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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-09 - Orange Coast Piloti I -. • ... .. • .• • Nixons In ~. ' . ---- End Stay Cle1ne:Dte; · Betnrniit.g . Soon? I . MQNDA)' AFTERNOON, ,JULY 9, 1~73 VOL. M. NO. Ht, 1 S•CT.aNS, U ,AGU, · '-""Foitd--Farewell Newport. Zoning re es Newport~s Asks Coast • s , Mayor Panel To Off~ City . .,: . I Tricia Cox No Struggle • Panel . Requested To Have Baby WASHINGTON (..\PJ --Tricia \fixon Cox, the older dau ghter of President and 1\lrs. NiXon, is preg· nant, according to the Evening Star-Ne\1ls. Detected To Lay Off City . , . . PRESIDENT N~XON, PAT LEAVE EL TORO FOR KANSAS CITY ..• San Clarninte Sojourn Moy B• Fol~wed liy Repeat In ·A1111u•t • . • ! By CANDACE PEARSON Of ""° o.!ly Piiot Slaff Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis today asked the South Coast Regional Zone ConservaUon Commission to leave redevelopment in West Newport alone. The mayor appeared before the com· mission created by Proposition 20 at iLS meeting in Long Beach. Nixon Ends County Visit; Uganda Dictator Frees 111 Yanks; Not Really Spies ' NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -The 11 l American Peace Corps •. volunteers ·de- tained since Saturday by Uganda Presi·. dent JdJ, Amin left Kampala today aboard a charter fliiht after Amin received assurances from Zaire President Mobutu Sese &!kb that they were really Peace Corps workers and not U.S. mercenary ' I , •' " :• ._ ' ' Might Returit :m August- • lay-JOHN "VATERZA-.~ took the-pie to the Spirit ol '71 walting troopo. 1 . Of ,... .Dlllt¥ ''"' '"" at the El Toro Mc.AS, They left aboard an East African ~dent Nlxon 1ef( casa Pacilica, to-The President waved several times to Airways VCIO at 7 p.m. (9 a.m. PDT)· to daY.( iJ'.l"brisk fashion ·after spending more the two-dozen onlookers assembled at the c«itinue the filght to Kinshasa,· capital' thaD1 two weeks along the South orange edge ot ,the helicopter ~~said-of the former Belgian Congolhli:tC !18flg-Cot8t. ~ • -nothing ·as he left f-;>r the fligh! to the oa-¢ its name to Zaire. Their departure The commission has denied or delayed action on a number or proposed duplexes in Newport Beach, citing concerns of in- adequate parking and increased densi· ties. The city of Newport Beach requires one parking space per dwelling unit. The commission -whiCh has permit juris· diction 1,000 yards inland or mean high tide lines -has favored 2 to 1 parking. "It is not my intent to appear here to- day in an adversary condition ," J\1clnnis told the commission. Contrary to what ·the commission h's been told, he said, "down zoning R·2 (multi-family) to something less in the West Newport Beach area was never ad· vocated, supported or proposed." "One of your commissioners," J\tclnn is ,said, referring to ·the absent Judy Ros- ener, "rea?ntly called the city ridiculous and asinine. If the city asinine it must follow that the public bearing proc· ess is asinine." eommissioner Rosener, a Newport Beach resident, is vacationing in Spain. In addition to clairding a number of public hearings b;ive already· studied the West Newport area, Mcinnis said it js 75 percent developed in multi-family · units and added the duplexes actually_creat.e Jess density not more. J\Irs. Cox. 27, was married lo Edward Finch Cox, a young lawyer, in 1971. The child would be the first l--gr"-'an"'dC!lifd roi: the President and his \vife. The newspaper attributed its report to "an authoritative source." The Nixons have one other ch ild. Julie, wt}o married Da vi d Eisenhower in 1968. Gas Rationing Ruled Out by Administration \VASHINGTON !UPI) -0 e put y Treasu~-Secretary \Villiam . E. Simon said eTphatically today t h e ad· ministra.~on has ruled out any possibi lity of gasolU,e rationing to meet the current shortage. · Simon's statement, his strongest on the subject, came amid reports that Presi· dent Nixon's Phase IV economic action. may include a rollback _in prices for gasoline and other petroleum products. Asked about persistel'lt.rumors that the. administration Is considering a program ~of gasoline rationing, Simon .said "absolutely noi." · By Officials By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of lht 0.11'1 P'llel 11111 The sad search for Linda Anne O'Keefe ended \vilh the discovery of the strangled girl 's body by a lonely roadside along Up- per Newport Bay Saturday but the man- hunt fof her killer continues today. One theory is that the II-year-old vic- tim -lacking a ride home from summer school -may have _ tried hitcbhiklng. She \\'as not sexually molested, however. and investigators said today there were 'no specific indications that she !ought her killer. This fact lilrrally leaves police with net motive as \vcll as no suspect. "\\'e're \\'orking hard al it." Newport Be<ich Police Detective Sgt. Don Picker said of the hunt for the slayer. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today that no specific cause of death has been determined, aJthough it was ap- parent the Lincoln Intermediate School pupil had been strangled . }ler mother -nearly hysterical during the 14-hour sea rch for Linda Anne -is now stoic considering tbe circumstances. "She was calm and compooed when I last talked to her," said Sgt. Picker. ' No r u n e r a I arrangements had been made this morning for the young victim, \\'hose parents are members of the Com- (See !\tURDER, Page %) ' Orange· Cout · • ~ ·AM ah:'eady 1bere are reports the lion's capitp.l. -. • was delayed several hours when the veto t""=".Piiftl'ii~den!r'it e'i!ilaiins~a;;no'lith!je;:r~ieli;.;on;lgii;th;ly111•r.!'j;Y.ioj"lio.""i~Aij. ifi. EIS:ftTifo~ro~lbiie~.s did ~ Jeave Entebbc on schedule. mont~. • ptepped down from the chopper waved the detainees. They were C h e r y I . NJ1~. accompanied by bis ~if;1 Pa'.J, iaild then boarded ~ Presideatiai jet. Aodel'8el1 'and Beverly J. Hart both of sll:#e, through_ the .1a~es. _le1td1ng . to his_ i ..l'bere wilt.be' one.Jtqp..aJooa_the way _ . ~llef!on. Ther~ wer~ nine ~tber Calif_9r· He claime4-0!atll'ie older S ingle-famil y residencCs attracl-large -numbers of young adults livin(lil groups. They own lots of cars he said, in contrast to ''the . tra amilies.'' "I absolutely do not consider ration,1ng even possible," he said. "\Ve have a . voluntary allocation sy\!em in place now that I believe is doin tJ\e 'ob." • • 3'C' . ' .. 16 .~t aboiit 8:15 ~.pt aifd wal~ 'Kinsai CU.y: Mo _where Nixon w'U at--mans on •tbe· plane). . brl~j-IO' his waltinc ~lleoi'ler w!lich ·teOd · lbf . :;....;;.,.in. cemaoal.; for . _ Uganda Radio today broadcut a ; •, · Clarence M. 'KeBey • u.; delo"chl-' of the speec:b by Amin thanking Geoerpl · · FBI · · ' · "'t Mobutu "for· bis menage which cleared F. · ' B · · · · up the 111ua11on .. ,reeze.r 8 are NiiOA•pianned to .-Jt briefly at the Amin, a111!11d). embroiled In several • , . . anm-~ ~t the Federal.Of· eerio,. dlplomatic disputes with the ' J t S . Cle . . llct Bulldlnt In Kelley• bomelqwn., • United States, ll!bed the Americans n an mente It .... the -·· lint public ap-Satuiday alter their Brililh charter rugbt -. --pearance -Jtme li, when be went to landed In Uganda to refuel. They had ' • '!'ooh bikes and surlboanll· have been ~llln. rn.. for . the cledlcatloo of • .laken .oil. to cooUnue the Oight lo Zai«. the 11.n&.rd loot r0< p,.... thieves In memorial c<qreltooal ~ ~ler tit< former Belgian \:Oflgo, but he re-yean, but.the hJgh price of food h<norillfl Iba late Seo. Everett M. orilered it to return and threatened .to 11111 be cllanllnl aD .that · Oirtaen. lend up his tiny air force il the plane did t! lit San Clemente Sunday the garage A public tlll'llOllt wu expected for the not land again. . . . ~•per was more like (l'and thelt-grocery. occasion, with Mlllottri Gov. ChrlllOllber The broodcast of Amin'• apee<h said Mn. Erma Smith of 1111 W. Marlp>sa S. -cm hand and Chief Judge WUU.m thal "In the.lutttre, East African Airwl!)'S went 10 Ote r-Sunday to discoVer It H. Beck.. of U.S. Dlllriel Cot!rt ·In attlboriU.. lbottld make 1111re Olghtl ouch was bare. Kansas City administering the eath. . u Sattriay'a are cleared." Someone had cleaned Ott! $8l)O worth or Kelley, II, Is a lO-year veteran of the The Kampala radio broadcast said meat and tool< along '• store or cmmed FBI. He Ital been Kaan City police chief ~t Julius Kambarage Nyerere· of ~ nearby u well. since lMl. Tanzania would conduct an investigation The gar• was unlocked o""111ght, Two aclln1 dlrteton hove been In !he Into the matler which was only cleared •be' told police. . . (Seo SOJURN, Pare I) ISU: UGANDA, Pap I) 1 '}( I The C(lmmission has suggested tandem parking as a solution but lifclnnis ar· (i« MAVOR,.Pqe %). CLASSIFIED ADS MAK}('EM V AIVISH Daily Pilot clwlfied ~ds can sell just about anything. This adverttser·certainly ha~ no problems : 1· ROUND oak ~hie w/sidc- brd, 4 Dnwer dres:sr, round kit. tabi<l anliq. chair, solid teak tab es. 10xJ4 braided rug. All items in xln'l cond. (Address;, (Phooe No.) The advertiseP sold all the · items he listed through this ad1-~fake a sale with your mlKcllaneous items. The direct Une -64Z.567l Congress must take a "very hard look" at the possibili1y of breaking up functions or big oil companies. JaOkson made ihe-stat'emCrlt ar·a ne\\'S . conference following di sclosure of a government report suggesting that tbe struffure of the industry had a major role in creating the gasoline shortage. Jackson said a two-year study by the st.arf of the Federal Trade COmmissioo (FTC) "indicates clearly that vertical in· tegraJion, concentration and market con· trol had an Im portant role ·tn creating the shortage." · Asked if he bt!llcvcd the industry wa s responsible for · thC g'llsoline shortage, Jackson said: . , •fJ believe there "''as a derinile effort on the part of the industry a yoar1 ago to create such a light si tuation In 1he marketplace !1J1d ~Y limiting Imports th at it resulted In t~c primary, Immediate shortage we have today." "The report C9ncludes," Jackson said. "that it ls essential that the nation must d~velop ·a program to insure fair com· (Ste GASOLINE, Page %> Weather Th e sun will break through those low clouds Tuesday -weakly. Slightly warmer temperatures, with 72 degree readings expected along the Orange Coast rising to 83 in- land. Overnight lows In the 60s. INSIDE TODAY An expe-rt Oil world food pro- d uc tion snys Anterica-11s ma11 soon have to ratiort food in or· dt!r to maintain. exports atid the vntue of the dollar abroad. Sec- story. Page 4. l e•llM L.M. lfl"d (ll!M"'ll Cli1lllletl (Ol'llitl Cr1111-.nl Otllll H1llttl IElitl•ll l 1"•11 11\ltrtlillnltfll Fl .... 11c• tlO•OM:OH } " • • .. H " " • • ··1· It• 1 " .&1111 Lal!Cert •t MIWlt1 11·14 Hlllofl•I Nf'llfl 4 Or•llff CllJf!lt I Srhli l"trler ti S-'• 1'-17 Tt ..... lt*t 11 Tllffltn 1•1t w"""' • WOl'll ... 'I Ntwl 1).14 Wwld H... 4 ' • ~ IJ"4.IL1 PJLUI -· • s Suit Says Oil Firms 'Conspiring' TALLAHASSEE, Fla. /AP) -The State of f·'Jorida filed .suit today In federal court against 15 miajor U.S. oil C.'Oln· panics, chargtng them with conspiring to contrive the current fuel shonuge. The 68-page suit calls for the com- panies to rid themselves of all crude oil exploration and development capabilities II they slay in the retail gas business, Florida Ally. Gen. Robert Shevin S3ld. The suit is one of the tiiggest trust- bustlng attempts against oil companies since the Standard Oil Co. was broken up in the early 1900s, assistant Atty. Gen. Dan Dearing said. "To this date we 've found everybody talking about the crisis but nobody doing anything about it ," said Shevin. 0 We fe1t lt was time to do somethfng." The suit alleges !he oil companies have ~ngaged in an illegal monopaly and WU'eAsonable restraint or interstate trade and commerce. Shevin charged that major oil com· panies should not be able to control crude oil from the time it comes out o( the ground until it is pumped at a gas sta· tion. '"nle gasoline wars are supported by profits made at the crude oU level," said Dearing. "lf we remove that section we cnn make the marketing truly com- petitive." The suit ls a class aclion on behalf of all cOu:nties, cities and school boards in the state, Shevin said. • • • Shower Tinie in Space It's 'Saturday nig ht' for Pete Conrad aboard Amer· ica's Skylab space station. The commander .is pie· tured during the recent space mission washcloth floating in mid-air (right). with his Beach Public Works Chief From Page l MAYOR ... Named u defendant' ~·ef1! Exxon Corp. ol New Jeesey, Texaco Inc. of Takes Joh 'In Paradise' gued against it. He said parking cars ])e. Delawtre, Gul f OU · C o t P • of hind each other co uld ht dangerous. Penrwylvania, Mobil Oil Corp. of "In our old part of town,''.Mclnni s coo· Delaware, Standard Oil Co. of California, Standard Oil Co. of Indian~. Shell Oil Co. Hnued, "if two parking spaces per _unit 'of Delaware, AtlantbRichfield.. Co. of At the-age of s-1, Huntingtoo ..Peach "lt v.-iJJ be. int.trestini" to help an becomes the standard below grade park· -. < I ()omputer Services Crucial County Board Vote Seeri -• By JACK BROBACK 01 11111 D•llw ~llol 11•11 A showdown vote by the Orange Coun-, IY Board of Supervisors is expected Tuesday on Who will handle the county's computer services. A county report released over the weekend recommends that an El Segun- do firm be given a contract to operate the computer facilities. The report by COWlty Administrative Of(iccr Robe rt 'lboma! recommends that the contract go· to the Oxnputer Science Corpontion. ,ln February, Thomas, citing a six- month study by a committee of county . department heads assisted by a con· sultant, reeommCnded th e upgrading of · the county's Di ta ScrvJces ~partment through the purchase or new Univac equipment. The 174 employes of Data S er v I c e a 11·ould be given the option or 1ransferlnc 10 the outside fi rm or resigning. The contract \\'Ould be effective on Aug. J. t Thomas said the bids from both t~ outside firms were an alyzt'd by a county team made up of his staff, the county counsel's office. the nuditor -controller'i staff and an outside firm. Proprietary Con1puter Syslems. Diedrich indicated three weeks ap that EDS ol Dallas bad lhe inside track.. The firm is owned by 11. Ross Perot. Diedrich had made a trip to Tena to inspect the firm's equipment ahd cap.a· bililies. . J From P-.e l UGANDA ... This recommendation was sidetracked when Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton suggested !he hiring of an outside firm to manage the computer up when Mobutu intervened on behalf oi work. the Americans. , . Three weeks ago, Thomas reversed Amin's action in the Uganda capital OJ himself and recommended~ an outside Kampala was announced here by U.S,. contractor. His decision was disputed by embassy spokesman Ga ry Morley. U.S. Supervisor David Baker who sat on a diplomats and the State Department ~ special committee that had studied the interceded in their behalf since ~ problem at the request of the board of mercurial Amin forced them to land in Supervisors. Thomas said the so-called blue ribbon Kampala on Sunday. committee had reeonunended an outside "They do have cle;i_r_~~ !:_o leave," firm, but Baker and others who served Morley said. "lt came through ·arourx1 3 on the commlttee disagreed. p.m. {8 a.m. EDT). They are now 1ootln1 By a 3-2 vote oC the board, Diedrich for transport. They don't know ~ and Supervisors Robert_Battin and Ralph they're going and won't know until tbe Clark instructed Thomas to confer with transport is confinned." two outside mnputer finns seeking a Morley said the Americans probably contract. 'Jbe in-house Data Services w:ould go either to Nairobi, where hotel Department was shunted• aside despite rooms have been boOked for them. or to ob}.e<i_l ions by Baker and Supervisor t_heir original plan~ transfer .point in Ronald Caspers. -· Buriindi~ They have been staymg in a Baker and Casperuald...tod.a,)t_lha~Ul~-~K~a~m~pratia[;ifH~ol;"el.,_,_ccom""!!!!forta~"b"'leubu,,,__,un""de"---11 would ask for a delay Tuesday for arm guar · Pennsylvania. PhililPs Petroleum Co. of Public Works Director Jim Wheeler emerging nation get prepared for self-Ing is the inevitable result. This in· turn · ._ __ _llle~l~aw~a~re~, _JCoo~t~lnen~t~a~I ~O~ILI -J~~!-~~::;-~wid·lse.i!' Lilf"11:.BtLhbJaunlddJ!He.e.hh1'asL....cnc.1~1e:;•"-• -:=_:_:~::_~~_:_::~~_:_::::--wiH-aHow-monrltvlng space and more aware, n · of Delaware, a new job. \Vheeler says the public works i'ob w1'll I d ·1 th th. g ar II Un~ Oil Co. of California. Cities Service It's another public \VOrks d'1rectorsh'ip peop e ensi Y-e very in we c a ""' be similar to the work he does in Hun-t · t t " Co. or Delaware, Standard Oll Co. oC Ohio but he won'{ be confined to a city with rying 0 preven · tington Beach, though problems will be Th M I I d h 1· ------and-Marathon Oil Co. of Delaware. narrow boundaries and miles and miles · c ayor a soc aimc t at pub 1c ac-compounded by the great distances and .t'...-P .. el GASOLINE ..• petition; Ind implies that this pr<>gr,am m11 r<qWtt di-ture ol major oil .J...Ji-...... -6: • .. aAill*IY ,,.....,..._ .iN mmenes. "'lbe report alto says that the major oil companies are indeed using the short.ale to eliminate competition and to increase their relalive shares in all three sec1on ol the industry -productioo, refllllll( ud _,.'1<•ting." • 1be FTC d.etlvered the report to Jacbon Jate last week al his request. 