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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-28 - Orange Coast Pilot• ' , er son e.son ar e • • • d • • '.· ·Bnn~i .11~gton ·Man ADlhitious. Suitor . I ' l • • , . ··seized in .Knife Bunts_ Lost Love Atta~k ·_ on. Oifieer With Last Dollars. " .. .. . · ,f'RIDAY AFTERNOON, Jl:ILY.21,J 97Z· . -.. ...... ,.,,-.,t.llClllll1r41PMU· • -. • l • Anderson . . ' . Backs Off On Charges WASllINGTON (UPI) -Collllllllkt Jade Andenian .... quoted toc1a1 u uybrg ·be lllould ban checlted further before ~dcasllng his clalm tbal Democratic Vice Praldenttal candidate Thomu· F. ·Eagleton bad a ream! of drunken and ieckless driving, The Washlngton S!ar·New1 In a story by Robert Wtlters and Nlcbael Satchell nported Andenon said . be "probably lhoukr have wltbbekl" publlclJJng tho charge but· tbat competitive neW.• pmoure pram~ hint lo mike II• without full -verification. Rqleton denounced Anclenon'• ...... lion that be • bed • been arrested Oil dnmken and recklea driving charges In the 19IO'S U • '«damnable lie. H Mlslourl records lor the IODllM sbow tbat be bad two tralllc Involvements -once for speeding and once for ID accident OD ID Jcy bllhw•J, Anderson tlto told the Star-Nm be felt his &tory "pt played up beyond pro. p:artlm'' became Jt came 'oo a day when there. WU DO atller tolil developm>! In ' the _Eagldm -tlon. . '!be vice ~·"·' nominee' dllcl- , • , J-uSifce :Order~ Refund ~ By Pacific Telephone WASHINGTON-(AP) ~ JUlllce· Byron R. Whit. _,.,.cleored the '.woy for a •i»mlllloa rofund lo custcmers of the Plclllc Telephone-le TclllUlllh Co. In a brief order laued at fbe .8upr<n!& c...rt he let ulde a teinporaoy ]>Ollpone- -of the ~ and deCUnoii lo further cl<lay the nte decisloa· li! Collfornla. ' The refund would amount to ·•bout $12 for a home telephone, but C()Uld mean tem of -fl! · clollin···fw-·..,.. poratlolll. PI'l/r attorneys had argued lbe llDIDilnoUa -by the caJllomia. Sdpreme Court WU patenlly artiltrary and contrary lo due proc:es Tbey alto · Aid the refund order .was ••a grave mllcmiage of . justice'~ aM. a "~m- Lost Love Hunted With Bus Ads, Last Dollars LOS ANGELES (AP) . -Emblomed on lO' 5ouUMrn Calllornia, Rtpid Transit Dlttrlct buael It an ldv~ reading: pounding blow." to the·conipan)"s· ability to.-...11s..-.., ,Besides ~ refund, tlie --on JWIO I lnvalldated a '10-mllllan rate-Jn. C!MM snnted PI'l/r by the llate public UW)tles .<Xl!llD!IMioo a year &IO and anOlhOr $Rkilllion boost tbat went Into effect last May. The COltU>IDY wu to hive begun making tbe repayments on Ju)y II but Wblle tbat day tempoiarlly "ll'iD!ed 1'TltT a pootponement while be C001klerecl a 23-J>li• pleo for .a slay of the decltlon. •. . • Wblte acted In the ablence of Jllllloe WUUam O. Douglas, within· wl!Qse · jucltdlcllon Collfornla ..... nonDally fall, lib order· said' "Upon lurllJer •con- sideration of the application far lllay of !be mandate of the Calllornla S~me CoUrt and upon exariih1atlon of 'the respo111e1 filed to aucb applicaliOrl, the temporary stay of mandate ~lore entered ·oa July II, 19?2 la vacated and the application for stay of mandate It denied." '!be Collfornla court bad found a tax accoontlng procedure known u ""' cellrated depreclotlon will! nomiallzatlon used by PI'l/r WO! unlawM. It tlto said · !be prlcet !be uUllty pa11 lit alllllate, Western Electric Co:, for equipment ' W!l'e excessive. Beach ~~n Held · • .. .. ,, . ~ Driver Held ' fu,~tY. Wild 'Drive BY ARTHUR R. VIN8EL Of ""' Ottlr "" ..... A )'OUth In a atolen gold C.dlllac led lawmen on a tlo.mJle-per '"·11r chue throuih 'three clHu early today, belate being captured In Costa Mesa when be alddded 1111 feet down a deadend alreet, crublnt Into a power pole. ' ,One motorist· had•~to--awerve-onto • •-•II<' and Into a telephone pole him.tf«illrlng !be fOW'mlle parault'bJ three ,pollce cars and two.'bellcopters t. avoid a· mlll!lon with the ampoct car. A Colla Mesa pollaman tlto lllld i.· had · lo· back out of the • woy 1 ...... Illa. ... peo1 ·...-i tbe,powerlql 1111111111 •• attem)ll lo ram !be patrol car blocklng bl!irat· an lntersedlon. Glenn A. Haney, 20, a transient, WU flnally•arrested and booted on llllpld .. of auault will! a deadly weapon m a police ofllcer and grand theft of an anto. He wu captured In the bockyard of a home at 2926 Clubhouse Drive u the circling , Costa Meta police ~cwter Eagle I opoWghled the area. Investlpton said Haney llnall1· -rendend on onlm of belicopler observer Offlcer Diet Ile!'lch, Who told the ampoct (S. aua, Pap I) ' . • • C:.111 Tuesclay be bed -boopltallzed three limes ill the 1••1 far poychiolric treat. ment beco1111 ol ·fatigue and'......., tension. 1,000 to. Lose Jobs "'I Love >Jbuquerque GlrLJleol Sl:lmy. -Who Warts le u ... In 1.A Plcbd· Me Up oo Hwy 1 In Sant& -.; July 10, C)oollct me al.115 S: V..-UrgenL" ,A former Unlvenlly. o! Michigan ~ dentl Davld Schwarts, :IO,'of'Bloomfield, Mich., llpenl his entire eollqe uvlngt of PllllADELPHIA (UPI) -TJUatees ol •1,fl4io In an eflort lo find a P'I be loves After, All~ge~'.., -'··'· ;'. Officer Attack . • •. 't "' the Pmn Central Railroad, alroady cut-, but wboee nome be doell!~ know. A %9-year-olcl Hunttncton 8-" man ting cornen dl1o lo blaknJptey, !IJlo _ '!be Jong-llolred, bearded Schwarll tald w11 arrtlled oo suspicion ol 1ttempted nounc:ed Tbundaf 1,000 -'era will be be met her w!llle bl...,,~ . murder . 'l'lllndly after be allegedly laid aft beco~of flood dlJDaae cauoed Tbe -· bron-bafNd ctr! and 1 t)>rew a II-Ind! butcher lmHe at a police . by troplcal -~ Aps. I male compantoo plcbd-blm. up In their :c:. ~~~tened·lo kill Te~as Hopeful Backs Rival HOUSTON (UPI) - T. H, ~ • llepu~ ......ikl•Je far pnci&t e...lable, ..id 'be bed ---ud bJnd that his lllHIO<fttic ~ WU the ---------wllhdmJ Thunday and ondoned his oppooeal, Wtller Rankin. "He abolJld continue hit eicellent oervlce without lnlorfennco ol a polillcal campalcn, • Gnllam aid. ... , bougbt. hint 1 ha"""1r(er and drove · Polloe alleged that · Edward Crable of· Jibn 10'm11e1 up Padllc Coul Hlgbwoy,. 50?2 Linda Clrcle, 1lnw the )JUie at Of. H and tbe •• , .. •-•~ ~ be •-~ t llcer Bnlce Young w1*n the lawman and e ... ' --._ ou ' two -police-olllOen atteaipted · lo • oho wu ·!ram ~N.M. -but calm him clown. II' nqlecled lo~-WU. Young wu cut 01i the band. He was <•i blew ii;• be . II. "It Wllll' until lrooted 1t Plclllca, Hoo]iitel. Tbe "°""" I I 1ot up 11 fir u Monterey tlllt I reall>. wu delcrl1Jed by police u minor. ed I dldll' lmqw • -Iba wu • Tbe lncldaal began )lit prior to,2 a.m. . gruL It'1 JGtl•• feellng)ool'bm'Wben ·· =~ l'lrl: ~ to, ti'!t 9'1ble I you talk to -and )'OU bnmedletel7 . Wiien _,._ arrived •'-said th y Jeem 1lU olll frilndl. ,, .....-• w.llll' e ·-~-~ .,-"-'~ ,_,. ._......,__ •=t .'. J~dlulllihis wife through the ""'"'uy ....._ -• "'"'"'""""'" .._ -Ibo -knife. Thty and bu .. _ enrythJng on' flndl~ her 1wwwld the couple's thrte children !rom -ill my breld for a -·• ad-the llomll and then trled to calm Crable ver'llllng." down. What ll abe hH other commltmenttT It -then that be allegedly thrtw the "I'm not wwrled," be uyi. "ll I find bile II Y-. The olllcerl iubclued him her, I'll !lb con of the not." ml 1ben Jllled b1m. l • • I , J. DAii. V PllOT S Hinshaw Hit McGovern Stands Firm ,By Counsel Over Park The lhr ... y.....,ld feud between Orange County Awsaor Andrew J, llimllaw and County Counsel Adrian 1'~ bunt into fillmf:s again Thurt-day. . Kuyper In a Jett• pr.,..S for the Boord of Supervllor• ehar1ed that Ri,&haw '1 clDce'1 appralaals of land CO«llprlalng the propoud toi-acre Yorba RoClonal Park oo the Santa Ana Rive< In no(theut Anaheim was "lncorrect ln f~I and legal premises." Hlmbaw hotly replied· that Kuyper wu aeetJng Hto dlactedlt the auusor'• outce IM>Ugh Innuendo and falaebood. • Him.haw's appraisers told t b • 1upervl&0r1 last June 27 ihll the coonty hai qrted to pay up to ·124,000 an a<re ror tllo perk land lbal la worth only fl ,10t Ill 'acrt. The llinshaw-Kuyper feud flnl ..upted in 19&9 over appraiial.t by the assesaor'• office ' of Irvine Company landl llOWld the \lpper Newport Bay. "I 1ald 1t that time that Kuyper bad vlolJ.ted the code and canon of the Amerlcali Bar Alooclation," Hlnobaw related '111uroday. "I added that thll of· lice from that Ume on would no IOOltr UBe the -ol the county counsel'• offlce." The Yorba park land purclt.,. hu been the 1ubject ol many appraisals and Inter-departmental argumenta for the past year. , The appraisal whlch Ignited Thuroday s e1c~e was clone by Gar Redding, a oupenillng IJ'IJl'llw In the ·-·· olflct. He llOln!ed out that .. crowa In the perk Ille .,... which eaJ1ed for payment of 'll,OllO to '20.llCIO ID acre for land whlcll II "°" under optlon lo the county w collapotd. Radding'• fl,IOO an acre apprallal bad ...., counlnd by value .,Umates by Joba R. Sboddy, aoalatant director of the valuaUon divJaion of the county's Real Property Services Department, and by stanley H. Yorshis, an independent ap. pral,.r blred bf the county. Boll>. acc«dlng to lleddlng Uled the defWICt e 1 c r o w 1 u evidence in determltllns land values. lllnsbaw llates that Raddlnl knew of the BIO'OW• and, "give them the appropriaie wel&bt - very llttle." StllllloJ Km,., cllrector of Baal Proporty ~ admitted 'lllunday that lour of 1!x -between devaloper1 IDd ·property ownera In the Yorbe park 1lte area have collapsed. · Hinshaw aJ90 cborgea that the 11.S. 'Corpl of Engineer& and the county'• tblef flood control di!trlct englnl<r1 G-Oebornl, bo9W • wl!'llld oz dangl!l'Olll flood baaardl lo the property. The aue.uor's aides have esUmated that sums up to fl0,000 an acre would be neceasary to mike the "'' llocNr Plvpr1• • The county hu • '1.1 )n!Ulon snm fro mthe otate to ft111nce purchue of llO percent of the proposed park land and supervllors have eannarked an ad· dlttooal ,1.3 -million In the · Harbors, · Beachea and Para Diltrict budget for the acquisition- 14-yeai·-old Boy Held by Police LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 11-yea!'Old · boy aCCUled ol kUUng 1111 elderly man with • shotgun during a robbery att<mpt !all week wu being held by juvenile authorttles for investigation of murder, antborlUes uld. · • ' Ricky Bonville, 14, wu arrested"after a police chm trlg(tted by an llle1al tum made by the youth as he drove • car on city otreeta, lnvestlgalora Hid Thur> day. · Alter hll arrei!l at b1s lf&ndmother'• home In South Central Loa An8ele1·Tuea- day nJcbt, Boovllle took olllcera to an · obanclooed boule where he bad bldden a lhotcun. aulborlU.. odded. Glenn Brown, 71, was killed Sunday juat 11 he returned from vllltlng blo wile Haul, 71, at Broadway Hospital, police said. I OUNN COAST IT DAILY PILOT n. Om1tt C.t DAtLY Pit.OT, wtttl wtllcll h ~ -........ ,...... It..., ... w .. or-.. C...t ""'"•"llW ~ ..... ,. .. lllltkw .... "*'Wied. Mtnhy ~ frld•Y· .... C.I• MtN, N.wpwf •uch. Huntlfll"" It~ 'Vtlltfl i...turo• •Mdl. lr.IM/$tidlt!MQ aM ffft Cltmtnt•/ 5-.t JWM Clls*lrtna. A 1lnt1• rt0tot11I '4111111 " ll'lblw.il .. IVNIYI Ml ,.,. • .,._ TM .,lrdftll •IWiir. ~I It ti Ill W.1t .. .,. •trwt. Gitt• M--. Ctll,..., .... l•hft N. Wee4 ..,...... .... "*...., J1ck R. C.rley Vici ........... 111111 0...1 MIN,., Tit.••• K"ril ·-Tholfttl A.. Mur,lti11• ,.,,,.,.. 1111/IW Ch1rltt H. l••• •lth1r4 P. N1R Aaalttant ~ •••• -c.t9 M•: D WW llY SINlt N..,..,. lhtdtr *' N..,.; IWlt•W ....,._. a..o: m,..... ....... H..n"""91t e.cti1 ,,.,, ~ ....,.,.. ... ~ ........ c-a.. .... Tlf ;I C7141 MJ.4U1 Cl....,._ AIM?' t ; '41·1671 ,.._ a..I .,.... .... " """" .... ., ..... .. ,,..,....,....c.....,caa1M1t1tt 14toUJI ~ '"" OrWtOt 0...1 l'Wlllfl"'4 Oftllit!'ff', -,,.... llerlft, lllwtl'ti•• .......... -........... ......,,~ -· fPltf .. ····-wl .... ~ ,.. ,,....., .,, ....... . .................. flt Cati .... c..!1"'""'-MtoWIM '°' unttt tt.U _...,, ..... #.If ~lrl lllftlllrw' _,.•I• a.t """9Nf, JourneB'• End Will Meet With Eagleton Over Criticism Jnm Win Sttvl ... C\ISTER, S.D. -Seo. Geora• S. lllcGovem, •landioi firm oo hie vice pml<JinUal IOIBCtlon amid crowing CntlciJm, .. YI he Wiii met! again With Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton early next week wbeo I.hey both return to Waohlngtoo. Carl Stotts Thunday jolned thole ad- vocaUng Eagleton '• withduwal. e The New York Times In sn edltortal pubiiabed today augguted that Eagleton volunt1ri11 withdraw as the DomocraUc · c•n<!lclate !Or the vice prealdency. CUlng Eagleton's adrnilalon that he had been hospitalized three times !or * * * Wishes Him Well ner'VOU! exhaustion and depression, tbe e<lilortal said ll would be "a healthful cootributloo not only to the McGovern candidacy but to the health of tho American political process for Senal()r Eagleton to retin from the field and \)Crrnlt the presidential contest to be decided whony on the issues." For the Becood \1111• In six dayo, McGovern reprlmlDded hla ataff, telling them he wanted no further comment by anyone other than himself and Eagleton. "I have made my support for Sen. Eagleton clear and I want no fUrther comment on the matter by any one con- ~cted ·with the campaign other than Sen. Eagleton or myself," McGovern said In a J(ennedy Gives Support rtatement. . McGovern, winding up a two-week ~tion in whJch he has gotten litUe tts~ went to ,; private lhowlng ol the To Nominee Eagleton movie "The Candidate," in CUster and SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sen. told, reporters afterwards that he prob-Edward M. Kennedy called Democratic ably would see Eagleton Sunday or vice presk1entiaJ nominee Thomas F. Monday. Eagleton today to wisll him weli, &n Eagleton dillclosed this week that he Eagleton aide said. had undergone treatment for a nervous The aide, presa .secretary Michael disorder three times in the 1960s. On top Kelly, said Kennedy called the Missouri or that report, colwnnlst Jack Anderson senator !rom Waahlngton and "ali he did said Thursday the Democratic vice was to cali him and give him hla sup- presidential candidate had been arrested port." a number of ttmu for drunken or Kennedy reached Eagleton as he was Anderson's charge a "low blow." He· said he thought it would hurt him because denials and refutations don't always catch up wilh accuaations even when the charges are false . He oald he thought the WOr!t part o! the Anderson ltory would be its postlble effect on his relations with his wife aild children and on hia reputation as a man. 'Eduardo Mantilla, 21·, a Cuban mechanJc from Detroit, .center, em- braces his father and mother after nine months of planrung paid off for Mantilla and a friend as they returned with 13 relatives and friends smuggled out in a leaky boat. reckless driving. about to address a ·galh«lng of local Eagleton said ln Hawall Anderson'lll Democrats at a breakfast meeting here. charge was a "damnable lie" and that he The support from Kennedy came one was all the more determined to stay on day after columnist Jack Andenon said the ticket. Eagleton had a record of drunken and In other developments: reckless driving, a charge Eagleton tm- "Jn the end, that's tbe only thing YCK{ leave to your children -your name,,., Eagleton '81d. Eaglelon, asked to rate odcls on whether he would stay on the ticket, 1ald, ''I think my chances are excellent.'' ~1issourl officials of both parties, past mediately labeled "a damnable lie." A• 1 • F ' and present, uy they doubt the truth of Eagleton said the Anderson charge tr file 3Clllg Anderson's report that drunken and probably will hurt his personal reputa· reckless driving charges were filed tion. Airp E • • agfn°i\PEa~:y· or Missouri tnffle Eagleton told the breaklaat meeting he Ort YICflOD S ... Viet Jets Strafe Foes . remains determined to s t a y on the records showed only a speeding violation Democratic ticket and to become vice · In Calloway County In l962 and two president. Jn Flight Fi~ht earlier speeding charges when Eagleton "I'm 100 percent sati.sfied that I can u was 18 and 24 years old. back it," he said. The first WS10on July '1:1, 1948, when he "I'm going to cross the country and do LONG BEACH (AP) -Westerp Dug in Around Quang Tri S.U.GON (IJPI) -South Vietnamese jets swooped through a steady drizzle !<>- day, bombing and strafing Communist soldlen du& in oo1y yards from govern- ment marines who are trying to recap- ture Quan& Tri City's Citadel fortress. The marines were sent in Thunday to ttUe•e battered paratroopers wbo tried for three dayt to drive the Norlh Vlet- twnete out of the Citadel. The marines got wlthln 100 yards or the 13-acre fortress but were not able to recapture ground the paratroopers had relinquished inside the 211-foot-thick walls. Military apokesmen Bald they must ~pture the Cltade1 1 whlch has been m CoinmuDlst hands 'stnce May 1, ~ore they can eount their month-old drive a success-d President Nguyen Yan. Tbl"! ordered 20.l)(X) men into Quang Tn PrOvmce J~.e 28 and' promised to drive the C.Ommunu;ts out before Sept. 19. So far, the troops have met heavy resistance lnJide Quang Tri City, the prov!nctal capitel, .along the highway which carries sup~lies nortti from Hue, and from Co~~LSt gunners who have been 1helllng Hue. In otller action, South Vietnameae troops recaptured a dlstrlcj county capital alollg the central coast but heavy fightlni was reported at Bong Son, ed town. government forces recaptnr ' k ' ' earlier In the wee · 1 b An American clvillan adviser, Rudo P Kaiser of COiorado Springs, ~Jo., was killed about 3.0 mlles south of Saigon near the vlllage of Hoa Dong. Government spokesmen said 62 North \llebi&mue .oldler1 were killed In two . i;,tUes nelr. An Loe'. '!> miles ~rth· ol · SJli:~;slilnaton. oUlctals ,.poried that ' North Vlelnom Is 1ettlng only about. 10 rcent of the supplies she was recelvmg J::fore the mlnlni of her harbors almOJl t~=~~~ uld that cootrary to bllshed reporll the North Vietnamese Cve not yet completed constru~oo of a '!OUl'lncb pipeline that would bnn1 much needed fuel from Chlna down to the Hanoi· Haiphong area. However, they~ rtions of the line have been fin pod are In use with trucks hauling the oil :f o the unfinished oectlon• of the Un•: .: ornctal1. aid that the pi~~· :!! the panhandle WIS being blt r..,-ar., ·Egypt Rejects · Call for Talks From Israelis CAffiO (\IP[) _ Pre!ident Anwar Sadal baa rejected 1snol'1 call !or direct talks to oettle the Middle Eut crlala ~ said Egypt wu pushln1 ahea~ military preparaUooa for uother w1r. . "We are contlnuinl mWtary prtpart-, lions for the llberaUoo of occupl': lands " sadat said in • one-hour speec at Al~andrla tJnlvenJty. 11We will never surrender to the status quo." Sad1t'1 rejection of a face-ta;face meeting with the lrilil, whleh Prime Mlnbter Golda llelr, called for W~ day, came wben ho diac:ulo<u America'• Middle East pollq. • ...... Sldat quoted ·~ .. ..,, "thert ii .. aubatltut& I« dlnct tolbC But. Sadat Aki, "If -bu !di !Inda occupl<d. ... bl --negot.11Uons! 'nm II tQU11 • w1ad•.'' "Thl• lnalltellCI .. <l1rod ......... a mtans .. lud • tD Mi ILJIT -•1 wt wW not IUl'TMlllW." t• ....... , aid. Ht '"1led 11t1. ID, 11old hmt • ., Tbo ,..,,.... .... ...,.. .... to: cep<od tho tarr1111 •II 1t1 -a '"traitCI'." and was totally out of use so that fuel for the tanks an!:f vehicles operating against the South Vietnamese in the Quang Tri area now bad to he trucked In. Aliogether, they uld, North Vlelnam was getting only about 10 percent ol the imporll she received before the May 8 mlnlng ol ber main harbors. From Pagel CHASE ... was fined $5 and court costs, and the sec-everythina 1 possibly can, not in the Airlines has refused to sign an agree. nd on Feb 19 19" when he was f'"ed ~"O ment with the city of Long Beach re.strlc-0 · ' .,.., ... sense of personal vindication but in the •10 d rt ts ting future fli .. ~t schedules, a move that • an cou cos · sense of + .... .J .. g to elect George "" On th th! d ff In 1-h an. ... ,-.. , could lead to evlctlon from the city'1 e r o ense, ;iw., e " McGovern," he said. peared in magistrate court in Fulton, Eagleton flatly denied a report by alrpol't Aug. 31. Mo., and was fined $35. Anderson that photostatic records show The City Council voted this week to •Almost every influential Democrat lhe MiMOuri senator was arrested a half· oust Western unless the airline agreed to who bas expressed an opJnlon says that dozen times for drunken or reckles.s driv· a new Jease with restrictions aimed at Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton'• adml!sion of · curbing noise pollution over residential undergoing psychiatric treatment will mtxierson made the allegation in a neighborhoods. hamper Democratic chances of defeating radio broadcast Thursday. The columnist "We are reCusing to sign lhe leue President Nixon in November. told The Associated Press that he did not because if we did, it would set a And a growing number of Democrats have the records himself but learned dangerous precedent which might en· are asking Eagleton to withdraw as the about them from a uhlgh Missouri of.. courage airports all over the country to vice presidential candidate. ficial." A check by The AP turned up set similar restrictions against the entire Texas State Rep. Frances T. "Sissy" """' "'""'Ing cltatioiis I · airline Industry," said Ray SllviWJ, lo halt over the chopper's public addtt.ss Farenthold and former Cleveland mayor some ,,_.. s~ 1 n Westem's public relations manager. SYstem. Eagletoo's name, but no trace of ~y .,.. Pa .. South Alrllnes rest for drunken or reek!.,. driving. Cu•C west iJ the ooll' No one WIS Injured -lnctudlng Haney Eagleton angrily told a newa con-other alrllne aervln1 the airport and I! -during the wild pumdt from New\,ort Mintoff Meets Queen fertnce Thuraday 1n Hooolulu thoflte had hu aaree<J to the restrictions. Beach into Hantiri~ Beach and on a never been arrested for drunken or The controversial lease would ba1 zigzag course' back hi.to Costa Mesa. LONDON (AP) -Prime Minister Dom reckless driving, and that Anderson's flights between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. and The chue began Shortly before 2 a.m. Mintolf of Malta, here to seek more report appeared to him to be 1 politically limits other flights to six dally Mondat money for BrlUsh bases on his Mediter-motivated attempt to drive him off the through Thursday and eight Friday when Newport Beach Patrolman Bob ranean island, called on Queen Elizabeth Democratic ticket. through Sunday and on holidays. ~ Hardy spotted the gold luxury aedan 11 al Bueklnghom Palace today. In an Interview whlle flylng hm from Siivius said Thur1day that Wesl<m has roaring along West Coast Highway at His morning meeting with Prime Min· Hawaii, EaglFton underscored his newly no flights scheduled during the prohibited Prospect Avenue.. ister Edward Heath was postponed be-strengthened resolve to stay on as nm-hours and operates only four flights da}:. He went into pursuit of the vehicle, cause Heath was at a House of Com-nlng mate of Sen. George McGovern. ly, including weekends and holidays, out whJch. 1 he said , was traveling ap-j'.::_m=om~d~eba;;t<~on~thiiieiiniiiaiitlon;;al;;dock;;;;;;';;lrike;;;;;;;' ;;;In;;;;'";;;ln;t;ervi;e;w;, ;;Ea;g~leton;;;c;all;ed;;o;f;Lon;g~Be;a;ch;.;;;.;;;;;~:----proximately 80 miles-per·bour in a 45 mile zone. Officer Hardy said the driver sped over tile Santa Ana River bridge, slowed down, then looked back, and spotted his pursuer, and gunned it, turning up Brookhurst Slreet. !Jstenlng to the dramatic broadcast of the progressing punuit, Co.<ta Mesa patrol can began deploying when OUicer l!Alily radlced the speeding · aedan had turned eutbound·on Vlctorla•Slreet. Chasing him toward Harbor Boulevard, officers said Haney forced Roger R. Richards, 17, of La Mirada, to swerve bis car onto the sidewalk and into a telephone pole. Costa Mesa Patrolman St.eve Nash said the Cadillac -whlch had heeb stolen 15 minutes earlier in Newport Beach - finally slowed almost to a stop as he ap- proached Harbor Boulevard. OCficer Nash, who was waiting for him, pulled across the intersection with his car's red lights flashing, bot said the on-- coming sedan accelerated, forclng him to back out of the way to avoid a collision . He ond o!flcers Jack Koch and Richard Johnson then fell irilo line )leblnd Haney In thelr patrol cars, rtaehlng 110 mllet per hour on Harbor Boulevard. They said Haney swerved left onto · Baker Slreet, then made a right turn on- to Samar Drive - a deadend street - and laid down 180 feet o! aldd.! before · slamming into the power pole at the end.1 Major damage resuJted to the car Jeas-- ed by Patricia Clifton of Whittier, who was filing a stolen report at about thai time. Police •Bid Haney jumped out o! the car and they chaaed blm on loot, but I011t him unW he was cornered by the police helicopter. Screaming. sirens and the blaring helicopter loudspeaker a w a Jc e n e d resldenll lhrolllllout the area durln& the punult. · Inveatlgaton Slid Haney wa1 bookod lnlo Newport Beach City Jail 1ince the chase orlJ!ll!ated there and held In lieu o1 110,000 boll pending Issuance of criminal complaints. He WIS charged with two counll of .... u11 with 1 deadly wupon resulting from evuiV< actions requited by )'OUlll Rotera and Off!Ollt Nub. P~otographer Booted • VIENNA (UPf) - A Ian tried to film ador Burt Lancuter whlla he wu on ._lion •hooting tht movle "Scorpio." •-... ukl Lancuter threatened the ,..... mu with 1 lar1e rock and kicked blm ID the ,..t o1 h~ pan11, Tbo inu pvt up bls !l1mlng eflorts. .. I • Henredon Upholstered Furniture On Sale! NOW YOU CAN OWN '.UXURIOUS FURNITURE AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ANC YOU CAN SPECIAL ORDER WITH THE FABRIC OF YOUR CHOICE! DREXEt:-HERITA6~ENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN • INTERIORS WllllDAYS I SATURDAYS 9100 tw l:JO l'llDA T '111. t :OI NEWPORT IEACH e .. 1717·WllTCUF~Dll., 642-2010 TORRANCE e 2164' HAWIHOlNI llVD. J71·121t LAGUNA IEACH e 141 NORTH COAST HW'r. 4f4 .. ltl roa the Par Jo Asa' M lu !!lat app Aug. Su Si B will Bra Play Li nam chll play Chr Loo 'B WU box cu the p con BoardOkays . · 2 Crossings Of Tracks Orqe County superman ...,,. ..,. pl'09ed allocatloll of $381,000 far l1lo IQlltheaaiem oounty 1Tad• croa!op ''"' and uader the Santa Fe Railrood tracD, but cletaJed approval ol a thin! an Weit Can)'OI\ ROltd near the Santa Ana River. An AJJcta Parin..y ov.rpau In MJulon Viejo will coet $295,000 with the eounty' paylDf $240,000 and the Calilomla l!ichny Commtaoian, "5,000. • An uncierP* !or Conada Road In El Toro will coet the county and lllate •1t7 ,000 each. The IUndl are obtained ln>m gas tar allotments. Held for completion of an en- vironmental impact ttatement was the We ir C8tJyon proposal. Supervisor David L. ·Baker of Canion Grove objected !O Immediate approval charging, "the pro- i>osed road goes nowhere." · " Ba.ker 11gued that ii would be live to to years.before Clevelopment in the area would require the oveicroaaing. Disa1Teeing was Third D I s I r I c t Supervisor Wllllam Phllllps who said the road would eventually provide access to the county's ptanned Yorba Regional Park oo the Santa Ana River. Joining him In urging approval was M<Jistaol County Road Commissioner Murray Storm who said the allocation ol funds was a "lormaUty to' get $100,000 In state ll)()lleY !or the project." He said the application to the state mml be med by Aug. 15. SUper)lisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim urged that approval be wi~d until an envlrontilental lmpact statement WU f!J.~ ed,by the road department. Also oPi>cising wu Rod Sackett or Costa Meaa, county greenbelt ooonllnator who reminded ·supervisors that the 1Teenbelt coordinator who reminded 1Upervison that the greenbelt program called for no roadways across Santa Ana /canyon. The allocatiCll was delayed lndellnitely by a 3 to 1 vote, with PbUllps dissenting. Lion Countr)' Site Appearance By Brady Bunch Seven performers from A B C television'• "1be Brady Bunch" will · adopt a lion cub . mascot and lign autographs during Family Day Sat~J at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hilla. Ann B. Davis, who plays Iba houaekeeper on lamuy .. r!ented show, will accompany the slJ: young actors and actresaea · who play the Brady children and their real-life lamlliea. They will begin a tour ol the park at about 11 a.m., after which they will cro\fll a cub Frasier the 2nd, after the famous dead lloo. KFI t'adion announcer Robert Q. Lewis will broadcast a show leaturlng the Brac!Y group live from the park's J11118le Playholl!e from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Lim Country will al'° be spomorlng a nam&the-baby_ ostrich contest f o r children. A drawing will be beld at the playholl!e theatre at 2:45 p.m. All winners will have their pictures taken with the Brady Bunch, who are Barry Williama, Maureen McCormick, Christopher Knight, Eve Plumb, Mike Lookinland and Susan Olsen. 1 'Bomb' Just ·Breakfast RENO, Nev. (UPI) -A woman desoribed u . "a grandmotherly type" ts In jail today !or investigation o1 an al· t~mpt to extort $100,000 from Harrah's casino. I s~ ~Reid; q, of Lake Tahoe, wal amoted alfe< a• woman holding a box 'banded a note to officials at the culno saying it contained a homb and they should.pay up. • Politi Del 'Fill agerits said the bdi contalried com flam and a milk bottle. Te8...iS-tef Sen. James 0 . Eastland (I). MIU.) Is expected to succeed Sen. Allen J, Ellender as Sen·· ate prestoent pro tem -pre- siding ofllcer when the vice president lJ absenl Ellender, 81-year .. ld dean of the Sen· It e, died Thursday (llory Page 4). Mtl 't PILOT Steff ....... s DAILY PILOT Soutk Coat Plans . • ' Sewage Program f Changes Posed • • • • The Calliiii"nla Regional 'Waler Quality Coaltol Board !or tho San Ditco region will be uked Mlllday to approve two proposals that could chilngo future ,.wage treatment programa along the aouth cout. The board wW bear r<questa lrom the Allao Water Management Agency and the South Eut Retllonal Rectamation Agency to allow two large sewoge outlalls along lbe coast -one near Dana Point and one off Allao Beach In South Lacuna· A second request Is to allow a number ol inland sewage treatment planta : • throughout the Aliso and San Juan ;. basins, as opposed to one giant .sewage • ~ treatment center in Aliso canyon. The requests run counter to re--• quire men ts ol an interim plan for 11\e San · · Diego region and tbua the requested re visions require board actlon. The plan now requires that sewage treatment agencies from south of Newport Beach to north of San Clemente • join together in one large rtglonal plant near Aliso Canyon with one large outfall. ' Since the board has stipulated treated • sewage from this plant be reclaimed for irrigation uses, the outfa ll would be used only for overOow capacity of emergency situations. MISSION VIEJO'$ SUMMER READING PROGRAM FOR YOUNGSTERS HUGE SUCCESS 011111 Moss, 8, C1rrlM L1rge Stick of Books; He H11 Rt1d 125 Thli Summer Power Plants . Given Clean Bill of Hea.lth SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Preference should be given to developing nuclear power plants to meet an electrical power shortage California will face after 1975, the state Public Utilities Commission says. The two water management agencies, however, feel it would be easier to reclaim water by having several pl'ants located along the south cozst. Carl Kymla. who sits on both the AWMA and SERRA boards, said the one outfall requirement would not be economically fea sible because of the high cost of pumping sewage over the hills £rom the San Juan to the Aliso basin. Books Offer New ·Eseape Viejo Youngsters Spe1ul Summer Days in Library A repor• by the PUC's electric power division says "any licensed atomic plant will be safe and will not have an adverse effect on the environment." It would cost $1 million a year In energy and maintenance costs, Kymla added. In a related action, the WQCB will act· on waste discharge requirements for the existing 'putfall at Dana Harbor, which recently bas been under fire for causing !lOllutlon near the marina. .... ' While many Mission Viejo youngstert may be spending their days at the pool or in front of a television, Dallas Mou has escaped into the world ol books. S. Laguna Pair Sue Bank Over Branch Break-in Lawsuits liled against the United California Bank in the wake of the $4 million burglary at its Monarch Bay branch continued to mount with the liling ol a $279,7!5 action by a South Laguna couple. · James Stephenson Moore and his wife, Nancy ol 22151 Paseo del Sur, South Laguna, charge the bank and the Oreo Alarm Company with neglect that led to the rifling of their sare deposit box dur· ing the weekend ol March 24-2'. Their Orange County Superior Court lawlllit ls part of a cluster·of actions that now total more than $56 millJon in dainaiO.. 11ley have been IUed by more tb:an 30: ol the !SI holders of salety depoalt boxes In t1ie SoutlrLaguna bank. Five men have been 'indicted by a federal grand jury !or their alleged roles In the bank robbery. Three of them have been arrelted and are awaiting further court action on the allegations. · The latest lawsuit wu filed while FBI agents continued to examine securities and personal papers found earlier this week by workmen who unearthed a ~ ny sack near Pacific Island Village. It Is believed that the sack and !ta con· tents was dumped In the area by the bank robbers as they made their escape. The aecurlties have been tentatively valued at $llltl,OOO. Don't Llouse Up The Llove Llif e Of ~he Llama SEATl'LE, Wash. (UPI) . -Charles Harke is a quick learner. It too~ him on- ly two lut but painful bites to un- derstand you don't move In on the love life ol a llama. Harte, an animal keeper !or three yean at the Woodland Part Zoo, was at. templlng to -a female out ol a male llama's pen so another ftmale could move In earlier this week. "I .... be tboui!ht I WIS cutting In on hil _..,.., .. Harke said 1'11undaY at the Baliu<l Hospital. "I really bad no IUCb intentions." The male llama took ollense, nipping Harke ooce on !the ann and fa tecond ttine ~More severely -on the left knee. "I went down and aorl ol wrestled him down with me," Harlee sakl. 11He got up1 and ecarilpered aw•Yr I was very glad to tee him go," • •lime then hobbled out of the pen. His ' arm _.wasn't oeriO.s, llut the llama ·managed to sever a knee l<ndoa whicb bad to be sewn together. ' . Education Test ·Seminar Slated , A UCLA educational testing CC11sultanl, will meet with Laguna Beach Un16ed District lnllt ... 11 t :ll a.m. Saturday to dlscuas distrlctwlde evaluation · p...,. eedures. Marvin Aikin Is ooe·of aev.nl experts ID tbe lield of educational loltlnl who will a_.-bolon Iba achool boordln the nut mootb, u a preludO to mnplaymenl of • tultable evaluatlaa eaaoultant. • Dr. Aikin, an -.to wltll UCIA, allO dlrecta Edllcitlaa E • a I a a t I o n Asaoctata of West Loi Aqeleo. Trusleea qreed to move ahead wllh employment of a QOOsultant !or evalna- Uoo following a ttonny debate ov.r tho lindblg of an Emerald Bay f)'ltoma an· alyst that llUloul delicleocles extst In tho Top of tho World Elementary School mllb procram. The a.year-old yourigster, blond hair falling over his smiling face, says he has read 125 book! th\15 far in the Mission Viejo Library's summer reading pro- gram. He and 790 other area children are enrolled in the program. Dallas, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Moss of 24671 Mosquero Land, says he' began reading before entering kin- dergarten. Despite bis penchant for · books, he admits that his second grade teacher at O'Neil Elementary School last year did not think he was the best reader in the class. "She thought this other guy could read better than I could," Dallas says, show- ing his summer "passport" in which he has listed the hooks be has read thus lar. He says one of. bis favorites was "Red Tag comes Back," a story about a salmon that a fishe.nnan caught and tag- ged when it was small. The fish grew up and returned to the fisherman, still bear- ing its tag .. Ex-senator Guilty TOWSON, Md. (UPI) -Former Sen. Daniel Brewster was found guilty 'nlurs- day ol driving while Jpipaired by the ln- Oiience ol alcohol. Judge llany O'Neal of this Baltimore suburb lined" Brewster '220 on that charge and aootber one ol falling to stay in· the proper Jane. I According to children's librarian Trish Melcher, the reading program Uiis sum- mer has surpassed all expectations of her and her staff. "It has really been successfiil:"lhe ~ says, noting that all of last s1..nnmer, the PJ'OllT•m only attracted about 100 youngsters. As evidence of the succ;eas of the program, she points to the nearly empty shelves of young children'! books. Based on circulation figures, she estimat .. that children living In the Sad· dleback Valley have read over 10,000 books this summer. · "I am glad to see that ao many kids will come in and read inatead of watch-- ing TV," Mn. Melcher aays. "Kids to- day are more aware than ·they used to be. The library helps them become more aware of contemporary problems.'' Althougb Dallas -els out as the most prolific reader, Mn. Melcher says that six youths have read at least 70 boob so lar in the program. The reading progiam hegan In June and will last through August. In addition to reading, the library each Thursday .at 2 p.m. shows a film !or ch)ldren •. Dallea HY• that, e~"' µiougb he bu read 125 books ·lhil ,_1 be hu not been spending an lib 'Um~ feadtni Be plays baseball and· is Oli the local lwim- ming team. ' · It concedes there is opposition to nuclear-powered plants on grounds of in· adequate safeguards, thermal pollution, disposal of atomic waste and earthquake damage, but argues such safety issues .. are all subjects or close scrutiny by scientific experta o( the Atomic Energy COmmisslon" and other regulatory agen- cies. "Ample opportunities are afforded all these scientis ts to present evidence at public hearings prior to the licensing of the nuclear project," said the report released Thursday. It contends that nuclear plants emit no pollution into the air, as do thermal plants fuelled by coal, goil or gas. The staff report says that the state, which had a total generating capacity of. 35,136 megawatts at the start of 11>72, will need 35. 700 by 1176, 48.llOO by 1981 and 89,000 by 1991. A megawatt is one million watt! of power. The figures are based on load and resource estimates filed by public utilities within the state, both publicly and privately owned. The report 11y1 a:as 11 now the chief fuel used in generating electricity but is declining in avallabWty, which will mean t!lat oil wllf becomt tbe principal/~ In the late tJ"°'.' t t 1,,., "Tbls present. a critical supply prof>. Jem to California electric utiJJtJe1," the report said. SPECIALS I The board also will comlder waste discharge requirements for the proposed ouUall at Aliso Creek , which ma y be under construction by mid-1973. Suspect Cleared Of Rape Charges A second Orange County Superior Court trial for a Long Beach man ac-, cused of ae:xually assaulting three young female hitchhikers he picked up in the Laguna Beach area was ruled out Wednesday when the prosecution dropped .. the charges. · PreskUng Judge Bruce Sumner ac- cepted ·the motion and cleared George Randolph Walter, 29. ol chlfges that led to a deadlocked jury in bis lint court ap- pearance last May. , Waller was cleared of the aCCU11tion that he WU the lloctlly built moto<Jst , who plcke4 up bitdlhftlng _ge,. In tbrel! ~ OCC&Slam In lfl\ 11111 Joro-.; • ed Nit'~ on lllem al l\llP(m. '. •. The ,tr!., twv 17 and -11, hid saJd they were picked up In tbe Lquu Beach._. area. f • - FRIDAY -SATURDAY -SUNDAY ONLY! TAKE YOUR PICK •.. Al,I. BRAND NEW! . .. 1972 ~IERCUBYS . • • ·MERCURY THIS WEEKEND ONL1: COUGAR • • • Auto., wsw.,power steering & brakes, radio, dual mirror>, tint gl.oss, beautiful medium lime. •2F91ll533087 MERCURY THIS WEEKEND ONLY ·$415500 MONTEREY • • • 2 Dr. Custom. AA vinyl interior, white vinyl top, white walk, incl air conditioning. •2Z56S596200 ......... ----WEEKEND SPECIAL! 191z . CAPRI . . • or . . . 1912 #GAECMA417711 TAKE YOUR CHOICE '2585°0 COMET HURRY! PRICES GOOD THIS WEEKEND ONLY! Home.Of The New Car ••• ......... J'•llda" Hom• Of The New Car • , • "GoUea T•llS" . J 2121 HARIOR ILW~ CCITA lfllA • MDIP' • 4 DAJLV 'llOT China Tells Lin's Death Tryon Mao ALGIERS (UPI) -Former Chinese DefenH Minister !Jn Piao tried to ususlnata Mao Tse-tuna 1nd sdsl power in Chlni, then wu killed when he ned to Ru.ssla aboard an alrcrart that <n1shed In Mon1oUa Sept. 11, 1971. the Chi.-Embwy said todoy. The embwy •nnouncement did nol say whether Lin, once de<ignai.d as Mto's SU«OSSOr, WU tilled In the crub or whether he died in some other man- ntr. Nor did the statement disclose the ause of the plane crash. 0Dttal1J of Lln'a failure to overthrow Mao and ailo to reach Russia ufely were published In the Algerian govern- ment newspaper El Moudjabld. The em- bwy later .confirmed that II had rel..,. ed the publlahed announcement. The CbU-embasay In Paris also confirmed lJn'1 death. The embwy llatement.. apparently ended 10 lllOlllbl of speculation ., to the fata ol the former defenae mlnlstar. After the crash of the Tl'tdent aln:raft In Mongclla, reports from the Soviet linlon ldentllfod Lin as one of the vlctlma but the Monaollans and Cblneae at the time denied the report. Lin "oonducted antlparly acilvftlea in a premeditated fuhfon with a well delerm1ned intrnm and with a plan to UIUrp Fl' that II, to take over the direction Iba party, the government ~ the · 1 y," the embassy ltatement In El MOudjahld uld. "Lin Piao commlti.d errora repeatedly and President Moo T...tung had time and 1pln battled 1gabllt him," tht em· bwy,Utementuld. "OUIJronlly be decllrecl openly hll aup- port of lllO' lhoucht of MIO TJe.tung and made propaganda in favor of UllJ thoulbt. Tlllli be was Ible tO hoax the ma-1' poople Into becomlni In their -the, ._r. of Mao Tae-tunc· "Some'tliDeo Lin Piao was obliged to tooe down 'hll anopnce and thus w11 able lo, ICOOlllplllh 1 certain meluJ work. Bui be, w11 nol obi• to renounce hts era!· ty nature during the Great Cultural Revolution. "The Lin Piao allair constltutas 1 hllecUon of the ballle bttwem lwo lines .. the bwl of the party that hod been golftl on for 1 long time." · Eorller, in HonJ Koftl, on authoritallv• Cblnose l'Ubllcation had hinted that Lin ·-dud. Actor's Familv • To Get Money LOS' ANGELES (AP) -The Bankers Secer:ity Life Insurance Society has agreed to pay the fonner wife of the late actor Jeffrey Hunter and their four sons $570,000 under an insuranoe policy. The illlurance. company had tried to conc:tl Ille policy, claiming Hunter had defrauded the company by not disclosing 1 beut ailment be had had since childhood. But following a nonjury trial, the -y agreed Thur1day to pay off the doable-indemnUy policy be!oro • de<llm waa handed down by SUperlor Court Judge John A. Loomis. Hunter died at 41 in 1969 aa the mull of a skull fracture suffered in a fall at bll Van Nuys borne. The original policy, for $240,000, paid "!OUblo with intereat and COits because Hunter died accidentally. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Ot/lw.y of !ht Diiiy Piiot is guarantffd' ~r...,.1 If you do 1 Mt llaw 'yeow· ::: ,..,... by a:;JO p,m., uH ~ YOUr c~ wlll ttlll,lpllt to "'""' C.llt .,. tlkttt 1111111 71Jll "'"" Slfllrdty 11'1111 lklMll'I tf V0U cl9 not l"lttl'lt l'Oill" ~ .,., ' ''"" S.tvns.y, .... 1.m. Sllndly, Clll Ind I copy Wiii lae IWOllthl • .,.._ C.lb .,. tt«tn until M 1.m. To~-MDll or.ntt COVnty Areu ---·· ....., Norft!Wet ttul!llflllton ...0. i nd Wnlmln11« .... , ................ ,,. S.n C'9mM11e, C.pbtrll!IO IHClll S.n J!Jln C1pl11r1no, 0.119 Pont, SOlllh UgVM, l.alllnl ~lat.Ill .. •• 4'l-40t 'Dudes' Try Duds Wearing their new western hau, Sen. and Mrs. George McGovern examine their newly purchased western jackets in a store in Custer, S.D. The McGovern• are finishing up the last week of their two week vacation in the Black Hills. Soviet Advisers Joined By Military in Pullnut WASlllNGTON (UPI) -American In- telligence oources said today the Soviet mllllary pullout from Egypt apparently will be on a tar more massive scale than had 1ppeored lllcely earlier this week. The aource said combat forces wblch operate the more sopblstlcated equi~ ment were joining the exodus o! purely advisory officera. 'lbe Ruaalans , these sources 1aid, not only are removing the most advanced military aircraft they had ,.nt to Egypt -the MIG23 .. Fozbat" -but are begin· nlng to evacuate personnel from the new SA3 antiaircraft missile sites south of Cairo and to withdraw from military balea In. the Aleundria orea. e '.l'ride11t OK . WASlilNGTON (AP) -The Senate hll handed the Nllon administration a vie· tory by voting to apeed development of the Trident submarine, the most ex- . pensive lhlp ever built. Opponenta objected to accelerating ( IN SHORT ..• ) d eve J o p m e n t ol the cruiser-sized atomic-powered veael and its 2• nuclear warhead missiles, but not to the concept itself. Sen. Lloyd Bent.en ( D • T e x • ) , • paraphrasing a former Penta'gon of· ficial's "fly before yw· buy" policy, said, 11We should swim before we sink." A rush to construction could mean costly overrum:, he said,. but his amendment to cut oome ISOO milllon in Trident funding wll defeated 17 to 39. . e British In Belfast BELFAST (UPI) -British troop rein· forcements poured into Northern Ireland by the thousanda today to help mount What Defense Ministry officials said would be a rigorous new army campaign agaimt the Irish Republican Anny (ll\A). 'I1lree men , Including two Roman Catholics, died Thursday in continuing violence in the province. The deaths brought to 471 the number ol persons killed in three years of strife In Northern Ireland. Army sources said most o! the 4,000 troop reinforcements ordered into the province Thursday would arrive in the territory today. The reip.forcements will bring overall army strength in the prov· ince to 21,000, including the 1,000-man militia, tlle Ulster Defen.¥ Regiment. e Parole Orders WASHING TON (AP) - R a I p h Ginzburg will be freed Oct. 11 after spen- ding eight moo.th! In prison for sending ob!cene material through the mails. Alben W. B. Truitt, a convicted sky- jacker who is a maternal grandson of the lale Vice President Alben Barkley, and John Pyne, a former Chicago police of- ficer convicted of extortion, were abo given their freedom under decisions Thurn!ay by the tJ.S. Board o! Parole. However, fonner Tammany Hall political boSI Carmine DeSapio will re- main in prison until nezt Jan. 31. The board denied his parole request. • EzperilReftt Eved TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP) -Several surviving participants in a federal syphilis ezperiment have retained a civil· rights lawyer to represent them in hopes of obtaining compensation for their roles in the study. The lawyer, Frtd D. Gray, aaid Thurs- day be also expects to represent families of several men who died in the ex- periment, called the TUSkegee Study. In an interview, Gray said several or the Alabama black men wbo partlcipai.d in the Tuskegee study have told him that when they joined the experiment, they believed they were going to be treated for whataver dlseue they had. Nixon to Attend Ellender Funeral WASHINGTON (UPI) -House Derpocratic Leadf!' Hale Boggs said to- day President Nixon will attend the funeral Monday of Sen. Allen J. Ellender (0.La. ), wbo died here Thursday night. (See story, page 4). Boggs, after having breakfast with Nixon at the Whit. House, said the Presl· dent hll decided to fly to Houma, La .. Monday mmling. Services will be held theie at 11 a.m. Boggs has been named by Speaker Carl Albe!l to head the House delegation at· tending the funeral. Maj .or Rainstorm Stri~es Ce1itral Minnesota Receives Over 6 Inches • 110.1•-----. ..... tzm1.;.... f:}13N!CMt!•'·=-- . 'Before Eledlon' President Vows Try to End War WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon, declaring the chance for 1 negotlai.d peact In Vietnam "better now than Jt hll ever been," hll pledged to Ir)' to end the war before the Nov. 7 presidential electlon. " .•• We hope to do everything we can to bring th!1 war to an end" in the thr•• "We •re ttot tulnf tlte 9re.t polller that eould tl11isll off North Vletnem 111 •• .tternoon, «nd tee telll not." months before the election, Nilon aald Thursday at a White House news col\" rerence. HE MET REPORTERS in his oval ol· fice and told them he did not "want to raise any false hopes" but believed ''the enemy is falling in his military of· fenslve" and sulfering from the coD- sequences of the American blockade and bombing campaign in North Vietnam. "Under these circumstances, the enemy . . . hall every incentive to negotiate," the President said. "At this point, the chance for a negotiated settlement is better now than it has ever been." Nlson also denounced tJ.N. Secretary General Kurt Woldhelm for criticizing American bombing. Nixon said Waldheim was seizing on "enemy.inspired prop- aganda" as "many well-lntentloned and 'British Dockmen Strike Seaports For 'Security' LONDON (UPI) -Bnlain's 41,000 longshoremen today struck all the na· tion's seaports and the government hinted it may proclaim a state of emergency. This \.\-"Ould enable it to use troops if necessary to ship vital food supplies . "The government is giving immediate consideration to the action it may need to take to protect the general interests of the economy and the consumer," Employment Secretary M a u r I c e MacMillan told Padiament. The walkout-Britain's second total seaport shutdown in two years -wu called to bact Iongshoremen's demands for greater job security. More than 40 ships which had anchored in the Thames Estuary waiting to see whether the strike would begin sailed for continental Ports. In the British ChaMel island of Guernsey tons of ripe tomatoes were dumped and left to rot. Tons of fresh fruit also plled up on the docks. But the country faced no lmmediate lood shortages. Spokesmen at London's Covent Garden fruit and vegetable market said "masses'' of produce were stockpiled there. Ports throughout the country were silent and deserted. Pickets ste¥><1 outside locked dock gates. Rows of cranes re- mained idle. At London's docks 26 ships were stranded with no workers to unload them. In the Hwnber Estuary in Yorkshire 26 ahips were idle. But cross-channel ferries to France, Belgium and Holland were • hardly af- fected. Most loading and unloading II carried out by nonunion docken. nalva people" havo In charging tJ.S. plant.I hid bombed dikes and dams Jn the Nor1b. NIXON CONCEDED there moy bete been aome "Incidental damage" to' tbt dlk .. but tnalsi.d the tJnli.d States bad exerted greot mtrainl "We are not ua1og the great power that could f!nisb off North Vietnam In ID aftenioon, and we will not," be aaid. The PHsldent coottnded Senate sup- porten ol .. end. the war' reaotutlons could doom at i...t one mUl!on South Vietnam ... to death it the handa o! the Communist... He accuud b1a critlcl· of 1 "bypocritlcal double standard •.. by not raising one wOn:i"' against deliberate North Vietnamese atlaclls on South Vie~ namese civilians. Nixon said congressional supporters of end the war resolutions really were pro- looging the war by encouraging the enemy and undercutting his peace ef· forts. POLITICS ALSO was heavJly :1treMed at the news conference wllh Nlzon vow· i.ng that the question CJf Democratic vice presidential candidate Thomas F . Eagleton's history of mental exbaµstioo and psychlatric trtatment would not be raised by him or his backers in the 197Z election oampaign. He said that the American voters "have the clearest choice in this century'' to pick a Presi~ dent on the issues, not personality. He said they can decide on the iasues, rather than the candidates because he and Democratic nominee George S. McGovern honestly and b a 1 l c a II y disagree "on fundamental ends and goals for the American people." HE RECALLED his own trials .. • vice presldentW Cllldidata in 1153 when there were those urging President EiseMower to dump him and noi.d that he did not "sinl: the Presidential ca"' didate" by remaining on the ticket. On that basis, be said be did not believe the Eagleton revelations would affect the race which he sald would be cl0<e and hard !ought. The Prealdent also took the opportunity to praixe Vice Preaident Spln> T. Agnew "as a man of poise, calm and judgment" wbo "could be expected to make decisions in the future in a calm, cool, judicial way." Bui be lllrwed that the "Vico PnsJ. dent does not mlR the decisions" altbougb be bas been "vtrf oollpoken and articulate" in policy making meetings. Officer Slayer To Get Testing LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man con- victed in the murder o! 1 Los Angeles policeman more than 45 years ago iJ to undergo o year of psycblstrlc treatment and evaluation at Atascadero state Hospital. Superior Court Judge David N. Fits ordered the care 'lhuraday !or Matthew Francis Kllgarlff, lltl. KllgarlH, wlto confessed to the murder of officer Perley L. lleMetl during the robbery of a downtown store on Jan. 25, 19'l7, but later repudiated it, wa.s con- victed by 1 jury Jul April :ta. Fills Mlled thet Kllgarllf WU mentally incompetent to undergo -1 sen- tencing oft« -psychiatrist.. uld he was unable to wiil.ntand legal pro- ceedings. U,IT...._ SENIOR SENATOR DIES Allen J. Ellender, 11 36-year Career Ends for Se1tlor Solon Ellender WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Allen J, Ellender, the outspoken Lou i s l a n a Democrat who served under s i x presidents during a 36-year Senate career in w!llch be became one ol the mtion'I most influential pollticiana, died 'lhun- day at the age of 81. Ellen~er, the oldest as well as the longest serving Senate member, was stricken by stomach pains while bqardinc a private plane following a Louisiana campajgn swing. Accordina to aides, the paln.s progressively wonened during the . Olght to Washington. Upon arrival, be was eumined and rushed to Bethesda, Md., Naval Hospilal where be died II . 7:20 p.m. of apparent heart failure. President Ni.Jon ordered White Houae flags flown at ball-stall and eulogized Ellender as 0 a good friend, a fine Senator and a splendid American." As President pro tempore of the Senate, Ellender was third in succession to the presidency following the Vie&o President and the Speaker of the HOU.!e. Ellender's death was anno1Jneed to bit Senate colleagues by . Sen. Russell II. Long (0.La.), son of Huey P. "Kingflsh'' Long, who gave Ellender his start in politics. Long said his senior colleague bad served for 36 years "wilh honor and dignity" and that his haH-<entury ot public service wu "unblemi&bed by ao much aa a hint of misconduct." Vice-President Spiro T. Aenew iaaued a statement saying: Ellender was "one of the most respected ond dlstlngulsbed members of the United Statas Senato." Senate Democrats today selected Sen. James 0. Eastland of Mississippi to replace Ellender as president pro tem- pore or the Senate, making him third ia Une of succession to the presidency. The vot~ was a formality, because bJ long-standing tradition the 1 e n J o r member of the party conirolllng the • Senate always succeeds: to the office of temporary president. The vice president is the consiltutlonal president of the Senate but rarely presides except when there 1iJ 8 likelihood his vote will be needed to break a tJe. Burlesque Queen Dead TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) _ flooo La&ee, known as the "Queen or Burlesque" who rtportedly made $2,500 a week u a Itri~ per, has died at her home here a!tor being ill several months. Although ghe never gave her age lhl was belie ved to be m her 503. ' Residents StfJeat As Phoenix Hit By Power Outage PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - A widespread power outage struck the Phoenix metropolitan area Thursday evening, knocking out tralfic lighll and causing confusion u tbo....OOS o! motorlsta headed home lrom work. Bobby Widens Chess Gap, Needs 7~ Wins for Title While homebound motorists sweated It out in the traffic jams that doti.d the area, others sweltered as home a1r con- ditioners !ailed In beat that reocbed 1 record 111 degrees during the day. Phoenix police sald the power outago ranged from a few minutes in some areas up to almost two houn in others. At one time about 130 policemen wtte In th• field, most ol them directing Ira!· !io at Intersections where traffic llgbls were 11111!1ed out. The Sall River Project, one o! the lwo ma!D suppliers of electrical power to the 1rta, uid about 1 third of Ill !I0,000 customers were affected by the potrer outage. A spokesman uid most of those had electrical power restored within 20 mlnuteJ after the blackout OCCU?Ted 11 ~:07 p.m. A spoktlman !or Arizona Publl4 SerVlce, the other inajor supplier of oloo- trlclly in the 1rta, aaJd "• good part ol the city" waa a!lected by the outaae.. He had no lmmedlata eJtlmota on how inany customers wwe llfec:ted. 1.t<n -l ndWoa people Hvo in the Pbomlx mebvpoI!tan aroa. The APS .......,.. uld the outage Wtl apparentl1 caused bf I f .... lo I 69 000-voll circuit breaker al Ill west Phoenix power plont, c1uiin1 a Salt River ProJtef plant II.to lo bnal: do,.._ From Win Servfceo REYKJAVIK, lcoland -B o b by Fischer'• cblncea of winninl the world chess crown looked beltet and better to- day altar Soviet champion Borla Spusky conceded the eighth pme in SI mov ... The acore ii now W ln Fiacber'a favor, and be needl only 711 ""'"' polnll to clinch'the title. S()Ulk1 needl another t to retain !l . "Fischer 11 agaln 1bowing the tremen- dous force that nilhl"'ly 1Wept aalde Mark Taimanov, Bent Larsen and. Tigran Petroalan In pmloill matc11u,• intematlontl Ir n d mast tr Iuae ~~~~~an · of malcll for ltd •rauett on tbls 1ame," con- cluded, "~ -demoralllod ind unable to...,. with the tnclllvo ICC1IJ'IC1' of his• opponent. Bl~ I «11nplel1 "venal OI form, Flocber 1 Ield ta 11b1J to increase." ,,,. ninth ,.,.. 11 lel for Slmday. -'lbe mov,. lo the eJcllih -o! the Boris Spulkf • _, Fltcber wwtd cbesl dlomptonlbip. F11cber (white) S-kY (block) !. P~ P.QB4 10. BKtl JI.JU l. Kl~ KMIBS ~I. Q-84 Q-M J. Kl-IClll K~DI 11 Qll-Bl Qll-Ktl 4. P·XltlJ P.IOW 11 P·KIJ JI.KB! , 6. Jl.KtS Jl.KtS H. Q0 P-QRS t. 0-0 0-0 11. JI.It! P.IUt 7. P.QI PiP It. Jl.R7 PiP I. KtxP KtxKI 17. BIR 1118 t. Q;lKI P.Ql 11. PIP Jill' ( '111ll'S HOW IT LC~i(;g'* Pl_. Wino Ith O....· It. JI.KB! Kt.QI 20. JU,QS QxQ 2L KlxP di K·Bl 2l lllQ KxKt SI. IWI R·Kll ch 24. &Bl Jtl,.M 15. K-IW Nllll 26. P·K4 B-RI 11. P.84 P-m Zl Jl.l!J u K·IU - siz Bou " her lhe bun .. str J Stri .. ol and me leg DC! Ang Chi per " beg Ma H was pas ala the bee trou rnou me A pilot the Ugh Lo and deb the IO p c I R fed grou here P"" r~ !or Ang help fed of a M Stud pble in copi p te m bi p g is lo g t a is A wi th Jet Parts Rain Down On LA Area .... LOS ANGELES (UPI) -It rolned jet plane parts -up to a ton of them - Thursday on the Sunset Strip, Beverly Hllls and West Hollywood. There were no reports of injury or &erloua: damage, A chunk estlm.ated to weigh 500 PoUnda, and •lnllng hot, plunged Into the lawn of a Beverly Hiiis borne. A chunk desc_>il>ed by ~ sberilf's deputy u "the size ol a basketball" embed onto SUnse' Boulevard. · "There was a metallJc clank" outside her office, said Gloria Lund, and there OD the pavement wu what looked like "a bundle of pipes lied together." "It was just bouncing there In the street when l looked down," she aaJd. John Bradley was driving on the Sunset Strip. "I was in the left turn lane .•. and ill of a sudden I heard a sound :...... a cmb and tinkle -and I saw two pieces of metal in the street. It bounced a ltttle." The debris came from one disiJl. legrating engine of a Continental Airlines DCIO which bad just taken off from Los Angeles lnternational Airport f o r Chicago. The plane Was carrying 123 persons. "The whole right side of the plane began to shake," said passenger Bruce Marks, 19, of Oaklawn, Ill. His mother, Mrs. Fred Marks, said she was in "a state of semtshock," but other passengers said the experience was not alanning. The Atarkses said a crewman notified the passengers that the tall engine had been lost, but the plane could fly with no trouble on the two remaining wing· mounted engines, and was returning im· mediately to the Los Angeles airport. A spokesman for the airline said the pilot, capt. Robert Glau, was alerted to the problem when the trouble indicator light !or the tall engine flashed on. Los Angeles county sheriff's deputies and Beverly Hills police gathered up the debris. Deputy Curtis Howard, who saw the engine disintegrate, estimated 41 to iO pieces fell within a four-mile radius. Coeds File Suit In. Booklet Ban RIVERSIDE (AP) The federal government is being sued by a group of Univenlty of Calllornia ~ here who were refused permission by the postmaster to mail 1,200 copies of a 47· page booklet or,. birth control to women living ofl-eampus. The suit is being handled by tbe Center for Law in the PUblic Interest, a Los Angeles public law firm which hopes to help the women students overturn a federal law which prohibits the mailing of abortion and birth control infonnation. Members of the university's Associated Studen!.s bought the illustrated pham- pblet from students at McGill University in C&nada and distributed about l ,llOO copies on campus. OFFICER TOM JENSEN, LEFT, STUDIES JAGGED METAL IN YARO Homeowner J1ck P1ul Astounded 1t Huge Chunk of Jet Bill to Aid Poor Schools Approved by Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -A last-ditch effort to provide property tax relief and pump more dollars into poor school districts sailed through the Assembly Thursday. · The measure by Assemblyman Dixon Arnett would put half of all the money raised by local school taxes into a com4 mon statewide pot. It would then be redistributed to districts on a Oat per4 child grant with additional state money thrown In. That would have the effect of equaliz- ing the differences between districls with high and low assessed value over a five- year i>~ln period, the Redwood City Republican said. Arnett urged passage of his measure as "an instrument" for property tax relief and school finance reform. It con4 tains no appropriation in the form ap- pmved by the Assembly. "ID !act, it may be the only Instrument for scJk,oJ flnance and property tax: refonn," he said. "It setlll! to me ·we're In the final inning of the most Important ball game we're playing this year -that of property tai: reform and school finan- cing." The basic theory of equalizing the wealth of school districts is the same as that of the $1.2 billion tu package back· ed by Go" Reagan and Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, said Assemblyman William Bagley. The ReagaJrMorelU proposal was kill~ eel Wednesday in the 'Senate Finance Committee. "The Senate's action yesterday still has me in .shock. I don't think they knew what they were doing,11 Bagley, a San Rafael Republican, said in urging ap- proval of Arnett's bill. The measure moved to an uncertain fate in the Senate on a ~ vote. Amett's measure-Jisure-does move a long way down the trail" to meeting the State Supreme Court's Serrano vs. Priest decision, Bagley said. The court ruled in the Serrano case that local property taxes for school sup- p o r t unconstitutionally discriminate against children in districls with low assessed valuation by making fewer dollars available for their education. Air Pollution Panel Said Doing Good Joh LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles County Air Pollution District is doing an excellent job, a state in~ vestigative team concluded in a preliminary study. However, the state Air Resources Board report said Thursday the APCD could improve its monitoring and in- l!ipection operations, its public relations, sy1tem of legal counsel and its en- forcement capabilities. 011]y Coast&-' SoutJierri Qffers Jail Guards, Profs May Get Raises SAC!V.MENTO (AP) Prison guards and college teachers would get $26.& million worth or pay raises on bills meeting legislative ap- proval, but the gap between good intentions and cold cash is still wide open. · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Servi·ce ·The Insiders Club One $5 million appropriation for prison guards went to the governor' a desk Thursday . Another $21.6 million for teacben In higher education advancecl Imm the Senate and is awaiting acdon in the Assembly. The guards could wind up with a total raise of about 15 percent over last year's pay, and the teachers could gel 13.1 percent more than last year. Poor morale was cited In both cases as reasons for the raises. The raise £or pri&on guard• and some employe!I of the Calilomta Youth Authority sailed through the Assembly without oppoattlon. T h e Iegialatora acted swl!Uy alter recent strike rumbllnp Imm the CalifOrnia State Employes AssociaUon, "blch ~per .. nti the guards. LET'S BE FROll Y ll yoU havt MW ncl&hborl or knoW of •llfOne mcwlnr to our uu, pll!Ue tell us so that 1'"e JJ\11' ~xtend • friendlr ,..1come and help them to become acquainted tn tbe1r new 1WTOUndlnp. Art Unkletter The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflaUon. Its membership card perrhits you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed-dOC¥ show- rooms at substarltial sav- ings -appliances, furni4 ture, stereo equipment, sparting goods, draperies and much, much more. \ You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substential sav· ings. The Insider$ Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minh·(1um. 6.00%·6.18% Two to Flvfi Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90.c:tays loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis- counts on tickets to sport· ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as4 soclate memberships en- titling them to all ootslde referral services. Ask about joinln1 at any CO.st office. MAIN OfflCl.: ·9th & Hill, Los An&eles • 62J.1J51 other offices WILSHIRE •t GRAMMDl:C't' l'\.ACEI 3933 Wllshlre Blvd., L.A.• JBl.1265 lA. CIVIC CorrtJt: 2nd & Broa<tway • 6~1102 HUNTINQTOH IEAl;H: 91 HunU11rton center• (71-i) 897-1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wllshln! Btvd'. • ~J..(1746 SAN P'EDftO: 10th & Pacific• 131·2341 Wt:ST COVINA: Eastland S~ppln1ctr.•331·2201 PANORAMA c1n:, Cll.aie ... \Ian NU)'I BNd •• 8'32·1171 TAll:ZANA: 187el Ventura l!ltvd. • 34s.&614 LONQ IUCH: ltd. LotU1t. 437·7'81 UST LOS ANKL£1: Ith a. soto • 266-010 OlAMONO Mlfb 321 Diamond Bir ll'ltf, • (11-i) 69S-752$ Dlllyltoun-t AM to4 PM OponS.-yo-tAMto I PM (C.C.pt Citic C.nter) \ DAILY PflOI' lJ Tax Plan Has Chance Assembly Leaders To Try Reviving Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly leaders 1alned another chance today to revive their II.I ~lllloo school flttance4ax refonn deal wltb Gov. Reagan after forc- ing a one-week extension of the 1972 legislative session on the Senate. DcmocraUo Aa!embly Speaker Bob Moretti hinted strongly that be would hi- jack a l900 millloo Senate-pasS$d school pmposal, write the compromise blll Into It and send It back to the upper house !or another showdown. The Senate passed the stop.gap l900 million !Choo! bill by Sen. Ralph Dills on a 25--8 vote Thursday after a day of closed-door .negotiations that ended with an agreement to fight for another week instead ol attempting to recess Friday. Behind the maneuvering were attempts by Moretti and the Republican governor to revive their tu reform-school finance oompromise. The Senate Finance Com- mittee killed that bill on a 7-6 vote Wednesday and passed the Dills measure in its place. The Dills bill, which Moretti called a "ridJculous" stV>stitute for his plan, would raise the state sa1es ta"!: one cent per dollar. That would raise $600 million. leaving the measure $300 million out of balance. The Moretti-Reagan plan also includes a one cent sales tai: increase and new state money for schools, but the similari- ty ends there. That plan would also hike state business and income taxes across the board, increase state aid to local schools by $509 million a year, give homeowners property tax cuts Moretti esUmated at $200 a year, and order voter approval for most future property tax rate increases. The battle over the two measures 1parked a bitter exchange between Moretti and his Democratic counterpart in the upper house, Senate President pro tern James Mills of San Diego. Mills criticized lhe Moretti-Reagan compromise for failing, he said, to either help schools or relieve tax: pressures on the poor. He added that Moretti left Senate leaders out of bis negotiations with Reagan because "be thinks t h a t magnifies his position in the California political scene ... It makes him appear be is leader of the Democrats." Moretti replied in an interview, ''I fuJly expected some such .statement from Sen. Mills, because as the pressure builds be starts to make unreasonable statemenu." Another part of the batUe oo the school pmposals surfaced In Iha dispute over a three-month recess beginning t h i s weekend. The Senate approved the ncess two weeks ago, but Moretti held It up ln the Senate to retain bargaining power for Senate acUon on his lax: biil. Neither the Senate nor Assembly can te(es.s for more than three days without pennlssion or U1e other bou,.. MoretU flnallY announced ThursdaY, after l>oura ot elated-door negotiation., that Senate leaden bad agreed to a delay ol the ,..,.,. untU Aug. f and that they bad also pmmlsed there would be al least three more meetings of the Finance ' Committee, where d.,... of Aa!embty billJ Including the tax plan are bottled up. Justice Douglns Okays Papers Trial Hearing LOS ANGELES (UPI\ -Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas agreed to hear today a request from defense at- torneys that the Pentagon Papers trial judge be ordered to revra l detai ls of a federal wiretap. Douglas, who v.'as altendin~ a judicial conference in nearby Pasadena whrn contacted , directed the attorne ys Thurs- day night to present their case to him in Yakima, Wash. Police Chief Facing Ji1stice ANGELS CAJ\1P (AP l The police chief or thls gold rush town found himself on th e opposite side of justice when he was sentenced by a local florist to the county jail for contempt of court. Jack Whiting, 33, Angels Camp pollce chief for the past year, resign~ as chief after the florist-judge, Marvin Shupe, fln 4 ed him $250 Thursday and sentenced him to two days in jail afte r he failed lo answer two summonses to testify on a traffic arrest and drug case. Shupe said he felt the Angels-Murphy Judicial Court was not receiving proper respect from Whiting. The only other man on the police fo~e of this community or 2,400, Jim Wadsworth, was named acti ng chief by the City Council, v.'hich had ordered Whiting to resign or be fired . The hearing was set for 7:30 p.m. !EDT ). The layers for Daniel Ellsbcrg and Anthony Russo failed Tuesday in their ef· fort to get such an order from a federal appeals court, and so carried their case to Douglas. The "'iretap dispute has held up the .start of arguments and testin1ony in the much delayed trial of Ellsberg and Russo. They arc charged with theft, con- spiracy and espionage for actions they took in ma.king public the classified Pen- tagon study of 1he Vietnam War. The dispute concerns what the Justice Department says was a J~ally authoriz· ed wiretap in an Investigation that has no connection with the case. The govern- ment says someone connected with the defense placed a call to a legally tapped phone and wa.s overheard by federal agents. GARAGF ()CiORS BALANCED S P~I N C>S REPLACf.l.I Genie DOOll ()PlPllER <;Al f~ A.N D lNSTAllATIO N ACtlVE~~PANY 842-4<126 1•110 G.tfler4 St. HONTINGTON llACH ·1 (l;lk. .... If l.l'litl •• TWA AMBASSADOR SERVla TO THE EAST COAST FROM YOUR OWN BACKYARD. 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D.C, 8:25A 9:00A lO:OOA 11:50A 12:26P l:OOP IOSTON 7:25A 7:50A 8:46A IALT. 9:05P 9:40P 10:50P J0:20A 10:55A 11:30A 9:05P 9:40P ll:OOP fOR ONl·CALL llSERVAnONS 'HONE YOUR TUVIL AGINT OR GOLDIN WIST AT: 714°979°1000 TWA AMBASSADOR SERVICE TO THE EAST COAST (with a little help from a friend) TWA ' • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Let's Try Harmony N.!>w The outcome of Laguna's recall..:ouncil election ii the third step in a series of evenu that seem to bave utablilbed the determination of Laguna citizens lo re- tain a clear voice in their government and their fiat re- fusal lo be led by officials who refuse to listen lo that voice... . , • "1be ouf!tandtng manifestation of Ibis attl!u e was tlie high' rlJe election, when the wters turned ou\ In ' fon:e lo oppose wbal they deemed excessive derelo1>- 1nent. · ' ' This year's City Council elecllqn, which return(!(! to office two community-conscious councilmen who had llr)!ggled l.o a minority role for two years, echoed the feellng. • The ouster of councilman F.d Lorr and his replace- ment wlth the less flamboyant Carl Johnson shows once more that elected offictals, regardless of their personal beliefs or pressure from their backers, mwt be willing lo listen and respond to the wishes of the community. U those wishes seem unattainable or unreasonable, they must at least listen, then be prepared to support their positions with logic, not emotion. A reasonable council should In turn generate a reasonable public response lo government and a return to the hsrmony that bu been oorely missed. Too Wide a Margin Announcenient of a substantial error in the pro- poeed San Juan Capistrano budget· iJ most disturbing. The citizen• Of the community deserve 'nothing less than a lull explanation. pense was left out of the budget because of a lechnkal· 1ty of accounlillg procedures. However, thlJ e1planaUon r aises questions about the entire financial system used by the city. Budget planning can never be exact. And mo"' than , one.city, fa ced with growth problel!l$ slmilat to San Juan Capistrano's, bas been caught In a cash squeese and forced Id trim clty")>rogramo. • Wbile the error tn the budget Is inexcusable/It II belng hab<!led in an open and honest manner by the city councll. Rather than sweett it under the rug, co'nncll· men wisely have chosen to, deal with it publicly. Misguided Directive When the slate's Regional Water Quality Control Board meets Monday in San Diego it will find an adamant grnup of San Clemente officials ready lo put their per· formance on the line in the field of water reclamation. The board has hinted that it will want San Clemente to spend a major amount ol funds to tie into a regional ouUall to be built somewhere uproasl San Clenlente will ar(ue that it won't even need that ouUali. Vlrtualiy ali of the city's sewage is re- claimed into usable water. . The only efliuent dumped at sea through the pres- ent small ocean pipe is highly treated material dis· charged during emergencies. This year only two-and· on~hall days' worth ol effluent has gone to sea when a pipe ruptured and had to be repaired. . The only time that San Clemente needs an outfall is during an equipment breakdown emergency, and the existing pipe is adequate for that purpose. . ' The error was brought to the city council's atten· \lon on the eve of Ila first budget study session. It will cause many programs to be modified to make up for the additional $121,000 in expenditures added lo the budget p~oposal following disclosure of the error. Forcing the city to commit many thousands of dol· 1ars in transmission lines to a regional dumping pipe seems at best premature, and certainly open to sharp chalienge. 'Sorry, we only believe in make-work for foreigners/' City Finance Director Paul P. Lew claims the ex· s Bigger Dogs Taking Place Of Lap Types ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ There · are many fonns of trend-spot. ting -some~ of Uiem more valid than ot.bera -but one,that might surprise you · IJ the study of the popularity of different breeds of dogs la the American popula- Uon. A> what the llCholus call a "sociologbl varlabte," the dog -can tell us a good deal about 1hiflins atµtudeo among the~ For-· Wbtn I WU growing up, the mOl!l popular canine house pet was the cocker apenlel, be- cause It was playful a n d friendly wtth. children. · THEN, A GENER. ATION later, as the country grew into af· flumce and wanted to acquire what it Imagined was chic, the poodle became the ml"I popular bre<d registered with the o!llcial American Kennel Club. Then. like the apaniel, the breed was nearly ruined by Ila own popularity and the in- sensste gre<d of Ila br<eders. Now the Gmnan 1hephea! Ls leading all tile rett, and t!ilo tells us a Jot about the temper of the country In the 1970.. It has gone from wanting a playful pet to a atylish pet to a proleclive pet. In fact, ••pet" ii an ironic euphemism for most of the shepherds people are buying - ••guard dogs" Is closer to the true ap- Dear Gloomy Gus Now that we have a dog ordinance in Laguna, wooldn't it be a gesture of thanks on the part of the dog owners if they would all carry "do-it·yourselr' s id e w a I k cleaners? D. J. Tti l1 f•tlure reltKll rtldtff" ~ltW1, not nect•••rllY ttloH of tllti MWlP•-· 51-nd wour Ht PffVI .. GloomY Gui. P•U~ PllCll. pellatlon. And the fact lhal shephenis have beeo known to mangle children is no dctment al aH to moS! purchaseni. IN A m DECADE!, lit baVt gone from clop -cuddle or -lo dogs that snarl and bite, whether hr the big ci· ty or the small vUlage, I reoently re- turned from New York, where the peve- rnenta are covered with dog-do; every family i• MaMaltan seems lo have • boulilX a bnrte for security, without baV· ing learned bow lo train them properly, And, at a recent town meeting I at· tended in the village where I spend my summers, the first hour of discussion was: taken up with the problems of dogs running wild and attacking children, neighbors, and the county may have to build a new pound to handle the pt0blem. TUE SALE OF' LARGE (and thus presumably {eroclous, though there IJ no necessary connection) dogs has begun to outstrip the sale of small ones : shepherds, borers, Dobennan plnschers, and so on, are commanding the highest pfi~ in the market; and outfits that train these dogs for security and attack (illeteby rendering them unfit as family pets) hive gladdened the beam of their stockholders in the Jut few years. Action on Bill Spurred Military Retirees May Get Action WASHING TON -Senate A r m e d Services Committee chainnan John Sten- nis, CO.Miss.), is finally being Pill squarely on the spot on the milltary retirees survivors benefits bill that he has stalled for nine months. The legislation is being offered as an amendment to the $20.S billion military procurement author- ization measure now under considera tion in the Senate. (ROBERT S.ALLE~ need of the retirees legislation or that it was passed last October by lhe House m to o after less than two hours of ~scussion. ··That is why it's deemed probable Sten-- nis may·insist on his committee's acting on ·the retirees bill separately -but, bowing to necessity, will make a definite commitment to report it out by a certain date la the fall. Whether he can get away with such a -ploy is conjectural. To a considerable degree, it would de· pend on how much backing Beall and Goldwater could muster for the retirees bill as an amendment to the procurement measur~. If they can rally sufficient votes, they can force a sho~·down and override Stennis -despite his being chairman of the potent Armed Services Committee. That 's happened before, and could again. Sen. John Tower, (R-Tei:.), who like Goldwater is a member of that com4 mittee, is working closely with him ·in pressing for enactment of the ret.lrees bill. So is Sen. Peter Dominick, (R· Colo.). another influential co-sponsor of the legislation. TIIEY TOLD this column, "There ls no reason for further stalling. This bill should be disposed of now and not later. It is not generally realized, but sen. Beall is one of the authors of the original measure as passed by the House. In 1970, aa a member of that chamber, he was on the special committee that drafted the legislation. It remains to be seen what Sen. Stennis thinks and does about that. T h e decision to force action on the Jong-stymied retirees benefit,, measure as an amendment to the giant military pro- curement bill MIS made by Sens. Barry Goldwater, (R- Arlz.), and J. Glenn Beall, R·Md ), Mr. Meany, Sir, How Do I Vote? "f don't jntend to wait any longer." Goldwater told this column. "We're going to see this thing through now. lt's long overdue." "The unjustifiable protracted delay in the consideration or this important legislation directly affecting close to a million veterans is inexplicable to me,'' said Beall. "It's time we put an end to it. I have said I was going to put this measure through this year, and I mean it. It has wide bipartisan support in the Senate, as evidenced by the fact that 38 Republican and Democratic senators joined me in sponsoring this legislation. They are in full accord with me that further delay is unwarranted and in· defensible." One of America's most talked-abotit voters is Miny Moe and he's in terrible ·shape. "' Thanks to George (Eeny) Meany, bead of the AFlrCIO, poor Miny Moe doesn't know whether he's coming or going. Frie(lds fear he may drink himself to death before election day. , Already in this campaign, the experts have written millions of words atx>ut Moe and his crucial im· portance to the out· come. For Moe ls, of eourse, The Labor Vote. -Outing the past 25 PUTl1NG STENNIS on the spot in this years Moe bas dis- manner forces him to either "fish or cut tinguished himself as bait." being the orll:Y ART HOPPE J ticket. "But who ever talks or write.s about The Socialist· Labor Vote?" he said with a shrug. "I'd be a nobody.'' Moe reluctantly agrees he's too old to be: 1be Youth Vote, too white to be The Black Vote, . too Northern to be the Southern Vote and too noisy to be The Silent Majority Vote. IN FACl',. he has but one option Jen. ''I've decided,'' he said, squaring his shouJders, "to be The Daley Vote." The challenge h e r e is that al· though Mayor Daley endorsed the en- tire Democratic ticket, to the surprise of the experts, he didn't mention McGovern by name. "Speaking as The Daley Vote," said Moe, "it's going to be tough to cast my ballot for a guy whose name I don't know. But with all the talk about Tho Daley Vote, somebody's got to be it," Thus, while Senator McGovern has lo6l The Labor Vote, he's picked up The Daley Vote . So, as you can plainly see, he 's come out exactly even. Air Study Def ended ( ) He now faces three alternatives: American who voted (I) Accept. the retirees survivors in every election as: Meany told him to. benefits bill as an amendment to the "Being The Labor Vote baa been an To the Editor: military proclU'ement measlJ!ei and allow awesome responsibility," said Moe, AJ project director in charge of the Problems at Age 200 Credit Mayor Frank Rizzo o f Philadelphia with clairvoyance. During his election campaign last fall, Rizzo of· fered !hill bleak apprawl of plans to hold an American Revolution Bicentennial E:r.· position In the City of Brot.berly11A:>ve in 1976: "They way it is going, we'll have the police band at Independence Hall playing the Star.Spangled Banner, and that wiU be it . Jf .. The mayor's comment has so far 'vithstood the test of thne, Although the American Revolution BlcenteMial Com4 mission (ARBC) has been in existence for six years , it has little to show for its efforts. Philadelphia expositi on was to have been the centerpiece of the nation's 200t.h birthday anniversary celebration, but the project was buried on ~1ay J, 1972, when the commission vetoed the only site tbe city could agree on -a swampy, poJ .. luted tract near Philadelphia Internation- al Airport. Nov( what? ARBC has proposed that commtmorative p&rkJ, costing from $15 rnilllOft to i20 ttl:UJion api ece. 'be built In each ot tbe 50 states. Congress, however, has shown little enthuaiasm for tbe idea. THI! (\OM~USSJON'S difficult~ Item in large part from disagreement aboul the nature of the bl"l"l•Mial. "To radicals, It Is a commercial ripoff, • bclrsyal of America'• true radical lradi· tlon and at the samt time an opportunity lo revive it," Eugene L. Meyer oot.ed In The Washington Post. "To blaclc critics, It la a mockery of freedom long denied and hlltory too 1.,,, untold. To old- fashioned flaa·wavers, ii ii an exercl.le Jo self<Qllgr&tulatlon. To partisan cr!UCI, It b 1 Nllon campalgn gimmick. To ...,. partisan ones, li Is • time for oober national r'aaseurnent." Still, the commission 11"1! la not Without blame. A study by the reapected EDITORIAL RESEARCH the Senate to vote on It -t.huS ensuring lighting a cigarette with trembling Southern California Regional Aviation its speedy overwhehning approval. fingers over this third beer al Paddy's Systems study, conducted by William L. (2 ) Try to have the amendment thrown Place. "I had to be lukewarm when I out on the ground it is not germane to the voted twice for Stevenson, moderately Pereira Associates and System Develop. procurement bill. Sens. Beall and cool when I cast my ballot for Kennedy ment Corporation for the Southern Goldwater are prepared to demand a and red hot when I pulled the lever for Cslilornia Association ol Governments, I rollcall vote on that, and are confident Johnson and · Humphrey. I'm lucky I was extremely disappointed by the they can win bands-down. didn't catch my death of pneurponia. . editorial on the subject that appeared in cambridge, Mass., consulting firm ot (l} Offer to compromise with 3 "But with everybody talkin,g about It, the Pilot on July 24 ("Sorry, No Answer Arthur D. Little Inc. harshly concluded: ""' Yet") and would like lo take this op. ~·The ARBC ls criticized for not having a categoric promise to bring up the somebody bad to be .ine Labor Vote. And portunity to reply to two of the principal program because it hasn't -had 8 pro-retirees legislation for separate Senate l was prohinitudllo doingm>:~d~Y· t°:fri this criticislll3 it presented. gram. The ARBC Js criticized for not consideration by a derinite date in the year' 1 t . 'in go "' uc · First of all, the editorial states that the being Innovative becaUH It hasn't been fall . MOE'S PROBLEM stems, naturally, report ,,.did not address ltsell to resolvbig iMovative. The ARBC b criticized for THIS LAST stratagem is considered from Meany1s proi:iouncement that he the issue of increasing preswre to e1- not taking the initiative because. until the most likely by Sens. Goldwater and wouldn't deliver 1be Labor Vote to either pand jet fllghta out of Orl.Jwe County recently, it ha sn't taken the initiative. Beall. McGovern or Nixon. Airport." On the contrary. the SCRASS The ARBC is criticized for having lo\v Their belief ls based on backstage and "In fact," said Moe, glumly, "he didn't study exprenly recommends, under COD· staff morale because 1t has low staff other indications, say where the hell he was going to trolled conditions iDeluding pauenger morale." Lately it has become evident that Sen. deliver me. Anothe.r beer, Paddy, U you processing at remote terminals, the joint IF IT IS ANY COMFORT t th SteMls ls "displeased" by the vigorous please " use by conlmerclal aircraft of the Marine m' . th Ce 1 1 1 E 0 .1r com·1 prodding in and out of Congress In behall The · lo8S of Moe's vote the eiper11 Corps Air. Station 11 El Toro. 18;"6 1~n. Ph~I nh~nn 8 1 X.J>OSJ on ° of the survivors benefita bill which unanlinOU5ly agree will h~ McGovern Tlllll COULD ll Ure! 10 1 adelp ia a 50 encountered mysteriously bas gathered dust In the far more than NixOn, o The Labor Vote · even~ua y en 1 problems,. Sen. Charles SUm~er CR· Armed Servicea Conu¢ttee for nine h tr dill Uy lo the Democratic •)hntnate commercial 11t traffic from Mass .) vigorously fought the pro1ect until months • as d'lt ~ gone the all k .;;Oranp~y Airport and, Indeed, the his death . shortly. before it opened. It ls ' 1mown the M,ississipplan ot a :;n i~ ·~Vb.re",.~ J°bo~ Vote",; .studY · that Orange County Congress withheld financial suppo,rt until flood of erllical mall raUo)"ing ihi' col•'., .lw.-J , .. . .., ~-'!:. ~·, , In time be devoted ... the last moment, and arterward:.!n31Jted . , . ~ •• <. •• 1 •• ; . . .,. · • , • ' .., e!biltt'l;1011tnU&l aviatlon.1t1hould be that the money was only a loa~ to bi unln 5 dlSclOS?~. "'"t ne ....,.,~~d,2~. , ~·1 don:t lo\olr," ~Id Moh•ft Y., •·."· '!!liled'tootbet the$CllASS study does not paid back . , furth<r delay...,._,. bY wit~,. .,. .. bien thil\klng or ~ :for o.>rp \1 ~ .. tablllbment of any '!bat 'was b8d enough ,but conilderaUonUlllil,lbeSenaf•d.~ol ; "wall .... , if he n111L BUI hdio ~11f''tdl>>.:,;Olf·~'iirport in Orange County, Plilladelphia 's se:squlcentenniai (UOth the •Irate.,._, lf1DS I! m I I & ll O a· \ ll\lt ll)lt. MeJn)' ...._,Id me lo ! Jt liliwi! U£dliis Instead that lb o 11 anniversary) exposition of 1928 wa a agreemen!l: -•-· • '" ' .. hfay IOU!ld-like I'm tr;tng to l>llll!t Mr. u,.orta llrwty In use b. utlllaed to tofal dwsler Rain !ell on 86 of the~ ' That unannounced lntenlion squarely Meany up, bUt I CID MY from pel'IOllal . lbe1r f;,/;j elfecUvenea d th r 1 · •contradicted 1n earlier pnJmlle (to Beall experience that The t.bor Vote bas The edt'~ 1 •••• · that the a)'I • a r was open. Moreover, the and Goldwater) to IMe up Ille biil after alway1 done wbal be told me to · -•• -tuggests •vent l<ill between $25,000 and $411008 a • atudy did not "lletle" the problem of week end cost the city more ti.;. f!5 !'procurement measure bid been acted NOW TUE EAJY ...,. out would be to prtv1te aviation ln Orange County. Yet milllon In losses and capital outlays. Stennil Is very touchy abOut his follow Mr. M1'llly'1 uamplo. He aays be 11111 IUbJecl llJo ls dealt with la con- Delplte 1!11Ch inauspicious precedents, ti ha! ol th rlul t.n't golnt1 to vote for either McGovern slderable dellii. Pralct.it Nixon appears confident that =• S:~:! ceorn":::ee 1~f:'e'*!ord or NiiEon. But II I don't vote. then I won't Amc:llg other conclusions, the report the bicentennial will prove successful . In ii be Is lalimating be wwld. consider 11 a be The r..bor Voll Ill)' more. And to t•ll ~ tbe use ol Lot AWnlios a July 4. 1972, radio oddr.., from San _.1 reflection U the relirees bill In the truth, I t1ncl ol likl beiftl IO much In Noni Air Stalion ftJr (llll!ral aviation ..:. Clemente, be Issued an "unprecentend ,... _ . ' the public opollllbl. MMe that a wblcb oi-eoal4 IC<lllUDodall ap. invitation lo the world" to \'I.sit the effect, ""° forcibly takc<J •WIJ from boDennlk•, Paddy." ~lel1 11111 prlvlle ilrcrafl -In United States ln 1976. the comnuttee and written into the pro-Deoplte bll years o( dm>lloo to betllc --to Nllrton Municipal Airport Re upr.-d hope lhal as many as 28 curement measure u 1• amendment. The Labar Vote, Moe IJ ...,. eonslderlnC and .......,,tut In lluntiogt111 Beatb. It "!"'loo forelcnen would accept the in-APPARENTLY tbls would mill Stennis various altenallveo. At one point he even ailo urges the eatabllahment of ~arks •1t1llon. no o04 _ Irr~!" ol the merlta 1nd thoucbl of votinc the Socl1llll·Labor -lor lnl\rUctiooal and recrutional ' I • I MAILBOX flying -at Brea and Capistrano. THE REPORT acknowledges that the projected growth of general aviation will ~verely tax the existing airport and airspace ~esources of Orange County and may require some of the sport (lying to be conducted at. airparks m· oiher co!Jll. ties. Al~ogether . the SCRASS study, in our opinion, ~ously and thoroughly 6 • plores the aviation problems of Orange ~s well as those of the other nJ.ne COUD• ties that comprised the study area and we do ~ot feel that the teport'a r:Com· mendalJODS, and the research nn whicl! they were predicted. were accurately reflected by the editorial In question. JAMES M. SINK, AJA OtlAHGI COAST DAILY PILOT • , l I • i I I Frld>1, Jllly.28,.1972 DAILY PILOT 7, ' L. M. Bo11d ·Why +\re British . ' Lousy Lovers? Just 43 percent ol the husbands in tbls country regard themselves as excellent Jovets. Or so they tell the pollsters. Pretty coolldent bunch. ·Jn France, 31 peroent clabn 1Uper- ior talents in rtl!Jlance. In Italy, 16 perceilt think ~ selves above average. In Britain, only four percent can-- tend they're nllti~ th~ usuaJ. What cmvinces ao many U.S. ~usbands they're superstars in the game of love? WJly . .do so many British husbands coi1sider ' .... themselves third-string players? Who knows? But research goes on, J'm sure. ' . ' ~-_-a 'r \i •. ( 1, -,- TAKES LONGER for !ooct' to pass from · the mouth to the stomach ·than ~ realiz.e. Al)out six Seconds.' ' / ~v science boys .. ONLY AN athlete can stage .a fill· buster, that's Clear. To utter just one wol'.d, said talker has to can into play . 12 di(ferent muscles, according to-the ' QU£R!ES - Q. "If all ·the farni land in tlie ciluntry were c¥vid~d up equally amOng U.S. familiea, OOw in.any. acres would my wife aqd . wb\d up with? worth bow' much?:t · . ' A.; About 28 acres. Wllfi a value of ~ $3,290 Q. "llOW long do those trained' ileas in flea c~uses live?" · · · · · A. Al)out four months, usually. And · this sad fact re- quires great patience in flea trainers, it's said. They're always working ·with rookies_. ' THE VlNTN'f:RS' biggest cellars aren't near Fresno, Modesto, Sacramento. Nor in Italy, Germany or France. They're just outside Cape Town in the Union of South Africa, land or wine 3!Kl diamonds. BACHELORS -Ba.cllelors were frowned upon in old Sparta. And the pepally !or 'emaining uninarried was severe. The young ·girls thereal)outs at the time were re- quired to undergo gymnastic ei:erciles. dally. And any man who had not mmied by the age' of 25 was forbidden to watch. It was· cruel. WORST drivers among women are those taught by Uleir husbands, claims an insurance researcher. NO DOUBT you've repeatedly read about the original Siamese twins, Chang and ~ng: Client wants to know what troubled them most, their matrimonial life or their occupa· tion. Neither. They married sisters, togethet fatpered 20 children, and made a llting by renting themselves out .for · public appeararices . But Chang liked his liquor and Eng was a teetotaler. Never could they reconcile the wet and the dry. That's what frustrated them. AddreS! mail to I:. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box .1875, New. imt Beach, CaUf. 92660. · He Feeds Family on $15 A Week'!"Steak, No Less MODESTO (AP) -fr~ Louis feeds his family of. hve on $15 to $20 a week -and they eat steak. 'J prices of .items by case or look for . sale riiecchandise. They , just pick things up regardless of price," he said. Louis combine $"'ll shop, , LOUIS wllo lives ·In a ping and quantity buyjng, a residential neighborhood with technique he says can "double his second wile Pearl and your grocery dollar." · tlree children.began turning a "For $1,000 a year you can 16x24-foot section of his two- feed a family of six or seven · car garage into wliat amounts and have steak three and four ~ a small grocery -e in times a week." says Louis, a 1956 after. a broken elbow put 41:year-old. warebc;>Use. field him out of work ·for seven representative whO ·b e g a n mootM. buying lood in bulk in the mid-Finances were · tiiht and 1950s. ' ·Louis. said he '<lecided tlien be , wanted a backlog of food, "to . KEY TO LOUIS' dainty be able .to live of! the shelf if I grocery bill Is buying canned bad' to." foods by the case, beef by the -. 'Eacli ·week for two years he , side and other items on sale at lll!yed $10 from . his weekly reduced prices: , ~ itY~ and , bought two or Louis has paid as utUe .I'~· 11 • cases of canned goods. cents a bottle· !or catsup sell: Eventually ·be added a l,OOQ. tng in. superm3rkets, at · 25 pound' freezer and now plans cents, regularly buys beef at to get another, Louis said. 60 cents a pi>und and. has · purchased caniied '·peaclles MOST' OF . ms pur'cha,.es selling f0< ~9 IO 31 ~for as' are ~de from· canneries, . low as 19 cents a can. wholesale food deales and Most shoppers 0 don't stapd fa.Mnen in thls San Joaquin t up for their .right!," the Valley area, but Louis said he J stocky, dark-baited Louis said. also buys at regular markets !\ ••They never ask ~or the· "when the price is right." .. Marijuana Bill Hit By Youth LOS ~GELES lAP) -A statewide youllH>riented group called CitlzOns Oppooing the Marijuall3 Initiative has been formed dedicated to the defeat of the November ballot in- itiative that · would ·1egaliz.e private uae of the drug. Launching the. group at a press conference In Los • I Angeles, zs.1ear-0ld T I'm Riley, a Calilornia Slate · Unlversity at Fresno gi;aduate student~ter~-the marijuana initiaUv .. 'i'the f"'lSI dangerooJ piece ol legislatiOil ever to be placed on the ballot In California." l . Riley warned .that if the'in- ' ttiative p a s s e s , California Many rruµ:kets give me a discoi1nt -usually 15 to 20 percent -wben I buy . sale mer~ise in quantity," ·Louis said .. He recently !)ought 42 cases of a loss ·leaj!er advertised by a local supetmar-ket. · For the past eight months the lamily has eaten beef from a 7112-pound steer Louts puri:hased for f363.H. IS ms TEa!NIQUE prac- tical for city dwellers who may lack space and .access to food .producers and wholesalers? L<>uis thinks 80'. j•Tbey Cati still look for oale· Items and try to bu.y In.large amounts. And they can get out In !lie country, v!Jlt tbe'W--S and canneries." · One mooey·saver w Ith I n reach of 'ctty ·~ Is · dayold and overt>Ued bread, Louis said. He normally buys six to seven loeveJ for $1, compared to retail prices ol 37 to u cents. The averige lamlly should be able to begin a quantity food buying program with an •' -- ·wmLE SCATIBl ~s. ' OUlllG.1.ttT0 2.tt 2 s3 Choice of hi·lo's, cut •n·loops·& plush piles. Decoratpr ,colors with sk1d-re,sist~nt back· • . ing. Surface fi!Jers or rayon, njlon, ~ly-• . • ester and other riianmade fibers. from 20K FOR ' 32" to 27x45". · ~s CHAMBRAY SHIRT -' ou1i1G,,11c12.2t · 1is Long sleeve cotton chambray shirts. Two button( tBree pocket styling. long tail bottom · and ,fashion coltar. 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With wood base and handles. 499 12 .GAHf CMI LDAo SHRLS OUI llG. rlKE 2.39 low base· nationally known brand s. Ideal for small game animals or just good target shoot· ing. Stock up·'now, Federal or Remington! 111 ' PACKAGE Of 150 PAPBl PLATES OUR LOW DISCOUNT PRICl ! 9" grease·resistant paper plates, to hold hot or cold foods. Stock up now for summer entertaining • sac • DRUXE TUNE-UP KIT OUl lOW DISCOUNT PRICE Complete tune.up kit with all heav y duty parts; matched points, rotor apd con· denser. Includes feeler gauge and ,jnStructi on ch~rt for various models. BIKE TIRES OR TUBES BIKE TUBfSBlOC BIKE TtRES OUI llG. 97c' OUI IEG. 1.97 tn sizes 27x!V., • $Iles 27•l1•, 26•1%,20.-L7S. ' 20•1.75, Of 76( A.' 141. 111 ~1'. ... REGULARLY PRICED 10·4.99 .SAVE ON HOUSEHOLD PLASTICS BE BOLD SlYET01UA. ,. CHOICE ' . . EACH • 30 gallon trash can with lockin& lid. • 30 qt. lifUop waste basket. • 30 qt. spin top wa ste basket. • Deluxe laundry basket. 1 uwill become a magnet to ~ draw drug users from all over ; the country. n He said his group would hold •eetings all over the state and conduct a ''house-to-house,· grttssroQts campaign" to deleat the proposal. inltlel lnveatrneat or ll'OUnd 1Good ·whlle 11•.•ntltlH lastl Nvrryl $500, Louis said. Since word of I Riley said the sponsors of the marijuana initiative '1are taklna advantage . or ~ elec>- t.oral' ...,.... to allow tlio1r contem"' ol the \aw,• L' ,.. bls experience has spread, STOii llOUIS: OAltr A#O SAT. 10 AM TO f PM• SU#. 10 TO 7 • THlll'S A WHITI flONT NIAi 10111 many friends are building up•-.--------------------·--------------. their own food stocks. . ir fOSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. San Diogo Frnway 11 llrlllol "People should atart settlnc aside $15 to '25 a week and do the same thing I did," Louis ,aayt, 11Y OU 've· got to' do ICllllOlhlng. Tbele -.. reeliytaklna)'ou.". ,._ __ '"'!"'~--'"'!'~--------------.... .---__________________________ __, I I , • ,;o,. ~.!) *"' _ ..... , " ' 1 1 DAii. Y '1lDT , QUEENIE Fr~111. July 28, 1972 By Phil lnttrlandi "All rl&bll RICht onl" ;. [Cooper's Droop : Scribe Interviews Braless . BY HUGH A. MULLIGAN : LONDON -Cooper's llroop bolds no peril for the bountiful ~raless blfda al Britain. 1! 0Cooper'9 ,rhat?" demanded Itncer Fk>na Perinaman when ' onned a recent" journal of he American Medical iaUoo had warned that :girls going wjtbout a bra risk ~'development of pendulous ;breasts caused by stretching "101 the fibrous tissue attaching <the breast to the chest." " ·: ONCE LENGTHENED by lravlty, ti,.. COlllUllanll sub- ltted, "these ftbroua con- lonr, Cooper's IUSpenaor'J ments, do not resume ,.-outhlul dimensions and no ,._mount of exercise w 111 )estore pristine mammary l:>ro!Ue." f "Thls Cooper nmt be a nit i)>r a twill' amfled Miss Pen- pressed it, she would return to hameu. Most of the unbuttressed ln- tervlewees were relieved at the medical journal's con- clusions that "the whole affair Is one of appearance rather than health." At worst, the perils of penduloslty, if realiz.. ed, would leave one look,ing Jlke members or certain African tribes where bras were burned before the dawn ol history. t 1J SUPPOSE IT all depends whether a dolly-bird wants her picture In Playboy or NaUonal Geograph!c," nmarted com- ely Lindsey Aldriddge, a caslrler at a hamburger haven called the Great American Disaater, who chose the un- confined state for comfort rather than creed . "I don't hold with that women's lib lot, I Just !eel helter without." • ' : "I suPJMl!t? (wearing a bra or not) cfepenu on whether a dollH.ifJlrcf want• Jaer plC!tNre I• Pfa1tfJ011 or National Geo• •raplafe.'' I • ~n. projecting a pectoral ·profile to delight the eye of a Rubens. "Going about· .. wl.&lout .a bra is far more comfortable :than being tnwell up lib a Yorkshire ham." Dispatched In the interests of pectoral pathology t o :Wimbledon , Chelsea, 1cnigbtsbridge and other areas of impending pendulosity, this reporter, lately teturned from Vietnam, approached t b e whole subject of Cooper's droop with the caution one reserves for a minefield. "Look, love," adv 1 s e d Josephine Quinn o f Not- tingham, leaning unlettered over the center court at Wimbledon, "one's got to have something to droop before one worries about it. Doesn't one? Rhetorical questiom in this type of reportage can be a burden. CDOOSING THE interview ~ubjects from a crowded field calls for keen powers or observation, fore and aft. And a wary regard for belllgerent boy friends . In addition to an imepccable ~· profiJe. there must also be clpar evidenCP. of what the doctors call "lack or mammary sup- port," usually detecta ble by the absence of a bra strap. Claire Greenway, a riding fnstructress from Folkestone, Kent. with a formida b le facade. met all the specirica- tions. No visible means of sup- port. No burly escort hovering in the shadow s of Wimbledon's tea lawn. She seemed a Ht!le put oul at the American doc· tor's suggestion that a sup- portive bra would reduce •·th(' amount of ptosis." until told this meant sagging. ''Oh," she cried in relief, "I only wwry aboUt that when 1 put on .,me weight. Like right now, nn half a stone too heavy.11 That's seeven pounds. 18 HOlllEBACK r I d I n f wllhout a bra uncolilfortablt . li.fiss Greenwuy r e J> 1 i e d • somewhat tftigmaUcally. "On- ly !or the borse." · Then there was the s!Jwullr case of Londoner Pat Adams who, proud as a bartender who didn't drink, sold brll at Escalade, t b e La.shionable '·Knightsbridgo shop, without • wearlnc one. 1'But I alWays wear one : :trben lklin&," she confided, a1 V makinc ii up in 10me woy to • Jhe manulacturen. ;.• -Adams coac..s.d thal i( Iii -. yun .W should become '4mariedly pl.oled," u the docton so delicately ea- Few of the girls approached even tbose ponderously pto;d, had dispensed with their bras in the splrlt of liberation or rebellion. "The flat 1ook Is in, isn't it, dearle?" suggested fashion model Maureen Madden of Br~bane, Australia, whose contour presented a well rounded argument to the con- trary. Oddly ellOUgb, the only real hostility to ~ 1 u rv e y developed In ,tlii\ Klngs Road or Chelaea, the no-bra capital of the Western world. In tow behind an enormous Great Dane came a prodigiously ptosed specimen who aptly fulfilled a U.S. naval surgeon's definition of the female bosom as "an Imprecise target al'!a ; it can fall anywhere between the fourth lnterCO<tal interval rib space and the knee." TIIE APPROACH was dis· creet, scholarly. "Madame ... the Journal of the American Ai e d I c a I Auociation has warned that your not wearing a bra can lead to ahem , penduJosity ... " " "Bloody cheek ," she bellow- ed. "l am wearing a bra." The dog was still growling and the wo~n howling for a con- stable, when the researcher abruptly concluded hill in· qulrles by disappearing into a crowded boutique. "May 1 be of some assistance?" asked a nodular nymphet in a see-through halter dress. "No. No. No. Just looking." Suit Filed Against Finn S.\N FRANCISCO (AP) -A ll:Jl.miiiion taxpayer~ ault bu been nitd ln Superior Court •K•inat tht Paclllo Ge1 & li:ie<lric Co., cbWing the uUlllJ has been 1el1Jiii gaa anil eltcll!city ill111llf In San l"ranclaco lot 33 ye1rs. John P. Gifford, a retired employe of the federal General Accounting O!llce, asked for a court order direct- ing $100 ml.Ilion in refunds to PG&E custonters since 1939; payment or 136 million to the city for a "franchise," and an order blockll\g c:olle<\lon or PGti: biU.. unlil demands aro aatilfitd A IQIOkesman !or the utllity oald PG&E "obl>ined Its tnnch1a leg1U1. In lull com· ptlance with oil provisions Qr the city dlatter." I .a: ~ w ' J .. Big Boys' Penna-Prest• Knit Tops Cotton and polycs(er pullovers in $ 5 mock runlcncck: sryJi03-Hem.med 3 'hott slttVcl and bottom. Solid.$ and 'tripes. Siics G to J 2. for ., " t ........... . A.llPttdll'I• Sean Pmtent1 the LAKERSFREE Rukelball Clinic AJ....a.,.. • •••••• ••••••••• ,.., 29 T~rraneeo • , •••••••• , ••••. A•P•• S Santa Fe Sprf .......... , A•':.!r~J •Pro Paint•" • SJ.eci•l Sktll .. •Witt!• You.rF•'t'Orlt• LU.mlaA.eliM • Ou..Uo. a.d Auwer FllEE •l ...... ~T~ ...... •°'""',_&..-Ta... Ti ,_ ' ' , I ,\ l . SATURDAY, JULY29 LAST BIG DAY! Mo!t Items at Reduced Prices CUT 67 c to *2.52 When You Buy 3 Men's Soft, Absorbent Cotton Underwear ·, ;, Were 3 for $2.65 and 3 for $4.50 for White cotton underwear, soft and ab- sorbent. Assortment of briefs, T-shirts and athletic shirts. The sizes ... small, · medium, large and extra-large. Take your ,,. pick now at Sears, it's time to stock up! Mm's FurnisfJings Drpr. Children's Penna-Prest• Knit Tops Short sleeve knit tops i.a pol1esttt· - cotton blend.Mock turtleneck:. Hea>-" 3 $ med sleeves and lx>ttom. lnsttipes ot ootid colon. Silts S,M,L (2 ID 6X). IN'. SA.VE •151 Luxury Wheel Exercise Cycle JI ..p lar 56'.91 49ss Scrong welded frame jn avocado color with tread- ' less tire. Adjustable tensioo and handy speed- ometer and odometer. SAVE '5! Economy Wheel Exercise Cycle Regular $34..93 29ss Strong sree1 coosauctioo with a J~iach wheel on an easy-to-score mini frame. Tension adjust· meoL Cosmttic Depr. SJVE 45c on 2 lbs. Candy Assortment Choose from chocolace parfait. mint parfait. coff>- oca., ~Mel nips, licorice nips ~d coffee nips. Girls' Penna-Prest• Dresses Size• 3 to 6x !iizes 7 to 14 Srylcs that r.1 rijht 1od lttl so coml'ortJble. Qaose ton Md Short 1len~d dreues IR pflRtl, plaids and solid! They're all of Pcrma-Pm:c• fabrics that nttd. no iron,ia,g: whe.rt rumble. dried. Dre.-i~ .. Pfttl1..Plu.l" 1iat:118Vs k> lb~ 2 rorl 9 l nfdnls·Chiltirm's DtfJl ... 11nJ ..• Gir/.s' Wt•r Dtpr. I -.u-........ ~ &MClftl ....WOOO O&TMftC&IOYO P'ICO SANTANSf'tltNGS TI+OUSANOOAICI Vf,Ufr 1WNA '°'* C0MnGN -Ml LONG ll&CN OMMOI POMONA SAH1'A MOHICA 'OMAHcl V-. 11-••• '*'°'4,_CDWIM llDU.NOOI MOIYl•llf PitiU~ IAHrAAHA ~COASTPl.AU UN.ND ll'''i'*'f 11 -f.Nfl§.iif§liijiD·i.til.lt.1.1g1f.j·IIIJtM'''i·':;5;;. I \ ,. ' Sun-print Mun Muns Short Style Long Style 397 491 Things start happening when you make your ap- pearance in something flowing and dramatic! These boldly ·pa~tt~med California cottons come in short and long srytes. Misses' sius small to large. In 011r U'nt.mi Dt/Jllf1tnt'1t Sem ii tioDored to 1upplf complete tr••el aad e•rad• dres9 W&tdtobet for America's 1972 Olympic Athletics. Tbest' t'uhioN rep. re1c:nt the: ltiad ol trcftd·settiO& ttylc:1 you'll fi•d i• the Mc:u'1 atid Women'• StoteuSc:trs. . ..