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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-02 - Orange Coast Pilot. ' • -.. ' • r1-me 0 .. • County ,W 01nan-H -as \ ' . . . • Gasoline. Shortaa&e Lnek· ·of the Irish Driv~ Costa Mesa -Wins 5129~000 ,To U of Propane I . • ·. I I MONDAY AFJERNOON, JULY 2, 1973 (_ VOL. 6f, NO. llJ, 1 SECTIONS, .a PAOl!.S Refle~ting Fun Increases Posted Coun.ti.aii Wins Violations Banks ·up Prime Lend Rate to 8% Sweepstakes I An Orange County woman \\·on first place and approximately $129,000 in lhc Irish sweepstakes to- day . l\fartha A. Cannis of 8 4 1 Cedarwood st., La Habra, had her lucky ticket riding on Wea\·er's Hall, a horse that paid 20,000 English pounds to \Vin. Denied by Pe11tago11 · \VASHlNGTON (UP IJ -The Pentagon said today the level of U.S. bombing in Cambodia has been intensified in recent days, but denied that the move violated the spirit or a compromise agreement with Cong ress to halt U.S. military ac· li\•ily in Indochina by Aui;. 15. .. • < ' J:.'-., • 0.llY ,.llol Sl•ll l"Mto 11'1 Rlchlrd K•ellltr Blonde .and tan Cindy De Mott of Newport Beach, reflects on the joys of bei,ng 17 and of being on the beach during this summer of '73 along the Orange Coast. Rock and Roll Payola Charges Hit Promoter From Wire Services A federal grant!. jurY investigating charges of payola in the recording in- dilstry has subpoenaed Ille ~ents of a. Los Angeles rock and roll promoter, the New Yor k Daily News reported l<>- clay. • ··The newspa~r in its New Jersey edi- lion identi~ied the promo.l~r as Robert Price, president of R .. J . Price Corp., and ii.id he has been ordered to produce lhe ritaterials for the grand jury Friday. ' Price was not Immediately available ... comment. f P.rfce;_according_t.o the News, respond- td with -''What invesl.Jgalion ?" When feached in his Los Angeles office. · -The grand jury has-que s ti o n ed recording tndustry officials from the New York Citf-metropolitan area. ,.The News said the panel specifically wants the documents of pa,ymen ts, oor- ,...xidence and publicity material tilating to the a~arance b).' the singing ,.oup~ "The Sequllis.'' a a rOCkTndroll concert 11t the Los Angeles Forum last April. · The grand jury ls.Jnvestlgatiog allega- tions that disc jockeys received payola in (he rorro of cash, cars~ narcotics and -.,arty girls for pluggjng cc rt a I n · r<e0rdiogs. Thorough ln·house probes by major ttCOl'd firms have been urged by the bead or their trade group. •tr am confident that these charges do ool accurateJy renect thl!: b{!ha vlor or tho tast majority ol companles and ln- tltviduals in our Industry," said Stanley !\1. Gorti kov, president or the Record ing Industry Association of America IRIAA) in a statement released today in Washington. ' "Nevertheless~ over the past f~w weeks, I have been-1,1rging the chief ex- ecutives of many Of our member com- panies to conduct thorough in-house in- vestigations to make certain that all their operations are conducted on a legal and morally sound basis and that ap- propriate action be taken agahlst of- fenders," he said. A !ederal official connected with ijle grand jury has indicated that underworld figures have forced singers and groups to hire them as agents, but didn't reveal " (See ROCK, Pqe 2) PENNY PINCHERS SA E YOU ~ S Daily P)lot Penney1Pincher ad5 can sell alm06t anything. LOok: how this advenlscr did It: \ CE DA R shakes No. I grade, 8 bundles + various pieC1?S of lumber, $50. (Phone No.) Everj'thing was 30ld thanks to a "good called rcspcme'1 to this ad. Pinch yoor peonies with a.Pilol.Plncher classified ad -3 lines, 2 times, 12. Call 642-5678. NEW YORK (AP ) -Nµmerous major banks, acting on the heels or Federal Reserve Board steps aimed at cooling monetary expansion, raised prime lend- ing rates toda y from 7~~ to 8 percent. The moves, which Collowed the lead o[ Philadelphia's Gerard National Bank, marked the eighth general 1/4 percent in- crease this year in the minimum interest fee cha rged by banks on Joans lo large co rporate customers. Some financial analysts predicted that the record prime of 8~2 pereent set dur- ing the 1969-70 credit crunch soon may be eclipsed. Among the dozen or more banks posting increasel this morning were Chase Manhattan, . the country's thi rd la rgest, and two New York banks, Chemical and Franklin National. as Y1e\I as such large Cllkago banks as First Na· tional Bank, Northern Trust Co. and the Harris Bank. . _Bankers said the moves would not af- fect rates on loans io smaller businesses or on consumer borrowings, including mortgages. Girard's annou ncement of an Increase in its prime came Friday night, shortly after the Federal Reserve Board raised its discount rate from 6~ pe rcent to 1 pe rcent and increased reserve re- quirements for member banks. The discount rate is the interest charg· ed by the Jo'ed on loans to member banks. Recent increases in it liave raised the cost hanks must pay In tapping one of their primary sources or funds· with which to do business. 1t1eanwhile, the dollar weakened again in Europe today, despite moves late last week that were supposed to help the U.S. currency. Th e dollar droppe(! sharply j n Frankfurt, Zurich and Paris. It inched ahe_ad in London. Dealers said, however. that trading was slow at the outset. There were no ea rly-signs oim6ffeiiiry CriSis. ""- Gold, which often moves erratically • • 2nd Kidnap Reported BUENOS AIREs (UPI) -Polle< loday reported the weekend kJdna p of a Ruma- nian real estate broker, Pedro Fiks, 62, foUoW\ilg the release Sunday or 11-ycar~ old Oscar LapajuOter. The boy's parent! said he was released on the road to La Plata , about 30 mll e.s from Buenos Aires, artcr payment or an undlscloscd ransom. higher in limes of monetary uncertiinty, was unchanged in London and Zurich, the ll\'O biggest ma rkets, in ea rly trading. TI1e mark y,·as revalued upward by 5.5 percent against seven European cur- rencies last week, and interest rates in the United Slates were raised, Both moves should have helped the dollar t<>- day, but instead the decline continued. On Wall Street stock market prices re· mained sharply lower and drifting at midsession today amid investor concern over the rising interest rates and tight money. The Dow Jones average of 30 in- dustrials at ti a.m. (PDT) was down 8.21 at 883.50. On the New York Stock Exchange, declines led ad vances by 2 to I. 'Sex Not Needed' On Space Fligl1t NE\V YORK (APJ -Astronaut-physi- cian Joseph P. Kerwi n says he doesn't think sex in space trave l is necessary, even on a "really long flight." . Asked in a .television interview Slftlday if women astronauts were essential, the Skylab I astronaut said: "IC you're talking ~about the se x aspect, 1 don't think it's mandatory." He noted men had spent lengthy ex- peditions in the Arctic and on the ocean without female companionship. Devil Made Him Do It? The long-haired yowig man in the ~na Beach Christian society · thi-ifi $hop !urned to Ole littlC old lady clerk and asked Jf there were ··any long black silk capes. He e:rpt~carefully that he was a member of a devil cult. and needed the black cape for a very important ceremony Sunday night. The clerk called polJce. Officers checked ·out t h e "suspicious person" and determin- ed he had done nothing wrong. He changed his storY arid told them he needed the cape for a play. At Friday's rate of exchange this y,·ouJd make the Orange Countian's .,..·innings about $129,000. ... Shortage-of Gas Driving Mesa T_ o Propane V se By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI The gasoline shortage is dri\'ing Costa r.1esa's fleet of city vehicles to propane. Cily !\tanager Fred Sorsabal will seek an appropriation of $9,600 tonight_for the conversion of 19 more tru(.'ks. pickups and ll'lility vehicles to liquid propane gas. The city council "''ill take action on his request at 6:30 in city (.'Quneil chambers, 77 fair Drive . Sorsabal sai d th is morning that although propane is also a crisis-affected petroleum product , su pplies to the city can be guaranteed. Gasoline ·supplies cannot. . ~ Costa l\fcsa began converling some of ·its vehicle"S to the cleaner-bu ming . gas three years ago. Included In the first switch ~·ere street sy,·ccpcrs and small trucks. From those experiments \Vith pro pane Cost.1 Afesa officials lea rned that pnr pane was easier on tl1e engines and costs Jess, accordin g to Sorsabal. Gasoline costs the tity 20 cents per gallon Yo'holesale and propane J6 cents a gallon . Sorsabal said at the present lime there are no Plans to convert any of the city's sedans to propane although the idea ls befng studied. The ci ty manager added that it. is doubtful police squad cars would be converted since these are pr~ cured unde r lease. • Shutdown Hiul ctl PllTLADE~PlllA IAP \ -The Penn Central. the rallroad giant in the throes or bankruptcy proceedings, said Friday that without massive government help by October all its trains will stop "before the end of the year." Railroad trustees have tried 'unsucces.sfully for three years to reorganize the railroad which runs on 29,000 miles of trnck in 16 states nnd ty,·o Canadian provinces. A Defense Department spokesman, \Villiam Beecher. said there had been a more 1han 30 percent increase in the number of U.S. tactical air strikes since the middle of last week. • lte said there had been no cor- responding increase in the level of B52 bom bing. Before the increase, the daily bombing total included approximately 40 B52 strikes and 150 tactical air strikes. Beecher said since the step-up, the lac- tical air strike rate has run in the low 200s on most days. He refused to say "''hat the higbest level had been. Beecher said the reason· for the stepped-up aclh'ity \\'as a si multaneous clea ring of monsoon rains and increase in Comn1unist atle1np1.s to sever roads around Phnorn Penh. lhe Cambodian capital. Co ng ress and President Nixon reached a compromise agreement that Nixon signed Sunday to end all American military activity in Indochina -in- (See BO~IOING, Page Z). • Coast Orange Weather 1'1ostly suMy Tuesday following the usual earl)' morning clouds at , coastal areas. 1-Ugru; In the upper 70s at the beaches rising to near 90 inland. Overnight lows in the 00.. INSIDE TODAY Sanui Aita ract driver Swede Sat}(t{le died today oJ i11;urie.t Sttjfcrtd 111 a flami11g 1mashup during tilt Indianapolis 500-milt race i'fa~ 30. See story on Sp0ris, Page 20. • L,M, to,o 7 •o.11tl!tt n (Ollftl'ltil S CllHlll" ,._,. c-iu " C:,_11 It ~"' i'fetlq1 • R~~ '""• ' ·~•111"'9111 11-1) JllNI"• 14-IJ hi' "" ·k~ . tttreK'" It A1111 L .... tr1 11 Movi.1 l f N1lloni1 N•wi. t 011flff (IV!llP t '"''"" ......... '' 1"'1• tf.'tl 119dt MM'llttt l~lf '*""""' '' TJIN!w11 It W-·• Ntw1 11•11 W..-IC NtWl t • '\ • • ' ) I ' I I ; 1' I '' I • ..__: .. :.:•::l:_'.:.'.:.'l=0:.:1 ____ s:._ _____ _cMc.:;Olldaw, J111~ 2, ·1q13 Hollywood Hit By T·emb'lor -l--llOl.l.Y.WOOD...{Ul!J L-.A. mild earthquake today rattled dishes but ·apparently caused no damage. The quake occurred al 8:48 a.m. • ind had a preliminary reading or 2.4 on the Richter Scale, according to U1e Seismology Ulbo<a!XlQ' al Caltech In Pasadena, which SI.id it -was cei:itcred ln the Hollywciid area. Th~ tremor v:as felt as tar away as Culver City where It W33 de'scrlbed by one resident .as a •·very little earthquake. It rattled dishes, shook mirrors and lasted about 10 seconds ... Coen Named ·-=Hy,ntington · ' Man of Y eci,r City Councilman Al O:>en -eaught speechless tor one of the rcw moments In his public life -Saturday was hoOOrerl as "Citizen o{ the Year" in HuntingtO{l, -TtM?'"'35--yeru:-o1d Coen is the eiglith wit}· rier of_the a..,-ard, presented annually by the Huntington Beach HOME Council, a coalition of homeowners associations. 1be award was presooted Saturday ntght duririg the HOME Council's luau banquet at Sam'$ Seafood Restaurant. AbOut JOO residents attended. M be accepted the award, Coen ad- mitted be couldn't· think of an~ to MY eicept a brier "thank you." "l rally Celt just the oominat~ was enough, because all of these people are cube.anding citizens. I'm really SW1lrb- ido!' be did say. - Coen was first elected to the City CouncU 1n 196§ and re-elected in 1970. He served as mayor twice , in 1969-70 and a.gain Jn 1972-73. He was nominated for the HOME Oxmcil honor by the Chamber of Com- merce, of which his law partner, Jerry Bame, ii pr.?sldent. -.A special selection committee, ap- Poinled by the HOME Cowicil. picked U1e winner frun nine nominees, based on a· list ol qualificatioos and pest civic ac- • l!Yitles •. 1be eight other nominees included Pat Downey, Jack Feehan, Janey Kodi, -M<Y<T~Bobby Murphy, Prim 9'ea. · Katherine ~allin , and Bruce WUliams. • Mayor Jerry Matney presented Coen --"...-• key to tile city, quipping that he ' didn't know whal a six-year COUJl(':il veteran woold do with it. "I never had one before," replied Coon. «:oen and his wife, Felicia have three r children, Josh, 7; Jeffrey, 5, and ?.lark, .22 months. Remorseful Rape S~spect 'Guilty' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man known jo autboriUes as the 0 Remorseful Jlapist" has pleaded guilty to three cumts: of rape and tv.·o or burglary. Edward David Apodaca, 32, offered the plea in Superior O:>urt at Van Nuys. Police said his victims were San Fernando VaJley housewives who allowed Apodaca to enter their apartments after be told them he was a survey taker. The victims told Investigators their attacker apologized to them. He is scheduled ror sentencing July 3J. 56% Ct·ed it Press NEW YORK (AP) -By 56 lo 18 per· cent, a majority of Americans believe that if it had not been for the press ex- poses the W'atergate M:andnl would never have been Wlrovered, the Louis Harris survey reported today. And by 59 to 12 percent, most Americans believe that "in . exposing the facts about Watergate, the Washington Poet and other newspepen have been an example of a free press at · il3 best," Harris said. OIAJIM COAST ST Clemente Swearing-• ID . . . . ·Today f o,r Schlesin:ger -~ President Nixon was scheduled to be on hand rn San Clemente today when James R. Schlesinger lakes his oath us secretary of defense. •Judge Spencer \\'illiams of the U.S. Dist'ric.'l Courl of Northcn\ Galifomia \Vas lo administer !he oath in Nixon's office. &hlesinger. 44 . replac.'CS Elliot L. Richardson in the Pentagon post. Richardson is now attorney general. Quiet Rei.gtas Schlesinger. a.rormcr chairmanOf the Atomic Energy Commission, directed l he~ Central Jn~lUgcncc Agency for I o u r months this year. I-le stildied economiC!'I al Harva rd, taugh t 'at the_ Uitiversity of Virginia, worked at the Budget Bureau . and -A'as associated at Qne time with the Rand Corp. "think tank" in Sant a Mooica. This statue by a quiet pool is part o( the 200·acre coiD.plex that houses the R·amakrishna MQDa$tery and its eight American monks. Not far from the Lake Forest, El Toro and Mission Viejo developments, the tting in Trabuco Canyon is one of peace and contemplation quite ike the nearby urbanization. (Story and pictures on Page 3). Council to Discuss ..... ~ Meado,vlark Course Fate The future of 1'.1eadowtark Golf C.oorse will be discus.sed tonight in closed1 ex· ·ecuuve ses.5ion by Huntington Beacti city councilmen. • Councilman Henry Duke said this morning he and City Administrator David Rowlands would present a pro- posal to preserve the golf course during the closed session. Duke said he could not reveal details of the proposal because it would violate the executive session nature of the meeting. B1iton Charges Hugl1es Favo1·s Executive sessions are allowable only for personnel matters or pending I~igation. The council's regular meeting starts at 5 p.m. Tonight is the last chance -barring any special CO\Ulcil meeUng -the city will have to make a decision on lhe 96 .> acre country club. Owners or Meadowlark have given the city until July 8 to make an o[fer on the Warner Avenue goU course, or else it will be sold to a housing developer. The reported price tag on the course i.1; $4 million. Rowlands and other city or- ricials have admitted they don't know ex- acUy how the money can be raised. One possibility is seeking another golf course operator to take over Meadowlark He Is ll"natlve of New YorKCity.--. ife · won a Senate confirmation last Thursday by a 91--0 vote. In Sunday activity. the President sign- ed a bill lnCreasing Social Security benefits by 5.6 percmt neit year and at- tempted to assure both businessmen and housewives of as short a price free-le as possible. In a radio address broadcast Sunday, Nixon said, •·we have been dete~ from the outset to keep the freeze as short as possible'1 -an indication he may disclose his new economle· game plan oerore the 60-day price freeze ex· plres on Aug. 13. Nixon said.-a temporary ·freei.e on. all except raw food prices at the farm level "'as necessary because it is "vital that w,e have gC11uine consultations with a Wfde range of interested parties before launching Phase 4." He said these ~ sult ations have begW1. Nixon said, "The many measures we · have taken to increase the supply of Cann commodities -including the release of more than 40 million additional acres for ·farm production -·will even- tually bring more farm products· to the market and will provide relief against high food prices." Acknowledging that the freeze has led to inequities, Nixon i'1id it also can create inflationary scarcity. He said, "We have seen this. for ex- ample, in the fact that some broiler p~ ducers have had to kill off baby chicks because they could not afford to pay the high feed prices and still sell the broilers al lheir ceiling prices ••• "For this reason, we have been delennined from the outset to keep the fn;eie as sliorl as poosible." - Nixon said problems or scarcity forced him to embargo exports of' soybeans, "which are especially critical to tbe s0lu- tion of the feed grain shortage, and therefore. to bringing down the price of meat and dairy products." Asking Congress anew for broad authority to control exports of Cann cOm- modities, Nixon saw such controls as temporary and said: · ''When this year's crops become available in the fall, we expect to be able to restore international aceess to these i;>roducts. During the brief period when controls are necessary, we shall do all · 1hat we can to insure that our traditional customers suffer as little as possible, and we shall keep before us our continuing goal of. progress toward more in- ternational trade, rat.her than less~· , 'Ibe soybean controls came as a particular shock in Japan, lhe principal U.S. export market for soybeans. Nixoo sa.id food scarcities had been ag- gravaled _by unusually poor weather for crops and livestock. But he said output is now rising, prospects for this year are gt'flera lly good and the wheat crop is ex- pected to be the largest on record . Tfte Social Security bill will mean t.hat persons who eam at least $12,600 an- nually will have to pay' <lJl additional $35.10. • The Social Security raises-, included in legislation extending the national debt ceiling of $465 billion to Nov. 30, take ef. feet next July I. Uncier the bill , average benefits will in- crease from $161 to $170 a month for single persons and from $277 lo $293 for couples. Guaranteed federal minimums under Special programs for the aged, blind and disabled also will be upped July 1, 1974, from $130 to $140 a month rot single persons and from $195 to $210 for coo pies. At the present time, the 5.85 percent Social Security payroll tax is applied to a maximum wage base of $10,BtXl. Under previous legislation. the base was to have increased to ·$12,000 on Jan. I, 197<1 . Under the hill signed by Nixon on Sun- day. the maximum wage base will now j,11mp to $12.000 on Jan. l. BOMBING· ..• Senator's • • Drunk Case duding the bornbq tn Cambodia -on Aug. 15. The Pmkl<nl agreed to the compromise In the face of demanda !rpm both 1iou ... o( Congross that the bombing be Mlted. "The Administration 13 an.xiolls to~ · G p h · elude a' cease-fire in Cambodia," Qts ro e Beecher said. '"lletwcen .this time ano • b Aug. 15, the Administration sUll Intends lo. try to use !'ts euthority tor bombing, __ _ to COnelude a cease-fire which s PHOENIX, A~fz. (AP) -'Mar icopa !!Oll1etblng the C.OOgress is as anxious lo County Alt!:_ Moise Berger said today he see as the admlnistratlon." Prcsld~nt Nixon signed the legislation ordered a grand jury investigation into at San Clemente to tialt all U.S. military lhe city's handling of a drunken driving action in Indochina by Aug. 15. charge against Sen. Paul Fermin fRs He served notice Sunday he will seek A · ) r1z .. new war-making powers 11 he thinks they Fannin was arrested Jast November in are needed to wln an lndochina peace. · Phoenix and charged with driving while In signing the · compromise measure. in.toxicated after he submitted lo a the President said : "The last remaining breathalyzer test. element d the peace in Southeast Asia is However. the case was dismissed in ci· a stable Cambodian settlement ..• 1 will ty t'OIP"l after Fannin's attorney sub- cootlnue to lake the responsible action mitted medical reports indica ting the necessary to win that peace. Should senator was taking a prescribed drug at fur ther actions be reguired lo that end the time which would make the · lest later in the year, J shall request the resuhs inaccurate. Congress· to help us ac~eve our ·.Ob-Berger' .said that after reviewing . the jectfves." facts, be decided a grand jury should in· vestigate the case. Dana Point's Police Boat· Catches Fire Dana Point Harbor patromen didn't have to look fir to find a litUe emergen- cy action Sunday afternoon -their newest · resc ue-fire boat caught flre off Laguna Beach. Orange County Harbor Patrol Sgt. Raymond Graham said today the trouble started when the 27-foot patrol boat y,•ent to the aid of a smaller cralt caught in the sutfline off t.aguna's 1'.fain Beach late Sunday aflemooi: .. "For soffie unusua:] reason, the boat's radar mast snapped off and the wiring shorted out." he said'. "All of the'· in- sulation in the boat sinoldered off before· the power could be shut.off." While patiolman Ralph Hurrman and Robert While struggled with the lire boat, another patrol era.It ~ded toward the boat Jn trouble. But before rescuers got· near, the distressed vessel got its engine started and :;ped off into the sunsel · Graham said lhe fire on the fire boat nev'er broke into Open names and was extinguished when the master switch was thrown. The boat limped back to Dana Harbor on emergency power and was brought to Newport Beach fur "llQirs today, Graham said. "It's really Wlusual and unfortunate when IOllletltlttg like this happem to an ~ ....,._Gt·equlpmenl," Graham said. 0 But some ol the gear we use every day is the same as on pleasure bots used only once In a 'fibile." ' Frot11 Pllfle l ROCK ... names. And another source indicated that one record company may have u s e d organized.crime personnel to promote records to black-0riented radio stations througb.,payoffs and favors. Among eight persons indicted in February in Newark, N.J. on ct>nspiracy and smuggling charges was Pasqua1e Falconio, an agent for s e v e r a I performers under contract to Colwnbia records. In L<is Angeles, the district attorney's office has been Investigating the reported use of drugs by performers during recording sessions and on ct1ncert toun. And one former recording ct1mpany ex- ecutive reportedly has told investigators that his firm used payoffs to promote its stars and to bribe the publishers of tip sheets that are supposed to keep radio stations informed of the latest "hot" records. Berger inade hi s announcement in a three-paragraph report. to newsmen on a complaint fi led in March aga inst the ctty attorney's office, which asked that tbe charge be dropped. The county attorney said that his office examined the facts and interviewed persons familiar witJi. the case .. ·He indicated the grand jury would study the case within t\\'o montl\5. Farmin has consistently denied there was anything wrong with the \vay the case was handled. Berger declined to discuss the kind of charges the gran~ jury might consider, but added that there was substance to the allegations of the handling of the charges against Fannin. · Asked whether the investigation would be·hannful to his political career, Berger replied, ';Let's say that it won't help it any." · But Berger, also a Repu~lican, said that he had been unaer no pressure to soft- pedal ·the investigation, except thooe normally accompanying any inquiry into such a case. Berger saJd that the grand jury probe also would look into the cond uct or the three doctors who signed the certificate relating to the pi:>ssible influence or lhe drug "Xyloprine" on the senator's bloods alcohol content. The senator's blood-alcohol report in· dicated the content at .13 percent, three points over the .10 considered the presume level of intoxication for Arizona motorists. He also declined to 'discuss the possible l · charges a grand jury might return .. but., said that bribery probably would be can- sidered. "We looked into all the facts available and talked to about 17 persons," he said. "Jll all, we probably spent about 400 man hOurs looking into these facts before we decided that it was· a prop?r case to put before the grand jury." • He acknowledged that It was a "politically sensitive" issue and this may have had some bearing on the length or the investigation. But he also said there was difficulty in finding time !pr some of the witnesses and added that this con- tributed to the manhours spe.nt on the in- vestigation. Among those questioned was Fannln's son, Berger said. X-raLd M0vies Accotd Reached ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -1'Ianagers of 17 movie theaters have reached a volun- tary agr~ent with the district attorney to ban the showing of X-rated films in Albany County. The agreement follows the . U.S. Supreme C-Ourt.'s ruling that community standards can be used to determine what is obscene . Dist. Alty. Arnold Proskin had in- dicated, he would "start looking at Xs movies" and co1nmence crilninal action if they were deemed obscene. LO.i'IDON (AP) - A British legi slator has accused government ·officials ·or favoritism toward American mullirnillionaire recluse Howard 1-lughcs. wilh somo type of lea56' arrangement .. with the city. C-Ount'ilmen mlght also l ,..J!'~:""------------------:::;;~--------------------, Opposition LaOOrite Ted Leadbetter demanded an explanation for Hughes' mystery flight to Belgium and back to England Thursday to renew residence re- quirements. · decide to hold ll bond election to raise the money. DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•• C-1 DAILY f'ILOT, wtltl """"" .. ~ "'-,..._ ...... ,. It t'UlllllMd .... " One mystery or lhc flight was why 1-lughes made it. British officials said he needed ooly to write the Home Office to request renewal of his residence permit. They do feel there is public support for the city saving the golf course. Two v.·eeks ago. a.petition with 7,000 names or. it was handed to councilmen to show support for some type of action. J The city also conducted a random survey of residents which showed a high percentage in favor o1 preserving the old golf course, though many were not sure OOw it should be paid for . - "" a.. ..... .a.i·• ,.,.. ........ c.mJt.lny, ..... "'"' .. lliwlt .,. ""'41Med, MwiN-, "'""""" ,., ... .,, N• Cot14' M-, H ....... ~ H""'llllffM kldll"-i.111 V1llrf, 1.......,.. lhwl. lrvlNJhdllin.dl lllCI s.~ c...,.nM/ s.n Jvo" C.pltlr-A 11no.. , .. 1-1 9dltlorl It ~ltllW $.1,.,_.,. llN:I lvnll•Vt- r.,. prlnd .. I PllOIWlll'lt 11141111 h •I .. Wnl ••Y Slrett, Colli M-. C.ll/wf\!1, m1t. R11i1rf N, W1.d f'r•llllM ll'llf ,...I_ J1ck R. C111l1y Vk• ............... 0-•l Mii,.... Thom11 K11¥ll l:lilof" ' 1\•1'1•• A. M111rplrii111 M-11111 l:llMI' Ch•rftJ 'k. Looi ltich1rd '· Nell .f.Mltl111t~---lnil h llWo ....... t.Hi. "-1 »I w.tl ••y SlrMI Iii~ hldll mJ *!WJIW' .... _ .. ----~ IMCl'll m 111'-t A ........ '""""""-9"dll 1111! ._.. ............. $off! ,..,_,., • *""' 1:1 CIMll'll ltul ' Tet1,t1 s1 1714) MJ-4JJI ct W1A1 A40;1fl .. 641·1671 ._ ""'9t ..,.. ..... Ill ........... • ·4•1 ..... 11 ·-.......... c..ty CllWil ••• _,.., (#yrl;ftt, 1m.. Onf'lll CMit ..... "'*" ~t. HI """' l!lr1-, lllWlr...._ ..itorlll fMllw .. lfwrl~ .... -· .. ,..,.,._.. •!l'flWI ..-111 - ' "'"""' .. C!l4'Yl'lfllt -· 11n11111 ""' ... , ... .,.111 ll CD1l1 fl\"'• C.l"-nll9. "*""'!titltri 1¥ (.,rltr UM fTW!fl'lrf'I fW ...... U,IJ -"'!'It; f!lll!tvf ... IN hl• UM !Mftl!llf, • I • Leadbetter said he understood police and personnel at Stansted ·Airport northeast of London were Instructed to •'tum their .hacks" so Hughes could disembark from his charterL'ii plane unseen. Btll'glar Gains $9,000 in Loot A Co.Ma Mesa Investment. executive Jost_ nearly S9.000_ ~uth ol persoot1:l belongings 10 a burglar who cut a pelio door wtndow screen to gain entry to his home ovtr !he \\'ceketid. Anthony B. Ccnceni, of 120 Albert Place, told polloc the Ion included more than a dozen iCITl$ of men's and women ·s jewelry, The burglar Also took a .32 caliber automatic pistol whJch was among the $8,975 haul he carried of(. lnvestlptoT"S sald. . The largest indlvldually·vRlucd llem !tolen was B i t,000 1nan 's wrlstwalch, ac-· cording to Cenccnl's police r~port. _ . The loot Included a small electronic computtr and a .32 call~ t1utomatlc pistol. I Rowlands sajd he expects the councll to take some kind of positive action this week. "Even if it ·weren't a golf. rourse, the open space would be valuable." he said. Duke said the city has asked for a mc.--eling later this .week with the l\1cadowlark Golf Course COrp. to discuss the mauer. No time or place has been established. The corPorntion has so far relused to meet wllh city officials because the citr. has nol been able to make a definite o · fer. 1tfeRd.lowlark Is located on \Varner Avcnut. east. of Graham Strecl. The land Is curreoUy zOned for R~l (single famil y homes) dcvelopmen1. Escrow for its sale- has alaready been entered with S and S; and S ConstrucUon Co., with the tity's option to buy the only blockadt. That op- tion. ej[p\res July 8. · Pot Bill Supported . SALEM, Ore. (APJ -The Oregon Senate voted 1&-11 to reduce the max - imum penally to .a $100 fine for use of ma rijuana And for possessJ(Jl of less thlln one ounct. The lfOU$e prevlouiily passed UK! blll 41-16. The m<"!xl mum penalty noW i!'I a year in jail ana $1.000 fine. self.<leaning gas ·range ' L--~-s399aa ••• High-heat proc.., cleans everyihlng. JuslaetJhe dlal1, lock the oven door. All that:s left of the meealest spllloveti 11 a fine white ash that wtpe1 away. C.eant bk>ller 1patters • .100. Becauae the radiant brollltf' ii In lhe oven. AlhondywaJat-loYOI • . . continuous- cleaning gas ran<Je L---r--- l'lillliiiiJj~ 'IS'J.lJ111.J!J!Dli lf8 Speclally coated porcelaln oven llnera. Combl~e '#dth oven heat to work whenever yo u 'cook. Spellers fade away gradually during baking and roasllng. Oven tertds not to becomt".r1a1ty ·d1rty becaUse it Is continually be ing cleaned. 90 DAY· CASH With App,..vod Credit 1815 NEWPCRT BLVD. Dmtown Costa Mesa 5(8 -7788 • ( • \ .. Dilly Plitt Sllotf ,..... IN VERDANT TRABUCO CANYON, EIGHT AMERICAN MONKS MARCH TO DIFFERENT DRUMMER The Ramakrishna Monastery,• 200.ac·re Compl.'!x, Is Scene of Quiet Work and Contempl11tion · Serenity A111id A~tivity 1'--tr Hi1idu-related Vedanta Mon.ks in. Trabuco Canyo1i Bv ·.JAN WORTll • Of • 1111 Dally Pllot Sliltl Deep iil the ·green recesses or Trabuco Canyo n is a sanctuary unknown to mo~t suburbanites in the exploding ct.i'lture just outside. · It is the Rama!v'ishna !\1onastery, the home of eighr monks. all Alnerican. who ha ve chosen the Hindu -related life of work and contemplation within the Vedanta Society of America. 'A visit to the 200-acre complex next to O'Neill P 3rKiSa venture into a· world of quiet -quite unlike the nearby devt1\opments of Lake Forest, El Toro and Mission Viejo. . ........ A half-n1ile road leads from a solid wooden ga(e at the foot of Li ve Oak Can· yon .Road to the center cl1JSter of ~tucc;o buildings. _ When I visited there two weeks ago, calm seemed lo envelop the compound like a fragrant fog. ~ A brick archway smothered with bougaj nvillea is the entrance to the monas tery. Inside is a well·tended garden. a statue in the cross·legged meditation pose, and tprough the most distant arch. some mist)' canyQns. At first it seen1cd no one was there. The only sound s · wei-e sprinklers and birds. Finally, from an orderly workshop, a tall, lean ma!\ stuck out his head. Jt was Cli'Jt!Johnson, 42. a California native. ex·reporter for the La Habra-Star aiid UPI, and ex-college professor. Now he is a·brahmachari, or student of Brahmin. a Hindu concept or the true self. His given nan1c al the monastery is Bhuma. For eight years, he has lived there -attempting to cultivate his soul and purify away any thoughts but those or God. In three or four more years, he most likely wiU become a swami, a spiritual teacher in the gospel o~ the llindu saint Sri Ramakrishna and in the ancient Vedanta scriptures. Dressed in a plaid cotton sports shirt, tan pants, and tennis shoes, he hardly looked priest ly. He was polishing a smooth square or wocxf, a new placard Co1trt Dismisses Suit to Close . Atomic Plants · WASHI NGTON. D.C. -(BW) -The U.S. District Court here has dismissed the l::nvsuil recently brought against the Alomic Energy Com1nissioo by Ralph Nader and Friends or The Etirth, which sought 10 shut down 20 operating nuclear power plants including the one at San Onofre. The court found that the plaintiffs were urging an et,roneow; role of law and had falled to exhaust their administrative· remedies before the AEC. The court also pointed out that the AEC i-~ dischargi ng its sC.atuatory ..rcsp:in.sibiJity to protecNhe public safety through the inquiry it now is cooducting into rcac1or safety. The dismissal followed the granting or General Electric's petition to intervene in the lawsui t as a defendant. In filing its motion. General Electric urged the court 16 dismiss the N&det/Friends of The l!:artb action as'ground less. ·General Electric pointed .out that the AEC now Is engaged in an extensive regukatory proe«!dlng reviewing the ade-- 11uacy ol en1ergency core cooling systems '11nd th:tl a court review at lh\s stage is improper a& a mailer of law. , Divers FJuc~ Body • !JAKE CACIWMA (AP) -Dive" havo disa'lvtred the body of a·rourth man''i4'ho drowned .June 16 ln a 'boating accident) The body of Julius Rlchard!K>n, 24, of Ll>s· AnJtelcs "'BS found 1n about ~ reet of watu. The four drOWlled when lhcit boa t ·capsiied. ·~·"""·'· . ··•··. ·~ ' ' -"' ~ NEWSMA.N_TURifE'D MONK Brahmal:hari Clive Johnson for the monastery entrance. As a former reporter Johnson a~ parently took the responsiblity for the in· terview and tour. He did all the talking, a sort of mystical public relations man. Though the others ap1'fared fleetingly, they mostly went about their business. What is this unlikely haven for Eastern ways in the middle or conservat~ve · Orange County? The order was created in 1894 by the Indian Swami Vivekananda, a disciple of Ramakrishna. The monks do not wear habits in the U.S., but in India they shave their heads except for one lock. Each year Swami Vivekananda is honored by the Ramakrishna society on July 4 -the day he died in 1902. tl-1orc than 300 members of the Vedanta society and the public are expected Wednesday at an all-day open house and dinner at the Trabuco center. Vedanta, the philosophical basis for the Ramakrlshnas, gained popularity in the U.S. in the 1950s, when Johnson says many disgruntl~ western intellectuals couldn't find what they wanted. in Chris· tianity . Vedanta does not necessarily imply a celibate life like that chosen by those at the Trabuco Center. Only 45 of the 750 members of the Society in Southern Galifornia are monastics -about hal f' men and half women. Al the Trabuco center, the monks range in age from 23 to 54 . The origins of Vedanta are ancient : it is one of Six systems of philosophy born in India thousands of years ago. ' It is not a reUgion, believers explain, but an approach to life that ca n be air plied to every religion and every human being. Jts sc.i;iptures, comparable to the Christian Bible,, are called t h e Upanishads ~iterally "sitting near one's spiritual teacher" or "secret te.achings." Under everything in the Vedanta way or life is the phrase "the search within ." Believers hold that each human has djvine essence within himself, and whatever path chosen by a searching in- dividual is uniquely his and dJvine. "tr you want to see God, look Into your neighbor'• eyes," Vivekananda ()f1('t sald. Four kinds of yoga fonn the basis for the Ramakrishna monastic life. Chie( among tbem lJ btr&kti yoga, the se8.rch for the per10JJ•I aspect o! God, the yoga of 'devotion. Bul the other three types. jnana, kanna, and raja yoga , also play im· portant roles. Jnana yoga coven the search for ·knowledge IJfld di!Crimination ln lbc search for one's true self. . · K:erma ts the yoga or work. "To use the common phi:ue. W<' want 'good karma' and try to go beyond It,'' John.son said. , For this reason, each monk is assigned ~chores to be Performed in a sptrit o{ · meditation each day. G a r de n in g , maintenance, and housework is divided up. Raja, one or the oldest forms of discipline, is the meditation yoga. 'This pursuit, combining all the others, is ac· commodated by a special windowless meditation chaj>el built by the late Gerald Hurd. Hurd· was an English scholar and self- styled "Christian mystic0 who bought the Trabuoo Canyon property in the early 1940s. Most of the existing buil4ings ~ere designed and .constnicted by him. He set up a college of religious training and for several years hosted about 25 men and women: It was c.alled the Trabuco COiiege o( Prayer. Many aduJts Int.crested in in- vestigating means to reach God -or the true sell or ultimate reality .:.._ came to the stucco compound. One of them was English author Aldous liux1ey. who Johnson said did much or the research for the book "The PereMial Philosophy" here. Another ~ Swami Prabhavaninda who now v its the monastery every t\v~ weeks. In 1949, Hurd donated the Center to the Vedanta Society. The monks meet in the meditation room three limes a day: 6:30 to 7:30 . a.m., noon to 1 p.m., and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. The main -meal is al noon. '.l'he a£. ternoons . are used for work and study before the evening meditation and a ligfit su pper. Then the monks me€l in the library to study _and talk. They do not leave the monastery or. ten . Chores of buying groceries and suir plies are di vided. Occasionally they travel to the Vedanta center in Hollywood. . ::. "After a while you lose your need to travel," Johnson sa id. "What becomes important is find ing meaning whereyer you are. 1bat does: not. d,epend on the locale. It is within yourself." . It may also be within other living things. The Ramakrishna monks believe in .reincarnation -another step in the purification process. The life of the Ramakrishna monks is made possible by the contribuUons of ot her Vedanta Society members and the tax~xempt status or the land . Johnson could not say exactly why he or his brothers decided to become monks. "Suddenly you reach a moment of crisis, and the decl!ion is made," he said. ... - .. It is not an intellectual or rational pl'OC- ess, he said. Some of the other monks were attracted to the mysticism of. the Catholic faith but wanted more individual freedom. "Monasticism is far those who want to ·live a more Intense Hfe. Frankly, when I go in to mediate I don't have many prob- lems to distract me -unlike a husband. or father." · Raised a Protestant, Johnson said he found within the church "no means to answer the inner search of who I am or where I am going. It is not wtlil a man knows who he is that Ju; can serve. "Protestantism is-not very.mysUcal," he said. "It doesn't provide the spiritual dis<»;raiii! that hefp _us discover why we ate here in"l>llr bodies. - "Our life routine is~, vt ry inf. port.ant to us,:• Johnson said. "You miss it and suffer without it ••• it is not a weakneM JO much as an in- dication that )'CM.ll' mind operates best in an order'y setting." Clive Johnlon, tour gukle and friendly mystic ls unimpressed by conventional arnbitlons. "You may be back here IOOkilig for . your self &0ml'day," he aaya, smiling. "A newspaper pel'IOD l5 one ol the buJ/est bbmam lo the world ~ but wtw:re does it get you? A man 11ttlng qu ietly atone may be doing much more." • ----~---------- ' • MMUr. Julr 2. 1Q7l s DAILY PILOT 3 Comput·er Study Hit Co$t Factors 'Ig nored' ir1 Jury Survey , . Feuding between the Board of Supervisors and the. Grand Jury over computer systems for Orange County b'O\'ernment contintied Friday vlil11 a criilcal letler from Supervisor ltatph Diedrich to Grand Jury Foreman ~farcia Ben<s. . D~'s letter berated the Jury for ibrnori.' cost factors, fail.lng to com- munica directly with the su~rvisors , Patient, 104, Sliows Figlit HANFORD 0 (AP) -Al 104. W· ciano Rivas. apparently still has some fight left in him. Officials at a c on v a I es cc n t }mpital here reported Saturday -~y-fotmd-Rlvas-hittmg-\Valter Rhode, 82, over the head with a shoe. 1\1.'0 officers and fi ve nurses from the COflvalescent hospital where the Uicident occurred were required to pull the shoe away from Rivas. and mi:itrusting the judg1nrnl qf Rolx'rl Thomas. ('\lOlllY adn1inist r<tli\·e offK'er Thr d1sngrcl'n1e11t <.'t.'!1\l·rs on "hl•lht·r the rou11tv shou ltl t11re an 01.1 1dl• d:ua proccS!iini_i lirn1 lo fill ,;:rowing COlllputi;r flC(.'ds. or enlari:e 1h1• ""isttng county <..-urnputer dc1>anrnent. On l'homas's 're<.,)mmcnda1ion, · the Bo,ard vQlcd 3·2 fec'l'ntlY to t11re an out side f!rn1. Electronic ~ta SyStcnts uf D<1U.:is, Texas. In a lel!cr ta the supervisiirs datt'd Thursday. ~!rs. Bents clain1ed Thomas's rrt.'On11neoda lion. supposedly re fleet ini: Grand Jury opinion, Y.'aS" in fact the op- posite of "'hat it "'anted. She snid lh nt on the h .. 1sis or a S'J.000 stvdy by the Arlhur A r1dcr~n ,Ct)n1p.1ny , • and lhc-findings of a rountv BluE> IUl>bon Corn anittcc, interna l contrOI of the cont· putcr systems y,·as ·the best rou1r. But Diedrich suggested that the Anderson study left rnany questions unans"·erl'd. As an exnmplt', he enclose\! t\\'o ""Pages M QucrtP.nC'g:i rdtng1tti!"' Jurr- proposed systcn1 . li e also questioned an earlier rl'<.'Orn· menda~on by the oonsµltant that U:".'IYAC equipment for the system should be purchased immediqtely. "The iprice or purchasing .UNIV AC has dropped appreciably since that date," Diedrich \\'rote.-"111at alone puts the • rt.'("1mrn<'ndat.ion in question on· a .simple doll.tr OOs1i;;. ··fur !lacsc re.'lsons. it would be ln- cr~'l"hbll' 10 state lh;:tt lhc Arthur r\ndt•r::.cu Heporl should receive top con· :-.1df'ration ·as is nl this time." Dledric:h :-.lid. "It 1.; in1:nn<.'f'ivab!C 10 me that the (Jr\lng\· C\IUn!y l.irnnd Jury can ~1e lh:it \Ir Hol>t·rt Thon1ns. Cowaty t\dminislrutJ~\· Offi('('f', 11·(>0Jd l'OOXJ1· 10i.·nd •111y 1>'.1th for Orange Couqty "1thuut thorou gh research." the lcuer l'Ull!lll\l\'(l, "ll 1s l'l'COrO slao"'s 1hat he is a good ad- n1 1n1s1rator \\"ho <.'On(·ludcs all tasks with con1pctenC!" .. , Di('d ril'h t•rrti(·11AJd the JUI)' for coin· n1uniC':.at1ng viii 11 press r c I ease. "1'\or1n:ith·. I \\Otild feel th.at direct flt.'r~n11l ~011tact ~·ilh the Jury Would bl! 1n ordl•r ," ·he s~d. The l!arlicr Jury lcHcr signed by :vlrs. JJcnt..s.. b.ad .said in pad; '"l'ht• Jury. as "t'll as some department hf'ads. has i,rravc (.'Onccm that an out-of· st<itc cOn1p;iny v:ou ld be bundling the ('()n1putini; or election results, personnel r11\'S f~lVt only county employes. bU't files for l'robation and the llealth Dcpan rncnt. '' CUSD to Offer -Summer Clas~s At _ School Sites · Fun at Fair ,- Texa1i Learns About Lib Hllrd Way Recreation activities Will be sponsored this swnmer by -the Capistrano UniUed School District. Playground recreation will be held from Tue9d.3y to.. Aug. 10 at Concordia. Crown Valley, ~s, Palmas, Palisades, San Juan, Marco Forster and 'Viejo sChools. Recreational sessions will be held from I p.m. to 5 p.m. on \\'eekdays. '-1oming classes in specialized arts and crafts will be taught at Las Palmfls and Crown Valley schools. Oil painting will be offered at Palisades School. The gymnasiums at Dana Hills and San Clemente high schoo ls will be open-for a variety of activities ror both youths and adults throug_h Sept. 7. Gym equipment will be availa"ble from 1 to 9 p.m .. Mon· day through Thursday, and from I to 5 p,IJI_,_ on Fri~ys._ Two sessions of girls' modem dance,· ballet and gymnastics will be taught at San Clemente High School from 9.a.m. lo noon, starting Tuesday Md JuJy 23. Womeh.'s !Oftba11. will· begin July 2 at 13:30 p.m. at Palisa<les si:hooJ. A $1 fee will be charged for each session requiring instruction. A SUMME R NECESSITY! LUCKENBAClI, Tex. {UPI ) -Guieb Kooch k;nows aJI about wOmen's lib to-- day. tic learned about' it right around the' time he was being tarred and feathered. Kooch, pronounced Cook. is the owner or the six·building town of Urckenbach (population 70), which was selected from no other entries to be the site of the first Luckenb.ach's \Vorld fajr. The fair fCJ!tured contests of ski ll -. tobacro spitting for aC"CUracy won by Hondo Crouch with a spit of 23 fett: ccn- tests of semiskill -cow chip throwing by politicians 111on by Tiep. Ben At"•ell (I). Dallas). with a toss of something short of a world's record (the official statistician lost his sccrcshcels): and contests re· quiring absolutely no skil l, but good forrn -cow chip lhrowing in hot pants won by Janey Scofield and Jo Ann llortoo, both or Houston. _ .- -The crowO of 10 ,000 was. for the most part. ...,·ell behaved. To wil : "There \\'asn·t much beer drinking dur- ing Sunday morning's gospel singing,'' Kooch said. In fact, the week end arrai r almost "'cl1t off \\'ilhoul a hitch. Al most. "The worst haepening or the whole ~ \ Our Light Weight All Cotton Kn it Shirt -A Cl.ts•it by H.tth.tw1y in Eight-"Cool" Sh.des -S 15.00 . shootini:: mal<'h was that I was tarred •. :ind feathered ," Kooch said. •·1 think the "·om<..>Q got mad O'ii\f U'teY were su.~ 10 do the menial house'hold chores like · pick up bt..>er cans and evict drunks. "They pulled off my shi rt, poured ho1ncn1adc n1olasses on my chest and dun1pcd a pillow over my head. I had to go "'ash off in Grape Creek. \Ve ·had 1xillulion c:hargcs. filed agains t us, b_µt l finally made it back." Kooch figun::s his fair qual ifies as a wor ld's fair because people fr om all ovei- lhc world sho"'ed up. "\\'e'\'c got freaks, straights, kickers and businesSmen -the whole spectrufn or hun1anity is here,'' he said .. "We got pcqplc from Sweden, Narway. England anCf' Mexico -dam n near the whole ~·ocld's oovered here." The Te~rmy marched into the ~.::...._ foot \l'jde town from llouston and a group of Kioy,·a Indians danced in fronl Uklahoma. Kooch and Crouch bought the town for SI0.000 th.rt.>e years ago and say they plan to have [his -shi ndig ann ually. "~1anifcst destiny prompted us to pul ii on." l\ooch said. P-5 • -· .;"'"°:.; ,... ,.,~· .,_ .... .... ~· .P' • ·- PHELrS MEAGER ~ O'IER50TEARSINCAUFORNIA .... .. -- Newport Seaeh, W lhhire,"Sherm.en P•ks, Pn,adon\, Lakewood, We,t Covi n• ,. r > ·' -) DAILY PILOT State · Really • Shows a Profit SO THE DEMOS tacked their very own pion-for a property tax -up to $2()0 onto the bill killing out the unwanted ex- tra sales tax . Then they nopped the whole thing on the governor's desk with a chortle of glee. They put old Relgan in a . reaI bind. · 11 he signed the bill, then the llmla! would get their way on the iocune tax rebate. Jf he vetoed it, then he'd be loading up poor Mrs. Priest with a lot more W'lwantcd money. Your money. ' ..... ./ - MOOd'1, Jvt, 2, 197' Get ~Bla~e • . I Israeli Services Set for Sl,qin Officer: -----~ • UPIT.._... . WIDOW DEVORA ALON WIPES TEARS FROM EYES AT AIRPORT Momorl1I Held 11 And..,.. AFB, Md. for Sl1in Col. YOMI Alo~ • Eight Perish Floods • Ill BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Scores of the ruJiog 1;.memb..-command council. arrests were reported in Iraq today after The killing occumd a few hours after the assassinatioo or Defense Minister Maj. Gen. Hanunad Shihab in an ap-President Aimed Hassan el Bakr retum- pareot attempt to overthrow the COWl· ed from . .state visits to Bulgaria and try's leftist regime. Poland. Diplcmati.c rtpOrts from Jordan THE Ii,-Iraqi ·army wu pit !aid Iiazzar, Shibab mid Ghaydan were alert as tmiks and armored cars toot up not at the traditional aiprort reception pos!Uon.s around the capital ol Baghdad, for the prosidmt. a=nling to repor13 r<aching Beirut. Bakr's oodalill government h a • - Swolkn Rivers Ruin Second Planting In Vermont Red Commandos Attempt Ammo • • Dump Exploswn SAIGOli (UPI) -Olmmunist com- mandol crept into an anumniUoh dtonp I So Gov. Reagan admltled defea~ sign- ed the bill and yoo get back your income --~,plus JlO inaease in ~-ta~. 1--i-1ght+ - 'lbe defense minister was slain near .strengthened. relaUons with the Soviet the Iranian-border early-&mday. in~ a -U.ni(ll_and. ~ European Communiat ShOOti>Of1>MWff!l!lle leaders ol an countr1 .. mid-has ,..._..ivC<l-stiong &Iii ~~~~ :....~~-=~ , IS"!mlDll!_tm".lll!ll!lllliM!!l!!!l!!!!l!!!!t!-~"51;""11a ...... m!=" E!E:llll'l""'-• WROt'\'G AGAIN, friends. H.e vetoed il By gollies, good old Gov. Reagan wasn't going to be slickered.around that way. He'd show 'em. Besides. the legisla tors had all gone home in ad- journment so they had no chance ol over- riding his veto, he chortled with glee. So there you are. You aren't going to get any income taxes back -at least for a\\1lile. And you're now paytng an extra penny-per-dollar in sales taxes. 1bat money is pouring an extra $1 .8 million per day into poor Atrs. Pn'est's treasury which is already overflowing. lsn'~ it wonderful how the government works for you? - abortive ooup and logal troops. He was from the Soviets. given a state funeral today in Baghdad, EGYPl"S MIDDLE East News Agency the Iraqi state radio reported in a terse quoted an official statement from broadcast.. Baghdad that Kauar lr.viled Shibab and R<ports In the Beirut press said Sad-~ to a beoquel Saturday night dam Hussein TakritJ, wlrO is vice 8Dd 8Pl'lfV • trap oa them end other of. ~nnan of the ruling Revolutionary fidals. Command Council, per•ooally led the "Whelt his plot was uncovered, he at- troops and ""'"'Y forces lhal crushed templed to etcape in the directiao ol the attempted coup against the Baatlllst ZerbaUa, near the Iranian bonier, socialist regime. holding the two miniotus and other ol· BAGHDAD ANNOUNCED &may that ficials as prin>en:. '!a clique of traitors" led by lbe Iraqi "At Zerba.Us, Kazzar and his ae- Security Directoc Naz.Un Ka:aar killed a:mplices were overpowered and ar- the defense mirUster and wounded rested. Delore Kezzar and is accomplfoes Interior Minister Saadum Ghayda.n. Both were arTeSted, they shot and killed Gee. Shihab and Ghaydan were member's ol Shihab in the shootout." • Holid-ay Outlook Warmer I Crowd$ Modest at Beaches Due to 65-degree Air ' ~t.Ut0NAI WIA1Mll 'llYl(I fOtl (A.1 I•1A11ro l•t 1 •I -71 J0.00 --' -l~IM (j~li ~4sHOw ~ ........ ~l*1WtU 110'# v.s. s •••• .,, Tiie ,...._. ,.,,,..,.,_ A0011M1 ,. l'lle "'"""' W..lflw Servke .,,...., WM l U •t OQA ttftd, ArfJ. l OO..,.• ~ w.t ct •t K..illttft, _._ could do any damage, the Saigon com- mand said. · One of the commandos was ki,lled. the oommand said. ~ Jllne I, commandos blew up 4,000 loos ol ammunition at IAlng Blnh, about tine mlleo awtb ol the dump in the rald today. The aimmand repan.d !N lllqed Cm>munl& ...,._fire vlol1tlnm In the M hours ending at I o.m. today, the moll since lOt were reported June II. It repan.d two civilians killed and II injurod in three oeporate Incidents thnlugbout the oountry. . Heavy fillbtin& abo WU J-1ed well or the Moolqnlrd city d J<mlum, :1t10 miles north ol SaliOO. on Sunday, with a toto[ "' • Qxmumlll ..... ml * govemnenl -killed and ....., ,..........,1-....-. In s.tgoo, Canadian and Hunprlao of. flciall met todly with rtp I Jtatlftl of the two Vl<lnamele lldes 1-the Joint Mlllluy OJmmlollon (JMC) to -the release ot two CNwff1n Glficen, mlsalng slnc:o laat '"'1..clay. Canadian Sen\or 'N.itical Affairs Advtaer Victor TUmer ol>cl Maj. Gen. F....,. Szuch, head ol tho Hungarian delega\lm to the lnt.gJallooal a.n- mbsloo ol Control and ~ (1005) held "" hauMonc meetioc wl1h the JMC ollloon ,,.._.,, Sciuth Vlotnlm lltld the Viet °""- DAll.Y Pl.OT DELIVERY SEltVICf -Otllttry of--thr D1ffr~pttot- H guarlfl,teed _,_ ........,,..,., If -......... ,_. ...,... ., J1• "'"'"' MN ... .,.., ,.,,, Win .. ....... 19 ,... a.. .... ... ,, .... .. .........., ... ......,, .............. .,_ ..,. .., t .... ......,.. •• l ..... s.....,, c•• * •..., ........... . • .,..,c••-••_.,. .. .. .. .Ttltphoftn MM Ot•flft cM1r .._,.... ....... ....mt """""" 11•11 et ..,... .......... , ............... ,. ... ~,..,._ ...... ... ,_,.,.................... . ..... L..-, i.....,... ...... •••• .,,....! ' r Faith Heals? Doo.dly Snake Bites Believer NEWPORT, Tenn. (AP) -Muri Bass, who tested his faith with a ratUesnake Sunday at the Ch urch of God iii Jesus' Name, was in a Chattanooga hospital today in 'very critic3.J.1 condition from a snake bite. Ignoring a cnurt order nnt lo handle snakes hundreds nf the failhful converged on the litUe church in the Easi Tennessee moun- tains near Newport to demonstrate their faith in Jesus with fire, poison and serpents. · · WHEN THE RITUAL ended, Bass had' been bitten and another man burned bh hand in a open flame insisting he wu nnl in pain. OfficW. at Erlanger Hospital said Bass, 35, of Chattanooga was In the emergenC)> room but refused further comment. !\ass, who had handled a snake during a proyer meetins satur-· day and was nicked' by a rawer, was handling a western diamond .. bock when the serpent struck, leaving a bloody track on his arm. Despite the wo~nd, Bass continue.cl to clap and sing for seven! minute_• before leaving the gathering and going lQ the home nf the Rev. Liston Pack. Later, Bass was reported to b6 resting comfortably at his home. But about 5 a.m. he was _ bken to the hospital. '~I HAD A fONTENTIOUS s~t here today," the Rev. Pack said. Where.theres ~ntuslon, theres contention. Anytime you have a group like Iha~ YQu .h••• a contentious si>ifit." . P1ek'1 brothar uli a North Carolina 'ptucher were killed last April In a siJllllar rl~ at the lli1Y wooden;frame church in New--P!'f!, al!Out 40 mllea eut-of-l&!omIIe: Each, hnwever, died of strych- rune poisoning, which was not In evidence Sunday. The epllOde led to a ct\oeuit court order banning the congrega- tion's handling of snalt:es ~ t.est its faith. ,8ut local authortu .. u well u . sev1ll'll hundred wonbljitn-who cante fiiim al Ieu! eleht statea -ignored _the court on!Or1ltind~y. ' AT TIMIS, THI l'AITHFUL passed u llWIY as six coiling .er- pents among, th811! while chanUog, "In ieous'Name." The malt:ea '"'""' taken from (Ive box-iour nf.whlch contained ratUen and the fifth an Indian Cobra. A Columbus1 Ohio, mlnllter, the Rev. Richard WIUlants teated his faith by Dlaong his foot Into a 1iox of · C'tlrllng hissing .imonts. H~ was "not b'ltteh ~ he 1poke, "I do that In the nahie of .resus!' -·-·. I ' • • • • , Brush Fire Rages Near Palm Springs PALM SPRINGS (UPI) -lo keep from filling o"" The lm'st bro3h fire lo hit clilC.. . C.lifomla lh!J )'tar IUtpd ool · A f-of !,JOO men bottled of control up lllOUIQln slope< into high Umber today, ~ilh . the Ore, which bas """""'"'1 fln!Clghter1 &erambUng after it mere than 1,000 acres ol brueh In helicopters and roping and trees. themselves like mountaineers state kr'estry offlclals said Resort City Air 'Worst' LOS ANGELES (APl-The desert resort.of Palm·Springs was the ·smoggiest city in CatifOmia last yeai, accordiitg- to one index. The oxidant level exceeded .08 parts per mJllion in the at· lhe blaze was &tarted by fire-. worts· and. aullmttlH _. dlOCting r<'porU of witnelses ·that a I r..o u.p_of_lhree..small .. boys was teen leaving the site of the crtgin 'of the fire. The blare, whJeh began Saturday oo the Morongo 111' dian Reservation. ·sent a spearhead of flame racing up tbe San Jacinto iMoUntains Sunday; e8ling 1hroogh stands of pine tr~ 75 to 125 feet tall, the state Division of Forestry reported .. PUSHED. BY · 25-mil&per- hour winds, the Dames nared . ( BRIEFS ) :';"i!:,acr.slnooethree- , ____ ._..;~:;.;. ___ _,.. "It's up .to 6,000 or 6,500 feet 1 mosphere for t,35(1_ hours in , altitude now," a 'spokesman 1972, according to figures for the ·division of (orestry, compiled by the state Air Carl Wolf, said. Resoorces Board...... "We're issuing ropes on the A reading of .10 parts per , million is the minimum ox-men. There s sheer cliffs Up id~l level at which smog af-there, with droi:>s of 100 to 500 fects human health. Other feel" ~ings for 1972: Idaho, 1,348 To get the firefighters into hours: Rlverskle J,Z31: Los th ed " , . ·Angeles, 516 hours. · e rugg area we re USIJ1$'. anything that can fly," said e llf•11or 'First' one spokesman. COMPTON (AP) -Doris A. "\Ve're mounting one ~f the Davis has take~ olrice in wtiat . biggest helicopter operalions a city hall researcher terms • the first time a black woman we know of in ·this area." Wolf has become mayor of a said. moderately sized city in the nation. Mrs. Davis, 37, was in· augurated Sunday .a f i. e r defeating Douglas Dollarhide, al.so a black, in this city of 78,000 just sou1h of W"lf& e Reagan l.e•.,e• SACRAMENTO (AP) With the signing of a $9.34 billion state budget and the vetoing of a sales tax measure behind him, Gov. Ronald · Reagan has le[t the Capitol for · ·-a five-week vacatioo. . Starting SUnday, Reagan said he would be taking four days to make a pack trip on the western slope of the Sier· , ... His camping party includes his -wife-and-son, a·n d Resources Secretary Norman B. Livermore and hls wife, Reagan told reporters. He ad- .. ded they planned to travel with a team .or lx>rses and pack mules from a poin\ 80"" miles east of Porterville to Y osemlte Valley. e Baig Honored LOS ANGELES (Af) Army Gen. Alexander r.t. Haig Jr., President Nixon's new White House ch.ier of staff, was honored at a weekend din· ner here attended by l,100 persons. Retired General of the Army Omar N. Bradley and several former prisoners of war were among th>se attending the dinner Satudray at the Bever· ly Wilsllire Hotel. Pepperdine University sponsored the af. fair. . ''THE ARMY IS doing a great job. They've got two 10: man· helicopters here. With t~ and Our 10 copters, we feJTied 500 men into dlose IIlOU!ltains Sunday." The men were backed by nine tankef"S planes, flying water bombing runs over the ·blal.e. . -0 "There's no guessing when the fire \vill be under control, .. Wolf &id. 1be lower area ol the fire was~t:ontained however, Blier lluming Satur- day lo the ~ of the town of_ Snow Qoeek, where one home burned and 30 residents were evacuated. WINDS HELD the fire away from the city of Palm Springs, a popular resort eight miles away, but the sky over the ci- ty was gray with smcke and ashes. The smoke rolled in pungent clouds over the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, tour miles from the blare, while judges Sunday \\"ent ahead with the ~tiss Tramway beauty contest. The tiUe went W ~Tony 1\\so. 19, of Riverside, '36-24-36, \Yho beat 18 other contestants. Fire officials at one point Sunday reported the !blaze had burned 10,000 acres, but later scaled dov.n ·the estimate. They said heavy smoke gave an erroneous impression ol the acreage. . U .. I T11e111Ml9 ,ljees Goals Newly crowned lt1iss California Susan Ship- ley said she saw com- mon goals in the 50th Annual state beauty pageant and the count. er fits. California pag· eant outside. She was Miss San Joaquin Co1,1n- ly. . . . Trio Drown . Bradley Takes Office Ea~l Warren Sivears l1i Black LA Mayor LOS ANGELES (AP! - Tom Bradley has taken office as .the first bl~k mayor of the nation's third larg~t city, triumphantly rec411ling that his family had found a "place where you would be measured by what ~ did, not the color .or your skin or place where you \\"Orsbiped ." Bradley, SS, son of a Texas .sharecropper, was sworn in as mayor Sunday by fonnef U.S. Chief J ustice Earl Warren Rs an estimated 10.000 persons cheered. '"The chance you have given me today, I believe, says more about this city~ decency and its se~ of faimeS9 than a hundred declaraUons [rom a platform ·or a thousand pro- clamations," Bradley told his audience. . "I INTEND TO fepay the chaiice you have given me by giving this city a chance," Bradley continued. "A chance to become the kind of city that U,IT....,_.I TAKES OATH IN LA Thom•s Bradley ·· partisan runoff election !\-fay 29. Both Bradley and Yorty arc Democrats. Calling ror political pnrticipation . by )' o u I h , l!radtty :said. "Th'° futurt or 1his .cit y dt-pends in large nleasure on v.·hat }·ou an> l'·ill· ing to do. There \\•Ill be ari opt.•11 door to this city hall." S1X'aking or the V.'aterg:'.!IC scandal , Br.'ldley said, ··niese last few ,.,,eeks have been sad for all of 11!1 '''ho believe in the American pronlise. Every day we'Ye heard fron1 the nation 's capital new t{1les of ideals betrayed. Ja~·s broken, prom- 1 ises repudiated. <'rimes <'Oil· t.'f:aled, loyalty to the Constitu- tion itself overridden b y personal consldcr.Hions. "WE WlLl.. BE a long lime erasing this stain ," Bradley said. "But let it be said that 1 here in Los Angeles toda)'. we 1 began to rebuild the kind of L government that says v.·hat it ' means and means \\'hat it says." r Bradify"taid later he had DAILY PILOT o'( f' llOLEX THE VERY SPECIAL WATCH FOR VERY SPECIAL PEOPLE. Rolex is world renowned as one of the world's finest timepieces. And this handsome Rolex Oatejust is. a fine example of Aolex styling. St"alnless steel case, features 14 karat yelh::>w gold fl ute9 bezel and crown. Th~ movement is a 30 jewel chronometer • Matching bracelet is stainless steel and. 14 karat yellow gold. $~60.00. Use your American E~~~ card. We might leave to our children . been unaware of a protest by • ~·ith. pride instead of YORTY LEF'T---.Q!l_'!._n_ .. 40 helmeted American Nazis apologies." Ala skan cruise June 22 and did from suburb.in El 1\fonte. Thel , In BoatinP' ••~kAmtric .vd nna M~•lt'f (.h~r91, 100 (.ll•rgt Account\ ln¥11t'CI -Amtrlt•n '"''''' . ~ Accident LAKE HUGHES (AP) Bradley's family mo v rd not attend the inauguration. Naz.is. nwstly under ~ , from Texas to Los Angeles Bradley, said he would con-old and sporting s astika v.•hen Bradley Was 7-years-old. ~entrate on the problems of armb.1nds. carried s i g n s He and his· wife Ethel have rapid transit. urbnn blight, un-saying "white JXIV.'er." They j ty.•o grown daughters. . checked growth and air pollu· have alsO picketed v.·hite Jew~ Bradley rose to the rank of lion. and :uitiwar supporters ln the SLAVICK'S .lo I• 'Ii ~·!11 '<' !917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1110 Three of seven persons in -an overloaded motorboat drown-police department and then necessarily a better city or a "The demcnstration that im-1 :.. ;,r ,,.,... lieutenant in the Los Angeles "A bigger city is not past.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~ served 10 years as city coon-healthier city." the mayor pressed me the most was on ..___ _---- ed when the 12-foot craft cilman before defeating In· said. "We mus1 have a ra-~lay 29." Bradley said, refer·1 ---~-- capsized in it.s own ~·ake on cumbent Sall_l Yorty in a non-tional growth policy ." ing to 'election d.ay . Lake Hughes in northeast Los1-----.-~----~-------------• Angeles <;ounty. Sheri ff ' s deputies said the dead could net swim and 'became en. tangled in thick undCrwater weeds. · Tile seven persons, including four juveniles from the san1e Los 'Angeles neighborh were on a family-style outi when the mishap occurr Sunday, 1.he sheriff's office said. Awarently only rsabel Bar- raz, 16, Los Angeles, could swim, officials said. They said she beg'an swimmlng to shore and yelling for help when the boat capsized 50 yards from land at the lake located 20 miles "'est of Lancaster. · T\.\'O fishermen on the shore heard screams . and got their nearby -boalt, rescuing the four survivors. Divers found the .three vic- tims tangled in underwater brush with slippery, tough vine-like ~entacles. They were 1 identified as Ray Basurto, 21, J\.1anuel Escobar, 9, and Jim- my C.herry, IO, all of Los ~ngeles. 500 Riot At SD Park SAN DIEGO (AP\ -The midway at Belmont Park was in shambles today after about 500 of 7,00Q persons attending a rock music concert \Vent on a rampage, authorities said. J\.fore than 80 police officers quelled the disturbance Sun- day. Seven persons \.\'ere ar· rested on charges ranging from disorderly conduct to theft, a police spoke'sman said. No injuries were reported. Announcing tna Greatest Advance . . in Service to-Sivers Since the Invention of -Money ' ThrOUghout history, people havebeen dreaming up ways for other people to spend money. At Great Western, we've. been thinking up ways for you to save money. After all, that's why we're here. And why we've been groWing since 1887. Now we're over $4% Billion strong. With more offices to serve you, all over California, than any other savings associatio n. I -·-. -· . ... . -·-- New! When our Savings Account Statement arrives in the mail each quarter, you know automatically how much interest you've earned and your new balance. You have a n itemized record of all deposits and withdrawals. There's no passbook to be up-dated. ' accounts of $1000 or more. It means extra convenience when you're away . I from home or whenever you're closer to another Great Western office. Get Free Travelers Checks, Free~oney Orders, Freo Notary Service, even Free Safe Deposit Boxes ..;here available. Make any transaction. And cash personal checks up to $100. New! Let our Automatic Savings Deposit Service do the saving for you. We'll transfer funds automatically from your checking account to your Great Western savings account Every month, every week. whenever you wish. BART Workers on Strike ' Come in now and sample our new w_ays to save. Our new statewide convenience of any service at any branch. A new quarterly statement which you can Choose in place of the traditional passbook. A new Automatic Savings Deposit Service. And the perfect Payroll Savings Pian. All with the highest rates on insured savings. New! The GW Card for special service is honored at all Great Western offices and available to all savers with New! A perfect Payroll Savings Plan, thanks to our new statement system. If your company does not have the advantage ol payroll savings, give us a call. It's a great new way to save. ' ) • • • • • t ' • ,. ! • • • ! \ • r , OAKLAND ( U P I ) America's first new mass lramit system in 6S years was struck today by 1,200 workers ln a dispute over wage equaUzat.ion and other con- tract matters. The Bay Area Rapid Tramil System doe1 not nm on weekends but the strike at midnight by the two labor. unions was expected to cause hardship for die . thousands of conuwten wtJo move over the 51-mile network·' each weekend. · The tramlt dblrict an- no•111C<d '"'lier Iha! II woold not try to operate: the trains If a strike W89 celled. · BART carries about 18,000 peraoos dally aloog Its Rici> mond to Fremont line and another 7000 between Oakland and Concord in eastern Contra Costa County. .The last leg of the system's East Bay line was opened in May and only the 3.6-mile tube beneath the Bay between San Francisco and Oakland and the San Francisco subway re- mained to be fmished in the $1 .4 billion system. COMMUTERS WERE ad· vUed lo find other .means of getting to work in the East Bay. Paul Varacalli, executive se<retary of l..<>Cal 390 of the United Public Employes, said 900 clerical and maintenance employes struck along with 300 transportation employes ~·ho are members of the Amalgamated Transit Union. Pickel lines went up im- mediately, he said. · "This means the orily BART workers not on strike will be management employes and the security di vision." The unions had threatened to strike two weeks ago but postponed the walkout after a meeting with BART directors. U n s u. c cessfql negotiations ensued. said Varac'aUJ . The major problem centered around 15o 'employes who transferred to BART from other area transit systems with pay scales guaroolet'CI by federal statute. Assets Now Over $41/2 Billion GW' GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS . ( MEWllORT/,_lfllotl C.m.t ............... M0-0333 °""' ........ ,. ,. "' ...... SPECIAL SM'URDAY OPENING: 9 TO 1, JULY 7TH. '. "IUENA MAK / 'LAGUNA HlllSfl1/1ure WoM / 'SANTA ANA 1101 IClll!tofl ...... L.. ......... l21·51tZ 24100 El Toro Ro•d • 837·1551 1411 North M-4" •I 15ttl • 547·7571 9 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. Daily f Until 6 P.M. Fridays/ Free Parking 'Sf:Al IEACHftMI_......, mt W.1tmhtst1r A••· • A4-ttll fflllE WITH ACCOUNTS OF $1000 OR MORE: Slit O.po1it 801111 l•t -•• _,u .. r1, T111v1le1• Cht eks. Money Ord'''· Not11ry Service. TN ti D11d I Note Coli.etlon, Also FrM ~ ....... ,._, MEMBER: FEOERAL SAVINGSANO LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION. FEDE RAL HOMF. LO;:N BAN K •/\SAVI NGS ASSOC IATION OF GREAT \\'EST£RN FINANCIALCORPORATtOH -----,·--· -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·-------- . ' ... B CERT TO 9:15· P. • AT FAS·HIO ISLA • . ' -. ' ' ' , • • _, • . I ·•· .. EDITORIAL PAGE An Ey~ on County Jail -1 ' \ Jails are much like hospitals In one respect: The people who are there don't wan~ to be there. As_ a re- .itUlt, they are likely to find fault quite ea,sily. • 'fhe Orange County jail has been the subject o( w1dc·ranglng crlticis1n o(f and on through the years. Newspapers, grand juries and others are frequently told of brutallt.Y. bnd treatment and abusive language on the part of cou'nty jail cuards. of ireas th.at deaerve lm-prOv1menl There are no ouUe:ts for prisoner energy, for Instance. Guards, for the most part, are rookie 1herttr1 deputies, with no training In penolo~y. Dispensing of penaltles -loss ol work time· or disciplinary tsolation....--.is done unfairly at times. _ These, and other matters, ,.arrant attention. Capt. W•llace seems to be doing a good job. It's just that with a UtY• bigger budget, he eould do a better job'. But· for the n1ost part, few of the claims have been substanlivc. and n1ost for1ncr prisoners are more willing lo forget the past onl.'e lhey get out. ?.teanwhlle, the watchful eye now being focussed on the Jail by the citizen gr9ups should spur some of the needed improvements. They, in tum, could help Capt. Wallace and hl.s men u much as they help the lnma!A!s. 1\s explained . in ' a dc~ail~d story ,ii:' the June 24 Uaily Pilot. new interest in Jail conditions has come a bout recently and It couldn't help but improve both pri soner treatment and public awareness o( problems faced by jail personnel. Finding the Chiselei:s ~,...,,, ., · '· 'fo rnia is makin' a succes!ful showing in its ef- J>rodded by a grour> known as Friends and Rela- tives of Prisoners of Orange County Jail, a number of organizations have ,j)een looking into conditions there. forts ·to nab the chiseling fathers who abandon their cbild·su port responsibilities. by moving away. ' These Include the Orange County Grand Jtlt"y, the Amer- ican Civ il l.lbcrfies Union, the Orange County Legal Aid · Society and the l-tuman Relations Commission.· To date, nothing start.ling has been unearthed. Few, if any. gross excesses by jailers have been proved. But, in the words of Grand .Ju ry Foreplan Ma.r~ia Bents, "1'here are very serious problems with the Jail and t}\e Grand Jury feel s they should be corrected." e Sen. James E. Whetmore revealed last week th'a'-'t 'l.'.80~.:000 absent plHnts. (alm<>1t all of them .fathers) eontrtbuted $50 million in chlld support· during 1972. That's a '37 percent increase in payments since 1970. Most of the increased contribution came as a result or the Support Enforcement Incentive Fundi which gives counties funds to track down absent parents and make them accept their responsibilities. In Orange County, the welfare picture was notably brighter in 1972. In two years, child support payments rose from $4.4 to $7 .4 million and the number of welfare cues dropped from 14,485 to 12,967. · caPt. .\Villia1n \Vallace, ja·il con1mandner, is a la}V· and·order man who brooks little nonsense in keeping m-----lllJn,ates under control.· But he h·as so far successfully de- fended his men fron1 most complaints about prisoner abuse. Gl1a rds are "needlessly r6ugh" in hand~in~ of some prisoners, says the Grand Jury, but there 1s little evidence of beating or violent abuse. Few of those unfortunate enough to classify as wel- fare cases are undeserving of the help they get. Spread- ing the cost of their suppof! where it belongs -prefer- ably to the parent who can affoTd it -is· a welcome re- \·Vhal the investigators have discloseCJ is a number lief to tupayers. ._ Cash to Bis Opponent _:_How Wallace-Was-Blocked \\IASlllNGTON -To eliminate George \Vallace as a thr~at io Pres ident Nixon·s re-election , the \Vhite •louse not only smllggled $400,000 in c;1sh to his political rivals in Alabama but also brought ~i:_ess~re ~ on ~m through a tax have deprived him of a power' base and 1nvesugaL1on..ol bis....brothcr. __ . __ -_ Jd-hav reduced his ability to cam· Long· be fore the 1972 election, the ~ • e • _ _ President knew from his secret polling pa.1gn for tl].e presidency in 1972. that \Vallace at the Haldeman , therefore, arranged to head of a third-party sneak ~.000 to Wa~'s rival& during ticket would drain, the 19~0 Alabama pnmary. The ~ey votes from him. The \1'as s~phoned from surplus ca~pa..i~ polls shO\\'L'CI I.IS funds In the custody of the President S many as four out or personal _lawyer, Herbe~ Kalmbach. five Wallace volers ~1yster1!l;US arrangements were made otherwise favored for Kalmbach to fly across mm.try and Nixon. The While hand over the f~t ~100,000 to a stranaer. Jr o u s e. therefore, at New York City s Sherry-Net~ wtlf\ted to stop Wal· ilotel. ~ot lq afterward, Haldeman s Ince from running for President as All brother-1n-law, France Raine, delivered independef'll. another $200,000, presumably to the same 'BOth the -secret polling and t-he stop-n1yste.ry .11l3!1, at ihe Sberry-Netherlaod. Wallace strategy \\·ere directe.d by the A similar tryst was arranged at Los President's former chief or staff, H.R. Angeles' Bank of Callfomla where Haldernan. So secretive were the moves Kalmbach tumed over-the final fl00,000. against Wailace that Haldeman didn 't Neither J(almbach nor ·Raine would even coAfide in his brother-in-laY.", \vho comment on the strange transactions. served as '3 g<>-betwee:n. Sources close to the investigation told us, THE WIIlTE HOUSE strategy in 1970 was to block Wallace from winning back tile governorship ol Alabama, This y.·ou.Jd however, that both men followed blind in· structions. 'Ibey were neyer told that the money would be used against Wallace, nor ditl they learn the identity ol. the bagman. WE ALSO HAVE been unable to identify tbe mystery man. From White House aources, we have established only that Haldernan's Afan Friday, Larry Hlgby, was in .wuch -with fonnel'- Port.master General Winton "Red" Blount about ebanoellng anti-Wallace maoey into Alabama'.s 1970 Democratic primary. Bk>unt couldn't be reached for comment. At the same time that Haldeman sluiced $400,000 no the campaign againSt Wallace, he also requested a rundown trom the Justice· Department of its tax case against Wallact's close associates, inc~ bis lxolher Gerald. The Justice Department sent back a confldenU.al progttSS rePort to the White noo... A«<rding to tllia document. lhe Internal Revenue Service's audit division had found thst Gerald Wallace allegedly had omitted legal-fee ilpllne from his tall: returns in IH'l aml 1968. The charge was that the Wall3ce brot~· law linn was used in funnel.lng polltlcal klckback.t aod th"' Gerald failed to report all the lnccme that came to him through the law firm. After deducting large losses from his cattle farm, he reported a total tuable income of $100,1144 in 1967 aod $6.1,9811 in !961. What Klein May Have Do:tle WASHINGTON -The coincidence of John Dean·S devastating Sc n :1 I c 1estimony and •lerbcrt G. Kl ein's final wee k in t.Nbi:on Administration paints up wh}• Richard t\ixon 's presidency is on me brink or ruin. The \\'idcly known but ~tory is that Klein, 1ninistr:Hion"s direct· largely untold as lhe ad· ( EVANS·NOVAK J ' TUE CO~CLusrONS are iinescapable: J·lad llcrb Klein been able ·to maintain hl's old, pre-White liouse int.tffiacy with most oothing of Afr. Nixon and had little lnfiuence over policy; - Still, Klein maintained his loyalty, using his .substantial and well-merited prestige 'in press and television creles outside Washington to effectively plead the President's cause~ He tried, without much success, to promote more presi- deotial press conferences. . <1r of communica lions, has been lg· 10red and hun1iliatcd ~Ir. ·Nixon, he might well have THE REWARD was more hum iliation. discovered the Watergate affair. Had he Kenneth Clawson, a Washington P06t by the \\'hltc llou.~c 1\1. cine sc:i rL-e ly be lievablc.-point l;-illt summ1:r. !ht• Nl\011 palate g1.n1rd \1 a.; ready lo dt't'llen lhl' humiliation b)' prl' i ~·enling: hln1 from even attending the Re- • · publican Nalional Convention. Like other Nison lieutenants similarly dt.meaned . Klein \\:IJ g11B1y Of having 1·ontact5' btj.;00 the \Yhile Jlouse \Valls and r1dv1t'C !hr !'residen t found un· discovered it, he surely would have pre>-reporter, last year was given control of tested and warned the President. Klein 's . department (while Klein kept the tltle). Presidential aides leaked word Lnstcad, the new generation of Nixon ad-that Klein \\'OUld be quitting by election visers ushered In disaster. day but ne\•er informed Klein. The final Klein Is oot alone amon g White liouse provocation to make life unbearable for aides \\•ho might have prevented Klein \\"S.S to keep him home iii Washing- Watergale but instead '\'ere eased out of ton \\'hile every Niion ribbon clerk went authority: Pete Peter.son , Robert to the Republican convention in Miami Ell~'Orth, John Sears, Robert Finch, Beach. Stephen Hess, Bryce Harlow, Pat A me cooler hoads prevailed· How Mo,ynihan, Dmald Rwnsfeld. The-com-•'Oll!d Klein 's fellow edtton cOvering mon denom inators of this varied lot are •. Ille CX11veotkm. regard his surprising ab- broad experience and widespread con-senc.-e? So, Klein was taken to ~fiami tacts. Beach end given command ol. a small Mr. Nixon once relied on such broad· yacht where he d~ food and drinks ..... .,....._ ... ~auged 1atsWanlti,. ~~ San Diego to reporters. But he was given no hard .------------·-~· -1ic\\'pa pei"e<tit0f Klein'. One Of his closest political information about 8.nything. pa\alablw. , .. ORAHGl COltS1' DAILY PILOT /r.Qbert N. \Veed, rubltJl11!r Thvn1ai Keevil, Editor Rarl)ara Kreibick Editorial Page f;d1tar advise rs in the late 1950s and durtng his After the election, Klein kept fig'htin" 1960 presidential campaign. But as Mr. privately for presidential acteMlbWty t~ Nixon's attitude Iowa rd the pre~ !he pres,, ·and publicly deCooding the ad- harden'cd, so did bis attitude toward minfstraUon. Evm tlOW, Klein remains Klein. Eve n in 196o, he complained steadfastly loyal to ~President and od· privately about ·Klein's • 'crybaby'' ministration. reeommend ations for easier preu ac· HJS TRUE thoughts· were un\•eUed Cf's~. gru mbling that Kl ein wan ted to brleny on NBC's "i\feet the Press" v.'hen nuike it easier 011 hlmselr rather than he asserted : "Too much r~nsibillty hel p lhe ca.ndidilte. \\'as given to too many people with a lack " f or e1perience." i\1R. NJXON knew what he wanted or f'riends say h6 particularly meant his second presidential try in l9l8: • Chlries w. Colson (ooe prtsldenUal aide ha~ prt55 sccr.etary wtthout Dear -Gloomy Gus Amid the scandals and woe! cf the world, pennit me to liment the passage of the metal zipper in fa· vor ot. plastic z1ppers .that clog, Mick 11\d break. M.V.- Court Gives New V ersiOn - Of Obscenity Su Friichco Olrooicle We now have a new, revised version of what obscenity is in the United State~. by decision of five ~ nine t:J.S. Supreme Court juslices. It iS the depiction or d,escripti<l'I of sexual conduct that a State, relying on tile Court's guidelines . chooses to make criminal by statutory definition. Anyone who has kept half an eye on the movement or the American people ttlroughout this century to liberate human sexuality and seroal conduct GUEST EDITORIAL from the category of wuncntionable sub- jects will not be likely to hold much hope for this approach. IT 1S UNPROMISING because it leaves lo the 1egislatures, \\"hich are notoriously imprecise, and often prej- udiced and puritanical, the task of sel- ling standards of judgment that have proved hard enough for the most im- partial and skilled judges to interpret. Moreover, by encouraging the States to ro back to defining what their citizens may not see or read because it's obscene, the c.ourt Is likely to find that it has stirred up more litigation than its deci- sions ~ la.st Thursday have put to rest. Tho jUlllces may have merely "1"" ferTed to the St.ate courts some Of the un- pleasant burden of deciding \vhat ls and what Isn't obscene that has heretofore fallen on them. Why is it desirable to encourage local ·option In these matten? Chief Justice Burger says the people of A1aine or 1'-flsslsslpp{ ahould not be required to ac- cept ~le depiction cf sexual conduct \Vhich is found tolerable in Las Vegas or New York City. This .is UlC sin city ap. pfoach, a double standard th.1t would ijeny Jep;alltv to 1hc showing in Jackson, Miss., of a film acttptable on Broadway. An Immense ~t of confusion can result rrom 1 rule like t~t iTT an in· . tercommunlcatin.a society like ours. Ttu-t',dl!onaJ r~J.:l'-or II~ 0111ly P1io1 scck11 10 1nfonn and. stimulatt' rTadcrs by fll'l"VT!t1ng on thl!I pqc '1 ivt'rv ('()mmml81')' on tople,; or U\· 1ncn by !lYn'fl('ll!~I rolumn l11" and car\oonl.!11, b)' 11rovkhng a forum ror _ JTaden' vli:ws Rnt'I by Pl""~ll°" lh11 new!pal>t'r'11 0111nlorul llllll kit.·~ on cumnt top!C!I. ~ t'dltorl11J opln~ friends In the ~s or unpleasAnt recom-told us Klein, undla ractttlstJcllly harsh, de9CT'lbed Co!son to him as a "cobra"). -mendatlons. I . R. Ha ldeman came up \\'ilh a young advtrtising ei eeullve named • But .he also puts ltaldcman and John TJJE OJfFlCVl.TY OF DEFlt<..'lNG 11- Ron Zll'gltr. Klein wa,, kept at 11nn's Ehrhchman In the SAme category. ltgal ~nlty is revealed ln the Court 's ~. cl. the Dally filol aPPt"ar O(\l,y In lhe ed,ltorW rotumn at lht' trip or lht Jl'llf;. Oplr\lons ~l)r'ftled by the COi• urnnlltl and cartoonlstJl and latt1:r \\Tltf'r8 art their own' and m tndotv- mcnt or tht-ir vl""ll by 11\e Dally Pilot llihelu ld be infn'n.'d, Mond ay, July 2, 1973 length, incre~ingly criticb;ed by the On the e,·e ot Klein's departure, tbrre ·-own language v.'here It gives as an ex· Unpcriou:s llaldcman. ii • tr1gk: oonl1'11i. Mr. Nixon. umrilllng Jmple "petently offensive repre1en- Klein's hopes o1 beOomlng presld<nUal to hear Klein'• "crybaby" odvlee oe pms t1tloru 9' cletcrlptlons" ol sexual acts. press sec retary \\'tM dl!lppointed in ltff Nllldon&, nevtrtbelw rett!Ved trom ~normal or per\'erted, actual-Or v.·hen' the programmable Zieglt r ,.v ·~ him auperb mlalonary work among the slmulat~. The question lhtn comes up, pointed and Klein got 1he new p>tt of media. "patently offensive to whom?" And the director ()( communications for the ex· The hard-bolled 11aldeman-Ehrllchman-answtr to that Is, of course, that to the ecutlve branch. Despite Klein'• fonner COObn trltlmvtrate, rclnforclng Mr. Nix· cenuloul! much Is patenUy olftnsl\le lntimRcy with the President and hll Jn· on·~ antl·press pre:jod.Jcts, ·gave hlm which to the rest of \he clUunry Is unob- vnluabte pollUa1I experience, he saw al-tomethlng else: \Valera.ate. jcct\one.ble . .. ' • •• il°HE ~ATTLE OF THE LEAKS • Humble Soybean ". ' • Ill Status EDITORIAL RKSEAltCH "Good as soybeans" is as valid a max· im as "good as gold" in these ~lllaUve times. The soaring price of gold on Eilropers free markets Is-front•page news. In most areas of the country, however, the feverish activily on the agricu1tural commodity exchpnges is reported mainly in the financial pages. Board of Trade, soybean p1iccs increased It's a pity, because higher grain prices by ·the maximum dail y flu ctuation limit will lead sooner or later to higher meat, on 19 of the 22 trading day~ ~n ~tay. bread, and poultry prices .. .\ncl that ney.·s Other grain futures y.·tte nearly as surely will make page one. volatile. and almost always in an upward Consider the humble soybean. This direction. member of the legume family is rich in • NOW ntE federal government has oil aild: protein, but fir* consumers would moved to control soybean speculation. think· of subsisting m soybean IOUP5 or Acceding to .a reques( of the Agriculture casseroles. Still, most families ~~ume Department's Commodity E x c h a n g e soybeans in one way or another virtually Authority, I.he Chicago Board of Trade every day. The oil from the bean is an in-agreed to limit the sale of July.,..August gredient of some salad oils and and Septe.mbcr futures in soybeans and margarines, and the .meal is an im· soybean meal fo liquidation o.f previously portant constituent of livestock feed. held contracts. , As soybean prices go, then, so goes the An exception will be made if a ne w price of many staples of the AmeriCan seller actually ow.ns the soybeiJ;ns or dit:t. From 1965 thr_ough ·1970, trading in meal-and intends lo deliver them. soybean futures on the nation's com· The 60-day freeze on retail prices modity exchanges hovered ~round $2.25 a recently an'.nounced by President Ni1on bushel. Now futures contracts have has added a new element of uncertainty reached the $12-a-bushel Tange. to the commodity picture. It ·is not yet known . for instance, if the freeze applies SPECULAnON in agricultural com· to futures eontracls or to grain-elevato" modity futures, as in anything else, In· operators. \'olves a good deal or simple avarice. A vice president of a firm that AND THE .Presiden i's request for specializes in commodity futures ex· legislation to in1pose export quotas left plains: dealers y.·ondering if they would be able "A 4tk:ent move in soybeans equals to fulfill future commitments to foreign $2,000 per contract.· A single large buyers. specu1ator could easily O\\TI, or be short, The commodity bubble may be due for 50 contracts. To him, the move means deflation in any event. The permanent ln- $100,000. Any sizeable brokerage firm vestigations subcommittee headed by could easily have 10 such speculators on Sen. Henry fft. .Jackson (0-Wash.) is its books. So the 40 cents move. lo 1he scheduled to open hearings later this broker, may mean a million dollars." summer on last year'i; v.·heat deal \\"ilh The lure of such windfall profits is the Soviet Union. Later. the panel .will -largely responsible for the steady up\\•ard undertake a full-scale invest igatiocr of spi ral of futurrs trading. On the Chicago commodity trading. " Abortion Laws Doubtful . Typical of the scores of letters I ha\'e recei\'ed about mr column on abortion is one that begins: ''I can hardly believe that a man of your intelligence y.·ould be in favor of abort ion." ~~NEY J.HARRI~ r I This is how people over-simplify a complex situation. I am not "ln raver" of ""aborUon. 1 don't - think it's.. a good thing. It may \"ery likely be "immoral ." ho\\'evei: \fe deli that \VOrd. ~ \Vh°at 1 am :iga insl is mak· ing abortion a crime. gested, adjacent states will have dif· ferent abortion laws; so thoSf who can affor:cf it will travel across a state Jlne hf have an -abortion, while those who can't won't. This makes a mockery of any law. Suppose t came out, 40 yeR!'