coast bu
been torpedoed by a Senate commltlff.
Backers say they will now step up their
efforts for approval of a November ballot
lnitialive that wauld :... like Ille defunct '
bill -impose a pemtit system for
development along California's l,067·mile
coast.
The Senate Natural Resources and
Wildljle Committee killed Assemblyman
Alen Si e r o t y • s coastline-protection
me asure Monday on a 3-4 vote -two
short of the five notes needed to send it
out of the nine-member committee.
"lt'a clear lbat the Senale Rulea Com-
·mittee did not want the bill to pass -not.
only this bill but other environmental
bills as well -or they .wOuld have chang-
ed lhe co111posilion of the COlll!llittee to
make sure it bad a majority of members
concerned with the environment," Slero-
ty said at an impromptu news conference
after the vote.
"Tbe Senate leadershi~ Is still In lbe
hands "of th_e conservative group. that has''
controlled it in years past," the Beverly
Hills Vemoci:at told ttporlers.
Tbe Rulea Committee appoblb olher
Senate CGliJmltt.es: Sloroly -"' has entered the .bearln& room wltb no .1'!af
hope of getting bis bill approved but nid
he felt a respoosibillty to follow lhe bill
to lbe end. ·
Tbe wne committ.e killed a similar
coastline bill by Sen. Donald G~ (R-
Watsonvllle),. earlier thil year. ' '
Tbe pennit syalem for coutal develop-
ment contained in. Sleroty'a· bill and lhe
coasUlne lnltlatlve would be admlnlsiered
by one -slate-wide and •ix regional
~"!'calllomta Real Estate Association
and other opponenta of holb lhe iniUaUve
and Siem\)''• bill ,aays tbe pennlt system
in effect would Im-a moratoihm\ on
coastline development without '. _c:dlp:
pensating . property owners.-Undeveloped
lend, lbey aay, would 1-value because
· it couldn't be uled freely.
Sleroty'1 amended bill would have
allowed local government officiall to hold
a maJ9rlty on tbe rtgionOI commissions.
The billot Initiative -regarded'by coo-
servatlonists u mote stribgent -splits
the commission between local' officlahl
and appointed commissioners. . .
' .
Pizza Prote~ts
Policeman Disarms Muggers in NY
• NEW YORK (UPI) -Two muggers,
one armed with a knife, attacked police
Sgt. David Durk Monday night as he was
carrying a pizza home.
Durk threw the pizza at one and shot
him and wounded him, then subdued the
other one.
Durk, 36, one of the officers whose
revelations of police corruption led to the
Knapp Commission investigation., said
the muggers may have thought be was a
plua dell very man. Off duty, he was
wearing old while pants and sandals.
Police said Durk was accosted· by two
men at 8 p.m. west of central Park. One
was armed with an eight-inch knife.
The man with the knife, later identified
as Alfredo Verdejo, 25, allegedly stood in
front of Durk and demanded bia money
while the other man tried to bold Durt's
hand bebind·bls bact.
Police 'nid Verdejo lunged at Durk.
The officer threw the bosed pizza at him,
drew his revolver and fired several abot.!11 hitting Verdejo In lhe chesl. In the llrug-
gle wilb lhe second man, Identified 11
Samuel Ledford, 24, Durk WU atruci< OD
lbe head but m11111ged to subdue him.
Verdejo was taken to Roosevelt
Hospital when bis condition wu Usted
as serious, Durk was treated later at the
hospital for a head abrasion.
Durk.'s wife, Arlene, caple out of their
nearby apartment building when she
heard Ille shooting and arrived just u
her husband WIS placing Ledford under
arrest. Durk said be was fme and headed
for the pollce llalion with i.ed!ord.
She retrieved the pl1.za and took it
home to lheir two daughlera.
Mom's Pleas Ignored;
I i:npr~~n;~d As Pusher .
'
MIAMI (UPI) -Mrs. Doris Willl1m1
fell to the floor screaming, "My children,
my children." But lbe judge Ignored her
pleas for leniency, sentenced her to three
years an<! said she bad hooted her own
and neighbors' chlkiren on heroin and
used lhem to peddle tbe narcotic.
"You're a regular Ma Barker1 .Doris,1•
Criminal Court Judge Alfonso C. Sepe
said as he sentenced Mrs. Williama, 43,
for selling heroin to a policeman. He
reffrred to the prohibition-era gangster
mother.
"You must be someone who really can
celebrate on Mother's Day."
Mrs. Williams fell to the fioor scream-
ing, "My children, my children ••• Oh
•
OAll.'f ~II.OT IMt ,..._
MEDITATION SPEAKER ,
PtterTI-
Lecture Offered
On Meditation
A free Introductory tecture o n
transcendental meditation wiU be held
5aturday 11 7:30 p.m. at lhe Lqunl
Beach !Ugh School auditorium. ·
Peter Tiller, a Lquna -lllch Sthool graduate, la tbe opeabr. 1111 ....
just retumed Imm a n .. -mune
In meditatlon i.qbl bf lhe 1lllllrlabl
Mabelll Yost In Mallan:o, llpolo ..i
Rome, Italy. "fl'• ........ bow qalc:klJ ..........
to -lncrUled _,, and "'""" of mind Iller starting meditation," •YI
Tiner, who has ·been medltatln& for the
past lour years.
TM, he adds, brings more enjoyment to
lite, less tension and m o r 1 •~
compllshmtnt and only requitt1 30 to 40
minutes a <la?·
•
Jesus, ob, Lord, God in Heaven, you've
got me wrong."
She had asked lbe judge to put her on
probation °because of my children and
my graodchlldren still it home.
"There's no way I'm going to give 'you
probation," Sepe aaid. "I'm going to take
you away from whatever childnn are
still in your custody IO they wll never be
subjected to this or you again."
None of Mrs. Williams' five children
was in court for lbe sentencing.
Hu oldest son, Willie, 2$, is serving
lime for possession of narcotics.
Jeanelle, ;1, her oldest daughter, Is In
jail for lhe 25lb time, awaiting trial on
charges of pett;r larceny, aggravated
assaul~ assault and battery, assault on a
pollce officer and first-degree murder.
Unda, 18, bu youngest daughter, ii QI
-youlh ball on charges of bttaklng and
entering and pouesaloo and lale of
narcotics.
Rodney, 14, her .ioungest son, recently
was released from youlb hall aller serv·
Ing time for being In a stolen veblcie.
Charles, 23, hasn't been beard from In
three yeai's.
Pollce charged that Mrs. Williams, who
does not use heroin herself, got.ail live of
b«-cbildren started 00 lhe dfug, IS well
.. -o! ber nel&hbors' cblldrtn. They Aid she Oftan recruited }'er
cbildren to "help weigh and package
"dim&· bql" of heroin for atreet aale,
lheo -tbem out to pedcllo tbe drug.
Tbe Judge orderad tbe stale to 'take
custody of l\lra. Wllliaml' two younger
chlldru and two grondchlldren who bad
been livlnl with hlr.
Education Group
Meets in 'Irvine
Bla1t Ripe Maguine
BEIRUT, Lebonon (API -A .-.1
exploded ..., In Ille Beirut olllct ti tho
lefllll mapalne Al llaclll, 1"1ou1Jy Jn.
JurfnJ lhe .,........ far tbe Popolar
Front for Ille Ubelllloa !JI )'wlootme,
police uld.
Tbe lnltlalive ...Wd 1-lhe pennit
ayalem Cll a 1,000-yard-wldo ••alb of
coutllle and utend ,..troll three miles
out to ._
Tbe a.mmiltee approvocl a coaatllno
bill July • by Sen. Dennis carp.I.er (&-
Newport Beach) that wvuld .i.. bne Mt
up a 1tite boanl bat 'WOlllcl •leaft -of
tbe de<lloao .. coastline devolopment "" to local eovermnent.
Siena Club lobbylat J obn Zierold calied
lba Carpenter bill "a disaaler."
Sleml)''• _,. and the lnlli.ltlve are
backed'by the Coastal.Alllance -a coall·
tion of about JOO CODI i r v. t l-oni• t
orgenlzatlclas lnClodlng lhe Sierra Club.
"If lhe lnlli.ltive doesn't -· I'll be back with another bill -but ii would be
more dUllcult to get it pused," Sieroty ..... , .
The natural ~· commiltee killed
a slmilBr Sieroty coaslline bill last year
aller Sen. James Wedworth · ( D •
Rawtbomel; failed to lbow up for lhe
meeling. Siero!y llld .allerwarcl he .bad
beeo counting on Wedworlb '1>r a yea
vole. Wedworlb voled qalnlt tlie bill
Monday and-blocbd ielevilill' coverage
of Ille bearln&·
· Festival Sahs·
Of ·Art WorkS
Reported Good
Sale1 of art workJ on Laguna's Beach'•
FesUval of Arla grounds conlinued at a
br1lk pace over the weekend~and vl&itors
are buying large, apenslve canv&se1' as
well a8 the always-poular small items,
One customer cleaned, out the entire
booth display Of irtist Jacque Tatum and
exhibitor Ervin Dara! also was back at
the easel alter selling 14 paintings from
bis di.splay space since opening day.
At· least three grounds exhibitors sold
canvues in the $1,000-plus range. Sun-
day customers were lined up three deep
at the sales booth, where major sales in-
cluded a !550 painting and a '250
macrame.
County Girl'Drowns
In Swimming Pool
A 3-year-old Santa· Ana girl fell from a
float in an apartme~ complex nuluning
pool ind drowned · Monday, lbe Orange Countf eomer•r.ofilie reported. •
Despite rtsuscitatlon efforts Kil.an!
Lee Nelaon ol 2803.W. 'Warner Ave.;rwaa
pronounce;f' dead at Fountain Valley
Com111!""ty H°'pital
DAIL.Y PIL.OT Siii! Plltt.
A Little of This ••• .. ~
Sepp Maier, 12, (left) and brother Mike, II, prepare spaghetti in a
cooking class offered by the Laguna Beach Boys Club. The club offers
other classes in EngliSh, French and Ger111an during weekday after·
noons. Fot further lnformaUon, call 494-2535 .
Wife of Accused Russian
To Ask Nixon to Intervene
LONDON (UPI) -A 26-year-<>ld
American woman, refused entry into the
Soviet Union to see her husband who is
about to go on trial for draft evasion.
flew home today and said she would ask
President Nixon to intervene.
"I am g~ing to make an all out attempt
to see President Nixon and ask him to
plead for my husband's release," Mrs.
Judy Shapiro of Cincinnati, Ohio, told
newsmen at Heathrow Airport before
boarding a plane· for New York.
"I have already sent the President
eight telegrams. He has not replied to
any of them. I am hopeful my husband
will be granted an exit Visa to allow him
to Oy to Israel where we both want to
settle.''
Soviet authorities Monday refused Mrs.
Shapiro entry Into the country when she
arrjvi¢ .at ,Mo&cow's sheremetyevo
Airport without an entry visa.
Mn. Sbapln>. tbe former Judilb Silver.
met her husband , G8vriel, 27, a chemical
engipeer, when 'she was visiting Moscow
as a tourist last summer.
They were married ln a Moscow apart-
ment in a priva te religious ceremony in
June. but she had to leave the Soviet
Union four days later \\.·hen her visa ex-
pired.
Minutes after her plane left for the
United States, her husband, a Soviet
army reserve lieutenant , was arrested.
He is scheduled to go on trial \Vednesday.
· "Gavri el was arrested on trumped up
and baseless charges for three reasons -
because he is a Jew, because he wrote a
letter to President Nixon outlining the
' plight of Soviet Je~·s, and because he
married an Am erican." Mrs. Shapiro
said.
Mrs. Shapiro said she flew to Mosco\v
Monday without a visa because Soviet <JC·
ficials refused to give her one.
"I had. hoped to appeal dincttr. to
Soviet officials -.iou would lhlnk· they
were human beings. But no .._ the treat-
ment I got came right out of a horror
show," she said.
An Irvine firm wW coordinate
pur<hasea of electl;Onlc equipment undet
a $10 million contract wllb tbe Cajavec
Organization of Yogoslavta.
l '.S. Elec~tlcal, Inc. located at
1792 Ka iser Avenue in the Irvine
Industrial Complex,_ announced it will
serve as eiigineertng consultant and
purchasing coordinator tor the expansion
of electronics, auto acceMOries and in-
vestment castings manufacture. The
castings -100,000 a month ·-will be
made in Ytigoslavia using equipment
supplied by the Irvine firm.
The Yugoslavian firm will manufacture
communication and c o'm put er in-
struments to meet the growing needs or
Eastern Europe, arcording · to Sig
Frohlich, president of U.S. Electro-
Optica l, Corporation.
Frohlich's firm will also provide equip-
ment to expand automotive accessory
production in Yugoslavia, including
horns, distributors adn windshield wipers.
wipers.
''Projected volume is in the millions of
units of each annually,'' Frohlich said.
The Irvine finn arranged and
coordinated the fin<lncing of the $10
mill ion contract with the Yugoslavian
company via the United California Bank
of Los Angeles, and the Export-Import
Ban k of Washington, D.C .
A repayment guarantee worth $9
million was given by the government of
the Communist bloc nation.
U.S. ElectfO-Opllcal Is an engineering
and marketing firm specializing in
sophisticated manufacturing techniques
an~ equipment.
Within the U.S., the fll'm is active In
lhe semi-conductor, printed and l\Ybrld
circuit fieldll, Frohlich said.
The firm also is active in Europe and
the Far East where its operations "em.
brace the ei:porting of all types of
Am erican know-how and production
facilities.'' Frohlich added.
Attempted Police
Kisser Held Over
MIAMI (UPI ) -A male protester ac-
cused of trying to kiss a police officer at
the Democratic National Convention has
been bound over to Criminal Court on
charges of assault and batlery.
CUrtiJ Bryant, •1wu bound Olf'er after
Mlami offlcei Neil R. Nydain sald
&;yant fl.'\OOI< nie by bolb aboulde" and attempted th klu me on the noee1,.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Bryant WIS arrested 00 Ille' •Jut Jlllhl
of the conventJon while Nydlm was
checking cr<denUall at one of tbe 1&1e1.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil '
TODAY! Mercury ., buy a • • I • • • •
"Car of the Year."
Mercury MONTEG()
Home 01 The New Car •• ,
''GeMett l'eacll"
., .
•
the elegant MERCURY
MARQUIS
Everything you buy a small car for!
Mercury COMET
the "Sexy" little IMPORT?
Mercury CAPRI
sleek ,and sophisticated
MERCURY
•oranQt Countv't FamflU of Fine Can•
COUGAR
Hom• Of The New Car • • •
"Ciolllea Tetldt"
• 2'211 HARBOR BLVD., COST .A MES.A • l40 IGO
' \ •
•
•
(
4 DAAY PllOT
Nationwide
Strike Seen
In Britain
LONDON (UPI) -The Brltlab _...
ment 14day s1'pptd Into the cue of the
PentonvJlle five, adJng to bead oil a
lllte11ened general •lrik•.
Nonnm Turner. the offtclal 1ollcltor
(IU«ney), &11d he would ,mut the N .. ilona1 lndualrlal Relatlona Court (NIRC) ...
and apply fur r«omlderation of the c ...
of five longshoremen oenl to Pentonvillo'
Jail fur eontempl ol the court.
"rurner Intervened In an earlier cue IJ>.
volvlng three ol the five men lmlled
Friday. The NIRC'• earlier action a1mt
the three brouiht lhteall ol a nationwide
strike In their support'.
1bat action materlallud thla week
when the court ruled the five dock
workers in contempt. II .. Id Ibey had
fi•uled Ila order to ceaae plcutlng and
boycotting a container depot u -part of a
who-doef.whal dllpute within. a alnaJ•
union.
~early all .lhe nation'• 4 0. 0 0 0
l!)ngShoremen walked out, clooing Br!·
lain'• patV. Proltal walkoull clooed coal mlneo, aul4 lactolja, new1p1per1 and
llUCldng !Irma. Union leaden oald the llrtke wave would apread.
Unlc>o lelldm lefl talkl wllb Prime
Mlnllter Edward ~th Monday uyln1
no lw1ber clJacualona with the 1overn-
ment would be,wcrthwhile unW the men
were releued.
"We 14kf the prime mlnlaler It would
be fruit! ... to try 14 engqe In any talkl
tomorrow (Tuetday) about the economic
lltuation u planned," one union leader
aald. ''ThJJ wUI ucalate the tonger the
men are kept In jalf and will be
catastrophlc 14 the economy ol the coun-try." .
Union leaders hekf a atriff ol meellnp
today al the local and national level 14
dli!cUa . lhe proopectl for a nationwide
dtmonstraltcni Wedneaclay. If approved,
II' would mark the ftral time since the
general llrike of IQI that workera
throughout the country have walked off
their jobs.
1be government m ... whlle said It was
powerleu to «lo anything about releulng
the jaDed -wlllioqt au)>eraedlng judicial autbortty until Ibey "purged"
themaelves by apoloatzlng 14 the court.
"No government could do thla nor
would the people u a · whole wish the
government to !love· the capacity 14 do
1 thil,"' Employment Secfttary Maurice
MacmJJJan aaid. ''The Judlclary la totaUy
independent of the executive. 1bat la the
foundation on whlch all our llberliea are
founded."
Union leaden countered by oaylng Ibey
did not fOC01D1zt the new law, the Labor
Relallona Act, and felt It wu lhelr duty to Of)polO IL
No. I Coal Mine
Had 500 Safety
Violation Marks
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (AP) -
Statlatlcs from the U.S. Bureau of Mine•
ahow that nearly 500 lederal safety clta·
lions wm lodled..agalnsl Conaoiidaton
Coal Co.'s Blackrillle No. I mine In Ill
four years of operation.
Nine men were given up for dead in the
sprawling mine Monday, two days aafter
the outbreak of a fire reportedly trig-
gered by an electrical aperk. Three omall
explolk>ns forced Tt8CUe workers to
withdraw and aeaJ olf lhe mine shafll.
The citations were filed by U.S. Bureau
of Mines inspecm fur violations under
t.he Federal Mine Safety Act and it.a ac-
companying regulations. The vast ma·
jorlty -381 -were lodged alter moat of
the provisions of the current act took ef.
feet in the summer of 1970.
Industry aourcei termed the number ol
citations high for any mine, but 11urprJs·
lngly high !or the BiackJvllle No. J mine.
Open in July 1958, it was considered es:·
ceptlonaUy modern.
John Corcoran, president of
Co090lldation, was not 1vailable for com-
ment on the citation record. ·
,.,....,, Jvt, 25, 1912
UPIT~
SHORE STAFF WORKERS LOAD LUGGAGE ABOARD QUEEN ELIZABETH· II FOR PASSENGERS
London's Dockworkers, Prote1tln9 J•lllng of S Picketers, Walked Off Jobs Monday
U.N. Chief Gets
Sharp Warning
On Dike Bombing
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The
United States has sharply warned U.N.
Secretary-Otneral Kurt W a I d h e i m
qalnst spreading reports of U.S. bomi>
Ing ol dikes in Norlh Vietnam.
Waldheim, while saying he CQuld not
verify the reports, replied that he
thought "it was his duty to speak out on
the devastaUng. consequences which
rnJght result" from either intentional or
unintentional . bombing of the flood con-
trol system along the Bed River in North
Vietnam.
A storm between the United States and
Waldheim blew up Monday after the
secretary.general told a news conference
he had "private unofficial" reports via
Hanoi of the bombing of the dikeo. He ap.
pealed to the United Stales to atop.
Secntary of State Wiiiiam P. Rogers
protested in Washington and sent
Ambusador George Bush to put the lJ .S.
position personally to Waldheim.
Arter his one.hour meeting with
Waldheim, Bush told reporters he was
convinced the secretary·general did not
went to gjve credibility to what Bush
called a massive North Vietnamese prop-
aganda campaign.
Waldheim told the news conference: ·
"11trougb private unofficial channels
• • • were lnfonned that the dikes are
being bombed, and we were informed
also that even in cases where the dikes
are not directly bombed, the nearby
bombing causes cracking of the dams
and that in th.ls way the result is the
same u if the dikes were born bed
directly.
The seeretary-general said he did not
know whether the bombing was in·
tentlonal, and he admitted , "this is
Hanoi inCormation." But he added:
"If these allegations are correct, it
would lead to disaster in the area
because It would mean that the whole
plain would be Oooded and thousands and
thousands of people would die. This , I
think, has to be avoided ."
Rogers said in a statement that
Waldheim's infonnation "concerning
alleged deliberate bombing to damage
the dikes In North Vietnam is false -as
the President staled In his June 29 press conference.••
Power Goes Back On, Heat
Turning Off in New York
NEW YORK (AP) -The power went
back on early today for most of the
estimated 500,000 residents of Brook1yn
and Queens who had been without elec-
tricity for up to 18 hours after seven
feeder cables burned out.
The other good news was a forecast by
the National Weather Service of a
"definite break" in lhe marathon of sizz1-
( IN SHORT ... )
ing 90-degree weather that has withered
city dwellers and strained power delivery
to the limit.
The restoration of power to most of
Brooklyn and Queens marked the end of
the second widespread power blackout
due to !ailing Consolidated Edison Co.
feeder Jines since the current heat wave
began 10 days ago.
e JHA Pressure
BELFAST (UPI) -British troops
keeping up pressure on lrish Republicari'
Anny (IRA) Provisionals' today ·entered
the Londonderry "no-go" Creggan area
and searched Belfast Roman Catlx>llc
districts for suspects and weapons.
While the military moves were being
made, Secretary of State Willlam
Whitelaw -the man who ordered the
army's "get tough" policy -met with
politicians to organize an all-party con-
ference on the province's.future. Earlier,
political :sources said the Br!Uab army
had sent armored tank·like vehicles to
Ul!ter In what could he a prelude to a
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oellvtry of the Dally Piiot
ls guaranteed
Moncley-Frklay: It yo11 Clo not ,...,. """"
paptr by 5:l0 p,m,. call and 'l'Wf' topY w!ll
be bl'oVgtlt to '!'OU. Cllll 1r1 tlktn wntU 7:l0 p,m.
S1!urd1y Ind Sundl'ft ff t"OU # not ttctM vour copy DY t 1.m. ltturdlr, « 1 a.rn.
SUnd1y, call Ind I COf'Y wUt • brOugftt .. VOii, Clll• 1r1 taken 1111111 11 a.m.
T!!lephones
Masi Ol'•not Cluntv Ar¥• •••••••• 6CMm Nol"lhwest HYntlnoton l111dl
Ind Wtalmltlstw ........... , ... ,. 141-1221 S..n Cltrntr1M, CIDlttrlno IHch,
$8" Ju111 CIDlJ!rlrtO, 0.111 Point,
South Uguna, L•lllllll H lg111t , .. , "'2.40f
full·scale invasion of the Londonderry
"no-go" areas.
e Cobra Deaths
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UPI)
--Six Filipino villagers in Central Luzon
were attacked and killed by cobras flush-
. cd out by floods, reports reaching
disaster relief headquarters said today.
The six snake bite victims were
reported to have been attacked in a
shack in Santa Rita. Pa m p an g a
Province, 15 miles south of this big
American air base.
Three of the victims died Monday night
and the three otben iemained alive until
today, the reports said. Serum arrived at
Clark today but too late to save the
three, officials said.
e Accuracy Cited
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les
Aspin (f>.Wis.), today said the Pentagon
should not require urine tests to detect
heroin use by children of overseas
military personnel until the acruracy of
the tests bas been greatly improved.
Aspin said the proposal was circulating
in the Penlagc;in and 'vas "patently
ridiculous" since tests for drug addiction
among Gls failed to accurately identify
drug users in up to 40 percent of the
cases.
e Arab Campalga
CAmo -(UPI) -The semiofficial
Cairo newspaper Al Abram called today
for an Arab-wide campaign against
American interests in the Middle East.
Another gov e mment-controllcd
newspaper in Cairo said the United
States was as much an enemy of Egypt
as Israel. The newspapers were com-
menting in r~action to a four·hour speech
by President Anwar Sadat Monday in
which be expressed dismay that U.S. in-
fluence in the Arab world was increasing.
Despite Viet Talk•
No 'Cease-fire'
Before Election?·
SAIGON (UPI) -Prospects appear
dim for any eeaae-flre In the Indochina
coofllct before the U.S. presidential elec·
lion Nov. 7 deiplto the aecrel talks under
way in Paris.
The war may even intensify before tltat
date.
AT LEAST one well·lnlormed U.S.
military source believes the Communists
will make another bJd to capture the old
jmperial capital of Hue before mid·
October.
A civilian expert on North Vietnam
expects a wave of Communist terroriam
In South Vietnam's cities, Including
Saigon, before the election. He also sees
another attempt to capture An Loe.
•·whatever they do will be designed for
maximum visibility," an American 'of-
* * * Preside11t' s Aide
Tells Nixon's
View on Pullout
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A key aide to
President Nixon quotes the chief ex-
ecutive as saying that if the Communists
do not let the United States get. out of
Vietnam 11tbey right way, they will have
trouble."
The view of Nixon's thinking was given
in an interview Monday by Harry Dent,
an adviser to Nixon on southern political
affairs, who bolds the title of special
counsel to the President.
Dent said Ni1on intends to continue
RepublicJi.n congressional leaders that if
he is re-elected his second administration
will remain coMervatlve and take no
swing to the left.
Dent said Nixon intends to c Ntlnue
conducting foreign affairs from a posi-
tion of strength.
"There are some things Richard Nixon
is very strong about," Dent said. "The
strength of this country and the honor of
this country. I've heard him say over and
over again, if the Communists do not let
us get out of Southeast Asia the right
way, they will have trouble.
"All along they (Lhe Communists) have
been misjudging this administration.
They thought he would react to political
expediency."
Dent said the President himself
brought up the subject of what bis
pOlitical position would be in second ad·
ministration during a discussion of Sen.
George S. ~1cGovem's liberal leanings.
Nixon, as Dent paraphrased him,
began by saying, "some will suggest that
we should therefore move to the left and
pre-empt as much ground as we can."
Dent said NlJ.on proceeded to knock
down this idea.
The President's remarks have now
become "the line" or "the word" for
White House advisers and campaign
policy makers, Dent said.
One event that has already borne out
the President's policy declaration is the
announcement last Saturday that Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew will be kept
on the ticket, Dent mid.
Princess Steps Down
BANGKOK !AP) -Princess
Ubolratana, the oldest of King
Bhumlbol's three daughters, has given up
her title amid rumors that she has
secretly married a fellow student at
Massachusetts lnstftute of Technology.
rlctr said. This, be believes, la the reason
for the random repeated Commun.lat
shelling of Hue.
OPTIMISTS AMONG the H a n o I
watchers See a prospect for a ceas~fire
In Indochina next year. Pessimlata
among them believe the W8l' wlll drag
along for four or five more years. I NEWS ANALYSIS I
But few American military or civilian
officials in Vietnam expeet any serious
negotiations by the Communists until
after the U.S. election.
The U.S. naval blbckade and renewed
bombing of Norlh Vietnam may be
pinching Hanoi but there is 110 sign of It
yet on the battlefield. North Vietnamese
troops have plentiful supplies and am-
munition and are receiving· replacements
for some of the men they lose. ·.
ONE PRISONER of war told of making
the trip from Hanoi to the Demilitarized.
Zone (DMZ) in eight days late last
month. He indicated that most of his 300..
mile journey was by truck. Despite the
Intense bombing of roads and bridgu,
traffic still is moving in North Vietnam.
And some supplies are getting through
the air and naval blockade into North
Vietnam. Chinese freighters lying outside
the ring of American mines around North
Vletnm's harbors are being unloaded
onto what the U.S. Navy calls "wlblics,"
a name derived from the acronym for
11water borne logistics craft."
DESTROYERS HA VE have been at.
tacking the "wiblics" and sinking some
of them. but apparently not enough, since:
U.S. Marine AHl Seacobra helicopter
gunships were assigned to the job for the
first time recently.
Even without additional supplies tbue
Js no indicalton the North Vietnamese
will be unable to sustain the present level
of their battlefield activity through the
U.S. election .
Supplies for the Communst offensive
launched April l were already in place
aheod ol it. In Quang Tri and 1bua Thlen
provinces the Communists are thought to
be drawing on supply stocks in caches In
the A Shau and Khe Sanh valleys.
Nixon, ,McGovern
Forces 'Spar'
Across Country
By United Press IDttrnaUonll
While Sen. George S. Mc<;overn and
admlniatraUon leaders sparred from
Washington to Alasks, the While Hooe
said President Nixon has no intenllona of
debating the Democratic pre.!idential
candidate.
McGovern at Custer, S.D., said Nix-
on's Vietnam policy of seeking release ot
U.S. prlsonera by bombing North Viet-
nam was "the height of folly."
In Anchorage, Alaska, Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew criticized McGovern's
propooals for draft dod&er amnesty and
reform of marijuana pc>ssesskm laws.
Republican National Chairman Robert
J. Dole aald In Wuhlngton that
McGovern has liken ••eonsiltent stands
against governments friendly to the
United Slates, and In strong favor of any
government antagonistic 14 the United
States."
Heat Clings to ~outheast
Col.d Front Ru11s From Atkintic to Ce11tral Plains
Coastal Weather
Mlillt1 IWltl1 too.y, Utllf Y•rlllll•
.,,,. night lf!d tnorrllf'll hourt bK-
lno ... 19r'l'f ID to to kllttl 111 11M-
nocllt todlY and WldnQday, Hlth '*"· ,_, 10 ..
CNsllt NmWllUl'fl ru'tpf from '2
.. 12, lnllnd fwmptr1tvr1s ltr!GI lretn
• flt 17, W1t1r l1mpe11tur1 ff,
S•n, Moon, Tide•
TUllDAY
St(tnd hfilh ............ l:ll p.m, 6.1
kanf low ............ l :Of p.m. 2.J
WIONllDAY
fllnt hleft .... , ........ lttU 1.m. 4,f
f!W low .............. 4:17 .. m. ,.,,
....-l'lltll ............ f :S2 ''"" ,,,
lllC*l4ll klW ""'"""' l t.,p.m, 2.1
Sllft •l11t f:JfLm. hft 1:S• ~:m.
"'-R!Mt 1lN P."'-ktt 1:1• 1.m.
rempef'Gtures
AIMnr, cl~ B ft Amar i\o, c n;
Allcllcw... c "' u "ll•nfi•• c{dY 8 "'1 l'llhlm ddY II '~"'''°· cfHr M, CIHr ~ ~ :r.; "'J, ~· ~ '"'·~"' 1:1.: ...... " ' l! n =If~., !! Ind, Y II . ' I! 8:1; !fl?'nT:, dHr ..
N", ~•Ir " Culult!. c dy .. Fort Wortl'I, <lt1r " " o:, l~rtrcc111r ll .. fiono1uh1:~ dY Ii !l OO"llf!n, ~ dY H ndltMpolil'. CUy .. sk-•'Yltlf, CIHt 'll " Ul'lllllf, l'dY .. ,., .. ,, lf'r·, t!Hf' " .. tn. Rock. c.-., IOI ,,
t:"~~Ht l! ff
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Stones in C~t
Led by Mick Jagger, the Jlolljng Stones 'perform be-
fore 20,000·plus fans at lfadison Square Garaen
In New York Monday evening. Police bad to contain • ' l
1 ~owd out,Jide the Garden who were unable lo Jtt
tickets for the performance.
••
•
c .,
CJ • •
• T
'
L
ct • c
'
Woman
Arrested
At Prison
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A
woman bu beta aecuxd .of
tryllll lo IDIUjfgle drug& into
San Quentin prlaon dur1111 a
special "family vilitu with her
convict huaband, prlaon of·
flclab Hid.
San Quentin Inronnatlon of.
flcor J ... ph O'Brien 111ld
aherlll'1 dtpuilts M o n d a y
booked Ruby Medina, 35, of
Sanla Roaa for lnve.tigallon of
Importing drug1 Into prtaon.
It wu the second Ume trou·
ble has arisen in the proe.ram,
which lovolvu about 'Ill In-
mates monthly.
Last month a YOllJlf Inmate
tllC.lped while visiting with hb
h!J family.
.. This doesn't do the pro-
gram any good, 0 said O'Brien.
"We're going to heve to take
another look at it."
lie Hid M<s. Medina and
their Infant daughter were on
a 4&-hour visit with Benjamin
Medina, 32, who iJ serving a
flve--year-to life term for rob-
bery and burglary In Men-
docino Coonty.
The year-old family visiting
program allows convicts'
[amllies to VYit them in home-
like settings outside the walls
but still within the priocm
grounds. The only requirement
Is that the inmate report for
roll periodically.
O'Brien said priaon officials
went to the cottage where the
Medinas bed been staying
arter he "appeared to be
under the influence o f
something" at roll call Mon-
day morning.
lie said they found half a
bottle of contrahend bourbon
and whet appeared to be co-
caine.
He said a rtlative picked up
tho baby after Mrs. Medina
was taken to the Marin County
Car Fails
First Test
EL MONm (AP) -A
man took a car from 1,11
auto dtalmhlp out for a
lrlal spin and ulOd It u
the setaw1y car In .. •l·
templed bank robbery,
pol1ce &aid.
LA £oanty Case Ells berg
Ex..admini,strator Trial May
To Be Sent,ence d . See Delay
Immanuel F1oru WU
1rreated at the dtalenhlp
Monday and booked for ln-
vutlgailon of 'bank rob-
bery.
Officers said the bandit
!bowed I First City Bank
teller a not demondlng
money. When sbt falntocl,
the bandit f1od from the
bank. A passerby noted
tbt dealer's tag on the
getaway vehicle a n d
Flores was .arrested afttr
be drove Into tho Iot.
Legislature
2-year Term
Consi.dered
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
amendment propoaal to adopt
the two-year Congressional
style term Cor the California
Legislature will go1 on the
November ballot.
'The constitutional amend-
ment proposal reeeived final
59-3 approval of the Assembly
Monday.
With two-year sessions, bills
no! a cl t d upon in !he first
year would not be
automatically killed: at lhe end
ol the year, and would tbul
not have to be relntrodueed.
LOS ANGELES (APl -
Former Loo Angelel Coon\y
Public Administrator Baldo M.
Krlstovlch b to ht aentenced
Sept. ll on four felony con-
vlctlona Involving the sale of
automobiles he made while in
office.
Tho 57·ytar-old Kr!Jtovlch
waa convicted on two counts of
proparlng false evidence and
two l'<!latecl counts o( perjury
Monday in connection with his
former job. The Jury l'<turned
Innocent verdicts on five
cowit.s and nine other counts
were dlsmissed.
At the same time .
Kristovich's 31 ·year-o•d
nepbew, Joseph L. Vicelja,
was acquitted on one count of
Jrand the/I.
Krlstovich was originaJly
charged wllb selling property
from estates under the control
of his office to friend! and
relatives far below the market
value of the Item,, and before
the items were offered at
public auction. Other counts
included embezzlement
regarding land deals.
One of the perjury con-
victions concetned a car sold
by the public admlnislrator's
office to Kristovich's brother
Marin. In probate court,
records revealed that a person
other than Kris tov i ch' s
brother was Imed as the
purchaser.
Similarly, the other perjury
Another provision w o u Id conviction stemmed from the
allow the Legislature to hold sale of two cars to a county
an organizing meeting a auctioneer. wllh those cars
month before the siart of a being listed as sold to another
regular s...ion. 11lb woold person.
ellmlnate the delay t he Probate filings are subject
Legislature oow suffers In, the to perjury prosecution.
start of committee bearings The Superior Court jury of
ea.ch January, said Assembly six men and six women failed
Speaker Bob Moretti (D-Van to reach a verdict on three
Nuys), chief author. other perjury and four other
preparing !alle e v l d e D c e
charges as well as one count
of conspiracy to commit coo-
nict of Interest. Tho latter
charge was alao 1evled against
Vlcelja but be wu aquitl<d
of it.
Eleven days of dellhtratlon•
came to an end Monday when
the foreman of the Jury
became ill and prosecutor
Timothy Flynn said, "Llttle
could be gained by having
them deliberate any more. It
would be hard to fmd a more
conscientious jury.''
Thus, with the consent of the
prosecution, Judge William A.
Caldecott dismissed the rest of
the fcharges and set the
sentencing date. The penalty
for perjury is one to 14 years
in prison. The malimum
penally for preparing false .
evidence is five years.
The conspiracy and grand
theft charges filed jointly
against Victlja Md Krlslovlcll
dealt with three purchases of
trust deed• by VlceJJa from
Kristovlch's ollioe. Vicelja
was accused of selling the
notes to a 79-year-o1d widow
for whom Kristovlch worked
as an attorney. while· he was
serving the county in bis
$26,800-a-year job.
'
LOS ANGELES <UPll -
·'11\e modi delayed Pentagon
1'11\ltn trial today fll!ed the
pwlblllty . of another
road.block over a tecret report
of eevtsdroppln& by federal
agents.
Apparently only the judge
and the Julllca Department
knew the detalla ol the report.
The judge Indicated It was nol
aimed dtllbenltly al tri•l
figures, but wu an unaou@lt
byproduct of another ln-
vestlgation.
Lawyers for the defendants,
Daniel EUsberg and Anthony
Russo, immediately demanded
a hearing into the report.
After months devoted to
pretrial hearings, the trial is
nearing the iu:llUJ1)tnl stage. A
jury !Jas been sealed, and only
sel~tion of six alternate
jurors remains be f o r e
lesllmony can begin.
Another hearing could again
delay the trial. .
Apparenlly, the judge In-
tended to decide whether or
not to hold the hearing, by rul·
ing oo whether the eavesdrop-
ping might violate the privacy
of tbt allomey-cllent rtla·
ilonship.·
U bu been well over a year
since the Pentagon Papen,
CALIFORNIA
classified research Into the
Vietnam War, ~·ere printed in
the New York Times and other
newspapers.
Ellsberg and Russo have
been charged with tbeft1 con·
spiracy and espionage. They
admit being behind the leak,
but deny what they did was a
criminal act.
Under the ground rules for
department has beenrequired
the trial, the Justice
department has been required
~Y U.S. Dlslrlct Court Judge
Matt Byrne to notify him of
any electronic surveillance of
the defendant.I, their lawyers
or counselors.
Late Friday, the govern·
ment filed an affidavit declar·
ing there had been no el~
tron.lc SW'Vcillance "exctpt as
, may hereafter be disclosed to
the court."
Tursd•)', July 2S, 1972 DAILY PILOT S
Skyjacker Fares
Psychiatric Test
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Ricardo Chavez-Ortiz, con--
victed of air pl.racy, faces 90
days or peychlatrk lesll to
determJne If his 20-years-to-
life sentence should be reduc-
ed.
The 31!-year-old unemploy<d
cook head U.S. Dlllrlct Court
Judge Charles H. Carr say .
Monday it was "no pleasure to
have to commit you at this
time" after a jury handed
down Its gullty verdict follow·
1ng 6'Ai hours of deliberation.
Chavez-Ortiz, a Mexican na·
tlonal, was accused of hi·
jacking a Frontier Alrlints
plane over Ne\v ?.leKico Aprll
13, ordering it flown to U>s
Angeles and then delivered a
broadcast plea ror the poor or
the Mexican.American bar·
rios.
J-fe carried an unloaded gun
and demanded no money -
only a platfo1111 for his
frustrations.
The trial "''as brief because
the defense admitted air
plracy had been committed.
The defen!le argued,
however. that their client was
suffering from "diminished
capacity" under the stress of
caring for his wife and eight
children while being subjected
to the injustices he said all
Mexican-Americans suffer.
His sentencing by Judae
Carr was a le11l formality
since the term could be
shortened following t h •
psychiatric leslJ. Dtftnst II·
torneys 11ld they would appeal
the Verdict.
In testimony last week,
Chavtz-Ofllz uid he hijacked
the jetliner beeau11 he wanted
to tell the worict of his concern
and frustrat'6n over racial
dlscrlmlnaUon. war, pollution
and dlher problems.
Clav...ortiJ' arrest and lo-
camaUon brought thousands
of Me1ican AmerlcaN to his
defense. They rabed '3$,000 In
bail and many attended h1!
court appearances. "Free
Chaves-Ortiz" '"as a rallying
cry in the primarily Mexican-
the primarily M e x i c a n ~
American East Los Angeles
area where he lived.
A large crowd of friends and
supporters gathered in the
courtroom Monday with many
more waiting in the hall
ou tside. When the verdict was
aflnounctd, Chavez-Ortiz was
moUonleS!, expressionless, but
ti.1exlcan-American activists
appeared shock«!.
Prosecutor Richard Rosen-
field emphasized the details of
the inciden t -and the
testimony or a psychiatrist
who 11id Chavez-Ortiz wa.t
manlaily Ill but that the illnt"
wu not disabling.
jail.
LEGAL NOTICE I .
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W• Deliver
Fine 0,-rlee,
Liquor, l'raahe•t et Pr1 duce &
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O ~ONA DIL MA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
J&1w"-old 'llobyslt1ir mt •
24-yeer-old Granada llllls man
hevo been arrested In lbt ap-
parenUy Wlrelated slaylnp of
two San Fernando Valley
children, pallet said.
Monday in the murder of
Scarlett Elizabeth Cisneroe,
IV, of Granada llUIJ.
SEC Accuses
Two Writers
•
IA The babysitter, Donald Dile
Chester, was booked Monday
for lnvesllptlon of murder In LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
the stabbing death of one of Securities and E•cheng• Com-
hls charges, S-year~ld Allen mission accuses two Los
We 1hlnl: Veqa is the best llttle air ever
built And if you'll stick with us for eleven
paragrophs we'll gladly
tell yru why. For
starters, the engine. Veqa is
blessed with a specially
designed overhead o:un,
aluminum block. 4-cyUndor
" La biln Angeles fllllllCisl wrilerl of il-'Q' ug · legally trying to Influence the
Allen's sister Lisa, 8, was price of stocks by publishing
listed in serious condition at favorable articles about com·
Northridge C o mm u n i t y panies whose stock they own·
H01pita1 witb knife wounds in ed.
her arms. legs, face and torso. Named in the civil com-
power plant Big words to
match an imp~ve
Chester was quoted as tell· plaint filed wlth the U.S. performance.
ing police when questioned District Court Monday were It's a light engine, ro we were able to
Aler N. Campbell, financial packit with plenty of horaepower for ils size. about the stabbings, "I don't columru"sl for"· Los •••ties = ,.... In proctical lenns this means you wind know why -jealo1t.1y, worry Herald-Examiner, and hb son, or nerves." Alex N. Campbell Jr,, editor up with the p::mer for responsive occelero·
Mark Terry llill was booked or the Western Financial tion and turnpike performance. But with
for investigation of murder Journal. about the ~e gas mileage as most other
MH11tM1Nat economy cars.
However, if engines don't ~ Now .••.• Plastic Cream ~':i'J:~~r:i::a;;.ft~":rly ~
I vantinnfi Artifi . ll th llttleoomOlilon\yadmire ~ ~~~T·~! thot.hu<~!!iooiK~otmo0
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O.K. We know. It orundo like we brdl;l-
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•
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•
!
4 DAILY PILOT
Nationwide
Strike Seen
In Britain
LONDON (UPI) -Tile Brlllah 11"""'-
mtnt tcday stepped Inf<> the cue of tbe
Pentonvllle five, acUng to held off a
lbrt1tened general atrlke.
Norman Tumer, the official oollcltot
(attorney). aald he would mut the Nat'
Ilona! Industrial RelaUona Court (NIRC) ..
and ·apply for reconsideration of the cue
of five longshoremen aent to PeniODvllla'
jail for contempt of the court.
Turner intervened In ao earlltr cue In-
volving three of the five men m..ied
Friday. The N!RC'• earner acUon a1a1Nt
the lbrte brought thrtall of 1 nationwide
strike in their support
That acliOD materialized W. weet
when the court ruled the five doclc
workm in contempt. It llld U>ey had
Dout.d ita order to cease picketing and
boytolting a container depot u part of a
wJio.<loel.what dllpute wtlhln a single
union.
Nearly all the natloo'• 40,000
longshoremen wilted out, cloolng Bri-
tain'• ports. Prolelt walkouta clooecl coal
mines, auto factotlea, newspapers aod
trucking llrml. Union leaders said lhe
l&rlke wave would tpread.
Unjon leaders left talks wllb Prime
Mlnllter Edward Heath Monday aaylng no further dllcualona with the govern-
ment would be.-worthwbile until the men
were releaaed.
"We told the prime mlnlater It would
be lrulUesa to try to engqe In any lalkl
tomorrow (Tuelday) about the economic
situation as planned," one union leader
11~ wilt eacalate the longer the
men ore kept In jail 1nd will; he
catastrophic IA> lhe economy of !he coun-
try."
Union leaderl held 1 aert11 of meellnp
19<1ay at the local and national level to
dl!cual . lhe proopecfs for a naUoowlde
demonatratlori Wedneaday. II approved,
It' would mart lhe ftrsl time alnce the
general 81rike of 111311 that workers
lhrooghout the country have walked off
their jobs.
The government meanwhile said It was
powerless to ·do aoytblng about releasing
the Jailed dockers wltlioo!t aujlerledlng
judicial autborify until Ibey "purged"
lhemaelvea by apologhhig to the court.
11No ,government could do thtl ncr
would the people u a· whole wish the
government to llave• the <8poclty to do thla," Employment Secretary Maurice
Macmlilln oald. ''The Judiciary II totally
Independent of the execuUve. That 11 lhe
foundallon on which all our liberties ore
founded."
Union leaders counlered by aaying they
did not recogni2e lhe new law, the Labor
Relations Acl, and felt ii wu their duly
lo-IL
No. I Coal Mine
Had 500 Safety
Violation Marks
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (AP) -
Stat!ltic:s from the U.S. Bureau of Mlnea
show !hat nearly ilOO federal aafety clta·
lions were lodged •ialNI Conoolldaton
Coal Co.'s Black.mlle No. 1 mine ill its
four years of operation.
Nine men were given up for dead.in the
11praw1lng mJne Monday, two days 1after
the outbreak of a fire reportedly trig·
gered by ID electrical spark. Three small
explosions forced racue worker• to
withdraw and seal off the mine shafts.
The citations w~ flied by U.S. Bureau
<1f Mines inspectors for violations under
the Federal Mine Safety Act and its ac-
companying regulations. The vast ma·
jority -381-were lodged after most of
the provisions of tilt' current act took ef.
feet in the summer of 1970.
Industry sources termed the mmber of .
citaUons high for any mine, but surpris-
ingly high for the Blacklvllle No. I mine.
Open in July 19681 it was consJdered U·
cepllnnally modem.
John Corcoran, pre 1 Iden t of
Coruolidation, was not available for com·
ment on the citation record.
Tuncfllltt, Juty 25, 1971
UPI T ... Phot9
SHORE STAFF WORKERS LOAD LUGGAGE ABOARD QUEEN ELIZABETH· II FOR PASSENGERS
London's Dockworkers, Protesting J•iling of 5 Picketers, W1lked Off Jobs Mond•y
U.N. Chief Gets
Sharp Warning
On Dike Bombing
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The
Unlltd Slate! has sharply warned U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt W a I d h e i m
against apreadlng reporta of U.S. bomb-
ing of dlkea In North Vietnam.
Waldheim, while saying he could not
\'erlfy the reports, r~plied that he
thought "Jt was his duty to speak out on
the devutaUng consequences which
might result" from either intentional or
unintentional . bombing of the flood con-
trol system along the Red River in North
Vietnam.
A storm between the Unit.cl States and
Waldheim blew up Monday after the
secretary-general told a news conference
he had "private unofficial" reports via
Hanoi of the bombing of lhe diices. He ap.
pealed to the Unit.cl States to stop. •
Secretary of Slate Wllllam P. Rogm
protested in Washington and sent
Ambusador George Bush to put the U.S.
position personally to Waldheim.
After his one-hour meeting with
Waldheim, Bush told reporters he was
convinced the secretary-general did not
want to gjve credibility to what Bush
caJJed a massive North Vietnamese prop-
aganda campaign. • ·
Waldheim told the~ news confertnce :
"Through private unofficial channels
• • • were lnfonned that the dikes are
being bombed, and we were Informed
also ~t even in cases where the dikes
are not directly bombed, the nearby
bombing causes cracking of the darns
and that in this way the result Is the
same u if the dikes were bombed
direcUy.
The secretary.general said he did not
know whether the bombing was in·
tentional. and he admitted, "this is
Hanoi information." But he added :
"If these allegations are corre ct, it
would Jead to disaster In the area
because it would mean that the whole
plain would be Oooded and thousands &ad
thousands of people would die. This, I
lhlnk. bu to be avoided ."
Rogers said in a statement that
Waldheim's information "concerning
alleged deliberate bombing to damage
the dikes In North Vietnam is false -as
lhe President stated in his June 29 press
conference."
Power Goes Back On, Heat
Turning Off in New York
NEW YORK (AP) -The power went
back on early today for most of the
estimated 500,000 residents of Brooklyn
and Queens who bad been without elec-
tricity for up to 16 hours after seven
feeder cables burned out.
The other good news was a forecast by
the National Weather Service of a
"definite break'' in the marathon of sizzl·
( IN SHORT ... )
ing 90-degree weather that has withered
city dwellers and strained power delivery
to the limit.
The restoration of power to most of
Brooklyn and Queens marked the end of
the second widespread power blackout
due IA> failing Consolidated Ediaon Co.
feeder lines since the current beat wave
began IO days ago. '
e IKA Pressure
BELFAST (UPI) -British troops
keeping up pressure on Jrish RepublicaD
Anny (ffiA) Provisionals· today ·entered
the Londonderry "no-go" Creggan area
and searched Belfast Roman Catholic
districts for s1,1spects and weapons.
While the military moves were being
made, Secretary of State William
Whitelaw -the man who ordered the
army's "get tough" policy -met with
poliUcians to organize an all-party con-
ference on the province's future. Earlier,
political sources said the British army
had senl armored tank·llke vehicles to
Ulster in what could be a prelude to a
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Oellwry of the Oally Piiot
is ;varantttd
Mona.y.Fr!cl•Y: Ir yav di> not flaw your
PllJMr Oy 5;30 P.m., c•ll •lld ~ COP'f wlll
k Oro1$11 to 'fOll, C.U1 .,.. INtn Vlllll 7:30 p,m.
hturd1y Ind Slmdtvl tf )'OU .. Nt r«ti...
yow COJ'1 by ' 1.m. Sttunlliy, ., • '·'"' Sund1y, all Ind I (ffY Wiii 1M brou81'11 ti V91J, Ctllt ire tlkM unlU It .. m.
Telepl'lonn
Mo.I C>rttlOt Count)' Ar~ ........ ta.an Norttnom.t Hunlil!lllOl'I 8Hcll
Ind W1itmln1l11' •• , . , . .. •• ,, , ... l*IDt Sin Cltmtnt., CtDlltr1"° !tlch,
$8n Ju1n C1Dlllr1no, Dena Point,
5outh Ltogun., L19UN1 Nlginl .... 411..at
full-scale invasion of the Londonderry
"no-go" areas.
e Cobra Deaths
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UPf)
-S'ix Filipino villagers in Central Luzon
were attacked and killed by cobras flush·
fd out by floods, reports reaching
disaster relief headquarters said today.
The six snake bite victims were
reported to have been attacked in a
shack in Santa Rita, P a m p an g a
Province, 15 miles south of this big
American air base. .
Three of the victims died Monday night
and the three othen remained alive until
today, the reports said. Serum arrived at
Clark today but too late to save the
three, officials said.
e Accuracy Cited
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les
Aspin (!).Wis.), today said lhe Pentagon
should not require' urine tests to detect
heroin use by children of overseas
military personnel until the accuracy of
the tests has been greatly improved.
Aspin said the proposal was circulating
in the Pentag9n and 'vas "patently
ridiculous" since tests for drug addiction
among Gls failed to accurately identify
drug users in up to 4{l percent of the
cases.
e Arab C•mpalgn
CAIRO -(UPI) -The semiofficial
Cairo newspaper Al Abram called today
for an Arab-wide campaign against
American interests in the Middle East.
A n o t h e r g o v e mment-controlled
newspaper In Cairo said the United
States was as much an enemy of Egypt
as Israel. The newspapers were com·
. men ting in reaction to a four·hour speech
by President Anwar Sadat Monday in
which he expressed dismay that U.S. in-
fluence in the Arab world was increasing.
Despite Viet Talks_
No 'Cease-fire'
Before Election?·
SAIGON (UPI) -Prospects appear
dim for any cease-fire in the Indochina
conflict before the U.S. presidenlial eiec·
lion Nov. 7 despite the secret talks under
way in Paris.
The war may even intensify before that
date.
AT LEAST one well-informed U.S.
military source believes the Conimunists
will make another bid to capture the old
Imperial capital of Hue before mid·
Oc!A>ber.
A civilian expert on North Vielnam
expects a wave of C:Ornmunist terrorism
in South Vietnam's cities. including
Saigon, before lhe election. He also sees
another attempt to capture An Loe.
"Whatever they do will be designed for
maximum visibility," an American of·
* * * President's Aide
Tells Nixon's
View 01i Pullout
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A key aide to
President Nixon quotes the chief ex-
ecutive as saying that if the Communists
do not let lhe Unlled State.s get oul of
Vietnam .. they right way, they will have
trouble.~'
The view of Nixon's thinking was given
in an interview Monday by Harry Dent,
an advilier to Nixon on southern political
affairs, who holds the tiUe of special
counsel to the President.
Dent said Nilon intends to continue
Republican congressional leaders that if
he Is re-elected his second administration
will remain conservative and take no
:swing to the left.
Dent said Nixon intends to c Ntinue
conducting foreign affairs from a posi·
tion of strength.
"There are some things Richard Nixon
Is very strong about," Dent said. "111e
strength of this cowitry and the honor of
this country. I've heard him say over and
over again, if the Communists do not let
us get out of SOutheast Asia the right
way, they will have trouble.
"All alonp: they (the Communists) have
been misjudging this administration.
They thought he would react to political
expediency."
Dent said the President hirmelt
brought up the subject o( what his
political position would be in second ad·
ministration during a discussion of Sen.
George S. McGovern's liberal leanings.
Nixon, as Dent paraphrased hlm1 began by saying, "some will suggest that
we should therefore move to the left and
pre-empt as much ground as we can."
Dent said Nixon proceeded to knock
down this idea.
The President's remarks have now
become "the line" or "the word" for
White House advisers and campaign
policy makers, Dent said.
One event that has already bofne out
the President's policy declaration is the
announcement last Saturday that Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew will be kept
on the ticket, Dent said.
Princess Steps Down
BANGKOK (AP) -Princess
Ubolratana, the oldest of K i n g
Bhum.lbol's three daughters , has given up
her title amid nunon that she has
secretly married a fellow student at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
I
ficer said. This, he believes, ls the reason
for the random repeated Communlat
sbeJllng of Hue.
OPTIMISl'S AMONG the H a no I
watchers see a prospect for a ceas&-fire
in Indochina next year. Pesslrnlsta
among them believe the war will drag
along for four or five more years. I NEWS ANALYSIS l
But few American military or civilian
ofHcials in Vietnam eipect any serious
negotiations by the communLsts WltU
after the U.S. election.
The U.S. naval blockade and renewed
bombing of North Vietnam may be
pinching Hanoi but there: is no sign of It
yet on the battlefield. North Vietnamese
troops have plentiful supplies and am·
munition and are receiving replacements
for some of the men they Jose.
ONE PRISONER of war told of making
the trip from Hanoi to the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ) in eight days late last
month. He indicated that most of his 300-
rnile journey was by truck. Despite the
Intense bombing of roads and bridges.
traffic still is moving in North Vietnam.
And some supplies are getting through
the air and naval blockade into North
Vietnam. Chinese freighters lying outside
the ring of American mines around North
Vietnm's harbors are being unloaded
onto what the U.S. Navy calls "wiblics,u
a name derived from the acronym for
"water borne logistics craft."
DESTROYERS HA VE have been at-
tacking the 0 wiblics" and sinking some
of them. but apparenlly not enough, since
U.S. Marine AHl Seacobra helicopter
gunships were assigned to the job for the
first time recently.
Even without additional supplies there
Is no indicaiton the North Vietnameae
will be unable to sustain the present level
of their batUefield activity tbroogh the
U.S. election.
Supplies for the C:Ommunst offensive
launched April 1 v.·ere already in place
ahead of it. In Quang Tri and Tbua Thien
provinces the Communists are thought to
be drawing on supply stocks In caches in
the A Shau and Khe Sanb valleys.
Nixon, McGovern
Forces 'Spar'
Across Country
By United Pre11 !Dle1111Uoaal
While Sen. George S. Mc<;ovem aod
administration leaders eparred from
Wa•hington to Alaska, lhe White Hooe
said President Nixon has no inte.nUons of
debating the Democratic pre.sldential
candidate.
McGovern at Custer, S.D., said Nil·
on's Vietnam policy of seeking release ol
U.S. prisoners by bombing North Viet-
nam was "the height of folly."
In Anchorage, Alaska, Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew criticized McGovern's
propooals for dralt dodger amnesty and
reform of marijuana poasesgion laws.
Republican National Chairman Robert
J. Dole said In Washington !hat
McGovern bas taken 41conslstent ltands
agaln!t governments friendly to the
Unit.cl Slates, and In !lrong favor of any
government antagonl•tic to lhe United
States."
Heat Clings to Southeast
Cold Front Runs From Atlantic w Central Plains
Coastal Weather
Moiltty M!Mr toeley, UOl\t v1ri.blt
wllldt. nltht 11M11 mornlno lloun bfcom-
11111' -i.rtr 10 to 211 k11tt• '" '""'·
ltOOM loCl'tY 11111 Wtdllffd1y, Hitll
fodl,, t-.r 70t.
C..11"' ""°'Plf'•turn r111111 trom •2
fa 12. l11l1nd tt'fnptr1lurt• r.ntt ,,.,.,
.. t9 V. W1t1r lem,,.r1l11rt ff,
SNn, Moon, Tides
TU~SDAY
$fCIWld Noll ............ fd l p,""· ,,,
Stc8l'ld low ........ , .. J:Oll p.rn. t.J
WIDWISDAY
Jill,.. llfllfl ............. 1t:Ul,m. A.2
Flnlf Jow .............. t ;J7 ~.m. .0.1
~ flltfl ............ f :S2111.m. 6.J
~ Jow ........... , J;Mp,m, 2.1
-.u ... ltfft.m. .... J!ltp:lft.
M.. al• 7~06 p,lft. ktt 5:1• t .f?I.
;
• Stones in Concert
Led by Mick Jagger, the Rolling Stones perform, ~
fore 20,000·plus tans at Madison Square G1rd~n
in New York Monday evening. Police bad to con~ain
' 1
a crowd outside lhe Garden who were unable lo pt
ticketi for the perf0rmanct.
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July
Woman
Arrested
At Prison
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A
wo111111 bu been accuoed . of
lrylnJ. to amuggle drug& into ,
San Quentin prison during 1
special "ramify vtail" with her
convict husband, prison of·
lltlals said.
San Que.ntln lnformatlon 0r.
fleer Joseph O'Brien aald
ahe:rlff's deputies Mon d 1 y
booked Ruby Medina, 35, or santa Rosa for lnvestl1atlon of
Importing druga into prison.
It was the second time trou-
ble has arisen in the proaram,
wblcll Involves about 70 in-
mates monthly.
Last month a young inmate
escaped whUe vlaitlng with bla
his family.
"Th.ls doesn't do the pro-
gram any good," said O'Brien.
.. We're going to have to take
1nother look at it."
He silfd MJ's. Medina and
their infant daughter were on
a 41-hour visit with Benjamin
Medina, 32, who is serving a
five.year-to life term for rob-
bery and burglary In Men-
docino County.
The year-old family visiting
program allows c o n v i c t s '
families to visit them in home.-
like settings outside the walls
but still within the Prison
grounds. The only requirement
is that the inmate report for
roll periodically.
O'Brien said prison officials
went to the cottage where the
Medinas had been staying
after he "appeared to be
Wlder the influence o f
something" at roll call Mon-
day morning.
He said they found half a
bottle of c:ontrabsnd bourbon
and wbst appeared to be co-
caine.
He said a relative picked up
the baby after Mrs. Medina
was taken to the Marin County
•
Car Fails
First Test
Ells berg
Ex-administrawr Trial May
• •
LA County Case
EL MONTE' (AP) -A
111111 tool< a car from an
auto dtalmblp out far a
trial apln and uHd It u
lhe 1ttaway car in ID II•
tomptod bank" robbery,
police aald.
!fo Be Sent,enced See Delay
Immanuel Florts WU
.,,...led at the dealuahlp
Monday and booked for tn-
vtattcaUon ol ·bank rob-
bery.
Offletr1 said the bandit
showed a First City Bank
teller a not deimnding
money. When sbe fainted,
the bandit Oed from the
bank. A posaerby noted
the dealer'• tag on the
getaway vehicle a n d
Flores was armted after
'be drove Into the lot.
Legis'lature
~-year Term
Considered
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
amendment proposal to adopt
the two-year Congres,sional
style term for the Cllllornia
Legislature will g°i on the
November ballot.
The constitutional amend-
ment proposal received final
59-6 approval of the Assembly
Monday.
With two-year sessions, bills
nol a c t e d upon In fbe first
year wo uld not be
automatically killf!<t at the end
of tho year, and would thus
not have to be reintroduced.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Former Los Angeles County
Public Administrator Baldo M.
Krlatovlch ls to be sentenced
SepL II on lour relony c:on·
vlctlons tnvolvlng the sale of
automobiles he made while in
office.
The &7·year .. ld Krlstovlch
was convicted on two counts of
preparing !also evidence and
two related counts of perjury
Monday in connection with his
former job. Tbe jury returned
Innocent verdicts on five
counts and nine other counts
were dlsmisseci.
At ·the same time .
Kristovicb's SS·y.ear ·o,•d
nephew, Joseph L. Vicelja ,
was acquitted on one count of
grand theft. :
Kristovich was O(iginally
charged with selling properly
from estates und~r the control
of his of[ice to friends and
relatives far below the market
vaJue of the items and before
the items were offered at
publlc auction. other counts
included embezzlement
regarding land deals .
One of the perjury con·
victlons concerned a car sold
by the public administrator's
office to Kristovich's brother
Marin. In probate court,
records revealed that a person
other than K ri stov ic h 's
brother was listed as the
purchaser.
Similarly, the other perjury
Another provision w O u I d conviction stemmed from the
allow the Legislature to hold sale of two cars to a county
an organlzlng meeting a auctioneer, with those cars
month before the starl of a being listed as sold to another
regular session. This would person.
ellminate the delay the Probate filings are subject
Legislature now suffers in. the: to perjury prosecution.
start of committee hearings 'Mle superior Court jury of
eas:h January, said Assembly six men and six women failed
Speaker Bob Moretti (0.Van to reach a verdict on three
Nuys), chief author. other perjury and four other
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
preparing !also e v Iden c e ·The mucll del1yed Pentagon ·
cllarges u well as one c:ount Pa'--trial today f·~ the or conspiracy to commit corr ,..... .. CM.~
Ok! or Interest. Tho latter poulb!llty · or I DO t h er
charge wa s atao levied against roadblock over a aecret report
Vicelja bul be wu equlttod of eavesdropping by federal
of it. agents.
Eleven days of deliberations Apparently only the Judge
came to an end Monday when and the Ju.dice Department
the foreman or the jury knew the detalll of the report.
be ·u nd t The judge indicated It was not came 1 · 8 prosecu or 1 aimed deliberately at trial Timothy Flynn said, "LJ!Ue could be gained by having figures, but was an unaoughl
them deliberate any more. It byproduct of another in--
would be hard to find a more vestlgatlon.
consc ientious jury." Lawyers for the defend an ls,
Thus, with the consent of the Daniel Ellsbe.rg and Anthony
prosecution, Judge William A. Russo, immediately demanded
Caldecott dismis.5ed the re.st ol a hearing into the report.
the charges and set the Alter months devoted to
sentencing date .. The penalty pretrial hearings, the trial is
for perjury 11.s one to 14 years' nearing the' ar.gurgcei:it st·age. A
in prison. The maximum jury 1ias been seated, and only
penalty for preparing false . ~l~tion of . ~x 11Utmate:
evidence is five years. J\ll'q~ remains b e f o r e
The conspiracy and gr.and ~Umo~y can 'i>'gln.
thert charges· _filed jointly Another bearing c:ould again
against Victlja Ind IQ'lstovlch , delay lhe trial,
dealt with three purcha,.s or Apparently, the j'udge In.
trust deeds by Vicelja from tended to decide whether or
Kristovlch's ollice. Vicelja nol to hold the bearing, by rul·
was , at'CUsed of selling the ing on whether the eavesdrop.
notes to a 79-year-old widow ping might violate the privacy
for whom Kristovlch worked of the attorney-client rela·
as an attorney. while· _he was tionsbip.. .
serving the county in bis U bu been well over a year
$26,1100-a-year job. silfte the Pentagon Papers,
CALIFORNIA
classifJed research Into the
Vietnam War, were printed in
the New York Times and other
newspapers.
Ellsberg and Russo have
been charged with theft , <on·
spiracy and espionage. They
admit being behind the leak,
but deny what they did was a
criminal act .
Under the ground rules for
department has beenrequired
the trial, the Justice
department has been required
by U.S. District Court Judge
Matt Byrne to notiff him of
any electronic surveillance or
the defendants, their lawye rs
or counselors.
Late Friday, the govern-
ment filed an affidavit decl ar-
ing there had been no ele<:"-
tronic sW'Veillance "except as
may hereafter be disclosed to
the court."
Tur.sday, July 15, l q1 2 DAILY Pll.O'f
Skyjac er Faces
Psychiatric Test
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
Ricardo Cbavez-Orti1, con-
victed of eJr pJracy, facu 90
day• or poyclllatrlo tats to
determine tr bis :ZO.yeara·lo-
llle sentence sbould be reduc-
ed.
The :IG-ye1N1ld unemployed
cook bead U.S. District Court
Judge Charles H. Carr say
Monday it was "no pleasure to
have to commit you at this
time" after a jury handed
down Us guilty verdict follow-
ing &'12 hours of deliberation.
Chavez-Ortiz, a Mexican na-
tional, was accused of hi-
jacking a Frontier Airlines
plane over New ~1exico April
13, ordering it flown to Los
Angeles and then delivered a
broadcast plea ror the poor of
the Mexican-American bar·
rios.
He carried an unloaded gun
and demanded no money -
only a platform for his
frustrations.
The tr ial was brief because
the defense admitted air
piracy had been committed.
The defense a rgued ,
however , that their client was
suffering from "diminished
capacity" under the stress of
caring for his wife and eight
children while being subjected
to the injustices he said an
Mexican-Americans suffer.
His .sentencing by Judae
Carr was a tea:al formality
since the term could be
shortened !ollowlng t b •
psyclllatrlc tuts. Defense at.
toroeya said they would appeal
the verdict.
In testimony lasl week.
Chavez-Ortiz aaid he hijacked
the jetlinff becauae he wanted
to tell lhe world ol bls tonttrn
and frmtraUon over: racial
discrlminalloo. war, poUutlon
and other problems.
Chavtz-Ortb' arrest and I~
carnation brought thousands
of Mexican Americans to his
defense. They raised $35,000 in
bsil and many altended b1$
coort appearance!. "Free
Chavez-Ortiz" was a rallying
cry in the primarily Me:xican-
the primarily M e x i c a n ..
American East Los Angeles
area where he Jived.
A large crowd of friends and
supporters gathered in the
courtroom Monday with many
more waiting in the haU
outside. When the verdict wis
announced, Chavez-Ortiz was
motionless, expressionless, but
Mexican-Ameri can activists
appeared shocked.
Prosecutor Richard Rosen.
field emphasized the details or
the incident -and the
testimony of a psychiatrist
who 11.ld Chavez-Ortiz wat
mentally tll but thst the illne.ss
wu nol disabling.
· jail.
LEGAL NOTICE I '
·~cz::~~:.::,!~~· 2 Held in Child Deaths
TM fol»w111t iterlllll /J doln9 bullnttt
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTITMJUS IUll Niii
NAMI JTAT'IMINT
Tiie followln1 WtoN ar• dolnt1
i:lull!IUI ••: P~kl<WOOO VILLAGE L TP. I•
C.lllott1I• l1t111lld4-Nrtnenhi.), lT.171
lrYlnt 8Mlltv•rd, , uttln. C•lll.
OOfl 1(•11 COl"lll•nY· Inc. (• C•INornl•
c:•llOl'ttlorll, 11'01 Dovt litretl, NnlJ)Ol't . et.a.. C•tlf, ,Tlloner &. e1rmlno"'-m CoMtNCl1011
Corp. I• Ollforl\I• corporation), 11l11 1,..,11\t l~l•Yard, Tlol'ltlll. C1Ut.
'Tllll MIMU ll btlnl ffl'lllluctMI bY •
Llmlttcl P•rl!Wt'SlllP l'Allk.WOOP VILLA CE L TP.,
By OOH KNOlL COMPANY, INC.
By: D. P. Mlddltl!Wl'I
Thb ltlllfRtrtt lllM Wiii\ tM c.unt'I
Cl•rtl of °''"" c-iv ori: July •· tm. Ir Arth11r I. Kmtr, O..Ut'f Qlllnt'f
'""' .....
Pvtllli!Md Orantt Cotst Oally P'llot,
.ltJIV 11, 1 .. 2S •fld A11111111.1tn 1117·n
' LINDA
'ISLE
" fBIG
·CANYON
W. Dollwr
Fine Of-<!•,
Lhluor, P'roohoat
.t1P1•&1 ...
~.... ...,
67J~lll10
CGAST Sim
MAIK£T I tt4! ~COAST HW't
ORONA DILMA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
1&1ur .. td 'bobyalttier and &
2t-year .. ld Granada Hills man
have been arrested in the ap-
parenUy unrelated slaylngs of
two San Fernando Valley
children, pollce said.
Tbe babysitter, Donald Dale
Chutcr, wu booked Monday
Monday In the murder of
Scarlett . Elizabeth Cisneros,
10, or Gronada Hills.
SEC Accuses
Two Writers
for investigation of murder in LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
the stabbing death of one of Securities and Exchange Com-
his charges, S-year-old Allen mission accuses two Los
McLaughlin. Angeles financial writers of il· legally trying to lnOuence the
Allen's sister Lisa, 8, was price of stocks by publishing
listed in aerious condition at favorable articles about com-
Nortbridge Co m m u n i t y panles whose stock they own-
HOIJlltal with knife wounds In ed.
her arms, legs, face and torso. Named in the civil com·
We think Vego. is the best little car ever
built And if you'll sticl: with us for eleven
paragrophs we'll gladly
tell you why. For
starle11, the engine. Vega is
blessed with Q specially
designed overhead wm,
aluminum block, 4<:ylinder
power plant Big words to
match on impressive
Chester was quoted as tell-plaint filed with the U.S. performance.
. 1. b tio _ _, District Court Monday were It's a light engine, 50 we were able to mg po ice w en ques neu Alex N. Campbell, financial about the stabbings, 0 1 don't columnist for the Los Angeles pack it with plenty of horrepower for its size.
know wby -jealousy, worry Herald-Examiner, and bla son, In proctioal terms this means you wind
or nerves." Alex N. Campbell Jr .. editor up with the power for responsive aoc:.'E!lero-
Mark Terry Hill was booked or the Western Finaocial tion and turnpike perlormance. Bui with
for investigation of murder Journal. about the ¥1lJle gos mileage as most other
MYertlMfftMt economy cars.
Now Plastl·c Cream "m~:::."'v!,,"'1::';,::;' M ·• ••• of other features that ct.her · ~ ~ r Artifi . IT th h\ila(Xlr&OCIIlOn]yadmire 1J RrOf Cla 1ee '. 1romT:'~i:i;11romthe1op our
. It ... li _llMr ftlt =~ revolut~oni~d deatqrc Oouble ~I roOf. One st~l
S. lllllnl lltflle . ttlot. you Me b'1'<1ir, cltew bet.-El Now,fotthetlnttimlllcienceoftma ter, eat more oaturallf. FIXOOENt ·
-pl•tie criaa that-boldl dentuttt lt lllMa for. boun. Reliltt molature. nevtt1>erore-.fotimaipelulicnirm· yrtr)turn that fit are aaentill to
brUe tli&t .. lp MW tP I• tk' tiealth. See JOW'. &ntfat rqular\y, •
Mlir-' t"-' -t yfttf' ,,...., ... It'• a , Ott eur•to-u• Flxoo&NT ~turt un,ue~caUMFOtODiPftll ~vtCrum.. tt1-..-, , .
.
co1~ii'10FVLAW
.. ~ OF
O•A,NOE COUNTY
now aicc.,tlftl "'"' and wo"'.,_ who art •lth•r:
. • ..,., 11 • f1 YHrt If .-,11W. c1H.,1 .H1i.1 .. ,, .,
• -ti ... ".••" .... '"' .,,..,Nit h•· ........ ~lttt ...... ""' ., ..... , ..
I a.. .,.,._, fty fttll
Tht J.D. "' LLa. difrM Cfll 1,bt. ,.,!ltd i;. A' v••11 of put-time
d4•"91 3 d-P'( WM~ 3 I hciur1 ,., cl,, ..
A.ipec11I ,,., .. m ef thr.. ..... "t S.IUrdty 1, IYt!IHki for
flrll·yt•r •!llcltnk. · .
Apply Now fo r S~ptember 7th
. Doy or Even ng Classes ·
• --w11n OI rttor. POI ~liON OI CATAlOGUl
II» '9uth lrookhuut
A\thallft 92104
17111,..;S-3453 .
•
'
roof fiimlY a ttached to another steel roof to
make the oor a little stron9er on the outside
and a Utile quieter on the inside.
We'vealaobolsteredourdoore,loradded
strength. with side gumd
beams that look and
work pretty mu ch Jtlte the
guan:lrailsyouseealo119
the hl9hway. '
For slopping power,
· weve added disc -.
brak .. in lron!J Big
ones.10.inchers that
oan stop you evenly
and frequently.
For comfort. there's Vega's
superb bucket aeata. No half· ~J!!!j;!;J!i way m~ h0l'9 either-:: full foam for fii:m but comfort·
'--' '---'able support.
And to help keep you cooi we've built a
power ventilation gyslem that le ao good,
air aotual!i ciroulales 1011-tR YE!ITllNIOll
evenwhenyourVega ~tM.
le etanding still and • •
·-,.
the wtndowa ore ?Olled up.
Other httle touolw include Veqa't Jdd.
den windJhleld anhmna
w~ you atlera faclay
Installed rodio, a oealed
side lenninal balte!y that
d<iee a wqy with oonOtlocl.
and coll sptinge, one a t
every wheel And if yM9
never had a Jide on ooil spring11, well, maybe
you don't lcnow what you've been miEinQ.
O.K. We know. It tcunda like we hraq.
geth too much. But other people have 1-n
1QYin9 the tame !hinge In even ellanger
tenna. One emmple: The readen al av .t
Driver maqazllte voled Ve<10 beet In ihe
"econO)IIY eadan" claa against oil com)l811·
tors-fomign and da'neotfc-for the oeConr:I
yearinarow.Noother
domestic= has evflr
won In that class.
So drive a Vega
JYJW, while The V ego
Drivels on.
---.~---...,, ...... ,.. .....
Building a better way to see the U.SA.
• DAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE.
Does It Help the Poor?
• 0
II ls easy to paint a plclure that would favor a sub-
.tanllal increase m the present '1.60 an hour, minimum
wage.
At the present level of '1.60 an hour, it can be
argued, a man working 50 40.hour weeks a year can
gross only ,3,200, well below the official "poverty line"
of '4,000 for an urban tamily"of four. II is hard lo argue
that a man can support his family at $1.60 an hour.
;io the Senate baa passed a bill lo increase lhe mini·
mum wage to ,2.20 a hour and the House has passed one
1etUng the minimum at ,2. A joint committee is now
working oul lhe differences between the two versions.
Whichev~r one is accepted -and lo an election year
one of them JS certain to become law -most American
citizens will suff,er. And that Includes the poor even
more than the aflluent. .
In the first place, increasing !be nation's minimum
wage by either 40 or 60 centa an hour -25 ·to 36 %
-makes a mockery of the administration's announced
poliey of holding the1 line ·of wage increases at five
percen1 to curb inflation: For not only those in the minJ.
·• mum wage bracketa . Immediately begin earning sub-
slantlally more than the five percent increase, but !be
pressure begins lmmediatefy to Increase wages of tbcise
In the nn:t lilgbest brJCkel, then the bracket after. that,
then all the O!her wage brackets for workln~ men and
women,, u each pay level seells' to maintain its relative
posiUop. __,.. • -·
There a· another basic fallacy In arguing that a big
boost in• the minimum wage is a boon to those at the
bottom of the economic ladder. What happens, very
limply, ls lhis:.Faced witbJncreasing costs, lhe employer
Is under 'prossure to eliminate mar'inal jobs by substitut·
Ing Jabor·aaving equipment, Teducll1g service to custom·
ers or, tn~some cases, he simply goes out of business.
When any of these occur, the first affected are those
whose work employers coo,tlder leait. valuable -parUc>
uwly inexperienced, young people.
'locreuiilg the minimum wage to u:so or ,1.85 now an~ to •2.00 or above ln a year or 18 months would
mike better senee In terms of keeping some lid on wage
1oJ1atjo11 pressures and in terms of preserving marginal
job$, while giving needed income boost to lowest paid
workers. It also ls well to bear lo mind that a great num·
ber of minimum wage earners are not supporting a lam·
lly or are not the sole wage earner In their famil.Y unit.
Raising the living standart!J of America's poor can
sound like a lofty and persuuive proposition -even In
an election year. But the cold facts say. increasing the
minlmum wage so greaUy will harm more people than
it would help.
Washington Name Game
II ls pleasant1o 11.ote, now and then, !bat life in the
nation's capital is not 811 serious, ideological, emotional
It sometimes can be amusing, too.
·Consider the exchange involving three highly placed
deparbpental execuuv .. , as reported by" the Wall Street
Journal, They are:· . · ·
George Shultz, newly appoinfed SJ!cret.,.Y of the
Treasury.
Charles Sehultze, former Budget Director.
Cbarls Walk~r. Undersecretary of the Treasury.
Said Shultz (George) of Schultze (Charles): He's a
very fine public servant '1except that be 'doesn't know
how to spell his last name."
Said Walker (Charis) of Schultze (Charles): "He
doesn't know how to apell his first name, either."
We've heard of alphabetical agencies, of course,
but this .•••
• ...
'My! What a surprise!'
Our -Negotiator: I t's Nixon 5 -1,,B e Says
i Who But Bobby?
Ballif >'llcber's tactics II Ille World
CIIell ClulmpkiUblp In lcillnd have -
h1m '!MlllidJI~ edmlntloa of -of AmertCIDI'-all of them, u 'It ao hap-
. pens, olllclals of the U.S. State ~·
ment.
11Now1 tbere111 chap who really Dows
bow to deal wllh the Russlana!" said
)'llWlg Under AlaJ.
atant Associate Sec--
retary Bagworth at
the Department's re-
gular Tueaday Hlgb
Level Policy Deter-
mloaUoo & Two
Martini Lunch ses.
siow:.
"I'll have to ad-
mit that · on several
ocaalOOI he had that Moris Spassky
cUmblng the wall," grudgingly conceded
portly Homer T. Pettibone, the
dlltlngulshed Deputy Under-Secretar/ for Neg6~. While llapers & Bar Chits. •1s~t ~'JP not1sun be can hold a candle to us.
( ART HOPPE J
Deoartment's annala." -•rob, 1 fully ooncur, sir," said
1-Baport)J. "But look at the fuss Fischer
pur up not only over the table, but the
chairs. He finally flew his own in from
New York." ·
Pettibone !rownl{l tboulhtfullY. "Yes:
you might draw ~ a Wblte---Paw on that, Bagworth. A lull study oil'the
necessary shape of the chain m1'bt be
helpful in our future dealings with the
Soviet bloc." ·
. "AND THEN when It Was au ~· hi! announced he wouldn't ... col1,ie
because· there waan't enoullh in ij for
him."' ~ •
"Tut, tut, Bagworth. That's been
Department policy ror years ...
"But he forced the British to sweeten
the pot, as it were, sir, and ... "
"I hope you're not suggesting we ev«r
tum to the British for help," said Pet·
tibone scowling. ••Have you forgotten the
War of 1812 already?"
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
What would the smokers do if the
non-smokers would leave obnoxious
crud and fumes and garbage on
1tbe smokers' desks -in garbage
tra1s· which,,,re coQ:lparable to ash
trays -!l'lildt woillil-be as ftlthy
and abhorrent to the smoker f' the smoker's filth (s to the non-·
smoker! • .... · ,
-0.D.
•
·court Plan
Npt~ceded,
She? Asserts
To the Editor:
AB 54, which W9uld establish a
Superior Court branch in Fullerton, is
superfluous and a waste of taxpayer's
money for the benefit of a chosen few, or
the ego of the Fullerton Chamber of
Jimmy the Greek Sets Odds
WASHINGTON -George McGovern
has only one chance in five of upsetting ( ) ~~ident Nixon in the November ele<-JACK ANDERSON
These are the carefull.r. researched ~ _
odds of Jimmy the Greek Snyder, the 7•1o-3 with youth, 6-to-3 with Democrats
famed Las Vegas oddsmaker, who and 6-to-3 with minorities. All totalled
prepares his pollti· Nixon has a 7().to-40 advantage.
, cal prognosticaUons
exclusively for us. ISSUES -Rating how the two can-
Off the cuff, he didates stand with the public on the
' rated the President issues, Jimmy believes the President has
a" +tc>-1 favorite on a 16-to-2 edge over McGovern on foreign
the eve of Mc-affairs; 10.t.o-2, business; Ho-1, military;
Govem's . nomi-'l·to-3, busing ; and 9-to-7, law and order.
nation. But now Jimmy rates both candidates even, 'l·to-7.
Jimmy baa com-' 00 their OCOl!OmiC_p~. M~vem p~ted a careful 1 Is giVen a t--\oil aavantage-<i'wel!art:
coo1parison of the two candidates, using lO-to-8, farm ' subsidies; t--~7; fedetal a~int system to rate them. spending; and 3-to-2, revenue ·sharing. Summed up, Ni.Ion comes out 72-to-53
e has assessed their advantages and ahead of McGovern.
disadvantages in three ' categories: Sup-
port, issues and image. Here are Jin1-
my's calculations:
SUPPORT -He gives Nixon an fl-to-3
advantage in financial support; 10-~l.
foreign support; 10-to-1, Republicans ;
10-to-2, Big Business; 7-to-3, Jewish
Americans; 6-to-4, independents ; 5-to-4 ,
labor; 5-to-4 women. McGovern is ahead
ThtAGE -Although President Nixon
bas had image troubles, Jimmy rates
him higher than McGovern in all
categories, as follows: 10-to-7, recogni·
tion; 9-to-G, politician; 'l-to-5 aedibility;
?-to-5, charisma; 7·to1, intelligence; and
9-to-8, religion. The total Nixon edge is
49-to-37.
By Jimmy's evaluation, Nixon is a &-tO:
1 (avorite to be re-elected.
CHOU REMEMBERS -Chinese
Premier Chou En-lai is still smarting
over the late John Fos.ter Dulles's refusal
to shake bands with him in 1954.
It happened in. Geneva, where the mn·
jor powers were carving Jhdochina into
spheres of influence. Chou walked toward
Dulles and held out his hand. Dulles
hesitated, then clasped' his hands behind
his back.
The Secretary or State muttered. "I
cannot," and stalked out of the room.
1be slight contributed to 20 years or
Chinese-American hoStility. Had better
relaliol]J been.achieved, the KOrean and
Vietnam. wars probably could liave been
avoided. · ~ The tiune!l: rebuff still buriis' inside old
Chou. He recalled the incident during his
recent vi.!lt with House leaders llale
Boggs (D-La.), and Gtrald Ford •R· Mich.), in Peking. .
sffiiling, Chou said that at least
Dulles's No. 2 man, Undersecretary
Bedell Smith, was a gentleman .. Smith
held a teapot in his right band so he had
an e.1cuse not to shake hands, recalled
CtJou. Still, Smith reached over with his
left band and grasped the Chinese
Premier's arm. ••LOOJC "-' hiJ record, sir,'' exclaimed
youpc. Jlaiworth. "First, he announces ho
can outmaneuver Spassky face-to-face
acrou . the table with one hand tied .behi!!!\J1il back. And when the cballenge
b aceepted, he managed to delay selec-
tion of a site !or the meeting !or a good
lix months." "You're forgetting, Bae worth,''
replied Pettibone proudly, "that we did het~lllan that when .It eame to picking
I spot for the SALT talks ...
"NO, sm, but you can't overlooJc: his
acmmplisbments. First, he so insults
Spassky by his delays lhat Spassky
threatens to withdraw. Then he finally
shows up, bolds one public session and
withdraws himself. Next he doeSn't show
up at all. Then he demands a private
session in another room and forces
Spassky to withdraw on the 4lst move.
Alter that ...
=r::~:o:~:ua~~r::r~ But Height May Play Role
( MAILBOX )
"I didn't mean to tarnish the
neParimeht's image," said Bag1vorth
apologetlcally. "!lut you must agree that
when_ it came down to stalling on con-
dition, for t~ meeting, Fischer showed true geolus -the lighting, the table, the .. ... "ROLD ON there, Bagworth.'' said
PetUbOne, stillly. "Perhaps you're too
young to' remember the negotiations we
held .... the shape or the table at the
Paris Peace Talks. It was one of the
greatest triumphs in negotialing in the
"Please, Bagworth. When you've been
with the Department as long :ts J have,
you'll realize this is all old h~t."
"Perhaps so sir. But I can't· help feel·
tng we could use a man like that at the
Paris Peace Talks." "Really, Bagworth. Your ignorance is
appalling.''
"Beg pardon, sir?"
"Where," said Pettibone, downing his
second martini, "do you think Fisher has
been training these past three years?"
'Prote ctive React io n'
.. Every stick," goes an old German
saying, "bas two ends to it."
I thought of this cauUonary maxirn
when J received a letter from an fn..
structor at Mundelein College in Chicago,
apropos of my recent column about the
teaching of Latin in the schools, and its
usefulness for an en-
larged English vo-
cabulary.
Wblle it is perfect-
ly true, as she
agrees , that a know·
ledge of Latin gives
more color, pre-
cision and !IUibillty
to English apeeeh,
the other end of the
atick (wblch I neglected to mention) ts
that the promiscuous use of Latinlied
words may e11ily be used to obscure or
hetray the p...,._ o! truth.
MY COllRllPONDENT renlnda me
tbal Georp OnNll, in his esuy on
polltlca and the J!>i1111b languagt, warns
us to beware of die la!laled style of
aoclal lcleotiata and polllidanl, In which
"a -of Lillo W'ords falll upoo the
facts Wle aoft -· l1larrinl Ille outllou and "'+trlac up tho cletalla."
ta -of 1111 most mmorahle C""• wrtttoo -II yeora ago, ~' H'W whit bu btcom& a
I I !le -of llDJlllP llJl011( all tllld._ alnoo then. lie wrote:
"llf -mm, polilbl _.. and
~YDNEY J. HARRI~
writing are largely the de!enae,,of tbe In-
defensible. Thin~ like tbO contlmance of
British rule In liidla, the Russia purgea
and depori.tlons, the dropping of ,L\1!1
atom bomb on Japan, can indeW M
defended, but only by 1rg11DM11ls whlcb
are too brutal for moat people l<l ffP'1 and which do not square with the pro-
fessed aims of poUUcal parties ...
•1DEFENSELESS villages are bombed
from the ajr, the inhabitants driven out
Into the countryside, the cattle machine-
gunned, the huts set on fire with in-
cendiary bullets: this Is called paci!lca·
tion. Millions of peasant.s are robbed of
their fanns arid sent tnidgiog along
roads with no more than they can carry:
this is called transfer of population or
recUllcatlon of !ronUers. People are im·
prisoned !or years without trial, or allot
in the back : this ls called elimination of
unreliable eleml"nta , •. 11
SINCE THEN, OUR own State and
o.re.,. l>epartmenla have come up with
aome Latlnlzed lulus thal would have
mcked even the caa&llanlened Mr.
Orwell -like Secretary Lainl'• "pro!»
tlve rtacUons,11 which 1impJt meana
bombing the hen out of them just In cue
tlte7 get tho Idea first.
Relations Division which a f I e c t s
thousands and wastes millions each year
with its many costly ramifications. Con·
c::iliation or family courts are lacking in
Orange County although we rank second
in domestic filings. MaJe and f e m a I e
groups have formed to voice their'-
dissatisfaction with our present system
and unheard.. are the thousands or
children who end up hetng the real vie·
titns.
To see the potential establishment of
an additional , wmecessary branch court
for the benefit of a few is an appalling
waste when so many more people could
benefit by better use or these tax dollars.
We hope that the already overburdened
taxpayers will oppose this branch court
apd seek reform in more beneficial
~e~ . ROSE MAZIARKA
, '0.t ·ot H•nll'
To 'ilte Editor :
, "ftnonally, the Libbers Are Gttting
Olli o! Hand" says the headline to
JOlll1De Reynolda' July 18 c o I u m n
Well, personally, I think Reynolds eot out
of band.
I found her stupid little (humorous?)
analogies such as ii It'• chairperson in·
stead of 'cbalnnan, then why not Walt
Wbltperson Instead of Walt Whitman
very annoying. I mean really! Does !hat
make any sense?
The whole cockeyed column-was an in.
suit to my intelligence. Anyone who uses
such comparisons to the use of the term
0 cbalrpenon" like using Batpenon iJtoo
stead or Batman or first ~raon In-
stead of flrst baseman to back up her
opinion makea no points with me.
Personally, 1 aee nothing wronc with
the term "chairperson." I must agree
witb Reynolds, however. on one or her
"points"-ft..-be ridiculous Iii order
to e.p aex out or it to caJJ It "The
lceperaon Cometh"! -MJ. Reynolds,
)'Oll're the ... who b going a hit too far.
At tile ead, sl1e ulred II ft meant that
now she was a newwpenan. 'l1lere would
be doubt In my mind too. KAY COOPERMAN
'\
II you play tt by the book, our next
President is going to be George
McGovern. That is, if he runs against
Mr. Nixon. For it is a widely accepted
political inaxim that the taller of two
candidates nearly always walks away
with the m~les.
The tall guy has always had the odds
going !or him. Vide
Aristotle, who knew
1 thing or two:
"Personal, beauty
requirea that one
ahould be tall; little
people may have
cbann and elegance,
but beauty -no."
The great stars of ruma. like John
Wayne, run to height. The heroes of
sports are mostly big chaps. eacepting
maybe baseball. In truth, tall men are
much better lit 11lOllt games than
shorties. This was recenUy found in a
study of the heights of playen and win·
ners at the Mexico City Olympics.
IN SWIMMING, for insUnce1 none of
the small people wm a medal, and 61 per·
cent of the Pofntl were takm by tall
swimmers. In jumping and throwing
events tho tall groupa wm 92 pettent of
the points and between 'IV and Ill perceit
In, springs and l\tJnlllng. Contestanla
under fl Inches tall pined no inedala
whatever In theae events.
The report concluded tbal the only
sporla where the man of average • he\1111 seems to have a chance are uae• wtiere.
quality of perfonnaoce ls takm Into ac>
count, auch u dl•lng and gyimMtlcs.
I have found that being tall Lt rather a
mixed blesatng, You are orten tUen for a
cop. This can be a good Uilq or a rotllly
bad tltlng. People tend to gt! Otll o! your w~, which II a pretty clear bllatne· .Bui
)'OU .... COlllj>!..-..... ... eully
rememhered1 wblch ti IOI loo pod In a
........ of crune, and In mrtalD Giber ..,.
cupatlonl. Yau ara 1oaa ....,...... in
Southem Calllornla tho ..... any
other pllee "' the world.
SINCE THINGS are macle for people of
avera,. atae, It It -limes dll!lcult to
gel the right kind of clotbe.a. The
llllUlllptloa of the t:lothet .....,..turiDC
•
(CHARLES McCABE)
biz is that all men are around five-nine,
This can lead to minor inconveniences
for the big man.
Ml extreme eumple of trus is to be
found In some or the work or Frank
Uoyd Wright. Wright, who bad an ego of
lmmoderati: proportions, was five-nine.
~ buildiQgs were eJtrapoJations of
humell, everything scaled to five-nine . I
went through his . Taliesin West in
~na & few years back, and spent half
my tune hunched as if I were entering an
English cottage. I'm silt-One. Those four
ioches sure made a difference.
Why Birds Stay Cool
If you were a bird, a llllftlDer beat
wave would be no sweat. Nelther would
winter's chilling blasts. Blrdl have no
sweat glanda. They keep cool by special
air sacs and by opening their beab and
vibrating the slda of their tbrol1ta -u
a Swlas mountain cllmbet mtcbl cure
tooslllttis by )'OdeJlng. .
How does a man get to lteawn! A
co u nlry preacher
ooce uld tbm waa
a tle vote.,..tbe day
man ,..., born. The
!Md voted r ... him
and Satan voted
ap1nat him. It la
then up to tho man
bow Ila -the
tie: for Ila -with Ille l.«cl ... J
with Satan by tho kind. of Ille be teada.
A check doean't have to ba tl10 "'"'" venlional lh:e unless the law uy1 l1 iloe.I,
and In -~the law 1111'1 lpfd!lc.
Qiecb lulva been honored that _.. fn.
ICrlbed Cit blocks of marble, . ro6I
shingles, skll. bot~e labelt or wbl~
ed Cit the aide of a -· Obi 111111, angered bf I Callfornla judp'a orcier to
pay l1,$Gt in a dharoe atdt, rip[lld .a 1111
lldrt Ud -m It a dlad< for tl1o _, Ria 1D11e had UUlo lrlllllt -
Ming !t to caah. lloral: Wbormr 10tl
canarp,...-....,watdl.i.
BlG ADVANTAGE: i'lang wllh lllttoc
more tootblome amlJel, -1111111ba11
of tho alllptor fl1llllt -..... -ta! adYanltlp ...-lite 1mmm rac.. 'l'l101
can grow 11 1111111 u llD IOll of teeth In •
llfellmt. -ll1o D1IPl1 ..........