• .... .~.' ·" ..... ,. ,.-·"_..,, .... :. ;: . .·.; ... ··, ,.·'· ..• ~·. ~ -·-·· ~ • · .. •., ... ·'· .• \ -· "I' ..... A,,~~··, o o , '•, .· ·:.o'· .. ,, ....... )?/, . . . ..:..... •. ·.•. ~ .. ~.· ! . ' ' • •'\ . "" • ~•· I . ·"·.':.· ';''. ;. :··~r~~-' , .. '"'" ' .. "'··""" . ' .. . .. . ·. ~ ·-~~· . . ·. ~ , ·, • • • •.!_.'. ,. ••• . .. ... ~· ... ·.\• S4VE ~2 on2! Contour Bra for Teens Figure flattering Perma- Prest9'bra bas nylon lace cups with Wonder-Fil spunpolfesrer for natural shaping. Nylon and Lycra• spandex srretch frame. White. Sizts 30- 361',AA.. Foundtttionr Dtpartmtnt Regular $3' each or2.33 each Sears ALHAMBRA BUENA PARK CERRITOS COMPTON EL MONTE l~GLEWOOD GLENDALE LONG llEACH HOLLYWOOD ' Keep Your Cool In These Dresses Warm weather's sudden- 1 y easy to take in our carefree styled dresses. Choose from 2-piecers, skirted styles, and many more. In charming prints, solids, and combinations . In Misses' and Half sizes. I fl 011r DrtrI Drpt1rlme'1t I ' frldaJ, July 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT • ' t r Final Summer • CLEARANCE! Choose from a fabulous assortment of summer fabric• ••. perfect for all your designing ideas! All ac drastic pril:l.' reduc- t io ns. 45-inchc s wide . Hurry, while they la~t! 3 yard•$1 I for· off Sean Regular Low Prices U1e Seari RetJol~ing Charge NICA /,ORRANCiE PLAZA VALLEY VERMONT .. . .. " ... . ' Satisfaction Guaranteed' · Or Your Money..la& \ DAILY PILCT Dana Set For Radio Beacon I 4 rodlo .,_,. marker at i-.1111"1111 -PolDt .. IJDOOI the -........ lrlltlllatlonl plulllod by tbe U.S. Coul GUiid. The Dini Point bea<on wlll · ohare tbe frequency with the Newport Beach bNcon, the Cout Guard Nid. The beacons sharing time frequenclea "Ollld be se- quencod to Opetlie during the • lliemale time periocll olmillr to the ulatin/I Jong.range radio beacons. Other beaODlll under con- DdtraUon are at M.issloo Bay, Redondo Hlrbor, Ch• n n e 1 "1sbmdl Harbor and Ventura -· The )\tdondo beacon will • share 1!!111 Marina 4<1 Rey OfFSHOltE CONTINDIR -Grllg Spencer of Los Angeles guides h11 17-loot Formula race boat, Way· II-Hind, through the Alamltos Bay entrance to Long Beach Harbor while hia 16-year old son, Mark wat<:hea for traffic prior to tuneup for the lntel11• !Iona! Class fiUe bl~ "Saturday In the Long Beach· Avalon Dash. • ' Oil Laws Toughened Coast Gllll'd l a w .,. ---to .... vent oll dlacllargeo from lomp aad U.S. -11 up to 12 miles olllbcn ba.. been stepped up, llCCOrdtnc to - Adm. Ja-W. WIDbl1111, -ol the 11th Coast Gull'd lllltrlct. oil in 'lllheae newly restrictid areu of the ocean. Com- mmtlng on the State Deport· meot announcement, be said: 0 It ta now cteir that C.OUt Guard units can procetd 1'ith the enforcement of l b e Federal Water Pollution Col> trol Act beyond the tmltorlal ... w it h 0 u t tllCOWl1'rlng Jurisdictional difficulties.'' The 1170 amendments J>nr hlbil discharge of oil into the navigable waters of the U.S. and a zone contiguous to them. Penalties are provided f~r ViolatioM and the po~luter is liable for any costs incurred by lhe U.S. In cleaning up the oil. MARINI HOLDING TANKS NIW S'l'STRMS Olt USI llCISTIN8 HUD THE HOLDING COMPANY n74tltl .... ldl. ...., .. The exlenalon Jor tbe control of oil dlac:balpo from the three-mile tarl!orlal ... to ln- cludt an additional nine-mile COOllpoul aone WU port of the 1979 amendments to the ·Federal Wiler Pollution Con- trol Act • Enloroemenl to tbe 12-m11e1------=~~~ iiilii1!11'91!! limit •14 recocnifed under • Article 14 ol the 11Convention of the Territorial Sea and Col> tiguoU> 1.ooe ... OA'l'l llOSS PONllAC'S El.CLUSIYE NEW CAfl • ond the Cl>annd lslandl and • Ventura beacons would share ·• common frequency. 3 Corintains Vie in Power Boat Event Up to this time. the U.S. haa undertaken enforcement ac- tivity asainst foreign vesaela beyond three-mile> from its coast only for violationa of laws such as the cuStoms and exclusive fisheries laws are expressly appUcable to a ,distance of 12 miles offshore. 5 YEAR/50,000 MIL~ wannanty The Coul Guard explained thlt a second alternative , undtr conilderatlon would be Three Orange Co u n t y , lo tequence Ill radio beaco111 drivers will be among the six In the four frequency sharing atarten Saturday in Pac:lllc , "°"""' Ollahore Power Boat Racine Group 1 would include Asaoclalion'a Long B ea c b • Minion Bay, Ocellllide and Avalon Dash. next November and on the 1972-721 national championship offshore clfcult in three dif- ferent types of boats. In 1987 Reagan was ec>win- ner al9"1 with the late Bill Cooper and veteran Rudy Ramos of the world cham- pionship outboard regalts at Lake Havasu City, Ariz. The Long Beach-Avalon Dash ls a preview to the an- nual highlight of the West Coast offshore power boat rac· ing se~the 8th annual Long Bead! Hennessy Cup world national points classic Aug. 19 as a climax to the Calilornia Internaliooel Sea Festival at Long Beach. The Hennessy Cup will be limited this year to boats fully qualifying under American Power Boat As.miatioo and Union of International Motorboallng Offshore Class rules. The Long Beacl>.Avalon Dash entries through midweek were: Mooysunk {No. 14) Charles Mendola, Van Nuys; Pumper (No. 1$) John Drake, Mission VJejo; Volvo I (No. 12) Bob Sinclair, Palos Verdes Est.ates; SKV Special (No. 65) Ken Llght. Garden Grove; The Ringleader (No.' 88) Bob Brown, Los Angeles; Cream Pull II (No. lll) Bill Olson. Anaheim ; Way-B-Hind (No. 144) Craig Spencer, Los Angeles. The new anti-pollution law ~ame effective June 15, when the Department of State published a notice in tbe Federal Reguter announcing Uie position of the U.S. to make use of a nine-mile coo- tlguous ZOil• of the blgb -' seaward pl the territorial IOI for purposa of c:uatoma. fiscal, immlgratiOn a n d sanliary conlrola. Admiral Williams_ said he haa instructed all units under his command to be partlcular-ly alert for vessela dlscbarglng Dini Point. Group II would be The event la a 104-mile : Jirwpor! Beach, Long Beach sprint restricted to amallor ; ond Avalon. boats of the International, : Group W would Include SPorl. Paclllc and Cruiser lledoNlo Harbor, and Marina clasaes. 'Ille tlarl will be 11 10 '. lfet Rey, and Group IV would a.m. off ~ Shore Pier in be the Channel I s I 1 n d s Lone Beach Harbor. The . Harbor, Ventura and Santa course calll for 1 run to Barban. Avalon, a retuQ> to Long ·l ID oddltloo to one of !best Beach, a second run to Avalon · ,..,_.t piltil, the Coast and then 1 linlab outside the Guard uid Pl. H-and Long Bead> breakwater. Anocapo llland light marker Mike-Reasan, 80n of Gov. rodlo beacons would be llDnald Reag&n, and a celebrl· cll>coatinued. ty in bis own right as a star Weekend Calendar ''You get it better at the Wherehouse '' ' Three transmitting antennal speedboat driver. will be-'tak· 1IOuid alao be re Io c 1 t e d • Ing part in his first ocean race Voyagers ¥ acht,smenBusy , Ooeanalde marker r 1 d I o as a co-pilot with Bill Olson of ~~would go to Light 1. Anabelm in . the 24-!oo.t Voyasen Yacht Club ~Ibo Newport beo<on to the M~num'hull Cl'Mlh'Pull'1! qi •dominates the local yachting ~Weot Jelly Ugbt s. and the . th; Sports •Clua.. ' , scene lhil -end with a l~rinl del Rey beacon to Reagan haa recently retuni-• thrie-point fX"ll'll1l of races. Mlrlna del Rey Light 3. ed to California after a year in Saturday"• reclng will feature All ol the marker radio Atlanta, Ga. He will campaign the Midget Ocean Racing be..... would be coded with a with Ol!on in the inboard Fleet in the Filth race of the di.Jtlnctlve characteriltic for marathon circuit, in the 1972 Mosey Series. Other classes ldenllllulJon. OUtboard World Championship will race in the first day of the Yacht Race To Circl.e All Hawaii ... Few off ah o r iaillors-lf any-bave ever Nlled In a yacht race In which an tntire alate ii left to j)Dr!. But that will be the tx· perlence of the skippers and crew1 entered in the first sail- ing of the Royal Hawallan CUp Race Aug. 5. 'Ibe 755 nautical mile race startl off WaikW. and leaves the tslancla of Oahu, Moloka~ I.anal. Kahoolawe, M a u 1, Hawali, Kauai, and Nllhau to port and finishes off Waikiki. These island! comprise the state of Hawaii. The race Js C>Ptn to all yachts representing y a c h t clubs ' afl!!!ated with t h e International Yacht Racing Union, with an !OR rating ol 21.7 feel or higher and bavlng inboard englnea. Among the entries are such well-known former lo c a I yachts as Enoore, a Columbia· 43 bull! in Costa Mesa for a IN HAWAII CLASSIC -Encor.e, the Columbla-43 Balboa Yacht Club syndicate. formerly owned by a Balboa Y.acbt C!Ob syndicate, Encore won the Enst111da is entered in the first Royl,l ,H,wallan Cup race race in 1970; won Cius B in around tbe state of ;Hawaii.'• The yacht 1s now the Transpac in 1971. Other owned and campaigned in Hawall. 1971 triumphs include Los•:;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;m;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: Angeles Yacht Club's Whitneyl l Serles (Cla" B) and Class B in the Hanalei ra ce in Hawail. Encore ia now owned by Gil Budar of Honolulu, w h o alternates between sports car racing and yacht racing. Other locally built boats In· elude the Cal-40, Bamboo (ex· Carioeo) which Ls now sailed b)' Bamboo Opperman. It Wllll fGarlh overall in the 1969 Tnllllplc under the ownership of Cllorlle Brown. .......... YNGUNG "1111 _ ...... ,,. :::n:=;:--.. .. A ........ . .... -. ATTENTION! ~LL , TENNIS PLAYERS PARAMOUNT SPORTS Caller 35 yean In Los AnJ<lea) Announces The Gra1td Ove11ing 0, ITS *2 TINHIS '"'" MAIKIT WID. ·THURS.. Fil .• SAT. July • ..,. J.tr 2t 333 E. 17th ST.,· Costa Mesa CBehlnd 1be lnlm1ltlonal u .... of Plncak•l , PHOlll MZ.-6 TENNIS M.OYIU -elPTI POI ALLI D•AWINO 'Clll llALUQLI ... trDI {no puttbue rwce11 ry) EYEIYTHlllC FlW 111£ 1fMS PUYEr lfldWl•~••••tna' 1&'81 ,,..,... .. , ... summer Regatta. CORONADO. YACHT CLUB OUR SPECTACULAR u:•:=:~::'!":in;,n~~ Qil~e~i=~"." Bay race. CLAS.SICAL SALE in conjunction with the Sum-Santa Moalca Bay mer Regatt.a. KING HARBOR YACHT Elsewhere in S o u t h e r n CLUB -Commodort's Series California. n al i D n a I charn-No. 4; (liuck Stein Memorial Continuing thru Wed., Aug. 2 pk>nship regattas are schedul· No. 3; Spinnaker Series NO. 5; ed from San Diego to P..!arina King Harbor to Isthmus, :~~~~ ~·:i0~bl~ ~ ::~~!~T. .. ~~MA. EVERY LABEL • EVERY ARTIST ~:.ia;un1.:i =.y~~~ ~~·~~A·~~!1't.:dp°JA'. Nothing Held Back! 100 of the young Sabot OOMH, SUnday. sail-Ors-including 19 from the North and Inland :1!~tare.-willco~pelein ::dc~l ~:~~.r::g.~ EVERY 598 LIST 99 The winner of the five race ta, Saturday and Sunday. ;:: WJ~u!1 cr=pi!~~ IN~UB BARB,:~ ~ lnc~ding RCA Red Seal, Sailing records •how that the s1a1om Regalia, Saturday and . A•el-Columbia, London, wiMets and participant!: Jn Sunday. ''6 If this annual regatta f 0 r ,, ______ ... !!!Ill II Ya""''""' Das Alte Werk youngsters under 18 years of WOP.•l_& • ;;:www •15111111u, , age graduaie intc o t he r Coastal Weather Telefunken, l'Oiseao-tyre, PER DISC 5.98 Mfg, Ust classes and represent the ma· AudilO J111tt1irv, etc. jor share of the 1future senior , -• 1 / championshipr'rac;.,., skip...... s1111nr todrf. Ueht v1r1MM w1M1 • _____ _. ______ _. ______________ _ "'-'f> ,.....,. flight Ind nionilng tic.its ~ Cabrillo· Beach Yach1 Clab ...,, .,. satwoer. Hiit! ,_,. 11t "'--· 1 1n the, USA. _..,., "• • ·-'' '""'" • Ev-6.98 List, lnchldlllCJ 349 m Los ~eles Harbor will be. ·,. c~~:,::::=,~ .... -.,: ·DGG, Phillps Import• Claulcs the aceoe of the Mercury " ' 0 "" wii.r """9ntW't 11. ---------------------------- PER DISCS 6.98 Ust and continuing thfough Sun-,••DAY Class nationals starling tod01 Sun, Jtf-n, l'Wes EVERY 298 LIST dey. Pacific Marinen Yacht """' ""' ........... .,,,...,. 1,1 Club at Marina del Rey will be S«Ofld Jow ·u:,·u•DAv5:11 """ ..,.. h y ref E 66 Piolllbips-the PC (Pacific Flnt •ow ......... ·· ·· · s:" '·"" .. , llosl to two national cham· Finl ................ "'" .... .. Nonesuc: I angua • ve~man, Class) and the ea1.21. ::::: ~.:: .. ·:.·.·: .. ·~;~~:::: ::i We$tminster Gold, RCA· 1ctrola Other events scheduled : IUNDAY Od Se h' t COMPLETI Saa Diego Flnt l'llotl .> ............ t:O'lp.m. !.t yssey rap Im e C CATALOGS SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ~':;,ri".:·:.'.·.·:.·.:·:1;~~::::: :1 ' 1 • \ PER DISC 2.98 Ml9. Litt -Safeway Trophy Handicap, s1eonc1 1ow ............ 1:01 p.m. t.f Sa•·-.1 Suit llllH S:5' 1.m. Sits 7:51 p.m. 1.W-u,ay. Moon ••-•:n p.m. .. •:n 1.m. OPEN HOUSE SAT. I ...... .. JULY 29· CllAllPA•MI PVllCll I ,... NOa r 01VY1D T~GENTKY men._ ha.lP deetgn mali .. -C11tltnll /0< iq dimiminadftf tllOlf HO Wiit C-Hwy. Newport a.lch '46-2116 Kids Like to Ask Andy • •PLUS• A IOLDEI TREASURE "TROVE" OF COLLECTORS ITEMS Cl ASSICAL • -. " c-• ''"'"'" """' -fl"lfll • llw1rlll If tllll -wrWJ .,..r ...... -Nit llCA ...... , ....... 1 ........ ClfllfllMI, Vu. ,.. ........ Mir- ..,, .... _, -.. ••• ~---" _., ..... ts Ilk• D1nft, ....._. V.. Kiri .... .........,., Clult,. 1•-..., --. or...-. ...... ldllnn ... "1c• "' 1.tL ............. . NPS .... ,,_ -lttk ••• ,... atlltl9!'I fttlN --tt•I •-flttlMll I lfd "1:9 t9 S. ... - ... "' .. rNlal!Mt ..,. If • """.-YW'I ftllllll -a. ........... .,,....... -Tiii W...-Qll ~ ., ..... .,.. -Cini ~ a c-anllf -...,....... wtitl A_, Clfl""-Sl1;; atW .,Af y.., l lrftl. ., Plffr" -..... ,..._ .., MllMll, DIMM W~ bto.r-.•a.T111,•1t _...,., U...,. A Wit ef olllttWI ....... 119 fllll lllcrll*I ..... -......... , .... ef \'19" fl.tHtk ......... t9 .. ................................. , ... , .. " ....... "' --. CURRENT POP HITS ' c PIR DISC OUR HG. 1.00 TO Z.3' PIR DISC 99 IACH SPICIAL SELECTION ··-~ ............... ..... . ,_,,,.,w.. ..... ..,.n~4!'!. -----~~ • IU -Nan W.. 15$.':lollM .,,._, • ·•UJ!llllff ....... ~ -·~ ·-li:--. -..... -· .... ft&.9---·--......... ....... ·-L .... _,.. l g .I' t c r a I • t F pl w to " m I es h' a 10 w th th to u a " of th d th k t 1 McGove1·n Material Expensive The Democratic Porty may be broke, but the Voles IJnllm!ted Corp. of Ferndale, N.Y., must figure the averaee Democrat isn't. VU bas malled out a McGovern fqr President Cam- pa ign Products Catalog with almost two dozen dilferenl 1 t e m 1 -poeten, bmnper stickers, bultonl, lapel pilll, lhatchboob-you name It. A o ~ e-e a c h m.lnimum order ~es to im, plus '87.IO for 111Uppln( charg ... Friday. ""'' 28, 1972 Breaking Old Molds Irvine Scliool Tries New F or1n of Teachi1ig By CANDACE PEARSON ••J hate to use a:rades. We've thrown out grad t.S, 0 declare• the principal 1t Irvine's El Camino Real School, where tradlUonal grade levels have been replaced by 1 mixed-age grouping. .. Just because a child Is a certain chronological a g e doesn't mean his mental age lits In at that orthodox grade level" said Delaine Richards. Almost all 30 classes at the new year-round school on Sand Canyon Avenue in Eut Irvine have atudentJ on two age levels, never more than a year apart. In the 41>15 echool , students go to class for five weeks and are oU for three in a con· tlnual, year.-round cycle. A pilot program in Irvine, it ts being attended on a volun· · teer bu!.s. Rlchlln!.s found that IRVINE INNOVATOR Dtlalne Richards enough to remain at one age level. moved up I! he progresses during the year, bu t can c!)ange le vtla. If he does well in math, he can ao to a more advanced level. But I! he does poorly, will go to a u11ower-moving" Jewel math but can stUI so on to a hlgher readJng level if he achieved there. Movement l! fle 'Xi bl e. Richard.I said, which he feels almost eliminates the stigma of failure. The child doesn't have to repeat the entire class year, just what he needs, he said. "We're rerognlting the dif- ferences In children. their growtn naoits physically. men- tally and emotionally." he contended. DAllY PILOT Patrolman Slays Capto1· At tliat, II Dtmoqala sheU ;out u , VU predlcls they will for such matulal, local clubs iood candkta"" abould have a good campol1n Income. A 20 by 27-lnd! poater with a draw- Jng of lhe porty'1 Mminee, for which '1%5 mllliott flrst-Ume voters • , • will be happy to donate from $2 to '5." costs oru y 18 "F<"ts-445 for 250. 'iMilllons of people will want this button and be happy to ii:.....: .... .;..;.-..a. as a result, class sizes were Children hove been tested in reading and math abilities and are grouped accordingly. In practical application. the philosophy mean s using " s t a tc·approved, nongracled math program and relisting grade leveled reading books on a 21-step program. NEW YORK (AP) Threatened with death as he lay on an ele vator noor under the gaz~ of a gunman who had just robbed him, an otf-duty patroln..an pulled a revolver from an ankle holster and shot ls assailant dead. pay 'I or '2 for 11," the vu Awaiting D-...J:.~-calalog says of a thre .. lnch ~• .• ., •• di'"!> I a YI n I the same Three lovely girls from neighboring countries get together and flash some McGover.n por!ralt as the II smiles in Puerto Rico. From left, Heidi Weber, Miss Germany, Jenny Ten ~t poster. 'l'llal'• pretty good Wolde, Miss Holland and Usula Patcher, Miss Austria. ·mark-up, 1incethe VU price la----------------------------- 'Only 20 centl. In a nod to the loo-)">Ulll-loo "ote aet and tbelr parents, there are the McGovern for President Ecology Coloring ~k. a l&-pager 1ar •Ix cenll each (it'• termed 11a major fund rajser" with a $1 sug- getled price) and I he McGovern for President Elec- tion and Americana Color &: Learn Fun Book, elghl peg" and four cents per copy. For the Women'11 Llbbers, .there are also red buttons in whi ch the fourth letter of the candidate's family name sur .. rounds an "equa l" sign <=> and has a little cross dangling from it. Officials Only Watched Agony of Little Girl GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -~echool principal, a doctor, pol man and firemen could " stand and watch" for 70 minutes recently while a 5- year-old girl cried in agony with her finger caught In a playground ride. bert to free the child, "but I would have left myself liable for any consequences." He said he didn't know what the consequences would be, "Lord only knows -whatever her parents might have done." He said if attempts had been made to free the child and it cawed more damage to her hand, he could have been sued. Reventlow Widow Gets Inheritance LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The bulk of the mu!Umillion dollar estate of L a n c e Reventlow will go to his 27- year-old widow, former starlet Cheryl Holdridge. Reventlow, 36, dubbed at birth 0 the world's richest baby" as heir to t he Woolworth five-and~e fortune , was kllled 1n a plane crash in Colorado Monday. too uneven: heavy in some grades, underenroUed i n others. So he mixed some ages together and 80 far i.! pleased with the elfects. Seven-year-olch don't attend class with 10-year-olds 4r other extreme age differences. Classes are grouped in five and s.lx, aeven and eight, eight and nine, nine and 10, and 10 and 11-year-o!ds. A few classes were large . ,./ Under the program, a child may have the 11ame teacher an · day if his abilities on all levels are judged as similar. Or be may go to three dif· ferent teachers : one ! o r language arts, one for math and a "homeroo m" teacher for art, m~ic and ttmaining subjects. A child doesn't have to wa it until the end of the year to be The teache rs see little dif- ference with the plan because they 've tried to teach to di!~ fercnl abllltles before, bu t they and Richards sti ll have to catch ingrained referencces to things I i k e "third-grade readers." The parents have to "read- just lo the idea," Richards ad· milted, but added that the "children don't seem con- cerned about it." Police said a second man who accosted Patrolman Ken- neth Shaffer, 24, in tho East Village building Wedneoday night esca ped but was bellev4 ed to have been wounded. Shaffer was on his way to visit a friend when he entered the elevator and the two men followed . He started up for the 15th floor and one of the men pulled a gun ond held it to hi. head, police said. KOCM stereol031'M the sounds of the harbor ..-.1~~?1-/24 hours· a day There is no mention In the catalog, however. of whether the various products offered are biodegradCb1e ..• They were he1p1ess to do anything, they said, without permission from M e I i n d a Graham's parents who couldn't be readily located. J .J . Finley SChool principal Matthew Paramore said he had the authority to make the decision to do what seemed A call to the state attorney's office while the search for the parents was being conducted verified that fear. His will WU filed In probalet------------------------------------- Ti1iy Twiswr Carries Kids ThrougliAir JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPf) ·-Four children playing in a backyard' tent were scooped up by a small tornado Wednesday evening, "spun around 11 k e sum- mersaults," and carried 350 feet through the air. All escaped serious injury. Police said Paul Smith, 12, his sister, R05e Ann, 9, their cousin, Richard Smith, JO, and a neighbor, Belinda Qiwart, 10, were playing in a tent \Vednesday in the backyard of the Smith home when a line of thundersqualls mo\fed into the area. '"It started to lightning and rain and it got real dark," Belinda said. Paul se nsed something was wrong when be saw the bot- tom or the tent start to billow upwards. 11Paul told us to get down and we didn't," Richard said. 11 All o{ a sudden, we were all wrapped up in the tent. "We were going around and around like summersaull!. It hurt a little ood I got dizzy," Richard recalled. Depository Caretaker Faces Rap DALLAS (UPl)-The caretaker of the T e x a s Schoolbook Depository, the building ! r o m which Lee Harv'ey Oswald fired the shots that killed President John F. Kenned!, has been charged with anion in connection with last week's fire in the building. Winfred Jack Anderson, ~. wu arrested and placed in Dallas County jail in lieu of ,,0,000 bond. Anderson was employed by Aubrey Mab yew, a Nash'/flle, Tenn., businessman who purchased t h e 68-year-old building in 1970 in hope of turning it into a museum. Last Thursday a o m e o n e broke into the seven-story red brick building, apread eight one gallon : cans of gasoline across five upper floors and then set fire to the structure. It was exUngu.lshed about a hall hour later with only minimal damage. Mqre Scouts OK After the parents w e r e found. Melinda waa taken to the University of Florida Medical Center. IJoclcrs failed to save the tip of her left index finger, whlch wu severed through the bone at about the base of the fingernail. Paramore "1d the girl was playing on a revol•In& ".1Unlle Jim" ride and stuck her -finger· into a bole on the shall which turns the ride. The finger slipped into another hole inside the shaft and the finger wu sllced. Paramore held "the ch 11 d throughout her ordeal and police, firemen aDd a doctor were summoned, • "We agreed that I he damage had been done, but there was no way of te11ing what elae might happen when we turned the thing back. She might have jumped off or yanked her hfnd out and made tt worae." He aid Melinda w a s whlmperiJ\g and crying and "you could tell she was in shock."' Container Ship Phoenix Sails LONG BEACH (AP) Phoenix Container Liner• Ltd. of Hong Kong hu Inaugurated tninspacific service of its 22,000-ton cootainership Atlan- tic Phoenix. The twister llCOOped the tent TORONTO (AP) _ The off the ground, carried it. over World Association of Girl A sister-ship, the Pacific the roof of the snitth hOlf1ie and Guides and Girl Scouts has ad· Phoenix, will begin service dumped it on the,imfnd aCrotis milted 13 couutries, raising its between Japan and the West the street. · 1 membership to more than 6.$ Coast next month, sailing court Wedneaday. The value of the utate was not !lated, but RevenUow's fortune haJ been estimated in the put u about ~million. The will provided for grants of 10 percent of the estate - but not to exceed •100,000 -to worked for Reventlow, and Dudley }Valker, who one• Malgaret Latimer,. a former employe of-Rev en ti ow ' 1 mother, Barbara Hutton, one of the world's wealthiest women. TV Newsman Offers Prize For Smut LOS ANGELES (UPI) - When KNBC-TV ,...,..iJy re- ported the arrest of cooiedian George carlin in Milwaukee for using it noted that Carlin had allegedly used In a per- fonnance "seven words you can't use on TV." The response, said newscaster Tom Snyder, was "about 45 or 50 calls from persons who wanted to find out what the words are we can't use." Snyder's reply, In a broad- cast Wednesday, was to an- nounce a contest Inv! Ung listeners to mail In their choices for "the seven words they would least Uke to hear." First prlie will be a ticket to Carlin's next I o c a 1 ap- pearance. "And second prize,'' Snyder ,said, Hwlll be two tickets.'' Paul. Rose Ann and Bellnda million in 19 countries. every two weeks. al! landed in a ii:P 1111lc!e-lheJ0·~·iiiii~;iii:;~ii;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~;;oi;i;i;;i;,;i;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j ~;nRi~~~~~=~ FINAL WEEII feet beyond the other three. · ~ The children said they didn't ;:g~~~~:~f§~~~;, ·SALE ENDS JULY 31st treated for minor C\lt• and bruises and released. -Tbe ~thtl:'e~~~:r.~g~ SAVE 50% TO 70% dissipated a short time liter. ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF AND MOllE CHANDEUJIS HANGING LAMPS -WALL FOCTURES FINE TAILE LAMPS Electric & Lighting · 222 VICTORIA ST. COSTA MESA -646-3737 ,~,... ,,_ .,.......... flllJrMfl' ~ ' • r1 ay sa e. ay, a ur aJ, un ay. 15% off our 2.50 bath towels.. You 'll love the lciOk of out thirsty sheared cottoh terry jacquard bath towels. In a choice of fmhion patterns. Handsome decorator colors. Bath towel, Reg. 2.50, Nows2 Face !owe!, Regj ,_. Now 1.20 Wash cloth, R9g1 7k Now IOc JCPenney The values are here etveryday. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the tollowlng 1tore1:_ FASHION ISLAND, Newport Buch HUNTINGTON .CENTER, Huntington Be1ch. -~I :: , . . -•• • • -• • • ......... rk•l'f -Mlli.t ~"' ~\. ' SPfclol Courteru lo Builders (> *HARBOR CENTER, Cost• Mesa, (• Closed Sundayj -: and Jnteifor Decorators _ • _ ____ .................. ____________________ _.,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- -- I I • •• ~ . ~ • " • JI DAILY PILOT fr!IW, JO!y 28, 1972 16,04% Aeres For The Record Supervisors Okay Region Park ~Ian ·. BY JACK BROBACK Of t111 DlffJ Pillt Stetf SANTA ANA -A com- lfthensi<e 16,0C.acre regtooal w VIGAI. NEV, -MlntHI park master plan bas bee:o ap-*-,..... Mr9 tndudel ved .... the . •M•Y·•IYNOt.os -JUN D. pro "'J Orange County ..,_., M. of Simi, eM Prltdlll Board of Su---'-. At-. ... "' eo.te MfM .................. IHAHNOM-ELMG•EN -JPM '17. TeotaUve COit or acqulrtng ~ K... ti, n. of k1J1N. Hawaii. ........_ .1~·t1oplng the . "'-•••t W SINM ·-· 11, ot l...-N~ .uu· ~ _.,,.. COITll.lQ.kltUSE -Jvflf "· WUU1m i)'Stem is es(imated at ..,.,.. .8 • •.1 '1, f/I New C•lflt. ..:..... ...-,H.,..lre -9 etada w .. ,,, or million. Qnmty o(ficlals ex· · ~.fl=H _ Ju,,. 111, ~" peei· 25 to 30 percent wou1d be G .st. ~ Mlrte c4 u. both ot Hu"'· covered by state and federal a11~~0HNCO'!'.· _ J\IM ,., grants, based •Oft past ex· ......,,,. .,. of Toledo. 0115o. •""' • perience. Mftl!\8 E .. C. of Huntlnelon IHCh FReHetck.JOHNSON -June "· T'lbe county now has three :,ci::,,~· ~ kft'I Jo. .u. klo111 completely developed regional GLoVE11to3C>WMAN -JUM ~. J1"'" parks -Feathetly cm the Sao-~ :w°!tmCV::::-•nd· ltftY R11t11. ta Ana Rlv~r near the • Jt08E1tTf.HO,IUNS --J\1118 JO. atrt RJvenide County line· lMqe M,, ... ..,. •otlbl• 1.. both of east of Or and o:N '01 ' , W-'"tlr4ter ange, e on IACKt!.lOlt-HATCH'Elt -Jltt'll :io. Trabuco Canyon Road In lhe • 111t1btrt "W", 61, of Newoort ludl. flt'ld -"'-'"' Lw, n. 111 or.nM southeast.em part of tbe·ooun· McHAl...1.-0T\CHE -June 30. J'.ul ty w • .,. .... ,,, 11111 C.rol l .. .,, both of • Hutlt!Mtot1 IHdl MAOUROWICZ.SKRlYPCZVK -.k.1111 ao. J.,. W., 17 of C:O,I• MH8, Mid J1nlM , n, of Kr1kow, "-11nd ORANGE COUNTY acres: Segunda . Deschecha near San Clemente, 195 acres; Fairview in O:lsta 11-tesa, 324 acres; Los Trancos east. , of · Irvine, 620 acres, and Prima Deschecha, north of San Juan Capistrano, 1,430 acres. VAUGHAN-FOSTER -June JO, ltobert J' .. 5'. of ~ ... ch, and RI¥•• ,,. °' AMheltn , WINTl!lltl-IEl.RY -J\HW JO, J1m81 Rlcll8rcl.-)6. of Lu Vffu. Nw., llMI ClfOI MM, IL ell, F«ll'ltlllll V1lll1 FOfllltEST£1t.WAltHElt -JUN lO, Jot .......... 2'; 11111· """" """' "· llOtll .•. , ... ~ ~ THltOCKMORlON-COLLlNS -Jllfle .. Wll....,.1bom81. 1,, of Slntl A111, ~ lJIMle L#, 17, ell Huntl ... IOl'I UNDER DEVELOPMENT at present are seven more regional facilities -Laguna Niguel, University, Mi I e Square, all In the Orange OTHERS IN the top list in- Coast area and carbon Canyon elude Yorba in the east Dam, Fullerton Dam, Villa Anaheim area along the Santa Park .and Yorba In Inland Ana River. 102 acres; Old San-. ta Ana along the river, 396 RaP......,.LOVD -J~y t, ic.nntth WOn. 2'. or $191111 HUI. Ind Gmffn " , F ..... of Wntmlnster ' • NOi-NOAKES -JufY" 1, O.Vld . •• c...,...11, a. Mid SMNY IM'f, a • • botll of l'Ol.l!ltllll V1lleV CLWFOltl>MARTIN -Juty 1, t:obtrt l!dfW, Cl. •nd Jlldl1'1 Afllll1 211, 'lloJfl '• f/IW..-.118f9r '. • DJ.!OAN-C•UIENll!ltltY -JUIY 1, WINtwn, .. , bf ·NewPOi"t lefch, •nd • ·, A\Mlt, .. , of Cost1 M-·~ NOLT-MILL -"Jut;i 1, Brue• Wllll•m• • at. ,of ~ Grow, Ind Roblritll«. • ~ 1', ti H~ INCl'I ' ICHIU.elt-MARTl!N -JlllY 1, f'tlllHit. 22. tlllill Crwttlleo 11* boffl of Hu,.. ,,...,.,.. ... di CH" VIZ.WEST -Juty 1, TllllrYIM lt1V, n. and Lindi Sill, 22. bolt! of Cnt1 . -, ltOSSl.f'tTZGERALD -Jul1 1, Lciult , ....... )I, of FOll"lll" V•lle1, Ind • Lind•, 27, of Coslt t.WM1 ' PISCITELLl·TANNER -Jul"f 1, : J'*llh F., 1S, of Htmllfllfon 818dl. , 811111 Sunnne, u. of Torr1nc:1 ., DI: SISTO.IROOKS -Jul1 1, Mo!Tlt • .... D. '1lf ll:edDll06 lff(:fl. Ind lu-l.-.111, 22. ti HuntiMIOll lffch ' W.THo.IOHflllON -Jul1 1, ...,,..,. L., ». tlNI e-11 l... al, llolfl of HUii> --MILIM.UNA -July 1, 01111, 10, of ,,.., Mid Cll'Ol111, 16. of Huntrnoton ..... SOKOLSKI-MAYO -JulY 2, Mld\1111. AS, cit NewPOrt BPdl, •nd JOlrmt W., 31. of RochffMT, Minn, NAKAYAMA-Mc:CURN -Jul1 2, Torn, 32, Ind Fl'I' L.olJIM, fl, lloltl of Foul!> fll" V1111'1' ITAUFFACHEll.QLASSCOCIC -JulY 2. How1rd Let, Jr., JO, ot Norco, •nd • G•'l'lt Arllne, 17, of Hu"t1nvto11 ..... MONTElltO.SALOAHA -Jul1 t, Gl!Mrt, 24, of Cod• M.... •nd • l8r0tr1, M. of Tu•lln : Al.IERTV·ROONEY -July 3. o....r LM, u. of Fount1l11 v1r111. Ind LI,,. di MYrltnl, 11, of Slllf1 ,l,nl IROWN-CRASS -July j,-Denril• Al.In. ,,, of wmmlMI.... Ind NlllC'I' ~IM, 17, of Hunll""ton &Nell . GOUGH-MIRANDA -JUl1 $, Jlffrw Mlrtln, a. of Huntlnoton INdl. Ind M8rth• ,,.,_, 23, of S.nl• Anl GALLON-STONE -JUIY' 5, \.1111'11 Lie, JO, of Tu1lln, Ind Donni EUillflf1, 24. of Huntillllton a.1th LIESCH·lROUT -Jul';' 5, Wtllr/' c., Jr .. tS. of 8utn1 P•rk. Ind SuMn F .. fl. of Hun1111111o11 h1Ch CLAUSEN.JOHNSON -Jut1 6, T1rrY LOU]J, ~ Ind l81111 f'.Ullnt. If, bolll of C0111 Mew GRIMEs.MIDDLETON -Jul1 7, John • ••• "' of Anellllm. Ind K1oko. ... of Hlllltlr111t =r1 8c~th ·CLAY8URN·80WDEN -Jiiiy 1, Joh" MUo, a. •lid Nlra' Nt., lS, both of WlthTllMltr MY-CIANCIOLA -Jul'I' 1, hWlvln, 26, Ind R-. lt, llofll or COlll MHI IM~N-USSHEll: -Jul1 7 J•rntt Fr1ncl•, 31. 1nd 01rl1ne S., 2f, bottl of Hunt nvton 8111ch HILl.·OANET -July 7, Hur1 J1ims. u, 8fld J1nln ••YI. :u, both of Coll• M-IEGOVIA·IUON ICONTI -Jul1 7. Rh'nlklO. 25, of COSl8 MHI •nd K1lhlMn, :is. of w111mlntt1r COX·BATSON -J uly 1, Ktl\nelh Alll'I, 26, Ind Bl'l'erl'I' Kl">'•• 23. bofll of Cotti MHI lOFilS.CONNELL -Ju11 •• Tony Floyd, 21, of L1111.1r11 8eldl, •nd Erm.Ill, 21, of NIWpo!"I Sl•ch COOPER·GOLOSBERRY -Julr I, John •·• 21, of Hllllllngton SeKh. •nd Debor ... JO'f'Cf, 21. of Tu1ll11 DUSTER·BALLINGER -July I, 01vld J., X, •nd Lindt R, 35, both of Huo- tlnt1lon 8MCtl Death Notices ; CAllLSON . Al"lld FrllJof C1rl:.an. All '5 of "Sl l!". · lolM Awt., W•1tmlMI•. E),iile of dt1t11, · J~ .• v u. 1111. Survlwcl bY IGllo L1wrtne11 . · t!~·r.•• E 11 Htc1rmn, E~t~r Nelsen 11\d .. Ros. TrKllYI or•nd<hlldl'ffl. LawrtMI . . Sltllllln Ind J1nlne C11llftrln1. Cllallft • ' MrvlCI Ind lnltrmef)I\ 5'h1rd1r,,_3_. PM, Wntmlntter Memort1 Ptrk ivwnuarr '~ Ctmtt1ry. BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona dtl Mar 113-9451 Colla Meu mWt BELL BfoADWAY MORTUARY lit Broodway, Costa lllesa u~ McCORMI.\ LAGUNA BEACH .~ORTUARY 1715 Lopea Cuyoo Rd. . ,_Ii ~Acmt VIEi'• MEMORIAL PARK Ce......,. Morl111ry Cloapol -l'ldlle View Drive Nau,_. ltllell, C.Wonla fU.mt n:nfAMILY QJLONIAL rtJNDAL BOMB .............. Wwl II II ·-· m 18 .liaroART ........ I 7f;.:- . ·- areu. The Orange County Barbort, Beaches and Park ~ct \>JI law ls now charged with ,the development and maintenance of parks. In addition to the regional faclllties, th a t · respomiblllty extend! to local parks•in unincorporated areas, Yorba Cemetery, c o u n t y roadside rest areas, and riding, bike and biking-trails. Fourteen regional .P a r k • have been given top priority for acqul..1ltion and development. Orange c.oast area facilities In this category Include Bell Canyon (Starr Ranch), 592 acres; Laguna Lakes In Laguna Canyon, 210 Valley Man Makes Plea On I Count SANTA ANA -A Fountain Valley DWI cblrged with a total of L! ,.. olfelllel plead- ed guilty to ... count Thurs- day and was committed to Atascidero Stale Hospital f0< an indefinite term. Orange C.ounty S u p e r i o r Court Judge William Murray ordered the commitment of Leeth• Lee Heater, 40, of 10922 Goldeneye Ave. and closed a file that was first opened five years ago • Heater, who then lived at 701 Rockford Road, Corona del Mar, was arrested in June 1967 and charged with the ab- duction of a 13-year-<>ld British schoolboy . who was vaca· tioning in Seal Beach. The boy told police that Heater drove him from Seal Beach to the Laguna Hills area and then forced him to participate in several acts of sexual perversion. Heater jumped bail and fled to Canada while awaiting court action on those allega- tions. He was recaptured and returned to Orange County, but again jumped bail of $31,250 pooled by hi! aunt, Mrs. Kathryn Hayes of the Fountain Va1ley address. Heater was subsequently recaptured In Laredo, Tex., and returned to Orange Coun- ty with bail sel at $500,000. District attorney's m. vesUgalors then filed further charges stemming from Heater's alleged multiple acts of sex perversion wJth a youth staying in his Fountain Valley home while the defendant was awaiting trial after his return from canada. Heater's guilty plea was ol· fered to one of those later aliegalions. Supervisors Present Four Awards SANTA ANA -Orange County service awards have been presented to four Orange Coast residents by the county Board of Supervisors. Honored for 25 years service to the county was David A. Robertson ol the county Road Department. He resides In C.pistrano Beach. Receiving JO.year awards were Lt. Buryl M. Battelle of Fountain Valley and Sgt. Frank B. Bean of Corona del Mar, both wilb Ille County Sherllra Department. Juli. J. Hubbard of Newport Beach received a 15-year pin for service in the county WeUare Department. acres; Peters Can yd n Reservoir north of Tustin, 399 acies; \)linda Disposal Station · near Brea, 225 acres; Lower Santiago Creek east o f Orange, 636 acres, and 'Los Coyotes near Buena· Park, 92 acres. AcquisiUon costs of · the 14 proposed r,eglona-ls is estimated at '32.9 million with development adding another $50.2 million. Second priority para !Ji. elude Talbert, near the mouth of the Santa Ana River,· 130 a c r e s ; Limestone-8antiago near Santiago Canyon, 528 acres; Serrano Creek, east of the· El Toro Marine Station, 112 acres; Los Alamitos Basin, '17 acres; Chiquita Flats on Ortega Highway, 782 acres; Santa Ana River in the Anaheim area, 293 acres; Miller Basin in the same area, 76 acres; Moro canyon, north of Laguna Beach, 387 acres, and Sand Canyon Reservoir south of UC Irvine, 95 acres. DOLLAR COSTS ol the ,.. cond group are estimated at aCquisition, $35 million, and development, $31.IS million. There are 13 parks In the last priority grbup tabbed for development by 1990. They in· elude Hot Springs canyon on the Ortega Highway, San Juan Canyon, Portola, Portrero Los Pinos, Hot Springs Flal, Hardlng·Modjeska, Upper Silverado, Starr-Viejo; Arroyo Trabuco, Black Star canyon and Trabuco Canyon. All the above are In the Cleveland NationaJ Forest and adjoining mountain a r e a s. Two others are U pp e r Newport Bay and Bo1sa Chica in ~untington Beach. ACQVISmON OF the final group is estimated at $30.5 million and development, $42.2 million. A report to the board of supervisors dated June 26, listed 8dvantages of total ad· ministration of the parks pro- gram by the county Harbors, Beaches and Parks District. These include a maximum 20-cent tax rate as mandated by law, proportionate ex· penditures for inland para to match funds previously spent for harbors and beaches, and a seven-man advisory com· mission, including' two representatives f r o m · t h e Orange County League of Cities. Grand Jury Bill Backed In County SANTA ANA -Supporl for Senate BW 813, now before the State A...mbl3' has been voiced by !be Orange Counly Grand Jury. The bill, ac<ording to jury Foreman Otto M. Schmidlen, is aimed at "correcting defi· ciencies in the present grand jury system." Key provisionl! include im· panelment of two juries, one civil and ooe criminal, and ex· pansion of the powers of the civil i!ll"Y to include ln- vesti.gaUon of city as well as county government. The jury has dispatched a rt10lution to all Orange C.OUn- ty assemblymen In supporl ol the measure with one rtterVa· !Ion. The jury opposes a pro- vision that would enlarge the ,criminal panel and reduce the number of afflnnatlve votes required for an Indictment to a simple majority, Scbmidlen ..id. • • 4' ·• y t.o ~ & . G f ~ • • I @ :~ • • /! ; • . . " I I . -.'•• f • I , l \ I \ I • ' ' ihe d~sh·ing 'dol1nan ' lly ,petage.of .eallfornla • To the office • • • then out ot · night , • , the doshing dolmon-goes. Tire foshion impect is in +ne ,sleeve ond'•the , potent. prints. Both in swingy, fluid Amel®. triocetote jersey. Junior- siies 5-13. A. llutton front cootdress witli woist tie, 28.00. B. Two-piece plndot set with .tucked bib ond cuffs in wh ite. 30.00. Moil ond phone orders invited~Junior World Dresses, M TIU9~ amt the broad"'ay ANAHEIM NIWPOAT HUNTIN$TON HACH I •• A 444 H. E•<IJ4 17141 IJl.fllf 47 f•1W..i l.Je!IMI 1714) '44·1212 1111 E.tl119• A.,.,..,. C7141 lfl·llJI • • SHOP, II A.M. I• f •IO P.M. MONDAY TH•OU5H FAIOAY, SATU•DAY IJ A.M ... 6 P.M. $UNOAY t2 NOON .. 6 P.111. I ) . r: • ' •• "' .. \~ ' . {'. . ' • .; "' •• • • ( ,. • ' 1 Ed crel ~01 '" I An ol T tervi hous Tho at a by Can Co lnte 'IJl<I Tric yea a1"> not ' I A Complementin g V enture • By JO OLSON oe -. o.1w P111tt '''" Nolv thal he is retired, Nelson . Holmwood be.Jleves work is beneath him. Edna Holmwood models .a French lace creati on of t he 1900 era . Th e gown is o ne of ma ny in her colle ction. He spends a great deal of time in the lower level .of his Laguna hillside home wHere a garage-workshop houses a prized collection of !levtn anUque cars -with room for seven more. l!iJ wtfe, Edna, complement.. his hobby with her collection of antique go~ llhoes, bats parasols and bags kept up- stairs in a spau bedroom. The Holmwoods, · Laguna residents aince 1935, ~ a fun-loving, .ad- venturesome couple who collabo~te on a rather unusual hobby. He collects and restores antique aqtomobiles and She cot .. lects and repairs the coStumeS to weir in them. I Holmwood acquired bis first car 'in the early 50s and subsequenUy •4ded 14 more to his collection. He bas sold some In the last few years and now bas seven left, including an 1899 Neff ~amer made in Canada, an 1890 Gasmobile, 1903 curved-dash Oldsmobile, 1900' Model A Ford (68th made and oldest known), 191111 Locomobile, 1926 Chrysler and 1927 Chevrolet. TWO I'()RDS " He oow.Js 'iestoring' two Model S.190& Fords, one for each o( his sons. The restoration process is a painslak· • ' t ' mg and slow one~ 8nd may take several years' to Complete. New parts must he made. bY, special Of4er and cast from the wom-oilt pan,s, Holmwood said, alfd he does every.thing but the machine shop work himself. Once ~ cars are finished, the. Holmwoods· lake lhe.m to . antique car meets, :drive· them in paIJdes and display lhe,m CRl l(JeCinl occasiool. , \n 1956 they ilr:Ove their 111118 t..oeomol)ile to New. York~and Canada, a 9,000-mile trip that. look four months. 'Ibey received press · coverage. all the w:tiy. ' ' • '\ This car, Holmwood explained, once belooged to Luoky . Baldwin, one· of the richest' men il(;Calllomia in . his ~y and • ; tUwfor .,...lbe 'Boldwin ·Hll!s area of Loi Angeles was~ .~men '""'' JllJ -. 1m P• u 'Tricia's ln-laW By BEA ANDERSON w ......... ••1ttr _ Anne Cox of New York, mother-in-law of Tricia NiJon Cox, "does not grant in- terviews." · She was in Newport Beach as a bo~guest of a longtime friend, Thelma Thomas and she was the ,honored guest al a bridge luncheon giv"!' for 80 guests by Thelma and Mn. Bert Coffey in Big canyon Country Club. Conversation revolved ~round, mutual Interests -families ••• traveling ••• fashion •• ~ charities. After a short visit wi th long- time frie nd, The lma Tho mas, Anne C ox (left J leaves for ho me. So one is free to piece togethe.r bill of 1 ~ · mbilature watercolor, a C h r I s t m a s lnfonnation while eavesdropping. presei\t for Anne. This was the first time Anne .•nd "And I Teally was annoyed with Ed ," Thelma have seen each other since Aime told Thelma. "I sho,ved It to him T,icia and Ed's marriage more than a ~ Jte put It in his poc~et. He still has year ago, so, naturally thef reminisced it.,, ~ ' about the wedding. "Aunt Thelma," who'• 'lbelma and Anne's friendship has not related , was one of the manY Orange spanned a quarter of.a century. Coast residents in attendance. Thelma said she met Anne at an old Anne said one of the most touchinl ladies' home, and then chuckled for ii moments of the wedding for her wai wu obvious neither yet qualified ·., 1 when Tricia and Ed stopped to kta their residenL parents. Thelll\8 said she found K most · "Actually we met at a party given by touching when Tricia kissed her in the Mrs. Ralph Roosevelt. We hit it off right receiving line. away. 'lbls was the only Whl!A! Houae wedding · "Shortly allerwanl, I got a caU [rom either have attended and both talked Mlle asking for help. She said, 'This is 1 about how Jovely it Wu and lamented real e.mµgency •." tlllt the newlyweds rarely have any Anno 1 wu bent on S.ving the home privacy. Wbich was in financial dtstre... · Tbeiml revealed how ~Ioaed ,Ille wN · Tbeima said ahe joined An n e .• a Illa! Tricia end Ed -t aome time wt\Ji' · baoclwap!; the bpme . wu S.~,' .jid lllom prior to the weddq. "'1'1111 Wis from tbit time on "we reciprocatal bad< wlltn Howard and Julie (Coal were here. $1d forth on each other's cbarlU..." Speaking to Anno, Ille cmtblued, "l The Thomases and Coxen have lbartd don't -ti you knew it, 'but that'• many of each other's joya end 10rrow1 1'herl Glen (Tbelm1'1 ..... bead who ls 1 onr the )'Uri, end their trlemdlhip bat weteraJlorisll did -llketcbet ol deepened becauae of IL Tricia." Lalfr he turned •ketches into • (Set 1IEMJNISCING hf• 11) --_..__ TW«;>•JBARS ~,./· -' .. 1~ •t 1"!rked .Jl lbii ' car for two years before the ........ '"" 'NebralP·bo • M't'1 -~ I ~ SWede recalled.• '1lie ,trip m Ille. four- <;l'Ilnde~ car, ~Lis O(!tll in the Iron~ was· epjoyable . because "the traffic wian'I bad-and•'lie bad good weather." ' -'lbe.Lagunam have mt.down on _their fOOring .now, though, because' of the in- creaae in tr¢fie .and -the higher speeds al whicli W-S.,trayeL" . Whatever. the occasion or whichever car they are 'driving, the Holmwoods Visits • • • have outfits to match. He has ap- propriate suits and she has sportswear, evening dresses, lawn dresses and tailored outfi~, with accessories rfor each dreS!. "I used to be able to get some nice things from Goodwill," Mrs. Holmwood said, "but now I have to get them from antique shops. A few limes someone has advertised." One of the more interesting pieces of her collection is an evening dress which was worn to President Taft's in· luguration. She has studied its history, along with the other a:annents and ac- Aong Touring in style are Nelson and Edna Holmwood who set out iR a 1903 Oldsmobile wearing costumes of the era. cessories, and can point out its details and handwork. GREAT INTEREST Interest is great in the costumes, Airs. Holmwood said, because "older people like to remember back when they "'ore them and younger people are interested in seeing how they looked." -Shoes are harder to find , she no ted , because shoes didn't last as long. '·Peo- ple didn't have shoes to wear with every dress, either,'' she added. "They would have only a black, brown and white pair." Sales Sl ip Most of the antique dresses have moth holes or other evidences of aae. but Mrs. Holmwood ·"just ;-®an~ HY-~ tention... to them:" She reworks them when possible but leavea ' the 'l(IOts , ti repairlrig them wouJd ruin · the dress. Ove r a moth hO!e in one coat she wears a decorative pin. "Look at this dress," she said, holding up a plastic-encased gown. "It's 62 years old. I wonder how synthetic materials will hold up~" (See CARS, Page If) Charges Mount DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a teen- age shoplifter. I am neither proud nor ashamed of it. I ahoplift because I can't aJlord to buy tbe things I need. I always carry money with me so , if I'm caught, I can swear I forgot to pay. I stick' to that story and nobody can prove otherwise. I've done a lot of shoplifting, but I only work the stores that leave merchandise out on tables, racks, in open display cases or, worst of all, right by the exits, I al!o enjoy working the stores where the salespeople are dull or lazy or don't like to wait .on teenagers. Once in a while, just tor kicks, I like to steal lrom stores with sophisticated security systems, loads of mirrors, house detecUves and electronic devices. It's fun to outsmart them, and I've done it. often. I do not steal from stores where the help is pleasant and the people act like they trust you. There is no fun in Jt. In fact, It wouUI make me ashamed of myself, as if I had shafted a friend. I hope the store owners who read this will see what I am gelling at . I'm not trying to· justify my stealing. I'm just trying to show them how Ibey can. cut down on their shopli!Ung losses. Thanks for your time, Ann. -PETTY LARCENIST IN MARION, omo DEAR PETl'Y: YOI allrt oat by aayto11ou sbopltft bt<aue 1• ... , aJ. ford to bu y tbe lbings Y'" Deed. la tlie ~ sentence you 11;y you carry uoug~ money to . pay for the merchandise Iii caM yoa get caught -wblcb Js t'vkknce tut yoa CAN afford to buy ti, so stop ldddior yoaraeU, llllb. You allopltlt beeoaae 10• are u • ..,. lloaally disturbed kid no Is teyllf to 1et evoa wltli aomellody for oometlilag. Tiie atore re,reaeall Ille llloms -t or .... leacbtr ......... ,. ••••• friend. Yoo ara 11ulia( beclue yoa led !Ml -•bed)>, aomewllue ltu wlllllltld aometlola& ir.. yoa. Tiie preei tliat' lldl tlieory II correct Is Ille fact tlial you doa1 1te1t from 1torH wllere \lie aaletpeople are trv1t1111 oad lrleadly. Yeu realbe, or ceane, Ua1t tat tf -daY•'1"tt ..... to &el caac•t, and yCMlr alibi won't "·ork. Suddenly yOV whole llfe will be dlfltrenl. You'll have a police record that wlD dog yoa to your dyln1 day. My advtco ·b lo quit wblle luck 11 alW with you and iG 5{>me counsellDg. You're sick in. lbe HJi«, ldd; evea Ibo ... you wr11e • lood k~. DEAR ANN: During the JI months J!Yti. been married I have alway;s called JD,y in·laws Mr. and Mrs. Smith. I llnaoY decided that aince they call me by ~ 11fsl name that I should be able to ·cia!L them by tf>eir first names. : 'The olber day, I made the leap 1pd called my mother-In-law "Mary." .ibc was visibly annoyed and said, '"WW, don't you call Die Mother?" I replied .. '~ call my mother 'Mother' ahd il WGUld;ll; hard for me lo call anyone elae ~ She shot back, "Fine. Then pieue cill me Mrs. Smith." ~~·: I nplled. "In that case, please call rio)' Mrs. Smith alao." Now ahe is upset and oo is my buaba¢.; t think this is absurd, since we are •II over II. What are your feelings about II. Ann? -FAIR IS FAIR DEAR FAIR: !!lever mlad MY foel-. lugs , tt'• lriow your mothe.MHaw feeh 11111-ud-JPe-- .. ut Y• to call lier •1 Mr -.-, So, I• ... k to clllto( Mr Mrt. ~ ~ad ......,.., Pe wID p ... k It YOllR :.t -~ tr tltt rtlltl I 0\ II II ftl- Do you feel awkward, oelf......,km- lone!y? Wtic:omo to the club. Thero'a help for you in Ann Landera' ~ "The Key lo Populai;llY.'' Stod a ..q in -with your requeal Md • Ioli. stamped. aclf .. ddreu<d envelope lo Ille AILY PILOT . ... I Jf OAJlY PILOT '"417· July ll. 1'72 Honorable Taste Buds From Page 13 .· Chinese Overlook Recipes ... Cars The Holmwooda' I if e togttht.r bu always been me o( adventutt, ta~ thtm to every state in lbe U'1oiOn, South Am<rica, the VlrlJn lllanda and the f'ar East, and pre. bRbly will continue to be to. "Wt haven't been around the •world yet but flla ybe we'll make that ," Mrs. Holmwood said . B7 MIKE GOODJUCll Of .. o.lly ,.., l*llt 'l1!t rich aromas of clucken pineappl<. e&S drop aoup and btol -too lllltd the claalroom •t 1.ountAln Valley High School u multr <hef Man Tat Yan talked about the art of Chinese cooking. "The whole idea b to bo crutive," ..MS Mu. 'rrhtrt Men Tat Yen tells cooking' clan how quick frying in 11 wok preserves natural flavor of Chin••• food. : :Getting Acquaintecl art 25,000 tons ol rocipea bot they ocl11lve yau ingredltJtts. You hlvt to team to cook for )'OUT OWft ttl!U. '' Min l11ctiel the art to abollt 1J lludeot chell through tile Huntington S.ach Union High School District's Adult Educ1Uon program. Man. a native of Canton, left mainland China when he was 14 and made his w.ey to Hong Kong . There he enrolled in a catering i n•t llu te and iradu1ted to cooking in 10me of Hong Kong's f I n eat reatauranta:. Whe:n he was 20. the affable youna: cook won a acholarshlp to study nutrition at UC Davis. He res.ides with a Huntington Btacb family in the 51Jm· mertime and teaches cooking. Aside f r o m emphasizing creativene.c;s in his cuisine classes. Man, 22 , a Is o describes the cultural in· fluencea behin(f certain dishes . While ttis· student! are biting into litchi nut.II, Man will ex- plain how the ancient ernporer Mlng-Luan would send his eoldiers throughout China to find the succu lent fruit for his ,,.,~ mi.stress. Man also takes his class on field trips. He will escort them to a market and explain how to purchase ingredients for any meal . In another excursion. his class will visit an authentic Chineae restaurant for a kitchen tour and an ex- planaUon of how the Chinese would eat the meal. "Americans pick up Chinese cooking very quickly," says A Visit to the Hospital Packing personal gifts onto a London bus for a trip to Orange County Medical Center are Oeft to right) the l\1me s. l\1ar garita Brecka. Charles Kriss and Doug- las Menzies. members of the Newport Island Women's Auxiliary. Twenty wom- en took personal gifts to geriatric patients and clothing to the hospital thrift shop. Your Horoscope Tomorrow He has sold real estate. own- rd a nursery, headed toun, 011.11ed a pottery factory and subdi vided land in hi! carw. and his hobbies have Included gardening and Japidrry work. She has beeq..1cdve in the Newport Btach"Ebell Club a.ltd the Laguna Beach Garden (lub. and they both belong lo the Vasa Order of America and the Presbyterian com- munity Church. They love living In Laguna and returned 10 the Art ~lony after being Newport resldenti for_ several years because, "' Hol mwood says, "you only li\!11 once . You should live where you like it.'' Their only problem now Is figuring out whst they will do \''ilh their collectiorui when they sell their home and move to their new a pa rt m en t building overlooking t h e ocean. They may ha ve to rent themselves an apartment jutt for t.he closet space. • Man. Cooking depends on en· joying the preparation. Once they have the atyle people can incorporate the Chinese way lnto all of their dishes." Pisces: Trust Own Judgment The Chinese are very con- scious about the ingredients of their meals, says Man. "Peo- ple In Hong Kong always want to eat the best food they can. Their food is alwaya fresh and they would never touch a hot dog or ham sandwich. "Even low income people spend a great deal of money on their food." Man also says t.he Chinese don ·t care for apple pie, ice cream or other desserts. "The Chinese don 'I consider dessert to be part of a meal. They will sweeten meals or fruits. You shouldn't want any de!sert after a good Chinese meal," 11ays Man. What is·his favorite dish? 1' l enjoy cooking every- thini,'' says Man. "But if I am really hungry." he says wlth a grin on hi s fa ce, .. t go out Md order six tacos and a side order of tea." Man will begin two new cooking classes on Monday. Ju- SATURDAY JULY 29 ARIES (March 21-April 19)o . Indecis ion is featured . Avoid extremes. Go slow. Perceive your own philosophy. Discover yourself. Cancer person plays key role. Cooperate in Project that could aid those who are handic apped. You v.i.11 gain reC(lgnilion. TAURUS (April .20-May 2()): E1amine various possibilities. Don't feel there is only one method. Ask. questions . Analyze answers. Look beyond the immediate, Accept social invitations. Welcome new con- From tacts. Ad vocate versatile ap- proach. GEMINI <May 21.June 20)o What you have been seeking now is in sight. Rtc0gnlze goal when you encou nter it. Accent is on legal documenl which prov ides green light. CANCER (June 21 -July 221· Be ana lytical. 0on·1 be satisfied merel) to know something occurred . Find out why it happened. Then do your best· to correct possible errors. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1: Some around you react in- temely. Feel ings can be easily bruised. Know this and be diplomatic. Explain reason5 . Get cooperation of Cancer. Be • • • Reminiscing determined without b e i n g stubborn. Spend for quality. not qua ntity. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22)o Lie low. Do more listening th.en talk ing . Let other~ set pace. You gain by being a perceptive, shrewd observer . Give attention to m a 1 e . partner. ~iake inte lligent con- cession . Rut refuse to be shov. ed 10 back :=ea!. LIBRA !Se pt. 23-0ct. 22 1· Others gra \·itate 10 \'OU "·1th their problems. Key ·is to ex- amine var ious areas of possi- ble solution. Take steps to cor· rect perwnal ailment wh ich you have neglected. Keep medical. dental appointment. SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): r·inish rather than begin proj- ect. S pr e a d influence. Good lunar aspect now coincides \\'ilh creative endeavors which succeed. Guard valuables. You could be parted fr o m possessions if careless. going for you than m.l1ht be suspected. Plan project aa a whole. Don 't bet bogged down with petty notions. Slrua in· dependence, originality. CAPRICORN !Dec. 22.Jan. 19!; Get dis putes 11ettled. Clear slate. Don"t ho 1 d grudges. Family membt.r is \Villin11t lo make concession. Be gracious. Then you g a i n point.c;. Ont 11.•ho kepi secret no\\' 1s ready to lell all. Don 't cast first stone. AQUA!l!US (Jan. 20-Feb. 181: Be flexible . Us e al!ernali\'es. Financial gains indicated if you explore. Give full play to intellectual curios1° ly. Refuse to be satisfied with status quo. There is plenty of room for improvement. PISCf:S {Feb. 19-March 20): Opportunity Provided ly 31 at Murdy Community Center in Huntington Beach and the Santa Ana YMCA. Prospective students may con- tact either location for in- Jormation. SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 22- Dec. 21 ): Get going . Shake off lethargy. You have more The Thomases have no tsland weekly newspaper. children, but think of the three Anne rarely wears white Cox children as their own . . . (it's too hard to keep clean or at least li ke nephews and a when traveling ! and she even ni ece. hesitates buying a dress trim·1jiiiiiiiiiii They are godparents of med ~·ilh a while colla r. She Bre;ik free from restrictions. Express yourself. f ind outlet for creative efforts. Take in· itiative. Trust your own judg- ment . You get chance for ad- vancement if willing t o assume responsibility. MAYTAG WASHERS DRYERS WAREHOUSE PRICES ; · Upcoming meeUnp w 111 give Orange Coast residents a chance to get acquainted with fellow sorority members. the joys of childbirth or foreiJn students. LB Panhellenic Mrs. Marshall Patton will preside when the Laguna Beach Panhellenic hoats a cof· fee at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. l, Jn the R<>hert Coulten ' South Laguna home. A committee headed by lflrs. Paul Davis IA preparlna: refre.!1hment1 for the get·•C· quainted party to which 11! . members of nation•! Greek- lette.red sororities are bivlted . Childbirth · A new class in prepared, husband-coached childbirth -will start Thursday, Aug. 3. In· · structed by Mn. H 1 r r y Yamada, RN in her home, · 1'596 ~1L Shelly Circle , Foun· lain Valley. Institute of Interior Designers meeting at Lo r enzo 's restaurant in Santa Ana. University AFS The 2-year~ld University High School chapter o f American Field Servi ce has elected Mrs. George Huett! es president. She will be assisted by the Mmes. Dave Kercher, vice president; Garth Honeycutt, and Norman Ginaburg, ucretarie!; Ralph Davies, treasurer: Adolf Hollrigel, Richard Bartkus, Ed Erikson, George Cullers, DtMi& Tylt.r and Virginia Kirkham, com- mittee chairmen. Senior Lunch Lunches. priced et 75 cents, will be served Thursdays .for senior citiuns on Aug. 3 In Fir.!lt United. Methodist Church, Costa Mesa , on Aug. 10 in St. A n d re w ' 1 Presbyterian Church. Newport Beach and on Aug. 24 in Com· mun ity Congregational Church. Coron• del Mar. The meals are sponsored by Church Women United and reservations must be made with the host churc:h office by the preceding Tuesday. Hoag Auxiliary A month of neiJbborhood Christmas card books will be on display from Au1. 1 until Dec. 1 in tht. hospital lobby but a 20 pt.rcent savings will be available at the coffee. Elegant Motif l\.1azi e Cox and Thelma beams thinks the ne'v stretch fab rics FOR FUND r•lsing by th• with pride as she displays one are ideal. "especially when I I So. L•gun• Civic Assn. to Vogue after "'another "'hich travel so much." wv• th• •nvironment. f h-hot f he Th t 1· d •t b · Celebrltles' & funk~ clOth-AJlurino , effortless a n d carry as ion p os o r e rave 1ng oesn ring -~ odd ht h Co d Tho Ing; i•welry. boo s, un-sumptuous is the way Kasper. g ;iug er. t e xes an mases bell•v•bl• furnltur•, ••o- designer for the Joan Lesl ie Althoug h Mazie does some together often, Thelma said. tic plants, sllverwar• from label. sees fashion for the fall . modeling, fashion doe.sn't in-'.'We don't see each other as Russia. Bring Io t 1 of Co t ~,rt LArea,g_ue h l"lt'st an "fe.~siehr. m or e hteerresmt ohtehreras much as it does ,mulo<thoanstwhee'dpboliknee, but we talk Jmu~".'•2,'•'10"','•"'•;"•'·m•a•a·· ACTIVE ACOPMLPANY s a .ll'Jesa t ui::ague as e egan mou . e s a y s . · · • · · awarded scholarships totalling "Which I see in dresses and At one time Ann e did "AMe is going to a wedd ing ::nth!u':,~o.,i:irt: 5:~;:. 842_..426 ' St,000 to Pauli Krugmeir, trouser-topper ensembles for custom designing and wrote a in Chicago and has traveled by Ster•, so. Co••t Hwy. In 16130 Goth•rll St. Sheryl McCartney, Na n cy daytime." rashi on column for a Long way of Los Angeles so she So. L•gun•. HUNTIN!;TON 11.ACH Colenbaugh. Coron. del "arl ·--------------------~JIFco~u~ld~se~e~u~s~.'~' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~= , ,,, 1 , , w JYI . H . I ... ~ ll lrl~.U~ High School: Valerie Rambo, iiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiii--iiii-;;;i;;:, Ellzabeth Sponagle, Ca thy Langston , Costa Mesa High School; Diane Cutro, Leon Adkins and Ann Powis, Estan- cia High School . Other winners were Michtle Vencllk, Ava Bolton, Pete Schroll, Newport Harbor High School : Gina Woltz, Golden West C:Ollege and Nada Stone, Orange Coast Colleee. Time Savers NEW YOR.K <UPI\ Durable press sheeta: and pillowca!les C05t slightly more than regular ones. but you 'll 11ave time and work by U!lng them because they ne~ no ironing and ltay neat In use. say home furnishings experts. You may find durable press shttt.s made 1 bit shorttr than all cotton One! becauu they shrink leas. FINAL REDUCTIONS! MEN! SAVE UP TO 1/2 AND MORE! • FLORSHEIM ANNOUNCEMENT FASHION j ISLAND 1. AT.EASE 2. APROPOS NEWPORT CENTER SUNDAY SHOPPING The following stores are now OPEN SUNDAYS for your shopping convenience: 15. MANDEL'S SHOES 16. MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTS -• The course. open to ex· pktant parents In the ir alxth to seventh month, covers such topics as Lamaze breathing. relaxalion tech n i q u e s , 'physiology of labor a n d deliver y, nutrition . ·breasUeedlng. hospital e1· J>erlence and r a m i I y ad- JUitmenl The Childbirth :6duc1tion Association of Los :~etes sponsors the training. :·· Interior De1ign Christmas card sales will wind -;;:=========:. up Thursday. Aug. 31, when the,, • BALLY • ACME 3. BACK STREET 17. MUSIC HALL 4. IATH SHOP 18. NEAL'S SPORTING GOODS • Orie tal rugs was the topic • oJ Tcm 10obe when ht. 1d- dr...-d tilt Orange County .chapter o! the American Auxiliary ol Hoag Hospital , Pre1byteri1n lnvilea the public to a coffet in the Conference Center on <he hocpiW f?0\11\dl in Newport Beach. ,,_.o'.,, \ ~ ',e. '"''·"~" t Jo••.s 1 rlt:o/teiifo"''-· '"°•111 AU DUSSES 1111.0W WHOLISALI tafacln's Snnlr Cm.t Sale! IATUllDAY, JULY 2t -SUNDAY, JULY JO . ' . IO:GI A.M. • S:OO ,.M. ' • PEDWIN • CLARK'S o.;glnally to $52. N 0 W •s to '29" WETHERBY ~KAYSER •4 FASHION ISLAND NEWl'ORT IEACH • ... .,,.... • ~ Olef'11t • • ....... l{fllf'llM. S. THE BROADWAY 6. BOB BURNS RESTAURANT 1. WALTAH CLARKE 'S I . COCO'S 9. B. DALTON 10. IL POCO 11. HAIR HUNTERS 12. HATCH'S HALLMAllK I~ KARLS TOYS 1•. LANZ 19. J. C. PENNEYS 20. PHELPS MEAGER 21. PAUL ALLAN SHOES 22. THE RIGGER 23. RUSSO'S 24. SEE'S CANDIES 25. THE SHOW.OFF 26. StLVEllWOOD'S 27. THI TOBACCONIST 21. VIKINGS FOUlt 29. YAMATO'S RISTAUU.NT SHO, THI OPEN.All!. OCEAN-VIEW MALL r I I . A the has •pe wh aga we' !lat pre Pal opi we a pol v 18. Am Thu 1967 Athl M pie mon WO tile H .. or 1964 0 fla Wor athl for ner. G role 421 Mlm 1960 scor H c wal and unit wtli T Ung rou ll)'t eac "I ... hfd San Sing Pllil F Cj>n def• .,. •ii ting SPORTS 'Palm er Gets Wrist Slap FromLPGA ATLANTA -The executive board of the Ladies Professional Golf Association has reprimanded Sandra Palmer for &peak ing out on behaU of Jane Blalock. who has a SS mill ion law suit pending against the organiza tion. "We called you here to let you know we 're reprimanding you for t h e etatements you ha ve made." LPGA president Cynthia Sullivan told Miss Palmer. ''You're entitled to your own opinion. but when ii hurts our mem~rs, we feel you owe the organization an apology." "" \1ALENCfA, Calif. -Kathy Schmidt, 18, a Long Beach college student, set an American recortl ift the javelin throw Thursday with a toss of 200 feet , 6 Inches. The previous record of 198·8 was set in 1967 by Barbara Friedr ich of the Shore Athletic Club of New Jersey. MUis Schmid t who won the U.S. Olym· pie trials in Frederick, Md ., earl ier this month with a throw of 197·9, is the first woman in the United State:5 to surpass lbe. 200.root mark. Helena Gorchakova of Rus.sla holds the world's record with a toss of 204-31h in 1964. "" OLY~1PJA, Greece -The Olympic flame that will burn for the 1972 Munich World Games was lit at this ancient athletic site today and left on its first leg for West Germany borne by a Greek run- ner. Greek actress Maria Moscholiou, in the role of high priestess, ignited the flame in the ~cred grove of ancient Olympia, birthplace of the Games. The Olympic flame to be carried to Munich by over 5,000 runners arrives there on Aug. 25, the da y before the Games get under way . It goes by way of Athens, Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, Hungary and Austria. The name will change hands every kilometer as it passes through each co unlry. "" QUEBEC-Maurice "Rocket" Richard. ~ first National Hockey League player to. score 'So goals in a season and a member of the NHL 's Hall of Fame. 1iJned a one-year contract Thursday as coach of the Quebec Nordiques of the new World Hockey Association. The fiery Richard had 544 goals and 421 assisU! in 18 NHL seasons with the Mbntreal j:anadiens, before retiring in 1960. He ~ame the league's first SO-goal scorer during the 1944-45 season. "" HOUSTON -A spokes man for Elvin "Big E" Hayes, traded last month from the Houston Rockets to Baltimore. said Thursday the former University of Houston All-American had agreed to terms with the Bullets. "They've agreed to terms and bot h parties are happy ." said Thomas Mc· Dade. n!presenting Hayes in his contract talks with the Bullets. Area Poloi sts Clobber Foes CUPE RTI NO, Calif. -Thom a !I Boughey paced coach Ed Newland'! NIMA (Newport-Irvine-Mesa Aquatics) B water polo team to a pair of victories and a forfeit win Thul"Sday to qualify the Ufllt for the national AAU championships Which got under way today. 'fhe NTMA B squad met the A con· tingen t at 8 this morning in open ing round action through a quirk In the dr1w lllat threw the two area teams against each other. "It Isn't exactl y what l would prefer,'' ooach Ed Newland told the DAILY PILOT, "but It takes 11 pair of defeats to lose oot In thi!I competition." Boughey scored a pair of goals In 1"81dlng the B team to victory over Mt. San Antonio, 6--3, in the opener Thursday. Single t•llles wore added by Boyd Ptiilpol. Chip Rowe and Tim Quinn. Following A forfeit lo NIMA by the Concord C team, Newland 's charges defeated Loder• Oak>, 5-4. Boughey a1aln scored a pair of goals In thia one with Ph\lpot, Quinn end K'elth Wall hit· ting one apiece. The. hnst De AnUI Aquatic Foundation team Is favored to wln with the NlMA A unit l«Olld seeded. Twelve gan><• will bo plJyed today with eight teams 1UTVivinJ td Saturday's action. The number wUI bo Clll to four for Sunday'a flnalJ. DAILY rILOT J 5 Angels, LA Gang Up-en Te xas Teams ' Osteen Uses New Ta cti cs; Beats Astros HOUSTON (AP) -Loa Angeles pitcher Claude Osteen had a b e t t e r idea Thursday night -and then capitalized on It for an important "3 victory over the Houston Astros. "As many years as I've pitched against these guys, they know me so well," Os- teen said following his llth victory. "I felt this might be the time to change a little bit. "I just changed my tactics. l 'm not going to ·say what it is. But I did throw Dodge r • Slate All ·-•~ Kil'I (Mtl JulY ?I Dod"'• .f Housion July 2' Dodier• It MOUllGn J uly lO Dodt•t 11 Al!;;t1l1 l:t5 p.m, :55 "·'"· 10:31t •m. Julv ll Dod~er1 1t flll'l1nt1 J t.m, more breaking balls and less fast-ball1 than any time th is year." The Astros, who are feeling the heat of the Dodgers pulling up on them from third pla ce, helped their own defeat with three errors, making four of LA's si x runs unearned. Wes Parker's sacrifice Oy and Larry Howard's passed ball let Willie Davis score two runs. Three more came in the seventh inning. Osteen delivered ~he final blow in the ninth with a home run to top his seven·hitter. Houston's Cesa r Cedeno drew Ost.een's praise for his 14th homer of the season in the eighth inning. "He hit a slider • . . inside," Osteen said. "Which shows you v.•hat a tremen- dous ball player that kid is. He's got great talent." Cedeno, who lifted his league-leading average to .358 , also popped Osteen for a run-scoring single in the third inning. Osteen's homer came off J im York. "Somebody told me it was the eighth of my career,'' the 33-year-old Osteen said. L" Anttl" UI H..,1hlll Ill .. ' ' .. , .. '"'' L1cv. " ' • ' • Mtl191r, II ' ' ' • 1111(11:111•' ' ' , , ' Cid-, cl ' ' , , w .o.vr1, t i l , ' ' WY,.,., rt ' • • F.ll:oblm.cn, "1 J • ' ' York, p • • • W.Pttktr, lb I • • ' L.M1y, .. ' • ' ValtntlM, .lD ' • • • Wt!son, " ' • • Sims, c ' • • • ll:1Cler, " ' • • ll:uuall, u , ' • • H.i"'I, 7b ' • , 01!ttt1, • ' ' ' ' How.,·cr, c ' ' • ForKll, p ' • • J.ll:•v, P • • • Grlllln, p • • • J .... lw, rl ' • ' Totat1 " • • • To1111 " • ' LOS Al'lgfclt$ '" "' JOI -' "~"" '" .. DIO -J .. " • .. .. JO °''-IW,11·1) • ' ' ' ' l ForKll l ' ' ' • ' J .ll:ty tL,.._..) ).J/l , ' • • ' Grlttl11 1·111 ' • • • ' York ' ' ' ' ' • w• 011-. .. -Howtrcr, ,,_ -2:,1. Allendlntt -22,031. Yancey Warns GoH Leaders; Palmer Fifth LIGONIER, Pa. (AP ) -Vetera ns Tommy Aaron and Charles Coody had the lead. Arnold Palmer had a satisfied look and Bert Yancey had a warning going into today's second round in the $200,000 Professional Golfers Associatlon national team championship. "If we played that good with 1 double bogey, I think we're going to rip it up,'' Yancey said after he and partner Tom Weiskopf posted an eight-under-par 63 - despite a double bogey 8 -in Thursday'• fi rst round. Aaron, a drawling veteran of 12 years on the pro tour, and Coody, a former Masters champion now in bis 10th season, blended their ta lents 1lmost perfectly for a leading 62 in the opening round of this 72-hole competition in which scoring is based on the better ball of each two-man team. "He did fine, just fine,'' Paimer said of bis partner after he and Jack Lewis, an obscure 25-year-old who went to Wake Forest on an Arnold Palmer scholarship, had posted a 66. five under par. They were among the 10 teams tied for fifth and very much in contention. Outsiders Steve Oppe:rmann a n d teaching pro Chuck Rotar took th ird with a late-finishing 64 while Alaba ma neighbors Hubert Green and Mac McLen- don were alone at 65. • Among the big bunch tied with Palmer and Lewis at 66 were brother~ Dave and Mike Hill and the uncle-nephew team of Sam and J, C. Snead. Former champions Bobby Nichols and George Archer, along with South African Gary Pla yer and Bob Rosl>w1 wOH In 1110ther large group al 61. .. Uf'I Ttl••l>•ll THE DODGERS' DUKE SIMS BLOCKS OUT HOUSTON 'S TOMMY HELMS' SCORING ATTEMPT THURSDAY. THE ANGELS' NOLAN RYAN GOT HIS 6TH SHUTOUT THURSDAY. I Couldn't Hit a Lick, Says Laver After Loss LOUISVILLE (AP) -Nikki Pilic defeated Rod Laver in straight sets Thursday tn gain the quarter-finals of the ~.000 Pro Classic at Louisville. The tall Yugoslav stormed back from a 5-3 deficit to win the first sel 7-6, and pocketed three straight games in the sec· ond set to a final &-3 win . ''Nikki hit some good points,'' said the 33-year-old Laver, "but he didn't ha ve· tn do it very often because l simply couldn 't keep the ball in the court." Laver has now been eliminated in the early rounds o( bis last four tournament outings. 1'1 couldn't hit a lick," the Corona del Mar resident said after his defeat. "It got so bad al times that I couldn 't have hit the hall If I'd been using the top of a trash can." Pilic was lo meet Britain's Mark Cox in a quarterfinals ma tch today. The other quarters pit top-seeded John Newcombe a~;iinst Marty Riessen, Tony Roche against Arthur Ashe, and Cliff D'rysdale against defending champion Tom Okker. Cox defeated Clirr Richey 6-7, 6-3, 6-3 Thursday, while Drysdale bested Ismail El Sha!ei 6..:1, 6-4 and Okker downed John Alexander 7~, 2~. and 6-3. We We re Dtill, Says Prothro After Sc ru1n LONG BEACJI ~A P 1 -'l'he IJen \·er Broncos ''bcal" the Los An~eles Rams 2· 1 in a se ven-agHinst-seven passing scri m- mage Thursday th l'lt pleas ed nei ther of Qle National Foot ba.U-_League teams coeches. ' The BrQncos and Hams had ne\•er seen each other. either in league play, ex- hibitions or scrin1mages and co.aches had thought it would provide an oppr>rtun11y to see their people in action agai nst a new roe . Jerry Rhon1e or the Rams was the fif· rensive leader, co111pleling 12 or 22 passes for 208 yards. Rookie Jfi hn \Vallon hit on JO of 25 for 138 yards and fornH~r Rutgers star Mike Yancheff connected on 7 of IS for 163 yards and one touchdown -to rookie Joe Sweet. For the Broncs, Don l lorn hi! on fi of Ui for 87 yards and one intcr1·cpt ion ; Steve Ram sey hit on 8 of 16 for 165 with !wo in- terceptions and 8 touchdown : rookie Mike Ernst 5 of 11 for 61 yards and ::in in- terce ption and John Stofa 10 of 14 for 150 plus a score. Eight-year veteran wide receiver .Jerry Simmons and second-year pro Dwight Harrison caught the Denver touchdowns, Harrison's going 75 yards. Sweet caught just two passes, one of them 75 yards and the score. "I can't rate the quarterbacks off this performance," said Denver coach John Ralston. J~e did say he fell the Bronoo5 showed lack of depth at defensive back. Rams coach Tommy Prothro said he was "displeased ; we were dull both ways. We didn't complete the passes we should ha ve or break them up on defense the way we can. "We played tired but they're pros and the y're supposed to pla y when they're tired ." Prothro praised the play of Bob Klein, a tig ht end who caught only 14 passes all last year. "•!e's getting open better this year," said Prothro. The teams were fighting JOO-degree temperatures end when the scrimmage w~s over, Prothro kept the Rams on the field for an extra 20 minutes. * * * Fund for Lund y Head coach Harland Svare of the San Diego Chargers says members or the Chargers , Rams and the Cowboys are contributing to a fund to ald fo rmer Chargers assistant coach Lamar Lundy, who is stricken with a r a r e neuromuscular disease. Sva re announced Thu rsday that each Chargers player ls contributi ng one week 's per diem to the fund and that the San Die~o coaches also plan to chip in. "It will come to around $6 ,000 whlch the Chargers, in the person or Gtne Klein, are matching," Svare aaid. Cowboys~ All-stars Clash Tonight CHICAGO (AP) -Nebrask1'1 Bob Deviney will try to conjure his Comhuaker coaching magic, which pro- duced two 1traighL national collegiate tlUes against the heavily-favored Dallas Cowboys in tbo 39\b All-sta r football game tonight. The National Football Ltagu• ch•m- plon Cowboys, making their first atart since the.Ir 24--3 Super Bowl conquest o[ the: Mjaml Dolphins, ire rated almoat 1 three-touchdown favorite in the Soldier Field contest. Devaney, fint coll•I• head COAch to direcl tbe AU .. tars 1lnce t!IM. hu a spirited coUepate squad, bulwarked with biJ entlrt llornhuaker coacblnc 111rr and a flock of 1971 Nebraska stars, headed by starting quarterback Jerry Tagge. For the past three weeks, Devaney has conducted a ~nonsense camp at 011 T V To11lght Channel 7 a t 6 :30 Northwestern 11nd direc\ed his band-pick· cd iquad to impressive gamt-type acrlm· mage victories over the Chicago Bears and st. Louis cardinals. Coach Tom Landry of the RQl!<r Stoubach-led Cowbo)'I Is wary about the fact Devaney has not only one. but two of his own Cornbuller quuterbacu -In· cludlng Van Brownson 11s Tagge's backup - to run his Nebraska l·formation. "That's the big advantage ol this All· star team," said Landry, adding the 17 ~­ Po lnt Cowboy favoritism was typical Jn thill series in which the pros have won eight slraight,jn~ludlng last year's 24~17 triumph by the Baltimore Goll.9, and hold a 27-9·2 record. "The pros should be favorites, bot this should be an inter,stlng game.'' said L8nd ry. whose altack wlll bombard the All·stara with Sfau~ch's passjng to such isklllcd receivers as Bob Ht1yes and Lance Alworth, ond the running of Duane ThomH, cat Hill and Walt Garrillon. O.vaney'1 oUenae has been sharp In praclice, fealurlng the passing of Tagge, Van Brown and Hcisman Trophy winner Pat Sullivan o( Auburn to such receivers RS Mike Sianl of VIiianova and Glenn Doughty or Michigan , plus the runnln& or Penn State's Lydell Mitchell aod !o""ranco Harris ; Bob Newhouse oC Houston and Jim Bertelsen of Texas. llowevcr, Injuries weakened the All· ttar defense:, espcci11\ly the \039 of ends Wailt Patul~ki of Notre Dame 11nd Herb 'Orvis of Colorado. and seeondary aCe Claren~ Ellis or Notrt Dame. The All·stora ' lost Lrlumph w11 In 1963 when Olio Graham'• colleg l 1n1 mea1urtd the Green Bay Packtn. io-11. Ri ce Confid ent No-hitter Will Come to Ryan · There's oothing like jinxing 1 pitcher. ''One of these dllys , Nolan Ry an ta 1oln1 to pitch a no-hiller .. , maybe more than one. And he's going to nirt with a 1oti of others." said California manager Dd Rice Thursday night. Ryan did somr serious romanclng ag:<11nst the Texas Rangers, eomlhg \\'1thin rour outs of instant acclam1Uon \\'hen La rry Biittner's two-oul dooble in the eighth inning ru111ed hii; no·hil bid. nyan settled for a '"'o-hit, 14-...'ltrikeout. A 119eb Slnle All GNnt1 •• KCM'° (tltl Julv 111 "'1'>11'1' v1. 11••• Jul't' 1"I ,1.ncr@" vt. T••t • J~•Y XI ... na~ll v1. i(An•A< (>!¥ July Jl Al'Q~I• YI. k An••• (o!v 5-o \'ittory over the Ran gers. 1 u ··"'· j u • "'· ju ."'· t !l •. ITI, Aflt•r his near miss, the pitcher who has become the talk cf the American Lc;iguc discussed how it was and what n1 ig:ht h:.ive been . .., "For the first tln1e in rny life, 1 felt t had a shot," Ryan said. "I've never gone this fa r before without allowing R hit.•• The 11.,.0-hit tcr was !he fou rth of his career and second or the season. He also 0"'ns ;t ·one-hiller this year end hl1 record is 12-3. Al Anaheim, Rylln Is 9.3 "'it h an e.r.a . of 0.89 and 114 strikeouts .. Ryan's shutout was his 1ixth of the season. tops in the American League and his 14 strikeouts ran his seasonal totaJ·tO 170. tops in the AL. "This was a big gRrne for me," Ryan s::iid. "I 'd lost three in a row and It wu about thi~ time last year that t fell apart with the Mets. I didn't want to havt another relapse. l've never been a aecond half pitc her but I want to prove to myself lh <i t I can be." 1'hc Angels and [\angers continue lhelr se ries tonight when Clyde Wrighl. 11·5, goes against Texas' Pete Broberg. $-8. Of the ~It that spoiled his no-hit 11spira· lions. Ryan said. "I can 't second gueu myself . I threw it how I wanted to and where I ·wanted to. It was 11 fastblll outside and he just beat me, that's aJl.11 The other Ranger hit cam' in the ninth -"' two-out single by infielder Jiin Mason . "If I can stay healthy I think I've got a good shot." he said. "It would be a .shame to .get close -llke win II or 19 and lhen mi.as. Thet wouJd be very disap- poinling," Ryan also contributed to the Angels of· fense, delivering a run-acorfng double in the seventh Jnnln1. But by then the only· drama remainini wa1 beln& provided b1. Ryan. The outcome wu already seal~.··. Ttx11 l•I ... , .. ,., CtlllenWt Ct) O.N•l10l'I, lb 4 t e t Alol'Mr, !II Lavina. cl 2 t O t Ctrdtf\111, 11 •II r 11 r bl • 0 0 0 1 I 2 o 5 I t 0 1 1 I 0 J 0 l I ' 0 1 I • I I I BUlln•r, lb 2 0 I I 11'.lll(:e, r1 81Ulrios, If • o I o 11.0llv•r, lb Ford, rf ) O O O McMutlfl\, Jb F11>1y, r; l O O O "••I ···, If M••on. u • o I o lltrry, ~I Harrlt, 2tt J O O O St~-. SIM>l>olist, 11 0 0 0 0 N.ltY•"• p F.Howtrc:I, pl! I D I O P1ul,11 1 0 00 D.J°""--" 1 O O I GoQol1W1kl, 11 I 0 0 0 Aql111d, 2tt r O O I c 1 8 I I • 0 ' 1 To1111 l'f o 2 o Tot•~ 15 J 11 J Tt•ll (1(11 000 l)Oll -O C•tllornl1 XII 010 10. -J E -l llllrw;r1 J. D" -Te•11 I, LOI -T011U1 1, c111tor111t n . 211 -111rrv, N. llv•"· l ltttnff'. sa -LOYltlo, Aloin.or, ltrry If' H • •II: II SO P•ul (L,J.ll • ' I 1 l I Ctogoltwt-1 J.J11 • 1 J I I Sta~t J.J/J I O I t t •·•1•" IW.11 .. l t 1 ft o I 11 H f' -by (,.oool~w1~I {S11Dl>tf\lOIO ) Wflt -N. lllyan I , Tlint -J:JI. Allend•nt• -1,nJ.. Loper.1.: Scores Win Over Goto In Tough Bout LOS ANGELES (AP) -Danny "Llttlt Red" Lopez, 121 Y,, Los Angeles, ran ln· lo his toughest opposition Thursday night but retained his fantastic unbeaten string wiU'I an eighth round knockout over Yoshi Nobu Goto at the Olympic Auditorium. Goto, 1U '4, or Tokyo, pe ppered Lopes with high arching rigtlt counter punchts lo keep the world's sixth ranked featherweight ofr balanCe. But Lopei was in command from the second round. He wasn't qulte ready for lhe ag• gressive. free-swinging tactics of Goto1 a m11sler at covering up. Lopez hit Goto three times ror each punch he look but was ahead only •2 v.·hen Goto was forced to quit becaw;e of a hand inju ry. Goto used both hands to protect hJ1 face, bent low at the waist as he COJt• stantly advanced on the stronger Lope:z. Each time the Los Angele.a fighter would land three or rour blows, the Japanese would rip home an overhand right. "He surprised me with that," 11id Lopez. "He didn 't hurt me with it but he surprised me." Danny thought he had Golo floored In th<! second round whtn a vicious ltrt.. right combination sent the Invader dan- cing acrcm the ring. Lopez relaxed for just a second as Gotn whirled quickly, kept his balance and la&hed home a1 brutal right. :" "! thougbt h~ wu down," nld Lopell ''lt was my ioughtest fi•ht to far. H1'1 ~ d11licult guy to tiaht -be 11Jy1 low an4 · moves well... ~: Lopez wants a shot 1t one at the twe recognized .world featherweight UU. holders -Clemtnle Slnc:he1 ol Mes.loe or Antonio Gomei of Vt.neiutl1 .. But U.. ZO.y<ar-old par\ Ute lndlJn, brotber o( Emit "'Indian Red" Lope<, reallies .,... YDWll and n..U ...... lnl. : . .. . r----, JI Nil Y "LOT Not All ls Lost for North Despiw 42"'.0 Loss to South l y llOGER CARLSON ., .... Otlf'r "" '''" LOS ANGELES -Things aren•t enUr<ly hopoleu for North<m ca!Jlornla football 1... d<tpit• the humlllalln1 0:0 lou to the South Thursday nl&ht It Memori•I C.llseum. ODO &ood reason la the fact thlt a 10lid core of those who · • dellt out punishment In the 21st annual Shrine Nortb-South &ame will be donnJne Yanlcee c•rb In the fall. &mset' League and Orange Cout repmentatlvea Terry Albritton of Newport Harbor and Wettmlnaltr High'• Jell lii<meJll will be at Stanford wlulo anothor lop tandem - Banning Htib't Vince Yor- ragamo and Steve Rivera IN beaded for C:.I. lt WU the latter pair that e~lod..i with •lUnninc regularity Tbunday before 32,957 as Ferrq:amo tossed four touchdown pauu en route lo com_pl<line II of 11 attempts for. ~ yards - game recordJ in each caae. And Rivera was on the receiving end of nine throw1 for 18' yardt. plua a 311-yard acoring caltb from Bilhop Amit'• John Sciarra. Sciarra <aupt three of For- r11amo'1 TD 1trike1 dwina Sea Kings in Bm For Baseball Title lfarbor-Huotlngton B • I c h aummer leacue baseball ac- -tlon wrapa up tonl&bl as COrona del Mar 1oea for a championahlp cilnchina vic- tory at.Costa Mesa. Park. !.> The Sea Klnp of coach Tom Tracer draw the I o'cl~k ualgnment at Colla Mesa Part apllllt Com Meaa " fdJowinl the Newport Harbor- • Estaoda tlruicJ•. Should Newport be we- , ceaaful against Eslancla the " Corona del Mar test with Coat.a Meaa will decide the ti- Ue. ' 1 ~ ' i ' ' ... I f ' i I I 1 ! tJie maaac:re. Albritton and the rut of bis malel up front afforded ,.,.._ rapmo ample Ume lo locate hla tar1et and 1<1 aet from the outaet. The Newport offens iv e tackle went all tbt way at h!J post wbll~ Siemens did the aame dtfwivety at cor- oerback. But SWnena mlpt u well have atayod home con&idertn& what Uttle came bis way. l.J 1 defensive back Siemens failed to hive a 1ing)e enemy aerial penetrate his territory. The North waa completely dominated by t!ie R e b • t defmse to the extent that it waa out.lint downed, 29-1. In all tht North squad ac- counted for 24 ymil on th~ around and 33 through th• air. The Seutht munwhile, piled up 389 yardJ passing and 112 yard• ruMlng In the wholesale &laughter. Sciarra'• touchdown catches were for lie, seven and one yarda whUe Royal Oak's Mike Vici DO caught a 12-yarder. The other TD for the win- ners w11 a !~yard run by Barstow's Garland Evan!. The victory extends the South dominance of the aMual midsummer clusic to 13-5-3. Mercifully, the game was limited to 12-minute quarters, contrary to prior i.uues lasting 60 minutes. ·Score by Qaarten: south 3 20 o l~ North o O 0 0--0 Laemmle Can't Stop Falconer Laemmle got double flew'• 1COrine from all five llarttro, but it wun't enoup to oll1tt the bot shooting of Craig Falconer (21 l and WFE 11 the litter .topped Laemmle, 7Ma, Wedneaday nl&hl In Costa Mesa open 1ummu leaaue batiketball play 1t Orange Coast College. Zubies took Southern california College. 58-44, in the other clash, upping Its record to H while SCC dropped to 4- 5. Allen Young and Caaey Jones led Zubies with l& and 13 points while David Payne was SCC's top scorer with 10. l11mml• <:1 " ,., *" ; f i ?i If ' 11 ll Lu1a 17 l """*" i 1j0 i:I J ,, 11 ;: 42-31, Corona Edges. Huntington; Barons Roll Past Edison Unbeaten ~ del Mar eacaped •Ith a 5H7 vie!«)' over HWJtlniton Beach HIJh'a Oller1 Wednalday nl&hl for !11 lath alrai~t win when Bob Clark conliected on a pair of tree throws with two ltCODds left. Other actlon at Edison High ln lhe Huntington Beach sum- mer baaietball league found Fountain Valley'• Baro ·n 1 Mfttlllltflll IM•lt IJ'1 """" t-:t: ~1 1 : ll.1M'F: i O o ' i"''--· 0 ' 1'1 T::' '!I ' ••-JI,, c'r'!r.i't 17 l'!I sl CINM lltl Ml" ("~ ,, t, deralllnc Edilon, 52-40 . Huntington Beach'• J l lD Teel had tied things up at 67 with 1:30 left to set the 1tage for Clark'• last 1 econ d herolC!. The Corona Sea Kings of coach Tandy Ollila worked the clock down from that point and Clark went to the basket in the lut seconds. He missed his shot but was fooled and promptly sank both trle1. Coach Elmer Combs' Hunt- ington Hve had enjoyed 1 le.ad of nine points during the third quarter until Mar& Keeton found bimaell In foul trouble and wa1 forced to exit. Keeton's domination of tbe boards had kept Huntington atop Corona, a team that bad ~lied to a 35-point win the last time the two met. Casey Jones and J e f ( Wharton led CdM scoring with 17 and 16 while Joe Rabe ( 17 I and Bill Hanour ill) paced the Oiler1. Fountain Valley's D a n Malane led the Barons' acor· ing ledger with 14 wltile Ediso's Dirk Zirbel 111 1 wa~ the Ion< Charger In double figures. ~ .li ' 1 l~ &!~1r.'". I , 1~ ¥Wi=· Ji!' Alamitos Results Ttt1t1 13 It ~ (dM ·-~ .,,~ • H11111111rtlll'I 11 20 . 11 l~ •llllM!t l~~ " ,, ,, ~~r.· } ; i lf =~~II' f 1 l ' ;ii,.~,., , I l ~~~.,,k& l e : .,• Tet1l1 11 lf n '1vt1l•llt V1Hr rn .. " ltf ,, Mlltne , j , " i: ::·;: I } 1i ~· J'l.1 "°''"' I i , ?:'1'l:frntr I 'l J~ Elfltan kin ~ Gulrtl~ 11 -40 1"11!, Veit.)< ' i II 20--"2 Tfllll'td11, Jllll1 !1. !ml c1ur & '••• .. lllT IACI -«ICI 'l'lrd•, t Ytl r oliu . Cl11mlnt. ~urM lltoo. SC1nl Of Llmt (Ad1lr) I .AO 4.20 J.00 Go Llthl ICra111'1) 4.00 J.00 Hlfh Gron U1111911f1J J.111 lrnt -20.12. ,,., IQ'lltht$. u ax1ct1 1 -Scent ot Llrnt a 4 - Gt Lllllt• ''" IH.tl, llCDHD 11.Atl -di y1rd1. J VH r old•. Cltl"'lr>O. ~urll U!OO. Tie Vino C81nk•) '"° A.AO 2.60 Judy'I LIMI ( 'trntr) 4.«I J.OD Wtllwllhtr C P•) 2.llO Tt1111 -20.,J Ho Kr1lcht1, TH llD aAtl -«1C1 y1rd1. ! yMr ald1. Cll ll'nlf19. l'UrM S1t00. Lucky Slltlat (Ll~m) 1.60 '·'° l.Oll Mustangs, Tars Fall In Foothill League l1rNr1 Llntll'$ ( 1(111~1t1) Chic ,,. Ga (Wllto11J Tlmt -20.•1. No tcr1ltfttt, POU•TH •ACI -110 y1rd1 3 y11r old• & uo. Cl1lmlrt0. Pur•• '2200 TDCJ E19l1 (l 111ktl 6.60 3.90 3.20 l(lr>0'1 ll.1•tu1 (11.lc~••ds) 6.20 3.90 Ont AIM! ()Illy (Wr)fhll J.IO Tlmt -4'.2'. AIMI r1n -Sllorl '1;oc:lr.t t, F1;!1 MllOll Min, W11th EU, Lugll, Turt 1<1111. No &e:r1tcM1. 1=1nH •ACI -GI Yard•. ! .,. ••• aids. Ct1lmlrt0. OurH S2100. Mr. SI~ (SMlln) 3.IO ).llO 1611 Hugt Tl11r ICroatry) 16.!0 l .111 M1g9110•1 Mike (ll.ltl'lt rd$) 3.20 Tl--20.lA. Nt &e:r1tchel. SIXTH aACI -GI y1rcll ! yu r a1!11 & ~. Cl1lmtr>0. Pun .. 51IOCI. Tiii a1mio l=or Lundy. M r , P1 rr ll u11 t r (Cl'Ol!lvl 3'.00 11.llO '.JG l'nt EtrlY Cltlc11.trd1) 11.00 7 2C Hutfllr>O a,,.,. (VI UOIVI) I 20 Tlntt -20.,J. SCr1 tcl'lld -Tlmt To F"•· 1J l xtclt I -Mr.~,,,. l'fll•r & 1 - I'm ler!y, ,.111 uni.If. Newport 11 10-5 while Corona del Mar ii llH. Coach Dtnnl> S m I t h ' 1 ., Newport nine edged lo within one hall game of CdM with an Mi win over Edieon Wed- netday a! the latltr'I field Ct1!1 Me .. ft) •• , .. "'4 I I I I l i ' ! , I , i Diablos Cap Unbeaten Summer Loop Season llVINTH ll:ACI -110 yards, J Co1ta Mesa and Newport Newport en)O· yed a rune-point Y••• 01d1 & IJP. A1tcrw111ct. P11r11 ,1'00. Harbor •tumbled In Footbill D•~· M111c !Hero 10.20 6.00 3,., advantage after one quarter un c~ar,. «W•llllfl1 6.20 3.10 High summer le.ague basket-before Foothill 's press turned s11111 ll.IY1t win 1up111m1 2 . ..0 ball at action Wednesday night things around. ~~c~ .o.~_. 11.99r•t1, c~m •••, as Santiago and Foothill G111trlna, coun ACTIOfl. ed t uch t h di C11I• M-14') prOV 00 m 0 M e . _ ft ff ,, II llOHTH llACI -3~ v1rtH. 3 Yfl' Santia1ro's donu'nali"on of the sw1111 1 1 1 1 olds & up, c1eu 1n1e1 Allaw1nce. Pu•w • ~eeabs I a 0 2 \7llOll. TM MtClonnlll Daugl11 Spec:l1!. • wit!i the aid of an eight-nm stanu. ! i •' " . · f t · 'd " k to boards paid off with a 53-46 umrnl111 s t o 1121 J1 t'1 Ltd'I' lu c k SlX· 00 range Ul.51 e u1e ey Hr ' a 01 fAUllOll) J.IO 2.IO 1 . ..0 turnbackSanClemente. triumph over Mesa's M""""l:t'"' t o l 11 1111ttrfP•rrie•l 360 2.10 Coach Pal Robert5' chaJnnt Mustangs, while Foothill han-~•I• 22 i J Rocky a1ech H1nk (P1111 '·'° Alamitos Racing Entries ,OUllTH llACR -3$0 verdt. J v••r oldJ. All-1nc•. PUrtl l !KIO, l'IY'a Jay ((, Ptr~er ) llP Ru11"l labb¥ 11.un {II., ll1nk1) 117 Al OUt (1. Ll!)ll•m[ 'I' Trlcl1 Truckl' (0. 1rc1o11J 11,.1 5Mld 5<1nt [J . Ot'1y1rl Air !.haw ro. K"lal'l!l 11A R1lonlno Sl•r fl(, H1rtl 117 For M1 Only \0. AJll1(1nl 1J1 Miu Llmlh I • Smllll) I 1 OUM'I Nin•• H. CrOlbY) ,,, ,,,TH llACI -170 y1rd1, J . YMr aid• & uo. Cl1lmlltQ. ,ur11 UAlll. Cl1lm!1111 pf1~1 lfOOO, Mol~M ID. l(nlaM) o-M!ull• re. s ... 11111 81 !,ur1 Kid (1. Llpt11ml Poc:t> !.•"'"'"' SKO ro. Alli.on) Wl r Ptl~ll (j. 1(111t1) HIYlkll (II.. Ad1t~) Flrtv Grind (II., 11111k\\ l=a•v "''rt e (J. W1b011 SIXTH llACI -400 "''°"· ol!h. All-•llC•. C1Hr-11tld. ,,, ... Slr Olt '"°""' UI. Ad!''' R11t11• 0Uro II (0 . All lOll1 JO'flM Fey 1\-Put,.,,.•) 11.,,.,.,1 Go Go [, 1'"11~1 11.av11 su,,... 81• O. l(~lah'I I'm N&t SfffpY 4 O. C1rdot1 llrothtrcuakt (I(. H1rl) Va!1•1 IJ. W1ti.an) P11dcl1 Lin (T. LID111m1 Rock tl Mine CJ. RkM•dl) I~ 117 lff HJ 'I' ,, ,,, :n ,,, ,,, ,,, "' lf-1 ,., Other r<sulia Included Costa .._,I U decision over Eaitancla aDdR u n t I n&to n V1Uey Sportlnc Goodl (Foun- tain ·Valley) downed Huntinc· ton Harbour, M. ' ... I I Mission Viejo's Di ab 1o11 capped an undefeated 1ummer league basketball sea.son with a 57-49 conq uest of San Clemtnte Wednesday night in the Laguna Beach t.oumey finals behind the combination of Mike Bowen and Gil Normand ie. ~ died N • · T Stert iw QNrten Time -11.02. rolled to a 34-13 halftime lead ewport I &Tl with a cwt, Mtu ,l 'l n 1o--41 Sc•1tcflld -Ho 11.n1r11n1, c11111d'1 ind coasted. tough press and won , 46-41. 1'"'"'° H••-' ~4n1 14 1-.u o i rt. 01~1111IH !~'~111 ... 1~ vJ~t 1J1,f. Danny Nau scored 19 for Mesa's Rick Browning and ct ft H " '' NINTH •Ac1 -.oo Y••ds. 1 Y••' i'1~ r;;: F-~~f.m· 117 i I And Sa tall'ed do ~!. 3 .5 A 11 Didi a. 1111. Cl1lmlrt0. ,\Irle i1110tl San Clemente, but it was Dana y ger I • un "'.--• ' o o • iuo eoi.c~ .. ta.nu> 3llO 3.lll 2..0 Llonin11111 a1a ic. 5..,11~1 'ff b hii J bn '•.•,,•~... 0 l I 1 De Judoe IJ W1rd\ 1 I Hills' Mark Eti·enholm who eac w e mate o CUm-! ! •' 1111 ~ CLIOl'l•ml •.IO 1111 Lr111• Ole-en tJ. w 111011) 1 Ina ed f~kmwer J ~-· Jr. flolle) 2 to A'ftf/¥ Go IJ. w1111111 ) ''! was high point producer of the m acor 11. '"?:fit"' 1 o 1 T1,... -20.JO F11t1Mr (O. c1•11ai•l 11 evening Newport'• Brian Cokas was •I• lcert "' ou!~,,1' t A scrttclltd -•••m0105 ll1r ti, l~~'r,1cc(~ru~nlB",1<n111111 llJ Westminster Posts 14-4 ' i In other action It was Oceanside taking L a g u n a Beach, 73-51, for third place; UnJversity l!I weep i ng by Mlsaion Viejo's No. 2 team, 63- 47, for fifth place: and the No. 2 team of Laguna Beach earn- ing Its first win of the cam- paign with a 78-!!9 triumph over Dana Hills. El . ho. 1 1 111 d in double fi 1n1N• with 11 HIWICM"I 'l A , 1f.--A1 " ... ,," t -11t certct"' ' 1 -11111·, 11.1au.,1 1T Lll)ll•m 11, Jen m a e 27 .. -~ • 1=oo111111 20 10 1)..-46 ••• s"', 111M ...s.•. M• st11dY u. M•'•""''' 111 counter• on • dozen field goals 1------''------....:=:::_ ___ ....:...::...::...:::=._:.::.::.:.:.:::...:..:..=.:_ ____ _::::_::::::..c::..:::::.::::::_ __ ~ .. Triumph .WeStmJnster advanced to the 1e~ond round of the ¥aheini InvttaUnnal baseball tournament ln A m e r I c a n Leg~ circlet Wednesday with a .14-4 triumph over Long Beach Peler90n in a &LI-inning atint at La PaJma Stadium . The winnen banged out nine hlta including Bob Hale'• dou- ble In deairoylng the Peterson nine. W•lml11tl1t 1141 ""• ,..,..,., 29 '1' 1. .... .,. lb 9 §!'i•i.f,li!,~·\. ! ! Mh1rdl, lD l ... T::::;, it J 1' Mf ll, I ""M • Tat1l1 . " ,. kart.,.. 1111111111 , ... 1 g ! l ! ! ' ' 1 ! • • ' ' Wt1lml111ter LI ""'"'°"' ' ' I 305 G60-I 4 • 0013QO.-•l• Fish Report DAMA WHAi, -2111 lfltltt'\: 112 c1lleo INU, W lllrr1cud1. I l'lt 11bul, t rock did, '42 m11:1r.....i. HUHTllUSTON II.I.CH -SS 1nol1ni, J05 ••I'd 1:11 .. , 2 lllrr1eudl, I 1'111!Bo111, 2 ll'llCktrtt. HIWl'DIT fArf'I L11tdl11t} -142 111ol1tS: 1" blu. t lllrr1cud1, 1 bel'llt&, f.5 rock COii, l l'l1Ulwl, I m1clr.1rt1. ID1w1•1 LKk1r) -lit 1no1er1: 23 1Mrr1cudt . 2 bal'llla. 1,JIJ 11111, I y1UoWl•lt, 36 rock cod, 3 Mll9ut, 100 mtc-tr•I. Bowen hit for 18 point! from his corner post while Nonnan- die did his damage from the Lltlun• l11cll Ne. 2 frtl """ .. I . McM1nus 1 O 2 1~ s. M<Ml l'lllt 4 l 1 ,, GNt1 4 A 1! A1'lltrto11 4 2 Wr!t l'lf l 8 1 ' =·~I fjj1l ~':,bJ: 3~ 1 ,. D1111 HHl1 ~ff) ft ,, 1, Etl..-l!flhn 12 3 l 21 ~:~':r ~ ' f 11 l(oc:I ' I ' • ~:r 1 ,:r Tt_tl•m 8 ! 1 O T~1I• 24 1 1J J9 Sc-.,, O\llrlt,, 01111 Hiil• t It 11 ls-59 lltlllll IHCh N&. 2 11 15 12 13-1' lllUlll IN Chit (J1 It ,. tf ~:mtr.ria"" J g ~ ' t 1r1no 1 o I i k~=h ,i 1' ' Allderten l! 1(~~1ts 2l ii 5f Sctrt IW Q111'11t1 OCH nlldl lA 12 1A /,>-!', Lttunt lt 2 11 ~ and three gratis shot!. Troy transfer Tom Ander90n • (6-5) led the La(una Beach No. 2 trJumph with 17 pointa. Unl.,.nltl' ~I " tf tp Witt '''" ~:ll•l'I J!l' ~'"" 0 l ]'' H1ncec:k I 0 O•Vl1 I l Ttt1l1 %l' 1 ,, MhtJlll Vlt ll H~ t 'i;7l ,, It L.o:Jer Theln11 Hlllf Y NtVfllld H1,...l1· TIMlll i 2 i ,, ! ! l I lf 11 27 " Scett ~ 0Nr11n tJn1v.,1lty t 15 11 Jl~ MV N&. 2 fl !1 10 1µ7 S111 Cl1m111t9 Utl """., Niu t l 41t '"" 1 1 •• ~=~., & J I ..,,_ 1 ' l l'enmtl'I 0 9 Olrttl'I A 0 S!~'"a 0 1 ,, 0 "'' Mkllon v11re~n1; ,, : ~::~'· ~ j lt :1 l':~n ~s r Wll kl11tal'I 0 0 ! l !11ck1r 1 o •ton 0 0 M1111r 1 j <> Talll1 , ll 1 21 S1 seer• iw Q111rr...1 !.I n Clem.,,11 f 1 11 ,,__.., MIHlon V!•la ' 11 11 11-57 Baseball Standings DEAN LEWIS NATIONAL LEAGUE Ptttsbur1h New York St. Lows Cbicagd Montreal Pbi11delphia East Dfvl•Joa W L Pct. 56 54 .122 50 39 .562 18 43 .517 47 45 .511 40 18 .435 32 58 .356 .629 GB 51\ 91\ 10 15 24 Clllclnnati Houston I>Qd1er1 Atlanta West Dtv11lon 56 33 51 12 18 42 San FranciSC() San Diego 42 49 41 52 3.1 57 .548 7 .533 II\ .4S2 15 .411 17 .367 11>.\ Tllunilll..,.1 ••.ulh Clnclnn1tl I, itn O!-.ci t 11. L.ovfl •• Mel'llrtll ' 'Cfllcne 14, P'fllltdtll,..11 w "" ....... ,, Hau1!all 1 HfW"Yortl 1-J, ~lltS9uf'lh 0.1, lit ,.,.,.. 10 ...,_ &ti'\ l'rtnclM:O et .a.1111111, rt ln Tlllt'l''I GlflMt (lllUtie (~ttM• M l •I l'hllde!Jlil!I (C•r"°" , ... , lt1 (.will (WlM 111-10) 11 MtllWMI (SIOM1111n •n Ntw YMt (SI._ 11,7) t t ~ltttbufw~ !l l•h .. , f<'"' ,.rlftldkft fl t"I'•"' t-A 111111 11,,. W ) 11 ._,.... (Nllllre· N tflCI Sdlulltr )..41 SM Olelo (IC!rtl'I' •tll II CIMlftftlfl (Sll"l- &M'4~ IDowl'tlN Ml •I HOLll!Ofl fWllMlll "" AMERICAN LEAG UE Detroit &ltimOre Bo>tnn N@w York C1eveland Milwaukee , Oakland Chicago Mmnesota Kansas City Angels Texas East Division W L Pct. s.I 37 .S89 50 39 .562 45 12 .517 43 43 .SllO 37 51 .420 35 54 .393 Wett Division 57 35 !IO 42 45 43 45 46 It I! 37 54 .!20 .543 .511 .495 .Ill .407 Tl!vrN11r1 11e1111t1 tftw Yer\ ,, l•tto11 2 CltYfl l ... d A, l•llt""''°' 1 O!ICIM ,-4, 1(1nU11 Cltv t-3 Ottrolt W. MJlw1IJl(ff t•J 0.kltl'ld 4, M!Mewfl S c.11..,,.11 J, r u11 ll Tld1r1 01"'" GB 21\ 61\- 8 15 171\ 7 10 11 11 111\ U\\ ~IOI! (~t...,_ 1-l I~ SltlH:rt N J 11 NIW Yorti: (l(llnt f-4 told Sltlftlff'IVN IG-11 ), t Cttwllfld !W!lcex .. 11, ,, Mlllll'tuli.H (Lerltaftl ... , 1(1f1111 Cltv (Df11111 1·11) 11 CllltffO !l rldlt'I' , .. , M~I fWoed-._,) I t Olkl1!1d (Mttt1m111 ,,., Tu11 !I r.,.. .Hl 11 C1!11tn11 !Wrlt lll 11..JJ DEAN LEWIS lff6 HAUOI ILYD., COSTA MESA s.r.IM 1NI l'•rh fer All lmf'Ol'ttd Car1 Mo~1rn ledy Shop for All Cora 646-tJOJ Oz'lq9 C-tf• Llrpd llld Most Jo!Ddun Toyota and Vnl•o Dealer • 041 -DlllVIAY ll'ICIALllTS r ' . '72 TOYOTA COROLLA c+ T. & L.l OR. $39.30 MO. Full cub price $2,096.30 lnclUd· inJ tax &, license. Down payment li tour hu.ndttd dollars. $39.lO total monthly payment lncludln.1 interest. tax A license. $35 pa,y plua balloon payment of $800. TOW deterred pay price $:2,S~.50 A.P .JL 11 "° On pre-arran.ced cred.iL (300785). VOLVO "Dean Lewis" We lus• more Volvos in Orenge County than any other dHlershlp. EXAMl'L! SAVINGS: S8890 MO. l ' • OUR BEITER HALFCOSfA ~ -. . Lr ...... rff,E WEIGHT. •• And gained a lot of friends. The new Early Times Half Gallon bottle is now two pounds lighter. And stronger. Which makes it easier to carry, easier to handle. Easier to pour, too, becaWJe of its unique built-in pourer. What'• more, our Better Half is ea&er to buy becaWJe of a birger aavings on the bigger size. Early Times in the new, lighter half gallon bottle. Our Better Half thought you deserved a break. 'I ' %GAU.ON NOWIJlll Buyacase Save m ·more •• ' l • I I Ii I ' I I i . I I i I I I I • • ; . . • Market ·Drop Predicted Tough Prob"lems Seen 'No Matter Who W~1is E"lection' Chl1•H•11 te:ltl'Klt M•ltw tfNtc• NEW YORK -Even thl.o combination -rwlectlon or President Nixon, a buoyant economy, and filling unemployment w o o ' t ~necess.trily ensure a major "llock·market upswing after •Nov. 7. 'A Republican win wouJd probably ipark a market rally, according to Burnham & C.. But the brokerage f I r m ·believes tht Woll Street r .. · jolclng mlgnt fade when tht economic realities of 1973 begin to lake hold. "NO MATTER who gets i!lected," says Walter P. Stern, senior executive vice. president of Burnham & Co .• . one of Wall Street's leadlng in· 'sUtutionaJ research finns, the ·economlc, end regulatory en- Vitonment present some tough P.toblems for money managus. • A Republican victory may allay investor concern over a possible legislative aasault on tax 1helters1 a boost In cor· porate taJ"es, and steeper in- heritance levies. But a aoarlng federal deficit !or ftacal 1m appears i.nevltable, Burnam believes, and aome type of tax increase has become almost mandatory. Undu the Nixon .. admlniatr11tion, • value-added tax is conaldered the most likely typo to be 1ougbt. THOUGH PRICE controls are due to expire at the end of April , Burnhllm holds that In· vestors would be imprudent if they assumed C(lntr<>ls will be lifted, The political pressure for controls will persist, and probably intensify, according to Burnham . The firm ls rather pessimistic a.bout the ability ~f Nixon administration ecooomic policymakers to bat· len down the ln!lationary hatches beclluse, says Mr. Stern, hlt'a pretty much a structural problem .'' H e foreca.sll an upsurge In in- flBtion lrom today's just-under 4 percent to more than S per· cent by mld-t973. This doesn't bode well for those who hold interest-sensitive stocks such as utlllties and finance com- panies . A more restrictive monetary policy looms as another cloud on the horizon. This year, the Federal Reserve's generous money.growth targets were generally in Une with' Wall Street expeekttions. But in 1973 Burnham expects the Fed 's policies to be less palatable. to investors. Burnham ten·tatlvely foresees 1973 5fter-tu: COT· porate profits rising 11.perocnt -a good gain, but not as briak as .1972's developing 20 percent rise. ·Money's Wort_h ____ _ AS MIGHT BE expected, the restrained optimism about the 1973 economic outlook doesn't Imply any highly bu 11 i s h targets for the stock market. Rural Home Loan Between no w and November, Mr, Stern looks for a "trading market" hovering between 850 and J ,000 on the Dow Jones industrial average. "The m&rket would probe the top of this range later in the fall, if Mr. Nixon looked like a sure winner. A surprise McGovern triumph would be a "short-term disaster for the market," the former president of the Financial Analysts Federation says. .. Program Available By SYLVIA PORTER Perhaps you know -or perhaps you yourselves are - a family dreaming of a home ln our true rural areas. Perhaps at this time of sum~ mer, your yearning to get away from city or suburb! and .aet down your root! in real firin land becomes so acute )'mi can almost "taste" it. ' It \•ery well rould be. Did yOU know, then , that among the fastest growing categories ~ of federal help for home buyers is not the fa· m11.ll1r Fed- eral Housing Ad ministra· lion but the relatively un- fa mi 1 i a r 'OllTlll Home Ad- ministration's rural home Joan program? Al(E VOU AWA RE !hat. d.urlng the current 1973 f11Cal Year, tlll! "Rural FHA" wilf help build nearly 1~.000 houses and apartments and sink close to $2 .2 billion in rural housing? 11 Is so. The Rural FHA's bU'dget for building n e w hoines. buying existing homes. reoovation and reconstruction of .farm housing is more than {our times the '69 budget, only three years ago . Q. Who qualifies for the loans? A. You must be a low or moderate-income family now without decent, safe and sanitary lK>using. You must be unable to get loans from private lenders on terms and CODditions you can .. reagonably be expected to meet. You must, though, have sufficient income to make house payment.!!, pay ins u r an~ e premiums. taxes and main· teiiance. in addition to your regu)ar living elpC':nses. This FHA also makes rental housing loans to individuals, trust . associa~ions. partnerships, cooperatives and corporallon• -to b u 11 d 1partments or cooperative rental units for I o w • to • moderate income families or people over 62 years old. BORROWERS must b e unable to finance the housing projects from their porsonal resources or credit rrom ·olher IOUJ'ces. However, if ~a.rnµles cannot afford to meet .• tho basic mortgage payment.. tn- c1uding at least one percenl ~f the Interest. they are not ellgt• ble for Farmer11 Home loans. Q. Who decides w h o ' I ellgJble? ,A. The Farmers Home A<fmin!stratlon ~ o u n I Y supervisor. workfng with a 11\rM-member local county co'ounittef!. 1 q, Wbat's liken lnto con· 11i!1raUonl • ,).;,· Your family's enl\re financial 1ltu11ion. AppUcants must give a lull fina11<lal statement. and 1£ this slatt- menl indicate• ~ou could ac- q1dre housing with your own reaourcea, you_ would not be tliglblo !or Farmers Home Uslslanct. q. W!u\t's !be muim um you can borro'!'? • A. Alihough the Rural FHA W!dl lb finance modelt homes ill ~Ile and cost, the matlmum Joan would depend on your femlly llr.o and abUlty to ftpay. NaUonally, Ille averap ~ for a Farmors Homa IWllCld bou .. , bicludl111 tho lot. la •bout $11.IOO. The avvlJ• variea from &tale IO &tale, frOm a low of llJ,000 Jn " • Miui!sippi to Wisconsin and m.ooo 1n both Hawaii . 118,600 In more than Alaska and Q. WHICH TYPES of hous· ng are covered and which not? A. Rural FHA loan8 are made only t.o provide. families with safe, decent homes. Se- cond homea. resort cottages, summe.r dwellings may not be built or bought with FHA loam. nor may loans be used to build homes for speculation or for quick resale. Q. What about mob i 1 e homes'! A. This is being considered by Congress . Q, How do you apply for this ype of loan? A. You fill out a simple ap- plication form , available from FHA county supervisors in more than 1,750 offices across the country, including Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Under 1 new loan "packag· ing" program. members of the home .building trades prepare , the FHA applicetion f o r families ieeking loans and in· elude !n th.e package all the specifications on the .ai~ and cost of the home and lot. Q. WHAT ABOUT terms? A. The interest rate is cur- rently 7V. percent 11. year and the maximum repay m en t period is 33 years. In the case or extremely tow income families. the rate can be as little as one percent. Q. What abou~ waiting t.!me? A. Loans are usually ap- proved within weeks -with delays the result of inriotnplete applications. Th! program is being con· stanUy expanded and liberallz· ed. Fc>~ iNtance, the FHA may now make Joans In com- munities with as many as 10,000 people; bo:fore '71, the limit was 5,$00 population. Q. Are home Improvements covered? A. A homeowner who caMot qualify: for a regular rural housing loan fl'l•Y be able to get a repair loan or up to $1,500 to correct conditions en· dang9riflg. the family~• health and · safety. An aadltional $1.00il loan may be available !or plumbing, wator supply and waste disposal system11. These loans be•r one percent lnterei!lt, may be repaid over- 10 years -but are limited to very· poor families. BU RN HA M'S MIDYEAR market outlook emphasizes the dilemma investors face in deciding between · reasonably priced cyclical stocks and growth stocks whose &hare prices are a high multiple of earnings. The latter have been institutional favorites for many months, but big-money managen seem reluctant to part with them despite !iigns By RUDY CERNKOVIC Ul'I l 11tlMM Writer PITTSBURGH -The city's leadership in steel, aluminum, glass and other "hard" pro- duction is well known. It also rolls out the barrel on another product. beer. The Pittsburgh a r e a , because of the many mill towns, consumes a lot of beer. Orders for "boilennakers" (a shot of liquor with a beer) are traditional in taverns near miU11 and factories . FOR YEARS THE Pittsburgh Brewing ·eo., pro- ducer of Iron City Beer, has been a leading purveyor in the area. Sales surpassed more than a million barre.ls an· nually. But they're.down now. Iron City. which tried to mollify b I a c k consumer resentment, bas been caught in a white "blue collar'' backlash which cut profits more than half. Iron City's traditions] sales position had been reOected In dividends. In February1 1967, the board raised its share dividends from 11 ·to 15 certts and that bonus remained con- stant until it came time to determine the d i v i d e n d payable August 1 or this year. It was cut lo 10 cents. THE BREWER\"S report for the first six month!'! of t9n showed profits orr 50.8 percent and sales slumping 9.9 per· cent. Company officials at· lribuled the backsliding to the Jagging economy, lncreaAed wages and other costs with no 1(001~+-+-+--f--+--+--+--+--t--i--i-·1 ssor-+--+--+--+__,1-+-±.,..=.,,.i;.i . .,:.Ji!j - ~1--J'P.'-l:ik--t--t-""":". :::::::: :;:;:;: ::;-~:;: .;.-:;., '.~ l!: :~:::::: .~ . ~.: ::~:~::: ~~=~:~ ~:~:~~: ~:~:~:~ :)~:~~ ~:~:~:1: :~:~:i IRON CITY ALSO promi•ed to run the same number of ad· OAU.Y ,JI.OT Jf LZGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE IZGAL NOTICS ftCTniOUI' tu1lii111 ' Jf DAll.Y l'ILOT s OVER THE CO UN TER NASD Ll1ting1 for Thurtd1y, July 27, 197Z 1----------------------------------1~~~ ::: .r.c.....c1.,. .llO OTC lTOCKl Jwtv 11 1'11 •Mwtr tJ'" 64 K•I._ ti 11 ll't $t11lt M J•t • r. TtllMll C UV. Jl'V. tmtM~ ~ ..= ~l!Oftl ·~·'.1~ i''*-" 1111 ,,. )\Ii Ktl-"' 11\t lf\oii ¥9'1 1)1" Jn!. 1 T~ C• » ff .t,d l.11r. .tfd =ll~~"i.r;:; ~rol i~ Aro l.eu ,.. 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M .. 1 G11 'I" J.Slool fKlln'I ,. ,,, 15' z .... l•t>• ''" 114 Am,.,, '·" l..aW&Oft 1J he.id O[ j lS em St-ti 77 71 Mo 111.Kh Ill t:i.. felotl R1 :JI :Jf ..... lloris Urh ].l:i.. lJV. ACt"ltf 1\lo mwTt ,. ~· l''" Motil G~' Jill' ljt.i. Am Ctm fl 11 ;,. Oii R ' 'h MOltl.ll • , \.'> A C"M 1.1'4 aerospace o per a on 11 ... « v. 4V. Moo•• r 11\ Gni11ers 4 IAsers Am c ... ,,, ' N.-por\ 8 .. t h ·-• e l••where. fo.~co 4 y, n Moot1 11 711/o 14 AmCIS9 1.41) " anu ""' nilth R t\IJ t\11 ~rl1n JJ »'It AmCy•n 1\1; YPrfft 71'4 ,,,. Mol(h M s~ ''" AM Dl1l!ll l Edward L. Montgomery, •"' 1.,11 x~ H • Mo1oo; c 1 2~v, 1••i. New Vort IUP1J-Th• followln• 1111 Ao111r1 10d 1nfv M 11111 " 1'Wrd11 0 1\i 7\i thow. ll'lt 1tock11 tlwol h1.,,. ••In.cf ,,.. ~ Owtl .lid ~-, pres1'dent ·-• genera! 1r1 §::' n ::.. IU•••• c 11i., 11 1 .. 