1be FTC did not. however, prGvide him With a Jegal 'Seellon of the report which reportedly recommends antl·trust acti<in be taken by lhc FTC against the eight biggest oil companies. Jackson said he ~·as launchJng his own inveltlfat~ into the situation. Onofre Patrol Nabs 190 Aliens Border patrolmen at the San Onofre checkpoint, operatin1 a 24-hour im- migration check, arrested nearly 190 il· legal aliens over the weekend. Patrolmen caught 87 aliens on Satur- day and another 100 on Sunday. In ad· ditlon, 135 immigrants were arres ted Fri· day . No drug traffic was reported. The increase In arrests ls attributed to the cont.inuou~ operation of the check· point. a patrolman said . NATO Aid Urged of asphalt streets. the lack of skilled workers. cess to the ocean in Newport Beach Starting Sept. 1, Wheeler will be public "Part of my job will be to train "surpasses that provided b yany other l'i'orks director for the U.S. Trust Ter-k I'll •·• ha he . city of its size." He said eight million ritory of the Pacific Islands _ wor ers, ao JON• ve \-0 patient," Micronesia . He report& to Salpan, the he says. -~t people visit Newport beaches each year. headquarters. Wheeler has helped lead 'the emergence He suqested the commission should His territory covers %,fMXl small islands, of Huntington Beach from a sleepy little allow "low intensity redevelopment" the 100 of which are inhabited. The total area fann community to a major city for the city wants and help the city in financing is as big.as_tbe U.S., though most of it it past 15 years, first as city engineer, then additional parking and a tramway salt water. acqulri!Jc the ....., tltle ol jdJlic -ks "I think it's wonderful w have such an diroctor. system to the beach. adventure at my age," Wheeler reflects, "Most of the tbinp: I wanted to do here ' "We believe the commission should not never losing his constant smile. have been done or are in the works." take negative steps to change the policies He can I.hank hls wife Betty, a He lilts such accomplishments as near of the city," Mcinnis concluded. secretary in the plaming department, for completion of the city's massive drainage Also in the audience from Newport the oppo~ty. , / system, de\'.elopment of all b11i one oC the Beach were ruchard Hogan, planning On a brier trip north, she discovered an needed water storage tanks arid con-director; Roberi---\Vynn, city manager; obscure ad in the San J<"ranciSco Chroni-struction of the first part of the new city and Oerutis O'Neill, city attorney. _ cle announcing the job opening. Jim equipment Yftr(I. During questioning, Commissioner applied and won ~he posl. "This wiif not only be a change of Ronald Caspers said he thought the same llis · new job covers the Marshall, v.·ork, but a total change or en-number of young adults with cars could Caroline and Mariana islands. He has vironment," he says. u1•m quite fond oC move in to a ne\v duplex as those who been there before as a Marine island-hop-my people bere and I'll miss them to lived in the older units. He told Mcinnis ping in World War JI. beat the band, but most of the ex-he c:ooldn'l understand the reasoning lhat "I've been out there before and it's citement of what's been going ·on here duplexes "·ould decrease .population. l'i1>nderful to go back to live in peace has worn off." Commissioneis Dooald Bright and there. The U.S. has a mandate fro m the In Micronesfa·, be says, the excitement Rit11mon C. Fay said they were still con· U.N. to develop the area in five years 90 will just begin as the area prepares t.o-cerned. about the need for parking by the it can become self-sufficient and self· capture aome of the tourist trade and beach. governing. builds itself as a new nation. At least 12 proposed duplexes in Severely Battered Victim Found in Laguna Cove -Laguna Beach Police today arc in· vcstigating a mysterious case o.f assault which left one ma n severely battered and unconscious on a beach cove and no other traces except bloody sand. carried him up the stairway at Aiounta.in Road. Officers checked with the manager of the Hacienda Hotel, 1289 S. Coast Highway, wbere it was believed Hall may have Uved, but the manager was not sure or the man's first name, and said that he had moved out some tlrne ago. Officers searched the beach scene but found only bloodstains. Newport Beach await commission action later today. • Antialarm Device Used in Burglary NEW YORK (U PI ) -Thieves using an anli·burglar alarm de\•ice with "wires and di als and stuff" pulled off a suc· ccssful $500,000 bur~lary during the "'eekend at a metals plant where a si milar effort had fai fed 10 days earlier. Police said the thieves left behind their• burglary tools and the electronic gadget. apparently homemade, that was used to neutralize the alarm system a t the L. S. Plate Wire Corp. Jn Queens. further study of the problem. The Orange Morley did not give details on Amin 'a County Grand Jury also has called for decision to release the Americans but further investigation. President Joseph Mobutu of :zaire in. The Thomas report scheduled to go to tervened today to tell Amin they really the board says Computer Science Cor-were Peace Corps volunteers and were poration submitted the best b { f e r en route to his country as they •id theJ for managing the data services for the were. Diplomatic spurces in Kampala next seven years. said Mobutu sent a telegram today uk· Figures are csc .. $26.6 million · Data ing for their release. Services Department, $37.8 milli~ and Electroolc Data Systems (EDS) of Dal- las, $41.1 million. The CSC and ·EDS bids are based on th e use of IBM equipment rather than the Univac proposed by the department heads committee and the consultant aft- er an $85,000 study last winter. From Page l SOJURN ... FBI post since the death of J. Edgar Hoover on May 2, 1972. Ni~on's first choice for the job was L.· Patrick Gray 111, a Connecticut lawyer '.Ill~ Justice Department official. Gray resigned as acting FBI chief after Senate \Valergate hearing disclosures about the FBI's handling of the Watergate case. Kelley takes over Crom the current ac- ting director, William D. Ruckelshaus, former bead of the Environmental Protection Agency. In winning Senate confirmation, Kelley prttn.ised he wou.Jd cooperate in drafting new legislation to bring the FBI under closer congressional scruf.inY than it bad during Hoover·s service, which dated back to the inctption of the FBI in 1924. Nixon was returning to Washington a day before the Senate Watergate com- mittee resumes its hearings after a Fou rth of J uly holid ay recess. The President notified the committee over the weekend that he would not testify before it nor tum over any 1rresid ential papers. ' ·Nixon has been at the Western White ltouse for 17 da ys. He came here June 22 to continue his summit talks with Soviet leader Leonid J. Brezhnev. Abernathy Quits As Civil Rights 1£8der of 8CLC ATLANTA.. (:a .. (AP) -The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy aruiounced todly he is resigning as president of the Southern Christian Leadership. Con- ference, primarily because of a Jack oC financial support. Abernathy headed SCLC for five years, since the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., in April 1968. He was frequenUy at King's side, and he went to jail with him 17 times. Abernathy was the second president ~ SCLC, and after he took ov.r lollowfnc King's death, he said, "They may till the dreamer, but they can't kill the dream." He had demonstrated many times bis faith in the dream of equality ud justke articulated by King. Abernathy, 47, stood willingly In the background until King was shot to death on a motel balcony In Memphis, Term.. Abernathy had said he bad no desire to lead the movement . Calling King the symbol. and the leader, he said, "l al ways wanted to stand with him and not ahead of him." . Since King's slaying, 1however, SCLC has been beset with financial !roubles. Abernathy also stood in the shadow of Coretta King, the civil rights leader's widow, and much of the finandal suppOrt lvhich "wld have gone to the SCLC has gone to the l\1artin Luther King Memorial Cen ter. BRUSSELS (UPI) -The European Common Market requested North Allan· tic Treaty Organization ( N AT 0 ) aMislance for the inland di!tribution of food aid to drought-stricken countries south of the Sahara, a spokesman said 1 today. The identity of the injured man still has not been confirmed , but palice believe his name to be either Christopher Hall or Gerald Hall . llis age and address are unknown, police said. An early morning beac.hgoer found lht man crumpled in the sand just below Arizona Blast Toll Reaches 8 LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE l\lountain Street. OIAN•I COAST IT DAILY PILOT He was taken to South Coast Com- munity Hospital where doctors reported he had massive facial fractures including breaks to his nose, chin, check, and all ,,,. 0r.,.. '°''' DA.tLV "'LOT. •'"'..,kl> other facial bones , Sgt. Norman Babcock KlNGl\fAN, Ariz. (UPI ) -The death Sal.d today. loll rose to eight Sunday from a fireball It CM!blned ""-N.-'"1n,. It puD>lllMd a, ..,. o •• ,... c .. u ~111111nt ~n,. ""' The man was unable to taJk after being that mushroomed through the center of ..-11111t1DM ••• •IWll. _,., "'""""" revived at South Coast. lie Was later senl town from·a burning railroad gas tanker. FrlUy, for Cotlt ""-• l'IWWPl11 lttcl1. Co 'led' I Ce l nd """""'IOI! l tKl\/FN1111ro "-'ltV· L........ to Orange unty 1• 1ca n er a Richard Lee Williams, -47. a school ••e11. 1,.,1ntthdd~ ...i $/In c1tmtn1tr "'.a~ promoun~. in "satisfactory" con· principal who suffered second and third ••n J111n c1ptlfr1ne. A '""" '"1ot111 . d1t1on today by a_1dc.s. degree bums OVf!r 6S percent of His body; '-=""'""'P~"~11ion~·~ .. !f.."J'"~-~ .. !-~;!;~~·~M~··!;-~·1:1:;~~~S.fgti\.iiil'B'ila"bc°'ocfitk aid t'Le department _di~ ~ny1._ti__ta!kffiw>Jiutai!-:;·~··~-1"9"1~ "' hf" Sl,-..t, CM It M-. a'iliO~~F.~'=-".,.;i. --~tibl.nc.:faOIDl " fx~A:fr~---=-. - man ~ho id~ntifi~ himself as Rar Bibie. Bill &sson,' 52, was buried Sunday in ,.rA.!i:!t• .~ ... ~:... lie said a fr iend who had been swimming the rlrst funeral of a disaster victim. Of jJ.1r.a-Cwi., .al the <:_arty ~our had found the man and .the 70 ix:rsons Injured. sii: were listed.in • ¥1cit '"'•"-"' _, ~·• M-.w critical condition at hospitals in Phoenix Th•111•• ICH'fll and Las Vegas, Nev. n..,., .. ~~-,iihM Mesa police Casson was one or nve volunteer llYI"""" 1111tw· firemen killed in the explosion. They c••i4• H. t.... a1ct.1N ~~· N.11 were fighting a flre on a.tank car or p~ .. ., .. ,. ._ .... ..,. Seeking Pervert paoe g•• .. 11en the tanker erupted. S<lld· ~ Ing a monstrous fireball blooming c..tt ,._1 m w..i ''' '''"' 1hrn11ahoul the area, en g u I fin g H"""' ihK!I: JW Mftl*I leultffN • ·-~ ....,.: m ,__, ,.,_..,. ~ta litesa pollce today are on the businesses, a. highway and a cro"'d of ~r:=,!~~ ::!7:... '1-r"Ct<oi'=~~':I lookoul for a man In hill early :Krs who people. T••••••• 171 41 MJ-4JJ1 forced a · 17-yea r-old girl Into an act of a 11w4 Alo•lt 1 1 MZ·••11 stx perversion over lhe weekend and --then paid her St. ,,_ ~' ... ff,::;. tt Llfl-•ttdl • The girl a student from Cypress, said ,,... ...,.. 0r...,. ~ c--111M !he was picked up whlle hitchhiking In Mt-tut Wes tminster M d dr iven to a llarbor c_.-,11111, 1t1J. Orel!ft c.." ~11t111nt Boulevard parking lot where the man c-,. ,... -. '"'""' 11"''"''..., reporudly forced his aflectioos on lier. .......... """" fK ................... .,. '*""' _., .. mn111wtt •'"'-' 111«1tl -She \vas subsequently taken to Newport """""' .. *"'*" """"· Stach, where the man gavo her the ...... (laM ............ '' c.el• ~. t "bu Cok hi " _, c.111n1a. ...._,'"*" .,. u"'"' •·• money o y a c or .!IOmet ng 11111.1 ....,wr-;-..--H 1a.11 """"'"1 mUlflnr told her to \valt for one-half hour until he ....... , .. •M _."· returned with hi• car. r From P•el MURDER ... munity congregational Church of Corona del Mar. The'y were struck ironically by a dual tragedy over the weekend. The ·family's chu rch sustained $5.000 dam41e in a fire blamed on araonista. Adntlrol NO-DEFROSTING • REFRIGERATOR/FREE~ER ALL THESE GREAT •~...,,..1 .. FEATURES ' • rull Width "_Bookcnt" Frnt1r~ Door Sh•lf -t or Instant •v1ilablH1y. • Du1t T1mp1111l1r1 Control•- Hltct lh• rl11tt.. t•mPtr1tu tt for Itch MC:!Jon. "i"lj;:;::;::lbJ:~~:~;.~,.~ .. ~'~'"~''~""~"!!i!,,,..!!',ill!<'f'if'"f • btrl L•11• ft.tri11r1tor Door S11erves-tio1111 evtn tall q\1\1\ .. •botlltsl - MMM NT 1114 No -'•fr•1tlnt r1frl9;,.~ 1tctien1 with Arctjc Air n-1ytt.M fot f11ll ·~I· clrcYl•llOI\, , ALL THIS $25995 FOR ONLY SLIMLINE REFHIGEllATill M..W Cl1 JJ • Full Wlctttt ,NlllW Q*f: -, W'ldeoilt11111 l""""1llfl CDntrd • ~ Vltutl Dtflwtotiniw tfldlcwW • btTt o.tci ~ """ • Full \IVldtf'I r,... ...... Ctwlltt.~ 159'5 IMmber of 90 DAY C•lil•r~i•'• L••lflf ,. •sH I] Cooperatiwe lvyl"I ,..,.., Group With The WITH APPIOYU Volum'e Buylni CllDIT •• "" ·--'•-of 110 Stor"t•i;I ~ ....... ", ... -. m 1115 NEWPORJ BLVD. Dawntawn Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • ' • • I I New Ru"ler Takes Over Jn Italy ROME (UPI) -A new center-left coalition led by Premier Mariarw:> Rumor tciok office Sunday as. the 35th govern- ment of Italy since 1943, it.s prospeCts for M>ilgterm survival haunted by inflation, rising crime and a Caltering economy. Rumor. a bachelor onetime high school tea~, said after taking \he oath of of~ fict that he would seek parliament's ap- proval of a program CClr'ICell.trating on dealing with economic problems, the weakness of the Jira and rising r1ghtwing Violetict. . A qtristian Democrat who becanle premier for the fourth time in five years, Rumor . took the oath or office . fnim President Giovanni Leone 26 days after the collapse ol..! ~nter.~ight coalition led by outgoing Premier Giulio Andreotti. Ruipor leads a ?JJ-member cabinet composed of Christian D e m o c r a t s , Socialists, Social Democrats a n d '.Republicans. The dominant Christian Democrats received 16 cabinet posts, the Socialists six, the Social Democrats four and the Republicans two. Christian Democrats retained the key minis:tries·of foreign affairs, finance and the interior. Among the cabinet positions was the newly-:ereated ministry of environment· The Socialists were returning to the govemment after an interrpution that saw the moderately rightwing Liberals take their place in the Andreotti government The main effect of the Socialist return ri I 1 Mond1r, J11lr '9, 1'973 s DAIL V PILDT :t Nixon Ordeal· Looms? Scandal Probe of Close -A ssociates Near By ljELEN THOMAS .,.....,~ .............. The dramo cl the Senate Walorfate hearings may tie more poignant lhan ever for President NiXUl in the next cou- ple of weeks as bis closest White HOl.lM! a.nociatcs -whom be has declined to prejudge -show up on the witness stand. Coming up will be John N. Mitchell, the former attorney general who managed Nixon 's 1972 re-elect.ioo campaign, and ousted top presk:lential . aides H. R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlicbm.an. The \Vhite House says Nixon staJfds by his April .30 statement that the latter ;tre "lwo of the finest public servants"· he has ever known. The testimony of this trio may be climactic in determining Nixon's fate in the PresiderlCy. Tbey must attest to his insistence that be had no prior knowledge , of the break-In and bugging of the Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate ~ no knowledge ol the cover-up and no involvement in hush money or ex· ecutive clemency offers to the convicted Watergate COllsplrators. How is he facing the ordeal of past revelations and more to come -things he claims he was kept "in the dark" about? To hear his chief ad\'isers and members of the family tell it, he is in a "good mood.'' They stress he is going about "business as usual" and feels that only the present "climate'' is keeping ttim from forging ahead to more ac· complishments. Members of his family still blame the press tot' the Slres! on the Watergate "'scandaJ in the news. His diughter, Julie Ei~wer, ays the ptt11 ii "obsessed" wtth Watergate, and his SOO·in-law, David Eisenhower, clalms the handling of lhe story by lnvC!ilfgative reporters "hasn't been entirely £alt." The picture of the President lh..1t reporters .covering the California White HOuse see -aided by nO personal in· sights by Niiton himself -is a secluded man. lonely, toughing it out, and angry to be so besieged so early in his second term. Family and aides agree he faces the worst eris.is or Ills life. Tbey also believe he wlll ride out the storm. Only to his most intimate advisers does Nixon display utter frustration that so many questions remain. \•is a vis himself and Watergate. One day last week the President bang· ed his hand on the desk, exclaiming "\\'e did release lhe 111ay 22 statement, didn't we?" "Do people read ii on May 22, file it On May 23 and upect it to be issUed again and again?" he rusked in exasperation. Jn that presidential statement Nixon e:<onerated himsef from any involvement in Watergate, but admitted that he had limited the investigalion of th e Democratic break-in on grounds or na· tiona\ security. In other \Yhite !louse statements. and through spokesmen, Nixon has indicated he IX!lieves unnamed persons and groups are out to destroy him. For Nixon . these past many months can only have been 1he "best of limes and the y,·orst of times." •Us landslide election. the ending of the Vietnam War. and the return of prisoners of y,·ar ,.,.ere the strongest evidences that t h c presidCnUal Juck . still "''AS holding. HJs second 1naugural was the high point or Nixon 's personal triumph and he exuded the joy or a man v.·ho bad everything. But the sudden tum to catastrophic events has left Nixon on the ~· cling~ ing to a conviction that he will be vln· dicatcd. llis aides believe that hi!i popularity rati ng -n(lw at a low 45 per· cent in the polls -will rise again aner the \\ratergate affair is over. And con- ridence arid respect of the nation will be res1ored in his administration. lie bas been mo\'1ng gradually to pick up the piC'C('S. replacing his · shattered staff Yii tb fantiliar fa ces -1eterans in the ways of government -such as ~lelvin R. Laird. his new chief domestic adviser and counsellor Bryce Harlow, a pro in dealing wllh Congress. But there is no ev!il· ce that Nixon has changed his lifestyle. or his method of operation. He still only three aides regularly - Gen . Alexandec M. llaig, Jr .. his chief of staff: Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler and foreign policy ad· viser Henry R. KiS!inger. His commands are funneled lo other staffers by Haig and Ziegler. forming almost'·the same "Be(lin Wall " that y,•as typical of the iiak:leman·Ehrlichman days. The President's Isola lion w a s manifested 'l!uring his 117-day sojourn in Califon:iia by the number of times he is know to have left his oceanside com- pound -t"''ice for outings. Mostly he has strolled on the beach. Although they arc in their California honfes nearby. Nixon has not been in touch with llaldeman, former penonal lawyer Herbert Kalmbach or fonner justice department official Robert Mar- dian, who lives in San Clemente. Saddleback Meet waS .. slight ideological shirt to the 1ert. Cu oritt1 • nie new government 1nc1.c1es some or Power Cut Dow·n· the most ·important names in recent When little Leora Kyle, 3, of Seattle, stuck her ann in a building Italian politics, amOng them former hydrant to ~e what was in there, she couldn't retrieve it. Firemen ~rs Emilio Colombo3 • · tlie new were_called, bui a .policemap, wit}! liquid. so~p freed thf dirty but un-Th llnanannlnister, and Aldil Moro, return-hurt limb. . . -'A.s. . ermometer TY/ -~J QI f • 1-•--1n~:m~=~~e<1:-;;th::,.:-.