('"_H_AL __ Bo_YLE ___ )
only tix or seven· sets.
',Worth remembering: ''I .cin't aay I
was in the• top half or my college
graduating clw, but I Wlf in' the group
that made the top hall -·~ "
QUOTABLE NOTABL1tS: "The CaptClty to endure lhe crueltla of Jile
and overcome !ls mls!orltUles without
despair-this requires a herollm ~d glory, pride and vanit• .. -rt SalOmoa. ,.
r-. -co.ur
DAILY PILOT
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DAILY l'ILDT l
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•••• -·· •••
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================Omozi!]f b~f!IUG===================
,_*,,..--,,-*_, T'"~l'""·--Y * * I * ,_,*,...-_, * *
NOT ONLY by ! the EPICUREAN
EMBEL&ISH.MENts of TRADER VIC,•
and'the dazzling DC-10's WONDERFUL
WORLD OF WIDTH ... But now:
[7c• • • II @Jg II , ••>~ _J_
• •
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Every Tuesday
at 8=45 am. GAZE ;n
•we •• en JNCREDIBLY GIFTED and
abtolutely AMAZING ARTIST cleverly
captures the subtleties and nuances of
the FEATURES · OF THE HUMAN .
FACE ;n EXCI'IlING and ORIGINAL
Caricatures!
* * l *
at 8:45 am. TASTEFUL-
LY savor the DEVIL-MAY-CARE atmo-
•phere and SAUCY SOPHISTICATION
a t our garrishly HIGH CLASS and
WORLDLY
Wine Tastjng Party!
*
;::an -.~ .... •, ----+-...-,.~ ' . ·v--••
~~ut Til~Ftd(JJ~
1t s~4s ()Jm1~
THRILL to the DEMANDING DEX-
Gfiifiiiir
who•• DAZZLING DIOITRY will leave
you BREATHLESS ond TAKEN ABACltl
l\'\~\ 1:Bringthe whole famjly~~-take advm~ of
. + URl1l1ED'SmLOWMID·WEEKllMll.YFIRES! +
So you will not only be WINED, DINED, and.ENTERTAINED ... but you can SA VE MONEY! Bring the whole family and take advantage of United's new low family fores.
Contact your Travel Agent OR call United TODAY!
~ unparalleled pleasuta:f ~ ~a c.,.,,, .
. . ~ou~ · ~ · ==l=Jn=it=e=d=s=N=e=w~~==o===·=··=-.'."00.,~,.,
*·**~esplenaent m "New'1irkTues.,We~ .. ,andThurs .. ' '
arveloust Grandt ·!· ComeOne-Comel\11.
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IAllV l'llOT
L.M.Boy d
SnippyChampion I
Took 29 Seconds
How fast can a good barber with nothing but scissor•
aJ:ve a haircut? The "Police Gazette" once staged • con-
test to flnd ouL As to whether the halrctua were good or
bid thoM were judgment calls. But the winner mansged
kl ttnl>b the Job In 211 sconds, the world 's record ..
NOBODY ye,t has explained exactly why It's the Orient-
al couple who is least likely to have •.. , : , ,.., a'iiii !
I' 1, I I -
•·. j
twins.
'l',t;C:tlNICAU.l', you ought nol be
terme<i Obese unlll 1nore than 24 per•
cent of your total body weight is fat.
That is today's good news, bad news
report Both.
YOU KNEW that fellow Halley dis.-
covered a comet. But did you also
know he was first to devise the ac-
tuary tables upon which Ure insurance
companies base the cosls of their premiums?
QUERIES :_ Q ... On double dates, 1've noticed every·
tiri\e one of the girls decides to go to the powder room,
lh• Insists the other girl go with her . Why~
A. Researchers who have mad~ a lifetime study of
this matter conclude it's because women would rather
leave their gentlemai unattimded than the competition un-
aupervited.
l
l . '
Stanfo rd
·ro Stud y
Railroads
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Fede r al Rail_road
Administration ,.rd It bJ•
a"8tded a $200,000 contract to
Stanford Research Institute,
Palo Alto. for a 15-month
study of the economic. envir-
onmental and social con·
sequences of relo c ating
railroads.
Field investigations are to
be conducted at Springfield,
Ill., Greenwood. S.C .. \Vheel-
ing W. Va .. and ' two other
cities not yel selected .
Secretary of Transportation
John A. Volpe said Monday
the study Will looJ into the
type of rail facilities in
downtown areas is often
detrimental· to the community
and unnecessarily costly and
inefficient to the railroads,"
Volpe said.
The administratio.n also an·
nounced a $2.55-million pro-
gram to proyide a com-
prehensive n at ion a I in·
formation system on railroad
highway ~ad~ crossing_s.
-The 14.-month project will
seek to establish and maintain
I
Enlarged to show de111I.
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Q. "BOW long does a gila monster live?"
A. By age 20, it ought to be ready for retirement. say
the lizard longevity experts. Some Like It Cool a computerized data base and1-~;;;~;;;i;;;;;;;;m;;;;;i;;;;;•;;;;;,-to develop a system for iden·
tifying by number e.ach of the
nation's 232,000 crossings. A MACHINE-LAID egg, that's what the agricultural
tcientistl expect to devise shortly. Don't wish to comment
whi1J11Jcally about the possible passing of the hen, cluck
cluck. '"'•' '• nonsenae. What'• not nonsense Is these gen-
iuses now feel certain they can tum out not only an artifi-
cial en of quality, but a container for it superior to the
natural eggshell, loog recognized as the most perfect pack-•I• known. Truly re markable.
BLONDES -A color p1ychologlst of world rtn0wn
claima blondes should wear blue as much as pouible,
rarely red. Blue influences them to act cool andlcindly, ~
avers, but red somehow encourages them to be argument-
ative. Fascinating, If factual.
IT'S WIDELY known only one out of every 100 engi-
neer• la a woman. Less widely known is these few female
engineer! rea11y enjoy their work. Their professional drop-
out ·rate. b low. Lower than among doctors and lawyers,
for instance. And far lower than among teachers. Onee
the lady gets her engineering degree, the rerord shows,
the tends to stick with her specialty, through matrimony,
maternity, whatever.
Alldren mail I<> L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Ne JJJ.
port B1a<h, Coll/. 92660 .
Police Patches Tell
Stories to Collector
SAN GABRIEL f AP) -A
headleu horseman gallops
aCf'Oll the shoulder patches of
the police In Sleepy Hollow,
DI.
The Montana Highway
Patrol patch ·recalls the day.
when the vigilantes dealt
justice.
. ' He has emblems . ftoln luch ·
distant paints a1 Australia,
Africa, Denmark and India
and has written to Peking for
one, without results.
Most patches haYe some
local basis ~n fact or fancy.
Florida 's hig~way patrol
tarries an orange, Utah has a
beehive and Iowa sports an
car of CQrn.
Sometime sports fashions seem to r un the gamutirorn navel to novel to neat as
these pictures attest. These comely young ladies were photographed at a recent
championship golf match.
The cost of the project will
be shared equall y by the FRA
and the member railroads of
the Association of American
Railroads.
Conservation of Water Still Volpe also announced that
new repo'rting procedures on
railroad Io com o ti v e in·
spections may reduce railroad
printing and postage expenses
by $87 ,000 and FRA processing
costs by $59,000 annually. Priority in Summertim~ U.S. The railroads are required
to inspect their locomotives
ea ch month. and to certify
woman and child in the United their rail worthiness. The F'RA
States ; of that, only about one now has changed the reporting
in five gallons i1 used each requirement to semiannually.
day fDr all purposes, including while retaining t he re-
industry. . quirement for monthly in·
WASfllNGTON (UPI) -
With the hot weather here,
the government says
Americans c o u I d save
thousands, even n:tillions, of
gallons of water by being a lit·
tie more careful.
While water -clean and
polluted alike -is i n
reasonably good supply in
most parts of the nation, the
potential for shortages in pr.r
longed dry .spells still exists.
But even that possibility
could be lessened if people
would take time , to think
before using water 1 according
to the t,Xpert 1 '
THE \l.S. 'GEOLOGICAL
1urvey sa1~ it-takes: ....
-30 to 40 gallons' to fitl I
'~a th tub . '
-20 to 30 gallons to take 1
shower.
-10 gallons to wash dishes.
the home. the agency said, is
for drinking. cooking, washing
clothes and dishes, a n d
bathing.
THE SECOND PRINCIPAL
use is toilet flushing, and the
third is lawn and garden
sprinkling.
The spokesman estimated
that some households rould
cut back on water usage by as
much as 50 percent with a lit-
tle thought and planning.
There are about 7 . 5 0 l'I
gallons of water available
each day . lor ·each · man;
..
What the supply statistics do spections.
not reflect, the Geplogical -'----.,-,.---.,-,_-,---
Servey said, is thilt water is I not uniformly available in all Helps Solve 3 Biggest
parts of the country and the 1 FALSE TEETH
cost or nioving it from ""·et"1 Worries and Problem& to "dry" areas ·should a 1 ,
f Confider 1 denture ad~ive. f'.\S. shortage develop would be ar TEETH• Powder doee all or thia:
greater than any inconven-11 Helpi bold uppel"ll and \6wer1
l·ence householders might suf-lonier, firmer, ateadier. 2) Hold11 tbem more comrwtably. 3J Helps fer in the meantime by cutting youutmoren1turally. Why worry!
back u .. FASTEETH Denture Adhe-. llin Powder. Dintwu tliat 6t are 't..ntlai to baltb.~ your deo.tiK
Criticis111 Beli Fear ~ly. ' ..!,rl_ • llffr"I .. .. _ --"-~-> "·
~
In GOP -McGovern
CUSTER, S.D. (AP ) -federal campaign law became -3 gallons to flush a toilet. D t . 'd t'al effecti·ve. e·mocra Jc pres1en1 -20 to 30 ·gallons to run a nominee George McGovem South, Dakota senator said :
washing machine. said that the barrage of at--His campaign will com· Petaluma, the, "egg capital
of the world," has put all its
eggs 1n·one basket on ita police
emblem.
But, a spokesman for the tacks from top Nixon ad· bine anti·Nixon effort with
KODl 'K 'LASKA 1· survey said. it isn 't necessary ministration officials ma y positive proposals of his own.
n ' tt. ' po ice to r1·11 a tub ·all the way to take
SAN GABRIEL Police LI.
George Hart, who wears a
patch depicting the S a n
Gabri~ Mission, has Msembl·
ecf one o( the largest law en-
forcement patch collections in
the eoootry.
h be f th e mean "they're not quite as Asked if his primary thrust ave a ar ... o e sam a bath ·, nor to run the shower sure as they thought that Sen . l't'ill be to attack the Nixon \A na~~· patch for Calexiro, 8 full blast to get clean . Eagleton and J will be record he replied "absolutely.
border town, has American D I s H w As HE RS AND pushovers!' ... I assume that is what it is
and Mexican flags separated WASHING machines need not He said Monday that "it is all about."
by a barbed wire strand. be run without full loads, and regrettable'' that Nixon has -His statement about leav·
Placerville recalls the free-even toilet tank floats can be abandoned the practice of re-ing U.S. troops in Thailand If
wheeling past with the motto: adjusted to work as well with cent presidents and permitted the North Vietnamese failed to
"Old HangtOwn -ls.s.4." less water. the secretary of state to at· release U.S. prisoners once all
"California, I• believe, has Then there are leaks which tack him "on partisan Amer I can troops are l!::=~'="~~~""~L.J
the most colorful patches and go ignored or unnoticed ; men grounds ." \\'ithdrawn from Indochina is
probably the most creative who leave the water running Responding to GOP charges only "a gesture" that probably
designs," Hart said. while shaving instead of mak-that his is an elitist campaign, would have little effect.
"Canada, on the other hand, ing do with a little water in f\.fcGovern called the GOP ef--President Nixon has been
~ALLI DAY'S
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A
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. l.:. f
MEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING
17tll & IRYINI AYI. -WESTCLl~f PWA
NIWPORT llACH -PH. 645°0792
Ho11rt : JO • ._Mo11. &: Th un . 10·9
"Each patch has a story,.,
whether lt'• In the colori that compr~ ,it, ihe •design that is
embrilidettd on it or the motto
that iccornpanles it," says
Hart, 1 lt-year veteran of tht
/orce.
Tht Montana patch i s
embliuu,ed with the numbers
3, 3 afld 77. According to
legend, the numerals date
back \o the day w h e n
vigilantu, ,would tell outlaws
they ha,~ three hours, three
minutes:&nd 77 seconds to get
oot of toWn . Hat~ said.
reflects that country's more the basin; apartment dwellers fort to re-elect Nixon "a tight· "begging Hanoi" to settle the
conservative nature by having who squander water because ly drawn elitist closed cor· war. McGovern said earlier he
very few rolorful ones except they don 't pay the water bill poration" and criticized would go to Hanoi to beg for
on their West Coast." he said. directly, and the ubiquitous Republicans who, he said. release of the , prisoners if
California patches don't in-car washers and Jaw n refuse to reveal the source of necessary -a statement that
SHOULD CEMETERY LOTS BE
PURCHASED IN ADVANCE OF NEED?
BART HAS COLLECTED
patches , from ell 50 state
highway patrols. all 5 8
California c o u n t y sheriff'£
departn:ients and all but 20 or
the. 349 city police
departments in the slate.
r'-. STARS I Sydney Omarr U one of
' the world'• great a1trolo-
ierL Mil column is one or the DAlLY Pn.oT'S ireat
futur&
elude the. name o.f the state, sprinklers. $10 million in campaign funds has drawn con sider a b I e
but those 1n the Midwest do. Th t t se of water in collected before the new criticism.
"Like Dodge City, Kansasl __ _;.~e~g~r~ea~es~u~~~~~~~~i;.;i;i'i;iiiiiiii...i;i;;;,iiii;i;;;,;i;;;,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"il Police," he said, "as if the l.ti
people in Dodge need remin·
ding they Jive in Kansas."
fast, Thorough, Guaranteed
Real Estate
Sol• s and o r Srolcer Licl'nSL'
TRAINING
P'1on c for frC'<' folder a ANTHONT SCHOOLS
HARIOI CINTIR
2* H1rJ1tr C1nter
Coit• Mtt1, c.1111.rni.
,., 17141 t7t..JJ1l
1'1' s. lrllklll'"' "·· A1111 .. 1111, Cit. ,_..
~. f714) 776-1100
'
HAMS
.. . . So Good It wm
Haunt You 'Tll It's Gone"
e Ready to Sonro wltfl Honey '• Splct Gian e Ideal For -l~o Prtparotlott
'"' • lmponed ChHHI CllHI Winn e DollcotnsH with Sanclwlchn To Go
e AP Typos of Catorlot •
J700 I. CHtt Hltflwey, C...... .. M• -67.J•tott
I ... Wiit "' CtlWM •nt•11r1at
1222 s .• ,....... ........ 6lJ.l461
by EUGENE O. BERGERON
hwrol '"'Oftl hewo beo• oclyo11ced why tht ntr ... fo111ily sho11ld p11rchne' .,,......_,
propHty h1 odYottco of ftffd, S.1Mrlo11 of o burlol plot lhould M o family dech lo11 olMI
..... 11111 be moff colmly ..... there It ff• lo Ml 011l11t,,ledly. l 11rlol spoco should IN p11•
ctt-4 with tile c ... oitd fnitollty tlMtt II •)ercked lo 011y 1nofot p11rchaM. Tiie ,..1u COii
M ti•I'-110111IHI et' It Cff nll lllto ...., .. '""'Nth of 4-llora.
luyen llMiold t9ko ttlt: tfftlt to lffll o.t tM INtt hmir.W. S.Cerio1 ofMI prlco for tM kh1d
9f lotl Ntt sultH to tMlr r.4111INtM1ttt-It .... 1; H pwcHsef ft•• • NU•tll• c ..... ttfW
...-lstlo• wltll .... hlblkltff ffd•WIM'l't (...;, W1tn • P•n:,_. h '""°"" 11•tll 4Mtll
ecc•rs. tltere Is "" llttt. tllM to co1111t9re prk n •r •••••tefn.
If Y••....,. • .. ....,, .. ebe.t f11HNll Mt'Yko, ,..._ wrtte.., coll , Wllno,., lhtl•ltllt,
~ wUI H ••werff .. ttill c•I•••·
Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home
COSTA M!SA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA dol MAI
646°2424 673·9450
stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor _r .
_bdS~:--;Jyouve never heard it so good
•
I I • • I I ,1
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I
I
'~way Fro m It All·''
.
Winston's real, rich, satisfying taste makes any occasion
a little more pleasurable.
Because Winston always tastes good, like a cigarette should.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That
Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous tq Your ~ealth.
e 1tJI t. J, tl'flOLU fOt•Cte CO., ..... Wl•lfel·l•Lt•, l ,C. • '
KING, 20md."te(',1.4 mg. niCtJtint. BOX, 20mg."tar",1.3 mg. nicotine, par cigarette. FTC Report APR. '7 2. -. . '
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•
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"
GOP Pollsters Find
Busing Issue Minor
WASHINGTON (AP) -A,
poll taken by Republican plat-
rorm writers found that most
of those responding don't think
busing is a very important
Issue for the 1972 presidential
campaign.
The survey, one of two
released in a news conference
. Monday by Rep. John J.
Rhode1, (R-Ariz.) showed that
30 percent of the
p re d ominantly Republican
respondents found busing "not
• problem" and 28 percent
Hid it was "not very im-
portant."
Unlike the 0.-111, who
recently 90m~ thtlr con-
vention, tho (l()I' wUI l!Clt bold
regional pllllonn hurlnp
across thi COllllllT· Rhodes
said the RtpU_,,. think
they can pt 1 .., ~
section Of rank ud file
thought thl'Oltlh polio Ind
other Stll'W)'J.
The Mi1ml llocll bttrlngs,
he said, wlU "II" 1141tionll
organizatitnl llld "'7 od-
ministratian offtda11! 1 chance
to put th•lr vle!n Ware the
committe4."
Rhodes , chairman or the
GOP committee on Resolu-
tions, said the polls were con-1 ducted to give the platform-
wrlting body an Idea of gras.s-
roots sentiment on basic
Jssues.
The two polll releuld Mon-
day agre4Cf on erl~ or law
and order 11 U.. chit! concern
of those answttlftl. Other
prime isS\I" lloltd wm drug
abuse , the ecqnomy a n d
welfare refo'°'".
The crif1'• luue tGIDld both
polls as Utt l111Jat· i..ue ol
1972. In a 11'111·.,........ lrom Republica~ Jllrly !MU!~ llall,
75 percent rtlad erl8" as a
very imPorllnl i... It alao
ranked lirol In I .,..ate poll
mailed to newa-. labor
leaders, mlnlltm, mayors
and community ~.
The commJttee, Rhodes an-
nounced, will hold 3 ~ days of
hearings ln Miami Beach,
Fla., beginning Monday Aug.
14 and will begin drafting the
• platfonn on the afternoon of
Thursday Aug. 17.
Rhodes also announced
• · creation of s e v e n sub-
' committees covering areas
: · (rom human concerns areas
tional security and foreign
policy, which will meet con-
currently with the full com-
mittee in Miami Beach.
The prlncl]lll ,.mtcty to
crime bae-od b7 t h ~
respondentt wu Nfltm of the
court and ,..al onle""·
Tougher 1enttncte Ioli con-
victed crirnln1J1 Wll lltC'Ol'Mf.
. . Union Chief Files Suit
To Force Raises in Pay
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
.Joseph T. DeSllva, president
of the 25,000.member Retail
Clerks Union Local 770, says
Cranston Son
,. Facing Trial . . ::·oct. 24
who has been lift °"1 reaicnJuaoe,
~I appearance In
! ><:OUrt lht date wu aet bf
· • Superlqf Qlurt Judge Charles
: 'H. Oldtr. ·· Cr.. "-' pleaded Jn-•" =nt _,. count or Id-.;\ · · • hallucinogenic
:. drug to !.larie Williams,
~ 23, and II • 0\1"'11 ol lorclble "' assault J.9'1mm1ng from the
i alleged _,Ing.
: The lion baa alleged ~ that _ pve Mia
;"!Willia.. V1IJ in a glass ol
~ : grape , without h e r
• l<now lrth 22 or 23. ~i;;;---. .
' •
' ' • • . .
' " -•
•
" '
' • • • . • .
•
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he had filed auit to ..... M.I'
raises and I ..........., 111-
come for u"kNt mlllllll L
He said Utt 1!1111 .,.... that
a recent ledtral OQll!'I ftot!lon
invalidate! IOl'Pt Colt ol tJv-
ing Council wage -raise
guidelines.
DeSilva said Monday the
ne\v contract signed May 9
between his union and super
market employers should be
modified to refiect the new
l'Ulllll·
One af De8Uva11 demands is
11111 pl?Wlme_ workers be .-lllllod an IDllllll Income
equol It Uie "~oqUate io-
"""1e" as deftlllMI by the
Bureau of Labor statistics.
The BLS 11ys an aMual in-
come of 91,lllO ;, adequate for
tho head of a family bl four.
A at'.atement by .DeSilva said
the suit' wu flied Friday Jn
Loi Aagtles Superior Court.
I ''This ii not a question for
arbitration," Desilva said,
"but rather the enforcement
of the law of the land, which
prohibits the uplollation o1
any ol It. Cttlum, especially
the poor." 1\
The dociJlon cited by De
Silva irai handed down July 14
in Waahlngton D.C., by U.S.
District Court Judge William
B. Jones.
I See by Today'~
Want Ads
e ENTERT AlN IN STYLE
¥1'ith these 12 place 11et-
1Jri11 Of hand painted
uhlna. lt baa an oriental
motif. ThiJ lncl\ldet evel'1t
l~ ~ il'I btond ...,,
• FoR A rlllllNO $
1)1(7!'' lf1 a ilOoo llf tilll
31' 1918 il11ier .. ~·
It's lmmacuJate w J j It
brand new cnginea and
radk>, RDF. auto. pllol,
depthometer, etc. Com·
plete ti!hing equipment.
Ready to So!
f
•
SATURDAY,
JULY 29th
LAST BIG DAY!
S.~ VE' 12.951.Handy 30.in. Size Rollaway B•d
RrgulorS49.95 s3 7
• Sturdy sreel frame. Innerspring roarucss, :
-'blue srriped·covet. (:::t•ttrs. Folds for
compacr stor13e. 30-ift, •iae.
$.l9.9.) 39·in. Rollaway 8ed _ .$47
.~A VE 1.10. 9.S ! 199. 91'1 (;ol11ttlol Holl;n.-ood Bed Set
Comfortabl e 216-coil r.iil aiae in~r-$69
spring marcress and matchiN,fou"4•,ion; _
floral prjnc cover. Metal ~ ftUne on
caste.rs. M!Ple finish, Co1oJtjtl 1tlye he:.d·
board.
1119.90 Colo.nlal ityle ·ueU,,. .. od B•d
Set l'lth 297 .. oll lilaltr••! z _,. •• 19
"
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satE.!a m,"'1
Give y_our h11me 11 frl!ih l11ok
1tlth be&lldflll lierlti1·l're1t•
Draperlli1,., _''Lyrlti11 oil S1lel -.
.. ···791
"L1iic" M:·ed flO i1'nipa . whe,. madiine
,, .. bed and tumbl, dried. Tbtrmatprd•
actrllc fitin btck l"•~ltfinA. l)~~~r-
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Sl9.?9 ':':!x5+.ln. lon.-__ l 5.97 Pr.
!:!5.99 96xi4-ln . lon 20.97 Pr .
$11.99, 48x84-ln. Ion 8.97 Pr.
$:?} .99, ":'2x84-I n. Ion l 7. 97 Pr.
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$:15.99, l:!Ox.84-ln. long 29.97 Pr.
S42.99, 144x84-ln. lon1 34.97 Pr.
Drt1.ptry Dtparl#Unt
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SAVE "15% on 3 "S11per Ready Stick•" SA VE '1 ! Decoraior Pictures, Plaques
Rt.gu'lar 39c t·•e h
l:?x 1 :?·in. tile
ro::=-1 ALHAMIRA CERRITOS
R,.~u l11r ., J.9ft anrl ~.9?
Lhuming n11ni .. 1ure-framed pictUre-'
•nd natural .,.ood or Florcnti nc -.·ood
trlJflc .,,,.11 plaques to round out 7our
... 11s artis1 ically.Jte-a d:y·to-h;;1n3!
U•jJ nJ C hi111 Dtpt.
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INGLEY{OOD OLYMPIC & SOTO PICO
POMONA
s4}:'EJ5o/o to 33o/o!
W•rrtt Auton1atic Blankets 991
• · .. · Yllm·up with au1om1nic blankets of po!ye ~t cr and
~ -.iaqd. 1 L temperature setun,1ts co choose from.
~hte!WtJhable. Non-allergenic. Lovely color5.
SlThU'11611iugle contro 12.67
*Bhtili19,dual contro 14.67
I Outeta1i1e. dual contro I 9 .~ 7 t l:iN.1i1e, dual cnntro _$21J
All-Polye•tcr T h crmowea• e Blank•!•
Rt"i;:ular$7.9CJ
'l\~--i n 1>izr
Sofc polyester b!.tnkers in color~
that Stay bri,1tht, C\'Cn arter man \'
397
ma ch 1 nc-9.•ashi ng5. ·
S9.99 }·ullaiz 4 .. 97 $14.99 King •iz,._7.47
$12.99 Queen size.._.6.47
Do1'11JlitJ D tpiJr/ffUff/
Handy Pattern Cuninir Board
297
Ht:lp~ a\·oid slir-ups in paucrn lUtllnJ!.
' J\oiird "IVirh 1·1 0. marlnn,i;::s. Optn~ ti')
40x70·in. folds flat to 20x40.in, Ji~.c.
/\.11li1,,J D1pt.
--,,.ice• Effective 1.hrou1h s .u1rdar. Ju Jr 29
SANTA MONICA TORRANCE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA VALLEY ~ a'UENA PARK COMPTON
ilA•S,•OllUCll:ANDCO. CANOGA PARK COVINA
EL MONTE
GLENDALE
HOLLYWOOD
LONG BEACH ORANGE
NORTHRIDGE PASADENA SANTA fl SPllNGS THOUSAND OAKS . VERMONT
Sati1foctten
Gworonttt4
Or Yewr
Money kck
STORE HOURS .. SHOP SUNDl\YS 12 NOON to .S P.M .... MONDAY thru Sl'.TURDl\Y 9 .JO 11 .M. to 9 .JO P.M.-FRH PllRKING
I\ •
Most items al
redueed prices
•
f
SAVE $Jl!
Kenmore Washer
with 2-Cycles,
2-Temperatures
Regular $179.95
$
Select normal cycle for regular
fabrics or short 4-minute 'ycle for
delicate fabrics. Straight-vane agita-
tor helps ·remove stubborn di,rt, 2
pre-set wash temperatures. Model
12l0l
SAVE $51! COLOR TV with
18-In. DiagQnal Measure Picture .. , ,
,kcguL.r $319.95
~268 .
•
It's a brand oew .telcyisi,on
season. FJ;"Om Monday night
football to Saturday nighc
at the movies, it's all in
color; Shouldn'c 1your TV
be, too? Check Sears color
TV out today. It's priced to
get you into great color
viewiag all year long. This
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tic chroma control and
built-in VHF/UHF anren-
nas. #41101
SA.VE '10! Kenmore
30-Inch Gas Raµge
Regular
$179.95
. . $169
..
•
Porcclain·flnish, non-d rip, lift·up cook-iop. Removable
ch.tome-plated oven racks and guides.· Lo-temp oven
control keeps f.ood a.t serviog temperatl!.re. ~fodel 71121
M11jQr App/;11nct Dtpt. ,
37 Key Reed Organ in
Handsome Wa1nut Styling
Sears
Price! 79ss
Si ogle, keyboard numbered to correspond with owner ~
manual and music b6oks. 18-pre-set chord buttons
clearly marked. 37 full-size organ keys.
TVQ1p1.
This Modern .NJ•
Chuck Wagon . , , ..
stless
15.~ Cu. Ft. Coldspot
Refrigerator-Freezer
S.4VE '20!
Regular
'329.95
"
30988
10.92-cu. ft. fresh food section has 4 half-width ad just·
·able shelve~. Plastic crjsper cover can serve as full-
·width shelf. Two 21.9 qt. half-w idth pori:elain finish
crispers. 4.28-cu. fr~ freezer section holds 150·lbs. of
food. Flush door hinging. #62)21
A•kAbo11t
Sear.• Convenient
·credit Plans
I
Kenmore Shampoo-
Floor Polisher
Scrubs
tloon
Select the features, selecr.rhe
model· at .the price you wa~t to
pay from Sears t orilplete as.
sortment of vacuum cleaners.
-See them at Sears today.
Revolving0bnish ~
•weeping 1cliou 'el
~
1111,ndle 1djuat11
to 3 h1ndy
J>6Jitions
M!MiMM.11 J1a.t)tl INCl"WOOO t11Altl~ U.N If.NA HOO lth1111
tAIOA ... NA l •f·lJ71 SI.,. HMWt Shi-w-0. N.i"'9t1y fe ..,""'' oncl Cetol., Ordtt Ster et M"" PAM' 11• ... •00. )tl"41t0 ICMO 11...cM •tS•Oltt
UNO-.. Hitll 1..-...1 "'°""°'"' '"°"'IJJ 011110$ ... ,011 I NOfWil&ll 1 .... 1111
(OMPIC>ft tlW1tl Ol't.wrlC 1.1010 1 ... 1~11 ~ .... Ml I OtANtt tW·ll ..
...... ,. .... ,,,, PAM9fftA.lll .. lll
........ Hl·IMl,t4'4Ml l PICOIJl ... fll:
1119U'lr0Cle 4.14 "1 .. 1!11.fO_,.. ttMIOf
Se;.1rs $ANI ... lf1f't!NGI t••·•lll )AIOA MONICA Jtt••Pl 1
•OlitM COAlr P\.AIA Jtl•Slll
lMOl.ISAHO 06111 •tt-4SM, Jl!.\t)I
lO•IANCl t<lt•IJll VA~'f7tJ·f•t!,tM•1tlO
••oNr 1st.1i11 =~~~~
\
-KIUO 'l .. 1111 _,,,.. lot ni. OOllM IO _..,,
IAUll 'fltlll 1>7·-1•-...... C•n "1·-~~~:!~1::-"-.. ~ ,,.....,.. •1111• *""'
Tllddat, Jvly 25, 1972 O~LV PILOT J J
LEGAL NOTICE Astronaut Set
• SUPlltlOlt COUllT OP CAl.IJIOllHl4
COUNTY 0" HANOI M CIYIC Ctn!., O,,fll Weit, .......... c .......
To Be 'teache1·
CASI MUM••• 0441" KENT Ohio (UPI) I UMMONS CMAltllll.01) , -
In re !!'! merrlMe of 11'.tltlontr: l ~lul ••••• MI'-'·U, who MARLE.NI! MVRTLt WIEAll: 1nd RHllO!lo AS~\IU wue-M;1111:
detlt: MELVIN LlE WEA• conducted • e v. r a,, tx•
w1i:'..,Rtne . l\tJllOllCMf!ti MELVIN 1.11 perlminta 1 n extrasensory
Tllo> "tltJontr 11111 1111e1 • 11ttlt1on cori-pe-~._ durin" .1.. ... trip of cernlt111 't'(jijr m1rr!otM, You ff'llY II .. 1 1 "'"'r-' 9 l.tll!ll
wrl1'1911 fOUOllM Wljhln tlllrtv dlYt ol' ,,.. Apollo 14 to the moon. will
d•t• t1111 thh -•• .-vtct on you. t e a c h a c o u.r s e i n If YOU fill to fli. O wrltttfl fltPCN'IM
wr1P1111 tud'I 11Me, vour o.111.1tt M•Y bl w,rapsychology at Kent State
onltACI 1nd lilt ~rt mor tn11r • IUCI• I It tl\4\nl C011f1lnl1W lnlunctlvo ot oftl,tr 0tW1 n VetS Y •
CON: ... n1t10 111v1t1on .. Pl'GH"IY'i te>OUHI Kent State President Dr, •110fl'0'1. e111111 c111tolfY, c111t1,1 'Yfl'P0'1• at-Robert O\'• conf'-ed that tomo't'I ftft, COSll, Mid M.idl ott\tf Allef l.l:I ,.,.,
.. "''" be 1r1nt.c1 1w ""' c-t. • "itcbell would n..m. the KSU u .,.., whll .. '""' .. llCMct " ... ... r"a'cu1ty. ,, .• '9rMV 111 •1' _,..,., , ........... ..
~t1v .. ""' ,_ -1n.i ,.,...., "'I-~-,.;. _________ _
a11r • .,.., .,. """' " ttmo. CE 011«1 Jan. 19, 1912 LEGAL NO'l'1
WILL.I.AM IE. St JOHN,
Cltrk ,ICTITIOUS SUSIHISS
By Conni• L. Sell MAME STATEMINT
OePUW TM folloWl1'19 pe.rlON 010 clo1119
(SEAL} butlMU I ll JAMES T. CA,ltll!:TZ J a. J STOCK FORMS, 7701 L.thltll
A1"9rt Tew1r Ntr.111 PIKt. w111mlntlt<1 C1llfotr1lt.
Svltt 4JS 11.k h••d e , Wr11t. 7101 t.thltll P'leco.
1Wt MtcArtl111r llvd. W11tm1,_1_,, C1UI. l"lne, CtUtornl1 tn11 H1ltn Wr1!1, 77tl1 l.ttl}!lll Pit«,
TM~ (114) SJJ..Jtll Wnlmlnsttr, C1ll l.
AtlOf'IWY for ,ttlllolltf" . . Thi I but1°"1 II belrftl condVClecl .... I
Published Oran119 Co.911 Daily Piiot. Parrn«1lllp.
July 11, 2S Ind Avgusl I, I, 19n 1886-12 Heltn Wr&ll IUctoord e . Wflt•
Thlt sttlf!'Mnl flied with 1111 C01Jntv Cl1rk of Ol'lr!Qe County on J11ne 30, 1912 bv
1--------------161tVtrlY J MaddoK, Dtputv Countv Cltrk.
FICTITIOUS IOSINl!SS • Flt712
LEGAL NOTICE
NAME STATl!MENT Puhllsti.d Ora• COISI Dilly Piiot,
Thi tollow•n11 petlO<'I Is doln11 t1usl11ts1 July 4. 11. lt. lS, ltn 1149-n
•s: SHADOW BOATS. 2991 Orte• Lene, LEGAL NOTICE
Bldg, 5 & 6, Cosit Mtll . l-------------Bruce Oonol'oue Car11ey, ~ l 9 M•rguerlt~. C0<ona d'I Mir. 5TATIMl!NT OP' ABANOONMINT O"
This bosin11s 11 be'.lnri (.Q<lducted tlV •n U5f OLll l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAM I!
lndlvldlJeL -Th• lollowln11 11<ir1on has •Wl~tfle
Bruce 0 . Carney u" ol t~ ll~~!lous tiuslness n1111'141 J Af<(O This s111ement filed with the County J STOCK FORM~. 3112 Trinity, Cos.••
Ck!rlt or Oran11e Counl v °": June JO, 197J, Mesi , C1Uf.
Bv f11ver 1v J . Madd~ Oepuf\I County Th• fictitious out\ness name referrtd te
Clerk. atxiv• wa1 Hied Jn Orange County on Ju~ f lt7M 19 1911
Punllshed Ora"99 Coast Deily Piiot, ' E~n A. wra1e. 31 12 Trinity, Coil•
July -'· 11. 18, 25 , lf7'l 11Jl.12 Mew, Ctlllornl1.
Tl'lll IJuSlMSI WIS con<hK led t)y on 11'-LEG,\L NOTICE d;v1du11. EDWIN A. WRATE 1"·10UO
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Pul>lhh4>d Ort nge CO*$! Diiiy P1!01,
NAME STATEME NT July 4, 11, 11, )5, 197l 17S0·72
The lollowlnll ~•Wn Is doln11 bu1IMS1•1 --------------
a1: LEGAL NOTICE MCS MA RKETING CO., 11U Cerdlnel
Drive, Colle M•s• 92626 l-------------Oeor11e W. Moe, 271 4 Ctrdlnet Orlvf,
Costa Mesa 91626 l'ICTITIOU5 BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT Thl1 buslnes, !s be!nllil cond11ct1<1 by 1 SOie Preprlelormlp.
GEORGE W. MOE
Tiii followln11 person Ji dOllll bu1l~1s
11:
Thl1 statemrnt 111!'11 with me County
Clerk !>I Or•nte County oo: Jvlv 11. 1972. Bv Bevt rlv J, M•dCIOlf, OePU!'I' Counlv
HARBOR E XCHANOE, J 4 0 71
Gr1rwid1, D11na Point, C11lt. 91629
Clerk.
Llncl• M•rfe Lee, 3"«)72 Gr•n•d•.
D•n• Point, Calif. 9l6l9
LS1M72
Pvblhh~ Orang• COflU Dally Pllol ,
Th!• btlllness 11 belnt conducted bv 1n
lndlvldUll. Lind~ M, lu July 19, 26 11n<1 Au<.1u1t 2, t , 1912 1116'72
LEGAL NOTICE
Thl1 f11tement tiif!<f wllh ll'le Countv
Clt rtt ol Or•no• CONntv on: J111v u . 1972,
By Beverly M. Mlddo11, 0t1111tv county
Clerk, ......
FICTITIOUS aUSIN•ss Publll!Md Ortnoe Coast D•ltv Piiot,
NAME STATEMENT July 11. " and Augull l, •• ltn 1115-12
The lollowlnllil persons era doln11
tlusl2~5LL~~:s & AIKMAN tNDUSTAIES, LEGAL NOTICE
INC., )olOO Hazard Av1nu1. wes1mins11r,l---------------
Cdllforn•a. flCTITIOUS auslNESS
Collins & Aikman CorparetlOfl, 1 NAME STATEM!NT
Delewar• CO<'porallon, 210 Midi.on TM following P<i•ton ls doing tiu.in.111
Avenve, New York, New York. 11:
Tl'lls l)Vslne11 Is conducted bV t tor· MUSTANG EMPLO'YME~T AOENC'f, P<lratlon. 1W Newwt Blvd., Cott• Mu..
COLLINS & AIKMAN JUl11 Vlr11lnl1 eushlk, 19170 Rtncff
CORPORATION LIM, ,Huntington BHch.
SlgnM by c. E. Oor11n Rtmona J ean Armstrong. 11150 Sen
Tre15urer Mttot, 0 -11, Fountain V1ll1y.
This stetemeM w11 !lied wn11 '"' Coun. 'rhl• bu!lne11 Is 1>1ln11 conducted by •
tv Clerk of Oran11e cou~tv on June )0, G-r•I P1rlr111rshlp, 1912. Rlmona J11n Armttroog
44l·OC Tl'll1 1tatemen1 lllf'd wlll'I tM Coun1y
LSllnJ Clerk of Oran111 County on: July It, 1Jn.
Put.ill1hed Orange Coa1t Dilly Piiot, ly ltvtrlV J. Mtadoll, OtpUIY C011nr1
July 4, 11, 11, ts, 1972 17<11·72 Citric.
" lt02t Publllhl<I Orange Co1st 011nv P1to1,
Jl.lfy lt, u 11no Au111.111 L 1. 1912 1"1.n LEGAL NOTICE
"IC'tlTIOUS 8USINl!5S NAME STATEMENT LEGAL NOTICE
The tollowln11 Ptrson1 1rt doing 1---=~°"°"'-c------bu1lness a1: PICTITIOUI IUSINl!SS
GOLDEN KEV MANAGEMENT CO,, NAMI ITATIMINT
16-U B•ker St,, Cost1 Miu, C1IU. The tollowlftl ~ ·~ 001111 eon.Id F, 811TlQ, 1"'2 •'\'o'r $l., butlne•• .•1:
C111t1 Muo~C.Ht. -"j" B9WMA~ll A~(lTMIN'T$, 3331
Donald F. N.uf\1111, 1Nl2>0111'111 LOl'll, WMI COlll ':'lllhwov. !UIN.2GCI. Nlwporf
Huntl"lllon Bffdl, Ctllf, i IHtl'I, C1lt!Otnl1 fliWO
This buslr.eH 11 beln11 conductld lw • TM GrHnwlch Group lncorpor1tld,,
Ptrtnershlp. DtlaWore, D3! WHt COlll Hlthw1y,
OunelCI F, Ntwhau1 Slllfe. 300, Ntwpcrrl lltd'I, C•lf!or"!e Thl1 Sll!t!menl tiled with the County n..o
Cl«k of Or11>11e Countv on; Julv 1(, 1972. Allon• I. Crowotr, Jr .• 11GS Summit
BY Beverly J. M1ddox, Deoulv County Orl\'1, L•ttun1 htel'I, C1llfornll1.
Cltrk. " Tti/1 bu1lntu Ja btl119 conducltd bv • LSl"U Umlfr9d Plrlntrllhlp, l P1,1blllhtd Oran11e CO*ll Dilly Pilot, TM Gr11nwlch Group J!Jly II, ~ 11111 Augu11 I, I, 1972 1169-7' lncwpgr1ted,
LEGAL NOTICE
Gener1I Partner, Jon Brublker
By : Jon Brutl1k1r
Senior Viet Prel!O.nt·S1Crltl1ry
I 21116 This 1tat1m1nt !Utd wUh tht County
NOTICI TO CREDITORS Cltrtt of Or1ng.e County on: Jt.11'1' 4, 1971.
SUPl!ltlOlt COURT OLll THI! BY Arthur E. Kr""' 011>u1Y County
STATE Of CALIFORNIA FOR Cltrk.
THI! COUNTY OLll ORANGE l'llU' No, A·no4S Publltl'ltcl Or•nge Coast Dilly Piiot,
E•t•I• of c. H. CARA • k . July 11, 11, 25 Ind August 1, lt12 1779-71
CLAYBORNE H. CARR, Dec•a1td.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 tlll LEGAL NOTICE
credltor1 of ttlt abovt "''"td dludenl'.l----:::===,.-,------11\tl •II ptr10111 hlVlng' clolml 191ln1t ltM 'l"ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS
111ld cltcedlnt .,.. rtqulrtd to 111• them. NAME STATl!MENT
with !ht necn1•rv ¥0Udllr1, I" lhl ofllco 1'1'11 followlnt per'son1 ere doln•
of Ill• citric ol ltlt I~ trrtllltd court, or bllslnets 1s:
to Prt1tnt them, wlth ltlt nectnory MEDICAL LEASIN G COM PANY 500
v_,cl'ltra. to lht undtr1l1ntd •I tlll olflct Mtwl>Ol'"I Center Or., Ste, '20, N..,;.,,ort
of her 1ttor1111v1. SNYDER, O'NEIL, BHch, Calif. t2'60.
HANCOCK a. ASHWORTH, 111.t F1lr Olk1 tl•IPh E. Gr1hom, Ull .E1st Chliao
Av.nut. SOU!h P•udena, C•ll!Otnl• 9101i0. min, Orlrlff, C•HfGnll•
which I• "" PIOC. of bullMM of IN JM I!, Lone. 253.S M SOI.Ith Mlltti unoer1l11ntd In 111 m•tttni ptr11ffllne to Street, 5-nt• Ano, c11lfoml1.
ttll "'''' ot Hid dKflllnf, wftllln four Thomn 1 . Joflnttoft. a N""'*" 1T1011th1 1tttr tilt flrtt publlc.llon of tlll• CMor Or., Stl, '211, Ml'#JIOtt IMd'lt
not1c1. Collfofnl1.
Dtlld JUIY 7, 1m. '•en L. H1rp1r, 1':11 E11t Ctllpmtn, LILLIAN CARR Ortl!Slf, Collfornl•, Admlnlllr1lrl1t of tilt E1t111 Thl1 l)V1ln1ts 11 btln1 conducted by 1
of ll'lt tbovt nttntd •dtc:tciltlt G.rierll P•rtllff'lhiP.
SNYOl!R. O'Nl!n •• HANCOCK.. Thom11 e . Jonn1ton
ASHWORTH Tllt1 sl•lll"l'ltnt flted wlfll fl!O County
11l4 ''" OIU A'llflWI Cltrtt of Ortn11t County on: Junt lCI, 1972. south P1ttc1en•, CoMfoml• tlNI Iv Btvtrtv J, Maddox D111utv c.,nty
T•l1 11111 1tt-71M Cllrk,
AttorMYt fW Afmlllbtr11rtx F 11m
Publ!llhed Ortngt Coalt D•llY, Pilot. Publl•htd Or1111• ca..i Diiiy Piiot,
July 11 , 11, ts •nd Auvuit 1, lfn 1112-n July ~. 11, 11, 2,, 1tn 1tu.n
Personalized • ~tylish • Effldent
Ordor For Yoursolf or • FrlorMt
May be used on envelopes as return •ddre11
l•b•ls. Also vary handy as identific•tion
J.bels for merklrtg per1onal items 1uch ••
boo~s, records, photos, ate. Labels stick on
,lass and m•Y be used for m1rkln9 home
canned focd items. All labels tre printed
with stylish Vogue type on fine quality white·
9ummad paper.
I
'
. "';
" ·' )
•
( . • • . • • . : • • • • ' • . . • (
I
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•
JI IMILY PILOT
OVER THE COUNTER
FINANCE
r
..
t
I
r
COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST '
•
•
b
•
11 an
for
Co.
ber
·. )
Jul:r lt10! ' • DAILY 'llOT
'
1 '
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I
'
DAILY PILOT
DICK TIACY
TUMBLEWEEDS '
MUTI AN~ JEFF •
,_ '
NANCY
'DO YOU
KNOW
ANYil-111'16 ABOUT RELIGION?
._ ... __ -.-··-
WELL., WE GOT
-A LITTLE TASTE
OFIT LAST
'TIME MfSSIONARY WNO +leRE!
DON'I PEEL. YOUR APPLE
YOUNG L.ADY·-I Al.WAYS'
EAT THE SKIN OF THE
FRUIT
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• i:; .... POW" I
ACIWSS
l Present:
47 Sprlnlr:ltcl
llbtrllty -S Ol}'1'1pic
50 ~Httllltlvt: ':) 'J,"'J J'l:J'1 ) 1f1J'[ I
.1.J.J.J :.J:J.J!J:.J 'JULI~
:J.J_J'.J J _J:J J '...J '.!'J:..Jl j•~
,:.11.1.J:.J;J;J.J.;J .JLJ.:J.JUU ...,..,,,.,
10 MUii oath
lt Scotch bay
ll MtthlrlaMh
AnUll.s
lsllnd l• "-btn • Adlell'' ti Kind of r111:Uo-
...... cy
generator
l'l Midday
20 "--and lltt
Pti*llum"
21 Col.llltltJ
· 23 Urtt an
26 EJl.ist
'27 OUr plmtl: l .....
)Q God of fife
J4 Ship section
35 Sha'p tili!ll'
Ardllt.
37 :r..or: Suffli:
)I E99: l'Ttfht
)1 llosl dllfl·
t..tt.ln nalurt
41 Actor --42-Pttce:
Mtrlc•
lrdllll ' 4) Appea"J to
ew:lst
44 Full of llistrtss
45 Unltts close\~
'
lnforul
S1 Sifll 52 l'ubUc uproatt
56 Rttlwn to 1
fOf'llNlf sublec:t Ml Town ht E.
Ktntul;lty
•l Afflun
WatlJl"CClftf; ,_.,
'4 Fomial
p1Klic:t 65 81aztd pith '6 HIWllllll
67 ri':,5:w1111y: .....
61 Surgical
~'"'" ,,...,_
69 CIYt: Poet.
DOWN
1 So!all p(tct of .....
2 -Hnh.-illll:
Jttihtl Nnr
Y•w '"8fh01d!"·
L•tln
4 C-.istd to bt
transpllfttd 5 Ont who ulls
HaC!
lo Ttxt!lt ScrtW
""' 1 Kowt'ttf
I Black: Poet. .,,_,.....,....,.,_. . '
<J :J:JI 11 /JI .:J.J.l.J.J'...J ~·1J1 '1tlij ']
.J;J.J ..l'.Jl.J_J.J .J.:J tJ~!LJ
.J.'1 .'I J :·J:·J .I I I I HJf1
"J.J •t:!J J J I; I I• l:J:J ) l ~'.IJ J,I I I '·JJ I J,,.J J,J'.1.1 J l •t·J
J,J.J'.J~c.I ,, .1JJ)!t i 1:1
.:J.:J.J.J.J.:J..J.J:Jcl ;JIJ'11il .J.1.J.J .J.J '.Jc.J.J .1::.11.J.J
.1.J.J:.J .J.J.J.J I _llJ J.J
' Unique person: ,_.,
10 lilt. Boone 11 Pttk-
12 "H igh-":
GwyC-_,,
ll Wrapons
18 Coln of Italy
22 Reliance
24 Cotldillon
ZS S..111 cmstacms 27 Harrow strip
28 -craft
Zfl -Doolittle:
"Pygtnallon"
"'"""' 31 CDll!PltlelClfl
32 loYe:
ll1lhrn
l3 Rf!IO'M)fd
36 Adjust
J'I Genus of ·-· 1 • •
40 Shows t1tet11 '" ' -44 lndlvldual
portion of
'"' 4' Very told
41 Condit1on1I relent
4'1 V1rtic11' ._. ..
structure
5Z Trlts
'""" 54 Anatoakal
•Hit of YlfnS
5S Cius
~1 At all tllltt
Sii Famed di'l'OrCt
'""" 5,lute
allowanc:e
Ill Oppos1t1 cf
"~tH .,_._,
Doditr •tit
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Land ers
f
I
f
I •
PEANUTS
By Tom K. Ryan
KIN I llORR't' YER AFieR l'!.IJCK LUllON ?
by Emie Bushmiller
HAVE A
BA"!ANA
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
' .
GORDO
ANIMAL CRACKERS
€ON, IF C,00 sec Bartl OF
11-IEM ~ THE eROt».I D ! \.IKE ll~'IOO'l1E5"FC-
' 'f!01i If </Cl() Oll.I~ ~ a.IE, ~ ~!,! Ul<E THC: l>EiJIL !
f
By Charles M. Schub
ly Harold Le Don
ly Mel
IF '>O(.(
CAl.L. '!'HAT
LMN6' .•
1·15 ..i~·.:.i.;. J.Co,Joo
By Gus Arriola
By Roger Bollen
THE GIRLS
• • .. < • • •
' Iii!. . di'&. "'1. 4#f.~;.,, . .....;1..J
.. Carl, I'm lellvia& ov vK1tlo1 plus ~mpletely up to
yoa -all I uk 11 tbat we 10 aome pllce wltll lots of nlct
1)topl ud ... fllldac, 1olf er eampln1."
DENNIS THE MENACE
·1
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Cl c
th
ni
Cl
ho
. te ha w·
Fe
dr
in
lolO
'
., ,,
t
I •
•
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7'30
,,oo
""
'
, ·TONIGHT'S
.•
TV IDGHLIGHTS ••
• NBC fll 5:00 -All.Star Baseball. The Amer!·
can and National League all-stars cl .. h at Atlanta.
Curt Gowdy, Ton9 ltuliek 'and Sa.ndy Koufax call ! the action.
KCOP m 6:00 -Circus Premiere. It's opening
night for the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Balley
Circus at the Forum. Hobo Kelly and Bill Burrud
host the festivities.
ABC O 8:30 ~ "'!'he People." A young school·
teacher In a rural community discovers her puplls
have unexplainable teJer,athic powers. Kim Darby,
William ·shatner, Dan O Herlihy.
KCET llll 8:30 -Evenlng at Pops. Pianists
Ferrante and teicher join Arthur Fiedler and the
Booton Pops fo~ a ooncert of old favorites.
' CBS fJ 11:30 -"Night Chase." This 1970
drama of a man's flight from the scene of a shoot,. l lng stars David Janssen and Yaphet Kotto.
. '
Fine Enseml»le Plfl!I
'Tom Jones' Good
San Clemente Romp
By TOM mus
Of IM Dtll'r l'lllof ttaff
'lbe novel has long been an
English literary classic, the
movie venion won a best pic-
ture Oscar in 1983, now comes
the atage version of "Tom
Jones," with all its color and
11\0!t of Its character intact.
"TOM JOMIS" T":.:,, "}1:1,ll~~ .'::3 Ott 9MC1 ~ Rk Nrd "J'n0tnen, 1tt0<t
m.tMOtt kott M•w=llollllno bY C11rt Wetlmt11 and ~ _ Pr9"flitd bY IN Stn Clet'MtlM omml,lnlly TllH•
t1r Th11rld1y1 ltw'Oll(lh Sllll"d•Y• 11
t :30 vntll Alll. 12 I f ""' CMrlllo PL1y-
ho!M 302 A'Hlllde CMl'l11.. $.n 0.
mt11tt. lttMrvttl_, ..,.._.
TMR CA.,-
tom Jones ....•...•.... TOl'l\T•ll1ltf"' !ooplll1 W"let'n , . . . . . Bobbi M1r'1MIU
Plrttldfrt .......... ·· .. Rlclllrd KOSOlb SQu.llr1 Al/Wl)l'ftly , , • . . RIY JUOIOR
Mr. Wftt.rfl . ·••••· .•.. :SIM W1~ MllS Wllteni ••· ·••· ...... Jafl 1111111 .•.•...••.•..•. Mark aior
Mn. W•ll1t1 ............ Miry Moal1111 Hltl'IWIYmait , •.••• , ••••. Clllrleti S«l!ll H-.......... · ....... l.OlllM Maroc Hatlett Fllrpalrlcll Shal"Cll'I Heu1lnkvtld
ft lfUl.ttr1c1c ••.••••.••••. w11~0.-' Ml'J.1_~lllt..rltkl • •• •. • . . . Doi' Dotlill llrlCJvon •..• , •.•••••. Glft!M 1lr.''"'" JtnnY J-......... · . 0.111 T 11 ,,_,.,, C1_pt1ln lflt!IH
C1111t1t:111 ,. .. ., .•.•. Richard Ml...,.,-
ThWldt\1111 •• • ·, •..••••... Glrrv Luclu1 ....... . . ' . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . "Ii' ,,,,,, JU.tic• Dowllnc ••• ••• . . . CU W11tk1 Dlc1or •• • ............ Rll'I Hutclllnp Ltdy 1!11ll1llon ••.•••.• · .tonnl1 J11<11on Sus1n ............. , ........ ,Mir! Luc:lw N•l'ICY ........ ~······ ..... Ann K-•n
..
counterpoint to the hero.
Ray Judson oozes immodest
goodness Crom every pore as
the self..canonized S q u I r e
All worthy, though at times he
appear• to enjoy bis own
perfonnance overtnuch. Jan
Gordon Is well cast as
Wei ssburg's matchmaking
sister, while GleMa Web:sburg
is convincing as Judson 's
spinsterish sister in a brief
assignmenl
There are, as Kosb ab
remai'ks at one point, no small
parts, only small actors. Prov-
ing this well-worn adage con-
clusively is Gharles Senge as
Tut.sd1y, July ~5. 1972
'TALLY HO' -Slan Weissburg leads a hunting party as Bobbi Marshall an d
Tom Taliaferro "gallop" along behind him in a scene fro1n "Tom Jones" at the
San Clemente Community Theater.
. '~EDWARDS
THEATRES
'
JV DAILY LOG
With a cast or two dozen
roles, aod a final scene which
brings them all together
onstage, perhaps the last place
in Orange County one might
vlsuallze this ahow being
presented would. be the San
Clemente Community Theater.
Yet director Richard
. Andersen, using a minimum of
portabl e scenJc; JIC·
coutrements, has performed
th!s minor miracle a n d
!n'ought off a hlghly enjoyable
)>roducllon in the bargain.
Moreover, Andersen bas
compiled a cast made up
·predominantly of new face.s
and created a most errec.uve
working ensemble which func-
tions smoothly as a unit while
relalnlng its sharply dellned
individual characterization.
NJ ls the case in any such pro-
duction, a handful of single
performances surface a s
superior, but rarely to the
detriment of the company as a
whole.
tn the character of Tom Jones
himself. As portrayed by Tom
Taliaferro, he ls more robot
than rogue with little of the
rustic charm and personal
magnetism which is t h e
nucleus oC the character.
a hilariously inept
hlgwhayman in one of the
most brilliant cameos of the
season· In local theater. In his
short, second act scene, Senge
elicits more sustained laughter
than the balance of the show
combined.
Peter J ason to Play
Lancelot in 'Can1elot' •• .. -..II"!!·. .. . ' •
Tuesday
Evening
JULY 25
1:00 u rn u m m -a 0 m Ml·St1r latblll (cont'd
~trom 5 PM) N1tlon1I 1nd Amirian
Lu1uu compete 11 At11nta St1dlum.
8 The l lr V1lllJ
(I) Cotlbat! m11o11n-m 1 IHCIA I WlcllRI h. ...
...,. • ..., Clrlll Prl•llrt CMr·
,,. Hobo Kelly 11,;( sm Burrud oo-
llost openlftl 11l1bt futivltlt1 11 lh1
t1bulous forum.
OJI ........ m-,..,,~ ..
fl:)IW-Udl' a-.... El'Jll --mn ... -
llt1r11tur1 tnctler b lllltnH to I
school whe.re th1 stud1nh 111 llOfl
low·incomt bDlnts Ind hostilt t3-
wirunments.
O Cil@ IDAIC -ti ..,
W1R: (C) ('IO) "TM ,_,..-(d11)
'72 (RHim DtrtJ', Willlam SllJI·
ner, Din O'HerHhy. An eerie dr1m1
1bout 1 youn1 teathtf. in I nirtl
comm~nlty who disamri her P\111111
h1¥1 unt1pl1in1ble teltplttllc POW· ••• ID 111m Crffft1 SMw "Couples•
G111111 111 B1rblra Bain aid 111,_tr•,
tin 1Alld1u, ShtnJ'lnd Mlcllf _.
lint, N1n1 111d Gtof'll O'NtlU, and
01'fld C.rr1dln1 1nd 81rb111 S...
1uH. \
IJl) Qll btllnl at Peps FtrTlfl\t
1nd Tdcller join Mhur Fiedler 1M
the Boston Pops fW I conctrt d
f1vorrtts. m Mnlr. (2hr) 'Tht CU•pio11•
(dr1) '49--«lrt ()oo&1es, Ruth R~ ... Iii -· CC) (1111) ""' -.... --<->. ·-Tom Adam&. C.tol Stepanek. • m.....,. OJ Ill YlflM ,.,. ...... ., .. _ .. _
Clll llol-. li)t.C1 111dM .. ,.. ,. ... Ill-~--
. .. .... --.""'-" Co ... _.." jlit1llos .. _.
throw IN #!bl llMflWllllll.
I """' I.Ml I= ft ·im With Rudol .. ""-· ·--:1;-.. __ u.
"Solomol's Cholol" 00 DI'. Wahly'1 __ ,_ ....... _
-· "" -N17. ""' llttfy .... otoo.
I C•••sa\»~ ~ .. Ms . • .,. • .,., ...,....
g .,... 11 .. -"Miu•
Two highly articulate
performances ln the upper
ranks are turned in by Bobbi
Marshall as Tom '• lady love
and Richard Kosbab as the
s:erv an t~n arrator. Miss
Marshall excels in her depic4
tion of the blushing heroine
with an expressive face and
the ability to be at once con4
vlncing and cunning. Koobab
takes complete cbarge of the
story with Impeccable style
and ingratiating manner.
Mary Modlam employs her
substantial n at u r a I en-
dowmenta to create a
memcnble character, the ob-
ject of Tom's attentions in the
famou! supper scene. Sharon
Heusinkveld ls demurely ef.
fective as a runaway wife,
while Walter Orange devours
large chunks of scenery ln a
juicy minor role as her wlld-
eyed Irish husband.
Borutle Judson turns In an
excellent performance as a
merry widow with an eye for
our hero, while Dana Taliafer-
ro also scores highly in her bit
as Tom's apparent mother. a
scullery maid. Less effective
M i s u n d e rstanding and
misadventure are the m..
gr e d i e n t 1 which !pice
Fleldlog's tongue-in-cheek tale
of a young man whose ques-
tionable parentage sets him
down a notch lz\ polite society.
Whlle the alyle -of the period la
tcaptured to some extent, it is
not overdone, nor do it!
peculllrillel or m a n n er
become outlandla h or
tiresome, as was the cue with
a recent British period piece
on another stage.
Other standouts in the San
Clemente production are Stan
Weilsburg as the heroine's
rooghneck father and Mark
Razor as the beapectacled,
mincing ylllaln of tbe show.
Welssburg Us all grit and
gumption, a sort of 18th cen-
tury Archie Bunker, while
young Razor crtates a
n!lreshingly hapless heavy, a
sissified schemer of perfect
ls Cllff Walters as-the judge, a
perfom'Wlce lacking in con-~ ~
viction. i." ,
Doris llonka is quite good as OCC'S LANCELOT
the harried innkeeper, while Peter Jason
The only real weakness of
tbe San Clemente productlon
Ues, unfortunately, at itl core
'Adding Machine' Set
On ·Fullertf!n Stage
Louise Maroc brightens the
stage as Miss Marshall's ser-
vant. Gerry Lucius and Herb
Johns wring a good deal of
humor out of their tiny roles
as Tom's tutors, w h i I e
Richard Misener, Ren Hutch-
ings, Meri Lucius and Ann
Keenan round out the cast in
utlllty assignments.
Eoonomy of i.:taging, with
tabl., and sofas shuttled in
and out, increases the playing
area of the Cab rlllo
A clgantic replica of an ad· revolving b re a k • a w a Y playhouse, while props ex·
ding machlne, complete with turntables, is Dr. Ronald Dieb, tended by apparently disem·
partially lighted keyboard and who direcled Marl Crowley's bodied hands contribute to the
a three-foot wkle roll of paper "Boys in the Band" last fall. overall effect. There is never
Playing leading roles are a. feeling of overcrowding
that 1pew1 forth on cue are Stephen Gray, Jennie Romney, about the production, a virtue
featured in °The Adding Shelly Parsona: and Mary attributable to Andersen's
MAchlne," tbe final production Tomblin. skilllul staging and t h e ot the Calif. State Fullerton Also in the cast are Robert ensemble prowess of his cast. Hopper, David Dotson. Ne.ncy f
1ummer theater wori.. .. lt. .... , Three more weekends o ~ Backes, Rod Pankey, Renee
Tr youts Set
For 'Ma ry'
Open readings for "ttary .
Mary," the first production of
the 1972-73 season for the Hunt-
ington Beach Playhouse, will
be held Wednesday at 7:30.
Jean Koba is directing the
Jean Kerr comedy, which
calls for a cast of two wom en
in the 20 to 30 age range and
three men from 30 to 50.
''Mary, Mary" wilI open
Sept. 8 for a five-weekend run
at the playhouse, 2110 ?.fain
St., Huntington Beach.
The Elmer Rice play la con-Mollan, IJoyd Sudduth, Mary T h u r sday-through-Saturday
'dered b critic to be one of Kna"•, Dan Mc. w.esi Frank performances remain f o r SJ Y s ...,. .., "Tom Jones," although ad4
America'• finest esamplel of and Chrlltopher Montalbano, dllional performane<s a re HOLLYWOOD (UPI) wil be the Lou i s e Kan e, Rob ert
J ayson Signs
: • Peter Jason, an Orange ••• 5 4 e-3102 •••• ••• :
• H AtlleG11 AT A OA ... S , COSTA ... ,,._ t~oaft area actor car\'1ng out :.i ""....,,..,. 11•• 1 ••u Ml .. ,.~ '"" , •••
· AlANA.r:t~1H .S,.lll llll!llMAN professional career in n1ov1es -u.-
und tele\'ision, \\111 rl!tum to ~of
Orange Coast College to take the Aecl tlot
the role of Lanet'!lot in the
OCC production of "Camelot." Lo¥ers" 14 ] ~·-·--' ; Jason. \Yho starred a s !r:Clc> 1 .
Professor 1-larold 11 111 in OCC's 1--""";,.,,==='--"--'I
summer n1usical "1'he f..1usic .._!'!!I!!!
Man" a decade ago, recently
appeared in the John \Vayn e
movie "Rio Lobo'' and an off.
Broadway production of "The
Wrb and the Rock" with Jose
l~errer.
··cainclot." directed by Bill
J>urkiss. ,,.111 be staged Au g. 2-
5 at 8:30 in the OCX:
audltoriun1. Also starring in
the production are Alex Golson
as King Arthur and Debbie
Ann Thomas as Guenivere.
DAILY MATINEES 2:\J P.M.
N•Vfl' S•n•: 2:~1 :oa
NlcllOL11 a Altl11ndr•: 4:llO-l:Jt
t ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER!
Best Art Olrecllon ~ Best Costume Oeslgf\
Nicholas ....
Alexandra
' .
WOODY Alli/ii In
MIJlA'Y IT 4641,.,,, SAM" 'liJaoo TKlwlltolor• A P..-Pldwe
• •
• . • • • . ,
""'~-·. l11o1-... (I) l!;)F,.._
exprtllionlJm. It on Marcan:lli, Ra1ph n 0 0 a 1 d , likely U Friday's overflow au-Michael Jayson signed with
Llttle Theater stage Thursday Mary Ann Bartoletti, Lani dience is any indication. Hal Wallis to join Glenda
through SUnday at 8:30 p.m. White, and Natalie Barish. Reservations are not only ad-Jackson and Peter Finch in • COA1T t!Wl'. At ~lllltUll tl.0 .•.
NEWPORT BEACH •. 644·0760 •
7:1111J .1trry WW HM Meris hilt, aJ LI llflllM • ....
john Twomey NDf1Tlln Andrm ar1 Albtl flalurtd rt1uiars, 10-.JO 1J Tiit t1IN!aln Udlt 1
D1recUng the show, whlch/F'~~~~~~~~~n~~v~:·~·b~1e~1>u~1~m~anc1a~~to~ry;·:::jljf~~"~A~Beq~~u~.g~to~th~e§N~a~t~io§n.~"~/ alJo will feature three large/I
9 MaM: (fllr) "'I' Sri' Whit YH suests.
Did" (dr•l '65-JOln Crswfonl, John I~~ Movie Deal
lrel1nd, LaH Ericllson. ID IOI ...........
0 CIJ (IHI)~"' s,uN "llHI -HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
with the Devit" IR) Vlkkl Calf matu II) LI S.tanlca MGM concluded a deal with
hat drrmttlc dtbut t's Illa f11nce1 fD Cafl If tbl Wtlt tfl th Pnwr'
If 1 Vletn•m war oorraipond1nt who ! =.?8C:~1t 0 s c a r -w i n n i n g director
Is inYOIYld In th• d1111 Ktnt. ., ..-Franklin Schaffner and pro-
(IJ I Dn•• ti -11:00•DO111 llH!l -ducer Lesler Goldsmith to
G MIWoo I "'"'' CCl (21w) (l)(IJ Iii -film • "The French Litllten-
"Cnct I• TM ltllmr" (in)·~ DOii..,..,.. ant'• Woman", fn:m John
0r1on wertu, Julietta, Cta, Brad· (!} Mmtlll DfflM
ford DIU!Mn. d lhM: (C) "All• °"' 11M1a• \j~no;;;vel~. ~~~~~~~~! QI NllitMI C.l'fplik (SUS) '60--ULlfU laClll, Klnnt1' m H1p1'1 ljltta Mort.
m-mr ...... -..... l1JJ Tiie FlrlJlt 1QI 11J hat..-Yo• Ult OJ la Mt£I DcllN fl) 11rMr TH Armtnfll
Gill ........ -flD"' °"-'"" """"~ ea.. 11 MN9t Fe•llJ "'' 11td Rit111nl let Wilk11"
l:GDD llillil-Ill_ (RI (I)-·.......... 11:11. (IJ Cll 1111 -CC) "ltlpt
• ~ W-•*"' Ca.." (drt) ''IO-Olvl' .Jtnssen, Cl U'"J Y1pbtt Kono. -of IMl'I fllaht ti MtrllMM Ceflft from tlll ICtnl of'• shoctl:lna.
flD Qtiw"""" "A11""/C1~11 .. • D •• -CtlMI ""''" (P•lt II) lnt1rvltw wlfh Dr. Runtn Howlrd :Y1lchm1n11 ("Gaot'CI S.
Zlmmtt, Sint1 C.t1lln1 Mtrlnt l lo-Kaufmln, tn lntlm1tt Pottralt1 tnd
loflail LJb Dnctor, t rtd Dr. Rldltnl Ptt 9toM t nd F1mlly trt achtd•
Tlbby, htld of USC'• M1rl111 Sc~n· ultd 1utm:.
Cll Oe~ltmtlll • Mlfle: .,... the Ct!Miltrlq
11111-J"""" . _. (oom) '44-{ddlt """'~
Iii> q..,tilt Do ,,_/llllc.. W~llftl °"""'"
c:.mt J a Cil (I) GI llldr --Cl ...,..: (!lw) Mm C..... Ult ' Funt ts tha ontr 111Ul.
N"1' 11 T• Tll"' Tllli l:JI. (IJ lltnll ,...... (I) lttll IUO. -CC) ., ...... ("")
Brlr.MU 111tttS at tM ..,... llrl· '51-MthollJ omtr, Etanor hfbr, w.M of t t.Ol\'ldti 111111'..,_ who ... II ,...
bdlpet ff'Oll 11rilon 1M tllrtallM
to ~111111. 12:11•--n..
~~.~~'fl~= t•!ll Dllll 4ll -°'"n11·°"' ... ·-.... 1:11 •-·--<->
"" 1'11 -A -lnClllll '3'41ol'f 1'ot1o, llttJI -. .
HARBOR AREA
SHOWING AT
REGULAR PRICES!
Nightly 7:00 A t :30
~~_!~o9A .,.."****". '}
-llowYottc Dolly -
·~MM11'11A
ICllCllUATlllfl llUlllCI-.' ' -·-· ••• 11• d llilltlllJ 'UIA•••)•-1"1 ---1111" -~......-"Ull••····· 'CMAMT' -A eTAA
'!IORNl"' 1110:01*......-
~OICAIWINND
"SENT!NliLS OF
SILliNCli"
HliLD OV~R
Cls.t l•twoff ......... ,
"JOE KIDD"
'UK• WOODSTOCK
ONAWAY•' ---Pacific YIMotkw .
cct.OR ... -........ , __ •
e 1111 ~--,.__ ...
---ClllFDOME lD
"' ,---;-_-I __J • I t. •
---... SIAD/UM I . '-' .. 11'. __,_ ---.. SIW/11+1 l ' -,.. . -·--.. $14RIU+I J
• ''I ' ~--- -.. SNOl//lf J . -. . -
"'TM• CANDIO.TI" 10'1 . ...
"COOL MANO LUIC&" 101')
"POllTNOY'l COMPLAINT" 1•1 .d
•CANOY .. UQ
Dustin Hoffman
in
"THE GRADUATE"
Sllow Stwtt 7:00 P·"'·
''lll£ YEAR'S FiliiT 11£AUY ur\s"IN&, 11& COMMEllCIAL
AM£RICAI FILM. ON£ OF TM£ MOIT BRUTAL ANO Ml!Ylllt
CHRORICLH Of AMERICAN lift HER DESl&NEO WITHIN
TH£ LIMITS Of POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT."
-Vincent Ctn__by, N11w York Time• "'THE IODIATHlll ' IS A IPICTACUUR MOVIE, DRE Of THE
llllHT UHITER IDVIH EYER IAOEI "
~· --:.
"'1141 OlHh"
'"' AND , ... ,
"WAn VNTil DAH"
Ill NB~TV
"lllLT JACK" , .. ,
-•Liit THI 1 um
AND CMIUHllN ..
DALY· 12.J0· 1130 • 7 4 IOPM
~f -CLINT
~l1rle1'
Br1ndo
"'
I ASTWOOD
.JOI KIDD
N·P"'3HfWMMilt,
"SOMl1'JMIS & llU.fllOT
For
Weekender
Adverti!!ing
P h one
6424321
"SlTJACID"
AND
-ntl CAllY TlllATMS•T"'
j
'
••
. j
•
I
•
,
'
... D.\ILY PILOT Tundair, July 25, lt72
For The
Record
Airport Use Rule Revisions
Facing County Panel Action
County Court Closes Book
On Abortion Doctor Case
Dl••olutions
Of Mar'liage
-Prohlbitlon of I ho 1 e
persons who do not have a
lease. permit or license from
the Board ol SUpervllors from
.. peratipg at lbe airport. Tbeae
lilclude stiling ol airttalt
puts. mechan1c.a~ work,
charter ru,bta, &tudellt pilot
: Death Notlre•
llALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOlllE
-dd Mar 113-Nlll Colla ..... l*ZlU
• lllU BIOADWAY
MORTUARY
lit-•• ;. C..11 M<ll
IJ Wl3l
, llkCORMI! LAGUNA
BEACH ..tORTUARY
m Logana Conyoo RL . -
'PACD'lt fm'; '
llDIORIAL PARK c. ll!rJ MerturJ
•Ped~Dl'm ........ -. Collf..U -PIEi f .um:r
ODLONIAL "1NDAL
llOllB ............
Watt' • rt1r ••
w1w.LnuuY Ill_ ..
3 ·=1111111
'
training. ·
Exi:eptecl are whoie&alers
delivering goods to licensed
retailer at the airport and
flights which originate at
another airport and are using
the local port u a temporary
ajopping place. .
-Flying clubi are pro-
hibited eacept those which
operate ·on a non-commercial
ha~ with a gennlt, owµ their
~'!". p14"e, ' allow o n I y
members to · fly such planes,
have a 'niaXimwn or 10
members'-for each plane.
County Aviation Director
Robert Bresnahan has told the
('01n>mis slonet1 th at
unauthorized businesSes have beei. ·operating at the facility
and· "have flourished primari·
Jy beCauSe rates offered are
subStantially below t b o s e
charged by fixed-base
operators."
'
Y. outh P"leads Guilty
Xo Lesser Charges
SANTA ANA -One of two yefll'S to life in state prison
when he plead ed guilty IQ se-
cond degree murder.
~calil.ornia Highway
Patrolmen arrested the pair
last Oct. 18 after Ibey lound
them in a car halted in the
Irvine area of the San Diego
Freeway, examining the body
or their benefactor.
young hitchhikers accused on
arrest of the killing of. a
motorist who gave them a lift
on the San Diego Freeway has
pleaded guilty to reduced
charges in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge William Murray ac-
cepted the plea of Norman
Vincent Burchell, 18, of Stam·
ford, CoM. ,and reduced the
charges from murder to ae--
cessory to a murder. He ruled J.be time served in Orange
County Jail by Burchell -
about nine months -to be
sufficient and ordered his
Lawmen wl>o described the
murder as a "thrill killing"
said both youths were high
school drooout! who came
from good Stamford families.
They said the pair were·
hitchhiking tlfeir way around
tbe U.S.
re~~~ll testified tbat fellow :-;·2···toun:tians
hitchhiker William D e n n i s
Dunne, IS, also of Stamford,
fired the shot that struck
Francis ~olln Puch1llkl, 26, Ill
tbe back of the head.
~ omm..., w1'0 ~milted beinf
the trigger man m the slaying,
was sentenced last week to 10
Cou11tians
J'.ace Cycle
Theft Rap
SANTA ANA -Three
Orange Coutlty residents have
been ordered to appear Thurs-
day in Orange County Superior
Court to answer allegations
that they were principals in a
theft ring that specialized in
the strJpping and reselling of
motorcycles.
Ronald Alexander Wallace,
33, and his wife Michelle
Clare, 23, both of Garden
Grove and Herbert L e e
Richmond, 34, of Santa Ana,
are accused of grand theft and
recei ving stolen property
among multiple charges con-
tained in a Grand Jury in-
dictment.
Sheriff's officers who ar-
rested the trio said they
specialized in the theft of
Harley-Dav.id.son motorycles
which were then stripped and
assigned to a "pool" of
motorcycle parts.
Investigators said n e w
machines were created from
the stockpile and sold to new
owners through f o r g e d
Department of Motor Vehicle's
documents. All three defend-
ant! are held in Orange
County Jail in lieu of bail
Scholar Cited
Kathleen Susan Nelson, 4221
Trum!luli Drive, Hunllngton
Beach, has be<n cited for
academic er.cellence during
the 1972 spring quarter at Ohio
State University. She earned a
straight A average.
Found Dead
In Sierras
FRESNO (AP) The
bodies of two Orange County
men who drowned in different
mishaps have been found in
the King River east of here.
The Fresno County
coroner's office SUnday iden-
tified the body of a man
found Friday as Dennis
LeRoy Jacobson, 26 o f
Anaheim. lie and two other
persons were tossed into the
river near Piedra July 16
when their ' canoe overturned.
The two others made it safely
to shore.
The second victim was Iden.
tired as Faustine Guzman, 45,
of Garden Grove. He fell into
the river May 27 near Cedar
Grove in Kings Canyon Na·
tional Park. Sheriff's divers
recovered his body Saturday .
about a half-mile downstream
from where he fell in.
Jacobsen Jived at 3050 W.
Ball Road, Anaheim.
Murder Case
Delay Given
SANTA ANA -A one week
delay was ordered Monday in
the Orange County Superior
Court trial of a man and
woman aceused of the torture
slaying of a Santa Ana
secretary.
Judge Ronald Crookshank
set the murder trial for July
31 in granting defense lawyers
more time to prepare pretrial
motions of behaU of Bert
Lebhar, 4.!, and Teresa Jo
Strange, 24. ,
Lebhar and Miss Strange
are accused of tbe killing on
Dee. 13, 1969, of Janet Louise
SUmmerlln, a woman who for
some time prior to her death
shared a home with the
codefendants.
f10NO ~ONG
CUSTOM TAii.OU rN OtAM01 COIM1T
'rtu'm'S1-3s san •to SK
... , Dlt • "'", ...... c.. ....
.... ~, .. Sltdll, arm..
• WI m AMT 1111
•ANT ITTll ""'9
•PIK ALflUTIONI
•WYPAYMCTI
I
C. Chester Brisco, a Santa ' . Ana attorney and pretident ol
lhe -Or .. ge County Police
NllociaUon hai ttsted that bla • • •
group opposes the changes ,
<ailing them a setting up "of . • QDl,lll!r. ' Nl'llU JY stupid economic royaltiea.." lfe ~ 1'UUn
predicts a massive t11J110Ut of
opponents.
SANTA ANA -Orange
County Superior Court Of·
fletsls have cloeed their m ..
on Dr. John Shriver Gwynne,
lbe aborlioniSt sent.need in
Los Angele1 Jut week to five
years to Ille In 1tate prison for
lbe k1lllng of bla paramour.
Jobless ~·ate Drops
Employment Totals Increase Rapidly
SANTA ANA -Unemploy· Altbough.ihe toW·nwnber or
ment continues to decline in employed waJ ~~·In· June.
Orange Ci>unty . an« employ· up from 28,000 the previous
ment totals have tncreaAed1 to month, the seas o n a I ad·
record highs .for the ~bird con-justment figure results in th9,
secutive-month, .accordil)g to percentage decline, Mrs. Yet-
the State 'De.partment 1 of ter said. · '
Hwnan ResOOrtes~ · · · · tn June 1971, by contrast,
The seasoitally adjustment 41 ,500 were jobies&.·and · the
unemployment rate 'dropped rate was 7.3 pe~t.
lrom 5.8 percent in May to 5.6. .A flood ol new ·gra4ilale.
Increased jobs during June and other summer' jo~kers
in services, trade, construction pushed the June total up, MrS.
and manuf~clu[ing pushed lbe Yeller explained. '
total employed; to 502,600, up E m p I oyment categories
5,400 over May and 25,400 showing increases inclu~
more than tpe June, 1971 . non-manufacturing, 5,000,, with
figure, according to Alta Yet· about 50 percent in 1ervic;e hi·
ter1 labOr aqillyst with HRD. dustries. Rec re a tt·o,n a.I
basic
IBCIJJUes added about 2,000
r workers for the tourist season,
Contract construction
employment jumped 1 , 0 0 O
over May and fmance-ln-
suraftce.real estate, 400.
Factory payroll! increased
by 1,000 to a tOtal of 118,900,
up from 113,600 the year
before, the analyst 1tated.
Aeiyspace accounted for 800 ot
these new jobl, along with a
few in scientific instruments.
Electronics were stable.
Only farm employment was
on lbe doWD!ide iJ) June with . eoo •orkers laid oil after the
·strawberry harvest wa& com-
. J>l•l,ecl.
:•
•. l
IAcal court action against
Gwynne ends with the notation
that the physician has be<n
lined $5,000 and placed on
three years probaUon follow~
Ing Ills plea of guilty to multi·
pie abortion allegations.
The line bu not been paid.
It Is highly unlikely, officials
feel, that it ever wUI be and it
Js even more unlikely that the
30-year-old physician will ever
be called on to serve his pro-
bation.
Gwynne's mother, Mrs.
Rubye UDnlh Gwynne, 56, has
be<n ordered to appear Aug. 4
for disposition of the abortion
charges filed against her for
her alleged role in _the · opera-.
tion of Gwynne's clinic on 17th
Street in Santa Ana.
Abortion charges filed in the
~me court against Debbie
Dwyer were dismissed shortly
before she was shot by
Gwynne in lbe apartment
shared by lbe couple near tbe
UCLA campus.
The'l!l-year-<ld Whittier girl
was shot three times last Dec.
18 and a Los Angeles County
Superior Court jury refused to
accept Gwynne's explanaUon
that the shooting was ac-
cidental.
OwyMe's lawyers 1 re
preparing an appeal again.st
the conviction.
Dpna Point
Man Jailed
As Bookie
SANT A ANA -A Dana
Point man has been sentenced
to six month! in Orange eoun..
ty Jail and. placed on three
years probation for his role 1n
a bookmaking operation that
Jed to the naming of four men
in a Grand Jury indictment.
Superior Court J u d g e
William Murray imposed the
jail term after James Collins
Miller, 48, of 3462 Alcaiar
Drive, pleaded guilty to one
count of bookmaking.
Miller, V it o Christopher
Meoll, la, of Orange, Martin
John Di Piano, 47, ol Garden
Gro"" and Anthony cassaxJto.
39, of Anaheim were indicted
on 53 c:Ounts of bookmaking
after tbe Grand Jury listened
to testimony that they were
active in the taking of bets on
horse races.
The$1,960~pric8.is .cibtf'•of 11Hm.
COMPARE OUR PRICE.WITH • · . . -. .-°"'".. .
THE LEADING UTILE lMPoRTS
Ford Pinto $1,960*
Volk1wagen 113 $2,15,.
~ .. • 1-·-·~T_o~Y.ota.._~C~oro..,.,~lla'--1~600...;.~~$~2~,1~09"'-•~~
Datsun PLS10 $2,306*.
,
'
•Monufocturer'' suggested re101I prlc• lot
2-Goor model1. fJ<cl..de1 deoler preporotio!'I
charges if ony, !Ille end !0J<e1. (l'into's d.elli•
notion chorge is $10$.00 ond Colilornio efl'lil•
sion sy$1ern $13.87.J
Solid tran1mb1lon •. 4
speeds, fully synchronized;
floor.mounted •. It's also easy 10.
mointain. In fact, both the'trons-
misslon and ·differential are
lu!ied for life • .They need In·
spection only during routine
mainle)lance.
'
Com'fort. Front budcet seals,
lols of shoulder and hip and leg . ' room.
A reRoble et19lne.lmprowd
and perfei:led in over 10 years
of actual driving in smoll ;ford·
built cars oil over the world.
I
Quality .. delalllo ,for In-•
sla~ We .,., a tolal of Six
coots of ,paint> to pro\llCf Pinto
and keep 11 looklng good.
"
lo~ and pinion 1'-ln9,
. The some responsive Sl'$tem .
· wed in rnony expensive spom
CO/$.
, I
··~~!tie unltlnil body.
Welded solid, ·thei> elettro-,
cooled to flghl colTOllon and
rust,
' I ~ f No wonder Pinto
. -··-~· .. , Mlll111 . . econ.-y-1 .
FORD PINTO
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•
Pat orm: Soe Com ort
By PATRJCL\ MtCORMACI:
NEW YORK (UPI) -'l1le bl&b ht<l 11,
marchln(to fashion's front rll1b for fall '
and winter -for him, fot her: ·· ~-
.For women, it'• a return to spike-heel
height, Some heels, with an ualsl ll"Om
Platfonn soles, meas1o1re four bM:bes. The
heels, wblle as blah ai spites, are
rounder JM, tblcktr.
The heeb for men are the highest yet
.>. some going to thJ'ee.~hall In-
ches, the siz< ol thooe aplk<> women ·
wore many seasons back.
On the shoe front men with high heels
aren't the only ones reaching over what
med to be strict bit-her lints In fuhlon.
The women are picking up from men's
ahoe> the wingtip and monk straJii.
Shoes that tie with laces, meanWbile, are more abundant In the female line
thmt 1n the men's line. 1be women'•
aboes also lnclu!le ~Y of the ·old
f!lithluls' -sling back, :r-strap, opera
-pump, and the clog.
' Soine of the clogs on exaggerated plat·
form soles are constructed in a way to
make them swing on hinges u the
.wearer walks.
Boots include a quilted Chinese worker
boot that bounces along on a two.Inch
crenellated platform.
Another Chinese inlluence reported by
the American Footwear Institute: a
bright red patent Chintse clog . with a
llim wedge heel.
,For children afoot, it'• more of the
aame -loafers, saddles, T-straps for the
girls for dress, llllUkera for all. A
~trooper boot for the boya bas plenty
or lacing, lots or sole and • lllde panel for
olashlng ...,,.ts oo con!ldentlal misslooa.
On the accessory scene watch for:
-Betts. They're hea~ toward the
narrow, with emphasis on quality. ~
chain belt bang• on In clOc chaJn and
bicycle chain looks. Buckles attract ln-
ter..t vln ba!Hk:ralted looks.
-Gloves. They're delinltely going to be
back for fall as an accessory that ties
together the clusic look. Moot are
limple In casual suedes, tenured looks
and soft leathers. ~ . ,
-Handbags. Theie stay tubed t0 Ille
classic look. The sboulderbag "stays, bell.
in soft leathers and suedes. Some have a
feed-bag or ciil-look.
The neat bandatrap baa retuma, meant
to go with the dreay -ror,....,.
Galo offers
tractor-tread plat•
forms I left) and
suede booh-
one with platform
soles, the ot~er
without.
..
"" the mall .-ltl6po -~·.''fllP l,:o'. portan~ FOi' eaMr, g1rll -,.111t•10lepi ~ ,'
bags tbat )9ok like brie,l~'* .' ;•
-Hoaf!I")' and bodyweai. ~\I
mme fu ·an the, r .. dy-to-wear 1j!Oul< and,
sweater styles, In all kinds of palttnil,
plaids, cbeck!, geometrics. ,
·Some bav~· "'"'lrujlnl dickeys,
icarves or deiachable .-.a. fanty-
mlor-matches body1'far In. :llie same
striking patttnis or goes 11.alont 111.-..
subUe, casual looks. ...
The . two<olor el!ect la paotybooe ls
new. Aho on the aceoe: the ~
look with boalery to match dresMi llld
hose. For evening the sexy black seam In
hose is a must.
Hosiery · ,$eam·s
By MARIAN ClllUSTY
. Seems the seamed stocking Is rearing
Into view.
-Designers and their vast audience ol
elegantel are reacting cootradlcwr!ly.
There are moans of pleuur. and just
plain moans.
Bacik-seamed pantyhose and stocklnp,
with the lnevltable crooked darlt lino
zipagglng up the back ol the leg, ara
~inning to click ....... ,..WW ....
dience bent on rellvlDI U.4111 Plf!Od.
But, IMblooabli!s Who are fllppioc for
seams are mosllf undOr ZS. 1lllo bavon!t
seen the look before and are altradecl. by
Its novelty.
Some designers aaree. Seams make
thin legs look aklnnier and heriy 1ep
heavier becauoe they call attention to
}ess-tban-perfect limbo.
. Two ol Europe's IJ10lt.alebrated
deitgnen -Valentino of Rome and
Givench1 o1 Paris -would Ilka to
obln8t I Joi of mJDds aboal awm.
ValentmO -1111 ~ -loa with a _, ol Va mardllnl ap Ille baS
of the -illg. Gl""""1 liba the look
of nude ti&htl with a thick llr1>o ol color
-not a seam -that matches the ..,tflt.
' !.<>rd Ir Ta)'lor, New Y ort. II 111t of tbt
firit stores to .-oe"""" (111111bose,
•t f.l.50. A-· ~. who aahd
llo( to be ldeoUfled. ..,., "Sure the
Crooked 1eam Is a pn>blom, but ti,,
laibionable II coping."
Designer Geoffrey Beene II 1"1111'
bo. "They're ...., oat.• be uys.
~Don't aik me 'lf(ly. Tbo loolk ICl'NIDll
lel."
David Evlna -wi-._ iw chmte
colltctlom by BID Blm, Norma Hanll
illd -GeJ Fl I -.. , C l'"nC
~to'\: w-.411111e<7.
Seam ed stockings-
are th ey comi ng
back?
·. ~·Goodman, New York, has
seamec1 pantyl\ose. "Seamed stockings
never lhould have been allowed to die,"
U)'I Louise Steccoal, BersdcJrf'a boa!PJY
buyer. ''They're nilly say."
Salm Fifth Avenue featured '3 oeamed
panl1hooe In a ne~-r ad. and sales
were ••exceJleaf." ICCOrdlal to a ltore
ll'Ctbm>an.
OIClr de la Rmta, tho handsome
., ,...., who comes ma the Dominican
""'"+lie, will DOI show 11Um1 with bll
fall colleCliGn. .
llws, the atockilc -.piny that
oervlces 10,0llO atores ....., the country,
llarted ....,..,_ iB lilt and bas no
Intention ol ..-... bact .. tbeir old
ways.
llerbhlre lDternatlonal Olrp., with
7,0llO llote acoounll, " ...... of the
"buzz" lllaul -• Ji lummC I deaf aar.
"Obee the ......... -•
the le( Dire • -. •"--..., i.
1et a nt&n dMU••," 1111 Berbllira'1
aalel _,.,., J11 WW... Rt ......
howem, Illa! Wli...,. h 1 • 11 a
cleei(pw'I -111 ...... ,.. • ' ... -
porate mlDd ownllPL .
' •
Men aren't the only
ones reaching
ov er t he his -her
lines in sh oe
fashions. A
-sample of
women's styles
(left I a re
borrowed from the men,
Controversial
I
I
I
• ·*
*
•'
6·men
BEA ANDERSON; t dllor
Tvttdlr, Jutr u, Int P~U
Not Thin-skinnecl -
Wife Saves Face
DEAR ANN LANDERS: May I say a
word to '1Tereaa," the woman who wants
a face-Wt but can't make up her mind? I
wu in her aboel a year ago at age 45.
My friends were asking me with In-
creased frequency if I wu unwell or
tired. 'Ille bags under my eyes and my
droop111J lids made me look perpetually
exhausted, hlDlg-over or ill.
It got so bad I hated to look at mysell
in the mirror. I never waa a vain person,
oot the appearance of wrlnkl .. and bags
bad a very depressing effect Oil me.
I dllcuased a face.Ult with my buaband
and he wiaed me that I looked great
the way I wu. When I reported his com-
menls to the plastic surgeon he said,
"MOit husbands react that way. They
don't want to be responsible for surgery
of any kind.''
I went ahead wlth the 1 .... UIL After a
three-week beallns period, during which I
was awollen, black-and-blue and a real
meas, I can say without exaggerating
thal I was thrilled with ljle resulla.
A woman who Is pleased wllb her looks
b easier to live with. You said In a re-
cenl column that most face-Ulla are done
for emotional reaaooa rather than ..,..
metlc reuons -that a woman who bu a face-Ult frequently thlnU It'• (Olng to
make a big difference In her Ufe, and ol
COUl'le tt• doesn't.
Well, Am, maybe It cloesni cbanp a
S>enoo'• llfe, but It can oertalnly boost
the morale and THAT'1 I good enouib
change for me. -HAPPIER IN ALBU.
QUERQllE
DEAR HAPPl'.llR: U f'" fed tood
·--!...-lilt, ... ~ ,.. •• II was Ille ,.,_ .. laioL Tllub for
w11llq.
• DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was 111-
. ' tereoted In the letter from the oecretary
who was pregnant and wanted to stay on
the job "UlllU they havo to rush me by
ambalanca to tho bospllal to dellvtr."
It eeemo her bou'a wile wanted her
out tho of!lce In her oeventh month
beclUle her pruence w a a 11t:fl\o
barruaing."
'!'he problem bas been solved In
WphlngtGa, D.C. II la now a matter ol
'
law. I hope all employed women
everywhere are aware or the Jeglstation
which wu signed by President Nixon
March 24.
To deny a woman employment because
she Is pregnant Is In direct violation of
the Civil llJihla Act of 1964, according to
the . l!qual Employment Opportunlty
Comm.iuion.
Pregnancy and all disabilities related
to lt are treated the same aa any other
temporary disability In terms of leave
time, seniority, relnstatement, and In-
surance paymenls. Pass the word, Ann.
-Wm. J, Cameron, MD, .clepartment ol
obstetrics and l)'necology, Unlverlllly of
Kansas.
DEAR DR. CAMERON: Coaalclor II
puled ud thaak 1" for wrtt111. (J'.S.
Aro )'ft awin tllat Patenlly LuYO ii
belq offered by some eampalelT YQ.
P-pta time oil Wflll paJI)
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A Joi ol -'•
wile bate pell twill the facto to mab 11
loot like pell are takJnc ovtr the coun.
try. A magnlne article bad thll
beailllae: "Peta outnumber people -to one."
When I rud the f1nl paracr11pb I
discovered .. pets" meant CIDariel,
parakeets, hamolers, .....,, llstlea
and poniel .. "1 u clap and .... '11111
Isn't lair. Please Ill the-" lbollld.
-ANDIAL LOVER
DEA& LOVD, '111t _. • ...
1lllat ...-YOU .. _,
Don't flunk ,..,. ehzulool 11 lrL i....