! age, 11gainst Prohibition. People ~"OUld write in to say thal I wu "in f&vor" of ltquor. I ·am-not at all in favor of liquor; a., for ~s I'm con~rnW. nil o( It could be poured Into the Pacific OceM tomorrow morni ng , 11nd the world would be a better place for It. • BUT ntlS doesn't mean I think we should havt laws making the drinkln& ot altcholic beverages a crime. Not tverything that may be bad for us, or even immoral, should be made agaln'st the. law. .. , Abonion Is an unbappy solllU(llt, bill all lhe alternative solutions are wone. to my mind. Making aborUon a crime doo,, not stop it, or even rtdu<.'8 It. AU It does Is make It t.1pcnslve, dirty, under·hand- ed , bypocrltical:. dnn,crou.s $1ld class- di5trlmlnatory. , If the subject Is Jen lo the dittntion or the st&te legl.slature1, M Mme have sug- nlERE IS no point in passing a law that cannot and wUI not be enforced. and furthermore. lhat provides Wlde.sprtad opportunities for grnrt, corruption and connivance. as did ProhlbiUon. Quite apart from the tangled moral aspects of the matter, anti·abortion la wit do not deter or restrain, exoe:pt for the poorest .al)<i-1nO!t·lgnorant, who are pred!ely the ones who cMnot handle more children. ff life It.sell is a~ precious as all that, one would C:\pcct lliesc people to be in the vanguard ol lhe pe~ce movement, for recurrentlw~ tire cerluinly the grtatcst violator ol the right to 1\fc. \\'Jlvin& a Oag and wea ring a "Right to Life" button lfrikes me as R doubtful posture. .. - As lo the m<'ltler of "life," and whether the fetus Is "1llve1" thls Is a thorny me"pl\)'~cal 01 well " blologjcal qu.,. don that no one can anner with an·y assurance. Whit !rlrlkn me '8 10mewhat U-Cruous abQul the "rlpt to II""" people Is their lntcn.te concern wllh the ftlua, ""pied ll'llh their opporont in· difference to IUe alter the womb -with their negligible efforts 10 Teduce povtrtJ at home. atarvalinn abroad, and nr throughout the: world. • -. • I QUEENIE ''They say he went directly from the accordion lo the eoncert piano.'' · · · L. M. Boyd Plastic Surgeon Makes Dimples Was none other than old Fred Allen who said, "The world is a grindstone and life is your nose.J' And speaking of the .v.·orld, don't forget how F.dwin Arlington""Robinson defined lt: "The world is a kind of spiritual kinderg11rten ~here millions -QI bewildered infants are. trying to spell 'God" with the wrong -blocks ... -My, that's -1ovely. Just lovely. It's the contention of some men or science that the pre- historic animals 15 million years ago from which we descended were vege- tarians who didn't evolve into human beings witil they started eating raw meat. ' Age 26 is when the average man Understand one New York plastic surgeon makes a substantial living specializing in dimples. · .QUERIES -Q. "What's a Mongolian ~iss?" A. The touch of his nose to ber forehead . Qi ''Who got in the more formal schooling, Sidney Poitier or Sammy Davis, Jr.?" A. Sidney got in .just about a year and a hall more than sammy who got in none at all. Can't beat tarent. Q. "What was the average spero in miles per hour of Triple Crown winner Secretariat in the last two furlongs of the Belmont?" A. Just a fractioo over 37 m.p.h. Green-eyed girls make Jhe best cashiers and bookkeep- ers. Blue-eyed girls. the best"waitresses and saJes ladies. Brown-eyed girls, the best wives and mothers. C>Jr Love and War man says he didn 't arrive at these positive opin- ions in some sttdden flash ol insight, but developed tbein graduaJJy during nomerous field trips. ReluctanUy, he ad- . mits exceptions. CmJ1.1PS ..:... That chimpanzees get toothaches is not spectacular news. What's spectacular news is that they sometimes extract one another's teeth when s8id teeth get into this painful condition. Yes, one another's. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875, Ne'IJ)- part Beach, Calif. 92660. · W.-llt 111111-Wll1t1 ~- I 1,I00 ..... 111111 S-. fltlt te llt -1 lltlll, Clrm CIRa• IMn . . ·1 I 1>1· rALM »'llNOS. lffl AllO ... , WllTWMIO he> MOTW Dl•I ''"At A~'°' C •ntfl"' I ' - ' --Mond.Q', Jwlr 2. 1973 > DAILY 1'11.S f ' 0 . A REl?ORT FROM· SHELL J - This sum"18 i& more irilporb!irt . than ever tq _squeeze every mile --::~-outof --gal ine. Why this slimmer? Gasoline supplies are short. Your local service station may even run out of gasoline for brief periods of time. Here is a brief explanation of - . how this shortage occurred. ~~~·"· .. lower thll'lia.tye.,:. - LaSt winte1', oil companies had to plo- gram their refineries to produce more fuel oil-it was essential for electric utilities, homes, business and manu- facturi!_!g. ~was done at the ex· pense of producing and stockpiling enough gasoline for this sunimer. So during the first half of this year, stocks were down substantially from ·last year. Although gasoline is pro- duced all year round, it must be stock- piled in the winter (when people drive less) to have enough gasoline for the peak summer driving period. • DemandforP">111& Upltpes;. There are more cars Qll the road than .ever before. Total demand for gaso- line is currently running at a rate well above last year. Refineries are tion. This is another reason why de- making gasoline at an unprece-mane! for gasoline is running ahead dented rate ... but there isn't enough of last year. crudeoilorrefirungcapacitym t e WhatlsShell United States to make enough gas er line and other petroleum products to u doing to try to help satisfy the current rate of demand. ·the slt!J,atlon? • And there won't be for some time to . Shell is continuing its search for come. Because of local zoning restric-domestic ciude of!. Shell is also tions, environmental constraints, and engaged in exploration in South other factors, only three large new Ame1ica, Afiica, Indonesia ana refineries have been built since 1969. Canada. Oil companies have expanded some Oil companies can never existing rejineries-but it's just not extract all of the oil from an enough to satisfy the unusual increase established reservoir, but Shell is in demand for gasoline this year. diligently pursuing iniproved Anothercompllcatlon: · Newcars1et tewer miles tothegallon. , There are more.new cars on the road than ever before. New cars are car- rying the additional weight of safety equipment and larger low compres- sion engines. They also have new emission control systems for cleanei· .. air. These changes in automobile de- sign have incre:ised fuel consump- techniques to increase recovery of .crude fi'om known oil fields. Shell is continuing to run its refineries at the maximum sustaina- ble rate, consistent with available crude supplies. Shell is planning . major refinery expansions. Shell is trying to get permission 'to build a new refinery on the East Coast where the need is acute. And we have intensified efforts to reduce fuel consumpqon at Shell refineries. . . How to get more miles out of ewry gallon of gasoline. In the past, America has always had an abu:ndance of gasoline. Except during World War II, Americans have never really had to worry about Ii gasoline shortage. But times change. More than ever before, it's important to squee?.e every mile from every gallon. Here are a few tips: 1. Travel 50 mph instead of 70 -get about 20 percent better mileage. When it's safe to do so, slow down. By slowing from 70 mph to 50 mph you can get about 20 per- ce11t better gas mileage. Another way to look at it: For the same ' amount of gasoline, you'll get 20 extra miles for every 100 you travel 2. Jackrabbit start& waste gasoline. Ot!r tests show that fre- quent jaclaabbit starts use up to twice as much gasoline as smooth, easy ·Starts. · · 3. Here's how to shift into bet- • • ter mileage. If you have a stick radial tires. Radials roll over the shift, ease out of the lower gears as ground with less friction than bias- soon as possible. D1ive in the higher ply tires; the result is a significant gears as much-as·irosstllle-,,;rhour---saving-in-gasoline.-I.f-your-~-doesn't "lugging" the engine. have radial tires, you can still help 4. ·A tune-up may help im-squeeze more miles out of a gallon of prove your mileage. Believe it gasoline by: (I) keeping your tires or not, about half the cars on the properly inflated; (2) keeping your road need a tune-up. And a tune-up front wheels aligned. could get you up to 10 percent better Other common sense tips. mileage. Th ere are other ways to hold down 5. Air filters and spark plugs gasoline consumption. Car pools are can hurt your gasoline mil e-one way. Avoiding unnecessary trips age. A really dirty air filter can cut is another. A little simple planning gasoline mileage. Air filt ers are easy will help . Cars are important to our to replace. Spark plugs can be way oflife, for business and for · quickly checked for fouling-or gap pleasure. erosion. Take the time. One fouled A small measure of driving plug can make your engine run discipline can reduce gasoline con- rough, lose power, and waste sumption considerably. If every mer gasoline. toii st would use just one gallon less 6. You can get up to six ev ery week, thi s summer's gasoline percent better mileage with shortage would be over. . --- . - • • } • , • • • ' • • • DAILY PILOT For the Record Marriage Licenses Otlier Deaths . •• LONOON (APJ -N11 ncy l\fllford, 68, British noveliSf. historian and witty chronicler of 'lhe British and French up. per classes, died Saturday at Iler hOrhe at V e rs a i l"le.s , outside Paris, after a long ill· ness. CORNWALL,. Conn. IAPI - Laurens llam.mond; 78, in- ventor of lhe Jiammond ele<:· t~ic organ and America's first electric clock, died Sunday. He also Invented stereoscopic pic- tures and hfld 110 U.S. patents. \VINNIPEG (AP) -iBishop \\'asyl \Velychko~·skl. 7 O, whose imprisonment b y Russian_....J1.uU1ocitics Y.'SS a symbol or persecution ror Ukrainian Catholics, ·die d Saturday. lie had been in poor health since 'his release from prison in January, 1972. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Funeral services were pending for Edward Nigro, 54, presi- dent or Del E. WebQ In terna- tional Hotels. who died Sunday or a heart auack in Houston, Tex. MIU. VALLEY (AP/ - Edgar Thomas ''Scoo p '' Gleason, 87, who provided the only first~y newspaper ac- count or the 1906 San Fran- cisco earthquake and fire , died Friday of a heat attack at his home here. He was a relU>fter on the San Francisco Daily News when the earthquake struck A pri I 18. Death Notices ' • I Monday, July 2, 1973 VCIHeµd Of School Named ' • ' • ' • Dymally to Talk in County Ba O.C. BvmNGS bargalnlni at the 5addk4>ack Shrillen ""'.laffted. Anyaoe · will be to develop • statewide Of ... °'*'ti-""' ...., Inn gathering. needing tnnsportation lhould position re 1 a rd I D-1 the State Senator Mer v yn * call Glyn Price, 17S-M471 or evaluation ol edl.lcaUoa. DYmaUy (D-Los Angeles), CONGRE88MANAndrew Barney Irwin, IG-2152. , * . Or. Wil ha m J. Lillyma n, chalnnan of the ~Sen ate Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach) * GL()RJ.A PERii ol Stantoo chairman or the department of ·nemocraUc caucJ,ahd a pro.. will speak to the Orange O>mr MIKE B R I C X , super~ bu beer!. elected vice presi- .. , "'' -IDATfR ·mASTER Cerman, has bee11; appolnted ~bty candidate for Htutenaht ty Shrine Club Fridi y. He'll tendent or the Fountain Valley · dent for the Far West Region dean or the School . 0 f governor, will addrtn -a tell club memben and their =boot ix.inct, bu been tap-o1 the Leque ol United Latin :-,,.,.,.,.,...,,Ullw' LL gi I tin. 1 th wivos, "What's Going On In to serve oo the Advl>ory Amer! cit· IL'" 'C) -TOILIT TANK 8A Humanities at UC! Irvine ef· 0 [CO re ona mee g o e Washington." Committee or the can izens u....-. . ......,, ..... ..._ fective Sunday. RANG · llJY ... Cal.ifornla State Em P !__o l. e 1 The luncheon meeting star.ts Legislature's Joint Committee She won the job..at the recent • ..._~._.......,._, He succeeds ~. Hazard -AJ!OC1at ill'sday in Santa at noon.at the Revere House in on Goals p.nd Evaluation. LULAC meeting in Albu-;";',":,"'";,-:;;1-;-:,=: Adams, nanled vice chancellorj_:-=========-.:____:Ana~:_· ~H~e~'ll~ta~lk~oo~co~llect~·~1~v~e_:Tus~~lln~.:_~A~ll_.:M~a11~'00~t1~~·~•~d~.:.....-'11'<~:._1~dv!Jory~~~bod1~y~·1~plrpose!Jl!i:~~-~q~ue~rque~!·~N~.M~. ___ .:_..,,.!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;~ for academic affairs last year. Dr. Robert L. l\Jontgomery, "'ho v.·as acting humanities dean in the interim, will de\'Ote full time to his position as professor of Engilsh and comparafiv~ literature. Dr. Lillyman, a professor o( German, joined the UC'Jrvlne ~filculty In im after servliig as associate prore.Ssor of Genn<ih literature · and preceptor at Crown College, UC Santa Cruz. Earlier he had taught at Stanford University. A NATIVE of Australia, he was gradu.ated from t h e Unlver'sity of Sidney and . studied at the University of Munich, Germany, before earning a doctorate in German -at Stanford. He twice has been awarded summer research fellowships by. ~ U C Humanities Institute. His scholatly interests are mainly in 19th centur y German and c om- parative literature. He is cur- rently completing. a book oil - - -the narrative . v.'Orks of the German-Romantic w r i t e r Ludwig Tieck. Dr. L!Jlyman is a resident of Costa Mesa. UC Irvine's W. Langer Prize Given Stephen \Valker Owen Jr-.ol Hermosa-.Beach..-is. the-iirsl winner ol the William L. Langer Pril:e in History at UC lrvive. J' ,, ./ ., ,. ;· . °'"I t[{ BATH I { 1· ·' .. . . after bath lotion • • • yo1;1r ' speelal gift with any ' pur;ehase of faberge's organdl • Introducing Orgondi ... a deli ghtful stir of flowers-and spices. Yours ' in a variety of offe ring s: Body ond Bath O il, 4.00. After Bath Lotion, 2.00-5.00. Bubble Bat h, 2.0!): Bath Soap, 3. cakes, 2.25. Body Tale , I.DO. Both Powder. 3.00. Alter Both Lotion, 1/2·oz., is .. yours with any Orgondi pure~o;.,. Cosmetics, 17 ....... _·~···· The $50 ,annual award was established by the department of history • to recognize the l-+-11------.,----'"' sen~r Nstory major writing t-f--t-----------...,..---------------------------------------------~..._-L the roost outsla!lding research essay. t"'-.f--+r--------------~----------------,.,..,..,,..,.,....~.--.-. The putpose--is--to--honor-the standartlS of scholarship ex· emplified by Dr. ·William L. Langer__, professor emeritus at Harvard University and dean of modem Euopean diplomatic hlstorians. Owen was graduated summa cum laude at the June 16 commencement program at UCL County Gets PEP Funds SA~'TA ANA -Orange Count y has received $2.27 million from the U.S. Depart- ment of Labor to continue the PEP (Public Employment Project) progran1 th r o u g h fi scal year 1973-i~. The PEP program provides jobs in govemment for young people and minority group members. Hopefully more than half of the workers hired into the ~ gram will become permanent county employes before the project is terminated next June 30. ,. " f dana's f estivtll of fragrances Uc to 3.$0 -~ • Captivating Ambush ... exotic T abu. Your "Choice of wit.her fra- grance in a duet of Cologne and Bath Oil, reg. $6, 3.50. Cologne Refresher, 2.50. Reg. 1:-;tr-Dano's exduslv; lipstick, 85c. Limited time-offers. ,. .- Cosmetics , 17 • I I . parfum de toilette ~pray l. • • your gih ..,ith pt1ttlaae of audace Fresh ; contempqrory Audoce Parfum· de Toilette Spray ... yours with any purchase from the Aucfoce line b Madame Rochos. Por- tum de Toilette Splosh, 7.50-12 .50. Porfum de Toilette Atcimizer, 7.50-12.50. Purse Perfume Atomizer, 7.50. Purse Flocon, 6.50. Cosmetics, 17 ANAHEIM NEWl'ORT HUNTINQ.TON IEACH ORANGE, MALL 0 , OltAN91 CERRITOS 444 N. E11cllcl {7 141 IJ5•1121 47 Fe1hlCN1 lil•11tf 17141 444-1212 7777 Ecli11t•r Av•. {71 41 192·lJJI 2JOO N. Tu1tl1 St, 17141ttl-IJl l 100 Let C1.,itM Mell l:llll •t0·0411 I .. .. SHOI' 10 A.M ••• t1JO r .M. MONDAY Tl:fROU6H FlltlDAY. SATURDA'fr o A.M. TO' P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOONto I r .M. • , ' • I ,. • • • ·- ; I • ' ' l I l I ! ~ • • • • • • . , ' l • • • • ' • • • I I I. ' I I l . ' ' 4 ..,All right-oYocodo. But, when , ·was a little girl it wa s j'ust plain green." ,,._ . • Sex Theate .. Woman. Enters Business SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A doclor's daughter says· she became an owncr<{)pcrator of a hard-core sex filrri theater "to try something different, sOmething creative.'' Arlene Elster led a "regular, straight life" as a blood bank researcher when she came to -San Francisco several years ago. BUT SHE MET philosopher Lowell Pickett as Se1ual Free- dom League ·clinic volunteerS am they became partners in photographing· and prOducing riude filnis. · Two years ago, they bought Sutter Cine1na, a downtown shopping district t h e a t e r featuring "explicit e r o t i c entertainment for adults on- ly." "I wanted to trv something different. something creat- ive," :f.1'iss Eisler said .in an interview. "I had a pro- fession ·r could earn a Jiving .al . I t~ou~hl I'd try something else for the fun of it." Miss Elster. 30 assumed 91'.lle control when Pickett left 1 the partnership. Most women involved tn operating sex-film theaters do so with their husbands. she said. shows pornographi~ means they are ''sex portrayed in probably a graphic way," she said. "Strictly speaking, I do not £eel any film I've ever shown is obscene. TheY may be disgusting lo some people, funny to some people, dif- ferent things is different peo- ple. but I don't believe obscene." Police have arrested Miss Elster -12 limes for in- vestigation or showing obscene lihns..-although.no ·charges are pending. As \\'omen in a sex-oriented field, Miss Elster and female employes are propositioned at ' tin1es. "SOME PEOPLE ask if you are interested," said a cashier who asked to remaht uniden- tified. "I just say 'no, I'm too busv'." Most approaches are made politely and aren't a constant problem, she adcfed. ''I get hassled fnore from kooks on the street just \valk- ing home in the da ytime.>• MISS El..Sl'ER , \\•ho said she pursues such normal in- terests outside the ,theater as a home,..:. bpr!~.i~od and the symphony. admitted 11_!! r mother and physician father aren 't too keen on her business enterprise. "She d o e s n ' t understand \vhy. The best I can say to'my pbrents is that individua ls ~if­ fer. My parents raised a ---;--·-·. • s tnrts to11101·row .. I /:/ I ~ • ' • ' ' ' ' 'I ' \; l ... /~ • ' \ 1 • •;·l!· -l!ll!!!lli---------~ '·' Reg. 779.95. Color ;5 the k ~ynote. Ston- ley Furnitu re takes cour1tryf~English and does it in yel1o•H and soft orange butter- nut finish. Crafted with sienna a nd white hand stripping. tops in mellow wood tone s. Crafted of Turkey. El rn veneers, - ~olid; Ash. sol:ds; _man-mode decoroti ... e .. .. • .-. ' •• ' .. - • ... ,, ..... J .::. I. ... -- • elem ents . The sei includes: 72" triple dresser, vertical mirror, fu ll/queen head- board 40.00 extra: match ing 40'' door chest. Reg. 349.95 , 284.95. 321/i" h;g h. Coventry lomp t"o motch by Sunset Lomp 60.oo. .a Furniture 92 ,_.Of . 8 , "I don't . feel I'm doing anything wrong," she said, in- dicating she may produce another pornographic movie. "The sex industr y is particularly involved \V .it h making money, exploiting an obviou., mRrket. f\.'lone.v is part of it. But throughout the \Vhole ttiine. I havcn·l 1'1ade what I feel· 1s a fortune." healthy, ha'ppy person, hut l'ml''f"'°"' not the same as them. It'S my1,;l•••••••••••lil•••lil••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• life and that's not always theP CALLING l\-JO VIES s h e same but a lot of my attitudes are just like my parents'." Tax es on Nixon ' Homes Increased t\flAMt (AP ) -The local property tax assessment on President Nixon 's Key Bis- cayne retreat has been in- crease<IDY-$55,000: - federal goverrunent. WHmlER THE Presiden will have to pay higher taxes due-!to......:the_incremLtax assessment will be detern1ined Dade County T~x Assessor in September, when local ~· H. Blak~ Jr. ~1d.·a.sscssors . govemm'ent bocli~s establish did not v,is1t t.he N1xo? com-next year's tax rates. po~nd, altpough . they re re-The Presid!nfs next door qutred, to examine all tax neighbor and close friend, C. payers property at IP,&.St once G. "Bebe" Rebozo, had his every three years. property va hie increased 22 r BLAKE SAID"', his men percent, from $73,088 t o checked i Ii f o r IJl a· t i o n on $89,188. ..• ~: . building perm~!~. to hike the S™ILAR IQXES w e r e !~• ·l . ., . value of Nixon s t• houses by made on two fiomes in the ;1~~ 23 percent, from 1$259,993 to . compound used~ by Secret ,J.-;I '315,568. ; . Service and s u p P-O r t i n g ~ 1" The assessment' on the personnel. · ~ i: President's home was boosted Assuming the Nixon pro-. '"° from $105,265 to $t%o,085. The perty was valued lilte other ot~r NixOll"Owned h o m e . Key B~yne prOperty, the which contains offices and .assessment of the President's servants' (Illar~/ was hiked ®mpound would still be below · from $151,733 to llSS,483. actual marki:tt value even with Blake said . the assess~nt the increase. · ."·' hikes were due· to inereases in Other homes on Key Bis- i and vallie °"t Key Biscayne cavne selling for "tnOre than and property improvement•, $55,000 were reassessed at some or them paid for by the $23,000. ' · 'Ha~bof DENTAL CENTER DENTURES' e CREDIT e PENTDTHAi PILLIMM • DTUCTION1 • RIMI WOii 1.un • Dllmlld • llPAID • .IACUTS ::'°'"AL • IOOt CANALS CIOWNS .llOOM TllTM I MIMOI orntO~NnA 2706 HARBOR BLVD-COSTA MESA ., A4-It ........ ,... 1 :Phone 556-8013 ,Try Satu rday's News · Qu iz , . • • ' ~ OUR ENTIR'E STOCK• OF SIMMONS l'tl ATI'RE SSE S AT SPECIAL VALUES . . '-~ : . .,,., . .,, . . ... : t'iWi-~; . .: / Iln®_ ANAHEIM NEWPORT , ; . 4 9.95 to ~7-2.00 65.00-90.00 volues. Now every Sim- mons in our stoc k is s~le priced. Toke your pick of the size ond firmness to s ~i I you r needs! Fu ll or extra long twins 70.00-95.00 vo lues, 57.00-82.00. ea. pc. Queen sizes 200.0-260.00 val- ues· 157.00-222.00 pe r se t. King sizes 270.00-340.00 volues 217.00 • 282.00 per set. Sleep Shop. 69 ./ 'Fai r trade items not included 1n this sale. -' ' HUNTINGTON I EACH 444 N. Euclid (714) ·535 .1121 47 f.,hion l1l1nd 1•2111 641·1212 1111 Ed int•r A¥•1'111t 1714) lf 2-J111 • OR.ANGE, MA L( Of OR.ANG£ lJOO' N. Tu1!i11 SI•••* '17 141 '9f.'ll 11 -2 ....... 1 SHOP 10 A.M. to 9:JO P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FR IDAY. S~~ CERRITOS SOO lo1 C•11ilot M•U 1211 ) 160-IMll 10 A.M. to 0 P.M. 5UN0AY 12 NOON to I P.M. -- • • • - • • •• Jfj DAILY PI LOr Easy Rider ' Kathy Stangel, 11, of Norco ·and her horse El Toro Wilhelmina stood otit ~among 100 riders in the first all-Orange County horse show at tbe new Mission Viejo "Equestrian Cen ter Satu~day. She won pony \Vestern pleasure competition and lost only in "sudden death\' for high Point \Vestern to 1t1aty Cox ·or Irvine. Kathy also won pony bareback equita_.!:ion and English equitation. . National Forest May Close Water Scarcity Threatens Muir W '!Ods • SAN RAFAEL (AP) -A water shortage in southern and cent ral hfarin County may force h1uir Wood s National propriation bill approved in 3 Senate .comm'ittee test. A 6-0 vote of the Senate h1onU:mcnt to close for all ol ( ) next vtar, ofricials -wam. OUTDOORS ThO Marin Municipal Wal<': District board of directors -~ raised the possiblity of cutting off water-to users outside the district boundaries. including the redwood prescrVe which had more than 813,000 visitors Natural Resources and Wildlife Committee sent the bill to te Senate Finance Com· ·mittee. open-space plin aimed at preserving San Diego's park and beach land . The plan ~ unanimously covers 23,000 acres of govern- ment owned tsnd, 17,00 acres which are or will be zoned for limited development, a n d 11,000 acres propoeed for public acquisition. 1be last category Includes 4,700 acres which will be bought 11 city voters approve a $22.5 million Man to Be Charged ·In Deaths WICHITA, Kan . (UP!) - ., Authorities say they will file three counts of first degree murder against a 67-year~ld man who called police SUnday ·and told1hem he had shot and killed his wile, his brother and hlssblel-1!1-Jaw. Floyd E. Anderson called ·- "'" ~·1 ... uot1•"'M .,.J.. ·· 1 1'0LO "!'OU 11''~ -SL IPP£.RY" WHEN WET! .. police to his brother's home at ---------- tne eiil-Ot-bls brltf shooting • • :Offenders Taxing PuJiishment Takes Form-1040 By DICK WESr W ASlllNGTON (UPI) -In olden limes when {l king becaroe displeased with .some o~ his subjects he llkely would order 1bem banished. .. According to evidenc:e at the Watergate hearin,gs. the modern way of dealing with offenders against a head ol. state · ls to have their tax returns audited. WHEN 'IN THE Biblical ac-• received a "cleim bill" count C~in is aent ta waoder the· Internal Reveooe s..V!c\ over ihe face of the earth, he Yea, and verily. criel out that his punlSl\rnelll It is distressing b more than he can bear. merely to be cauaht m II) But Caln never had to ror by a Martinsburg Monslett justify the entcies on a Form as the computers that ~,.-,; 1040. 1111 '°"""" are alfedlona""<f r Anyone v.•ho has undergone called. . :~·~ ,!uch an ext>erience surely \\ill As an 1ostrument of retrl empha~ with Robert W. tion, the "terrible s w I . Greene th~ Newsday reporttr ·fiword" mentioned in "Batt. ' H of the Republic" pro1!l ymn .• G H T ably couldn't -h -. THE OLD WAY was more • \. h)f rtble s'!'iJ't computen. · hwnane. ""'. -e ~ •ll'tt S>mday. They found ·Leonard And<niin , 90, and his This is ·not to suggest that ~ . S I DE I RAN AFOUi. o1 one · Nud C banishmenl was any bed ol yur and I aae<! 10 ~ . e _ Ump r-. The lament of the exile<\ whole eturn as audlled -at heCore I got it stralgh~ ~ a favorite theme in White ~ouse ~tigation after .out . ,And the '!bite Hout!!,. V• "tat• li~ature. he -wrote a series of articles wasn t even mad at me. ·! lSI. lOU . Shakespeare call~ it "t¥,. · about President Nixon's friend 1 :a?:" =wssur'1;~tor~:j! (IN SHORt: ••• ) biller broad of ,banishme~l. Bebe Rebozo. ~ g he Wlllt Houot wife, Ruth, 59, dead of wOlUlds R ""ted But he neYer tasted a ·tax been on . 1 _ e, ~ in the Chest !tom a .38-<:alib<r eCOU1~ ' r'etum arle'r '!he lnlernal GREENE SAi)) the audit "enemy !)St" described In 0,.. ReVenue Service made hash of cause<l him "untold mental Watergate · testimony of Johrb pistol. In Anderson's own WORTHING, "-land (UPI)• _:i::t. ________ _:a:jqguts11~u=ish::;._"_:ev_:e_:n_thoug_:_.::_h_he_:_._De_an_. ______ _ home, police found hiJ wife, ...... , _. "\::::;::::= M. argaret, 67, also dead. - A Church of England m1nl!ter has told his e Tanker Blut parishioners how he and his wife found themselves strand: SE A.TTL E (AP) ed in a Yugoslav nudist camp Authorities say a Liberian by mistake. tanker holding 10,000 pounds of The Rev. Tony Polter, 54, fuel that spilled fuel into Seat-and hl.s wife Yvonne were· tie's Eliott Bay after an ex· v4cationing wher\ they spotted an advertisement offering a plosion and fiash fire is in no boat trip to ·a "naturalists; danger Ot sinking. island," be said in the Two crewmen were Injured Woriltlng parish magazine. whetl the explosion Sunday morning ripped throogh a ONLY WHEN !hey go! there and found the place "alive forward fuel cargo tank that with nudists" did they realize was being cleaning to prepare the adverfuement sOOuld have the ship for dry dock. 'rtie ""d "naturlats' island "·Pol· tank -hid been' emptied t>f its ter said. 'lbey had to ~ait for cargo Thursday. hours for the boat to return Coast Guard cutters and city and get them. fire boats battled flames for "ODD AS IT1nay seem, J six hours before controlling am oonvinced that exposure to the blue on the 560-foot such an experience would kill vessel, Cygnus. lust stone dead," he said. ''The lPJman body, bereft of e Teml»lor Felt the annor ol clothes, make-up and other aids to beauty, haS a IMC. ;);IURC. 1nl'\1 onu GHT LOWER PRICES TO THE BEACH AREA PHARMACY ··-· WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICl THISI SU"I SAU IPICIALS-s.n. •tr. , o.r .... f>rll:• 1 SCOPE MOUTHWASH, II 01 ••••••••••••••••••••• $1.59 1.2t ANACIN TAILETS, 100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.67 1.4t Ci.tritv conoN BALLS, 260 •••• : •••••• ; •••• -. ••••• 11¢ 6t; Willi111"1,'1 "LECTRIC Sl1AVE," l 01 •••• -, •••.•••••••• 91¢ lff S.le Prfce 99c 1.19 39c 6'c 2700 t Coast -Hi2hwav. at Fernleif6arona del.Mar • • 644-7575 PALMER, Alaska (AP) defen&eless innocence which is Minor damaa• .... reported heartening 1n lhi• sex-mad Try s·a.turday's News .·Quiz from an earthquake and a_~"l~~~,'-'~"l'~sa~::::::=-___ !__ ______ .:!_ __ _:__:.__~'.__-----~=----------mild allenhock which r11liled the southeast Alaska town of Stlki. Residents of Jooeau, about 150 mHes northeast of Sitka, also rep<rted feeling the quake on Sunday, a ~ for the federal seismic Obsei vatury •id. The quake registered 6.8 RI ch t er ._ttude. e POW Stddde? last year. · bond bsue in November. DENVER (UPI) -An in· Superintendent R I c h a r -d llardiri told the board that the alternatives to closing the • ___ park include truckµtg in water or Wilding an expensive pipeline to take water out of Aslemb1yman PauJ Priolo, (R-Pacific Palisades) OU· thored the bill lo finance the purchase of the land streC.· ctting from the Topanga Ca- nyon area to Will Rogers State Park. The plan, Intended to guide complete autopsy report irr fut""' park development, also dkates that Marine Sgt. Abel includes oroposals for energy L. kavanaugh, one of ei~t conservation, waste disposal, ...former POWs charged with increased reliance on local OO~rating with the North water and maintenance of air Vietnamese, c o m m 1 t t e d quality. suicide, a source in the cor· • Redwood Creek. . ~~llltles Ope1l e Draini.ng D11e Capitol News Service Capitol News Servl« SAN BERNARDINO -The TRUCKEE _ Boca Lake, first permanent recreation near Truckee, will b e facilities of t h e Silverwood chemi~lly treated this fall to Lake State Recreation Arca elimmile u n desire able have been opened for public oongame fish and improve use. trout fishing, according to µie The new day-use area is the Department of Fish a n d Sa~rpit Canyon area at the Game. sooth end of Silverwood I.Jake, The lake.· on the Little 30 miles north of San Truckee River, will be drained Bernardino on State Highway to facililate thCtreatmcnt pre>-138. cess. Nongame fish-have. in-TJ)e ar~a i!l£!~d~s a marin_a creased ot the point that they compl~x, . a su-lane . boat are threatening the trout...-launchin~ ramp, a J?Ubhc ac- fishe ry offi cials said. ~modat~~.s dock, f1s~ cle?n-.. 1ng fac1ltt1es, a sw1mm1ng e f '1n1d• Backed SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 3. IQO..acre sHce of the Santa l\1onica l\.1ountalns "'·ould be purchased by the stale for under a $4.25 1ni1Lion ap- ~ch, a snack bar and 241 picnic units. e Ope1& Space SAN DIEGO (AP) -The City Council has approved an e Bill Opposed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Forest Servtce op- posed a bill lo designate Jiart. of the Mendocino National Forest in CaJUornia as a "'ilderncss area. Deputy Chief Jofm W • Deinema said the senrice believes that wilderness presen'alion would not be the best use of the 37,000-acre Snow Mountain area. lie told a ~nate Interior subcommittee that the area in Uie coastal moontain ranges of Colusa, Glenn and Lake coon-- ties contains valuable timber and has recreation potential. Logging is prohibited in a wilderness area. oner's olfice sald Sunday. Irivestigators be I i e v e d Kavanaugh, 24, took his own life but they also said he could have died accidentally while tryirig to fix a jannned pistol. e Mezlc .... Vote MEXICO CITY (AP) -The ruling Institutioilal Revolu- tionary party apparently won Sunday's ooogresslonal and gubernatorial ele<lloos by a wide , margin, but official returos_ were not ~ un- 111 the middle-or the week. Early figures showed that, ·of the 25 milllon persons who registered to vote; at least 111 million cast ballots. At stake \\:ere the 19t seats In the °"':nber of Deputies and seven govemorships. In '1lx of the gubernatorial races, thert were no apposil1on candkllltd. Mesa Bar Owner Fourth Revived Sues City Police ln Mistreatment Mesa w Bring Back Tradition A bar 0\\11Cr v.·ho claimed nc1\'S CO\'eragc of a melc c. \\'it h Costa i\Jesa police d;i magcd his 'family's commtinlly ~landin~. and cauSt.'Cl hi1n pcrSQnal injury is demanding $557 .000 in a lawsuit 'agai nst the :igency that arrl?Sted !hem. Cornelius Perez, 39, of 1079 Salvador Drivt'. Costa f\lesa . waS arrested along with his wife Lorraine and their juvenile . . ' E\·cr \\'onder ¥.'hat .happened to ihose good old-fashioned Fourth of July 'S ig1i of Ti1nes' Sparks Minor Confrontation son on Aug. 11. 1972, nea r their home , after being slopped for an alleged traffi c A ~ign of the times appc21red Frida>: on violation. th<> dark marble facade of the Orange celebratioos with picnic ' lunches, cofd lemonade, music and firework!? Well, they're reviving the tradition in Cos~ Mesa this year. · · . The ceremonies get under way at 11 a.m. Wednesday In O>sta Mesa with a Flag salule by t h e Colla M..a Girl Scouts. A band COllCert by !lie youtli tiruld of Explorer Post 808 starts off the music at 11 :15 a.m. and will be relieved on the stage by a barber shop quartet at 12 :30 p.m. 1----p,= ~~-Uken into eustOOy-by-or.-County..Courtbouse__apparcnlly placed by ficers Tom Boylan and Phll McCormick , a midnight visitor irate O\•er Watergate. Other event& include a baseball game ror high §chool boys, 1 p.m.; games. 1 races and a tug of war, 1:30 p.m.; horseshoe--pitching contest, 2 p.m.+ square dance demm.strations, 3 p.m.; prize drawings! 4 p.m. and judfing or patrioUc costumes. l:30 p.m. but evcntuiill:Y cleared in Orange County 'f'lhe bumper sticker .. stuck tighU.t-to Superior Court of assault with a dcadl the \\'a ll beneath the raised letters giving • -• !he ha Y the addr('SS, read: ··rmpcach the Prest~ weapon wtU o r c rges. dent." 1 Orte ol the police.mm respcmctlrig to the A young man with lorigish hair and a other's radio call ror nssisUl.nct cl.aimed short ponytail was s.lill d<>sgedly spniping he round lhe Pttez romily bea.tln g the solvent tand scrubbing at the stlclJtf_ at · 10:30 a.m .. two ana one-hair houf'S Jtcr patrolman with his own b<:tton. it was dik'Overed. Perez mnlplainli in his suit lhal II ha~ "Why are you removing that ?" snap- pencd lhe other way around : that he and ped a white-haired older "·oman, Who his family wCre mistreated and that the then proceeded lo browbeat 1 the Cl ol r~ M youngster about the Watergate affair. ty ..... r.ua csa condones such prac· finally , be told her, "Look, r hAvt to Uccs. re.move It. I'm the janitor." ' . . . / Box lunches wilJ be on sale for $2 each rrom 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. by the Costa Mtsa Bicentennial Committee, l n cooperation with the DaucJiters of the American RevoluUon. · ' ....1" Later in the day the celebration con· tlnu~s with a show at 1 p;m, in the Orange Coe.st College stadium and a 7:30 p.m. pyrotechnical d~p!hy. Flroworks tickets, pr!ceCl at 50 C<Ots for adults, and 25 cents tor children, will be sold In the OCC parking lot prior to the show. I expect my savings lo give a tQP performance. All the time. At Jmperial's ·over 60 offices, you can be sure that your money will earn the highest interest possible on insured savings. And Imperial o ffers 20 helpfu(services, loo. Most or them free. So pick Imperial. You'll stay with them. I did. 6.00% 5.79' 5.25'1 ..-,._ .. -......... ........... --.... ,....,-ea ""' "··-· 6.F .592*' 5.F _._...,..... ~-'"""'' -----· 5.W' I" --5.1.Jl' .... _.....,..... '111111iolllrtltWWWI ................. 11911111,_. .• A Plan for All People; Downiown 'Los Angtles • Clu•mont •East Palldona·Glmdon • NewpOrt Bt1ch • NewportUnttt • Puadena • Redl1nd.s • Siun M'1dre • Topanga Canyon • West Covina • Wnrwood Village· \Vhittier. Woodl1nd Hills. plus 16 other Southern C.IUornia offices. ' .,_,,_.,_-at OW.. UMl.l(IOI DOWlll-....,CIQlllOllA-OJ-.A. 0 011!1 .· I OPEN SATURDAYS Special Hours in Most omc.. • -" ,. v. ., . . ~ ' ' '· .1 ' • , --·--' • • Monday, JulJ 2, 1973 Pieasso Plea Bejttted ' commltaee suicide June 10, oommial,klned in S• to create late Fttnch eclcntl.st Dr. Ale1· -left an eltate ol mere thin a nine-foot, 7'0t).pound brOnze lJ: Carrel. A French court rejected the $5(),000 to his abler, Heleli statue d the late President The a vi.at.or and rffi':archer requett of Mn. Maya Walttt C..U. ~ D. Ehfalliowr. It was collaborated ln the 1930s in lhf 4 Widmaier to be recognlud as Mrs. Connell Uved with 1n&e placed at EI a • n how er ' a development ol a "perlusiOn a legitimate child ol the late 1t the HOUywood HiU.. home DealJon, Tex. btrtbplact lut pump" that kept. or g a n s artlat Paw. l'teaM. w•-re .~ g---~ "--·If to AUCllll. · ~ f I r 1111: uoe ~ n•u-1.x'. remo\·~ rom anima s unc-Mrs. Wkhnater, sa, wife of a death with carbon monoxide Now the time has come to tionln,g for several hoots. naval officer in Manellle, was dedicate the ltatue. T h e born to Picasao and hiJ Undbe.rgh, 71 , kno\o\·n for his ........... (' J' Denison Histarical Sooltty In• transatlantic solo night, made ~ .. ~ .. • mlstttu, model PEOP'LE JlOISIC<d ~ Jolie Niu• Marte.'11tertte Walter. ElseUower will come July t a rare public appearance a! Two l h 111 l" t .., _______ _,, C.eorg'ttown U n 1 v e r s I t y o er eg uma e to help in the dedication, and OAl.V PllOT 11 Captive Of Birds Sr. JOHN'S, NOd. (AP I .,... A "'ildlUe orflcer was htld captive on an Island bird sanctuiry for sever111 dars by noci.s ot birds tha t ~·ould not I et a helicopter land to pick hin1 uy. , children, Claude and faloma, from hi• auto e""'ne. ~ ~at •--... ~--•, ~,Id A1edic~I Center In Washington hlldr ol F ---•--Gllot ''6' w1 ,__ 1~JU .,. for a program marking the ~ornclals finally rtallzed !he puf rlns would not ny in rl a rk nes s and the hc li t1>1>ter landed after sunset. -~-en -r ........ VWl"C quaintancu •aid he was c-1·~---·. may a-pany · l r r--l ' bt-• h 1 l-• to n.. -=---...--'""""'' centennta o ...... ,e s 11-11. w 0 now s m&lT cu un:: plunged in despair by a 1(). her. David ls the -1 a t e ,_::::::;::~::_::_::::..:..::_:::__!:====::::;:====: . ' ere's · Goldie! 'idie· ~awn, making first appearance as night club star, partially sheds omedy 1.mag6 (and some ol her attire) in Las Vegas. She sings, dances and ·s comedy routine. . New Airport 'Eye' Used SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A low radiation 1 X-ray stem has been put to use by 'ted Air Lines in large ts throughout the coun- de signed so that inspectors will not De directly exposed to the primary X-ray beam· 1 • • the airline has reported. " The unit, developed by the Bendix Corp., can screen one piece ol paueogers' carry~ luggage every three seconds at peak capacity, said Frank fl.1urd0ck , UAL's st a ti on operatiorui manager at · San Fran.cisco International DR. Slri.tON Kinsman. head or ·lhc Department of Health's bureau of· radiological tiealth, and Will.lam W. Steffan, head or the Department 0 r Industrial Relation s • en: vironmental engineering units, introduced.the regulations at a news conference · at Los Angeles International Airport. ;.~ y:~Educator ~ 'Airj>ort. '~ "THE BEAUTY of this new security system is that it's at least twice as fast as the old manual .search m e th o d , ' ' Murdock said. ' , 1 ·~Installed ' :. Jim Sebring, dir~tor or ~ificatcd personnl,!-1 for the :puntlngton Beach Union High :SChool District, has been in- stalled as president of the Orange C o u n t y Cioast Administrators Association. On the board with Sebring "Also, it almost entirely eliminates the need for aome stranger shuffling through a persoo's private belongings." . They said that baggage in- !J)eelors arc exposed to radia- tion every day and although the level of exposure is not great, It could be dangerous. J are Oyde Glasser, a principal from the Huntington Beach Ci- ty Elementary School District, vtce_president; Kent McCUsh, admbtistrative assistant in charge of personnel ser\rices for the Ocean Vi~w School UAL is installlng 29 of the Wlils aroond the country. Murdock said, with three_ in use in San Francisco. Holps Solw 3 ~­ EARLIER IN Los Angeles. FALSE TEETH state health officials an-Worries caMI Prolll••• nounced toughened regulations ~ \!.i_ ,...._ l'Mo for. airport x-ray security ~ w -= :._-'.: devices to protect baggage in-· ...... ~w. . I) s.... s.__..."rs from heavy doses of Ulilit. -• ., 111111! • District, .secretary ; and Joan ' Read, a principal in the Westminster School District, treasurer. ~--_... . -radiation. 11i9\I'• .Mlil- The new regulations require ::J'w":!'>.!t1:::: J:: that X-ray equipment be ~. '• !;, •', \ • !#~J<ef~ Promises Tu Pay You A Guaranteed Income On Certificate Accounts At Their Highest Intel-est Rates In 38Years ! Right now, whilacummt high in-ratmprevail, select the certificate account that best IUita your needs! Start making the most of your money at Orange County's Jargwt, first and strongest independent Federal .... wheie your penonal Welo:me is warm, your financial security ill sure, and 10llf eunin• growth is ,guaianteed foe the full term .of your account. ,. ...... Ac:coUntl ln •'11•........m · $900 1n)nlnMn ... $2SCX) rnJNmam held far 10..,. 1 to I ,..n * . . B" $5.000- 2•1,..n·• . r . 1nquftlboUt ltDIY.., · cw--AllDOVbl-pafd_.., .. _ of $100,000 or--. Ad nowt * , • · ,.......orthnllaccountslimW. INTERE8l' ON ALL AccoUt;n'S IS OOMPOUNDED DAILY, PAID Q~Y •oo daY intermtforfeitu!! for early wit.hdra..,..aJ • G):l;;:,:-;,;:-;:;'ta~-IR~~@/~- AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ' HOME OFFICE: 260 Ocean Avtnue, La11na Beach. Calif. 926.S I La1una Hill• Brancb: 14011 Calle de la Plata, L11una Hills, Calir. 926.Sl La1una Nicuel Branch: 3 Monarc.h Bay Plaza, Sou1h La1un1, C.li!· 92677 San Clemente Branch: 601 N. £1 c.'mioo Real, Saft Ckmcnte, Calir. !>2671 Late Eltlniare Branch : 600 Wttt Otabtm Avenue, Lake Ellinorc, Calif. 92110 I American polio vaccine year slump in hi.s wnt1r.... president's grandam. "' developtt Jonas Salk, filed "'" suits seeklng legitimacy In caner. A grayillll but Ill CUrJet A. 1951 and 11170 but their suits Sculptoc ~ Deu was ~ .. ••"' tribute to the a1sO were rejected. .-,...... * Carolloe K.....ty, IS.year- old daughter fA. the late Prtsi · dent Jolla F. KeaedY, is sum- mering Tu the east Tennessee hill COUDliy north of Nashville • But no me Will talk about her or even reveaI the identity of Ille family &he's staying with. "We just aren't talking," tx· plained Clairfield ( Te n n . ) Postmistress Louise Adams. "Caroline wants pr i v a c 'y , wants to live like any other teen-eged girl. We're giving her that." * Pulitzer Prize w i n n i n g playv.Tlght William Iage, who Madam's Spouse . Denied Alimnny CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) -Ca'lvin J. Sandau's wife runs a house that's not a home, which is legal in .some areas d. Nevada. Sandau says she bas a weekly hx:ome of $3,500. Nelly 1.farie Sandau .is suing him fOf' ~lvorce, and he asked . $250 a week ali"mony, arguing that he COl)tributed to his \.\rife's success as a brothel keeper but oow earn.!! only $50 a week for himself u a ranch hand.· . · U.S. DiS1rict Judge Frank GregOf'y rejeded Sandau's re- quest • . THE AD OHR CO LOGY B·Of T~E Ill i I SERVES MILK. SERVES THE ENVIRONMENT. RECYCLABLE RETURNABLE LOOI toR RED HANDLE~ DON'T DESTROY! RETURI TO YOUR llLUAll Because glass bottles carrbe used over anq · over again. they never become a Pollution problem. Th e avera ge Adohr glass bottle does the work of 100 plastic containers. If you 'd like to stop contributing to the pallu- tiori problem. become a part of the solution . by insisting on glass containers. Adohr has for over 55 years. PLE ASE RET UR N Adohr · Ferms 11 .A.l f G.4.l l ON The Adohr Ecology Bot.tie is available from ' . these fine distributors in y'our area: r I ·' I Al DEWALD BRUNO FICEK RA~PH -flSTEt A: , . . Bill SCHOFIELD GABBY COMEAU ARCH MESSERALL GEORG.E BARNI MACK BROUGH · ·JOHN SHAFFO BUD BARNES BOB PRINCE. EMIL HILLIG . CHRIS HOWNGHURST JACK WILHITE Bill HOTCHKIN BOB . ST AVISKI ART LOGAN JIM FLANAGAN 'LAN TO AnlND TOMMY WAtKH'S"JUtT 4"fltlWOtK5'lP!CTACULAt , ANAHIIM STADlb~Y:lU-P.M'. Adohrfarms -, FOR HOME DELIVERY. OF THE . ADOHR ECOLOGY BOTTLE CALL NOW (714) 839-2100 • • " • •• •• • J • ( DAILV PILOT • • TONIGHT'S TV lllGlillGHTS KCl'I' flll 8:00 Biography. George Washington at the age of 22 is portrayed by Rene Auberjonois in thls Playhouse New York production, also featur· Ing Lyle Bettger and George A!ontgom~rl'.- ABC D 900 -"The Spirit is Willing." Sid Caeser. and Vera Miles play a co uple planning a peaceful New England vacafionl"whO Wind up in a haunted tiou.se. Barry Gordon, John McGiver, Jill Townsend . • .. CBS IJ 11 :SO -"Pris~ner of. ~nda." Stewart ~I Granger plays the title role·in this' 1952 adventure ~ movie with James A1ason and Deborah Kerr. ' • .. ·yv DAILY LOG Monday 'Evening O:OD II{)) llWkll c..ttr <Rl An 1ut. cmh·Y~im.6iscJ~s lo .IOI Gn· non that he llas sm11Q1ed • d1Ud into this country frem South Amel· ICI. howewr, 11111 isn't lhe on!1 problem. ··-{j) 1wiliPI hM CJlqilNDilTalbT• .•. ·--m ¥• "S1lesm1n" A lil1111d docu•lltlry portrait of fa11; Billll hucbtan; and Ille ptrso111I crisis of oM whO is frust11ttd In 1 world 7:JG G Jll!llllJ' w.1111•1 9111141 u, 11111 Whtr1 iucau it lbt measur1 cf 1 Qelr (R) M1rllyn Mlch1tls 1111sts. fl!:l.I. • I (I) lllpll'a Hmn io.:i V1rie4Mn D TH Ntw Price I• ltipt • 10:30 g Tai; lack D lllWI: c1111> "Th• 11_..,., 00 ht st.,"""' Witt" (ran) '48--Ciry Grant. di NI• ~ Tiit nrttt-un U!J" "'*-a •-I _, (C) llh•I llil-/- "'Slttl111 lllll'" (W!S) '54--0ilt Rob· ertson, Mtry Murphy. 11:00 II DD mm m ...... m""'"' oooo a m-•-., ... ...,_ fD T'll Ctli Ctl'ua (!) hrry Ma• m TH Adw:llhlnr D ...... : "TM Lut Mile" (dr1) G!) Mnklll '59-'-MickeJ Rooney, Don Barry. fB"' Mdul• ,,.., tDJnrltl If c..,._lttl(U 1:00 II (I) Cu11M110kt ~II) Rich1rd m llM!e: ~AMnMntr (dll) ·49 l1s.h1rt aursts 1s • ruaflcl Mia -Otnnis O'Kttlt, G1!1 Storm. capbill, and ~lome .lt11 auats u · th• wklow tit plans to lftlrfY ll:JO 8 00 £11 "* "'"4t: (C) "f'ril. D m M•liw LHpt ... r... SU .., " ?IMI" {adv) '52-Sltwlrt Die~ Y-1dre1 vs. Houston Astros G11np1, ·Jllllt$ Maton, Dlborltfl •t Kouston. Kerr. D rn m TH lloffits "The Sllow D di m Jtift11y Cane11 bb" (R) The two·mlllion·do1111 IJ l•i C..., , cadlt of cont11b1nd d1up tht U (}) Q) W"IM WttW If lftttr· roo~es t::lspi;se nl 1n th• octan ls1 tlilMlt "Th• Niahtm.Jrt Step" (RJ stolen by a scuba diver. An unh1pplly married woman, ti· (f~ Newi fused 1 divorce, hires 1 plld killer m TIM C~nt 1114 M11. Mwlr to rid htr of her husband. Don CB fit Unt1uch1ble1 S1n1ud, John Vernon, Louise Sortl. fl> LI Stntn Jtw1n ' Mike F1rre11, Lillian lthmln, 1f!d IEJ 1i9tr1pll1 "Geor11 W1shin1· S111 Ant l1n1110f1 sl1r. ton'' Rent Aubtrjoll:ll' stirs 11 m T• Tiii the Trlttl Geotae W1slt!nrton 11 111 22 in lhis P111house New York production 12;00 (JJ M•nhl Dilllll of the h1ro ts 1 ,OUJll min. Lyle m Mlrtll HittHtck rreWllb B1t11et ind GIOflt Mont1t1IMIJ lZ:JD 0 H11lm7 Ptlrtl tlS<I Stir. m llhrif: ~-C.lltltft" (llh) ID Tt. It An111NU41 · '40-VlctOI' M1tur1, louiM Plitt. ail M1ptitt Ylklts Show Ill"""' I'"' _...,.. l•())DBOill .... (m~) '34-AI .lolson. 'ltlJ Francis. •:• m...,.. ''''"" stlOW a!>NMtla •:to D Ci) Ntn't Lacy (It) llutlt Buni tutsts as the ullr d1Kklin1 mem· ber of Kim's drama dub wl!om Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES l :JO D !C) "lllJfflr's h niR(' (rom) ·s~tller Wllll1ms, How1td Kffl. 10:00 (l) "Str1111tf Ill My Arm" (dr1) '59-JUM Allyson, Jtlf Ch1ndt11. 0,"Slllddt lltlHl•n" (dr•) '5&- Mlkt Connors, John Asllley. IZ:OO e MSofWYI JHu" (com) '4t- Bob Hope, Luc111t 8111. "~ ti ~ 'lnlitl l1111.-(mys) '39-BlllCI ...... I :45 II lllwlr. ,....,.., Cmlilll" (mys) 'S3-Je111111 Crtln, MkMtl Rtftnit. C1rl Bell, Mtf)' Anderson. l:lO 8 MtM: (C) •rro11 Htll le ltf· •" (1dv) '&4-Ge«_lt MOllllOfll• ery. Tor in Th1\dltr. Julie Greu. 1:00 m "On DtnprtltS CrnMI" (mys) '51-Rob.lrt Ry1n, ld• Lupino. I :JO G "SNM H•lldl Witll 1111 Dml" (dr•)· ·st-James C111111, Doti Mur. uy. Dtn• Wynler. l:OO (I) (C) "Sllart" * (•d-) '6&.-8.1111. R!yno!ds, B1rf)'·Sltn1Y1n. iDl (C) "ltKll hltJ" (tom) '63 -Fran~le AYllClll. l:lD 0 (C) "llwr ltlr" (1dv) '48- YvonM OeetrlO, 0111 Ouryt1. 4:00 II "Tiit Pl'MCI 1111! Ult rriflM• (drt) ~~WiflMm Holden, Def!. onh Karr. •:JO (]) S... " lOMI ..._ '• • • Ii All Happens in ihe TV Newsroo 87 JAY SllARBUTI' ~w YORK (AP) -A ma· Jor network recently took out a ntwapaper ed here to report that the anchorrDe:n on the nve TV 1t&1ionJ it OWl\I DOW do thtir newscasta right from the newsroom ~tead ol a studio. "When you take newsmen ofr t~ #t. and m•.v•' the cameras into the newsroom, where lhe rea1 1exeltement is, that's News," the ad said. Jt may be News In New York. ttut It's old hat for my pal Evi!.rett Scrimshaw. who is the owner, manager, pro- ducer, director, reporter , anchorman and staff trom- bonist ror WWWW·TV in Bum- ruageon, Fla. "Ah've "been 1*oadcastin' (rom the newsroom ever since W!!! IHE . ALL THIATllS COOLID IY 11rl1GOATION OW Pl AYINr. llSllVID SEATS Dn S.11 Ul 'Ii i "30 rri .. Sat.. Sun. Jlaon MARLON1 BRANDO lP.t. 'fi1tt 'J>8l1s ' r.;;....-Uftt.. .' I.el 11-11" U11111r~ •l't111 MOI. THRU THURS. I P.M. FRIDI! 1 I H5 SITURDll 1-J I U5 SUIOll 1-1 I I All SIATS $4.00 IMU IT !1'"4.J,11-J<Jl I M.1, _ _. Al JMlltONI "UVI I LR Dll" '·'· ---,., • t.11. I Ml. _,.II 1-1,.1-l:tl JONll WllM. u "CAHIU, INTIO llt.m ... stlll.I" Mi. .,..., ~J+:<J.lt;• ·u .IWH" Ah took over the. staUon," he said. ''Ah have to. lt's where we ketp the cameras, the newa tickers, mah typewriter. the pay phone and the corree pot. IJ a beehive ol exdttment and voices and no 1111.VU. tlpoy lipplen today teetettd actlvl!.Y · the .moment he' ar· 'lbil isn't the cue, or toward teurkana -what the rivet to _. the lbow. courae; manr llllCbormen are -·;::bell;:. ;::IJ=tb;::la;::, ;::Brt;::t;::lle;::!;::"==~ The reuon it is to buy is fine reporteni. But you can tell ~ that Everett uaiany arrives :J> wbea Sinbad'1 tenae of minutes before air Ume • .,. outrqe Bell to him becau.e ·---"""'-"' .,..,.. "AH ALSO keep a tittle rye handy, but don't put that in the paper," added Everett, who .acquired-WWWW two- years .. ago when the former ownet._went to Washlng\on, to talk to the FCC and never ... came· back. he'll deliberately w r I t e 111E UNSUNG hero or the "toogue twlst«s," ,...__, 1•J 8' Yoo News" is its sole that are -e•lremtly hard f« newswriter and aulgnmenr EYUett Scrimshl• to pt out. cdl1or,-.Sinbad_BrlUle • .He's a Yoo can ten when Slnbad Is thin, sallow-faced man who outlagect when Everett L!I on Jett a major newspaper -tbe the a~, t.urn8 a page of copy Bwnfudgeon Eagle -to work and says : "ln.naUonal news, for"WWWW. . '-:~~=====:;:===:"j • .... v ...... .... ....,_ IAIAH MILD INl L "THI MAN . Wt!O OVED CAT DANCING", Everett's station isn't .large. Like many e,x· It would fit inside a network newsroom. It's so small he doesn't peed interof fi ce memos because there's only one office to send them to. newspapetn'len 'A'ho m a k e the switch, he thinks the anchorman couldn't find a story unless It was World War Ill.· lie thinks all anchormen have ooly pf'f!tty faces, golden And that office is where he does the "I See You News" program e1cti. night from live to six p.m. The tiny newsroom A ... ....,_,. ' "YOUNG WINSTON" • "WHERE DOES IT HURT?" Witt. ,..... s.lkn CPG-J -· -CO'.o "ARISTOCATS" . '"' STADIUM I " 0. .& .>1,••1 ' hL • :'Soot Of TH Soultl" IGJ -·· -...... STADIUM l :~: "CAHILL·U.S. MARSHALL" -"-A '-'•'" r• l>I ' • "HANG ,'!M HIClH" IPGJ .... -··· ..,RllNDS 0,. EDDIE COYLE" STADIUM ·3 ·. . "" .. .A!.lL\".L!.'...I ... ~·---"PRl~r, CUT" (R) a.ttte h.-Tiie ........ Of Tiie A,_" ( G I • • "THE LOST CONTINENT'"· U. A. CITY Al'D SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAY stc IL.AOIES ~NO, Got.DEN AoallS)-O'l!N 'l'IL J:DI ,.M, C. rv-1,. Wl111ielll "S.OUNDEJI" Al111 A"'ill "'01'1" •otti In Clllorl tGJ -MI T. Only! "WILLY WONKA" "CHAllLDTIE'S WE•" (G) Evl Ontyt ''LOVE & l'AIN" "I IS A LONEL 'Y NUM•l!JI" (JI ) IN THIATJI THIH NOW. THEATRES 2 & 4 lhe protfMCtfw: OWl'W't of .....,,~.--.. GENE HACKMAN fiii-''11 ' 5CfRECRON .. " 1 M I NIWPOIT 141-1111 WALT IHSlllY"I ''ARISTOCATS" ·-"SONG OF THE · · SOUTH" (G) C0"'11!!10n MILT ROM 1 P.M. w "TMI HAllAD .._ IXPllltflM1'"' Ill ... " DY". ''A ROYAL TREAT!" CO.HIT ANAHEIM "TOI.I.I TOUI TOIAI" EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENTS s1urs run. •••• i STA' RTS All NEW & BEAUTIFUL • EDWARDS WEDNESDAY WESTBROOK JUL y 41h TWIN CINEMA WISTMINSTll AVI AT llOOKHUIST TIMPOIARY PHONE INFORMATION 892-4493 "THE Dl!IER" I ·~·· ......... . • • • • • • . . ' .. ' . . • I l\111\1 f\lfK "~I t ,,O f. f.. J. V ) ',0,'A o,l!\,!. • '17~ ~141 ED\A/ARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~A .. "! ' '"' I ' l.I P &/ T1 ·~· , ~ ' ' kOO ' .... a.. Ek«••• ·~-.., _,..WHllU__,_. -Oii-- " • *********** .-~­:T..;;;""..;... ._, ....... ....... ·---···" f ----· ·-··~,. s ... , ...... . ,, ..... ~ ..... . Chopm•n 11,.,.. 551·702'2 CAHILL U.S. MAISHAL !JGJ ""' • ~ MrOt.111~ LI MANS -.lll.-••U.1.1 ,l - • .. ,, • ._}• • • • • • • \• .f , •' .. ' ,. "'T I I • •• (' ... DAILY PILOT J:J TUIS. & WID. O NLY Dally 10-10 s... 10-7 9 PEN WED .. JULY 4tll 10 TO 6 j • · Y 01tng 11' qslai ngt!»t Tony AWard-~inning . actor Rene Auberjonois por-a· trar.s George Wasbi.ngton as a young officer in "Por- •• trait of a Hero as a Young Man" on the PBS Spe- ~ ci al of. the Week tonight at 8 o'clock on KCET, :;, Chann61 c _. ~. U.S. West New. Scene ~ ; . . . : Of; Spaghetti Western s ·~ , .I , -- :f; MOGQLLON; N.M. (AP) -3.50 Westerns in 10 years - ~-Years Bao, Frank Trolio's are tired of the same Spanish •• parents emigrated to the scenery in Leone's movies. United ·'States from Italy. Morsella said the .unfilmed Because: he ~· lived 1n this New Mexico ~ was -~ isolated southwest New Mex-worth-the~-roto percent in- s ico ghost towd' fQ! many of his crease in production costs of t' 80 yeari, it's been some lime -the $3.5 milliQO movie. Much i'r. since he 'ls seen Italians. or the additional expeit.se is at-~ Now, lilfhough he no longer , tributed to the necessity-.of _ I~. speaks fhe language, Frank flying the daily ~kes to Leone ~ Trolio will ~ ~n by millions in Rome: ~· of movie labs in his parents' Leone is besc· known to I, ~ native country b e e a u s e American fans fOr 'bi's so-call-·: .. ~ Mogollon is the location for ed spaghetti W~st.erns $tarring ;-· ,,., Sei'gio Leone's lates t Western, American actor Clint ~: "NobOdy ls My Na me," star-Eastwood. What interested an ring Henry Fonda and Ter-Italian director in Westerns, rence Hill. 1 considered by some critics the •: The movie's executives were ultimate Amert~ art.form? ~~ so impres~ with tf!e Western .... flavor of lTrolio's appearance :~ -he wears an eye patch and ·• limps -that they paid him to " appe ar irl one o( the scenes. THE WEsTERN does not belong to ·Americans alone , Marsella said. It's an in- ternational e~ri€nce, "the ~ last fable that ·people are \Vill- lnglo liste-n to~"- . 'While Qilantitle1 La st MEN'S 3-SPEED BICYCLE GIRLS 20" HI-RISE BIKE Th• popu1•r ]-spied mod1I. Twi1I 9rip 1hifier, lu99•9• e1ni1•, l 1tt1rv h11dliCJhh, chrom1 fenders ~nd rim1. White 1idew1 ll1. Knobbv '''" tir1 for f•H g1i-•w•y1. Fe1lur1 1podv b1n•n• bucket 1addl1, hi-ri11 m~libu h1ndl1 bar1, chrom• rim1 i ncl •'!'oolh 1c!ion co11!er breke. U1e your K.m1 rl'ch•r91 c~rd . 26" wh11l1. · MODEL #2696 -FAMOUS BRIGGS& STRATTON ENGINE . Md l. KM1 2S 28" MODEL •2041 1888 " 20-INCH, 3-HP ROTARY POWER rl . LAWNMOWER Ch.orge l t ! 33ss Fomou' Briggs & Strotton en;ine. 14-govge 51eel deck, side d ischarge chute. 7" whee.ls, c:hrome loop tKindle·. Throttle control at el'lgi oe. Don't mi~\ this sole! Ctior;e it. • ' -, • 200 111Ul BALLS 57t. Fre1h d1liciou1 m1h1d milk ball1 in ,.,il k conl•in1r. • Hill, who has starred in • seven Westerns, wa s in the Ml .. '"": ' 'L .. _ American West for ~ · firsf ~ time, and he was impressed. · ~. _, ,,.,. .. " ' ' ' 3344 Ji,NIPER SALE 67c . \Vhlle mi!Uons in Jtaly and ~ -other countries mig?lt see his ;~ performance, Frank doesn't :{ expect to see rum.self - :~ Mogollon's onty movie }¥:1use ·f. collapsed several decades ago. GOLD WAS discovered at ~ MogoUon in 'the 1'706' and at ·~ · one time, this tiny vi\18ge near -.. the Arizon(l border supported 'q!to. a pop_ulation of 2,000. In 1960, "I was always told how big ' It was," he said, "but seeing it ~ is something else. It sort or ~, ~drugs you_ to'drive through it.~ I can understand maybe the CO\\'boy better because I can ~ see the places." · t ' l·G61lon ~ T •m, Pfit1ers, Armstrong t: be1utify those dull spats i • . in enY yerd. I ~ i ~ ·l ~ • ., " /! ~-if. ~· the re were t4 saloons, seven restaurants and two hotels nestled 'amon~ the mountains. Now th~te are no buSlnesses and only a 1ew •residents, like Trolio. I So what brings an Italian thovie company to Mogoloon? lt's really quite simple, says executive producer F u I v i o )ilor5¢Ila. Italian fans -after The film is being shot in Z' English, Morsella s a i d , , because Americans are un· ;; consciously lip readers whi le the rest of the world doesn't .!' mind if Its cowboy hereoes are Ii a little out of synchroruzation: (; Ile said it will be dubbed later , in Italian, French, German and 1 probably Japanese. / • Soni:t bo x, wading pool. High • im · pact material. canopy in vinyl. ~ SF Symphon y ·Earns .. , , ....................... _. 7'' oj'l I"' ...... ... J Kudos From Moscow ::~- MOSCOW (AP) - A pro. minent Mo sco 1x conductor has praised the jusk:om- pleted Sovleti t~r or the San Francisco -symphony as " a I .: great success." · ; Prof, Boris 1Haikin had · 1:: praise tor all the orchestra's : :; sololSts in a revie\v · fu· the ;. newspaper Sovietskaya 'Kul- l ~ tura. / \ . ·~ Haikin singled out soloist ~ Stewart Kanin es , "an ex·· 1< celfent viollhist .1v.'ho pl8ys ·t with bbuDdJesS. vigor, and by :~ his initiative'keept the eriire 1~ string sectiOO at constant, 1) tense attention." , . ~ But Halkin had t h i s 1.. criticism : '1At tbe same time, 1~ the sound 0£ the stririg in· . ~ sti,1Jnenls wa~ not all it shoo ld ~ be. We are • accustomed to , .. greater warmth and stronger feeling.", ~· ~,. : Ha.ikln sal pifni;n Andre · Watts was "a pleasant discovery for S o v i e t au~ !.. diences." · !'He has a beautiful sound, ~ faultless timing and virtuoso technique w i t h unlimited possibilities," the Soviet con-· ductor said. "The ;young pianist can only be reproached ti for certain sentimentality in ~· his interpretation of Beetho-[ ven 's ,Fourth t:Oncerto." Conductor Selji o· z a w a . ~ ~aj~. Wl,'Ot~,. '.'~ an "()figirial tmlltcian who tehes mostly on intui tion and f i e r y tern-. perament. His i!Wiretation of Tctiaikovsky's F o U r t h Symphony attract_ed. ·~at in- terest," Haikin cootinued . "His mfticulom and spiritM perfonnance merits approval . ... ---· ·--.. . .. Charge it at K n1art 6-PIECE GYM SET The lyrical section of the scOre lllO'°lf,.., . .,. sounded with__p art i cu I a r wannth ~aM lnsPiratiorf. Many things 1n ,.his • interpretatloo were unusual but lnterest,ing and attractive," , $PE IAI. (AKErDONUTS • PATIO & GARDEN ANIMAL DECORATIONS ' . '88¢ vour: CHOICE .. Add the ru stic appearance o·f these farm animals to the chorm c f -yo ur yard er petio. Cha rge it! .. ' Plastic toble for patio . Choose green, g ol d o r crystal , Save • 2•• ., • <Vl!NC•INI'> SUMM ER TWO PASSENGER LOVE SEAT Rem in :~c on: en: p!Das.::nt days of the p•st. Stronq, sturdy con:frucfion. Has scolloped cenopy •nd •pron, :'< 2" b1,1tton tufted seat and back, Ide•! for l•wn, p•tio, etc. Buv now and save, -' ' ... w "'-. ..::~: • ALUMINUM SCREEN " DOOR WITH KNOB, , AIR-CLOSER, LOCK "177 ~ C,,or9.e ii! . Durca.:frome aluminum with fully riveted rece1sed hinge1. Ad jusl able side and bottom (honnels.. ~ , r. '.' r ' ' Q. ·- • . ..!.o. "" _ .. ~-"· 22" KETTLE GRILL 1000 Rustproof num qrill with ' •djusfe- ble chrome qrid, 2 dreft controls, remov•ble ash pan. Char9• it! 4" COLEUS PLANTS __ _3.--,.1~0 . U11f11l for ''"'"''' llo11f1r1 1114 •• outlfoor-inlfoot t o11l•i11er pl111tt. i11 1h1lll11 of 9 r1011, ch•rlr111i1 y1 llow 111111 1th1••· l·GAL FU~HSIA 774 , ·1 • '' I • -· • • - .. • • J 4 DAIL V PILOT PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS IUSIJllllSS MAMI StATllMINT • 5 • T~ lollo'f!llM per111n• •rt lw•l-1 11· P.LI'. =-'cE\IELOPMENT CO., 1077 Mlttmer, LIQl.IM 11-.dl, C•lllotl'lll "'" . l'Mll L Fttbtt."~11 Ptrl,..., 10'1 ~~--!Mr, LeouN ll•Ktl. C1Ulofnl1 f'C.!.tt.lfl' .... ~ltrlill' Co .. I UW• ,_,!Mn IC1Htorr».), Llmlt..t "''"""' llltS S11ulll lro1dw1y , c;.,...,.,, C.llfo!'Nio ~ Thi• ~-IS CCllMWC!ecl llY I llmlr .... ~rlnerllllp P1ul L, 1'1rbt1" G.,,...11 P1r1.- Tllll 1t1tement w11 filed w!tl'I !I'll Coun· ,., Cl"k 11'1 Ot•l'Qt Counly on Ju,,. 20, l•n - l'·H•I f"ubil&hed Dl'I"'" Co101 Dilly Piiot. Jllfle :ZS 1NI July 2, f , 16, 1'73 ltSl·13 PUBLIC NOTICE ' NOTICll 1.-v1TING 1105 NOTICE 15 HElfE!IY GIVEN fflll Mtl· .. Pf-II will bt rKllYff DY Ille City of COit• M..S. ,, tM oUlc• "" ""' City Clatk 11 IM Cll'f Hill. 11 F1!r Orlv1, '°''' Mn•. C1lllor11l1, Ul'llll ,,.. hour of ll:(IO 1.m. on ~ly, JUI'( f, ltr.J ,, wtlkh llm. !My Wiii b9 -ned pi;bllc1y and r11d •loud In the council d11mbolr1 fOI'" furn!P.1"'111 111 l1bor, •n<ll!ti1la, eciulir -n1, lr•nsporllllOft tl)d sucn otn.r 11· c::IHtl11 •• m•Y• ~ rooulrtd IQ' It>• CONSTllUCTION OF THE MENOOtA STOllM DRAIN. A H I cl a11n1, -l!lca•'oM -.rd o!N!r conlr1et dlll;um11nt1 ma-, lie Obl•!ntd 11 in. olllc• ot th• Clry Envlneff, n . F1lr Q•t .. , Co111 Men. C&lll0tN1, "'°" & "°"" tlfUndlttl• ••vmenf of SS.DO .• ,., cn.r119 of Sl.00, w111 be ......,., II l>liiclltd tty mi ll, PLEASE MAIL SE P/j,AATE CHECKS. E1Ch bid ..,_II tM ~ on the P<OllMll ~ NICI ln 1111 m•n,.... Ptovldtd In .1111 conll'KI docu"*'~· Ind sn.11 lie K · CDf'nP<lnltd ...,. • certt!IM or c1W.ltr'1 J:Mck or • bid bend for no! leas lh•n 10"-I. W flMI &mo.111! cl the bid, mad• p.11y1bl• to !hi City o1 Cotl& Meu. NOTICE 15 FURTHER GIVEN that the Clly Council ·of 1&ld Clly h11 herttolort •1l1bll1htG • PflV&llln<;! rite tnd 1cal1 ol wt;11.s, In K COrdln<;t wlln law, lo lie ~Id In 'me con11rvc11on ol TIMI &bo111 .ntltltd l~h. Tll&t ..io r111 •nil JCalt · -• Nclpltd by 011 City Council by RllOh/Uon No. 7l-1 on 11,. 2nd Dty of J1n11&ry, 1m, &lld 11 on fill In !he otUce of 1M City Clerk or .. 10 Clly. Tn.t ltld l'•N 9"11 tule II herein reterr.O 10 •nd 9do91td In lhl1 no!lct •1 ftlou!lh ft.Illy •nd c~llly Ml torth tMrtln, 1/IO ,.,., w lo mc:1i., 11 ICIOO!td oy uld resolution, 11 rn..i. a p.11r1 ol ttlls nvtk:I by rtllr91!(t. Thi' Contr1etor shall, In I h e pwformll'ICI ol 1111 -k • tnd lm- prlW-11, conform lo flW Labor COdl of the 51•11 of Ctl!lornl• wld otl>lr ltwa of ltw SI tit of C1llfornl1 -tppllctbll mtreto. wl1h Tiii 1•c1ptlon only ol 1uc11 vwl1Hon1 •• m1y lie •l<Wl•ed 1,1nder !hi tfll'C.liol 1t1tut11 p111·1111nt to wt>tcn pro- c9tdlf111 Mrl'l/ndtr ar• Ilk.., ano Which ... .,. not llHn luPtf....itcl b'I' lhl pro. "!"-of 1M LI_. Codi. Pr1fer...Ct TO ....., NII bl lllYlll only in TM melllll'I' prO¥ldtd by law. JM 11111 M\111 bl Clll'lllffrld 111'11111 JI" 11 mMt-°" • blilflk-tor'ln ·fVl'Tlllfted oy "" City of C01fa Miia, 11'111 h m-ln I(.· cootmnc• w11t> -pro<olsltlnl ol the pro. pawl r9<111ir1n11nta. EKh blOdw must be uc..,,.i tt>d 1lio pr••••llfllld as rlqulrlld by llw. Tiii Cit.,-Countll ol tne City ol Co111 Miu ,....,....., 1111 rl9ht 1q,,r1ltd 1ny or t ll Didi. r O.t.d: Jvnt 25, 1913. •Y TH& Clt'DER OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF Tl-I E CITY OF COSTA MESA,, CllLIFORMIA ~bll1hld Or•noe COflll Oflly Pllol JUl'I • and July 2,. 1913 2Cll-1J PUBLIC NOTICE lllOTIC• IM\llTlff •IDS .. :J'~e~ ~1~Et!Y...;•,;-::ND¥ '::J City of COlll Miia •I the offlc1 of -City Ctlr1l 11 the City Hill, p Fair Dt'I"-Coll• Mell. C.llfornl1, untH IM i-r ol 11:00 1.m. on Mondl y, Jlll'I' t, 1t13, at which time IMy wllJ 111 _,,.. 9111 pvbllch and read tloud In lhl council ehllmblrs for Purnhhlnci au 1111or, ma- llrlt la. ~!-1, tr1nklof!1Uot1 tno 9"Cll o!Mr 11emfl .. 11 may be r'9Qufre tor tMP'ROVIEMENT OF TE WINKLI!! MAINTliN/j,NCE YARD. 'A Ml 'ol pltf\5, IPKllk ttlons ...0 Olhft C'Olltr'KI OCC-11 m.y be abt1lned "' 1111 olflce of !hi City Engl.,...., n F1lr Ori .. , Cost~ MIN, CalJ~nlt. upan • ,_. ,...,.,,,..i.e pa....,,...1 ol Sl·'°· Clwltll'! of ,1.00 w111 tM ,,,_ II hafldltd t1¥ ,_..It, PLEASE MAIL SEPARAT E CHECo<~. Eidt bid ..... II blf made on TIMI pr~I farm end In 1111 mil'•-pr<Nld«I In thl conl•ICI ll«llmll)ll. alld 1n1H °" IC· ~led by 1 certllltd or c1shltr'1 chlCk or • Old 'boftd for no! lu1. tlltn 10 P.,c"'t ol 1111 emount ol The bid, mtd1 .,..,able to Thi City of COii• MIU. , NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN lti1t tne City Council ol Mid Cl!y 1111 hett!Olor1 ..i1blllllld • prl~•ltl!lll r•ll Ind Kiii ol W19'1· In 1C(Ot"(l111C1'Wllh l1w. to't>or Plld In ttw con1truct1on ol lhl above 1nlltllld lmpiov•'-•'J. f"-1 wld ••le ilnd Kille wt1 adoptlld by tn. City Council ~ RIMlvtlon Ho. n.-1 on the 2nd 011 cl ,,..,....,.,, l'73. lllCI 11 on flit In -Ottlc:• :>! tn. Clll' Cilrt ol n ld Clll'. Tt..ill Mid rat. Md KM 11 ....,,;" r1fffrM 10 and adoptlld In 1n11 riotke •1 tticiuvn fllll., Ind C'Ol'nPltffty Ml forth htre/n, •nd IN! ltld 9Cllt, 11 ldoollld ...,. said rfl0h1llon. 11 1" .... a ~rt of 11>1• notice by r•fer1nc1. TllO Conll'Kfor lhlll, In I h. pa..-lorm.1nc1 ol 1111 .wort end lm- Pftl\llmlllb, c..-m to thl Leber Codt of ltM Stall ol C1llfornl1 and oll>lr l<lwl o1 ttw St1l1 o1 C1lllornl1 tP01k1ttl1 '""''°• wtlti Ille U CtPllon ontv ol l..CM v.rl•llom 11 m.1y lie requlr~ llhde-r ll'le ..-1a1 1111111n _....nt to which oro. cwdl"°" ...,........,. 1.-. lllk"' •nd wnkn ""'" ""' -'""""'°"° by The l)f(>. "'11-of TIM Labor c-. Pre~renc1 to labor WU lie gh"' only In 1111 manner providtd by llW. No bid ""-'1 be C'Oftllci.r~ unit» 11 11 Madi on • bltf'lk torrn f)irnlsMd oy the City of CCIII• Mesa. •llO II mt<k 1n &c• cwd&IK9 wtlh TIM provl'1on1 ol 1111 pro. "°"' ~.......enl1. £.ch blOdll' m111f be llc..,1ec1 1nd tlJO pr"11)111111d as l'l'qV!rld ...,. llW. Thi cr1., counccn o1 1ne cuv o1 co:i11 Mn;i rnar,,.. ltM right to rel<KI 1ny or ... bld1. Dlltd: J1,1ne U, 1'13. 8Y THE OAOER OF THE CI TY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COST ... MESA, CALlF"ORNt ... P1,1bll!ohtd Ortng.e COISI Diiiy Pllot, J-21 end J1,1ly 2, 197J 20'.Zl·/J PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI! INY!TIHG ••os NOTICE IS. HEREllY GIVEN Th•t w11- ld pr-•'• w!H ~ received 11¥ !he Cl1y of Coll• Mt11 &T Ille olllcl of IM Clly Clerk 11 !he City Hill, 17 Fair Orlve, Cotl1 Mt••· C111for'11,., ""!II !M r.our of 11:(11) •.m. on Mondt¥, July 9, 197J, II which 11m• tt>ey will 11e """ned 1>Ybllcly 1nd r1.a aloud In !hf "'until cM1mDer1 for turnl11'11n<;1 111 !ettor. m.11e•i•I•. eq11to. """'• lr•MPOrllllon and 1ucn ott>e• ti'- ' ~~1~\~~1110:-;" ~,;~riti:~s R,~~~~: A MT ol plfns, Nlldl•Ull°'" tnd other conlrKI c1111;..,,,_"' m1, 11e ODll!ned 11 1111 offlcl ol IM City Enpl,_r, n Felr Ori". Cmtt MtMI, (1!Hornl1, ~ I Mnrlfundlblt PIY"""'I of 1J.l)O. A C!\lrgl of 11.00 '1!(111 be m-11 htndled oy molt. "LEASE MAIL SEPARATE CHECKS. EKh bid INll DI mtde on "'' pr_.r b m I nd In !ht m"'"'' p•Ovli:led In Thi contrtct do(um111t$, tnd $/Wiii "" 1c· con111&nl.a by 1 c•rl1fltd or ~11nltr'1 chK• IW • bid bond for not llSI 11\111 IO"o of 1111 1mD11nl ol Ille blO, mldt p11.,a1111 to !tit Clly ol CM!& Mtu. !rlOTICE tS FURTHER GIVEN 111<11 the Ctfy CllollnCU ol wld C!ty n11 ner110!00"1 ftllblllhld I OttV•ltlnQ tl!t Ind Kiii of ..-1911, In KCordlnt(I Wiiii l1w. Ill DI P11d 111 1111 con1trucllon of tt>e tbo>o• en- Hlltd lrnt:M"O'ltmtnl1. Tn.r 1110 r111 11111 K iii Wll adaolod ...,. 1111 Ci1r Countll Dy RllOIV!lon Ho. 11-1 on !hf 1nO D1-, ol J tnU••Y lt1J Ind 11 on lltt In lhl.Otllcl ol "" City Clerk OI .aid CtTJ, Tn11 Mid r•!• and Kiie II hl•tln ref1rrt0 lo Ind ~ 111 It.II llC>llct IS lho\IQh !ullJ Ind COIJIOltttlV Mt lortb ner1111, ind 11111 111111 1(.111, &I lllellllotd Dy llld r1i.otutlon,•l1 ' Expo Goi11g Up . .. • This aeria) view· shows Spokane's Expo '74 taking shape on J-J averm~Je lslarid {center). Canada \l.•ill use all of the island on the left to accommodate her pav- ilion and·exhibits. The fair. opening J\"1ay l , 1974 is expected to bring 180 days of run and profit to the \Vas,hington community. • 'Detroit: Adjust' U.S. Reg ulatio1is Here to Suiy-EPA By EDWARD S. LECHTZIN UPI Alllt Writer DETROIT -;-There have. been comp taint s from automotive cxecutiv'es ,-both privately and in publjc -that Washington burc au c rat s · decide what cars will look like and how they will run. .• Entrance of the -federal goverrunent into building cars \\'as a "traumatic intrusion," says one Wa s h .ln g t o n bureaucrat who a d v i s c s businessmen, both in the au10 industry and elsewhere. to recog nize lhat regulation is here to Stay. ERIC 0 . STORK. deputy assistant administrator or the I:: n v i ronmental Protection Agency, recently participa ted in a three-day Environmental Activi ties Week . s e Th i n a r sponsored by Gener a I Atotors. It was supposed to show that fighting betv.·ecl} the auiomnkcr and the govern· ment has ended. The theme was set by the chief executive of the gian t oor'poration , Chainnan Richard C. Gerstenbcrg. v.·ho said that only a few barriers of misunderstanding a n d suspicion ren1ain. Thal thezne was shattered a fe\v hours later as Gl\-1 p!'.esident Edv.•ard N. Cole renewetl a more familiar sound -one of shut· downs unless· Congress reWTites the standards set in the Clean Air Act of 1970. STORK. TII& EPA ex· ecutive,' discounted doonlsday talk but told the auto ex· ecutives they had better get used to federal regulations. "The auto industry's reac· tion to the imposition of federal safety and emission conll'Ol requirements w a s general!;" one of \•igorous op- position. As public pre:ssu res for regulatory controls built up over several years. the auto industry freq u en 11 y denied there was any problcnl at all," he said. · "And when regulations were finally hnpOsed. and as they were made more stricl. thC're were frequent industry predic- SEVEN ADVAIVfAGES OUR PAGER OFFERS that yours may not"! tions · that the dc3th knell of the auto industry was at hand;' he added. STORK ALSO said it is an unrealistic expectation for au19men t~ see Iedcral rt!gula· tion "as a bad drenm , hoping they will soon awaken from the nightmare." The public will continue to demand that the govern ment protect it from vii riou s hazards. and the government will C{)nlinue to respond to these demands," sald Stork. "In other words , regulation of the auto industry is here"' to stay. You might as v.·ell learn to live \Yitb it." Pointing Io commercial aviatiOn and the food a.nd drug industry as two areas w,hich have adjusted !O federal regulation , Stork said auto ex· ecutives could take a hint from the men who control those industries. ''I speak from personal observation when 1 suggest that most executives in those . industMC$ appear to be more sophisticated when It comes to · dealing with g9vernment than arc many auto industry . ex· ecutivcs," Stork said. "AND WHY SHOULDN'T they be," he added. "For in each of these industries at least two generations cf ex. ecutives have grow n up in their jobs facing the need to deal with regu l atory re· qui rements right from the day they v.•ere hired." stork described three ways in which auto executives react to being.regulated -pu~ out· rage ... the ostrich approach -and realization that there nlay be a problem, illoney's Worth Home Freezers Hot Items irr Sumnier By SYLVIA PORTER A1nong the hottest se \ling items on the market today are home freezers -.and if you're pl~nning to buy one, buy ii now . For thi s is the bargain season for home freezers and for refrigerators too -and aHhough sizzling sales n1ay understandably limit any pri ce reductions. the na!ional price freeze plus the mark-down tradition adds up to a.n at- tractive background r 0 r purchases. THE BOOt\1 in Sllies is spec- tacular. In ApriLalone, freezer shipments soared 55 percent over a year ago. reports the Association of J-lo1ne Ap- pliance Manufacturers. In the first four months 'or '73. shi pments ran 38 percent above '72. The reasons for the boom alto stand out clearly. You can save money on 'food by buying it in quantity and storing it in the freezer. You can try to offset sky· rocketing food pri~s through home ga rden· ing. freezing and canning. And YoU can stock up on frozen foods in the belief that you'll only pay more if yoo wait. costs (UR between 4 cents and 19 cents per pound of food stored v.·ith the t:Osts declining as you increase the amounts of food you store. DECIDE IN ADVANCE V.'helher an upright or chest model is best for you. The chest type. requires more floor space and is less conven ient because much unloading, rear· ranging and bending is re- quired to get food in and out The upright takes less noor space and is easier to defrost, but may cost $10 to $30 more lhan the chest type. Decide. too, what s i z e freeze r is adequate and ap- propriate for your family. Today's free1.ers come with capacities ranging from three to 31 cubic feet, but the most popular models have 12 to 17 feet of storage space: One j!eneral rule is you'll want three to four cubic feet for each family member and five to six per person if you have a vegetable garden and thus do a lot of home freezing or if you shop only every 10 days to two \Yeeks. SET A BUOGET for your free1.er : today's price tags range fron1 about $175 for a no-frills 12-cubic-foot freezer ··to $250-$270 fol"' a 16 to 17· c'ubic-fool model lo $300-$400 for a luxury 17 to 18-cubic-foot (rost-free model . Decide \.\'hich ''extras'' you really want and need. Frost- 1 COMPLITI ORANGE COUNTY COVERAGE h1chH:lh19: l09u•o Inch But whether or not a freezer v.·ill be a riioney·saver for you v.·ill depend on how n1uch you use it and how much you save on the foods you buy and s!ore. IT COSTS S80 a yenl' to ow n a 360-pound caparity frcczC'r Hlbout 10 cubic ft. l, including depreciation. electricity and average repair~. at'('Ording to the Depar tn1cnt of Agr11.:ulturc. free (self-defrosting) freezers are considerably n19rc con - venient than models you must defrost yourself, but you'll pay $60.$70 more for this feature. A sclf.Pefros ting freezer also costs substantially more to operate than a st andard model._ Simi larly. a "nash dc.fros1er" feature may cut defrosting lime lo 15 1nlnutcs, but you'll pay S30 or so moN! for thi s time saving. S.. CletNnte, Mkl1011 Yk-1• D-Poh1t, en wtll en lo a.octi nd lltOtt of l.A, o MONTH TO MONTH llNTAl IASIS HO DIPOSIT IE9UlllO ON APPIQYID. Cll!tiilT •• .. ' ·- Wall Street • • • Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. We ,couldn't that the of course, it, prove percentage Coast area ... and but it see l"1 s likel y the here . in Or-. IS even greater day. ange every it's . growing Tha t's why the be the to first DAILY PILOT . newspaper in was proud, years Orange Coun ty to ag o , br in g hig h its readers "today's fin.al stocks today" via super speed wire services. We're still doing it in every ho me~ -' delivered edition and the service gets better all the time . it .. • .cS Wall Street's computers DAl[Y PILOT plant "ta~I k to" co m put e r s . in the more than minutes to every trading 1,000 d I wor s Rer minute. enti fe New day It move the York at the of and Stock from the machines Exchange reports the typesetting on the Street to .right Orange here Coast. ra te takes only 12 American) canyons of Wa ll of the DAILY PILOT And when the use technology finds a way to beat tha t speed DAILY PILOT, no doubt, w.ill be among the bring record, first to When it to to if comes is the business readers "today's action today,'' financial news, the one th at means ' 11----_..,_a P1rt.ot.tb~nolla-D¥--•1laraau ,,.,. Con!re(lor 1hall, fn I !'It Plfftwmonce of 1h1 w!ll'li. 11111-iin: prO'/tmMll. conform to ,.,. LIDClr C.001 of lhl S!1!1 of C1lllDr!111 111C1 olh•r l1wt of 1111 Sl•t• o1 C11i11>11111 1pp11~1oie tfllortto, Witt> 1111 •~ce~TI"" ontY ol lllC~ "ar11llont 11 may De required un.dtr rht -1•1 111111111 PUl'llllnl to whlC!'I Pf• cll!dlntt 1-.lndtr ''' tflotn Ind Wiiien ,....,. not bttn •llPl'l'Wdld PY tht pr~ Yllol«tt of tht Ubor Codi, A O,.LY S1'[.JO Pll MO NT "TOTAL ~() T 1 ... 11 ... lted '"""' 5 MIW COMPACT UNIT If you store anrl use only 360 pdll1nds or rood-in yvur freezer during a year, your .-·11Sls \\'Ork out to Hn avcr:-.}!:o or 2.2c per pound. I ( )'OU SIC'rl' fr10 ptiund.~. the costs drup 10 15 cents, and FIND OUT before you buy any freezer. wfiCDicr lhf:rel! a l-II----~ v.'arrnnty and exnctly what It HO bid llhlll be conliM•911 unlllt It " h'lldt: on o blen.--florm f\lf'nl.n.N by 1111 City Gf C11111 ,,.,..., •1111 11 fNodt 111 IC• CotdatKI with tht jM'O'lhlont DI TIM -,....,~'-"· EK~ MOdll' ITIUll be lfc11•11MI Ind t lMI s1t 1 ri v •• ~• v,1 6 YOICI MISS.AGE PAGllS ALSO AIE AYAI LAILE ., ,ULl Fiii MAINTINANC OllANGE COUN7Y l/,\IHO TELE PHONE SlUVICf 1 .. 1 Jll'MW&l(llod •• .-.-lr1'd .,.., llW'. Thi Ct!'y C-.cll of 1111 City of C..I• 714 • IJ .. JJOI Mll9 r9Ml"<IM fM rltht to rtlKl •ny tw 111 llld1, ~' ' ' . 411 10, 1,...-f,.' flE, S•NTA "'""' o.t..111 J-25, 1m, -~ •eoc11, MIHllll \llefl, I V THI-Ol'DElt OF THI!! Cl'TY Hltrt, 111111 ClMwllt., lln JIM COUNCIL Ofl f~E CITY, Ofll ffitfll. Jr "°"· ctfl NU I CO$TA MISA. CALIFOlll:NI• 4f6JDJ ,.~IMlld O••fll'I C-11 D~ny 1>11o1 JlllW,'••••••••••• • tnd J\lf\I L lm ,.._,J,. • • · if you slorr and use LlllO pounds of food . the costs fnll 10 9 cents. With a 3&0-pound capacity freezer. you would have to use more than 900 pounds of frozen food a year and save more than 9 cents o pound on the food you freeze before it would begin to break even. One role of thumb IS that your total iinnual ownership covers. Docs it cover n1erely repairs for the freezer?· Or docs it also cover losses in food spoi l11ge when the freezer brenks down? And who will honor the warrant)'? t~inally, take special care to Investigate the rellabllily of the dealer before you buy. If your freezer breaks down, you could lose your entire In· vestment in it.'I contents unless It cun be repaired within o 1\ml\Cd period, pcrhnps as short 1\5 24 hours. I ... • I • I • ·- I • . . . ----·----- ' ·.- . - ARE COMING ~AG ·Al .N! . ' July 18 through 21-South .C.st Plaz~ • j .. ' . ' , / • -. -·-··~·-----· ";'"""' ---~-~ ..:: __ ---·--·-- ' . -------- --~. - . BUILD -YOUR GARBENSTANGEL QUICK AND ENTER ·IT IN THE BUILD A · BETIER GARBENSTANGEL . . . ' . . . . . CONTEST AND · INTERNATIONAL RALL YE. ' " . ' ' \ I . ' \ . -' .. . , CUT CORNERS ,. ##I # I ## I # I ## I # I # I ,,' Yes, I : ,,' will build a : . # I ## Garbenstangel I ,, : ,, or · launch a · search 1 # . I # I . . ,' for one I can put into _1_ . ~-~-, I ,,' shape for exhibition ·at 1 #, I ,' the rallye. : / • I # I ##NAME. · I # I ## ADDllUI I ~ I # # CITY ' Zll' PHONI! I . # Mollt•• · I #..# PrtfMlloft Mlft1911, DAILY PILOT •• P.O. lol 1SIO , Co1t1 Mtt1 , C•lll. IH2f II ---··············-···-----------··· -1 ' ' . I r . . . ' -.. • .,J •' . . . ' ' -· J DAILY PILOT ' Monday, July 2, - ' HOT• I COCA·CllA SPECIAi: Something good to eat and drink. is 2 I ·c ready for you at our snack bar: at a NOW mighty low price' Not available at ONLY Jefferson or Canoga Park. . . J , ~ • •• I B11-'PB1CE llAlllfl lAn-.. w . t• .. IAY BISI · ·: ' ' • ' LISTERINE 17-0l BONUS eomE The oral anti1•ptic th1t kills germs -1· a· c 'en contact. Get the 17-01. plastic bottle a_t the pr ice of a 1 '4-oz. ·:::· ' bottle. Thats like' gett ing 3 extr a ounces free. GllU llACll ' . .. . " ' Barti«:ue steaks 01 hot dogs to per· 311 feclion with this cast iron brazier. HG. · Adjustable grills, wood haooles and '·" base. Ideal for home and outi~s; . SPECIAL •HRL ... PIAmC WAm CANS - IV.M CIP. U, PAPER PIJU . '' .. ' •. ' Ii(. 41' n. pack of fifty 6 01. foam curs · . • QJps 01 reg. S!)c ea. pack of one oooorid ' a PKGS. 9" while * p~les. Stock up row PLATH ... for picnics. '2 PIGS. .. . . ' • • GlffMJl.3 OZ. TUE TIIOJllAIJE · , . -.... ,. . t IN ASSOR1B-eus~-111111aua.flEClllfA1t:---, -~ --~ ~ l~===~dJJla.new dmlllOYeJl·Gleemoll·toot!wste -~ with both decay fighti ng fluoride aoo RIG. bnghteners for glamorous looking teeth. 39' IA. · -· · ---"'·' lade; J Sllee•FmofuF.iffd.safelnu~ · ·· Q---j . ;::--• -. Tile .big br~ milkfr w[th a 5 Wi11! ~· . 80 I ,\ Stock up' . gg · on !root and back. lightweighl~ has top· I t .. 97' · . . . . rnou.ntedcarryi111harl!le. #7200/(-301 ,.' . • ... f -fACI SIZES & SHAPES FOR ALL NEEDS e BARREL WASn BASIET e 20 GAL TRASH CAN e 60 QT. WASn BASKET ' -METAFUME mH l·All Pa e 44 QT. SllDl TOP BASKET . WEBCll BlCTllC ICE CIUllllR , . Ultra quiet· a1'I efficient PUl!ll for use with aquarium fillers. MinilOOlll of mov- ing parts aoo fully insulated. FOi use .llith most aquariums. _ 11L' ·111 3,49 . ' IDRAMIN TROPICAL RR F9I The' original German formula flake fish 54c 1oorf with all the nutrients needed for llG. healthy · fish. floa~, so won't cloud 19' walar. I/& Ill. can. . BRIAR. MmlC mET SET . . . ~ in. aoo ll in. drive 10 pc. se~ with wide ra~e of most needed sockets, revlr· s1ble ratchets, extensions aoo fitted meta l 'tase. Come in and save today. ~IG. 711 Jl.2t Fil just about anything with_ loo ;;~pie pop o"!!'y 1 •• ot a rivet. Outt11 comes with rivet paper-_ rooer aoo supply ol 11 in. rivets. A neces- .. sity for loo l~mlly ma1. . ' . IPAlllPI DOT PRO Gaf BAI.LS · Sjleciil gift pack of . s[x 9{) compression 411 giilf balls alll a giant gait ball size soap HG. spoore. It's the ball of th<: tournament '-" winni" pros. FREE! Ball of soap. . - VOIT .llRCIAL TBHEIBAll IET Excellent lun aoo exercise for the action . mir<led Jainily. You .get tethelbaft, nylon rope, galvanized pole aoo grouoo sfee\1!. Don'! pllt off this lerrilic bux. .IG.4ee 6.97 Steel frame and heavy duly bed lei you $ 64 lay a good game of pool. Woori grain 110. finis 00d'3pfons & ball relu[n. With balls, ~-97 slicks, rack. fun 101 everyore. . GAllETS GAL•E fOR YOR • SP,oon sets, towel holders;·tol1gS, · 2· !I scoops, various type scrapers, scales, YOUI · towel rings, garlic & lime presses&a .CHOICI whole lot more. Be_prepared. POI ' 4fC. llECllATDft CAllTEI ID Cotortul iacquerware canister set '<lith • 311· choice of 3 c~ designs. Sizes for coffee, -tea, flour, sugar or whatever you want to OILY keep fresh. Compliments allY dew. . ~ I I PC. UlM IEIVlll CIT IET Jfere's what you get: large tossing bowl, 4 • 311 serving bowls, toss i111 fork & spoon, salt& NOW pepper shakeis. 3 colortul facquerware OILY designs. Serie a salad tonight! B.EC111···fm .ITAlllHI , " G~I barbeCue files ,starfed like a 11oY SC-Ol!L 1· 8" No more messy alll dangerous fl uids needed; llG. D just plug in starter aoo lay it on too charcoal, 2.9' A must IOI convenieoce. · • 11 IOY !4 IN. BBQ WllJ·• A ful ifealure model with semi~i~ular hood.• 911 motorired rotissene, revolvi~ giill aOO r:~ heavy gauge steel fire bowl. Tubular legs. • Enjoy delicious bbq flavOI todai. I 111 PAllT •IRI m TUY·' Male a list alll neat job of paint ing. 9' rollei cover alll pairit pan. Can be ·used llG. over alll over with both interior or exterior 1·" paints. ~ve now! · · • Bf -5PfC/AlPlf-HOUDAY.Sf01f HOUIS:MOllOAY IOAM1e9'M. TUESDAY IOAMI• JI,.• IUlY4l•.10AMr.7 rM•SOMf IVAllTmUMArlf UMITfD• ntnc•1,,,msrmo. _ _,,... . #11•~1 -1--~=.m"'-~r""o~u"'•-=ca=:1==DtT~CA"'"1t:.•D 3088 IRISTOL ST. . " ~· .':-1• ,Jr:f . . ... --COSTA MES.A ". S•n oi.r. FrHw•y i t Brlllol • . \ r ' ' ~ .. '.-c ' ' • . . . . 1 -.. • . ' -:• :..-:. .. - ' • I~ the split seconds 'between scenes, Mary Mark adjusts , a headpiece o n 'De esi s' set ~.LJ!Jotl¥-JOl1<~-1old.~---~-------.. for correctness. Above, she attac hes robe to background of 'The Cardinal's Portrait.' •' ·~costunlers Unmasked ' ~ r ~. By CAROL ~IOORE Of ffllo Deity 'iltt Stitt ·Pageant of the Masters costumes are unbelievable -even to the two women who make theg:l. · Betty C4lu'3d _ot Laguna Beach and Mary .. Marft of Missi'cin Viejo• modestly · credit 'the lighting that transforms Ninted rnhsliD and ·nannel outfits into artistic ~sterpleces. But;What the floodlights dori't show arc 1---fl,,.._..,""_inonths that the seamstresses have J:~~~ sketching, draping, fitting, tu~, basting, _cutting, hemming material and experimenting w i t h Sfffrofoam and foll. ;~.~[ can't imagine how they got along Wjlhout this," said Mrs. Coonrad, whack-WW of£ another piece of mesh-adhesive • used commercia1ly in place of zip.. for placket closings.· '" P!'TCH WORK • :~;-oo costumers buy yards of it to stick OQitumes to backgrounds, keep pleats in ~or position an accessory. · :f1t's also hard to imagine how the got along for 37 years without ustrial·sizcd sewing machine, con- tbe demand for 22 Japanese for "Gr,eenhouse " 25 Civil War ~crms for "Gettysburg," 13 Biblical "•<>· ~ ' •'• .•. ,.. ~ •• •• · .• ~ .. ~ ~-~ ~ t.-.. •• ".. .. •, • .. . • Daily ' Pilot Photos by lee ·Payne · • • robes for ··The Last Supper" plus the 25 other reproductions. ~Imes. Coonrad and Mark work from bolts of fabric 108 inches \yide 'and pijsh costume pieces through the new machine that sports spools. of 6,000 yards or thread. The two predecessor i;nodels, one of almost treadle vin tage, stand by for last minute touches and wig adjustments. 0EASV OPENING AltQough the needle has rough going ()Ver several thicknesses o( painted muslin, one sewing ~ugaboo -zippers - has been eliminated completely. ' . Costwn'es are triply tied like hospital ·gowns to allow for speed of dressing and the slight dimensional d i f f e r e n c e s betv.•cen the ·alternating casts. It also prevents the chance of a stuck zipper at curtain time. "Your heart Still beats fast though." Mrs. Coonra"d admitted. "·When you 're backstage . trying to make everything perfect and you hear the music for the preceding picture." Typical of the family atmosphere among pageant volunteers, there arc several on-call seamstresses who come to SC\'/ on ties , snaps; obls, ruffles or epaulets. Homemade treats from the backstage kitchenette accompany the handwork. I ' ..... ·Often the sewing is secondary. During two hours one morning: -Director .Don Williamson neede<S "somebody 5-feet-8 to stand like 'Nike from Olympia'" for a set measurement. Betty came closest. -l\.1ary took another stab at the styrofoam vest she.decided to use for the stl.ltue of Vin~l Van Gogh since '_'fahric just couldn't ake sharp enough lines." -Betty cau · ooed.Nicole Gotts hall, who paints · lhe C06 es_, that the washing machine was last used for a pink dye job. -A mother and daughter cOmmented on the warmth or their costumes and pa· tiently scrunched into place, filling tv.'o or the 22 positions in "12 Hours in the Greenhouses." -One of the Greek "statues" was draped and wired for the part or her cos- tume that was not fixed to the set. Lighting does, indeed, v.·ork magic here . The garment resembled shrunken pa- }amas after a hard night. NO PATIERNS If their jobs lack descriptions, that's okay. Neither of the women applied. Mrs. Coonrad was recommended by a friend who knew she loved to sew and had studied art in college. She, in turn. found Mrs. Mark, working· as a sewing in· structor~emonstrator for a m a ~ ll r department store. In January the staff saw v.·hich wOrks of art were to be duplicated for this year's show and the costumers have averaged about a week per subject from material selection to final fitting. t tuslin has been used fo r years because il lights up bett er than the satin or velvet that's depicted. And a few productions, such as Gettysburg, arc repeated with hold-ove p costumes. NEW FlNALE But the costumers have to redress •. "The Last Supper" this year because Ti- tian's vef'sion v.•ill replace the traditional da Vinci portrait. Plus they've had to find colored foil to simulate jev.•cls, choose the lightest v.·eight stuffing for men in "Land or Cockaigne" and attach "La Pieta's" billowing folds one by one to lhe screen so they v.·on't have to be redone each night. Since each picture has its ov.•n _challenge of structure or sheer numbers, the Mmes. Coonrad and Mark couldn't remember the niost difficult. But the easiest? "Oh , the nudes. -They just get sprayed ; we df;)n 't have to worry about them." '. . /' " - . . . --·--... -- , ' ' BEA ANDERSON , Editor Mond11. Julf 1, 1'1J ...... , • •• While positi on ing Joy Holl of Seal Beach for 'Dancing G irl s," Betty measures a heml ine and ma ke s a dra pe"beheve. Fabri~ used for sculptu red figures ;,., flecked with paint to give appear,ance of marble . • '• . . ., • • -. • • ' • , I MOllday, July 2, 1'73 Retired to ·Busy Life ' By LAUl\IE KASPER art boob, tlle recalled from her di!Wbood, "I'd grab lhat as IOOn u it came into the Esther Funk retired hi IKO house and see all the places 1 but sh,e still hasn't had the wanted to Co·" time to do all of the things she }\ad pJalllled to do. She had tried to go to China, She's just been too busy to Hawall and Alaska to teach read her Will Durant col-but, for varlOUI reasons, these led.Ion or take up oil painting plans fell tlrough. "I just and jewelry making. decided J would teach here Still, she's done the two and do my traVeling in the things in. life she most wanted · summer time." to do -teach and travel. "l can never remember when I didn't want to be a teacher," she said. And, picking up one of the Natictial Geographies which she stac.ts on her coffee table With other travel, history and • . ' QUE SERA She deteribes herself as a fatalist. "What's to be, will be. Que sera, sera. "l Jhlnk that yoo uke life In stride mum more when you feel that. U you take things as Esther Funk, .. 11rtc1 Huntington Belch tueher who w11 named "Outatandlng Citizen'" at Golden West College r8Clnfly, r1t11 gardening 11 one Of her m1ny favorite Interests. • thty come, 111ey ..naln)T p ,_th beco-an tm. luctJ esplalnod -111 • ion•I ... itt," lhe 6\)llined. lhinll 1-to .... 'Ibey tellor who -told .'!'! Even tboolh lhe didn't Just come out ol the lkJ." mi, !!llod with illll"'T' ~:ten~~ .. ~ ..:UW..".'" .i.o'.'