~p=re=•·=·ous:--="'====================~:::::_::'...::~~=~~::_ ____ W-UIYeS,-U-"eu2 ~ JCe.._..z.... ___ --1 Center·left coalitions from late 1968 until Jn NY CJim.b ~ • I I :1~':d~~~1as1 governi;ien1 re11 ar1cr Dollar Gaining Ground s F S fw' , l B d .In announcing agreement on a coalition NEW YORK (UPI) -A 600 megawatt aci•ng c 0 oar program last week, Rumor said he would generator servicing the New York press for reforms that political sources metropolitan area failed today as · said helped to bring about Andreotti's I E M k temperatures again soared toward the fall. n uropean ar ets I 90s and Consolida~ed Edison cut vol!age Approvals for faculty salary increases, A tentative budget of $11 .8 million "There is need to deal immediateiy by 5 percent. a 1973-74 publication budget, and election presented in June called for a tax rate or with the economic situation, blocking the A spokesman for the ulility said the of board officers for the coming year top 84 cenlS per $100 ass€ssed valuation, up in8atiooary spiral," Rumor said. "The cutback occurred at 10:50 a.m. when the Tuesday's agenda of the Sadd\eback 19 cents over last year. primary conditions to do this are the con· LONDON (AP) -The dollar recovered The dollar also made a comeback in temperature stoo<t at 87 degrees. Community College &ard of Trustees A public heriring on the budget is slated solidation of democratic order at all some ground on European money Paris, buying 3.96-4.00 comm er c i a I Con Ed also reported poy,•er knocked meeting. prior to board approval at the August levalnstels against .any Fascist insurgence and markets ktodayh·~f~~~ t?z_,cootinent's cen-francs in bank-to-bank transactioos, up ouhent to 1~.ooo 1~~omersb1in Queens1 County The meeting will be at a p.m. in the meeting. , . ag any VJO\ence." Ira! ban ers mi.cu uieir governmt:!lts 1 3 003 . w 1ve ~r ca es ailed. Crews bo3rd room ol buildinn A·l. • Most of the budget increases are for • might protect the American currency but rom ._.. ·89 Friday. Trading there was were.attempting tor......,;,. the cables. .." skrN however ~,..-At the June 11 board meeting, constructiO!f.' specifically for the school's: Air Crash Ki11 s Mother, Child ' ~ SONOMA (AP) -A woman and her 1- year-old daughter were killed when two single-engine planes collided over a small airport near here, lhe sheriff's depart- ment said. Dr. Tony Cohen, 40, o[ San Francis'Co, was attempting to land at the Sonoma Sky Park just eilst of here Sunday,:when his plane rammed the cockpit of a plane piloted by Dr. Marvin Simmons or Fresno, Deputy Larry Hansen said. The Cohen plane crashed into a shed near a residence, lipped over and ejected Cohen's wife, Dr. Lynn Cohen, 36, and their daughter, Stephanie, both of whom suffered fatal internal injuries. Cohen w~ trapped inside the wreckage, which did not bum. Hansen said. He was taken in very serious condition to Smoma Valley Hospital, Hansen said. fell again . when no i n t e r vent ion The, --i.. B · The spok~man said the immediate represenLatlves of various faculty grnups sCcond permanent building, devoted to developed. Wt:<U>. ritish pound slipped slightly cause of the failure of the Arthur Ki"ll ' .g••n~ t•-dollar from 12 555 Fn'day lo presented ....rn1ests for salary .. 1·n_c,reases science and math, which is now under The dollar OJ>E!:ned In Frankfurt at .... ~· 1 ~ • .• number lhree generator on Staten Ts1aod · ~,~ 2.3250 marks, Jt;z pfennlngs above $2.552.5 at . the opening today. But the whk:h went out or SttVice at 8 a.m. had averaging 6.8 percent. construction. pound r••• ag•'"I the mark Europe's The representatives have been meeting Other items on Tuesday's agendo I,,. F-riday~s close. Dealers reported "ex-"""' ....... • not ~n dete-=~. _ -SI gest Curr. r ·s T.l k F · • 11wR:Q ~ with a threermember board. committee elude adoption Of an Aasociated Student tromely small" demand; and after an ron ncy, rom · mar s ri-He said Con Ed was asking 'all large day to s 98 since to hash out an acceptable final Body budget for the new year. con- hour of trading, the price dropped back 1 T ky. • lh d 11 customers to "cut back as much as percentage. sideration of a computer a......_....., with to 2.2950 marks. n ° o, e 0 ar rose two yen at the possible" and was requesting residential &'"'"'""¥"'• "The situation remains · extremely openinrg to 264· then was driven down to customers to "put off use of large ap-pu~ri~~~r:~ i~r 1~ ;:::: s~~pdg~w~~~ ti~l~~.c!:d~~~:;xnm_ t_ion ~~~ r~= unstable," said one key Coreign exchange 254 be ore the close by a false rumor that pliances Wllil late this evening ." ~v·"" banker. the European markets would be closedlf~===~~~~~~====~fin~a~l~a~d~op~t~io~n~. =========~i~n~m~a~le~rn~il~y~lc~a~v~e~po~llc~y~.==::ii::;'.j The rate opened nearly 2 percent up in today· This aroused fears that the ; , Zurich at 2.75-2.77 Swiss francs, then Japanese government would be forced to plunged back to 2.695-2.71 by noonr below close the Tokyo market also, and the de-. Friday's close of 2.705-2.72. mand for U.S. currency evaporated. "Everyone had .. expected an in· AJthough the European central bankers tervention," said a Zurich banker. said they had agreed on a plan to support "That's why the dollar shot up in the the beleaguered dollar, France's finance morning. Jt did not come1 so it came minister said it was up to the United down again." . States to act first. The volume of trading In Zurich wa s 11le Nixon Admjnistration so far has reported relatively large and hectic. ruled out American intervention to aid In a parallel development , gQld opened the dollar since its fall last week to at $125.25 an ounce in Zurich, down $1.50 record lows in Europe. U.S. officials con- from the close Friday, then rose to $l26. lend that the dollar is undervalued and The opening price in London was $l24.50. that normal economic forces will bring a down from $127, and dealers said market lumaround. was "highly cautious and jumpy." T.he central bankers met Sunday in Basel. Switzerland, for the i r monthly meeting. But instead or saying nothing for publication as usual, they ended the meeting with a ISO.word com· munique which they apparently hoped would check the fall of the dollar when the currency markets opened today. The central bankers said • • t h e necessary technical arrangements are in pl::ice" to support the dollar. Bul' they did not indicate when their governments might authorize intervention. They cited the declaration last March by the Group of Ten -the non-Olm· munist world's richest nations: -thaf of. ficial intervention in exchange markets "may be useful at appropriate Umes to facilitate the maintenance of orderly con- ditions." ·Rancher Breeds 'Tiniest Horse/ • . ..t14 I ncli es Tall i"'NEWBERRY, Fla. (UPI) -Rancher 'Joel Bridges, who breeds inioiature .' horks~ for backyard pets "like dog s," i8id Sunday he has bred the world's smallest perfect horse. The 24-inch tall, 14-pound foal is named "'Gumba ,'' said Bridges, 50, a fonner mortician. Cumba was born June 3 and .weighed 11~4 pounds. "As far as I know, this is the smalle!t ~rfect horse in the world, excluding • .Jwarfs and freaks," he said. Bridges said Gumba will weigh only about 20 pounds at malurily -in about 18 months. Bridges has bee1l breeding miniature hones for the past five years and has a ~rd or 141 American miniature horses and a herd of miniature Sardinlan donkeys on his fOO.acre Komoko ranch. • ,~ WE'LL LOOK SO NICE FOR SUMMER, DAO! The Ever Popu_lar Pincord Suit of Da cron ·, Cotton by Deen19efe • $80.00. Short Sleeve Button Down Oxford by Ea9le Shirtmakers. SIZ.00. Grenadine Tie by Robert Talbott -$8.SO. ·-,.. . .., PHELPS MEAGER ~ lll'ER 50YEAHS IN l'AUfORHIA ... . Newpor~ Beech,..Wil•hire,. Sherman Oek•1 Patede~e, lakewood1 West Covina • RANCH I R JOEL BRIDGES SHOWS OFF 'SMALLEST HORS&( 'Gumbo' Wol9h1 In ot 14 Pou~d• orid 11 14 lnchos Toll "We have just about all kinds of people buying them . They wattt• theJn ··~ror backyard pets, like. dogs." Bridges said. "I'm also selling S<lme as breeding ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~~~=========~ stock." _ I ! ,, . ~ I •• . WORD GAMES DEPl'. -GasoliM prioes are still vexing a lot of folks these dap. particularly· those who can fmd a staUOI\ open to sell the stuff. Anyway this word has gotten to Washington and ap- parently the folks back there are going to do eomething about it ~ Reports today indicate that when the 1overmnent. launches Phase Four of the anti-inflation program, fuel prices may be rotle•f bock. Tllil Washington Star- News reported that the new gasoline rre&.e Will es'tablish prices where they were last May 15. _ Admin\Stratim officials were ques- lionod en 1be date rePort.d by !!le newspaper. They termed Ifie May 15 date as beina "wry speculative." YOU WILL NOTE they didn't say it was wrmg. They didn't say that a date hadn't been set. They just sort of tert it hanelng there. U'°IT ........ Visiti1ag Royalty Wetl, there are a lot of phrases like ••very speculative" that come from government officials these days. Thus you. are left in the postion of having to in· terpret into plain language what the bureaucrat who \Vas talking actua11y meant. You might go through the ex· ereise ike this: Prince Charles of England (ce nter) watches a week· end event at the Queen Elizabeth Sports Center with Bahamas Prime A1inister Lyden Pindling (right). The prince is representing Great Britain during tbe Bahamas' independence celebration. Tonight at mid· night this ·archipelago of 700 islands becomes the world's newest nation. statement: "That date is v e r y -....lalt " • • >""'-.._ve. . MEANING: ''Boy, I wonder who leak- ed that me? I'd better not say this ill un- true or Iller-my statement might become inoperative. 'lbe boss will kill me 'if I confirm this date." Meaning: "We lied to you. I told them back in the inner office that you 'vere asking this terrible question and they told me to try that earlier answer on you. You caught us at it. So now we have to make that one Inoperative. Try this one. ·n ope1ate ..... Statement : "You quoted me ou t of con- l<xt on that ... " MEANING : "You jerk, you've really me in tntuble now. I gave you all that her which was intended to cover up main ;ioint. Instead of quoting it all . you boiled it rlgh& down to the main point · and now eftf)1)ody lJ going to 'Un' denUnd it. This ls terrible ... '' Statement: "Let me give you the boclrground oo this." ~' "ll just the plain facts get out CJn t!U one, we're going to look awfully silly. II I can pump enough blckground into here, maybe it won't Joolt ., bed. Allo., ll I can keep talking looc enough, ma;lie ,you'll forget the point you ,..re aft<r Ia.Ille first place." Statement: "In res~to yotr ~­ lion, I'll have to H ,a the~ . _ /'./': MEANING: "NO'wa, clif we Jk tbe ,,.itlc !mow what tbls II Ill •bout or we'll haft an upriltng 1lft our liMKls." Stttement: "We hlnd1ed that matter in uecutfve session • • . " Mea.niq: "We -met aec:retly. We had .U · the doors bamd and the cUrtiins" pulled. We llod the CIA check the place (or bugs. U ·the public ever found out what we ""re plot.ting in there. they'd run us cut of towh oo a rail ... ·• Statement: "Government sources said " MEANING :o "Okay, you've got me 1ropped and I told you the truth. But foe heaven"s sake, don't attribute the state· ment to me." Statement: "No comment." Meaning: "If you think you're going to get me to admit that. you're -a candidate for the funny farm. I'm locking the office and aoing to lunch. .. lraq'i Troops Execute 13 More Linked to Plot . BEIRUT, Lebanon (APJ -The Iraqi gove1u1ue11t a1uruonced today that 13 more men were shot Sunday night as plotters against the leftist government. ThiS brought lo 36 the nu mber executed for the attempted coup led by the coun- regime. Baghad radio said the 13 men died before a firing squad and were the last group of plotters to be executed for the attempt June 30 on the Baath Socialist regime. The 23 others, incl~ding Kazzar, "·ere executed Thursday but the news v>'as not announced until Saturday. All were conviCted by a three-man revolutionary court, 'and President Ahmed Has.wl al Bakr approved the death sentences, the broadcast said. A t'otaJ. of 130 executions now have been announced by lbe lraqLgovennen t since- tbe Baath Socialists seized_power in July .. ~..iz'dlil. 14 .\Jews in 1961 as spies 'Ind 1J·1Iracifl· in •January 1970 on charges of at.tempting a coup backed by Iran. Baghdad radio .. said· three other members of 'l:be. Kassars' plot were sentenced to '1J'ison : one .to life im- prisonment, one to two years and one to one year in jail. Twenty others were ac- quitted. and Bakr commuted the death sentence of one . man to life im· prisonment. He was Abdulkhalek Samir· rai, a member of the Baath party's in- ternational command in charge of the party's operations 1n the Arab world . Lansky Case Denied MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -The federal In· t'Une tax f:Vasioo trial of Meyer Lansky was delayed today pending a .hearing on ~-bether the aging rackets figure is well enough to stand trial. Viet Cong Admit Holding Canadian Pair Hostage "- SA IGON (UP I) -'Ille Viet Cong ad· ed the location of the Viet Cong uOit they m1Ued 'toaay It !!.JiOtdlng tW0~1!tll~n ~vl""s'"lle<t,-sincnheirvtsit was followed-by oUicers who disappeared 10 days ago, a heavy government attack. and the Canadian truce delegation said In Cambodia, American warplanes "we will not be satisfied until they are pounded Commu:n.ist targets late Sunday returned to us." and early today on the outskirts of A press officer for the Provisional Phnom Penh, where government forces Revolutionary Govenunent PRG, (lhe were reported cut off at five points to the formal name for the Viet Cong) said south •. east and west of the capital. Capts. · Ian -Pat of Toron.to anit Fletcher Thomson are alive and well. -THE RAIDS WERE so heavy that-lhe THE PRG AOCUSED the South Viet· namese government of ordering all-Oay artillery fire oo areas where the two Canadians were being searched for. Of. ficials in Saigon termed this a slander. But the painstaking IO-day negotiations over the release of the two officers a~ peared to be about to su~. - Canadians concerned for tbe safety of the two officers have been,clos~mouthed abou t the delicate negotiations with the PRG. The agonizing slowness of the release negotiations, as correspondents have pieced the story together since June 28 when Patten and Thomson disappeared . seemed to be caused by : -DISAGREEl\1ENT over who was responsible. Canadian authorities have maintained the two officers were simply touring their area of responsibility; the Viet Cong conununique said today the· two "went along with two Vietnamese. infiltrating into the . liberated area without a PRG liaison officer. . .and without advance notification." -Some coocern by the PRG officers on the spot that the Canadians, on a previOU! visit t.o the area \\1here they were captured, had inaQ_vertently disclos· concussions of explosions shook windows in the city center. It marked the 124lh consecutive day of U.S. bombing in the intensified air raids that began after the Jan. 2i1· truce in neighboring South Vietnam. The strikes today, 'and the center or groWld action, was repattedly 12 miles outside Phnom Penh on three sides of the city. No details or the fighting were an- nounced. ·In on~ sharp skinnish-reparted today on Highway 6, IS miles north of Phnom Penh at the strategic ferry crossing town of Prek Kdam, military sources said four governm ent soldiers were wounded and evacuated by ferry boat. The fighting itself stopped at dawn after 90 minutes .. French Issue Final W urning Before Blast By Untied Press lalernational U.S. Mostly Hot, Humid France today issued its customary final warning before the start d. nuclear tests, ordering aircraft to stay out of the South Pacific test site area. The publication of Notam -the air "'aming -has usually come 48 hours before tbe first explosion or the test series at Mururoa Atoll in French 'Polynesia. Storms Linger Over Texas, Twisters • in Temper•t•re• ..._ .... .,r. " . .. .. " ~ ~ :i " .. .. ,. .. " " n " " .. " .. " .... r ~ n ~ ... .. . . :g ~t tl 71 u " '" n •• 11 :t r n " " " p ,, ,, tJ • " .. ,, " " 11( tJ ... .. " lot •• " .. " ,. t j! -" •• •• ·" _,, I.Ir\ •• ..,, ... •010c.u1 . .Secr1mtnlo 1111 SI. Lo.ii• fl S.lt L1•1 Cfly lDD .S111 Oleoo 12 Stn ftrtn<ll(O 6" .~ !'''"' n OOll:int ll B •ot..1M (;~·5~j)s1o1ow ~ '--All ~·llOW'lll ·-.; l\OW S. Dakota c.loucb •nd rog 1rt ••1?K'ed 10 111lnl • glOOmY we11twr Pictu ..... .,._ ~M ihoilld brim ttwouvl'I by -•nd 11roduce w1r,...r dl't'fl"'* ttm11tr11ur11 I h r o u I h .,,_, fJ.S. S•JR-ry lfot humid ,onc111lon1 lff't vllll'd OV'tl" mm.I '1r-of 1'119 !Miion t-1rly !odtY •I tllllflditni.ms llniit:red ln !IOU1'Mm Tt••• tl'ICI otMr tctnfl'ft loc1llon1, S......,•I torn9d--•• t1Ql'll9d 11i. Sllfldl V I" So\lttl OakOfa, b\11 thert WI,.. no nports ol 111!11<111. Winds of IJ mll .. Df'I' hour _. r"tllOrled. ""'II 11one$ tlmotl rwo lnc:,,.1 fn d!1.,,.11r POlllldtd Comllotk, Ntob. c .... t•I Wearlle r S111H1'1' tooUy, Light v1rl1b11 "''"°" nloM Ind m«nll'lll 110ur1 becomlnt Wfl1.,.ly 10 10 16 kllOll In 1U1moon1 TodtY 1'1Cf Tuesd1y. High ._., 74. Coe1t1I ,.......,.,thlf•• r1nire trom &1 ~o n. lnltl'd lllftPf!'tlll'tl ••"99 from '3 to 14. Wtttf' lllftO'f•t!ur1 "· S1111, "''°"' Tltfes MONDAY 5tcOl\d lllOl'I ..• • •. . . l :O'I p.m, S.4 TUESDAY Flrtl 111911 ...... ., 1:17 1.m. 13 Flrfl low .......... J;u 1.m. o.i St<ond hll!l'I . .. •. .. 6~5] p.m. S.6 St<Olld low ......... n :1' p,m, , .. $111'1 RI"-5:'9 1.m. Sell 1:117 p.ITI. M-RIMt 3:SS o.m. 'Sell 1:1• •·"'- French· national radio said it appeared likely the first test or this series should come before July 14 -Bastille Day, the national holiday. The Not.am order \\'as first reiw>rted by civil aviation in Britain, but navigatioo officials at Le Bourget Airport. emf.inned the airport had received the order. Sunday the government's O f f i c i a 1 Journal Instructed shipping to stay out of a SO.mile security zone around Mururoa, the bomb site since tests began in 196e. Both the avlaliQO _and shi)?pil!g !Jan'!! were to go into efrect at 5:01 p.m. PDT- Tuesday. France has indicated it intends to go ahead with the atmospheric atomic tests despite protests by Pacific Ocean nations and a requesL two v.-ceks ago jJy the \Vorld Court that Paris suspend this sum· me r's tests. Sunday's orflcinl journal also in· structed . the admiral in charge of the Pacific) ei:perlmentatlob Center (CEP ) to take all action to insure the security of all boats lJ\ the area. 