II mon than -111 ol .,... ..... i.
another. U )'GU bl" lnllblo ....... a
dlltlnctltol,.. .... Alll'I -. "IA'l9 or Su Eld ...... It Toll Ille Dlllw I •
Send I lalll. llllrM 11, •r...-..
envtlopo wttli ,_"'""' .. a -In coin to the DAILY l'llDr,
I .
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Jazz Festival Comes to Newport (Beach)
YOur Jrloroscope .'
:-.·
Sagittarius: Release
Yourself From Tension
.. :::
'
WEDNESDAY
JULY 26
By SYDNEY OMARR
Scorpio is dynamic, can be
fnalstent and usually i.s in-
tense. There have been rive
U.S. presidents born under
this zodiacal sign: John
Adams , Jame1 K. Polk, James
Garfield. Theodore Roosevelt
and Warreo G. Harding.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
You get action Jn areas that
bad been blocked. Where there
was frustraUoo there now can
be pleasure. Income through
occupation can i n c r e a s e .
Outline goal. You are closer to
fulfillment than might be im-
agined.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Accent on special ambition,
aspiration. Promotion is due.
You get added recognHion.
But there also is more
responsibility. Know it and
prepare aceordingly. Aries is
involved . Finish rather than
initiate project.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201:
po6itive manne~. you feel
more fulfilled. Garn shown
through written word.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
You get to source, to heart of
matters. Truth b e c o m e s
available. Know It when you
encounter it. Mate, partner
wants to discuss money. Be
cooperative. Check. I ease!,
policies. Examine I e g a I
documents.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Spotlight on special
agreements, joint e f f o r t ! .
Look around you. Examine
various alternatives. Don't be
ir. too much or a hurry to com·
mil y o u r s e 1 f • Sagittartan
could play key role . Play
waiting game for best results.
VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22!:
Your natural talents come to
forefront. You are able to
achieve, to work wit.h those
with varying views. Reun!on Ls
indicated. Be with one who
shares interests. Thorough ap-.
proach brings constructive
results.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221:
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. st):
Accent on where yoll llve, tiiow
you relate to famUy. Rectnt
disagreement ls settled. Bt I
gracious wlrmer. Don't ru~
salt in wounds. Deal gingerly
with Tauru11, Libra peI'IOlll.
Remember s p e c i a I an.
niversary.
SAOmARIUS (Nov . :j.
Dec. 21 l: Che<k direclloru1,
reservations. Relative l n
tranall could make special re-
quest. Pl11ce1 could be very
much in picture. Leave detalls
to others. Change P a c e •
Release self from needle&f
tension. ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jaii.
19 )' Accenl on ln<om"t
personal possessions. Money
comes from unexpected
source. Fine now for 'paying,
collecling debts. Don't give u11
something of value for me~
pronUse. Get commitment ~
writing. :~
Five 1lage1 at the Newporter Inn will serve u centers of attrac-
tion for the annual Summer Music Festival, sponsored by the Or-
ange County Musician's Wives' Club. The event will begin at 2 y .m.
Sunday, July 30, and an open session will start at midnight Gath-
ered for a practice session are (left to right} Ronnie Brown, Frank
Rosolino, Ansell Hill, Don Dennis and Marlene Sawtelle. Proceeds
will support the Emergency Relief Fund and a scholarsbip fund.
Good Junar aspect now .coin·
cides with journey, higher
education, special inspiration.
Personal magnetism s o a r s.
One you care for resPonds in
Romantic interesls are
emphasized. C h a n g e of
scenery would be beneficial.
Express yourself. Refuse to be
confined or shoved into corner.
Bridge generation gap. You
are on target and personal
magnetism soars.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Felij
19: Take initiative. Judi•
ment, intuition are on targe'
Be a sell-starter. Personal ap,
pearance I! on agenda. Strell
original approach. Accent In:
depende nce of thought, acUon.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mareb IO):
Visit one confined to home;
00.pilal. Keep COlllldentlal
matters under wraps . Obtain
hinl from Aquarius me...,;,
Chemist Reveals Formula for Advancement " -~=~
L -
Peering Around NEW YORK (AP) -"One
message I'd like to give young
girls is not ~ lower their
sights because they're female,
not to settle for being a nurse
when they want to be a doctor
-that's a tragedy,'' says
Julianne Prager, who set her
own sights high and achieved
her goal.
A research chemist wjth a
PhD in organic chemistry,
Dr. Prager supervises e group
ot nine male scientists at 3M
Co. in St. Paul, Minn., who do
research on new technologies
and systems for the life
sciences.
"For a woman to rise ad·
minlstratively is much more
difficult than for a man," she
admitted on a visit to New
York to attend a short courie.
flea Market, Porth Sale
"But in the laat few years it
has occurred to me there are
quite a few competent women
around and it may be time to
exploit this talent."
When she became
supervisor of the physical·
biotic section in the firm 's
Central Research Lab she had
some misgivings about how
the men would accept her. ·
Focus on Fund-raising
Orange Coast groups are
focusing attention on fund-
raisers and socials.
Demos
Orange County. Democratic
Women will meet at a p.m.
Thursday, July 27, in the Cem:i-
tral Committee Headquarters,
Santa Ana to disctm plans for
a fashion show and dinner
dance in the Royal Inn Sept.
29.
Flea Market
The annual three-day an-
tique show and flea market,
sponaored by the YWCA will
open at noon Thursday, July
27. at the headquarters. Hours
will be from noon to 9 p.m.
Thursday and Friday and noon
to 6 p.m. Saturday.
Tempting buyers will be 70
antique displays, Grandma's
Attic and a Country Kitchen.
Auxiliary
The Rosan Ranch, San Juan
Capistrano will be the setting
for the . annual awards coffee
of the South Coast Community
Hospital Auxiliary.
The event will take place at
10 a.m. Friday, July 23, and
more than 400 volunteers will
be recognized for t b e i r
volunteer service.
BPW
Huntington &a.ch Business
and Professional Women will
conduct a porch sale Saturday
and Sunday, July 29 and 30,
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the
home of Lucille Allalre.
Luau
Junior Hostesses of the
Interfaith Servicemen's
Center in San Clemente are
planning a luau at 6 p.m.
Saturday, Jul;· 29, in the
center.
*-.AG--;:';.1.'~~b'< ....... ~,,,...,, ~
To avoid disappolntment, prospec~ve
brides are reminded to have lhelr wedding
stories with black and white ~lossy !'holo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that tbne wW not
be used.
For engagement announcements It . Is
Imperative that the .-tory, also accompamed
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If de adline ls not met. only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories. forms are
avallable In all of the DAILY P.ILOT ofiices.
Further quesUons will be answered by
Women's SecUon staff members at 642-4321.
•
WOMIH'I WIA•
llt• ' .. ,. vu 1. e .... Hwy, ..._ .. _ ........
Tli• Fi11ett Wofft•11'1 W••r Fi.t11
The lftt Am•ric•n &
E11to1M•tt 01ti9111"
f•t1t th•l'f• ••c•111~t ••l•t111t .
ll"rtihl lllftlrllf .~ ..
•
Altrusa
Laguna Beach Altrusans and
their hu sbands will gather at 5
p.m. Sunday, July 30, at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Z.
Taylor Malaby for their en·
nual summer poolside party
and buffet.
New officers are the Mmes.
Jean Davis, president; Sylvia
Raupp, vice p-esident; Bea
Cri1t and Velma Newinger,
.sec retaries, end Hillie PriJl..
ciotta, treasurer.
The club will be furni.shing a
room for the Florence Crit-
tenton Home wh ich will open
in September in Santa Ana.
SC Juniors
Story hours are concluded
for preschool and primary
grade children at the C.Olonta
Jtlarez Community C en t er
every Tuesday at 2 p.m.
through Aug. 29.
Conducting the sessions are
member• of the South Coast
Junior Women of Fountain
VaUey. They also are showing
a series of entertaining and
educational movies e a c b
Thursday at 2 p.m.
MY Women
?drs. Pat Getchell is the new
president of l\fission Viejo
Women's Club.
Serving with her are the
Mmes. Jim Osborne. Jim Felt.
Sal Barricella, and Leon
Wofley, vice presidents ; G\Jy
Garner, secretary and John
Spousta, treasurer.
Travel Tip
Recommended for tr.ave! or
any other time you don't want
to face a hand laundry are
new disposable panties. Wear
once and diacard. Or use them
as liners under tights or
slacks. One aiU! fits all (up to
38 inch hips).
~ ox CART I
BURL
TABLES
Otho a IW""4
20°/o OFF ,_...,_
"Bul it worked out great,"
says the lrim, animated scien-
ti.st. "I'm senior to them all,
which helps. I think we work·
ed out a relationship where
my talents complement theirs,
rather than compete with
them. And I lhink they respect
me."
Proof of this is the fact that
she was elected chairman of
TechnicaJ Forum, the: 3,300-
member professional fratf:mi·
ty of 31\1 scientists. She admits
she was pretty proud o( that
honor, since most of her co-
workers are men.
"Since there are so few of
us . I think it's important for
women who are professionals
to be completely committed,"
she declares. "I have tried to
avoid what are considered
traditional female weaknesses.
I've tried not to get the
reputation of wasting time
talking or breaking down in
tears when things go wrong."
Dr. Prager believes one of
the m a j o r deterrents to
women entering the science
field is the)way they are
brought up.
"They play with dolls lrt-
stead of tinkering w i t h
watches and automobiles.
"Maybe they're e£raid It's
unfeminine and they won't
,
find a husband, but actuall y On the subject of homemak·
it's a very good hunting Ing, Dr. Julie Prager reports •allOllWB_,. ____ .,...,.,.,..,..,.,..,,.._
ground since girl scientists that Dr. Stephen Prager is a
frequently man:y men scien--"marvelous" cook, a talent
tlsts," laughs: Dr. Prager, who which lhe herself has been
did just that. Her husband is careful not to cultlvale. Bui,
professor of p h ya l c a l she addl, ft and her cll!8~
chemistry at tbe Univ.ersity of woman do all the rest of the
Minnesota. Both got their houlework..
Ph.D.'s at Cornell University "I welt on him, mate a
and she report.! they ollen dellherate ellort to provide
hold "shoptalk" discussions him with a 1 e r en e at·
that are mutually beneficial, ~ " abe d e c I a r e s
"I ask him quest.ions and he "Role c1efiruuon contributes tO
provides help," she explains.-. successful marriage. U
"On the other hand, he's a you're just roommates quar-
professor and sometimes more reling over who's going to do
theorellcal than practical. I wbal It's no good but one ol
Iring the real world to him, the grootest ~ about life
:"'!'1•.g this is,!!'< way tlley do nowadaya is that people are
it in industry. not as intimidat.d by wilal'a
Dr. Prager thinl<.s lhe.-e has proper for eacti sex to do.
recently been a change of at· "I think I'm pretty bright
tltude in the nation's in-but I think my husband Is
du strles Iowa rd the brighter and l'!Jl. glad that's
capabilities o I women. She the cue " she adds firmly ~g~ girls to have an interest "7bat's 'the male ea:o and 1n 1t, who like to know why ,
AFrER THEIR Mediler·
ranean cruise, Dr. and Mrs.
Robert Roper of Laguna
Beach visited hometowns of
Hebron, Neb. and Bowen, Ill.
on a trip to her 50th class reu·
nion at Western Illinois
~nlveraily.
Femily Visits and a tour of
Eisenhower-Center in Abilene,
Kan. were Included in the
Previously the slnger--pianlst
composed for and performed
with the Mike CUrb Congregt-
1.lon.
Miss Wiseman graduated
from Corona de! Mar High
School, was a Children's Homa
Society debutante in 1961 and
attended USC. She is the
daughter of Mrs. Lloyd P.
Smith of Woodside.
Midwest jllllket thal fmished -=::;;~~~~;;;:::--wtlh llopo al the Grand Can-
yon and Lake -Havasu where
the Ropers .., m a d e ar-~
rangements for a fall tour by FRANCJS. the Mondty Morning Club,
F 'ORMER RARBORITE '\.,, ORR el
FINE STATIONERY ,.., .........
Jacquie Wiaem a n now
performs with the gill's trio ,
the Rock Flowen, in the Tom
Jone.a Show that is touring the
U.S. and will appear al the
Greet Theater for a week
starting July 31.
· HAlF PRICE
SALE things work, to think aOOUt a that s the W,~Y men have been
career in science. brought up. 1111 l.CIAIT ., ... , 111-U
"I'm not saying my thing i.!0 --------------------__!~~"~"~"~'~"~1~11~·1~"~"~,.~·~' ~·111~111~ right for everybody," ' she1-
says. 1'If a girl wants to com·
mil herself to being •
homemaker and can be happy
at that from age 20 to 85 I'm
all for II. Maybe there'd be
fewer disturbed chUdren."
•
~
Hickory Far,msoi~o·
has gone bananas
over
banana
chips
• . • • .
"SOFJIE" PERM
A unique, tropic treat that's good
so many different ways. Try Bina·
na Chips on ice ~am, cereal or
rll#lt out of th• box. Plain or fancy,
1host toostY-<tlip ~akn of Pltilli-
plne bln1~11rt unbeltlble...so git
on down to 1ht 81n11111 Ollps bQn..
•nza today! s-t or Soltodll I
'
,
" I
SPEC I A ~~;:'"
~16 ~I
Take a vacation
from curlers I Have your hair cut,
styled and permanenlly curled for just
$16.75 including lanolized neutralizer
~GIC ~~~ 'BeautySalons
C.ill for an appointment •
1620 Nrw M~., •N.. MAllOI YllW CINTll
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Cd 644-41040 "' AppolOITllnt
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JOURNEY THROUGH BOOKS -Blake
Peters and Danna Stocks check their
travel progress on map of the seven con-
.. tineots at Mariners Branch, Newport Pub-
... lic Library. Last stop on the "tour" will
. . ·be a party Thursday, Aug. 24, with en·
tertainment, refreshments and prizes.
Making Allowances
~
:i It's Mad 'Money
~ :• By ERlllA BO!llBECK
' .. ., My neighbor, Wanda Wier<f.
-\was co mplaining to me the
:tother day about her son.
-\ "That kid is going to drive
;me crazy," she sa id.
"Everytime I tum around he
wants to be paid for what he
does. Do you know what he
had the nerve to give me on
Mother's Day? He gave me a
chintzy ·little plaque made out
of library paste and toothpicks
that he had made himself."
"f think that's rather
i'Weet ," I said.
:; "From a 19-year-old boy?"
:· T know how Wanda feels.
Qur son 's middle name is, "Do
l· have to use my own
money?"
Some years ago, in a burst
of paternal insanity, we in·
itiated th e "allowance"
sy stem at our 'house. We
thought it would be an jn-
Centive to do a good job, instill a firsthand working knowledge
of how our fr ee enterprise
system works, and give him a
feeling of financial in-
dependence.
AT
WIT'S
END
We didn't know then he was
saving up for a down payment
to buy Nevada.
What do we get for our $2 a
week?
We get tbe table cleared
whether we are still eating or
not . 1 have had my coflee cup
snatched from my mouth
while my lips were still
blistering. .
We get a decision maker
who decides that the remains
of a $6 sirloin should be tossed
down the disposer while a
peach seed floating Jn a bowl
of syrup should be saved in
the refrigerator.
We get a garbage husUer
whose open lid policy has at-
tracte<I dogs who have taken
buses to get to our garbage
can smorgasbord each night.
Eve ry week, hfs money goes
into the bank, giving life to a
new adage, ''It ts better to
receive than to give." Whether
it's gum, a movie, a po1ter, a
record, there is always the
perenniaJ, "Do I have to use
my own money?"
Yesterday, we stopped Jn
.. front of an ice cream parlor
and I could just anticipate bii
ne:rt question. So I said to
him, '41 do not think you
realize that it costs parents
$147 ,154 to raise just one child.
0 That includes education,
bealth expenses, dotbes, bo.,.
iag, food and the potential
salary of a mother who might
have worked but stayed ·at
home to raise the child. There
is some sacrifice involved.
"Of course, we wouldn't
have it any other way. But
think about it. ImaR:ine that in
a lifetime your father and I
will have coughed up $147,154
on your bebaU."
He was silent for a moment,
then got out of the ear and
went in for the ice cream.
Wben he returned, he handed
me a cone ~ said, "l only
got one dip each for m. I
didn't think you could afford
two dips each."
ONE-HALF PRICE
SALE
• LOTS OP TOPS • LOTS OF PANTS
• LOTS OF PLA YCLOTHES
• LOTS OF HA~Dl~GS
• LOTS OF DRESSES
(JUNIOR & MISSES-SHORTS. & LONGS)
• LOTS OF COATS TOO!
-----~tii~
WEStCLIFF PLAZA ONLY
17th & IRVINE -NEWPORT !llACH
I•
'
DAILY PILOT
Leafing T.hrough Books
Reading Transports ChiJdren to Travel
Children Ill the beach citt ..
bave gone contlnem.bopplng
this summer through reading
programs in city Md county
llbraries. Now passports are
being iasued fot ancl-of .......
mer parllea.
"Continental Hop" w 111
theme the finale · for HUJi.
tingtoo Beach !Jbrary's "Le~a
Go! Travel 1blough,Jleldin8"·
Pl'Olfllll planned for Wednes-
day, Aug. 9, beginning at .'I
p.m.
Chiidmi having comple!ed
at least· Ill books will be issued
a pwporl to their selected .
continent and· a ticket lo the
party. George Popa and his
Dixieland.era will perform,
their services donated by
Orange County Musician 1
Local 7.
Paramount Pictures will
supply tbe film and the Pto-
jectionlsts Union a pro-
jectionist-for a movie showing.
Children a r e encooraged.
to come in costume.
R<lrubmentr will be sold and
prizes awarded. ·
"Around the · World in 80
minutes" will theme the party
given by Mesa Verde Branch,
Orange Count)'> P u b 1 i c
Library. Music, folk dancing,
refreshments and o the t
surprises are on the schedule
for the Saturday, Aug. 12, par-
ty beginning at 10 a.m.
The party will top oU a l!llm-
mer of travel tbrougb reading,
young people's re ad ·in 1,
preschool story hours and a
film series designed especially
for the young.
Lion Country Safari will
share a lion cub w I t h
participants in tfie Fountain
Valley Library's s urn mer
reading program. A slide show
will accompany the cub's ap-
pea™""'.
Friends of the Library will
serve ice cteam to children at·
tending the Aug. IZ party
planned for 2 p.m. in tbe
Foontain Valley Community
Center.
'fn spite of small temporary certificate at the end of his
quarters the Laguna Beach tour.
Library will end the summer Wrapping up the summer
reading program with a party for the Costa Mesa Library
also on Aug. 12 from 1 to 3 will be a celebration in Costa
p.m. in the library patio. Mesa City Park Saturday,
Entertainment, refreshments Aug. 12, at 2 p.m.
and balloons will be provided. The Veselo Dancers will
Newport Beach !Jbrary will perfonn Turkish folk dances
reward children who have and another troupe w i 11
completed their r e a d i n g perform Scottish d a n c e s •
travels with an afternoon par-Children who have read the
ty Thursday, Aug. 24. Enter-most books and teen a g e
tainment, refreshments and volunteers will be honored .
prizes are planned. Each Refreshments will i n c l u d e
traveller will __ e_a r o a_ popsicles ..and.candy.
NO AFRICAN CAT -Boots Ran·
dolph, held by Sheri Leary, is an All·
American cat, but finds it interest-
ing lo I o o k up his heritage with
Fountain Valley Library children'•
librarian Lynne Pendleton. Lion
Co untry Safari will bring a distant
cousin cub to visit the library Satur-
day, Aug. 12. Party will end summer
reading program.
YOU CAN BE TWO SIZES SLIMMER IN ONE MONTH
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THE g&ualJlaMklt WAY
3 4 5 6
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28
9 10
all, weighing
els, Cindy Malh llmd .
W a cut , wholetome loo ..•
29
16
' hidiq her
m the photo
.23
30
17
inch
her)
24
11 13
but now , ..
WOW!
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I I 11.
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YOU CAN TOOi WITH NO STRENUOUS EXERCISE, HARMFUL DRUGS OR STARVATION
DIETS. OUR FIRMING AND TONING EQUIPMENT IS THE FINEST AVAILABLE. INDIVIDUAL
ATTENTION IS PROVIDED EACH OF OUR PATRONS. YOUR NEW FIGURE IS GUARANTEED
IN WRITING!
THE j~aMhafi? SYSTEM OF WEIGHT CONTROL IS ADAPTABLE
TO ANY WOMAN -FROM TEENAGERS TO GRANDMOTHERS
Be our gu11t for a FREE treatment to see what we can do for YOU/
~~kit FIGURE CONTROL SALONS ~"4,~~!W'l //{fl Open d1Uy 9 tot-S.tu«11y 9 to 4
N1tlon'1 Je~ing·t;gure eonlrOI t)'Slem
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, zt ~IL Y PILOT
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Lockman
Replaces
Durocher
·' ATLANTA (AP) -Leo Durocher, who
• loolt ov• the down-lrodden ·aucaco Cubo
·:In llM and made them pennant con-
tenders a. year later, bas "1tepped ulde"
iU manacer. ·
: ~ pr .. 1c1ent\John Holland used that
phra. In making the announcement ear-' lY today. leaving it unclear whether The
Lip hM quit or been fired.
• In any caae, Whitey Lockman, director
ol player development, Is the man picked
: by own•r Phil Wrigley lo revive the
. CUbe. They are currently languishing in
· fourth place in the NaUonal League East,
10 pmea out of first .
The Chieago Sun·Tlmes reported loday
that Wrigley N!d summoned Durocher to 1!1• apartment Monday night for a top.
oecret meeting, the secorid such .purunll
conference In nine montbs.
The newapaper said a CUils . source
predicted, ''Leo Is going to have to do a
tremendous acjllng job to keep from get·
'. ting fired."
Lockman, former New York Gi@_ntl ~ ftm baseman under Durocher, denied
that the CUbs are suffering from morale
problems.
.. Of course, t haven't been too close to
the team in my positlnn this year/' he
edded In an interview today, his '6th
~. birthday.
" lie. utll he was hard put to dllgnose
: the team's: Ineffectiveness.
~ · 0 You bave to remember t bat
~. Pittsburgh and St. Louis have been ·
i playing exceptionally well,'' he said.
. Lockman, Holland afld other CUbs staff
were in Atlanta for · tonight's All.Star
"game, in which Cub shortstop Don Kess-
1nger is starting for the National League.
Durocher had dropped from sight and
was unavailable for comment.
No bfg player changes are anticipated,
said Lockman, and ntanaglng policies are
not expected to be drastically revamped .
"The first thing • l~I do Is to get
logether with the coaching •taff and
evaluate the club. We bave good, sdlld
personnel down the Jine and I think we
have a good chance of contending for the
division pennant," he said.
Lockman spent 15 years as a player in
·the majors, coming up in 1945 and retir·
ing after the 1959 seasori with Baltimore
'. and Cincinnati. He played under
•, .Durocher when he managed New York
Vll'I T .......
PRETIY TRIMMINGS FOR THJ ALL-STAR GAME IN ATLANTA.
Sports In Brief
Type~ast Na bs Su-ns et;
Sweeney to Sign Pact
INGLEWOOD -II the fillies and
mares ever think up a gals' lib program
of their own, they can point to Hoilywood
Park.
Juvenile, the first time a distaff runner
has done it in 25 years.
r · for 7lh yean in the late 40s and early
50s.
\Yhen Bobby Thomson's ninth-Inning
'1 home run took the 1951 Giants Into the
'. ·World series over the Brooklyn Dodgers,
Lockman was one of the baserunners
who croaed the plate.
The 6-year-old mare Typecast enr
barrassed the gufs again Monday when
she surged to the fore and won the
$135,380 Sunset Handicap by a head.
Typecast went one up on that. She won
the Sunset in its 31st running and no gal
had ever finished first in that one. ,,,
..
J
For the meeting, the mare won
$234,400. She beat the guys in the Ho!·
lywood Invitational Turf Handicap and
then came ~ck in the Sunset. Lockman's fint assignment · after
" ioining the Cubs' organization in· 1964 was
· to manage Dallas-Fort Worth in the Tex· Now the t.boroilgbbreds b~ad for Del
as League. He guided the team to a first· Mar and the start of the 43-day season
' , place tie and'was named Manager of the ---there. 1be ·$15.000-added Palomar &;n-
. Year in the league. ~cap.~pens the program and, as only fit·
From 1967 to 1970 ,Lockman managed tmg, 1t s for the gals.
J the Tacoma Cubs of the Pacific Coast Hollywood Park showed a 5.6 percent
League. The Cubi won the PCL cham· drop in betting handle and an 8.27 ~r·
· · pionship in 1969 and he picked up bis seC-cent decline in attendance compared with
ond Manager of the Year award. the 1971 meeting. The figures for the 75-
• In 1970 be was appointed suj>ervisor of day 1972 session were $213,493,MO wagel""
player development - a minor Jeague ed by 1,990,826 patrons.
job -and two years later he was ap-Last Saturday, Bold Liz ouUegged her
· . pointed assistant to the vice president. male rivals to win the Hollywood
B ree :es Past Chile
·. U.S . Davis Cup Team
Plays Spaniards Next
:: SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -The U.S.
· • : Da vis Cup tennis team leaves for
•; Barcelona today to play Spain , the Euro-
; pean champion, after breezing through S. I· O against Chile in the American Zone
it won in 1968 after a five-yea r lapse to
Australia .
: finals.
l ' ~ The Chileans put up a tough fight , but
" they were no match for the powerful ~ American team that still fa ces two in·
Harold Solomon, 19, thinks the Roman-
nians will win the series. "They're
favorites and I think they will defeat the
Australians," he said.
Solomon, of Silver Springs, Md.,
delighted Chilean rans with his two-hand·
ed grip on his backshots during the
series. • '
i terzone finalists retain the Davis Cup for
t another year .
'(he first, against the Spaniards, is
scheduled to begin Aug. 4 in Barcelona.
Spain clinched the A series of the Euro-
pea n Zone Monday against !. Czechoslovakia.
{: The second will be decided after
~ Romania and Australia finish disputing
• the other interzone series. The U.S. team f ~ must beat both to retain the CUp, which
1• .
J. Rosary Scheduled ..
·:For Sweetland ..
~ Rosary will be spoken Wednesday ftight
"I think it'Jl be tough in Europe, too.'' .
he predicted. "We don't know who of us
wi!J be playing and we don't know who
the Spaniards will put out.
1'But like we did here we are going
with the attitude that we 're going to
win."
Dennis Ralston, tbe captain of the
American team, said the series in San·
tiago "provided some very valuable ex·
perlence for the men, especially in get·
ting some accustomed to clay courls.
*'We can certainly learn from some of
the mistakes made here too," he told
newsmen. Lite it did in Chile, the U.S.
team will play on clay courts in
Barcelona and these are much slower
lhan the gra,. courls used in the United
States.
All-Pro offensive guard Walt Sweeney
says he is close to signing a contract With
the San Diego Chargers.
Sweeney said an agreement was reach-
ed Monday but that the fonnal signing
was postponed because be was told that
club president Eugene Klein was en route
to New York and could not approve the
contract terms .
The eight-year veteran labored through
his first day of workouts at the Chargers'
training camp at UC Irvine Monday after
reporting seven days late because of the
contract dispute.
He and linebacker Pete Barnes, who
also repOrted late and said be intends to
play out his option, were each fined
$1 ,050 by coach Harland Svare. .,,
LONG BEACH -Quarterback Roman
Gabriel of the Los A n g e I es Rams
did some jogging and light throwing
Monday, a week after he suffered a col-
lapsed Jung. -
Gabriel, 31, who has taken over
virtually every Rams passing record in
his 10 years with the team, wu first
feared lost for the season when he had
trouble breathing during a workout last
Monday and the condition was diagnosed as a collapsed right Jung.
But doctors who inserted a tube to
reinflate the Ii.mg later said Gabriel protr
ably would be ready for cootact wort in
three weeks. A Rams spokesman said the
quarterhack was feeling fine during the
workout Monday and his recovery was
"right on schedule."
Coach Tommy Prothro continued shuf·
fling positions Monday, moving Fred
Dryer from defensive Jell end lo right
end, the position he played with the New
York Giants, and Sending Coy Bacon to
left end.
The Rams also cut rookie linebacker
Kenny Page of Kansas, their 15th-round
draft choice. .,,
AMHEHST, Mass. -The New England
Patriots announced Monday they have
traded veteran fullback Jim Nance to the
Philadelphia Eagles !or an undisclosed
1973 draft choice.
The announcement was made by
Patriots general manager Upton Bell at
a news conference at the National Foot-
ball League team's training camp at the
University of Massachusetts.
The Patriols said Nance look a cul In
salary, rumored to be more than $80,000
a year, and would ttport lo the Ea~Je1
training camp at Reading, Pa., J.Jna
mediately.
-" ,
Gibson, Palmer Duel
In All -St ar
~
ATLANTA (AP) -Bob Glbm refuo.
tantly throws the, flnl pitch ~ in lhe
43rd All.Star bueblll gome, daimlog all
the while: "I didn 't want to ltart. l'
,,.· St. Louis CardtnaI rightlwlder,
leu than overjoyed about his asalpnent
for the 'National League, faces Jim
Palmer of Uie Americln League at Atlon-
ta Stadium. '·
"!fl bad my drulhers,. l wouldn't start
this All.Star ·game,~' aald'Gibson, the bot·
teat pitd}er in llueball wllb I.I etralgbt
viclorie1. "I'd ·much rather jusl pi!cll -
On TV Tonight
Channel 4 fit S:JS
Inning -and leave. An All.Star asatgn.
· ment mlgbl be an honor, but it's bard
work, too."
Gibson· matches serves with Pilmer,
the right-handed ·Baltimore Oriole ace,
.before a fuJJ·bouJe ol ~.7ff while al>®t
50 million more ·are ezpected to watch on
national television.
"I piesa I gotla start -whal else II
there to say?" aaid Glblolt. "But, DOW, I
gueu I won1 be pitching Thursday."
-GI-wu scheduled' to start agalnsl lhe Montreal EJpos Oil Thursday. Now,
N!·llld, helll probablY have to wait "until
Friday ., Saturilll'" to get hack'inlo, ae-
llob.
Wblle the talkllllve GlbsOll~ spoke h1$
~ P.almer remained a silent starter
on rae eve of the mldaummer classic.
Palmer wis abseitt from the press ....
!erence, but Earl Weaver, his manager
• at Baltimore and the boal of the American
League teaqi, had eooUgb to.say for both.
''This gome Is importanl to me and to
every player in1it;" said Weaver, respon-
ding lo Glbaoa's postutt. "I don't think
IJ!llbodY should say he doem't want to
play. Ninety·flve pertent of the· gale
from this game goes into the pension
funcLTbis P81I for my retirement and
bis (GibsOll's) and be'd better not forgel
it." Weaver, pnxluclng newspaper dippings
quoting Gibaoa'a outspotep. comments,
added: · "It'1 aomething that. sboWdn't
have been· said .. I'm sure be'• happy lo be-
here and he'll go out and do 1 job,
especially after me popping off."
National League mllllll!er DannY
Murtaugh seemed unra!Ued by tbe
Gibloo storm. ••t haven't seen auy article," said U.
former Pittsburgh mana1er. "Whal did
1' aay?"
When Weaver produced the cllppinp,
Murtaugh glanced at them and llld:
"Well, Bob and I have dilferenl ideas.,I
named him u my aiarter • • • and !'In
going to start him.'' .
Murtaugh refused to commit blmlell
past the fll'lt three inmtings, allhoqh II!>
haJ a quanUty of power!Ul pitching l!Dll
lo choose from, incl-g New Yort''
Tom Seaver, Sieve Blau of the Pill>
burgh Piratea, the Phllade1phla Phillies'
Steve car1tiin and Don Sutton of the Lao
Angeles Dodgers.
But wilb all that reserve pitching help,
the National League is 1 7-5 favorite hu-
ed beavlly on slugging atars -in<ludinc
Cinclnnali catcher Johnny Bench, the
major league's home run and RBI leader
with U and 72.
Gibson, historically· a · fierce com-
petitor, created oontroversy with bis
position on the All-Star Game.
FootfJall's T..-Attraetion
"Yes, I said that I didn't want to start
bul l didn't oay that. I didn't want to
pitch -the writers said that," Gibson
remarked Monday at a press conference,
referring to a recent newspaper story.
Jets' Namath Seeking
The bard-throwing hurler said thal he
preferred to work just ooe inning in relief
so that it wouldn't inlerfe,. with his
normal rotatioh during the regular
Rason. It's usually the, practice for an
All~Star starter to complete three in-
nings.
·2-year, $500,000 Pact
TM rottert for toftlthl'I An.£11r blteMll 1111'111
•I Atl•nta .SllMll11m: AftMrlclll LN1w NatllMI U.,..
Na.Na-,_, Na.N-hi.
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S S<:htlnblllm of lt Sanlo If
6 Btlldo II 11 KIMlfllltr If
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• Yaslntrmkl of 17 Cotblt't II
f J1ckson of 11 •.U..rt If
f Plnlttla c 2CI Brock of
11 FrHhan 11 2CI .Sutton p
15 D, Allin Jr 21 CMIMl'lt9 of
11 c. May of 2J .5tmmoM c
1' Campaf'Mlrls If 2J l. May Ir
tf McNalty p 2• Mars of
22 Palmar p 2• 1i-ma11 p
2S Casi\ II U·Wllllimt of
M Otis of 21 81111 p
26 Rudi of 21 C.cltno of
27 Fisk c ll Jtnklr'I• p
21 Hunlar p 32 Carlton p
21 Wood p lS Sa119VH1tn c
2t ca,..,, U 2S Spltr 11
tt lollch p :w earron p
It Holtunatt p •1 snwr p
30 Ryan p '4 Aaron et
IS G. hrry .. "5 Glbsofl ,.
J7 Dobson p .u McGraw p
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) -Joe
Namath Is unquestionably pro f)lotball'•
No. 1 gate attraction and that fact, says.
Joe, should be reflected Jn dollars and
cents.
The aleepy..,yed, loa(·halred 111per star
declines lo name ·an euet figure but
associatea cJalm tt Is In lbe neJibborbdbd
of haU a mllllon dollan fer two years.
That's a Vf!r/ nice neighborhood. .
That's tbe working amount that will•be
on the table when Broadway Joe's at-
torney, Jimmy Walsh, meets this
weekend· with top management· of the
New York Jets, Phil Iaelin, chairman of
the board, coach and· general manager ·
Weeb Ewbank and Jet's attorney Dick
Barovict-on a new-Namath contract.
Both sides are optimistic that an
agreement can be reached before the
Jets' lint exhibition game against the
San Francl!co 49erl in Jaekaonville, Fla.,
Aug. 5.
0 No live combat for me tmtll I have a
contract/' Namath .insisted Monda1 after
Landing lutructiOllJ •
• • Coach Bud Marquette corrects LOs Alamitos' Clth:f R!ab)' as she di&>
mounts from the bar. at the U.S. Women'• QlymplC gyD111UUc team
training headquarters at Yale Universlly.
reporting lo the National Football Loque
team 1 week late and going through hill
first workout. "No txhibitlon gamea. No
playin& under the optiod clause."
Rumors are rife. There are nports
that fiamatb Is demanding 1 mllHen
dollan covering a four·year •-Olber estimates are for $200,000 to $250,000 over
a shorter span.
"We're talking about a two-year con-
tract," Joe said. "I think both sides
would prefer it." It ls almost certain
Namath will come out o! the negotiations
the highest paid player Jn the game.
Relaxing in the dining.room of Hofstra
University, the Jets' training site, the 29-
year-old quarterback propped his fragUa
leg!On a chair and told why he t!ilnks be
should get a bigger salary than any of his
contemporaries.
"There are a lot oj reasons," be said,
toying with a toothpick. "New York is
the biggest dty in ille country. The Jeis
are the only team it ha.I. The Giants are
terrible.
"II the Jell .,. to win Ibey have le
hire me or one just u capable. Or tbey
have to get one oot of the washin1
rnachine."
Namath, for all of his physical
ailments, left no qutStinn that be thought
be WU their boy.
"I think I can play betier than
anyone," be said. "They don't have to
take a gamble on me. They know what I
can do. They can aee what I do out ~
in practice. I alwaya go full speed."
Namath said be would continue lo work
out bul not plsy in tile absence of a con-
tnct. "Of coune, it will CIUR I buale
on the team," he added. 0 Some guys will
understand. But others will think I oughl to. be out there pllying."
Laver Flattens
Tennis Rival
In Easy Fashion
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -"I wlsb
he'd hit more balb - I need the wort " ~id Corona del Mar's Rod Laver a1~
Oatlening Tom Leonard in first round ac-
tfon of the $00,000 Pro Tennis Classic al
Louisville.
"I don't tblnlc he was loo lntemled in
playing,"·aaid the Jeft·handed Laver Who
·woo the match with Leonard M f-3 in
j11Jt under 40 minutea. '
Laver, the 1970'~ic champion, but a
loser in lbe opening round last year
literally swept lhrough the first ..i;
dropping only ~ of lbe '34 points con-
lested. In lbe llna10 Laver broke
1-ard'• serve al Jove Jn the elghtll
· pme to !al<• the match'.
Laver will meet IOOOftd.aeeded Nikki
Pille of Yugoalavla in aecond round
•Ingles acUon WeG>eaday.
Thli tall, aggmotve Pille utilized a
powerful forehand lo defeat Doret
&cbrocler f.l, f.%. ·
In other inltcbes M...i.y Fred S1c11t
downed Graham SUl...U, f.%, 7-4· Bob
Lull ralJJed lo beal 11th seeded Rocer n,Jcr, 44, f.t, f.I and Frank Froe1J1iar
outlalecl Haroon Rahim, f.7, f.I, 7.f.
'
(or Don SweeUand, a former Saddieback
College baseball standout who passed
away Sunday night.at St. Joseph Hospital
In Orange.
: The rosary II 1et !or a o'clock in the
• Saddleback Funeral Chapel ·at Tustin.
' Sweetland, the first elected captain
Solomon was about the only one who
professed to liking ground clay under his
feet.
Stan Smith, 25, a U.S. Army Corporal
from Sea Pines. S. C., and the
Wimbledon champion, liked the clay
courts least of all . He had a hard time at
the beginning getting used t~ them.
T r evino ' Irked by Unrolr Crowd
or the Saddlcback baseball team was also
• named Gaucho of the Year in 1968.
After ati.ndlng Saddleback, SweeUand
: played at Chapm111 College.
, He was drafted bY the Los Angeles
: Dodgers qallilation and was playing
: 1e111i-pro ball at Bellingham, Wash. when
; 1ffilcted with Hodgkins disease 1 year
•{ago.
; Fllneral ..,.,,;.., will be held Thursday
, 11 lhe Saddlebac) Chapel at 11 1.m.
He Is the llOll of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Sweetland, Jr. of 21131 Turquesa, Mlsalon
Viejo.
Erik Van Dtucn, 21, o! San Mateo and
Tom Gorman, the other two team
members, got accustomed lo ille clay
without much trouble.
Solomon summed up the play agalnsl
the Chileans Jn Santiago as ' ' a
challenge."
''We knew they were a toL1gh team and
as it turned out they played 1 tough
game."
I
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Lee Trevino
thinka it's aboul Ume the gallery teamed
aome manners Jn following the pro pill
tour!Jts.
The popular Mwcan, who ltopped
Jack Nicklaus' grand slam bid in the
British Open nearly two weells ..,, wu
the victim of an unruly crowd Monday 11
lhe Columbus Invitational Pro-Amlteur
Championship.
"It~ a matter of eUquttte," said
Trevino, the second le•dm& money win-
ner on the four this year. "You beltar toll
tlloee people llow to .g ".
Trevtoo Aid he wu treated roughly
tbe Ollllrt II holea ovor lbe SciU Coom-
111' Club coune and WU evt11 lmoe1<ed
down Olll lime. •
''I act lmocted down cormn, oil tlle·
llth green," said TreYino in lhe ... of
a fwo ov« por n performaaoo In the
~evmt. ,
"I was gouged, kicked and tripped. I
got stabbed In lbe eye," he tald.
'jTbe crowd ran acrm lbe-creec-1
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DAILY PILGT J(
1t:· M .__
=· '= e .. rv Leap~ . :; ' .. Albritton
May Pllly
.Leglea Baceltall
·' Late Comeback Schutte Derails
I
Again for Bucs Both Ways .
LOS ANGELES -Practice
sessions are 1.,perlng off
somewhat in the North 1nd
South camps as the 21st an.
nual Shruie football game
nears with kickoff !lated for
8:30 Thursday night at Men1-
orial Coliseum.
Westminster, 2-1
. '
'
Ward's Pirates, on the heels
Cr a four-game winning streak.
rocketed ' into the No. 2 posi-
tion in Metro League baseball
warfare following SUnday'1
~... come-from·behind 6-5 decision
' ' <1ver the host Orange 'Pan-
... thers.
In other action it was
. Senik's Rusllers rebounding to
take an 8-7 decision from La
Fonda while Saddleback was a
13-4 loser to Fullerton-
Anaheim at Cal S t a t· e
(Fullerton);
The Pirates gained their
. , .• fourth straight victory with
-:· .. their customary late finish .
· This lime it was a three-run
seventh that' did the trick for
. ~:. Ward's, Rich Fielder and John
. • Palmer were the h1tting stars
'
for the winners. ·
· Fielder slugged out tl)ree
Anaheim
Boxing Set
Live boxing, feaiuring an
all-star card. returns to the
Anaheim Convention Center
Monday.
Armandci Muniz, ·an Orange
County favorite, headljnes the
three· main bout e v e n ts .
, . . , 1'.1uniz, sporting a 2 0 • 2 • 1 · ,; < 'record, with 14 kayoes, will
defend his North American
:welterweight title a g a in s t
... ·'"
., ' ..
"
..
Ruben Vasquez of Mexico.
Vasquez, currently the top
ranked welterweight in Mex·
fco. has a 33·7 record.
The bout marks the third
appearance for Muniz at the
Anaheim Arena.Last January,
he dropped a decision to
,_.,; · . fonner champion Emile . Gr if·
fith. Pr.ior to that, he KO'd Gi°I
King.
. .
Two lightweight fights are
11lso scheduled. Reuben Navar·
. ro and Rudolfo Gonzales clash
,• '"
. "
• • ' .. .. ' \ ..
'1. ' .. ·;-~
. ,.
" . .
...
in a 10-round bout with the
winner getting a title shot at
the current lightweight
champ, Roberto Duran.
The ot~er bout' features
1 Rudolfo Lobato of Santa Ana
against Jase Valdez of Mex.ieo
City. ·Lobato, attempting ,'lo
get ~ack on .the victory trail.
lost In bis last outing against
Irish Frankie Crawford .
· Tickets for the triple card1 at fl, $5, and $3.50 are now on
sale at the C.Onvention Center
and at all Ticketron outleb.
base hits including a triple and
JOOred twice.
Palmer socked a pair, of
singles to account for three rbl
and scored twice.
· The Rustlers won it In the
bottom of the seventh inntiig on a three-run homer by
Blaine Calder with Gary
Simpson and Phil McCartney
on base .
Earlier Curt Peterson had a
lt)rel'--run four-baP.ger for Sad·
Rustlers. Mike Dodd had a
double and triple to aid Senik's
cause.
La Fonda had only one earn·
ed run as six errors helped it
along.
Scott Johannes slammed a
t'YO·run four.bagger for Sad·.
dleback in the seventh inning .
But it fell far short o(..equaliz·
in" eight Sadd,leback · errors
which led ·to An aheim·
Fullerton's t:t niarkers.
••nlk Ru1t1an ttl ab r h rbl
Me,•ule'f, ss-2b • 1 l O Dodd,c l 120
51mo1011. ct ! ' • 1, 81tkllt'f, Jb 0 0 P. McC1rtnty, 11 1 I , o1 ' Nodlend, If 3 1 0 Wllwn. IS l 0 0 0 Cel(ler, rt-311-lb J 1 2 • Pettr1IH'l..i._ lb • 1 2
0
2 C:rtKI, .nt 0 0 0 0
Slll'ftn1, lb-rf ' 0 1
Alberl1on, rl o i • 00 Lulld•rl!\, 11 I o Hamlin, Ph 1 i 0 ' P1rktr. 11 o 0 O Pru11e1 o 1 0 ,,• O Tot1 1 ll I t
klNb'f IMllff R M e
Le Fond1 0?7 001 20!)...1 10 7 Ru1Her1 030 010 .:Ix-I 11 4
W1re'1 1>1r11:: !fl r h tbl
McKlnlt"f, 3b 3 2 l a FlehMr. 2b • 2 J 1 Palm!!!". cl • 1 1 l Flem!119, lb l 0 O o M!ne1. rl 2 0 1• 1• Bowen. rl 2 0 W11SOJ'I, IS 4 0 1 0 Peppas, If • o g o
J ohnt1111.t i O 1 3
Quisenberry, • j 10 • Totals nJ: k«lrtl ntSR Ht:
Pirates 300 000 3-4 10 o
Included in the South's star··
studded alignment are Orange
Coast area standouts Terry
Albritton of Newport Harbor
and Jeff Siemens of
Westminster.
Albritton has proved his All
American status in practice to
such an extent that he may be
used both~ offensively and
defensively. .
He's primarily an offensive
specialist but coaches t(arry
Frum (Monroe) and Bob
Hitchcock (Temple City) haye
thought. oI utiliziiig Albrit-
tan's ability both ways.
Tfie South has been working
out at UCLA while the in-
vaders .from the North have
used use as a home base.
The south is ·favored to win
its 13th against five losses and
three tieS. Tht North hasn't
come out on top since it pulled '
a 24-22 upset off in 1967.
TiCkets are scaled at $5. $3
arid 11.50 with the proceeds
going to the Loo Angeles Unit
of the Shrinm Hospitals for
Crippled Children. ,
Anaheim Schutte put tilt
1 akidstoWe1tmln1ter'1
distrlcl· pliyoft dreams Mon-
d1y nisbt at La Palma
Stadium with 1 2·1, 10-inninf
victory in a opeclal playorr.
The victory puts Schutte into
the playoffs as the American
League No. 2 team .
Westminster returns to ac-
tion Wednesday night 1t La
Pa1ma (7) with a con·
frontation with Long Beach.
Peterson in the first round of
the Anaheim Invitational .
Westminster was victoriou~
in Sunday's final salvo of
American League 1c1 ion.
\Vestminster turned back
Placentia. 1-2. behind the hit·
ting barrage or Gary Rungo,
who banged out four singles in
five trips to tht plate.
In other action involvi ng
Orange C.Oast area nines San
Clemente won two of th rte
weekend tests, Newport and
Jo ... ountain Valley lost and
Mission Viejo forfeited to
Bolsa Grande.
San Cltmente closed Foun·
tain V1lley'a winl.e!S aea son
with a 3-1 decision Sunday.
Toby Reschan was the center
or the San Clemente attack,
accounting for two rbi v.·ith 1
iingle and sacrifice fly. He
al so scored a run on Rich
Douglass' single. Bob Palmer
struck out ts for S a n
Clemente.
W11lf11111•I., Cll allo , .. Al
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Wllilaley, 11>-lb ' 1 1 I RU<lfo, c S 1 • o Nodltnd, II J 1 t' 8lttll1y, u l I 1
OtM11M,df, 111 l f t 1
Halt.1 l ll f Andr1w1, rt ' I •' T11tltr, rf I t 0o Huchon. 311 I I o =v~~c' J !-1? i 'c1r1 •1 11111R11 • M I Pl1c1nll1 e10 ,.. __, ' l WKlmlnsttr Ml 210 to)(-4 13 J
1111 ·C .. IMfltt 11) •~tllril
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Kl1111,3D ' 1 II
Ktou911, 11·1 ' I :' o llltK fll"' t l 1 o P1lmtr, II ' 0 O ~~1~ .. ~~11 ! : ' 0
Ni1l1111, ,, I I 1 T Grlllln, rf t O II k"I Mlklo1, rl J I I & Tot1l1 11 l 4 I lc•rt llY tnniHt • M I G1rll1n Gro~• 1112 001 116-j • l
S111 Cl1m1n11 OGG 001 1~1 t II Cltlftllllt UI .. . J. Sprln1m1n. Jo ! t
Kint, u , I KfOU>lh, rr l 1
ltffctltn. < ' l Ptlrner. )II ' I
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Plcl !ot1 OOl 001 ')90 1-<1 I I
''" Cltm1ntt 1GC DOD 102 1-$ 1 I
Or•llll• Pa!ll'Nn
FV Defeats
La Quinta
In Polo Tilt
. SadclltMtll <41
Faroo. 'lll "l ~ V "i Fountain Vall~y talliid a 17·
Ander'°", s$ 2 '. •, ? t victory over La Quinta in I-· 1 lo onannt1. 111 • ' 2 l Santa Ana summer water po .Per"l,ld,cl ,' 00 2 0 k
IRVINE LASS CONNECTS -Irvine's Joni Fisher (center) is flanked by Larry
Nichols of Anaheim ~ell\ and skipper Lee Goodwin of . Costa Mesa _on the New·
porter out of Art's Landmg.-M1Ss Fisher hooked up with a 25-pound halibut in
the Laguna Beach area . Nichols' 71h-pound silver salmon was caught near the
Newport Harbor bell buoy. ·
Terry Nielstn homered in
the seventh for the only San
Clemente marker in a 5· l los.5
to Garden Grove Sunday.
Saturday's 5-4 win over Ran-
cho--Pacifica came on John
Springman' rbi single with
Nielsen aboard in the tenth in·
nin::!.
Eich Earns
Sea Swim's
Top Prize
Alhcr111. 11 1 o competition at Saddlebac
'Moen.lb ', 0 I 0 • h'h G•lme1. c o i o College Friday night as 1g
P•remo. " , g 0 g point man Mike Hickey scored 'l!/gf.:f;" J.~4[ . self'• •r litnl"I• our tunes.
saddlemct 100 000 ~. ", ~ Jn other games, Marina An•~•m-Full 121 •!G x-IJ 10 1 forfeited to Wilson and Bolsa
Grande forfeited to Kennedy. ,
Albacore
Far Out,
Bass ·Hit
Mat Re stiits
Buena..P_ar.k defeated Millik~
llH.
Fountajn Valley's frosh·soph
..,1 ..... , .. ,., team also edged out Garden
".....-t tll> OH c1111M Grove 6-s at Estancia High
1G0-4oW• (CJ ·._.. by lort~11. School. Allen Romie led the Ho-No n'llteh. • o-~ 110-e11111 <Cl • icw11tntio IN! scoring for the winners with · · :~.io-.',.m'l<,.~ .llK-·J_., <CJ ,..1• out_ il?8Is. . . Limits of bass and rock cod uo-DosJtr 1G '.ct.c Ml.ll)lt• 1N1 ,_,_ •· }\-!1ss1on Vie JO d e f e a t e d• conlinoe to ~ghlight . the
1so-e,1rr.,_ 1c1 dK P. MtrJl119 IN> Buena Park '6-3 with Cary sportfisblilg scene along the '"?i.o-M. ~,,,,,. 1N1 d~t etn11t1 Okazaki doing half the scoring Orange Coast with the elusive. '1ht~hor!1 (JO _die. D\eti :.ICl .i.2. . for the Diablos. ~ .. .,_. .... albacore still ~ ~ TeplOVed
iao-Hor"91 oo. 111nMCt, Olfl!lll• 1~ dr'Qpped a 7-3 ·decJSKld to Loi for one-day 1ct1on. ·
3:Cll. • •• • •• Alamitos and · E ·st an cl a "1be albacore 'are ,too far ,,,_.,...,., . . . f J 'ted'" N ....._. -.. k . in Hwr-N.--ff,ftr(J ·won "" forfllt. 011ei "w e..-....,... out for us w ma e Jt one
· · · · ' day,11 s~en fbr Art 's
Landing, Davey's Locker and
: Dana Whart aU report.
•
.. . " . .' • Cll
'
·! ' The· trip would be lor two
daYI• and ~ ·or the three 1andii\g(leOJS the effort would
be worth the jlrlee.
, Meanwhile, all three in ad·
dition 'to the · McCullah
· ~ operation on the
Hunting19n Beacli Pier, report
°'i't' bals li!hing locally as
,.ell • as ai Catalina · and San
:'>Clemente Islands, continues at
a rapid pace. , · "Ille ChaMel Isle out of Art's
bl'O\lght bacl a 36'h-pound
yellowtall early this week.
Bay fishing is doing well on
l>ass.
Bob McCullah of Huntington
, Beach r~ports that all boat.
limited out on bass at the San-
ta Ana rivtt jetty Monday.
Davey's is getUng some bar·
racuda, blue perch a n d
mackerel at Catalina while
-----------------------
Sea Kings, Marina
-Mix in Cage Action
The No. 1 remifai of the_
summer l e a g u e basketball
season is on tap tonight when
Corona det Mar High's un-
~feated Sea Kings invade the
lair of Marina in the first
round of the Huntington Beach
league tourney. ·
It starts at 7:45.
Corona de! Mar struggled to
a 62-&C victory over Marina at
Edison during regular season
play .
Coach Jim Stephens' M11ina
crew extended the unbeaten
Sea Kings until the com-
bination of Mark Adams' foul
trouble and Corona's takeover
of the board in the second half
turned the tide for coach Tan-
dy Gillis' CdM five.
Action at Huntington Beach
includes the host Oilers and
Ht ·l.lttw ll•llllln; L GI
cor-dtt Mar 1 o · -
M1rlnt 7 l l
Hunnn11on 8Ntll ' 2 t Fount1 n V1IM1 ~ .a .a
G•rdtm Grovt 4 4 •
··-j,'l le Quint•
Vl!MI Ptrk 10 71 11 861u Gr•l'l<I•
Fountain Valley at 7:45 follow·
ing the &:30 clash between
Edison and Garden Grove .
T"~dM_.. .. -•:.M -l!dl"" "' trdtn Gr•..,.
7:4S -Huntllf~CM.lft!flllrl VIUt'f
6;JD -Vitia .. ~r u.~· Qull'll•
7:4! -C'""" ·~Yi Marin. ~. 2:11 •::ID -Hll'l!tll'lffOll vi COl"IH'll lltl Mi r
1:6 -Edi~ CNlntt
At" . yhKlt
•:30 -Cor1111o1 de! Mar ,,. Founltln V.iUtY 1:45-,_.,.,11t'1:.t::lfltten lelCll
•:»-l!dllOfl vs Vllll h rll 1:45 -Gtrdtn Grovr Vt L• Oulnl• .... Al MlrlM •:» -Gerdtrl G~ v1 Vllll r."' 7:4 -Ml!rll'l1 VI P'OUlll1ln Vtl ·~
Menne Wins
Marion Menne went plus 5 to
Capture the A flJght top awatd
at El Niguel's most recent
womtn's match vs. par com·
petition.
Mary Agnes Sigafoos was
plus Z to top off the B Oight
while C flight winner Wlllda
Christensen turned in a 0 for
her top prize. Bette Halliday•s
minus 3 won the D flight
award.
The winners gol even in the
ninth when Douglass socked a
two-out homer with Palmer
aboard.
Reschan had hit 1 solo
homer in the seventh and
Niel~n sparkled on t h t
mound. striking out 10.
Newport's only fireworks
came. in the sevent h when Bob
Dean 1incled with the baser·
toa.ded tc plate two ·rwtnen.
Mike Eich of the Huntington
Beach Lifeguard Dept. was
the major winner Sunday irt
the inaugural runnlnc cf the
Quiet Cannon Dana Point
Harbor swim.
Eich won a perpetual trophy
for winning the lifeguard evenl
(one mile) and the prize was
presented by Oraftle County
1up1orvl11>r Rao CUptrs •
Other wiaMra locludt4
Costa M111'1 Pete Garcia
P'HllllW v..ev Ul -•Ii r 11 rM0 (men's mut~ra 40 and over),
l •u•,C J ll Zimmer, J11 l • 1 f Miuioe Viejo' a Patrick Schlup Hutch!n1, lb • I 2 ,
H1tt111d, ,, • o o ,• (men'• 11llltera a.a\ and C1rroll, IS 1 I 0 1' ~:~;i.~~,;.~bcr ~ : : : Huntm,ton Beach'• Ken Wills
M•uler, • • I o I ( ., 11-24) 'Eif~~1~1
''" c11mt11;: 1J1) l f mc::,n ~~~siaff S
0
iclt it was a•, .. rw
J. S1tr1n11m1n. 1• ' 1 01 • Beverly Elliot of Dana Point l<ln1. » 3 1 0 ~~~.;. •: ! ~ i
1
t capturing the w o m e n • 1
:~T.i. •,tt ~ : 1 masters 25--30, Ann Adams
Nell1tr1. 111 1 1 j • won the women's masters 40-Sl•v,.., Cl l I 11 1co1t M1k11s. "' t • 1 lJld-over, MJssln& V 1 e j o · 1 G.-.P:~~, 11 J ~ ~ i Kathy Howe taking the junior
~,.,. ~ llllllM• 1t H 1 girls 12-15 and Jule Rilty of
:;~· cY.~1• ftt ::I ~:=J ! : Huntington Beach A q u a t i e
"IW"'1 II)
Mcl(lnl•Y· '" •"1, ; ,: ",l Gl••PJI• ,. I Jim DMn. !II • I Y0$11 cf j 11 1
Kubieka.c T I Sl11flllrt , '9 ", I
1011 DNn, 11 :' I C•rmtn, rf l I Htnn•. If 2
Lucie, If J.' I f •1 ••• r. , . •
Tolt t nl 1 ' 2 ... Ml ....
~~:.r:'' II · • l:=f : ft .
Club won tht girls 11 ... nd·
under:
The boys 11-an~-under event
was won by Kurt Kovack• of
U.. Seal Beach SWlm Club.
The ll·and·under events were
300-yml races.
The junior boya ii. 15 race
wu won by Sell ' Belch'•
Ancl'rew Taylor.
Baseball S tiindings \
DIAN LIWIS
National Leal"•
East
Americu Leap• -'72 TOYOTA
Because in America more people drink and. en jay 7 Crown than
· ""1'1 IJ · briogtng back .rock
llJh , aculpin .ond halibut from
San Clemente. w
SS
L Pct.
.625
Gii w
It
50
4.1
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3'
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37
31
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Gil COROLLA ..
,..
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the leading Scotch ana .Canadian combineq. And they do .it for a very
good reason' the taste . It's uniguely and consistently S/TIOOth.
So whatever you do this summer, take-7 q;rown.along, too.
Taste the best of America. Say Seaaram's and Be Sure.
... ~." "'~11"',.' ,,
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Jst rtc1t co11..1 MlllM.lt. IArt'• Le*""' Ne York -SI ....,1111: ... »NI btl .. .ft rodl W
cod. , , ma • .,.1. ~ St Lo . O."A WMAR, .-121 al'lll•r1: lS7 • UIS
c1tko btu. 14 Nrr1ellde. to macller.-1.
1t1DONDO -14 •l'll•tr1: ' hatlbut, Chicago m calico .,., .. NJ Ill• """ ,.,,. -
1:n: ....i1n: • blut Nu. ts meU.«fl, Montreal no roc:ll cod.
MUMTn••TOM ••Ac" -" • .,.,.,..: Philadelphia 21'1111Mr nt Mnct bllst. LOMG alACH 11~'"9111 PW) -3t
•Mltft: 1 blrrtcUde, ,,,. Miid 1N11.
(P....-111 ltllClllll) -7) tMlffl: 221
c:lllco llllu. 3 Mtl• ·-"''" ltS rllCk ~~A•.tiDn• cov1 -,. a,..itr1: 1.o2S GinciMati
roc;k.i<PCI, 11 clllco btJ1, 2 llllllbllf. ffoustnn UL tlACM -1.._.ntler!LJll :==r··
roctr; cod, 1.-11ricl N11, 12 Mrra<llCla. Dod
11 tntell•r•'· -'''" -,.. •nti.ri: 21 gen b.trracude. II .. fld btu. 4 llllltbi.tt. 14 All t
fn•tkerel. an a
SA" DllOO (,._Mc)HI '*'> -1,..0
en11er1: 1 .,enowttll. JU .~ •• 2 San Francisco
blvtlln ti/NI, 6' !Mlntto, t'1 ullc• H11. Sa 0 . as bllrrec~. D ieeo MOllO IAY IV.,... lal\flng) -4f .,,......: :w lino cod. 114 rock cod, S
49
45
46
40
31
Weal
03
47
42
4t
33
38
43
47
57
33
41
n
49
52
5&
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.Sit
.Sit
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.352
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.462
.441
.37t
•lbetetf. (Safi ll-1 -ts tn11ltr1: T\lfffly't .. _
17 lln• cod, t$1 rock (llf. 1 '''''' 1 ''' 1 >·l> • •DT OXMA•O -1'1 .,..i.rt: SlO c1Uco r """ t 1111' " •• ''
...... 1 ,.. Mnd .,.. .. w k•1• bt11. u ,...,....,... .. _
lint (Cid,' lltllbut. SI. lou!s at /""1tr11l
LET'S IE F .. Y
Ctlluilo •t .. llllldtlfll'llt, t. twl-fllellt
Htw Yett '' All•nl•
11n 01 ... t i Clncl~lf DHttrt ,, ,.._ton
S\\
10
10
14\\
24
Detroit
Baltimore
Boston
New York
Clevel111d
Milwaukee
Oakland
Chieago
~llnneaota
Kansas City
Mltl1
Texas
I
Weit
5'
41
4.1
44
4f
37
!5
41
42
u
$1
$1
.llS
.$44
.517
.4H
,411
.411 T--AN·Sltr llml et Alf.tnle. 1:11 f .m .• PDT ,.,,...,._
Mlnnaota It Otli;llllllll
T11ett t i .._
K•nMll C!t'I' •I c111, .... t. tw~nltllt
CllWIW .t .. ltl"*'-
Oew.11 If Ml/Wallll .. , t. t'Ml·nlt llf.
'°''*"et frilew Y"'
DEAN LEWIS
I
s
7\\
14ti
lStii
U )'OU have new neighbors
or know ot •nyone movlnc
to our atM. 1)&tee tcU ua
to U.t "'~ me1 Ht.end • f'riemlT weklome and: Ml p
them lo be<omo -intcd
in lMlr ntW turroundlnp.
SI. Cast Ylsltar
1966 HAlllOR ILYD., COSTA MUA
Service •"" P'•rts fer All ,,_.... c.,.
'46°tJOI _.,.. Modern lody Shott fer All c.,. ·
llltu Vlsltl' Orange County'• Largest and Most Modern Toyota ud Volft Dul•
MMl74 OVIUIAI OILIYIRT INCIALllTS
t'
I+ T. & L)
oa
S39ll MO.
}'ult cull price $2,096.30 • tnclud·
ins ttx A: license. Down pe,yment
is lour hundred doll.&J'I. $39.30
tolal monthly -t In<_...,,
lnt.ertst, tax a. lic6'st. 135 par
(llus balloon • -<ti -. TolaJ.dtferred ~ plct S2,515.fO
A.P.R. 11~ On _....i
crt41t (3Cl0785).
VOLVO
"Dean Lewis"
w.1 .... -.v.i-
in Or"'te C-'Y thift
• ..., ether~
1:XAMPL1 IAVlllGS:
SBBW MO.
I •
l
I
•
'
J I
\
IJ DAILY PILOT
Alamitos
Racing
Entries
'
L• Allmi~ llllrltt ttr T1111war
JlllllT llACI, l$O r1rds l r11r old1.
(!llmll'tl. """' 11.tOO. Clt1m/11t 11rlct ., ...
,,., •• &old l•t J 1(11111
Don't Mii•, It. l1nli.1
Hu1'1 Tl••· ... CrMr Vld1INntur1, J. W1ro
Al•"'r:: St•"· o Kn\fht S11Ur 11, 'f. L111Nm
Wiid epy c . Smln. ~If Tnickl.. 11 . ,\01lr OOldMllO .. J. WllMlll
011nc:t Al, J. R1<111rO• AIM 1Htfblt
AIU'l'I llodctl. It Adlh
MKKIY'I Cl1b9fr, JI. ltnk• l'l'l'I A Clollt ll1r, S Trt11<1r1 ltluro.¥ Hero. IC. H1r1
"' ·~ '" "' ·~ "' '" "' ••
"' '~ "' "' ll:CDND llACI:. "4 Y~fOI l v•tr 614• .. Ulll. ci.im lM. P..,..M \2,000.
Clel111!M Prk• "'~-1111911ed Ptl, F. S.-A,...i I We. J llldlMll1
!IN Lid, J. M.ll-1 l Ar.It, S. Tr11111r1
l f\111 f'_•ndt. H. Crnbv !Vl'!tn,M W11tll, J W•t-1.,•1 J lkw, It. Adtlr I~ ClllrM, 1. Llcthll'l'I
'" '" "' '" '" '" "' "' THlltD •&Cl. lSfl y1rcl' , y11r old,.
Cltlmlftf. P\lrat Sl.IOO Cltltnl"9 Dr k t n.ooo. "'!i:i"'t I( Httt i-1 ~. • wr!.,r Elf l'I Cul• l1r, II. lll'llU
P1l!to Cvlllel'. EJ G•rtt Gold l uclr; Ill', Wlll!ten SDur 0.Ck. C. Sml lh
\'fftdl Lllldt, J. W111rd Llvln Ooll, O. AlllMHl
&ittJl<'I' Ol11¥1efld, S. 1r11wr1 (1'11Hlt'1'1 Anodt, J. lt!clltrd1
AtM •lltltll llillonlo Mtn, C. PtrM<
Mt11 Ce9111 lt~!r K. H111rt Oobr• Z.n, J. w1rd .let Wondtr, It, Ad1lr
'" " ' "' •• "' '" "' '" "' "' "' "' '" '" "0UllTH llACI:. 11D ftrdt. 3 v11r ekl1 & Ulll. Cl11m1M. PurM 11,900. Cl111lmfflf Pl'l<I 11,600.
(\/It ltr't •-· S. Trttwrt 11•
,\1,19 VOO Delo, H. Crcrttlv l\1 ben ICst!.f J. W1I-111 llulutt, ,, Llllfltm 1;>(1
C"""" Kiit!, It, AG1lr 11G MIH 011 ltt~ l1r, W, M•IMn~cll 111
F-1rd ll1t11r'f. K. Ht rl 111 Tiit WllfJ, lit. ltr*1 111
l'IJ11M !IA.Cl:. 400 Vtrdl-) 'ftlf eld1.
Allow1nc1. Pur11 12.a:io. i 'l'll A COl)'f (II, ll. l•!\kt l 11
ICnltl'll Aflllr. J . IUdltrth lXI I IC-Tflll Girl, T, LIOttlllm 111 Trvl<t Trlfflc. J . Orl'fet" 111 N!T. A.ooUo A:odr..i. A:. Ad1lr 110 l'fnn C•, J. Wiit..., 111 l rolhtrcwid. K. Ht rl JU
tlXtH RACa1 l50 y1rd1. 1 r••• eld•
& up. Cltlmlng. Pu.rse 11MCI. Clt lml119
price tlAOll,
Tlmtr re Flrt, L. Wrl11>t 111
Ptc1n l1r, O. C1rdol1 111 Trw C1n FIY, C. Smllh llt
Wl'ltl L\ICll, J. lfUd!1rd1 111 P'At<~ Kif, C. PtrMr 111
kl P ofl, T. LID •m llt ~f"llli I Al1"'1t'it It. l1nk1 11'
OtndV 81r llo, . P1.. 111
Gt,ld lna>c). H~bV 111
llVSNlH •ltACI:. «IO Vlrd1. 3 vnr
ol01 & ""· CJ1tmin1. Pu11e 11.JOO. Cl1lmln• 11rlc1 S5.ooG. Tiit A111hetm
1r1e Yl•lter1 tnd c.on~enllen ctnter, L~:'~~;,~:'!l,, ~~l
ed'( l.avw, (, Pltfntr 11t
Jtorel To.> e1r, S. Tru1ur1 111 lltbtl c11erll1, J. W1l1M l lt l'lu~. L. Wrlfl'll 111 Ot!'ll• It Geed, M. CrOllW 117
•llHTH llA(I. 400 r 1rdt. ! OIO•. Tiie JDl'lnny Oltl. 11_. PtMl!m, IC, Htrt COiie J t1r1, JI. 111\111 Wiii lfroom, J. W111ro ~ Wlmtnort, J. Wtt-Gwf"ro, C. Ptr""' lum Good 0 . All/ton telor: Ml P!ii':, T. Llllllllm Cll•rlevo, M, CrosbY
~ .. ,
'" "' '" "' '" "' "' m
Hlll!lH ttAa. no Ytrd~. l Y••• Okll. Clelmif'lll. Pw'M Sl.1111. Cl1lmlng prlct
12,.500. 0.l"llt.X Go l111r, J. W1rd o.,•~ir.tt, o. C1rdm1 1:xi Mitty l'I. J . r>r.Ytr Jel"lco, . TrM1Ur• Mt. Ftrrla._ C. Smlltl Cmy k.'1 Gtmbll, O. AlllWI
Acllertt1-. H. "'" SIMlr llr, C. PtrMr
Htrtile l oy, M. 1rc~11 Neblt cav. T. Uphtm
·~ '" ,,,
'" " ' •m '" m '"
Baron After
Cycle Lead
At El Toro
Bruce Daron of Westminster
Is second to ts.year-old Davey
Carlson of Anaheim in the
USMRC motocr053 point
standings at El Toro Speed·
way in the latest compilation
of standings .
Motocross action at El Toro
continues every Friday night
with a junior racing card on
Wednesday evening. Bot h
start at 7 o'clock.
Carlson has 1,400 points to
1 .~. for Baron. Carl.son has
dominated the 100 cc class
while Baron is the leaciing 250
class rider and the two ha\'e
been dividing the 125 cc ac·
tion.
On Saturday night al El
Toro, the USRC full midgets
and the NMRA three quarter
midgets will st.age a double
header, the first of the season.
Danny McKnight Clf La
Verne heeds the USRC card
and ChMs Cumberworth of
Sanla Ana is the leader in the
NMRA circuit.
Over 70 racers are expected
for the twinbill with quali!y1 ng
beginning at 7 and the firsf
trophy dash at 8; JO. Two 30.
lap main events will lop the
card with heat ra ces reduced
from eight to six laps.
SPORTS
Alamito s
Racing
Result s
MoMer. J"'y u. 1n1
CIMt I "•ti
'11t•T llACl -lSO •••Cll. 1 ~ti<
Olcll (l1lmlnt. Pul"MI 11$1GO Clf:pl/\ ll1r J~y IPtrnerl 1 IO 5 60 4 00
Fl1fllf Jolll' (CttOOUl 16.10 $ 60 ~ 00
R/\Y!hm Min !Hirll ~ olO
Tlme -St.l -11.63
,O,!•O <otl'I -FIJI 1, 81(1•¥1\td, V•n
Ori<tht, SonntY Gt!, S111'11n1~1 P1rt,
C1n l'loo. Su11n ltodc. ~r1telle<;I -Roblnll, Cl>1nt l own,
lrl~ Fire, Feoo .
11 l••<I• 11 -0.plll lar Judy & 6
-Flem• Jt11er, 111•11 1·n,,,o.
SECOND llACf: -tl'O 'f'l•llt. 3 y11r
olclt & UP. CltlmlM. Pu•'~ lll'CICI Tia Vtrltl (A.dtlr) t.00 1 60 l .60
T9t:O 01111fv (lar>l<JI h 2G • 20
J11'1 Sun CP1Gt l J '°
T•m~ -4'.11
ScrtlclllCI -F-t•d lt!!trY.
THIRD llACI -.IOO Ylrdt. J r11r
ekls .-.1io.-1nc:t Purw UIOO Ju1lill;t Pt Cll11n~1) J.IO 2.20 2 :it
Truly Trll(I tl•Pfllltll 2 '° J .;e
M LH H-rmocn (1Cno9ftl} 2 IO
Tlmt -20.Jf.
Alto rln -S.UCY Meoft, Du"'t
Nlnet, Go 5"'°'* Go. Mist Monlc1,
F rt sno Moen Glrl, I'm I n A"Oel Too.
No Krtlellt t.
l"OUllTH It.ACE -~ v•rclt ] ve111
01111 & UP. Sltrl!'I Allow1nc:1. PurM! ....
Go Mi1rv Joe
CT•t1sure) ll«I J :lft 2ill\
Bree11 ,O,tcoon! (L•llkt m ) •.llO 3 20
Du \1t• l'l~• e.,.,. {Smith) I~
Tlmt -21 t5.
,t.ii.o r1n -C/\1roe Em. 1CiuP11 T&a.
G1blno, Go ""round, 1'011•1 l roubl~.
Gr1nc:111 Holl~.
Sc111c~ -O'Arcv K•r.
FIFTH ltACIE -400 Y•rd1. 1 "''' Oldl. AllOWll!Ct. Pur11 lllOO
ll1r1'1lof !P1rne(l •.OD 3.M 1 •0
Cl'!ou Cllou (81nk1! .5.611 l.;>G
CeitV W1tdl t1Cn1111'1l) 2 IO
Tim• -;>G.J.6.
AllO rtn -Ol•mend O'Arln, w11c11
Z'I F1ncv, F11r1 Jev. Rhed~'I Rebel,
S"""'I Wor>Mr M1n.
Antelope
Deadline
New Tagging Ruks
For Deer Hunters
LEGAL N001CE
IUPa .... COUltT Oii lMI:
ITATI: • CALl,,Ol:NIA rOI:
THI COUNTY Of' OltAMI ...... ,.,,
ltOTICI OP M&AalN •Ill Pl'TITIOM
f'CHt PllGUTI Of' WIU ANO "Oil
UtTlaS lWlfAMl:NTAaY tlunters wish.Ing to apply for E1l1M "' JOSEPHINe LILLIAN HAYS,
I f h A 2'1 o. -..• :>i;• "" JOSl!l"HINI L. MUllPHY, °""''"· perm IS or t e ug. ·.wpt. 4 \Y ith the opening of lhe ear· once he has UffU lS general NOTICI! IS HSlll!IY GIVl!H !Mt 1(-
buck antelope hunt in Modoc. ly detr hunting aeason jwt tag. ht can no Jona:er b11nt 1n a :'4 .. ~-.:,:-:·~:" ,':"':.,' t':t~~
Lassen. Shasta and Siskiyou around tht. corner, the Dtparl· o-a .1---·-a , .. """*"., ... ,. .... lttlntr ,..,.,_. ,. ment ol Fllh and Game toda y 1~· ..... • W111c1111 mMt,., f\H't11tr ,..rtkll!ltt. •
counties have only a abort reminded hunl.e:r1 of their 0~ Many hwiten:, the DFG =:,. ~ "::n •: :!.'"°""~'~·:~. ":,
time to do JO, tions under the new tag said, will use the option tag tr» 1.m.. 111 IN '*""-" "' o..trt·
I t d ~ •· ly -~&-mtrftl Hoel, ' Of M ill uurt, t i 70I Civic Proa:pect ve applican s' ap. system, The early seaaon will U1dl& tuiu ear susoo wui:u <enter Drive w .. 1, 111 "" c11.," s.nt•
plicaUons must be received at open Saturda~, AUJ. 5. they ar.e permitted to take two An~,~~1:.;1;;, itn
DFO headquarters by 5 p.m. Under the new-rules, the deer, ,avlng the general tag w. E. s1 JOHH
Friday. general tag will be good for for use in a later lel.90D in a Mu1w1~~11.:'u~:m1 &Mo 111M1:11
Applications received alter ont buck anywhere in the one-deer area. . ::"a::rs~.!f••
the deadllne, regardless of the state where the commission This will permit the hunter "· o .... 1w
postmark date, cannot be bi-his authorized deer hunUng. to hunt and to take deer in ::=, •:,ii~r=" n..a
eluded in the pubUc drawJ»o . The second, or option, tag more than one area. The Pubt11MCt °''n" c1111 0.11¥ 1"11o1. Ju.
Application cards for hurit ..may be either: (I) used for general tag must be used in "'u. "'•nd A
119
u
111
•
1911 1941
"
71
peTmits may be obtained £roi1l takfng a buck in areas where o~eer areas but may be us-LEGAL NOTICE
licens.e agents and DPG 'of· the commission ba1 authorized ed in two-deer areas. 1 ,,.,..
fices. tciking two buckl, or (2) used But the hunter could use the 1uP1:•1D11 cou11t °"" TH• r I ITATI Of' CALl .. Dll•OA l'Dll Persons wishing to apply for by a success u special hunt general tag in the early THl couHTY • Oll&No• ••• h ed f I' -~ -ha I -... • t Ht A 1307 utc Wlt are urg to care ully app 1c11u~ tn exc nge or a 3eason, savtJUil' u..:: option ag NGTICI DF M•A•iHe 0,. Pl:"TITIDN
read the inlormation sheet. special deer hunt permit. on the chance be would be "o• i-11101&n o" w1LL AND "o•
Wh-1ch ,-, also ·1 bl r o • 1 ha ----• h'· dr r -1 h 1 L1n1:111 -r1:.1tAM•HT••Y ava1 a e rom nee a uun er s ~ ~ awn or a spee1a un . e11,1, o1 EAltLE GO•ooH WALKfJI,
DFG offices and I i c ens e one tag, the DFG emphas· Under these circumstances, "'' e. G. H.K>HNNIE" WALKE•,
agents, before completing ap. ired, he will be unable to apply however, be would be unable· °:O~~i 11 HE11tE1v GtVEN fl'll• .....
plication.'>. for a special hunt permit. And to hunt in a on~eer area. 1e1ne111 L. W1lk1r 111111 filed .,.,.1 .. • "'1-
----------------'-----'-----------------non IOI' Probllt of WIU t nd for 11tut n<• I ef Lllltrt Tt11tm1nt1rY Iv !hi Nlltl-r,
••ftr...ct 11 -ldl 11 midi for f\lrltl1r
NrllcuJ1ra, t nd 11111 1111 llmt end ,i,,,
of hH rln1 th1 ul'l'lt h•l llHn Ill lar
Au1u11, &, 1t72, 11 •:30 e.m., In lllf
courtroom of. O.Plllrtfl'ltnl H1, J of 1111111
coutl, 11 100 Civic Clflllff Orlv1 W••'· ln Ill• Cltv ol 51111111 . .._,,,, Ctllfer11J1.
~ '-"' -, j lnto andoctot ~of r-parking. And !he crowds
'jl' haven1 frund it yel Yoor
travel agent knows the way.
0.ttd July 11', 1911
WILLIAM E. St JOHN,
County Clt rk
MUNNS. l(Ol',.GllD, t10"1"MA.H,
HUNT & lHJIOCKMDltTDH
1n~u111,hll•*
l'1u4en1, C1llfvml1 •1111
Atlll'NYI fll': HlllllMr
Pl/Dllthtd Ort "CI' C111r Dtllf l'llol,
Julr is. :u, 1nd AIJ9UJI 1, 1t12 1n1.n
LEGAL NO'l1CE
"tCTl11DUI IUllHl:ll
NAMI: ITATIMl:H1
The +oUowlnl 1>1r1Dn 11 doh~ blnln11s
11:
Tl-IE SHOllES INTfltlOkS, 1•1 Callon
SI., Ntw_.I ludl. CtUI, nUD
JoYCt C. Wt lll!, ll7 C.l\lllfl SI.,
Ntwp0t1 l1K1'1, Ctllf. '2W
T!'ll1 bu•lntu 11 btl.-'°11111,11:1'4 bv '"
lrldlvldut l.
JOYCE (, WALSH
Thl1 HlltrMnt lllld wi111 ""-Ct111n1Y
C!trk of Or1nve CouMV on: JulY 21, 1'12.
tiy ltvtrl' J. Mlddo:c., Otpu!Y Countv
Cl•rk. -1'1'172
1'11Dllsn.d Or1r101 C1111 DtllW l'llol,
July is, i nd August 1, 1, lS, 1111 1m-11
LEGAL NO'l1CE
CA .. ISTlllANO UIOl'l•D SCHOOL
DISTllllCT
C1P11lr11 .. •••rll. C1llMrnl1
PUILIC NDTICI! l lD ND. 41
lt11Kat1 PlrtNlt ,......,_,
ti.. l aird DI Tr111t1n, (1pt.tr1no
Unified Scl\001 Dl1trkt, ltl" Vktorla
Blvd., (89llfrlM a11tl\, C1lll11rnl1 will
rKelv1 1ultd llld1 untfl l:OD P'.M., I
AU9Vll l t72 I« aid Na, ~. lltl-'lon DI
Porltblt CllUtOOl'l'll. Cl111reom. 1r1 10
IM movft from S.n Clemtnla Hl911 S<Nol
to Mara Forlltr Ju11lor Hltl'I Sthool. lkl
M>Kllk1llon1 1 .w:I H •IDl'm1nc1 bondlnti
l------------------------------------l'1tCWf11ment1 un IM obtt ll'ltd ''°"' SIXTH llACE -JJO v1rds l ve1r M1!11t-rw:1 and Oper11lons Offkt at the
aid s. C1JJt •• areri. Cl1lmi"8. Purst tlOOO 1bo'<o1 9dd•t•.
No .K•llCl'>ll.
C1i1Pld'1 Dari tPtrner) s.oo J.'20 J.o.J Oiled 2~ July itn . ~llP'flllffCI 7nd f 81nk1l 72 IO ID llO Caphlrt l'IO Un!f!H
Trvlv ua 119111 t.W.1rl 5 00 kl'IOol Ol1trfcl
T1mt -11.1'. Al:l.o ran -Rllooc~Jan, lll:D(kln• LMtT, Geortt L. Wl'llte :!.OKI Ho,,, M«I.. Rocke!, Sonor •' Acll ... Cltrk DI 11\e · ... •4
O«k, Mc~t Rovat, Delli Sirldl Pllblllhed Or1nge (Mii Otllr Piie!,
Scrlltr>td -V1ln Tc n e I 1 d I, July 2S, tnd A\lllllSI 1, 1'71 lt41-7J
M10llolmineul. LEGAL NO'l1CE
SJ l!Aldl 1 -Cutlid'I Dtrt A J -
SuPtrWffd 2flll, ''°' llil.Jt.
Sl!Vl!N"TH llACI! -«ID ~••d•.) v•1r old1 & 119. CltHlllld 1llow•nc:t. Purse
"''" Vlntwin !Adtl•I 1.60 J 00 1 olO
Nuevo Mvchtcflo (K~l9hl!
M~rCI• Mlln j Drro•) Tlmt -XI JI
A.114 ''" -Vt Go! Troublt, H111~l1I. JU~9lf 1'19/\!!r, Rlct 'I G~ld, IClply'i M-.
No •tr1tcnt >.
EIGHTH RACE -•10 y1r111. 3 Vtllr
ecds lo up. Cl1lmln9. Pur11 51600.
8old Aoventut• (Ad1lrl 1• IO 9 '° •
Mr. Adf<lut tl tHtrtJ 10 60 3 '° ll19llm1 Cllldt !Per,..r) 160
Time -'5.73.
NIN1H llACE -.fOll Vltdi Cl1•mln1.
J'or Fllli(ot I mt•et. 3 v••• olll$ lo u11
puri.t $2000. PandlQUI !Wtrd) •.to l IO
1i1!U1nt 11~1 IPern,rl J.CIO
llunnin9 Music IL101!1ml
Time -M 51.
No 1crt!ch••-
IS Euct1 l -l'l~d11u1 & 9 -Tl·
lu1r11 TIJI, "Id tu.JI.
T ourname11t
For Netters
The El Cam ino and the El
Niguel tennis clubs w i 11
sponsor a doubles tennis
tou rnament Aug . 12·13 and 19·
20 for the Boys' Club ()f the
south coast ared.
Competition will be I n
men's, women 's and mixed
doubles for B, C and D
classes.
Only members of the El
Camino. El Niguel. Three
Arch Bay and Laguna tennis
clubs and associati()ns as \\'ell
as players residing in the
Capistrano Unified Sc ho o I
District, are eligible to com·
pete.
The deadline for entries is
Aug. 5. Entry blanks are
available at the four tennis
clubs.
·~-----····----·~······-·········~ BRAKE ~\~·~)' ... I I OUTERWHEEL~'''~~·
I ADJUSTMENT199~ : : BEARING REPAI~: a~= """'jOd""'-....-v:; X" I I "'----~ 1Jt..-...1 I ........... w-•:;;,:::W!tll,.;,~' I I ....,.<..,._ = ....... ~:""1
I ,.._.,."'""' I I * 1 •.111• I ~··········~··..!'·•: :•···············: =~ TfRE \ ' "'1'-·-=!:I = FRONT END ~\\ ~ -'41
;:..ROTATION 99c::;; ALIGNMENT ~$599;1
1-, W.aholnll•-....... I ==-~~ \~I ·-I ·--"·""~•I .... ~--~I .-1. ~ v.,· I\\', .... ...._ ..._ // '""" ~···········~··~=:~················~ I SHOCK ~~~~I I~ DYNAMIC 19'9"c ~I
; ABSORBERS ::: $999:; =~ WHEEL ::ti
I -n•ll•no•••.i.r. ~ m I I ~ BALANCE "1ill':.."':"r~I
I . ---"·1111 '/"'/•I'\ '\'I I ~_,;, \-~~•I ~ ................... ,_ ................• .,
BIG BRAKE $PECIAL
N« AlllJllC.lll PASSOIGEll CM
MOHAWKMmOR
...... ..-........... ~ n.n.c ..... l.llllSA PO'
AU.4WHlll.I
~"' '*' ...... M! .. -· ---" __ ,.. ..... • 'lhrt ........... 4 ... ClilWloe ----·--:: ..... ............ Aillllal_ ..... .. --.-n..
aam.-...... r.:: u-· "-" .,} •• u.• -.....
•5900
...,
,..ICTITIOUI I UllNISS
NAM• ITATIMINT TM lcll-11'11 par-.,.. dcl"9 '"'9111ft$
11:
SOUTH COA$T J'UllNITUllf ITJllP·
,.Ells, 2S.u Mtwpett llud., C•t1 MQI,
C1Ulcrn!1.
J1m11 Ztnoln, 12'2 An1nl1, No. S,
Hunllnvtcn ltKl'I, Ctlllornlt .
llodMY Arnold, "'' Allt nlt Ne. 11,
tl1111lln1kln a.ac:11. C1lllornl1.
Thl1 flll1ln111 It N !nv conducted bY 1
11•rtntrthl1>.
J1mt1 Z1nolll
Tith 1l1t.m1111 llltd with Ille Co1111lr
Clltfk el 0••"9t teunty on Jl.il'f 24, 1t72.
l 'f 11n1rtr J. Mtddol: Olputr '°""'"' Ct1rtr.
F 1t113
Publlshld or·-C111t Dtlll' l"l let, Ju-
,, 25, I nd AU9Ull I. I, \j. 1'72 l,,.._1l
LEGAL NOTICE
f'ICITIDUI SUllNISI
NAMI ITATIMl:MT
Tiie follow'lnl "'""9 trt fot!NI
11111111111 '" KLfVCO, 2IOI W. Siii Strttt, Unll C.
St11!1 Atlt, C1lltor11l1 nm.
Frei* L1Vlnt, 1n s-1• Wt '(, ""'' An1, C1!1lernl1 t11'04.
Ctr! E. ICnnt, 1'°22 St!n1r1Y L111t.
H11nll11tlon lle1cll, C1lllornl1 n.u6.
Mlrltn MJMlr, 301 Ll11e91r!, Hurt-
tlfltllon leac:ll, C1tlfol'nl1 """
Tlll1 bulllneu •• IMl'I etnelutlld bY t p1rl119rlhlp.
Frenli: LIVl11t
C1rl I . Knrw
M1r!1n Mlnttr
Tlllt •~nt flied 'IV!tl'I tht Ctuntv
CJtl't. el' Oftfltt Ctulllr t11 Juty U. 1912.
t r I.verb' J. "'4H1dp, C>ettlltr Counlv
Cltrk. ,. ,JtlW
l"UOUlllfd OrtflN Coltl 0•11., Plklt, Ju·
ty JJ, l rld AU'IUll 1, I, 15, 1911 19»-72
LEGAL NO'l1CE
"ICTITIOUI IUSINlll
HAM( ITATl:M•NT
Tl>I tetlllWIM HrlOlll •r• dOllll
bu1lneH 11:
THE l'IUNGllY HAMIUllGEll, 11''1
SHI lttdl l lvd., 5"1 le1d'I, Ct lfl. ,.,.
SWtl'lenl C1lllonll1 P~tulmlf
lll'tlS""9rli Corp.. C1lltert1l1, 1'NO
llolJten Orlwe, Llktwood, Ct UI. f0112
Tllll WtlM .. 11 bllllnt conducltll " e
ccrpot'•llo11. ltl NwlMll M. l"ork11, \'I"
Tlll1 slit"'"'"' flied wllll 11'11 CounfJ'
Cltl't. et OflMI c""'lv 111; JulY 14, 1'71. WIUIAM (, sr JOHN,
County Cltrtl. ,,, ..., ..... , J. MMOu
"""" """ l'\lbll:IMd Orafltl Cotti Dtll'I' Plfot,
J'<AY 11, 2$ Ind AutU~ l, I. 1112 1~71
LEGAL NOTICE
DAVE ROSS PONilAC'S
EXCLUSIVE NEW CAR
~ ....
JI.JI 11• -G
ii •13ss &ll ... m 1111111.aa
5YEAR/50,000 MILE
W6nRanty
f
121w.11:17t1t..,.. • ltfrtl AN• C7l•> awu1
llZS L ~ • .... flltit • (71A) SSMOll
lUll lreokMrlt .............. (71•> QUiil
Siil MMW 1W. • CM11 ._ • '71•) 549-4021
..................... C1 • ""--·-·--"""
I
DAILY P I LOT
CLASSIFIED ~~~\ [ -·-I~[ _ ... l~
General Gen•r•I
4 Uliljl C:U: t!CMf
NEWIE BUT GOODIEi -ZAPI -3 Bed-
room, golf course area Custom with peg_ged
floors a handsome stone £ireplace. spacious mode~n kitchen and beauti£ull y manicured
corner lot. This is -among the finest proper·
ties we 've seen! Priced realistically at
$58,500.
PHONE UNIQUI HOMES, MISA Vl~DI, S44·1ttO
ON TOP Of THE REAL ESTATE MAR IC ET WITH THE
NICEST PE OPLE SELLING THE NEA rEST HOMES
CORONA DEL MAR , 67S·60CM'.l • MESA VERDE ,
546·S990 • NEWPORT BEACH. 64S·6500 • CALL US
.G_•_•_•_••-1~~~~~-i -G;e;n;e;r•;I;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2-STORY •
POOL-$20,900
It's true! A crackling brick
1 fireplace. Winding staircast'
Macnab-Irvine
lo qUeen size ~rooms.
Gourmet kitchen IN· 1 FOR
CLUDES REFRIGERATOR, YOUR "FAIR LADY"
\VASHER AND DRYER~ l3 BR. Visla view Jiving room.
Private patio. Pool with Formal din ini room . Slidina:
caha.!!_a. $200 BUYS IT r Cati ~-_,~s doors to Sl!Cluded patio
fast for appt. to see . 66-030.1
1
pool.
. LIKE A SPRING
MORNING IORl_\I L 01\0 \ ..
Rt 4 1 r(l<'\
A dtllght ~ Light. airy, fre&h
4 BR., lorn1al DR.. large
panelled FR., lofty ceiling,
and a myrlad of nowe1-s
$1,350. DOWN * <trol<h;,. lo a •pa1i<li"1
Gov't. repossession. You Bay Ii Ocean VJE\V. Jane
ahould see the ··sparkle" of Fraz~. 642-R23.'>.
this delightful refurbished BIG CANYON
home. J BR, I~ BA. ne\v Handsome double doors open
carpeu, ne1v kit le ba Door· lo an entrance aallery w/
ing and other goodies. Large bean11!d ceiling & tile floor.
enc. rear yd. Great slarler ~lagnifictnt GoU Course
homt. •p]u11 costs & i01. Vie\\•. 5 BR's., 4 baths.
pounds approx $600. •lurry $17~.500. P.la.xinP \Villiams
on this one I 642-8235. Cill~ <Open eves.)+.------
NEED ELBOW
ROOM
Stt thi!'I impn'!ssive 5
Bedroom, family room
hoine in Ne1vports' finest
are11.. Priced below market
value at $84,500. OuUllln·
ding master bedroom with
private bath, 'form al dining
room and ALL electric
kitchen. Truly 11. top vaJue.
Call 673-8550 to show.
O T HE REAL
"-ESTATERS
ASSUMABLE YA
Anyone can asgwne this high
balance VA loan. No qualify.
Ing &nd no loan points.
Sparkling 3 bedroom home
features all buillin aarden
kitchen, a larie bonus room
and enclo~ed patio. Aakina:
$33,500. For details -
Call ~1151 (Open Eves.)
• HERITAGE
REALTORS
w~~~~.~ s!:u ~,[
lodayg merket. Otten 3
queen.aized bedrooms and 2
b..ths • sparfdlng clean and
ready. Assume VA IDl!.n
with total payments of $188
per monlh. Lara:t corner lot
with trailer eate. Full price:
ts $26,950. Submit Your dov.·n
payment to
-"''I If''' I ~,,J, \ 1 r. l f
Realtors 545--0465
Open Eves.
TRIPLEX
Most exceptionaJ -Custom
buUt. Ownua upper unit
with about ZlKl sq. ft. ha1 3
BR, oolarium, 2 Ba.. 2
frplc'a. hi&hly uperaded
cpta ii drpg. Other 2 U are
dtilahUUl, 2 Br. ea. All ~
per plumb., encl. pr'a.,
patios. low mt.int Dm&ned
lot max. ltttlrity • bt•ul.1
with wrouaht iron rrlll
courtyard. A ddl&ht to
behold. South Cout R•al
Estate, 5'5-1424, ( 0 p e n
Eves.).
OWNER LEAVING
THI! COUNTRY '
Talct <rvtr exllll• 111A Loan
on tlli1 3 Bed\'OOnl. I Bath
Komt.. ln JUllllry it w111
Compl•l•ly Rel'urblohe<I by
11IA. Only 12tll!O. Call
-· Evtnlop 111-1111.
COLWELL
f•f,I 1,>1 Rl ·f.., IN•
Ht ALT<>H._,
I
Macnab-Irvine
Rl!<y Company
642-1135 ~2DO
COLLEGE PARK
3 BR, 2 BA , 2 bi-lck fire.
placts give this Ke:nkoll
Cambridge n1odel home an
xtr11 nalr for Calif. living.