0u1 01 .a.ii l'~ &JIU tll l ,f; NII G\01 l}~ lJU. moU 1nd 011 ,,,_ mcnt based Ofl ,,_~..,I AmElt(: 1.14 r '""-, 11• !h: ""' NII llbll' 11111, ~'-" of cNntN Ofl ti.. 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UP 11.$ Am l"V .2Sd :Pbilco-Ford'a Aerospace and h•°" J • , '"' Nor1111• l,.., n"' 'cemll\lte .1}<1 !"" ~.. u11 111 A Med1<.1 .12 utel •t. J:l4 NoCr NG '°* lor.i ! Ce"rld l>r Ind j ~ UP 14.l A Mldlcor• ~·-··· Sy1t·-· o-ations ld1 ll"' ,._ Nwt 1;.... :W\'I 41.... ' SU"llln fl.cl S'.lo "' Ull jl.J AMtlC• 1.40 u.u.,._ ..,,.., Y-Jon• Iii 11\Z Nwt NIG llPt 10'lt 1 M..-rlt1 Ch ff.1 ~!t 'Iii UP J.3 A.MIC pf $\lo •t •~) ·~Oil JO l04i NO.SP Cm » 11\lr I F ... e Ceco In '~ "' UP lJ.J Amir Moto.-• tu.>''1\1 • t 9 lT :it~ NwPb $v 73'41 ]41-'o t Aiko Lind 0V 7111, '"" UP 1J.l AmNG1 1.)1) •• fft Will --· I S fUll•ll'mt "~" 0 11'-J1h NOiie!! CP jW, 'I"' 10 Wtt1111r Conti ~1 "' UP 10.4 Am St11 .n .,... • rl"'" 1J ll'h N.udr Re ~ v. II Air lndu1trle1 71"1 '4 UP 11·' Am5ftlp ,609 ·.-··'~·n1 to • -waon, w ho I• ((In l•b 3'114 ~14 §i~ Cllfl "'" 3' 11 MI Attoellll !~ '" u. .I A Sm11tt 1.10 -~ -V dtK $v1 j '~ Mn Or $1"' • 1114 1 lonochtmP'I l \'t+ ;iii UP f .7 AmS Atr ,1(1 '-~~ .. 1·· to ,.61-about the NEW FORD p I N\IUI 1 '!~ "l" Lt• fl!l'I ,,~ ll Midi~• lncorp !!'"'+ ,,.. UP ··i Am Slnd ·"° IM.OI~ t:\I U1 ~ I PISJ! 1 ...., l )\ 0.1 vv M 47Vt lllh U CSI Cmplr Sv ~ 'Ii Uo f . AmSldpf N 'end o f the yur a s Philco-F ord I!. L. Montgomer y mos Oii 1"' 7s1to l':l~ F1rrA ' ·~ It Ar111t P11rolm 1 ~+I Uo t .3 Am5ttrll ·'' ner11v c jh ~ O!IH r Co 1• 11\1 H It T Sv•••ma l t 14 Uo ,,, AmT&T ''° moves AOSO headquarters l"Vlrlc l ~ l''" Otvm1> e '~'"' 71 14 " Ptr!IC Cor1>ln t v, "' Uo 1.1 AmT& f pl ' ' ll\lllv 01 t'lt l"lo Om1h1 N '1 11'4 It C..,rurv l1b1 lN +J•.-U" I. Am f &T wt from New_,,. Beac h t O rlt: rec: 11 1l1oo1 ~" ltd J'\~ jl JO Ank•" lndu11 J'•J:.., u.. 11 AmW1tr .60 ,.,,.. year s ." so Ccim 10'6 1 OJI! Sein rn Olli 11 1Curn1Y Tr•ll: 11)14 \:'o u .. J.S AW!r,,. 1\4 ~Dearborn, Mich. . lhe" A d'A •Slool Ore PCm lJ\'o j' 2 Leisure DYnm 17'\ ~ UP l .l AWlr ol 1.•J Montgom-. 11 a 11'1'aduate ,,,•, c,~, t,)! ''-Ormo"' IJVo • n Electro '''" 4 + ... Uo '1 """"'°" .lS F 0 rd ' 1 loog~•tabli •hed _ _, •• ·-.,. 14'4 Otter T P n 7''~ '' Oi.,,.rJilr11<1 4 + "• Uo 6 7 Amttelc .60lt """"' w of the Univer1uty of Utah and F111 11111n :1~ !!: o.,,.,, NA ' "Ii u Rembr1n1 Enl 'Iii +,,. UP J.f AMF lncp 1 .._Aeronutronic Oivi!lon in 11 cemr ''"" 0111• cr .. ll)llo 11v. Amf1c .60 Harvard Univer11ity. "' W1fP' ,.,,, 1'11111 er '''"' t Alo LOSlll!S AMP Ill(' " , N-.virt Buch ii one Of lhree --------------! Fltco Inc H ,_..., P1<:c1r •JV. "6V! I ltlwr• Group >4---'ti. Olf lJ.3 Amricol' l& ..... ,... Fll<:ko• 21 ttl.4 Pac; Lum 3DV. JP4 1 Ct1emtru11 lflCI 3Vt-~ 011 11.6 AmPlx 'cp •ADSO d ivisions. JI will rema in Fo.t Gr"' l.S'h 36'4 P1So &rd 'j~ 17\ii l Omet11 Alpt,• 1~ llo Off 11.1 Amrt p Corp '•-e under th• dlr-ilon of Fr•ll CD •'!\ I'"' Pin 0co1 1 1,__ 4 so111"0111y '" .J -1 1o. §!J,' 1i.1 Amit•r I II> um "" '°'l,"k IE"I 10V. 1 P•ul lltew 11 111'1 5 G1l1•v Ci ro.I ~f _,,.., 111., A111rpf 2'45 ' vlee -•••·nt Loui's HelU•. s La Fr Kh R 11111 ~v. P1ulev I' j"-' ' Furr •)•I• .lO l V.-l•i. 10., A~tr p1 · 61 r -~ • late Fr9'lFdE16't .. 7%Pawtl• Vi 10 7Elbl 1!'....,\ ~~ ~': '°1Amtlfdl"·2 ~ n-,.t.1-... ,,_...., lrO • and ws Fulltr H !if V. "'Ill CH 3'\IJ 31 I Rm•lAlll 1111 n.-\4 f, Amil/ I" 20 t ' ~Neil IKlvnu DIC ~,elbrf"'h ~ "* P1v N SY n nv. 'coeir c111m1 ,...,__, •. ANl<ond · WDL Phll~Ford'S aerospace rl!n ,. 23:it l"Hrl91 121'1 l(Vo 10 Forum 1111 .1' 611t-"" 8!1' t .3 Anchor~ 1 • ..,.,.. n Aulm Vo 2714 P1G..a. W H l''ilo 11 Nil P1le"I DY 40 -l t 1 A i·-tio' ns Include the Coin"' s R d ~" lllE11 !;iii tV. Pepsi W1 '"" 1w. u GRI com1111tr l"'-"-•.1 A~°tf 1·~ -...--t , n Sh111 a j'"' P.i Ht.H 311.;, ,_." U lion c1~11rl 1j -1'4 Ott 1.1 Al'!ll ·.ll mwtlcations and Technical op ecor !11f111 "' 1V. Petron• " " !4 Allvn 111< .15d V.-r• ()ff8l: •.•• API~~ ·,', ~•ill W 40 P.tl1 Cr• 12\lt 11 1s Ooenll.o.ad 1nc 311/o-l I . • •-'-D1'·'·'-In WUlow r:d MN l"-lV. P1to1n Inc II~ 11\11 u c11proo Co•P J\'t-v. t.J Arico 011 ti t 1Ja'l'1""" ¥J.IJIVU E F~l 11~ 11"° PJnkrfn ''V. IS'6 11 Sl!rtlld CtP Co 21:1-13 Otf 77.t ~PtP~I ,.ud G-•e Pa p Dfl n 4 •'Iii Plonlr W lO'o 1,_. 11 Medkll Anal~ 6 -Ill Oii .1 " orp IV~ • • • • Dfl ' 20~ 71'.lo """' T81 ''''" U'ilo lt AOA Fncl .m f -It,, Otl 1.1 APlplC l.06 In making the an--iracy irnM! ,. UV. 15111 Po.-tr HI( 72 ,, 20 V1r•dYnt Inc \-Ill Olf '·' APDlled M9 d tha rl'f Adv !Tl't 11* Post CP ~ l''lt 11 (Mdlmnt Ind ,.,,_,.._,,i., 81~1 >g AAA 5v I.JI DOUDCer!'ltnt, l,.aWIOJl 18i 1 t •-l"r n. N PDll Inell 2•111 1 72 Am EIKI lab .S -.. 1. Arc111N .1 4 ha ~ u ult 1(1111 !'... 6\;lo ~ In 1~ ~,,.. Jl StdHm pl 2.40 1-Ill 1.7 Are11trO"I I Moot:gomer'Y s ~n ei· R 1 c HM 0 N D v (AP) vrodY ti! .... Prof Goll '" ' 14 11.Df<!n PrK In l OV..-:0.:. Otl '·' Ar(llc Enr11 ·-~•·'y lnvolv~ In Ford • 8 • H•ll Fnt ,. n"' 1>u11s NM I"" 1•" 25 GenAutoP• . .o 11o,;.-2o.r. Oii 6.7 Ari: Ps 1_14 1-ClQN e.1 oeu • • I H.,_ R 11 ll'lo PSN C1r l'Ao 11Vi Arll"1 0 St Motor Compeny'a and Philco--Virginia has 8 new aw ~;=.,. ;~ t ~~~=' ,I '~ Teti Most Activ e =~~o ~~1101 ·~·, 1-ospace and deCense making it illegal to manufa c-!jlnt1 Lm .s oMV. Putn C1P ' Jv. • Arm p1 2.1Q .. ~ .,. "llYW Trr 1•'4 1f~ Qon11r C 13"-1~"" Armurpf • ; •ctJVitlet OVer the p&St 16 ture, distribute or I e (I u:...~:'41"' }~ i.!;t ::= ~'i. llt NEW VORIC (UPll-T0,.i.. 10.,,m~~r=~j :i:::::1~k 1·~ • HOKk Ml 6\lo '"' RllM Ptc 17 l7'1t llvl tlock• I••= on ~ Arv Ind ." wholes ale any recording wtth ~ud P~A t 4\? 26 Rtc:Olil EQ 1>o1o '"" Thurlld•., 11 "' v~,:: Nlld'iiltld c M. A,.,,l"ou 1:20 • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST ... .. (JJH.J ......... c-. <ait. LIAYIN5 TOWN? OOW'T LIAVI vou• MOMm UN,.OTICTID knowledge that the sounds "~U c Jt11o ri"' ::,c•u~e ~" tt~ ,'"•n aco.."~1 "-l~~.JOO ~"' ~i..-~ :S~pf .~~'! HVlltr C ""'° SO'llo Rev" t.R 40 ~ ""k ~ ?i O:: s S'4+. .. 1'1 A10rvG J' • •••• ···-tr•••ferred to the ,,_ s .... 11'1 II' Ric• Fd 10 'llillV. c,,•_r;llM 1-!'' II '•~:z: H '"' 11~ '-\ ASIOSP< I,; RE.NT AN UL TllAION IC BURGLAR ALARM SYSTEM ... ,..,llDttllll Olttt CALL l'OJI llll'OllMATtON HA COAST ALARM IYITIMI ~ Of ... (Mtf ... l'L '-" 1'91 PIKtntl.....C .. h MtN 6424490 ~ 11/VITED STATES NATIONAi.. BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRAN CH . HOW Ol'IN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON.-THUlS. 10·1 P.M. NllAT5 1M P.M. ·(TI4J 140·1211. Lecm4 ftl i le. c..t ,._., CMttr M ... IJ.l' ~I "-''"' Irids NIKI :W.-. jS"' A:kbs Inc 40\lt 41 \lo ..,tllf' "" ' SS' .,... lo. A T . lnr Akim llV. ''°' Rlplfv cl 10 11 Amtrr E•• 1' ,. ~ noc r•ns recording without consent of tn ••w A 71.'o 7* RIV'•I M 17 11 '",~ °"'•h!.,. 6,{-!9! 1t~ 3,~t ~ ::"~1g:, ·~ 1"1 svc:n1 1n in 1110.d E• 4, 4TV. l!(urw ........ D -... l • · the owne r . •onl~ In 101M 1114 lltobto Mv 11 1' Olli Gt1'tCJI l',i:li '>~V. ;Jn-,~ All 1E'oE !~O Thi b I to lo th be 'I Utl ~ 211\to l:Ol>lllO L ll~ 1J\lo Mv•tt CP • -,,_ C pf ""° s r ngs e num r 1 1 11f'11r1 , 714 Rous• co ll" Hi,,; c1~not1 comm 57,lflO IV. 1\11+ .... At R1<;h110 1 f ~-1 h' h h II J•c* P'I l"" ,j R""" Fnl V. -AIRc pf J.IQ o awa es w IC ave an • J1cDDn St 1 111 ''"" Rusr s1ov ,_,,.., NASO vorum1 r oc11r 7,421..600 AUii.ch m J I la Th .. he Ji m Wi t 1"' 3141 Rlflnd Gr 4N O.V. Adv1nc•1 5'0 Atl11 Corp p racy ws. e rs are Jamffb 1 ~-. 11,4 51411" w ~ l'llo 0Kllnt1 111 Alo inc .11 N.w York ca I i r 0 r n I a Jiffy ,d, 1~• 1'-' '"" Ads .i'"' """ utld>, ''"• ,", .. ''1' • ~~om o.r. • • lo.!vn M '°"' ~ $Ml'll"lt tt\IJ :n~ oll "" ... w,oml Inds A rizona, Arkansas , Tennes8ee, :::: cp ':: Florida, Texas, Washington ~~,"' .ii: and Pennsylvania. AvonPd 1.1' A111e Oii ti The Federal Cop y r I g h I MUTUAL FUNDS , • Amendm e nt w hich became e~Mwii .i~ I I Oc 15 I ,_ 81ktr tn .16 aw a s l t. on y granl-3 ll•kerou .10 copyright prote c tion to l:~s '~~ record ings lssued after Feb. N .... Y&rk cuPtj ctt:Vt01t "·" 61 n 'G sr:h , 11 s 10 ~'L"&'61 1t 1~rs111·°' ::~~~ "l.J l~ 1972, -Foll-11'1!1 11 t lt1 e CO ',.'° '·" l~I i·" 4.JS lnlr Inv 16 iO 16 4S ll"k Of NY l • o1 Old Ind 11i<ltd It II om Cl ~ li ne 16U 16U lltnk VI .ID Pirated re co rd s from .,..-kn en M,,.ut't!! o••'"v •'••"•·',6,.•l .71 f::!f ~~ if1'0 13.u :,., 11~1 11:s2 811111.1 Tr 0 • u • Funds 11 ctllO .,~ I I Fnd 21 u :t:l.J7 PfCl l )It 10 ll.10 •rberO I 41 r ecordings issued before that IM NA~nc. ~ t~ lJ:60 ~,:g 1:' Fund I.ID I ID SECURITY ~OS: ::~e ~,:t -~ have to be protected unde r Tttvr"')'mJu1v "· ~a 1 ~, 1f E 1tft f1~u~~ l~·11 ::·ll fu~~7 :.~ ::D :a:tsM .10d state laws. •Id A•k Et.E Mu 3.5'1 J.S.C IH•n pth 111 '" Ullr• F 10 4111 •1 B~h'r,: "'201 ;; mmmmmmmmmmmmmolAblrdl'I 2,\, a.l, EATON a Jotll'l!iln 27.t4 17t 4 SILECTl!CI P'OS: BIUK!IL. 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NCtAL Maon( 11:'lt 12:11 1 .... sll .n j·j5 lot~ r ' .I.XI! l'lt.OGRAMS : M•"l'lln 514 s.n roQr1 1.11 , 1 1"1 n D. DEAN HEISER ORDER YOURS TODAY! v ~eautiful Stic:k-on LABELS Personalized • Stylish • Efficient r I I I I Order For Youraall or • Friend· Mty ht ut ed on envelop•s •s return .ddres1 lebel1. A lso very ha ndy •• iclentificetion labels for m1 rkin9 p trson•I i tem s such a s books, records, photo1, etc. labels stick on g ltss end m1y bt us•d for m•r~ing home c•nntd for.;d items, AU l•bels •re printed wlth 1tylish Vogut t ypt on f ine qutlity white gum.med p•ptr. ttOUGHTON : Fln OY'n •.U 4.'3 M~! Gwl 4:11 4.17 ll Fr Gr 4.11 l .11 a.c.t,Ed 1.U Fund A S.60 '·°' Fin Ind 4.lO 4.JO MA.SS co• I Fr Inc f . .O f.60 IGI pl •.• Fund • 7.13 IJI Fin Inc l·o" ...... 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" •• •• ~: • ~: i: •• p :· :· .. :: p p : " : ~ p • p p : • : ' • • • • ·: • ,P : ' p p : p • p : ' • • ., Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York St0ck· Exchange List Stocks Tumble For Third Day ' NEW Yoruc (AP)--Sharp declines in some key Issues today kept the stock market in the lo" col· umn for the third session in a row . . Robert Stovall, director or research ror Reyn· t::f:~" 1:tt olds Securities Inc., said technical facton, lhat is f !11.:1; ~ interna~ ~ark.et factors. were still counterbalan ci ng Tla!nec~i the pos1t1v~ econoi:n~c news background. 9(""k"" Re said techn1c1ans felt the market might hive t!rC:..':: 1; to build 1 further base before a more determine d t~:=';ft t°"J assault on higher level of the Dow Jones industrial I: ,·.i; aver11e could be expected. t::C.t•f.,.. ml! ..................................... [f~ff! S•I• Htt S.111 Met t•G~f~ i: 611!11•.I Mftl L .. ClfM Clltl. (lwtl,) Hiii! 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Do10 .Ion~• Jul~ 1'9/'l I DAJLY 'ILDT • " Finance Briefs e Baron Trlal LOS ANGELES -Superior Court Juda• Campbell M. 1.lK.'IS hllJ cltared the way tor tri1I of !ht Rath P1cklna Co. on ctu1r11;e.<11 of • · 1 ho rt· wtighing'' its packa&ed blcon. lit dtnied "move by Rath's 11.llo~ney to have the case decided on tht basis of documtnL~. Lucas said 1ri11l ll'Slunony Is needtd 10 dtlerminr . among other t h i n 11: 11. It R.a1h "!hortweigh~" thf' baton al the timr or packing or lf weiaht chanaes nccur with li>s.<11 ol moisture i.n shippln1. 'q lcl'a 1t\'i ,.c, ~ lttlcr>tO ,JI!_'> •I 15'ili 1~1 lJ . .. T me 111 I.ft 1 !"'. I' 1•·11 + \• Rt!Etpt I .~ I ., ..... .cj\~ .c.s•A-14 " n~ n7S ~t~·a =:~11,*lcl..l: ':: 1:!; it" 1:.,.-::.~ C I Cl . p . A . S k E h L. nil~ 1 11,· i:~ P1tti5 =~~~~. ~ 4! 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" .. , ="l l1D i '" ~·~ '"' ,,• 11 ll!:+ t ... l"tltt111• '" •1Jo ..,. ~-.. swc:m ...., il ~ :,\ :t\ +: t• St1tlslic1 reported today • . .... .. . ·-~"'"' I fi ....... ·w ~ I + '°"" I .~. ·~·.. ftlc ,.. '•vJt ~ lJ\11 I Sll-lfll 'VMrlll' Ind n 111. "" 'I"' -~~~~~§~§~~§~~~ . :='r.'!l'l!J.,.,I .. ·· -.,,.• .. ::::: ' "' • 11 '' ~ ... ,. '1' .'' 1~-· · JO Most Aetf"e '~1"1~1 J .!It Jll!lll:::..='" J l:il :;,; :.-7 ~ • • c..,.. ~ Tf•~ ..... l ' 1• 1 1 ' f " c:'\riftt 1 "'" ™'-''' ~--11111c ii ,. Ii' .. 11u.+ i. s-.-~ c. j' 111'11 '} 1n. +-" 111 ::!, ~ ~ b\t ,l.,. ,!~~" .i:f~rr'!9~",,/1(i:"",;;,~:: lU't! io1t1••• ,1!. t J~ .!\\ m.,.i,t """ ~ 4 ,,._ '11 111• Ii ll l: ~ -r.:;..... """"' .m THE BEST ' •i ,:Jt 1~":-." s ci... ca.. '1.': •r,:: 1 1" 1,_...__N .. ,.,.it. ... 11r "" +·· .. c~~·,,." R~p po ll• IP"IMf ,t 1i1i ~''-~. ~:aMi wl1 "·~,".i l ... +:~~T,= ~~lJ~~~of~ ii!. j . ~ ttl .'!I 'I '::! !!::f ~ ,,'Ml . ':: J = "'~· =:=!1 1 : ·~ .!:: (. .... ::~"'~ .. ":":"'~' ·~--II dally In Ille ~• Ji •• ;~.II \ ~· , • 'Q ,. 1:: . -=:; "!! • ,,,: ~~ 1_ "!' riu.. ...... . r> Y rnm. 1 ~ 'h.P'.I 1~ lt fi"° l? ~ '°4 = 1>" = l ~..Jfittr il I\ 11.: ~ rrf.-,_"",,.., .:~. ,;,''. ; •' -~ ~"'"'" .W 'l "' l!t i ' · • ,;;;nO'm, 11.~ \, I, -" "" '" ...... , ' I I .I DAll.Y PILOT Frldl)<. J\Jly 28, 1972 , Mick Jagger: Rock Music Scene's Consummate Artist ~&VI J.ORK (AP) -Juol andH Ja~§~.".'asStthe powder. pilJJ.hedThe aenlence later was ~~~~.,lliiendllaedloo,~ wAlthlrMialla·aa -the devil. The~ he was. ~!'000e glvlngd Ilea !rdeeilconcei;t.!~ who wou1thld tlikletedto lot.Ir ~~ dp~yP; f:'!~ ~e~~·\~ •• RJ.1 51 tni.-CU1 Mtct Jagger? e at111 um ones came on quas . AJuuw "' us , Pranclng the stage, snaking INll, an t ev was wc1e apart w w s ve. u on him. But it could be tba& We.ll, I!"'• •• EnsllJhman bard and tough, the other side Then Jl was a stormy where be starred In the second contempt and acorn and d<:-In cape and Uncle Sam bat there is a dij!erence . "'I who 1lngs ~M htt$ bten. ~alled of the track'• answer to the romance with atnger Marianne of his two films, "Ned Kelly." fiance. But watching him, the with a bodyguard of Hell's Some rock critics say Jag· the audience has caUe;.a• up a1moot ev.ry bod name and lleolies. They opened Buck· Faithful, divorced from her Jagger haa tlnce married impression was c I ass i c Angels. It ended In tragedy; ger bas matured. Others with Jagger and percelvea even ~ one there is. Stick Ingham Palace for Paul, John, art dealer bus band on grounds Bianca Perez -Morena de theater. J a g g e r ls a with the stabbing death of an ~~ar~gu~e~b~e~ls~alr~at~· dgto~pro~he~~bi~m.~~~~~~~~ to that &nd you IT'Jghl be sate. Rlngo and George. For the of adultery with the pop star. Maclni, the daughter ol a performer, with a beautiful 18-year-cld black. Jagger and ·~l:c'Ck lliG Graham. the pro-~tones, they doubled the In 1968, Jagger told the world Nicarariuan diploma!. Jagger ,..,.. of himself and the the Stonec suffered. motet awl tnuovatlvo ste~ guard. that be and Miss Faithful wel't wore an almond green aul t, hh absurd. Some saw lt as pure The current tour bar been · /a\her o! rock: Jagger became the snarling, expecting a cbUd and bad no 26-year<ild bride, a midi length evil, however, a dell berate el· described .. a bit subdued. Nearly Everyone ''!i.fick'~ the g r e a t e s t strutting, snaking showman. Intention of getting married. white wedding dres.s with a fort to bring out the worst in The grind and the flash re-perfi>rnu~r alive today." The money flowed and the The child was Jost by miscar-large cape. They settled in the the fringe people. main. J agger, in an } Check • yoongster in small· gaudy headline• rouowed. · riag•. south of France. There 1s a outrageous white •• q u 1 n e d Listens to Lane ers 10'.\'ll A1nerlca: First it was dope. daughter, Jade. THE BUBBLE burst in jumpsuit still struts and coos l ~ln~1~967~J~a~gg~er~d~r~ew~thr~ee~~T~B]E~M;O~R~E~DO~P~E~,~a~l480~;;;~1~n~the~~l~u~e~60s~~J~a~gg~er~~llece~~m~be~r~l969~a~t~a~dr~ag~s~tr~ip~~and~~w!bi~ps~b~~~sa~s~li~a~t~tb~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "llE'S 111E DEVIL. man. months for possession of pep fine {or possession of marl~ became -or wu christened in A1tamont, calif. The Stones young girls and scented boys Ke'• the srcbangtl Michael. Jlel11 he's anyone you want h!ni to be." Thi• ad 11 good . Check Jagger'> mother lo (Thank You). Might be lier wMe boose In London's that way 'tU becnon tniddlt·class ru!>urb, Dartford, bow1 who. (Which Kent : 11 Aug. :I. 1972) ""Jt inh:riates m~ to know &'.;Jc peopie regard him as a Diaron. He's a very intelligent «cn.\itlve l)Jy. Sonuitlnres 1 wil'ih h.? \'.'ere jnat an ordinary bey ag:ain. tl!e fame isn't worth the worryi'' · At 29, Michael Phillip Jag· ger is the inost fa1nous member of tlle most famous rock 'n' roll bal)d in the world -The Rolling Stcmea. Wednesday. Jagger and the Other four Stones completed an elght·week tour of America piat baa attracted more tbaq '00,000 people and will give them a gross profit of nearly -.., million. : ll'OB 'MIE Mosr part, It has .gi>ne well, with Jagger and the SkineJ reafflf?lling their cull of energy among the young and not ao young believers. But, as has been the case in the past, Jagger has received hi•· share ol gsudy headlines. 1'tqa time it was an arrest 4fter a scuffle with a news 'pbotogrepher in Rhode Island. A m.isunde.rstanding on both -sldea, ~bly, bul it became '-~rt or the Jagger mystique. . Growing up in sublH'ban London. Son _ of a physical education lecturer at a teachers' training college. The ao,called normal childhood. .. Mike" to hiJ Australian-born mOtber. A cherub fa c e d "°""no 'tn the local choir. A J1Uto9{~-mill g r am m a r acbQol kidi maybe a bit more ol the devil than his.mates. A tiero· to a younger brother, now ~ ani! trying to !ind his nic!Je Jn rock. ·tliiaer:neath b r e w e d a geoer111M'i rebellion. Parenta '""' -'8rlel. "I OWE MY parents notbingt" Jagger once said in an interview. "They're my W"!n)I and thaf's that. I like lhem and stil!"do but there are no dueJ to be paid by me to them. I .Was never part of .ljome llfe. I• !mew I'd b~ away when I did." The 0 i:ystem" was another tars•~ l!l1ll "Jagger still 'speaks bitterly In four.Jetter words and, amiil imagery about F)ngland and goveir!nients and peQple with small dreams. Yet, be can be a very articulate and pe'rceptlve man, delivering candid views on Britain's policy toward South Africa and Ireland a n d American poliUcs. Then one day in the 1960s, Jagger quit the London School of ·Economics to f o I 1 ow another muse, rock music. Jagger and his childhood frit:~, guitarist Ke t t b Richard, set out to form the "&onea. It wss a tougll grind. A hand-to-mouth year in a ru~ clowil London apartmeoL Rock is extremely hard work. Then lie.'I and a song called "Come On." . THE STONES became what ts known as a dynamite band Th!1 Is th• ,ftnt ID a Mrlff ol bathroom 1tulf ID this ad. A place to 1tore junk cmd ... yourseU. tool 1444 MEDICllE CDDl&T FUMES Sc:rolly. Goldie, Wiggly. . Squtg;lr •. make th• old one that came with the house look grand. ••• EllPIBE MQJTEiBUWf PULJ.illl If yoa wet mo,. them juit th• top, ll<qi J'O'lf mjltl OD OD• of u.... .. o... pl~tap. •xqal11t• 'lrOOC!wortr..a lib 11!* word •·nqu111t•'1. Fcrucot extra. 3997 SUDlllG TUB EICLOSUBES Safe, hecny pla1tlc glC111 so you. con shower at a fraction. of a ahower room crdditlon cost. 1477 • WHY GO TOPLES.S (cmd th•n avaln. why not?) EUROPA IDJUSTULE un SDWEJI J77 Non-bnakabl• nylon with "'" .. lldorc.d Ylnyl ho... AllO ha• wall moUDtlng bracket for wall 1bower use. ....... ..... , " . . . . ' . . . ' I I •;' :: ', ~ o : ' . ' . . . . '.\ : '! :.-·_.: ::·.' ~·: ... : : 1 . . ' . . . . .. " . '. • 1: •,,I • ' .. tOILET sun· I'' ' ARROWHEAD BATB FAUCET 4'7 l>oa"t k-}cmunill!I WCllh*'9 Into your old leaky on•. Fork up tlr• dough cmd g•I a new plated braa1 one. Kioiiun BITI UBDWUE . llOll llOOC 2<1c PAPlllllCCDD llC fOOtlliiiUlll •. Tllllltlll c::::;;;?J HOU>m • -• IOAP Dllll • TOJVEL IJlll TOWIL IUllG 41c 4jlc 17c lie Such prlcHI R~ tho whol• r<iom wltll th•H alilny new thlng1. AllO ..... uable In whit• ad ..-ado. JJQml , PLVK'B 59~T. J ahouhla't haft to t9ll yoa aboat tbla (you .._ aboal II OD if.'f~ AJl I Mft to tell yoa Is the prfc9 cmd -'U _,_a1N..-L CULTURED MARBLE PULLMAN TOPS We'•• spent thousands .on tbeH things Hnding them to school so'• they'd be cujtund. Th.Y do haTe yery slight im~rfection1 at theP prices. Fa.uc•t extra. 24'' 88 11.88 13.88 TWO LIGHT BITB SWIG 11 88 F.ot tbat elegant touch in your bathrOom. 1Dclude1 chains. hooks. etc. for ·mountbl;. Real nice. Mounts flush. Hai A.C. outlet for appliances. etc. I 1H the light! I '" the l!ghtl With the tube. luy a buncb. You're gonna hne to bar 'em sooner or later-IO you might 01 w•ll, ltock up at this price . ROLL-OUT CLOTBEsLoo: 13'6 Rld1 your ymd of lb• 11D1lghtly drooping clott..a11De1. I atUI IC!Y Aur '. Au,..Pla Ii wrCIPP*CI up ID mine. 3-LICBT MILIBV LOW-YOLTICE S!STEll 2997 Nan yoar -.. look un .. mono -··· (TOil -wit~ a dhon:• lCIWf*r al th• lroDI cloorT) Bu 1 llg~t. -u.. to IJ ftll D.C. b-or. •••as IEPOBT: TM btdldliig . la up ID · leJuio.., ITlie""'91111Ml'll I 0 c I ·s t • f~U,. July 28, 1972 , ::: ••• 'Camelot' Returns to Coasf • 4 ... . ·~· . . • Orange Coast College's sum- mer musical proc)uction, 11Came- lot," will go on the boards next week and in this production the boards will be bare. '.J:he auditorium will ring with th& romantic and sometimes stir· ring lyrics of Lerner and Loewe' but there will be none of the ornate trappings seen in most other productions of the .musical. Director William Purkiss has chosen a simple unit set with no scene changes to dramatize the underlying theme of the show, the conflict between emotion and logic.· The : stark set Is shown in a ·scene above in which ·King AI· . thur, played ,by 22,year-ola Alex Golson of Corona de! Mar, Is ex- tolling · the virtue,s of "Cimelot• to Lady Guenevere, played by Debbie Ann Thomas, 18, of Costa Mesa. It is one . of Ute show's opening numbers . .Arthur has to rely on the lyrics alone ·-and no sylvan setting: -to enchant ·bis bride to be. Right Is a closeup of Miss Thomas and at far nght nearly . all the cast Is seen rehearsing ·one of the livelier numbers from the production which centers on ·the romantic yet painful triangle . that entrapped Arthur, Guen· evere and Lancelot. . ' MILY t'llA'f-... """ VON .sctWa TAICIS llTI OUT OF RoalN SMITH • lly CBlllSTINE COCHllAN Of ... Oe1tY Pl ... St.n The finery ol Medieval tapestries and trappings is common to stage adap- tations of Lerner and Lo e w e ' s "Camelot" But Orange Coast College'• summer musical cast hu chosen a bare, unomamented setting for Ila production, taking place Wednesd4Y through 5unday, Aug. 2-'5, tn the OCC auditorium. "The show won't possess tlie plhk fluff and superfluous pomp sets common to most "Camelot" productions," said Director William Purkiss, whose prefer- ence for theatrical simplicity is mir- rored in his direct manner and casual dreSJ. "Instead we hope to produce a novel adaptation, emphasizing the story's dramatic angles in which men attempt to replace emotion with reason and real-life situations (as the love triangle) are cwr fronted, n added Purkiss. 1be set la a complete success in bis opinloo. It is a Jll8S3ive, stark, interweaving of embattled wooden pillars and piers with cascading stairs and platforms at tmeven elevations. A unit set, a simple one with no scene changes, ts Often cbOSen to help trim bcKh show costs and backStage-delays cau.sed by niµnerous set changes, Purkiss u:- plained. . The complex aettlng adda a hazardous, element. Active stage performers must be alert to every step ii they are to avoid Injury, be added. "Tbe success of a unit set may hinge oo the ability or its actors to carry the scene changes,'' emphasized the director. But Purkiss, lounging this evening before a rehearsal with IO.year-old son Eddie in center seats of the auditoriuril, doesn't seem worried. It's ttie 0 most experienced cast" he's ever worked with. Before rehearsal he exchanged a few Jdeas with aides and glanced confidenUy on-stage wh~re many lively perfonners loosened up with cartwheels, juggling and warm-up exercises. Once rehearsal began, the wann, and intense director frequently left his seat for a more commanding position at stage-front. There he coordinated lighting techni· cians, stage perfonners and the newly- added orchestra. Purkiss then moved leading lady Guenevere, played by 18-year-old r 'e Ann Thomas , of Costa Mesa, throl ie maze-like setting attempting to syn- chronize her action with the orchestra- tion. After several Wlsuccessful attempts, followed bY bursts of laughter and mock applause from the onlooking cast of 75, Purkiss and Debbie finally found the ex~ act route to bring both stage-scampering movements aod the flighty music together. Purkiss Immediately broke the next musical routine. King Arthur, played by CLOAK AND FANG ROLE ., ·I~, .,.. !2-yeaN>ld Aler Golson, or eorona;ll ~far, was warned to "play it dowmtap," or face and focus on the audience. :~: "It is of utmo,,t importance," uq:ed Purkiss, "that performers project t:)elr voices outward to the audience at: 411 times, since no microphone system -will be used in the show." · Botb Go"°n and Mark Stirlen, ii; of (:osta Jlilesa, who stars as Lancelot,,have acted before on the OCC stage. Golson portrayed J .B. in the college's productipn of "J.B." and appeared in "Indians" 8fld "Tartuffe." Stirlen played Sasha tn OCC'S 1970 summer show "Fiddler on \he Roof." · Purkiss directed "Fiddler on the Roof" and says be has taught drama classes at all ages and education levels, f r om kindergarten to college, in the past 14 years. The cast, which has rehearsed from 6:10.10:30 p.m. each evening since 1ate June, has only a few more days to pollSb up their acts. ~ ": Last-minute rehearsals will not only !ft. elude arrMging lights and tipping the orchestra on exits and entrances, biit also building a fluent cohesion of the e&. tire show. • : Ticl:eta at '2 per person will· -:Jo available at the OCC auditorium _.,,. lice today, Monday and Tue.day min II a.m. to 2 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.-8:30 P.11\< It will be open Saturday from 11 a,l)t. to Z p.m. Tlcketa will also be avallable'M perlonnance night .. Golden West Gives Its Interpretation of 'Dracula'- By JOHN ZALLER Of .... Dlllf Pllel $Int Count Dracula bad been around as a fictional character !or a long Ume when an unknown Hungarian actor possessed of a heavy ea.!5t European accent took over the title role of a 19'J7 Broadway play about the Vampire King. -' It Is said, m !act, that Bela Lugosi didn't even speak Engllsb at-the•time he opened as star of the soon-to.be PQpular play. He apparenUy jmt memori1.ed the lines, so that the lntooatlona be gave them -famous as they were lo become -may have been quite accldtntal. · But to generaliens ol Americam since the foreign born actor firs! played the part, Bela Lugosi bas limply be<;ome Drecula. Tbo hnpoccably lwmll manntr, lho cold reserve, the dark pow<n over women, even the Hungarian's personal ldlooync:rales -they ba .. all betome claulc. 'Dleae are !acts every director must ~ and Cl>lck Mltebeli,· d- o! the Golden West Colleg'e }ll'Olloctlon that will p187 loaJ8l>t llld 1ietlll<lq lll Huntington Beach, ls no exception. "Everyone knows bow Dracula should behave, and there are certain things Ibey expect to ee," Mitchell aay1. 1'U we depart too far lrom wbat Lugool did, the audience will think it bam't letll authentic Dracula." In a w1iy, th1s makes 11Dracula" easier to do. There are ecrtaln trled-and·lrue formulas for everything from capework to makeup, and Mherence to them guarantees at least modest success. E!peclaUy in the key action scenes - sucb as sucking blood from a victim's neck -Von Schauer, playing the lead In the GWC production, won't have to lm- ,provlse very much. It ii mential tbat Dracula "look" a certain way, and It ii just a matter of doinl wllat Lugoal did. But at the aame time, It would be ' }Jlllllble to BO too lar. Il, for eaamplo, Schauer mimleked J:.uaoal'a dlsttlictlve apeech pelt.,,. both he ml director MUChell fe~ the role woulcl -oil onl1 .. a ~ta lmltatloo ol iAll"ll, So Instead ol -king wMll • beoYy eutem Eur_,i acceni, Scbeuer will use i contlneotal dialect, In addiUoo, be . ' will portray a Dracula that ii m«e bla- tantly animallatlc than Lugool wu. 'lbuJ While continuing in most waya to loot and move like t.uCosi. Schauer will be trying·wttbin tl-llmlta to develop a · somewhat dillereot character. Mllcllell•planl a, lrad!Uonal "Drllcula" that stlCka to the original script written by Hamilton Deane and Jobn Baldentm in 1927 from an earlier novel by Brahm Stoker. Tbe basic plot Is probably well known. Dracula, who neecla a cup ol lreah blood each day to remain in his .. undead'' state, Jeavet bis native Trauylvania for England where '1he opportunity" ii areater. "' · It ii aboUt 1920 when be buya a Cllllle Jn tbe countryside and bellnt leeclllng blood from the Seward ram111. lie tills flrat tbe mother and haa llarted OD a da1111hter when Dr. Seward, the llve-ln operator ol a aanltarlum, aends b: the wl\Y and coura1eouo Van Helainl lo try to save his da1111hter. • A batUe ol wits between Van HeJi!iil and Dracula ensues, lllld ii ,_, _ b)' the former -when be dilcov ... Ibo collin to which Dracula 1111111 a1wQ1 rel&ft In dayJi&hl hoUrs and -a wooden -· through the heart or the the!Mlelpleaa count. . WheJI "Dracula" was lint produced in 1927, it wu conaidered a 111C1tf" play. A registered nurse was always. ltltMJned ia the theatre lobby to mlnlsler to }tl,r• goera w1-nerves gave out, and U...Sb this muat bave been la'l'l1 a publlolty device, the New York Tlmet In one ol tta reviews reports very ..rtously thlt peoo pie did blade out, and that the ratio WM five-to-one men over women. Mitchell eipecta bla audlencea to watch ~ ~"."!·~~e-the ~~~ ably could acare you. All the eleal are there." "llrlCll!a" will llqe In the •- Golden West Community Collep Olqlo muolty Theatre 11 l :IO p,m. toollM..,. It 1:111 ond IO:IO o'elock Saturday lllPt. Ticketa are available at the door !or '1M for adulta, 50 centa for cllilck-tn. lo lj • , CAIL Y '11-0T lleff '"''' 'SANDRA kASPRZYCKI SHOWS HUSBAND JAN'S PAINTING OF DAUGHTER AND FRIEND .. . . ... ' A ·Fa1nily Affair .... ' " . . ... Lisa, 5, Joi~s Kasprzyckis • Laguna in By FRED SCHQEMEHL Of tlle Dllh' ,net Stiff Art with the Kasprzycki'1 in Laguna Be~ has become aomething of a family eroo. ''l"trree members of the household are Official exhibitors in . the 1972 Laguna Beach Festival of Aris and a fourth has Picked up some unofficial space which, surprlMngly, has become quite profitable. •, :Jan,Kaspriycki, 30, was juried Into the ... in 1970; his wile Sandra, 291 came eboerd in 1971 ; his brother Paul joined tu.year, and Jan and Sandra's ~year· old .daughter Lisa has taken over a cor·. per of her mother's booth. Lilli tnjoya sitting out on the festival ll'teJl with her lltetch book and dr1wtn1. ,,·· -~ In tlte Galleries ' When she completes a sketch. she lacb it up in her mother 's booth, with a pricetag of 20 cents. So far, Lisa has sold three works. Sales for the elder members have also been good this year. Jan Kaspnycki has sold five of his expensive acrylics, ~1rs. Kaspriycki 's water and temperas are popular and Paul Kasprzycki 's fine furniture has captured the eyes or several buyers. Last year, a "disaster for most artists sure wasn't one for us," Mrs. Kasprzycki recalled. Not only were sales good but both iiihe and her husband recei ved com· mi ssions for art work . In April. Jan, Sandra and Lisa were olf to Hominy, Okla.1 to the 100,000 acrt ranch of Mrs. John Dunkin, who com· mmioned Jan Kaspn:ycki to do a number of paintin gs of the ranch. In between his work on the commission and hi~ work for the festival, he still finds time to run an advertising design studio in Santa Ana. Mrs. Kaspr.,;ycki traveled to Europe late this spring to work on designs for fine china for a ma jor manufacturer. "I can't give the name until the palterns c.i:ime out next year," she added. Paul Kasprzycki , 25, lists boatbuilding as his real interest and is soon to be of( on a voyage. In the meantime, he's content lo be landlocked on lhe Festival grounds throu1h the end of the exhibition Aug. 21. ~:Challis Exhibits Oils, W ate~colors •! . :1Cli4LLIS GALLERIES -13111 S. Coast Rw1y., Laguna THE WRIGHT GALLERY-Art Becerra, oil!, 275 Broadway, :. Buch. Oils and watercob'r bf DOuglas P11'JChall, on exhibit l..flguna Beach, daily except Monday and TUesday, 11:00 a.m. ::ihroutih Aug. 27. Through August 27. ~'GLl!NDALE SAV~GS AND LOAN -500 Newport c;.,ller LAGUNA BEACH ART GALLERY -307 Clif[ Drive, Laguna .•..Drfve, Fashion Island, Newport Beach, Watercolon by Mari· Beach. AU California . Show includes paintings and sculrr ~ Jy1i:Mill1r on ·exhibil through August. · tures. Open daily ll'Qm 11:30 to 4:30 p.m. through August Zl. AVOO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bris!OI St.. Costa Mesa. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa OU. aM acrylics by Gordon Andrew, on exhibit throogh A1eSa. Oil painUngs by Herschel Yeager. , ,Aup.L GLENDALE F'EDEllAL SAVINGS AND LOAN -500 New- :: QlSTA MESA LIBRARY -5a& Cenler St., Costa Mesa. port Center Drive, Newport Beach. Watercolors by Marilyn ·,Acrylics and watercolors by Fem WJ!liams, on exhibit Millar lhrough July. - ::through Atigual. SOUTHERN CALWORNIA FIRST NATIONAL BANK-Bay- •'CIU:NXER CITIZENS BANK-2300 Harbor Blvd., Coat.a Mesa. side Drive and ~amboree Road, Newport Beach. Seascapes ~Acrylics by Lucy Sanford. by William D. Vogel' through Auausi 11. ::DOWNEY SAVINGS Atl!J LOAN -~IO E. 11th gt.; Costa COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE'S ~EW GALLERY -During · Mm. Oil paintings by Lassie Hud1Dn, 3'ne Hultman, and the month of August Clay Campbell and Bob, Dennistoun, ::nny Krasunit'; oll paintings; watercokn and collage by both residents of Corona de! Mar, will exhibit a variety of ·'Frances Ryder and quUfed b1llk.! by Donna Frlebertshauser. intereSting art work. Included in the display are dry point .:FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY -1850 etching, watercolor and oil paintings by Clay Campbell. His · 'Adim1 St., Costa Mesa. Oil pajntlngs by Chuck Davis. etchings capture the charm of the old and fast di~ppearing ;:GLEljDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS-2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa scenes of Orange County and throughout the country. They , °'IMesa . OH paintings by Fran Ross. have become coll~tors items , as have his watercolors of , SECUIUTY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. local land1narks. ·:oil paintings by Alma Phillips. Bob Ocnnistoun, a native or Canada, will exhibit paint- 'l'flANSAMERJCA TITLE CO. -170 East 17th SI., Cost~ ings ranging from lradilionill to non-Objeclive, in watercolor, :Meil. Oils and watercolors by Shirley Richardson on exhibit acrvhc and oil. Hoth of these artists are members of Costa 'ijv'ough August. McSa Art League, Torana Art League and Laguna Beach Art ~MARINERS LIBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Association . P.~raphy by Allan Warington on exhibit throu&h August. Also featured at the gallery will be batiks and sti tchery 00RoNA DEL MAR LIBRARY -420 Marigold, Corona de! by Donna Fricbcrtshauser ahd pottery by John Burke, a Mar. Stoneware ceramics by Sorrell (Mrs. Newton E. Wayne) student at Orange Coast College. One or Mrs. Friebertshau· McJ.. paintings by LlJa Ridgley, on e1hibit through August. er's stitchery designs has been purchased recently by the JA.Glt GLENN GALLERY ...... 2831 E. Coast Hyw., Corona del "Bucilla" company and will be a\failable at major depart· Ma,r. Paintings by Bruce Richards and hanging ·construction ment stores In lhe Fall of 1973. Last year, she was the local Jtl~s by John Okullck. recipient or the Pi Beta Phi scholarship to the Arromont · -1~h~of Arts and C~ls in Gatlinburg. Tenne.~e. Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertising I ·.· ... ·." 0 65' Sth ooner "KELPIE" A•allebl• for WllKDAY CHAITllS -MOONLIGHT SAILS COCKTAIL P'AITllS -WIDDINGS AT SEA. A .. Ak•t O"' Twlll9ht SeU .. $10. Per,.,._. -I,:,.., to Mhflll"' CALIFORNIA CRUISES 548-4192 . . Where to Go, What to Do 'Wizard of Oz' Arrives JULY tt CHJLDREN'S PLAY -Members or the Teen/Adu.It and Children'• Theater Work.shops of Orange Coast YWCA will prestnt "The Wiza rd or Oz'' on St11turda y at 10:30 i .m. at the Monte Vilta Elementary School, Newport Beaclt Tickets are fl for adults, 50 cents for children. &42·9990. JULY 19 SUNDAY CONCERTS -Costa Mesa's Sunday aflemooo ''Concerts in the Park" take place at 4 p.m. each Sunday ln Costa Mesa Park, 18th and Center Streets. Costa Mesa. Estancia High School Stage Band to play at 4 p.m. July 30. Pacific Pops to play at 5 p.m. Aug. 6. JULY!! FREE FILMS -f\te sa Verde Library, 2969 Mesa Verde Dr. East. CoBta Mesa. One·hour films f()r children 9-14 shown at l p.m. and 3 p.m. W. C. Fleld's special on Saturday, July 29. "The Jmmigrant," "Unicom in the Garden" to be shown Salurday, Aug. 5. JULY 2!1 CHRISTIAN CONCl-.:RT -Hosanna and ~lah will appear in the Calvary Chapel tent, at the corner of Fairview and Sun· flower avenues, c:osta Mesa, at 7:30 p.m . .Admission free. THROUGH JULY 30 ROCK OPERA -"Jesus Christ Superstar" at the Amphl· theater, Universal Studios, Hollywood. Tickets f4: • $9. FuU Broadway version to be presented. Mulual ticket agencies. JULY %9 B~TrER BICYCLING-A bicycling senilnar covering main· tenance, safety and technical aspects of the sport will be presented by the Newport Beach Parks and Recreation Department from 10 a.m. to noon in the Mariners Savings and Loan Association multipurpose room, 2002 Dover Drive . Admission is free but a 10-spced bike is required. It l! open to those aged 13 and over. AUGUST! - 5 SUMMER THEATER -"Ca melot." Orange f.Mst College's summer production in OCC Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. All seats reserved, $2 per person. Mail ticket requests to OCC Summer Session Office, 2701 Fairview Rd., Costa Mesa, 9262& AUO. M KARA TE CHOP -9th lnter111U...1I Kor ate Ollmplonalilp at Loog Beach Arena, be1in1 II I 1.m. daily. AUG, ... SEA FESTIVAL -CalUornla ln1etn1ll011af ... FutlVIL City·"•ide ctlebration Includes boa' tlCU1 aquatics meet, sand castle contest, art lair ud 1tatll11!1 concerti (ILi) 437-4101. AUGUST I CITY PICNIC -Oldtimer-Newlimer Picnic in Estancia Park, Costa Mesa . Potluck supper. Call f\trs. Alvin Pinkley at 548-1:;1)5 for information. AUG. 11·13 HOBBY SHOW -Southern Californ ia Ceramic and Hobby Show al Anaheim Convenrion Center, Exhibition Hall. AUGUST 14-!! CIRCUS -Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey at the Anaheim Convention Center. Performances at I p.m. 1t10o· days; 2:30 and 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays; 10:30.a.m., 2:'30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays; and 2 and 6 p.m. Sundays. Tickets ~. 6.15-5000. THROUGH AUGUST RALL OF SCIENCE -More than 100 elhibits from modern physical sciMtce on display at the Griffith Obesrvatory, Griffith Park, Los Angeles. Open Monday through Friday from 2 to 10 p·.m., Saturday 10 :30 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sun· day 1 lo 10 p.m. Admission free . THROUGH AUGUST L.A. ZOO -Featuring animals pf the world. the ~ Angelu Zoo is open every da y from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m .. Gr1ffl.th Park. Take Loz Felli turnoff the Golden State Freeway. THROUGH AUGUST DUNE BUGGY RACE -Southern California Independent Driver's A.ssociation sponsors dune buggy sedan racing on the first, third and fifth Saturdays of the month at th8 Corona Racew.!!y, Buchanan Street and the Rlver1lde Fre& way. Hot laps are flt 6 p.m. with qualifying laps from &:30 to 7:30 p.m. Spect r•·,. tickets, adults, $2.SO ; juniors, fl.IO, children, $1 and under eight, free. ~1566. -·-1 ~--- Teens Take To Program . . Pied Piper Tom Jones. the pled- pi per to children In hi.! hometown of Pontyridd in South Wales. He comes to the Greek Theater Monday, July 31, through Sunday, Aug. 6. Tom Jones says. "I enjoy singine, it is my life.'1 The Westmirmer Recreation ..• ----------·-------------------- Department is sponsoring 11 new overnight program this summer for teens~ Teenage girls wil be. steam- ing to Catalina on the oceanllner 11 Prince" ' -. Thursday, August 3 and spen- ding the night there. They will return Friday night, August 4. The cost of the trip wlli be $20. w~ich will l n c I u d e meals', hotel accommodations, and steamship fare . Teen ege girls who are in· terested should contact the Recreation Department at the Civic Center .. HOBIE CAT SAILING CAMP ,rot.aioltOI IMtr. AUG. 21 TO 28 BIG BEAR LAKE BOYS & GIRLS 7 TO 17 WATll SKllNe ALL CAMP ACTIYnllS fEl Sl25 llLLOWS LOD5l Heme of Seew S•M"dt S.I Ce111, lei 5405,'lit lear L•H, Cellf. f2Jl S PH : 714/86Ml71 QUALITY SHIRT5 FOR MEN $4 Shirt Sale 20, JJJ Marlot A.,. I. 17th St. lalboa Costa Mesa llllMI ,...c::i.:_ 11:• A.M.·11 J'.M. MM.·S.I. IM 1 tit!,' I ..._ '"'· 'fff I •·Ill. i7J.0197 642-8711 HUNTER'S BOOKS #8 FASHION SCj)UARE SANTA ANA (714) 543.9343 • Hard b1cks • Piper b1ck1 Greeting Cards OPEN EVENINGS MON. & FRI. • Alie 111 l1t¥trly Hlllt e ~•• Oekt e Le Jelle e Phfftll1 • Se11 Fro11cisce The \Vesl'5 Oldc>~t & FinMt Bookstorfl Scrvlni:I'. Cnlifnrnia Sinre 1851 WE'RE BACK IN THE ORAl4GE JUICE BUSINESS! no Healtll Dept. ha tin• us the O.K.1 to 1~uH11 your oron90 Julca fresltl to orderl We .... i. ,...,_wit• tile coclel We clldl A new •-· hot watw, ••• •oln, 110lnlm steel 1<1ulpmHI, fly fowo. coved floor. J sb1ka. 1ew rtfrlterator, etc., etc. Now we lln• tM cltm1ftt orClftt• lwlc1, the frnhnt ONftt• juice, the 1wHIOSI -t• l•tlca, o..t !fie lowest prlcocl -•• l•lcel We're pro1d of -H°""' Dept. for dlftNllHllnt these lhl•t• •• dofto. It cost u1 e lot, but ... ~. 'tek .. care of fttrytflf..,,I AU now w1'r• 1411tH111t your "'"°'" Jvlce, wlfli !lie opproffl of Ille OrOftt• c .. nty Heoltk Dept.I DOUILI HIAOI• ! FINAL REDUCTIONS Fl .. NAL REDUCTIONS : :L:.:y,• L~s: ~.:. • ."Mt.1H,.11,r ,,.!,.1tr. • •-A0 ·"""'"'·"'" • \ CILLO CAUOTI w lANGI JUICI • ICllUCI • CRIS!' • . •• II -• • LETTUCE • CELERY • 39C Qvort • • : !.YO~IJw.,. s~. Now 8990 Top.'n' T•unh gre•t m•r• clo w111 o" slw1'M NU·U f.~~~~.i/35~:. SPORT COATS WEAR, WALK SHORTS t11~ 4990 TANK TOP'S for 11111 f11r1, R I $90 W «9 N '--.,-w-.,.-IO---, -,,.-m-• -,,.---" 99• 0 • erl ~ • OW . , , • • • •tc"-'" ti dNrMCe tll"IC ... Cordwoy ~~~!~••It•~~;~ 79~ mens haberdashery • • 201 marine 673-8782 ave., balboa island open mon. thru sat 10·9, sun. 10-6 ' • J llM • I ~ . • Lll'llt ':!!.. w~:.,. ~ c..,.. • • V9' ha • V9' ha • O•ANGH • • Limit S a Limit J el lath • 12 Llto $ 1 °' • • With Thi• (H'9f' • Wltll Thfl c..,_ • L111111 -u LIK. wi111 Tlllt c..,.. a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS DrlU AUIO. Joel, 1'72 These rest1ur1nts dtm•n' the finest for th•lr cu1tom1rs, th1t'1 why they fti~ ture Newpert Pr1lluc1I Petroniie themll .. ty Ptllct11, Ntwport j DI.._., 81lboi• The Cron H .... , Logu~• Niguel : Yin.to 1 .. , lelboo l1lond: Mr. Mlkn. Bel'. bo1 , end o:ver 300 oth1r1. How 1bout yaur c1lling us 1 •orange C011n1W'1 ratut ~ ~ and Flowtr Orgnltalloll• -.,_,, .,_, . . .,....., ~N~L~~~ _ Uli New'°" 11110,.d .. th P .. 1-lo . ___ _, "35 Ye1111 "' l'mluu "Whcr1 qualltr II lh• K"ow Bov• Order of th• Houn• or t A h [I G R F u H M G M H ti Hi In J M ev co cl 2 at Ca ci F wi an [a' H pr le co • m I I I Musie Fills .. Air Countians Stage Summer Festiva~ .. The hl!IJ aroond Del Webb's Newporter IM will genuinely be alive with the sound of music this Sunday, July so. And fot a near-record period of Ume as the Orange County Musician's Second AMual Summer Music Festival unfolds. This marathon event, slated to run ten hours plus, will showcase doze ns of entertainers performint continuously on five different stages. Headliners slated to lake part include Gene Hackman, Ella Mae Morse, Ina Ray Hutton. Dick Lane, V I c Feldman, Murray McEachren, Con ti Condoli and Harry Babbit. Still others are Tom ~1ullinex and the United States or America Dance Band, Herb and Joe Trio, Frank Amos Combo, Mark Davidson Trio, Alonzo Brothers, George Popa Orchest'ra, and Bill ~1cClure. And more yel are Orange county Home Grown, Pacific Strings. Irving Cot· tier Quintet, Joe Pass, Rainbow, Ansell Hill Orchestra, Eddie and Rosie 1tyao1s In Sounds, Bob Youog. Zulu Parade!'I~ Joe Rios' Nuevo Fabuloso, and the Murchison Company. Music-wise there'll be something for everyone -from jazz, rock. pop, and combos to big bands, ensembles. semi- classies end male and female vocalists. Official prQgramming gets underway at 2 p.m. and lasts until midnight . Starting 81 12:01 a.m., however, there will be an open session running until lhe last en- tertainer folds. The non-stop musical smorgasbord will be presented in the Newporter Inn's Carousel Room, Empire Room . Monte Carlo. Terrace Garden and Lido Lounge. Festival sponsorship is by the Musi· cians' Wives Club. Local No. 7, American Federation of Musicians. All proceeds will go to the union's emergency relief and scholarship funds . The success of last year's first.time af· fair -held at the Sheraton Beac h Inn, Huntington Beach -led to this year's program and establi shment of the festival as an annual event. Tickets. tabbed at $2.50 per person. cover admission at all times to all stages. Children under 12 will be ad· mitted free . The Newporter Inn l! located at 1101 r ~ Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY Jamboree Road, Newport Be a ch . Festival ticket Information can be ob- tained by calling 714/546.1168 « MWISJ. Chez Monique Make note of 1 bonafide restaurant ''first" for the South Coast. And be prepared to savor a marvelous and lilUe-known cuisine h e r e l o ( o r e unavailable in the area. Eurasian food is the. house specialty. The place serving It is Chet Monique, a brand new spot that's jWlt opened on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. AU of which considerably boc\st1 the cosmopolitan dimensions of the local din- ing srene. For uninitiated out 'n' abouters. the restaurant's specialized fare embraces elements of French and Chinese cooking in combination with dishes native to the lndo-China countries of V I e t n a m , Thailand, Lao.s and Cambodia. While there are some g e n e r a J similarities with Chinese cuisine, make no mistake that the Eura.sian variety stands other than di.stloctively and flavorfully on its own. The dinner menu lead! of.f the Chez Monique special, a blending of cboice .seafoods and meats in cha go, or chi ya (a kind of noodle wrapper), $3.75. It is served with Eurasian soup, crisp lettuce and cucumber. highlighted with the restaurant's specially prepared sauces. Eurasian com chian , vegetables com- bined with a meat choice of beet or chicken. is tabbed at' $2.95. Included are soup, egg rolls and fried rice. Our initial sampling of Chez Monique 'ti food "'as 8J1 exceptionally well-seasoned and prepared beet curry. '4.50. Accompanied by Eurasian soup and tossed green salad, tenderloin and mushrooms in the main dish bad been a~y aautted in a tangy curry sauce. ln addition to the Eurasian dishes, Chez Monique offers four specialties with • decided nod to French cooking. They are duck a !'orange, $5.75; frog legs Provencale, $S.7S; New York steak, saUce bordelaise, $8.SO ; filet of sole, sauteed in lemon juice, SS.SO. Considering the one-time French In· nuence In Vietnam, this latter touch shouldn't be at all surprising. And even le:51 so in vie w of the Chez Monique's highly unusual and charming propnetors. They are two sisters -Monique Toth and Kim Cleary -whoie background and ethni' origin.s give them credentials alm06t without parallel for their new Costa Mesa venture. Born In Bangkok. Thailand, their mother was a native Thai while their father was half Vietnamese and half French. Making it neces.sary to look a long time to find a more authentic Eurasian mixture. When they were still small children the family moved to Saigon, where they re- mained until they came to the U.S. in 1960. Residing in New York City and Washington D. C. for five and seven years, respectively, Monique became a top fashion model and Kim worked as a hol!lteS1 at several w e I I . k n o w n restaurants. A vacation visit to Orange County last year led to an overwhelming desire to make the area their new home. This dream was realized several months ago and reached its ultimate fulfillment with the recent opening of Chez Monique. Aside from Monique and Kim's gracious warmth and hospitality, their classic Eurasian beauty gives Orange County's restaurant picture one· of its prettiest views in recent memory. In addition to being open for diMer - (See OlJT'N ABOUT Pqe Z4 J 'RON SHY--. DON kENDRICBJr'loc=:o. J Extra Ordinary ••• for th• best P,.ime Rit 2Jinner • ~~ 95 2645 H•rber, C611• Mou -545-~1 , .... MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Room DINNER SPECIALS Chait• of Soup er ~·l•d liked Petito or Rici Pil1f e Girlie lr11d l1ver•g• e D11111f WEDNESDAY -To p Sirloin Steik -· $2.'5 THURSDAY -Prim e Rib ............... -..... $3.40 FRIDAY -Br•ised Sirloin Tirs ·····--$2.tS SATURDAY -Tournedo, o Bui _ .... -.... -. $3.25 SUNDAY -Lob•ter Toil ........... -.--.... ---$4.35 Orang~ Countv'• Top Entertainment BUDDY AND HELEN 16712 •I.A.HAM AYINUI (At War.rl HUNTING-TON llACH {714) 146-1116 (J1Jl 1'2·1914 Food -~ -Eotertalnm•I -Daoc1"9 ~ · Now Appearing "GOOD CO. PLUS ONE" lunclay thru Saturday -1:45 • 1 :JO OPEN DAILY lreakfest -Luoc~ -Dlnoor -Suoday INoclt llarly 01 .. ., 3.'5 Children under 12-2.50 Sundap Through Thursday 31106 COAST HWY •• SOUTH LAIOUNA -4H·2663 AMplo Parkl•t COUPON SAMllO'S DOES IT AGAIN BREAKFAST SPECIAL 2 FOR THE 1 PRICE OF $2.lO VALUE FOR $1.15 (C:.'!.) Tho Fun Piece I II Y,1, we "'''"HI Twe ef ou' or Ftm Y Foocfl u11 bee+11tr. br11kfest1 ,,, Sam]lo;s , ... o;,~~~;~;:;·A ., .. llllTAUltANT SAMIO'S SPICIAL Shi S.mbo P•noc•k", One l"rtsJt ll:llKll l!gt, Tw.. Stl°IPll Ill L11" •-· Juice ef YIM.Ir dlolc1, Tlgotr 11111 ..... your-cf'lelc• et ,.,.,,,. 141-4479 JOO 1 S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA Offw-1111 ... s.. Otlly 'A.M. .. 2 11'.M. .__. ,N.ltttlll YtlW Mty .t '-M' .. s..te All"•'""'""'• COUP.ON NIW UNDERGROUND PRESENTS RICHAIU» GIUON Duo' ' MIY MONDAY IS P•RTY NIGHT St•tlwt 111 4:00 ,.... SpteW PrlcM ....... c ...... ,.,. C•pleN 0-. $2.50 D•dotlp..,.tel ..... SUNDAY JAM SUSION Ope"' Deily For Lu•ch OA tL Y l"ILOT 51111 ........ '. TEACHER KATHY MEISTER TAKES SUZIE DREES, 12, THROUGH STEPS ' • Scrambled Egg s Dance Su11ny Sicle Up By JOHN ZALLER 01 Iii. O•llY ,lltt !tell "All rlghl. Pretend you're scrambled eggs. Really pretend. Let's see it. You're scrambled eggs." The 80 girls in Kathy Meister's dance class at Spring View School weren't really prepared for that kind of assign· ment when they signed up. big change. On" mothrr r\f"n rrird" It wasn "l thRt pri rr nt s dnuh1ed their daughters' ab1litv tn bt-h;ive like scrambled egg.'\, ~1rs. i\lr1strr explained. but that "girls at 1h1s ;igt' are JUS! becoming ~n.,,are of tht'1r bodies, and they 're very sclf·consc1{luS about tL "If they can lea rn to cont rol their body through dance. il's R very Jil,ood th ing fo r them. Jn order to gel up 1n fron l of peo- ple and danre. you need to feel good about yourself." no mancr how short or Insignificant. pver,·one in thr l'lass ,.,,oul<i applaud ." ~!rs 'Mrister said . "Everyone did it. loo. because they a\1 wanted 10 be sure that \.\'hen th<'Y got up there In perform. they \.\"nuldn't get just silence at 1he end ." The class started out with simple ideas -hke pretending to be scrambled eggs. Or gum trying to get unstuck from the side,,·alk. "\Ve wa nted to leach them to express lclf'as through their bodies without the use of word.,," Mrs. h1eister said. "Later '''e \rent on to more difficult ideas like fe;ir and warmth.'' . In fact, many of them would hide in the restroom rather than be seen in dance tights. And if tbey did come to class, they giggled constantly and covered the ir eyes, wore teeshirts pulled down to their knees, and lived in desperate fear that a boy might chance to see them so foolishly attired. But three weeks can work miracles. When parenls gathered in the Spring View auditorium last week . there were few signs the dancers had once been so self-conscious. Gelling th"e girls In th<1t r')lnl. or course. was the big challen_i!e for ~1rs. Meister and her teacher airles. Rut they had one simple rule that was never violn led: Always be positive. ·'One laugh or hint of a smile at the wrvng time could ruin a '~:hole re[a. tionsh1p." Mrs. i\1cis!rr says. ''You always ha<i to bring out thf' good points and help lhf' girl do hell er." The class turned out to be a near tot8l success for Mrs. Meister. Not a single. person dropped, and the 80-student enroll ment was more than twice the-ati-• licipated figure. Often. she reports, th!?:' class ran as much as an hour extra. • "Parents were amazed" that their daughters would actually get up on a stage and perform," says Mrs. Meister. "Three weeks is a shora time for such a One of the most satisfying aspects or teaching the course for ~1rs. f\1eister was that the whole class adopted this at- titude. "I'd be dying lo get a cu p or coffee and the girls would just keep demandin& 'Look at me. Loo k at me.' If you can give them attention in this way , it's better than some of the other ways they migh~ seek attention." "Whenever anyone perforrried a dance, 8.utlda9 ~runoR With A View From the Terrace Overlooking Beoutiful Newport Harbor Every Sund.oy, 9 am to 2 pm 496°5773 .499·2626 ENTERTAINMENT Tu••~•v thru S•futd•v. 1:30 to I :10 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO Tllwrsclsy ,_lo• SM• 12:11 Opftl Seven O.ys LUNCH e DINNll e SUNDAY" llUNCH 11 •·•· 4 p.M. t :JI •·•· • 4 p.11t. 32802 COAST HWY. , •• Cnwl'I Yellty P•rtrw.r> LAGUNA NIGUIL .f! SUNDAYS ~~ ~ STAITS THIS SUN., JULY lD e GALA .s II Hawaiian Luau I1 II I S:OO TO 10 P.M. I "Cemt lft Ai.M tlllrb •114 MUii Mun" 1 i 1 AllOltTID TROPICAL ,lllUITI I I HOT SELECTIONS I 'r ' TWly .. I •re4ltll Cltlc1t1t1 OrMl!I & W1Nr Cl .. 11111111 (llldlef IWM! P'lllton Sllrlm' C1rry II I ..,_... 1"9111 CHfltrll Ollltlf' I •'!!!•I Cl!UfMy ...., IC11..,....ta. "II ,.l'lllf"ll .. I I ,.,,.,. ,.,tjt 1•111111 lallll'lll I l11tM Rk• StNfllM Cr11t KMI Cit! .. Ice ,,...,.. •M .c-Mlt l,.,., Clll• • '"""'" I I:I. TONY LOIO'S ISLAND MUSIC I .. ttle of cMm,.tne nch fer lttt Muu Muu , I I and Aloha S~irt ·--"LIO SIRVINO ••GllU.a COMlt\.ITI OINNlll: MINU llUNOAY lltUNCM l'IOM 1t1Jt A.M. TO l ,..M.) A llllNlllNllT SHOii lllYI llOM All IHIWAll ~TUfT~~IR[ A EST AU RANT NIW,Ott llACM 22" W. COAST HWf. (71'1 •••·1017 I ' I ' I I1 I: ll Fine Italian Culslne Coelcltl&b 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673°8267 Reurvttloht .. Ope n Daily -S p.m. to 2 1.m. CLOSED MONDAY -, --Chln;;e Cuis°in';° I /,fr;.... 0"EN OAllY 11 AM·!1 "M . ClOllO MOHDAY I l ·--oo I· SP..&CIAL WITH .. =-:.-THIS COUPON · 1 .A.-an&~ Complimentary T er~aki Beef Stick I ~ 1t With E'lch Dinner Good July 30. A"g. 1, 2. 3 I f"rlMlll Ceu11111 Al TlrM Of Ortl..-1ftt) mJ -;1 "';.-If-I . I PHONE •••• 845·5550 lB EAST 17TH ... COSTA MESA I --------- ·-·~· OLD WOBLB INNI 2121 I. c .. tt lllfl"" (en• Dll Mer, <11lfff1i. 67J.tllS '"DHk .... k '"' , .... Mltttl"' FRESH FROM STUNNING SUCCESSES IN ·HOLLYWOOD AND BEVERLY HILLS, OLD WORLD RESTAURANTS OPENS ITS tHIRD·ANDJUWEST· RESTAURANT IN CORON& DEL MAR Extra-Ordinary Steak. & Lobster .. .. • Th• M11119111"1•11f ef tht Old Worl4 ltttf1ur111f 11 ,t rtic• •• 1,,1, ,,~41 et tho fo cf th1t ff11y tC'llllrt Mt f fT..111 .,... clt l •1rch which 1rt f1d 019 111/cttly 111d tr• 1111 111l1)1ctM to thoh I oth1r m.dic1tlo11 thot h1w1 l11111 ft111H1 tl•tti• m111f1l to good h11lth. Th• •114' rt tuh 11 th•t our •I•• .. • "'' 1101 only 11ttplion1llv t111d1r 111d l11icy, tfi1y'r• .. 1,. tt.1 Dttl 111 fht Southltnd, IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE JUDY and JIM oF MERV G~tFnM FAME k("omp11nifl! hy r1lt.ntfll and ac:complb htd fr,.u icNn-. ' ' ' '· ' . ' ' •·IJl ,.nicr•1in you niJht1y .·, ... ~~~~~-..------------~~--~~~· . THEMANAGE/lfE T '"""this op. :i por11u1ity lo ptrsondlly i11vil1 yo11 lo • join lbtm in"" 11lmosph1rt of lht old world. r f • • ---I a DAILv P1i.ot ••• _ ... ·zna· rrldlY, •Ju~ 28, 1972 e .,, .. ' ... \- JULIE'S BACK -.-~~. - RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.15 JIU SAYS: ''.YOU ONLY HAVI TO 'BY IT TO LIKI IT." STIAK A LA IOMA $2.50 "HICON LIVllS IN WINI 5AUCI Sl.U . ION SHY lo DON KINDRICK Mon. thru Sat. ln the Lounge Lunch--Mo n. thru Fri. 11 •.m. to 2 :30 p.m. Dinner-Mon. thru Sit. S to I 0 p.m. CN1plill'l•11t1ry l1k1cl' Al11k1 for 111 l irfhd1y1 l A11ni111r111!11 • 2641 H-llYd., Cotto Mtto 545·f471 "-PiRis-c·iNN .. CONTINENTAL CUISINE Now Open For LUNCHEON 11 :JD to J:JO-M••· ritnt Ftl. Atk For Our 'Culinary Masterpiece' Compl•t• $3 95 Dinnar • / F?·o1n 6 p.m. -Moo, thru 1'hur. JiORS D'OEUVflf~S AT TllE BAR Han Yeu Heard' About ~ CLl,IB DE PARIS Mambtra Only pancl,.t-Lata Sup~r IOI "JOtll ST., NIWPORT HACH 675..0300 ... '· ·: . .... TREAT '!'OURSELF TO THE PmR WICKERSHAM EXPERIENCE · ' Now Appe1ring Six N,ight1 A WH k Sund1y Nit• Jim Session with tho JIM NEMETH QUARTET • • "CLUI 21" Mon-1rf. 4 to 1 GARGANTUAN DRINKS iNTE~TAl"MENT NIGHTLY . LAGUNA 0,.EH s.-vEN DAYS 1460 S. COAST BLVD. FLEUR DELIS LAGUNA BEACH PR~I PAIUCJNc; IN IU.l Br endel, Tuckwell Return to Bowl Pianist Alfred Brendel and Symphony and prlo<lpal cue.t horn player Barry Tuekwell conductor ot the ft o ya I return to !ht Hollywood Bowl, Philharmonic. will dine! the Los Ang.i,., Aug. I to appear Loe Angel.., Philharmonic. aa ao1oi.sts bl an all-Mozart Margaret Harr.ii ' w l JI evening for the second con-btc0111e the lint woman to secutive yt:ar. It will begin at conduct the Phllharmon_ic 1t 8:30 p.m. , Hollywood Bowl •lo<e J92S, This year Brendel will play when she direct• lhe orchestra the Piano Conetrto No. 25 in Jn the traditional family picnic 0, K.503 and Tuckwell wilt conetrt at 7:30 p.m. Aug, 2. A perform the Fourth' Horn composer -pianist -conductor Concerto, K,495. she bas for more than 11wo Lawrence Foster. mu s I c years been the national mu.sic dJrector 9f the H o u s t o n director of tht m u s J c a l . "Hair/' and has previously guest conducted with. the Chicago Symphony and Mio- Miss ·A ndreivs in .TV · Se rie s By Terrence O'Ji"l1beriy ot "" OlllY ,li.t ~MH For the past two decades the entertain~nt world hat been w1ging a war against ) wholesomeoeM. tn its place we have beeo ahown the sleazy loser and the petty hood and the public is asked to "relate" to them. We have been \Qid that the healthy person does oot niake an interesting ~ero or heroine. uesl3 looking up the ais le ror much. We have a wonderful ~ bride1 and suddenlx ,._1iss . home (~ith prod~Jer:Jrec) ~ Andrews swepl onstage and -husband Blake wa s into the lights. Encouraged by it's co~stantly filled ,~llb the publicists and a few true sh.~wbus1ness frl~~g:c~it. hold-believers among the preS!I, the Were you a audience stood and applauded. out insofar as a TV series ii "Why am I doing a tele-conce rned -oro did some pro- vision series? Because it ducer just .come up to : gives me the chance to be me. front ~oor a:,~ ask you I've been hiding bchin<l 1roles you said yes ·d. sed It fo all my life. One is always "No. We ISCU! ,, r playing a role. But in a TV month!!. Th.en I said yes. show of one 's own , one can Someone asked . about her sing the songs one really likes flawl ess complex1oh { ab e ,, drinks gallons or fresh water . i . nesota Orchestra. ~ llJmI~L!I. -.....:., Nowhere is the success Qf that campaign more clearly measured than in the dilemma of interviewing Julie Andrews , a performer al great talent who happens also to· be beautiful and rerined at a time when show business is slanted toward the talentless, the ugly and the vulgar. · ·while l waitt1d for her to ex· -bottled without chemlc1ls) tricate herself from her one-and someone asked what her ' ness, my mind began to image of herself was ("I think "'ander ever so slightly. When I'm terrific!") it came back Mi.!S Andrews "Do you ever long to shed wa!I saying : your image and do somet.hlng B ERLINE R F-t1U' /tit .-~rbr•lt• fllilh po·i.eo i.wm!"i"I' LUNCH 11:30 i. t ::IO TUl!SOAY TO l'ltlOAY 5 ~.M. POlt OINNll TUESDAY TO IUHOA:f Gl'tmen MU'l!C Fri, " s.r. N19111,. CMncin.g S•I. Nl<;int 8111<11,1t J F...:IUtin iun ••ill(h ••~<1. Hunll119lon Buell T•w~ & Country Ch'. t'41 -JIH MCXt<.-"N dk:_Mtr<t1.1aii/; "Finest Mexicart ·Food in Orange Co." Ch•1broiltr-Pood to Go Op•n 7 Dty1 Entertei nm•nt 547 W. lttll 11. e MJ·t1'4. C•1I• Mtn \\~M~ ANCHOR INN HOUH OF SEAFOOD NOW OPEN FOR . LUNCH 11 :30 to 2:30 Tues. thru Fri. Ni9htly Dinner-Coc ktails 4 to 11 p.m . Sund•y 2 to 9:30 pm-Closed Mondays MONIQUE TOTH Owns Chez Monique ABOUT ... (Continued From Page 23) from 5 to JO p.m. -seven nights a week, Chez Monique is open for lunch from 11 :30 to 2, Monday th.ru Friday. . Eurasian com chian platters offered on the luncheon menu include beef, $1.95, chicken, $1 ~85, pork, $1.85. Sandwiches include the Nguyen beef, $1.65, and the Eurasian special, $1.5!. Cocktails are served in the lounge nightly until 2 a.m. ,Chez Monique is located at 719 W. 19th Street, between Pomona and Placentia, Costa Mesa. A, less hardy person would never have survived, but Miss Andrews is alive and well. I am happy fo report, aod will haVe a television·series of her own this fall on ABC. Sh~ is just as polite and pleasant R!I she was when I first met~her backstage at "The Boy Friend" in the mid-'505. And just as diffi cult to make in- teresting in print. The network brass in· troduced her to newsmen at a press con'ference last week which had all the trappings of an interview with visiting royalty . Seats were arranged in a half-circle around a raised platform which held two chairs which were bathed in the glow of pink spotlights. "ls she here?" asked a publicity man peering from backstage into the audience. Indeed she was. There wa!I a turning ·of heads like wedding , 8rwkf11t ,_, NOW SERVING 24 HOURS DAILY Oiriri ... COdr.llJt. ,Entwttlnmwrt CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFEE SHOP Ph..,. 13:1-2770 . "Oh, rm not sure th.al Carol really depraved?" asked I Burnett influenCed ine 100 per· non-believer. . . ·cent but she demonstrated •·oh YES!" she· cried. that one can manage a family "Whal a nice man' you are to life alongside a TV career ask " quite nicely. For several years . · B~t I don 't think she meant I've been a ·mum' for our it. And I'm giad she didn't. three children. She's just about the only "Jennifer is nqw IS and I performer these day1 who don't need to be around as doesn't need it. Mexican Rodeo Opens At LA Sports Arena The National M e x I c a n Festival arid Rodeo opens a new program at the Lei.! Angeles Sports Arena today w it h a five-performance schedule comprising t h r e e evening and two matinee shows. - Tony Aguilar and his wife, Jo~lor Sil vestre. both Mexican film and recording slar!I, together with their two sons, Tony Jr., 13. and Pepito, f, will sing and perform on horses as highlights of the two-hour show. Aguilar 's collection e f horses , Lipizza n 11 A n d a I usians, Appaloosas, Portuguese stallions an d quarter horses. will be 1ten in trick riding feats and other rodeo action under command or the show's 28 charros. Real · Cantonese f Pod e1t here or take home. 1814 N. Coast Hwy. ! El Camino Reall · c.Airporter qnn ST A 6 SAN CLEMENTE 492•6571 'Hotel l~~!~~.~~~!.~}VD. CHINESE· CASIN() ;;~;;~~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1.~.~~~~~~~~:::::::::::::::::.~~~~~.~,i"~~~~~~~~!~~~~!!!!!~.I! ll~,?.'~..!'l;.,~~~i:;t12~1~1: M. ••~ ';!.'~ 13~9!60 THE BLACK KNIGHT. Sun 'Downer 'Dinners TEMPLE GAIDENS ll~~~~~~g RESTAURANT SERVED 6:00 TO 8:30 P.M. MONDAY 'l'HRU SATURDAY SOUP• ENTREE •BEVERAGE ... INTIMATE DINING COCKTAILS • DANCING SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAINMENT Open Dally 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. NOW APPEARING . . Lunch 11 :30 to 3 MATT LEWIS ·g CO. ' . 330 EAST 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 548·7791 ' ·.PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES : HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE .THE OLD .DAYS How Mt 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious pipinc·hot piue1 to your door Jn minutes. ' l'or prompt servioo phona 646·7136 (Newpait Beach/Costa Mesa· 17th and Tuotin) · i / or 847·1214 (Huntinaton Beach-Be1ch i nd Hiel). /J!/ :· Get the Piua with Pizza0_.j~ ~ ~ 'llWn-QW . -- ·- V .OLCANO HOlTSE PRESENTS . . THE POPULAR AND SENSATIONAL ENZO AND HIS GROUP DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT FROM 9 to 2, Tues. thru Sun. JOIN US FOR- TIKI TIME HAPPY liOURS MO~Dr:.~-~ ••• WITH JOHN GLORIA & HIS GUITAR DINNER HOURS 6°11 P.M. .. 1400 PALISADES ROAD eosyA MISA <Briston 557-7057 2.95 .• :--------1 SUN DAY CHAMPAGNE" BRUNCH DINNER •PRIVATE PARTIES OANCING FROM ROCK TO BACH BONED RAINBOW TROUT AMONG JO SELECT DINNER I NTRllS 1'llVI£M ,IU!&TA.UUNT . Continental Cut1tne Cockt1lll S11'\ltno Lunch1on and Dfnncr llondou lhrdllflh Satllr<14W. Closed Sundays . We t r• loct t•d ntrl to tho Moy Co. in South Co11t Pl111. U U l .- C.... .._... • .... ,... - Q·-HWi;SGRestaurant RICKSHA COCKTAIL Lu nchoon & o; •••• De ily .31...LOUNGE IU,.IT ~UNCH ,,,,..,,30 I ~'(J t\\,•J[!f ~. Monday thru Friday , Fri.&: Sat. I to 1 ,,__ __________ • 1500 At'AMI (St Harbor) COSTA MESA Featuring Exotlc Tropical Drinks 540-1937 540· 1923 Weft D.yt: 11 :JO A.M ... 12:Jt Op<n 7 Day1 NOW APPIAllNIO RUBEN ORTEGA Fri. alMI Sot. 11 :JO A.M. ta 1:30 lnterna tion•lly Known S••dcryt: 4:,00·12 MIDNl•HT Latin Guit1ri1t 909 3 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BJ;ACH 962.7911 NOW APPEARING BILL SELF DUO SUNDAY l l UNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. U.N9Un FACILI TllS 117 PACIPIC COAST HWY. HUNTINfiTON II.A.CH OPEN 7 DAYS . 536-2S55 'Gfe Extraordinary tfalar~~VID80!(Trio t/'l<tw:.wru ~ug 12 at Nieupcgrt 17 Restaurant •, !IMITl lllTll """ ~.,.. " . --. -'-" ... ~. ~!!11...----.J: ·i..,. I I 1 l r. TV DAILY LOG ... Friday Ev1nin11 Saturday Morning JULY Z• JULY :II 1.10 •• _...... l:OO.ClllM• -tll ..,.., Dtllil---, ..... ~.. (l)lYIQet•- Dt-I"'' ... --7:00 _.,. [wMq It..,. "fer1ntt 111d 1•e1r ...... T CIJ JlnJ i:... - I_ .... _ ·-... 1111-..... , .... LMll ...... .... LI ....... -7:111-•T-llno-• ....-..... •:11 CIHllllltn W... 111-1-,_ -(Ii<) 11o SUp11 !owl (1)(1)-- --111-... ... --.. .,_ ... .,_..... toolCll.,. -... ..,... • ...... , 1•" Golden West's Thespians Keepµig Busy in Summer Tbeltrlcally 1ptakl n1 , Golden Wea! Collece bu been the Avl1 ol the coaltll aru'1 three junior coUeces for the past aeveral yun1 but the drama studenta ol the Hunt- tngton Beach school have, ltke Avts, been trylnl harder tMM clays. TOM TITUS Intermission The GWC thespians are cur-w ~--rtnUy In the mlcht of 10 Playhouse acholarlhlp, wbo tbe helm of the G C w ~ ambitious program ol sum· will bead for greener educa-department In 1167. mer tltelter which ;, bringing Ilona! pastures nut fall . "Our technical capabilltit1 The thteHhow program Is were very Umlted In the old three productions to the atage somelhinl that would have theater," be polnta out. "We In II many -u. Lairt -k been virtullly Im-Ible !.ut b1ve 1 much sruter capacity It was I student·mounted evening 0 f nfne..oDHd..'I; year, Mitcbell points out, since for acenery and effects now. to .. 1 .. ht they open "Dracula'' the college had acceaa only to and we have a much broader wa its 7~seat Actor's Playbox. choice of material." (tomethlng they can really Now, with the 300-seat Com· Mitchell plans to crute a sink their teeth into) and nm munity Thuter, it's a whole repertory co mpan y at. week they'll present Woody new bill game for GWC's mosphere at Golden Weal nut Allen'• "Play It Again, Sam." eager a,..,,.,,. classes. seaaon. with emphasis on the It'• the first 1 um mer ... ...,. th theater P""m-am at GWC, and The expansion of the Golden ensemble approach to tater • .,.. West drama program ls a and erperimentation w it b DAILY mer • MIME._ FDR l'MENl&Mll WINI FIDPl.E ........ ,, ......... .. __ ............. .. __ ,,, ___ _ AU. Mii -""' ---liii'I OU.--~----.. --·------... 1 ® .... _.1,•mu <Atl llllrl ..,.., ·--••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •D ..... _.,._ ____ ,.. . ----·e..1--,.,,,,. .. _ ·-INf-' --(J)(l)f...,_ . -ID A.II. -·-IN CM- Golden We'st drama tnMructor particular IOUrce of pride to variowi for:ms of staging. Tbe Charles Mitchell, who'i~betn Mitchell, an alumnus o I season will culminate ln lhel =========='!' pushing for such • project Orange Coast College who production of the oolleee·s\~ Z during most of his five-year changed his major from fi rst musical in the apr.in& of tenure, Is admittedly quite ex-speech to drama after playing 1973 -.... _ .. _.( ... )"!$ 1:11 •• -.,, "' .,.. lo -1-> ·12-...... fir Mitt lud Aiiott 1114 L•u CMtlllo. -·-·--cited about It. Guildenstern In OCC's pro-with a siza ble new theater . "We 're learning a lot ," says duction or "Hamlet" '"'1th summer orf"-i11c tions an d P.1itchell. who is directing the South c.oast Repertory director musicals on the horiwn, the "Dracula" I hr i 11 er . "We ..... Mt uw •:Je I (J) , .. ,., .. ........... ..., .... _ ,_....... . .... .,,,,, -72 • (J)(I)-"" =ii'.. 1:001=~=· 'LENNY'· TO RUN 4 WEEKS AT AQl:IARIUS S•ndy Baron •nd Joo Silvar ln Bro•dw1y Hit Broadway Smash Moves .to Aquarius David Em.mes In the lille days of Golden West College's have only 50 students ln the role). Mitchell studied under playing second fidd1e i n program for all three plays. Lucian Scott at Orange Coast theatrical acti vity may be There's IO much more in· 'and succeeded his mentor at numbered , volved, particularly In the i~i;;;;i;i;i;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I U!clmlcal area, since both ...,.,_ ---ri-1·u -· (Cl "11111111 ·---0-O'lriM, -w-. 7:Je ct..i G CllCflllaM11 ..., .......... (J)C.W c..-. -car!~ --Y• ·-~ (W)'U-111" (4n) '6-Joe11 Crtwflf•. &111111 Cetiltt. hbir.11 hi!•. Cll'-""'"" ·-~ .. """""(Wm) 17 8 -$ -= car! -''""" -Ceolbnco foft The omallh Broadway hit, ,_,. (lln) 'U--IMGamr1, Stu· •Cl••llC.. ''Lenny'', with lht original •rt Wllit!Nll, """'"Devis). t.JDI"' *" IMf hMll New York ca st starring Sandy Ult_.. ...,_ .... ......,, -... (I)....,: ......,. tf 1-1 ,..... Baron l!IS Lenny , will open a lnplt · (wtl) 'SG-Joh111retaM,M11 CM1r1L four week limited engaiement --lllw..lle at Los Angeles' Aquariwi Lei....., .. ,.,.. 10;00 ,...... • .... II•• Theater Aug. 15 before corn· ;:•.::.~.. = ..:!,-\.., menclng a naUonal tour. 1't -,..., -..., tooli ti Vton" Based on the ·tile and words "" Cll"""' ii! 10-.Jt Cll-.1' ,_ f f Am rl ' ~ • ·--.,.. PtrtMn 8 ...._ ."'-.._. <•> .,1 o one o e ca s mo!!. con-.,... ~·n.e fllll" (IQ ltlMrt Ltw.-.,,.,,.. ew,w.' ti-overslal utlrists, L e n n y ,.,,,._ Mimi" <•) ''63-l• l"oltaft, ceived for the at.age by one of ..... -~ .............. di W111Ph1cW WMl i. ..,.. ll:tO Cl)..,.. . it! producen and Los Angeles ' ---118•-'--native, Marvtn Worth, who Los Anaeles It the Mark Taper Forum In John Gum'1 .. Muzeeka ". Pri!:views Cor "Lenny" at the Aquaris Theater will be Aug. 11, 12 and 14 with tickets at redUced prices. Performances wilt be Monday through Thurs- day at 8 p.m. with 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. performances on Fridays and Satllrdays. For ticket lnformaUon call (213 ) !11·32U. shows involve l n t r i cate lighting and spectal elfecla." Mitchell ii mounting "Dracula" as "a really old l fashioned melodrama with all ldnch of gimmicks such as bats flying around. It's a lot of fun and not very deep -a good choice for a summer show." Playing the title role Is one of GWC's mainatays, Von Schauer, who took leaaing roles In "Taming of the Shrew" and 0 The Visit" earlier this season. It'll be the parting shot al Golden West for Schauer, a recent winner of a Huntington B e a c b Live Theater on Coast lfM.......,leU. ..... : (C) ..,... Ill •rt Bruce, "Lenny'' was con- l.w. CMtrll St· Louk C.rdilllls It CAQao CUiis. was also one of Lenny Bruce's 1-: <2'rl "1111 Joa -' cil ....... -"DrlClll1" "Camelot" a:. 9ec:Mn 1T1 D {])..., Qllnl managers. !..,~---w.. __ ...., 1,1 "Lenny" was written by The clusic honor play Orange Cout c.illece's sum· ·~ -__ , prod -~ b OptN tonight for t h r e e ·ca1 ~" HI en r• --= CC> (.a) I:' uw. Julian Barry anu u~-eu Y performances at Golden West mer musi "'"' open next ..,.._. _ ,_ ""' •u:1t1Cll_,...,...,..k Marvin Worth, Jule1 Flaher, pouege'sCommunlty'lbeater. Wedne.1d1y for four """"Jt.,. tlM 111 •.,.. Cll~ Ult who 11Jo did the llghtin( for OJrtain times are 1:30 toolght porformaOc.s, through Salur· Ji,.. ....,. -,.,.,, lllp• ""'.., the production, and Michael and 7:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. day, at 1:30 p.m. In the OCC l«a-. Jlct .~·~-~ .. ':""Jo. · · ....w: .,...., "'9 11111" (d11) Butler,' producer of 41Hajr". Saturday. · 1udilorium, Costa Mesa •• * Ill ''Ml -• ""-1 ISt--St.,ttt• litcNI"', Vic Morrow. nie music 1s well as the "Tom Joaes•• "Pl1y It Acaln, Sam" ""'! htttt; *" 111 "Mia StNtrt, • ......, •~ direction for the aalire was The San CJemente CA>m· Woody Allen'• popular com- Sir. 'T "' supplied by director, Tom munity is presenting the stage edy will be preeented for three I:;::"_..., -Afternoon O'Horgan. ("Futz", "Hair", version of Henry Fielding'• performances, Thu rs day """"" 11:11.(J)Dt-· ·"J'8Us Christ Superstar") He novel tonight and Saturday at through Saturcky of next llll..,_111111 .._ ..,.. .,.... '\lllllf will also provide supervision 8:30 p.m. in the Cabrnlo , week, at Golden West C.OIJege , I.IC 'atU•,.,. TJlll" for the show's translation to Playhouse. 202 Av e·n id a with an 8:30 p.m. curtain. t:• di e 1ecw1 Tlll 1b1t , G (I) (I)• NA Wt111 T-the Aquarius 1tage. Clbrillo, San C 1 e m e n t e . 0 Tbe Wl&ard of OI" 11t 11111 Al MIC ..._ McumentJry W Sandy Biron, who starred as Reservations 49t-04&5. The Fountain ·Valley Com- 2ND ANNUAL Summer Music Festival ORANGE COUNTY MUSICIANS BASH AT DEL WEBB'S NEWPORTER INN 1106 J1mborH Rd., N•wport Bo•ch SUNDAY • JULY 30, 1972 2 PM TO MIDNIGHT 50 BANDS -COMBOS Many, Many Stars & P1r1on1lltl1t Continuous Performances On Four S.p1r1t1 S!"fU $2.50 For The Entire Sh ow ' Sponsored By Mullcla111 Wives Club of Local '#7 iF of M 1,..... Lelll .,...: tc> "fllt .._... Lenny on Broadway, won Hff1ppy Birtbd1y, Wa1da inunityTheateropenJitspro- Cll 00 m .... m (R} (WIS) '51-.lotf Mc:Clll, unanimous aiUcal acclaim for J1ne" duction of the c I 11 • i c ,., ,... .. I IJ ,, ...., Pl14 a .........,, ,.14 II::,. ,.,. : ::::, his portrayal of the now heroic Kurt Vonnegut'• comedy children'• fantasy nut F'rldly1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I ...,. 12~eCllYM An""" (R) comedian. No newcomer to satire contlnue1 with for four weekindl. Curtain1.;;; •-,.....,. ,_ In' DUJIW'Ollt Broadway hits, tonight, Saturday and Sunday p.m. Saturdaya and Sundays IO:IO -I"' ·--the atace. Biron bu appeared perfonnances at I ' p . m . times are I p.m. Frlday1, 2 Nearly Everyone (l)T<tll•Y""' . l:IO (IJm -• Fiio , ... Including "Tchin-Tchin" with 1tSouthCoutRepertory, 1127 11 1!2MI Mt. Baldy Circle, a -"1111 -· -,.. <11 .,...., ,,. ,,.,.. An!honY Qufnn and Margaret Newport Blvd., eo.ta Me11. Fountain Valley. Reaerv1tions Listens to Landers 1rt c....,, -11yt-. ·-iCl •ia fl'"' 11 111•, _Lel:::gh:::.::to::.n:.... :::He::..:.":::":...l:::u!::..:-=n:::ln=-:::R::;eaerv:=.;::.at::.io::.ns:....:646-.:.....:1::.383::.. ___ _::.ll&W::.;..l::.911::.. _______ , ____________________ 1 • -(Cl (!IN) .. -(Im) . ..__ ""'""" ,_ ... tw...t" (rom) ''S-Jun111 a (J) (I) II NII 11 ,, .. ftel. Cnln, 0.MI Wffllll. ... 1--·--....,.... l...... Tlllltrs .... Dicll: Clrttr ,.._. A*e a..• k TtNI 'mew• Ant11r ,... ~ 11 LIM " .. 1'9lltl .. -('J Sto w .... 11'11 l:SO. -· "1111 lldo -(Wm) llslin1. '57--AllthoiiJ Qulilll, Wlltlsm Connd. I=-..:.... ·=,.~--Uh" (dn) '!I EE.,....,,.,,._ --Doott, Kl! W11tll. . It.JI IN JJ. Ill) 1:111-' y-: . • (13 •••• ,""' ....... ,, -~----r.a "* ,., _, "" -SNIT .. __ ,,_ ....,_ .. ""' -1--1.1-....,_ ....... ,.hi 2:11.ftlt ........ =-•• -•• -:.. _.. ·-~ ,_ ll:tl Cll -·-.... -1---:-:,:.~•1n ,.1:-i.: ... lloJmlll(O) --~ .. ··-:..~~--(Im) 11:11 !,.a.-. M: ..._ s 11 ,.. 'lt::-.:,-' ~· Henry follfl1. u:SOe• ,.... -·(Cl '1lln'I 1-, '."Mt" ...... <• .. 1 .._,. (COll'i) '6s-EMI "'91ey, '«>-John w.,_, Antflonr Q!Jllltl. Frei Jeffrin. MIO' Mil Moblu. • ,... fl UP' •··--_,_,, ...... -"1111 -l*•l 'II -(~ 'IO ,_ .. LI-~ y--C«'f. ·Lltf-.... • ! (I)........ ...... a111 ts . ·-(Cl·-" .. (loo. .,. ....... --..... -(ld·ft) '--... ht" ... _,,. __ Doll. -·· ....... _ i:'t!..:S~ --i:r.:.aca..:..,. <*-> 11:11 -(Cl ... -(llol --1p, 'II-JIM 5-""" -Lit.-._....,... ............. -(noo) · 1--· 145 .. la k.nfl, Diii Dlw. , (I),..._ I 11 11 El .... --... IZ:JI - -Ylllt 1111 -l'lllllJ 1:11 ·-i.... II _ ... 1:1t•-(Cl .... -(Mil l:ltill-...... --11...-.._ L---'It SOM• COOO.,. ·-----.· 1·-u.. ~--·--·--1:41·-=·_, .. , ... (.,.l ..... ~ •li-111-.• ,.,. -lllltr .. - \ Nmrly Everyone Listens to Landers • • ' EVERY NIGHT PEOPLE ASK . TO SEE OUR ~~ELECTRICAL PARADE AGAIN. . . .. . Beginning Salurday Mnlng, ~II hM two clilncla ID• , Dlwyland's Eltclrical Parade. Once al.9.And qaJn at11 :30. The parad1 ls blggar and brfohlar thlll belort. Wt'VI ldcW a spectacular 40-foot d11gon and th'" other orlglnal cratlons. VARIETY proclalmtd 1111 Ellc1rlcaJ Paradl the "moll lmaglnltM Miii" In our17·yaar hLllOiy. Youwon'lwantlO mLll lt. Now that 11'1 twict a nlGhl you won't hlVI to. TWICE AS BRIBHT BECAUSE IT'S TWICE A NIBHT Disneglg!'.4 ap.na~-1 Lm. l JOI fUNl PIOflTI UIGAINSGALOlll VISIT THI SUPll SWAP Mill lVllY SATUIDAY & IU,DAY,All DAY IA.M • TO' P.M. AT TNI OIAltll II I 1 llVD. • • ' ' ' I : ' '• . • • l • ' ~ I • I I • . • • • • . • ' . . ,: ·. ft D.AILV PILOT . ,. ,. ,. •• ,. f ,. ' ,. ' .. • FM01 • .11111 28. 1972 • • • • • • • • • . COSTA MESA HOLDING SERIES OF CONCERTS AT DOWNTOWN PARK Pacific Pops Will 81 Ft•tured In t Perform•nce •t 5 p.m. Aug. 6 • • • . . • ~ : Park Series A l'luseum to Play In ; ' ( : Features • . Science Show Has Much for Childten • . p 'f' p : aCI ·1c ops Summertime fs here again : • • and with it comes that annual : Costa Meaa't Concert ln 1fle problem-where to take the : Park series Ceature11-the youngsters. control air foils. change orbits explain mathematics, elec- "''ith gravity, fire jet engines. tr i c i·l y, communication, use their bodies to conduct energy, aviation, embryology electricity, play tic-tac·toe and human physiology. with an electronic brain and And there's much m~re. Not discover the mysteries of the only ror youngsters, but for · human body. their parents tdq, who can also Here a little boy can pretend to gulde a jet landing Crom 8 enjoy the countless · and ever- Becket Show Due Play for Chlldrea Jack MacGowran'1 eoe-man. 1how of samuel Beckeq worl<I will bo a1red on Channel 24 at l:!O p.m. Thuroday, NJg. Audi.ence w Particip ate 3. . A pli.y that requires tetive J Said Dr. DonaJd R. Henry, them help the actors ~ave the partl~tlon of the 1Wtience production tupervisor for the world. the play pro.vide! ~x-play, HBy involving the citement and immediacy to it s "A Vjewer't Guide to Samuel Becktt" features (JI med 1eenea: ( r o m MacGowran reciting Becket in the Mojave Desert setting. wlll be the O>,ildren'a Theater h'ld •• young audience." production this aimmer at _::<:::•~re:'.'.n~t·~~-~tv~ .. ~· b~y..'.l'':l'.'.:tin~g'.......:~~::::=:.---- Based on MacGowan's 1970 off-Broadway show. ''Begin- ning to End" includes excerpts from "Embers," "Molloy.'' .. Waiting for Godot," "Words and Music," "Krapp's Last Tape'' and other works by . noted playwright Becket . In developing his one-man show, MacCowran work e d closely with Becket, sifting through all of his poetry, prose and plays -a project that lpok about five years. He adapted the show r o r television at the request of Freedman. KCET will repeat "Begin-- ning lo End" Saturday, Aug. 5, at 9:30 P·~· Callfornia State University, Fuflertop. jjThe Mirror Man,•• a play for chlldren from eg,. $ lo I. will be staged al noon and 2 p.m. on SaWJ'day. Tic:kela are available by calling 870-3371 . The play; by Brian Way, in· volves the story of the Toyman, who has made '• doll named Beauty who can walk and talk. The Mirrorman, who is the Toyman's re:nection, enlists the aid of the Toyman, Beauty and the chHdren in the audience to prevent the evil Witch from obtaining the Mlr- ronnan's book of ins~Uona, which would gi~ the Witch tot.al power oVer the world. . .. ~ .• "THE YEAR'S FIRST REAll 1 SlTISFYIH, Ill COHERCIAl llllERICIN fill. ONE OF.THE IOST IRDTll Ull lllOYIN& CHRONICLES Of llllERICU LIFE EVER DESIGNED WITHIN THE llll!ITS Df HPUllR EMTERUINllllMT." -Vliicent Canby, New York Times "'TllE BDDflTHER' IS'I SPECTACULAR lllOllE, HE OF THI ltNllT IU&STER lllDltES EYER llDEI" ne Shal't, NBC.TV Barney wanted \von1en in the worst way. And that's the way he gut tl1em. ---· ........... Kclt.__ .. .......... _ ,4.lan Arkin "Last of theRedtlot ~ =Kellel-man '. Prentiss . ReneeTa,lor ._ ...... __ ,,,..,,,.... ..... _ .. "-' ...... --....... Nllflii t..1oOMl..tl 1pGJftf:~;:.~ EXClUSIYE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT 2ttti AT EDWAIDS 21ul AT Al ( # 1 LfE MA.RI/JN -VEN £ HACKMAN IN "PRIME CUT" (Rl ABC THEATRE #1 IN THE CITY ORANGE -997-0132 : . . How about an afternoon al a : PaCJfic Pops Au4. 6 m I museum. That would be quite : performance at tfle downtown 1 educational and Inexpensive. : park, corner 18th and Center J. But how can a child spend an : Streets. , afternoon in • . m u s e u m : The 5 p.m. con c.1.~~t , :~~;J~ttµtg bored, cranky -preaented at no charge by the It' ·bL .1 . , ••-. ht life-size contrOI tower, while changiog tem~rafy , exhibits his younger sister can press which ru~ the gamut o! ap-••• • • • lmc.!11,"'1. her pudgy little nose against a plied arts from photos to . • COAST KWY. AT MACAllTKUI ILVO •• • .... , ,, l Nl:t ·l!t,·4111 _: Leisure &ervlc:es Department, s poss1 1~. 1 1t s 1.11t: rig -featura modern and aemi-kind of mu!ewn. A museum t classic.I musk played by 22 where instead of being told not ~ professlon•I musicians. to touch, youngsters are en-~ AU of · the artists are couraged to push buttons, ; members of other bands. work cootrola, dlal telephon~s C. orcbeltras and c h am be r and !'love about to their I" crouPs and their repertoire hearts content. glass and, watch in wonder as ~ar".'c:"h~ite<~·~tur~•=·---_.: _ _l_~N£=W:PO:RT:::BE:•:c:H:•::•:•:•:·0:7:•:o =::'°::':°':'K:•:••:••:•:•:•:'°'::=._/ scores ot baby chicks peck t ~ their fuz.zy yellow bodies out ! ranges' from Bach to That's the kind of museum ~ Baeharach. found at 700 State Drive, Ex-! J a.m e s Chrlatenaen', .con-position Park in the heart of ,,. ductor of the Pacific Pops is Los Angeles, right off the -belt known for hil published Harbor F r e e w a y -t h e . arrangemenlJ a n d com· California Museum or Science positions for band, orchestra. and lndustry-whlch is free to Nie bind, •*"1bies, and all. . 10to· tnatrumenta. Children at · this museum of eggs. From there they can operate a gas balloon. multiply and divjde with lights, control the planets, hear recordings or their own voice, play with soap b1:1bbles or check their heartbeats. Wlthiri 150,000 square feet In three different buildings there are $8 mil1ion worth of fascinating . visllp'r~partlcipa­ Uon exhi bits that dramatically JI ,.a're looklDI for troultle .. M11l11 i11A~I ll ~~ii ~ el iii~ lila~ ~ilillin1 i1~in ~~dll ,..illli 1,...,. Ir~ ~-,,.'..,~' CONTINUOUS DAILY 12,30 . 3,30 7:00 & 10:00 P.M. (ll ---llnJOEIUDO. AT THESE SELECTED THEATERS ~ ·-·-- @ .• . . CLINT EASTWOOD JOE KIDD · PLUS . PAUL NIWVAN "SOMJTIMD l ~~·" !IRST AREA IWH • IATm (Pl) --. , ....,.... a.cti -·· ............ _ Alan Arkin .. . "1.ut~ihe Reel Hot LcMtrs" I PREMIER ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT some book. some . movie. • I I THE GREATEST FIGHTING MACHINE THE WEsT HAS EVER KNOWN CALL THEATRES FOR SECOND FEATURE! -. r . Al.SO . . Ifill 0 Cll(ll ST AR.S: IOA lUPINO IEN JOHNSON • ROIT, l'ltfSTON 1NO EXCLUSIVE RUN WOODY All EN . - .• ~ i • • • • What's That Again? Show Tells Of Blacks ln;.Prison ' . Frldq, J11tr 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT /If.. 'Cope' Opens Soon At Taper 8owers Ope~ 'Mom, Pop' Alexandria Mal)darino of Fountain Valley tells John Richard of Downey about the men in her life in scene froht Golden West College production of "Play It Again, Sam.'' Woody Allen's romantic comedy opens in the community theater on the Huntington Beach campus Aug. 3, with two more dates Aug. 4 and 5, all at 8:30 p.m. Bowers Sponsoring Children's Concert "Don't Bother Mt. l C.,,'t 'Cope", • new 10ul·JaU·go1~l musical entertainment by Micki Grant and concetved by Vinnette CArroU, will bring ila blend o( lively and infectious vibrations to the stage of the Mark Taper Forum 11 the fourth m a j o r aublcriptioft event of the lm C.enter Theatre Group seuon. "Cope" will open Aug. 10 through Sept. !4, the dates originally announced for a new production of Herb G1rdMr's "The Goodbye People" which has been cancelled from the Taper schedule. . The Taper has acquired the rights for the West Coast premiere of the hit show which opened in New York in :late April to an overwhelm· ingl.y· enthusiastic critical .and audience response w 11 l c h necesaitated moving ,the mualcal from an off-Broadway !healer I!' ~ lar,er BrOldwfY house where it ii currently captiYaline audiences with, Its joyful, aa11sy, and soulful !IOUndS. Presented by arrangement A nostalgic trip back lo the era of the "Mom and Pop·• 1tore can be made at the Bower1 Mu .. um. 2002 N. Main Str<el, Santa Ana, AUIU•t S through August 2?. The "Mom and Pop'' store ruched Its hi~best popularity during the llMO's and early 60'•· They reached t h l 1 popularitr for • number ot reasons. First of all, the;e w,as an inflAted economy that gave people the opportunity to buy in &tores with higher prices. Also the "P.1om an4 Pop" attire wu able to offer at· tractions such u fresh fruit and vegetables and rationed products , that outlying chain stores could not offer, Another factor and perhaps the most important was that travel was restricted by shortages of gasoline an~ transportation. Al the wartime economy diminished 80 did that of the VONNEGUT! VONNEGUT! 1\Happy 'il;~thdaY,' ~ffilnda _,.C041T,lllMllJ • .,, ,..,,.. une •XMllCIONlY with Edward Padula and Arch l=;~===~~§~~~ll Lustberg, the new production II for the Taper will be staged by the ahow's original director, Vtnnette -carroll. Winner of tile Outer Critics' Circle Award as "Best Musical" or 1972, "Cope'' also copped two Obie Awards, including one to ll •-------__J Micki Grant for "Best Music lurt leyt!Olch and Lyn.cs". ••"11el Welcil Y11l lfYH' Like last season's 11Be11t ''FUZZ" Musical" winner, "Godspell", "Cope" ls being brought to -Alto- A Ctriklren'aHoUywood Bowl ~ing both narrative and West Coast audiences by CTG Dick v .. DP• Coticerl L! scheduled ~Y ihe chalk cartooning stints the while ii is still a fresb new hit "COLD TURKEY" stories unfold before the au-entry in New York. Bowers Muaewn Foundation· diebce. Then with a gentle riir The setting for the show will popularity of "Mom and Pop" .tor.ea, People now had the abiDly to lravtl to git the best barga!N ·and because ot oer- tain conditions the ''Mom end Pop" store could not compete with the cha in 1tore and 1t1dualty started lo disap- pear. C~pman College student Pat SparlQlht, and hb camera bas brought a (ew of the re- llWI P!fGH· , ..... , stlillfNf~ -Nlchalas ..... Alexandra r~~l~:; ~~rff "CATCt4,,THI 1uaeLAH" ~"· SlllH't' '-llllr ' Herry 11111"'" IUCK & PREACHER" I =~ Will b l1111Y "NOW YOU Sii HIM, NOW YOU DONT• Al.. IOI "WHAT"S UP DOC'' c ... t. l'rem I """" ' N.-oefllUClt ........ _ .... .. i.wi.· ,~ ........ ...,.._ • (1110 •••tweM ' "JOI KIDD" Now -Exclusive H1rbor Area Showing Al Regulor Prlcul Shows Nlglttty 7:00 & t :JO HELD OVER -2ND BIG WEEKI :rhe .,.m..u,, political &warenm among black men Ip 'prtaon will •be depicted .-llil'ough drama and poetry in · lpe rebroadcast of "Victory :Will Be My Moan" on Doin' It. :fu.,day. August I, at 9:30 J)..m . on Channel 23. Education CGmn1ittee for off the cartoons ar given to a be designed by H. R. Poin· '::7. .. :--:.:·~· Monday, July: 31. ·' lucky' few in the audience. dexter, who most recentiyl';::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:=:l~==;;;~~~~==oll With allotted space in the Reservations can ~ made created the set for "Rich•rdll : : ::Actors recr~ate the roles of five inmates whose d)alogue ~ only serves to qpose the P.rrent !=fisis taking· place in the nation's penal institutions. bu\ also indicates t h e renaissance o( thinkil)g that ~ lransfonnil)g pl8ny bl~ctl' in· mates into PQlitll:il a It d feVOJUtionary being!! K I Poetry written ·by iilmates in IAlifornia penal institutions ii recited during segments of ~· drama by the Watts Prpphet8 which adds a sense Of -teality and immediacy to the production. f "Victory Will Be My Moan" focuses on Big Man. a self- ~ucated student of black politics. who urges his fellow inmates to take full advantage er the time spent ''inside" to educate themselves. ln the bme cell block ate Tony, an 'ddict hooked while in prison; SW~tpea. a newcomer to the ~ block, and 6tis, an ei- j:lu~tler. ~The broadcast was ·Eljinally presented earlier y e a r and ii being a.nsmitted nationally by the Public Broadcasting Service. ;. J(CET will repeal the pro- ~ Saturday, Aug. 5, at 7 P·'1>' bowl for a group of forty-one only by check payable to the II " at the Ahmahson Theatre, that makes one b"• load of Bo with costumes by Noel Taylor ..... wers Museum Foundation who was most rec e ~ t 1.Y happy youngsters f r o m Education C.Ommittee. Send at represen{ed al the Taper with Bowers Museum . Admission is once to the Museum at 2002 his costumes for ••Major free; bus fare Is $2.00. North Main :Street. Santa Ana, Barbara''. and "Volpope'~, and Departure time from the 92706. This is another in the lighting by Ktn ·Blllinllon who BowerS Museum Fouhdation lit_lhe New York production of Museum at 2002 North. Main "CUitural Adventures, 1972", "Cope". Street; ~nta Aria ls 9 a.m. ,--------'-------"""''---------11 Performance time will be 11 ~ln,""f. ' ~ .~program wi Yconsist of llllllic, drama attd chalk talk c~. Eysa~th ,Waldo's Pan.American ensemtile 0£ six artists will perform aR Aztec. Mayan and Incan inspired repertoire ~6 n, instruments traditional for thoae Central and' South American areaa. Included are v i o l i n, flute, guitar, bass, marimba and vocal percussion. Three short plays by Leo Tolstoy, the eminent Russian author of the 19th Century wil be adapted and llirected by Rob Bowers a leading drama student at Los Angeles City College. The plays, The Hedgehog and the Hare, The Golden Haired Princess, How the Imp Got his Reward, will then be voted upon by the au· TECl:INICOL'dR• ..._...,. .... '..r:...,_aa.1e•w.i•-.--. ALS01 "PERRI" A TRUl-UFl FANTASY , CO.WIT ·rwKATSIPD0Cr dience for the prize of the 1-;;;===================I Silver Bear. fr Tony Jenkins and Gary Go!!· dard )Vilt take , familiar fairy tales ·tl1.rOuP. 1 1 new routi~e. col fared l<riit I $"1irls me,.,!!. al\Cf ~, on the screen Untlld Arttlll @]~a@@)@@ . ' 15th SMASH WEEK! !~m•1mi1_•1 ' ,,.1 1 At-n 0' FIU·llliMTfO ,AitJNG IOJ OflJCI OHN 12.00 • t.«I ,.111. M(IN.. Tin. nus., l:f» J.111, WIO. loSO, 1,00 ,,,,., Fll!IAY l1IOSAT. I SI.Ill. 1.00, MJ. lXI ~ , , b1nk11'111rlcard e fl'lltftr cl>t1r9e 1 f1thion itl1nd, 111wport c1nfer '44·1070 '•' ' ' HELD ,OVER -2ND BIG WEEKI 11.IKE WOODSTOCK ONA WAVE' • • ~l!ftll'1--· 'SPECTACULAR' --a.1"'!'~111\M -· 'GORGEOUS' •::::::.-..__ •DU• •• ....,., ---Clf/UOMf ?U ' . ·-I I ll"' l~• --C!NfDUMf lf "-• rr 11 •• ---,, ,f r~Ul/JM I . -· ... . --- -. S14D!UM / . -.. ~ .. ..... , ,._llOYie! "nl·CMl•I '4~, .... • "COOL JtAN'll 'LUN:l" (Oltl "ll'O•TNOY'I COM,U.INT" I•) ... "CANDY" (JC) "•IO tUN" WI~ Cll1rttt .ll"llllMll (li'O) 1i.t "JUNIOR toNNI•" ('01 K1t1ll1 ""'St .. ium °'""" • 139-71&0 • 2114 llti-1111 ' MARLON ~RANDO Iii "CAllDY" • & Oscar Winner "SENTINELS OF SILENCE" (PG) . . ... ... ALEXIS* GEllE *DOROTHY* JOHN. l :t SMITH 1N~1 ~I~ McMARTIN t 'j;..Wii*J . . *.YVONHE 0 DECARLO* f BEST MUSICAL-1971 :t N.Y. DRAMA i< CRITTCS' '_. AWARD :: I « « .• « * ' PRICES TUii, WED, THUllll. llJN, l•1e.1t 1:3tl, SI/II.a\ 7:SO ~ Ordl. 110.so. Meu.11.50. l1le. "·'°1 '·"· •. 00 ''"·'SAT. , ...... 111:10 t Ord!. $12.IO • Meu. $10.IO • 1-'c. tt.IO, I.SO, 1,00 W!D. MAT. 112:30 Ord!. t7.IO • Mtu. N.$0 • l11c. ll.I0,4.I0, 1.50 SAT. MAT, It J:H Ordl. 11.80 Mtu. 11.00 •llfc. $7,00, 4.00. I.II '#MIN QllDEllllNO IY MAH. M1U dMicll: p1~1ble to $l'll.1blrt Th11lt1 It 1!'1111 to 2020 A'ffnill 01 TM l11t1 CenMy iC Cll)', Clllf, tOtlT, endOlll'lt Mlf·lddm .. d, lll1t1pff 1n•1lopt, -f( FOR INFORMATION ANO MOUi" IALll. PHON! (a1ir..,... llwtl AVJ.1~ AT 141. flWTIW. Allll"IL . *** rs1 sh~!~ .. r~~tre ~OClTll DlllCTL't' ACIOSS "'"" tM( cllfrh'f ruuilua . ('llf flll 1111 111&0 IHI Ullf,I *JU rat:ftUTI) f .............................. StereolOOl=M ;. .. . • • I' • .. • _r the sounds of the harbor J::d.S~~youve never heard it so good • . 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I ' ' All con.,. 111b}Kt to prior sole -AR,..rlctt .,. pl• hll1-4 11c ... -·AR ptke•l .. .,...,.,. 11iie,.p.-.. ...._,, ..,.,,.J .... . \ ' t • I • •. cyouR WEWLY ~"'RPO/NTE.D . , • lljTE.Rl!ATlQNAL'S FABULOUS NEW 1972 1110 l/:z.TON PICK UP TRUCK S•ri•I· .t: l .ll IOI Hl 10431 I ••• . . · . . . . . .. · 1 • .I • i • • • I • IMMmlATE DEllV!RY BR.IMO '72 MEW . -----.;;- • fULl . •P.RICE • -. 1 TON CHASSIS CAMPO! SPECIAL • v..a eng\ne . • Auto. trans • Power brakes • Pow«. steering •·12 Plt raled tires • Stll Coo\toined • Slffps 4 •Toilet •Shower • Ronge & Oven E30GHP20041 Frlci<J, Juty 28, l9n llDIDIATE .· DEUYERY • ----bAJlY PILOT II • .. '4 ,Spee4~ Transmission. 1600cc Engine, Bucket seats. Emission Control. (~10W196955) . ~:No '72 COUNTRY SEDAN ~ '70 DATSUNPICICUP ,&CAMl'Elt $1688.-.-··-------------- 1 W/fUllCABCMR~4 ........ hoollr(661BS) =~ND '72 ' MUSTANG • t O.PASSENGER WAGO,. • I '69 ~!!2_~~1.!:.. ............. $181 loOOod~omt.F«tory#,V-1 : '69 ~~°='~~.':-(kl-. $1988 Engine, Crulse-o-matic .. WSW Tires. J . PQ'R"windows.Lmldll•Lt.ML YHM519, RadioTinttd.J!:s,PowSttitn.g, ;1--~· _._. --------~=I o;,c~~74S1~ l '70 FORDPICICUP . : $2388 .' I i \«.A 4 ..... ...;·..,.,,.Ii lri!lln',,,.. ~ IMr.'l~PIATE I --72290 ................................ . DELIVERY : '71=~=:._~·~:·.~~~$2388 I , ' . , • I : ' ... ' I ~ . • #2F01L167484 IMMEDIATE D~IVERY , ' . 250 CIO !NG. Cruis-o-mat- . c, Radio, Heater, Bucket ~._,,.,...sAll VV1YI Interior. • D ll.llLY l'tlOT frWly, Julr 28, l'1Z DICK 11ACY A.: . MUn ~ND JEFF. lllGMINTS ;:.-~~~~~,...~~~..,-~~~~~ • • . ~ • • l l::==~=-~~~~.E!:.:::::::::::~L.l • : NANCY I F ANY.ONE HITS A FOUL BALL INTO 7H!: :tHOPEt l • GCT A ~ F,OUl. 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Ryan ~:~ cllN "IUll ~7 ~ By Al Smith By Dale Hale by Emie BushmiDer I BOUGHT ALL 7HEt Al c;iHT FIE'l.P SEATS JUDGE PARKER AwOMAN'S WHAT 010 YOU FINO, HANDKERCHIE F I I LIEUTENANT? ANP UPSTICK""!H-~i I I J I I • MISS PEACH :tRA, WHIH Vlltl ltfALIZID '>OU Wlltf NOT CilTTm ALONG Wn:M· 'l'OUll: l'll:l!NDS, 010 'l'Ol4 "'" VOUlt,IL' 'Mly ?' l GASOUNE ALLEY GORDO .. ANIMAL CRACKERS ~\ .. By Charles M. Schulz .------__, •• .. IN CJ6E. '«XJ DIDN'T l<HOW, THE MU. POe5N'T HAVE 10 STOI' ~UN6 l!EFOR£ t,oo CAN PICK IT Uf' l! .. •• .. "' '" •• IT lilAS HAVING A 600P 'TIME,_ ANP I DIDN'T lll'N 1 TO ll15T~ IT By Mel ? ) t• By Dick Moores By Charles Barsotti ...... _,;ta,...' A.t:"""i-t,,....-~-:-:-.d.4,.,.--,, -~ ~-i=t. By (?us Arriola ~ • ' • -..i l By Roger Bollen · ~, I ~ J I ( ' ' ' THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE In ., I '· i • ! t i ~ .. !: ' .. ' • " • . • Immediate Action , ., What you're interested in 11 11 satisfying sale of your property in the shortest possible time. T~is 1t11kes action and the Elmore ·Company is an ac- tion o;iented Company. DAILVPll.01' •• PEIFOIMANCE, RESULTS, SERVICE AND llTElllTY WE WILL SELL IDUR HOME! '' " ' :1 ,i t-D----d---------d----S __ .....;;.... __ ..;... __________ R_US~~--w-1_LU_A_M_S ......... --,...-.•• -•• -....... ---.~R~O~B~ER~T-B~R~O~O~K~S---,~.-LL~O~Y~D-G~U~l~C~H~O~N-.~D-.-A~N~NA ..... P~O~TT~S ........ e l•cate ales tea· m • EDWAR!>. JOFfE • HEUN BALL • TOM cox • LEN MILLER • ·e RICK ROEGNER • CHARLES LOOKAllLL • JACKIE SADLER • JOE STANCZVK j l I • HERSl1 McMULLEN • COL JAME$ BROOME •. CHRIS BARR • AUERT ANTHONY MARTELL • LOIS CROMMm • LEE McFARLAND • VIRGINIA GEORGE VOSBURG Our sales-te!lm is. m~de up of pr~.feuionels who ' · are dedicated to your service and satisfaction. • BRENDA PARIS • WILLIAM STRACK • : IE DO . WORK . HARDER yJ~R ~~'~TY. WE .WILL HELP Y.OU FIND EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT OVER 500 HOMES TO CHOOSE FROM HEW LICENSEES ATTENTION We have a special train- ing program which will I • assure y o u r suc~eu in selling Real Estate. ~· '645--4040 ' . FINE RESIDENTIAL· !:IOMES • BAYFRONT WITH PIER AND SUP PLEASE CALL . US TODAY ' Real Estate Professional Salesmen & Brokers! The opportunity is here! You ere needed immed- iately. for our rapidly ex- panding Reel . Estate di- vision. Positive oppor- tunity for advancement. • ' . • Commercial ' Prime .--rci.r pooperty on the San Die90 frHwey. Approximotely 3.21 acres lo- cated on a mejor off ramp fantastic exposure fot a re- tail business North West quadrant Mo9nolia and War· nor traffic count 130,000 a day for only $3.00 per sq. ft. can o .. • c:e..111orclal Depal••t .. FINE . RESIDENTIAL HOME' BAUOA PENINSULA POINT · S bed., 2 bo, 2 story home with private beach In front of house. It ;. zoned · for aod the fioor plan will allow you ID rent It ·u a duplex or live in it .. a fine home for you aod your family, in one of 'the finest areas on the Peninsula at Newporl Full price only $147,500. Vacant. ·OPEN HOUSE 7 bed., 6 ba. plus large family room; •undeck, four ear garage puld/lg for 10 cars in beautiful tiled courtyard -plus>many nwty .olbt11"fllilhlnil <on- tained In this 7,800 square foot home built on three loll loeai.d a half block ID beach or bay. $135,000. Shown . by appoinl I LOOKING FOR UNrTS? Let us help you find the property that fill your particular needs. FIXER·UrrER ON THE "rOINT" Prime Balboa Penin!ula area. 30 x 90 Joi ID alley. S bed. home need! paint aod carpeting. All electric home -good rental area. VACANT aod ready for the ·summer rush. Loi appreised @ '40M. run 'price only $39,950. Sale subject ID court app~oval. NEAR COUNTRY CLUB . . Charn!inR 4 bed., 2 story home In choice eutside location near Saota Ana Country Club. 2 full baths, beautiful tile, bar style kitchen with electric builtins. Raised fireplace, nice carpets, detached double garage. Full price $36,750 -owner has moved ID Montana. Make offer. Zoned f<Jr horse. NEWLY DECORATED Try th!• 4 bedroom home on small Cul-de-Sac in beautiful hardwood fioors. Flfeplace. F.A. heat, Electric builtin kitchen, large double garage with built· in storage and work bench. Raised patio deck overlooking tree shaded rear yard. All this for only $33,000. Owner said sell! . ' DEWXE CONDOMINIUM 2 bed., 2 ba., large airy wi!h poet-a-boo ocean view. Lots 'of extr .... Beautiful PoOl aod recreation area. Double garage private Newport Beach. Excellent location. . . · • WE TRY HARDER . DIREOORY SUNDAY 7 bedroom•,14 b•tll1, 1511 Mb1 Mir Newport l11eh, l1lbo1 '•nin111l1. $135,000. Open lio1111 S11n. 1·5, SATUUAr A SUNDAY l IMdroe••• O.n, 2 b1th. 26f6 S1nt1 At.1 A••·• Co1t1 M111. $36,750. Open kuM Sit, I Sun. 1 ·5. 4 ; SATUIDAY I SUNDAY l Mdroo1n•, I beth. I 514 l1lbo1 Pl, l1lbo1. $39,950, Open hou11 Sit, & Sun. 1-1 • • S,ATUIDAY I SUNDAY , 4 or l /d•n, I '4 b•th1. 20J Su11nn1h Pl.t C01t1 Me11. $31,000. Op1n Ho111e Set. l Sun. 1-5. SATUIDAY I SUNDAY l b.droom1, 2 b1th1, 1151 Dor11t ln, Co1t1 M1t1, -$21,500. Op~ hou11 I Su11. 1·5 • . SATVIDAY I SUNDAY 2 1Mt1Glilt, 2 b.+ht. C.twiMinlllflll, Pool 1504 W11kliff, Villi l, Newport l11ch. Op111 hou11 Sit, I Sun. I •I. l bed., I Yi b1., 930 W, Wil1011, C01t1 1 ·M111 Opell hov11 Sat. I: Sun. 1-1. $2'4,50~. VERY RARE Beautiful duplex on Balboa Peninsula with private ~ront beach and room for pier. Uppei:: 3 bed;, 2 ba. ~wer: 2 bed.,· 2· ba. Out.landing laundry room with "2·ba: Potential Income <onsiderable. $198,500. TlllS IS BAY- FRONT IN BEAUTIFUL BALBOA! UYE £LIGANTLY! . A fine custom home on aclustye· S6nllagci Drive In Baycresl Lovely en• traoce; 4 bed., .a ba., IJrR• famuy ·ro0m, formal dining room, 2 fireplaces, excellent kitchen, .BIG Iaunclcy room: Atlrlctive pool and yard. S.Car gJrage. Fee laod. All for '98,500. , · , . • lmaJtine Beach area du:!~''s8bed. ~~~~~own. FURNISHED. Just $77,000 with i beautiful v A 7% 1UUJ11able loan Of •ss.ooo. 2 blocka lo ' ocean, 1 block to bay. --" COSTA MESA 3 bed., 1 * ba.; home, patios, stove, refrig, freezer It bulltln Color TV. Try 5% down. Only $24,950. VACANT IMMEDIATE POSSBSION Dutch girl clean ·'large back yard with lovely patio back aod front 3 bed., 2 ba. BuilUn stove aod refrigerator.-All this and more for only $28,500. ' SANDPOINTE HOMES . 4 hd.i 2"2 ba., family room. Beautiful, linmacul~, adult-occupied home. $34,9!!0. ' ' SHOPPING CENTER ~eia 'good Westside Costa M .. mopping center '250,000 Jw thao six times gross. Let us show you the projected return on this one. ' REALTORS Serving Greater Newport Halflor ANa Member M.itlple Ustfllt Senlce I " r . . I If OM. y I'll.OT · Everyone Hes Something Tluit Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trad• It With a Wont Ad . "' . > ·rhe Bigges_t Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results Gener ii j, ---l~I __ .. J~._--_--_,l~I ......: .... '~ I _ ..... :1~1 -i:--I~ 2-STORY --$19 ~Cht~;_;~;ro;l;;;;;;;:;~~-;;;o;l;;;;;;~;;:;;;;~;o;ne;r;o;l;;;;~;;~G;tnt;;;r•;l;;;;;;;;~.1~Go;;;ne;r;•;l;;;;;;~;;Goner~;; .. ;;;;:;;;;;;:;;~,~~L~i~~~~~1;?~!· .. ~·~···~1:::_·_·_·_~_~_~_~_~0.;•~· .. ~~··~1::~~=;'-=·::~--~-11 iiiiiiiiii to queen •Ile bedroom._ * * * * * * Gourmet kitdim • JN. ' CLUDES REFRIGERATOR, TAYLOR co WASHER AND DRYER! Private patio. Pool with e COMING SOON Pele /Jar~fl f<eaft'I Q hA (;UESTA ~ f'H:J•nl:J TRADffiONAL UVING-WESTCLIFf FIRST !IME OFFERED -By original owners. Gracious home -3 bedroom, large living room with fireplace and b o o k c a s e wall, spacious formal dlning room. Garden patio entertainment center with builtin B-11-Q and refrigerator. Pool sue yard. Porte .Cochere over .driveway permit. extra parking. $75,. J BY THE SEA 500. ' 968-2929 962-1371 1529 Lincoln L•ne, N.B. Open Sal & Sun 1-5 AN ADVENTURE IN LIVING ON BAYCREST CUL DE SAC-Like living in a mountain hide-away surrounded by trees. This charming 4 bedroom home has complete privacy, and an aine of serenity. $78,500. • AIR CONDmONED ELEGANCE CUSTOM BAYCREST HOME -enhanced by "!!•W11•••••1!11•11!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!1!!•!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!m•ll!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!I courtyard with fountain, lovely decorating. 10....rol -1 S Bedrooms, beautiful t It c h e n/breakflst • · Gener•I ~rol area. Designed for entertaining and gracious Ayres Since 1905 NO DOUBT AIOUT IT WE'VE GOT THE DUPLEX BoUTH OF THE HIGHWAY-IN CORONA del MAR, Z-Bedroom cottage with large patio Mp&l"ating 2 bedrm. unit oYer garage, with remodeling possibilities. Build up to see the ocean. Motivated seller asking ...... $69,500. POINTS TO PERl'ECTION c IN IASTBLUFF 'SEA HARBOR LIGHTS from this newly dec- orated POPULAR MODEL 4 bedroom, 2 bath, dinin' room, rock firep\Ke, carpeta lc drapea, built.-m kitchen. Safely fenced-in back yard for the little ones ......... : .......... fSS,500. ''ST ART SMART'' WITH THIS CONDO! IN BACK BAY AREA-3 Bedroom, 2\oi bath, builtin kitchen, .stone fireplace, FAMILY ROOM, community pool & RJi;C. ROOMS in- f~\:.~. b~: .F~~d-~dcl~~-to;~fhi IUT &-E·A·U· T·l·F·U-L IN :rHIS Enchanting TWO STORY 5 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 fireplaces, FAMILY ROOM, formal din· Ing room, NEW carpets and arapes, island kitchen, SOMERSET model on FEE land in HARBOR VIEW HOMES ............ fl2,500. "SPLISH-SPLASH" ON THE WATERFRONT POOL, PIER and SLIP available too. New carpets and drapes, 2 Bedrooms, 2~ baths, WET BAR, marble fireplace. Overlook THE WATER from your patio and enjoy. $85,000. -OPEN HOUSE - (3 BR. & FAM.) -723 Cameo Highlands, Corona def Mar. $69,500. Open Friday 1-4 p.m. living. $79,5()0. Harbor Lights HARD TO FIND are Included In dramatlc HARBOR ROOM TO PLA y vl<IW• 01 Bay.& "'!an trom HIGHLANDS 2700 sq fl BAYCREST HOME - 4 Bedrooms a mountaln like bide-away . . . . ' tn Newport Beach. sur-Priced just right and extr~ large family room plus dining room . rounded by dozens of t:rtt!, availabl@ for occupancy ~acious .Yard .and S car garage. No thru traf- this hillside home with s before the start of school. fie on this qwet street. All for $851000. Bedroonu. 'Plral ......... Large three bedroom OWNERS LEAVING ·'AREA & gourmet kitchen, has all located on a tree lined ' the quality treatment for street . quiet inside lot with SEE THIS IMMACULATE - 4 Bedroom home. ~ ~ntertainen delight; little trafiic. Walk t o large country kitchen, newly decorated and mclucliJ>l< a ~· 194,4!JO. Mariners School and the ready to move in. A very good buy at $33,- Call MW 646-U1~ llbrary. Cool patio and In-900. • 1o ·THE HEAL ·""" ESTA TERS ' ,, CORNER LOT vtlina fireplace. Up-araded 256 C1mell1 lllckblv ar11 O-n Sun 1-5 througboul Call for details. ' ~ C. F. Colesworthy NEWPORT HEIGHTS & Company CORNER HOME - 3 Year old. 4 Bedrooms, 3 640 0020 car garage. Walk to all schools. Excellent Large 3 Bdrm home with • terms -$47,500. CALL Mr. Wells. ~.,;:l .. ~·~p. .. .;,:,ta~ COLLEGE PARK "40 LOVE" $28,000. Hu rr Y ! Call 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 brick lire-CONQRETE PADDLE TENNIS COURT -is 546-8640 Open eves till 9 places gtve this KenkoU . de -. · with ,.,_ · · · Cambridge model home an stan aro eqwpment LIWi home. EnJOY pm. xlra flair for caru. living. this popqlar s1>0rt-then jump in the 20'x40' Jumbo bdrms make this a fenceg pool! The hous~ is a spacious 4 bed- most livable home. CALI.. i'oo'm,~ 3· bath and 'format dining room -on TO SEE. quiet Lincoln Lane. $811500. $31,950. HOLIDAY ROAD0 NEW1'0RT BEACH AVAILABLE NOW -.3 Bedroom, family room Newport and newly remodeled kitchen. Many extras! Large back yard. $47,500. at Hug•~.~! Pool ::~!~~ ' j p;'f °C,~;n· 'R~Ztrv $35,000 (inytlmo) 1605 WH!cllff Dr.. N.8. Large ltmtly room, ·3 bed· l!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!J!ll ~... 642•5200 rooms, xtra baths, dining ~ room, entry hall, 2 fire- places, bullt-1111, dllhwasber, electric garqe door opener, picture book )'ll'd, patio, pool, brk, 540-1720, TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Co.ta Mesa ------ EASTSIDE DUPLEX Owner' I unit • 3 Bdrm w I bltln kitchen, new shag carpeting thruout, newly decorated, fenced yard: PLUS 2 Bdrm, l bath • rented Jor $125/mo. Owner'• unlt vacant and ready for lrnmed occ. $34,500. Owner /Bkr • 646-5855. --------$28,300 4 Bedrm. +. 3 B•th• 1_G_"-"'-'-'-' ______ o_ ... 111_r_a1 ____ _ Beaufilul !amUy home, entry hall opens to spaciouf.Jivt:ig room, dining room, :atutal wood cabinets, park 'like yard, Brk, 540-l'l'j) TARBELL 2!rJ5 Harbor, Costa Mesa PENINSULA PT. 2-Sty. 5 BR., Ocean Blvd. home. 3,00) Sq, fl. 2 Frplcs. Vacant -absentee owner asking $87 ,500, wW carry ht T.D. Call: 613-3663 67U086 Eve1. associated TRADITIONAL HOME·-DOVER SHORES/ BAYCREST AREA home in the finest tradi- tion and dramatic too! 4 Bdrm., plus family room, plus cathedral beam ceilings and a 28' stone fireplace. Over 2800 1q. ft. in all, and beautiful too. Proudly presented at $92,500. PHONI UNl9UI HOMU. CORONA DIL MAI, 67.MIOO cabana, $200 BUYS IT! Call fast for appt. to see . 64a--030J I 01!1 \I I Ol \O\ '4't4 ·o R) MESA VERDE 5°/o DOWN Tl :1: RCAL 'fZ 1:STATE:RS NEW DUPLEX Plush new duplex. 3 Bdrms, l ~ baths, fireplace, shag cpts, wet bar, inside service porch in each unit. Nice comer lot, view of Sad· dleback. Call today, 546-8640. Open eves. till 9 pm. MESA VERDE 5 BEDROOM $41,950 * Spacious Pacesetter * Custom Drapes * Shag Throughout * 2200 sq. ft. of Enjoyment * Sprinklers Front and Rear * Close to Schools and Parks * No Down to G.!. * Call 545-2313, · THC REAL R t~STATE:f<S 20nALot ONLY $2B,500! Wow! Extra larie R-1 lot. 2 cream putt homes amid park like grounds. Queen We bedroom11. Chef's kitchens in both. $2850 to buy! Hurry. Cal\ 64$-0303. l 01:1 \I l Ill \II\ " , . . . -MODERN- BEACH HOME 134,sod. 3 BR 2 BA "·Frame" cot- tage. Use YoUl' imagination, others have, and the result1 are fantastic. Pool & tennis courts inc, Open daily 1-5. 