'Better Alte1·11•tlve' I Food Rationing In U.S ; Future? . • WASHINGTON <UPl) ~An expert on world 'food production be 11 eves •Americans '°'"' may be forced to rattoe the food they eat in order to maintain ex· .Japan Keeps · Tanaka-A'lso Communisu - \ TOKYO (UPI) -Prime Minister Kakuei · Tanaka's ruling LI be r ~ 1 Democratic party surged back 10' pow~r today as the single largest force in the prestigious Tokyo Me I r op o Ii tan Assembly. Tanaka's party captured 51 or the 125 seats available to retain the same posl· tion It occupied in the previous assembly. But voters also gave a boost to the rapidly growing Japan Communist party ( -JN SHORT .. : 0 ) whose campaign hit hard at such urban problerps as the worsening urban en- virooment, a housing shortage, inflation, traffic congestion and garbage disposal . e Cu ch Accord • Porta and Jhe value of the dollar abrood. Lester R. Brown, an economist for the-~ nonprofit Overseas Development Council. said · Swlday domestic food rationing would be a better alternative to Preli· dent Nixon's proposed controls on er· ports. BROWN, WHO DIR E.CTED In- ternational agriculture developm!'lll ff.c' the Agriculture Department from 19" and 1969, deacrtbed the export controls u a "seriotla mistake." He also predicted tbal -· food prices will never return to lhe low levels of the I!lrol. He said food woold be In short supply around the world for the next year. "Beyond that, we may ~ faced wtth chtonic global food scaroty for the foreseeable future," ~ said. . Brown made his comments 1n an In~ terview published by U.S. News and World Report magazine. HE WAS CRM CAL of Nixon'S order limiting soybean exports and the President's request to Congress for authority to jmpose broad controls on other U.S. farm exports. "Those exports are keeping this nation economically afloat in a very real sense," Brown said. "A limit on U.S. farm exports would further .weaken the dollar. ability t "It would certainly limit our o import the vast quantities of petroleUm ·.t that we must have from abroad to keep U.S. business and industry going." He said that as a rtsult it may be PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) -necessary to ration foocl in the United Secretary of State William.P .. Rogers to-states "in one form or another.''. day signed tbe fll'St direct cxmular "We can't hold down farm exporta .agreement between the Uni ted States -without endangering the dollar or _trig-_ ·and·Czechoslovakla's Communist govern· gering seriOus energy shortages," Brown ' ment. said. ''In such ,circumstances:. It may Ro.seri ca lled the aa;reemeot "an >J~il-be-tAat..Amerlcans-wiU-b&v.t...."'----1-~ essential building block in the new rela· limit the intake of certain types of food, lionship we are constructjng between as some other countries are doing, in Czechoslovakia and the United states." orde r to export agricultural• com· 'Until now, diplomatic re I at i o ns modities." between Prague and Washington have Brown said tile administration should been governed by the Vienna Convention, not impose price ceilings on beef, pork, which laid down broad basic ru1es for poultry or eggs under Ph~se IV. of ~he 9ealings between states. economic program. He said .reta1l pnct e Flooll De•tlu --ceilings coupled with ·~ high jll'iee of feed would force many producer& out of business. GUADALAJARA, · MextCo (AP) - Rescue workers searched today for bodies and survivors after a wall of water swamped three fl!bing towns on La~ ctiapala. At least 30 penom were reported tilled. Thousands of retired Americans liv,e around 10.inil~wtde ctiapala, Mexico 's largest natural lake, but none were af- fected, authorities said. e Stt lfce Crisis SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI) -Water service broke down in San J uan, sporcdic power failures were reported across Puerto. ruco and the government mobiJiz. ed 1,000 more NaUonal Guard ln>Opl 111& day to deal with a strike by firemen and electric company workers. Gov. Rafael Hernandez Colon declared a state ol emergency Friday and ordered the mobilization of National Guard troops to preserve es.senti&l .services. e Belf .. t Victim BELFAST (UPI) -A woman who was badly' burned .when bijacters oet lire to a Belfast bus last -died in a hospital today, police said. ·w.. The death ol Mrs. Dorothy Lynn, 47, raised the fatality ton in almost lour years of violence among Northern Ireland's majority Protestants, minority Roman Cetholics and security forces to M3. W. Berliners Tear Up Wall BERLIN (AP) -A Q'OWd ol several hundred West Berliners, crying ''crimi n a l s'' and "murderen" at Cmnmunist border guanll, ripped • sil·fool hole in the Berlin ... tr &mday morning. The angry -tore out the wall _ _.after East Gennan -guanll, firing s1veral machine-gun bunts, foiled an attempted escape to the Wes t by three East Germans. 1'he angry West Berlin residents streamed out of a ·nearby apart- meat complex and ripped a wire frame fence out ol the ~munllt· bullt wall. West<m polJ<!e arr!V<d to pusll the group beet and even- tually the hole wu rewired by tbe Commualsts . Rhodesians Seek Fleeing M~can Black Guerrillas SALISBURY, Rhodesia (UPI) Rhodesian troops, big game hunters and trackers searched heavy jungle near the ~ozamblque border today for African guerrillas fleeing with 13 host.ages they kidnaped thrree days ago from a Roman Catholic missionary school. THE GUERIULLAS oriainally .med 292 African students and sdXIOI employee from the remote school late 'lbunday, but most of the hoolag'" sublequonlly escaped during clashes between punuJrc troopo and guerrillas. A government spookesman said tl'OOpl lost contact with the guemIJas, but that they haped to pick up the lrail again to- day. 1be Rev. Egon Rojek, head of the St. Albert's mission, which is nm by West German Jesuits, said the guerrillas tokt teachers they wanted to train the students and the mission's African workers to, fight the white supremist regime of Prime Minister Jan Smith. Rhodesia declared itself independent of Britain in 1965. Its white populaUm is heavily outnumbered by blacks. 1. USTED BY 1tOJEK •• sllll mlMln8 m the jtmgles Jn the north of Rhodata to- day were seven primary school studenti, tlree teachers and three kitcbeo maids. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otli<ltry of tht OailJ Pllol is g11aranlffd ~-· .. r1NY1 II -.. Jiit 1111 ... ,_ ~ ey I:• i·""• tl ll •llf 1"W nn wHI ... ~ M ,..., C•llt .,. tA:111 1111111 ,,. ,, ... 11-11 llfMI ,_..,, II .,... • lllf teal ... .,_ c.,., "" ' '·"'· ''""'"'' ., ...... . """''' Ci ll itflt I C.,. will .......... M Y"ll· (•"• .,. .... lllfllll " '·"'· , Ttltphonts _, o ...... l!""t' ., ......... , 6'1!-lfll H-wtll HntllltlM •••<~ ....... "' ..................... 11• 1111 Cit-le, C1ttfflr-•llHll. s ... , .... ( ....... -• .,_ ....... . """' \. ..... \. ...... """" ....... .... ''POPS'' CO ·I. CERT TO IGHT • 9:15 P.M.· AT FASHIO-ISLA \ . ' \ ( L • -. • ' . ";' 234th Arrest P rot.esting Pro N ow 93 ... SACRAMENTO (UPI) -"""11)' jail, Sim-wu State poll<e.pve fellty Robert -rtleal<d 1111<1 r<tumed lo tho H. Slmpoon, dean of the ltato ctpllo! rotunda to~ share a Capitol protesten, Just what birthday cake with bemu.ed he wanted for hit 93rd b.lrth-tourists and enjoy a kiss from day. Calberlne Van Dyke o I They arr<1ted him for the Hauhurg, N. Y. 234th time Sunday. "Give me a scrap and 111 be After a cup of coffee at the hippy forever," said spnpeon, who makes it a point to bear- Younger: Too .Many Records rested for picketing in the capitol. THE ARRESTS have oc- curred ao often that a Capitol policeman once said, "It's like taking the cat out at night. It's something that has to be done." To Simpson, his job Is to protect the people's right lo complain. SANTA BARBARA (UPI ) -HComptaining is the first of There are too many criminal your rights and you should records in state tU6 and preserve it. When you can't authorities Ought to reduce' complain, you're lost," he them by ellminati~ those of said. the innocent and minor of. SimJ*Xl has prowled Capitol ·- • fender.1 and holding others for corridors since 1966 with his 'DEAN OF PICKETS' WAS HELD ON 93RD BIRTHDAY limited periods, Atty. Gen. portable walking chair, pro-Mister Sirftpson Two Years Ago at 45th Arrest Evelle J. Younger said todey. voking the Legislature to pass ------~------~-------- Jn remarks prepared for a a law banning his activities. - Mondl1, Jul1 q, 1973 DAIL v PILOT IS Accused Slayer on Trial SANTA CRUZ (AP I - Former honor student Herbert W. ~fullln goes on trial today on charges or slaying LO persons in less th.an three weeks last wlnter ln this coastal commwtity. Santa Cruz County Dist Al· ty. Peter Chang &aid an agree- ment between the prosecution and defense bas allowed ®n- solidation of the guilt and sanity trial phases for the first time in California history. Mullin's attorney, James Jackson, has entered pleas of Innocent and innocent by reason of lnsanitv for the 25- year-old Felton rrian. ~1ullin is 3ccu.sed or shooting a mother and her two children. four teen-aged boys in a remote camp, a y91-1ng married couple and a 72-year-old former prizefi&ht« list Janu.ry tnd was atTeited in hiJ car after Xathy Ftancl!. 29, and tJer Ftbnwy. the fatal shooting of Fred aons David, 9. and Oaimeon. 4. Ptttz, 72, as he stood i.n his ~·ere killed in their mountain EVIDENCE regarding ~ drtvewar here. cabin. James Clant.ra. 14.. • sanity normally is covered in Wea.pons found in the vthi~ high school friend of MuUln's a O>Urt hearing separate from cle led authorities to charge -and his wife, Joan. 21, weR the determlnatJon of guilt, Mullin with fl\•e killings the slain in their home here m tht Clang said. lf a jury finds a previous month. On Jan. 24. same day. defendant has "diminished·-'------------_;_ ______ _ capacity" then he cannot be .--------------------, found guilty of flrS!-degree murder, \Vhich requires both malice and deliberation, the dlstrict attorney added . Chang ~limated the trial would last five weeks and about 50 "·Hnesses would testify. Superior Cnurt Judge Charles S. Franich h a s granted the defense unlimited chaUeng~ o f prospective jurors. On Feb, 13, r-.tullin. a fonncr high school football ph1yer, IF YOU'RE O VER 30, IT1S TIME FOR A REAL FACIAL~ 11'° Y<;>UR SKIN IS OVER 30 0 YOU NEl!:D MORE THAN THE REL.AXING SURFACE METHOD OF" ORDINARY FACIALS, IN THE ADRI EN ARPEL SKIN HEAL.TH SPA THE EURO .. EAN MACHINES STIMU~TE CIRCULAT ION, BRUSH AND VACUUM YOUR SKI,.. TO NEW HEALTH. OUl'I ORGANIC PROOUCT5 D!EP- CLEAN THE PORtS ANO ADD MOISTURE TO MAKE YOUNGER~ Girl F ouiid in Desert YOUR SKIN LOOK SUPPL.£, SMOOTHt:R, TREATMENT, $2Q HR, $10 1/2. HR. IN OUft BEAll:rY SAL.ON . I--~::i=::::::-~~~--, meeting today wtth police · The red-lettered signs of the chiefs and sheriffs from Las native of Ireland - a former Angeles, Ventura and Santa amateur boxer , Methodist Barbara counties, Younger minister and Salvation Army said the paperwork of criminal major -denounce officials records· has gotten out or from President Nixon on hand. down. He said it is no longer But Simpson's f a v o r i t e Brown Tells Reagan To Forget Mansion BAKER (AP ) -After "'andeclng for almost 24 hours in the hot desert sands with her raithlul pet dog at hrr side, \lltle Debbie \Vilson ()f Josllua Tree was fin ally spot· ted by a search party. Debbie, 7, was located Sun- day about one mile from ~lid· llills eampgr()und in t h e ~fohave Dese rt 68 m i I e s southeast ()f Baker. A 100- mcmber rescue party, backed by helicopter and airplane, pressed the search. day in the Anza Borrego area of San Diego County. He and three companions had been on a 12--mile pleasure hike \vhcn they \\'ere overcome hy the heat arter about five miles. they explained, and became lost when he tumcd back to get help. Fetze r. stationed at the San Diego Marine Corps Recruit Depot , was localed arter the ·three companions recovered with night's coo I e r tern· peratures and \\0at ked to a store \\·here they summoned help over the telephone. economically or efficiently target is California Gov. SACRAMENTO (AP) "possible to attempt to main-Ronald Reagan. 8ccretary or State Edmund lain in the files of the Bureau of Identification the Ya.St •ir M p EACH REAGAN," Brown J r. has told Gov. numbers or recU'ds ol. sul>-reads one of the old man ·s Ronald Reagan he should drop ject! who in some way come signs. . his "outrageous plan to build a in contact with the criminal· And iri a letter to Reagan, new govem or·s mansion on justice system." Simpson has offered himself th e site of an ancient Indian There are alJO the.RfOblems, as 0 mlssiona.ry..&t-large to the burial ground." , Younger sa~ of "the Im-heathen in control of the state Brown, who is considered a to the slate governinent's callous disregard for the In· dians of California," Bro\vn concluded. Further south. Marine Da''id Fetzer, 19, \\'aS rescued Sun· NEWPORT 2 F ASHION ISLAND 644-2800 1 ~--__ilpl)ro~per'!lll!l""ion,o_fpcrinrin'-1\0:Wia!l:!I il'recor,Jllld\---•-f _c_a_lii_o_m_i_•·_" ______ Democ.ratic contender in the I-inf · particularly that l.Q14-gover-ooH-Face,sald-eo":t--------------I... whlch is stale, the result of struction of the mansion-on mistaken arrest of an innocent M ' penon, or an iaolated youthful agna_te S th e proposed Carmichael site indiscretion." overlooking the A m e r i c a n River would "desecrate" the Younger has Scheduled a S f S le series or meetings throughout a e to n "religious and tribal history of the state with local law en-th e ~1aidu Indians." forcement officers to discuss Indian groups have opposed his I nd •'--· LQS ANGELES (AP) -the construction in testimony proposa !, 8 get ~ir before legislative committees. reactions. Burglars using crowbars and 'Ille proposals w 0 u J d acetylene torches gouged 3 They say the location is a "reduce by over 300,000 the former Maidu cemetery which safe through a concrete wall th t cd number of new r e c 0 rd s cy wan prcserv . established each year," he in the offices or miUionaire in· Writing Reagan in a letter .said; and "if economically duslrialist Norton Simon and issued to the press Saturday, feasible to conduct an actual escaped with more tha n the state's chief election or· purge oC the files, it is $90,000 in bonds, securities and ficer also criticized plans to -"·"-... ed.that neer,ly 5 million, · build fl wine cellar, sauna and ~ .... uai. foreign ; currency, authorities f h · cards could be purged from gym as part o t e mansion. the master fingttprinl rue and said. ~ over 2 million folders from the Police said the robbery at "AT A TIME when our state record folder file. the Wilshire Boulevard office taxes are :ikyrocketing, it is ".ntf!se figures reflect ia was discovered Saturday night outrageous to build a virtual reduction in file size in excess Taj Mahal for the governor,'' by company vice president h 'd B dded th t h of 50 percent." e sa1 . rown a a e Robert ~fcFarland, but, it was ravored locating th<! new not reported until Sunday mansion near the state Capitol afternoon. · in downtown Sacramento in· ,....,.., ___ ,,_..,_ CHOIR SEES GOOD, B AD McFarland said the dtlay in stead or at the proposed reporting the lhefr'· was suburban site several miles because or a misunderstanding away. betwei!n himself and building "If the governor's mansion -security offlcers, with each is built on this si te, the LOS ANGELES (AP) - A thinking the other would building will stand for all to Norwegian girls' choir now report it. see a!I a shameful monument knows first-hand some or tbel;====================::;I good and bad or America. As the 8G-meml>er San- def jonl choir sang t a s t weekend of love and God's works, a sneak thief in an ()ffstage church room was emptyt,. their purses of all their spending mooey -Sl,800 -on the first stop of a 21-day CaUfomia tour. "Many were so saddened they just stood and cried," said Grete Helen S la n g • soprano SQOllst. "Some or the girls llad worked so long to save their money." · The freshly scrubbed lasses, tears sMU marring ~ cheeks, had boarded tbolr bu• at the Whlte Memo r ial Seve!Mh-Day Adventl!t Church in subUrban Boyle Heights when the minister rushed up. Out ol breath. a smiling Rev. Ronald Shorter handed the girls a check to oover the loss, expJalnJng t he con- greg1Uon audience of 2,200 llad rat.sea the money on the 'f>Ot upon hearing of tJ>e milfortune. · The girts, aged 10 lo ti. cheered and were on their way again. Singing. · Bay Strike Continues OAKLAND (AP) -The Bay Atta Rapid Transit system strike enters Its aecood week today with the major !Aue of "'I' equallullon r.malninl .-tied. N°""taton for about 1,200 strikin& tran1ll woril:en and the Bay Atta Rapid TrlUllll dlltrtct met for nine hout1 · S..ndly and ldleduled 1nother 1ts1k>n for today. The strike by Ualted PUbllc Employ.. Loco! 1111 and Amalgamated TraJlllll Unloo Local 155& IJoCan Jut MondOY wlth a walkout which Jett about 11.000 East San Fran- cJeeo Bay area. commut.er1 to find ..i .. mallvo lranlportlllon • IF THE GENTLEM AN IS·AELUCTA NT to buy himself a diamond ring, w hv. r don't you d0 jt foi .ntm? After all, the ~are passing-and w hy shouldn't he • w;ear the V101':ld's most desired gem? \~: Brilfllot diamond in 14 karat white 9 ,$760. 81 S8ven·di8mond cluster in ;>;ot!-gold. $650, C. Striking ~i~ i4ker~I ve!!ow gold,.$825 . ·0o· Something l!eautttul ... CJll ..... A°*""' hl'rltM -A-rk•11 ll!'"'t .....,_luN .. Mettw CM .......... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644·1380 Wllfl IOClllof\f 9f1 l orr-t, Or•""ll•• l t CtPPotot, U H••r.-AllMI a..n 0"80 .,., l•s v..... ... \ • GIANT 4 FOOTYARDSiiCK! 101 u_ses: Measure ~hildren, dogs, trees, fabrics, plywood. what·have·you. Great for hu sband's.do·it·yourself jobs and wives at home. An education al gift ideal for teaching children measurements ... yours free at the Big M where you always get an extra measure of service. tOne ptr fomi~>. odultl on~. pkase.J (fJJmE ~ Look at these valuabl• free services- 0 Free Safe Deposit Box D Free Photocopy Service O Free Travelers Cheques O Free Notary Service O Free Note Collection• • u.i1h quatlfying bokinc<! 2018 1ytar1lrm'I. $t00> mlnlmUl"tll Now nea ri ng a half-century of service to Southern California savers. the Big M-Mutual Savings, is almost half-a-billion dollars strong ".and still gro";ng with three new offices this year! Now 9 offi cei: Canoga park· Chatswort h. Capis trano-San Clemen te, Corona de! Mar, COllina, Glendale, Pasadena, Thousand Oaks, Vista, West Arcadia'. ~ r . I!' ~ ' iJi THE BIG M MUTUAL SAVINGS C..-dd MIC 2867 Eut C:O.st Hlghw1y/67S.SOIO • RobcrtO.Alloo.- • ! . v .. .. r. .: ., ' ' ' , •1 / lncaraendbuR~ 'L.--~------~--~~----ll-~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~-~~-~-~--~~~-~~~~--~~-~~~~~~-~~~ I • • I I ' I DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I• . P olicing Froni Overheaa . - When Orange County law enforcement agencies · began proposing helicopter patrols several years ago, a number of good arguments were advanced for over· r head-policemen..