Jumbo lxlrms make this a
most liv11.ble hon1e. CALL
TO SEE.
$31,950.
Newport .,
F•irview
646.1111
(•nytime)
WOODSY
RETREAT
IN SOUGHT·AF'TER CLIFF·
HA VEN • 3 Bedrooms and
formal dining room , a big
bac.k yard filled with trees
and n10re !rees. Thl!! new
U.111\n&: ill a hide·R\\'8.Y for
kids lllld a.dull!! Rlikl'. $'.JG,51)).
PETE BARRETT
-REALTOR-
642-5200
$27,950
Assume 51/4% Loan
Payments len lhen rent. The
rear y11.rd has beautiful fru it
lrtt5, covered patio, and
BBQ area. 3 Bedrooms, dM,
built-I n rana:e. 0 v 11 n ,
dishwasher, natural brick
1.ireplacl!, no. down ttnna,
Brk, 54t>-1T20
IM:l:i4!1
~ Harbor, Coii,\a ~te111
TIME BOMB
with • short price of $17 ,900.
Take a look at thli beauty.
Low price &IS) Includes
wubl!r 6: dryu. VA lkl
down terma and SlOO down
FHA with total payment of
1155. W)\y nirt! Call ,_
for inJormation.
-MODERN -
llEACH HOME
134.500-
3 BR 2 8A "•Frtmt" cot·
taae. Uae your imatlnatfon
othtrs have, and tht reau1U
""" lantut!c, Fl>ol l ttrmla
"'""' Inc, OP<lt c1a!Jy 1.S. D» ~r, N.8.
I
Tutsd.ay, July 2S, 1972. DAILY PILOT
Everyone Has
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAllY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With-11 Want Ad
·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
I -.... I~! -·-J~ I --.. I~ [ -·-l~I -·-I~ I _.... I~ I _.... I~ I _.... I~ I _, .. -I~
Gener at
CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS
EXCLUSIVE PRESENTATIONS
AUDREY'S
NEWPORT HEIGHTS CHARMER
One of N'pts, outstanding small homes: as
neat as we 've seen in a long time. This cus·
tom home w/3 bdrms., is set on a manicured
lawn. Be the firsl to see it at . . . . . . . . $42 ,000.
GEORGINE SAYS
"GO TO ESCONDIDO"
Not tha~ she is mad at you , but some invest·
or or builder is going to snap up this 2.1 acres
of R-1 at~ bargain price, & make a fat profit.
Owner w11J carry 1st T.D., with 10% down,
payable 19~ per month, with 7% int. Yot1
should buy fl, even if you don't need it, at
" ' . " . . . . . ... " . $28.950,
GEORGIA HAS
MORE THAN PEACHES ON HER MIND
She has a beautiful ~larbor View home, with
a htd .. filt'd. pool . This large home is an ex-
ecutive-type & needs nothing added to give
you every comfort you expect in such a home.
Offered at . . .. . . .. . .. . . . . . . ..... $74,500.
CLEO'S NEWEST
Ocean side of hwy. in Corona de! Mar, on two
•i2" R·l lots. This solidly built home is in
xlnt cond., also a nice guest ·house with a liv·
ing rm., kitch . & bdrm. Some ocean view.
The lots alone are worth nearly the asking
price of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... $82,500.
MARY HAS "LOTS"
OF DIRT, IN THE RIGHT PLACES
Two lots, both \Vith ocean views; one in Em·
erald Bay, where you have a priv, beach,
tennis facil ., swimming & a guard at your
gate; these privileges yo u enjoy even if you
don't build a house, offered at $35,000. The
other lot is an R~I in Laguna Beach offered at
$18,500 ; call for details.
MAKES PAUL BAWL
General
Hard To Find
Harbor HM)hlands
Priced JUlll right and avail·
able for occupancy before
the start ot Sl'hool, Large
three bcdroon1 loca!t'<I on a
tree hned strt'el . quiet in-
sidr lot \vlth litlle traffic.
\Yalk to r.1ar1ncrti School and
the library, Cool pal JO and
lnviling fi~placc. Up.grilded
throughout. Call for details.
C. F. Colesworthy
& Company
640-0020
A BEAUTY
BY THE BAY
This 3 bedroom home i11 se·
eluded on a cul-de-sac street
near the Bay. Recently
painll'd inside and out. Knot ·
ty Cedar paneling. Shag car·
peting. Large yard. A rf'al
charn1rr, The large kitchen
has lo!s or cabinets. should
delight any homemaker.
$38,450. Call &46-7171.
COLLEGE PARK
POOL
Poolside Cabana has 2 Bed·
rooms & Bath, Tht' ~tain
1-lomc is 3 Bcdroor0, 2 Baths,
Fireplace and Extra LARGE
Living Room , Electric Kil ·
chen 1vith Dishwasher.
$37.500. Call 646-0555, Even·
ings 998-1286.
COLWELL
PROPE RTIES. INC.
RE A LTORS
COOL POOL * Mesa Verde *
He bas fallen in love with this Evening Can·
yon home. but the Shorecliff owner says he
has to sell it -customized home has been
done so well, once you enter it, you'll never
want to lea ve~ The brick entry leads up to
one of the finest designed homes we've ever 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, living +
If ' h h t 't' t • dining area, fireplac€', built· seen. you re a ouse-un er, 1 s a mus . . do bl . 1 ins, u e garage. Trop1ea
General Gener ii
HEYll SWIMMERS
HERE'S THE POOL FOR YOU
Can1eo 11ighlands. Architect designed-New
carpets & drapes. 4 Bedrooms, convertible
den, 3 baths, cathedral ceilings and 2 used
brick fireplaces, family room, built·in kitch·
en & B-B-Q, PLUS MANY EXTRAS. Enter·
lain around your own POOL .... $76,500.
WHO LOVES A VIEW???
WE ALL DO
Just ren1odeled 3 bedroom. 2 bath, dining
room {or family room), fireplace, cheerful
builtin kitchen wjth inviting SUNDECK for
your entertaining pleasure, overlooking the
canyon & view of the ocean. One-of-a-kind in
CAMEO HIGHLANDS . . . . . ..... $69 ,500.
LIVE IN THE LAP OF LUXURY
ON LIDO ISLE
... in this beautiful 2 story 4-bedroom. 3 bath
home \Vith many extras a nd builtins . Carpets
and drapes,. fireplaces, builtin kitchen. On
extra wide lot, so you can store your boat
or trailer. . . . . . . . . . . . . ........... $79,500
CHARM, COMFORT, VALUE
TRIPLEX, CdM
ONE-OF·A·KIND ; 2-2 Bedroom, l·l Bedroom.
Clear. O\vner may carry. Close to shopping.
This will go in a hurry .............. $71,500. '
"SO RARE" DUPLEX
SOUTH ·OF HIGHWAY, CdM
/1«4tUe-Sffdd
~ ... -
REALTORS
~ --Call-US--fo r--your-n-.1-.mte .. naeds -WE·-·-bodc··yant--wrttt-lovriy·,,ool-.--6111F1210··--·-·· have lots of good things to tell you about! Good terms ..• $32,750.
CALL ANYTIME
~3928 or Eve: 673-8936 CORBIN-MARTIN Lachenmyer
Realtor REALTORS 644-7662
Newport· Coron• del Mar • Coda Mesa
2128 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
Cionerol Gonoral 2 On A Lot ''iiiiiiiiiiiimmmUii~jij;ii;iiii;ijiiii.I ONLY $28,500! * *'." * * * *
II \Vow! Extra large R·l Jot. 2 TAYLOR CO.
•
I l
I I I I .......... ..,
CAPISTRANO COUNTRY ESTATE
Nearly new. secluded ranch home : 5 BR .•
50' pool, cust. arch. design. Acreage, many
trees, horses O.K, Great family living.
$165,000. George Grupe
OPEN DAILY 2-5
**2106 E, BALBOA BLVD. Estate size
bayfront lot. 73' Frontage. Marcia' Bents
305 LI NDO AVE . 5 Bedroom Peninsula
home. Bill Bents
BEDROOM TALK
If 2 bdrms. fill your needs-this is it! Very
nice University Pk. townhouse. Well locat·
ed, priced to sell . $29.900. "Chuck " Lewis
GREAT VIEW-THREE ARCH BAY
Charming 2 BR ., DR, patio, BBQ, new kit-
chen. Low maint., sprinklers, hardwood
floors ... and more ... $64,500, Bob Yorke
DOVER SHORES-BEST VIEW
Spacious 5 BR., F.R. home, with good floor
plan. Fantastic view from L.R.. kit., DR &
mstr. BR. Lge . rear yard & pool. $125,000.
Charlene Whyte
UPPER BAY_..lll EW _
Charming, customized Ivan Wells ; 3 BR.,
could easily be 4. Oversize family room w/
parquet fl oors. Two story entry & living
room. Immaculate. Eileen Hudson
LINDA ISLE
Ele~ant-but economical. 4 BR ., bayfront,
deSJgn ed for happy living. It's a beauty for
only $139,000 . Call to see it today. Jim Mui·
Ier
WALK TO BEACH
Corona de! Mar, So. Hwy. R-2, ready to
build unit. 5harp, redecorated 4 BR., 2 Ba.
Sunny yellow kitchen. Covered patio. Mov ..
in condition. $59,950. Triona Bergin
BEAUTIFUL BIG CANYON
Golf course, open space, compll sec.: el ..
gant 4 BR .. formal DR.. fam, rm., 2 frplcs.
Call for details. Paul Quick .
FIRST TIME OFFERED
Jn EXCLUSIVE BROADMOOR. A family
home w/4 BR .. formal din, rm. & lam. rm.
Ideal CORONA DEL MAR loc. Community
pool , too. Cell Bud Austin
Ul-0700 .--· Cald\wll,Briar
644-2430 ~
551 NEWl'OltT CINTllt Dlt., N.B.
Dally Piiot Clu1lflecl
•
cream puff homes amid park
like grounds. Qu een size
bedrooms. Chef's kitchens
In both. $2850 to buy! Hurry .
Call 645-0303,
10111\I I. Ol \O\
RtA,TtJRS
CAPE COD
OPEN DAILY
383 Santa Isabel
good Eastside Joe, lrg fam
nn, formal din, 3 Ir& BR 2
ba up, 1 BR l Ba down.
Periect in·law house.
EASTSIDE
DUPLEX
O\vner's unit · 3 Bdnn \V/
blUn kitchen, new shag
carpeting thruoul, newly
decorated, fenced yard;
PLUS 2 Bclrm, l bath •
rented for $125/mo. Owner's
unit vacant and ready for
immed occ, Call to see •
°"·ner/Bkr . 646·5855.
FIXER UPPER
JUS'I' LISTED -~t Mesa
Verde loca!iotl! - 3 & faml·
IRVINE TERRACE -OCEAN VIEW
Custom elegance! Designed & buiJt with no
expense spared. Superb home for family &
en~ertaining. 3 lge. bdrooms, separate guest
qtrs., 6 baths, den, 20' DR. and lanai \Vith
wet bar. Extensive use of marble thruout.
Master suithe with Catalina view. Secluded.
pool & fa bulous shuffleboard e<>urt. $165,000.
''Our 27th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis R .. d
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
General
Buccola • Built
$39,900
Gener1I
G.I. APPRAISAL·
$42,500
Be sure to see all of thi~ Coo!)l'Tative seller has
charming provincial style a.greed to sell this spacious
home 1n immaculate con· 2,000 sq. ft. home at the
dition throughout. Features governn1ent appraisal. 4
3 spacious bedrooms, Iamily huge bedrooms, 2 luxurious
room with used brick baths, beautiful atrium oU
fireph1ce, country kitchen, master bedroom, I al' g e
formfll dining r oom, workshop and &ewing area.
beautiful garden and yard, 3 Located on quiet cul-de-sac
car garage and many street S minutes from the
custom featuret> Very close beach.
to the beArh, schools and
11hopping. For appointment
and additional info, please
phone 546-2313.
\-0 THEREAL
,'."'\._ ESTATERS
' • • • • I "f
C WALK ER & LH
Realloni 646-Till
2043 \Vestc!Ut Drive
Open till 9 PM
Jy, Need!I lots o( \VOrk but ..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. SEE CATALINA
4 BEDROOM
& NEW! make offer OOw and AAve!
Vacant. Cul-de.sac, v.·alk lo
achoo ls ."
Call 546-5880 OPEN EVES
., ~ • HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
* WATERFRONT * NEWPORT SHORES
2 BR (can be 3-4) lam. rm.
3 be. Xlnt cond $55,<XXI or
trade tor· srnf\ller ~am<!. area.
VACANT
No down GI Loan availahlt!.
!> Bedrooms and !amity
room . Carpels & drapes
thruout plu.s many extras.
OwnPr anxious, must ~n
immedialply, $34,000. NO
DOWN GI.
Call Sf0.1151 (Open Evr.!i.)
· i . ..,. HERITAGE
. • RE ALTORS
CAYWOOD REAL TY !!!!'!!!""'~""'~""'~ *' 541-1290 * Bayfront Condo
16.l LINDA lSLE OR. N.8. 3 Br, 2 Bil, pool, pier le. LClip.
3 BR. 21t Bl\, 66' lot. 55' boat Oelighllul $1'9.500
aup. 1149.soo EMERALD BAY
Custom built 4 bedroom, 2%i
balh huge family room
home with "formal dining,
~ Jot with ample room
f0-r pool, c11n1per nr bo11t
stora!t(!. Greet view of
Catalina and waler area
from upstalrt. Built In
stf!reo, ttlf cleaning oven.
and au the finest finishine
1ouchcs a CWllom built home
has. Buyer h.u choice of
cnlor of carpeting also. All
this lar S."i!J,COJ, To see.
CALL 616-1171.
24."l> BA)'&JIOR£.c:J DR. N.B. Immaculate 3 Br+ f.arn nn.
I BR, l BA. SS' lot 1149,000, Ocean side of hwy Vl.w DEN FOR DAD
, K.L. Hartman R.E. Inv. Must BeP! • p49.00o
00-0160 S46-'68l Tod Hubert & Anoe. * NEW LISTING * 3411 Via Lido 6~
PRIME BALBOA LOC, • CADIUM YEU.OW *
Plu1 family room, forrn&J
dinlna, 4 BR. 3 BA, Room
for bo3t/tr11iller. \Yalk to
bo.ach. $45,500, 4 Furn. apt~ Walk to ba.f, Indian rtd Zl nn\3~ deoorate
fmy, ocean '-pler. kitchen ln 3 Bit, ,..arm ClNN'l t-101\RtSON
••LBOA~BA O wl\lnut den. Much love here. •• • -REALTORS-
8"' y p R p. $39,500. .... • ... 1505 ~ICIA * 641-7491 * REAL ESTATE 1 •CiM •v-Dr. Eoat,
°'11Y Pilat Want Ads h&ve TREASURES * •M-* CosVI Mesa
bllra:ainl g!llott. 11.ll \VtstclW, N.8. &U-6770 *•• • • s:i7..f.1XI
•
General ;G~•~n~•~·a~l'-~~~~~~G~•~n~•·~•~l~~~~~~-1iCioi1itoiiirM>ii1ioiiiiiiiiiiiil
SUPER HOUSE, IT ISi I POOL TABLE
sur.rr t'Ondition al\ll suptr \ViU fit with room to spare
t1rl1·1'. 3-LaO?:' l:>edroon1.!i, 2 in 15' x 30' den. 3 Bedrm 2
bath.<:, ttt.•itvy shakr roof, bath, fireplace, bltint, Xlnt
fa n1ily roorn, ovrrsizf'd l1v. ln & out
injt rou111 and d o u b I 1· $32 950
garage. Beautiful location in ,
North Costa h1esa c~ to
all schools and shoppina.
.Priced only $33,950. CALL
for furthrr drlail'i. 546-f&O.
4'ii.5-HERITAGE
' • REALTORS
BAYFRONT
3 bed., 2 ba ... 2 story homr
on the \\"ater 'vith pier and
slip and private beach, Va·
cant, and zoned R·2 so that
you n1ay now rent this home
a~ a fam ily. 1''ull price
$117 ,500,
MOUNTAIN VIEW!
Spat:ious J.beclroom , 2-bath hn111e i11 pre~l1gc
ne1J:(hborhood ot l)ia111011rl l~c1r con11l1a nds
lights and l\1t . Haldy \"IC\\'. A rural et ln10 :--
phere, privacy and pro:-.111111) to hors<' l'uun-
try and all of southern l 'aliforni<l niakc 1h1s
in11naculatc ho1ne a buy. Extras include a
fo r1nal dining room , professional landstC1p1ng
\Vith l\VO patios. complete air co11rhtion1ng,
Old \Vorld Kitchen and all-brick famil y roon1,
t\VO fireplaces. Priced at $42 .500.
Roy McCardle Realtor
5411-7729
1810 :.lewp:irt Bl\'d., C.M.
TRIPLEX
Thl'f'l' '! BR. un11.o; 1n likP·nl"\I
con1h1 ion. t 'prrr unit has a
lo\rlv \'l('\\', v ... u;l1ng high
\'A luan 111 7', f'an be 3"1·
suu1r1J 1~1\h le:-~ than 207r
d11. A-..k1ni;: $1!l.~j(l.
t:Al,L 0 D46·2&1&
~ Nt•r ~'t"pnrt Pn •I orrlt e
BY !l\\~tlt :'.\RP., 1 ~\ RA.
PAUL BOYD REAL TY "'""'"'"' '~"'' nn ,,,...,. 1 .. 1 11 /ro.,n1 for hr"l<i-t nr 1rlr,
S24A S. BREA BLVD. h;i\ \• in<ln11 '. 11Je k1!('"hf:'n
_____ B_R_E_A_--'(~71~4_1_5_2_9~·4_2_84 _____ 1 1i /t1l111... rrpt~. r1 r p,.
$28,300 General General P'"'l'1'" 1 1nl. ~1'~ •;. GI
4 Bedrm. + 3 Baths i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 11 n ii 11. s 11 h m 1 t y nu r
Beautilul family home, entry trr1n~. s::1 .:.oo. h!'.I~ Sturgron
hall opens to spacious livL,g ofi J. 1· g lJr . ~1 lfi.-7CO'-l"~·· ---= room~ dining room, ;latural • A. t..:A:o.'TSIDJ-: COSTA ~tESA
\\"oocl cabinets. park like tn U J e A11rac111r 3Rfl . J:\f. BA
>'"'~· Brk. 5'0-rr>J PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES ''""'· "'""' ""· wtw rrpll!;, !pl. lrl!; Jn!. \Vallong
TARBELL SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT riii.t in \Vf'i.tcHlf £hopp!nll"
2955 J-la.rbor, Cllsta J\l C's.1
53 Linda Isle Drive t"('111, Just SJ0.000 w/JO'J1
Elegant 5 bdrm., 41h baths; on lagoon. Ne\V dn. Exc:IW1ive, H'. O ·
REPOSSESSION carpels, drapes & \vallpaper. Lovely garden Johnson. Bkr. 646-8362. 2121
& large Slill . . $200.000. Plnrrnltn. Av .. C.M.
r.1J.:SA V€'rrle; "T'" Plan Owned b~ FHA and complete-
ly refurbished by them. 3
Bedroom 2 bath &: dining.
Full price $23,750, with lo"•'
down paymt. FHA terms to
anyone. Hurry •
For Complete Information ...,. pon1 .. :: Br. 2 Ba
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call : 1'111 t1r . .o;r1r-. I blk l1b & ~1esa l"
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
~1151 {Open Eves.)
341 Bayside Or .• Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
Vf'r•1C rll'm. i;chl. $37,900.
16.""17 11'1.lnu Pl. By Owntr
'.l'lll-'.12'.:1.
Bt-:ST-Cncl-1•-,,-P-ar_k_a"'-'-~l
.,,,,$:,.. HERITAGE General I Corona del Mar Rr 2 R.-1 ., l'nl"I. patio, hl<K'k
.;..::;.;.._______ \\till, Jlf'Rr !ll'.'honl11, $28,750.
SUBURBIA PARK 4 BEDROOMS "",,..,.,., '"""' Prloclpleg
4 B.R. + POOL ""'"· c-.11 "'· ""'· &12 i:it2. Onf" short blk. to the ocean ---~-----·I
$46 900 & ··s1g Corona Bt'ach." \\1r BY OY.nt'r. Cu<;toin homP,
REALTORS
TIME BOMB
-mttt·a· short--.price--of·-$1-l.
1 lhink this 40 II. 11 ,de prop-JUSt 1'ffrircora!ed. 3 Br .. 2
If ·yoo're-· par1~ular ahoul -erty. \\•ith 4 bdmlS., 3 ba"th!'i . bPI.. ffrm t'm.. ff"pk>,, all
and want a bfoaut1ful j;\\1n1· & 3 car garage l!'i as line a l'll'<.'.f. F.:x!ra lr2. rooms.
ming pool hl'l"e's your nl'>.t h find for Near schools. Oay1 646-7741.
Take a look at this beauty.
1.9,v price also includes
y.•asher & dryer. VA no
down terms and noo down
F}{A wilt°' total payment of
$155. Why rent'!' Call ll)W
fur information.
home! Featul"f's fit 1n LI Y 11"9Y500as . ytilud_canlh land eves&. wknd1 646-4j68.
f I ... , , rnc u 1ng e • I=~===~~-,.~ room, orrna u1n 1ns.t roon1 , TRANSFERRED • r.1ust Sell
21.ii batha, and a l&x38 pool $33 350
·with jacuul. Gr<at IRVINE TERRACE ~8:iiC:.1:~. ""-9.i<!
C WA l l<l R & llf
neighborhood for families Need room !or campers,
and chUdren, very close to tra.llers or boats'! This 2 BY ow_ner. 3 br, 2 bl, utility
elementary school, park. bd 1-h I t of nn. din rm, frplc. 2 car J&r. mi. cu 1e u pen Y Cov patio. I..ce tncd back
Realtoni 545-9491 tennis court!'i and brach. rooni for S<'VC'l"BI of them. yd. 833-2:1:\7,
}-~or adclitionttl lnforrn11tlon, Located on one ol the bestq~===~=-=--,-=
please phone 546-2313. streets, 1•lose to $1.50,000 BY OWNER-2171 Rural Pl. Open Eves. * OCEANFRONT *
Home. 4 Bdrm!'i.. 2 baths,
with 40 ft. frontage. This
older home has lge. Jiving
rm., frplc.; dining rrn., ex-
tra lge. kitch. Dbl. garage
plus extra parking. Best
area. nr. NeY.'JX)rt Harbor
Yacht Oub. Easy lo show.
$100,00).
i-O THEREAL
'"'-ESTATERC::.
homes. This home may be 3 BR. 1 BA. $26,500 l.Dw
had for $49.750, do1vn. 7J4 ;524-251l.
Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves.
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
102S W Bolboo 67)·1661
PRICE
$1600. DOWN
PAYMENT
That's all it takts to own this
spscklus Mesa Verde home
with 3 big bedrooms, huge
family room. Fully lnsulall"d
plus many line features in·
clud~ •hake root, block
fence, lV&ter softener and
intercom system. Full price
only $31,950.
REDUCTION· ~ COATS
VIEW . WALtACE
Comlortable living In a set· REAL TORS
lihg of fabulous Corona del -54i-4l4l-
Mar. A price reduction of
Sl@ makes this view • 4 (Open Evenings)
bedroom, 3 bath • family ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~
room hom• the host buy of 14 MINUTES TO
the year. Plush landscaping PARK·LIKE LIVING. 2 BR
and a view of the ocean, deluxe townhotlM coodomin·
harbor and skyline are cnly lum $l9,950. 15500 Tustin
a fC\Y ot the finer points. Let us !lihow you the others. Village Way at McFadden
Call 673-8550 for an •P-olf·ramp.
pointment. $78.500.
.,. THE REAL
. ESTATERS . ' . . . ' ., . .,
VISTA DEL LIDO SPORTSMAN'S Luxury Apt. On th• bay PAD p,_fa.gniflcent View
S.lO.ij(I In Costa P..1esa. $3100 Slip Available
cash rll'.lwn buys 1hi-" i:::parkl-Georg• Wlll ie m10n
Ing lliharr home with ne1v Realtor
shags, fine pA.neling and 548.6570 645-lS64
huge Pll.IOR Vf'rde stone B•lboa Island
fireplaC('. A professi.-,nally ~~------
bulit TRAILER &. BOAT NEW bayfmnt home. PIPr &
PAD ha!'i hook ups rOr all Income. Open Slit/Sun/Wed
boll.I g11.1e to t'Omplele th<!. 1·5
picture for privacy on huge 3.17 F.. Bayfront, Lltllt': 1idAnri
'fun' yard with p11tm llild WlNTON, Realtor 675-33l1
childrtn's play area. Coron• dtl Mar
fljHAl ,\ 111: u ·111
llE.U:I'\' I \I .
t~· 1Tl~ t' ,".OJ
SUPER DIGGIN'Sll
C.orona de! Mar'!li most 1uper
duplex. 3 BR., 2 bath home;
bll·ins, frph·.. shutters.
* CAIL 546-7'739 *
3 It. 4 BP. mpos. (l·w3/car
gar), \Vilh1 Realty.
smart carpeting PWS 3 ,::;::::;:~~~e;
BR., 2 bath apt., bltns a: all
the goodies includirlJ OVl!r·
size garage. Patio, too, just
$74,500.
Unlvonlty Roolty
3001 E. Cst. 1.Jwy. 673-6510 * DELUXE * Custom bit. duplex. SO. of
Hwy. on exlra.wide lot. 3
BR & 2 ha ., & a dclUXf! 2
Br. Storage C'ellar; priv,
patio. 2 Laundry areaa. Ex·
tra balh in lge. 3 Car
garagf". Good financing.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
DUPLEX in Beaut. Cond. By
Owner. S00,500. Prine. Only,
673-4169.
Costa Mesa
MESA VERDE
$30,900.
Be sure to see this! 3 &d·
rm f.J)d friendly family rm
w/fittpl! Separate utility rm
for mom, and great patio
for entertaining. You can't
beat the area er l.h~ pric.c.
Call for detaib 979·1000,
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Brand New Home 5 BEDROOMS ~al'"" ~ Thi• ,,.,u111u1 ,..,. -Climb ,., ..,...., 11a1n • ,.,.. Marketplace Ope.n Evts. (,ui;;k hon1e hu never been cioul S BR., single sly. home · ROOMS FOR l!vl"d in Anrl it 11 av.'lllln& In a tine area oI nl~ home~
• new master, The hlah Vacant &: n!ady to OCt'UPY·
C WALl<fR & l f[
ANYTHING ""ulled wood colllog wflh Only l yn. old. CM i,,, had
flvl'! big bdttoom& Including txposed bt11m11 In the livlnl with very low 00\\-n, A as-
,.. huge muter brdroom. roon1 Is outstMdlng. The attne xl.nt loan. $36,!IOO.
Lots of walk-in closetA. kHch('n with ll1< brlaht in.
Large family room oU lhe formal eating •rca Is alBO a
modern kitchen. Big llvln" real plus, CAii 675-7225,
room 1\•lth & fit'epl11.ct and
i;;cparate djn\na: area, Thi•
2500 square foot Irvine
bl"auty is only $41 ,900 In--
COL WEL L
m111n· ,\ llL\fll'
Ill: U I\' l\C '.
'' • < < 1 Q I '', 1 ,\ 1 )
'
PROPERTIES. INC
R EALTORS ~~~. '"" ian<1i eau CLASSIFIED ADS
\D i THE REAL ~)£ ES'.I'ATE~~
The wt•ll dnlw In tho Wm FOR ACTION. • •
· A.i. ~Pilot O..llietl I CAU ~-5678
•
I
f
•
I
OAA.Y PILOT Tut>d01, July 25, 1972
1
Coote Mou
-VA NO DOWN
Oh WI n.re va)ue. 2
Bedroom1 each unit. Ont
Dnil now vacant and ready
tor immNiate OCC\lptney.
Et.di unit renta for '165.
Kttp u home or rf:ntal. On·
ll' $32.!liO. II 1011 -be<n
lo the aervkt, call us.
~ .. 'II ' I ......_. ,.,, .t ,, I
r Real--j Open Evenl111.1
I. Ml!Sj\ Vl!RDE
Laree 3 bdi-m, '2 bath, den, !::'.\;di 11: /\Ill
din nn/fam rm 1urrounding REALTORS
' ' I I ,,
a Calif. patio. Deluxe crpts I.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
&: tile. Move-Jn con<!. 3260
l\fichi1an. Owner 549-2688.
El Toro
3 BR., 2 BA.. cpil, drJ><, lg•
patio, Jgtt, pool-11iie lot
enclosed by block wall,
clOR to xlnt ir.chools,
markets. new m a 11 •
Reuonable. 837-1753.
f94...2U6 aft S:3Q It wk-ends.
Fount•ln vonev
ELEG_ANT ·
MANSION
2 Slory. $29,950, 4 BR 3 BA,.
gracioua Uv nn w/m.assive
fpl, tonnl din rm, bltln111 inc
dbl oven Ir dshwlhr, better
than new cond. 3 Yn cld. All
upgraded crpl• &: drp1.
patio, block wall, oveniz~
dbl gar, top nbrhood. See
today!
ired hill
REALTY
Un iv. Park Ce:ntu, Irvine
Call Anytime, 83.'J.M2.()
Ottice houri II AM to 8 PM
COLWELL
PRO PERTI E S. INC
REALTORS
Com-rclal p,.,,.rty I.II
*FOR SALE*
5,650 Sq. It. Joi -Loaw>a
Near Forest a: Third St.
ld<al '"" proffflional ..-retail bid&.
REALONOMICS, BROKER * 675-4700 *
Condominiums
for u .le
THEY CRIEO
Ill
WHEN THEY LEl'T
But much a1 they hated to
ltave thia luscious 3 bdrm.,
Ins-I ne P1 »•rtr "' Money to Lean t40 lloYOOI llnfilm. =_=N=~!=~L=,!_AS:::_;;1.~ =~;';1;::1;t =-=r~D~L~,-.-nsc ::::-=·~·~1 ~Mo~·~::-:
·~ -Q•• •~ ** DUPLEX BRAND on ~ h!nn lu• 9% % INTEREST NEW. li'lt• dlx owner'&
R-rctllwt retum 2 d JD L uoit 3 BR., l BA. ' ru• priol M.ooo n oans Flreplac:t. bllinl, m "'· n.
Tftml Available: + 3 .1aat.1 w/Yit!W of bay, Lowat ratn Orange Co. ~ "WE BUY TD'S" ocean, 4 hill•. Walk 10 bch
" wppina. 1 yr be. llS5. Sattler Mt9. Co. Relit ....,i...i. ~.
142-2171 MU611 Cost• Me•• Semnr a.-ar .. II }'I'S.
WE make loans OD ~perty.
AllO buy TD'a. McClure,
Bkr. 4924332 or 492-004,
FREEll
L1ndlord ... Ownar1
21> ha Tiburon townboule, ..... l!!l! .... !!!!!!!!l!!!!O! .... I Mort, .... , they were transferred A-(10) 2 BR-Dtluxt Bldj', • & Trust Detcf1 260
they are aonel N 0 w tnOI aid E/alde C.M. Prin-1---------
We will refer tenant1 to you
FREE of charge ••. Many
desirable tenantit Of\ our
'vaiting list.
ALA Rtntal1 e 645-3900 defi:pera.Hon prictd at clpal,s only. W.lln. $40,0IX> -2nd T.D. 10% Jnt. 3
$32,950. Move: ln now. yr due date $2000 Bonus 3 BR. gar11.ge, New I Y
l•rwln re1lty inc. lnduatr)ll P,...rty 161 well at"Cured, .640-1515. decorated. Orps. Sh• &
$-HOS (2' bn) SEIL or trade your vacant HAVE 2ND T.D. ~ AT c:rpt'g. Huge fenced yard.
Duplex11/Unlts M-1 on leued ""M·l bldga. 8%-% WILL DISCO~T. Quiet re1ddential s t re e t .
'-•• •·· PVT PTY ... ~25 Close IQ shop'g, schls &: .. ,. 1.. Sullivan, Bro~r ~19 . · ~ · 6 0 2 Le duplexa:, next door, ~ beaches. $n5/mo. 9
bl:k from ocean beach. 10 Units C5 hse + 5 Apta) Lott for S.11 171 Lindt'n PI. C.M .
NEW LI TIN -· ~· ••~ sell·Alk'-•M 500. will SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -hr-n · · S GI -ooo ....... ~ ·~ E/aide, C.M. Priced to I If e J u !um 2 BR Crpt's S1'ngl•
5 2" ba' f ·1y ·~ ~~ garage, 2 sn\l children ok: B<lnns., ~ 1., anu Newport Helahfl take oUer. Grou $1,C60 per \t Acre '* Horse O.K.
rn1. Adja«nl to community · mo. By Owner. &t2-85:Jl BY OWNER * 493-9lS8 No pets. 1.fu11t havt' ref's.
I • •· ' BR. VICTORIAN $150 mo. + $75 dcp. 646-5637 swimming poo • tennia ell. .. In·-•. P-.. rtr. 1'6 ".-.~ 1.ln. ft-ort,. ,Houan Furnished 300 PRIME, PRIME LOCATION You rawst see_ this CU!tomil-..._,, _ • -..... ~' _.,.. ~"1="::'·::5!:.P:::·m~·~,.-~-,,
GI No DOWN ·1 won'l laat.loog at $4!,00o. eel masterpiece. 3 yrs old, 3 Ro..,. 174 1 BR io· LR. •hag w/w, hie
THE BLUFFS
ONE STORY
Uke new 3 s.R., 2 ba's.; priv.
patk>. l\fove.tn ready, $375
Per n1onth.
2414 Vista Dd Oro
Nev,,port Beach
$«·1133 ANYTIME
$210 -Lido Isle \Yalttfront
very Ira:. 1 Br. Ulil. pd.
$235 -3 Br., 2 Ba., frpl c ..
studk> v.•/gar & patio.
$285 • NWR-1 Hghts 3 Br., 2
Ba .. gar .. yrd .. deck. 3 blk:ii
bay!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-4000 Ol' 494--3243
HARBOR VIEW HOMES-2 &
Den er 3 BR. $380. Lit. or
mo. ftl mo. 645-2552.
Condominiumi
Unfurn. 320
blkl ro !!arbor H;gh. OWNER LIQUIOATESI. . . Gontrol BA.'palio s1io. Sept 1st
Super Jh&rp 4 bedtm 1.n btst fU.4471 ( =:J 54M10J Owner-Agt cffers terms & • 6 Comm'l Units • Gl'Oll WOODED % A·3 8d cabin . \Vanted: Retiree, apt, mgr., Cost• Me11
Fountain Valley a r ~a.. '1mmed. poss. $ 4 9, 5 0 0. $110 per mo. Taxes $1014. $22,000. fl~S °Ch~~~ ;-gk l Br. Utt!. t'xper. 2 day11 per mo, mar. ..--NE_l_Y_2_B_R. __ A_LL....,..'£X-. 1 Schools a: shopping are close ~2'.i57. Utll $50/mo. Asking $72,SlXI. CHALET-Shell Sl0,950 · 1 .pf'; 0 • 543--1098 aft 6 pm SCHL.S. MUST j for conveni•°"'· Laree 1850 HOME + INCOME Sant• An• 444 Old Newport Blvd., NB HOBBY SHOP . $69,000 SITS • E/S1de. Al":ac. 1 Br. away. , ~;~~ 1:J:iMo. Sj~io69.
j· aq f1 hdme with huge yard A beautlful triplex with a 2 e 17 Unit . 2 blks from Bi& LAKEFRONT Homes . trom Me, gar, y,rd., patio, pool. 2 BR hotlM!, crpt!, drps, gar ..
compl 1enced. Only $31,950. bedroom pJwi. den or 3 bed-"SINCE 1946" REDUCED $2500 Corona. Gross $2700 per mo. $36,500 $220 • CdM .. 2 Br over gar. I $1~5 mon th. 2 Sm _a I I I CAU. for more details room owners unit with fire-1st Western Bank Bldg. • All on Jae! Taxell $3600 per Godwin& ALPINE Realt)' Quiet &. pnvate. children, no peLo;. 646-5928.
I 9'2-U A 537•5642, COW NS place. It also has a 2 bed· University Park, Irvine Xtra lharp 3 bedrm 2 bath )'l' Askini $265 000 Box 1796, Big Bear L&k" NU .. VIEW RENTALS 2077 Wallace, Apt 6, Cr-.1.
' I: WATTS'. room and a one bedroom Days 552·7000 Nights near Mac Arthur&: Bristol. 308-312 Carnation,. CdM <n4> 866-7511 6?3-4030 or 494-3248 PVT. & Clean 2 Br .. fncd.
rental unit. It wlll make a Only a )Tl new, convenient e 10 Units (5 hses I: 5 apts) Eve1 (213) 44S-637S Corona del Mir yard, crpt/drps, breakfst.
2 BR, tonclosed garage, priv
patio, $715 per mo. 54>4976
or 547-9613 v.vrk.
Condo. Furn. or
Unfurn. 325 C & W beautifUl home. Call 842-2535 Turtle:rock 4 BR. family to frwys, major shopping E/llide, C.M. Gross $1050 LOT in famous Lab Havasu. . bar, gar. Ideal for child.
· for more info, room & atrium. Nr schools, and Orange County Airport. per mo. Taxes $1400. Htes home ot the world tamous Slnglea -Farn.Uies. 2 Br. Gar. su..3289. Newport Be1ch
QWN1"'a •--~~ntsh sh.). · park, pools. Prine only. Has fireplace, sunken tub all 1eued. Askfne $88,500. London Bridge. Located Fenced. HF\u'n ot Qnfurn. 4 BR, 2 sly $300/mo. Avail
ed ;J;de;J; with""~ $39,500. Owne\-. 833-1467 ~ aJI extra:s. Reduced to 2636 Elden Ave., C.M. close to all schools I: city. Rent-A--ousa 979~30 now. Dtive by 3138
beautiful ·Spanb'h archwaya L.•aun. 1 Beach $30,SOO. by anxio1.1s seller • 2 Duplexes • fin:t blk from $9000 ot will trade for C.osta Newport Beach Killarney Ln, CaU J im at
on lhe lroot exte~r ma!ler who may help wilh Cl's 0<ean. Gross $600 per mo. M ... or Newport Beach In-6'lH040. ~~-m locat-' on far side UNITS closing C05ls. Hurry, this per unit. On .,,.Jy ~nts. come prop. 6'4-4687. 3 BDRM, 2 trplcs, bar, . .:.::c~::c:..~;;-:-==::-: U<:t.uvu = -'l I -CALL ,. bl doo Long Hairs . Sngls -Studenls of the home feature!! its own ., ....... 900. one lVOn a,,.. $85.000 per duplex. 2 Lots, secluded $2 450 lll!I, auto gar. r cpenf!'I'.
ROman step aown tub. The Needem Bandito T1vo 1-bdrm. apts. plus guest 962-5523 &: 537-5642. COWNS 124 & 126 45th St., N.B. Moonridge cabin s15'750 soft water. $425 month. Cpls. Pvt hm $105 Util pd. I ' other 3 bednns are on the You can steal this.' 3 BR z studio, close lo beach & &: \VA'JTS. • 11 Units. (8) 1 BR. (3) 2 Lakeside cabin S35;1XX> avail. Sept. 15th. 646-5291 Rent-A-House 979..8430
-******** *BRANO NEW*
Condo home w/boal 11ip
Summer, or leases avaiL
4401 \V. Coairt Highway * Call: 675-6120 *
Duplexes Unfum. 350 I ottier lide. Family rm .. din-BA home for $1100, dn, & &hopping. Zero vacancy for c & w Br. Zoned for 14 units, Gross Can 866-4641 or write: WATERFRONT dlx 3 br. • 2 BR home, redecorated.
-....... total """""ts of $198. Has last 5 years & owner will $1 760 •-s Real ~-1a•-p O d Ix G 1~-· d k Older couplt'. $155. Coron• dtl Mtr ~ in1 rm., Ju ... w.vus kitchen, ,....,... help finance. Top value • , per mo, taxes "'""' pencer B LOO o.c;, ~ • p . ar.,
67
·-;r. oc . 1 _c.;....;;...;..; ______ 1 1 0~~:~::86~ u • t ;!,"~~ ~· ti1'u.inn~t:~: $44,00J. 1 )'l'lig, ~~fu~'.~.M. ~if.2823. i& Bear e, :;;~~11. l-?8f3l; (80j) 3 br, f:~;~~l:s. $26.5, NEW Duplex-Upper 2 Br. 2
' leave home. 4 Bdrm + Don't miss this! ~'4an, I ~--I~ • 1 Duplex · Newport Shotts. VIEW cabin, fabul""•• loc. \Valk • Bay or Bch ~ 1 Br 1st A last mo rent, It clean· Ba, frplc, dshwhr, disp1. Dbl
I' -,_ c F ~.... ov1::"rL Deck. Crpt'd. Drp'd. Family· rm. Many x":a ......-ross $560 per mo. rplc's Runnlnc Sprgs. 4 BR. newly mob hm. -125. Util 'pd, Also ing deposit. 540-4400. I · i both · 3 B 2 Adults. No pets. Ref'1. leatun!s such" a complel•· 5•1 5 I ( REAL ESJ:'A'JE n A k uru~.;. 500 r, Ba '• dee. $22,900. 646-135.S $105 hse C.M. El Tllro Req'd. $2'0. '75-1911. separale laundry room' • • I I ::::J 531·$111 ,. ea. ' mg ~. . Real Estate W•n•-• 114 Ront-A-HouM 979-8430 ;;;......;.;.;.. ____ _ famll)' room + a rumpus '1190 Glenneyre Sf. Mobile Homes 210 Ft'rn, Ne'lvport Sch 1911 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath Design 1 Huntington Beach
p.me room, Pf.II thru YOU SAVE BECAUSE IT'S 494.9473 549-0316 For Sile 125 • Duplex .. Newport Beach • Pvr pty wanta 3 or 4 BR Hou1e1 Unfurn. 305 Home. Vacant. immediate o --E-LUXE-::....2_B_R-. _co_v_pa_ti-o. I' hre.akfast bar, dining rm., o 'IRTY ..•. Thil "-· 3 BR. HARD TO FIND on water. 7000 sq, ft. Si.lb-home. Call Harry, 833-1129 General occupancy. 2 children O.K.. N d hull 1 n..L. uue . Contempo Mobilehon1e Expo terranean prk'g, 3 sty, Ask· •'M:ll h e1v rps, crpts, bltll!I, dbl 1 t· ns, ...,..., 13 3 • 5 0 0 • 2 BA, home needs cle8J1:ina CJose-ln, remodt>led 3 bdrm. 2 * Grind Opening * ing $260,000. \\'kdys; eves &: wknds but no pets . ...-a mont · gar., lovely private ~nds.
f sn.&i91. &: pa.tntfng. Includes blt·1ns, balh cottage on !ge, R-2' Lot. See Orange County'!! newest 4401 Se ho 0 NB 64l-2312. • Coh\'ell Properties, lnc \Vater & gardetll.tt' pd.
1 • OWNER must aell this home. FIA heat, king size master Room to add units. $45,000. •72 furnished model mobile Ph 64;120 fo" info ~586-=0222:;::::.· ~~-~--Responsible married couple
4 Bdrm +pool elegant slat~ bdrm's. Located on shady * 499·2800 * home display. Open daily, 9 • r • HuntinMon Beach fAClultsl $165 no pets. +-·S~fS:;aE -~::r~:=-ii-:·: ID»~ a~~~~:::~-sMFAodsR---~-·:::.~1~~;---3 BR:2-5A:bltl;;:x1nt 842
;;:·2 Br cpt, drpa.
! oven, diahwuher, enclosed ten:ns. Call SEYMOUR ~:n.so...== LagunaN· °: 83:pis '5-2 BR & 2·1 BR. Indtvldl141 cond. Only $229. per :'.~!~rL~:n
I' patio. Assume !5% % loan. REALTY. 847-1221 c r ............. ~ igu • •
1900. homes on large corner lot lu1ine11. mo. Agent 962-4471 or ~~~~~~~~~I
BRK, $24,900. 962-5566. 546-4212. 3 BR & D e4..: llX55 1 Br Mobile home. Needs some n.c and OPPorlunity 200 $llO • QUIET Ref.teat! Fum 546-8103. . • en ..-,950 SJ,2000. See Sat-Sun, Bay & 1eneral cJeanup. Never [ [!) ,.. 11BURON TO.WNHOUSE LUXURY HOME Unique, white br.lck exter. Beach, 7204 Pacific Coast vacancy. $875. month in-WANTED, Man to enttt ~ Studio. All util pd, Choice ~ ,_..,.1 ·•
RESALES. l~m realty, inc. This executive home ha.a 4 gated entry. 2 Ba., bit-ins, lfwy, N.B., Sp. 16 , come $10,000 dn. Aaking wood finish Removing Serv. location Walk to Beach. Vacant 2 Br. ' ,
me. spacious bdrms, big family frplc.. carp. Yard needs ·213/537-8333 or 5J6...2350 aft $79,500. CALL 642-1771. ft!move all types ot wood * $135. Cpl/drp, brin~ kids!
(24 hn.) rm. Immaculate! This tri-work, but a real buy for the 4 pm OnJu tinilhel trom. furn. I: !nt. $125 ·YEARLY at the Beach! Rtnt·A·House 979.8430 A-a._ Fu~.
handyman Call· panelling, k1tchen cabinets, Avail now, ldeaJ tor singles. .,.., '" 3'I Garden Grove 1hevardelfeatw;aParqu1 etenti:Y, MISSJON REM.IT 494-073l '68 Kit Fairview Mobile ~ dens. etc., on 60% basis. * Irvine 1-;.... ______ ..;.,:I
wood uoors, ge patio, • home, 12x40' metal skirting • 21 C •""" k General IF You ARE A water softener + other nice Lula Isle &: awrUngs, Sp. 1', ~-t •-an net .-... wee • $150 ·MOVE Today! 2 Br. w/ •u "" auarantee. $1500. required garaae. Stove, rebig, Child/ 3 BR. 2 Ba., fam. rm. • • $325 VETERAN: to have xtras. Priced to sell Now 11 the time • • • Tustin, C.M. -to enter 22 yean of estab. pet ck. 2 BR. 2 ba. Choice! •..• $300 A
And looklna for 8 bargain, ~~ 1n.950
. Call • "" To lbt your property. we ·n Levitt modular No.l!JOO. FOUR PLEX bus'ns. 1iooo. Dn. Slartinc * WE HAVE OTHERS lold New r.--...
here il IS. The owner will · have qualified cUstomer.s 24x46, 2 BR, 2 BA, oor lot. larie interior paneling job $170 . SECLUDED 2 Br on Ira: ----rs. "HAY DAD!'' waiting. Ocean breeze. 0 w n r Select ana· ... quail._ con-tn Hawaii, Au,. 10, 1912. lot. Crpt/drps, gar. VA. pay part of your closing 4~19 "' <n•1 689-l(XX) t 48 FURNITURE Dnrrll cos!A on this four bedroom, 3 CAR · GA, RAGE LIOO REAL TY 1 •":ucllon • 1.,.. rooms • v • ""· • CANT! llllllllL
2 bath home ju'st to make a 3377 Via Lido, N.B. 8 x 42, 2 BR, patio, lndtcpd, beautifully Jan&caped -3. anytime. *
fast sale. Thia woul d make Everybody wanls one, here's * 67J..7300 * ree room & pool, \valk to 2, 1, 1, bedrooms. Good fn. Bak~ .•.•.• whlsle, retail $175 • BALBOA Island. 2 Br.
the TOTAL COST TO YOU cne for you. 4 bedroom, 3 ELEGANT shoppg. $65 mo. $2200. vestment -income $7,680 -Filh A: chips • .•.....•. good 2 Ba. All turn. Avail 9/l:l.1
"SlNCE 19tl" about •uon. Total sale -ice baths, 1~ family room • bed • f .. -i1.. 646-.8464. 10% down -~ $66,500. Liquor rtorn ...... cocktails * .,-.. .,. lvith fireplace. Very large .. room « .... ,....,. room Will exchange for more I, 1 ONLY $25.150. CAU. NOW. lot near Mile Square Park. home with 4 baths• 2 fire. 10x40 PILGRIM. $2,700. units. Call 1 n"e 1 tm,n1 $225 ·OCEAN Breezes! 3 Br, I 192 500 5.25 Fa,~--Dr c M HOLLAND Bus. S•le1 2 Ba, •-1c, bllns, tenttd tor All this tor only $41,500. P aces, · · · u·uu • • • Division """ 1600. .. !' C ·: ... :111. & 1r 1
1st We.stem Bank Bids.
UnJverslty Park, Irvine
Days 552-7000 Nights 645-13.55; 645-0049 ~ 645-4170 ltids/pet. • AU. terms. Call toll free bowaR& loweon Jrz. ~!ii!! j REALTORS • 842-«55 842·2535. --;: Money to Loan 240 LANDLORDS!
H I D. h 3416 vm· L•'do ~ '562 [ •--•E ,.t l ~ Do ·you have a vacancy? We 4 BR., 2% be, .......... $.365
I
L
I
f
1.
" '
unt ngton P9IC .,,..,... ~II e, HOMEOWNERS! can fUI it. Many desirable
WE STILL MAKE MtH Verde . . BORROW lenants on oor waitinc list,
4 BR, lg 12x24 pme room, A for I •ea•w Ab.,luleJy NO CHARGE. HOUSE CALLS OWNER must sell Spanish 1% ha, blln kit., c:rp!A, drps, .,..,. H • ISO INCOME HOMES $IOOO. $10,000 Up BEACON RENTALS
And we have ju!t 'vhnt the design. No down, term11 \vater soUeMr Incl. $34,700 6-NEW DUPLEXES $48,950 LOW MONTHLY * -64.S..0111 * S4Wai
517-0314 a
d1~rorhathordered. 13 bedroon1s, avaiiable er take over ex-557-9194 ~..i~::;t So~~ of 5Rubdi~v"',.~?:n· 4-BNEeauwl. TRIPnew_ 2LEXE:S,. 3 BR$67un'~t· PAYMENTS LANDLORDS! * DOCK & PIER * ...., s, firep ace, f!!nced istjng fl!A loan w i t h Newport S..ch ...., mv ... LOANS en ANY HOME, W• Speclalltt in N~wport REALTY
corner Jot with Iols of Jruil monthly payments cf $235. 4 _.....;_______ catering to ~uestrians. 151 E. Bay St., Costa Me.la. PAID FOR or NOT Beach •Corona del Mar • Univ. Park Center, Irvine Charming 1 br, furn apt, on ~.:Ofo ·~:,~· $30,750. Call bcclrms., tamily nn., dining PARK & POOL ~::e :=t~:.S~C:~~ Comple. 8/1, Ph: 642417. COMPARE 11'1'!l!, COSTS 6 Laguna. Our Rental' Ser-Call Anytime 833-0820 ~:8::"~~.IU· ~
rm .. built-ins, s Pa ci o us Seldom available, Park Lido $4,CXXI per acre with finan· DANA HARBOR FIRESWE''i.oAN vice Js FREE to You! Try otJice hours 8 AM to 8 PM * Prestige Home *
1900 Model, 4 ·bedroom, 3
bath. Lush Landscaping.
Super I.harp with many
extra.a. 847-6010.
O THE REAL
\""-ESTATERS . '. . .. , ~·~
CHAMPAGNE TASTE FOR
BEER BUDGET .... 3 BR,
2 BA. 28' rear living room
with fireplace, w a I n u t
panelling&: c:ue;tom bu ilt bar
for the family who enjoys
living. $30.900. . . .All
Tenns. Call SEYMOUR
REALTY, 8-17-1221 or
54M212.
$32,500
By owner, tranS"fen'l"d! ~lust
tell beaut 3 BR, 2 BA, pool
home. A515ume $27,0CKJ GI.
witb $3000 down. Will can-y
2nd or oonalder auto or
bone trir aa pa.rt down.
846-4834.
kitchen, archway leads into t~. Park·like cing available. Call for ap. INCOME HOMEs (NEW) Nu-View! l""'""""'~""'!""'""'""'"" B~A l!land Hotel.
the home, Brk. $28,500. lin& pool. Channing 2 BR, 2 pointment. 4-Plexes •. $66,950 to sn,950 , GUARANTEE: NU.VIEW RENTALS lafun. Beach f=~s. B~psD~~~o~t~
S<i.2561. grounds A carefree apark-E khoff & , • I Duplex .............. 152,500 II you can aet the SAME 673-4000 or 4!N-32a 11~ CHARMING 1 B A l =
PRIDE OF OWNER Ba k. bltn ti dbl c ""'"" nc. 8 uru·11 "" -LOAN from ·-OTHER " • r . ....::g;;,a_e.-'=:;;;C-::C3:... -~-.. it. o~ pa3 o, 211 54l-262l Alcazar ai"i:;·~~t·.,•o;; LENDER in c;ruornia at SPOTLESS! l\!le., No. end. Quiet & 2 Br. Sm mo yrly. No Imnlac. 4 BR, 2 BA, many gar. $30,500. r, a BR, .,.,'!'""""'""'!"'!"""'""'""'""' 3 •~-2 bat'· din!"" ~uded b3 f $31995 I~ Pt, WEBB (Bkr.) 642-4837 RATES LESS THAN WE u\u-iuac •I>) -·-o • pets/no children. Avail Auj ~~~~~ ~7 1~· ~~~-H. ~rghla' nd. Fli"ng Commercial ·*-N"""'E~W~P;.O~R~T=B~E~A~C~H.;_* OFFER, return the rooilm..!_amily roo~_ ... -one S2'15·111.rgdrp. 2BGr. ln!~le.'<V. New 1. 673-6900, S'1J..5829. ; · · · Property I.II MONEY within 15 d.,., and m· • uvm ocean ~~ near crp s, ar. -· u.
hurst, N. crf Adams. $32,500. Have a fling in this sparkling c•MNERv VII.LAG;:-::--Luxurious. Office Bid&. YOUR LOAN with US ii Newport ~ach. Adu I ts $250 -~· ocean. Dix 2 Br. A~~J.E~~~kte~~nl1la!T•' Broke!' 547-6334 or 546-6261. POOL. on Highland Dr., 1n .,.., " ~ ut:ue $200,000 Down. Prime loca-FREE' R.C WERNER preferred. No pets please. apt. All features + Pool. ~
V, MILE FROM BEACH prime area. 4 BR, 2 ba. & 2 BR. house $300 mo.+ util lion. 30,000 Sq, Ft., steel I< l'rtlid~nt . \ • $275.00 mo. Call 546-3688, NU-VIEW RENTALS mo. !213) 698-3021.
Clamming, surfing, swim-family nn. Kitchen bltns, \VIES!', Agent 675-2123 masonary con~cUon. • . SHARP 4 BEDROOM. ~ or 494--3248 lalboe Peni!'Jul1
ming' 2 BR and den. ..p. laundry rm.. slone C-2, 21161-2070 Newport Merritt Properties 64l).033lJ l'IRESJllE, Thrift ALL BUIL'~'IN KITCH. 4 BR, 2 Balh, lam rm home. PENIN' Pt. Ire i hr wi"
1t1assive custom patio. 20' frplc. All A·1 !!harp con-Blvd .. CM. 100'x315'. Prine!· For that item under '5(1, try ma Harbor BJ., C.M. 645-1000 QUIET · CUL-DE.SAC Deck w/180• canyon view, crpt pvt patio Yriy 1:
Gourn1et kitchen. S h a g diUon. $44,000. pals only, Ph. 642-1121. the Penny Pincher. _ 8:1.9 N. Main, S.A. .547--0684 '270. PHOr:lE AGENT f enced y r.d . New I y Util 'tncld. No peis. Sina:Je ~
thruout & lols cf custom CALL '-"' •4•·1414 540--1151 JACK d~rated. No small cplonly.$195.Avail 711.l500 built-ins. Clean, oozy and ,,~ ~ children 494--7007 1tfira.m cnly 211 years young. .,...., BR.AND new Harbor View · · ar, · Bal~ Down-
$25.!XXI, By owner. 536-3645. • 41'.U:TY ~ftiQ"O £\,f _ /)-C bts• hOme,3 sR.,11'!arpool,$425 wb~lkto~trp<1.2 ~id°r~Frpl, statrsunlt. 67U711.
Ntllll'. Htwptrl Ptsl Office ~\!;;1 1.'QU l,'VI-<::J. J,:J~ per month f n cl u d In & Ill~, ut · 1 11· • $45 Wl(·• Up-On Ocean REPOSSESSIONS * 6 BEDROOMS * gardener. 6#-1191. 'Ront-A-HouH 979-8430 Lovely BacJ>.1 Br .• R..ms
For tnformat•'on and locallon The ·Puzzle wifb fhe lui/f./11 ChucJ./e p 1 L Hill• Maid Sennce·Pool·Ulll l'd Formal din., 3 ba. New paint a.NIM llfttfttU • qun1 of these FHA ' VA homes. 0 i.tt.J f th • • Call 675-8740 • contact _ in It out + new carp, drape:s, ::;ro:mbltd !o,d, b! r,;-...._.,,---...._.__ 09' the. Pt. Octanffont '2 Br, f BR, 2· BA, hltns, feoced Corona ttel Mmr
wal]paper, etc. I I I ·-hi yard, ,...ti... excellent loca-~::::::::'."=:..;;.;;;;, __ _ KASABIAN Really Sparkles! I 159,500. '° o•m 0" •mp• WO<d• ,. 2 Ba. ,.,,, hu .-,1 111· 11o· • ,..!:.~ -~ ;:;.;.,~
E D E E [ Kid<. 0-mm-occup. -· per r ~~dS!fED 'pt • ..,,l to Rul E•l•I• 962-6'44 --G M L P G • Ronl""-HouH f7MQI mo: eao aaent 516-4llli ""llurant Mm.t, liquor
Gov'T OWNE.D. lSIO W, Coul Hwy., N.B. c:'--'----~~1 ~ .. ,-_,--·I U--...... ·~i:e "' ot~~-~hol'f. """' • REALTORS 642·4623 oroftl -.... ,.. • ...,. ' -vmuence.s. ~. 5 minute
Repossessed hoMe& Low 122> 2 Br .stove walk. 11!-'l/mo, ~t 4 !ut + o~. ~~-lransll '.,'· down. Government ""' 155.900. Fee Land. Harbor I S U D 0 E I ~, f---~~C-..... ; .. _ ,...;.tovtr/-.'arprl. '~~.· HARBOR VIEW HOME l50 dep. 1,.., It.;.,, Adulll ·~ ~. 11muy closing costs. Call 96$.4441. View l{omea. Carmel, 3 BR, • 1 ''"' ...... • -...... .,... • ... .,. 3 Bed dining preferMS. Call f 4 z_ .. 4 21 o
room, d<n, dining room. * Crest Realty FR, hnc. crplg, prem Jot I I I 1 • I l2Z • f Br. hie. w/trplc, -$395 rm.. lllllre. Ewa. 5.11-422.
mice muter bedroom, rear --~-= .---"--sprnkl.N:., Jndscpd, prlnc on-• • • • • rar., yrd, ~hi.Id/pet.I bl RrEooALm.TOR . =;,._., $170-0:ium"'• I .,_ llv!nr room, c; re u In r OWNER Jy. owner -· 613-1166 $.193-3 Br., 'Ba. fr1>., Ins, , ,.,.. ·• pac .. ~n. qL
&vallable, Brk, 1 3 2, 5 0 0, 3 Bedrm, lli bath, boat or F•NTAST!C d·'-1_ ··•eon L E E T I . NU· VIEW RENTALS. "'LO"'VE=L~Y""nc-.,-.5c-Br;;:-ho=me""'ln uec, frplc, orlvaey, & Hwy.
dri.......,.. No dO\m. TMma TRANSFERRED anytime. · r,_.;:,.;:;..;_,,;...;,.-'l I• 3 deckl. VIEW! ~ Non '. Slnol<<r, Gtnllemaa
9C-U'1J. camper gate near btach A kttioa Ptnl:." H~ 3 br I I I j j 1 !W>l'utJon cf a comtf; It 67M030 or • ~ Harl) Vw Hnu. Cloat to l7M8st ' bWNEit trusttrnd, '4 bdrm AChool. 5~ down. Only owners apt w-bC!'auJUul new was a hotM that &wallowed SHARP 4 cltan. 3 Bdnn., t achls, bch A •ho P•. BAatapt, 2-"'*aa,~
l, + 11mi1J nn. wm>12'>dod $:U,500. Call !J62.7'1TJ. furn. $15,000 F.P. Worll>I r _R ____ A __
1
lls _ bath "°"'"· !Op .,.th of Cbhle/pool, $550 mo/LI<,
11
1 25.adu!Ulll~ pd"' ~,;.._Ytartf,
l
!
I
,_ boouf!M troH, • RED CARPET REALTORS 18$.$90,IJOO), lH E. Balboa U 8 l It 7 '15 llwy. locailon, $350 per l44-ll01. · ........,, w. ... , .. -mut..-l A 3 BEDROOM • Vacant, Blvd, '73-0il26 • ~ tfot """"' ~ month., Call Mr. Baily, SUPER Harbor View .. nlal COit• Mota
b I I • l I I l by """"' '" "'" -"°"" m.m Aamt "-;::::":'.==-:..,.,,,-1 a Ir-. -r ck nr pool. R<deooratect. ISOO, OCl!AN VIEW• -~ dev.lop 1,_.., N..1 bolow. , • 3 BR, •hie crJ)t, 3 doon * • $11 WllK & UP * llNllltae. -, -. din. dn.-move In. BEVERLY DUPLIX
1
"UICIC CASH lrom pool A.(lllrtr. Clllb priv. ""nn., llllllWn ....... JACK SON REAL TY Brand --A 11-. •"~~~ri~!WslETl!UlN I' r I* I' I' r ... THIOU ... H" G-ow.$415.Sll!Ml9. =~d::.18:.!: ... a °""" 0 ' 2i P ff, Ir Ir• FOR Sale by <>wner, • BR, hU&t-Only $81,.a. Dlw, -· -· • • -• .-,. YEARLY 2 8.R. It.xi ynt, dbl e Phone Sil!rvk:iMftd Peal
-·-honusroomtlamrm.2!00 Apt ~tm doys, 6 uN1SCtAMB0G"lA!NA5~1El!l!fRS I I I I j I I WANT AD .P'· No pell. '290/Mo. •~•,.llldka
GUUlllllOOK llESALE8 11<1· IJ. IS0.000. 8*-900L ~71117 em. ,, ,.. • • • • • • • DAILY PILOT -T l!l<ei .t wtcnds. 2119 l!ewjiiil BM, at
...... Nlltf, .... •u the old anill. Bii)' the Sell th< old •Ml. 11"1 the SCIA ... LITS ANSWERS IN CWllFIC "nON 700 L .. J.5671 -........ ! "'-.. ad! Ml 11" ., .... l!~!_ ___ _;l14~~hn.~) ..,. •luU. new null. •--~--"'"----------------'"------"----------Coll-· Thlo Ad W"'111 e 'II ....
• I I
I
' ' 1
,,
IWLV PILOT
( ~~···-1~1-... -~·-lltl I•····-lltl! -b .. -J~ r -1~1;.ml -I~ I lto1•-1 ~......:~~ 1--.... J~
l6S R_,1 4IO OfflCl9 Ront•l 441 l'ound lfrw .. , 55G ,Cem011t, Colle"'"' HHll119 & Air
CUSTOM C.nmte, »o.tloo, CGftdltlonl119 LUXURIOUS, priv entrance Small IJ"IY Wdmaraner, sidewalks plantttr :rtte ---------1
a balll, klt priv, .., ~ WJ~ femL 'Vic Hartor lll&h Sehl, e•~ ' • AIR COND. CONTllACl'OR Coate Mt1t Laguna ..,,.h
VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIOUS 1 & 2 IEDROOM APT.
DELUXE * 2 BR. New. I b1k to amolcrrt. ma1d ••rv. ~~-~" •lltjj~ 548-2417. !l.'!S-7311 c.lll<>restlmate--
. APARTMENTS beach. View! 1240 t. llP· -73'7 m-o:no . P1>r q, mot., vlo Ocean Contractor RR Huggi,,..486 Newport. N
Alr Cond. Frplc'•. 3 SWlm· <M-338l or 494-2339. ROOMS $13 wk up w-ldt ' . .!...~!.!, t.C>rnatlonO>ron&del Mar. --------..., HoustclNnlng Furnl"*I & Unfurnished mtnr Pwls • Health Spa • OCEANFRONT apt-Lquna Pt wk up Apla. 2376 S-.11 Nltrt!Vflt •::t '-NtWC*t'• .~ Call to \Cltotlt) 673-~. J A CK T a u J a ne-Rtpalr ---------Adult Living
Dishwasher color coordlnaled appliances •
Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardrobe doors-
lndlrect UghUng In kitchen • breaktast bar •
huge private fenced patio • plush landscap.
·In!? • bt1ct Bar-be-(!ues • large heated poo!J & lanai Air conditloninR.
TennU O>urts • Game and Sanda. 3 BR. adults, 1 ¥t Newt»rt B 1 v d • CM. ~:='~~:: ~oi'':i!"Lr!:r;n::: FND. 2 Cba:m.Pllne ®ottd remod., addit. 2> yn. exp. PROFESSIONAL
BUUud Room. lat. 499-ll69 . 5'8--9755. Mii 0.11 °1 V••I ui!klc Mliff. tml. cock>&•poot VI c, lJc'd. My Way Co. M7..oo36. CARPET CLEANING
1 BR. From $160 Mesa Verde UPSTAlRS: LJv. rm •• ~011 lllNm.fl~ ~OWlt_A Qa.rfteJd ' A ~. F.V. Drifting Alto \Vlndow• • F1oor C&re
I BR. t. Den From 11'0 bedrm. t. batb. .. p. entry, ~ ""'"' ~ 968-JIM. ---"-----Coll Dutch
MEDITERRANEAN DELUXE 2 & S BR. 2 Ba. no cook'r. 18l/mo. YORJ<SHJRE Tmi.r 10 A"" i.!'!~FTING5579695 S37·150I ....... 24Hro.
· VILLAGE encl. gar. llSS up. Rental * 839-3489. Bu1lne11 Rental 44S ,...... old. Vlclnlcy 11.,.;,., a ·v ' · • MESA Cleaning. Carpell,
3101 So. Bristol St., S.nta Ano 557-8200 2400 Harbor Blvd,. C.M.
(n4) !157--
RENTAL OFFICE
OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM
Ole., 3095 Mace Ave., ROOM $25 lc UP. Over1ook:tna: talt Drive, C.M. 540-0795. El•ctric•I windowll, 11 o or s etc.
54&-l034. Harbor .I: Ocean. % blkOFFICE. store near N'pt. PET Jtacoon. Identify, •E-1.-,,CTR--l-CA-L--WO-RK-'.-AU Rtstd/com'L 557-6742, " COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. Newport Bl•ch ocean. 2500 StaYitw, C~.,, Post Ore. & Greyhound ~9510 kinds. Big or small Llc'd & _54Mlll:::::.:::=·------MANAGING AGENT PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
NICE room for work1na man ::i 53~ ~:!1~~~1~'·L ~-0-11...;..-·-----5=55 _,,1"'=,·;,;Free:="==";::t:,.. ;:;5'6-0:.:..:c:m=·:,.,,..,. I Prof. CerJNt Cleaning
·w/k1tchen privileges. $65 on . n.i."n • EL ECTRIClAN. licensed, AlJO windows & floor care.
mo. 267 Sherwood St., N.B. * OFFI<;E-600 sq ft avl ~tALL, thin beige/apricot bonded. Sma.IJ jobs, malnt. Call Dutch 531)...l!m, 24 hrll.
Guest Home 415 noW. 800 Sq, Ft. IN· female poodle. (Go ld i e l & repo.irs. 54~. JAPANESE lady \\'OUld like
-------
ptl .. Furn. .360 Apt. Untum. 1-------1
Coit• Mt11 Costa Mt1t
J135 mo. Deluxe, mobile [ iiiiiiiiiii
borne. "Nice'. patio, Comp.
fum. W/W ~ts. Mature
couple, no pets. Ponderosa
Mobile Est. 1991 Newport
Blvd. 646-8373.
$135-mo dlx mob hm w/
screen pon:h, compl turn,
htpool, adlt cpl, no pets. 4 , seaaon·s 2.159 Newport ,
54U332.
2 BR. Very clean. Adult..
Steady people only, no
children « pt"ts. 364 16th
Place, Apt B. CM 64"'4285.
e TROPICAL POOL. 1 Br.,
Garage & Wat« fum. $145.
per mo. No. 15, 145 E. lBth
St., 543-1188.
I Br 1r1 $140 t. $1.15. S/pool.
Adlts only, ideal for
bach<lora, 1993 Cburch. CM
518-9633.
VERY Nice 1 Br. dplx.
Quiet. Sep, by ear. Adults
over 30, no pets. 548-1021.
HARBOR GREENS
Fumlshtd &
Unfurnl1htd
From $120 to $215 mo
Bachelors • 1 Bdrm•
2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrm1.
I ~ or 2 Full Baths
Muter size bedrooms w/
high beam ceillngs, large
living room w/gas or
wood burnlnc fireplace.
Convenient laundry area
oft ldtcben. Encloted P&·
tlos. 2 awlmmlng pools.
ta.Una. recreation taclJl..
tles. Security euard.
Moclal1 Open 'tll 9 pm.
2700 P•tonon Way,·CM
nr Harbor Blvd &
Adami
546-5025
Park-Like Surroundlllf
QUIET • DELUXE
I & 3 BR APTS
Prv. patios * Htd Pools
Nr ahor'g * Adultl Only
Martinique Apts.
1m Santa Ana Ave .. C.M.
Mgr, Apt. ll3 646-~
on the bay
Luxury aparbnent Jiving ov-
erlooking the water. Enjoy
$750,COJ health spa, 1 swbn-
ming poolJ:, 1 lighted tcn-
nla courts, plus miles ot
bicycle trails, putting, shuf·
! Bedroom, 1% bath•. Deboard, croquet, Jurilor l 's
Spacious r<>om!l. Bri c k trom$\'14.50monthly; alsol
snack bar. Carpeted. i blk and 2-bedroom plans and
to shopping. Ch 11 d re n 2-story town houses. Elec·
. welcome •. One month'• rent tric kitchens, private patios
required. -No deposit $160. or balConles, carpeting, dra·
351 Victoria, A-i>t 3. ~es. Subterranean t>a.rk· * * $110 * * Ing wllh elevator.s. Optional
3 Br, 1.1,i Ba, newly painted maJd service. Just north of
Blltns, crpt/drp!, e ri c I Fashion Island at Jamboree
patio. Nr sch.ls & shop'g. and San Joaquin Hills Road.
Children ok, no pets, 880 Ttlephcme (n4) 644-1900
Center St., CM. 642-8340 or for rental lnfonnation
548-2882. VERSAILLES
EASTSIDE; Woodland St. Executive Apartments
Adults only .. 2 BR. crpts, Overlooking Newport Beach.
drps, btttns. ~/mo; 3 Spectacular views. Luxury.
BR. 1~ BA, crpts, bltins, Models open 9 to 8, On Hos-
$ 2 8 0 I mo . Call MR. pltal Rd. oU Newport Blvd.
FREDERICK, Her J t a I e or Superior Ave.
Realtors. ~115L 2 BR, 2 BA Mobile Home.
LARGE 2 BR, 1% BA, shag Yearly rental by lease.
cpts, bltns, frplc, pri patio, $197.50/mo. No children, no
DUSTRIAL SHOP avl A\li. 1/3. Nr Coast Hwy, CtlM. THE GUEST HOUSE ,,.,.,.....,. """'.,. Furniture housecleaning. Own ~ o-tlr"4.wu. Rc\vard. v1;rorolG. · ""9-1029 Elegant Jiving tor the elder. lnduttrl•I Rental 450 transportation . ..., • I rl • 1 ri RE\VARD! Lost 1 yr <lid lnt•rior Decorator '£"..cellcnt Housecleani .... y, P · • sem -p ·• now male pa.rt Slan1ese cat, vie HOMES OFFICES MODELS Loi' .. ,. Open. ... -N ~·-11nl---------· • b" dav, Own trans. ~,..... ' ,._ COSTA MESA Cameo Highlands, CdM. Thoroughly "xperiencro in "* 8Jti~ •
SArea. R I O 1440.& 2880 Sq Jt. 613-4310. all phases. By appointn1ent umm1r tnta I 42 CABINET MAKER· RD 1 20 k nl 'U/~., ...... o, .,._ RE\VA . -. Nr Br hrst o y ~ i....-•• .., . * * * * * * * * FIBERGLASS I< Adam•. Pepper lorn. FURNITURE Stripplog & * BRAND NEW * Nr1 Nwpt Frwy &: S.D. Frv.'y, cockapoo. 13" Blk, ailvt'r. RetinistUng. Fttt Pickup
Condo home w/boat slip 293l Grace Ln. Shaggy. 96i~22. and Otlivery. &1s--OSGG.
Summer or leases avaU (So. of Baker, E. of Fairview REWARD: Great Dane Pu~ Ga,"dening
Ironing
mONINC -lX a piece
64>1487. Please deliver and
pick up.
4401 w.'.coast Hl~hway0
lh Mi) Representative there py, 5 mo's oli:I, fa.wn fem.1 ----:.....----* Call: 67>6820 * 9(~-~~ or 879-4Ill Lo.st nr Bushard & Garfield, AL'S GARDENING C01ttMERClAL k RiP:side~
BAY VIEW 2 bedroom, HB 962-9634 or 96S-12!t1. lot gard«ming Ir s ma I I tlaJ, tree E5t. 24 hr t1erv. By
Janitorial
sleeps 4 completely furnish· R1ntal1 W•ntld 460 LOST in Dana Point, fem landscaping services, call week or mo. 13J..8898 or
ed ail J Pomeranian. Ans\\'flrs to 54~5198 f!~!l. Ser v t n C 'l"A ~82 ·Av une to Sept fViO ·-Newport, CdM, Costa 1'1esa. ..,:~~·-·------pr month. AdultJ ohly HOUSE or BOAT SITT ER. .iMerry". R~va!'d. 496-0597. Do\·er Shores. \Vestclill. Masonry
agent. 675-4930. Doctor, 3 8, dependable, * Lost. Small blk woolly
AUG. 24 to Sept 7. Balboa quiet, wUl care. for your d I N , ·k p k PROFESSIONAL tree work, BRICK, BLOCK I: h boat h og, ma('. r. &..a. e ar · pruning,trlmmtng, :~:;.n. ::t?'°~t 5 ~,a4!lr;'1? 1::1e r~:idence m o~xc s:m"8:. B536-IG 1M85:LaElt S5~ • ~lESE. Near !!praying, •Pr ink I er s , 646-541;1'0N~r\V0~1o.-0929
_2039_ 5.52-1168 10 am-2 pm. ""'' Landscaping, c 1 ea nu p. R I 01->-Southem CaJif. co 11 e g e. George 646-5893. Plaster, Patch, •P• r
ON Canal Slps 8, outbrd NEEDED Immediately. 3 545--1178. ---","ou~N-,STO~-,N~&~S~O~N---* PATCH PLASTERING
dock. Lrg prkng. Aui:c S..19. BR. home on Eastside C.M. I~~~~~~~~~ I Complete ""ardening service, t«-.-~:-.. ~ •A5() or "'1ctl wk f>75..6131 Pref. Harbor Hi School & All types. r ·~ esu.iua "~""'~"-==-· ~=~·= District. Re as on ab I e, 1 ~ Also new lawns&: <."lean ups. Call ~
NEAR BEACH&: STORES Reliable 20 yr. resident. Instruction ~ c'~"'ij;'~E~sl~-~·i9~1!l--O;;;;l~<Si.~~+f--~-~-l..:..~&-----
2 BR. $1.25 wk. Single 1100 64&<1188. I ~;;;;iiiiliiiiiliiiiili~;i;m~IFRONT-Yard·Lawn Se~ Point !'.ffi ...•
\VIEST, agent 675-2123 -!MM"-'-"A"'c". -f-amil-. -y.-,-.-h=ild, I : s10 n1onth. Backyards alao. per angina
BEAUT garage a,pt, slps 4, c .M. 3 BR., unfum house Schoolt & Yard cleanup, 'veedina:, H&H PAINTING
nr beach, Corona del Mar, w/pool. Yr. lse. Aug. u to Instructions 575 hauling. 962-8612. Serving Orange Co. Since '56.
2 Br, carport, very quiet &:
private. No pets. Atnts ouly.
Util pd. Nr. 171h t. Irvine.
$1SO. 642-05.18.
encl garage. 1 blk from pets. Avail Aug.15th ,
!Chools. 634 ~ton, Costa,1..:.m.=:.:..:=·c....--~=
Mesa 645-6345 eves or LIDO ISLE .. 3 BR., 2
WORTH waiting for • but 830-8254. ask for Toni. BATH' Ad II I • u 1, ease. nobody did! Lot'• of 1olks SPAC. 2 & 3 Br. apt. $140 .up 101 Via Ant I be 1
Dy 673-5150, eve" 675--0146. $350. 541;.176!. .. _. * LANDSCAPING * Re&ldenUat * OUlce SW!ea
Newport-2 Br tum sips 6-8. Bachelor with two small dogs Interested In New lawns, Sprinklers, decks, * Acoustic Cellinp *Caril· 1 BR, 112>. Studios 1115. No
children or pets. 2135 Elden
Ave. See Mgr, Apt. 6.
28R, partly furn. Nr shops.
Older child OK. $135.
64&-2627.
$145 • Nicely furn. 1 & 2 BR.
Trallen. Adults only. 132 W.
Wll!on. C.M. 645-453>.
already have moved In • Ppo~ q>t/dt1>. blll1s, ldds 714:753-Q719.
1h blk bch. 673-9142, 832-0942 desires 1 bdrm. apt. or cleanup. State Uc'd. 536-1225. mtrcla1 * Wat~ *
ask tor Gayle or 713: 944-4890 house unlurn, Pb. ·~2335 A Real Estate }Jomes Exterior, One Story they couldn't wait for us to ok
finish everything at Jam-2206 College No .••• 642-1035 NEWPORT I!lland, new ......,. EXPERT Jap ane1e 1rom$275.2Storyfrom $325.
Rentals to Share 430 aft 6 p.m. Career? Gardene:r • Complete Yard AU work tully guaranteed.
boree. It's too late for a 1996 Maple No. 1.,. 642-3813 duplex, 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, WANT Nice female room-YOUNG couple want unfurn. -al "GRAND OPENING," -_;;,:;:;:::~""';:-;='°";;:: sun deck. $350 mo. 675-8169. 2 to 3 BR house no ~... 2 BR-Mesa Verde, $140. Elec mate to share modem 2 BR. . • .' but ·we're ready now with bltns encl pr, nr. ahop'g. EXCLUSIVE Beaoon. Bay apt. 1 blk. from beach on children, 1 c.at, will fix up.
the best Adult Apartment in Adutis No pell 548-6357. 1 Bairoom apartment Balboa Peninsula. Avail. 642-9875 eves. Reis.
Costa Mesa. Private patio • • 6'73-4m call after 6 PM now thru 9/9. at winter
or balcony, fireplaces, beam 2 BR. unfu:rn, Crpts, drps, 2 •· brand rat 197 50 ~1833 I~------,
New or Experienced
Full or Part Time
Licensing Prep. For
e R.E. Slsm & Bkrs
Services • Cleanups. Free 639•0939 for Jo'ree Estimates.
est. 548-2661. Steve J{obson, Owner, State
EXP. Hawaiian Gardener Licenned Contra<."lor, Complete gardening service
Kamalani, 646-4676. No Wll.!nng
ceilings, walk-in closets, range/oven, refrig. No pets, 3 br., ~ 1n1., new. es. , . v•;r eves. I lit.I Huntlftflton Beach wood paneling, carpeting, $14<1/mo 968-1455. Oose to channel, beach & MAN, 40, will share apt. Persor\afa
--drapes. Fumished & Unfum. • shop'g. $350, yrly. 673-14~. w/lady who knows transac·l :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~
e Sa.Jes Success Training e Placement Asst for grads e Day & Eve Classes
PROFESSIONAL
J apanese Gardening ServiCf!
Free Est. * 646-0619
JOHNSONS' GARDENING
Yard Maintenance, Planting
Oeanups 962-m
* WALLPAPER *
\Vhen you call "J.1ac"
543-1441 646-1731
bulou bull_. Dana Point NEW View Apl Kings Roed. tlonal analysis & real LaQUINTA HERMOSA lshed.AFa ,....,_ ~ e TU!Uon Reimb. Plan Spanish c.ountry Estate Liv-ing with pool. Bachelor & 1 * Brand New Ocean View Avai1. Aug. ht Single adult. estate. 979-7877 be.fore 6:30 Personals 530
lng 6 Spacklu.s Apt!. Teti-BR's train $135. 140 W, WU-Apts, 2 Br From ~65. 3 642-6889. . AM. . •FULLY LICENSED* F<ll' Information Brochure
-raced-poolt---IUllk•n--gal ---__(~_oLN"'1IOl'I BR. 1225. Oolle<LJLJo!!, 3-Bfy-2-Ba,--trplc,...cto.ed-m. liEWPOJ!T....-Buaine11-: .... 11>00WiieQRl00uTpffi!liiillir.--~114)-54&-H92~
BBQ. Unbellevable LMng ... Blvd.) Costa Mesa, 114: 968-3563. pat10, blk to beach. $300 Prof. Man share presUge Spiritual Readings given &: Free Guest Lecture
Only • Huntington Beach yearly. ~2455. area house ~ pool with 2 daily. 10 AM-lOPM. Advice 325 Old No. Newport BJ. NB
1 BR • FURN. $175 TAKE A MOMENT Apts., others. Avail. 7/'!JJ. $1SO. given on all matters I can Edmond F. Jackson
ALL IJTILlTIES PAID $175 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 645-1502. help you. • R.E. Education since 1$1
and enjoy the peaceful ..,. Ch~dren.Welcom• STUDENT mother & 2 312 N. El Camino Real (4_blb S. of S&n DlelO Fl"w1 rounding• of this adult com· Cott• fMsa children to find &: share hse San Oemente
on Beach. 1 bDt w. on Holt plex oppo!llte • goU course. New Family Apts. nr. occ w/same. Bonnie, 492-9136 or m,.9034
to l&211 ~~~oe.) !"',.:~~:."""' at 2 Bdrm. Color Coord. lfealiJUIU 20 S57-<337. WANT to meet an Old Bald
1,...,.., ... !'l'~!!"'!!!!!!!!!!'i * Lovely living and enter-~" CRT PUTTING Sparkling New Adult· Apta. SINGLE woman would like Square Foggey! Don't call I! .. ,,.... ••• ,,.. ·• £iO to share hOme with same, me, If ""U are cute, petite
Academy
RHl ·Estato
Conlracllllf &
Insurance School•
CGI approved, M/C, BoAJ' 1145 • $165 tainlng areas wilh fire. GREEN, POOL. BAR-B-Q'1 •• 11 B~~~_!l ' ,_ ! = tlos n.-•w-•• .,~ age 25-35. 645-4619 a1t 4. Nr. and want to m~t a recently Bachelor I< D" pa • place, patio CHILD PLAY AREA • occ 1 k 1 BE AN ) prf el 1 balh DAY n ••~ CENTER e 2BD l l;4 'BA Unfum$210. • divorced, nice oo ng trp e's. v. & a ra r · * 3 bedroom•. 11 • ~ ., INVESTIGATOR
Divided bath & lots of * Pool and putting green l STORY REC. BLDG., INC. • 2 BR, 1 ~ Fum $225. SHARE my waterfront home sincere bachelor 38 with Recorded MeS!age Tells How
closets. Rec baU, pool &: Take a moment to aee who GYM A: PARTY RMS. Prl~te patios, lush ~ w/doclc, man 31).00 yrs, own home, call 54G-ro45 • Call Toll Free
--Jones--tawn -seffice
!.-tow, edge, vacuum. Small,
large, clewHJp. 54S..2943.
LAWN SERVICE
Cut • Edge • Trim Dependable
Eves aft. 6 545-3766 557-8585
AL'S Landacaplna. Tree
removal. Yard remodeling.
Truh hauling, lot cleanup.
Repair sprinklers. 673-1166.
OO~fPLETE La w n Ii
Gardening service. 1-Iaullna'
&: clean-up. J im 548--0405.
JAPANESE Gardener
Comp. Ya.rdwork & Cle~up.
pool tables, sauna be.tbs. )'OU've been mlulng at DESIGNED FOR nIE aetung. Carporta, gas paid. $150/mo. StraJght. 6T'a-4331. moms or after 8:30, (l) 800-4
2
""2
32 See 1or )'OUl'teU! 11301 GROWING FAMILY 114 E. a>th St., C.M. 548-0137 GmL to share ~e 4 BR PALM & CARD READINGS ~~~~~~~~= JIM'S GardenJng, complete
Keet.on Ln. n blk W. ol FAIRWAY VILLA SEE FURN. MODELS FABULOUS 2 BR. house. Own nn. $70. mo + Advice & help In many mat-r lawn & yard care, cleanups.
aeach, l ~n: Slater). APARTMENTS 6401 WARNER AVE. $130 Up. Fum/Unfurn util. 64S.lG68. = ~ ~~~o~ll-:~ I ___ ,Gel ~-.c:c=,;;af;;.t.:.5.:..pm~----
Free estimates, 642-3102
(Corner warner Ir F.dwards:) You won't find a larger, Gi":r ... ~es for Rent 435 readi. ... for $3. w/ad. (2l3) l~ General Services UPPER front 2 Br, overlook-20122 Santa Ana Ave, 546-6215 Be "'6 ·
P ROFESSIONAL Painter.
H o n e s t \\'Otk, reaa,
Lie/Ins., Inl /Ext. Free
est.---Rers.-·M&-2-'ffi9:--
Professional Painting
Inter/exter. Quality work
Reu 557-1455
PAINTING .. Honest, clean,
guaranteed ...orlc. Licensed
" inlured. 87>§740.
PROF. PalntJnr, also rooll,
acc:oua. cell., lnter/ater.
I.le/IM. Free est. 645-S191.
QUALITY Inter/mer pain-
ting, Free est. anytime.
Lic'd/Inr. 531-3168.
FOR clean a: neat palnline.
Interior, rens. rates, Call
Dick, 968-4065.
ing take park Ir beaut. --------~ Project of Urbanetics nicer apt 1or 1~· a~t. GARAGE, closed, SINGLE. 694-1350. Fully lie. La JAO<SON . The Magiclan 45
enclosed patio &-pool. FRPLC. aunken Uv nn., 2 -e -~:dm;~r=· ~!: $25 month. 109 ''A'' Habra. Call for appt. Adcf...A-Room min. of spell binding magic PAINTING, int &: ext, reu.
Mature cpl, no chldrn or Br., 2 Ba. w/w, bltns, $235 N--Ave. Adult., no Clearbrook Lane, Co 11 ta PROBLEM Pregnancy. CoDo ,, __ ,. .. e1·.-p "·· Roo•· ~~ 9~9 drena parties, $8. rates, work gua.rntd. Local
PAINT Equip. For Salt..
Airless, ladders etc. Conv.
spray & c.qulp. 968-4065.
DISCOUNT on hanging H
buy on \V.C. Llc/Ins, call
The Hangmen 547-5846.
pe•n ... ,.,.. 1035 12th St. tlo ·-·• 117 5 "".t"'~~ Mesa. fident, s y mp at he t 1 c •'\Quvu J.'6. AUV8, lll, ~ • ref's Ins Phil ·~ ~, ""· .. .w;;r. pa , .:-nu. gar. • ft.:-tt.1 WELCO'~ pets :mo Fullerton Ave :;.:,;::::;-~....,,,.---,.... • • ' "1'7't..,.,., • 536-2692. fl3..!i629 in AM. CHILDn.=• m.c. • • ., * O.OSED GARAGES FOR pregnancy counseling. Abor-Uc. "-Bonded. Goodwin A iioME Repairs. Carpentry,
$125. $135. 41e. modem 1 2 BR. IISO/mo. Beam ceil, BRAND NEW FAMILY ~Just E. ol Bay) STORAGE. 125/mo. 2135 lion & Adop..,. r•I. Son, 846-37Q8or 647-8372. painting, cemen~ remodel, P~~'ita~ho:!~!Jt~~
er.; redec. Cpll .. drps, Nr. crpll, drps. refrlg. PMI. I,,_ TOWNHOUSE APTS. 1 I< 2 B;.. furn. 0~ unfurn. Elden Ave .. Apt 6, C.M. APCARE. 642-4436. Babysitting etc. Bob, 646-#16. bonded. Ref', furn. 642-23116.
ocean. 27o Chic 11 o. fant ok. No pets. 313 E. 17th 3 BEDRMS. + FAMILY, Pool. $140 Up. Children's Office Ranta I 44a PALM CARDS t. SPIRITUAL YOUNG Set School Ope T ,H~au::l:::lng~-----WALLPAPER HUNG ~2268; 847-5169. Pl., CM. 642-8852. GARDENS ==----,,_.,..-=I READINGS. Bring ad 1or re-n 1 • :2 BA. TENNIS er.. aectlon. ELM DE:sK space avdlable i50 duction, 10831 Beach Blvd., days, SAM-1:30PM. Prof, W EEK END IE v en ing Call Reboo 6*244&
LGE turn penthou1e .
Panoramic view of village
& ocean. 2 bl', den, 1rplc,
sundeck. Indoor B B Q • ·--
YEARLY renW. New dplx. 2
br, 11'15 mo. 3 br, $375 mo.
Must be seen to apprec. On
Balboa Penln. Avail now on
1 yr lease. 673-0026. * 11 block BIY & Beach.
Bachelor apt, $125. 2 BR
.... $2'lS. Ms.OW.
, e WINTER RENTALS e
I 2, 3. 4 BR. Reserve Nowt
.\em:y REALTY llC-38511
2 BDRM, 2. BA. or 1 BR, 1
BA. 2 b1ks to be1eh. Yrly
$300 " !250. rnMlQ,
S.n Clemente
Spac Townhouse. 2 BR.
2 BA, Vaulted ceiling,
prage, pools. air/co"ld,
$210. 540-4179/MQ.llMS
DELX 1 Br. Nu cpts/ drns,
stove, pool. Utll pd. Adlts,
No pets. 1884 Monrovia. -· CLEAN 2 Br studio, 1% Ba,
bltns, gar. Adlts, no pets.
$155. Nr 19th & Pomona.
54&-0351.
1 &.2 Br apts. Garag<1. Quiet
garden setting. $135 A up.
Util tree. Fum avatt •
Manager 5.11-S!m, 548-8992.
PU'ITING GREEN, APTS. 111 E. 22nd St., C.M. mo. WW provide furniture Stanton. i ml aouth of 1eachen. Register now tor Movers-Large !nick, power Plumblnt
POOL, BAR-B-Q's 642-3645. at S5 mo. ~service Knott's Farm. 527-3406. rest of summer & Fall. $20 Utt. DoUy, driver le belpier ___ .;;. ______ I
CHD.'"l PLAY AREA Huntington Beach aYlilahle. 17873 Beach Blvd. ALCOHOLICS Aoonymous wkly. Ag<!1 211-6. 64&-17116. 115 per hr. 545-2886. Drains unclogged • 17.50
3 ~~Y~. =CL. 2 BR FROM $139 Huntington Reach. 642-4321 Pmne S<Z-7217 ., wri.; Carpal Service YARD, garage cleenup1. Sew-:l~~z.if~· 115.
GYM t. PARTY RMS. MOVE IN TDDAYI BAY VIEW OFFICES P.O. Box "2.1, pasta Mesa. JOllN'S n--t" u hot. Remove ...... dirt, Ivy, e PLUMBING e Deluxe, air-conditioned. "-'-....-P tery Dr l v e way 1 , gTad.lfW.
DESIGNED FOR THE Kids., pets OK. Pool. AU Redecorated, Udo area Social Clubl 535 Ori-Shampoo 1ree Scotch· 847 .. 21966. Install·RemodeJ.Repair
GROWING FAMILY extras. 3 Br, $199. 17392-A Realonomics, Bia. 675-6700 FIND YOURSELF l'WdDe..._, ... ~Sol'11U ._Reallt~~~ SKIPLOADEn. • dump tru"" Free Est. Lie, 548-8172 SEE FURN. MODELS Keellon Lane. (Nr Slater & _........ ~ l.'Ulv~ '· « ""'
un I WARNER AVE DF.sK space available SSO IN SOMEONE ELSE. bri••tene-• 10 m1nu•~ work. Concrete &-asphalt PLUMBING REPAIR """ • Bcacb BL) 847-4260, 847-3669. DISCOVER -•• s w N job too all mo. WW p!VVlde fumllure bleach for white Clrpets. •wing I< b re a kl n I . 0 '"'
(Corner Warner" Edwards) Newport Beach at 15 mo. Answering .....ioe DISCOVERY Save your money by,..... Me-7310. * ~m *
Project of Urbanetii:s l.;;;;;;;;i======• I ava!lahl•. 222 Forest Ave. 7341835-6885 273/387-3393 me extra trips. WW clean YARD a Garage Clel?IUP. COLE PLllMBING OAKWOOD Lnguna Beach. -Travel SIG living rm .. dining rm. I< Free est. 1 cla)'L Call 24 hr • ..,.Ice. 645-ll61
OFFICE Space, 444 Old hall $11. Any nn. 17.50, anytime, 54&-0031. SAVE On Plumbing. Paintln&,
Neivport Blvd,. 3 blks No. of SET SAIL couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. Fut l'ellllta are lull• pbme Jnstallationl. Fre< estimates. ON BEACH! * * BEAUTIFULt 6 2 BR. 2BR, 2BA Uni. Fr. $25l
Contemporary Garden Apts. 2 BR. Furn Fr. $308 The Last
Word In
Great
Apartments!
Hwy 1. 300 sq. 1t. $95/mo. TAHITI exp. la what counts, not call awa,y. 642--0078. Good refer. 839-0372.