!"" I I• e "Ev...;u.. I do ! lib~! plKe die w,.ted to F aa a In pr....iq lier with the lib to doe~, lho :f· glance· around .lier Hunllngtoo · OUtltlndlrW CJlllren ann1-plllned. ' Btad> home readily nveala. during Golden Wtlt CGl!ec•'• "I never could -bow Artlfacta from Japon. South r • ce n I com-· pie could be bored. AD I "-lea and Allie• • r • Chlllcellor Norrnln E. w-ha,. to do If they.., l>n4 .. pee1auy .-In .the said, '"11roqbout 11or yeon In 1tt In llld do ...,iJll>bC living room. an tables and Ille the .--and <lOinlmmily ~ ebe." • wl!)dow llill. -t. Esther FUnk 11u lbown And at the 81• o1 74, obe Several ...,...... -king ua more cl-ly that the btlt said, "l don, mind lettinC with tbe late ard!Hologilt teod>en -down ore 1WJ -... I f .. J I lived the bell Edgar Loe H....U Iii N.,, ~ at ~ lbd pod years ol ...ncl hlstGey." Mesioo, G<ui ..... la, P<ru and teaddng Jnvelveo ;_. mutery She .......mera the lint Bolivia led to a moeters of aubjecl lDltt« liul sbarini can and alrplanel. And people degr« m ancient and mod<n! one'• W.." tell bor oho is on ""'*1'isl ·Peruvian teliiles. And that does leelD to be because as lbe loob ~ ~~~·!: ~t:. ber pblJooopliy ol Ille. ~ "= ::,: .J: Everywl>ei< lbe -obe col-True, she UU. tnve! and wu llUCh a concern kr the llt- .Jected mata'ialll and toot plo-beUeveo "I tbould be ~ to tie j)mOll and indivldpl tuns lor use Jn ber history IP> wtien I want to go" and lbe righls . ' claSRS al Hunllnglon Beach bad looPd forward to t'l!tire-She 0know1 that 25 ~ ii· High School whmo lhe taug!lt men! '6 ll>e could do oome of If oomeme had said ~ lot 15 years after 3> years kl the ithlnp lbe didn't have the would be a ·Negro as ma)'OI;. of the city's on1Y elementary time to do while teadier, but Los Angeles, that penoo school. her Hie has been anything bul """1d have been Jhought ol u aelf-«mtamed. aaiy TRAVELED Alter she relftd, ehe travel- ed foe !4 .-· 1be llnl five mttJthl lbe waa alone but then she llayed with a J apanele lamlly !pr three modlls. . A lonner -..t bad In- troduced her to the family who have !im:e come to America to viJit with ber. She will lalk of them and others •be haa met in her travela: 'easily and with obvious enjoyment. "l think oometlmes I wu born with a silver apoon in my She jo!Ded the Leacue of ·~ Funk bellaves, '"lbefe w ...... VOlerS, Friends ol the Is a feeling for people as Pl'>' Library .(Ille wu a me_ of pie" . I tile library -•!J and Family And It ls tile Jntereotlng I'f>' Servlce ~tion alWl!aey pie and the !mere.ting ~· and continued bor activity oho baa done which causo with tht Anierican Field to say "The btlt time ol Service and PEO after. retire-life ha! been since 1960." • me~ a1ao bu a garden fUO of lu~~bat will she do lo ~e llowen 8!"1 vegetables and ex-"I'll just do the things ~t plains... 'I'm a dl>-it·your-interest me. Keep on ~ aelftr. what I've been doing, trave~ LIKES EVERY'111ING ~. keeping 'up with ~ . Her lnlemls may have been golnl oo in the communily._, ~ummer -Weddings Cel~~r_ated ----- STEARNS-SPARLING honeymoon In Puerto Vallarta. Larry Lyle•Stearns and Gail Sparling were married in a ceremony at St. And rew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach with the Revs. Donald Maddox 3lld William Parry of- ficiating. Parents of the newlyweds are Conunander and fl.1rs. Lyle Alva Stearns, Long Beach; Mrs. O>ester Ferrell Salisbury, Corona de! fl.1ar, and John Robert SparLing. Newport Beach. · The bride chose as her at- teodants the Mmes. A • .-·Nicholas Javaras, V. Ray Hibbs and Gary Nakahara and the Mimn Anoe Lawrence, Michael and CltrisUne Sparl- in&, and llia. and Lori Nakahara. Best man was Frank ·Rldllu'm and ushers were Rich Inman. Roo Klndschl. Q-alg McCune, Tom Shepherd and Michael Loughery. They will make their home in-laJg Beach following a MRS. STEARNS TUESDAY JULY 3 - By SYDNEY 0:\IARI\ ARIES (A-larch 21-April 19):. Accent is on service, com- pleting basic tasks. Those who are cooperalivc d (' s er \' c recognition. Don 't t11ke situa· tk>ris or people for granted . Aclivity may be low key. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20 ): Yeu gel hint of good ne"'S on horizon. Spollight will be on creative efforts, love 11 " d meaningful changes. You oome oot or doldru ms. METZGER-SUCHARD Lori Anne SUchard became ~trs. Philip Marti{! fd etzgcr in a garden ceremony i n Anci.heim conducted by the Rev. Dr. Ray Gery. Their parents are Mrs. Sue Su.chard of Newport Beach, Olarles Metzger ol Dallas and r.rrs. Darrel Witters o f Hamilton, Ohio. Attending the bride were the Misses Cyndi Suchard, Terri Bradbury. Karen O'B rien and Sharyn Rumsey. Best man was JOOo Harrison and ushers were Eric Stricker, James At- tebeny and Kirk Leste<. They will make their home in C<ista. Mesa: The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange County Busi- MRS. METZGER · MRS. LEDESMA College. Her husband. a NHHS • University, Fullerton. graduate, served with the ' They will live in Orang~. UCLA. She affiliated with Delta Delta .Delta and is a teacher at University High School, Irvine, and he is a member of Phi Kappa Sigma. Navy. LEDESMA-SWANGO Denise Swango and Jacob L. Ledesma were united in mar· riage in Newport Harbor Lutheran Church· in rites con- ducted by the Rev. Roger Berg. Their parents are t h e Dmald Swangos of Newport Beach and the Marcelo Ledesmas of Orange. · Miss Theresa Gi~t was maid of honor and Marshall l..edesma served as best man. Other attendants were lo1r8. Marshall Ledesma. the Misses Beverly Goody and NancY Collier, Jesse Zepeda, Edward Espinoza. Max Lede s ma . Dana Swango and 'Thomas Oliphant. The bride is a jJJ'aduate of Newport Harbor High School. lier husband is a graduate of El Modena High School and attended California St a t e Family member aids in hel~ ing you decid~ on important project. If receptive, you win. CANCER (June 21.July 221: You discover holes in some id,eas, pr oposa l s. Do something about. it. Don't 1nerely sil . wait and wis h. Key is to perceive corrective 1neasurl'S. Aim high -seek standard of excellence .• You net>d not take back seat. ELINK-SCHUURMAN- FERGUSON The First Baptist Church. SCHOONOVER- ·Lagwia Hills was the setting EBERHARDT for the marriage of Theodore Fountain Valley will be Elink-Schuunnan and Susan home for David Schoonover Lee Ferguson. and his bride, the forrner- They are the son and Sheri Eberhardt, who ex· daughter or h1r. and Mrs. flen-changed wedding vows and drikus Elink-SchuW'TTWl of rings in the C om m u n I t y Palos Verdes and Mr. and United Methodist Church of Mrs. Robert H. Ferguson of Hunlingtoo Beach. Mission Viejo. Their parents are Mr. and Miss Diane LaPorte was Mrs. James W. Eberhardt or maid oC honor and bridesmaids Santa Ana and Mr. and 1.frs. were the Misses J a c k i e Howard L. Schoonover of Hun- Nelson, Linda F!eterson, DeP. tington Beach. by Moore and 1'1eta Trout. 1.fiss Dawn Anderson served Phil Klein served as best as maid of honor a n d man and ushers \\-'Cre Norm bridesmaKts were Mrs. Jesse Yoder, 8111 Battles. Rich \Vhit-James and Miss Sherry Gran· ton and Rob Ferguson. neman. After a honeymoon i n -· Attending the bridegroom Hawaii the newlyweds will Were Bill Champion. best man, reside in Mission Viejo. and Doug Schoonover, Bill 'They both are graduates or Brack and Mark Reider. responsibility. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 21)' Take inilialive. \Vager on your own obUities. Don't reel you must resort to past or rely on one Y!'ho formerl y guided you. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c!. 21 \' ,\rea shrouded in 1nys tery is Clue to receive benefft of greater light. Your creat ive nbilitics will become n,10rt evi· dent. Welcome new contacts, opportunllles. Set your 0\\11 pace. Be independent. Lto, Aquarius persons ere In pic- ture. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov, 21 ): who ~ (rylnl something dU- ferent. Be sensible without becoming s!ully. You will comprehend, SAGmARIUs (Nov. 22· Dec.··21 ): Accent is on ad- vancement through socia l con· tacts. Spread wings. Means look beyond what appears lo be limitation. Prestige is on upswirig. Recognition is due from one in · position of authority. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 • Jan. 19): You can break through to new areas of learning. Travel, education, philosophy -these Flower girl and ring bearer were April Martin and Olris Llpsoomb. 'The bride attended Orange Coast College and her husband is a graduate of UCI. MRS. SCHOONOV~R ~-NeWlyweds' Punch ·Controversy Spiked . DEAR ANN LANDERS' Our daughter was married in a beauUful, intimate home ceremony. There were only 40 peo.. ple· present; 20 relatives frun our side ~Q·~ .. :f .• .1 ~ . ' .. :~ ~ • ! • • • J ' " . ·--"'8Dd 20 from the groom's side. Something occurred which spoiled the day for me . and now I'd like to know if I behaved properly. My husband and t beloog to a religious sect that does not permit the use o1 alaihol Our daughter knew W. wl1en she Wed to have the weddirc et home. It was agreed that we would serve fruit (Uld>. She let us -that ber future i.o-laws were not very pleased. did NOT get the job. My friend im· •• mediately called me and said she 'was awfully disappointed -and asked, ''How are you ta.king YOUR letdown?" 1 told her I had been hirf4. Her response was .~ "Oh?" Fifteen minutes later she called back ~· -.;, "l to say I was some lousy friend for taking ~ ... tht job I had encouraged her to apply . " Immediately alter the c:er<mony I saw the father ol tile groom pour a bottle ol gin or vodka into the punch bowl. I wa:s shocked but said nothing bealuse l didn't want to create a scene. 1 knew my hus- band would be furious. for. I told be!' she was mistaken. Her attitude depressed me so that I contacted the personnel director and' ask- ed her to please call my friend and ex- p!eln -which Ille did. The girl was still sure I double<Tossed her. l theo asked the penomel director II she """1d do me a special favor and drop my friend a note, making It clear that we had applied for tcitally dillerent jobs. That lovely woman wrote her a detailed letter and sent me a copy. ~ ' ' '<; ' ·"~ . . ' • • ...• ' ' . : --- None ol tht guesls let on but I strol!gly ~ some of them were aWlt'fl that there was more than fruit punch ln that bowl. Later that evening l told my 00.. band •iiat had bappell<d. H~ was bolling mad -said I should have dumped out the punch at once and served aoda pop. What 15 your ~? Om I-GUILTY. OR NOT? My friend returned her letter to me, and written across it in red crayon was, "l don't belien either of you." Wlm can !. I do now, Ann?-SlCK AT HEART. .,. DEAR HEART: Well, you c:oald kDI ,.......U, bot I doa't -It woald be -11. I cu~ omclentald wby anyone woallt ecmdder ndl u eltldnate, 1mall- mtnded, 1111generoa1 penon a udear friend." With a little luck yoa mJclrt; DDt ·DEAR G.O.N,, I aay ,_ t'l!llralllt was admlrahle. Had you done u yoar .. .-sapested II m1Pt i.m. l"ll9ed tlle day for yoor ....,.._. w ... baacl. '11111 ... y, It edy -,.an. lllckleatally, the sroom'• f--like a clod. I ltope be Uves in uo&lter town • DEAR ANN LANDERS' l 1pplled for . and got a job I have been' wanting for a Jong time. 'l'1e pel'3Clmel director asked me when I applied If I knew ci IOll\eOOe who might quallly for 8fl<lther job In the company. l recommended a dear friend. This friend went down and toot the tests and phoned me that evening to say she was sure she had done very well. Last Tuesday I received word that the poaitim I wanted was inine. My friend did not receive a call. The followlng day the pern.,.I dlt'l!c- tor !nlonned her by teleitm< that she -'""" •r ap!D. RECENT VACAnONERS in Vreeland and Mrs. Pa u I Santa Barbara have been the Manti, Newport. Beach, and Tyler Pollocks and P a u I Mn. Zoe Sni.th, B a J b o a Mc€abes, Huntington Btad>: Mkbael Maclnneses a n d Isla nd. 'Ibey were guests at Stanley Sheldons, Mra. Elsa the Santa Barbara Biltmore. " "' • :· GE~UNI tMay 2t-June 20\' Study Aries message. Steady pece equals sure progress. LEO (July 23-Aug. 221' Emphasis is on collecting, paying, consolidating, takin g Slock of situation. You are worlh more than you might have been led to believe. Start acting Jn manner w h I c h depict& authority. Ac c e pt Friendly persuasion could ac-f' =====:===:==:=::;::::;::::;::=:=::;::::==::=::::::"11----'-,,.- complish wonders. Stick to OVERWEIGHT? what is lamlliac. Entertain al • home.· Encourage associate ~-5s-tB:tOSS1H-481IAYS- wHY · BE Under Medical Suporv111on· SHY • . . ""t,~::;;;--....._ at Ille Adi ebo•t ;r.; .. ,, c...,i.n•~I• · "-'C~itk"' ,. j")~~:".... Omega Clinir. 642-4104 f':~j,~'.' VASSARETTE . HOURS:'9:00 -7:00 r .er. •• ~ J ,)u : c.~~ .• ·t,,~.·:.~.'.. 1 ... CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT • I Ml:pl_Cl•I SHOP ... i!IW JU •• 111t1 fl, C•tU Jltn. '{ COSTA MESA' ANAHllM SANTA ANA ll"""'911'1·LIH••,, )tf I , 17 .. St. 9t 19'tlt1 Att. IMll 11 ll•lffl'• .W.t,I ~ lNf N..,M 1"4 w, 1nry, Uft!Tfttll!A .. (714) 170..9347 "'""'u~ Pl"" '"' •nd lnolne, c"'."::;: ._ M•;.Mt04 · ,...,.. .....,.'lio. / 646 1633 nt-4141 547.mt 1213) 6'7-1791 Ncwpotlt llcacb,C'llifornia92660 Mtro, "'"' l'rt , i. ._s.1 ..... t ,... • nt w. L•H•• aiw. '-~~~~~~IL_::..:_::..:_.:.:._::..:_::..:_.::..:__J -~~~~~~~1•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- cmon·s SPORTSWEA R ' . " I \ I • , ucrsPECJA[ • DRAPES ./ -19• .::. ............................. , .. lllflll•I Cle1nad and Fan Foldad 20"/o OFF ALL HOUSIHOLDS , ........ _._. ... ,. t!~:r~~~~ . ' •• • AMILER TUMBLEWEEDS ANP HOW$ ·· · Llf!l.~ LOTSA LUCK '·· 10PAY? ~.· ... ""' .• .. .. ··'· MUTT & JEFF . MUTT, WArrl.L YOUSEEWAAT :t Gari .,,~--· NANCY TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE ACROSS 45 Most 1 Wild hogs pre~ipitous 6 Pi!cific i5lands 48 W1lh11m·H. Saturday's Pu_zrld Solved: cloth ------:Amer. 10 Not found &tatesman lreriuently 51 Numerical 14 Ant prefi~ 15 word of 52 Red wines surprise 54 Tidiest . 58 Feels pain 16 Pitcher • , 59 ··-di~it: 17 Old womanish Dictum 18 Bird , . &1 Japanese 19 Soap. Prefix religion: Var. 20 N~a.test 62 Gaucho's 22 Bnt1sh and Roman ······· '24 Canada's Mt. Saint----- 26 Item of I weapon 63 Alaska glacie1 64 Consumed 65 Hang a1ound 66 Dropsa f!y 12 Oriveoff equestrian • 67 Skie1s' milieu . 13 Jagged gear DOWN 21 Urge to ·27 Cigar 1. Rhythm attack 30 African 2 All: PrefiK 23 Wood animal 3 Surrounded pioduct 31 Manofups by 25 Most and downs " Baa---···-: immediate 32 "ltffOlfe'~-Certai n 27 flegant:- bed: 2 words scu!p1ure1 Informal -g Solar system S Rich~rd ·····.: 28 Toiletry case •1f:»cen1er . Eng, JOurnaltst 29 Wedding ~~Brighter 6 F~male ceremony ~g.':Sports gear w1tl maker • thing ;. •1tem 7 Past 33 Ridio fans i.Jf,Voter'• 8 Trim 34 Bone: PrefiJt J;'.~l:once1n:2 9 Water:2 35 Instruments: '' 1.::,...ords words Informal .:i3;orfice 10 Dwelled 36 Tinge '.f ••Work en · 11 Calder or 38 Look I•,·······. H . ( ~ ""' e1sman 39 "He gave me )f"' Head ftatu~• Trophy a ........ .. .42 Rumor 43 Pertaining to space 46 French summer 47 Gets 1id of 48 Strike· breakers: Informal 49 T. S.·····: Poet SO 50% ola Washington city 53 Cowboy's jlCCHsory 55 Inside: Comb. form 56 Footprint 57 General effect 60 Title \ by Tom K. Ryan ~RIMA J10Nl'VI <;C~IS&ll'! _<,;c."-1~ •• •!! " ..... • DOOLEY'S WORLD "JM~ ~ors UB MO\l to:ME"'r l'i ST'~ING A oc::tVG" A6AINSI \tl.UllTiEl!ISM SALLY BANANAS GORDO -. . ANIMAL CRACKERS -~fi'.'( a.AIM ~""" srrHo roo MUCH T'1""f \lN NOfrJ· PA'/1NG Aa1V1r1E5 PEANUTS by Charles M. _!c:hulz , .----~~~~~.., ARRIVING A,T SAM DRIVER'~ OFFICE f OR H\5 APPOINTMENT, RICK LA5Sl1ER DISCOVERS !HAT IT'6 5EEN CANCELLED! -/lr.R.0 17"' ,--/I/, 770'-',..-...-.. . y# i'-2 . MISS PEACH •W1c.LTI-f&V H M!l<li ALL ~· SUM""" ? IN CNAINS ~.PAECCClOUIJ, ' -THATS WNIRl!r Ec.aTlSTICM.,PIRSISl!NTI WNSM MAS IT · GOI' NIM? • , Yl~, ANO 'T'ME TMING~ J<l!.M!M ll&!lr: 1'.S, 1<,fP A LOW PIWl' .. f . . I ··~ by Mell -DAILY Pfl,OJ 'J 9 by Roqer BractfielCI by Charles Banotti v.'..O ?A-""I' NoKiOOir.J>"Gee. K«J.11.. ffl.Qt IT'>'1: You SURe GeT To /'1€.eT a LoT oF FG!""°"'5 R?~t.e fN Sl-lot.J 'OUSINeSS. • by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson n------t ·---------- by Roger Bollen -~-~1!Sfl eef~&O/ • THE GIRLS ~ r. n ' • "l\ly horoscope ~·as certainly right about this being •a day filled with romun·ct' -the dress~s I fell In love with!" DENNIS TH~ MENACE • . ' • • T .t• OAJLV PILOT Mond_,, Jlily 2, llJ7J Indy 500 Injur ie:s Fatal "~To Santa Ana's Savage lNDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Santa Ana 'face driver Swede Savage died in ]dcthodlst Hospital today ol Injuries suf:, •fered in the IbdianapoUs SOO:mile 'auto race May 30. · r Savaae, 26, had been in critical condi- ;tion aince his 11.amlng crash during the $9th lap ol lhe rain-plagued race. He suf· ferred rractures ol both legs 1lnd bums *1 his face, anru: and rtgbt. hand. Hi.'> Eagle-Offenhauser crashed Into the inside retaining waU on the fourth tum, slld 800 feet into the ~tside wall, disintegrated and burst into flames. . It was the second 6Crious 'accictcnt in his career. •le was critically injured in a sports ca r race at Ontario in 1971. His condjtion following this year's 500 had been listed as "critical, but stable" fOf' more than two weeks. But Dr. Thomas A. Hanna, Indianapolis l\1olor Still Ahead 'by 5 lh -- :LA Not . Hurt Yet I• ::.By Double Def eat ·' ,. CINCINNATI tAP) -The Los Angeles . Dodgers t1ifice decided to walk Johnny JJench in the late innings and it cost Uiem iJI doubleheader with Ci ncinnati winning 1,_4-3 and 3-2. ln-OOth cases, following Reds ~tten came through to win each ball .,pme&mclay. ~ The Dodgers, who won S-7 Friday tnigfV. hope to get even tonight in the four we can catch L.A .. " said CinciMatf manager Sparky Anderson . The Dodgers' Don Sutton, 9-5, walked the pinch hitting Bench in the bottom of the ninth in the opener while Ieadin{S-1:--" 'l'heq another pinch hitter, Hal King. one for 10. since being rt>Called June 17 from lndianapolis, Wlloaded a two-out , t~strike homer with two ·runners on base to win the game. -~~" · ---~~rs Sl4ate ' "l swung so hard at that pitch I nearly ,. -·-,. • ...._ • ••• 1Mt1 ripped my shoe off iny Coot," laughed ~l~ f k: ai:.=1!1'L~1~~ 1;s: ::~: King •. dlsplaying the tom shoes. He said MY• l•n Dl909 11 L .. A""9'lft ':" '·"'· -he hit a screwball off Sutton in 1971 for a Jiiiy J S.n OltOO 11 Liii Allgoeln 7:JS p.1'1. ~---~--~-----grand slam for Atlanta. igame series. 'Los Angeles remains si;, ''Yeah" said Sutton ''he's two-for- sgames on I.op of UK!' National League's two off ine now." ' ___ fWesteCTt_llivision and Cincinnati is nine_ -ln-the second' game, reliever-Ch3.rll!! 1cames back. Hough walked Bench with two out Jn the ti-"This gave us our pride back and bottom, of the tenth with Joe Morgan on · i.~'ve got to catch the other teams before second base. ,lllST GAM• • LOS Alll•ILll CIHCtNNATI • • Mrll"' HrllrM .. l_, 211 .( I 1 I Rot•, If • 0 l 0 f 11uc:1rnw, lb ' o o o Mc1r9.,.., 211 l o o o ,,w~vl1, tf ' 0 0 0 Drlf1M11, JD • I I 0 oiCtY, lb l 0 2 2 TPlirw, lb ' I I 0 'Mol•, If • t I I Tolui. ct ' 0 0 0 •PKlo!'ft. ,.If 0 0 0 0 St-111, rl ' 0 0 1 t11~:1uelL 11 • I 1 o Coolc•n. 1t J o o o WCrwfrd, rt t o o o !lllllCll, Pl o o o o ~"""· c J 0 0 • ChlllfV, pr ' 1 0 0 SvflOri, 1 J o o 1 Ph1mmr. r J o o o "' Klfi9,pfl 11 11 l WorTq"·' 1 001 Tot•I ;n • .s t 3 · Tot•I ll • 6 ' T-eu( 'fl'Mn Mnnl .. run KOnd. La ,._... m • 001-.l ClncW...tf -100 ~ I E-Y9199r, W, ~m OA.-l.ool ""9tlts I, Clncln- ,, Mil :L lOB-1.0. .......... :lo Clncfnn.lll $. 2!l~lt'I' .. liw. ~vft 2, T. ,..,.., Hit~ 2. IClng 2. IB--~~ 119111. ,,. JI • Ill ••·SO . ' ' ' ' ' . 'SUiton L. t-f 1 212 ' ' Jilonnlfl w. u 1 T--2;24 . . ' " llCONO GAMI LOS ANGILll CINCINNATI ·r· 1or 111111 1or11..-1 ~-1.111 JOOOR010,ll JO ll Mol1,1f SOlOMor~1'-lb 3 1GO %we.vis, ct s I l G C011Cep;11, u 5 l 1 G eC1y, 3tl 2 0 I l 8..-cft, c • o 1 o fl~cy,pr OOOOTP-t,lb !032 ' McMUln, 311 I 0 0 0 Ko.t;0, rf J 0 0 0 1.G•rvrf· lb J I J 0 Tot•n. cf 0 0 0 0 'lh1$Mll, SI ' 0 I 0 Menl<t, lD I a 0 a 'l"•clortk. rt 3 o 1 a c11_.,., ll:I o 1 o a 9udl_., rt 1 0 0 0 o.nwtlrno, Cf f 2 0 0 0 C:.1V1lurt1t c 2 o 1 o s11111, rl 1 o o a WCrwfnl, pl! I 0 a 0 GrfrNJtY, II 2 a 0 0 YHVf!', c 1 • 0 0 G19ll11'10, all I 0 0 0 1t111,p 3 01 1C1rroll,p 00 00 ~.P JOI OKl"'IJ,pll 1000 t llortmn.p OOOD I T~1/ «17 1a 2 Tol1I ll262 Two out """'"" WIMlrlo "'" KOred. llot Atvfln 100 100 000 o -2 Clntl11t11H 000 001 100 I -J 01"-Cliw:1<"11tl I, LOii-LOi Ar191ln 13, Cll'ICllWI- ! 11 f. 1&-W. 01"1 .. (IJY, T, ,._., COncwicloll. SB-~ "'-~· 5--0ll,...,,-Rim.II. • ll"HRE1ta1so l 1u 6 213 Jl J•• .-iouo~L.1·2 l I 1 I J J ••lmtlrf 1 • 7 , 2 0 C11T01t 2•0011 •or'bOrl W, J.) I l O • l • P~YN91f, T-::41, ~. ~ IJ"RAZIER BIDD ING ~OR COMEBACK r LONDON (AP) -The talking ls over , and Joe Frazier and Joe Bugner are to fight tonight, under the burning lights at London's Earle's eoprt a. Frazier; the former world champioo, ill'id Bugner, European heavyweight ltileholder .. both have said they can't JM:. Jn !act, both are .looking ahead Coward a possible meeting with w6rld ~ion George Forerpan. which the :'lrinoer cwkl receive. Tony Perez then slammed a line drive off the left cem.er field wan for a single, scoring the winning nm. "Tony's' a good hitte~," said Anderson , "but when he's hot, he's an exceptional hitter." Peret has seven hits ln his last 14 tries. Against Los Angeles, he is hitting .347 with 17 hits. four homers and 10 runs bat- ted in 12 games. The teams now are 6-6 oo the season. The first game victory went to Fred N.orman, 4-1 since be was traded to .an- cimaU by the San Diego PadI<s. . CiricinnaU's wiJming ri.lly in the leCOl'ld game started with one out. wtten Joe Morgall' walked and took second on catcher Steve Yeager's paNed ball. . ' ' Speedway 'medical• supervisor, sald' two weeks ago that his condition had wor~ ed and was-no l<S1ger 1tai.. Hanna said lung problems because of name inhalation and, kidney pr~ l>ecause of the bums, causing a renal shutdown, had hampered Savage's ftsht for recovery. · . The doctor said he bad trouble lighting !he respiratory problemsA"becausc there are so many other things wrong with h' " un. Savage's aegs had been placed In a sts . because ol the multiple · compaund frac- tures. Savage slar·led racing quarter-midgets when only nine year6 bid. He started on go-karu at 12· ~.:"began racing motorcycles when 15. He · waS the Southern ' California Scrambles champ in ~ t!le California dirt track champion in 1963 4J1d was sec- ond at Daytona -Beactr-ftl'1.9M while rac· ing motorcycies. He had a total oi 35 pro- fessional motorcycle wins. He started driving stock cars for · Holman and 'Moody in 1967 tand in 1968 went to work for Costa Mesa's Dan Gurney, of Ml·American Racers, creator ~ or the Eagl~ ' Savage drove C8n;Am', Trans.Am and Championship cars. He was fifth at Don- nybrooke in 1969. ran 14th and 7th at Kent and finished the season wiUi a 6th at Riverside. He ran second to Mario AndretU !in his first 1970 race at Contintental Divide and was leading the race at Indianapolis Raceway Park when he spun oil the course in the rain and finished eighth. He qualified for the.·500 ·a~ Ontario that year and finlshcd 27th. He won his flf'St Qwn •. pionship car race in the seasm finale·at Phoenix. He started the 1971 season with a 4Ul and 5th in races at ArgeDlina and finish- ed 3rd at Phoenix on March 27 but was tDjuied in th8 Questor Grand Prix at Ontario the next day. He was unable ·to race:-again until the CB.?if'omia 500, where he finished 12th . Savage qualified for the tm In· dianapolls 500 at 181.726 miles per hour, starting 9th. He went out after five laps with a broken connecting rod. He made every race· on the Ownpionsbip circuit 1ast year· and finished 25th in !he point standings, with a 6th at t~ Milwaukee J 50 his best finish. 1-ie was one of a handful of members of the 200 mile J>t!:r hour'club, turning a lap at 202.7 mph at Ontario Feb. 15 during tire tests. Fiminl1 arranieriittib were being ' Jnade in Sao Bemardlno. . ' ' . Members ol tile famlly --tlial menwx1al --be maile to the childn!n's meotal bealth deportment al Larue Carter l!Ospital here . Fra&ier weighed In at 20IJ pounds .this pi.ming. Bugner S<aled 221 pound~ . u,.,, ......... BALTIMORE'S EAllL WEAV ER J AWS WITH UMPIRE JOHN RICE . lB irds' Weaver Rips Ump · r • ' Baltimore Manager Calls Evans I n.competent By tile Anotlaled Pms -ping a 1-l tie. Two outs later. Aurelio "I didn't want to get on base that bad· Earl Weaver, manager or the .Rodriguez delivered two more rwu v.11h ly," sakl Cash 'alter.wards. Ttten he add· ti.more Orioles, docs not think too a slf18le, and the Orloles ncvtt caught up. ed, "1 ·woukl have hit a home run U be lh!Y ol umpire Jim Evans. And thal's Evans did not award Cash · nrst base hadn't sent)11e to first. Weaver's I .. ~. r 'n• It mildly. ~·T "J ·bt!Jnt J in\ EvMS js_jn.®Jn en rigtl!,_,a..,w,_,a .... '--"11-'w.,as.,_,no""-1 _,.un.,.W"'-'""'--""'"lt"."-'-'~"h"'it.~"--~~---~ lncapablt of bein1 a major leagtML_ veteran. tosisted he had been hll by the ..'.lbere was further aggravation for ~ei'' said Wea•er. wt\Qse team drop-pitch and .finally .&00\lt•ed .the. umpire a ~aver in. the seoood game, a foot-tut a doublebotlder to the Tigers In red mark on his left ann that he wu shutout by ~eran Mickey IAtich. it Sund ay 5-3 and 1--0_ sent to first. Tiger maftft;gtr Billy Martin m1t h11 '7hat was the v.'Ol'St umpired series I Weaver COntended. that C8sh had not delJ.gn.t:lted bitter, big Frank Howard, out "ever aecn 1lnct I've bccfi in the ma-. been hit by the pitch. but that he hid to c..tch Lolich's Warrt\oUP, pltcbtl prior leaeues," &dded Weaver, who's skip.. pinched him.w:tr on his ann to pn:iduce to the third inning. • the Orioles for the put six lht red mark. 1-fe argued with Evans for Weaver, still peeved At the way the 11111n1 •• 11tis Is Evans' St<axl year as a few minutes, then heeided for the tint game went, announced he WIS ' AL umplrt. dugoul -by way ol nrst baae, where ho playing the game uncltt protest. But What ,ot, Weaver going was a pl~ iq examined CNh'1 arm for hlmle.ll. Martln -to I.be Cheers ol the 'nger tl>e~Ottrth Inning of the opening game, on "Thal stupid home plale umpiro Stadium crvwd of 48,173 -Milt !Iowan! witldl ·N'I"" c.;~ was ~warded •l\nl (Evons)," Jaitl Weever. "When Cull out again prior to the eijhfh. ba•. 11Iet belnc hit by a pitcll from Jim pinched bl.s ann, there was •I I-a JoM Rloe, cht.r ol Ille umpiring crew, Plilmtt.' minute's delay, thtn Cash said Lhe boTI explained aJtcr the game that· a similar That loaded th! bases, and Duke Sims had hit him and he was awarded first si tuation had occurttd earlier Involving followed with 1 run·!<:Ol'I~ single, snop. bale.'.' Martin. l I -, U,.I T1 ....... POCONO 500 WINNER A. J. FOYT OPENS CHAMPAGNE BOTTLE. I· Kaat Scuttles Halos Angels, OakliiWI Begin Crucial Series Tonight Jim Kaat is 33 years old and has been pitching in the major t~gues for 13-sum- mers. He was asked Sunday night when he threw bl.s wt ooH!tl<r. · •'i don't think I ever pitched ooe," he answered, 1'even in LitUe League." He pitched one Sunday at 1.naheim J uly 1 July l July ' Juty • An9els Slatie All .. _ .. ICM"! cnt) 7:.H oim. 7:SJ 11.m. ·''" p.m. •:SS p.m. Stadium against the California Angels and It earned him a 2-1 victory which enabled the Twins to sweep the three- game series and remain one game behind the loop-leading Oakland A's in tbe Aznerican Leagtie West. ;.., Minnesota is in seconcf\>lace, while the Angets, who have lost four straight., are In fourth three games behind. Calllomla can gain ground on the A's as it opens a three-game series at Oaltland tonight Clyde Wright (6-10), who has pennitted only one earned run in his last 35 in- nings will pitch for ~ifomia against the A's Vida Blue (7-3). lour.hitter and his fourth loss. After Roblnson!s blow put the Angels ahead. the Twins came back wiUi a pair of runs In the third. Singer hit George Mlllerwald with a pilef> and then Jim Holt 1o11.-wttb the !irsl ol hll -hill! -• slnrle to center. Mitterwald advanced to th1rd on the play and when km Berry's throw went to third, Holt alertly advanced to second. Rod Carew followed with a decisive two-run single to left with Holt barely beating Vada Pinson's throw home. "I don't know where we're going to get them but we need runs," appraised Angels manager Bobby Winkles. During their four·game losing streak the Angels eoored four runs. "'Ibls is an important 1tries for us at Oakland," Winkles said. "lf we lost three .up there we'd fall a long way behind." "We got a chance to gain ground ~ ourselVes," said Robinson. "We don't need help from anyone." Kaat used rr pitd>eo to dispatch the Angels and pocket his 118th career win - the most among active pitchers In the American League. It took only oqe hour and 40 minutes to play the game -fastest at Anaheini Stadium this season. Lean Years Come to End For FQyt ~ MOUNT POCONO, P1. (AP) -A. J. Jl'.oyt, • II/ON immortal If °'"" ..... -one, cradled his luck In his sl""" driving arms Sw!daY and won his first 500 mile champiOMhip auto race In aix lean years. He got It at the expeme ol luckless Roger McCluskey, -hu been around the racing scerr almost as k>ng u Foyt. . Mcauskey, a C.yeal'(lld veteran from Tucson, was leadJng Jl'oyt oomlortably with just over a lap to fO in the Schaefer 500 at Pocono lntematlonal Racewly. Foyt. a cagy Twm 'who never leaves anything to chance, had pilled for fuel 10 la .. earlier. McOustey had decided to stretch his 40 gallon supply to the lhntt, hoping to ·e..,. home for bl.s ...,..d 500 mile victory iii less than a ytar. It didn't won that way. A • McCluskey's blue and -Eagle head- -ed out of tum one on the 199th lap of the 200 lap race;'"it ·&uddenly slowed, ~ along slowly !or about a hundred yards and came to a stop. He was out of gu. Foyt, winner ol tbroe lndlanopolla 500I but without a major {ri,..p. In tile big car division of the United Stales Auto Club since bl.s last victory ti-in 11117, roared by his Ariz.ona buddy to take Starter Shim Malone's checkered Oag. The 'Texan, auto racing's most prolific winner of prize money -amx.t '3 million in 16 years -and more: recently named driver of the decade, had led only II lapo of the race. McClllstey bad been In front sz laps -more than any ol the other seven driven who aet the pace. "I have Said many timeJ that It's the last lap that counUI," the battlHcarTed Foyt-said. "1 didn't tbintt McOuskey could go the distance, lllnoe we bad pitted . lo(elher when he made his ~ a.p. I was surpriled that he went • far as he did." ,-,- Only eight of the original 33 starten finished the wreclt-maJTed grind around the 211 mile tNnglHhaped coune. n.. mishaps, one of whldl sent 11170 'and 1971 Indianapalls winner Al Unser to a hoopilal, a1.-the action for more than so miles. In spile of the slowdowns, how...,, Foyt's ,elapoed time was mly 3 boon, 311 mlnuleo and 5U7 seconds !or a speed of J44.914 miles per.Jiour. '\'... _· _ San Juan Capistnno's Sam .....,. fimshed ninth. He wmt out Iller HI lapo. And Laguna Beach's IUck 'Mutber was 19th , quitting after 91 laps. Third place went to 45-year-old Lloyd Ruby of Wichita Falls, Tex., fourth to Mike Mosley of Clermont, lnd.,.and fifth to Johnny Rutberfonl ol. FL Worth, Tex., who drove grimly m all<r hrwhlnc tbo first turn guird rail --tbo race started. Unser, «!vlng !or Pmtelll J_. super Ieem that Includes Mllrio - and Joe Leooard, lost control on tbo ntntb.la p.and amashed Into.the wall mly a few feet from where Rutherf«d made his lighter encounter. The only hlt -and nm -Kaat allowed wu Frank Roblr}Jon's second inning homer. 'l1le blast was Robinson's 534th moving him into a tie with Jimmy Foxx for sixth place on the all-time list. Only one other Angels player -. \YiMton Uenas -reached base. Llenas got aboard In the seventh when Steve Braun, the Minne!Ol:a third ·baseman, booted his ground ball for an error. Ca~per Reg~ins Spotlight, Celebrates With · Dance "My fastball was better than average tonight, so I just kept challenging them," Kut said alter tmprovlna his reconl to H . "But t won't be impressed with myself until t can slart pitching con-- slstently. l haven't been doing that this year." Kaat outdueled the Angels' 12-game winner.·Bill Slnger, who wound up with 1 CHICAGO (AP) -The old thrill and smile of winnJng a tournament returned to Billy Casper, who did a little dance &tnd&y on the 72nd hole all<r dropping a six-foot par putt to clinch the .Western Open tllle. · It WB! Casper's lirst tournament vic- tory since taking.the Kaiser Jnlft'nalional . -in 1971 as he stepped back into the ~in\<figbt that he 9nce held In wilti>lng 41 champiooshlps and earning nearly 11.4 million. ' - Buffalo Bill joined early century Willie MOOfllOTA CALll'OllNIA Anderson as .the only player! to win the cim, 211 •: ' ~ f "lnMn. 1, ":'; : flt , Western Open four Umes. He captured it T1rrt11, " • • o Ai-r. n .> t o previously in 1965, 1968, and 1969. Ollw•, 6h •. , ' o St.nton, P11 1 o o "I II it the ~. " he 'd In o.rw1n, rt • ' o Ll-1, "' 1 o • ca ...... sper stomp, aa1 ~I:'' cl• ~ : : :~e,1 1:h ~. ~ ~ descrl .... ~ hi.a footwork on the lut hole LI• • .1ci: 1 o o kllnbfm. rt 1 o o that UJVl.lght la~ from eome zz1000 Mlt1-•1d, t O 0 0 8...ry, ct 3 0 0 fa"'• RMI, c 2 • 0 TortlOfl, C 2 0 0 oo;>. H011, 11 .i .i • Moo11. 11 2 o o The Jut tv.-o holes were ttlllcil !or 1< .. 1. P o • o ~· "' : : : him. On the 7tst be saved par with a 12- Tot•• 31 • 2 TOl•l " 1 1 1 loot putt after comlng out a bmtter. M~I ~ = ==-~-On ,,lbe 'l21ld.~-ftl short .... _.,_ LO~llwllM!il 1. autw111• '· n-ancl he pitched stx feet away. He needed Htiff-Hiii_,., It~ IJ, , the JIU11 for a p&r, & finisblnc •, and I KMit w. ,.. '", ~ ~ 11111 •.' ':' llkmder par m: over the: tramplitC! .,,.... L, 11·• t • I 1 , • ' MkDoC.l:i.an C'OOl"lt1 '" ... ~·..,.., Mii......._ T-t~C. A-U.-. He pt it, avOldlnt • ~th • " pioyoll lrtth Lorry lllnlon and Hale • lnrin. tnnaon cunt lo within ftve. lnchel night's TV Game o1 11o11na .. ear1e .. 11te 1iot....., and the birdie save him a 11 for m. '!rwto -In I 40-fOOI birdie putt Ill the llnil hole lo -wttb • r.r bla 171. • Hubfl't Green with a blazing 65 and J. C. Soed ""ith 68. Art Wall and Arnold Palmer were next at 276 and Jotn Mahaffey followed with m. Seldom have IO!ers been so happy. "1 didn't win my fifth tournament ot the seuon. ·but I achieved my most Im· portant milestone," saiQ. Crampton. ''I got into the million dollar bracket." The ~ustralian boosted his Clfter eaming> to II,003,103 to join. Jld: Nicklaus, Palmer, Casper and Lee Trevtoo .. goll'1 --.. , didn't win either but I got whit I went after in thil t<mnament -a spot on the Ryder Cup learn," beamed Snood. "I'm going to Scotiaact and wbup. tbelr butta." . T• ~ tlld ~1'1111,_. M 9tM t,,t.000 W.IWl'I OWi 9'lf """Mll'lll!f; Biily CMP''• t.iS.000 ,,....,.-.....n ~H•i. Ir.In. 11""' ... "*n..,...n Ltrry Hl-.-llL1•1 •....U-tn lrt1tt c,.,..,....,~.,~,m"'----"""'"'"'....,. l c. """'· '1.tJI '411btrt o,._ t1.»J AtMld ....... tS.311 Arf W•ll• U.XI .>n~ ..... rn •noc. 0.Wl!n. MA2S ~~!!!" JflfTY MdM. i£lt 111.lk ......... a.llO h!F~t.IOO Mllitt l«Mr, a.elO ~ierr.~r ~~ .. ... ' ~·· lelovlsed """""' ol the -Altrooo&in Dl'IO l'ldnl N• Uonol '-boltboll pme will be lhown on cbonntt 4 at I: ti. For !hole who ·~ able to pick up tlllnnel 10 out ol-$aft .Dt ..... Ille 'Clnctn-' ~·· Ylt1a<y -wu1h '3$,oot ' wlllle lllNon and lrwln 'ldt pocteled ,11,lrl. Sharlnfl four1ll piace money ol '7 ,233 at 211 ,.... 8rvc< Crampton. the third· ....00 leoder who tailed off to a 73 : ~Ii':~ .. .... l~'c,• .,·..os ,, ..... ,.., ti I Cl'M'la •lockfr, I , '::i~'1:'.:!.·m1,. 1 .. • na1t Red>-Loo """"' Dotfgm duh will be,... live at 5: 15. I • lltn Y~ey, ti, JI aott SPMtw, "i'" Tom W•lllOl'I l,1)t ' ~ I I ... Sports In B rief McEwen -Goolagong Wins . Accorded At Wimbledon Top Honor , g~~ar Corl Olson ol Ganfen Grove • Tho 111__.._ of tllo ...., WJ~fBLEOON -Aus1ra11·a1s Evonne Goolagong, the 1971 Wimbledon champion. easily advanced to the semifinals at Wimbledon .today with 9 6-3, 6- 3 victory over Virginia Wade ~-of Britain. - ii' The third-seeded ri.1 i s s :{-Goolagong volleyed easily and ~: hit I) um e r o'u s well-placed • ,~forehand shots in leading Mi~ ··Wade , seed e d si.xth, ':,ft 'throughout the 60-minut e-- ,r match. , ~" The Australian brokl her ;·;;foe's service twice in the first set to serve for set at 5-1. Miss ... Wade broke back and closed (. · the gaP' to 5--3 before losing ;:-1 .set. - , 1 Miss Wade, making the t• women's singles quarter.finals here for Only the 'second time, 1 , was ,again in . trouble at 2-2 in ; the setond set. Serving for a "·'one-game lead, she netted .., ... volley after volley to give M"ISS ?.;, Goolagong three break points. But the Briton hung on and ;: • held service after six deuces 'it• with ia superb smash. ,t": The Australian, however, • , :·swept the next three games , ~ for the match. .. ~fills Wins edged out Bob Noice of Van ..--..... l<~rnnoois Cevert or France in Nuys for the top tuel ttUe in i:i:nnot be emphub:ed too m11dt.. a 'fyrrell·Ford. Sat u r da.y's Nitromethane The way Y°'l. bold your dub Carlos Reutemann o ( Olampionships with t be directly artedl the anale ol the Arg~tIDa. a_t the wheel of a closest finish ever rtCOrded at clubhead ai it ltrika the balL Brabham, took tltinf by Inches Orange Coonty International This; la tum; ,__._ Ibo over Cevert's T}'rell team-Raceway. d~'-• t J k. Ste rt f Both driv-1 -~ed ide-, "'!"~n yow lboti Will bead, ma er ac 1e wa o "' n:uJ1-v the,,,.. if th-. bend at all. Scotland. Stewart's 1-·-• t'-1 ela--' times to _, place finish gave him ;':.; ~t;;"0t 8 aeoond -In lenetal, the farther yom point leail over Brazilian S.UI. Olson bad the fastest left hand ll turned to 'the riaht · Emerson Fittlpaldi in the 1913 speed with a 2Z9.59 mph ckx::k-oa your dub 11 y:oa look down World Driving Ownpionshlp ing to Noice's 219.51. on it, the 'areater your cbucel standings. After being .named recipient of elo1ia1 the clubface and Ser les E""'• of the Mike Sorokin Memorial bendlq_your lhoti to tho left The baseball ~es-hell\'.,,n ~~oP asfu'!f =r~ (Illustration no. I). If the club-· the U.S. and Japanese college year, Tom McEwen (Fountain face ii turned too far to tbe au.stars has ended, but the Valley) defeated Don Mondy !Oft (no. ·3y, Ille, oppooito wllJ coach of' the American team, and set qWck time of the meet hi.ppen.-fO!il'lllone the clubface University ·<>I Southern at &.36 set'Ollds before losing t.o · open ind llice ahota.to the riahL Califon)ia's Rod Dedeaux, is Noice in the semlftnals. Some inteiiiie:diate polition alread~ anticipating,. th• . Gary Cochran ,CFoontain . , (bO. 2) ll lllUllly bott, but you'll · renewal of tbe games next Valley) had top speed at 230.17 haft tO iex--*-·Dt with your •' year in Japan. m.pb • '.I .,....uuv I DedeaW< watched his team Bob Pickett (L<ls Angeles) left nand lriP and watch the J eke out a 1-0 win .in the bottom drove hi.s Qodge to 8 win over shape of your sbotl until YOU. r! of the ninth at Anaheim Mert Litilefield's (Long ftDd the position that ii bat for : Stadium· Suildiy 'for a S.2 ad-Beach) Vega in the funny car you. · Wbateyer· )'ovr position, i vantage in the series and said : final 6.SS.214.28 to 10.36-79'.'M remember to place your riaht 8 "I am looking forward to the when Littlefield lost traction band on tb.e club-ao that your e series in Japan next year. I and shut off at miMrack. palms are fadna a. think this was coll_ege Roger Garten {Arcadia) set 1--------·--------------1 bueball's --finest hour. We're low e.t. for the funny cars at "HITTING THE 1RONS"-offtr1soffd1rip,111nc1.1ndswln1 point· expoSing college baseball to 6.79 seconds while Mike Snive-tr• to boost iron p11y i nd lower plf tc0rt1I Stnd 20t ind 1 many more people than have ly (Rialto) set top speed with stem ptd, return envelope tO Arnold Pllm1r, c/o this pape" seen it before and the game a 218.44 mph perlonnance. creates Jl'd.lch internationJ Ken Veney (Torrance) set a ;_: ATLANTA .._ Mary Mills good will." track record of 7.09 ·,.:.two-putted from 22 feet away seconds 192.71 mph enroute 1. I -. ' ·-- Pirates Bag First .. Trium ph Ward's Pirates notched their flnt w1n of the .,.mmer, UH, over the El Toro Marines. but the Saddleback G a u c h o s "'ertn't able lo do likewise tn Metropolitan League baseball games Sunday. The Gauchos were bl.....r, 12.-2, by ·the Garden Grove Olargen to a)>oo<b their seventh consecutive loss. The power hltUng of .Marl< Schrujlp .and the pitching ol Tun Kelly were the big ractors ". '" "' '" '" ' '" - in Ward's Pirates' vic tory at El Toro. Schrupp, a Costa li-fesa High product, had a three-run homer and a run producing triple in tho-game, while Kelly kept the losers in check despite some lapses on the part of his fielders . DAil V PILOT %1 Ba'ts Sparkle ' • A C"lean Sweep For Legwn Nines A &lx·Nn first jnniJli ~ pelled Fountain Valley to an llA victory over Sonol'3. and the heavy h itting of W,estininst.er. and .i\llssion Vie- jo al'° ~ht victories in Arnorican Legion b a s e b a I 1 gamtl Sunday. Wt-Stmlnster felled Garden Grove 11-4, while i\tission \'ie- jo reeQrded its th ird Straight win, 8-4 over La Habra. The San Clemente A t ea m , · dtfeeted the Fullerton Angels in a night coolest, 10-8. The death ol Anaheim manager Frank atunt forced caocellation of a scheduled game with the San Clemente B team: BIWlt v.·as affiliated with the American Legion pro- gram for. over 20 years. as . both a coach and manager. Blwlt suf.fered a heart attack Satll'day and died Sunday. <llris Brainard. W a i1 e Hor1Kl1'3n and rHarold Reither provided the first inni ng fireworks as Fountain \1 alley scored its victorv over Sonora . times in tht eighth inning 10 nctch the victory 'for right· hander Rich Rommel. Rommel started the rally with a itngle and one-base. bk>\\"S by Kevin McGatTY. John Densmore. John M~ CUrthy and walks to Tody Richard.son and Rick Wh* acrourned !or t~ runs. ·,. RtchardSCln also drove in • run' with a seventh ioni!)C' single. and Mark ?lotoffitt had.a tv.-o-run· single in I.he flrst iD- ning for the winners. Rommel 5truck out nine as Ml.ssioo V.irlp- jo raised ·1ts record to 5-7 for the summer. Foor~run outbursta ln the 'second and eighth innings pro. \i ded the impetus tor . \Vestminsters home vk.if;rY o\'er Garden. Grove.· as 1the \\inners upped their record to . 8-3 on the season. Dan Aooomando and Ken S-Aingle had triples and ~ Gary end Cumal Run.go ,ba;d doubles for the v:inners. nm Richards pitched the Win, hoJdjng Garden Grove· to ;ev. en hits and striking out &&VCR· All six. Garden Grove ruftS "'ere earned, ·~L on the final green SundaY and V.S. Tria•plts to wiming the injected fumy _ .rr• 'vas prepared for a sudden SHANGHAI-A tough man--car·competition. Ven ne.¥' s '.>:"'death playoff which never to-man defense and driving Vega downed the similar car F...-Tonight Schnlpp's three.nm homer in the third broke up a l-1 tie, and his trlple in the four-run sixth inning was a big hit as the Pirates pulled away. Brainard had a tY.'O-ru~ homer and lloseman r ipped 11 double as the winners can1e out swinging in the opening in· ning and Reither also stole home in the frame. Roger Sailor handled the pitching dutiis~ fol' six innin'gs to pick up 'the Win, striking out seven batters in the process. Horsman pitched the final throe frat~. st riking out l'A'O and holding Sonora scoreless. At I,.a Habra, meanwhile. ~lisston Viejo ~ed four CUrnal RWlgO doubled. rROV• 1 ed UJ> .£In a_sihgle by Dave Twiss and came home on • squeeze bunt by Rich Rosen to start the rour-run secorid tor \VestntillS'ter. A sacrifice fly by Run.go and a si.nJl'le by Gary Rungo accounted lot two more runs in the inning. came. lay-ups by George Kart o( the of Bob Llllegard (Torr~e) in ~··· "I really thought I needed it University of North Ca.n}lina the final 7.~189.47 to 7.86- V:<i to tie .Sharon Miller," ~ propelled the. U.S. College All-.156.25. ~ .. GuUport, Mtss . .,-golfef said-stars t0-8-97;a1 vtctory-over-Commenclng this Saturday- b.:. alter claiming . the $30,000 the~ men's team Sun-all.drag-races a:t ocm will be" 1 • Lady Tara Open with a three-day-night. --conducted bf Motor Sports Alamitos. Entries At Cypress College , mea™•hile, Garden G r o v e scored in all but two of the nine innings to easily handle Saddleback. . , CIHr a Piii. ~I~ POii 11U ... 111. ··, under-par 70.for a 54-hole .total Karl's basket with s ix International Inc., under the ~uisr •.tt:• -150 virdi. 2 ve•• r 2 7 nd 01<11. Clalmll'IQ. Puri• SllOO. Cl1lmll'IQ o 1 , two u er par. minutes left in the first period sanction of the American Hot prlte sxoo. ,.. She had wa\ched as Miss pushed the Americans ahead Rod Association. Rtd Riv..-· Ru•tv tl"ao-l "' '" "' FO•Y Nl1'1C (W1ls.ot1) Senoulne'1 J1f (G1r1a) knight Aff1Jr (Myl15) Sc~ SPO<I (Knlglll) Alw .... " .. '.•~Miller sank a 10-foot putt, but 33-18 and from that point, OClR president BUI White Tri»1c11 81r <KnF11hll ~.' .. wasn't aware it waS for a coach Gene Bartow's bench explained that the raceway Kln11'• Cruise (Smith) ' '·bogey which dropped her into •...J.. over lo increase the has opted to withdraw from some l"umkln• <Cen1or1J 111 JullNrll lknighfl m ... ... '';rhe 9aUChos got-single-runs ht t1* third and eighth innings. nt Roger ~aswell scored the first 111 nm when he reached base on '" ed 119 an error, mov up on suc- f t. f nd I """"' "'· SVptrdwrve (Hfftl " a our-way 1e or seco P ace spread to 52-25 at halftime. direct operat'ion of its events Jon 11,_, (Treuurel •;..f; With veterans Sandra Haynie , in order to proVide more com. CE!S.$ive walks to Larry Lak 113 and Mark King and came home on a ground out by John Springman_ ' . llVINTH RAC«~ UO y11'ft. ' .,,..r and Judy Rankin and popular Cager Seateneed prehensive management for ·":":;newcomer Laura Baugh, the MARIETTA Ga. _Former-the many different activities .)i teen-age blonde beauty who Atlanta Ha~ ks basketball that-now occupy the facility. ~fl had led after each of .the fir st player Tom Payne w a 5 Operations l~asing f r o m two rounds. sentenced to 15 years in prison OCIR under new arrangement Sheb9!1l1 ll1r1 C81ckell Hippy Rhytllm CWrlQhfl ll1ch:lr1•1 Cit lll:icMnftl Summer SunlhlM (M11Sud1l AIM t!tlllllltt, D1rllng Elli CM1llud1) 111 olds ·a , up. Cl1lfftl"'. l"urn UOQO. 117 Cl1lml11Q price 17t:IO. ·th• Poun111n 111 v1111y. · 111 P'1"1 COPY Ctr11sur1I Do1.1rl S1nd!lorm CICn!11ht) '17 Nifty Holl (Smllhl O!e Ll111111nln11 IB1nks) ... • 11• "' ... Bold 8ld CWal1on) , Rocke! To M1 fC1ordor1 J Rick On 'hn (Adair! ... ... ... Sl!CONO RACI!. ,. 3SO y1rds. 3 ye1r olds & up. Ctalmlng. Purtt Sl_!OO. Clalmlng prlc1 $2000. 1:: l!IGHTH RACI! -110 v•rds'. 3 .,, ..... 121 olds & up. Cl1!nllfl!I. "'"'~' 12300.· A walk to Ken Nogawa and singles by Gorky Fi.<her and Brian Hester accounted for the eighth inning marker. S1HtllM<k G11uc"°' 12) .. . ' Ltlf,o 400 Klno.u 1 o ll ~~~~·.~: Cl ~ g ~ P~rlQ'\ld, <f 2 O o ,. • • • ' • 122 Cl11m11'1Q price USOO. 1'12 1"rlnc.me1r (Myles) 112 F11ltlr, rl 1 O 1 -·Baseball's .Top Ten HATIOHl\L llAGUI! ... ..,., (11111 . JI AS R " !"Cl. MOi. I.I\ Q lllO 2~ ,, .JJf u.:.11r Phi w.1_. "" .......,,, t.'.1400• SF Mallhes SF Card~"•! (n; Santo l l!I l...Ue1>1> H:n Ilona• Sf'" " ... " .. "' " ~ 2S. 11j ., ·~ " " 'N " " '" " " m d " "' ., ,. "' " H .... 1 •uM " " .. .. " " .. " .. ·'" .m ,u, ''.!' "t rea'lly felt like Laura and Friday night after being con-include drag racing, motorcy-·~· Sandra were the ones I had to victed of rape and aggravated cle roa~ races, s~way and :>i ·beat and didn 't think about sodomy in an iattack on a 42-moto-cross r a c 1 n g for ,y Sharon until the end," said year-old woman. motorcycles, sports car road ..,• Miss Mills, clairlting her sec-It was the second rape· con-races, a driver training school , ond title this year on . the victim for the 7-foot.t former for pol,ice officers and "a L• LI Cilduua (B1nksl Custom l\rl (Hlrll J!rlco (Myt~l ISreadl!lck (W1rd) Un•"•dled (Sm!tll) F1!r 81•1r !Knl9htJ My Romen lndl1n (Ad1lrl 172 l"hoetMr'1 8 ruc1 (Smllh) 122 Burnt Al'IQlll (Wri9ht) lit Mertln, If • o 1 11t ~~~~·3~ ~ : ~ & I Sl1r1111, PU1bur9h, n; Evins, Alt•"· ' Ladies Professional Go If University of KeOO.tcky center~ . storage compound. Association tour, " " Mesa n Lead s Volleyball Title to BBC &, LAS VEGAS -Costa 1,'l Mesa's Bobbie Bl;lffaloe con- :~ tinues to lead the pack in . ~. women's s ing 1 es .standings Special to the Dally Pilot All-American team, tbe Bay ; with her 706 lhr.ee-game series The Balboa Bay Club senior Club team jumped to a &.<t .... 'in the · Women's International volleyball team won its fourtP lead in the· game and was Bowling C o n gr es s cham~ straight championmip at the never headed on its way to a pionsbip tournament here: U.S. Volleyball Association na-15-8 victory. THIRD RACI -·350 ylr'd9. r yMr olds. Cl1lmk19, l'\lrM '11DG. Cl1lml119 ~·l~ s:lllOO. Q1119! T 811'911 (W!IMnl Zen's Svn Dotek (We!Mnl Fr1!lob1 (T~turel SWllH .Bir (H1rl) Ml-IG•rnl Shlkf M UP IDAYll') MIU TOI> Llnk.t (Wrl9hll Tttrl 8~11 (MOITlt Mvtu•I Furod (f'191) "' "' "' "' m ... m 117 ' "' POU.TH •AC:I -5 .. Y1•ds. 3 YHr old5 & up. l\llowencl. l"vrM 12100. Scott Mlcl..Nn OCnl9hl) Ht B1rrlno (l\d11r) 911 8rNllr>D Cr"k (My1e3! lit Nlokl (Pl!lll 11] Aob!nlt Dr1'(9fl lll ":" The 107-day tourney with a tional championships over th~ In the opea divisioQ the 'Bay ; . total purse or $706,000", began weekend at Duluth, Minnesota. Club team finisOOd I i f th ~IPTM RAC• ..... 350 Y•rd•. 3 'I'"' ~~.:· the final 20 games Sunday. The Bay Club contingent, overall, but saw John Stanley olds & up. Fll1l11 & M•rn. c111m1n11. he d. •-· med d team All Purse SHOD. Cl•lmlng price ssooo. ~·~ toi>seeded in t 1v1.:11on. na secon · • N•srlt111on ceenksJ 11• Rlckt1y !Smllll) 11• ~ •• '.1 Peterson lt'·l11s went undefeated into the fmals America. Ooh 1.1 L• cMv1n1 111 Th ~ C t 1>1411 S1nd1 IC1rtoie) 121 LE CASTELLET, France -against the Outrigger Canoe e Vlange o u n Y Ml11 ~ a1rd !Morris) 111 · Ronnie Peterson of Sweden club before losing 14-5, 11-8 to Volleyball Club's girls team, ~~::.,.t~"'<i::'~~).1 :~ : ~· won the French Grand Prix force ·a final sudden death the only other Orange Coast Judf'" Low 1w1rct1 · 119 :·,: Sunday, his first victOry ever game. team represented at the event 91xTH •AC• _ •70 v1rd!. 3 .>_ : on the Grand Prix circuit, tak-Led by Bob \Vetzel, Chuck was an early tournament v .. r Oki• & uP· c111m1ng. Pwst uooe. K ho I. · I · tw ol "-ee c11tm1"9 Prlct 52000. Mol.ti. ( Knltl111) , 11t • \'lf'IOlll, 111 J O 1 O It, 11; Bon<h. Sen Fr1nd1Co, 21 1 11, O'Dlll (l"lltf), 172 C1sw .. 1. c • 1 1 O l\1ron, l\ll1nl1, 10; Mon-d1y, Cl>lc1go, •· Oii My11'try M111 (Adair). Llttll Mill B\IJ(" (Rlchardll 119 TOl1l1 .32 2 • i ·-.. .,... In 117 1C-.,. IMtlllll'I N_INTll •AC•. -'5t", Y•rtb. 3 v1•r olds. C1elmlng. ,....,.., •:noo. Clelm!flll price S«IOO. ' E1rley Chl/'111 (W1tson 11'2 Otbf• Z1n·!H1rtJ 117 S1m'1 WO!ld'" Min CTrH,11rel 11• Hy OVll'drl111 (Smith) lit lml Olckl• ll1r !MyltO 112 \•1!11te Rflvrn fWltsOll'J in Good Frld1y GFrl (11:1Cl'liilfdl) 117 Town O..ton fONl'l'lr) 1:!2 R1pld 01nl111!1 (Adel(J lo S11r1 Al Al (B8flkll~ 119 AIM t!lltlMe Duj)e'a D.iiut.unt (Hirt) SMlt A"ICk.'fC1rdOll) Ft<lo (T~1Ul'1) r "' '" '" • •• 111101 :Jn -17 9 J 001GOOCl10 -1 ' I • "' • • ' ' ' ' . ' ' . . ' . ' ~ ~ v " Sew• ~r hlfllfltt er TClll'o 100101001 -' Plr1tn '103 lo.I 01• -10 • , , ' ' ' • , ' ' • ' • • ' • " ' • u • • " Barr~cuda, Bass Hitting In Coast Area Waters B....c:11, Clnclnn111, '81 S!lrt •ll, Pllltbvrtf\, 11; Weflon, Ht1111lon. $11 l oncll, Sin Fr1ncl.c;o, S.o Eveni, l\llent1, SJ. l"ltt.._ er Dl<l~I a.rerr. Pn11.oe111n11, 1.2. ,n&: o.tt..,, Let A,.e111. ''"'· .7't1 TwittFlell. Pnll1dl!ph!1, 6•2, .HO; Jef!n, LM Ano1b. •·J. .n 11 8ry1n1, s.n ,,,,.. cloc:o. l].S, ,/": Po•krt, Ne,1,• 'for•, 5-l, .71'> ·RtltlCMI. CMClllO· 9..._ .691; SNv.r, New York, M , .m ; ·w111, SI. Loul .. '"'· ."2. AMIAICAH L•l\GUI PllYI!' Cl... e Al R 81omt>ffl, NY ... I.. V w. Horton DI! •1 11• 23 C1rew Min 1'I 1i.s ~1 Blt lr 811 " J1l 32 o. l\llen Chi .. us :19 Buf'lbrV 811 n fQ JI I", Kelly Chi 6! ,"2 l7 M1yberry KC 80 1'1 Sot Murctr NY 1i ~II ._, 0. M•v MU 7• N •S Htmt IYll• H Pct, ~ ,,, "° .:us 1' ~i 1• .;no " ·"" " "' lj .:JOI " .m ... 3'11 '.0.1Vt1•ny, K1nwl City, It; Fl~•. B°'1on, !&; 0. 1\11..,, C.nke11<>. 11: R. J1c•1on, 01•l1nd, Ji; 1-1 t n d r I c k , CltVlllftd, IS; 8endo. 011d1ncl. U. R11n1 l1tled 111 Mt vtterrV. Kt ntts Ci1v. 7'1 II . J •(Juon, O.l<l1f'l4. '3; Murcer, Ntw Yor1r, lS: D1rwln, MlnM.OI.. SCI/ Miiton, Chlct00. 0 , ::: ing the checkered Oag in a Nelson and Jim eane, w e urunee, osmg o uu Finey Wiilow tWrlghll in :,__:J~P:S~Lotu~~s~30:."'seco~~nd~s~ahe~a~d~ol:".__.:'.a~U-w:e~re'.:..n~a~m::'eff~to::._:t:h:•~se::::ru:'o:r~:m:•:tche::::'~·~~~~~~~~-'~'='="~'='~'=''~'~''-"-~-•~~~~-"I' ·bite on .the big ca1i<x> and bull bass " -· Da ' "'"'"' .. (1 Dtc.1111_, , • "'t""' ..., a vey s H11n11r. 01k11n0, n.J •. IOO; co1toor"· ,. Locker official. Mllweukn . 11.J~ ·™' Sl11t1r, C•W....,.11, U-4, ·''°' L ... 8cnfon. t ..l, With. the Jul F ~• hoJ'd .15'1; Mt0•~1e1, New 'fort , .. 1 •. HO: Y OU1 <ll I ay Pin•, 01t t1M, 5-1, .11•: 111..e. O•kl1nd. approaching H's also noted 7.), .100; Sol!llCH"ff. K•~··· CllV. 10..S. A single by Richards, a tri-' ple by A«omando, a· dwble: ·by Rungo and ·.a linife .bf Swingle led to the finaJ W•- minster runs in the eighth • A:latt Keough's grand slam liome run paced S a n Cleniente's A team .to its 10:.. victory over lhe Fullerton Angels at Amer~ 1Part: in f'ullerton. 11\e blast came in- the eighth inning. '·"· -· B.aseball Standings Sportsfishennen continue to reap ·~he ·rewards of area \V&ters out of the three Orange Coast area landings with bar- racuda, boniU> and bass Jll'O- viding most of the action. Davey's Locker out o I Newport Beach reports a bet- ter baITacuda bite Ove!' the weekend and .yellowtail action continues at a sporadic pa~ in area waters.· .'61. that area landings geneQ.Uy1 --------------------~~ go oµt ught despite the lime of£ fishermen enjoy in that • • DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO THIS WEEK'S SPECIA .. S '69 Doclft Pol•r• • DR., llltnlie,, ••llMlflc lrat11,. powll' ,....,.1,..., •Ir cenllllllonln11, rMle, .... ttt. Vinyl T~, Yllllw t:lft. Only 577" •lff4P•ltl • '" Volvo 544 i OR. 4 $,...., AM/,M $777 ()ISPl2n '61 Mud•nt Y ... 11,...., RMOI $977 141 ... 111 '71 Chrytl11t Newport H1,.ttp, .... tr..£ llt CIMlll111lflt, ......-'JMttlllt.- lo Ylf1i' Cf.1111 (It, Only 197r. . 111.0Cll '" '"· ·--''"" ,...,...., ..,,._ car .,.,, 327700 ' AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Baltimore Milwaukee Detroit Boston' Cleveland Oakland Minnesota Chicago Angels~ Kansas City Texas East Division W L 45 33 37 33 38 37 39 38 38 38 27 50 West Dlvlskln 44 35 40 33 33 35 39 36 42 39 26 ~ ,..,.,.., ... _ MIMl'llOtl 2, Allnls 1 New York ,_II, CllYIHlnd ).J Detroit .s-1. 81111mor1 i.o Mllw1uk1e ... 2, llo&lvn M O!lkl•l'ld "'3, Chk1110 u Tt 111 t , KlnSIS City J Ted•M 0 111'i!s Pct. .577 .529 .507 .506 .500 .351 .557 .548 .521 ,520 .519 .36f GB 4 51/2 5'k 6 171h I 3 3 3 141> "-11 (Wrltht 6'10 CH' M1y U) 11 D•kl11'1d • CBlu• 1·31 Detroit (Frym1n :1-7) 11 Ctt1rtl1nd CTldrow .. , ChiU!JO (Slonl ,._31 11 Te1t1• !Clwdt 1.0) MilWIUkM (Bell 1·11 ., 81ttlrnor1 tJ9ff1rMn 1.0) ' 8oston (Curll• S.7) 1t Ntw YIH'lr (Ptllf'SOll .. u Ml...-f• (WoodlOl'I , .. , II K.nttt City c•u·~ .. , T ........ 1'1 Otfnlf Allt'fl• ,, Olk11nd '°'Ion If N• YOl'k Mllwlvll:H 11 B1lllrl'IOl'e, 2 Otll'olf II Clelltf•nd ChlcttO •f TtJe1, 1 M'-11 el K11111• (lly • NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Chicago " 33 St. Louis 37 38 Pittsburgh 36 38 Philadelphia 36 ~ ~1ontreal 34 39 New York 33 ~ West Dlvfllo• Dodgers 51 29 San Francisco 46 35 Houston 44 36 Cincinnati 41 37 Atlanta 34 ~ San DJego 25 53 ,.,,.•Y'• ....... C!nc.11111111 "3, °"""" 3-2 l"lff$bur1h M. MOntrell 2-4 N1w YCH'lc W. Chlt ltO U Sen FrM1d1co 1•1, l\H1n11 •• Phllt<letphl1 1, SI. Loult 0 HOVllOll .,, S11'1~Dlill0 A T....,.,.-..• Pct. .588 .493 .486 .474 .466 .452 .638 .568 .550 .526 .425 .321 GB 7'h 8 9 9\1 10~': 5\\ 7 9 17 25 °"'"'9 fM~11tl 7 .. 1 11 CJndflnltl fQ11l· 1111 1·1) N!'W Yllll'k (SI-j.2) II t.\Ofltr"t (lttnllo ... ,, Sin Fr1ncl-(!ltrr .. 7) 1t Atteni. (Fl'lll'l'llll ... ffllldlflll<l1e l'Mitllt9 , .. fll'" LOl!bortl ;U l t i SI. LOUii (C~tftO ~SI• Sin otltO tJOl'ltt 0-11 1t "°"''°" Ht~ M-51 -·-kn0lt9011t~ l"hfllde!p~ II ChlClllO f'ltttburti'I lff St. Louis, 2 ~ Yorlc at Mor!l•"I Howton et At11n11 S911 FrlloeitcO 11 Cldclnn.H A better shot at "!;he yellows is provided by Art's Catalina boat. "Our early boat fishing olf Catalina is still catching a few yellows and we've had a good Soccer Team P lans Tour period . "It never fails ... around the Fourth we don't go (lut Y.'ith capacity loads . . . maybe everyone thinks this is too busy a holiday," says the Davey's spokesman. Art's Landing, also out or Newport Beadl. reports a good bonito catch Sunday with the t wilight boat (leaving at 5:30 p.m. and returning 9:30 p.m.) augmenting the 6 a.m. and 12: JS p.m. half day boats. Dana Wharl reports 3,300 bonito taken Saturday and Swlday. The Dana Hills rand- ing hes a 'twilight boat dally ·Eleven Or:Ulge COast area at· 5:30 p.m .. half day boats boys ··are members of Uie daily at 8:30 a·.m .. 10 a.m. and American Youth Socc'er noon. and an all night boat Qrganization Orange County daily at midnight headed for All-stnrr,who lntend-to~ tour the Catalina area. Germany this summer. OAMA WHARP -310 •noitr': nt 111e yOtith.s are among 20 ta1s,, 17 blrrec~. ,,,,, 1:>onllo, 10 boys aged 14-16 who were ~!~ti;';11~2 vt1•ow11n. •• rock coa, l selected for the Prange Coon-N•WPOltT (Art'• LHffltfl -U1 d h .. __ •nOI-; 6 Hr'Kudl, 1'-' bonito. 150 ty team an ave ~' e111co bl•., , ri:.1111111, 1so l"Ot.k cOd. ' training lour months for mac:k11't1. lDl'f'f't'I l.ldlll') -''' the uRcomlng•trip. :.~~·: a eo.rrtc:lld•· 4'12 bOnllo, •11 'MMi team .members include s•.t.L •t!ACH -m 1ner1r•: • Ill•· r1cudt. 150 bofllPO, 31 hlllbuf, t.t.O Tyron Blair, Ja(k Rainwater 11e, ... 111r;1 -11s •l'lll!•rt: s i.r. Md Kem Raug from Ne...-r1c11C11. '~ bOl'lllo, 1• 11n1 11111. 1 "...,. • wtiii. ~•1 b111, l'll 111u11u1, Beach.; ruck Bartels, John LOHO ••AcH , ... 1'111111 ,...,.) -1)4 Duley, Ken P1rker. and Jeff 1r1111 ... 1i t«i sanct ta111. 3 1MrrK11<11, ,, . DOllllO. 3 llallkt, 8up -l:Jf enol1<1: Kelce from C-Mta Mesa: Dane 110 11M111. t 111"'1c:Ud1, 30 wnd 11111. -Partridgge and Joe Sloan from 1' n111rw1. 11'1 ... ,..,., '"'"""'' • -ui --,T."-ftftm.wi eeacb~-u= Po __ &f19191J.;.JJ...billlrJ.Kltdl.J1Lbol\U0,_19 nun.au&_, 1; ""'" pov unco-.M.,1 v111owt1n, tn reek coa. 3 • f Be-' "':..-.1 Tommv rwnl)Ut, 1'1 1:11~ .,.,., ~rom . -· _iUIU_ --~ ~MO••O UY,.,...,_ SI l l'IOlfl'J.: Wassmann from La a: u n 'I w tort cod, ' 1111, m. " wlh'iOfl. ~ I ,..,,,.., .........,, -11 11111t••: Q 111'11 --• ~----= ~-1,ou rtCll cod. 15" si-1 -,. . v•••'6e '-""'f.lty team -11r1: ,, lono <od. 1uo rnc• "4. UI pla W~, · t ""-• •AN Olt:to CMt!MC .... ~) -MO 1' Y eu.u~-.ay I 1.AlltJ> enolfr•: ltt ytffoW11H, 11 blv. fin Ill"'• man .College . against an AU· ,., NrrKlldf, ,., 110t11,,,, 1• 111tnwt. star team , from the Padfic '·'t',...',,~~:o uw 11. """""'' -Coast -Ito~ in a S p.m. 13' ,..,r,r11 1 vtUowi111. lJ Dlf''""°'· M-kol( foll b "-h as ce11co M•'-m Yllk!W'lell. 11 1111 .. .. ,..,,. , . OW Y a. ma"' r1clld1. 17S «1Hco .,.,., 107 t.IM lll•s • betweeo the P21*Ur Club of '' bonito. 42 n11c-trt1. ,,. b111t ta1••· 11 -~1~ ~ ,._ FC roe-(od. '"*lfttlr1•-.,, ......,.: Aut"'ll' 111 ~JU u..:i 1 yt110¥1t1l1, 10 bl!'fKl>d1, '2 lf'4fll"S1 1 .f>..u r m e r • h e i m team of v111ow1111. lO Nr,11C1.1t111. » oon1i.. p1 K •• L. Germ cllt(O "'"' 120 MM ~. 1 tllMb\11, • ar~ruutt:~ any. .-. .iw. blU • ,-. " • MEN! SHOE SALE S.ave up to 1/3and ~~ •• • ........ . ,. ... e Altot H ... lo $60.00 NOW ~16 to•44 , Stl•cttd ityle1 only. -w -ETHER-BY ' ""'W' in. ... n . KAYSER FASHION ISLAND Newport .leach •. Callfo~la -. ' -. • • • . ' • , .. .it V PILOT Wh S S \·1· · o · tiys · u·i •ng U'I Tt..,_.lt Isn't -Athletic? · Strong legs and back are required for this k i n d of hikjng as ca n be-seen by Stephanie \Vhitconib's pigtails dragging in the water as she "mans•a. the tra- peze for husband Chip 1n catamaran race on Lake George, N.Y. This kind of athletics is common in high-performance dinghies and certain classes of cata-marans. Catalina Crow.dee] By Boats • By Al..,.\fON LOCK.,\Bfo:Y .-· ... ""' , .. ,.,. Catalina l.sland coves from Avalon to llowland's Landing were jammed with pleasure boaL<> during the ""'eekeOO . 1'1any were. planning to spend the entire ¥i'eek at the island as the July 4 holiday falls in midweek. The channel b c I \V e e n Newport and the island hnd a steady stream of boats in both dlrectio,l'li Sunday. J 1Ar-.'Y YACHTING types will be heading for the ""'est end or the island Wednesday lo wilness the parade of yachts in the b i ennial 1'ranspac race as ,they round the islaJ:ld and head for Dia· mond Head , flonolulu. some 2.200 miles away. The west end or Catalina is the only m~k of the Transpjlc course and will be the last landmark the sailors will see before sighting the Hawaiian group. • The fir st boats around Catalina lslan~ are generally considered 1o have the best chance of maintaining the lead as they ease sheets and head toward the tradewinds which '"ill start spinnakers blooming for the ~ong run to Honolulu. BOATING Mesa-built Boats Win Two Ran.ger-J75 built in Costa Mese sweyt t h e I r division in the first race of the Eastern Lake l\ficbigan Yacht Ract? Association for Interna· ti6nal Offshore ~e boats, .The. race, from Sau'gatuck to Port Sheldon, Mi~ .. was '19 miles with mod era t e soulh¥il!Sterly wind condiUons'. The winner Patriot, tiwned by Rudy Ve<lovcl Of Bayhaven. fl.1ich. hlld just been launched the day before the race. The second place boat Sun Tiger, had lJeen sa iling for three weeks. The race marked· the first . major compelilion in fresh waler for the _Gary r-.tull designed One Tons. Nixon Procinims Week· for Safety Safety Parade On Tap t President Ntxon has pn>-the importance education. or boating Chlcl,,.Cmd.c-Walter Coidon claimed thi& ~·eek "National ol the tJnlted States .Power Safe Boating Weck." TOO '"I'here are a number of SquadroM will head the &ife Departmenl of Navigation and dedicated organiulUons d · Boating Week boat parade in Ocean Development, the age~ fering free boatlng instruct.Ion cy responsible for boating he St te The Newport Harbor S a t u r d a y safety in the State 0 f throughout I _ a . sponsored by the Balboa Calllomia. wlll be "'1visil18 aU Coast Guanl Auxliary, tlie Power Squadron. 1 boatmen to play it safe this U n 11 e d S ,t a t es Po w er Other dignitaries a n d .summer. Squadro'ns. the Amerkan Red Joh E n----1t Depart Cross , and several local agen-celebrities ex"""'ted to be on n · U\:lu1c: , • r~¥ ment Dlrcctor. said, ·~we are cies offer excellent eotrses." hand for the gala parade are fortunate to have the first Bennett added that boatmen Rear Adm. James W • week in July designated as Y.i'to hlJ,\•e questions on classes Williams, commander of the 'National Safe Boating Week.' pamphlet," Facts About Free 11 th C.oast Guard District : As July represents the begin-Boating Safety aasses," f:n::m Cmdr. R i c h a rd Rounsuell, ning of the iieak boating the ·Department of Navigation chief of boating safety, 11th · season---as well -as the peak oi and Occa1t nevelopnent, 1416 · Coast Guard District: Mayor the accident season. Our Mnth Street, Roopl 1336, Don Mc!Mis of , Newport emphasis this year will be on Sacramento, 92814. ... Beach and Buddy Ebsen, TVI-;::=":==='=::============::::; actor and yachtsman. COUNTRY WASl£BURN and his band will furnish music . auring the parade. Also on deck wilf be Miss Newport Beach. The boat parade will begin ·at 2 p.m. at Buoy 8 (near the- Harbor ~rtment office). It will theil go west in the harbor, passing llarbor Island and the Lido Isle reaches to th~ turning basin, then come back around the south slde of Lido Jsle. passing Newport Harbor Yacht Club, arouod Bay Island and a1ong the peninsula back to Buoy 8. Bi£ ttb of July Danca! Soeiety ·:F:or "rhe Preser"U"ation Of :Sig. :Sands! f'rom 8:30 to J J :JO pm. A~mission a Mere S2.50 Includes Free Buffet Dinner~ 4 10 7 pm. Mna= , .. ·r~, . a'ma' ~. ri~ ~~~ ~00 MAIN STREET • BALBOA, CALIFORNIA • C\LL(714) 673·5245 ; Eleven classes of sailboats -s umed out Saturday and Sun. day for Newport lfarbor Yacht :ciub's Independence Da y &gatta. it was the lightest turnout for the event in tnany years. Follow'ing are trophy winners: · NflYC: (21 Tom Tupman. SOLING -(I) Goldtficker, NHYC; (31 Leslie Drozo, Argyle Campbell, BYC.: (2) s~liOT A -f I I Mark Humpit, Tom \Villsoo, eve.. I RastellO, ABYC: 12) l\fark RHODES-3.'J - ( l) Mistress. 1 ;' , Gaudio, NHYC: (.1) Bi 11 Bill Taylor, BYC.· · " '.~ Bilsborough, BCYC: (4) Vicki 470 - (I) Torch II. Jim and ;_._ Call. NlfYC; (5) Mark Abbey Gnibbs, CYC; (2) . • Ll00-14A :..... (I) Jack A1cClarty, BYC ; (2) Jim Tyler, BYC; (3) Merlin Gay- Jllan, ABYC. Golison, LSC. Flashpoint, Gerry Looman, · SABOT a -(I) Bill Buck· save. ;. LID0-148 -(II Al Perez; (2) (2) Dudley Johnson, BYC; (3) Oovell Smith, BYC. • .JOTE ....... (I) D a phne .Je.rgins ,NHYC: (2 1 fliitcheU ~hnider, SBYC. , LASER -t 11 Bill fl1errell. in gham, NHYC; (2) Bruce - Crary. NHYC; (3) Lisa Grun- da y, NHYC. SABOT C -!I) Lindo Oleson, BYC: (2) Br a d Westcott, NHYC; (3) Peter Dodger, NHYC: (4) Mike Pinckney, BCYC; (5) Ottis· 'line Homme. NHYC. ~Grand Banks SHIELDS f 1) Theresa, Bob Searles, BYC. PHRF -(1) Pussycat, John Szalay, BCYC; (2) Charade, Pat Ayres. NHYC. LUDERS.16 :_ (I) Zephyr, Gray Wood, Lahaina YC. ETCHELLS-22 -(I) Bon Boo, Roger Meisinger, NHYC. prand Banks comparison photo shows the new fiber glass model on right. Amer· jean atarine. Ltd. of Newport· says the easiest way to tell the difference be- tween the traditional wood and the new fiber glass boats is by the navi gation· a"I lights and sideboard on the flybridge of the fiber boats. American Marine ahifted to fiber glass in the Singapore-built boats to cope with competitors who ~ reportedly building fiber glass power boats similar to Grand Banks. :· :Windjammers Race Slowed by Weather Light \vinds along the south coast Saturday night and Sun- dily made a slow drag OUI of the 1t1arina dcl Rey to S.:in Diego race sponsored b.v \Vindjammcrs Yacht Club and Southweslem yachl club. Nearly 300 boats started the race Saturday at 11 a.m. and Navigation Official ~lected .:il a 1a1l' hour Sunday some 240 had finis hed. TlJE RACE committee at S\VYC \\'Orkcd until ~ a.m. to- day finishing boats and trying to resolve a number of pro- tests. Trophy presenta tion for the rnce was scheduled at II a.m. today and handicap res ult s n·crc not a\'ailable until that time. Cup Race Sclieduled Dana Point Race Won ByKahuna Belted Atlas Pacesettec 4tor •w1ttt 4 111d•ln1, pl111 $2.31 Fed. El.Tll lor e1d'I E78-14 111~rua bllltkw1ll. with 2 tr1d11-ln1, plus S2.3f Fed.Ell. Ta• for ead'I E78-14 l11btlH1 bl1ctwall. Engine tune-up. Two reinforcing belts of fiberglass cord over two polyester cord body plies. Big values now through July 31 ! ••• ~n~ 1;;,., .. ~, 'r.';~;;~~ Ell-U 4 lor 99.00 2for55.00 2,J I fll-U .. mr l~n.uu 2 for60.00 ·~ 0.11·•• 4 tor 125.00 "' G1'·1~ 2 lor 65.00 '" 1111 ... 4ior 135.00 '" Hll·U 2 tor 70.00 ,. ""l-lt•!J -·-· -·--- Summer radiator senic:e. We'll replace points, plugs and condenser. Set ti ming and dwell. Adjust idle speed. Set fuel mixture. i Drain and flush s79s radiator and put in . up to two gallons of Atlas Perma·Guard Good values, right in your neighborhood. s22~--·~ 1111de w,1. c"•· . Sftl:95 for t111nd1rd • ~ 8-cyl. Fordl, Che't'>'I, Plyrnouth11nd rno11 Arnerlc1n·l'l'l1de cornp1ci.. AINondH!oned c111 higher, ValueCenlers ere Exxon"stalions that offer yea r-round coolant Inspect radiator, coollng system hoses and all belts. • Pressure·lest cooling system. Free under-the-hood check. We'll check belts. radiator and heater hose, transmission, power steering and brak1Jf1ufd levols. ::·.~.~--.~ Look for the ValueCenter Sign, ---ll~a continuing program of g_OOd~v11a.,tueo,.,,"o'\nf--li---'ieffiings your car needs. A lg hi in youf neighborhood, you can shop for tires, get a tune-up, an oll change and much more. Check out all the good values this month at the Exxon ValueCenter near you. Blue ValueCenter Signs idenlify stations o'perated by Exxon Company, U.S.A. ==-----R'-l-Ptloe1.and ofJ&r.ahown-above-are av at I~ line-to clllrpll-.t" I 1CEU111i L =··~· - ' ' c - 1 able at thete stations located In many metropolitan areas and commun ities. All offor1lflCIJu!J31. Red YlllueCen .. r Stans identity partici- pating Independent Eixon dealers.Prices and otters may, vary at these stattons. , . ' ' ' ~· ' . . .. -..-• • : C!.S •. Marches to Ne.wSt1·ain--No Growth ( J.'rUJtrattd by traffic jams, .sliocked at urban 1prawt, choked bu Pollutio11, citiztn.s and focal government.s ocrosi the U1iited States are rtbtlliti{J agai~t tlllrt!trtilned growth.) By ROBER1· CAllN Clirisliau Science A1011iCor Scrvict As you drlve south out of Santa Fe tow ar d Albuquerque, N. ~1., oo Interstate 25, a lone n1Uboard irresistibly draws yoor attention ~·ith its bold, one.- word message: "UNDEVELOP!'' The mural portrays what the high~'Sy traveler v;oold see \li'Cre the.re no billboard at all -!ht volcanic beauty of Bhtck ~fesa and 1hc Rio Grande Valley. Carefully lettered in the lower rlght-Mnd corner Js the name of the billboard's sponsor : Ne\\' Mexlco ·Underdcvelopment Commission. It is not entirely a gag. Although no such "commission'' exists ln governmen· tal circles, thi s unoCficial undevelopment comn1ission has immeasurable gadfly in- fluence throughout fhe state. Its rounder, a young, articulate nev.·spaper publisher. Mark Al'Uf!, v.-tlO V.'tll~ a \\'3k:hdog column in his \\'ttkly New ti1cxlco In dependent , ~s issued 'more than 500 commission membership !'3rds and hil.s sold 4,000 "UNDEVELOI'" bun1pcr slickers. In these way.o; the "corn· mi5sion" kee ps the advocates of un- checked develoon1ent off b:ilanct' \\'ilh tlw kno\\'\cdgc that so1nconc ls watching. LJKE TlrEJR COUNTERPARTS in mp.ny parls of the naHcn. ~e1v ~tcidco's ~If-appointed unitcvclopcr~ arc riding !he spreading 1v [1 v e o( nulion:JI stn· timen~ \\'hie~ quesuons 11 hat "·as heretofore unquest1onnb!l' -1hc sta r· ~pnnP,lt>d tben1 e of chambt•rs or con1· 1nl'rl·c froin coa"t to co:1:-.t "Gro\\'~" .. Grow!·· "Gro11' '." t\ ju~l ·releascd rl'porl by the Tnsk r orce on Land Vse And t'rban (;rov.·1h. headed bv L<1 uranl'C S. ltoekcfcll cr. i.<Jvs 1his qucS tioning or gro\1th is :1 "nC11• mood " that is :;v.eeping the nation. lis C~rl1!11~ Science Monitor PPlol~ TRACT HOMES IN SUBURBAN SAN "FRANCISCO SNAKE UP THE COASTAL FOOTHILLS Some Cities Try Cliristiuu Science AI011itur Service Is "no grov,.th" a realistic ansv.·er to the overcrowding of the land and en- vironmental decay that threaten many American communities today? Citizens Of some cities, such as Boca Raton . Fla,, oi-Boulder, C.olo .. have so strong an inti-gro\vth sentiment that they are tfying to cloSc !heir gates. Other cities. caught up in the ne1v mood , arc taking such steps as enacting zoning restrictiOfls, ~enying se\ver permits. or imp6sing buftl:ting moratoriun1s to limit grov.•th and development. These actions appear to be needed and plausible, especially to the citizens living within a threatened area. However , a new report by a citizen group points out dangers in trying to stop growth on a piecemeal. city-by-city basis. . Na tionwide. it must be recognized that. by the end of the centu ry, an additional 54 million people will need· living spa~. "Stop growth here, and it .... 111 pop up there ; slow it down over there and it will speed up somewhere else. because people are not going to go a\\•ay," states the l'ofers i1a Boca Rato11, Fla., have approved 'pop- 11latloH enp' of 40 ,000 dlllelllng uHil•. stance. This communi ty of 41,000. norlh of tvliami, composed mostly of middle-to- upper income residents. voted last November to ...establish a ceiling .on growth. The • .:bty was startOO as~ ::i wealthy private club. It had only 7,000 r~sidenls jn l!l60. But by _1970 it had grown -to' 28.500. With nc1v oceanfront condominiums attracting retirees from the North. and \vith an expanding Florida Atlantic ·University drawi ng o th c r residents, the city was becoming 1norc cro1vded than its resident s desired. Many of the loudest complainers were the newest arrivals. At the polls last November, Boca Raton voted a "population cap." This limits to 40.000 the number of dwelling units -both houses and multiple dv.·ell- ings such as apartments and con· domi niums -that can ever be built. \Vith an average of 2.5 people per unit, this would mean an ultimate cei ling of 100.000. After that total is reached , the city could deny any more housing-con· S1ruction permits. The city already has imposed a moratorium on new btlilding permits in order lo prevent a rush of development ~fore the ncv.· controls are clamped do1\•n. Son1c developers with building permits, and homeo,vners desiring to se ll, wil! immediately benefit' from the increase of demand over suppl y. But tt:c ..........-.~ law 1vill impose hardships on land owners k F La d u \Vho expected to develop in the future. report of the Tas orce on n se The law will undo ubtedly be challenged and Urban Growth, chaired by Laurance at some time on \\'hetbe.r this arbitrary S. Rockereller. ~ ceiling is in fact exclusionary and ·goes TAE STUDY, C0~1!\fISSIONED by beyond the constitutional powers of a President Nixon's Citizens' Advisory mun icipality. Committee on Environmental Quality.. VOTERS IN BOULDER, COLO. nar-_ notes that even V>'ilh zero population Ol'flw!h (!he rate at which we sim ply rowly defeated a maxi 1num·popu\ation e·v Id limil in November, 1971. The city. 22 replace ourselves), population wou not miles north1rest of Denver. has been one actually level off for about 75 years. The migrations Crom rural to urban areas of the leaders in anti-growth sentiment, and from inner city to out lying suburban however, and is doing something about ·areas are expected to continue for some it. A re~nt report by lhe American Socie-timc. IY of Planni,ng Officials says Boulder is This concentration of population in_ "probably tl'le farthest along of any city regional urban constellations "'ill result . in Hie coUntry \Vhen It comes to a public In five-sixths of the people living in large conSciousness tDat gro1vth ca n be con· urban regions by the year 2000 .. Adding to trolled or significantly affected Ds a mal· the housing dem and is increase in the . ter of public policy." number or both young and old living Boulder adopted one oi· lhe nat ion's apart from their fa1n ilics. Each new first locally financed green-belt Pro: household takes up living space and re-grams in 1967, voted a sales tax to help quires services. From now until 1985, support open·space purchase, and has over 27,000 households -as many as in a already bought or optioned h)ore than city the size of Ridgewood, N.J . -will be 2,700 acres. \Vit h the populalion jumping established each week. from 37.000 to 67 ,000 between 1960 and Members of the Rockefeller task forces 1!170. citizens became alarmed wilh the warned that while limiting growth and results of a com prehensive'· plan that development may be justifiable in order predictcd the i>oPulation of the city and to protect 1he physical and social en-nearby county area woold ·double again vironnl{!nt, restrictions should not be im· in 20 years. to ·Slam Gates · across the nation ha\'c expressed an in· lcrest in \Vhat has been called the "Ramapo plan ,'' based on the actions of Ramapo, N.Y .. in .prosperous Rockland County about 35 miles from New York City. Ramapo. v.•hich had doubled its population from HIGO to 1970. adopted a time-controlled zoning ordinance in 1969 for tbe unincorporated 60 square 1niles of the tO',\'TlShip. Lant! for OC\\' housing ip Ran1apo can be developed only afte r the 0111ncr receives a "special pern1it. This 'is granted ir the land is !Ocatcd in ;.1n area served by a minimum level of Cf.Im- munity facilities. These facilities - sev.·erage, drainage. parks and'rccrcation areas. roads, and 'firehouses -arc scheduled to be installed in accordance \\'ilh aJ) IS.year, capi~al·in1provement prog ram. In order to build, an appl icant must have a minimum number of points ( 15) based on so many points for each of the sen•ices. He can speed up the schedule only by installing enough of the services Jli~lf to gain his rcqwrcd number of points. TillS "DE\'ELOP~'fENT Tl~llNG" plan was tal<en to court by a de veloper. But the New York Court of Appeals upheld it last year. Under the new ordinance, the bui lding rate has bec.n cut from approximately 1.000 new d\\'elling units a year to about 350 a year. Critics claim that the. dcvelopmcnt·tim · ing regulations \\'Ork to exclude· minority groups. The town had ba1med any more apartment building. And. it is claimed, at the end of the 18 ye::irs. all new residen· tial building could be denied .. This \\·ould m::ike the plan a measure for establishing a maximun1 popuintion. Palo Alto, Calif .. thro\\·s yet another light on the gro...,·1u is;;ue. The city's 56.000 residents live within half of 1he town's acreage. Tbc other half is un- developed foothills, At one point , the city had bi..">Cn planning 3,480 dl\·elling rn1its in the lov..·er foothills. It had extended "'artr and sewer lines to the area. Btlt as part cf an overall dcvc!opmcnt study for ~he Palo Alto area. ~1 startling discovery V.'as made. It \\'OUld <ictUalJy he cheaper for the city to buy the foothills outrighl than to allo\v thcin to he idevcloped. The study by the San l' rancisco plan· ning firm of Livingston & Blaney sho\\'Cd that 1he cost of schools. roods, police. fire, and other se rvices \1ould fa r exceed projected lax revenues. The city council used $4 million frc1n its budg.el to start footh ills acqui sition. And to prevent dc1·elopmcnt . the city then voted to reduce zoning density in the foothill s from one unit per acre to one unit per JO acres. It also votC'd to allo\\' a \aricty of land uses such us golf courSC"s. educ.a· 1ional or research institutions. or rarms that v.·ere consistent 11·ith open-space r~ quirements. .\\lh ilc the costs versus tax rc\'enuc estimAtcs arc frequcn1ly ·disputed, other s!udics ha1•e verified the Palo Alto con· clusions. It is rare these duys fo r a city council or county board uf su1:icrvisors to accept without qu~tioning a de\'eloper's argument that his iidditional ne\v homes or development 111ill be L'COnomical!y beneficial to an area. posed purely for exc!usiven~ . or JN THE SA~lE ELECTION, "'hen the r---~tcQIJOJD.iCJ ~ n s. Growtt;hmlt1!1&__voteM1-tumed-OOwn the population-~!----""°'""'"""_:;;: meas:ur~s caMOI be . 8 PP I i e ~ in· ing, they adopted a 55-foot height limit 011 discrnmnate\y on a wide scale w1thoul downtown buildings and apprcwed n affecting the a!JMralions , or millions of resolution dlrccting that t~ locail govem· ~rlca~ v.·ho rn • .,y Int~~ seek to ex· ment •·take all steps ~ry'' to hold ercise lheir right.! of mobilit y. . , Lhc rate of growth in lhe Boulder valley Options available for d~ahng y;\lh 10 a level substantially below th at of the growth problems are expanding "" com· 1960's A study suflported partly by th<! mWlltie,, seek t~l r own solu!Jons. The federai gavernment · is ~k!ng 10 movement Is so new thDt .It is not yet delcnnlne the physical. !Oclal. aod clear which of the planl Will eventually economic efftdJ' of different gro\\·th -work ou t, and whlch mny be unrair or strategies. And the city council In i--r----unduly reatrlctlve. Some af the current February t972 voted to discourage new errorw.~ however, \\'llrrant car cf u I primary ' emPloymcnt centers. from -opponents reCcr to 1t a! "anli·i;roy,·1h ," ··no-grO\\'lh." or ··zero i;:rov. th ... v. lull• hd· \'OC(ltf'!I Ri'nt•rallv call It "<'Olltroltl-d gro"1h." "Ll1nitl'<i gro"li1 .'' or· tjuu!Hy gro"th .. The prJ1·;1tl'I:-' tunJ~ J !{()('kefell1•r report. eo1n1n1ssloo<'d by Prf'sidl'nt !\L~­ on's C'ili7.\•n Advisory r.:0111rn1tte~ 011 r:n\•lr011n1c1Ha l (~uallly, arrl\'l'<I <H !hf' conclusion th.11 :ibsoh1tl' "no ~ro.,.,·th" is nol 11 v1;.ible option in the near futurt" Populallon IYlll uru1\', l'cople 1vill illl· prove thf'ir i;Ullus and seek n1ore desirable living 11rt':.i.t:__ A policy th<ll 11·oukl dls{'rin1~nt1t(· rin !n(!t..·Jdual frcedon1 of 1nobility \\'Ould be both lcgttlly and n1ur=illy "Tong. Y('I 1he report 1rt11TS the fll,'rvasi\'f' op- r.,silion lo unconh-oJlrd g r o w I h 1hr<.ughout th<.-nul100 It po1n1s out that this oppo:;luu11 is 1no1ivnt 1•d 111 1>.1rt by conct·rn fur !h1• qual11 v l'f hfl' The rl'fi<irt suggr.sts Iha\ ncv.· 11is11tu11ons and i)T0- 1..<tdurcs nrc n1.•1ted lu fu1:.I 11;iy<; of t·on· trolllng tht· c:iitl'liSt'" that h.11\~ r1·:.ulrrtl fro1n the oftl'll unplaMl'd or 11!·p\.1111ll1cl dC\'C'lopn1rnt 1h:Jt h:1.s 01.:currrtl in c111es. i uburbs .. and t•ouh1rysidc. TllE .\!';TJ-G H0 \\'1'11 ~1001) has l>cc11 e\'id<'nl to n1e in \r;n·els 11round !ht• C'Oun· Ir~· the l11st f1•11' ~ca1·s 1n1·r.;t1l::lt111iz l'll· viro11n1<'11!:1l ;1eth·itics. Ac<.·oi'thng 10 the, Rockefeller r'cporl and to urbanologists :i nd pl annl'rs. however, tht• rnood is not be ing created by far · out C'llViron· 1nentatists. ~!any citizens arc conscious lhat nt•1\' dC'velop1ncnl carries potent'1al cronomic h:irdships as well as hannful en- vironment al cffC'cl~. The ready assump- tion of city or county officials that nl'11· grO\\'lh automntically brings more jobs ;ind 1nore lax benefits has bcc.-n sharply qu esliuncd in stud ies and in the prrsonal experience of m<iny taxpnycrs \l'ho find .. that the i;crviccs rt:'q uircd to ac· l'o1nmoda1c the ne1\• gro1\lh c11n bl• n1ort~ cost ly 1han the tax benefits derived therefrom . IN SO~IE AHEAS. the nel'I' mood. consciously or uncooscioosly. riJ::hlly or "Tong!y. may 1:1(' Rn exclui>ionary Tl'<•C· lio n of the citizen \\'ho likes thing s as lhcy arc and doesn't 1rant othrrs, and C'Spccially others who m;1y have differing st andard s of Jiving. to enter his city or neighborhood or bloc k. This kind of reac- tion can co1ne from the pioneer resident , or fro m the ncv.•est arrival all too ready to block the rqad behind him to others. \\'hat Is •·new" nbout this 1n:lny-fa£'eted n1ovcment or mood opposing grov.·th is that ii has su rf:lced in action. instead of just in gri.imblings and letters lo the editor. New restrictive la\\·s. zoning ac- tions, n1orator'iums on bu ild ing permits. 1lc nsity limilations. size or hei ght hmila· lions. or bans on septic tanks are sprouling all O\'Cr. They arc acco1npanied ·by citizen lav:suil s to prevent develop- ment. Once-tranquil city council or coun· ty commission meetings have become areas of protest. overno,~·ing "'Ith citizens see king lo block new subd ivisions or factories or 'amusement parks. In New ~ir.xico. before ~1ark Acuff slartcd the New r-.-lcxlco Undcvclopn1ent Co1nmission, citizens had raised such loud and \'igo~ous protests over a pro- posal to locate a paper n1ill near Albu r- qucrquc that the compa ny fi nally gave up and scltled elsc"'hcre. ~J OST OF TllE STATE stilt is rclalil'e· ly unde11cloped. The average New Mex· ican v.'anls to keep il that way. Albuquerque, \\'ith · its sno11·balling populat ion and physical growlh over the past \\l'O decades. ;ind a crime rate that last year v.·as the highest in the nation , no longer seeks nc11· rl.'sidc·n1s. The Albuquerque City Commission 1vith a new antidcve lopmcnt ma1ori1y, \'Otcd a te mporary moratorium on pro- \•iding se1\·age disposal. \\'atcr. and utilities to nev.· areas outside lhe city, A decade ago, citizens of Oregon \\ere developing ;in anti·gro"·th atlitude. even !hough their then gol'ernor ( now senator) Mark 0 . Hatfield. wa s tryin11: to bring in nC\\' industry to help the slate 's depressed economy. But ;unong Orego- nians, many of \\'horn had recently migrated to the st111 c for v.artimc jobs. the Hatfield industrial pu sh met v.·i fh resistance. There alre:idy voerc too many people and too much polluting indl!stry, the people said. TI!!-. PRESE1'i GO\'ERSOR, Tom ~lrC~1JI, has gone tht' opposite route. ··eoinc. but don't 5tay," he told Oregon 1 1~11 :-s iw o yea rs ago. Then Inst year he .su~li~:cd nl:l)'* !he)' shouldn·1 con\c at t ! This ,\car he h:ls rt·quesled the Lt-glsb1turc lo sl11sh thl' "('on1e to Ort•gon" travel advrrtlslng budi:iel by 30 pc rcrn1. Th<' Lt>glsh11ure nu•y rt-duce ii .-inother 30 percent. · · Ct1\·rrnor ~lcC.all believes so1ne gro1\·lh is incvitahle.But he 11•a11ts adcqunte pl11n· nlnt: for It. Ill' pushed sirongly for a sin!• · land -use ll11v 11·ith provisions to protect {·nvirorunentally crHicnl Jrca·s. A ft'\v month.<1 ago. 'he used th& pubUc·heal~ l:J"'S of tilt• st;1{(1 tO force I.I boo111in3 (.'(lastal N1untv tu issue n 1noratorium on nil ney,• bu iki'1ni; pernlil!!i until plan!I art! dc\·iscd for adequate W"'age disposal •n1d \~:llrr SUJ)ph . !tis l:ltl'St IUO\C IS a Tl'· nuest to lhc Lt•gislaturc to ra ise camping f{'Cs for out-of-state C:lJS at stale parks, • Floridu a n d C<ilifornia. states lh" tr;id111on.1\11· ha1·(' 1 itd 11·\th L-:lCll other 10 anract 1·1.-'aors .-ind ind ustry,, now are Sl'f'k111g It) ouldo t'<ieh Olhi:r in IH'O\\'lh· t·on1rol llll'asurcs. F'lorida oiil)' 1'Cceutly h~s av.ak~·nl'd 10> 11 nt'Cd for stc1n1nin~ th1· tide of growth. Its extensive ad· 1·1·rtisir1g of sunshine a11d the good lifo h<1r1 inereased population by almost 2 1nillion. 11r 40 pcrcrnt. fro111 1960 to 1970. But b1· J9i0. :1 eornbi nat ion of new and old c<i uscs suddenly n1adc the citizt1ns a11'are th:l! !hl'r<· al ready 1vcrc too n1any ix·oplc ju1nmcd into urba n areas. ' Al)Df.'O TO 'Tlll'.: NOIL,1AI~ innux of tourists and retirl't.'S. thousands of Cuban refugees rnoved into southern florid;i . Disney \\'orld brought a n1assi\'c surge or unplanned growth to central Florida. Oth<'r c1·id('ncrs of the nc1v mood in flor1cl:l urc the efforts lo preserve the 1Uost111. llre 11e10 1nood. is just a feelhrg lhnt creeps tap '''1 011e as i11- eren.<ed t raffic e.rte11ds ("01Ulllllti11g ti111e. ~ . Big Cypress S\\'ilmp 'and to protect E\·ergl ades N1.1tiona l Park a g a In s t dt:Vl'lopn1ent intruslon.s and 1v a t c r shortages, Go1·crnor A s k c w ' s ap- pointnient of Professors De Gro\le and ~larshall to the board of d!,rectors of the pol\'Crful and dcvetopment·biased Cen- tral and Southern Florida Flood Con~ trol District. and an awakening by towns- people in central f'lorida that Disney \Vorld may eventually bring more lrcu-- blcs than profits. DJ!".\'EY \llORLD ADOPTED some en· \·ironmenta l protections for its own site. But it rhd nothing 10 help the ma~" nt'ar.by IC\\'l'IS 1hat no"tv are overrun wttb-:' rraffil', are sprouting new motel and: toc rist srr1·icc facilities, and are faced~ ""'ilh de1nands for 1\·atcr. sewage treat~ ment. and electricity that f:ir excee4). supplies. 1'.lany of these central 1'~1orida:0 to\loTIS are considering growth limitalion1.:~ A( a recent conference sponsored b)':; the Florida Defender~ of Wlld!Ue. 65 oi:e the state's top seientisls. cducalors, cotlt~. servation1 sts, economists. land planner~ and urban experts spent two dny ,.. discussing the effects of growth on tnee. ability of nature to se rve man, and on the;.: C'OSt of li\'ing. • '! fncreascs in population lhat rai!e th~!" cost of scrvi~ are devastating to thosu citi7.ens with fixed incomes . Benefits that seem to accrue lo the middl e-incomi; range of th e population from inc~sed sa laries arc largely illusory bceatlse of ------------------ C n I i f o r 11 i a ' • a11t i· gro1clh aell.,itle# •tnrlt'd e nrlle r I h n 11 those 111 Floridt1. the increase in the cost of livlng and the cn11ironmental debt incurrt..'CI by not paying the full costs of gro\\·th in 11¢ past. A~IOKG Tllll'iGS THE ronfcrencc rccom1nended "'as that ' the state discourage all in-migration "until v.•11 know \vhat areas can accommodate grov.·th ;'' lin1it commercial development and divert in-migration from arealil! knr11rn to be overloaded: produce no economic analysis that \\'ill clearly shov.• 1hl· rosts a:o; 11ell as lhc benefits or gro1\'th. and take st rong steps 10 discou rage land speculations. such a<t pro\'iding a tax on land sales. California 's anti·gro"1h a c LI vi ti e s start1.od earlier than those 1n t,loridR . In some "'ays they are more S\\'CCping. Though st atcv.·idc vol(', the cnti~ roastlinc is being protected for 1.000 yards inland . St,1tc and regional coin- missioni> have bct'n established to ~ntrnl cu:is1at development 1\ state t'T~ vironn1cn111I policy oct. stronger than th (' national l::iv.'. rcquirt:"S environmental in1. pat•t statc1nents f<ir mos! commercial i!cve.!opn1cnti; as "'ct! as for state f1t .... 1!f)ns A J'IO"erru l citizen g r ou p .· Cahforni<1 1'on1orrov.·, has produced a comprehen sive staJc plan for con- servation and development. This cxplorr~ alternative~ for immediate actions a.nd implication'I of lhcSl! acUons. It mukes projecl ions to the yenr 2000. Citizens of Uvcrmorc and Plea~ton caies 50 n1~le<1 ea~t or San Francisco'. • f-'"'L._.;;pa;;;SS<;-:_d an LOllll'llil'(' limiting i'iSUance or : cv.