-- _, The.r were per:suasive arguments. City councils in Huntington Beach, Anaheim, Newport Beach and Costa Mesa were convinced that helicopters could be a usefUl tool in law enforcement, crime prevention and lifesav· ing. The Dally Pilot was among tho\e persuaded that the overall benefit or helicopter patrols outw~ighed their nuisance as noise-makers and their potential threat to privacy. Today, we may not be quite as convinced th~t the investment is as good as we had reckoned, but all ut all the pro-helicopter arguments still stand up. Still, we~d like to make these observations: -We seem to have too m~ny aircraft available in some areas and far too few in others. -The police departments with helicopters 11\ve been unable -or unwilling -to <:OJJ.SOlidate the ex· pensive maintenance programs required by helicopters. 'ne cit,ies of Newport Beach, Costa !desa ~nd Huntington Beach have two helicopters pach 1n service. Huntington Beach is buying a fixed·wing aircraft and has taken possession of three high·perfonnance heli- copters from the Army -a ~ath~r silly d~isi~n in o.ur view and certainly an expensive item cons1der1ng main· tenance and pilot training involved. Newport ·. Beach's chief helicopter -pilot, "Scotty'' itcGregor, said bluntly last week that these cities ha.ve more than enough helicopters. In fact, he; ~id, six police helicopters could service . the e~tire co~nty .. ~cGregor wa s speaking with some 1mmun,ity; ~e is ret1r1ng . from police work to fly for the Californ1a Park Service. McGregor's ex-boss, Newport Police Chief B. James Glavas, strongly disagrees. He sees helicopters as "functional and operational" tools that have been tremen· dously effective in preventing cr\!n•. apprehend.Ing criminals and performing public se~ices. GLtvu·aay~lhe that helicopters should he viewed as an extremely e(- lective unit of a police department and that ,there. e!· licacy would he too sharply reduced 11 they, were under simultaneous demand from different agencies. Glavas's arguments undoubtedly are backed up by police cl)iels in Huntington Beach and CosLt Mesa . .All " 1n all, it is up to each community to de~ne if it wants -and can afford -overhead, police units. And that's the rub. In areas where helicopters - and fixed-wing craft -could be most -effective, they aren't even in use . Air patrols of rural and mountain areas of Orange County would be many times more efficient and effec- tive than ground patrols. ·And they could prove invalu- able law enforce'nient toots·in communities such as Mis- sion Viejo, San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente and La- guna Beach. For' an air poli~ :,system to be effective in these areas, the Orange County Sheriff's Ollice probably would be the only agency capable of making it work. Unfortun· ately, Sheriff James Musick flatly rejects such a proposal. He sees no need for aerial police and it is ironic that the are.a his ground units patrol surpass by far the areas covered by the nine aircraft in the coastal cities. Even weighing the noise nuisance and invasion of privacy factors, law enforcement agencies can and should make effective use of them. A countywide study of each community's needs is the only way to balance the situ· ation. Plainly, it doesn't make sense 1.o have 11 aircraft covering one.fourth the county's iarea (Anaheim, Costa r.tesa, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach)., while the rest of the county relies on conservative and less efficient systems. In short: Too much in some places, too little in others. I " , , 1<1~M UNLIMITI,,!!! SADISM UNMAS KEP! • ·~T ~Ci! JUST~ WE WI1E BUill<Ull*i TO SORE PEOPlE !' \ ' t I I I I I I I • I • I . . , I • -HtJW to Win In This Banal Show, Only -S.en. Sam Hlls Class: 1--+-o-_,_.~,uOSMe7J--;;::-;;;:;;;~~~;---~~-=---=-~=--=---:-~~~~~~~ 1 The Roman Repubiic was almost TJ G T d • S C • tnertg11nime;-Rorr,-ycnnnustn't-sa,)'-'-1no1---~ A Tax Battle overthrown by Catiline (Lucius Sergius ie reat ra ing tamp onspiracy cotiommn. ent" until they've, asked the q""'I'' To the Editor: Sunday I went to the Stop ··and ~ Markel to buy a si1pack of beer. It 1s located at 146th Street and Balboa Boulevard in Newp>rt Beach. When I wiu checking out at the cowiter I told the clerk that I wished ·ooiy to pay 5 percent sales tax. He thought J was kidding. I told him that J ,· was quite serious and that he didn't have to sell it ao me I! he dido 't w1nt to. I went home with the beer. This momlng I picked up a book about President Nixori In the HI-Low · Drug St0tt at Magnolia and Adams in Han- tington Beach. I asked the clerk as I checked out 1f then was sales tax on book!. She llilll yeo. I told her that I would like to buy the b o· o k but that I ooly wilbed to pay 5 percent sales tax. She refused. I suggested that ( ___ MAIL_B_ox___.J she cbecL with her riianager. She re- fused. 'Ibey lost a $1.50 sale fo1 one cent. /uJ I did my grocery shopping at the Lucky Market, I carefully separated the taxable item5 from the food iterm. When I approached the clerk, I asked her to check out the two orders separately. 'Ibe food items were ft0 .26 and I paid for them wtth my checlc. Before she started to check out my second order 1 told the clerk that I had been shopping there for four years, I wanted the Items, valued at about SIO. but that l only wished to pay 5 percent sales tax. SHE CONSIDERED it, and requested a person, whc 1 believe was the assistant manager of the store, for advice. He con- sidered it and soon the manager joined our group. He thought that it was against I.he Jaw to charge me only 5 percent sales tu. J told him to pay the government a few cents leu. They had my name and address and it was quite simple that it was I, not they. who would owe Governor Reagan the few cenls and that he was free to try and coUect it if he wished. I k!ft without my beer,~gin and waste basket that I wanted to put out in front of the ilCRlse. After I returned home and put my groceries away, I went across the street to the Bal Port Liq uor Store. J asked the clerk if he believed in capitalism and democracy. lie said that he did. I told hlm that I wanted one bottle of gin; ooe sixpack or beer, and two peci:ages or cigaretles bot that I would only pay five percent sa les tax. He agreed. After I had written my check and had the Items, he laughed and said that tbey hadn't started charging the 6 percent anyway and that was the reaaon \bat he had no JlfOblem making lhe decision. I told him the .. me story I bad told the manqer at the Lucky Marktt:-'He said that be couldn'l avoid poylng the 6 per· cent sinoe he had lo pey for the tax and the goods at the same time. 1 WU in busJ.neA 10 years ago and l couldn'l believe what he was saylna. The bullnes$man pays the customer's lax in order to malntaln an Inventory! Al I left I remarked , "After you change over to 5 percent. I hope that l havt 1 place to buy my gin." ARTH UR 0 .• WEIMAR Co11a Mtaa ~lice record.$ dilclost tl1ai otJ Jul11 4 -two da11s aft(fr. wriL-. ' Ing th is letter -Mr. lVelmer was •arrested and jailed for refusing to pou tile 11ew one-cent aale1 '" 011 a ,J.75 h(l1'tburger snack at Uo's Co/· /•e Shop. The clwr,ge wm cU/rotiding o.n tnt1 kteper. -Editor I , I Calilina), 1()8..26 B.C., a consplriitOr of . 1 i~~~~~~. stahiture h~a!..s!_cerhlo coulfro d chair and an ottoman. holy God, did they been doing ii. lie says of his April ta It is a tribute to their own treachery the ·Senate and stopping his plot. 'l.'he 1 a Y rou 1ve 1 e e peop e meeting with Mr. President that "the in-o! Dean-, American R<public was almo.t reduced in lho televisi6n coriimerdAIS1 Talk VON HOFFMAN teresting thing thit happeri<d during the Do you ··remember the part · 8 Juuuon.adze m w e ""I '' ... g m m do •t II so the Id 1· J'k Jh ) ( J 1 joward each other that they got canaht about Ute banaJit-,.r of evil, what we ha. ve • be testimony where Dean, Haldeman and to a Presidential aul· -" conversation was VefY near the end, Ehrlichman are sitting around the White archy by a collection ,.zT-'f'\ here is the evil ot banality. got up out of his -chair ... and· in a near· House· trying to figure out how they can rt twerps and pi~ f' • ' De ·ded he Jy inaudible tone said ao me ht was JrOlr frame Mitchell and "smoke him out'' in· ... _ .....,. cessfully peri·ure his way 1),,_.,.,),, the ably foolish to have ~diJcussed Hunl's .......... '& squeaks. .. ( • f SVCH DEGRADED people. QJbon hires merce partment provi can sue-to + .. i.; .... all tbe blame? Consider that Senator Sam uc-HWlt, his old friend,. )tho performs hi s . . , '· -~ they are in cootrol of the.cops, tbl: FBI, served better than a ... despicable tricks, but they're friends', ... StulQ!'Waterg.«e ~s: · · ~ · · clemency with Colsoo." the CIA, the Justice Deparlmoot and at bunch of conspira· their families are friends, Ind tben~)f1?i 1":' :."~ bave MaP."U~.~· ~ ~ •• ~. What was he doing, trying to get out of least one crucial judge, and they can 't ltorsust'~driftedsni!!llnelo~l Hunt dies in the Chicago airpJane·qash bis lawyen .wtielf be "l'il9pec" ICI ~cro~:.,~~~~~~ia::;: make the fix stick. Their mutual Senator Baker mer-scattering Mexicaa ~ _blackmail· money · ~_peg(>ai1~,;~~·sJ~ both "'-them baCking •WlliY from -eac mistrust is to great they have lo tur;n I .•• -·~--sav· .. ~\/er ttu:ee acre_s, ~ dln!t decide laced with .a~ that they're set· other's tape record en. fJ&cb other in and rat. wt ...... ., u.... Whether or not lo to the 'Mier I •t • · • ' Catiline was a classic conspirator ing the r e p u b 11 c from men who So a · .,. ling him up. · ' . ~. ·-· ' · be klen J.¥> of. had 00 _ _._ scheme in mind l"J&lh, he sends his~secretary:with a let· THE STUPIDITY! They .hire a guy to brought down m 1t bGo f e~ an !i......... ter. Nice people. A FINE BU'Nf;H. rapiitg eaeJi,~otlJertii • go burglarize Ellsberg's doctor's office aristocratic repub ic Y )it5 oremost man than skimming $4,850 (wby µ.e ez-or-·-·. th!'s ..,. -...... ••• , versi·oo o! the pho . Can . . d b h the CIA . hi of law and letters. ISO') f their ),,_.,.. Whe ........ ...., ~· ne cooversations.. you unagme an l ey ave give m a tra · or '""""J''"oons. n events. We haven't heard from Colson wfiat' those Wliite··HoU!e; ·staff fueeOnP camera to take pictures of the Senator Sam is .a classiC American Cicero finished off Catiline In tha1 oration yet, and · Dean hates 'COison; ·and must have been like? They all t.ome in documents. Instead, he poses in frmt of Whig, one of ~ long line of · Southern, which school boys still sludy, was Mrs. Ehrlichman and Kleindienst' hate each with · tape recorders m· their·· 'POckets. the building, has a snapshot takeo for lhe . cowrtrified, Protestant constitutionalists. Catiline sittipg behind him , looking like a other, and Magruder . and Liddy and Next .you_ hear .~ ser)es ~ cli.~ as .. tQey scrapbook, and leaves the film in the an exemplar of a type that we Castro Convertible sofa, done In gold· h1itchell, so you can't be sure who's ten· tum 'them on, and' then what?' Are ittie camera. egalitarian Americans cherish even when neck upholstery? ing the truth. A 94fe rule, however, is to conversations constantly interrupted by And that poor, puppet.headed Ziegler. we disagree.' He is confronted with the Here a buck, there a buck. Dean was believe the._ ...,,.orst and the Jacklest. the beeps from the machines· signaling For him the motto around the White Great Trading Stamp Conspiracy, the ex· making petty trades in • Suburban real We have ~lagrudcr coming to the. they!ve nm out of .tape, or.do they sneak'· House seems to have been, "Don't tell ecutive trainee, corporate boardroom, estate to furnish his house, and his White House and asking, according to off· into the washrooms every 15 ·« "20 the dwnmy a thing.'' Even so they had to shopping-center franchise plot. master is chiseling the public treasury for Dean, if they'll give him a better job minutes to check thei r apparatus? rehearse him every day so they could be ·The matchup offends poetry and de- money to buy himself a rug, a lounge than Assistant Third Out at the Com-If Dean's right, evi:n Nizon may have sure he'd say, "No romment on that" al means the dignity of history. Postal Service Fired Too Many Too Quickl y . WASHINGTON -With the price ol mailing a letter likely to reach 10 cents early next year, the Senate Post Office Committee is taking a hard look at the decline in delivery service. The results of the postal investlgatloo aren't due to be reported to the Senate witil Aug. 31. A progress report, however, bas been submitted to Chair· mao Gale McGee, 0.. Wyo. Here iare the confidential findings: -The new postal managen put cutting costs ahead of Im· proving service. "At the management lev· el," stat., the ~ ~ repott;-'a con.spit"UOUs over· emphasis of co,,t-cutting produced severe ~terioratiCNl in postal service stand· ards." -ln their eagerness to economize. the officials also went On. a firing spree before mechanitatlon was ready to replace manpower. "Management," states the report, "erred 'in cutting back personnel . . . Pifanagement severely underestimated manpower needs." -"By the Spring of t973," adds the report, "the overall profile d. the post.al service was an uneven one. 111ere was evidence of improvement ovenbadowed Dear Gloomy G.us H Jvlit Nixon E1""1"'-doetn't keep quiet 1he'll make the Dean's Lis~ ' P.O. by areas of deterioration ." NEVER111El..ESS, (.ongress hasn't given up on the postal reorganization, which . transformed the J>c.t Office Department into an independent govern· ment corporation. 11Memben were unanimous in not want· ing control o! the Pool omc. in the hands ol Congress again," declares the report. '"Jbere ts no indicaUon that a change of heart by the Members has taken place.'' P.1eanwh.ile, Senate investigators have · compiled ''a corWdtrable list" ol postal bottlenecks, which they would like to in- vesti~te. These include "the genertil post offices at New York, Chicago, Oa kland.San Francisco, D e-!r o It ; Cleveland . Philadelphia, At I ant a , tlouston, Columbus, Ohio, and others. "The stall will be making trips (tl, these postal centers) following the July 4 recess and dwing August," according 1to the interlm rePorl This will be lollowed by rtglooal hear- ings in "some of the problem areu" end . a "linal set o! wrap-up publlc hearlnp In Washington with tbt Post m 11 i er General. "'!be purpose here Is lo puD all ol the strings tog<ther before ~ 111111 tVlluation.,, BIBLE EMBEZZLEM.SNT' T h e Jwtlce Department has now cof1finned, in !JOrdld detail. our chargts 1gablst el· Rep. J. Irving Whalley, R·Pa .. lnol$;1g the astonishing ract that he used 1 al kickback mooey to purchase gift Bib es ror constituents. A clM'ch elder and former United Na.- tloos dcleg.r•. Whalley was ")>00<4 by us ln September. 1971. as the architect of one of lhe mos t pecuUar klck~k schemes lhat ever fiouri3hed on 'capitol mu · Jurtlce Department sleuths In Plti. burgh ·and w.,hington, supported by paiMtaking f'-BJ l''Ork, discovered that . 1 ..• Banal or Not, It's Costing Us a Bundle ttl(.u, 1'•, Mrs. Mftchtlll •• , No, Mrs. Mltr:li.il , •• · ·Y•, MFS. Mltth,flll •• : ' the fonner congressman reqllired biS aides to buy handlome Bibles out of. their own (JOCketl and -them out to vciten In his district as ii they came frorii Whalley. W~SHINGTON -Enjoy It while you can. As a taxpayer, it's costing you plen· ty. . "At least $100 million" is the estimarea cost of_ the TV·spectacular Water@:ate in· vestlgatlon and the numerous . yet • to • come prosecutioN. That's the "con1ld· ered opinion" ot a veteran member ot the Senate i\ppro- priations Conbiilttee -who hu bid a lot or lnvOllJiatlng experience a n d Is thoroa.dliY knoWledpable about their cost. Satci he mildly, '"'lbe men lenl8· tional ., lnvestllatlon, the higll<s' the price tag. Thlt~afways happens; the two go together." TAUaNG anonymously, foc !rankly admJtted Political reasons, the veteran !egislator based his opinian · that the Watergate probe and prosecutions will CO!Jt $100 million or mon! on three fac· HIS EM?LQY~ also paid from their tors: 1 salaries kir ~expensive funeral floral (1) They are "open end· operations"; sprays Whaliey sent to bereaved families that.is:, there is no Ihit on~ spend· and the "courtesy!' advwtilemenb be ing. Observed the ~ """''· "Who purchued In fairground programs. not to is going lo say, no )o lhoni oo their mention Ids casollne bllla and parting bu<lget? Waterglite ls'dynamlle and no fees. one . dares open hia mouth about ln- In ooly one cue, however, did Whalley vesttptlq and l<(a.I O'.Jll'llldlW. Tbat ..,uy tal:o large-ol .... from -be rlDlnr polltleol oulclde." his employe1 and pat ll la< bis own (l)Bollltbell"iclal-lnveltlpdnc poolet. Ile broull!ll fill -.. to -wu.e one! sptdal p r o s e c u t or WahiJtlt9n to ..n I• blm lmt paid tbe Arddbold en a)reody have WI' - stlllry ou\ 11 poiml <fundl lo -1 ol laW1"". IC<OUnlants and var1om the nepotism. But altenranl, WbalJoy other -1allm, and are likely lo et· relmbuned ld-11 by IC(UOOlfng the poild them as they pl'oc:eed. Ncited the money fr*rl hll ~· , Senator, •11'\at alway1 h 1 pp e n s . 1be J\DUce Dljilr1meot 1\as drifted Congr"91onal Investigations and these cha!'l'I alleclnl lllat Wllallty made false kinds of pn!OCClltlons invariably pro- st1temeats 1bOlC tbe kk:ltbecks and literate. There 11 •lways aOmethlng mott ordered 1 Waterg1te-1tyle <..'OftNJP rt.o to explore, Ad tl>INIMe elJe ao prose.. quiring two o( hlt'llalfm to give falH cute." ( ''!''"' statementa to the Houae Ethics (Sl 1be Jnveaugatlon wt11 run lor torluftltteo. months, ind the penecutl,.. for years . 11\ the cour• of our investtiation S&ld the Senator, "As a gueu. J would ha've spoken to ~ aever-1 tl;;s~ say Cox will still be busy ln the couns He hi• repeoledly deniff any lnlentlooal when \!'< Bl""'l'ennlal ( lr7e) comfl wrongdoin(. The -ted thl -·'· ~ '~" ' • chronic: heart JlfOblem, b now probably "I KNOW this IOUTids cyni<ll, but It I• too fragile to OUlllln I prison 8'tll<net. a !act ol Ille thot three o[ ti-sewn j ~-·-..... i (ROBERT S.