548-5300 Grand 3 Masted Schooner, method. I do work myteltjjjijjiijii;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'j MEDICAL Ole, 850 sq. ft, & crew & gueltl sh, co!lf:s. Cood ref. 531..mot.
equip avall. Fashion Ialand .1~~~(2~1~3)~-~37~a.~1~2~3'~~
1
S1'EAM Carpet Cleaners, * Idea.I for lnt--0.P. 644:--6125: prof. at lowest prices. ~
64~00. I J[S) ""· ft. 12!!,95. m.-0612.
TWO ADJOJNJNG OFFICES l.ost ond -Carpantor ~---------------...
busy corner, <»sta Mesa. LARGE OR SMALL
ADULTS ONLY Patios, 1rp1 e • , pool, Fundture Available
$155-;l'l1). Call ~63• C a r p etHrlpes.dlshwuher
SHARP unfurn. 1 BR. .& 2 heated ~unu.tennt.
Br. w/ttrNt. Clote to OCC rte l"OOm«tU views
& UCI. $135 • 1165. patloH.mple parkJns
557-1168. Security Guarcls.
* * * * *
$1.15.00 FURN OCEAN W ·-• LG. RMS PARKING 2 BR, unfurn, crpll, drps, ~" • ' $1.15 mo. 1st & last, $35 clng. HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
What more can· )"OU say
about an apartment com-
munity that comes with $1
mWion worth of recreation 1
tI.00, util's pd. 642-6560 All Typet Work! cut doors,
e DELUXE l, 2 or 3 room Found lfr" •d1) 550 panel, remodel, f In I 1 h, Trader's Paradise
* ADULTS fll2.m9 * SIS-7196, ask for Lorry.
Apt. Unfum, 365 CServlco Mgr).
C.,_ dal 'Mar 2 Br. Adulta, no pets.
BAY MEADOWS APl'S.
381 w. Bay St. Cl\I ~
731 OCEAN A VE .. H.B. m4> 536-141"1
Ole -10 am-6 pm DaDy 'W1LLIA!1 WALTERS CO.
Or a tennis pro & activities
director plus sreat 1Un
times?
of1ices. &st deal in 0 .C. r.•noto-kl frame, repairs, etc. 962-1961. Airport uea., 833-2840 BUnru.c.A:1E, Gray, tten.
Beautiful!! Wearing raw • CARPENTRY • ,
hide ooUar w I co I o re d RoU&h A: Finish Patio, Tops
beads. Found Charle St. & cem~nL 6 4 6 ... S 911, QUICK CASH C.M. (bet_,, Hamilton" Ms-1594. Rents from $145 llllhl aft 6 pm. 548-7887. -w-.,-,d-'1_Be_at_Ca_rpe_n_ter-
E/SIDE Attrac. 2 Br, bl!ol. S.• Air Apts • $115 FOUND Big golden male Small Jobs Refereneet
lines
times
dollars :~:·pe~~eo~ 'f!.21B~iic~~=.~ ~~.~·. THROUGH A ~~~~Y:i~;~~.;:u.1o"f A-1 ~7588
... allJob
3 BR, 2 BA, nr. ooc. Beach, 129-6 UUca. 5.lt;-'IV/O. Orange. <»sta Mesa. Piclctd •Po<iallat call Gordon . I '----------,_..,...---... 'I =""· Np~:,.~~-* 1140 * Models Open Dally up by Humane Socitcy. Call 53M454. ARROWHEAD goU course HOME (Colla llleaa) 3 Br., NEW~".';·Ba.dhl-. na!:~~~.C:,.~ !rom!Oamto?pm DAILY PILOT :::o~·;:-~rrl<r v1c. ~-~•.:.:l..;ll;;:ng-,• ______ ~':.:.:.•ag.;~-:::,,~ ~~~u.:·eq~.'~
OAKWOOD or? "Ann," Fa.rel \Valktt. mit what have Yo\L htlns'. dlhwhr, c r Pt ' • LARGE 2 BR I story 4-pl<l<. Sayhroolt near El lllncho In Acouatical C.Utnp blown
llllO/mo. 645-Ql3. 83.'H447. Cptt. droc. r/o, gar lnccl, GARDEN APT$ Huntington Harbor. H.B. machine applled. F,. e Realtor, 642-3989/641>7414. Bilr/Own llC-2221, '4S-91I88
l!J.O.LOVELY llJWle apt. for child OK. $1.15. 847.o245. THROUGH A 84e-2238. ffilmattt. CUAI'. 644-7183. '65 MU1tang w/~ whts. stA POWER products, oil,
• •• P<ool. -v1ew1. 1 ldull. Blint, ttlrlL IOOI 1 BR. B1tn1. Qpll, drpo, nr Newport llffch North WHITE long hair l•maJ• cat Cement, Concrtlt Sharp! .,. '60 abbi:..tated Pl and transmlulott ...,. • -N'-bMch. $210 El Camino. 54&-61Q4. lchlr. Gang<. End patlo. l!OO 161h Streot wearin& flea collar, vicinity Corvalr Belt. B'IQY, trade cllU..... l<>r auto, boll or
A-•te •• SPACIOUS2Bl\AM $155/mo. 847-1!60. 64UITO WANT AD Ocean Blvd .. Coron& de! PATIOS.SIDEWALKS '.orVWBU1.29iilJacaranda. UIYeqW!l'. _,, • ~ Mar, 673-6157. CEMENT CONTllAC!OR =CM.;::_______ l!Hl2( 1 BR apt, $175. mo. $!.15/mo. -WALK to Beoch Newport Beoch Solllh c.11 M *** -AVlll AOPll l, leuo. !Ide!' prelttrod. U 2 Br., cptJ. drpo, dJhwlhr 380 lrvlnt\ A\'OllUO Malo Collie & Shepherd/Mix ax 5 AC. 2 nn Cabin A balh, Llol to trade! OUr Tradti"I
Call MMll'I 2 BDRlll ttttftDofi.dftll. 2 125A30816lll, 847-3957 l56-05llO N.B. lie. Vic. Nt'\Ypot't I< EXPER. :;itracto~"' weU. ln Chriltma1 Valley, ~tohtmnlalorJllUl
PRIME UH-2 bib to belt. tldl OK. no pets. mo, mo. 2 BR., 2 ba,. dolux•. SircJe 642-5678 Fair Dr.. C.M. Ca II :i~ ... ~';.k 194-:tii33 OrtlOn $6500 Cl..,, Will
5
5 ~ lrw 2 er, 2 ea. Avtll Aug. 1. 179 Shalimar. 53M'llL 11oey. Pvt. patio A -· Like to trade! OUr Trader'• MS-75118. • •· conalder property tnde ol ...,.
No -ta. m.tm, f75.473. Put a II"'-"loot" In 10ltl' ~ ~. Pancllle column 11 l<>r you! FOUND 7/27 watch on e CUSTOM CEMENT WORK "I· val. 1944 Monrovia, CM. for 5 bucks.
,_ \lftl 5 lints. s d*Yt for$ bucks. oceanfomt between m and Drives, -~ patlol,
2 BR, llll1'tm. crpto. tfrpl, A ~ • oell -bauhlu lol mo, Two bdr. 0orpeta, Call -.,.A-IOO<f-.-watt-.I '"'ad"'t1-.-,.-oo<1"'"'1n-"' I l!lt, N--" B 6 a e h , pool decks. Don, S4).IS{f * ' * * * * * -211 bib to Belch. .. _... Call Claatllltl dra .... pn.g<. Excd Cond. ~-=~=--..,, ........ . .. -I ••••••1'111!!!!!1!!•••••••• PllS!mo. m.J121 1MU111-53Mm,. Noed a "Piel"! Platt an od! vt1!tntnt. m-&ru. PUot ClaM\fled. _.,. 11
,. • ~ ' •
I
'
,
•
DAILY PILOT T\a1d-'1, July 25, 1972 I
Schools
and
Instructions
This variety of fine schools
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow.
For furth•r inform•tion rt9ardin9 th• Deily Pilot
+ Schools •nd Instruction Directory
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
1 Interested In
A Real Estate Career?
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
IN FOUR WEEKS
LICENSING PREPARATION FOR -
• Real EState Salesmen & Brokers
• Sales Success Training
• Emplayment Placement For
Graduates .
• Day And Evening Classes
For lnforrMt.ion-Brochure
Frff Guest Lecture
Newport, 325 Old No. Nprt. Blvd., 548· 1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
Real Estate Education Since 1964
ACADEMY REAt ESTATE
CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS
ST. ANDREW'S
KINDERGARTEN
• Individual attention
• Small Class Room
e Enriched
Curriculum
e Christian Nutw:e
·• Accredited
St Andrew's Presbyterian Church
600 St. Aridrows Rd .. Newport Buch
* * 646-4646 * * * * 646-7147 * *
'Roolint '
1~ T. Guy Roofing. Deal
I Dlrcct I do my own work.
I &f5.,-278(1. 548--9500.
GOOD TYPIST
Will do your typing ot
her homo, Wiii rlckup
and dollYtr Jou H.B ..
1LEE Rooting Co. Roofing all F.V., West, 75c per pg. I typel!i. Recover. rcpnirs. or will work by hour
1 thenno root roatings, while call 847-3095.
1 & color. Lie/bonded, since NEED help at home? \VC'
1 1947. Free est. 642-7222. hnve Aides • Nurst':-1 e
jewing/Alter•1ions llou~rkprs • Companions
'sEwmG:DE'slGN1NG • Homemaker. • u,;oho ~ . 547-Wll. ).fen/\\i'omen. Reas. Rnl t>s ..,.....:.:.::.:_ _____ I
o min. Call 846-7450 Help W1nt*CI, M & F 710
I Alto rations-442-5845 ACCOUNTING CLERK
eat, accurate. 20 years exp. Gru\Vth oriented eleclronic
llt firm has immecl. opening
C tile rle\V &
remodel. Free est. S1nall
jObs welrome. ~2426.
C TUe. Kltchens,
Baths, Entrys. C u 11 t o m
"fl'(d. Rtu. Glen. 548-726.1.
for a dependable Individual
1\·/expericncc in accounts
payable, pa y roll , &
sec1~tarial functions. Varied
responsibi.litics require a.
capablf' individual. Ca 11
?i.ln:. Rtiutz, at ( 7 1 4 \
892-5531 between 8 am &: 5
I
I
"Mommy, I
anything to
don't
do"
It happens every Summer
have
• • •
Kids are ou t of school and out of things to-do.
Suggestion: This Summer, send them back to school.
' SUNFLOWER EARLY ACHIEVEMENT CENTER
Our special Summer classes run from June 19th through September 8th (three week
sessions) to fit in with your vacation plans.
Newport Air Associates
Right School & F~ing Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500. .................. ,
* FAA APPROVED * Coune Includes:
35 Hours fliQht time in Cessn1 ISO's with
20 hours du1l instruction. Club membership.
3 Month's free dues. lndlvidu1l insiruction,
tailored to YOUR 1bility.
10 AIRCRAf'? AVAILAILE AT
LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
Leam to fly now - -and hive fun I * Fly Moxlco & Can•d• * S.,.cial Rates for Commercial or
Instrument Students.
For Comploto Dot1ils Call NOW
.. alp W1nto<1, M & F 710
BEAUTY Opr: PI t t tn e
a 11 iltant, Tburs-f'r1-Sal
Busy Salon, llllO W. Cout
Hwy. NB.
BEAUTY operator, female.
Busy shop Laguna Bcb.,
$-ml.
BEAUTY operator wanted,
75% comm., Fri only 9 to -t.
AUiUSt 4itb thru Sepl. lat.
646-7900
BEAUTY OPERATOR
Needed Immediately
~1010 For Appointment * Boat S11Hmon * Ex.per. necessary. Lar&:e in-
ventory in Newport Beach.
64>1144 645-3!80
BOOKKEEPER wanted tor
youth-serving agency. Call
642-9900.
BOOKKEEPING-Part time.
Female. To \\'Ork for an ac-
count. Call 897-0443.
979-11$5
BOOtlliEEPER. Intelligent
individual wanted by 1ast
growing N.B. CPA f.irm.
:r.1ust have FC bkkpg &
payroll tax returns e~p.
1 ';;~~:::;::~~~:::;::~~~==~~~==~I Future Jimlled only by abill, !~~........,... ty to assume responsibility.
are worth training for
• TRAVEL
Sal open. 64~1333.
BOYS
Age 1~14 to dellver papers
in the Dana Point, San Cle-
mente areas. DAILY PILOT
4924m
[_ Any child aged 2-11 can attend.
In addition \Ye offer separate s\vim lessons, ballet and modern dance and a new
program specifically designed to introduce eligible children entering kindergarten
to the fuhdamental structure and requirements of the public school system. This is
taught by a public school kindergarten teacher -2 days a week.
• ADVANCEMENT
• SECURITY
CABINET maker, exp'd ln
all phases of furniture lnak-
ing. Custom shop, Jorgensen
Furn. Co. 786 Newton \Vay,
Costa Mesa, ~0310.
Our fun filled program will be divided into four sessions and your child can enroll
in one or all.
l t t Session
2nd Se11ion
3rd Session
4th Session
6/19 -7/7
7/10. 7/28
7/31-8/18
8/21 • 9/8
Literature & Drama (Childrens Theatre 7/7)
Science & Nature (Science Fair 7/28)
Creative Art {Art Show 8/18) AIRLINE
SCHOOLS PACIFIC
CAN'T FIND
THE
JOB YOU WANT? Music/Body Movement (Music Festi..-al 9/81
Consulting child psychologist, pediefricioi!ln,
speech theroi!lpist and bus service.
Afternoon recreational activities inc.Jude:
PHOTOGRAPHY
COOKING
POnERY
Sunflower Earty Achievement Genter
2515 West Sunflower Avenue
3anta Ana, California 92·704
714/54G-4750
Learn How You Can Qualify
Call 543-6655
610 E. 17th St,. Sonto Ana
Computer Reservations Training For Quall·
lied Graduates At Los Angeles International
TRY OURS !
OO!EDIATE PLACEMENT
FOR:
• FIGURE CLERK Airport. By These jobs are varied & chal-
lenging! CONTINENT AL II you're good .w/numbers & can type a httle you may
end all exciting things that your child would want. AIRLINES quality.
SMALL
WORLD
PRE-SCHOOL
NOW OPEN
AGES 2 THRU 6
Open All YHr 6:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
FULL AND Va DAT• STATE LICENSED
CREATIVE EDUCATIONAL &
PLAY PllOGRAMS
HOT LUNCH & TWO SNACKS
CERTIFICATED TEACHERS
Reservations Now Being Taken
For Fall Kindergarten
DAY OR
EVENING 549-3877
NI'# IAltTHQUA•I! SAl'E IUILDINQ
2950 McCllntock Way, Costa Mo11
SW c.,.., el loller I hlrricw
Kindergarten, 1st & 2nd Grade
SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM
REGISTER NOW FOR FALL
Agos 2 thru 2nd Grado
e Full Learning P rogram
• Phonics Stressed
• Arts & Crafts
•Music e RHdin; Spocialty
• Sports Activi ties
2110 Thurin Ava .. Cost• Mos• Ph : 646-1444
A member of the U. S. Financial Group
e MMlcel Mslstat
• ~AllJsf9Rt
e lnNl.tloR Thenlpy TochRicl••
• 1.......-CY M•cUC•I 1.UlllcJeR
• Ello Tecll11lcl•111
• Me4Jcal Rocoptle11i1t
BY A RECENT ACQUISITION OF NEWPORT BUSI·
NESS SCHOOL, CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL COL·
LEGE NOW OFFERS:
CLERK
Good skills neccn. Insurance
exper. helpful, but oot es-
sential 1 Position requires
lite .steoo.
INTERVIE\VJNG
?.ion 1.hru Fri 9 am-12:30 pm
ON
SITE OF OUR
NEW BUIWlNG
PACIFIC MUTUAL
FASHION ISLAND
(Comer Santa Cruz &:
Newport Center Drive)
* FREE daily bus transpor-
tation for "1ork in Los An·
g'eles until move to Newport,
Sept 'Tl. e Typlag • IMkkffpl--.
e SllortHlld e Legel S.Crotary ,,.,., .. I•• CASHIER
We will train mature per!On
to work in our busy Service
Outlet in Costa Afesa, Apply
in person btwn 11 am &: 2
pm. COIN-OP. 295 E. 17th
St., CM.
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
ENROLL NOW FOR SPRING SEMESTER
California Professional College Clerical
Tired of staying home'?'
'Vant to start a career?
RECORDS CLERK, 1801 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA, CALIF. 714/645-2922 (Etc.I
Important News For Parents
With Children Ages 2 To 6
The Educational Readiness Cen tre would like
to take this opportunity to announce the ex-
tension of its pre-school program. Working
mothers especially will be glad to know that
children in the two to six age group may no'v
be enrolled for the full day, 7:30 a.rn . to 5:30
p.m., Monday through Friday.
We suggest you visit our facility and meet
the staff. Enrollment is limited to 24 children
per session (mornings and/or afternoons), so
don't delay. Parents with toddlers are also
welcome. Plan now for your child's edu-
cation.
Several clerical openings
avail for mature carefr
minded individuals. some
-req. x1n't math ability • all
trainee positions. High school
I( i I) diploma req'd. Apply in per-En1>foynnt: . f son 8:30 AM-9:3{) Af\.f. Safeco
Insurance, 17570 Brookhunt.
-------.. •I Fountain Valley. Equal Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wontod. M & F 710 Oppor. Employ"·
ASSISTANT MANAGER. CLERK typist. Exp in alt ofc
Starting salary $450. Must P~Ure~ 10 kE"y add
have neat appearance & machine. Accurat~ 50 wpm
desire for career op-el~ typewriter. Varied
portunlty tn ta 1 t food duties. Apply 1741 Placen-
restauranl 695 S. Coast tia, C.M. From 1-3 pm.
Hwy., Laguna Beach. Mr. CHEF wontod. Exp.
ADMIN. Mgr. tor private
community assoc:. Know
budgets, accounting, prop
management, malnt & PR.
Start $700 plus car allow.
Resume by Aug. 10 to Selec-
tion Committee, 202 Via
Palermo N.8. Ca. 92660.
ARE you looking for more
thnn just another job!
Beautiful Ideas Div. ot Gen.
J'o6ds needs 5 pcoptr to
leach prof. makeup tech.
Exec. pos. Ava il. SC.2004.
Piepenbrink. $1000 mo. Call 675-4241
AUTO SALES aft. 4 P.M. Bluo BHt.
Would like experienced man. Clerical
Join one of the most wc· CLERK TYPIST
ceulul Ford Dealerships In Newport Beach firm aee.ks
cn:ana-e County. Top oom· clerk typist \v/min, 3 yrs
missions, Insutance, Demo exper. Typing 50 w.p.m.
P~. 'Ve need a truly Jll'O-Ability to work w/numben
fe111onal new car salesman. A: kMp accurate i-ecords
Apply in penon to Don Xln't co benellllt ·
ELECTRONICS
Crevier. Theodore Robins Coli Mrs. Smoot
Ford, 2060 Harbor Blvd., 644-3389 E x p e rlenced Assemblcra ~Co~ota~M~e~oa.~=-,,.;.,,...-11 ____ .;.;.;.;_ __ I
'ASSEMBLER
needed tor varled jobs in AU TOMOTIVE SaleSman.
production. Openings ft-Want a good exper. Strong TIM .. E FOR
quire knowledge of harness-cl0&er. Call Jon Saltus, (l)
ing, cabling I: cha111i11 wir-521...0000, CottQn Gott VW,
ing. All jobs immediate A Buena Pk • QUICK
pennanent. BARMAID: No exper. nee. CASH
Apply in pel'80n $2.50 hr. Apply Vikki's
REM~X LoCMunge .•• : ~~I> Newport Bl, THR"UGH A l[i 1 J pm. Educational Readiness Centre
11o•mut t Acr;;~~""oPERATOR q..~ e.· ~ .. 9•$@ 2070 Moplo Avenue c::9i ~ ~ _ Cost• Meu, C11iforni1 92627 [
Newport Bf'at·h • • • The (2 blocks 'wait of Harbor Blvd.}
Je1t Wentad, MAI• 700 lrYine Company needs ex-1"'!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!1!!!!!!!~1 646-433.4 per. NCR operator who can1""! _______ .=.;.::...:.::.:.::_ _____ _
SC.Al LETS f,yJK' 50 w.p.m. A USt 10 key
• adding mftehine or calcula·
A.lrEIS tor. Poaition involveiJ heavy
machine bookketplng A
'::~-0.--EUtc -~ -IAt>DLE Ew&udoa ot a camel: lt
a h:rflt thll swallowt.d
poottna JournaI '"""' to the ..,,.ru lodger. Som• IOl'o
rnAI tducaUon tn aecountina
deslrabl~. Xln'1 hf>.ne.lit•.
Coll Mrs. Smoot
"4-331t
DAILY PILOT Classified for Action ! ! .
.Telephone 642-5678
•
1733 Alton St. Santa Ana ~ V
(In Irvine compli!x, 3 blks N. BEAt.rI'Y open.ton • full &
of MacArthur, l blk E. of pa:rt time. Com· :o~portunlty Employer :.:o'wt!:011~?~. r~~ DAIL y PILOT
Assistant Manager
SALES WOMAN
Exper., brlaht, .nthuslutfe.
Caret?' minded. Top pa,y.
Full co. bondlta.
APPLY IN PEMON
BACKSI'l\EET
No. %i Fashion 111 .. N.n .
64:i-lOGO.
BEAUTY C)pen.tor wanted, .tun Ucne •l•t tor O'lmtt',
b..,, oaion. 1o1 .. t be Ile •
Tue•. Sat. IU-3910. 1610 w.
Cout ftl-. N.B. '
Lil<> .. tndef Our ~···
Paradite coiumn !. t« '°"'
'
WANT AD
642-5678
1-------1
DAii. y "1.0T
[ t J[i}J I L4hJir I l[ll) I ..... , ... l[iJJ I II , 6 5 I lfDJ I li t (-Iii li:k I
twp Wentell. MI. P 710 Corneru &
Equl""""
I~ I ~,._I ;;;· I-tr. ';;::~;;;~,1 '----.. _ ... __,I,'=-!.
I 111'11 3 u-. t n-. UM
Ill TV, llldio, HIFI.
.. t 2
.. ,,_..,...._____ $-.. )1\EE ldtltlll1hal lib clop.
SondwlclE Mlbr Swltchl1o•ml Opr. OLDER -pre-tab • Call In Aloi.
SbOtt Ord<n KOBENA 421 Super• movie cablne~ 12' • :11· ;llO. Ratt S1'EREO 1912 Garrard * -*
Mature woman wanted to Ke Dy Girt camera. lmtant p u 11 m • n Ii: l t c be n equipped wltb full med pro.. -Kl1TEN==~s---N-«d....,.,,hoo-oe"',.-UWt"""' won-at lunch COW\ter pre-loldlni. Pl°:M'ft' tdepbot u. n l t • -• I n k .. • t • v • , feaSonal cbaJtrer' AJtUnl.
partna aandwkbn, salad.I, Needs )'OU b' .mrt tt.rm w1cJe angle lent. Al.molt rt rrtcerator eom~ •teno· rtttiwr, ~ air-wet"k! WW deli;m'! Tabby
and lhol't orders. 40 hour tempnry &11ta:~nts. new. f15 or mm otter. $l!D tL ,_,12 ft l&llbel ta, ~ IPtaktn. tape :: 1 ;;;bl~~:.':;:.,:
wetk. No Saturday nllbt or MllSt h..vo ..,,.... Xlm 54).1734 ... , " -· need Uttle -k $100. loll.. dedc a b<ad phom plug-in tnlned. 837~3.
SUnday 'WOl1t. No .,Ut lllll!L ~ -· Top eon> Y ASHICA BOOE, mo v 1 e motal Utt boat with 2 Jacb. Bnnd new In box a, -=,:'-"""-'"-~--~
Clean., modem, lunch count. lnp. Wttkly p 1 ye beck. camera. ?.oom 1en1. Cll'JOL7YI. ftlY conwrskln sua.rantffd. Orlgtn&Uy prle> BEAUT. Part Siamt'S* kit·
COOK. ..,. u or ow:r. Ap. l!:lloe. Se<retary '810 • .Ac-Executlvu
er. Apply lJndbtrl Nutrition Abeolut•ly no fee . 7.~un. Ft.6. Auto e<· ~ ::'lf::i cd,il«ml· ed •t S2'!9.91S. Balulce 18'! ten. ltoolm lib Slametel 7
In rear Of The Toy World Kelly Girl ....,... W/waJT. -· • cash er ama11 paymeni.. -"' old. w.....i A ply • Vao De Kamp<, 3099 ~ Secy to im • Dlotrlct Monotero
Briolnl, C.M. See Mr. Secretary R.t. to $560
Tl'udo. F/C Bookekepor to lS!I> Exeeptlonol opportunity ltn:
Sto .. on )owor love! South lOSl -· Ctr. Or. Fumlturo 110 HAYE (4) n c11ns nL. !:.: ~. y D • p I. -Call l37-&i03.
Cout P.Wa Sllopp1nr C.n-Irvine 833-1411 iu; I ;;:"::,-:o,::,:.::1·=~-~"" WVlNG-Black It .,.y Iona
ter, In OW. M•11. T ECHNICIAN MACLANE M<>W<r $95. Bil'Oh ZENfrli & RCA Color TV1 h&lr kitt•n. female, 7 -kl COOK . Exp. \Vheel-Boolcl!ffper to T.B. i:i;o · ... .,...Pl 18 to 28 to make e BLUE DOLPHIN e PBX BAeepllonlst to ISXI ·aoocr money NOW! Have
P•t••t ef th,....,. at leu than the dlscounten. old. \Veanecl Ir trained. Call ~uld tapet t~~ A d~~ nn~, g'?ond1•-•1+ 2 lvs, e SUNDAY, JULY 30th. M09t "7l modeta in stock. 831-&003. l3M Via l.Jdo NB Cleric T)'pilt $475 tun and be where It'• hap-
1 =:=:---~'-· ---P/Tbne/Genl Ole $2.50 hr penlng! !t'1 pennanent em.
Sl!CURITY GUARDS
Oak..m GU'den Apia. needs
appllcant1 lmmedlatr-
ly. J.tust be matw'e, 1ta.ble
individuals over 21. HoUl'I
'7 am.J pm, wk.ends 7 pm-5
am.
•• ereo tq pmtn • -e over cu.•-:t ~· ... an Prov. '72's at drutie savings!
operation of entire repair •&: cocktaU ibl, FJin w/glass Tr•d• for •ny Free color a.n trnna imlalled LONELY little male dog
COOK. '1<per. Park Udo Oerk Typlat to 18111 ployment and fast Pl'OlllO<
Conv. Hoop, 466 Fiaashlp Reeept/Modlcal to $500 llonl.
lnltallation center, Salary top $1'5. Gold leaf J\l'ag perforrnenc• aft•r Au9. 3 with all ooruJO!es thru July needs lonely little boy lot
plw:. U.S.A. Stereo F.qufp. lamp w/pedestal table $95, 2 673°0261 l ll!t. 3 yr. plc:ture tube, 1 yr =~nshlp & Io v e .
Rd, NB. 642-80H. Accounting Clerk $4'15 21.l: 43U71l Wftkcta,s Warebouae, 119 E. 17th St., matched annkn eh r 1 . parts & !lttVice. Cash 90 ..:.::..:=------
Cona M!A 66-2442, open blue/gnn $55 pr. 545-7978. Electronic S\uplua Sal"; P.C. plan or terms. ABC Color POODLES: SllvtT m a I e ,
ll AM. SURPLUS Salt: Dinette Set bouda, capaclb:n, rtmtors, TV, 9021 Atlanta. Hun-black fem. min. \Vhlte stan. ** TELEPHONE Appt w/f ehatr1 • $15. coils, transformen, wire, tington Beach, 968-3329 dard. Fen1ale Siamese cat.
CREDIT coUoetlons elm, 488 E. 17th (al Irvine) CM
lull ttme, days, Mon .. J'rl., · 642·1471 • (eollecll
nl:m.21193 eves/wlmda. ocea1kmal weekend•
PreviOUI experience prtb!r-JANITORS and waxm, ex.-
red. PflTVl1lnel Oftl"t, South per .. tor san Clemente area.
Ooaot Comm. Hosp.. South Cail 630.1601.
Apply In-Stc'y -.PART TIME. s.9 Upbolatu'!d chair, $12. Cot· equ1prnent, t'lc. Ju.J1 29th. . 546--2848. PM, Corona de1 Mar. Xln'l fee tables $4.50 to $10. PRECISION Wind.Ing Co. * l..1\tt> model Packard Gt!IAU. ,~.;.w;,h.;.lt_e_m_al~e~de-al~c-at.
Lal\[M. 499-l3U. An equal --------
NEW FACTORY
E XPANSION
$SOl-$650 Per Mo.
OAKWOOD
GAR DEN APTS.
aa1 + boi:ru•· Req'd: A Refrigerators $100. Btwn 9 2247 s. Grand, Sanla Ana. Color TV,4~TI09 allo amall gray calico kil·
po 111.l'I e d ~cumbered Ir: 12 AM, 2001 Grace I.ant, {Warnt.1' •Grand) 540·4lOl. tl!:n. Call atte-r 6. 548-7672.
oppor. emplr. Jr, AcCOU?ltant
F/C Bookkeeper
Sec'y/Comm'! Ine
Exec, Secretary
See'y/Enillleerlng
si ...
F ull Time llO'lrvlne Ave.
Newport Beoch
bt1Sines1 woman wi the gift C.A!. 979-4434. LEAVING for Europe. Must GERMAN Shepherd dog g ~~ ;a'ion. 8.13-3656 ~ LADDERBACK CH A 1 RS . :':oohsehold tumishlngs incllil-----.__J--.,I , mos. Shots. Atale. 3077 DENTAL Aut. ·eXper.
c~de. El Toro-Lag Hills
area. Sal. Open. ~ll30.
Youn.a: men.mechanical ap.
lltude helpful, but not re-
quired. MUii: be 19 or owr.
Able to start_ work Im·
mediately, U accepted. For
Job Information
a-· Need at least tour matching p antique tbl. $lOO. flW to You CoJ Udge, C.M. 56-79tt I
Equal Oppor. Emplo)ttt TELEPHONE S&le1: Sell high. ladderback chairs. hotog erqulp incl new Duriit I'·---4 MO. Old German Shepherd * DENTAL ASSIST
NEEDED. , OR 3 DAYS
PER WK. EXP PREF.
644--0683.
Southern Orange County'• Fin. or untln. Must be M-30l enlarger, S 8 O · 3 Lines,. i Tim" $2.00
Favorite Newspaper from •turdy. No antiques. Free or Developing tank, d r Ye r ' , pup, Sbo«~·2001 ~ -----
Clerk Typist
PayroU Oerk, HB
R<cept!onltt, HB C1ll TuH doy
10 o.m . • 4 p.m .
776-1551
6 Sec'y' $620 your home. Make u mucb reaaonable price. Pb. Mike clothing, books. 675-0»1. 3 f /C Blckpr• $700 as you need. Generous com-at 897-Tm a.tter 5. J<ENMORE wa!'.her k gas NEED home for Lab puppy. Beautlf\11 male Siameff
J Conttr Sec'y• $650 mls!lon on each aale. Call BENTWOOD dryer, 6 mo'•· 0 I d . 'Jw. mos. AKC. Ch bred. Femi. 4 months old ORA.PER'! workroom,
exp'd. tabltt, will OOMida"
tr&inet. Paid vacation &
holld&yl. B<acll Drapery,
tlOO W. 17th, CM.
NEWPORT
Peroonnel Agency
133 Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3170
3 Stenos $500 557.m9. CHAI RS Fr!gldaU.. ,.frig. Lr g . , "'°"· 846-6252. • 833-2149 •
J Gen'I Ofc $450 T RUCK DRIVER Need at least four tin, or un-quttn sz. bed, 6 mo's old, *GREAT Dane, 1 yr oJd w/ NICE long hair kittena:. WeU ,
NURSES Aide 'n'al.nlng. A IJz Reinder's Agency A·l Ueenae tin, Bentwood chain. A~ Schwinn bike, I i r l s. papen. trained & alert. 8 wkl old
bl!:-alth care career oppor. 4500 Campus Dr., NB Call Mrs. Schmit: pearance not lmp:irtant, but 962--0589. * 00-4454 * need home. ~8.
DRAPERY.CARPET Sales.
Exptr. docarator type per·
too. Active store. Excel
draw + comm. 492-2251.
Employment ofter ed . Fee .,aid By Co. 546-2118 WES1'CLIFF must be in good cond, No MOVING east, make offr r, FREE Puppy, 1i Lab & ~-l PUPPIES, l M, 2 F, 8
KEYPUNCHERS Petaonnel Ol!:pt., Ho a I Personnel Agency anttque1, Free or reu. po o I tab t e . I a r g e Shepherd, all black, female, weeks. Mixed breed, very
Needed Immediately. AD Hosp. N.B. SECRETARY * 2043 Westclltt Dr., NB price, Mike, 897-1'191 a.rt. 5 t et rigJfttezer, setional 9 wks. 499-2118 ait 11 a.m. anWJ. 546-4310.
shifts, must haw exper. NURSES Aides, iexp~r. * 645-21'70 KINGSIZE headboard, tofa, dryer & misc. 3136 ADORABLE, 7 wk. old, DOCK-4'x18' heavy 2xl2
E xp'd Clothing
Sale1m1n
Otallnl, So. Coaot P!u&
Xlnt C1:fi' Sue prefd. All Bhifu:. Parle Lido Immediate opening for cap-TYPIST, must be accurate. bookahelf type, lamps mat-Trinity Dr, Costa Mesa black & while male kitten, const. Dry & in Ute water.
KE LLY GIRL Conv. Hosp., 466 FJ.aphtp able, attractive experienced Weatmtru:ter area. tress &: sprlnp, apotless. 9 540-1839. 644-1612 Eastbluff. 67$-0956 capt. Neel,
833-1441 Rd., N.B. 6t2-8M4. aecretary in ClUl' Marketing * 8934529* drawer dresser w/min'or, KOBENA 421 Super S movie FREE KITTENS Males. WANTED loving bome1 tor 3
2l61 Bulinen Centtt Dr, NURSING auiatant care for Ir: Salea Department. Re-~. Octagon dining rm tbl, camera, Instant cartridge Bo.'< trainf!d. . adorable kittens, 7 wks. i
EXPERIENCED .. T--'-seml·lnvalld lady, muat be qulra lhortband and typln&'. TYPIST 2 leaves, table padl, pecan, loadln&. Power telephoto Call 536-6092 Weaned-trained. M!>-2929.
u;y.._., _,..•d, lite bouee'--lnj:. 1100 ti.A#. IWr -1 wide ana:le lenJ. Almoet
LAUNDROMAT Cleanup, M;nday&reliet-"'Muat ·~am uu•Y· new. $TS or make ot1E't. KITI'ENS. MJF. 5 wkl. LARGE, oomf;y Early
SAYINGS & LOAN
'mLER
p/tbne. Lite work. Retll'ed be able to work llO.lne nltes. Apply Peraormel Dept. 2 Pc M.'Ctional $90. Platform MZ..1734 eves & weekend1. Fluffy. Very P 1 a y tu l. American Couch, n ••d •
or Jemi retired. Good for $2.25 hr. 613--3Sf7 BERTEA // J}J} /? /J rocker, $1351. Nite '!_,and._!~!15. USED doors, w i n do w • , 54&-4413. upholstering. 5f6.«Sfl.
cpl. -· NURSES. pvt. duty, all J\11ll';J '::Jirl :i:: ';.i:,P111; H';d': ..,,..ns, n . to $5. Chair $3 •••••••••••••••••••••
Lev•I Secret1ry lypes, all shifts. Leacoul!e CORPORATION Rrl .• N.B. BaHamby buggy l15.1Playpen SS. ··"~r.--"'"'-=----==-"'"". Good Skills Nurse'• Registry, 3 51 per $2. Poe lamp $5. ~
Call Lorraine Hospllll.l Rd., N.B. Typist temporary. Au exper. c:;:~o·s ~ •t. 1 S ;~· Swivel TV stand SS. 673-0928. Imperial Savlnp • Loan
3366 Via Udo
Newport B<aeb 67:J.3130
WES'l'O.JFF 642-9955 or St0-9954 'J 800 I Von Karman considered. Top earnings for c Iner, , vlny , ....,. Intorv!em g.5 M/F top aktlh. Let Kelly Girl Sewing Machine, 13 5. SUMMER SALE ~~:11~""k Irvine, Colif. 92664 ..... ~with your best loot 64:i..500. PERSIAN RUGS et .. OPTOMETR.Isr Aulatant. forward on the work assign-ANTIQUE Victorian cut 20% oft.July 15th thru 31st
645-2770 Uve in.,. •. Ai" 40 plus. 833-1 424 ment of your choice. Start velvet couch, chain, tables, Call Kennan'a 10:30 to 5:30 ~ wa.ltreu, hn 10:30 am· LEGAL Sectttary, Newport Must t;ype. Call Dr. Lewis, work immediately. Come in lamps. 962-7057. Corona del Mar, 675-7340
2 30 M ~ • ·-· C Ca"""' Cotta Mesa. 543-0565.
Equal opportQn!ly employer
: pm, on..rn .......... ,.., enter. _...e--exper. Anequa! orcall... FlNE Oriental dining room MOVING,twlnbed.$30,extra
Pantry, 1891 Herbor Blvd. Salary comm•murate. PAYROLL o_.unltyemploy<r Irvine 833-1441 ,.L ,.,._ ablo ot'ir longtw!nbed$<0.I.oveseat
C.M. Aft 5, 842.366.J_. --MO-OSOO. 3)61 BUBineu Ctr. Dr. oriental turn. ..9.a....2448. ~-Uphol chair $15. Sqr , ....................... ...,I LEGAL SecretarY w/lllli•--PERSONNEt ----SECRETARY--. --iwo GREEN uPHOL-·picnlc: tabie, • benches. 11s. Excelle!A~!! work. lion-~~ Rapidly ...,.ndinr co. ne<ds WAITRESSEr ···-. §TER.Eo Ci!AiRs. ·-·-·· ' .. Baby • .Grand $'15(). 540-06l7.
'l'ralnN .\ experienffi!. lm· ---------you to aereen A hire key Lunch 6 dinntr waitresses, * 675-1222 * 12 Place Settings, hand
mediate placement Weekly UVE-IN ho\llekeepu/b&by· people. Some payroll exper. // JJJ g, I coclrtall wattreues • night 9 PC BASSETT Fruitwd painted china, 0 r I en t a I
PllY check. No tee. sitter. Hunttnstm Beach + a lot o1 penonality putJ J\sll1f t ir hostea. Apply in penon din. ~. •t. 2 Pc. oak br: motif, tDclds everything,
KELLY GIRL ...._ 968-9680. ~ 111 top Iii. Xt-a long :J.5 pm, Mon·Frl. seL 1' pJOI tbl. S5'1-li855. brand new. $90. 494-n09.
l06l -Ctr. Or. • Mochlne Oper1tor term lllllpment. The Derby • ALLEN SYNCllOGRAPH,
1r¥lne 133-1441 onJ1 PreQ " Lathe. MID 1 Irvine 540-4450 SWmner '1'1!M, Winter Ttmo, UID S E. Brittni (old Pail· 8 SOFA" love-~ never MODEL E 1115 Ho JTF,
yr. lllop <JQ>tr. Appl.y In NEVER ~~p~ TEMPO ~ :-K-~Gltt~-:-oadw°:j;.,,c:=. Maa.EXPER ~:-$251'.°~.~10 ~1~· --~ ~~nds.E.
F lnonclol Sec'y -858 Production P~ . ~ ""' -~·~ ·~ ...... .. Good sldUI, ••eounttn r N.B. Tempor1ry Help Juol Seo •BLUE DOLPHIN• PECAN cottee & end tablfS SURFBOARD,
lrnowledge. MACHINIST 1'UMP bland Sa I• 1 man, 3355 Via Udo, NB ~ ~lll.tor dinette "' ~b, ..-. run.
Call Lorrati>o CdM area. 5 Days, 50 hn. // Afl (;') f ·-~-h •-~--&ood eond. ~. ca 11 WESTCLIFF To $5 Per Hr. Nile ahlft. Top wqe1. -1\llll't'J ir Wtu.i~.,,.., • oater• ANTIQUEChlppendale 5'8-4440
Personnel Agency NO FEE PMne 613-881.S for appt. n e e de d ' ex p er 1 e n c e Breakfront Excellent con-..:.:.:..:.::::·----"'--,,.,.,....,,.. Apply Ba"'• ~·~ 536-· BRUNSWICK VIP I' slate
*3 Westcliff Dr., N.8. We h&vt over 25 openlnp tor Real Ett•te C•rMr Lair, 4501 w. Cit. Hwy., d!Uon. •~ mt. (1") pool table. $550. xln•
64>2770 top machinist.I tbruout New or expertenced,jalntbe Tbe~=~~:!i: Newport.aftS. *· Mahogany bednn set cond.~1128.
GEi.COAT TOUCH·UP Orange Co. We urpnt1y ComPM1 lhal'a growtnr. U Tha Ft y ·-•• . ·wa1 w/dbl bed, 1711, R<frtg, $10. ·~OGE ~ t n:BERGLASS MOWERS .. ---': you do not haw a Uceme, . t ta our Needs W""'~ &/or treues, Dining Sl!:t $15. 642--2398. ........ ..-.a .ea, new ··~ You'll Work For ua exper. 25-40. for dining nn. handmade quilt. blue cblPI.
Coaot ltecre•llon, lne. • -Lathe Opn -... our On Our Payroll a "°""l"'L See Penonnel G ..... Sale 112 Imp. ""· llok. 642-8989. •
!HO West 17th strfft • Mi1l1ng Machine Opn. $49 In Our Cuatomen' Otficel. Ma:J'. Balboa Bey Club, Im FRIGIDAIRE, furniture A: BRAND new Sean deluxe
6C-0542 • 'l'Urret Lathe Opn. We'll Plan A Work W. Coalt Hwy., N.B. lots of goodies. 620 llth st, bl!:lt maaaapr. Colt $100,
GENERAL OmCE: Groat e Ge..ral Machfililtl RHI Eollfe Schedule To Sutt Yw WAITRESS ....,,led 21 and Hun"-n S.acll. oell $!IO. 64f.J.'13:1.
Job tor the p1 w11o Uk" lo" some '"""1n<I• require oel· Llcenolng Couroe <>no That II TaUored exJ food 1~.;;,.,.,:.;--;.._=-~
Of vv!ely. P!•uam 1oeal up. -• do not. AU open. Full ea1 .. -~'---To Your AbUlty over, exp M can ' Mlchlnery 11' FUCHSIAS -FERNS . MISC. olllct.Oo.w!lltralnplwilo lnp are w/top firms w--.r~·-· . YourTtmo applyatMJCaaa,296E. 50aeortedotm40c-'1
esn type. swt $400. Call pncrally free "'111 layoll. ;;;,::::.."::;. "::''::"l.:: Your Traneportallon 17th st, CM. A LL EN SYNCllOGRAPll, 291 E. 23rd st, OW. Meoa
Pat !WI, 540.Q)!'6. Coaota! P.P.S. Jones I« tnlarmatloa at Call Or vtolt WAITRESS wanted, mull be ~~':5 :~· M l1cello._1
•--. 2790 Harbor BL at P1clflc 84U58l. l"""I 833 1441 over 21. matutt 'll'OllW1 · W•nlecl · 120 ~.., .... ,, r-y ne • preferred. Call Galley Cafe, 5f2.1734 rvea & weekendl. ---------1
Adam&, c.M. Peroonnel S.rvlceo Tarbe0 ltallors :1161 Bustneu Center Dr. 129 Bayside Or. N. B . M1 ... u1._1 111 BI NTWOOD
GIRL Friday, young ll2 No. TOM!' .. -~~ ~··~------i;;;;ru:;;;:"'ii";;:'i::'i.::-:':i CHAIRS n1 Bank Squ R.E. Sale1man. Sharp. -----· .. ~. w/pmoonallly,lltetyplngl U on ue U.Hna 0rt .. tec1. small · SECRETARY WAITRESS Exp_ good lSl'ERID: Unelalmed Needatleut-1111.GrU!>
bkkpr, UJte to work Oranre. Calli. (~) office. Takes 10% 1be Irvine Comp&J'ly seeks Cocktail. ne Blue Bfft. 107 layaway, Carra.rd 4 gpttd fin. Bentwood ehalrl. A~
w/poople. 540-96!1. 547-6446 The rest 11 y0un. NB. Writ• s•er .. aryw/mtn3yrseXJl'r. 2llt Pl. N.B. aft 4 PM. chonger, a Ir l\lll)ens!on pearanee not tmporlall~ but
GROCERY Oerk -full time AJk for Rachel M&Y C1aWfied Ad No. 428, Daily Baeklntlmd tn aeCOW1tinl llJ)eaken with m U 1 t IP 1 e mut be tn &cod cond, NO
days, married man -t'd. Pilot, 330 w. a ... , Costa desirable. Polltlon requl.res WAJTRF.SS, exper. only. Ap. erosa-ovtr nl!:hrol'k, an"-•ea. Free or nu. ,.. MACHINIST, lathe or mill. ~ ply -· E 111b St CM -·
A OONVlNIM IHOPfllNQ
SEWING CU!Dr fOll THE
CAL ON THE GO.
For •n ad tn Wom1n'1 World
C•ll Mary Beth 642·5671, ext 330
To Size· 50! Sashed with Dash!
712 7
llJZS "'-.• S-10-12'
M.-14-16
L-lt-20
liq A6t. 'B ..• "4
Oontad Mr. Adame at The M.,., ea. 9'l626. statiltlcal typing l ""' Of • ~ · ·• • · AM/FM/MPX radio and price. Mike, 89'7·'1191 aft. s. Capitol Mlc:hille. 1642 E. after 3P M Still Oout Super-· 3347 E. Ed.,,..., Unit A, Santa Ana. RECREATION DffiECl'OR lO key ~ddlng machine. Xln't . • !al" dock. brand oew. LAODERBACK CH A IRS. 9497 S4'll lh~ exotic tunic over i(•t Hwy., Corona det 541-2651 City of Fountain Valley worktc""11coMnd8 a Seo. benefits. WOMAN tor tactory m.;f~~ ~.i:: .,~88 oft Neei at least four m1tchlna: SIZIS ·34-50 sk\rts, pants, sv.·im suit
ar. 30 Salary: $13,6"-$16,920. • rt. moot operator, eome exp .,, ... , • • ...,.,, or high. laddet'back chain.""..,.,. Whip up gypsy tunic lvith
HAVE opening for mature MAID, full time, ?-3: · Degree Rec. or related 644 331t will retain, MS-OtOl. paymenti of $8.25 monthly. Fin. or unfln. Murt be tl1Mi .... 1Tf~.... tlowing slee'Ve, easy em-
woman in tarie office. wkend rotation. exper. prd. fidd 5 P SECRETARY, for 1 ..t..i otc. WOMAN, over 65 yrs. No ex· USA Stereo E q u t P • aturdy. No antlqutl. Free or broldery. No waist seams!
Duties conai&t of typlnt, fll· Penonnel Office, S 0 u th net bept~i02ooexi:ter ~ Young powtng jl' E. per. nee. P/tJme. Min Warehouae, 119 E. ·17th St., rtatoN.ble price. Pb. Mike EVf1'Ytb1nr about t b Is pattern TI27: lhrtt motils, 1
tnr. 10 kty addll11 machine, ~:'iJ07;, =~ 97l08. Pb: (714) 962-2424. development tlrm, Typing A wage. Intere1ting work. Costa MeSJ, ~2442. at 897-1'191 aft 5. prlnce11 ii a dellght .. the fit Printed pe.ttem S tl0.12); M
ansMrlng phO.., otc. Must oppor emplr Apply by 814/72. SH ·reqd. Start Sal. 1500. Vatted hn. Mull be free * AUCTION * WANTED: 10 speed Blcycl•. and 11aft, deep poekoll, the 114-16l : L 113-20). sui.
be able to work % day on · · RE"I"AIL cletldna: " part J.A!1.sure Qmcepts, 1.13-2892. 110tne nH.e1 A tome wknd1. Fine Fuiinlture Good condlUon. quJck zij>-Up.Mdogo! Whtp it •lie.
Saturday occislonally. MAID work 1n exchanle tor time kltchen work 1 n SERVICE Station/Sales • Nr ffO&I Ha.p. !A-8P, I: Appliances * Call 645-'1598 * up in a 1ay stripe or print. !EVENTY~FIVE CENTS
Advancement Opportunitlff apartment. 2376 Ntwpart holp'tal Full time 5 Sen-lee ]>l'tllOnnel needed. ~ P /O I Printed Pattern 9497: NEW for each pattern -add 2>
Excellent compan,y bl!:nefits Blvd., C.M. 548-9755. ~ 8 to'T."Sn-w. ' Exper. only. Full A: P/time. Widy'~t!~Yl e:;n lanot "'"' 26 Women'• Slze134. $6, 38. 40, int. for each pattern fer
lneludlng p&ld vacation, MAINT ENANCE RN'• r. LVN'•, u.7 & :J.U Gd. •arnlntr potential. M•.. 1~ n I n 42, 44, 46, '8, 50, Slie JG Ar Mail and Special Hand!·
p&ld INurance l retirement MECHANIC shill>. Hwrt. Bch. .,.... CaU Vml• Sholl Service, 3lll •dlll • 1 ~Ii N"'l'O't, CM 646-1686 FREE (bu>! 40) tak" '3/8 yards Ing; otherwise th;n(-clasll
procram. Coll& M... ..... Plastic ms, Plant ••• """ H ~ Bl C ~ Behind Tony'111Jda M&l'I 60-lneh. delivecy will ta!« lhroo W~t ~---"•-• d N io ,.... -L er~ " ·~ '·-•·m ,., e ~ a o. 2nd Shift .. 4:S0.1 '-"""C'Tff 'noERS -uan-ttd Start'-wdek of A .. -... T IEVltNTl'..J!'IVE ClENT8 WM11a or more. '"""' 10
Dally Pilot p O Box 1560 SERVICE Station Salennan, 01'.:=.._.,, .. ,. ....... a..... All~ Broot-the DAILY • • Req'1 exper. malntalnlna A Je I/time, expor!mccd, neat In Antlquoo IOO ,..., • WOODEN ONLY , ORAN E COAST •vr each pattern • add 25, ~
Coat& MeM, Calif. 92lll(I repelr!ng tndul!Tlol plan! / ' ablo:l-28' EXTENSION HAMMOND ST UDIOS <fllta lor ftch pattern for PtLOT. l05, N<edtec:nlll
HOSl'ESS Wanted' Mull be production maebln<TY I< fa· l/Uben j appearance. Apply "'°"" ANTIQUE LADDERS • h&d been uffd olfen Air Mall aod Special HaJ>. DepL, Bolt 163, Old Cbelttia
)'OUlll & at tr a e ti v e. ciUti.,, Pro!rr -· w/ Ing" 2500 Newport Blvd.. SHOW I. SAl.E by retired painting C<lfl. 4 Adult Evenina ClasH1 dUna: oth•rwlae lhli.1-daso Station, New York, N.Y.
Re1taurant exper. helpt\ll. Injection .\ compreuion Lotuna Hiiia C.M. Anahtim Convention Ctr., tractor. Priced for QUICK e Beg1Meri delivtty will take three i~ =:,..!f~ AM'W.
Apply In penon only, felt. molding. Buie knowledge of SERVICE Station need• aeft>SI fkom Disneyland, 800 SALE. Only $2.00 and up, • Secondary week• or more. Snld to p, •
ctano'• Re1taurant, 1617 plant electrical helpful. Cam-e x Pd· man· D a Y •. w. Katella, July 21. 28, 29, 1212 South Rosa St., Santa • Theory Marl&n Marttn. t1w DAILY NEEDLECRAFT ''72! Oo-
Westclltt Dr, NB. bro Mamdacturinc CO. ~ Now Jnterviewinc Permanent. AJto part time 30. Thun/Frl/Sat 1 PM-10 Ana. M2-3UJ. • Wotklhop PILOT. "2, Pattern Dept., cbtt, knit. etc. Frte dJttc..
HOUSEKEEPER .. live in, Clay, Hunt. Beh. 341-3531. BUSBOYS mnn tor nJaht1 .\Sun. Union PM, sun. 12 noon-6 PM. BOOKSHELVES and 2 small Call for information 232 West 18th SL, New ~&..~· Ma.mtn:te Boot.
nice home>. Z to 50 yn, Equal Oppor. Employer. OU. 393 E. 11th St., C.M. Anot1artcn I02 delika Sultable for extra ........,,., York, N.Y. 10011. Print Buie, ta-knols. .. ~
Costa M.... -alter MAINTE!<ANCE MAN • Ole SER/tiVICE Sta'tc:n •ttendam, ·-"'" In your 2854 E. (lout Hwy., CdM ::~·m:n°::s ~ ....... $1. ~
6. bldJ, Nwpt Ctr. Gen't p m• ev"' s weekonds. RECOND. Appl'•· Som• nu prqe"' for children'•""'· PIANO SALEI NUMllEL Eur Ari Of Balrpl• a.
HOUSEKEEPJ!lR, for Npt lmowl<dge of plumbtna ol D1y Or Niie Experion<ed. Apply, 2590 w/lrelght damage. R<\IOI. Prlecd for QUICK SALE. ~ uaed In tcachen SEE MORE Q u I e k .W • °""' :I& deatans to
Beh tam. Mlture, Exp In eleettteal req'd. AlllO, Ute l'ull Or P /Tlm• Newport Wvd., C.M. W• d•li';!:_, olN ruar. 1212 South Roll St., Santa atudlos: floor modtll: ctt. F-and choote one mike. $1.
care of Wants. Live tn or janltartal duttes. Pleuant SEWING MACH. OPRS., ex· Dunlap's, .&0.w e w P 0 rt Ana 542-31M. continued modelli damaatd p&ttml fl'ee Imm our lutaat Qochet Boot -
cuL 14Mi635. wotldlll eondl. Pd Ina A AP!Jl1 In p.....,, per, TOI> ...,,.swim weer. Blvd .. C.M. 54$-77!0. HAN~ air conditioner tor c:uea. Tbey'n all hero A on Sprinr-~mmer C.lllot. All Learn by plcturel! Pat-
HOUSEKEEPER, ltve in at vtc. Write speettyinr "*'• 2«J01 Tve De La C&tlota 3760 Cl.mPQI Dr., N.& MAYTAG repairman hu cu. Excellent condition. sale at dJICOunta to SlOO. atzt1! Only f!Oc. tem1. St.
not. Small family. lite -exper. ftfl to Clalalfled ad Lquna Hilla 5'().M25. WUhen 135. •• 1100. Can A1lo wotted -from Wolllch• Muolc City INsrANT S£WJNG BOOK °""-,_. Gilt-·
Inr. m4IOllll: -· NPoO. ~ ~:'!, ~r. MPllot. (Al thS.eDEl. !."~.~)ramp SKILLED TYPIST deliver w/l yr. parn. 1961 Olds Station w.,.,,. South OoutPluo ""today,_, tomorrow ...... than 100 rUta •
• • ~· -· ~~ .... "~·-To Jum the '"°"Pl' 139-11'18. R>ucnable. 1>31-388; all<r 540-:is:IO $1. $1.
H't;'tc =~ :.:=orover.torcounter F.qua1 Oppor. Employer :1 .. ~ ~ ~ "'i!:: ~N~~J'ree-:. l~JO:~~cf:.':n chain MOVING, 1&crlllee, baby =~ :.~io:, ;t:mrA'*"Af&l/lu -
hu an ..inr tor Equip. l!flp, wknd• $1.65 Pf' hr to SALESG11118 a wtotant lrv!l1e -Dist. The vadea aecepted. !146-8612 at link !f'llee, \)Oita lncludod. ~,Plano. ebony, $750. l&lhlon ll<tt. IL " 11111' •or -• Siie. Z ~!"'-~ ;;r-Call ·_, 5 lo 9 -· O'Mtive Uahlon ~~ m4340. 0':1..:!112005 B~~P~· l.IO;_~~·ro TV, R.;.lo, Hll'I. Don't rive up the lhlp! ~el u""' All' •
txctllantbonellh. • _,,,,....,..TO!Jalll'y. SUPE RVISOR ·~~ ·~·~"''""• ~~· RSALE . S-W "Lllt"lltnciulllled,Shlp 'lolll-l•l4poU.....
Jnle11stad qplkonta report ~· ,l~H. evt 111111. Exp rtq'd. l33-6lG lll1tll U Boal ...,.bi, line. Exptr. ~~ from $39.111. by (!arptt Layer. Call to &a. 1!<1111111 -lOc.
for tbt .ritter. test on July 'ft'inchell • Dobntt. 25.l E. am reqd. Top Wllfl ior toP .,,.,.,..IOV• • ~745 • 5i«>-2086 MAKE ofter: SttfllO wlt&pe Vacancie• C'Ott money! nent Mw!&d Qdl ---•
11th 1972 •t 3:30 PM In ~5!· ~ llf!O· -SALES. !n'ttai \)01!11ono ... ~ REFRIGERATOR. 15"' ft 2 WWNMOWER 165. 0th. r earlrtdi"s, alto 71 RPM t<>l· )'OW' -· apt., ·-!IOe. .room 136 In Huntlzvton MANICURIST avallablo IL'oll\ wllolotale to 1ll&nder Yaclttt tne. dr, •uto dallolt, 5 yn old. mite. Garden -11. lec:tol"o llem1. 3136 'l'l1nlty hldt .. •le. lhru a Dolly Pilot -1or 'hlllJ'• u.tts.
8-h llllb &ebool, JI06 WAHTID ,.,ta!I. A11o 00 1-nt Tm W. 11th St. -* 557-llll • Dr, C.M. 540-1131. Clulltltd Ad. U bsu\Uul ,.._, Siie.
Main St., )luntu.too Beoch. Oilt Btlty, 145-IOllO po altlont. Envbomnlntal Coola -Rent Woohero/Dryors GIANT llealgr<r Ragtdy AC0\1Sl'IC llO. US RMS.
Dally PUol Wam A.to !law llOUsr. HUnllftrf Woto\i OW Pl'odud~ Mr. Gordon • Daily Pilot Want Adi ba\'t 41 Wit. FUii m&lol. ~Andy" 4 n. $lS. 14" Llko new. Prteed to ldl .••••••••••••••••••
.......... pion. OPEN HOUSE colwnn. !»-UT!. 1 bolplnt pion. * l!S-12112 * ~ 6G-6889. _!64~2-3963~~all~•:_r .?_S_!P~M.~ _ _J·---------------·
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Wlrlte/mctalJlal<e red, 85 hp
A!ere OIB, tilt trollor $12)0.
336-1!154.
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CADILLAC
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Amlrtc8il Mallarl ,.
547°5826
1234 So. Main St.
Santa Ana
GREMLIN
Brand New 1'72
GqEMLINS
over 25 Gremlills In .t~
all models, & colon aVail-
able for
IMMmlATE DELIVERY
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San f;Je111ente
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:VOL. 65, NO. 207, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY '15, '1972 TEN CENTS
Residential Use of .Farm Land Gets Capo OK
The rezoning of 241 acres o f
agriculturally·zoned property in the north
part ·of San Juan Capistrano was AP:
proved Monday by tbe city council.
The change to residential zoning,
restricted by several conditions, marked
the end of ~e than a month of debate
on the subject, at four public ;neetings.
The rezone appeal was heard twice by
the planning commission and twice by
tl'in r,.,..,,.;I.
Some Loot
From Heist
Discovered
An unde.temtlned amount of securities
nnd personal papen! -apparenUy
discarded by thieves wbo blasted their
way into the Laguna Niguel branch of the
United California Bank in March -were
found Monday afternoon.
Orange County Sherifrs investigatorS
and Federal Bureau of Investigation
agents were summoned to the end of Sea
Island Drive in Laguna Nlguel's Pacific
Island Village by workmen in the area
who found a guney sack stuffed with the
weatl)ered bonds and other documents.
NO cash or jewelry was included in the
loot, said Lt. Charles Conaway of the
sherUf's department.1Many of the papers
-:ere ~Sfi'.eWn.. on Uij' ground_ ilODgii~~
sack, he added. ·
A dozen investigators were im:
1P.W.tely djspatcbed 1o the scene when
the sur..reying crew called the sheriff's
department around 1:30 p.in.
The crew worked for seven hours comb-
ing the· area for more k>ot, but tm-
covered nolhing more than the original
sack.
••we're convinced we found
everything," ·i,,t. Conaway commented.
0 Anyone going up there today would be
wasting his time." · ·
FBI agents 'along with the sberifrs in-
vestigators today began an inventory of
the recovered loot. No dollar figure bas
yet been placed n the find.
"I doubt the stuff was worth very
much,'' Conaway said. "I guess it was
atull they didn't want.
"Of course, that's just speculation," be
added.
-Five men -three of whom are in
custody -have been indicted in con.
nection with the March 24-27 robbery
which left United Calilomia Bank $50,000
short in cash and 458 boxholders out an
estimated $2 millkon to $3 million in cash
and securities. ·
Held . at 'Los Angeles County jail is
Charles A. Mulligan, 38,.of Youngstown,
Ohio. In custody in Ohio are Amil A.
Dinsio, 36, of Boardman, and Philip B.
Christopher, 29, o! Cleveland.
Two brothers. Ronald and Harry Bar·
ber of South Gate are still at large and
subject to a nationwide search by the
FBI.
·w oolworth Heir
Reventlow Dies
In Plane Crash
ASPEN, Calo. (UPI) -L a n c e
Reventlow, heir to the Woolworth five.
an<klime fortune and son of Barbara
Huton, one of the world's richest
women, has been killed with three other
pi!rsons in the crash Monday of a, small
plane in the Colorado Rockies, law of·
ficen1 dtscloaed today.
Reventlow, 36, a sports car racer who
Was given~ title of 44the wofld'J richest
baby" at birth, was killed in the crash
during a heavy thunderstonn about 10
miles north of lhil Colorado resort.
Reventlow bad been surveying a tract o' land he wanted to buy, officials saia.
Killed with him were· the pilot and two
other passengera, all unidenUfied.
The craft slammed into a wooded
mountainside eight mil.. from the
nearest road. Sherill carol! Whitmire
illid the wreckage wu spotted by
another plane. A reacue crew roached the
site Monday night alid confirmld that all
aboard were dead. r
Reventlow married actreaa~ Jiii St,
Jobn oa March 21, 1960, in Sin 'ranclaco.
1h<J' ""° divorced In llltll.
Ou Nov. I, 11164, he married llarlet
lleryle Holdridge, then It. Tbe only
nlaUve who attended the wedding wu
Cory-Gran~ a former husband of Mi.ls
Hutton's.
RevenUow was an avid aporb car
•thuslast and polo ~layer. He bUilt and drove Grand Prix racing cart and
developed bla own 1'1lclll& eacine.
During !hos&· meetings, cl>mplainu by
resideou about the quality and density of
the development proposed for the prop-
erty resulted In 16 conditions being at-
tached lo the sone change. Some of the
condiUona are so strict that the original
home builder, Covington B,rotberi, drop-
ped out of the deal .
Officials . of MIMlon • Billi llonch
Development Company announced Mon-.
day that Hallcraft Homea of Phoenix, .
Ariz., will now.1itilkf-w 120 residence
planned for the community. Tho 241
acres Is located on sleep, rollJnc bills
between Vlllaga San Juan and -
Hills Rench.
Althougl\ the JDDe change waa paaed
l!londay, it was only a llrtt Aadinl and
.must be approved again It a second·
reading at the Aug. a council meeting,
One .of the strictest condlli®l 'ploced
on the developer's· plan ls the re-
quirement for submlsaion of an en-
vironmental impact statement for the
suli<llvliion. II marb tlie fli'st time iucli
·a. statement bu been reqWrec! pl a
developer in· S.n Juan Capistrano and
wlll call for extemlve study of the
geol,OIY and plant and animal Ille on tbe
land.
I Qlher, cooditlOlll· imposed nn the
!fev~pmenl Include preservation of the
nal!lral· skyline o! the hllll: consideration
pl-the need> for 11ehool site In the com-
munltY: nocotlations with the city to see
if a poOd, oa the ~. the only one in tbe
city, can be preserved or deeded to the
city aa part ot.park fequireoients: use o!
moderate ~ a\)d llll operatlQDS to. pro-
• vlde pads for the homes, and elimination
of a small commercial area at the en·
trance to Ute community.
Jay Hamer, representing the
developer, called the restrictions "pretty
rough," but 88.ld his company was willing
to meet all of them.
Jack ~y. a resident of Mission
Hllh Ranch who has spoken against the
development ;1.t several meetings. said he
believes the conditions c~ld have been a
"little tougher.''
"But In talking with the other
residents," Connelly said, 11J l'lynt the~
are fair and 'generally in the ~ Ur
terests of all.citizens of the comm~y.''
Connelly had asked for some me~of
controlling dual from the development ~
expected to Ille frOm three to fJve years
to complete -and for some condition to
help control the rattlesnaker 1bat may
flee the vacant land for the nearby
residential communities. The council ap-
proved neither request.
Error
Pointed Out to Council
UPIT .........
BACK IN HOSPll'AL
Ex·Prealdon!. Joh11oon
LB) in Hospital
But Doctor-8 ·s~y
' No Heart Attack
.,
Riles Educatwn Plan
Challenged by Burke
By JOHN ZAU.ER to-I with tjie use o! parent VOllDlteera and
Of "" 0.1'1 Plllt Jtd p,aid ajdes The aim woUJd be to
Hunilngtof\ Beach A 11 e m b I y m a n "'guarantee" that every child mutered
Robert, Burke bas laded· bo,.i with lilalc'readlhg·anc1-math akills by the t!lld
Stale ,Superintendent of . Public 1m1ruc-of the thW grade. '
lion Wllaon Rilu over a '2imillloll Early . -Thei-1 allo,calla,for enrolllng
Childhood F.docaUon PJan; now pendbis · · l:'J-lh ~.llW':radvol "'I·• '"JlalllarY before the Legislature. • . _.....,.. IA> · ~· ti. wjlot
The ~Vt"Weat '0/11111! Comily ... ~ ........... ii a ..... IJNt.i'
Republba -tjil .._ ilohoOI dde('a l:":..~ :'ii. ~1;:'~ i::~:.::11· ~i:::ui:.:: Cldldmod 1'"11'*.'liowMr, li ·not in-
study befQff . ...;,~led fUndlii, 11' api. eluded bJ tilil '31 njllllm DOW Ulldet> COO--ved • •' llderatioft. ,
yov • ' • • Boirb Iiaa lamboilad the pl,n u an
Rilea, wbo bu ~de rilorm of school· "untried, ualeated ~ tliat , could
Ing from • ~ tbri>Ug~ tblrd rtslilt:tn Jliorin 'tci our ~"
grade a · maior thrJill <Jl bla ad-H the •_, "' _,_ be '· minlstraUpn, clalml t'be. · ~Ian · I a · ' 11111 " "'an can. _, ~
necessary to cut down ibe "appil!ing llff "IJllDJ Pop.JI
number of children , who can' read alle-
'Mike' Was Too
Hot to H aridle
If the dispatcher radioed: "car
'4J2, where are you?" Monday
afternoon, the reply could have
crackled back over the air like this.
• •1ear 4412 is In the parking lot
behind the station, crashed into Car
f.411," or words to that effect.
Dispatched to a silent burglar
alarm, Costa f\.fesa Patrolman John
C. Casey leai>ed into Car 4412,
¥1tatt~ ijle engin~. shifted into llrive• ~ grtbbed the microphone.· •
.. ''!be lnik!i turned"<lUrto'be red' hot lrnni 'ailtkig In tbe cloiec! patnr w u " lilll aumrnt,. ..., ...,... l!l\"CICJlb •,
the~ ·.' • .,,,. beat ... 'llllllcleit· ..
di!traCt this oftlcei''a 1ttenltoh " ' ' P.atrolman Cuey wrote In a report
explafnlni car 441.Z crasheil into
car 44If, ·accidentally.
The silent alarm call was ac-
cidental, ttllo. . ' '
SAN ANTONIO (UPI) -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson has been
hospitalized becatl!e of .che.!t pains and
nausea. But doctors said there 1'fl$ no ifloo
dication he bad suffered another heart
attack.
"It may be several days before any
definite conclusions cin be drawn about
the nature . of bis Prestnt illness,'' a
B.rooke Army HospitaJ bulletin said.
"However, at 10 p.m. ,he was com~
quajely at-the end o! ibe thlid irad•. aiid ·u· ·'fl . . H '°::~~~~·~ ; : ~I ospitnl, Fund OK,· now before !be' state iienata u •,parl of a
$1.2 billion tu reform and ecilool finance ' ·
· fortable, in eicellent · spirits and" ·his
general condition w'as·quite satbd'actory.
measiire that ·bu· the.~ o! bOth
Democratic:' A>aembiy Speaker· 'Bob
Moretti and RepubUCan Governoi Ronald
Reagan. '· · F·ight in Asse~11;b~y· ~een
"There have been no Irregularities in
the beart rhythm or blood preosure."
Johnson has suffered two heart attack5
-a severe one in 1955 and a second one
Jast April during a viait tO his daughter
Lynda and her husband Charles Robb in
Charlottesville, Va.
He was hospitalized. three ·weeks for
treatment of bis second heart attacil, and
had been scheduled lo travel IO mllea
from the µJJ Ranch today for a routine
checkup. lns\e"d, .the hospital , said
Johnson was flown iothe hospital ahead
of schedule when the pains and nall!ea
occurred Monday night.
"He was flown to San Antonio by a
private plane based at ·his ranch and was
admitted lo Brooke Hospital at 9: 15 p.m.
for observation," the 1ta,_~ent said.
Dr. Robert L. North, cllltl Of medicine
at Brooke, was placed In charge of the
case. Johnson bu a hospital' penlbOUse
suite· pennanenUy al his clilposaL
'The 36tb president was releued from
Brooke April Z5 ,after · rteovering from
the heart attacil be sutterod In. Virginia,
aod ··has made loe\oeral pulifu: ap-
pearances ·since· then. ·,
The education plan, which couJd cost
$350 million over five yean, has two
main parts:. . ,
-II would bring a gradual but fun.
daiDental restructuilng ·or schooling ·in
the primary grades by lowering Uie
adult-to-student ratio ·from '31Mo-l lo 1ij.
Beach 'Invaded'
By Stingrays
JelJyfish ~are out; a~y1 are · in.
That'• the picture for the San Clemente
beach while the surf is down, lifeguard
Capt. Phil Stubbs sald today.
"When the surf goes Ila~ the rays will
come in to about two feet of water. lt'•
warm and they. sleep and feed there,"
Stubbs said. ,
He recommended that beacbgoers
sbulfie their feet In the water to prevent
a painful sting from the raya. '
"They're very timid creatures, but if
you step . on them. their defense
mechanism Is to lltlng," be said. Stublil
described the wound u · ~ausing "acuta
pain. ti
' ., ' .
liy GEORGE LEmAL
Of .. ' Dlllf Pllll Steff
, A• bill adding ' $919,000 to the slate
budget io '.pn>Vide' piannlng lJinds · for a
350'bed teaching 'hospital · at UC · !rvlne
appeared beaded for trouble in the
Assembly today · even. though It Won
unanimous approval· in the Senate Mon-
day.
State Senator Dennis. E. carjieriter (R·
NewP,Ort Beadl) drafted the llnal-lleur.
SB ltletl alter tile Leglaliture bad cut the
allocaUoo lnnD lilll' ~el · · :
A Clrpeliter alcle.todiy iald.the bill I&
.beaded for I "llrong• fight" In the
Aisembly 'Wats ·and Mean Committee,
Its -oo!,·elearlnl that committee are ·•111certabJ1" ifte atde laid, due to the
oi>polltloll tt 4-bl,yman Wlllle Brown
(~ ll'rtnclaco). . ' -11rowa·-., eiJd be'll -any· future fundtftt· ol ·ualvently . medical faclll1"!1
until fld!W.. to ·oerye lnnet<ity ~
&re proY!ded. . ' · UC! Vice .Chana!Jor · L. E. eo. uld
today, the whole lutur, of the medkal
achoo!· depends ·ca Asaeinbly approval ol
the· planning _. ond ~r approval
next fall of • $155.1 mllllon · atatawlde,
.Sewage Plant ·:to Ile Sold
•
Capo Council Takes Step Toward Regional Group
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
Monday voted to ..U the city's aewage
troatment plant lo the South eat I
Regional Reclamallon Authority (SER·
R.\), . •
The aale, 13 -tho In the negOtlatlon '
proc:eaa, ii a major.~ toward the lint
regioaal ~ of .. wqa In all of
Southem Calllomil. Operation ol the
• plant and of the ~ 0... Piunt out-
fall will be taken ...,. by SIRRA in late
19" or early lrl4 followinc C0111J>1e11on of
present upanalan projoctl, aooorcllag to
San Juan Capistrano 'dlnctor ti. publlc
works T. J. Meadows.
When SERRA tabs.,..,., aD sewqe
from tbe Saddle• Valley IOUtb ol El
} . I
bealtb 'scleOce's 'bodcflssue. ·
• Wbi1e the budget addiUoo would·pay
for wo~· drawinp and cletaUetl plans
and tpedftcatioas for the •holpltal, the
building can't be bull! without the bond
money1. ' · eo. ·ezplained that about ·ball of the
total '35 nilllon cost o! the hospital would
come froin the sute ·bonds with the re-
mainder upectecHo come.from federal
aourcea.
. 11 \be Anembly approves the planning
money and the bonda are approved in
November, the hoopital could· be com-
pleted In 04flY , lr16, Cox lald.
The facUlt)' would allow the UC!·
Calllornla College o! Medicine lo double
ill entering clau size 'from . M !<> 123.
medical atudenll,
Change· in Vjejo
Boundary Slated ·
By School . Board '.
' . .
'
Capistrano
Aide Tells
His Reasons
By PATRICK BOVLE
Of tM D•llY f"lltt $1•ff
San Jtiiit'CaJ)ist!'J no .City Manager Don
Weidner lflonday offtc,iaUy and publicly lnfonn~ city councilmen that the: pro-
pooed 1~73 budfet Is In emir and ... ~~I $1ot,.,defldL · ~ ~ lalormed ol the error
ail necutlve lellioii. !vl.lowfDI a
~ meeting Wednesay,' Weldllet aald
Monday nJcbt at . a ..,war council
sesatop. He presented the council and
membe'I' ti. the p~ With a .momoran-
dum ~~ t,Ke reuon for ·the error in
the blJ<!lel, which, aa published and
released July 13, shows a projected
$11,90~ SllJl!lu.s.
The rµajor reason for the error,
Wet•· said in his memo -whlch was
not discOslM by councilmen -was the
failure on the ~rt of · Finance Director
J>aul Lew to ,include two major e1.·
penditures i!l the proP\)Sed budget.
Acco!dlng lo Weidner, Lew told him
five daya alter tbe budget was relea!ed.
that -.. $121,000 would ,bave to be
added .to the. expenditures to come out of
tbe general fund. Lew sajd $80,000. ii
needed to pay the COWlty for a street· im-
provement project on Del Obispo and
,U,000 for bridge repair.
"The net .-Ji of Mr. 0 1.ew'a lllt
minute ~lils waa ·•· pi:ojeded $1112,000 dellclt at the' end of the lrl>-73
fiscal year,:• Weidner said in his memo.
. Le bU made no public statements as to
why the two expenditures were Jeft out of
bis orllinal proposal~. He could not be
reacbed for comment this morning.
City offlcials and councilmen haV'e said
off the record that they expect the news
of the clellclt lo burt the chances of the .
police ' department issue passing the
vote~• Ail&· 12. ·
In the proposed budget. $233,000 bu
been Mt aaide fgr the formation of a
department in the city. This would
re~leCe th;e present contract system of
police aervlces from the Sheriff's Depart·
ment, whicb u upectetl to cost the city
4bout $170,000 In U.Cal lrl>-73.
According . to Weldntt, he and Lew
determined in mid-Jrll that the city, then
with 1 fteo,ooo reserve, 'could aUotd a
(See DEnCIT, Pap I) ' ' . .... ,.
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M
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'
Se~dStor
!$ng .. lien. James ~·. Hamlet
has become the second Negro
in Army bistoty to achieve
two·star rank. The so.year-old
Ohioan was 32nd on a list of 34
brigadiers nominated for pro-
moUop t~ major general.
Wes Klusmann,
Nam ed I;J oy Sc out
Distr ict Clticf
Wes H. Klusmann, or San Juan
capistrano, has been re-elected chainnan
of the El Cimino Real llo)' Sooul DIJtricl
at the District's Annual election.
Serving with Klusmann will be four
vice-chainnen, each representaUves · of
the varloua 1ecU0111 of the dlltrict, ·
Graydon Oliver, Laguna Beach; John
Hendricks. Laguna Niguel; Rotiert Dur-
rans, Mission Viejo, and Alan Peterson .
Coata MUI.
MIMlon Viejo resident Jack Elli! wffi
succeed W. T. Bradberry of San
Clemente u pistricl Cotnlnissl9ner. 9f·
ficers start their new terms Sept. 1.
·Elected to serve as membet&-at-large
on the Dlitrlct coi\imlltee are Leen
Evana, and Ra811ar Engebre\oen, Miulon
Viejo; Dt. ldaurice Mason "'1d ,Chari.es
~eSI, Laguna Beach; Leo Fessenden,
Roy Phillips, Thom11 Delle, Ben
Mcl.ane, Michael Johnaon and Wiley S<r·
Ing of San Clemente; Mrs. Patricia
Chrlatlanaen; Wllllam /.. Bathgate eni1·
Edward H. Saxton of San Juan
C.plstrano: Donald Frankel and Law·
ronce Lizotte of Laguna Niguel; earl
Smith and Richard Dickey of C.plstrano
Beach; Jay Reynolds. Dana Point: Bret
Lund, Roger Summers and Jerry Wolferr
den of Costa Mesa and Donald WllUams
of Newport Beach.
Named as commlttee chairmen are :
Ted Rowley, Activities CommJttee are:
Frankel, Clmploi; Stephen Rackleff.
Coneerv,1tion;. Rebert Durrans, Finance:
Wylie &!rlloi, Organization and Ex·
tenalon; Ed Saxton, Public Relations;
end Mike Jobnaon, Leadenhip TralnJni.
Employe Retirement
Ordinance Appr ove d
Employes of San Juan Capistrano will
have to retire at age fiS following city
council approval Monday of a new
cltY ordinance.
The retirement law applies to all full·
time employea with the exception of the
city manager, clerk, treasurer, attorney,
elecUve officers and members of ap-
pointive boards or commfsslona.
The only city employe now over the
age or e5 Is city ~asurer Alfct Ross.
IC
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Pe11ifJk. P""k IJse
•
Ni x on Studyi·ng
t ,
U .S.-owned Land
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on said today it is ridic."Ulous for the
Federal govttnment to own over haJJ the
l1t1d ln some Westehi states, but aides
8"1d l•ter the White House WQ giving no
thought to dispaslns of any of tlte wears
milllo111 of acres of public domain land.
The chief executive's comment came
as he. met in his Oval Office with
members of the Federal Property
Review Board which has been handl·
tng µie adminh1tralion's effort to convert
l11u .. usec1 federal property Into state and
local park.I.
Pointing to a mop of the United States
which showed the 144 parcels o! land
tran1ferred under the t.eaacy ol Parks
program, Nixon observed that the federal
government was owner of more than half
the and In 10me Rocky Mountain and
Western staes.
"That's ridiculous," he said. "We don't
need it."
tie didn't elaborate while newsmen
were in his office for the start of the
meeting, but officials said later Nixon
was referring to a category known es ac-
quired land -not to the/ubllc domain
land which ia often lease for livestock
grazing.
Presidential counselor D o n a I d
Rumsfeld, a member of the property
review board, told newsmen, "We have
not even looked at the question of public
domain land."
Nothing the President 1aid et today's
meeting "was meant to apply to public
domain land," Rumsfeld said.
The review board's executive director,
Darrell M. Trent, said some public d°"
main land had been taken earlier for
such use as military resrvations and no
longer is under control of the Bureau oC
Land Management. This, he indicated,
might become available for transfer to
state and local governments for the
Legacy of Parks program.
After the meeting, Nil.on tS1ued a
statement 1aying he was pleased that the
144 new parks had been created in 39
1tate1.
''The federal public lands belong to all
Americans and are part of the heritage
From Page l
BURKE •..
terpreted, ~· an attempt by the
superintendent ol public Instruction to
build bil image and 11tbfy the 'hang the
expen1e' education innovators w h o
elected him."
Burke ii especially opposed to the pr ..
po11l for brlngiilg four·yeaN>ld! Into the
achool 1y1tern. He aays this opens the
door for 0 ,uthlus planners" to mold the
personalities of the atudentl at an early
age, and says prHChool education should
be left to church and private operaUons.
He further attacks the inclusion of the
early childhood plan In a tax reform and
school finance package. "I don't believe
that addlnc the financial burden of an ex-
perimentol program \hat could cost $350
million over the next few years baa
anything to do with tax relief." Instead
hli would like to see the education reform
considered as a separate issue and
debated in the regular education com·
mitteea of the Legislature. Burke it •
member of the Assembly Education
Committee.
''It is obviously untrue that this pro-
gram ·is unproven," Riles counters. 11The
things we want to do have been around
for yean. We just want a chance to put
them into practice."
On bringing four-year-olds into achools,
Riles aays, "l think parents have sense
enough to decide whether thelr child is
ready for school or not. Snlce It will .be
voluntary, the choice will be theirs. The
very rich have always bad preschools for
their children, and more recently, the
poor and welfare families have had
them. I think ti's time !or the majority of
people who are In the middle to have the
opportunity."
Riles said that Including the education
measure in a tax package la legitimate
because "you need money to have a pro-
graD}, and this is the way you get the
money." ·
Riles contends that the reforms con-
tained In the Early Childhood Plait are
guaranteed to be successful because
"each district will have to set acceptable
goals and objectives for itself In order to
qualify for funding, and If it doesn't meet
those marks, it won't be refunded. ThUI is
the first time in Califomla that we have
ever done this an a mass scale."
The totol •1.2 billion package -which
would Jn one fell 1woop lower sohoof prop.
erty taxet, increase the level of school
support, and increase tbe itate 1alea tax
by one cent -passed the state Senate
Commlttee of Tax and Revenue last
week ind la now before the Senate
Finance Committee.
Hinshaw Slates
Irvine Address
Orange County Assessor A n d r e w
llhlth1w, Republican candidate for the
39th 'tongressional seat will apea'k: Friday
at I dinner mt,etlnl of tlte South Coot
Republican Fortun In the Alrporter llln,
Irvine.
and !J!rlbri&bl of every citilen," Nixon
said. 1'hey are the breathing apace of
th~ nation, and it is esenllal that they be
preserved for future gen·eraUons."
Al the meet1111 ht h!J Oval Office, Nix·
on cjle<f o plece of beac~ front property
ntar· hlJ San Glemente home as 1n ex4
ample of fe(jeral property which can be
converted to public use.
The four-milt·long beach once was part
of the Camp Pendleton Marine reH.rVt-
tlon, but it wu turned over to the atate
of califomla, Nixon old, however, that
he learned on July 4 when he vi.sited the
bei~h that It WU being ueed by only 200
people. At that time he Instructed hla
aides to work to accelerate the develop-
ment of the land by addinf public
faellitJes and bettet actess roads.
He ·Uled the former Camp Pendleton
land as an extmple of the close. watch
which he said must be kept to make cer-
tain lranaferred land Is put to the fullesl
use.
Solon Seeks
A ntiwar Bill
Showdoivn
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
W. Brooke (R-Mass.)1 assuming
leadership ol the Senate's antiwar forces,
today pressed for another showdown on
the withdrawal of U.S. troops from
lndochina in exchange for tbe release of
American prisoners.
The Senate adopted the far·reac)iing
amendment Monday then nullified the
action by killing the $1.8 billion foreign
military aid bill to which it was attached.
Brooke immedJately announced he
would offer the amendnient to the $2il.6
billion military procurement bill now
pending in the Senate. 1
The amendment would withdraw all
U.S. forces 0 land, 111, and air" from
Indochina four montha alter enactment ii
the POW1 Wtre released.
The strons coalition which put the
amendment into the bill and resisted ef ..
forts to lake It ou~ collapaed on the 4MZ
vote on the foreign aid mt.sure.
Strong supporters ol anUwar le811la·
tion, including Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield and S<n. J. WIUlam
Fulbright, could .not vote for tlte foreign
aid .bill although it Included the amend-ment.
Sens. George S. McGovern and Thomu
F .. ·Eagleton, the Democrata' national
ticket, missed the vote.
The foreign military a11istance pro-
gram appeared to·be In jeopardy.
"That's the end of the bill," Fulbright
chairman of the Senate Foreign Rela:
tions committee, said.
Mansfield said he voted againat
military assistance to foreJgn natloftl
which he has long opposed, because ~
bill had "too much gimmickry in it."
Fulbright said he was not disappointed
that the antiwar amendment had .to fail.
He said the ·11maximum lrnJN1ct" came
when th• Senate passed the amendmenl
and added "it's done it's job."
It would have marked the first time
that the Senate has voted to cut' off funds
for the Vietnam war. The Senate has·
passed policy statement11 lncludlng obe,
calling for witbdraw1l by 1 ."d1te cer4
tain," which reached President Nixon.
Clemente Market
Robbery Suspect
Held by Police
San Clemente police today hold
Guy Joseph Duchl, 38, of Milpltoa,
wanted In the Investigation of a '4,!0tl
armed robbery of the San Clemente
Alpha Beta Market.
Duchl w1s 1rrested earller In the week
by Mllpllas police officers on a felony
warrant obtained by the San Clemente
department.
A second man Involved in the robbery
remalna at large.
San Clemente Police today uid that
Ouchi was ldenllfled wllh the robbery u
a rtsult of "ellenslve lnvutlgailon. ''
Duchi was identified by police as the
man in sporla clothing who wielded the
.45 caliber automatic pistol durinc the
robbery Juno 21. ,
He wu booked on coui>ta of auapldoo.
of armed robbery and burglary. ·
Police said be will be arraigned al
South Counly .Judlcjal D!Jtrict court
Wednesday.
Sirhan Brother
To Go to Court
PASADENA (AP) ~ 'l'he clly proo-
ecutor'o olflce hu otdtrad tht brother
of Sirhan B. Sirhan, the --10 of San.
:Robefl Kenned)', lo a~ lo oourt ht
connection wlth a.thrtat to hla mothar.
...,.., CllMI ,_, ... NW ti CINI MtM, Ctlllofnr., hhc:r"""'9 ., u,, .. , ltd
"'*llMJ1 ..., l'MI• u .11 "*'"''..,, ~"''"' .. tJN\lreM lf.fll fNl'llMl'o
The South Coast GOP fP'OUP draws
members from Irvine and the S.d-
dltblCk V11ley. .
A n .. 00.1 reception at 7 p.m. will be
followtd by dinner at I p.m. Tlcl<ela are
'5 per person and "'ervaUona may be
made by calling SSS.2.!112.
The ·artier wu laluad Mondl)I aflar
Mary Sirhan lPUld a complalnl aca1n11
her eldell aon Saldallah, IO, c1altn1111 lta
thr .. tened to bunt ~ bit bo ... with
her In it after thro1'1Jti a pllct of metal
through a window cl Ifie houae 1114 lair'
Ing off a acretn door.
I
Scorn• McGovern Plan .
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott, at an lmpromplu news con·
ference, says that cutting off all aid to Greece, as proposed by Dem ..
cratic presidential nominee Sen. George McGovern , would begin the
downfall of NATO. McGovern said that, if elected, he would cut off
all atd to Greece within 10 days after taking office.
3 Rotary Clubs
Set Joint Mee t
A Joint meeting of the .Rotary Clubs of
San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, and
South Laguna Niguel will be held at 7
p.m. Thursday at the Mission Viejo GoU
Club.
Fonner Los Angeles Times Sports
Editor Paul Zimmerman will discuss
"'Ar• the Olympics Pricing Themselves
Out of Business?"
The evening program will be preceded
by a Tri-Rotary Golf Tournament on the
Mission Viejo course.
A Pro-Am contest will also be lnclud¢
ln the afternoon activttles with Rich
Martinez, pro, teaming with Phil
Ellsworth, and Roger Bellanger, pro,
teamlni with San Clementian Ed Chaf·
. fee.
People Refu8e
To Pay Tax~s
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Fifteen
penon1 publicly refused to pay the
federal excise tax portion of their
telephone bills Monday as a protest to
the Vietnam war.
'the IS said they Instead had donated
the money, amounting to about $50, to a
Quaker project eatabllshlng and maln-
taln)ng a hospital for war-diJabied
children lo Vietnam.
. Ohio Bell Telephone Co. said It would
JlOt cut off the Service of the protesters,
but would turn their names over to the
Internal Revenue Service.
School Office Hit
San Clemente High Scbool officials
reported the theft of between '125 and
4150 in cash. from an oUice desk drawer
Monday to San Clemente police.
Entry was gained through the office
door, possibly with a key, and the delk
drawer waa forttd open, police aald.
Fr om Page l
DEFICIT .••
police department. A director of public
safety, Joe McKeown, was hired in
January 1972 to plan the department and
come up with a proposed budget.
However, Weidner said Lew told him no
May ~ that he expected to have an
$11,000 daflcit In the 1972-73 general fund.
Lew had Included the addition of $160,000
in capital improvement.I in his projection
and Weidner ordered the llems dropped
and placed in a separate budget.
In late May, according to Weidner,
Lew submitted a proposed 1972-73 budget
pre>jecting $627,000 and calling for the
need of a $400,000 loan to the city to
balance the figures.
. Lew's proposal contained the capital
1mprove~nt1 ~hich Weidner had asked
not be in the trut!get. }(e then ordertd
both the "mythical $400,000 bank loan"
and the capital improvements funding
dropped, Weidner said in his memo.
<;-The tentative budget released to the
council was balanced and refiected the
$19,000 surplus. Lew's memo to Weidner
about the expected $102,000 deficit came
on the day the council was scheduled to
hold its fira budget study aesaion.
Weidner has suggested several way1
the deflcll can be eliminated while still
keeping the proposed expenditure for the
pollce department. These include:
-An expected $23,500 increase In
revenue, $8,500 of which has already been
received from the county Building and
Safety Deparfrnent.
-$40,000 in disaster aid from the
federal government for damage due to
the 19!9 floods .
-A $5,000 cut Jn salaries in the plall-
ning department, whicll was sched.Uled
for~expansion fr.om two to three plaMers.
-A •15,000 reduction In the allocation
requested by the Chamber of Commttce
for community promotion.
Other modifications could include 1 cut·
back in the money allocated to hire a
planning consultant and a cut of two men
The council scheduled another study
from the proposed pollce department.
session for 7 p.m. Wednesday to discuss
Weidne.r'1 recommendations.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or i• it?)
' .
Rape Case
Get,s . Delay
From Judge
South Laguna Disposal Com pany owner
Thomas Trull! 11howed up in Orange
county Superior Court a day late today
to win ~· three·monU1 delay of his rape ·
sex perversion trial.
Trulls, 38, expla_ined to presiding Judge
Bru~ Sumner, that he hal been advised
by his attorney's secretary that his trial
with ~efendent Eugene Imondi Jr. had
been delayed until Oct. 2 and it waa not
necessary for him to be in court Monday.
Judge Sumner con!irmed Trulia' story
from the "ltorney's secretary and
(.'anceled the Sl0,000 warrant he issued
Monday for Trulls ' arrest. Bail of $12,500
for the South Laguna trash executive has
been restored.
The court action means that Trulis and
lmondl, 35, will race trial Oct. 2 for rape
and sex perversion charges filed by
Newport Beach police who inve,tigaled
a)legalions made by a 17-year-old Foun-
tain Valley girl.
The girl told police that Trulis and
l1nondi told her they were Hollywood
movie producers and were anxious to in-
terview eligible girls for major roles ln
movie and television produ ction .
Police said the girl told then1 she was
persu aded to participate in a number of
sex acts with both defendents in a car
parked at Fashion Island.
District Accepts
Developer's Gift
Of School Site
Acteptance In principle of an AVCO
Developers gift of a isoo,ooo site for a
new junior high school was given Monday
by trustees of the Capistrano UnUied
School District.
AVOO would tum over some 13 acres to
the district, and another like parcel to
the county parks department for develop-
ment as neighborhood park.
The company plans to build a com·
munlty clubhouse wlth teMIS court and a
swin1mlng pool adjacent to the school
and park area.
Trustees noted lhat the gift Jand Is
some of the most level property in
Laguna Niguel. AVCO has ajreed to
perform rough grading on the area.
The property Is In the area of Crown
Valley Parkway and Niguel Road. The
district previbU1ly had a , school site
located planned uphill from the gift !Ile,
but use of that property would have in-
volved purchase of that land.
Teenager Wanted
To Kill People
To Force Outcry?
FORT WORTH. Tex. CUPl)-PrlJon of-
ficials say a teen·ager who held five
person~ hostage at the Federal Cor-
rectional Institution Monday apparenUy
wanted to kill them in an effort to force a
publle: outcry to reinstate the death
penalty.
"He aaid he wanted to shoot three or
four ~ople and this would have enough
Impact acroas the country that the
s.up.reme Court would put capllal punish-
ment back on the books," aasociate
Warden Allie C. Mobley said.
Lonnie Wayne, 18, of Fort Worth was
charged with assaulting a federal officer
and carrying • firearm into a federal
building in coMecUon with the incident.
Bond waa set at $35,000.
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND IEFORE A SALESMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DmRMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT MARKED? . ' .
T
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPLIS. THE .THE 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC: WILL IEAR."
. ' .AT ALDIN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPL!S SO
111AT CUSTOMERS CAN IROUSE THROUGH THE SEUC:TIOt(S AND
KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
POSSIBILITY OF A LOWER PRICE IF C:ONl>RIONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
CARPITS .• DRAPES
1663 Placetltl• Ave •
r. 1'I COST A MISA ..........