• Uulliling perffiilS"lfii(tl SCfiOo . scy,~ge·lrcatmcnt , anti \Yater fnci1tics cx.L$l to !i<'n'c new popolntions. Tht San Franc1sco Ba \' Area c; o v e r nm e n t 'II p AS!>OC1a tlon :idoplcd a re~ionul policy to " halt the area's popuhtlion growth at S 5 million bv 1980, only D million more tha1\ at present . • a~ls. locating in the valley. fAKE Bot''\ RATO~. · t•LA .. for ·in· lilcanwhile. a n{lmber (If communilit'l WALL·T<i'•WALL CARS STREAM OU T 0:' LOS 4NGELES FREEWAY i:;~n r.!cqo h:i.s acted to deny ~l'\ltccs to .r 1 rYr1oper~ 1vho do nof co1nply wlth pro-••' \'isions for needed services. A..nd las\ ' No\'embt-r 1hc city votei1 a heigh~ limit:\·'.' lion on shoreline bulldinss. "'hJCh w10 1' stop th~ growth or !kyscr:.ipcr con· dominiums. ., I ' ' ' I' ,. • I ' . . .. . . ' . ' ~ DAILY PILOT • 'Mendly, July 1, 197) ~1 THE PICK ' OF P..nch I PUBLIC NOl'ICB PUMCll I "'Ttl ell II we'r• In YOtlf Way.~ .. ·' -' • ' .... DAllV PILOT ' I • 6 4 2 5 6 7 8 • . . ;:. . -• DAll.;Y Pll.JftT WANT ~ADS Geno< ___ ._i ______ 1 General -----"--SMILE! G~ono;;;;..;r~•~l ------I Gono~.::;~'~"~1 ------1 INYESTMOIJS_ . c I .. .i.... Ir-Ai -r r:;'"'==-=.-= .. :::.;;...._J·:::::•~ ~~ .... .,. .,.,., ......... , .. Gl-REPO-~ $25,950 Spic and span 3 bedroon1. 2 bath \vlth double car garage and large lot. \Valk to schools. 2 miles to the beach. Exce ll e nt op- portunity. Only $950 down payment to anyone. EXP~NDED. & VERSATILE That dC!SCrlbes this expanded Newport Heights h'o mc . Take a 2 bedroom home - expand one bedroom into a pool table 8!7.e Family room (can also be used a! a Teenager's dorm), then add @ new Master bedroom and -bath. Remodel the kitchen with built-ins and add a new dining room. Double garage on a newly paved alley. Priced at $48,500. Call 646-0055 • ~Pl~x oU Newport. Freshly Painted. Good return. No vaca n cy. pPde of ownership. 81,4 fina11Cing. Hurry -call to preview. ~1600. Lease 1.57 Acre 101\l\l I lll\O\ -., ' f} ' $27,500. -· ·C'F'I•,_..._ Nl'L .......... JU c r•rr1 ...... ..._ ......... m A ~""'"'·.,. ................. ns T.........., ....... .. . .. .. . . . ... . U1 ~.-... ............ SU .,. ............. .,. """""'-•. Mt °"""'"'' ... .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . )45 O.•• ....................... . Prime ?wl-1 land. Close to San Diego Freeway. ·aeaeh tou·n JoCatlon. $238 per acre. Call now. 546-l&JO. 4 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, plu~ an xtra BONUS ROOM. Big e.orner Jot witfl a \\'e!t side OCEAN BREEZE. Try )0% do\l.'11. . , ' ...... ,.....,., .. .. . .. .. • • • .. • .. • . J6S S. =-:.~.~ .. ~~:.:::: = .... fllnl. .... ........ . ' . . . • • • l:rt .,_ : .. · ..... · ...... ··· ....... • 2043 WestclW Drive ., ·-& ... ,.,, • "" • ......... • 41S t:At:1111 • Ev 546-1600 INVESTMENT DIVISION 16'x38' POOL 4 BEDROOMS, 2 Baths, plus large FAMILY ROOl\.f plus \\'ORKSBOP plus 16' :X 38' OOLPHIN POOL. North side location. S ......., ~ .................. •1• .,...,.... <>Pen es . ...... ..._ .................... •u ''COOL POOL" s...... .................... ... Y...._ • ..-.. ............ ., .. as "I'm too Bmall for my· pres-• -:C.'9,-:.:e··:::::::::::::: :· ent oY.'nl'l' but just right for ..,.__._... .-..... , .......... • you \\'1th my 4 BRSi)ark:ing S33,9_00 • · ......,... .... , ............... • pool 1-f '· I .., I ...,.., : .......... ; ............. 411 , u5 cov pa JO. mm"". .Newport II f.•lrvltw .6*1111 (anytime)' F D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D L y p .. .L < 0 t • ...,... ......., ................ -. occ. a\fall. Submit on $42,500. Mir•••'"•"•' ._.. ........... ,..., -OINNY MORRISON• I ~ REAL TOR-.157-4130 .·~-·Ato~·-·~=·-"'~··~_11i1f 1 .............................. 1 •. . * NEARL y .New·* ....... .....,...,,_.IN! . .. .. .. .. .. . JU .._ ......................... SJI ,..,., , ........................ SJS ~ ................. M 181 -~ Or• ... ,, .. .. .. ... .. . Sit Lett ...... '.................... SU , . ...._[ ___ .. __,!~ SdlMllli .. i.trwtltM .. .. .. .. jJJ T1NIMllC.lt .. • • .. . .. . .. • .. . • • • • 5lf S..Vk• rMrKtwy . .. .. .. • .. • .. . '" -....... ""'" . • . . • . . . • . . . 700 MW....._,_ ............ 1112 ~ W•llfl, M&, JIM Mllf Wt~, MA, 711 ._,_I _ ...... ~ ... -~ =·· .. ::: .. ::.:::.:.:::::·. : A«JllR ........................ 114 ........ Maholill• ............ .. ~ ... ....-. .......... .. """'""'" ...................... ·IM .., ... "" .................. 111 .......... °""' .............. 114 ~r'° ......................... Ill MC •.r ...................... IU M91: .. .__ .................. Ill MIM ... 1111 U W911tel .. . • .. .. at .,.......,_....,, ........ Ill Offk• , ... 11we1aw:, ......... at '"'-'0"9'1' .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. a' ................................. """""" ......... , ............. 1• stwt.a111MrW.s1r ........ m ,..,. ........................ Ut TY, ...... Ml-l'I.. 1'-...... IM Cute Spanish style home. Nenr beach & shop/ping. 3 D G BR. 2 oo .. din. rm. Frpk. 0 KENNEL Hea11 of BalOOa · SG9,750 T\VO large lots on Orchard Call: 673-3663 830-7914 Eves. ·Santa Ann Hieghts. Good associated BRO K E RS -RE A L TO ~S i"J~ W 8olbc-c-61 1 )61 J GO DIRECT Thats right! Go direct to Red CIU'pel, Renltors 2629 facilities. Best of rinancing and now only $16,500. I e CALL ANYTIME e · 646-3921 or Eve. 644 4543 Lachenmyer. Realtor Harbor Blvd., Costa ?ifcsa. HARBOR VIEW \\'e can handle any Real Estate needs you have \vilh ,MONTEGO our highly professional sales stall. \\'e can save you Extremely delightful color hours of trostra:tion in find-scheme In this beautiful ing your honte, let a pro-4BR home. Fully upgraded fessional serve you and call \\1th Del Pi50 tile and lux- Red Carpet, Re a 1 1 0 r 5 urious Karastan carpeting. 546-8640 lOpen Evenings! · Complime.nted by decorator drapes and \\'tlVCI~ \\'OOCI SEE USI shades. Priced to sell at For the r ight home for you. $72,000. Call 5.\G-2313. Complete selection of hon1es 1 .,o;o"'-"".;';;""'c·~'="='="":='O=BE=MC=" ~'A1~i~1ac~1EW·HOMES ~~~,·,. - REALTY % THE REAL ESTATERS 13U780 "SPLA~ IN THE N" You can do jus that "ith thl!l sparkling l~~_yr. old, 4 bdr, 2% bath [IOOI home, '"Ith fabulous rumpus room. priced right at $49t700. Cal.I Red Carpet. Realtors so;.soso NEWPORT BEACH l\.tarlne Con1racting Firm Finest equipment & water front location. 35 yr. old company. Space avail. 1or boat sales & .. repairs. BILL GRUNQY RLTR. 675-6161 COWGE PARK Charn\J.ng, beamed celling, ·~iving roOm and family din· 1ng area. overlooks xtra large back yard & patio. Double brick fireplace, 3 bedrooms. l~• baths, li!un- dry in breezeway, double garage \\ilh \\'ilrkbcnch. CI05e to all schools. I-~-lfEJ ,. .... a-a1 ... : .............. •• L ,Cltl .. . ... ... •.•. . .. .. .. .... 1u Ike to Trade? Our Trader's Dl9f ..... -1 .................... U4 Paradise column iS for you' ""'' ... : ........................ •» s lines' 5 d s fOr $5. cai1 ... ,..,.. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . "' • ay i .LhtnlKk • .. .. . . .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . IJI . t<:Klay • • • 642-56 8 I~ ~ ... ,,_ ... , ............. "' ..... Mt1Rt.(S.,,,k 1 ... .. .. • Ml ~l~rlM .................. ,.. ...... ......, .................. ... IMh. ••t C111111r .......... ,. ...... Slff ...................... ... ...... S.,.DKtt ............ tit Just Say 'Charge It' Old Spanish five bedroon1, den, forn1al dlnl.llg room, fan1ily roon1. on oversize lot' just i:;teps fron1 the beach \\'ilh a fabulous ocean vie\\•. The only spa.clous authentic Spanish hon1e ,vith all of the chann of old Corona de! l\.Jar. $1!17,500. 6~'l0. •OPf.N Tll 9 • IT'S fUN TO BE. NICE! SPA!1115H 51,JPREME . Immaculate 3 bedroom with rod tile f.odt. Nothing for buyer to do but niove In. Quiet cul-d<?--Sae, I o w maintenance yard. Liv nu, r;pn rn1, forml din rm. S-:9,500. CALL 645-7221 BALBOA PENINSULA Custo1n, ·top quality hQn1e plus 2 bedroom apt. aOOve. l\tany out.standing features. Steps to ocean and shop- plng. 7<¢ loaii. CAU. no1\' for details, .&15-7221 Ontu~21 ~· 1133 Westciiff Or., N.B. CHECK THESE AMENITIES * Extr• L•rg• Lot *Boat Gate * 4 Bedrooms * Form•I Dining * Perfect Landscaping * $36,450 Call now. 847-6010. Ii .if 18\ll EXECUTIVE £ASTSIDE DRUM HOME Imagine a 4 bdr, 3 bath, 2 story custom built home on a corner lot 'vith boat gate and !JO many extras. Built just 10 months ago. Priced to sell fast at $45,00J O\vner will CObrider a trade. Let us show )IOU this beautiful 1 honie. Call Red Carpet, Realtors at 645-80!0. Huntington HOMy Spacious 4 Br , 2 Ba on super wide lat, Best Hunt Bch neighborhood. Immac rond, \V/blt·ins, shag carpets. Jots ' OCEAN VIEW 3 + Guest $25, 95q Pri\'ate circular street or fine homes. Paint and save thousands . Sweepi~ grounds \\1ith room for boat. 3 bedrocnns ifl c lud i ng hide-a-,vay n1aster suit~. scparalc guei1t facility; <lC!11 \\;tt1 sliding i:tass dQor to· 25' entertainers patio. Breathtaking view or can- yon and blue Pacific. BET· TER HURRY ! C-al l 64&-0303. IOHl\I L Ul\O\ A ' ., i 1 ti " , OCEAN VIEW · front this almost new ma· jcstic VIP family home: Spacious bedroon1s, 2 balbs and excellent nren. Yoi.i OWN tile land. 1~u11 price "6.500. Real tors 646-771.l 2043 \\1estcllff Drive Open ti! 9 P?if *ME~A VERDE* PACESmER A sharp 3 bedroom horn~ with large 12 x 24 scrcene<I TeCl"e6tion room of ltne ram~ liy room, park like yard, and separate mas1er bedtoon1 suite. ' $46,500 C&.11 644. 7211 rJD.NIL[L • HAI LE 1 & A55(J[IA 1 E5 of landscaping -nn for boat! , ---------'--"= Submlt IO\v d\m, trades, $17 000 T.D:s. Prioro right at • • $34,499. Call 645-8400. NO MORE , ZQ<BCUSERt?MiYQUl fflTll? Very clean 3 br/den &. \\'ork: I V. .,.E. ~ C.O.I ~hop in rear. Lot11 of pri\•ae)i . _ --...., v>'lth chaln·llnk fence around this cham1lng home! Price PRIME DUPLEX-" finn . """' ltnanoing . ............... Al ••.•... _. ..• fll ...... Stlretl ................ .tit I T:a-.Mutfon j(r11) WHEN PLACING ·-· ~ South ,of hlgh\\•ay in Corona .;,, •1 de.I. l\.far, Let your tenant \'~'~-~~~~!!!!!~~~I help pay your expenses . Realtors MG-0022 • .__. _ __J AJl"C,.... ........................ "' c_,_. S.IW• ............. ,. ~.--. ............... m ,....,. C.1'1 .................. ,. ...... ~ ................ f:ll ................. ,_, ........ Mt T ......... Tfnll ................ 941 THllitn. Ultllry • .. .. • • .... .. • Hr ................. ,.., ....... .. I.__ _____ ... _,.__,!§] ,.,_ ........................ ,. ........ /Clettkt' ......... , , ... HI -'T. ............ 1 ........ '" ....,,..,, -11• .......... "' TNdu ........................ ta ...._ .......................... NI .............................. "" ..... -ltntN .. "'"' ...... ; .... ............................... a..,,......,... .............. "' ~ ......................... , .,,_... ......................... ... -:TIMnO :QUICK CASH T.HIOD8H A IAliY PILOT . . WINT AD 842-5171 ' • A WANT AD IN THE ORANGE . COAST DAILY PILOT WATERFRONT Here's a really great buy of two unit• , • .,,, """' three BEAUTIFUL DUPLEX-$170,000 """""""' and ... baths. POOL HOME Good condJOon plus prime includes l\1.1> botlt docka and location With only a short OMslanding 4 bdr, 2~~ baU1, adjacCnt vacant lot for ad-walk to the beach. Cnll for huae rumpus m1, plu1 kt\'e • diUonal building -or for appointment to see -ly pool. Thls hOn\e Is Im• just plain ·prt\'acy. Just 673-8.550 . .$95,500. maculate and decorated bet· listed. OPE.N T/4. 0 • ITS FUN ro 8E NICE/ ter than a model. 1\ll t.hit 2043 Westcll rt Drtve 641rm1 Open eves. f'.IEWPORT HEIGHTS, CHARMER (Wl lUl'll'll fii.~;~~t ~~ *Newport Supe,.Dupe Sharp!! Freshly pa I n t e d duplex, one block off \\'8.ter. $ BR. unilA w/flreplace, new cplJ:, bltm. Just like New! Owner anxious. li"lex• Ible on most any tenns • Trades·, TD'.s o·r ?? Better hurry at thfs price, Q){LY 31R,28A Doll house neat the Hf:lgh 1 ~· of !Own. Sharp 11; ck?ani nu.-e neighborhood'. WW w:i., VA or FHA. uy1 lhe teller or submit !he nc"' 5'Ai program. Are .YQU cruaUfledT Call now. . Perfectly decorated 3 bdr. Z bath, formal dining rm. lovely COl"l'IC.r l o c al Io n . Ready 10 ael! \I $5.),000. 1----1~ Don'~'Wll!nlrcnll $90.900. . • l OO!gs lifflWQ 'fWI O'EH 7!l P JUST DIAL 642;.5678 • The "Yellow Pas..-e11" Classified. : •. &IW!618. ol Red Carpel, R e altor • -*BAYFRONT 6 Bii.* P.10dlt cxclu$h1e N'pt, Joe. O:>inp. prlvncy, BE:AOI, PATIO, PIER le Fl.OAT. You ~·n the lRnd. Priced belO\\' market, $17$,000 BALBOA BAY PROP. * 641·7491 * Any day Is the' 1)£.W DAY to run an od! Don't delay, call today 64~ I v.~:=!fAI IMMACULATI ' SHARP 4-PLEX Choice. choltt llun CONDO imi Brand new, 3 BR. • 2 ba. Beach k>catlon. T If deluxe owner'• quarters A 3 beautiful 2 bdr, 1 ba, tnndli i.JJr. income u'rilt", Spa.nilh , 11 reedy tor )'O\I lo .move lni motif. Castslde Cosr. &tesa. Prlctd (br lmmedlalc 11.llt 'nr. N'pt. HU. See thi1 A In· a1 $24,950, bctltr llul"fY vest t~; $UO.OOO. Oris one. Olli Red C CALL A '4f-J414 Rn.Hors ~ ( 91.1;7 ~ Ev•nb l JIAI& I 0on•t give ur, the 1hl llALTY "Ll!t" lt ln caullled, Sb Ht1r lft•••rl Pttt Offlrt to Shore RctUllSI 642--5678. • I • -· • DAILY ,,LOT .tlJ •: The Bluest Markatplace on the· <>ranee Coast •. ~ •••••• 5GO ·S34 --... .-. ••• 125· ... DAILY Pl•Oi /CLASSIFIED ADS • • ""'°" I a • 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 -· f50 .. 990 loob & Morine ~ 900 -914 ~ •..•. • •., .S1S•J4t ................ " ......... ... a-I 1,._ ~ • • • •ISO • 199 ...... " •••••••• 700 . 799 finonUGI • • • • • • • • • 200 • 299 ~ for Sdt • • . ••• 100 • 124 LOit & FO&.N • • • • • • • s~ . 57• "'-rc,_.. , . , . . . . . IOO • 849 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It Wlth ··a Want Ad (642-5678 } One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval -.'llol . • • . • • • . . • . 300 -... Schoch ond ht1vttlofl ••• S7S • 599 ~ ...d llpoio , , • • 600 • 699 ll'Cll'llPOl'totion. • • ' • • • • 9'$ • Mt ERRORS. -Advortl,.rs should cMck thoir •• ciolly & roport orrors lmmodlotoly. Tho DAILY PILOl 011u-1 llobillty for tho fi rst Incorrect lnMrtlon' only. A. Ul-.llClUI' tl()MI' One of the Best Home1 Available for Lease 2708 j\LBATROSS, 1401 SANTANELLA;2516 VISTA -Unique Homes in Irvine Terrace, Mesa Verde and along the beach: 2, 3 and 4 bedrooms, fa mily communities, all with yards, patios a nd some including gardeners. From $450/mo. Call your neare:it Unique Homes office, 675-6000, 546-5990 or 645--6500. Ull!lll()UI: liUMl:i REALTORS Geritr1I FABULOUS SPYGLASS Hl'll \Vonderful NEW home !or a lge happy fami· ly! Spacious entry·hall w/circular s~r\vay, 4 lge bdrms, lge FR, DR & huge finished bonus room with balcony. Rm for pool. C9m· plete ldsc. You own the land ! $125,000. ''Our 28th Year" WESLEY N.-TAYLOR CO., Realtors · 2111 Sa n Joaquin. Hills Read "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Ch!'b" NEWPORT tENTER, !11.B. · 64'"4910 General General ''$16,500.00 TO DECORATE" -_-.2~Bi~D-R_6_0_hf_ HOUSE R-2 LOT ASSUME FHA [ ........ Sale ]~[ _,,,., .. . - All4tiM-s.td ~-llllASSOCIATIS REALTORS 2828 EAST co.sT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644-7270 •MOVE THE FAMILY IN · aOd enjoy this lovely home: Dew carpets and drapes, family room or formal dining room, - but what a value this 3 bedroom, 2V• bath, fireplace home is! Large patio for· your en- tertaining pleasures. All yours for only , $31,450. • HARBOR VIEW HOME SOMERSET-MODEL -Immaculate - just remodeled TWO-STORY home. New carpet- ing, drapes and wall coverings. 5 Bedroom, 3 bath, FAMILY ROOM with fireplace plus another fireplace in the living room, FOR.M- AL DI NING ROOM , sprinklers and feii ced ya rd. Near park. See to appreciate $89,500. • DELUXE CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX ·Beautiful ... tree-lined street in Old Corona del Mar. BOTH DELUXE UN ITS HAVE 3 bedrooms, den, fiieplace, 2 baths, builtin kitchen, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopging and schools. Choice localic:>n ............ $98,500. oflnJa !J6/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT Custom 4 bdrm ., 5 bath home with view of main channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel· 1ng & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel-· ing. \Vaterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath, sitting area, view docks ......... $295,000. For Complete lnfori:nation On All Homes & . Lots, Plea•• Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•y1ldo Dr., Suite I, N.B. 67S-6161 ........... --- H~re~a · ~fol~ Ha\f·gone in half a year and the rest will not last long . Hurry to see this di stinctive Newpprt Beach development of condominium homes, b uilt·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models. each a · masterpiece of . luxury. comfort, convenience and quality construction. S undecks. fireplace, wit-bar. elegant Master S uite, S un.·Litec kitchen, priyate e nclosed double garage. Recreational. r facilities include ·heateO swimming pool, lighted tennis courtS .. sauna, thetapy pool. A\1 ext~rior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy Y.our curiosity-see Newport Crest today! From Pacific Coast Highway end Superior Avenue {Balboa Blvd.), drive up Superior to • Ticonderoga, ;:ind directly to Newport.. Crest Information ........ . ., .. General General · =;;;~==~==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j -4BoiiM.J-~ -4 BDRM, 2 BATHS 'OUR l4TH YEAR Offering Servlc.• Only Experi ence Can Provide CAMEO SHORES • VIEW . In one of. Newport'~ most pr.estigious a r eas. with its priv:, locked beach entrances, this 4 BR. home offers immense family comfort. The living nn. frpl c. !aces a conversation pit for relaxed loafing with your !riends.,-or- enjoy U1e-p.90l with the m. The splendid ocean vie\v is a bonus. $123,500. VACANT. OCEAN VIEW Level homesite in .area of fin e homes. \Valk to beautiful beach, recreation club, tennis & golf course close by. $49.000. · PR!Cl:: RJ..:OUCED. °"•ncr sa.,rs, "Sell 1bi. houw ini · nu!dlatcly," close lo &hop. pint,: &: Li1ancla 11.S. Necocb son1e TLC, $25,950. HORSES, HORSES . , , nllol'·ed on this ~I acre rnl'K'h 1111.h rcnced cornl. l bt~l1Y.1on1 horne, pluJ 11''0 l'i'nral 1wH1,;~. saio. il'K'Omf!. 1'<.>c'<ls a>1ne fixio' .•. Only $j:l 500 · · CALL ·su11rr1 wow INVESTORS ALEIT! Sl:iO, se<.'Otwl 2 brt l batn, rents for same. Both only I T\\'0-0"-0ne·lot! One 2 br/t hath '2 yr'. old) l'f'nls tor ====i 1 $27 ,500. Live in OM' I: lei Go .. r.I ' I !iOOU?One elf!e make Ole pay· ~~~~~~~~~G~o~no~r·~~~~~~~l 1nents! HORSES PLUS DUPLEX C: ',.\'t\LI\( R ~ (tr ONE ACRE L0 1' -TY+'O separate homes, zoned for either horses or income property. Priced at $59,500. and O\\'lle r wants offer. This prope rty ml1Sl Qe sold! UNUSITAL,IS THE WORD I AT LEAS'.f IN COSTA MESA -1700 sq. ft. older home on 141' x 107' lot \vith 3 car ga- rage plus 2 detached buildings for hobbies, \VOrkshop, storage or what.not. Amazin g, and p riced at only_ $35,000. --!-.t.. HERITAGE n.cnhors ~ *6-UNllS* \\ro triplex~ on l kK. All :! J~R. unlis wi nlOd. bltln kirchens. lncouie· $93)/mo: Roon1 for '.! or po~ibly JI n1orc 11nl111. Ou1-0r·t0\\11· (J\\'n"r needs immcd. sale. $92,500. Call 545 ·8 42 4 , !:iOUtllCo P.~Jftlrs. 1 -~~~~~~~~· Get The Paint I Brush . \rA ho111r • $23,500. 3/br I: "'"""'"'!'""""'"""""""""""'!~""""!"'"""""""""""""""""\ one milr rrom South Cout " Go I Plaza shopping center. N -;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;";•;;";;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;I ''™"1 &. liCller will pay most REALTORS 546-5880 Open Eves._ • ot your dosing COSL,. * LAGUNA * PACESETTER Lovely, open vie'v of the hi lls EASTSIDE CUSTOM • -, . 1'his large 3 bedroom, 2 bath newer home is -priced at $41:500 and ready to go! • 'llSSUMABLE 7% V.A. LOAN . We have listings of many other homes Cell us for your needs 4 bdr, 3 ha th custom buili:ten horn!'. Only I yr ne\Y a nd highly UPirRdcd. LDveJy c'Ornt'1' lot l'.i th boat pte in choice F.ast Costa Atesa. • Cnll Red Carpet, Realtors 546-S&IO (Open E\.-entna:sl Thats the amount of the price reduction on this f '\bu I o u s viC\v hoip.c overlooklrlg the South Bay. high on a blurt. O\vner \Vanta in1medlate s a I c ! 3Bdr .• 31;~ baths 2600 54. fl. HURRY!! OPEN HOUS~ SUnday 1·S 204 Kings Place Rd. Newpoa1 Beach Red Carpet, Realtors 645-8080 LOAN ·"' Gener•I · Gonorol This Costa Ml'.'Sa home with ;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:, 1l "'"-'-_A-D_O_R-... -.-LE--- Centet Telephone: (714) 64.S.6141 Sales Office open dllily .JO a m. to sunset CORBIN -MARTIN WALK TO BEACH . . , Tl'~NNlS, POOLS1 0..UB • Vc1y · clca.n ,3 Bil. 1 ~. baths. Fan1ily 11n,. frplc.. bltrui, bcamcd ceilings, and huge SHOWS UKE " back yarn,,'" ideal st•no< DREAM HOME ....,....,.. •• ~ ...... '"''""·c-"". • 1 0R~E"A"L':T"o"·"R"S"""c"."11"A"n"y!'t"im .. ·~ ..... 64 ... 4,,·,,7,,6"6"2•\ C'.:lv:Obo ~~i. TY home. Note the FHA A MODEL •obfttH.O..iitC._-.o.-.ic-rac.tw. -~ . J; rn8;~~~1°!~ ~~~;~; Pripe reduced to $28,950. details call 648-nn. with only $1450. down. 3 OPEN Tll ri • trs FVN ro BE NICE/ bedrooms and den or famll.Y A nX1st cha-r m ing 3 bedroom., beauti[u l l y decoraled. Lovely'· carpets ancl drapes, "Blue Heaven Kitchen." Fireplace, service p o r c h , pr o ressiotially landscaped yard. \Valk lo 111ajor shopping center. Call today for more infom1ation and preview of Uris great buy at $30,500. Call 842-2535. OP£N rlL ' • IT'S F\JH ro 8£ NICE/ r.k<nooo111llfl'•l•~ .... -... ,. .... ~-. .... ,~ ...... .-...i .... -··~~"""""'..u..""' General Ge"eral * 541-12'0 * _ ...... ,.. ...... .,_.,_l.,,..••"'•• .. -• ... a-.n..-.P-·1<<-lr4 I' --... outo•~ ....... ,_ .. -.. ~··'~ ..... -..~·~""-""'" ~ ON THE WATER 1 ·B_o_c_~_B_•~y _____ , A REAL STEAL! · room. Brand new bullun ~~ ~ kitchen. to,.ly garocn ""' CLOSE TO CO>ll Lf:FF.LY •«ltt0nted. covered patio. HURRY ON Lovely conM!r · Jo ca I lo n~, upgraded 4 bdr + fan1ily tm, in cool Costa Mesa. A real cool price too only $29.500. Call Red <Jarpct, Realtors 546-8640. ' THlS!! MESA VERDE in benulirt1I lf u n ti n gt on 3 Bit, 2 BA, lrg. den. n1any General General Harbour is this huge singk' new f'Xlras. Vttcanl. 2300 i.q. -;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I COUNTRY CLUB !llOry v.·ell cart"d for hon1e fl . $62.000. 646-319'1. You'll !.ind it in Classitied -·------------ All WE ASK ..... . is you see what w'e feel is one of the finest Lusk H .. V. 3 bdrm. offered in..a long time. $88,800 -Fee. It's a beauty. Call now. Jim Muller IVAN WELLS BAYCREST· Lots of charm in this 4 BR., formal din. rm. home. Bright fam. rm. overlooking pool. 31> Ba. Courtyard entry. $87,500. Va· cant. Ma ry Lou Marion ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORONA J ust listed! Custom home ; dramatic use of wood, brick & glass. Fireplace in large liv- ing rm. 3 BR, den. $94,500. By app't. Dean Kring BEAUTIFUL ESTATE .Lake Forest dream home . 4 Bdr ms., family nn.; on huge p ark-like lot. IL won't last at $65,000. Ask for Pete Hallock . BAYFRONTS -EXCLUSIVELY OURS 5,BR. 3 Ba. Beach & 60' boat slip .. $2251M 4 BR 2 Ba. Beach, pier. Mag. view $200,M 4 BR. 5'.> Ba. Pier & slip. View ..... 197,500 By App't. Biil Bents COZY COTTAGE l>rivate Bays ho res area w /2 swimming beeches. 2 Bdrm. home w/guest suite. Lovely brick patio & plantings. $49,500. Mary Harvey XC t USIVE IRVINI! TE R RAC1!'~­ A lovely 4 bd rm .. 4 bath super nice family home. Large pooloized lot. Lovely gardens It play yards. You own the land. $94,000. Call Geo. Grupe _ ' --Coldwell.Banker 644-2430 .. ~ 550 Newport Center Dr., N.I . \ ' • \ ' co: Ts ' WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0ptn Ev1nin91) THE REAL ESTATERS Harbor View Homes i Just listed &. new on the n1a1·k e t . S p a rk l in g This is the niost. outstanding "t.:lonaco" model featuring home thats come along for 3 bedrooms or 2 & a con· awhile. 1 bdr, I ~~ bath, vcrtib1e den, 1~ baths. family rocnn with open NC\\'\)' landscaped & in beam, new plush carpet, move-in cond ition. Open rantaslic yard. $3.t,000 . beam c ei l in gs , cozy Seeing is believing!! OPEN firl'place, intima te dining house Sun 1·3 2 S 6 2 3.J'('a & you own the land. Westminster. (bt"twecn Del Quick possession if d1?sired. l\1a r & Monte Vista) Call SSj,950. 'EASTSIDE DOLL HOUSE ~'P"t. nea1ion " C. F. Colesworthy REALTORS -0 3 Bdrms-$27,500 Big family kitctkn. Large EASTBLUFF shade trees. En c Io s e d 3 Br., LUSK HOl\-tE. ror l!ICT"l!encd patio. Quiet area. 1 salr by O\\"nCr. Exeellenl brk 54()..1720 I rond. quiet SL ~.000. TARBELL 1 644-1601. • d"ign<d 10' •·"1"'''° !iv-Bolboo l1lond · . Roomy 4 bedroo1n, rnrnlly 1n1J. Inc ludes 90 feet ot boa1i -;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;; SUPER DUMP-F IXER UPPER of the fi rst , rooni and 3 battu;. A lovely dock. Call f)f)\\I for an ap-1• order , needs paint a nd lols of cleanup. 3 I yard ruled with fruit trre~ poin1 rilcnt to see th i J W•terfrant & Pier Bedroom, large yard. Quiet street in very and roon1 for ve!'elt1bte elegant home. 847-6010. dbl lot. Ir&' house w/yrd . G t t 't '24 900 . garden. ;\ Vl'l"" good buy at OPEN llL' • lr'S FUN ro BE NICE• By ....... _:. """" ~991 qwet area. rea oppor uni y a~ ., , . ., [ vw, .... , .....,...., =}:~?=~:~~o~n ~~!~u.~~J:y~~~r~~ "'~1~1~~in r@-: I ;:~:::~~:.::· ... d .... ·642-5200 Total T BR. 5 BA. $1Z,OOO cupancy. Full price $87,000. 4 PL.EX NEW l\larsh~I Realty 6Th-4600 I ---• • Coron• del Mor ~o §-'"" HERITAGE . • REALTORS 540-1151 Open Eves. I NEW LISTING ,s"""' Sho.,,. "'" roo -1-------- , ~tnirt('tl ne\\' 4--plcx in * NEW LISTING * Lo\'ely 3 bdr. 11: hnth plus' choice rental area. Priced So 1 If . 2 '-"· 'lh r 'I l •t l ' t II "'"OOOTk .o \V)'., ·l\ ..... te"WI an11 y rn1 . ocn e1 in n1os 10 lit' at ~· . a e ad· a ll The olll Corona de\ ro.1a.i· ~ ........................ '!"'""" ... """"""""""""""'"I dcsirabl<' Ea.'l't Cot<!U l\lf"sa. \'llnln!?e of (11'51 O\\'ller Tax Cl 1 2 Bit 2 ba . I General General A real i;teal :-ti .,34,000. l>PI· benelils. Call Red Carpet. i~r'~· ·· ·• "ec. -:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; i ==""'------!er hurry to the l)ho114 .. Red l{eoltors ~16-8&10 < 0 P, n hl l·•.n~. ah1_ind11~ or s tor-, • Carpet, Rcl\ltors ~~86.\0 E11cnlng1l (P .S. \\'c hn\'e age, . llCA\y Miakc roof, • 4 BEDROOM. 2 baths, iopen Evenirl"SI. nianv niorc • heaut1.ful paneling. C.Or~r double garage. $30.{IOO. Best " · 101 pt·1vac)'. Can to lieC Uu!!. of tcrm&. Salesman General General lll"forc ir 8 too late ! * C01.1l\IERCIAL ZON E ._ 2 I ii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l * THE BEST! * BR 11''0 story older honie, of Iha month a flen•'s the best huy in Crn"Ona (,!Orner lot. S24,:i00. I Highla.ncl!f . lot.'! or d 1am1 in R M C di R I' •h is <l<:lightfut 3 bdr1n. oy C •r e ea or MACNAB ho1nl'; 1~ bo.ths. f'le\\' car· 1810 Nel'·oort Blvd., C.;\1. I pcting; proress. decorated. 54&-n 29 • Paneled li\'lrn;:-nn. 1\•thug~ I RV I NE ~Jone frplc. Concrr te s><ttio: ' S©il~1A-.l&f-tf_s.·. IRVINE TERRACE BRICK & CHARM Char1ning 4l:JR home -large f~e lot v.·/ trees & seclud~d graciousness. New cpt. thru-out. Ready for you to move-in-enjoy a. marvelous sun11ner in your own ~k­ ll ke setting. ~7 ,500. 'Baf63fa A u n e- 642-8235. (XII ) vie1v fJf the OCNl11. O\\n ct· anxio1111, prlced lo selll MORGAN REAL TY '73-6642 '7M4St *OPEN DAILY 1.5 * That Intriguing Wonl Gome with o ChvcHe -----~· 14'11U try CLAY I , POUAN ------ H·YPNOT I I I I' I' I . I HY SUK If Dorl l!nrighl co1ri ""•• omc. Oon Enright 1'111 been named S1l11m1n OI !he Monlh 1t 0111 Costa ~ti office. A. member ol our 1xclu· 11ve Wlnner'a Circle, Don 1'111 been honored twice· prevlousfr for OUISttl'ldJng montl'lf'J s1le1. He Uve1 here in Coste Me11 with hit wife, Kt lhl, and !Mir LUXURIOUS FAMILY LIVING- BIG CANYON ~1aster BR w/it's own fireplace 16' beam· ed ceilings. Lari e FR for f8mily fun. $124,500. Charlene Reichmann 642-8235. (X14) 422 GOLDENROD South or h'>l'Y· du11tcx. l Odm1., :!1 i bli., O\v~r unit plu!! 2 liH. 2 ba. apt. Very dlJllneli~!-Cl!J:'ll! ro ~ach.1 2 yearg new. A l!l k l n~ $12:.,000. ~·,, _,_.. I f I I' I f 1-Mvc-A-i I · two children. EASTSI DE CUTIE --~"t-w•.Mlt-o¥er..J1,000,0QO.ol----H-lh\,.,.1.---..-nn-c--i;,-----""''==-~=--reif eli:sate evef}' d•r. out· , eaL " 0 1\ uo.mc -m::am ce1 1ngs - en-HARBOR VU HILLS 1 Lu!ik: J>rt. pool·A7.. ~I. 3 br, 2 ba. fnni rn1. 179,500. incl . land, 3 car k'lll'. o....~ 1208 , j j' j A naval moneuveri. ''Ke's . . . one ot 1ho1e Novy psychic· 1rists, No couches, Just -." ~-------. I T 0 H $ ... c I ,_, 1.,--.,~1...,.,-,;,,--.. ,c---.j-t O Complet. rhe chudcle quot.d .. ....J.C......1.-1. • ....J.C......1--' by lflli"g In th1 mlul119 word you d1'1'elop from .tlep No. 3 belo#, • e mw.r~~.es 11 I' t I'. ·r I' I' I' I . I) ~of;~j~\es tmeos I I I I I I I I I - SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS I ~ CLASSIFICATION 800 1t1ndln11 111e1me n like closed pati~rOom. Lg . corner lot. Harbor ~ ::~~b::,•,,::,~ rea· H~h district. $27,500. Lo is Egan. 64~. (XIS ) 1714) 545-1411 (714) 545-0411 Walker & Lea [J)W lfl.~j Outria"i~r. 6-1-4-3167. , I COZY comer cotta,ge, 3 BR, I "'2 BA + nu UOO 1q ft unlL 2 · Llrvine --1-~,,,eoo...., I ~~tu::v~Wti:·-:, 1 101 DOwr Dtlff M2·12U CAMEO SHOR I S By ~-ner~ 3 br, 2~~ ba, tam I 1au M1'tArthur M4•12oo· rm. pool. $113.000. 675-1007. ! Newpof11tech,C.llf0fnl1 t 211S e e DUPLE X e e ~~~~~~~~ T1vo \.er.. \\"e,lk. 10 bcRc~ = 559.$00 ,\g'91\ 61U:i00 \ I I " - -. • ... • • .... • • f • DAllV1Pk.Ol I ---MOttdJJ, July 'l, 1913 7 7 I~ [ _,..... J~ I _,... I~ [· _,"'.. l~ f _...... I~ I -"'"" I~ I _ ~~ · I~ I -I ~ I -·---. 1 ~iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;m;, 1 ~---~-~-~ s:;. **· Income Praporty id 1 .. 1 ..... Wonted ,, a: ... OJI!,.. • Co•I• (.lou ____ F 1Huntlngton llNch H_un_11_ng1z.-°'-"-'-•-•<_h __ 11_L_ot;,.".a.1'° _______ --=;;...;.=----1· WANTE D : A HOME Genorol ME:SA -IVERDF..-Owr<" Nrj .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Ur rr,..._ BeA\JTllVL locttlon KEATED 3'' po>L lmmao 2 NEW 56 UNIT Wilitm<M'>";.urpaymenla. .;.;;=""------HARBOR VIEW 1. 3 Bedroom und fwnlly - large yard and large patio. }o'ee land. $84,5W, 2. 3 bedroom and faniily - Jol/ely lttrge yard .. bt•11 utiful dCOQraU.na:. f ee I a 11 d $87,500- 3. 5 bcdroon1 nnd family - l\.\'O story -llke new. Jo'(."(! land. $110,000. hi •nn 3"• tll '"9f'WINll1 Gardens ......,UTll 1.AGUN block itory, m·, S brm. den, tam ...... ,, alt 6 P" -IC s . ..u on, u rn1. 4 BR 3 be 3 C OJA.> A. I nnl 2~ bfl. 3 car, Sad· Otluxe Car<Jen Appartm~. "'..... , m. 646-1-... &.tlnt oond, nicely ldacpd. · · ar prage. to brf.ch. Nfl'Wly ttmodeled dleDeck ll',,., lll' wide ~ 1st owner de:precla-llusl-A!l.&Unie-VA $33 SW Ph· Dramttdc entf')'. P!Uih. Car· 2 Bdnn. fumJly .,,,, 1 ....... e -·• .,., • ., lion. ~ ?~-· _w ~1 "' · ' ' · '"1!1 Tri 1--• •= l:N> ...... ._-...--de-.ac. $Ul,500. Prl. Pr-.....,uxe auwt •-.. "--_.•-lty oN -v~~l .--· · • ,...,._.,, -·-· deck w/ocean view. Cuea.t ty. SC.2"1t4 located In holte1t Anaheim ...,..,_..,_, 200 BY °"'ncr Back Bay CUsto1n ---'GE~Mll---~pl. $62,500 nrm. By o~r. "'"u'"'"'i=-""1 Css-.,P,_rk,_--7 I aportment a re a . All honit'. 4 Br, 3 Ba, den & If.le Ca.II 499-1204. \Voo1d con· n Y•r • ty • amf!nltles Including A/C, f II N II hool 1610 \V. (.'oft.st llv.·y., N.n . Alder 11ummer rentals all!O. di '--·II I il nm Y mi. l'ar n 1'<" !t. HElALTOJlS 642-4623 • OCEAN VIEW * PHINCE.."'TON model, 3 BR, 2 j hwashcr, vu t-n,, • Wondcrrul quiet ~tn-•ct. \\'Ill ..cond luminated celling11, etc. show 2 to 5. $62.000. Prln. l~NTINCTO~-~CLJbea'F'F • • llU&:e, ocean view llv. nn. ::· ~er. $49~ ~.!; Priced very reWIOll&bly. unly. 646-2634 v•lt' story 4 """""""m U1y • 'ATTI w/frpl; din al'l~U. 2 Bit. den I I soi-7893 $1.S5,000 down & b.11..~ loon SEU~TNG ltom<'. By owner . \•:ith f.onnal dining, private WALKER + g1.1cst rm, w/.w carp, 7n~<--~-------I commitment for $590.000. Exceptlonnl ktta .• 4BR. 2 patio. LuxW')' living ,cl05e •~1"""1 • thruout. Central ki t , W•1tmin1M Hurry, there aren"t m!Uly full BA. $43.riXI. 5'11Nrn by liench o.nd i,'Olf cout-xe. ''WANT TO GET AWAY w/rallll:e, oven, dlihwhll.r. llke this around, lt1 r. Mis· C'Al..L 968-44~. Jo'ROM nlE KIDS'' See thla one! $&3,000. 2 STRY. 4 bdr. 2 ha., w/w clone I 2S6 Ph 639-1501. 0 1n1 Point PRIME LOCATION· Walk to 4 n .> X" 1 n pl~ .. ._Mission n~•iy -~· ~1 crpt., drp., newfy1 decor .. b<•111·h and !!Chool.s. Movie 0\.11'5, "n oor ... , '"' '""".... ""'9'11'., Jg. land:scp. yd_&,!Jg. patio. ATTENTION ~ DOCTORS/DENTISTS -DEYROPERS- T11x Shelter!! P r e 11 11 I d Interest and Deprcciatlvn: I Excellent Loc&tion i n 4 . .t bedroom, fl\mily and bOnu.~ -l n Spygh111!i -good vif>w In all d l rt!Ct ion 1 $129,9"'-2 Utt, 11.i BA, 41 slory, l'ioi!f' to 111arint1, i·pt/dl"JI~. lg iun frtn1ily -dl'ck, S.17.500. 493.0029, beautllul S. 6 bedroom and cul lie sac landscfll>i~ and S135.lnl. v le .,.,.. F ou nt•in V•ll•y :·~~~11 In n.nd aA11n11! th!M Qu1~~ni~utd~·~:·'kf_,,~v~: L1gun1 Niau.I ~~ .1 1 1i klun. 4 Bedroom &nd .,,6 ·~ p!el'lly or bllr!lCC. CAIJ. .,. •"""t 3 Br. 3 Bao~ laJl;'e 00.'1-1156. "l&Xl MODEL" Jot , $39,95(}. I --l[••I SPiit.AL $TA1HCASE • By Best Cul-de-sac lot in the 4~ 8 UNITS 1 Orange County for Medlen! Showa $1939 Kl'OSS spendable. Buil~ing . on Fast DeVelop. owner ha~ had no vacancy Ing Bristol Street across for ~'O yea~. 2 1 BR, 4 2 from New Mercy Hospital. BR, 2 3 BR, Ir. 2 laundry Drive by Bristol A Central rooms. $85,COO Loan and will to see location -\VUI sell, carry small acoonCI. 1() yrs. lease or ljuild to suit. I==;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 6. 4 bl•dronm u.nd fArnlly - • bt'6utiful honw • oot51.and-j ~ \'lew • ln Spygfnsti $139,500 ' : CALL 675-7225 I VACANT 3 Br. l't Ba, only $23,ii@, \'oUmay nssume 51,';;, APft the Sea,. '1 _or 5 fk..:lrooms · PRESTJGE tract. 2400 sq. OWNER, 3 Br, 2 Ba, Wet j iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii All you.lit"' 1•ver wttnted ln a ft or gractous living FIR bar, Vu, cpts, drps. $47,000. Mobile Homes l1001f': flr{' ring, J)lld for bmaJ DIR fTpl. \ve coutd 495--5582 • For S.lo 125 boat or trailer. wf'OUStht-lron and • Lido Isl• t'OUl"tyllrd . this \.\'Oll"t la.!t . KO on ori. ="-="--------------- CA LL """"""· "EXCEPTIONAu.Y LIDO blo 7 By Owner 7 3 Motor Home Rentals -CLEAN" BR.., 2 Ba,. fam. nn., 45' Adult occupied 2 Story • 3 lot, S'ro,500. ·Princlpla1 only. Bdr. 2% Ba. one ot the fl3-. 7319. nit-est area.s. You'll love it! 1 •'""'e"'o"'R>~t.-3°"\71~BA=.~ .. -amed-7' clng:a, beaut. pool, 45' lot. ''KEEP ON TRUCKIN' " Pvt ply Sl.14,500. 6TJ..-0563 SALES & LEASING full servJce facllJty Danmar?Motor Homes EflS)' acces.!!I to San Diego L ido Isle & Garden Grove Frwy, Xlnt ---------. SWIMMING IS 1 _acro c~ property. Wost-RARE CHARM 12X42 GENTRY 1973 Modol. 531-6800 Lo.Im. &>Her y,~Jl ·tlllTy 7~;,-"'"":'!"!'~~~~~~!! se<'ond , TD. I minster Blvd, English Country fa m 11 y fully furnlsh.ed, awning & GOOD FOR "WE HAVE IT" home. 60 Ft. lot. 4 skirting. Costa Mesa Adu! old good Orange, County, 'e 644-1121 e area, Mr. Misdone I zrt Courtesy to Brokers Pb. 639-all. WANTED active \lurking partner to enter the wood finish-reniovlng and wood bleach.Ing AerVice on a 60 ·percent basis of all work you perform. Good worker can net S300 a \Veek. I pay nll overhead. IAts -;:it work on hand. 90 percent of\work done on customer premises. Removing aJJ types of \\-ood flnllllles from furniture & in. RENTALS Apei b i ..... oup.e -433 \\'. Htth SI., Costa li1ei1a UIS1 S. Coast liY.'Y., Laguna <;<JSTo MESA OFFICE $193 • ~eY/port Beach Jux:. &en, 11teps to \\'Bier, on hte. 1145 • 2 BR l'nc:I. yrd. for kids, rommuni1y pool. $195 . East11ide 2 BR, w/gar., stv, rclrlg, cpts & d11MJ, Klds & pct!!'. ok, encl.-yrd. SZQ • llB, 3 BH. h.se, w/gar. encl yrd foi• kids & r>el5. CALL~Ul ' LAGUNA BEACJ{ OFFICE $190 . Nict> & Quiet 1 Br. Walle to Beach. Av! 7/15. SZ15 .'New 2 Br. Coodo. Pool. Vv.'. Gar. Chlld/!>CI. $250 . Priv 1 Br. 't'Otlage. Stove, refrig. Btk kh, So. Laguna. . ALSO SUMJ\.fER RENTALS CALL 494·9-191 * LANDLORDS *. FREE RENTAL SERVICE 3, 4 & 5 BR. sharp, exl'C. homes, 11·/many xtrns. !lent , $261).$390. No r~. ll) 828-5671 or 828-5200 "· YOUR HEALTH Prime Beach BJvd. location. Bdrms./00.ths. Huge llv. J>a rk. $5,250. or offer. OPEN DAILY 4.25 atTeS C-4. Comer Site. rm., rec. rm. & din. rm. American 557-9390 · ~ 1\nd ~re ls a GREAT POOL $152~500 NEWPOR'f BAY Attractive 2 story motel. 49 tcrlor & exterior v.-ood roonui, pool, restaur11nt, work. Homes, Bus. blrlgs, cocktail ~. & banquet I\farine vessels, etc. $1500 facility. Well located, toom required to enter 24 year of Coron• del Mer for expansion. Gl"O!!'I over established business. lt1oney B1·igh.l a nd . t'Olortul . 3 : fountUin VoUev c!_· '2 . DEAL, at I ached to a 3 ''It, 1 HAD A l!AMMER'' LIDO REAL TY New 2 BR, 1 BA dollhou.se.. bedroon1 Lusk Jlarbo1· V1£'w, 714 963 5611 708 bdrrn, 2 bath, hon1e.-lo11 of Looking for lD acres • we 3377 Via Lido, N'pL Beach Adult park, private beach. 1226 Seacrest $87,riX!. 1·5 -landscaping, euliy · ca r c nave hall of it. 5 Acres of * 673-7300 * $lG,500 540-3672 p m GT>-7225 -==:=:=:=::::=:=:=:=:~ j lawn. N e a r Golden11.·est -' • • College, f'i)'s, major ahop-•~x.cellent R-S propprty. MeM Verdie '73 BUDDY 12X40, l bdrm, 'REDUCED $.3500. ping. 1>Ulr price $32,lnl _ • PATTI • -'=-'-="------1 furn. Costa Mesa Adult for faslsale at $49,500. WALKER PRIVATE party wants house Park, $4500. *'Ce ntury Park 4BR 2~BA ,w111Au In I\fesa. Verde. 2400 sq. ft. American 557-9390 *" t-·amily kitch. overlook! 17 n .... or +, •I or more bdnns. I CBeaAU.<h842Bl_•1•...;;, H.B. Prine. onl)'. 54<Hi099. 8X29 BUDGER v.·fl()}i."3(1 ad-f!&:F' pool. 7682 Edi~r Ave., open .. '° ded room. Costa Mesa Adult $2000 per unit. SUQ,000 refunded In 12 month.s. ~ down. Lease -back of bar & Leave mes.sage w I t h * * * * * * restaurant possible. Mr. , Ansv,.'ering Service. 7J. 4 .. Deluxe 3 BR, 3 BA, 011.-ne1"s Stine/234, Ph. 714; 639-1501. liSS-2000, Extension 13. unit, in new duplex, near ' EXTRE.IELY I . beach, patios, fireplace, no in e op-pets, $425. mo. Available S-l portunity for good, 675-6900 stcady-tlow business, ideal •· * * * • * for the yowlg couple want-~~ ing to \lo-Oril: for a com- 3 BR. Carmel mock>!. Open dntly;--19f9-Pt. Ramsgate Immac! ~24 0\1'Tl/at1;t * 'Brick firepl in family nn eves. til 8:30 -7 days. ""l~~l"'!"!:~~~!!'!!•IBY O\\•ner. 4 BR. :? BA, Park. $Hf.JO. * f>,or1nal din & heavy sho.ke ;;;;;iii;iii;iii;O.. ... iiii ... .-. R OOMY 2 STORY f·an1. n11. Large lot. New American 557-9390 * ~e lx>nus room $24,000. hwge·3 Bdnn. home \V/Early ~~'7:u~ ii'allpapcr $49,riX!. 10X47 "'ith. lOXM cabana, • Sclll'r transferred. 3BR 2BA, ovenlzcd dbl gar., Amer. decor. Lrg. fanli)y ' xlnt oond. 1741 Pon10na, Je rwin realty inc. 60' x 100' fenced Joi,. elec nn w/rich paneling. Pretty f,...li o::.o;ion Vlelo Space.41 Costa Mesa 968-440S (24 h ) blttn R/o, eating bar, din yard tu1d fresh paint. \\'alk MOBILE Home, 10x40', xln'l Z:=:=:=:z==:=:=:':i::' r m, tam/llv m1., ·FA hi , to Is & shops. Chann· LOVELY 3BR, 2 BA. fam cond. 1 Br furn. Pilgrim. C ... __,to~MoN-------w/w crpts & rlrps, Jrg ·Ing. RED CARPET rm, t'pls & drps. Alondra. 642-6990. THE MOST FOR THE niaster suite. $1200 dn. REA RS, 536-8836. By ownr . Princ~pnls only. ~~~~~~~~~ DUPLEX WITH LEAST $ l w/pyml• 1'" lhan nml. REP SSESSIONS· --~ A FUTURE ' ~.'i"' 11•1 ~ 3 Bedroom 3~2 bath rondo For inf mttlion ahd locatiOn N•wROrf &Mch Two units in an outstanding • All built.ins (Including gas ol th e F11A It VA homes, . * R-2 COR-NER * Eastslde Costa Mesa 100xl30. 2 Older houses Close In RIVIERA REAL TY 149 Broadway,_ ~.M. 642-7007 645-5609 EvH. fortable income now an6 a SS-2 Br. Frplc, garden, secure future; or middle patio, gar, charm! age oouple wanting a Mr & $290-2 Br front house, lrplc, Mrs operation. U.quor store, yard, patio, 2 blks beach.! grocery sl:Qre.. Shell Station SJ50.New 2 + Den, 2 bath, •. w/lube roOm, laUndromat fJ;plc, gar, patio +-deck! A . 1ce·i.oo.e. borber •hot> ren'. NU-VIEW RENTALS? "' tal plus 2 bedroom house. 6'.lliltlilO or 4Sf..32-18 Priced to go at $110,000. On DELUXE 2 br ho u 1 e . State Hwy. 247, 9 mi. N. of w/firplc, blt ins, crpt & dra. Yucca Valley on 0 Id walk to beach & to\\'n. ~~ Springs Rd\ {Il4) Lease $290 r.~o. 675-7-138 SL"\'. UNlT -apartments with •;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;il.;;;;;;ii-·I 2BR, So. of Hwy. carpets, Airport l ocatlo n . All • B-p1B·QI 531·5IOD (r,:;.) 531·5100 ''° Cl· NEW BAU01' Acroo-2r .. j. 150 •peoulalon will be In-u• huge ""'" hou"' ' KASABIAN . DUPLEX .- ocean b1-cezcs. Spacious 3 e Bars & Dinner House~ drapes stove, $2'25n10. ;;:;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:; j BR, l~~ BA, bltins, crpt'd, • Health Food & Gen '! store 642-5957 .. lerested in lutw-e uses for e On ly $3t,900 -Loy,• dov.·n GRANDMA'S HOUSE this ,_...,,n,. You can b"" lar)ltin realty inc. Re•I E1t1te 962""'4 PRIME N•--port P•oolnsula drp'd. -6S' x 300', close to • Cltlldren's Shop, Unique Coste Meu eSPOT FOR RANCHe grammttr school. S1Cl50. in· e snack Shop -Marina. ---------r·-r--or a.t• .... ,.,5 (24 h ) \\'u never 90 sv.·eet as this -=n " it now for 32,500. Plc11sc call ~ rs cute 4 BR, 1% BA, located BY owner. Accepting pro-location. Spacious 4 and 3. cont<'. Asking $.115,00D. bu t e R.E. Sales Oppty JMl\fACULATE 3 BR, 2 BA, 5 to 25 Acres, level land Best make an offer. KINGAARD Holland But. Sal•s screened-in patio, beautiful row for additional ln-j z=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:= in the heart of Fountain · motion, must sell. 4 to 5 Deluxe features l n c I u d r formation. REPO , Valley. J~ave ~r own ball· BR., din. &: fam. rms. & floor to celling b r I c k Perris Lake Location Zoned R.E. 642-2222 645-4170 or "'~"----"""" fenced bac .... ·ard -on quiet • for horse8, Mobile Home. ~-~~~---= ~ "' ~2313 dlamoOO in your back yard bonus rm. Your work is fireplace. Lavish. use of t;Je Ol'f#TIL 11. rrs ,IM 10BE NICE/ $750 DOWN and only $..1J,9:j(), at 5% done; sprinklers, pat Io, in kitchen and b a I h s . OK. Call today. lndu1tri1I Property~~ streetNin Colle1e .P1 .. ~k. $325 e BAY MESA e * ELEGANT B EA u Ty mo. o pets, chi w"t:n OK. I 12 or 3 BR Tov.'l'lhouse, hge oo,vn • Se'1ler "111 help pay block wall; upgraded all Walk-in closets : .. open li~!'ll't run1pus roon1 dble gar, buy cost Call areas. 2 lo'Iont.bs old . beam ceilings. La' u n dry ( ·., sv.·in1 JX>OI, rev.· left Hurry!. r~Pl"RfUR~tA~CE SGl-2800 area for each uniL Stops to : -·-•• ·-· 557-9144 or 842-4421 · * 847-358-1 * GREAT localiOil= 6 min. to the beach. $109.000. Call F irst P ionff') Realty • bcil, lo down w/financing 646-1171 548-2121 SHOP, Newport B ea ch , 642-5«l2. 4 ACRES OY111er operated. Good 1''EW To11.11house 3 Br, l~i e . clientele -xlnt area -Ba. fully crpt 'd, drapes. 2 t:ornmer clel mon<!y maker! I 11 n e s i car cnclos-• g•r. N r _ Well located corner. Present :.o:u PrQfMrty 151 forces sale. 642--0596, or sWim'g pool. $265 per n10. Income $1400. ]!er mo. Great eves 548--0128 See Jack, 979-I63J. *FIX-UP & PROFIT* FRANetSCAt. convnltted, 2 BR in 2-stocy OPENTIL 11 • rrs FUN TOBE NICE/ is is an olf.k.---r home in a Yov.·~r. Meadov.'S Home. 2 · FOUNTAINS townhouse. 1 yr. old. Pvt. BEACH CITIES poteritial • will divide. Ap.. prox $1.25 sq. rt, Mo to l l40 UN IQ UE 3 br, 2 ha, fenced eooct location. Near shop-yn old, 2,100 sq ft, 4 lrg Br. "BIG SUR". Separate family ply. $23,350 S.17--8235 ping. Needs paint, carpet&&: 2!1 bl\, din rm. frplc in fam rm, formal dining nn, 4 Irvine yard v.'Ork. Good future rm. bltns, $46,900. 963-4381 lrg bednns, pl\.15 a sundeck. THE REllL ESTllTERS Roy McC1rdle R•altor nay Oln yd, huge frplc, new crpt., I. Rare oomer In Laguna 1810 N5'4t~· C M: 1st TD Loans ~l'.imm<>. Av.il July lsl, potentlal. The Price la right. Huntington Beich . Only $52,200. Call . JOHN CAREY REALTORS 846-13.'"il or 847-8531 -"""'"'_"'. = __ =_"". =_ == DOUBLE UP 150' x 150' -exceptional. ""'""'""'""""'!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!•I 2 BR. Home $140; also 3 Br 1\w bdrnu., two ba .. tv.-o 4 BR • 271)) SQ. IT. restaurant sire. Submlt Lots for Sele 170 UP T O 95% $180, ha.I all, s l n g l e 8' . Call 557-2022 * INEXPENSIVE * 2 BR, house ...... , •• $2"2.350 1 BR. house ••••••.• szi.rn Ea(.t\ on separate k>ls ' Zoned tor ]>1'.'0fess. use BALBOA BAY PROP. * 55'-* OPPORTUNJ;TY tor properly acquisition -\"11.11 beautltul coltilge8 orl large corner lo! East Costa ?desa, income s.lSO mo. sr;:i0 ti o .,.,, n . ~. $.17.500 on •saies contract. *TRl·PLEX $47,*-* I E-lcellent Costa :r.1esa loca- tion adse to shopping. I theaterf1t bo£pital. Don't be lat N CAREY. RE ALTORS Call 557-2022 Owner. Nr. So. C51. Pl~. Sharp 2 Br + 11,t Ba SC'OO dn. T.O. GI 7'1~ p)'lllnts $259/per m o . 8.13-1103, 5.i2-9503. COl\I~ SEE :: Bl'. fireplace. lots of tree1', room to grow. Bv ov.·ncr after 6 pm. 64Z-2la> BY Owner, 3 BR; 2 BA hlti ns, frplc. quiet t;!, ,,30 Esther $32,500, 8.17..0417, No bkrs. 4'-1 LRG. Park Like yrtl, 3 BR, 2 Bl\. Newly crplrt homl! on f!Ui<'I rlll·d('·ll8C in ~1esa del rilnr. $34,500. 847-1005. LRG 2 slOI)'. rondo, ·I BR, 21 ~ ha. l"t'\\'port Rl\•lrrn, "'3.000. Prinr. only. 54~16 El Tot o 11:arages, tvlo patios, double $92,lnl. Form din rm-wet otff.>I'S . a»d:ng $225,000. 2nd TD loans ~a::li;,s~ds/pcts, Agl. fireplace divides s ma I I bar, two patios, b It l n 2 • ..Bulld to suit lot in C.D.M. llbrary and spacious living vacuum. 3 car gar, e,t. 47' frontage_ parking for 14 APARTMENT SITE BEAUTIFUL 3 BR, 2 BA , room with beam ceiling. lites. 2442 WlndWard Lane, cars. 60 cents n foot. Prlmt' Huntingttm Beach lowest r•t•J Or•nge Co. cpts. rlrps & bltns, 2 patios, Large kitchen v.1tb eating Newport Bench... location, with excellent Settler Mtg. Co. xlnt loC. No pets. 645-8148 space, uUllty room.. pool siz. EARL FU SS EL ll.1 AN 3. 126' oorner location in "window" near 642-2171 r•r -11 SHARP 4 Br Mesn del Mar cd "lot, parkll, tennis and REAhTOJ'l C.D.M. Offered at $16.a,000, HunUngton Harbour --ho I pools. Ufe of leisure for 645-3500 but submit any offer. $200,000 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. me, ease, $ 3 2 5 I m o . 1 $24,500. Thm:-l>Nlroom starter home $47,500. • • NEW OCEANPR-ONT CASH IN A HURRY! 548.44n or 979-0745. SURPRISE not lar Cron1 beach. Copper v . '1. Stylish otfice bullding with HARBOR Borrow on your home, paid FOR rent: 4 bedroom, nlce kettle kitchen, 2 vanity ISIOR-DUPLEX rdon1 for expansion. Ample for or not. use fwids to oon-yard, near Catholic Church. PACKAGE baths. Owner says one year parking. Name Tenants. solldate bills, Improve your $240. Agent, 842-4466 old washer, dryer, refrlg go 8 Huge 4 Bdrm. up ; 3 Bdrm. $382,000. home, buy ntw property, or Fountain Vell.y Nestlr<I among $50.000 homes, y,•ith. house fur fast sale. d •• ,, On. High ceilings, beams, for any good purpose. Con· ll'e found a 4 Br. 2 Ba, Bh'.R 962-SSU re I glass. $169,000. Good finan· CALL 675-7225 REALTORS fidentlal, fast service In 3 BR, 2'A BA. gigantic rum· r: for .only $"::,~· This 1 --~L'"A""K'"E"""P"A"R=K~-cin~.ORVATH REALTY SI NCE 1944 your home or our office. pUs rm, all bltns, OW swim din! Ml·. t. bomdd .. e as.1~aI1 fishing from this 4 "l'CRJ' old REALTY Da,-40, ~s. ~-!97' 673-4400 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. pool, kids OK. Only $275 ng m a it•on to am1 Y Cal'! '" ...........,. .,,.,... (n4) 551Hlloo. mo. No fee. Agent 842-4421. rm. You may even assume 1 • da.ssic is only a short A Company With Vision Harbor View Homes loiiiiioiiii;;;iiii'-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 3 BR l '' BA f ced ard the 5%':1 APR k>a.n. l\'alk ay,·ay, located In a Univ, Park Center, Ir,,.ine Palermo Mod•I BUILDER ha.o; old Top of the • ,,ti • en ~ • ~~e:::r:~('a~Sa3".,:.1~t!! Of~ ~USM1~f~M A stone's throw 1 r 0 m World Jot. Valley view of 2ND Trust DHds ~,r: Ask fu~· Wa~!: fa:., I/ GOODWI~ I )...,""'"'~ ONLY $1200 DOWN !2 !!-Hie to bt·ach. 3 BR, w/flrepl & huge patio. xtra lrg lot. Only S:bl,000. I' illage Real [stMe a"""· Call~ Jo,asWon Island. 2-Sty. beau· strean1s, grazing cattle, PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. ~-, ,,._...,_.., __ .... .,.,1 deer & birds. Lnst ol An Amount ~~~-~-~~-1 tor PER1''0R..i\fANCE ''In The New Ch ty; 4 BR., 2 frp\cs., wet bar, original Laguna Be a c h y Huntington a..ch' * 847-3584 * •• 1 boat gate, greenbelt , artists hall'Cn, Engineered * C1U 675-4494 BKR. By Owner-Prestige 19 o <! Of Irvine•• cluhhoU!!e, pool .ire much. lST TI.ME offered • N'pt. sewrui:e disposal, surveyed & I ~~"'!"!!"!!!!'!!!!"!!!!"!!!!'!!!!"!!~ I NEAR BEACH 3 Bedrm od I more. A ~ buy al $83,900 . ~_:: I I l\T e. choice lac., 4 lrg lmmacuJ!'.re 4/br, 1 year old CAPRI REALTY 644--7525 Blvd. 9.2% RejWil .spend-top compete & pa.Id. Soon NO points, no penalties, free 2 Bath, bltins. Child· brirm's, 3 Ba. 3 cnr gnr., hon1e "\\'Ith Oriental decor & able income. Reeltor6~700 lo start plans by N.B. appraisal, low rates, f8J1t. ren/p t OK Air d se11 farn rm .• formal din gu.nlens. Quiet cul-de-sac * BEACH HOUSE * architect. $18,500. \V i 1 I Investors Thrift 639-64l.l. e s • .con · rn1., sunken liv rn1. Prin· adjoining lovely greentx>lt in 2 Bedrooms Condominium& subordinate lo constn.lction $275. mo. Ask for Dale cipals only. SJ 4, 5 O (). "TI1e Ranch" . Irvine's One block to bench for tale 160 loan. 494-9526 Mortgages, 9624471. iis .. ·4&-5085 .. -,... .. -,... .... ,...,.....,,...,I i>laru1l'd community. 15 1nin-CIO!!IC to pier & shops AmNTION Trust Deeds 260 cu 0=STO=M~-b-u!~ll-q_u_a~1 -1 -1 1 uies _[ron1_ Fashion Island .~ Only $39,SOO * CONDO-Vacant, TREES, mobile home. \VIII lease on LEASE OR LF,:ASE/OP· Newport Beach. Among lhe BALBOA BAY PROP. gardens, pool, 3 BR, 2 BA. BUILDERS PUT YOUR MONEY long terms 10 qualified ~~s~n ~~ VJ!l~a:;acanllld< olora,ng.,·.'oooO.rchards. Rctluced * 673-7420 * ~1'~/~~o ~,''. 6n.s2'Ji~ Eastside Cmrta Me511. One TO WORK FOR YOUI tenants. Adult park. Call for "" I 1-.. . ..,..,. appointment, 962-¥'/i $280 /nio. * OCEANFRONT * 64z.J&l5. Bkr. · parce .,,.,AJIAI; zoned tor a Earn .10% Interest oo well· la rwin realty Inc, PARADISE 1 p 66 total of 18 wilts. $95,000 IP.Cured 2nd Tru1t Deeds on 7 BIJ{S to Beach. Br older 968-4405 ncome roperty I CALL I!\ 141•2414 Orange r.ounty real estate. home: also 3 Br, C.M. $180. Realtonr ~ 7.000 Sq, fl . of woocl & chann , ~\!I'' SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. Klds/pets ok. Ag!. Fee. BY o \.\'n. v11c. 4 er. 2 ea. suP$r.,t v:~~T $ !e B MUST SELLI th' :;1~~~~!~AL TY *96 Unifs* 71~~ 4500 ~:!P~~~ N.s . 39~:JJ conw . crp11drps. Sl950 tin. T.O. FHA 7~~-;i, J • • tlt>r ' 0;~',11f'~a1v~ on 1 lS *'"67•.7-300N'p! Beach N••r N•,.por1 Post o t t lc:« bltins, refrig, pool, clbhse. f62·+471 ( :=1 546-BIOJ pymnt~ $276/mo 83J.U03 Uian l"l('w 4 Bdrm .. 2 bath. nu u e me, yr. ~ * CEN'nY\L COSTA ).fESA R·2 LOT $2m mo. 548-1403 552_950:!. • 1 Loiv, lo"'' dov.11, FHA /VA old, 4 BR. 3 BA, bonus rn1, O I Sl 280 000 ,::;:,;:;=------I ll'rrtts. Only $28.750. SCOTT fam. m1., stia11: cpt, nir c•an ront Duplex Zoned for 6 Uni!l, Huntington SHARP t Sty - 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 E l Toro REALTY 5.'16.T.,.tl · oond. ~prlnklers, c o v • d Large bldg + buy ,tt_ <X:ean Bee.ch, Sewer paid, Alley. '*-fw"9nt car gar. Frpl. , Pool~. ten· MUST SELL 2 Behm "Sea patio. $57,0IXl. See to ep-view + 4 garages + extra f f • $20.00J. nlit, $350/mo. Lse. 962-3430. llavl'n'" honK"r fey,• blks predate. Open Sat & Sun J. beach k>t +furn.+ comer. $13,333. per unit Sperling lnve1tm•nt _Huntington Harbour from ocean on Bush.a rd nr. 5, 4<Hl Escudero Dr ., Long ~ <lWl"lf!r. $135,000. C , •• 5662 HouHS Furnithect 300 838-26.16. R. Brose Rf'(lllor, 67J..3012 Ed Riddle Realtor 646-8811 orp. -W ATERFRONT~·? AdamB. U>.900. JI.l ake otr. C 2 LOT 1 Lenune •-·ctt ~~ 0\\'11!'/Prlncipals on 1 y, LOVELY 4 BR w/gr:eat WEST BLUFF DOCTORS & INVESTORS -• x nt luC., a11prox. • -w/boat 1llp, mttin channel. 962-57•J.I. 15x23' fUlly en~. ptttlo. flUll. Formal gnnl('ris, sht-ltcrod A TI ENT ION . 50xl!I) on l farbor Blvd., 2 Br. Lease. 84&-0069. nn .,./regulation liete ........ 1 C.?!f. must sell, owner. $U:>--Util Pd. BAOI Apl, LAKE FOREST 5 Bedroom Plus POOL .. Elegant 2 story hoine includes feature:; .i;uch as: many fine .. ::>hog Carpeting 'Throu ghout Eye ·catchin g Livin g Room and 1\triun1. J-fuge family room '''/\vet bar 3 haths roR SA!.E BY' OWNER · .,...... terrace, pool.!!, putt I n g 20 ·new unils, Costa ~te&a. ~ (71.3) 792-lOZS oceanlronl! trYlne No qualifying, llMume 6'JP. 4 tal)le. located across from greens. 3 ·Br. 2 Ba. $•15,000. n1Hes to beacli. A<'CClcraLed $140-Util Pd. Ch a rm J o g I ;;;;;;;,;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;j Ur, l * ba. Be8t location. wk & El Cainlno Rl'nl Ploose Call Oe-nison d e proclation 1 oppottulrily. VIEW WT "' Studkt, prhi. patio, nr bchl I 1 Like new ln1dt1e & o'ut. School. RM Carpe t AJOOCialf'S'. 673-7311 Sch~. l~'Omc $54,000. For Newport Beach vlt'w or Bay S150-Utll Pd. Bach, sml yrd, 2 BR. '2 ba ............. 5325 l\1any xtra!!I. 1714) ·892-e78, R<'alton1, A.t~. ~JUST sell NQ\\', 8..'l.)'shtlrtos detnllit i·11ll , ' & ocean. 547,500. 979-.'U!)I 3 blks beach! 2 BR. 2 ba, den, A/C .•. sm 611.12 Retll('l'(Ord Dr, llB L aguna Beach Co1,y Cottage, pri bch. 2BR. CJS REAL ESTATE Mount•ln , Desert 5185--Util Pd. 1 Sr. ocean· 3 BR. 2 bn, alr-cond. • · $275 LOVELY F ranclsclan }o,oun-lhn, \\'/Jmlio, yrd, boat 11.1;. 548-ll68 or · 83.1--0584 Resort 174 fro111. dec)I:, view! 3 BR, 2 bft, bonus ...... $425 talM. Spirlll s 1 a i r e a so •PRIVATE + roo1n 10 cx11nnd. 2595 *WOW* 209/o NET* NU-VIEW RENTALS ':eRii:v~S~,;;;,;;;.·R~~t~:" n\Oltcl-5 br deco r tt t o r but not !!Ccluck<I. Thi~ Cr\'stvlc\\' Dr, 714/&16-0079 On annual gross or $21,(Q) EXTREMELY f ine op-673-4030 .or 494-3248 V' • dra1x·i;, el<'. • (.'Clurtyard . unique 8]>1it-lt'Vcl home of· or 644-7311. 12 u AU. 2 .Bdrm Unfurn. P 0 r 1 un t t Y for good. &.&... u f 305 ISIOn- rntry-wnlk lo city 300 nc. fers beautiful. unoh~tructed EASTBLUFF t year old-Spanish modern steady-now business, Ideal :r:UHI n urn. ~ )Htrk. LibrRl'Y & l'cl100ls. \.\'l:111te l\'1llcr vtev.'. Cathedral 3 1JR, 2\, ba. nu x Plan, $25,000 DOWN . : ~: ~-oU: ~pl~ :~:._Gt"-''-'"°o.'c;•;,;I______ 8 d h 11 $56.500. Uy nworr. 842-7388 l"t' rig'.8, "11.-ood b urn i ng Full Pfllio, w/vle14•, Reacb' 16% retum on dov.11 PLUS fortable lnoome llO\\P and I. re •• IDEAL lor 111t fAmlly, Im· fireplace:, brick patio & July 1st. Lea$C for SSJS, or DEPRECIATION a secure future. or middle UNIVERSITY PARK , nil'lt. 3 BR. 15x20 dc.n (4th neat.ly land$c11pcd _yant, quiek 111.le price $61,900. LYNOi REALTYe 832--6022 I 11 •1 ~ AtltllcJ1ve Z-bedroom. den, BR) + t!nl!'hed '11:ar, fbonlll "'Ith I011 Of tree11 It pr1v1tcy. Qv.'ll('T. 551-l<WI or 56.]526. f!g coupe wan ng a" r re Oillncellor home {private rn1 • eltll' 10 nll schl11 & Tn1n1aculalt cond!Oon. 2 CONDO • Vacttnt, treed gar-J UNJTS-$75,00,0 ;:;!;":t~':.' ~~rs~!i::~ dwelling) 2 balh.!I, double REALTY . ' " Alry Kitchen \\'1th lia~~ lhrough v. indow.=Ou1lf.fns - Heated, filtered. lighted i>ool fth ppni;;. uvp.11 tl(lV.'. $.14,;,()(). Bdrn1. plus drn. $52.fOO d l'flS . pool, 3 Ult 2 1¥,f w/lube room, laundromat, tlttplace. Dining ar e a, A Company '-''hh Vision -Mf.:1~. ~'()/ia,~ m.@~ Clc:lwn: or v.·ill ~lent ~m 1e1 m--t'etl . -tCl!-hou.Jr."b:lrber-ctiop ren· l>llllt-m. and 16\/ice-~ uruv-Parlt...Ccn~~-1-o-1~.: _ BY Ov.·nrr . Glen ~lf1r 4 br, 2 rt.'flt w/opt. 10 b~. 673-5221. menl units, L hlock from tal plus 2 bt'dl'()()m houBC. Rear yard haa COV'f.red Ca.II Anytime, !62-75(X) ba, frplc, crpl. dra,. crptd 642-3645 Cout llv.')'. \V tl I k In a: PtiCt'd to g1:1 a t $110 ooo. On pA.tio, a1omge ahed, trult OUfce houri 8 AM to 8 P~I ki tchen w/bllins, cul<l'le-REAL ESTATE ' dl!tance to aU schls & State 1{"11.ry, U7, 9 ni'I. N. of llftt. Front yanl hat com- ' • \Vith slide Outdoor gas barbecue Auto mallc garage door opener ••. and more. Off•r.d for flral tim e by own•r. P rlnclp1l1 only Prlc.c! at only $52,900 Call 837-4239 r' Opon Sot..Sun. 1-S ' hlk hi ·' · 11"1 HARBOR Vi<>v.· homes -4 br, ahop'a • Yu-a Vall-"" o Id plcte privacy. Po o I and Mc, fl).~ ' ... iopping 1190 GI S 21S. ha I bar I f II .._.. ~# I " partc. 3.1.fJOO. !16243'11 •"1 "''.,., cnncryt'(' ,.!;. ""16 oo' . "o'e ' x,alnlt nm, ~y s ,.rllng Inves tment Woinan Spring1 ltd. (71.() ',t"~i.!.. ~rt ptl~l310Cl9" :? '""'"' ~ me. pen 1 Y ""1-Corp. 631-5662 · ~ o "!...,.,ping center. ptt o:,_E~~:)~~1ys.i:,rm~O~fRo~ * HARO TO F I ND * 64.s..2848 afrnl. 4 Pl£X£S ·Lo"°'1ce~c.."-g-ory-Ch=-a~1,-1-s7Lo~•~e month. can e v <' n In rs OR. 4 U1·. 2 Bti. t.•len n & Close in, v.•alk lo bt:ich. J OCEANF RONT view 2 BR 11,i; BA tr/pl ~ or ~ any beau. $311.500 -1 rms Af{tnt Bdmls., 2 boths: l.ollguna Duplex, ownf'r/agenl 673-92Qi • turnlahed $26,500 S2t...4142. 1---:-=-==-===,,--"121,,J,:;1,,a,.-"'"+23fG~...,,..,._,~ 1 ch.irm, 11.·ith den & tffnl~g Duplexe~ near the ocean Lei ua shOw you how to begin RMI Ett•t• W1ntW 114 LANDLORDS! ~fOO'S.. ll)uu• ln.ndttt1111111f, tm!O.; l1e. fCl'!('ed ·yanl with Mlfcs l.At'JOI'\ Realtor your lnvttltml'!nt Pl'08'l"M1 . \Ye Speela1l1e ln Newpc:n:1 1b\g y1n•d, 5000' to bl!nch, nice lrt<'S! $39,500;-• 673-.a56J * 11.'ith one of these dtluxe -1 WILL-BeAch e Corona del M1.r 9' $80» d14•n, a~a111nt> 6~ loon. ·g· , .. ~ Sen Clem,nte 4 • pl.<'xes. A 11 ~enltiel GUARANTEE TO SELL • l..agu.na. 011r ~1rtal Str· S.17.600. 71~ :ms.1. ~ plus uctllent l~t1.hon. Only • YOUR HOME: • vice ls FREE ftl You! Tf')' OCEANVIE\V, lmmttf'. !I Br,· • ()CF.AN VJF.W lot, WU! ltike lOS% doll\.\'l't. $&ii .~., t fN 30 DAYS. Nu -Viewl ' family rm. P.OHo. By owner. 6 unite. $22,000. including par ng nves men Cll8lt ·t1dvaoccd. NU-VIEW RE NTALS $42.!IOO. 9f'l!l·43'11 , 4t•·S•1• •tt.1100 11lnn11. 492,.8264, Corp. 631-5662 ARt•nt ....... : ...... 847-6.112 673-4030 r<r tl\f".Z~ I • . - -x 3 5 Or 6 Bdrm•. . •..••. , •. $375 3 BR, 2\6 bl .•••... $300/Ji5 °'f 4 BR., ~ bt.ths •••• $ill/42$ - 1111!1 l 'i lid s? -'' 'I 11111liill' "m1... '.J4:1" 111 \Vr -tc r:i :! i'. l!l1f1. 11 .. l\•rr"' · ,.. •• 111' Dey• ~52.7000 Nigh t - I J N L s 3 I I I Ii I S· I 6 N r 3 3 3 I I ' . . • • -. ' MMd1y, July 2, 1q73 DAILY PILOT .I !~! 'iiiiiiii ""----~1@~1:;;;[ _;;;_;;;_;;;;l(5l;;1 I~ [ --~ I~ I_.. ·--1~ [ ----11'! I ~· t I·--· 1·1 --un1u.... ., lia~!.,...,!i!"'~i!1n!!111;.m!,~~iiiii~/~ .... -'-""'"-----*-Af", un1um. l~I r --... - 1--------Unfum. :nt Coot• -. -~ BNch klboa Island Sl~l Br. Nr heh •••••• , •• ,, Sl~l Br. Beaut V~·! ..... $21>1 Br. l blk !;each vu $275-2 St. Ulln1, nu Cll)ta, drps. 2 paOoa:, vlewl ~Very lrg & deluxe 1 Br oceanfront, frplc. deck ..... $350-3 + dC'n, Irv yn:I, frpl, older home nr bc!ach. $375-3 ~ •·am n..n. 2 frpl c, blln•, gar, yard, C:X.1.'tl.n vu $400-ChtlQnlJ'.lg 2 Br. 2 &. frl)lc, gar. Yrct. Vlew! ~U-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 '* $825 MONTll w/l·yelll' lease, for the lrue aesthete. M a g n i flce.nt oceanfront Spanish villa. Private beach &-pool. Lovely gardellll, SUpcrb ur1 1.&Ue dclaila.. Call alttt l p.m. 494-33311 JAPANESE li1odernc, 3 BR, 2 bas, dbl gar. Walk 10 beach. Adulla, no peta. $375. Leeae 1197-2923 ATTRA.C"l"IVE tum. 2 BR, 1 ~~ BA, heated pool, nr achla 1; lbopplne. No pets. 646-4)174 0C£AN View & Catalina liWlieU ('llWI a ba.y view from lhis new 2 BR. condo. Security i{WlJ"ded bid;. dose l BR. tnu 6 unit bu.lid.> pr., to shops & J'C!ltauranu.. $475 adutu no pell:, $15.S. 2'J20 Month Elden, MS-1512 · Bay A: Beach Rlty. 6T"::i-3000 Huntington llMch · Cost• Mesa 1---':... ____ _ ll4S-11"1 FOR lease Met14 Verde BACHELOR. &. 1 BR., Country Club Villa.. 3 Br, patios, frple'• prlv. pnge1 2% ba, adult1 only. No pets.· -Dtvldecl beth-& lotll of S390 + util. 541).6726 aft 6 clo8eta. Ree. hall, pool It Eost Bl fl pool table•. •auna ha.I.hi. u. See for yoorr;elf. l'r..01 ~-.l...br. 2~1: ha. lrnmed. occ~12 Vista Ot'I Oro, NB. ?o.tt. Lewis 6~4-l133 or htr. Koo.n.1, 64&-0806 1 SfORY, 2nd·20x20 br, over dbl gnr, ele<:t. door opener, elect kilchen, pool, tennis crt. sauna, 4 mi from ocean. $210. 646-$32 Irvine Keelson L11. tl blk \\', ot Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater>. W-7848 S140 -ULTRA. NICE Apt. 6 Pools. 4 Carde1111. Sauna. Tennis. Pri~ a t Io . Adults. Ph: . Huntl!IJ!on Harbour 1 BLK from beach, Studio Apt. Waler pd. Frplc, O/W, jacuzz.l. $145. 213: 59Z-m7 3'SS--R..,tals 420 lndu.trlol Rontal 4SO Found (!roe adsi SSO Gordtning N."!~•!!pe1~rt~_;l!!:!!•·•~ch~---IOCEAN 11'tou~," 1 br CHOCOLATE Bro•·n Hurri.d Sloppy Work -=::. 4.AJ~nts'f~ 6t~ NOW LEASING 8"nn"M" klnt>u, rmw.ie. Is Not Wh•t I Doi DILUXE THI NEW 11~ to t l2S. F'ron1 umi Huritineton &.•ch. Vk: PKlllc"'Coa.111 11-.')·. I CAR E APARTMINTS BAV\\'OOD APARTM'f.l\i'TS w/dttk, ftducrd from $22$ NEW M-1 l~l~·nrod. Cd?.1, tiT.:.4;67 1-:~per1 mo11: ~ ~'('. 11rompl Air Ont • Frpk:'.1 • 3 Swim· 1n Nrwport Beach an lo n'D. ~ 9'IO Sq. Ft. Ii UP .!.2,1' ..!Jtrrp). l"l1't!-~ ~;:'4 pm -min&: Paoli • Jtealttt 5i-. l'Nd)', 'nle tales cttice Ui V • R , I 425 llamlltoo Ir Ntov.•l1nd f'OUNU tiny malt'·part Ktt\nx .l!)j.~!)93, anytlnte ~1-1187. Tt'11nla Cow'ta • Gym and OSNm dai!)I from 10 A.)1 10 •cation ent• I '46-06f7 o r IU-0519 kllte11 \'lt'1nlty V11·1or1.a ~··*GARDE NER * Billiard Room, 6:30 Pi\I. lol&eArthur IM\•d. OCEANntONT APT ~~.,. ~t." ,~!:b.!=.'·s~= '.\IU\1' -...Ji:.._.~~ J:t'n'I J,:ardl'rl- l Hit. f'rom $100 4c San J~IW.1 Road. ~. avttll, l-7 to 7-21 S't50/wk. lJlOO SQ. Joi. l\1-1 space , ' , I~ '"'""" Ex1ic"rl It dt"pend- 1 BR & l>c'n f'r0m $190 ===~;---7--c.,--,'-I iWo 8-t to 8-11 Sl1'5/v.-lc, \\'ffront offiCt', lr11: ·rear TAN f'(ln1~11\n, \\c. l ~.h alil<'. :\I°"! areu.. 2 BR from 1210 DELUXE. Yarty. SltPS to JG! West OceanJront, N.B. Jloor. kleuJ lor lnbrato1')', It 1'°'h'1}1-h, S..nla ,,111-.:1 6 29. P romp t-F rff Ei t 2 BR. Twnh9e. Jo"'rom SZ"il Beach! 3 Br, 2 Ba. It 4 Br, 2 Stl-.1930 SW. 177S Whittler St. C~I. S.LH406 N ~-·2¥12 Pete S)t..7117 MEOITE'RRANEAN Ba. 1'"rpl:e Bia ~Ta-49ll ·1300 SQ •• .,.. SlSO. 1791 \\'hi!• Lost $55,1-~·----=---"'--· . . REST It Re<.'n!atlon. \\'lend!! tll'r St. Daya Gt&-~ or1---------'-:.. GARDENr.R nt n >'~Bnt1 r ;<· VILLAGE -n Clement. or wkly ren18.ls, Bill Bear 64t;..0081 ~''l!s. REWARD ix·r. t;l'i>kl 4-j :uldh!OnGI 2400 Ha.rbci-mvd .• C.l\I, JtUGE ! BR. 2 BA, w/trplc, ~:.!'~.-~ .. ~l~~L.odge. *COSTA MESA * NIU11fl your prlo,"'t': 3 pound tualntrn:tl'll'I" job•. Ut.'Of'1;C (71-1) 557-8010 oceu.n vlcw apt. Children 1600 sq. ft. 2 Offices. :l 'ph. 1Uvrr Kray n1alc iu,xlle. Ines • :,i9-20I~ * OPEN EVERYDAY OK, l pct OK. SUQ. nio, IR. Rental1 to hre 430-pov.·er, 1 yr old. Good loc. OoQ: n1u~1 htt\'C Insulin JUHlt,; ;.t '' -·-· 1~ -·-1n ~ 49Z-75M, 492-2318 il7 Ohnu \Vay, C.:\1. (l~Uu, Jood• \'"'"'" J .l" * Cro•tiv• Gard•hln 11 """'"· n ·aw= ..,..,. 1\-tALF. transferred ·lo llun· &'6-7663 or ~1201 .1 ' "" "' -• \\'(."tl. & Thurs. 10'.7 S•n Juan ca,htrano lirl{:lon Bettch area seeks to RN.Ll1y, 16612 8'>1u·h Ul\·d .. E;;t,po•r. lr1.;;i1111an. ac-anup, More ROOft'taLets Money rind atraJght female to 4001 Bl RCH, NB 11.B. 847·1216 01· s.12.s;..io. !\!:tint. l.nnd"'"aJlill~. :"prlnk· COl\-lE ue a real garden 3 llR UP»tt duplex, Oa!an ~ expensei, 8'12-4518 or 2000, ~. 31600 !!q.R. or com· 5100. r<t:\\"1VtD, Blal·k Cocker lt•t:.iJ ln~rallrd N.'Jlliir. 6'1&-1072 apt! Uke lMng In a home Vu. $250 nv>. ()pm Wknd•, 213/J.34-446.fi Dav"' bo thereof. A\'all. 911173 Spaniel 1\-lale, v.·eiui1i,,; nea Generel Se rvices f-1162."~/MO 2 BR. 1•~ l G-1. UM.1 Vie Esplncm., ROO TE lo.Ir. Bnumgnrdlwr, ;..i1-;,ol2 c.,..,Jlar, Vic: !\lOMi SI & Coast ::.:c.::c:.:~:.;..;.;.;.;..:.. __ ..,. N • 71 Capistrano Sch. 8n-o666 MMA v.•antrd, Yt'Ork· II 6 BA. 2 prlt'e places, prtv -·et i"" -m&tUtt. 2 BR, 2 Ba., Shaf't' APT or HOU:.E w Y • L o 1 t / 1 3 . fl{>:O.IJ.: ltl·pair. ull lypei. tiOs " wu.m ""~ .... c II HOi\l&-PARTNEI<' •IM-4779~2AAO. l\f'IUttl 11111(' & 11111teri!\l. pa rec areas. a-· Apt, c.~I. Call ~I alt ::i. a · • • F ~ r.; i.-.b 100 GardeM. on Wilson St., W. _,..,s,, pin. 83G-ll94 or 548-1479 OJ.:l"P on.ni:e 1hor1ll<ur ral, 11i11 ·.'"''IN', • o ,,.., ot Jlarbor. No dilld./peL Fum. or·Unfum. :S70 ~!ALE 10 ,·•·-Apt w·olh Stor-• . 455 :all. n1ale, 1\·/flr1:1 collar . srnall. ~ & li llonl(' llc>fle1r. 2283 Fountain 'V&y Ea.at " ,...,., -• \'1c. 15'h & Santa An:1. NU 6'12-l·IO.'\_~-~-~- COtt•- l •gun• Be•ch · &\&-2S46 Cost• Melli f;.~s~'ar~.' Laguna SI'ORAGE )'d _ J.·ellC'Cd. 56 x JtJ...l\'AltlJ 6IZ-n1:~~ ~rt _ ou1door labor. NEW 3 B' 2 Ba •ntrl A/C THIS IS IT! l"""· SUitahlo for r.ontractor. \\'1-llTE long hiilrNI, blue Y1U'll rl"a11u 11:<, h:iullng, ' t ' .. ' 2 BR. 1 ~ii ba, twnhse, centraJ PEACE • Q.UIET TIIE EXCITING SHARE a(\'t or houl!IC. Save S. o#O \ I Ii I l! Rentflse. o!.>. S2'15 pc. r mo~. ••·r. lot• of ext-·. Fam. rm. SPACIOUS Studio, 1 blk .,. S Call II E PARTNER Sn1ell bldg.,. BoAI. 1rlr ryffi cal found _1\·k ~-,-\c \\' '." 1_?11.' ...,·as I II£:', i;l\l'l I'll 11:· 833-1103. 532-9503. pool, xln~ J~tion. 'Call above Vlclorla Beach. $55. All elec, C.Old l\.fedallion 2 br PALM ,MES~~PT • 836-ll~~ or 548-l'1?9 • . spa~ &16-4'.)56 So. Ola Vllilll &: P'r~mt·~s.1-":c""'='c::'9S:::,_,_==~--·I wk. $20Q mo. 494-2956. epi w/patio, encl ' ~ ~fiNUTES TO nr J • BCH. Rentals Wented 460 San Clcn1ente. 49"..-9761 l)A \'\\'Oft!\: 1L ·-·~g~u_na __ N_ig~ue_l __ ~-I ~N833--0"°o~w~po7~19~rt·~a~-.-ch~---\\'/storage " 18.und· fecil ,Bach, 1.1: 2 BR. from $150 Off ••A =-'---~----S"l'R.A \'ED f('nlale Jab ii mo , EXPERIEN 'EO. CA R. -Newport BMch Adltsonly', no pets. siGS mo: ~~ta,MNo l!_ta. ·Ice Rental .._ WANTED 2 bedroom hou5e: r hllds pct. Vtc: Presidio. • M&-1234 • SEA Terrace 4 BR., 2 BA., 1;-;;;;-;;:;;'7';;;-;---;-;;:· I ;::;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;: 20th s 1n c M .. ~ .LJ<Jt. ~ ...,,. din, fam. Guarded gates. SUBLEASE 3 BR, 2 BA. """-1...J.-. , '• _,...,,,,,,,,, (5 blb from Newpori m vd.) or duplex . J>ets. Rl"llftble. 6173. F'rlrtl).y ~J6-009.1 . H1uling Private beach. Few steps to frplc, shag cpts. drps, all 3 BR. 2 be.. + den, fl'pl. Nr. ..,...,... auJ 546-986tl PRESTIGE ' Relerences a v a 11 ab I e. GER.i.\tAN SIK'phcrd !llalel---''-------1 pool, lennts, rec club. elec. kit, ""'asher/dryer, beach. $400 Mo. yrly. HARBOR GREENS OFFICES ,J 66-6164. "LOBO," Vic: Ei Toro, Re· GEN llnullnj;, 'l•-ee I ShNb $5.10/mo. 8.'U-2160. 2--<:ar gar, encl, patio, N.B. We rrave Surnmi!r Rentals F &. Unfu Fr Sl.30 * CASA VICTORIA * Fountaln Val ley, Beauli· \VANTED 2 or J hedl'Oon1 \\'an!. &~. lTin1. Gar .(.: Yd cleanup. I ~-. -1--Vi-1-----I Sm. pct OK, Sl50 lsc. Bay & Oceanfront :~ii. 1, 2 & 3 B'R.·1. Model~ 1,..~2_,BR-.._FlD1l &D/Uw"'umiv, ful new building, ground housr in Costa ritesa ,,r I :~~~~~~~~~.l s\'~''f,"~'6'~'-"jj"fm~,·-,'~~7,7.,;~"'*'~· ru;. . Miss on • o &1~7811 • Call: 67l-~ 642-22.53 .Eves. o , I 7 ~oo ................ s, ui·apes, • floo 3 000 t N rt Be h Sl 75 H .,---pen 10 ti pm. "' ant. Pool, ete. 525 Victorift r, , square eel, cwpo ac · ave Sl\.l Pl.OAO~:R & dump truck 3 BEDROOM 2 Bath, f'LAIR, Class,. plus view, nu Peterson \Vay, Cl\t. nr. Har· St. at ltarbor, c.ro.t 642-8970 will ilivide into smaller pet!. RcUab!e references. If l• J v.·ork. (\1ui·n·t<', usphalt .enclosed patio, snook-2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo, near bor Blvd. & Adems. H 11~ •-· h oUices. 50c per square 1 '~64>646~~7~~~~~~~1 •trvcnon i;:iwlng, l;rc'nkini;. 846-7110. Sauna, pool, ·tennis, & Sea, 546-0370 un •.·-..·-n -c -fool, incl udes c&rpets-, 1 ';;;,;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii~·~-1 i1':1' 11rl of trash + er ta b le, doughboy Avail Aug. 15th, Ne\\'POrt sPACIOUS LA QUINTA HERMOSA. drapes, all utilities, jani. l~l l l}(>brl11. Sl2 loiul. Cullev po o l ' gardener & Crest, $500. 644-2117 I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~ II & 2 Br apts. $135 & $1G5. Spanish Country Eatat°' Liv-~~:'17i4> ~~~ "'10nala Schools & student . ~~ water furnished, $375. * NU Tennis Club Villa, 41 · Crpts., drpa., blt·ir& Cov-lng &::: Spacioul Apt& Ter-1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I iiiiiiim•li;I instructio ns 575 CLEANU1:.s, rem£>\"(' din. per mo. -1 year ~ or Br. 2 Ba., Fam rm. din, + $35 &-•Up. 1 BR, 2 BR &-ered C8I'Jl0rt. Orlld. O.K. raced pool, •unken 1811~BAVFRONT OFFICES ln'Cs, i\'·y, dri\'h 1*"fl-gnt.d· more 1e·ase, 546-5990, bonus room, Aug. 1st, $585, Bachelors. Cok>r TV, maid <lose to heh &::: ahops. 830 BBQ. Unbelievable Llvlna:. Persona ls 530 ~ ini::. ~li-ai66. Lie. 240182. UNIQUE HOMES. 644-260'7 sen-. pool The Mesa, (IS N. Cenl'ef" St. 5e'l'OO). 1 BR. UNFURN $165 ~ge ottlces, over looking ---------PLEASE! 32' ~~URNrrt.JRP. Van lor Townhouse Unfum. 335 Nev.J110rt Bl., NB. 646-968l. $140 UP 2 Br. 3 Br, 2 Ba 1 BR. FURN $185 Balboa. Bay in Newport TAKE POUNDS O'F y I & 'I Newport Beach AT beach. Yearly: bach., 2 Pool, blttns, play yard. 1996 2 BR. FURN $215 Rn.ch. Various size suill'5 PER!\IANENTLY _ 1 he Do )'OUT'Self a le\w U you local_ funi hnu 8 rcn Newport Beae'h BR, 3 BR. $200 To $400 Maple Ave. 642-3813 2212 AU.. urruTIES PAID a.s Joy.· as Stal. per mon. In· sensible ~·ay _ v.·ithout pills, "'ant 10 Q:ualify for a GOOD hotuhng. MS-l861. $165-1 Br. Oceanlront •.••..• --'--------1 Property liouse 642-3850 College No. 1, 646-6032 Adults, No PeU dudt'S drap, cpt, utilities. Mots or fad diels. ?-.like PA YING JOB In Just a re,1· !\10\'ING. hnull;:tj· clcan·U(K. $100-1 Br. Ba.ylroill, gar .••. ADULTS ONL y Apt. Unfum. 365 EtSlDE 2 Br, 1 Ba, crp~g. (4 blks S. ol San Dlego Fno.~ janitorial services. l\lon1hl)' Turin's P .O.P. pror;:ram ?o.IONTII S or evl'n a fl".v Reas. ralell"-0>1., Studenu. $235-2 Br. Channf'lfront ••• .. 2 BR 2 ba N• II~• Hosp d 1 encl ar n..: on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt or lease. 3700 Ne\\'POt't Blvd., .,,-orks to get weight oH and \\'~EKS, if qualified. fn-c est. &12-7581 $-· 2 B h •·1 · · •· -o · rpe;, 1 o\'e: g • ••• v. t i~u P"~d '-·-l N B •= ·~ · CALL S4• •121 :~;;-. 8r. 2se nr ~ 11·• ··.... Comm . Pool. Pet O.K. Ba Ibo• Isl ind' patio, $160. ~9695. o 1>"<n<l~84~7• iu~ ....... ..-. · • ,.,......,, keep it oU -and il's Rp--A~U.JJTIOIJS rollcgc studt•nls .S~ r. Ba. r•P c, gar. $%>01Lease. R e a Ito r , Din• Pornt -""" Ol>'F'ICE spru."e In newly con· proved at Y.l-1 .C.A.'s and BUSINESS INSTITUTE w/PU. Loadlrw. • anythln,gl deck. 4 doors ocean! ~64:::243:13:..::'::' ::·-~-----I* ELEGANT 2 BR iv/gar. L .. UM a..ch 1tructed Contemporary bldg by medical doctors. eau ·ror OF ORANGE COUNTY R~n~. mr.:-11. Doug 557-'TM6 $425-New all glass baylronl, Newport Heights Nr. irhops/bch. yr I y . r views wlk to bch. 1 . -in -So ... Lagtina_b:Qm $1~-!!!Jorn!alion no~·! SliG-1~ 1580 E-.Ed\ngM", SU\te Q LOCAL nioviug &: hauUng by 3 Br. frplc,~ar. -~---~---·I 835-3437; eves & wknds, furn 'or u n f u;. n -SUMMER, Winter, '\'rly, n10, 325 to lfiOO sq ft. Ocean _o~'-""=~=-~---~ Santa An.'l ~tudent. I..a'§\e truck. Reas. $450-Pcnin-·rt. Charming 3 -"'"""-'""r • Anita's Rmta1-Bkr """"' vi I •-& · --=--,.,,__ ,,..,_ . 2 64 e BRAND NEW-Lux-Q"IV"'"~ ·s~. mo. Bkr. 49&-5721 """•. • .-N ews, cps, ..... .,s • air PROBLEM rn::gnancy. u.on--~-~-$1-lSIG or s.: ·I-1 . Br. oldc1· home. Bilbo• Penlnsul1 Balboa Blvd, fin:~. cond., Contact Cacy" totter firlent, l Y m Path r. Ii c -- - - -S4~Harbor View 3 Br, 2 Ba, urious 3 Bdrm, elec I----------* DOG RUNS* Newport a..cl!. at Lingo Bldg, 31700 s. pregnancy counseling. Abor· TENNIS ANYONE Housecleanin.n frplc, tncd )Td, gar. Kitch, self.clean oven, S750 yrly, Oceen!ront 3 BRt 3 Spa. 2 & 3 BR . .$149 &: S199. · Coast Hl11.•ey, 499-1397 tion & adopUona ref. GROUP OR PR-IVATE -----··"-·-~~-I NU-VIEW RENTALS !irepl, lrg patio. Prof. BA + den. Dishwasher. Kids ok. Pool. Keelson Ln; 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. Cdr-.! -2700 E. Cst Hwy, 400J APCARE &\~36 INSTRUCTION COLLEGF. student .... 111 do 673-4030 or 494-3248 dee. Nr. Harbor Hi & Disposal. 673-5729. {~ blk \V. ot Beach Blvd., 2 BR., l &: 2 BA. Bltn ap-sq. ft. or ind. guiles from PREGNANT'!' Th Ink Ing IAN RICH hOui;eclennlng -So. Hun· THE srun··Fs · E.nsign sch·oots. Lease C I B ch off Slaler). 963-4029 or pl~. Pool. 64U274. 500-00> sq. rt . From 37c Air abortion'!' KnoY.· all the lll<'t.s ''LEARN THE lington &>ac:h al'Ca. 4 hr. N~~~ ~~~le~~ti. r·~rita~: $300. 64&-7555. 3 :~s~P: du:~ex. Ocean 384~~~1~ to stores. S185 ~~·S::i!;ity~~·1~'.:4~~~ ~~!M~~~F'E LINE -24 AUSTRALIAN WAY'' ~:;'",'-'~~;;~'-""~"''"'f-·OO~h_'_· TCal_l _Lln_·I forml dining, fam rm, 2 Duplex•• Unturn. 350 ~u. $250 mo. Open Wknds, mo. ()pen Sat.. 7731 Ellis, C1arJes \V. Masters, 011.·ntt/ ALCO~~H-O_L_l~C~S--A-oo_ny_mow-~. PHONE 96J..11l3 Carpet Cle•nlng frplcs, many xtras. Lrasc 1~2. 34443 Via Espiooza, 6AJ!t ~ .. !-. or call Owner, -II at.) bkr. Phone 542-7217 or write ~~~~~~~~~~I Floor C•r• &-Windows \\'/option to pun:;hase. $600. Balbo• Peninsul• Capiiltrano Bch. BTI...0000 ,.,......,.,.. ,,., 1~'LL SERVICE o 1~ o '' 1-lowant Gurv t.z 1o. eves. '* 2 BR, cpts, dips. bltns, Westcliff Building SWINGING SINGLES ·~ --I 'v P. ·Box .. ...,, OAta e!l8.. l~ D11tt'h ~1ainl Serv. 5..17-15Cll 837-0530 days, S12-6967 e~s 2 BR, l BA, upper, crpts, Coron• del Mar one child, no pets. $170 per .R Comer W tcl"U Ori &: --L•nd•c•plng ~ ~96 mo. '"""""''>"' """' Irvine Blvd., Newport HARBOR VI Ew drps, b!Hns, garage. Avail. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I ·~ -~ ooms •-es I ve . Cal1 "Leah" U pm 530-1250. now. Yearly."'"'""" F ii C Ii LANDSC,\PE, Gard~ n -HOMES--=cc..c====~-1 WALK TO BEACH OCEAN VIEW Be.oh. Mr. Howard •l!I Y ounff "9 C I u--"'' 'lOl ... B b ... maim .. clf'ftn·up, sprinklnl. Palermo Model, 4 Bed-01 • ~ -2 BR. Qpt/drps, bl.t-ins, pr. ~ .-35000 or 5--3&&3 • yslttlng ' L" llTI90 64tHiS:i2 I ·1 $525 -e.1'..., "'~""l"'St=:h=. 840:7-3"95~7=·-,,,,-= Spac.ms, exec. oH\ee \n *WATERFRONT * Socl1I Clubs 535 ic. · rm., am1 y rm, . 2 BR. Adultlf. No pets. Patio. ~ ; * UNFURN. 2 BR t UrUOn Bank Bldg, Nev.-port Prime location, New p 0 r t I;;..;,, "'--'-'-------IBABYSITrlNG: Lie. ages 3 M•sonry per mo. lease. Agent Garage. $185 mo. 359 16th !!!! riui ap • Center. \Vl~t. typing, Seo.ch. Large suite; Good * INTRADATA * to 12. Fun ellentlon. Ph.I ---'------! !)44-7270. Pl., C.M. Call 548·5218. near beach, ............ xerox, etc. Mr. McFaralnd. park:ll $350 month 96IJ.-0887 Brookbunt & BLOCK, slumJ>15fOll(', wa.111, ~====o---Di na Point' ON TEN ACRES -962-7S49 644-S440 Bill "rundy, Raa' ttor Q UA LjITY ma tc he 1 Adams. brick, 11one, plntn A patlo5. EASTBLUFF. Apt t l unturn Le Huntington BMc:h wfPllOTO All types <'nlrywaya. Ex-3 br, 2'!.i ba, nu X plan, full PANORAJ\IIC Ocean View. s. urn. . ue ROOl\lS $18 ~ wfklt $30 341 Bayside, N'~L Beach "Largest In Callt' BABY~rrrir..G, 1.ly }Jorn~. pertly install"<!. S p ec I a I patio w/view. Readv Ju'lv 3 B bl kit 2 Ba Fireplace I priv. paUo!I. NOW READY'. wk up apt~. drn & pct * 67Ul61 * !Call NO\V fo FREE u Eutside 0.f. Tender lo\· prh.'Cs Bob· M5-4930 J J Lrg · r, tn ·• · Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. section, ZJ76 Newport Blvd., " m· ing Care! ~71.15 ""''=''"' =""-""'-'i"'-,-· I 1st. l.<'ase for $5.15. or quick Bldg less than 1 yr. old. 900 Sea Lan, Cdl\I 644-2611 CASA JIEMPQ Cl\f. 548-9750, 64~. DESK space available s;;o pie prollle on I pro1pe<::tl\'e BRICK \-enetn, slump81one sale price $61.900. Owner. Close to beach le harbor. (MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) ="'"'==='7~=-"~'-',--,,--1 nw Will provide furniture matj:'.:h. 24 hn:) C1rpet Service & block fenct"S, roncrete 5ll,..' ··n-tir"545-1526. $300/MO. 4~~ 2 SLEEPING Rooms, l&dlei at is mo A~-ering service n4 -541-3738 I l.A 658~28J patioi:, wnlks & driveways. E:ASTBLUr-r~ v1~w hon1c iiliiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiii <You can see the CLOCK only. Single $W, Share Sl5 evallabie'. 17875 Beach Blvd. LADIES July SpP.Cial l y.r JOllN'S Carpet & UphOlstery .!file entry way11. 963-1355 ::: BR., ::r ba., family rtn., 2 lBc·BR1ow' wh:,,.b1', ....._&Mo~~.· from the San Diego f'rn.'Y· wk. 646-70Z7. Huntington 'Beech. 642:4321 meinbcrship $5. Ca 11 Ori dShainSoP?"> frt'e Scotch-P•inting & • "I -i 1 I .. , •-'~ t h , __ Di NEWPORT Island. Room ""' MM 'P·--r· 836-127l or guar 1 11 H.ctardanrs). , $550 l\1o/ycarly lease Ao•••~-·· tor Rant e!I );'...,,,.,_ at M"'""'iia.) ~ wtll consider dlyjd\ng for 2 ..,.., ·p cs. r• \Ill. e garc en I~ llal Pinchin Rltr. fiT~2. Just No. 0 1 e -.ii ego \Vith priva te bath. Yearlu. ll~ • l . ED. occupancy, r:..•~1'4'"79 I)(ogrt'asers ;\ all color P1perh1n11nt \Vin' R E 67• "'31 , ___ .. _ ... _~--~ 1ll§i' 2 BR. PENTHOUSE. "-ts, ' '~ 3 -..·-$60 Month 67S-3971 brighteners & 10 minut e . on · ~· ;)-,,..,. _ . ...... drps, 1 Ba. Pool, $zsOiM.o. DELUXE 1 & 2 BR.'1 · Ol' more tenants. Coast Hwy bleach for "''hlte ca~t!I. COl\1PLETE J{ouse !"alnll'll. B1EACl,-t home, 14 BR, 21 BA.1 ·--------· r .Ph~' .C""""°""-="·---~-I • p "f fFIIR;EJ>P l..AllCES! R1<:>?1~1df~at~n~topermr::, aprtkngNe642wpo_!'! .... Blvd. Free &ve your inoney by saving 1c,,V .11t~~ I n1 1Eer1:~ r N a1n m, poo nn ~· poo .-riv•' • OS IV\"'" ~. •'" • · -..rn. nie extra trips. \\"Ill clean l"l!.vrc1 ·p roo x o.'Tlor. o table, frplc, across sttwt A F 360 2 BDRM. crpt., dPps., stove e DI h L-275 Flower St, 0.t ~9l36 CUST. DESIGN UOO .. n.n . ll\'inrr nn., dino·ng rm, & job too Sniall. Reuonable ' f-m '"nd• ~ ... h. '125, l•t •. ~;.:s.'-..;"..;'..;"c..· -----__,_. •M ...,.," Incl"'-1 W•t ... rs .... o ,., -~ "" .. ., -,..,.,,g., no pe..,, _ _,.., u.,,. I I Pd DELUX p:ri ent. ba, mRkl comer. Suitable 11tore/of· haJI SIS. Any rm. S7.50, Reliable. & las!. 645--0836. Balbo• Peninsul• utilities. 6'5-6737 or 675-5507 • Al He•t ng • -service. No smokers. Costa f\~1. Fronts on Westcl!ff Found (frff •ds) SSO couch $10. Otair -$5. 15 yrs. • &47-..1296 • ON the Point. \Valk to hay or $lS WEr K & UP SHARP, ocean clQse 2 BR, l •• JH• .. <•1~i Pool l\lesa etta. ~TI97 Dr. NB, Air Cond. plenty ""P· is what counts, no! CER~IAK PAINTERS bt>ach. 2 sty Spanish 3 Br, E ba. Avail on yean: le1l5e, -Guett Home 415 pkg. 1815 \Vestcli[f 548-9Zl86 FND lmJ long hair cat. Tan niethod. l do work myself. WE GIVE FIRM EST. ram, 3 bo.. dbl lot. has all + e Steeping Rq:>ms S285 mo. Agent 675-5930 e Rec"•tion 81,lg, AIRPORT CENTER wfblk streaks. Wh ile PB"''' Good ref. a.11--0101. ON.THE PHONE gar. Kids. Agt. }·ce 979-8430 • l·lousekcepilig Rooms Coste MeM e Luxurious Lndtc" VACANCY for elderly l<'tdy Deluxe 1 2 ~ 3 room offices Vic. Huntington Harbor. C•ment, Concrete Resldf'ntin l Cell.Ins.:• _ Walls LUXURY BAYFRONT e Ocean View, Apts I ADULTS ONLY in lie. Guest home. Good adjaceni Alrporter llotel. 592-1'136 eKterion. Coinpetitiw New, big, dnunallc .,..'OOd &. BALBOA INN * EASTS I DE STOP BY & SEE US . DAY food served. &~3391 l.D'.vest rates full M!r'Vices. FOUND luge bl.eek & v.·hlte PATIOS, walks, drlve1. Saw, PriCf.'11. Quality pa I n t 1, glass 4 Bdrm. $55011'10. Yr· 100 !\-lain S~t Large 2 BR. Open celllng. OR NIGllT -FOR YOUR Summer Rentals 420 833.-3223 (S.tl weekdays) rabbit , 1 floppy ear. Vicini· bre,ak, remove .& replact'1 _,,..__1_926~~~~--- ly. Dave 494-0015, 675-1972. 6/a-8140 Carpels, drapes, bit-ins. CHOICE Of' APARTMENT. $l26/MONTH ty Vit"'Rinla Place, Costa I ="°c-"""'~"'O'e'-' ......... ==::..::fo::,r.:c•:::<t,_. -I No \Yasting 3 BR house, Newpor1 fleights Sh•r p-Redecor1tecl Private pa.Ilia. Swim'g Pool 1912 Heil Ave. H.B. NE\\TORT Island, water 2 Room office • Brand new l\fesa. Ca.II 548-2S69_ Child Ca!L.-* WALLPAPER 1( $275. Call eves. ( 2 1 3) 3 BR 2 BA d frpl $160 Per 1.to. ~ 1.1gr. ~tr.&: htrs. Elliott front~k ney,•!y decorated, elegant decor. 17th SI., '73 1.lARINA Hlgh Class \\'hen YoU call "Mac" 293-9594 · fl'oni porch C:n1~ :~ tei Call Bkr. 847--4912 sleeps 6, 2 Ba, available Ju. Costa Mesa area. 642-9347. Ring. 3 Arch Bay Beach. CJlrLD care my ho!n<'. l)c. . 54.S-l~l4 eveA. HARBOR View Palermo 4 race. Nr ocean & bay ** 3BR., l~ii BA ** WAITING ly 14-28, $275. per week : . Hi Lag Bch. 0'1,.ner klentlly. pmable, mature .,,,-001an.1--~~~~~--- ' ....,...... beaches .Adults onl". $400 Large, ncv.'IY decor. encl. Augu.st 4·18 SJOO, per \\"eek. BRA_ND new &tores, 0 ces, 4!&-3623. Days or \\'ttkends. Call * PAINTING * ~!·n2!~.1~~":~ -"'Ml per 010 Yrly. l\tay ~nsider patio, bltn11, crpt, drps. LIST 6T:r-7599 ~~r· ~:C:ea~l~eva}~· FND male Irish Seiter ap. 549-1&11'1. It PflY' to call profe1.,ional11. "" · · · al Close to everything. $170 OPEN NEWPORT Penin. Lovelv 3 84~-". · · · prox 2 yrs •old. Vic Santa CHILD CARE. Age 2.,· . ..._ J.-or free e1l. &46-5178 HARBOR Vu Hn1s, ConneJ, for July summer rent · mo. 868 No. I Q?.nler St. .1 .. -.oo.Yt ....... ~ Sharp 3 Br, ram rn pool, inc 646--$211. tor Br, 2 Bn home w/enclo.wd FOR Le 650 f Off Ana St &: Del 1ttar C.l\t. pendable, matUtt lady. l\tain PA INT lNG·Rt'al!I, clean, gardener, ·$455. 644-l7'9l. ARLY $250 LGE secluded l Br duplex. l, 2 or 3 BR Apt patio. Beaut. lge kitchen 11.s a.se, sq. 1· ice 833-3186. & Edinger area (Santa Ana/. l"f"llabll', Llc'd, Ins, w/Rels. 3 b 2 2 BR.ni'~. BAY · Eastside. G8.rllge. Avail at the blk to bay. Near ocean. ~~· ~t~ ~· FND -Cat. sm1 dark 1110rt 541·1881. 1''rce Est. 6T.rf1740. POOL. lovely garden, · r, 393 ·~ "91 7/10. $165. 6 4 2-118 6, VILLA YORBA 6'5-2804 or 548-00TI ext 394 .... ., s. ..,,..,.,, asomi: e. hal r w/collar. Jo"emale vi e • PRO!' · •·-k ba, $.175. + Sec. Deposit. 6'r_,...1 ... ".......,.. 646-9S2S "'ihti~cfii!:f-"-'t;;f;~;\~4~94-3~0>!g=-:=;--,,..-;;c;;-O~ILD Cr\RE. 1'.IY J!Ol\1E. . pn1nter. , ..... 1c11 y.·or , 2.~ Uni\'ersity. 642-3f145 Coron• del Mair lluntington Beach NEW P 0 RT I 11 land CORONA DEL MAR lleil & Bolaa Chica, 1-1.B. LTci::NSED. NH. SOUTH reas. lnl/e.'l:t, free cit. 1 BR duplex $100. Ideal for (714) 142~9622 waterfront apts. 1-BR S175 846-3476. COAST PI..AZA 557-8656 Rt•f!!. :;.vi...2759. Newport Heights J..,BH.. ,.,.f[rpl. & balcony. older cpl. 219 Magnolia St, \\o'K/2-BR •XIO wk. Monthly ~luxe US sq. ft. office FND • Female lrL,h Setter p,\Jfli'TTNG & paperhanglfli: Bcl01v hwy. $225 Mo/Lease C.M. Avail 7·1·73. Call 546-C'llAR\tiNG I~. 2 BR older or 10 wk special rate. Dock Sl90. Broker 675-6700 puppy, Costa r-.tesa ana, Contractor ~:xt & Int. Airleu spray 2 Br. ExCfllent condition. $285 1110. HERITAGE REAL BSfATE • 54G-l151 * Newport Shores BEAOI, Pool, Tenn!!!, 3Bll, den, 2 BA, bit.in!!. crpl!i, drps, !rplc, $375/yrly lsc, &l:h'!368 . S•n Cl•m•nfe SJ IOP.ECLlFT home t or Jr>ase, ~ Br, den, famlly r n1, pliv br.a<..il. golf COUNC & gardener. $.1riel. plus dcpo11it. See ut 432 Culley Vista Torito. ofter July 3rd. NR .Beach; new 7BR 2BA 1\ouse, shag crpts, drps, bltin1, fl)!. patio, elec gar. Comm. pool &. clubhouse. l\lllc lo Yocht Harbor. Le&ii:e $26!'i./49-)..3231 Hal Jlinchin Rltr, 675-439'l 2277 or 642-0'112. npt. Newly redec. $l30 Mo. &\'ail. 548-£592 B:_•:•::i;:":°'::':.....:R:;on::;:l.:•:_1 __ 41::::;S: I ;~675-~757"i'3'cp;;;l~o""'~,;':,;"';;""'"~'';,·;;;; JACK Taulane, r __ ., , . J.'f'N' eiillmll!C'11 97!l-~'29-I DELUXE 2 B' apt ' Ba Realonomics:, Bkr. 675-6700 UDO ISLE, delux .f.BR. :i'Bi\, LARGE I I" h •-1 ' •-Costa Mela ,..._t. -· 1,;,. 11;, n-~·. 2 ~.. /-~-, · NEW SHOPS ma e .-.s .-x: !er. remod, ad1l, 20 yn; exp. J,ic Pla•fer, P•td'I, Rep•lr ..,..,...,., gu °""'"' L19un. 8e•Ch Avd'J;):'].i~~l.""l, ':'~;!· -, . Vlc. 18th ant.I Pomona St.. B-1 26907"1. l\1y \\';t y Co.1 -------~-- Apt. B. $175 mo, 548-S.212 or O CE A NFRONT-0.i.U Dr. 644-48$ or M&-9410 A few choice ghops still C~t Ploo!!ie id('flt. 64:>-8969. 547-<mG * PATCll PLASTERING • !'67..sn>. Huge, 1 u x u r y, 1 ..... 1. ~~=~=~~---1 available at Villas;::e Fair, SHEPHERD puppy? V ic El-tro'<•l All type!I. l'"'rce e1timalA:!1 ALL lll'Il.JTIES PAID HONEYMOON apt. 2 bdr., $300 I MO. Yrly, Da v4 ; • fl.'"EWPORT Island -Single 1.100 South Coast Jiv.y. Jluntlngton Geneva H.B. ...... Call 5"°""'825. O:impnre before you rent studio, lanai, dosed garage, 494--0615 6'5-1972 res1dence w/pri. dock, A\"8.il Laguna. 536-lfl.». EL ECTRICIA.'I,', licensed, Plumbinn Cu."1.0111 designed, featuring: 11""' ...... ;""'•..,._Ave., apt. • · July~ 12'l5. .~ SI-5 4~ 1111 •----··.o...•-----·I tchen ith in "' ....... ~ r..a.in •u•. ;(\. -~....-· ~ SMAU.. hlru:k poodle male. bonded. Small jobs, nUlinl &•- • SpaciOU!' ki". w ·c .,_,,,:C:,:-':;:'::.· =~~~~-_Ma·-'-'-•_V_o_rd_•_____ m.<1883 1,o E !8th ... C'I Su't bl Vic. Ontario & Huntington repair!!, S.l.~52U:t L.R. OTIS PLU~ffilNG di.rret. Jigh ng ~ 2 -BEACHFRONT N '"' ' .:x., ' • ' 1 a e 84 2 . . Remodels & JkPflir11 . WateT • Separ-.tte din'g e.rea BACHELOR, l & Br. From DLX 2 & 3 Br •• 2 Ba. Encl -C'4'port 3 for stores or ofc. 362 eq. It. St., Hunt . Sch. 7-514 · 1'.I.ECTRlCAL Contrdclors healel'll, dl~pminl!t, lumaotJ, e J.lonie-!ike aturage S1Z5. St()V(', retrlg, cpll, gar. $165 up. Rental Ofc., 6B1;;. 71~V/D, ~Int vu • S.100/mo, Ir. 1069 sq, ft. $280/ FOUND ladles wat ch, , rtc!I. Comm: l~u.st. Uc. dshwash.rs. &12--626.i J\.t /C " e Pri\•atc patios drp!!. Adults, no peta. 3()1)5 lo.lace Ave. 54f.-1034. ~.:548--t~le I\ u g . ~~·ll6SC..J.S. Real Estate, t•eshlon 1sland. Q\\·ner Iden· No.26fill4. ~7. 8-12-0nl RIA. Complete Plumbing • ClOllt.'<I gal'llgC \\'/stoni.g~ "·64:::>-8965'0'=·~~--.,..,.-N rt Boach ~~~i:J.~~~~~~11 :-;;;;;;;;::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;:;::;;;'~'1Y~·~-;;;;~";';;1 ;'";';';•;;m;;·:;;;;;,. I G d • e l\-lerble pullman · 3 UR. patio, Jrg, quiet. nr ....;.ow'-'-po-'-------·BALBOA Island' 4 BR, 2 Ba. •r •ning SC'rvi~. e Kil'l"·SZ B<lnn.o; Baker&. Bristol. Jmmcd oc· CllARMlNG 2 BR .. 2 ba.., 2 ·Sleeps 010. On the ~· CO' PL~I l'LUl\tBINC; Rl':PAIR • •t l~AVal · Cl N "'·-.....,.. "1 ,..,_; l llnd.o;ca pr Nojob>oo•mall •Pool • Barbcques -8Ur-cup. n gr. ""' encui, car 1.,,., eome,•pts. w/fpl ean. e\V ,..,,., •~ . malnt ~rv ,,... ·1 'nd l'oundcd. l\ith plush land· ~l-7766 & benm ceil'!'!. Avail. on 613-7910 T d Y Pa d• re!'lid.· Spri~kl~.m'i;l~~p'. •• oo..3!211 •• · ~apl,g. °'0E='.Lc0UXE.:.0:-,,-, °"B,..,,..,,~Bac-.-wc-/;,-w le .... $285 to $300. BAYSHORES • 3 BR. 2 BA, ra er S ra 1se 64a-6!187. TOT•\L SF.llVICES CO. Adulls. No Pets. crpt. f.rplc, patio, encl gar. 644-7932 675-5930 avail. July and/or Aug. \'\RD Cl . hflnnr Plun1b!rl(C & ll~p3\n LARGE 1 BR, $185 · 11951-.... 673-5629. 11200 mo. Call 9-4 PM ' ean-up, m. a 1 n 1 · 646-0077 or 646-1800 2 BEOROO~ $2(6 ""' DUPLEX brand delux 3 hr, 1 • Comm. -Res. Openinit ne\\"I ~-~~~~-~--1 '"'" IV • .,.,,_' "· 64' 19TI 1 BR. nr. trwys &: 1hopng, 2~ ba, $39.1 per mo. 1 blk to ~!! or wkndll n 4• Ines route. Exo. J 0 pan cs c Remodel & Rep1ir ~ • "1 ""'1 •-quiet tropical 1etUng. $140 ocean or bay, 822 -W, • .....----.....,... >-r.nrdenet. ~'1'-1622 $30 WEEK Ii UP Incl. utlls. 531~1548-8992 Balboa, Open Sun. 213: 2BR compl turn. sips 6, ti• mes 1_.r.r us mov.· & cd.S,:t' your Sewlng/A1te r•tl?nl e Studio & 1 UR Apts. E•st ilde Lrg 2 Br's 41&-678.1 Newport beach, % blk !rom 1 1 t 1 Casa de Oro e TV & ?-.la.id Sctvice Avail. bl.tm, frig, patio at pools!~. * * BAY~'RONT • pr i v . beach. \Vkly. July SpeclaJ 1~~n. awlle~~ e~'1~~1 e~~ Alter~tlons.-642·5145 I Nf;W 4 Br, 2 &, Comn1un. • Phoiic ScrviC't'-Htd. Pool S1i'5. Adlts/no pelt 642-t:i20. Beach & Pier. N(!v.• 3 Br, 2 675-6850 !"'34-71117 Nr11 t, ftccurate. 20 yt:a.n exp. POOi. 1\i ml. Denn Point e <..'1l1Jdrcr1 & Pet S«-tlon Ba. Yearly ,550/mo. LOVELY 2 BR tum house, dollars ' llnrbar, $32'). L ca 1 c. 2376 Newport Blvd .• Chi SPACIOUS 2 Br. apt. ~1esa 979--063l, '44-45lO cloae 10 beach, Cd1'f, J uly 15 O:P. Jnpancse Card«tw•r. 1 I ' -t9.1-ll3S7. · 548-9755 or 645-3967 \ltrde ~~/mo. 2 BR., l ba. Ftplc. steps CO I<> A\IA' 12, rellabl~ pooplc, ~:;~~~:4.,~1n;~l~~11!; I 1 ,. > qJl f 3 BR house. 2 stoT')', trplclo. (Ad Cood for-$S on reno UNF\JRN 1 & 2 B ,.~~ ocean. Yearly; SXIO moatb 644-7902. • '------------------..... I 1~1la~b>~•~ln~l~""~·~st~· ~>-"'4~'¥:;'·~::~\~·~~~~~~;,J.!!];;;;1_ __ _ crpt/drpg, 2 air gar., pat CUTE t BR. spanking clean, · r. varuen Mk for M1ke RENTALS on Balboa Penln, ** llA\"t lit TRtJST TRADE ~na Beach &: fncd yard. Pool &: clbtwe _)9ts O( pr1vacy. 2 blks/ma.· Apta. Frpk:, DIW:_Jriv. JCl'lES REALTY 61).6210 Ocean front. avail lmmed, .t!.E.E 0 apim)X\mat~ly rt"Yidnltlal lo( f<:rr com111.e:r· 1.:~1~~~· IA::, ""f)f'ivtt-~. -,orlltiiji ctr. Ad1, no-pd& pado. $165-$190.-557 1 LUXURY Bayfronl. Spacklus ~•IJ!l:.!B• famll1" on! . S.I0.000 c(i.-g·~. $600 Pf'I'. rial or???. rompn11t, IJUlre yu::·pllllltS Job-Wintiil, Female 702 Condominiums Furn. ,536-G114. S90 It up. 1 I: 2 br.~l~l'!l. 1Br,1 Ba. Secur bkl1r. Pool, 613-....,,. month, wit.nt Or•n""" Co. in. Value $10,500. 133 E 161• St Sp C-• -.... fnr Mie .. 96S-002'.i NE'-D help '&I ~m-•. \\"c 31 S C01'1PLE:I'ELY tum. 1 BR. · · • u"' r;lp avail. tJlil pd. Yrly be. CORONA de! r-tar, l blk to come. Broktt ~-3228. Ml-3881 ~ "" •· A Adu! N 131 l\1esa $4-675--3464 Bia Corona 1 bdnn $600 ==~~'-"";..;..~~= 1Gardenini/Landsc1 p int h(l.ve aides, nu r •e s , ~pt. 11 ts 0 Pt'ts. I 0c"CH~1:t=n~R~---,ki""'cho,-, rJ. ~ • ·HAVE Costa t.lt!n 4-plvc. llAVF.: T'rwlt ~ »4.500 t-:Xi>cn N!l\able local IN'<' h o us ekpr11, com(JfUlionf:. i' BAY Front D"ec. largr 1 br, 6 l1'IOll-l yr, pool. 673-1141 or 6-. 'l\Vhite Elephanta" OVt!r· nmninir YoUr' house? Tum thcen ,lnto "Cash" • , • .ell lf1tom thru a Da.lly Pilot claaaUled ad! J."'\owrr St., C.t.t. &&1883. BA . .A.J apt I no t n. QUit:r 2 BR upper •Pl mo. evei. ex"change for icmA.11 hou~. 