~LENJ ,Senators al'e up for reelection next year. foremost amcng lhcm Ervin, who i~ ,,. anrl all of them are acutely aware of the value <A this kind of limelighting. I would strongly suspect that al ready at least t 1'. \l of them have budding presidential a1n· bitions." Pressed for the identity of the tv.'o possible .presidential candidates. the: Crank-talking Senate veteran laughingly shrugged, "Oh, you know them as well as J do. You've been around. It's written all over them." "Baker and Welcker?"' (Senators Howard Baker, R·Tenn., vice-chainnan and son·in·la\v of the late Senate Republican Leader Everett Dirben · Lo\vell \lleicker, R-Conn., 6 -f o 0 t . $ member or a wealthy family, Yale oarsman, who parlayed one tenn in the H~se ~ a seat ln the Senate in 1970). ~at s a pretty good guess. They're showing all the symptoms." DAILY PILOT ·r1:------........J \ .I • I I I I I I I I I I I I \. I I • . I • • • MOtlday, J11ty CJ, 1973 DAILY PILOT By Phil lnterlandl G~~-Short_age: Step Toward Monopoly? " . .... ..... . • . ii; l/lllel ..... -·-·· dependent M'Vtce slationl have been told to clOle 'down .witlifu 10 Uys. , with ollck public relaUons. ed directly or Indirectly !tom the major oil companies, he said. may lose thei r crop1 unless there is Immediate relief. that three ba llalions of about t , 100 men were serving two- week slints in Pltassachusetta rather than Virginia to sa\'e the gas used to transport them. .A opo11....... lor the ... depmdml wvlce 1tallon opera!On bu cbarpd lhat major plOliae flrma are ua- h>tl • small fuel ......... lo lalle • " giant ,A1<1J loWanl , mooopoly. . . "Tbele owners have in- vestments rA between SU,000 and ql,000 at •take," be aald, and asked , for mandatory government conlrola on alloca· lions and 90 dayt notice for tennina1ion. In o_tber deve)opment.s, a NOrlh Carolina ofllctal said Jock of fuel woold hurt the loba«o crop, and I h • Massachusetts national guard announced plans to -c u t gasoline consumption during summer ei:ercises. Victor G r a y , legislaUve d~ed« ol the -l!'ann Bureau, recommended that ' government Impose at tbe earliest possible <date a man- datory fuel allocation system. Graham said in a statement "no encouragement has been giva to these are.is as to when fuel can be erpected. . .Thert is little doubt that serWus crop losses will occur unless ste~ re taken now by those who control the rue! sup- ply." In addition, he said, the guard lw ordered that uniVI traveling as far as Texaa for summer camp be sent by bus and plane rather than truck convoys. . ~'tJa·rry, 1·ctOn·( \~'ant tO .. nag, blll remember, WE'.RE compulei"·tnatchecf. '' ...... ' , L.M. BOfld . . Western Writer .. ' . ' Really D~ntist ·Was reported that breast c.ancer ~ women ~rs~~ often in the left breast than ID the nght. A client . &Us if this is true worldwide. It. is. The difference ii\. foreign -counbies ·is even greater"Also. wuna.nied~." ln~ United States seem to have a.much loWtt left-kH'tgbt ntio· thin wiVei, even though they"te far more likely to contract said ailment. ia e ts sa a Junior who becomes a doctor ougbtnot use the "Jr." a ter s name 1ess bis dad is a doctor, too. , Whether you have wisdom teeth also depends on YQUI' ancestors. Almost all West Africans posseu same. But numerous folk of Asian origin Jack that set of third molars. Rare even among seasoned citizens is that soul who knows novelist Zane Grey _was a dentist, football coach Knute Rockne was a-Cllemlstry teach- er, pilot Amelia Earbarl was a social w«ker, writer Mary Roberts was I riurse. Q. CIWHO'S the better public speaker, President Nii:on or Gen Sec. Brezbnev?" .· A. Am not qualified to judge .. Still, yeur qnery caHs to mind the reply offered, by Queen Victoria when asked which was the better, GtadStooe or Disraeli. Said she: "Glad· stone ta1ks to me as if I were a public meeting. Disraeli' can address a public meeting as though it were an indivi- dual." Q. "Do clams have hearts?" A. Yea, and blood vessels, too. ONCE A YOUNG man whips bis teen year.s, fights his . way through.his 20s, then overpowers hiS 30s, it's generally believed he's about ready to Settle down. That's WJ'OOI, evidently. Exactly 72 percent of all buSbands who nm away from their wives are between the ages or 40 and 50. Surprisingly, the statisticians now report that guns Ille just about as common nationwide as coffee pots ... It's t.he stated opinion of the stargazers that men who most readily do their share of housework are born under the sign of Cancer ... Slits in the backs of men's suU coats originated to let horsemen spread their. ~t tails when mounting up . · Not much pleases an elephant mor'e tfian a ·chicken that's running back and forth across its head. A zoo man told me that. For some reason, he said, the elephant finds the flutter Of fowl feet on its dome somewhat soothing. Address mail to L . M. Boyll, P.O. Box 1875, New· port Beach, Ca lif. 92660. State Says Buzzers On Cars l111p<?riant ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state wants auto dealers to refrain from te1ling customers bow to circumvent seatbelt warning buzzers, the director 4 of the Department of Motor Vehicles says. passenger....,to circumvent the warning ooner. Also , some salesmen have indicated will- ingness to provide a device or clip to apply to the retracta:Ne bell lo elimlna1e the wlnllng buzzer, or even suggest to a buyer how the buuer can be disConnected." IN RALEIGH, N o r t b Lee Auer, acting executive director ol the M ,i 1 a u r i 'Congrea of Petroleum Retailen, told memben of the }louse •R]All business energy subcommlttee at a hearing in St. Louis that some in- AUER SAIO lh• bi« sup- pliers were using an alleg~ 5 percent shortage to gain a monopoly and covering it up Rep. John Y. McCollster (R· Neb.), said at the St. Louis bearing that oil companies now have "ultimate control of supplies." Ninety-nine percent of all service station,, are leas- Carolina AgricuJture Com- missioner Jim Graham said fuel supplies in S9me tobacco producing areas of the state are so critical that farmers Gen. •towarct Elliott. who oversees the U.S. Anny sum· mer cam p operations for the n a tion al gua rd i n ~1assachusctts, said Thursday The general said the total amount or gasoline saved .,.,·ould not be available until all nicn had completed tours. ' <'!; ,. • For to celebrate the opelling of our Newport Beach office Slll¥e ap 1D $24 a yeart• When you ~a Oieqdng Account for $100 ormore·at our Newport Beach of· • ' , ··1 1(j.1 ~ fice on or before August 31, 1973,' charge. If your minimum balance falls below $100, your account win be transferred from Free Checking ., to one of our other convenient checking account plans .. .rid maintain.a $100 minimum bal· • 111Ce,you'll get free personal.a,J!eck· ing. You11 be able to write as many cheeks as you want , e<ich month and never have to pay a monthly service •"Free Personal Checking" could save some of our customers up to $24 a year and some customers of other banks even more. Be sure to visit us during Open House Week July 9 through July 13. Open a Savings Account We're giving away for 550 or more and ~ 10 HEAD TENNIS RACQUETS! receive-FREE... \. '"'!,\ 10 TENNIS BAGS! 48 CANS OF · . TENNIS BALLS! YOUR OlOICE OF 1. "The Book of Tennis" by the editors of World Tennis Magazine, 21 Two cans of Tennis balls, 3. Sunset's, "Beachcomber's Guide to the Pacific Coast," 4. Sunset's, "How to Fisli the Pacific Coast,'' 5. Sunset's, "California Wine Country,'' or . 6. Sunset's, HSeafood Cookbook." Free drawings for Valuable Prizes On "lucky Friday the 13th"! FREE for everybody! A copy of "STAN SMITH'S TENNIS TIPS." Refreshments! will be served all during Open House Week. Our two drive-up teller windows mean fast service without even leavi ng your car. Or when you c ome into the bank, there's a large parking area for our customers. 0 ~ • " ' CUrrently buzzers are re- quired,, by Jaw on new model cats so that motorist~ have to ----------1 buckle up if they want to SOO.t Advwrtllement Fill out your entry and put It In the entry box in our .lobby before 4 p. m. Friday, July 13. You need not be pres· ent atAhe drawing to win. " f oil the buzzer noise. "Telling customers !low to silence theSc devices is a dis- service · to them," Robert Cozens said In a statement. Jie wrote three m a j o r Butomobile dealer assdci.ationS saying: "We are advised that often a salesman will show a potentJal buyer how to fasten the bellS together behind a NowManyw-· F.ALSE TEETH Wlih M-Colllfoit ,,.,.-..-.;-....... ~ - ...... •utUl• ..... ...s: ..... 1-11'.~p.. ... 11oW. T• tw .-a r 691 ... --·--· FASTSSTB Ddte9 AiMllllllft pofts. n.e:-dllA•-.:;: u ........... 819799 _ .. .,. · semi-ennuel cle~_rence! '250/e' te ,50~ off _;. .. Mle ••rc••lllMI selection• from every depertmenfl gr9et 1avin91 on- 1 ort coetsl sport shirts! dress sleeks! •••h ,r,c~s! dress <Shirts! knit shirts! tiesl sweaters! gifts! end m•ny more ... PLUS ..• our greet ~•rg•in teble-..._,.,.. ..,.., ...... @j~jlj~ Drive-up window banking hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday· Thursday. 9 a. m. to 6 p .. m ... fa:idar.; . Regular banking hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Thur.;day. 10 a. m. to 6 p. m. Fridays. Wemakeba • 1401 Dove Street, Newport Place, NeWport Beach, California 92660 (714) ~511 Warren P. Thompson, Vice President and Manager , .., ....... en ,, ... ..-w,c, J easy. I ~ " < u < ~ I I I DAil V PILOT ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF l\10RTUARY tZ7 E. l'llh Si., Costa f\1~a -• BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del 1'1ar 1'1i-MSI Costa l\fesa 14&-ZCM • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\1esa u 3-3433 • 'lJLDAY BROTHERS MORTUMlfES l7tll Be•cb Blvd. , uuot1ng100 B..,da semr Uf Redondo Ave. 1.oa1 BM<b 1-1111 • ~<eCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17" La-C..)'1Ml ftd. IH-Mll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAi, PARK Cemetery~ MOl'1ll•ry :1511 Pac~~lew Drive Newport Bodi. Callfor•lll SU-mt • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL .. HOME • '7Hl',BolA Ave. Weslmlaster M-3525 • S~IITllS' MORnJARY 11%1 Mola SI. llcmtln,ton Beadl S3M53I PUBLIC NOTICE ••CTIT,OUS •vs•N•11 NAMI STATIM•MT toOOWll'lf' prrlOll• It tllolnv Mint" , .. 11: CALIFORNIA PIGGYIACI( sea v. ICE. inn •ot.1 Chit• ltd.. Hltft> 11"11"'4t•cll, c1111or1111 nut Mlc~11I Dile W'ltllf, 171n tolM Cllk1, Hunlfflllon &Md!., C1lll • .,..,, Tllll tllllll'llH 11 cllf'lllW.ttd DT In Ii.. dlvld1>1I. Mll(E WILLIS Tri.II llllfmtlll WU llJfld wit h thl. (Ollrt ty Clltk ti Of1"99 COllnty on JuM 21, 1'n. ·-· Publlll'led Or1fllf CNll Diiiy ,!IOI, J-JS -Jul¥ J, t. 16, 1971 IN1·7l PUBUC NOTICE l'ICT\TlOUI •Ulllll•ll NAMC ITAT•M•MT Tiii lollowlng --.,.. ooi,.,. Ill/I!-It: r • COMl'OllT COMPANY, DJ Na!1lt ltd., Lltlllll &Heh ,.,, Gltncl• Glrmoot. :IOU N•t1n ltd .. Ltfllfll Btt<I\, C1Hf. Culdl Fn!er, U1 Alt• Viti• W•'I· L1flll'lll BtlCh, (1111. '2411 Tri.I• bulll\t1$ IJ <OlldllCfed by' I '11'1tf'll ~tlnertll!p Gltfld1 G•! '"°" Molld&)', Juf1 9, l'J73 PUB UC i'I011CE • PIJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NartCE ---o::;:=:=:;-::::;:::;=---f·-----:::---::-::-:::--l---'--'--'--'--------11----;,;;...,;;;T;;;;j,iiiiUI01"1";, .. ..,jii--,ICTITIOUf •vtl•nt: 'l<TfTtoUS Mtll... ,."1'"1-..... ·~I rtJ/mf6TW -_ _ ...... Jt.:::Wf.,. wt• lltAMa ITAT.Ml.,Y MAMa .,...,..,. • tutialfOll' -ntl ""' ,_.,,.,.. ,.,..... .,. ,,.. TM iollowltlo ""'°" )• dOll'lt IWtlr*' l lilt ........ ,.....,. ... ._ctolJll l ffM"I Ol'·CM. lA ,._ Wll-•: • t;::-.n --~1 Oll!CATllSflf, -e. u : AOA EQUI PMfJllT ~lNTAL •• 171fl ""'1~·1 1un0tt llCUtttTY, + .. '"' ~ ::'*""" .:.;-,.:;., 0~=. '&...... ~ ~ "..,,_.,, e--.. Matt h!Kll 9 1\'d., H,,.,.tll'IQ!on lt.u., f2MI ~ fl .. C .... Mo9M, C..111. fflDI CMtN• TO wtOW c.AW• ,.1 CMA... ""1 "" --Ofh 1171 W. ""'8 Niii• C.•lot '4o11¢i..a. 1'113 14111 St.. J.-n '''°' JM!fllllftl, nt ~It. °' ........ ,,_. L .. .,..,., ..... ~L.... • .. , ...,_.., Clflt, ,_ ~i:;t~::;. C~fl~ bY tn In-Cotll ,,,_ .. , C.ilf. ntM ,...,.,, Lo...-..... ...--""""" o.11, 1m w. '-"'• Alllt. dlVhlw t ao111it11 LIWh T-, Ut .. ~. In "'9 M.ltt« t//I "-...,,.k.,._. t//I ~-..i..-............. c.,, 1 nt· At11 .. AfW91•, c.llt. '1• ....,._ C•f'IOf Jlll(Mf Afl-'111,... QUI.~ DILOltlS "" tfOl.IMAN. .__.,. c.lltwl'!il) °""""" l'.wtNI'• > MtlllnY vMir.. 1m w. s.me Tiii• ''•1•l'Mtll ..... " ... wltfl fM c-~~=-1 1• , .. IW • fMl"ll • ww::ea.!' r.:..--:r::: ~ ~~ I •• 'I.. • r ••• w . 'I • AW.. Arc.ti•· CINI. ""!, bY • p"'"'" ty (11<'11 of OrlMI c_.., on J\IM ti. ... JOM ,. Jl'ftllflllM ..._ ,....,........ -.,.,., o~ C•llflnll• .... Tl'llt IMIMtt II (OtlCl\1(1 )f}':J. ....... Tiii• tt1-.f.1 Wit fllM"""' tflt c-::rOfl:cn"' Hos&MAN .. 011 M. Thll ...-•• <11°411Cftd b'f • flmlMd .. ,~~'! v .. 111 Mlhf\H Or•~ c-· 0•11r ~"" "' Clwt!;tif or-. C-ly ... J-'" LIVIMOSTOflO ,.,.....,':":. '-,....,. Tlllt 11~"""""1 Wff flllll With""' couit.• J-2s •lld Jlllv 2, 9, ''· 1tn ""'7> 1m l'oWI IT i.: ~~~ ~ ~ !;: Ofntf'•I l'anMr . _ 1y Clfft .i Orlnff c..S..tv ... J\1119 1~ I l'vtlllthfd Or""fl c.o.tt O•ll'f 1•not. ':: ..._. 11111 CflUl1 1111• -."' .. .,. 1111 Tiii• tt•~ -11• '"""' tflt c 10 1tn ,._. PUBLIC NOTICE J-"· u tN JlillY t..t;!m '"°'" ;111 1111 ., Jut'!, 1m ,,. • (ll.lrt,_ oj ~ Cl«'I "' °'""" GWlt'Y °" J-' '""""'" or.,... c .. ,, D•ll'f '1'°" .• OfHrtmfnl -"°"' :s. M cl<ilc c.....,. m ,..,.. J-11, u •IMI Jwtv t. ,, 1tn 11n·~ l'tCTITIOUI •VllMlll PUBUC N0'11CE Drlv• W..t, c-:i c"' °'-::" Cl~ l"vbll.,.. Orlnot CMd 0111'! ,Hot. Na.Ml tTATIMINT Siftfl AM, Slli. lllfOrfl ll'lllcMftOI JUlll IS tfl Juty f, t 1'-lm lfll•lli----o""'::-::-:::C-:;o;:=:;;;;;--- Tht •01iow1110 PMlOll " 11o1n1 111.1,1,..,, "KTirNM.11 •u•••••• ~.:..!.' .-.."t:111":t ':: ::'!:."' · ' ' PUBLIC NOTICE NA~I ITATIMINT "' ,_.,.,. .,....., Ill h : ALL.• P It 0 OISTltl•VTIWO COM· " ... lOllOWIPlf ""'" I• '°'"' tMlllUt ~ ·~ ~T= t ':!:~ PUBUC NOTICE PAM'I', 24" V11ll HOflr, NtWPOl'I It: RA..,CHO ollVt!ltA. LTD., •JO "'*"tflld 11'1 TM o.!l'y l'llet, 1 STA·IOI 'j:'~.; c~..:.'t° T'*"lltOll. 1'41 • Yltll Ntwfl(ll1 c:.nttr !)fl..... luUt 221. of lf!lll'll drt\lltllon, ,,111t.1 111 Or9"ft l'IC'TITIOUI IUtl•IM •OTIC• °" TllllUSJ.~" $ALI Hooer, N"'1IO'l lrl<JI, Ci. ti..o Nrwiiort •rtcfl. Cl'llfofnl1 OOWl'lty, lllft ef C-lllftmll, fOI' ttur t:; NI.Ml ITATIMINT T.I. Me. TITLE Tllli OUSIMtl II <Oftdw.IMI by i n Ii.. Pll,ll •. L-ldfl, ~r1l P1tt111r, erMh'r weet.t IM'lor 16 fftl C.tt ttl Thi Ill~ H rllOfl 11 OOll"oll 111.rtlMH Ot1 JlllV 11, lt1J, 11 llT:OOC~:~AMY 11 dlvld1,1i l, t20 Nl'WPl"I '"'"' Orlw, 51.lllt m , ""'l"' on"" Pl'ftlloft, 11. INSURJiNCE AND TltUS • IMI J 0 Tll6!'nOMlll NrWllOl'I IHCla. CA 0AT&Dl,J\lftl fl, 1'13. • IU,llll-4 •Hrn Edfllflf W'vkl , 12t d\11, 1ppo1111tc1 Trust.. llfldt~: ... T~ll 11:~1 .,,. !ftMI wllti 1111 Coun. I Tlllt Ml-~~ lllf"lll condVd.i tty I ~-i n:':-1-M. a:'~ 09' Maf, Suitt(, S111 Cl-ti, Ctlll. JIV'l'IUlnl 11 Oeecl ofl T,'11~ flt' In 1, Cl1r~ o1 Or..,,_ County on JuM I•, lmlttd r.~1 ... p. ~ f1fJ1; Olctn'll)tr 11, 1m, 11 M • o, ' d 1t11 1111 "· Lovtr1d91 LI.-P:t-. US 1'1llQ6t, Apt, (, loOOll; 1°""' ~ lU, ot Oflk,111 ·~ .? ' ....... Tllll M11tm•t1I lllH wlf!\ I~ C-ty • ·w Offk• Of "' C OO• '"" 0 .. ~ft< o1 t11r COlll'ltr t<or.,., .,. ---• ·11n et.rnlflll, I • -ft "' • · C oo-•· WO' L S!LL Pvbllihld OrMIOI Con! 01Hy PllOI, Cltrk.ol Or1 ... 1 C-ty Oft! Jiiiy •• 1t71, JOHii K. nt ... ••••' · Thi• loUllllltl 1t b11f11 ~Md b'f' .,, Orlflte Ctur1ty, I ,.,.n,., .. JllM II U Ind Jul'/ 1 ' 1tn 11*7l •Y TMrtl<I M. W11d, 0.PlllY County S .. 11 -IPICll~~ll AT l'UILIC AUCTION TO l'OGHES_! ' ' ' Clfl'll.. •1 Cl'lk C ..... Drlw ... Ltrry .,,_,., 1100£111 R)ll CASH (pl'flbll 11 llrnl "' ~"' ..... M ClitMnM l.w.I"' Thll ... l'lmfflt flllcl 1'1191 11'11 COlll'lfY NII lf'I ll'llfUI .._,. o1 t11r \/nltlll 5111nl 'lllll lthld orloWlll• CO'll 01ltr PU01, Ju-1 ... 1 ..._ C.....,... tt1ll (LAik ef ORftf9 c-tv-Oft! JUlll '°' lm. 11 "" Soutfl tronl 1nlr....:t Ir 11110 ~ 1----------=----llV t. 16. U. ~. 1t1J 2114·71 T.._.... Olfl """"" • as-4'U • ..,,. Twtll M. WenS, ~ COlll'llV OriflOI C1111nty CCllJl'IMllH klutrd n l'ICTITI0\11 IUSIN•Ss A,,...., fir ..... "-" . ~ :II» llotk o1 Wftl 111'111 AM II.,.,~ N~I ITATIMINT PUOllthM or ... ,CO.ti 01Jty PllOI «II. ....,. tormtrly w .. 1 "II StrMI, $11111 A~•· Tiii 1o11-1""' "''_, 11 ooino tlll1l111st PUBLIC NOTICE JllM "' tM1 Jlh 2, 9, 1'-'"' 1m.n Pullll.._. or11119 , .... Ollf'f "'°' ,...,_ C.Hlor!lle. 111 rlfllt, 11111 1PICI lt1t1mt ~ '" PLAST IC SALES .. EMG. co .. II{ w. UfM>C '5 """.Jllf'I 2• '· 1" Im -• l$7' = :,.0 T~=I ':"' .... ~~ :'..:4'1n 17th SI .. (6111 Mew, C1. YU21 ' NOTIC• TO c•IOITotl PtJBUC NOTicE ' ·• Miiii (Ollftl'I efld si1i. dtterlDM 11; P•lll INMU '"491, 1072-5 Ohio "-v... Off IULK TRAMlffll , PllBUC NOTICE Lot m of T,act No. 1112. 11 ""' ,..., Lot A1'19tllt, C.. t004I C'-1111-41'7 U.C.C.) i r..:orcltd lfl look 50, P"81 U to 3', Ii.. Thli bl/lll'llSS la COfldW.IH DY 1" lft· Nolkl 11 llfl'tbY fl....., It 1111 Cflldlror1 OllllOIMAMC• MO, n.# cl~lvl of Ml1Clll1MOU'f M1pt, rtcordl dl,¥1d .... I. ot ARMA.LITE. INC., Tr1ru .. ror, wtioM AM OWDINAIKI 0,. T"9 CITY 0" COi• IU,••tollll (OU•T OP CAlll"O•tOA ot Ori~ COllflty, C1llfort1l1. '•"'4 Wtl•I bullMll lddtnt 11 111 E111 Uth J.lrfff, TA MIJSA, CAlll'OllllNIA. OltDlal .. , COUWTY Ofl OIAN•• Thi strfff lddr1u •ncl othlr ctmmDl'I Tlllt tl•~t ••• nild with IN (OUfl. Ca.11 Meu. COlltlty ot Or1nor. 51111 of CALLIMe, ,llllOVIOI .. , JI09: ANO "' ..... Clwlc ~ Dl1¥9 de,lg11111l0<1, If tft1• of lhl r11I property ry Clerk ol Orl"119 CounlY Of\ J\Hlt n, C•llrCll'flil, tlllt 1 b\1111 1r1n1ltr 11 1ballt to OIVIN9 MOTICI O• A l'ICIAL t•lltll a ... C•llfwflll nttl aescrlbld 1bOW 11 pufll(ll'ted lo ._, 1'~· •••• ,,. "' midi lo CHAltTER ARMS COit· •L•CTION TO II MllD 1• IAIO Cl-cu• NVMI••. ~ All:IOlt, COSTA Ml!IA. CA. .. PORATION c II t pOrlllOfl TY ON ,.,.,.,. ••• 11, 1m ~o• ...,,.,. TM 111\dtrllOfll(I Trutl" dl1Cl1lrnt 1n1 Pllbll1llld 0r•1'191 Ctttl 01lly Piiot JUM ' 1 Ol'IM< cu cor ' THI ,Uft,Oll OP IUIMtnUte TO IUMMONS CMAlllll1¥J•I lllbUlty tor 1nv l"corrt<!MU of Ille itrnt 2~ 111d Julv 2, t, 16, 1971 lt41·1J 1:~:::~-;\:a~~~;.!1~~=11: 2!: THI! OUALl•tlD VO'Tlll 01' IAID In fl !M mlrrl-tt If l'ttlllOfltr: MARY lddttH incl otlllr camm1111 d11lgnU!M, II DlllV Pllll Stilt ....... Fi!tlll!d, 511" of C1111nKtk1,1t. CITY A PltOl'OSITION TO IMC.Ult lOU KILEY incl ltffpond<el'lf: PAUL J. 1ny, 1hown lllrtlfl. PUBLJC NOTICE TIW pr.,.rty lo bt lr1n1l•rrld It IOMDID tNOllTIDftllS IY SAID KILEY Sild 1111 wm bt midi, but wltlloul i-----o-cC"CC--°"OC-:O::----jloc11ed 11 111 E11t l"h Strfff Cosll C"Y POllll A ClltTAIH MUNICll'AI. To tM ltllPOl\dfftl : Thi ptl!tlol'oer Ills cOYtMl'll Or w1rrlflly, lltPflll ordmplll'd, ••cTiTIOUI IUllNISS ...... ,., Cout11V ol Or1no1. ,,,,, of l#ltOV8MINT tllld I ptllll"' COl'ICtrftlnl"'I°"' m1rr11ge. r111nll~ tlllt, pou111lor1, or tn· NAMI! S'rAT•M•NT C1lltort1!1. ' WHl!lllt!AS, 11 1 f!IMllllO lllld IM'lor lo Yw m1y Ille 1 wrltlfll,.,,..... wltllln JI cvmbrlMts, JO p1y 1111 rtm11n1t1g prln· Good Old Days PUBLIC NC1nCl'l PUBLIC NonCE PUBLIC NOTICE Thi 1o11-rno Plfton It dolfl8 t1111lnc11 S•ld property It 0t1Cr!~ In .. ,.,.,.,, lfll Mtt!lnl 11 \llhltll tlllt ordln1t1et I• llil'fl OI 1111 d•ll lhlt thlt "'"1!'l'IOlll Is elp.11 i11m of the no••(•) NeurMI 11¥ 11ld h1rs. Janie B. Johansen of Costa tr1esa l ooks over re· ••· "1 EIQUlornfftl rnKhl'ltrl'~ toollftt. ..... 1C1G1ttte11.,.. nw city c111ncn, II'!