-'"' 646-4131 ·
tfOUH1 ......... .,....,, t h l1JO -Pr!., f h t -kl. 9110 h I
\1
. I
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FINANCE
Tuudot, J"'1 25, un
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Kenmore Washer
with 2-Cycles,
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Regular $179.95
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Select normal cycle for regul!"
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SAVE '51! COLOR TV with
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season. From Monday night
football to Saturday night
at the movies, it's ail in
color. Shouldn't your TV
be, tQO? Check.Sears color
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TV f}tpt.
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DAILY PILOT ' J!'. >·:
Astronaut Set -;:·: LEGAL NOTICE
iu~··~~:~·:. O:J~~°""1" To Be Teacher .·
Jlt Clric CMllW Dff'flf W .. , ........ c.lifllftle
(All NUMtllt 0"41M KENT Ohio (UPI) -IUMMONS (MAlltlAOll 1 '
In " 1M m•rrl... of l'ttlll_,: Astronaut Edgar Mitchell, Who
MAltl..INI! MYltTl..E WEAlt •nd ltMIOn----Aucted •• v. r a 1 ex-llltfll: MEI.VIN LEI! Wl!Alt '-VUl.I
To IM """'ldtnll MEI.VIN LEE perlment.s l rt extrasensory w~~"'''*"' .,.. fllod , ,.1111on *" perctptlon during the trip ~
urnlnt VOUf m•rrl•"· You ,.,,., Ill• • Apollo to the moon, w.1U wrltMn r•NIOftM wllllll'I ftllrlY dtV• of tnt
••'• 11111t tN• WfMIOl'll Is "'* on )'Gii, t e a ch a c o u r s e 1 n
11 vou 1.11 10 fllo • wrm.n ,.~ ch I at Kent State.· w11111r1 111(11 11m11, ..,.,,, o.101.11t m•v "' parapsy o ogy • ·
tnltf'tcl tnd lflO court mt\'' tf\ttl' • llldfo uru·versity mtnt contolnll!I 1n111nctlvt1 er olhtl' Ol'dtrs · ~
conclfl'nlM dlvltlool ot "'°"""' "'*'"' Kent State President D.r1 ·~· Qllld cu.Tod'(, dllld wpfl«I. •1• Robert Olds confirmed that :'::':a:'~.~i:-.;1.":i~~ rtlltf Mitchell would join the KSU
If VOii Wltll 10 Mllll tflt HVkt .. •11 II• faculty. •.:
tWllO'f "' ttllt m•ttw, YM IMllM • ..
""'"""'" M tut r•t Wt'lttM ......... ff • t
'""' "''" • ttaMI "' '""'· • LEGAL NOTICE " O•lld Jin. lt, ltn ;,,,_,;
WILLIM\ E. St JOHN, ,
ci.rk •1CTl1'IOUI au11H•SS ··j
BV Conllla L. lell HAM• ITATIMINT ... ,,.~
Dffl/IY-Thi foltowlne pOttOllS .,. ..... .
(SE!ALJ bu•lnoM al: L"11· JAMES 1'. CA•1t•TZ J • J $TOCI( FORMS, 7701 .-.'
AlrpOrt T-"'"" Pl.Ct. WllhTllMlfl", cantornl•. .,.;.:, Svlt. .,, Rlch•rd e:. Wr•M· 7101 Lelllol'I --.
llH1 MKArtbilr IN4. wt.imlMltr. C•Uf. ' ll"llM, C•lllWlll• '2117 H•l•n Wr•te. 1101 Ltflllh Pllct, ,1,., a •...... wu1mln1ter, Cell!, , TMpflOIM: ,._.,. .. · -1, •··olneu Is belnt conductld bl' • AttM'llt'I' kit Polit"-• " uv Publlsr.td Or•• Cots! D•llY Piiot. P..-lf'IOl'thtp,
J11lv 11, ts •nd A~1t l. I, 1972 1~7f ~=r:-'£.''wr•t• 1:.:.::...::_::_ __ .:_ _____ -'--·I ·Tiils st1ttM1nt fl'" wltti Iha CouMv
LEGAL NOTICE Cleric of Or•l'l9" coun1.., on Jlll'MI 30. lt12 b~ BltYffl'I' J Mllddoll. o.puty C.unTY Cl•k-' Fll-.,.
FICTITIOUS IUSINl!SI Plltlllslltd Or•ntt CNJI D•llY Piiot, NAME STATaMENT 11 11 15 1'72 17•,_71' Tllo tollowl119 ptrJOn I' clOln• buslnoP July •· ' • • •:
•t> SHADOW BOATS. 2"1 Grtc• Lint. LEGAL NOTICE .. ~
Bldg. $ &. ,, Co1t11 MHI. ' -------------~ Brv<• Oonoh11• C1rnt'I', • 1 ti,
M•r1111•rlte, Coron1 del M11r. ITATl!Ml!NT O" AIAMDONMINT 0" •
Th!• buslntP I' btlno condllCled b'I' •n Us• 01' "IC'tlTIOUS IUSIHl!SI NM\ICi
tndlvldu•I. The toUowlnll person 1111 1bendontd 'lhr, Brutl 0 . C1rn1'1' UM of !Ill fk;tllloos blniMSI nlJIW J ANJ)<I
Thl1 11a1enant flied wlll'I "'-CounlY J STOCIC FORMS, 3112 Trinity, Coa, ... •
Clerk of Orafl9e COUnl'I' on: Jul\t 30, 1972. Mtp, Catll. a.., Btverl'I' J, MltdOol( Otl>ulY county Th• tk!ltlou1 riusrn11s n1mt r.,.,.rl!CI '9 ·
C!1rk. &boYf Wll flied In Oren;• Co1mty Oft JU{l9,
.. ,., .. %9 lt71 :
Publlslled Or•not Co.st D•Uy Piiot, ' Ec!Wrn R. Wrel•, 3112 Trinity, c .. ,.~
July .._ 11, 1t, 2.S, 1'7l 1733-n Me11. C1tlfornl11.
LEGAL NOTICE
This bu1lnen w11 conduttl!CI b'I' 111 f11-
d!vldu11. ' EDWIN It. WRATE P·lt1M:
.. ICTITIOUS ausurtess Pllbllslled Or•not Co.st Dilly Piiot.
NAME STATEMENT J1.11v •• 11, 11. u. ltn 11.so-n • The tollowlnt perflln 11 dolnt blltlneu I
II: MCS MARKETING CO .• 271~ C•rdlntl LEGAL NOTICE :
Drlw, Cost• Mest '262' 1-----~=-,,cc=::---Geort• w. MOe. vu C•rdln•I DrlYt. ..ICTITIOUS aus1NESI •
COiie Mn• 92626 NAM• STATIMl!HT • This bu1ln1sa It bt!M c;onducll!CI b'I' • Tllo followlne p1r-Lt dollll bullnlP ·
Sole Pr®rletor,hlp. •••
GEOltGE W. MOE 'HAR80R EXCHANGE, 3(072
Tiils s111eme111 flied wltll 1!lt coumv Gr11ned•. 01n• Polnt, C•lll. t262t · •
Clerk ot Ck'eno• Coontv on: Jul'I' 17, 1972. Lind• M1rl1 Leti. 340n Gr•n•d••
B'I' Be~rlY J. M&clclox. DePVIV CClllnl'I' 011'11 Polnl, CeUI. 9U2t
Cltrk. Thl1 bu1tne11 11 bthlll condl.lcild lw ·•n
"1"72 l!ld!Yldu.11. Publlllled Or.1n11• COISI Dally Pllol, Linda M. L<!I
J1.1lv 19, 26 and A11Qu11 2. '• 1t12 1126-n This stetement tiled wllti th• Coun"t ·
LEGAL NOTICE
Clerk ot Or•nte Countv on: JUl'I' \(, 1972.
av Btverly M. MeddoX. 0.P!Jf'I' C01Jnty
Clerk. l'Tt12J
l----,-IC-T-,-,.-0-0-,-,cUclclcNcEclSo---I Publ11hed OrtnQil COllf Delly P11o1:
NAME STAT•MIENT Julv 11, :l5 Ind AUIWll I. I, ltn 1115-71
The lollowln1 pet'IOM er1 dolnt
buslr.ess •a: COLLIN$ &. AIKMAN INDUSTRIES, LEGAL NOTICE
INC., 7-'00 Hatltd AYlnvt, W1stml111!1r,l----~~=-,,==::---
C1llfornle. FICTITIOUS IUllHESS
Collins I. Aikman Corpore!lon, • NAM• ITATt:Ml!NT
Delew1r• Corpor•tlon, 210 Medl111n Th• following p1rson Is OOlllQ bllstnou
AYenut. N-York, Ntw York. IS:
This bullMN II conducled bv • COi'• MUSTANG EMPLP'(MENT AGE~C'(,
POr•!lon. lU. Newport 81Yd., Cost• Mtu. · COLLINS & AIKMAN Julie Vlrolllll Buslilk, lfl10 Rende
CORPORATION L•no, Huntington Buch. ,
Signed by C. E. Dof'1n R11non• Jffn Armt1ron;. 17UO S&'lli
Tr••.wrer Melot, 0-17, Faunteln V111...,. .
This 1llltl'Mllf w•s flftd wllh Iha Coun-This buslntn Is lltln1 cond11Cled l:ly •
l'f Clerk of Or111911 Counf'f on JUl'll 30, GeMf•I P•rl,...,.lhlp.
1972. R•mont Jt•n Amutrq , •
o4Q« Thl1 slaltmtfll tiled wllti tM C°"'nty · f'llm Cltrk of 0!'1~ County on: Jiiiy 14, ltn.
Publllhed Or•na• COit! Dilly Piiot, By B•Yetlv J, Mtddolc, O'fllltv Counr.,
July •, 11, 11. 25, 1912 17•12 Cltrk. ' fl IMH. LEGAL NOTICE Pllblflhtd Oranot COis! 0111'1' Piiot, J1,1ly It, 2S Ind A11911st 1, I, ltn l"l•1't
FICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAM• STATl.MSNT LEGAL NOTICE
Tile followlne peri.ont •re dolnttl----=:c::::::::c:-,,==~--bu1lnen •t: FICTITIOUS IUSIN•ll • GOLOEN KEY MANAGEMENT CO., NAME STATl!MINT 16'12 B•ktr St., COii• NwM, C•llf. The followlne Pfl'SOnl .,. dolns
Dorllld F. Barrie.. 1'42 B•k•r It., business •s:
Cost• Mna, C•llf. BOW'MANOR APARTMENTS, :mJ Ooneld F. Nlllltlaus, 1t.t02 Oltnt L•no, Wint COis! Hlllt'IWe'I'. Sull• zoo, Newport
Hunl!r1111toli B••d'I, C•llf. 8•1dt, (•tllt'.lrnle f2'60
Th ls buslntll I• bflng condlldld by • Tiit Gl'ffnwltlt GrOlll' lncorpor•tld, •
P1rtnershlp. . Delew•rt. 333S Wfff Co.it Hlgfw11..,,
Ooneld F. Ntw111u1 $ulte XIO, Newoort lffcl'I, Cellfornla , Thi• tl•tfl'n•nl flied With !ht County 92Uf • •
CIMk of Or•ne• CounlY on: Jul.., 14, ltn. Alton t. Crowell, Jr., 1105 Summit: Bv B-rlY J. Mtddoll, DIPlll'I' Counti Ori.,., L1wn1 ll••ch. C1llfornfe, ; ~
Cl1rk. This butlneu 11 btlno tonduetld b'I' 1
"'"" Llmll9d P1rtn1rllltlp, Pulllllhed Ore!>ll' Cult 0•11'1' Piiot, The Gfftnwtc!I Grvup
July n. 25 and A119u11 1, t, 1m llff.n lncorP<N"•ll!CI.
LEGAL NOTICE
GIMrel P•rtner, Jon Bn.ibtkw e ..,: Jon Brvbtk•r · ,
S1nlor Vlco Prttldtnl·S.Crtt•,.,.·
a ll* lhls stetffTltnt ftltd wltl'I the COUf\JY
NOTICe TO CltlDITOllS Clerk of Orll'lff Cauntv on: JulY 6. 1971.
IUPl!ltlOll COUltT o• TH• a.., Artllllt E. Krlfft', DeflllfY County
STATE OP CALIPOltNIA FOii: Clerk.
THI! COUNTY OP OlANGI PllNt N•, A·ntll ~llblllhed Or•nge C011t Delly "llq.1,
Estele of c . H. CAltR • k. Jiily 11, 11, ts •nd All(IUSI I, 1m lnf.Jt
CLAYBORNE H. CAltR, Dtct1sed. '
NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEN to tM LEGAL NOTICI$
crldllort of 111• above ntmed c!Ktdtnt1----=-:===-,,==~---tt1at •ti P1rS0111 hrilllf d•lrns "'ln1t thll PICTITIOUI lllSINBll • •
said dtcmtnt •rt rtc1ulrtd to fl .. tl'ltm, NAME ITATIMINT •
wlth 11'1• nttelltn' vou<llets. 11'1 !tit office Thi foltowlMI PlrlOlll •re &oll'ltl
of Ill• cllrk of !hi •boY• tntllltd COi.ir!, or butlMtt •1· •
to Prtient tl'ltm, wllll Ille ntenMry MEDICAL LEASING COMPANY., M
Y01.1cher" to 11'1• undtr1Jtnld at "'-oHlct NtwPOrt Ctnter Of'., Ste, no. N"""P#t' of lier attorflQ't, SNYOER, O'NEIL, Bffdl, Cell!. '266(1, • •
HANCOCK & ASHWORTH, 111' F•lr O.its llt1Pll E. Grit.om, 2501 1!1tt °""" Avenue, Soull'I P1saden1, C•Hfomlt 91030, man1 Or•nM, Callfornl1.
which 11 the Pitt• of bllslnint of tnt Jot E. ~. 2S)5 M SOU1ll Mllit
11nderlh1ntd In •II miller. Plrl•lnll'll tlJ Sir"'' $1nl• An.1, C•llfornl1.
Ille eJ11te ol Mld ~nl, wllhln follr Tilom•• E. Johnston, D NOWllOrf
montht •fllfl' m. llrtt putlllcatlon of tl'll• C1ntw or,, Ste. no, NtwPOl'f 8eldl,·
not lea. ca111orn11. •
Dalld Jul\' 7, 1'72. Bin L. H1rpor, 2501 E•d ClllPtn•l'lf LILLIAN CARlt Or11191, CllllfOf'nla. ·
Admlnltlr•lrh1 of the Etllll Tiils bllllllftl It bofntt conducted by •
of th1 •boY• ntmed decldonl G1111r•t P•rtnorlhlP, • SNYDER, O'NllL.. HANCOCK & Tllorn1s E, John1!0rt
ASHWORTH Thi• stei.ment ft'9d wltll tho County
.112• ll"•lr Olkt AYOtlM . Clerk of Or•nH C011nl'f on: June JO, lt7J. Slllllh PaMdelll, Calltornll ,T.,. B'I' BtYOrlY J, MtddoX DNUI\' County
T•li 11111 m.nu ci.r11.. '·
AttON1nt fir Mmlnbtr•lrl• p 11"'"'
Publllllld Or•ntt Co.st D•llY Piiot, Pllbllthrtd Oronpe CottV D•llY Pl1GI, July 11 .11, u •nd At,191.1111, 1m 1112-12 J1.1ly •·Tl, 11, u, 1m 11"-1'1~
.
.
•
•
;
J
I
TODAY! . ·.-.
Penonallud • • Stylish • Effldtnt
Order For Yoursolf or a Frlonct '
1 Mey be u1ed on envelope1 a1 r.+um address
la,bel1. Also very hendy as identification
lebel1 for mMldn9 per1onel items 1uch as
book11 rtcord1., photos, et~. labels 1ficlc on
gless and may be u11d for marking home
c•nned focd items. All lebelr are printed
wilh stylish Vogue typo on fine qu1lily whito-
gummed paper.
r----;:.~:c:;:;;;~:=;~~::~---1
I Piii! '""''"" ...... °'"'" P.O .... )Mt I .__...,_,,... I
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• • • • • •
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Tuesday's aosing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Spurt by Market
Ended by Selling
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mtrket rally
petered out Tuesday,
Prom t.lltlng eroded a solid early gain ln prices
then began erasing some of the advance piled up
Monday, In what had been the market's best per·
formance of the year .
However, Charles M. Lewis, a partner in
T,.ves & Co., sald he believed the sharr gains Fri·
day and Monday were "more than jus a Dash in
the pan."
He said he thought the market was just "paus·
Ing to catch its breath" today. Trading slowed lrom
Monday's moderately active pa ce.
.=i ..... -=
'
July 1971 SC DAJLY 1'1LOT
I
-'
DAILV PllOT
DtCIC TIACY
TutsdAY, J1.1ly 15, 1972
Mun AND JEFF
NANCY
t>O YOLI
, KNOW
ANYTHING
A80UT RE~IGION?
DON'I PEEL YOUR APPLE,
YOUNG LADY--·I ALWAYS
EAT THE SKIN OF THE
FRUIT
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by • A. POWER I
ACROSS
1 Present -5 OIYft\plc
Games evtnt
10 Mltd oath
14 Scotch bay
U Ntthet1Wlds Anti Hrs
lsl.-id
1• "-~ Adinl"
11 Kind of rldlO""
'''"'""' . 11rner1tar
19 Midday
20 "--llld the
Pendulum"
2:1 COllJtrlts
2J Uf'Vl!.cn
2b Exist v Ourpl~: 2
"'"" :30 God of llrr
34 Ship Stetlon
JS Sharp ridge'°
Arch It.
37 Tumor: SUfflx
. )! E~: Prefix
3.9 Ut11l dilel·
· t.,te In nature
41 Attc:r """" -42-Pme:
Alllrric•
Ind Ian
43 APPtars to exist
44 Full or
distress
45 UnlttS closely
47 Sprinkled
liberally
SO Rt'Pl'rwntative:
lnlor1111I
51 Sttp
S2 Public uproars
56 ftttn to 1
former sublect 60 Town in E.
Kentucky
lil Afrl¢1n
wateteourse: ,_ ..
'4 Fonul
practice
6S Blued path
66 HIWlllM
67ri~.y: .....
68 Surgical
probillg
instrument
69 Caw: Poet.
DOWN
1 SmaU piece of .... ,
2 -Hashanah:
Jtwish Hew
Y•M J "~hold!'"
L1tifl
4 Caused to be traisported
5 Ont who stlls
N<1CI
6o Ttxlilt smw
''"' , ........
8 Blact: Poet.
Yn:tetday's Punle Solvtd:
9 UniQUt: PtfSon: ,_.,.
10 Mr. Boone
11 Peek -
12 "High -":
Gary Cooptr ... ,.
lJ ltilponS
18 Coln ol Italy
22 Reliance
24 Condlt!Oll
2S Sn.all
crustactans
27 N•row stri' 28-c111ft 29 -Ooolltlle:
"Pygm.lllon"
hmlne
ll C011pltxlon
32 Love:
ltall11n
ll Renotll'ltd
)6 Adjust
39 Gen111 ol
""""'
,40 5tlows l!Sietlll
1~ 44 lndlvli:llal
porllan Of
""' 46 Very cold
48 Condfllaial
rtlease
49 VtttiCill
supporting
sttucltl't
52 Trtts
5J One
S4 Anatomical
Msh of vei ns 55 Cius
,7 At all times
51 flftlfd di'l'Ol'Cf
cenlfl' 59 Waste
allOWMCt
62 ()pposilt of
"•y•"
6ol-HodQH:
Dodgtr or•at
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
l
I
i
f
I •
,
PEANUTS
By Al Smith
By Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
HAVE A
BANANA
...
JUDGE PARKER
GASOLINE ALLEY
SAll-Y BANANAS
~ CR'r'itGtM'
GORDO
ANIMAL CRACKERS
~. IF 'tl'.JO SEE BOr.t OF
1ilCM Oil THE &ROUND ~ \.IKE lH~'l~'~SAFC-
~ BOTi IF 4000JIJl:::EE ONE, ~ !alt.I Lli'E "THC: l>EVIL I
By Charles M. Schulz
llOW CAN AH'IOllE l'rIOI A
6M\E WITK'am: ~
,_,,.
By Harold Le Doux·
WHAT PID YOU l~~~IEFJIE~7 SAY HIS MAME ·~, v
ALAM, I l>ON'T THINK -,OU WHY,
SHOULD ANSWER AH'/ MORE KATHERINE
NO, I TALKED WITH
WH EN THIS SPEAKING THE PROGRAM CHAIR·
ENGAGEMENT WAS MADE, MM OVfR THE
I PRESUME IT WAS YOUR PHONE!
SECRETARY WHO MAD~~-,\()"-,_
THE ARRANGEMENTS,
JUDGE I n-.,,--'
MISS PEACH
WAS ... RALPH HIMSELF AHO
CAMERON? DO THE GROUP HE
.YOU KNOW HIM? R'fPRE$£NTf P .. ;
THAT f!tll, CMJI.:t:!l'IN, STAlfT'ft> ~~OWIN&
SOO Yl!Al!S Af01 ANt> HAS S'IOOO ON 'THAT
SPOT IYllft. SJNC~ ! THINIC ~°"
IT t 1-r•s ONe OF NA'IW!f'>
Ol.t>.,T L.NIN6'
CU~lflS!
QUESTIONS I I'M GOING TO ?
CALL SAM DRIVER! r--~i;;
ly Mtl
PEllKINC: I .;v John aA r. • ·
/1t1/11I /Jhhllll 11\li/llrNl\rklh\111111111111111ftJ/k
' I
By Gus Arriola
By Ro9er Bollen
THE GIRLS
' 4/k~lf
''Carl, I'm ltaviag oar vacation plans completely up to
yow: -all I aU: 11 that we 10 some place wttll lots of Dice
1Hpcl and ne flaldng, goU or camping/'
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
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a ,,
Pri
ch a.
J • an
hi
N
acr
Gr'
and
on p
Dy
par
and
at
mu
the
s
Pr
hos
u.
I
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ol
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Ii ..
' J
' ~ ' .~
·~
•
Lag1111a Beaeh Teday's Fl•al
. -. . .
VOL 65, NO. 207, 2 SECTIONS, 10 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JUESOAY, JULY 25, '1 972 TEN CENTS
• • • • • ·~ ... ' .
Road Extension Legal Battle JVIoves to Court
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL
Ot fllrt ~11'1 Plitt l':'ff
A legal battle between Village Laguna
and the city of Laguna Beach over con-
struction of an extension . ot CimP.UB
Drive will move Into the Superior cOOrl
chambers of Judge James F. Judge Aug. a. • Judg~ Judgo Monday rtlused to grant
~ temporary restralnlng order stopping
any flirt~r action on the project,
because; the city' attorney, Tully Seymour,
hlld no\ been centacted about the matter
anil wu not preseni in court when
Village Laguna filed IUit.
After reading the IUit, be ordered a
beorjng for Aug. a, at wblch lllne the city
must show cause why a prellmioary i...
jLDlction blocldng the city from moving
abead with the project should not be
granted.
The Village Laguna IUit charg., the c~
ty with fallUrt to cemply with the
Environmental Quality Act o! lVW and
the caiifornia Government dode.
"'The env.irownental quality act re-
quirea that an environmental impact
statement be filed d!otalling the effects or
the project," said attorney Barry
Silllons, who t.. representlng Village
Laguna.
The city, be 'said, prepartd an en-
vltonmental impact statement dealing
only with the purchase of the rlght of
way !or the road behind Riddell Fi<ld.
The rtporl concluded there would be no
Impact, since the purchase involved only
paper work. No impact statement was
made regarding construction of the ex·
'Tripped~ Some Loot
Screa1ns Lead to Five Drug Arrests From ·Heist
Nelgbbors' reports of ••a woman
acreamlng" led Laguna Beach police to a
Griffith Way address at 4:30 a.m. today
and resulted in the ......n or five persons
on narcotics charges.
Police said they found . Minka Ellan
Dysinger, 28, of San Diego, on an ap-
parent LSD "trip," screaming, kicking
and tearing down drapes in the residence
at IW Griffith Way.
Sh'" was taken to South C.Oast Com~
munl!1 Hospital !or emergency lrtat·
ment, tbeo transfer.red to the Jail ward of
Olange eoUnty Medlc8! Center.
·Abo arrested ....,.. her sister, Suilan Oirtia, 27, 1lllo pOllce uld Is the owner ol
the house; two llnlthm, Folb< Marcel
Doboaz, 21, and Maurice Dobm, who
IOld they live al the Gri!flth Way ad·
drtaa; and William Rn!us Yancy Jr., 27,
who gav.e a Palm Desert addre,ss.
Se.ize.d as evidence at the scene, police
saJd, were_ll7 grams of marijuana, found
in a plastic bag, two shopping bags and a
cigar box; 72 pills known to narcotics of·
ficers as "mini-bennies; '' 2 doses of
LSD; 14 assorted colored pills, as yet
Ujlidentilied; and 2 hypodermic needles.
The five were booked on suspicion of
possession of marijuarla, poMeS!lon of
dangerous drugs and possession of drugs
with intent· to sell.
TJie Cuttil womin WU ~y·
eborted' -111ep1 'r ''"Iatan er the • hjpodennlc needles and her' lister with
being uiidel !ht. tnnuence · of an ·i...
to:&lcant.
Discovered
An undetermined amount of securities
and personal papers -apparently
dt..carded by thieves who blasted their
way into the Laguna N"iguel branch Of the
l)nited cautornia a,nt in March -weNi
!ound Monday afternoon.
Orange <:DomlY · Sherif('•. Inv~
ls!~~~
Johnson Put in ·Hospital.
For Chest Pains, Nausea
Ialand Vlllag9-by --hi tho -who l"""11.--atulled wHb ..
weathered bonds aoc1·other -
·No cash or jewelry was Included in the
loot, said Lt. Charles. Conaway of tlie
sheri!f's department. ·Many of the papers
were strewn on the ground aloogilde the
sack, be added.
A · dozen investigators were-Im.
mediately dispatCbed to the scene when
the surveying crew called the sherUf's
deparlment around 1:30 p.m.
SAN ANTONIO (UPI) -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson bas been
hospitalized because or chest pains and
DIUSta. But doctors said there WU l'IO m-.
Woolworth Heir
Reventlow Dies
In Plane Crash
MPEN, Colo. (UPI) -Lance
Nv.entlow, heir to the Woolworth five-.
am:kllme fortwie and son of Barbara
H1tnri. one cif the worl~'s richest
-.en, bas been killed with thrte other
perJODI in the era.sh Mooday of a small
plane in the Colorado Rockies, tsw o!-
flcers disclosed today.
.RevenUow, 35, a sports car racer who
"'3 given the Utle of "the world's richest
~by" at birth; was killed in the crash
dllrlng a beayy thunderstorm about 10
mUes oorth of this Colorado resorl.
<R.venllow bad been surveying a tract Ol land be wanted to buy, olflclals aaid.
Killed with him were the pilot and two
other passengen, all unidentified.
The craft slammed Into a wooded
mountainside eight miles from the
neartsl road. Sherill Caroll Whitmire
Ald the ...,...kage WIS spotted by
another plane. A rescue °"'" rtached the site Monday nJcbt and coollnned tho! all
1board were dead.
;eeventlow married actress Jill St.
John on March 21, lll!O, In San Francisco.
• '(See LANCE, Pap JI
Road Resurface
J0.b Nears End
A Lapna Beach Strtet Deparlment
spollesman ukl today that murfatlng of canyon Vista Drive, Cout View Drive
end Buena V!sta Way In the Temple Rills
orea lhoWd be oompleted by the end of
thil week.
dication he had surrered another . bearl
attack.
"It may be several days before any
definite-concluslOns can be drawn about
the nature · of his presez& lllness," a
Brook! Army Hospilal bulleU. said.
''However. at 10 p.m. be was com-
!ortab)e, in excellent spirits and his
general condiUon wU quite satisfactory.
"There have been no irregularities in
the heart rhythm or blood pressure."
Johnson has suffered two heart attscka
-a severe one in 1955 and a second one
last April during a vt..it lo his daughter
Lynda and her husband Charles Robb in
Charlottesville, Va.
He . was hospitalized three weeks for
treatment of his. second heart attack, and
had been scheduled to travel 60 mlles
from the LBJ Ranch today !or a routine
checkup. Instead, the bospitsi said
Johnson was flown to the hospital ahead
of schedule when the pains and nausea
occurred Monday night.
"He wu flown to San Antonio by •
private plane hued at his ranch and was
admitted to Brooke Hospital at 1:15 p.m.
for observation," the statement aaJd.
Dr. Roberl L. North, chie! o! medicine
at·Brooke, WU placed In charge ol' the
case-Johnson ha1 a hospital penthouse
suite permanenUy at his disposal.
The crew worked for-seven hours comb-
ing the area for more loot, but im--
covered nothing more than the original
sack. ·
"We're convinced we f o u n d
everything." Lt. CQnawa1 commented.
"Anyone going up there today would be
wastihg his time."
FBI agenls along with the sberifra h>-
vestlgators today began an inventory of
the recovered loot. No dollar figure bas
yet been placed n the find.
"I doubt the stuff was worth vefY.
much," Conaway said. "I guess it was
stuff they ·didn't want.
"Of course, that's just speculation," be
added.
Five men -three of whom are in
custody -have been indicted in corr
nection with the March 24-17 robbery
which Jell United California Bank $50,000
shorl in cub and 458 bolbolders out an
estimated $2 milll:on to 13 millloo In cash
and 1tturlUes. .
· Held at · Los Angeles County jail la
Charles A. Mulligan, 38, o! Youngstown,
Ohio. In custody in Ohio are Amil A.
Dinsio, M, or Boardman, and Philip B.
Christopher, 29, of Cleveland.
Two brotbera. Ronald and Harry Bar-
ber of South Cite are· aUlJ' at large and
subject to a naUonwlde search by the
FBI. '
Laguna Voter Turno.ut
. . . .
L-ight in· Recall Elf ort
Voting In the Laguna Beach rtclll· wbert the early count was 16 out or 399
counc!I election IOI off to a slow start ellgibie ~ten.
thia morning willi voter turnout averag· Light..i early turnout wu reported at
ing only 11 per<ent In ,.ven o! 14 pollln1 the Nolan Real Estate poillng place, UIO
plac:es checllecl II mkknornlng. Glenneyre St., where only •libl percent
This compared with an average turnout or U-ellgiblt bad voted by mid-morn·
or 17 perteD! at the aamo time in Jut Ing. '
August's hlah rlae e1ection, which .et a Tho Harcum and Horn Rtal Estate
local .record With I final voter turnout o! polling place at 998 Glenneyre St. logged
61 perce11l of the elecl«ate. 1111 of a possible llO vola at the same
In tbb yur•a munlcipol election In time and a slmillr CllUlll -... eporled .. 1-/.Prl~ -1$ percn ol tho voters had the U. Temple HUlo Drive polliiia.plaCo
tenalon, Simons said.
The IUit alao charges that the city
council, In a]Jp!'Ovlng purchase or the
right of way June 21, violated the goverr;.
men! code aectlon stipulating a report on
whether the> purchase conforms with the
cjty's. general plan.
·The· aeclloo ststes that when a city
wants to 1equlre properly the project
must be sttbmitted to tha plaoning com·
mls!k>n for i. report. The commission bas
40 daya in which to ·make the report to
the city council. ·
• IXOll
Laganagrlns
Simons argues the council took action
approving the project without waiting !or
or requesting the reporl.
City atoomey Tully Seymour said to-
day he would discuss the suit with the Ci·
ty Council at !ts Aug. %. meeting. "I
would not react until I see the plead·
ings," he added, noting the suit had not
yet been served on the city.
The S.2 acre parcel now i! in escrow,
Seymour noted. It ts being purchased
from Pyne Estate Company !or 1124.000.
The city's $72,000 share of the cost is
by Phil Intorlandi
!rom gu tax funds . The county through
ill Arterlai Hi&bway Financing Program
is !uncling lhe rtmalnder or the cost.
Major shareholders in the company are
Helen Bluroct of Laguna Beach, Jack
i!artin of Los Anaeles and Hoxie Smith
of Brawley •
Bernard Syfan o! Laguna Beach,
Roberl Shelt<>n of Newporl Beach, Edna
Blurock of Laguna Beach and Mrs. P. J.
Ellerbroek ot Santa Ana are listed as
minor shareholders. ·
Hope Told
I
To Unseat
.
President
PARIS (AP) -Jane Fonda, back !rom
Hanoi, says a group or American war
prisoners asked her to tell their parents
and ' friends to work ror the victory of
Sen. GeorJe .McGovern because "they
fear lf Nilbn ltays in office they will be
prlsonera forever."
The actreaa.acknowledged that she bad
tl!at se\ll!a'-ptlaonerrlhe 'met·gav.-her
..... ~ messaaeo Jor.~ ol ~...jncludlng '" ••. irbo .... ll'"'ClnllieCounty ......... -. ....... L .. .,.1 .; =a. =..Ii lljo lfOl!rnber
strl~ '='·~"= ~
,
.' .
"Oh, No You Don'll You Just Morch Rl9ht ·llKk to Whlche•!t"
Fe1tlv•l ~Got to-You( ••• '
. ·.
VC1 . Hospital '. Fu~ OK;
. . . .
Fig .ht in. Assemb_ly Seen
By GEORGI! LEIDAL
Of tlle ·DallY~'l"" ltlft
A bill adding. 1919,000 to the state
budget lo provide planning !unds !or a
350-bed teaching hospital at UC Irvine
appeirtd beaded for trouble in the
Assembly · today even thougb it won
unanlmowl approval in the SeDate Mon-
day.
State Senalor Dennis E. Carpenter (R·
Newporl Beadi)' ciralted the fln~hour
SB 11186 alter the· LeglslatUrt bad cut the
allocation from the budget. •
A Carpeo!er aide today said the 'bill t..
headed !or a · "sining flght" in the
A-.bly Wayw and Mean Committee. ·
lls 'C:!1111c<s ol clearing that committee
.,.. "uncertain • the aide aald due to the , I , I oPpogiUon /JI Aisemblyman Wlllle Brown
(l>&n Francisco): .
Brown baa said he'll _.. any !uture
ILD!ding. of university medlc;al• faclliUes
until facilities to ~eve Inner-ell)' areil ,
'Mike' W tll Too
Hot ro Handle
If the dispatcher radioed: "Car
1412, where art Jou!" Monday
a!temoon, the reply could .have
cnekled back over the .U fil.e this.
"Cor 4412 Is Jn the parking lot
behind the stsUoo, cwhed Into Cir
4411;11 or wor(ls to that tffect.
Dlapilched to a silent burl)ar
alarm, Coolil M ... l>mo-JObn · c. Caley leaped Into Car 14U.
startad the engllie, lhilted Into
drlvi and IJ!l.....,. Ille m~. -1f'll.-~ 'tiUl ~ ~ ra;rjd .. Mril ~In tllt clooed pttrol 'car' a lho·llilmmer .,.. ... !hrouP
are provided. •
UC! V)"!i d.iincelor L. E. Cox' uld •
toilay; the ,,IIiOle lulure of the medical
school depends O\I Assembly approval or
the plannln1 ~neys and voter approval
next !all of a 1155.9 mllllon. ststewlde
health sciences b6nd Issue. ·
)l'hlle tjje. budget addttion would pay
for working drawings and detailed plans ,
ahd specilicoUona lor the bolpllll, the
bUlldlng can't be built without the· -moneys. . ,
Co• expl•l...t that . about ball ·of the ~t81 ~ nJD!l;"coot of the' hoopllal ftuld .
come from the stste -with the ~ mlinder expected to COIDe' ,.... federal sOurce,,. . . •
If the Aaemhly awr-·llll plirinlnr .
mOf!ey and the bonds ere• approvtd I!' ·
November, tbe holpilll eould be cont
pleted In early 11'/1, Cox l!lild. · ·
The !acillly Would • allow the UC! ·
CalUomia Collqe of Medldno to Clciuble '
its entering clan Ille hvm M' to ut-
medlcal students,
Education Unit,
Trustees · Disc~
School Doctrine
color~~ mode durtna her
North IDam y!tlfJ"'1 wt The rai of
tJie lllm, ~ wbot the aciresa
conslden lo be deliberate American at-
tacks· on the Norlh Vietnamese dllta
system, lhowed Jane in black Viet Cong
type .pljmna pants and a black T·shlii
touring paddy !!Olds. Jane, wading
through bomb ruins and Jane with a
helmet atppPed around ber neck, peer•
Ing out to tJie hor!Zon.
The IClrtls acknowledged that she had
made daily broadcaat1 over Hanoi radio
aimed at American aervicemen, but did
not rePJt alrtcUy to a question about the
statemeat by Rep. F1etcber ThomJ>90R (fl.Gi:l:Oiat ·treaiim charges should bo
brought aplnst her.
She ailirfed tiowever, "I did not aay
what· I am accused of ,.ytng," relerrinll
1pparm!IY to reP.Wls lbe uraod ~ lo
clllobey ordon. Miu Faacla aald ...
wOul4 produce the lc:&ll ol bu bnld-
casts in New York oo Friday.
. TraveliDc through North Vietnam,
Miss Fonda said, led her to believe "pn>-
!QUlldty that dlltes art being bombed on
purpoee.'' 1be. U.S. government has
denied the 1ccusatlon of the tactic which
"'.Ollld eodooier the lives or thousands or
North Vl&amese.
Jolie Feeling Better •
M~er'lllness Bout
WASHINllTOlf (UPI) -JUIIe Nixon
Eisenhower wu reporlod on the road to
~ery today after 1 two--k bout
'(it~ viral pneumonia.
•
0Sbe'a feeltnl better," a White Houle
1pOkesmen sata. But ahe waa still coo-·
file4 Io the family quarten. ' . .. . " . '
r '
I -.. ....
, -.
Weaehr .
'!be project Includes removal o! et·
latlng dama1ed nctlonl .of 'tho roadways
11111 murfaclng 'lrilll aspbaltie "''"crete !tom their lntenectlona with Temple
lllUs Drl••·
cast ballota by mliknomlng on election "•Ith IOI out of a J>Oi!fl>le 911' I .
day. • · · Ji'ollt 'Wlll -oi>en untll 7 p.m. alld City Ball and 'l'llllnton School polllng 1!iallott 1111 lie ...ad al CltY Hall ~
plaoes rtporled Iha! 10 perceol of -.....inc. -Illo flllal cOllnt expected fl,; , reg!atered in lhooe prtCincta cast early 10 p.m. -•
ballots. . . Voters ere bolnl ubd to decide o~ the
.. !'lndsllittd. . . "'"'°'· belt -,..illclent lo • distract this officer'• .U...U.0." '
Patrolman c_, wro1o.1n a nporl
~~ Car. 1412 crube;I Into
{tar 1411, acddtntally.
During the work, porting Is prohibited
91' either aide of the roadway Oii eoch of
the -between the boun or 7 a.m.
and 4:IO p.m. VelllclH left on the -
will be tAlftd away at the o .... r'a el·
peak.
ol the 417 Mo~ Drive nc plac<. and lo vole for OM of four ~-'lbe rate wu b=:;;cenl -recall or city counctlman Edwerd c. Lcrr
where 10 of AO voten had oeeklng to ftPU bim-Wayne Bqlln, '!be a11ent Alarm CIII w., .a<>
dllelllll, .... cut moninc balloU, ancl the Arch Belch Lourtnce A. Campbell, Corl E. Johmon
Heights pollln& place al 13$ LI Mirada, Jr. and Beth Leedt. ~---------..J ..
I •
'I D,Ul V PILOT l8
Rape· Case •
Get.s Dewy
From Judge
South Laguna Disposal Company owner
Thomas Trull! ghowed up in Orange
County superior Court • day Jato today
to win a three-month de.lay of bis rape--
ux perversion trlal.
Trull•, 38, explained to presiding Judge
Bruce SUmner, that he hal betn advlsed
by bis att.Orney's secretary that his trial
with co-defendent Eugene Imondi .fr. had
been delayed until Oct. 2 and It was not
necessary for him to be in court Monday.
Judge SUmner conflrmed Trulis' story
from the attorney's secretary and
canceled the $10,000 warrant he issued
, Monday for Trulis' arrest. Bali of fl2,500
for the South Laguna trash executive has
been restortd.
The court action means that Trulli and
Imondi, 35. wtil lace trial Oct. 2 for rape
and aex perversion charges !iled by
Newport Beaeb pollca who ' investigated
atlegatlons made by a 11·year~ld Foun-
Wn Valley girl.
The. girl "!Id police that Trulis and
Imondi told b<r they were Holll'wopd
mov~ producers and were anxious to ur
terview ellgible. girls for major roles 1n
movie and television production.
Pollce said the &lrl told them she wH
persuaded to 'Plfllclpoli In a number of
&el acts with bOth dalendenli In a car
parktd at Fashion laland.
From Page J
LANCE ••• ..
They were di•orced In 1963.
On Nov. 8, 1964, he married star Jet
He;yte Holdridge, then .19, .The only
rebiUve who atltndtd the wedding was
Cary Grant, a former husband ol Miss
Hutton'a. Reveotlow was an avid sports car
enthllllalt and polo player. He built and .
drove Grand. .Prbc racing can and
developed bis own racing englrie.
Born in Feb. 21, 1938, be was the most
guardtd baby In the world. An elabOrali
buraJar: ,alarm "!IS, Instilled to protect
him • ... 1n1ant. COmpllcattons from his
Caewean dellvery left bis mother
fragile and Ibo 'fU unable to regain the
atrqUt llbo lost '' Quarrels over RevenUow 's education
led to Mias Hutton'• divorce from
Lanoe'1 . father In 1918 In Cooenhagen. A
custody ficbl over the child luted aevtn
ye1111.. .
1111 .,....1~ !I~ atmwe!I.,•• -heme!! l&01!"1llloo and $100 Qlllllon,
. Oil bl.I ~'" 'blrth<W'~ bis ""!ther pve hliD a *°;ooo hnme m Beverty1Jlllli. ·
He was the 10n of Mias HUl!OQ'I mar-
riage to Danllb Coqrti (:w't von
Haup!ta.11.ventlow.
.. So ypu were bom with brown eyes,''
he ~ lell fiiendl. "! was bOm with
JDOOa1. Jt'juttmlkea Ule'eonvenleill.''
lilt mother, tbe i!:ancld4ugblir_ol F. W.
Woolworth, ~f4d ~five ~i!Jme
·-fortune and'll stl\t;?qarded .. the world's rlchelt woman.3.flu Huttd:l waa
married six times.
W).len Reventlow wu asked about his
mother, all hi would say was, "l admire
my JDOtber."
' .
U.S. to Resume .
Sudan Relation8
WASHI?jG1"N (UPI) -The Unllid
Sta tis ariliounced today, )I was mumiilg
lull diplomatic rtlationa with the Su_dan,
the l.bird such resumption among seven ·
COIJlltrles which broke ties w I th ·
Washington II! a reault of the 1967 Arab-
lsraeli War. ~
The Stali Departmtnl and the govern-
ment of the Democratic RepubUc of
statements, said: "The government of
the Unllid States of America and govem-
men tof the Democratic Republic of
Sudan have decided to resume diplomatic
relations as of this date. An exchange of
ambassadors wlll take place in the near
future."
II
. . . ...
DAILY PILOT
Ttl• Orantf/ CO.II O...IL y rlLO"f, w!lh tlflldt
Iii umblMd the' N.-Pren. h pubtlthn ey
._ or.r.,e Colst Publbhlnl eom,.ny • ..,..
nre edit~ ere Pl,lblllhld, Mond1y ttirw;h
Friday, '°" Colll Mei1, N....,.,t 19Mdt,
H\lnttnotM 8HChfF°""111n v11...,.. L11un1
hKI\, ltv1nt/Sldd11btck 11'111 $tn Cltmtnk/
S.f\o Ju1n C1pbtnno. A lll'llll!t r11i.ri11
•11Jon It p,lbllshld Sltvrd•rt 1nd Su1'd1ys.
lfle "IN:lllll pullllll'I"" ~nl h 11 »O W..t
IJIY SJttd, C.tll M9t .. C.JlfornJ., 0)6.
Rot.1rt H. w,.d
Prnlcltnt aind Publl~W'
Jtck R. Curley
Vkt ,,.ldll'lt and ~I MIMftl",
Thorn•• k11.,il
ldl!Or
T1io1r111 A. M11rpld111 MMlllN ,Editor
Oorlt1 H. lo•• ltichtnl P. N•ll
,... ..... ~.&dttors ...,_ __
222. Foro•t Affll:V•
M•in11t A44tH1: P.O. t• 6661 92611
. -~ Cott• .... : -,,.., ..., '""" fl=•dl: JlitOll ,...,.... ""'"9N Hilftl ,_di: 111'1S 1•0 IOViw1rd IM C ._ as...,. II CMllM llMI
· T•hrtias «n4J '4M1Jt
C'-lfW M,..tta111 641·1'71
........... Al ...... Jttt
TlfsJ' Et 4f4.f.4U
-· '"" -C-f _, .. ,,. (..,.,..,.,. .. ... ~ m..m. .....
...,Ill •• er .,.,......,....,. ""'* _,,, ___ ,_
,...._ "' ""'""" ...... .:... ........ ~ .. c.tt Mt5I. 0....,.. .... i.t'.. .. Qtt)W IUJ ....,...,, w .... n u.11. ....,...,,, ""'"'"' .......... ......,,.
I
.,....., ... 25, lt7t
•
Bwke "•· Rae. Extra Land Youihs Held
'
.After .Murder ·
' ~ IUPI> --,_, clllllld a lltlitl llde ,ouch Wltli the
. ' Early Education Gets Study
' . '
........ ol a 1'-,..-old let -.-wtio ...-to Nm4I onr laas lhln II he bod-10C11111ul1t.d in
small change:. Plan Under Fire By Nixon ..
Poll.,. aald the dead man, Id~
tified aa Sandy Reed, a pensioned
war veteran, ran lrom h I 1
puahcart, shouted ror nearby apart-
ment dwellers to call the poli<;.e and
WM shot by one of two youths when
he return~· to the cart to protect
hla merchandiae.
Police aald the youths were bOlh
15 tears old. One was charged with
murde'r and the other wlth armed
robbety, police sald.
Solon Seeks
Antiwar Bill . ,
Showdoivn
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
W. Brooke (R-Mass.), assuming
leadership of the Senate's antiwar forces,
today pressed for another showdown on
the withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Indochina in exchange for the release of
American prl.9oners.
The Senate adopted the, far-reaching
amendment Monday then nullified the
action by killing the St.8 billion foreign
military aid bill to which it was attached.
Brooke immediately announced he
would offer the amendment to the $20.6
billion military procurement bill, now
pending in the Senate.
The amendment would withdraw all
V.S. f~ces "land, sea, and air" from
Indochina four months after enactment if
tr.e POWs were released.
The strong coalition· which put the
amendment Into the bill and resisted ef·
forts to take it out, collapsed on the 48-42
vote on the foreign aid measure.
. S~ng supporters of antiwar legisla·
t1on, including Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield and Sen. J , William
Fulbright, could not vote for the foreign
aid blll although ii included the amend-
ment.
Se111. George S. McGovern and Thomas
F. Eagleton, the Democrats' national
ticket, millsed the vote.
Tbe foreign military assistance ·pro-
gram appeared to be in jeopardy.
"That's the end of the bill," Fulbright.
chairman of the Senate Foreign Rel4·
llOns co'tlunlttee, 'said. 1
•
Manmelcli oald he volid against
rnilltat)) assiltance to foreign nations,
which ~ has long opposed, because the
hill had ''too much gimmickry in It."
Fulbr!ght nid be. was not disappointed
that the anUwar amendmeot had to fail.
From Pagel
.REPORT •••
district shou'ld work through established
channels to get satisfaction.
-A. study of district administration
should. be commissioned, possibly with
asSisWlce f1:0m people from the com•
munity worldng with professional con·
sultants. Committee membets stressed
tqis was not meant as a criticism ~f the
present ad.ministration.
Monday evening's meeting was the sec·
ond session held between the board and
the citizens study committee since the
release of the Educational. Priorities
S!Udy · ~tlie report in Jilne.
The need for improved com·
municaUons and long range financial
planning wtre listed as the two most
serlOU! problems facing the "aura for ex·
cellence" in the Laguna Beach schools,
the report stated.
In opening the in-the-round 'meeting,
board and tbe adminlstraUon have been
observed: "Communications between the
board and the administration has been
the big hooker.
"Admittedly, we have had dlHicultles
In the pasl year. It got to the point a week
or ~ ago that both sides were on the
defensive, n he added, referring to reac-
tion ·11:!· bis proposal to scrap the program
at Top ol the, World School
"Since then, I've met with the ad·
minlstratton for several hours and, as I
said ln a news release, we're beglnnlng
to see a glimmering of communicaUon, ''
Thomas said. ,
By JOHN ZALLER
Of ,_, DlllY r11t1 Stiff
Huntington Beach A 11 em b I y man
Hobert Burke has locked boms with
Stale Superintendent of Pubtic lnltruc-
tlon. Wiison Riles over • tis million Early
Childhood Education Plan now pending
before the Legislature.
The conservative West Orange County
Republican says the state school chief's
plan is too costly, too innovative, and
possibly harmful, and be urges thorough
study before even limited funding ia ap-
proved.
·Riles, who has made re!orm of school·
Ing from kindergarten throulh third
grade . a major thruat of hiJ ad·
ministration, claims the plan i 1
necessary to cut down the "appalling
namber of children Who can't read ade--
quately at tbe end of the third grade, and
so are already doomed to school failure."
The Early Childhood Education Plan is
now before the state Senate as part of a
$1.2 billion tax reform and school finance
measure that has the backing <1f both
Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob
Moretti and Republican Governor Ronald
Reagan.
The education plan, which could cOll
$350 million over five years, bas two
main parts:
-It would bring a gradual but fun-
damental restructuring or schooling in
the primary grades by lowering the
adult-to-student ratio from 30-to-1 to 10-
to-1 with the use of parent voJunteers and
paid aides. The aim would be to
"guarantee" that every child mastered
basic reading and math skills by the end
of the tb1rd grade.
-The proposal also calls for enrolling
four·year~lds in school on ·a voluntary
basis in order to take advantage of what
educators believe is a much greater
learning abillty than they wtil have later
in life. Funding for thla part of the Early
Childhood program, however, ii not in-
cluded in the $25 million now under coo--
slderation.
Burke has lambasted the plan as an
"untried, untested proposal that could
result in harm to our children."
He says the plan "can· only be in·
terpreted as an attempt by the
superintendent of public lnstructi<1n to
build his Image and satisfy the 'hang the
expense' education tnnovators w b o
elected bim."
Burke js especially oppoled to ~ pro-
posal for bringing four.year-olda lni4 the
school system. He says th1s opens the
door for "ruthless planners" to mold the
personalities of the students at an early
age, and says pre-school education sbou1d
be left to church and private operations.
He further attacks the inclusion of the
early childhood plan in a tax reform and
school finance package. "I don't believe
that adding tbe financial burden of an ex-
Change in Viejo
Boundary Slated
By School Board
Trustees or the capistrano Unified
School District took steps Monday to <:<>r:
reel a Mission Viejo boundary whlcb
would slice in half 36 planned residential
lots.
The boundary change involves two
Mission Viejo Company tracts.
The first is proposed tract 9722 in the
vicinity of Marguerite Parkway and
Trabuco Road. There, about 99 single
family homes and 26 acres are involved.
The second trade area ls located on the
side of Trabuco Road between Alicia .
Parkway and Los Allio· Boulevard. The
area contains 114 acres and would have
aboUt 413 homes. The development is an
expansion of the company's Barcelona
home program.
Tbe boundary change would subtract
portions of the tract from the San Joa·
quio district and add them to the
caplstrano diatrlct.
AltbOugh approved by the Capistrano
trustees Monday, the changes muat DOW
be approved by other districts in tbe area
and the county school committee on
district organization.
J(lusmann Re-elected
Scout District Chief . '
\Ve,s H. Klusmann, of San Juan
Capistrano, hAs been re-elected chainnan
of the El Camino Real Boy Scout District
at the District's Annual election.
Serving with Klusmann will be four
vice-chairmen, each representaUvu of
the various sections of the d.Lstrict,
Graydon Oliver, Laguna Beach; John
Hendricks, Laguna Nigutl: Robert Dur·
rans, Ml5'lon Viejo, and Alan ~tmon
Costa Mesa .
Mission V.lejo resident Jack Elia will'
succeed W. T. Bradberry of Sin
Clemente as District Commlseloner. Of •
liom star! their new tmna s.pt. 1. 1
Elected to aerve as memberHM11r1t•
on the District Committee are Leon
Evans, and Ragnar En&Mlltn. MlJslon
Viejo; Dr. Maorlce MHOD and Charles
Hess, Laguna Beach; IAo Fenenden,
Roy PhWJpo, '1'h9mU Delli, Ben
MeLane, Michael Johnaon and Wlley Ser·
Ing of Sin Clement<~ Mn. Patricia
CbrlstlaMtn, WIUlarll A. Bathgate and
Edward H. Salton ·of San· Juan
caplstrano; Dooald' l'nDbl and Law·
rtnce La20tle of ,,), ... , Nlluel; Carl
Smith and Richard l)kb.y 'OI Caplatrano
Beach; Jay ReynOldiij •Dina Pttnt; Brtt
Lund, Roger SummOI'! and Jerry Wolfen-
den of Costa Mut'll8d Donald WllllamJ
of Newport Beach. • Namtd at commlllle chairmen an:
Ted Rowley, AcUvlllu OnmJUee are:
Franlcel, camplnc; ....,... Rackltlf,
Conaervatlon; Roberi tlumw, rtnanco;
Wylie S.rling, Ot""""tloa. and Ex·
ltnsklo: Ed 5aston, Public Ralatlono;
and Mite Jllllnlop, Leadenblp Tl'alJlla&,
~
perlmental program that could coat f35Q
million over the nu:t few yean bas
anything to do with ta1 relief." Jnstead
he would Uke to see the education reform
considered as a separate ~e and
debated ln the regular educaUon com-
mittees or the Legislature. Burke is a
member of the Assembly EducaUon
Committee.
''It is obviously Wltrue that lb1s pro-
gram is unproven,'' Riles counter1. "The
things we want to do have been around
for~years. We just want a chance to put
them into practice."
On bringing four-year-olds _into schools.
Rile! says, "I think parents have sense
enough to decide whether their chlla is
ready for school or not. Snice it will be
voluntary, the choice will be theirs. Tbe
very rich have always bad preschools for
their children, and more recently 1 the
poor and welrare families have had
them. I think it's time for the majority of
people who are in the middle to have the
opportunity."
Riles said that including the education
measure in a tu package is legitimate
because "you need money to have a pro-
gram, and this is the way you get the
money."
Riles contends that tbe reforms con-
tained in the Early Childhood Pla9 ·are
guaranteed to be successful because
"each district will have to set acceptable
goals and objecUves for itself in order to
qualify for funding, and if it doesn 't meet
those marks, it won't be refunded. This is
the first time in California that we have
ever done this on a mass scale."
The total $1.2 billion package -which
\vould in one fell swoop lower school pro)>
erty taxes, increase the level of school
support, and increase the state sales tax
by one cent -passed the state Senate
Commitlee of Tax and Revenue last
week and is now before the Senate
Finance Commit! ...
Firemen Control
Rive1·side, LA
County Blazes
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two brush
fires fanned by brisk winds threatened 50
homes in Los Angeles and Riverside
counUes before Jieing stemmed by
fireftjJhten .
. A brush fire thal charreG·l50 acres of
scrub brush and scattered limber south
of Jdyllwtid in the San Bernardino Na·
tional Forest and forced the evacuatlOn
of 250 persons was lated 70 percent con·
tained early today.
.Fire informati9Jl. officer Jack
McCumin said 25 cabins in tbe area were
threatened. the evacuees from the 7th
Day Adventist camp at Pine · Springs
were expected to return today, be said.
Jn Eagle Rock, a fire which broke out
east of Occidental College Monday was
stopped after sweeping close to 25 homes
on brush-covered bills. The fire burned 25
to 30 acres and damage was estimated at
$2,000. .
Meanwhile, tn Bishop, firefigbters we1f.
••mopping up" in the Wake of two fires
that destroyed more than 650 acres in the
Sierra, the U.S.Foreat.Servlce said.
~ut a sptokesman said flretnen have
caDceled ellortS Iii battle a slow burning
30-acre 'blaze in nearly inaccessible ter-
rain at 11,000 feet in the John Muir
Wildemeas.
The high elevation blaze was reported
Monday on Mt. Williamson about 30
miles south of here in the C&lifomia
bigh<im sheep zoological area. The fire
was burning slowly due to the altitude
and firemen will "just let it bum out,"
the Fomt Service sald.
UPI T•l#lloll
Second Star
tsr1g. lJ en. James ~·. l~amlet
has become the second Negro
in Army history to achieve
two-star rank. The 50·year·old
Ohioan was 32nd on a Jist of 34
brigadiers nominated for pro-
motion to major general.
S. Viets Battle
Into Quang Tri;
Resistance Low
SAIGON (AP) -south Vietnamese
paratroopers have battled into the night
in their drive to recapture Quang Tri's
19th century Citadel from diehard rem~
nants of a North Vietnamese occupation
force.
By evening, army spokesman Lt. Col
Do Dang Bo reported "enemy resistance
is weakening." There was no word on
casualties.
Bo expressed hope the South Viet-
namese flag could be raised over the old
walled fortress Wednesday to symbolize
the end of enemy rule in the battered
provincial capital, occupied by North
Vietnamese forces since May 1.
"The fighting is continuing," Bo told
newsmen ·in ·Hue. 1~·1 think many Nortll
Vietnamese were killed. I do not J)ink
any escaped."
There were conflicting claims on the
recapture of the Citadel. South Viet-
namese military spokesmen in Saigon
said it had been retaken. ·
An army communique Issued in Hue
said government troops entered the
fortress at 10:2{) a.m. But newsm·en at
the front could not verify this because
South Vietnamese soldiers fired warning
shots over their heads when they tried to
approach the battle wne.
Associated Press correspondent Dennis
Neeld reported from Quang Tri that coir
tinuous machine-gun, mortar a n d
artillery fire was beard from the Citadel
area for most of the day.
South Vietnamese planes 1 dropped
napalm Into the Citadel before the initial
~ssault by two airborne companies total·
1ng .about 400 men. American planes
previously blasted two boles in the
Citadel's walls with laser-guided smart
bombs and spokesmen in Saigon said a
third breach was made Tuesday night by
South Vietnamese bombers.
The paratroopers ran inlo Withering
enemy fire as they advanced through the
northeast wall of the fortress , Neeld said,
but they managed to suppress ·some of it
with counterbattery shelling at close
quarters.
WMilllNGTON (AP) -President Nii·
on said today it is ridiculous for the
Federal government to own over hall tht>
land Jn some Western states, but aides
aaid later tbe White House was giving ncr
thought to disposing of any or the West·s·
mlllionS of acres or public domain land.
The chief executive's comment came
as he met in his Oval Office \Vith
members of the Federal Properly
Review Board which has been handl·
Ing the administration's effort to convert
little.used federal property into state and
Jocal parks.
Pointing to a map of the United States
which showed the 144 parcels of land
transferred under the Legacy of Parks
progra1n, Nixon observed that the federal
government was owner of more than hair
the and in some Rocky Mountain an4
\Veslem staes.
'·That 's ridiculous." he said. "We don ''
need it."
fie didn't elaborate while ne'lll·smen
were in his office for the start of the
meeting, but officials said later Nixon
was referring to a category" known as ac·
quired land -not to the J'ubllc domain
land which is often lease for livestock
grazing.
Presidential rounselor D o n a 1 d
Rumsfeld, a member of the property
review board, told newsmen, "We have
not even looked at the question of public
domain land."
Nothing the President said at tod;iy's
meeting "was meant to apply to public
domain land," Rumsfeld said.
'1'11e review board's executive director,
Darrell M. Trent, said some public do-
main land had been taken earlier for
such use as military resrvations and no
longer is under control of the Bureau ~
Land Management. This, he indicated,
might become available for transfet to
state and local governments for the
Legacy of Parka program.
After the meeting, Nixon issued a
.statement saying he was pleased that the
144 new parks had been created in 39
states.
"The federal public lands belong to all
America~ and are part of the heritage
and birthright of every citizen," Nl!on
said. "They are the breathing space of
the nation, and it is esential that they be
preserved for future generations."
At the me~ting in bis Oval Office, Nix·
on cited a piece of beach front property
near his San Clemente home as an e.x-
•'l'PI• of ledt,ral J!l'opel'IY, which cao be
conyert!d 1$ pu!>llc. U)le. 1 .
The four·mile·long beach once was part
of the Camp Pendleton Marine reserva·
tion, but it was turned over to the state
of California. Nixon .said, however, that
be learned on July 4 when he visited thp:
beach that it was beiog used by only 2:00
people. At that time he instructed hil
aides to work to accelerate the develoi>'"
ment of the land by adding public
facilities and better access roads.
He used the former Camp Pendleton
land as an example of the close watch
which he said must be kept to make cer-
tain transferred land is put to the fullest
use.
Employe Retirement
Ordinance Approved
EmpJoyes of San .Juan Capistrano will
have to _relire •t , ag~ &1· toUowlng city
C?uncll aPAl'J)val ·.Monday of a ,new
CttY, ordinance,
The retirement .law 3jllllies ·to· all full·
time ~plilyes with tf10 eieeptlrui of the
city manager 1 clerk, treasurer· atiorney
t¥ecUVe ·.officers and membe~s Gf a~
~lnUv~ boards or cornmiuioni. •
1'te only city employe now. over the
age of 65 is city treasurer Allee,~-
. THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(Ori• it?)
HAVJ YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, ~ND IEFORE A SAWMAN
AJIPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DET!RMll'<fE PRICES. ON GOODS NOT.'
MARKED? . '
. MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATEQ ON
THEIR SAMPLES. THE THE 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHA~GE ''WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL BEAR."
'
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE .POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOQ, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
POSSIBIUTY OFA LOWER PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES . ' • 1663 Placllltla Avt.
11 "' COST A MESA ---'"' 646-4138
HOUH: Moo. tin 'l1lln.. t h S:JO -I'll., I 19; _Sot. t:JO to S
1
I
I
i
1
I
' Saddlehaek . -.
Tedar-'s FtUI
N.Y. Steeks '
VOL 6S, NO. 207, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CA.LIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 2S, IW2 TEN CENTS •
Tustin T~.ustees Okay 3.06 Percent Pay Hike
. . .
By CANDACE PEARSON
ot •• OlllY ....... ~ '.j
Tustin Union High 'School District
trustees Monday night approved an
average 3.06 percent sal~y increase for
teacl}ers after more than two hours
discussion marked by standing' ovations,
ca.tcalls, accusations and the ~bainnan's
powuling gavel. •
The teic.'hets , headed by secondary
association president James Wehan,
were asking for a 4.8 percent raise.
'Wehan: i fnatb teacher at Miukm Vie.-
jo Hlil> School, alJo.iWrted that the pay
scale ouWned by the ldminlilrallGn wu
"jllst · plali\ not just" becaUIO driver's
educat!OD tt.cben trill get !IA JI percent
ralae wblle loaa-tlme teachen wlU get
lea °"'I.'·°""' percent T"'-llli:krln BoraiJae WJ!lted lo
delay voti1Ji on 1he "1aiy oeheolUlecl !Or
a ,week eo ·au sides "could getl together
once more'! and more equitably divide up
the paCk.age. • ·,
. '
Board chairman Paul C&lhoun, ob-
viously ruffled by the noisy, 100.strong
audience, said the vote hact to be taken
~onday because "salaries are 85 percent
of the budget" and the budget is due in
early August. ·
Boranian twice moved to have the ac-.
tion delayed -to resounding applause'~
from,teacbers -but hi! motions died for
a Jack of second. On a motion bY Chet
Briner, the board voted 4-1 to approve
the scale, with Borapian voting no.
.Wehan, of Dana Point, repeatedly asked
the board not to pass the schedule while
it was still under negotiation. "Basically
whit I'm asking for is that you treat us
as "1utt men and wumen and not slaves
or llUs IChool llistrict," be said.
Les '.Frances, representing t h e
C8Ufornia Teachers Association, accused
the board of .''blatant violations of the
spirit· of the Winton Act," the Jaw
governing Wary and benefit negotia·
tions.
Senate Ql(s UCI Hospital
But Carpenter . Sees Strorig Fight in Assembly
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of tfM Dll,, Plitt StltH
A bill adding $9I9,llOO to tlie state
budget to' provide plaening funds for a
350-bed ~.;bing hospital at UC Irvine
appear!'d headed for trouble in the
AssemblJ today even tbougb It won
unanimous. approval In the Senate M°'"
day. · ·
State Senator Dennis E. carpenter (R·
Ne.,port lleacb) · drafted the final·bour
Sii I~ alter the ~ture bl\(I cut the
allocation from the budg~t.
A carpenter aide today said the bill is
headed for a "Strong fi~t'" in the
Assembly Ways, aJid Mean Committee.
'Mike' Was Too
Hoi io Ba1Ufle
• u the d!IPatcher ~•·car cru, 11beie are ,.ai" Monday
alterno0n1 ~ reply. c:ould .have
crackled DOCS 0 ... the air illje lldll. "Car ' 44l2 is In the ~g lot
behind lbe atatlon, crubed bilo.car
tt11,"·or words to that effect
Dispalche\I to a sll!"t burglar
alanil, Costa Mesa Patrohnan John
C. Caaey leaped Into car 4412,
·started ' the engine, shifted into
drive aed grabbed the microphone.
The mike t!imed out lo be ted bot
from sitting lo the' closed patrol car
as the summer sun shone through
the' windshield'. "~· beat w.. sufficient to
dlsfraCt this officer's attention,''
Patrolman CUey wrote ln a 1'eport
explajrung' Car 4412 crashed into
Car 4411, ~c;cid~~rtldly. · Jbe aj.Jent alarm call wu aca
tjdental,. too.
'
Retarded School ' .
F.acility Okayed
Tu.stiD Union High Scboot Dist_rict
trustees Monday night approved a hous-
ing agreement for trainable menta1ly
retarded studenls (TMR) in Tustin. '
The studenls will attend the TMR
facility being built in Mission Viejo ad-
jacenl to the J,. Paz Inlennediale School
by the San Jnlquin School District.
The Tustin district will pay San Joa-
quin lo rhouslng the studenls and coots
al!bve those reimbursed by the state.
The TMR f~cil\IY P!<lbably won't be
ready until Jaeuary, so the lllUdenls will
be housed in a TustiJr cburch 1U1til then.
The agreement was for the I9'12-73
school year.
, -
Citizens Unit Sets
'
Voter Signup Drive
A meeting to QrlluiJo a 'fOltt ft8ltlra·
tlon drive for P.-. November; aloclloa will
be held at 8 o'clock tlUs mnlpg In Ibo
University ComnmaltJ j\ ,.. o c! h 11 o n
Clubhouse, 4530 Sandburl V(l{f. lrvlne.
The Orange County Cltlzens for
McGovern is hosting the meeting which
;, open to voters of the 71st Assembly
Distrlct which Includes portions or all of
the cities of Costa Mesa, Newport Beach,
Lagumi Beach, San Clemente, Mission
Viejo and Irvine.
Julie Feeling Better
'
Mter Illnea Bout
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Jul141 fiilpn
El,.nbower wu reported on the ~ U>
...,.very today after a tw .. week bo1J1
With viral pneumonia.
"She's feeUng betjer,• a White 8-
apo-said. But sho was still con·
filed lo the family quarters.
\
Its chance1 oi clearing that committee
are "uncertain,'' the aid~ said, due to the
opposlUoa N AssemblYman Willie Brown
(D-San Francisco).
Brown·bas said he'll oppose any fu~
funding. 9f. university medical (acilities
until facilities to_.aerve lnnel'dty areas are provided.
UCI Vice Cbancelor L. E. Cox said
today. the whole future of ~ medical
school depends nn Assembly approval of
the. pj_anning moneys .and voter approval next fall of a $1ip.9 lnilllon llatewide
heallb sciences !>'>!'I Issue·
While the budget addiUon would pay
for workjng drawings and detailed plans
and specifications ""for the hospital, the
building can't be built without the bond
moneys.
Cox esplained thal about hall of the
total $35 nillion cost of the hospital would
come from the state bonds with the re-
mainder expected to come from federal
sources.
If the Assembly approves the planning
money and the bonds are approved in
November, the hospital cOuld be com·
pleted in early 1976, C.Ox said.
The facility would aJ\ow the U<;!·
California College o! Medicine to double
its entering class size from M to 128
medical students.
] ohnson Put in Hospital
' tFor Cbest r.aim,. Nftftse ·
• • , SAN AJ'ft'ONIO !UPll -Former P...-Lyndo{I B. Johnson )\al been.
hospltaliled becaUIO of chest ,pains and
nausea. But 'dOcton said 'there was no in-·
dicatlon .be had auffired another bear!
attack. ,
"It may be oeveral days before .any
definite conclU!.lons can be drawn about
the . nature of his present ~.·•' a
Woolworth Heir
Revenilow Dies
In: Plane Crash
·ASPEN, Colo. (UPI) -' La n c t
Reventlow, heir to the 'Woolworth fiv,e-
and-di.me fortune and ron Of Barbara
Huton, one of the world's rlcbest
women; 11WJ been kllied ,with three Other
per~ in the crasii Monday of a small.
plant JD ' the Colorado Rockies, law of·
ficers disclosed lOday.
Reventlow, ~. a sports car racer who
was given the Utle of Hthe world's richest
baby" al birth, w .. killed In the cruh
during a heavy tbunderslonn aoout IO
miles north of this Colorado resort.
Reventlow ,had been•surveylng a tract-
.~ land be want~ to buy, officlall .said.
Killed with lili)1 wero the pilot· and·two ·
other passengers, all unidenWied.
The craft llammed into a wooded
mountainside eight miles from the
nearest road. Sherill Clroll. Whitmire
said t~ wreckage wu spotted by
ariothel p!aiie. 1:,_ crew reached the
·~ Monday nicJll .... conflnned that ,all
aboard were dead .'" ·
IU!venUow married actress Jill St.
John on March 24, I!IO, In San Francisco.
They. were dlvorc.eclJIJ". , on NoV. a. JIM, "!ll lilarrled starlet
Heryle ·,lfoldrlc1ge, tbeil It. The only
relaUve wbo attended the Weddlnl was
(See LANCs, Pap I)
• ' -
' ...
Brooke Army H~tal 'bulletin said.'
•;However: at , 10 p.m. ·he wu1 com~
fortable, in excellent spirit!: and his
general condition wa·s quite satisfa~ry.
.. There have ~n.no irregularities in
the heart rhythm or blood presaure."
Johnson bas suffer"!I !Wo heart attacks
-a severe one in 1955 and a second ooe
last April during .a visit to bis daughter
Lynda and her husband Charles Robb in
Charlottesville, Va.
He was hospitalized three weeks foi
treatment of his ~nd heart atlack, and .
had been scheduled to travel 60 miles
from the LBJ Rinch l<Mlay for a 'routijle ·
checkup. Instead, 'Ille . hot!pital said.
Johnson was Down to the hospital ahead
·of schedule when· thl!! pains and nausea occurred Monday night.
"He was Down 1o &n Antonio by a
private plane based at bis ranch and was·
admitted to Brooke Hospital at 9:15 p.m.
for observation," the statement said.
Dr.· Robert L. North, chief of medicine
at Brooke, was placed. in charge of the
case. Johnson has a hospital penthotise
sulte permanently·at liis dispo8al.
The 36th president was released from
Brooke April 25 after recovering from
the heart attack he suffered in Virginia,
and baa made several public ap.-
pearances since then.
The most recent was 1ast Saturday
night when Johnson, tan1led and sporting
longish hair, attended,a play at the ~
State Park Auditoriurq Jn Stonewall,
Tex., not far from his ranch. The play,
11A 'Raisin in the SUD" was presented in
his honor by the speech department of
Johnson 's alma mater, southwest Texas
State Unlv~lty of. ~n. ~cos.
Johnson suffered a near fatal heart at·
taclt i~ I9SS when he was Senate majority
leader. For years alter that attack he
gave up bis habit of -king three packs
of cigarettes a day, but resumed smokinr
in 1971.
-Johnson was also hospitalized briefly In
1t:arch of !l10 for a relatell heart ali-
ment, angina pectoris,, or a hardening of
the heart's arteries.
'
That increase also is depend,ent on ad~
ditional classroom and 1 a b o r a t o r y
buildings to be built with the state bond
moneys. Projects supported by the bond
ftµids amount to about $55 million in·
eluding the $I7.S million state share of
the teaching ,hospital. The remainder of
the bond money would provide a medical
sCience building, a clinical science
building and possibly a stjlool of nursing.
Cox noted that a delay in the Assembly
pasaage of the hot!pital plaDning bill would
hold up construction, perhaps .for a year.
Once all fwids are availab1e the project
will take at least 30 months, Cox said,
OIJBTER1" &.O.. 1APJ -Democratic
vice ·.Preiidel!tlal nomlbee Sen. Thomu •
F.:Eagletoo di~ loday bel!ad ·volun-·
tarily hot!Jiit"llzed himself ' three times '.
between 1980 and 1968 "for ·nervous ex· r
haustion and fatigue.i 11 but that since then .
ht !\as enjoyed "good · sound, ·solid
heaJth."
8el). George McGO 'V.ern '", the ·
Democratic presidential nominee, said he ·
had no~ known· about the hospitalizations
wbell he picked Eagleton to be his run-
ning mate, bbt added, "I am fully
satisfied~' by his explanation., McGovern
applauded Eagleton's "good judgment"
in seeking·.inedical aid when he·needed it.'
Eagleton ouUined his. medical history
after a morning of conferences ·with
M~vem ·at bis vacation retreat In the
Black Hills of SOuth Dakota, saying that
the American -people were entiUed to the
full story about rumors througbOut his
career about his health.
Ex-dean Facing
Trial in Theft
A former assistant dean of students at
UC Irvine has been ordered to face trial
Sept. IS in Orange County SUperior Court
on charges that. he pocketed more than
$1,000 from· the school's loans-to-students program.
Judge William Murray set the trial
date: for Robert Edward Sharpe, 43, of
l« Angeles. Sharpe II free an his prom-
ise to .appear for trial.
District attorney's investigators ar-
res~ Sharpe shortly after they were
called lo the school by UC! officials who
unc.'Overed one of two complaints subse-
quently filed against the official.
It \s alleged that Sharpe diverted II,060
to his own use. while obtaining loana for
two UC! students.
POWs .. Rap ~i~on-.Fonda
,
Actress Says Prisoners Want McGovern to Win
PARIS (AP) -J-Fonda, back from
Hanoi, 11)'1 a croup of American war
pr-.S ..ad bor lo i.n their parenls
11111 frlmda .. ·• for the. victory of Sea.• 0-.. lldlooern because "they
fear If 1'11111 ...,. In olllce they wtD be pr'-,._,.. .
'ibe -aclmowledpcl that the bad that ....., pr_,. • met c..:: rnea,.. !Gr ...,.. ot people,
a wm1111 wbo wwtl la an °'MP coanty
supermarket, urJia1 the111 to defeat
Prealdmt Nllllll la the November
pmldeotlal elocllan.
Tbe pr!-, -""purple and red
striped uniforms, -ihown In a silent
color film Miss Fonda ·made during her
North Vielnam visit July-Mlc'l'bereat ot-
the film, emphasizing what lbe actresa
Clllldler1 14.bo ~te American at.
-• Ille ;.;;;vietil"-e dika .,....., ....... J-'m black Viet Cong
tjpe pojlma poDll and a black 1\shlrt tom1ll ,... flollla. Jane, wading'
UINlllb bollb "'1111 aed Jane with a
loabllll *-.I -ber lle<k, peer-
.. OIJl lo tfii 1'orlai\. I
Tiii -adlnowledged that lloO bad made daiJ1 ..._. over Hmil ndlo
~ II "-lean aervlcemcn, bul d~
not ttply dll1Clly lo a qua1loD aballl ~
••
' . statement by· IU!p. Fletcher Thompson
(R-Oa.). that treuOa.qbargea abould be
llfought against her.' • . .
i.. She a.sterted however, '11· did not a:ay
-what I a111 accuaed of saying,", referring
aPlllttfttlY to reporta she Oiled troops to
disobey Qtders, M1ai Fonda laid she
woald produce Ibo text.I of her broad·
easts la New York an Friday.
Triveling lhroush Nortb Vietnam,
!Illa Fonda sald, led her to beli.,.. "pro-
foundly lblt mt.. are being bombed on J.111._." 'l1le U.S. government has
dented the •-lion of the tactic which
WGoild ........ ,!bi llves ai thousands of
ti:OrC11 VletaO-,
The audience was sprinkled with
teachers' families and co n1 n1 unity
members, drawn to the meeting by
teachers lobbying for suppOrt this
weekend in shopping centers and special
mailings.
A few parents expressed opposition to
the . board's action and said that if
teachers were unhappy it would carry in·
to the classroom.
Teachers jeered when Briner said the
cost-of-livi~g was up 6.6 percent for a
t\VO year period, in this area not 5.$ per-
cent for one year as Wehan had quoted
President Nixon's payboard.
Briner and other board members told
the teachers. who Wehan characterized
later as "extremely frustrated," they
could continue negotiations to amend ·the
package later.
The board's representative in meet and
confer, associate superintende nt Jack
Schumake r, said earlier the two 1ldes
· (See ~JES, Page %)
j . ~ I ~ . • .AA_tLY PIL.OT St•ff , ....
TEACHERS ENLIST..'F~ILlES IN .flGHT ,FOR MORE MONEY
. • ' Appo1I' Falla to Sw1y Tustln~f:iool Board
' ..
~~ohe·.on 'PoJice .Copters __
' '
Slated for 'Newp.ort.:,~~~h
' ' By L. PETER KRIEG
· Of 1!1t PIOY ,llot• Stiff
Newport Beach's police helicopters,· the
subject of contfoversy since they took to
the air nearly two )'.ears ago1 are· going to
get CioSe scrutiny at a s~ial city coun~
ell public hearing in September.
Before then. the council's Intercity
Li3ison Committee will meet · with
neighboring comm'l"ili,;. t~t have
helicopters lo inves~gate llMo, possibility
of a coast saving cooper~t,i.ve patrol
C.witilmari Paul Ryckolf proposed the
Sepl. 11 bearlllg cit!Dg a l,etle~ signed by '
IS residenls urging th~t helicop~ be ,
kept out of the sides excepl In emergen·,
cieS.
"I'm concerned about the patrol'
aspects,'' Ryckoff said this morning,,
•:whelher they should be on the ground
on call. or up ,in the ·alr cruisihg all tbJ?,
time."
'RycRoff salil In no.way Is he proposlllg_
elimlnation ot the· helicopters. /
. '
ciJ meeting ·to-voice -their approval," he
said.. . . SigQatu~s On the letter that triggered
Ryckofr! proposal came mainly from
residents ; 1n ' the Harbor View Hills ..
Corona del Mar area although two are
Balboa residen15. .
0 1 ~e UJCre are some people in
the communitY, wbo are·disturbed by the
noise of the helicopter," Glavas said. "I
recog$e also that the helicopter as a
pblice patrol vehicle has lound wide ac-
ceptance in " law --.. enforcement circles
across the nation.
"It is both econornlcal and effective,"
be said. •
"Newporf Beach bas found the
belicopler 'e\>en fu~ effictlve tbaii !nOst
cities .by "''""' or ;(a at y p 1 ca 1 topography," the .chief~· ......
"I'm not, c11aaesting we do awa)'· witlf · • , ~ I them," he said. 0 But they're really onei
of our most controversial things and the)'•
should be airel publicly."
Ryckof( said !be poiice department' '
should' keep Jll!>re o! a log of bcllcopter . . . ' achv1Ues. •.
"Maybe this will come-out of It (tl\e
hearing) -It . would b6 more of a
justification," be aa1d. ,,. · ·
"If it accomplishes !Is PID'JlOM lllll
ought to be made known," he said!
Police ·Chier B. Jame• Gljlvu thlr
rooming replied by poiotlng ou~ thal the
department does keep a dally log of
helicopter acllv!Uos.
"He (Byckoff) perhaps has never seen
It," GJavas aatd.
Clavu alto defended the need lo• the
helicopters. ' • •
"It would be regretlable If those people
who value safety and JOCUrl~ in Ilia
communily don't come out for lh1a ..,...
•
I • ' More sunAhine on the agenda for
Wednesday along u.. cxance Coast,
. with temperatures once again near
' IO 'lnllin'd. Beach hips on'...nd•
70 are expected. Lows -.'
INSmE. TOD~ 1'
Ob1m>Ors, who ·~ m 1,11. k~, sav tllen ;., .,., clMmci"
thOt a Viet.am' ctQ$e-flrt !Dill lie
reached· l>tfort • 111< N ..... ~
praid<fllillL ffCctiOAI. Sn olorJI, Paq• 4.
L,M. Ml t
Cal..,_ S
OMl!ffM ... C...ln ' 14 -.. 0..-Wil ... .. ••111r111 ,... • • ........ ts ,..... "'" ........ ,.
~ L.MWt ,,
•
•
J DAILY Pit.OT IS
. ' You~lis· Held
Alter Murder
.r...r.!i.-,:.'"'1'1111'":
of a 7$-yeON>ld let cream
...,dQr who ,..fused to hind over
less thao '5 he bad accumulated in
omall c~e. Police said tbe dead man, lden-
tlfled u Sandy Recd, a pensioned
war veteran, ran from b i a
pu&hcarl, shouted for nearby •P•""
ment dwellers to call the police and
was shot by one oi two youths when
be returned to Ibo cart to protect
· bis merchandite. Pollca said the youths were both
15 yeara o1d. One was charged with
murder and the other wlth armed
robbery, police said.
Solon Seeks
Antiwar Bill
Showdown
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
w. Brooke (ft.Mus.), a 11 um in g
leadenhlp of the Stnat.e't antiwar forces,
tO!laT prwed for anothtr ahowdown on
the wllhdrawal ol U.S. troops from
lndocJ!lna In txehanie for lhe rtltue ol
~pr-· Tbe Senoto adopted the far-reaching
amendmelll Monday lhtn nuJIUled the
action by ldlllng Ibo $1.I billion lorelp
millltry aid bill to which It wu atteched.
Brooke immediately announced he
would offer tbt amendment to the $20.1
billion· mlilltry prccurement bill, now
pending in tbe Senate.
'!'be amendment would withdraw all
U.S. forces uland, sea, and air" ff(lm
lndocblna lour months alter enactment ii
th POW• were releued.
'!'be lltOllC coalition wblch put the
amendment Into tbe bill end rtlllled el·
forts to take It out, collapoed on the *42
vote on the lorelp aid meuure.
Strong ~· of anUwar Jq!Jla•
tlon, lncludina Senate Dem6cratlc leader
Mike Manllleld end Sen. J. Wllllam
Fulhrltbl. could no\ vote !or the fqrelen
aid bill allbou&b ·tt Included the amend-
menl
Sens. Georae S. McGovern and Thoma•
F. EaJJoton, the DemocNll' ·national
ticket, m1ued the votet
Tbe lortlsti I inrutary u.i.tana. pro.
cram 4pPeand to be 1n ~· _ ..• 1• ''That'• lb, end of the ·bl!~·· ~~ chalnull ol the Senate For.Jin Jlill.
tlons oommltlee, ,.Jd.
Mamfteld .. Id he voted qalmt
military Uliltanct to forelp natlona,
whlcb·be lw Joni~-the bill had "too much In IL"
Fulbright ..id be WU not IDied
that the anilwar llllllldmont to falL
But tho lar.ruchlng anUwar pro_.,
had II paued, laced a dlfllcult letl ln the
H .... and even If It aucc:eeded In getUng .
through Congreu, Senate GOP leader
Hu•h Scott predicted a Nixon veto.
Tbe Senate Ignored 1 t r o n g ad·
ministration pre.asure and a stem wem-
ing that passage of the amendment
would hurt the peace talks.
It voted for the amendment twice. The
Sena\e incorporated the amendment into
the bill ~ end then blocked an attompt
.. kill It, 4M6. '
'"Ibis amendment could scuttle the
Paris peac.e tatks," Sen. J,ohn C. Stennis
CO.Miu.), 'warned. "StnslUvo, delicate,
thing• are going on that may have a
bearing on ending this war.
"The effect of this amendment would
to toke pressure off Hanoi and put It on
the President."
But Sen. Frank Church (0.ldaho),
replied 11we are alwaya told this ls not
the proper time.
'1Ut1s not back away,"' he urged.
"Let'• not aeLze defeat tn tbt moment of
\•ictory."
The amendment wu the combined
handicraft of two Rtpubllcana, Sen. John
Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and
Brooke.
OUNel COAST II
DAILY PILOT
' lM°'Mfl C...t ~ILV PILOT, wtfll Mlk"
h amblftllll tN N,....P,..._ II Mil"* W ""-Or'llltt (0611 P\11111.iilftl COmlltfl,, S..,..
nl• Cilllfte •f'9 lllUIJI ....... MMll•Y "'"""It
Frld•Y· tor °"'• 111\ne, fll••PIM'f ••tch,
HW!!llneNn 9•1dl.IF01,1nlllift Valley, LatVM
9"dl, lr't'IM/"41111ltbldt w.d S.11 C""-1•1
S.11 J11U1 C•ol1lr•r.o. A 511111• rt0IOMI
•ltlM ii fllbl~ S.f\lnllP ..... lillllll"'°
rN "1!K1.,.1 PU&llsh1111 -"'"' i. ., m w.-.1 ••r lilrtet, C.OU• M... C•llfor11ll, DIJ6.
Robert N. WeN
Prtl~ .... Pvtlllhtt
J•clf ft, C111rl1y
Y1¢t '"'ld'"t .... o.ntr11 ~
Th•m•t K••'+'il ElllW
1'heM•t A. M11rp~i11•
Mtinlelllll lllllW
thtri" H. L..•• lich•r4 P. Nall
All/MM! MM'lllOlnl l4Utr1 -CO.I• M .. : a Wfft lty 11f'ltt
tilt'WW1 httf!; laJa ~~ 10\lle't'IAI
Llfl!M ~I 221 ll'Ol'ftt A't'tll!W
tfWltlllftM ... ctn 11111 9Mdl ewiw1r11
.. fl CltfMlltll .. """' IJ CIM1-a.I
, ....... (7141 '42-4111
Cl ...... '°4Ntf ... '41•1671
S. C' "' Al .. ,,,.MWIJ
11klf I 4f2-44JI
, "" Q'lllfl '9MI flWllilfrllfll , .,. ..,. ...... RM!rtlllftl. ,,.... ... .....,,ltttnltltt .......
... ,, ................ .-cltl ..,. .............. .....,.
..... dRI ,....... ..,, ., a.t• Mitt.
~ .......... 11r ttrrltr Jl,U ="'' " 19111 ... ,. fMfltl!lrl flllllltrt INI• UM MllttlN.
'
Child I Education Hit Extra Land
lturke Battles Riles on $25 Million 'Plan Gets Study
'
117 JGIN MU.Ill
CH.llt .........
HunUngton Beach A 11 .. m b I y m • n
Robert Burke bu locked horns with
State Superintendent of Publlc Instruc-
tion Willon RUes over a $25 mUlloo Early
Childhood .Education Plan now pending
before the ~gl!lllturo.
The conservative West Orange County
RepubUl'IUl '"YI the state school chief's
plan is too costly, too innovative, and
po$Slbty harmful. and he urges thorough
study before even limited funding is ap-
proved.
f\iles, who has made reform ot school·
ing from kindergarten through third
grade a major thrust er his ad·
mlnl!tratlon, claims the plan i 1
necessary to cut down tbe ''appalling
number of children who can't read ade-
quately at the end or the third gr8de, and
so are already doomed to school failure."
The Early Childhood Educ.ation Plan is
now before the state Senate as part of a
Sl.2 billion tax reform and school finance
measure that has the backing of both
Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob
Moretti and Republican Governor Ronald
Reagan.
The education plan, which could cost
SSM million over five years, has two
main parts:
-It would bring a gradual but fun·
damental restructuring or schooling in
t~ primary grades by lowering the
adult-to-student ratio from 3G-to-1 to 10-
to-1 with the use of parent volunteers and
paid aide1. The aim would be to
"guarantee" that every child mastered
basic reacting and math skills by the end
of the third grade.
-The proposal also calls for enrolling
four·Year-olda in school on a voluntary
basis in order to take advantage of what
educators believe is a much greater
leamlng ability than they will have later
In life. FtmdJni for thla part di the Early
Chlldbood program, however, is not in.
eluded Jn tbe f25 mllllon 'now under con·
alderatlon.
Burke lw lambuted the plan as an
"un_trled, unteste,d proposal that could
result In harm lo our children."
He aaya the plan "can only be in-
terpreted as an attempt by the
super1ntenaent of pubUc Instruction lo
build bis Image and satl!!y the 'hang the
e1penae' education innovators w b o
elected hlrn." ,,,
Burke ~ eapeclally opposed to th.,,..._
polal for bringing f0ur-year-olda 1,. the
achoOI aystem. He says this OP"' the
door for "rulhleu plannera" to mold the
~Ute of . tJie aludenll at llD early q~, Ind .. YI prHchool educajlon should bl' left to church Ind private operations.
Be further atlacu tbe inclusion of tbe
early childhood plan In a tax reform and
acbool finance package. '11 don't believe tlla\:f the finanClal burden of an ex-
P!f program that could cost $350 1riilUDn over the nei:t few years has
anything lo do with tax relief:" Inalead
·he 110uld llke to,.. the education reiorm
considered aa a separate issue and
debated in the regular education com·
mltteea ol the ~glslature. Burke ls a
member of the Assembly Education
Committee.
"It is obviously untrue that. this pro--
gram is qnproven," Riles counters. "The
things we want to do have been around
for years. We just want a chance to put
them into practice."
On bringing four·year-olds into schools,
From Pagel
LANCE .•.
Cary Grant, a Conner husband of Miss
Hutton'a.
Reventlow was an avid sports car
enthuaia.st and polo player. He built and
drbve Grand Prix racing cars and
developed hjs own racing engine.
Born in Feb. 24, 1938, be was the most .
guarded baby In the world. An elaborate
burglar a1ann was installed to protect
him as an Infant. Complications from his
caesarean delivery left Ws mother
fragile and sbe WH unable to.regain the
strongth she lost.
rQUarrels over RevenUow's education
led to Miu Hutton's divorce from
Lance's father in 1938 .ln Copenbagen. A
custody light over the chlld lasted seven
years.
His personal fortune was estimated at
between $50 mllllon and $100 million.
On his 25th birthd1y, his mother gave
him a $SOO,llOO home In Beverly Hills.
He was the son of Miss Hutton's mar-
riage to Danish Count CUrt von
Haugwitz-Reventlow.
"So you were born with brown e.y11,·'
he would tell friends. "! wu bom with
money. Jt just makes llfe convenient."
His mother, the cranddaugbter of F. W.
\Voolworth, Inherited the five and dime
store fortune and Is sun regarded a• the
world's richest woman. Miss Hutt.on wu
married sit times.
When RevenUow was asked about hla
mother, an he would say was, "I admire
my mother."
Mayors Attack
U.S. Policies
WASHINGTON (UPI) -MayOr& of.
American cltl.,, large and medhun .. lzed,
told a S.nat• committee today federal
pollcltl "bavt Cirfven the plil!hl or
American cities to crisis proportions."
At th• same time, the mayort pral!td
P""ident Nixon for hl• revtnue aharlng
propoull pending beforw the S.nata
F.inanct Committee.
•
lWot .. ,., "I tBbllt ~ i..t -enoogll to decide wbelher their cbild II
ready for actloo1 or not. Snice tt will be
voluntary, the choice will be theirs. The
very rich have always bad preschools for
their children, and more recently, the
poor and welfare familles have had
them. l think lt's time for the majority of
people wbo are in the middle lo have the
Opportunity!'
Riles said that including the education
measure in a tax package is legitlmate
because "you need money to have a pro--
gram, and this is the way you get the
money."
Riles contends that the reforms con·
ta1ned In Ute Early Olildhood Plan are
guaranteed to be 1uccessful becauae
"each district will have to set acceptable
a:oaJJ and objectives ror itsell in ord,er to
quaUfy for funding, and if ll doesn't meet
those marks, it won't be refunded. Thia lo
the fln1 time in C&llfornia that we have
ever done this on a man scale."
The total $1.2 bllllon package -whlch
would in one fell 1woop lower school prop-.
erty taxea, increase the level of school
support, and increaae the state sales tax
by one ctnt -passed the state Senate
Committee of Tax and Revenue 1a·st
week and is now before the Senate
Finance Committee.
By NiXon
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre~denl Nix·
on said today lt Is rldlcuknls for tht
Federal government to own over half the
land in some Weatern states, but aides
said later the White House was glvlna no
thougbt to dispolln& otany of the West's
millions of acres ot public tSomain land.
Klusmann Re-elected
The chief etecutive's comment came
as be met in his Oval Office with
members of the Federal Property
Review Board which has been han dl·
Ing the admin1atratiot1'1t effort to convert
UlUe·usod federal properly inl<> state and
local parks. Polntlna to a map of the United States
which 1hol)'ed ~ 144 ~arcels of land
tranalerred under the Legacy of Parks
program, Nixon observed that the federal
government waa owner of more than half
the and in some Rocky Mountain and Scout District Chief Se-ndStar Western staes. •
\Ves H. Klusmann, of San Juan
Capistrano, has been re-elected chairman
or the El Camino Real Boy Scout District
at the District's Annual election.
Serving with Klusmann will be four
vice-chainnen, each representatives of
the various sections of the district,
Graydon Oliver, Laguna Beach; John
Hendricks, Laguna Niguel; Robert Dur·
rans, Mission Viejo, and Alan Peterson
Costa Mesa.
Mission Viejo resident Jack Ellis will
succeed W. T. Bradberry of San
Clemente as District COmmlssloner. Of.
licers start their new terms Sept. l.