5300 River, N.B. ?l@tu1-S""'-' ~ Alta AS!OClATIS layffont Condo 3 Br, 2 Ba, pJOI, pier &: slJAo Dellghtlul $79,500 Rechlced $Z,000 uo~!~~A~ST~~!:e~TH~~ * =:::i~~ * 2 Story homl' only 2 yn. old! NICEST P£0Pl£ SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES 2 BR (can be 3-4) tam. rm. BROKE RS-REA LTJRS 2G25 W (lotboo 671 J~b J REALTORS 644-7270 EMERALD BAY Immaculate 3 Br + lam rm. Ocean side o1 hwy, View. Must see! $149,00'.> Tod Hubert & Assoc. 3411 Via Lido 675-8500 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY Fast results..,. Just a pnone CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. call away 6(2.{;618. 41Jedrooms, 21;i baths, 3 car 3 ba. Xlnt cond $55,00'.> or il.ftl&e· Large family room CORONA DEL MAR, 87HCXIO • MESA VERDI!, trade for smaller same area. with fireplace. Ovmtlzed 54&5990 • NEM'ORT BEACH. 14&6600 • CALL ua CAYWOOD REAL TY lot. All !or only $38,950. A1il--===-=====c;,:,;=-lfl,.::.;e=d:.:....-i * 548-1190 * terms. Call -to see. Dally Piiot Clau =-B -='-~.'-=__:::.::::......!!..._ y vwucr, 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, ORANGI COAST'S BUT w/w Clll~ drps, xlnt loo Wenmtnsrer, $26,000 -· SAi 1$MAN •• See to apprec. 84&.6910. .,\.. • 9,.. ¥-' .,,,,,. 'tfi • ~· ~ -..._. General, ~ Gener1t Gener1I Gener1I Gener ii --~----~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiii~ IRVINE TERRACE -$54,900 . Really sharp! Very attractive .brick trim charmer with lovely pool. Spacious 3 bed· rooms & DR. Near Newport Center. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 1416 SANDCASTLE. Lovely 5 BR, 3 ba. Lusk home. Formal dining plus ~ge lam. rm . w/ view of hills. Fee land. Great buy! $95,000. Harriett Davies BAYFRONT-OPEN SAT. 2·5 Price reduced to $149,500! Charming home - 3 BR., 3~ baths: conv. den w/wet bar. Beautiful walled garden. 2001 BAYSIDE DR. ' Bud Austin CORONA DEL MAJ! Redecorated 4 BR., 2 ba.; So. of hwy., walk to beach. Charm galore, ready to build ~nil OPEN SUN. 1-5. 429 HELIOTROPE. Triona Bergin SEE ME SUNDAY 1·5 'OPEN for your viewing for the first time at 1038 SEA LANE. Very sharp & clean 4 BR. w/outstanding view. Only $65,000. Jim Mui·. ler ' VIEW! IRVINE I Plus finest family living. 5376 AMALFI DR,, OPEN SUN. 1·5. Best home in Turtle Roel< Hills. See it no\v! Paul Quick LIKE PACIFIC BREEZES? Lovely, l ~e. view ho m e; 4 BR., 5~ ba's., pool , maid's suite, privacy, custom design. Private beaches. Here is a fabulous buy! $175,000. George Grupe SUMMER RENTAL ,Bayshores. Walk to private beaches. Furn- ished 2 BR. $790 Per month. LaVera Burrui EXCLUSIVES-PRIVATE COMMUNITY 3 Arch Bav-2 BR., view, low main! $64,500 Monarch Bay-S BR +. view, walled, priv. ................................ $82,500 Emerald Bay-S BR, gourmet kit., spac .... ' ' ..... ' ....... ' .. . . . . . .. . . . .. . $ll0,000 Priv. beach, tennis Ct., Security. Bob Yorke ' PRESIDENT HOME 5 BR., large family room; highly upgraded in all respects. Air-conditioned, beautifully ' ·decorated. Fee land. View. $92,500. Eileen Hudson SPYGLASS HILL # 1 Beautiful, bNnd new Lusk built 4 BR. home., · lam. rm. w/frplc., ocean view. Professional- ly decorated. $96,500 Includes land. PARK VIEW LOCATION Family fun in University Park, 3 BR., fam. rm. Park home; sharp ... seeing is believing! Come see. Fee. $54,900. "Chuck" Lewis ENJOY LIDO BEACHES, TENNIS & CLUB 1. New listing 5 BR. Nord bayfront $270,000 2. Orvieto 45', 4 BR., tam. rm ... $ 89,500 · 3. Gracious family home, 4 BR. 65' $122,500 4. Vacant lot 40'. $53,000. Charlene Whyte , EACH ROOM ENJOYS A VIEW 96' of unsurpassed view of Newport Bay thel Pacific Ocean & Westward to Catalina Charmin~ 3 BR, 3 Baths; on Ocean Blvd.;' Corona del Mar. $195,000. Bill Bents --Coldwell, ...... 644-2430 ~ 133-4700 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B • I SOLD I WALKER · .. & ill REALTORS~ -" "Ill' 1 • lll :........: ,, .... l \ '11 1e a l1or> SOLD 11,3U HOMES LIST YEAR CA$H FOl YOUlt HOMI* *f« Info coo-546·1754 now! t $222 TOTAL MO. Subject to VA Joan at 7" with $5000 down or offer. 1 itOl"Y shake root btauty with 3 bedrooma plus family room, 2 baths and stone fireplace. Saller -!Nt sale. $29,500. • Superlative cuttom mt.zWon with 3,600 aq, tt. of happy famlJJ' livtnc. The epitome of NI)' care with electronic OYe:n, bfauutul W"et bar, aoothlng .aun1t t.ltctMc movie ICl'ffl\ ud tbe bttt tn burater llann l)'ltems. No •-wlD be atvm. Qualifitd ~~ by adVln<:O appointment onl,y. fountain Y..., Office 17213 lroolctlunt 961-1371 Opon ........ IO¥llt SHOlllS $1107,000 Over 3200 aq, n. 'ot comfort, luxurJ, and prestige In a magn!ficont Newport Beach aettina: with an unfcl'gettable VIEW. Four spadou• bedrooms. 4 batba, larp fami11 room and FORMAL DINING ROOl\!, Shown ~ appointment only. SU CATALINA From thll mttnllictnt cuttom home with Just under· 3000 sq. ft. of comfort and luxury. Tired ot the view! Take a dip in the mammoth heated A filtered swimming pool. Have teenqenT -the pool YoU ..,. probal>ly uae the bif 3 car garage! '82,500. Shown ONLY.._ Wall!tt •Leo. DICUTlft SflCIAL ~ for th!I 1uperb 3 bedroom home ~ omonr -and lhnibl. Sp..-~ qualltr IDr fine Oil~ Lulh deep pile -...ttnc with.,,._ .. tdlbqr ~ aU eloelrlc ldtchtn with Ill the trlmmlnp, Ian-~-wi.t a thow placo for $39,5001 Solle< lo 1"--4 tor GI. ond 1llA -_., the tlmt. Call ...... " .... Office -646-7711 »A Wtltcllff DI'. It tmne Opon ._.,.. " • TIME IOMI with a short price of $17,900. Take a look at this beauty. Low price .... Includes WUher a dryer, VA no down "'""" .... flDO down ~ with total payment of SW. Wby rent? can now tor lnfonnation. GIANT TWO STOlt'f On ldng 1lze lot In North CA>lte Meaa 4 bedroom. UJl'llllJ's and • 20:<24 flllWled _..te !Wlll' """" olownota!n. 3 bet111, country kl,_ Ind dlnlnrr. ._ J>tii, '*'!>tis • tin.pet la ev<ry room, At. '31.~-betlu·eteltnow! New on market. • SIRIOUS II' I D with ....U.Uc price !~mar-et. Otlm 3 qu,.n-alttd bed-rooms and 2 bib -clean and rt1dy • .AMume VA loan with total poyments $1811 ~per month. Large -...r Jot with triller pte. hll pr1tt II J:lt!,llllO. Submit -down l>O)'rn"1t to C. M11a Office UM ...... IW.. 01111191• ... ' • 141-1461 14M4tl ! ! I . •• ' I I Friday, July 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT ~I ---"'-••I n-111rel 1~----;;;;;;; -"'-------~---------GoMr•I c;-r.i ....,,~.M~R~S-.~CL~E~A~N~ .. ~j.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;; Genar1I Gener•I G1n1rel G1ner1I General la thi.t llharp 4 llR. 2 ba. Mme wilb bltn. MO, real loc trplc., F .A. beat; cool breces under the c:ov' d. patio. X.OC.ted In Estaocia School ....... Call ta.st lo< this Ont. Try 5~ down. BURR WHITE REALTOR * * WELCOME * * PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Announces A Ntw Name SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Expanded Service· Same OWlltr MOUNTAIN VIEW! $27,500. BARGAIN I Owner really anxious to move to the drsert. & "".Mts to ,.u his Eut!ide 3 BR, 2 ba. home. Blt·lna .\ new carpet. Priced to sell for 3 Linde 1111 Drive Beautiful new 5 BR., 4'h Ba. home. Water· front living rm. & formal dining. Handsome oak paneled fam. rm., frpic, wet bar. Large master suite bas frplc. & cozy lounge area. View of Bay & the mountains ..... $179,500 . ~21 NEWPORT llALBOA OFFICE Burr White Rultor Sp1aclous S.be,droom, 2-bath home In prestige m.m ne ghborhood ol Diamond Bar commands IMMED. POSSESS. 11 Linda 1111 Drive Completely furn. 5 Bdrm., 4'f.a bath home. Lge. waterfront living rm. with floor to cell. marble frplc. Formal dining rm., family rm., SALES OPENINGS AVAILABLE • lights and Mt. Baldy view. A rural atmos-Are you mov1ng to <'nah<lm? I phere,r.lvacr and proxlnilty to horse coon-Here'• a nice home to mov• 2901 Newport Blv., Newport Beoch ' try an all o southern California make this right tnto. Lovely 3 BR, 1%. immact!late home a buy. Ex\ras jnclude a ba., lge. family style kit- maid's rm., Pier & slip ......... $195,000. 675°4630 24 Hour Service ELOISE MORRIS Gen1r1I G1ner11I 53 Lind• 1111 Drive ! fonnal dining room, professional landscaning chen w/blt·itl4-· Spacious wiUi two patios, complete air conditiolling, corner lot 'w/room tor boat : Old World Kitc6en and all-brick family room, " trailer. Good im.ncini. l two fireplace~. Priced at $42,500. ~'ClRG'A'~"'REAL TY Elegant 5 bdrm .• 41h baths; on lagoon . New carpets, drapes & wallpllJ>er. Lovely garden & large slip .................... $200 ,000 ! .;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!Austin-Smith Gorman Is pleased to announce SHORECLIFFS that ELOISE MORRIS has joined our stall. PAUL 'BOYD REAL TY 67).6642 675-6459 524A S. BftEA BLVD. ON BALBOA ISL.AND '57 Linde Isle Drive -Open Sunday Custom 4 BR., 3\.2 ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr. BR. has sitting area & frpic. Waterfront f~mily rm w/conversation pit around the frpic.; lovely garden, lge. slip •.... $189,500. ~ (*?~): ~ 963-1500 ~ BREA -{7f4) 529-4284 Don't W•it To Buy Real E1t1te G1nor•I· Gonorol Buy Rul Estate I. TfnuJCu~ Here1s~"Z':!:.1ructed Lovely 5 B~.'. ~1~~~ ~~~.D~it!i downstairs IF YOU ARE , J · ,. duplex near bay, with an ex· waterfront ms\r, suite & lge. game rm. or BUYING A HOME • " J w f. ~ cellent rental record. Upper .study. Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings, I ., ·an a ·~ e, .. ,. 3 bedroom 2 bath plus view, don't mis.• the hon\eS no ., ~. , . ., quality construction, slip .......... $155,000. b-'· r ill ·"ow ~u for ,,. Balcony off living room &: 1Vf<;f' w ~· ~.. • ' ' · 1 tt t bedroOm For Complete lnform•tion pictures, maps and complete ·~Vatch the husUe & busUe of Balboa Is and sundeck 0 mas er · descn'ption of 30 n1 the be~t ' th bo tin f h t th · tt 2 bedroom 2 bath tower On All Homos & Lots, Plea11 Call: v• ' e a g scene rom ere o e Je y. . • buys mail $1 to DIRECI'ORY Spacious 4 qedrooro, 4 baths plus den home, urut, Jarx• 2 car garago BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR OF FINE HOMES, Box 541. rotected pool & patio. plus ~ing tor 2. cars. l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'l!!!!!!!!"""!""""""""""""""...,_ Jiuntington Beach_ Modem kitchen. De1¢htful· 1::; 1215 DOLPHIN TERRACE OPEN DAILY 1y d.corated & owner wants General Gonor1I REDUCED TO action. Asking $86,500. 1;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;~ I $74,900 UNIVERSrTY REALTY C. F. Colesworthy CAMEO SHORES cdM Duplex. Two R-2 10" 3001 E. COAST HIGHWAY & C with tantastic tropical gar· ompany A tremendous value in a family home on a den & building potential. See CORONA DEL MAR 673-6510 640-0020 huge lot in exclusive Cameo Shores. OPEN & appreciate! ~~!!'!!!~~~~~IBAYCREST HOUSE Sun . 1-5. See; 4500 Roxbury Rd., 3 OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S :1~ ~lt) ~-•D1.al ,;,;o,.v.__r1 t.., .... ..,, 41Nc...,. ...... ,.. ............ . ,.. ................. 11 ................. .. .. ~·· .......... h .......... .... .._.la H14ef'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. PtlfrMI ...... .,.. .... fer ............... ..-.. lilt hell w......-1 .... tllh c ..... MCI! "'*'· s.r. .,.., • s • .-,. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedrooms) 31S Milford Dr. (Cameo Shores) CdM 644-2430, $65,000 (SUnday) 1710 Miramar, Balboa 642-8235, $62,500 (Silt & SUn 1·5) *26.'I Oceanview, (Newport Heights) N.B. 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1..5) 221 Milford (Cameo S)lores) CdM 644-6200 (Sat & Sun 1..5) (3 Bedroom• I. Family Rm. or Don) 3125 Trinity (Nr. c. Cst. Plaza) C.M. 548-7729, $32,950 (Sat & Sun 1-4) 2511 Loyola Rd . (College Pk.) C.M. 557-4263, 640-8811 (Fri-Sat-Sun) 2001 Bays ide Dr., Coro112 de! Mar .644-2430, $149,500 (Sat 2..5) 18921 Via Messina (off Amalfi) T. R. Hills 642-823.5 , (Sat 1-5) 2030 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) N.B. 646-1550, $110,200 (Daily 10-5) (4 Btdrooms) 2309 La Linda (off 23rd.) C.M. 548-7729 $42,500 (Sat & Sun 1-4) 1038 Sea Lane (H.V. Hills) CdM 644-2430, $65,000 (Sunday 1·5) f29 Heliotrope, Corona de! Mar 644-2430, $59,500 (Sunday 1·5) 4521 Brighton Rd. (Cameo Shores) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (4 Bedrooms I. F•mily Rm or Don) ·2813 Nevis Circle (Mesa· Verde) C.M. 540-5306 $52,000 (Fri-Sat-Sun) 383 .Santa Isabel, Costa Mesa 646-3255 (Open Daily) *20i4 Nautilus Lane, Newport Beach 646'3255 , (Sat & SUn 1-5) *2815 Harbor View Dr., Corona de! Mar 644-1425, $77,500 {Sat & Sun 1-5) 5376Amalfi Dr., (Turtle Rock Hills) Irv. 644-2430 $78,500 -(Sunday 1-5) *2018 Ghlaxy Dt •. {Jlover Shores} N.B. 646-1550 (Daily 10-5) H38 Galaxy (Dover Shores) N.B. 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 10-5) 1221 Keel Dr. (H. V. Hills) CdM 642-8235 · (Sat&Sunl2-5) 1836 Galaxy Dr., (Dover Shores) N.B. 642-ll235, $112,500. (Sat & Sun 1-5) -. . . , r (5 Jlldrooms) "**54'tllida Isle Drive (Linda !Ste) NB 644-2430 (Sunday 1'5) (5 Btdroom• I. F•mlly Rm. or Don) 1416 SandcasUe Dr. "(H.V. Hills) CdM 644-2430, $95,000 ~sat & Sun 1..5) **•46 Linda Isle (Linda 1$le) N.B. "642-8235 (Sat &Sun 1-5) 'il-*309 Evening Star (Dover Shores) N.B. "M2-6235 (Silt-&:·Sun 1-5) •9 Greenbrier {Big Canyon) N.B. 642-8235, $17S,5oo . (Sat & Sun 1·5) *1315 Santiago (Westcliff) N.B. , 642-82ll5 (Sat & Sun 1-5) HOME & INCOME **49 Beacon Bay, Newport Beach .. 1144-2430, $65,000 (Sunday 1..5) DUPUXES FOR SA~ (I Bed,_,,t each Unit) 221·223 Flower (East.Iida), Costa Mesa 646-3255 (Sat" Sun U) (S llod,_,,s & 1 llodroom 008 Iris, Corona de! Mar 673-2222 (Silt" Sun 1..5) ..... *1t ...... .. *** .......... .... SPECTACULAR bedrooms & family room. Lots of room to add 608 IRIS . on. '79,500 HOME BLUFFS REALISTIC PRICE BAYSHORES Lowest priced 3 bdrm., 2 bath Separate upstairs muter Super Bluffs condominium on wide green· tr,i-level with sundock: 10 bafmt, suite with frpl., belt, "th 3 bedr & f mil ,.. romple11'1y refurbished. formal dining rm., large Wl ooms a y room, open F8mily room of( Patio & beam ceilings, private sun yard, fireplace & Quick Jl066ess. $34,500. 1'ool area. w-ge Kltche~ gourmet kitchen. OPEN HOUSE Sun. 1 • 5. DON V. FRANKLIN lncludes breaklaat area-2 See: 555 Vista Fiora. Priced to sell at '53,· REAL TOR large bdrms., adjoining bath 000 • 673-2222 • + maK!s rwm Car den> and GUEST HOME bat b. Arc b itecturally THE BLUFFS Sy tho POOLSIDE is a 2 designed for that individual Great family home on l lh lots. 1with lar~e Bedroom, * bath Guest family. Open Sat. &: Sun. 1· grass yard; formal dining room, 3 bedrooms, Home suitable tor Relatives S, at 2024 Nautilus Ln., N.B. completely remodeled $79,700 or Guests. The separate Main Home is 3 bedroom 2 baths. Brick fireplace and large living room. Many plants & sh.:Ubs lend to the Garden Setting. $ 3 7, 5 0 0 . WON'T LA 1'T! Call 646-0555, Evenings 836-6960. e 3 Bedrooms e Family room • 2 Dalba • Wall to wall abaa: crptg, •Draperies e 2 Fireplaces • Over 1600 sq ft. • 6ntj(S3J,500. CALL TO SEE • ANYTIME. co: Ts HARBOR c::;':t'v Since 1944" 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• d1I Mir "Stilling Reil ~1t•t• in Newport H1rbor 673•4400 COLWELL PROPERTI ES INC REALTORS ASSUMABLE VA . WALLACE General . !l•nerol REALTORSl'-"-'------"-'-'------ Anyone can assume. this high b-a1ance VA loan. No qualify- ing and no loan points. Sparkling 3 bedroom borne features all builtiri. iarden kitchen, a latge1bonus room and enclosed patio, Asking $33,500. For details ---554646"14141- (Open Ev1nint•l BEAT THIS! 3 Big Be'.drooms-tamily room- g a rd e n kitchen-Iaurfcµy room for Moth-boat ·Or cam~'l' ? for Dad-New grade school and park for the kids-large cuJ.-de-aac lot- very private and j u s t minutes lo the ocean-All this for just $31.,500 •. Ask about the easy te'mls. JCiit,.. co:rs ""WfJll WALLACE RlfALTORS Open E~enings •: 962-4454 •. SPORTSMAN'S PAD $30, 750 in Costa Mesa. $3100 * * * * BALBOA ISLAND NEW LISTING 3 Bdrm., 3~ baths, lge. family rm. D)>I. gar- age, enclosed patio •.•.••........ '82,500. OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 213 SAPPHIRE * * * * * * * BAUOA ISLAND NEW DUPLEX UNDER co'NSTRUCTION Ono Of Tho L11t Of lls Kind Two 3 bdrm., 2 bath luxury apts. Upstairs unit a dream! Come see the plans & choose your colors! * * * * * * * BEST VALUED DUPLEX Upper 3 bdrm., 2 baths. Bay view, 2 sundecks. Lower 2 bdrm., 2 baths. 2 Service areas. Lush carp. & drapes ................... $86,500. CLARK SOMERS, REALTOR· 306 Marino, Bllbo1 lsl1nd 675-4000 Call 540-ll51 (Open Eves.) , HERITAGE , . REALTORS woµLD YOU BEUEYE e A Channing 3 BR Home e A l.6l'ge FR, bltn BBQ e 2 Garages • Large yard with storage area tor campu or boat e Completely-fenced • Freshly painted • A well-maintaJncd home in Eastslde Costa Mesa AU. OF THIS • FOR ONLY 126.900. The Fox Co-R11ltor1 613·JM95 . cash down buy• um spilrld-* * * * * * Ing sharp home with new • shags, fine panelin&: and DIAMONDS ARE 'A GIRLS BEST FRIEND and this 2400 &q ft. 3 Bednn home will truly be the dia· mond in your life, Every spot a delight • from the covered patio to the spacious Roman bath, Youn for only $.19,990. Try $4.000 ·down or huge Palo• Verd• 11o .. 1 ~f--=A-1-=-·--· -C~l"""l _,,&4~2=-=-5&=7=3 b:·1~K"'~~f or c ion • • • a - PAD bas hook ups for all • P'I Cl "f' A :;:,~a~r ~ri:::~·b:. . Daily 1 ot ass1 1ed ds use your GI. · l11rwin reelty Inc. 54G-54ll <24 hrs.) 9684405 'fun' ynrd with patios arKI ~bildren's play a~ Reallorl . ~ Open Eves. DOUBLE DUTY BEAUTY Larp, tarp living room. 3 Br .. I'll biltba. FamUy room olf the patio • l"'1 the place for : yoor pool table, yoor teenagers, )'OW' o(lice, )'OU.r rnother-tn-1aw ar )'0\11' own private eteape from the rtsl of the family. 3}" car &:ara.ge with 10• d6or for trailer or CIJT'lper. $45.00I> - 90% tlnanclnr. Call W-253>. WATCll mE SKIPS No 11')'1!1.., n.<dtdl Million II vi.., o! Lido, Balboa & Catalina; hatdlome houae bf tl>a ..., ooly $51,!l6o. Rl!A~ EST;ATE TREASURES l&ll \VrstcliU. NB 6G-61'JO • .. S©\t~~-l&"BtfS" The Puizle with the Bui/f.fn Chuckle 0 Rtorrang• lett•ts of the four arornbltd words be-· low to form fovr llmple words. :. I HIT CEC I • I I I I' t r c 0 N u E I ·: -----.1....:J.-....... _./ 1-,,r-Tl-il"'-rJ-l Confucius say: ..,Mon who ..__.._..,_.._· "'-' put pipe in back pocket, burns r--::-,.,...,:-=,--::-=--.,hi• -behind him.• R u B .T E T I 7·~9 licr-iJr-"'J 'r-,1;_;;.,[ .;...[nl.-1 O Cornpleft th• thuc~!e quoltd by 11111119 In the mitilng word • )'OU d1vtlop frOITI sttp No. J bt!ow. 6 UNSCltAM&IE ltnus1 FOt ANSWEt I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 •,.-~~~~~....-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I I I ~he has been in the Real Estate field in the Local professional has spent Ne\vport Beach area for ~e last six years thousands of dolla~ to \Vith one fir1n and wa s named Salesman of create what we feel Is one the Year for 1971 in the Newport branch for of the. most outsta nding tha t company. homes 1n our area: from the Eloise has established a very profe ssional re. massive brick entry to t!~e putation among her many clients and fellow secluded rear yard, you.II Realtors fall 1n live with it. See 11. · , • even if you don't buy it~ \Ve are very p_roud to h~ve. ELOISE_ JO~n our $89 500 Including land. ever expanding organization and 1nv1te all · •CORBIN her c_lients and friends to call her at her new • location. AUSTIN-SMITH GORMAN, 2828 East Coa st MARTIN Hwy., Corona de l Mar., Calif. Ph : 644-7270. REAL TORS 644-7662 General TUCKED AWAY 1-G-•n_•_ra_• ___ _ on a "eluded Ion•. wHh < * BEACH HOUSE * • JUST LISTED bednns., fnmily room, 2 Ne wly dt'~r. 3 ~R, 2 ba . baths block wall fence and l..ge, patio, parking for 4 Slna:le story 4 bedroom Pace. beautiful pa1 io, Ju.~t 4 year!! cars. 1 ~ blk. 10 OCf'an. setter. Xtra \Vide lot with old and in gl"('llt condition. 30xl02 Ft. lot zoned R·3. fenced sidC yard, great for' A bl FHA I .tb Gr'f'al summer r f' n l a I . camper, boats or whatever. ssuma e onn w t $5:! 500 paymts only $217, per mon!h · · Quick possession. VA term~. including taxes and insur· Newport Be11ch Re11lty ~.000. sot.ITH; <;c>AST anee. CALL us for further ~ Newport Blvd. 6Th-1642 FtEAL ESTATE, ~ details. Daily Pilot Wa.nt Ads have I ~!!!!!!!!!!'~!!!!!!!!!!_l!~!!'!'!P) ~5880 10pen rves.) bargains galore. Pilot Oass!lled. 642-6673. General . ~ .. HERITAGE REALTORS HELP!! Do yoo h1tve a lovely <I bdrm. homE.' 'll-ith lge. family rn1, fonnal dining rm., frplc., gourmet kitchen, pool or pool area, for •1ualiried buyers who like to cn- tf"rtain? Will pay appro:<. $100,0CKI. Jr you wish to ~11. please contact mf'. l;IOPE GERRIE l R~Li:Y°. -. . 833 Dover Dr., NB from Te.nslon To Tranq11iUty A terrific home tor a large family. Two story 4 bedrooms, 2% baths, 'tamily size kitehen, large eating area, formal din. room. 3 car garage-. This home Is upgraded throughout. Pric- ed at 48,950. Ail Terms. Call 847-Mlll. !-Ol THE REAL '"\.'. ESTATERS . . . ' MS, CLEAN Very sharp 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Home. Exten.1ive TUe in Kitchen & Bathll. Modem Kitchen with ·Dishwasher. Large Corner Parcel with Covered Patio and Ea!y Ac· cess tor Boat Storage. New ,Carpeting. $26,500. Ca J l 646-0555, Evening> 836-6ll60. COLWELL PR OPERTllS. INC REALTORS S(j)UEAKY CLE~N LEASE-SELL OPTION Sunny bright and squeaky clean this beautifully redecorated townhouse is nothing less than e1egant. 3 BR, 2 Ba., flawless grounds and _you name the terms. $48,500 or -450/mo. Call 673-85!IO. 1-0l THE REAL \""\{ ESTATERS '-" '.I I I '~' * OCEANFROl!IT * Home. 4 Bdnns,,. 2 baths, with 40 ft. frontage. This older home haJ lge. living rm .. trplc.: dining nn., ex- tra. lge. ldtch. Dbl. earaie plus extra parking. Best area, nr. Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Euy to show. 1100,000. Call: 613-3663 642-2253 Evt1. associated 8POKERS--REAL TORS 1015 W 6c;ilboa 61)-l66J VACANT No down GI lAan available. 5 Bedroom• Md f•mlJ,y room. Carpet• l: draJ>t• thniwt plus many extras. Owntt u:dow. must st11 immediately. $34,txX>. NO DOWN er. Call 540-1151 !Open Evn.J -. • HERITAGE REALTORS MACNAB IRVINE F1NER HOMES FDR PEOPLE WHO LIKE PEOPLE come see this marvelous home for your family & friends. A new llstlng w/finest VIEW in Dover Shores. tovety ·garden en- try w/beautiful swlmm!ni POOi a. special• room for yoor pool table. A panellejl den -2 wet bars -. buUer's pan.try. A tnlly outstanding 4 BR.· home. Jane Frazee or Barbara Aune 642-8235. A HOUSE IS NOt,A HOME unless it contains the sJiilrkling warmth. dignity & pride of ownership that "this 3 BR w/a REAL FR. shows YOU. Baycrest. $64,950. Lois Miller 642-8235. LAST OF THE BEST FINAL opportunity to choose a striking 3 BR., FR .. DR. -newly completed Ivan Wells' custom home w /sweeping Bay &: mountain view. $110,200. An unusual chance to share in Newport's fantastic apprecia- tion! Furnished model OPEN DAILY 10 a.m. -5 p.m. 2018 Galaxy Drive . H~RBOR VIEW HOMES New Lls!hlg ! Beautiful 2 + den or 3 BR. home. Completely carpeted -gorgeous drapes. Large pool size lot. Tastefully land- scaped. Tom Queen 644-6200. l)NDA ISLE MEDITERRANEAN This magnificent borne, now completed & ready for immediate possession for full enjoyment of the season. Extra large 5 BR -4'h bath-FR-formal DR-room for pool table & space for 55' cruiser. See it NOW! Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5 p.m. •46 Linda Isle. Dave Cook 642-8235. LUXURY PRESIDENT HOME Turtlerock Terrace!! Exquisite location ! Panoramic VIEW! Superb condition! Transferred owner I Laszlo Sha(ka~y 644- 6200. Open Sunday 1·5 p.m.18971 Glenmont Terr. SECLUSION Newly listed, custom built 3 BR -FR - Pool home. Completely secluded on one of the largest lots in Westcliff/Dover Shores Area. Off street parking for your motor home & boat, $87,500. Barbara Aune 642- 8235. Open Sunday 1·5, 910 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. HARBOR VIEW HILLS Isl time offered. Squeeky clean, beautiful decor, extras galore .•• Self-clean oveniif ceramic cook lop, waterfall in deUgbtf garden, decks, mirrored doors, kar gar-- a~e. fee land' & more ... 4 BR's, 2 baths, FR, DR. See to believe! Dona Chichester 642-8235. RELAX IN COMFORT Enjoy a cool pool & a likeable, Jiva~le faml· iy room w/stepdown wet bar, refrigerator & fireplace. Light & a\rk~ BR. in Newport Heights. Walter Kin g 200. NEARLY Nl!W Dellghtfui home -3 spacious BR's &. ci>n- vertible den on quiet cul-<te-sac near schools. Ideal for growing family. Only $35,950. Charles Arnold 642-8235. [Irvine 1-b·IMnlRM"'_,.., I IOI -Ori .. 141•1UI 1144 -· 144·- • DAILY PU.OT _..... I~ I _...... @J I --I~ C -·-I~ I -..... 1~1 -·-I~ [ _.... I~ I -·-I~[ --~~ DEN FOR DAD c o...,. dol Mor c:o.i. -H...tt...,.. -~·--~--~...,.. ~~~-~...,..~~~ ~;::::::::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii; SPANISH RETREAT Newport BNch ... . .. . lffwport Beach o • , , I .. t To Serve Yor' CORIANDER Plua Wally "'°"' lomlal VIEW 4 BR., 2 BA + J>Owder TRAHSPERRED • Must Sell I ~. 4 BR. 3 BA. Room rm. LR-m..DR, oecllld<d 4 Br., 2 B&. $33.3!0. . 4-l'LEX fDlr boolltraller. Wilt to JIOOI, by .....,. S?T.500. !280 Mldllpn. 54lh9347 ''The Best of Two Worl ds" ' Ni>t one but .... 1-rtlfUl1y beodl. "5,500. 6#-1425. BY OWNEll-21tt Run! Pl. 'nlls fabuloul home ii situ- ated on a hU&e, •treet to street lot: mature landscap- ing A breath.taking ocean vie\f. 4 Bdnna. plus, pl11.11, plUI. 119,500. 9=f21 malntalmd '1>ln units OJNinr MORRISON DUPLEX in Beaut. Cond. By S BR, 1 BA. $26,500 Low by 1ld._ Eleh '1u ~2 8', 2 *** -REALTORS-Owner. $68,500. Prine. Only. down. ttt:!IU-2SlL REAL ESTATE Ba unltl *"" one 3 Br -2 Jt-• 1505 Mesa . 6'J3.-41G9. * CAIL 546-7139 * Ba ~·· unit with Ptido. .AM* Vtf'de Dr Eut Cott• MeM 3 " • BR ft:poL U-w3/car ~ i:na·• but .Wted "!.'7fll:I: Cott.a Meaa · 1;:;:=:;:;====;IJ!P'~l.~Wlll>~~R<~al~1y'!'.·:......:·_ u l.I OW!lft' occ:upe.ncy. *••* 557-4130 East Bluff 0 I ,,.,:n, Rosldoni11I & Income Propor!IH \\'IU mnslder .-ellinr one orl--'='==-=c.,:=-- both at S?t.500 eadl. CAPE COD l!w. -MARKET PLAC E - Call 6734550 tor lofonnatloft.. A«nctiw 4 bedtoOm (3-ex-Best Bluffs Buy Thil sharp tbret bedroom model can't 1uU It's priced just rtcht by a rtalistic teller, ii ln a good loc:ation, bu low moolhly mam. tlM&nCe and a 2nd TD 11 available. Huny -don't wait on t.h.iJ one! Call 61::.-7225. for buyer• ind 1eller1 REAL ESTATE REA LTOR, Vi< J11hl n1kl, LI. Col. MOZ ELLE BRASHEAR 'O ~THE REAL '"\.'. ESTATERS lnl largo), 3 bellll, formal dlnlna: +-crea1 family room A tarp ldtch. Sett to heUevr NEW TRAINING DIRECTOR for all offices of Real Estate by McVay, Mozelle brings 25 years of experienc'e, was owner of her own office since 1964. Also, •he will continue to serve in resales department for her many friends and greaUy appreciated clients. J.190 Gieoneyre St. USAF Rot. 491-9173 S49--0:JI6 1733 Westcliff Dr., Newport Beach SPANISH ESTATE 645·7221 1-'===='"='7"==::==1 thSa bla1 at 383 Santa l.llabel, ·TRIPLEX C.M. Ootn 1,5 Dally. Close in, white water view, I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~ ~~;~~ ~l 7.~!5£~~:: trple'a. hlgbly upgraded ure. Al this .Price, you can't • on Jge. fenced lot. 4 Bdrms .. 3 baths, 3 frplcs. Beamed Newport &.•ch eeil's .. plus l·bdnn. guest I .., .... ;.......,.. ___ U __ _ apt. One of a kind, in xlnt Slight Fixer• pper. oondltion. $ll9.500. Back Bay 'liiiiiiiiiiiiii.:il' -~-* 4~2800 * Great 3' bedroom, 21h bath • COLWELL <P" • -oth<r 2 u ... YA Repossession mJu. $36,500 with 1ow down •. • dellghttul, 2 Br. ea. All cop. G t 4 Bclnn. ~ bath Ir low interest loon. per plumb., end. garL, i:~ pr1em at' 138 950 tor COLLEGE PARK patiol. low ,mainL Oealgned ' . . · • 20951 B kh t A I PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS ~· 'U home with a Jarg• !amity Mobllo li11!11-'' i room, large lot with ample _F;,.•;,;r..,;.S.;;•;.;l• ____ ,.2J, 1 .,. '°' co..sr lfW'( room tor pool. Cam~r or Contempo Mobilet.:ime EXpo tor max. security le beauty Gill)' $1250 down. Bet.I.er h~-Brand new listing whi.ch won I --cc-=~~~--roo urst a t Int•, with wrought iron arlll ry on this one! Call Red last 3 Bdrm., 2 baths; on * $2t,SOO * Huntington BH ch 968-1456 ...... =.'::!:" CALJ& boot storage 8:1"a ~ced to * Grand Opening * sell, needs a IJtUe fixing up, See Orange County's newest courtyard A delight to Carpet, Realtors Tod a y full size land at $32,500. 3 BR, 1.,_ BA. Condo. Xlnt !------------------- behold. 5ou1h Cout R<al 51&-864o. Owner "" bought larger <Ond. Prin<. cnly, Call Hunlln..._ BH<h ·Huntington Baich 3 BR. & 0.n $36,950 that's all. $29,500. Call •72 furnished model mobile UtUque, white brick exter, 646-TI'1l. home display, Open daJ!y, 9 Eslate, -. ( 0 pen * 103 LINDA ISLE * borne, owner 642-2657 lor appt. I;;;:::;;;:;•;;;;;'-;;;;;:=:== Eves.I. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 675•3000 1.E_l_T_o_ro;..' ----- . gated entry. 2 Ba., blt-ins, d··-" Tak San Diego ENJOY cool ocean breeze· 2 :trplc., ca.rp. Yard needs am· ,,._, e A H"'USE FOR 3 BR, 2\1 baths. 66' lot, 55' 3 BR. • d Jg V bot.t slip. J,hported tile en-• • BA., cpta, rps, e BELOW MARKET $211,500. 60x100 ft. leru:ed lot, oversize dbl. garage. 3 BR, 2 ba., elec. bit-in range & oven, eating bar, dining rm., formal living nn.; lge. wardrobes, plenty of cup- boards; W/W carp, ,drapes; patio. Good loc. $1,0'JS ))own, Paymls. less than rent 4 Ba lam Frewy to Avery Pkwy eiit sty, Br., 3 ., . rm.. work, but a real buy tor the . 2 Id • --·-VA In 28282 Camino CapisfranO, yn.· 0 • .nAwne • handyman. c.ail: $39,500. $2500 cln By Owner MISSION REALTY ·~ OCEAN VIEW . Laguna Nigoel. 831-1900. ALL AGES Cath •• 500 patio, lgf!. pool-size lot try, ed. <~U. u~, · enclosed by bloclc wall, Prb>c's only 833·1103. OCEANFRONT-DUPLEX NE\V24x60Silvercresl Jf you havt an "age Spread" K. L. Hartman R.E. Inv. -close to xlnt .11 ch o o I .11, in your family, this could be 642-67fi0 646-2681. markets, new ma 11 . 839-TI45. Fabulous view, surf & rocks. Brand new wood Ir glass, Mobile Home. \Vorth ovq the ....,.r. Lo<:atal not tar VISTA DE L LIDO MESA VERDE Ro ... nable. 83 7-I 7 5 3, BY owner 2 story 4 BR. 3 OWN-YR-OWN apt 2 BR, 2 huge. Only $86,500. Dave, $21,000. Will sell for $16,~. BA, family rm, 3 car BA, tum. $52,500. 3 BR.. 2 Agni. 675-1972 d a y s • Fully lndscp'd, pore~. from grade &<boo!, hleh Luxury A ... On the bay $lO,,OO. 494-21l6 alt 5:30 k wk .. nds. school and p a r o e h I a I Magnificent View schools, parka pd be~bea. Slip Available Be sure to see tliia! 3 Bed· Founteln V1 0ey garage, Sprinklers. Crpts, BA unfurn. $79,000. White 61~749'1 eves. patio, & util. shed. ~~-~ drp bllns 1 old • ., 000 ..'-':..C"'-~~~-...,--choice lot in a new a.uwt s, . yr . ~. • water, security, elev .. pool, FANTASTIC dplx for sale on Huntington Sch park . This sharp 3 bdrm. bome Is Georg• Wllll1m1on rm and lrlendly family rm GI NO DOWN located on a quite Cul.<Je.. Reiltor w/firepl! Separate utility rm IBA usumable loan. Prin. subt. gar. Bkr. 4~ Balboa Penin. Huge 3 br 968-4 only. 962-4236. be ·ttui 445. :L::•:!::un::.:.•.:."i;l:;;ll::•----owners apt w-au1 new =--,---,---;;-;;;;;-~ --.. ·-·~· Sac 1b'eet. 128.500. Sfl-«l!O. SIU570 645-1564 fDr mom, and great patio Super sharp 4 bednn in best for entertaining. You can't Fountain Valley are a. I' illa2e Real btJte SHANTY • ON-THE-RIVER '' furn. $75,COJ F.P. Worth Cont1mp>l19un1 H ills for aa.le, Can be a 3 3 BR, 2 BA, beaut. view, $85-$90,00)). 114 E. Balboa Only 19 spaces lelt! Adult Bedroom home; stove, rugs, drapes, rdrig, many Blvd. 673-0526 park, adjacent to Leisure fireplace. Needs yard work xtras. 6 mo. old. New ~.;.::.c;c:..::=...--,.-,-World. 23301 Rldge Route 0 THE HE~AL ""'ESTATl.:RS 5 BIG BDRMS. beat the area or the price. Schoob" shopping are cloae Call for detaila 979-1050 for convenlenu. Large 1850 Hz.4471 I :::: l 546-1103 Sharp, clean horn~ with large: • 1-'~""';c=:::;:=::==::==::=::o I family room located tn • POOL nME • Newport Beach. $55,000. MESA VERDE • 3 Bdrm, 2 *FULLER REAL TY* bath, living + dinlnc area, 541).(1814 Anytime firoplace, buUt·lnt, dbl , ... Balboa l1l1nd Ttoplcal bocl< yard wllcwely1--------poo1. Good te'rms. $32,'150. NEW baytront home. Pier le OPEN DAD..Y, 1590 BAKER Income. Open Sat/Sun/Wed CALL ANYTIME 1-S , 1 ........ Eftl f1J.tn6 337 E. ,llayfront, LllUe !~and ' WINTON, R<altor 6'15-3331 . • • Lachenmyer: " Balboa Ponl~•ul• * Watefront, aitrs.nce tG N'pt, harbor. 5,000 It. S27, 950 , :;58~. c1en 152,500 Anume 514% l:oon * 4 BR, den, Ill lots $12,500 h)ruenta litsa than rent. The * Duplex, sundeck. $65,500 nor yard hu beautilul l>ull Manhall Roally 675-4600 -. covered potlo, and BBQ lftL l Bedroom.9, den, OCEANFRONT, 4 BR, 5 Ba. bldLt,.in nnae. 0 v e n , tam rm.. wet bar, elegant 2 dilbwalber, natural brick story. Ph tor appt. 613-6892. ; ~ no down terms. Corona dol Mor ' 8'k. 540-1731 TARBELL 2815& Harbor, Costa Mesa $21,950 ft the Jow, low price tor thll 3 bedroom, 2 bath no m&lntenance home. Alto , feature• bulll·I• kit<hen, OCEANFRONT dllh\vasher A double car Overlooking the jetty & prage. Better check this beach, on private road, Both ooe TODAY! levels have the most tre- R<altol'I 64&-77ll »&3 Westclill Drive Open 'till 9 PM ONE BIG HAPPY FAMILY SHOULD BUY this !S BR, 3 BA, huge sep. fam rm, fonnl din. large corner, Walle to beach. $45,500. GINNY MORRISON •**• -REALTORS-'* *• 1505 Mesa mendous vie\.V. Open dally P .M. 3329 Ocean Blvd. $165,000. BEAUTIFUL BLUFFS An exceptional fine Trina 3 Bdrm., with space galore surrounding It. No\V vacant & ready !or a di5criminating owner, See this one anytime. $49,950. 675°3000 m HA\ ,\ llL\C 'll •CiM *Verde Dr. East, • • ..,.,..: eo.t, MOIL Lovely Lusk Homes * * * 557-mo The two most popular four . $49,950 bedroom model• ottered by 5 Bdr. +Family Rm. Lu5kHomesinHarborView open beamed ceilings in fam-have been the Monlectto and bar the Sandplp<..ir. We have iJy rm, dining rm, wet ' listings on one of each with oversized master bedroom, interesting differences tor 2 fireplaces, built·in range you to choose from. The +' oven + dishwasher, Montccito ha.s great tropical compl fenced, Onl¥ $31,950. Omtu · sq ft home with huge yard HANGING TREES a re smothering this h o u s e ! Should be pruned. Hu 3 bedroom cottage hidden from the street, heavy shake roof. gas builtiml w/disbwasber. Many added modem extru. Best beach and a woman'a touch. BKR. World. 83'1-3652, Owner. $55,900, Fee Land. e1"f~ Dr., (oil MouJton Pkwy.), 962-5.5ll. I View Homes, Cann • 1 t' Laguna Hills. 830-3900. 21 CAil. for more details ~ 962-5523 &: 537·5642. COLLINS GOY'T. OWNED L•tuno Niguo ~. :/':,;/;;",.:::, C:,: MONARCH Bay Terrace. 5 ly. Owner ~ 6'13-U66 ~ 11 . &: WAITS. C&W Repossessed homes. Low down. Government pays closing ...... Call -* Crest Realty . HUGE DEN OWNER trans. Spanish <!YI-lo<. ;. lowo. Pli<e -·Uy ed elegant design with 4 reduced. BKR. 962-55ll. OWNER ';-~S1 3 bec1roollom~Ex2 -~?'°t' beautiful sponlab archways LUXURY HOME ' TRANSFERRED UI"t:P ace, pa • ct:.1.1en on the front exterior master 3 Bedrm, 1 %. bath, boat or condition, bedroom located on far me This executive home bu 4 camper gate near beach & $32, 950. ol the home features tu own apaclou. bdrms, big lamily achoo!. 5% down. Only Roy Mccard le Realtor Roman step down tub. The rm. Immaculate! nus tri-$24,500. Call 962-7771 . 541-n29 other 3 bedrnu are on the level ff!1llures Parquet entry, RED CARPET REALTORS 1810 Newport Bl d C M other side. Family rm., din-hardwood floors, lge patio, SAVE n -Owner I ·•-v ·· · · water softener + other nice ,OlN. ea"'""'' BR, 3 BA. tam nn, pool, anytime. 3-car gar, view, close to ~~~-~--cN::-B=­ beach. Just reduced, BALBOA Owe.I, • • 496-4016. Waterfront. Pri. ramp & float. Modern 3 Br. $77,500. Lido Isle Call Owner, 675-4150 tor ELEGANT 4 bedroom & .family room home with 4 baths & 2 fire. places, $92,500 • appt 2 Lg duplexs, next door, SA. blk from ocean beach. $8.5,000 ea. Agt 613-8563. Nowperl Heights 4 BR. VICTORIAN ·n Levitt modular No.1001. 24x46, 2 BR, 2 BA. ""' lot. Ocean breeze. 0 w D r 493-ll91 lOx«I PILGRIM. $2,700, 525 Fairfax Dr, C.M. 645-1355; ..,_ COST A Mesa lOxSO motile home. Air.eond. Full patiD canopy. Adlt prk. 642-25(5.• l2x55 l BR Mobile home. N.B. location. $3,000. 213/337-8333, 646--9926 Mgr. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II ing nn.. luxurioo.s kitchen, MWlt sen. Jmmac 4 br. Nr BRIC. $30,500. 962-8865. to have xtras. Priced to sell Adams & ._.n.....,,.H.. Call to BY Ownerj Bought newl .::=::....:.==.:..::...:::.:.:...._ at only $41.950, Call A see, .. -..--. home, must sell. Nice 3 Br. OWNER desperate must 962-1G3'1. l -",..=·,,:968--::cl:cc454=·---- houae. Reduced $3000. Shag leave home, 4 Bdrm + ---------* OPEN SAT/SUN. 1..5 * bowaRl> laweoa J-a. 3416' Via L'::'f.oA 675-4562 * PIE;R & SLIP * 7'.I ft. ooyfronL $295,000 Trade c:ommerc. or lndust. • 90 Ft. lDt * You gotta go in to see this RtafEst~t.. I [;i p l u s h y crushed • velvet General value. 3 yrs old & better =.iiiiiiiiiiiiii ' crpt, huge yards. tots of Family rm. Many xtra WALK to BEACH 10222 Kalmu. 3 Bdrma., 1% trees. ~·d. patio. Room to features such as a complete • 5 BEDROOMS • baths + GAME ROOM build. Stove, drps, hanging separate laundry r o o m , % story, all elec kit, form! Agent 64)..'l(XM) 963-5985 4 Bdrms., 4 bath&. Large rumpus rm. $135,000. LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Lido, NB 673--'1300 lamp incl'd. Aasume FHA family room + a rumpus din. 2:rx16' f.amUy room, 2 loan $198. per mo. total p.me room, pass thru ~es. intercom, New Xlnt tenns. 548-9876. breakfast bar, dining rm., paint, dbJ gar. VA 8P-66, WT _ Strada comet bullt·lns, Brk. $ 3 3 • 5 0 0 ' praisaJ $41.500. LOVELY 3 BR Townbouae, 111 BA. crptg, bllnl, frplc, co n v e nt/FHA. Owner 962-5667 than new! 3 blks to Harbor • Principals only...call 645-2552. $49.500. Acrugo for solo 111 San Ju1n Capistrano SHARP & PRETTY BY OWNER 3 BR, Ill BA. 84U69l. REAL ESTATE by H/F JIOOI. At le..t 3 Br, 3 Beautuut home on corner -"--------Ba. Maids quarters. Quiet tot wtroom for boat or trlr, OWNER must sell this home. McVAY 96I 445' ~asS:,:I: ~~ ~ street, secluded privacy, Cold shag carpets thruout bay windoWs, tile kitchen 4 Bdrm na't pool elegant sl: ~~ ~ust 00seJJ ~ sq. ft. $50,000. 846-!IOOl. Owner anxious. $89,500 ~ng a 3 ~amil~ LIQUIDATION SALE : I 11 improved lots, great tar modulars, Palm Springs' ~ $3'150. each. • : 54 acres, view, close th Upland. Beautiful home site&-$1500. per acre. 40 acre producing o~ grovt<. Riverside. $6500. Pl:r' w/bltns. crpt1, d rps, entry opens to cen eSJgn. o wn. erm.1 clt'aJ'. Bwlster Creely, Agt, or -ms, poolsize yard. 5% % CI floor plan, 4 bedrooms. huge a~ble or take over ex-Irvine 646-6338 or 6~2723. baths, family room FPL, 1 0 a n • S u b m I t y o u r family rm., built-in range, isting F1lA loan w i th ;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; MeH Verde sunny kitchen with double terms. $32,500. 598 Sturgeon oven, dishwasher, enclosed monttily payments of $235. 4 • oven range &: pass thru to Dr., MS-'1325. patio. Assume 5'4% loan. bednns., tamHy rm., dining YALE Pool-4lxl8 patio. Fenced level ttar BRK, $24,900. 962.-6566. rm .• built-ins. spa c i o u a 2500 Sq. fl, charming 2-sty. 4 BR Ranch style, Beaut. yard. A good buy for ••• 2 FOR 1 . H ntlngton 8.Kft kitchen. archway leads into home, just steps to major i&ndscaped. 2 blks to MV JUST $31,500 in a blue ribbon area. Live in u the home, Brk. $28,500. greenbelt. 4 Bdrms., incl Country Club. Like new. By FITZPATRICK'S ~· re;t~o:her.r1Both TEE OFF 842-.2561. huge mstr/ suite w/frplc.; owner. $49 ,500 , Call CAPISTRANOVA.LJ..EY wi~se1 es h or; pparkvacy PICKET FENCE surround1 sep. dining rm., family rm. 549--0977'. REALTY boat eno:W spa~~-Executive 3 bdrm. home on your te?Tltory. An old Let us make an app't, tor 4 .:ccBR,::_::;clg.:c....12x_<24_ga>ll __ e_roo_m, !1501 Camino Capistrano or er. 2nd .Fairw"v of Meadowlark fo•h•'oned "cu"~' with big you to see this home ·now. iv ba, blln kit -drp San Juan Capistrano tnveitment for the $$ con-,..._,~ Co ~ 0 • tllul .,,.. .._.... INCLUDING THE LAND "' ·• ..... .,...., 5' sclous. $33.500. c ALL uvu. Ul'8e. ~au ap-white .shutters. All gas ' water l!Oftener incl. $34,'100 ,..._,..~..:49:.:3-:..:.:11:.:2:.:4 __ _ acre. , Com'! Bldg, Baldwin Parlt. Prime corner, priced right at $175,00). All properties are fl'ee A clear. Will take low down a calT)' at 6%. Will trade. ; • DOROTHEA FINDLAY Real Estate Broker f· P. 0 . Box 782 Dana Point, Calif. 92629 714-196-4345 5 5 '1-5 g 11 KA T ELL A po i n t ments throughout builtins, hardwood floors $5C,900. 557-9194 $.ntl Ana REALTY. lmPorted Italian tile ·in with new carpets. Perfect Apartments For Sale 1S2 REDUCED $2500. "'s ""UN°"rrs--..ne_ar_go_u_co_urae~.,, Xtra sharp·3 bednn 2 bath ocean · · SC 1110000 bath. 2 .fireplaces, !onnal space & price for small 4 BR. 3 BA, fonnai living & dining room, beautifully family. You name the dining, panel!E'd family rm, ed · 2 I M V rd carpet & draped. No green terms. BKR. 962-5.5ll. "I ' I -I ' 111 I I' 11 ii ' ---'1 L'11il11r Ml11ion Vlofo 4 BR. 2 BA home, sprinklers, lndscapng, Reduced to $35,750. 25442 El Picador, St7-5161. view, m . , ., near Mac Arthur &: Bristol. $20,000. down. Mark H. Dunn Only 6 yn new, convenient Realtor, 492-993). story n esa e e. 1 Gorgeously landscpd, 36 ees to play goU. Only SPANISH FORTRESS -Sit· tree corner lot Across from $43.~. For appoinbnent to ting room in master suite, •• .. k I · & f see, call parquet floors with ele""'"t SINCE llM6 Newport n-och par • mmac. pro • "'".. ht West Bank BJ.ii,. u. decorated. All xtras incl. in-If carpets, 3 baths, family em "6• tercom, garagt!' d 0 0 r room dining room, living Deys 552-7000 Nfthts opener, b It n •helves, 531·5111 ( :::J $31·51H room: library + den plus 4 Unlvemty Pari<, Irvine 1prinklers, xtra storage. bedroom1. Divorce • BKR. $52,000. 540-5.106. By owner. ,,:962-5511.::....:=·-~-~~ PICTURESQUE 2 SI'ORY NR. PARK etc OWNER trarmerred, • bdrm SETIING Close to beach, lhopg. & • + family rm., surrounded Lovely Marquette Model tn schls. This 3 yr. new home by beautiful treeB, 4 excellent condition. 3 bdnns., is only l blk from ED'S TOP CASA'S bedrooms, ovenized master ~ ba., large family room LOTS OF PRIVACY In this lovely custom 4 Br .. 3 ba cul-de-sac Back Bay home. Big big family room. A t rium, intercom, sprinklers, electric garage opE.'llel'. Room for pool on big 69x135' lot Asking $45,500. Term.s to suit. neighborhood park. JSXI sq. 5 BR ••••••••••••••• $33.900. bedroom, natural b r i e k and _more, AU for the price ft. in this big Gold Med. 5 BR, .••••••••••••• $34,750. fireplace, family room, din-of $42,950. N t to :frwys:, major &hopping Commerci1I and Orange County Airport. Has fireplace, sunken tub ~perty 151 and all extras. Reduced to 4 • INCOMES on C-1 prope;r- $30,500. by anxious seller ty. Owner will consider 109' who. may help with Gl'.s dn. &: help with financinlo cloSU1g """"'-Hurry, thls CALL ANYT.IME one won't last. CALL 646-3928 or Eve ua..906I 962·5521 & 537-5642. COLLINS ' • WATrS. C &,W Lachenmy eri Re .1 lfo1 sweeping view, bric, ~1720. landscaping and' m 0 st TARBELL original decorating and the Sandpiper is brand new where you can make all the $29,950. Century 21,3 BR..&pool ....... $34,'150. ing rm., built-In...,,.., h I ewpor POOL HOUSE 835-5511. 4 BR. Lse, hid. •·•••• 125,500. oven, dishwasher. Br k, ired .1, 1t In Saddleback: School Dist. CLEAN 3 BDRM. 2 BR. & den. condo •• 125,750. $l'6,000. 84&--0604. Fairview Rooms galore·bedrooms 4. New carp. Lge. corn..-lot. KASABIAN •32 •-See the Glorious Pool and • ,.,.. 646-1811 atay rool. Here'• a great *NEWPORT BEACH• BAYFRONT r lligh rise oruee bldg. Fee Jot • excellent terma ·, S550.000 2955 Harbor, C.OSta Mesa decisions. Call 6'15-'1225. FIXER UPPER • JUST LISTED -Best Mesa Verde location! - 3 It fami· ly. Needs lots ot work but make offer now and save! COLWELL PROPERTIES . INC REALTORS Vacant. Cul-de-sac, walk to1--------- 2 Baths, family rm. $29,950 REAL ESTATE 962-6644 By owner, transfened! Must REALTY home.in the J:killhouse tract FllA·VA. YOU SAVE BECAUSE IT'S sell beaut 3 BR, 2 BA, pool Univ. Pari< Ceoter, IMne (anytime) You <an't ml!B. Be a wtnne; REALONOMICS --GEM DffiTY .••• nu. line 3 BR, borne. Aasume $27,000 GL Call Allytimo, 833-083) and <all today. $29,000. VA Rt1llors 675-67'0 1610 W. COast Hwy., N.B. 2 BA. home needs cleaning with $.1(X)) down. WiU carry Office Hoon I AM to 8 PM appraisal. Call 5 5 7-5 311 COMMERCIAL acre eoati. REALTORS MM623 .i. painting. Includes blt·lns, 2nd or oonslder auto or A BEAUTY KATELLA REALTY Mesa, Includes 4<11l, sq. fl. GOLF COURSE VIEW F/A hea~ king size maoter hone trlr u part down. TurtlO!'OCk f BR, lamily BY .,.HE BAY Santo An• Holghhl •hop & olflee•, lehC04, M V rd , Br 2 Ba bdrm's. Located on ahady846-4834 ·:::.:::.::.·------!room A' atrium. Nr·&ehoo1.. I .... $'15,00 0 cash . p 81,1 esa e e ~ • ' cul-de-sac street Oose to -..., This 3 bedroom home ii" se-3 BEDROOM HOME on Westbrook, Bkr. 494-9788 ' =• ;,:· 0.:;;;'~'i .:~: sehoots " •bopping. Below REPOSSESSIONS ~.~ Prin< 1133--~ eluded on a cu!-de-sa~ street large lot. ~sume FHA c.2, 2068-2070 Newport TAX-BEATER lmmac. Low .down. $32,500. ;narket c~t S El27Y,ooo.O All For lnlbonatlon and Io<atlon SPECTACULAR unobltructed _,, the Bay. R«enlly Joan with total pay. Blvd., CM, lOO'x315' PrJnd: OPEN EVES UNITS Owner, 1849 I I 1Ino1 s. enns. M UR ot t}\ele FHA A VA homes. 180• view ot entire valley • Painted inside and out. Knot-ments of $201. per pats only. Ph. 642-ill:t. .. Get flrst user write off, CUS· 546-6460. ~~~· 847-1221 0 r ccntact -140' front on view aide. 4 BR, ty Cedar paneling. Shae car· month. '25,500. BKR. c;;: .. =-= .. ;:::~.'::i'I :c,.:..::.:=:....:.1 achools. ' Call M6-5880 , ~ .. HERITAGE tomlzed duplex, near Big ~~ KASABIAN 2 peting. Large yard. A real 546-0814 anytime. omtn um1 Corona Be ch 3 BDT College Park area. 3 OiAMPAGNE TASI'E FOR BA exec. home. Turtle charmer, The. large ldtchf!l'l I ~~~~~~~~·~ ... !or sale t• 2 BR., ~ pl..:~~ P~~ 8' .. 2 Ba., encl. patio, block BEER BUOOEr .... 3 BR, RHI Estote 962-6644 Roel: Hlll& 846-4391alt.6 PM baa loll of <a-. abould " • .. • • 1" 1,.!!!!! ____ !!!!_!!'J olfice. wall, near schools, $28,750. 2 BA, 28' rear living room $23,500. l.ogvM -delight aey homemalter. I ]~ O'.>NDO, Hli Bc:h. Nr ·..,bl t. I' on •pe<lal terms. Principles . with flreplaee, w at nu I 4 BR, 21' BA. elec: kltch, ~ $38 450 Call 648-7171. --Ill' pool. 3 br, Ill ba, bl!lll $29, 950 $16,500 only, Call 8J3.ll03, 642-2112. panelling" <11stom built bar pt. crpts, drpl. A"""" to SPLASHING ROCKS ' . ~.-;;;;;;;;;·~; d:;, ~~:~br°'1;, • ~·. REALTORS 5 Bedrooms I I ., ., ., I O'.>RNER lot 3 BR, 2 B~. for the Wally who •ltjoyl pool • clubllo-. Walk to Next lo oceon -elevated MOCIC A-a FllA·VA. 1n:soo. CJS R:. Irplc., bonus rm., block w&ll living. $30,900. • , .All beach. artitt.8' borne, aep. studio l2S EllA.te, A&k tor ,...... . 2 laths TRIPLEX !<'lee. 3140 Boston Way, Tenn.. Call SEYMOIJ!l REAL ESTATE by qpper_Jevel: tropi<al garden For Sole W.ll68 AM: SfS.9659 ;;;,.,. Wonderful l•mlly home. Coh· ll<ll b<low hwy. kX:allon: big 135,500. By owner. 546-7193 REALTY, 847-tm o r McVAY f6M456 "pool, auelt apt., adjoining TOWNHOUSES •~-thl ·-. venienJ f&mily room, natural lot, aome ocean & bay view! Prin onb'I 546-4212. blt·in bunk rm., • camper ~ "I Greet! EASJ'SlOE. Quiet Jocatlcll. brlek fi<epla«, entry hall, 3 Roomy 2 BR. unit• pl~ MF&\ VERDE 3Br,213A, OLD LOVERS **SHAG·ONlt It height prag<t, Oii-~ available Park Udo Family. Ion • ooWttey qule~ Adulll only oommUlllty •• 2 rear living room, dlnlng guest rm. &: bath, frplca., 1 h 1 4 bdrm parldnc for 5 autos lower t.ownbouaes. Park 11 k e 15 mlnutts 1l'am Oraiq:e B~ 1% BA. frplc.: ~ room built· Ins. brk 540-1120 easy to own. Fam. Rm, Screen Rm . Beaut Condo Jovely park LUt o t e amoua Jevtl. Sl.67,500. C1'.0UDCf.I ' eentrte·sparkl· County emplayme1d centers. pool, rec. room. Gana-. • • · $87.500 Sharp, •hag, 0cu!-dMac. front entrm. 2 Spec sit'. CAsi:AWAY-=tnPark ESCAPE HATCH ing JIOOI. Owml111 2 BR., $77 month, in!:I alll C.., 121.fllCl.BY<Jwntor.~. Schla, llbry. 05C. By 111 BA stall lhowtr lrplc. llunlingtOn. r ""''· For tbe mauve &. ....,,., 2 Ba., kitchen bllnl, polio, ~~;,~ TV cable. 1n • University Ru lty Own<r. 541}.:1473 Newly de«>rated, ooti-. ;;:i: ~·" $45,000. l!...ive tlmben f<r beaml. dbl, aar. $30,500. f ·~ ~ tamUr pule. FO.R Sale or Ren~ 29ili Harbor, Costs Mesa 3001 E. C.l llwy. 6'1U.llO BY owner. 3 br, 2 ba, uUUty Pool avall. Nothtna to do, • • tree-nowlnr floor plan; 3 AND Contempo Or-Rlwr ~· West ' CoO<l,o. 3 BR, , nn, din rm, lrple. 2 w ao.r. ready to llvt Vt. Furn or un-OPEN SAT•SUN 1-5 bdnnl., 2 balba: ••<lucled, tm1111culate J BR., 211 ba. Adla.,..t lo golf couno. Take 8Y owner. 644-111'1 * NEW LISTING * R·2 South of Highway C<7V patio. ~ lned baelt !um. owif.r 962-:lltl2 lo< Imma<. 4 llR, 2 BA, many dole In.la ...... 159,500. !Mp llvq nn. ... potlo Green~ olf ramp mm -""--· ----.:...-1 TARBELL PRIME BALBOA LOC. 2 A 1 BR dupl~ on ,...,. ol yd, 1133-2317. appt. xtru, ...,,., lot. 1"22 <:ar-SEE THIS lrontlpon pool ut1. Slf.500 Rlvmlde n..w.,. 4ilOl Dupl .. H /Unlts 1 f1Jm. opt<. Wall< to b&f, •xtra wide, 45 lot. Tm!-lln-BY OWNER : MESA OWNER leovlng. .tnnsfcr-mania Lant. E. OI Broolc-Modem 2 bdnn. bome pl"' 2 CALt a 'ff•UU Green Rl""' Dr., C-0.. .... ,. terry, ocean " pier. ed, dead bull<nd llttel. Loto of VERDE. 3 br, 2 bo. JIOOI, red. 4 bedroomt, lamlly hun~ N. of Adamo. 152,500. bdrm. <0ttop t. • thriving 91• ~ (Tlf) 73M37f. -:;:;:-;;~:::::;~-,:,:.:;:I $62.500 room to d. 159.500. Call c:uHI .... <. 1651 Palau Pl. room. den, dining room, -... 1147'633f "' 516-G26L qpholftery "'"'"""" 112.500 .dll& l2Xl!I 1 Br Mobile borne. Largo 2 BR d"1>iu In BALBOA BAY P ROP. -· $37,900. 54tl-323L hug• master bedroom,,.., 2 .. 3 BEDROOM -v .... ~ -Negotloble. l l ALTY $3,:mt. s.. Sal.SU., Bay" ...... 0Uls\and1,. Invm 11 * 642-7491 * BYOwner.3Brhoule.Ntw llvlna room. circular nr pool Rede<oralctl. $llOO. HlLLIEM<CORMACK Nnr N•-rt PH IOlll .. Beaeh, 72>4 Pacllic eout 133,700.o-.-7' pain~ 14lllc'lll Jot. Frpte, driveway. No down. Terml dn.-ltl<We In. l!EVERLY REALTOR m-7551 NEWPORT J:S'l'A'.l'E lo POOL H"'l', N.ll., Sp. 16. ll&WI ~ )W wont Ii> FA!f, bltln" Conv. 128,000. ovt.il•blo, Brf<. $32, &0 0 , JACKSON RE ALTY &ell tba old 1tufl. lllU' tba $94,000. I BR,• F.¥. Kerry rur.m~ er 53&.a3SO alt odl! Clulllled Ids do 8 A good want ad ts a good 1J1. WttmmL Call m-86.10 !16W373. * W.al33 1' ..., .ll1llt. Scbult, Bkr, -I fm .,..U • <all 1«111' ta a;• I - I • 1 1 • .. t : ! . : ' • i t ' . '. ' ' . •' ' ' I ; ' ' I . ' ' ' "· i ' ·r '' • ' • • ) ( FlldlJ, Jut1·2a, 1972 .... i....., Gt.nwal ~,11~ ;;;-...;I~~ I _,.,_ I~ I -... -l ~I _. ... _ )ncom• Property 166 ' .::;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;,;;, Butlnen Houn1 Unfum. 305 HouMt Unfurn. :IOS Condominium• 1 Ap...;..t~•-· _F_u~'"-·----"°...; Apl1. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfum. 3'5 Apt. Unl\I~ General , _o=-=rtu=n;;.ltv-'--__ 2:;;:;00 I:.;;:.:;:=,..;;.;.:.;.;;;,;;.; _ __;.;.; 1--------Unfurn, EASTSIDE ,. Gontrol Hunfhic!on Bo~ 320 Costa Muo NowPOrt Bo•cfl 4-PLEX CAPtSTRANo Unllied School ;;.;;=;;;... _____ I·-....,+-"-----'c-o·.-,.-Mo-.-.----I iiiiiiii District wlU accept wrltttn NE\V apt, 45th St. N.B. ytlU'- 4 ll<autiful 2 bedroom unit. appllca1jons for Broker of S BR-2 BA·bltlno-Xlnt 2 Bl\. •nclooed guago, prtv LIVE LIKE A KING ly renW. $350. mo. 3 BR, 2 on !O'x140' lot Q u I et ReCord oo lhe Group Medi· cond. Only $229. per patio, 1215 per mo. 545-0916 At Budget Prices! 8 A• d w • "P 10 ' EutsJde lt:rfft near rrtljor cal lmurance Proenun until mo. A~eot 962-4471 or or 541.s673 work. washer/dry('r, w/w c:rptg, ahoppina areu. O•'ne'r ... ill .. ..-c:A.n: 010 nJRNlSl-lED-637-3753 aft 6:30 pm. ,... August 4. .li.1''"· Anyone wish· ""'"' • UNFURNISHED heJp with financing. W&rits i.n&-to apply fl;lc this JlOlllUon Huntington Beith e \VINTER RENTALS e tut sale. A.aldng l.'55,000. ~i... .. 1d all th DI-...:-1, 2. 3. 4 BR. Reserve Now! Call SfG.ll51 <Open Evea.} .......... c e 11u11,;I Per-2 BR. Brand new. lluge back 2 BR. condo, AdultJ only, * POOLS IOMe( Olflce 496-J.ZlS for a yrd. 1235/mo: Incl. wtr. Incl. ,.lrl&, w•sh<r, dr,<Jt. * E NCLOSED ABBEY REALTY M:h3850 prelhninary que1tioona.irt'. SllO -QUIET Retreat! Furn Days 714: ~5-0550. a.all! .fOJ" Years lease $ 2 O 0 Imo. GARAGE S 2 BDRM, 2 BA, or l BR, 1 Please do not request a per· Studio. All utU pd. Oxilce Mr Mumlh. AdlU'M & Brook h u rs t . * CONVENIENT BA. 2 blks to 00!.ch. Yrly sonal appointment at this location \Valk to Beach. vacant 2 Br. 644-5996 or 968--2290. TO ALL BEACI-fES $300 le $.250. 673-4430. '"''"""':''!""~'!!'!~!!!!!!!, time. Preliminary appllca· * 1135. Cpt/drp, bring kids! Condo. Furn. or FROM $135 MONTH I tions will be reviewed & $125 . YEARLY at the Beach! R t A H ~ ••30 U I Apt. Unfurn. S65 20 UNITS evalualed on the fnllowlng Avail oow. Ideal for single~ en • • ouie ",_ n urn. 325 ADULTS PLEASE ...;. ______ _ .§. ~ HERITAGE REALTORS VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS l & 2 BEDROOM APT. Fu mlthod a Unfumlthod Adult Llvlllf Dishwasher color coordinatecl appliances • Plush shag carpet -mirrored wardrobe doors- lndirect UgbUng In kitchen • ~aktast bar • huge private fenced paUo • plu.sh Ian~. Ing • brick Bar-IJe.Ques • large heated & lanai. Air condlUonln~. • 3101 So. Bristol St., S1n t1 An• 557-8200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT · ~ pwner would liker to ex· criteria: * Irvine l·N-e'"· w_po_rt_S._a_c_h___ Balboa Peninsula • 'change down -This ts in a L TechnlcaI capability 1"6. MOVE Today! 2 Br. w/ -VILLA POMONA J BR, 2 BA, 1 yr lease. inclds IJ!!!!!!!!!!!'!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!\!!'!l~!!!''!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!PI r. good rental arta. No vacan-2. Exper In employe benefits garage, Stove, refrig. Child/ 4 BR. 2 ba. fam rm ••• • $360 * * * * * * PHONE 642~2.015 trplc, din rm, 5 belconit"!, 1 ,Ap;,:.:.t.:..U=n.;.fu;.;r.;.n.;.. ___ :U;....5_A..;p:..t .... _u_n_ru_rn_. ____ 3'5_ 1 .ley. Price $227,500. Call the 3. Stall pet ok. 4 BR. 2% ba. f.am rm·· $400 * BRAN D NEW * (1760 Pon1ona Ave.I bJck from bay & ocean. Aug - -Ittvtstment Divis i 0 n • 4. Expel' lo working with * l BR. 2 ba. f.am nn •••. $325 Condo f1<>1Ve w/OOat slip 1,...,.,,.....,....,,..,..,..,... lit occup. 64M161 dys; \ ... N .. e:.,w..;po~rt_B_•.,.•_cl'l ___ """".N,.,•~w~po~r=t~S.':=o':ch:::::==::: 1" '646-1600. school dislricts & other 1170. SECLUDED 2 Br on lrg 2 BR. 2 ba. choice! .... $300 SUmmtt, or leases avail. * $30 WE E K & UP * £75.2306 eves. WHY PARK NEWPORTERS public agencies or private lot Crpt/A...... VA 4401 W. Coast Hi!?hway e Studio & 1 BR Apts firms. CANT. •. .......,, gar, • * Call: 675-6820 *' e TV & ?\laid Service Avail 5 NEW units. 407 Harding. Occupancy early Aug. 2 BR STAY HOME ON 5. Location * Townhouse Unfum. 335 • Phnne Service-Hid Pool 111 Bs. l'l35 mo. Le .... •• 1 =;=~===""'""'"'I The_ best qualified applicant~ $l?5. BALBOA Island. 2 Br. •Children & Pet section S4S-S607 or 54S-7~58. WEEKENDS. N~ Tax Deduction! will be contacted within a 2 Ba. All furn. Avail 9/lL Newport Beach 2376 Newport Blvd, CM By O\\•nE.¥'"4 Unites on 2 Jots. short time alter receipt of * 548-9755 or 64>3967 2 Br, ll,i Ba, patio, ball'On)', 'T YOU? I '\t 1 Blk to ocean, Newport. application. "SINCE 1946" BEAUT new 3 br townhse. This Ad Worth SS on Rent · 315 E. Bay. $2'25 monthly on WOULDN R cl · I Co pl l ,I-;;==:;;-~-~--$225 ·OCEAN Breezes! l Br, l:S' BOAT SLIP, BAY yrly it'ase. Inquire at Apt C. . . e cc. in out. . m ete Y CANDLE Shop for sale. 2 Ba, frplc, bltrui, fenced tor 1st Western Bank Bldi. VlE\V. Bltins, db! gar $135 mo. Deluxe. nlobile 673-1521 or 548-mI. furn. ·Sum.n1er-W1nter ren· Across from Mission in San kids/pet. University Park, Irvine w/elec dr opener, Xtra pkg. home, Nice patio, Comp. .:.:c:..::=.:;;;..'-"-'---- 1 tal. $12S,OOO. l32 45~. corner Juan Capistrano. For in· LANDLORDS I Days 552-7000 Nights "A" "A..,, 64 furn. W/\V carpets. Mature Coron• del Mar Balboa Bl. Look first, then fonna"-• call '93-lill .......-vo.J;>; 5-438.5; 838-5035. ~ , Do ~u have a vacancy• We coup!,, no pets. Ponderosa 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I call to see inside. fi4Z..9955. • J" • DuploH Unfurn. 350 • ...... ~..... WELL established Service can fill tt. Many desirable 4 BR., 21At ba ••••••••••• $365 ~100dile64;:~·13 1991 Newport • _....__,.9 Station. Inventory only for tenants on our waiting list. l BR., 2 baths •••• $3351340 Balboa Penfnsula v · u-M · ~ . INCOME HOMES sale. Texaco. Harbor & \Vil· ABbsoEAlutCeOlyNNORCHARENTAGEL.S 3 BR, 2~ baths ........ $350 DLX duplex 2 Br .. 1~ Ba, $13rrmo dbc mob hm w/ •NE llOfl, CM 548-5116/54&.5373 screen perch, comp! furn, , .,. W DUPLEXES $48,950 • ' i d h•11 bltins, nu cpts, drps, '-'I, Jo CANDY nd. h' * 645-0111 * uy htpool, adlt cpl, no pets. 4 t. 4-NE\V TRIPLEXES $67,950 ve 1ng mac 1nes re I encl gar. yrs lse only. • ~ Beaut. new 2 & 3 BR units. for rent, $5. month. 545-5180 NOW VACANT. Modern, 838-4949 Season's 2359 Newport , 151 E, Bay st., Costa Mesa. or 646-2816. near new, l bedrm., 2 bath l·c,cc_.c.;..;.:_ __ M____ _54_8-6_33_2. _____ _ . , Comple. 811, Ph: 642-4837. ---------home on quiet cul-de-sac REALTY orona de l a r BEAUT, FURN. 2 BR $175 ' ( .. NEWPORT BEACH* Business Wanted 21 0 Large ovmized yard. Lease Univ. Park Center, Irvine 1 BR. DUPLEX. Partly furn. up incl util. Htd Pool. Arllts • $275. mo. lrnmed. poss. Call Anytim 83J.OS1.0 $UJ/mo no pets. Also 2 Br Unt. : ! Luxurious Office Bldg. FLOWER shop, 0rg Cnty Call 545-8424 S 0 U TH Office hours 8 ~I to 8 PM * 544--0l98 * 642-9520. ~ ~ ON TEN ACRES Apls. fum./unfurn. Lease Fireplaces I prlv. paiios. Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. 900 Sea Lant, CdM 644·2611 MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) ; .-$200,000 Down. Prime Joca. area. $100.IXX> or more COAST REALTORS. ~i~~~~~~~~,~~~~~::~'.:= : ~· tion. 30,000 Sq. Ft.. steel &: gross. Adams, { 213) 's~-'-'="'-=-="---Costa Mesa l Br furn. Hamilton/near $190 2 BR fro t d Ix lrpl l , masonary construction. 345--0735. BR, 3 BA, exec. home. In NE\V l BR, 2 BA, dshwhr, Harbor. Lots of privacy for · n P • ' M rrlt Pro rtl "" "~" ---------upper bay area. Avail 8/1. re.frig, lrpic, patio. Across 2 BR, 11A ba, cpt, drps, pvt single person. $115 per mo. Cold shag. no pel/chlld. ' e t pe es v.rv.:>.ll.I M to L 240 "" "~ t1o G 67' gar ''" cle•n m g no •-·t • ~ . oney oan -~---'~-'-''------tram Park. Pool & tennis pa . arage. ~1573. • u-= : f ~Co~~~nt'el~to~& ~Frwy1:: ."'walGk. wto. 1st ., n· ¥ J..L'o'" '"a'" ""n" s' _B_•.;.lbo..;.;•...;..P.;;•..,n;.cln ... •;;.u;,;I•;.__ crt. $285. By Appt. 962-0022. $165. 548-6.181 2 BR. Very clenn. Adults. ~~ Iris, v a c an t .. ~ Laguna Beach j Huntington Beach Steady people only, no 1..::.::.==------ ' · park 10% Dn Agt 536-Jm On the Pt. Oceanfront 2 Br, .;;;;.::.;.;..:..:;.;;;.;,.....,_. .. ..__ J ~:::':'='.:"'"::~::-----:-children or pets. 364 16th 2 BR. Pool. Some views. • 3 B . • . 6% % INTEREST 2 Ba. $275, has everything. $175 .. OIARMING 1 Br. DNELUXEd 2 BR, cov patio. Place, Apt B, CM 645-4285. Near beach. S2lO ', ' DRM. owner's home plus 2 d TD L hse., No. end, Quiet ' & ew rps, erpts, bltns, dbl AGENT ~MS: 9 houses on lge. lot. Income n oa ns ~~~-A-House secl ded gar., lovely private grounds. BACH APT. FURN. 1 BR apt, Sl7S. mo. $17,800. _______ 9_79_.843_0 $215-uLrg: 2 Br. in dpJex. New Wll.ter & gardener pd. NR l7th & IRVINE Avail August 1, !ell.Se. 1 • FORTIN, Realtor 642-S(XX) Lowest rates Orangf! Co. crpt/dft>s, Gar. Bal. Vu. Responsible married couple SllO mo. 645--0963 Call 644-5277 ' J (10) 2 B"Delwce Bldg .. 6 'WE BUY TD1S" Corona def Mer $250 -200' ocean. Dlx 2 Br. (Adults) $165 no pets. 2 BR FURN -$155. ~ 0 '"3Z76 C ts d bltl N t PRIME area-2 blks to heh. mosoldE/side C.M.Prin-Settler.Mt,. Co. **DUPLEX BRAND apt.Allfeatures+Pool. 1-~-v~.;.· ______ P •rps, ns. opes. cipa!s only. 642-ll:zt. 642·2171 545-0611 NEW. Huge dlx owner's NU·VlEW RENTALS $165. >Br. cp~ c1rp~ Nr Harbor Center. 540-4484. : !:'.:-: ~~:1:•6~fu:· By owner d. uplex 1 yr old Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. unit. 3 BR.', 3 B A . , 673-4030 or 494-3248 See after 6 pm BAOIELOR apt. $95 mo. d & ~-la bl"-· 1800 ft 309 "A" Lincoln 1 1/1 I All ·1·ti Id 2 BR. unfurn. crpts, rps, Capistrano Beach, $50,000. WE make loans on property. r u-.::p ce, .... .,,, sq. • Walle to Wtr. 2 Br. Den. Frpl, !---------5 as · uh 1 es pa · sundeck. 21~ blks to Beach. , or trade for Jot. 536-0346. Also buy TD's. McClure, + 3 decks w/view of bay, bltns, utJ pd, Kids/pets, Laguna Hills Avail Aug. 19th. 963-2187. $2S5/mo, 673.3828 I ' Bkr 492-8332 r 492-0424 ocean, & hills. Walk to bch Re nt·A·House 979443011---------, * 4-PIE!X Nr. South Coast\~~·~~~·~~~~·~ & !!hopping. 1 yr Ise. $395. o-'=~~,.;..;_.:cc_:_"-'1 *3 BR, 2 BA. Air~nd., Huntington Beach · Plaza. Dlx 3 Br. Owner's!. 2 BDRM &. d:'1, ocean view, custom Interior wood. ~·;;;· ·::;·;;;· ;;::;;;;::;;;:;;;;:;;::;;.;;::;;;;::; Costa Mesa I Unit. Bkr. 54.~2321. I Kouusforll"1t I[ I@ I 11;;,la~ ::'.::::~ove, ~~ii:';:~ 32086 So 837-5921 · 831--0336 LaQUINTA HERMOSA iiii iiiiiiiii 'Z'BR Hse + Fourl-Br units, Spanish Country Estate L1v-HARBOR GREENS 1 . refrig., crpt/drps, privacy. • · "nn for 4 more, Inc $6,780.\~;;--ijiii~~ L Hiii l [!] ;"" & Spacious Apts. Te!' 1225 • 2 Br. hse. w/frplc, oguno t ] \' -~ ' Ask'g $61,240. 548-4562. ..-' hild/ t Apmments for Rent raced pooh sunken gu HouMS Furnished 300 gar., ,, ...... c pe · NEW 3 BR, 2 Baths $250 mo. BBQ. Unbelievable Living ... Furnished &. ll's all here for you lo enjoy Saturdays and Sundays and all week long, too. $750,000 health spa, 7 swimming pools, 7 light· ed tennis courts, bicycle trails, putting green, shuffleboard, croquet. Spacious junior 1 's from $174.50 monthly, plus I or 2·bedroom plans and 2-story to\vn houses with 2 or 3 bed- rooms. All \vitb electric kitchens. private bal· cony or patio, carpeting, draperies. s.ubter- ranean parking, elevators, optional maid ser- vice. Gourmet food market, dry cleaner, beauty salon on grounds. See beautifully fur· nished models today, 9 a.m. lo 7 p.m. Other times by appointmen\. Just north of Fashion Island at Jamboree and San Joaqum Hilll Road. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay Telephone (714) 644-1900 for ront1l inform1tlan, Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfum. W Costa Mesa FRPLC, sunken llv rm., 2 Br., 2 Ba. wfw, bltna. patio, encl. gar. $115. 673-5629 in AM. SPACIOUS 2 hr, bar, bltins, cpt. $165 mo. 13.'i Albert Pl, Apt B. Mr, \Vhite, (21l) 5954436. * * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Contemporary Garrlf'n Apt11. Patios, fr pl c. , pool. $15>-$170. Call 54&-5163 .. * CLEAN 2 Br.. 1 'Ai Ba. Bltns, gar. adults, no pets. $155. Nr. 19th & Pomona. Hunt ington Beach $175 Children W elcom• New Family Aph. 2 Bdrm. Color Coord.· TENNIS CRT., PUTTING GREEN, POOL, BAR·B·Q'1 · CJ-tILO Pt.A Y AREA DAY CARE CENTER 3 STORY REC. BLDG., INC. GYM & PARTY RMS. DESIGNED FOR TIIE GROWING FAMILY SEE FURN. MODELS 6401 WARNER AVE. · ''. li.dustrlal Property 1611~-.....,,.------~-~Br~.lrpl., bltns, or 1ell $1000 down. Only Unfurnithod Gonoral N U.v iEW RENTALS Owner/Agent, 644-'1525. Apta. Fum. 360 l BR · FU.RN. $l75 2 BR, unturn, crpts, drps, C~ Wamor a Ed""!"'> ' Good l<>r one user. 8.124 acres Ra•lly Clean Renfol• 6'1:!40.10 or 494-3248 Laguno Niguel ALL upl.t'l'IES PAID From $120 to $2!5 mo ms mo.1st & las~ $35 clnf. . Pro1ed of Urb.nehcs ~357. .,. ,zoned M·l in Orange, East 2 BR. $185. Costa Mesa _;;... __ ;;.... ____ Generat • 545-n.96 ask tor tarry · I An l Std. Ea 3BR, 2Ba w/trplc. Top S. of NEW 3 BR house. Beaut (4 bl.ks s. of San DJe11)Frwy Bachelors• 1 Bclrma • • -•- 0 ge a ,um, 'Y ac-3 BR. iZ70, Mesa Verde H •-~ -• ted -C~s.rvt~-""~Mgr~-)·----I $235 cess to all freeways and will 4 BR. $2'10. Hunt. Bch. wy """·......,.up. i-.:\.lecora • view. Lease. Central A/C. A on Beach. 1 blk: W. on Holt 2 Bdrms e 3 Bclrms but --• 0 .....__ new crpts & range, $350 mo. Frplc, elect kit. 962-3883 to 16211 Parkside Lane.) II h DELUXE 2 BR, 1% Ba. ~ ... -&-.., m'IN '""'~ a propo~ .range "'~ No charge to renters. Call 1 1 673-8902 1\12 or 2 Fu Bat s ~~' "~~uz. way and be mmute. to on tnday! We'd like lo help you on yr '""· · Newport Beach Bold New Concept <nl) 8l?-<i441 Stua;o, C'(lt/drpo, ]!001. BRAND NEW FAMILY and off ramps on Orange-find a home. COATS &: Coste Mesa Master slze bedrooms w/ Bltns, pvt patios. $1$. 1 wood Pri $32 500 __ ..._____ SUPER Harbor View rental fl4S -$165 high ' beam ctlllnP. large child ok. no pets. 646-0l!le TOWNHOUSE Al'TS. acrt>.· For ~er' intor!:: =CE REALTORS. YA NO DOWN 3 BR. shag crpt, 3 doors fURNJTURE RENTAL Bachelor k 1 'QR, patio!, ll:/ room w/gu or 2 BR. $150/mo. Beam «11, 3 BEDRMS. + FAMII:.Y, ~ tion, please call Hat Loomi~ -65-~Sou--La--l~Br--til on this rare value. 2 from pool&: park. Club priv. frpDlvid~·sed, pbrivth. gar 1 8 g e 'o1' Convenl~~un~p~.i Cl'l)ts, drps, retrlg. Poot. In-2 BA. TENNIS er .. t with 1'l • th g. • U · Bedrooms each unit. one Gardener. $475. 644-5.569. * Month to Month a &: ot! ott ldtchen. Enclosed pa-fant ok. No pets. 313 E. 17th PUTIING GREEN, . E kh ff & A I pd Child/pet ok · t and dy BLUFFS . Le·-"'" 0 ·U * lOO% Purchase OpHon close!J. Rec ball pool 4 tl 2 -·•--•--la Pl CM 642'9852 POOL, BAR n .N c o 54.1-~~~oc., nc. n75 -E/Slde. At.trac. 1 Br. :t :=.:~~: oc~=Y· $34, ~!. 2323 ~~ ';;r. * Wi~e Selection-pool ta~. sauna bath!. sa:ia. ;;;;;t en~ _Spa,.;··-c~;~ownhn~-u-se-· .-2~B~R-, -.CIID . ."> PLAY.~A Eves __ ,5 213·. •-.9710 hse, gar, yrd., patio, pool. Each uru·t ren•-•-r $165. Appl Bkr t!AA .,.,,,,, Style-Cblor~ See for your!:ell! 17301 ties. Security cuard. DAY CARE CENTER '""'-'Ill -ui S220 _ CdM, 2 Br over gar. l4 w • • ~·· * 24 Hour Dellv-Keel80n Ln. n blk W. ot 2 BA, Vaulted celling, · Keep as hnme or rental. On-N rt B h .. , Mod I 0 'tll 9 pm t 11 d 3 Sl"ORY REC. BW. INCL. Quiet&: private. ly $32.950. U you haw been ewpo eac • Beach, l ~1is: Slater)'. es pen • ~e·~:,g~~';.s GYM&: PARTY RMS. 170 NU-VIEW RENTALS 1n the service, call u•. THE BLUFFS rt( __ ),ll 2700 Pott rson Woy, CM DESIGNED FOR 11!E 673-4030 or 494-3248 l!'='f Fa1 !?;I HUNTINGTON Gardens nr Har~r Blvd & 1 & 2 BR. Pool. $140 Up. GROWING FAMILY B Ibo I Ind ONE STORY --Apts.'Hell at Bolsa Chica. Adems Furn.AvaU.Chlldren'steet. SEE FURN.MODELS ~ * ONE ACRE * 1 • 1 • Like new 3 BR., 2 ba's.; priv. 846-132:1. Compare • See El.ME. 22nt!OARD81. CMEN~;/.!',.~ 1T1 640· 1 WARNER AVE. , : Lstlide R·2 Zoning. 2 older 2 BR. hse.' steps to water. patio, Move-in ready. $375 517 W. 19tb, CM 5C8-3481 what you'tt missing. Fr. 546-5025 ..,...r_...., homes on lot. One of the $275/mo. yrly. Avail Sept. Realtors 545-0465 Per month. 2756 N. Main SA 547.0314 S 120-$240. 1 &: 2 Br apts. Garages. Quiet (Corner Warner A Edwards) 1few remaining large pa.reels. Al80 summer rent a Is Open Evenings f"'$12S c='-'.-$13!='5-. -Lge-.-mnd--,-rn-1 gardEn settinA'. SUS a: up. Project of Urbanetics Terrific buy! Call now • 675--0STI. --~F~R=E"'E"'l '°'I ~-,.,. Anaheim Br .. r.d<'C. Cpt/drps. Nr. TAKE A MOMENT Util lrte. Furn av a I !.\ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ·642·17n. Corona d1I Mar Le ndlord...OWn.rs C:"f I!. J!ief{' 1 br, $127.50; 2 br, $155. New· ocean 210 Ch 1 ca go Manager 531-8508, scs..8992. ON BEACH! $55, 900. LARGE 2 bdrm. furn We will refer tenants to you (floiJ j Jy alldec;,,!11~· ~!,!.;..Pool 536-22S8, 847-5169. . . and emd'oy the! ~~cadelulul aur. AVAIL. now • E/Slde, 2 Br., FREE of charge •• , Many av · ~: v.N"'UOO.i.. APT. Poolside .. Spacious roun inp: 0 1..1uo t com-1~ Ba Bltns dshwshr Onto w/frplc., $250. pe~ month. desirable tenants on our ~ .teaJty Balboa lsl1nd Bunga1o\v, Pvt. patloi $1.SO. pl~ opposite a colt course. cpt/drp,. encl. P,. No pets'. : ~~Ubl. ~: = . ' -rimTr nJ'. 21 yrl,y, Call eves, 6 7244. waiting tat. 2414 Vista Del Oro mo. to right ad u t ts . Privacy, luxuey, secur:lty at :11=:75.:. . ..:£45.4220.;.:_7.:.· -o-~= ADULTS ONLY .,, Singles. Families. 2 Br. Gar. ALA R t I e '"S-l 900 BALBOA Island Hot e I~ 846-1323. a reasonable price. Fenced. Fum or Unrurn. en a s -Newport Beach Suites, sips 4. Rms. Kitch.1 * Lovely Jiving and enter-l'Bdrm. wdurn, clean, 2 ldds Furniture Available Rent-A-House 979-8430 Unfurn 2 BR. Crpt's. Single 644-ll33 ANYTIME tacit. By Da/Wk/Mo. 127 • LRG .. 2 BR, Bungalow taining areas with tire-OK, no pets. $140 mo. TIO C a r p ets-drapes-dlshwuhel garage. 2 sml children ok. "---t 6....: .,.,..3 Apt. 4 Carde11$, 6 pools. tlo Shalimar. 538-474L heated pool..qunu-tennia Lido lsl1 $210 • Lido Isle waterfront ~ .. e. ,_, . Saunas. Hot Jacuzzis1 Ten-place, pa No pets. Must have refs. very lrg. 1 Br. Util. pd. A'ITRACTIVE winter rental, 1190 aAt! Nim * 3 bedroom•, l-',I batM Large 2 BR, crpts, d:rpes rec room«ean views ·SAN JUAN CAPISfRANO * WATERFRONT * 1150 mo, + 175 dep. ~7 l'l35 • 3 Br., 2 Ba., trplc .. >BR. 2 BA, I> b!k bay. $175 n~ courl!. . ~~'· *Poot and putt!oe areen $130 mo. patios-ample parklnc A~* ft H°r::~~ 5 mt, 6 Bd,; home. Beaut. after 5 p.m. studio w/gar & patio. mo, (213) 6!J8..3021. FREE UTILITIES.Furn l BR Take a moment to aee wbo 548-7209 Security Guard.I. · tum. Avail 1 to 4-months 2 BR house, crpts, drps, gar .. $285 • Nwpt Hghts 3 Br., 2 2 BR $200 1 N apt near beach. Pool. $135. you've been missing at $175. UTIL. tnr.I., 2 Br., 11,i HUNTINGTON OCEAN vu. Arcb Bcb. HIJJ., beginning Aug. 1", at 12500 $lSS month. 2 Sm a 11 Bs., gar., yrd., deck. 3 blks pelJJ/;., chlld':n yr/~• ; ~ up. 5$.377'7/5$.7282. FAIRWAY VILLA Ba .. encl. gar .l patio. 343 PACIFIC , ·t lots. JlriV'. pty. Howards, per mo. incl. pier & sJip. children, no pets. 646-S928. bay! Aug 1. 6'r.H)900 0~ 673-5829 VERY Nice 1 Br. dplx. Cabrillo Apt. C, 548-2933. 711 OCEAN AVE H B. : 213, <:zt-1909 ~ 93'1-5855. Boy & Beach Realty 2077 Wallace. Apt 6, CM. NU-VIEW RENTALS · Quiet. Sep. by gar. Adults APARTMENTS 2 Br. Adults, nope,.. C710 5.'f&.lm · ' Mountain, De11rt, * 675-3000 * Long Hairs. Sngll. Students 673--4030 or 494-3248 Balboa Peninsula over 30, no pets. 548-1021. BAY MEADOWS AP'.l's. Ole open UI am.$ pm Dally : Resort 17~ Newport Beach Cpls. Pvt hm $105 Utll pd. HARBOR View Homes area. e $45 WK & UIH)n Ocean 2 Br, carport, very quiet & 20122 Santa Ana Ave, 546-6215 387 W. Bay St. CM 646-0073 WILLIAM WALTERS co. Rent·A·House 9794430 3 Br, 2 Ba, iamily rm, elec Lovely Bach-1 Br. -Rooms 'Pl'ivate. No pets. Adlts only. I---------l BR 2 BA occ ... !'!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ' ~~:ED % A-3 Ba cabin WATERFRONT db: 3 br. $235 3 BR 2 BA trplc kitch, w/w cpts, drps. $400. Maid Servfce.Pool·Util Pd Util pd. Nr. 17th & Irvine. DELUXE upnai,.. New ~:·Ii drpi: DUPLEX.· Clean? 2 Br •• cov. 1: CHAtXNlhell $10,950 dpbtn. :_ar., ~~. docc 805 k. patlo, BBQ: 546-lool days: mo '"":~;, Sbown 213 -b~,,!PP'· e can 6'f5.8'140 e $150. £42.-0538. APARTMENTS $169/per mo. Call S52·!1786. patio. New drp•, cpt.. bltna. H·oBBY Sl:{OP $69 000 Ava ~pt. u1o1-10•.u, l 892--079l eves. 714:494-.,...,.., : 1;o1•1w1. YEARLY 1 BR p I u 1 1 BR, 1125. Studios $ll5. No Alt Cond • Frplc's • 3 Swim· dbl gar, lovely pr iv,. I · .. • 687-8384 Coll h'd bed ly d -1 ..... Pools Health ~ 3 BR, 1" BA., bttins, cpts, ,,_ ..... "• wa-• -~ , ~ONT Homes • from · 3 Br, 2 Ba, family nu, elec 1 e-a-• ne\v e c. children or pets. 2135 Elden " ... ,. • "t-• drp tio rpi dbl m.•"w'" • .... ., &_....,.,.... ; , ;36,500 Walk -Bay or Bch • 1 Br 3 i!,~ ;ors~~: ::1ra: A~ kitcb, w/w cpts, drp1. $400 Laundry 7facil. Creat loca· _A_v_e_. See'-~Mgr.::..._A.:p.;ct...:6:... __ ~~~ ~~-• Game and $1~· ~. '1 pr. ~pleRe~;1~{e $1~~ : BoGodwl~ ALPB' ~ ReLakalty 1mob1= bhmse.C·1'5. Util pd, Also Aug. 1. $230/mo. ~224.2. m71o.4· l.~~~~"~713· ~ tt7~2!· Ction. 6'1:>-515. 2BR, partly furn . Nr shops. 1 BR. From $160 2·B.a..Mesa Verde. 1140. Elec pets. 842-3276. , x 1'7U, 1g ~ar e vo1 .M. · ;rr-<J<IO't, • ,.,,_ -.oi orona d el Mar Older child OK. $135. 1 (1l4) 86G-75ll Rent-A-House 979-l430 LARGE 4 BR home, 2 BA, 1 BR. le Oen From~ bltns, encl gar, nr. shop's. See Afr Apts .. $llS dbl garsge '187 Joann St EXECUTIVE hm, 5 br, 31> FURNISHED t to 6411-2627. MEDITERRANEA Adults No pets ... ~·1 Eves (213) 448-QJT6 1619 w. Balboa mvd. 51,,. · ' ba, avail Aug. l . Clean, nr ap -next 1 ---------• · ~ • Lrg 2 BR, Crpts, drt,pea;, blt· ,..., see af1cr 5 pm daily. restaurant market ll"'"'r $145 -Nicely furn. l & 2 BR. · 1 blk N "•--• 1 LOT tn ftlmotll L6ke Havuu. 8. $100 per wk. Aug-sept. 1ni 645-0636. schls. YrJy $600 mo· ' .,..... Trailers. Adults onJy. 132 w. VILLAGE SPACIOUS 2 BR Apt. ll'.ll, ·OJ: -...ms. ....., J home of 1he world famous blk to beach. 962-4349. ...c::...:=----~-~35.'U store & other shopg. con-Wll-CM ... •530 "M 'l bo Bl d CM SllS/mo. Carport. Beach, 729-6 Utica. 536-'10'10. 4 Br, crpt/drps, bltns, veniences.,Beach, 5 mlnute 1 __ -_•_._._._~ ___ .__ *'1\111 'a.r r v ·• · • Older preferrtd. 67M145 I London ~~ 1:cl~ 3 BR. 2 BA, ~mpl turn, pool pa~. Nr occ. Avail. Now. HARBOR VIEW HOMES-2 & walk. $165/mo. ht &: last + * BACHELOR Apt. * (n4J 557-8020 S SP~ ~:; atl!d~ .Fncd ' ·= to will trade tor~ prlvilega, Jovel,y. Avail $280. 549-1507. Den or 3 BR,. $380. Lee, or $50 dep. 1 year lease,. Adults $100 month · RENTAL OFFICE ldrpBR. .,!~"'~Pre. r;_frlolg.d, crpts, peya t.s.' 11272 mo~.i.. , -, llB. l Me; C:, Newport Bea~ 1n-\~~$C~p~t.~l~0.!!520;!~~R!!ver!!~J,~ve!.~CLEAN -=::....:.;;. "'c=h:ca.;.r_m_t -0 -1-, -.1• ~"'°-·..,to,,..m_o_. 64_5-_251_'»_.__ preferred. Call 6 rl 2 -4. 21 O Call 646-~7 1 __ o:cPEN..:::.:...:10c.AMcc:c..:•o.:...:6.;;P.;.M;_, . ple.'·~. u:r er COU· 842.-4549. -"" .J.OU I come prop 644-4687 tractive 2 br hle. Some cpt San Cleme.nt• 1.~Mlk~•-· ~--•.c· _536-4622 __ .__ ----,---;..... __ . · I ~ $145. 54M680. 1170 Cbannlng f togu"• llHch Pork·Llko Sur rounding 3BR, tll ba. $165 mo. LARGE 2 BRlri>ey ~ ' 2 Lots, aectu&d $2,450 -~-1--_lt_drpa~·------DELUXE 1 BR a Pt 1., • epac. um. QUIET • DELUXE 753 Shalimar Cptr, drt>s. r/o. Pl'. ltxd, Moonrldge cabl.D $15,750 . . ....::I S BDRM house. feJiced patkl diahwashtt, rdrlg., stove, • 11 • N ° n ·Sm 0 k er• LGE. f\irn penthouse. 2 1: 3 BR APTS 645-0973 child OK. $135. 847- Lakealde cabin m.0001;;;;;;;;;;~iiiij chlldn!n ok, no pet.a. $'144. shaJ crptg, drps. 2 4 0 Gentleman exec. fr P 1 ~' Panoramic view ot vlllqe Prv. pl'ltiot * Htd Poolt Call 866-4641· or write: llH . Ofti ii Call Sat. 64S-0'158. Co.nada. 830-3486. privacy, 8· liwy. 6754859· & ocean. 2 br, den, frplc, Nr shor'g * Adults Only o~n• P(llnt Laguna hr.di Spencer Rt.al Estate, P. O. OUMI · u m; LEASE 2 BR t BA -S J C I 2 BR. 1 ba. Annual rental sundeck. lndoor BB Q . ' Bo<Calll·.?828· BJ& Bear Wke.,_G_•_n_•_r_._. ______ $») mo. iW.. nq. ~ a n Uln ~ •P strano ms per mo. AvaU 911/72. 494-8$11. Martinique Apts. * Brand New Ocean View * 2 BR • N'ew. l blk • r Kerry, 645-0303 3 BR, 2 BA, fnad ~. close 67J..-0:934. Open Sat 9-3, ~11' 2 BR · b Uti l lTn Santa Ana Aw .. C.M. Ap1s. 2 Br From $16.IS, 3 ~ach. View! s.zto A \1p. !.EVEL LOTS. -....overed, LANDLORDS! FO" -nt 11~ per mo 2 br to schoob, church, sbop.,~M~artgo,-"-_ld_._~---1.,,..;,.~"'';m u .;:· ~: Mgr. Apt. 113 646-5542 B71R4. ~:....,CoU"'t U toil, 494-2339 eves. ,...___."_ "' ''" N • pi""· Avail. Aug. 18 at ·-·~LRG ·•·-I"-bachelor apt, ' -· wttJ>.waltt. ~~•u-....... We Sptdal!u tn Newport houst, 182 Cecil Plat<, -• ~" ~-u• ·~ cAd=ul::l•::.·..:4~::...:19115=·---LARGE 2 BR, 111 BA, •hag · • M tSI Voroo By OWf)lfl', Call 546-4827 J3eacb e Corona dtJ Mar e ())eta Mesa. mo., lat .l tut + dep. For Jlt:ntleman prc_f'd. Ca I l Newport Beidt cptt, bltns, trplc, pri patio, East Bluff a, toauna. Our R<ntsl Sero 1.3..:;:;;BR.c;;..l=ba::., -$1ll5.--Fhcd-~yd-. appt call 493-a971. 67>-5156. <nd -· 1 blk !torn I;;.~;...;..;...;..____ DEL)JXE 2 A S BR. I Bl. vke 11 FREE to You! Tl')' Gange. Chldn OK. 2lll S.nfo ""-Holghh Cot to Mlle DELUXE 3 Br, Den, 2 Ba. school1. 634 Hamilton, Colta > ~ apta!J w/vlew. Bllinl, •ncl. ·iar. i1ll5 i,p. R<llbl lrAJ ~u"'.1~EW RENTALS Monrovia. &ts.Ills; 646-62M ............ ,.,. ...... I A 2 BR. Pool. 1140 Up. ~~~h ~~·~~sloo er:: ~~r! ~1' or :!t1o,"T•rrsce~':''~ • .=: ~~ Ma<a A .... l:!!J --or .... ..,,. F ountain Valley 3 BEDROOM. $225. per Unturn av!. Children's sect. Le See 5000 N Pool, bldr)' lac. No cltldn. or , "~ -....... n!Otllh. BKR: Ph S41H1811 ELM: GARDENS Apt., 171 ue. now ep. SPAC. 2 A 3 Br. apt. 1140 up pe ... SepL O<CllP"llCY· 751 ~·°'."~rt Beach -' Buslnott LE ASE OPTION/OR 4 BD~. 21> BA. tU flee anytime. ~ -·St CM. 641,.3645. tune, N.B. Pool. cptldrp. bltn1, kids llomlnao Dr Mer LIDO ISLE • BR 2 'EASE • BR. 2 BA. k!I dlMwhr w ttr -' Nr ~ "'~ YEARLY ftntsl. New dpbt. 2 ok ~· -• " '' • • ., 1 Opportun llv 2llO " • ' " 1 a "'" • Condomin1·-1 Br 1rg 11~ • 1"•. S/pool. br -eou N "' -· ~· BATH Ad 1~ •--. I •-I ' school $2S5. mo. 962-9924 •n• ~ • -, $21S mo. 3 br, 131$, mo. -ege o .••. ~"~ . • U ,., ...... ' w w crp .... , rg. cover-· · Unfilrn. 320 Ad!'· on!•. kle•t r or Must be .... to app-. On IS!l6 Maple No. 1. .. 642.s&U Huntington Bffch 101 VI• An t I lo• t n .. llh Food realauranl ed patio, lovely rural Huntington Beach ~ ' "~ Card and Gilt lhop Im b .... Cotto Mato ~~~. 1993 Church. CM Balboa Peoin. Avail now on * 3 BR. I Ba. Avail about r BR .• 3 BR,, Bo. w;.i\'.;, 714:75M7lt. 1 ttsh and Chlpo 8 osp ere. ,.:t1t1 •• per $13.~. 2 BR Duplmc fenced ~ 1 re 1•ase. 6'13-()526. Aug. t. 1185 per mo. lst. a. batcb. Siias crpbt, drpa, 2 BR Upper. 111 -to HOLLAND llut. S•let mo. CALL agt. 54Ml4l Child, pet OK. N.;., paint: *NEW 2 BR. ALL EXTRAS. $10, -Cuta 1 Br 1,,.,, pool * 'i Blk a.,. lo Beach. l b:g. lut In advanoe. llO cleM. bltns, lrplc's. prgs, $200 lht octan. 11 bllr to 1i11· • 1'111 ORANr.~. <l.M. Need a "Pad"'! Placa •n ad! 18154 II. Beach Bl Yd . NR. SCHLs. MUsr SE£t widen, patlO, pr. Adulls. BR, ba. A rtlr!i .. $1.lS: 2 !ft. 2 chlldr<n only, no pell. \Jp. 8312 Atlllnta. 511-744~ AvaD. Aq, 1. $D11D. 645-4170 C•Jl 611-ll6'18. 644-ll392. $200/MO. ~ AO pets. Qolet. 646-3161. Br., apt., $265. 6'75-4600, JM lat SL C.M. SIM985. -Ytorly. f!S.a!I. , __ _ I Loh for S•le - I f~d.,, J~y 28, 1912 ' .;·1;;;1 "_t _, ... -~!~~· I -I~ I ~-l~I ~ IMl __ .... _.-..:l~[g] 1---1~ 1 ----·l~f--.--l ~I ....... ,j[Il) ;;;I .~ ... ,._. ·~111~11 '. Allll. Unfwn. 365 Summer Ronta l1 420 lnduttrl1I Rental 450 F"""" lfrM 1clol 550 1>ooy11ttrnm Ganlonlnm P~:~i'h:oglnv Help W onted, M & F 110 Help Wifttod, M & f 710 " Newport lloocf\ OCEAN !Joni ITnl&L By the COSTA M ESA LGE l"'Y 6 whit• eat vie YOUNG Set School ()p<n 7 --AL7.":.Zs '::G7ARD::~ENIN::::;~G;:--llP .Al..:..:NT:!::IN:;G:.:ln:!l:<riOr:!../-ext-enor-Aaailtant Mana;<r COMPUTE!\ te r m In I 1 :: l't'ffk or month. 5 wkl 1n 144042880Sq ft. Harbor I: l9t.b, C .M. days, 6AM·7:30PM. Prof. tor prden1nc ft a mall Flrst clau palntm Top SALES WOMAN operator & data control ~ ! ~ VERSAILLES Aug. Lrf. l BR, apt. Comp. CABINET MAKERS-545-7308. ~c11>en01 .;..~~ F~ ~ landscapinr suvlcea, caJJ -••Uh• pal.m1. 541-0336 .. h .... __ , ti clerk. Experieoctd 10k .. tf, • ~ E.xKvtlve A,partm.nt1 fUm. tt.!iO per wk. 23)4 Jl1.8£nCl.J\SS FNO datlin& 2 month old ~~• ~0"'"'' • ..... -54()..5]98 evn, Ser_ vi n I -.-•1 • ' Exper., brt..,,t, enuiwuaJ c, ticient in typing A &ey. > Overlook.In& Newport Stach. Ocea.rtfr'oftt, N.B. For hlfor. Nr. Nwpt Fl't.')I' & s.o. ,.,...,., Shrphttd. Vic.16th St., N.B. wk1y. Agn 2'1H. fi46...3'106. Newpol't, CdM.~ Costa Mna. P~IN·~~bo PAP~G, ~r ~~~ Top pay. Night tblttPtete:ns $pectacular views. Luxury. call Joab \Yla:ht 646--7171 or 2931 Grae. Ln. 67>29f7• DAY Nur.ery, bablt'1 to 5 Dover Shcrrft, Weatcli.U. 1 ndyn ft r area. ~ . ..:;-op",y IN p~SON wW be acce 1 ........ ~· Models open 9 to 8. On lloe-646-67(11 or a.sk at loc. for ($0. of Baker, E. of Fa.lrvtew yn:. $15 per wk. 646-6188 or FOR u ique .Penonallzed bo ud, Re s tum. 642-~. .,..... .... """' .July 31st. App Y at 1 .... un • , pital Rd. oU Newport tuvd. PhU. I,\ MJ) Repraentatlve there ~~ 1:~ ~~: 645-0:l2. Landsce~ln& & full maint., WALLPAPE R HUNG N 25BAF~~ N.B. c.otnniunity Hospital, 14662 ·• or Jiuperiol' AV'!. BAY VIEW 2 bt!droom., 9 arn·U JllOOn. Laguna Beach. 49'1-2124. Bu1fnt111 S.rvice Po 1$ Briggs Cunnln.gham ca.u Reboo 646-2449 °· a " Newport Ave., Tustin ' ' • • SEAQJFF 1otANOR Aptll. 2 aleepe 4 completely fumlah· (n4) 97'M434 or 81M1U dld, calf James C. Elmer, P l bl ATTENDANT at Shell sta· COMPETENT & Exp er· er. \Jnturn $165. Pool ed. Avail June to Sept. $750 Rento1ls Wo1nted '60 3 Wet Sulta. Cout Hlwa,y. P lo1 nnlng &· Mappl"I ~7662. um nt tkln & Hertz-Rent-A.atr in bouJektieper. Live-ln. MUlt Crpts. d.rps, b1tn1, prb. pr month. AduUa only -Ccrona dtl Mar. 673-7286. Zoning & plW1nlng CasH pre-. PROFESSIONAL tree work, Drains uncloga:ed • $7.50 Laguna Beach. College ~tu-be able to do sim,ple cooklng dffpl. 1525 Placentia Ave. agent. 675-fmO, NEEDED Immediately. 3 CHILDS wallet • Vic: Two pared tor present•tioa to p r u n 1 n g , t r 1 m m 1 n & , ~wer line to JOO' • $15. dent over 18. Permanent. 20 &: drive a car. Pri. room & Ask abOut our dllcount. NEWPOR'f • 100 ydll 10 BR. bona on Eutslde CJ.I. Guys · H.B. 963--2598. cities in Orange Co. We &lao spn.ylng, 1 pr 1nk 1er1 , * ~2502 * hn weekly. No long hair.I. bath. 1% day1 oft All eves. 54&-2682 or·~. beach. 3 BR. 2 BA, fllps 8. PreL U.arbor lll SChool FND. truh setter, Newport spcciaJiu tn Realton Baae Landscaping, c I ea nu p . • P LUMBING • 1,,:•94-S00:.:..:=3·:_------0-. tree. Salary open. Immed. RIOlARD'S/LIDO AREA Mo. pf Aug. Avail. or by wk. ,Platrlet, R ea •on • bl e . Beach. 6'13-33liO Ask for ~M,..•;;:P,..•-c,963-~..:1360"7.----Gtorge 646-5893. lnslall·Remodel·Repa.ir BABY SITER fDr l yr. old Please reply in writing to: New large 2 BR, 2 BA. xtra (l) 827-2382. Rellable 2t yr. resident. Chip Ca rpet Service SPENCER'S Lawn Service! Free Est. Uc, 548-8772 boy. Perm position. Start Classitied Ad No. 396, Daily niee', cpt.s, drpt, trple, 3 BR, 2 BA, deluxe-furn. M6--6188. -Free est. Lawn care, P'UMBING ·REPAlR 8/7. Hours 10:30 am . 4:30 Pilot Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ,,,.~, s-"'-•-to "th t all-... FOUND white rabbit Vic. JOHN'S C"""°I &: Uphobt...... '"' M I be 11.vail ' all Calif 92620 ~''"'"'"• ga.rare. '-N· mo. Steps to Beach. $325/wk. in J;HLCuc r wt wo am ....,.s -..-~., cleanup•. Reas. 548-5213. No inb too small pm. us · -==·..:;:.:......'-~~-,.,.,. yrty. f'l3...0844. Aug. Aho 2 Br. 2 Ba, deail'es 1 bdrm. apt. or Irvine field off Dover Or. Dri·Shampoo free Scotch-""'""'+~-~-=--JV mom. s:n week1y or $4. per COOK, exper. Park µdo -1 "A I NB boule unfurn. Ph. 646-2335 NB. 646-7891 , guard <Soil Retardants). AL'S Landscaping. Tree * 642-312! * day Call 64S-8746 Conv. }fosp .. 466 Flagship WATERFRONT Apt. Large 2 .-.. w ... uz, 646-61. 4 . . Degreasen &: all colol' ~moval. Yard remodeling. COLE PLUMBING . . Br. w/prage. Dining area. Corona del Mar, nr beach aft 6 p.m. Lost 555 brighteners & 10 minute Trash hauling, lot dean up. BABYSITI'ER. tnY home. 5 _R:.:d::·:.• :.cN:.:.B::. . ..:64;;;~:..:.:~· ---1 Appliances, uUUUes Incl. 2 Br Sl.SO ""k; 1 Br $80 wk YOUNC couple want unfurn. •R_EW_ARO ___ fu_r_info_.-.. -.,.. bleach for white carpets. _R<palr='=~sp:.,rinki_._•~"--·-673-,.c..l,l;..66_. 24 hr. service. 645-U6l da,ys wk. 8 'am-5:30 pm. 4 COOK • Exp. Wheelman $300/mo. I am-5 pm, Cotnplele!y Jumiahed 642-33.11 2 to 3 BR. house, no Save your money by saving -::: SAVE On Plumbing. Painting, boys, (2 schl). $160 mo. e BLUE DOLPHIN e 675-8011. Newport.2 Br fum alps 6-8. children, 1 cat. will fix up . ~~;~!~ :1:;. me exlra trips. Will clean ~ t: w:a~ Installations, Free estimates. Mrs. Perkins, ~; afl 6 3355 Via Lido, NB 2 BR, 2 BA Moblle Jtome. 'Ai blk heh, 673-9142, 832-0942 642·9875 eve•. Rell. ' taken fl'om back oJ Coco's, living rm .. dl,ning rm. &: &:.clean.up.~: 54~. Good refer. 839-0372. "p:=m::.·_.:oo-.::.,rn;..c.'2_. ----DENTAL Asst.·lnterested Yearly rentaJ by leuo, askforGayleor:l13: 944-4890 Fashion Island. Belong& to hall $15. Ally rin. $7.50, JAPANESE Gardener Rooting Banking "'Orking in Christian ofc. 1191.50/mo. No chlldNn, no ** BEACH APTS. iipe S. I ]~ _w_-_· __ ''"_•_e_nt_. _1_rn_m._ couch 110. Chair 15. 15 yrs. Comp. Yardwork & Clea»up, • T. Guy Roofing. Oeil CLERK TYPIST Need <hairs;,Je g Ir I. J>l'l.S. Avail Au & • l 5 t b . $125 to $175 wkly, Aug/Sept. . PtnONIS 64z...3634. exp. is wti,at counts, not F'r'ee estimates, 6(2...3102 Di'rect. I do my own work. Opening in Newport area, re· Certified for x-rays. BrieOy 673-3800. fi75..5810or673-6880. ';;;;;;;;;;;~~~ LOSf 2 mixed lain, 'black ~~f.153~~~rk myself HOLLORAN'SLawnService. 645-27&'.l. 54~9590. quires 50 w.p.m. typing Ir. describe qualilicattons NEW duplex, Refrl A: dshwsbr Canal I w ; white markings Quality Workmanship. Free LEE Roo,;_,, Cc. RooFi~ all plea~ing pl1l'IOnali~ for Classified Ad 468 c/o Daily 3 Br., 2 Ba., $325 lse. View ON Sips 8, out b rd Auto t r1n1portetlon 525 7/Z2m vie. Newport SI'EAM Carpet Cleaners, est. after 6 pin. 962-9703. types R:oov UJ'l5 . public contact. Prev10us of· Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa !~·Bal• 2 ~.: BS2101vd.""· 64No2-~~1 =-orL~~67~19. WANTED. Woman rider to Heights. An• we r • to prosq. fit.a~~~~s. 300JIM --.S-G_ard_e~n-in-g.-co-m.-,P-1-ete ~ root, ~tin,~1!~~ fice exper. pre;terred.N Mesa, Calif. 92626. -uua .,..... "Baby" &: "Joshua". Call """"-"-'-"'-'-'='--I lawn&: yard care, cleanups. & coior. Lie/bonded, since R. E. LOA DENTAL Asst-Receptionist, NEWPORT f&laM, new 3 BR., 2 BA. Furn. house in ahare/ drivinDg _& ,expenses _atc:..,I 5'-'-'pm--·:.,G<:;.:.=..;:;2985:;c·:___ -:eihng1 ~aft 5 pm. 1941. Free est. 642-7222, PROCESSOR exper. only. 23.30, Prefer duplex, 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, CdM. All or part. Avail w aame, r l v n g to mok 644-0880 -. sun deck. $350 mo. 675-81&9. Aug. le Sept. 673-7469, Virginia. Between Aug. 1 & LRC white cat. Heavy Aooustical Ceilings blown General Services Sewin9/Altera;ion1 Huntington Beach area-re. non-a er. · 15 5.52-7416 w/light blue' eyes. Flea col· machine applied. Free DENTAL,· Girl Friday, 25--35 l br., Zl,il ba., brand new. Cole to channel. beach A ohop'g. J350. yrly. Gn-74:11. NEW View Apt. Kings Jtoad. Avail AU&-1-t Single adult. -· Newport H•lghto SPACIOUS 2 bl', amartty dee. Frplc, beamed ct)llng, cpt, drps. Quiet bldg. Adltl, no pell:. $UM}. 2100 Haven .PL Rento1t1 to Shar e 430 -"-· =--""-·-----18.r, Spayed. Vic. ot Santa estimates. Guar. 644-7183. JACKSON • The l\tagician 45 SEWiNG:Oe$iGN1NG ~uire:O:~~~!. yrsfi=c!: yrs., tor new ofc. Will train. ---------Personals 530 Ana Ave, &: Ogle, C.M. Cement, Concrete min. .of spell binding magic Men/Women. Reas. Rates 1 Send resume to: Classified WANT Nice female rocrm .. ~C..:.="'-----'"'-' 645-3103 Reward. for childrens parties. ;s. $10 min. Call 84&.7450 loan processing & accura e Ad No. 470, Daily Pilot, mate to sbatt modem 2 BR. Tl RED OF WORK? 494-3669 typing, Xln't salary &. bene-apt. t blk. from beach on REWARD. 7·20. Nr Brkhn:t PATIOS.SIDEWALKS · Alterations-642•5845 fits. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Balboa .Peninsula. Avail. Bored? Want a couple of & Adam&. Pepper fem, CEMENT CONTRACTOR HOME Repairs. Carpentry, Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. TELLERS Calil. 92626. months of unplanned ka 13" B1k 11 Call Max *** 644-0687 ·ti nt odd now tbru 9/9. at winter carefree funt Can you a:et coc poo. . • •vet. pain ng, ceme , rem •Tile .DENTAL Asst. exper. rates. $91.r.n. 675-7833 evea. Shaggy. 962--6022. • CUSI'OM CEMENT WORK etc. Bob, 646-6446. ----------Full & Part Time Openings chairslde. El Toro-Lag Hilla ...., away duting Aug. &: Sept'!' Dri alks tlos -Bcb area/So, Org. Co. Sa1 0 ~1130 SHARE home. Of' rent nice!" Tall 1 t ro n a estab"· .. e'd REWARD: Great Dane Pup. ves, w • pa • Hauling CERAMIC tile new &: ERSON area. · pen. · , • ~· 5 1 f . pooldecloi.Oon.642-0514 re-odl ~-,,_Small APPLYINP ST tum br'1 w/kitch priv. bachelor wants to take hap. py, mo'• o d, fawn em. '" e · "'~ """•· * DENTAL ASS I H B 96• ~~ alt 6 I al Lost nr Bushard & Garfield, CUSI'OM Concrete, patios, TREE &: large Plant jobs welcome. 536-243i.. Room 20l NEEDED. 2 OR 3 DAYS , , area. "''"""' PJll py, fun oving g 30-45 on HB 962-9634 or 968-1294. sidewalks, planters. Free removal. Rot o t l 111 n g •lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 1055 No. Main, Santa Ana or all day wknds US tour in luxury motor· 536-7378 renovating, Yard cleanups. ,...-------So. Cal 1st Nat Barut PER WK. EXP PREF. 1, 6424181. STUDENT mother &: 2 home. All repllea confiden· LOST Siamese cat, vie, 19th ~e='='-=--· ----Move &: HauL . Call Z..t&'I' I • lfllJi r· F.qual Oppor. Emp~ ,;;644--0683c:,;:~·'="'....,,.---:::--,,- children to find &: share hie tiaJ, wrlte Clas1tfied Ad No. St. Costa Mesa. 830-3456 EXPER. oontractor, patios, 642-l403. _ ~ .. -. f" DESIGN Draftsman. Prefer • San Clomentti I 2•BR, 2 Ba. new Jhq, pali11, ·, :.. drpo. Frplc, retrlg, range, ; \:t balcony. <>ooui view nr nr. OCC w/same, Bonnie, 429, Daily Plk>t, Box 1560, after 10 am, or 642-.5102 walks, drives. brick & W EEK EN 0 / Eve 11 ing ~ BANK TELLER w/pril'lted circuit board ex· M7-4337. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626, after 6 pm. Reward! slumpetone work. 894-35.13. M --per. Small growing co. =«' thl be" / · PATIOS ·"·· drl eo. . overs-Large. truck, power Job Wanted Female 702 Commercial Bank Exper. w/chance for advanrement. wtµ. share 3 BR conilo in •FUlLY IJCENSED* -·~ n age apncot • WCUJ\A, ves . .;>aW, hft. Dolly, dr1vet" & helper ------·----·I Min. 6 mo's required H.B. w/ female over 21. Renowned Hindu Spiritualist. female poodle, ( G 0 1 die > break, remove & replace $15 per hr. 545-2886. GOOD TYPIST Newport Beach Area 646-TI7G. Call 536-3860 Spiritual Readings given 7/3. Nr Coast Hwy, C'dM. concre~. 548-8668 forest. YARD cl WJll d you ty . t Call Mrs. Scripts DIESEL trk mech. need fDr beach • shopplnl, $190. mo. 1 111 Algodon, ~. I~ t • Apts., funo. or Unflirn. 370 Cotti MHa ': . ' , lleali.BllU 20 k • ·~ N.,. Adult Apt& • e 1 BR:U~ noo. • : : ::-:-~~ 1210. , e 2 BR, 1 BA Furn 1225. , Private patiol, lush forest setting, Carport~ gas paid. 114 E. 3>th St., C.M. 543-0137 * 1 BR, CPI'. DRPS, FNCD YD. 185 lo $150. M:;.1657. I 3 BR, Crpta; drapes, bltn1, 1 blk IO &hopping center, Sml pet ok. TI3I Elio, Apt D. mgr.""'42-1831. : ~rt Belch OAKWOOD The Last Word In Great Apartments! What more can ycu say about an apartment com· l '· munlty that cornea with $1 million worth of recreation! Or a ttnnis pro A: aetJvlties director plus great fun time•! Roni• from $145 Sorry, No Pets Or Oilldren • • • Models: Open Dally From 10 am to 1 pm • OAKWOOD GARDEN APTS ?jewport Beach North 1700 16th Street 642-8170 Newport Beach. South 880 Irvine Avenue ~ • l!!"""""!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!~ Rooms 400 ' WORKING female, lowly : ! home ln University Park, prlv. nn. le ba. Kitchen &: : • laundry prlviJ. Po o I 1 • : $.100/mo. 833-0811. • ROOMS $18 wk up W·klt: ' Pl wk up Apt& 2376 ', Newport Blvd, CM. ; 518-9755. ROOM with kitchen, laundry. p001 pdvg1. Female only. 142-8472, H.B. area. WXURY'. Pvt, entr. A ba. ' KlL priv No omcktn; maid • ..... 51&-719'!; 675:0310. llOOll $Zi • up. flverlooidng --"' Ocfan. Ii blk ._.., ZiOO .9tavlc!•, CdM. Summer R...t1lo 420 UutD~Et; -.. /boat allp ~, « 1taJN av..U. .. daUy. 1D AM·lOPM. Advke Reward. 675-4616. Contractor ' garage eanups. 0 r ping • Sat. only to help with maint. ~~ B~· ~~~ coife1~ :~~~n ~~all matters. I can -l.00--KIN-G_fD_r_lo-,-, _Coc_loi_l-eil, 1 A. c K T a u 1 a ne-Repair ~rn:°:: w -:;~ , d~d~'. ~~d ~:if:;, 'r~ar1H~8~ Equal (~~~4:p1oyer Sal. ~pen. 645-4100. grad, 54!>-4<49 btwn 7-9 pm. au N. El Camino Red r,.'.';,,;':~r.'~.' ~~: remod .. addll. ro yrs. exp. 847,2666. F.V., WHI, 75c per pg. DRAFTSMAN Ga.rag•• for Rent 435 San Clemente 540--32S7. Lic'd. My Way C.O. 547-0036. SKIPLOADER & dump truck or will work by hour BANK We need an e1ectro-meeharde- STOR.AGE GAR.ACE ror ~=49_2-9~136=or~49i-=9034== FEMI.... Basset, brown, 4 Drafting work. Concrete & asphalt call 847·3095. al draftsman to prepare lay· rent. $18/Month. 2 41 7 PALM & CARD READINGS yrs. "Charlie." Vic Bushard 8awing &: break i 0 g · RE: L J ABLE middle-aged Experienced out drawings, schematics, Orange Ave., CO&ta Mesa Advice &: help in many mat. &: Ad H B 96S-8358 DRAFTING 846-IDO. , woman, Prot. nurse will Proof Operator wiring diagrams, parts lists 646-3810. ten. 1 free question ans. ams, · ' · Any size job, 557-9695 YARD &: Garage CleanUp. yr old boy will live in &: detailed drawings, Mini· GARAGES for Rent. 1959 Maple Ave, Mgr NoJ * Costa Mesa * overphone.Receiveflllllife REWARD for finding heavy Electrical Free est. 1 days. Call w/elderly person or UNITEOCALIFORNIA mum 2 yrsexp. reading for $3. w/ad. (213) gold bracelet w /Io ck et. anytime, 548-5031. m 0 th er less h 0 me . BANK Borg·Wa_rner Controls 6S4-1350. Fully lie. La 675-4000. ELECTRICAL WORK. All Heating & Air References. 83~3 3300 S. Hallado1y Habra. Call for appt. ~s. Big or small Lic'd & Conditioning NEED .l)elp at home? We 6 Monarch Bay Plaza Santa Ana WANTED.: Garage for storage. Indefinite period. C.M.-N.B. 642-'651. fident, g y.m pa t h et I c lnltruction I ~ EL ECTRJCIAN, licensed,, AIR COND. CONTRACI'OR HoUsekprs e Companions 49~1273 Employer MIF : PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con.. I ~ . Free est. 546-0211. have Aides • 'Nurses • Laguna Niguel An Equal Opportunity , pregnancy counse1iJ1t. Abar-'-· ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~~ bonded. Small jobs, maint. Call for ~stimate -642--0515 • Horhemakfon -UpJ9bn D R A FT S M AN or JJ. GARAGE tor re11j, etorage tion & Adoption ref \ I &: repairs. 548-5203. RRHuggmH86Newport,NB 547-6681. • · ' ·F.qual Opper. Employer Deaigner ex per. only. $25 per D)Ontb. 182 APCARE. 642-4436. Schoels & Furniture CLEANING lady requests w Im e ch an I ca I de1ign Ceeil Place. Costa Mm PALM .CARDS & SPt n'.rruAL Instructions 575 Hou1"teaning . . background & Ind ep I h I I D -----------1 work in/01' near '.Baycrest BOAT-YACHT Office Rental 440 READINGS. Bring ad for --nter or ecorator PRO SSIO AL X1nt · •-know'l ot sailboats for ·-INTERESTED IN A FE N area. rea, 13·33 hr. BROKER ductlon 10831 Be eh Bl d HOMES. OFFICES, l\'IODELS 646-SGU perm. position in engineer.. ' a v ., REAL E.SrATE CAREER? Thoro hi pen· --" . CARPET CLEANING Need an ·~-Ive "Take . d~ ~--. quality Stanton. 1 mJ south ol Cn4) 543-ll92 ug y ex e'"'""' tn Al Windo .. Fi C ~ .. .,.. mg '"t'" '""""'~· m ~WY~ all h B in so ws 001' are I do shopping, help in home, Ch•-e" -''es m•·a-• wl Knott'• F8.lm. 527-3406. P ases. Y appo tment .... e -... ..,, o-assurance desirable. Oppor. A\~' ~~ Academy Real Estate only ZU/71)4.7581. Call Dutch also nursing. 6464654. 1·12 local contacts for the largest tor advancement. Send ~~ ~qr· DARLING, our afiair ts Contract &: Ins. School 537-1508 ....... 24 Hrs. AM: $400 mo/$3 hr. &: fastest growing marina in •-RE J Pool . &\. JPILA over! Am leaving. Left 325 Old No. Nwpt Bl. NB FURNITURE Stripping & resume w • • • e, -~!.!. taped message 545-(JlS R.E. Education Since 19&1 Rf'finisbing. Free Pickup M!:ws a. ea~n:~ r ~~: Help Wanted. M & F 710 !'!a.NGewport_reat o·~.~e:, C/O Columbia Yachts, 275 Stri1n wattrfrllftt olfke1 in NtwpOl't'• old Love, Sylvia and Delivery. 645-0866. t't"'''"'u•.r McCormick, Costa Mesa, cinJIOf1 1111, Sop11istlcated iurniMiiniJ ~=~~:;,...:;:_;:.::.,__ Resid/oom1. 557 -6742, A BEAUTIFUL IDEA the tiiht man with the en-Ca .. Equal Oppor. Employt't r.ntct bY.ron• "'of 1~. ear111r1 cwt ALCOHOIJCS Anonymoua. BE AN Gatdening 548-4111. I .. ft_ .. 10 ,.-men., Ira'" as thusiasm & creative ability M/F. •fllf d•11 °' arut u itinc ltllpl. Plmne SU..7217 er Mite INVESTIGATOR •o=u ... v w ... u ~ JOllNSTON & SON Prof. Car--t Cleaning professional beauty consul· to bu . d •. productive sales DRAPERY-CARPET Sal"'- OM NJNEJY.flY[ DOIJ.A~.ti P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. Recorded Message l'elLs How -I Full 175·1Z3D ~ Social Clubs ~•1. Call Toll Free Compl ete gardening service, Also windows &: floor care. tants. High eaming potential organ1~ ion. resume.to Exper, decorator type per-~ Also ne\V lawns & clean ups. Call Dutch ~15-08. 24 hrs. Executive positions also c.~asslfied Ad #405, Daily son, Active store. Excel DESK spa.co a.vailable $50 FIND YOURSELF (l) I00-426-02~ Free Est.• 979-0745. DAYWORK. General Oea.n-available. For interview call Pilot, P.O. Box J.Sro, Co9ta draw-+ comm. 492-2254. mo. WW, provide furniture 1N SOMEONE ELSE. FRONT-Yard--Lawn Service, ing. Reliable. Transporta· 54fi..l835. 1-'M;:esac:::•..:92611l=;·~----DRIVER/DELIVERY MAN at SS~~ aervtce DISCOVER I : jrCJ $10 month.. Backyards also. tion. SU.7006, 541·9330. ACcoUNTING CLERK * Boat Salesmen * Progressive office !umiture available. 11815 Beach Blvd. DISCOVERY Semcel llld ......,_.~ Yanl cleanup, we e d i'n a:, Excellent Housecleaning Growth oriented electronic Exper, necessary. Large in· co. Excel tncome potenttal. Huntlngt(m ~h. 60-4321 n4/83S-6885 2131387_3393 •••••••••• hauling. 962.s612. by day, Own trans. finn has immed. opening ventory 1 in Newport Beach. Stop by 1931 Nbport Blvd., BAY VIEW OFFICES * LANDSCAPING* * 836-0648 * for a dependable individual 645-1144 645-3880 Com Mela to fill out ap- Deluxe, air-conditioned Tro1vel 540 Adcf.A-Room New lawns, Sprinklers, decks, w/experience in accounts BOOKKEEPING-Part time. plication. Must have' good Redecorated. Lldo area SET SAIL cleanup, State lic'd. 536-1225. Dedicated Cleaning payable. pa Y ro 11, & Female. To "'-ork for an ae-driving record & be bon- Realonomics, Bkr. 6T'a-6700 TAHITI Remodeling, Patios, Roofs, *~-DO EVERYTHIN2839G * secretarial functions. Varied count. Call 897-0443. dable. Lie. le Bonded. Goodwin & EXP. Hawaiian Gardener -™=· Free est. 64&-responsibilities require a _ __,.....:_::::...:.:...,=.:..., __ jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil DESK space available $50 Grand 3 Masted Schooner, Complete gatijenlng service bl !ndl 'd mo. wm provide furniture crew & guests sh, costs. Son, ~3708 01' 847-8372. Kamalanl, 646-4616. ~ Plaster• P atch, Repair capa e . v1 ual. Ca 11 BOYS ot SS mo. Answering llOJ'Vlce (213) 378-1239 Babysitting Mrs. Reiutz. at 1714 I Age lCJ.U to dellve. papen avallabl9. 2:22 Forert Ave, PROFESSIONAL * PATCH PLASI'ERING 89.z.5531 between 8 am &: 5 in the Dana Point, San Cle. Laguna Bl!ach. 494--9'66 BABYSJTI'ING, my home. Japanese Gardening Seivice All types. FTee estimates pm. mente areas. OFFICE Space, 444 Old I lr'Rl Have crib, high chair. Will Free Est. * 646-0619 Call 540--68Z ACCOUNTING clerk for DAILY PILOT Newport Blvd., S bllcs No. of I ;~;Lotliii;""';;Faunl;;;;;;;~:;;;; care for infants, s m. JOmi.SONS' GARDENING Painting & CPA. Accts payable, job 4924420 Hwy L 300 aq. ft. S9S/mo. c h i 1 d re n 7 AM -6 PM Yard Maintenance, Planting Paperhanging costs, accts receivable, peg BUS"B"O"Y~--. S4S-5300 1i Re!iiaaoiinaibliei. &U-iii1205ii0iiiiiiaieianiupeiiiiiiiiii!Mii-;ijiii12035 H&H PA"INTIN.G board. _Reply by mall only Frl/SaVSUn Niles Over 18 Found (frff 1d1) 550 I' to' 500 Newport CeOter Dr, Apply Io per90n Col . MEDICAL Ole, 850 sq. ft, & -·--------• • * Serving Orange Co. Since '56. Suite 507, Newport Bl!acb, Kitehon 3211 H bor B~ equip avaU. Fashion Island. FND. Beige &. Blk small frnl * * * * * Residential * OUice Suites Calif. 92600 CM. -. ar v • Ideal for lnt+G.P. 644-6125; dog. Vic. Orange Co. * Acoustic Ceilings * Com· ACCOUNTAm for cost aC··l'-===-:-,--c-- 644-8100. Fairgrounds. 7 I 21 / 7 2. mercial * Waterproofing * oountlng position In Santa CLEANING Lady, depen- PROFESSIONAL S u i t e , 546-6255. ~ Homes Exterior, One Story Ana Manufacturing Co. with di;tble. 2 Days wk. 6 hrs. ready to go, Heil al Bolsa PUPPY, male, brown, short from $Z75. 2 Story from $325. excdlent opportunity for ad· Lido Isle. '73--0629. Cillca, H.B. $ 2 7 5 / m 0. haired. No collar. Vic. Trader's Parad1'se Ail work fully ilJ&ranleed. vancement; "'pd in cost ac-Clerical 8~1323. Pammy Ln., fJtg. Bch. 639-0939 for Free Estimates. counting systems necessary~ Tired of staying home? TWO ADJOINING OFFICES 847-5762. Steve Hobson, Owner. State Send resume to Cringle, Want to M.art a career? EARN $200 plus per week Management tr1lnlrit for tho10 who qualify, Mllllon·dollor pr09ram, 19H 11 to 28. ' 213: 433-6ru weekdays Ccou.ct) 714: 838-2893 eves/wknda busy corner, Costa Mesa. YOUNC pa.rt Beagle, male. li'nes Licetiaed pintractor. Switt, ~rimley, CPA'a, 888 RE<;OROS CLERK, noo. uw·. pd. -blk, whit• tan. Vic. Orange N. Main. suite 900• Santa '(Etc.) E loc1r .. Moch1nlc1I • DELUXE I 2 3 .. ]6th CM 64•1496 No Wuttng Ana, 91701. Several clegical c ....... 1 .. -I , I • or room · · ~ ; • * WALLPAPER * avaU ''" ma"·--~.--~er· nspoc:.,. officea. Best deal in o.c. 673--1050. ·times :un· uu:e -..-We need ab all around tn. A•-rt '-. 833--·o 1 Wbon ~ call "Mac" Advorfi,iog Agency minded tndlvi ua11 aom• ~t"' ... ..,.. ~ :rOUND male black & white u•.i"4 &4$.lnl J...oot..i-... f harp g1 • apectol' to check dctalled B -'~=~---_.,,-,,,;..;.: ..... ,.. ors rl Friday req, xln't math' ability . alt part1• sU'"'-bll" • -. usiness Rtntat 44$ cat recently o~ated. on d 11 = /good ,....... kill ere t 0-.1-·· ~n • ........ · · · N • •-o· ars P ROFESmONAL Pilinter. w ...,,.,ing 8 . s. a · u.au-:POfition!l High school plex el~me<""'cal ~ v1c1n1ry orse "" .,,..nta iv ·11 h J rut St ..... 1..... lo ~·~ ·-• .,_ FREE ?w1onth's Rent. Corner Isabel. Costa Afesa, Hone at work, reas. e wn ng ep · .. ""'6 dip m~req'd.App\yinper. tems. Varied background in store, Boutiqueish, redwood 1,;646-4;;;,:;1,::n::.. -,---,-.,..........,~ U~/1!~·f• 54~~ Frtt o,a1p~, Fee/AJ90 Fee Jo•· Ison 3:30 AM1·7S9,1030BAM.,~feco inspection will be helpful. Jru;kle & out. crpt. S75/mo; es ... ne a. a·"''""' · ...,, U8 nsura~. tooiu1u11t, Thil·bl a ·fUll time, !int lhlfl $IOO/mo alter Feb. •73. FOUND on the beach at 47th 5 AC. 2 rm Cabin It bath, 50 U·2 ac. E. CM. $639 M. Professional Painting Call Barbara King 540-0635 Fowit&lb Valley, F.qi.tal po&1tion with erowth poteo-- Selilng lease. key, 11000 s::.,hNewport1 tra ee1 acbcb~· well. In Christmas Valley, Inc approx 186 M.15% dn. Jnter/exter. 'Quallly work PERSONNENWPORT Oppor. Employu. ua1. cash. 2603 Newport Blvd, w.,. l o ve en eclUI. Oregon S6GOO Clear. Will Low Vacancy, Exe. Mgr. Eq Reu 557-7455 EL AGENCY Borg.Warner Controls PthiNula. 64,;...6100. Mwit Identity name It check consider property trade ol. $361 M Want· Leased Com'l 3848 Campus Dr NB CLERICAi: numben 673-J762. eq. vaL 1944 Monrovia, CM. • · PAINTING -·Hones~ clean .. 3300 S. Holl1doy * OFFICE-600 sq tt av! or Indu.~ Bkr. &ll 6621 guaranteed ~ Lltenaed -. POSITIONS Si nJ A new. 800 Sq. Ft IN-FND. F•ml buff coloml pup-rRADE UP: Your clean '6&-HAVE CM bn\ (SUM eq)-4 ·ldnaured. ~740, ~DVERYT11151NPG SALES Inlorvtew!n( 1!11'1wortc In Lot An Equal ~~unity DU5I'RlAL SHOP avl Aug. py, wearing dbld Ilea ccllar. "~ oompact W' or walcn ublts, WUmin,gton ($15M eq) ~onner e ow age or mag~ Arwtlff undl mJVe to New· Em Jo)'tt 64&-2l30. Vic Marguerite Pkwy & ror my •72 Counny Squlr~ ·trlr(SJ!llO oqM•• 'l'D !12900 P•~ P•!::""· 1~!';,:'~· a.i.e ,..co exper. Matutt port '7:!. FREE doily 00. P Mlf 151738 An l.hein1, CAt Ccnlnlmo Rd., Mission Vic-t.000 ml, •29 engine, air, tun eq). Submit ?f, for~ or all. Lie/I~ ~est 645--5l91. male er tf'tn. CommhJsion transportation iprovlded. E>tp'd Clothir. GrMnd floor. nenr 17th & jo, Tue• nile. 837,9629, pwr. TTP. 545-2665. ' Bkr/owor. 642-222li~ • . • only. can for appt. 646-0536. PACIFIC . Solo1m1n J-"rwy. Parking, restroorns BLACK Kitten . \Vhlle spot TRADE 14 week old female N. Redondo 3 BR 50xl50 h>I Q!1ALITY lnter/cxtcr pa.fn-ARE .you looking for more MUTUAL Chaalrui, So. <?oatt Plait on (r()nt • Yellow eye1. Vic, 1 ed 'bu ' • tlfll. 1'"'ree cal. anytime, than fuM anOt.her '°bt etc. Schworcr 673--26&1 Broa.d , & Newport 0 n raccoon 1or Ruger 22110 tnc , room to Ud. For Lic'd/tn11• 531;3168. BcautitUJ. Jdeu Div ot Gen Appl.1 Monday )bN Frtd'll.Y OF FlCE, stol't' near N'pt. Wcst:inlnater, ~S?i7. rune or 1rlsh Setter pup. of BR. hOuat, duplex ~r 2 Qn FOR clean A neat P&lntlfll, 1'ood8 needll 5 ~Pl" t~ 9'-12 pm, corner of Santa EXP't>. Dental Chaio\de Pol!t Ole. & Greyhound ~Sl;:,AMES::::;:;;::;E;:.:;lri;:..H..:en,.::..:=oBl:.cue..:po....,....int. 557·2447 ~n: ~8!1h07~ interior, .reas. nits, Call ieJcb prof.' ~akeup tech. Cna •,Newport Centt'I' Dr. ::-'::! b1.:l~i,'°': ;':~ Oepol. ~17 Ft. USO; 700 Fl. I Po Shack. =-=·•~U~alt~&-~~ ' • Dick, 96MQ6$.1 Ex ... -Avail. 84l-S4. pm ONLY on ·~ ~~, $7l5 Month. Agent 646-2414. " c. lttrY on Glen. BEAUTIFUL Ir& 5 BR. 4 :W UNITS tn Gvden Gmve 9 CLERIC tntit· _9P in aft ofe . aum .• •""" l OFCS, Stl'-lo 900' Pvt. baths ll<yr._ LacunL 494-S533. Ba, C\Jstom Exec. Hom• on w/pool, a<lOd YrV Income. PAM l:qujp< For Sole. AS5EMBLE1!S-ol >m.all <I"' )ll'OCedure>. ,ID key add :'tl~~ Bil A 3/1 Pit. 2k I t" dJ 0 N FND. B~INT Siam,.. Frlendit HIU. acre in Wbl~ WW tnde OQ11llf ... land 1.lrle11, !add"!' •le. Corw. tro mechanical d~icn No machillo. 60 wpm Y9i;i;;;"',;;:;:"°';;---l ocea: ~B ·L ~tr ~30i. 1 male, outaRle Hoaa Hoepltal tier. $80,000 value. Honet unJta or ?!' 1n 19. cout 8"t: ~ • t.'IJl.Mpt.9llf.4065. exper. nece& Vla;on & drx· eltd • Varied EXP'D. Ma Int. Man .. l*rt <ntranco. 548---06;1 Contact OK. Trado for! 67W191. !>lark H Oum Rltr -DtSCOUNT <m blrwtal 11 tmty lmportanL No amok-dutlos. A lly llU Pia..,.. -, r.r lm'lceo; -· lndu1trl1I Renta l 450 Public Relation• ·~•nWIJEAD -• __ buy oo w.c. Ll<:/lnt. call ~ )X'rnutted.all a..nCall.ti tla,C.M.• ,,..j:&pm. PlmbJ, otc., Sltd•n'r . IU\.nU ........ ""'-~ Uke to tradet OUrTnider'a The u ... -iu:'f...$846.. .,.euant am co. ---..----~ RENT M-1, 112S "I· tt. FOUND, special blnl, vlcln~ lot UO' tr<ml••e w/WI• w ; --·~eel f tor 1 ·-... ~n !'.:'. for appL S.R. CHE' • lxp. I;;:;;;;'"'-;::-::---- $140/mo. 1355 Locan AVf!. ty of Bronkhund 6 AdtmJ, by clubhR. Ct•ar. Trade/ ~-5 'Ti: • >"~ • PAIN1'1NG °£11111 _;'-' • c · · Cllll 67~1 EXP. Wolll'll. '""" A No. 4. Coll• Mesa 675:5116. Hunt. Bcb. ().11 6 ldtnll/)I or ! "Ann," Flrd Walker, 5 dl.Y• e GENERAL REPAIR, Pl., N.S. . 1ft. 4 P.M. llue lloot, CocklAils, Appt, fno - YICOncl .. coat money! Roni -· Rtaltor, -/146-74lt tor 5 bucks. !rte •stlmate~ 1"U. 67Mln. Lib k> Ddel Our 'n:adet'I V---lttOntJf It.till ~:t: '!.'~, .. , CdM )<>llr lmulo, opt., own CERMAN Sh<pberd; malt, PAINTING, fnt..i. ut. ttU. Par,dlle ool-lo r.r ~I }'Ollf -· .,._ -I ;:~==::-:-:"'"'-::.--I Wdir-. etc. tbru a OaJ'1 Pilot aflwr & blaclt. Vklnll)I Cop-* * * * * * n .... -auamld. Local 5 U-. 5 dl,ys lor 5 bucloi. bldg., elc-thru a OoJb Pllol l'ut mulitt --o ..... I -W. Coat Hllfi"l1 _ * Call: 67Ul20 * _a...w.d Ad. MU&18. _ lstranc Beach:.._ -ill•lll!ll!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!1111111!!!!!!!!!m•••!!!!ll!llJ,;m'~o.~l.no.~2P~h~il,:..!-~!!! Coll -,9mlfied Ad. call ... ay. 60-llll. I ' .J ,, ~ -. l I ' I . ' I I i: I : ' " D.lll Y PILOT ~)!Mil J[Il] I l[I}) ( ~ ....... ~ 1[1}11 I IJ I .......... I~ I ...... , ...... I~ I~ ~I _ .. d_, .. ~ HolpWant..i,M& F 710 HoJpW1ntod,M& f 710 ._,pWMletl,M& F 710 H1lp Wanted, M & F 711 Antlq-.. Fumllure llt G1rage Sile 112 Mlscelt.nH11s 111 Ml-11<1-• ill GARDENER. • x per. LEGAL secr.tary, Nawport I 3 Sec')'t-(:onstr $650 CARVED •• cheot, tnJald BUTFET ISO Dinlna' tabla GARAGE aa1 .. su H • • e I KOBENA 421 Super 8 movie SEARS 1 yr. otd 11" >::«' Complete malnt. 2120, 2128 Center Capabl~ PRODUCTION f/41~/Cbkkpra $100 pm.e A dlta ~lat $40 Chtst. • drawtn $50 Drlw(N.of!:utc.t Hwy), camera. lN1a.nt cartrlda:e mo'AW, fl'O,UpStevn.1 Orange A\l'e,, 210 Pauline Sa I a r y' CO~h,: 'I/ 8 Stcretarit>.s ~ oak beer cooJ.et, oeJc ldtcbm End table, 2 dN.wtn $al, all CdM, Slt 10 am to 5 pm, loadlng. Power Wephoto lhotgu.n, $45. 2 outbd. mtp-. Pl., C.M. Evt's. &: Wknd.1, ·64G--0800. ./Legal Sec'y $600 cabinets. ffooller Cabineta. oiled walnut. 735 Joa.an St. Lumber, 2"X8"X:U', B&:W wk!o qld lem. Almoat $50 ea. Sf&.-2503, 1 646-204.2.. LIVE·lN, mother's • 1 de . Heavy ov--.r-., 3 Stenos $500 many othtt art•t new ..,.. Apt 4, Ot. TV, cou clu.bt complete new. $15 or make offer. PPRO·"' EA• b 11nk tip! rlRLF """" lllllTI••-•'-Relnd.,.'1 •·-cy riv'"''" -. n 1w .. -.... ..,'IC M•••-•··tte ... • M2-17S4eves&weekeodl. A ""-• ~ c • • y riday, ~. lor new housek~1ng. 2 chlldttn. ..-. .-.g.... ..... iue ~~...-l\ll'" SDJ.JNC 5 rooms ot ne&r ......,. -v u...,,.;. ..... $60. Tent $». eou blo $10 dental ot~. Will train, Send Lido Isle. 1)15...8186. 4500 Campu1 Dr., NB t.iqun. 2500 Newport Blvd., new furn. Livi.re Rm, Den, PARKING lot sale. Sat, 7.3 M 0 BILE t e I e phone. & $7.50. Medicine cab $5.:50. resume to: CIUlllied Ad MAID, full time, 7.J::I), SR, ELECTRONIC Fee Paid By Co. 546-2ll8 C.M. 2 BR ,.,., Din Rm Set, pm. 715 Lak•. Ht& Bch. trantbtorlztlf, U channel. 