9~~ lntere!t l>ut' 10 )TS, rttl , T8kata Nu~ry ~S-38i8 ~lomcmakcrs Up Jo hn , 2 Bk UPPER ... bl-am -ii. w/bo.th, 175/mo. No potJI. w/Mt~. Nr,. \Vftltditt OCEANI>"RONT. N.B. 1 It. 2 J, I.odtet Beatty Jtltr, ...,'Ml : l.ocaJ homt or unit~ ·•17 ,,., ~ 820 Center St. 642-5848. · BR. Pro i:io ml f' ~ · c rtle ·~·,.,-,"--..,,,.--;;-,,.-..,.,,--,·,.,, w/w, blmlf, ru,i., Sl80, pool , Shop'g Btta. N<> pel.s. 646-Apts m S to 832-.f.2'tO . « 1?'!' .O....·ncr/Bkr. .x,1P<1r. 1 cn can a nt•r •oAV .. ~·rk G n'I lnl All Adlls. no PJ'l!f. 642*9520. 2BR. l'l ba, ·2 itt)' ~. prt 4ll2. wk. ~. 6n.T.5m. eve9 ~ 6i3-67".S • a nttnAAr .. Cleanup & _.., • •<' C' flR:, r 1 t $16.1 ?J:; L'\ndscap\ne. 'call &&.l9'.l0 a.1'f'a•. Relb1ble. Tran•. SUPER lrg. t BR, encl. gar. .ro,.,~ ':. S:.~· • OCEANFRONT. n_ew ~ Br, 2 l ~ be11~h ~~ br Me Jr f\10BILE hOme lOI In Palm l3'.l Acni mobll home, rtv i.J\\\'N l\fal Jo ulltpt·llme. s ·11 -9 3 3 o, qui I. Nlul!11. No pell. 2452 1 ,::;o:~:.;,""'="""°=,--ca.r l•t'8Ji:e. S600 )'TY ht. be . SI or <>-Dtw:rt Greem, )oc, on roir ;m1c 6 ranch; will ex<'llMKc ·, ntcn:i.11<'C'.. Exp. ~70CJ5. Eldon. 6·1&-27G8 • UP5J'AIRS % BR. 1 BA. t:n-CID, bltns. frplc. M2--3443. rate1. '75-5810; ~ cout'lt'. Value S16.500. Pay for Oranre cnty Ahop'r. Japam-11C1 Gardener. F"ree l,.;.;-"'='~...,,,.---,-,---1 1 "'°""' .. ~-. 1 child OK. "--· " • ....,..... 'IO'-.c ....,00 f of 1~.-pl esllmale. !H.;-6106.· PVT'. Dul)! Nurse "'1dt'grtt ~NING-2 Br, l Ba.. ··--NEYl.3 JlR. 2 BA N.S. '"'""'V'tdtront, 2 BR. Ou ...........,., ....,..l&lty •" • or cntl' tt O'I" ,..,....,. l\rrt. dl'ls1rn rio1\rn1 care In ga.i'den Apt, pool, rec; af'ta. No peU. $IM. 8-16-7129. $400 rM. fiOO Fronr St. l10IMt ,111eep8 1, wtdy or mo. Vm'J sd. auto. &t0-1000. lrwil:a Cb. Rlln. • 64-l-6U1 Ga.rdcnlrnc & clean-ups home. Tly lhc hr or g hr $1 75 •. 110 w. 18th SL Se-lt Idle lltmt ••. &42-!1678 213: :rfl-!m.fi .;:Sl~lp!'.,_!•Vlll~l:,_· 6'l~~!: ...... ~---1 ••·---------------· SJ4.06S7 t'llJ O. Reflf. 492·7\1.17. ' • • I . • • .- Mood.it, J11IJ l 19'13 I ......... Jf l4 1 [ ,_,_ l[l]lf -J[Il] ;;;;[ ;;;;;;" __ .... ~J[Il]~IJ II I"' :. ][fi][ ........ J[Il]1 I I 1111 l[Il] I .... ,, ••. l[UJ f "...... ][JJ Jobi Wontod, M & F 704 Help Wonted, M & F 111 Help Wonted, M & F 7IO Help Wonted, M&F 7101HeloWonted. M & F 711 Holp Wonted, M&F 710\I Holp Wllntod,M & F 710 Holp Wontod,M & F 710 Help Wont.I. M&F 710 za DAil Y PllO r EXPEmENCED. r1.:ll311lv, ' •1 CLERK.TYPIST -MACHINISTS NUtl'IBS. p/llml;", LVN T--3 malUl"I! couple \.\"8nt U' Hl\NKNltj s& L IC11n. C.ort'•.!!tpoJV.lenot. l\1in. ~Aulstant' LEGAL SECRETARY ·,,. 1 ·~· lo MATURE lady _.....,...1 for & 11-7. HN 11-1. A,pp1y M .. TELLE S I lllwpn1 IYl•ln~ ~ p" INSUllAJICE SAU$ ,. p kl ~tl•M . I -"[l("t'~tuenta It .............. c1 n. ·~ •t Vtnl r·-· n\llnago an apa.rt1nen1 t.."()(lt-R .. ff 11. · .-.... ,. _.us tna 5 y in DI '-•! u.n1bulatory home. Uve--ln, p.m. ., eta e ........... ~units or un\.kir. 213: CrO\\'h•~ !lA\·ln~ t IOii t.o56-73'itl in health 1po, \\1iU 1ml11, no No esp nct:., earn whllt you ocic•nl~ lncJlv. .w/good. ~1~1~11ntatJOrf.-~ Room j .board +_aaJary.1.:::~::::::=::__------'.-I plex Ut beech ai.·».. A )'tj. ~-ti~t~ltc.'tll11[i1 · ar";~: Youn& 118-~l to &JSIRt la\.\')'t 1· needs e ff icient fl :In~ ·~J~~t :i_e'""( Mutthavereter e ne e t lloep. ~I Centrr St, C.li.1 l-"=='---------1 11, 1 "o c I at ion antlcl11<1I --ux11. nuc. Ap1ily in pea11U11 learn pa11 !lmt• l'\'et a ':!'•Ila. SaW'y IO ST.00· Al.So Klnt>ti(.'S Inc i231 Vlc:torl• Call 642-3381 before 6 P~1 NURSES Aide ror elderly • .,. uiiunlnl( of Ne1111011 Hea Cocktail WaltrltS Al\V nn or tV('. mo \V. wknJi. (ull tlnu1 ~hen quAll· ~~~ ,£~~Ja!G)Qr'",a~ra!:, St., c.~I. M&-716.1. Equal P.tEOIANJC -needed. Prof. lud,y" Uve In, day llbift. XlDt Hohp Wanted, M & F 710 '--ancl• ,,,,.,.,. A' """'' Gth., >><r1CJ·. ur1ly. til2.s:l'-I Coltst IIwy., N.B. " I .,...,..,,.....,, ~ • ...,,....... 0 o pt , d \\"Ol'kil'" COACI \Veekenda oft .,.-...... 1~L'(. • Agency, 2790 llarbor BJvd PIJ'Or . .r.n1ployer. WJar_&!lt'et' u.g (jo. Nee ,,_11 ~" 11t<.ft ft 1 Vn~·111M'le11 cur1..-.111ly f'S ll't C..'Ot.LECTOH, tt•luphont• <'01· OOl\Tt:STJC llclp Geo""e r urmcr5 lnsu1·1u~e Group Cl\l 'J M 'I Cl Ir: .__5 qualificaUous. 613-3320 "'" • ,.,...._,,...,,, a p.tn. for cxpi.•r. lf'\JenJ 1,.1t th1• lf'C tor, no CKI, l''</· SU11'1ln• II I . ., Ed Lani * ~lllJ~ · 111 er ~ . E !CA& -~"'°'"'°""""==~=,,..,~-I A ()II By and l\"l!llC)', 106-B ,-AR 0 u T 1 ., -Al D L assistant IVfUited -i'lt'"'Pf1rt Br1u·ll & Cu1Tilul( ~1dary '{5() rno. p 1M 1'0nu11. .. 0111»1 u_ui Y· . " 2 OFFICE GIRLS office11. Thi~ 1mllion \\•ill 11)1\tact l\1r. Gibbs, &12-14il t.:. lGth St .• S.A. 547.03!)j ....,.,.. n ~ .,. *' LIFEGUARD J~olly n~t l'tltry level iui· 11\f !\t ED -~ ATE Ly for NEE ED p1'01'idc r..,pr1:o>ur,. 1(1 11C\1' .,, .. ' OH.APt:nY In s 1 11 J t c r -lion. To Start you 1vll1 drive dern1atologist oJfict, .full D ACCOMPANIST Rellablc, f t1n1e 111 lllich ltf;.iiool VOchl & t.:h<>l'lil lllUSh.:, l\lUiil bo.~ rlCt.:(•Ucn1 slj.,'lll 1-.?udfll'. Con!H\'I l\ln1. Ht.'Y· oold!i, bctwn ~ iuu .~· :: 11111, t'QUlltll n.s 1rcll a11 l"l'l.:Ulllr ( CO-OK & Su I t• 5 111 an , f:x~rienCf'd co. CCU' beh\'11 L.A.'& N.B. tln1e, ,rront Ir back 0U1cc. Radio telephone dispatch lf'llc1' Uulil·~. tle.~il"Hblc.f'~ull time employ· IR'JINE PERS()t\lNEI.. Summer Only ntrices -dcllverhtg the NECESSARY. NO SMOK· !\Just be 25, ablt::_ lo ilrlve rncnl. Al!"'I 1)('(!(J drnpery 'SERYICES.,ArC'tr..ir\/ Ir, Newport Beach 1naiJ. Then n1ove Into other ING. Call weckdJlY!I · A.pply ln Jlel'llOn Locill 1n1ervic\\J; 11111 ht• DISHWASHER p1i.•sscr, full 1in1r.. Cl'oul) In-·~"'f\-1 !\lust have Senior Life Sav· dept. if you desire ll$ this ~1435 4 YELLOW CAB C0.-1• ...... -... -............. j bt•hl 111 tht• (.\_•rrHos oflit:•·. I surancc after 90 days. 1 Art('lr 5 Pl\! By Appointrncnt lngs Certification. \Viii work ,greut co. pronlOtea from !\IEDlCAL office: in 1-lunt. . 18G E, 16th, Cbtlta !\fesa ACCOUNTING CLERK l\fund;1y, July !l1h, 1\Wks paid \'acntion after 12 Al.'COUntt1111-~™ 1o S15H 2-1-32 hours "''eek1y in-wllhln. Xln't benefits. F'n..-e Udt. Back oWCe girl. \Vrite 'OFFICE CLEANING 548-11 21. . ' ·-1-·•I n · 11 ,, I • \p1·'y ,·. I"''''' mOll. Coit Dr.i.pe•y Cleaners, Co,11,-1 ~·,..,, BS<'E lo $12K chKling all<rnate y.·eekends lo 8t)J>tlcai1t • 1\IJtO fee Jobs. Classified Ad No, 889 Daily · ..... ·1u • llf)I( ) i; ·II\ fig ,.,,,. 1<••·11>>'• 1,,, .. ,.,,,.,l•""' ,t-11, I I " " 1 V< '-'.., , ·"' ' • P/11 _,., All e•••pei~ r. I N 1 u. h v " ., v 1702 Ne\\•port Blvd .. 01 ''"""•t A• t!~ 'I I $12K Good Sal""" Abigail Abbot Pel"llOnne\ Pilot P.O. Bo:< 1560 Costa me "• ·-.,__. "" 1rn1 n f'~'rJ')r .,._•ac · h•ri.-·lc11· 111•111. CaU Pl•n;un· ••••-i..,., 1• ,.,ai 0 ... "'. bank NB E)I; r Over 21 PQ.s1 All' .111 Atli. "' i;l·n'I tK'I: Snack Shop 540-t:!GG Ol' fi.12--0Z70. Salt"S/A1anagco1cnt Sl2K+ Call Mrt. CaPece Agency, 230 \V . \Varner, ~fesa, Calif. 92626 • • .·pc · ·1cd1:cr. Si:ilnrr '" 5500. A.lllO I 1-::'l!l>LOYAIEN'f ot~FERtO Contract bckgrntl. Furn Dist. 9Jt.6l2t Suite 209, S.A. '5.i7-6122. l\1EDICAL Assistant, '1ack ooly. Top Pay, 2131927 -0llS. fcl' joh11. (.'nil (ilorht Gray, (213) 62.S..7341 !\ln le. sn1al l lite n1ofg. co. 1\licro Hiologisl lo S12K l"''"'""'"'"'"""""'.,._.,.. l\ft\LVJ'ENANCE / janitorial office. Exp'd only need ap-O~ERATORS, cxper. only. 510-60M. l'nHslnl ,Pf'r51)111}f•I NO g need!. relinble full tinie op-Dcsl1:n Draflsn1ru1 10 ~ L YN SUPERVISOR-man. Apts _ Costa llfe11a, ply.~ bet 9:30-4:30 single needle &. overlock. Ntency, :ri!JO 1-lurbur. Ulvd. LOS ANGELES • I flly. lo ji'.l'O\\' \\'/\.'().. l\tin. t'X· lud/Co1nn1 Loan Proc Sil:iO for Nun; .. ,,. ho c Beach f'ull LlnlC po&ilion, 5 day MEDICAL St:cre. l"'Y _ full !.'1J' ~1.·,l~f sr,'.' 00Nu1B ... • C~t 1 µi:·r. rt'(1ulred. 9'ffi..-2'l90 J im Exrl'. Sccruary to $800 ~a '10 h';' 111 ' k C~ll v.·er.k. Start $500. Call ~1r. charge, GP 1n N.B. Desires ~ N>~vu '"'" ADMINI ST RATIVE-FEDERAL J.444 E . Coest Hwy 1 nillc 11·k. dnys. _ __ Sec'y to Conlrollf'1' to $750 , · 8 per \\'CC • ~AHls1er, 545-2300. exp. medical sec. perm. fulll-'-~"-'=~· ------ c Ow Payi"Oll·Conslr lo $1.,0+ 49:1.go75 for rietails. time, ntust Jeno\\• insur, bill-P/Time l\Ien .. Day ,or night. _ ASSISTANT SAVINGS ., orona del Mor .ESCR. OFFICER o-.. 'y/RE •-••I 10 "''~ MAKE IT A H I & · C > 1 1 \ ~" ....... -ing etc., sal,...., O"'"n, apply on1c c enn1ng serv · • t1'() Pnl1I. Estah. 01'~. o. · · , et> ~a11 . • A.t\ lh1t1 oHt;>t'S Scc'y/Proi> lll "nll to "'""" l\tACHINE SHOP -s .-st rant owl t Over 18 !inn oUl'r.; 0111s11uldlng op. I E1.tuil! Oppor Enipl•Jyt'r .. nlf I ·J:;q~ttl Opi.our. Llnploycr vutsianding OJ)J>Ot'. 101· of· R.C<.-e11t Gcn'I Ore 10 ~ • ~e~"S()O ee! 12 ;;ni. S ~ :iy~u Extra C~e Main· por, lnr l(ll'\~r 11iillfh.'ff l11-• • ficer 10 movC"·up tho ladder Sec'yTmlnet> to $550 Lear S1'egler GREEN $$$' SUMMER 411 NB Cf r. UI e tenanre, 8'11-2259. tllv, ,v/goocl math aiJ!Untl•· --_ ~1 ccx;n.;:s -r.ravt!yun:! 11bllt. 61 fl nauciaJly. Salary 19 $800 AccowiU~Clerk ,_JQ_$_5~ _ __ t.· ~ood typing a.kills. Lih• I Beauty Operefors r\ays u i1·eck lo train Cor + L"Onun. Also ~·er Jobs. Copy Typist S·MXl -------\. • -.l\tEDICAL office., in J lunt. PART Un1e Wsertlng for sh. Salary In SfiiOO. Also t'e<· 1 ~21 No follo11 in~ rlt!CCSS. NCI\' 1 l•ssls11u1t m11nn.gcr. Apply In Call l\ay \Ying, 5-I0-6CN5, 1-~ile & A1all Clel'ks $360 Inc 'WITH Bch. Back offiee•girl. \\'rite' l11allroom. see G ~o r g e Jobs. D.111 1..indu Hay, lit•, ok. Bu~y shop. li-lf>-1050 rc1;;o11 Jue~ ln Thf' Box, Coa!ttal Personnel Agency, CALL TRISH HOPl\JNS· • CIPil8'fil{pied0 Ag~~o. 889. ~i}Y '-"'~'O'm"'~sA"',~"~-i=h~J.='~ID_•_;_ly~p;~tot"'I ~. Coaslal Pe1·so1111el Alon tlu·u Sat. l20:~i•k(!r !!'·S~~ln l\Icsn. 2790 llarhor Blvrl., C!\.I . Jt.:RRI \\'H.IT'TE:lllOllE ot, · · uv.-.. 1560, -..u!><.8 1; Agency, 27'JO llarbor Blvd., ----SOAT8UILDERS <.001< EX PER. EXPF.R lndtist St'Ctttary to 488 E.11th St. (at ltv inc) CM T D . l\Iesa, Calif. 9262& PARTS Mnnag<!r, cxcelleut CM I B<'VPl'IV ;\laJIOI' Couv. Hosp. I -·1 '·"'' rr· c ' s It 224 642 1470 r•r)Sport ynam1cs __}(. ~~ MEDICAL See-1·~·. e.·-c. opportu nity .• Al[a-Ron1co & Adve111s111g .Clerk T)·111s1 tll'ed.; ('.\fJCr. resJlOn~illlP ~ _, -,-,-· gun.'l. s 1;s11.~ some bkkp1ng, typing. ~ Oictaphi>ne & insurance aa ,,. A H . • . . IQu;t!ily SaHOOttl 11111nu L !C'7.:S000 Lil 11111 ia"" e u i 0. ice. ot-u • ~ Division '" .... "' .~.,... S I BE C IMPORTS tn1ml'.'d .opC"n1nC 111 nu t'l iievJ•IC 10 {ill llii•se JJOSilions: C\)U~Sl~LOH 111un1~1I for Ctt!I r9r nn appn!. 714 : 3131 W. Segerstrom '1 'J 6•.~Y...v1..?,fc. Salary open. =pori:· Coast Hiwa,y, a d v crhslng rlcpur1mcnl, F ' • h c C.lon11 !\lnrshnll r I g u r (' a·ll-ZUS JANITOR, p/tlotc. &>nri .,,......,'1UJ, reqs ACCURAT E lypinu nt 1.nis arpenters Control Sa lon NC\\'port. \\'111 £-"' p E I' 1 .., re!irt'<I. No expi:•r. nccess. Santa Ana ..-ATEDICAL Ret..'Cpt. Day-i PEOPLE ARE NICE li5 \1'"1n on FXJ::CUTI VF' I L\1111. ! YL' 1•xpf·l'iruc·1· I trf1ln l\tu~1 he attrai:tivl• ·"' ~ '1 1E ~ c ED do.., !\I Sc ~ \V' I! · Sec.r..._r1'es ,. . ~ · M h . H I · · . groon1er u I linie good op-'."· ·nne or .,f~. 11 nn1s, A well kJlO~·n locnl nianufllc· •tu Swing. }~/Tln1e. Personnel \Vhen you call on ll1C"m a,; typc\vrilt>r. \Viii nlso rill• & I . ec , an1cs e. per h11vL•_trh11 .r1~1u'C, a nd enjoy IMlituuitY. Bus ,' sh 0 P. S1lve1'\1'000s, •l;i F'ashlon . h bl 1 ..-Typi"sts Dept, Hong Hosp, N.B. an AVON Representative. co ~ ~" ' . • n1ent needs e l\1EN 11ecded iit l-t.B., F.V. ~Hl av~ un n1a e h11ndle phOlll'l<. Sonir t't'l~ll1 I i\1 111. 6 11111. ~XJ1Cl'1r'nL"1' I 1\orktn'-' l\'llh l"<>PI<'. I-lour~ .,~,. ""'7 ,..... ) Island Nwpt Cc11tcr lurer Y.'ll sta e enlp Oy· \' 'II h J & k office exp n1-c. A1111ly U1 ·Maintenance Man 2-9 p1n. Call 642-3630 ror np-· JA.i\'ITOR, lite nuilntcnance, · ..., Accntn9· Clerks ar e a, for m ·0 r n in g fncnds selling. our fan1ous person. Technit.'Olor Int:. 299 1 All ui-iunil l':O.IK'riri1<·c pointn1f'111. FAMIL\' Coinpanion (Chri!!· I/· Ov 2 TOOL ROOM rod ht To le ho Kaln111s Dr., Cns1u J\t<'s:i. 1 WESTSAIL CORP. -lian 11·0111an) lot 11 yr old tlnte. er l. Appl y in -newspaper, auto route. Ap-P uc ·. arn. 'v easy I 0 0 1 _ '·-/a bu< th •t n person Hunlington Bench Don't s1iend vnur whole 'sun1• prox 21,•, hr ...., .. n"'-ing. It ls .to stan, call. [.qua lll)()J'luni ty "·111P 0~'rt• 1 16:!..i Pltt1·C'nno Al'<·., (;::0.1 e Cross country uuy "'' .y mo er." 0 • Convalescent l{O!lpital, 18811 MACHINIST 1n£'r in n11 ~fricc. Jusl """M 847-S979 .. -• "''" 546-5341 01' 640-7()..11 i\ SHOE SALES\\'O~!.\N, full 1---------FM: 9-43. Sal Open. &73-llG6 f'lorida St., H.B 8.47-351:;. ,.._. time, exJJl'I'. pi't•fC"rr\'tl, !llil· ~kkpr ~/C . $750 ~p Drivers JANITOR/Ga~•--· -m'-_TOOL _& DIE .~!~;·~~~rls~~~~~kT~!':Yrg~ lltOTE L n1ald rK?at Production Control ary oJ)(?n, Rf•ply in JN'•·.son /Co. 111Qv1ni,; 1u10 t>l!uut1ful .• Foremen F /C BOOKKEEPER '" '""" .. u uu MAKER energetic, Lagun8. BeaehToSchedule the manufactutt on;y. TllE BOOTERY, 2'!5 11C'11• N.B. officc-s. T_rllct 1 • Menegert Capabl<> of supervising Ji/lime, Apply b Ct iv n \l'ant, "''hen you want. resort, 6 day \veek. 494-1196. & shi_pping of sailboats. E. 17111 Co!Ola ?\lesn h u 111 c cons t r u c 1 1 ~ n e Assemblers others. Hepo11i; 10 contnl\lcr. 8am-4pm, !\lon-J."'ri. !\iest1. GRINDERS Call Or Visit NAUGLES MacGregor Y echt Corp OOckgrouricl 11Cedl.'f:I. Co. e M Id Snulll electronics Cirm. ~el'tle SCo~v. llosp, jj61 -1631 Placentia, C.M. ~plits fl'l' & rt>hnbur.;es O lrs Kno11·Jt'dgc of computer !IYS-entca· t, !\t AUTOMATIC __}(.~~ q.,.1 DRIVE-THRU ASSEMBLERS """'. rn•lf-·\I~ F,,. ''"'· e Inspectors tcm• .< mech;.,, bkkpng '" JUNIOR SALESMAN:· -1 II 1I ··~· ~ Ahh:;nil Ahbo! Pt>t':'l0t111•'l e Gel Repairmen !ll'ntlal. /\lift. 2 yi· ..... exper. Earn $2(}-$40 per .week SCREW • l.ESTAURANT 1\gcncy, Z'.O \V. \\'arnc1. All '.l Shifts 54f..3041 1''0l'king after school nnd MAC. HINIST . OPENING .SOON. V • 0 t~ . M h " . 1 SUilt' 200. S.i\.· ;);'ii"-6122 \\'r \\'Ill 1·,-,·o •·q••"i Oppo · E >•p'-<" o•t Sal••~o•s geltlng n"'" --___ ~rl:,:_:,:, ·:; ~~" -"m· •"•F ,,., ~. " " ' '· • · •• .;.-. •• ""I-TURRET I *'~••" "'· ~. '-~-'rn:'""" iiutcr tndusrry l)tL"" scVernl & tmy1,1ll 1·:-.111·1-. Snu11l Or· 1631 _Plncentln, C.l\'I: r~J.ORJST. fen1. -t-u 11 y Pllot. TI1ls Is not a pn~r LATHE . l!!:vin1 833-9107 immt.'fli1,.1\e oiienin~~ in our nng" Coun1y ro. 1'Qn1pany. ,1uatified. E."JlC'r in all rou te anti doc"i nol-inc\udC -1 AcroSilroriiO:-C. Airport -Pmiitions open for-mature pr 0 du 1, 1 1n 11 ai·ru ror Good 1111y & b c n 1• f its . CUSTODIAN 11hu.scs of design. 546-5025, deliveries 01· L"OllC.cting. ENGINE 1 adults &-young adults & As~nil>lerri 111 nll ll!vcls 011 ~j-!l~-___ _ £~iS~J-$Tl[( Per lllonth Ask for Cheri. \Ve have openings 1.n Sou!h--'1\11\LE Wanted, Apply at ·reena~cl's. 1'"'ul\ &•parl time, I ' ,. 2 d 111 -'-BREAKFA-ST COOK * GARDENER 11·cst Costa ~lcsa and Sou1h LATHE <'o••l"<ky F'•"•" Chleke••. clay & nig~.t shill. Apply in s ·~· n IC\ Is. Jlf &:-nd 11 ri1te11 i"eSun1r to &ul· * Jtuiitiu~on Beach only.• 69 .. $;i C t j!" La B person ONLY,_ beginning If . 1 k' f . • ' E:.:11er. Good puy & hours. dll'h,1t·k Vallry U n; f i rd Be your own Boss Api>ly KnoAwR! A96~1J9641. 1-TRACER " · oas wy, g. · l\londay, July 2nd, 9 ~\.l\1-, you 1.'<' 00 ing . oi a JlOSI·-• L\lutl! be clean & nee.I. Ap-School Dlstricl, !\Jr. Shinkle, 1-II ;1· · l\1ALE \~·anted · Apply al 5 p;J, 214<)1 81-khu-1 al !Ion \vllh 11 ~l'O\\'ing Oi~ingc ph· in 1)1).rson Surf & Sirloin, 24018 Chris11ntn, ri1ission · u oi· P 1'1'.nel 1-11 your LATHE Kentucky Fried Chicken, l'am,·11on. -" PROMISES! PROMISES! PROMISES!- _WE MAKE OFFERS NOT PROMISES Coun1y L'On1puter 1'?ni1~1ny :iii!\\'. coo.St J-hvy. N.B. Vit•jo, Ca . 9267a. Deadline 01\'ll. area. igi JnL'Qme. I 2929 E. Coast J{1vy, Cdl\1. .:.;':;:;;;;;;.0==='7.=c--1 &: 1nre1 lhL•Af' quallf1cat1ons · J 1 J? Guaranteed Customers E·. -ll<nl ft'ngo beoor·,1, ,,_ 1 MANAGER NEWP. RTER INN , , BUS Boy \\:anled, e-xper. IY!· _ u Y -· No Cash Down I NSTRuc:rons \\'ANTED ........ , Plea.sf' Applv, Jn PcNOn 1iuim.I. Avail lunch & di1111e1" DEi.IVERY OF o A t I.\' E eluding con1pany n<>•d group E J · Needs l\licldle aged or older V11r1en Dete Machines . . run No1\', Pay.J..t1le" No ex""r. nee., sa.lal"', to ,.,,,01.0n-. ,,..... x~r. not /ICC'. otn groiving I nllil.•. gardener for perm. H•" Tho Jo·-·•·•ale /\Ion-Fri tl:W ain-4 pn1 shirt. $2.25 hr -+ gra tuities .. PH.OT, SUNO,\Y ONLY ro AL ...1:1• 7117 .-.• ....~ l'hatn of SUCCC! f I ..,, U!l<.'"\I To nw Pt>r~nt\C'I Dt•t11. Apply in person. 9-tlam, ~t:\rSPAPER CARRIERS ..._ s1ar1, n1ust 1> u I' r h use 11·ashes. M•t•l hn'v'o" ,,,',~1,'.· t pos1t1on. No. phot>e calls Follo\ving Openings •1 1 a· c o NB uniform Cnll !\Ir. Lennon PHONE 546-.3131 plense. Apply Ln person. Ask · I No. i::: !)n~"On r~ IN S.\N c r4 E r.'I F. NT E GENERAL OFFICE 6:'.S-24...qo npti1u0c, nbi li1y to supervise 0 lay Ellis (head Offi'ce Clerk CAPTAIN -rlinini;-rootn. Big ,\H~A. 1'11.!S'"f L!YE IN , Frr Pai1!. The job ynu\·e Equal Oppor. Employer help .& handle customers. _R:arde ) 1107 Jambortt Or Contact B. Krafke 2722 Michel1on Or. Canyon COlll11l1 Club, App~y AREA, Hf~9Ul~E.., U<;;F:I 1h't.•n1ned of ~citing. Xln't \\'illing lo 1\'0rk long hours.1 ~Rd .... ~N~··~·~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil l\l.r. lloffsteltcr No. I 81~! qF S(ATIO~ \\AGON OR lypi11:;::-skill.~. Sail in & :;::el ].t.\Cl-ll~-.,,.-/ Tool !\f a.ker Sul. $200-$250 ix•r 1\·k. to Filing, collating, lite lypi~. l oR1vE1ts LICf"'"s."~· .ro~. Fl'C Jobs. ca11 Elly Ellis. • ~~!~n:!s. \\~~-Pl~~ ~~~ l\IAN1cunlSI' _ Pedicurist, RNs, LVNs & Aides Electro Mecham-cal I Canyon D1·., ~.B. \ ,\ N .\ N 0 VAL I D !his OTlf'. S111rt $550. Also ~ ~~ 9 ~ start. 8·12--145.t Nui~s ExJ)('r. lll'l'f'(I. Irvine 133-2400, ext 33' E<1unl Oppor. E111ploy;:r 'CHECK HERE T,ACT,. llARl!Y SEf.LE\. ,......,.,, Control Careec e u tr :J •. """''--~··~-=-,-~---' 3.1(1 \ • BAY ST.~ COSTA Eniployment Agell('y, 3400 (f 13"' rou.< licensed & qualified. Kelly G I H k B1c11us1 We Ask Trainees & exper. oprs. work week! Assembler I WITH THE ~~?ii..i~ PllONE 492-4 120 lr\'ine Blvd., N.B. Mechin• Operators ~~;·P=;:t445 E. 17th St., Create your own OE:o-rr1\L ·assistant position inera ous• eeper A L' I Mo needed for an shifts. \Vork MANAGER TRAINEE lliature, Exrw•r . .. .... 3()61 ltt I re--H 't I St ff R I' f open for dental secretary. ·~ """ We ,Cen Give A im modem new clean bldg. Outstanding opportunity to osp1 • • I 11 •• • 2nd Shift. l\'lin. 3 yrs recenl JOB KINGS 01Jportunity to movt-fron1 GENERAL OFFICE Little More · Shilt bonus premium for adva11Ce ton1anagerialposi-solder exper. l'vlust be able assistint{ to front oUicr F'et> Paid. The job you've nite "'Ork. Oppor. for ad· lion in 3G-fiO days. Our cut·· AllO\\'S Y°'! To ,\Vork TM to -do component repla'cc- ASSEMBLERS F.LECTRONJC Xlnt opportunity for <'X- ptMenccd e l ec tr onic :i58C'n1bll'1"s. ~lust h1.1 ve i::oocl sorllC'ring-&· \Vh1n.; ~kills. Goott JKIY. 11'01·king C.'Ot1'1s & fringes. n111.n11ge1iul position In busy tll'l':lntetl of ge1tini;. Xln'I • va ncemcnt & good fringe rent 111 an a g c r s earn Days .t.: Shifts '\ ou Erefer mcnl on PC boardis :; dnctor orfil.1.'. Assisriui; e..... typing skills. Sail in & get Receptionist l!cnefits. Apply in pc1·son $1~1500 mo. !\lust have A Variety Of Assignn1ents Rece'1v1'ng' NO DEPOSIT NO REGISTRATION FEE IX'rlehCc neC<'ssary. \\'(''"ill this Ol"K'. Start ~-Also 9-llarn & 2-1pin direct Sales ex1>erience. [\f't'p You Curl't'nt iv/Ne\\' fully trnin you fo1· front of-.,~C'C Jobs. Call Elly Ellis. . C.1.1\1 .CO-._ Call Mr. Newman 979-5222 Concepts & Techniques. No · Ii~. ;~:m. Ca1-ecr Employ· & Marketing h"\'111(' Indus. Co1nplex !\IAN tru;n for ll'inck.>11• tin1-Fees or rebates. Gd. Pli)'. Inspector .ELPAC. I.NC. ~ Jl:ll So. Standard ;i;J:,...1,127 111e11! Agency, ~400 h'Vinc _200 Briggs Ave, C.!\1. ing installer. Start $2 hr. Hon1e111nkers-Upjohn Elel'. Repair nutn.St. $:1.:t;, hr 1 -D-,,~.,-,T~A-L~~C~h,~1irsidt•/Control I -~B~lv~rl~, ~N~.B~·c,,._____ /\-!AID 1vanl.ed: Don' Quixote Raises mont hly to S'l.50 hr 180j No. Broadivay, S.A. Sant1;1 Anu !)19-4-140 ASSEi\1BLERS. ::o hr "'k. Ladlc!i over 2.'1. Sl.80 hr to ~tnr1. Ap1Jly 9-11: :tO nn1. Goldt•n'!'l lllaglC' \\1a nd. 941.i \\'. 17th SI, Ctll\lrt l\lt'M. Oril'C'l'·'~-···· 5 SL 1121.~ 1 1 1r Nuri;e. Enthusiastic & GENERAl. Office, gioeat op· lllust be poi,sOO, wcll groom-!\Tolel 2100 Newport Blvd. "~thin 1 )'r. Over 2j. Tall, 547-6611 ASSC'nl. 1 11n:S •• t. _.,., ll' motiv1ttcd intilvldunl \\'ll1111!fl por. for personable, a t-L'<l, low p!'t!Slrurt' jobs.11~Coiiiii'l~aii1~t~e>~··~·~64~2-:;i;i>;~7~0iiiiiiii..:,~"'iii"~·~644-<4 ... ii;i94iii;,. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..I 01ron1e Platini,; fnr pt"O""-Csslve "''''"' of-· . _ _.. _, S I ar t immediately. Ex-s I,"" ... 11'1\CllVC l!KliV. II' I g 0 0 " TraincC' , · • · · · · · · !. ·""'' hr fice. Should be al.lout 20-2.) · · I b·i· L" eel lent opportunllics. J<'un I. 'l p u orgaruia110na a 11ty. lie Dt• !\'Cry-" ust ha1·c · 11 ,·ears, in excellent hettl lh & h assignmenls. Cocnc in & ' . bkkp11;,:. AccucaTe lyping, '!I Or Van .......... S hr + 1111 exp'd. Hout'lC 7:3().4:30. 5 pref'd. Interesting variety register today. LOOK • • IAu!o ------ !1~~=~~~A!,~!~nE~ly noolf'fl in 0114• nf Or1111gc County's lr11.1.hn·~ Fo1'tl .-k•al- 1.•rsh!ps. E:-.c1•llcnt t'Ull1niis· s1rn1~ & bouus 1)lnn. 1nsur- arll'l' an<l tk'n10 plan. Puld •'1tt•11tion11. SI"' Don C1't'1irr. :0.1111•h. Shop Tnw .••. s.1.00 hr __!!_ay!I. Salnry OJW>n. 9i9-6SIO_ f •-! El P -B 11~ k --ur Te!IJI. pe_rson. ~. open. Call oc y,·.,, ,;,;:;;, i;,~, .~'.'.':,~·$2:75';;,,oENTAL ""'"""" Hen"• 83:l-'840. • IT'S GARBENSTANGEL TIME I an op111J1111n11\' to 11101·l· nit o GENERAL Offiet', "'/typing ~~~ 9,.1·· I r;cn·1 Ofrit'f' ~ ..... $110 "·k nc11· ~ r .... paix~in.i: fi';'ld_ of ··-"."·"··-',..",."'.,.",.·•.'>ii"iilii2iilii"•· I (! 11 ; -• Cl k Typi .1 S<I~ 1110 dental 11rcven1.i•n. Lirnucd :>ID-:Z:-129, llunt Bch .. er::._ ...•.•.. a s sistin~.Expcrienced ----- 1 THEODORE ROBINS FORD Delivery Driver · · · · .S2;00 hr rlf't"Ci;s:u·1. \\'c \\"ill 1ti1in 1·ou ~creta_ry. · • · · • · · · ·-.$6."J(l nlO as rull -Unie prc\.'Cniion J.ccepuonist ... ·.St. $300 n1n ;1,..gi~t11nt. :,.t:,...J.121 Assl'n1b l ers , Factory Trainees, OEXT.\L A1'-"!nl., Exp . , J\1any Other~ l'hair~idc. 21-35 yrs. old. Costa l\'ll':oia J:it'111·h officr on hou1·ly GIRLS-GIRLS Easy fun job. Day or nig11t. N~ cxperif'nce lll'L'essary, \\•ill train. You must be 18. Apply in pCrson noon ti! 6 pn1. 2112 !{arbor Blvd., Costa l\1esa. '.ioGO H111·bnl' Hl\'11. APEX Part lhne v.'ork in Ne111J0rl l---~-.. \UTO~----hai;is. :: dny!I 11 week. 8001\J.;:F.:EPt:H tilG-7-tsi -GiRLFRIDAY-- lr.\NTED '""''"'1;,""" T» I EMPLOYMENT AGENCY o>.-r<T.\L '"""'"· ""'" ll!indh· ,\f'!'Oll n1s l'u\·uhlt·. 1i11nis1 2.-1--'.\."1 years olrl, Ortho ll'll.l'I 11nty Clu i1n,;, ,\ u 1 o IS IO·C Neii'J)lJl't Bl\'il. 1•x11 pn•fl'1Tt't t. A11ractivc P.1•tail store, accounts pay· aide cxper. -I dny11 \1•eekly. Call "1-W-1500. 1111i1·1'll. Cull !\IR. s1NrT F'or 'l'usti11 1trt•11. 11:~2-:iocill t.:JTU .• Friday, part !line, xlnt J)ei1\c1·!il1il) E:q.11.•ri•'lll't' R1'- 1 Coilla !\h~i;u 6~:~20 11.11<1 11111turr, Ka1ary open. .l1>r:olntn11.•n1.. CJ{Er _ bren.kfasl shift. Ref DENTAL Assist~;11 . cleanin~ typing a ~1~t10 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. Irvine 133-9107 Across frocn O.C. Airport Keypunch Operetor F/lime temporary for ap- prox. l rno·s. Qualified keypunch/key v c> r i r i er 'I Univnc 1701-1710 n1nchine expcr. desired, hut notl l"t"q'rl. Appl y he.l\\'n 8 8: 12 L. l\I. Cox l\Janu r .Co .. Inc. I~ E. \\'ltl'llf'r. SA Equ11r Oppor. ·rcn1ployer . , S!J.l·."1.1-11 . • 11,11• Union ivage. 3110 inst rue! Ion, x-rn~'ll & 111Jinc !;\Ill,!·. :'IJ,.C,\H.Tll' HUICK I Nril'JJ!Jl'l Blvd NB G73-9792 fn111t office. Non·11on1oke.r. GIRL F'RIDAY. ma I u re, KELLY GIRL 1;1.-i.·i0 &H•'h Rll'd. -~-• Pn•f un1lcr 30. good driving r eco r d, \\"c•Kln11n!!ll'1'_ ! Civil E~r Conslr $hlK DENTAL s 1• t~ r c I Hr y, ex-Luwtna, 49-1-9-l:.R I AUTO I lil'11'I Acc\ng. illttr to s1:1K I perierK'e ncc<'s!if\ry, O\ff.!r 35 --GROUNDSMAN Elec, 1'l'chnician 10 $lj K ) 1·:<. ~111111 usr;:istant, l'X· S,'>.lt9-$i18 Pff n'IO!lth Service Manager for S.·1·r:1·1:!ri~~ -· lo SGalJ. Ne~·ixi"rt Bt'a(•h. ·l!&-4601 $ii l~S•~ Per nKM"llh $ SUMMER MONEY $ Join the Kelly Corp Jobs In WANTED Experienced ltu11t rol Engr 10 S14-Sl51.;: Jl('rienct•t"I. for prnctic~ in GROUNDS LEADMAN I locel G .M. Dealership. Aud~I Sf'l') · !'.A. 10 $62" DE7\'TAL Assisr11n1. E.'!-Si">flfl 1\"rir1en 1'1'sun1c 1n S.1d· • Good pay a nd percent· 1 t'_lrr..: Typist.~ !~ pl'ricn1i.'<I, chair I' Irle . 1lll•haek \r11 11ey u 11 if i rd Packai;?ing, La he l i n g, nd S d ~t)l>UJ1'.'h to "':"" X-ltays. Spaniiih helpful, fr· Sc:hool District. Alr. Shinkle, A:issentbly-Tralnee & f'.Xpor, age a car. ~':' r1su-l:,,>.p(.•t'. fi•llt>r S~ inq(' bclll'fili'. !llS-23.'l'.l 24611.; Chris:i.nta. :llission PC A!M!.1nbly -Soldt"nn_g & me to, Class1f1ed Ad I A".:it ~k~pr . .~iOO DESALINIZATION R&D I \"ie-jo, Ca. 92675. Ot>adllne Han 1es:is1ng, i\I a c h 111 e ::so3 c /o DAILY PILOT llll'<I Claim.; f ..... :1111 $600 Julv !2. Operators & l\lany more.- p O Bo• 1560 Cosla NEWPORT RECEPTIONIST SEC. · . · · p 1 Ag f''rorn de~ G:d lyplsl 60 GUARDS 1 lst. 2nd & 3rd shirt~ open. Mesa, Ca. 92626, 833•~:: Or.,•N~1. \\'Pi\!: no ~/h. Prcicr 2' Y" J:'uU & P ltinie PoYfl1ons . ~~liw enming~. Ap1,1y &t 2 Cnl1l1CC Ir. 2 y1-s ~"Ork txpt.'1'. t~•n h1 Orflll'l'e CO•, L o 11.J; ' Auto Mechanic 64 .317o S:i50/nl0 plus ben. An E<1unl 1~11eh. L11.g1u1a Nlg-u1.•I in Dr· 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. ou~y 1"1'1)'1111 ll~(·nr·) In llunr Cl.J','\,,J,NG i1"'i·non. A111 • nprortun11y r n1P1 o Y <' r . I i.;ull(\ & Co111pton n1't'f1~ 101· Irvine llJ.9107 · el nl'r~ ii v1.i<1~ .\ hnt• ("o~ffl ~li•sa, nr. Bus. Full C'Ot'[l. 002-8881 l'h'(• i;tl!tldy cniplO)'mt'nt. IS Acrws fron1 O.C. All'IXll't " I I I r " HUl'll'< .~ R1oe Constr11ctlot1 11uulitled applicanht 1vl10 de· . . n1P1.11. wnh 1;1",..1 1n11~n 1 ,.,. 11,11,. po~ition, ;, <h•Y 1\'k, ~I Yrs. or sge or oldci\ Apply F..qunl 0115>0r. F.:n1ploy1.1· !ll.'r. $~2 ~1 . s t11r1 . Cal l · ~26 So Lt' -·- For u f'01:r111, Jo1l1111lh 1111· l~·-~1 1 i\1nc, :'llt·.\llis1cr, ;;.1; .. zwo. DIAL A JOBI •n Pl'l'SOll, • • nion of /J('nerlt.~. call ,\ii'. lin1ir h, St., Anaheim, hch1·n !I am & KEYPUNCH s-17-s~i.'i:i. C'LE:RJ C,\I~ • ,,1o'T"s'·,,,,, .. •--,,~ly Service I ~ 1~11. Rr•lnders Age_ni:y """" •' DAY SHIFT Bi\B'iSl'rrF:n tlf.•t'll('fl ni} •riOO Cflnlt>\lll or., N.B. An F.qunl Oppor. En1ployer lt01111• for IS n\(! 0111. Olin CLERK 557 3401 traru;p, a Gptn. 5.16-12:l.I • Ho1plt1Jity Host.ts _ BABYSITt ;n .2:-11~1.1:..· ~ ·Service per hr. 0\\·11 t1·0.11~J).)J'l.L11lon. TYPIST Dishwasher & Busboys Ts looking tor \ro·n)('n to • 6~~""'23771 :11 i\lu~l l.H· t'lenn & n•nu. Apply Y.'Cll'Omf" &. intcn•le1v new r. !\Io's aclua1 11'0rk r:xJ)('1'. on keypunch, keytape or key disc dcv!(.f.. If you USED GARBENSTANGEL l\fust have rlght-handM· 2oenstift with powtr dip. poltek. Would accept ear- ly model with batttty oP. e rated plddlebottom. Writt: Cluslfitd ad No. 114, DAILY PILOT, P.O. ox 1560, Costa M~. CA truly understand garbenstangels it's time to garben . . . If .yoo don't understand it may already be too late but, what the heck, send in the coupon anyway ' ·············~·············· . ., . • Yes, I will bu il d a garbenstangel ~ or launch a • • search for one I can put in shape for exhibition at • • the DAILY PILOT-South Coast Plaza Build A Better • 2nd Shift. 1.1in. 3 yr.~. exper. tes1i ng_resistors. capacitor!!, pulse tra ns f9rmcf'S, c!c. In-Process Inspectors 2ntl Shilt. 2 yrs. exper. in. spectlng cables, c i r c u 11 boards & chassis. Electro Mechanical Assemblers lst & 2nd Shifts. A min. 6 1no's expcr. In one of tlw follov,ring areas; compQll(>nl preJ>llralion, hand soldering, assen1bly or PC bon.rds, cableing &/or \\'it'C\\'1'8p. Data Control -Clerk Previous c.'Ompu !cr prcf'd. 2nd Shift. Secretary c:-;pcr. Typing 60, sh 80. Prev~ expcr. tn engineering pttf'd. Shipping & Receiving Cle~ Recent exJ)('r. prerd. l'llUl!t be willing to v.'Oliri:-overtime ·when requested. Keypunch Opr Min. 3 yl's. exper. on 029, too. ~take °'''11 drucn card1 & verlf)'ing. lf you n1cet uny of lhollt! qualiflcatlo115 &: a~ looking for a po81Uo n wUh a gl'OY." ing Orange County con1- Pt1!er t.'Ompony & l<*>ldng tot' offen, no proml11e11. Please Ap_ply In Per.on Or Contact B . Krafka ""BV"fTTEP.___ I In n1•rso11, $urr t,,. ~ir1oln, n':'li1h•11111. Suh.,.; or a.d\'tr· OI' ~ • -rn.v t'll111•., r, 1 1 1 "' ~--N ,·~ h JJ 1 •1 1 doys/y.·k, II hri1/dh)' 1 111111"' 1;.irr 11111•uing rl'{lu rf'8 59::0 \\1. \ . .011sl ThV)', ,8 . 1,.,n!l <''i!'l"-'r. t' 1,,u . " t~ 1------l'T'htld. \-\'\II fm.-J W'l'll. ~~':\'p.~ a i;a.udul~ ·~Uh cx1.·•·l_l••nl -n lSJl \\IASUf:l:: hrl"I' car & typewriter. TI('C. 9m-.11B8 j t}11u1c sk1l111. Son11• Pl'(>\'JIXL.111 k BUS ll0Y$ ~7-:i.n!l~3~·==~--,,.-,,-'°' Appl)• In Thi' PC'l'!()nnl'I Of"part"lt"tlt l\londa.v·rri. 1J an1-12 Noon PACIFIC MUTUAt- • Garben~tengel Contest and International Rallye. • : f!leas e-tell--m e-more. • • VDM BARTE."NO!:;R r 11 . '\lll'fl~·ncr 111 imrr:1I olllf-.· ,\lll>I) blli n 2 le~ pm. i{OlJSEKf.;EPER, cart of 100 Nt!"'fJOrt Center Dr. · u 11nle, 1lu1i1•• 1\111 IW• helpful. \\'Ill "'-I home ,t, J ehildl"f'n, 5 MY• a N••-llen•I• nhthl.!I, Al-o p/thnr n11\n. ''" n. , f~xf,'d. Nent Nppe11 r:Ul(_'f, I li:xrrllt>n1 lri""' bcne'it11 in· THE DERBY we<!k. Ov.·n lrtmf!portatk>n. .... ., ·rurtlerock area. 979-m2 or zsLEG'L SECR2E=T•RY Cn t RI~_? -1 r·lud1~ 1"0lflfl8 llY JH'lid i.:ro11p Ht111aumnt IC3-.'i89:'! Rlt 6 PAI. "" ""' e BEAtrrtCIAN, full lunC". 1n.~11ral'lt'r . 1262 S.1-~. Brl11QI Ave>. --=~-For corporal~ a enc r a I l!Xp'd ln todRv'.ti 1tylii1jJ. I $11nta Ana I SURA.NCE coumtl. Good 181\1 A- • SllAAfPOO GIR.L. rliii.:.> R41f\IY To ~-AGENCY GIRL 11horthund ikllls required. • NAME . .. ..... _,,_\ . ... --· .. --·~· . ·~·-. •· ' . • • ADDRESS ........... _ ........... .. . ' • CITY ........ , ....... , ............. --.-----ZIP AGE . • ----.----. • PHON E --· ...... ·--• ....... -... -.--....... - Varian D•t• M11chlne1 Irvine 2712 Michelson Dr. IU-lM)G, •• , 236 F.qual Oppor. Etn~r s" ND c RAB II A I RI ci..~$iff'fl ,\(t Nn, .Iii~~ * DISHWASHER Co111 1111•r1~i1.1l lillt>S urtdernrlt--X~nt mlary. <:811 m-9002 O&SIC:NS 1;, 00l>:[~Y 1;!1u1 p ti & k d Ch• Ing .tr ra ti111:. £)!per, /ICCt'~. LEGAL Secrtlal')'. Nc\\'pDr'I lluntlnglon Be11ch · · )\ :x;o flrt int ~Ile· 11 11· 1rr Pt·.nt..'()ck ln•uN1rn~ i\lN Seo.ch 11.llom<'y nee<I& !!;harp 96.'h'Wll3 Co1nn !\IC'«tl, Ca. 926~ 1~. "So1ull n.i:utl' t•a1-e llm'· Brlldky "£l-l~'i : ~1~· Secretnry iv/·-1 ikltlt • M• .. : • You don't I~ a gun to ---~~ T,, 1-.~111r~1 111t.nl, !/(f!l2 Dt-l a11·l\1'\.', llunl · ' 01 ' • 11>..,..,.. ,, ...... M__,., DAILY PILOT po h 1160 c M c... tlW "Draw Fast~· v.'hen YoUI BEA~\' Oi1t'. to 11 o ".'In I{ I 1111 i1pplit·t1t.ion form , lnl(lCWI Bc:it•h, SIZ--0611 , r:d.1 •\ny day ~the BEST DAY to ~.!nslbf11~ .. ~ 5'i.t:i~~ 111 I' •• ' ' • • w ' .... .., • phwe aft ad In the Dalty • • r,~f.d ... Good . c:"15!ttnfliliml)1 f.<iu11r Opr.»r. f'.fnp1o)-',..r n1 1'1.S. n1n an 11.dl Oon'I delay. . .... J • • • • • • • • .-• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I Pilot \Vnnt Adi! CaU 00\v ~,92-.i!IOG . .)!.ll-2177. .call t0011y ~8. _ 1.':.'':.:"..:'::'"::.'_:':::l'c::"'.::'-'-' '--''~'2:.:'"'='':i•.----------------------------11~·:_£!!;1!!2~11!!:_· -----· • ; . " • • - .. l - ---· . . . -. . . ~ ,;;._ --,_-_-_-_ .,._ • • . ;q • DAH.V PILOT 29 1 1 I .... , llll 1 l[Il] I mJ I Et, .. , .... ' ...... ![§] ~I ----··.:;)I~;;;, -,~, l[fl]l ~ _ ..... _ ...... _IITTJ I ,, •• tu•s a A &it*J•••t .. Help W onted, M & F 7IO Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Antlqu .. IOO Mochln"y 816 Se w ing M•chlne1 128 PRINTINC OFFSET PRESSMAN ,2ND SHIFT ' KORD 64 end 1250W with T·51 two color unit. MuJt be a bl• to maintain uniform cql· or b.laitce and hair· line r-eistratlon on coded lltho labels and be able to setup and print on 40 pound lit• weight stock. We need a craft1man who is a nlf starter with .2-:4 years · experience in offset presswork. Ex- cellent ben•fit pack- age end sterting sal· uy. Apply in PCf'SOn or Call: Dona LeVerett (n11 540-5000, Ext. 250 HYLAND LABORATORIES 3300 Hylond Ave. Costa ~1esa, Calif. 9263) J>ROOUCTJON CO~'TROL J'ERTF.C oUen permanr.n1' en1p1oyn"1ent, pa.wt vacation liher 6 months plul!i l ~ttk f)llld time 01r 111 Ch.ris1m&11, l'Ollll)(lrty paid life, ho51>ilttl. -"<Ul').-ical, medical & ~1al benefits. Excellent worlting conditions and g r owth potc>ntlnl. EXPEDITER Thbc job 'Win ~ntail pre> duction shortage tollOW\lp und parts expediting. Should be familiar wilh elcctroriics pr o du c ti o n control. l\linln1u1n I year experience In production ex· peditlng / dispatching re- qu ired. Apply Or Submit Resume To PERT EC BUSrNESS sYsra.-ts lTI-22 Annitrong A\1enut? Santa Ana. Calif ... PROMISES! PROMISES! PROMISES! RECEPTIONIST Soc'y/Mktnv to S600 TECl!NICIAI< SCRAM LETS LITE BOOKKE A.'llist Ch31'111in;: <l)'Mmic PERi'fX: olfton . pc-rm~t • -EPJNG 1.taniu:er ol lo!krlceU~ of em~rht-nl , p11.1d va.c:&t10ll For Acounting Ofc thb ftamtAls N.B. ('(), Op· lif'IM" 0 months plU!I .1 \l~ ANSWERS \Yant lhwi> worn-.n to ha.ndlc Jll.'lr'\untty to k'tmi .all piud Onie oft 01 Otrutmns, tronr ~. Call \\'t"!lt(oi'tl 1.Jhiulc1 of this depL Xln't compnny Jlllkl llfe, IJOiilpital, Uwrines.s Sl'lvlc:~. 563 y"· poUinUal tht' co · xuni:iall, n1"dkill Md den· P).lll()l'1 -llll..'dcy -&unac• - 19th St., Cdsta JI.Joa. motes ~ \\ittwi: P.fu' tat tK-nefi!JI. ~<'l""llt"nt \l'Or'k· ~tlU<.<0! -llA~1~10CKS ROCh;\'EU. f>t"lt~ I a It I t' Sca w, 2 hp. w/.starw:I and .u·· 11•jl,S, S."lro. 641"'i-lllf7 M1sc•ll"in90us 818 612--0212. benefits. Ftt to applicant ~ Ing rond!Uol\$ and .l;T'0\\1h A "''''al n~uw1•: "'l/i''1o Somr <.'Ompe.nles nlakc pro-IR;;;;EU,_,,E~F~''-:•~w-;-I ~, -,~h~b-0-,-,cd I Also Fee Jobs. p(ltC'11l L"tl. Ofl~ ot thO~ r-.;1ny j)lj'y<;hlr1· mlst.>s, we make offcn;, operator, tue clerk for rie~· Abigttil Abbot Person n (' J tr!~~s. NQ ('OUt.'hl'll-J us t car auto agency, Tues thru Agcnc.'Y, ~ \\'. Wan1er, ~sR TEST 1c;1~A~M~•~IOC:7-K~S~·~··~~~~~ V•rian Data Machines Sat lm-9300 ext 35. Suite ni. S.A. 567-6122 • ANNIVERSARY SALE J{as The Immediate • RN nigh! shift rcllef ll-7:30 SEElGNG dln.>ct salesulf'n TECHNICIAN Admiral Jknbqw antiqU('l>. FolJ~ 0£ertings Beverly ?.1anor c 0 n v , tor hlghl,y desired product. ~hUlY i:uod1l'1. D u n c 11 11 Shipping & KBceiving Jloop, 49&-S786, Salesmen now earning ovt<r Phyfe DIR 1abll·, x chairs. *AUCTION* $S0 per dfl.y. \\lorr~ or men. , Sl50. Clo .... 1 July ·Ith. T.;ii Fine J>"urnllurc ROUTE L full or pnrt lirne, No a~r (THIS IS A 1-:a:it Coasl. Cd~I. :.lext ru Clerk SA ES 11mi1. c.n 111, 01~m1 . CHALLENGING & 11,.,,,,, r ,,1. ""'' • '''""· Vita-Lean Beef Co., 1121 E. INTERESTING JOB) Appli1nc" • 802 & A11pllnnr1·~ AU<'l k1n~ F rld1i.y, 7:30 p.m. Windy's AuCti on Born \\'llJ. Ii.'$'!, calibrate, troullle ~'t-:N'.\10H."-..: a u r o n1 at i (_" 20751 ~ ~l"\l·f!Ort, C~f 646-S68G Prefer a min. of l yrs exper. Draftsman 1 'lr. cxper. should lncludr logic drawings & Interest in learning PC \l"Ork. Re.ceiving Inspectors i..ru'l:'l' National Co. is klokini: for r>cnnanent stable people . ~xceUC'nt S"larting saltuy. Jr 1nte:rellted CaU : 714, 774-0330 Ash St., Fullerton. Service Writer ~hoof and n·JMir <.VMlJ>Ul\'r v.·11.sltt•r & 1tll.~ dry1•r, bo1h Behind Tony's Rldg :'>lat'!. S • M OUlpl.Lt 1nlcr6 film SYSft'lllS. f<Jr S80. ~tu)-1Ht:: nulon1nlic sut~ER lll\l illoVil' COJl\{'l'l\ &: 8rYIC.e GftGger Backgro1.uxl in <llgilttl i·lr· v.·tishcr $65. Gu11ra11f{'rd & CflS(', like lll'I'.', $-1;). Pol11ro1d C"uirry tp1"t·fe1T11Wy TI'L in-trN> drlivef")". ~lli--867:? or lanrt ,eru11cr11 Y.'ith flash at· SALE.S -Mechanic !<>grated circuib>), powt'!'.~·~·7~--~·~·~'-------taclun<>nf llkf' l\C\\• s-1~. Ai11r· SPLENDID SPARE ·•u~lies. CRT d<'nf.'Cti?n <."!t· YREIGHT Oam~g" ~le 011 bo\\•llng boll \1•ith f,ild out TIME OPPORT M~' ~an <."Ui.t.s. CJlT (:0'-m:>' (1n;1uts ne\\' llotpolnt & \\'hlrl~I 1'()(,"'Tllng ca.~" 1.:on1plcte In-' UNITY •IJ1ilt l\Jkl St'JVO t·1n.·t11tw hd.pfW. l'\.•[riro: / v.·a.~hC'l""S 'l dl)'f'l"'S cludln' "hoc·~ <11"0r11 I Nationally known lAl rat~ 2 )'t!W:S !onnal t~~ining plus 5'15--0780. ' thnf'!!I ll~e ncv.·. ?.lt>n'~ ~ilf' cl~gan~ns:d ~~ g:r; Parts Man , 3-a )'t"•ll"5 '-'Xperl('f\C(!, uo-rP01Nr t4 t·u r i . 9'11i'.t Pholl(' &l-1--1687 !und ralsing line Includes Aot' . . TEST reflij:;l'1·:11or lre<•zer. Only 10 ELEGAl'\T, unui.ual furn. nf· candy, noveltiC?-S, greeting 1ve grw:1ng 1n1J?Ort drnJ. mos old. $:.!00. 673-ml days, fi~-e furn .. rct1ig .. twin Bil An cqu~ opportunity 2 y t ,_ rs l'PC('fl e.xper, in· ~==~•l:ml:pl:wl:Y~'='===::: J 11pecling circuit board com· ii poncut.s. (lst &: 2nd Shifts) In-Process · PURC!-IASlNG • A/P cq;:RK Inspectors 2 Yrs exper. inspecting cables, circuit boards & chassis. (1st &: 2nd shifts ) cards, candles, plus n1uch crshlp need!'! quahf!ed IX'I'· ~ . f'\'es 1\47-2888 !K~t. tn:iny ni('(.' odd ch(>sts, 0 . aonnel 646-930.1 ask for Bob TECHNICIAN ·~---~-----" !r1Ull'S, 1·ht1Jl'S, bcJOkCM\."!i. rnore. ur commissions !ht? · .' · Rent Wash•rs/Dry•rs highest, no lnvcstnwnl, \l'I' SERV~CE Stat.ion Sales1nan 12_ \Vk. Full maint. Pllir of ~r11 ~-Lrg or1c11tul train. Prestige position con· full lime. 1 _Yr cxper. Top REQUIRES n1!nimum or one 1' 6.~9-1202 * :~g, 1;.i~ll~in:s~sf~i;._s;'~!;~;;~'. lacting schools, •churchc·s, pay . for right rnan + year cxperiCflC'<' [X'1'forni! ·r---,-"-""--'='-"-- clubs., organizabons. \\'rite. bc>1wfits . .l\tcc_h. knowledge. fun c 1 ion 1 <.'st a ni Building Materials 806 ,::"3~2-..1:.;::97~0e,.::•~'~'~"~~=9582=.'--- lnclud1ng telephone number ! Chevron Station corner of troubleshoof of I · ALL Olf'vy parts. ~!9 6 to: P.O. Box 85, Ca1XY_-a Nc1,-port BL &: Del l\1ar, digital cqui~enl e ectronic • Surplus . Building Cornplcll' cn.c:!nc $ 2 o o. Park, Cal 91304. " j C~·I. c ' l\fATERtAL . HY-A's Of NE\V Heads S!Xl. lrlli1kt's S:"JO. Sales Rep saoe+:"-.Oe SERVICE Station Salesn1an USTOMER IT£l\IS? Doors, lu~1bt'r. ply. Rlock SIOO. J.j() Hlock Sl.00. Jmniedlate Opening Expertcnced Only >..1nt't \Vages & Bt?nefits Sche fer Bros., Inc. (J.Urn. t.1anul. in G. G.1 Call l\taria 17141 894-4429 f'or Appointment , Equal Oppor. Employer /~~~M~al~e~&~F~em~al~e~~ I PRODUCTION Publlo Rolotion• Receiving Inspector Highly Mot"vated 1 Hosp .. paid & good \l'Orking ~'~._alum sh('(!lmg, nlold· l 27 Head!'>. $50. '11.P. Heads Westclilf wtmcch. ability. F'/linll'. SERVICE inc:. v.·1Mrni.·s, etc. Sl:l"i. ~·IZ-1150: S.12-J<\·11 Personnel itgency Hosp .• paid~ good ~11i·orking BUILDERS SURPLUS nr~SIDI::~TS or Th,.. Hun· JKll E. Edinger, S.A. conds. C.l\l. 540-1745. 2400 So. ~to.in St., S.,\. lington \li'OUld like to have a lMark II I CenterJ SE~VICE Stalion _Sales111an, TECHNICIAN l\lon thru S:it J().5 mlrm1>honc <lonatl'.'d for 512-8836 r/tune eves. Lite 1nech. 714 : 546-1032 thcir usr. Tht• 1-luntin~lon SIN Cit;H 1QUCh .t-!lt'W. hlOlt. r11hi11•''· gnod 1.."01k!, y.·/al• tu<.'h. pri. pty St25. Gi3..fi37tr Swap s . 834 \\'II.I. lr:itJ,-. or i s: 1 n • 1 dr!llv.'OOd urr&lij,'CAl<'nl& for ~·:L..;,·1-r"· 11.1llntlng or an 1lc1ui>lll ;~2AA TV, R1dio.-H'"'iF~i,--­ Stereo 836 RENT TO OWN TV'S & S'rEREO S10 i-;., Crt'<Ut Chcck•No Deposit t·1~· ~·ll\'£·ry • r'rL'C' Repair ~lon!hly H"n1als Avnilahle Open Eves. 54J..4444 •, 1\ P1\NA.'iONIC &len.'O tape f'Cl'Ol'd(•r \\'hh autornnllc n>\'•'l'!lt". UiW~ Ampex 1% l't'<.'I ~ 11nel h1Pf's, lnclude11 3 sJlC'.'(111. 2 stC'rt'O speaker.I, llC'lt<lpl••IW , Jj prt"1'el'.'Onktl • tapt•li aud hlank reels -:lll f'c1ul1,n1c•111 1.s brand-~w. A~kln.'! $T.J(J, f 71,1 ! 846-5491. * Summer Speclal * Rebuilt·P ictur• TuM $87.5~21 '' or 25'' Color * 2 ''l':Aft \\'ARRANTY ln~1aU11uon Available R l1,_.·~ ·relrvlsion Service fom1rrly r-.l~a North CentC'r I Bl('k S. (Jf Baker 546-6002 (l[M'tl !t--:l 16 days) STEREOS. 1973 GARRARD ,\IOl\f'I. l)U!O I u r111 ah({'' A:\llr~tl:\fPX rttt!iver, :1 \l ay :lir ~11i1 p ensio11 Sl1f'Uk•·r"'. JusJ r c I e tt s C" d fro1n \\'llN'hi1uS£>, still bo."'<t"cl & ~11:11·. !\If~. ll'r S•l&l.90 No1,• Sl9:!.75. Te r nl s. 89:~1. . MANAGER P.R. , At least s Years expericnc'c EXEC. LEVEL l\1in. 3 yrs e.xper. teSting resistors, capacitors, pulSI.! transformers etc. Stock Clerk SALESMAN _ i\lanagemcnt knowledge. 1 Yr local expcr. F 't Rer!mnll'tll Re s ide n -, s , lrninee. Home improvement Nein appearance. Apply 1J1Et expansion of lhe pro-.i --"-'"-'-"_'• ______ 8_10 1 ~84""2-=77~88"=~~~~-~ sr~:R.EO~:· 197:1 l)\'NA- sales. S650 + l'Omm. 60 morns, 2590 Ne"1>0rl Blvd uc support department ~1AYTAG \Vasher & dt)"f'J" QUAD S)'!llem, 200 watt FA-1 required in !ibetgla.ss boat hrs. Wttk. Color Tile. 2221 C.i\1. 'has !!rt.•ated opcnings for SACR~.~ICE NU SUiO pair: 9xl2 rug & pad lltl'l"f'Q rt'l"t'iver, 4 Quad construction of lengths Ovt'I' We seek outstanding sales ~· s..~ · · oriented lady for oor Irvine •.,o.,;j. ~~;;.-..-•.ISO[)' expenence office .... Ideal -for ~results .. --knowledge of tib!tglassing hfin. 6 mo's exper. (2nd shift) · 1-farbor Blvd, Costa Mesa-, oo!lm Ge-.....,oon J uli ti tecli.nicl5uis to P ". r fo r m " .~ITURE · S20: krtchen tbl w14 1·h11 irs spt•1tkl"'l"'I, 8 tmck !ape ~k. ..,'"' • -· me ~s and,J\.'pall' of data Cootl'mpo_ a.utiq.-Qrass \'!'{ J d 645-1l26 day_ help .. A-1usl be ~x, processing· .systcifts and set -v.11lliut blt. top 6 ; S!i:' sol $.'Al;.-ii«ange ~l4t ~adphone plug SALESMEN • Exl'iting op. penenced, xlnt benefits. sub-!f)"Sll"'m'I. i\loclcm c · IC'{l0ter d1m:1ors chr. 'all chnlno..,S.J.i ca. G;r.:HlJ.)O. 111 Jlti~s. us ~ fnm! tectmiq!Je!I are mandatory. oriented, career minded, Salary commensurate ,vith creative .... vmnn who likes to ability. Excellent frir).ge bcn-'run her own show'. This'--is eflts. ~ -a m;ponsibte_&: _digni1i_ed Send resume to: pOsition offering personal gro.vlh \\'/$.<J, Calif's fastest g1"0wi11i 'Temporary J-felp Service, Xlnt t.1arting salary + exp. acx:t + comm + auto. alk:r.v. · & loads of benefits. call Dot t l e , 54().4'150 for , confidential appl. KETTENBURG MARINE Clerk Typists rt ·u· · · Prefer manager t v. p e . "·' 1 il quip. • .,..,, T . 1 _, LI ·d ti A 1 v.·11rrlMluS4!. Now SlJl.40 po uni es an investment R .11 , ARCO 1901 & JllC'TII a.... ac· itil.'s as V.1!1\ .,.-.uu. 1ge!.r ur sp1-u on dbl qui R n.: !\.'It' s · · sales. \Ve trnln. M.P. Kruse el 'Y 8 C • as ronlf>(lny po.id benefits bi..>d -10 fur pillO'A'S cont· 26 RK Games. $S0 up, 8 .. ·"=}-050=~1-· -------! Typing--50 w.p,m.-----A-nlin. yrs office exper. & Co., members Pacific Newport, .?.1 · ll\l'llit qusHficd applicants. plt!le unit $130. Sears dC'IUX Brnns\lo\ck Gold C-f'0\\'11 4~x!I AD~lllL\L 24" rolor TV . 2 "Sfock Exchangc.-Clll r SERVICE-Station Atwhd"aftl ff yOil are lftt~4rra 1nodels, \Vhite \l'a.shcr-& gn~ Pool Tables, ~a, lnslnt" pill)'. UllF-VJ-ll'~ cn.<il. 547-59'11. (!xperienc1'd •. __App~ • ..i·n position · that orren1 gf'Ol\'lh dryer $._175. Bro\l·n .~. blk Snooker 5x.IO $6!r3 ea . $150. !\lust :-;re to appf. Secretaries Min. 3 yrs experience. ing I)(), sh 80. TYi> SALESGIRLS person, 990 E. Coast Hwy, and dive~i!y nnd have 1 tO hC'nvy rug 12 by 15 $225. Oil &18-Sl2·1 1 c-=-'~'"'=~------ Exper. l/Ume for hiJl;h Newport Beach. 2 )'l•ar.s digital experience Painting:r. 56.i2 Jfighgatc t-.f I ~ C EL [. AN E o us f{W\. 110~11'; Pntt>rttiinmenl _ fashion contemporary SHAKLEE P r o d ucts -plC'ase a'!ply. • Terr. I,!' \~I 11 e ''.Prcsi~nt ll,ousP~ld ltc1ns. .G L center, color TV, A?.'ll F'M meris shop. Good ~; • ?.fakers or Organic Cleaning Eng1neer1 n g -Jlom£>s. R: .. 1-395.1 r {'fr I ij e r a 1 0 r. Conk!UI' ~~i:o,,· ,n.:cord plnyrr. Call portunity. call 547-7733 Product!, Food 15upplement11 SALE! \Yarehoilse packed rt><:linrr "'i!h v i brat o r . -"""'""""O Il you meet any of lllese1~===c...:;=..=c.cc::::._, and bea u ty aid s. with FURNITURE! Davcnpurl. 1121 S. l·lallady, \\'ILL buy color TVs & 18'.te qua.lificatlons & are looking Distributorships available. TECHNICIAN lOO's slyles 10 choose from Santa Ana znodf'I black & \\' h l 1 e for a position wi th a grow· Santia90 Bank 54&-Jll32 for intormaUon. Living roonise lJving rooms KE.Nl'wJOIIB auto .,.,·ashini; por1ahlrs, v.'Orking or not, TEMPO TEMPORARY JIELP 281.D Carleton StN'Cl San Diego, Ca. .e'llt); Miss Mummery An equal opportunity ..,-... ·=====--ing Orange C.Ounly com-e Exp'd Tellers, full or part SHOE SALES n1 ~'1EDIATE . Bedroom.'!, dining rooms, box machine SJO. Xln! cond. :llq....lll!l jpulerU company & looking time. rutJ & P/01·mc, •x-. ~1y. I 'h . . ·1h'P"dry1~g I ~or sprgs, mall r's, s Io v cs·. Tv.1n ?.la pie beds I ead s. c,·~Dc·,lcl~R-A• c·L-2cl-.. -----I or o ers, not promises. • Exp'd proof n.....rator -.,... "" ,',c ~1c1an ~1, . 1gila 111-rc-trig .. wnsht>rs, dryers, all / . <-"Olor TV . ..,...,. Xln't bt!ncfits + profit shar-rgiatcd circuit board al great sn~·ings' ~hesl • ,<, nllf' ·stand. $25. ln.s1nt play. UltF-VJ-11'~ cnsl. Please A~ly In Person Contact i\Tr. Lorem: ing. Busy, pleasant store. back g r o ~ n d. Perform REPOSSESSION" CEf\.'TER 3-fiO!IJ Sl5!l .. ~lust see 10 appr. ',"' A CONvfN!ENT SHOPPINC AND SEWING GUIDE FOR THE .. · Or ontact 714m 5200 • \\'f's !clitt SllOCS, N.B. ~fr. brt'a.d-bo~n1111g an~ ('(l.m· 619 E. 4th St., Santa Ana PH 0 N E -~111-l c 400-S, c"c"'->-87l!O~-·~~~----·t B. Krafka S -'~l~a~ro~w~l~tz~. ~54~8~.s684°"=·=~-I fl01Ucn1-kve l troublcshool111i;:-Daily 9 to 1 * Sunday J 1_1': a u to Ill a I i c 1 l'lf'phonc S90. Colo1" TV ante nna, used:! .r.::A?.ISTRESS for sail TAILOR FITTER :ind chC'c k out ron1µut('r . :.> answering n1:1chinC'. Nt:\\'. ~'" rnttker, e~ w/ppw e J" pcripheral equipntent , LP. & bdr. ltalt!UI Prov. An-642-78TJ nio. """· n1 a chine. Job \l'/Op· Silverwoodl Du1i1•s in<"lude lab tcstin~ or !l11ui• gr. "Tiling table, gor. SWIVEL Bamboo chair, li).:4'" ---*-"'-'-"'~-"'-*---·> portunlly. 675-6970 Ex ....... F/1in1e for N"'\·pon engineering protol"""s •-" gl'OU-"< $200 ·~d lapcst-. ~1UST Sf'!! 2 beaut 25" ·~· -.· _,,,., "" " ._, ™'.,.,"Poll' lamp; Underwood Bt'ach store. A1n't <.'O. bcne-maintenan<.-c of d0cumen· tutted couch, xlnl. cond. type\\•ritt>r. Hand ni ad e "11'1\lnut 1'0lor t'On90\e15. Xlnt VDM GAL ON THE ·co. .. __ _,,,,~ 0.:. Varian Data Machines • Secretariel e Typists fit.s, Apply S58 So. Broadway, talion. Should have workin1t S150.yellolv veh-et lovt" srot shawl 642--02T2. oond SISO t'll. 968-b-54 aft 2 · - L.A. or eall A1r. Carlini, kl ~1,·l~!:__,of 1T TdLd:-_D TL Sbl.501e-1. ,<-J>flee tabible $?5, end ta· QUEEN size watttbed, cus· Zl'' COLOR TV $85. Al50 21 " For an ad In Womtin•s World C1ll Mary Both. 642·5678, •xi. 330 Irvine • PBX Operators • VOLT =2!3'='1629-"'=.'221.==~~---I og1c a1""'w1t n u. 11ion to bl Y1,_mor1. e top pedestal tom rustic wood rrarne. \\'ill blk &. \l'ht tJ(). Both TEL EPHDNE A--·· . G<'nC'r ' e ectron1cs. Re· ta e 1J, 1tlle ,1."0ld tablt' guarnnteM. ~9-<4L18. l ,....,. ... enng <1uircs at least 2 years 11f glass 101• $30. stuUC'd cl•";; trans. & a..._.mble. l\.1ake of. l Main Parts · ,, Loak·Alikes 7131 " ., :.-' . ~":..: . t ..,.,,,. ~-~ .. ' :.. ... ' , ... ,. ' " ~ . ,.c . . . . ' .. ' .... ---~\' ~·.~. .. .,. 1.--~· ~. ' _,. Service, Beach area. Prefer ......, ft?r l!.'U-2800 over 30 yrs. of age. Varied npplicable expt'l'i<'nc-e and $35. Alln Italian bedroom · hours. \Veekends, G73-1lr.G. t"'O year~ cducalional t'lC'C-furn. 8."G-0033. !m2 Southall RAGGED'' ANN 'N ANDY'S 1 Ifs 2722 Michelson-Dr Instant Personnel 833-2400, ext 336 Temporary Service tronics &!Rkground beyond Termer, Tunle Rock, Irvine 5 fl. S16:' 20 Inches. $6. ,.., 10 "•u TELEPJ-IONE ' Sales. \\'ork high school . LIN;l I I &12-6$9 '' f1'0m your own hQmc. Apply (h. Contac.1 \VF.STCLIF'}" r.-toving S11.l_e! -gll{'r nlO( es. · ~------~ Equal Oppor. Employer l84S Cnmrilll! Dr., Suite 106 ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i INewport Beach 546-4741 REAL ESTAT~ SALES SUCCESS CAREER New or exper ienced. Join the World's largest and fastest growing resale organiiatton with a network of over 300 oUiceS-and become a member of our hlillionaire Oub. l\1ulli-mlllion dollar advertising program. Free guaranteed licensing school. Excclll'nt sales training. \Vhnt is your license v.'ortu to you? Check our monthl) bonus progran1 1\•hich means US to )'OU! Please call Virginia Jones &~ll. Eq1111J Oppor. Empioy<"r J-lighest commissions. l::.x· T. Knight Pnrck11rd_ -3'·~11 f:o I o~ 5 N"E\V tires, 9.50. 16.5, 8 3 Lines, 2 Timas, $2;00 periencc n o t · ne<.'essary. (7l•I) 54(}.83-IO 'IV-Ai\f/F.J\T ~tr~. 8 plys. \Vlth v.·hl'l'ls. 842-1150 SECRETARY 892-5184' couch. Club chairs, king slu-rvl'.'S or anytin1e wkC'nds. Lagun3 Beach Unlfitl! School J .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ PERT EC bed, 1'clvinator free~r: * f'IOUSl::HOW run1iture .. dh1trict ls accepting ap-J[MPO'·S rcfrig. 1idC' by sid<-'. 2001 Couch. 2 chairs, din ~I. elc. plications tor Secretarial l·lighland Dr. ~'B ~m Call R41-4517. · positions: t y pi n g 50, BUSINESS SYSTEi\IS 5'15-3"'.45 , Jo~R.EE! \Ve foond 5 a.ban· doncd kllll'ns. Giw one a good home! Housebroken! .....,166 Shor t hand 90 and D I A J b' Jnl2 Armsrrong Avenue STICKLEY coffee table 48" MiJcell1neous Intermediate Clerk, typing •la Q Santa Ann, Calif. ctiamcl£>r ,r.i Sticklt"y 4 poster Wanted 820 5 AOORABL}; ruddly kitten' 50. Apply at District office, • • • Irvine Industrial Coniplt"X lv.'ln bed .'(('1, conipl. All xlnt ff'lf' lo\'i~ hon1C', 6 "'"Ir:\. ~; 5.)0 Bluemonl, Laguna an equal 0 p port u n j 1 y eond. Call ·\vkdays 9 10 5 Wanted Oriental Runs Siam. Sally J cnk1ns 644-1700 Beach before 4:30 p.m. Ju!y NO\V Orange C~ty'15 m.om employer 5'10-S222 ask Jor Ito. ' pri pty n<'f.'<l.~ S!'\"l!f'ai ~ F..\t SIS · lO!h. p~~v!, fielp1nnos:~~~ TYPISTS BEAUT. whitr \l' I l' k r r _ruc7'•~'·~·~·~·1~·'~""~· ~6~7'-~8~773~·~··--I BOX lr<1lne<1 Killens, 1 wet'klr ,,....~_, k[t h t 6 kd l I $100 .~ ol<l, long-haired, one. nil Secretaries 'does it again.' TEi\JPO . (' rn SI'' \\' .~ n I . \\IA..VTED lo buy, like new black, On(' all black \\·ith offers a truly unique ~i:: NEEDED NOW J)l>eorolor lamps $40. i\f11r-tumiturc & lamp!'!, nice' & ~·hitc pa\l':I. 6'16-426S lime saving opportunity for b!c top Ibis. $50. Ch:oi1rs. reason11ble 644-4687 T ' t · 673-4169 PREE Cocka-a·poo. Good YP IS S skilled • · · · · · i11ust have b'OOCI typing skill,;. ~ . . \l•fchllrlT'('n. l~ii yn has TYPISTS 45 w.ri.m .. good fib'llrr \i·ork ~1A~l..F. labl.c .\l /6 ch~1rs, Musical Instruments 822 I 962-7 !20 BOOKKEEPERS & Sf.)111(' officc l'.X!X'ricnc:e. frost rl'\"'f' 1efr1g, f'e(.'hner, c; 10ts, . . -=·=~--·I E rnd. thstress coff{'(_• lablc 19 J 7 f'L N'DER *KITTENS* R.E. SAL SMEN Earn Your Way ••R...02:112 \\'hy not \\·ork in the hottest Th K II G' I W KEYPUNCH Apply In The> "a.ii TELECASI"ER. 642--0176 REO CARPET Realtors a , e a 11 "n t in g 1 0 " e e Y Ir ay Personnel Drpl. S;\1,\LL pink ...,.;~11,, .. ~••· Sli5 .. \\'ho \\'ant dignified & '' lh ,. · 9 12 ~ • "2 5 8£'aeh/F'ountain Valley. • -On Tl P/TI I · 1 · on ru n am-noon $LI. Ex1·1"'llent condiLJon. ..-1:>-193 aft. Pi\1 ..,.., e me me sti111u a11n~ ong or sho1·1 1 [B us train you! Call Phil Or All The Time tcrn1 11sslg11ments • te·w PACIFIC MUTUAL " 673·7311 Cdt.1 * * SCANDALLI accon:l111n 1 'L.. ?.lcNn1ncc, VILLAGE days, couple \l'CC'ks or fev.· * SOFA & LOVESEAT • 120 bass, bcautilu! con-Pets lhd 5"PPilll . r, ltEAL ESTATE. 96J'..4567 )·ou'll \l'ork for us on our n1on1 hs . you dc<-ide! NO\v 700 ~~~~ ~~1~1~ Dr. n("\ler used. both for $155. ditlon. ';iiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiii.:~~ REAL ESTATE payroll in our custo1ncrs of· you can. . . 968-7910, U:orually home. $200 * 962-liG.1 I S4LES MANAGER fices. Just see Kelly' Girl, APPLY BY PHONE \VAITH.ESS, EXPER. RE'F'RJGF:RATOR., co uch , GIB-'IDN EB20C. Base Cats 852 R ..... ou· d lhcn pick th<' hr.;, days, APPLY BY PHON 0vl.'r 21. T\l·o Guys from lln· coffl't' table Aquarium, <lln guitar. $200. Plush h!l11r ----:------.cSd.le uice nee s manager 1 E nmp. •.1•,,·· ,--··-.-.. •~. PF:RSl.1\X knter.!I, bluo. ••·•[,• with 2 years of Real Estate t•nglh of employment that ly, New ltall1tn J{estaw·anl, ln.'! srl. 6<16-.1-1-12. ., ,~...,.., • ., ...,.,., " .. fits ......... lle('(}1_1. Our APPLY BY PHONE "267 r,·,-"c C 'I 96?.-12 10 & ~·nil. c~·A rri.::. ~to;, experimce. Newport Beach _,,,..,. "' .-vi \\'· ·• • \\'AN'rF.D lo buy lik•'-t'll'•1 .......... 1 1-· ""'"'"38 o~·-d· ~··1om•1·• g"t tit" •k1·11, 0 Off' .~ .... ,,· IJU.1 . ,:, ur1. o • ...,. area . ._....,.., 1ng company. ..,..., '" " Call TEi\tP 'S ice al \\'AJTRESS I r•omh1nation fumi1un-& lan1ps, n1Cl' & Exc~llent opportunity for t,hey n!X'd. Nol 1'·ha\'s 5-W-4"50 & Lcl us kl'IOl1' cook neat ap""arantt. n•.j.r;onable. 6lH687 Office Furniture/ Dogs 854 available. ,,., e PUP prorcssional gro1vth. Apply \.\'hal yo ur skills art'. 1'o ncffl Call IW2-li1-19 * QliEl'.::'\·siie hidr-a·h~'<I , Equip. 824 PY WORLD e in confidence. Send J"(!SUme Call or visit t~ C{ln1~ In ri;n;ona~ly ',until \\',\!TRESSES, nmlure, ex· Jikt• llC\l', 1..ftmps, Sat'l"lh<"i<-! _. . I l!KI l\llX}';J) 1--'L'PS. Opt•n toCla.ssifiedadno.638,c/o \\C'ha,~lhe justr1ghl spol pcr, xlnt lips, good hrs. 6T:>--0869 .F~XEC 1111·\l ehro; Si:i/SZ-1. l•;\C'll. Jn.sh Sc t t'Pr ,Costa MeM, Calif. 92626. • Your lime ls valuable. Don't 8,1:..~1 ?., • arage Sile 812 S20t!X>. l'lt'r('e Ent. 867 \V 19 !h1J1.kil! Hull ·r,,n·icr T-0.rli Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, _x ~~ q, ~ for You. H H or Sunset B c h G SN· •·hrs SX 21. DMks r>rJl)i-rmllJl. Colllco... $ 5 o' e u tr .6 \\'3Stl' ii. Invest it Wi!K'IY l\'ilh I ·~·· C/11 642-3-io..'I. I P(IQ{ll1·: Chlhutihuti.' 1..8.h .. Toos on pl"l'tty capes when REAL ESTATE if Tempo at hi hourly rates $S ~ARD Clrrk needed to \1"0rk OAr< din r1n , oak rockrr. onk Pianos/O rgans 826 f Boxel', Coc·knpoo. S\\',\J' the bl'(!('ZCS blo1\'. SALES NEVER A FEE AT TE!l.1PO in utlracth·c Mnv. hosp. hk1·:1sf', 1 dr11\\'l'r ouk r!(•:o.:k. Shrpher<lg ror ?? Stud Scrv Crochet n1ulti<0lor ........,., 2061 Buso·ness Ctr Dr Expcr ntt<?ss. C'.ood \VUR1'!1 l<oU top desk, 6' oak 1Jl<"1""' m" 1 h .... ··•t ·- yokes or gay !K!raps: ';id FREE LICENSE Irvine 83J_1441 Tempo Temporary Help & bcm:lils Please call cabinet or ": m;irblr r~f; ORGAN WORKSHOPS . us~ 1 ,.,,, .... ,. '"" -...,.,, leaf bon:lt-r. Finish cape in TRAINING 642--2410 usk for ~!rs. Jtid· bdmi 111'1: mahogany 4 S.\VE. A llOi\l~LE..'<iS P'E:-r p:Ht~m sti lch. Quick and Pree Placement Service. Across !ron1 OC. Airport T • 0 • dell. ~ PCl"rer bdrm S£>t. \'rry hf'au1 l..1:ir1s:: hriln>il ~ h I !1 n a. h u a ' lnan<'\\•dren:mood? $1::\\· eBR)' in v.-vrsled! Pattem Free Training Program. , ra1nee penlftCJ WHO WANTS TO \\'ORK? cn1'\·£>d91x·l1d1·1nsr1: cur.·· Wednesd•yl 10 A.M . {.0 ~k 1 '"1 ~· Pck.incest;. this quickie dflYlin1er "11'1lh :1 7131: tchild's 2-12); (leen's, Earn while you learn. Al SECRETARY \\e \\i ll trnln you to ~come DRl\rE A CAB? "'I ook Cli111a c11b1nt'I nutr· Or,n't tniy any Ol't'tul 111 1 <~in lhurtd l.>oxic X, prcMy, lti..'OOped neck nm.I misSC'S' 8-18} incl. S\oan (n4) 832-5440. re(' Paid. Great co. 1\'flt'r-11 hrWK'h nlnnagrr of onr of CHOOSE your houn;;, \VOl'k blr top wa,:h .'iland ; 'mvrh1 .)'OU c11n pin.): ~'~~·riln~~r .. 1~~~~~~ Shcph£>rd puppy. Cfll' 111ecves in a nm1nlng .· SEVE?l<"TY·l'lVf. Cf:NTS • REAL ESTATE SALES rHic benefits. \Vork dln't.'tlY our 800 branches. A llChedul· for )'OUrlll'lf. bi' ynur 01,·n 111'1n.' 12ffi ~. 81rt•h, Santti l\'Clmmr hi nllriwl r,..... 1;ork ...,·=~·~·-,,-',--~~-,I jUlt 3 MAIN PARTS! &:nd! for each pattern -add Z5 MANAGER_ 1 am looki~ w/mnn<1~r of R.F.. dt>pt of C'~I trn1n1ng ~~rain \1i ll hoss. :\1C'11 or u·omrn. Qin ~·~:.'>-ln9 shofK, For inlorniallon SlllH·Tiu. ~ \l k!!. n1&IC', hlk Printed Patlcm 9 20 4 . cents for each pattern for for a glncere. hof'IC'St person Nationally knov.11 co. Sal"f'Y s::1ve1 you 1 !O'n 1 • 1 n1ng & t'X· he sllifhtly hand1c:a11pcd. 1 :1\Jt,\(;~; S.'ll": A ;oz. ;·uni c r,rnnef: 1·01n ni~lrrit·h & 1\hl, SiJ011' 11u11t11y. 9 mo. \Vomen's Sizc11 34, 36, ~. 40. Air Mail and Special Handl· who ls inlcrcsted in ix'I· to $000. AIJIJO Fre Jobs. Call IX'r ence n o ice manage-Ne a t-Oenn Ar>f'Carantt• .. "'fl)\!;, ·nu IN, blkl":"i, <'lk r:i '. 642.2851 ).(uld '"'"· 1\li;.1 lrt'<'•lO 'ndlt 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 3G ing: othenvlsc lhlrd-elas.s lerl~lm.sell CALL i tr. Sa.Uy 11a.rt, 541Hill5.i, Coastal n1cnl, budget counseling. \'Is, reri1•1•tl Ai:£> zj to 70. tlios. unll<llK-,., o•r c·o.-'o!<•r.i. 1 C t M I S • ho111r, hlk ~hH)j'.J.{)' fl'lll. 11rt 6 (bu~, 10) truces 1 SAi yards delivery wil l take three . 1 LEADE Personnel A"ency, 2 7 9 0 business promotlon Ir Suriplemcnt your !ncomt'. \f\\" F oas u s c erv1ce _pin, 1197-377!1. ks •-~ ID D1erc er, RSHIP II bo Bl d CM I I . E n1r 11111'1. pl~. r011t1 N"I""""'-* Blvd. "t llou·bo•· -·-'i;'t';;~.,-.,,-:----f tiO-lnch. v.·ee or more. ""''"' 842 •= -~"'~·iiii;';;ivi;i;;';;ii;;,_-.;;;;;;;;;;;.I J>t.'l'scu1nC' superv sion. ~x-Drive n cab 6 hrs or more 3 1 I 1 1 (' • ··~•• " \\'El ~IARANE'-' ,. ,., ,. '" n" All B k ••· DAILY ~. •o•llc"t omplnl)'<C bc-"I< . ., & ""Y• • Applv 1·1, -····••"· 111 r:u · j' vi t" !ll', •[!·. ()nl(' ,....A-,., )·It"'" "' '--' ,-UVE?'fTT·flVl': CE?lo'TS ce roo 5• u~ -~ ~ ...... ular •'J)iII"'' i~::' ..... , .... , ''" _, .~.... &.-h,,,...,~ .• 3)54 Cootin1'ntttl. , "'""'" ~· Short llnir, mal£>. a ll brown for each pattern _ add 2j PlLOT, 105, Needlecraft R. E. s n I es opportunity. Secretaries S.\00-$900 ·~.. "'' •J "'"~ ~ Yclb1\' C.:ab Co .. 186 E. 16tb (':\1 r.16 212i July 7 ~ 10 '· fllOI. All itl'{l1i1. u r·,1: tt.nts lor eo.ch pattern for Dept .. Box 163, Old O>elsea ea~ .. night. 7:30 p.m. Jr. Secretaries $3G.'»500 h:i.M:d on_~L,tr pl'OgT't!S!. St .. CO!Lta ?.ICU . li;n 'ij .pm.'' . . . ORGAN SALE l'f'<'d!' gootl hl)nu", '°"' Afr Mall and Speoial llandl· Stalk>n, New York, N.Y. Tu .. ........,.. July 3, 18SO E. 171h, Clerk Typi,ts $365-.$4)0 Approv.u or v•terans \\'urlllzt:r F11r1Qry Authorized childrt'n. $25. ('all &1-µ;.:-,29, I~. otherwlte lhlnkla!ls 10011. Prlnt Ns~. Addrma, S&.nta Ana. 547~154 1_, FREE On th • b (iAIV\f:f: &ii~. in Sliorf'('llH, Sal I Zl1>i Pattern N11mbor. vuto · • e·1o I '~ S.C. Funuturr, ~-ash r 1• • '' r.n rnany niodt> ~. Othtr 1!1-:Al.Tll\', lla11J))' Collie de -\'~I')' will take three NEED L ECRAf'T "7:?! " • Vtl•M Lil ll<'h1dCl'1 ,\gency I Training Benefits ..__.__~,.. ~ fl1'\. ··•'. •·Tc. July 5th, 43'i hr11ncl• e!!IO on Mir , pr1e{!(I Puppirs. AKC. TN & ,,_ks or more. S<!nd to D I A Job R•~ ?-"'! p If. r · _..,_ 1"°111 SZ"1• I 0 • bl '°lh 1 1 6 ~·1'iirian l\1artin, the DAJLY Crochet, knit. etc. Frtt Realty, Inc. o;ticc ..... ::::::::::~i.21is 17ill Ne~~~~ l~r~·~ Costa CC.nl h· "1!.!!•~orilo. Wa Ui~h s Music City ~-~.\\I ~IO S. \\'k.~. PTLOT. 442, Pattern Dept., d=~tn.s·~~rame Boot •• R ti i·• ~ l\-1es.a :ilt .\IRS. t."<, h llo k s , "-·11 ~ t Pl ...... ....,,.,. •l·c E i· h ~1 232-Wffl l8th____.;iot.._ New e.;:•p on ,....__ ~. ..00 ,. IJ)l\(''1, 1001!1, mort'. r:x .~u I '011.S a.za ;i-.,, .... :00 .... "" n)Z 15 ,_,, ntcr pups. York. N.Y. J<al.. Prinl ~sic; slr:ey knot!, -pat· \V k d nl 9 ....... Sie'y·l'ecfi , yping All Equul~ JI 0 1" I \J ti l t)' Antiqu.a f'OTll!. Jone ~-21. 289-0;pe I C'hnmp. lilrcd. \Vbclped ~lay N,\U, AOOR-...--SS .. •ith ~~~nl · Croc1iet Boot _ ee en S 0 y, ruv1 ~ Ill~! F.lCC!C. 3,5 )'t'S eiqx.!'I". J\rf. Emplo~r SIHP~l£NT'" ntw.· ln Ir 0 in St ,\pl, C. ,,_,,f C1\~~.F. Nelson Ccln.'lol. lls;:ht 25th. Cnll 6r.;,..AtiJ:t zrr. l!llZE Md 8Tl'LE l..enrn by picturtt! P•I· 6 PM. $2.50 per hour. vnl'll~ K!ne1lr1!, IOI.' .• 1zn Englund. TnUlc-il .t: tlin l?'l', IJJ.(J('ll'. Sale. l\11. F.di·n Cir. \l'll nut -LlllllliMI\\, Pvt pty., (;<)l.OJ.";N" Rf"rrir\~l'J;; 6 wkc NUMBER. lern•· $1 .00. Ji 0 s s BARTLETT. Vlctona SI., c.~f. 646-716'5. TRAINEES w11n:lrobe1 ~kll' l;tl:1rd<1 'llf r-;'1•\li l'IOIM' & Warfl('r, ~·v. $T;iOIPh: &14-834!t r /~·w: AKC, 'hflln p10.U. s150'. SEE l\tORE Q U' Ck 0itnpiet111 lntltlnt Giit 8l'IOlt 846-0641. Equal Oppor. Employer. h:alltrte!I 1fila\n ~la.<11 win: Furn. Aprilian<.'C.!I, clothin!J \VAL.VUT ·Au.~trh1 n GJ"afld 673--7130 FN.hkim and cboosc O:n<! -mol'lll than 100 ~fts -RECEPTIONIST !or animal SECRETARY WiU train dependnb.le "'omt.n do..,·9, m,, ml!K'. lt~m1 II t'lali\ i1rrns. Sa t-Sun, Xlnt ..,.mil. Sacnr1l'C nr sr~: ~N~O~R~"~'l~ci=1 °'°'p,~,-.-.. ~,"'-... --AK-.-C-.I t)&lttrn free J:'m ~ SJ.00. holpl! I N 8 3 Dl¥.I k Greet varkty-ipot. SC': Jn-to become planic \njt'ct:ion mu<'h mnre. 1550 S. CQA"I Jl7,'E lS..l&-li. Householrf _ 968-'Jl)O. ~~~~t of nw Terrien. 1 ~-Summer taloi. A Complete Afsbaa Rant -Ind. Fri" Stai. Send reau:e \'Olvl!d ln all ~spe!'(U: or r'l'lll modcllnz opcn1ors. ~tl.t'lt ""'Y· l.11g1JM Bc-arh. 5, .. "..., _ r.xercise, hoat l.t \VMTEU otd plu~·t·r piunos. ~ JNsrf:flf" :'WtNG BOOK $1.00. • C'lullllied ad ~ 89'2--('/o e1tale field. Salar)' to $700. httvt' own car & be able to • \\'F..srERN P1\IN~. h.--i n1 1(ll f'qulpment. m I). Durntt. 29-VID Grace AKC Bo'i"(!r JXll'IPll'"· Cham· ' "" •J••, -· to--. ft Jllff Rltl &o:lc • 50c. Dally Plk>t, P.O. Box ~:..:/\ Call Sally HIU'I, ~. stand entire shift If booght and Mld ol l:i..O :io (t'< li Pl., Ci\!. Lallf'. ,t\f, ~. 8:30 to piorl batQrouJl(J. 2 female•, $]. ........, .. ~--,._...._..... r::* or 1' Prlltl Al1Ch1"'" Cotta Mes.. Ca 92626 ...,.,., Coest11l Ptraonnel 1\#tnty, ~~~f:'~.O~l':ttonsm. <;0011 llwy, ~na tka,ch. · -,;;;;lry i 1s ~ pn1. ' call 968-ml INSTANT F AS Jt l 0 N QalJ I Boot I -16 patterns. RECEPTJONISr -1.-"'_ofc. 2190 Hastior Blvd, C.M. 3nt shift $2.23 PM' hr ro 1\;\'TlQUE seUee c a r v (• d • F'REE Ontan tla._-.s for 'a'">"°;"R"'M.,...,A'°'N~.....,M<>,_rt--~ho~--t BOOK -~undttdl of !IC)(', Neill ap~!!_noll• lyplna. • stCRETARY -Accuratf' sttu'I. RRIMi In 30 dlt)'S. 11'00() frame, bcaulilul fAb· 0 11\.\tONl l ra~. pcrlect adultit. E..\'C'ry Th ·s. nllc Pointer.~ yr•. G<•nlle. ?.Jove fu hfon fa.ell. $1. !Oc.·~lt1~u'n QuUI llOOlr I -_C.=U:-.::.6'tJ.-OIOO:::..:=:.· ----l)'Plng , 110me Ahortband. ~ A~y 9 ...... 1 t ani or J " """' rte. 673·16 16 ~11'1lC'!I'. Appra1.tf'd $ 3 • 6 «D • 7:30. C~l Btach Music'. forces !allt', sts-6306. • "" k 8 ,. 1 12 .,n t'P' """,...__ .,, ...,... l\-1;1k1> n1rer. 49f>...iW78, &•fl)rt' 847-8.i.'lti ~. Aey day la the BFST DAY lo The f&lllCit clraw in the WI!&!, YI " wee : ~ o :.,..,. • Ornng<' "-""!It Plnf(lcs 1' Any day 11 the DESI" DA y 10 9 ani or A.rt 6P~t Ukt\ to Trade!' Our Trader' a run an ad! Don't dtl..'1. • • tJ11111_, ft11" 1'ods.r '• Uvtnr • • GtR.L FRIDAY, aime er-&:ill \\'L'!.1 tSth Sf, . · Cltl\ND Uf!rl~ht p11m;, $100. Pa.rac1iJ11:> cohunn Is fflr YoUI .call tQda.y &U-6678. 15 bee.ulltut p1111em. 50c. ••• a Dally Pilot ClassWed rands. CAii hfi'. ~lc:Namee. Cotrtn ~T·~. c.Jir. run an ad! Don l ttehJY. • rt lillf''· 5 days ror 5 buclu:. 979.~ ~ llnt'I, 5 da.vs rnr SS. Call 1-------------------At!. ~2-56i'R. 00.1-4~i67 • .eall today 6-l2-5678. -Afl. C.:.11 642-00'r~. af~O!.!!..t'flt'!.oc I~. _. ~"'-'-,.._-'-=---' ' ' . ~ . ; ; I ~ • I I ' . ' I r I I • I .. DAILY 'llOT ' -· .hlty 2, 1973 ·~-~l l ~~~l ~~11 ~!iJ!•j I -... -1~1 1 -..... I~ !;;I -~ .. ;; .. ~I~~~ _ ..... I ~! _ ..... 1:.= ~ llMtt, Sall '°' ,.._, __ Trudt1 M2 A-. 1!'!!'39" '711~1..,.,,_ '711~ l"!"'!'i '711 A-. Utod ' 990 Aulol, UM 990 TAU.'( Ho ... ma. ""'" .......... I Sale/Rent p~ ~-~ IMW MJZDA VOWWAGlN can111 ac ==.;:;FO=-R-D--'-~I =: ~4, 1: .. i $2.18 PER U ; e SALllS e "'""' duty ~ Full 1---==-~ 1-...:....~=~~-,..,...~ -"'""'°""' AUSAl • • SllVICE • ....,.... AJc. eam--· LIASE A 1m * M••• '71-it.t•ry * 71 VW ,EL DOR.ADOS 1 =·~= ~~·· .. :: CHEA:::::~ ~TEAii • llOOALS • ·~=' :~ ~ v: .. IA;,~ "1:1rh~~ w= coJ:Jg,~=LES w ......... Foonlo;n Valloy o• Th• Bl& l.Jll!c lloaJ lhol EXl'LORIR Aulo. 38' bl&h ''"" wltb • Sl!LICTION OF CAU. MR. FllY -c:omplcte wld> lmt 1971DU!1l DE. VI• LLES call S~"'15. ,. ... , a lo"• w.,, to<''"" bunk and • lhelves '800> US!D, IMW'1 H I B h $2899 · 2 c..11e Gelding•. approx. 8 S S I OI' ~2· . 19Tl :mo ·Uft • 810 ' ' ,. 31 TO CHOOSE ! ,.,,. old. mo ... One ..... Aloh1 WHk 5.P,oclol HUNTINPTON llEACH SACRll'lCEI ·n "Ton Ford 19T.I BAVARIA • • BILL MAXEY· ' t'OUPES ,_ _ _,. ~Aiif¥ CcldlrJi ? m,.J 6H,. --·-~·-~· 18801 Beach J\llld. 84Ull03 cu a t 0 m c. mp er 197J BAVARIA ..:._MADA-. ov"'"!'A . SEDANS lood dlspoflitton, weT -··THE 'BOAT--PL"A'"'CI: NGTON-iBEAaf-bomenwie ·e•·m-p-tt-r -1 ... ,1-.v·• . TIQm trtarted, "°"" P' • ... '" 3101 w. °""" Hwy.-MOTOlt HOMES xiru. &-r'""'51 ,... 1600 -18811..BEACff ai. 1841-&155 Maey .,..,.,u .. t a>1o.-s ~. aood poten1ial show Ntwpart BNcta &lft..1144 ·n EL CAMINO. Mai whls, CREVIER IMW • _ HUNTINGTON BEA0-1 Ololce of Jnterion ~horle. $800 •. AlJJo .8 yr old • • ! • • • • • • 1 Apollo, Paeeaetler, Baron, AM/FM, tllt ""bl• tinted • ~7331 Beach Bl. ·IC-6686 • 69 YW (Cklth A: leathtt> · I !~.J~'r~rjr~~ PclT, troptcy" winn er, Jam~C ~·~ • f~454a1~u~~· Oean. $2800. ~e,V: ~~S..~':! BOB LONGPRE -4 Spd, Atr Cond, <134FOV) Factoryalrcoodltioning 16.I Hando. TA L L Y HO tralle•, '°"""· xtru, xlnt , KENDON . AWIJl MAZD:A '"1595 >'lill~=AM/FM--a.o"trolke ,.°''d!o i Fums~Newllole, cond.mustaill$7-5810,or 'li9 FORD Van, w/wlndows, • ."~:: .. v · • Foon __alloy, ,,._., HS:::,'~ .. Jmmao. 1 }T old. MOTOR HOMES ~I~= .:,\~;~"!. 'i!: 'JO BMW 2800 -SERVICE FIRST-BILL MAXEY r:;':',""""'.~l m«e .. "!"...:':. 5Geldinald "'•'~~-No --s~----·· 107 N. 'Hart.or, S.A. oUr. ~ 1st Street at the Santa Ana . TOYOTA mm ate cond1Uon o:imn:1, yrs. o · 1, .......... • •-· ...,...,,, '"""' M"'-0011 '56 an:v 18• v .63 Air oond., all radials, au~ Largest aeleetion in aood jumptr. $15(1, w/tack. $900. Trtr anil w/deluxe ' an, en;:. ··-'th bl"" Int · 1st Street at the llUNTINGTON B""',...T n--... ro--tv '61 FORD LTD, RMI, air, ! stereo tape, avail "°""· $150. 1 833-0'7IJO Wk-dayl, 49J..1'9t6 I eve a: wknds. ·12 FORD Country Squire I Red Sta. Wgn. New oond., 1 $3600. Belt offer. 673-2791 GREMLIN 28;ixxn:n~,-$1'1' or $200 and take over pay- ments. OAC -can be 11eer1 af 515 E. Be:!boa. Blvd., N.P. Bcb. ~51QJ MA~CK 1970 MA VEfUCK. auto trans, 1 xlnt buy. QUI 968-8232 MERCURY 830-CT3'1 boom box•Sl75. M6-f306 1973 D~ and SUDdlal Runs good, . tandem whls, w• tu:11. enor, •per Siuna Ana Frwy. ~n 1.1.-L:'.!"' ......... C v 10 YR. APP. Mare good tw KITE No. llm. MotorHomesforr8tt,make paneled I.:. uwulated $800. clean. Santa An& 558-7871 '~9 V W Sedan, "4118Wn aclillac leeNpn. $250/hHt oUer, An attached equip. Yellow reservations for SUmmer 55l-3305. · •J1A185 UERCED"'"' IENZ Sunroof/radio. Lo mi.· Im-AUTitORIZED DEALER 1956 MERt'URY Park Lanr, I .....:nt a.ft 6 bull, white 10psk!e. XJnt now. Phone ~tla Bennet at 1965 INTERNATIONAL 4x4, "" .... ft! ~ ~· Orig. owner $1,250 or ~ 2600 HARBOR BL, • vinyl top, full power, A/C, • ll'r · c:ood. $600. 675-2300. Bob t..onrPl'e Pontiac. Travelall, many new parts~ ~ .. 846-6306 COSTA MESA D/B, 'good cond. $300., 9• BOSTON Whal.,. Squall 892-<&51 "" ~2500. · 3 gas tank•, $15!1l/otte.. JIM StEMONS '65 VW 1500.0J bk xlnt ,,.,.b 540-9100 Opco Sunday cll33.-="2656"="'' ====-~ d . ~saillnc~· ~· EXECUTIVE motor_ !46-T022 31ter 4:30. IMPORTS .cond nu · ti,rea reblt enc 1971 Eldorado, 11fc best --:--•---USTANG 1' Latttfl sail, $350.. home !Or rent. Fully 11elf 'ti& .FORD VS, E300 Super MERCEDES IENZ ~~ b::ldy work ~ 11 n Cadillac color combo ever, "' 515 Playa,NB 640-1009 cont. g.u..:2150 • Van CamJ>e". P/U trade. . 5.il-9569 coco w/tan landau top, 'li6 MUSTANG, ·a·ir·cOn. -· .o.n..1· 900 ~~ = ~-,:Ost RiW~~ •• i;.ws ~~ '51 GMC ~nick reblt 3100 w. ())&st Jlwy.,,N.B. ~o=CE ~~~SG, ~~:t ~ne·;; ~~w~ ~~~.~~~ ~lioned, :s-vsa'ndl ~n tihe --=-'-'=---= _, __ .._: OB. . s,. Pvt . .: .... ...:..... . bit -.... • "2-'405 .R-Sle-ns· •••·1767' • • • p!w ' Best o'tt-"""""19' oo1·, ra K> __ ,,,eaerb,, ...-••-~•, awe: powr, mac. . owner. OJD"'V<tVV eng, re ...... ..., new ,,,www ~ · "•· · .....,..,.. carefully maintah-.. y IS' RUNABOUT Fl ... lu. 30 prlv pty 490-3814. DELUXI! WINNEBAGO .....,.., """xlnt. 51+6594. '68 IMW 2002 I · '66"SQBK, reblf •ng. Noedo daYI S:J<Ml:OO 644-0637. local Ford dealor. $850.00 I ,. Evin: Incl. use of B.I. KITE 631. Race _equip. 2 l\ftr 1-fme. &«HM82 N.B. '73 CHEV, "T. Picku'p. Hvy ~~ M>me ,body work. $545. •'72 CAOILI.AC Coupe de 646-8018 Private Party. --------- 1 moor *-' wmmfto $350. sail.a, Ute blue bull, dolly. T . II duty, Muat ·aetl, malce'oUcr, :;liver, (XJIA5e6) 1301. Quall . 675-7282 da,ys/673-2491 eves. , Ville •. Silver, stereo, lthr, '69 MUSTANG. Red w/whitll' 1 Snowbird Ir trlr, needa Excel. $550. 673--0152. r1 en, Travel 945 I.Huna, 494-5072. $1799 Newport Beach '65 ~U.t.."D'C'DAl"V gond ~load~ed~, ~la~nd==•u:;:to;p:·:$5300,:;;:::: vln"I top, p/•, p/b, radials, I I work. $95. &0--1272. . ~ 833-931)D C(iOO--~~~ 4~ •v ..... , Melnt./ lkNt•,. $peect & Ski 911 1~~~~.fe1r1~': ·~M~.~i'tes~ o:e'!:. ~~ llLLOYMOATXAEY ENTER-FROM-MaeARnMl . 5::~?5-rrtm·* '68 CAD. Conv. :«hlte-W/Red ,.;~:::CF:=: 289~ r-- Servb ' 902 NEW l6~ deep Vee fib gla, * Ra.nee~ O\"cn * $lerep$: sale. 645-5124 . T 50 USED '69 VOIJCSWAGEN Sedan leather interior. Ex c · 4 spd, wide ttres/mags, I----'-----;.;.. outboard hulls, $ 7 5 O . Six, * Sink, * 30 gal. '56 FORD Pick Up. &st ot. 18881 BEACH BL. 1147.8555 MERCEDIS"' Auto Trans, $950. Cond. 979-1907 real clean. $1295. 67J..8577 ' I MARINE MECHANIC 646--4187 9am to 4pm "'ater Tank, * Levcling fer. Call • 213: 596-4594; JIUNTINGTON BEACH Call 213: 002-29'1'1 '68_ ELDORADO, all pov.'l', MUST SACRli=ICE • wocic:. Fair lSf· Saw • 16' GLASPAR, 75 hp Jacks, • E·Z Utt Hilch 114: 847-31%l. o· N. DISPLAY '72 SUPER BEAn.E crtiise control. S9,(0J ml, '68 MUST A G V-8 I /h )'OU money. ' BWT'• J-. trallor. * Tt-allor Movinr Doily, Vant 963 CAPRI $1700 OR BEST OFFER $2650. 551-2305, 49>-3971 N • , P '· r , Mutne. 615-a'l'l. Slfd'.I. · 6'TS4922 Incltlded. * ~11mn in. Sharp New Car m.:n85 after 3 . xlnt. $925. ~&t. -1... duded. -GREAT nm FORD Vao '72, ., Ind 0 Trade-ins . '61 vw Bug $195 CAMARO '65 MUSfANG •• apd, v-8, ....,.,. ·. 904 11•1 CAMPING -EXCEU..EljT Econoline, lone body nu '& Comi111 In Every Doy Very nice corXi. ln/oot '69 ·~ auto p/• pdb lo m•· 'eauape ~k.l ~n't cone!. $800. -OONDmON -$1351'.1. ttres. Completely iii&Wated. · • • -• • • • JJ -.uu. 5 HP ESKA $65 T• e ahlt!M * M&-1395 * X1nt cond. Duk gJttn. • Ask About Our Unique Call 613--2420 ~~I ~o ~ ~~late. ~SHELB==y'-=•51""'GT=500~SO~M~M~i. ..-. PROWLER 1,. ___ .. _........ $2100. or ofitt, ~. Used Merceclts LNM ~.,!I' se!!._. ~·Pri·~ V\V · · ' · 4 speed $1500 UDK 131 --906 C · Sale/R~ -liltt: oew. S oublcfi: ,;;;;;; 1133.-'1523 NOW OWN THE PJ.M . 49>'.:m'< ~· ouer, v pty. CHEVROLET Pn. Ply '(7141 646-1925 • ...,.., _,, 7-. .eU cont. R.. .... 1.. ..,_, E-300 Suptt y.... '72, 8000 FABULOUS 1~3 Ho·--of ·~ '69 FORD MU.'llAng Convrt ~ -~-.. ..,_ -.. 71 •-. ~·-.:--"* '65 .. V.\V. Van. Good tX>n· ' hardtop ,....., 35u •'8, ~ VS, OM•. -·-• .,·., _,_; E 2 BR ~OUSE, 1972 A I R and ael ·con-714-962-4341 ml. p/s, ·p/b, paneled, ,. .a.nRI 6862 Manchester BUeria Part dilio ~ Be a ~...-v ...... -• ... ......... • Am\. m nn, xlnt o:im .. A~· • .., ..:nd, ._ .. _._ ,:.:., ARI~"~ .• _-~.~-crptll'd., w/~ ~at. Best . ~ ., __ ,_ • n.-or sto er ·steering, radio, autom,1tie oond. $1,795. 64&-3684 a..-1ec1 In .. ""-...o. Fountain ... ., ..,...,.... ""' ., ............. J, •...... -....,.... Ofter. 968-9615 \Vllh 2,m:> 4 ·-.11-ter or V~ on the -.. Ana l'?WJ 49'-2385. , lrans in consolll', strato =c=.=~~""",..:,:""'=,:,.~-1 ~ 111 u.o""' -fl.-~. Y ll'XtiTui. See at; cond • ..-$1~-~ stoft, · --· engine, w11h1."'; •,without,. 523-TlSO '70 VW Bus. XJnt ~· 36,~ bucket scats, vinyl top, B.F, OLD$MOllLE Valley area, bn~ 7%~ H u n t In J too-By.'Ibe-Se&. aleepl 6: Phone 1395 '57 VW Van gOO<J tires, IOOd decor poup aome with aun '61 ~IERC;EDES 190---0.SL )O_ ~ camptnc lied fraine, Goodrla\ radial -t tl' es-;-t··-· -.,..,-..;;..,""".._ __ I ~ =~ FOR-t»ai _ Space 123 <n4) 5.'i6-8316 Auto Service, P•rhl 949 body ·~5«-Mi'T *. root or 1!lndau top power convt. Good cond. $22M. SUl50:-96J:.S353 644-4687. Sal'8 • sCrvice 0r Pcnche or equal value. ~68 vw Camper, Pop Top. -d ' brak tyi' steel Call 6'13-0i97 ; 967 -, PLOSMOBILE ,!unCh Bay Rea.tty Agmt/ .Rebuilt engine, 14M. Im-TWO G70x15"&: two F78 x 15 '68 DODGE Sportsrn&n Van, ~sc es, s II' . ' • l VVf Bug.~-Reblt eng 67 ~Impala Sta. Wgn. , GMC TRUCKS Ownd'. 91)2..,2H1, 'tv e •. mac. fully equip, rll'ady to Kelly Springfield ti.res vw nu eng good cond Belll or. v.h.~, radial tires, bucket 73 280 C Mercedea. Silver, Jtme .73 Gd tires. Pvt pty. P/B, J'JS, air ,eon<:!, pvt 9lll-9109. go $2,lOO. S38-32S7 ~ wheel•, U.S. mags. 2-ii,i>rtS ter, ~2007. '_ ·~seat~. ORDER YOURS leather., ~. stereo. Call 979-2879 party.· Xlnt cond. $950. HONDA CARS . • • 0 w r N s c AB I N ... p.m. and . Ul(xlS. wm .. u ... OOOGE Van. vs. full Jn. NO~G. USTAFSON 2.300 m•. 491'7'64 '68 BUG, 1600 aoto tran•. 49'-1706 UNIVERSITY OLDS . cRuISER New·itep YaR conversion separateb'l W reaaonable ter stereo $1T"4J Call , .,, MG 45,IXX> miles, ugly body, $700 1m NOVA, V8, p.s., p.b., 2950 Harbor mvd. F/campr, truck reblt from offer .. Musf 1111'11, Ca 11 96i.3976. ' ' Unc.ol Me or best offer. 962-n12 a1~, delux~ int., new Costa·-Mesa 541).96«1 Ellct.~1.":'ad,n:;Jt KnXtup.66-(336,:07:9(17 anytime.~. Auto L :--~· •. ft• rcury '61 MG Ml.1-t '67 VW new ~nglne and Michelin tires, $2700. ~=-===="-"=-•ALL Qievy perts. 396 "::..:! ~ 161m Beach at Warner $500 __.. clutch 8,000 miles $900 very 494--12'79 OLDS '69 Delta 88. 36,<XXI ta*. etc. See Sat. or Sun· 81ii' CAB over camper. com,plete erclne $l(ll. Heada DISCOUNT Mark 10-Mark 10 14 Hunti1\rton Beach • * *~W--0145. .clean pri. prty 8f7~ CONTINENTAL miles. Fully equ(pped. New ~Dam PlNirt. m Call ~ 4. $600. 80-lliO; $90. lntakel $50. Block $100. "B" Ignition l)'ltems u.vea 2-IMC * (JIJ) Sn.5544 tires, battery, vinyl roof . . ~= !'W"'1oo." c~ ···-. 350 block $100. 377 "T"' mil• ......... poln ..... "Homo of·the Vlkl111" OPEL .. VOLVO 1969 LINC <loot. fully ~,..;."'" Pnv ply. Almolt new. & men:. 110. '$;;..,!--. 925 ~ll~·;P~ds Sl s . .tan.~. 6"-589.l ' DATSUN •·n OPEL nm station equip'd, l~new. chaUH~ur ·OLDS '12. Cutlau, 2 dr full •pl tank. cabln belld SS 5 NEW tirH, 9.50. 16.5. 8 Autos W.,.... 961 wagon 4-6peed, radio, no THINK dri~n. wh!le on white, P'\~ air, bucket seata. vinyl radio. Extru. Water aid, or e BICYCLE SALE e plys. Witp. wheels. 842-USO DATSUN 240Zs air, clean inside & out. 494-4527. 494-190'1. top Mint cond. $3,000. Orig ...., wator llohln(. ..-..um NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN """" or anytlmo wknda TOP · SUOO. 642-l(l;O or 673-00U CORVAIR 0""''-.58&-0ll6 'e\'ff ' • ' BICYQ.ES $59.95.. Beach ·56 dlrl. 2 door hrd/top Ii FOR SALE ECONOMY '70 · DEI::.TA 88, f/pwr, air, 1" BOSI'ON Whaler. Bl--•--E. Balboa nu·.,. ,,.,._ · DOl,.LAR Li1r .. 1t Selection Ever 1968 Opel Sta_tion Waonn. '""' CORVAIR. ~-.,· -~. vlov. I top. ••u-,.11·. ~Ing 81......,. •f'¥J bp JOOiiiin m~7'615-Ti2. Authorized .... * ·~ * of fully equiPPt!i z.. Afags, Call 968-3141 o-Newty painted. '400. Askt~r over scu. $2500'. m-s.iii =:-:.:; ';1,. ... ~ mSHoo deal-.. · vw Eng .-$150 + .-. PAID m ,...-nlni. • -"" PANTERA WHILE WE HAYE 40 Earleno, 612-90ll. Aft s 1965 OLDSMOBILE 1 TOp cmd. $1960. 6'0-3313. n BULTACO -.., s, Eng'• 4 Sale. Bill • Pato IMMEDIATELY automatics. . wknd• 67>-5938. $150 5.57-86511 ...... mew.~~ ·~ ~~~ ~; Aulomoll"". 5.51.{Ql POR ALL · '71 PANTERA NEW VOLVO$ IN 1961 .. Z":,v~:,~w PINTO ~·n!';!'."'nt""-"':.: = •.. Llltt: new. __ .. FOCREIARGSN 7500 DRIGINAL MILES STOCK . co"::'t IE "2 PINTO ~dr., 1600• ~ .... · Ews.~ m-un.. · * S...19\ii" SchwlJm Varsity WE ARE IN Excel'9nt Concfhkm :1~~·~:~ Xlnt. :10 CIJSl'OM Mlnl Soon. ~°!'1$iob!~" l boy, 1 DESPl!RA'TE NEE. D 3100 w. ~~wy., N.B. Fully L~ fl l.fJ8i& '64 VET PLYMOUTH """"-_.. ,. • .._ cowr, 5j0.7388 Ant1nuo1/Cloulco 953 Coll After ''00 P.M. ..,., • Reblt big block, 4 apd., new -· IL M«C Cntlae -:;:i OF 0000, CLEAN · $ SALE $ · ~71 Wll 411 rear end. '1do mouM•, tnc. trtr, 50hp 4 cyl Mll'C 1971 SUZUKI· lSS. Oranae· FOR Sale '48 Packard Cl ub FOREIGN ·CARS YOL¥0 ·. rpags, Goodyear's, stereo, 2 '6.5 PLY .. Sport Fury, lea• ~~~;.~-~lpm. ~.mi8l"U,,®nd~7So: =:C~~=~ TOPDOLJ,.~R-PAID DATSUN$. PORSCHE tops. E\'.ts. 6'2-3706 or ~~.e·Jt~27.Uerforallor -·~ ,_.,_. liCii ·anytime wtnds. --sell $1200 or ofter, 56-MU FOR 1M: ·NOTI NEW DEMOS 1973 TRADe 2 BR TOWNHoiJsE 1996 Harbor, c.~t. 6-46-9303 *'-0000 . '69 ROADRUNNER -Gd , ~~~wU:·.::;:: ·n-wo~T Maverick MERCEDES 300 SL oun. Call orN-.EWPOtn tolT11ee us. ~~P &22 tam rm, x!Qt .conr:t.'.' 197$1o850voLVO, 4 dkr, xlnt 1coM. DODGE cond, new tires, chocks It Siii), Eves 6'1l-Q01. _ , Cllltonl chamber wing. Silver, ietthet. nrted located in 'prlmlt Fountain. • or m.a e o t er . front end. 4 $pd. 646-5993. '30 TROJAN, TS, m se.11 P .P .• fut and mlable xbrt I~. $19,196. 494-2204 IMPORTS All Mode161l~s .... _,_ lo Valley area, immed OC·, 64()..1312 DODGE Coronet "12 small PO .... AC L--"' _.___ amd., mast aell 5.'J6-2T79 R I .......,... cupancy, awunable 7%% . VS, A/C, P /S, leather in· rt 11 , coat. JEW.I, many ,. ... _ '68 TRl. 250 Trophy $3Xl. Tri-KrHtlona 3100 w Coast H NB OKlOfle l'rom. loan, $3500 equity. FOR boat Avtos, Used 990 terior, lo. ml. reasonable --------- '9,500. 644-1&15 Qib. '10 Honda. SL 90. '10 Vehk:les 956 . .a-..r·· . ' or Porsche ot equal value. financing avail. 842-1101, LEASE OR BUY 21' ~~-··BOAT. Yam.aha t:5 St. $250 oach. TOP CASH South Bay Reolty, ,,.,.,.; IUICK 11811 Boat:h Blvd., H.B. •n thru 'T.I Pontiacs ::!J6.vw-.W. u.-v xtru. ~-'68 ,QOOG. [ Owner. 962-24«>, Eve g .' '66 DODGE 1':Mera 4 dr., hrd. DAVE ROSS l!'lO YAMAHA Enduro, Ina tor dll'&n li.te model can , 968-9l09. ' '66 RIVIERA -needs engine top. Auto., air, Orig. owner, PONTIAC l~ FIBERGLASS, 5 Ob P than l'lllO ml1a. -cmd. fAllllJ WA"Olt and trudu! o; PORSOIE 9ll $2850 °' o,,...,,.ul -would make <loan. $"'5 ,...,.,13 ~-O~ tran.., $400. ,.....,., an.. 6 •IL • Howard Ch-•~ 1973 DA TSU NS best-off.... . great low-rld<r. s 3 0 0 . '61 OOOGE, !..-mer yoUow 2'80 Harb..-Blvd., at Fair SCHWlNN 2 ~ Taildem., ••rvnn ALL MODELS 64S-31'!8, N.B. 544-9470 ext 36 aak for cab. Best oUer. Call Eves Drive,' Costa Mesa 546-8017 ** 11' GLASS boat, 7> hp ""'> (OOd. $60. Folding blltt: Au., tram., 'm cond., "'°""· ~and Jam"°'""' IN STOCK TOYOTA J)m. ' ' o• Sun 64U382. 1971 GRANO VIUo, con-J~cii-MH1S2 SJI). 646-40'11'. rirrlgerator, POP 'IOP, Newport Beech -'10 SK'iLARK. Good con-FORD vertible, lac air & tpe KJtWASAKI '71, 350 Bia:-~.IDJ miles. 833-0056 BARWICK IMPORTS .. 5. 'O· dition. Full power. Fae. Air, player. actual mi I ea g e c~ss ~~~= Horn, $500. • $2695 ~:gp~~~ 31375 Camino Capittnno , . = top. Economy 8. ·n GALAXIE 500 XL, cream !n~. ~~" cond. orig h u 1952 Sll 950 963-4029 * 673-8616 * U San Juan Capistrano /of1er. 96S--5461 puff, air,--must sacrifice, u ' ' ' . USED BICYCLES _:: ~~-U extra clean, 493-3375 or 831-1375 '64 RIVIERA szm. no down w good '68 FIREBIRD 400• t speed, 8M'ts,. S.ll 909 All Ty])ll'S * 642--1272 BAUER BUICK '72 240Z. · Auto, air, mag Xlnt cond. credit, priv pty. 49Z-J814 ~~i·J~~:1~e;or'· ~ *'nHONDACB175• 2925HarborBlvd. whls, Beckll'r AM/FM NeW Toyotas 673-5930 '70 FORD Galaxle soo. Hi ·ncRANo~· con· .. fac. . SOL CAT ~-,,.nabl• ott••. c:o.ta Mesa 979-2500 stereo, radio & sterec '62 SPEClAL CONVERT; mileage, eeU cheap. Nu .... nc ~ I Stock valvts brakes go6d nd air, tape pl , actual mi. Call 5'>-0879 aft. 6:30PM. IMPORTS WANTED .,.cuseXltt•,·tB~ndt orangs•'••'°o'· n ' Good0 ttansportatkin $1450. '548-8852.' co · 21,000, beau. cond. ong. GEMINI •~ ~--(Jo t ... • • """ • • •--Pr tfer. 548-7180 $2 o~ ~ -· Tiie Newest Breed! $125. Goocl """"~ 0 ~ t .~I: 3100 w. Out Hwy., N.B. rop·; au~· ~Z..9980, 1624 Antigua Way, ...... Ice '68 1'-URD Galaxle 500 4 dr I ;;c ....... ;--,:o;':;:i=':C~'=--"~"""~='-~ 963-:"'° 642·'405 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ,,....rt. lncrea. ses! CADILLAC hrdlp, Air, P'" d' ". . .. PONTIAC G'8nd Prix. '71 YW 18881 Beach Blv.l. ·n DATSUN 240Z, stick, b96~~~. New tires. $85fl. Nu brakes, good tires, l 'Tl PACfFtC MULTI-llUU.. 2 BOYS Sch\viM Varsity 10 H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 new map, 2 new tires, lm-v-""1W I ~o•_.,,.,..'=:'0'$325~o,;· 8460"--"•39::.1'=--1 Ef!ldoncy Cl>amp ""'" $45. ~<(>.;,!'all W-tphallo ,,~ llUY mac. ,,..._ .,, t1...:1 1.968 CADILLAC Ooupo. Ex· 70 FORD Galax;, 500, al• STUDEBAKER See It! Sail it! Buy it! "'~ •• ., .,_. "81• eel concl. l owner. Best of· conditioning. excellent cond. C IMPORTED Atn'OS DATSUN, Toyota eng. body m f.r 493--04<1 Aloha .\\'eek Special ·n HODAKA JOOB. Super rat a111per BEST PRICES PAIDI pan. or ttbulldable car. OTA · · Sl500. 645-6467 aft. 5:00 p.m. ·ss s TU o Es AH ER _ Save S $ S pistons, Rffd valves 2 -...p1--~· t -1-uol )loor Dri·-IL ~,...,. '70 CAD. DeVllle. Loaded, 1973 GRAND Tonno· \"agon. transport tlo ll , ~~ "~~TH~~.~;E 1~7:'· ~~~ 3&'.J ,MX """'" ~e $Ja99 .,.,.., DM~ LH=.'~kr~ , flAT ,,.. ''"· 1996 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ~~or~~~.~· =~·~It s!T!~~e·;, 7700 $100. a5.11:;r. runs. n<: 64$-ll« Deam •IYI•. GlrlJnr &boda, BILL MAXEY 646-930.l '69 TOYOTA Aulol, New 9IO A-. UMd 990A •=:-c""":=:---::990:-=I , ----..,, ott ... 968-9515. TOYOTA Autoo, Import°' 970 '69 Flat Spider COROLLA . uto1, UMcl , HOBIE Cat 16'. XJnt cond. ·n YAMAHA dirt b~. xln't R-~-· Aoldng $1450. Bost buy In cond. Maey xtru. $27>. Call 18881 BEACll BL. 847.85.5oJ e THE FINEST IN _,.,.. Sl'RINTER town, 847-141~ 847 ..... 1. HUNTINGTON BEACll USED IMPORTS e · Onng., (WOA1lll (ZY7."'6l * H·211 KETCll·"""" '56. '68TRIUMPIUSOTl'opl>yfor Tbelu.,,.drawlnlheW.,L • TH'E FINEST IN $1399 $l399 ""' Albin diesel ·n. Daoa $61;. Overl>aoled. x In t. ..•• Dally Pilot a ... 1oed IMl'ORT SERVICI • llLL MAX' EY Pt. btrtll, owner, 545-2321. o:md. ~1--0MO evll's. Ad. 6(2..5678.. Do )1lW'l'll'lf a faYOI' and come llLL ~ . ' • • • • • '• .. e "' first . Opoc Tuft. 1IOYOTA TOYOTA !U1s. Thura. ti! 9, Sat.sun 18881 BEA.Cll BL. 847-855.i isss1 BEACH BL. 847-8555 · HUN]INGTON BEACH JJUNTINGTON BEACH (@I tRC._%1211 ~AL/TC) •54 Flat 1100.D. Fo. part•°' ''9 TOYOTA HILUX ..._ ~) ..,.. wholll' car. Good tires, lots -""""""~ of new parts. 646--2564 after PlCKUP 1----===-~---·--5;30 pm (ZVE5,22) AUDI JAGUAR $1499 ?-.fUST sell heve a Co. car '72 2 door 100 l..S. new radlal tm, AM-FM stereo, air '°""ltlonlng, aun roof. 4 «pd, undtt book value $3500. 613-1153 IMW DRANOE COUNTY'S OLDEST SALt~SER'LEASm~ OVERSEAS DF..L!VEl\Y RO:Y· CARVER, Inc. 2:M E. lltb SL o.taMeu ~ .. '71 JAGUAR XI& ~llt.11 ·i"'" 111 1·11•1' O• '' ' • Selection of colon, air OOR· 1---:-:=-::o:-~-- ltttionlng, 1u11 faotory equip-'68' Tffota ""'· Corono Sedan $1395 , ---Auto 1nt'll; (WJC3G)_ -. ---$1199 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Clout Hwy .• N.B. . M2- MAZDA llLL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 UEAOI BL. 847-&5 HUNTINGTON BEACH J971 ROTARY M & z d a, '1910 TOYOTA Corona, 4 dt, PM1tct condlUon, n e w auto, radio. vtf'7 Io w JdlcblUrui, white vln)'t top. mllea,p, lmmac. 9 r i l , Prtv; party. Best offmo. Ar OWnn'. Make otter. 53&-96 66-3833.· ' I.,,=.,..,,===~~ Nl!<d a "Pad"1 PlaCo on ui You'll find It ln Oallltlned Call 6G-ft, • . ' \ 2~ AnnlYenary Special "the Gas Savers'' ;fREE ••• IMPORTED ITALIAN lO~SPEED 81KE uu •••. ,... ..... , , WITH EVERY NEW CAPRI ORDERED & DELIVERED THRU JULY 10, ~--·----C.Aml ....... ~- -THE "SEXY" AND ECONOMICAL IMPORTS 2121 HARIOl'I ILVD .. COSTA MESA • .... •• . . ·1 I I , . -' r ' • • : -... .---~-;:;,...._. • Teday's Final San Cle111ente -~apistrano EDI TION N.Y. St.oelm .. .'VOL. 66, NO. 183, 2 SECTIONS, lO !'AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CM.IFORNIA' MONDAY, JULY 2, 1973 TEN CENTS Major Banks Raise Prime Lending Rate to 8'ro . corporale customeni. 'Some financial analysts predicted that the record prime or 8" percent set dw'- ing the 1969-70 credit crunch soon may be eclipsed. ' Among the dozen or more bank s po~ling increases this morning were :NEW YORK (AP) -NumeroU! major ~s, acting on the heels or Federal R.elerve Board steps aimed at cooling llfooetary expemion, raised prime lend- llg-rates tOOay from 'P.4, to eight-percent. -The moves, W?llch followed 1he lead of P~de)phia's Gerard . .Natjonal Bank, marked the ~ightb general y, percent in- trease this year in the minimum intere!t M tjiarged by banks 1=1n loans to large · Chase Manhattan, the country's third largest,· and two New YOfk banks, Chemical and Franklin Nllf.ional, as well as such large Chicago banks as First Na- ·--. ' faiet Reigns ThiS statue by a quiet .pool is part of the ~00-acre complex that houses the Rtimakrishna Monastery and· its eight American monks. Not far front·the Lake Forest, El Toro and Mission Viejo developments, the setting in Trabuco Canyon is one of peace and contemplation quite unlike the nearby urbanization. (Story and pictures on Page 3). 2 Incumbents, Trustee To Be Sworn In Tonight· " JNewly elected trustee W i 11 i a m Thompson of Mission Viejo and two in- c;umbents will be sworn into office tooight at the board meeting of the Capistrano Unified School District. ·Thompson, the only new board tOe:mber . was voted into office in las t M~y's election . He will fill the post ~cated by Fred Newhart, who is retiring alter 22 years of service. • C'J'hompson, who will represent the areas o{ southern Mission Viejo and San Juan Capistrano, has attended board meetings and executive sessions of the !Chool district in a non-voting, capacity since ms election. Trwtees Stephen Smith and Bob o. Hilrst will also receive the oath of orfice · al the meeting. Smith will begin his ftrst full four-year: term on the board although he \Vas elected to the board liSl summer to fill a vi,cancy. Hurst will begin his ;Jilli Would Ban TQOI . -·--.' . - ; SACRAMENTO (AP) -A sharp..dged l!fietal instrument used In karate would M banned ln California under a bill in- t!;.Oduced by Assemblyman Louis J. Papan (D-Daly City). Papan said Ille - weapon, callc<l "nunchaku," has been coofiscated ln numbers from ,..youtM by the Daly City PoUce Department. second full term on the board. Also planned at tonight's meeting is a reorganization of the board, with the elections of president, vice presi dent, clerk and county co mmittee representative. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be held in the board room of Serra School. Bus y Schedule For Soutli Coa st Boys Club Seen. A busy summer schedule starts TuCS;. day at the South Coast Boyi Club in San Clemente. ·, The club at 1304 Calle Valle will be ·opea from. IO am. lo 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.in. Tuesdny1 ~h Fridays and JO a.m. lo 5 p.m. on"Saturdays during the summer season. The clu\I U closed on Mondays. Club program director Pat J{artnett said there will be .a wide range of ac- tivities this summer, beaded by a ';T- Ball" league for bo~ 7 to 0 l'rom 12:30 to 5 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday. Hartnett expects between 150 to 200 tlonal Bank, Northern Trust Co. and the Harris Bank. Bankers said the moves would not af- fect raies on loans to smaller busine~s or on consumer borrowings, Including mortgages. Girard's announcement of an increase in. its prime cameJriday_night, shortly after the Federal Reserve Board raised its diJcount nte from S'h perttnt to 7 percent and increased reserve re- quirements for member banb. The discount rate is the interest charg· ed by lhe Fed on \oa1lS to member banks. Recent increases in it bave raised the cost banks must pay in tapping one of thelr pri,mary sources of fund,! with ~·hlch to do business. ltteanwhile. the dollar \\'eakened again .. in Europe today, despite moves late last -week that were aupPoSed to he.Ip the U.s. currency, . , The dollar dropped sharply i n Frankfurt, ZUrich and Paris. Jt inched .--- ahead in London. Dealers said, however, · 1bat trading was slow at the outset There v.'lte no early signs. of monetary crisis. Gold, v.·hich often moves erraUcally higher ip times of monetary uncertainty, was unchanged in London and Zurich, !he two biggest markets,· in early trading. · The mark -.-·as rev·alued upward by 5.5 percent against seven European cur- rencies last week, and interest rates in the United States were raised. Both moves should ha\•e helped the dollar to. day. but instead the decline conU.nued. On \\1all Street stock market. prices~ malned sharply lov.·er ~ driftlng at midsession loday an1id investor concern O\'er the rising interest rates and tight money. 'J'he. Do\!!· JOl'l<'s a\'erage of 30 i• dustriafs at' IL a."m. (POT) Vt'aS down 1.21 at 883.50. • On the New York Stock Exchal\it, declines led advances by 2 to I. San Clemente Hospital Chief Unleashes ·salvo <1.--- Boat Burns Dana Harbor Patrolmen Find Home Fires Hot Dana Point Harbor patromen didn't have to look far to find a little emergen- cy action Sunday afternoon -their ne\\-'f!st rescue-fll'e boat caught fire off Laguna Beach. Orange County Harbor Patrol· Sgt. ltaymood Graham said to<lv the. trooble slarted when tbi Si.foil paftol boit went to the aid of a.smaller craft caught in the Pentagon Denies Bombing Breaks Cong1·ess Accord WASHmGTON (lw11 -ThO Pentagon said today the 1evel of U.S. -bombing in Cambodia has been intensified in recent days, but denied that the move violated the spirit of a compromise: agreement with Congress to halt U.S. military ac- livity'"tn Indochina by Aug. 15. A Defense Department spokesman, \Villiam Beecher, said there had been a. more than 30 percent increase in the number ol U.S. tactical air strikes since I.he middleof-last week. He said there had been no cot· responding increase in the levet of 852 bombing. Before the increase, the daily bombing total included approximately 40 B52 strikes and 150 tactical air strikes. Beecher said since the step-up, the tac"° tical air strike rate bas run in the low 200s on IDost days. He refused to say v.