• ....,11 ot 1trVtc1 on you. 11 'fDll i.u ta file• wr1111n l>ttd 01 Trv11, 10-w11, 12.ns.•1, w11" In· 'FOVR OOLLAR l"ltEO, ,.., Al( flxl11r1t, lnYlflt0ry, 1111 ...... llte tniwl""' tf 1Mt1 fwo.1111~1 ol tl'l9 metnblrJ rllPOl'I .. wltllll'I 1ucft flrM, YfM' idlliult i.ntt lllef-. 1s provlcltd In ••Id Production o f Vol. 1, N o. 1 of Orange County's firs t R!--lldl Ntwp0rl ... ch. C.llt. ~ •Ml d1t1, •1111 ,.-:tftt.d "''''""' ""'""' tnrrtol, .... City _COllMll ~opltd • ml)' bl e!lfl!flll ~""_,IN, 11\ltr !'IOI•(•), MV1""91· 11•ny,Ul'lcllf1111 ltrmt Fr«lerl~ Mllll'I Oo1Nif18, IOJ\') « 111ttllnl110 to: 1911 m1t1\llktlll't 11'1d 1111 f'tlOl\lfllft dtMrml"lftO 111~1 Ille pllbllc In· 1 IUfllNilt c0ftt9trllft0 lllJllM.11111 « II Hid Dfld ot Tnnt, fttt, ch.lrf)H 11\11 newspaper, the Anaheim Gazette, which began pub· com"" ••t-11111'1d, c1111. t1'61 """A•·' hlll•• R1n1. ttrnt 9111111 '*"''ty dfm•nc1 t111 •t-14Mr or_. (Oft('"""' 1uvb1°""' pr°"" , • .,..,,.s 0, !ht T•v11 .. 1nc1 ot thl trU11t !'·cation 1.0 1870. It 1•5 part of 25.panel exhi·ba"t s pon-Th11 l;>U•IMH 11 cotldll(IMI by •n Ii.. Tiii lllllk 1r1o111i.r w111 bl con__, qu1s11ion. an11rw.11on 1n111 camp1tt1or1 o1,_• wty. llP(llltll •""*"· c11110 C11Stod..,¥. ,,..1.., 11y 111d OHd 01 Trust0.0 0..., ., dl•lOu1t. Of! OI" lfll't lfll ltlll d•V ot JIJI¥ 1'73, II c11t11lft mvnklpel lmprov-t. ll'ld 1'111..-ctilld IMIPPOl'I, •ttor111'f'• ..... COtll, • Thi Wllelk11ry UNI¥ II 0 C P Cl b h 0 Frl!<lerlc M.. Doellrl"I 1£1 A.M. 11 HILL. FARltElt & IUltllll/LL lllQ Kftd11'195 tellll"O thtrelol I tllci'I Dt'lltr' rtllef II IMY bl tr1nlld 11'1 Ttllll lltrtlolor• t xec\llld Incl dtllve~~ sored b y the range o unty ress u at I e range Thi• 1111m1n1 .,.,, 1uw w1111 "'' c-ty '4S ~'" F111uer .... 3-1111 F~. LOI NOW. THEREFORE. 1111 cw Clllrldl ,... <-'· JO 1111 llnffrilon«t • -1111n o.ci.••1...., • • h C · · B ·1,1; c1 ... k ol Or1nve: '"""'"°"Jun• 20, 1•n. A,,...itt. County of Lot ""1!tlff. Slit• ot ot Ille City 1:111' Coll• Miii. Cll!toml1, If }'II wflll le Miii flit~· ef IR It-of Otflllll 1nd o.rnal'ld for S1l1, Incl 1 County Fair. Exhibit 1s in t e ommun1t1es u1 wng "KllN c1n1orn11. ooEs OR0A1N ,, fDli-s: __, 1""" _...,, •...,......, .. Wl'tlltfl Noll<• o1 °"'""''!Id e1tc11or1 JO d · C '! P11bllthtd Or1r1419 C011I 01lly Piiot J-So l1r 11 "-to tlll Tr1111feret. 111 $ECT10ll I. A sp..:111 llt<llOfl llt<tl!Y 11 '""""y 11 tlllt ,_. wrfl1'lll ,....-Siii. Tftl llndlnl1tfwd c1...-uold Nolle• -a_l_f_a_irCgCr_O_U_n_s_1.n ___ o_s _la_,._e_s_a_. ___ =--------21 1nd July 1. f, 16, Im 1"3-73 bu11nn1 "'"'" Ind lddftues lltld bY c1lled 1nd ordlnd 11111 tM.11 M Mid lfl II ...,, llllY ...... • tliM. of Otl•ult incl EltcUOl'I to S.H lo ~ ---~-='.C:c::--c::-::::-::::::---1Trat11ltror for tM lllrM ......,.. 1111 PIS!, said CllY Oii s.ptfn'IMr 11. 1m tar ""' OIMd Ml 31 lt1) rtcordtd 1fl "" COllftlV wltlr• !ht ,,, PUBLIC NOTICE •rt· s.rn1. p,orpose ot Mimttn1111 1o "" ~1111111 w l st JoHN c~11 property I• *""'· -----=~-c"C=c_co----1 0.1ec1: J1111111, Hn. YOlen of uold City "" pr-91""" .,· oOnn. GllltioM. Ot....... TITLE 1M5Ull:ANCE AND CKARTElt Alt.V.S lwrtlM!ttr Ml forth ot IMurtlrtt II\-.. ,....., TltUST COMPANY l'tcTtTIOUI IUllNISI CORPORATION • ~llCIMll -.wt fst1111111 llOl'lds Cit Slld,Clty AllTMUa ,, AU ' at Mid Tr\lllff • NA.Ma ITATIMINT l y; 1t-r1 L GrMl'I. lhfl'efor, lfl tM Pf1t1elP1I 1mourtl tllltd In 111 ................... .,.1 I '! EUllE• w. NEINZElt Tiit fVlkiW\"' llfl'tOl'I II do! ... ~-Tr1n11tret !ht blHOI ~!loll lllrwlt1•ftlr Ill ....... '~ Avtl'lorllld SIOflllUl'I It: ...... _ Pvbll•llld Orll\QI COl!I 01lty Piiot )11ly forfll. Ind for' "" Clbltcl •l'ld ,..,.. ..... , ...... '··-· st ..,· en,..• --Oii•: Juro1 "· 1'73. '' ,,, ' SOHRISA dc'OltO, 09lt~ .,.,.,., t, 1973 f10t·72 forth In Pld rnofu'llOll _...:i In .. Id N ........ ..___ Co.I OllJIY l'llOI, Publltl!MI <>r•not COii! DI 'f -to' Cot11 MeM, 111fonl •· ,_., llfCIPCilftlOll • ........... 1,.,1 72 J\IM 21 tnd Jilly t. 9 1tn 1, .... Joll" s Llndtf'f, '" SllnMI Ori..,, SEC.Timi 1. ,.... llllhMlrd eoet "' tftl Jlll'll • -Jvly 1.. '· , .. ltn • ' ' (11111 MUI, C1llfot11!1 '2627 PUBUC lUIM"ICE mun!cl,.1 lmlWfl'9'"'"' deKrlbld lfl 11111'1 --------,,,.,-,,,:=~--.... ----;;;;;;;-;;;-;;;;:;;;;M;;---Tllll buslneH II tOl\dU(tMI lty Jft lfl· '"VI• blHCJ! propo.!111111 I• tftl 1um of 11.30l.OOO.I PUBUC NOTICE rl•ld..,.I. wllltll Is 1lso tlll 1mourt! o4 the prlnCl"l:l---~P'.:,'.U~B~U;:C'.'.,:N()'l'l'.;~~CE:.::---;--::;::;;;;-:;;;;;;;;-;;~;;;;:O<;;>;";;i;;: Jtllt1 $. L!nd11'1 NOTICI TO COMTltACTORI ot 11'9 lndlbtldMU IM'-8d to N In· T-hls ttelemtnl Wll lllld wllll tllr CW!>· CALLING •OR 1101 cllfred S.ld 1um lncludtlt 1111 lollowlfll OllDINANCI MD JI If reovl1r llKllOll preclnch S2.aot 11'1d !J. ty Clerk ot Orl!llM COllnly on Junot ti, Scl'lool Olt!Plct. N I! W P 0 R T • M E S A (I) 11111 or othlf IHI lnctdlnltl I& or AN ffDl•ANCI Off TMI' c1.fy OP COi-1)'), A, I , (, 0 . Assessment Asked . SANT A ANA -Supervisor David L. -Baker of Garden Grove has called for a reassess ment of Orange Coun· t y'S policy-o n -the._sale. of surplus coonty land. KE SAID the policy should be to retain the s urplus pro- ~rties and tum them over to ci"ties or ciYic organizations Co develop into minipark.s or greenbelts. Baker won support Tuesday for blocking the sale of a 3 0, 0,4 9-square·foot parcel ' Consumer Problem? The South Orange Coun- ty ~ of the Office of Conswner Affairs has two telephone lines ro r use of local residents-during-of-_ fice hours, 8 a .m . to 5 p .m . each Wednesday. Stan W in traub , representative al t h e branch office in Laguna Niguel. can be reached at 834-6447 or 4~1650. C o nsumer complaints also can be filed at the main office, 511 N . Sy camore, Santa A ii a , telephone 834-3100. 197J. , -·-UNIFIED COllM<IM with tfll •lllllOl"l.uollon. lllff!KI '" MISA. CAl.•~••ta. OllllDI••••· VOTING PRECINCT ' Ahlll con,111 • .., -81d Oftdllllfl. 11 :00 o'clock Im on Ille and"'' ot"" bOncls. 1MI (II) lhl co1t I/A CALLIMG ,ll:OVIOIMe l'OR AMO ot rrgul1r 1l1<tl1111 pr1<lncl1 »-llS Ind ,ubU•hld Or1t1QI (Mii D•ll'I Piiot J-24111 d1y ol J1,1ty, ltn P!'J!!lln(I 1111 bOl'ldl Incl otti« COlll •od ••• • NOTIC• ~ Sl'KtAL 52.0)1. I H '"" .l'IAy 2, .. '" 1m ' "•n PIKI (If l ld RK•TPI. 1157 1')1Clflf11 P«ll-111 lt1ddenl1t lo or conM<led wllll lht et,,-.C'TIOll TO II MILO IN IAIO Cl· VOTING PR;ECINCT 7 t111n COl'llltt ... declared surp us after the Av•"uo. '""" Me1<1, c11uorn11 •utl\orli•!I°", 111~1nc. l!ld 1111 o1 1111 TY OM 11,..,1 Miia +u 1m l"Oll: r1gulir •lt<llon pr•c!Mh si.21J 1nc1 S?· "d · of S · d I St eel PUBLIC NOTICE Prolect 1c19n1111c1t1or1 N•,.,. MODULAlt bonds l'OI• 0 , iueMinuie TO ou WI entng pnng a e r CASEWORK·O~VIS/PRESIDIO SCHOOL SECTION 3, Tiii m1xlmum r1lt of lft· 111: ~:Lt•llD VOT••• 01' SAID VOTING l'ltECINCT. lhlll consist ot in Weslnlinster. CTITIOUS •us1111•ss Pl1c• Pl1n1 ••• Oii "lit. 1157 PllC"'ll• ltrlll to bl ..-1.:1 Of! uolt lndtbfldMH TNCOTY A P•Of>Ol"tON TO IMCUR teQIJll• tlktlon prt<lncll 52'°33 Incl 52· F1 T A.....,uo, C111t1 Mn1 sftlll 1101 1uled IM ml•lmu<TI rlll I T•DMhS IY SAID 211. NAM• STATIMIM NOTICE rs HERE&Y GIVEN thll IM llled bY I fo.wll .. _ pe!Ufll SOMDID ••• • ,,.AL VOTING PRECINCT 9 111111 con11tl of BAKER SAID a study by his :11e lollOWtno fj9fton 1' doll'lf bVl!nrst 1bclv1 n1mtd School OJ1trfcl o4 Orl"!lf ~ Pl' lftrtlt:,~·tlle tc1U.1 rlll tr tit.I ~0~11.rc••TAIM MUNIC rtl<'I•• .. ..:llOll Pl'Klncll SUS&,,... S2· • • 11· PY r .t.up LTD l20 N-porl Cout11y, C1lllwnl1, t<lll'll bY Ind lMOlllJll of tnternl on 111d bol'lft lo M dtlffl'nll'llCI Wt!Eltl!A,S, 11 1 m1tt!M1 fttld lflor lo IN llff1ce· had-disclosed thel~tbcre c ~-1vFSW4,21-Nfi/P6r1 BtKh "• Goo/1rnl1'11 lolrd. htrt!Mll«.-rtlerrlld ......... 1or II , ... "'"' ol 1111.ple"' ..... 1111 ~I"'' II Wltkll-11111 ti'dll'llMe 1• v'oTtNG l'ltfCINCT 111 111141 <on1l1! are 76 acres of SUCh s urp}US ~ r ' ' 'To IS "01STlt1CT," w111 rectlve up to, bu! lhlreol. 511d l'!leral tft•tl bt PllVlbll tt-~II'/"" Cltv Ciiaftc.U, lly 1 voll o1 o1 rtg\111r 1l1cll011 prtCIMtt J:l.(131 I nd . "}f f Piul f, LOYtrldtt, Gin«ll Pirtner, no! ltl" thlln !flt lbovt tllled time, !lt•I· ml111"u1ll¥ ll<C~ 11111 lt1ltr1tl for 1 ... 11 ._.11 tw.tlllrdl ol tlll ~ ~. la nd 1n I.he County. we 0 . ,211 Nl'WllOrt C1111tr 0r1 ..... S\111• 171, .., bldt tor 1111 1w1rd ol • COllll'lcf tor ""' vur m1y be med• Pl'flllil II '"' ""'"'°' 1111 Coty c-11 ~ • VOTING PRECINCT 11 WH consl1l r ii to Cities !hey could N___. I I\, CA thr •bovt ~IJ(I, tfld ol .. Id.,..... IHI tion dlltrrnlllil'll ""'' Ille P\lbllc In-o4 rf!IVI•• WctlOfl pl'Klflelt ,,..,, jJ. e r ' • T~i;'b.;.Jn::,c It cOlldvct..:I "" • Hmlled Bl<U tNll be""'"""' In lilt pl1e1 Iden-SECTION &. TM polls for l<lld eM<tlflfl :..."~ ...cl MCIMlty dln'llnd -IC• u1. U·119 ...cl 5~ .... 1. landscape it ~d malntam It to ... rlntni!IO 11nec1 lbcw•. •l'ld """ "' QPlftlCI Ind .,,,,,bl~ 11 1.0D o'Cklo:k Im. ol,.,. ""' Ill o4 I (l'tlllfl mulliclpll Im-VOTING l'ltECIMCT 12 ""'" COfltl1I dd ' pot F L lclfl l'\ltlllCty rtl<I lloud II tM lbovr tlltld llY ol' Mlt lloctlon 11111 11).111 t""llft 1 Oii II'-fl dlflll ,mlll'll .,,; '""-"'r tlletlon prt<lflc:ll '2·222. JZ. a to our open space en-P•lll 1 ~ """"' ti. Col/!lty 11rna 1nd' pltc1 o(l9nld conl"'-'tlY tram 111d ttrn1 vnlll prov•"*''· •l'ld '"" ~"' " 1 21r, 1nc1 s2459. tial " he added. c~~J ,J'~ie:,:: ,_,ty Oii~ Jvty •• 1tn. T,,.,, Wiii br • SID.OD de90lil required 7:0D o'clodl p.m. Oft "" -.,..,, Wllffl ~I THlll:El'Olll! lhl City Count!! VOTING l'ltECtNCT 13 WH CCINb l The ~upervisor said thatly T,,.,tuo."" Wrrd. OIPlllV COU11ty:1r1:C.: .::i re~n"'f,., =111.:t:J:1/'fr,"~~\:..,1111~'~""11~ot 1111'c1ty el COit•' M ... C111+ot.t1!1, of rt11u!1r tltctlon pr«IMh .lilCJ i ncl Cltrk. . ..... , ,, ' ••• ' ¥ OOl!:S OllllOAIN II follows: 52·114. ca-, .... ,, ' ' 5"rplus county lands usually f:N.StlS ..,,,, ft 111r1 I ,.,. ,,.,. ""' OPffl I'll dllt. '""" ,,, !ht SllM "' C1l1Jornl1. SIECTION I. A ...-cl•l ltlcllon lltrlbY ,, VOTING l'RE ...... <MIS J • f th . PU'bll•hH Orll'l!l'I COlll Dilly Piiot, Eich !lid mlllf confor~1 Ill 18CTIOtil S. Oii lhl blUOI• to bl ,....,.. c.illlll ...,:i ..-....d Ind '1'1111 bl ,......in of r"1v11r tllCTlon prtclnclt 52·111, 52· are sold for a fraction o etr Jl,ll , u. 21, 30, 1973 2uJ.n ns_,,.,., to 1111~ . t 11 wld ...-i.1111c11on, in ~ot°" to"'" Id City on '8Pt•niMr 11, 1m, tor tM m. 1nd 52·17'- or,.·,nai -st y ' Et<h ltld sMll bl I CCCll'l'\Plll'I bV lllt oltier '"'""'' tlllllltlll by l1w, 11wr1 """'' .. -"' Wbl'ftltllfl8 to ttll ~•HllH VOTING PRECINCT 15 111111 consist ,. '" · UBUC NOTICE Hc:urlly r11 ... rrd to In ltll <Oflll'tct bl pr1ntte11 1¥11sl1t1tl1ll¥ ttw 1o11ow1no: pill' el Id City lhl propollllon ci1 l'llllll•r ~lion prtcll'ICI• 52·UO 11111 The County B 0 a rd of p doc-•· ll'ld bV 1111 1111 ol ptOPOttd MARI( Cll:OSS <+J ON IALl()T o•Y ¥Olin-..... ---Cll lncurrl If!-52·221. · ked C t 1ubconlr1dor1. WITH ltUlll!lt STAM.1'1 HEVl!a lll't "'""' of ~City VOTING PIECINCT 1• 1111111 cOllfltt SupervlSOr!I: as 0 UR Y l'ICTITIOUI •USIMl!SI Mr. Jlmlf M. H1!1tlftd, • Dlrtctor, WITH PEif OR PENCIL. =::--:. = ::r'~r::'m!unt ~lttd lfl 01 "9u11r •l.c;llon precl111:l1 52·111 lftll Counsel Adrian Kuyper !O Th• 1o11:=•=~~=!; 1Mlnt11 ~~ !.~111:.:i -:,1~"':.:!' ::'~:: J:a'ii~6~1Ti:'A~~~T~No~:K g: Ille ti.hot ,,..~11111 hlr•!fll'fhr :: 52~~1NG ,RECINCT 11 t11111 C0111l11 research the legal ways 1n ••: 11r111M1 In 1-1111 1111 1111 11 <911ftc'-I on P1•c1LJ1 forltl, 1•rld :r ::i.:1t<~:dnc:nP~;l:":'11101 of reg1111r e1Ktl.,., P•telnctt n.m 1nc1 which the county could tum l l·TRONlCS, H02 HtwpOrl 11"6.,"' lltlort Jlf1y lt, U7l 11 1111 olfla, tt:I M"NICO>•• aAL'DT lortfl n1 11 r ""' 52·181. NrNPOrl lftcll, C1tff., t1'6I Ilk« Str .. 1, C11111 Mm, ft+lptlol\f .... .. 114'119111 on. Thi II !Id ct1I of thl VOTING PRECINCT II 1h11l corolll over the land no longer needed Jtek E. 11v1n, 151s !"l1ctnn1, ss1-Ml1. ,_ • SPECIAL. ELECTION .~~0c:r,1,.•o, "•m'.:...~ ri;:Krlbtd 1,., .. 111 o4 •llOlll•r •1tc:n1111 prKl"c11 si.on 1nd I II. d • I di t . t N~ Buch CA 92'60 Thi OISTltt.,, ,._.....""'""',to... CITY OF COSTA MESA .... ' ~· I Ill 'Utot.000 n .. 1 •. 0 C 1es an Spec13 S rlC S. Tllll bus!ntu is col\dU(!ed by 1n In-I.Cl •~¥ OI" 111 bldi or lo w1!vt 1t1y Jr. COUNTY OF OA:ArGi 13 be11kl~ rc:.-n:: :,,,c:11:11:; ~ Prlnclp•j VOT1tfG PRECINCT U 11\111 CMtlll dlvlduil. ,..1111r1!1•1 or lnlorlMllJlet In In'/ bl4s or -~~.;;"~=:m~r V~T;ltl ;:' ~ ~no: ..... propolld ~ bl. lt1· ot reglll1r 11..:llon preclnch J2·1t~ •nd KUYPER SAID !here \Vas Tiii• !i:~:..!r.;'~~= lllta w!tll tht CtKlfl· 1,.,T~': ":i';T1·1cT II•• ikltrmln«t lhf To Y01111111ny "'""'''' 1t1mp • cro.• c111T1111. lilt""" Inc~ 'r' 'c::°i:":;. 51JlJ3itHG PRECINCT 20 "'811 cons111 one constraint on land owned tv Clerk o1 Or•rl§e C01.1nty on J111v '• on. fl!'l•••I pr1v1mno r1!1 ot "" diem w•oe• 1;:~51n thl v~no ::;''' •J''!.J~. ~~ f1) "C ~ "::' .'::.-1:,f:' , .. 1111'1<, o1 l'IOlll•r .. 1Ct!on prtclncll Jt.1'3 •ncl R d De f'U)H I" 1111 loc•lllV In lllhlch !hi -" It to bt " " or I tr -• COlll'llC o4 flll bolllll. W Cb\ ti.,. CCIII ot 52"°22. by the COWlty oa part· Publlshtd Or•not Cotti 0111¥ Pllol, Ju. perlor....., tar Mell '''" « ty111 of m1ru ••ctPI lhl cr111I l+l .,. forllhl· ·n:..1·11thl bondt .nd olhlr (Olli 11'111 ... VOTING P•ECtNCT " w" contl1t ment ''If it was purchased 1¥, '" n xr, 1971 211~n --"""" !INdld 10 ••1e11111111 cDl'llrac1. c11n. All dlsllt1111l•lll"I m••k• or pr . fl81ftcldlfttt4.. onMdld wo~,..,. o1,111111,11..:111111 prtcinct• !2·20t •nd • ' ' Tll9M tltn .,. on 1111 11 11S7 PllC'fflfll lt"lturll lrl IOrlllddll'I •nd TTllll.I IM Pi=uft«I, I II' C nd .. It ol lllt $2-020. with gas ta:ic funds those funds PUBLIC NOTICE A......,., '°''' MUI. Coe>I" m•¥ bt • 11o1no1 void. "' -IK• • VOTING PA:ECI NCT n """ con11,1 • sed "f •••-• f Ill~ Of! rtqUlll. A COP'I' of t11tM r1ln If '!Oii Wl'Oflll'I tl1mp, tllr OI" ~ bONls. ..o O -.• ,, ,._.,_ OIK0-0• •••••• -must be re1mbur l ~ or 111111 bt ptsMd II ""' 100 llM. tlllt Wl1ol. rtlUffl II to l!ll lfllplt!Or "' SECTION l. Tiii ...... """"'1 rll•,.;..:; ... ....,,,. .... ~· ·~ , .. any oth er P"rpose than s treels l"ICTlTIOUI •USINISI Tiii tol'l90i"I .cfltdlltt ol Pff' dltm ellctlol'I ilnd otll•I" 1noltllr. ..,.., .. bl Pl'lt on MM ft:MV II S1-.Jo~tNG PltECINCT n $11111 COllSlll NoVo\I! STATl!MIEHT wlgott 11 Miid .....,., 1 -1111"1 dly ot Ort 1bMflt vot« l11l\oll m.rfl I Crotl INlff f'IOI nc.-"" '"1Xlmlln'I fl te\11 ellC I tctnd Jt.ltl nd' or highways," the attorney T111 IOll~nt ,..._ ••e eo1111 9'tlllt cu 11oyn. TM, ... tor flolldlV .-Id i+1 with ., or penctl. ~ ll'I' ....,,,.'-'!:.,N-, ... ~= of ' •r 1 on pr • • · t11111nn1 11· ....n1 11 .tfllll M .i ... t 1 •OND '11:0f'OSITl0N "I "· (~\ II"'.-, IC•.,. r ''" ~ · S2·lH. said. HAllt .GALLEll:Y. l?IS ··F" Well -· L ... , •• -I ' .... 11'11 ~ .... I "" c11, o4 (11111 MN of r"""" llft •It .....,. lo lll dll«mlnH VOTING PltEC1NCT u 111111 <onsltl ' ·---.. ,. " ol 11'11 111• "' ..... of rtoul1r 1lt<tlon prtclnd a.on. 81kl!f' St .. (11111 Me1<1' 61' 11 1111111 bl IMMllOfl' llpQI\ tflt COM· IMlll' • bMdld llldrbleOMSt In If Ill' "' ..,. ble VOTING PRECINCT tS 9'llfl C011tl1t C1rol Sll\dl'ts. 210D 'fttrtOtl W•¥· No. TllACTOR to ""-"" contrl(t " tht pr*"9f wm of 11.lDl.cocr YES l!llrlof, Slld ltrtlrfft 11114:,.,:"' ~'I~ ;:-o1 r"flllll r tlt<tlon prtc11Klt S2·201 A, I , 15 0, Cosll Mn1. C•HI. '2621 IWll'dMI, lfllll -l flY Mltl<ontrldor IOI' tflt ~Slllon. constrve!IDl'I mf""""'I"' nc-c ""' ern "" S2·lf1. 11'14 S2 .. ll. Pike WI.do,~· 1!11rry YOl/1'11. 1100 "-ltr50fl w.,. No. llncler Nm, lo,..,. llOI Ifft""" 1111 Mid .... _,,,,..,..., fl/f perk l'""'ovt-""' v-' ~ l'ftHI MY•blt If VOTING PRECINCT u 1111111 con1ht U A. Cotll Mt1<1, C•lll. tu26 -lflld r1t11 lo 111 -kmlrl ·-_... .... publk r«,..H_I ..... M Nit YMr. -.. -• -··-o·--... _ Tl!li llulll'lflt II ctl!lllW.IMI II'/ lft Ii.. r.y tlllo'ft In lllt' elllCV!lon ol thl contrtct fldN.... IKl!llfll'IO slnll:turtl. Sl!CTtofl f. Tiii polls fw Mid ol !ht 52.;;r:-•r ""' pr..: "'-'1 H ''"' dlvtd\HI!.' S .~. No blddlr rnlY wltfldrlW his blO for .I '-ldle...m.. t 1lulpm1t11. tholl1~ .... "''"1:.:=~.i.:it'"'-i,. VOTING PlllECINCT 27 """II <11111ls! C1fOI • ._rt Ptr1od "' l«fV·AW 1'5) dl'fl 1lltPr lllt fuml....__ Ind other --HT ... .. '' .. " ,,, ........ ,_ .......,_, '' ,,, -Tiii• tllltmtnl WIS nled Wllll 1119 Coun. di!• Ill •or""' OPtnl"ll o4 bld1 .. ~ ......... e-1111n1'i;";~y ........ eort1tt11-ty '""" Mid """' "" • ll ,._,_, ........... l . • .... ly Clerk er! Orl"91 (ounly on July 'p~ A "I'm"'' bond • ..., I ..;i,.,. .. _ ~-..:r ..... Md 111 llll"fll<lt NO~: ~::C~i/"i..~.::,l"=.:r";. ":': $2~ilNG l'RECINCT a """ CMl!ll P\lllllthl!<I Or•l'lft '°''' 01Uv Pllo!. J\I' ~ wlll "' flqllfr.-.cl prior to ... ICVl!on °' lnddlfltal to « COfl<ltetH wlltl v1clllll "' $lellel'! 1"'36 of ""' Eltctl .. 1 ol 1'19111•• 1!1dlon P•IC!flCll :S2.0U, 51-1¥ t 1• 11. 30, lt7l . 21174·11 I Ill:"::'· ~ 'f:"""'11 bond lllllll N lhl fllltiOl'fllllon. IUUlflCr lnl Codi o1 h Sl1i. o4 C11llol't1l1. '°" 51·19' A, ltl, lfllll 52 .. 1.C. ' ' n m " Ill n Ille tonrt1ct 11i. of 1111 borldlf SEC'TIOl't S. Oii Ille l:lllloh ta Ill llSued VOTING PltECINCT 1t 1111111 CDl'ltl1t doc-ti. Sf:CTtON .. A CTOll C+I plterd Jn tflt ., Mid 191d1I tt.cllOll, ... lddlt!Ofl to ll'IV of "'8Ul•r t!eclton ptlJ(lnct. S2-614 Ind r~ ':i'rd l'1 vollflll IQ\l•r1 Iller 1111 -d "YES" lft otftlr ..,.,.,.,. rff11lrld ll'f 11w, tlllr1 thlh 52·'16. ..~'"'.,A ·rvr ....... tflt '"'!Wit!' lll'ttlt1lltfor'e prOYklld llllll lll bl prlllttd ll/llll.nllllty fhl ldMrwln11: VOTING PltECINCT JO 11\111 CDMlll To Lecture In County PUBLIC NOTICE TM' t1•1tmenl ""'' Ille-II .. 1111 lhl C1111i..jl-------------~ ty Clerk ol 0.1n11 C111ntv on JuM 1', NOTICE tNYITINO llOS Publl..-...i ln'0rlftl':'C IO II Pll COllfllMI lfl l1vor ol !hi ldOpllon ol tflt MAit.i( CllllOU C+I ON IALLOT ONLT ot regul1r tl1Cllon PrK!l'ICl1 S1·217, J1. IUO ITEM MO. m j Oii • 'I OI ll'CllO$lllon. A cron 1+1 placed In ltll ' EVER Its, Incl 52421. ANAl-IElf\1 -Diane Ken· NOTICE 15 HElllEIV GIVE N "'91 'c"::r.'· Jiiiy '•1'111 Illy 1': l'7J 2l04·73 voting IQ~-"" .... '"~-'"' W•:!_.::NO'~ ',', ..... ::~~ .. :~~:~EN~~~ I N VOTING PR ECI NCT 31 111111 CO!l,ISI 1111. 1'·2"41 Publllhfld Ofln>QI (OfSI OlllV PllOI. Center Gets Large Grant d Plk 'd of the late Ml proposals will bl r..:11...ed bY 1111 !'11_1-r "'" ""' prov..,,.,.. lnl (AISEf'ITEE BALLOTS MAY IE ot r19u11r tlt<!lon prKlftCll 52.(IJt, S1· ne Y e, \'ol o w 01 c0511 M~1~. 