64&-014'1 No. 4n, OaUy Pilot. P.O. w-eekend rotation, exper. ASSEMBLERS S!X;'Y-Glrl Friday. Pn>ss~ ANTIQUE RCA stereo, ltlisc items. Everytbln& from A to z. lias call llaht It: buuer onl0..:Rl:::::G::IN~AL:_.._J_A_P_A_N~E~S""E 926Box¥ 1560, Cos:a Mesa, Calil. pret. 12.48/hr. + bencfi2'. (1 Shift) position, front ore type, req. SHOW & SALi! 847~ Proceeds ...UI go towarda "'-Ing caU. Wired tor PAINTING B •au t 11 u I ""'· Penonntl Ottlce, s 0 u th it Iota or initiative. 4 days-10 Anaheim Convtnt'°<I ar., ANTIQUE orpn, Enkebol iending tetnAgt-n ta a horn ttlAY wMn a'A'a,y trom Japanese orl&fnal art. 1nJm GENERAL OFTICE: Creat Cout· COmm. Hosp. South hr. day, ?.! on· Thur•. acroa from Dllne)'land, 800 Span. furn., pat n t Ing 11 Christian JUJnmer camp. vehicle. 64S-Xl'73 p). Call 586-2811' aft, 8 pm. job lor I.tie gal who llkea,Jott La,rwla. 499-1311. An equal C•pable of 101~ Tutervh.'v1;s Wed-Fri. 7.S:30. W. Kattlla, July 21, 28, 29, lamps. Brown 4 Jordan GARAGE·FW'n. Sale. Sat· EJectronlc SUrplus Sale: P.C. 1 ..:=::.=::.=:.:...:::;:;,-,,,~'- ot variety, Pleasant JoeaJ opportunity ,employer. derlng printed Vought, Div. of Computer ~. Thun/Frl/Sal 1 PM·lD paUo tum, alld• proj. SM 9-5. Many 1tem1 • boards, capacitors, reslstora. * HATCH COVERS * ottice. Co. w!U train pl ~·ho MAINTENANCE MAN _ circuit b01rd1 to Equip. Corp .. 290 Fischer PM. SUn. ll na'on-6 PM. 492--0421 Magnavox TV. Sunbeam coils, transformen, wire, Sandblasted, from S 12·50 can t):pe. Start $400. Call Ofc. bldg., Nwpt Ctr. Gen'I N • I• requir... Ave., C.M. 540-l024. 1958 Copenbqtn. Derunark HOUSEllOLD Items. China pwr mower. Birch 6 pe. BR equJpmlf'nt, etc. July :l9th. ~l ::r:.a. ~ Pat Hall, 54IJ.0055, Coastal knowledge of plumbing & ments. Mu~t al.. SECRETARY, for 1 girl ofc. Christmu plate. $ 15 o . cabinet w/match. din. set. set, ruas. tables. lamps etc. PRECISION \Vind.lug Co. A,tency, 2790 Harbor DI. at et.......i .. ,.1 -.•d. Alto, lite to be exnarJ.. Young growing R. E. 494-8541 W·· .. e "'·-ne M' 3107 MAde1ra. CM 2247 S, Grand, Santa Ana . 6' Simrnoos IOJ'a bed. Uft. handed golf set, comp' KOBENA 421 Super 8 movie wfcue & cart, used 1 time. camera.. Instant cartridge i ..:96:::WJ:...:.::::28::.. --=~~~ loading. Pov.•er telephoto YACllT junk, SHIP stuff. V.'ide angle lens. Almost Used Marine Equipment. new. $75 or make oftE'l'. SARA'S MARINE SALVAGE ....,1.4~~ ....... ,....... _,, r, UJW w. tae. (Wamer & Grand) 540-4101. 1Adams, C.1\1. janitorial dullea. Pleasant enced fn fabri· development firm. Typing 4! Aooliances I02 ~5615. COBBLERS bench, hsegoods, GIRL dellvtry driver. 19-25 working condl. Pd. tu. It eating C•ble1. SH reqd. Start Sill. $500. GREEN club chair new &ll.llll, silver, bookl, toys, yrs, Overseas Motor Parts, vac. write speelfytng age, Solder & crimp LE'isure ConcepU, 833-2892. ELECTRIC Dryer, new dinette-6 chain, qu~ b@d · clothc1, Misc. Sat., Sun. 713 1990 Harbor Blvd, c .M. exper. Ir refs. to Clawt:led cont•cts. Pr• s E c RETA Ry, e!<per. cond:. soft heat auto temp aet, twin, etc. Phone for Larbpur, CdM. GffiL Friday, part time, ad No. 465 c/o Daily Pilot, vlous N••• sol• w/b}Q>ng, P/time to start. control, K~. $100. Gu appt. 962-5721. MVLTI famUy garage W e: rood pay, call for appt. P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, daring certlfl. Call MoDday & Wed. morn-obroven &doobroile~ Caloric, 14' IVORY 2 piece sectional Baby things, recliner chair, * """ ""17 * Ca 9ai2'6. c•te desir•ble. ings 613--1928 nze n, ............. temp antique'! &-to""'. 3 12 "'1 ~1" ' control sso 545-4359 aofa. Ex~l Cond. Ori& ,,- G Of R $450 ?rtALE, part time, retire'd, SERVICE Station/Sales &: ' • , $1<XXl/sell $50. 557--0596. Bucknell Rd, Co~tll ~tesa. • c ecept. apply in pe=n. Fa Ir MACHINISTS Service personnel needed. RECOND. Appl 1. Some nu Fri. afternoon & Sat. Local/Type 60 Grounds Gou: Range. 100 Exper. only. Full & P/tiine. w/freight damage. Repoa. PECAN coUee I: end tables BLUFFS, 2144 Vista Lareoo. Call Lorraine Fair Dr, CM. (Experiment1I) Gd. earning potential. lrfesa We deliver A: Cu• r. ms. Oecon.tor dinette let G44-493?. Lots of goodies, an- WESTCLtFF Verde Shell Service, 3131 Dunlap'1, 1815 Newport Sl35. 557-3111. tlque .•·-ltu-, ptgs., br,·~ Personn('I Agency MALE 18 or over for COU11ter Wiii -rform "'" """"" '~" "" .... -h I knd 11 65 •-t ,..~ Ha.rbol" Bl., C.M. Blvd., C.M ........ , '°"· 8' SOFA &'love seat. never • •ra·. new clothes, wigs. 2043 Weslclitf Dr., NB e P w !I, · · per i u -o hi h I I MAYTAG pa1rm •--...... Both ~~. •·w,·na -u .... 64'lno___ sta~ Call 54•2057 5 •· 9 g prec son SERVICE s tlo H 1 re an ·-~ •-~ ·• ~ ,.. o-w k · ta n e p, ex· mach $25. Pvt Pty. OOS.7910 CAMERA Equip. GoU Clubll. PM. m•chlnlng wor per F\ill & part time. Hrly, washers SM. to SlOO. Can 2 TVs, Sears Vibrator and GUARD 1--M~.-n-ic_u_r-is-t,-.-.-.,.-,-. -from blueprints, wage+ comm. 990 E. Coast deliver wit yr. guarn. GLAMOROUS twnbse turn & many misc. items, 20731 Full time for industrial firm, Call 675-3385 a k et Ch es & Hwy., N.B. ~lTIB. appliances. Moving SUn. 453 Mission Ln. 536-7602. good fringe benefit!!, paid s p 9 c if f e •" SERVICE Station Salesman, OVER 200 washers, dryers, Bolero NB. 646-7S6T. GARAGE &:. Patio Sale: 1800 vacat.io11 &; holidays. ldeal MANICURIST tion1. Adapt & I/time, experienced, neat in refrigerators from $39.95. MATCHING red velvet Tustin Ave, Cl\f. Fri, Sat & for retired 1n ll!tary. WANTED improvi1es iim-appearance. Apply moni. 545-0780. chairs, 2 for the price of 1. Sun. Lots of Misc. Borp·Warner Controls Call Betty, 645-1050 pie to moder-ings, 2590 NeY:port mvd., Electric wuher let Good' col'ld. 963-1643. GARAGE SALE. 3300 S. H.11.d.y ately tooling & c M ele~-•---MATURE adlt to help semi f ' t t . ' '-'"4•v ..... ,."'~• .,... 1601 Warwick Ln, Npt Bch Santa Ana IX ures o com-SERVICE Station attendan• -=~*;.::962-::;.:%137=:..:*::...,~-1 G•rate S•le 112 Fr' Sa s invalid at home, 2 or 3 aft$ I t · • .. 1, t, un An Equal Opportunity ;er week. 5.57-7568 Coat.a , P e • experi-p/time eves. & weekends. DRYER, Kenmoft! elect. WHIRLPOoL delux g a 1 Housohold Goods 114 Employer M/F Mesa. !"'ent•I m•1 chi~ Experienced. Apply, 2500 Xlnt cond. Moving. ()eyer, elect washer, $285 pr. HA VE . f t ing a ' s t n ~ Newport Blvd., C.M. $50. StS-1967 Malory rev-pol distributor opening or ma ure ments. Recent MOVING sale ant t q u e "''Oman in large oUice. MATURE d e P e n d ab 1 e SEWING MACH. OPRS., ex· 1967 Frigidaire electric $lS. Aluminum finned valve Duties consist of typing, fil· babysitter w/t:ransp. Mon experience on per. Top pay.swim wear. dl')lel', excellent cond. covm for 'SS.'57 V-3 Ford Spanish dining !let, king sz Ing. 10 .key ahoddJng ma 1 cMhlnot, tRe~ ~ 7220StlU't:lng Sept. lst. l&matrllicovrortmlc1111sl ~ .,,,Sampus Dr., N.B. $'15. * 549-31'13 !5~ '67De~~m3 S.d250 tallg$1at 0 e ~~ .l more, 126 de La Paz, answering p nes e c. ua __ ~_._.,_,. __ . ----~· REFRIGERATOR,. 15 cu It 2 .....,, -rawers . be able to work ..,, day on required. Shampoo . girl & assistant, dr. auto defrost, 5 )Tl <ild. Bookcase 3 shelVH $10. 2 G.E. Portable Dishwasher, 1 Saturday occasionally, MATURE person needed to licensE'd. Sand Crab Hair 8$J..9060 matched bookeues 8' Jong x dble bed, 1 !lgle bkcase Ad t 0 rt 't' babysit in our home, 5 days WILL ALSO --~~-~,---.., wide •~ pr •---d headboard, to highest bid· vanccmen ppo uni ies Designs, Hntgtn B c h• 16 cu ft w"'ue refri"'erator/ "7ll _, ' naao.i,ie Excellent company benefits wk. Sat. open, 548-1540. INTERVIEW 963-• .,3 "4' ... mlrrort $2-$10. Alaorted der. 842-11'13 .;yw • freezer, froat-tree, 1 yr old ===_,,,--,,,----includ ing paid vacation, EWCO U1'C'Tnn SATURDAY S•'lver Soldirer $125. 645-lOSZ. cabinet doors and shelving ALMOST New, Hoover paid insurance &-retirement N MER ""' ............ MJl'lG: 9 •A.M ... 1 P.M. $10. pr. Trailer slider win-vacuum. attachments $50., program. Costa Mesa area. Hospitality Hosten Exper. in silver soldering, NEW • Never used toutu-dow frosted 14%" wide x 110fa bed $45. & misc. 4924670 Write Classified ad No. 10 To Call LOCALLY on new Apply In Person small stainless steel sul> broilf!'NM!n. Still in box $20. 40" long $12.50. Squirrel Dally Pilot P. o. Box 1560 resident families bringing aMemblies & thin wall tub-646--0818. cage ·blowers &: motors. Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 gif,ts & civic in.to. Good pay Empl;,r.ment Office ing. Exper. in inductlonl·*~-=LAR::::.G_E--whi-.-t --GE-Bench iwivel chairs-Trailer P/tlmt'. Must have happy 3333 arbor Blvd. braz.ing desired but not es--Ir! .__ _... ~-~'Hon, water tank • 20 gal • water HELIARC bench welders (2) smile, car, typing ability, Cotte Mes•, Calif. sential SJo ~70fi •"""' \.VllU.I pump, 12 "YOlt 2 hyraullc &: machine shop workers 547-3095. 546-8030, ext. 153 G~lton Industries · · jacks. 3070 Killybrooke Ln., (2}. Run saw. mill, lathe, I-'-'-'-="-------1644 Whittler, CM WlllTE washer le dryer Costa M 54!)..6583 115 Jowolry ---<-------ANTIQUE ring, 3 lge rubies, 4 11mall diamonds. Value $500. Sell $400 or gd <iUer. ~-etc. Must be able to work NURSES Aides, f!xper . CELESCO 642.2400 combination IUitable for ~~-•...:sa...:·-~~·~~ twing shift & have own pref'd. All shifts."'Parlr1;1d"o apt $150. 64>-1052. DIR set, 18 cu ft frig, Elect M hi 116 hand tools, Apply at 770 W. Conv. HOlp. 466 Flagship; SKILLED TYPIST KENMORE automatic wuh· clothes dryer, Sml a~ _•_c_n_•_rv.;_ ____ _ 17th. C<lSta Mesa 9 to 3. Ritt N.B. ~. INDUSTRIES To l_eam ~he m<lrtgage er. 3 'water level, white, pliances 29x48 walnut desk, ALLEN SYNCROGRAPH, HOSTESS Wanted: Must be business. Min. 00 w.p.rn. good eond $40 &46-6948 l4xl8 beige Acrylon, S S MODEL E 1415 HD J7F, young • a t t r a c t ,· v e . ---------· t t•h Must be able to learn. • • • table ware, Kitch ware. 2 DISTRIBUTOR MACHINE. ~ OCEAN VIEW A Div. 0 e ..... a di'"" T •· lad' Restaurant exper. helpful. e .. p" Co Irvine Indus Dist. The Sears 1964 Sml cheat ""'"' "'.es, een oc: ies 542-1734 eves & weekends. SCHOOL DISTRICT .,.....uehanna rp. treeeier 5 3 tt. clothing & patterns n 9-14 Apply in person only, Fell. , t" ...... 1 o........, Employer Meairs Co., 833-8340. • · CU • • Hu n;....ning!I For ......,,~ ,...,_. --::::::=:-:::=::--l:--_:$45~.~-~~1026~--Lamps, plcturea, occu. Mlscoll1-us 111 ciano's Restaurant, 1617 "'~ cm-.. ·- Westclill Dr, NB. . Clerk " I E c SUPERVISORS Camer11 & chair, "~"' l>Ol'I•, 81---------Sorvlng Kitchen' -~11 "a.te ""'· Boat ..,.mbly 11n •• Exper. Equipment IOI mm brownie. Gamos, <1o11s, * AUCTION * HOUSEKEEPER needed for ., $2.10 Per Hr New or--· join the reqd, Top wages !or top A toys, Top coat & ov<rcoat FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. ·~~··ju:C:~& =~ Parttimeposltlon.Cafeterla ~~thai!!e~~ aupervl.sors. COLLECroR'Scameru-a 40. Webcore re c.. JULY 2I h l ful Ph 54&.9358 or aales elerk exper. pre-check OD our Islander Yachts Inc. Argus /d'goDex $15., Kodak ·Qllldaraft .eet, ~22:dl platcr New A u.aed quality tumlture. exper. ep · : 'fertttf. $49 7711W.17thSt. Jr. sfx..16 $15.. Kodak ~~t;:k':'i!:,at~ DinlngaetaA:cbinacablnets. H o us EKE E PER/Child Custodl1I Helper Costa Mesa Browrue No. 2 model F iua ,.,.,..., cocktail tablea, commodes, care, live--in or out, Cdl\-1'. $2.31 Pe:r Hr • ' **. TELEPHONE A p P tAll $25., -~t. w•"::'t~N:~ '!°: 1...:~;;:..=':...._~=~--Rembrandt lamps, new di· Teacher couple. Ref's ex-Part time poaltiM, lite clean-ReBl E1t•te Secy _ PART TIME, s..g ~ ...., ncui .. .ua -MOVING -vans & love teats lazy boy pected. 5 or 6 days. Begin ing duties. CUstodial exper. Licensing Course PM, Corona del Mar. Xln't • GARAGE SALEI recliner, ~ 1 et 8 • Aug. l. 6#-4150. desired. Full sales training program sal + bonus. Req'd: A KOBENA 421 Super S movie Moving must teU! • bar chest., like new color TV, HOUSEWIVES, Fact 0 r Y Production Clerk -no cost. Management op-po Ii shed unencumbered ct.Q'lera. Instant cartridge stools (nautahyde seats), a ppliances A much more. ~t~"c:;1~°:::.· 878 w l6th operate~:; M~pmcnt, s:: :f'arn:a~ ~ !~e:i::_an ~~ ":! =ing~~ens. te= =~· =...bed~~ WINDf AUCTION llek plate maker, Xerox T rbell R Ito 67"0-1089. new. 175 or make oHu. cbait, mlsc:. boulebold ttem1 IRYJNE PERSONNEL ~ERYICES"AGENCY Free & Fee Positions Immediate Optnings 1 Acctng/ S.crat•ri•I Clorlcal/Gen. Ole. 4S8 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM 642-1470 2400. Au1st in operation of G ff r5 TELEPHONE Sales: Sell 542--1734 eves A weekend1. A much more! 17319 Oe.k St., offset press. High achool Southern Orange County'• NIKON OS I a n de r w a t er Fowitain Valley. Sat. le SUn. grad or equivalent. R.E. S ale 1 m a n • Sharp. Favorite Newspaper from camera, SIOO. Xlllt cond. July 29 .I: 30. 842-6525. Applications must be filed Listing Oriented. Sm a 11 your home. Make as much Call 5'8-7593. GARAGE Sale: Sat only. 302 Personnel Commission or. (MLS) office takes 10%. as )'OU need. Generous com-BEU. & Howell movie Evening Ca.eyon Rd., CdM lice, 1912 Warner Ave., H.B. The rest is yours. NB. Write mission on each sale. Call cam~. 1t1per g i.uto load. Trundle type sofa bed 4 s.tore 4 PM, August 4. Oasallied Ad No. 428, Daily 557~739. $47.50 Phone 64M067 cover, eost -y $25. Equal Oppor, Employer Pilot, 330 W. Bay, Costa I ,,;:;.:.,;:;;:~=-=...,.-,.,.---1..:.:.:.:::..:..::::::.::::==:::__ Wood -t of drawen, $10. " !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""! Mesa, Ca. 92626, TV T EC H N I CI A N, ex· MOVIE projector, Argus Cabaret doorS $l0. Sl¥>w<r -~===.,.o='"s=--perienced out si d e, no Showmuter, ·super I, SIT.SO JANITORS and wax.,..., ex-OPTOMETRIST Assistant. RECEPTI NI T . Sa!\Jrdays, gooc1 pay. Pbone 646-4067 dour $10. Col!ee fable $15. per., for San Clemerite arta. Live in area. Age 40 plus. Busy front desk w/hvy phone I =493-~1;;795;;;,.o=---~=-Singer port aew. macb. $39. Call 630-1601. Mtut type Call Dr Lewis load • .Accurate message re-WAITRESS, exper. P/time. Fumlture 110 I.re. green lthr cha.Ir A Ol· JANITOR-main!, full tinu!'. Costa Me.;,,. 548-0555, ' cording & xln't spellillg a Not under 21. Closed Sun. & . = c= ,;!::_ velvet 5am-lpm. 6 days, Sun <iff. --~------I must. Type, file, own transp. Holidays. Kramer's Colonial Lido Furniture Blrgaina; I !ul ~., ill PAINTER req'd. Sh & knowledge of v '1c•·n, l9tb & Harhor, Beau• 9 pc. pecan din rm. Garage S.lit Sot/Sun Exp he P • uu we w R.E./Construction a definite ""' '"' "'u• t r a I n r i g h t m a n • C.M. set, cust: inlaid pecan coffee _....., Avalon, Costa Mesa Con··rvat•'ve grooming pret. Pred re:_ exi>;eriencewlthin . p,ro-+.Call Mrs. White 833-8681. -==-------table, nesting end tablet, 1'1' Frost free retrig., 6 )'l'I. ~ uct""'n painting air ess ....... r -... line t I Sc See Mgr. McDonald's, 20362 'v a.,.,,, WAITRESS, EXPER. 1ect o na sofa, $50. Man't hwhm, 5 apd spray equipment. Must bel ~=""'==~==~ hard--• drop! -• dine bik 26" 2 Beach Blvd, H.B. ab! RECREATION DIRECl'OR MUBt be over 21. No Phone wvuu elll tte e S50 &: , $10. 1leds, rm: A ~~Jy ::ers~~7~ City of Fountain Valiey Calls. Apply in penon, Surf table, cust oak ltUdent deak $5. Back pack $5. 2 Deep eea J C P ' c s a 1 a r" · $13 mns.m ~ Sirloin, 5930 w. ~--~ & matching hutch, 3 original roda • reels, $10 i. m. <XlME BROWSE AROUND 207511 Newport Div& Behind Tony's Bl~ Mat'IL Costa Mesa * 646-8686 NEW clothet sale. 50%·70% discount q.11 all clothes, at Southern Callt. Co 11e1 e· Gymnaatwn. Wed·Sat. 9 am· 6 pm, A truck load ol T· lbl:rts, ft!'Yt'nlhtea, football jerseys, my.de ahlrta, tube aocks, jackets. ICl'imm ... vestt, sweats, CYID lhorts, Cb'b P.E. au!tt, etc. Sb:e:J 2- extra lge. fot kids 4 adultl, Some ahlrta plain, or with college names, etc. Sample! Shorts. 50c, T-ahlrls, 90c. Enter front door, ,Southern CaliL Collea~ G)IDUlUhun, 2525 Newport Blvd., C.M. 54$-1178. 542-1134 t>ves & v.-eekends. 4.ll·301h St., NB. 67S-46M SPANISH King !lite head· board $25.. Boy'1 Raleigh bike $15. Chain driven lawn mower & basket $ 3 0, 586--0773. WALNtrr formica tabll", 6 cha11'5 $30 Elec dryer $25. Uphol rocker & ottoman $1.0. Floor polisher $1S. ~949 aft 5_ "Look for !he Llgbthou!le" FRA?.fED 54x42" picture of Avalon Bay, around l!«l. L\ghb up at nite w/black lite. $250. 644-15.'6 UNOER\.\'000 Typewritu Standard, net"lis small ad· justment. $30, 6 7 3 • 4 5 0 2. 673--5370 John FORCED air furna c e . NYLON Carpel, A\'OCado Cttrysltr 120,000 BTIJ, used gt'("en, approx. 120 yds. pad only 4 mo. Like new, $125. Incl. $2 yd. Also !ltroller, 66 gallon elec. water heater, high chair, playpen, car 1 yr old, $50. 838-8719 bed. All good cond. 557-3891. l.Ml.:...:.SC.:..:;E:;ILAN:c.::::.EOc.:.:cU:..S,:.c::..1-w-a-p SUMMER SALE PERSl.A.N RUGS meet merchandise $15 . 646-S977 201/"o oft.July 15th thru 311t * MEXICAN tile, best Call Kennan's 10:30 to 5:30 grade. 11%xll%. 250 pieces. Corona del Mar, 675-1340 60c ea. 646-4656 MOVING, twin bed $30, extra GRAPESTAKE f~ l3x6 Fl. long !win bed $40. Love stat 2 4.x4" posts, assembled $35. Uphol chair $15. Sqr 2 sectlons. $25. 673-491$ picnic table, • benches. $15. CARPE"I' FOR SALE Baby Grand 1750. 540-0617. by Carpet 1-f, Call POWERFUL a.stre-teteacope • 546-5745 • -- w/caae • xtra. lerutet $35. LAWNl\-tOWER $65. O th ~r Posture typing ch a l r • misc. Garden tools. 673--9119. * 557·3lll * ··~················· .. , A CONVr:NtelT IHOPPING ANO SEW!NC CUlDf fOR THE CAL ON TH( CO.. For •n •d In Wom•n's World Call Mary Beth 642-5671, oxt 330 Vest and Skirt Look Leaner 7063 • • enntr. o. coe.ta of la""'•er It: enamel # • ' ' .,. """"'' il -·~ Cail --·· d • '"'"u · Degree Rec. or related H....,, N ... ·-Bch. 0 ..,,._ u1.-.&.U1". Fender ampllfler Ir elec Fa1hionl1an BOrsa·W•rnerControls field·Syn.exper.Penon. ~J .... .,...... ruttarf7SMiae OLDER wood pre .. tab StrlpeshavetheliveJy"Jook 3300 S Hall•d•y ' Sia WAITERS &/or Waitresi1e1, MACLANE Mower $95. Birch . ' cabln, 12' x 24' $200, Rare ·'"·loves for "fun" 00i1.._ 11u Openings For · OFFICE·CASHIERS F\tll & Part Time ~lust have 1D adding machine knowledge Excellent working conda Ou~ing Benefits Apply Jn Person 10 AM-4 PM 24 Fashion hlond Newport Beach Equal 0ppor1unlty Employer • nel Dept., lD200 ter Ave., exper. 25-40. for dining nn. dln'mt tbl, rou, nd + 2 lvs, 8 SUPEI\ Gan.ie Sale! Books, p Ullman k 1 t ch en am: ._.., .... AnEqS:it~Apon!m11y 92708. Ph: cn4> 962-2424. & banquet. See Pel'90nnet chn $295. 6 Italian Prov. books, books! Stereos, ae-unit a -atnk-1tove, INSTANT CROCH ET. 9385 10~·18~ ,,., 11f,..i .... 11fr...1"-P Apply by 814/'12. u-Balboa Bay Club 1221 cocktail tbl, Elm w/glass: cordiom, •peakers, bike, re .f:riattator comblnatkm Shipe-happy vtsl In ebell Employer M/F .. ,... • top $145. Gold leaf _,.... twin bed atltch, altemating open rows, ---..:...."'-----W Coan Hwy N B ···-, camp atove, $150 ea. 2-12 tt aa.llboatl, to th htd.1 atitch lkirt . PBX Busy board & lite type makes thf1 4 day week sal1 by. Top Us. Xtra long term . lrvlno 5411-4450 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO TEMPO T1mporary Help PRESSMAN t · " · · lamp w/pedertal table.$95 •. 2 apol'tl equip. We have a ball need little work $100. 144" ps e 8 • • ' WAITRESS, 21 or over. matched annleu ch r I• to till your <Nery need. Sat. metal life boat with 2 Use knitting wonted, big t!!U en 6 Days. Ship Ahoy, Laguna. blue/inn S55 pr. ~7918. only! ~M. 25l6 Va.uar canopya, ft.I)' conversion hook. Pat 7063: 1iu1 2-12 in- ELONGATED and leaner II the way )'OU'll look in Util vertlcally-uamed skimmer - tt'• the de11ign half.,bt1 wtth Laguna Hiiis Now Interviewing BUSBOYS --SURPLUS Sale: Dlnene Set Pl. CM $350. Mllceilaneoua ,...... c1::~.nn: CENTI! WAITRESS wanted, must be w 1 4 ch a t r 1 , • 1 s ·ALL 7~..,"~, •• c-.0~1-00-oda.,.-~.-.nda...,. 2761,i Sabta laabel, CM, 1 ach tt •• 4 25 ta1hk)n savvy choose 21 tur • ..... ~ • or e pa em -... Print~ Patt-9385 .• • ~ over • ma e woman UpholsttTed chair, $U. Cot· from garage. Light fixtuft!1, S'I'EREO: Un cl• J med ts f h tt~ for '""" """ ... ~ .... preferred. Call Galley Cafe, fee tablet $C.50 to $10. turnifun, pool table, plumb-•··--.. , Gatta.rd 4 __,. cen or eae pa m Hall: Size1 10%, ~. 14%, 829 B•~ide Dr N B fl .., ... _, .,_ Air.Mail and Spoel&l ll&IJdl. 16\1, 18". SIJel4" (8"• -~-• " · R<!rli<i:a-,.oo. Bt-.n 9 Ins llUJ>llllt•, d h h • 1. changer, •Ir IUll)Onalon tJ>a, otherwtae thlnklul talles 2.;''.-~. :J5;--• -· •:'. 6~. &. U AM, 2931 Grace Lane, lumber. Saturday A Sunday IPt&ken: with m u I t 1p1 e delivery wU1 take thret U:V!"NTi:nv. ~ - WAlTRESS Exp· food A C.M. 979-4434. lOAMtoGPM. EverythinJ croa1-o vt:r network. weekt or more. Send to & ...-r'1£D Cocktail. The Blue Beet, 107 LADDERBACK CH A I R S . goes. 230 Santa Iaabel, AMIFM!MPX nQlo and Alice Brooks the DAILY lt>r oach pat("" -add 2S I 21st Pl N B a.ft 4 PM Cotta , •• ,. Still PILOT ,_ N__,_:..._.. ctnll for each pattan for 1 Year mlntrnum eXJ)Cr. D1y Or N te · · · · Need at least lour matching ,-:;~,;,·-;;;::~·,-.,...-..,,---tape deck. brand new. • -.., ~ll;\;n:u1 Air Mall and Specla:I Hafd. on A. B. Dick 360 &: Itek Full Or P/Time WANTED· Housekeeper, for high, ladderb&ck chain. LEAVJN"G Country. Garage OrlrtnaJ,ly $09.97 pe,y off Dept., Box 163, Old Otelsea tnr· 1~ tblrd..e1us Camera. Sa1ary _ incentive. 1.2 months convale!lce'nce. Fin. or unfln. Must be Sale, Friday 3 PM through small balance of $197.M or Station, New York, N.Y. delivt~ will take three Jr. Accountant Sec'y/Comm'! Ins Exec. Secretary Sec'y/Engineering steno Call 64i.9470 A.pply tn Penon Help • care 1 child. Lite sturdy. No anUques. Frtt or Sunday. Dinette, cof:ttt & peymentl of $8.25 monlbl¥. 10011. Print Ntme, AdclrNI. week.I ot more Stnd to •am DurellMurpbj ·2400. Ave De La Carlota b&e:keeping. 494-6176. reasonable price. Pb. Mike 11lde tables, baby crib It USA Steno Equ i p . Zip, Patient Nillllber. Marl ,..a ...... ..t ;.._ D'"Y -------'-"'-~-! t897-·*-5. bed NEEDLECRAFT'72! on•~, uw ~ 1700 t ......... Hills WOMAN, over 6.5 yra. No ex· a -11a L ai\a" thinaa. twin , couch, Warehouae, 119 E . 17th St.1 P",,,.,. ... ., Pa"-De•• _..... ""' Crochet. Jcnlt, etc. Frte ~.L, ..._. """'" -.. $025 TIME FOR (At the El Toro oU ramp per. nee. P/time. Min Bt:NTWOOD kltchfn ute111il1, lwing set .t Cotta Meta, 6f5-2442. dtrectlon1 50c: 232 West l8ttl St• New IS50 s.o. Freeway! wage. Interesting work. CHAIRS much more. 2937 Royal .. .,..,..,..,..,..,...., laatanl 'Maonme -. York. N.Y. 1001L Print 1475 Varied hn. Mu•t be !ttt!Needst leut101D'llo.or..,. PabnDr.,CootaMna, HAYE (4} TICKETS Bail<:, fancy lcnota, pat· 11.lMIC, .lllDl!EllS with Clerk Typbt Payroll Clerk/11.B. • I AIR Cl6rk $450 QUICK CASH Eqlm Opper. Employer 110me nites & eome wknda. fin. Bentwood chatrs. ~ GARAGE Sa.le, Super terns. n. ~~SIZE and ~ 0 -n Nr Hoag Hosp. IA-81', pe&rMCe not Important, bat Neishborhood Salo! Toots, , __ -• tho M~ •--•• ef 8 1 1 •u--~ SEAMSTRESS ri --" ~~" no.i:.~ -.. "'" _,..,. .._, ""'" a rp • SEE M~~ Sprln1 s;oo , expe ••·~· ~--· must be tn good cond. No Camp, equip., auto occeu., SUNDAY, JULY 30th. er..hol-over 26 c1ettcns to F ·~-'::::;:' ~-- $525 JHROUftH A Gslngle nttdfCaill•fo~,~~~~o r. ~~~~~~~~~I antlque1. Free or nu. baby tum., lawn equtp, Trad• for iny ma.kt U . aa ...... ,. ....... c......,_ ~ • • 1 Girl Ortle< NEWPORT Personnel Agency 133 Dover Dr., N.B. 642·3170 KEYPl,INCH Univac experlenct, full Ume, top '*>' A excellent fringe bonelits. lor9·W1rner Controls 3300 S. Halladay Sant• An• An "Equal Opportuntty Emplo)'tr M/1' LEGAL SECREl'ARY, ex· per. C4."n'I p r a c l I c e. Ffl'lme. -. U ypsy 0 · .,..,.'""""· : i~ price. MJlte, 197·7791 aft. 5 edger etc. Sat. 9-3. 24242 f l•~t ·Crochet Book .. pattern free from new SECRET ARY •-&J 2 AQUA blue upholstered Larkwood. El T 0 r 0 • porform:;;~0;:;• Aug. 3 le1n1 by plctUl'<sl Patt'"" Spring.SUmmu Cat&los. All W • NT AD Type 60. Ute ah. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;1 chain $25 each. I med. desk D~:!! "·--p tlo Sal .., ........................ 1 n,;__--~--t Gift -· ~J!';# ~G DOOi> A Up to ss-Mo. $3). 2 end t.ables, pecan JW.,/U~ .............. a ~. B~ 'UT!FUL ..L. .... ,_ l.a-1 ""'°' ._..... .......... ~ ., ch. 1 ~· ~. bold Mh It .c.I\ """"IH'V ""''" • -"·-too~.•• -IL sew ..........,, nu ... w1ow. • FIE Antlq-.. llnl1bed, 125 ft wwt• •~le , ••• •ms, percusalon cop lhofaun. .._.. •-• •·-DAil y pf(OT NO Fr<nch Prov. \'anlty $45. l&mpo, lllm. antique•, Pecan lormlca & gl111 45 (lomplett M&Ma -• ~·NSTANT FASlllllll :;~i~: SCRAM-LETS =: style *>lid "-" ~ S: ~~~~19 : .. -=in:.~:~~.~ ~~ i:;•.:b ... -S>o. ::. ~ i:-e! WJ!NT lD • Per-I S.rvlcn ANSWERS ·:m:::J. ':~~ !~Pow•• mowrr, •'""· =-"~113~~ ~1: !Oc. TIME FOR u.: i:"~ ~ Bl ... .,.... M•tellue curv· otart sell·pn>pld, -cond. Ln. N.B --1 -ts pattm>L 64• 5178 Orlnp Colll. Hectic -Saute -Ounct -ed <OUcb, $50. 536--0!48, or Sac:rll. hall ""''' lamps, CHINA Cabinet, dinette ,.t ~~-Qollt -I • QUICK CASH '• 547·6· 446 BUt~ .... .,B~1 "° ... at e21-11th St.. !Ls. ltlm.aor. • dW....h , ,tab•::tcbas·~· w/hlack '"ther Chain. t.. 5oc. THROUGH " ~~ Ay: " an "' -M.,, CORNER GROUP· .. muc m sc. -~·· I din! bl '" '·" fo n. hel M burna 'uN• 9537 S U F V cart, U(flge, Ilg I ' Qolltl tot '?GdaJ'• Uvtoc -W"NT & A -r ~c 1Y put PIP" in hack llOCkc~ l!IG 0 DINETI'E Sf:r COF· lar ng, • • corner tbl, 2 chesls, wheel I.I hoa utilul pattttna. IOc. A -Don't give up the ohlp! SECRETARY/typist. Part his BRl'ICRES behind him." FEE TBLS.. BAJisTi.!. YARD tale. barrow, potlo chain, new "Ll1t" It In cla .. llled, Ship Ume, 10 to I.I hr.. wk. Lik• to tndeT Our Tnder'I AU. !IEW. WILL ACCEPT Fri • Sat only, bedroom lei, lamp 1, ••••••••••••••••••• to Shan """'"' &lo.5678. * Ctlll -* Pantllle rolllmn 11 lor JOO! BEST OFFER. ~. 2110 Orange, Coota ..... 54&-2966 • :Y PILOT i.no-Ill LI-tock UI Beelt, S.H G ~-~ KnTENS. Nffd -th!t PUCKLIN . Cycle1, Blket, Scooters MA~·~ .,... , -k! WU1 del!veM Tobby GS $1 (]'<kin or CORONADO 25) '11111 ...... DlCJSER $10. MMlllS. cok>rs w/white paws A Mallardl). Grown $1. Bu-Spin. EvJntude, T 14 : •67 G-.s5 Matchlt11 Matiue. WOMAN'& 211" bib. Jla1!ooll 1...._ 7 wu 911! Wtaned " tam c:\11" $1. :l8U S. E. M,. -at 7 AM: Prlv. Pr-lllOO. !inn. '12 llonda 125 SL ttm. Xlnt cond. f 3 t. trained. m.mo3. Dr. · 1.• ,.;;IY_· .;.,-~-·--~--230 mllel. $400. ti rm • $6-5l95. No checb. G ER 114 A N SflEPHmD * l'rel&ht d am a I e • 52S-6369, 8:30 to 5 : 3 0 • SUllFBOARD ~'I" 'ftmale 2 ~ ...a. ~ I ..., I[• Jt I Catanw'lllt, " 22' ..UboaL prlvat• party. 910 S . ~~'! ~ Movin, to a~t . ..._"t:,b :•• _.. ~:r]~· New cond; =~e!:tn.~J USED BICYCLES BEAUT. Part SJ....., kl~ c:,._ S:norol i Q 1'' SURF\l(lARD aallboat. BRAND'oew blcycl,._ !Ady'a ~ .• ..-ea.1212 "" (Jooka lib Sia"""') 7 • • Cenlerbo..,i. rudder, 1a.lll. Ralt!gh Sport, fro, Call· MltcellaMOVI w~kl old. \Veantd I: SABOT -Flbera:lau (No Jle•t otter. ~41. ~alter ~ or 6G-4ln, W.ntecf l20 trainf'd, Call 837·5003. ~). $95. MotO'l' 1~ HP, KITE No, '121 with trailer. "·-""'H"'o"'ND:_A~CL-1-00-. -·--m-L . Jib new $95. 673-42241 .aft Good -ndlt!o uM " -. SMALL Fox T f! r r i e r, 6· 30 pm. ...... n . ...-. Leaving stale. $350. 833-7346 IE~TWOOO }llt~k/whlte, spayed. Dark • ' 644-lT32 or 833-8186 ev~. . CHAJRS brown Burmese c • t. FISIUNG Boat. 11' ~/trl~, SNYPE ••. like new, wUh =~-"'""-"'--- N-at ltul four fin. or UDo 540-0111, plus exctllent o u t b o • r Cl al.Ip. Sacriftet!. Phone '69 Honda eI. 125 Scrambler . . fln. BmtwOod ~ AP-Johrut01'), outboard motor-. All 613-938S Xlnt cond. $295, peaJ'tJ'ICe not Important. but LOVIN~ack &: &reY long for $199. 318 OrcbSd, CdM. , ' * 544-3044. * ~Ult be 1n &ood (!Olld, ~o haoldirWkitten,dlem" tra~·-! .. WHCallk• $99. * 4-people• boat, car top. t2D FLEE'J'Yll. cenGoodter~., 1971 CL l'ffi Honda. U mo. ptlquer. Flff or reu. • eane uJCU. ptr, raCk, 1; extras. Fact acron u s. 00'" Old. Excel Cond, $475, Call .Price. Mike, 897.1191 aft. 5. 137-5003. blem. New. 536-6646. dltk>n, $250. 673-7469. 839-860'1 days LADO FRIGJDARE wuher Ir , ERBACKCHAIR_S. drytr needll some work 7 FT. Dingy, Clear. plu Coron1do 2$..Gd. Cond. 72 HONDA CL-450, $850. Need at least four matctnng Must• p· k u 549-3725 • 'GI• s 1 hopper ," $00 Pvt· Party 644-6531 Good cond., incl helmet, ~ ladderback cbaJt!. .itemoo: p. S4S.-159L * CORONADO 15 &: Trailer. heavy chain &: lock 646-2901 .fln. 'or unftn. Mu.It be ' YAMAHA 125 CCR t 9bardy. No antiquff. Free or FR E E tan Poodle-Terrier, Boats/ Marine No. 435. Immaculate. $99,5 w!Xtras $300 Hlun.s, erea reuonabl:e ~· p~ Mlkie )'OWi&' blk/whitf! Water l!qufp. 904 or best otter. 846-1950. heaii u5 892-iln comp. "•t,197,.rm aft 5. Spaniel mbt. 5 4 2 ~ 7 0 9 6. VENTURE 21, VOfi. w,inner, • . • WANTED: O'Brien watenki 548-0813. CHRYSLER Marine engW. 5 aails, spotless, too loaded •n •SUZUKI 50. Excellent 23'' to '4", Good condition. 2 LOVING, faithful Siamese Compl re.built + a 1 v to list. $2!KIO. 962--8534. cond. Only 1300 miles. * Call "5-7588 * cats; male A female, both that run.. Shaft acrew etc. CORONADO 23; ~ry cleafli saJO• 1. .f94.7J.T6 Muslcal tnttrviner'lts m altered. 56-4267. $150 or best offer. 540-3427 jib ma>n, o,b., We lines, 19'11 Suzuki. super cond. aft 4:30. , must se'u -oUer, 962-6382. 8e'&t otfll!!r. ~ •&~ • s•-s~·•, '70 aoocl home. Klttem. 10 ERC Co . Co 1 M ... 3874 ~~ --~:.! r"7. wk.s old. 1 rnalc, 2 female Ml .. ;,,. mplele low~ unit, BEAtn'IFUL 15' C I as s l! a esa, V'l.r- ftn' •"""' 1.vnu • ..i.,-tw pa .... '45-5362. 1? .liJl1 or 500 mode:i, Gd Sailboat, trlr incl. Excellent '68; KAWASAKI 175 cc 'JU5, 642-9Q22 .after 4~ 1 Year old while Cockapoo, Cond. $75. 9'1'9-3l94. cond. USfiO, ~3641 Xlnl condition. Offt. Fumftvre/ female, Clean · and loving. 3 H.P. outboard motor, runs * 673-7354 * • l~ulp. ~124 AJl iholr. 64U670. ,...u, $25. Bo•t1, Sllps/Dockt 910 '70 350 SL HONDA * ~5397 * -$325. 646-7623 aft 4:30 MOVING -Must tell by thll Krl'TENS • Frtt. All males. WANT Moorinr dor Lido 14. ftmd! 2 draWtt. boril. Housebroken. Cule Ii }'\my. Bolts, Power 906 North Bay for month Aug. '68 HONDA 160, xlnt, 5,000 ltpl Ill•, 175, m 4 drawer I wkl, old. 64'"5308. lllrd partnmhlp In 31 It Call collect • F. PrW. 2J3. ml. $225. 644-5687 ~ dHkl, blk. hue, lt. GERMAN Shepherd-Boxer cmtom built cabin cruiser 385-83TI.. ==~;:.:.='--­-~IP: nafonnic: ~.:; Pupp~ '1 wkl. 116 Del aleep1 4, salley, radio, tom'e· '** AVALOl'J mooring, good 19TI"'BSA 500. New flame • ~ Mar, CM. 5'8-4639, fishing rif; moored oft Bay Joe. nr.. Descanso Beach paint Immaculate. Must sell eb&ln. ~ea. ~ ~: F 'R EE tan Poodle-Terrier, Shore•:· avail for wie 3 Club. $4000. '* 673-8760. • best offer! 644-2564, =c0 !;n;:I p!'net' feml, 10 mos. Shot.I. Well wkndseamonth&f!Veryday , MOTORCYCLE50CC $UO. 67>-88Sl m' S45-188S. ' behaved. 847-3130. . during-k-A lot oll~ I< Boofl, Speod I Ski 911 GOOD CONDl'ttON SSO. • 0 a llmlted cost way of o~ 14%~ BIESEMEYER. 7 5 e &16-5848 e Pl•nct1/ rt•nl 126 1 . II~ I In& your own boat. $1500. Ev!nrude + Trlr & skis. ~KA"'=wAS"'AKI=-m-;-n;'-tra~il~MT-1 . . fRE£ f"I' Ml flwll:li . 1' Call. 67~ to see I: ~~e. Just overhauled. Leaving 1971. J200 w/trailer $175 ' 15' Glass flat country -mu.t • • 11. "'wl"°tho=u.,...t."7.96~2-8132~=· ~- Startlne week of A.,..t 1 Poll, Gonoril ISO · 1~61~:1-00=70~·=,....,..,....-= HONDA, •n, SL350, 600 ml, .,. OAANGE COAST aott·om Ski' HUD 14' TRl-HllLL Johnlon V·15, $650. '69 'I'rJ>il 96, $3)0, Both HAMMOND STUDIOS * "Sherry'•"· Groominf 10 litre""'· Stair '"" Canopy, perl cond. 968-1'65. otter& yrt in all breeda. (Free • trailer, skis, jackets, bait ~10"-=SP=E===-, ~li~k.-new-'--. ~Cam-pl C Adult Evenfn& C1aue1 -pickup). Boerd1na. poodle WhJte/metalflake red. 65 hp .tank. n,ooo. 962--~. . derailmi, $85 or otter, f s.ctnnen pupp!ea. 516-1848. ~";'ii/B, till trailer $12JO. SKI boat 14' g!Jus.$5 h.p. 613-3340, 548-S369. f .•Secondary · BABY'cbix$1.,ducldinp$2., 31' 1969. Cru' , Mere. Boat cov. trailer, '67 Yamaha 90cc tw~n · • Tbeoey (Pekin or Mallards) ~wn • Hatteras l9e!'. $1250. 646-8559, · auto-lube dirt bike-extras. 1• Workihop $3. 2612 S. E. Mesa Dr. ' ::::ac! :ra:1 new en4r'· 14''€lassle Ski Boat. tilt trlr, Good ccnd. $12.5. 646--6948. • • Call for information 2 Avaries: l -3'x3'x8'. 2-· 9' o, D , auto • P ot, •Mercufy Mark 75, must sell '70 Kawasaki 3.50 Avenger, % 644-lnO circumference, height 6'. Depthometer, etc. Comp $650 M&-8609 il 13 285f E, <'.?Pt Hwy., CdM . fishing equlpt. Ready to go. -· ' • m e, .5 seconds, $450. l-;.,.-;;.;;-;';;:C7im;-;;;;l.;$1~0:.· •::a::::•h:::.·..:968--0833::::=·~-= Asking $22,oo:l-make offer. Gooii eond:·673-4228. 50 ORGANS 50 Cats 152 675-2256. · r-----~~ YAMAHA ·n MX-Rn, s"" YM, ,50 OJ'lant on the floor. PERSIAN •kittens. CFA ~ 14' · RUNABOUT Perfect for. I T,......,,..ltion ] irih riding time. $T':it. Jfanimond Wurlltler othen • -" Couple or Guy A Gal. 35 hp.1~--;:iiijjjjjjjj~"~ .. :;~ I * 645-8434 * f)Dor modell dlacoiltlnued all papen, champ, llneqe. ll'ouol ...... , Sleet Tr a 11 er, ·~ SUZUKI 100 Full kl ..;..a..1.. '· Shotl. $50 I: up. Abo ·black '""'''6'"'" . .1..;u.1. . • t, -~· new A ued. Buy er IDlOke stud serviet! 192-2970 Cover, Lifting Sl In r. Cempert S.l•/Rent 920 akronts, F It R. Full race. ,.t at nat attractive · · ' NaugahydeUphohterymust1--'"-"'• __ _.. __ , A winner! $350 o1fer , "'°"· SEALPOINT ki1tt.,, ,lllllt .. u1475.oo-...... "Camper ·Truck" 6'13-4122.,... • _. W ellic~s Music C"tty f:":1;;s. ~.,.tun!, 16' 11oa1on Whaler. 100 HP ;.;;.GMC, ~ Lang Whool BOYS BIKE. !>SPD. lbutb O:>ut Plua 540-2830 · Johnson. 3 yn. oJd. Xlnt Boi, 2 tone, olive Ir white, LIKE NEW. ·$40. · 1918 Bush &: Lane Cedlian Dogs U4 cond. $2575-terrifie Buy-suPll!!r CU1tom interior, air IRVINE, 833-9442 upright .pla;yer piano. BEAUTIIFUL German Must Sell! 673-6220 or ·cond.,powersteeriilg,power '72"HONDA350CB, 3,000.ml. Maulw, ·omate walnut burl Shepherd pupe:, 3 brown, 3 6'13-6552. disc brakes,; !(iOxl.65 8 ply Xlnt conct $600 or best of- cue. }µ:bit. Refin. EleC6 ' black, Inquire 1030 s. Coast, 14' Fibqglus, 35 H P tires, dual camper mirrors, fer. Pvt pty 897-8689. tdtled .• 1250. 5'5-t750. Laguna or call 49.f..6848. Jo~n. trlr, ski access. radio, H.p. sii!penslon with "M70-1-0r~H""o""m-9-1--- $495 or best otter. · Bein& leaf 1prinl1. WW baJld1e sell ~'3'G,!anoaaCrll!ct, blby PU R EblacB ~ E5P ~bri.di>n, dtaftcd. 548-l809. conWncd ca.mpor. 5035!!0, Salo/ Rent ••u~ P ' ebony, $750. •• w~. $37·9' 5' 540--0617. · No po-n.>,, ~CRIFJCE • 24' .I.one" Siar -Motor Home Rentals . * Ml-0159· *, ' I cabin ·c:ruber, !IOhp Evin. Bill .. BARRY' PfANO, aOod. condition, $160. eria: 11: trlr. Lic'd. $700 or bit 2314 \Veltmbuter Ave. , YORKSHIRE Territt, AK,C, ofr ~ Cosl4'M,.., perfect color!nc"lhln. 1812 k · · Fiet-GMC·Pontlac Wurlitzer Sp'-~ Piano Npt Bl. No.16;CM. f46.. 77'13 ~6· ~l'ifl ski or fish boat, 65 ..,..,. ~ ?.ferc w/trlr full equip! (1st St, at S.A. Frwy.) Mahogany $300, ELEGANT b'GHANS pet " . ldrlt 'cond. sJ2oo or btst: 2000 E, l'I St., Santa Ana " * 17Mlli. * llhaw pupplt• " all brecdtnc 540-0241, 5.16-9414. 558-1000 ** PORTABLE Electronic lltoclc. All colon.-· ii> Fl, 'liiJLL. 8' Beam. Buil! 101/2' HAVASU Available for daily. weekJy or monthly ·buts. 21.', 23', and 25' self contained Mo- tor Homes, all equipt with generator, r&ot air, .nnd many other extras. AD Coaches are 1972 models. , We havll!! the all steel Amieo also. Please call 839-9560. Organ. Cost sio;>; u.crlfice * AKC l"f!'I, German ,,...,. ~~-~ -M-' . $3)0. 50-4218. 1 shorthalr Pointer. Field -'V. , .uiuua.1v or. . a.ae Cabover sleeps 6, inc, kitChen . 1-"-::=:=:=.::=--==,.-A I trained. ~935f·, e,7_.,.....,, otter. 2076-A 'I'hurin St., CM. water pump, stove'~ oven, REVCON · MO'l'ORHOME UPRIGHT PIANO ~ -dlnett I< Be tifUl STUD SERVICE 13' Boston Whaler, w / 40 II.de e with ~11seat au* 548.~· $150. Black Lab HP John90n, Cover, Trlr, toilet room, a beautl!ul home I==,,..,,-,~---*--• AKC rer. champ-Extras. Xlnt cond. ~1933. away trom home. Seriai 7S9. PIANO Upright, good cond. ~ blckground. m.3341. WAS $2195 FOR sa1f! or trade 25' Chris Movln.r! Sacrifice! $150. WHITE male Germ a n ,._.., 173-4502, ~John. Shepherd, AKC Reg. 2 yrs. ••u• Cab Cril Only 50 •ng NOW $1.495 . d 2966. hrs. Va.Jue $3500. 548-6439. Sowl"" Mechlnot 121 °1 • 546-· * Ntw 14' Whaler. * FULL PRICE . WHITE ZIG ZAG 0eew tEnmalglW. uSh"'• Dog. 1375· . Bl.LL BARRY • , au . e. mos. AKC. ~1:>36; 646-7588 SEWING MACHINE $350. 545-6588. • . '35 * 540-0023 16' tsn NEWPORT, 911 PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT . • IRtSH Setter, male, 5 mo, Johnson fully e q u 1 pp e d , Sporting Goods 130 AKC $1.a> (lat St. at S.A. Frwy.) Olds front wheel drive, Ulti· mate in luxury & efficiency. Only 9,000 ~iles •• µ8-0052,. MOTDR HOME Lots of slorage & living space -Expklrer 26, fully equip, $235 wk. Only 6c mt. 4 Day wJCnda avail. 548-2886. ·PLUSH Shasta mtr hm for rent 18', s.lp.s 6. Se.U cont. Air. Pvt. pl)'. Aft 6, 491-2384. " . • i44..sooi $175. 547-11645; 6~. 2000 E. !st St., Santa Ana ,:S. Cof1?plete Jets ot malc~ng HARLEQUIN Gfeat Danes • 20' SoulhCout. Cust blt for .558-1000 . Rent A Motor Homt pro-hned eoU clubs; ~·· Sacrifkd $150. Gentle. 11 NavY. No eng. Best ofter. . '71 Pickup $17'+5 for YP.:Ur V•c1tion t':'toba& If~~ coven. mos. old. 545--6588. Aft 6-644-2l99. Datsun. chrome step bumper, * 839-f301 * . . . WE IM AR AN ER ARC 2T Drake-Craft Exp Crulse.r. aide mirrors, tonneau ~·. e 72 LIFETIME SURFBOARD, Auso:aila Ii: Champ. sired, 2 mos.' • 275 H.P •. Chry!i !lemt. ~ast. radlo,Jie~ter, 4 speed~. 25 M.H., 23' A &pier House mt suit.Good 4.96-2lo9 10112 _range. $2995. ~3. only 15,000 mlles. ('119BLV). '.Air, lux. A safety equip., condition. $70. 96W549. · 28' Fairliner twin en,. Net'ds "BILL WHl'J'LEDGE'S'' x\n,t rates. Pvt. pty., 968-l.39"1 WATED: O'Brien walerski ~AK~ R;g. 81~~~ni~ 1 .TLC~1!2500. Call wkdays. Su'nut MOtor1 tn good cond. & s track tape ~:ie:s s;· ~ 516L41:81. ,1970 H1·r~r Blyd. dick w/FM. 646-7643. · ea. ' , -30' TROJAN, TS, ra Co1t1 Mes•· 64$..6677 Hor1e1 ·1 ·, 15'' ··· TV, R•dlo, HIF ' • ~~ 5· Fully tq11lp. '70 Toyoto • .S19roo ~ w * APPAS.:OOSA * ~112•500• 644-l836 •'Pr. sedan. Radio, h .. 1er, ,...,.,.;..-----~ " · · clean #828BEU l(l'f:REO 19711 Garr a rd 3 yotr old f"ldln.. Bollll., S•H 90f · $'99 • lflllipptd wllh lull llzcd.pro. roglator,od. $475.. , 37! 'Cllpper -Crublni I.ow Down I.ow TemtJ ~!onal changer, AMIFM CALL ANY'Tlf,\E ' ' Kelelt· bit WlLLARD BOAT PHONE 645-6199 '""° i;ecelver, 1talcd air-540 .i 3803 . ' lj'ORKS: 1962, buy •••• $34,500 ~CLE MAZD.A !~~n,.s.ion speakers, tape CRAY '6 Arabian· },f~ .~· JYL S&S Sloop $23,500 '2145 Harbof ~lvd. ~ head phone plug-in . ~ 34'·FGL' Morgan S1oopS22 500 Costa Mesa 1ac1<1. Brand new In box A sound, healthy,. gen~•. Slljd .,; _L·~·• Sloop M.'ooo"---.,.........::=:---tee paid to I I UOrial> '"·.sou ..... ••··~· 11· i ~an"~·~!Pnally pric-Cha.mpion KA~M'uF . All-1.34240porto, !lwP!.Bch. TRUCK/Camper Special •n hal ct · a11' Balanct 181 Eves. 64&-Ull. • PAVID F:RASER 613-S2S2 !I Ton \lMC • Sierra PU .cu 1m payment!. COLUMBIA 26 MIOl 1971 w/12' weekender cam'per. Lay· aw a y D e p t, * MUST SELL * ,,,,,.,.;;1 ,....,... Bea ' lG1 Leu than 11,<0.'I m.I. ~ 1tf/893-0501. Reg thorolnd matt, 5 yn ~ u '"""I'• ut. 962-3513 wknd or aft 5. ~m-I I: R old Great hunter • thOw Ge~ O>mp IJlln-rlg. Shag . pm. !'~Je11 than tf: d=nt:~ pot~ntlal. Xlnl contoi-tn.,Sac :t. ~ Better than ll' F'our Winds CllJIU)ll!!l', jce Most •73 mod l · tock $1400. ~2616 after 5·30. w. 'bo:if, 3 burner ,.ttoYe, .eye 1.n·a at dl'M~; ":a~i BOX Stall ~pedal: ·2' Mo'• KiTE No. • si..u· ~ ~E!'n, alps &. $1000. ;J'ree ,color antenna installed Summer pacJca.le stD,I 6v..u. DinJhy w/dolJY, $41a. 8 ·1 • • , • lriih .u -lhtu July Fairgrounds. m..9IU "' Salling Plnghy-Gltn L. aal1i Iii It El Dorado camper Ji,t, s yr, plctuft tubt, 1 yr 962-8619. . Incl. $40. 673-4224 All 6:30 $350. or w/1962 Ford !I T . ...... I. -· CUh 90 BEAUT pm, P.U, w/irs. , l!roa, $).550, "'•n or '-• Abe Color · . POA pony, l ·Mii NEW o•~ .. Y·~•-w/Mln-' '* !\14.S417 * .... • .. ~ . Arab lllJ.v. w.u trained " .l.. .,., ....... . • TV, 9021 Atlbta, H""' gtnUt, Saddle " cart °' SOl!nr. List $ 31~ 0 • '65 • Ford Camper, 11/H. ttncton llfaelt, • ~ m-'219t. · SpecJal Pri4'0 $:1!1111. -Qu<tn b<il, alnk, table, IJIED TV'a .........., like THORo\!GHBRm G , Id ~ ext '23 ot le&Y< r.lrl(. Good cond. 64&-34'11. •· Oolor $100." "II. /N!<k ..... t 1Tl 15 t H IOUnd' l1\tll&IO w/-.tor. !Sill DODGE A·lll8 Camper 6 White $30. It • Call ~..n·-."EJtilW~st l61S'. 'MARINJlR $1 Loaded w/o.· Van, V-1, Rall, IOQd.<Ond, Ill Sl83. 544-M35. tru. Jl<frlr, Sp-. $Zl50., $l5l9 aft f •Sun. • Id st..n.r. ..... rr1 u lllp •n vw Pop '!) yr, o Bay C.ldlng. 342, L , B' Pr! PIJ op e&111per • w/.,.stt'Jn bck. $350, Call • tJ3.598..29&3. Wide tins. ..U ""'L $llOO. THIOUGH A 141-1893, 5:30 pm or •knd• '".;;~;_;;;=;;,;1. ___ _ LIDO 14 with tral)Of, '..,.,. CLASSIFIED ADS Llhe to Trtdtt Ollr Tradtt'• North Ractnr -_, IJll& to trt.deT Ollr -· 642 5671 ,.,_ooiumnv ... ,..1 -at. CZ. or-. Parldlloeoiumnlllor)'Olll qutCK CASH The DAILY, PILOT OAANGE COAST'S · ' lllHlng Marketplace • llln8,5dayslorSbtic1<3, .,,.._ w/opm.lor. 5l-.5-tor5budao. 1.;.;;::;:;;:.;:,.=:.;.:::..:..:;:;:=_t_.__~~~~~ l I I ' • • l () Are You Letting Cash Slip Through ·v our Fingers See If You Have A,y Of These Things A WANT-.D Will Sell Fast! I. Stove 29. Blcyclo 57. Electric Tr•in 2. Gultor 30. Typowrltor 58. Kilton 3. B•by Crib 31. Bor Staoia 59. CIH1ic Auto 4. Eloctrlc Sow 32, Encyclnpodlt 60. Coffff Table 5. C1mera 33. V1cuum Cl11n1r 61. Motorcycle 6. W•shor 34. Tropicol Fish 62. Accordion 7. Outboard Motor 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 63, Skis I . Storoo Sot 36. Filo Cabinet 64, TV Sot 9. Couch 3~. GOif Clubs 65, Wor~bonch 10, Cl•rlnot . 38.-~i.,rlln9 Sllvir 66. Dl•moild W•tch 11; Rofrigorotor 39. ·Victorian 11\irror 67. Go-Kart 12. Pickup Tr:u~k 40. Bodroom Sot 61. Ironer 13. Sowing Ma~hlne 41 . Slldo Projector 69. Comping Troller 14. S.•rfbo•rd 42. Lown Mowor 70. Antique Furniture 15. Machine Tools 43, Pool Tablo 71. Ttpo Rocordor 16. Dl1hw11hor 44, TlrH 72. S1ilboat 45, Piano 17. Puppy 73. Sporn C•r 11. C1bln Crulaor 46. Fur CCIOt 74. Mott .... Box SPll 19. Golf C•rt 47. br•po1 75. lnbotra Spoodboot 20. Baromotor 41. Linon1 76. Shotgun 21. St•mP Coiloctlon 49. H-n . s.ddlo 22. Dlnotto ~ so. Airplane 71. D•rt a.mo· 23, Pliy Pon 51. Organ 79. Punching Btg 24. 8-llng ll•ll 52. lxorcyclo 10. Biby Corri1go 25. W•tor Skis 53. R•ro Bookt 11. Drums 26. Fr-54. Sid Booll 12. Riflo 27. Sul-55, High Choir I~ Dotk 21: Clock · 56. Coins 14. SCUBA Goar These or any ~er extra thlllCJI araund the house " can be tarried into cash with a ; DAILY PILOT WANT-AD l ' ,, I so • ' ' .Don't Just , Sit , here! I I I . DIAL. DIBCI 642~5618 l I • • I I ' I , I • 11 / ' I· t NOW! NEW! PILOT PENNY PINCH .ER CLASSIFIED ~DS WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE i . , 3 LNES 2 TIMES . 52.00 • ANY ITEM ' • j. ' .. OR LESS e EACH ITEM MU$T BE-· PRICID e • Comblnod Total of Items Nol To Excood $50 • e No Copy Chang11 e1 Np Abbr.ovi1tio~1 e • No Commercial Firms • r C•LL '642-67'8 . ASK FO YOUR DAILY PILOT ·~D@VISOR 'AND. YOU MAT: C.~AR~E IT! • • I I IWLY l'lLOT I Motor.-. MIAutos, 1....,tod ~~~~~-FIAT REW ARD l-A-LL-·:w-OD-EL_$_ * FIAT * '71 MGa.G~ $2"' WILL PAY OVER IMMEDIATE Grttt1 with !4'1dle lnterlor. Low DBalltLIVfj~::llCUw , • 128'1, 124'1 & 850'1 ~.~:·:::.:~!= Salo/"-! ON Dl~Y MidasMini 6 cyi~ ... ~i~ma uc 1 Ton Dodee.-. Sleepo 6. Al Low Al • transml!3k>n, po~r •let.T- ing. (f0889E) Kelly llue look 11• .. ,. DEMO SALE llLL JONES For late modol, clHn, Up To ' . SPORTSCAR CENTER 'SJ199. $2099 CONNEL L CHEVROLET 2828 HU'bor Blvd., low mllo1go clomos. 48 Mt. T8nt1$. ·· * $1688 * 2833 H~ •• ~91 a Me1& tlc11 Imports, trucka or .,...,,...... c•mpers. ou approved ~t "'' .... ., ...... ~~ '6t ,MGB-GT Sl100 ~ TIOGA ' MOTOR HOME Costa Mesa 546-1203 '70 Chn. Vi Ton Pickup, VS, heater, C.Ufi>ER SHELL. ~76. DEALER $20tt eau DAYEROSSsuyu & * ~YOWME-;>· Make o~~g.~ 5:" Quick! · '62 MG MIDGET PONTIAC * SAYINGS * xtn• """'· 962-3428 u~· 1 Too Docl&e c:haula. Low Down Low Terms Sleopa 4. PHONE 645-5199 lmlilediate Delivery ":~~~~~ CIMr Motor Homes 1951 oo':::::. TR UCK D ·.Y{. Isl, SaJ>t&·Ana Body In Excel. Cond. Eng. 135.3171 needs V.'Otk. Good tires. --------I New paint job. Inside panel· ed in cork. $175 er best of. fer. See at ~ Charle St., C.M. <ll''call 646-0388. '70 'Chevrolet ~ Ton SEE US Al!OUT o..r .... °"" .. ry B·111 Jones' CREVIER MOTORS DI W. 1st St •• Sant.a Ana 13$-3171 24IO Harbor llYd. Costa -· . 54M017 WE PAY TOP CASH '69-BMW 2002 (stk •T·30A). Beautiful .,, l1IOd eon 6 ~ ,.., tondilion. iRorH'Hlll s2199 A*lorSllls~ 11211 S..cll -. Kanlloltoa U..dl CREVIER MOTORS MGI OPR Ml.al Kl.u!I n w. lsl St., Santa Ana , 135-3171 '71 Fint 124 Sia. Wgo. 4 whi ''70 OPEL GT OPEN ROAD 6 CyUn<ler, stick sh I f t • WE lMl)' all makt9 of dee CAPRI pwr. disc. brks. Air cond. Coropet!Uon Orange Black Pickup ?t'IOTOR HOMES (826582) uRd aporlt can. patd for R~clining sea~. 10,000 mi. Bucket Seat. 4 i pd dtr. Ex· 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. -$999 ;'."°~ ~ 1n torl·,-71-C-ap_r_l ___ $_2_0&& Ltkt' new. $l99.1. 5'ID-85&1. «llent condltion. Can fl. Garden Grove 894M79 Silvtr with black interior, 1!!70 Fiat. 124 S p i d e r , nance private party (!ND- '71 WILLIAMS ....... .,... CONNELL ,_._ .. __ .. _, ... like Tif"W, AM/F~1. Real sharp, f.lust 2'.M). Call 49U811an10 am. • _, ~1 •1 ·Irie·.· CHEVROLET H"':::..on-thi'a-o-ne (70lCKJ), 5acrifir.e. $2150. 0 w n e T, 546-8136. · :.iri';::io:.: . ';;:~tat eo.ta ~.,!ar11or mv:.&_rm -·BILL JONES _968--0 __ '82~· ------------E-- 11ea1er, ael!-eontained 001==-==---==-= SP0RTSCAR CENTER ~.......,J,,,,A""G_U_A_R__ PORSCH Tradesman roo •. : v.a, '68 Chevy 112 Tn noo w. Cout H'llJ'., " '57 PORSCHE Automatic transmW>On, Picliup Newport Beadl· 2833 Harbor, Coot& Mesa '117 J AGUAR 2+2 coupe. ~. Steering (789CTQ). t'.0--'"'--, '"ust ~U. ~-or ___ !:'42:!:!·*5~:_--l--=540--449'==='=--Automatic, air conditioning, --·=~ m -CITROEN :=.. DwAhVeeEtaROSS(UlNP052JN)-1600 COUPE BEACH CITY DODGE best ofler, 100% FlnaDdor WE PAY '!OP DOLLAR ~,, Avail 0 .A.C. 897~. FOR TOP USED C4,RS TJAC, ~ Harbor BJvd., at YAMS,. ~ ll your car ls extra dean. Citroen Maserati Fair Dr. Costa l\.teM.. 16555 Beach Boulevard ... UI ft.nt. -. 546-80li Price effective thru Huntington Beach BAUER BUICK AWARD WINNING July 31, 1972 (711) 54().2660 '69 GMC I: Ion. 6 cyl., stick. 2925 Harbor Blvd. " Trailers. Travel 945 18,000 mlleo. (33143A), Coola Mesa 979-2500 LUXµRY CAR KARMANtt GHIA --------'69 CHEV. % ton. V-8, ltl.ck, • IMPORTS WlNTED '69 KARMANN Ghia, i.uto stick shift, A1\f/F1'!, lo ml. $1000. Chris, 675-8421. TENT TRAILER customized. (U5t6E). Oranae OountSe9 Ro1d It Rally• Motors Cyclists WW Appreciate! ·~v:. ~ER~ top. 'l'OP $ BUYER Orange County•a Oldest Dir. '65 Tr•vel Mate ditio..:_ c-':1 $2699 con-JilILL MAXEY TOYO'.I'A 1609 Pomona Ave. Sleeps 1, kitchen Ir add on CONNELL 11881 Beaet. Bl't'd. Costa Mesa 714-548-3559 cabana. Frame completely R. Beach. 1'\. M1... .-==...:..;...c....-~-~ rebuilt to carry 3 motor-CHEVROLET WILL Sul' ,_car poll! tor Cr-r. Sports Masor1tl cycles. Extra Clean. 2828 Harbor Blvd., or 'nDt. Call Ra)pb c..doa Orulp County headquarters 546-94$1 Costa Mesa 5f6..l.21l m.elloo-4e 1;. C0Ut 8 ..,, tpr kica1 .l European or • . • .., delivery Aft. 9 P.M:, 540-3894 Newplirt Beaeb. . Jim Siomons Imports KEN SKILL 18' t r a i J f! r , Autes, lmportecll 970 2'201 So. Main, Santa Ana w/tollet & sbo\\"er. Like ...5242 Open SUn. '!i&6'6()~M~ andt:::::==---~;:;;_= new eond. S875 548-4391 '61 %. T Ford S' ~ Full ,.,.,. ............... _ Thurs 3,00, Fri 4,00, Sun. cmpr Equip!:°"" 9800 ml part&. 352 ~St. Oranle. CORTINA all day. since BRAND NEW at % ~54l~~=~-----1·-------- 0ASIS ''3, slpa 8. 3 burner ~~Of a new one, V-8, · '68 CORTINA • Good eon· atOV6.l ovm, 50 lb k• box, AUto Trans. AUSTIN H~LEY dltlo"' rib, !550 or otter. 'Elec braku' $695. 557-3163. '6' A.H. -· $AVEl..::54H21:::::::.7::.· ____ _ 16' CLEAN, complete, ready She'• blue Wlth blue IOterior, •• D'a·rsuN lo go. $495. 505 Redlands, 15· 5 f...i Ra-i-wfwhe<ll, O(D.~~,Io1 ..... _.._" __ """"_ Newport Beach, 548-3136. lllU IUlll1I find beauty 11 extra !halp1'" '70 Datsun 510 16' TRAVEL Trailer, sleeps . · · , (UJM731), See and driv~ srAnori WAGON. Fully 5, Xtra butane tanks, elec. 6 <:Ylinder, automatic, rad10. llLL JOuES G N (OYH,~) • " , 1aet, equipped. 323A D. brakes. $695. 645-2073. '""· $8'~' 9. Trallors, Utility 947 SPORTSCAR,, .CENTER Low Down $1299 I.ow Terms CONNELL 2833 Kar~. ~. Meoa P!JdNE 645-5199 RIVERSIDE Utility two CHEVROLET 54IMll1 MIRACLE MAZDA wheel ~ T. auto trailer, nr. 2828 Harbor mvd., 2145 Harbqr Blvd.· """· 9'19-4384. eo.ta Mesa 54&-1203 ALFA ROMEO Cc111i M~ Auto s.rilco, Parts 949 '61 Cbe'!Y. % Ton P.U. Xln~ '!' DATSUN 510, •AM/FM . PORSCHE part. • 9ll s'. ~ tJi.ei, -radio, AHa -· ~,.z;_ .-.. air, tape pl.,...., trln1, S/Wheel, 1 seat au-, upbol ' more. $750. radial tlru, mac wbls, vinyl (Houndstootb) 2 Nerf bars. 892-3147. 2000 top IJ985.' m.5817 . , 714: fi!IT-2t67. VAN • 1972 Dodge 1969 Datsun PU dock bumper ALLE N SYNCROGRAPH Sportaman. Radio, heater, NOW IN STOCK ftberrJ.,. bed COYOr, R/H, MODEL ~E 1415 HD J good tlrts, engine fire, raclial tir'l'I. Exl. Sl.350, 2721 DISTRIBUTOR MACHINE. needs -!650, W-1205. For lm.,,..ilale 5th Ave CdM, 1144-7202. 542-1734 Eves A: weekends. '63 CHEVY ste~van &: 13' Deflwry '65Datsun1SOO SPL !lll, new • 61 vw pan w/pink ~ip e>mptne trailer, $ml. '62 ln1t...t Crodlt top r. ttres, l'Ul1I r. lonkl Door a. rear fenders. make Dodge step-van roG cu ft, BANK FINANCING aood. Could uae --ic, MAZDA '72 MAZDA Rotary Engine RX2 $2588 Demo. CS122A.104723)' HUNTIN.GTON IEAC:H. MlZDl: 17331 Beach Blvd., Hlintlngton Beach ~" mile South Of Wamer Phone · MZ-6666 ' . MERCIDES IENZ -MBZ 'lt' 2BO SE • 4 speed. an1·fm . Very ctt"B.n. Must see Ir. drive. (YXY392). S1488 OR BESf OITEP. COAST IMPORTS 1~1200 \V. Pacltic Cit. Hwy. Newport Beach (n4) &12..()§06 546-4529 XLNT. eond. 91l·T Ponchr, 1969. Fully equlpt. MUlt sacrifice thia wcrck. Best of- fer. 675-5850. 'TO 914 Whlte/black. Appear lfp. Chrome w h e • 1 1 AM/FM. Cover. $2900. er otter. 5152.a'har. '63 Porsche, xlnt cond. SZIOO or belt olfet, Must 1111 Imo mediately! 541-3llOS. POJl.Goodyear Blue - 511" -rims. llllO· -·· 7 PORSCHE 91 lT s speed, &m·fm mar wheels, )ow miles. (357ABV). S5495 OR BEST OFFER COAST IMPORTS o!fer. 544.3417, 1700· 54S-3'158. COAST $475. 675-2802. ~7145. All oxtras ll"l· air iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '68 CHEVY \I Ion P.U. Short DATSUN '71, 24(1Z. 16,000 \#6160) ' cont!. j()()0.121JO W. Pacllle Cal. Hwy. bed, attop side, 4 speed, 3Q7, miles. Gold, !/l'aek vinyl, $6650 I _.,,.._ 11~1 ~~~it.~ cond. ll'PORTS' ::t\m~· Will 'llnance. ';;;;;i;;;;;;;~; '60 Chevy P.U. V-8, < speaf. fyt '72 Datauri PU. Only l8t)O ml. • 4 . g~belt tires. Asking Un.reg demonstntof •. $2,ooo. Antlquo1/Cla11lc1 953 $750. 545-0882. U100.1200 W. Paclllcest. Hwy, Poca! Leulng, 548-1155, 1941 BUICK Coupe-Super, '67 Chev. 108 Van 3 lpd.. 283. Newport Beach (714) "2-0a 240Z, lf10, air, ma.cf. Must needs paint etc but in Great in/out and mech. Of. Alfa R"'1H tell. '$3500, Prt9ate ·party. good run n1I n g .condition. fer/$1690. 673-1.342. . 644---'647. · • r • Bargain at $275. 2 O 5 6 '48 Ford PU. 4 1pd. trana. 71 DATSUN ,lDJ pr leaSe Southern Calttornia 1st National Bank · _ Leasing Newport Beach CTI4) 6'2-0tOS 546-4529 ·~=~·mxint ":· oond. Many atru. $35S), 1 · 830-2254. " PORSCHE 912, '68, new paint A: engine, 3000 ml warranty. 6'73--G02, 673-5370 John. I '62 PORSCHE yellow chrome 2022 Buainess Center Drive. rims, AM/FM, $1800. j . 64Ul91 Irvine, caut. 92664 n4/833-8620 213/627.f1367 '68 912 Porsche, rct. cond. Orchard, Santa Ana Hats, Gd. tlret. New mtr1 Xlht $100 cub, take ovei'. Daya oU Irvine. • runni11J cond. $500. 646-?rill. 53&-4890. ewa ~76. AV ANTI Classlc, '64. Worked ~ FORD van camper, V-1, on by Granatelli Mechanics. stick, heavy 'duty acce•., RAT 1 owner. $2400.. 673-2456. $27'50. 548-2811 eves. ' . . ~ . .. .. '1931 DeSolo. Runa good. TOW Truck, '66 Chevy, 1 NOW ON~! " n '72' PJAT Needs paint r. bot. $'IOO Too, 6 cyL, Id. colld. l l7l0. Sa1ea -Brand !)OW lfl2 ut 2 <Ir. led, ~cash. No trades. 646-7975. 962-915'1. Putl 8od:r aop aerial No. 12tAClllU. ''2 MOrcas 220 4 Door sedan. 365EA!:. "" MUJt adL Belt otter.1 64&-ml. I '67 PORSCHE. Sliver Good condition. - RENAULT I Dune luftlos ' t56 '69 Cffl"VY .van, v.a. auto, COAST IMPORTS , $199 ---------1 paneled, crpted. 11100. MUii lflOO.UOll W. Oou1 Hwy, • DUNE lluaY • 1964 engine • oell now. m..ms. llwpat Beodl IG-0406 $59.lS PEI 1111 • R.noult Salff & S.rvlco1 blue flake 1.. radio -roll bar -, . . .,_ lor over a decade lD Olup I excellent condition $795. Auto Lt1slng H4, ~ ~ ~~"'!""-air!!: · Cc\W>IJ ~. 1773 Creslmont, • .., ,....... • y •ust .lo. oo 11 ••~ fotal S-. Dept. Open Ill I p.m. C.M. • DATSlllf 240Z tt97Z -· seoo.-.:a. :;...: .. ;;;;ent' .;-l"'ly ~ MEYERS Manx. s tree 1 AUmN CO\IPER $!i&.39 11 the total monthly Jim Sle..--.it · Legal. Alao equipt' for ofi· Auto •• air . magi, (#31C) --• "" PQmept includhii tu, llo-~~:::: elS.:,':r:;: rood. Many extras 61&-3478. Sl 08 '62 AUSTlN COOPl!!R. ..,.., and all finance eha!'ld Trucks 962 Beat offer. °""' m.7755; for 36 '"°"!hit on approved lli!rYlce -154MUI eves, 541-4749 · credit. 'Ibe cash ~e ii Sale• Department 557..0U NEAL MOTORS BONDED DEA LER '71 Otevy " Camper Spee. Air Omd, P.S., P.B., Low miles. one owner. Must Seti. 210C Hl'W 8 1.-c:' C '11a MMI ' ~ J ' \" 1 + Tax per mo. 36 mo. Opd end Seatllem cafdamia 1st llatlilal Bank Lea~ $2)34.<$ lnclutllQ( tax and 7o'Ronauft.16 $Ifft ~ Deferred payment -;::::,,..;::;:;;;:=:;;;;:;:;;:;::::;;;::: Hu Gre<11 with aaddle b> --------1 pr1 .. 11 $2337.114' •.lliCh tn. terlor, Exft 1-Mllet. VIall -DOW -I duties all ttnoneo cbarlet, Mint Ooodldall, (Oll2BLX), l ' ouat -1-~t.o ll t.11. M ... , : SPORTSCAR CENTBI Ill BARIY ., 2S3S Harbor, O>lta Mesa ' IMW I sai.. tax and 11een1e. ""' llLL JONES . ROY C:AR • i.e. l'IAT·l'ONTIAIC~ '70 Mlil aoAosllR 1141M49l •":l!'FC!td Rancbl!ro. New mt 1~~~~ Dr!Ye 1H I:. l'IUI k (lat SI. •t S.A. n-.y,) 'JO 1·18 WAGON paint, trans., brkl. ;nteree~ n4J'l3U620 iJ.31m.o317 Cott.a Mea. • ~ DOE, iat St., Santi Ana t ...... AJW'M, wire tor eng., Roe ... hauled A 71 -21• tflllM l!l8-1Ddo -low -,.., one Fully fa<by equipped (I,. tuned. l6QO. 548-4905. ~ ...-''8 IM......_• $1 ... o.woer. ••r1 dea n. dudlns radio and bealtl'. I .,._... (0UJIEL) . (OGCF,J). ' '69 Fon! F350, stall< body, 22 000 miles, ,like ~ ... lt'a ...,.. with blocl< Int... $1 7 w/electro hyd dump bola!. ~ test dilVe lodll' '(!fS) >or, 5 Spd. ExtN lhllJ> car, II $1411 JOnt cone!. :I0,000 m l . 1"7 oor leue .,...... tor See and Drlvo (WXP'llllJ, "" 1142-6686 for appt to .... AB Sl\OIJtp • S.tldleUoo • -D~l. llLL' JONES QR BEST' dn'ER !Or \\'a)'ltt Gi&n AIL POPULAI\ $5995 SPORTSCAll. CENTER co A (',T OR B!Sf OFFER NEAL MOTOR S BONDED DEAL [R Will bot>' )'Oll1' ~ • For cub toda7 • No 'W'Oftinr, ~ "=." a>llPE'l'lo CRIVlll MOTOU llll -· Cott&o»na' IU c..n,:::n~tor •w.~1;;--'M ;::rm.oo IMPORTS THIODORI , "'"' q, • at>arp. V7.Zlll1. ROBINS POllD Don1 atYe t111 Ibo ablp! FR1Tl! WAJU\EN 1000.l21111W.l'lolfleCl!.8wy. -.uoow. -C..ll'llJI _, -llhll. "Lllt" u fll d•.....,, f1i1t s..rt. Car Center llewport-(714) -port -!ft4) .. ,. °""' 11... -to Shon -II!-. no t . 1al. s.A. 1><1.mt4 -1• tm COAST IMPORTS j I I ' I ~ .. Frtd>J, Juf7 28, 19n 940 Sile/Roni MOTOR · HOMES FOR RENT AD Sizes Available For Rental Complete $1,les & Service Fa cil ity DANMAR MOTOR HOMES l§J I _,_ .. 1§) .__I M_ .. ,.._ .... _l§J I _., .. J~I Aul0t, lmpo<hd 970 A-. i-11d 970 Autoo, lmportld 970 Autoo, 1.._ild 970 Autot, Imported --R ..... E'""NA"""U,.,.,Lc::T-SAA! _____ s;....AA_•__ __,:su::•~AR~U=--1·--i;TO;i;Y-.;O;:;T::A-;-- R•ns:~, ~:.::i·i. '72 SAAB 96 '72 SAAB 99E * SUBA~U * 197211 j;yota "' LoW u $1591 Demonstrator v~ 4 1peed, radio, heater, Full lactory "'arranty. 4 4 SP.EEO, radio, beater, 16,000 m.lles. (WSN924). FRITZ WARREN'S Coroll1 1200 Soden Sport Car Center $49.99 Mo. 9 0RANGE CO UNT Y'S . OR BEST LARGES? Plateau yelkrw, wlutewalla, OFFER no E. ht St., S.A. 547-0764 heater, t1.nted ala.u, wind· OAST ::::..:::.===:,__~-I ahleld waaha-, full recline TOYOTA bucket seats, back-up ltaht" • 002-3822 . - carpeting, and many other IM ORTS V\V Beetle, J971. Sup<>r ,70 TOYOTA Corona extru atandard on this car! Sharp! Like Tl('ll', Undf'r $1195. Good Cond. $125.77 ca1h or trade-I n value l O,tXX) ml. $l8!J:i or bt'St orrer 673-3004 down. $49.99 per mo. tor l®UOO W~ Pacltl.c Cst. Hwy. 535-3319 _ ___ .:;:.:=.:._--I forty.eight months includes Newport Beach (TI4) 642..()406 ---,69-VW BUG QUICK CASH tax and license. Total cash 54ft.4529 ....t 28 OCXl nii. Xtra cJran, 4 sl"" price dellvert'd Lt $m..07. '70 GT6 $1999,00 Must sell. $1'.!93 or best oHer. THROUGH A Total de(erred payment Sharp. 060BQH s.i&-J2)(. . price $2525.29 includl"i tax, FRITZ WARREN ~__::~---1 license, and !Inane< chargH-Sport• Cor ·Center '6tl VIV DAILY PILOT Annual ptteentaa;e rat .e no E. lsl S.A. 547-0764 Nt'''' 1600 enitint: 10.9% on approved cmiit ' Looks sharp! ,.,.., (650878) '69 TRIUMPH S p 1 t f I r e $900 ~l'tO• WANT AD Rdstr. 4 spt'ed, radio, ,71 BUS niusl 5dl, 11.tr cont.I .• BILL MAXEY heat"1, CFOU85230Ll Kelty '""'I '1 P'-"• rad"-Xlnt 642 5678 suggested r\!tail $1550 Our mcch.' corn!. Call 496-5J34, • · J price $1399. Only 21,CKKI . ---·"' N w 'ITIOIYIOITIA miles. DAVE ROSS PON· '69 VIV ""'· "'"' '~u-' $1390 Clearance Sile 3800 miles, like new , lu.11 •pttd trans, am·fm radio. lac .... .,.,,,..,1y tn02941. Demo. (53021. This Weekend $2188 $3199 Unbeatable Pricts OR BEST OFFER COAST ALL 1972 MODELS COAST IN STOC K FOR IMME DI ATE DELI VERY IMPORTS INSTANT CREDIT IMPORTS APPROVAL BANK FINANCING lOC0.1200 W. Paclttc Cit Hwy. COAST 100().1200 W. Paclttc Cit. Hwy. Newport Beach cn4> 642--0406 Newport Beach (tt4) 642.otOO 546-1529 546-1529 IMPORTS TIME FOR SIMCA '67 Slmca 4 Dr. Whlte. Low UJ00-1200 W. P'\:lllc Cit. Hwy. QUICK CASH fn:lleage $400. Good con- Newport Beach ttt4) 50-0400 dltion. Call 64&-143>. Vacancies cost money! Renr THROUGH A Put a little "loot" ln your your house, apt., store Levts -sell those baubles fot blda:., etc. thru a Daily Pilot 642-5678 "bucks". Call Oass!lled . Oa.u.ifled Ad. 64>-5618 • --------I TIAC, 24fl> Harbor Blvd., at. tlr~. e.ns:. Ko~~ .. ~~ Fair 'Dr. , Costa Mesa. 33,000 m1. $1750. ~ · ~7 Prlct effective thru 1970 V\V SUNROOF. XLNT 13801 HAfBOR BLVD., G.G. 31 6800 Motor Hom•• Motor Hom11 Motor Hom11 Motor Homos 18881 Beach Blvd. 11i. ..... 1!!!!! .. l!!!!!!llll!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!...-~S~1l~1~/R~·=nt======~940=iisi1ilel/iRi•intiiiiii'i4ioliis •• 1.e/iRi1iniliiii2'940iiiiiiSi1l1/•R"" .. ';;;;;;;;;;=::940il_~"-~---=~~~~~:::.Bu.~ch~- MID ·suMMER c·Los· ,, E-OUT MOTORHOME . . '72 TOYOTA COROLLA $1966 (+ T. I: L.) or $39.30 MO. l'ULL cash price $2,096.30 in- cluding tax & Ucenae. Down payment is four hundred dollan. $39.30 total monthly payment including interest, tax A license. 35 pay plus balloon payment of $800. Total deferred pay price f.1,515.SO. A.P.R, 11 %. On pre • arrtnied c r e d I t • July 31, 1972 \ COND. $1500. *Ca.II~* * TRIUMPHS * '69 VIV Pop top camP'r-'71 CLOSEOUT Reblt ,,,,_ Clean. 12150- SP!TFIRES AS Ul\V AS S239!I ~64:::2::-1::11:;6·:-...---,,----;:::::-::::.I GT-6 SAVE $500 '66 V\V Bug, ye llow, t\\o new FRITZ WARREN'S t~. very clean, new Sport Car Center brak ... sharp. 1100. 644--Tliil ORANGE CO~N TY 1 S '63 V\V Tran!. with camper. LARGW Comp! rebuilt. Very pxl. 71D E. ht, S.A. 511.mM ~15:::":::·:.:~:::__:=::,· ,--;-~;:o I '70 TR6 $2699\00-•n vw 4ll. • .-. Xlot AM-FM • ~culal;C con. cond. A real b&rpin! Qne owner. 863BEt.J, I 979-(1949. FRITZ WARREN '69 V\V Bus, 7 pur. Sports C11r Cenhr Good rond. $1850 710 E. 1st, S.A. 547-0764 * Call 979-8373 * VOLKSWAGE!f *-;:;I VW panel, low mt. stereo. MUst sen imme<I. $2500, p..s, m-1244. ~,,..,, (300785), ·n vw Camper B u '. Ora.ngl!/whlte top. Shutt¥ window!. Fully equipped. Kelly Suggested retail $l380. OUr price $2699 f876CIBJ DA VE ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair Dr. Costa Mesa. 546-8017 Price effective thru J uly 31, 1912 1966 VW. Rblt eng. Ni!W brakes, Everything e!Ae good too. Clean. 8J3..3860 '68 V W Van . 1 6 00 new/rebuilt engine. Best offer! 548-1517 after Spm NEW '12 PACE ARROW MOTOa.E . coMP\.ETI . aMOfAI ·· fA01C0£ fAC\\i'tY\ ' l lG 20 FT. MODEL with •11tom1tic tr1111ml11ioft, power 1te1ri119, pow· er br1k11, 1p1ci1111 w1rdroh1, b1111tif11lly 1ppolrtfed kitch111 with J ,-burn1r 1!o"t1, forc1d 1111it h11t, cl1l1o1~• b1tJ!room A oth1r l1o1xuri11 tF- s£tt,V\ . • . lf•t.llrDt1l1"41tnlc1St•ll•ttAcc ... M•tt · YOUI IKllAtlCMIAl VIMKLIS IMAIDLISS Of Siii •• '.'t¥hlfl )'OU purdlaM o reueolicml ot ll!«h City Dodo• you con ,.11 ossind your pun:hoM is botkld by tht rlfll$t ond nml ~• · bl. focfory ll'Oirild 191Clolisfs ovollobta. Every mtehanic is tr11intd tohandl• oll of the 1p«lal ~bllms of lorvtf' recrtationol ~thicltt. WI UPllTIY INSTALL ,, '•STEREO SYSTEMS • G£HW.TORS •Iii! CONDITIONING• AWNINGS ANO UNOERCOATl«i TO KEEP OUT ROAD HOISE IN YOUR MOTOR· tttlMI WI SllVKI AU SYITIMS;,. . •aECTRICAl • ENG INf • PlUMBING ! lRAHSMISSIOH • EXTERIOR SURfACU 1 INTERIOR DKOI • 1.WHOLST£RY • AUXllARY POWER PLAHTS • GLASS • Allt CONDmONWG • WE ALSO DO COMPlm ,Q.U,NH;, RENEWAL AJfJ DEOOORIZflG Of THE INTOJOI Of YOUR HOMIOHW!lat NEW'12 DODGE VAN (ONVERSION • Unit c ...... tlil'ilti W llM ~hl..._n lnlo6ilnt, w1ter WJ•/y wit~ •~"If. Ji:.-,......,&M1ta110. ..... """' " .. " ""'111nlr, , 1ter11• cU!n111.125 ''• 5'\,.1jft ttf 1l•11 I 4'11 jt ... , CHI! •rort. Str, ~\lt-Wf*7Jl I WE CUSTOlllZE YU COMrERS IOIS Tt sult tOUI YOUR ·CHOICE PACE-ARROW OR TIOGA f OR ONLY MONTHLY Yt1, th1 ~r111d n1w 1972 P•c1 Arrow or I io91 for only Slt911; only $691 down pl1o11 ttx & Uc1nt1: 1ith1r 1quity far yowr tr1cl1, c11h or • c~mbi111tion of both, 14 monthly P•Y· mints •f $101 •nd 1ppro't1I of yor.ir goocl cr1drt. D1f1rr1d p1ym111f pric1 i11cludl119 t1w, llc•n•• A 111 c1rryi119 ch1r911 is SI0,204.40. Tot1l c11h pric1 i11el1o1dl1t9 <Jtw A lie11111 i1 $7422.40. ANNWAL n acooA•l IATI 11 .01% NEW '72 TIOGA 18 ~ FT. MINl-MOTORHOME --~·;~'•""=....,_'" •• 2 flaor pl1n1' t• cheo11 from , , • 1111,1 ... Optiofttl 6. I ton Docl91 Ch111l1 with d1o11l1, lltO V0 I 1n9i11e, 111tomatl1 tr•111ml1· 11011, pow1r 1te1rln9, pow1r br1k11, s1lf·eo11t1lttM . A tr1me11do1o1t 'l't lue ••• IMMEDIATE/DELIVERY OUT THEY GO, •• CLOSE.OUT PRICE NOW ONLY '6988 NEW BASE PRICE • I NEW'7"2 'MEL MAR MOTORHOME With cholsii mDunt Y-1 ·-.na. Mlmoric ~smtssiain. power stlll'ing.. poww lnka. fUlly Mff-corioirwd. .slteps 4, blauiiMly: · appoinl.111~·S..:1311f2USS744l '30 .DIFFUENT ROOR PLANS ON MO· _TORHj)fAIS AND MINI M9TORHOMES I I I 11ams ''DODGE · Ol'llMAN V·t. ~·frlrllllils!Gn. Miilt .. Ml ............. .,..""' ...-i1 IMM.\O..U,TU IJ71f18) nmteAUi& -TOYOTA 646-9303 '71 Toyota Corolla Radio, heater, low low m iles. 141CKZ. $149S '70 Toyo!• Coroll1 Radio, heater, excellent con- dition. 792BQI, $12'5 ~ 170-Tuyota Mark II 2 Door. 4 Cylinder, 4 speed, factory air conditioning, 22,235 careful m 11 e • • (675BZ'l') Bargain. $1799 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Col!ta Mesa 54~1203 -,69-Y.W~WAGON * '64 VW. GD. COND. * $400. 673-1:>36; 646-7588 1'1UST aell, '69 Billl. Split seat-Ex cel rond. $1 7 7 5 . Auto m at i c transmission, ~· roof rack. ('153FVW). '63 VW Convertible $1599 $625. * 963-2141 CONN°ELL \VANTEJ}-VW body W/lranl CHEVROLET axle ~ IUlll'OOf in &OOd cond. 2828 HarlJp" Blvd.. 6'0-1639 alt 5 pm. Costa Mesa 1 546-1Xl3 '67 vw sunroof~ AM/FM. '71 VW Stltion Wogon dell!, 1695- 9 pass. Bus. One O\\'ner =~-=644-~5687-~--=--,-, 14,<XXI. 460CBY. '67 VW. Xlnt cond. Reblt $2399 e,,.lnc. lDw Down Low Terms 66Z-1ll9 PHONE 645-5799 ---.,-,,68"'°"B"'u"s--:*-- M1RACLE MAZDA XLNT CONDm ON'. 2145 Harbor Blvd. 644-2420 aft 5 pm Cost& Mesa MUST Sell -'66 VW bul. '65 Ghia $AVE R<btt 1600 ""'· ean 962-89<5. Yellow with Black inte rior, anytime. 31.<XXI mile one owner car, _:.,,6=1~8~ug-.~R~e=bl~t-.,,.-. -I What a beauty, (NRA403). New pa.Int. Top cond. BILL JONES 1915. 64HWJ ll.H"\$' SPORTSCAR CENTER * '68 Squarobaok, new pa1n~ • "" 2833 Ham>r, Costa 1t1esa engine. Xtra clean. $1150 • • .ten ~ . 64S-C520 or 6U-12l.L Toyoto .. J...U o..i.. Autbc<lad llalsolSorvfco 900 S. Cout HJabwa, Laauo• Beach 540-noo -""'6'""t '"'VW-==-=$119t.00 ATTENTION '64 VW Van. Very clean. One owner. ZSH· Reblt trans. Xlnt runnin& 285. cond. Cult int 53M974. FRITZ WAR REN DEPENDABLE '62 VW Sports Car Center sunroof, xlnt engine, $450. er '69 TOYOTA Corona sedan. 4 no E. 1st, S.A. 547-0764 best oHer. 494-8467. speed, radio, heater . good --,6-SVw $699 MUST sell. '61 VW bt.JI. miles. (ZDY193) S 11 5 1 • M Theodore Robins Ford, 2000 VCT"J clean -runs perfect. any xtrru;. Mu.st see to ap- Harbor Blvd., 2060 Harbor REE060 pre<:. $850. 642-9646. Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010. FRITZ WARREN 'TI VW sqbk. RMI. 4 spd. ***** T ta Corolla Sports Ca r Center Michelin tires. Warranty, ,~ 2 cir ta.,.. , pd no E. 1st, s.A. 5'1-0764 l2450. 638--9401, ll-5pm. ..........,, ., I wagon, $ " 20,<XX> orig mi Xlnt. '69 FASTBACK. Immaculate. VW Karmann Ghia, 1966. l cond. $1095. 833-128C Auto, AM/FM, &fr, 30,000 owner. Vf=T"y c 1 e a n . mJ. Sell Blue Boo k Everything orig. Askin& TllUMPH '69 TR6 $2299.00 Sharp -lug rack -Ai.\t:-F1tt'. !l03E:fC. rn.ITZ WARREN Sport• Cu c.,,,., 7ID E. 1'!, S.A. 5'1-ll~ '61 Spitfire $119'.00 Perfect c:oJ\d. • hi a out FRITZ WARREN Sports Cir c..,1or no E. i.t; S.A. S<T-0764 wholesale. 644-2199 or $795. 846-7308. 640-1136. '68 bul, Sundial campel'. '70 VW Camper MAKE OFFER. * 5.1&-0288 l!Yet * Immaculate, Bubble Top, ;;::;-=,-;;,-=:=--;:7-,::...- Ready to go, 100% financing '67 Bug. Sunroof. Reblt enr. avail O.A.C. 897-0'l24. New trans. lmma.c in 6: out '68 vw BUG 1815/otter. 66-'989. '16 WH!TE VW bu&. Xint 4 .peed, radk>, bl!ater, $995 cone!. $975, or &MUme loan. or best ofter 64M687. 548--0301 before 2:30 pm. The 1astest draw tn the West. VW bug, Meehan. J)elf. New • • .a Dally Pilot Clucllied t.,..,, body lo gd cond. ;l15 Ad. _., S<;.3400, • '" ,._ --. ,_., ·. " -' '1 ' "' . "' I I- I ... j. I : "ll' ' I .t'!J I I .,, ,, ' • • I i· -' ' I • I , .. 1 .. I -r~ I .. ' 1--, 4 SPEED trans., air cond .. AM·FM low mileace (526AUX). $2399 OR BEST OFFER COAST IMPORTS CADILLAC "°-.u- CADILl.AC f rldiy, Ju~ 28, 1972 -1971 CADILLAC '72 CADILLAC SACRIFICE, must ,.u, •n 1910 Chev. Omcoun Eltate, '69 Impala Sport Cpe. ~ DORADO Camaro. Inquire Ookwood 8 Pau. Sta. Win. Pwr. ~"'Y ·--·~ full --· CONVERTIBLE s~nlll DE VILLE ..... 1100 16th St, Apt Steering " brakes AM-FM V.S, automatle, faetory alt, 'u~ -· ~·-· Truly the !ineat ol the ' great Ullln G-102, Nowport Beaeh. Stereo eadlo, t111 l!eer. whl. factory air, AM·FM •lel'EQ line of automobiltt. Luxury 1967 atEVY van. 327 eng Factory Air, lu.uase rack, PoV.'ef' brakes, PoWer lteef. tape, vlny$439J top. 5(424CFQ). ta everywhere. Only 10,211 FULL power, factory alr, stlck, Good abaPt, $1650: new tlret 4 brakes. Panel· ~. ~~u 1~~1, local miles. Fact. air oond., vinyl top, am·fm stereo, low 536-5493. lng, Aaldng $3100. 557-4861. Outs tanding buy. lull power, tilt 1: tel~ic m'fle1 , 1er. no . '68 Che V $1634 ··---AM·™ 60491121191908· "" ""' """"· ..... i. '68 Impala Custom · , , , $6495 xln't eond 1 owner. CONNELL stereo w/multlptex tape, ~. . CHEVROLET trunk k>Ck a sentinel that ==-_,,....,,,,....,,~-= tum& your liahta oa A off 1or MUsr aeU '51" Chevy, 283 COUPE, Factory Air, (VZU· 2828 Harbor Blvd. you. Plus a bost ot features ORCBESTOAOSFFERT ~ rond. $225. Pb. 549> Sl49S, dlr. 836-GS35. Costa l\1esa 546-Wl to brln&: the thrill of motor-'66 Caprice, 9 pass wa&. Like to trade? Our Trader71 in& back to you. (01'8CXW). For that item under $50, try Loaded, $750. P aradise column ts for you! OR BEST . OFFER COAST IMPORTS • SALE;::: IMPORTS :,::: Motor::-~:-:·~:::orsbuck3. ~~ 1000.1200 W. Paelllo Cat. Hwy, UJ00.1200 W. Pacl!ie ~" Hwy. N-~ Be eh m4l - Newpcrtl!eedl<n4l w.0406 ··~· ~ 54&--4529 1972, VOLVO Lo-Tod,y ot Bott RolH $11.74 Per Mo. Cadillac Solo/Rift! · 94CI Solo/Roni 940 Solo/Rent 940 '69 BillCK Skylark H.T. Cpe. UW.1200 W. Pae111e Cat, Hwy, I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~ Robinl blue/white vinyl 2600 HARBOR BL., Newport Beaeh <n-0 642-0406 11 top, VS, auto, P.S., tilt COSTA MESA 54&-4529 wheel, low m 11 e •I e · 541J.9100 ' Open Sllllday 1971 CADILLAC (YCM'/04! Kelly auaested '71 Sod. do ,Ville $5695 FACTORY• AIR retail $2440 Our price $2199 This local beauty has very CONDmONING YOUR NEWLY APPOINTED O.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. trans., -brakel.36'1no. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd at Fair low mileage • only 14,769 Vinyl tpp, p1ulh full leather ·n Co t M~ .. 546-8017 miles, factory air condltioJt. interior, full ~. tilt I: ~~ ,~.:tive ou'.u July 31, ln&', custom padded' top, telescopic steering, stereo, TIOGA COROLLA $1966·. S39.30 MO. • hH -price S2,ot6:ll loo chtdl"f fd <& lkMM. hwti -~,_~ ... ltn. SJt,JO ' ...... ...;wy For LoHlnt or buyint j>~lt 1972 power windoWs and seatl, door locks, new WSW tire•. • _. AM-FM stereo. Must aee. An exceptional value at this ·n BUICK Opel, 2 Dr. 't (132051).' . low sale price (llBCQIJ. 1peed, R&H. 12,500 miles. "BIIJ.. WHITLEDGE'S'' $Sm 1S66 HarljOr. C.M, 646-9303 (597DLI) KeyY 8~ Sunnt Motors :;'!~E ''3:o:' ~~IAC: 1970 Harbor Blvd. .a, Nabers U Cadillac: '70 ,Volvo 164 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair Costa Mesa 645-6677 AM/FM radio, air condltlon- irc. a.utomatic trans, like new. 743BQJ. Dr., Costa Meaa. 546-8017 YOUR ONLY Price effective thru July 31, 2600 HARBOR BL.. $2695 1972. '68 BUICK Riviera, full power, air, AM/FM stereo. xlnt "!l"'I· $2450. 84&-2191, CADILLAC 1969 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE Factol'y air conditioning, full1 ZDG625. Immaculate car • power, vinyl top, plush 1ull air. One O'Nner. lea~ interior, tilt A uqe- $2699.00 scopic 11.eering, door 1ocU &: FRITZ WARREN a host of other deluxe xtras. no E. 111., S.A. 547--0764 Truly an exceptional value 540-2512 at this low price. FACTORY AUTHORIZED COi;rA MESA 54().9100 Open Sund.,. '69 Cad Sedan de Ville, 39,000 , DEALER mL Orig. own. Xlnt eond 9 • l.arplt .election of C:adil4 AM/FM. 1tereo $ 3 4 5 • la~ m 0ranp eoun~ 546-0701. CADILLAC Saies--IAYJne. --------.c=-Naben CAMMO U Cadillac: 2600 HARBOR BL, COSTA MESA NEAL MOTORS BONDED OEALER 540.9100 Open Sunday Wtll buy "'"' Comar!> -For '70 Seel. do Ville $4395 c:ash t,,.iay • No waltlng.' Beautiful low mileage car 2100 Ha1bot Blvd Casia Mesa 6 4 5 , 1!)1 MOTOR HOME DEALER ~­ ~ 181/2' FULLY SELF CONTAINED TIOGA MOTOR HOME ~.64~V'""'o1-.o-·p·1aoo $999.® $:1414 Air • Runs pertoetly. OPE861. • Naben FRITZ W AR!tlll Sparta Car Center Cadillac: 11D E. ht, S.A. .}47-0164 2600 HARBOR BL., '58 VOLVO, '62 motor, COSfA MESA neect5 work $100 540-9100 Open Sunday 513-4513 aft•r S. pm • '72 Cod FIMtwood 'Wlth only 34,0TI miles, AM·l--'------FM stettO, power seats, power windowll, tilt " tele CHEVROLET steering wheel. Priced to _______ ...__ .. u. <329EKS>. '70 Town-W-··sILL WHITLEDGE'S" .Wllllll ••-• Sunht Motors 1970 H1rbo< Blvd. VI, Automatic, Powee S...,._ Cotto M.10 645-6677 ~4113B11L: f1995, dlr. Sleeps four or six I with optional rtar pull-down bunk I. fei1tures lar9t l- shape dinette, convertible to a "48" x 88 " bed. lar9e cab over bed with ladder will easily accommodate two adults. Convenient chi1n9ing are• between large bathroom and wardrobe can be made private with optional divider curtain. All appliences are n1me brand. Ed r1 l•rge galley is coordinated with stove and refrigerator for single are• cooking con· ve nience. This plan iS' ch1r1ct1riz1d by its open, specious feeling. VOLVO '68, 23,llOO ml. Im· BROUGHAM SEDAN. maculate. new radial ti.res, All extru. 4% mos old. lp,000 $1&'<), 54S-8001. ml. Call Mr. Talbot, 835-3500, ~~-=T.:::;:C---1990iiii I Mon-Fri, ~ .... ' 1-~-"--':...,--,=.,...-,,~ -=======-'66 Blue Coupe de Ville Cad. TRANSPORTATION Afr.cone!. $1<XXI. 96247"0 '66 Dodge Dart wagon. Automatic. (TG~}. $11!9·~ '&I Chev. Malibu. W~n. Air. P.S .• auto. <ULH752). $599. '68 Cad, 36,600 mi. New 411,0tlO -~ "° ~ · + • ~ereo. ltbr, • Wiy1 top, door locks, etC. $2495. 644-1288. '69 ELDORADO '64 Chev. 'Malibu cpe. Auto., radio, babket seats, console. tREC733) $699. FACI'ORY Air, full power '68 Ford iFairlane 500 2 Dr. (~~) $3595. Dealer • H.T. power steering. Radio,-~--·----­ air, auto. CVRT678l $1099. '63 Lincoln 4 Dr. Continental. Auto., P:S., •uto,., above aveeage,j YW1"9'll!). $499. 19~2 COUPE DE ·VILLE '65 Oi<h c;)ltlaM 2 Dr. P.S., Full powtr, faetory alt, vinyl automatit, radio. (TXU988) top, cl<!th I: leatJ;ier interior, $599 tilt wheel, AM·FM radio, '66 Mustang. (REV441l fl99, fully 'C(Ulpped. Extremely '68 Camivo Cpe. S .S. low mileage. (234622). (ZKZ58l) $1099. • .... CONNELL' ~ · CHEVROLET 1828 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa SKJ-120.1 IUICK '62 Burck Convertible Good condition. Clean. fl50 I* 646-:m5 ~ HARBOR BL., , COl;fA MESA 54().9100 Open Sunday 970 A-. Imported 970 1970 CADILLAC '71 Chevy Impala COUPE DE VIl.LE (194CXV) Full Power, dlr, FACTORY AIR Air Cond, I.ow miles, Call CONDITIONING 546-8736 aft 10 am 49f..68ll. Full power, padded top,1---,----- beauWul cloth I: leather in-IMPALA ~· 4 dr., clean m. terior tilt I: telescopic steer-out, fact air, PB/PS, .tll:H. ' recent eng work. Good buy Ing, atereo, ,~_loci\!: new at $650 eve& 546-3627 -..... WSW ti.res, JUW mueage. · • Gem that shows xlnt. care '66 CHE\1EU.E XKt Detux. 4- lnslde & oul (Ser. 13701DJ 4 door, 8 cy~ .R/H. 28,500 others to thoose trom. miles. Immac. f775 .or· ~It Prices start at offer. Aft 5 pm-675-0469. Take Advantate Of Our LOW Introductory PRICES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CREVIER MOTOR HOMES 208 : vi~:· I It STRln, SANTA ANA 135.31·51 $4444 Autos, ln>portod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autot, Imported ..ai, Nabers 9 Caclilac:. 2600 HARBOR BL., · COl;fA MESA 541J.9100 Open Sunday '70 EL DORADO Excellent condition. Full lux~ ""' oqulppa!, including full po we r I: factory air. 701AGK. Mmt be seen to be apprelcatecf. $5095 Drive a . . '. ' 1DATSU.N ' Plant a TREE! , For-,,..-• -cM111 a NEW DATSUN, NIH• Motor Co. la callj•t:tloa wltll tlia Natl1aal VACATION -SPECIAL "-"' s.r'lice wll plcmlt • --la ,_. -· Alie FREE to yea la -•--a A..i Ad •n scllllc pelter. BRAND N1W '72 YW POP TOP CAMPEil FUU T saP C:OllTAllllD lllCLUDIM •IANT TlllT. I 1m U'L HUSnER l'ICIUP MODIL 111 u, .. 21 111111" ,_ ...... MN ..... ,..ay. All ,;.yl w.Mr, 3.,,..4 he1t.r/41f....., -.e .,.. ..,_ I --· ..... ,..4 ... tyMllftl ~ ONLY '2286 BRAND NEW • 1m DATSUN "1200" 2-DOOa•All St*•"' ..,,,.,.... ....... ...-..;, .,, .... ,, wt.a.. •• 11 t;,. .. i....,., ...................... 4·•,.H. .11 "f"C"'• tt111t. ' ...... ..,. ......... .,., 30 -"" ,_ ,.11.., S..-. H .. Lit tflJMIL '2026 970 ,., .................... . ,,.,..,,.._,_ 4 Spwl. ..... M••· #U221122141. MmJ, Te Cli1110 ...._ ef ,.... ,_. .... 1114 ,.., prk• SJ,IJS.10 A.P.ll. 11 ,_ 0.,,..... ......... tJ ... 7111. '9532 ~WM Sft532 PU PAYMINT • ., MONTH ft5.J2 '(hf1I 411. "'"'· ftl,Jt It tot1I Me, ,.,..t. l11ct. t1w, •1i lic•M• I 111 fl•1Rc1 chart" .p .,,,..,.. crMlt Mr H 11111. DtfenMI flYIJlf. Itri•• MOl4.2t. ~-· •" ._,.,. c1'1rt"• hu., '72 llc1"'1 ., If you ,,.,., t• t•'f c11h, ft.II ••• pl'1c1 lrf'4'161.19 IML 11le1 t1r,1 '71 lie ..... ANNUAL PIRClNTAW lATE I 0.11, ova 150 lllW ' USED YW'~· ' POUCHES :ro CHOOll FROM -OPEN SUNDAY 1 I l DAILY PILOT FREE DEMO OVERNIGHT TO TEST DRIVE BUY or LEASE 1972 VOLVO 2 Dl .SEDAll DEAN LEWIS $78 DWN. 58676 r .. Mo. Cuh price la $3550. plus tax &. license. Deferred payment includes bal- loon of $1425 plus 35 poy· mont1 of $16.76. Totol deferred $4539.60. An- nual Percentage R•te 11.00't.. l .l l I I l §11 Step Up To Luxurx .. · ,, Excellent selection of previously owned Mark Ill's and Continentals. '' ' " ' ' I !1 , I fr ; I " . . . '! :, .. ,. 1: .. ,, I I ,, ' : . • . '• .. ,• .. '. ,. ,. ·; ' i ! • l • ! 1970MARKID lmnureulate , Glamour.mist ginger/matching leather Interior/white glamour vblYI roof. Equipped with every luxury feature. Full power, climate control air cond., Individual power front seats, power door locks, tilt wheel , cruisomatic, AM/FM stereo _radio. SALE! ·-· Outstanding Gro~p Of Choice Cars! 1970 ,C&dillac IL DORADO $4975 , 1971 Pinto RUNABOUT 2000 e.e. Brom:e mist metallic/matching buck-et seats. i4 spMd, radio. heater, tery Clean.· (6850Lll).. $1875 ' 1971 Ford LTD CONVERTIBLE Beautiful red with black 1.op, V8, automatic. power steering & brakes, air conditioning, excellent condition. (501EJO). Sale priced. $2675 1971 Capri "THI SIXY EUROPEAN" Polar wbite/burlUl'ldy interior, buck- et 1eats. decor group, 4' 1j>eed. rldio. : helter, $ee and drlve. (879BND). S&l• pl'\<:ed. $2175 1971 Maverick _ I OWllJi,R 15,009 MILES • 2 door. Arctic white/contqutlng blue plaid interior, VS, automatic, factory air, power steering, chrome window mouldings. See and drive, like new. (338DZQ) Sale Priced 1971 Mercedes 210SI 4 DOOR · 11,000 miles. Desert beige with brown Landau and si.ddJe tone 'interior. Luxury equipped Incl Automatic. AM-FM radio, air cOnd., power steel'<> tng & brakes, power )Yindow& ·See and drive. (414ELU) $6875 ALWAYS A GREAT SELECTION · OF TOP QUALITY CARS ... "Onma• Counll/'1 Famflu of Fine Carl" ohnson&son \ t 1 '1 111~y 2826 HARBOR BLyD,. COSTA MESA • 640·6830 JlAlme Of The New Car ••• "G•l•e• To11e1'" J§)l ~I ;;;Autos1or;;;s.1e;;;;j~~~:I 990 Autos, U1o<1 990 Autos, Used 990 -for- CHEVROLET ' •.. CHEVROlEr ... '61 MALIBU convertible, 4-'64 Malibu Wgn. 283 enr. 3 (2) 19Q) au:vr Sta. wens.. '66 Chev. "Caprice" radial '64 CORVAm Convert. '72 CHEV. Blazer. 4 spd., . . wagon Less than 2'XMl mllel. on.the-floor, top cond. $725. aeat. $425. '1250 Corsican $100. for both. tlrel. Ste to appreciate. -76M Rd., H.B. 841~. 536-2394 $00). 5#J417 Automatic, radK>, heater, CK£iB2F1Bl4.1S) Must See. good miles. (0ML156J. $451 < · C ••M Theodore Robins Ford, ~ DAVE ROSS pONTIA ' ._ Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. llarbor Blvd. at Fair Dr., '62 CllEVY Impala, $130. CHEVY Impala SS, 1962. In '* "65 . CHEVY. GOOD "67 EL CAMINO, new titt" New starter, muter cyl. Mint eond. Lots o1 xtru .. COND. '.$451). or Beat otter. PI S, air, tonneau cover, lo Tires Id. Call 615-0:m. $425. 67>4i90. ~ Alttt 6. ml, $1550. 846-2194. &tZ-0010. , Costa l'tlesa. 546-8017. Autos, N.W 980 Autos, New 980-Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autoi, New 9IO DISCOUNT- FROM MM. WINDOW STIClll PllCI 2H440506 New '1972 Electra Custom LTD 4 Qoor Hardtop. Fun power, factory equip.pod plus tho following luxury options. Sono-matic radio, rear speakers, white waU tires, fac~ory air conditioning, tintid .glass, pow8r steering, tilt' steering wheel, custom limited interior & custom top. Window sticker pric' $6988.21>. Bauer Price $5788.26. ------BRAND NEW 1972 RIVIERA-------. $1 DISCOUNT NOM. MFG. WINDOW mcm PllCI 2H91 6•1 Ntw '1972 Riviera. Full power, factory equipptCI plus t'!ie following luxury options. AM/FM stereo ridio, 'white side walls, factory air conditioning, tinted glass, 60-40 custom interior with· 1\ way power se1t driver & passenger sides. Power ·windows, cruise-control, elec- tric door loch, chrome wheels, custom vinyl lop. Window stitker ,.-ic~ $7083.85. Bauer Price $5883.05. OP .EL SA .LE! . , CAR & DRIVER ,..agazl11e in unbiased c0mpetition test rated Gene.ral Mo- ton, Buick Opel 19~0 ,~es over Capri, Pinto, Vega, Toyota & Mazda. ---BRAND· NEW 1972 OPEL STATION WAGON--------. $ +Tax & Lie, N•w '1972 · Opol St•lion Wagon. Full l•clory equipped Including full syrichromesh trensmission1 heeter, defroster, flo thru ventiletion, luggege teclc, plus white side well tires, Delco radio & tinted windshield. . •392576825 ,\ BRAND NEW 1972 OPEL $EDAN------ $ +Tax & Lie. New 1972 Opel Seden. Full feelory equipped includ- ing full syncromesh trensmission, heater, defroster, flo thru 'f'tntilttion, plus white tide well tires, DelFo rodio, #639567233. ' OVER 60 BAUER BUICK USED CARS ON SALE!!' ' '70 TOYOTA MARK II 2 Door Hardtop. Radio, heater • automatic tl'aru!. (735BHK) $1595 '6t '°NTIAC IONNIYIUI ' $1995 4 Door. Automatic Uanl., power 1tffrlng, power brakel, power wiqdows, landau top. (VCNMl). Week~ S~ • 01_1_o_P_n_1t_o_o------~~-6-9~5 4 Door Sedan. Automatic trans· mission, radio. heat~~ only 15,000 miles. (lBODQV) 2000 CC. AulomaUc trammlsllon, AM/ ·n c:APll • · • 52395 FM radio.· cuatom mags. Better hurry for ~one. Onl7 13,000 mlleL C324CTN) • '71 YIGA HATCHIACll 4 speed, railiO, beater, only 13,000 mlles. (015DCH) • Won't tut long at 51795 i:.!~~~e!~.~::. ~~~~~win .• •54695 R.lH, V,•W tire, tint glass, lug rack, CUit. vinyl lrlt.. 0/llde wood •appUque, tilt whl ... . " I • TREMENDOUS TRADE IN ALl,OWANCE fl()~· YOUR l,!SED CAR • WE HAVE A GIANT USED CAR FACllJT'f. i. WE N~D YOUR CAil OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK e STORE HOURS e 1110 A.M. tllf f P.M. M_ .... M4ty l :JO A.M. tll 6 P.M, s....., 11 A.M. tll 6 P.M. hMoy e SERVICE HOUR$ e 7:11A.M.Ill1111 P.M. M_ .... M4ty CloeN 1111•"1 & ....., "SERVICE TO· BELIEVI INw .. ' Frld11, July 28, 19n DAil Y l'llOI' I ........... l§J I -.. ~ 1§11 ---l§l I --... 1§11· _ _,,. l§J I .... "'.. 1§11 -·.. l§l I -.... I~ 990 ;Au;~;•;.~u;..,.;;;;;;~~ --- A-. UMo 990 Autos, .Uted 990 Au*, Used 990 Autos, Used 1--------' ,._....;. ____ ~ CHEVROLET CORVEfiE FORD GREMUN .. . .. . . . . , ., . . . lr1nd New Im flOAlllM,U...S MAVERICK 990 Aui.o. Uood 990 Aui.o. ~ OLDSMOBILE PON11AC '68 Pontiac: PONTIAC 1""'" s=rA=·no=N'"""" wA=GO=Ns"""· ~·1 -'""'•5"""'7 'VETT=E,__ GREMLINS '71 MAVERICK '69 OLDS 98 FULLY l~tncy equipped. l SEDAN speed trans., radio, l><'attt. 4 Dr. H.'f. Fun power, lac- •n LE MANS Bonneville ~~ ,_ ~-la 2 2 Dr. H.T. Vllzyl IOp, v!Jzyl ~...,. ~"' ~•• ~uni e Interior, tnctory air, radio, dr., !Ar-Mane:, must se_e to healer \VS\V l)OWer atrer- appttelate. Serial No • ing A 'brakes: Low mUeage '62 GOLD O»va!r, nma. '100. "' lat tllor. - NOW THIU AU5UST 10 ' 15°10 DISCOUNT FROM FACTORY STICKER PRICE On Any New 'Z2 Buick Elo~r• 225, Riviera or Estate Wagon In Our' Stock 14°10 01seouNT FROM FACTORY STICKER PRICE On Any Le S.bre or Le S.bre Custoin In Our Stock 11°10 DISCOUNT FROM FACTORY STICKER PllCE On Any S~ or styln Custom In Our Stock SPECIAL LOW PRICES ·On Al ~pell In Stool,. • -' '' ... •, '· ~ IOW-•-n • Since 19U ·Ith I Welnut .-----. Huntl""°" hoch •• (37AS0). tncy air, Vll\YI top, Alll-F!ll $1299 radio, Ult • t.ie. whe.i, new -.·bite wall tires. liard to find uy cleaner. fl'O'rJOS) •. $2666. 2027!>2P119847. local 1 owner cu In hn· $325 DOWN p«:<:able coodltlob. <WQM· 143). $85.8.1 PER MO. $1999 Y••· just 1325 11 ..., 10,.1 Nabers down payment and only Cadillac mo Ftreb1n1 350. x1nt cond. $2300 or St-st otter. Home 6'5-1753; bwo. ~ .... tor John. '55 CLASSIC G.M.C. PICKUP ••••• CMfTy llll'IUndY -Hurry On This OMI -(tll ESE) $85.81 ia the total monthly 2600 HARBOit BL., payment including t ax COST A r.1ESA RAMBLER license and all finance 540-9100 Open Sundny --------cbargea tor 36 months on ----~----'-1966 Rambler Rogue hard top· approved credit. The cash '69 Bonne Cpe. - 6 CyL, auto, nice little cu. prlce is $2993.85 Including $259S $495-5'!9-2625. tax and license. Dcfcn-ed Factory a.ir conditioning, payment prl~ is $3-114.16 po'''cr 'vindows. tilt ste{!r· \Vbich includes all linance ing 1vheel, cniise control, charges, sales tax and door Jocks, padded top, only license. Annual percentage Z7,R72 n1ilcs. (()53C01). rate is 9.76. "BILL \\llJTUIDGE'S" BILL BARRY Sunset Motors 1970 Harbor Blvd .. Costa M,,. 64>6677 T-BIRD T-BTRD '66, otean blue, air, ps/disc brakes, pwr \vin- do1vs, xlnt mcch cond. $850. MG-3444. VALIANT 1 -~--~--~ '67. Po11tiac Le ~fans hrdlp, '61 VALIANT SfA. WGN, 50,000 mi's. p/s, p/b, air. R&H. NE\V BRKS. $1050. 510-4-076. nuns cd-$125. 540-3199 $Jl95 FULL PRICE + tax & lie. Price Includes Our Excluslwe AMC layer Protection Pkln BRAND NEW 1972 GREMLINS HUGE STOCK All models & color1 available for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1972 Hornets, 4 Or s, 2 Ors, & Sportabout Models No vailable With Air Conditioning At No Extra Charge '72 GREMUN Custom Bucket Interior, Luaal• Rack, Big 6, Full Syncromeah Transmission. (A114888) $2195 '71 TOYOTA MK 11 . 2 Dr. Cpe. Auto. Trans., Air Cond, Low Mileage. {567CID) $2195 '71 JAYILIN Leu than 11,000 mllel. See to ·~te. (373DDZ). Come In and - SAYE '65 AMBASSADOR Wagon. 9 Passenger. V-8, Air Cond., Excellent Transportation. (ZZG897) S595 .Prlc•t Effective thn1 Mo"·• J1i1fy 31 , 19 72 •$lOf5, .'67 VW S9UAREBACK .............. $995 N"' Rtd P•lnt, SMrpl A ~. (VOX •311 '61 , VW PICKUP ........•••••••••.. $695 '69 AUSTIN AMERICA .. , .•.•.•.••.. $895 DMa CO. liJllC'I""" Rennllli"OMdlT!on.. (t/ll1Mll • , , , '68 FIAT SPIDER .. , .•............. $1 088 ......... CllldltlDn. Ntw TGP, IX!Y '20). Ir~ Rtd W/llldl lnlttlof. '56 . vw BUG I ' .................... $4?.5 Rta1N c.tlrn lvdr.tt ktfi, Cleulc Condition, (OPI '7JI ·sa ·vw BUG ..................... $399 A ....... """-' ......,, CHYH '4fl '71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON ....... $1999 SllDWNIMl't Cditllfl, RMlt, 4 Spttd, PolytleJI Tim. ("7 ODVI '69 VW BUS ..................... $2195 lhlt, llldlt. .....,.., • ,,_., C*°2Utfl '71 VW SUPER BUG ............... $189 5 '64 VW BUQ. ..................... $69 9 •'9clt. ..... .......,,~ cowe "'' A SPMd. IYXl 2'01 '67 JEEP . .. . . . . . . .. .... .. .. . . . . . $~ 5!~ • Vt'tlftl Dl'lve, CJSA -New s.rld Tires -Ntw C.Miry P1 tnt. This Wffli:t!W Ontyt Lk, I• OIMI '69 MUSTANG MACH I ......... ,.$1795 GT. A S,_., • COllrl Jtt, Lott of GeodlH, (YRX 110) '64 VW CAMPER BUS ........... ; . $12'15 4 Speed, 1411 IQEI '70 KARMANN GHIA ............ _$1695 Jled, lltd19. Helter, A Speed, (IU 151) '67 VW BUG ................••••. $1 OfS RMlo. UgtJt 11119 w"" 111<11: ll'lllfflOt, Htnl Tl Ott. CUGJ ltJI '68 vw WESTPHAUA CAMPER-.-.-. -.. --s .... z3""9~5 ,_.loP, Ntw Tlr., 1tM1t. HMIW, 4 ....... CODI ATOI '71 VW PANEL BUS .......• , , • , ••• $_229i Clnlry ......... 4 .,..,, Pl'Wlt Diie ........ f)4l6 IZV) '70 VW BUGo .. · .... • ..... · ...... 51495 '69 VW S"'UAREIACK $179" °'"' "'-..... ·-IA< OlV) ' ,.. " " " ' " '.,. ,.-All*Nllk, AW Condtllol'IJrll, Low LtW M .... (10'1' t•I '70 VW SEDAN ........... , ...... $1495 '69 VW SEDAN ' $1395 ·--.... "'· ..... """'· -,. ........ ., . . . . ............ . Gtlbbtt or.nee. l,ob Of btl'ttl o.,... Wl'lffr .. Ownlted Tlrn. n• ACAi •71 · VW 411 WAQ.ON . .' ......... $2795 '69 VW CAMPER -$2595 ·-. ......, -. -. ..... -.. _ ............ '"''•• .............. . , $2395. lllndl1I Dtlullir, 1iu._ WJ...._,-CMl"li&t !'MIM Ftf l.ot& Of ............ Jc. •• ,,.•) '69 VW KOMll BUS .. . .. .. • . .. . . '69 VW DELUXE B"S $2295 W,_, ._. _T ____ .... ., __ ....., ._T,...... U • • • • • • • • • • • • • . c:.trftly't ~ .,..,...., Of Y.W. i8'tw1 .. 1M ~ U&. l'rlM NO ltlCllo, All' c.I,, W/Stw, Tlr9, -'--111-. Tllh .,._.,.. On~ -l k. I~ 111 • I ' . ril BEAUTIFUL LOW MILEAGE STAFF AND EXECUTIVE CARS AT TRULY UNIQUE SAVINGS!. ' .. CH SE FROM .(UTLASS'S-98's-88's WHILE . ... .. lH:EY LAST! . . WHI E THEY A· T! IMMACULATE 1971· HON·DA CARS ONLY • YOUR, CHOICE • OUTSTANDING USED CAR . ! ·~ ·* - . . . V~lUE.S ! HURRY! . ~70 OiDS 98 LUxuay·sED. '70 OLDS VISTA CRUISER . ~ r .· Full pow•r, fecfory eir $ , · · cqndifionin9, vinyl roof, . : ' AM-FM, ate. · 9 Pa$S. Auto., power steer-$ ,in9 & br1k•s, 1ir condi- tioning, roof rack. · l296BELI ·A .FEW ·LEFT ' . . _'69 'BUICK SKYLARK . '72 HONDA CAR DEMO. TO CHOOSE , ri1dio, heater_, power s~eer- ' 2 Dr. H.T. V8, i1utom•tic, $ ' in91 vinyl roof, f1ctory FROM! ' EXAMPLE BRAND NEW ·1972 CUTLASS HARDTOP COUPE - LO~QEO: F•ctory Air Conditioning • Turbo Hydram•tic Tr1n1. ,e Power Stffrln'g' e· PoWer Disc Brakes • Vinyl Roof • Deluxe Radio • White-, *•1.11 • Sporty Louvared Hood • Full Wheel Oisu • Tinted Gl111 • Plu1 inuch·much more. (3F87H2Z135514). ' .. SPECIALLY PRICED AT s· 00 ' I 1ir conditioning. IZDH-. 2861 '70 HONDA CAR ·Radio, heater, 4 spe9d $ transmission. (l62CQRI " • ' '67 BUICK ELECTRA • 4 Or. H.T. Full power, f•c· $ tory air conditioning, vinyl roof. I U DU004 I '66 OLDS DELTA 88 V8, •UfOm•tic, r. d j 0 I heaf•f, power steerin9 & bra~es, f1ctory air condi~ tioning. ISJN7841 Iv•.· . . t I . ' Fully equipped. $ ' IE10~14531 · . . '66 TORONADo· R&H,' power steering & brakes, 1utom1tic, factory $11 '6 CHEV. 3/.t Ton w/Camper . '67 KARMANN GHIA ITQM199) ' ' 1 \ I •I ' ' ' ' • '71 PINTO 'WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS IMMEDIATE DEUYIRT 5199DOWN536A MONTH FOR 3S 101111$ "'"'Ii•~ ......... tronSlllJ111ot1. IM.leket MClh. rodio cnt '*'*· 661ESH. '72DODGI BlOOVAN BRAND NEW '72DART SWINGER -IAIDTOP 22SCJ.D .... iM, ..... _.. .,., ,ed4"14t•ll. bock-tlfl lithl .. hfft .... '-lty f.ctory, ... ,"' Sl" mw •TJl'M.S104 ls ... IM. . ,,.ti Met. te1 liu9h I 4'I c..,.Mt dlarfll • ...... o9'l for .. -0.. tlfrW """·price S:ttU illd. to• I ft. Cfftll, AICHU4t PUCEH1'AGE tiTI 10.tl'!ro •="'"'"" IMMIDIA Tl $218800 DILIVIRT '"" ..... _,,,...... ::~E 5199 DOWN ..... -........... _ 571 A MONTH FOIH =:.~::';:;"n~~": MONTHS &. lic11111. AHNUAl rntDITA't aATfllJ "· '64VWWAGON 4 Speed Irons .. ro. dio, htotef, buckrf ieOIS. full vinyl int .. rior. 326 Elf, . f•ldar. July 2a, l9n '71 VEGA 2300 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DAILY PILOT 5199 DOWN 536 A MONTH FOR li MONIMS . BRAND NEW 0100 '72 DODGE PICKUP ;-~..,-, TRUCK .. -J~ 6c,1 ....... 11 s·· wheelbo11, 3 speed, mo1111ol Irons .. htovr duty ~S. ~ plqi .. front L rlOI' chro1111 1Mimp1r1, dtlu1.1 wheel cov1r1 and much, 111LKh ll'lort (01~211574142) , l l" " 1ot111 c1i1 P\'fll'. S7l h 11M1 """"" ind , II•. ll(1ni.e & oll car•firlt chofg•• 111 llplN' (ftdif "' 36-. Def..W""" iwic• l1t27 wl. •• & Ii:-. AIH./Al IRCl• IAG!•All 1006 ... FUU. PRICE s:::o '72 CHARGER l .... .tlll •iwfl kM• t"lt. ..... rn.,. '"'"" ....,w.w •••llttl. d1t.c1i1n •1tnal1, l•H •inrl illlHiDr. '"'' "''" COll!r1I "*"'"""h """"-·· VIUICZA11J417 '69 CHEV. 1/2 TON VAN tevtrl 654120 4 Sf>etd trans. n>dlo, heator, wfltto-$ 2 8 a = tire~ deluxe wfleel covers. 875 . U K Jul ,oww. factory oir, k1119111 faJr. ~ inllrior, whitewols. dlllx• wt...i cowws.Wl'J967. ~ 1-------------------t~---------'70 PLYM. FURY ~!~~.~:::!~::~~:~:~~ $1188' · FUll Pl l I PllCE '69 PLYMOUTH STA. WAGON V·L ,.,,..,-sfrllfW!I, mrt illltwiar, 1* ....._, dnlM ...... nd:.. 6 pes&. whitewol!S. 'lflllhMI CCMn. 617£05 '69 PLYM. Roadrunner '68 DODGE Coronet 440 -v ...... _ ........ 11U11-heater, vinyl interior, niog wheels. power steering, londou toP, full vinyl 383 v._ .... __ --•loctory $988 383V-8,4spetdtrons .. radio, $988 2-DoarHordlop.V-8 ,-auto.trons .. $ 618 air, radio and h1ater. , ZXX427. irterior, wtiitewoll tires. deluxe wheel '69 PONTIAC STA. WAGON PK41LOD224061 • ' COVlf• rodio, hootej. VZUSS. - =V-1.fo<trtw.--&-.WM• ..... -...... ~~~!!'!'!~~~~~~-ru....,u..,•.,•ic.,•..,.+ ........ --------'-Ull-•• .. •c.1_,_ __________ ,U_U.:.;';.:.:;;':.l- TAKE YOUR CHOICE $988 ~lt~E . IOI» •199 DOWN •30 A MONTH -·• , ... ·--e·-r.!iJ---··-=·-..... _ __,,.,, ........ ._ M1U ft1 • '71 GREMLIN 2-DOOR$9 . '70 FORD 4-Door Sedan '67 CHEV. Sport Van :f.b:~.=~~~~I~;.~:; • 88 V-8,au1o.!'""•·-stotringancl·$988 , lOl"Whotlbo"-ClllO·'"""-nidio $888 seat, custom ulorlor. lrntkts, rudlO, hearer. US8£M. and heater. 96434E A1F465E200472. fUU.PIKI . fUU.PllCI '69 CHEV. NOVA 6 cytindor qint, pUto ...... ; rod"ta 5688 and"'*· ZKC407 '70 MAVERICK 2-Door Auto. tranS .• rad io. h'eoter, wh11I $888 covtrs. Dtlu11:1 chrome moldings. S17AllL I '66 CHEV. 2 DOOR S-trans. mag whttls oncl tires plu1 much. nuh ..... SHF927 ' -· -• . • . • I ff IAILY 1'11.01' LAST CHANCE! • " ............ ·~ , ... ,, .... -----... ~---............... -·-·-,,.. . ... . ' Co-in and help us '.c•lirate 51 years of seJYice to the greater Harbor Area'Vnderthe 'same .owaenhip· and ma~gement • LAST CHANCE! ( ALL.PRIZES WILL BE DltAWN 'SA'T.URD1(~1 AUG~S-AT2 :P.M i . ' . NOTHING TO BUY: YOU 'NEED NOt •••• I BE ~.PRESENT . . . ', '1o::·w1N! EXCLUSIVE .AT .. ~ lOADED WITH .GROCERIE·S.1 • l . • ' • . ' -., ' ' ' • • I I j LAST CffANCE! ALL PRIZES . WltL BE DRAWN SATURDAY, AUG. 5 AT2 P.M. 51 . PRIZES IN All! -\ LOO~ HOW EASY IT I~ TO WI" • • 1 '"--t·1..r, •. .wll4.,,.,.1tce.e·h .. ....,. 3 ,H rw~-~---"-1.-.. ...... ·atl-,....,. .,tor ..... ....,. ..... ~ ....... ,,,._....._ • ,. ••••• 1 .... 1m-.,,,..~ ..... 1 '" ....... M ,,._. .. wbil -Fn• er ........... 1, 1'72. ,_,_, .. ,._. 2 J• c-. S..,fUI "''"' ,,.. tkht .. .., e It I• .., ..... •ML Not1119t ... b91. N..W91 ..... ...: ' --··-----· .......... ,,. ~ ....... ,,. I 111 ,.. ef ... ..... ,..~.,..!~Ml• ••• ef ............... ....... -......... _ _._ .. _ -1 • THEODOlll ·. ROBINS FORD REGISTER ·TODAY! . --J i Doaltn Cost· ao all odwlltlud ..,, 1~11:~; w,a.r •. ,,... t1t~NMtt91 , t.ct •• ,9!1'iilck. · . 2V2 ACRES Of ROBINS··Reacly Used Cars NOW AT SPECIAL · · Anniversary Discounts! · 'NEW 1'72 'l " •ALAXIE y , . NEW ltn · OUN TORINO 2 DOOtt... . s51 OVER DEA~ER . . · (OST , .. + TAX . &:.LIC. $51 OVER '._DEALER ' • · . ·COST ' • + TAX ·A l,.IC. ·(1044 (1085)· • I N1W 1m ' . ' MAVERICK (2014131 ·,CAMPERS . llG SELECTION! '. $51 OVER DEALER COST +TAX ALIC. ' • . NIW 1'.72 ' . LTD 2 DOOR J ., 'lo • . • 51. ·'ovl!R DEALER • , ' ' 1co'st . 4-TAJC' A ·LIC. '(048) ANNIYDSAIT lEASE'SAVilGs! 1 J OVER 300; CARS AND• 1 TRUCKS TO ICl:fOosE FROM :: CALL ~~·~,,~·~ '>1 • • • 1J. MAtc0LM"RllD. . .,. : ' ..0.1 ~ ~ ' ' .., I ~ ' ' ~ ,. •o'\'r "''" > I ' • • ............. 7-··=--" , ... ......,... ( ' 7 • 7 San f;Iemente Capistrano ... EDITION I TodaY'• Ft.al • N.Y •. s.-- VOi:. 6~, NO. 210, ~ SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 28, ·1972 . . TEN CENTS Philip Morris To Buy Development Company Philip M01Tls; owner of 51 percent of· the Misaion VI~ c<l\npany has given no- tice it will ei:erclse an option io purchase the remalnlng 49 percent of the aoutheastern Oraoge County development compaoy for an estimated $27•.5 plillion. . The New York-b&sed, manufacturer of cigjll"ettes and other produot. bought a 51 percent interest in the' company m January1 li7U for $20 million. ' . ; ' Total land In the vasWlancho Mission · Molso, James E. West, board cbairman Viejo b 45;000 acres with about 11,000 and Pblllp Reilly, president acres under development by the com-In addiUon tO' the 7 ,000 acres now pany. partially developed by the company there Richard J. O'Neill, chairman of the are 4,000 acres of the O'Neill Ranch Orange County Democratic .Cen"31 Com-under .opl\oD, for, futµre .borne building at ·mittee, is chief ow)ier of. the land boldlng ao estlm,ated price of $15 million. The firm. Other principals In the company In-land 11· owned by O'Neill and tu. sister, elude his two nephews, .An~ny Moiso, Allcll O'Nelll,.Avery. , vice ll'esident and secretary, Jerome · S~arted from.ICl'atch 1n the rolllng hills . . ' southeast of the San Diego Freeway in on the Palos Verdes peninsula. 1~, the Mission Viejo community now The Rancho Mission Viejo b part or boasts 18,000 residents. The Mission Viejo the original Rancho Santa Margarita, Company also has , developments under way .in Phoenix and Den.ver. once owned by califomia Gov. Pio Pico O'Neill .OW:OS•'a• number of restaurants and his brother Andres. Included in the in Sou$ern California, two lighting V33f. holdlngs was about 250,000 acres ex· equipment manufacturing fll'.DlS i n tending to the Mexican border. Orange County, office buildings, apart· Johp Foster, an Englishman. who later ment compl~us and a shopping ,center .. c~ged hi,s name to Juan For&ter in 1836 ' upon becoming a Mexican citizen bought · the ranch from. the Picos in 11164. In 11182 Raocho Santa Margarita " a I sold to Richard O'Neill, grandfather of the present orJginaJ owner. In 1940 the le<lerai government bought 165,000 acres for the Camp Pendleton Marine C.Orps base and the remainder was held by the O'Neill family, all In southeastern Orange County. Pacific Telephone Co. Complain~ Sought Against . ; ' ~ ' . . ' ~ap~trano Counc~~ Orange Coonty Sltetifl's officers today wlll ut the dislrlcl allomey's of(lce lo i!Mie a c0mplalnt cbatglng San Juao clpistrano Councilman James Keith Weathers with usault with a deadly weapon. investlplors decided lo •eek a com· plaint after JX1>hlng a family fracas '111irscloy that \bey clalm ended wjtb WO.then, fl, of ' :mil Ortega Highway, sin Juao ClpiltraM, 1,veling a loaded 1bolguq at l1lo sberil!'o deputies. . : weathers was releUed from county jail late ~Y m bis pledge lo ap- pear and answer assault cbargea In South Orqt County M~ Court. Tiie coulicllman wii arnsted at a ~ Viejo hom' llbortly after dejlatiel IUDll110lled "1 Mrs. Ellen Weatben arrived lo lnvestlpte her ac., count ol a car ramming !ncldent at Dana Jo!arlna. . ed ~with a •botiun. She. oald she· then drove lo the home of family friends In Mbsion Vl'jo aod called the 1hlrllf's of• lice. Weatherl 'arrived at the home wblle ' . deputles,were discussing the earlier In.: cident Wttll Mrs. Weathers. Oftlcers oald he threatened them with the shotgun but WU qulc:ld)' disarmed after I abort ·stiuggle. . No shotl were fired d\lrln( the con- . frontatlcmal'the Dana Marina or later at the ~· Viejo residence, ofllcerl oald. . W-11 the manager of ca~ Hardware "·be! Glib, 31921 Cl!nino Caplatrmle. lie bas lived In Ibo com- munity U. put eight yean. Weatherf -elected to the San Juan ca~ CllY Council 1n APrtI o1 th!J year. lie and bis wife recenlly _,ated. ~ . '· ·omoen said Mrs. Weatben, the niother of two· cllildjen. bad -with a S Sh Se friend the prev1oos evenlnl. ,,,., wd. RD88· !}NlCe . ot . t .... bad -returned by her male -lo ber parl:Od car at· the' Dana MOSOOW_,(U\'ll -. Tiie Sovtet Union -at aboat f:JO a.m. when her P'""8bl1 Will llllllCb a new SalJul -aiiilrY ....-drove up, labooll>rT * a -or thne-"';,Z She aioertl!dly told olftcen that opaeecral\ In the next few days,. Wea!Mn rammed'llet"car 'tinll thr'ealel)-' eompi.--oald today. .. • • ' ' t , Fft!flk ·A~ilent Predators Hunted In Park By JACIC CHAPPELL manner. Meanwblle, the llale rangers wlll be patrolling the bruah .,.... of the park aearcblng for '1odlet of dead animils: Junette ll8id Jils rqen have ord<!'l lo ri>und up wild loses at the park. Notices prepared by the bealth depart. ment lnstrucl'campen to; -Remaln within camp oitea or on establisbed patha. . -Sleep above ground, preferably within an lncloouie. -Avoid all ulmel•, especially any aoimal that aPl'*lleo -le or appeara ill. -Report aoy ha~ fox, or ~ to the rangers lmmedlately • -If a peraon la hltten, lmmedlately oeek medical care, cootacl raogers and the Orange County Health Department. With the determlnatlon that the fox shot Tbunday .did not have rablea, of. fiClals oald that comidentlolll of clollng the park are being bald In lbeyonce. "If ao animal turns up that la rabid, II la·a poosibility !bat -otepo would be tuen," Juaotle oald, SUmmertlJ!lt vlsltor population of the park ftrla between 1,IOO and l,000 • per .... dally. Rania belleye lhcat \bore ore perbaps thr!O men loMI In the park area, but -that 11-oouJd be mote. Tiie loxeo m natlYt lo the area and -called. "llray ,...., • although they are not ~ (11'!, he oald. . ~· the "K~y . Fits, Drive . ,. r . . After aettJnc an ....Uc ecmne through Iha Jot, In wblclo. several 'flhlcles were llll 1lun1m. ad Mn. Dlmorw'a car ................ -~Into• car~Amta._s...,.., ol l70S todto, Sin Clemente. A llnlco t~ft for the .......... ...... In the Incident .. Ila llatl ...... -..... Ill wblcb U. ""'8 el -car-!It .oher. Bcllll con ... ldoollcal la etJte, color and ,.., ..... Aid. ' ;._- · W ayCleared In Ruling By Justice WASHINGTON (AP) -Justice Byron R. White today cleared the way for a $150-millli>ll refund to customers of U. Pacific ~ne le Telel!!'apb Co. . In • lirle/ Ofder blue4 ~t ,the Supreitie Court bi iel 'llhle a ·leii-·peotpone. ment ol the rtfund and docl1ned to furtha" •delay •llw •,rate dldliocl In ~Q~~ ..JN:~•·iiiiilt fiit a lioiile' ..,....,....., ..-.f. ' . tens of tb\>!'f'nd• al · dollan tor ...... porallaal. ' ~-=· tr· ... :i9~ SU.Jlf-Court WU potently arbllrll'J aild CCllliW 1 lo due process, They.,alao said the refund order Wu 0 a grave ' mlscan:iUe of jUsUce" and a 0 com-poundhig~blow'' to the company's ability to serve 1&1. customers. Besides the refund, the state court on June t Invalidated a $1~mlllion rate-Jn. crease ·vanled PT&T by the state public uWities cornmisslon a year ago and aoothercfll.11-milllon boost that went lnlo effeci Jut MIY· The company wu lo bave ~begun making the repayment! on July 14 but White that day temP!Jl'UllY granted Pl'&T it· p..tponement wililo,.he · COftlidered a 23-page plea for a stay of . the decilloJI. . , , DAILY ,ILOT ....... IW' a~ KMlllW MARIE ST.UMP KNOWS HOW TO BEAT THE HEAT Lagunan Cocil1 Off In .Ocoan to EK1,. Si~l•r Mer~nry Will ;Drop ·.a Bit In· Coitnty Over .W~ekend ·Orange cOunt)r re81dents can bask In slighUy c o o l e r weather Saturday. as' temepratures today began dropping a few degnes from the week's unexpected 1 htat Jl'llVe,, weather forecasters oald to- day, Coutal temperatures remO!nell fairly COllltant today, at about 73· degrees, four degrees cooler thao Tbunday'a high. The aame mkf.10 degree beach weather ls ex· peeled thb weekend. Beach areu will have early momlng patchy log both Saturday and Sunday, but Oraoge Counly Harbor District ol ·lncreued uae ol air conditioners. -and fair. . 'Hardolt hit Tbunday """''Orange and ~-CallYCll atta, 'both reaching highs ol lllf degrees. , Tiie aame was ••c•,,'.llod today, but forecuit!rs predlcted ".cooler" -ther Saturday: marking about 11111 ~ Irvine Lake reconled Ill degrees and Santa Ana hit a · montb'1 hl8h of 11111 clegrtes Tburtlday: • Both areu dtupped to the mid-90'• to- day and .that tr""1 la apected lo COD• tlnue Saturda7. · ni, El Toro-Mlsliolt Viejo areas were in tJie 1Wellering lo•IOO'a today and 'l'butlday, Forecutera ti the El Toro Morine Air Station oald that beat would cool to mJd.I0'1 thil weekend. Eien wllb the sUpl drops, many peo- ple stlll found It ~ to my Inside 1IDd tum Cll tbelr llr·ClCIDdlU...,. the . . . Southern Calllomia. Ediscin Company repoded. The company reP.rted abou~ 10 "burn-· ed up"~ resideplfal·aru transformers ln ~ the COllDly In the past lour day1 because . of increased Use of air condltl Nm.· , A compaoy spokesman oald that oo far this presents ''D!> problems" I o the overloaded electril:al circuits, "but U llje beat persista -•well, juat wail anCI aee." . ~ · · Areas with the translormer failures but no major. biackouta wm Santa Ana Orange aod Villa Park. ' A ~ high In Los ""8<lea la forecut lo~ Satunlay. That city tucbed • a• high of 111:1 Tbllndl)'I Southern mountains and deaer!J. will have clouds and possible thunderstonni Salurilay, the, National Weather Service . said. . Highs recorded Tbunday lncluded llf · In •Palm Springs, 105 In San Bernardino, 104 in Riverside and II in Lone Beach. • Victim Identified SAUSALITO (AP) -The body of a strangled young woman with a ooct In her IDCMlth bu been identWed 11 that of Lynn Maureen Derrick, 24, a medical 1tenograpber at the UniversilJ el Callfomla Medical Center. ' White acted In the ·-of J..ue. Willbm 0. Dougiu, within whooo jurbdiclion Calllornia cases normaJl7 fall. Hla order said: "Upon further "°"' sideratlon. al the application for stay ol the mandate of the Calllornia Supreme Court and upon examination of the resJioosea filed lo ouch application, the temporary stay of mandate heretofore entered on July 14, 1972 i.!J vacated· and the application for stay or mandate la denied." The Calilonila court bad found a tu accounting proctcfu.re known u ac-. celerated deP«Clation with normalization used bi' PT&T ,.., unlawful It also oald the ~ the utility poy1 lb affiliate, west... Electric Co., for equipment were exceutve. ' . In calle you baveo~ ,_ li- lt's gonna .be a 1iot -.bad. ,_ peratures of • are upeCled In Santa Ana Salllrdi1, _., cooler than today'• ~ Beacbea around '/$. LoWI In 80'1. ' INSDB T8DAY Summt' tuOftl U&ntcr ,.. son J6r manr'°'-'·COllll nal- d••lf .. ,,. porliciJ>oto flt Golden W .,t Coil<Qf a"4 OnnQf Coorl Colleg• prod..UO.... Adon .,. brlnfllnfl 1o lift •camc1o1, • "Drceu/4~ and "1'14r II AfOlo, Sam.'J See todav'• WnMWr. LM...... f -" Clliflnlle I :;...c... .!! -. ~·::... : --. ,..... "'" ,.. .. ~ 11 .... l4 .. .._ . ....,.. . ----. --. :-:-!:"" ..:: --" -----=-.: -. -----. • 7 .. I J OAIU PILOT • SC 1fit1&1&oW. Pritats Suspect's Wife Texas Hopeful • Backs Rival ,llOUSl'ON (UPI) -T. H. (lrabaln1 a Republican qndldate for prjc""" oonalable, 11ld ho bad ' ' aces Court Rap M --ft-and f.Und that bis Demoeratlc opponent was the belier man for the job. Grlham withdrew Thursday ar,id endorsed bis oppon•nt, Walter Rankin. The wife of a suspect in the II million Laguna Niguel Unit.<! Califomlo Bank burglary refused Thursday to supply her fingerprint& to a federal gnmd Jury and wu found Jn contempt of court. M11. Linda Dinalo, 34, wife of Amil Dinslo who Is charged with the bank burglarJy along with rour other •· was sentenced to jail py U.S. District Judge Malcolm Lucaa untu ahe provides her finRtrprinta to the Jury. She received a stay of executJon of the sentence pending an oppell of the rullnl to the 9th Cimllt Court of AppealJ. She 11 represented by Im Angele• lttomeyo Monball Nasltlr and Ronald Mlnkin . both of whom were unavailable for com- ment on ·the case this morning. Mn. Dinsio, said U.S. Attorney John Walters, has been in California for the past week, visiting her buaband who b being held at Loo Angeles County Jail. Walters alld Mrs. Dinlio appe;ired before the srand jury Wednesday' and rel\Jlld to be fingerprinted. 'Then, on Thursday momlng, she ·appeared before Judge Lucas and again refused, leading the Jurt&t to declare her in contempt of court. other within :W da)IO. Mra. Dinaio, o! Boardman, Ohio, b also the itallr ol SB-year old Charles MullJcan, the firtl 111&11 arreoted ID c<ino meclloa with the bank bul'llorY In whlch tbi .. es rllltd 451 aafe depciOJt &oxes. Also in 'custody as a suspect in the case Is 31-year .. ld Philip B. Christopher of Cleftland. Both Chrt&topher and Dlnsio were trans(erred to· Loo Angelu County Jail irom Cleveland Jut weekend. Indict.<! ID COMection with the burglary but remaining at large are two brothers, Harry ~r, II, of Youngstown, Qhio and Ronald Barber, 29, of South Gate. · Walters alld the appeal will be ex· Badham Seeking Youthful Voters For Miami Trip A IJ>IC!al off« Ii avaJla ble to YGunl votera to atteild Ibo Repu~Ucaa N1tlonil Colivenlloo In Miami Beach from Au1uat 18 to 14. Qualilied vot ... 1 under 30 yeon Of ase may aPPly tlthtr tllrollih the olll~ ol Antmblyn\an lloberl E. B1clbam (ft. Newport Beach), 1149 Weatcllfl Dr)ve, Newj)(lf( Beach or to Paul Presley al the Sin Clemente Inn for the co!IV.nticlll trip. The packaae Involves all tpeeill events, melli, and houllng for 11% dayo and five nlJd>ts, recreational facllltl., and round·lrfp air faro from Los Angeles at a <oil of '230. In Miami Beach, conventloni .... • will wve as alde1 1n communicatlon1, raJll .. , ae®rlty Ind d11egat!0111 II Will .. driver• and eocorts. Special eventa such 11 an Appreciation Dinner, Nomination llllly and Old FashJonecl Victory Party have been plan-, n.a for evening entertainment. lleslrtallona moy be nnt dlz«tly to the Wuhlngton D.C. office of !he Com- mittee to Re-elect the Prtlldent. San Clementans may oend theirs to Prealey · for forwarding. Deadline b Aug. J, Little Leaguers Set For Championship The area Little League champlonshlp game between San Juan Clpistrino and Laguna Niguel will beiin at I p.m, Satur- day at Crowa Valley Elementary SCbool In Laguna Niguel. The game wlll be the final of a series of contests between LltUe Leaguen 1n the south county. OIANHCOAIT .. DAILY PILOT 1'1'11 Ortnte ONll.I DAil Y flllOT, wllft tlfllch 11 comb1M4 11'1• H•ws·Prtu, ls l!lfiltllllMif ,.., tfll Otafll9 (•••• P11bl11t11nt ctmttnv • ..,.. ,.,, edition• 1r1 Jll,lllUtMll, Mondt't tll~ Fr!Ny, fer Cuti irMM, NtWJIOrt ••Kft. Hunll"8taft 1l•K~ll'lljlnlll11 v.11 • .,, L-a!JM 8tldl, lrvlne/hlNllNU tll'llll ·Itri Cllmt!llt/ u., J11111 C.11l1tflnt. A •lftflt tt0lon1l tdl11on Is Pl/llH•'""' &ttwtll'(I •11111 SWlll•'l'I· The prlMl,.1 twbll~"'8 1111111 I' 11 l:IO Whl ••Y ltrttt, '"'' MtY, C11lt1N1ll, mK. ••l.trt N. W114 Prtt'"4'1t 11111 P'~bll11\fr J1ck l. C11rl1y \lkt P'rtllllt(!I IMI Gtlltftl Mentttr lh111111 K11"'il E11110f Thtm•• A. Murphino Mtlllfl"' Elitor Ch1rl11 H. l••• klchor4 P. Nill A111tt1t11 M•IWllM fllli.rt .. ~-lDI Norttl ll C1mi111 k1al, ,2,7t -~ Qtjlt }Mu: • W.:!:~ ttNtt """"' "9Cfl! --..i.