•hat the highest level had been. Beecher said the reason for the stepped-up activity was a simultaneous clearing or monsoon rains and increase in c.ommunist attempts to sever roads aroun<I Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital. Congress and President Nixon reached a compromise agreement that Nixon signed Sunday to end all. American military activity in Indochina -in- cluding the bombing in Cambodia -on Aug. I~. The "!'resident agreed to the _ compromise in the race of demands from both houses of Congress. that the (See BOMBING, Poge II surlline otf Laguna's Main · Beach lat~ Sunday aftemoot .. "For some unusual reason, the boat's radar mast snapped off and the wiring shorted out," he said. "All of the in· sulation in the boat smoldered off before µ,. wwer Cf!ld;~-.nrt-oll;'l . While ·l"'!llilman RalPh lluflman and Robei'I While strualed With the r .... boat,. another Pltrol. craft headed toward the boat..Ct trouble. But befcre rescuers got near, the distressed vessel got its engine started and sped off into the Suuet. · Graham said the fire on the fire boat never-broke into open flames a~ was extinguished when the master switch ll-"3.S thrown .. The boat limped' back to Dana Harbor on emergency power and was brought to Newport Beach for repairs today, Graham said. .. "It's really unusual and unfortunate when something like this happens to an expensive piece of equipment," Graham said. "But some ol the eear we use every day is the same as on pieesure boats used only once in a while." -Power Blackout Caused by Car Striking Pole Residents of portions of San Juan Capistrano and Capbtrano Beach were left without power fo~ two hours and 20 minutes at 4:10 a.m. Sunday, resulting from a car accident on Ortega Highway. A San Diego Gas and Etectrlc Com- pany official reported today that a car traveling on Ortega Highway, one-h.olf mile east of Interstate 5, ran into a utili- ty pole. separating a •·ire. 1be impact cut o(f service of a circuit servicing the San Juan papistrano Beach area. There were no injuries. By switching the cil't'Uits, the workmen were able to restore service: lo moat of the customers in the area within a period of 42 minutes. But the remainder or customers were without Power for two hours and twenty minutes. 'Threat to Ca11apaign' • Caspers Cited on • . Countia1i Wins S'weepswkes An Orange County woman won first place and approximately $129,000 In the Irish sweepstakes to- day. Martha A. CaMis of 8 4 1 Cedarwood St., La Habra, had her lucky ticket riding on Wea.ver"s Hall. a horse that paid 20,000 English pounds to win. At Friday's rate or exchange: this would make the Orange Countian's ~·innings alxxrt $129,000. Viejo ·Residents Picket Blockade At Access Road By JANWORTII Gt ... .,..,., ..... '''" About 100 irate ~IWion Viejo residents lqda y picketed along Jeronimo Road Vt'here last week the Orange County Road Department erected posts to block off vehicular access. Access to Jeronimo Road at three in- tersections was blocked. Pickets carried signs reading, "Turn This Back Into a Planned Commanity," "Yoo Limit Our Gas Then Extend Our l\1iles" "You Can Get . to Hell Quld!;er 'Iban You Can Ge t Through Mission Vie- jo," and "R<moY<.Thcse Road_l!lo<ks foe Commlllli ty Unity." Spokesmen ror the group issued statements listing 10 reasons for pro- te3l~ the blockades at Carranza Orive, ~1ontilla Lane and Cordillera Drive. The main objectloru seem to be block· ing access to Cordillera Elementary School which "''ill shift a great deal or traffic to the front ol the school. Another objection was that a four-mile drive would be required to reach the main business section of Mission Viejo. The Board of Supervisors' action was prompted by protests of about so residents of Naccome Drive, San Andres Lane and San IU>que Drive . They said their residential streets were being used as a speedway by dri\•ers tak· ing a short a:t lo the l\1ission Viejo Shop. ping Center on La Paz Road . County Road Commissioner Te d l\fcConville said an intensive: survey ot the problem had determined that to decrease traffic on the three streets closures would be placed at · ~ ;n: tt?rsections of Jeronimo Road with Cordillera and MontJlla and Carranza. (See PICKEl1, Pap Z) Firing South Coast Officials Assailed By JOHN V ALTERU Of ... D9ftr P'lkif Steff The head of San Clemente General Hospital today lashed out at critics from South Coast Community Kospital whit have asserted that private ~tary heatth facililles are at fault ln cq.llcatlllc oenoloes aloog ihe South c.at. Breaking long-st'Olinl silence ln a acathing letter ~ -San aemente General's President Dr. Ralph Gnbam formed r«enl comments b)' Soetb CoMt officia l s ''l u dlc r o u 1." "In. comprehensible" and "the ..,-kind ot. m~tim. II • Dr. Graham and other officlal!I of San Clemente's private hospital had '"""" tained ·a policy of not job.sting w1th crtUcs from other heispitals · £n the put few years. But in today's release the hospital bead said the "time has come to set the record straight'." Graham assailed comments by outp- lng South Coast Board Chairman William Mann, who blamed san Clemente: Genttal and Mission C o m m u n i t y Hospital In l\fission Viejo the two private hospitals in the South County for buUd1ng witmut regard to an earlier Sbuth Coat master plan and thereby cre:aUnc an O\'erbedding problem in the area. Dr. Graham said that it wu clear tha t an earlier South Coast master plan show~ ing satellite faciliti es Had lost the con· fidence of residenls in the San Clemente area. He said the early South Coolt plan pro- posed the South Laguna hospital as a hub in a health-care neN·ork and that that nucleus was "poorly located" because of traffic congestion and lnaccesslblllty from freeways. A recent appeal by South Coast of· ficials for the dellcensJng of hospital beds at the two area prl\·ate hospitals 1p- parcntJy motivated today's charges . Blaming the private hoopltals directly for "needless duplicaUon," t b e • spokesmen for South Coo.st recently ap-o pealed to the Orange County Health Planning counct1 for lhe de:licenaing. l Such a drastic measure, said Soeih Coast Administrator ~ Cir~ v."OOld eliminate serious ove:rbeddin1 ~ along the Soulb ~.. I Welidler . Mostly sunny Tuesday 1~.., lht U!l\lal early morning cloada I t coastal areu. Highs• in the upper 70s at the beaches rising lo near llO inland. Overnl&ht lows In the 60s. .. boys not served by the city•s minor Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d South Coast Conservation Commission, sidered i n co n s e: q u e n t l a I , ' ' the PENN·y PJNCHERS league or Little League programs to Id not ~ ched I En . ,.., 1· . •-INSIDE TOD ay ! , participate in the club baseball Pl'Oll'•m. Caspers' a<tlon ,.moving. Ron Yeo .rrom cou ~ 11!& or cornm<nt. viroomen••• Coo 1tion pml~nl claim-~ ~ ~vs wUJ -nit on · a1J: earns the Orange County -Pianning Comm1ss1on At the time Yeo was asked to resign. ed. s .• A d j S d -.,-~ rru-vnr•~<f'<l~~-~...___-, .~ ,,. •· -lik-k...-rand de I --, Cnspe said the-rOqllesrwaJ"llladeto n 1.-En•ll'Olll!leruil COilitlon =-QI---""-"" Nee ' "!' .., • ·c:tt·• 1>-1-VU 'i"PY~--groupe<L..by-~L.at~as. was en to-ee ve OWU!!PP<l!:. -r,;;•ru ~=-~-··-~~-Sa---~ --lY""--ditd ·todov "' inturkr . _ • • Inst~ad ot having the ball pitched ~-n~~t year's elect.ion. ~rt Sny~et, iaelnore n:presentauon for u~ o>aa-nces 1n n1a Ana re:pr,Sf.lltA individuals su//ered i n 0 flo.min h .Dally PiJot Penney· Pincher acb can stll !hem· lbe boys wlU • hit It oCf an ~t..P-f the Envvocnpental Coalluon, d ~ck Valley on tbe: planning com· ~ orgaoiuttlonJ to_ twt what ~Y during the IndianapoBi ~ife . •--ytbln •--~•·-th' ad·--•-iustable lee ,,. explained _ h;ls charged. . .. ,_ ;., ml"""''· . . bejieve are envlronmontal ·~ m race Ma~ 30 s,. 1•~·"" s-.. •··-~an g. ~ .. Nw " ~-r A drop-in' ;'.ior baskeiball program In the July ~'ol '~&I 1 ~ appointe<I Birt SJ)Clldlove, OrMI!• County. p 20 • -·• ,.. ' did It. ror bo)'> 15 and .. ., will be plaved on the News, SnydeT "llQ!t Y'..e b' r ·~ o<. lba Saddlebic~ IAroa' ''The hnj>Ortanl point iii· in 'this I• tbat •0• . lub• out""'"' -·-·· 1rom.· ·7<·1o t p·-• ~~ ·w outidlhding Q,orclnaUng ~I, to'Y•'s pO&iUon en our e:lecllon sy1tem, whlch calll for-bu,ae • L.M. • ..,. ' ~:::i!.• 111•, .. -CEDAR •hokes No. I -ode. I c • ..,,., -~ ~ • _.. ,_ _ ·--• ' -••• ssl of ·---• .. & ... ~1-+ varl-·• rpie· -· Tuesdl)'5 and 'Miursdifl. .,_ -very much in t~1 w1th \be pro(e:ued ..,. comm.I on.. sums money to wage * campel1P,J1 1w,q (611..,.... .1 .. ..._.. ,.... " LIUIN .. ~ Yua ....... n ..... , , __ .. t II Id I --rva"-'" :\:°'Mt .... __ •. To!.--.~ rrom·1mr deve1*t's. -conTP.leiet)r~di!torted.our political ltedren' ~~ ,...,, Orell9t (.... • of lumber, $50. (Phone.No.) .....,,s UV!u " o years o can eem ...... _ """".. . • ._.......... ~.-' ol I ....,.._., ·~ ....,. •• the fundamental• of. archery on lhe But obtene s~ ~. Jnyder q&spers "s his environn\eittal trap-sense v1 *· c,__.. t• ,..,.. •n , ood archerycourscbe:sidetheclub. Bowtl~ writes, mainta1n 1hlnat ~·1pt_ac:e pings," claima Snyderr ''The county~· primary =...-;c_: : i::;1::;r-..,,, .. Everyth1na was 90Jd thanks to a "g is trom 3:30 to 5 p.m. Wedneldays and' . "to thwart ,lllY <by land OIK!r ' "The move will probably save him rcspomlblUty ls exttdsing land ute con-• ....,.......... n.11 "'-"'-:: tA Ued response" to thll 1d. Pinch your Frldays. interests to ~ a 1hreet to ~m· ·11eve:ral thousand dollars in reelection ti· . 'trol. That seems simple enough, but heVe ::-::,: • ...,.. 1•1: :=n ..... """ "": pennl .. wllh a Piiot Pincher cla~•Uied od Girl's 0~ 00 Tuesday. will op<n lbe palgn" In 1'7•· · --· TM coet1jn termi ol ~,41'.SllP-' you coniid<red just how valuable that _ •-· " -! lines. Z limes. 12-Call M2¥18. !See BOYS ·CLllB, Page Z) Caspers, altendflW a ---~ tk port from ooncd110d"liii!M-was""'" (Seo CAlll'SllS, Pqe fl .__ ______ _..;_• -----"! ' .-... - • • , ---· ' ' DAIL.'f PILOI SC 2 Segments -Of General , .. ... ---------- .Cledt.ente Swearing- • -• j • ID ,/ Today for Schlesinger The Sao Juan Capistrano City Coonrll f---;ls""'e~ed to vote tonight on two new IOll! of the cify's generiil plan. President NlxOa W.1 ICheduled to be on hand in San Clemente today when James -R. ~lllesl!ller lakes Jlls.-oalb as se<retary ol defense. market and will provide relief against 'Ibe Social Security raise.s, included in 1 high food prices." lesfalatlon extending the nat.lonal debt 1be council has received reeom- tnenc.'aUons from lhe city Planing .Com· mlaslOll on the plan's open-space and COOlen"ltioo elements and the land-u!e elements generally call for • 1 h e following public hearings on the twp elements plus the Park!! and Recreation section of the plan tonight. 'lbe open-space conservation elem•ts were drafted to mee\,. an assembly bUI requirement and are drawn essentially from an interim open space plan. T1>e elements . general9' calls for t· h e preservation and conservation o( natural beauty, outdoor recre_ation, historkaJ anct cultural areas and the protectioo of public healll\ and safety. The land use element is based on the existing zoning map and includes guideli~ for land occupahcy and a description of the locatjoo and distribu· tion o( land usefi. Residential areas under the element's 'requirements~ would reDect various ~ts of tbe San Juan Capistrano en- Vlr'Oflment. Business areas woUJd have to be com- patible with the residential function of the city and maintain uniqueness. Tourist · businesses would also be limited to the central part of the town. · Industrfal areas would be in sectors of adequate circulation and in conformity with the overall city development plans. · The Parks and Recreation element calls for ,;he development of seven acre! of recreation land for every l,000 city residents. This portion of the plan is b::is- e:f"""'"1i!ABJMO whkh provides-:"-the mechanism to obtain lilid for loc&J parks to serve residential subdivisioo popula- tion. F,..,.PageJ BOYS CLUB. •• club facilities to the girls from I to 5 p.m. lt '111'111 be a family night on Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. wltb-lbt club open to the entire family, not orlly the boys. The crart Shop will be open from 1 f-0 5 • t p.m. aDd 7 to SI during the week and 10 • 1.m-. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays. Cub director Mike Brady said outdoor campoutJ, and l r i p s to pro baseball games and lbe Shrine High School All· star games are being planned, but no finn dates have been set. A )uniOr ·blgh school summer recrea- tioo program run by Gary McKnlgbt wi!J also be held at San Clemente High School. . Top Tm toumammts will be held in • p;ng pxig, pool and Wmper pool as well u 1 <l>ets Ladder elimination meet: All ' ·tourneys are he kt on 1 year-round basis. : Brady said the club's personal fitness : · program is ttill going on. w l t h ' perticipmts judged on their achievement and improvement A trophy will be 1 prese11ted to the boy who Improves the most by tbe_end of lit< year and certificates will be given .to all who participate. ' ' The club will al90 be SJ)OnlOr!ni weekly m:cursioo.s for members to various events around the area. Persons in· terested should either stop by the club or can them at 4~--0376. RegistraUop for any er all programs is $2 per boy. \. Stmtmer fiirl ~Jonde a~d tan Cindy De h1ott of Newport Beach, refiects on the JOYS .of being ~ 7 and of being on the beach during this summer of '73 along the Orange Coast. Rock and Roll Payola ' Charges Hit Promoter From Wire Senices A fed eral grand-fury investigaling charges of payola in the recording in-· dustry has subpoenaed.the documents of a Los Angeles rock and roll promoter. the New York Daily News reported to-- day. The newspaper in its New Jersey edi· lion identified the promoter as Robert Price, presiden t of R. J. Price Corp., and said 'be has been ordered to produce the materiaTs for the graDd jury Friday. Price wa!I not immediately available for comment. Price, according to the News, respond- ed with "What 'investigation?" when reached in his Los Angeles office. TI1e grand jury has que s tion e d Summer Session Signups Slated For Saddleback Registration ror the summer session at Saddleback IAUege will be Tuesday. in. slruction will begin Thursday. Appointment registration \rill be !rom 9:30 a.m. to l :30 p.m. and 6 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. Classes are open to all high school graduates or persons over 18. There is no tuition fee. Day classes are scheduled from 8 a.m. lo 5 p,m. The extended-day program is . f.fonday through Thursday from 5 to 10 p:m. The session concludes Aug. 17. recording industry officials from the New York City metropolitan area. The News said the panel specifically wants the documents of payments, cor· respondence and publicity material relating to the appearance by the singing group, "The Sequins," at a rock and roll ctincert at the Los Angeles Forwn last April. The grand jury is investigating allega- tions that disc jockeys received payola in the !onn of cash, cars, narcotics and party girls for plugging c er t a I n recordings. • · Thorough in-house probes by major record firms have been urged by the he ad of their trade group. ·•1 am.confident that these charges do not accurately refiect the behaviOr of the vast majority of l'O mpaniel i nd in· dividual.s in our industry," said Stanley lt.f. Gortikov, president of the Recording Industry Association o! America (RIAA ) in a.__statement released today in \Vashington. . . "Nevertheless, over the past few weeks, -I-have been urging the chief ex· ecutlves of many of our member rom· panles to conduct thorough in-house in· vestlgations to . make certain that all their operations•are conducted on a legal aod morally sound basis and that ap- propriate action be taken against o!· fenders," he said. Patio Furniture At Model Home Lost to Thieves Judge Spencer Williams of the U.S. Dlstrict Court ot Northern canfomla was to administer' the oath in Nixon's of'flce. Scb.lesinger, 44, replaces Elliot L. Richardson in the Pentagon post. .Richardson is now attorney general. Schlesinger, a former chainnan of the Atomic Energy c.ommJssion, directed the Central Intelligence Agency for four months this year. He studied economics at Harvard, taught at tbe University of Virginia, worked at the Budget Bureau and was a90Ciated at ooe time with the Rand Corp, "think tank" in S a n t a Monl~. . He-a'lfnative of New York Cltj'. He won a Senate confirmation last Thursday by a 91--0 vote. In Sunday activity, the President sign· ed a bill increasing Social Security benefits by 5.6 percent next year and at- tempted to Kssure both businessmen and housewives of as short a price freeze as possible. In a radio address broadcasJ Sqnday, Nixon said, "\Ye have been· determined from the outset to keep ·the freeze as short as possible" -an indication be may. disclose his new economic game plan oefore the 60-day price freeze ex! pires on Aug. 13. Nixon said a temporary freeze on .all except raw food prices at the farm level was necessary because it is "vital that we have genuine constiltations with a wide range of interested parties befote launching Phase 4." He said these coo· sultations have begun. _ Nixon said, "The many measures we have taken to increaSe the supply of . farm . comi:iodities -. i~cludi!l~ the release of more than 40 milhon additional acres for !arm production -will even· tually bring more farm prcxluct.s to the Acknowledging that the-freeze has led ceiling_oL$f65 billion-to Nov. 30, take eJ~ to inequit.les, Nixon said it also can feet next July 1. create inflattonary·scarclty. Under the bill, average benefits will m.. He said, "We have seen this, for ex-crease from $161 to $17.0 ·a mofith fOl' ample, in the fact that some broiler pro-single perSOIU and from #1'1 to 1293 for ducers have bad 1o klll off baby chicks couples.· because {bey could not alford to pay the Guaranteed federal minimums under high feed prices and sUll sell the broilers special programs for the aged blind and at I.heir ceiling prices . . • disabled also will be-upped J~ly J~ 1974, "For this reason, we have been · from_ ttM to $140 a mooth for single determined from the outset to teep the peraons and from f195 to '210 for freeze as short as pos1ible." couples. Nixon aald problems ot scarcity forced At: the-present time, the 5.85 ~rcent him to embargo exports of 90ybeads, Social Security ~yroll tax ls applied to 3: "which are espeeiallY crtUcal to the aola-_.maximum '_Y&g~ base of fl.0,800. Under tion of the feed grain abortaee .-~ previous legislation, the base.was to have therefore to·bring"'8 clown-the ~of 1Jl<re8$ed to !12,000 on, Jan. 1, 1974; meat and dairy JX'O(fuct.s... · Under the bll~ signed by Nixon-on sun ... Asking Congress anew for broad ~y, the mllimum wage base wiU, now authority to control exports ol fann COJO· Jump to fl2,000 on Jan. 1. tj modities, Nixon saw such controls/as '1 tempocary and said: "When this year's crops become available in the fall, we expect lo be able to restore international access to these products. During tbe brief period when controls are necessary, we shall do all that we can to insure that our traditional customers suffer as little u possible, and we shall keep before us our continuing goo.I . of progress toward more in- ternational trade, rather than less." The soybean controls came as a particular shock in Japan, the ptjnctpal U.S. export market for soybeans. NiJ:oo said food scarcities bad been ag· gravated by unuaually poor weather for crops and livestock. But be said output is now ri$ing, prospect! for ibis year are generally .good and ~ wheat crop is ex· pect.d to be tbe largest on record'. The Sod@! Security bill wlU mean that persons wbo earn at leaSt $12,600 an· nually will have to pay an additional $35.10. Devil Made Him Do It? The long-ha ired young man in the ·Laguna Beach Christian society thrift shop turned to the little old. lady clerk and asked if thele were any long black silk capes. He explained carefully that he was a member of a devil cult, and needed the blaCk cape f9r a very important ceremony Sunday night. The clerk ea11ed potie&. Officers checked out t b e ususpiCious person" and. determin- ed he had..dme.nothlng vwong. He changed his §lory and told them he 1eeded the cape !or a play. -Mesa's V-ehictes--Switch--From Page 1 CASPERS ... To Propane-It's Cheaper By RUD! NIEDZIELSKI 01 rtt. D1llY l'POI S"ff The gasoline shortage is driving Costa Mesa's fleet of city vehicles to propane. City Manager Fred Sorsabal will seek an appropriation of f9,600 tonight for the From P.,,e I BOMBING ... conversion or 19 more trucks, pickups and utility vehicles to liquid propane gas. The city council will take action on hi! request at 6:30 in city council chambers, 71 Fair Drive. . Sorsabal said this morning that a\lhough PfOP&Jle is ·aJ.so a cri!ls-affeded petroleum. product, suppll<s to lbe city can be guaranteed. Gasoline supplies canoot. . Costa Mesa began converting some of its vehicles to the cle8ner-buming gas three years ago. Included in the first bombing be halted. switch were street sweepers and small "The Administration is anxious to COO· trucks. clUde a cease-fire in Cambodia " From those experiments with propane B~ said. "Between this time a~ Costa Mesa officials teamed that pro- Aug. 15. the Administration still intends pane was easier on the eni:P.nes and co.sts less, according to Sorsabal · to try to use its .authority for bombing Gasoline costs the city 20 cents· per to conclude a cease-fire which is gallon wholesale and propane 16 cents a .something the Congress is as anxious to gallon. see as the administration." Sorsabal said at the present time there power is in Orange County," Snyder aJk. ed. Noting 6,400 acres of land valued at $20 •million aie developed each year in the county, Snyder states: "It is not hard to imagine why Campaign costs are skyrocketing" Concluding his message in t he ne"'.Sletter, Snyder writes, "How can we expect a fair shake for environmental coocems when it costs th.is much to get el. ~ the funds come from land developer interests? Our democratic proCess: is no~ reflecting the mood of the citizens. We all must work to undo this . imbalance." The Environmental Coalition fiwill be working for meaningful tjection reform," the newsletter claims. Engineer Killed Brandishing Gun ' President Nixon signed the legislation are no plans to convert any of the city's at San Clemente to halt all U.S. military sedans to propane although the Jdea is action in Indochina by Aug. 15. . being studied. The city manager added Ile served notice Sunday he will seek that it is doubtful pollce squad cars SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police say they new war-making powers if he thinks they would be converted since these are pro-shot and killed a 33-year-old construction are n~ed to win an Indochina peace. cured under lease. engineer who fired a double-barreled Jn sigrun· g the compromise mea••-, shotgun at them after creating a .......... disturbance. !.t)e President said: "The last ren'laining K Before the midnight Sunday incident, Border Patrol Arrests Increase 4~ at the San Onolre checkpoint increQed sUghlly over the weekend as border patrolmen atTeSted 171 aliens.' The day schedule will offer art, astronomy, biological science, business, chl'"mistry, drafting, English, French, geography, geology, health, his t o r y, humanities, mathematics. music, philosophy, physical education. physics, police science political s c i e n c e . psychology. rccrealion, socio Io g y, Spanish. and speech. efemenl o( the peace in Southeast Asia is osygin in Vienna Cal ~. l a stable Cambodian settlement ... 1 will vin v"''en But er refused to droP tv;o Burglars who climbed the fence to gai·n t. k be 1 pistols and ran back into his home, coo 1nue to ta e t responsib e action VIENNA (UPJ) -Soviet Premier · I t ·lh th hol ffi enlry to the premises carr1·ed off palJO' n-" 'A . lh t Sh Id emerging a er w1 e s gun, o icer An official pointed out that there has been "ebbing and flowing" at the local checkpoint, with the past weekend show· ing at least IO pertent more arrests than the previous weekend. Patrolmen said · that during long weekends._ or weekends prior t.o holidays, .such as thls week's July 4, the number of arrests usually increases. I l DAILY PILOT ., ...... .,,,ary LU wm a peace. ou Alexei N. Kosygin arrived today on an of· said. No explanation was given. furniture valued at more than $300 dur-further actions be required to that end flcial four day visit - the first by a Butler surrendered weapons during a ing the weekend from a model home in later in the year, l shall request the Soviet leader since Nikita S. Khrush-similar . disturbance in January, police the San Juan Capistrano area, ~-ge Congress to help us achieve our 00-chev's summit with John F. Kennedy 12 said. He lived in the Clairemonl area v•au jeetives." J f County Sheriff's ofncers said. years ago. w th his ...,; e and 19-year-old son . Extended-day schedule Includes art, biology, business. 'Che1nistry, ear J y childhood education, English. health, history, mathematics. music, physical education, physics, police s c Jen cc , political science, psychology, sociology and speech. Deputies said the burgllrized home at lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o From Pagel PICKETS ... But picketing residents said that peli· lion~ bearing 1.200 signatures to request n four-way stop~ at Cordillera and "11fronimo have been presented to the county lwo yl'ars in a row y,·i1hout response. ""'e just don't \\'ant our s treets block· eel off." one resident said. ~uggcsted solu lions to the problems by lhc residents include : · -Reinove the barTicades. 29612 Orind:i Way, is one of a number of Village San Juan houses recently built by the U.S. Development Corporation of Newport Beach. They listed the loss at one table and four chairs. Sheriff's officers stalioned in the San Juan area are also investigating the y,•eekend theft of two surveyors levels, OOth taken from ronstruction sites in that area. \heY said a $500 level was stolen Crom a site at 32162 C3rnino Capistrano just a few houn before an almost identical In· strument valued at $300 was taken from a nearby building site at 32029 Camino Caplstraoo.- Julie and Tricia Anive on Coast -Com1>lcLe other main thoroughfares such as Aliso Parkway, Jeronimo and Los Alisos. President Nixon's l"'O daughters, Julie -Provide freeway exits and oUramps Elsenhower and Tricia Cox, arrived at consistent \vlth current pop u I at 1 o n La Ca$a Pacifica, san Clemente growths Instead of p,.ojtctlons 3\ldl as at Saturday for a vacation and to cl:!lcbrat~ _Canada Rood and 0so Park"·ay. Julie's ~th birthday. _ ~lilng street& IJDol1be..aos·"~=~~a_--The-~wo-daugl'lterl-Oew aboard does not take lnto consideration the vast milltt1ry·t1imaft-without·their hu.~bftntb major:lt.y of the people," ·the release David Eisenhower Bnd Edward Co'x. ~ stated. , · Pretldent and Mrs. Nlxon·were expected to continue their ¥Ojourn in California un-- til next weekend. P.ot Bill Supported SALEM, Ore. (API -Tho Oregoo Senate-voted JS.11 to reduce the max· lmum penalty to a $100 fine Cor ·t1$C of marijuana and for possessloo of less than ooe ounce. The Howe pre•Jously passed the blU 41·16. The maximum penalty now lti •.year In .)Ail ~ s.t.000 line. Earlltr llelen Smith, the Or1t lady'1 press secretary, said that Eisenhower "-ould be accompan)'ing his wtfe. But "'hen !he plane landed, he. "'as not aboard. .JUiie, who hos bten making a steady round of publlc appearances dcftnding the President In the Watergate scandal, came to the presidcnUal estate to m t, A-1.r1. Smith said. goudothe . coaking. self-cleaning gas range s399aa . ---Hlgh·h••t PfOCHI cleant everything. Just se1 the --Ofali;J°'k tlOCOYeiflloor,.Alllfiil'(lifCOI the rneulnt 1pUloveta 111 nne white uh that Wipea a~y. Cle1n1 bf~I., 1paittera. too. 8ecaUM the radiant broiler I• In the oven .. Athancly Wliot-loval. ~-----r.::;;-- contln-· cleaning gas range 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa 548-7718 • I ,, . 1 ,. • J 4 DAIL 1 PILOT SC PllBUC NOTICE ,-KTrTI04H. aUSIMO:f Jil~ITATIMaNT ,.... JoUow'ine ---'*"-••: ... 1..11. Df:Vel.O,.MINT CO.. 1011 Mh"W!'IW. LtgyM loMcJI. c...i!1W11lt ..... ,.Ill l. '''°"'• 0.-11 P•t!,....1 1071 NJ1am1r, Ll>IJUl'I& e .. dl. Ctlll'O'llll "'" Ctfll""y lbl Mal.,1111 Co., • COt· ,...,!NII (Ctll ... ), Llmltlld PIN'tlltl', l•ttJ SCl't,tlll lrttdw1y, o ....... C1Hfwf111 '2MI Tl\I' ""'°111*• 11 t-uc!tcl 11, I llll'llltcl patlMTMllp 1'1114 L F...- G1ntf'fl P'1rlntf' Tllll 'llltmtflf Wll !!led wlll'I 1M (out\' "" C19rk el OrMllt c-tv on J-~. >m .. u .. PUl!lltlltd 0rl1'111'9 Co.it Dilly PllOI, J-2ll •lld JflfV t. t. 1" 1tn 1ts1-n PllBLIC NOTICE flOTICa IJllVITINO l lOS--- NOTICE JS HEllEIV OIVEN ltMI Mtl· ed prOl>Of.•I• wl!U be rtc:t'lvtd by 1"' (Uy Of (Mia MHI II tr\1 olfl(I ot !he Clf\I Cl.,k 11 11M CllV Hill, 71 F1!r Orlvt. (111!1 M111, C11llornl1, un!ll Ow hour ol 11 :00 1.m. on Matldty, July t, ltn t i Which Tim• Tiley Wiil ~ •ned putlllcly ~ rffd 11oud In Ille coundl d1tmMr1 for tvrt11tlll1111 111 t1110r. "lll"ri1ll, equip. !Mn!, "tr1 ... poM11tlot1 Ind wth 0111ef I• clllll•• II IMY be r«jl,lllltd fOr IM CONSTRUCTION OF TMI! MENDOZA $TORM DRAIN. A Mt of pl11111. 1~llfc111on1 1nd nth•• (OIU•KI documerih m•1 IM obl1lntd at ·,,,. office of the t;lty ftllll'lffr, n F1lr Oflvt , C:otll MtM, !;1Jllor11t1, UPOll I llOl1· ,..funcl1bl1 PIY"""I ol SJ.DD. A chl•!ll ol ll<Oll wUI tMo midi II hlndted by <Nit PLEASE MALL SEPARATI! CHECKS. EKll bid .r.eu Doi ~ on Ille i>rOllOlal form arid 111 Ille m1nner P!'o"1ded In the C1Hllr1CT clocu....-11, Mid $11111 IM· I C• comp1111ed ,bY I certlflMf "Of Clthlet'I Chee:~ Dr" I bid bolld tot l'Cll le.I• lhlln 10-;, ol 1hl 1rftOllnt of Tilt> bid, mllde pay1bla «I the City ol COllt -"· NOTICE IS FVRTHEFt GIVEN 11111 !he Clly Cwnc:ll of said City NI l\et'tlDIOrt 11tabllf.hed 1 pr1v1lllno r11e end "'•1• ot w1gr1. 111 IC:CDrdil'l(I wOh ...... ID be p1!d In 1111 con11ruc:tlon ol !hi 1oove enll11td lmpr·ov1m1nh . Tl\11 s1ld rl tt illd $Cale wa1 ld(llllld by 11141 Clty COi.ineil by RH!llutlon No. 7J.1 on 1111 7nd Oay ol Janu1ry, 1'73, 1nd Is on lilt 111 The Ofllct of tM CllV Clerk o1 111d City, TM! 11ld r1l1 encl, Kiit 11 lltreln rll«red to Ind edoptld In lllb l'IOllCI IS !~I\ tu11y tnd compl1t11y sit forlh ll4lr1ln, tnd !Mt wld Kalt, as adopted bY uld r11ohrll011, t1 m1de 1 ptr! DI !Ills notA:t bY rei.rtnct. The Conlraclor 1Ml1, rn Ih a perform111c1 of !ht work atld Im· provemtnrt. conlor"1 to th• L111<>< Codi ol Ille S!1t1 DI C1!1'°'nl• end otMr l•WS of 11141 s11t1 ol C1llfornr1 1ppUcabl• ttiereto, wl!h lht ••ceptlon only ol wch v1rl1llons 11 inay bt reQ11ired unMr TM sp1cl1t 1t11ute1 pur1111nt to which pro- c...ilnrg1 hlfeunMr i re llktn Ind whk h h11vt not" l>Hn super11dtd bY !hi pro- vlslon1 ot the L•bor Codt. Preference lo leo< 111111 bl glvtf> onlr In 1111 m1nntr j!<OVldtd by llW. No bid .r..H bt conildcrtd unll11 ll 11 INdt on • blink torm lur11lr.llld by tilt City of COllt Miit, lflCI II mlM 111 K· cordt"'I with ll'le provlllDl'I ot tlM pro- posel rew!rtl!'llflls. E1th blckr...-mu1t be Uce<>lld Ind ti~ 6rtQu1lll1td 11 r.ciulrld by 11w. The Clly COOJM"ll of tht Cltr or cos1a Mtst restrws IM rlghl ffl rtl•cl 1nv or all bld1. . 011.i: June zs, 1t12. .-._ BY THE ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF TME CITY OF COSTA MESA. CALIFORNIA Publllhlld Ori~ Cotst DtlLV Piiot June 29 1nd Jutv 2, 19n :1:111&-73 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC~ INVITING •IOS HOTtCE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhl_1 111tld proPQs.111 ... 111 !Mo r11e:elvtd by"lhe City of COlll MIU •• Ille office of •he Clly Cl1rk 11 lht City Hell, n Fair Drive, Cotlt Mtu. C1Hfoml1, unlll !he llOUr of 11:00 1.m. Otl Mond•Y· July f, 1t7J, II which time lhty will bl O(ltll- 911 fl"bllcb trlCI rtld 1loud Ill lht C:OUMll tllllmbtr1 fof" furnlslllf!lt 111 \tbor, m• ttr11ls. 1qu1pment, tr1,....portellon 111d suc:ll olhtr t1cllltln II !T'IY De f'l.<IUlfCd for 1'-APROVEMENT OF TE WINKLE MAINTENANCE YARD. A u l ot pl1ns, specHlc1tlons ind a!Mr contr1cl docurnerits mlY bl obtllned 11 _ tilt olflcl ol the City Ef!ltlnter. 17 Fair Orlvt, COlll Mnt, Catll0t11l1, upon t non- refundablt Hymtnl of i.1.:111. C"-'•Otl o1 l1.00 win bt made II llltldled by mtll. PLEASE MAIL SEPARATE CHECK~. Eacn bid 1n11n bt mlldt on the P•OP01•1 form and In 11\e m1nner provided ln '"- C0r>lr1c1 d0Cumenl'$, ind d11U be •c-cornpanlltd bY I ctrllflld « CtlMtr't • c~k « 1 bid tloflCI tor not 1 .. 1 ll'len 10 percent ol Ille lmlMll ol ""* bid, mid• ~y1blt lo tilt CllV of COlll Mtw. l!!OJICE IS FURTHER GIVEN ttial Ille Cl!Y Ciiimc:U of "said Clty 1111 heretC!f'Dl"e 1111bllthed 1 pr1v1UIM rttt •nd Kilt ol ~ waoes, Jn tecordaMe w!lh law, ta be p1ld In 1111 CDr\llrucilon of the 1bQv1 entllled lmprovemenll. Thtl uld r1!1 and !IC:llr 11111 tdopled bY 1111 City Counc:ll bv Rnotutlon Mo. 7J.I on IM 2nd Oay ol J1n111ry. 1m Ind Is on Ill• In tM Ollkt of Ille City Clerk of u ld City. TM! sald r1i. tnd Kalt 11 11trtl11 reftrnd to 1nd 1dop1ed '" 1111s riotlc• " 111ou1111 tu11r •M completely ,., forth htrtln, 1nd !ht wld Kiii, IS IOOPled bY ••hf fHOIU!lon. Is mldc 1 part ol !his r>ollct by rrftrtnea. TM ContrtC!Olf tMll. In ' II. ptrform1nc1 ol Ille work ttld" Im· pr0Vement1, conform lo TM Ltbor Cod• of the $!tit of Ctllfornlt Ind otlltr lilWI o1 the Sl1lt ol C1!1!ornl1 •PPlkabll ll!ereto, wfTll tM ucepllon only of such v1rl1tlont 11 may !Ml ~rid utlder IM ~111 •lllut11 pur11Hnl ro wh!cll..E'•~ cttdll'lll• lltrtood« 1rt t1ken 1nd ... lch 1141v• ftOI bHn superHded bY the iwo- vlilons of tM Labor co.i... P•toference lo .. bor 111111 be ;!Yen only 111 11\e mtnrwr Pf'O\'ldld by l1w. No bid IMll be eonsldt!'ed unleu 11 Is f"11is. on 1 bl1nf1 torm turnhll«I bY IM Clly 11:1 COlllt Me!lll, Ind II midi In IC· cordll!Ce Wllh ll1t provl1lon1 o! Ille pro- pos1I rl'itul,..m1nt1. EKh l..rddtr must bt llc1n1ed ind tlJO prequtllnld 11 r.ciulrltd by l1w. TM City COUMll o1 tilt City ol Casta M1'4i rntrvet tilt right 10 r111ct 1ny or Ill bld1. D1!9d: J_.7Jt-lf73-8Y Tt-tE OflOER OF TME CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA P'ubllthed Ortnoe Cots! Di!llY Piiot. J.,.,. :11 end Juty 2. 19n w1.n; Pl!BLIC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING alDS NOTICE 15 HERESY OIVEN 11111 seal· ell prOl)OlllS Wiii be ~•lved by Ille City ol COl111 MHI 11 tht ofllct ot ttw City Cr.rt et !M City Hiii, n Ftlr Orlw, Cotll MHI, C1lllorrt11. unTll IM hDllr ol 11:00 1 .m. on Mon41y, Julf t, 1913. •I wtilcll llrne llMIY win bt Opt!\td publlcty o!;llll flld •loud In TM COUM1L ch1mbtf't tor f\Jr11l1hl110 111 llbof", m1trri111, ~Ull>­ "'-"'' ll"•n1p0rr1tion and 1uch other It· cll!tln 11 m1y bt r.ciulr.cl for RECON• ST RUCTION OF CITY SJREi!!l5 19n-7l. A sal ol pltns, ~ll!c11lon1 ~nd ollltf' contract dOCU11'1"11s llUIY IN obltlllld ti lht ollfc• ot the City Ef!ltll'lffi', 11-1'111' DrtV11. C01!1 M1t1, C1llfornl1, uoon 1 nonrtfurod1bll f>IYmitnl Of ".00. A •cl'ltr11t1 oi ll.00 wnt tMo ll\lde It ll1ndltd by rntll. PLEA51!!' MAtL SEPARATE CHECkS. EICll bid sll1ll be !Mdt on ll!t 11f'OPOHI form Ind In lhl menntr provldld 1n lhl con!l"ICI doc:Um.enh, I nd 111111 bl e.Qo ~nl9d ~ I certffltd al' Cltl'll.,.. clMck or I tlld bond for not ""-tllln IO'lt 01 Tiit tmlMll of 111t llld1 midi 1111y1blt to !Ill Clty o1 COllt Mffl. NOTICE 15 FURTHElt GIVE N TM! the Ctly Cauncll ol »Id CllY hll lltretolort 11t1bll1htd t prtvllllftll r111 1nrl tc:111 01 Wt!IH. In ICCordlnac• wltl'I llw. IO bt pjkl Ill 1"4 con11rucl10t1 ol lht •bOV11 en- lltlld lm11towmt11t1. Thll "Id 1111 tnd little WH dOPUd by lhl City COUt'(!I by lt91D1utlon No.. ~1 on tilt 2nd Dty al Jaiw.1ry 1tn 1nrl It on n1e In 1111 Ollk • o1 11141 City Clll"-ol Mid City, Tll.ll Mid rlll 1ttd 1e111 11 herein ref1rrllf fO Ind lldofl!M In 11\ft notice 11 lllOuOh f\111~ tnd cornptttely 111 tarnf 11tr1l11, 1nd TIMI "Id Kiii. •• ldollfM by Mid r11o1u1ron, 11 """" • "'' ol 11111 not!~• by ...... ..nu. TM ContrlCtor 11\etl, In 1111 ptffonMM.t Of I~ I -k 1ttd 1""' ~'" conform to tM L1bor Coot "' !ht ''•'-of C1lll«nl1 Ind olfltr llWI It----:--' 11IJll p1 wacu1.a-11uw.. --;-~~l':'i11~f~!f'~1r~~~ ,,_ t411(111 llllUltl pi;tsulnl lo WhlC!I ~ utdl"ll llll'tullCI ...... llkfn tnd wlllc:h !law not btl'll 11101rit0ed IJll' !ht P"" Mlkln1 of 111t Llllor CDlll. No bid -"tit bt conll4t•l'd Ul'llttl n 11 f'l\ICM' on 1 111111k form tvr11li.llf0 .,. '"' City o1 CMll M_, Ind 11 n'lldl In k · Cffdlll(t Wiii! lllt provltlo1u pt Int llfO- POl•I rtc1~l•eJNnll, l!at11 OldMI' mu11 bl Hc.riHd Ind 111$0 pr....,.llfltd •• t'tclulflod bf llff. Th9 CtTy Courocll of lllt Cl!y ol C..U ~ ,.....--tht rltlll ti r1IK1 My or Ill Oidt.. Dllld: JW'lt ,,. t•n. av THI ()lt(llilt. °" THI crTV COUNCIL OF THI! (ITV Of' CDllA Ml.S.1. CALlJIOltNIA ~llbl!M!e!I OT•ri,t Cot1! Dtlty PllOt JUM • .,... J'llY L 1m 2010-n Expo Going lfp 'This aeria! view shows Spokane's Expo '74 taking shape on Havermale Island (center ). Canada will use all of the island on the Jeft to accommodate her pav. llion aiid exhibits. The fair, opening .ri.tay 1, 1974 is expected lo bring 180 days. of fun and profit to the \Vasbin gto n community. - 'Detroit: Adjust! --U.S. Regulations Here to Stay-EPA ,. By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN UP'I Awl• wru ... DETROIT -There have been complaints from automotive executives -both privately and in public -that \Vashington bu r eau c r a t s decide what cars will look like and how tl}ey will run. Entrance of the federal govcrnnumt into building cars was a "traumatic intrusion," says one \Vashington bureaucrat who ·a d v i s e s businessmc.n, both in the auto industry and elsewhefe, to recognize that regulation is here lo slay. ERIC 0 . STORK. deputy assistant administrator <Jf tbe E n v i ronmental Protection Agency, recently participated in a three-day Environtnental Activities \\'eek s e m i n a r sponsored by G e n e r a l Motors. ft \Vas supposed to show. that fightin g between the automaker and the govern· n1cnt has ended . The theme was set. by the *chief executive or the giant c orporation, Chairman Richard C. · Gerstenberg, who said that oruy-a-rew barriers or misunderstanding a n d suspicion remain. That theme \\'as shattered a few ·hours later as G·~f-prcsldenfEdward N. C.ole renewed a more familiar sound -one of shut- dowm unless .Congress rewrites the standards set in the Clean Air Act oll970. STORK, THE EPA ex· ccutive, discounted doomsda y talk but told the auto ex- ecutives they had better get used to federal regulations. "The auto industry's reac- tion to the imposition of federal safety and emission control requlrements w a s generally <Jne of vigorous op- position. As public pressures for regulatory controls bullt up over several years, th e auto industry frequently denied there was any problem at all ," he said. • tions that the death knell of the auto Industry was at hand," he added. • STORK ALSO said it i.s an unrealistic expectation f o r automen to see federal regula· tion "as a bad dream, hoping they will soon awaken from the nightinarc." The public will continue to derrlarid that" the governq1ent protect it from va ri ous hazards, and the government wil1 continue lo respond to these demands," said Stork. "In other words, regulation or the aut<J iJ1dustry is here to sta"y. You might as well learn to live y;jth it." • Pointing Io commercial aviation and the food and drug industry-as two areas which have adjusted to federal regulation, Stork said auto ex:· ecutives could take a hint Ho1rie Freezers Hot Items in Summer By SYLVIA PORTER Among the hottest selling -items on the market today are home freezers -and if you're planning to buy one, buy it now. For this is Lhe bargain season for home freezers and for refrigerators loo -and although sizzling sales may understandably limit any price reductions, the national price freeze pltLS the mark-down tradition adds up to an at· tractive background f o r purchases. THE BOO~t in sales is spec- tacular. In April alone, freer.er shipments soared 55 percent over a year ago, reports the Association of Home Ap- pliance Manufacturers. In the first four months or '73, shipments ran 38 percent "And when regulations were above "72. finally imposed, and as the~ · The reasons for the boo1n were made more strict, there \ also stand out clearly. You can were frequent industry predic· ~ save money on SEVEN ADVANTAGES QUR PAGER OFFERS that yours m•y -not ! COMPLm OUH•I COUNTT COYllAGl ... IHlbit: ........ S. C._...., M_,•• YJal• .,_ '•""· • -11 -. .._...tlMltefL.A. MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IASIS NO DlftOSIT 119Ul•ID ON A,,ROYID CllDIT ONLY Sl7.IO Pll MONT TOTAL COST ,..,......,.,..., le NIW.COMPACT UNIT ~ .f-J,1.-... 4 •·\11-f .,.._..._._... .... V ALSO ARI AYAll.AILI 'I FULL fRU MAINTINANC OllANG£ COUNT\ II \DJOlfl l PHONI S£HVl('f I'<{ 114. nwn1 ..i to. SANTA I'll. SANTA AHA ,_ ~ htdl, ~ Ylt+e ,.,....,, "91 Cl-"-SN """'""' II ""-nll f9fl ..... u. rood by buying it in quantity and storing it ~n the freezer. You can try to offset sky· rocketlng food prices through home garden· ing, freezing a n d canning. And you can stock up on frozen foods in-the-belief that you'll only pay more if you wait. But whether or not a freezer will be a moner·saver for you will depend .on bow much you use it and how much you save on the foods you bu)' · and store. ·) Complete New York Stock List " I ) ----• • Mond•y, J11I~ 2, l Cl73 DAILY PILOT. j3. TUIS. & WID. ONLY Ol'EN WED., JULY 4tlt 10 TQ 6 h ' Y ou1ag lVaslaingtmi Tony Award-winning actor Rene Aube.rjon~is,_por­ trar,s Gooi;ge Washington as a young officer lfl ·P:or· . • trait oC a lllfro as a Young ?.1an" on the PBS Spe- •. cial of the \Veek tonight at 8 (clock on KCET, ~·~C~h~•~n~n~e~l ~c~-~·~~~~~~~~~'-"'--~~~~~ ' ·. ·' U.S. West New Sce11e .. j:. ~ Of Spagh~tti W ester11s : . ' '350 \\1eslerns in 10 years I, Dolly 10·10 s ... 10-7 ;~ MOGOLLON, N.M. (AP) - ".1 Years ago, Frank Trolio's ;.:: parents emigrated to the : United States from Italy. '• Because he bas lived in this are tired or the same Spanish l!iil° isolated southwest New Mex· iro ghost town for many of his ~ .~tn%:~::s i~n~~i:~ Ume New Mexico scenery was FAMOUS worth the 30 to 40 percent in-BRIGGS & STRATTON crease in p..oductioo coslS of ·the 13.S million movie. Much ENGINE of the additional expense is at- GIRLS 20" HI-RISE BIKE Knobby rflar lir• for f•1f 9•+·•w1y1, Fe•lure 1pody b1n•n1 butktl 1.ddle, hi.ri1e m111ibu ha ndl• b•r1, c"rom1 rirru i nd unocth' 1clion co•der brake. U1e your K-ri'larf ch1r9e card. MODEL #20'1 1888 ' •• - ~ Now, although he no longer • speaks the language, Frank !;_ Trolio will be seen by millions sc~:~e:~ r.:~e~ilir:'~~~ed 1 ~.1 ,... ___ ,,.,...,..,..,.,..,.,, ___ _, tributed to the necessity or 1 ~""'""'"""'"' flying the daily takes to Leone ' ~ 20-INCH, 3-HP ROTARY POWER , LAWNMOWER Clwrge 1 I! of movie fans in his parents' ~ native country be c a u s e ;: Mogollon ls the location for .... Sergio Leone's latest Western. :: "Nobody ls My Name," star· ".... ring Henry Fonda and Ter- rence Hill. · The movie's executi\'eS \\·ere 90 impressed wilh the 'Ves tCrn :: Oavor of Trolio's appearance • • -be wears an eye patch and ~! Unips -that they paid him to ;.. . appear in one of the SCi!nes. '":~ While millions in Italy and " other countries might see his perfbnnance, Frank doesn't ,._. expect to see himself - l\1ogollon'' only movie house collapsed several decades ago . • l .. GOLD WAS discovered al ·• :f.1ogollon in the 1970s and at one lime, this ttny village near •• the Arizona border supported :I a population ol 2,000. In 1960, ~ there were 14 saloons, seven .. -restaurants ahd two hotels ~ nestled among the ITlQuntains. •• Now ·there arc no .businesses · and only a few residents, like .-; Trolio. . · :: So whit brings an llalian ~ movie company to t.1ogoloon? '" It's really quite simple, say.r "; executive producer F u I v l o l\lorsella. Italion fans -aftu in Rome. Leone is best known to ~ American fans £or his so--call· "' ed spaghetti Westerns starring · America n actor Clint Eastv;ood. \\'hat interested an Italian director In Westerns, ~ considered by same critlcs the ultimate American art form? ntE WESI'ERN does not belong to · Americans alone. Morsella said. It's an in- ternational experience, "the !ast fab~e that ~le are will· K~~'2s 1ng to hsten to. • Hill, who has starred in ' seven 'Vestems. was· in the ~~"""" American \\'est for the first ~ ;•t)oi lime; and be. was impressed. "I was ahvays told how big it was," he said, "but seeing it is something else. It sort of drugs you to drive through It. ! I can understand maybe the tVWboY better because I can see the places." "' The !ilm is being shot in English, ._1\lorselta_s aid_,;- because Ameri cans a.re un-I'. COOSCiOUSJy Jip re:lderS While_ I~ the rest of the world doesn't , mind if its cowboy hereoes are ~ a little out of synchronization. If He said it will be dubbed later r in Italian, French, Gennan and t' probabl y Japanese. SF Symphony Ecirns Sand box, wading pool. High • im· pact material. Canopy in vinyl. .. 1.A<""';:,,;.:i. ................. ~· • 3888 Famous 8rig;s & Strottori engine. 14-gouge steel deck. 1idtl discharge chute. 7,. wheels, rllrome loop handle. Throttle control at engine. Don't rni11 this sole! Charge it. 7'' Plastic table for · patio. Choose green, gold o r crystal. So Ye, 200 MILK BALLS 57' ... Fre1h deliciou1 lft•lt1i mil~ bills i11 F"lilk co~l1in1r. 2•• . ' •• . , Kudos From Moscow ·1,...~ ..... ....,- ~ .... ,_.., ............................... ~ ~10SCOW (/\Pl -A pro- minent ri.1 o s c o ". ronductor has praised the just-coin· pleted Soviet tour of the San Francisco Symphony as " a great success." Prof. Boris llaikin had praise !or all the orchestra's soloists in a review \n the newspaper So\.·ietska~·a Kul- tura. •• Jlaiki.n singled out soloist ~ Sle\.\'at1 Kan !n is ''an ex· ) ce!lent violinist \•:ho plays with boundless vigor. and by , his initiative keeps the entire I" string sectioo at constant, • tense attention." ! But Haikin had I his t criticism : "At the sa me time, I' the sou!J(I of the, string in- struments was not nll it should • ! be. We are accustomed to greater wannth and stronger ~ !~l.ng." ~ au· di scovery for Soviet diences." "~le has a beautiful sound. faultless tinting and virtuoso technique w i t h unlimited ·~ possibilities." the Soviet COO· ~ ductor said. "The young pianist can only be reproached . for certain sentimentality in ; his interpretation ol Beetho-1 ven's Fourth. Concerto." ... Conductor Seiji 0 z a w a • , Haikin ·wTote , "is an original mwician who relies mostly on . intuition and f i e r y tern· » perament. His interpretation rt. of Tchaikovsky 's Fourth Symphooy attracted gr<at In· j terest." Haikin continued. · "His meticulous and spirited Charge it 0£ K marl 6-PIECE GYM SET 2588 perfonnance merits approV&l.I::::::~~~"""::::~·':,~:!:'!:::!. The ln:ical section or the score sounded with p a r t i c u I 1 r -~-·.~- • . SUMMF.R TWO PASSENGER LOVE SEAT 3488 Rcmini$t ent oT plca ~.sn t days of the past. Strong, 1turCy cor.s~ru cfion. Has scalloped canopy a nd apron. 2" button .t ufted seat end back. Ideal for lawn, patio, cic. Guv nov1 ~nd ~aYe. (\ f; I ' • ,, ' I ,. " . :4 j . ' __ \: , -" .. ·-~ @ · MEN'S 26" 10-SPEED BICYCLE ~ I ~ .. ' • .. .. I. ;. IO·speei , li9htwei9ht. Sj.ifter le~•" on lop of 21" fr 1me. C1li per hand bra~~ • front t ni rt••· Chrome rim1, 2 11~ I l /1" tir11. Wide r11lio 91arin9 l6 n lo 90. 3344 r ~.>~­. ~ JUNIPER SALE • l ·Gallon 6Jc .. , ~ Tam , Pfitiers, Armstrong to beautify those dull spots t in any yard. ~ ,,.. e· .-.v.· :it· ''" ., ~ ". ... . . .,. .· -- 22" KETTLE GRILL 1000 Rustproof cast-alumi • ' ·1 .. I • '• num grill with adjusta. ~' ble chrome grid, 2 draft :•; controh, remoYable ash :._I r,; ~ a pan. Charge it! • • Haikin said pianist Andrt Watts was .. a plcru;ant warmth and inspiration:-1.1an thi{lgs in his interpretaUoo vlefc unusual but interest"'c and attractive.'' SPECIAL · . ALUMINUM SCREEN DOOR WITH KNOB, AIR-CLOSER, LOCK I : • 4" COLEUS PLANTS CAKE DONUTS 7'' • :t==-==::;:;::0=,9=.=::,,;;:. ===-:~=;;~::;;;;,;;;fiilM-.,-. -,-,.-.. -., t -r:-', e1~b!-oo-,-.1JHM -t.111111-1,-,-, _.._--lt-- ple11tt i11 1heie• ef 9reen, ch 1rtr11111 yt llow •~i olhtr1. . ~ . .' / / ,/,? .. Duro·frcimi aluminum~-~~---~------ WffilfUlly """'ea recessed ~ t"·GAt-FUCHSIA- hinges. Adjustable side "' 77c and bottom channels.. ' u,. rltht or htNt;~,. Sw~''"' color;~ tht 1h1ie. Auortti colt,.. i 2200 HARBOR BLVD. ;~~:~' 0~~ COST A MESA Harbor • . ' .... • I - .• M~, J11t~ 2, }q;7J Monday'.s Closing PriceS-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • Rat~Hike Proves Drag on Market NEW YORK (AP) -The 1tock market moved sharply lower Monday as investors reacted to n!lng Interest rates and tighter money 1'he boost by the Federal Heserve Board In the discount rate at 11 or Its l2 member banks to 7 ~ percent Fnday and the Feds decision to tighten re- .serve requirements at member banks acted as a drag on the market, analysts said 'J( the money supply becomes restncU\e, It usuaJly has a negative effect on the market," s11d Robert Colin, analyst withJ'aulkner, Dawkins & Sulhvan ._ Also, numerous major banks upped their prime lending rates to 8 percent, making 1t cosW er for business to borrow funds for expanston • I' , \ -• SC DML Y Pl LOT J;; Sptclult o lbe Dally Pikil 1 OS ANGEi 1-.:S -Ntl 1n ron1c of Amerlcnn ~1cd1cul Internatio n al Jnc. "as $1 905 000 or 28 ct>n ts a ~hare for lht"'lhlrd qulltrer ended r-.1.iy 31 compared w I 1 h $2 3SB 000 or 37 cents rest i11~d for 1)00l1ns!'! of interests, In thu like fL~Cijl 1972 period Rc~t'Jlues "ere $.17 338 000 <'Ompnred with $36 491 000 a )Car t:ar\Jer Briefs e Turbine Gear SAN DIEGO (AP) -The ~o\Jct Un ion h<ls bought more than $25 million v.orth of ga~ turbin' equipment from thl' Sola r d1v1inon of lntC'rnallonnl llar\cstcr Co the compan) announced Sol:ir a(;:reed lo ship more than 35 gas CQmpressor seL" and spare parts and r'lated equipment lo the So\1CI Union bet"een nQW nnd April 197~ compan y off1c1.:ih; s:i1d O S lnllon Sold SAN DIEGO f \P) -Radio stauon KFS[).Ft\1 has been sold by T1m(' Inc to Lotus Comrnun1ca11on.~ Corp of Los. Angeles sta11on officials sa\ Lotu!I has off('red ;275 000 for the San Diego station Bar rv Zortluan president of Tim~Lire cab I c Com munkat1ons Inc said Thr> !!ale 1~ subje<:t lo Feder ti Communications C<lmm1ss1on approval" • If.~. ~ ..... , .... \\ASJllL\r.TON (APJ -The CensU3 Bureau says the n1c dlan f~11n1ly u1come I n America h.is r1.~n 10 more thnn !11 000.a vear for the fir"'t 11mc but that hla<'k families are ap~rcntly no1 sharing In the tncrcased t.1r nuencc 1'he bureau said lhc mcd111n fnm1ly income of America ~ 5.f S mllllon ftim1hes climbed 8 I perct'nt to $1 120 last year • l'e lroloHe Spe<"lal co tbe nany Pl1ot LONG BEACll -P'trolane lllC tms reached agreement v.1th New York Life Tnrura nce Co nnc1 Prud<'nual L 1 r <: lnsurancti Co of America on ., 20-ye:ir loan or Sl8 million n J f\tunit.lj thlurnw_n.. -said the mone)\\h\ch will be---+-< taken down In Augus.t will 00 ustd to refund sh6rl tenn OOr· rowings ™1 ~--ircight---+I percent Interest \ I . -. . DAILY PILOT --- ' ' ' m• 1 CllA·CIU SPO:IAL LISTERINE J 7 -OZ. BONUS BOTTLE . ' Some!hing good 'to eat and drink is ' z·· I' c· ·ready for you ·at our snack bar; at a NOW mighty low pr.ice! Not available at ONLY • • Jefferson or C!"oga Park. The or•I •n)i,eptic that kills germs . 73c on contact. Get the 17 -oz. plastic bottle ti + the price of • 14-oi.. ;:G. · bottle .. The.ts. like 9ettin9 3 ex+r• ' ounces free. ' . ' ' Cl FFM 113 OZ. llBf TIITllAl1E · " -MEIAFIAME mH I All POMP · . · -·- ·- BarbU steak; or hot dogs to Pel· ... ' a· 99 fect ion with this i;ast iron braziei. 1!1." · Adjustable grills, wood handles and .s.". · -· base. Ideal for h9one and ootir«s. SPECIAL OFHR • ~ • PlASTIC WlllE CANS .IN ASIOBl.m CUI .. SIZES & SHAPES FOR ALL NEEDS e BARREL WASTE BASKET e 20 GAL-TWH ~ e 6Q QT. WASTE BASKET e 44 QJ. SLIDE TOP BASKET .- , ' , \ I • ~ ••1;APBI PIAlE . . . : · ait. ,9. "-·~ o1 fif!Y s' oz. ioam :curs 1 IC cups or reg; 89c eir. pack bl one hurxlred ,3 nas. 9' White ~·plates. Sllck Up OOW PIAID ' IOI picnics.-2 PIGS. '.-Ultra quiet and etticient RUmp fO! use . 1•·•-with aquarium littei~ Minimum of mov· HG. · · ir« parts and fully insulated. for iJSe 3.4t • · -. · : • • with most aquariu~ , . · A ·great idea for yoor kitchen or bar. Has ice 7'! level wirrdllw .and removable serving ·cup. llG. · . Just what's needed for makir« special drinks, 9.97 crispy salads. ;JOO IC. 1 · ' -· ' , ii ' • TEIUMl JmlCAI. HSI .. . . The . original German fO!mula flake fish 54c food with all the nutr1ents neii!ed for l!G. llealthy fish. floats, so won't cloud 19' walll. 71& oi. i;an. . · BUR II ME1111C SOCKET SET l4 in. and 'JI in. drive 20 pc, sets with wide range ol most ooeded sockets, rev er. sible ratchets, extensions aoo fitted metal tase. Cooie in aoo save ioday. ~:~~7~a BX TIPIS EAllLY-WITI llvns DOT PRO GOLF BALLI · SpOCial gilt pack oi six 90 compression 419 golf balls aoo a giant goll ball size Sflilll l!G.- sphe!e. It's the ball of the tournament 6.91 WiMing pros. FREE! Ball of soap . VOIT IFICIAI. TETHERBAl.l SET · , flcellent fun and exercise for the action • minded family. You get tethe!ball, nylon rope, galvanized pole and grouoo sleeve. ~n:t put off this terrific buy. llG.499 6.97 MMAC 7 FT. CISTDM P8 TAllf GADGETS GAL• FIR YmR •E Spoon sets, towel holders, tongs, ·2 !I scoops, varioos type scraper,;, scales, YOut - towel rir«s. garlic & lime presses & a.CHOICE whole lot more. Be prepared. FOi 4 PC. llECllATll .... IEI Colorlul iacquerware . canister set ·With a•• choice of 3 cozy designs. Sizes-for coffee, llOW tea, flour, sugar Of whatevei yoo want :to OllLY . keEfl 'fresh. Compliments any decor. · • -' 9 PC~ iAIAI lflVSllT IET 2 Jf. mr-cn.ior 1111acoii11 "'""" .. ,,. ...... ' ' BfCIRIC • flE ITAllER • Get barbeciJe fires startli!l like a B-Oy si:oul . 1 aa No more messy and dangeioos fluids needed; llG. just plug in starter and lay it 011 the charcoal. 2." A must fO! conYenierce: · .. 11a1i41.111wm• ' A fuli'feature model Willi semi·ciocular hood, · sea motorized rolisserie, rewlving grill and l!G. heavy gauge stee! fire bowl. Tubular legs .. 11·" Enjoy rlelitioos bbq flaYOf today. · • · ., ' 11. PAINI •IR Am RAY -fitjustabootarr,thing'With fhe simplell®~ 1 of a rivet Outfit comes with rivet PQPtr· ~:~ iMer and SIJ!lply of ~ tn. riyets. A 'fl!Ces-· ·-• -Smf frame-and irea'ly d bed-!el-)Oll A-play a good game ol p:. Wood grain RIG. finished ·aprons & ball return. With balls, 14.11 roller covir and ·paint pa~ Can ~ used 'llG. overand over with both hrtli!iO! or ejlerior 1•59 paints:~ve now• ' sllY fO! the family 111<11. Stiel$, rack. fun fllf eveiyone. . . . s,,c Al r k:lnlubll'lTOll HOlllS:MOHDAY'IOAMlt ,,M. TUfSDAY JO;QI It JI rM. JUIY 4111, JO A/II It 7 rM. SOMf QUAllTITlfS ... , If UAlmll• P(ISTCOMl,flln'SflVfD -~ COSTA -M .. ES. ·A -3088 BRISTOL ST. -1-· c•,!:. !1--~-;.=:;=u:,..,,.,c•=rD=ira=lrill•il.-- Sin D'-lo FrHw1Y iit B;l1tol VI!~' ----. . • ' . - ' ( .. . .. .. ~- f\ . . 7111 I • : . ' Lago11a Beaeh EDI TI O N ' Today's F lnal . N.Y. Stoeks 1---'t'OL 66, NO. 183, 2 SECTIONS, 30-P.AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . -TEN CENTS ' :Major Banks Raise Prime Lending ·Rate to 8'r.o NEW YORK (AP) -Numerous inajor banks, acting on the heels of Federal Reserve Board steps aimed at cooling monetary expension, raised prime lend- ing rates today from 7~ to eight percent. The moves; wtlich followed the lead oJ Philadelphia's G~rd National Bank, marked, the eighth general y, ·Percent in. crease thia year in themlnimwn Jnterest fee Charged by banks on Joans to large corporate cUBtomers. Some finanCiat ana19its premcted that the record prime ol 81,ii percent set dur~ ing the 1969-70 credit crunch soon may be eclipsed. Amoog the. dozen or more. banks posting increases· this morning were cr.ase Afanhattan, the country's third largest, , and two New . York bank~. Chemical and Franklin National, as well as such large Chicago banb as .f<'irst Na- tional-Bank, Northern Trust Co. and..the Harris "Bank. · · · The Bank ol cauromia, 'wells Fargo Bank, Security Pacific Bank. and Crock- er Bank also raised their prime lending . •· rates from 1~4 percent to '8 percent today. ' Bank()( America officials .were in con- ference today and oould not be reached for comment. Bankers said the moves w6uld not af- fect rates on loans to smaller businesses or on consumer borr()Wings, including mQrt_gage_!,_ _ _ Girard's announcement of an Increase in its prime came Friday night, shortly after the Federal Reserve Board raise'd its discount rate from 6\2 percent to 7 ' . percent and increased rtser\'e re- quirements for member banks. The discount rate is the interest tiw'g· cd by the Fed on loans lo member banks. Rettnt increases in It ha\·e raised the ccst bank.s must pay in tapping one of their primary sources ()f funds with which lo do business. Meanv.•hilc. Lhe doll ar y,·cakencd again in Europe today. des pile moves late last week that were supposed to help the U.S. currency. The dollar dropped sharply· i n Frankfurl, Zorich and Paris. It inched nhead in London. Dealers said, howe\'er, fhal trading v.·as slov.' at the outsel. There y,·ere no early signs of monetary crisis. Gold , which often mo\'es erratically higher in lirnes of .monetary uncertainty, v.·as_ unchangc~ in U)ndon aod Zurk:h,...the tv.•o biggest 1narkets, in early trading. The mark was revalued upward by 5.5 percent against seven European cur- rencies last y,·cek , and interest rates in • lhe United Slates yere raised. Botll moves should ha\'e helped the dollar to- day. bot instead the decline conllro(ld. On WaU Street stock market prices re- mained sharply lw·er and drlftlnC at midsession today amid ln\•estor concern • O\·er the rising interest rat.es and t.lfrht money.· , The Dow Jones av~rtige ol 30· ir>- dustrials at l 1 8:ftf.' (PDT) wai dowa 8.ll at 883.50. On the New York Stock Enilange, declines led advances by 2 to 1. Homosexual Activities On Decline • Ill Laguna Summer Girl ~ ~~~~~-~--~~ ' Blonde and tan Cindy De fl.1ott of Newport BeacJ1, reflects on the joys of being 17 and of being on the beach during this summer oi '73 along the Orange Coast. • Viejo Pickets Protesting County B!ocking of Road By JAN \VORTH 01 11M Diollw .. Hiit 511111 .About 100 irate Mission Viejo residents today picketed along Jeronimo Road "''here last ·week the Orange County Road D:epai1ment erected posts to block orr vehicular access. Access to Jeronimo Road at three in- tersections was blocked. · Pickets carried signs reading, "Tum Tltis Back Into a Planned Con1munity," '1YOOLimif Our Gas Then Ex tend Our Miles'' "You Can Get to Hen Quicker Than You Can Get Through Mission Vie· jo," and "Remove These Road Blocks for Community Unity." Spokesmen for the group issued slatements listing 10 reasons for pro- testing the blockades at Carranza Drive, Montilla Lane and Cordillera Drive. The main objections seem to be block- ipg access to Coidillera Elementary School which will shift a great deal ()f traffic to the front of the school. the problem had detennined lhat to decrease traffic on the 1hree streets closures would be placed at the in- tersections . of Jeronimo Road with Cordillera and Afontilla and Carranza. But picketing residents said that peti· • tions bearing 1,200 signatures to request a four-way stoi;. at Cordillera and Jeronimo have: been presented to the county two years in a row without re~P.Qnse. "We just dOn't wa·nt our streets block· ed off," one resident said. Suggested solutions to the prob lems by the residents include: -Remove the barricades. -Complete other maip Lhoroughfares such as Aliso Pnrkway, Jeronimo and Los AJisos. · -Provide freeway exits and offram ps consistent with current p () p u I a t I on _(See PICKETS, Page ZJ Boat B.,rns Yeo Firing • Linked to Campaign Fifth District Supervisor Ron a Id Caspe rs' action removing Ron Yeo from the Orange CoWlty Planning Commission was taken to keep .land developer support in next year's election, Robert Snyder, president of tbe-i:rt'vii'onmentll Coalition, has charged. Jn Lhe July issue · of Enviroomenlal News, Snyder stateS "Ron Y e o ' s -performance had been outstanding - very much in keeping \\ith the professed conservationist.stance of A1t. Caspers.',' . Bu( observers close to Caspers, Snyder Y.Tites, maii;itain the change took place ';lo thwart any effort by land developer interests to mow1t a threat to his cam- paign" in 1974. Caspers. attending a meeting of the South Coast Conservation Commission, could not be reached for comment. ~ At the time Yeo was asked to resign, Cas pers said the request was made to provide more representation for the Sad· dleback Valley on the planning com· mission. Caspers appointed Bart Spendlove. president of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council, to Yeo's position on the commission. To keep support from land developers. Caspers "shed his envirorunental trap- pings," claims Snyder. "The move wilt probably save him several thousand dollars in reelection ex- pense. The cost in terms of loss of sup- port from concerned individuals was coo· sidered in con sequent i a I ,'' the Environmental Coalition president cla i1n· ed . The Environmental Coalition l~ith of- fices in Santa Ana represents individuals and organizations to halt what they believe are environmental abuses in Orange County. "The important p<>int in all this is that our election System, which calls for huge sums or money to wage a campaign. has completely distorted our political leaders· sense of values. 1 "The county supervisor's pr i m a r y (See CASPERS, Page ZJ Another objection was, that. a four-mile drive woold be required to reach lbe fnaln'business·section of Afission Viejo. -Tbe Board or Supervlsora' action ~as' prompted by protests or abiout SO residents of Naccome Drive, San Andres Lane and Sen Roque Drive. ~ . ' '}'hey said tlleir residential streets \Vere ti,µng used as a speedway by drivers tak· ing a Short ci:t to the Mission Viej() Shop. pjng Cen~r on La Pak Road. County Road Commissioner Te d McC.onville said. an Intensive Sijrvey of ·Dana Harho1· Patrolmen Ffud Home Fires Hot Dana J>()int Harbor patr()men didn't boat, another patrol craft headed t()wa~d 01nr l"llot 11111 1"1111111 Q11iet Reigtas This statue by a quiet pool is part df the 2QQ.acre complex that houses the Ram akrishna A1onastery and its eight American monks. Not far fro1n the Lake Forest, El Toro,,.and h'li ssion Viejo developments, the setting in Trabuco Canyon is one ·or peace and contc1nplation quite unlike the nearby urbanization. (Story and pictures on Page 3!. General HQspital Ch.ief Lashes Out at Critics Dy JOHN VALTER7.A Of 1111 011" .. lllM Slilll The hcnd ()f San C1emente General llospital toda y lashed out at critics from South Coast commu nity flospital y,•ho have assert(-d that private propr.ietary health facilities are at fault in duplicat ing services along the South Coast. Devil Made Him Do It? Breaking long-s tanding silence in a scathing letter today San Clemente General's President Dr. Ralph Graham termed r~nt cornr;nents by South Coast offi ci al s ''ludi c rou s," ·•in· comprehensible'' ·arid "the grossest kind of misrepresentat ion .·• Dr. Gra ham and 01her off icials of San Clemente '~ priv:ne hospilal had main· 1ained a policy of not jousting with c~ilics from other hospital s in the past few years. But in ·today·s release 1he hospi tal bead said the "time has come to set the record straight .'' PENNY PINCHERS have to loot for lo Ond a lllUe emcrgcn-tbe boat In trouble. But before rescuers cy acUon Sunday afternoon -their got near, the distressed vessel got its "The' long.haired young man In the Graham assailed comments by outgo· ing South Coast Board Chaimran \Villtam ~lann. y,·ho blamed Sa n aemenlc General and ~Ussion Commu n it y ' Undercover . ' . Operation SJ1ows Dip Homosexual activity in Laguna Beach hars, Main Beach and Heisler Part ap- pears to be-on the wane. Del. Sgt. Ne il Purcell said today following a wttktnd undercover operation. Sgt. Purcell said the operation 1\'as undertaken to get an idea of what IOrt ol vice problems the city might face through the summer. 'Iburaday, a 49-rear-old San Juan Capistrano man was arrested ·f(lf allegedly tOliciling an undercover oUlctr to perf()nn a lewd act in Heisler Park near the memorial sh.lft. One ()ther case of alleged solicftatlolJ, thi~ one in a Laguna bar, is pending a courty,·arra.nl now, Purcell said . Purcell said homosexual activity was not nearly S(J pre\•alent ()r blatant as last year when a number or Je...,'d condlld .,.... resas were made. and a gay protest was made at the city council. Purcell said pc?rlodic surveillance \\"OU.id be maintained. "We do like to 1et some .kind or idea where we stand It the beginning of summer," he said. "It's a Jot better than last swnmer, wli.ich I think the community-as a whole \\'ill appreciale." he said. The detective said t h e in- creasing nwnbers of famil ies visiting main beach park made proper conduct al«>g the boardwalk and the beaches especially Important. At almost the exactly the same time last year, a number of arrests tot SC11icitation, and lewd conduct were made in Laguna Beach bars and in Heisler park. The action brought a protest by 200 gays and straight persons at a Laguna Beach City Council meeting. A body ~11-­ cd C.Oncerned Citizens Group fonned and charged gays ""'ere being harasaed, and entraped and enticed. It called for the firing of City ~1anager Lawrence D. Rose end PoUce Oiief Joseph J . Kelly. The department denied entrapment and enticement charges. The furor ra ised .last year produced a statement by the city council that; "it ii not no"'· nor eve r will be city policy to harass. entrap or entice anyone in the community as long as they li ve within the community.'' OraBge C.ut Weatller hicmly sunny Tuesday following the usual early m<>ming clouds al coastal areas. Highs In the upper 70s at the beach~s rising to nea r 90 inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. . INSmE TODAY ~==:!S~!A~£ v~,.,~~ '"(:'Q "'!nf.::.~if~t:===nc~w~e;s1;:r~es;;cue-~fir=e~boa::!t=:c•:u~hl~fir~c=o=fl~=·~ng~i=ne:;lllart;;;:o;iod~and~r.;]ped~~oh.fl~ln;;to;:j;l~hiie=bl..8guna Beach Christian society 1-, cr-v-i-v 1t:1· l.apAa BtMIR. Cralt&fn...Mid-&be-fwe IA Lhe-ilre beal thrltrs tttnl llo ital In ~fission Vic o the 1 .... ·o priy~ Santa Ana rocc driver Sioedi Savage....dicd. tocta.11.-0/_injunc-· ~'-!--===Iii Deily Pilot 1'"nney·Pincjler ads can sell 11J!too1 0Jl1lhing. Look how this advertiser ·did it: • CEIJ.\R shot., No. I gradC. 8 bundle!t-!.+--varlowl p}e.ees of lumber, $50. (Phone No. I Everything was sold thanks lo a "good caned ...._.. to lhla ad. Pinch your pennies with a Pilot Plnc~r classU~ed ad -3 llne1, 2 llmes, $2. Call 1142..1618: ' > • • 1 ' I Orange County llarbor Patrol Sgt. never broke iuto open names and was iOyc er an as 1 re ""'ere Ra·--' G h 'd M"'• he bl In · bed hen u.... · h any !()ng black sUk capes. ,, .. """" ra an: sa1 t..........,. t trou e ell. 1UJ! w ,ll!l:i master swnc was 1lte ex plamcd carefull y that he started when the 2"1-foot patrol boat went thrown t() the aid or a smaller crah caught in the The boat limped back to Dana Harbor ""P a m~ber ol a devil.cult, and surtllne off Laguna'• ?tfain Beach la~ on tmerrmcY power and was brought to ~ed the black cape for a very ~nday_ tj_ternoo1.. /Newport Beach for repairs today , important ctremooy Sun<jay night. "fo'()r some unusual reason, the boat's Grahn m said. The clerk called police. radar mail anapped ()ff and the wiring "ll's really unusual and unfortunate Officers checked out the shorted out," he said. "All ()f the in-wbtn tomelhlog' like this happens to an "suspicious per!tOOU and detennln- •ulatlon In the boat mold rod oll before expensive pltc< of equipment," Grafiam ~ha~'~1~i!,.y ™:'Jf.1~,;, 1~ the power could 00 Shut off." said. ".But some. o1. tbe: llllt we tae ev~ry -ded the c•pe for 8 pta~. While patrolman Ralph Huffman and day Js the same N on pleMure bot!'-·t.,.~ ~· Robert \Vhite 1Jlruggled wllh 1he fire used only once in a while." '" • • )' • Y.i thout regard 10 an earlier South Coast m3ster plan · and thereby cre&llng an overbedding problem in the area. Dr. Graham said that it ~as clear that an earlier South Coast master pll'n sl)ow· ing satellite facilities had lost the con- fidence of residents tn the San Clt:me:ntc area. llo said the early Soulh Coast plal) pro- posed the South L.1guna hospital as a hub in a heallh-are network and that that nucleus Wfll '"poorl.v located'' because ()f IS.e LE1"l'ER. Poge II . . ·~k~ d.uring the lndlanapali! 500-milc .r4Ce Ma11 30. See 1tor11 on Sport.t, Pog< 20. I ( • DlllV PILOI LB Cou.1itia11. Wins lntensiti Grows HoUyivOOt!-Hit S~eepstaktJs Pentagon Denies By Temblor Traveler~s Paintings Dl,sappear An Orange Counly ~oman "·on JIOU.YWOOD {UPI) -A mUd Ont place and 1ppro1lmately • earthquake today ratUed dishes but Sl:S,000 Jn lhe lrbh sweepstakc1 to--B h v • I t • apparen&ly camed no dlml&e. da,1.rtb.t A. Canhl• of ;;1 om· -· IO a IOn , Thequakeoccurrtd•t•:4&•.m. Cedarwood St., La Jfabra, had her and had a preliminary reading ot lucky ticket riding on Weaver'• \ 2.4 on the Richter Scale, ac«>nllng lf u to tho Seismology Labotatcry at 11----=~~~~~:i'!~~~~~~~!-~"~·.,. ;•~ho:':Jrse that paid 20,000 Callee~ in Pasadena, which s.jd it rl en lrom an Oxnard man 11s he was tran~-I\ F' Id o-te-wi.,.,_-----+---""'5HINCTON lil!l)..-..lhe.hntar1Q~n1--1w!'.!IN,UJ!:!;Con~!~"~''l'1:-l~1J&IL,1!,Jl.·-dlJ!!'l!!'la!!Jr".Y....•!!£.:-l-wss cen)cred in lhe Hotly;WO;Od_ ferring property rroni hi s c:ir to a South ' 1 t ny's rate or cxchnngl' this said today the level of U.S. bombing In tlvlty In fnd Ina by Aug, IS, a rea. Coest Jfigh1''8Y Inn. "'ou!d make the Orange Countian's Cambodia has been intcnsilied In recent A Defen9e Department spokesman, The tremor Y.'as felt as (ar away Duane B. Porter told officers he !cit a winnings about $!2!1,000. days, but dcnlro that the move violated Wllliaril Beecher, said there bad been a •s CUiver City where it was waterwlor painting and an Indian sand lhc spirit of a 1.-on1promi~ agreement more than 30 percent Increase in the -described by one resident as a painting leaning qnlnst his car In the number of U.S. tactical aJr strikes since "ve ry little earthquake. It rattled 1500 block <>f Sou th Coo.st Highway "·hll<.• the middle of last week. dishes. shook mirrors and lasted he moved inlo the motel Saturday. 2 I b T He said there had been no ' e<1r· about 10 seconds." · He said he was gone about 3'1.ruinut" . ncum e11·ts, rustee responding increase in the level or BS2 and when he returned , the FXJ.intin)s \\·crc bombing. _ gone. _ • ' -•Before the increase, the daily bombing In another case, tl''O young seamen total Included approximately 40 B52 were hlt for $150 in cash after the wind· T B s I T h strikes and 150 tacUcal air strikes. wing window of their car was forced 0 e worn n oni·g t Beecher sakt slnce the steJHJp, the tac--open and wallets taken. Their auto was lical air strike rate has nm in the low parked in the ~ block of Nyes place.' 200s on most days. He refused to say Robert W. Graf and lU!ynold P. Weber. what the highest level bad been. both as.signed to a ship In Long Beach, Newly _elected trustee \Y i 11 i a m he .,.,·as elected to the board last summu Beecher sakl. the reason for the reported the crtme at 5:40 p.m. Stinday. Thompson of .Mission Viejo aod two in-to fill a vacancy. Hurst .will begin his stepped-up activity was a -~imultaneoos ,....Rol)ert ·c. P.tcCrillis, of 251: Ai!:atc cu1nbents "'ill be ' s .... ·orn into office seoond full term on the board. elearin(I: of morisoon rains and increase Street reported the theft of a $400 toni~ht at the board meeting of the Also planned at tonight's meeting ls a in Communist attempts to sever roads camera taken during a party at his CaP.1Strano Unified School District. · reorganization ot the board with the around Phnom Penh, the Cambodian residence, police said. Thompson, · the only new board elections of president, vice' president, capital. McCrlllis told officers he left the party member. was voted itito office ln last Clerk. and county co mmitte e Congress and President Nixon reached to take a walk on the beach with his girl May's election. He will rill 1he post representative. a compromise agreement that Nixon friend and • \vhen he returned, fi ve vacated by I•'rcd N~wharl; Y.'ho is retiring The 7:30 p.m. _meeting. "ill be held i n signed Sunday to. end. all American persons at the party were gooe and so after 22 years of service. the board room of Serra School. military activity in Indochina -in-w~s his camera, police said. Thompson, who will represent the eluding the bombing in Cambodia -on The !Ois of a painbng and a bed valued areas of southern Missjon Viejo ahd San ,... ... ~ Aug. 15. The President agreed to the l at $275 was repofted SUnday by.Eve·Fri· JUatr Capistrano, hat attended board 1l~ i-v• compromise in the face of demands day, who told officers the thefts were meetings.and executive sessions of the 11 lXOU 0 WW· from both <>houses or Congress that the from rented propcrl.y at 980 Dluebird school district in a non-voting, capacity bombing be.halted. Canyon. since his election. Q J C "The Administration is anxious to con- Tnistees Stephen Smith and Bob D. .at l CremonieS elude a cease-fire in Cambodia," •1urst will also rccei\'C the oath of office Beecher said. "Between this time and FroMP .. el PICKETS .•• ~wth& instead of projections such as at Canada Road and Oso Parkway. t -__,,Clolin("streets i! not the answer, ~and t&oes not take ioto coosideraUon the Vast majority of the people," the release stated. '. H~gli Surf See1i . Iri Laguna Beach __ ...,t:" Higber surf and rip tides were ex· pected today by Laguna Beach lifeguards , lollowing a weekend of moderate to large surf in the Art Colony. Guards recorded 43 rescues, 76 first aids 8nd warned 515 swimmers ol -danger<lUI surf condition,, over the weekend. One cliff rescue at Divers' Cove was logged. Ufeguard Jim Stauffer said t h i s mcwnlng Laguna sun was up to 5 feet and bullding. Guards are oow Hying the "yellow" _caution fiag, bul, the red qer fiag may be pooled il coodiUOflS -worsen. Water temperature ls 64 degrees. 9 Perso1is Cited At Templ.e-Cafe Nine persons were cited for blocking the sidewalk and doing building con. stJuctlon after 6 p.m. Friday at Laguna Beach's Love Anlmab Don't Eat Them establishment at 782 S. Coast Htghway. at the meeting. Smith "'ill begin his fir!t F S hle ' Aug. 15, the Administration sUll intends full faur·ycar term on the board although or c singer to try to use its authority for bombing to conclude ·a cease-fire which is ' Probe COntinues . Into Sl1ooting At Block Party Investjgation continued today into a Newport Beach block party that tumed into !"-b!ock brawl Saturday night,~ result ing m the shooting of an irate homeowner who eame outside armed with a shotgun. -Charles Whtiney,· 26, of 116 37th st., was listed in saU!factory cond1tlon today at Hoag Memorial Hospital, following surgery for stomach wounds. He was hit twice in the abdomen by shots from Officer Richard Goodell's revolver when he fa iled to drop bis shotgun as ordered during the late-night confrontation. -Whitney was trying to help disperse the mob, police say. In,vestigators say the shooting resulted l'rom a wild party whooe putlclpants flocked outside and fought orders to disperse at the 10 p.m. curfew, with a · resulting announcement of unlawful assembly .. "We've been doing it all weekend ,-, said DetecUVe Sgt. Don Picker when 8sk. , ed if questioning of area resident.a was cmtinutng in an attempt to ' detennine the cause of the mini-riot. President Nixon was scheduled to be on hand in San Clemente today when James n. Schlcsihger takes hls oath as secretary. of defense. Judge · Spencer \Villiam.s of the U.S. District Court of Northern Galifomia was to adminisler the oath In Nixon's office. Schlesinger, 44, replaces Elliot L. Richardson · in ~ Pentagon post. Richardson is now attorney general. Schle5inger, a former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commlssion, directed the Central lotelligence Agency for f o u r months this year. He studied economics at Harvard, taught at tpe University of . Virginia, •'Orked at the Budget Bureau and was associated at one time with the Rand Corp: "think tank" lo Sa n t a Monica. J1e Is a native of New York City. He \.\'O!l a Senale confirmation last Thursday by a 9~ vote. In Sunday activity, the President sign· ed a bill · increasing Social Security benefits by 5.6 percent next year and at· ,!empted to assure both businessmen and housewives of as short a price freeie as pogible. In a radio address broadcast Sunday, Nixoo saidf "We have been determined from the out.set to keep the freeze as short as possible" -an indication he may disclose bis new economic game plan Defore the 60-day price freeze ex- pires on Aug. 13. " Nixon said a temporary freeze on all except raw food prices at the farm level was necessary because it is "vital that we have genuine consultatiOO! with a wide range o( interested parties before . launching Phase 4." He said these coo- sultations have begun. something the Congress is as anxiou.!. to see as the administration." President Nixon signed the legislation . at 8..1n Clerpent.e. to halt .~ U~S._rnilitary actio:n in Indochina by A.ug. 15. · He serycd notice Sunday he will seek new war.making powers if he thinks they are· needed to win an Indochina peace. ln signing the compromise measufe, the President said: "The last remaining element of the peace in Southeast Asia is a stable Cambodian settlement ... l will contiQUe to take the resPonsible action necessary to win that peace. Should further actions be required to that end later in the year, I shall request the 1 .Q)ngress to help us achieve our ob- jectives." Fron• Pagel LEITER ... traffic coneestioo and inaccessibility from freeways. A recent appeal by South Coast of- ficials for the delicensing of hospital beds at the two area private hospitals ap- parently motivated today's charges. · Blaming the private ho$pitals directly for "needless dupli~atlon," t he spokesmen for South Coast recently ap- pealed to the Orange County 'Health Planning council for the delicensing. Such a drastic measure, said South Coast Administrator Bemard . Carr, would eliminate serious overbedding along the South Coast. Border Patrol Arrests Increase Defense Says Death Suspect ' 'Justified' By TOM BARLEY 01 !IHI Da)ry l'llat llall An Orange County Superior Court jury was told today that the killing last Sept. 20 of Buena Park detective Darrel "Bod" Cate was "entirely justified" and will be proved so ln what is expected to be the three-week murder trial of Herman Lee Clouston. Defense attorney George Shibata told the panel as Clouston's tri.al opened in Judge Everett Dickey's court.room that his client shot Cate, 43, "without malice and premeditation· and without intent to kill" in an encounter at an Anaheim home. • . "It was justified in lbe circumstanc-. es," Shibata said in his opening state- ment ".And we will_be_usin~ testimony of lbe prosecu.Uoo's own witnesses to prove our point." . . Deputy District Attorney Robert Chat· terton had earlier told the jury ·that he will. be putting about 20 witnesses oo the stand to offer "irrefutable evidence" that Clouston, 38, deliberately fired a series of shots that struck Cate in the head, chest and back as the officer tried to arrest the defendant. Clouston, also known to the police under a number of assumed names, was wanted in connection with a sex advance reporte,d by a neighbhorhood woman when Cate and fellow detective Dale Wilson of,..the Buena Park Police Depart· ment drove to the Anaheim borne. Chatterton said he will prove that Clouston's .,.,,lfe ran from the home screaming that her husband had shot a policeman shortly after Wilson and two -men working· on the roof heard a volley of shots coming from the kitcbea area of the house. 'Ibe prosecutor said a reconstruction of the Crime acene lndlcates that Cate was shot in the hallway by Clouston and again shot in the back as he tried to run frOm the home via the rear door. Wilson will be the first prosecution wit· ness in a trial made possible when the - jury ruled that Clouston was sane and able to face charges of first' degree murder. Clouston was booked on those charges after a five-day manhunt that ended when he was flushed from his biding place in a garbage can behind a Torrance tavem. Chatterton said his wit~es will rn. clude neighbor Lanny Armstrong who allegedly was kidnaped at gunpoint by Clouston and forced to drive the defen- dant to the Bell Gardens area shortly Two Teens Nabbed in Pot Arrest . A 19-year...old youth and a 17-year-old rr.t-were-a!restedo n-n:smrtt on a ponce-- 0U1c~, r.cs1stl.nl:' arrest and possession of mariJuana charges 8,lturday by two undercover Laguna Belch off.leers. Robert Dale Alkire, or Monterey Park and his 17-year-old companion, were spotted by Del. Cliff Nye and an un- dercover officer in Woods Cove Beach area Saturday. The two were taken into custody after Nye followed Alkire into the su rf end subdued hl)n forcibly. Ny_e repo.rted the two appeared to be paS!l.mg a c1garelle between them as they sat on a rock. As officers approached, the cigarette was allegedly placed in the girl's purse, Nye said. Det. Nye said he approached tbe cou· ple,_identifi,ed hi m.seJf as ~a p;i llce ,gfiic_er / and said that he intended lo ·searth the' purse. . Nye reported Alkire fled and ran into the water. Nye followed him and a fight occurred in the suet'. The y0ung suspecl was subdued and hauled out. During the course <>f the fight, Nye lost his wrist watch, police said .. The girl allegedly resisted custody ori the sands while Nye was in the water. N ortlierri County Singed by Blaze A windbloWn grass fire burned over seven acres in the Yorba Unda area of north Orange County Sunday. It took 14 units and 61 men of the coon· ty fii'edepartme_nt_ one hour to bring the blaze under cyntrol. NO structures were damaged. - Investigators · said the fire, near Amberda!e Drive and F a l r m o n t Boulevard probably was set by children playing with matches or fireworks. Ft'Olll Page I CASPERS •.• responsibility Is exercising land use oon· trot. That seems simple enough, but have you considered just how valuable that power is in Orange County," Snyder ask· ed. Noting 6,400 acres or land valued at $20 million are developed each year in the couoty, Snyder states: "lt is not hard to imagine why campaign costs are skyrocketing" Concluding his · message in t h e newsletter, Snyder writes, "How can y;e expect a fair shake for environmental concerns when it costs this much to get ell"tted and the funds oome from land developer interests·? Our democratic process is not reDecting the mood of the citizens. We all must wor k to undo this imbalance." The. Environmental Coalition "will be working for meaningful election rcfonn," the newsletter claims. Campaign Fund Went To Senator Gw·nev • Police were told that the building materials strewn along the !idewalk were shared equally by all the persons at the vegetarian tempJe.cafe. . ' Summer Session Signups Slated For Saddleback Nixon said, ''The many measures we have taken to increase the supply of farm commodities -including the Activity at the San Onofre checkpoint l\1lAMT. Fla. (AP) -Sen. Edward release of more than 40 million additional increased slightly over the weekend, as Gurney received $2Q,800 for his 1974 cam· after the slaying of Cate. So police officers cited all of them, Sgt. Norm Ba beock said today. The L<ivc Animals Don't Eat Them people were ordered to appear in t.a·gulm - Niguel ~1unicipal Court on or before July 20. Kosygin in Vienna VIENNA (UPI ) -Soviet Premier Alexei N; Kosygin arrived today on an of- ficial four day visit -the first by a Soviet leader since Nikita S. Khrush. chev's summit with John F. Kennedy 12 .years ago. OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT rf Registration for the summer session at Saddieback C.Ollege will be Tuesday. Jn. struction will begin Thursday. Appointment registration y,·ill be from 9:30 a.m. to 1:311 p.m. and 6 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. Classes are open to all high school graduates or persons over 18. There is no tuition fee. Day classes are scheduled from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The extended-day program is !\londay through Thursday from 5 to 10 p.m. The session concludes Aug. 17. The day schedule will offer art astr~omy, biological science. businesit" chemistry, dral'ting, English, French, geogra~y. geology, health, h i s to r y, human111es. mathematics, m u s i c , philosophy. physical education. physics, Pollce science polil ical s cience psychology, reerealion, socio I o g y '. Spanish. and speech. Extended-day schedule includes art. biology, business, chemistry, e a r I y chUdhood education. Engli!h, health. history,. malhcmatics. music, physical education, physics. police s c i e nc e . politiCtll science, ~ychology, sociology and speech. Small Car Flips; Driver Uninjured A 19-ycnr-old Pasadena woman escaped serious injury when a small (i>reign ta r in which she was riding wenl out d control and rolled several limes on North---€oost-Hi wa n Street Fr)d•Y· , ~. Kathy Boggus suffered an in~ niht shoulder when the 14·ye.ar-old car driven by David t.1cVlcker Jeffrey. 21 , of Pasad~n{}.:Wtnl out of control as II was SOULl'lbound OQ the. highway, police aaid. No other vehicles were lnvolvl'd. Valerie Sulla, 13, of 1!>99 San Remo received an injury lo her right shoulder when the whee or a bicycle on which she was riding slipped Into a storn1 drain s,rating at Glc:nneyre Street nenr Park Avenue Friday. 'TM glrl was treated at South ~st O:'lmmunity flospltal. /' acres for farm production -will even· border patrolmen arrested 171 aliens. p B'ill S paign from contributors who included !Ualty bring more rann products lo the An official pointed out that there has Ol upported presidential !riend C. G. "Bebe" Rebow market and will provide relief against been "ebbing and flowing" at the local and former White House adviser 111urray hlgh food prices." checkpoint, with the pasl weekend show· SALEM, Ore. (AP) -.The Oregon C'hotiner, formerly of Newport Beach, Acknowledging that the freeze has Jed ing at least 10 percent more arrests than Senate voted 18-11 to reduce the max· the f.1iami Herald said today. to inequities, Nixon said it also can the previous weekend. imum penalty to a $100 fine for use of They said the Florida Republican create inflationary scarcity. Patrolmen said tbat during long marijuana and for possession of less than rceeiv~d the money at a Washington lte said, "We have seen this for ex-.,.,·eekends, or weekends prior to holidays, one ounce. The House previously passed cocktail party May 23, after he was ap- nmple, in the fact that some br~ller pro--such as this' week's July 4, the number of the bill 41·16. The maximum penalty now pointed to the Senate Watergate CQnl· ducers have had to kill off baby chicks 1 .1a;;rr;;es;;ts;;us;;u;;al;;ly;;in;;cr;;e;;a;se;s;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.i•;;';;;;;Y;";r;i;•;i;•l;;l;a~nd~ll;,OOO;;;;iftn;' ;e·;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;it;lec~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o- because they could not afford to pay the high feed prices and still sell the broilers at their ceiling prices ... "For this reason, we 'have been determined from the outset to keep the freeze as short as pa;sib le." Nixon said problems of scarcity forced him to embargo exports of soybeans "which are especiaJly critical to the s01U: tion of the feed grain shortage, and therefore to bringing do"11 the price of meat and dairy products." Asking Congress anew for broad authority to control exports of farm com- modities, Nixon saw such controls as temporary and said : "\Vhen lhls year's CN>ps become available In the fall, we expect to be able to restore international access to these products. During the brief period when controls are necessary, we shall do all thnt we can to insure thnt our traditional customers suffer as little as possible, and we shall keep before us our continuing goal of progress toward m<ire in· te:rnatlona1 trade, rather than lt!ss.'' TIX! soybean controls ct1me ns 11 particular shock In Japan, the principal U.S. export market ror soybeans. Nixon said food scarcili~s had be'n ag· gravated by unusually poor weather for cro s and livestock. But he said out t Is generally good and the wheat crop II ex· peded to be the ltrg"'1 Qn record. The Social Stturity bill will !Titan thal persot1s who earn 111 least 112.eoo an-1 nually/ wu i'liive to pay an additional $.'15.JO. The Social Securlly rtllJC!I, Included Jn legislation extending the n11tlonal debt celling or l46S bltlton to Nov. 30, ta~e d · feel next July 1. Under the btll, average bencllts wtlt In• crease ltom $161 to $170 8 Jn()nth for si11gle persons and from $277 to $193 ror ('(lllple1 . • ( self-c:lfffting gas range contlnuous- cleanl!HJ gas. range s299aa L--~·--s 399aa L----·-- BllllB tmlJiiJilj""" -~-H~h-h•at process cleans ever)'1hlng. Ju1t H t the ett,-iock-the-oven"door:-Aff·thel!s-fefH>'~;;;:=~i===~~iiij~~~iiii'iiJi~~il~~::OOnbiii'e.