Elected to serve as members-at-large
on the Districl COmmittee are Leon
Evans, and Ragnar Engebretsen, Mission
Viejo; Dr. Maurice Mason and Charles
Hess, Laguna Beach; Leo Fessenden,
Roy Phillipa, · Thomas Dette, Ben
McLane, Michael Johnson end WUey Ser·
ing of San Clemente: Mrs. Patricia
Christiansen, Wllllam A. Bathgate and
Edward H. Saxton of San Juan
Capistrano; Donald Frankel and Law·
S. Viets Battle
Into Quang Tri;
Resistance Low
SAIGON (AP) -South Vlelnamese
paratroopers have batUed into the night
in their drive to rocapture Quang Trl's
19th century Citadel from diebard rem·
nants or a North Vietnamese occupation
force.
By evening, army spokesman Lt. Col
Do Dang Bo reported "enemy resistance
is weakening." There was no word on
casualties.
Bo exprtosed hope tbe South Viet-
namese flag could be raised over the old
walled fortress Wedne&day to eymboliie
lhe end of enemy rule in the battered
provincial capital, occupied by North
Vietnamese forces since May 1. 1
"The fighUng ls continuing," Bo told
newsmen in Hue. "I think many No~h
Vietnamese were kllled I do not think
any eacaped."
There were conflicting claims on the
recapture of the Cllldel. South Viet·
namese military spokesmen in Saigon
sald it had been retaken.
An army communique issued in Hue
said government troops entered the
fortress at 10 :20 a.m. But newsmen at
the front could not verify this because
South Vietnamese soldiers fired warning
shots over their beads when they trled to
approach the battle zone.
Associated Press correspondent Denni!
Neeld ,..ported from Quang Tri that con-
tinuous machine-gun, mortar a n d
arUllery lire was heard from the Citadel
area for most of the day.
South Vietnamese planes dropped
napalm into the Citadel before the lnltlal
asaault by two airborne companlea total·
in,g about fOO men. American planu
previously blaaled two holes In the
Citadel's walls with lllf:r-gulded smart
bombs and spokesmen tn Saigon said a
third breach wu made Tuesday night by
South Vletnameoe bombera.
The paratroopers ran into withering
enemy fire at they advanced through the
northeast Will of tbe fortreu, Neeld oald,
but Ibey managed to suppreas aome of It
with counterbattery shelling at close
quarters.
Fishing Derby
Prizes Awarded
Two boya, from Newport B .. ch and
Fountain Valley, took the top prizes In
the !Jrat lrvbte all-city fllhlng derby.
RecretUOD coordinator Brian Clark ...
day announced the wlrmera ol pr1ul In
the Saturday event al Bonita Caeyon
Reeervolr.
Seo« Temll, 15, ol 1'2$ Port Charlee
Ploce, llatbor View Homa, Newport
Beach, "°" llrlll place for bll three-fllb
calcb. lle'll receive a rod end rte! from
the Irvine Kiwanis Olllb.
Second place wlmttr lo 1lllM Conway,
16, of lOllf Momlnc Glory St., Jl'ounteln
Valley. Irvine Jayceea ~·a llablnf
rod .
rence Lazotte of Laguna Niguel: Carl
Smith and Richard Dickey of Capistrano
Beach; Jay Reynolds, Dana Point ; Bret
Lund, Roger Summers and Jerry Wollen·
den of Costa Atesa and Donald Williams
of Newport Beach.
Named as committee chairmen are:
Ted Rowley, Activities Committee art:
Frankel, Camping; Stephen Rackleff,
Conservation; Robert Durrans, Finance;
Wylie Serllng, Organization and Ex·
tension; Ed Saxton, Public Relations;
and Mike Johnson, Leadership Training.
Change in Viejo
Boundary Slated
By School Board
Trullees of the Capistrano Unified
School District took steps Monday to cor-
rect a Mh1slon Viejo boundary which
would slice in hall 36 plaoDed rtsidential
lots.
The boundary change involves two
Mission Viejo Company tracbs.
The first Is proposed tract 9722 in the
viclnity of Marguerite Parkway and
Trabuco Road. There, about 99 single
family homes and 26 acres are involved.
The second trade area is located on the
side of Trabuco · Road between Alicia
Parkway and Loo Aliso Boulevard. The
area contains 114 acres and would have
about 413 homes. The development is an
ei;pans.ion of the company's Barcelona
home program.
The boundary change would subtract
portions of tbe tract from the San JG8•
quin dl!tricl and add tbem to the
Caplatrano dl!trlcl.
Allhougb approved by the Capiatrano
trusteea Monday, the changes must now
be approved by other districts in the area
and the county school committee on
district organization.
Hinshaw Slates
Irvine Address
Orange County Aaseasor A n d r e w
Hinshaw, Republican candidate for the
391h Congresalonal oeal wm apeak Friday
at a dinner meeting of the South Coast
a.publican Forum in the Alrporter Inn,
Irvine. The South Coast GOP group draws
member• from lrvlne and the Sad·
dleback Valley.
A no-bosl reception at 7 p.m. will be
followed by dinner at a p.m. Tickets are
15 per person and reservatlona may he
made by calling 133-2382.
tlr1g. lien. James F. Hamlet
has become the second Negro
in Army history to achieve
two-star rank. The 50-year·old
Ohioan was 32nd 011<a list of S4
brigadiers nomlnate'd. for pro-
motion to major general.
County Planners
OK El Toro Road
Alignment Move
In a 3·2 vote split, Orange County plan-
ning commissioners Monday recom·
menC:ed modifications in a proposed 2.6-
mile alignmeyit of El Toro Road between
Trabuco Road and Cook's comer.
The commissioners endorsed a plan--
ning department report which said that
the 2.6 mile stretch of roadway should be
moved about 100 feet easterly to
minimize the environmental impact on
the Aliso Creek Flood Plain.
Two weeks ago the Board of
Supervisors. failing to resolve a dispute
between the planning and r o a d
departments, sent the road proposal back
to lhe commission for an envtronmefttal
Impact statement revision. The matter
will be before the supervisors again on
Aug. 1.
Property owners ln the ~ wame4
supervlsora that they will reaclnd an of·
fer of dedication of right-of.way anti
about 67 acres of flood plain to the couil.·
ty il the alignment Is cbanged.
The planning department plan accepted
by the commissioners calls for county
acquisition of an additional 9.S acres ot
property.
Commissioners Howard K. Smith of
Huntington Beach and Dan Foley of
Fullerton voted against the department
plan on grounda that It would jeopardize
the property owners land gift.
Road department officials warned
supervisors that the long delayed El Toro
Road realignment was urgent becau.se of
severe traffic safety problems resulting
in many accidents and more lhan ten
deaths in the past two years.
Fishing Boat Sinks;
Five on Board Saved
SANTA MARIA (AP) - A 33-foot com·
merclal fishing boat sprang a leak ~d
•ank off Point Sal Monday night. The
Coast Guard rescued the fJve peraona
aboard unhurt. ,
The Volpe, owned by Bob Balil,t'!W.!f of
El Monte and John Sllvkolf of lliclenda
Heights, bad departed Wilmington Satur·
day night.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or i• it?)
"That's rldici.ilous," ·he said. "\Ve don't
need it."
lie didn't elaborate 'vhile newsmen
were in his office for the start of the
meeting, but officials said later Nl.xon
was refetTing '° a cate1ory known as ac.
quired land -ilOt to the public domain
land which I! often reaoed for livestock
grazing .
Presidential counselor D o n a 1 d
Rums!eld, a member of the property
review board, told newsmen, ''We have
not even looked at the question of public
domain land.''
Nothing the President said at today's
meeting "was meant to apply to public
domain land," Rumsfeld sald. ·
The review 'board'a execuUve director,
Darrell M. Trent, nld some public lier
main Jand had been taken eatUer tor
such me u mWtary resrvati.ons and no
longer ii under control of the Bureau Of
Land Management. This, he indicated.
might become avallable for tranafer to
state and local governmenta fO'r the
Legacy of Parka program.
After the meeting, Nixon lltued a
statement saying be wu plealld that the
144 new parb bad been cruted 'In 39
states.
"The federal publlc !Inda belong to all
Americans and are part of the heritage
and birthright of every cltlzen," Nixon
said. "They are the breathing space of
the nation, and it is esential that they be
prtserv~ lor future generations."
At the ~ting In hla Oval Office, Niz.
on cited a piace of beach front properly
near his San Clemente borne as an ex·
ample of federal _ property which can bl
converted to pub~ uae.
•• ' -,
FromPflfel
SALARIES •••
. .
were at the point of "dl!agreelng what to
do about pera!Jtenl d!Jagreement."
The teachera left the board m .. u.,
early, boldlng their picket •lina which
they bad carried in a l'all< eround the
Tustin lllah calelerla prior to the
meeUng.
Tnuteu lhtn approved unanimously a
4.4 pereent ra111 !or admln!Jtratora,
which Schumaker seld would btlnt tbem
up to county average, and 1 thrte per·
cent plus '90 fringe benefU for daHilled
employes.
The $90 frlngt beneflt for emplnyes
with dependen!J alao appUeo to teachers.
Clas.s!fled employe1 probably wll!
rosume negollatlona In Sep I ember,
Schumaker apologl!ed for 1JpeiJdlng ao
litUe urne ·With them, b.u; said the
cerUflca.r.d teacberi meeUn~tl,,'bad push-
ed .themtaatde. • , ' 11 The rlille for ltacMr& u!)l;tbt "'Sin-
ning aallll'Y from $7,IOO to fTIJ!ll, Which :r1ner ~d w .. third hlghest.t the coun-
The three 11lary area ~ 1rm' cost
about $320,ooO, a dlltrlcl offlclal Wd to-
day. •.I ·
'
HA VE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, '.AND BEFORE A SAWMAN · •
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES.ON GOODS NOT.
MARKED? i
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON I
THEil SAMPLES. THE THE 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN '
CHARGE ''WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL BEAR."
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMl'LIS SO
TH~T CUSTOMERS CAN IROUSE THROUGH THE SILICTIONS ANQ,
KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THEREISALWAJSTHE
POSSIBILITY OF A I.OWE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WAUANT.
'
!tt•17,, ~ ~ r1 I ~-" J1~~~0 ,111 :~
j I / • ·-, ----1' I -.·--·c.~
l -·: ----...· .... -· ...,.. __ ..... --_, .. , ., . .
ALDEN'S
CARPns • DRAPES
1663 Placllltla An. ' COSTA Mii.A
64M8JI
HOUllS: Mtt. ttn ........ t It ltJO -1'11., t It t -Ill. t :JO 11 I Two "'"°"' up, boll! !ram IrWie. ~"'' announced today. Tbey are Mlkl-~Mln and Bill Parlsia, Clark llld. ----------------------------------------------~~~~~~--'
t I
I
·1
•
l
"onii!ngton Beaeh
~~ir\:.F.ouniaia Valley
,_
YOL 65, Nf). 207, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JUESOAY, JUlY 25, 1972
•
•
Teday's JfiUI . -
--TEN CENTS . -·
Buildi"=g Chief Keeps Ear on Noises
By MICHAEL GOODRICH .Ujidlr Ille J'ourlloln Valle)' noise
ot -. IM"1 '"" SIMI ~ wbldl wem. lnto effect last
In the past 10 morilhs Dick Hubbell has Odolier, tbe eily ii divided into thr<e
•pent a good deal of tbne chasing ice ~ aoetiooa, eecb with lta own
cmm trucks, crashing rock band prec-doy ind nlgh!llQll -levels.
!ices llld llstenlng to swlmmlng pool . ·u a ""!dent bell..,. there ii exceqlve
pumps.. . noiae in his neigJiborbood, he can contact
·Sound a little ~ntric? Not if you,'re Hubbell ln the city building department
In Cila!"P ~ enforcing !be Fountain and •k-lhat-a noise reading be taken.
Valley noise ordinance, the job assigned When the noise .syrpasses the level set
to .Hubbell. th~ tlty'a aenior bultdlng in-· down 'for the partlculer zone, Hubbell
1pector. \ must~ some way ~ muffling. Jt Or
eliminating It allogether.
"<Nr purpose lsn1 to find noile
Violators llld prooecute them, but to find
aolutions· for noise problems In the city,"
says Hubbell. "People bave to make 1
living and we try to find ways for them
to do that without bothering t h e l r
neighbors."
Hubbell's most recant recurring com·
plaint involved ice cream trucks. "Some
mothers complained that the 90ng from
the trucks would wake ·their youngsters
up from their naps In the afternoon,"
asid Hubbell.
So the noise eofon:er chased down
three ice cream trucks and metered their
loud lnllable>. "U they were above the ac-
coptable level I would bave them turn
down the oound while I measured ii with
my sound level meter. Once they reached
the right !eve~ I had them mart It oo
their volume switch and leave it there,"
ssid Hubbell.
, In another .imtance, Hubbell was driv·
ing ln a residential area when be heard
the sounds of rock music from a garage.
"I stopped and measured the noise and
got 96 declbels," said Hubbell. (Tbe
blghest allowed anYwhere in the clty is 60
decibels). "On the Inside of the garage it
must have i.n close to 115 decibels ,"
recalls: HubbeU.
"I went to the front door and rang the
bell, but no one beard me. Then I went to
the garage and told one of the players
why t was there.
"His only reply wu, 'What'd you uy
pop?' '!'be noise to there was equlvalenl
to a Saturu nickel blasting off and hil
hearing was probably somewhat dsmag·
ed frocn it," Hubbell opined.
'!'be senior building inspector ssys
many people aat him about noise caused
by can backfiring or racing. But those
things are not covered in the ordinance
because the ltate retains control over
vehicles. T}\f same 1pplies to planes and
(See NOISE, Pa1e !)
Eagleton IllneSs · Bared
Senaior Hospitalized 3 Times for 'Fatigue'
CUSTER, S.D. (AP) -Democratic
vtce presidential nominee Sen. Thomas
F. Eagleton disclosed today he bad volun-
tarily hospitaliud himself three times
between 1960 and 1966 "for nervous ex-
haustion and fatigue ," bUt that since then
he has enjoyed "good sound, solid
health."
Sen. George McGovern, the
Democratic presidentlarnOminee, said he
had not known about the bospltalizations
when be picked Eagleton to be bis run-
ning mate, but added, "I am fully
satisDed" by bis explanation. McGovern
applauded Eagleton'• "~ judgment"
In -kinl medical"ald when he neelled It.
Eagletclt ouUlned his medical history
altar a morning of conferences with
McGovern at bia v-cation retreat in the
Black Hills of South Dakota, saying that
the American people were eoUUed to the
full story about nlmors throughout his
career about bis health.
Eagleton said, "On. three occasions in
my Ii.le, I have voluntarily gone into
hospitals for serious exbawition and
fatigue,"· the most recent In September
ij1116. • " : He said the. hospl(aljzatlqos resulted
from hi! being "a r8ther intent, f\lr'd-
wOrking man." But since these incidents,
he said, "I have paced· myself a ·great
de81 more." '
Two of the hospitaUzations, one of
about one month in Barnes Hospital in
St. Louis in December 19!0 and a second
of about three weeks at Mayo Cllnlo In
Rochester, Minn., in September 1181, in-
cluded Couiisetlng from a psychiatrist !no
cludlnf electric ahock treatment and
lleeplng pills, I
' ThO thltd holpitaltsatlon .... far -four doys at the Mayo Clinic In
December 11164.
Eagleton uald he had undergone
pby;tcal daminallon last Frtdoy Imm a
Senate physician and Monday J n
(lee EAGLETON, P1p'I)
Sown Seeks Woolworth's Reventlow Actress Says
POWs Choose
McGovern
Antiwar Bill
ShoJ!Jdp,l,f?n t .• '·
Di¢s w Light Plane Craeh
' . . WASHINGTON (IJPt)'..; 5e11;;~nn1
' " W. -(RiloluL), llllNl!l•I
leadonblp of lltt a.ate'• anilwar forces,
' today ~ for ~ sboWdown on
the wlthdfawal of U.S. · lroop1 from
~ in ex~bange for the release of
American prilonera.
The Sepate adopUd the far-reach!ng
ameodmeot .Mo.Uy then nullified the
action by kill1l1i ,the 11.8 billion foreign
military aid bill to wblcb It was attached.
!DAILY PILOT Stan .......
A 'Wal·k· on t.Jae ' Lake . '., . 0Jobn and cirleen Nelson of Garden Grove and tbeir son Harold walk
on tbe ~ bottom of Talbert Lake , wlilcb ii to ht "part of tbe ·new '
Gentral Park. It has sunk to tbe lowest level ' In nine• years, because
of litUe rain' and a sinking gr,ound water level. · ''
, , , ' .r . . 1 . . ...
. Se~ate :Unarlimously Ol{s
' . . . '
lriine H;osp't~· ~ea~.~e
By GEORGE LEIDAL • Of ... DI"' PMM Sttfl'
• A bill adding $919,000 to the state
budget to provide planning funds for a
:SSO-bed teaching boepital at UC Irvine
appeared beaded for trouble In the
Assembly today even thougb It won
unanimous. approva( In the Sena ta Mon-
doy.
.Slate Senator Dennis E. Carpente~ (R•
Newport Belidl) 11rafted the tlnal·hollr
SB 111111 altar. \ht Legislature had cut the
allocation fi\Jih the · budget. ·
' ' ' That lncrea,. also is depel\(leot on ad·
dltional classroom' and l a b o r a to r y
buildings to be built 'with the state bond
mooeys. Projecll .,l'l'Orted by the bond
fuods amo6nt 'to about 154 mllllon in-
cluding the •17.5 mlllioli 1tate sbare of
the teaching hospital. Tbe remainder of
the bo!ld money wwld provide a ,memcat
scleoce building, a clinical J!C~e
buildln& and possibly a .school of nursing.
'Cox noted that 1 delay In the Assembly
lllilUi of ~'J!alpllil p!lbnlng blll w'ould liold Up aJllltrucllon, perhops for a year.
~ all furida 'aN 11anable' the project ~ Ide at leut 11 months, Col said.
Brooke trnnwliat<Jy announced be
would offer the'.amendmeot to the l2tU
bllllon ·military procurement bl11, oow
pending \II the Senate. ,
The amendment would withdraw all
U.S. fotces "land, sea; and air" from
Indochina four moo~ lifter enacbnent if
t~e POWs were relesied Tbe · strong coalition wblch p!lt the
amendment into the bUI -and resiSted ef·
.forts.to tal:e lt out, coltsfl!ed on the 4M2
vo~ on the foreign aid measure.
strong supporters of antiwar !eglsla·
tion, including Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield and ·Sen. J. William
Fulbrlgbt, could not vote for the fqrelgn
aid bill although It lnciuijed the ameQd..
ment.
sens. George S. McGovern and Thomas
F. Eagleton, 'the Dtmoctata:' national
ticket, missed the vote.
The foreign military assistance pr~ ,
gram appeared to be In jeopardy.
"That's the eod of the bill," Fulbrigbl,
, chairman of the Sensta Foreign Rela-
tions committee,. aa.id •
Mansfield said he voled · against
military assistance to foreign· nations,
whlc~ he has long oppoaed, because the
bill had "too much glmrn.ickty in It."
Fulbright ssld he was not disappointed
that the antiwar amendment bsd to fall.
But the far~eaching antiwar propoaal.
had, It paiae(I, faced 1 difficult test in Ille
House and even If It succeeded in getting
throogb Congress, Senate GOP leader
Hugh Scott predicted a Nilloo veto.
' '
J J .: ~ ' .
: ~. ~~iUPIJ ~...,f-J;allo~ ~.,..,. ~ lite WQOlit'W, nvel ~ 4riime 1114 ... al")arbani
Hulm, ..,. of the world'• richest
women, bu been killed with tl)ree other
pel'IOllll In thO crash• Mo.Uy of a small
plane In the Colorado Rocld .. , law of•
Ileen dlsclOtied . tod8y.
RevenUow, ;e, 1 sports car racer who
wU given the uue of .. the WorJd'i richest
baby" at birth, w111 killed ' In the Crash
during a heavy thunderstorm about 10
miles north .of thia Colorado resort.
Revenllow had bieen surveying 1 tract
o~ land bO wanted to buy, ofllcills said.
Killed wit1F him wero the pilot and two
other pauengers, all unidentified.
Tbe cr(lft siammed iJ\to, a wooded
mountainside eight mu.. fri>m the
nearest i:Ood. Sheriff Caroll Whlimlni
&aid 'the Wreckage was spotted by anolhU plane. A resoue crew reaihed the
site Mondoy nfgbt and, confirmed ·!hlt all
aboard_ were dead. , , ·
ReveoUow mam.d 'actress Jill St.
John on March 24, 19!0, In San Frarlclsco.
They were dlvotcedcln 11183:
On Nov. a, 1914, he married starlet
Heryle ·Holdridge, then 19. The oo!Y
relative who attended the wedding was
C4ry Grant, a former husband of Miss l:lutton'1. ·
RevenUow was an avid sports car
enthuatast and polo player. He built and
dnive Grand Prll raclog can and
developed hla own racing engine.
Born In Feb. 14, 19311; be wss the moot
gilarded baby In' the world. An elaboratO'
burglar alarm WU Installed to protect
him as an lnfan~ Compllcstlons from his
Cae1arean delivery left his molller
fragile and she wu unable to regain the
strenglh sbe loot.
Quarrel! over Revenilow's education
led to Miu Hutton's divorce from
Lance'• lather In 1138 In Copenhagen. A
~ flgbt over the child lasted seven
years. · A Carpenter ·lide today ssld the bill is
beaded for I "slnlng light" In the
AaaemblY w,ys.and !¥an Comptittae.
Ila clllnces ti ~ Giit committee
ore ·-~.Ille aide sskf, dlle to the oppolitloo of 'Ail<lnofyman 'Willie Brown •
(!>San Fronciaco), ::.'11etnam Educators Visit
Brvwn has said he'll oppose any !Uture
fundinl of lllllvonlly medlCal faeili~.
lmtll factlitla to ..,.. lnDer-<i'1 -
mepmkfed.
' UC! Vlc:e QIJacelor L. E. Col said
\pdly the wllole luture of tile medical
' ' ... ,. ; ~ppetite for Learning Whett.ed, Professors Say
' . ..booi depoada Oil ....... 11 1..,...U al • • ~ Mladlt _,lllCll
the plaoolnl moneys llld votar approval °' -..., """ "'!I t1ft1 fall of 1 !155.t million stata-Despite mu.-lllfferlng llld untold llbltll acl«lcel bond Issue. destruction, tbe Vietnam War may have
Wblle the bucfsel addltloo ....Wd P*1 1 had one poettlve lnll-. In the eod -· -tJaa clmrlDp llld detailed plans the whetting of Ille Vll!lnamese appeUta
pc! -1flraUOlll !or the boopltal, the for education.
J,oikfhig Clll't be ,built willlGut the bol)d Thu. tbo_.op1n1on exprtlBed by two
'iiiooeyL Vlelnlmeae educltora who ire presently
Cox uplamed· llllt -hall of tho taurinc the Clllll Community College
total 135 mw.,i ...i al the ~Ital ""1d District u put Ii a trip to dlacover how
...,. fnini lbt atato bondl wtlll the re-junior con.a are IOI , ,. and acl-
malnder ~ to .,... 1n1111 feder:ll mln-.L •
-. Tbe two educalon, Dr. ,,..,..,.. IA!
U the "-bly approm the plannlnC of the Niie Trane OooanocrlPhlc *'-1 and tbe bonds •are 1ppio•ld In Institute and Dr. NlfQ)'tll Dane Lone of
Ncmmber, the boopltal could be com-the Saigon N1tionol ~ °"!'«• ploled In early 1171, Cox said. bave been cllarpd by tbetr ,...,_
no facility 'llOlld lllow the UCI· 1!'1111 establlsblnr the fll"ll two-year cof..
CaU1om11 <Joll ... of Medicine to doUbll lqes In Vit'"-biltory.
l!s mterin& els• mo -61 to di Wldle Gil I -al tbe Goldln Wal flllilcal lbldenl.I. '-Colltge In HUIJlinCIGD Beacll, tbe two
visiting educators diSClllled educstloo In
Vietnam now and their bopes for the
fulurt.
"BecaU5e or the war, mort people have
come to the cities and have seen much
more than their parents did," said Dr.
l.oog, "They realize the lmportancs ol I
good educaUon and IO mote people want
to go to school"
"Wben I attended the University of
SallOl In Ille, there were only 200 .ma-at the school. Now there ore
men than •.ooo lludents lo the same
lacllll)''" ..,. Dr. Loi.
Bodi men bellove the Vietnam,..
edllcltloaal '1llelll mUll llted Its .Fr<nch
Influence and becoma ...,. 8aJble.
'l'he1 1114 thia ii oeceasary for the npld
tralttlnc ol the many technlclom and
teachen the ootm!ry will need wllm lbe
Wit ends.
"The French syatem leads lo a -
of tbne atid ......,. -... If • .iudent
falls 1111 comix ehonllve fat at the end of
the year he must ..,..i the whole year,"
say1 Dr. Long who recdved 1 master'•
de~ from UC Dnil and~ ~laln
plant patltoJou , Ina 'Wtlllooi · State
Untvenlty. ,,,., l
Both men plu•1o Im .... a credit
system 1t lhelt .\fo1• ..ue,. which
will be somewhlit alllflar Ill ti.•• tlled In the U.S. _, .
"Estimates allow thlil W w~ at
leall 4.1,000 ~laril ~ to ht! rebuild ow' "°""lrJ wu :L," PY• Dr. 14ol. 11A J'llf ~e
with I cndU 1J11<m ..::«:. '111 tq train U-people -. 4uJc "
Dr, 14 ~ ba Oiutar
ConvnunllJ i'AllMe In ~ lboul lllO mlla norl!I of Sa~ IW llllll of
• (lloe 100I, '
l ------~-------_JL__-
' . ..
Cliess Players ,~~.;
Open ·7t~ .Ga~e :·
With Bold ~~8.
REYXJA VJK! !Celand ~:.: cw.;'id chess champloo .Borjs , ~-
to make ~p 1:--• t ..._llls
seventh game ' wttli-~ ·'J!~ ..
started play tonight llltli 1.'tlt!l'P·l!'wn.
opening. It J"U an llflllllll move li\f•IM'
Sovtet UU!Jioider and lndlcsled be wil
outfor blood.' ' • • '
'
, P~ (,\fl -Jalia FtlDda, back from ...... ..,. a ..... "~ war ll'Mt I ........ lllr lo 1111 ~ ,._
.... ~ to -,... ,,,. ~ "
Sen. Qtorro , Mc<loflm, i.e... "they
iear ~ Nb!-..,. In' ""1<e tho1 will bl
prJIOqus loreftl'." '
·The -adinowWpd that .•he had
t'hat•l!W!ll J)rlJoners she met gave' her
~-for scores of people, Including
1 WOIDID who works in an Orange County.
alipei'mirltt, urging them to defeat Pre.-Nilon In the November
praidelltlal election.
. Tbe Jldoooen, wearing purple and red
1triped,..Uorms1 were abown in a silent
color. ~ Miss Fondo made daring her
North V,iotnam visit July S.2Z, Tbe rest o!
.the mm: empbaslzing what .the -
conalden 'to be dellberate-,\merlcan •t..
tacks aa' the North Vletbameae dlka
system, sbOwld Jane 'ln black Vlet 'Cong
, ~ pajlnlo plnls 1114 a black T..ittrt
tourlrtt paddY lleldl. "-· ......
lltnulh liolnli -: llld J ... ' -•
helmet·llntiped -her nedt, ...... !pg out. to, .the horizon.
Tiie adrj!u acknowledged that she bad
made1 U;Dy broadcasts over Han61 radio
alniec!, at American se"lcemen, but did
not rePf1 dlrectty to a questloo about the
sta-by Rep. Fletcher Thompson (J\-<Ja.J, tbat treason charges should be brottCltl apl!!st her.
Sbe -.led however, "I did not SSJ
'1batj llD accuseil of iaylng," referring
1,,.,,.nmly to reports sbe urgea troops·to
d1IObq orders. l4ila Fonda said sbe
wnu1d pradltce the tuts of her broacf. caiti lo l'lew Yort 'on Friday.
Tmellac tltl'llP Narlll Vietnam,
Miu r.-said: .led ber JO belleve "pro-
foundly that dikes lie belnC bombed ...
purpoat." 'Tbe U.S. ....,.....t liu
den1<d the accuaotton o(' the tactJc wltlcll
w..jld Ofidanltr !JIO llVJI of. lltoussnda O~
NOlib, Vietnamese. '
FlscJ\er, '!~ SIW\\, reput.f Wtll!.
an ecjua!ly aqrusl~ .,.... pawn ~~
queen'• blahqp.I, movlng ,lnto a Slclllan'
defense. ,
'!'be Amerlctp ·~ts one of the
world's 111Df experlenc:od playen ta Uill
clelenoe, wlildl oeldom ...it. In a draw.
' ' ......
SpoalJ orrlved oa time. Al -u referoe Lotltar 8dun1cl llllried tbe ..e
clock, he made bit flnt ..... llllttl .....
whlta jlleces which allowed blm to -
the game and 11 .. blm a sUcbl ...... -•
rtscl!er "orrtvq four m-lalt, Ill for" I feW Jllhlldl ~s,a.ky•1·
opeolns ":": I flYOrlla fl tbe ~
American. • • '
By the Mveltlll · movo, the 1111111•
de~elctped ln,to the li•JdOrf mtatbl, • ertreniely limlllar to f'llcber. Spasa'1.
again lltowed his mettle by inriilQ( a
pawn aacrlllce, hoplnt to coin • open ati.ct f\fe, At.lite ·ellldb lllOVt, ll'ilcber
tool: the....... • .
This -him 1t lo!lll tlireo -· • ' ,.wte ,... deYelOjlOd 1our palhrlul
~-.bis two~ ... tn blsliapt. .•
Al tltls ~t Nikola! lngt9, SpaaQ'1'
llcood, WU all smilta.
"(t'• pqd for Spa'*1,.·ba .,._.,
"He's come out klckiq."
' '
Jr DAll.Y PILOT H T.....,,,, 1W>t 2$, 197l
' Newport Bearing
Police ·Copters
T o Gef Sc r utiny
By L. PETER KR!F.G
Of ... CMIW ~16tt ,,_,,
Newport Beach's police belloopten, the
subject of c:oaln>Ytl'S)' since !hey took to
the air nearJy two years ago, ire 1oin1 to
aet close ocrutlny al a special <lly coun-
cil public bearing In Stptember.
Before 1ben lhe council's lnlerdly
Liaison Committee will meet v.·ith
n;,lghborlng communities lhat have
.beiiCopten to Investigate the pouiblllty
of a cout aaVlng cooperative patrol
Counc:Umao Paul RyckoU proposed the
Sept. II bearing <!ting a letter IJgned by
Championship .
Surfing Slated
In Huntington
The HmtllnClon Beach R<cttalioo and
Parks Department is oow accepting en·
lries ror lhe local aurfing championsbps
to be beld August 12 and 13.
The competition, which will take place
al the Bolsa Chica Bluffs, i. open to all
,aurfers residing within lhe boundariN of
lhe Huntlngtoo Beach Unioo High SChool
District wbo have not been rated for the
U.S. champloosbips by lhe Western Surf· m, Aaloc:lalion.
'l'n>pbies will be awarded to lhe top u.r.. winners in each ol lbe m dlvlalom
.. d a large lropby will go to lhe bell
IOlrlu from the~Ungtoo Be a ch
Recreation Activi s Association.
The six cate le5 are : Seniors (men
25 yean old and up), Mastera (m:tn 2S
Ulrouih M yean old), Men's (men II
tJJroQgh 17 years old), Boys (boys 1'-
y~d and below) and Women's (II>/
age ).
All entries and a $3 fee must be receiv·
ed by the recreation department beff e
Aug. z. Parma are avallable at any Bun-
tlntgon Beach surf 1hop and lhe recrea-
Oon department.
FromPqel
TOUR •••
the South China Sta.
He elj)Octl 10 begin hi• collep with
about 1111 ltudentl comblnlnJ. Ille
facillllel ·of h1I oceanocraphlc lchool IDd
it Korwl mUilary training alte wblcll will
aoon be turned over to the school.
He expectl tuition at the Coaslal Com-
munity College to nin about '311 a year
and the major emphasil of the lchool to.
be marine acieoct IDd teacher training.
Dr. Long will admlnbler the Upper
Della Community College to be located In
the clly o! My '111o, ippro.tmately flJ
mile1 10Uth of Saigon.
He will have 100 acres of land to
develop h1a college which be expecla will
have an agricultural and teacher training
emphasis. •
Bolh of the Vielnamele educaton hope
to expand the curriculum of thtlr1echools'
to Include 1Uch technlcel majon .,,
enelneerlnl, computer tralnln&· and
archllecture. .
"We will train for the national needl 11
they evolve," &aid Dr. Loi, "tiut our
greatest needa now are developing our
agricultural and lnduJtrlal production."
Similar to junior collqes in lhe U.S.
the empbasi> of Ille new Vietnam"''
colleges will be on aervlng the needa ot
the JOcal community.
Each college will have a designated
ocliool district o! provinces and citle1
which U will llOl'Ve and receive !lnanclaJ
support from, At the moment mosl of the
motley to establlah the colleges ii coming
from the natJonaJ soverrunent.
'"11le war Is laking much of the money
that we need to improve our eduet.tlonal
l)'ltem/' says Dr. Loi. 11But we can do
many things In parallel with tbe' war If
we have the desire."
DAILY PILOT
Th9 OnllCle Collt OAll,Y 'II.Of Wlift wMdli
h tornOIMd 'Irle H1.,,,.Pm1, ta PUbli.Md W
ttlt' Or ..... COid P11blblllnl Clfftlllfty, .....
r•le 9dllloflt Ire Jll,lblltfltd. Menclay ""--"
l',i.fay, l'OI' COii• MtM, H""°" 1111.ai,,
Huntington 8Mtt11Fount•ln Yallty, LttVM
•-"-lrvlM/Sldlllltllldl Md 1111'1 CltfNtttel
Sin Juen Clpblrano. A 1lngi. niglarlaJ
edllllll h Mil"*! S.lvnltYt ..... Silnd1ys.
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R.a.rt N. w.M Pr91~ ... l"lllllblltr
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Vkl ,,_ldtnl •Ni GIM,.I Mlntttr
Thom•• K11'il
Edl!Of
Tllom1t A. M11rplrii111
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AMlll•11t Mlftllllftl fdltlrl
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........ RM '""""1r.
1$ nolclenll urging that helicopters be
ke.pt out of the skies except in emergen·
cit.I ..
"l'tn concerned about the patrol
uperu:," RyckoU said thi1 mo ming.
''whether they should be on the ground
on call or up in the air cruising all the
time."
Ryckoff said in no way ls he proposing
elimination of the helicopters .
"I'm not iuggestlng we do away ?.'ilh
them," he said. "But they're really one
of our mOBt controversial things and they
should be aired publi<ly."
Ryckoff said the poiice department
should keep more of a log of helicopter
activities.
.. Maybe this will come out of it /the
hearing) -it would be more of a
justification," he said.
"lf it accomplishes lts purpose this
ought to be made known," he said.
Police Chief B. James Glavas this
morning replled by pointing oul thal the
department does keep a dally log of·
helicopter activities.
"He (Ryckoff ) perhaps has never seen
it," Glavas said.
Glavas also defended the need for the
helicopters.
"II would be regrettable iJ those people
who value safety and security in the
community don't come out for this coun·
cil meeting to voice their approval," he
said.
Signatures on the Jetter that triggered
Ryckofl's proposal came mainJy from
ruidents in the Harbor View Hills-
Corona del Mar area although two are
Balboa resldeni>.
"l recognize there are some people in
the community who are disturbed by the
noise! of the helicopter," Glavas said. "l
recoplze allo thal lbe helicopter as a
police patrol vehicle has found wide ac--
ceptance in law enforcement circles
across the nation.
"It is both ecooomlcal and eUective,"
he said.
"Newport Beach bas found the
helicopter even more effective than most
cities by reason of its at y pica t
topography," the chief added.
Forum Scb_eduled
W e$ltlsday for 4
School Hopefuls
' I Four uplranti to a vacant seat on the
gowmlq•bolrd of the Huntington Beach
City ( elep10ntary) SChool District will
!lave lhelr night before lhe public
Wednaday in a forum sponsored by the
League of Women Voters of Huntington
Beach.
Tbe'tneeting, which will Include a ques-
tion and answer period with the au·
dlence, will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the
caleterla o! Edison High School, 21400
Magnolia St.
The candidates are competing 1n an
AQI. I electkm lo fill the vacant seat of
former trustee Ivan Liggett, who rtsiloed
th1a spring over a ligbl wilb teachers. Hi.
tei:tn would have expired June 301 1973.
The Hunllnglon Beach City (elemen-
tary) School Dlsjrlct Includes •most o!
~ H1111llngton Beach.
Contenden 1n the speelaJ election are:
JC. Dale B~. 39, an attorney: Eduardo
Da Sliva, 45, an accountant ; Roger
Garctau, 33, a tlxt.b grade teacher with
another district; and Lewis Kidder,
president of a Ccista Mesa music finn.
Class Scheduled
In Pool Safety
·Fountain Valley Commwiily Hospital
wtll sponsor a swimming pool safety
clus Thursday night m the commwtity
·l'OOJI! ol fbO hnspllal.
~ Closs, which will begin at 7•30, i!
alm<Cf'·al reaching lhe many Fountain
Valley familles who have recenUy added
pools to their homes.
The program wUI Include a color sllde
presentation describing all types of
poolside rescues and other emergency
me"!)!tt!, Including cardio-pulmonary
resUJCttation.
The class will be laugh! by Ors. Burton
WUlil and Arthur Sailer of lhe hospital
stall and engineer Dave HeUner of the
cily fire department. Tho1e person$ in-,
terested In attending are urged to make
resuvsUons with the bospllal 's depart·
ment of education.
Dudley W. Eller
Services Held
S.rvioe• were held lnday in Huntington
Beach tor longtime Orange County re.ii ... •
dent Dudley Wallace Eller, 49, of CoS!a
Mesa. He died July 22.
Rev. Thom11 Nevin officiated al tbe
erypt-slde rltes tn GOod Shepherd'
Cemetery.
Eller, who lived tn the cnuntx r.r t1
yean, wcned u a carjienter at Unon
and Mellor Boat Yard In N•wport Baach.
He ii llW"VIVed b)' hla wile, Joeepblne o(
the family home, 48S Abbie Way, Costa
Mtaa ; a son, WTillam Eller and hl1
lather, Dela EUer ol Santa illrbera,
Cheering T hem O••
Deana Hardy Oell) of Hunlingtpn Beach and Dawnie
Anderson of Fountain Valley Will lead a delegation
of 12 song and yell leaders from Golden West Col·
lege tn a workshop or the National Cheer Leaders
Assncialion in Santa Barbara Aug. 27-31.
Beach Dist1ict
Lauded for Adult
Education Plan
Se curities,-Papers Found
From Laguna Niguel Heist
The Huntington Beach High School
District has received praise for its first
year adult education program from the
California State Department of Educa-
tion.
''It is extremely seldom that I write
letters commending 11Chool districts in
adult education," wrote John H. Camper,
consultant tor the department's Bureau
of Adult Education.
"After seeing the treme ndous growth
of the Huntington Beach Adult School, I
feel I wouJd be negllgent in my
responsibilities without expressing some
comments !or its outstanding growth in
one year."
Specifically cited by Camper were
what he termed the well·balanced 0£.
ferings of the district's adult education
division and its rapid growth in enroll·
ment.
Last school year the adult education
division enrolled 4,200 students in fields
varying from foreign language.s to in-
dustrial edUcatibn. Ninety-two students
also earned their diplomas through the
division.
F rom Page I
EAGLETO N . • •
An undetermined amount of securities
and personal papers -apparently
discarded by thieves who blasted their
way into the Laguna Niguel branch of the
United California Bank in March -were
found Monday afternoon.
Orange County Sheriff's investigators
and Federal Bureau of Jnvestigatlon
agents were summoned to the end of Sea
Island Drive in Laguna Niguel's Pacific
Island Village by workmen in the area
who found a guney sack stuffed with the
weathered bonds and other documents.
No cash or jewelry was included in the
loot, said Lt. Charles Conaway of the
sheriff's department. Many of the papers
were strewn on the ground alongside the
sack, he added.
From Pa,,e l
NOISE ...
any helicopters which might Jly out or
Mile Square Park. They are controlled by
the federal government.
Aclwllly, lhe ordinance only applies lo
residenUal areas. Even those persons
working Jn commercial areas who have
noise aggravations must take them to the
county, accordi~g to Hubbell.
Another discovery made by Hubbell in
his investigations is that noise levels in
Bethesda, Md. Complete results are due the city are remaining the same despite
later in the week but Eag leton said the rapid growth in the past two years.
doctor told him, "I'm two pounds "When. we did the study that led lo the
overweig'ht and have half 8 hemorrhoid." ordinance, we felt we mig ht have to go
Eagleton said that it took these ex· back and modify it in two to three
periences to enable him to learn how to years," recalls Hubbell.
take it a little easier and he intends in "But areas which only had tW-O housing
the forthcoming campaign "to give it all tracts when we took the survey and are
that I have on a measured basis." completely developed now haven't chang-
A dozen investigators were Im-
mediately dispatched to the scene when
tbe surveyq crew called lhe sberill'1
departmenl aromtd l:lO p.m.
The crew worked tor seven houi's com~
Ing the area for more loot, but wi-
covered nothing more than the crlginaJ
sack.
"We're convinced we , found
everything," Lt. Conaway comrpented.
"Anyone going up there today would be
wasting bis time."
FBI agents along with the sheriff's in-
vesUgators today began an inventory of
the recovered loot. No dollar flgpre hal
yel been placed n the find.
"I doubt the stuff was worth very
much," Conaway said. "l euess it was
slufr they didn't want.
"Of course, that's just speculation," he
added.
Five men -three of whom are ln
custody -have been indicted in con-
nection with the March Z'-2'1' l'Obbery
which left United Calllomia Bank $50,000
short in ca,sb and. 451 boxholden out an
estimated $Z millkOn fn SS mDllon in cash
and securities.
Held at Los Al18eler County jail b
Charles A. Mulll11an, 31, of Youngstown,
Ohio. In custody tn 'Ohio are AmU A.
Dlnsio, 36, of Boardman, and PhiUp B.
Christopher, 29, of Cleveland.
Two brothers. Ronald and Harry Bar·
ber of South Gate are still at large and
subject to a naUonwide search by the
FBI.
Bloodmobile Set
l 11 We stmi nster
McGovern said when he a s k e d ed their noise levels. I think it shows the The Westminster Fire Station Head·
Eagleton to be bis running male 12 days hoise standards we established are quarters will host the Red Cross Com-
ago, "I asked jf there were any problems realistic and will bold in the future." munity Bloodmobile from %:30 p.m. to 7 in his past that be tbou"l.t" would cause. Since the Fountain Valley noise Fr'da ... dJn bli bed lhe . ha p.m. I y. serious problems "and he said no." or ance was esta s city s The bloodmobile will be able to accom.
He said the 42-year-old Missouri received more than 250 requests for modate more than 150 donors during is
senator infonned him about the copies ·of lhe law: Requests have pouted hours at the fire station, 14123 Golden
lao&pitalizalions on the weekend after in from cities and counties around the West Ave.
iheir nomination. country and the Environmental Protec-Red Cross workers hope to gather
!\.1cGovern made clear, "l think Tom tion Agency. enough blood in the next weeks to meet
Eagleton is fully qualified in mind, body "I feel very strongly that we have an the critical blood shortage currently fac!-
1.nd spirit to be vice president ... " and · ordinance that could be copied by other ing Orange County.
"take over on a moment's notice" as cities," say11 Hubbell. "But every city Unless eqough people donate blood,
president. should survey their own noise problems. certain surgeries will have to be can-
Asked whether he would have picked Each city's noise is as individual as celled In Orange County hospitals, at--
Extra Land
Gets S(udy
•
By Nixon
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -President Ni•·
on a:aid today It la ridiculous !or the
Federal government to own over hlllf the
land lo aom e Western states, but aides
said later the White House was giving no
thought to dlspoolng or any o! the West's
mllllons of acres of publi~ domain land.
The chief es:ecutlve's comment camr
as he met .in his OVal Office with
members of the Federal Property
Review Board which has been hand!·
Ing I.he administratiori's effort to convert
lillle-wed federal properly Into stale and
local parks.
Pointing to a map of the United States
which showed lhe 144 par~ or land
transferred under the Legacy of Parks
program, Nixon observed that the federal
government was owner of more .than half
the and in ·some Rocky M9untain and
Western staes.
"That's ridlculous," he said. "We don"t
need it."
He didn't elaborate while newsmen
wl!re In hls office for the start of the
meeUng, but officials said later NI.Jon
was referring to a category known as ac·
quired land -not to the public domain
land which is often leased tor livestock.
. grazing.
Presidential counselor D o n a I d
Rumsfeld, a member of the property
review board, told newsmen, "We have
not even looked at the question of public
domain land."
Nothing lhe President said al today'•
meeting "was meant 'to apply to public
domain land," Rwnsleld aald.
. The review board's e:ucutive director,
Darrell M. Trent, aald .. .,. publlc do-
main land had been· taken earlier for
such UBe as milltary nsryaUona and no
longer b under control of the Bureau of
Land Management. . This, he indicated,
might become available for transfer to
state and local governments for the
Legaey of Parks program.
Aller lhe meeting, Nlxoo lsaued a
slalement saying be· was pleaaed that the
144 new parks had been created in 3'l
atateii.
"The federal public land> belong to all
Americans and are part of the heritage
and blrthrlshl of every cillzen," Nilan
said. "They are the breathing space of
the naUon, and It b eaential that they be
pre11erved !or future generiltiona."
At the meeting in .his Oval Office, Mz:·
on cited a piece of beach front property
near bis San Clemente home u an es·
ample of federal praperty which can be
converted Ill P,.bllc 111e.
'Mike' Was Too
Hot to Handle,
If the dispatcher radiOed: "Cir
4412, where are you?" Monday
afternoon, the reply could have
crackled back over lhe air like thi>.
"Car 4412 is 1n the parking lot
behind the slaUon, crubed Into Car
4411," or words to that effect.
Dispatched to a silent burglar
alarm, Coata Mesa Patrolman John c. Caley leaped into car 4412,
started the engine, shUted into
drive and gnbbed lhe microphone,
The mlkt turned out to be red bot
from sitting in the closed patrol car
as the summer sun abooe through
the windshield.
"The heat was sufficient to
dlsttact Oils officer's attention,''
Patrolman Casey wrote in a report
explaining Car 1412 crashed into
car 4411, iccldentally.
The sUent alarm call WU ac--
cldenlal, too.
him if he had known about Eagleton's fingerprints." cording to the Red Cross.
hospitalizations, McGovern said, "I I~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~
wouldn't have hesitated one minute il I I
had known everything Sen. Eagleton has
said here today."
Eagleton, who flew to South Dakota
from Washington late Monday, left after
the news conference to fly to California
on a campaign swing that also will take
him to Hawaii.
Rear-el1d Crash
l11jures Cyclist
A 23-year-old motorcyclist was listed In
satisfactory condition today after nm--
ming into the hick of a car and landing
on Jt.s hood Monday afternoon in Sunset
Beach.
Huntington Beach police said Grtgory
Robson 9f Downey was travelln& east on·
.flacific Coast ,Highway near Warner
Avenue when be collided with a car
driven by Pamela Shipe, \9, or Lon•
Beach. '' . ""
Miss Shlpe was stopped while another
car in front of her was parking on the
side or the street when Robson h.lt her'
said police.
Robso n suffered a lacrratlon on hit
right side and other minor lnjurle.s, ac--
cordlng to a spokesman at Pacifica
HospllaJ. '
School Meet.Can~elled
Till! l'egular meeting of the trust.., of
the Hunttn(ton Beath City (elementary)
School District, wl)lcli 110U!d normally
htve been held tonighl, has been can-
ctled.
Trusttea took lhe acllon 11 their Iul
regular moeting whon informed b)' 0..
a111rlct adnllnistrallon tbal there was ""
•ulficlen1 business to require a meeting.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, '.AND IEFORE A SAWMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DmRMINE PltlCU ON GOOl;>S NOT,
MARKED?
MANY CARPEr STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON
THBR SAMrtES. THE T H E 0 R Y IS THAT THIS--WA¥ THEY CA-N-
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WIU IEAR."
. AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL PF OMR SA .. W SO
THAT 'CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE'$1LICTIONS AJitD
KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THDllSAi..WAYSTHE
l'OSSlllLITY OF A l. OWE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
hi ... H---""
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES .
1663 PlcicHtfa An.
COSTA MISA
646 4111
HOUIS: NOi. tin n.n., 9 le l:JO-Pit., 9 le 9 -Sat, 9:10 N I
•
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I
H D,\Jty Ptl.OT :J
Sieroty Bill Killed Yugoslavia, :
Backers Now Pushing Coastline Initiative Irvine Firm
Make Deal SACRAMENTO (AP) -Thi last• con-
aervatloniat-blcked bill to con t r o I
development along califomia's coast has
been torpedoed by a Senate committee.
Backers say they wlU now step up thelr
efforts (or ·approval of a November ballot
initiative that would -like the defunct
bill -impose a pennlt system for
development a1oq Cllilornia's 1,087-mile
<Oa!l.
The Senate Natural Re90Urces and
Wildlile Comn\ittee killed Assemblyman
Alan Si e r o t y ' s coasUine-protect.ion
measure Monday on a 3-4 vote -two
short of the five notes needed to send it
out of the nine-member committee.
"It's clear that the Senate Rules Qlm-
mlttee did not want the bill to pass -DOI
onJy this bill but other environmental
bill! as well -or they would have chang-
ed the composition of the committee to
make sure it bad a tnfjority of Members
concerned with the environment/' Slero-
ty said at an impromph1 news cohferenoe
after the vote.
"The Senate leidershlp Is still lo the
hands of the conservative group that has
controlled It in years past," the Beverly
Hilla Democrat told reporters.
Ti. 1\llW·Commillel •)lllOinls other
I 5eo1'le ~ Sim# said he has
entered tbe helrinf' room with no real
hope of cettJn« bis bill approved but said
he Jeh a responsibility to follow the bill
IA U. end. •
' The •~«>mJlllttee killed • similar
.bW by Sea. Donald Grunsky (R-
ille), earlier tbls year.
permit system !or coastal develop.
I -~ In Sieroty's bW and the
iftkiative woold be administered T-and six rec1ona1
1 california Real Estate Assoclat.ion
app0oents of both the initiative
eroty's bill says the pCnnit system
in effect would impose a moratorium on
co8sUine development without com-
pehsating property owners. Undeveloped
land, they say, would I<* value because
It cooldn't be used freely. ·
Sieroty's amended bill wouJd have
alldwed local government officials to hold
a majority on the regional commissions.
The ballot initiative -·regarded by con-
servationists as more stringent -splits
the commission between local officials
and appointed commissioners.
Johnson Put in Hospital'
For Chest Pains, Nausea
SAN ANI'ONIO (UPI) -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson has been
boapitalized becaUJt of chest paloa and
nausea. But doctors said there was no in-
dicaUon he had suffered another heart
attack.
"It may be several days before any
definite concluslona can be drawn about
the nature of his present illness," a
Brooke Army Hospital bulletin said.
"However, at 10 p.m. he was coQla
fortable, In excellent spirits and his
general condition was quite satisfactory.
"There have been no Irregularities in
the heart rhythm or blood pressure."
Johnson bu suffered two bear! attecks
-a severe one in 1156 and a second one
last April during a visit to bis daughter
Lynda and her husband Charles Robb in
Chartottesville, Va.
He was hospitalized three week! for
treatment of his second heart attack, and
had been scheduled to travel SO miles
from the LBJ Ranch loj!ay !or a routine
checkup. lmtead, the bospltal said
Jobnson was flown to the bospltal ahead
of schedule when the pain! and nausea
occurred Monday night.
"He was flown lo San Antonio by a
private plane based at bis ranch and was
admitted to Brooke IJospllal at 9: 15 p.m.
for observation," the statement said. /
Dr. Robert L. Norlh, chief of medicine
at Brooke, was placed in charge of the
case. Jobn.9on has a ho!pital penthouse
suite permanently at his disposal.
The 3fith president was released from
Brooke April 25 alt.r recovering from
, the heart attack be suffered in Virginia,
and has made several public ap-
pearances since then.
The l'llOllt recent was last Saturday
night when Johnson, tanned and sporting"'
longish hair, attended 1 play at the LBJ
State Park Aud.Jtorhun in Stonewall,
Tex., not far from his ranch. The play,
"A Raisin in the Sun" was presented in
bis honor by the speech department of
1 Johnson's alma mater, Southwest Texas
' -state University of San Marcos. ,
Johnson suffered a near fatal heart at·
tack in 1955 when be was Senate majority
leader. For years after that attack .he
gave up his habit of smoking ll>ree pa),1ts
of cigarettes a day, but resumed smOk:lng
in 1971. '
Johnson was also hospitalized briefly in
1.-:arch of 1970 for a related heart ail·
1 ment, angina pectoris, or a hardening of
UPIT ........
BACK IN HOSPITAL
Ex·Prasidant Johnson
Hiker Finishes
Desert Jour~ey;
'It Was Awful'
FURNACE CREEK RANCH (UPI) -
111 never want to see this place again.
Never again. This is terrible."
Bill Emmerton bathed his blistered,
bleeding feet in alcohol today, wincing
from the pain.
Emmerton, an Australian-born health
food buff and physical endurance record·
setter, bad just finished a US.mile walk
across Death Valley late Monday night,
covering the distance in "2 days, 15 hours
and 1 minute," he said.
the heart's arteries. He claimed a record for walking across
I the storied desert, the lowest -and often
I tbe hottest -place In North America. II 4 F' Co } uplield, It can atand beside his record !or 1 ll'emell ntrO · running LIO mllel acrosa the valley In
, 11118, to three da,.-ol • running and
: Riverside, LA ~de the walking trip with ooly I
• few lbort rest breaks. ' · ' Co ty BJ 41ll anyone can beat ttlia Ume in this
•. un aze..s weather they're welcome to it," groaned
the --Emmerlon alter be Br• < LOS ANGELES (AP~ -Two bnlob rived at-the 11n1sb point, Scotty's Castle.
I fires fanned bJ lid* wllJdl~ "Ii-nee'°" there's DO other man
I homes in Loa Anltlea Ind RI~ 52 Y'"'8 Gf qe who can do this.
' counties before betni atemmed by "And II -else wants lo try to I firefigbltre.
' A brush IU. thel dwrecl uo· •crea pl beat this record, let !hem do It in July•
1 llCnlb brush ..a acat-timber IOUlh · not lib llil plioola who do It In the
Lof ldyllwUd lil.-llie -IM llemaftUDO-Ne-·~W""'h!ler._._, .,. " -
fr-• Foreal and forced the evacuatiOo 'I've nm IU,000 mlles in my life, but I
of 2IO led ~ t bavo ,..... upa-such pain and I pa1CM11 wsa ra •• perceo coo-agony."
I le~ -=&c.,) olllcer JI~
: McQmtln llld.}1-la Ibo--"'
·--tliii -hll the ,,. r ilo1 -camp at 1'1111 ... _.
• "'"' apacled lo -lodllJ, bl llid. \ • In EIP --I ftre w'*li ...... litll
··-.. OL'ddllllal Calleao MoutlQ -stopped -"''M clDae lo • homes IClti -........ hllla. Tiie llto btned •
t toJO-lnd-...--..
$2.1100.
l MelllWllllo, In Bllhop. ~ -
l•IJIOlllllnl ..... In Ille -" ""' -that dellbo,.. ,_. lban • ..,. II tho
Sierra, die U.S.-Sentee llld. 1 But I .......,_ aid ft1-lirfe
~ed elforla to l>oltlt I ..... bm ... I
laln II ~GOO In=-~ ':'":".::
ltVUdomau. t
~ hlglt elevation blue -reported 1 oo M~ Wllllarnaon about JO I
Jnllel ICMlth of here In the Calllomla
bJchom sheep IOOloclcal area. '!'be lire I waa buminl llowly due to the altitude
and firemen wUI "jtllt let It bum ou~ • •
the Flirlll Service llld.
•
'If it Cackles,
A"est It'
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
Polb In Doytona Beach today
laued an .U-pointo bulletin !or 1
cltlcllen.
A dllaotei.r !or the Police
Dtflrlmlat Mid a tourilt, Samuel
Morrta GI lllate-, Colo., reported
tlial llil pol c:llicnn broke away
-1 pool lo wldcb be wu tied at Ill-""" ......... a!ancl.
'Die polCI ballatln diaoribed the
rmn1J ehlcl1111 • a wblta ltcbom. wewtng 1 D• eou.r with
1 allver lag attached. Morrla nld
the bird WU worth $.\ and WU not
Insured.
1be chicken 1n1Wer1 to the name
"Sam."
• The-Initiative would impose the pennJr
system on a 11000..yard·wlde swath -of
coastline and extend controls three mlles
out to sea.
Tbe committee approved 1 ..,.,Uno
bW July 3 by Sen. Deonls Carpentar (R·
Newport Beach) that would Ibo baw aet
up a stata'bcild'but would leave most GI
the clecisGr!S oo coaslllne development up
to local govenunent. ·
SI~ Club.JobbylstJoho Zierold called
the carpeoter bill "a disaster." SUPERINTENDENT RILES ASSEMIL YMAN BURKE
An Irvine firm will co ordinate
purchases of electronic 'equipment under
a $t0 million contract with the Cajavec
Organization of Yugoslavia.
Sieroty's measure and the inltlllive are
backed by the Qlastal Alliance -1 ooall·
tion of about IOit con 1 er vat lo n t 1 t
organlzatloos including the Siem Club.
"If the initiative doesnJt pass, I'll be
back with another bill -but it would be
more dillicult to gel ii pwed," Sien>ty
aaid.
Riles Education Pinn
l '.S. Electro-Optical, Inc. 1ocated at;_•
1'792 Kaiser Avenue In the Irvine·~
Industrial Complex. announced it wilt·.
serve as engineering consultant an<J...
purchasing coordinator for the expansion
of electron.la, auto accessories and j,..:_
·vestment castings manuladure. The
castings -100,000 a month -will be
n1ade in Yugos lavia using equipmeot ·
supplied by the Irvine firqt
The natural re!OWUS committee killed :
a similar Sieroty coastline bill last year
after Sen. James Wedworth ( D •
Hawthorne'), failed to show up for the.
met:ting. Sieroty qid.afterward ~ had
·been counting on Wedworth for a yes
vote. Wedwortb vuted against the bill
Monday and blocked te1evision coverage
of the hearin(.
Challenged by Burke The Yug011lavian firm will manufacture
communication and com p u t er in-:
struments to meet the growing needs o(
Eastern Europe. according to Sig
Fcohlich, president of U.S. Electro.-,
S. Viets Battle
Into Quang Tri;
Resistance Low
SAIGON (APl -South Vietnamese
paratroopers have battled Into the night
In their drive to recapture Quang Tri's
19th century Citadel from dlehard rem-
nants of a North Vietnamese occupation
force.
By evening, army spokesman Lt. Co1
Do Dang Bo reported "enemy resistance
is weakening." There was no word on
casualties.
Bo expressed hope the South Viet·
namese Dag cou1d be raised over the old
walled fortress Wednesday to symbolize
the end of enemy rule in the battered
provincial capital, occupied by North
Vietnamese forces since May 1.
"The fighting is continuing," Bo told
newsmen in Hue. "I think many North
Vietnamese were killed. I do not think
any escaped."
There were conflicting claiins on the
recapture of the Citadel. South Viet-
namese military ~kesmen in Saigon
said it bad' been retaken.
An anny communique issued in Hue
said government tnioP! entered the
fortresi at 10:3' a.m . But newsmen at
the rront Could not verily thi5 because
South Vietnamese soldiers fired warning
shots over their heads when they trJed to
approach the batile zone.
By JOHN ZAU.ER
Of tM O.lly Pllft St•tl
Huntington Beach A s s e m b I y m a n
Robert Burke has locked horns with
State Superintendent of Public Instruc-
tion Wil!Ol1 Riles over a $25 million Early
Childhood Education Plan now pending
before the Legislature.
l'be conservative West Orange County
RepubUc~n says the state scbooi chiefls
plan is too costly, too innovative, and
possibly barmlul, and be urges thorough
study be.lore even limited funding Us ap-
proved .
Riles , who has made refonn of school-
ing from kindergarten through third
grade a major thrust of his ad·
ministration, claims the plan i s
necessary to cut down tbe "appalling
number of cblldren who can't read ad"°
quately at the end of the third grade, and
so are already doomed to school failure."
The Early Childhood EducaUon Plan is
now before the state Senate as part of a
$1.2 billion tax reform and school finance
measure that has the backing of both
Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob
Moretti and Republican Governor Ronald
Reagan.
The education plan, which. could cost
$350 million over five years, has two
main parts:
-It would bring a gradual but fun-
damental restructuring or schooling in
the primary grades by lowering the
adult-to-student ratio from 30-to-1 to 1~
to-1 with the use of parent volunteers and
paid aides. 1'le aim would be to
"guarantee" that every child mastered
bulc reading and math akllls by tbe end
of the third grade.
-Tbe proposal also calls !or enrolling
four-year~lds in school on a . voluntary
basil in order to take advantage of what
educators believe is a much greater
learning ability than they will have later
in life. Funding !or this part of the Early
Childhood ptogram, however, Is n-Ot in· Oplical, Corporation. ~·
eluded in the $25 million now under con· Froh1icb.'s firm will also provide equip-
slderatlon. ment to expand automotive accessory ..
Burke has lambasted the plan as an production in Yugoslavia, including .
"untried, untested proposal that could horns, distributors adn "'indshield wipers.
result in harm to our children." Viipers. .
He says the plan "can only be in. "Projected volume is In the millions of •.
terpreted as an attempt by the units of each ann ually," Frohlich said.
superintendent of public instruction to The Irvine firm arranged a n d
build his image and aatl.sfy the 'hang the coontinate.d the finaocing of the $10 :
expense' education Innovators w ho mfllion contract with the Yugoslavian
elected bim." company Vil the United California Bank
Burke is especially opposed to the pro-of Los Angeles, and the Export-lmport
posal for bringing four-year~lds into the Bank of Washington, O.C.
school system. He aays this opens the A repayment guarantee worth $9
door for "ruthless planners" to mold the million was given by the government of
personalities of the students at an early the Communtl!t bloc nation.
age, and says pre-school education should U.S. Electro-Optical Is an enginee ring '
be tert to church and private operations. and marketing finn specia lizing in
He further attacks the inclU!ion of the sophisticated manufacturing techniques
early childhood plan In a tax reform and and eq'\lipment.
school finance package. 0 1 don't believe Within t~ U.S., the finn ls active fn>..
that adding the financial burden of an ex· t~ ~I-conductor., print.ed and hybrid'!
perimental program that could cost $3SO -tlPCWt fields, Fr~hl1ch sa1~. -
million over the next few years has The firm also is active 1n Europe .. and ,
anything to do with tax relief." Instead the Far East where Its operations em·.
he would like to see the education reform brace the exporting or all types of
considered as a separate iuue and Ame;lca~, know-how and production:
debated in the regular education com4 facihtles, Frohli ch added.
mittees or the Legislature. Burke is a
member of the Assembly Education
Committee.
"It is obviously untrue that this pro.-
gram is unproven," Riles counters. "The
things we want to do have been around
for years. We just \\'ant 1 chance to put
them into practice.11
On bnnging four·year..Olds into schools,
Riles says, "I think parents have sense
eno\ii~ .to ~ide wheiher their child is
ready for school or not. Snice it will be
voluntary, the choice will be theirs. The
very 1kb hive always hid JllUChooll for
their cbtldren. and more recenlly, the
poor and weUare families have bad
them. I think it's time for the majority of
people who are in the middle to have the
opportunity."
Attempted Police :
Kisser Held Over
Ml.AMl (UPI ) -A male protester AC·
cused of trying to kiss a police officer at ,
the Democratic National Convention hrui
been bound over to Criminal Court on
charges lqf assault and battery.
Curt1s Bryant, 21, was bound over after·
Miami olllcu Nell R. Nydam said
Bryant "toot me by both abouldera and ;
attempted to ldu me on the nose.• •
Bryant wu arrested on the ·1aat nlfht •
of the convention while Nydam was ·
checking credentlaJa 1t one of the gates.
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4 DAILY PILOT
Nationwide
Strike Seen
In Britain
LONDON (U PI) -The Brllisb govern-
ment today stepped Into the case of the
Pentonville five, acting to head off a
threatened general strike.
Norman Turner, the official solicitor
(attorney), said he would meet the Nti·
Uonal Industrial Relations Court (NIRC) ..
•nd apply (or reeonsideraUon of the case
of five longshoremen sent to P<.'TI.tonvi11t
jail for contempt of the court.
Turner intervened in an earlier case i"" volv~ng three of the five men arreited
Friday. The NIRC's earlier action agairait
~e three brought threats of a nationwide
strike In their supJXlrt.
That action materialized th.is week
when the court ruled the five dock
workers in contempt. It said they had
flouted its order to cease picketing and
boycottlog a container depot as part of a
wb~s-what dispute within a single
union.
Nearly all the nation's 4 0, O 0 0
longshoremen walked out, closing Bri-
tain 's ports. Protest walkouts closed ccal
mines, auto factories, new~pers and
trucking firms. Union leaders said the
&trike wave wouJd spread.
Union leaders left talks with Prime
Ml\lister Edward Heath Monday saying
no further discussions with the govern~
ment would be worthwhile until ·the men
were' released.
"We told the prime minister It would
be fruiUess to try to engage in any talks
tomorrow (Tuesday) about the economic
situation as planned," one union leader
aaid. "This will escalate the longer the
men are kept in jail and will be
catastrophic to the economy of the coun-
try."
Unio!l leaders held a series of meetings
today at the local and national level to
discuss the prospects for a nationwide
demonstration Wednesday. If approved,
it would mark the first time since the
general strike of 1928 that workers
throughout the country have walked off
their jobs.
The govenunent meanwhile said it wu
power!.,. to do anytblng about releasing
the jailed dockers without superseding
judicial Jt,Uthority until they "purged'.'
themselves by •.J>OlogWng to the cour\.
"No government could do this nor
would the people aa a whole wi$ the
government to bave the capacity to do
this," Employment secretary Maurice
Macmillan said. ''The judiciary is totally
independent of the executive. That Is the
foundation on which all our libertie1 are
founded."
Union leaders countered by saying they
did not recognite the new law, the Labor
Relations Act, and felt It was their duty
lo oppose it.
No. I Coal Mine
Had 500 Safety
Violation Marks
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (AP) -
Statistics from the U.S. Bureau of Mine•
show that nearly 500 federal safety cita·
lions were lodged against _Consolldaton
Coal Co. 's Blacksville No. 1 mine in Jts
four years of operation.
Nlne men were given up for dead in the
sprawling mine Monday, two days salter
the outbreak of a fll'e reportedly trig·
gered by an electrical 1park. Three smaU
explosions forced rescue workers to
withdraw and seaJ off the mine shafts.
The citations were filed by U.S. Bureau
or Mines inspectors ror violations under
the Federal Mine Safety Act and its ac-
companying regulations. The vast ma·
jority -381 -were lodged after most of
the provi&ions of the current act took ef·
feet jn the summer of 1970!
Industry .sources tenned the number of
citations high for any mine, but surprl,s..
lngly high for the Blacksville No. 1 mine.
Open in July 1968. it was considered ex·
ceptionally modern.
John Corcoran, pre1ident or
Consolidation, was not available for com-
ment on the citation record.
Tuadar, Ju!J U, 1972
. ur1 T.itPllort
SHORE STAFF WORKERS LOAD LUGGAGE ABOARD QUEEN ELIZABETH II FOR PASSENGERS
London's Dockwork•rs, P.rot11t lns J1llln9 of 5 Pick1t1r1, Walked Off Jobs Monday
U.N. Chief Gets
Sharp W urning
On Dike Bombing
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The
United Slat.. bas sharply warned U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt W a I d h e i m
against spreading reports of U.S. bomb-
ing of "likes in North Vietnam.
Waldheim, while aaying he could not
verify the reports, replied that he
thought 0 it was his duty to Speak out on
the devastating consequences which
might result" from either intentional or
unintentional bombing of the . flood con-
trol system along the Red River in North
Vietnam.
A stonn 'between the United States and
Waldheim blew up Monday aiter the
secretary.general !Did~ conference
he had "private un~ reports via
Hanoi of the bombing of the dikes. He ap-
pealed to the United Staies lo llop.
Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers
protested in Washington and sent
Ambassador George Bush to put the U.S.
position personally to Waldheim.
After his one-hour meeting with
Waldheim, Bush told reporters he was
convinced the secretary-general did not
want to give credibili_!y to what Bush
caJled a massive Norlh "Vietnamese prop-
aganda campaign.
Waldheim told the news conference:
"Through private unofficial channels
• • . were informed that the dlkes are
being bombed, and we were informed
also that even in cases where the dikes
are not dlrecUy bombed, the nearby
bombing causes cracking of the dams
and that in this war. the result is the
tame as if the dikes were bombed
dlrectly.
· The secretary-general said be did not
know whether the bombing was in·
ten14Jnal, and he admitted, "this is
Hanoi information." But he added :
"If these allegations are correct, it
would lead to disasler in the area
because it would mean that the whole
plain would be flooded and thousands and
thousands of peop1e would die. This, I
think, has to.he avoided."
Rogers said in a statement that
Waldheim's information "concerning
alleged deliberale bombing to damage
the dikes in North Vietnam is false -as
the President slated In his June 29 press
conference."
Power Goes Back On, Heat
Turning Off in New York
NEW YORK (AP) -The power went
back on early today for most of the
estimated 500,000 residents of Brooklyn
and Queens who had been without elec-
tricity for up to 16 hours after seven
feeder cables burned out.
The other good news was a forecast by
the National Weather Senrice of a
"deflnitibreak~' in the marathon of sizzl·
( IN SHORT ... )
ing 90-degree weather that bas withered
city dwellers and strained power deUvery
to the limit.
The restoration of power to most of
Brooklyn and Queens marked the end of
the second widespread power blackout
due to failing Consolidated Edison Co.
feeder lines since the current beat wave
begsn 10 days ago.
e JKA Pressure
BELFAST (UPI) -British troops
keeping up pressure on Irish Republican
Army (IRA) Provisionals today entered
the Londonderry '!no-go" Creggan area
and searched Belfast Roman Catholic
districts for suspects and weapons.
While the military moves were being
made, Secretary of Staie William
Whitelaw· -the man who ordered the
army's "get tough" policy -met with
politicians to orgsnize sn all·pariy cop-
ference on the province's future . Earlier,
political sources sald the British anny
had sent armored tank·llke vehicles to
Uisler in what could be a prelude to a
DAILY PILOT
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Telephones
MOit Or1119• Counly ,ltirtll • .,. .... '°'4Ut
Nl)rlll'/lmf Hll!'lflnOton Bncll
•rid W1itmln11er ....... , , .• , ...... '*U2t Sin Clement., C1ptltr1no BNCh,
Sin J1,1an C111111r1ne, Dlln• ~Int,
SCvlh L1gun1, Ltg11111 Nl;wl .... tn-4411
full·scale invasion of the Londonderry
"n.;go" areas.
e Coltra Deaths
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UPI)
-Six Filipino villagers in Central Luzon
were attacked and killed.by cobras flush-
ed out by floods, reports reaching
disaster relief headquarters said today.
The six snake bite ,victims were
reported to have been attacked in a
shack in Santa Rita, P a m p an g a
Province, 15 miles south of this big
American air base.
Three.pt the victims died Monday night
and the three others rerri'ained aJive until
today, the reports said. Serum arrived at
Clark today but too late to save the
three, officials said.
e Aeeurar11 Cited
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les
Aspin (0-Wis.), today said the Pentagon
should not require urine tests to detect
heroin use by children of overseas
military personnel until the accuracy or
the tests bas been greatly improved.
Aspin said the proposal was circulating
in the Pentagon and was "patently
ridiculous" since tests for drug addiction
among Gls failed to accurately identify
drng users in up to 40 percent of the
cases.
e Arab Campaign
CAIRO -(UPI) -The semiof!icial
C81ro newspaper Al Abram called today
for an Arab-wide campaign against
American interests in the Middle East.
A no t h e r g o v e mment-controlled
newspaper in Cairo said the United
States was as much an enemy of Egypt
as Israel. The newspapers were com-
menting in reactioh to a four-hour speech
by President Anwar Sadat Monday in
which he expressed dismay that U.S. in-
fluence in the Arab world was increasing. ,
Deaplt.e Viet Talhs
No 'Cease-fire'
Before Election?·
SAIGON (UPI) -Prospects appear
dim for any etase-fire In ~ Indochina
conflict before the U.S. presidential elec·
tion Nov. 7 despite the secret talka under
way in Paris.
The war may even intensify before that
date.
AT LEAST one well-Wonned U.S.
military source believes the Qnnmunists
will make another bid to capture the old
iniperial capital of Hue before mid·
October.
A civilian expert on North Vietnam
expects a wave of Communist terrorism
in South Vietnam's cities. including
Saigon, before the election. He al.so sees
another attempt to capture An Loe.
"Whatever they do will be designed for
maximwn visibility," an American of-
* * * President's Aide
Tells Nixon's
Vie ·w 011 Pullout
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A key aide to
President Nixon quotes the chief ex·
ecutive as saying that if the Communists
do not let the United States get out of
Vietnam "they right way, they will have
trouble."
The view of Nixon's thinking was given
in an interview Monday by Harry Dent.
an adviser to Nixon on .southern political
affairs, who holds the tiUe of special
counsel to the President.
Dent said Nixon intends to continue
Republican congressional leaders that if
he is re-elected bis second administration
will remain conservative and take no
swing to the left.
Dent said Nixon intends to c Ntinue
conducting foreign affairs from a posi·
tion of strength.
0 There are .some things Richard Nixon
ls very strong about ," Dent said. "The
strength of this country and the honor or
this country. I've beard him say over and
over again, if the Communists do not let
us get out of Southeast Asia the right
way, they will have trouble.
"All alon~ they (the Communis\•l have
been misJudging this adminlflraUon.
They thought he would react to political
expediency."
Dent said the President himself
brought up the subject of what his
palitical position would be in second ad4
ministration during a discussion of Sen,
George S. McGovern's liberal leanings.
Nixon, as pent paraphrased him,
began by saying, "some will suggest that
we should therefore move to the left and
pre-empt as much ground as we can."
Dent said Nixon proceeded to knock
down this idea.
The President's remarks have now
become "the line" or "the word" for
White House advisers and campaign
policy makers. Dent said .
One event that has already borne out
the President's policy declaration ts the
announcement last Saturday that Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew will be kept
on the ticket, Dent said.
Princess Steps Down
BANGKOK (AP) -Princess
Ubolratana, the oldest of K i n g
Bhwnibol's lhree daughters. has given up
her tiUe amid rumors that she has
secreUy married a fellow student at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
fleer said. This, he believes, Is the rea~n
for the random repeated eonunurusl
shelling of Hue.
OPT!lllfSTS AMONG the H a n o i
watchers see a prospect for a ceasrrfire
in Indochina next year. Pessimists
among them belleve the war will drag
along for four ·or five more years. I NEWS ANALYSIS I
But few American military or civilian
cfOclals in Vietnam expect any serious
negotiations by the Communists until
after the U.S. electiQn. •
The U.S. naval blbckade and renewed
bombing of North Vietnam may be
pil'M!hing Hanoi but there is no sign of It
yet on the battlefield. North. Vietnamese
troops have plenti£ul supplies and am-
munition and are receiving replacements
for .some of the men they lose.
ONE PRISONER of war told of makin~
the trip from Hanoi to the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ ) in eight days late last
month. He indicated that most of his 300-
mile journey was by truck. Despite the
Intense bombing of roads and bridges-,
traffic still is moving in North Vietnam.
And some supplies are getting through
the air and naval blockade into North
Vietnam. Chinese freighters lying outside
the ring of American mines around North
Vietnm's harbors are being unloaded
onto what the U.S. Navy calls "wiblics,''
a name derived from the acronym for
"water borne logistics craft."
DESTROYERS HA VE have been at·
tacking the "wlblics" and sinking some
of them. but apparently not enough, since
U.S. Marine AHl Sea cobra helicopter
gunships were assigned to the job for the
first time recently.
Even without additional supplies there
Is no indicaiton the North Vietnamese
will be unable to sustain the present level
of their balUelield acllvlty through the
U.S. election.
Supplies ror the Communst offensive
launched April l were already in place
ahead of it. In Quang Tri and Thua Thien
provinces the Communists are thought to
be drawing on supply stocks in caches in
the. A Shau and Khe Sanh valleys.
Nixon, McGovern
Forces 'Spar'
Across Country
By UDlted Pre11 brternaUoaaJ
While Sen. George S. McGovern and
administration leaders sparred from
Washington to Alaska, the White Hose
said President Nixon has no intentions of
debating the Democratic presldentiil
candidate. ·
McGovern .at Custer, S.G., said Nix-
on's Vietnam policy of seeking release or
U.S. prisoners by bombing North Viel·
nam was "lbe height of folly."
In Anchorage, Alaska, Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew criticized MCGovem's
proposals for draft dodger amnesty and
rerorm of marijuana possession laws.
Republican National Chairman Robert
J, Dole said in Washington that
McGovern has taken "consistent standl
against governments friendly to the
Upited States, and in strong favor of any
g9venunent antagonl!llc to the United
States."
Heat Clings to Southeast
Cold Front Run.s From Atlan,tic to Central Plains
Coastal Weatl1er
Motllll' sunny todty. L1;M v1rl1bl•
wll'ld1 nl;ht 1nd rnomlr111 llourt ~orn
lrtf W11llrly 10 lo 10 kllO" In tl!lr·
noon1 t1;1C11y I"" Wtdnt~•Y· High
lodty, IOWtf' 701.
Cot1t1I t1mper1ture1 r1np from •2
"' n. lnlllld ltmper1tur11 ,,~ !rum
tO to 17. W•ltr l1mptr•IUrt ff.
Su11, /tJoon, Tides
TUISD,ft,Y
$teond 111(111 .. . .. . . -. ''II p.m . 6 l
SKOl'ld IO'W' , .. . •. i·Ot p,m , 2.J
WIDNllDAY
r:lm 111011 ....... , .. ,. 1o:ss •·m. •.1
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l4r:oftd ti!gh •••••• "" t :Slp.ITI. 1.l
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&1111 tllln f :Sf 1.m. tittt 7iS' p.P!'I.
~ •"" 7:16 p,m. kh 5?16 •. ,.,..,
Temperatures
Stones itt Concert
Led by Mick Jagger , the RAllling Stones perform be-
fore 20,000-plus fans a1 Madison Square Garden
In New York Monday evening. Police bad to Ci>nlaln , ' r
a crowd outside the Garden who were un1bl1 to ft!.
tlcke!s for the J>ff ormance.
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I
~I
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Car Fam
First Test
IA County Case Ellsberg ..
TllKd.q, Ju!Y 2.S, lt12 DAll.V PILOT f
•
Woman
Arrested
At Prison EL MONTE (AP) -A
man took • car ftom an
auto dealerabip out for a
lrial 1pbi and used ii u
the getaway car in an at,·
lempted bank robbery,
pollce nld.' •
Ex-administrawr Trial May
To Be Sentenced See Delay
Skyjacker Faoos
Psychiatric Test
•
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A
woman bu been accused ol
trying to smuggle drup Into
San Quentin prlaon durlJ11 1
special "family visit" with her
convict huababd, prlaon of·
ficl•ls said.
San Quentin Information of·
fioer Joaeph O'Brien 1ald
aberUf's depuUea M o n d a y
booked Ruby Medina, 35, o1
Santa Rosa for lnveatlgallon ol
Importing drugs into prUon.
It wu the second time trou-
ble has arisen in the proeram,
which involves about 10 ln-
mate1 monthly.
Lest month a young inmate
escaped while visiting with hil
his family.
"This doesn't do the pro-
gram any good," said O'Brien.
"We're going to have to take
another look at it."
He said Mr's. Medina and
their infant daughter were on
a 48-hour vbit with Benjamin
111eclina, 32, who is serving a
five-year-to life ttrm for ro~
b<ry and burglary in Men-
docino County.
The year-old family visiting
program allows c o n v i c t s '
families to visit them in hom e-
like settings outside the walls
but still within the prison
grounds. The only requirement
is that the inmate report for
roll periodically.
O'Brien said prison officials
went to the Cotlage where the
Medinas had been •laying
after he "appeared to be
under the influence o f
something" at roll call Mon-
day morning.
He said they found ball a
botUe of contraband bourbon
and what appeared to be co-
caine.
He said a relative picked up
the baby after Mrs. Medina
was taken to the Marin County
jail
Immanuel Flores was
amsled at the dealerohip
Monday and booked for lJ>.
vestlgation· of bank rob-
bery.
Offlc<n laid the bandit
llhowed • First City Banlc
teller 1 not dennding
money. Wben she fainted,
the bandlt fied from the
bank. A JlUSOl'.by noted
the dealer'• tag on the
getaway vehicle a n d
Flores wu am.led ~ter
he drove into the Joi.
Legislature
2-year Term
Considered
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
amendment proposal lo adopt
the two-year Congressional
styJe term for the California
Legislature will go on the
November ballot.
The constitutional amend-
ment proposal received final
5H app~val of the Assembly
Monday.
With two-year sessions, bills
not a c t e d upon in the first
year . would not be
automatically killed at the end
of the year, and would thus
not have to be reintroduced.
' LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Fonner Los Angeles County
Publlc Admlolslrator Baldo M.
Krlstovtch ls to be sentenced
Sept. 12 on four felony con-
victions Jnvolving the sale or
automobiles he made while in
office.
The 57-year-old Kristovlch
wu convicted on two coants or
preparing false evidence and
two related counts ol perjury
Monday In connection with his
former job. The jury returned
innocent verdicts on five
counts and nine other counts
were dismissed.
At the same tim e .
Kristovich's 3 8-y ear-o! d
nephew, Joseph L. Vicelja,
was acquitted on one count or
grand thelt.
Krlstovlch was originally
charged with selling property
from estates under the control
of hit office to friends and
relatives far below the market
value of the items and before
the items were offered at
public auction. other . counts
included embezzlement
regarding land 4eals.
One of tbe perjury con·
viclioos concerned a car sold
by the public administrator's
office to Kristovich's brother
Marin . In probate rourt,
records reve.aled that a person
other than Kristovich 's
brother was listed as the
purchaser.
Similarly, the other perjury
Another provision w 0 u I d conviction stemmed from the
allow the Legislature to hold sale of two cars to a county
an organizing meeting 3 auctioneer, with those cars
month before the start of a being listed as sold to another
regular session. This wou1d person.
eliminate the delay the Probate filings are subject
Le1islature now suffers in the to perjury prosecution.
slart of committee hearings The Superior Court jury of
each January, said Assembly six men and six women failed
Speaker Bob Moretti (0.Van to reach a verdict on three
Nuys), cbief author. other perjury and four other
LEGAL NOO'ICE I
·:I!l!+:.::~:N·:· 2 Held in Child Deaths
TN fllllDwlM P"r10ll i. dolnt butll'INI 11: •
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llldlvklull. L1wrtnee Orrl11 t.Mwll • Tiii• 1r1tt1M11t lllld wlll'I t11oe countY
ci.rll or °'"'"" CtulltY en: Jvne 2', lt71 e... en-..-tv J. Mlddolc, tlt'PlltY county
CMrk.
DANlll. •· IUCICNUM ATTOttNIY AT U.W
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LEGAL NOO'ICE
,.ICTITIOUS •USINISS
NAMI ITATIMINT T~ foOowlnt H<IOl'I& •r• dol111
lbvtlllltt ••: l'AllltWOOO YILU.G'E LTD. 11
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corp0.t1llo11l, 1901 ~ SITH!, N,..,art
81tc:h, C1UI. ThoMr &. l lrrnlflONm COl\1trvctlon
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Thll butll'lftl 11 1111111 condlletM IW I
l lMltld P1rl111rahl1t "AfllCWDOD VILLAGE LTD.,
9y OON KNOLL COMl"ANY, 1NC.
ly: D. I". Mlddl..-nll'I
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er Artllllr E. Ktfttr, Dft'Vl"I Covntv
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
18-year .. Jd babyaltl<r and a
U-year-old Gronada HIIls man
have been arrested in the ap-
parently unrelated slaylngs of
two San Fernando Valley
cblldren, pollce said.
The babysitter, Donald Dale
Che!ter, wu booked Monday
for jnvestigatlon of murder in
the stabbing deslh of· one of
hi. charges, 3-year .. ld Allen
McLaughlin.
Allen's sister Lisa, 8, was
Jisted in serious condition at
Northridge Commun i t y
H<>1pital with knife wounds in
her arms, legs, face and torso.
Chester was quoted as tell·
Ing police when questioned
about the stabbings, j'l don't
know why -jealousy, worry
or nerves."
Monday In the murder of
ScarJett Elizabeth Cisneros,
10, ol Granada Hills.
SEC Accuses
Two Writers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Securities and Exchange Com-
mission accuses two Los
Angeles fmanclal writers of il-
legally trying lo influence the
price of stocks by publishing
favorable articles about com-
panies whose stock they own·
ed.
Named in the civil com·
plaint filed with the U.S.
District Court Monday were
Ate:r N. Campbell, financial
columnist for the Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner, and his son,
Ale1 N. Campbell Jr., editor
of the Western Financial
Journal. ci.rll.
Mirk Terry Hill was booked
for invesUgation of murder ...... 1~~~~_,;;,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
~l.n.d Ortnte Comlt Dilly l"Uot. MftltlMrMll
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LINDA
ISLE . • BIG '
CANYON
w. O.tlvff
Fine Groceries,
Liq-, l're11M1t
ol Prod-.
M111nl""llNf
673-3510
COAST SUPEI
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O~ONA DI!. MA
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coiiiiTEorwiiw
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OIAllGI cOuNJY
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Apply Now fer September 7th
Day or Evening Classes
ftft OI l'ttONt fOl IPrflCi'IMATIOH Oii CATAlOOUI
• aoq South Brookhurat
Aftoho1m 92804
17141 635-3453
Gttdu1tu ,,.. tllfl~lt i. t1\1 tf.. Ctllfomlt St111 ltt btmll'ltliln.
PIO'llSIOllAU.T ACC~ If THI
CAUPOIJllA COllMITTll Of IAl llAMINllJ • ---mnAlll ~~~~~~~---~~~
'l
preparing false t v I d e n c e LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
charges as well as one count The much delayed Pentagon
of conspiracy to commit con, Papers trial today faced the
flict of interest. The latter possibility ot a n o t h e r
charge was also levied agaln!t rotdbloak over a secret report
Vi celja but he was 11.quitted al eavesdropplaa by fedual
of it. 11eata.
Eleven days of deliberations Apparently only the judge
came to an end tl.1onday when and 'the Justice Department
the foreman of the jury knew the details of the report.
became ill and prosecutor 'Ibe judge indicated it wa.s not
Timothy Flynn said, "Llltie aimed deliberately •l trial
could be gained by bavlng figures, but wu an unsought
them deliberate any more. tt byproduct of another in-
. would be hard to find a more veitlgatlon.
conscientious jury." Lawyers for the defendants,
Thus. with the consent of the Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony
prosecution, Judge William A. Russo. immediately demanded
Caldecott dismlased the rest of a hearing Into the report.
the charges and set the After months devoted to
sentencing dale. The penalty pretrial hearings, the trial Is
for perjury ls one to 14. years l)l!arlng the argument stage. A
in prison. The maximwn . jury has been seated, and only
penalty for preparing false . selE1S?tioq of . six alteryiate
evidence is five years. jurors remains b e f o r e
The conspiracy and grand testimony can begin.
theft charges flied jointly Another ~aring could again
against ·vice1Ja and KristoVich delay the trial.
dealt with three purchases of ApparenUy, the judge In-
trust deeds by Vicelja from tended to decide whether or
Kristovlch's office. Vlcelja not to hold the hearing, by ruJ.
was accused of selling the ing on wheth6 the eavesdro~
notes to a 79-year-old widow ping might violate the privacy
for whom Kristovich worked of the attorney-client rela-
as an attorney while he was tionship.
serving the county in his lt bas been well over a year
$26 ,aoa..a-year job. since the Pentagon Papers,
CALIFORNIA
classified research into the
Vietnam War , were printed in
the New York Times and other
news papen.
Ellabetg and Russo have
been charged with 1heft, con-
spiracy and espionage. They
admit being behind the leak,
but deny what they did was a
criminal act.
Under the ground rules ror
department has beenrequired
the trial , the J us t ice
department has been required
by U.S. District Court Jud ge
Matt Byrne to notify him or
any electronic surve illance of
the defendants, their lawyers
or counselors.
Late Friday. the govern-
ment filed an affidavi t declar·
ing there had been no elec-
tronic surveillance "except as
may hereafter be disclostcl to
the court."
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Ricardo Chavet-Ortiz. co~
vlc ted of air piracy, faces 90
days of psychlalrlc testa to
determine it hls •years-to-
life sentence should be reduc-
ed.
The 36-yeRN>ld unemployed
C'OOk head U.S. District Court
Judge Charles H. Carr say
tl.1onda.y it wu "no pleasure to
ha,·e to commit you at thJs
lime" after a jury handed
down Its guilty verdict follow-
ing 6'h hours of deliberation .
Chavez-Ortiz, a !tfexican na-
Uonal , was accused of hi·
jacking a Front ier Airlines
plane over New Pifexico April
13, orde:ring it nown to Los
Angeles and then delh·ered a
broad cast plea for the poor or
the Me xican-Amer ican bar-
rios.
lie carried an unloadt'CI gun
and demanded no money -
only a plat form for his
frustrations.
The tr ial was brief because
the defense adm itted air
piracy h11d been comnlitted.
The defense argued ,
however . th at their client was
suffering from "diminished
capacity" under the stress or
caring for hls \\'ife and eight
children while being subjected
to the injustices he said all
tl.1et.ican.Americans suffer.
His sentencing by Judge
'
Carr was a legal form1Uty
since the term rould be
shortened following I h 1
paycblalrlc te.sla. Defense at..
torney• said they would appea
the verdict.
In te.stlmony last week,
Chavez-OrU1 said be hijacked
the jetilner becaUH he wanted
to tell the world of bis concm>
and frustr1Uon over-racill
discrimination. war, pollution
and other problems.
Chavez-Orth' arre.st and Jn-
carnatioo brought thousaodJ
of Mexican Americans to hi.s
defense. They raised $35,000 in
ball and many attended ltls
coon appearances. "Free
Chavtz-Ortb:" was a rallying
cry in the primarily l\.1exican-
the primarily M e x I c a n •
American East Los Angeles
area where he lived.
A large crowd of friends and
SUPPorters gathered in the
court.room 11-fonday .with many
more \\'Biting in the hall
outside. Wben the verdict was
announced, Chavez-Ortiz was
motionless, expressionless. but
Mexlcan·American activists
appeared shocked.
Prosecutor Richard Ro.sen-
fleld emphasized the details ot
the jncident -and the
testimony or a psychiatrist
who said Chavez-Ortiz was
mentally ill but that the illness
wu not disabling.
We think Vega is the best little car ever
buill And if you'll stick wlth us for eleven
paragraphs we'll gladly
tell you why. Fa<
Slartern, the engine. Vega is
blessed with a specially
designed ovemead Ollll,
aluminum block. 4<:ylincier
roof fumly attached to another steel roof to
make the car a little stronger on the outside
and a little quieter on the inside.
the windows are rolled up.
Other little louches Include Vtq/11*1-
den wind.shield anterma
when YOI/ order a factay
installed radio, a oealed
t!lde tenninal battery that
does aWQY wlth OOllClilbl,
power planl Big words to
match an impressive
performance.
It's a light engine, ro we were able to
pack it with plenty of hon;epower for ils size.
In practical terms this means you wind
up with the power for responsive accelero·
lion and turnpike perlormance. Bui with
about the same gos l!lileage os most other
economy oors.
Howeve;, if engines don't ,;::: "3'
tum you on, Vega hos plenty ~ of other features that other
little carsoan only admire
fromafQ1'.
Taking it from the top, our
double panel rool One steel ,gg
•
We've also bolstered ourdoono,foradded
strength. with side guard
beams that look and
woii pretty much like the
guardrailsyouseealong
the highway.
For stopping power.
we've added disc --
brakes in fronl Big
ones. lO-lnche11 that
oan slop you evenly
and frequently,
Forcomlcri, there's Vega's
superb bucket seals. No half-
~!11~~~~ way measures here either-~ full foam for !inn but oomfori·
'---' '----'able rupporl.
And lo help keep you cooL wevebuilta
power ventilation system that Is oo good,
air actually circulates f0\4.tR VEllTil.NIOt.!
evenwhenyourVega ~\><.
is standin9 still and • •
•
and ooil~ a>e at
every wheel And U you've
never had a ride on ooil spring11, well, mqybe
you don't know what you've been mia1;nQ.
O.K. We Jcnow. It oounda like we braq.
geth too much. But Other p9ople haft..,
&QYinc;i the oame thln91 In 9'en llronQer
terms. One example: The readers cl Car ci
Driver magazine voted Vega best In the
"economy sedan" clrus agalnal all oompeti·
tors-foreign and domeollc-for the seOcnd
year in a raw. No other
domestic oar baa ever
won in that claso.
So dnve a Vega
now, while The Vega
Drive is on.
~. ltdl/4",_,,,,,.,, ......... ,..,.._ .....
Building a better way to see the U.SA
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!
t DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Does It Help the Poor?
It IJ UllY to paint a picture that would favor a sul>-
llantlal Increase In the present .1.60 an hour minimum
wage.
At the present level of •t.60 an hour, It can be
argued, a man working 50 41).bour weeks a year can
&J'OSB only $3,200, well below the oUiclal "poverty line"
of $4,000 for an urban family of four. It IJ bard w argue
that a man can support his family at $1.60 an hour.
So the Senate bas passed a bill to Increase the mini·
mum wage to $2.20 a hour and the House has passed one
•etting the minimum a\ $2. A joint committee Is now
working out the differences between the two versions.
Whichever one is accepted -anCS in an election year
one ot them is certain to become law -most American
cltlzen1 will suller. And that Includes the poor even
more than the aflluent.