~ .... , ..... ,. H\IJll.,._ llldli t,...J IHdl lllllWW ._..... lotd!J m Ftmt "'""""' tlf1,e 11 tn4t Mt-4111 Ctllltrllll .Wettal11 "42·Jl71 s.. c;:ai Al ht••=• .....glt..;1 491-4421 -~ ..... -..... ...,_ """"""· ... . ... ... """"''-... _ ........ __ _ .,., .. ·= ••!'*ft .. liN ..... -· -· -""'~'&." c.... .... ~.. ::..r.;l"'...::: ~r. •......... pedlted to the h11ber court and that a hearing could be held within two weeks. Lucas, Walters added, wants the con· tempt matter solved one way or the other. Wishes Him Well "He lhould continue his excellent service without interference of a political campaign," Graham said. l\.ennedy Gives Support To Nominee Eagleton SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy called Democratic vice~ presidential mminee 'Itt>mas F. Eagleton today to wish him well, an Eagletoo aide aa!d. The aldt, preu H<nlarY Mlcbael Killy, aald Killned1 called the MlslOllrl aenator from Waahlngton •nc! "all ho did was to call him and give him his sup- port." . Kennedy rt.ached Eagleton as he was * * * Anderson Hedges On Drunk Charge Against Eagleton WABlllNGTON (UPI) -COlumnill Jack And•,_ w11 quoted today u aayln1 he 1hould have checked further before broac!Cutlng hJa claim that Democratlc VI~ PrealdenUll candidate ThollW r. Ea1letoo bad a record of drunken and rectleaa drlvlnl- Tbe Walhi.,..ian SJar.New1 Jn a story by Rabirt Walters and Michie! Salcbell reporiod Andenon aald be "probably ahotlld have withheld" publlclzlna the Chari• 'but that competJUn ntWI preaautl prompted hJm to mike it wltbolll lull verlllcalion. Easletoo denounetd Anderson'• aoaer- tlon. that be bad been arre1tad on druliktn and ncld ... drlvln1 cbar1u in the t•'• .. A 11dlmnablt llt," Mblourl recorda for !lie aenator 1bow that be bad two tralfto Jnvolvementa -once for •peedbif and onco for an accident on an Icy hJsbway. Andenon alao told the Star·New1 he feli Jila 110ry "IOI played up beyond pro- portlOn" beca1111 If olme on a day Wl\OD there .,... no other IOlld denlopmemt In the. Eulttm lltliatlon• The Vice FUJdlnUll nominee dbclDMd TUelday ht hid bet• holpltallled three t-bi" tile 1..0"J' for poycblatrlo treat-ment became faU,U. and nemua tenalon. Monsoon Rains Trigger Slides In Philippines MANILA (UPI) ~ MoMOOn nlna tOUllbed off Jaadalid11 and renewed flooding lodly Jn Central Lu10n, the PhDIJ>Plnes' main taland where an estill)ated ona million people are sllll Isolated following the worst Roods In 26 years. The Red Cross aeld landslides Jn the mountain resort city of Baguio and On the west coast province of Zambales kill· ed eight more people today, raising to more Uian HO the number killed since devastating mouoon ralns began a month ago. A Red Cross official said the fioodlng is the wo"t he has seen ID bis 26 years of work with the organisation in the Pblllppbles. OUlclals said Roods today washed away graves as torrential downpours slJilled rivers over their bank.I ln some areas. Residents in San Simon Town, 45 miles north of Manila, reported coffins raked up by flood• in the munlclptl cemetery drifted to ouilylng vlllaaa and had to be tied to trees. Mrs. Ferdinand E. Mal'COI, wife of the Philippines prealdenl, 11ld flooded areas are "thick with Otes' and JM9qUltos." She was dlstrlbutlq relief goodl to 101tterld ref\J.g:ee camps, where cholera and typhoid have kllled at least 10 people, most of them chlldren. One million of LulOll'I 2.5 million residents were reported atrandtd or isolated by the fioodlng 1nd combined U.S.-Phlllpplnt milllary teama have been flying reocue Jllluloot aad ferrying food and medicine to llood vlcUma for two weeb. Power Tools Stolen From Clemente Truck Power woodworking too11 valued at $900 were ltpclrlld 1tolem '11M..iar frUm WUford J. Sptlngham, !21 Mlldrld, San ClemtntL ~ toll! Sin Clelill!de o!llcera that tht IOoll, li>cludln1 itml 1111wr, a tandor -.I rout., were Jallan from a cbul In tht i.ct ol hb pickup truct while JI WU park«! It a lot bebJnd 23t Del Mv In Sin'Oemerite. about to addre.>s a gathering of local Democrab -at a breakfast meeting here. The support from Kennedy came one day after columnist Jack Anderson said Eagleton had a record of drunken and reckless driving, a charge Eagleton im· mediately labeled "a damnable lie." Eagleton said th e Anderson charge ~bly will hurt his personal reputa- lion. Eagleton told the breakfast meeting he remains determined to s t a y on the Democratic ticket and t.o become vice president. "I'm 100 percent satisfied that l can hack it," he sald. "I'm golng to cross the country and do everything I possibly can, not in the .sense of personal vindication but in the .sense of trying to elect George McGovern," he said. Eagleton flatly denied a report by Ander10n that photostatic records 1how the Mlsaourl senator was arrested a half· doten time1 for drunken or reckless driv· Ing. Arideraon made the allegation in a ndlo broedc11t Tburaday, The column!Jt told The Auoclat.d Pre11 that be did not have the re<Ords bims•lf but learned 1bout them from a "high Missouri of· ficlll." A check by The AP turned up some put speeding cltatlon1 I n E11let0b't name, but no trace of any ar· re1t for drunken or recklesa driving. Eagleton angrlly told a ntwa con- ference Thursday In Honolulu that be hsd never been artested for drunken or recld.O driving, and that Anderson's report appeared to hlm to be a polltlcally motivated attempt to drive hJin off the llemocratlc Ucket. In an Interview whllt flying here from Hawall, Easleton und«•cOroil hla newly atrengtbeaed resolve to 1t1y. on u run- ning mall of Sen. George McGovern. In an Interview, l!lllgieton called 'Anderaon'a char1e a "lo"' blow." He said be thought It would burl blm because denlala ind refutation1 don't always catch up with 1ccu11Uons even when the charges are false. Council t,o Meet For Third Ni.glit In Capistrano San Juan ~plstrano city councllmen will meet tonight -for the third time this week -to again dlscuu the city's budaet !or the 11112-73 fiscal year. While other bud1et study aesslon1 have consloted mainly of delalled questions by councilmen of the various propoaed ti· pendllur.,, tonight's se11lon will Involve ellber cutuq programs or coming up with new sources of revenue. The council must find c way of meeting about $65,000 Jn expenditures for which there ls as yet no Income. The ses.sion will begin at 6:30 p.m. at city hall. At previous sessions, the council cut several thousand dollar• from the pro- posed $2.2 mUlion city budget and discussed the possibility of gaining new revenue by charging a plaMing fee to developers. FoUowlng dbcloaure of a $121,000 error In the iniUal budge! proposal, the couacll did some minor cutting and were told of about an additional $50,000 in unan- Uclpated revenu.,, At tonight's session, the cl~y staff b expected to present a proposal to raise new monies wllh the ~Janning fee. Developers would possibly pay a per unit or per tract tee to help offset the city'! coata of oversetlng the project and of dol1111 long raqe plaMing to meet the needa of a growing popuia!lon. Uruguay Chief I Of UPI Kidnaped MONTEVIDEO, Ul'Ug\lay (UPI) - Two young men who l denillled thetntelve1 11 members of ' • T h e OrssnluUon" today kldnaped Hector Menoni, United Prw fnt.matlonal manager for Uruguay. TIHly said llJeJ were takln1 hlm to 1 newr conference. Menoni'• wife Blanca ·uld the lil<ll ap- J)ffred at his Avlnld• 11 de Julio 1part- ment al 1:41 a.m. and aald tlley Would a~mpeny J\Jm to the confmnct. Mra. Moaont oald h .. hu1band'• Cl!>' tors ~Id not brand1lh -pOlll, bul nm- ed her not to tt&e the telepJ...,.. 8ho walled !O mlnuta, tlten Ille tlllid Ute UPI o!fil:o lo ., betwttn .Obi that utbey l'llve tabn him." ' Monon!, 4T, ls a Urusuayon olU1t11 who baa btttt emplo7ed by UPI aJnce !Kl. Reds Bacl{ McGovern North Vietnam. Sees Peaceful Settlement TOKYO (AP) -North Vielnam hu predicted thal the election of Sen. George ~1cGovern as president of the United States in Nov ember "would lead to a wr· rect and a peaceful settlement of the Vietnam problem." Ngo Dien, head of the Press and Information Department of the No~th Vietnamese f~orei.gn Minl1try. s a 1 d McGovem'1 "sweeping V-lctory" at the Democratic party convention "is mainly due to his stand on the Vietnam prob- lem." "Mr. McGovern ," Ngo Dien declared, "holds that all American bombing in Indochina would be stopped, that al~ American troops should withdraw from Indochina and end all milllary assistance to the Thleu regime," all with no precon· ditlons. hotcGovem's position "Is the oppo8lle of that ol l\fr. N~on who even oow keeps. ca'rrying o~t . ' gressive war, pursuing the Vletn . . . R, refuslng·to withdraw American ( ' ' and to maintain the Nguyen Van Thieu administration," Ngo Dien said. . He appeared at a news conference tn Hanoi to make public a memorandum which exposed what he said was 11an ex· tremely serioua war escalation move by the United States against North Viet· nam." His remarks and the memor~ dum were distributed by Hanoi's Viet· nam News Agency in a broadcast monitored in Tokyo. The memorandum declared the Nix~n Administration bu intensified the war m Vietnam "while putting f o r w a r d hypocritical talks about 'peace' In aa at· tempt to conceal the chara cter and origin cf this escalation." Terming American war policy "a criminal act," the d~u­ ment claimed Washington "has put into action more U.S. air and naval craft than ever in Vietnam." Answering questicns by newsmen, Ngo Dien said North Vietnam's view "is that the choice of the U.S. president is a.n in· temal affair of the American people." He added however, that any candidate who wishe~ to gain the voters' support should respond to the people's most burning pro- _14-year-old Boy Held by Police LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 14-year .. Jd boy accused of killing an elderly man with a shotgun during a robbery attempt last week was being held by juvenile authorities for investigation of murder, authorities said. · Ricky Bonville, 14, was arrested after a police chase triggered by an Illegal tum made by the youth as he drove a car on city 1treet1, 1nvestigator1 said Thurs- day. After his arrest at his grindmother11 home in South Central Los Angele1 Tues· day night, Bonvllle took officers to aa abandoned .house where he had hidden a shotgun, authoritieS added. Glenn Brown, 71, was killed Sunday ju1t as he returned from vl!lting bis wife Hazel, 76, at Broadway Hospital, police said. blcms, Including "the prompt ending of tbe war in Vietnam/' McGovern's position "contains positive elements which would lead to a correct, peaceful settlement of the Vietnam prol>- Jem," he said. commenting on reports of U.S. boml>- lng of North Vietnam, Ngo Dien asserted it was ridiculous to say the destruction of dikes was accidental . "ll thls is attributed to mlstakt1, then there have been too many ml•takes/' he slid. Meanwhile, a leading British news magazine said today tbat McGovern's plans to cut American troops in Europe "would destroy the strategy the Western Alliance has been working on since John KeMedy's time." The Weekly Economist , in an editorial headed "John Foster McGovern!" 5ald the cutbacks would destroy the chancel for a "flexible response to Soviet attack in Europe." This would leave "no alternative but a return to John Foster Dulles' old, brutal and now thoroughly impl1usible threat of massive retaliation" with n u c I ea r weapons, it added. Brush Fires Scorch 530 Camp Pendleton Acres Several brushtlres blackened 530 acres of grassland at Camp Pendleton Marine Base Thursday. O!ficlals at the base said the flte danger was erpected to exist for several more days with temperatures soaring ln the lOO's.and wind continuing to blow. One of the major blazes, on the north end of the base adjacent to San Clemente, burned out of control from noon until midnight and blackened about 150 acres, officials said. Firemen from San Clemente assisted in extinguishlng the blaze. The other major fire was located in the Nixon to Come To San Clernente President Nixon will Oy to the Western White House following the Republican National Convention, leading to specula- tion that he will kick off his re-election campaign In San Clemente. Washington reports said that the Prell· dent would go Immediately to bis San Clemente home following the Miami Beach convention which runs to Aug. 24. The President has said he would hold a 11polltlcal press conference" at San Clemente White House. ~ The President has scheduled talks with Japan's Prime Mlnlster in Hawaii at the end of the month. Parking Permits Go On Sale in Clemente Parl<Jng permits for the fiscal year 1972-73 are now available from the San Clemente Police Department for a fee of $10. . The permits enable motorists lo park their cars at metered spaces without feeding the meters and guarantee againal overtime parklng tickets, officers aald. Persons with old 1971·72 permila have until next Friday to replace them. : central area of the base and burned about 380 acres before be ing contained by firemen at about 7:30 p.m. Officlala said there were no injuries and no structural da.ma1e as a result of the bll!es. However, the fire did knock out a power transformer, causing a power failure on the central portion o( the base that lasted for ab<iut one bill hour. Lost Love Hunted With Bus Ads, Last Dollars LOS ANGELES (AP) -Embla'411ed qn SO Southern California Rapid Tran.It District bus.. b an advertisement r•adlng: "I Love Albuquerque Girl. Rell Skinny -Who Woru & Lives In LA Picked Me Up on Hwy 1 in Sanll Monica, July 10. Contact me at 92S S. Vermont Urgent." A former University of Mlcblgan 1tu- dent, David Schwartz, 201 of Bloomfield, Mich., spenl hls entire college savings of $1,800 In an effort to find a .girl he loves but whose name he doesn't know. The long-haired, bearded Schwartz alld he met her while hltcbblking. The slender, brown-haired girl and a male companion picked blm up in their car, bought him a hamburger and dr<>v1 blm 10 miles up Pacific coast Highway. He and the &lrl tallted and be fouacl out she was from Albuquerque, N.M. -but he neglected to ask who she was. 11I blew lt," he admit1. "It wasn't until I got up as far as Monterey that I realiz- ed I didn't know her name. She was great. lt'1 jll5t a feeling you. haye when you talk to someone and you lmml'<llataly seem like old friend.I." Henredon Upholstered Furniture ·on · Sale! I NOW YOU CAN OWN LUXURIOUS FURNITURE AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ANO YOU CAN SPECIAL ORDER WITH-THE FABRIC OF YOUR .CHOICE! DREXE(-HERITAGE-HENREOOr-1-WOODMARK-KARASTAN ---------- • 1Mrr1•101s WmDAn a SA'IUtltAY1 ttH .. l1JO ...... , 'TIL .... .. NfwPO~T l~CH e ' 1117 WISTCLI" DR., ' '4Mt10 TORRANCE e UMt HAWIHOkNI ILVD. J71.-117t LASUNA HACH e HI NOAl!1 COAST Hw'r. .. ...... , ' I I 11 -· J IJ DAILY PILOT SC Mday July 28 \972 OVER THE COUNTER NASO l11t1ng1 for Thurul1y, July 27, 1972 FINANCE Succeeds Lawson Mo11tgo1nery Gets Pl1ilco-Ford Post Ph!lco-Ford Corporation has announced it is promoting the man who will succeed John R as head of l t s Lawson aerospace-o p e r 11 t 1 o n s 1n Newport Beach and elsewhere Edward L Montgo mery, vice president and general manager of the company s Western De v e 1 o p men t Laboratories ( WDL ! 1n Palo Alto \Vas named vice pres1 den t -executive director -0f Phlico Ford s Aerospace and Defense Systems Operations (ADSO l He will serve as fuU t1me ASSJSlant to f.,awson who IS scheduled to retire about the end of the year as Ph ilco-Ford moves ADSO headquarters from Newport Bec:cb to NEW FORD VP E L Montgomery vears " Dearborn Mich F or d s long established Montgomery ts a graduate Aeronutr-0nic Oivi.c;ion 1 n of tile University of Utah and Harvard University Newport Beach is one of three --------'----- ADSO d1v1s1ons It will remain here under the direction of vice president 1.AJu1s Heilig Besides Aeronutron1c and WDL Phti~'Ford s aerOSpac1! operations include the Com murucations and Technical Services D1v1s1on 1n Willow Grove, Pa In making I he an nouncement Lawson said tha t Montgomery ha s been ex terwve\y involved 1n Ford Motor Company! and Phllco- Ford s aerospace And defense actlvlt1es over the past 16 LEAVING TOWN? DON'T LIAVI 'f'<IUfl HOMI UN~ll(ITECTID RENT AM UlT"ltASOMIC BURGLAR ALARM SYSTEM N• IMt•ll•lltfl Clll,.,t CALL •<lfl IN,<lllMATION SIA COAST ALARM SYSTEMS DITtli.it Of SN CHtl llclra. SllH" 1651 Placentl......Co1t1 M•,. '42~3490 UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MOM THUIS. fllDAYS 10 I PM 10.6 p M (114) 140.1211 lee.otff 111 k CH1t Pl.,., Cestti M ... ORDER YOURS TODAY! State Laws Stop Record Piracy RI C HMO ND -\i 1rg1n1a bas a new law maktng 1t 1\\egal to manufac ture d1str ibutl!! or s e 11 "holesale any recording w1th knowledge that the sounds have been transferred to the record ing without consent of the ownr:r Amazing Leases NEW MERCEDES 2200 250 $128 44 mo $141 02 mo 2805E $151 94 mo 54 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY ~tautiful Stick-on LABELS Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or • Friend M1y he uitd on envelopes'' r1turn •ddr•ss libels. Also very h•ndy 11 1Cl1nt1flc1tlan l.btls for m1fkH19 p1rion1I 1t1m1 such 1s kioaks, r•cord•. photos, etc. libels 1t1c.k on 9111• •nd may bt u11d for m1rk1n9 home c1nn•d fo4d 1t1m1, All ftbtls 1rt printed with stylish Vo9u1 typo on IJM• qU1 hty wh1t1 9umrned piper. r=1· I I I I I I I r COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST ~ ,,... .. .. I~•) Mltll l.-C""-O!f ,... fllld UI•• I N!tll L•w CleW (119< '• " . ... 1a. """ "' "" '-SI U • u 11 • t: R~ J!S ., 10 l•..., 1& ,, ~· 1"'• ' 11~ Jt ~r: ' " 16 u .. l• , •• )$6 l''lt ' 10 2• • l'AO Jo 1 t) 11 7' ll•• ": ~ . .. ' .. , • JS • ~· l) ?• ' ,, ' "' • • ' • • ~&9 6.1 • 111 }} ~~ '" " ' " lo 1~ • \'" .. "" .... , ... "' H '" "" .... .... ,,. .... " '" " .. 1)-· " ' " " • ,. . ~-' . '" ... #: " " " . •• • • n~. " ' . " • " • • • 1 ' 1 10 0 ]1 • )} 1• J 7!I _,._ . " k " !:ill 11 .. ~ ~ l ~. ' 1f 1] • •l 26:1o ' ~-1' j • ' . I Market Drop Predicted Tough Problems Seen, 'No Matt,er W1io Wins Election' C ....... H itl-Mlll!fl« Sf,..,ICt NEW YORK -Even thl• comhlNtioin -re-t!ltttion of Pn!iesldent Nixon, a buoyant ecot'ltlnlY, and fall ing oriemp1oyment w o n ' t MCHsarUy ensure a major ttock·-market upswing after .Nov. 7. A Republlc•h win would probllbly 1pork • morket rally, according to Burnham & Co. But the hrokera3e f i r m btUeves the Will Street r& JolclJ18 might fide when the economic reaUties of 1973 be&ln to like bold. "NO MA TrER , who gels elected,'' 1ays Wilt.er P. stern, aeninr tXtcutlve vlce- fn'Sident of Burnham It Co., OM of Wall StrttPs leading in· atltutlont1 reuiirch firml!, the econo,mic end regulatory en· t"lrOnment pttMnt some tough problem t for manty m1nager1. A Republican victory may 11l1y invei1tor concern ovtt a poM\ble leg~IAtlve 11.,.,ault nn tax Melt~s. • boofll in cor· Po"llfe f1JtJ1 , 11nd stee~r in- heritance leulcs. But • Jnarln$C feder11I dt.ficil for fi scal 1173 llppefrs ineYit.tbl•. Bum1m believe&, and Mnw. type C)f t111 Jncre&H has becomr alnwt mandattJry. Undl':f' the NiJon admlnistr11tion, " v11tue-11dded t111 is OONidered the m<Mt likely type UJ bo '°ught. THOUGH PRJCE oontrol1 are due to e.xpire Rt lbt t.nd of Aprll . Burnham holds that in- vestor!! would be impntdent U they assumed cont.ml! will bt lilted. The politico! P™"ute fnr control• wlll persist, and probably i_nt.etu!ify, according tn Rt1rnh1m. The ftrm ii r11ther peuimistic 1bnut, the Jhillty of Nixon admln i~t rat io n economic policymakers to bat· Money's Worth ~~~~~~~~~ ·Rural Home Loan .Program Available : lly SYLVIA PORTER • Perhaps you know -or per.haps you yourselves ire - • Jlmlly drtamlng ol 1 borne 1n our true rural 1N:11. ~tl,'haps •l th is time of sum· mu, your yeaminJI to get away from city or suburb.! ind ieJ down your rootl jn re1tl larm land bec<:1mes "° tcute )'OU can almost "tast.t" II. .p very well could be. Old ybO kno,., lh<n. th•! •mong the fastest growing categories ol1 tederal help ror home buyer• is not the la~ m11li1r 5'ed· erel Houslng Ad mlnlstr•· lion but the rebaUvely un- f a ml 1 i a r _,_,,. Jlome Ad- minlstr1t1on11 rural home loen P;f"Ol"'8m? 4llE YOU AWARE that, cblrinl u.. cumnt ttl'I! n ... 1 y_ear, thla "Rural FHA" "Ill help build nearly 140,llOO houSN and llf)lrlmentl and sink close to $2.2 billion in rlJraU.~IZ~ Jt'tJ eo. The Rural FHA's budget !or bulldlng n • w homes. buying existing homes, renov1tioo ind reconstruction of farm housing Is more than 1.,.. tlme• (be '&9 budget, only thrff ye1r11 ago. Q. Who qualifies for the lOBns? Ml11sl~ippi to Wisconsin and 122,000 in both Hawaii. IJUOO I n more than Alaska and Q. WHICH TYPES of hoU!· Ing ire covered and which not? A. Rur11I f'HA IMnl! 11re m11:de only t.o provide familieti with safe. decent hnmt.!'. Se- t.'()nd hnme1. resort cottages, summer dwellings may not be bull! or bought with FHA loan11 , nor may loan!! be u~ to build hnmes fnr 111peculation or for quick resale. Q. Whal •bout m o h i 1' homes? • A. This is being considered by C.ongre!'a. Q. How do you apply for this type of loan ? A. Yoo flll out 8 wim ple 1p- pHc1tion form , available from FHA county supervjm>r11 in more than J,75'1 offices ICJ'MI the country, inr.l~ding Ala.!Jk11 H11w11i anti Puerto Rici>. Under a ntw Iman ••packag- ing" program, members of the home building trades p!*epare I.ht FHA tpplication f n r ramlliq aeeklng loan" and in· elude, In lht p.ackage 'all the ll'petlfic11tion1 OI\ the 11ize and coat of the borne and lot. Q, WHAT ABOUT terms? A. The intere11t rs~ i! cur~ rently 7\4 percent " year 11nd the m11:lmum re pa y ment period Is 33 yeRrs . In the case of extremely low income familles. the r11te cRn be as litUe 8l!I one percent. Q. What about waiting time ! A. Loans are usu111ly ap. proved within week.'J -with delays t.he result of incomplete applications. ten down I.he lnOationary hAt che8 ~''"''· AAys Mr. Stmt "it's preuy much a •tnu:lur11I pmblem ." H e foreoa~ an upsurge in in- llalion ff'om today's just-under 4 perct.nt tn more tha n S J)f'r· cent by mid-1913. Thi11 doe.."n't bode well f(lr those who hold interesL·&ensltive stoc:b such as utlllllts and finance C'Om· panieli. A tnore rfl!liricti ve monet.lry policy loom11 11s ~nother cloud on the horiwn. This year, the f'fderal flei.ervr.'s geM.rOO.S money~rowth targets were generally in line with Will Street expectal ion.,, But Jn 1973 Burnham u:pecLIJ the Fed 'J11 polkie$ to be less palatAtble to investors. BurnMm tel'!t11tiv1:ly foresees 1973 after·tat oor· porate profi ts rit1ing I I percent -a good 11t1Jin. but not 11s hri"k 11 urn·s developing 20 percent riM. AS MIGRT R~ tx:pected. the rei>trB ined optimism 11boul the 1973 economic nutlonk doesn't imply .. y highly bu 11 i' h target.s for the stock market. Between now and N<1vembe:r. Mr , Stern 1001<3 for 11 "tr8ding market" hovering between 850 and l.000 on the ~w Jones industrial average. "The market would probe the tnp of this range l;a!er in the fall , if Mr. Nixnn looked like a sure winner. A s urprist: Mc('.()vern triumph would be 8 "short-term disaster for tM market." the former president of the fin3ncial Analysts Federatk>n uys. B URN HA M'S MIDYEAR market outlook emphasizes the dllemmR investors face in deciding between reasonably priced cyclical stocks 11nd growth stocks whose share prices are s higl1 multiple nf enrnings. The latl.er h11ve been instituUonal fa vorites r or many month11, but big-money manager• sttm reluctant. to part with them despite 1igN1 White Backlash Hits Pittsburg Ale Sales By RUDY CEIUIKOVJC u,1-1ffJl'!Hf .. Wr1-.r Plil"SBURGH -The city's leader!lhip in steel. aluminum, glass and other ''hArd'' pro-- ductinn is well knnwn. It 11\sn rolls out the barrel on another product, beer. The Pitts burgh a r r. 11 . berause of the many mill tnwn11. eonsumes a lot nf beer. Orders for "boilrnnakers" fa shot. of liquor with a beer) are traditional in tavems neRr mi/J11 and faclories. roR YEARS THE Pittsburgh Brtwing Co., pro- ducer or lrnn Ci ty Beer. has been a leading purYeynr in the 8rea. SaJe11 surpa!\sed more than 11 million bRrrels an· nually. Rut they're down now . Iron City, which tried to mollify b I 11: c k eon11umer resentment. has been caught in 8 white "bl ue collr1r" N ckl.11.,ah which cut profits more l han half. Iron Cily'!! tr11dilion11l l'!ale!! A, You must be a low or moderate·lncome family M• without decent, safe and 1anitary hoUJing. You' must be unable to gel loan11 ft(lm private lenders on teFml ind condltloM :voo can rer1~nl\bly bt expected to meet.. You tnU$l, though, l111ve sufficient \ncome to .make ll 0 11 ~ e itaYJnents. pay Insur~ n c e premiums:. taxes 11nd m1in· tenanct., in addition to your regular living expen~e!I. Thls FHA also m11kew rental hou!ing loins to individual~. trust . RISOCIAtions . partnenhlps, roopP.r11tives and carpor1tlon1 -to b u 11 d apartments nr coopera:Uve rental un its for I o w -to - moderate income fr1mllles or people over 61 years old . The program Is being coo· 1!.r1ntly upandtd 11nd liber11.lli· ed. for in«lance. the FHA mAy no• make lnens in com- mun_itie!' with R!I many RS 10,000 people: be(ore '71. the llmlt was S.SOO population. Q. Are home improvements covered? A. A homeowner whn cannnl qu11Ufy for " regular rural holl5i~g 1oan m11.v be 111blr. to 4el a repair loan of up to S2,MO to correct r.onditinnii en· danaerjng the f11mily's he11lth end 11afety. An ~dditlonal SJ ,000 lo11n may ht> AVailablfJ for plumbing. w-11ter supply 11nd waiite dlllpoii.aJ 11y11tem!I. The.!it! lewtllli be11r onf' percent tntet'f!st. m1y be rep1id over JO ye1r11 -but are llmlled to very poor famiHes. PoSilinn ha~ been renected in dividends, In F"ebruary, 19fi7. the bnard r11ised iUi 11hare dividends from 11 tn 15 cent,' and lhat bonus remained con· 11tant until It camft timft tn determine the d i v Ide n d P'!Yable August 1 of this ye11r . ll was cut to JO cents. BORROWERS mu•t b e unable to finance th' housinR projects frt>m their personal resources or credit from othtr IOUrces. However. If f1tmilies cannot Afford tn mef't the basle rmrtgage pr1yment in- cluding at le1111t onf! percent ~f the interest, they r1re not ellgt• ble for Farmers Homt loan~. Q. Who derides w h " ' 1 eligib)t ! A. The f1rmtrs Home Adminl!tr1tlon c n 11 n t y tUperViMr. working with a thrtt·mcmber local county committee . · Q. What'1 t11ken \nto {"(ln• sidtratlon'! · A. Vnur fsmlly'1 ,.nt1re fJMncial 1itu•tion. Applicant• must aive. 1 fulJ fin1 nci1I rtattment. ind Jf this st11te· mtnt Indicate• you could 1r· QU1n! hou'1nr witb your ••• reaourc.,. you would not "" dlgible '" F'mners Home u«illlnct. Q. Wh1t11 tht. maximum )'OU ..., bomlw? A. Althoulh tho Rural FHA lmcla to 11111 ... modnt homtJ • mo and coot, the m•lrimum loin woold dtpend on YOllf fllllll7 1110 and 1blllt1 to llPll'· Nalklflady. tho •Vtr•,. tml for I J'Aml<IW llonlo llun<ed """'°• l11dudln1 tho ktl, la abnul ftUOO. Tbt .....,. vll'les !rem ttoto to hm a low ot IU,000 lJI THE BREWERY"!\ l"eport fnr tb4": first six mont.h!! or 1972 11Mwed profit!! off 50.8 percent and 11ales slumpln~ 9.9 per· cent. Company offici11ls 111.· tribul.ed the back1lldlng to tht1 , lagging ecoMmy, lncre1tsed wagt.s a:nd other costs with no - frld11, Ju~ 28, 1972 OAILY PILOT Jf t.mAL NOl'JC!l LZGAL NOTICJI LEGAL NOTICE l I • I l I ) Friday's Closing Prices:..Complete New York Stock Exchange ,Li st Market Wobbles 4th Day in Row NEW YORK !APl -For the fourth ron,.<11 · t1ve !iies.~1on the stock market turned 1n a weak per lormanC'e ~ ru;la' Trading wa~ slo~ The general lenor or lhe markPt \Vill! shov.1n bv the rart that garn1ng 1ssuel! clung r.ers1stt'lntJ\ to ti small lead over losers on the New 'ork Stock Ex change Mean\\h1Je the Dow Jone~ average or 30 1n du~l rials wobbled 1n a na1 row 1 an~e r1 om ph1l! to m1nu~ and back through !he c1rcu1t a~a1n 1 The market •~ 1n a tw1l1gh1 zone ' said Larrv \\ achte.I of Bache & Co ' II doern t w11nt to go up and 1t doesn t want to go rto,vn " .. ,. .. .. ,------------- (Wa,J N .... lft CIM• 0t Dote loMea .... lllft.I """ Phone h 12-4.12 1 For Weekender Arherli•in~ Complete Closing Prices-America11 Stoel\: Exchange List S1IH Ntl 11101 > H•tll Ltw CIH• c~, Stl" No! 111111 I lilltll L1w C1tt1 C'ht • \ll•J N•I (1111 I Hl•ll Lt• C!t'' C~t ,, . ' " > • " " ' •} l I • • • I\ 101 20 " ' . > " ~ ~ ' t ~ '3 ~ .. ' ' ~ :~.: .~: 1J I 11 o 111 II lJ \ __. ,__ -··-11 l 'I J 'm • •• ,, n ' .. . .. >• ' ' " . ' l ... > ~ • • ., Ill • ' .. ·~ > • l lJ • • I lo o ' > .. ,. • ' " ,,. 'II) •• .. , .. "" , .. tt: "' ... '" .,. " ' " " . •• .. ... • • > ' . ••• I • " " .. ... .. • • • .. ' ' ' ' ' , , ' • " ,.. ' • " •• I ' . " . ' ' l~h •• l \o ! •• " ' " " • " • .. " . .. ... • • > ,. " "'" lllC11 I Ht~ ~•"' c 1\1 Cllt "' TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Oa,. You ... · Every Saturday • • • • • " • • frldly, Juli 28, 1972 ick Jagger: Rock Music Scene's Coµsummate Artist J'!EW YORK (,\P) -Just • 1111111 cu.Y Mick Jagger! ..,... ho'• on Engllabman wllo .... and bu -called .._ AftrY bad 'name and ...., IOCld -there Is. Stick to tliat and you mlght be Slit. Cboc:k Bill Graham. the pro- ~ and Innovative llep- lalber of rock: "Mick"• the greatest perfonner alive today." Check a youngster in small- and Jagger was the powder. . plllJ. The sentence l•ter waa juana. llls liaison with Misa -the devll. There he was. were giving a free concert for who would like to tear him deep, realizing the beast he He and the Stones came on q_uashed. Falthfu1 ended in Australia, Prancing the at.age, anaking 300,000 and the devil was there apart with t_wisted love. But playa to could suddenly tura hard and tough, Lhe other side Then Jt was a stormy where he at.arred ln the second contempt and scorn and de-in capt and Uncle Sam bat there ls a dll(erence. on hlm. Bu ·it could be that of the track'a answer to the romance with singer Marianne of hlt two films, "Ned Kelly." fiance. But wale~ him, the with a . bodyguard of Hell's Some rock critics say Jag-the eudienct has caught. up Beetles. They opened Buck-Faithful, divore«I. from her Jagger has since married impression was c I as 1 i c Angels. It ended ln tragedy, ger has matW"ed. others with Jagger and perceives Ingham Palace for Paul, John, art dealer husband on grounds Bianca Perez Morena de theater. Jagger is a wllb the stabbing death of an ~~ar~gu~e~h~e~ll~al~r~ai~d~to~p~r~obe~~hl~m~, ~~~~~~~ Ringo and George. For the of adultery with the pop star. Maciu, the daughter of a performer, wlth a beautiful l~ye.ar~ld black. Jagger and Stones, they doubled the Jn 1968, Jagger told the world Nicaraguan diplomat. Jagger sense of him.sell and the the Stones suffered. guard. that he and Miss Faithful wer' wdre an almond green suit, his absurd. Some saw It es pure Tile current tour has been E Jagger became th• snarling, expecting a chlld and had .. 2&-y•ar .. 1d bride, a mldll•ngth •vii, however, a deliberate el-described ... bu subdued. Nearly veryone strutting, snaking showman. intention of getting married. white wedding dress with .a fort to bring out the v.'orst in The grind and the flash re- Tbe money flowed and the The child was lost by miscar-large cape. Tbe.y settled in the the fringe people. main. J a g g e r , in an gaudy headlines followed. riage. south of France. There Is a outrageous whites. q u I n. d listens to Landers WHY GO TOPLESS Flrrt it was dope. daughter, J~. THE BUBBLE burst in jumpsuit still struts and coos l...!!!~ln~l967~~Je~g~ger~~M~ew~t~hr~~~~TI~IE~~M~O~R~E~DO~P~E~,~a~$4M~~~ln~t~h~e~la~to~!Os~~~a~gg~er~Dee<~~m~ber~~l969~~a~t~a~M~a~g~str~i~p~a~n~d~w~hi~'p~s~bls~~~~w~a~t~t~b~•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "RE'S 'THE DEVIL. man. monlha (or possession of pep fine for possession of marl-became -or was christened in Altamont, Calif. The Stones young airll and scented boys 11,e's the archangel Michael. 1 Hell, he's anyone you want him to be." Thla ad la good town America: Check Jagger's mother In (Thank You). Might be her white house In London's that wcrr 'Ill h..,.... 1mlddle-class suburb, Dartford, kno•• when. (Whkh Kent: la Aug. 2. 1972) .J "lt infuriates me to know aome people regard hlm as a moron. He'a a very intelligent sensitive boy. Sometlmea I wlBJl he were just ar. ordinary boy again. The lame isn't worth the wbrry." At 29, Michael Phillip Jag· ger Ls the most famous member of the most famous rock 'n' !'Q)I band In the world -The Ro01ng Stones. Wedne!day, Jagger and the other four Stones completed an elgbt~week tour of America that bas attracted more than 750,000 people and will give them 1 grog profit of nearly '3 million. FOR THE MOST part, It has gone well, with Jagger and the Stones reaffirming their cult of energy among the young and> not ao young believers. But, as has been the case in the past, Jagger bas received his share of gaudy headlines. Thia time It was an arrest after a scume with a news photog.,,pher In Rhode Wand . . A misunderstanding on both : 1idt1, frobably, but it became part o the Jagger mystique. ·Growing up In aubtrban London. Son of 1 physical education lecturer at a teachers' training college. The ac><:alled normal childhood. •1M.ike" to his Australian-born mother. A cherub faced aoprano ln the local choir. A run-of-the-mW g r a m m a r 1Cboot kid, maybe a bit mOre o1 tho' devil than his male.!. A hero to a younger brother, DOW 24 'and trying to find bis niche tn rock. Underneath brewed a generation's rebellion. Parents were one target · 0 1 OWE MY pare-nts nothb}g/' Jagger once said in an interview. 0 They1re my parenll and that's that. I like them and still do but there are no dl!ea to be paid by me to them. I wu ~ver part of home Ille. I knew I'd break away~when I did." The "system" was another target, and Jagger still speaks bitterly In four-letter words and sexual imagery about England and governments and people with small dreams. Yet, he can be a very articulate and perceptive man, delivering candid views on Britain'• policy toward South Africa and Ireland a n d American politics. Then one day In the 1960s, Jagger quit the London School of Economics to f o 11 o w another muse, rock music. Jagger and his childhood friend, guitarist K e Ith Richard, set out to form the Stones. It was a tough grind. A hand-to-mouth year in a run- down London apartment. Rock ls extremely hard work. Then 1963 end a song called "Come On." THE STONES became what ls known as a dynamite band B••r• Vp -set aem," a refugee of &be Wilkes-Barre, Pa. llood.ing y a w n wldel1 u be .revlewa Ille troaplJ. Tbe Injured bulet bouad WU re,_ cued and~ by memben ol a Jocal Na· lloaal Guard troop and adopted u tbelr ml> cot. OYEBJOD STOUliE WllET WITB MIRROR DOORS Thi• ii the .flrtt ln a •rl•• of bat-m stuff In tbla ad. A place to store iunk and ... yourself. tool 1444 MEDICUIE CABll£T FUMES ScrollJ. Goldie. Wiggly, Squiggly •. make the old on• that came with th• house look grand. 8•• EllPIBE MEDmBRUEIH PUIJJID U you want more them j\a.t th• top. atc:rp your mitt• on oa• of th••· OD• plK• top. exqul1lt• woodwork. (I ltke tho word ''exqu.l1lte .. ). Faucet extra. 3997 SLIDUfli TUB EICLOSUBES Salo. b"'"f plaatlc gla11 ao you con shower at a fraction of a ahower room addition co.t. 1477 (and then .again. why not?) .. ~·-· -· EUROPI IDJUSTDLE BUD SHOWER J77 llon·l!rffmblo nrlon with 59" rolnlorcod Ttnrl hoH. Alto bas wall mounting bracket for wall shower uM. • . ·. :.~ : . : ... ·r . ... : . I ,. ;": o 't ' ' I • '··' ' ' • • !. • • •. ' :·· : •. i '· '·:; • : • • ••I ' ' .o, '' ' ., . ' . .. . ..... ', . . .. ' •.' '•'I • ... . . . .~.·a :· .. .· ... :~~··· . '. ·· ... )'ii ""'~!: • ,".J: .. .. . ,. . . .. TOILET SEITS 199 ARROWHEAD BATB FAUCET 497 Don't hep Jamming wa1h•r1 lnto your old leaky one. Fork up tho dough and got a new plated brcu1 one. DOMOIEL BITB llBDWUE llOIE 8001 . 24C PUD 1101.D111 Ille TOOIKlllOlll aTUIGLD 411c .... 87c Ille ROI.DEi IOAPDWI TOWEL IAll TOWEL lllJIQ Such pricnl R...to tho wbolo 100• with tboH oblny DOW tblngo. Aloo cmrUClblo In white and cnocado. CULTURED MARBLE PULLMAN TOPS W•'•• spent thousands.on theH thing• Hndlng them to 1ehool .0'1 they'd be cultured. The'y do bGT• ••ry alight impertectlona at th••• prices. Faucet ....... 24'' 30'' 36'' 88 11.88 13.88 TWO UliBT BITB SWlli 11 88 For that elegant ·touch in your bat-m. lncludn chains. boob. etc. for mounting. Real nice. ~ ~ FLUOBESCEIT UIDEB couma UliBT 2•• Mount• flush. Has A.C. outlet for appllanc••· etc. I lff the llgbtl I IN tho light! With tho tube. WITEK SfJralEB SALT 69:i.LB. Bur a bunch. You're gonna bcn"e to buy '•m aooner or later-IO fOU might aa well stock up at this price • BOLL-OUT CLOJHJ:SLJIE 1396 Rid• J<>Uf Jard of tho unalghtlJ clroaplng clolllullDH. I~ 1C1f Aur ~ Auroall« I• wrapped up In mine. 3-LICBT K•LJBU UW-'81.TlliE StStEii 2997 •••nswr: . I TM n•kll111 18 ap la hllflo- (TU ...... tiiCit '" / 1 / 7 I l • eh VOL-65, NO.· 210, 4 ·SECTIONS, 't6 PAGES I •, ' ·• Ho1n·11tin~ Bes~11e • · Firemen CalJ,ed ro Shoo Bird Away ' ' • • j ' ~ \ ' • An ·otherw1'e-1qlilet.swruner evenlng•for Laguna Beach firemen wu dis- 1turbild, veey •1enUy,-)y, tbet""i;tlstent·, bum Of a hummingbird'• wings. . • , The l!'\Y .creature,' lfld:(·lady. caller · at 10:30, p.in.·'lburadoy waa trapped ,lif,lbe raftiro,lhslde ·.her MOS1 .Stri;et, home. She waa concemed·a~Ull wel- flr'e and, she added, it waa keeping her awake. · The Agate Street Fire Station rolled 'Its unit to the ....... manned by ~ firemen. (They must remain with their fire engine at all times while on duty). . . . , • · The llalwart trio, uailted by•the lady caller, med a standard arm-waving ' • teclmlque to cliaae the 'llDlll lntruder out ol the ·lady's lroat door ablf lnto the balmy summer nl&hl-· The operatlm, according to the log, toot •·~ 20 minutes, . . ~udge -Fines : Riot ·Figure bi .Laguna Dei;nonstration '· Judp· Wllllam Mumy nad the riot act' In Orange Clounty SUperlor Court Wfdnesday . to ·• Laguna Beach m a n tagged as the centril figure In a riot at tbe.for)llel' Orphanq~ lleitauran~ fined him '2,11111 and. plaCed him on a year's prpbatlm. His· actlmr -the me on Josepb Stephen 1-Jr., JI, of 7lO Rembrandt Drive; provided that Longo oboerves the strict terms written Into the pt®atlon order' by Judge ~y. Tllo· jilrllt ·.._.sici wbal could bave llffn a county WJ 'term for the tagunan In'• of, 'the JXolJatlm amtract. Longo waa arrested Sept:~ at the liolchl <IC. ... ~·~ . 'yboll ., f ••. \ • • • Lagana police tried to quell a dlSturbance at ·the aeo Street-South COast HJcbwaY· locatlm. · / He waa acc111ed·on amst'ol attacklbg olfleer Cormen Pollutro while the of. fleer and other jj!embeft of the /Art Ccilony·for<e tried to .c1ear , the area of jeerfnc and booting bJllandera. -claimed.tllat Longo repeatecl-!y, kliiacL and lunged at him and Wll Jn. atrumental In removtnc .bis,bat. The bat wai 'jUmped m 'add muWated by other -wbo :trled .to free · Longo from1be'olficer'1 -LoliP 1'11 lliltiallY accused o I uaaulling'a polb olllcer. He WU con- victed m te....r ..,._. ol lpllawful a~µ<'!'~•> , I ' ~~ •• , "'.{o~; ' ""' ..,. ~. Hitchhiker HrMts .Lb t • • . . . . ' ......... ,1 •• ·J~ •.. ' . ' (A·na · Namele~sj Looe . ' . , . :· J,OS· ANGEj.ES , (AP) -""""llOll'd Up on. Hwy 1 In Sanla Monica, July 10. on It lliluthem Callfornta Rapid Tramil C411tad-me at m S. Vermont Urgeol." Dlstrkt -lJ ID ar!vertliemelll · A foi1ner Unlventty o1 MICblgan' 1111-~I'..:_ •~ .. -. ..L.. •• ,Girl ,,_, /..,_ clelll, Darill ~ ID, o1 Bfocmllefd. -· ........ ....,._. '· ........... , Mlcb.-opent' bll f!llllre eoJ1qe lllVlnp ol -Who• Worb ,, u ... In LA Plcbd Me ''·'°'In ID effort to find a girl he love& Hinsha~·Kuyper Battle Empts Over Appraisal but..,,_ ilamehe dlJeoni know. The ·loac-halhd. -Sclnrartz uld he met her,whlle bltd>bltlng. The alfpcler, brown.Jialred girl and I male companloll picked him up In their car, bought him. a bambu!'ger and drove him 10 mlletl .up Pacific Coaat Highway. Be and the girt taltecl and be found out alle waa -Albuquerque, N.M. -bul he neglected to Ilk who abe wai. "I bl• it," be admib:. 11u· wun't until I got up a m as Mooteroy that I reaJb. ed I dld!i't !mow ber name. She waa crea~ II'• Just a feeling yoii bave wbm Y<!ll talt to -and ,.. lmmedlltely aeem HD old friends." · Sdlwarl& lurled back to Loa Ancelet and baa "111111< everytblllg on llndlnc ber -all 1111 -I« a· -·· ""' vertlaing." Wbat If she baa other commltmenllT "I'm 11111 wmlod," Ii, aaya. "ll I find ber, I'D ....... "' tbl rtll. ~ . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY •2f, '19n an Anderson Backs Off On Charges W ASlllNGTON (UPlf -c:otumnlst Jack Anderson WIS • qpoted today IS saying be sbould bave checked lurthq before broadcaatlng his claim that Democratic Vice PnlldeDtlal candldale ThomU F. Eagl.tcin bad I I<COrd of clnmten and rectlesa driving. The Washlngtoo Star-News In a atery by Robert Walters and .Michael Satchell reported Andersan said he "probably should bave wlthbeld" publlclzlllg the charge but that competitive news pmsure prompted him to mal:a II without full verification. Eagleton denounced Anderson's asaer- tlon that be bad been ,arrested on drunken and reckless•drlvlllg cbarges ln the 1980'1 u a udarnnlble lie." M1aourt records for the ""8tor'.&bo1f•tbat be bad. two traffic involvements .__, once for speeding ml ooce lor!ID accldeot·oe "' icy highway, . Anderson also told the Star-Newa • be fell his story "got play-p beyond -portion" because it came on a day when there WIS DO other aolJ4 developmont Jn the Eagleton sltuatlm. · '!be vice ~dentlal nombioe dloclooed Tuesday be bad·been bospitalhed - times in the llllO's for ,poychtatrlc treit- ment .....,,,. of ·fatigue and nervuut . ttnaion. ; · · --__ ... d • . ' # ~ ~ • . war &ttlement ~ , ) I • ·- With · McGovern -. ' . TOKYO (AP) -North Vlelnam baa proillcted that tM eleciloo of Sen'. George. McGovern 11 presldmt ol the United SlalelJn Noftmber l'-.Jd lead to a COi' red and a peacefql iettlement ol the , ! ~ereW'y .Will :Dr~p ·8: .Bit . I ' ' • ' I • ; . • ' ' . ' ', - Vletnam problem." • • · Nao Dim, bdd 1" 'the Press and lnfllnnatlm, Depal1plent· ol the North fu =·County Oyer W~ekend Vietnamese l'oroigp Mlnlltry, 11J d · Orance ·c.anty residents can• ball ,In' McGovern's .,...._._ -i .... -" at the ··~.-. ·--1 allJlhtly c·oD'le r weather Saturday~aa· ·Democralic party C111ventlon "II mainly ~tures today. began dropping ,, t:. ~ blJ atand cm the Vietnam prob-f~w degi:ees from' the week's unelpected . "Mr. McGovem," Ngo Dien declu'ed, heat wave, weather fo~rl aAlci to- "bolds tbat all American bomblnl In day. . · ' Indochina would be s,topped, that all , Coutal •temper!!turea mn~ f,Jrly , American troopt should withdraw from -~--tod · bou I lndocbtna and end all nlllltary·a&Slltanee "'""\'"'I ay, at a . t .73 degrees, our . to' the Tbleu rqlme, 'I all with no precon-d..,... coolpr than 'lburadl!ts lilgb. '!be dltbw. aame ml.i-70 degree bescb westhef II U•, Mc:Gomit'I poaltion<."ls the opposlta ol P.<ciecl 'this weekend. that of llr. Nlsm who even now keePs . Beicb areis will bave earlf morning carrying m the ._1ve war, puraulng patchy fog both Saturday and Sunday, the V~ to withdraw but ,,..._, ,._,,:.., Barbo. r . D'~·lct . American lroopt ilJd to maintain the v•_. _, - Nguyen Van n.ie., admlnlatntlm," N10 of Increased uae of 'alr coodltlmera. Dien lald. 1111111y and ,fair. lie ~ at a news con!.,...... In Hardosl'hlt 'l'buradllY were Orange and Hanoi to mab publk ii memorandum Tnbuco Canyon area, both reaching :, ea:=. "!::.1:..~.;;: -:; hlgbS of 1115 ileP-,' 'll>e-same• WU !be UDltad States against Nor!b Vlei· recorded ~. ~ forocaslen pfedicted' nam." His temarb and the znemonn. "coole'r". ~tber Saturaa,: maitinc dun> were dlalrlbUted byo Hanoi's Viet-about 100 degrees. . , . · . , , ' nam News Ag9r/ In a tnadc:asl lrvlne Late· recorded 99 ·degrees' and monffared In ToQo. , Santa Aita hit I . JDOOth'I •hillh' of 100' Tllo memorandum declared the Nhon .,.._ Thunday.. • • · Admlnlltratlm bu 1ntenslfle0 the war In Both· areaa ~ to tbO l111d·J0'1' to-V-"while putting forward 'day and that .freod ,ts upeCled to eoll-bypilcrltlcar~ 'lbollt 'peace' In an at-tlnue siturday. tempt to conceal the character and orflln The El.Toro-Minion· Vie~ areas . Were' (Seo HANOI, Page I) In the awtJterlng lqw-100 ._ todaX and, 'l'bursday. Forecasters a the El Toro · . . . . . Marine Air Statlon llljd Iha( beat·llOuld cpol tO mJd.~·· tbis ,~tend.' . . Even ·willi the lllght,drops, 1Dllt}' peo- ple sltll round Jt necesaary to stay·.inslde aild tum on· their .u:-Ooadf-.,, the · s0.ilhem . Californi&. Edlllpn-C!liDpill1 tjlporjed. ' '!be compaoy reporled•about 10 "burn- eO ·up" residenUiJ:.area transformen) in the county In the ·pasl four daya 'becausa . ' ' of Increased u..e of air condlU Nen. A company sp0ktsman Uld.tbit so far this ·presents '.'DI¥' • ~» l n the overloaded electrical clrouill, !'but if the heat persiJts -well,. just wait and ' aee:" , . Areas with the transfomier '!allures but no major blsctoots were Saata Alla Orange and Villa Patt..'' A 93-<legree high Jn Loa Angel" ts· forecaat for Saturday. '!bat city reached. a high ol lllZ Thursday. Southern mountalnl and deRl'll will. bave :clouds and possible ~~rma Saturday, the · National Weather Seryice, said. ' ' Highs recorded Thunday Included 114 Jn .Palm Spr,lnga, 1111 ln San~.· ~04 ln Riverside and Ill In Looc ae.dL Wife Holds .Fi~gerp~ints . • ' Faces Cont.empt C~rges in Nigµel ·B4nk ,JieiSt :'lriaJ. . ' . ~ . Tllo wlf• or a auapect In the '4 lllilllm ment on the .... this monlill(., • , Ible.., rlflod AR life depooit boles. ,...,... Nl&uel United California Bank Mn. Dlnslo, llid U.S. Attomer•Jolln · Allp In~ 111 aiapect la the> .... lllqlary nluaed. ~ to "'111'11 lier Wallen, baa been In California for the II 11-yeat·•llh l'lllllp · B. Cbrlltoplm of ~l'flnll to a·fedml grand Jur1 and put -11:, villllnc her'i..bucl who lo aevefalld.·Bolll •W!ltofber.llld •Qinslo waa fGOlnd In contempt ol court. being held at Lol ·Aniel'rCounty.Jall.' · were o!JODllorrt<! i..Loo Aniefeoc~i, Mn. Linda Dlnllo, M, wile ol Amil ' Wallen llid .11n • .Jlialio, ~ Jal! f-CleftlmlJal ~ I D1D11o wbo 11 dwpci with. the )ant before !1\1 ..... jwy, Wtclneocliy and · Indicted· :In ~· wllh the barllarlJ alq wtt11 --men, waa muted, ton~' flncerprlptad.'. Then, on burglary but re1'>allllnr at tarp: an. t!'O = 11 jail by U.S. Dlltrlct Juel(• Tburaday momiJJl,·ahe appeared befora brothers, llany Bari>er, 31, ol Lacaa uatU • ,ro.ldM lier Judfe Lacaa and again reluaed, le1dlng Younaatown, Ohio and Ronald Barber, lit, .... !ala to· the jury. jlla Jur1!t lo declare lier Jn.contemplol ol Sollth Gale. ' . • .;-...,.,ed a 1111 ol -loa tf the court. ' ' · Waltell aald the appeal •will be U• I f I Oii ......... appeal ol the nillnC ' otller wUlllD. days. . ' pedltad to the hf&bu c:ow;t AN! that. & to 111 '°'Qftuil c...t~ a.11 • . Mn. Dllllo, ol Bolrdman, Obio, 11 •lso bearing coWd. be htla wlthln.l?O -U. Z 1 1; ' i.r IM au.mey, , Illa ...., tf 'a.year old Cbarlt.S Lucas, Wallen l\(lded, wants Ille ...,: • Nulllr .i tf1Dllla 'lllJlpn, Ille !Int man arruted In im• tempt matltr solved -war or the • ..,..., .... wen ............ fw...,.. · -rill Ille beak.burglary-In.which other. T..tq's l'l•ml N.Y. S'•ek• TEN CENTS • Laguna Aide Will~dge Protest Bid Laguna Beacb Public Worts Director Al Thea! will appear before the San Diego Rtglooal Water Quality Control Board Monday to protest a recommendatloD · tbat the city bave all Its sewage treated at a .pro_.t plant In Aliso Canyon. '!be rocommeodatlcn, City !4anqer Lawrence D. Rose sold' this rooming, ef· fectlvely kllls any other altemaUvea the city might loot at for treatment ol Its sewtige. In a letter to the city dated July IT,. Dennll·O'Leaiy, uecuUv:e olllcer of ,Ibo: regional board, Aid Ila will ""'"'"l'ODll: al Mond15'1 meeting that the city con-: str:uct a 1arp sewer line to carry sewage: lo the South Lalflllla site. There the sewage would be treated 1t a: yet to be 1pproved treatment plant under the auspices of the Aliso Water Manag~ ment AC<!ICY (AWMA) ol whlcb ~ is a member. · The UDUpected ulUmstum fro 111 O'Leary, J!ose said, jeopardlua other treatment alternatives curren.Uy undet study -ouch u a tie-In with Irv!M Raoch Waler Dlltrlct treatment facilities'. or complete, rehlbWtaUoo of Laguna"• exl!lfn& treatment planl Role quoted O'Leary u SIYlnc the city would qot i;ecel•• any !eden! ... &tale funds If It .-to"lllllili ltaelf 'fibm AWMA and !rut .wap m Ill own. The clly ma,... nCoW 11111 a ,..,. and a llllt m· • ., ....... .... "* .-i -... d -• -.... ' ,1'1 .....,.w.z' "loot• ... .. .. ' ~·· alllnati-whidt •Ila dMplte the fad LaS-jolMd A WMA. .Al kif M'JW1e 1.·0'Lealy indlcated be WU uillllecl with Laguna Buch'I effort to stady ..it altenialtvea, but Mfdenly cha .... Jill stance, Role contended. Rooe lllll<d that the reporl detailing tho aitenialtvll would DOI be completed 111111 Aug. II. "II 11111 111 In I bad opol," be Hid. '"lbll .-runendatlm c:ame with DO ad-vance· "'"11ng." "· Boys Club Makes Pots for Flowers saiillai 11...tt pots will be idded' to the deccr ol a nwnber of Laguna Btacb patloo 'lllll week as the first iroJecl In a new Boys' C!ub class 11 completed. Boys Jn I new afternoon pottery claa, conducted by club volunteer MarlUOri~ Oliva, carved the hanging pot forml from llyroloam, fitted clay Into the forms and· will bave them ready for gla> fnC· 11111 week. In Mure -of the pottery claa, held on Wodneaday1 and Tburadaya from 3 p.m. lo 4 p.m., )'OWllslera will learn how lo tlnw clay pots on the club'• ,.,,,. ly acquirtd potter'• -~ which will ellmlnale the -I« -....... • ..... -' -.. c...... . c...--,, -... a~~ ij --............. t:'L:.:... = -. • J llAILY PILOT LB Predatnrs Hunted · In Park By JACK CllAPPELL Of ~ Otll'f Jlli.t St1n The grounds of the San Clemente State Park were being combed loday by rangers tor any sign of rabid animals. in tht wake of bltln( Incidents at tht park. Visitors are being warned by ranaer• not to Jleep on tht ground and to avoid all wlld ll!lmalt. By Saturday, Orange County HeaJth Department notices will be given to every person entering the park warning •I the hazard. A 101 killed Thuroday by head Ranger Eugene Junet~ waa teated by the healtb departmenl No evidence of rabies wu found. However, further tests · are pen- ding. Dr. ~-llamllton, of the coonty Health Dipertment, laid l>mplts of the dead fox's brain were being rushed to a state lab in Berkeley for tests seeking diseasa other than rabies which might cause the animal to act ln an aggreulve mannw. Meanwhile, the state rangers will be patzolllng the brush areas of the park aearehlcg for bodies of dead anlma13. Junette 11id his. rangers have or<lm to muld up wild IQXta at tht park. l'folicu prepared by tht health depart· ment lns)tuct campers to: -Remaiil within camp 1ites or en es~blilbed paths. -sletp above ground, preferably wilhln an lnclosun. -Avoid all animals, espeelally any at11mal that aproachel people or appears Ill. -~port any bat, lox. or skunk to the rangers tmmedlately. -U a peraon is bitten, Jmmecjlately zeek medical care, contact rangers and the Orange County Health Department. With the dettrmlnailoll that tht !Ol slip! Thursday did not hava r1blt1, of· fi¢.ala .-Id tliat COl!llderations of closing the park are being held In abeyance. "ll •an animal turna up that Is rabid, II !J a poulbllll)I that those steps would he taken," Junet\e said. SUmmertline vlsito<, population of tht wt varies between 1,000 and 3,000 perlOlll a.Uy. l\an&trs belleve that !here are perhaps ~ more foxes in the park area, but not• that there could be more. · ,'Ibe fox~ are native to the area and are called "tray IOlt1," although they are not .......,.uy gray, be aald. Skateboarder l • Seriously . Huf! An' ll·~ld Westminster bOy wbo sulfered bead Injuries when he fell wlille skateboanling • down a steep Laguna Beach bill Wednesday even)ng remains-In - critical condition at South Cout Com- munity Hospital today. A hospital spokesman nld I b e y9ungster had not regained consclouaness since the accident. Also atlll !lated In critical condition is Kellen Alarcon, 20, of Tustin, who suf •. fered serious Injuries In a South Laguna motorCycle accident Tuesday night. Her companion, Dooglas Keyworth, !01 of Orange, bas shown s11gbt improvement . but remains ln guarded condition in the bo.n>itfl's intensive care unit. Vote Canvass Slated At Special Meeting The Laguna Beach City Council wlll hold a special meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday In City Hall council cbamhen lo declare the result of the July 25 recall-council electlon, after receiving the city clerk's report on the officlaJ canvass of the vote. Councilman-elect earl Johnson will he sworn into office at the Tuesday meeting, preparatory to taking part In tht regular council session Wednesday ni,ht. DAILY PILOT Tiit ar.1'11141 Coelt DAILY PILOT, Wlffl Wll~ I• combl!lfd ftl• NfWl..Pr .... i. pub!llllN _, tll9 Or1n11 CO.II Mtlthlht OlmP1"1. S.,. r111 tdlllons •r. PUblhllltd, Mondt)' thrvv;tl frld1y, lot COl!t M•, Newport hldt. Hun1!1111lon lffdl/Ftum1ill V1IWy, LlfVlll lhad'I. lr¥1N/S.dd~ d Sin Cltmm14/ S"' Jlllln Ctphltl'tno. A tint'-r.olorotl Wlllo!I fa PUtllltl'IW S.tvrdlYI Miil SVnd1ya, The prlll(lpel pv01l1hll!f pt1nt I• It »0 Wftt a.y llrHI, Colfl M.... Clllflmlt, f:M.M, lto\.ert N. W11d Prald.,. •M ""llllsllfr Jeck R. Curley Viet "91111 .. t '"' 0trner11 M.tlllt« Thom11 K1 1'1'i1 ...... Tho111e1 A. M11rphi111 /llltMtinl ESll'OI" c••rf•• H. L.01 JJch•r4 '· N.n Aubin Mtn111nt E41t.iii ""--office 111 forto1t A'l'111111 Malllttt M4,111: P.O. 111 464, t2612 OtWom- c:.tl M-1 Sii Wftt t.y Strllt N=M<ti: ml ~ 8Mtv1N HlilM IOI! l•dH 11'7J .. di •OV!fto11' ... .. .. ,.... .,. c.rnir. ..... Toi.,._ ln41 UJAIJI Cl•lfW Al11: ..... '42·1671 &.e,.e ........ ., ....... 1 1rl r•••• •M-t4U ~. '"' °"""" CMtt fl'lilbftdlhl ... c-,,, ... .,"f._ .. -.......... l•rtittw. ., ................... ""'"' .. , • •• •alsttl """""' ..-w .... ....................... ...... ~,..,...---_~~! C..lfttn'llt,. ...... W '""""~-IUI _.,..., lir 1M1 ti.II. ~I rnll...,., ....... 11 ..... ......,, I • • ' I • \ I I I I .. r.. ..... c.,. .., ,,_ • --- , • SJSO MiUlon .Justice Orders Phone Refund WASHINGTON (AP ) -Justice Byron R. White t4tay cleared the way for a $156-million -refund to customers of the Pacific ~elepbOne· & Telegraph Co. In a brief order issued at the Suprf!me Court be set aside a temporary postpone. ment of the refund and declined to further delay the rate decision in California . The refund would amount to about $12. for a home telephone, but could mean tens of thousands of dollars for cor- porations. PT&T attorneys had argued the unanimoos decision by the California Cigarette Firm to Buy County Land Phlllp Morris, owner of 51 percent of the Mission Viejo Company has given no- tice it will exercise an option to purchase the remaining 49 percent of the southeastern Orange County development company for an estimated $27 .5 million. The New York~based manufacturer of cigarettes and other products bought a ~l percent interest in the company in January. 1970 for $20 million. Supreme Court was patently arbitrary and contrary to due process. They also said the refund order was "a grave mi scarriage of justice" and a "com- pounding blow " to the company's ability to serve its customers. Besides the refund, the state court on June 9 invalidated a $143-mllllon ntte·in- crease granted PT&T by the state public utilities commission a year ago and another $68.t+-milHon boost that went into effect last hiay. The company ""'as to have begun making the repayments on July 14 but \Vbite that day temporarily granted PT&T a postponement while he considered a 23-page plea for a stay of the decision. White acted in the absence of Justice William 0. Douglas, within whose jurisdiction California cases normnlly fall. HI! order said: "Upon further con- sideratlon of the application for stay of 1 the mandate of the California Supreme Gourt and upon e~amination of the respoll!les filed to such application, the temporary stay of mandate heretofore entered on July 14, 1972 is vacated and the application for stay of mandate ~ denied." ' I Water Line Pa:rs Off as S. Coast Supply Dwindles Total land in the vast Rancho Mission A million dollar i.nvestment began to Viejo is 45,000 acres with about 11,000 pay off this week for the South Coast acres under development by the com· County Water District when the drain of pany. stepped up construction in Laguna Niguel Richard J. O'Neill, chainnan of the and a minor beat wave threatened a Orange County Democratic Central C.Vm~ water shortage in the South County arta. mittee, is chief owner of the land holding After requesting a temporary cutback firm. Other principals in the company in· on water usage in the construction proj· N1!WP9RT BEACH NEW SHAPE OF CITY-Map shows present 18,200- acre city of Irvine, shaded area, and 8,200.acre "Frasier" annexation approved Wednesd~y by the Local Agency Formation Commission. Annex is bounded by dots while dashed line represents the new city's &2,400.acre opbere of influence including DAILY PILOT Malo In" Tl"' Ptlt!"'• adjustments made for Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and Orange. CUrved annex boundary west from Laguna Canyon Road is approximate, pending agreement between Irvme and Laguna Beach on its preci.e location. elude his two nephews, Anthony Moiso, ects, water district officials arranged vice president and secretary, Jerome with the Laguna Beach County water Moiso, James E. West, board chairman District to activate the mw transmission and Philip Reilly, president. line they had built jointly through In addition to the 7 ,000 acres now Laguna Canyon. partially developed by the company there The 42.inch canyon transmission main are 4,000 acres of the O'Neill Ranch nd I h So under option for future home building at a a ao.. nc uth c.oast County feeder From Pagel HANOI .1 •• 'of this eacalallon." Terming Amtrfcan war policy "a crlmfnal act, 11 the docu- ment ~ wulllnitoD "bas put Into action mo,. U.S. air and naval craft than eve: in Vietnam." Anowttlng .;...tlons by .. wsmen, Ngo Dien said North Vlelnam'1 view "Is that the cboJce of the U.S. president is an in- ternal affair of the American people." He added, bowever-1 that any candidate who wishes to gain the .voten' 11.1pport thould respond to the people's most bumlng Pl'<!- ble!Dll, Including "the prompt ending of the war in VJetnam." McGovem'a _position "contains positive elements which would lead to a correct, peacef111 sttUement of tht Vietnam prob- lem," be saKL Commenting on reports of U.S. bomb- ing o! North Vietnam, Ngo Dien amrted II waa ridiculous to say tht destruction of dlltes wu accidental. "If this Is attributed to mistakes, tben there bltve been too many mistakes,'' he aald. ·MeaDwJillt-; a leading Brit18b news magazine said todlY, that !o!J'Go"'!m'1. plans to cut .American troops In Europe "would destroy the strategy the Western Alliance h8.! been working on since John Kennedy'• time." The Weeltly Economlat, .In an edl!Drlal headed "John Foster McGovern?" said the cutbacks would destroy the chances for a "fiexlble responae to Soviet attack in Europe." This would leave "no alternative but a return to John Foster Dulles' old, brutal and now thoroughly implausible lhr<at of massive retaliation'' with n u c l e a r weapon1, It added. From Pagel FEUD ... praiser hired by tht county. Both, according to Redding used the defunct e 1 c r o w a as evidence in determining land values. Hiru:haw states that Redding knew of the eacrows and, "gave them the appropriate weight - very little." Stanley Krause, director of Real Property Services admllted Thursday that four of six esaows between developers and property owners In tht Yorba park slle area have oollapsed. Hinshaw aloo charge.! that the U.S. CorpJ of Engineers and the county's chief fiood conllol district engineer. George Osborne, have warned of dangerous fiood hazards to the properly. The assesaor's aides have estfmated that sums up to $10,000 an acre would be necessary to make the area flood pniol. The county has I fl.3 million llJ'anl fro mthe stat• to ltnance purchaH of 50 perttnt of the propooed perk land and supervisor• have earmarked an ed.· dltlonal $1.3 mtlllon in the Harbors, Beacher ind Parks DIJtrlct bud(el for tht acquisition. Complaint Sought Against Capistrano. Councilman main carrying w.ater south from the an estimated price of $15 million. The Laguna city limits, had been activated on land is owned by O'Neill and his sister' a test basis only since its completion. Alicia O'Neill Avery, Started from scratch in the rolling hills The SCCWD invested $1.4 million as Its S-Outheast of the San Diego Freeway in share of the line Uirough the canyon and 1966, the Mission Viejo community now an addtUonal $344,000 for the feeder line. By putting h9th Into lull use, tht boasts 18,000 residents. The Minion Viejo threatened water shortage was averted. Company also has developments under according to Raymond c. Miller, SCCWD way in Phoenix and Denver. manager. O'Neill owns a number of restaurants Next step ln upgrading SCCWD water Ora'nge County Sherifrs officers today escort to her parked car at the Dana in Southern California, two lighting service, he said, will be replacement of will ask the dlltrict attorney'• office to Marina at about 4:30 a.m. when her equipment manufacturing finns in the existing IS.inch line under Pacific . lain barg S Orange County, office buildings, apart· Coast Highway with a new J4-incb ISSUe a comp t c ing an Juan angry husband drov' up. ment complexes and a shopp••• center ilm he _, tramm.luion line at' a cost estimated at Capistrano Counc· an James Keith S assertedly told officers that on the Palos Verdes peninsula. ••111 ooo $7 000 ,_ h ...,.,, to 00, . Weat11e.1S with assault with a deadly Weathers rammed her car and threaten· T e Rancho Mission Viejo is part ol The old line, which is both undersized weapon. ed her with a shotgun. She said she then the original Rancho Santa Margarila, and deteriorated, said , Miller, is being Investigators decided to seek a com· drove to the borne of family friends in once owned by California Gov. Pio Pico uUlized to full capacity. The project ta . and ilis brother Andres. Included in the replace it will be up for bid in August plaint after prqbing a family fracas MWion Viejo and called the shirifl11 of-vast holdings was about 250,000 acres ei:-and the new line is expecitd to be in Thursday that they claim ended with flee. tending to the Mexican border. service early Jn 1973. Weathers, '.rl, of 27341 Ortega Highway, J-~~j;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;~~~;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;;.;;liijjl!i;:--:-- san Juan eapistrano, tevenng a toaded I shotgun at two sheriff's deputies. Weathers was released from county late Thursday on hi! pledge to ap- and &Mwer assault charges in South Orange County Municipal Court. The councilman was arreated at a Jllisslon Viejo home sbqrtly after deputies summoned by Mrs. Ellen We&;U!ers ~rrived to investigate her ·ac-- count o( a car ramming inddeDt It Dana Marina. Officers s a 1 d Mrs. Weathers, the mother of two children, bad been with a friend the prevlOus evening. They said she had been returned by her malt Laguna Scouts Become Eagles Two Laguna Beach boys received scouUng's highest award this week in an Eagle Scout ceremony in the school <Hstrict offices. The new Eagle scouts are Kim L Johnson, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Johnson, 1226 Starlit Road and Bryn E. Barnard, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest R. Barnard, 28892 Top of tht Worl4 Drive. Both belong to Boy Scout Troop 702 of Laguna Beach. Assisting in the Wednesday ev~ning ceremony were Jim Cowan of Troop• 702 and Chuck Hirsch of Troop 45, along with Troop 702 oUicers Dr. Charles Hess and Paul Hance of Laguna Beach. A scout must pass through five levelt of Scouting before he can earn the Eagle Award, pass tests !or 21 merit badges, and fulfill character and leadership re- quirements. The Eagle rank Is achieved by oruy two percent of scouts in the na- tion. Tires, Accessories 1 Stolen at Station Henredon Upholstered Furniture On Sale! DREXEt:.-4iERITA6~ENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN • NOW YOU CAN OWN LUXURIOUS FURNITURE i\ T TREMENDOUS SAYINGS AND YOU ~AN SPECIAL ORDER .WITH .THE FABRIC OF. YOUR CHOICE! . . ' NEWl'ORT BEACH e IH7 WlSTCUff DA:, Russ Space Sh'ot, Set· MOSOO'I\' (11Pt) -'l"9 s.tltt \Jntori prollably wUJ launch a new Sl.b'UI - laboratory and a two-or threHDan ~ opacecrt!t In the nert few days, qualllltd Communlllt sources said today. Laguna U.1ch police ·~ lnvesUgatlng the thlft of 1331 worth ol tJrta, auto •<> cessorlu and c11h ll'q/D 1 s. Coul lilgb~ sarvlce stsiion. ' L The .... WIS repo~ wly today by • BW'1 Chevron Slalloa, 11111 S. Coaat l!ighway. , Police said the noctunial bursJOr •P- parmtly made .... ra1 ..,.._ at· tempts ID brealr into the ltatlon belOr'I 11na117 gaining entry to the lube and ..,. cessor)I room. '4J·2010 TORl\ANCE e • 21141 HAWTHOAHE ILVD. l11·127t LAGUNA IEACH e 141 HOAYH COASJ HWY. 4tMllr • I ' I I I ( 7 7 r • - Saddlehaek Tetlay's l'bull VOL:. 65, NO. 21<1, :t SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 28, '1972 TEN CENTS Annex N·ear Last Hurdle • Question of Natural Boundary Line Confronted Jly GEORGE LEIDA!. Of tlll Diii)' l'lllt Stiff Mapping preci!ely the ridgellne which forms the Laguna canyon walttshed is the last obstacle to Irvine's annexation of 1,200 acres of the Irvine Ranch. The watershed line would follow the hllltopo 'and become the city boundary of Irvine west of Laguna Canyon Road. It is tbe point along the ridge at which drops of , tlattt ~eclde whether they'll now toward 'Laguna Beach or Irvine. 0 lt'I I dlfficult line to draw Jegally,u Cigarette Firm to Buy County Land Philip Morris, owner ol 51 percent of the Mission Viejo Company baa gtven·no- tice It will exercise an option to purchaae the remaining 19 percent of the 10utbeutern Orange County development company for an estimated $27.5 rnllllon. The New· York-hued ·manufacturer of cigarettes and other products bought a 51 percent Interest In Ille company In January, 1170 for $20 mllllon. Total land In the vast Rancho M!Jslon Viejo Is 15,000 acrea with about 11,000 acres under ~velopment by the com- PIDl'• -Richard J. O'Neill, chairman nf lbe Orange County DemocraUc Central Com- mlllee, la chief owner el the land boldlng firm. °"'"" 'prlncipail ljl jbe cpmpany m. aludi Illa .... nephewl. Antboey Mollo, Ylce p:11ideM liDd llCl'IUrJ, Jenne .,_, J-E. Wal, board chairman City Manager William Woollette Jr. said today. Within the next month, however. it must be drawn to saUsfy the condition required by the Local Agency Formation Coinmls!lon (LAFC). The county boundary •gency w..me. day approved the Irvine annexatjqn with the condition that Irvine and La.guna Beach work out the watershed line. That agreement, Woollet! said, 'Will in- clude a formal . legal description and a map of the boundary. Both must go back : 'SHO~=~~~~~ED'!. ... . . .iWderson Hedges .... ,....,_~ d'! L1!~-~lion to ~ 10 'lcret now paruauy deYeloptd hF the ....,there art 1,IOO -of , the O'J(olll Ranch -option 1or ~ llo"8 11alldlng 11 O D le m_ • an atlmated price-ot $15 JDiDlon. The . n n1n .(..narg· e land la o~ by O'Neill ond hll slater, . · Alicia O'Neill Avery. . A ... E I Started from scratch In the rolllng hllil gamst ag eton aoutheast of the San DI.., Freeway In -· the Mlaaion Viejo community now boasts 11,000 ~·The Mlasloo Viejo Compony aiao bu developmenbi under yay In Phoenix and Denver. O'Neill owns a number of ..stauranls ln southern California, two llP.tlng equipment manufacturing finnl i n Oranc• County, office buildings, apart· ment complei:es and a .shopping center on the Paloo Verdes peninsu!J. .. The Rancho Mllslon Viejo Is part of the oriilnal Rancho Santa Margarita, 0nce owned by California Gov. Pio Pie» and bis brother Andres. Included In the vast boldlnp wu about.250,000 acres u:· tending to the Mexlcan'horder. Jom Foster, an Englishman wbo later cbailged bis name to Juan Forater In 11136 upoa becnmlni a Mexl""1 citizen bought the ranch from the Plcoa in 11161. In '1111 Rancho Santa Margaribi w a s eold tO Richard O'Neill, grandfather of lbe pmenl original owner. In !Me the federal government bought '!65,llOI acres foe the Camp Pendleton Marine Corpo hue and lbe remainder waa held by the O'Neill family, all In aoutheostctn Orange County. .Company Tells Loss ·of Precision Tools Ol'lnp County Sberlff's ofllcerl are lo- ·day -.king burglars who carried off a he< CODtalnlnc valuable preclalon too!J from on ltvlne firm. DeplJUes said the bolt WU taken by ln- tnidm who broke lDlo the pm'n!Jes of Berte& Corporation. lllllOI Von Karman Ave., In'1h0 ltvlne Industrial Complex. Company olficlals valued the box and lta CODtenta al $739.311. • '\ ' 2 Man:y Make a POMPANO BEACH, Fla. -A ........ entered•MrYlce tlgjs olllce, pillad • ,... on mlnger ml deman\lld all the cash f""' ... roa111er, poUce said ~· ..,.... the manager COllld obll&• _..... -enlorad with • gun ... ...........i • holdup, Slunned, .. hlo ..-, who did DOI -... ~. docldod to Join forces, n.r --ap the cub OQ the opol ... Did. W AsmNGTON (UPI) -Columnist Jact And<noo waa qucted today u saying he ahculd have checked further helore broadcasting his claim that Democratic Vice PresidenUal candidate 'l'hanw F. EaiJeton had a rea>rd of drunken and reckless driving. The Wuhlngton Slar-News.'ln a story by Robert Walltta ond Michael Satchell reported Anderaoo llllid he "probably should have withheld" publicizing the charge but that competitive . news pressure prompted him to make ii without full. verification. Eagleton denounced· Anderson's aaser- Uon that he• had been arrested on drunken and recklesa driving char(ea In the t•'• as a ""damnable lie." Mta.>url recorda for lbe aenator show that he bad two-traffic involvements -once for speeding: and oooe for an accident oD an icy ·bighway. Alldenon alJo told the SW-NeWI he fell hll story "got played up beyond pro- portion" because it came on 1 day when there was no o~ aolid development In lbe Eagleton llituatloo. 'lbe vice -idenllal nominee disclosed Tueaday be bad been hospltau.ect thrte Umes In the !MO'a for psychtatric trealo menl becauae of latiCU• and nervous tension. '* * * Eagleton Says He's Vindicated In New Charges SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -DtmocraUc 1ioe presldenUal ~ 'lbomos F. Eagleton said todly he feels vindicated because cclumnist J.ick ADlleraaa bu fal)ed to prvduca documenla to -hll cbarge that Easletoa has a record ff drunktndriving. · "I feel I've been vindicaled ol thel charge/' he told a news conference. Anderson .aald Thutaday he bad localed ~!JlllUc copies of rtcenlt showing ieton WU arrested I balf-. timtJ I MllllOUl'i for drunken or ncklela cir!•· • But. Andtraon lald he did not have the docu-ond did not -If the --llllaouri official wbo llod lol4 him aboat tliml had tbtm "1her. At the nen confeence, Eqleton ft• J)lllded hll deolal ol lbe dnl-4-lvlng chorae, aaylng he bad nmr been ll<ipo peel or quetlloned In COlllllCllon w1ill -L 'l'llandly he had denled flatly that he'd (lea IWILETON, Plop I) ) to the LAFC for review btfore the annex becollle3 final. Since fewer than 12. registered voters livt within the area, only a City Council resolution is needed· to complete the an- nexation. The area trimmed from the Irvine sphere of "influence and annexation arhounts to about 1,100 acres. The land ls hilly terrain located above Laguna can- yon Road. Because the land drains into Laguna canyon and to the ... 'al Laguna Beach, Art Colony officials asked that ii be reot\l'Ved aa part of their sphere of In- fluence. Choo&ing the watershed Une for the Irvine boundary aebi a County JlRCl'lent, Woollett ooted. Usually section lines, freeways or boundaries of oJher. jurisdlctlona are choten, because detailed legal descrip- tions are readily available. "We are hoping it won't require a phyalcal, on site survey lo delttrnine the precise line," Woollette said. SUcb s~ (See ANNEX, Page I) * * * * * * Boundari.es for Irvine . Based on Drain Lines Sin<e the beginning of the In-way water flowed at the pn>posed corporation movement two years ago, northern tip of the map. Now that quea-- Irvine's boundaries in part have relied on tion bas been resolved and about 200 drainage lines. acres of Irvine Ranch lapd !J considered Councilman John Burton noted today part of the city of Orange's sphere of In- the northern boundaries of the 53,000-fluence. acre sphere of influence originally filed "No way did we want to end up having wi~ the Local Agency Formation Com· to pump sewage over hilltops," 1Burton mission (LAFC) were ,drawn along ·the said, expialnlng ·wby the .early city pro- ridgellne of the Lomas de SaoUago . posa1 resulbi In a howl·shaped, area nf Mountains. land. That early sphere map waa rejected by 'l'be "howl" stretches f!OJD the Lomas the LAFC. Until Incorporation of a city In de SanUago ridgellne eouth to the ridge Irvine, they said, ii was' not a binding of the San Joaquin Hills -between UC map. Irvine and the city of Newport Beach. Now, the fledgling city of ltvlne baa Mappers a!Jo loUnd ii difilcull to con- gotten LAFC endorsement of that map Unue the oouthern line along the ridge wl!lch outlines the area Iha( Irvine may which hounds the . Laguna Cinyon someday grow into. Watershed and thus followed "section The LAFC .approval ,detmes more lines and quarter sectioii lines," Burton clearly the -drainage of the Pet.era Loke noted. ' azoa, Burton noted·today. When planners 'l'be eaatern ~ wu ~aay. be of·tbie City of.lrvlna w.re drawing their aaid. ·'lbal •line \Is the4rvlne• l\oncb · DAILY l'ILOT l'IMN h' Rldlft KMll• MARIE STUMP KNOWS HOW TO BEAT THE HEAT Lagun1n Cools Off in Oc11n to EK1pt: Slultr Mercury Will Drop a Bit Initial sphere map ii, ~·t -· ~ lJQrdu, , , • , • i• ' ."': ' t.!io I .,, l;, 4.l!ft'!J... (/lflllef' ""'*I o • 1,1. ', .' \1 ·' . I I I t . { , , .Hirishaw.,Kuyper Conflict . Bursts futo Flame. Again The three-year..old feud be t iw e en ' Orange, County Aasesaor Andrew J. llinobalf and County CoUDBel Adrian Kuyper burst lDlo flames again Tlill's- day. Kuyper In a letltr prepared for lbe Board of Supervisors charged that Hinshaw'• olllce's appraisals of land comprising the proposed 1oi.acre Yorba Regional Park on the Santa Ana River In northeast Anaheim was "IDcon'ect In factuaJ arid legal premises." Hinshaw holly repiiOd that Kuyper waa seeking "to dUcreclit the aasesaor'1 office through Innuendo and falsebood ... lllmhaw'a apirallers told I h e 811pervisors last June 27 that the county baa agreed to J>1Y up to '24,000 an ..,.. for the park land that bi wm1b only $7,lOO an acre. The Hlnshaw·Kuyper feud first erupted in 1999 over appreisala by the usesaor'1 office of Irvine Company Iinda around the Upper Newport Bay. "I said at that time that Kuyper had violated the code and canon of the American Bar AMociation," Hinlhaw retaled 'lbunday. "l added that this of· fict from that lime OQ wcuid DO tonger uae the services of lbe county counsel's office." The Yorba pork land purchase baa been the aubj4ct of many appraisals and lpter.Qepartmental argume!lts for lbe past year. The appraisal whlcll Ignited Thurlday'r ucbange waa done by Gar Redding, a supervjslag appraiser In the .aasesaor's olflce. He pointed out that .mw, In the park lite area which· called for payment of $11,000 to $20,000 an ..,.. f9f land which ls now under opllon to lbe ccunty bad collapsed. . Reddlni'• fl ,&Oii on acre appralial had . been ~ed by value estimates by Johli R. Siiadcty, wistant direc!tor of the valuaUon div!Jlon ol the county's Real Property Services Departmen~ and by Stanley H. Yorshl.I, an independent ap- praiser hired by the ccunty. Both, according to Redding used the defunct e s c r o w 1 as evidence in determining land values. Hinshaw •tales that Redding lmew of lbe escrows and, "gave them the appropriate weight - very little." Stanley Krauae, cilrector of Rtal Property Semces admitted 'lblll'lday that four of six escrows betl!tfn developer• ana· property ........ In the Yorba park site area have ccitap>ed. llinshew a!Jo char&er that the U.S. Corps of Engineers ond the county'• chief flood · CIODtrol d1ltrict engineer, George Olhorne, hive warned of dangerous flood hazards to lbe· property. The a1sel80l''1 aidet have tttimated that suma up to •10,000·an acre would be nect!llUI')' to make the area flood proof. ni, · county bu 'a •1,J million grant (See FEUD, P ... I) Hitchhiker Hunts Lost (And Nameless) Love .LOS ANGELES (AP) -Embll2oned on 50 Southern California Rapid Transit Dilirict bwea ls an advertiMment "8dlng: "I Love Albuquerque Girl Real Skinny -Who Works • Lives ID LA Picked Me 1Jp on Hwy I ii Santa lfoaica, July 10, Coolact me al tl5 S. v.-Urfenl." A (Ormer 1Jnl.,.., ol Mlchlpn stu• -. Dnld kb.a, .. ol Bloomfield. Midi., 1111111 Ilk --.. 11Ylng1 of •1,D ID on eflwt to !lad a girl he loves but --he-~ know. ,,,. lq-llllred, hear..i Sclnoarb aald he mot her while hllchlliklnl. The lieDller, ~ c!rl ond I male COlllplllloll picked lllm up In theJr ' car, bought lilm' i hamburger ond drove him 10 mlleo up Pacific Coast Highway. He ond the girt taIW ond he found out she WU from Albuquerque, N.M. -but be ~lecled to aak who she wu. · "I b111r 11," be' admlis. "1t wain't until 1 fol up u for at Montorey that I reallz. ed l dldn~ , -her llllllt. She WU great It's Just a feeUne ,.. hev,e when you talk to ......,,. ond JOU lmmtdiltoly aeem llke old frlendlt." Schwarll hurried-beck te Loi Angelu ond baa "sunk everythlDc '"' OadU. her -all my lntd for a mooth'a ad- verttatng." What If she bu other cornrnltrneots! 11J'm not W<1TJed," be uya. "If 1 find . her, I'll take care of the rest" I OrA!lll 'County l'tlldenil cafl ,,..., Id ali'ghUy c o o 1 e r , weather Saturday, as teinepritUres today began dropping a few de.,... from Uie v.:eek's unexpected be.at wave, weather: foreca~ers said to-day •.. Coastal. temiieratures remained fairly constant today, at about 73 degrees, lour degrees cooler than. 'lburaday:s.hlgh. The same mld-'lll degree beach weather is ex- pected Ibis weekend. ' ·Beach areas ·will •have early morning patchy fog both Saturday and Sunday, but Orange County ' Harbor DiJtrict of Increased use of air conditloners; IUDDY and fair. Hardest hit Tbunday were Orll!lle ahd Trabuco Cinyon area, both reaching highs of 105 degrees. '!be same was recorded today, but lolecastora predicted 41cooler" weather . Saturday; mar~ ' Telephone Firm Told It Must · Make Refunds ·WASHINGTON •(AP) -Justice Byron R. White today cleared the way for a •llO-milllon refund to cuatomers of the Pacific Telephone & '(elegraph Co. In a brief orderlisued at lbe supreme Court he oet ulde a temporary potlpone-· ment -of the refund and declined to further' aeiay the rate decision In C.Ufomla. The refund would amount to about •u for a home telephone, but, could mean . to.na of thousands of· dollars for cor• poratlons, PT&T attorneys ~d· 'argued' the unanlmous decision by · the California Supreme Court was patently arbitrary and contrary to due process. They also aald lbe refund. order was "a grave miacarrlage of justice" and a 11com- pounding blow" to the company's ability to aerve its cuatomer1. · Besides the refund, the state court, on June I invalldated a $113-million rate-ino cr..,. granted PT&T by the.state public utilities commission 1 year ago and another Na.9-milllon boos\ that went Into eftect ' last MO}'l The company •WU te have herlun ~ the repayrnenta on · July II bot White thal daY tempwwlly ' granted PT&T a poelponllllfllt,wbilt lie 1 consld<red a U.pqe ~,for. a, stay of the declalon. • Whlte,~ted 'ht '111.am,n.e ·o! -.J111jlce William · O( ·ll<!llglas, ,11ltbln wllose • jurladictlon Caii/orD!a easu . nornially fall 1111 order said" "Uporl furtbier 'con- slderaUon of the application' fol slaf ,ot the mandate of the Calllornla Supreme Court aiicl upon examlnaUon ol the responses filed to such appllcaUon, the . tomporary stay ol mandate heretofore entered on July 11, 1m ls vacated ond the appllcaUon for sla1 of mandate la denled." -..... [' Irvine ~ romrded II decrees and Santa All& lilt a -ull'• lilch of 100 degrees 'l'hw'aday, 1 · B@th areaa dropped' to lbe mld-90's to- day and that trend Is ezpected to con- tinue Saturday. 'Ibe El Toro-ML!!sion Viejo areas were in lbe aweltering low·lOO'a today and Thu~y. Forecasters at the El Toro Ma~ Air Stetlon said that heal would cool to mlct·90's this weekend. Even1 with the slight drops, many peoo pie still found it necessary to stay inside and tum on their air condiUonen, the Southern Calilornla Edison Company reported. The company reported about 10 11bufn. ed up" residentiaf·area transformers in. the county in tbe past four days because of increased use of air condiU Ners. A company apo.tesman aald that oo far this . presents 11Do problems" ~1 a the overloaded electrical circu.ltl, ••tart .t( the heat persists -well,, just wall and see." Areas with the trans!onner failures but DO major blackout.. were Santa Ana Orange and VilJa Park. A 93-degree high in Los Angeles is forecast for Saturday. That city reached a ·hl1h of 102 Thursday. southern mountains and deserts will have clouds and possible thwiderstonns Saturday, the National Weather SerVice .said. Highs recorded 'lbursday Included 111 in Palm Springs, 106 in San Bernardino, IOI In Riverside and 118 In Lona Beach. Oru1• In case you haven't cueaed tt- 1t1s gonna be a hot weekmd. Tem- peratures ol 95 are apected In Santa Ana Saturday, tomewhat cooler than today 's rUdln&s. Beaches around 75. Lon In Ibo 8011. INSmE TODAY Summer mtc.tt.1 Chcatu , .. son /or man11 Orange Coa&t rcrio dents who portidpott m Golden W tit Colltge and Onmg< Coast College productiO!ll. Acton ant bringing to Iii• •camtfot, • "Drcc1d4" and 'iPlav It Aoain, Sam. 0 St• toda11'1 Wtckmdcr, ~"-"" ,: = ..... ~ C1llf9n1I• f ....._. .. .,,. • c.,...r ~ u on-c:-. 11 ~.... .... .......... ... CMl!u a ~....,. '' (,_...... ,. '-" , ... o..-•Met 1t ............... ••"'111 .... ' "'........ • ,......,. ,,.,, ,....... ... ,., ... ..,...,,_ . ........ , .............. ,. ... ~ u """''-' 4 -. ... • I DAILY PILOT Predatnrs Hunted ' In Park ly JACK CHAPPELL Of .... ...., '""" ..... Tbe llOOJldl of the Sin Clemente State P.-lt w.. belllf combed today by ranpra tor aey atau ol rabid animal•, In the wab of blllna lncld1nll at tbl park. Vllllorl art belll( warned by r1n1er1 not to lleep on tbl ~ and to avoid all wtl4 anlmall. By llalurday, Orll!it County Htlltb Deporlment not!Ctl wUI be 11ven to every pnon 1Dlerlnl lhe park warnlnl of tbl huatd. A. fol ldllod Tbureday b)' head Rana1r Euca Juno111 wu 111ted b)' tbl htllth depll'llll111t No evldenct of rablu wu found. Howevor, furlbet 11111 art pen- din&. Dr. on-. Hamilton, ol tbl county Btilth ~en~ uld 11mpl11 ol the dead lox'• brain wore belnl rushed to 1 state lab· In Barkeley for 111t1 Hlklnl di!!UIU otb.-than rablet which ml&bl caUll tbl animal to acl In en a1are111v1 -· J\4aanwbll1, !bl lllle ~"' wUI be patrollJnC !be brush .,.... ol tbl park ..areldni for bodlu ol dead an!mal1. JIUlllll 11lcl hll tlDIWI baVI orders to tOWl4 up wUd loiu at the park. Nottou prepared b)' the heal.th depart. men! lllltrucl campen to: -Romain wllhll camp 11111 or on ~bllllied pathl. -81.0p above pwncr, prel••blJ within an 1nc1-.. · -Avolll all lldmlll, tlpecl1l11 any animel that a_.ii.t people or appear1 w. -a.pan any ~~/..IOI, or lltunlk to !bl ranam lmmedll...,. --- r---· ~ NIWPORT BIACH Eagleton OK • ' McGovern Firm On VP Selection From \V lre Strvlces CUSTER, S.D. -Sen. George S. McGovern, standing firm on h1J vire presidential selection amid growing critlciam, 11y1 he will meet again with Sen. 'lllom11 F. Eqteton early next wee~ when they both ret urn to Washington. For the second time in six days, McGovern reprimand ed hia staff, telling them he wanted no further comment by anyone other than himself and Eagletol'l. "l have made my support for Sen. Eagleton cle1r and l want no further comment on the matter by any one con-- nected with the camfalgn other than Sen. Eagleton or myself,' McGovern said in a 1tatement. McGovern, winding up a two-week vac1Uon in which he ha1 gotten little teat, went to a ,private showing of the movle "The C8ndldate," in Cuater and told reportefl afterward! that he prob- ably would see Eagleton Sunday or Monday. Eagleton dl11cio1ed this wetk that he had underione treatment for a nervous disorder three times in the 1980s. On top of that report, columnist Jack Anderson said Thursday Ute Democratic vice pre1ldentllli candldalt had been arreated a number of Umes for drunken or reckle11 drlvtna. ' Eagleton 11ld In H1w1ll Ander1Dn'1 ch•fl• w11 a "damnable Ile" and th1t he wu all tbe more determined to 1t1y on the ticket In other developmenll: Mlllourl olllcllli1 ol both part1e1, p11t and ptesent, aay they doubt the truth •I Ander10n'1 report that drunken and reckle11 drlvtna chlrtH were ltled agalnll Eagleton. On the third of!en,., Jn 1!162, he •P- peartd ln magistrate court In Fulton, Mo., and was lined $35. • Almost eve ry influential Democrat who has expressed an opinion saya that Sen. Thomes F. Eaaleton11 admisa!on of undergoing psychiatric treatment will hamper Democratic chance• or defeating President Nixon In November. And a growing number of Democrats are asking Eagleton to withdraw as the vice presidential candidate. Tcx11 State Rep. Francl'I T. "Sis:-y·• Farenthold and lormer Cleveland mayor Carl Stokes Thursday joined those ad- vocating Eagleton's withdrawal. • The New York Times in an editorial published today suggested that Eagleton volunllrlly withdraw as the Democratic candidate for the Vice presidency. Citlng Eagleton'I adtnlsslon that he h~" · been ho1pltallzed three times tor nervous e;xhaustlon and depres.sion, the edltorlal slid It would be "• healthful contribution not only to the McGovern candJdacy but to the health of the American polltical proces1 tor Senato.r Eaglet.on to retire Crom the field and \)E!rmJt the presidential contest to be decided wholiy on the issues ." From Pagel EAGLETON ... ever been aJTested for drunken or carele11 driving. Before the new1 conference Eagleton received a call from ~n. Edward M. KeMedy (IJ.Ma!!.J, who, an Eaaleton aide, aald, wl.ehed him weU. -U 1 pmoa II bltlell, lmmadlltely ieelt llled*I care, contlcl ranaen and the Or11111t Cow!17 H11lth Dlplll'lmlnl. With Ult dltermlnlllon that !hi m shot TburedaJ did not hl\11 ' rabltl, of· ficlell llkl tbll conaldarallone ol clollnl the park art bell\& hold In abeylllce. "If an antmel iurnt up that II rebid, It fs a posslbillfy thet tboll ll1p1 would be taken," Junette sald. NIW IHA'I 01' CITY-Map thows present 18,200- ICH cur, o1 Jrvlne, 1haded area, and 8,200-acre "Fr11ler' 1nnexatlon approved Wednesday by the Local A1oncy Formation Commission. Annex ls bounded by dots while dashed line represents the new city's 52,400-acre sphere of influence lncludln& DAILY ,ILOT Mell h' TIM Plflrttl adjustments made for Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and .Orange. Curved annex boundary weot from Laguna Canyon Road ls approximate, pending agreement between Irvine and Laguna Beach on Its preclH location. A UP 111tVey of M111ourl treffle record• showed only a speedlna vlol1tlon in Calloway County In lll02 and two earlier 1Plfdlrt1 chltgtl when 1C11loton w11 II and H yem old. The llnt wu on July 17, 1911, when he wal.flned f6 and court COlll, and the aeo- ond on Feb. 19, 1954, when he wu fined $10 end court coat.. · The aide, pre11 secretary Michael Kelly, said Kermedy called the Mi1souri senator from Waahlngton and "all he did was to call him and atve him hll sup-port. II Kennedy reached Eagleton as he was about lo addre11 I gathering or local Democrat. at a breakfast meetlng here. The support from Kennedy came one day after columnist Jack Anderson said Eagleton had a record of drunken and reckleBI drlvlng, 1 charge Eaaleton im- mediately libeled"• damnable Ile." summertime visitor population of the part varies between 1,000 and 3,000 ~ .... .i.111 •. ilan1m bellne. lhll thltl art perhape three ~ falu In tho park arta, bUI note I.hat there could be more. The foxes are naUve to the area and ve Ctlled 0 gray foxes, .. althoUth they It• not ~ f•f· hi lild. Schoo] District Agendas Offered A.ey Itvlnt ruld1nt1 "ho wanl to receive co]ltos ol thl Irvine Unllled School Dltlrlcl board 11endu can re- qUlll !ham In wtltlni !rom tbl Ot'IDI• CoWI\)' Department ol Edu!,Uon. Apndu wlU be poaled at the lrvlne ochools, at the cll,Y poatlnl place at Alpha Bela Marki! Jn Unlvenlfy Park, and ... , to homeoimli'I' lllbcllllodl. Ruldlnti can lllo requlll lo rt<elve the .. lltl packll ol back1round m11trl1l1 with the agenda by wrtUna Aaoctate BuPltlnltndinl Ftld KoCh, l!M Civic CtDler Drl~e Wut, Sanle All" 92701. Two packtla wlU hi 11nt to each td!Ool In the dl1trlcl and one 11cb lo 1111 city and all pattot-teacher organlUUont. Fro111Pqel FEUD ••• from tne llate to flnence purchaM ol llO percent ol the propoaed park land and ,;upervlsors have earmarked an ad· dltlonel fl.3 million In the ljatbor1, Beach11 and Parka District budaet for the acqublllon. OIANH COAIT h DAILY PILOT n. Of•l'lll• CNJt OAILY r'll..OT, wmi ·~ it CO!Mlrl-' ..._ N..,..P,..._ It M ii.,_, ... N Ot'llllfl C-.tl Pl1Ml1hlna Cll'l'l .. ll't, hNo t•I• •lticwit er. PlllN!thld, Mcnelly tllrou;ll FrlNy, for CMle M ... , Newport lffdl, H11nllngtln ltecllllfMl911t V•llfY, llOlllQ I.ch, ln'IMfk .. liMdl tfti h11 C~lt/ S.lt Ju.it (tJlil,.,.., ,. 1l11tl• Ntklnll ldlltlft it piublallN .... YI •lld Sundlys. ,,,_ prfi'lc.,.I PllbUtlllfit Jki11l II •I :J30 Wnt lty IWMC, C•lt MMt, C• tlftnlil. fa.M. lte~tff N. Wet4 !'"lllffll 11111 lllltlillMr J,,. It. c:.,,,,, Vitt l'ttlldt11I tM Otfttrtl Manittr Thtlfttl KttYll '""" Thofl'I•• A. M11rp1iin• M ..... lfll .. lttr ai1d1• H. L••• l!th•N P. Nill ANi.lll'lt Mtnttltw ••nw. --ewC::r M ... t • "':!:J' 1"9tt H lMC111 SW H llvltwlrl 1..-lltd'l1 tit ,11'111 Avtl!lll ""''m:r...'1."''' '"" ..... "''~ .. lall I al Htttlt II Clrfl'"" lllMI Toi ...... 11141 tu.4111 C~ A••thl11 ''14171 S. c-Al h,e.t-1 1'1hrt1• 4ft.44JI _ ...... -......... , c.,,..,,, ~ ,.... 1ttt'-, lllwlfll ........ -ffltlltr .. .,_,~,-i. .... ,.___ .. , ............... wl....,. IM&llt ,..._ .. ..,,,. ..... t11"'....:!~'5F.r,'1. "~= '".I::; ~. ,IS "*'thl't1 fl'lllliltf _ ........... ..,,. N. Viets Predict War Settlement With McGovern TOKYO !AP) -North Vietnam has predicted tl)a,$ the election of Sen. Georee Mi:GOvem u president of Iba Ul\lted SlltH Iii November "would lud to a cor- rect end 1 pe1cefUI aettlemeot of the Vletnln'l problem." Nao Dien, heecf of the Press and Information Department of Ille North Vtet111m11e Forell" Mlnlllr)I, 1 a Id McGovern'• 111weep1n1 victory" at the Demoeratlc party convenUon 1111 mainly due lo hll lllDd on the Vietnam J>NI> Iem.•1 "Mr. McOovem " Nao Dien declared, "holds that Iii American bombing In Indoehllia would be 1topped, that ill Amertcen troope ehould withdraw lrom ~ochlne and end all military usll\ance to:tbi 'l'h1ltl n,tme," all with no prtcon· dlllM•. Mc<lomn'I poslUon "la the opposite o! · that of Mr. Nixon who even now keeps canying on the aggressive war, pursuin1 tbe Vl1tnamlut1on, relll•lnl to withdraw American trilopa and Io m•lnltln the Nguyen Van Thieu admlnJatratlon," Nao Dien said. He appeared at a new1 conference In Hanoi to make public a memorandUm which expoled what he aid was 11an e1.- tremety aerlo1.11 war t1c1I1Uon move.by the United States against North Viet· nam." Hla remarkl and the memoran· dum were cll1trlbuted b)' Hanoi's Viet- nam News A.aency In 1 broldcut monitored In Tolcyo. The memorandum declared the Nixon Administration hu 1n1111imed the war In Vlelnam "while pUlllna f o r w a r d "1pocrltlcll lelka about 't>t•ct' In an •~ tempt to conceal the character and orlcln of thll eaclliaUon." Terming American war policy 11& criminal act," the docu· rrienf clalmed Waahlnglon "has pul tnlo act.Ion more U.S. air and naval cran thAn eve:o In Vietnam. 11 From Pagel ANNEX ... veyt •re tllne-con1uming and co1Uy. "There are some pretty go o d topographical maps of the area," Woolllett said. "It's possible the required boundary could be drawn on thein." Other alternatives include finding a county acency such as the Orange OJun.. ty Flood control District which may have at one Ume legally described the ridgeline. Once that boundary is worked out, the seven-morith-old city of Irvine will en. compau tl aquare mile1 of Or1n1e County, five equate m.ilet more thin the next largest city, Anaheim. The annexed Portion adds 1,400 acres or land pl1nned for an indllltrlll perk, 500 acres of recreaUonal-comrrterclal land lncludtng Lion COunlry Salari and more thtn 8,000 acre1 of hilly area now in a1rlcultural prenrvet but ma1te.r planned for r11ldentl1I u11. Russ Space Shot Set MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Union probobty will launch 1 new Slliyut opace laboratory and a tw~ or three-man SO)'UI sp1cecr11l tn the nell lew deye , quawted communist soul'Cll aald today, Texas H opefu.l Backs Rival HOUSTON (UPI) -T. H. Graham, a Republican candidate !or precinct constable, uld he had done 1Dmo reaeareh end found tbel hll Democretlc opponent w11 the better man for the job. Oreham withdrew Thurlday and 1ndomd . ht• opponant, Walter Ranltln. "He •hould conllnue hll 11t11l11nt urvlce without lnterl1renct of a polltlc1I campaign," Orlllam aald. Complaint Sought Against Capistrano Councihnan Oranae CountJ Sherltt'a offtctn IOd17 wlll Ilk lltt dl1trtcl attorney'• olftct to t!llte 1 complalnt charalnt ·san Juan Clpt1tr1no Councilman Jamu IC1llb Weather• with 111aUll wltll a dtadl)I weapon. depullu 1ummonod by Mn. !Clt•n W11th111 arrived to lnvelllgale her ac- count of 1 car r1mmt111 lnddtrtt at Dina Marina. Officttl 1 1 I d Ml'I. W11thtra, I b e mothtt ol two clllldrtrt, had been With 1 fflend tlll prevloua avenloi. Tbq ~ta !ha had been 11turned b1 hlr 1111111 elCOrt to her pa,.ed ctr at thl Dani Marine 11 abtiut 4:30 1.m. whln her ·~ blllban~ drov< up. lnvullptore decided to ,.., • cont• plain t oiler problna 1 lamll,Y lracu T!lunday that they claim ended wltb W•athert, fl, of 17341 Ortep Hlfhw11 San Juan 0.plttrano, leV1llD1 a lot~ sltotaun at two 1her!U'1 dtpUIJ• • Weatlltn w11 releaoed ftonl county )all late 'l'hureda)i on bll pl .. It ap, pear, and •nswer 1 .. uu c~ ln.Soulll Onllit County Municipal Ceurt. The councllman was a!Ttlled al 1 Mission Viejo home thortly aner She autttedly told elllcm.-tllal Wtallttn rammed lttr car end tldalen- ed ~et with a ahotaun. Sltt,le14 • U.. drove to !ht home or fllllll)> ll'l6tllll-In MllllOb VlejO Ind celled Illa alllrlfl'I fl.. flee. • Tires, Accessories Stolen at Station Laauna Beech police are lnveatlgettng the theft or $239 worth of tires, auto ac- cessories and eesb from a S. Coast HJcbway 1ervfce 1lalfol\. The Jou wu reported early ioday by BUJ'1 Chevron Station, 1990 S. Coast lli8hway. Polle• said the DOclUrnlli butglar ap- parently made several unsuccessruI at· tempts to break into the station before finally 1•inillf entry lo the lube and ac- cessory room. Nixon to Come To San Cle1nente Pretldent Nixon wilt Oy to the Western \Vhlte Houu followin1 the Republican National Convention, leading to IJ)eCU]a· tlon ·that he will kick off his l'Hlection campaign in San Clemente. Washington reports said that the Pr~sl·. dent WOUid ao frnmedialely to hll . San Clemente home following the Miami Beach convention which runs to Aug. 24. The Pre1ident ha• uld he woUld bold I 4'polltleal pre11 conference" at San Clemente ;white House. The Pruident has scheduled talk& with Jap1D'1 Prime Mlnl11tr tn H1w1U at the end of the month. Eagleton said the Anderson charge P:robably will hurt h1I peraonal reputa· tJOn. I Eagleton told the breakfast meeting he remaln1 determined to s t a y on the DemocraUe ticket and to become v1c1 president. 111'm 100 perctnt aatlllled that I can hack It, 11 he 1ald. "I'm Jolni to cro11 the country and do everythtng 1 peaalbty can, not In the '""'' of ptraonal vindication but In the sen1e of trying to elect George McGovern," be uld. Eeat•lnn flatly denied 1 report by Anderson that pholostatlc record1 show the Ml.s.sow-i senator w11 arre1ttd a hill· dozen 11tne1 for drunken or recldeu dr!Y.. ing. Henredon Upholstered Furniture On Sale! ., NOW YOU CAN OWN LUXURIOUS FURNITURE AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AND Y0U 1CAN SPECIAL ORDER WITH Tl1E FABRIC OF YOUR CHO) CE! DREXE[-HERITA9e.-tltNRl\OON-WOODMARIC-KAllASTAN --"----~-- INTIRIORS W.Ct.l'rl • IATlllDATI t.ot M 1110 fllDA • 'TIL tiOt ., 141-2011 TORRANCE e 1114' HAWT'40RNl ILVO, ltl·lllt LASUNA l~CH e 141 NORTH COAIT HW'I. ........ • I • • • Taxes Are the Fulcrum A significant Issue *,,,. to have been overlooked In all tha debate over the development of formerly in· dustrlal properties near Orange CoUllty Airport. The integrt\y of the 4,40().acre muterplanned light industrial pailc appears now to be threatened. As the city of Newport Beach moves toward designa· tlon of more acreage for commercial use, It becomes increasingly apparent the Irvine Industrial Complex will not loolt anything like its planners bad hoped. That may or may not be a bad situation. . But it may be reasonable to assume that the )ncreas· In~ amoUllts oC tax,rtcl\ commercial acreage may soon bring demands from owners or lessees of neighboring parcels for .>lmilar zoning advanta~es. · It already bas. In one significant instance. The Irvine Cpmpany, whlch "cpntrols another 1,200 unsold acres In the complex, has filed a request with Newport· Beach planners for tone change. •On its ·s&:acre North, Fo'rd tract above Aeronutronic. . ' That's a)ways ·~11 -1abbe~ a!"'ln·industrial park site, but now it looks like the firm baa •grounds for \he rezonin~ application. BasJs for the current rash of requests Is the fact that current assessing practices consider the value o! neighboring land when computing assessments. The as· .sessed valuation of a property determines-the amount o! , taxes to be paid. . Commercial property generally ls worth three times mote than industrial property. , • There is no doubt the 177-acre Collins Radio Cor· poration parcel, across Campus Drive from the Dougla$ parcel, will increase in value if Newport Beach approves the Don Koll Construction Company's plans for coriJ.· mercial development. In fact, Koll's offer to purchase the parcel from Collins at $90,000 an acre is contingent on approval of the zoning. Elsewhere in the induStri"al complex, in· dustrially zoned land sells for $85,000 an acre. continue operating hlJ business on land be bought for industrial u.e. Such a firm might well determine It ill necessary to add commercial or oUlce buildings to his buildings tn order to afford to r•Y hi> taxes. And owners o land presenUy undeveloped, but zoned for industrial use will lllcely see the writing on the wall and press Irvine officials for ione changes, too. Additionally, there are 1,200 net acres of Industrial· ly planned land not yet sold or leased to firms by the · lrvwe Company. Of course Irvine cify officials· have the power to ,fl.raw th& line between comnlercial and industrial proP.: • ertles. Nevertheleos, the ptessures for ione changeJ will be great.-;rt>eir approval would only worsen the street cqngestion near the airport and virtually assure upan· sion of the airport. ·-· __ Welcome . ~~P!Q~~ Trustees of the Tustin, Irvine and. Saddleback Valley Unified School Districts this week displayed a com· mendable unity of purpose. It appeared for a time that the new Tustin Unified School Board might hold up state funds for new con· struction in the existing San Joaquin Elementary Dis· trict. Approval of the loan applications for the seven projects ~as required ~ro_m each of the new districts. 'rho!e debts will be shared when the old elementary and high school districts ,fold next June. . · In exchange for Tustin's approval, the Irvine Unified Trustees offered to continue to educate 272 pupils from: Tustin who attend University !Ugh School. The agreement relieves Tustin taxpayers of some of the burden of educating these pupils, while allowing the students to finis!) high. school with their friends and classmates from Irvine. · The next time the assessor tours the industrial park, the value of commercial--office developments on the Douglas, Emkay and Collins parcels may well result in increased assessments for the neighboring lan d. Since higher assessments result in higher taxes, it may .well 'be unprofitable for a manufacturing firm to Tu~tin's $76,851 share of the school construction loan will be deducted from the nearly $225,000 Irvine will charge them for educating the Tustin students at University High. The compromise indicates all the new districts do share a conCern for the provision of adequate facilities 'Sor1y, we only believe in make-work for foreigners!' for students. . SB Action on Bill Sptirred Bigger Dogs Taking Place Of Lap Types Dear Gloomy Gus Military Retirees May Get Action ~YD NEY J. HARJU~ There are many forms of trend·spot· ting -some of tbem more valid than others -but one that might surprise you is the study of the popularity of different breeds of dogs in the American popula.· lion. As what the scholars call a ,.sociological variable, 11 the dog can tell us a good deal about shifting atuludes among the people. For instance, when I . It's. too bad Frasier didn't live to see bla ·domain annexed to the city of Irvine. A.A.L. Tiiis "'twe ~ ttlHn' vi..._ not llKHNrlly ,,_ et' !he MW$P&_., hnd .,_ pet ,""' to Glooml' Gin. Dtlll' Piiat. pellation. And the !act that shepherds have been known to mangle children is no deterrent at aH to moot !Nfdtaaers. WASHINGTON -Senate Armed Services Committee chairman John Sterr nls, (0.Miss. ), is finally being pot squarely on the apot on the military retirees survivors benefits bill that he haa stalled .for nine month!. Tbe legislation ia being orfered as an amendment to the $20.5 billion military procurement author· ization measure now under consideration in the Senate. T h e decision to force action on the long·stymled retirees benefits measure as an amendmen! lo the Whether he can get away \Vith such a . . .pl9y is conjectura l. (ROBERT S AJJ,EN) ' · TO a considerable degree, lt would de· ' pend on how much backing Beall and need of the retirees legislation or that it was passed last October by the House m to O after less than two hours of discussion. That· ts why it's deemed probable Sten· nis may insist on his committee's acting on the-~retirees bill separately -but. bowing to necessity, will make a definite comm.iqtient to report it out by a .certain date In the fall. Goldwater could muster for the relirecs bill as an amendment to the procuremen l measure. If they can rally sufficient votes, they can force a showdown and override Stennis -despite his being chairman of the potent Armed Services Committee. That's happened before, and could again. Sen. John Tower. (R·Tex.), who like Goldwater is a member of that com· mittee, is working closely with him in pressing ror enactment of the retirees bill. So ls Sen. Peter Dominick, (R~ Colo.), another influential c~sponsor of the legislati on. THEY TOLD th is column , ·~There Is no reason for further stalling. This bill should be disposed of now and not later. It is not generally realized, but Sen . Beall 1s one of the authors of the original measure as passed by the llouse. In 1970, as a member of that chamber, he was on the special committ.. that drafted the legislation. It remains to be seen what Sen. Stennis lbinka and doeo about lllaL was growing up, the most popular canine house pet was the cocker spaniel, be-- cause It was playful a n d friendly with children. IN A FEW DECADE!, we have gone fmn dogs lhat cuddle or llrUt to dop that SDa<).IDll bile, whetbet In the big ci- ty OI' the ....U village. I -.otJy re- turned mm New York, wllln the pave- ments are conred :ollh dog-do; eveey family ta Mlllhatlan seems lo have bought a brute !or security, without hav· Ing learned how to train tbett properly. giaot military pro-, curement bW was • made by S-. Barry Goldw11tr, (R· Arb:.), and J. Glenn Beall, :JI-Md). 111 don't intend to wait ilny longer," Goldwater told thiJ column.. uwe're going lo see·lhis thing lbrough now. It's long overdue." Mr. Meany, Sir, How Do I Vote? THEN, A GENER· ATION later, aa the country grew into af· fluence and wanted to acquire what it imagined was cbic, the poodle became the most poptdir breed register~ with the official Ainetican Kennel Club. 1'len, like the spaniel, the breed was nearly ruined by Its own popularity and the In- sensate greed of its breeders. And, at a recent town meeting I at .. tended in the viUage where I spend my summers, the ftrSt hour of discussion was taken up with the problems of dogs running wild and attacking children, ~ghbors, and the county may bave lo build a new pound lo handle ~ probltm. "The unjuatifiable protracted delay in the coll!ideration of this important legislaUon directly aHecting close lo a million veterans la inexplicable to me,'' said Beall. "It's time we put an end to it. I have said I was going to put this measure through this year, and I mean it. II has wide bipartisan support In the Senate, as evidenced by the fact that 38 Republican and Democratic Senators joined me in sponsoring this legislation. They are in full accord with me that further delay is unwarranted and m. derensible." One of America's most talked·about voters is Miny Moe and he'.1 in terrible shape. Thanks to George (Eeny) Meany, head ol the AFUlO, poor Mtny Moe doesn't know whether he'• coming m-going. Friends fear he may drink himself to death before election day. AlreadY in this campaign, the experts ha\-e written millions of words about Moe and bis crucial im4 portance lo the oul· come. , For Moe is, or course, The Labor Vote. During the past 25 ART HOPPE J ticket. "But who ever talk! or writes about Tbe Socialist -Labor Vote?" he said with a shrug. "I'd be a nobody." Moe reluctantly agrees he's too old to be The Youth Vole, too whlte lo be The Black Vote, too Northern to be the Southern Vote and too nolsy lo be The Silent Majority Vote. IN FACT, lie hss but one option lelt. "I've decided," be lakl, oquarlng biJ shoulders, "ta be. The Daley Vote." 