-..=l:== • meiiieat ii)lfl'overa Ti ·a ffiii wrunrorrrrra .-- w!pet away. Cleant broiler spettef'I. too. Because vdth oven heat to work whenever y u cook. tht radlent btoller 11 In the ovtn. S1>1tter1 fad• away gradually.during baking and At handy wallt-level. routlog. Oven lends not to become really dirty ' • • because It ls continually being cleaned. 90 DAY CASH W/thAppreyod Credit 1815' NEWPCRT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa \ • 548-7788 c ·7 I I i ·7 I ... -------~ -· • • Saddle,.a~k ' EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks *· , '.\IOL •. 66, NO. 183, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES TEN CENTS • (:hanges Sought in Master Plan for Hospitals plan language at a work session tonight. wou ld e1Cclude UCI from bed counts in, The final draft of tbe •plari and its fluencing health planning for Irvine. ame·nctments is due for July 10 con--C.orrect.ion of present population sidUation and adoption by the full county st8tistics for Irvine area including health planning ·counclL removal of the El Toro and .Santa Ana Among the. changes' Mrs. Benes will Marine Corps Air Station servicemen seek are': ~ • · · I from the counts for north Irvine. This -Blanket remoyal of ·the UC Irvine move would more a~aately reflect teachin&~ho&Pital .on campus. and the beallh serV"ice needs for the ~ity · as a ·· Orang~ O>untY. ~ical ~ from ·the . whole and particularly north Irvine. facilities · and seryi~ counts of their Best estimates of Jumped report statis- respective pJanniDg ·areas. )'be proposal tics suggest planners have accounted ~or Viejo only 5,000 persons wben city figures show IS,000 Jiving north of the San Diego Freeway. -Adjustment of the planning r~­ meodallons affecling Irvine to allow con- struction Qf a }*pilal or other service fa~jlity sooner than lhe 1983 date now shoWn in the plan,· ass~g populalion grows_ more rapidly than projected in the council's study.-· -~ ~frs. Benes said lhe points she'll cover with her colleagues tonight reflect con- ems expressed at Friday 's hearing. Those appearing on behalf of the ne"' city y,·ere Cowlcilman Henry Quigley. Councilwomi}n GabrieUe Pryor.· ,_layor' John Burton's "''ife Janet, rrvine Tomor· row Director Glen Woodman.see and Walter Clark._ ex~1.11ive director of the \VeStem·world Afedical Foundation which ho)jes to build a 162-bcd hospital 4djacent to UCl's teaching hospital. -· Mayor Burton al so bas "Titten the Juli conuniltec to poinl out the city's ex- pand<'<l planning nre:'L or JOO square miles and ils demonstrnlt'd commll ment to providing the health care innovati oiu -such as !he health plaru1ing council sug-gests. , Among lhrsc are the city's emergency care. paramedic-a mbulance program set for the 1973-74 budget. "_Qne has !>nly .t9-Jjve_Jn theJrvine are.a to recognir.e that an oversupply of hospital beds in l\"orlh Orange County has \See flOSPITAL, Page !J Residents Picket Protest C,ounty Blocking Jeronimo Road Access . . ,. - . . .Quiet Reigns This statqe by a quiet pQ;Ol is pari of the 'llOO-acre complex that houses the1.Ramcikrishn8 Monastery and its eight American monks. Not far from the Lake Forest, El Toro and Mission Viejo 1developm.ents1 t~e settin·g in Trabuco Canyop is one of peace and contemplation quite unlike the nearby urbanization. (Stpry and pictures on Page 3). Services Set . Tuesday For 2 Killed in Crash . . • ~funeral,services"will be held at 9 a.m. ~ay in Mission Viejo.for two 14-year- Old. Mission Viejo High School athletes .fti, were killed Friday in a freeway ac-. ddent. "'rlie mass for Ross Hollister and Tim hjcHugh will be at St. Killan Catholic Qhurch, 26872 Estanciero Drive, Mission Viejo. Father Bertrand Horvath will or- (~ate. :)l<>th youngsters were scheduled to COmpete on the Mission Viejo High freshman football team in the fall, ac· cOrding to Coach Bill Smith. , They; were killed when the car in whiCh they were ri'ding collided with another vehicle near Oso Creek on the San Diego Freeway. They had been bound for the beach. Following the services Tuesday, when football teammates will act a s pallbearers, burial for Hollister will be at Hollywood Cross Cemetery in Inglewood. Burial se.rvices for ~1cHugh will be at Pacific View Memorial Park, Nev.·port Beacll. McHugh, of 26701 Pepita Drive Mission Viejo, is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McHugh ; ,sister, Karen ; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lombardi of Costa Mesa, and aunt, Mrs. Chris Teregis, Costa Mesa. (,_ Hollister, of 26591 Cortina Drive, Mission Viejo, is survived by his mother, Mrs. Dorothy Holli s ter, and grandmoLher, Mrs. Edna Ferguson of Michigan: Saddleback Mortuary in Tustin is handling arrangements. By JAN WORTII Of IM D•llf Pl ... Sl•ll About 100 irate Mis,,ion Viejo residents today picketed along JeronimQ ___Boad where last week the Orange O>unty Road •Department erected posts. to block off vehicular access. Access to Jerortirro ROOa at·tbree in· tersections was blocked. _ Pickets carried signs reading, "Tum This Back Into a Planned Community," "You Limit Our Gas Then Extend Our Miles" "You Can Get to Hell Quicker Than You Can Get Through Mission Vie- jo,'' and "Remove These Road Blocks for Commwtlty Unity." ' More Banks Hike Interest To 8 Pereent NEW YORK (AP) _:_Numerous major banks; acting on the heels of Federal Reserve Board steps aimed at cooling . monetary expansion, raised prime lend· ing rates today from 7% to eight percent. The moves, wnlch followed the lead of Philadelphia's Gerard National Bank, marked the eighth general I/, percent in- crease this year in the minimum inte!'est fee charged by banks on loans to large corporate customers. - Some financial analysts predic'ted that the record prime of 8\h percent set dur· ing the 1969-70 credit crunch soon may be eclipsed. Among the doz.en or more banks posting increases this morning were Chase Manhattan, the country's third largest, and two New York banks, Chemical and Franklin National, as well as such large C1tieago banks as First Na- tional Bank, Northern Trust Co. and the Harris Bank . The Bank of California, Wells Fargo Bank, Security Pacific Bank, and Crock- er Bank also raised their prime lending rates from 7% percent to 8 percent today . Bank or America ofricials were in con- ference today and could not be reached for comment. Bankers said the moves would not af- f cct rates on loans to smaller businesses or on consumer borrowings, including mortgages. Girard's announ_t__ement of an increase in its prime caine Friday night, shortly after the Federal Reserve ~rd raised it.s discount rate from 61,i percent to 7 percent aod increased reserve re- quirements tor merriber banks. The discount rate is the interest charg- ed by the Fed on loans to member banks. Recent increases in it have raised the (Set INTEREST, Page%) Oraall• Cent ,.e,itagon St1,1tei nent Spokesmen for the group issued statements listing 10 reasons for pro- testing the blockades at Carranza Drive, Montilla Lane._30d_Cordillera Drive. The Dlain objections seem to be block- ing access to Cordillera Elementary School. which" will shift a great deal of traffic to the front of the school. "Another objection was that a four-mlle drive would be required to reach the main bu s.iness section of Mission Viejo. The Board of Supervisors' action wa s prompted by , protests , of about 50 residents of Naccome Drive, Sail Andres Lane and San Roque Drive. ,. They said their residential streets were . Devil Made Him Do It? The long-baired young man-in lhe ~ .~ CbriJlian Society tlU1ft' illiOp tUmed to the little old lady clerk and asked tf there were any long black silk capes. He explained carefully that he was a member of a devil cult, and needed the black cape for a. very important ceremony Sunday night. -The clerk called police. Officers checked out t h e .. suspicious per900" and determin- ed 'he had done nothin g wrong. He changed ltis story and told them he needed the ~ape for a play. • • Rescue Craft Catches Fire Off Laguna Dana Point Harbor patromen didn't have to look far to !ind a little emergen- cy action Sunday afternoon -their newest rescu~fire boat. caught firi' off Laguna Beach. Orange County Harbor Patrol Sgt. Raymond Grahan1 said today the trouble started when the 27-foot patrol boat went to the aid of a sinaller craft caught in the surfiine off Lagwla's Main Beach late Sunday aftemoot.. "For some unusual reason, the boat's radar mast snapped off and the wiring shorted out,'' lle said. "All or the in- sulation in the boat smoldered off before the power could be shut off." While patrolman Ralph Huffman and Robert White struggled with the fire bOat, another·patrnl craft headed t_oward the boat in trouble. But before rescuers got near, the distressed vessel got its (See FIRE, Page Z) • ' . . Mostly sunny Tuesday following the .usuaf early moqiing clouds at ·coestal area.!. Highs in the upper 70S at the beaches rising to near go inland. Overnight lows in the eos. Asian _ Bombing Increased \V ASHlNGTON (UPI ) -The Pentagon 200s on most days. }le refused to say Aug. 15;--the Administration still intends said today the level of U.S. bombing tn what the highest level had been. to try to use its authority for bombing to conclude a cease-fire which is Cambodia has been intensified in' recent Beecher said the reason for the something the Congress is as anxious to days, but denied that the move violated stepped-u p activity waS a simultaneous see as the admlni.ltratlon.'' being used as a speedway by drivers tak- ing a short ct:t to the Mi ssion Viejo Shop-- ping Center on La Pa; Road. County Road Commissioner T e d- McConville said an intensive survey or th~. problem had determined that to decrease trafric on the three streets closures V.'Ould be placed at the in- tersections· of .Jeronimo Road wlth Cordillera and Montilla and Carranza. But picketing resident s said that peti- tions bearing 1.200 signatures to request a four-way stoi;. at Cordillera and Jeronimo ha ve been presented to the coun ty two years in a TO\v v.•ithout response. Figure Links Yeo's Removal To Election Fifth District Su{iefVisor R on a I d Caspers' action removing Ron Yeo from the Orange County Planning Conunission was taken to keep land developer support· in next year's election, Robert Snyder, president of the Envi ronmental Coalilioo, has charged. In the July issue of Environmental News, Snyder states "Ron Yeo • s performance had been outstanding - very much in keeping with the P!Dfessed conservationist stance of Mr. Caspers." But observers close to Caspers, Snyder writes, maintain the change took place "to thwart any effort by land developer interests to mount a threat to his cam· paign" in t!n4. Caspers, attending a meeting of the South Coast Conservation Commission, could not be reached for comment. At the lime Yeo ""'as asked Jp resign, Caspers said the request was fuade to provide more representation for the Sad· dleback Valley on the planning com- mission . Caspers. appointed •Bart Spendlove, president of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council, to Yeo's position on the commission. To keep support from land de\•elopers , Caspers "shed his environmental trap- pings," claims Snyder. "The move will probably save him several thousand dollars in reelection ex- pense. The cost in terms of loss of sup- port from concerned individuals was con- sidered .inconsequential ,'' the Environmental Coalition pri;sldent claim- ed. The Environmental Coalition with of- fices in Santa Ana represents ii'tdividu als and orgJln izati ons to halt y,·hat they believe are· environmental abuses in Orange County. "'The important paint in all th.is iS that our election system. v"hich calls for huge sums of money to v.'age a campaign, has completely distorted our political leaders' s.cn~e of values. "The county suQCrviSQr"s _p_r.lm a_r y_ responsibility is exercising l;u!d use con- trol. Thal seems simple enough, but havd you considered just--how--\•aluablc that power is in Orange County," Snyder ask- 'cd, "\V.e tust don 't \\"ant our streets block· ed off," one resident Said. Suggested solutions to the problems by the-resideflts include: -Remove the barricades. · -Complete other m'ain thoroughfares such as Aliso Parkway, Jeronimo and Los Alisos. -Provide free"'ay exits and offramps consistent \\'ilh current p o p u I a t i on growths instead of projection s such as at <;anada Road and Oso P:irk\\'8}'. '"Closing streets is not the answer, and docs nol take into consideration the vast n1ajorily of the people," the release stated. Couritian Wi1is Sweepstakes · A.n Orange County woman won first place and approximately $129,000 in the Irish sweepstakes to-da y. . . I Martha . A. Cannis or 8 4 I Cedarwood St., La Habra, had her lucky ticket rlding on Weaver's Hall ._ a horse , that paid 20,000 Engli sh pounds to v.'in. At Friday's rate of exchange thi s "·ould make the-Orange Counlian·s v.·innings about $J29,000. · Def e1ise Tells Jury Off i.cer' s Deatli Justified By TOM BARLEY 01 tM DlllY l"llot St•ff An Orange County Superior Court jury wa.s told today that the killing last Sept. 20 of Buena Park detective Darrel "Bud" Cate wa s "entirely justified" and will be proved so in what is expected to be th·e three·"·eek murder trial of 11ennan Lee Clouston . · Defense attorney George Shibata told the panel as Clouston's trial opened in Judge Everett Dickey's cOurtroom that his client shot Ca te, 43, •·without malice and premeditation and without intent to kill" in an encounter at an Anaheim home. "It was justified in the clrcumstanc. es." Shibata said in his opening state- ment. "And \\'e will be using !he testimony of the prosecution's own witnesses lo prove our point." Deputy District Attorney Robert Chat- terton had earlier told the jury that he will be putting abou t 20 witnesses on the stand to offCr "irrefutable evidence" that Clouston, 38. deliberately fired .a series of...:. shots lhat -s truck Cate in the head . chest. and back as the officer tried to arrCst the defendant " Clouston , also known to the police under a nu mber of assumed 11ames, ~·as y,·anted in connection "'ilh n sex advance repotted by a neighbhorhood woman ll'hcn Cate and fellow detective Dale \V-ilson of the B"uena Park Police Depart· ment drove to the An aheim home. Chatterton said be will prove that (See CLOUSTON, Page !) INS~E TO~Ail' the spirit of a oompronUse agreement clearing· of monaoon rains and increase President Nixon signed the legislation :=-=1r.~s.,,;1a~· -.!~no. roc~1drit.ier-S~-wttl'l--GonimHo-halt-u.&-milU.U.y JC-in Communist ·attempts to se~er roads ~t ~_Clemente. kl halt all U.S. military li!~rtnl•rlri -uvnr iinnclochlna by Aug;-11. ~-l'!lnom 'Penh, ·the C.mbodian--action.iiiJnaoili1n1 by Aug. LI. . 1uf1'Ted ffi a fl.amipg 1mcuhup ' A , Dden$e Department spokesman, capital. He served ~ice &Jnd.aY he ~111 seek Noting 6,400 acres or land valued at $20 million are developed each yea~ in the county, Sny,der .states : "lt is riot hard to imaginC why -campaign-costs arc skyrocketing·• _ ·- PENNY PINCHERS SA.YE. YOU$$$$$ Daily Pilot e~~Y-Pi~htt.ads can.sell~ almost an)'lhifll: Mlok how Uils advtrtiser · t I 1 duri"g the lndianap0l4' 6CHtmile WUllam ~her, aaid there had been a : cOngrm: and President Nlxon ~ ~ew war~a~ JIOl'ers if~ lhU:U they \trace Mat130. 'See ''°1'11 on Spores, more than 30 percent increase in the .. a compromise agreement that Nixon are need~ to win an Jndoctuna ~cc. Page 20. numbei:; of U.S. tactical air strikes since signed Sunday to end all American thelnP~~ :id~ measu;e. 11 the middie of last week. militif'Y"" acttvlty Jn Jndochinl -tr>-'--:11~ : '1\e 1Ml-temai!"1ng :;:;:,. lt He said •there had been no cor· eluding the bomlilng in cambodla -on elemtnt of f.ht peac:e ln Soatbea.st Asia Is CWMW a.r : respording Increase tn the lcvtl of BS2 Aug. 15. The Pmident agreed to the a stable CatnbOdfan 1et~t • •• I will 1= """ .,J; bOmblng compromise in the face of demands continue to ttkJ the rtspoMtb1-action •--••" Beforn' the Increase, !~'daily bombing' from bolh -ol OJngress that tilt .....,.ary to win that pctct. Should :':r" · :: tot&I included approximattly 40 BSZ' bon1bil'i1 be baited. . .• funhtr 'Id.kins· be required to that end .,._,. ,..... ,,.,. strike• and 150 tactical air strikes: • '"ntt Admini1tr1tkm ls·an1ious Ii) con.-later In the year, 1 ah:all. request the •lfM "'""' , • Beecher sakt slnce the step-up, the tac·-elude a cea•fire in , Cambodia, t• Coogress to htfp us athieve our 00- tical air strlkt-rate has run In the low Beecher said. "Betwten this time and jcctives." ,. ... I '. . Ctwalln&' h.11 message ln Lh c newsreitCr, Snyder writes, "ltow can y,·e expect a fair shake for environmental concerns v."htn lt costs this much to get elected' and the funds come from land developer interests? Our democratic proc:<ss I~ not refle<ting ~be mood of !be eltiieni. We all must work Jo undo lhis im'balance." . · , The Environmental Cotlition "wUI be workin& for mtaningful election refonn,'' the ne wslel ter claims. -i._ t did it : CEDAR shakes No. t grade, a bundles + variota pieces ol lumbtr, $50. (Phone No.) . Evef}'.thlng was sold 't1U.n)s to a "good called respon.s(f' to this ad. PJnch your pennic_,, ¥tilh a Pilot Pincher clwi.lied ad -3 lines, 2 times, 13..c.J! 6U·Stl78. ' ,, .. -. ---- · Schle ~Uige1· ·Ceremony In Clemente Pruident Nixon was scheduled to be on , hand in Sao Clemente toda y when James R: Schlesinger takes his oath aS ~secretary of derense. 'Judge Spencer Williams or the U.S. District Court or Northern Cf!Uomia was lo adminisler the oath in Nixon's office. Schlesinger, 44 , replaces Ell iot L. Richardson in the Pentagon post. Richardson is now allorncy general. Schlesinger, a former chalnnan of tbe Atomic Energy Commission, directed the Central Intelligence Age~y !or, r o u r months this year. He studied economics at Harvard, taught at the Unlvusity of Virginia, worked at the Budj:et Bureau ·and was Bssociated at one Ume w}lh the. Rand Corp. "tllink tank" in Sa n t a Monica. He ts a native of New York City. He won a Senate con!irm~lion last Thursday by a 91-0 vote. In Sunday activity, the President sign· ed a bill increasing . Social Security benefits by 5.6 pe rcent next year and at· tempted to assure both businessmen and housewives of 'as short a price freeze as ; ~ible. In a radio address broadcast Sunday. ... Nixon ~id. "\Ve have been determ ined ~.from the outset to keep !he freeze as short as possible" -· an indication he • may disclose his new economic game plan Defore the 60-day price freeze ex· pires on Aug. lS. St1t11111er Girl ~londe and tan Cindy De l\1ott of Newport Beach1 reflects On the JOYS of bei.a g 17 and of being on the beach during t bis summer of '73 along the Orange Coast. Fir.emen Seeking· Fro111Pagel Nixon said a temporary freeze on all except raw food prices at the farm level was necessary because it is "vital that . we have genuine consultatioos with a C · · f Bla .,.-ran1e of interesti<! partlet before ause 0 .ze; CLOUSTON. • • • Clouston's wife ran rrom the home screaming that .her. husband had shot a policeman shortly after Wilson and two men \l/O[king on ti\e roof heard a volley or shots coming from the kitchen area or the house. . launching P~ 4." He sai.d.JhCJ.LC<:ll· __ _ __ • >UltaHOlf! have begun . L $500 000 Nixon slid, ''The many, measures we OSS ' .• have taken to Increase the supply of .. farm commodities -including the release of more than 40 million additional acr!:(for farm production -will even· . tually bring more farm products to the ' market and will provide relief against high food prices ." Acknowledg ing that the freeze has led to inequllles, Nixon said it also can • create inflationary scarcity, . He said, "We have seen thi s, for ex· ample, in lhe fact that some broiler pro- ducers have had to~ kill oU baby chick! because they could not afford to pay the bigb feed prices and still sell the broilers at their ce:IJ.J.nc prices ... "For this rea!Oll, ·we have been determined from the outset to keep the freeze as short as possible." Viejo Man Takes Seat on CUSD :. Board Tonight Newly elected trustee. W i 11 i a m Thompson of Mission· Viejo and two in· cumbents will be sv.·orn into offi~ _. tonight at the board meeting of the Capistrano Unified School District. Thompson, the· only new board ' member, was voled into office in 1ast ., May's election. He will fill the post • vacated by Fred Newhart, woo is retiring '. after 22 years of serviee. Thompson, who will represent the ; areas of southern Misaion Viejo and San Juan Capis trano, bas attended board meetings and eiecutive sessions of the school district in a non-voting, capacity since his election. ·: Trustees Stephen Smith and Bob O. Hurst will also receive the oath of office at the meeting. Smith will begin his flrst full four.year term on the boatd although he was elected to the board last summer to fill a vacancy. l·lurst will begin his second full term on the boerd. Also planned al tonight's meeting is a reorganization or the board, wilh the electiom of president, \'ice president, clerk and county c ommittee representative. The 7:30 p.m. meeting "i ll be held in lbe board room of Serra School. OUJtt•t COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiie Or-Coln DAILY PILOT, •ITll ..,,\cfl k uomllolnttd HW N.-l'r"'' It M!lt.11111 ~ ll'le Dr .... (Ht! f'\1111111\"" (OtnNftY. S- , ... <llllllloott 1'9 t111ltll.,.,., MOfld1r lf,,_11 FtW.y, ICH' C..11 ~. H-I l'f<I', Hw.llnfbi a.~F-19111 Ylllt'Y, l._. '-<II. l"'lrMISM!dllfloldo .._ S•11 CIM>lfl!ol SM J.,.,, (•plttr1-A tl"O.. '"loNI Miiion II ,.....,_, ..,.,,,,_.,,_ 11111 ,....,..,_, fl!ot "'Jnsi..J Joltlllflio!O t11111 11 I! lllll Wtll ••r s""'· c .. 1. MIN, C•IH0•11MI. "'"' Jlob11f N. W11fl "rHklflll I NI ,UOUt~tr ' J1c• It. Curl1v Vlt.• ft,n11o1..,1 ,,,. OtMf•I M111•0"' Thom•• IC11vil l•r .. , Th1""11 A. Murplli110 MIMfl!ll flllw Ch1rf1t H. loot Rich1od '· Nill .-. .. 1111111 MtMtl"' E•l ... t c .. 11 MHt: W WHI Ill' St•H I """""' a..cti: ~ "...,.." IMllleYM• ..... .,. lwc1'114't•"-...._ Hulltlfltlln 1..01 11111 ~ ~ - '"" Cl-'r: Jiii Hortl'I 11 Cl,,,fftt 1.ffl ,.,,,. ••• rn41 MJ-4221 C'-Nl94 Uwill .. '42·1671 S.. C......_ All hrp•l:co•11 T•h••••• 4tJ.+421 C•''-''• 1'11. Orlf'll• Go11t l"\elittl"'t (~I'. Ht ....... '"""'· lll111tr1lltM, , ... l!Wlll IN!Mf W ....-Wl....,_lt l'ltffolft -" .. ,~... •1lllllltlt """'-' "'' ll'llHIM Of flll'ffltftt •-· llcond (ll lf ~I ... H ilf II C••• Mru , (11/Wlttt. lllMulalltll "' c.,, .. ~ UM _,,,ll'J l\i> ,f!'l,11 U.JS ""°""'"-1 1t1llUtfJ' fttll,..llOftt · A.JI ,..,.,.1111¥. Firemen today continued efforts to detennine the cause of a half·mi\lion· dollar blaze that gutted a 14-lmit office building near Orange County Airport ear· ly Sunday, injuring one man. The fire in the three-story structure at 4500 Call)pus Drive caused an estimated $500,000 damage when it flared up after smoldering for a lengthy period . "It burned for a Jong time before we were called," remarked Newport Beach Fire Department Capt. Jim Topping, who declified to speculate on the cause of the blaze. "It's under in,•estigalion," he said. During lbe baule to control the names Fire Department Capt John Br~ was overcome by smoke and an am· bulance y,•as called to the scene. He recovered surnciently after fint aid treatment·, however, and did not need to be taken lo the hospital. The predawn blaze dest royed a number o!'businesses in the building, which was one among three structures located in the· office complex. One of the victims was Liz ·Reinders, operator of an e1nployment agency bear. The prosecutor said a reconstruction of the . crime scene indicates that Cate y,•as shot in the hallway by Clouston and again shot in the back as he tried to run from the home via the rear door. 'Vilson will be the first prosecution wit~ oess in a trial made possible when the jury ruled that Clouston was sane and able to face charges of first degree murder. · 'Clouston was booked on those charges ·after a five-day manhunt that ended when he was flushed from his hiding place in a garbage can behind a Torrance tavern. Chatterton said his witnesses will i1'l-- clude neighbor Lanny Armstrong who allegedly was kidnaped at gunpoint by Clou.ston and rorced to drive the defen· dant to the Bell Gardens area shortly after the slaying of Cate. Probe Continues ing her name. · , J Sh • "Our records ... they're all gone," ,i.,-.--nto oollng sobbed af ter the lire. . Last Rites Held For Youth, 12 Requiem mass: was held at 10:311 a.m. today at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in Laguna Hills for Robert O!Wald Morton 12, of 24432 Blackfoot Drive, El Toro. ' He drowned Thursday afternoon in the swimming lagoon of the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club , l\.lulrlands and Ridge Route Dri ves. The boy was ·the son o[ i\1r. and i\1rs. Oswald Morton. At Block Party lnvestigat.ion continued today into a Newport Beach block party that turned into a block brawl Saturday night, resulting in the shooting of an irate homeo\\ner who came outside armed with a shotgun. Charles \\1htiney, 26, of 116 37th St., v.·as listed in satisfactory condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospi tal, following surgery for stoma ch wounds. A student at Aliso Elementary school, .... he is also survived by his brother Gary, 8: two sisters, Cynthia and Cheryl; and maternal grandparents of New Jersey . He ,.,..as hit twice in the abdomen by shots from Officer Richard Goodell's revolver when he failed to drop_ his shotgun as ordered during the Jate·nighl confrootation. 'Vhitney ,.,,as trying to help disperse the mob, police say.· Rosary for Robert was held at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at St. Nicholas Church. Sea Disturbance -·aosely Watched i\llAMt (UPI)· -flurricane hunter airplanes checked a tropical low pressure system far out in· the Atlantic Ocean to- da y and repbrted it had not moved or_ in· tensified during the night. The low pressure· systcn1, the first tropical disturbance of the 1973 hurricane ~ason . \\'as located 700 miles cast o1 i\·fiami. Hurri cane forecaster Neil Frank sai d "t.hc system \Vas stalled in weak steering wind currents and \VAS cxpc<;tcd to drift erraUcally in the sam~ area throughout the day. N ortliern · County Sin-geiFby-BTaze A windblown gra~ fire burned over seven acres In the Yorba Linda area of nOrth Orange County Sunday. It took 14 units and 61 men or the coun· ty fire department one hour to bring the blatc U!XJer control. No structures were dan1agcd. lnvcstlgators said the ni',r, near Amberdale, Drive and F' 8 11 m o n 1 Boulevard probably was set by children playing with matches or firework!!. ' lnvestigators say the shooting resulted from a v.·i!d party \vhose participants fl.ocked outside and fought orders to · d1spe~se at the 10 p.m. curfew, with a resultmg announcement of unlawful assembly. '.'\Ve've been doing it all \\'eekend." sa id Detective Sgt. Don Picker v.·hen ask· ed if questioning of area residents was continuing in an attempt to detennine the cause of the mlni-riot. fro111 Pagel FIRE ... engine started and ·sped off into the sunset. Graham said the tire on the fire bOai neve r broke Into open · fl ames and '"'as extinguished when the master s\1•itch "'as thrown . · The boat limped back to Dana llarbor on emergency l>O\\'l!r and was brought to Newport Beach Jor repairs today Graham said. ' "It's really unusual and unfortunate \Vhen something like this happens to an ~ns!}re iece OJ:OW!pmen~'_Jiraham Mid. "But-some.. ea.r_we-.use:-e.ver..y day is the same as on pl~asure boats used only once in a while." Pot Bill Supported SALEM, Ore. (AP) -The Or<1on Sena te voted 18·11 to reduce the mix· !mum penally to a tlOO line for use of marijuana and for pm;M!Ssion of less than one ounce. The Howe prevlo11sly pMltd the bill 41·16. The maximum penalty now Is a year in 1an ~nd Sl.000 fin e. I ............. ,, 1 HOSPITAL ... absolutely oo slgniflcance ln ttrms of our rtsldenlt," Burton aald1 He suucsted It would be lhe "height or tolly" to suaest lrvt.oe residents be .. bused to lho au~ ho6pital b<ds ot oorth Orange Couaty0 fot lhe oext JO years. Similarly comtlnc on I.bole beds to meet the heattb needs of the growing city Is 1 ... lhln eood plimning, Burton ....... led. He urged cblniee lft the plan to make room for the UCI teaching hospital "or " any other accredited hospital" Vo'hlch may want to serve Irvine citizens. Burton noted lhe council recently unanlmously continued the life o! the city'! health Care· setvlce study com· mlttee to study the county master plan proposal for hospitals and its impact on fhc new city. Councilman l·lenry Quigley said today he made t~·o key points· .rriday night. They were : -The !hough! that there will be no new hospital built to serve Irvine until after 1983 "Stl'ikes penic" among residents of the city who sec greater distances beh¥t;en them and racllitles in overbed· ded areas surrounding Irvine thq.n the planne~ ~vision as they look at a map. -Commi~ StaH me m e r s Un. derestimated the city's future population growth by overestimating the effect of agriculture preserve lands on the city's future. Tn fact, Quigley said, all or the present city's lands are out side of the preserves and could be developed in the next decad e. Further. these lands are flat areas suitable for more dense develop-. rncnt than most hillside, agricultural prescr\'e lands wiU be in future decades. Clark. speaking for the only non·profit. community hospital thus far annoufl<'ed for the new city, said. '"There are cur· rently some-33,000 hulnan beings living and v.'Orking in Irvine. "Their immediate health care needs have. not been met and this plan would depnve them cJi any facilities for the next 10 yea.rs, even though it is the ~~ growing area in the state," Clark sa1u . Clark Urged council members to send the "pla'n,. back to technical staf(-fot. "reappraisal of the allotment for· health care faCllitles in the city of Irvi ne . "We cannot afford a IO · ye a r moratorium on medical ·progress," he concluded . · Western World both won and lost ap. provals rounds wiih tbe local health plan· ning council. An appeal of a full council denial later resulted in an okay for the 162-bed "seed" hospital. Finally, last \\'eek. the full state health planning coun· cil denied the hospital its approval. \V~tem World said it will build the 1rvine facility anyway with construction lo start after Sept. 25, the anniversary of the original council denial. Elderly Gunman Battles Officers At Remote Farm CHIRENO, Tex. {UPI) - A man rortiried himself in hls remote farm home today 'and battled with sheriff's deputies for more thari an hou r. . The man's elderly wife was found dead m the house and five persons. were wounded, inculding the sheriff and two of ricers. "I don't know how bad Sheriff John Hoyt is,'.' San Augustine deputy Dorothy Poss said . ' "Deputy Richard Carl Davis took a gun.shot full in the face and he didn't look too good. They transferred him to Shreveport, La." ~1attie· Mae Clerk, 58, was found dead on the floor of the small house west of the East Texas town of San Augustine. Department of Public S a f e t y patrolman Doyle Pittman, ambulance driver Lonnell Gamer and Roger Williams were wounded in the gunfire and take n to nearby hospitals. The suspect. identified by police iis V:in Lacy, 67, was not injured and sur· rendered to deputies. self-cleanillCJ gas range :M3'1'1'-6HP' l 'Ludicrous' Claarge• • Hospital Chief .f>r Assails Critics t ... ' ' .,., t By JOHN VALTERZA CH' fhl D1JIY ~Utt St.rt The head of San Clemente General Hospital today loshed out at critics fron1 SOuth Coas.t Community Hospital who have asserted that private proprietary healt.h facilities are at fault in duplicating services along the South Coast. Breakin g long-s tanding silence in a scathing letter todaY San Clemente General's President Or. Halph Graham termed recent comment s by South Coast off i c i a I s ''I Ud.i c r .v_u s," ''..in· comprehensible" and "the grossest kind of misrepresentation ." Dr. Graham and other officials of San Clemente 's private 1iospjtal had main· lalnt'd a policy of i:iot jousting with critics f«llJLOther _hospitals . in·' the past fe$t.... years.. 1 But in today's release the hospital head said the "time has come to set the record straight." Graham assailed comments by outgo· ing South Coast Boird Chairman William Mann, who blamed San Clemente Gene ral and Mission Co m m u n j t y ~Iospital in Mission Viejo the two private h?Spitals In the South County for building without regard to an earlier South Coast master plan .and thereby creating an overbedding problem in the area. Dr. Graham said that it was clear that an earner South Coast master.plan show· ing satellite facilities had lost the con· fidence of residents in the San Clemente area. F..,,...Pagel INTERES-T ..• cost banks must pay in tapping one of their primary sources of funds with which to do business. . Meanwhile, the dollar weakened .again in Europe today, despite moves late last week I.hat were supposed to help the U.S. currency. r The dollar dropped sharply i n Frankfurt, Zurich and Paris. It inched ahead in London. Dealers· faid.1 however, that lrading v:as slow at ~ outset. There were no early signs of monetary crisis. Gold, which often moves erratically higher .in times of monetary unoertainty, was unchan(ed in London and Zurich the two biggest markets, in early tradmi. 'Ille mark was revalued upward by 5.5 pe~nt against seven European cur- reneres last week, and interest rates in the United States were raised. Both moves abould ba\le htlped the doUlr to- day, but IMtead the decUne continued. On Wall Street stock market prices r~ malncd sharply lower and drifting at midsession.today amid investor concern over the rising interest rates and tight money. The Dow Jones avera'ge of 30 in· dustrials closed down 'Jl.14 points at 880.57. On the New York Stock Exchange declines led advances by 2 to 1. ' Campaign Fund Went To Senator Gurnev -i\1IA~1T. Fla. (AP) -Sen. Edward Gurney received $20,800 for his 1974 cam· paign from contributors who included presidential friend C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo and former White llouse adviser Murray Chotiner, formerly of Ne wport Beach the Miami Herald said today. ' They said the Florida Republican received the money at a Washington cocktail party May 23, after he was ap. pointed to the Senate Watergate com· mittee. • . ' . I l!e said the early Sooth Coast plan -I poa.ed the South Laguna hospital as 1 hub m__a health.care network and tbat that nucleus was "poorly loca led" be:eause of traffic congestJon and Jnaceesslbility from freeways. ~ . A recent appeal by South Coast of· f!clals for the deliccnslng of hospital beds at tbe two area private hospitals 41.p-- parcnll~ motivatf~ l~ay's charges. . BlamJng the private hospitals directly for "needless.; duplication," l he spokesmen .ror ~th Coast rttently ap- pealed to fhe Orange County Health Pia.Ming.council for the. dellcenslng. Suc;h a drastic measure, said South Coast. Administrator Bernard carr would elin:Uoate serious overbeddinK along. pie Sout h Coast. -. H olly,wood Hit By Temblor llOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A mild earthquake today rattled dishes-but apparently caused no damage. · The quake occt>rred a( 8:48 a.m. and had a preliminary reading of 2.4 on t~ .ruchter Scale, according to the Seismology ~boratory at Caltech in Pasadena, which said it was centered in the Hollywood area. The tremor was felt as far awax as· CUlver City where it was described. by one resident as ' "very little earthquake It rattled dishes,_sbook mirrors ·and lasted abou~ 10 seconds." Summer Session Signups Slated For Saddleback .. Registration for the summer session at Saddleback College will be Tuesday. IDo struction will begin Thursday. Appointment registration ..Oil be from 9:30 a.m. to 1:39 p.m. and 6 to 8:30 p.m. _ Tuesday. · Classes are open to all high school' graduates or persons over 18. Tbere ls no tuiUoo fee . Day classes are scheduled from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The extended-day program. is Monday throi,igh Thursday from 5 to 10 p.m . The session concludes Aug. 17. The day schedule · v.·ill offer art, astronomy, biological science, business, chemistry, draCting, English, French, geography; geology, health, history, humanities, mathematics, m u s i c , philosophy, physical education, physics, police scie.Qce political s c i e n c e , psychology, recreation, s o c i o I o g y , Spanish, and speech. Extended-day ·schedule includes art, biology, business. chemistry, ea r.J y chilQhood education, English, health, history, mathematics, music, physical education, physics, police s c I e n c e , political science, psychology, socHJlogy and speech. Ko.sygin in Vienna VIENNA (UPI) -Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin arrived today on an of· ficial four day visit -the fir st by a Soviet leader since Nikita S. Khrush· chev's summit With John F. Kennedy 12 yearS' ago. cantlnuous- cleanillCJ CJCIS range r-~ s299aa s 399aa \L--•d - illllldeoi . r • Hlgh·heat Pf'OCffl cleans everything. Just Ht the dlale, lock lh.• o_ye.n_door. All lha(s le_ft of 1M-m111le1t eplllovtr1 lt-a Hne white-Hh -that_:,:, wipes away. Cleans brolllf spatters, too. Because the radiant broiler la In the oven. Spocl•.l!Y.·coaled"ll!!!E!i•ln"omi llnart;-Curnblne --- YClth oven eat to work whent1vef' you cook. -... Spett1r1 fade away gradually during baktng and routing. Oven tendl not to become really d'lrty At handy wa111-1, .. ;1. becauM It It contlnually being cleaned •. \... 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa 548-7788 · • •• '' ; 7 Huntington Beaeh Fountain :valley ·-' • EDITION VO L 66, t:IO. 183, 2 SECTIONS, 30 ·PAGES ' .. ~ • - ' Today's Fin al N.Y. Stocks I TEN CENTS Beach Trustees Cut $358,681, Okay Budget . . After a bitter five-hour budget trim- ming session Saturday, Huntington.Beach Union High School District trustees eliminated about one third of the $1 million they wanted tO .remove from the district's proposed 1973-74 spending pro· &ram. . When the meeting closed at 1 p,m. Trustees Dennis Mangers, ·Ralph · Bauer and George Logan approvecf a $30 million preliminary budget. · Trustees John Bentley and Ray ' . Schmitt ,bad i.ft .mid-way through the meetini. Roo Shenkman and Robert Knpx , the two men wpa Will replace them on tbe board Tuesday were present throUiflout the long, heated aessl,oo. The $351.Ul Vt-Orth of expenditures !bat were dropped by trustees did not come out of the budjjet without ~ from OislfiCt .aCfiffiiiiSlrators. --~ As · trustees "-ent down-a Ust of pro- posed cuts fiom the items least necessfry to 1he district to those that \\"Ould be cut only y.•ilh di(ficully. argumenta: from administraiors "tavoring retention ot the items ~became stronger and more heated. · · At one point. an obviously exaspei;-atcd Bauer snapped, ''Three years down the road we'.re going to spend ourselves into oblivioo. 59mebody ~t there is soing to have ·to give ~thing up." · ·Newly elected Trustee Shenkman , who assumes his post Tuesday night vowed that future budgets will be planned on a !~year basis, as in the city of Fountain Valley. ··1 don'! have a vote. but I have a \'Olce and it hasn 't been heard yel. but ii v.111 be," he declared. The unusual weekend session y.•as call- ed \\'hen Logan refu sed 10 appro\'e the prelimi nary budget despite a July I deadline. He nptcd that. .according to estima les made by administrators. by, 1975-76 the district \\'ill be more 1han $2 million in the red. The $1 nlillion in cuts was suggested b.., Logan. He 1aid the district \l·ouJd have to face the possibility that its current finan - cing from the state and local property taxts may not be In effect during I.hat year. Logan was not pleased al the close of ' Salurday·s session and pledged tG make niore cut§ before the final btldget I~ adopted by Aug. 10. "\\'e will be fiscally responsible by 1975." he dec lared. · The budget session closed at l p.ml on- ly because managers had to leave because of a pr ior commitment. At thal ixiint Benllcy and Schmitt had left, .so the three remaining trustees \\·ere forced to adopt the preliminary budgel in ~ to meet the deadline mandated by state 131'.'. \\"hen the meeting opened at a a.m. Superintendent Jack. Roper suggested _. ''number of alternath·cs" to the pending bankruptcy. lie listed some bills before the (Set BUDGET, Page !J Cambodian Bombing Council Tees Off ·Increased -Decision on Me adow lark Course Due \VASIUNGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today the level of -U.S. botntting ,:in c Cambodia has been intensified in recettt'-~ days, but denied that" the move violated The future of '-leado\\•lark Gnl! Course \\'ill be discussed tonight in closed, ex· .,_ .. eeullvc session by Huntington Beach city - councilmen. Councilm:in Henry Duke said this morning he and City ~dmiriistrator David Rowlands would present a pro- posal lo preserve the golf course during the spirit of a compromise agreement with Omgress to halt U.S. military ac- tivity in !~Ina by Aug. 15. A Defense Department spokesman, William ·Beecher, said there had been a more than 30 percent increase in the number of U.S. tactical air strikes since the middle of last week. 1 He ·said there had been no cor- responding increase in the level ol B52 bombing. Befornhe increase, the daily bombing total included approximately 4Q B52 strikes and 150 tactical air sfrike1 . Beecher said since the step-up, the tac--_ tical air strike rate has run in the low 2005 on mo.rt days. He refused to say wbat the bigbeat level bad been. Beecher ·said the reason for the stepped.up activity was a simultaneous clearing.of monaoon rains and lncttase in ·Communist attempts to seVer roads aroW.t Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capi.tal. ·Congress and President Nhton reached a compromise agreement that Nixon signed· Sunday to end all American military activity in Indochina -in- cluding the bombing in Cambodia -on Aug; 15. The President agreed to the • comprori\ise In the race of demands from both houses of Congress that the bombing be halted. "The Administration is anxious to con- clude a cease-lire in Cambodia," Beecher said. "Between this t~ and Aug. lS, the Adminittration still intends io ·try to · use its authoritr for bombing to c:ooclude a cease-hre which is Something the Congress IS as anx.lOU{I to see as the administr.ation ." Summer Gi.-1 ·Blonde and tan Cindy De Mott of Newport Beach, reflects on the joys of being 17 an.d of bein g on the beach during ttiis summer of '73 3:long the Ora nge Goast. Prime Lendll1g Rate Up To 8% at Major Banks the closed session. . Duke said he could no t reveal details or the proposal because it would violate the executive session na ture of the meeting. Executive sessions are allowable only for personnel matters or pending litigat ion. The counc il 's regular meeting starts at 5 p.m. Sweepsta k es Prize Go es To Countia1i ·A SJ. Mother's Day gift ballooned into a 5129.000 sur,:irise for a La Habra \l'oman this v.•eekeild WhcN an Irish S"·eepsta kes tiCkct given her by her husband rode · home With the y,·innc r. l\.1rs. ritarthn A. Cannis, Ml Cedarwood SI .. mother of six, is still stunned today. "Thi s is the \\'inning ticket," her hus- ·band. Nicholas. 54. promised her \vhen he put it in her hand on ~lothcr's Day. It v.·a§ one of two t\ckets Cannis, a meat cutter, had bought from a customer in the supermarket ,where he works. "I didn't think it \\'OU!d \'..in. I just lhrew it into a Chinese jar I keep on my dresser." she said. The Cannis' are still uncertain over how they will spend the money. They do NEW YORK (AP) _ Numerous ma}or Harris Bank. not harbeir aoy lifelong dreams \\'hich the ba-• ctin th h Is f Fed I The Bank of Califomia, Wells Fargo payment of 20,000 English pounds can u11.s, s g on e ee o era bring to fulfillm ent . R · Bank. Security PacUic Bank, and Crock-eserve . Board steps aimed at cooling er Bank also raised thei r prime lending "I haven't really absorbed it all yet. monetary expansion, raised prime lend· rates from 7'4 percent to 8 percent Probably \\•hen I do. I'll completely fa.II ing raies today from 7% tO eight percent. today. apa rt," said ~lrs. Cannis, also 54. The moves, which followed the lead of Bank of America officials \Vere in con-~trs. Cannis is currently reco\'cring Philadelphia's Gef'al"d Nati onal Bank, ference today and could sot be reached from a painful hip ailment and be lieves marked· the eighth general \~percent in-for comment. lbat her sedation may ha\'e been crease this year in the minimwn interest . Bankers said the moves would not ar-responsible for ''maintaining my cool." Tonight is lhe last chance -barring any ~ial council meeting -the city \Vill have to make a decision on the 96.5- acre country club. Owners of ~feadowlark have given the city until July 8 to make an offer on the \Varner Avenue golf course, or else it Y.i ll be sold to•a housing developer. The reported price tag on the course Is $4 1nill io n. Rowlands and othe r city of- ficials h~ve ad mitted they don 't know ex- ;:clly ho"' the n1oney cnn be rn iscd. One possibility is seeking another golf course operator to take over ~lcadowlark \\'ith some t)J>C of lease ·arrangement Deilr fll .. I Sl•ff ......_ HE'S THE MAN Citizen of the Year Coen Councilman Coe11 Elected 'Top Ciiizen' Y outl1 Accused Of Mansla tig htel' In Auto Death fee charged by banks on loans to large feet rates on loans to small er businesses \\'ith four of thtlir children gro\\'ll and corporate customers. or on e-0nsumer borrowings, including the other two in thei r teens, the Cannis' Cily Councilman Al Coen _ caught An 18-year-old Westminster man has Some financial analysts predicted that mortgages. say that they "live.comfortably." speechless for one of the few moments in bten charged. with v eh i cu I a r the record prime of sin percent set dur· Girard's announcement or an increase "\Ve'\·e ah~iays been able to get along his public life _ Saturday \\'as honored manslaughter following an accident June ing the 1969-70 credit crunch soon may be in its prime· came Friday night, shortly fina ncially and we don't have any as "Citizen of the Year" in Huntington )I which killed Heather Liddell, 18, of eclipsed. after the Federal Reserve Board raised outs tanding bi lls," A1rs. CaMis said. Beach. F _,.,.n· Valle AmfV'I,,. the dozen or more banks its disJ:OUnl rate from 6~ percent to 7 "But this \\'iii make it really nice for us." ......._in y. "''-o and · d ri1ean\\·hiie _until they decide whether The 35-year-old Coen is the eighth v.•in-Cbarged with m i Ii dem ean or posting increases this morning 'were percent · increase reserve re· , H ll' " · ner of the a\\•ard. presented annua llv. by I ht b the dist. "ct alt y' Cha Manhat•--the country's th'~ qulrements for meinber banks. they want to take "\Veavcr s a s \\·1n-mans aug er Y r1 . orne s se wu1, uu 1 de 1 the Huntington Beach .H0~1E Council, a office was Gene Ed~·ard Angell of 10111 largest, ·and · two New York banks, The discount rate is the interest charg· nings to a trave agency, an auto a er, COd!ilion of homeo"llers aSJJOCialions. Margo Lane. Chemical and Franklin Natioll81 , as well ed by !he Fed on loans to member banks. or just to the bank -~trs. Canni.s sa}:s ·W~ at the scene of the accident as such large Olicago banks as first Na-Recent increases in it have raised 1he her onlv ambitions are to "stay 1n this The 3\\'a rd was presented Saturday told traffic investigator:i: lhat Angel,l's Uonal Bank, NOrthem Trust Co. and the (See lt<i.'TEREST, Page J) hou se aiid to puller around in the yard." night during the llOME Council's luau pickup was traveling touth on Brookhurst banquet at Sam's Seafood Restaurant. street abd ran a red light at Slater About JOO residents atte!lded. -Avenue, ramming lnto the driver's side l'tL-mL-Pri,,.,e n-IJated As he accepted the a\\·ard, Coen ad· of Miss Llddell'• car, the district at· ,.,... ueT' ,. 11111:' milled he cooldn't think of anything to tomey said. say except a brief "thank you." .Miss Liddell, 10577 Fuente St., died ·w The T. e N ? "I really felt just the nomination was ~~u1;;'u~~ra1~~~0~~:t1"w~a~~ . as IS r1p ece.ssa_ ry. ~:~~~di~ac~:ic~~~.~f·~~:,r;o~~:i~~ graduAted from FOuntaln Valley High ed." he did saf. School only the Week before, was • · Coen \\'as first etectcd to !he Cily · reporting for her first day at work with • Council in 1966 and re·electcd In 19i0. !·le t6C Fountain Valley Recreation Depart· Agnes o . Matthias or 1750 Whlll !er ''\\'htn v.·c round out that she \\'orked "They told me I \\':IS ineligible but served a.s mayor t\\'lcc, io 1969-70 and ment. Ave., Costa Mesa , this morning \I.On the for Avco. "'e had lo award the tic~ets to everyone else around thc·office had filled again In 1972-73. No arraignment date has _been set for Newport Harbor Chamber of Com· the tecond name \\'C had dr.3\\'TI." out the lickcts and ii' didn't say anywhere lfe 11•11s nominntcd for !he llO~iE Aniell, w ho was unlnjured 1n the ttash. merce's rree trip to Hawaii, awarded 11 Council honor by the Chnmber (If Com· , ·~· part of the Chambe:r 's Hawall \\Uk pro-Chambtr ?tlanager Jack Barnett said that employes were ineligible. merce. ot "'hich hi!> law partner. Jerry ..... ·ith the city. Council men m.ighl also decide to hold a bond elcctk>n to raise the money. They do feel there Is public support for the ctty saving the golf course. Two \\'eeks ago, a petition with 7 ,000 names or. it was handed to council men to show su pport for some type of action. The city also conducted a random survey of residenl.s wltich showed a high percentage in tavor of preserving the old goU course, though many were not su~ ho\Y it should be paid for. Rowlands said he expecl$. the council to (See GOLF, Page %1 Natal Cle f t Prohibited . ' In Valley ? . By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ""' o.Jlr fllll't SI•" The natal cleft may be baMed in Foo~ la in valley. Tuesday night councilmen .,.,'iU vole on a propoSed ordinance regula ting nude entertainment. The law is identical to one adopted by the county and the city of Costa ~fesa. It prohibils', display of the nalal cleft. The only problem is that no one in law or medicine seems lo know just what a natal cli!t is. City Attorney Tom \\loodru!f said this morning that he doesn't know either, but Ile said he agrees vt'ith U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stewart Polter that bt'U know it when he sees it. Woodruff explained lhal the law was taken verbatim from the county law at 1he suggcslioo of the distr ict attorney to provide countywide consistency in ban- ning nude dancing. "Because this ]a\v has the state Supreme Court's blessing." he said, "..-·e arc taking it \\'Ord for ..-·ord. I don't want to tamper ..-·ilh it to change even one • 1'-'0rd because· that could give someone the hole they need to say it's different and take the "'hole thing all the way through the lega l mill again." \\,oodnd! explained that the proposed ordinance \\·ill back up existing city ton- ing ordinances "'hich have been used to keep topless, bottomless and nude en- lertairtlng out or the city's businesses. The council is slated to meet at 8 p.m. in city council chamben; at city hall. Oraage Coast Weath e r ].tost ly sunny Tuesday following the U5Ual early morning clouds at coastal areas. l;lighs in the uppc!r iOs at !he beaches ·rising 10 near 90 inland. Overnight lows in the 60s. • .. J?ENNY PINCHERS mot.ion in Newport Beach. , tirfitt today. The second n;nne was that ''So when I called and made a big stink name, is president. It wam't easy but so did Ray and o1 Mn. Mau.bias. , they said they u.'OUld give me the prize A special selection committee, ;'Ip-... TSIDE T OD Sharon Coburn 16825 Brkleeport Ave., But Mn. Coburn didn't take kindly to back,'' she said. ''At first they told me pointed by the HO~tE Council, picked lhe ai, J\ Y • FOllMalD Valief. . her lladdtn fort.one and misfortune. 'tO!lgh iuck' ." ~1.n. Coburn said, "but winner from nine nominees. based on a S.anta_Ana race....drive1:-SW£d&. =:::::::;SJ4:~'f-f1~~=~f)JEi::"~l$1~:-:;==::-~~~ilds~~ot~Cl*"~c~IOoo~1~11"1~lif~iOM>GIJ>~l/l-;"t~holad~one~·m~-~1 -the~~but"~_!*l,;,~boen .. ~ .. ~att)!~ore~~2pa~l~t-y'.!'.dbr~'at~w·~n!noi~ggl,~1t==~1~~~,J.1-1o1<1~tlithem~~-i::woutd=l".;~~~;t"'::rl;~';=~l~istF.!!ltJI!~•~lli~lc~at~ton~•~-~an~d~~M~-£d~~~o--.::!!:~:..=f--~iedi..'.,';::&;:~'if::,;;;j;';;;;;:.=f=====J ... L f~-UU 1 i-.. IO I 1.1.1': llV\lltS. f;Uffti-td ill tl flamJnfl .tma.shUp allo had to do a Hu.le tuam& at a retuc-Mrs. COburn explainC1f. .., and go to the new~pen . they Cllled The eight other nominees included Pat durinf1 tht Indiallapolfs .500-mtle Dall)' Ptlot Penny Plncller odl can ,.n almoot an)'lhlo&. Look how thl.9 advtrtiltt did it: CEDAR 1hekct No. I grade, a bundles + various piects of lumber, llO. (I'!..,. No.) ' E'{er,tbh1c wa11 90ld thanks to a 11good Olllecl mponse" to this ad . Pinch your pennlel with a Piiot Pincber clatsinecl ad -l llll<O, 2 times. $2. Call 1142.sfl8. tarit Qwnbu, and airline compeny.· "Someone from Wtstem Airline:! called back and said they Y•ould go ahead and Do\\"ney, .Jack F'eehan, Janey Koch, rtict ~101130. Set itoru on SporU, Mrs. c:obum'a ticket wN drawn Sun-my hust.nd thll momtng and Mked ror give me the I.rip tOo:. . ~larlon ~feyer, Bobby ~lurphy, Prhn Page 20. dl:V n t 1 ht at the luau climulnl the me. I, wasn't there ind they then. asked ''They said that they "·ere legally Shea. Katherine \Vallin, and Bruce .-oei'loo(j promotloo. •j>ue 1.-.llld they said Utey would within their rights not to do that but they Wiiiiams. But tbe 0.mber and wutem AlrUne~. get la toudl wtth me. said 1hey felt It "'OOld morally be the ~1ayor Jerry ~latney presented Coen ,vhlch CCHpmllll"ed the event, balked at "J had' friend who ttayed later at the right thing to do.'' -\\·it b a key to IM city, quipping lhat he .;y1-""°the prtae tltft mominff beaule party " Mn. Coburn aid, "so I called 'Barnell this morning called the mixup didn't know wha't a six·year council :he '-''fs an apoye <II a participating htr' tfus m~ and lhe said, 'do you "one or those thin'-s." veteran \votild ao With It. business In town. Jive in Fountaln Valley:' "She "'asn't ellg1blc but since she wall' ·~ never had one before.'' rtpl!M Coen . Mn Cotlum 30 it a bookkkttper '" "She load me that t bad WOn the tr ip, not &\\'arc 9£ the rules lhe airline declded Coen and hit wife, Fcllcla have thrtt Avco · Ft""9dil Services ln Newport So I started ailing the 'Chamber,"' ttlt. to g1vc her a trip rather than m3'ke Mr children. Josh, 7; Jeffrey. $, 3Rd Mark, Center. Coburn sal,(1 1 unhnppy." 22 months. .;. r , . AIWt ~ 11 *"''" ,, Jfflleul ,.__ ' °"-c~ • ,, .... 1. flfrtff' 14 '"'" -.n tltd: M•tllttt 1 .. 11 'rtle¥1t1H 1• _... )I w-·• "'"" lJ•M Wt1111 Ntwt 4 • • • • ------_-,: - -···---·- • !'i Z DAILY PlLOl _H _____ .....:;M.:.-:;:::!'..:CJ.:.".:.'.:'.:.· .:.H::_:1l Senator's •I Drunk Case Gets Probe_/ PHOENIX, Ari•. !APl -Maricopa County Atty. Moise Berger said today he ·..-dered, a grand jury investigation into lhe city's handling ol a drunken driving ebarge agaimt Sen. Paul Fannin (R· Artz.). fannin Waf arrested last November ln Phoenix and charged with driving while 'intoxicated after he submltted fo a · breathalyrer test. However', the caae was dismJ!Sed in ci- ty court after Fannln's attorney sub- . mitted medical rtports indicating the eenator was taking a prescribed drug at · the timt which would make the test results inaccurate: , " Berger . said that after reviewing ttte ' facts, lie decided a grand Jury should in' veatlgate the ·case. · Berger made his announcement in a three-paragraph report to newsmen on a eomplalnt flled in March against the city mtoroey's office, which asked that the ' charge be dropped. ~~· county altomey said that his office txamlned the facts and interviewed perscm familiar with the case. He Indicated the grand jury woold llbiy the case within two months. Fannin has consistently denied there ..-as anything ·wrong with the way the .case was handled. Berger declined to discuss the kind of diaries the grand jury might consider, ' ttit added that there was substance to lie allegations ·of the handling of the obarges .against Fannin. A~ked v."hethe.r the Investigation would ft ~I to bis political career, Berger 'leplied, "Let's say that it wm•t help tt· .any." • ·But Berger, a1JO a Republican. said that he bid beeo under ... ~· lo JOit· pedo1 the inv..ilgation, exC:ept thooe nonnally aocilmpanylnc any inquiry Into IUCbacue. - ·• Berger said tblt tbe grand jury probe •·also would look Into the condiict of the , three doctors who signed the certificate • • relating to the possible mnuence of the drug "Xyloprlne" on the senator's blood- , alcohol content. • FromPqel I :;BUDGE'f ... Legi.<lature which, il passed. would · -some ol the tulng ability taken away from the xhool district by the ex- ,• istinj! school finance i.... SB so. He also polnled out Iba! H...r.Jne!oo Beach "is not \be ooly district In the state fa<:iJC • proJecte!I deficit." And he _-.. ~he doetn1 belJeft the ltate ...,Id allow the district to go bllnknlpl. • Logan, ,_ Jn roplY Iba! the cuts :.t should l>e_ made regardleas of pending :1 ~on. "If the bills pasa, then we can : j restore some of. the cuts," be said. : • Logan also a-iUcized ·Roper's remark : • tllat the state wooJd not allow the diltrkt • ~ to go bankrupt. "1!1at's not an ac- ; i·ceptable way to run a bl11ioeP/' the ·~-said. .· : l Roper Indirectly refemid to tlie : possibtllty ol havq a tax ovtn1de eloc-: f lion saying "unlesa the state moves to • ~ alter the exl.!tlng law, then we will have ~ to leriously conakler raising taies." ~ The election possibility war brought up ., again laster in the meeting, but trustees ; refused to discuu il nollng that Roper : bad not made a formal e.Jection proposal. , 111 Another .money~ving proposal wa.t ~ made by Shenkman. He asked if lt might . · : be possible to put off oomtniction of the : $660,000 center to house the diltrict's , special education students. . : Admlnistrat.<rs strongly discouraged : : the idea and trustees agreed to leaVe the ' :· center in the budget. · : The cuts made were based on their -poterrtiat eff~ on the ability ot teach- . ers to most effectively IMruct students, : trustees said. ~ Administrators had prepared a 42-item ; : list which totaled ll,000,347 for deleliQn : from the budge<. Trustees approved all : • or part of 25 of those cuts and made two • :· ol. their own from the public relations : : and publications budget to bring the ; total to $358,000 in cuts. • ' ' " . " • :: I • " • • DAILY PILOT lM Or-C..11 OAll'I' l'll OT •1111 Wl\loi ii coonltlntol Tl'll ............. u ... ~hlllw 11'1' 1111 Ol'"'fl C•1I l'Wl!lllfnG C-y. s .... n"t ..in"°'' lrt po,ollUtMCI. -....V !""""" l'rliM~'. fw co1i. Mu•, N._rt •••ell, H11nli1'111'9n lltKll/l'..,..11111 VII...,, L"'Oll!'f' "'9dl, l"""°"S""'flt~k ... SM Clttntfltt/ .... J..... C.111•~..... "' •lnolt '"ll:IFllll .. lllM It jMlilUIMt ......... .,. -""'"y .. Tiii ll!'l!>cl"t p\llMllllio!I """' II 11 ill! Wnl llY 1,,..1, ,._.., MtM, C.Mtern11, .,.,., lloli11rt N. W1114 PrMillMll 11'111111 "llbll..,,tr Jeclt It. Cvrl11v YICW "'"'""' IPlf Otiw.i ,Ii\ ....... · 'SORRY· TO BE LEAVING' Retlrln9 Tr:ustff Bentley . . ' . 'WISH ALL OF YOU WELL' Longtime Tru1tff Sc"mitt Board Meeting Marks End of Two Careers Saturday's special meeting of the Hun· tington Beach Union High School Board of Trustees marked the close of two careers which have totaled 27 years in education. T'rustees John Bentley and Ray Schmitt closed out their tenns of office to make room for two newly elected school trustees -Ron Shenkman and . ltoliert Knox. Bentley, who has aerVed the -tiigh school board for 10 years, announced hi s retirement prkr to the April ocliool board electJons. 111e !Huntington Beach resident said he decided to retire because he had served the school boanl "long enough." ·Schmitt, a retired dairyman from W estmlnster~ has tieen on the high school board for 17 years. He also serves on the Westminster ElementarY School District boanl. ·\ Jn April's election, Schmitt \\·as par· rowly defeated by Knox. Both retirees were honored at the regular meeting of the school board Inst Tuesday night. Board president Dennis P.fangers, in present ing !hem with plaques com- memorating their years of service, com- mented, "l wish there was something more you could say to people \Vho spend sc;> much of their time in service to public educatioo in their rommunity. Thank you doesn't seem to be enough." Bentley, who served four conserutive years as presldent Of the schoot board, . accepted the tribute, noting ·that "This )las been a very rich experience for me. "l have · seen· some tremendous developments in education and I ' don't think the dynamic period will end fer some time. -"l 1llll sorry I have to leave." Schmitt has served the school board as clerk for the past 10 years. "I've appreciate the years I've had on this board," he said. "I've enjoyed every ·minute of it and I leave you all \\i th my best wishes." Beach ~Homes Needed For 'Up With People' ' . More !bin 250 Huntington Beach homes are needed to house the young members ol the three international "Up Wlth People" musical troupes in town July 30 thtoqh All(. l. '{be a.amber of Commerc~ i.s seeking local ...... ~ fe< the students for their throe-day stay. llosldfslts who can pro- vide cme or more beds should phone the chamber at -1. Members cl the "Up Wllh People" cast range in ace from 17-24. They are all tiigh school and college students from througbout the U.S. and 20 forolp COUil· trie.s. "Up With People" featuns two casts of, 125 performers each, and a third cast of 50 performen. All three ~ts will giv~ a full -July 31 and All(. I In tbe Marina lilgh Scl)ool gym . They are practicing and performing throughtout. Orange County this summer. The t~-o Huntington Beach shows will be their final , polished perfonnancts prior to a thre:e-mon th tour of Europe . .. Up With People'' is an independent , non·profit corporation v;hl ch provides high scOOol and college credit for the Image Changing • For Seal Beach To Be Discussed Controversial plam to "modernize'' Seal Beach into a seaport village to at· tract more tourists will be discussed in public \\00rksh0ps tonight and Tuesday night at 7:30 in the city council cham· btrs. · The meetings were called foUow\na: ft similar hearing last week when an estimated 350 persons protested a review 6f a city land use plan near the municipal pier. . year ~ traveling during the sbow 's tour. The students are selected from audi- tions across the country and in foreign riations. Their !how features 'singing and dancing. · Residents who can provide a home for any cast members \\ill also be asked to help them get to their dally practice sessions (three) and the two night perfonnances. Tickets for the t .... ·o Marina shows will be on sale at the Chamber of Commerce office. Frot11 P•el GOLF •.. take some kind of positive action this week. ''Even ii it l\-eren't a go lf course, the open space woutd be \'aiuable," he said. Duke sa.Jd the city has asked for a meeting later this week with the l\teadowlark Golf Course Corp. to discuss , the matter. No time or place has been established. 11le corporation has so far refused to meel with city offi cials because the city has not been able to make a definite of- fe r. l\feadlowlark is located on Warner Avenue, east of Graham Street. The land is currenUy zooed for R-1 (single family homes) development. Escrow for its sale has ala.ready been entered with S and S. and S Construction Co., wi th the city's option to buy the only blockade. That op- tion expires July 8. Class Proposed For Handicapped A special class for the visually han- dicapped Js expected lo be approved tonight by trustees of the Ocean View School district in Huntington Beac:h. lf approveG,""the class \\-Wld be In· augurated during the 197:M4 school year, Feeding · the Multitud~ Beac.h Parade Entries to· Get Hot Lunch ' ., TOM GORMAN Of ........ ,e.ft Coordtnatln( a ....... that wlll attract 5,000 partlclpoola .,... only «>e problem facing Mark Harnmarquist when he sat down seven months ago to organize the July Fourth parade in Hlintington Beach. The other problem is how to feed 3,000 of them. "I didn't expect to be In lhc food business when I took on Uris assign- ment," said Hammarqu.ist, a dire<:tor of the Jaycees who .are sPonsoring Wednes- day's &9th annual patriotic di.splay, "\Ve knew we should feed some of them.'' tie 'said. ,;But we had no idea of the response we'd get from band entries. "Most of the marchers will lo.@d up on buses and either go home or head off to another parade as soon as ours is over," he said. "We couldn 't really let them go without first· feeding them." In past :y.:ears parade participants have betn fed cold 'box.luncheS. This year Hammarqu.ist d e c i d e d lo feed them hot box lunches of chicken to thank them for their efforts. Cost of the lunches will total about $2,000 -IO percent or the total parade budget of $211.000 offered by lhe city. ·Another SMIO will ·be spent for a lunch~ eon at the Mayor's invitational rece ption for about 400 persons. "But our budget is extremely low for the size of the parade," Hammarquist said . "We've really Cl,lt comers. ''If the city had gone out and paid a professional parade direc tOf' to coordi- nate the event, U \\'ould have cost ~ t .... ·een $45,000 and $50,000. "The only expenses this year are for food , transportation for the entries com· . ing from outside the city, and printing costs. All the manpower has been donated by city officials and Jaycees.';. Working under Hamtnarquist are about 40 c 0 m nM. t t e e chairrl\en Wtiose responsibilities rail.ge from soliciting en- tries in the equestrian c a t e g 0 r y to coordinating traffic and crowd problems with local police. "And each of our committee chairmen have two or three men working beneath them. In all, there are about 100 of us who are donating our time to put the parad4!:' on." .. "You wouldn't believe the organization problems in coordinating a parade,'' he said. · Elderly Gunman Battles Officers At Remote Farm CHIRENO, Tel<. (UPI) - A man fortified himself in his remote farm home today and battled with sheriff~s deputies f9r more than an hour. The marr's elderly wife was found dead in the house and five persons were \VOunded, inculding the sheriff and two officers. ' "[ don't know how-bad Sheriff John Hoyt is," San Augustine deputy Dorothy Poss said. "Deputy Richard Carl Davis took a gunshot full in the face and he didn't look too good. They tr&Merred him to Shreveport, La." l\fatlie Mae Clerk, 58, Vt'as found dead on the floor of the small house west of tbe East Texas town of s3.n Augustine. DeQartment of e®lic $a f e t y patrolman Doyle Pittman, ambulance dri\•er Lonnell Garner and Roger Williams Were wounded in the gunfire and taken to nearby hospitals. The suspect, identified by poliei! as Van Lacy, 67, was not injured and sur- rendered to deputies. The gunbattle began an hour earlier when officers went to the small farm house near the Louisiana-Texas border to investigate reports of a woman being shot. As officers approa ched , the .man began firing from the windows. goudothe coolcing. self-cleanin9 CJCIS raftC)tl But •l ammarqulst Is confident all tbe work wUt pay off. • "Each or the entries In this year·s parade-wa s speclaUy invited. to ~ttend. We keep newspaper clippings of other parades, so we know who tbe best entries are. "We have cut lhe sl1.e of the parade from abou t three hours in length to about two hours. But we've neve r had more qualified entries." The parade ~'ill begin ·at 10 a.m. at Boat Barns Laa Park, swing. downtown on 1'faln street past .a judge-s ievtewlng stand in' front of city hall and head back up to1 l..ake .Park. · • At 3 --p.m. the Huntington BeaCh Com· mtmity Concert Band will stage an "old fashioned ooricert in' the park'' featuring patriotic music. ' A fireworks 'show will be held al thf: end of the munlclpal pier bellmllw about 8:45 p.m. ' ... ii~ . ... ,.. r· . , ' ' .. ~ • ' :.J~· .... ~· • . '·' I Dana Harbor Patrolmen . ·.Find Home Fires ·Hot (Dana Point Harbor patromen didn't tiave to look far to find i little emerg~. cy actl9n Sunday afternoon ~. their newest rescue-fire boat caught fire off Laguna Beach. Orange County Harbor Patl'.OI~ Sgt. Raymond Grahani sai~ today the trouble started when the 27-foot patrol boat went to the aid of a smaller craft cauitit In the surfline oil Laguna's Main Beach late Sunday aftemoo1 .. . "For some unusual reason, the boat's radar mast snapped off and the wlring shorted out," he said. ,"All of the in- sulaticin in the boat smoldered off before the power could be Swt off.'' While polrolman Ralph-Huffman -and ltoliert Wblte strugled with the fire boat, another patrol craft heeded toward the boat in trouble. But before rescuers got near, the distressed vessel got ·its engiml slarted and sped oH Into the StmSet. I G!'.aham said the fire on the fire boat' never broke into open flames and was extinguished when 'the master switch was thrown. The boat limped hick to Dana Harbor on emergency power and was brought to Newport Beach for repairs today, Graham said. FrotnP .. el INTEREST ••• cost baJlb muat pay In tappmt one or their _primary sources of funds with i<wlilch to 11o·i.11fneu.' Meanwhile, the dollar weakened again in Europe today, despite moves late last week that were supposed to help the U.S. currency. • ~ The dollar dropped· sharply i n Frankfurt, Zurich and Paris. It inched ahead in Lorlc!on. Dealers said, however, that trading was slow at the outset. There were no early s.igns of monetary crisis. Gold', which often moves erratically higher In times of monetary uncertainty, was unchanged in London and Zurich, the two biggest markets, In early trading. The mark was revalued upward by S.5 perctnt agalnst seven European cur-· rencies last week, and interest rates in the United States were raised. Both moves should have helped the dollar to- day, but instead the decline continued. On Wall Street stock market prices re- mained. sharply lower and drifting at midsession today amJd investor concern over the rising interest rates ·and tight money. 'fhe Dow Jones average of 30 in- dustrials closed down 11.14 points at 880.57. On the New York Stock Exchange, declines led advances by 2 to 1. • i "ltls really 'unusual and un(ortuna te when. something like ihls ·happens to an experisive piece of.equipment," Graham said .. "But some of the gear we use every day 1s the same as on pleasure OOnts used only·once In a while." · P1·obe Continues ·Into Sh~ting At Block Party Investigation continued today into a Newport Beach ·block •patty that turned ~to a block bra~I Saturday night, resulting In the shooting o! an Irate homeowner who came outside armed with a shotgun. Charles Whtiney, 26, of 116 31th st .. was Usted in satisfactory conditron today at . Hoag Memorial Hospital, following surgery for ctomach wounds.' He was hit twice. in the abdoMen by shots from Officer Richard Goodell's revolver when he failed to drop his shotgun as ordered· during the lateitlght confnxitation. Whitney was trying lo help diepene the mob, police say. Investigators say the shooting resulted from a wild party \\'hose participants' floCked outside and fought orders to disperse ai the 10 p.m. curfew, with a resulting aiinouncement of unlawful assembly. "We've been doing it all weekend," said Detective Sgt. Don Picker when ask- ed if questioning or area residents was cont41uing. in an attempt to detennine the cause of th;__.!}1ini-riot. Sea Distm·hance Closely Watched MIA:M[ (UPI) -Hurricane hunter airplanes checked a tropical low pressure system far out in the Atlantic Ocean to- day and repcrted it Md not moved or In- tensified during the night. The low pressure system, the first tropical distb:rbance of the 1973 hurricane season, was located 700 miles east of .., Miami. Hurricane forecaster Neil Frank said the system was stalled in weak steering "·ind currents and was expected to drift erratically in the same area throughout the day. Tho11111 K111¥11' illlOr lh111111 A. Mvr,hi"• Mtnft!itJ f:dttor c;J11rlM H. l111 ll.ich1r4 '· Nall A new plan calls for commercial development near the pier, public park· ing on vacated Pacific Electric land dO\\'Rtown and 12 acres of tourist at- tl"8ctlons on vacant land rurrently owned by the J..os Angeles Department of Water and Power. Members of the Save Seat Beach Com· mittee claim the plans would create a congested commWJily. ~299 88 financed by $1$,000 in state f\111ds, said superintendent James Carvell. $ 39988 · ""'ho '4-ould qualify for the class, he said . \ AUlllllll MIMtllflt Edllttl r.,,., c.~u. : W..f Or .. -=-·· lldlt .. It==:;:~ H ........ IMdi Offtce~~::.:::::=-:..J---C:Olillit¥:(:01iij!iei~iiiie --~ , .. ,_._.. •• "' 1 ... 1 ••• ,.. onaressinen j Mtfll..t A'4rtlll r.o .... 1'11, tJMI " There ... five students In the district . -ra· >=..- ln past years the district has sent Its visually handicapped students to the -westmm~e:rSchoot-t!11li~'!'1<t·:::::::::::=I u..,.... TiUiie<iWiJrine< i1 -7'M1n-..rt+~,....,.~flMI---eYW'fl~lng,Jual-M~ dlsUict board room, 7972 Warner Ave. diets, lock the oven door. All th1t'1 left or ~=tXifJ/Jiiiiir~---f--M ' ' -~~ Op F <IC ff ·, t...,.. "'°'! .m ,._,A-pose un uto l , .... -· .. 'l::T.:t .. .. • flil-' l lleftl »n ......... ,., • "" t~1 ~ ....... t QIT\lflt .... ,j T .. 1rt1•1 (114, MJ-4JJ1 ? c~ Mhc:r1.-. MJ.U71 P',.... ...,. Of .... c...., Ceawnlllfllllllil ---: • ' ' • • • ..... J .. e t, 1tn. ONl'lll C..$1 l'llllll,tllfl; , Nt PllWI '""'"' ln1111111-, Wlflrlll IMftlr' w tdvltt'-'-" ~ -• a.. ...,...,._.. wllfltlllt '"'"' ,... 111111fln ti °"'ICM """"'· 1«:1!'11 , .... ,.., ... Ille ef '°''' Mitt • Ctllfll'fll•. lklMa"""~ .-t.etrlifr It.if -111111 .. •!Nh P.11 "'°~''""' ,,..lllhl!'Y t ..m-1"""' "·" """"'"· ~ L,.;;;.;.;.;.. ______ _.. I\ ·- All lour Or.Inge County congres.,mcn joined Frld~y In the defeat of an amend- ment to cut orr aU lund1 for bombing In Cambodia. The votes came just prior to the-J:lou!Je vote aetting an Au g. 15 cutor!. Opposed to the Immediate fund lna cu toff were Rep. Clare Burgener (R·L.a M•sa), Rep. Rldlanl T. llanha ([). Anabolml, Rep. Andrew J . Hlmhaw (ll- rt1isslon Viejo ) and Rep. Cralg Hosmer IR·Long Beach). · • ' Woman .Dies of Sjl]ad ' tho l!IM8IHl tplllov0f9 la a tllia white uh that wlpet aw1y. Clnnt bfolltr apattera. too. Because the rldl1nt broller la m the oven. Al handy wallt·lovol. Specially coatad porcelain oven llllllW. combine wtth cwen heat to wotk whenever you cook. Spatter1 fade away gradually during baking and routing. Oven tends not to become reelty dirty · becauu It la contlnuanv being cleaned. 90 DAY CA$H With Approved Cradlt • 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa "548-7788 • t.'ond.IY, AIJ1 2. 1973 H DAILY ,!LDT 3 Clement£· 'C .. mpaign . Tftreat' ~I I -C~spe~s Assailed ) IN -VERDANT TRABUCD CANYON, EIGHT AMERICAN MONKS MARCH TO DIFFERENT DRUMMER The R•m•krl1hn1 Mon11t.ry, a 200-acre Complex, 11 Scene of Quiet Work and Contemplation Serenity A1nid -·A~tivity· 8 Hindu-reWted Vedanta Monks • Ut Trabuco Ca1iyon Cerenw~y For Oath • President Nixon was scheduled to be oo hand In San Clemente today \¥hen James n . Schltsinger takes his oath 35 l(!(retary of defense. Judge Spencer Williams of the ll.S. District Court of Northern California "'as to adminiSter the oath in Nixon's offlCt>-. Sch1esinger, 44 , replaces Elliot L. Richardson in the Penlagon post. Richardsoq is now attorney general. Schlesinger, a former. chairman or the Atomic Energy CommWion, directed the Central Inlelligence Aiency for f o u r months this year. He studied economics at Harvard, taught at the University of Virginia, ~'Orked at the Budget Bureau and was associated at one lime with 100 · Rand Corp. "think tank" in S a n I a fl1onlca. . He is a native of !\e.\\' Yor~ City. He v.·oo a Senate confirmation last Thursday by a 91--0 vote. In SWlday activity, the President sign- ed a bill increasing Social Security benefits by 5.6 percent next year and at· tempted to assure both bustnessmen and housewives or as short a price freeze as . possible. In a radio addttss broadcast Sunday, Nixon said, "\Ve have been 'determined from the outset to keep the freeze as short as possible" -an indication he may disclose Jps nl:!w ecatcimic game · plan oefori; the 60-day price freeze e.1· pires on Aug. 13. F~r Yeo Firing Firth Diitrict Supen•\sor R n ti tt t d Caspers' action remo\•lng Ron Yeo rrOm tbe Orange County Planning Commission v.·as taken to keep land developer support in next year's tlection . Robert Snyder, president of the En\'ironmental Coalition, has charged. In the July issue of Environmental News, Snyder states "Ron Yeo ' s performance had. been outstanding - \'cry much ln .keeping wilh the profes5('d conservationist stance of ~tr. Caspers." But obser.vers clOle to Caspen, Snyder writes , maintain the change ~ook place ··10 1hv.·art any effort by land developer inieresls to mciunt a threat to his cam· paign'' in 1974. , Caspers, attending a meeting of lhe South Coast Conservation Commission, could not be r.eachcd ror romrrienl. At the time Yeo was asked to resign , Cispers said the request "''as made to provide more rcprescntnuon for the Sad· dleback Valley on the planning com· mi ssion. Caspers president appointed Bart Spendlove, of the Saddleback Area Coordinallng Council, to Yt!O's position on the •commissloo. To keep ~upport fronl land developers. Caspers "shed his environmental trap· pings." elahn.s Snyder. "The nlO\·e will probably save him several thousand dollars In reelection tx· pense. The cOst in terms or loss of sup· port from concerned indh1iduals was con- sidered in c o n sequ e ntia l,'' the Environmcnla l Coalition presldenl claim· ed. The Environmental Coalition with of· fices in" Santa Ana rcpr~ts individuals and organizations to halt "'hat they believe are environment.al a busts in Orange County. • ··Tue important poin t in all this is that our election system. ~·hich calls for huge sums OJ money to wage a campaign, has completely distorted our political leaders' sense of ''alues. ''The oounty supervisor's prim a r y responsibil ity is e:itercising land use con- trol. That seems simple enough, but bavr you considered just ho\Y valuable that · power is in Orange County," Snyder ask· ed. Viejo Pickets Protesring County Bloclcing of Road Nixon said a temporary freeze on all excepl raw food prices al the farm level V.'flS necessary because it is "vital that v.'t have genuine consultalions with a v.·lde range of intcrestl'd parties before launc~g Phase 4." He said these con· AOOut 100 Irate Mi!Sioo Viejo residents resident~ of Naccome Drive, San Andres sultat1ons have belJWl. ... oda · · • --d s »-Ori By JAN WORTII Of Ille l>altr PNel Sutt . Nixon said, "The many measures we I , Y picketed along Jerorumo Road ..... ue an an .""'iue ve. ·of life is the phrase "the search Within:• have taken to increase the supply of where last Wttk the Orange County.Road They said their residential streets were Believers hold that each human has rarm commodities _ including the Department erected posts to block off being used as a speedYlay by drivers tak· Deep in the green recesses of Trabuco Canyon is a sanctuary unknown to most 1uburbani,tes in the exploding culture just outside. divine essence within himself, and release or more than 40 million additional vehicular access. ing a short ct:t to the Mission Viejo Shop.. whatever path chosen by a searching iri· acres for_ rarm production -will even· Access to Jeronimo Road at three in· ping (;enter on La Paz Road. · It is the Ramakrishna Monastery, the home of eight monks, all American, who have chosen the Hindu-related life of work and contemplation within the Vedanta Society of AmeriCa. dlvidual is wtiquely his and divine. tually brmg m?re far~ prod~cts to _the tersections was blocked. County •Road Commissioner Ted market and wdl provide rehef against ~·lf you want to see God , look into your high food prices." Pickets carried sigTU reading, "Tum McConville said an intensive 'survey of neighbor's eyes," VivekanaQda once said. This Back Into a Planned Community," the problem had dctennined that to FoUr kinds of yoga form the basis for "You Umit Our Gas Then .,Extend Our decrease traffic on the three streets 1he Ramakrishna monastic life. N ortlie c t ,f\.!iles" "You Can .Get lo Hell Quicker closures v.wld be placed at the in- CWef among them ·Js bbaktl yoga, the Tl), OUU y · Than You Can Get Through Mission Vie· · tersectioos of Jeronimo Road with A visit to the 200-acre complex ne~t to O'Neill Park is a venture into a world of quiet -quite unlike the nearby .deVelopments of Lake Forest, El Toro and Mission Viejo. · search for the personal aspect or God, jo," and "Remove These Road Bk>cks for C-ordille.ra and ~fontilla and Carranza. 1he yoga of dev,ation. Singed by Blaze Commwtity Unity." Bul picketing residents said that peti· But the other three types, jnana, · Spokesmen for the group issued iions bearing 1.200 signatures to request A haU·mile road leads from a solid ~n gate at the foot of Live Oak Can· yon Road to the center cluster of Stucco · karma, and raja yoga, also· play im· statements listing: 10 reasons for pro-a four-way slo~ at Cordillera and A windblown grass fire burned over testing the blockades at Carranza Drive, Jeronimo have been presented to the portant roles. seve"n acres in the Yorba Linda area of Montilla Lane and Cordillera Drive. county t'A'O years in a row without Jnana . yoga covers the search for north Orange County Swlday. . The..plain objecti?ihs seem to be block-response. buildings. . knowledge a.Qd discrimination in the It took 14 units and 6Wnen of the coun-ing-·access to Cordillera Elementary "We just don't want our streets bb::k· search for one's true self. ty fire department one hOur to bring the School "''hich v:ill shift a great deal of ed off.'' one resident said. When 1 visited there two we,eks ago, calm seemed to envelop the compound !ike a fragrant fog . · · Kaima is the yoga of , work. "To use blaze under control. No structures were traffic lo the: front of the school. Suggested solutioas to the problems by the common phrase, we want 'good . damaged. , , Another objeCtiOn \\•as lh3t a four-mile the residents include: A brick· archway smothered with b9qgainvillea is the entrance to the monastery. Inside is a well-tended garden, a statue in the cross-legged meditation pose, and through the most distant art*., some nliS~y canyons. karma' and try to go beyond It," JohnsOn Investigators said the fire, near drive would be required to reach the -Remove the barricades. said: Amberdale Drive and Fairmont main business section of ~fission Viejo. ~mplete other main lhof(llJ.ghfares Frir_this reason, each monk ts assigned Boulevard probably was sct by children The Board of Supervisors' action "·as such as-Alisb Parkway, Jeronimo and chores lo be perfonned in a spirit of playing with matches or fire~-orks . prompted by protests of about 50 Los Alisos. meditation each day. Gardening, Ir~~============~~==~~========================~ maintenance, and housework is divided up. -. At first it seemed no one was there. The· only sounds were sprinklers and birds. Finally, from an orderly workshop, a tall, lean mpn Stuck out his head. It was Clive· Johmon, 42, ·a• California native, ex-reporter for the La.Habra-Star and UPI, and ex.college professor .. Now he ls a brahmachari, or student of Brahmin, a Hindu concept of the true self. His given name at the monastery is 8huma. For eight years, he &is lived there -attempting to cultivate his soul and purify away any though4: but those of God. In three or fOur more years, he most likely will become a swami, a spiritual teacher in the gospel of the Hindu saint Sri Ramakrishna· and in the ancient Vedanta scriptures. Dressed in a plaid cotton sports shirt, tan pants, and tennis shoes, he hardly looked priestly. l-le was polishing a smooth square of wood, a new placard for the monastery entrance. • As a former reporter Johnson a~ parently took the responsiblity for the in· tervlew and tour. He did alI tbe talking, a sort of myst.ical public relations man. Though the others appeared fleetingly, they mostly went about their business. What is this unlikely heve.n for Eastern ways in the middle of conservative Orange County? · The order was created in 1894 by the Indian Swami Vivekananda, a disciple of Ramakrishna. The monks do not wear habits in the U.S., but in India they shave their beads except for one lock. NEWSMAN TURNED MONK Brahmachari Clive Jotinson · Each year Swami Vivekananda is honored by the Ramakrishna society on July 4 -the day he died in 1902. More than 300 members of the Vedanta society and the public are expected Wednesday at an all~iiy open house and dinner at the,trabuco center. Vedanta, the philosophical basis ror the Ramakrishnas, gained popularity in the U.S. in the 1950s, when Johnson says many disgruntled western intellectuals couldn't find whal they wanted in Chris· tianity. Vedanta does not neci!ssarily imply a celibate life like that c~n by tho.sc at the Trabuco Center. Only 45 of the 750 members of the Society in Southern California are monastics -about half men and half Women. At the Trabuco center, the monks range In age from 23 to 54. . The origins of Vedanta are ancient : it is one of six systems of philosophy born in India thousands of years ago. It is not a religion, believers explain, but an approach to life that can be a~ plied to every religion and every human being. Its scriptures, comparable to the Christian .Bible. are called . the Upanishads -literally "sitting near one's spiritual teacher" or ·•secret teachings." Under everything in the Vedanta \Yay Raja, one of the oldest fonns of discipllne, is the meditation yoga. This pursuit, combining all the others, is ac- commodated by a special windowless meditation chapel built by the late Gerald Hurd. · l-lurd was an English scholar and self· styled "Christian mystic" who bought the Trabuco· Canyon property in the early l!HOs. Most of, lhe existing buildings were designed and constructed by him. l{e set up a college of religious training and for several years hosted about 25 men and "·omen. It "'as called the Trabuco College of Prayer. l\tany adults interested in in- \"estigating means to reach God -or the true self or ultimate reality -came 10 the stucco comix>und. One of them was English author Aldous ffuxley, who Johnson said did much of the research for the book "The Perennial Philosophy" here. Another "'as Swami Prabhavananda, who now visits the monastery every tw o weeks. In 1949, Hurd donated the center to the Vedanta Society. The monks meet in the meditation room three times a day: 6:30 to 7:30 a.m., noon to 1 p.m., and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. The main meal is at noon . The af. temoons are used for \York and study before the evening meditation and a light supper. Then the monks meet in the library to study and talk. J _ury Computer Stance Hit . -, Feuding between 't,le Board of study by the· Arthur Andersen Company, without thorough research." the lette r Supervisors and the Grand Jury over and the findings (lf a county Blue Ribbon co ntinued. computer ·systems for Orange County C.Ommittee, internal control of the com· "Ills record shows that he is a good ad· government continued Friday with a puter syStems was the best route. ministralor who concludes all tasks wiUl critical letter from SUpe!°vlsor Ralph But Diedrich suggested thnl !he competence:· f>iearich-to Grand JW')' Foreman Afafcia Anderson study left nlany queslions Diedrich crcticized the · jury for com. Bents. unanswered. As an e:itample, he enc losed municating via a press re I ea s e . Dledrich's letter berated the Jury for two pages of queries regarding the jury· ··Normally, J \\:ould reel that direct ignoring cost factors, falling to com-proposed sys~ern. personal contact 1tith the Jury would be , municate directly with the supervisors, 11e also questioned an earlier rccom· ·in order,'' he said. and mistrusting the judgment of Robert menda1lon br the consultant that The earlier Jury Jetter signed by ~1rs. Thomas, aiunty administrative officer. UNlVAC equipment for .the system Bents· had said in part : f--11.._--;C-llle disagfeement centers_lll\ mtheL ~~~M~~:~C"hl"S--''.fhe-jur:y:·as-well.as.aome dcpartmont- the oxmty should hire an out8ide date d~ appreciably since that dafe,"-he~ grave concern tffaflfil. dil-of:" -11li firm lo fill gr.,,.q computer • .,,..,.. Id be hand! th ~ or enlarge the exist""" cOunty Diedrich wrote. "That alone puts the state ~pany ~ 1ng e "• te<.'Ommendalioo In question on a ftTiple com?Jting o" election result5, personnel computer department. dollar ba.'lis. · "'· . files for not only county employr s. but On Thomas's recommendaUon, the ••f•or these rea.50n.