: In the first place, increasing the nation's minimum
wage by either 40 or 60 cents an hour -25 to 36 %
-mates a mockery of the administrlition'1 announced
policy of holding the line of wage Increases at five
percent-to curb inflation. For not only those in the mini·
mum wage brackets immediately be~n earr\ilfg sub-
stantially more than the· five percent Increas£, but the
pressure begins immediately to increase wages of those
In the next highest bracke4 then the bracket alter that,
then all the other wage bracke!J for workin' men and
women, as each pay· level seeks to maintain 1ts relative
posiUon.
There is another basic fallacy in arguing that a big
boost in the minimum wage is a boon to those at the
bottom of the economic ladder. What happens, very
simply, is this: Faced with increasing costs1 tbe employer
lJ under pressure to eliminate mar$iJlal jobs by substitut·
tng labor-saving equipment, reducmg service to custom-
ers or, in some cases, he simply goes out of business.
When any of these occur, the first affected are thos•
whose work employers consider least valuable -partl<>-
ularly Inexperienced, young people.
Increasing the minimum wage to •t.80 or $1.85 now
and to $2.00 or above In a year or 18 month.a would
make better sense in terms of keeping some lid on wage
inflation pressures and In terms of preserving marginal
jobs, while giving needed Income boost to lowest paid
workers. It also ia well to bear in mind that a great num·
ber of minimum wage earners are not su~portlng a fam-
ily or are not the sole wage earner in their family unit.
Raising the living standards of America's poor can
sound like a lofty and persuasive proposition -even in
an election year. But the cold fac!J say increasing the
minimum wage so greatly will harm more people than
it would help.
Washington Name Game . .
It is pleasant to note, now and then, that life in the
nation's capital ·is. not all serious, ideological, emotional.
It sometimes can be amusin,, too. 1 '
Consider the exchange Involving three highly placed
departniental executives, as reported by the Wall Street
Journal. They are:
George Shultz, newly appointed Secretary of the
Treasury.
Charles Schultie, former Budget Director.
Charis Walker, Undersecretary of the Treasury.
Said Shultz (George) of Schultze (Charles~ He's a
very fine public servant "except that he doesn't know
how to spell his last name."
Said Walker (Charis) of Schultze (Charles): "He
doesn't know how to spell his first name, either."
We've heard of alphabetical agencies, of course
but this. • • • ' 'My! Wha a surprise!'
Our Negotiator: It's Nixon t;.J,
Who But Bobby?
.
~-_,. FllCber't tactica at the World ( ) ~ Cheas Qwnplomblp In Iceland have won ·
•.. htm 111e undying admiration ot tbouaanda , ART HOPPE . ~ of --all ol them,.as It so hat>' ~ pens, olUclall of the U.S. State Depart• '-----------' ~ ment. Department's annal&." J· "Now, there'• a chap who really knows "Oh, I fully concur, sir," Mid :J bow to deal with the Russians!" said :1 young Under Assl-Bagworth. "But look at the fuss Fischer
·1 Stant As!oclate Sec· put up not only over the table, but the ~ rotary Ba-orth at chairs. He finally flew his own in _from
" r... New York."
j'-the Department's re-Pettibone frowned thoughtfully. "Yes,
gular Tu..day High you might draw up a White Paper on
f
Level Policy Oeler-that , Bagworth. A full study on the
mlnation & Two necessary shape of the chairs mii;bt be
Martini Lunch Ses· helpful in our future dealings with the
t, sions. Soviet bloc." ~ "I'll have to ad·
~ mit that on several
:1 cccaslons be had that Moris Spassky
l climbing the wall.'' grudgingly conceded
l' portly Homer T. Pettibone, t h e
~ dlstbigu!Jbed Deputy Under-Secretar/ for •~ Negotiatiorui:, White Papers & Bar Chits.
" ••eut 11m no\ sure be can bold a candle to
•
Uf ....
uLOOK AT bis record, sir," ei:claimed
Y°"'1i Bagworth. "Finl, be announces IJC
can· ,outmaneUver Spas!ky face-to-face
-the table with one hand tied behllld bis back. And when the challeoge
is accepted, he managed to delay selec-
Uoo of a site for the meeting for a good
alx months.It
uyou•ra ·forgetting, Ba I w o 'rt h , '•
replied Pettibone proudly. "that we did
better than that when it came to picking
a spqt for the SALT talks."
"I didn't mean to tam1sh the
Department's image," said Bag\YOrlh
apoiogeUcally. "But you must agree that
wbeh it came down to stalling on coo-
diiloos for the meeting, Fischer showed
true' genius -the lighting, the table, the .. ...
"l:IOLD ON there, Bagwortb," said
Pet~ne, surny. "Perhaps you're too
young to remember the negotiations we
held on the •hape of the table at the
Paris Peace Talks. It WM one of the
greatest triumphs in negotiating in the
"AND THEN when 1t was all set, he
announced he wouldn't come come
because there wasn't enough in it for
him." "Tut, tut, Bagworth. That 's been
Department policy for years."
"But he forced the British to sweeten
the pot, as It were , sir, and ... "
"I hope you're not suggesting we ever
turn to the British for help," said Pet·
tibone scowling. "Have you forgotten tbe
War of 1812 already?"
"NO, SIR, but you can't overlook his
accomplishments. First, he so insults
Spassky by his delays that Spassky
threatens to withdraw. Then he finally
shows up, holds one public session and
withdraws himself. Next he doesn't sho'v
up at all. Then he demands a privcte
session in another room and forces
Spassky to withdraw on the 41st move.
After that ...
"Please, Bagworth. When you've been
with the Department as long ~s l hav~,
you'll realize this Is all old hat."
"Perhaps so Sir. But I can't help feel·
ing we could use a man like that at the
Paris Peace TalkJ."
"Really, Bagworth. Your ignorance is
appalling."
"Beg pardon, sir?"
"Where," said Pettibone, do~ his
second martini, .. do you think f'1sber has
been training these past three years?"
• l 'Protective Reaction'
• " ,• • • "Every 11tlck," goes an old Gennan
saying, "has two ends to it." ~
SYDNEY J.HARBIS ·" .• • t ·:
I •
~ :1
·f
I ;t
' .,
• • l :~
• ..
,l • '
I t.Mught of this cautionary maxim
when I received a letter from an in-
etruclor at Mundelein College in Chicago,
apropos of my recent column aJ;K>ut the
teaching of Latin in the schools, and its
usefulness for an en-
larged English vo-
cabulary.
While It Is perfect·
I)' true . as she
agrees, that a kno~··
ledge of Latin gives more color, pre-
dslon and flexibility
lo Englilh speech.
the other end of the
•tick (which I neglected to mention) Is
!hot the promiJc:uoUI use of Latinized
WDl'ds may easily be used to obscure or
betnY the -ol truth.
II)' CORll!Sl'Ol'IOENT reminds me
lhll Gtorge Orwtll, In hit essay on
poUllca and the EngliM Ionguap, warns
ut lo beware of the lnllatcd 1tyle of
...... octentlltl ond polllklln•, In which
"a -of Latin wordl fllll upoo the
-• oo11-, ~the outlines .. "°"""' up the cletak In -ol hit moet memorable .....,.., written some 2$ years ago,
ar..11 Jll'Ollb6les what bu bealne a ........ le.._ ol i..,.... -all elllc:laldomt &lnco then. Bo w10I<:
"IN CM( mm. pollllcal opeedl llld
(
writing are largely 1he defenae of the b>
defensible. 'l'h1ngJ like the continuance ol
British rule In India, tbe Rusaia purges
and deportations, the dropping of the
atom bomb on Japan, can lrideed bo
delended, but only by argument.t wblch
are too brutal for most people to face,
and which do not oquare •Ith the .....
fessed aimJ ol political parties ...
"DEFENSELESS villages are bombed
from the air, the inhabitants driven out
into the countryside, the cattle macltine-
gunned. the huts .. t on fire with b>
cendlary bullets : tbl.! Is called paclnca·
tion. Millions of peasants are robbed or
their fanns and sent trudging along
roads with no more than they can carry:
this ii called transfer of population or
rectlflcation ol frontlen. People are Im-
pr isoned for yea n without trial, or shot
in the back : this ls called elimination of
unreliable elements .•. "
SINCE THEN, OUR own S!Jte and
Dtfenae Dtpartmenl.! have come up with
10me Latinb.ed lulus that would have
rocked even the cue-bardeoed Mr.
Orwell -like Stcrtlary Laird '• .. protee-
Uvt ructions," which a1mp11 'meanl
bombing the beD out of them Just In case
tbq ,.. the Idea lint.
I
·Dear
Gloomy
Gus
What would the smokers do if the
non-smokers would leave obnoxious
crud and fumes and garbage on
Ille smokers' ·desks -ht garb ..
trays which are comparable to aSh
trays -which would be as lilthy ·
and abhorrent to the smoker as .Utt
smoker's filth is to the D(ln-
smoker?
---0.D.
Tllls fMlvr. rtfleCh r1adtrl' vlt'#t, not
nkUS ... ll'Y tMu Of ,... ,_..,.._. s-nci
·-pet PHYt1 ti GlclOmY Gu .. D1llY ll'li.t. '
Court Plan
Not Needed, , .
She Asserts
To the Editor :
AB 54, which would establish a
Superior Court branch in Fullerton, is
superfluous and a waste o( taxpayer's
money for the. benefit of a chosen few, or
the ego of the Fullerton Chamber of
Jimmy the Gree Sets Odds
WASHINGTON -George McGovern
has only one chance in five of upsetting
President Nixon in the November elec-
tion.
These are the Carelully researched
odds ol Jqruny the Greek Snyder, the
famed Las Vegas oddsmaker, who
prepares lli pollti·
cal prognostications:
exclusively for us.
Off the cufl, be
rated the President
It 4401 tt.V~ ~,.. , the 019 -of M<>-
G<wem'a n om i ....
nation. But now
Jimmy has com· ~
pleted a careful i.
comparison of the two candidltes, using
a Ppint system to rate them.
lfe has assessed their advantages and
disadvantages in .three categories : Sup-
port, issues and image. Here are Jim·
my's calculations :
SUPPORT -He gives Nixon an l\.to-3
advantage in financial support; 11>-to-l,
foreign support; 10.to-1, Republicans ;
11>-to-2, Big Business; 7-to-~, Jewish
Americans ; l-to-4, independents; S..to-4,
Jabor ; S..to-t. women. McGovern is ahead
(JA~ ANDERSON)
7-to-3 with youth, &-to-3 with Democrats
and &-to-3 with minorities. All tolalled
Nixon has a 70-to-40 advan~Sie.
ISSUES -Rating how the I two can-
didates stand with the public on the
issues, Jimmy believes the President has
a 11).to-% edge. over McGovern on foreign
aJftjj(I; J0.1<>2;)1usinw; 6-to-t. military;
7-to-3, busing; and 9-~7, law and order.
Jimmy rates both candidates even, ;l·to·7,
on their economic propc)sab. McGovern
is given a 9-to-6 advantage on welfare ;
10.t~. farm subsidies: t-lo-7, federal
spending ; and 3-to-2, revenue sharing.
Summed up, Nixon comes out ~tQ..53
ahead of McGovern.
ThlAGE -Although President Nixon
has had image troubles, Jimmy rates
him higher than McGovern · in· all
categories, as follows : 11>-to-7, recogni·
lioo : 9-t~, politician; 7·lo-5 credibility;
7-to-5, charisma ; 7-tc>&, intelligence; and
9-t.o-8, religion. The total Ni.loo edge is
.{!l-lo-37.
By Jimmy's evaluation, Nixon is a 5-t.o-
•
1 favorite to be ~lected.
CHOU REMEMBERS -Chinese
Premier Chou En-Jai is still smarting
over the late John Foster Dulles's refusal
to shake hands with him In 195!.
It happened in Geneva, where the m<l-
jor powers were carving Indochina into
spheres or influence. Chou walked toward
f1u!les and held out his hand. Dulles
hesitated, then clasped bis hands behind
his back.
1be Secretary of State muttered, "I
cannot," and stalked out of the room.
. ,The slight contributed1 lo 20 years of
Chinese-American hostility. Had better
relations been achleved, the Korean and
Vietnam wars probably could have been
a Voided. '
The Dulles rebuff still bUms inside old
Chou. He recalled the incident during his
recent visit with House leaders 1-lale
Boggs (P.La.), and Gerald Ford IR·
Mich.), in Peking.
Smiling, Chou said lhat at least
Dulles's No. 2 man, Undersecretary
Bedell Smith, was a genUeman. Smith
IJeld a teapot in his right hand so he had
an excuse not to shake bands, recalted
Chou. Still, Smith reached over with bis
left band and grasped the Chinese
Premier'a ann.
:,~'2:~~a~!a~~~:f~ But Height May Play Role
( MAILBOX )
Relations Di vision which a f f e c t s
thousands and wastes millions each year
with its many costly ramifications. Con-
ciliation or family courts are lacking in
Orange County although we rank second
in domestic filings. Male and f e m a I e
groups have formed to voice their
dissatisfaction with our present system
and unheard are the thousands of
children· who end up being the real vic-
tims.
To see the potential establishment of
an additional, uMecessary branch court
for the benefit of a few is an appall ing
waste when so many more people could
benefit by better use of these tax dollars.
We hope that the already overburdened
taxpayers will oppose this branch court
and seek . refonn in more beneficial
...,,.. .• ROSE MAZlAl\KA
. ·~tot Band'
To the' Editor: ••Personally, the Libben Are Getting
OU! of Hand" sa)'S the headline to
.Joenne ReynOlds' July 11 co 1 um n
Well, personally, I think Reynolds aot out
of hand. -
I found her stupid little (bwnorous!)
analogies such u if It's chairperson In·
1teed of chairman, then why not Walt
Whltperson Instead ol Walt Whitman
very annoying. I mean really ! Does that
makeanyoense?
The whole cockeyed column wu an In-
sult to my lntelli&eoce. Anyone who uses
such comparisons to the ... of the lerm
"chairperson" like 111Ina Balpenlon In-
stead of Batman or first balopenon In-
stead of first bueman to back up her
opinion makes no points with me.
Peraonall)', I see nothing wrong with
the term "chahperlOll." I must agree
wl1h l\eynolds, however. on one of her
"polntJ"-lt 1iolld be ridiculous In order
to keep JU out ol it to call 11 "The
lcepenoo Cometh"! -Ms. Reynolds,
you're the ooe wbo ii going a bit too far.
At the end, Ille asked If 11 meant that
now llhe wu a newsperooa. There would
bo doubt In my mind too.
KAY O:JOPERMAN
If you play it by the book, our next
President ls going to be George
McGovern. That is, if he runs against
Mr. Nixon. For it is a widely accepted
political maxim that the taller of two
candidates nearly always walks away
with the marbles.
The tall guy ha.o always had the odds
going for him . Vide
Aristotle, who knew
a thing or two:
"Personal beauty
requires tb4t one
abould be tall ; little
people may have
chann and elegance,
but beauty -no.11
The great slarl ol
films. like· John
Wayne, nm to height. The heroes of
sports are mostly big chaps, excepting
maybe baseball. In truth, tall men are
much better at most games than
shortiee. 'Thi! was recenUy found in a
study of the helghll of playen end win-
ners at the Mexico Clly Olympics.
IN SWIMMING, for Instance, none of
the small J!OOPle """ a medal, Ind 18 per·
cent ol the points wmo takeo by tall
swimmers. In jumping Ind throwh>J
evenll the tall groupo "'"' 12 pertenl of
Ille points and between ~ and • percent
In aprings and hurdling. C:.Olellan!J
under 11 Inches tall 1alned no medals
whalever In -events.
The report coociuded that the only
gports whera Ille man of aver.,. height
seems to have 1 chance are tboee where
quality of performance Is taken Into 11\l"
coun~ such u diving and 1)'11!11Utica.
I have fouiid that being tall ii rather a
rnb<ed bleuJng. You are often ta1leJ> for a
cop. This can bo a flllOd thing or a really
bad thing. People tend to get out of your
way, which t.t a pnotty clear bltalng. But
you are conspicuous and too eully
remembered, which IJ DOI too flllOd In a
career of crime, and In certain other oc-
cupations. You are leas conspicuous in
Southern Clllfornla than almost any
other place In the world.
SINCE TlllNGS are made for people of
average a!Je, It ii oometlmes cllfficult to
1et the tight kind of clolhes. The
wumptJon of the ciolhes manuflc:turlni
(cHARLES McCABE)
biz is that all men are around five-nine.
This can lead to minor inconveniences
for the big man.
An extreme example of this Is to bo
round In some of the work: of Frank
Lloyd Wright. Wright, who had an ego of
rimrnoderate proportions, W3$ five-nine.
His buildings were extrapolations of
himseli, everything ~aled to five-nine. 1
[w~nt through his Taliesin West in
Arizona a few years back, and spent half
' my Urrie hunched as if I were entering an.
English cottage. I'm siJ:~ne. Those four
inches sure made a difference.
Why Birth s·tny Cool .
If you were a• bird, a swnmer beat ,.-----------.
wave would be no sweat. Neither would f ( ) winter's cbilllng blasta. Birds have no HAL BOVT "I:' sweat gllnds. They keep cool by special '.I.~ air sacs and by opening their beau and .., __________ _,
vibrating the sides ol lhelr throats -u 1 a SwiM mountain climber m1ghi cure on!J six or seven .. 11.
lonalllltls by yodeling. I Worth remembering: "I can't nay I H was In the lop hall ol my college ow does a man get to heaven? A graduating clus, but I was In the group
c o u, ntry preacher that made the top half possible."
once said there wu a tie vote the day QUOTABLE NOTABLES1 "The
man waa born. The • capacity to endure the crutltlet of me
Lord voted for him and overcome lta mlsforlunea without
and Satan voted despair-this requires ~ be,;<>ism beyond
against him. It is 1 glory, pride and vanity. -Albert
then up to the man Salomon.
how be breaks the ' .--------...,
tie: for bt votes
with the Loni or
with Satan by the kind of life be leads.
A cbect doesn't have to be the ,.,.,.
ventional size unless the Jaw says Jt does
• and In most place.a Ibo law Isn't speclfl~· .
Cbecb have been booored that worw
scribed on blocts of marble. root
shingles, skis, botUe labels or whitewuh-
ed on the aide ol a cow. One "*'•
angered by 1 Califomla judge's onltr to
pay ll ,500 In • divorce sult, ~oil lilt
ablrt and wrote on It 1 cbect Jot Iba
amount. Hit 1n1te had little -""'1
vtrtlnl It lo cash. Moral: Wherevtr )'Oii
can sign your name, watch ouL I
BIG ADVANTAGE: Along with bavlni
more toolhsoJlle 1mlles1 certain members
of the aUteator family navo aDl)\ller den-
tal advantage over the human rac:o. They
can grow as llWlY u 40 sets ol leeth ht a
llfetfmo. Even the ~ tleplwtl eeta
• .. -
DAILY PILOT
. Tho11141 Jl'eMI, Editor
Albm W. Bot<1
Edltorlol Page Editor
Tuesday, July ~. lU'/2
7
N.Y. Steeb
YOL 65, NO. 207. 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES . . . ORANGE CO~NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 25, '1972 N TEN CENTS
,
Council (}Ks Project Over Planners' Denial
'
A.clinl 111 a. motlon by Vice · Mayor
Howanf ftolert, 1lbo reprelltllts Balboa,
counctlmea ..t.a 5-1 to approve tlie JAK
appeal lnft tbe plannllll conimbsion re-
jection fll the plan.
· Coundlman .J>aul Jlrckolf" cut the
"no" vote, cWng lbt delllliy, the plan-,
ntrs', obJOqtjona to mldeo.~ "'° In the commerctal-aqd a ~Uon
that any polentlal uae llbould await
formulation of a new city mister plan.
Allan' Beek, pmldenl GI Newport
·Police Co.pte.~s
To 'Get Scrutiny
'
Ban on Hitchhiking
1'o • • .. .. ' • • •
OK;d by .Comicil Unit.
LOS·ANGBLES (AP) -A'aty Council'
coauil!t\H bu ondoned in ordinance to tiall blldihlldill . wblcli ' appllea I o
motorllll u 'wtn u bllcbhlkera.
TbicOf!llnance WU approved S-1 by tbe
Public Worb Committee Monday. It waUld ban rides for penom no\ kMwn to
eacll olblr. It 1IOllld not apply to FU!"
ranaed -·· The ordinance wtll 1<> lo the lull couni:tl wl\llln l110 Wetka.
them," be said. "But they're really one
of aur -·conlrovenlal thinp and they
sboulcl be aired publicly."
,Ryckolf 11iJj the poilce department
should ¥eP more of a loc GI beli<:opter .
activttiti'. ' ' I
..it will· eime Gllllof lY .ll!>e. .,;;ti\;'~ ~ ..... -JOI, ••
......... ~ ... ""* lbil' _ .......... made mow.· ii lliC •
Qlof Ji. lainao G"'-""' lbll
--ftpllad by poillllow""' lhal Ille ~ ·-bep il'dally·lclg of hellOOJllef acl!villeL "Iii ~) pertiapl bu ~ ..... ...,,
it," G..._ aakL , •
Gi&Yu allo defended lbt need Iii< the ... ,._._. . . '
~~·· . ,. "Ii """1111 be i:egretlalila JI --le who value aafely and aacurlty Jn' the
mni-tty don~·cilliie tul·l<ir Ibis ......
ell meellq to -lbelr oppn>val," be aa1cl.'. '
· · Slpitum .., the· letter that .trlP,'td
RyUoll'1 proposal came mainly ttom
""""""'"'In. "lbe Harbor v .... llllli-
Cortlla' dohMar· area allbouP two are Ba!b6a·*--'
· "I.reo>inbe• lbere ate ...,. people<.ln
\be. M!J!!IU!ity who· ... dialurbed bY ""'
90i1e .fl the belieopta','' Glav11 aald: "I .......,u... allo tllal lbe hellcopler; u a
pollce palrol •ebicle bu found -...
eeptance ln law """"'""1enl drcles
..,,_ lbt nation.
"It b botb ecmomk:al and effective;"
ht said: "Newport Beach liu found lbt
lieilCOpter mn more elleclfv• lhan lllOllt
ciliet !J1 reuOll of Its a t Y p I C a 1
topograpey," tbe chief added.
Newport Council · Action
Here In brief are JD1jor acUona taken by flewport Buch city councilmen
lolGDday nlibl: '
"-DUPLEXl!ll -·All> Jl.t (duDJ .. ) laU m ·~ hland -. ._,... to
ri-U, a claulllcallon Iba} plhnll'a llCtlld 11111! "briae iparlmenli" no iarler
\ban IOI squire flal. Tllo -cirdi...,., ~ -lalely, W!ll lalt W da)'l IDIW perllllllllll rcmJnc can be accom~
' FllN ZONE -Ianored plannlnC cornmilllon .,,..1t1o11 and_approved con-
lirudloD ' of a· fAmlf CQlidomPhun m lbt•lile fll 'llalbOa'I OllCe'chorllbed Fui
'Zionie: • .... • ~ •
BEIJCOPTI!lt -Scheduled beartnc lor s.p1..11 to talk llllolil contrmralal J
police litllcopterL . .
... . .,, . ... . "' coWNs'-~ed lol'aol belr1hl 111 'IJI dlll ~t plan for lf-==:=....~:.nr~"=7=:.ci~
eolnclde wltb roa4 ~. . ' ~ . . ' SUUING -Jfeard 1Uffer1 UI: !er earller IUl'llnl bouts Mid told tbeai -
!Mel wltb IUeguard and PBR olflclala and -•aen. 'Surftn want to 10 II
lbt 111\er at 5 a.m. 'I'lley're -Rpt out ,.,w 7:• a.m.
~TION -Alrted to bear Irvine Colllpo111 pllDI far deftlopoeat Gf
Ult ~rated area 110Uth of Corona de! M• llepl. U. "'-' li1or wm 1et a report 111 lbt COii-benefit rallo fll ~atloll ~ II!' 1·5 mile lllretdl.
---Ni ... aelllin Cl! a ....... by Wind Ambulance ... ke !or a pann1t to ...... ii .. dty. PollcO <* ). l-Glavu urpd
llllld1 of tbe .,._al NYial It mlchl !area ..,. or bolll GI Ille two otber ...,..
... -"1lullMal ;... be-• ...,_t lo ld'flea ...... by retldmta.
ll'llNll.atl -AftrlCled )llllOlg code to reqalro 111tl-flre l!l'lnklnl
.,_ 11 11it1 balldilp and b • I cbalD 1ilt .. otber "cllmblblo" lmclo
...... d ••'"D'Q poalL
...... -Delayed until All-1' a dacillon m wbelber to 1pend ~ to
....... "' buJ ..alild ............ part litea ... Balboa !Jland and CIUt
llrtft. '
Residents United. atso argued against tbe
proposal. .
Beek this morning announced li>-
tentioos to appeal the decision v1a a
citywide referendum, but Assistant City
Attorney David Baade said the action by
~ilmen was "administrative" and
. not "JegtSlative" :and theref'Ore not sub-
ject to an appeal to the voten.
'1bey're sabotaging lbe general plan,"
Beek charged. •
The action overturning the planner•
also came over the objections of three in-
fluential homeowners' associations, those
representing Balboa Island, Central
Balboa and Peoinsula Point.
'The Balboa Businessmen's Association
supported the council action and this
drew criticism lrom !lffk.
"Businesses in the area have not been
pushiag ridevelopment," .Beek said, "I
suspect their intent is ~o make similar
proposals for high density development. .
"I! that's the case," he said, "whf
•
don'\ they come belore the counaU and
say so, so the city can decide on the
future or the area in a coherent man-
ner."
Rogers, prefacing hb tn0tion, said he
didn't like the density of the project ad-
ding that hP doesn't like the present use
either.
"It's a trade-off, It's the role of a
politician to work on compromises, to get
the best deal for people who elect you,"
he said.
' I ' ' ·AERIAL.PHOTO INDICATES HOUSING DENSITY ON NEWPORT'S BALBOA ISLAND ,· Council En1cts1 Enwr...,cy O~din1nc1 to Curb Duplex Construction· '· · · 1 • ··;.., .. ~ ' • • .. ... c. •. 1' -. . . . . . . . . ' . '
Duplex Construction Halts
Newport Council Gives Order Vnder New Ordinll.nce
Newport Beach city counc~en Mon·
day nigh\ ordered an Immediate bait to
the construdion or all duplexes on
. Balboa Island.
,. .
In a unanimous vote with Councilman
Carl Kymla abaent, tbey adopted an
emergency ordinance that rezones all R·2
(duple•) lots to a· new R-U zone they
Sen3te Unanimously Ol{s
Irvine Hospital Measure
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of fllt DlllY ;uot St.tt
A bill adding $911,000 to tbe state
budget to provide planning funds for a
350-bed teaching hospital al UC Irvine
appeared · hea~ed :or \rouble in lbe
Assembly today even though it won •
11oanh1wJ.!1 approval in the Senate Mon--
clay. '
State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach) draftad ~ final-hour
SB IOtll al!er tbe Legtslature had cul the
allocaUon lrom the budget.
A Carpenter aide today said the bill ts
beaded !or a "strong fight" In the
Aaaembly Wa)'! and Mean Commltte..
Ill dlancea of clearing thal committee
are "unctrtain," the aide said, due to the
oppoo!Uon of ~lyman Willie Browo
(Mia Francl!co).
8-ilal aald heir oppose any luture
....... Gf 1111 .. nlity medical laciliUes
unlB ld!del to ..,.. Inner-city areas •u&••lded. Vice Oianoelor t. E. Cox aald ~ll:i Ille w1lole fllture of the medical on Allembly approol of
1111 _,.. and voter approval
nest fall $115.1 million statewide
bealtb -bond --Wblle Illa lladg!t addlUon would paJ
for wonlhl clrawlnp ad dclailed plans
and specifications for the hospital, the
building can'\ be built without the bond
moneys.
• Co• explained that about ball of the
total 135 nillioo cost of lbe hospital would
come from the state bonds with the rer
mainder expected to come from federal
lource.s.
If the Assembly approves the planning
money and the bonds are approved In
November, the• hospital could be com·
pleled In early 11'16, C!i• said.
The facility would allow the . UC!·
Calllomia College·GI Mediclnt to double
ii! entering clasl alze from Ill to 128.
medical stodenl!.
That increase also Is dependent on ad·
dlllonal ciusroom and I a b o r a t o r y
buildinp to be built wltb the llata bond
moneys. Project.s supported by the bond
funds amount to about ~ million in·
dudinl the •17.5 million stale share of
the teaching hospital. Tl1e remainder of
tbe bond money would provide a med!Cll
oclence bulldiog, a clinical llcience
building and poulbly a school of nuralng.
Col noted that a delay in the iUlcmbly
passaae of the bolpltal plannin& bill would
bold up cooslnictlon, perhaps !or a year •
Once aD -are IVallable the projec:I
will tlU al leul • maoths, C.. aald.
had created minutes earlier.
The new zoning claasiflcation restricts
the size of secqnd units to *XI .square feet
and labels them 11garage apartments.,.
Citing clalms the new zone won't ef.
ledlvely reduce density, Balboa Island
Councilman Paul Ryckoll1 wlio apoDJOred
the ordinance, aald:
''There mlgbt be better w,)'a, .0. one
c)aima this is the bell of all pouible
ordinances. 11 may be · jmpoulble to
leglstsi. bow many people .'steep In·
bedrooma. I realize 11'1 Imperfect. Our
inlenl Is to try ·to do ' aometblog wltb
density aa ·well u wilb bei&bt."
The new ordinance alao lowen lbe
belght limit from ~ to 28 feet.
Ryckoff'• propoul won key 111pport
from Sixlb Dislrict CGuncllman Richard
Croul, wbo hlltorlcally bu defended the
rl&hts of properly owners f'! develop lhler
land, bu\ who aiao repreaents part of the
Island.
"We're conctmed with I.be' masaive
duplens going up. They're acabblng w:Uts," Q-oul uld. . . . '
"PreUy •IOOI\ we11 ba,. all bulldlni-
and nothing elu. We must try to 1et
operuieU a<i people 'can'\' gel lliclt
massive units in crowdld artU •llie
Balboa Island," be -11U1timately,n Crool llldj ''ftlli woukl
be decreued (il du@.._ are -too
continual. It Iha, -k a bardalllp, blll,
with 800 feet ln Iha second unit -18
"111 at .ltasl have the opportunlty for two
bedrooma ujlltalrs, but -~ be bulldlnC'
over the entire lot."
The emergency ordinance llld lbe R.l .5
!Ol1lng claaalllcaUoo wort -1>1'
tbe Balboa Island Improvemeot "'-la·
lion.
"An)1hinc will llelp," aaid Georse
Wood.I, representlnc the Improvement
1UOCl1tlon. "We must 1 t a r t IOl'nt-
Wbere. '' . llil words ..... echoed laler bf
(Sae, DUPLEX, ..... t)
John Konwiser, JAK president, told
cowtcilmen he had tried to interest com-
mercial reaJtora supported that con ..
had been totally UMUCCesslul. Com-
mercial realtors supported t hat con-
tention.
Koowiser Ibo claimed that the project
will actually reduce traffic since it will
not attract as many visi tors as the Fun
Zone. •
Councilman 'Richard Croul. him.self a
(Seo FUN ZONE, Page I)
ness
Has Been
Iii Hospital
3 Times
CUSTER, S.D. (AP) -Democratic
vice presidential nominee Sen. Thomas
F. Eagleton dtsclosed today be had volllJ>o
tarily hospitalized himself three times
between 1960 and 1966 "for nervous ex·
haustlon and fatigue ," but that since then
he has eo)oyed "good sound, solid
health. ..
Sen. ,Geoqe ~cG'<lvern, \be
~tic pr•1-*'•' *"'"*· aa\d be bad !l'-l~about the bo•pllallzallons W!a M "Eq'Jetm tO be bis nm-
~ !1#.lllldld, .. , ~
ajlpllt!• by ~ Jucllm'"I" hi~ lld wllea be neac!ed It. E.,woa ~ bts )!ledlcal lllllory
alter a lllOl'llln( GI canlerenca with
1ofcGo\'efll at 1111 91C1tlon retreat ln the
Black Hllls GI South Dalroia, aaylng \bat
the American people were entiUed to the
full atory. about rumora throughout his
career about his health.
Eagleton aald , "On three occasions In
my Ille, I have voluntarily gone lnto
hospitall for serious exhaUJUon and
fatigue," the most recent· in Stptember
1966.
He ~d the bospllalizatlons resulted
from his being "a rather iiitent, hard·
working man." But since these Incidents,
be said, "! bave paced myself a creal
deal more.'' .
Two of the hospltalizatloiis, one of
about ODt· month In Barnes Hospital In
St. Louis ln December 1960 and a aecond
of about lbree weeu al Mayo Cllnlc ill
Rocbeater, Mlnn .. ln September 1•, In-
cluded counaellni from a psychlatrill ID-
cludlnk electric shock' lreabnenl and
aleeping.pllls.
The third bospitallzallon waa for about
lour daia al the Mayo Clinic ln
December 19114.
Ea&leton uald he had undergone
physical .. amlnallon las\ Friday from a
Senal< physician and Monday in
Betheada, )Id. Complete mulls are due
later ih 'the wee~ but Eagleton said lbe
doctor told him, 0 J'm two J>O'fDdS
overweight and flave half a bemorrhold." Ea&letoo aald thal It took these H·
perlenm to enable him to learn bow to
take· It a Utile easier and be lnlenda in
the forthcWnlna campaign "to &1ve It all
that I have OD I measured basis."
McGovern said when be asked
Eagletm to be his running male II day1
ago, "! liked U Ibero wera any problems
ln bis paal that be lbougill" would cause
(See EAQLETON, Pqe I)
....... c:. ••
Wutller
More ~ oo the agenda for
W-.,Y along 1be Onngt Coul,
with tempei:atum """' apln near
IO Inland. I1eacb blPt Gil arcuod
70 are~ low• IML
INsmE TOD.t'Y
: Obs.,..,.,, 10ho are "' l.\c
~"°"'• 14V IMr• ii •no clMmct"
llkll • Viltnam ua•fir< IOill bt
rcoclltd be/Or< IAc NOMllbcr
prerid<ntlol clectiotu. Sec atory,
Paoc~ ...... _ I -11 c...-I --.. ·-..... --• -.. --11 -" .... ---" ,.,._ .... ·--• --" .... , 'f 11 -11 -.... -• *"I " ............. -..-. " --•
I DAILY PILOT N
Sign tudy
Ordinance 23 Years Old
"~lgns, sfgm, evervwhne thtfe'rt
lig111, blocklflll up the sc"11try, break-
ing mv mind. Do thi•, don't do that,
can·i vou read the aign?"
• -From IM rong.
Twenty-lhNO yeara ago, Newport
Beach enacted a 1ign ordinance. II bu
been slightly amended a few tlme1 slnoe
then, but the basic character of the
ordinance st.ands as ll was written ln 194.9
when Newport Beach wu 1 seaaonal
l'e.!lOrt town.
' Now that It has become a r'"ldentlal
city with a potential population of 180,000,
city officials are re-examining the sign
Qfdb)an~ ln an attempt to maintain a
vJUage-like auno•phere.
Did Hogan, community development
director, said bis department la drawing
up a draft of a new ordinance baled mt
•uggestlons from the city council, local
realtors and the chamber of commerce.
Thursday afternoon be took bis quest
for suggtsticw to the plannlng com-
mlaslon.
Based on an informal survey of corn-
milsioners, the new .ordinance would 11>-
clude strict eontro.ls of the number, siu,
type, location and quality of signs.
"We want to know what abuses you
want curtailed, what-kinds of signing you
want encouraged. If we know what you
want, then we will try to arrive at it in
this ordinance," Hogan told com4
misaiooers.
Here are 1 I~ of the ~·,
"'"1::'e-r said she thmb u-
art currenUy too many signs which are
••too Jarge and too out ol keeping with
11.11TGUndlng1... S h e advocated a n
ord-rtmilar to ones enacted in
C.rmel end Palm Springs which allow •ilnl only to show tile name of tbc
bUslness and the product or semce
available.
-William Agee objected to signs that
are out of scale with the buildings thty
bang on. He also hit 2$-foot pole signs
used for gas stations and banks. He
prai5ed the Irvine Company's sign restric-
tions and suggested the application of
some of them in the new ordinance.
-Curt Dosh, chairman of the com-
mission, said his chief objection is home
made signs that give stores a "junky
look."
-Gordon Glass recommended the new
ordinance contain a review process for
0 101DeOne Who wants to do something
unusual." He cited the use of super
grapbltl -palnllng a building with large
graphic desi~ for advertising or safety
purposes -as an idea that would have to
be reviewed.
-WJiliam Martin advocated including
a secUon on use of illuminated signs.
11'Miey should be turned off after a cer-
tain hour or when the business closes,"
he 8ald.
Council Drops Property
Sitpulation on Collins
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
night threw out a planning commlaslon
stipulation that development of the
Collins Radio Company property by
Orange County Airport be tied to im·
provements in the adjacent road system.
They voted unanimously to conduct a
public bearing on the controversial $135
million development plan and zone
change Aug. 14.
'!'ht decision to strike the condition that
the project be built in stages -with
periodic review by the city -came alter
builder Don Koll, who will buy the Collins
lease .., the I Tl acres U the """' cqe
Is approved, sald be could not get finan-
cing under the cloud of that provision.
. No sales price for the 18-ytar lease
from the Irvine Company was revealed.
Koll will borrow the money from the Aet-
na We and caauaity Company.
Councilman l\lcbard Crout, a builder, ~ed Koll's claim. ''1
' "From' I i>1'nntni stalid~l', I ..,,,,l!Oe
the reaaonlng !or the · ~
mission's requesl to pliiH"the ' • op-
t ,, ....... id I' ,\ men. Ja;: _.. • •
"But from a bualness standpoinl, 11 IJ a
completely unworkable klea. How do you
spend mililODI of dollars when you may
only get ball a loal," be said.
0 Jt's a handicap, ~ut lt11 not unwork·
able," said Councilman John Store,
"1 ·bave no knowledge of bow the lesBOe
Froml'qeJ
FUN ZONE ...
'builder, wa5 the lint to support Rogers'
moUon. ·'
"Mr. Konwiser has txplortd every
avenue pouible. It's a tough area to
figure out anything for. He's looked at
proposals ranging up to 10 stories hi8J:I.
"This la a good plan, It will open up the
area. The building wiil be pushed back as
m~ 88 possible. II ba1 good arcltltec-,
tural design."
Konwiser said a partially underground
parking garage will enable the first floor
of the building to be above Lhe beads of
pedestrians on the public sidewalk in
front of the project that runB between
Palm Street (the Ferry Landlng) and
Main Street (the P3'ilion).
Emling commercial use& on the
sidewalk, various hotdog and ice cream
alands, will be eliminated. The walk will
be dedicated to the city.
ORANGE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
Ttlt °"*'"Coast DAILY fllLOT, wttfl wMt1t
h amblftM tti. H ... ,.,...., .. publ"'*I by
tM °'"" Coett ,..11n1111111 COrnolJtY, SfP9-
"'' fld lllonf •rt ciublltlltid, Mond1y tlll'OVDlt
FrW.y, fw Coit• Meu. Ji11wp0r1 l e1cll,
H1111!1ntil1D11 ltKlllF-!111'1 Y111fy, L.ftUM
1"'11, 1rvl11tfS1ddltlllck n Sin ClltMnle/
"" J~an C111blr•l'IO A 11/ltll!I m iOMI
.ilHM i. OUOllMM ~h,1rdtys 11'11f Sllncle"'°
flit ~--/ Mli1lllnt pf1nl 11 11 lJO Wtsl
.. Y Strttt, Cost• M-, C•litvrni•, mu.
\
'
Robtrt N. Wt.d
Presietnl trif P...oti.Mr
J•c~ R. Curley
Viet PralMnt •1'111 Ge!Wt•I M11141ger
Thom•• k•evil
EGIJOf
1\om•t A. Murphine MllMtt,. ftlfw
L. Peter krl•9 ~ 1k1C1t Cily Edlflf
.... ,.. ..... Office
JJll Newport l111lev1r4
Mtlfi.t M4r111: P.O. le-. lt1i, 92661 --cm• Mae: m w"' llT '""'
Llflll'I IHdli m ""•' """"" ....,..,... letdl: l1'7$ leedl l'VllYtl'll a. ~: •t Hwttl El CM'l'liM lltlt
, ........ (7141 642...CJJl
Cl1111'W ~ '42"'671 = """ Or•ntte (Mal "'*'llhlnl
# ... ,.... ••"!ft. lltwrr1._.
""""' .. """""~" Wwfl'I .., • ......... •llflouf ill*iM ...,.
...... ., ~~ twllll'· =cm. ...... -., C#!• .... Ill. .. ..... w (""" t:IM _..,., _. _.. u .11 INl'llhlY1 Mlllfll'J
J F IMaM ........
might do i~ but be might do It in several
ways." ·
"I can'I fmance it (under the restric-
tion)/' KoD said.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, who bad
movell ihe introduction of the zoning
ordinance, then amended his motion to
omit the. controversial condition.
Councllman Paul Ryckof! supported
the amendment, saying, "Development
of a traffic pallern is out of the control of
the developer. II Is Inequitable and
unworkable. How do you plan a whole
projecl If It la contingent on eometbing
out of ·hil control.''
Planning conunlaslooers wanted lo
review the staluJ of lbe traffic network
when the projecl WU one-ball and three-
lourtbl completed with the authority to
Yank the ...mg U adequate roods had
not-~ "1 thal lime .. •· •
The ma~ road In doubt, councilmen '~~: ,11:_(¥ P.IJi!ned, Coropa de! Illar
.£All!~~ , 1 I t
Cocmcllman Milan Dostal . won an
~ !ram lawyers fa< c;:ornn., ~t
a coodJtlon in the properties' conditions,
covenants and mtrlcticnu, cite the city's
efforts ·to i:lo away with commercial
!ligllll /rom Orange County Airport.
Oppoil!Hon to the development has
come from mldenll wbo contend high
intensity public 'uses would place ad·
ditional demand on the airport.
Chess Players
Open 7th Game
' With Bold Moves·
llEYKJA\IIK, !Celand (AP) -World
chesa "clWnplon Boris Spassky. lighting
to make up a one-point deficit in his
seventh game with Bobby Fischer.
started play tonight with a king's pawn
opening. It was an unusual nlove for the
Soviet liUeholder and indicated he was
out !or blood.
Fischer. leading 31h·2~2. replied with
an equally aggressive move, pawn to
queen's bishop 4, moving into a Sicilian
defense.
The American challenger Is one o! tile
world'• most experienced players in this
defense, which seldom results in a draw.
Spusky arrived on lime. As soon as
nleree Lothar Schmid slarled the time
clock, tie made his first move Using the
White plooes wlilcb allowed him to open
the game and cave him a slight edge.
Flieller, arriving lour mmutes late, sat
for a few minutes. considering Spassky's
opening - a favorite of the lanky
American.
By the seventh move, the game
developed into the Najdorf variation, one
extremely familiar to Fischer. Spassky
again showed bis mettle by inviting a
pawn sacrifice, hoping to gain an open
attack rue. At the eighth move, Fischer
took the pawn.
From Pagel
EAGLETON. • •
serious probtem.1 1'and he said no.''
He said the t>y .. r<>ld Missouri
senator infonned him about t h e
bospltallUUons on the weekend altct
their nomlnaUon.
McGovern made clear, "I think Tom
Eagleton Is fully qualilled In mind, body
end spirit to be vice ...,sldent •.. " and
<!take over on a moment'• notice" a.s
president.
Asked w~he would have picked
him II he had known about Eagleton'•
hotpilallzatlons, McGovern said, "l
wouldn't have besitattd one minute II I
had known everything Son. Eqlelon bu
sal4 here today ,"
Eagleton, who !Jew lo South ·!lal<ola
1 ... m Washlngton late Monday, left alter
the aeWI ·con1ertnce to IJy to calllo1111a
flil a campJlcn hln& thal alao will take him to 11.twa!J. • '
t 'Mike' Was Too
Hot ro Handk
H the .usp.ldler l'lldlaod: "(:at
1411, When ors ,.,.r• ........ 1
allerDOoo die rePIY eeujj ... ....W~-·u. jlf UDllllL
Nixo·n Studying,
•
"Car 1411 la Ill the ponil!I lot
behind the s~llon, cras~ed lnfO Car
1411," or words to thal effect.
U.S.-owned Land
Dlapelched to a silenl burglar
alarm, Costa Mesa Patrolman Johll
C. C4ff)' leaped Into Car 1411,
started the engine, shifted Into
drive and grabbed the microphone.
The mike turned out lo be red bot
from sitting In the closed patrol car
as the summer sun shone through
the windshield.
"The heat was sufficient to
distract this officer's attention,"
Patrolman Casey wrote in a report
~lainlng Car 1412 crasbcd into
Car '411 , accidentally.
The silent alarm call wu ac-
cidenlal, too.
Emkay Plan
Loophole
To Get Study
A loophole in the Emkay Development
C:Ompany's planned c o m m u n i t y
ordinance that allows professional office
buildings in what was intended to be the
industrial area of the massive project
may be plugged by the Newport Beach
Planning Commission.
About 50 acres of the 180-acre lievelop-
ment were supposed to be limtted to low·
density industrial uses, but the fine print
of the ordinance allows various kinds of
officea, such as thole for constructkm-
related busine .....
Among the businesses planning on
relocaUng to the area are Air Callfornia
and the engineering firm of Robb, Bein
and Frost.
Planning commieionm don't think of
them as industrial uses, however.
They have scheduled a public bearing
Aug. 17 on a proposal to amend the
Emkay planned community text lo delete
any professional office mes.
One or those sure to be present Is Don
Koll, whose construction co m pa n y
already is there and is building =o,ooo
square feet of 1pace for other tenant&, a
dozen of which he11 already aigned. con-:
tracts with.
· ''Thi• will really bur! us," Koll com-
plained.
"It's unfair to change the mnlnl in lbe
middle of the projecl,",)le.,said,,
Koil Is devtloping ll>out 19' ol \be 41
acru in what lie calls the Koll Bu1iness
Complex Ill the'<loullnrest...._, of the
former Lockheed .,....1 where the "11>-
dustrlal" area ii .uppoled to be.
Emkay, a. Sllb8ldiary of the Morrison
Knudsen Company, is developing the
rest, Ille!!.
Emkay won the controversial zone
change about 11 montm ago, convincing
city o!licials ~I the projecl would not
place an undue demand for an increased.
level of servloe al nearby Orange County
Airport. ·
The zone change baa triggered a
number of similar requests, including the
development plan for the 177-acre CollinlJ
Radio Company property a c r o 1 I
MacArthur Boulevard.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmldenl Ni.I·
on aald today it ia ridiculous for the
Fedtral government to own over half the
land in some Western states, but aidta:
uld later tbe White House wu giving no
thougllt to dlspolling o! any of the West's
millions of acres of public domain land.
The chief executive's comment came
as he met in his Oval Office with
members of the Federal Property
Review Board which bas been handJ.
ing the administration'• effort to convert
little-used federal properly into slate and
local parks.
Polnllng to a map of the United Stales
which 1bowed the 114 parcels of IJnd
translemd under the Legacy of Parks
Woolworth Heir
Reventlow Dies
In Plane Crash
ASPEN, Colo. (UPI) -La n c e
ReveoUow, heir to the Woolworth five·
and-dime fortune and ton of . Barbara
Hulon, one of the world's richest
women, has been kilied with th.rte other
persons in the crash Monday of a small
plane in the Colorado Rockies, law of·
ficers disclosed today.
Reventlow, :!&, a sports car racer who
was f,ivtn the UUe of "the. world's richest
baby ' II birth, WU killed ID the cruh
during a heavy jbunderslorm 1boul ID
miles north of thli Colorado resort.
RevenUow bad been 11111'\'eying a tract
of land he wanted to buy, o!liclals said.
Kj(led with blm were the pilot and two
other paasengen, all unidenlified.
The craft slammed into a wooded .
mount.alnslde eight miles from the
nearest road. Sherill caron Whitmire
sald the wreckage W08 "spotted _by
another plane. A relCtle crew reached the
site Mooday night and confirmed that all
aboard were dead.· ._
Revenllow married actreu Jill SL
Jobll oa March 24, 19!0, Ill sag Francisco.
They were divorced ID 1983. ,
On Nov. 8, 19&1, be married starlet
Her](!• Holdridge, then 19. The only
relaUve who altended the wedding wu
Cary Grant, a former· husband of MiM Hutton's. .
. R-•Uow WU an_ .Jvld ...,.ta car ' .JiifuSi'iif and')iolo pl&J'Or. Be tiullt and
drove Grand Prix racing cars and
developed-bis own nclnl'enalne·
Born In· Feb, 14, 1'11!, lie ·WU,lbe most
guarded baby in the world. All elal>orate
burglar alarm WU Installed lo prolect
blm as an in!anL Compllca~ .lrlJl!l bis
Caeaarean dellvery left bis mother
fragile and she wu iznabl•tO rqaln the
str<ngtb she lost. Quarrels over JlovenUow'• education
led lo Miss Hutton's divorce from
Lance's lather in 19.la lo Copen!lagen. A
cu.itody flgllt over the child lasted seven
years.
Bia ptl'IOll&) fortune wsa estimated al
belween !50 million and $100 million.
_On bis 25th blrtbda)', bis mother gave
him a !500,000 home Ill lleVerJy Hills.
Brooke Takes Leadership
Of War Foes in Senate
prosram, Ni.ton ol>sen>ed tbal the federll
government wu owner of more than half
the and Jn some RodQI Mountain and
Western stats.
''That's ridiculous," .he said. "We don't
need it."
He didn't elaborat, while newsmen
were in hls office for the start of the
meeUne, but officials saJd later Nixon ' was refewing to a c1tegory known ~IC·
quired land -not lo the public domain
land wblch Is often leased for livestock
grui.ng. DA.ILV PILOT INff '"'''
Presidenlial counB<lor D o n a I d Poolside Attire?
llumsleld, a member ol the property .
review board. told newamtn, 0 We have
not even looked al the question of public
domain land."
Nothing the Preslderit slid 11 today'•
meeting "was meant to apply to public
domain land,'' l\umsfeld said.
The review board 's executive director,
Darrell M. Trent, said some public dcr
main land had been taken earlier )or
such \lie 8' military resrvations and· no
longer is under control of the Bureau of
Newport Beach Mayor Donald
Mcinnis showed up for city
council study sessi9n Monday
with new headgear given lo
him by a constituent: Mayor
suffered head injury in a fall
recenUy al a Palm Springs
swimming pool. His new bard
hat is designed , according to
the constituent, for poolside
wear.
Land Manqement. 'Mlis, he indicated,
might become available ror transfer 10 Actress Fonda
state and local governments for the
Legacy of Parks program.
After the meeting, Nixon issued a
slatement 88ylng be was pleased that the
144 new parks had been created in 39
otaJe<.
''The federal public lands belong to all
American8 and are p8rl ol the beritage
and birthright of every citizen," Nixon
said. "They are the breathing· space ol
lhe nation, ilnd II ij esential that they be
preserved for fu~ur~ g~r1tiana."
Al the meeting in bl8 Oval Oince, Nix·
on cited a piece of beach front ptoperty
near bis San Clemente home as an ex·
ample of federal property which can be
converted to public use.
The four-mile-long beach once was part
or the Camp Pendleton Marine ~rva·
tion, but it wa·s turned over to the state
of California. Nixon said, however; that
be learned m 'July 4 when· be viallell the
beach that It wa5 being used by only :ioo
people. Al thal lime 1" instruc""11 bis
aides to work to 1~elerate the develop.o
men! o! the land by adding "public
facUltles and better access roadS.
He used the former Camp Pendleton
land.¥ an eumple of· the close watch
wblcb be said mu&JI~ lo make cer-
tain translemd land Ii put lo the luilest ...... , '
.,
Surfers Told
Support Needed
For Early Hours
A group of surfers who want lo get into
the wavu earlier in the mornlna will
aparently have to get the 1Upport ol West
Newport bomeownen before city coun.·
cIJmen will change aurfing bours. ! •
Says Prisoners
Want McGovern
PARIS (AP) -Jane Fonda, back from
Hanoi, says a group of American war
pr!80Jlers asked her to tell their parents
and friend! to work for the victory of
Sen. George McGovern because "they
fear if Nixon stays in offict they will bt
prisoners forever."
The actress aclmowledged that she had
that seven prisoners she met gave her
messages for scores of people, including
a woman who works in an Orange County
BUpermarkt~ ui'ging them to delta!
President Nllon in the November
presidential election.
The prisoners, wearing purple and red
striped unif(!TIDI, were shown in a allent
color film Miss Fonda made durinl her
North Vlell\am viail July~l-22. The lUl of lh6 flim, emAl'l'•jdng .what Ille aiilreu
considers to be deliberate Amerlcall ,at-
tacb CN1 the North Vleinan>esfl dJb
system, &bowed Jane In blac:It Vlei Cong
type pajama pan11 and • black T-shirt
tourinJ paddy fields. Jane, wadlnr
· throuih .bQ!nb ruin! .and Jane with a
helmet ilrapped around her neck, peer-
ing out to the horizon.
The actma acknowledged that 8he bad
made daily broadcasll over Hanoi radio
aimed .at American aervicemen, but did
nol reply cllrectly to a' question about the
slatemenl by Rep. Flelcher Thompoon
(R-Oa.), that trusoo charges should be
brousbl against her,
FromPqeJ
DUPLEX •••
Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis, who "!>'
reM!lll West Newport, told lour youths
appearing before councllmen Monday
nlgbl thal tbelr plans to cir<ulale peti-
tions for tbt taller houri ors tine. "But if the petition la going IO ln!luenoe Mayor ·Donald A. Mclnnil wbo admitted,
me, you bad belier nol luve out one seg-"undoubtedly !l's Imperf eel, bu1 ii ii a
ment, 11 the mayor II.id, in an obviOUI place to start."
reference to homeowners In bis area who /.bo\ll ~ persons appeared In op-
he said complain regularly about early pooitton, claiming Ibey would he hurt
morning noise aused by surfers. !inanctally by the change.
The group is setking a change In surf-The emergency e<dinance will be el·
WASHINGTON (UPI) -S<n. Edward The amendmenl would withdraw all Ing hours from 7:30 a.m. to 5 a.m. lective !« 90 days. During that period
W. Brooke (R-Mass.), as 1 um I n,g U.S. forces "land, sea, and air" from They said lbal they aiBC intend lo meet· the planning commilsion la expected to
leadership of the Senate's antiwar forces, Indochina four months after enactment if with city Weguard and recreation of· conduct fonnaJ bearings to adopt the R·
today pressed for another showdown on t~e POWs were released. ficials. l .5 zoning on 1 permanent baais.
the withdrawal of U.S. troops from ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;m;;m;;;;;;;;m;;m;;m;;m;;m;;m;;m-;;m--;;m-;;m--;;m;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;. ;-~-ji~;;iii;;;;;;;iiji
Indochina in exchange for !he release of
American prisoners.
The Senate adopted the far-reaching
amendment Monday then nullified the
action by killing the $1.8 billion fortign
military aid bill to which il was attached.
Brooke Immediately announced he
would offer the amendment to the $20.15
biJJion military procurement bill, now
pending in the Senate.
Campaign Debate
Measure Backed
By Carl Albert
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Speaker Corl
Albert threw his weight today behind a
bill to lllow broadcast 4ebates lietween
Presldenl NllM fnd Sfn.· Geor11 S ..
McGovem. It had been given a low
prlortty by the committee chairman in-
volved.
Albert told reporters be bas asktd Rep.
Harley o. Staggm (J).W.Va.), and other
members of the Houae-Commerce Com-
mittee to get the bill cleared to the House
despite Stagsera' OllnOUllced reservations
about IL
"He WIS not unrecepUve," AIJ:lert
raporled.
Sla'8ers hu said Ille main problem In
his raw WU thal pasafng the SenllNp-
proved equal Ume amement would be
a "lullle ll's!ure" tlnce Ni.Ion aides have
gald the Preaidenl will • debale bis
O.mocrallc cball...., an)'ll'llt.
Staggen bad said be c!OObla the bill
eoul<r be brolJcbl belora Ilfl committee
belare ~ .._ on Auc. II I.or
lh• ~bDcan NaUonal Ccftvenlloft.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
HAVE YOU EYER GONE INTO A STqltE, ~ND BEFORE A SAWMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT.
MARKED?
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAYE PRICES INDICA'llD ON
THEIR SAMPLIS. THE THE 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE ''WHAT THE TRAFFIC WlU BEAR."'
AT. ALDEN'S PllCIS ARE POS.ftD ON ALL OF OUR SAlW'LES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELICTIONS AND
ICNOW WHAT THEY ARE l.OOlONGAT. TOO, THEREISALW•YSTHE
POSSlllUTY OF. A LOWER PRJ~ IF. .CONDmONS W~NT.
.... ---1"7
ALDEN.'S
CARPns • DRAPES
' ' 1663 ...... AYt.
COST A 11\ISA
64Ml31
MOUU: Ma*'""'-t te l:JO-M.t tetr Sot. t:Hte 1
'
....................... ____________________________ --.;...;,;,__,
,
,
H
••
7
r
Teday's final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL · 65" NO, 207, ·2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANEfi ~UNTY, CALIFORNIA .TUESDAY, JUL'( 25, '1972 c TEN CENTS
1
Bill to Fulld UCI Hospital Plans Progresses
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of• tllt DlllY P11i1t SMft
. A bill adding $919,000 to the st~le
budget to provide planning funds for a
851).bed teaching hosRilal at UC Irvine
appeared headed ~\Jr trouble in the
AJSem,blr today 1even though It won
unarumous approval Jn the Senate Mon-
day. r
State .Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R-
Ne\YPC)rt Beach) drafted tbe. final·hour
;
Nixon B'lamed
SB 1111111 alter the LeglslAture bad cul the
allocotlon from the budgel
A Corpenler aide~ Slid the bill .ii
headed for a ~'strong flchtn ln the
Assembly Waya and Mean Comlnlttee.
Its chances of clearlnf that cqrDlll!ltee
are "uncertain,"· the aide Said, due to tbe
oppaoilion of Assemblyman WUU. Brown
(0.San Francilco) ...
Brown baa said be11 oppose any future
funding of .llDi~ersity medical faclliUes
•
·Fonda: P:OWs
Bac·k McGove.rn
PARIS (AP)-Jane ~onda}back from
Hanoi ,· says a group ' of American war
prlaoners asked ber to tell their parents
and lrieilds to wi>rk for the victory of
Sen. George McGovern because "they
fear if Nixon 1taya in .office Ibey will be
prilooeis forever:" '
·''i'lie icireil -Jedged'thar sbe bad
dial aerin 'prlacioers abe met gave ber
•
~esan ·~
' ~
With Gun Wound
In Money R~w
A broke and WJemployed Costa Mean,
wbo wenl to di!cuaa money alleged!Y ow·
ed , blm, fled .froJ!l an uphobtery shop
with a .38 caliber revolver wound in the
iboulder Monday nlgbt. .
Mark C. Davidson, 21, of J8SO Santa
Ana Ave., escaped the 7 p.m. shooting
With on1y a flesh wound, police said.
Noah ~. · Gr.een, 30, O'fllef of the firm
at 1650 SUperior Ave::, was subsequently
~arrested and· booked on SUBpicion of
assault .with intent to Commit'murder.
Officer David Walker met tbe bleeding
victim · at a ·nearbJ bowling alley alter
Davidaon-called to say be bad been shot.
... He· waa driven to Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital where the flesh wound was·
dean«!' and stitched then taken to head-
'quarters to tell his etory.
Deteciiv' 'Wayne ~ber, meanwhil~
·contacted Green' at his upholstery shop.
T]\e sti.pect accompanied him to head-
quarters for questioning leading to book~
Ing on the attempted murder charge.
· De!ectlve Lt. Harold Fl!cher said
Davidson told o! going to tbe shop with
' two friends, where he attempted to
• discus.s money matters with Green.
'Ibe vJctlm claimttd he was asked to
~alt fiv~ minutes while Green spoke with
>another employe, then went into the
'11uspect's office where further discussion
''occurred.
r Details were not revealed , b u t
Davidson told'lnv..Ugators Green ended
the heated cpnverslitlon by pulling tbe
'gun and firing. .
,· Davidson fled for· safety at that point,
,l'Je told police, closing the office door as
.he ran out. ,
meJSages for scores of -1e, Including
a W001an who works in an Orqe County
supermarket, urging .theni to • defeat
President Nixon in .the · November
presidential election.
'Thi; p"'9ners. wearing purple, and red
striped uniforms, ·were shown in a lilent
color lllm"Mi!S Fooda"liuiiie during lier
Nortli Vlttllam viail JUiy g.~ reit Of
the· film .. ~~ wjlat: the•~·
COlllldm .. "" ...... ,-=-: llo, ta••• __ tbe , Nortjl .... .y~;·ibowec1 i Ill 'T; \Pkt~ fypl pajama .,_..,.. ·llllal!tT-
tourlng Pl\!dY • flel4I. .... wading
lllraqgh bomb ..... Ille! .1... With a
· helmet slra~ aroimd ~r ~ peer-
ing out to tbe'bortzm:
The actress acknowledged that abe 'bad
made daily broadcaals ·over Jlanoi'radio
aimed al American oerricemen, but did
not·rep'1 direcUy to a q1Mlllon atiOul tbe
stalemellt by Rep. Fletd>er 1bompson
(R-Oa.), that treason cbargeo should be
brought againal ber.
She uaerted.. however, · ••1 did not say
w~t 1 Bin accused of '!lying,:• referrtqg
apparontly to'reports !he urged troops to
disobOy orders. Mtss Fonda · Slid she
woUld produce tbe tens of ber broad-
casta:ln New York on Friday.,
Dri~er Injured
In Mesa Crash
A Costa MeJS motorist who told police
he was reaching for a brlefW. while
turning suffered slight injurtea · Monday
night' in a headOn car colllaion in lbe
Mesa Verde di!trlct.
llalT)' M. Balch, 29, of 3090 Molokai
Drl ve, w aa lpued 1 c\lallon (or allegedly
making an Improperly· CO!iiJ>leted left
turn, aCCQ.rdlng to OffJcet P h I !·
McCormick.
Balch also suffered a forehead cut In
the collision at Gibralter Avenue and
Molokai Drive, but motorbl Jamsbld N.
Kiani, 1_!1 ,or 1011 Calilorrila Ave., Jlun-
(ington ..Uch, esca~ Injury.
The Injured driver, wboae left·IW'lling
car coll«!ed ·Witb Klani'a, didn't require
hospitalization, police said.
unlli faclliU~ .to oerve inner<ity areas
are provided.
UC! Vice OianCell«,L. E. C0J: said
today, the whole fUllft of lhe medical
l!ChoQl dependa on ~ approval of
the pl•PDinl mme)'.I and voter approval
.next fall of a $11&.t mJlllon stattwide
beallh -bond laaue. Wlille Ill!' budget addition would pay
for working drawings and detailed plaDs
aed speciflcaUons for tbe hospital, lbe
'
,7 ~l··~~ ... ·'J
buJldlng can't be built without tbe bond
mpneys.
Cox exp1alned tblt about half of the
total $35 nilllorl -o! the hospital would
come !rom the atate bqnda with the re-
mainder erpecled to come from federal
""!fCOS·
U the Assembly approves the planning
inooey lnd<tbe bonds are approved in
N.Vember, the hospital could be com· . .
pleted in early 1976,· Cox said. eluding the $17.S million state share of
The facility would allow the UCl-the teaching hospital. The remainder of
· Cal~ornia College o! Medicine to double the bond money would provide a medical
its entering class size from '4 to 128 science building, a clinical science
medical students.. building and possibly a school of nursing.
That increase a1so is deW\dent on ad-/ Cox nqted that a delay in the Assembly
dltional classroom and I a b o r a t o r y passage of the hospital planning bil l would
buildings to be built with the atate bond hold up construction, perha·ps for a year.
moneys. Projects supported by the bond Once all funds are available the project
funds amount to about f55 million in-will take at least 30 months, Cox said.
n ·ess
Has Been
1n· 'Hospital
3 Times •
CUSTER, S.D. (AP) -Democratic
vice presidential nominee Sen. 'Ibomas
F. Eagleton disclosed today be had volun·
tarily hospitalized himself three times
between 1960 and 1966 "for nervous ex·
haustlon and fatigue,'' but that since then
he baa enjoyed •1good sound, tolid
health."
Sen. George ~1cGovern, the
Democr1Uc presidential nominee, sald he
· had ~t ~W}l about \ht hospitalizations
when lie pJ¥ Eo&jeton to be bis run·
ning ·m'.ate, but added, ''I am fully
·~ :·~·tloft.·McGovem -~ .;:;C"J'=~
~ S~lptii~e -'
Scholm1 .oayi. a true work1 of art requJres. ·beauty, •
balanced desilJl"and function . 'Gracefot 1upj>ort ]>ii·
lars of: Newport Freeway. interchant& at Bristol
.. ·
: ' 1 . .
,........ autllDed bis. lllldlcal history
after I momlllg .ol --.,, With
M~ at hil •acalioa retreat In the
Blact,llUl,s ol South Dakota, saying that
lhe American people were enllUed to the
lull atory about rumors throughout his
career about hts health.
_!tree!' and P.iisades Road, .Costa ·M"'la, ~em to
qualify. Puzzled alien visitors from'space; however,
.mi(lht suspect ·a vanished .race w0rslliped them, if
, •manltind · dis.•i>peared · tocl~y. In commuter·dogged
SOuthertfCalifornla, that ought not be too tar wrong.
• Woolworth's Reventlow ·.Chess Players . ,. ' . ' . ' ' . . . .
Dies ·m ·Light
AllPEN, Cqlo. (UPI) -L. n c.
Reventlow, heir to. the Woolworth' five-
anckume fortune:-and son of Barbara
Huton, One : of 1' the World's richest
women, has been kUied witb' t!iree .u.ir '
perllOllS in the cr"!h ~onday of a amall
plane In the Colorado RocldOI, law of· 11cen 'dlic1oseG today.'
Revenilo1',. 38,. a sports. car .racer who
was given the UUe of "the world's richest
baby", at, blrtb, was killed in the crash
dliring . a heavy thunderstorm about 10
miles north o! tbb Colorado r0aort.
ileventlow .bad been surveying 1 tract
o1 wa be wanlii¥to liUY. ornc1ai. wd-Kl\led ~lb blm -. the pilot and two
other puaengers, all unidentified.
The craft 'slammed Into a wooded
· · · ·. Open 7th Ga rve·
Plane ·'.Crash With ·Bo'ld Moves
mowttalnside eight miles from the neimt . road. Sherill . carou Whitmire
laid the wrecklge was spotted by
~ther Plane. A 'rescue Crew.leached th~
1119 Mohday night and conflrmed that all
aboarif were 'dead.·
RevenUow marritd icireu , ·JUI SL
John ool Mardi 21, 1960; in San Francisco.
'They were divorced in 19e3.
0n ·N'ov. 1, llM, he manied starlet
' . ' Heryle HOidridge, tbf!I 11. The only
relaU,ve .wbo. at~ed 'tl)e wedding was
Cafy Grant, a former husband of Mis• 'HUt~'1: ' • .
Rn'enUoW JJU an avid sports car
•enth\Jsta;t and polo player. m built and
dro~e. ·Grand Prix racing cars and
deve!q~ hla own racing •engine.
. I .
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) -~World
cheas .cbarnpion Boris Spa5'ky, fighting
to make pp a ~e-polnt deficit in his
·aeventb game wltb Bobby , I(ischer,
started play tonight wJtb a king's pawn
·opening. lt was an unusual move for the
Soviet titleholder and indicated be was
, out for blood. •
. Fischer,: leading 31>·211,, repll"'! with
an equally O(grallve move, pawn to
queen's bishop 4, moving into I Sicilian
·defense. · ·
· -The American challenger Is 001,of the . . ' world's moat ,experienced players~ this
defense, wblch,oeldom i'esults ln<a drsw.
Eagleton said, "On three occaslona In
my Ule, r have voluntarily gone into
hospitals for se rious exhaustion and
fattcue/1 the most recent in September
1918.
He Aid the hospitalizations resulted
from Ills being "a rather intent, bard-workfni man." But since these incl den ta,
he uld, "I have paced myself a great
deal more "
Two of · the hospit8tizations, one of
about one month in Barnes Hoapltal in
St. Louis in December 1960 and a second
of abciut three weeks at Mayo Clinic in
~helter, Minn., in September 1918, Jn..
eluded COUNtllng .from a paychialrill ln-
cludlng electric sbOck treatmeiit and
sleeping pills. •
The third hospitalization was for about
four days at the Mayo Clinic in
December 1964.
Eaileton liald he had undergone
pbyaical examination last Friday from a
Senate physicl'an and Monday i n
~. Md. Complete results are due
later In the week but Eagleton said the
doctor told him, HJ•m two pounds
overweight and have half a Jiemorrhoid."
Eagleton said that it took these ex~
perfences to enable him to learn how to
take it a little eas.ler and be intends Jn
tbe forthcoming campaign "to give it all
!bat I have on a measured basis."
McGovern said when he a 1 k e d Eagleton lo be his running mate 12 days
ago, "I uked) Jf there were any problems
in• lill put that he thought" would cause
"'
"
_!.Mike' Was-Too Police Co-11fer Pto.he Due
. Spaisky arrived on time. Aa ~ as
referee LolbAr SChmld started tile time
·clock, he made hi.I first move uJlnr ule
white piecea which allowe:c! bim I!> open
the game and gave blm a lllgbl qe.
Fischer, arriving four mlnutea late, sat
for a le• minutes COllllderinf 8ploali:y'1
opening - a favorite of the. lanlly
American., .
. (Ste EAGLETON, Pace I)
........
Hot to Handle
I
If the d(apatcbet' ~: "car
4112, where are you?" Monday
afternoiln, the repJY could have '
crackled back over tbe air like this.
•icar 4412 Is in the parting lot behind tbe station, crashed Into Car
f411," ~words lo tblt effect.
D!Jpatcbed to 1 silent burglar elarm, Colla M ... Patrolman John c. casey leaped Ullo -<:ar 4!l1t,
started the ....... .iiJlled Into
' drive and gra~ !be mlcroplDe.
The mite tumed out to be red hat
from altling In tbe dolid !"!!'II car
u the llUllUller .,. ...... lllzwib
tbe windahteld.
"The Mat -IUlflejOlll to•
distract Ibis officer'. -lion."
Patrolman C8Sey "1'0le In an~
explalnlns car 4112 crubed Into
Car 4111, a!)ddenlally.
Tbe 111ent alarm call lfu ..,.
cldtotal, too.
-
Residents' Complaints , Prompt Pu~lic Hearing
By L. PllER llUEQ
Of .... °*" ""' Dlfl' I Newport Beach's polke belicopten, tbe
subject o! controversy llnce Ibey took to
the air nearly two,..... .,., are Coinc to
get cloae acnrttny at a spldal dlf ...,..
ell public hearing In ~.
Before then the CO<lldl's lnltfdty
Jjil.-Connlltee wl1I -lfltb nollhBoJ1nc eommuni11oo tliat !lave
beliooplln i. tn.-ipte ... poalbllllJ'
of I COllll oa.tiic ~ ~
.. <'•acUmm Pnl Jtlddf ""II .. ...
Sepl. 11 lw lie dtlnt I 'IeU. ...... bJ
l~ ~ l"l!nl .tat h'llJ'&I Ill
1:.ep1. -ol llie aldel .... It ....
cits. I
"I'm -n•ed about t1Ja petrol alpedl," Ryekoll aald 11111 ......,,
"•helber they abould be Oii Ille .,..md
Oii call or ap In the air .......,. all the
time."
R1dloll Slid 1n .. "11 ii lie 111•rioe
. I
elimination.of lhe beljcop~. ·who value 'Safety and aecurity In lhe
"I'm not suggesting we do away with corrimunJty don't come out for thi1 coun~
them," he said. "Bui they're really one• cil'meeting to voice thelf approval," be
of OW' most controve!llal things and Ibey aald.
8liould be aired p.ibllcly." Sljl1Aturee on the letter .thet triggered
llyoltofl said the poiice department llyclloll'1· 'prop!Sll came mainly from
abould keep more ol a log of belicopter nsldomts In tbe Harbor View • llill ..
adlvllles. Corwa ,del Mar area altboup two are "~•this will come-out of It (the .BalbOa JUldenlf.. ,
Wbil) -it would be more of a "! ~· there ire some people In
jJ&llflcMlatJ " be aa14. • -. • lhe conunun)ly Wh<l •re clialu!bed by the
"If II atCmoplllllol Jti potillGll' thli ,.... ol 11>9'bol~," OlaYU 'lid. "I
..... to lie mode linolfn','' be aald. '"°""""' alao that lhe hellcopter IS I
-llllllqa Qlllf B. ~ GUvu• out ~ Jllrol tehldO bu !oabd lflde ac-
E ftllllad' 111 "1lnlloe oat that the ' dp!ance In law oalortelileot circles
... ..... • dally ... of. ICl'Oi> the Dlll!ill. .
ltCtttldel-" "It ii both eeonom.Jcal md effective,"
.. (llJ ... ) ,....... bu .. .... lie llld.
It,. Glavu -"lllelfpart Beadl bu found the 011-.. ........, die need for lbe hallclptar .... m0re tffectlve than lllOll llellcoi*n. " dllU bl' ,.._ of Ill I t y 'p i ca J
"11-W .. ,...iW!ilf ti-pooplo lopappb)I, .. '\hi cbiel added.
By tbt teftnth move/ 1the · rgame
. developed Into lhe Najdorl variation; ooe
extremely famillat to Flscber. Spallly
again allowed his -U. by ltMllll& a
pawn aacrtnce, bopln( to c•in· an ·open
·attack fUe. At ttie elibtb move; Fild>er
toOk the pawn. • ;1 '
This coat bim at leut three ·-. u
white aooa developed 10111·: pol!tl'ful
piece• -bil two lmilbta " and llfo 'bishops.. ' • .
At thll p0lnt.Nlkolal11iotlus, ljlallcyta
second, WU Ill srn1W I
"It'• pod. for~/' be attneed-"He's come~ .-~ ~ · 1
HO!feVer,.lfie. <cUlp noted
Fischer WBI-. (lllWD Up and .b14i1et Jo
develop Iii•· ~ ~ said *' bad
ployed the N..-vwtlon -~
u •. teenago """"'' -117 'ilbring. "But 'he lfQJl'f ~ ~ 11 llloie
days," a CbJCNO buff tdded, -1
There •ere oo camera 1n U.. illllO
audltorllnn, Lawyer l'llll lllanhd, rill
flew Jn ITom N•• Yor~ at Fladlil's ie-
qunt, •llld Cbe . ~can WU Mt )el
oatl811ed with tbe Mtup.
More' sunshine on the agenda !or
, Wecjnesday along the Orang~ Coaat,
with temperalurts once again near
90 inland. Beach h!ilio on around
70 are eipected. Lowa IH5.
INSIDE ·TGDA 'Y
Ob1erw11, uiho are tn tht
knOtD, IOlf Chere fl "no chance"
lllcl O Vici"°"' CfGffo/itf tDill b<
rroched be/ore the Nov•mbtr
prtri<lenllal tlfetioft.t. Set llcrt/,
P1J11< 4. " ... , 4.-I QiM1• t ·-.... C..Ja ,. -" --.. E' .... •••Ill n-ff --,. --"
-II •.• ...... ,, ..."'"" ....... . _._ M -.... E~ ,.,. . .. .. -. -.. ... "''' --.
DAILY PILOT c T-.r, Mt 25, ltJI
8-ae Atnelldnaent
Brooke Seeking
War Showdown
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
W. Brooke (Jl...Mass.), a s suming
leadership of the Stnale'a-antiwar Jorc:u,
to<t.-y pressed for another showdown on
the withdrawal of U.S. troopc from
Indochina In exchaJ!ie !or lhe release o!
· American priloners.
The Senate adopted the far-reaching
·amendment Monday then nulllfitd the
acllon by ltilllni the 11.8 billion foreign
House Approves
Conte.Sled .Aid
Over Cyclamates . .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Opponents
called it a "boondoggle," but the House
paued 177 to 170 Monday a bill lo com-
pensate bottlers, fanners and others who
lost mooey In the 1969 ban on
cyctamates.
Tllo coots of the bll~ wblcb ltilt must
poa the Senate, wu estimated at from
•100 million to 11many umes that."
The legislation would a· u t h o r 11 •
growers, manufacturers, packers and
distributors o! foodl and drinU P,.parfd
with cycla!nates to collect !or direct and
lndir<ct touea resulting from the fe<leral
· ban. An>ounls would be detennlnod by
the U.S.Court ol Clalml.
Food and drink producers widely used
cyc1amic acid and Its salts as a non-fat.
tenifil: sugar substitute until sclentiatJ
found the addlUve caused urlnar)'
cancer in rats.
Rip. Emanutl C.ller (0.N.Y.J beaded
opponents of the measure, who aald the
woy would be opened !or future claims
whenever the. government acta to protect
public health.
C.Uer argued manufacturers usl"i
cyclamates had ample warnlna over
1everal years that the lllllU auboUtute
mlghl be found dangerous to health.
"This ii 1 cue where bulinasmen
1kated on thin Ice," the Judiciary Com-
llllttee chairman Hid.
Assembly Kil~s
Big Environment ·
Protection Bill ..
SACl\AMEN'ro (AP):-A ~.c&l"' ,,....... mvlronmntaJ protecllOjl DUI -
~a nre meeting of the minds
belween the 8'a1an Admlnlltration and
COlllllVltlon forces -wu deleated on a
llnt Vlllce ""'" In the -bly 1Gdl7. .
Tiie llltUlft would lump the praeit
Air -and Water -....,
bom!s Into one, lfvlJ!i the stile what the
bUl'1 author termed '01 comprtherwlve
Independent" approach to environmental .......
Tbe bill fell II votes short of pwage
m. a 30-31 tally, but another vote was
alated later. ·
lllllltar)' aid bill to wblch It was attached.
B·roou Immediatel y announced he
Would otter the amendmenl to the $20.6
billion ~UIWY procurem~t bill, D9'1f
peiidllll In the ~le. .
The ~endnient would wlthdrsw all
U.S. forcta "land, i ea, and air" from
Indochina four months after enactment if
tte POW1 were released.
He said the "maximum Impact" came
when the Senate passed tbe a.mendmenl
and added "It'• done it's job."
lt would have marked the first time
that the Senate has voted to cut off funds
for the Vietnam war. The Senate bas
passed policy atatements. Including one,
calUng for withdrawal by a "date cer-
tain." wb1ch reached President Nixon.
Cooper ffnt offered an amendment
which would have called for the
withdrawal of an forces from Indochina
four months after enactment without any
conditions but he ran Into strong op-
position frOm senators who wanter to
blclude the release of prisoners.
Overrldln( Cooper's objectio.,, the
Seilate adopted, 62-33. a Brooke amend-
Dlent which made the releue of POWs a
conilltl<>p foe withdrawal.
Once Uiat vote was taken, Cooper
abandoned his own amendment. He voted
eAaiMt if and explained "we are voting
to gtve the people of the United States
the impresakln we're ending the war
When in fact" we're voting for a prescrip-
tion for continuing the war ."
The Senate defeated, before reaching
the tbowdown, a sense of the Congress
reaolution which would have endorsed
Nlxon'a Vietnam policy. The vote was 50-
45.
Mesa Committee
On River Usage
' Meeting Tonight
A froUP of Colla Metans developing a
priorities program !or public use of. the
luwer Santa Alla River and the proposed
Falrvlb Patt meelJ tonight !or con-
tinued dlacualons.
"Diane ""1c• said the session will be at
7;:!0 P·l!I .. In ber home at 228 Amherst
Rood for anyone wishing lo contribute
~or ott.r help.
• l!he'·ll' Ollllt1 Mdli Clty lChalmia1f of
!J!e ~· i;ounty Greenbelt Organiia-',.~. -~~. , a"'. coallttoq" ;wor~g
. lllider IUpe!"llloo o! lbe county Plannmg
·bepann!ent and the County Counsel'• of-
fice. ; ..
'1l1e mmplete agency Including com·
mittees from all cities affected by the
proposed greenbelt along tlie santa Ana.
River from the sea to' the mountains will
meet Wedneaday In Sante Ana.
The 1e11sion will be at 7:30 p.m. in the
-o! supervisors' bearinl room , !ilth
floor, 51! N. Sycamore St., according lo
Mrs. Stenge.
\
DAil V !"II.OT lttff ,....
GeUing At .The lob
Construction workers are getting down to business
this week as Fairview Road fl ood control drain pipe
project closes two lanes of traffic. Costa Mesans are
advised to use other streets while job between Ar·
lington Drive and Baker Street progresses. Turns
are curtailed too. County Flood Control District
project is aimed at eliminating severe Fairvie\v
Road flooding that occurs each winter.
Part of Robbery Booty
Found in Laguna Niguel
An undetermined amount of securities
and personal papen -apparently
discarded by thiev" who blasted their
way into the Loguna Niguel branch o! the
United Calllnrnla .Bant In March -were
found Monday afternoon.
Orange County Sherifrs investigators
and Federal Bureau of Investigation
agents were summoned to the end of Sea
Island Drive In Laguna Niguel'• Paclllc
Island Village by workmen in the area
who found a guney .. c11 stuffed with the
weathered bonda and other documents.
No cuh or jewelry was included in the
loot, said Lt. Charles Conaway of the
sheriff'• department. Many o! the papers .
Younger Pleads
To Allow Vote
' . .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Atty. Gen.
Evelle J. YOWlller uked• the Calllornia
supreme Cowt today 1o· keep on the
November ballot an lnltiatlve restoring
the death penalty In the atate.
"Interference with the legislative
powers, whether a bill propo.$ed by the
legislature or a Jaw proposed by the peo-
ple, strikes at the very heart of our
separation of_ powers," YolDlgef argued.
He asked the court to reject a. man-
damus petition to bar the iniUaUye. The
petition was filed last week by the
American Civil Liberties Union foun·
dation.
were strewn on the ground alongside the
sack, he added.
A dozen investigators were im-
mediately dispatched to the scene when
the surveying crew called the sherUrs
department arotu1d 1:30 p.m.
The crew· worked for seven hours comP.
tng the area for more loot, but un-
covered nothing more than the original
sack.
"We're convinced we found
everything," Lt. Conaway commented.
"Anyone going up there today would be
wa$iing hJs thne."
FBI agents along with the sheriff's in-
vestigators today began an Inventory of
the recovered loot. No dollar figw:e has
yet been ptaced n the .find.
"I doubt the stuff was worth very
much,;• Conaway said. "I guess it wu
stuff. Uiey didn't want.
"Of course, tbat11 ju.st speculation," he
adde11.
Five men -:: lhl"" o! whom are In custody .. ,-hlye bee• indicled .In ,...,.
nectlon '!jth the Mardi Zf.117 ,.tJbery
which left pnlled Cail!O{Dia I!••• $50,000
ohort:ln ~h and .f58. bi>:lholdfu oul an
esUmated 12 mlllkon to $3 ,mllllon in cash
and securities.
Held at Loo AJ!ieles County jail Is
Charles A. Mulligan, la, ot Youngstown,
Ohio. In custody In Ohio are ·Amll A.
Dinlio, 31, o! Boardman, and Pblllp B.
Oltlstopher. 29, of Cleveland.
TWo brothers. Ronald and Harry Bar-
ber o! South Gate are stilt at large and
subject to a nationwide search by the
FBI.
Governor Hints
Special Session
On Tax Reform
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. 8'agan
said today he might order t h e
Legislature back to Sacramento lf it
recesses th.i3 week without pa..ssl.og the
$1.2 billk>n tax reform-school finance bill
he and A"embly SpeaJu~r Bob Moretti
worked out last monl.b. (See earlier story.
Page 5)
On Mooday. Sen. Randolph Collier,
chairman of the Senate committee whlcb
now has authority over the compromise
bill, hinted strongly that the measure
might not even get a bearing belore ~the
three-month recess sCbeduled t'o begin
Friday night.
The bill, a ma'jor compromise bet"'8D
Beagan ~ the DembcratJc leader or the
Assembly would boost ·state income,
sales and buslnesa .tam to pay for $545
million In extra state 1Upport o! local
schooll ~nd new pioperty ~ relief !or
homeowntn:. '
Despite stronc oP.!u'!'. it flnally
pakd tile Senate RA!venue and TauUon
Committee last Friday. But It still must
clear the Senate Finance C.Omm1ttee
before Jt can go to a final Senate floor
vote.
Hinshaw Slates
Irvine Address
r 1
·Extra Land '
•
'Gets Study
tt
By Nixon
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nis-
on 11id todM7 It is ridiculous for tht
Federal govenunenl lo own over half the
land In some Western state.I, but aides
said tater the While House w.., glvin& no
thought to disposing or any o! the West'•
millions of acres of public domain land.
The chief executive's comment can1e
as he met in his OvaJ Office with
members of the Federal Property
Rev'iew Board which has been handl-
ing the admlnistration's effort to convert ·
llltle-uaed federal property Into state and
1oca1 p&ru.
PolnUng to a map of the United States
wblch allowed the 144 parcels o! land
transferred u.nder the Legacy of Parks
program, Nixon observed that the federal
government was owner of more than half
the and in some Rocky Mountain and
Western staes.
"That1s ridiculous," he said. "We don ·1
need jl."
He didn't elaborate while newsmen
were in his office for the start of the
mettint, but o!ficlala said later Nixon
wu relmlnc to a catqog known u ac-
quired land -not to the public domain
land which II often leased !or livestock
grazing.
PresldenUal counselor D o n a 1 d
Rums!eld, a member of the property
review board, told newsmen, "We have
not evtn looked at the question of public
domain land."
Nothln~ the President said at today's
meetlnc 'wu meant to apply to public
·domain land," Rums!eld said.
The review board'• executive director,
Darrell M. Trent, said IOl!le public <Jo.
main land bad l>eea taken earlier !or
such use aa m.llltary rurvatlon.s and no
looger is under control of the Bureau of
Land Management This, he indicated,
might bt<ome available !or transler to
alate, and local (O\'tl1Ull<nta for the
Lqaey o! Parke program.
Alter the meeting, Nixon Issued a
statement sai'ing he was pleased that the
144 new paru bad been created In 3'
states.
"T~ federal public lands beloJ!i to all
Americana and are jJlrt o! the heritage
and birthright of every clUzen.'' Nixon
said. "They are the .lnathlng space o!
the naUon, ~ it Is eMllUll .that they be
-ed for future geqeraUon1."
At the meetin& i1J hie oVll OUlce, Nix·
op cited a piece ol beach front property
~ h1J San Clemente home as an et·
anlple ol federal ~Y which con be
cOnVerted=bliC ""< The! ' ~--· . _ .. ~once WU.,-.•
·of the Camp etoil Marine ruerva-
tion, but if wu turned o~ 1o· lbl" alate
of OOuomla. lllx6a Aid, however, t&al
he learned on Jilly 4 when be visited the
beach that it waa beln1 uaed by only 200 .
people. At that time be lnllnicted hlJ
aides to work to acceluate the develop.-
Jl\tllt of the land by adding public
!acWtlee and bettar •CCIII roads.
He UJed the former Camp Pendleton
land as an exemple of the close watch
which he eald must be ko\>t to make cer-
tain transferred land II put to the fullest
un.
• Assemblyman Edwin Z'berC ( D •
Sacramento), pleaded !or pauage ol the
meaaure, saying both Gov. 8'agan al!d
the Siem Club favored the statewlde 'tn-
vironmental protection bQard at up
under the bill. .
But numerous leplalors attacked the
bW during noor debate, echoinl ob-
jections by Alaemlilyman Frank Lan-
terman (R·LI Qlnada) who· called the
bill "• 76-pafe paper umbrella ."
Profs Say War Whetted
Desires for Education
Cost Council Exempts
10 Million Workers
>
Orange County AlseucJ< Andrew
HID!haw, Rlpubllcan candidate !or the
39th Congresalonal "8t will spealt 1'rlday
at a diMer meeting of the South Coast
Frot11 P .. e l
EAGLETON. •• WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Cost or Republican Forum In tlie Airporter Inn,
LivliJg C6UncU · 1\lexday exempled from 1rv· serious probJema "and be llld no." 1ne. , wig• controls all workers earning 12.75 · He said the O-year'old M1111RJr1 per hour or less, rai!ing the low·wage ex-The South Coast GOP group draws semtor informed blm about the
emption from $1 .90 an hour. members from Irvine and the Sad-bolpitllilatkN . <111 the weekend after
The new figure is effective July 15. dleback Valley. their nomination. ·
Actress Has Child
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Linda Day
George, a star of the "Mlaalon :
Impouible" television series, ii the
mother o! a 7-pound, one-ounce baby girl.
The 2'ryeaMld act.reu and her actor
buaband, Christopher George, 35, alto
hive a 1-year-old son. ..
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By MICHAEL GOODRICH or t11t DtOt' l"lllf Jt8ft
Despite Immense suffering and untold
destrucUon1 the Vietnam War may have
had one poslUve influence In the end -
the whetting o! the Vlelnam.,. appetite
for education.
Thia ls the opinion expressed by two
Vietnamese educators who are presently
touring the Coast Community College
Dillrlct ·as part ol a trip to discover how
junJor colleges are set up and ad·
,ministered.
'.l'be two educaton, Dr. Tran-ngoc 1.JJi
o! the Nba Trani Oceanographic
institlite and Dr. Nguyen Dang Lolli o!
the $Jgon Nallonal Agriculture Center,
have been charged by their government
with estebllshlng the Ont two-ye11r col·
leg es .tn Vietnamese history.
WhOe on a tour of the Golden West
College In Huntington Beach, the two
vlsitlug educator• dlscU!ted education in
Vietoam now and their hopes for the
!uture.
"Bectu!t of the war. more people have
come to the c!Ues and have seen much
more than their parents did," said Dr.
Long. "They realize the importance of 1
good education and so more people want
to go lo school."
"When 1 attended the University' of
Saigon in 1958, tiiere were only 200
studens at the school. Now there are
morer~than 8,000 students in the same
facUlty," says Dr. Loi.
Both men believe the Vietnamese
educational system must shed its French
influence and become more Oexlble.
. They said .lbla 11 necwary ror the ropld
tralnln1 o! the many technicians and
tuchm the <OUllJrr will need when the
tiar ends.
"Tb• French '1Jlem leads to a waste
o! time and h10llU beceuae U a student
!alla his comprei\Glslve test at the end o!
the year he must re:peat the whole year,"
"YI Dr. Loni who ....,.lved a mamr'• ·ctecr-f-i!C Davis and a doctorate In
plan! pelholoiY lrolD Lollislana State
IJnivenlly.
.Both. men plan lo Implement a credit
111tem at their two-year colleges whlcb
Council Director Donald Rumsfeld said hos • 111 McGovern made cle1r, "I think Tom
will be somewhat similar to that used in at a news conference. A no-t reception at 1 p.m. 'W be Etgle~ ii fully qua1lfled tn mind, body
the U.S. He said the aclion removes about 10 followed hy dinner at 8 p.m. Tlclltta are and spirit to be '1CO -ldant ••• " and
"Estimates show that we will need at rniWon private nonferm workers from $5 per peraon and reservaUcm mQ' be 11tall:t ovv Cll a mmnent'1 nollce"~u
least 45.000 technician.. in all Deida lo direct pay controll. made by calllni 833-2382. -ldent.
help rebuild our country after the war Jriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;iiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiii"•
ends," says Dr. Lot. "A two year college
with a credit system will enable us to
train these people more qulckly.11
Dr. Loi wlU be heading the Coastal
Community C.Ollege iii' Nha Trang, about
200 miles north of Saigon on the coast of
the South China Sea .
He npeclJ to begin his college with
about 200 students combining the
fa cilities or his octanographlc school and
a Korean military training site whicb wljl
soon be turned over to the school.
He expeclJ tuition at the ~stal Oom·
munity College to run about $30 a year
and the major emphasis of the school to
be marine science and teachtt training.
· Dr. Long will adrnini ater the Upper
Delta Community College lo be located In
the city ol My 'lllo, approaimately 1111
miles south of Saigon .
He will have 100 acres of land to
develop his college which be exj\Oets will
bave an agricultural and teacher traltlin&
emphasis. ' • •
Both o! the Vietnam.,. educators hope
,lo expand the CUJTiculum·o! their scljooll
lo include such technlcol major1 u
engineering, .computer training and
architecture.
"We will traln fot Ute nationa11 needs 11
they evolve," said Dr. Loi, '1but our
greatest needs now are developing our
agricultural and tndustrlal production."
Similar to junior contpe In the U.S.
the empbe•ls of the 'new Vietnam•
colleg.. will be on lJer'1nc the needl ol
the Ioctl oommunlty .
Each college wlU bave a d"!analed
school dlatrlct o! provlncn and <ltlu
whldl It will ..,... and receive nnan<tat
support from. Al the moment D10fl of the
money to estebllsh the collqes 11 coming
rro"' the b&Uonal covernment.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?) •
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND IEFORE A SAWMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TllED TO DETERMINI! PllCES ON GOODS NOT
MARKl!D?
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPLl!S. THE T H E 0 R Y IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILLIEAR.''
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPW SO
THAT. CUSTOMl!RS CAN IROUSI THROUGH THE AuCTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THEO II ALWAYS THI
POSSlllUTY OF A L 0 W E R PRICE IF CONDmONS ·WAUANT •
SR.~ '-!l·:r,, T11 1 l . .. ~· . . :u ~~~ o~ I 1. I J.• ·• ---' & --• -~ .....
l . . . . . -. •.•. .. ... ---1H7
~.--·
I
ALDEN'S
CARPns • DRAPIS
1663 Plec1llflll Aw.
COSTA MQA
646 4131
HOUU: .................. f 19l:JO-l'rl.,f19f-s.t.ti.Ml9 I
"The war Is laklng lllUcll of~
that we need to Improve our 'educational
1y1tem, 11 aaya Or. LoL 11But wt can do
many tl!lngs In parallll with the wer ll
w1 bavethedalrt." ................................................................................. ~
(