'I1ie challenge h e r e is that aJ .. though Mayor Daley endorsed the en- tire Democratic ticket, to the surprise of the e;iperts, he didn't menUon McGovern by name. 11Speaking as The Daley Vote," said Moe~ flJt's going to be tough to cast my ballot for a guy whose name I don't know. But with all the talk about The Daley Vote. somebody's got.to be it," Thus, "'hile Senator McGovern haa lost The Labor Vote, he's picked up 1be Daley Vote. So, as you can plainly aee1 he's come out exactly even. Now the German sbepbenl ls leadlng all Ille mt, aod this tells us a Jot about Ute temper of Ute COWltry in the 1970!. It has gone from wanting a playful pet to a stylish pet to a _protective pet. In fact, "pet" is an ironic euphemism for mo.st of lbe shepherds people are buying - "guard dogs" is closer to the true ap- THE SALE OF LARGE -(and thus presumably ferocious, though there is no necessary coDDecllon) dogs lw begun to out.strip the sale of small ones: shepherds, boxen, Doberman pinschers, and lM> on, are commanding the hJghest prices In the market; and outfits Iha! train these dogs !or aecurity and attack ( tlJe!'tl>y ·rmderinl lbem unlit .. tamily pets) have gladdened the hearta of their stockholders in the lut lew years. Problems at Age 200 Air Study Defended PUTl'ING STENNIS on the spot in lbls years 'Moe has m.. manner forces him to l!ilher "fish or cut tlnani•bed himself as bait." 1:1-b e in g the only He now faces three alternatives: American who voted (1) Accept the retirees survivors tn every election as Meany told him to. benefits bill as an amendment to the "Being The Labor Vote bu been an To the Editor: military procurement measure and allow awesome responsibility," said Moe, A3 project director In charge of the the Senate to vote on it -thus ensuring lighting a cigarette with trembling Southern California Regional Aviation Credit Mauer Frank Rizzo or its speedy overwhelming approval. fingers over this third beer at Paddy's Systems Study, conducted by WUllam L • .,, (2) Try to have the amendment thrown Place. "I had to be lukewarm when I Philadelphia with clairvoyance. Dur_ing EDITORIAL out on the ground It is not germane to the voted twice for Stevenson, moderately Pereira Associates and System. Develop--his election campaign last ran, Rizzo of· bill Sena B all d U i ment Corporation for the Southern I.red th·is bleak· appraisal of plans to hold procurement • · e an cool when 1 cast my ba ot or Kennedy California Association of Governments, 1 RESEARCH Goldwater are prepartd lo demand a and red llol wben l llUl\ed tbe lever !or an American Revolution Bicentennial Ex4 roUcall vote on that, and are confident Johnson and Humphrey. I'm lucky I waa extremely dbappointed by the position in the City of.Brotherly Lave in they can win hands-down. didn't catch my death of pneumonia'. edJtoriaJ on the subjtct that appeared ln 1976: HThey way it la going, we'll have the cambrldse, Maaa., consulting firm of (3) Offer to compromise with a "But with everybody talking about it, the Pilot on July 24 ("Sorry, No Answer police band at Independence Hall playing Arthur D. Little Inc. hanbly concluded : categoric promise to bring up the somebody had to be The Labor Vote. And Yel") and would like to take this op. the Star.Spangled Banner, and that will "The ARBC is criUcized for not having a reUrees legislation for separate Senate 1 was proud to do my duty. Only this port.unity to reply to two of the principal be it." program because it ·bam't had • pro-consideration by a definite date in the year, I think I'm going to chuck it." criticisms it presented. Tbe mayor's comment haa -'Ml far gram. The AR.Be 11 criticlied for not fall. First of all, the editorial atate1 that tbe withstood the test of time. AJthough the 1 being innovative becawie it baln't. been MOE'S PROBLEM stems, naturally, report 11dld not address illell to resolving American Revolution Bicentennial Co~ lrmovaUve. The ARBC la criUclzed for TJUS LAST stntagem ls considered from Meany 's pronouncement that be the issue of lncrtasing pressure to ex· mission (ARBC ) has been ln existence not taking the initiative becauae, nnlil the most likely by Sens. Goldwater and wouldn't deliver The Labor Vote to either pand jet Olghts out of Orange County for aix yean, it baa little to show for its recently, it hasn't taken the lrlltiaUve. Beall. ?t1cGovem or Nixon. Airport." On the contrary, lhe SCR.ASS efforts. The ARBC is critlcl..zed for having lo\f" Their belief is based on backstage and "In fact," aaid Moe, glwnly , ''he didn't atudy expressly recommends, under con-- PhJlade\phia exposition was to . have ata[f morale because it has low stall other Indications. say where the hell he was going to trolled conditions including iwsengt1:r been the centerpiece of the natlon'1200th morale." Lately-it has become evident that Sen. dellv~r me. Another beer, Paddy, if you processing at remote tenntna1a, the Joint birthday anniversary celebration, but the Stennis ii "displeased" by the vigorous please." use by commercial aircraft of the Marine hen IF IT IS ANY COMFOR'I; lo the com-roddin · d out I Congr tn behalf Co Air St I t El T project was buried on May !• Im, w •• mission, the Centennial Exposition of ofp he g m a1n oben fi essblll blch Tile l°"' ol Moe's vote, the experts rps at oo a oro. 1 the corrunission vetoed the only site tuo bl •·-ed t surv vors e ti w unanimously agree, will hurt McGovern TlllS • · 1 1176 In Phlladelp a· a..., encounter erlo 1 ha he ed d 1 In tbe COULD eventually eotlrtly city could agree on -a swampy, po • problems. Sen. Charles Sumner (R.. mAnnysled uSera Y I s gCommiat r "ttee us! . far more than Nixon, u 'lbe. Labor Vote eliminate commercial air tra!flc from luted tract •ear Phlladelpltla lnternaUon-Mass.) vigorously fought tbe project untll v ces or mne has t_radltionally gone to the Democrattc .Qrange •~ly ~lrport and, Indeed, the alN,\olJ'~ha· t•. ARBC bas p·ro--' that hls death shortly belore· it opened. "'1t~· known the . u•-•··tpplan got a cand1da~~-· The quelllsttTlieo~ theyboareVall ask· .study ._ts that Orange County " ,._. Con ·.-~Id •·--·•-1 aupport Iii ·-'nongw,". ,•,. _ re w La. r , ote go • ... irlVI. 'rt• -v In time be devoted ex· cominemorat(ve parks, costing lrom 115 grm .w•~~ '"'"'~ un flood ol critical mail lollowing this col· .. n-~ ·~ million to,.. million apiece be bull! in the last moment, and afterwanl Insisted limn'• di.ocloouce that lie plaM!d to' still "!don't'-" aid M I .... ;,! <1us1veiflpJeneral avtatlon. llshould be •-' · 1"'1· ti'< money · wu only a loan to be .. • . M•OW, s oe 1ra....,. ,., noted .tootlfal the SCRASS sludy does not each ol lhe 511 stales. Conireu, llowtver, pald ~k , lurther delay theme'Uurt ~9·wllhhotding been thinking· ol ~Ing r<t ~ge . ricommend,.\the establishment 01 any baa shown little flllllluslum !or the Idea. 'l'hll' .. 'wu bad -II. but conslderaUon untll ,Ute Senate disposed of Wolloce, If lle runs, Bu1 !>owl can I do"· 'n.e~ rt~ airport In Orange County Tlli COMMISSION'S .clilll~tl• lllenl ~,1 eeoqulcentenrual' (JIOlbl the llralqlc, ,arma I Im I lJ I Ion that ti Mr. Mean~ doeon'I tell me lo ?•II <...~~ Instead that I h 0 1 ~ In targ• part ¥-~t llidbl' -.arti·~tllii of 1121 ma a~....;,n;;~nceif-tnten· ;,(squsrety ·-:::rn7:./:l:OU:.1;'i~~i al'!'"na already Jn uae ho utilized lo the nature ol the., bicentennial "To total -ler. Rain le~ on 86 of. tbe\1111 ' contradl<led an earlier promlae (lo Beall experience that The Labor Vote has their lull~ effectiveness. radlc1ts, ll ts • com1nerclll rtpo((, a days tbe ~ •• open. M-. liie and Gold,,.ter) to tai!e op the bill after always done what he told me to. The edltortal abo suggests that the betroy1J of America's true radical trsdl· event kllll bet-'25,000 and flll,ltllll a the ~menl measure bad been acted 1ludy did not "tackle" the problem ol tton and at tbe same time an -rtunlty week and -the city more than fl$ NOW THE EAllY way out would be lo private aviation In Orange County. Yet to rovtve ii," Eugene L. Meyer noted In million in loaes and c1pltal oullaya. ""stennil i. very touchy about bls follow Mr. Meany'1 eumplo. He says he this aubJect also b dealt with In con· The Washington Post. "To black crlUca, Despite such ln1uspld0111 precedents, prerogatives 11 cbalrman ol the powerlul isn't goiJli lo vote !or either McGovern 1lderable 'detall. It ls a mockery or freedom tong denied President Nixon appeart confident that Armed Serv!C<s Committee. inside word or Nixon. But If l don't vole, then 1 won't Among other conclusions , the report and history too Jong untold. To old-the bicentennial will prove aucceaful. In 111 be ts inllmlting ho would consider it a be 'l'lle Labor Vote any more. And to tell recommends the uae ol Im Alsmttos fuhloned flag-waven, lt ii an uerclao In a Jul1 4, 1172, radio odd..., I-San ~ rellecllon If the retir.., blll, In the truth, 1 kind ol Uke betni IO much in Nsval Air Stalloo for general avlaUon - ..U-cnngrstulaUon. To partisan crltlcs, It Clemente, be iaued an "un[Jl'ilCOlllend effect, """ lorclbly taken awiy lrom the public spotltgllt. Mille that a whlcb alooe could accommodate ap- ts a Nixon campaign gimmick. To _. lnv110tloo lo tile world" lo vlltt the the commlltet and written Into the pr.. bollennmr, Paddy." proximately lllOO private alrcralt -In partisan ooes, ll Is 1 lime f,.. IOber United States In 117L eurtmenl mwure u on amendment. Despite his years or devotion lo beh>g addition to Fullerton Munldpat Airport naUonal roasaessment." He upreued hope Illa\ u many as U The Labor Vole, Moe 11 now conolderlng and Meadowlark In HunUnglon Beach. It Still, the commlulon itsell Is not million lorelgnen wllUld accept the lq-APPARENTLY Ibis would mlfl Slenn1' varloua alternatives. A\ one point he even aloo urges the e!lablillunent of airparkl witboul blame. A otudy by the respected vltatioo. no end -Irrespective ol the merits anCl tbou&bl ol •otlnc the Socl1llal·Labor -lor lnltructlonal and recreational ' I • ( MAILBOX ) flying -at Brea and Capistrano. THE REPORT acknowledge! that the projected growth of general aviation will severely tax the existing airport and airspace resources of Orange C.ounty and may require some of the sPort flying to be conducted at airpark! in other coun. ties. Altogether the SCRASS study, In our oplnloo, seriously and thorou&hly n• plorea the aviation problems of. Orange u well. as those of the other nine coun- lles that comprised the stlllly area, and we do not feel that the reJ:10rt'1 recom- mendaUorui, and the ttsearcb on whlcb they were predlcted, were accurately reflected by the editorial In queollon. · JAMES M. SINK, AM OllAHOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robt rt N. W ted, l'lll>U.ll<r T,_., rr..U, Editor Albtr\ W. Bak1 EdUoriol Page Editor The editorial -of Ille Dol11 Piiot ltt.kl to infonn and aUmu· late re.den by presen~ WI newa"paper'1 opj~nt &Dd c:on\---ment~ on t~PJca ot lbtn"ftt and 11\;nificanCt', by ~ldlar a femirn ror the ~ ot·O\lr 1ttd.od ootnlons,. and bi t>MMU.. the dlwne vJ.wpolnu ol tnt...,... oJ>. M1'Vtn &nd apoknmta oa. &opb or the da:/. Friday, July :18, 1972 ' I 'J . etParts Rain Down On LA Area .,: LOS ANGELES (UPI) -It rained jet • plane parts -up to a ton of them - 'lbursday on the &maet Strip, Beverly lUUs and West Hollywood. There were no reports of lnJury or "'"*"" damage. A cllunk ~timated to wtlJh 500 poundJ, and 11Dllng hot, plllJlged into the lawn ol a Btvlll'!y Hltil ho111e. A chunk descrlbod by a allerlfl'a deputy as "the size of a hutetblll" cruhed cmto Sunset Bouleylld. "There wu a ~eljlUlt clank" outside her.olllce, lllld Gloria Lund, and there on tbe pavement Wu what looked lite "• bundle of pl pea tied together." "II wu juat bou!lctnc there In the ·11reet when I looked down ," 1he aahf. John Braatey waa driving on the Suta•t Strip. . "I waa lu the left tum lane .•• and alt of a iudden J beard a sound -a craah and tlnkJe -and 1 saw two P.iecea of metal in the 1trett. It bounctd a little." 'Ibe debris came from one dlsfn. tegrallng engine of a Contlnenlal Alrllntl DC!O wtiJch had just taken off lroin Los Anaelea International All'port I o r Chlcaao. The plane wu carrylnc as peraonr. "The whole rlcht aide ol the plane began to ahalce," 1ald pa.,.nger Bruce Marka, 19, ol Oaklawn, DI. His mother, Mn. Fred Marks, said she waa in ••a •tate of'aemllhock.'' but other passengen said the experience was not alarming. The Mark.lea said a crewman notified the puaengers that the !all engine had been Jost, but the plane could fly with no trouble on the two remaining wing· mounted engines, and was returning im· mediately to the Loa Angeles airport. ·A apowm1111 f'!r the airline Hid the pilot, j;apt. Robert .Glau, was alerted to the problam when the trouble Indicator light for the tall en1lne Oaahed on. Los Angeles county sheriff's deputies and Beverly Hills police gathered up the -I.a. Deputy CUrlla Howard, who saw the m(lno dlllntegrate, estlmated fl to IO pleceo !all wllhlll a four.mile radius. Coeds. File Suit In Booklet Ban RIVERSIDE (AP) -'!be ledonl IOVll'lllllenl II being oued by a group of University of Cllllomla coeds bere wl!o were refus¢ permtaalon by the pollmuter to mall 1,200 coplea of a 47· page booklet on btrth control to women living ofkampus. The autl.ll being handled by the Center for Law tn the Public Iatereat, a Loi Angeles public Jaw firm which hopes to help the women student& overturn a federal law which prohibits the malling of abortion 1and birth control infonnation. Members-of the university's Assoclated Students bou&ht the Illustrated pharn· r.blel !torn students at McG!ll Unlvenity n Canada and distributed about 1,500 coplu on campua. UP'I T1l1llflett OFFICER TOM JENSEN, LEFT, ST UDIES JAGGED METAL IN YARD Homeowner Jack Paul Astounded 1t Hug• Chunk of Jet Bill to Aid Poor Schools Approved by Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -A last·dltch effort to provide property tax relief and pump more dollars into poor IChool d!Jtricts sailed through the Alaembly Thursday. The measure by Assemblyman Dixon Arnett would put half of all the money raised by local school taxes into a com- mon ststewlde pot. It would then be redistributed to district! on a flat per- chlld grant with additional state money thrown In. That would have the effect of equaliz- ing the differences between districts with hJgb and low assessed value over a flve- year phue-in period, the Redwood City Republican aald. Arnett urged passage of hl1 measure as "an instrument" for property tax relief and school finance reform. lt con- tains no appropriation in . the fonn ap- proved by the Assembly. "In fact. It may be the only instrument for school finance and property tax reform," he said. "It seems to me we're in the final inning of the most important ball·game we're playing th11 year -that "'f property tax reform and school flnan· cing." . The basic theory of equalizing the wealth of school districts is the same as that of the $1.2 billion tax. package back- ed by Gov. Reagan and A'ssembly Speaker Bob Moretti, said Assemblyman William Bagley. The Reagan-Moretti proposal was kill· ed Wednesday tn .the Senate Finance Committee. "The Senate's action yesterday still has me in shock. I don't thtnk they knew what they were doing," Bagley, a San Rafael Republican, said in urging ap- proval of Amett's bill. The measure moved to an Wlcertain fate in the senate on a 64-8 vote. Arnettis measure "sure does move a long way down the trail" to meeting the State Supreme Court11 Serrano vs. Priest decision, Bagley said. The court ruled in the Serrano case that local property taxes for school sup- po rt unoonstltuUonally discriminate against children tn d!Jtricts with low assessed valuation by making fewer dollars available for their education. Air Pollution Panel Said Doing Good Joh LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles County Air PolluUon District is doing an excellent job, a state in· \l'esUgatlve team concluded in a preliminary study. However, the state Air Resources Board report aaid Thursday th& APCD could improve Its monitoring and in- spection operations, its public relations, system of legal counsel and its en. forcement capabilities. _01/]y Coast~ SoutflPrri Qffers Jail Guards, Profs May Get Raises SACRAMENTO (AP) Prl.on guards and college teachers would get $26.8 million worth or pay raises on bills meeting legislative ap- proval, but the pp between good intentions and cold cash is still wide open. • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club One $5 million appropriation for prison guards went to the gove.roor'1 desk Thursday. Another $21.6 million for teachers In higher education advanced from the Senate and ts awaiting acUon in the Al .. rnbly. The guardJ could wind up with a total raise of about 15 percent over last year's pay, and the teachen could gel 13.1 percent mol'fi than last year. Poor morale was cited In both ca.sea as rta901'11 for the faise1. The ralJe for prison guards and some employes of the California Youth Authorlly aailed through the Assembly without opposltlon. T h e legi.81ators acted swiftly after recent strike rumblings from the Califomla State Emploves Association, which repersints the guarda. LET'S BE FRIENDLY U you have new nclahbot'J\ or know of anyone movlnK to our area, please tell us IO that v.•e m.., e>ctmd a frlmdly1 wttcome and help them to become acqualnlod in tht1t DtW aunoundlnp. So. Coast Visitor 4'44S1t 4'+tHI llarfllr YISltor '4M174 Aft Llnlr.11Uer The Ins iders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed·door show- rooms at substantial sav- ings -ap pliances, furni- ture, stereo equi pment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobil e homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of Interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all cert ificate accounts. also provides big dis· counts on tlc'kets to sport- In a and entertainment events • , • plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum blllance. Coast borrowers now recelve as· soclate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. MAIN OfflCC: 9th lo HUI. Lot An11le1 • 623-13!51 Other offices WILtHl"I .. GMMMIM:Y l"t.AOlt 3933 Wllshlre lllVd,. l.A. • 388-1265 L.A. CIVIC crNTllt: 2nd lo SrOlclWI)' • 625-1102 HUHTINQTON aUCHt 91 Hu nun.ton Clntii • 1714) 8!17·1047 SANTA MONICA: 711 Wllshlrl Blvd.• 393.0748 SAN H'.Dlto: loth & Plclflc • 831·2341 WEST COVINA! Et•U•l'ld Sh0ppln1 Ctr.• 331-2201 'ANOllAMA CITT: CMSfl & Vi n Nuys !IVd,. 892·1171 TARZANAl 117!11 Ventura Blvd,• 34M614 LONQ l!ACH: 3rd & 1.0cu1t • 417·1481 EAST LOI ANGILfl: Ith & Soto • 256-4!110 DIAMOND IAA: 321 Olamond Bar Blvd.• (714) !19~1Y!I Delly Hout'I-9 AM to 4 PM Open Slturd1p -9AMtolPM I (belpt CIYIC CtnltrJ < ' DA ILY PILOT 5 Tax Plan Has Chance Assembly·-ieaders To Try Reviving Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ammbly leaders gained another chance today lo revive their fl.I blilion achoo! finance-tax reform deal with Gov. Reaaan after forc- ing a one.week e1te~lon of the 1972 leglsl aUve aesslon on the Senate. Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob MorelU hinted strongly that he would hi· jack a $lll0 mlliion Senal .. pausd. !cbool propoaaJ, write the compromiae bUI Into It and aend It back to the upper houae for another showdown. The Senate passed the stop.gap '900 rnlilion scbool bill by Sen. Ralph Dills on a 25-8 vote Thursday after a day of closed-door negoUaUons that ended with an agreement to fight for another week instead of attempting to recess Friday. Behind the maneuvering were attemptx by Moretti and the Republican governor to revive their tax reform·scbool finance compromise. The Senate Finance Com· mittee killed that bill on a 7-6 vote WedneJd~y and passed the Dills measure In Its place. The Dills bill, whJch Moretti called a 1'rldh:uloua11 substitute for his plan, would raise fhe state sales ta1 one cent per dollar. That would raise $600 milllon, leaving the measure '300 million out of balance. The Moretti-Reagan plan also includes · a one cent eales tax increase and new state money for schools, but the slmllarl· 1y ends there. That plan would also hike state business and income tu:es across the board, increase state aid to local schools by $509 million a year, give homeowners property tu cuts Moretti estimated at $200 a year, and order voter approval for most future property tax rate increases. The battle over the two measures sparked a bitter exchange between Moretti and his Democratic counterpart in the upper house, Senate President pro tern James Mills of San Diego. Mills criticized the Moretti-Reagan compromise for falling, he 11aid, to either help acbools or relieve tu pressures on the poor. He added that Moretti left Senate leaders out of bis negotiations with Reagan because "he thinks t h a t rnagnllles his posillon tn the Cllllomia political scene ••. It makes him appeir be is leader of the Democrats." Moretti replied in an interview, ''I fully expected some such statement from Sen. Mills, because as the pressure bulldJ he 21tarts to make unreasonabl e statements." Another part of the batlle on the ocbool proposals surfa4*! in the dispute over a three-month recesa beglnnlng t h I • weekend. The Sellate approved lhe recesa two weeks ago, but Moretti held It up In the Senate to retain bar&.alnlng power for Senate action on his tax blll. Neither the Senate nor Assembly can receas for more than three days without permlulon of the other howt. MoretU finally announced Thursday, alter hours oJ closed-door negotiations, that Senate lea4ers )lad a1reed to a delay of the recess untli Aug. 4 and that they had also promised there would be at lea.st three more meetings of the Finance COmmlttee, where dozens of Assembly bills Including the tax plan are bottled up. Justice Douglas Oka ys Papers Trial Hearing LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Supreme Court Justice William 0 . Douglas agreed to hear today a request from defense at· torneys that the Pentagon Papera trial judge be ordered to leveal details of a federal wiretap. Douglas, who was attending a judicial conference in nearby Pasadena when contacted, directed the attorneys Thurs- day night to preaent their case to him tn Yakima, Wash. Police Chief Facing Justice ANGELS CAMP (AP) -The police chief of thls gold rush town found himself on the oppo,site side of justice when he was sentenced by a local florist to the county jail for contempt of court. J ack Whiting, 33, Angels Camp police chief for the past year, resigned u chief after the flori•~judge, Marvin Shupe, !Jn. ed him 1250 'lbursday and sentenced him to two days in jaij after he falled to answer two summonses to testify on a traffic arrest and .drug case. Sbupe said he felt the Angels-Murpey Judicial Court wia pot receiving proper respect from Whiting. The only Other man on the police force of this community of · 2,400, Jim Wadsworth, was named acting chief by the City O:luncil, which had ordered Whiting to resign or be !Ired. The bearing was set for 7:30 p.m. (EDT). The layer• for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo (ailed Tlieoday tn their ef- fort to get such an order from a federal appeals court, and so carried their case to Douglall. The wiretap dispute has held up the start of argument& and testimony in the much delayed trial of Ellsberg and Russo. They are charged with theft, con- spiracy and espionage for actions they took tn making public the classified Pen- tagon study of the Vietnam Viar. The dispute concerns what the Justice Department says was a l~ally authorU. ed wJretap in an investigation that has no connecUon with the case. The govern. ment .says someone connected with the defense placed a call to a legally tapped phone end wu overheard by federal agents. TWA ·AMBASSADOR SERVICE . . TO THE EAST COAST FROM YOUR OWN BACKYARD. TWA's fabulous Ambauaclor Service to theEaat Coaat. It's" ao 8&8y with a little help from Golden Weet. "Goldan Otter" commuten zip you to LA. International, right next to TWA'o terminal ... and that means : • No frteWay traftlc • No p&rkinf baaales • No expenaive t.aJia • No b•H•i• han1-upe, 1tralght-throu1h checking. . . PIOM OIANCH cOUNIY AtAPOIT GOLDIN WIST TWA OOLDINWHT TWA Lv .Ar LAX Lv LAX Lv Ar LAX ilvLAX ·NIWYOIK 7:50A 8:25A 9:00A PH!LA. 7:25A 7:50A 8:45A 9:l5A 9:50A · 11 :•0A 12:•0P l:I5P I :50P 1:•5P. 2:20P B:OOP 9:05P 9:•oP ll:OOP 3:00P 3:35P 4:15P 9:05P 9:•0P 10:•5P WASH. D.C. 8:25A 9:00A lO:OOA IOSTON 7:25A 7:50A 8:45A 11:50A 12:·25p l :OOP IAL!• 9:05P 9:40P 10:50P 10:20A 10:55A ll:30A ' 9:05P 9:40P ll:OOP POI ONl.C:ALL AUllYATIONI PHONI YOUI TIAYIL AOINT 01 GOLDIN WllT AT1 714·f7f•IOOO • TWA AMBASSADOR SERVICE TO THE EAST COAST (with a little help from a friend) Ines < • l Huniingto · Bea~.ti \ ~ -Fountain '1., alley Today'• n.a1. YOt:. i5, NO. 210, :t SECTIONS', ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 18, ·1971 TEN CENTS Community Centers ~close At Hand' in Valley. .By JOHN ZALLER • Of .. DMW Plllt Miff Ten community centers, one within 'fl'8lklng ~ ol lllOll homeJ In FOW> l8ln Valley, 'will begin owatlon this fall JI the FOuntaln Valley School District bas lta way. visions I~ the Community Centm would offer everytblng from ballet to lordgn language leslOM to 1 c:ourse on meab for the elderly. A& many u too """'""' might use each school every afternoon and evening. "Whatever the people were interested in, we'd try to provide a program in that area," Brick said. ''Each community. would determine it! own program." To fund Community Center optraUons The idea, whlch Is s.till in the talking 11,Ag.,., Is that alter school adjourned •acll ~afternoon, th• bulldlngr would be kept o~ to offer a series of recreation al each of the . dlstrlct'1 ten schools PfOll'ams for ~young, the old, and for within Fountain Valley city limits, Brick' families, · hopes lo get a $25,000 ilfant from t II e 'A& Superintendent Mike Brick tn-\ Community Services· Project ol Fountain Valley. The money would be wed primarily to pay utm.. ol two coordinators, each of whom would handle the programs at five schools. Volunteers would then be recruited to, Instruct-_, supervise recreailon, and, In general , to provide the b u It of , the · labor needed to keep the program going. . . . "With proper work, l 'm· aure We could , get the volunteers we need," Brick said. '!In this school district. we have mo(e1 than 100 persons who.are on call to come during the day and teach a aubjeci,ln· whlcb they are a llpeclatlst.. And -have thousands of parents-without lpeclal otllls who help out In the classroom. ''°111e people who would be wllling to help fn I Community Ce!lter jype of op- eration alter nonnal wort boon are com- pletely un14PPed-" Brick sees an even greater number: of people wbo ...Wd take advantage ol a Community qtnter. . • "tlrtve down any llreet .In Fountain Valley and you'll ... lumd\'<d! of kids with' not m'uch to do and few interests. Voe ol our l1nt prtortiles would ' be. to. provide an organized recreaUon program for these kids. "'Ibere's also a . grut need for ac- tlvi lles in which families could take part. Right now. lhere's no place wUhin walk~ Ing ·dlstance of most homes where a parent can ro to de something with Ills or her child. "We wouldn't Jeave out ol d people, either. There are many single old people llvlr:li in back rooms of homes with their children. These people would be offered an opportunity wit hin walking distance of their home to get out and meet other j>eople. Most of tllese old people also possess grtat talents, and we•d be grattrul to put them to use teacblnc some of the courses." Brick's proposal Is based on several successful Community Center prbgrama in other school districts. Fountain Valley became interested in the idea alter Jan Wilhelm , a qi.ember of the Citizens Advisory Committee of the Special Services Project, made a presentation on it ..f.Wo months. ago at a tr.usteea meeting. Brick said he will bring a formal pro- posa l back before trustees at lhelr regular meeting next Thursday. Crash Ends High.Speed McGovern Firm City Chase BY ARTlllJll II. VINSEL ot fM ci.flY' Plllf lltff A youth h\ a stOlen gold Cadillac led lawmen on a 110.mlle-pei bOur chase through three cliles early today, before beinC captured in Costa Mesa when be lkldded lllO feet clown a desdend -~ crulilng Into a power pole. One -had to swerve onto a 1lclewalk and Into a telephone pole himself durlnC the four-mile punuit by three pollc:e con encl two bellcoplen to · avoid &·colllsloa with the lluspecl car. A 'Colla Mell poll<eman abo said be had to beet out ol the way wbm the 1-1 .....,i ·the pow.nut lledan In an attempt to ram the patrol car blocking him •I· an lnterllection. Gleno-A. llaoey, 20, a transient, was llnlDJ .,_ and booked ... ouplclon of --a.deadly-... a pOllcl-11111.,..S llllll ol .. iiuto. lie wa capturtd In Ille backyard of a hilae at -Clulliloulf Drive u the = ~thepiolloo ~ Inv~ ,ald =::-1111a111 """" -rihdeloG.cm 'orden of hlllcoJlt<!r. observer Olllcer Diet Bench, who told the suspect to,hall Ol<er the chopper's public addrw system. · · No one WU Injured -Including llane1· -. during the wild pursuit from Newport Beach Into lfunllncton Beach and on a slizaf COUtR back Into Costa Mesa. • The dlaae began lhorily before 2 a.m. wbm Newport Beach Patrolman Bob llaid1 spotted the gold luxury sedan ~ aloog West Coast Jllghway al P,..pect Avenue. lie went lnlo punuil of the veblcle, (See CHASE, P11e I) State Mediator To Enter Talks With Employes •·BERKELEY (AP) -State conciliator Tom NlcoloPulos wu slated to join negotlatlm ........ today In Berkeley's l~y lllrtte by clty-employes. 'rt.; state CoecillllUon Service was call-ed iato-.Uie talkl late Thursday alter no progrea wu reported In another llt(Ollating -1oa .. . About 4IO of the city's 1,100 empleyes •• an llrlke, lncluclirir garbage co~ Jecten, publlc ,....a and park emptoyes. lneler maids and bealtli department and JUnry employes. • Tiiey have rejected the clty'1 latest of, 1111 far a four percent pay ralae and acme j>er<ent 1ncre-In fringe benefits. , Nam el!ect ol the llrlte Is the ..,. pmutatlm of uncollected prbqo, some ol wblcb bu been clumped at dty hall In ~. Some homeowners have hauled lbetr refuae to nearby townl and clumpa. . . 61 Billboards '·To Come Dawn • The Cl billboards cm state<>wned ~ In lluntlncton Belch will be r.m...d lhortly, Awmblyman Robert H. Burlie (ll-R11111oP>n . 8-b) lmlOID!lOd today. , The llate Deportment ol PUbllc ·-w-, ..... 1 notlea to Ille boal-d•1 owners cancellnl their permltl ad orclerlnJ the bll!boordl I down by Sept. a, llurU uld. 'l'lle llalt wUI remove thole not dllmanlled by that Ume, he added. . • Tbe actlm __ ,..,. -Ille dty flrll ,._ ...... ..... ..W,,. lor elimlnotlm ol •Ille ....... StnnJsBy Eagfuton · As Clwice ........ Wire Serilces CUSTER, S.D. -Sen. Gecqe S. McGoverl!, ~ llanding firin' . .., · his vice 11'Uldenllll .. 1ect1on amid groWlng Crltldm!. !1J1 be will m .. 1 again with S... Tbomu F. ~ early nm weet When they -return lo Wasblnlton. . For the """""" time In a1x days, Mc<lov!m reprimanded his 11a11;. telllntl itlem he wanted' no ful1blr comment by any..,. oli.-hl!naell and~' . ~1 ba>e -!lo .my ....,..,t' r.r Sen. '· ~- Candidate Feels Free Of Charges SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Democratic vice presidential nominee: Thomas F . Eagleton sakt today he feels vind.Jcated because colwruU!t Jack Anderson bas lalled to produce documents to back Ills charge that Eagleton haa a record of drunken driving. "I !eel I've been vindicated of that charge:" be told a newt conference. 16 1~¥!!'1 .W!M.wllll "' Andtraon 1ald Thursday be llad localed photostatic-copt• ol records showing Eagleton WU arrellod I batl-<loun ilm .. in Ml-1 ir tlrllaaa Gr ·nokleu drlv· ,, Int. 1111 ,....... 111111 • • llDI 'have the clocumeata ... did 1111 ...... u the DAILY PILOT,,... W RJdllnl klilllW MARIE STUMP KNOWS HOW TO BEAT THE HEAT L19un1n COol1 Off In 0-n to EKlpe Sluter • Mercury Will Drop a Bit, fu Couµty Over Weekend . . Orange. Cciunty residents can bast In slightly coo 1 er weather Saturday, as temepratures today began dropping a few clelrees from the week's unexpel:ted beat wave, weather forecasters said to- day. Coastal temperatures ttmalned fairly constant todly, at about ·73 degrees, lour d-cooler then Thursday's bilh· The ....., Jllld.'IO degree beacb weather la U· pecteil this weekend. · Beach .areu will have early morning patchy log"-Saturday and Sunday, but Onnge County Harbor DIJlrict o( --ol air cmditiooerl; ....., and lair. the overloaded electrlcal·cln:ults, "bot ii ' the heat perslsta -well, ju.st, wai~ and see." Areas with the transformer failures but oo major blackouta were Santa Ana I Orange and Villa Park. A 93-degree high in Los Angeles Is lorecut for Saturday. '!'bat city reached a higb of I~ Tlllrlday. Southern mountajns IJld de9ertl will have clouds and possible tlnmderllonns Saturday, the Nal*W Weather .Service aald. Righi ·recorded n.inday Included 114 in Palm Sprlnp, Ille In San Bemanlino, IOI In Riverside and II in Lolli Beach.. ,...,...., .:.z; I W, Jll:Qlftm -·In ~ Illa-. -. llloQ11• .. z u • • eau-•acatton ln · ht haa aalim UIU. rot, went lo a prtftte lbowlng ol the movie 1'Tbe ~te, '' in CUster and told reporters, alterwanlJ Illa! ,be. pn>bo ably would ... Eagleton Sunday or Monday. · Eagleton dllcloled this weelc that he had undergone treatment for a nervous disorder three tlmel in the -· On lop of that report, columnist Jack Anderson said Tbunday the Democratic vice presidential candidate had -armited a number of times for drunken or recklesa drjvlng. Eagleton aald In RawaU Andmo11'1 charge ·wu a "dimnable lie" and that be WU all the.more cletermined to stay 08• the ticket In other developments: · Mlsoourt off.ici,ts ol bcitli parties, put lind · preR\111, iay Ibey ,doilbt the truth of Anderaon's report· that drunken, and recklesl . driving cbarge1 w;ere flied against Eagletoil. , A UP •IUtvey of Mislouri traffic records showed only a speeding vlolatton In Calloway County In 1982 and two earlier speeding cbarge1 when Eagleton was II and 24 yean old. The first WU Oii July %'/; 1918, wtien be WIS fined $5,and court cost!, .and the aec- oud on Feb. It, 1154, when he WU lined ,10 and court 'COiis. On the thlid .ou .... , In 1t&2, he •Po peared in· m1glstrate court ID Fulton, Mo., and wu lliied $35. • A1mxt every laliuentlal Democrat who ~ erpr111ed u opJ.nlon aaya that Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton'1 admission of undergoing paycblatric treatment will hamper Democrailc chancel of defeating -.(8el MeGOVEllN, Pap I), . Ande~so~ Hedges On Dnink Charge Against Eagleton WASHING TON (UPI) -CohDnnlst Jack Anderoon was quoted today u . ' saying be should have chocked, further beforo broadcutli1g.' hll clalm· that· Democratic Vice Presidential candldate Thomas F. Eagleton had a record of . ' "·· &imken and reckleu dliYIDg. :Tho ,Washlnl!toe •Slar·News.in 'a story' by Robert ~alters ·and Mlcbael Satchell reported Andj!J'son al.id he "probably should-have· wltlibeld" ptibllclzing the charge . but that . eompeiltlve news pressure P~P..ted him to make it without lull ~lcation. Eagleton den:tilllced ·Anderson's asser- tion that he 'fl4d been -~led on dnmken and reckless driving charges In the 1960'• u · a 11clamn8bJe lie.'rlfissouri records for the lellllor show that.he had lwo traffic involvements . -once for speeding and once for an accident 1111 ·an 1cy. highway. . Anderson also told the Star·News he felt 'bis .story "got played, up beyond· pro. portion~' because it came on 1 day when there wu no, Other solid development In' the Eail•ton, 1ltuailoo, · · Hardest bit Tbu!'lday were· Orange and Trabuco Canyon am, both reaching blgbl of Jill degrees. The same wao ttcon!ed today, but lorec:uten-predicted '1cooler" weather Saturday: marking about 1tll degJ:ees. · Beach-fi.nanced · Survey lnlDe Late roconled " degrees and Sinta .Ana, hit I month's bilh o( 100 degrees Thursday. Both .,... drvppecf to the milHO'• to- day and .thlt tread ls upeded to - llnl» Saturday •. .The El Tom-Mission Viejo ll'IU ...,. In the llW<ltertnc tow-100•1 toclay and 'l'llw:MW-.~ at the El Toro -Alr Station aald thlt --cool to mid-t0'1 this -. --the lliPt dnlps, many peoo pie ltlll faaad it WllllJY to 1"1 inakle .... -·· their air ~ •• ""' Swdiani Cllllonllo ldllm. °""ll'1Q' reported. The -...:.::r::!:' about olt "bunt-ed up" trwfol l'Dtn ID Ille county ID tlle pall !oar daya heel• ol lnl:reued Ille ol llr -- " -......... aald Uiat .. far !Ilia pl Ill ''no )INblemt" ID Archeologists Begin 'Pre-bulldozer'' IWlian Study A tesm ol archeoloCillJ bu• begun I where Indians once lived, burled their survey of andeat villages, burial dead, pthen!d food, or manufactured gr<IUllcls, and mllUllacturtog alt .. within food proceu1ng tooiL , Huntington Beach. About IO oucli llt• are alnady mown, ~ ol the city.financed """•Y is and 'Ahlerinf SJ1 bl! hopes to dlltovor to ioalte remnants ol old lndlan cultures about Im -. tn the llUl'Yey. for eventual excavation. The lnlonnallon will tben be 'turned "~a -.irtract•hu been put dn ever .to the city .~ Department, lop ol an arcbeologlcal lite, WI pttlty Which wlll'm wltll bllilden to ~e bard to explore k," llald Mlle Ahiertnc of •1111111cant llllol a -space In their ArdlaeoJosicaJ -· Inc., (ARI), ol dove~ .. alli to mvate them Colla' M..._ before dmioument beclnL "We'h ...., lo mate a complete . City omdlil .believe that Runtlncton """"1 aqd. lnvllllGl;y ""' tllat "'"' ol . Beach II """ ol the only dtlel In the ·11-otte1 can be praemcl from country to be uadertatlng IUc:b a """"Y· elm~ UDIU they are lint et· "We 1t1 b7ln( to make a pbaildam CIYated,11 .. llld. t ltudJ," llld city admirdlUDdr Dlvtd' The M.200 "'""Y wlll tan abllt two ~ ''Dot Ille ....i ~ wblch monUil lo complete. ARI .,,t nlolfN .-lo a banJ after bulldolen bava will "Wilk" -ol tlle ll>d...io,.t land tumoci "' artllectl wblle baildq .. boua- ln Ille dlJ' ID 111 elf«!' to delermtDe -• 1n1 tracl or lllappinc C<llltr. • Ahlering said lbe areu that will receive moll careful inlpect~ In the 1UtYey wtU be the bluffs anu overlook· Ing the Santa Ana River and the llolsa Qiica manh. lnd!MI prelemd lheae spots, be aaid, bccau,e they wve hlcb ground and also becauoe Ibey probobly bad bigb quality spr1na water avallable. • The llUl'YoY will, lor the moll part, be llmlted to llUl'face -..iton, thouch core umpt .. D)aY be taken. "Our P.D'J)M ii not to excavate sites, but to locate them," Ablerlng said, LoCatlJW 111<1 wltbout actually dlalllr ts .... ~ the moll dlllicuil parts ii. Iii archeololkt'• job, Ahl'lfini~ The mlln lfllnc an ardleoioclal will be looting for In trying to dllcove< tllel ol the old l!unllnston Beach lndlMI II soil · (S. ltJllVEY, Pap I) . ~ .......... told -=n•·,, .... panel delllalotllla ......... drtvlng charge, 11ylng he bad .never -stop- ped ot q-uciaod ·1& c:amtectlon with alcohol. ' Tbundly be bad denied Dally that he'd ever been arrested for drunken er careless driving. Belon the news conference Eagleton received a call from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (f>.Ma.sa.), who, an Eaglelon aJde, uld, wlsbed him well. The aide, tnSI secretary Michael Kelly, sald Kennedy called the Missouri senator from Washington and HaIJ he did was to call him and give him Ills sup-port." . Keonedy reached Eagleton as be wu about to address a gathering of local Democrats at a breakfast meeting here. The support from Kennedy came one day alter columnist Jtlct AnderlOD llllid Eagleton bad a record of druUan and reckless driving, a charge Eqletm llD- medlately labeled "a damnable lie." Eagleton said the Anderson charge probably will hurt bis petllOnal rewta· tion. . Eagleton told the breakfast meeting be remains determined to a t a.y on the Democratic ticket and to become vice president. "I'm 100 percent satisfied that I can back it, H he said, "I'm going to troS3 the country and de everything I possibly can, not In the ltnae of personal vlndlcallon but in the (Boe EAGLETON, Pap J) ....... . . ' . ID cue you haven't guessed lt- 11'• goona be a hot weekend. Ten.. p<ratures ol 95 are upOc:ted In Santa Ana Saturday, -bat cooler than todly'1 read"':; Beachel ll1'llUDd a Lowa 1n IO's. INSmE TOD".\" Summn n&1on.i • theaur 1ta<o son for mmir Oratio• c ... 1 ,..,;. dents who porllci!>GC. ilo Gold<to Wtsl College°"" o,... COOll Col!eg1 producli°"'. Actorr ,,,. brin¢ng to Hf• ·c~1o~ • "Dracula" olld "Ploy II Agal .. Sam." Stt todar'• Wttkndff. Uol.-• -.... ...... .. --.. .,_ • --• _..._ 11 --" -.... . .... , ... -...... • --" e.111 .. .... ----" ............. ., --• 1'111 ..... • -,.,, --............. .. -• -I 1 11 • .. ---=·~ " --. • - ' I DAil Y PILOT H Potawes, Vegetables Cost More WASIDNC'l'ON (UPI) -Potatoes and bub summer vegetables will cost con-- aumen more thil year because farmers are growing fewer of them, the Agrlcult11n1 Department aald today. Department economists, wrltlni In a summary of their "vegetable situation'' report, sald production of potatoes for earfy summer harvest is down 4 percent from last year, and late summer potatoes are off 14 Percent from a year ago. AJ a result, Jn3rkets ire stronger, the report sakt. In the fall, when the maiD part of Jiii potalo·c:rop ts harvested, a .......a priot drop can be expected. Bui if ~t forecatts or a 7 percent decline from 1971 In fall harvest acreage are accW'att, price! wtll be 0 iubstantJal1y higher" than last year, the report added. Economists also reported that: -Summer fresh vegetable production ts estimated 4 percent below a year ago, with output down for all major items ex4 cept carrots and tomatcies. Average prices should be above last year. --Current eJtimaltt Indicate a "moderate" lncreue In packing of proc· essed vegetables tbiS season, but wholesale prlces· for most Canned and fror.en vegetables should remain firm becauae carryover stocks are lower. 'Dial A Book' Plan Initiated In Hunting~on !,lllltllllCJon Beach resldenll can now cllal a boot. The llunUnglon Beach Library is con· ducting an experimental book mailing _.am aimed at cutting future building an4 operati.e ~,. of the city's ~brarlea. Under the ttew system, 1 ,._, •· call the main branch of the library and HQUeal a boot. The book la malled In a co.~ln•r wllb a ~le fr(. the readtr to relllm it through the mail. llunllncton Beach f.o the first city in OrlDJ• County to mall boolcl, according lo lJbrary Dlreclo"1\'alltr Johnson. 11we-'re really experlmenlln& now:• 11y1 Jolllllon. "But ii thts mettt the needs of the )*>pie we can retblnk our ,ians for future libraries.'~ I Johnson feell the maUIDJ of boolcl ,..ou14 be m~ Uu expensive than open· --"' ....... llaild, ..... ""8ncbea 111111 $200,QllO a yur te fllll lbem. Two nw branches are currently plan- ned for Huntington Beach in the future, according to Johnson. Plans are also in the workll now to publilb a mail order catalogue of new boolcl. The catalogue would be furnllhed by the library's wholeJ1le distributor, ac- cording lo Johilloll. The dial a book number ts 536-11481. Wrltton requesll will also be accepted. Huntington Baby Making Progress LONG BEACH (AP) -A tJu:t .. montbo old lluntlnston Beech boy unable to digest either formula or cow's milk ts making steady progress on molhtr11 milk beln& donated by more than 100 women 1brougb0ut Los Angeles and Oranae Counties, hospltal officials said today. The condition of John "Jy Jy" Shulll, son of Mr, and Mn. J o • e p h Schull!, 17291 Forbes Lane, has Improved from .. guarded" to "satisfactory," physicians at the Earl and Loraine Miller Childn!n'a Hospital here said. OIAM•I COAST Ml DAILY PILOT 'fhl ~ C'Nll DAILY PILOT writ. wflldl h COl'llltll'ltd ttie N__,.rns, 11 pi;btltlltd llY I'll C>rlnte CO.II Pllbllllliflf Cim91!1'1', lflNl- nit• ..i111ot11 •111 Mlltl'lt<I, MOl'ICM'I' tllrovth FrlAy, fw Ctot!1 Mttt, H1wPOrl 8t1d'I, HunllnglDlt llHd\fFOUl'llllft Vl!llf, U;una '""'-1,..,kM/hcMltMcll Mii Sin Cltmtntt/ JM JUM CaplJtr•,,., A tlnllle ng~I edition 11 p!IDI,.,_, lftvnll't'I Ind Sund1ys. flle prlflCJpll S1Ubllthl1111 pl1n1 ·1111 JlO Wnl IQ' 11,...., CO.fa M ... , Ullfomlt. f2'». a1b1rt N. W1~ ~lfll'IC Ind M1i.Nr" J1U It. Curley Vkt·Prald-.t .nc Gtnt111l Mtt111tr Thom•• )(,,,11 ,14110!' 1\a"''' A. M11rphl111 MIMlh'lll Edl!Or Chtrl" H. i..01 Rieh•"' P, Nill Malltefll Ml1111'"9 IUlllfQ T ,,,., c."a1. W•t °"'""' °""''' ad1tw " .......... Offk. 17171 lttch l111l1,1r'1 M1Ui .. A4«1N••• ,.o .••• 7tO, tl•41 --· U91M1 tlldl• IZt HrlJI A•hlt Clttt ... : -v:.:.;~ '''"' ""'""' .. OU alS ht.111~1'9 .. °"""""' -~ ll Cll?llnl ,..., t ztepl 111 (71 4J '42o4J21 C1w'rlel .... ,, •• '41·1671 ,,.. ........... CMltJ C.-lttlt _,_ ~. ""' ~ '*' ""'"'"" °"""""'· ... -~ llll.lltrtt• .....,"" fM!!!!. .. .. ..... 11 .. .,....... ,..,. _, .. ,..... .... """"" JrMCill ..... ........................ ..... -· ......... " (lltl """· ~ ....... lllllWUtTltl"tl-'I --~ -Mii U.lJ r-t"IY'I fllltltwy .-.... ·----· I 2 Many Crooks Make a Heist • POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -A swuna• enttrtd a nrvtce 111.- tion olllco, pulled • gun ~ ll>o mancer and demanded all lltt eJlll from the reaJster, poUce aald Thursday. Before the ma""ier could oblige another man entered with a gun and announced a holdup. Stunned, the two gunmen, who did not know each other, decided to join forces. They divided up the cash on the spot and fled. Cigarette Firm to Buy County Land Philip Monis, owoer of SI percent of the Mission Viejo Company has given no- tice Jt will exercise an option to purchase the remaining 49 percent of the soulheaatern Orange County development company for an estimated $27 .5 million. The New York-based manufacturer of cigarettes and other products bought a 51 percent interest in the company in January, 1970 for $20 milliop. Total land In the vut ~ Mission Viejo is 45,000 acres with ~~ut ·11,000 acres under development by the com~ pany. Richard J. O'Neill, chairman of the Orance County Democrauc Central Com- mittee, Is cblef owner of the land holding firm. Other principals In the cnmpany In- clude hla two nephews, Anthony Molso, vice presldtnt and secretary, Jerome Mollo, Jamea E. West, board chairman and Phlllp Reilly, president. In addition to the 7,000 acre• now parUally developed by tbe company there are 4,000 acres of the O'Neill Ranch under opllon for future home building al an eJtimated price of '15 mllUon. The land ts owned by O'Neill and hla sister, Alicia O'Nem Avery. . Started from scratch In the rolling hills southeast of the San Diego Freeway in '"'.:,the Ml11lon Vlej• • .,,,,.,...,... e,_. -11,000 r.,ltlmll. flll M tw ' Com~y also has developmenll undtr way In Phoenix and Denver. O'NeW owns a number of reatauranta In Soulhern Callfornla, two lighting equipment manufacturing . !Irma I n Orange County, office buildings, apart· meril complexes and a 1hoppln8 center on the Palos Verdes peninsula. The Rancho. Mllllon Viejo la part of the orllln•I Rancho Santa M1rcarlta, onco owned by California Gov. Pio Pico and h11 broiJ!er Andres. Included In the vast holdinga was about 250,000 acres ei· tendinf to tlie Mexlcan border. Valley District To Try Program For Handicapped The Fountain Valley School District has been selected by the State Depart· ment of Education as one of four "model programs" in California for education of tbe . band,icapped. · The designation c.trrits no extra money with it, but school officills 1ay it wlll give them the fiellbillty needed Jo continue pioneering "'ork in integrating the handicapped Into regular classroom activity. "To dtvelo'p as a health)" Individual, :~~:l child needs contact with other · en who can set patterns of nonnal behavior,'' aaid Fountain V a 1 J e y SUperinlendenl Mike Brick. "If you place the handicapped off in segregated classrooms, as most schools now do, they don't get this contact." There are about 1,000 children in the dl!trict who will he dlreclly affected by the Integration concept, Brick 11aid. These include the educationally han· dicapped, the educable mentally retard· ed, the partially blind, and the physically .and netH'ologlcally handicapped. The model designation will enable the district to relax many of the strict legal requirements governing bow t h e s e children must be educated. Most districls, for example, must spend all of Uleir specially allocated n1oney for the educable mentally retard· ed to put these children in segregated classrooms. Fountain Valley, however, will now Use some this same money to give special training to regular teachers to enable them to handle these han- dicapped children at least part of the day in a regular classroom. This is what Brick calls 0 bringing the hanclicapped Into the mainstream of life." A major benellt of the program tl tbat many handicapped, who formerly had to attend special schools. will now be able to attend regular neighborhood schools. FuJl.Jlme spoc!Dll•ts will continue Jo be available to servt each particular klnd or handicapped child, but they will travel betvieen the several schools in whlch the children will now be located. Brick noted that there wlll also con- tinue to be ctntm where thost han- dicapped children who are not ready for full integration can enroll. ' Rms Space Shot Set. MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Unlorr probably wW launch a new Salyut space laboratory and a two-or three-man Soyu& spacecraft In the nut !ew day1, quallOed Communist aources 1Sld today. fJIJO MIDlon Bike Bill Justice Or ders Faces Hard P hon e Refund Pedaling WASHINGTON (AP) -Justice Byron R. White today cleared the way for a $150-million refund to customers of the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. ln a brief order issued at the supreme Court he set aside a temporary po11tpone- ment of the refund and declined to further delay the rote decision in California. · The refund would amount Jo about ''% for a home telephone, but Could mean tens of thouJ<U')ds of dollars for cor~ poratioos. PT&T at-eys had argued the unanimous decision by the californla Supreme Court was patently arbitrary and contrary to due process. They also 1aid the refund order was "a grave miscarriage of justice" and a 11com- poundlng blOw" to the company's ability to serve lt:s customers. Besides the refund, the state court on June 9 Invalidated a '143-mllllon ratt-in- crease granted PT&T by the state public utilities e11mmission a year ago and another $68.tJ.million boost that went into From P agel CHASE .•. which he said was traveling ap- proximately 80 miles per hour in a 45 mile zone. Offlc'er Hardy sald the driver sped over the Santa Ana River bridge, slowed down, then looked back, and spotted his pursuer, and gunned it, tu ming up Brookhurst Street. Listening to the dramatic broadcast o{ the progressing pursuit, Costa Mesa patrol cars began deploying when· Officer Hardy radioed the speeding sedan had turned eastbound on Vlctoria Street. Chasing him toward Harbor Boulevard, officers said Haney forced Roger R. Richards, 17, of La Mirada, to swerve his car onto the sidewalk and into a telephone pole. Costa M!l!::I P.,11.tl'clnl:m $!.gvo~'""h ~ .. c.-, _._ .... _ .. mlnutes earlier in Newport Beach - finally slowed almost Jo a stop as be ap- proached Harbor Boulevard. Officer Nash, who was waiting for him, pulled across the intersection with hls car's red Ugbts Dashing, but said the on· comini sedan accelerated, forcing him to back out of the way to avoid a collbion. lie and officers Jack Koch and Richard John.On then fell inlo line behind Haney in their patrol cars, reaching 110 miles per hour on Harbor Boulevard. McGOVERN . • • From P agel SU RVEY •.. discoloration, Ahlering said. 0 An untrained ohlerver might not see anything," he explalned, ''but U 1 site had been lived on for hundreds of years, the build-up of organic material Crom food and charcoal from fires would give the soil a noticeably dillerent color than it would otherwise have." other things to look lnr are shell•, remnants of tools, or significantly dil· ferent from normal plant cover. AhJering discouraged amateurs from "poking around" in .~s they believe may be archeological situ because un· professional excavation can mean the Joss of up to 90 percent of the in· formation the site contained. ' He said there are also laws making tt Illegal fnr an untrained person to look for artifacts on a property unless he owns It. From Pqel EAGLE TON. •• te111e of lrying Jo ek<t George McGovern," he said. Eagleton Oally denied • .report by Anderson that phoJo•taU• reCnrds show the Missouri 1en11ot w11 amsltd a ball· doun times for drunlten or l'ei:kltu drlv· Ing. Andtraon made the all!llllon In a radio broadcast Thursday. 'i'bt columnist IOld 11te As30Clated Presa thal be did mt bave the reCordJ blnuel! bul ~ about them from a "hlch ~ of· Octal," A clteck by 11te AP tUl'Mll ap aom• put 1peedlng cltatloU In Eagleton'• name, but no trtc. of U1 • rest !or drunlten or reckltll drMa(. r effect last May. The company was to have begun making the repayments on July 14 bu\ White that day temporarily granted PT&T a postponement while he considered a 23-page plea for a stay of the decision. White acted in the absence of Justice William 0. Douglas, wlthin whose jurisdiction California cases normally fall. His order said: "Upon fur\her e11n. s.ideration of the application for stay of the mandate of the California supreme Court and upon examination ot the responses filed to such application, the temporary stay of mandate heretofore entered on July 14, 1m is vacated and the application for stay of mandate is denied." The Calilornia court had found a tax accounting procedure known as ac- celtrated depreciation with Mnnalization used by PT&T was uolawfUL It also said the prices the utility pay1 I~ affiliate, Western Electric Co., for equipment were exce1sive. New J'rlneipal Daniel B. Keck, 35, will be the new principal of the Fountain Valley School District's Foun· tain Valley School this fall. He comes to the district from the Azusa Unified School Districl. where be was an .assistant prin· cipal. Brush Fires Scorch 530 Camp Pendlewn Acres Several brushfires blackened 530 acres of grassland at Camp Pendleton Marine Base Thursday. • Officials at tbe base sold the llte danger was expected to exist for several more days with temperatures soaring in the lOO's and wind continuing to 'blow. One of the major blazes, on the north end of the base adjacent to San Clemente, burned out of control from nOOf' until midnight and blackened about 150 acres, officials said. Firemen from San Clemente assisted in extlngulsblng ~h!~. 'ftt_...i-' .. _ locattd In the central area of the ba!b and burned about 380 acres before being contained by firemen at about 7:30 p.m. Officiala said there were no Injuries and no structural damage u a result a{ the blaze•. llowever, tbe fire did knock out a power transformer, caualng a power failure on the central portion of the base that lasted for about one half hour. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Cycling Sen. James htills has pumped his bicycle licensing bill through the California Assembly but it 'vas uphill all the way. One bill won final legislative passag~~ with only a on"° vote margin Thursday. . Mills. a San Diego Democrat, likes to exercise aboard his two-wheeler in tht• Sacramento area. And he kno\1'S -like other cyclisls do -that bicycle thieves· are more c<>mmon than milestones. The bill would permit counties and cities to outlaw the riding of bicycles which have not been licensed. But more · Important to Mills, he says, is the re-· quirement that the California Depart·· ment af Justice keep records on lost and stolen bicycles. • The assemblyman \Vho carried t~e bill, Robert E. Badham (R·Newport Beach l. Said the measure would make bicycle theft more difficult, ai'Kl recovery easier. He said bicycles are a $25 million to $30 million industry in California. But Assemblyman John Vasconcelloi<; (D·San Jose ), protested that the bill "would make a crin1ina l out of anyone riding an unlicensed bicycle." Tbe bill appropriates $150,000 to set up the record operation, and that feature means a two-thirds majority, or 54 votes, was required. On the first ballot, the vote was 49-16, so Badham asked that the doors be clos· ed and the absent member be brought in to vote. That was done. and the biU finally passed 55-14. Beach Man Held After Alleged Officer Attack Henredon Upholstered furniture On Sale! • DREX!t:-HEA!TA61i-HEN RE,00N'-WOODMARK-KARASTAN NOW YOU CAN OWN LUXURIOUS FURNITURE AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AND , YOU CAN SPECIAL ORDER. WITH THE FABRIC OF YOUR .CHOICE! ?tJ-"' NEWPORT BEACH e 1721 WE!TCllFF Dlt., 6U·20IO TORRANCE e 2164t HAWTHORNl ILVD. )7t·l27t INTlllOIS Mn I IATUUATS t tGI 19 l:J• MIDAT 'TIL t tGI .. LA6UNi'< BEACH e U~NO!TH 00.ul HWY. .,~""' • ' • • I I ( I Friday, Juf1 28, 1972 H DAIL v PILOT I Reds Back McGovern Predawrs North Vietnam Sees Peaceful Settlement Hunted TOKYO (AP) -Nortb Vietnam bu prodJcted lhat tbe electloa of Sen. Cleora• McGovern u presldeit of tbe United Stites tn November "would lead to a cor- rect lllWI a peacefUI aettlement of tbe Vietnam problem." Np Dien, · heed al tbe Prea lllWI Information Deputment of tbe North Vie~ Foltllft Mlnlstey, I a Id McGOvtm•1 "sweeping victory" at the Democratic party convention "ia malnly * * * * * * S. Viet Jets Strafe Foes Dug in Around Quang Tri SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese jets swooped through a sl<ady drlnle to- day, bombing and strafing Communist soldiers.dug in only yards from govern- ment marines who are trying to recaP"' ture Quang Tri City's Citadel fortren. The marines were sent in Thursday lo relieve battered paratroopers who tried for three days to drive· the North Viet- namese out of the Citadel. The marines got within 100 yards of the 13-acre fortress but were not able to recapture ground the paratroopers had 91Unqulsbed inside the 20-foot·thick walls. Military spokesmen said they m~t recapture the Citadel, which has been m Communist bands since May 1, before lhef can. count their month-Old drive a auccess. President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered 20,000 men into Quang Tri Province J~e 28 and promised to drive the Communui:ts Power Plants Given . Clean Bill of Health SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Preference should be Biven to developing nuclear power plants to meet an electrical power shortage callfornla will face after 1975, the state Public UWltles Commission llyl. A ,..por+ by the PUC's electric power division says "any licensed atomic plant will be safe and will not have an adverse effect on the environment." It concedes there is opposition to nucle&r·powered plant.! on grounds of in- adequate safeguards, thermal pollution, disposal of atomic waste and earthquake damage, but argues such ':!:~'~es .,are all subjects of close by acientlftc experts of the Atomic Energy Commission" and other regulatory sgeo-- cies. "Alnple opportunities .are affonled all tbe9e scientists to present evidence at public hearings prior to the licensing of the nuclear project," said the report released Thursday. I~ contends that nuclear plants emit no pollution into the air, as do thermal plants fuelled by coal, goil or gu. The stall report says that the atate, which had a total generating capacity of 35,138 megawatts at the start of 1972, will need 35,700 by 1976, 18,000 by 1981 and 89,000 by 1991. A megawatt is one million watts of power. The figures are based Oil load and resoilrce estimate. filed by public utllilies within the state, both publicly and privately owned. The report says gas ls now the chief fue! used in generating electricity but is decllning in availability, which will mean that oil will become the principal fuel In the late 19705. "Thia presents 1 critical supply , pi:ol>- Jem to caUfornla electric utilities," the report said. out before Sept. II. So far, the troops have met heavy resistance Inside Quang Tri City, tbe provincial capital, along the highway which carries supplies north from Hue, and from Communist 1urmers who have been shelling Hue. In other action, South Vietnamese troopa reCaptured a district county capital along the central coast but heavy fighting was reported at Bong Son, a town government forces recaptured earlier in the week. An American civilian adviser, Rudolph Kaiser of Colorado Springs, Colo., was killed about 30 miles IOI.Ith of Sajgon near the pillage of Hoa Dong. Government sp:ikesmen said ll1 North Vietnamese soldiers were killed in two battles near An Loe, 60 miles · north of Saigon. In Wuhlngton, officials reported that North Vietnam iJ getting only about 10 percent of tbe supplies she was receiving before the mining of her harbon almost three months ago. Deleose olliclals sald lhat contrary to published reports tbe North Vietnamese have not yet completed construction of a lour-Inch pipeline lhat would bring much needed fuel from China down to the Hanoi·Haiphong area. However, they said portiO!I! of tbe line have been finished and are In use with !nicks baullng·the oil along the unllnlsbed sectloos of the 11ne·. The officials said that the pipeline in the panbanille waa being bit ·regularly and was totally out of use BO that fuel for the tank! and vehicles operating against the South Vietnamese In the Quang Tri area now bad to·be trvcked in. Altogether, they sald, North Vietnam was getting cioly about 10 percenl ol the imports she received before the May I mining of her main harbors. Don't Llouse Up The Llove U.if e Of the Llama I • f I ' SEATTLE, Waah. (UPI) -Cbarlea Harke ii a quiet learner. It took him~ ly two fut but painful bltet to un- derstand you don't move in on the love life of a llama. Harke , an animal · keeper for three years at the Woodland Park 1.oo, wu at .. tempting to move a female out of a malfl llama '• pen so another female could move .in earlier this week. "I gu ... be thought I was cutting In on his preserves/' Harke taid 'I'burBday at tbe Ballard Hospital. "I ttally bad no such intentions." The male llama took offense, nipping Harke once on the arm and a aecond time -more severely -on the left knee. "l went down and sort of wrestled him down with me,'1 Harke aaid. "He got up and scampered away. I was vuy glad to aee ~go." Harte tben bobbled out of the pen. Ria ann wound wun~ terlous, but the llama managed .. to sever a knff. tendon which bad to be sewn· together. I Appraisals Under Fire Hinshaw-Kuyper Conflict Bursts Into Flanie Again The three-year~ld feud b et we e n Orange County Assessor Andrew J, HilllbaW and County Counsel Adrian Kuyper burst into Oames again Thurs.- day. · KU)'ll« In a l•ller prepared for the Board of Supervloors charged that Hinabaw'1 ofDct11 appralsalJ of land comprlalng.the proposed 102-acre Yorba Regloaal Part on the Santa Ana River In northeaat Anaheim ""' "Incorrect In factual and legal premises." lflnlbaw botJy replied that Kuyper was seeking "to dlscrtdit the assessor '• office tllrough IMuendo and faloel>ood ." IUriablw'• appraisers told t h e aupervilon lut June 27 lhat tbe county has acreecl to pay up to 124,000 an acre for the port land that Is worth oo1y f7,5()0 . .. ~ The Hlnsbaw·Kuyper feud first erupted In 11111 over oppralsals by the assessor'• office of Irvine Company landl around the Upper Ne""°rt Bay. , "I aald at that Ume that Kuyper had •lolated tbe code and canon of tbe_ American Bar Auoclation," llinsha'w n11led Thursday. "l added that thla of· flee from that time on would no long<r uae. the mvices of the county coUJ11el'1 off let, II Tbe Yorba pork land purthase bas been tha subject ol many appraiaals and -.4oportmeotal lll'lllllltnts for the pal,.., .. Tbe apprallal wbicb l&niled Thunday'1 exchange waa done by Gar Rodding, a supervising appraioer In the 1ssessor'1 office. lie pointed out lhat escrow1 In the park. site lll'U which called for payment of $11,000 lo $20,000 an acre for land which ls now under option to the county had collapsed. Redding'• f7,IOO an a""' appraisal bad been countered by value estimates by Jolin R. Sbaddy, ualstant director of the valuation dlvialon of the counly'a Real Property S<rvlceo Department, and by Stanley H. Yonhls, an ledependent ap- praiser hired by tbe COWlly. Both, according to lleddln& used the defunct e • c r o w 1 u evidence in determining land values. lllnsbn olata lbat Rodding knew ot the ......... ud, "gave Ibero the appropriate wellht - very little." Stanley Krause, diroctor of Real Property Services admitted Tb..., that lour of llx ....,,.,. between developers and properlJ ownm In the Yorba park Ille area !lava coU.poad. Hlnlhew also cborS-!bat the U.S. Corpo of --. and the county'• chlel llood -dlotrici .,..i-, Georr• onom., hlw wamecl of dang ..... flood -to the prvperty. The a1ellt'l''t Iida baft •timated lhat 1UD11 up lo •1t,OOO an acre wollld ho nec-.ry "' make the lll'U Dood proof. Tbe counlJ baa a $1.S mililon ll'anl (S. PIUD, I'll' I) In Park SPECIALS FBmAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY ONLY! . TAKE YOUR PICK .•. AJ,J. BRAND NEW! ... 1972 ~IEBCUBYS . • • M.E·RCUR)' THIS WEEKEND ONLY COUGAR • • • Auto., wsw, power steering & brakes, radio, dual mirrors, lint glass, beautiful medium lime. MERCURY THIS WEEKEND ONLY $415500 MONTEREY • • • 2 Dr. Cu llom. All vinyl interior, white vinyl lop, white walls, incl. air conditioning. . WEEKEND SPECIAL! 1972 CAPRI 1972 COMET . or • • e • • #GAECMA41779 TAKE YOUR CHOICE #2K81'1'54169 52585°0 HURRY! PRICES GOOD THIS WEEKEND ONLY! Home Of Tbe New Cat ••• "Ge,._. r .. 11 .. "Orcn\g< c .. ntr'r FomUr o/ FIN Car.• 2921 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA ft1ESA • l4Ml30 Home Of Tbe New Cat •• , "Goltlear~ .I • ~- ' ~· . . . • 4 DAll.Y 'llOT China Tells Lin's Death Tryon Mao ALGIERS (OP!) -Former Chin.,. Dolenso Mlnlster Lin Piao tried to assassinate Mao Tse.tung and seize power In China, then was killed when he fled to Russia aboard an aircraft that crashed In Mongolia Sept. u, 1971, the Chi.,... Emb.my said today. The embassy announcement dld not say whether Lin, once designated at Mao's successor, was killed in the crash or whether be died tn some other man- ner. Nor d!d the statement disclose the cause of the plane crash. ·Details of Lin's failure to overthrow Mao and also to reach Russia salel; were published In the Algerian govern- ment newspaper El Moudjahid. The em- bassy later confirmed that It bad re1 .... ed the published allllOUl1Ullleril The Chinese embassy in Paris also confirmed Lin '• death. The embassy statements apparently ended 10 months of speculation as to the fate of the former defense minister. After the crash of the Trident aircraft In Mongolia, reports from the Soviet Union tdmtllled Lin 11 one of tbe victlma but the Mongollanl and Chin.,. at the time denied the report. Lin j 1conducted antiparty acUvlties in a premeditated fuhlon wJth a well determlned program and with a plan to usurp power, tllat ls, to take over the direction of the party, the government and the army," the embassy statement In El Moudjabid said. "Lin Piao committed errors repeatedly and President Mao. Tse.tung bad time and 1g&fn battled again.st him," the em· bassy llatement said. "Outwardly be declared openly his sup. port of· the tboug~t of Mao Tse-tung and made propaganda In favor of this thought. Thul be wu able to hou the ma..., of people lnlo becomlng In their eyes the 1tucceS10r' of Mao Tie-tung. "Some tlmes Lln Piao WU qbltgod to tone clown bis arrogance and thus was able to accomplish a certain useful work. But be wu not able to renounce his craf. ty 111~ during the Great CUitural Revolution. · "The L1n Piao affair constitutes a reOectJon of the batile between two lines In the heart of the party that bad been gotna on for a long time.,. Earlier, In Hong Kong, an authoritative Ch1nde publication bad blnted that Lin wu dead. Actor's Familv • • To Get Money • LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Bankers Security Lile Insurance Society bas agreed to pay the fonner wife of the late actor Jeffrey Hunter and their four sons $570,<d under an insurance policy. The insurance company had tried to cancel the policy, daimlng Hunter bad defrauded the company by not disclosing a bear! ailment be had bad since childhood. But following a nonjucy trial, the company agreed Thursday to pay off the double-indemnity policy before a decision was handed down by Superior Court Judge Jobn A. Loomis. Hunter died at 41 In 1969 as the result of a skull fracture suffered in a fall at his Van Nuys home. The original pollcy, for $2401000, paid double with interest and costs because Hunter died accidentally. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellwry of tht Dally Piiot ls guarantetd Moncttyo.Frld1y: If you Oo not "''"' )'Our ~Pllr llY 5:30 p,rn., c•ll 111d your eopy wrrl be br0u9fl1 to '!'Oii. Cllll IAI tlkWI vntll 7:30 p.m. S.Wrdly Ind lllndlYI If WI# clo not rte9l\l't your COPY by ' 1.m. S.t11rfty, OI' • '·"" Sundty, uitl 11111 I COP'f wlll IH lll"01o911t tt you, C.11• '"' t1k.n untll lt 1.m. Telephones Most Orll!Vt COV1'11V Artn __ ... , fa.mt NorthM11I Huntlr1910r\ 811dl Incl Wtstm\115ltr •.•.• , ............ •11H ... n Cllmtnlt, C10111r11>0 8ffdll S.n J1H1n Capl1!r1no, DflM Pont, lot.rttl UlilUM, Ugunt Nlguitl • .,, "'9"40t Fridly,Ju~28, 1912 UPI T....,_,. 'Dudes' Try Duds Wearing their new western hats, Sen. and Mrs. George McGovern examine their newly purchased western jackets in a store in Custer, S.D. The McGoverns are finishing up the last week of their two week vacation in the Black Hills. Soviet Advisers Joined By Military in Pullout WASHING TON (UPI) -American Jn. telligence sources said today the Soviet military pullout from Egypt apparently will be on a far more massive scale than had appeared likely earlier this week. The source said combat forces which operate the more aophistlcated equip- ment were joining the exodwi of purely advisory officers. The Russlarui, these llOUl'Ces sald, not onJy are removing the most advanced military aircraft Ibey bad sent to Egypt -the MIG23 "Foxbat" -but are begin- ning to evacuate personnel from the new SA3 antiaircraft missile sites south of Cairo and to withdraw from military bases in the Alexandria area. eTridentOK WASHINGTON (API -The Senate bas banded the Nb:on administration a vic- tory by voting to apeed development of the Trident submarine, the most tx- penaive ahip ever built. Opponent. objected to accelerating ( IN SHORT ..• ) de v e Io pm en t of the cruiser-sized atomic-powered vessel and its 24 nuclear warhead missl1es, but not to the concept itseU. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen ( D • T e x . ) • paraphraslng a former Pentagon of· flclaJ'a "fly before you buy" policy, said, "We .should swim before we sink." A rush to construction could mean costly ovemans) he aald, but his amendment to cut some J500 million in Trident funding was defeated 47 to 39. e Brlti•h in Bellut BELFAST (UPI ) -British troop rein· l9rcemeni. poured Into Northern Ireland by the thousands today to help mount what Defense Ministry officials said would be a rigorous new anny campaign against the Irish Republican Army (IRA). Three men, including two Roman Catholics, died Thursday in continuing violence in the province. The deaths brought to 477 the number of persons killed In three years of strife In Northern Ireland. Army sources said most of the 4,000 troop reinforcements ordered into the province Thursday would arrive in the territory today. The reinforcements will bring overall army strength in the prov· Ince to 21,000, including the 8,()0().man militia, the Ulster Defense Regiment. e Parole Orders WASHINGTON (AP) -Ra Ip h Glnzburg will be freed Oct. 11 alter spen· ding eight months in prison for sending obscene material through the mails. Alben W. B. Truitt, a convicted sky- jacker who is a maternal grandson of the late Vice President Alben Barkley, and John Pyne, a former Chicago police of- ficer convicted of extortion, were also given their freedom under decisions Thursday by the U.S. Board of Parole. However, former Tammany Hall political boss Carmine DeSapio will re- main in prison until next Jan. 31. The board denied his parole request. · e Experiment Eyed TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP) - Several surviving participants in a federal syphilis experiment have retained a civil- r1ghts lawyer to represent them in hopes of obtaining compensation for their roles in the study, The lawyer, Fred D. Gray, aaid Thurs- day he also expects to represent families of several men who died in the ex- periment, called the Tuskegee Study. In an interview, Gray said several of the Alabama black men who parf.icipated in the Tuskegee study have told him that when they joined the experiment, they believed they were going to be treated for whatever disease they had. Nixon to Attend Ellender Funeral WASHINGTON (UPI) -House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs said to- day President Nixon Wil1 attend the funeral Monday of Sen. Allen J. Ellender (0.La.), who died here Thursda y night. (See story, page 4). Boggs, after having breakfast with Nixon at the White House, said the Presi .. dent has decided to fly to Houma, La., Monday morning. Services will be held there at 11 a.m, Boggs has been named by Speaker Carl Albert to head the House delegation at- tending the fu neral. Major Rainstorm Strikes Ce1itral Minnesota Receives Over 6 Inches ""WIAl~I JOtOCAa-1. Temperature• Hlth Low "r Al~v. c:IHr 7t SO •1 "' ""' .. .. A an a,, clttv It U ,Of la~«t11tld, C:INr 100 n l~mar(~. (!dY ,." ,." OIU, C:lttr Boti!Ol'I, clt1r 1• 6-t ~rt.,lon, cklY ""rlollt. cldV '.,' " ~1Jfltl<1, dear •'•' ,." hie.to. deer ll 11'1<:11'11'1111, <ldY i " -l•nd. ddyii ", ... Otr1vrr, (l11r 57 Del Mcllnn. Cid\' ~~h .. ~~~r ;;.;i;.;~'"' ti " " 1dl1n.1 · .. cld't .. ' IMMI ll' eld't , •7 '' \l.,at. ,, .. , 11 ff Llrtlt R~k":le•r Lot An es. ciNr ,.·,.'· Mll"QW t., d itv ,,. M.wMh s. ci."r Mtnntpll..SI. P111t, ddy Mft Orlt',,'i cllU tt 7! IN'i.~l.'ir( ~. 1..,. 11 ' nom. Em. ct .. , 'H ~ .... ,,., a •dt!IOlllll,. C:ld\' Phllfllll', C:llar tn ~·c:1~°T ~~ fli7r.~~~, " '"°\ CIMr n r111( tc:o. c:ld't 1111, C/tlr •ne, c!11r l."':;.1,",1:., , i} 111'11n1 on. c:1c11 • ·" 'Before Eledion' President v ·ows Try to End War WASllINGTON (UP[) -President Nixon, declaring the chance tot a negotiated peace in Vietnam 0 better now than it bas ever been," has pledged to try to end the war before the Nov. 7 presidential election. ". ". . We hope to do everything we can to bring this war to an end'' in the three "We are not ualng the great pomer that could flnbh off North l'ietnam in on aftert1oon, and we evlll not." months before the election, Nixon said Thursday at a White House news cotf .. ference. HE MET REPORTERS in his oval of· fice and told them he did not "want to raise any false hopes" but believed "the enemy ls failing in his military of- fensive" and suffering from the con- sequences of ·the American blockade and bombing campaign in North Vietnam. "Under these circumstances, the enemy . . . has every incentive to negotiate,'' the President said. "At this point, the chance for a negotiated settlement is better now than it has ever been." Ni.J:on also denounced U.N. Secretary Genera1 Kurt Waldheim for criticizing American bombing. Nixon said Waldheim was seizing on "enemy-inspired prop- aganda" as "many well-intentioned and British Dockmen Strike Seaports For 'Security' LONDON (UPI) -Britain's 41 ,000 longshoremen today struck all the na- tion's seaports and the government hinted it may proclaim a state of emergency. This would enable it to use troops U necessary to ship vital food supplies. "The government i.s giving immediate consideration to the action it may need to take to protect the general interests of the economy and the consumer," Employment Secretary M a u r 1 c e MacMillan told Parliament. The walkout-Britain's second total seaport shutdown in two years -was called to back longshoremen's de~ds for greater job security. More than 40 sblpJ which had anChored in the Thames Estuary waiting to see whether the strike would begin sailed tor continental ports. In the British Channel island of Guernsey tons o[ ripe tomatoes were dumped and Jett to rot. Tons of fresh fruit also piled up on the docks. But the country faced no immediate food shortages. Spokesmen at London's Covent Garden fruit and vegetable market said "masses" of produce were stockpiled there . Ports throughout the country were silent and deserted. Pickets stood outside locked dock gates. Rows o{ cranes re- mained idle. At London 's docks 26 ships were stranded with no workers to unload them. In the Humber .Estuary in Yorkshire 26 ships were idle. But cross-channel fenies to France, Belgium and Hollal,ld were twdly af- fected . Most loading and unloadlng Is carried out by nonunion dockers. naive people" have In charging U.S. planes had bombed dikes and dams in the North. NIXON CONCEDED there may have been some .. incidental damage" to the dikes but lnalstod the United States bad exerted great restraint. "We are not using the great power that could finish off North Vietnam In an afternoon, and we will not," be said. The President contended Senate aup.. porters of "eod the war" resolutions could doom at least one mllllon South Vietnamese to death at the bands of the Communi!ts. He accused h1I aiUcs of a "hypocritical double standard •• , by not raising ooe word" age.inst deliberate Norlll Vietnamese attack.s 0n South Vlei- namese civiliam. .. Nixon said congressional supporters of end the war rf;S<llutions really were pro- longing the war by encouraging the enemy and undercutting bis peace ef· forts. POUTICS ALSO wu beavlly stressed at the news conference with Nixon vow- ing that the question of Democratic vice presidential candidate Thomas F • Eagleton's history of mental exhaustion and psychiatric treatment would not be raised by blm or hia bai:kers In the 1972 election campaign. He aaid that the American voters 1'bave the clearest choice in thi.t century" to pkt a Presi· dent oo the Issues, not peraonallty. He said they can decide on the issues, rather than the candidates because be and Detnoct'atic nominee Gecrge S. McGovern honesUy and b e a i c a 11 y disagree "on fundamental ends and goals for the American people." HE RECAU.ED his own triala .. a vice presidential candidate In 1952 when there were those urging President Eisenhower to dump him and noted that he did not "aink the PretJdential can- didate" by remaining on the ticket. On tbat basis, be laid be did not believe the Eagleton revelations would affect the race which he aald would be close and hard fought. The President also took the opportunity to praise Vice President Spiro T. Agnew "as a man of pol!e, calm and judgment" who "could be expected t.o make decisions in ~e future in a calm, cool, judicial "!lay." But be stressed that the "Vice Presi· dent does not make the decisions" although he bu been "very outspoken and articulate" In policy making meetings. Officer Slayer To Get Testing LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man con- victed In the murder of a Los Angeles policeman more than 45 years ago is to Wld"go 1 year of psychiatric treatment and evaJuation at Atascadero state Hospllal. Superi0< Court Judge David N. Flu ordered the care Tburlday for Matthew Francis Kllgarlll, 68. Kllgarllf, who confesaed to the murde< of officer Parley L. Bennett during the robbery of a downtown store on Jan. 25, l9Z7, but later repudiated ti, was con- victed by a jury last April 28. Filtll ruled that Kllgarllf was mentally incompetent to undergo normal sen- tencing after three psychiatrists said be ""' unable to Wlderstand legal pro- ceedings. Ul'I T•l .. blte SENIOR SENATOR OIES Alton J. Eltondar, 81 36-year Caree1· Ends for Se1rlor Solon Ellender WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Allen J. Ellender, the outspoken L o u i s i a n a Democrat who served under 1 i x presidents during a 36-year Senate career in which he became one of the nation'• most infiuentiaJ politicians, died Thurs- day at the age of 81. Ellender, the oldest as well as the longest serving Senate member, was slficken by stomach pains while boarding a priva te plane following a Louisiana campaign swing, According to aides, the pains progressively worsened during the Oight to Washington. Upon arrival, he was examined and rushed to Bethesda, Md., Naval Hospital where he died at 7:20 p.m. or apparent heart failure. President Nixon ordered White House flags flown at half.staff and eulogized Ellender as "a good friend, a fine Senator and a splendid American ." As Pres ident pro tempore of the Senate, Ellender was third in succession to the presidency following the Vic~ President and the Speaker of the House. Ellender's death was announced to his Senate colleagues by Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La,), son of Huey P. "Kingfish" Long, who gave Ellender his start in politics. Long said his senior colleague bad served for 36 years "with honor and dignity" and that his half-<:entury of public service was "unblemished by ao much as a hint of misconduct." Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew issued a statement saying Ellender was "one of the most respected and distinguished members of the United States Senate." Senate Democrats today selected Sen. James 0. Eastland of Mississippi to replace Ellender as president pro tem. pore of the Senate, making him third ill line of succession to the presidency. The vote was a formality, because by tong-standing trad ition the s e n i o r member of the party controlling the Senate always succeeds to the office of temporary president. The vice president is the constitutional president of the Senate, but rarely presides except when there i3 a likelihood bis vote will be needed to break a tie. Burlesque Queen Dead TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -Rose LaJ1ooe known es the "Queen of Burlesque'' ~ reportedly mede $2,500 a week as a strip- per, has died at her home here after being ill sevecaJ months. Although abe never gave her age, Q was believed to be In ber 50s. Residents Siveat As Phoenix Hit By Power Out.age Bobby Widens Chess Gap, Needs 7~ Wins for Title PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -A widespread power outage struck the Phoenix metropolitan area Thursday evening, knocking out trallic light. and causing confusion as thousands of motorJats headed borne from work. While homebound motorists sweated it out in the traffic jams that dotted the area, others sweltered as home air con- ditioners failed in heat that reached a record 111 degrees during the day. Phoenix police said the power outage ranged from a few minutes in some areas up to almost two hours in others. At one time about 130 policemeQ. were · In the lield, most of them directing traf. lie at intersections where tratfic lights were snuffed out. The Salt River Project, one of tbe two main suppliers of 1electrlcal power to the area, said about a third of Its 190,000 customers were alfected by the power outage. A spokesmap said most of those had t lectrlcal power restored within .20 minutes after the blackoul occurred al 5:07 p.m. ~ A spokesman for Arl20na Public Service, the other major supplier of elflOo tricity in the art.a, said •1a Sood part ol the city" wu allected by the outage. He had no Immediate utlmate on b9w many customen were 1ffected . More than 1 mllllpn people live in the Pboenllt metropolitan area. The APS spokesman said the outage was apparently caused by a r :e in a 69,000.volt circuit breaker at Ju wtst Phoenix power plant, ct•slng t Salt Ri ver Project plant also to break down. Fnim Wire Servlcet REYKJAVIK, Iceland -B 0 b by Fischer'i chances of winning tbe world chm crown looked betler and better t .. day alter Soviet champioO Boris Spw!G' conceded the eighth ram• In 37 move1. The ICOl'e 11 now W in Fischer'• fawr, and be needs only ?\lo more polnll to clinch the UUe. Spwlcy needs another t to retain i~ . 11FLscher is again 1howlna the tremen. <foul force that ruthleasly 1wept aalde Mark Talmanov, Bent Lanen and Tigran Petroeian. In previous matches,'' international gr a n d m a 1 t e r 111.ac Kuhdan oald Jn an analysis of the match. lo~ The Asaoclated Presa. 0 Bued OD tb1s pme;" Kuhdan ~ eluded, "Spuffll 11ee1111 demor•lbed and unable to cope wltb the Incisive acouracy of his opponenL Barring a <omplete reversal of form, Filcber'1 lead II likely to increase. II The ninth game Is aet for Sunday. -The mOllea Jn the el1bth game of the Boris Spoul:)' • Bobby Fllcher 11orld chew cbamplomblp. Flacber (white) S-llJ (black) J. P-QB4 P.Q8' 10. BJ(IS JJ.Kt I. Kt.QBS Kt.QBI II, Q-BI Q-RI 3. Kt-ICB3 ~KBS lJ. QIUIJ QR.fell 4. P.KKIS P·KK13 ll P-Kt.1 R·KBl S. Jl.Kts'!J.Kts II. Q-QI P.QIU &. 0-0 0-0 IS. JJ.IU P·Ktt 1. P.QI PlP IS. !J.R7 PIP 8. Ktxl' Kl:lKt 17. BIR Rill t. Q.&Kt P.Q3 18. Pl!' Bx!' &passky :bta<k • , UPIT ........ HERE'~ HOW IT LOOKED FIKhor Wini llh Gamo 19. ll·KBl Kt.Qi 20. Kt.Q5 QxQ 21. Ktxl' ch K·Bt 22. R1Q KxKt 22. Rill ll·Ktl c.b 21. JJ.BJ KHU 25. K-K11 P.QRI is. P-Kt JJ.R8 27. P·BI P·B3 23. R-K2 as K·K3 29. Jl,Q2 !J.ltt7 30. !J.K2 P·Kllf 11. Jl,Q2 B.R8 32. P·B$ cb PxP 22. PxP ch K·Kt S4. !\.QI ltiP 35. R.Q5 ch K.JQ S8. llxP ch K· Ki 27. 11-QBS 11et1,,,. -' DAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE • Surf er lmagf Damaged Huntington Beach bas always gOne out of Its way I<> be a friend of the surfer. The city spo!lJiOrs a major annual surllng tournament, it bas set aside 1,5 miles of ita beach for 24-hour UH by surfers, and It is now study· ing a propooal to create a regional surfing park. It ls a shame, in lheu circumstances, that sllrfers and t~e city don't get ~ong better. Jn the most serious controntstloll to date; a fol'Ce of 40 police and lifeguarda were required two weeks ago to enforce surfing regula· !ions over a band of surfers who Insisted on trying lo surf despite warnings-that there were loo many swim- mers in the water. Tb.ere were 14 arrests in that ~fair, , While life~ards rep.or!· lhat slmllar, though sma!1'r ·confrontations take place every day. This much seems clear. Lifeguards have 'the legal responsibility to decide wheil 'it is safe to· surf on boards and when it Is not, and also the legal right to enforce those decisions. Surfers who think this amounts to per· 1ecution had better think again. There have been two deaths caused by surf ~ards in recent years, and life· guards must see that there are no more. Innovation Pays The landscaping or two ne:w neighborhOO!I parks in Fountain Valley was approved recently by city council- men. They are the 10th and 11th neighborhood parks the city has established. Urbain Plavan Park, located OD the north side or Warner Avenue between Brookhurst Street and Bushard Street, is schedµled to be a two-acre development of school property adjacent to the newly constructed Ur· bain Plavan School. Urbaln Plavan School will have facllilles tor handi- capped children, tho clly also is studJlng the possibility of setting up specisl recreallon faciliUu for them. The second landscapng will be on upanston of Cordata Park located In the Century Homes tract aouth of .Ellis Avenue and W06t· or Bushard. Basketball and vol)e}ball courts Will be built on top of the newly com. pleted water reservoir ).!J!xt to lhe present park. By building facilities on top of the reservoir and planning special equipment for handicapped children the city is demonstrating an Innovative splr1t In ita park planning. ' • . Help for .. Industry · Huntington Beach has finally shown al least a brief attempt at cooperation with major industrial interests. Last week the city council agreed to drop a requirement for sidewalks on interior streets in the John Lusk 317· acre industrial tract north of Marina High SChool. Sidewalks will be built on arterial streets, but Lusk officials argued that they do . not want to encourage pedestrians within the industrial sector. The city did maintain the right lo build sidewalks at a later dale, if needed. One councilman, Henry Duke; stiggested first that the sidewalk requirement be kept until Lusk agreed not to build some apartments for which he bad pr.evious approval. Fortunately, other councilmen aborted Duke's pressure play and showed an honest desire to work with Lusk. - . The park will be a grassy field with large sand 1reas and playground equipment for the children. Sinco The Lusk tract is the major industrial develooment Jn Huntington Beach. It may well provide 1,000 new jobs each year for the next eight years. It's a vital as· set to the community, and deserves constructive guid- ance, not sniping, from the community's leaders. 'Sorry, we only believe in make-work for foreigners!' ' . H Actima on Bill Sp11rred Bigger Dogs Taking Place Of Lap Types Dear Gloomy Gus Military Retirees May Get Action ~YDNEY J.HAruu~ There are many fonns of tread.spot- ting -some of them more valid than __ others -but one that might surprise you ls the study of the popularity of different breeds of dogs in the American popula- tion. >.. what the scholars call a ••sociological variable," the dog can tell 111 a good deal about abilting altitudes among the people. For inltanc:e, when I was growing up, the most popular canine house pet was the cocker spaniel, be-- cause it wa1 playful a n d friendly wllh children. THEN, A GENER. ATION later, as the country grew into al-· fluence and wanted to acquire what it imagined was chic, the ~le became the most popular breed registered with the official American·Kennel Club. Then, lll<e the··spanlel, the bl'Hd was .nearly ruined by ila own popularity and the ii> aensate greed of tis breeders. Now the German shepherd Is leading all the rest, and this tells us a lot about the temper of the country in the 1970s. It ha> gone from wanting a playful pet to a rtyllsb pet to a protedive pet. In fact , "pet" is an irotUc euphemism for most of the 1hephirds people are buying - "guard dogs" la closer to the true ap- Let's give Meadowlark Airport back to the meadowlarks. A.R.L. Th1• fe•tur. reflKtt r.Ml•rs' ¥1f'#ll, not MCHllrltv "'°" ctf ""' ntwlPIPl'I". '" vow '9t "9'111 to GICIO'ft)' Gui, 0.UV f'llot. pellation. And the fact that shepherds have been known to mangle childrtn is no deterrent at all to '1"'61 purdwers. JN A rn DECADES, .. have .... Imo dogs that cuddle or atrut to dogs that snarl aad bite, whether In the big ci- ty or the lllllll village. I recenUy re- turned !nm New York, where the pove- mmta ara <overed with dog<lo; every family la Manhattan seema to have bougbl a brute for security <:'!itbollt hav- ing learned bow to train them properly. And. at a recent town meeting I at- tended In the village where I apend my swnrner1, the first hour of discussion was taken up with the problems of dogs running wild and attacking children, neighbors, and the county may have to build a new pound to handle the iroblem. THE SALE OF LABGE (and thus presumably ferocious, thouiJh there Is no necwary connection) dogs ha> begun to outstrip the aale of small ones: shepb!rdJ, boxers, Doberman pinscbers, and oo on, are commanding the highest prices In the market: and outfits that train these dogs for security and attack ( tlierdJy rendering them unfit u family pets) have gladdened the hearts of their llockl>oldera lo the lalt few yurs. WASHINGTON -Senate Armed Services Committee c)Jal,rman John Sten- nla, (0.Miss,), la finally being put squarely on the spot on the military retirees survivors benefits bill that be has stalled for nine months. The legislation is being offered as an amendment to the $20.5 billion military procurement autbor-- ization measure now under consideration in the Senate. T h e decision to force action on the long-stymied retirees benefits measure as anamendmeilttothe giant military pro- curement bill was made by Sens. Darey Goldwater, (R· Ariz.), and J, Glenn Beall, R·MdJ. "I don't intend to wait any longer," GoldwJter told tbls column. "We're going to see this thing lhroug)l now, It's lcmg overdue." 11Tbe unjustifiable protracted delay in the consideration of this important legislation directly affecting close to a million veterans ' is inexplicable to me," said Beall ... It's time we put an end to it. I have said I was going to put this measure through this year, and I mean it. It bas wide bipartisan support in the Senate, a.s evidenced by the fact that 38 Republican and Democratic Senators joined me in Spot]S!lring thla leglalation. They are lo full accord with .me that flµ'f.her delay is ·unwarranted and in- defensible.'' PUTl'JNG STENNIS on the spot in this manner forces him to either "fish or cut bait." He now faces three a1ternatives: Problems at Age 200 (1) Accept the retirees survivor! benefita bill as an amendment to the military procurement measure and allow the Senate to vote on it -tlius ensuring ita speedy overwhelming approval . Credit Mayor Frank Ri= o f P.hiladelphia with clairvoyance: During his election campaign last fall, Rizzo of- fered this 61eak apprar..al of plans to hold an American Revolution BicenteMial Ex· position in the City of ·Brotberly Love in 1978 : "They way Jt ls going, we'll have the police band 'at Independence Hall playing tne Star.Spangled Banner, and that will be It ," The mayor's comment bas so far withstood the test of time. Although the American. Revolution Bicentennial Com~ mission (ARBC) has been in · aistence for six years, it has litUe to show for its efforts. Philadelphia exposition was to have been the centerp\ece of the nation's 200th birlbday anniveraary celebration. but the project was burled on May 1, 1972, when the commission vetoed the only site the clly could agree on -a swampy, pol- luted tract near Philadelphia Internation- al • Alrpcrt. : Now· whatr ARBC has proposed thai eommemoraUve.P.arks, ¢91ting from $15 million to !JO million apiece, be built in each of the 50 states. Congresa, however, bu abown little mthu&lasm for the idea. THE J:OMMIMION'S dilliculliet Item in large part from cllaagrffnienl "al>Out the nature of the \. bicentennial. 11To rtdlcalo, It ls a iornmerc1aJ ripoff, I betrayal of Amtrica'a -ndldl trad~ lion and at the aame time an opportunlt; to revive it," Eugene L. Meyer noted ln The Washington Post."'1To black critics, It is a mockery ol freedom lcmg denied and history too lcmg untold. To old· fallhioned flll·wavora, It I.! an exercla In ae1f .....,a1111a11oo. To partisan crttlca, It II I NIJm compal111 g!mmlck. To - portillD -· It ta a tiiDe for IOber uuwt re1aeasment. .. Still, the coriunlsalon itaeU Is not wllhoul blame, A study by the resp<Cted I EDITORIAL RESEARCH cambridge, Masa., consultlng firm of Arthur D. LitUe Inc. harshly concluded: "The ARBC Is criticized for not having a program because -It ha11P\ bad a pro. gram, The ARBC Is· critici7.ed for not · being Innovative becauae It han't been (2) Try to have the amendment thrown out on the ground it is not germane to the ptocurtment bill. Sens. Beall and Goldwater are prepared to demand a rollcall vote on that, and are confident they can win bands-down. . (3) Offer to compromise with a categoric promise to bring up the retirees legislation for separate Sena(e consideration by a definite date in the fall. innovative. The ARBC ii criticized for 11DS LAST stratagem l.s considered not taking the Initiative because, until the most likely by Sens. Goldwater and recently, It hasn't taken the iniilatlve. Beall. The ARBC ls criticized for having low Their belief is based on backstage and staff morale because .lt ri.s low staff other indications. morale." ' Lately it has become evident that Sen. IF IT ts ANY COMFORT to the com-Stennis is 11displeased" by the vjgorous mluion, the Centennial E...;..ition of prodding in and out or Congre.jS in behalf .. ,..,... of the survivors benefit.! bill which 1879 in Philadelphia also encountered mysteriously has gathered dust in the problems. Sen. Charles Sumner (R-Anned Services Committee for nine Mau.) vlgOnlully fought the project until months. ffis dea'ih shortly 'before it opened. ' ~.~14 •·-·-· It ts known the Miuwipplan got a Congress "•m~ ~~•al suppori until flood ol critical mall following i!JiJ coi- the la!t moment, and alterwili'd ·tnslste\I . llmi1'1 discloaure tbat he.plannedio sill that tl!t money wu onl7 • loan to be ,1 further delay the meillure by wllhholdmg pa~1;"ck, u bod enough bU t conilderallon until the Senate difpooed of PbUld~~·s -ulcentennla! ( (l50ttl the stratOJ!c ands 11 m j:t at Ion ann1vmary) OXJ>!liition of 11111 was • ·~:'::mouncet ~le~i1;,;, squarcl; toW dlsut~t', Rain fell on 1111 of ll~.ut. contrldicted an earlier promise (to Beall daya the ll1r wu open. Mol'<OY<I', the and j:loidwater) to lake up the bill affer event tort bet,.... $25,000 and '40,000 • the Pn>curement measure had been acted -k and coot the city -. thu fU on million In •-and capltil outla,.. · St.mus II very touchy about bis Despite sucb lnauspacloua ll"OCedenta, · -•atlves as chairman of the po er! I Praldenl NIJon appears confident that At;;,';. w u the bicentennial will prove ~ul. In Serv~ Committee. Inside word a July 4, tm, radio addrea fn>m San II be II brtbnatlng he would conS1der tt. a Clemente he luued an "unprecaalend pmmal refl«tloo If the retirees bill, m Invitation' to tlio world" to vtall the ellect, were forcibly taken away from United States la 1"'. the committee and written Into the pro- Be opreiied hope t.bat u many u 21 cunment measure as an amendment. mU11on foretcners -1d accept the in-APPARENTLY this would miff Stennis Vl\llUon. no end -irrespective of the merilt and need of the retirees legislation or that It was passed last October by the House 372 to O after less than two hours of discussion. ··That is why it's deemed probable Sten- nis may insist on his committee's acting on the retirees bill separately -but, bowing to necessity, will make a definite commitment to report it out by a certain date .in the fall. Whether he can get away with such a • ploy is conjectural. To a considerable degree, \t u·ould de· pend on how much backing Beall and Goldwater could muster for the retirees bill as an amendment to the procurement measure. If they can rally sufficient votes, they can force a showdown and override Stennis -despite his being chairman of the potent Armed Services Committee. That's happened before, and could again. Sen. John Tower, (R-Tex.), who like Goldwater is a member or that com- mittee, i! working closely with him in pressing for enactment of the retirees bill. So is Sen. Peter Dominick, (R· Colo.). aoolher influential c~sponsor of tht! legislation. TllEY TOLD this column, "There ls no reason for further stalling. This bill should be disposed of now and not later. It is not generally realized , but Sen. Beall 1s one of the authors or the original measure as passed by the House. In 1970, as a member of that chamber, he was on the special committee that drafted the legislaUon. It remains to be seen what Sen. Stennis thinka and doa about 'that, Mr. Meany, Sir, How D<J I Vote? One of America's most talked·abi>Yl voters is Miny Moe and he's in terrible shape. Thanks to George (Eeny) Meany, head of the AFL-CIO, poor Miny Moe doesn't know whether he's coming or going. Friends fear he may drink himself to death before election day. Already in trus campaign, the experts have written millions of words about Moe and his crucial Im· portance to the out· come. For Moe ls, of co~, The .LaOOr Vote. ART HOPPE ) ticket. "But who ever talks or writes about The Socialist -Labor Vote?" he said with a shrug. "l'd be a nobody." Moe reluctantly agrees he's too old to be The Youth Vole, too white to be The Black Vote, too Northern to be the Southern Vote and too noisy td be The Silent Ma~rity Vote. JN F Acr, he bas but one opUon !ell. 1'l've decided," he said, squaring his shoulders, "to be The Daley Vote." The challenge h e r e is that al- though Mayor Daley endorsed the en. tire Democratic ticket, to the surprise of the experta, he didn't mention McGovern by name. "Speaking as The Daley Vote," said ~1oe, "Jt'a going to be tough to cast my ballot for a guy whose name I don't know. But with all the talk about The Daley Vote, somebody's got to be it ," Thus, while Senator McGovern has Jost The Labor Vote, he 's picked up The Daley Vote. So, as you can plainly see, he 's come out exactly even. During the past 25 years Moe bu dis- tinguished himself u being the only American who voted J Air Study Defended In every election as Meany told him to. "Being The Labor Vote has been an awesome responsibility," said Moe, Ughting a cigarette with trembling fingers over this third beer at Paddy's Place. "I had to be lukewarm when I voted twice for Stevenson, moderately cool when I cast my ballot for Kennedy and red hot when I pulled the lever for Johnson and Humphrey. I'm lucky I didn't catch my dealh of pneumonia. "But with everybody talking about it, somebody had to be The Labor Vote. And I was proud lo do my duty, Onlr, thl.! year, I think I'm going to chuck it.' To the Edllor: AJ project director in charge of the Southern California Regional Aviation Systems Study, conducted by William L. Pereira Associates and Sf!tem Develop. ·ment Corporation for the Southern California Association of Governments, I was -extremely disappointed · by the editotial on the subject that appeared in the Pilot on July 24 ("Sorry, No Answer Yet") and would like to take th.ii o~ portunlty lo reply to two of the principal criticisms It presented. First of all, the editorial-atatea that the MOE'S PROBLEM stems, naturally, repoi:t "did not address ltsell to reoolvlng from Meany's pronouncement that be the issue of increasing pretlW'e to ex· wouldn't deliver The Labor Vote to eithtr pand jet nights out of Orange County McGovern or Ni.Jon. · ' Airport." On the contrary, the SCRASS "In fact," said Moe, glwnly, "he didn't study upressly recommendl, under con- say where the hell he was going to trolled conditions including paaenger deliver me . Another beer, Paddy, if you processing at remote termlnala, the joint please." use by commercial-aircraft of the MArine The loss of Moe's vote, the experts Corps Air Station at EJ Toro. · unanimously agr~. will hurt McGovern 11llS cogu> eventually entlrely far mo~ ~han Nixon, as The Labor Vote dimlnate commercial air tratfic from haa traditionally g~ to the Democratlo;,. 'draue CMlnty Airport and, Indeed, the can<!.ida~. The qu~st1on they are all ask4 ..studt:.'"'a4Auests that Orange County ing~~: Whe~e will The ~~ ~~e go .. AirpOrt o \'nay in time be devoted ex· "°,,1· don't kn. ,, Id M;· tr--•I "!' flual•illrto genera! aviation. It should be w • 1a oe ..,. y, '. .ll!>led too thet the SCRASS study does not been thinking of voting for Gt0r1e. rtcoi\\""'P! the establishment of any Wallace, If t}e runs. Bu1t bow. c'n 11 do new' 1f4klllal airport in Orange County, ,that Ir Mr. Meany dot1n l !ell, m, 1!'·1 If . r~lng instead that those m&y sound like I'm trying to &Ul\er Mr. airports already in use be utilized to Meany up, but 1 can HY from peraonal their fUUest effectiveness experience that The Labor Vote has · . always done what be told me to The editorial also auggesta tliat the · rtudy did not "tackle" the problem of NOW THE EASY way out would be to private aviation In Orange County. Yet follow Mr. Meany's example. He says he this subject also ii dealt wtth in coo- tsn'l going to vote for tit.her McGovern 1iderable detail. or Nison. But If I don't vote, then I won't Amoog other conclusions, the report be The Labor Vote any more. And to tell· recommends the use of Loa Alamitos the truth, I kind of lilte belng so much in Naval Air Station for general aviation - the public spolllghl Mate that a which alone could accommodate ap- boilermaker, Paddy." proximately 1000 private aircraft -in Despite his years of devotion to being addltloo to Fllllerton Munfcipal Airport The Labor Vote, Moe Is now CODllderioC and Meadowlark in Huntin1ton Beach. It various alternatives. At one point he even · also urges the establishment of alrparu thought 91 vollnl tb1 Socialist-Labor -for instructional and recreational I ( MAILBOX ) flying -at Brea and Capistrano. THE REPORT aclmowledgea that the projecte4"1rowlh of general aviation will severely lax the existing airport and airspace resources of Orange County and may require some of the sport Oylng to be conducted at alrparks in other coun- ties. AlloJielber the SCRASS study, 1n our opinion, seriously and thoroughly ex• plomi the aviation problems of Orange as 1ttll as those of the other nhie coun· ties that comprised the study area, and we do not feel that the report•,. recom· mendatlons, and th'e research on whJch they were predicted, were l<CUTltely reflected by the editorial in question. I JAMES M. SINK, A1A QaAMOS COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. W <ed. l'Kbliolur Thom41 K~<t>ll, Edllor Albtrt W. Bot<1 Editorial Page Editor ,,,. editcci.t """' or the Dall)> Pilot attb to lntonn and •Utnu· la~ mlderl b)' PttMntlnr tbil llC\l.'lfl'w'• opinions and corn- m~tary on topics of lntttest &bd. 11IJ{nlflcancc. by provldtnr • torum for the tl(ll'CUk>n or our reacted ophllo... and by ...... u.c Ille dlVl'J'le v\ewpotntt ot .Informed • 9H'Yftt •nd •pokutnen Oft topics ol lheday, Frld~y. July 28, 1172 I . Jet Parts I Rain Down On LA Area .,..i LOS ANGELES (UPI) -It rained jet plane .parts -up Id a ton of them - '111ursday on the SWUet Strip, Beverly 1 Hills and Weot Hollywood. There were no ,.ports of Injury or oerloul damage. A chunk estimated to we!Ch 500 J>OU1Jds. and llzdtnc bot plunged Into the lawn of a Beverl7 RUii borne. A chunk described by a lherlll'a deputy u "the 1lze of a batkelball" embed onto SU111tt Boulevard. "There WU I metallic clank" oulllde her olllce, llld Gloria !Amd, and there oo the pavement w11 what look.Id like "a bundle ol plpeo Ued together." "It wu Just' bouncln& there In the 1treet when I looked down," 1he u.ld. John Bradley was driving on the Sunset 5Jrlp. . "I wao In the left turn lane . , • and all cif a ruddeo I beard a 110und -a crash and tinkle -and I saw two plecu of ·metal In the 1tmt It bounced a UtUe." 'the debrlJ came from one disir)oo tegratlng engine of a ConUnental Airlines DCIO Which had just taken off from Loa Angel.. International Airport f o r Chicago. Tiie plane was cerrylna W perlODI. '"l'bo whole right aide of the plane began to lhakt, 11 uld pauenger Bruce Marki, It, of Oaltlawn, DI. His mother, Mra. Fred Marki, aald she waiin "• 1tate of leDlilhoci:," b~t other passengers said the espert111ce was oot alarming. 'lbe Marbt1 1ald a crewman notified the pwengm that the tall engine bad been 1 .. t, but the pleoe could fly with no trouble on the two remalnlng wing- mounted engines, and waa returning lm· mediately to the Loa Anieles airport. A spokesman for the airline said the pilot, Capt. Rob¢ Gllu, was alerted to the problem whln the trouble Indicator light for the tall enllnt lluhed 111. Loa Angeles county aberilrs deputies and Beverly Hills police gathered up the debrll. Deputy CUrtil Howard, who 1aw the engine dlalntegrete, ellllmated 41 to IO P*ti fell within a fOUl'mlle ndlul. Coeds File Suit In Booklet Ban RIVERSIDE (AP) -Tiie federal ,......,..t II being 111ed by a l"'UP of University of Clllfomla coeda Mre who were refused permlulon by the pootmuter to maU 1,200 cople1 of a 47· pqe booklet on birth control to women living off-eamp111. Tiie IU!t II being handled by tl!e Center for Law In the Public Interest, 1 Los Anielea public law !Inn wblcb llopeo to belp the women '1Udenls overturn a federal law which prohibits the malling cf abortion and birth control information. Members of the unlveralty'1 Auoclated Studentl bought the ilhmrated pbam- phlet from students at McGUI Unlvmtty In Canada and dlatributed about 1,500 OFFICER TOM JENSEN, LEFT, STUDIES JAGGED METAL IN YARD Homeowner Jack P1ul Astounded at Huge Chunk of Jtt Bill to Aid Poor Schools Appro~ed by Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) - A last-ditch effort to provide property tax relief and pump more doUars into poor school districts sailed tbrolllfh the Assembly l'buraday. The measure by Assemblyman Dixon Arnett would put half of all the money raised by local school taxes Into a com- mon statewide pot. It would then be redistributed to distrlcb on a flat per- cblld grant with additional state money thrown In. That would bave the effect of equallz· Ing the differences between dlatricts with high and Jow a1se11ed value over a five- year ph..,.ln period, the Redwood City Republican said. Arnett urged paasage of hi1 measure u "an instrument" for property tax relief and school finance reform. It con- ed Wednesday In the Senate Finance Committee. "The Senate's action yesterday still ha.s me in shock. I don't think they knew what they were doing," Bagley, a San Rafael Republican , said in urging ap- proval of Arnett's bill. The measure moved to an uncertain fate in the senate on a 64...a vote. Arnett's measure "sure does move a long way down the trail" to meeting the State Supreme Court's Serrano vs. Priest decision, Bagley said. The court ruled in the Serrano ca!e that local property taxes for school sup- p o r t tmconstltutlonally discriJninate against children in districts with low assessed valuation by making fewer dollars available for their education. tains no appropriation In the form •!>' Air Pollution Panel proved by the Alstmbly. 10?".:!ittn:~:~don1/..:::"::: Said Doing Good Joh refonn," be said. "It seems to me we're In the final inning of the most Important LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los ball came we're playing this year -that Angeles County Air Pollulion Di.strict is ot property tu reform and 1ehool finan. doing an excellent job, a state in· cing." vestlgative team concluded in a 'The basic theory of equalizing the preliminary study. wealth of school districts is the same as However, the state Air Resources that of the $1.2 bllllon tu package back· Board report said Thursday the APCD ed by Gov. Reagan and Assembly could improve Its monitoring and in- Speaker Bob Moretti, aald Alsemblyman spection operations, its public relations, William Bagley. system of legal counsel and ita en- coplea on campus. The Reagan-Moretti proposal was kill· forcement capabilities. '~~~~~~~ Otlly f;oast ~ SoutJierri Qffers Jail Guards, Profs May Get Raises SACRAMENTO (AP) Prison guards and college teachen would get 128.1 mllllon worth ol pay raise• on bills meeting legislative ap- proval, but the gap between good intentions and ·cold cesb is still wide open. • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club One I.I million appropriation for prison &Uards went to the governor's deat Thursday. Another 12 U million for teachers In higher educstlon advanced !tom the Seoate and la awalUna action In the Al .. mbly. The guanla could wind up with a total raise of about 1& percent over last year'• pay, and the teacbera could get IU perctnt more than 1ast year. Poor morale was cited In both cue1 u reuona: for the raises. Tiie raise for prison guardo and aome employes of the Callfomla Youth Authority sailed through the Assembly without opposlllon. T h e leglatator1 acted swiltly after recent 1trlke nimblings from the Callfomla State Employes Association, wblch repersents the guaiil1. LET'S BE FRIHllL Y U )'OU hi.VI MW tt(!lghbora or know of anyone movlnc to our atff, pleue tcll u1 J10 tl\a t we m11 ot.tnd • frteodly --and help them to become acqualnttd In their -IUITOWldl- SI. cast Ylsitlr 4'Ml7t 4M-Hll "* Ylsitl' MM174 Art Unklelltr The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permi ts you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantia l sav· ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipm ent, sport ing goods, draperies an d muc h, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" pric:e and mobi le homes and motor· cycles at subst11ntl11I sav· ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% P1ssbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certitlcate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%·6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of int1rt1t on amou nts withdrawn before maturity on 1111 certificate accounts. also provides big dl s· counts on tickets to sport· ina: and enterta inment events .