$ it would be ln· files for Probation and the Health Board voted ~2 rl'Ctntly to hire an credible to state ihat tJie Arthur ' ·Department." outside ftrm, Electronic Data Systems of Andersen Report should·recelve top con· ''While there are means to. safeguard Dallas, Texas. sideration ~as is at this time," Diedrich this confidential material, it was the ln -a k:tter ~C.O. tM ~rs dated said. geocralconsen.sus th.a,t coUege J:lcctroni<: 'IW3day, Mt1. Bent.a clahood Thomas's "It is inconceivable to me that the whiz could break the safeguard iind this recommendation, suppoM!dly reflecting Orange County Grand Jury can aJSUme v11luable 'information 'could be open .to Grand Jury opinion. was In tact the op-that ~1r. Robert Thomas, Cou:nty theft ·aJld blackmail. This lnronnatlon ..L!......JIOelle of what il wanted. · . Administrative Officer, would recom-should be kept in the coonty under j She aaid that on lhe basis of a $9,000 mend any path for Orange County dedicated elficient manag ment:' I ' ' ------A-SUMMER NECESSITY! . Our l ight Weight AU Cotton Knit Shir-I -A Cl•1,ic by Hathaway in Eight "Cool" '5fnida, -$15.00 PHELPS MEAGER • . -· --- ' Nawport Bee ch, W il 1hira, Sharm•n o ·i11k1, Pi111edena , Lakewood, West Covin• ' -· • I . -- < • ·-----.... , • • • I ' DAILYPILDT Mond•Y, July 2, 197) , -Get Blame l;~li Services Set f or Slain Officer .. TEL AVIV, Jsrael (AP) -Delon5e Ml'1!Jttt MDohe Doyan loday accuaed Palestinian terrorists oC slaying la'aeU air attache Yosef Alon in ·suburban Washingtoo. lie pledged that llrael wlli try lo Uquidate the tem>ri11 gmips. vesUgata the ldlllni· An honor-guard of · 11x air force men with rillOI and beyooell oaJutad the <Of· !in. A rabbi niclted a psalm uk!ng God to "punish the evil ODel." I State ·Really Alon's body arrived home aboarii a U.S. Air Force jet esooned by :r.r1eli . fightm. one day alter he was shot 'out.side hfs Chevy O.SC, Md., home. DAYAN, THE I .. raeU chief of 1taff, air force coqunand- er and other aeQi<r officials.. six U.S. Embassy inilitary attaches and about 35 relatives a n d friends of Alon •r> peered at the air- hows a .Profit ,.RICKY TICKY POLITIX' .Coosider the tlrrible p-oblem or our good California Trea8urer Ivy Baker PriesL Sbe ha.! iDoney · piling up all over the the place ial doesn"t know what 1.o do with it nus ii a ten'ible cmdi.Uon. ~ Mrs. ~ u a matter of fact.,~has a us ol ·cash in the amount of an lltiriwt«i $789 milli<n What a wonderful ~ thJs Is! We are all used to govern-~ at all levels crying poor-mouth and . ilbruPIY. oor-Golden State 15 actually a iold mine. ~ Groat 1w.zaJls were soonded In the t.;;.;i-. when our good solons leerned ~-We are actually over-solvent. So ~ts began to give the' ~y b8ck to where It came from. The tax-. P,aytrs. that ls. You, in other words. l;'lbe Democrats wanted lo give II b\'<1<· 'nJe Republicans wanted to give it ~-. _j.~m Gov. Reagan wanted to give it THE ONLY Q~TION wu, how? -C:OV. Reagan bad a plan wborein tM. would be a one-time 20 percent rebate on your income tuea.: Ob, no you <km't, tbe Demomb cotmtared. You'.d be ·gtvin& --more lo the rich than lo tl>e J!OO'. What'• """" with that, lbe pemor aske4. '!be rich paid In more than tho poor. Never mind, said the Democrats, we have our own plan for a 30 percent rebate with a 1lmit of $200 to each cwple, So the rebate argument went oo. The taxpayen waited to see if they were tubll to get the money back the benix:ratic or Republican way. MEANWHILE ON Capitol Hill, there was UU.. sales tax measin to boost sales taxes from five cems to six cents on the dollar. 11 was going lo go inlo err.a ... ,. ty quick. Everybody agreed Ibis was prelty silly. what with Mrs. l'rlell'• _..,. already lllllllloC .... and opllling IXll lllDOOded ...... . '1be Democrats agreed. 'Ibo ·Republicans ..,.ed. Et'm Gov. Raqai1 agreed. So a bill was drafted which would eliminate the one-cent sales tax ina'ease. But ttaci '4Jy Democrats saw it as an OJ>"" portunlty to.also $licker in their own way o/. giving )'Ott. back the state's suprlus cash. -, SO T11'E DEMOS tacked their very own plea for a pniporty4u ~ up lo $200 ' octo the l>ill killing out tQe unwanted ex- tra ~Sates tu. Then they flopped the whole tqing.on.the govemor'a desk will> a chortle ol glee. 'Ibey put old n_, in a real bind .. u he ~gned the bill, tboo the Demol wwld get their way m .tbe Income tu rebate.:U he -i~ Ihm he'd be loading up poor Mn. Prieol will> • lot more UDwanted ~· Your money. So Gov. Reagan lidmlltad deteal, o!p ed the bill and you get bock ,...-inoome tu:es plus no increue in aaJm: tu:es, right? WRONG AGAIN, friend!. Ho vetoed IC By gollies, good old Gov. Reagan wasn't 'going to be slickered around that way. He'd show 'em. Besides. the ]egiSlatOrs had all gone home in ad- jourrunent so they bad no cbanoe or over- riding his veto, he chor'tled with glee. So there you are. You aren't going to &ct any income taxes back -at least1or a"'1llle. And you're now paying an enra. penny-per-dollar in sales taxes. 'lbat money is pouring an enra $1.8 milliJn per day into poor Mrs. Prie,g's trelt!ury which is al ready overflowing. Jsn 'L il "'"OO~rful how the government works for you ·~ "IT MUST BE me ol. them, I don't see a pcwslhility of anyone else," Dayan said at Lod Airport, wliere the flag-draped casket arrived, accompanied by A1on's sobbing widow and lhree children. "We will llnd the terTOrtsts wherever they ar. ... and do what we can lo liq· uid&te tbe terrorist movement," Dayan added. 1be defense minister told newsmen that the Palestinian guerrilla movement bad annoanced over Cairo fadio that one of its men had slain Alon.· He said he ia satisfied so far "with what the Americans are <kling" to in- port. Oxnme.rcia1 OM.. ALOfll traffic was suspeoied durq 1be arrival Some Israeli newsp1pen l8ld Aral> ter· rorism must be combated if it bas spread to the United Stales. 'Ibey said the U.S. government should increase security for Israeli diplomats. · Dayan said Israel would not retaliate dire<:tly for the murder but would keep following its ~ anti-guerrilla pollcy ' '. " "''I X..... VILLAGE MOTEL IN HARDWICK, VT. SLIPS INTO LAMOILLE RIVER Scene W•• Common Pollowint Flooding in VermOnt, New Hamp.hi re Iraqi .Defense Minister Killed ln. Attempted Coup BEIBUT, Lebanm (AP) -Scores o! • arrests were reported in Iraq today after the assasmatloo of Deleme Minister Maj. Gen. Hammad Sbihab in an ar> parent attempt to overthrow the coun- try'• leltlst regime. THE IS,-Iraqi ermy WU put alert as tanks and armored cars took up po!iti'"1s around the capital ol Baghdad, according to nports reaching Beirut. 1be defense mi.niste~ was sJain near the Iranian border early Sto:lay in a shootout between the leaders of an abortive coup and logal troops. He was given a state f\meral todiy in Baghdad, tbe Iraqi state radio reported in a terse broadcast. Reports in the Beirut press said Sad· danl Hussein Takriti, who is vice chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Command Cooncil. pe..,..lly led the troops and security forces that crushed the attempted coup against the Baathist · socialist regime. BAGHDAD ANNOUNCED Sunday that "a clique of traitors" led by the lraqi Secwity Director Nazim Kazzar killed the defeMe minister and woonded Interior ?ttinister Saadwn Gbaydan. Both Shihab and Ghaydan were members of lhe ruling IS-membfr command council. 'Ibe killing occurred a few hours aft.er President Al:med Hassan el Bakr return· ed from state visits to BuJgaria and Pol-Diplomatic reports from Jordan said Kazr.ar,~bab and Ghaydan \Vere not at the ttaaiticnal aiprort reception for the president. · Bakr's Socialist government h a s strengthened relations with the Soviet Unioo and other European Communist , COl.Dltries and has receiv.ed strong aid from the Soviets. EGYPl"S MIDDLE East News Agency quoted an official statement from Baghdad that Kazzar invited Shihab and Ghaydan to a banquet Saturday night am sprang a trap on tttem end other of - ficials. _ "When his plOt. was wioovered, he at- tempted to escape in the direction of Zerbatia, near the lranian border. holding the tWo ministers and other of· ficials as ptjsmers. "At Zerba ti a, Kazzar and ~his ac- complices were overpowered and ar· rested. Before Kazzar and is accomplices were an-ested, they shot and killed Gen. Shihab in the shootout." Holiday ·Outlook Warmer .. Crowds Modes t at Beac hes Due to 65-degree Air • •• -1/ltN ~$N()W ,,..,., ... "' ~MOWW _, r1CYW v.s. S11111mar11 TM lllQllHt '911'11)fr1hlr. rl~ tD --lht N1tlont.i WH!htf $1roric1 Slll'ld•V w11 114 11 Giii &Ind. ArlJ, TOOIY's low Wll In 1t ICl lllf'lll, -.. -c-•liil. ll'ftillii!r - ~ """"" todl'I. l JDtit vt111bl1 wt .... nl;M _, """""' l'lollt's lllCOl"I· Int ills'9rt., It to 11 kl!Gh 111 ttt.r· -f!Od.IV 1ftd Tllftd1.,, HIOll ._., 111 IM l'Ot. ro.u .. tMtWltllrtt r•fltl '"""' '5 to 10. lrll•IMI l'lmW•tvrn r•ntl ,,....., ~ to.U. W.tler """°"''"',.. '5. S u11, Jll oo11, Tide• MOfllO-'Y hce<'ld "'~ ••• • 101~ •·""' '·' SlcOl\d 10w 4;20 11.lft. I.I T!JflO-'Y Fl•~! Moll lt:ID p.J>I, 4,j Flr•I low •:•I .t.m •• 1.t $1CO!ld high 11 :11 p.m. '·' $KOM low , .. , i:l5 p.n1, I.I $Olft alMt S:4' 1.lfl. ..... ''°' II•"'' MIOll ltlMI l l:IO '·"'· Sib 10:01 p ,., ... by "c:oatlmd~ dolac -....... .- doing," He appanmtiy -•eel lo - guln'llla --Al'lb -ond underground warfare -t be Mideast I Dayan llood by a bllll! and while Israeli !lag •I ball -u the -WU loaded onlo • military balftrlck. He comforted Alon'• Wtdow and ---ALON'S CAllKET was carried -the piano Sunday ~ af1e< a somber memorial service '!I Andr<ws Air r.... s-. 'Ibo U.yeu-old -air ·-to the Unll<d Slates "81 -early Sunday . momlng OU~ bis Chevy <llue, Md, home .. be ttlumed with bis wife, Down, fnlm • party. Maryland Medlcal · Examine< RlnaJd , , Kornblum Aid be died of fiva gwisbot , woondl In bis chest. Kornblum l8id bis autopsy revealed no other marb or brulles Oil the body and that be oould not tell wbetber the bullets were fnlm a madtlne gun or a handgun. • Local police and the FBI said they had no """'°"'" In the caae, although millta?Y spokesmen in Tel AviV said Arab ter- rori.sb: may have plotted A 1 o n ' s assassination. " . Prellder>t Nixon &ITanged for the aircraft' lhllt returno:d the body of Alon and his family to Israel. Nixon asked his top military adviser, Gen. Brent Scowsroft,-to convey his condolences to the lsraeli ambassador over the shooting. UPI T ....... 11 WIDOW DEVORA ALON WIPES TEARS FROM EYES AT AIRPORT Memorial Hold al Andrews AFB, Md. IOf' Slain Col. Yooef Alon Eight ·Perish • Ill Floods i I Swolkn Rivers )luin S-econd· Planting In Vermont . While Moontains ol New ~ after other ,llasb floods last March ml By 'lbe Associated Pr<H . ........i !llO> the U!UBl!y plodd Ooimecti· o!ficials said the dlmage to the ·leOOild . -. cut-River, v.iDd1 eepantes the two plantings may mean a secmd OJOo Eight persons were reported dead and states. secutive bad crop "yeai-end mere . loai11 three others missing in weekend flooding for grain to feed stock next winter. Coro that caused heavy damage to farmland~ FARMERS IN Verm'ont ~d replanttd the · rtl affect-.1 in the Coonecticut River Valley. was · crop pnma Y '="· In Mi990Uri, heavy rains meaairln& Gov. Thomas P. Salmoo. of Ver;;mont, more than a· dozen inches caused flash 1he state hardest hit by the 24-hoor rain· 60-pound Rodent !Jooding Sunday between Springfield and I all oC six inches or more, SOUgbt to have the Arkansas border. · Vermont declared a disa$.er area. 1be 'Ibe ...,....,. of hh ...... ram. also '~tn1dated "--~-~-. r~ were no re....,.... ~----bul ·· ,.~~ n· 11 · Id auistian CountY -JO. Mayberry Maine and New llampobire. Iles . '*'"Ye8r•O said be beDeved then> woold be u.-i: 'l1IE FLOODING wiped IXll lbe second I plantings ol some already bard-bit Ver· Bo Obi ~-'·1 homes were flooded and the ....., mont farmers and caused between • y at ·o Zoo ....,. million and $10 millloo pniperty damage . waters llWepl can lnlo .-, - to state roods and bridges aJaae. -• and -the dooal& ot -Four per90ll$ died in Vermont, -COWMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A four,-.. highway, and comtrY toads. in New Hampshire and one 1 n year-old boy wu bitten · anci. oerlously · · · ' · Atassachu!etts. Two persons we re wounded by a gitantic 80-pound rat-like RESilp~ ~ So u t ·he a 1 t ern reported missing In MassacbU!lel1s and rodent at the -Columbus Zoo Sunday Peoosylvarua, including ~. one in New Hampshire. ~· look ~ Sunday of the damage COU!Od Flood w8ter.s today had receded in aU Jason Estep ol N~wa!k, Ohio, stuck his bedy ~ 541°' ~!ridaytrandedthat ~ but ·the Connecticut River and Otter ann through a chatn1link fence _ where a -&~ ~ l!"'' ... 3• a &Jr Creek after the heavy rallis Saturday capybara -one oC the largest species of tr~velers and claimed the lives d. ~ spilled brooks and rivers across lowland rodents on earth -was holl8ed. The boy . ch=hil -.1--d towns, roads and bridges. Streams in the was bitten on the upper left ann. e, ~~s an ~re Green M0W1tains of Vennoot and the Estep was rushed to Riverside th~tonns _sliced l8Cl'OSS the upper R ed Commandos Att-empt Ammo Dump Ex plosion SAIGON (UPI) -OJmmunist com· mandos crept into an ammunition dump IS miles northeast of Saigon bef<re dawn today, but were driven off before they could do any damage, the Saigon com· mand said. One of the commandos was killed, the command said. On June l, ctmmandos blew up 4,000 tons of ammunition at Long Binh, about three miles south of the dump In the raid today. The command reported 94 alleged Communist cease-fil'e violations in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m. today, the most .since HM were reported June 19. It reported two civilians 'killed and 11 injured in three separate incidents throughout the country. Heavy fighting also was reported west or the Montagnard city ol Kootum, 260 miles north of Saigon, on Sunday, with a total of 39 Communist troops and six government soldiers killed and seven government soldiers wounded. In Saigon, c.nadian and Hungarian o!· !icial.s met todly With repneenlallves of the two Vietnamese aides frcm tbe Joint Military CommissiM [JMC) IQ discuss the release of two" C.anadian officers, mi.uing:since last Thursday. Canadian Sen1or Political Af(airs Adviser Victor Turner and Maj . Gen. Ferenz Szuch, head of the !lunprian delegaUon to the" Intematimal Com· mission or Control and SUpervision (ICC.SJ held oo hour-long meeting with lhe Jl\!C officers representing South Vietnam and the Viet O>ng. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dil;oo.OI tliiJl.illJ .-- ls 9UM'lllttfd I MfllH"'Ptltl"I If )'*i .. ,.., l'la.ltt ywr l>lllff -.. IJM fl.""-rtll 1M ""' "'" wlll IM .....,.., 19 Jft, Cllll .,.. t411M ..itl ,, .... 11\. 11,_,..V NNI SWIM.,t If M ....... ,_, .... '"' , • .., ..,, ' '·"'· ,....,...,, ., • .t.M. S•MltJ, Clll 111• I C9tl'I' Wiii .. """""" M FM• (1111 IFI 11111.., WllM If '·"" Ttltpl'IOrle~ Mftt 01'11111 C"°'lt AtiJU • M•r"'-•1 M~111111tllll •••ell .... . ....... .._ ... , ' . . '' S.11 ci.-11, C1111tr1,,.. t11t11. .. ,,,. 1111 J•111 U,111r-, OtM li"Hll, ,..,,Ill LllWfll, lttu~• .,.,... .,., .. , .... Hospital, where he underweftt emef'gency Midwest, dowrung ~r. lines, caudng surgery to suture the wound. He was in· flash floods and killing at teaS two itially listed in serious Condition and to-persons. . day was reported In fair condition. A total. of nineteen Urnadqes were "He 's not in any danger ol I011ing the repcrted m Minnesota, !Nebraska and arm," a .supervisor at the hospital said South Dakota. "I think he's going to be OK." 'Ibe supervisor said there were deep bite holes on both the front and beet side of the boy's ten arm. The caP'j'bara, about the size or a large dc'I bat reeembling a rat, i1 a native oC South America. ONE PERSON -.ldlled ond two ln- jlftd when lig!Kmng slluck _.. • volleybail game northeast of Rnlllld •••e, Minn. Another person died-when he - hit by a wiDd-C:kiveo board near Webeeer, S.D. Faith Deals? Deadly Snake Bites Believer NEWPORT, Tenn. (AP) -Muri Bass, who tested his faith with a rattlesnake Sunday at the· Church of God in Jesus' Ijaine, wu in a Chattanooga hospital today in 'very critical' condition from a snake bite. Ignoring a court order not to handle snakes, hundreds of the faithful converged on the litUe church in the East Tenn ..... moun- tains near Newport to demonstrate their faith In Jell\IS with fire, poison and serpents. WHEN THE RITUAL ended, Bass had been biUen, and another man burned his band In a open fllme lnsisUng he Wll not -In palit. Officials at Erlanger Hoop{lal said Baa, 35, of Chattanooga was in the emergency room btii refused further Comment. . Bass, who had handled a snake during a prayer meeling Satur· day and was nicked by a ntUer, was handling a western diamond· back when the serpent struck, leaving a btoot1y·tract-on his ann. Despite the wound, Bass continued to clap and sing for several minutes before leoving the gothering and going to the home of the Rev. Liston Pack. Later, Bass was reported to be resting comforabty at his home. But about 5 a.m. he was taken to the hospital. ''WE HAD A CONTI NTIOUS spirit here today," the Rev. Pack said. "Where there's contusion, there's contention . Anytime you haft a group like that, you have a contentious spirit." Pack'• brother and I North carolbia preacher wen killed Wt April in a shnllor rl!ual al Ille 111>Y wOOdiD frame diurcb In N.,,.. •-: ~1.r.abOut 40 mflel WUif..&!!!~ llR, bowHer, dled-.f'm,cll< nine poi4Q;lnc, wbldl -not In Hldeiice Siiiiilay. Tbe ~· led to a clrcuit court order banning the congrea, Uon's handling of Blllk" to teat it& faith. But local au!horlttes u Wiil as several hundred wonhlpers-who came from at leut eight stalel -Ignored the court order Sunday. AT TIMES, THl~ITH,UL passed as many as~ collkt11et· pents amona, them w chanting, ''ln Jesus Name.'' ' The snalies were taken !rom five boxes-four of whlcil contained rattlers and the fifth an Indian Cobra. A. Columbus, Ohio, minister. the Rev. Richard WUliams tested his faith by placing his loot il)to a box or curling, hilling aernen!B. He waa not bitten u he aPQke, 1'1 do that in the na,me of Teaus.f' -- • . I ( • •• V,OL. 66, NO. 183, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES 8.% Loan Level ' . NEW YORK (AP} -Numerous major ban.ks, acting on the heels . of }'ederal Resei'Y'e Board step! aimed 'at cooling monetary expansion, raised prime lend·' ihg rates today from 7% to eight percent. The moves, Wlllch followed the lead of Philadelphia's Gerard National Bank, marked the eighth general 1/.a percent in· ..crease this year .in the minimum interest fee charged by banks on loans to large c rate customers. • Masters Across Bay. Tippy, a 12-ycar-old mongrel dog owned by a \Ves tcliff family, apparently didn't like it too much when her masters locked her in the garage Saturday and went for a weekend aboard their boat docked near Balboa Isla,nd. By so1nc nuke Saturday evening, a high-frequency radio signal acti.vated the · electronic garage door i:ipener at the 1417 Antigua Circle home of the John Connells and Jet Tippy out. According to the Connell's 12-year"ld son Tim. Tippy spent the next 10 or 12 hours swimming around Upper Newport Ba)' searching for her family. "I guess she knew "whi& way we had · gone and just came looking," said Tim. "1'he Connell's boat was docked. just west of the Marine Avenue bridge to Balboa Island. Tim said tbe family never left the d0Ck, preferring just sunning and swimming in the bay. · "That dog just knew we were on the boat and swam doWn the bay and across· to tlie Newport Dunes,'' said Tim. "I guess she tried"-for a !Ong time to scram· ble onto the docks there but couldn 'f make it." Tim said a boy and his father sleep- ing in a cruiser nearby heard the frantic splashing near thei boat at about mid· ni~ht and spotted • exhausted Tippy. They pulled the d aboard, cleaned ber up and tried to ph the Connells, whose number was on the 's tag. "They finally got us Sunday emoon after we had been looking all o for Tippy," Tim said. "\Ve were pret ur· prised because a swim like that take a lot of energy for an old dog like her." Tim noted that Tippy's 12 human years are equal to about 65 dog years. Reagan Vetoes More Expenses For Prop.20 The new coastline commissions today are back operating under the original $5 million alloted by Propoeition 20 and whatever pennit fees they c a n gather. . Gov. Rooald Reagan vetoed the ad- ditional $250,000 requested by the State Coastal Zone. Conservation Commission for planning and generar expenses. The original budget request ~·as $500.000, but that was pared iri half in Ammblyman Willie Brown's (0-San Francisco) confereRce committee. Reagan then ni1ed the r.emainder. A re11resentative of the state coasUine commission said today although coastal o!Jjcials were di sappointed, they realize their request came in !ale to the con· ference committee. Jt v.•asn't in the in· llial state budget. The commJssions created by the coastline initiative last Novembe r con· tended their operaUng costs were higher tpan origj.nally estimated. the reconl prime of Ill pen:ent set dur· inf.the 19S9-70 crt<lit mmcli soon may be 'l'Clipeed..; ...... . 1111 ... Atnoog the dozen or more banks posting increases-. this morning were Chase Manhattan, the country's third largest, and two New York banks , Chemica\ and Franklin National, as well as such Jarge Olicago banks is FlrSt Na- tion.al Bank, Northern Trust Co. and the Harris Bank. ~ Bank of California, \Velis Fargo Bank, Security Pacific Bank, and Cioek- er B8!1k/a_lso 131ised ~he!!'_I>rjme lending rates from 7o/• percent to 8 percent today. BIUJ!I; of America announced this after· noon that it also will increase the rate. Bankers said the moves w·ould not ar. fe~ rales on Joans to smaller businesses or on consumer borrowings, including mortgages. Girard's announcement or an incrcasl' Otll'I' Pnot s111f P~cuo FIRE BURSTS THROUGH ROOF OF AIRPORT AREA BUILDING Sunday ·Bla1e Causes Heavy Dam•g• at 4500 Campus Drive Firemen Seeking Cause In $500,000 Blaze Firemen · today · continued effort! to determipe . the cause of a half·million- ollar blaze th3t gutted a 14-unit orfice b '!ding near Orange County Ai rport ear- Ulie. and Tricia: Ar1·ive on Coast President Nixon;s tWo daughters, Julie Eisenhower and Tricia Co:ii:, aIT\ved at La Casa Pacifica, San Cle mente, Saturday for a vacation and to celebrate Ju1ie's 25th birthday. The two daughters . new aboard mililary airetaft without their husband,,, David Eisenhower and EdwarO Cox. The PresideJJt and Mrs. Nixon \\-ere expected to continue their sojourn in California un· ti! next weekend. Earlier Helen Smith, 'the first lady's press seeretary, said that Ei.senho~·er would be accompanying his wife. But ,.,,hen the plane landed, he v.•as not aboard. Julie, who has been making a steady round of1 public .,..ppearances defending the Ptesident in the Waterga te scandal, came to the presidential eslate to rest. 1.trs. Smith said. •· , ly Sunday, injuring one man. The fire in lhe three-story structure at 4500 Campus Drive caused an estimated $500,000 dam8ge when il flared up after smoldering for a lengthy period . "It burned for a long time before \YC we're called ." remarked Newpo rt Beach Fire Department Capt. Jim Topping, v.·ho declined to speculate on the cause of the blaze. "It's under investigation." he said . During the ftattle\to control the names, Fire Department Capt. John Brannon was overcome by smoke and an am· bulance was called to the scene. He recovered sufficiently after first aid treatment, ho,wever, and did not need to be taken lo the hospilal. The predawn blaze destroyed a number ol bw:inesses in the building, which v.•as one among three structures located in the office complex. ·- One of the ·victims was Liz Reinders , operator of an employment agency bear. in,, her name. 'Our records ... they're all gone," she s00becf·arter the fire. 3 lwnates Stabbed SAN Q.UENTIN (AP) -Three more prisoners have been stabbed at San Quentin Prison, bringing to 2.8 the number of such incidents there thi s year. " • in it.s prime came Friday night, shortly after the Federal Reserve Board raised its discount rate froni 6~i percent to 7 percent and increased reserve re· quirements for member banks. The discount rnte is the interest charg- ed by the fed on loan:s to member banks . Recent increases in it have raised the tO!-i-t banks mu.st pay in tapping one ·of fh('ir primary sources of fund s with 1See INTEREST,_Pnge !I f Bombing Increased \VASHJ NG TON (UPI ) -The ~entagon said today the lev.el of U.S. bombing in Cambodia has been intensified in recent days, but denied that the n1ove violated the spirit of a compromise agreement \Yith Congress to halt U.S. military ac- tivity in Indochina by Au5. 15. A Defense Department spokesman. William ~her, said there had been a more lhan 30 percent increase in the i:iumber of U.S. tactical air strikes ~ince the middle of last v.•eek. He S<lid there had been no cor· responding increase in the level of BS2 bombinC. Berore the increase, the daily bombint total included approximately 40 BSZ strikes and 150 tactical air strikes: Beecher said since. the step-up, the tac- tical air strike rate has run in the. low 200s on m~t days. He refused to s3.y \\'hat the highest level had been. Beecher said the reason for the stepped-up activity was a simultaneous l'learing of monsoon. rains and increase in Commun ist atte mpts to sever roods around Phnom Penh, the Cambodia~ capital. Congress and President Nixon reached a con1promise agreement that Nixon sig ned Sunday to end all American military activity in Indochina -in- cluding the bombing in Cambodia -on Aug. 15. The President agreed lo the compromise in the face of demands fro m both houses of Congress that the bombing be halted. "The Administ ration is anxious to con· elude a cease-fire in Cambodia •· Beecher said. "Between this time a~d Aug. 15, the Administration still inlends lo try to use its authority for bombing to conclude a cease-fire which is something the Congress is as anx-ious to see as the administration." President Nixon signed the legisla tion at San Clemente to bait all U.S. military action in Indochina by Aug. 15. He served notice Sunday he wil l seek 'new v.'ar·malting powers if he thinks they are needed to win an Indochina peace. County Congress1nen Oppose Fund Cutoff .AJL. four Orange County congressmen joined Friday in the defeat of an amend· ment to cut off all fun~s for bombing in Ca mbodia . The votes came just priot lo the tlouse vote setting an Aug. ·1s cutoff. Opp<>sed to tile lmmedla-te-funding cutoff were Rep. Clare Burgener (R·La ~tesa ), Rep. Richard T. Hanna (0.. Anaheim), Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw CR· Newport Beach ) and Rep. Craig Hetmler (R·Long Beach). Today's F inal N.Y. Stpeks N TEN CENTS S11111111er Git•l Blonde and tan Cindy De l\tott of Newport Beach. rcflcc:1s on the joys of being 17 and or being on the beach during this su1n n1cr ol '73 alon g the Orange Coast. · --------·---- lryine. Company Muni On ·Bay Preserve Plari By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tlle Dlll'I PIW St.it The announcement Saturday that the U.S. Department of·Interior wants to In· elude thrCe semi-submerged islands in Upper Newpor:t Bay in a pro(?psed wild· life preserve today failed to drnw much ·of any reaction from Irvine company Prc.sident William R. Mason. Ma.son pointed out today that lhe Jr. vine Company had offered "any and all public agencies ~ion of any and all o( the company h6ldings in and around the bay la~t April. "OUr April statement stil l represents our position," Mason said. •·we ~vuld encourage any and all of Michigan Mart Kriocked Arourul ln Neivport Surf l . A tiliclligan man knocked cold \\'hile ' riding an air mattress in the surt Sunday v.·as the only major inl'ident in an otherwise dreary v.·eckend on the Ne~'j)Ort Beach shoreline. Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said to- day Ron Rottsheffer. ZS. was thrown from his mat on the crest of a four-foot wave at about 4 p.m. and jammed into the sandy bottom at about 13th Street Beach. Lockabey said the man washed ashore unconscious and was pulled in by lifeguards ~·ho rushed him to Hoag ~femorial Hospital. fearful he h<ld broken his back in the mishap. Bul a · I loag sp:Hcesman sai4 today Rottshcffer "'as treated and released. Only 150,000 people braved the hazy . skies and cool v.·eather that socked in Nev.·port Beach most of the "·eckend. Lircgua rds reported ony 22 rescues all • \\'ctkend and none of the treacherous rip- tides that plagued the beach·JMt week . triggering hundreds of rescues. Air temperaturl's never got above 70 degrees both days and the \\'atcr hov'Cred around 63. The Orange Coun ty Harbor Palrol reported a lot of boat traffi c for a cloudy day but other~·lse no major incidenls. the public agencies involved 10 develop a plan and to take possession of the prop- erty pend ing a \vorkable method of com· pensa.ling the rompany," he said. Saturday's announcement hiid come from the ofrice of U.S. Rep. 1\ndrew J. flinshaw (R-N"e"'flOrt Beach). Hinshaw had said that information on the islands had been forwarded to him by Ro~ers C.B. htorton. U.S. Secretarv of Interior. • tfinshaw said Morion \\'as replying to a leller and indicated th;'!t his depart· ment would al so like 10 include the sur· rounding water area of the Upper Bay to the mean high tide line in the future preserve. The Irvine Company and re prescnta- ti\·cs of Orange County and stale and federal agencies have been meeting tor a year in an attempt to determin e both the \·alue of the company's holdings and how much of them should be acquired by the governments. The machinery has b<!en moving slow- ly. however. especially at the coun!y level . Nev.-port Beach h1ayor Donald A. ~le· Inn is just last week v.TOte Orange Coun!y supervisors trying to coax them to speed up efforts fo r their; appraisal of the properly. Bank Opens Office lu Newport Bea ch ' The Bank or California toda y opened ils Ne\\'j)Ort Beach office , 1401 Dove Street in Newport Place . the $200 million industrial-commercial project planned by the Emkay J)cvelopment Comp<my near Orange County Airport. The branch is the bank 's 801h, ac- cord~g lo Warren P. Thompson , vice president and branch manager. Orange Coast Weather PENNY PINCHERS SAVE· YOU-$$$$$ Reward Offered In Baby Kidnap Windfall for Conn1ian l\lpstly sunny Tuesday following the usual early morning clouds at coastal areas. Jlighs in the uppef 70s al the beaches rising lo near 90 inland. Overnight lows ln the 60s. INSmE TODAY .,-Dou; Pilot PeMy Pi~ odl can sell almost anything. Look how tbla advertiser did it: CEDAR shakes No. I grade. 3 bundles + various pieces of lumber, !50. (Phone No.1 Evtrythlng was sold thanks to a "good called response" to this ad . Plnch your perm.Jes with a Pilot Pincher classi fied ad -3 lines, 2 llmca. 12. c.u 1142·5678 . ' tQNl!Qli];\P -XJ!fi1\!j!i~~ olfued a S2,500 reward ay or in- formatian leadin~ to the arrest ol a kid- naper who took a baby girt from her car· riage on a · Londm 11trett and ltft her · near death ln a suburban woodland. The Dally Mlmlr 11ld It hoped ihe of· fer would help pol.ii:::e trace the k14naper before another child ls abducted. The ki_dnaped baby, seven-week~d Kriste.n Bullen, waJ repoited sUgbttY im· proved but still seriously Ill at a London hospilal. She is belnc treated tn an in· tensive care Incubator ror severe t l · posure and pneumonia. -- • - 'A S3 MOther's Day gifi.bllloOOiJ IBlcfi · ·threiir lnnto a Oilnese jar I keep oo my '129.000 surprise for a La Habra WOTI\IP dreuer ," she said. this weekend when an trfsh Sweepstakes The Cannis' are still uncertain over ticket given her by. her husband rode how they wfl\ spend the monty. They do home .. ·1th the wiDDer. oot harbor an y lifelong dreams which the Mrs. ·Martha A. Ce.nnis, Ml CcdarY"ood payment of · 20,000 English pound$ can St., mother ot iix, Is sl\U stunned today. bring to fulfillment. '"l'h.is is the wlMYlg ticke~·~ her hu.s-. "I haven't really absorbed it all yet. band, Nl~a•i·S4i. promised her when he Probably when t do, I'll completely fall put it In her hand on Mnthcr's Day. It apart," said Mrs. Connls , also $4. was one of two ticket! Cannit. a meat ~1rs. Cannls ~ curren1ly rttovering cutter, had bought from a customer in from a pnlnful hip ail meu.t and btllevcs 1he-11.1permarket where he works. .. lh8t her sedation may ha9e been "I didn't think It ,would wiJl. I jwtt responsible for "maintalning my cool." -r • · .. . ,, ..,....Uh four of their children grown and lhe olher two In their tetnS, the Ca:nni!' say that they "live comfortably.,. "We've always been able to get along financially and v.·e don 'l have any outsta'ndlng bills," ~frs. Ca.Mil said. "But this v.·111 make it really niet ror us." ~leanwhile -until they dcdde: whether they wDnt to take "Weaver'• Hall 's" Win· nlngs to a travel ngency, 111n auto dealer. or just :to the bank -P.1rs. ·CanrU! says • her only 1mblUons arc to "stay In 'this OOuse and to puller around ln the yard.'' • Sarila dJHl IQ:.<:e drive.r Swcd.e Savngt died today of injuries suffered 111 a f laming &mdlhup during tht' lndkniopoli.t 500-mflc race !.la y 30. See srorv on Spor..,, Page 20. L.M •• ..,. r , .. ,"" n (0!1'°'1110 I C141tlttl.. ,._,. CM!kt • It c,..,-• ,, ONlll H<ftlctt I 1..11., .. 1 p-• Ejllttr11iilfMll1 ll-11 PMHc1 14-U '" lllo 11:.unl • -" ' • .. .. -.~---.• . --' IWLY PILOT N • H0Uy141ood Hit Citizens Eye Dana Point By Tef!lblor H • tal HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A mild osp1 ouibqull<e todqhtUed dlshe$ but Patrol Boat _.ml)' -.. damoce. ind had 1 prellmlnary 1-t!ading· of ,,. .... ocnrred ., •:• •. m. Plan Change ---t-.11ft..,<n""'lbe"'Richter Scale. according ' . -~bonitury-at-t----------=-­Colloch in Pasadena. whkh said it WU centered in the Hollywood Burns Up · . ·. .. ' .,..._ ... The lrtmor was felt as far all•ay u CW.vu City where il was ddCrl~ by one resident as a "very little earthquake. It rattled dishes, shook mirrors and ·lasted 1boul!Oseconds."' ·Armenian Convicted . . ··In Sfuyings SANl'A BARBARA '(AP) -Armenian writer Gour-gen Yanlldan W811 found cullty today of murdering two Turkish ccnal\ate officials in revenge for the deaths of his relatives at the hancb of Turts a half century ago . He had no immediate nactK>n -emo- tional or verbal -to the verdict. tbe jury said over lhc weeftnd it .-hod It. decilloo but oealed lbe ver· dkt !or uoounceminl -,. Y-. 71, ldmltled he shot M"1met Blydu-, ~7. Turkiah """'"'1 in Los AlllOJel, Ind Bebadlr Demlr, 30, ..,.. -"""'"'1. He told 1be jury Cll 1be llUnd be lhol """' but -lo oclmowledp their -· 1aylng <Dy "I ~ hro evila." lllll lltllrney IOid fie'~--.dlmli-mentol copadty·lrid·could be fomd CUlllY "' nolhlnc more lhlll , Jl\lllllauillle. A funnal plel of lnnocen! bad Ileen made. "I did not kill," he told the court. "l destroyed two evils. For me they are mt : .. human. I know if it would continue like thll, mankind w0uld disappear. I cannot kill anybo<ly."' Aulhorilies.Aid Yonikliln. an Armenian immigrant, held a grudge agairut Turks -Turks killed ,,.... than 20 mermers of his family during a tum-0f- f.be.celltur)' war between Turkey and -.. . 1be """' contended -be -the Los Angles-baoed diplomats to a Santa Blli>ara coUage la1' in January wlllt lbe promile that be pn,d pca•asioo of -'nriilh llt --be wllbed lo relurn. He did not -lbe men. Ylft.ikian teltifitd that after a brief · djm!MkM'! be shot the dlplmlats with a ~ be" bad bnJuBl!I Ind Ihm oabd the _, ....-rel operator to notify autborltleo .• f Two days after tDe men were tilled, the -Blli>ara N..,. Presa received '.".a letter bearirc Yanikian's signature refenlng to a ''new type ot, war." The letter, mailed ,lbe day ol the slaylQp, alJd, "Perhaps my Id wiH be m<n elfeclive in w~ lbe sleeping amdence of many Ind chal1p for tho be4ler today's sltullkln whJch will beoelll all mankind .•• Forrest Locker , Rites 1'ursday Funeral wvicos are scheduled Thur .. day for Coeta Mesa yacbt.sman and .st.eel sales executive Forrest D. Locker, who died 1t the age of 63 Sunday. Rites for lilr. Locker will be at 10:30 a.m. in Westcliff Olapel Mortuary with members of Newport Harbor Elks Lodge officiatJng. Interment will follow at Harbor Rest Memorial Park, A former salesman for Bethlehem Steel, Mr. Locker kept a boat in Newport Harbor and bad been a member of the Elks Lodge for more. than 30 years. He leaves his wife Virginia, of the home at 227 Monte Vista Ave., Costa Mesa, plus sons Gary, James, John and Gleaves, in additio1\ to f o u r l'andchlldren. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ttM Dtl.,. Piiot lllff lr\'lne citizens appearing at an Orange County ffealth Planning Council. facilities plan hearing Friday may have influenced potential easing of recommendations which discourage hospital licenslngs in the new city for 10 years. Mrs. Lois Benes_. ot the Ranch is Jrvtne's delegate to the facilities plaMlng committee. Today she said she would be seeking chaJlie.s in Ute proposed master plan language at a work session tonight The final draft of the plan and Its amendments is due ·for JuJy 10 coo· sideraUon and adoption by tbe fuJI courity health planning cooriciL. Amonr the changes Mrs. Benes will seek are : -Blanket removal ol the UC Trvine teaching ~ital on campus and the Orange County Medical -Center from· the faclJIUes and services counts of their respective planniDg areas. The proposal would e:ic:lude UCI from bed counts in· fluencing health planning for Irvine. -correction of present population statistics for Irvine area including removal of the Et TQrO and Santa Ana Marine_ Corps Air Stat.ion servicemen fi-om the counts ·for north Jrvlne. This mov1 would more accuraately reflect hellftb aervlce Deeds for the city as a whole and porllcullrly north Irvine. --!el of lumped report at.tis- Uct suue:at planners have accounted for only &,000 penons when city figures allow 11,00D living north of the' San Diego Freeny. · . -Adjuslm«lt of lbe planning ....,..;. meodations a/feeling Irvine to allow con- structlm-of a hospital or other service facility IOOl'ler than lhe 1983 date now !bown ln the plan, assuming population grows more rapidly than projected in the council's study. Mrs. Benes said the points she'll cover with her colleagues tonight reflect con· enu e1pressed at Friday's bearing. Those appearing on behalf Of the new city were C'A:>uncllman Henry Quigley, Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor, Mayor Jotm Burton's wife J anet, Irvine Tooior· row Director Glen Woodmarnee and Walter Clark, executive dlrector of the Western World Mecilcai FoundatiCll which hopes to build a 162-bed hospital adjacent to UCl's teadllng ho6pltal. , Mayor Burton also bas written the full c:ommittee to point out the city's e1· panded plarmJpg area ol 100 square miles and ita: dem<mstraled commitment to providing the health care innovations· such as the bealth planning council sug· 1..i.. Among these are the city's emergency c&re, paramed1c--ambuJance program se& for the 11173-74 budget. '•'CJne..bas only to live in the Irvine area to recognize that an oversupply of hospital beds in North Orange County has absolutely no significance in terms of our residents," Burton said. He lll!ilemd ii would he the "height or foUY" to suggest Irvine resl~ts. .• be "hu&ed to lbe wperfluous 1-Jtal beds ' of north Oranae County" 'for the ne%t 10 years. Similarly counting on those beds to meet lbe health needs of lbe "°"ing city ls J.,. than 1ood planning, Burton llllil .. ted: . He urged changes in the plan to make room for the UCJ teaching hospital "cir any olbel' a=edli.d boopilal "' which may ·want to serve Irvine cilizem. Burion noted the ooWlCll recenUy unanimously conti.aued the Ji!e of the city's health care· service study com· m..ittee to study lhe county master plan proposal for hospitals and its impact on the new city. Kosygin in Vienna VIENNA (UP I) -Soviet Premier AJerel N. Kosygin arrived t¢ay on an of· ficial four day visit -.the first by a Soviet leader since Nikita $. Khrush- chev's summli with John F. Kennedy 12 years ago. Otnr"'PlliM stttf ,,... Dana Point llarbor patromen didn·1 have to look far to find a Uttle emergen· cy action Sunday afternoon -the ir newes~ rttcue-fire boat caught · Ore orr Laguna Beach. . ' Orange County thtrbor Patrol Sgt. Raymond Grahan1 said toda.v the trouble started when the 27-foot patrol boat went to !he aid of a smaller craft caught in the surfline off Laguna '~ Main Beacb late Sunday aftemoo•~· ~ "FOr .Gme-unusuaJ reuoo, the boat's ra4ar rna!:t snapped off and 'the wiring shcifted out,'' be said. ','All of ·the in-suJitiOn in the bOat smoldered ore before the power could be shut off." RESCUERS LIFT ACCIDENT VICTIM TO SAFETY AFTER . CRASH IN NEWpORT C•r Goes Over Cliff Early Sund•'f at Superior and Coi11t Highway; Two HospltaJlad While patrolman Ralph Huffman and Robert "Whlte struggled with the fi're ~t; another patrol craft beaded 1oward the boat in trouble. But ljlefOre rescUer.s got near, the dJstres.sed venel got its engine 1tarted and sped off into the S\bet. . Mesa Vehicles Changing Over to Propane Fuel By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille D1Uy 1'1111 51111 The gasoline shortage is driving Costa ilesa·s fleet of city vehicles to propane. City Manager Fred Sorsabal will seek a'l_!Ppropriatioo of $9,600 tonight for_ihe ~onver3ioii of. JS" 'iiiote trucks, pickups and ulility vehicles to llquid propane gas. The city council ~·ill take action on his request at 6:30 in city council chambers, 77 Fair Drive. Sorsabal said lttis morning that although propane is also a crisis-affected petroleum product, supplies to the city can be guaranteed. Gasoline supplies cannot. County Fair's 1st Day Ceremony To Be Televised Costa Mesa began converting SOOle of its vehicles to the cleaner-bu.ming gas lhree years· ago. Included in the first switch were street sweepers and small trucks. From those experiments With propane Costa Mesa officlali teamed~ that pro- pane was easier on the engines and costs less, according to Sor11abil. · Gasoline costs the city 20 cents per gallon wholesale and propane 16 cents a gallon. Sorsabal said at the present time there are no plans to convert any of the city's sedans to propane although the idea is being studied. The city manager added that it is doubtful police squad cars would be converted since these are pro- cured under lease. · l'l'OlltP .. el INTERES,T ... which to do business. Two Men lnjtired As Car Plunges Off Coast Cliff Graham said the lire on the fire bolt never broke into open flames and was extinguished when the master switch was thrown. The boat limped back to Dana Harbor on emergency po"•er and was brought to Newport Beach for repairs today, Graham said. A pair of Newport Beach men su ffered major injuries early Sunday morning when their car sailed oil a Superior Avenue bluff and tumbled 130 feet down to Pacific Coast Highway. San Clemente's Hospital Chief I ' I ' ,_I \ I Gregory MCCandless, 23, of 43CID W. Assails Critics Balboa Blvd., Ind ileonja Lawler, :q, of By JOHN VALTERZA Of "°' Dtll'I' l"llot tllff 4302 Balboa Blvd., w~. taken ~ neorby-- Ho11 . Memorlal Hospital then lfans-ferred' .. n-.... Coon · M•edl 1 ,..~. The head · of San Clemente General 10 ~•oauge ty . ca vmnc:r. Hospital today lashed out at critics fro,m InvestigatOl'3 said McCandless fell out South Coast Community Hospital v,rho of the car after n shot off the roadway have. asserted that private proprietary and new into the air whlle ..Lawler health facllities are at I•ult in duplicating bounced around inside '·as It careened services along Ute Sout.h coa.st. . d the hill ' Breaking long.standing silence 1n a own . . · . scathing lltter today San Clemente Both victims suffered multiple head General's President Dr. Ralph Graham and fa et cuts, while Lawler sustained a termed .rec.ent comments by South Coast skull fracture and was actually tbou&ht of f 1·c i a l s ' ' I u d i c r o u s," •:jn. to be deod at -Po"mt before being comprehensible" and "the grossest kind """" of-misrepresentation " g~ven mouUHo-mouth resusciatatioo. Dr. Graham and ~her officials of San "They went straight off • • • they're Clemente's private hospital had main· lucky," declared Traffic Ac c l den t tained a policy of·not jousting wi th critics Investigator Gary Lee. from other hospitals .in the past few years. A. ·Grettenherg, But in today's release the hospital ·head said the "time has come to set the record straight." I Can't make it to the Orange County Fair oo Friday! Wei~ sit back and switch on the tube. Opening day ceremonies will be shown on television. Meanwhile, the dollar weakened again . C · • · B · ', in Europe today, despite moves !ale last . rtnse Oater 8 Graham assailed comments by outgo-· ing South Coast Board Chairman Wllll4m Mann1 · who blam~ San Clemente General ~ and lrtis.slon C o m m-u n i t y ilo.'JJ)ilal in Mission Viejo tbe two private 1hospltals in the SOuth County ·ror building A three-hour broadcast by KHJ-TV {Chamel 9) will originate Jive at the fair beginning at 10 a.m. Regis Philbin is the host. The telecast will be aired as one of the daily "Tempo" shows. • Opening day ceremonies will begin wilh an antique car driving through a large paper hat carrying the theme of this year's exposition, "Good Old Da ys '13.'' . Also on tap on opening day are an old "fashioo" parade, demonstratklns of string sculpture and the coronation of the Orange CooQty Fair queen. Speedway motorcycle races in the arena conclude the day's events. One of the more popular opening day attractioos promises to be a show by the Popcorn '!beater J\.larionettes called "The Surprise Package." "The SUrprlse Package'' is a musical set in the •;good old days" of Paris and features a Parisian balloon seller, a v.·ooden-legged pirate and a multi-colored bird with v.·hirling feathers and eyes that glow in the dark. The puppet show v.• i I I be repeated throughout the 10 day run of the fa ir. Fair tickets are $1.75 for adults, 75 cents !or children 6 to 12 years old with I children under 6 free. Senior citizens will be admitted for the reduced price of 75 cents next Monday, Senicr. Citizens Day I at the Fair. I Vt11tk that were suwosed to help the U.S. CUrTency. . The dollar dropped sharPly i n Frankfurt, Zurich and Paris. It inched ahead' in London. Dealers said, however, that trading v.•as slow at the outset. There were no early signs of monetary crisis. Gold, which often moves erratically higher in times of monetary uncertainty, was unchanged 1n London and ZUrich the t\vo biggest markets, in early trading. The mark was revalued upward by 5.5 P!rcent against seven European cur~ rencies last week, and lnterest rates in the· United Slates were raised. Both moves should have helped the dollar to- day. but instead the decline continued. On Wall Street stock market prices re- mained sharply lol\1er and drifting at midsession today amid investor concern over the rising interest rates and tight money. The Dow Jones average or 30 in- dustrials closed down 11.14 poinll a.t ltID.57. On the Ne~· York Stock Exchange, declines led adv~nces by 2 to 1. Wife, Succumbs Aileen Grett~nberg, wife of the man who has spent the last 24 years running the cruise boats out of the Balboa Fun Zone, died Friday. She was 58. Afrs. Grettenberg worked with bet bus. band, Dal, since their marrJage in 1952 organizing harbor tour's aboard the "Showboat" and the "Balboa Queen" and fishing tlips on the small fleet of boats the couple had for rent. "She was real well known in the fishing crowd down here," said her husband. "But mostly she spent all her lime work· ing here. with me. She never really had time for much else." Grettenberg opened his tour boat con- cessioo in 1948. f.frs. Grettenberg. who lived with her husband at 1810 Kings -;-Road, is also survived by two· Children from a previous marriage. Andrea Hiser and Don Cristin, both of C.osta Mesa. ~rvices will take place at 10:30 a.m. at \Vestcliff Chapel Mortuary in Coota Mesa. ' without regard to an earlier South C:O.Sl master plan and thereby creating. an overbedding problem in the area. Dr. Graham said thatJt was clear that an earller South Coast master plan show· ing satellite facilities had Jost the con· fidence of residents ln the s8n Clemente area. He said the early South cOast plan pro- posed the South Laguna hospital as a hub in a health-care network and that that nucleus was "poorly located" because of traffic congestion and inaccessibility from freeways. A recent appeal by South Coast of- 'ficlals for the dellcensing of hospital beds at the two area private hospitals ap- parently motivated today's charges. Blaming the private hospitals directly for "needless duplication," the spokesmen for South Coast recently ap. pealed to the Orange County Health Planning council for the delicensing. # Such a drastic measure. said South Coast Administrator Bernard Carr. would eliminate scri.ous overbe<.lding along the South Coast. • DAILY PILOT Mesa Woman, Valley Pair goudoUae cooking. . . ~ ...... -. • ' • • • ' ·• T"-,Of'.,,._ (~ti DAILY PILOT, ... lfh """ldl i. ~"'W the N...,,.,.,-u, It llUClllWIW ~'t' IM Ori~ CHff Jlualw.IM c.ni,..~y. hN- ,.lt ldlliafo'I ••• ....i1s,,.,., M-ty ttirwtll ftr~y, tow CMl1 ,....,.., H-1 l<htll, Hvoilt!loleol hl<llt,..,,,11111 v1111,, Lt0V'l9 SffCll, 1rv1nt1•Ma11Wd! -$!If\. CltlMl\!t/ l•ll J1,1e11 C..plltrt llO A l tf'lllt r-010.,.1 •111111 .. ~ ...... ,_.,. • .., ~nct1y1, l'M lWIMl.-1 M!~lilf 1119111 11 11 >» Wnf l tl' llfNI, C.0.lt Mesi, t1Mfor"'-· •Htt. J11Wrt N .. W•-4 l"t~ ...... I Ind ~IW.tr J1.1i 11. c~1.,. \l')CI l"r.w.nt ... ~ti Mtfllttfr 1"1t111 K ..... 11 .... Tlt11t111 A. M111phl111 • AUllllll"' ldllw L P•••r Krl•t Htwoorf letcl CllY l:llllllff ---JlJJ .., .... ,.rt a.111 .... ,,, 1111111 Allth.1 P.O. low lt7S, 9266J ...... __ '"'' M-1 D w..t 11'1' llr"' llolU'lt tftt111 m ....... , A~ "'""'"""" l..Clll 171171 lll(tl levln9!11 t.M """""i.: JIU llf«1l't •1 C."""' A6tll Tll.,k1111 1714) M1-4Jl1 -C._... M••I In I '4Z.U71 C.,.,..ltflt, lnJ. Drt'llt Co111 l"..-1 ........ ~ ... ,..... ••'-· lflvtlf•~ H IMl' .. I llW!fff w <Ml"fffll-11 !Mftt11 _, .. '"" • ..... •lllllYI ...... ~ ..... 1111 .. 1111 ., ,..,., .. , ......, • &.....i Ci.et ............ ti C•1 Mtlt, '''"""''-· ...... ,,.,. w cMrlfr ..... -'fll'll --II U.lf "'*"""' llllllflt? allllllflllM .... """"'"'· .. I • . . . • Win Harbor Hawaii Trip Agnes D. f.1atthlas of 1750 \Vh\tticir Ave .. Costa J\.lesa. Lhis morning won the NcWport Jl:irbor Chamber of C.Om- merce·s free !Mp to Hawaii, awarded as part of the Chamber's Hawali Jt'CCk pr(). motion in Newport Beft'Ch. It wasn't easy but so did' Ra y anl1 Sharon Coburn, 16825 Bridgeport Ave., Fountain Valley . The Coburn! not only had lo bent the odds of close to 30.000 to one but they also h11d to do a l!Ule tugging at a reluc· tan! Chamber Ind airline company. Mrs. Cobum's ticket was drawn SUn- day .n.i ~ h Lal the loau cllmnl!lg the week-long promotion. Btit the Chamber and Western Airlines, which CCMpOnsored the event, balked at giving her the prize this morning because 11he ts an employe of a pttrtictpating businesll In to""TI. r.trs. Coburn. 30., \s a bookkkeeper at Avco Flntnclat Services in Nev.-port Ccnt~r. "When ~·e found ool that she worked for Avco, we had to award the t.lckets to the .second nAtM we had drawn," Chambtr Manager Jack Barnett said earlier today. The ttCOad name was that of Mra. Matth111. .. r ' But ~lrs. Coburn didn't tate kindly to her sudden fortune and misfortune. "'\'e had been at the party last night but had to 'teave before the drawing,·• ~frs. Coburn erplaincd. "'Someone from Western Aitlinrui called my husband this morning and asked for me. l wasn't there and they then asked v.·here l "·orkcd and they said they would get in touch with me . "I had a friend who stayed later at the party," ~trs. Coburn said. "so l called her this momlng and she said, 'do you live In Fountain _y_aue~:' . ''She told me lhat I \\ad' v.'()11 the trip. So I started calling the Oiamber," Mn . Coburn s.ild. "They told me t was ineligible but everyone else around the of[ice had filled out the tickets 11nd it d1dn'l say anywticre that emplo)'ts wtre Ineligible. "So when I cnlled nnd made a big stink lhey said they would l(ive me the prize back..'.' sht 5aid. "Al first they told me 'tough luck' •· ~trs. Coburn said, "but alter J told them I would get a lawyer and go to the newspapers they called bock and laid they Would go ahead ond give mt the trtp too. _,, l ' self-cleaninq gas rcmge J s399sa 'l.----·--•••• l=Ugh ... hut proceu clean1 everything •. Juat MYlfe-:.... dlat., lock the oven dOOf. All that's-left of - the melllest 1pHlover1 Is a nne whlle Uh that . wlpee away. Cleans broiler 1patt6J1, too. BecaUM the radiant broiler 11 In the oven. · At handy wal1t-l1ve1. "' contl- cleanlng gas range -i_-r--- t1iil/Ju71Jis76MJvl_, Specially coated porcelain own liners. COmblne vclth oven heat to work Wh•1"11ver you cook. SPltt•rs fade away Qfadually during baking .... and roattlng. Oven tende not to become really dirty becaute It II continually being cleaned. 90 DAY CASH With Approvod Crodlt • . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa 548·7788 - <..-' . I i • • ·. Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks . as Shoi-tage ·Drives Mesa to Use of Propane: . .. ,, ' lly JIUDl NIEDZIELSKI ·CH:~ n.llr.PU,ot S_lllt 111be gaaoline shortage is driving Costa Mesa's ~t of city vehicles to propane. , City Manager Eted Sorsabal will seek ' 1 arr appfopriation 'ot $9,600 tonigbHor the oOnvenion oC 19 more trucks, piciups lilld utility .v.hicle1no liquid propane gas. • '!be city council Will tate actlon .on ·,bis request at'6:30 ·in city ®Uncil"cbambers, 77'FalJ' Dilve. --• I .Sorsa~I said · thuP morning .)hat I . I although propane is also a crisis-affected petroleum product,.. supplies to the city can tie guaranteed: Gasoline supplies cannot .. Cotta Mesa began converting S(llle of its vehicles to the cleaner-bum.ing .,s:u three years ago. Included in the ftrst switch Were street sweepefs and smau · tructs. ', ' Fi:om those experiments with propane Costa Mesa officials lea.med that pro- pane was easier on the engines and costs less, according to Sorsabal. .G~Une oosta the city 20 cel)ts per gallon wholesale and propane 16 cents a gallon. · ' Sorsabal said at the present time there are no plans to ccnver( any of the city's sedans to propane although the idea is being studied. The city manager added. that It 11· doubtfUJ. police squad cars wbuld be converted since these are pro- cured under lease. Another volatile subject on lonight's council agenda is· a theater license re- quest by Steve _ Waterbur)' for Papa Joe's, the 1784 Newport Boulevard nudie club. · Waterbury js seeking the permit to avoid prosecution under a. new Costa Mesa Ordinance which prohibits n'ude waiters and entertainment. T b e ordinance exempts theaters. One week ago membenJ Of the city counc il_ unanimously denied a ·similar theater application for the Fire House, 8% Loan Leve l . . . Costa 1'fesa's other nudie club. · Both places remain open and nude while Assistant City Altom'¥ Robe'i-t Humphreys and Fire Fouse lawyer Ber- rien 1'foore battle in Superior Court over the. legality of the theat,er denial. Afore is pleading for acourf order man- dating the issuing of a theater license. He' believes he can obtain the order because the · city'-s ordinance· is "dev9id o! any standatds defining what a theater is." A decision in favor of the city would mean the resumption ()f police arrests f"r any violations under the anti·nudity statute. The arrests \\'ere ordered suspended by Superior Court injunction until the. case is heard. The city manager predicted .that roun- C'ilmen Yo'ould nol rule on the Papa Joe's <theater , liceMC tonight. The busines.• license request is exj)ected lo be referred to city officials for an inveStigatk>n in the areas of parking, fire, building saJety and policing. Major Banks , Raise Rate ' I · -Summer Girl BIQnde and tan Cfndy De )1ott of NeWPort Beach, reflects on the joy!! Of being 17 and of being on the beach durin-g this summer of '73 along the Ofan.ge Coast. Defense ·c~aims ~laying iOf Officer 'Justified' By T0!\1 BARLEY Of tti. 0.llJ Piiot Steff An Orange County Superior Court jury was told today that the killing last Sept. 20 of Buena Park detective Darrel ''Bud" Cate was "entifely justified" and will be JlfOVed so in what is expected to be the three-week murder trial of Herman Lee Clouston. ·Defense. attomey George Shibata told the panel as Clouston's trial opened In , .. J'udge Everett Dickey's courtroom that 11 hfs client shot Cate, 43, "without malice ,, and premeditation and without intent to J klll" in an encounter at an Anaheim .. 1 borne. .. · ·"It. was jllstilied in the circumstanc- tl," ~bata said in his opening state-ment. "And we Will be using the testimor(y · of the pl'osealtion's o.wn J witnesses to prove our point." Deputy District Attorney Robert Chat· terton had earlier told the jury that he Will be-putting!about 20 witnesses-On -the stand to offer "irre£utable evidence" that Clouston, 38, deliberately' fired a series or policeman shortly after \Vilso'n and two men Wtlrking on the roof heard a volley of shots coming £rom the kitchen area or tbe house. The prosecutor sa id a reconstruction of the crime scene indicates that Cate was shot in the hallway by Clouston and again shot in the back as he tried to run fro1n the home via the rear door. Wilson wiJI be the first prosecution vl'it· ness in a trial made possible \\'bet\, the jury ruled that Clouston was sa ne and able to face charges of first degree murder. Clousl<ln was booked on those charges after a five-day manhunt that ended when he was flushed from his hiding place in a garbage can behind a Torrance tavern. Chatterton said bis witnesses \Viii in· elude neighbor L.anny Armstrong who allegedly was kidnaped at gunpoint by Clouston and forced to drive the defen- dant Tu the -Bell Gardens area~ shortl y after the slaying of cate. NEW YORK (AP) -Numerous major banks, acting on the heels or Federal Reserve Board steps aimed at-cooling · monetary expansion, raised prime lend~ ing rates today from 7~~ to eight percent. The~moves, W'hlch followed the lead ·or . Philadelphia's Gerard National B~. marked the eighth general IA percent in- crease this year in the minimum interest fee charged by banks on loans to large corporate Customers. Some financial analysts predicted that Nixon Plans. To Comment ' On Watergate ' I ' '-The Westemil' Wtiite House said this altemoon llilll -..t N-"lill speak oUt atiiiut the Watergate affair as tooq, a& the Senate Watergate committee oon- clude1 the cu,rrent phase of the in· . vestigation. . The phase is expected to end sometime in August. Exactly how Nixon intends to comment still has not been decided. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said at San Clemente..'. The presidential spokesman said he could not _9e specific as'to ho\v soori after the \Vatef}::ate phase of the hearings ends that NixOn would speak ·out Ziegler ruled out any press conference until that time and continued to decline comment on the testimony of former \Vhite House counsel John W. Dean III or any, other witness. \Vhen asked if special presidential counsel J. Fred Buzhardt was represent- ing the White House position when in a recent int.erview he described Dean as "a confessed felon," Ziegler said that he was speaking "as counsel for the \Vhite House." Ziegler said that Nixon was not aware of the statement by Buzhardt before it was made. It also ~as announced at San Qemente that Huang Chen, China's top envoy in \Vashington, will fly to San Clemente tor talks Friday with .President Nixon amid speculation that Henry A. Kissinge.r soon will fly again to Peking. In announcing Chen's planned visit , Ziegler said today, "This should not sug· gest there's a matter of urgency tG discuss" He d'escribed the sessi"n aS part or "ongoing contacts" between Chen and Kissinger, Nixon's foreign policy adviser. Some sperulatlon about an early Kiss- inger return to Peking has noted it could colnclde closely \vith a return to the Chinese capital from Europe by Cam- bodia's exiled Prince Sihanouk: -shots that SttuCk Cate in the head , chest 8nd back' as fhe o£ficer tried to arrest the ···• defendant. Claatttbe r P1•i%e Debated the record prime 0£. 81h: percent set dur· ing the 1969-70 credit crunch soon may be eclipsed. Ainong .the dozen or more J>anks pc>sting increases this rooming were Chase ltfanhattan, the country's third · JargeSt, ahd two New York ·banks, Cheinical ·and Franklin National, as well as such large Chicago banks as First Na· tional Bank, Northern Trust Co. and the Harris Bank. The Bank of California , \Veil s Fargo Bank. Se<urity Pacmc Bank, and Crock· er Bank also raised their prime Jebding rates from 7% percent to 8 percent today. • . Bank of America announced this after· noon that it aJ90 will· inO'eue the rate. Bankers said the moves would not af- fect rates on loans to smaller businesses or on consumer borrowings, including mGrtgages: Glrard's announcement of an increase in its prime came Friday night, shortly · Gift Pays .011 ! . Cou ntian Wins lrisli Sweepstakes A $3 !\father's Day gift ballooned into a ~129,000 swprise foi" a·La Habra woman this weekend wben an Irish Sweepstakes ticket given' her by her husband rode bOme with the winner. ·Mrs. Martha A. Cannis, 841 Cedarwood St., mother of six, is still stunned today. ··~This is the winning ticket," her hu s- band. Nicholas, 54 , promised her when he -put it in her hand on l\.fother's Day. It voas one or tv.·o tickets Cannis, a 'meat cutter, had bought from a (:Uil<lmer in the supermarket wher.e..he. v•or.ks. "I didn't lhink it \'lould '"'in. I just threw it into a Chinese jar I keep' on my dresser," she said. The Cannis ' arc still uncertain over how they will spend the money. They do not harl;rlc..any lifelong dreams which the payment of 20.000 English poWlds can bring to fulfillment. · "I haven't really absorbed it all yet. Probably when I do, I'll completely fall 41pan," aaid Mrs. cannis, .ai.o 51, Mrs. Cann.ls. is currently recovering from a painful hip ailment and believes that her sedation may have been responsible for "maintaining rpy cool." With tour of, their children A'fown and the other two Jn their teens, the Cannis' say that they "live comfortably." "\\1e've always been able to gel along financia lly and. v.·e don't have any outsta nding bills.'' Mrs. Cannis said. "But this v.itl make it really nice for us." 1'tean\\·hile -until they decide v.·hether they \\"ant to take "\Veaver's Hall 's" win· nings to a 'travel agenc)'. an auto dealer. or just to the bank -!\lrs. Cann1s· says her "nly ambitions are to ';stay in th is house and to putter aroWld in the yard." f entagon Tells I ncrease In Cambodian Bombing \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today the level of U.S. bombing in Cambodia has been intensified in recent days. but denied that t~e move tiolated the spirit of a compromise agreement with Congress tQ halt U.S. military ac- tivity in Indochina by Aui. 15. -A Defense Department spokesman, William Beeche.r, said there had been a more than 30 percenl increa se in 'the number of U.S. tactical air strikes since the middle of last week. He said there had been no cor· ' responding increase in the level or B52 bombing. Before the increase, the daily bombing total included approximately 40 B52 strikes and 150 tactical air strikes. Beecher said since the ste~p. the tac· lical air strike rate has ru n in the low 200s on most days. He refused to say "'hat the highest level had been. Beecher said the reason for the stepped.up activity v.·as a simultaneous clearing of moosoon rains and increase in Communist attempts to sever roadS around Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital. ;c1ouston, also kno"'n 10 the police ubder a number of assumed names, was ,,,.anted in connection "''ilh a sex advance. • reported by a neighbhorJ1ood woman f'hen Cate and· fello\v detective Dale .. ..;, Wilson of the Buena Park Police Depart· -~ drove to the Anaheim home. 'Chatterton said 1 be WU! prOve that . ...-Clouston's. 'wife ran 'from tbe home ~-~ that her husband '!\ad shot a .. Was This -Trip Necessary? Congress and President Nix"n reached a compromise agreement that Nixon signed Sunday to end all Amecican military activity Jn Indochina · -in· eluding the bombing in Cambodia -on Aug. JS. The fyesldent agreed to the com promise in the face of demands from both houses of Congress that the bombing be halted. ;,The Adminis1rali"n is anxious to con· elude a cease-fire in Cambodia," Beecher said. "Between this time and Aug. 15, the Administration still intends to try to use its authority for bombing to conclude a cease-fire which is something the Congress Is as anxious to see as the administration." ; PENNY PINCHERs ' Agnes D. Matthias of 1750 Whittier Avco Financial Services in Newport Ave .. Costa Mesa,, this morning won the Center. .. · Newport Harbor Chamber of Com· "When we found out that she worked mer:ce's free trip to HaWail, awarded as for Avoo, we bad to award. the ticket! to part of the Chamber's Hawaii week pro-the set'Ond name we had , drawn," motion in Newport Beach. Chamber Manager Jack Barnett said live in Fountain Valley;' '1She told me that I had won the lrip. So I started calling the Chamber," Mrs. Coburn said. • President Nixon signed the legislation at San Clemente to halt all U.S. military actiOri in Indochina by Aug. is·. after the Federal R~rve Board raised Its: discount rate from 6'h pereent_to 7 percent and increued reserve re- quirements for member banks. The discount rate. is the interest charg· ed by the Fed on loans to member banks. Recent increases in it. have raised the cost banks must pay in tapping one of their pri mary sourNs of funds with v.·hich to do bustness. ... ff< Intere st Low In New M~sa Law on Signs Costa t.tesa Mayor Jack Hamme« said today he was dis3ppolnted by the low level of interest. among homeowners organizations on the proposed city sign ordlnan~e. Of the eight homeov.'Tlcr groups asked · to pro\'i~t nominations to the ne'v Costa Mesa Sign Study Committee. only lhe College Park Homeowners Association responded, Hanvnett said. "Here the people \\'ere all up in anns saying "'e're only appointing people from · the business community. And when we give them the chance for representation on the committee, they don't seem to \\'ant ii," the mayor charged. Hammett v.·as cfiticized earlier this summer for allo\11ing too . m a n y businessmen on the sign rommii.tee. The committee later v.·as expanded to include as many residents as businessmen. The committee is expected to make recommendations on and revisions to the new Costa J\1esa sign ordinance which ex· lsts in draft form. · If approved by the City Council, it would reduce the amount of signing In all parts of the city by imposing lighlcr standards. It v.·ould also order signs not meeting the ne\\·er standards phased out accord ing to an c.morlizalion schedule. The draft ordinance doCs not include Jimil ations on billboards. Pact to Be Extended PALO ALTO (APJ -Neogotiators have agreed to extend a contract cover· ing 85,000 Californi a Teammrs Union cannery v.·orkers on a day-to-day basis \\'bile talks continue. The dCcision v.·as reached early Sunday following an 18· hour marathon negotiation session and the midnight Saturday expiration or a oontract affecting u·orlccrs at 10 can- neries. Orange Coast -;. .. We a t her Mostly sunny Tuesday followihg lhe usual early morning clouds at coas.tal areas. High.s in the upper 70s at the beaches rising to near 00 inland. Q\·ernight lows ln the 00.. INSIDE TODAY : • ·~-~-Y:OU-$$$$$'~ It wun't easy but so did Ray and earlier today. 1be second name was thal Sharon· Cobum;"ll825.::SJ:l~eP'!'!~Ave:;-ot•MrJ. Matthla . "They told me 1 was ineligibl~ but everyone else around the office bad filled ou e c e an Clfdi\1 say anywb! 1-fe strved l)i>tice ~ay~he-.':!i1Lse:ek ___ SOJtttLA.ua· race dr.lver--Swtdc-1--rf-11 new war.making powers U-~·thlnks they-Savage died tOdny of injurj.es ., · • Dally 'l!!lot Peruiy PindlOr ads can sell "" 1lmoslanythlng. Look how this advertiser tt dj(fit: • . CEDAR shakes No. t grade, 8 bundJts + various pieces of h1mlltr. ~-(Phone No:l -Ever)'thlng was told thanks to a "good C.llid res-" to lhl• ad . Pinch your \innlit with a Pilot Pincher elassUied ad ~ 3 lines, 2 times, $2. Call 642·5&78. • t ' . ' Fountain Valley. But Mrs. ,Cobttm didn't take kindly to The. Cobums not only had to. beat the her sudden fortune and misfortune. odd• or close to _30,000 lo. one bot they ,;We bad been at the parly last night also had to do a little tuggmg at a reluc-bot bad •• 1 bel ... dr I .. tant Chamber and airline company. "' ea~ ore u~ aw ng, ~1rs. Cobum's ticket was drawn Su"" Mrs. Coburn explained • day night at the luau climax.Ing the j'Someone t'rom Western Airlines called \\'t-e.k·long promotion. my ~.sband this mominC_ and asked for But the Chamber and Western Airt'lne;, · me. I waan't there and the)'. then asked which ~sored·U,.,evcnt, balked al wbere l worted lliCl theY &iiaillcy woUld" giving her the prlie this morning because · get lo touch wtth'me.. she ls on cmploye of a participatlng ''I had a frleod lfbo sll)'ft later at the buslnes.' in town. . perty,"' Mn. CollUrzl '..ad, "ao t called Mra. Coburn, 30, is a book.kkee"per at her tht!i mGmtn1 nd tbe said., jdo you ...._ I .,...-. , J 'I .. • " that employes \\'ere ineligible. "So \\'hen I cilled and made a big. stink they said they would give me the prize back," she said. "AL first they told me 'tough luck' " 1'1ts. Coburn said. "but after I lold them l \\"OOld get a lawyer and go to the ~wspapers they· called back and sa1d Ibey '\\'OUld go aheod and give me the trip too. . "They .gaJd that they were legally wiUtln their rlidlll not to i1o tbal but they !See HAWAII, Pl{• II ' are needed to win an Indochina peace. suff«red i11 a flaming smashup d.u.ring tlie /11dia 11apoll! ~OO·mile race Atay 30. Set story 011 Sport-&. Pon• 20. U.S. Eases Stand IV ASll!NCTON CUP!i H E W Secretary Gaspar W. Wclnb<irger Friday ordered a relaxatioo or civil rights requircinenhiflo inibfe al leasf Rve big city schOol systems to qua!Uy tor &pedal !ed<ral .Choo! !unds by mld·August. The cities are Baltimore, O\lcago, Detroit, IM Angol<S and Olllaboma Olly. --' L,M, • .,.. ' INflllt U C:••"'11!• s CIMllflM J4.Jt C-'ict It Cr _ _,. It °""' Htlktt t •fltt<ri•• ..... ' ••wt·~· lt-ll "llltllCt , .. ,1 .. ., "" llecft • ""'""'" " Allll leM«• II M•Yln n H•tl-1 Nen • Or111" Ct\llllJ I S""!e Perftl' II '"'" ' ft.JI SlKll; -.rttlt U·ll Tttwt~' It Tlleettn -ti ·---...... 17'11 "et!' ...... ' .. , -.... ' I • • --~--. - =~'--'-·-'..,"..c'c:.":..'c._ __ ...,;:<~--·,---Mond1y, 'J11ty 2, 11JIJ Wi idii f e Preser ve Irvine Company Qui~t • on Plan -.!f < -• County Fair In Mes a Set - ·For Telecast 1----''----'>Y L.-PETER=-K·RlEG---:.:---·\Vc-1J'OOld encourage any and aU of 01 rl'lo oaur PHOf s1a1t the public agencies involved to develop a --<lan't-rnake-It to t~nge-Gount~ F'air on Friday? Well , sit back 11 nrl swilch on the tu be. Opening day ce remonies will be sho\\in on television. • • The announcement Saturday th11t the plan and to take possess ion ot lhe prop- U.S. Department or Interior \vants to in· crt~ pending ;1 v.·orkable method of co1n- clude three semi-submerged islands in ·pensating the L'Om pany.'' he said. Upger Nev.'J)Ort Bay in a PJOposed v:ild· Saturday's announcement had come life preserve today failed ~ draw much from -the office of U.S. Rep. Andrew J. of any *'eaetion from Irvine Company Hinshaw tR-Nev.1>0rt Beach). lllnshaw Preskient William R. r.iason . had said that information on 1he Mllands MaSOh pointed out today that the Ir-had been foN'arded to him by Rogers vine Company had offered ''any and alt C.B. A1orton. U.S.' Secretary of Interior. public ag~ncies possessk>n of any and Hinshaw said Alorton v.•as replying to all of the company holdings in and a letter and indicated that his depart- around the bay last April. men~ would also like to include the sur- "Our April statement still represents nxmding water area Of the Upper Bay our position,'' Mason said. to the mean high tide line in the future Drunk Rap On Senator . Reopened PHOE NIX, Ariz. (AP I -l\ta ricopa .County Atty. Moise Berger said today he ordered a grand jury investigation into the city's handling of .a drunken driving charge against Sen. Paul Fannin (R-AriL ). . Fannin was· arrested last NoVember in - Phoenix and charged "itb driving while intoxk:ated after he submitted to a· bi-eatbal}'W' teSl However, the case was disntissed in ci- -ty court after Fannln's attorney sub- mitted medical reports indicating the ll!Dltor wu '8king a pr'e5Cribed drug at .. the time which would make the test results inacalrate. • Berger said that after reviewing the ' facts, he decided a gr.and 'jury should in- ~ vestigate the case. Berger made his announcement in a thnJe.piragraph report to newsmen on a complaint filed in f.iarch ag·ainst the city attorney 's office, "•'hich ~sked that the charge be dropped. , ., ' The county attorney said that his office examined the facts and interviewed persons familiar with the case. He in<ticated the grand jury Would ; study the cue within two montm. Flllllln bu coaslst ... !y d<nled there was anything wrong With the way the .:. case Was handled_ ,, Berger declined to discuss the kind of charges the gnad jury migbt <OOSider, but added that there was substance to the allegations of the handling of the charges against Fannin. -Asked whether the ln'·estigation would be ~I to his political carter, Berger repUed, "Lel's say that it woo't help it ally." preserve. . The Irvine Company .and representa- tives of Orange County_ and state and federal· agencies have •bttn meeting for :i. yea r in an attempt to detennine bo th the value of the company 's holdings and how much or th em should be acquired by the governments. The machinery has been moving slow- ly, hov.·cvcr. especially at the county level. Ne•,1.'port Beach ~1ayor Donald A. J\·tc- lnnis just la.~t V.'l.'Ck v.·rote Orange County supcn•isors trying to coax them to spet.'d up cffor1s for their appraisal of the property. Man. Falls Into Cave of Bears BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Spuoje .Vilas ned from a woman who was attacking him with a pair of scissors and fell. 50 feet ·into a cage or hungry bears. who mauled him badly the newspaper Vec'ernje Novooti repor/s. It said the 26-yeat-old shop assistant and the woman got into an argument "'hile dining Friday evening at a cliffside restaurant overlooking the zoo in Belgrade-'s Kalemegdan Fortress Park. She pulled out the scissors, he ·jumped over the'restaurant's fence and fell into the darkened bea r cage. Vilas landed on the back of one of lhe animals and they mauled him for 30 minutes before zookeepers pulled him free. ' From Pagel HAWAII •.. s:.iid they felt it would morally be the right thing to do." Barnett this morning called the mixup "one of those thlngs." "She wasn't eligible but since she was not aware o( the rules the airline decided to give her" a trip rather than make her unhappy.'' ·:l .But Berger, also a Republican, said that =-:;he had ~n un.der no pressure to soft· -:I ~I the investigation, except those :f, normaUy accompanying any inquiry into ·,'such a case. · ~ Berger said that the grand i•ry probe· Boat Burns H11rt, B11t Safe D•llY Pilot S .. lf Pllolo As youngster~ watch, ambulance. attendant.s wheel away Terry Strader, 11, of 413 Broadway,-Costa Mesa, after. she was struck by a car Sunday in the 100 block oI E. 19th Street: Poli ce said the girl ap- parently ran into the path of a car driven by· James Dickey, 66, Huntington Beach, who could not avoid her. The girl was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital where she was treated and later released. A. Grettenherg, .. £ruise Boater's Wife, Succumbs Aileen Gretti;!nberg, wife of the man who has spent the last 24 yCars running the cruise boats out of the Balboa Fun Zone, died Friday. She was 58. f.lrs. Grettenberg worked with h.er hus- band, Dal, since their marriage in 1962 organizing harbor tours aboard the "Showboat" a.nd the "Balboa Queen" and fishing bips on the small fleet or boats the couple had for rent. ''She was real well known in the fishing crowd down ·here," said her husband. "But mosUy she spent all her lil}le work- ing here with me. She never reelly had time for much else." Grettenberg opened his tour boat con- cession in 1948. . l\1rs. Grettenberg, who lived with her hu~band at 1810 Kings Road, is also surVived by two children from a previous marriage, Andrea l&er and Don Cristin, both of Costa Mesa. Services will tak~ place at 10:30 a.m. at Westcliff Chapel trlortuary in C'.olta l\1esa. · Firemen Seeking Cause . . . In $500,000 Blaze Firemen today contiiiued efforts . to determine the cause of a half-million!' dollar blaze that gutted a 14-unit office building near Orange County Airport ear- ly Sunday, injuring one man. The fire in the three-story structure at Michigan Ma1i Knocked Around In _Newport Surf A Miclugan man knocked cold while riding an air mattress in the surf Sunday was the onb' major incident in an olheN'ise dreary weekend on the Newport Beach shoreline. 4500 Campus Drive caused an estimated $500,000 damage when it nared up alter • smoldering for a lengthy period . "It burned for a long time before we were called," remarked Newport Beach Fire Department capt. Jim Topping, who declined to spetulate on the cause oC the blaze. "It's under investigation,'' he said. During the baWe to cootrol the flames, Fire Depaitment Capt. John Brannon was overcome by smote . and an am- bulance was called to the acene. He recovered sufflcient]y after ftnt aid treatment, however, and did ~ ~ to be taken to the boopital. • The predawn blue destroyed a number ol busin<ss<s In the building, which .... one a,,_ three atnic:tures located in the o£fice complex. One of the victims, was Liz Reinders, operator of an employment ligency bear- ing her name. • "Our records ... they're all gone," she sobbed after the fire. · ,11 alJo would loot into the conduct of the\ · : ;I: three doctors who signed the certificate , , relating to the possible influence of the ;~. drua "Xyloprine" on the ~tor's blood- .• l aJccib>I content. ._;,_~ The. senator's blood-alcohol report in- Dana Harbor Patrolmen Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said to- d3y Ron Rottshef(er, 2.S, \Vas thrown from his mat on the crest of a four-foot wave at about 4 p.m. and jammed into the sandy bottom at ,a.bout 13th Street Beach. Lockabey said the man washed ashore unconscious: and was pulled in by li feguards who rushed him to Hoag Memorial Hospita l, fearful be had broken his back in the mishap. Forrest Locker Rites Thursday- • : ~ dicated the con tent at .13 percent, three :.-. points over the .10 considered the : ~ preswne level of intoxication for Arizona : : motorists. : . ·:· ;. .; .. '. . • . . . ! TONIGHT COSI'A MESA CITY COUNCIL -R<flular me«ing, City Hall , "30 p.m. TUESDAY, JULY 3 NEWPORT -MESA SCHOOL BOARD -Regular meetin!I, Coota Mesa High Lyceum, 7:30 p.m. ... TM Or..,.. CM" DAIL'I jOILOT, """' ""'ldl 11 ~ llW ............. II PVlllfoMcl _.,. 1119 ~o .... CO.it PuDIW.lng C-'!' . ...._ ttM Mltion1 er.-llUbltfl*I, M-t'I' "'"""" l"rt61y, tot Cotto Mn., """"'I ... ell, Hunll"'"" l•Kllll'-1•11) v.1 ..... : L"O ..... SMCll, l•wl,../t.dllltllKll tllOI S.11 c11,.,..,,,, Sert Juell Ctllltll'-A 11"9!t •tO ..... I lllflt1141 I• -411r!W S.IWU'fl ltl'lll s-.n, T ... PflrtClilWll .... Ith"-Nnt II ot JlO Wtil lfY llrMI, C-lo M-, ~llfor11~, '1'1', Find Home Fires Hot Dana Point Harbor patromen didn't have to look far to find a little emergcn. cy action Sunday artemoon -their nc,vest rescue-fire boat caught fire off Laguna Beach. , Orange Count)i. Harbor Patrol Sgt. Raymond Grahar •. said today !he trouble started when the 27-root patrol boat went Burglar Gains $9,000 in Loot A Co&a l\1esa investment executive lost nearly $9,000 worth of personal belongings to a burglar who cut a patio door v.·indov1• screen to gain ent ry to his home over the weekend. Anthony B. Ccn<:('ni, of 120 Albert Place, told pplice the loss included more thnn a dozen icms of men's and \\·oiUen 's jcv.·elry. 'f'he burgla r also took a .32 caliber auton1atic pistol v.•hich. ,\·as among the $G.975 haul he carried off, investigators said. · '. The largest individually-valued item stolen "'RS a $1.000 man's \\Tistwatc!l, ac· cording to Ccnccni'& police report lo the aid of a smaller craft caught in tlie surfline off Laguna's fllain Beach la te Sunday aftemoo1 .. "For so me unusual reason, !he boat's radar mast snapped off and the wiring shorted out." he said. "All of the in- sulation in the boat smoldered off before the pov.·er could be shut off." While patrolman Ralpl) Hu!fman and Robert White struggJed with the fire boat, another patrol craft headed toward lhe boat in trouble. But before rescuers got near, the distressed vessel got its engine started and sped off into the sunset. Graham said the fire on the fae boat never broke into open Dames and was extinguished when the mas~er switch wu thrown . The boat limped back to Dana Harbor on emergency power and was brought to Newport Beach for repairs today, Graham said. "It's really unu sual and unfortunate \\"hen something like this happens to an ell'.pensive piece of equipment." Graham said. "But some of the gear \1-e use evrry day is the sa me as on pleasure boots used only once in a v.·hile." ' ·, But a Hoag spokesman said today Rottsbeffer was treated and released. Only IS0,000 people braved the hazy skies and cool weather that socked Jn Newport Beach most of the weekend. Lifeguards reported ony 22 i;escues all v.·eekend and none of the treacherous rip- tides that plagued the beach last week, triggering hundreds of rescues. ~Air temperatures never got above 70 degrees botti days and the water hovered around 63. The Orange County Harbor Patrol reported a lot of boat traffic for a cloudy day but otherwise no major incidents. self-cleaning .gas • range ' Funeral services are scheduled Thurs- da y for Costa '-fesa yachtsman and steel sales executive Forrest D. Locker, who died at the age of 63 Sunday. Rites for Alr. Locker will be at 10:30 a.m. in Westcliff Cllapel Mortuary with members of Newport Harbor Elks Lodge officiating. Jntennent will follow at Harbor Rest Memorial Park. A fonner salesman for Bethlehem Steel, Mr. Locker kept a boat in Newport Harbor and had been a member of !he Elks Lodge for mor.e than 30 years. He leaves his wife Virgin ia. of the home at 227 Monte Vista Ave .. Costa Mesa, plus sons Ga ry, James, John and Gleaves, in addition to f o u r grandchildren. A three-hour broadcast by KllJ-TV 1Chamel 9) will originate li ve al the fa ir beginning at 10 11.m . Regis Phllbln Is the host. The telecast will ~ aired as o~ of lhr d<iily "Tempo'" shows. Opening day reremonles v.·111 begin with an antique car driving through a large paper ,hat carrying the theme of this .year's .ezpositioo, "Good Old Days '73." \ Also oo_tap on openlng_day are en <!_Id "fish.ion" pai'ade, demonstrations of stfing sculpture and the coronation or the Orange CountY Fair queen. Speedway 1notorcycle races In the arena conclude the day's events. One of the more popular <>pening da.v attractions promises to be a show by the Popcorn Theater Marionettes called ··The Surprise Package.'' "The Surprise Package" is a musical set in tbe "good old days" of Paris and features· a Parisian balloon seller, ;1 Wooden-legged pirate and a multi-colored bird with whirling feathers and eyes that glow in· the dark. The puppet -w 111 he repeated throughout the 10 day run of the fair. Fair tickets are fl.75 for adults, 75 cents for children e tq 12 years old with cbl!dr"1 UDder 6 free. Senior citizens will be admitted for ~ reduced price of 75 cents nen Monday, Senio: Citii.ens Day aJ the Fair. · Probe Continues Into Shooting At Block Party Ipvestlgation continued · today inlo a Newport Beach block party that -ed into a block brawl Saturday-nlg!it, resulting in the shooting of an Irate homeowner who _came outside armed will> a sbotgun. a.mes Wbtiney, 26, ol 116 37th st .. was !lated in satWactory condition today at li<log Memorial ;Hospital, following surgery for !:tomach wounds. 'He was bit twice In the abdomen by shots from Officer Richard Goodell's revolver when he failed to drop his shotgun as ordered during the late-night confrontation. Whitney was _trying to hel'p disperse the mob, police say. Investigators say the shooting resulted from a wild party whose participants fl ocked outside and tought <>nlers to disperse at the 10 p.m. curfew, with a resulting announcement or unlawful assembly. .. We've been doing it all weekend," said Detective Sgt. Don Picker when ask~ ed if questioning <>f area residents wu cootinuing in an attempt to detennine the cause of the mirii-riot. 56% Gredit Press NEW YORK (AP) -By 56 to t8 per- cent, a majority of Americans believe that if it had not been for the pres.s ex· poses the Watergate scandal would never have been uncovered , the Louis Harris survey reported today. And by 59 to 12 percent, most Americans believe that "in exposing the racts about Watergate, the Washington Post and other newspapers have been an example of a free press at its best," Harris said. continuous. cleaning gas range " • Rol>•rf N. W1od Pr•IMl'll •M Pllllll ..... r J 1c• It: C11rJoy vn ,.,.....,. '"' ~•LIMN9W Tito11111 K11•ll The loot Included a small electronic computer and a .32 caliber auto1nati c pistol. Julie and Tricia Ai·rive on Coast ·-9 Perso1 "s c:ted President Nixon's two daughters, Julie l-_ ::::=:::.;;;,,.fl s299aa ' -.; lk~ ':::!''"'' a. " Eisenhower and Tricia Cox, arrived at ;: Q erf" H. l••• • RrcJior.I '· N•ll La. Casa Pacifica, San Clemente, .....,"" """""1111 ~1..... At Temple -Cafe Saturday ror a vacation and to celebrate c.... ..._ ~ Julie's 25th bir1hdny. • . ..,.._,....Hw_'"::" =A.~;;;-~ Hlgh·heat procOM.<l.--ev"Y!hlng,Juot ... t-tht--,...._ fMUllllll/Alol dlale, lock the oven door. All that's left of ,. JJO W11t l•Y Stroot • 11le two . d~hters ·flew aboard ... --c,.~l-MM:c•rt"1:::.,:-Affi,.,u ·r.o. kc'-','i;11iooo•,0•"n"2"1-l'-~N"'l°',.,-per.;o~.=n"°s ~w"e-r"'"e-c"it'ced7-cfococ-r •b"'loC°'CK=in"g-0moiri7'tary°='a•lfCra!t wil00UT1Jleir Musbands, ~ Offill.. the sidewalk and doing building con-0 1;1\•id Eisenhower and Edward Cox . The :r " • " : I ,.....,.... toM1t1 sm N......,, """""'"' structiorf' after 6 p.m. f'~rlday at Laguna Prtsldent and fltrs . Nixon V.'tre e)CJ>ected &....-s-tlJ m """' "-Bcach·s Love Animals Don'I Eal Them to conllnue !heir sojourn in California un· I ..... """" ._h: .,.,J '"""' ....... ,d _ I illl '""""'" •• Nor1ti '' c.n'llM "'"t eslablishmenl at 782 S. Coast Highway. lil next "'eekend~ 111.,aan r f714J '4Jo4JJI Polict were told that the bu ildin~ Earlier Helen Smith . the first lady's .. 11111 u .... -., HJ 1111 materials slrewn along the sidewalk press secrefary, said that Eisenhov.·er 0 MS ~.. • Id be I h' 'f B l c.rllM. tm. a. .... c.t.1 "'*'.""""' were shared equally b)' all the persons al wou accompany ng 1s wt e. u .......,. ,.. -..... 1n. 111111tt""-· the vegelltMan temple-.care. when the plane landed. he was not ~ _.,... "' """" 114"Mf1" ""'"" So II ff' ~ S boan! - -....., ... ••••e • ..,.._ ,... ... ,... -po cc o tttrt cit'"" all of th~. gt. a . ....._ " _,.,... ....,...,, Norm Babcock said today . Julie, v.·ho has been making a 1tc11;dy =..ca-.::= ""1111 " c.ta MeM, The 1-<>ve Animals Don't Eat Them round of public appearances defending .......,.t_-, IWI .'ri. ':r,. .. :;,..,""'=· people were ordered to llpPear In Laguna. UW! Prtsldent In the Watergate scandal, the musiest 1plltovera Is a fine white uh that Speclally coate;d P«Ciifl~ln oven llnera .. Comblne wipes.away. Cleans broiler spatters, too. Because Y<llh oven heat to wor'k whenever you cook.· the radiant bloller Is In the oven. Spellers fade away gradually during biking and At l'landy walat~l1vel. roasting. Oven lends not lo become really dirty becausa It Is continually being cleaned. 90 DAY CASH With Approved Crtdll '"'""""'! • ••• ·*'·" ,_.....,, Niguel Municipal 6iurt on or hf:f()f'e July came to the pf'e!ideiitial eJlate lo rest, I • 1.----.--------t 20. Mn . Smith said. ,.._ ______ .-.;;.. ____________ ""!" ________ ""!". ~ • ...;-;;..-.-._.,. .. 1815 NEWPORT BLYD.'Downtawn Costa Mesa ' 548-7788 • \ I j '