•• plus a who le list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require· ment for savers-$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en. tlllin1 them to all oulslde referral services. Ask about jolnin& at any Coast office. MAIN omcE: . 9th .. Hiii, Los Anl!les . 623-IJ!il other ofllce1 WILSHlltl •t QIUMMERCV l"l.ACE! 3933 Wlllhtr. 81Vd., L.A •• 388·1265 LA. CfVIC cnnD: 211<1' & Bf'09dWly • 628-1102 HUNTINGTON 8UCH: 91 Huntlnrton Ctnlii• (714) 1197·1047 SANTA MONICA: 711 WHlh lr• llWI'. • 393-0741 &AN"DftO: lOlh & PKllJc • 131-2341 WEST COVINA: Ea1tt.11d Shopplnl Ctr.• 331-2201 P'ANOftAMA CITT: Chase & Vin Nuys Blvd.• 192-1171 TAftZANA: 1!7!11 Venture Blvd.• 34~614 LONQ llACH: 3rd & Locust • 437·7411 tAIT LOI ANGtUI: 8th & Soto • 266-4510 DIAMOND Mft: 321 Diamond B•r Blvd.• 1714) 59~1525 011'1 Hout1-9 AM to 4 PM Open Saturd1ys - tAMtolPM (bc1pt Cl'YIC CenterJ ,/ DAILY PILOT 5 Tax Plan Has Chance Assembly Leaders To Try Reviving Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly leaders gained anotber chance today to revive their 11.2 billion scbool finance-tax refonn deal wlth Go'I. Reagan after forc- ing a ooe-week extension of the 19'12 JeglllaUve seuloo on the Senate. Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti blnted strongly that he would hi· jack a l900 mUlloo Senate-pausd tehool propoaaJ, write the compromlae bill into It eod lelld It back lo the upper house for another showdown. 'Mle Senate passed the stop-gap $900 million school bill by Sen. Ralph Dills on a 25-8 vote Th.ursday after a day of closed-door negotiations that ended with an agreement to fight for another week instead of attempting to recess Friday. Behind the maneuvering were attempts by Moretti and the Republican governor to revive their tu. refonn-acbool finance compromise. The Senate Finance Com- mittee killed that bill on a 7~ vote Wednesday and passed the DUlJ measure in its place, , . The Dills bUI, which Moretti called a ''ridiculous" substitute for his plan, would raise the state 18.les tax one cent per dollar. That would raise $600 milllon, leaving the measure $300 million out of balance. The Moretti-Reagan plan also includes a one cent sales tax increase and new 1tate money for acbools, but the slmilari- ty ends lhett. TI!.at plan would also hike state business and income taxes across the board, increase state aid to local schools by 4509 million a year, give homeowners property tu: cuts Moretti estimated at $200 a year, and order voter approval for most future property tax rate increases. The battle over the two measures 1parked a bitter exchange between Moretti and his Democratic counterpart in the upper house, Senate President pro tem James Mills of San Diego. Mills criticized the Moretti-Reagan compromiJe for failing, he said, to either help schools or relieve tax preSIW'es on the poor. ' He added that Moretti left Senate leaders out of his negotiations with Reagan because "he thinks t h a t magnifies his position in the California political scene ... It makes him appear he ls leader of the Democrats." Moretti replied in an interview, 11I fully expected some such statement from Sen. Mills, because as the pressure builds he starts to make unreasonable statements." Another part of the battle on the school proposals surfaced 1n the dllpute over a three-month ,..... beglnnlnt t h I s weekend. The Senate approved the receu two week> ago, but MQrettl held It up In the Senate to retain bar1aln1ng power for Senate action on his tax blU. Neither the Senate nor Assembly can reces1 !or more than lhree days without permlssloo of the other house. Mor.tu finally announced Thursday, alter boun ol dosed.door negotiatloos, that Senate leaden bad egtted to a delay of the recess uolll Alllf. 4 and that they bad also prom!Jed tbere would be at least three mofe meetings of the Financ. Committee, where dozeoJ of Assembly blll3 tndudlng the tax plan are bollled up. Justice Douglas Okays Papers Trial Hearing LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas agreed to hear today a request from defense at- torneys that the Pentagon Pepers trial judge be ordered to reveal detalls of a federal wiretap. Douglas, who was attending a judicial conference in nearby Puadena when contacted, directed the e.ttcnieys Thurs. day night to present their case to him in Yakima, Wash. Police · Chief Facing Justice ANGELS CAMP (AP) -The police chief of thls gold rush town found himself on the OpPoSite side of justice when he was. sentenced by a local florist to the county jail for contempt of court. Jack Whiting, 33, Angels Camp police chief for the past year, resJgned u chief after the florist-judge, Marvin Shupe, fin. ed him 1250 Thuraday and sentenced him to two days in jail after he failed to answer two summonses to testify on a traffic arrest and drug case. Shupe said he felt the Angels-Murphy Judicial Court was not receiving proper respect from Whiting. The only other man on the police force of this community of 2,400, Jim Wadsworth, was named acting chief by the City Council, which had ordered Whiting to resign or be fired. The hearing was set for 7:30 p.m. (EDT). The layers for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthooy Russo failed Tuesday in their ef. fort to ,get !Uch an order from a federal appeals court, and SQ carried their case to Douglao. The wiretap dispute bas beld up the start of arguments and ~tlrnony in the much delayed ll'lal of EU.berg and Ru.so. They are charged with theft, con- spiracy and espk>nage for actlom they took In ll!altlng public the clwmed Pen- tagon study of.the Vietnam War. The dlapute coocerns wbat the Justice Department NYI wu a legally autbort.- ed wiretap in an investigation that has no connection with the case. 'Ibe govern- ment says someone connected -l'ith the defense placed a call to a legally tapped phone and wu overheard by federal agenta. GARAGE ooo~s BALANCED SPRINGS P~~f-'LACf(J Genie flOOP OPftl(Q "A' f) llNO I NSTAl.LA ~IO~ A.CTIVE COMPANY 142-4426 11Ut •-St. HUN1'1N•TON llACH I ... M. M Lt'llh: WI TWA AMBASSADOR SERVICE . TO THE EAST COAST FROM YOUR OWN BACKYARD. TWA's fabulou1 Amba818dor Service to the East Cout. lt'a-"° eaay wit.ha little help from Golden Weit. "Golden Otter" commutan zip you to L.A. International, right nett to TWA'1 tenninal ... and that means: • No freeway traffic • No parking haulea • No expenaive taxis • No banap han1·u1>1, ttraight-t.hrough checking. . PROM ORANOI COUNTY AIRPORT OOLDINWISf TWA OOLDINWllf TWA Lv ·ArLAX LvLAX Lv Ar LAX LvLAX NIWYORK 7:5-0A 8:25A 9:00A PHILA, 7:25A 7:50A 8:45A 9:!5A 9:5-0A 11:40A 12:40P 1:15P 1:50P 1:45P. 2:20P S:OOP 9:05P 9:40P ll:OOP a:OOP 3:35P 4:!5P 9:05P 9:40P !0:45P WASH. D,C, 8:25A 9:00A IO:OOA BOSTON 7:25A 7:50A 8:45A 11:50A 12:25P !:OOP IALT. 9:05P 9:40P 10:60P 10:20A 10:55A l!:SOA 9:05P 9:40P ll:OOP FOR ONr.CALL UHRYATIONI PHONI YOUR l'UYU. AOINT OR OOLDIN Wllf AT1 71••979·1- TWA AMBASSADOl SERVICE TO THE EAST COAST (with a little help from a friend) ~~ • I c • h t a h • a h t Orange fAtast T ... y's l'hud N.Y. Steek• • • VOL 65, NO. 210, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 28, ·1972 NC TEN tENTS Army Promises ·Cooperation on Groin Project By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of IN Olll'I' PMtt SIMt . Two years ago when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers bad a sand hauling project In West Newport Beach, residents 9f the area voiced anger and fru!traUon when their complaints about the projett seemed to fall on deaf ears. When the corps' groin buUdlng project gets under wa,y in the same area. this fall, things are going to be different. . That's the promise made to Newpori Cr™hEnds • H·igh. Speed CityC~e BY ~THUR R. VINSEL Of Ille Dlllb' Pli.t Sltff A youth In a stolen gold Cadillac led lawmen on a 110.mile-per hour ch8.se through three cl ties early today, before being captured in Costa Mesa when ha skidded 180 feet down a deadend stree~ crashing into a power pole. One motorist had to swerve onto i. sidewalk and into a telephone pole himself during the four-mile pursuit by three police cars and two helicopten to avoid a collli:ioo with the suspect car. A Costa Mesa policeman also said he had to back out of the way when the suspect gunned the powerful sedan In u attempt to ram the patrol car blocking b!Jn at an intersection. Glenn A. Haney, 20, a transient, was finally 'artest.ed and booked on suspiciOR. of aaaaull wtllt·a clndly -on a police officer and 1IJ'llld tl..rt of an auto. He was cap~ In the !Jadlyanl of a home at 2al ClubhoUle Jlrlv1. II the clicllng CO.ta Mesa polb llelicopter Eagle I lpotHgbted the ._ Investlgatora uld· Hanejl finally sur· rendered on orders of helicopter observer Officer Dick jlmch, Who told the IU!pecl to halt over the chopper's public address system. · No one was injured -including Haney -during the wild pursuit from Newport Beach Into Huntington Beach and on a zigzag COW'le back Into Costa Mesa. The chase began shorUy before Z a.m. "ben Newport Beach Patrolmao Bob Hardy spotted the gold !usury l!edan roaring along West Coa.st ilig)Jway at Prospect Avenue. He went into pursuit of the vehicle, (See CHASE, 1'11p ZI Republicans Get 'Zoo' on Coast For Headquarters The Committee to )Je-Elect The Presi· dent will use the 7.oo for its Newport Harbor beadquarten ...... Local campaign officials weren't sure what they were going to do 1bunday whell they learned city ordinances ruled out their plans to haul a tr.Uer to the parking Jot of the former drive-in cafe on East Coa.st lllt<bway. But this morning, Mrs. T. Duncan ••Jerry" Stewart, area chairman, said the committee ba1 the Irvine Company's pennl8'ion to remodel u much ol the in- side of the defunct Corona de! Mar res- taurant as it wants. "The building la going to be demoli~ so they don't care what we do," Mn:. Stewart sald. She said Nixon backers will use only th e front part of the atructure and are iolng to tear up some of the Concrete floor, lay carpeting and get the place cleaned up in time for the orlclnailY. acheduled AutJ. 5 openJnr. School Board Hopefuls ~feet Outgoing school boon! member Donald strauu will host 1 forum Monday night for five candldatts "'king hi.I &Ht on the Newport. Mesa Boord ol F.ducatlon. 'lbe meeting will take place at f:IO p.m. at tho Lido Island Clubllou .. 011 Via Udo Soud 11 Via Son Remo. Strouu Mid llhe meetin( II·- to 111 IChool'dlatrict ... ldonta. : 'lbe election 11 Aue. 1. 'lllt<e on Ovt candld1lls rwmlng for Strlua' -I Ind tltlhl ... klai tl1o Dolt ncaled by. Selim S. Fronklin. <':an- dldot• wUI be elected tor eocb IOll by 1 'IOle of Ille entlrt dlltricL Beach midenta by Col. Harry Roper, district engineer for the Corps. In an effort to quiet residents' fears about the project, Roper and his staff came to Newport Beach five weeks ago al\(! held a public meeting to µplain the project and answer questions. But . the' community' relationt work won't !top Uiere, Roper said. At that meeting he told resldents',weekly ses.sions will be held for the duration of con- struption so they can air t!ielr gripes. Roper alsc said tlie Corps will also sub- mit a copy of tbe contract for the project to the city for review and comment before work begins. And there \\'on't be any round-the- clock work this time -the primary cause of complaints before -be vowed. Perry Davis, public relations officer for the C.Orps, said the public relations effort was started because "we had some problems last time we worked down there. "The amount or effort that goes Into these prograrris vari~ with the job and the impact it has on the community. Since there is such interest in this area, we will try to communicate.." Davis noted that the proposed con- strucUon date '" the groin building proj· ect bas been moved back from Sept. I to mid October as a result of the first: meeting. ~ "Residents made lt clear that that ls a time of year that Ibey use the beach heavily, so we changed the construction date," he explained . 'I'be project involves constnaction of groins on the beaches al 28th, S2nd, 40th, 44th and 62nd streets to stop lhe erosion of sand from 1be beaches in that area. When the groins are finished 300,000 cubic yards of sand will be hauled to ihe!e beaches, probably f~Balboa. In a report published in , engineers concluded the groins wer the only reliable and practical methods f stop- ping sand erosion which lw plagued weal Newport's beaches for decades. The erosion !J caused by shin CUI' rents which sweep along the beaches from the Santa Ana River toward the harbor entrance. Several times in past years, high ceas and prevailing winds have combined to completely wipe out the beaches, send1nl surf pounding into beach ftoot homes. Engineers note \h•I lhe shore Cll1' (See ENGINEERS, P11e I) . McGovern Firm • DAILY P1LOT ....... .,, "aktllnl klllltw MARIE STUMP KNOWS .-HOW TO BEAT THE HEAT Lofun•n Cools Off in Oc11n to EscaP9 Sinter M~rcury Will Drop· a Bit In Comity Over Weekend Orange ·County mfdenls can bask· In sligbUy coo I e ~weather Satilrday, as temepraturea toda1 l>egu ·dropping a few decrees from the week'• unexpected beat wave~ weather fo,.castera l8id W day. . Coaata1 temperatures -, remained fairly """81ant today, at about 7S degrees, four degrees cooler then Thursday's high. The ume mld-111 clqree boach weather i.. ex· peeled Ibis -UOd. BelCb areU' will have. early momlng patdly ;fol both Saturday aD4' SUndoy. but Oraace County Harbor Dlllrict. of -uae of air condltioaers. &UDJJY tlDd fair. ' of increased use of air conditioners. A <»mpany spokesman said that so far this pre!ents ~·no problems" J n the overloaded. electrical circuits, "but il 1be heat persists -'well, just wait and see." Areas with the transfonner failures but no major blackouts were Santa Ana Orange and ·Villa Park. A -gree high in Los Angeles is . lorecan for Slturday. That city reached · a bigb ol 1113 Thursday. Southern mountains and deserts will ha"" clouds and possible thunderstorms Safurday, the National Weather Service laid. Highs recorded Thursday Included Ill in Palm Springs, 106 in San Bernardino, IOI In Riverside and 98 in Loog Beach. Stands By( Eag"leton As Choice From Wire Services CUSTER, S.D. -Sen. George S. McGovern, standing firm on his vice presidential selection amid growing criticism, says he will meet again with Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton early next week when they both return to Washington. . For the second time in six days, McGovern reprimanded his staff, telling ....... ~ lf'IO!I )!O fU<lber ,Sf'illll!!'1 "' ;.,~ .u.r u...1mnS.lf mil illreton. •'.J 11 .. .f. "'* #Ir support ~ ,Sen; , Ei¥1~ cl.,.. lllld f WIDI DO ·fllrther eommtljl ta Ille -by 1111 °""con-~ecl dh Ille~ .. other than~ ' Eae!elon or DIJ'S<lf, McGovern said Jn a . statement. f •."W.ttkn I ~ 'SHOULD "HAVI CHICIClol ~ol11mni1t Anderton McGovern, winding up a two.week vacation in which ·be has gotten little rest, went to a private showing of the movie "The Candidate," in Custer and told reporters afterwards that he pro!> ably would see Eagleton Sunday or Mobday. · Eagleton disclosed this week that he had undergone treatment for a nervous disorder three times in the 1960s. On top of that report, columnist Jack Anderson safd Thursday the Democratic vice presidentia!·c8n.iidate had been arrested a number of times for drunken ·or reckless driving. · Eagleton said ·In . Hawaii Anderson's charge was a 1'damn'able lie'' and that he was all the more determined to stay on the ticket. ln other developments: Missouri officials of both parties, past and present, say they doubt the truth of Anderson's report that drunken and reckless driving Carges were filed against Eagleton. A UP survey of Missouri traffic reconb showed only a speeding violation in cauoway County In 1962 and . two earlier speeding charges when Eagleton was 18 and 24 years old. The !irs) was on July fl, 1918, whell he was fined $5 and court coSts, and the sec- ond on Feb. 11, 1954, when be was fined $10 and court coats. On the third offense, In 1962, he ap. peared in magl!t.rate court in Fulton, Mo., and waa fined $35. • Almost every influential Democrat who has upressed an opinion say1 that Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton'& admission of undergoing psychiatric ireatment will hamper Democratic chances of defealing President Ni.Ion tn ~ovember. . Anderson Hedges On Dn1nk Charge Ag?irist Eagleton W AS~GTON' (UPI) , -Columnist Jack Andersoo was quoted today u saying he should have checked· further before broadcaillng hil claim that Democratic Vice Presidential "candidate Th<imas F. Eagleton bid a record of drunken Ind reckless 'dri'vlng. · . 'the ·Weshington Star·News In 1 story by Robert Walters and 1!1ictiael •!!ttchell re~rtect Anderson ' said he . "pro;bab1y should have withheld" publlcl:rJng the charge-but that <»mpeUUve' newil pressure prompted 1itm to make • 11 without fuU verification. Efagleton.denounced Anderaon's .u&er• tion tllat he had been , arr¢ed on drunken and ·reckless driving charges In the1J96011 u a "damnable lie." M.lsSourl records for the senator show that be had two traffic involvements -once ·for speeding and onct for an accident OB an lcy highway. Anderson also told the Star-Newt be fell his story "got played up beyond pro. portion" because it came on a 'day when there was no other IOlld development ID the· Eagleton situation. The vice presidential nominee d!Jcl-i Tuesday he had been hospitallaed three times in the 1960'• for poychlatrlc treat- ment because of fatigue and DemJu1 tention. Hardest hit Tlmnday were Orange.and '1'111buo> Canyon area, both reaching higbl of !Iii deiJ"OeS. The. nme was recorded today, but forecaatera Jiredlcted "coaler" weather ,.,Saturday: marking about 100 degrees: 1"ine Lake recorded 99 • degrees and Santa Ana hit a moollt'• bigh of 100 degrees Tbunday. Fireman Jobs Sought Both ..... dropped to the mld-90'• to. day tlDd that tr...i 11 expected to cm- tinue Saturday. '1'he El 'fAm>.Mlildm Viejo areu were In the . sweltedtll low·l00'1 today and Thursday • .,........... II the El Toro Marine Air Statioa laid 11111 hoot would cool to mJd.111'1 tbis --. Even wlllt the llilbl dnpl, -peo-ple still found It...,.._, lo Illa) Inside and tdm Gil their air coadl-, the Soulbem California Edbon ComPll1Y reported. . The-reported 1bout 10 ."!Jum. eel up" retldenuaf .. rea tranaronners in the cout11Y ID, the put lout da)ll becaU!O Photographer Booted VIENNA (UPI) -A Ian triad to lllm ..wr Burl Lancuter whilo he ., .. location -. Ille -"lmrplo." Wit-Mid Lancuter threatlllod the """" 1111• with • 1'rlt rock 1nd kicked 11i1D ID the 1e1t o1 hfs pants. The man ..... up 1111 lllmlDc ellorta. 250-400 Men Apply for Few Posit.ions in Newport Ask 1 little 'kid what he wan ta to be when he growa up tlDd he might teU you he wants to be. a fireman. For about IOO Onnge Coast grownups the atiroctlon ol the job !J atilt there. Whether It's the thrill ol a dangerous job, the baun, or the environmental con· llidenUoos or, working In 1 beach city, they have all 1pplied to become firemen In Newpnrt Beach -even though there are only throe job openings. But tbal didn't seem to lue the ap. pllcanta •who lllowed up at c I I y ball ,,,_., momlnt to take 1 written t"t u port ol tllolr oppllcatlona. They were memlien el -ol five sroups tested thb-t. Darrell IQcuchi, 22, ot amen.. voiced the aUl-ol 1 number ol the 1ppU· caota when he said "I figure 11'1 let the best man win. The men that do the belt 111 the teata lbould be ibc ones who cet the Jobi," In some caaea ti was the job ltael! and In others it was the Idea of w<>rking in Newport Beach. Richard IUcbman, 24, is 1 fireman in Riveraide. ''It'• a lltUe cooler here and you don't have the amoe." be Wd. Richman aald he doesn't think being a llttman gives him a buUt-ln advantage on the te&tl. 0 8ure, It give. you a little more confi .. dence, but aometlmel It's a diaadvantage because you have to unlearn a lot of t~lngs you know for 1 different training program," be aald. . • F<>ur •l•I• •DIYlslon or· Fomlry °* men said they were 1ttracted JJy the bctleJ· pay, fewer houn, greater bene- fits and Improved worlcing cooditlons of • fered In Newport Beach. The men, whe ukOd net to be ldentJ. fied. said they have a combln<d job ti. pertence ol lllne yeara. "But conalderlnc all the liremm lhat are taking lhe te1t1," one noted, 11Jrloob like · we're just about even.'' For local resident Clayton MeKeown, :2.~. the applic1Uon represents a chance to become a flrtman -tomethlng he11 always wanted to do. M.cKeown, who ta a mechanic at McDonneU IJouclu, Lona Beach, and a D1<mber ol the !inn'• auxU. lary fire department, said he lw •P; plied In Huntington Beach allO. Higuchi and Vern Buwalda, 21, of Play• de! Rey agreed that the time off WBJ • blg •ltrictlon for them. "With I 18-hourNeck, I enjoy• the proopect of the day1 orr for recreation~'· -Buwalda aald. ' Hicuch( alao noted thilt' • department Uk"' Newport'• "II new enou&h IO thal a penon can , advance In .a reuonable amount of time." Frank. Ivens, city peraonnel ldmlnlo- tr1tor said tllll week'• heavy turnout II standard when the city tests for Jolls in !See FIREMEN, P11Ct t) ' Candidate Feels Free Of Charges SAN' FRANCISCO (AP) -Democratle vice presidential nominee Thomas F .. Eagleton aaid today he feels vindicated because columnist Jack Anderson bas failed to produce documents to back bis charge that Eagleton has a record of drunken driving. "I feel I've been vindicated of that charge,'" be told a news conference. Anderson aakl Thursday he bad localed photostatic copies of records showing Eagleton iru arrested a ·ball<lozen Umes . In MiSIOUl'l for clruDqa 0( rtckleu driv· :: ::.-=-.:. ':= ~ ~ llbai: aDOl!Y ... lllaoatliloflldal Who hacf toOI . .ltiJD ........ lilt! lllim ollllor. ~-..... llJ 0 -. !qi ..... ......... ....i"' "" drtllloiO dl1rinf charge, u)'ln( lie had nevr beet llop- ped or quutlcmed' ID connectlotl W!llt alcohol. Thursdly he had dealecl Daily that he'd ever been a!TtSted for drunken oc careleaa driving. Before the news conference Eagleton received a call from Sen. F.dward M. Kennedy (!).Mass.), who, ·an Eagleton aide, said, wbhed him well. The aide, press oettetary Mlcbael Kelly, said Kennedy called the Missouri senator from Washington and "all he did was to call him and &ive him bis sup- port." Kennedy reached Eagleton 11 he WIS abouL .ID addreaa a gathering of local Democrat& at a breakfaat meeting here. The IUpport from Kennedy came one day after columnist Jack Anderson aald Eagleton bad a record of drunken and re<:ktellf driving, 1 charge Eacleton Up. mediately labeled 111 damnlble lie.'' Eagleton oald the Aoderaon cbargw probably. will hurt his personal reputa- tion. Eagleton told the breaklast meeting ho remains detennined to s t a y on the Democratic tic.Itel and to become vice president. "I'm 100 percent &atisfied that I can hack it," be said. "I'm IOlni to cross the country and do everything I possibly can, not In the aenie of personal vindication but In the sense of trying to elect George McGovern," he said. Eacleton flaUy denied 1 report by (See EAGLETON, Pqe I) Ona•• Weadter In case you• ha"""t g..-I~ H's gonno be-.i hot ---Tem-peratures ol 16 are apected In. Santa An• Saturday, wwwwhlt cooler than today'• readlniL Beaches uound 75. Lowt In tho 80'1. INSmE TODAY SUmmtr mean.r ~thcotcr-teor ion frrr man~· Oru11111 Coul ffri- dlflll IOho Jl"rllcipote m Goldcio W ut· College o!ld Oruogo Coo.rt Coll•ll• prodllClionL Aelor1 ..,.. 'brln¢ng 1o Uf• •cam1lo~ • "Dn1<11lo" and "l'lat/ It Agaiw, Sam." Sec todoll'• Wtektlldtr, •• =--i: --. --" =-... ' ..... ,, !!!!' -,.l, .......--·:: ---. ~ .... ,.. .. --. •n II IMP ' I I , - DAILY PILOT Slit! Plitt• All The Way In J50 MlUlon Justice Orders Phone Refund WASHINGTON (AP) -JUJtlce Byron R. White today cleared the way for a Sl~million refund to customers of the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph .CO. ln a brief order issued at the Supreme Court he set aside a temporary postpone- ment of the refund and declined to Cigarette Firm to Buy County Land Philip Morris, owner of Sl percent or the Mission Viejo Company has given n~ tice it will exercise an option to purchase the remaining 49 percent of the southeastern Orange County development company for an estimated $27 .5 million. The New York·based manufaCturer of cigarettes and other product! bought a 51 further delay the rate decision In California . The refund would amount to about $12 for a home telephone, but could mean tens of thousands of dollars for cor- porations. PT&T attorneys had argued the unanimous Jecision by the California Supreme Court was patently arbitrary and contrary to due process. They also said the refund order was "a grave miscarriage of justice" aOO a "com- pounding blow" to the company's ability to serve its customers. Besides the refund, the state court on June 9 invalidated a $14.l-mlllion rate-in- crease granted PT&T by the state public utilities commission a year ago and another $68.klillion boos! that werit into effect last May. The company was to have begun making the repayments on July 14 but White that day temporarily granted PT&T a postponement while he considered a 2.3-page plea for a stay .of the decision. Fro1KPf1irel CHASE .•. which he said was traveling ap- proximately 80 miles per hollr in a 4S mil• r.one. Olflcar llmf1 said the driver sped OVl!r the Santa Ana River brldg'. slowed down, then looked back. and spotted his pursuer, and gunned ii. turning up Brookhurst Strecl. Uatening to the dramalic broadcast of the progressing pursuit, Costa Mesu patrol cars began deploying when Officer Hardy radioed the speedlng sedan ha<l turned ea1tbound on Victoria Streel. Chasing htm toward Harbor Boulevard . officers said Haney forced Roger R. Richards, 17, of La Mirada, lo swerve hi~ car onto the sidewalk and into • telephone pole. Costa Mesa Patrolman Steve Nash said the Cadillac -which had been stolen 15 minutes earlier in Newport Beach - finally slowed almost to a stop as he ap- proached Harbor Boulevard. Officer Nash, who was waiting for him. pulled across the inters~tion wilh hi s car's red lights flashing, but said the on· comJng sedan accelerated, forcing him to back out of the way to avoid a collision. He and officers Jack Koch and Richard Johnson then fell Ir.to line behind Haney in their patrol cars, reaching 110 miles per hour on 11arbor Boulevard. They said llaney swerved left onto Baker Street, then made a right turn on· to Samar Drive - a deadend street - and laid down 180 feet of skids before slamming into the power pole at the end. Police said Harry Axene. 67, of 85 Linda Isle, New- port Beach, backed out of his garage Thursday afternoon and bumped a water softener truck. He then apparently put the car in drive and drove into his garage and his den. Firemen treated the dis- tressed driver for sc ratches and gave him oxygen for lihock. percent interest in the company in January, 1970 for $20 million. Total land in the vast Rancho Mission Vie}o is 45,000 acres with about 11,000 acres under development by the com- pany. White acted in the absence of Justice William O. Douglas, within whose jurisdiction Callfomia cases normally fall. His order said: "Upon further coo- slderatlon of the application for stay of the mandate of the California Supreme Court and upon examlnatlon of the responses filed lo such appllcalion, the temporary stay of mandate heretofore entered on July 14, 1972 1.s vacated and the application for stay ol mandate is denied." Major damage resulted to the car leas- ed by Patrlcla Clifton of Whittier, who was flllng a stolen report at about lhat time. Police said Haney jumped out or the car and they chased him on foot, but lost him until be was cornered by the police helicopter. Newport Police Capture 3 Car Theft Suspects A trio of suspected auto burglars were shadowed by the Newport Beach police helicopttt crew Wednesday, while patrol cars were tied up in heavy traffic, leading to capture of the fleeing youths. The chopper sped from the west city limJts to cameo Shona, at the far end of C«ona del Mar, In two minute! to comer the two 1&-ye&Nlld boys and one juvenile girl. lnvestigaton said the suspects Ded on foot when the helicopter arrived on the scene at Miiford Drive and Perham Road about 2:20•p,m., but there was no escape. Patt.oimm entangled tn routine 1 sum. mer beach traffic finally drove up eboUt five minutes after the helicopter began tailing the teenagera. The boys were boolud· lnto Orange Coun'Y ,Juvenile Hall on 11.11plc1on of car burglary, whlle the girl wu charged with lack of parental cootrol. Police were lnltially notilied by an area resident who said he saw one suspett us· Ing a coat hanger to unlock a luxury sedan parked right on the street in the uclusive nelghborhood. From Page J EAGLETON. • • Anderson that photostatic records show the Missouri senator was arrested a half· dozen times for drunken or reek.less drlv· tng. Anderton made the allegation in a radio broa.dcast''I1lursday. The columnist told The Associated Pre" that he did not have the records himself but leal'Df1 about them from a "hiltt ~uri of· ficial. 11 ·A check by The AP turned up &ome Past speeding citations i n Eagleton'• name, but no trace of any ar· rest for drunken or reek.less driving. l\fintoff Meets Queen LONDON (AP} -Prime 1i1inister Dom MintoU of Malta, here to seek more money for British bases on his Mediter- ranean island, called on Queen Elizabeth J[ at Buckineham Palace todav. DAILY PILOT TM Ortllll• c-t DAILY f'ILOT, •llh which Is 'ombl!Mll ths N.-Prn1, it PVOlllhc.d by tM Ortn(l4' Co.11 PllbUll'!in9 Cllll\INltl'f'. 5~ r•I• Mllllollt t rt J1Ubll$l'ltel, MIN'llll1y l'llro1111h 1"r11:11i. tor coat• M111, N-p0r1 ,,,c,,, Hunllnt!O<I l11<h/Fovn111,, V•ll•r. L1g1,111• IHdl, ln1IM/~lkll1blcll Wiii Sin Clernenfe/ ,.,, J111,, C..pl11r1nt. A t ll'!illl .-..1on1t llfll'911 Is llllbll1Mlll UtUrdl'f'I .... SWldlV,. Th• Jll'irlciPfl P11bllehlft9 11lanl II 11 llll Wtll 11'1' $frfff, c .. 11 Mn•, C1tlhH',,l1, t1'7l. • lt•lt•rf N. w •• d Prt1lllMll 11111 f'u1.11J1111r J1ck It. C1i1rl1v Vice ,,..IOll'll Mid GMlr•I MllMttt n • .,.., k••Yil ..... n•rfl11 A. Mvrphin1 MIMllrig t•i1or Gh1rl1t H. l•o• Ric.h1r~ P. Ne ll AIM!Nt ~ 1111_,., om.. C.fl ~! U1 WU! ll'f St'""' H..._t a.Kii! »U N1'11111rt hul_,. l.AilllM hfftl: m ...,.., .. .....,.. HnilltW l>Mdll l1flJ IMC"\ lovt.v1 r• "" o.r-MI -Hlt1ll II C...,,.._ ltMI Tlll1.t1r1 tf1,, &42-4 111 C1 11"t!W A•u11tltl .. 642·1671 ,,_ 0.-N911 a.Ill If ut-IMtl 4f2MJO ,.,.. ........... c-~~ -1110 ~ '"" 0,.,.. C.f ~ ~. -...... ........ lllv\lf•~ lfl'W11t ~ .,. .,.,,IMf!lfrlta IWllll ..., .. r..--. WflllMf ~.. ,... .............. .._.. ..... dttl .c:::;: '9"' .. ,.., ..-. "'.......... lr<W ..., lft'l'llr t:t.• ....... i "' ... a.fl "*""'lfi lllHIWY ........... ._ .. ,,..,.~. • • Wife Refuse s to Supply Richard J. O'Neill, chairman ol the Orange County Democratic Central C.Om- mittee, is chlef owner of the land holding firm. Other principals in the company ~ elude his two nephews, Anthony Moi5o, vice president and secretary, Jerome Moisa, James E. West, board chairman and Philip Reilly, president. The C.illomla court had found a tax accounting procedure known as ac- celerated depreciation with normalization used by PT&T was unlawful It also said the prices the uUllty pays its affiliate, Western Electric c.a., for equipment were excessive. Screaming sirens and the blaring: helicopter loudspeaker a w a k e n e d residents throughout the area during the pursuit. Prints, Held in Contempt In addition to the 7 ,000 acres now partially developed by the company there Investigators said Haney was booked into Newport Beach City Jail since the chase originated then! and held in lieu of. $10,000 ball pending issuance of criminat complaints. The wile of a suspect in the $4 million Laguna Ni,!uel United California Bank burglary refused Thursday to supply her fingerprints to a federal grand jury and was found in contempt of court. Mr& Linda Dinsio, 31, wile of Amil Dinslo 1<11o lJ charged with the bank burglarly along with four other men, was sentenced to jail by U.S. District Judge Malcolm Lucas until she provides her fingerprints to the jury. She received a stay of execution of the sentence pending an appeal of the ruling to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. She is represented by !As Angeles attorneys l\farsba.11 Nasltit and Ronald Minkin From Pagel ENGINEERS • • • rent normally would carry sand from the Santa Ana River to these beaches. But the river has been channelized for flood control purposes, so it carries very little sand as it flows into the ocean. A draft environmental study made or th e project by the Corps, stated the con- struction of the groins and the haullng of sand would kill about three percent of the bottom flora .and faWla offshore, will make the beaches steeper, will make the water lempor;irUy murkier and will cause pennanent rip tides in the com- partments between the groins. Davjs said the report was sent to more than 50 governmental and volunteer environmental agencies for comment. To date !he Corps has received about 14 replies, "most or which say they have nothing to say," Davis noted . 11e said deadline for comments from these groups is mid-August and the final edi· tion of the environmental report on the project will be published by Oct. 1. One of the agencies to receive the report was the city of Newport Beach . Councilmen were given a summary or the report prepared by staff members at Monday's council meeting. They ac· cepted it and filed it without comment . Mayor Don Mcinnis, whose coun- cilmanic district includes the affected area, said he believes residents are more cor.cemed with the opernting procedures of I.he project than they are with en- vironmental concerns. lie praised the Corps ef(orls in com- municating \Yith residents. "While they tlhe residents) are not real happy at the prospect of more \\'Ork on the beaches. tit least they understand v.·hat's involved," he said. li e said the fact that the project \~Ill have defini te slarting and stopping hours instead of round the clock work as in the pre\·ious project.has impressed residents. Fro111 Page J FIREMEN ... the fire or police department. '"\\'e usually have bct\.\cen 250 and 400 men evuy time," he said. lie '"Plained that the written tesl constitutes 60 percent of the men '1 finul arore and the oral u.am makes up the bnl~ce. The men also hove to take a physical aglllly tCJt on a pau or Call basis. Ivens said oral exams will be aivcn ne~I week . "'Then the scores are tallled and the men aN! ranked." he explained. "And the chief aclectl the top three." ! both or \vhom \verc unavailable for com-are 4,000 acres of the O'Neill Ranch ment on the case this morning. under option for future home building at an estimated price of $15 million. The Mrs. Dinsio, said U.S. Attorney John land is owned by O'Neill and his aister, Walters, has been in California for the Alicia O'Neill Avery. past week, visiting her husband who is Started from scratch in the rolling hills Firemen ·Quench Trash Can Blaze being held at Los Angeles County Jail. southeast of the San Diego Fr~way in Walters said Mrs. Dinslo appeared 1966, the Mission Viejo community now Where there's smoke there's fire and before the grand jury Wednesday and boasts 18,000 residents. The hfissioo Viejo tenant!: on four floors of the Park New- refused to be fingerprinted. Then. on Company also bas developments under port Apartment!: knew it Thursday night Thursday morning, she appeared before way in Phoenix and Denver. when a blaze broke out in a ground level Judge Lucas and again refused, leading O'Neill owns a number of restauranta: trash dumpster. He was charged I with two counts of assault with a deadJy weapon resulting from evasive actions required by young Rogen and Officer Nash. Mesa Park Gets Big Band Sounds the jurist to declare her in contempt of in Southern California, two lighting Smoke billowed upward through the A pilot program for a series of Sunday court. equipment manufacturing firms j n expensive unit!: at 4220 Park Newport concert!: in the park organiied by the . other within 30 days. Or1J18e County, office buildings,, apart· Drive, but Cimncn cleared the fumes newly re.structured Costa Mesa IJ<part. Mrs. Oinsio, of Boardman, Ohio, ls also ment complexes and a shopping center with smoke ejector devices.after doulin& ment of Leisure ServJces this weekend the sister ot 38-year old Charles on the PaJos Verdes pe.niPsula. the trash fire. features the Estancia High School Stage Mulligan. the first man arrested in con-The Rancho Mlssioo .)riejo ii part of Investigators said they were unable to Band. nection with the bank burglary in which the original Rancho Santa Margarita, determine the cause of the blaze, bqt it Blg band aounds iocluding swine, blues lhieves rifled 458 safe depoolt boxes. once owned by Callfornia Gov. Yio Pico could have been somebody'• smoldering rock and jazz pieces will be played by the Also in custody as a suspect in the case and his brother Andres. Included in the cigarette or pipe ub in the trash. popular IS.member ensemble dh-tcted by Is 31-year-old Philip B. Christopher o{ vast holdings was about 250,000 acres ex--Peter Fournier. Cleveland. Both Christopher and Dinsio tending to the Mexican border. Music begins at t p.m. In the downtown were transferred to Los Angeles County John Foster, an Englishman who later Russ Space Shot Set Costa Mesa Park and families are Jn.· Jail from Cleveland last weekend. changed his name to Juan Forster in 1836 vited to l>ring picnic suppers. Indicted in connection ·with the upon becoming a Mexican citizen bought MOSCOW (UPI) -The So'{iet Union JeU Schweer, drummer, won top burglarY but remaining at latge are two the ranch from the Picos in 1864. probably will launch a new sal)'ut space honor• as a percussionist in the Orange · brothers, Harry Barber, 31, of tn 1882 Ran~ Santa Margarita, was laboratory and a tw~ or thJ'ee..INn ~~ Coast C.Ollege Jazz Festival tbil year, · YoungstoWn. Ohio apd Ronald Barber, 29, sold to Richard O'Neill, grandfather of spacecraft in the nut few days, qualWed where the band featured original acoret of south Gate . the present original owner. Communist sources said today. from the Stan Kenton Llbrary. Walters said the appeal will be ex-\--=-~,.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj;;;:--pedited to the higher court and that a I hearing could be held within two weeks. Lucas, \Valters added, wants the con- tempt matter solved one way or the other. Leslie R. Tarr, Former Coast Attorney, Dies Funeral services will take place Mon- day in Glendale for attorney Leslie R. Tarr, formerly of Cameo Sho1 es. Mr. Tarr died Wednesday in a Newport Beach convalescent hospital at the age of 74. Originally a resident or Glendale, Mr. Tarr and his wile Christine had spent their summers in Newport Beach since 1940 and moved to the area in 1958. Pi1r. Tarr, while a practicing attorney with his own firm in Los Angeles, specialized in condemnation proceedings. As a Newport Beach resident, Mr. Tarr \vas a member of the Irvine Coast Coun- try Club and Balboa Yacht Club where he raced in the Rhodes fieet. Masonic services will be conducted at the Kiefer and Eyericks Chapel in Glen- dale at 11 :30 a.m. Mr. Tarr leRves his wife, of 22{)! Vista Fuerta. Newport Beach; two d!ughters, Patricia Leavitt and Barbara Kroninger and six grandchild ren. W 01na11 l11jured In 3-car Crasli A Corona del Mar woman suffered neck and leg lacerations TbUtsclay In a three-a.r collision that oCcurred after her sandal became entangled In the brake pedal of her import sedan. lleath~r Love, 21, of 1407 Seacrest Drive, was treated at COata Mesa Memorial Hospital and releeaed followlna thcrear .. nd crash on Newport Boulevard at Flower Street. lnvesUgaiors said. Miu Lovt w11 drlv· Ing north on the bu$y downtown boolevaro at 11:25 1.m. when she reportedly glanced down lo try lo un- tangle her footwear, " - The car then piled Into one driven by Ralph C. Vargas, !Cl, ol Orange. rammlni II forwaro into another driven by Jimmy Ramiro, 33 oC Yorbo Llnda, police uJd. Henredon Upholstered Furniture On Sale! NOW YOU CAN OWN LU XURIOUS FURNITURE AT ;TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AND YOU CAN SPECIAL ORDER WITH THE FABRIC OF YOUR CHOICE! DREXEc-HERITAGr...-HENR&DON-WOOPMARK-KAAASTAN --------- • • NEWPORT IEACH e 1717 WISTCLIPf Dl,, M1.2010 TORRANCE e 11MI HAWIHO•HI llVD. JJl.t21t LA&UNA HACH e 141 HOrnt CIMfT HWT. . ....... , • • I Done • Ill Public Better Newport BeJch and Costa Mesa h1Ve many almllll' mes, many dlf!erences. Because of both -and becawe the lives of the two cities' citizens are so intertwined -the highest degree of understanding and cooperation Ui essential. With that In mind, the two city councils have es- tablished an Inter-city ~iaison committee to improve communications between the communities and to see what common goals possibly should be pursued. i. Certainly all of thls is laudatory. But the committee nas ope~ed Itself ,up for'criticism by-meeting pr!vatel,r rather'than •publiciy ·urequired by law. They said lbe7 talked about umutual problems." ' :; Whatever the extent o~ the problems, the busll!ess they conducted was-In the tealm of public interest and i i> should have been announce~ Jhead of .Ume and .,(2) should ·have been open to the public and press. · It is perhaps a little easier to discuss touchy issue~ behind a wall of secrecy, bot· that is not the 'base upon which our government was organized. Citizens have a right to know what their representatives are doing and Wking aboul Taxes are the Fulcrum A significant issue seems to have been overlooked in all the debate over the developinent ' of formerly in· dustrial properties near Orange County Airport. The integrity of the 4,400-acre masterplanned light Industrial eark appears now to be threatened. As the c1ly of Newport Beach moves toward designa- tion of more acreage for commercial use, it becomes increasingly appare_nt the Irvine Industrial Complex wlli not look anything like its J>lanliers bad hoped. That may or may not be a bad situation. ' Beach planners for zone change on Its 88-acre North· Ford tract above Aeronutronic. That's always been tabbed as an industrial park site, but now It looks like the firm bas grounds for the rezoning application. Basis for the current rash or requests Is the lad that current assessing practices consider the value of neighboring land when computing assessments. The ... sessed valuation of a property determines the amount of taxes to be paid. • · • , • • Commercial Jl,lOperlJl.gelll' ally is wo'rth three times ;.··~O~ than Industrial propert}'i . • , , ' There is no,doubV'lhe ·1'1'1~ Co!Un• R,acllo Cor· p<iratlon-parcel, aeross Campus;l>rlve frobt th~ljloUglas parcel, w)ll increase in yaJue11 Newport Beach aJ>P~oves the Don Koll Construc\ion Company's plans·fo• com-, merclal development. · • ' • -111 fact , Koll's' qffer• to purc;hase the parcel from Collins at $90,000 an acr .. ·fs..-iU..ge•I -on-.. pprovat of the zoning. Elsewhere in the industrial comp1ex, In· dustrially zoned land sells for $35,000 an acre. The next time thfJ assessor tours the in dustrial park, the value of commercial-office developments on the Douglas, Emkay and Collins parcels may well result in increased assessments for the neighboring land. Since higher assessments result in higher taxes, it may well be unprofitable for a manufacturing firm to continue operating his business on land he bought for industrial use. • Such ·a firm might well determine · it is necessary to add commercial or office buildings to his buildings in order to afford to pay his taxes. And owners of land presently undeveloped, but zoned for industrial use will likely see the writing on the wall and press Irvine officials. for zone changes, too. Additionally, there ate.'l,200 net acres of industrial- ly planned land not yet sold or leased to firms by the lrvme Company. . \ , . ' • But lt may be reasonable to assume that the increas· in~ amounts of tax-rich commercial acreage may soon bring demands from owners or lessees of neigh boring parcels for similar zoning advanta¥es. lt already has, in one significant instance. The Irvine Company, which controls another 1,200 unsold acres in the complex, bas filed a request with Newport Of course Irvine city officials have the power to draw tbe line between commercial and industrial prDP.· erties. Nevertheless, the pressures for zone changes wilt be great. Their approval would only worsen the street congestion near the airport and virtually assure expan· 'Sorry, we only believe in make-work for foreigners!' Bigger IJ.ogs Taking Place Of Lap Types ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ There are many forms or trend-spot· ting ~ some of them more va1id than others -bulone that might surprise you is the study of the popu]arity of different breeds of dogs In the American popula- tion. NI what the scholars call a "aoclological variable," the dog can tell us a good deal about lhlfting attitudea among the people. For instanct, when I wu growing up , the most popular canine house pet was the cocker spaniel, be- cause it was playful a n d friendly with children. THEN, A GENER. ATION later, as the country grew into af- fluence and wanted to acquire what it imagined was chic, the poodle became the most popular breed register~ with the offlclal American Kennel Club. 'Jben.- llke the e:panlei, the breed was ·nearly ruined by its own popularity and the in- aensate greed of Its breeders. ' •' Now the German shepherd is leading all the relt, and this telis us a lot about the temper of the country In the 1970.. It hu gooe from wanting a playful pet to a stylish pet to a protective pet. In fact, "pet" ts an ironic euphemism for most of the shepherds people are buying - "guard dogs" is closer to the true ap- Dear Gloomy Gus 1 • U ,Newport Beach I! so concerned ·abotit pafks and open space, how come so many or thoae street-end beaches have been commandeered by adjoining residents for private use-especially in West Newport, Mr. Mayor? N.C.E. Tiiis fHtvr. reflects rffdtrs'. ~ TIDf llfCllUril'r thos9 of #le --. lend r-Ml peeve .. Gi-nr Gva, Otlty Piiat. pellatlm. And the fact that shejiherds have been Irnown to mangle children is no delerrept al all to most purclwera. IN A J'IW DECADES, we have gone from dogs that cuddle or atrut to dogs that snarland bite, whether in the big c~ ty or the small village, I recently re- turned from New York, where the pave- ments: are covered with dog.<foi every family hi Monbattan seems to have bought a brute for securtty,:wlthouf hav- ing learned how to train them properly. And, at a recent town meeting I at- tended in the village where I spend my summers, the first hour of discussion was taken up with the problems of dogs ronnlng wild and attactlng cblldr<o, neighbors, and the county1nay1bf;ve to build a new pound to bal!d!e .the problem. ~ THE SALE OF LARGE (and thus pfOSUIJllbly ferocious, though there is no necessary connection) dop has begun to outstrip the sale or m:nall ones: shepberdll, bo1ers, Doberman plnschers. and so on, are commanding the highest prices in the market; and outfits that train these dogs for security and attoct (thereby renderinf them unflt as family pois) have gladdened the hearts of their stockholders in the IHI few years. , sion of the airport. -N : Actio11 ma Bill Sp~rred Military Retirees May Get Action WASHING TON -Senate A r m e d Services Committee 'chaiiman.Jobn Sten- nis, ([).Miss.), is finally being put squarely on the spot on the military retirees survivors benefits bill that he has atalled for nine months. The legislation is being offered as an amendment to the $20.S billion military procurement author- ization measure now under consideration . in lhe Senate. Whether he can get away with such a . • 1 • ploy is conjectural. (ROBERT S,AJ.J,EN) To a considerable degree, it would de-pend on how much backing Beall and Goldwater could muster for the retirees need of the retirees legislation or that it was passed last October by the House 372 to 0 ·afti r less than two hours of discussi.On. 'fhatis why jt's deemed probable Sten- nis may insist on his committee's acting on the · retirees bill separately -bu!, bowing to necessity, will make a defi.nlte commitment to report it out by a certain date in the !all , bill as an amendment to the procurement measure. If they can rally sufficient votes, they can force a showdown and override Stennis -despite his being chairman of the potent Armed Services Committee. That's happened before. and could again. Sen. John Tower, (R-Tex.), v.•bo like Goldwater is a member of that com· mittee, is working closely with him in pressing for enactm ent or the retlrees bill. So Is Sen . Peter Dominick, (R- Colo.), another influential ccrsponsor of the legislation. TilEY TOLD this column, "There Ls no reason for further stalHng. This bill should be disposed of now and not later. It is not generally realized, but Sen. Beall 1s one of the authors of the original measure as passed by the House. 1111970, as a member of that chamber, he was on the special committee thal drafled the legislation. It remaim to be seen what Seo. Stennii thin.U and d ... about tbaL T h e decision to force actim oo the loog-stymied retireeo benefits measure as · an amendment to the giant military pro- curement bill was made by Sens. BalTy Goldwater, CR· Ariz.), and J, Glenn Beall, R·Md ). Mr. Meany, Sir , Ho w Do I Vote? 111 don't intend to wait any longer,'' Goldwate~ tol~ this column ... We'r~ going One of America's most talked-aboUt ~ :· ----------- to see ~ thing through now. Its long voters is Miny Moe and he's in terrible [ ) overdue. shape. ART HOPPE "The unjustifiable protracted delay in Thanks to George (Eenyl Meany, ~ad the ~1deration ol this unportant ol the AFL.CIO, poor Miny Moe doesn't _ _ legislation direCtly affectmg close to a know whether he's coming or going ~on v~ is inexplicable to m~." Friends fear he may drink himself ~ ticket. wd Beall. It's time we put an end to 1t. ·• death before election day. "But who ever talk! or writes about I have ~d I was. going to put this ~ ... , A lr .... .1 .. in this camrur.;gn, the •TI"IPr'-The Socialist· Labor Vote?" he said with ·thro gh this and I "" .........,,. ,,..... -r-14 a shrug. "I'd be a nobody." measure u year, mean have written millions of words about Moe it. It has wide bipartisan support In tbe and bis <ruclal Im-Moe reluctantly agrees he's too old to Senate, as evidenced by the !act that 33 portance lo the oul-be The Youth Vote, too while to be The Republican and Democratic Senators Black Vote, too Northern to be the joined me in -ing this legislation. come. Southern Vote and too noisy to be The They are in full · accord with me that For !doe is, of "Silent Majority Vote. · further delay is unwarranted and in-course, The Labor IN FACI', he has but one option left. defensible." Vote. DUrlng the past 25 PIJTTING STENNIS on the spot in !his years Moe has W.. manner forces him to either "fish or cut tinguished bimsetr u bait." being the only "l've decided,". he aald, squnring his shoulders, "to be The Daley Vote." The challenge h e r e is that . a) .. though Mayor Daley endorsed the en- tire"Democratic ti cket, to the surprise or the experts, he didn't mention htcGovern by name. . "Speaking as The Daley Vote," said h1oe, uit's going to be tough to cast my ballot for a guy whose name I don't know. But with all the talk about The Daley Vote, somebody 's got to be it, .. Thus, while Senator McGovern has lost The Labor Vote, he's picked up The DaJey Vote. So, as you can plainly see, he's come out exactly even. Problems at Age 200 Air Study Defended He now faces three alternatives : American who voted (1) Accept the retirees survivors In every election as Meany told him to. bene'fits bill as an amendment to lhe "Being The Labor Vote bas been an To the Editor: military procurement measure and allow awesome responsibility," said Moe, As project director in charge of the the Senate to vote on it -thus ensuring lighting a cigarette with trembling Southern California Regional Aviation ( ) Credit Mayor Frank !lino o f Pblladelpbia with clairvoyance. Durlnc bis election campaign last fall, Rizzo of· lered this bleak appraiJal ol plans to hold an American Revolution Bicentennial Ex .. posillon In the City of Brotherly Love ill · 1976: ''They w1y it ia: going, we'll have the police band at lndependence llall playing the Siar.Spangled BaMer, and that will be it." The mayor's comment has 80 far withstood the test of time. Although the American Revolution Blcentennlal Com- mission (ARBC) has been In existence for six years, it has llttle to show for Its elloris. Philadelphia exposillon was to have been the centerpiece of the nation's 2()(1th bitthday anniversary celebration, but the project wu buried on May 1, ,197%, when the commission vetoed the only site the city could agrte on -a swampy, po\.o lute<I tract near Pblisdelphla lntematloil- al AiJ110<1. ·· • • rfow wbatl ARBC bu proposed that conupeniontlYO parks, costln(· from $15 milliO(l to $20 million apiece', be built In ••ch ol the 50 1lates. Ooocrea. however, has -. lltUe eqhmlaam for the Idea. • TllE COMMISSION'S dllflc:ulllos.Jlem In large part from ·~ aboUI the nature of the llkmtltlllllal. "To radlcall, It ts 1 l'Ollllllll'Cla rlpall, a betrayal ol America'• true radical tradl· Uon and at the 11me time an opportunity to revive It,'' Eugme L. Meyer noted in The Washington Poet "To black crltlct, It ls a mockery of freedom lq denied and history too long w,1old. To ol6o lubloaed flol·WIV"1, ii ii ID uerdae In aelf-tulatlon. To partisan crlUCI, It Is a NIDln campelcn llmm!ck. To ...,. partJaan oaes, 11 Is i~ lot oober a1tlonal ruunsmmt." SUI!, the conunlMlon Itself ls not without blame. A study by the rapeded EDITORl.At·: ~~ RESEARCH ils speedy overwhelming approval. fingers over this third beer at Paddy'a Systems Study, conducted by William L. (1) Try to bave the amendment thrown Place. "I had to be lukewarm when I out on the ground it is not germane to the voted twice for Stevenson, moderately Pereira Associates and S)'ltem Develop- procurement bill.. Sena. Beall and cool when I cast my baUot for vennedy meot Corporation for the Southern pulled " caIUornia Association of Governments, I Goldwater are prepared to demand a and red bot when I the levtr for was extremely dlsapt>Olll. ted by the rollcall vote on that, and are·confident Johnson and Humphrey. I'm lucky I they can win hands-down. didn't catch my death of pneumonia. editorial on lhe subject I.bat appeared ln Cambridge, Mass., COlllUlting firm o1 ) Oii th the Pilot on July 24 ("Sorry, No Answer Arthur D. Llitle Inc. harshly concluded: (3 er to compromise wi a "But with everybody talking about It, Yet") and would like to take this -''Tfie categoric promise to bring up the somebody had to be The Labor Vote. And ·~ ARBC is criticized for not having a retlreea legislation for separate Senate I was proud to do my duty. Only this portunJty to reply to two or the principal program because it baan·'t had a pro-consideration by a definite date in the year, I think I'm going to chuck it." criticiams it presented. gram. The ARBC is •crlUclzed for not fall Flrat of all, the edltorlalstates that the being bmovative becaute it hasn't been MOE'S PROBLEM stems, naturally, report "did not address Itself to resolving · innovative. Tbe ARBC is critlcl!ed for TRIS LAST stratagem ls considered from Meany's pronouncement that he the issue of increasing preuure to ei: .. not taking the Initiative becaUse, until the most likely by Sens. Goldwater and wouldn't deliver The Labor Vote to either pond jet filghts out ol Orange County r~ntly, it hasn't taken the initiative. Beall. McGovern or Nixon. Airport." On the contrary, the SCRASS The ARBC is criticized for havina low Their belief is based on backstage and "In fact," said Moe, glwTily, "be didn't study expressly recommends. under con- statf morale becaute it baa low staff other indications. !ay where the hell he was going to trolled conditions iocludlng passenger morale." Lately it bas become evident that Sen. deliver me. Another beer, Paddy if you processing at remote terminals, the joint IF IT 18 ANY COMFORT to the Stennis is "displea!ed" by the vigorous please.'' ' use by commercial aircraft of the Marine mission, the Centennial E%pooltlo~~; prodding In and out ol c:oi,tsress In behaU The loss of Moe's vote, the experts Corpa Air Station at El Toro. 1876 In p lade\phla also encountered ot thet . sulrvlvhasors betbernefiedts dbUlt lnwhthelch unanimously •gree, will hurl McGovern TIDS cOULD eventuaUy enllrely -•J Sen ~ •• 1 ~-·· (n mys enou.s Y ga us lar more than Nl•on, as The Labor Vote !Im\ le 1 1 Ir rr· P•~ ems. • u-es ~••d ~ Armed Sen/Ices Oonunittee for nine h t dill lly t the Dernocr r e na commerc a a tra ,. !rom Mass.) vtgorouaty fousht the project until mon"· . ••nd.rdaa 1 oTbena g~-0th U a_~c · Orance CU>ty Airport and, Indeed, the bis d..tl) ~•-bel It --' ~. t _ . . ca 1 e. que.~. ey are a •~-· -"• ' • Iha •~•---~ """""' It is lrno\m the.._ppian JlOt a log )! "Where. Ww ""1e Lall>r V"'• go . atu., auguts t Orange County Oooci;'"8 wt ....... "!"'"""" "'-' anllt flood of.' cr!Uca~ ma,11' toltowllt( thCs .. 1. ·, llOW?'~ • , .. ·j, ,.... Alrpor\-'"!"~ In lime be devoted ••- the ~ -t, and aftuwaii, ialilled • umn' ~ ss· ptallt<I 1e..un . , i.. . • clllliv'elf(W general aviatioo. It 1hould be ~ ~ _,. w~ oalJ;.a IOM, lo lie » ~ de!Q U>! m · b;1t1thhC>ldlft8 ;.J. ~;!_.,,~1'/r si~oe frilikly. "Ii , noted too ~t the SCRASS study does not paidl*t. : \'I; • c:onsldf<t.tioDuiitjftbe ~dlsJ)ooedOI wa11a'"'iii: ol t' for ~ge; ,..~,the establishment of aey ~ bajl_ }tnoUgh, b • ~-~ J,I'm ._. u 0 n lbiiJ.ll~t. wt.'17'.b."!'•t ln J:'k,i,'\': 'l)e" riwtoiaj airport In Oraft8e County, a ~tennlal f.lmthi • .-e;jta· ·• -·-" -·-..• ~ ,. = ltl. · recotrllllendlilg Instead that those 811111.......,) uPoelU'"1 ol Ille -a ' ... -.. . may SOwN • Im .,Ing to butler Mr. airports alrtady In .,. ho uliliied to lelal d•-er. Bain feD cm • ol llie ,~ 1 That unannounced intention squarely Meany up, but I can aay from personal their fullm effe<tlveneu. da1I the r.tr ,.. -. 111oreo.. lllo contradicted an ear1fer promlJo (lo Beall experience that The Labor Vote has The editorial '&ilo lllUetta that the event loll betftal _ODO and ..,. ;_ and Goldwater) lo take up the bUI alter always done Wbal he told me to. t d did t "ta kle" the bl f .-, .-.-1 the procurement me.uure b:ad been acted a u Y no c pro em o ...U and -the city more thin $15 on NOW THE EASY way out would be to private aviation In Orange County. Ytt million in ioAet and capital outlaya. Stennis 1J very touchy about his follow Mr. Meany's ezample. lie says be this .subject also b dealt with In con- Dolpile IUcll inaoeplciOUI precedenls, pmogatlvea 11 cbalrman ol the powerful l•n't going to vote for either McGovern slderable detail. . Prtotd..t Nuon appeara conltdenl that Armed Service• Commltlee lnalde word or Nixon. But If I ilon't vote, !,hen I won't Among other conclusions, the report the blcenlemlat will pme -· Ill ls be is inllmatlnc be would' Contlder k a be The I.aboi' VIiie any-.. And to tell recommendl the ute of Loi Alamitos • J\111 4, Im, radio addnsa li'olll lllD ,.......i rdlectlon 11 the retlr ... bill In the truth, l kind of like beinl •much In . Naval Air station for ~ral a'1atlon - Clemente, lie lllUed an "unpr&collltad effect were forcibly token awoy from th• public• spotllghl MU. that 1 which alone could accommoctale •P' invitation lo lllo world" to 'r1all the the cGmmitue and written Into the pro-boilermaker, Paddy." , proilmale]y !ODO private aircral\ -In Uollod Sia• In 1171. curemenl meuura u an amendmeat Delpite his yean al dm>llon to beln1 additlan to Fullerton Municipal Airport He...,._ bope that u many Hill • The Labor Vote, Moe ls MW conaidering and Meadowlark In Huntington n,acb. It mlllkln foreipera would accepl the in-APPARENTLY this would miff Stennis varloua alternatlvet. At one pc>lnt he even also urges the establishment or airparkJ Yltation. no elld -irrapectlve of !he merlta and tboU&ht of voting the Soclalilt·Labor -for tnttructlonal aod N!Cre&Uonal MAILBOX flying -at Brea and Capistrano. ' . THE REPORT acknowledges !bat the projected growth of general aviation will severely tu the existing airport and airspace ttsources of Orange O:>unty and may require some of the sport nying to be condtleted at alrparks in other coun-ties. ' Altogether Ille SCRASS study, In qur aplnlon, seriously and · thoroughly ex- plo<es Ille aviation problems ol Orange as well as those of the other nine coun.. . lies that comprised the study area, and we do not feel that ~ report's . ....,..,. mend1tlons, and tile research· on which they were pre<licted, wefe accurately rellected by lbe editorial lir question. JAMES M. SINl(, A1A DAILY PILOT Rober' N. Wetd, Publil"«r Tlloma.t Keetril, Editor .Alberc W. Botc1 Ediloriol POii~ Edltor 'Mieo editorial P'~ ot the Dall¥, Piiot attkl lo W""'1° •nd 1tJ.mu .. l11.te rM~rs by J,>MtenUnc ' thff n~-.paper'• opinions and com-- mentflry on to):llcs or lntcml and •llrnlf1C8.ntt. by proyldJnr a '9"'m fOr the t.Jlpt"Nal n ot our mckn' ot>lnlol'll, •nd by prttentl,. a. dlvtne viewpoint. ot tntormed (lb. ~ ~~---... .., Friday, July 28, 1072 , .. ~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~-----~~-------~~~~~------------~~~~~---------'----~ I 1, . --.... )et Parts Rain Down On LA Area .... ' LOS ANGELES (VPI) -II rained jet plane parts -up to a ton of them - 'tburllday on the Sunaet Strip, Beverly Hilla and w .. t Holl)!Wood. 'tbere were no roports of Injury or aerlous damage. A chunk estimated to weigh 500 pounds, and llzzllnf hot, plunged Intl> the lawn of a Bevet!Y Hllla ·ho111e. A chunk descrl~ by 'a lherilf'1 deputy •a "the size of a buketball" cruhed onto Sunset Boulevard. ' ·"'diere wai a lnetalllc.dank" outslde her plllce, llld Glorja Lund, and there on the pavement wu what looked like "• bundle of pipes lled together." "It wu just bouncing there ln the atreet when I looted down," she said. John Bradley WU driving on the Sunset Strip. "l WU in the 'Jeft tum lane • • • aod all ol a sudden I hurd a aound -a' crsoh and tinkle -and· 1 saw two pieces of metal In the atreeL It bounced a llttle.11 .11 The debris came from . one disi& legrlUnf' engine o! a Continental Air Un .. DC!O wblch had just taken off from Loa Angelea International Airport f o r Chicago. The plane 'wu carryln1 123 peraona. '"!'be wholt r)ght lide of the piano began to abake," said pauenger Bruce Mam, 19, of <>aklawn, nt · -· Hil mother, Mrs. Fred Marks, said she •as in "a state of 1emisbock," but other passengers .said the experience was not alarming, 't1le Markaes 1ald a crewman notified the puaengero that the tall engine had been loll, but the plane could Oy with no trouble on the two remaining wing· mounted engines, and was returning W. mediately IA> the Loa Angeles airport, A 1pokesman for the airline aald the pilot, Capt. Robert Glau, was alerted IA> the problm> when the trouble lndlcab>r Ught for tbe tall engine flashed on, Los Angeles county sheriff's deputies and Beverly HUia police gathered up the debrll. D<:puly Curtll Howard, who saw the engine dlalntegrate, estimated 41 to IO places fell within a four-mile radlUJ. Coeds File Suit In Booklet Ban RIVERSIDE (AP) -The fedaral pernment Is being aued by a group of Unlvenlty of callfomla coeds here who were reluaed permission by the pootmuter IA> mall 1~ copies of a 47· PllC• booklet on birth control to, wcmen living off-campus. The suit la being bandied by the Cecter for Law In the Public Interest, a Los Angeles public law l1rm which hopes IA> help the women students overturn a federal law which prcblbits !he malling of abortion and birth control information. Members of the university's Associated Studenta bought the lllustrated pbam- phlel from aludenla at McGlll University In Canada and dlatrlbuted about 1,500 OFFICER TOM JENSEN, LEFT, STUDIES JAGGED METAL IN YARD Ho,....wner Jack Paul Aaloundad al HU1J• Chunk of Joi Bill to Aid Poor Schools Approved by Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -A last-ditch elfort to provide property tax relief and pump more dollars into poor school districts sailed through the Assembly Thursday. The measure by Assemblyman Dixon Arnett would put half of all the money raised by local school taxes into a com· mon statewide pot. It would then be redistributed to districts on a flat pe~ chlld grant with additional state money thrown in. That would have the effect of equallz. Ing the differences between districts with Hgb and low assessed value over a five- year phase-in period, the Redwood City Republican said. ed Wednesday In the Senate Finance Committee. "The Senate's action yesterday still bas me in shock. I don't think they knew what they were doing/' Bagley, a San Rafael Republican, said in urging a~ proval of Amett's bill. The measure moved to an uncertain fate in the Senate on a 64-3 vote. a Amett's measure "sure does move a long way down the trail" to meeting the State Supreme Court's Serrano vs. Priest decision, Bagley said. The court ruled in the Serrano case that local property Illes for school sup- p o rt unconstitutionally discriminate against children in districts with low assessed valuation by m~ fewer dollars available for their education. Arnett urged passage of his measure as "an instrument" for property tu relief and school finance refnrm. It con· tains no appropriation in tbe fonn •P-Air Pollution Panel proved by lhe Assembly. "In fact, It may be tbe only Instrument Sai"d Dom· g Good Joh for ·school finance and property In reform1" he said "It seems to me we're In the final inning of the most important LOS ANGELES (API -The Los ball eame we're playing this year -that Angeles County Air Pollution District is of property tax refonn and school finan-doing an excellent job, a state in. clng." vestigative team concluded in a The basic theory of equalizing the preliminary study. wealth of school districts is the same as However, the state Air Resources that of the $1.2 billion tax package back· Board report said Thursday the APCD ed by Gov. Reagan and Assembly could improve its monitoring and in- Speaker Bob Moretti, said Assemblyman spection operations, its public relations, William Bagley. system of legal counsel and its err copies on campus. The Reagan~Morettl proposal was kill· forcement capabilities. ~~~~~~ Jail Guards, Profs May Get Raises SACRAMENTO (AP) Prison guards and college teachers would get $28,S million worth of pay rabes on bills meeting legislative a~ provaJ, but the gap between good intentions and cold cash is still wide open. One $5 mllllon appropriation for prison guards went IA> the governor's desk ntursday. Another $21,6 million for teachera In higher education advanced !ram the Senate and is awaiting action in the Assembly. The guards could wind up with a total raise of about 15 percent over last year's pay, and the teachers cculd get 13,1 percent more than last year. Poor morale was cited in both cases as rtasons for the raises. The raise for prison guards and some employes or the California Youth Authority sailed through the Assembly wit.bout opposition. T h e 1egislators acted swiftly arter recent strike rumblings from the California State Employes Aasociation, which repersents the guards. LET'S 8£ FRIENDLY U you have new nclihbors att )91ow of 1nyone movimt tb our em, please tell u~ eo that we m~ ~xtl?nd a frledlt welcome and help 1hlm. to become 1cqualnted la tbttt new 1WTOUndlnp. SL Cast f ISitor ... 494-t:MI .... Ylsitor '4Ml74 . ' 01/]y Coast~ SoutJierri Qffers • 63Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art l inkltlter The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every· thin g you need from the finest closed..<foor show· rooms at substantial sav· ings -appliances, furni· lure, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draper ies and much. much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of Interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate 11ccounts. also provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport· ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership roqulre· ment for savers-$2,500 mlnimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en· tilling them to •II outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. MAIN OFFICl: . 9th&. HUI, Los Anples. 623-1351 other offices WllSHlfl:l 1t GMMM!RCY Jtl.ACD 3933 Wllsh1AI Blvd., L.A.• 318-1265 LA. CIVIC CINTDt: 2nd&. Bro.dWIY • 626-1102 . HUNTINGTON llEACH1 91 Hunt1nlton Center• (714) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wlllhlre Blvd.• 393-0746 SAN rlDfKh loth • Pacllle • 131-2341 WlST COVINA: EaSllancl Sh0ppln1Qr,•331-2201 PANORAMA cm: Ch1se & Van NU)'' BIYd. • 892·1171 TAAZANA: 18751 Vtntura l!lvd. • 345'6614 LONG l!ACH: 3rd & Locust • 437•7481 UST L.01 ANQlltl! 8\h & Soto • U&-4510 DIAMOND I.Aft: 328 Dllmond Bir 111\ld. • (7141 515"7525 Dally Houra-t AM to 4 PM Open S.tunl1ys - tAMtolPM (bctl)I Civic C.nt1r) l "'1doY, JU1Y ZS, 1'17? ~All Y PILOT 5 Tax Plan Has Chance Assembly Leaders To Try Reviving Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly leaders gained another chance b>day IA> revive their $1.2 bllllon school finance.tax reform deal with Gov. Reagan after forc- ing a one-week extension of the 1m IeglslaUve session oa the Senate. Democratic Assembly Speaker Bob MoretU hinted strongly that he would bi· jack a $900 mllllon Senate-pasSJd 1cbool proposal, write the compromise bill Into It and send It baclt to the upper house for another showdown. The Senate passed the stop-gap $900 million school bill by Sen, Ralph DUia on a is.a vote Thursday after a day of closed-door negotiaUons that ended with an agreement to fight for another week instead of attempting to recen Friday. Behind the maneuvering We.re attempts by Moretti and the Republican governor to revive their tax refonn-scbool finance compromise. The Senate Finance Com· mittee killed that bill on a 7-6 vote Wednesday and passed the Dills measure in its place. The Dllls blll, which Moretti called a "ridiculoUJ" substitute for his plan, would raise the state sales tax one cent per dollar. That would raise $600 million, leaving the measure $300 milllon out of balance. The Morettl·Reagan plan also Includes a one cent sales tu increase and new state money for schools, but the similari· ty ends there. That plan would also hike state business and income taxes across the board, increase state aid to local schools by $509 million a year, give homeowners property tax cuts Moretti estimated at $200 a year, and order voter approval for most future property tax rate increases. The batUe over the two measures sparked a bitter e1cbange between Moretti and his Democratic counterpart in the upper house, senate President pro tern James Mills of San Diego. Mills criticized the Moretti-Reagan compromise for failing, he said1 to either help schools or relieve tax pressures on lhe poor, . He added that Moretti left Senate leaders out of bis negotiations with Reagan because "he thinks \ h a t magnifies bis position in the California political scene ... It makes him appear he is leader of the Democrats." Moretti replied in an interview, 0 1 fully expected some such statement fiom Sen. ?i-1ills, because as the pressure builds be starts to make unreasona,ble statements." Another part of the battle on the ocboot proposals surfaced In the dispute over a three.month rec... beglnnlnl t b i s weekend. The Senate approved Ule recess two weeks ago, but Moretti held it up in the Senate to retain bargaining J!Ower for Senate action on his tu bill. Neither the Senate nor Assembly can recess for more than three days wltbeut permission of the I other house. Moretti finally aMounced Thursday, after hours of closed.door negotiations, that Senate leaders had agreed to a delay of the recess until Aug. • and that they bad also promised there would be al least three more meetings of the Finance Committee, where dozens of Assembly bllla including the tax plan are bolUed up, Justice Douglas Okays Papers Trial Hearing ,LOS ANGELES (VP!) -Supreme Court Justice William 0, Douglas, agreed to hear today a request from defense at· torneys that the Pentagon Pepero trial judge-be ordered to reveal details of a." federal wiretap, Douglas, who was attending a judicial conference in nearby Pasadena when oontacted, cllrected the attorney• Thurs- day night to pr.,..! their case IA> him In Y akirna, Wash. Police Chief Facing Justice ANGEil! CAMP (AP) -The police chief of thls gold rush town found himself on the opposite side of justice when he was sentenced by a local florist to the county jail for contempt of court. Jack Whiting, 33, Angela camp police chief for tbe past year, religned 11 chief after the florlst·judge, Marvin Shupe, fin- ed him $250 Thursday and sentenced him to two days in jail after be failed to answer two swnmonses to testify on a traffic arrest and drug case. Shupe said be felt the Angels·Murphy Judicial Court was ·not receiving proper respect lrom Wbltlng, The only other man on the police force of thiJ community of 2,400, Jim Wadsworth, was named acting chief by the City Councll, which baa ordered Whiting to resign or be fired. The hearing was set for 7:30 p.m. (EDT), The layers for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo failed Tuesday in tl)eir ef. fort to get such an order from a federal appeals court, and so carried their case to Douglaa, The wiretap dispute has held up the start of argumenla and testimony in the much delayed trial of Ellsberg and Russo. They are charged "{Ith theft, con· spiracy and eslJ'lonag% for actiom they took In ·maidng public the classified Peil' tagon study of the Vietnam War. The dispute concerns what the Justice Department says ms a legally authori1 .. ed wiretap in an investigation that has no connecilon with the case. h govern- ment says someone connected with the defense placed a call IA> a legally tawed phone and was overheard by federal agents. TWA AMBASSADOR SERVICE TO THE 'EASI COAST FROM YOUR OWN BACKYARD. TWA's fabulous Ambaesador ( Service to the East C08llL It's· oo ea1y with a little help from Golden WesL "Golden Otter" commuters zip you to LA. International, right nelt to TWA'• tennlnal ••. and that mean1: • No freeway traffic •No parking hawes • No expenslve taxis • No ~ggage hanc·upa, 1traigbt,.throuih checkinr. TWA . noM OitANOI COUNTY AtlPOIT OOLDINWIST TWA OOLDINWIST TWA Lv .ArLAX LvLAX Lv ArLAX LvLAX NIWYOllC 7:50A 8:25A 9:00A PHILA. 7:25A 7:50A 8:45A 9:15A 9: 50A 11: 40A 12:40P 1:15P 1:50P 1:45P. 2:20P 3:00P 9:05P 9:40P ll:OOP 3:00P 3:35P 4:15P 9:05P 9:40P 10:45P WASH . D.C. 8:25A 9:00A lO :OOA . ll:SOA 12:25P l:OOP BOSTON 7:25A 7:50A 8:45A IALT, 9:05P 9:40P 10:50P 10:20A 10:55A 11:30A 9:05P 9:40P ll:OOP fOI ONl.C:All llSltlVATIONS PHONI YO~tl l'IAVn AGINT Ott OOLDll(WHT AT: 714•979·1000 SERVICE TO THE EAST COAST · (with a little help from a friend) -- • • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PA.GE Done Public Better • Ill -Newport Beach and Costa Meaa have many slmilal" August with Attorney Jack Uncoln as chalrm and with IUes, many differences. Because of both -and because 18 ·citizens representing many areas and interem u the lives of the two cities' citizens are so Intertwined members. -the highest degree of understanding and cooperation Resolution of the Newport Freeway'ISSue, of rourse, is essential. Is a high priority problem, one that the Goals and 01>- With that in mind, the two city councils have es-jectives Committee can do little about. But there remain tabllshed an Inter-city liaison rommittee to improve many as yet undefined subjects the group can outline communications between th~ cornmunltles and , to see ~an!f..)lelp seek answe~fl!I'. • ·~·l . , 1"'-; , what common goals possibly should be. pursuejl, • ~airman Llnpoln,Jor uample, said' ll'quld lilte • . '1 Cei:talnlr. all of.Pli5 ls laudatory. But the committee to ·~ tJ\e city ... bl. h.-...W• .. ··L•ente .fAO mi!lc tf has· opened 1l8elf up for critici!m by meeting J>ri•ately 1"".th~~irls. ·He a1~"cl:a,'lil'eas ";;c:;'ime ~ndho6slng~s ·'/ ·---.,. rather than p~bllcly as requir~; by law. They, said they poti>nUaJ U>pics JM ~mmittee ~ explore. CeJIWD)y . talked about mutual ,)1roblems. · • . there .,.~:others• that l'an he proYided hv olher mem ,Whatever the extent of tbe-problem&, l!Je bustness hers o! the committee 1' --, • • Ibey conducted was in the relilm ot public Jnterest arid • ~:r ·. · · " •' · '..-<t<'" · • .. • ' (1) should have been announced abead of time 'ancf (2j Goll)S and ob~lves are t .l'Jtber fll"reaclung / should h;lve been RPIID to...the .~m!>lic '!I\.~ pr.eu... .• '• •••• _ .. word.V"fhey. ~ertai!llJ....sho11!!1' per1111t the_ co91nlltte<i ____ .. ~· It ·ts.,,erllaps a little easier to aiscuss touchy issues enoQ~h flexibility to enteM!!lnlill!t any-a~f of Co~t~ behind a wall of secrecy, but that ;. not the base upon Mesas. pr~sent and future to resolve its problems, 1m- whicb our government was organi.zed. Citizens have a prove its 1.mage a~d brighten the ~uture. right to know what their representatives are doing and . We hope to see many provocative thought& provided talking about lo the city council -and we hope the city council will act in a responsive manner. Guidan~e Would Help Ever since it was incorporated 19 ye·ars ago, Co,sta Mesa has suffered somewhat from a lack of identity. It is not just a matter of more freeway sisns to tell people where Costa Mesa is, but more of an mner matter, re- flected in what many citizens believe to be a rather bland community personality. Give Him a Call! The MaYor Is lonely. Costa Mesa's top elected official, .Jack Hammett, holds ollicebours from 8 to 9 p.m. daily. He has Issued an invitation to any of Costa lifesa's 73,000 residents to drop in and discuss matters good and bad about munici· pal governmenl ... Since he opened his oll:ic'e last April, Hammett h8' had two visitors and be ruefully admits that one of them was there on a personal matter. •• • " • • . .. ' All of this could be helped considerably ii a new committee formed by Mayor Jack' Hammett can provide some inspiration and ideas to feed to the city council. It is called the Goal.! and Objectives Committee and Mayor Hammett said be "hopes that many worthwhile plans and projects will be forthcoming." The new committee will bold its first meeting In U you have something on your mind, Mayor Ham· melt says he would be happy to use part of that hour for your benefit. You can call 834-5325 for an ap~ointment. 'Sorry, we only believe in make-work for foreigners}' Bigger · Dogs Taking Place Of Lap Types ~YD NEY J. HARRI~ There are many forms of treod-spot· ting -some. of them more valid than others -but one that might surprise you Is the study of the popularity of different breeds of dogs in the American popula. tion. As what tbe scholars call a "sociological variable," the dog can tell us a good deal about shifting attitudes among the people. For instance, when I was growing up, tbe mOlt popular canine house pet was • the cocker spaniel, be- cause it was playful a n d friendly with children. THEN, A GENE!i'. ATION later, as the country grew into af. flue.nee and wanted to acquire what it Jmagined. was chic, the poodle became the most popular breed registered with the official Arnet.lean Kennel Club. Then, like tbe spani!l, the breed was nearly ruined by its .oWn popularity and tbe in- aensate greed of Its· breeders. Now tbe Germao shepherd Is leading all tbe rest, and this tells us a lot about tbe temper of the country In tbe li'IOs. It has gone from wanting a playful pet to a stylish pet to a protective pet. In fact, "pet" ii an ironic euphemism for most of the shepherds people are buying - "guard dogs" is closer to the true ap- .. Dear Gloomy Gus A 4 per cent raise on the average for our city employes sounds very nice, but the truth is that some of tllM'n received zero while a few received as much as 15 per cent, and the biggest share of these employes only received 21i2 per cent. A Costa Mesa Taxpayer T11l• f91tvre rtflleh 1'{191ien' 'Wltwt, "°' nece111rllv tl!ol4I of tl'lt MWl~I!"" Stnd vour "" llffWI to GloclmV Gut., DallV Piiot. pellatlon. And tbe tact that sbeplierds have been known to mangle children is no• deterreot at all to most purchasers, IN A FEW D£CADES, we have gone from clop that cuddle or strut to dogs that snarl an4 bite, wbethet In tbe big ci- ty or the llllall village. l i-.nUy re- turned from New York, w• the pave- mebta are covered with dog-do;" every family bi Manhattan seems to have bought a brute for aecurity, without,Jlav- ing learned bow to train lilePI· ~ly. And, at a r..,..t town meeting I at.. tended In tbe village where I spend my summers, the first hour of discussion was taken up with tbe problems of dogs running wild and altacking children, neighbors, and the county may have to build a new pound to handle Iba-problem. ~ THE SALE OF l,Alt\lE '· (and thua presumably ferocious, though there, is no .. -~ connection) dogs has heliun to outstrip the aale of small ~ones: shepherd6, boxers, Doberman plnscbers, and so on, are commanding tbe highest prices in tbe market; ""d outfits that train the!< dogs for aecurlty and attack (thereby rendering them unfit .. family . pets) have gladdened lhe hearts of their stockholders In the last few years. Problems at Age 200 c . Action on Bill St•urred I Military Retirees May Get Actio:n ..... WASHINGTON -Senate A r ·m e d Services Committee chairman John Sten- nis, (D-Miss.), is 'flnrQY .being put squarely on the spot on the military retlreeS survivors benefits bill that be has stalled for nine months. The legislation is being offered as an amendment to the $20.5 bilUon military procurement author· ization measure now under consideration in the Senate. Whether he can get away with such a ploy is conjeCtural. (ROBERT S.AJ.J,EN)"· · ''l'o a considerable degree, it would de-pend on how much backing Beall and Goldwater could mustct for the retirees need of the retirees legislation or that it was passed last October by the HouSe m to o after less than two hours of H~iop. . . That is why it's deemed probable Sten- nis may insist on his committee's acting on the ., retirees bill separately -r-but, bowing"to necessity, will make a definite commibneot lo report ii out by a certain, date In tbe fall. bill as an amendment to the procurement measure. If they can raUy sufficient votes, they can force a showdown and override Stennis -deSpite his being CbairD\lln of the potent Armed Services Committee. That's happened before, and could again. Seo. John Tov.•er, (R-Tex.), who .like Goldwater is a member· of that com- miite,:, is \1io-orklng closely with· him in pressing~ for ena'ctmcnt· ot the ~etltff9 bill. So ' ts Sen .. Peter OOminick, (ft,. Colo.), another lnflu~tial ~s'ponsof al. the legislation. TllEY TOLD this co!umn, "There is 'no reason (pr further stitlling. nus: .bill · should be dispoae4 -of now and not later. .It is not generally realized, but Sen. Beall 1s one of the authors or the original measure as passed by'1be HoUse. IO: 1970, . as a member of that chamber, he wu on lhe special committee that ·drafted' tbe legislation. It ren\aim to.bt Hen whit Sen. Stennis think( and llQea aboul 'tba~· .. Th e decision to force action on the long-stymied retirees benefita: measure as an amendmeot to tbe giaot military pro- curement bill was made by Sens. Barry Goldwater, (R· Ariz.), and J. Glenn Beall, It-Md). Mr. Meany~ Sir, How Do 1· V.ore?·,· .. · · H[ don't intend to· wait 8ny longer,'' Goldwater told this column. 11We're going to see. this thing through oow. It's long overdue." "The · unjustillable protracted .delay In the consideration of this important legislation directly affecting close to a million .... veterans is inexplicable to me," aaid Beall. "It's Ume we put an end to it. I have said I wu going to put this measure through this year, and I mean it. It has wide bipartisan support in the Senate, as evidenced by the fact that 38 Republican and Democratic Senators joined me in spOnsoring this legislation. '!'bey are In lull accord with 111~ that further delay is unwarranted and m. defe:mlble." One of America's most talked-abo~ ,.....,., ---------...... ] voters i! Miny Moe and be'a in te1'ible A,' ("' : • shape. • -· ART HOPPE Thanks to George (Eeny) Meany, head of the AFL-CfO, poor Miny Moe does•'I "----------....J know whether he's coming or going. . Friends ·fear he may drink himself to ticket. death before election day. · .. But W1!<> .ever talkJ or11writes. a~ut ·. Aiready in this campaign, the experts The Socl.~!U:t • Laboi: Vote~. he said with have written millions of words about Moe a shrug. I d be a no~y · and bis crucial im-Moe reluctantly agrees· he's too old to portance to the out· . be The Youth Vote, too whi~e to be The Black Vote, , too Northern to be the Southern V Qle and too noisy to be The Silent Majorily Vote. . come. 'For Moe is, Of coU:rse, The Labor Vote. IN FAcr,,be has .but one opUon Jen. Dllring tbe pail 25 Pln"l1NG STENNIS on the spot in this .. yelµ'S ?.foe bas dis. manner fol'Ce3 him to either "fish or cut +i ...... 1 .. t...A hlmRlf as bait." UUfj~ being ·lhe' only He now faces three alternatives: American who voted .. . . . . . . "l've decided ttt he :·sa1d', -uaring his · I I~ shoulder;a,-!'\o be .The Daley ·Vbt!." . TIMI '. challenge· h e r • is -. uiat ._a1: though Mayor Daley endarsed . tbe .,,. tire. De.fuocratic ti(:ke;t, to th~ surprise. of t.he erperts , he didn't mention McGovern by ·name. · · · .' . uSpeaking as The Daley · Vote," said Moe, 1'it's going to' be·to~gh to'cart my ballot for a guy whose name· [ d611't ; know.-But with all the talk about The D8ley Vote,,somebody's got to:be it,".' Tbua, while Senator McGOvern has 'Josi · The Labor Vote, he's picked . up The · Daley Vote. SO, is you ·can plalnly·. see, he's come .out uac~ly even. ' (1) Accept the reUrees IW'Vivors In every election as Meany told him to. benefits bill as an amendment to the "Being The Labor Vote has beezt an To the Editor: , .. ----------... its s.......a .. overwt....1 .... 1 .... 8..,.....,,val. fi .,_ third beer p dd , Southern CAlifornia negiooal Av,iation . . • tbe Senate to vote on it -Illus ensuring lighting a cigarette wtth trembling pro ec r "-c ge 0 · e . .. . MAIL' B'OX· ·. military procurement measure and .allow awesome respomibillty," said Moe, A> ject dlr to In bar r th (' .··J. Credit Mayor Frank Ri2zo of 1'<"'Y ~=.. .,.. ngers over 1·~ at a Y 1 Systems Study, Conducted by William L. (2) Try t;O have the amendment thrown Place. "I had to be lukewarm when I · .. Pbliadelphla with clairvoyance. l)Jrlng EDITORIAL out on tbe -·"" ii ls not gennane to tbe led tw' r Ste od tel Per.ira Associatea and .System Develop. .,. _____ ..__..,.. ___ of' his elecllon campaign last {all, Rizzo of. &'......,.. vo ice or venson, m era Y men( Porporation for ··the. Southern · . fered this bleak appraisal of plans to liold '" procurement bill. Sens. Beall and cpol When 1 ca.st my ballot for Kennedy · California Association of Governments, l fiylng "':"'" at Brea and Capistrano.· an American'Re~olulion Bicentennlal Ex· RESEARCH Goldwater are prepared to demand a and red 'hot when I pulled the lever for wu eitremely disappointed by \he -. . . position In 1..,; CilY,o[ Brotherly Love in rollcall vote on that, and are confident Johnson and Humphrey. I'm _ lucky I ..,,ilorlal on the suhi'ect that.ap""ared In THE. REPO.RT acknowledga !liat tJ!e . ~ they can win bands-down. didn't catch my death of pneumonia. 'C\f Y"" projected growth of ge.neral aviation will 1976: "Tbey way li'is golng,'we•U have the Cambridge, Maas., consulting firm of (I) Offer to com--•·e with a the Pilot on July 21 ("Sorry No Aoswer · · '" . · · . police hand at Independence Hall' playing Arthur D. LitUe Inc. hanbly concluded: •·~~ "But with everybody lalldng about It, Yet") and W.uld like to .. Wte this •OP-· 'leV<\'tlY la• the -'eJtJsting· all'JlOl't 81\d the Star.Spangled Banner. and that will "The ARBC is critici>ed f..-oot havlna a categoric proml!e to bring up the somebody had to be The Labor Vote. And portwiity lo reply to two of the princ!Pal alrspace ·reoourco:sof O•ange Coonty and be It." program because it hasn~ had a pro-~~r1t1~~io~ ~':r.:"'.:.\~ \':ti:: ~;,~Ii:= I~ :1n~Y to ':~~r. this. criticisms it presented. . , ma9 require .aome:or tbe sport Tiylng· to The mayor's comment has .JO far gram. The ARBC is criticized for not First ol all, the editorial 1tate1 that the ""'.\:'"!ducted at airjiatks Jn ot!w c"'!": ' withstood tbe test of Ume. Although lbe being innovalive because ii hasn't been fall . MOE'S PRO.BLEM stems. noturally, report "did not add(ess ft&elf tO.fel'!l•lntr ;·U':itog~tbe ·, the· sciiiss study . i,, · Amerlca11 Revolution Bicentennial Com-innovative. The ARBC ia criticize<! for TIUS LAST stratagem . is considered from Meany's pronouncement that he the ·mue of incrtasllJrl preuure:tO u~ ~ .. r .• t . • .®I' misalon (ARBC) hBJ been in existence not taldog lbe lnitillive bec:a111e, until tbe most likely by Sens. Gold waler aod wouldn't deliver The Labor Vote to either pand jet Oighl8· out ol . Orange · Counly . op1plon, !UJOUSlll a~d < blrqilibly ti<· for six years, ~ bas little to show for !is recently, It hasn't taken tbe initiative. Beall. . McGovern or Nixon. Airport." On lbe contrarj<, the SCRAS$ . plor°!ntl>e, ·~h:l:!I"':· /h:bl~ :J... Orarrie . , efforts. The ARBC ii criticized for having low Their belltf is bued on backstage and "In fact,'' said Moe, glumly, 0 he didn't study ei:pressly recom.mendl,,UDder'i:po--as w ~1 · . 0 . .!' . •, ~· ·• ". Philadelphia exposition was to have staff morale because it-bas low staff other indications. say where the hell be was going to trolled conditions ~udlng .JMlsiengt:r ,lies thal ~mpr~ !he' ,st04Y ~rea •. .nq • been the centerpiect of the nation's 200th morale." Lateiy it has become evident that Sen. deliver me. Another beer, Paddy, If you procesaing at remote tel'IniJ?Bls, the· joint · we .do 119t feel lhat the report.•~ bh thday anniVersary celebration, but the Stennis is "displeased" by the vigorous please." use by commercial aircraft .of the Marlrie -rn~ndi~• •. 'and . the retean:b oa. which project was buried on May I, 1972, when m/!i!!', ~~c.n~=~R~:~ prodding In and out of Congress in behalf The loss of Moe's vote, tbe experts Corps Air Station •I El .'roro. ,• . , ·~ecC:r.:Y r:n:i:'!:w ":" -toljt .,' ·., the commission vetoed the only site the tered of the survivors benellts blll which unanimously agree,. will ~urt McGovern city could agree on -a swampy, po~ 1876 In Philadelphia aJao encoun mysteriously bas gathered dust In the far more than Nixon, aa The Labor Vote THIS COULD eventually entirely JAMEs Jl..l!INlt. ·m , · > I led tr 1 Philadel bl lnternatioo-problems. Sen. Qiarles 51Jmner (R,. Armed Servic" Committee for nine the ellmloate commercial air tralfle from . · . · · .' u . ac near P a Mass.) vigorous!,>; fought the project unlll bas traditionally gone to Democratic ·y· Airport and ·Indeed the . . • " al Airport. his death aiD't'ly before . 11 opened months. candidate. The question they are all ask· 11.. 11 that ,,.,:"' · ~: .. ", . • • .. Now · !'ha!? ARBC bas proposed' that . . ' It is known the Mialiliipplan got a ing is "Where will Tbe Labor Vole go ' } • v•-.~• ~ Y .. .. OU11H -commemos:ative park.I, costing, from $1$ Congress wi~. financial suppott unUI flood or critical mall following this col· now?': •. ~ , ' . ' In ~me ~ devoted · ex·· · · : '.;. milli<# to.$211 l!Pllion apiece, be built in the 1aat inoment, "'!d afterward 1ns¥ed ,lllJVl1' dllclOouie tllit lie...,_ lo -"'·1 don't ·i.;.,...". 'd M ,( •"" '•q. ~i!neral avialloa .. IJ should be • • • ' each of the 50 states. Congress, hownver, that tbe money was only a loan to, be • 1futthe~ dol_,,.the ~.iii-~ ,..,_ lhlnlcin 'ot ~otin oe .;-rG!.;r .1. 'i)O!~ -the SCRASS atudy doo_s not. • hasshollD' little enthullasm for tho Idea. 1>1id back. • · ' l el>nilderalion wiiil the Senate llJ..cloed of , Wall~ " J . BUlghQw p L· T~.OJ!lend \he establishl1)eot of •nY ,. • . · · .• , ·, That was-bad _,ugh,\ y•J ,\be strategic' arma llmfi~'lion tlfali!Mr'"M f"'-."te11m'!':.i!A/ ·!\!>I alrport ·ln'Orange .County. ·RobrrtN.•Wtt<l,.PubfUMr >, TllJi: COMMlllSl\1!1'11 dllficultlell ettm' ~phlo'o _.i..otennlal Q.111!• y a~""" , · • :::IJ • ' bill~ ~ inllead that t h o s·e • • · • In lal'IJ JIOrl from disaCreemenl~.( ~l..~lhl of 192tl "' ~ , Thit"1i11adi1aiincecr~-siiuarely • ·l:i!:ni': bUt l~ilfL~r::O, ~~nai. ai~ dy In uae "bi. utilized to TMlllOI Ke..U, rdieor · ' the nature of the bicellonnlal. 'To total dilaater. Ram fell on Ill o1 the~ ~l!dlcted an earlier promlae (to Beall experience that The Labor y.~-has their lllliest effectiveness. · Alb<rt W.'.Baki;: •• · radicals, ii is a COl11llllk<iaJ ripoff, a da)'I the fair wu open. M--. -' and Qoidwater) to late up the bill after always demo what be told me to. . The editorial a1ao 1U13ests tliat the . 'J;dltoriol Pogt'Uilor-• betrayal ol Ameri<o's true radlcal Inell-event loot 1111-fa,000 and t4tl,lltl • the proc ., >ent meaaure bad been acted lludy did not "tackle" the prQblem ol · • • lion and at tbe same time an opportunity -k and -the city more Ii"'!' '11 on.14 1 NOW THE EASY way out would be to private ~vlation In Orange County. 'Yet The ...iiiclri.I .._e ot ·Ille oinp-· to revive it.'' EUgene L. Meyer noted In million In 1 ..... and capital outiaya. Stennis is very touchy about his follow Mr. Mean>"• enmple. He aays he this subiect also Is dealt with In ·con-,Pilot.._...., to Jnlom..., • .._ · The Washingtoll Poot. "To black crllica, Despite auch Inauspicious precedents, preropUves BJ chairman of the powerful isn't going to vote for either McGovern alderable detail. • _. . . lat• ~ II>' ·iinwnuna: tlilt It la a mockery o[ freedom long denied Prealdelli Nixon appeara confideiJI that Armed Servic,. Commlitee. Inside word or Nixon. But if I don't vole. then I won't Among other C<11Ciusions, tbe· ttport·. =~·i.$:'; ia;'..t":i • •. and history too lon1 untold. To olcl-tile bicentennial wlll prove aucceulul. In is be is lntlm•tlns he would consider it a be The Ljlbor Vote any m0tt. And to tell · recommends the u,. of Loi Alamil.. •l•nlfioa11«>,·by Jll'O•!din( • ,,,.,.. • fub1oned Dag-wavers, It Is an exercise in a JWJ 4, lm, radio addrtu from Sin pereonat reflection If the retirees bill ln the truth, I kind of lib beina 10 much ln Naval Alr $l.uon r0t 1ene:ral avlal.iorJ -!~~}:!. ~~bybl ~=;..,.aw' &ell-<ongratulatlon. To partisan crltlca, tt Cltmenlt, be laued an "unprecentend .aect, were forcibly taken away 1.:.m the public spotllchl-Malra that a wblch alone could _,odate. •P-div~'!~~ .. Oflnl 11 ..,_ b ' Nixon campaign gimmick. To non-lnvlt&tlon to the -Id" to Ticllt the the committee and written loto-the pr.. boilermaker, Paddy." proximately 1000 ~lvate all'l:rall -In . .-.. •nd •"""-"' ..., partlson °""• ii Is a time for aober United States In tm. curement meaaure u an amendment Despite his yeara of -to botnc addition to Fullerton Munlclpol Airport oe iht-41<11, • natlooal ressaeaam<nl." He upresaed hope that • IDICI)' u II ' The Labor Volo, Moe ii i10W «ad'lsrlag and M-wtark lJ\ H\Jfllinltoft Beach. It • ·. ' ' Still, the commlsaton Itself ts nol million lorelpim would accept the In-APPARENTLY lbla would miff Slenols vart..,. allernatlves. Al one po!J\t be even also urges the atabllshment or alrpark1 Fr:t4ay, July 28, 1971 ' • without blame. A study by the mpected vltatlon. no end -imlpectlve ol the merlta and thoulhl of voling Ibo Socialist-La bot -for lnstructlalal and ~~l .._ __ . _. ·-'----.,.....:. __ ._, .. I .. .. . r . I I 1 I , . Jet Parts , Rain Down On LA Area "" I.OS ANGELES (UPI) -II ralntd j~t plane .P8rls -up to a Ion of. thi!m - Th1'rsda)r oo the Sunle~ Strtp, Beverly · RIU. and West Hollywood. TberO were no nporll of tnjwy or aerloul damage. A Chunk •atlmatad to well!~ 500 pounds, •n4 ....... hot, =led 'i'n~ the lawn of. a Bo""1Y llDt e. A Chan1c detcrt1*1 by • oherilf'1 deputy .. "lhe 11,. of a 'basketball" cruhed onto Sunlel Bonlevard, ''There WU I ~ clank" outatde' her olllct,.asld Gloria Lund and Ihm on the pavement waa '!'hat kioked like "• bundle Of pipes tied tocether." "II wu jult bow)dnJ there In the 1treet wben I looted -.,• obe said. J\)lm Bradley WU drlvln1 OD the Sunlet Blrlp. . · l'I wal In ~ left !um lane ••• and all . el a.sudden I 'hord· a oound -a crab ~ Unlde -and I uw two plec .. ot metal In the ltreel.11 bounced a llttle." The debril came from · one di.sin. legratlng tllll!!e of. a Continental Airlln<t DCIO wblch lil<! jult 1aken oU from Loi Angelu lntomatiollal Airport Io r O!ICllO• Tiie plane WU cmyfJ111 ll.! preons. ~ "Tiie whole right 1\de of the plane begl!I to -.," said paaaen1er Bruce Marki, 19, of Oeklawn, Dl. HIJ Dl(lther, Mra. Fred Marki, uld 1he waa in "•· ttate of lfJDllhock/' but other puaengera uld the ezpertence was not aJarm!ng. 'Ille Markles laid a crewman notl!led the pe1aen1m thal the tall engine bad been lost, but the plane could fly with no \rouble on the two remaining wing- mounted eneines, and was returning im· mediately to the Loi Angeles airport. A 1pOkelman for the airline aald the pilot, Ctpl. lloberl Gian, WU altrled to \be problem '!'hell the trouble Indicator J11hl far Ibo tan engine l1aahed cm. Loi Anleles county sherlU's deputies and Beverly Hilla pollce. gathered up the dabrll. J)oputy Cur\11 Howard, who llW jha ..,.ma dillnlelrale, eollmatad 41 to ~ ,_ loll lfltlilD a fow'mlla radius. Coeds File Suit In BoQkret Ban RIVERSIDE (AP) -The • U,I ,...,,,.._ OFFICER TOM JENSEN, LEFT, STUDIES JAGGED METAL IN YARD Ho~nu Jock Paul Altoilndecl at Hugo Chunk of Jot Bill to Aid Poor Schools Approved by Assembly SACRAMENTO' (AP) - A Ia st-dlleh effort to provide property la• relie! and pump more . dollars into poor school dlstrtcll aalled llirough the Assembly l'buraday. The measure by Allemblyman Di.Ion Arnett would put half of. all the money raised by local school lue• into a com- mon stat.wide pot. II would then be redllt.rlbu~ to districts on a Oat per- cblld grant with additional state money \brown In. That would bave the effect of equall>- ln1 the dllf~rences between dlslrlcll with high and low assessed value over a five- year pba,..ln period, the Redwood City Republican said. Arnett urged passage of his meuure as ''.an instrument" . for property tax rellef and school finance re!orm. II con- tains no appropr~tion In the form ap. proved by the Asltmbly. ed Wednesday in the Senate Finance Committee. • "The Senate'.s actlon yesterday still bas me In shock. I don'I thlnt Ibey knew what they were doing," Bagley, a San Rafael Republican, said in urging ap- proval of Amett's bill. The measure moved to an uncertain fate in the Senate on a 6f..8 vote. Amett's m~ "sure does move a Jong way down the trail" to meeting the State Supreme Coort's Serrano vs. Priest decision, Bagley Did. The COUrl ruled in the Serrano case thal local property lues for school sup. po r I unconstitutionally discriminate against chlldren In dlstricll with low assessed valuation by making fewer dollarl available for their education. Air Pollution Panel Said Doing Good Joh DAILY PILOT 5 Tax Plan Has Chance • As~enibly Leaders To ·T~y Reviving Bill ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly leadera gained another chance today to revive \heir fL2 blllloo school finance-ta x reform ,deal with Gov. Reagan alter Ion> Ing a one-week exteo.slon of the 1m leglllativa .... 1on on the Senate. ' Democratic Aasembly Speaker Bob Morelli hinted strongly that be would hi- jack a ~ million Senate-pasud school propo'81, write the compromise blll Into It and send It back to the upper house tor another showdown. The Seiiate passed lbe stop.gap l900 million school bill by Sen. Ralpb DiUJ on a :zs.a vote Thursday alter a day of clOled-door negotiations that ended with an agreement to fight tor another week Instead of attempllng to recess Frldsy. Behind the maneuvering were attempts by Moretti and the Republlcan governor to revive their tax reform-school finance compromise~ The Senate Finance Com· mittee killed that bill on a 7-6 vote Wednesday and passed the Dills measure In Ill place. The Dilla bill, which Moretll called a "ridiculous" substitute for his plan, would raise the state sales tax one tent per dollar. Thal would raise !600 million, leaving the measure $300 million out of balance. The Moretti·Reagan plan also includes a one cent sales tax increase and new state money for schools, but the similari· ty ends there. That plan would also hike stale business and Income tues across the board, lncreaae state aid to local schools by $509 mi1lloh a year, give homeowners property lu cull Moretli estimated al $200 a year, and order voter approval for most future property tax rate increases. The batile over the two measures sparked a bitter exchange between Moretti and his Democratic counterpart in the upper house, Senate President pro tern James Mills of San Diego. Mills criticized the MoreUl·Reagan compromise for failing, he said, to either help schoob or relieve tu pressures on the poor. He added that Moretti left Senate leaders out of his negotiations with Reagan because "he thinks I h a I magnifies his position In tbe Callfomla polltlcal acene .•. It mates him appear be ls leader of the Democrats.'" Morelli replled In an interview, "I fully expected some aucb statement from Sen. Mills, because as the pressure builds be siarts to make unreasonable statements." Another part of \be battle on the school proposals surfaced In the dlopute over a three-month recess begfnnlnl th I s weekend. The Senate approved the recess two weeks ag•, but Moretli held 11 up in the Senate to relaln barc•lninC power for Senate action on hia lu bill. Neither the Senate nor Aasembly can recess for more than three daya without permission ol the olherbouu. Moretti finally announced Thursday, after houri ot closed-door negoUations. tbal Senate lesdera bad agreed to a delay of the recess untU Aug. 4 and that they bad aloo promised there would be at Jeut three more meetings of the Finance Committee, where douns o! Assembly blllJ !Qcludlng the lu plan are bottled up. Justice Douglas Okays Papers Trial Hearing LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Supreme Court Justice WUllam O. Doug)a.t .agreed to hear today a reques! from defenae at· torneys that the Pentagon Pepera triel judge be ordered to reveal detalls of a federal wiretap. Douglu, who was attending • judicial conference in nearby Pasadena. when contacted, directed \be attorneys Thurs- day night to present their case to him in Yakima, Waab. Police Chief Facing Justice ANGELS CAMP (AP) The police chief of this gold rush town found himself on the opposite side of justice when he was sentenced by a local Oorl!l to the county jail for contempt of court. Jack Whiting, 33, Angela Ctmp pollce chief for the past year. resigned u chief after the Oorist·judge, Marvin Sbupe, lin- ed him $250 Thursday and sentenced him to two days in jail after· he failed to answer two summonses to testily on a traffic arrest and drug case. Shupe aald be !ell the Anget..-Murphy Judlcial Court was not receiving proper respect from Whiting. The only other man on the police force of this community of 2,400, Jim Wadsworlb, wu named acting chief by tbe City Council, which had ordered Whiting to resign or be fired. The hearing was set fcrr 7:30 p.m. (EDT). The layers for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Ruaoo falled Tuesday In their ef- fort to get such an order from a federal appeals court, and so carried · their case· to Oougla&. Tbe wiretap dispute has held up tbe start of arguments and testimony in the much delayed trial or Elbberg and Russo. They are charged with the.ft, con· spiracy and espionage for actioM they took in making publlc the classified Pen- tagon study ol the Vietnam War. The dbpule conctrnS wbal the Juslice Department says wss a legally autbori<- ed wiretap in an investlgatk>n that has no connection with the case. The govft'l)o ment says someone connected with the defense placed a call to a legally tapped phone and was overheard by federal agents. federal ~ II befJ1ll IUed by a """" <I Untventty el Clllfornta coeds hart wllo were nfusecl pannllilqn by the paalmuter to pWl 1,tOO cop1el ol • 47. -bootlet on blrlb control to women Uv11111 oU-campus. Tbe lull II llefnC bandJtd, by Ibo Center for Low In Ille Public ~ a Loi Aqelca pulillc law !Inn wblch hopea to belp .\be -atudenll overturn a federal taw wblch prOlilbits the malling o! abortlall and birll\ conlfol in!onnatlon, "In facl, It may be the only lnlltumenl for achoo! finance and prwerty tax refonn," he said. "lt seema to me we're In U.·Jinal inning of the IDOll imporlant ball Pmi we're playing lhla year -Iha\ of properly lu rdonn and achl>OI flllan- cig.g." . The basic theory of equalizing the wealth of school cli&trlcll ia the same as tbat of the $!.% bUlloo lu package back- ed by Gov. Reagan and Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, said Asoembl!'llllD Willtam Bagley. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Anleles eoUn!f Air PolluUon District ia doing ID ucelleol job, a stale in- V~~V~ L ~ teal'Jl concluded ~ . a ~ prellininary stu~Y.· · Membera of the university'• Aaoocllted Bludonta, bouil!I the Ullll\rated pbam- llhlel from atudenll at McGill University In canada and dislrtbuted aboul 1,500 The Resgan-Morelll proposal was lull- However, the st.ate Air Resources Board report aald Thursday \be APCll could improve its monitoring and irt- spection operations, its public relations, syatem o! legal couruiel and Ill en- forcement capabilities. ~oncampus. Jail Guards, Profs May ' Get Raises SACRAMENTO (AP) Prison guard& and college tescbera would get $le.I million worth o! piy raises on blllJ meeting legislative ap. proval, bUt the gsp between good lnlenlions and cold cash b stlll wide open. One '5 million appropriation for prison guards went to lbe goveroor's desk 'I'hlll'lday. Another '21.6 million for teschers In bigber education advanced from the Senate and II awaltinl acUon In the Aaemhly. Tbe guarill could wind up with a total raise of about 15 percent over lut year'• pay, and the teschers could get 13.1 percent more than tut year. Poor morale was cited in both cues as reasons !or the raists. The raise for prison guards and IOme employes ol tbe caJJlomla Youth Authority aalled through the As"mbly without opposition. T h e leglslatora acted 1wiftly after rteent strike rumbllngs from the California Slate Employes Aasociation, which repenents the culrds. lfi'S BE FRIJIDLY U ,,,. hive new nclshbon OI Jcnow ot. anyone movlna: to our aree, plMae tell ua • that we mq extend • flllndlT --and btlp !ham to lle<UM acquainted lalbeW-~ 1 Ir.;;;;;;;~ Otl1y Coast ~SoutJierri Qffors • 63 Guarante~d Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art Llnklttter Th• Insiders Club: A new way to beat Infl ation. 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