10 wi1: T111 c1iv c:111nc:1 . PUBUC ~cE cOlll'ltH ,,.,,.,,, 11111doo11on o11111 P~ MA1t1<!D WITH ,1• AND tNIC oR °"· 1nc1 »·211. Bishop J ames Pike , ... nt be in p o. Elo~ 1200. ot ll'lo en., o4 c.otl• """'· ,,Vil otltton. ••NCIL) VOTING PR ECI NCT :n 111111 COll•I'' JllN 11, u •!'Id Ju11 i. '· un 1111.73 FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY 642-4321 ORANGE -The Providence Speech and Hearing Center, a nonprofit agency that helps people with lllliuage, speech or bearing problems, ha s r«elved a $50,000 grant from the James Irvine Found1tion. A spokesman for the center saJd the money will be used toward the purchase or land on S. Bush Street where, even- tually, the organization plans to build a modern trea1n1('nt facility. ' C~llforn11, on M 111110" ,.,. llolll' *' 11 :0D IEC:TION 7. ti 1111 p1"11posll11111 !or llw MuNICIPAL EIALLOT o1 regvl1r tlecllon pr1e;lnct1 S2·200 '"d Orange County Thursday to 1.m,, 1)1' 1$ IODn '""''"'' •• ptK!ltntr. CITY 01' COSTA MliSA 11Kurt!f19 "' bOndfld lroOtbf..mtl• '° '""' SPl!CIAL ELECTION S2·'10. de liver 8 lecture at the on Frld11y. July u. ltll. l fdl will Ill! OltAN•• COUNTY, CALll'O•M•A mlllld l'ICll••• lhl rtQll!•IT• fturnbtr ol CITY OF COSTA MESA VOTING PR ECINCT 3.1 •h•ll comi11 . PllblklV openl(I llld rlld •IM I I ll:OD NOTIC• TO CONTIUCTORI '161n, ~I: two-lllltds of lhl 'tottl ol tflt COUNTY OP: ORANGE ol r19 ul1r llt<llon preclnct1 51·1H •no Psynetlcs F oundallon, 1212 E . •·'""or •111lon lllttrtlllfl' ., trlctlctllolt, NOTICE IS HEtU:av GIVEN 11'111 •••I .. nflld fl«tOA votlnti Oft Sl id PFtlP-T.,.lllltY ~ 11 1913 51-lff, Lincoln Ave on Frld•Y. July 27. 1m 1n ""(Oltlf'ICll Ml propo1<1l1 Wiii bt rec1fvtd b'f tllr c1,Y llllllOll. r..;fi boMI ot Mid City, (fl .,., INITaucf.o.s TO ...0.,11111 VOTING PRECINCT " tllll! con1!11 · Chlftlbt'I. Cltf Hi lt, 11 F1lr Dl't ..... Cot.II o1 (till Mtl<I 11 thl olflu ol !ht City ,,,._., ftOI tultdlfll lht prlncl,_I Tt voM on lfl'I ,.......,, lllmP 1 crt1t of Fft\lllr tllCllOfl ptklnc:I S2 .. ll. Mrs. P ike 's lopic will be Mts1. Callfor"lt, for , .... fllmlltil1'19 of Cltn. •I'""' C:llY H1H, 77 Fill' 0,1,,., 1mtuf'll '''*'In IU(h propoiltlOfl, m1, lll t+J lft 11'11 'l(ltlnt .. ,~ 1lllr llM word V011NG PRECINCT lS 111111 con1111 "N A Lo\'e 11 She said her ASPl-IAL T for rtp1lr o1 City 1ttM11. COil• "'"-• C1Hfbrfil1 Ul'llll 1911 ftour' el 1-..r •M tlld t« 1111 tb!ICI 1nc1 Plll'PtS• "Y•S" "' ,11.,. "" word "NO'' All of r1911t1r .. t<lltfl prK1nch 52..CW 1nc1 ew ge · Addlllont1 sets ol 1111 111elfle.t1or11 m1y 11.00 1 ,.. on J\ltY 31 ;,11. 1 hi 11 11 111 1«111 111 uold pnipo1ttl1111. ft\lr1I: ..,, "'9 l+) fOrtid n.1tt. lecture will center on the "' Cllllllned 1t thl OfflC9 of,,.. ,urthlJ• ttW,, win ' bt flf'IMd' Pllllff~ .... ~ ,..: $ECTIOH .. Tiil llltClll •llCllon ~ lfiM,. ri'1 1111::a111 :rkl ,,; VOTING Pll:ECtNCT ,. 1111•11 contl1t d · f jf •'--and 1119 Ag.et1!, n F1lr Ori ..... (Olli Mffl, 11ovd In 1111 Cwncll (ftlmlllrt !tr Clllld IMll bl Ind h l!rrtey .,...,_, <-W wr1I& .,.. ll'lll -!!I tllr of t•1-r l~llOll prKlflCb 52·17' 1rtG ynam!CS 0 5e w:.1.vVery C1llfor1'11•, 8 1ds tfteM.1111 Ill ~ In • f\rrnlllhlng Ill llbor ~ -..ill 1111 loildll9d wHh """"" lfll(lll lfl\ll'lk .. I ~Ill """' S140l. her work o n '"II'he Love Pro-tNled fllWIOPI, ldlftlllfH on 1111 oultldt lr•n ... 111on lftd 'tuc:tt oltllr' l1e1n~ ~-'*"-" to bl hlld lfl Mid d tr ell l<lkl II '!'IU wranet'f lllfnP', IMf or dlflCt VOTING PltECINCT ,, tlllU COMll! " Wlll'I I,.. Bkl lltfn N11mlllr Mid 1111 °"""" ftlly M niqvlrld FOlll TH• IN-dllt l<l!d WCl'I Mlcllom 111111 llot Mill Pn 1n ltlll ....... l'tftfP1I ti to fM lllfll'IClol' tf t//I ~ lhctklfl pncll'lcfl SJ.OU Incl ject. l119 01tr. STALL.ATIOH OF TitA•,.IC SK;MALS ,__.. .. If fllll'• -· Ol'ltv -Mlcttltl lllclltn -........ -""' Jlo.171. Mrs Pike is the author Of fi!acti bid INll ~lty Md! •Ml ,.....,., ANO SAl'ETY l I G HT IM G AT • ""Y -,_ ot blllof ~I tit lltlt Oii *'it """ ... .,. ni.r11 I von VOTING '"ltfCINCT :JI 111111 c-hl ' Item I I *' kWlll lft fl'lt W*llk1lllM. Any MliCELLAN!OU'S lOCATl()t.1$. ""'-'• TM ..-.Cll'ICll. """"" IMcff Mil t+l w1191 ...., ti' "911tll of rl'll/l1r llKllOll P'ICll'ICll Sl.fll l tld "Search " an account ot the 1rid .•H ••ctP'l«ll It lhl -Ukl llOM A .. , Cll Pl ..... 1111Clllceti-lf'ld """' olrtcln ol •ltctlon for ttll lptdll et.di.. 90ND PllllOIJCllTloN "A"· SJ.In. 'he h •--" bod In 1'Mt 111 clNrlv •'-'" 111 tftl bl~. 1nd contrtct dOC\lfl'lfflll bl * lfMld ""'*' t.1nlll 9"1111 lll tt11 .. ,.,. " "-0 C MIN VOTING Pll:!CINCT :rt tfttll <-IS! hunt for r USUKnu S 'I 11U1Wt 10 NL !«WI 1nr """ ,,., '"' thl off1<• « 1911 Cll'f~...i-'n .,;: .,..._.. fw MW ot111r '=" Mcllln = !"'~ :,.:_:11 .. 111 ot rltlA•r .i.ctt., Prtclrim n.1111nd Israeli desert country In J968. i::i:!;''c!.'°"J.. ·~1 ,. fl'OWMI• ior r• Ori.,., c.11 ~. C111"""1.' 9"lt • ~"',., ..... f:"'~·::C,11 ~": ,.."'"""' Wl'll llf aMu. YES ":b~iNo ,.R!CIMCT • wn cllfttl 1 She is the co-author \\'Ith htr E1eh bid 111tn Mt flrtll IM tun ~ ~~t_ ".::"~1",.. u .oo.,,.A ~wit: or.11N11C:1 No. n.2t, lt1ll'lldwcld .. flll' "" M'ltlltllloft "' tMll fer ot ,..fl' tlt<l!on prlCJM.ti n,.11, ,;. , ll'ld rttldlnl:f1; f14 111 ptrlOFtt lftd ..-rH91 ' 1'111 by mall. J-,., 1t73. •trfc II .. -/jll' OHfl 'ff(I 201, Miii J1•2l,, late h usband o f "M1e Other lnllrtsll!<I In !ht Pl"OIOtll .. Pfll'ICllYI•. Pll~~~~us::AltATE CHICKS. SECTION '· Eretllt It otlltrwl .. Ill'.. """"'"' Mii ... ~ 111CI-.HSI SECTIO N '· l!•crpt I I Oll!trwl11 1'•6' Side 11 an account · o( ~ychic 1n c•'• ot cMDOl'•tto111, lt1ellldt 1111 ,..,,,.. form w 1 tM ,.,...... w. "°" 1toeto1al vldld 111 ""' or1111111te1. lh9 111ct1on c1nM1 dtl\111 tie tit ~ wuti 11'11 VklH 1n """ •dltllflC1, 1,.. 1r.ctton ci!led -' • o1 111r P•iuldtnt, $1C•rll,.,, T,..1urfl' 11'111 Irle! .~ IMfl'r'~"=~ In '91' ~ Wll bl cond\ltttd, 11'11 ¥Oii• c•~ l vthOl"ll•llOl'l. 1-l'IC'IO i ncl Siii lltrttw lhfll Ill CDfldtJtttd, ""'rO!fl Clft· phe:nome no ('Xper1enced by M1n1~r COfl Oll:\I " I bl tc• vi~, !ht flf\Wfll. llllf'IOI' l'!lffl, tnd' ll'lo! M•tftl boftdtT .~, VIUl!d, llW rtturn1 llllrtof Midi, Mid lllt · ho Plk The ,liv • c'out1eU of ,,.,. City ol C1tl1 "''""nlMI !IV 1 cfl'l1tlld "' Clll'll.,.'i rl9illl idlltffl'llned 'lt1 11\t ft'llnntr ll'O\'ltlld '. ..0 ,..11111 dt t1rm1flld ll'l"thl llll!lfltt ll!'INldra Bis p e . M•S• rtstrve1 , ... rloht to r•f•t l .n, OI" cl'llc:ll Ot' II llld llond tor l'IOt ltH lhlft 1~ b¥ llW for Oll\4f trWl'llCIPlll tif(t1-kl SICTIOJI .. A Croh• l+I pllCld 111 "" ... 1,..., lor otP\tf' m11nlcJpe1 lltcllont In ·-------11 bid ol 11111,,_..t of 1111 bid, '"oldt Pt\'lbll To Wkl City, Yllfllll JOlllf• ,,,.,. "" -d "YES" In N ici Clly, • n.-.T~·o· Jul~ 5 1tn '""' Cllv (If r~t· Mt11. SECTIOM 10. Tiii Clfy Cl1rk tlwlll tM Nlll'llt' ftlrllllbtltf• prl'llftd Jllltl Ill SECTION 10. Thi cnv Clerk .11'1111 Pul)liillfa Orin'oo C.,.11 Oi lly Piiot. NOTICI IS ~UltTHElll GIVEN lh1t !ht CtrlllV to lhl P•S~fl Ind' ~loft of !till ~!If 11'1 fl'VOI' M 1111 loltfllloll of 1111 .. rtHv to thl lll•HIOI Ind ~llO!l o4 !hii J 1.,. • 1913 1111•11 City COIJnd l of wtd Cit¥ ""' "'"10tor1 ordfftll'ICI bY 1 volt ol 11 le1st i-1hlrit1 ~llOfl. A crot• C+J ~ ln 1111 ordlt1•11C1 bY • vo11 ot •• INIT iw.llllrdi v • .it1blhhld I Pl'fVllllnti ,,,, w Kiie of ol •11ti'lfllmtmbtf't:ol11111 (U'f COllflCH. vtllfltl ...,.,.. If!.,. "'' ._d.''NO" lfl 1111 ol 111 ol lhl mtfnbtr1 o4 1111, Clly c~u B Wl ntt, In ICCOfdMCf with ,,...,, 111 " p1ld IM ~11 Clllfl! thl1 ordlnlfKt to N Mlfl~ 11 ... 1 .. ort prwldld •llall Ill ll'ld thlll CIVIi lhll lll'dlfllnct to ' PU LIC NOTICE lfl 1111 c1111sll'U<llon M 1111 1bt'<o1 onttllrd p,o~t1!>1d Ol'l(I 1 div tor 11 l•••I , • ....,., COllflltll it,1lnt1 flll llCMPllOll (If 1111 pr&-P11bll11'1ed once • dty '°' 11 •••if lt v:= PHARMACY -ccc-=~:-:::::::-;:-::::;-:::;-:::;,.-;::-:;-;ilmprov1mtnt1. Th1I 11/d fll• ll'ld tClll (1) 111'/t 111 tllt Ora1191 Co11I D~lty PllOI, potltlon. , (1) dlYI In 1116 Orl!'OC!t (Ott! Olll ,.II I NOT1c• 0\9 PU•LIC N•AlllllNG TO II w11 ldolltfld DY 1111 City COOl'lell ll'/ 1 , ftlWtPlper of ltftlll'll dtt11l1t11111, llCT_10N 1, II lfll ,,..._lllOl'I tor 1t11 • l'ilWIPIPtl o4 ft_.tl c!rtilll!!i' N•l..D •Y TMI CITY °" lltVINI Rtlolullon NO. n.1 on !hi trid dlY <rt IW'IMld ..,... put)ll1hld In llld Cl•v. lllClll'rll'll llf ...... lflCllbltodMtl '° t ub-IM'il'llfll 1ftd 1Wllfl'4ltll In llld (1TY ' PLANMINO -cOMMISSoOH OH 1'11:0-J1t1"'rf 1'7). Th1I llld r1t1 11'11 Kt4t II SECTION II. Tlll City Cttr\ tl'llll II• mm1t ,...._'1M '""lltl !Mntltr OI -SECTION 11 . Tht City (ltrlr, Miin II l'OSIO AMINOMINT TO A l'UN••o 111 torll'I hfl'91ft, •!'Id 11\11 •• .., k lll, ., 11111 C1111rfl'lt"" I ... ,on.bit dltt ptlOI' " ........ fll.Wttt ~"" ol ""' Vlln oj ll'ld dlllfml"". lfflOll•btt ••If prior I~ • COMMUNITY Hcl9•fll llV Mid R•l<llutlon, 11 '"Mt • "" rttcflon ~ w" I c It wrtftll'I ,.. flltllfllM lllktWt -~ .. Id ,,.. ""' ,litdll)fl lfltr wl'H<tt w, I I I I n .. PllF11Mt1I 10 11>t Pl1t1nl"O 11'1d Zlllll"I Plrl of 11111 notkf wltll ti... lllglltr lldtrll '"""""'"' tor f/I .. t!ntl 1111 -· ot111tn. 1Mf1 ..... llf ta City, In lfl 9r9l/IMl'ltl lor • ... !nil 1111 11'11111/tl \ Uiw, 11 1l'l'lefldld, incl order If ltll City or loc11 r111 ll'..,1111119, """' M )Ol'IOlf' bl Mlllf'ftltttd. = Ml . ......_ tr\MIMI _, l'IO IOl'ltlr R lllllmlltH. 1" OI trvlnt '1-l'll'llnl COl"ftl'l'l!s1lon. notlc1 11 Thi City ot COlll Mf .. htrfllY 110t1n11 SECTION lt. Tl!l1 or.iln...ct t11t7i I• ...... !fl~ ............... !MY lll IE(TIOff lt Thll M llllnel tl\WI t1kt I lllrffiY ofllfft 11111 • 1111111c 1111r1"1 "'111 •II ~ lfllt II wm •!firm•"...., lfllWt .-ct UPOn 111 ,....... ,...,.. .,.. -,. n. ltllftl ll'ld llJUI',.,. lltMI ~ th .,..,..,.., N l\e4d bY Mid Comml\Pofl Of! lft tfltl lft ..W tonlrlCl "'""Id~ IUrWlftt AOOP'TED. Sl0f'!IE0 AHO APP!tCWIO 11t1 Wlfl In MW ,,.,..,.on. ADOPTEO,.JIOf'!llO ANO Al',ltOVEO ont1..a11C1 PfOOalllO wlllll'llNofl .i.n It !tilt M '+'tftlHtMflt, mll)ll'lty .......... fftl• 1nd d"f of J...,, 1m .. ~O:. a. ,., "" ,........ tit NldlllO llllt t!ICI dl_'f J..,.., ltlJ. 1'19l/llllont .i1111t11ti1 City 01 '"""'-~-wlll bl ~ Ml • JACK -HAMMETT Mid ........ kil ..... (.ny llll'tl JA(I( ~ET"f llllH•ttd W: City of lrvll'll "-1111 ~.._..la tlltlnlll llldl Ill ....,..... M Ml'fW• Clly ef (llltlo MIM llfllfl ...... wt...,. ............ fofty MITw, City If C.11 .,._ (-IMIOll ""-lirnt1lllfl tnt wtlt flof Iii • CllAll la) ..,..._ ~ ............ 11 ISIAll llld Pllbflc hleflnl Ofl "" 1111W ,.... fltctl!'lllllflfff ... !Ml M flll "°""* ef ATTEST! ftoltlMfllr lltl flW9I. ._.. WCtl VlllllO ATTEST. WE QUOTE . PRICES OVEI THE PHONE ... AtfYTIME -CHICI THUi sum SAU SP'ICIALS-~. lttt. Ovr tlH .... 1c. , CllE~ TOOTH,..ASTE, 1 01. 1 1. I J l'c 6Ek1TOL VJ11"'h1 T1bl1l1, 10 4.•t J.ft DIAL A11t1,,,,,1r1nt Spr1y, • os. 1.29 tt, CUTEX "•/Ith R..,,,.,...,, 'I ~·· 551 41f: Ille ll'fttt nc 2.99 73c Jlc 2700 E. Coast Hinwav. at Fe111le~f. Corona del Mar • I , "OMd ordl>Yfltt wl41 \o lltlCI •• 7:lll ,,M .• rtct. '*""· fl# MflwlM .,..... "' ~ 11'\.EEN ... PMIMMIV ................ "' "" f/f • -""' or EILEEN ... l"MINNIY ) or 11 IOOl'I .,...,...,,., 11 poul111t. 11111 •kier•.,.. "°' 111 .,...,., CllY ei.r11. City « e..11 MIN ""'-o1 -Ill ,,...,,.. ,.....,. 111<11.,., City Ctlrll. C.ltv ., C•I• Miii I Tlll/t"td1y, Jlrl'Y S. 1•1'. tt1 !hi htlrlftt 1r>C11 1'ltl c.,tr1<1w tlltlt. 111 tll t ITATI OI' CAlll'OltNIA ) .,_lllch l'YWIS """'II flll .....,Ill ot $TAT• OI" c:ALl~NIA l 1'11111"'1 rown ol "" Clty ti IMl'!I Piii.. Hf'~I If h _. ....S l~ COUNTY OP ORAHCMr ) Mlf C:lty M -" ......, lltc'*" COUNTY M Ol:ANOI l rtl!'OG COl'ftmlllklo'I. Town '"'"'· not ~ ... confirm ,. "" ~ ,... \, llLIElll ... l"t'INMIY, Clf'I (11111 .-lflch '"' -............ II ""' I, llLll M ... PHINHaY, ~lty Cflf'll If """""" Of1¥t. ·-a , ln'll'll, 'If IM $flll ol '(1Utcnil1 ..... ..._.. liws lM CITY ot Cot.1• MeoM. C.ilfor1'111, DO "-l'f If Orllflfl fir TM ~ II ti ... .,_ City ol C.!1 M1W Cl fflll'fl1-DO ~llt•ornl1, 11 w11k1t ri1'11 Intl PllC• 111 flf "'-11111 llf CMltonN ~lk1blt 1'41111E•Y CIEllllTll'Y !Ml lllt .... <-f'f Mttt.ftt, n.. Plllttill 1111iee. HllllE9Y CIEllTll'Y llllir "" ftr .... ·-.rfllw ,.__ OI' Cll'Mtl, N it ~lo. with ltll •~llefl! MY ., WC" ont/fl.lflct: -lfl~ld •I tfl Id tw ""' f91111CMlll wtJfll ~ Mlllifl Ml~ -lfltroOl.octd 11 lft Mferfflllll lfOPIMd Pl11'1 wtH bl llHl"ll. It 1 , .. v1•llllon• H ftll'f 1111 ......... ...., "" rewllf -""' ol "" CITY CMHKH .. ......... Ml ~ ef tltctttfl ,.., .. , l'lltttlnf OI "" City (tllftCU ~ Ollfl!W tti.t tftY wrltttfl r011M1111 ta lfll• tMtlli 1t1tvt.1 wr-.,i " Mlllfrl II"'• N11f on ""' Hiii ,..Y fl/f J-. l'n. Mil 111111 • ~'" 111¥ lllAl•'"'nl f'IMIY. lllld 11111 1111 Jt•ti 111y M J-l•n. ~lie MllCf 'rt llMl'lllttd 16 tflt Pllll'lf'll"' tllcllflll """"*' .,. l .. lft ff\11 ~di tlltrM""' •1 I l'lfllfl't "*""' OI Nit .... t//I !Mt City C.W.Cll, Olfy "'Ill ..... .,_,..ttrr 11 1 '""''' 11•1 .. tr'11t OI , .. COftlmlHlon prior It tflt httrlf'oll ttlf, lllW llOI Mffl WM!'...... ..., flll Jrto Clly Cl\IMH dlllY lllld <rft 1911 1'ld drt II 'l'lflft ,... .. ~ Ifill City .,, l!lfl!IM It City C""'KH duly lltkl 111 IM 2"f • .., If l"or ""1111• ll'flfll' rt01~110 1<1ld pro-'111lon1 el ll'lt L• ..... (Odl, Jlll'f, ltrl. Wff """' pofflld ll)C!I HOiP'9t ll9tt .-1 uold ltl(l\tn. . Jiiiy, 1t7J. W•• lllllY PllMrll ll'lt "°''" IOtH ord!fttl'IC:I . •" r11rt,111td Pltto•" NI llld tl\llf Ill (eftlMIN .. .,,, ... tt I• bY Mkl Cltv (Ol.lfl(ll .,,. ...... Mii .. V'OTll'tO ... l(lflCT I .... 1, COl'Mllll ot ..... 1e1 City Ctlll'ICll ..,... '""""" ....... 1r• lt1vllld to U ll 11 IM llllc• o1 !hi City mi di "'..i' 11111111. loml ftlrfllsllld br tM l'l'IVH ::r tftl MIY« II thll (lty, rtlVI.,. eflCllorl .,ICln<tt ft•lM M'lll $2-.......... ..,. 1M ,,,,_'f'OI' f14 !Mil (lly lllf ol lf'1"' Pllltll!/lll Ceniml1•!t11. TCJllt'll City.of \;ltlt Mal, lftllf It ll'lldl 11'1 IC• lftll 1<1 Ol"ll!l'llflCI .......... W lk. . 11111 1111i Onllfl'!\tl "Ill ,., ... • llltll '"'"' •:ict• .(,,.,..,.. O<!W't, llllClll'I Ut cor'dlnc. wttfl 1111 "°'"'"Oflt ti 11'11 ~ HOP1rt11 !Ir tflt 90!'-l!'OCI "'°"' VOTING P•ICIMCT t ~If <Ollt lll ol ldoptrd bY 1M lltlowlf\f vtte• !rvlftl.' Clll~. Wiit'• ttlll ... ~ OMlll l'fQtJ!rrm1n11. ' AV'll!:S: COUNCILMll!:N: r•""""'"• '~llt lilCtltfl ,,_,lllCll l2..00S .-Id J:I-AYI!$! . COUNCii.MiN:' H °"f lMn« It Ill "II 11'1d •vtil•'fl tor TN CITY COVllCll II 1111 Cll'f ol Clll Jont1n, l'lft1111y, ft'lltoll, Rll( .. l! (1111. • Jerd111, P!ntl.1¥, Wlltofl, ltKltl l!tlft'lll1, l!Ubilc '"'"'"°"' Mru ,...,..... lllt "'"'"' f9f«,f tllY NOE:l1 COVNCll MEHI t4 vor1NO l'lltlCINCT ~ 111111 <Ofl II OI NOES: COUNCll.MlN) .. _ CITY 0 111 ~ll:VIN! 11! llll t. ' AISEMTt COUNC/lMIN1 HOfll 1"\lllt MICttoll ll't<lMll 5,,. W '1· AUiN1'1 COUNCtLMl!H i N- 'LANNINO COMMIS.IOH 011111 JWl'f t, 191) ltl!!AL) • It). llLli)I •• ,HIMHIY It/ JM L. Wlltoft TN~ CITY OI' , , • , _, IU.llk '· ~!NNIV' VOT!MO l'llllCIHCT I llMrll C11Nl1ll City Cll'tt. (lty 11 (Olll IH:Y AWtl•fll *'-'11¥ COSTA Miio\. UL)irf:MNIA City' C ...... C1h" II a.tf,.,... Of rMU11r llllcrltfl ll"'ldf!Cfl ....... ttllM.I 1'11blf•l'lf0 Or•l'lft C...t 0•11Y 1'110!\ Pllb!!lllH Or•• c...1 01llr P'IW. Jy, P'\llllllMO °'""" Coetl DllllJ' l'l'tlt, J" Jt..OG. . • 1'111111 ...... Or...,. C..11 Ollf'f~ .... J-~· •M Jirty 2, t , 1•. 1973 ,...n rr '· ,., ,,,, »'1·1> 1y J," 1, •·" lO. 11, "1> ' .,..,, vototo f"llllCIHCT I""-"" 1y s. ., 1, L '' "' 11, 1m m,..11 1 . j ' 1 • , ·-• •' ,_,,. Clf'ftla ' • :, "Why don't yo~ retire.from work now, Doddy, before . you re too oki to ploy with us?" .• ITT~ ~~ILY SUNOAY• 11 TO 7 " • r •, . 'While Quentitie1 Laat • ""'""-:.>I ""--···W _.,.. ~. .- J,r ' ' TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY Men's Wrinkle-Resistant NO-IRON SHIRTS DAJLY PILOT I I . I ; R FOIL -r -,Prof)lenu ·Huge 11"x2s· K"rn~~ brand alu· 4 ·:F ,1 OO • • " ar minum broiler foU In handy 1 'T' B ..]I l.I ...,.1-cuttor-edgo box. -.t-Olll ~ i!au ey......., . ,a·s. ~ ldoaJ. for barboc:..,... , ! " ( ......... .,.. ... , . .....,....,,,. .. .,_ .,.. I , to.. ......_ ~ ~i-ll , .. . ' . ' ~ -.. . ,;~ .; .... " .. -..""" __ .... 1 • • Big -Task Ahead. · Copitet New1 Service "paya biih taxes" yet hu . SACRAMENTO -How.does "almost no publiC tr&MpOrta- pne become an "activist'' Uon and is pockmarked with mayor of a major city when unfln1shed streets"; he follows a man who spent 12 -NeaJected areas like East yean of. virtual inactivity in WUmington "which is like a tbe office? waatelancl," ·and East tos This Is Ille probleni lacing Angeles which needs jobs, Tom Bradley who has taken playgrounds "but more ~an over the reins of Los Angeles 'that, hope~'; city government from Sam ·. ·• -And Venice~ Where ''Vl.t81i- )'orty. . . ty bu al1J1~l.stJ!p)lO!!," · -As a charter city, Los · Angeles is run .by the City 11IE NEW MAYOR said he Council which functions tlke a was interested in finding ways ·legislature, and by more than to end dupli~tion of govern· d ment tervice!, protest the 11 ~ high cost of food, upgrad~ and LoglcaU" •pealc-cleame the heachea of pollu- fng, ·the ma.or of lion, develop a r a p I d , .transportation system and use Loa Angeles b the "~ll it! __ ers o! J><rsuasioo aeeo11d strongelt and CXMmciliation" in the area e:recutlve officer 0 f labor-management ~ , -in California. blems. He committed City Hall to ~ economic pro g r es s 1 by 100 municipal commissioners e s t a b I i s b i n g a "full who are appointed by the partnership to stimulate, en- mayor. courage and cooperate with Thus, during Yorty's three the private sector of'ttle com- rn_unl_ ty." 7 terms, the mayor turned the Operation or the city over to ·r • -• • ~LUMINUM' ROCKER hi! commissioners, blamed the 11MANY OF YOU have •' City Council for lack of action, heard !'le· s~y that, I am i~ A~u minu111' foldin'i rock1r is slur· and travelled around the world· love with .this city,' Bradley d 1 ed " nd" t' t b t d ilv built wit~ dur1blo pl11lic makin,g "foreign p 0 I i c y ' ' ec ar , a o.ua s rue, u. 1 .. 1peeches and running for . more tha~ that, I lo~e th~ ~ arms • ind 2 ti polypropyl.•n• IOVemor and President of· the pl~ wh!> hve here. ~ w1bb1n'i. Avoc1do or l•n91nn1. United States. .. hal intendh to .repay tbhe :'l tp•cia!ly ~ric1d for this 11!•. 'c nee you ave given me y BRADLEY WANTS to giving tl!is city a ch~nce ; a ;.-.w.~ .:4 ,..1 . '·""' reverse -this course. chance to meet and defeat thOse ills we filce, a chance to chance, to. meet and defeat those ills we face, a chance to become one city in America which mastered i t s dif- ficulties ; a chance to become the kind of city we might le.ave to our children with pride instead of apologies." •.• ~":t;:. ~ ~~ .. ~~-. Hidden in the body of his speech on Inauguration Day was the line, "We will keep our sister cities program, but we shall add two new sisters cities -Sacramento and Washington. I intend to go to these cities to fight for out fair share of our lax dollars." Yorty visited . sa~mento and Washington infrequently. Re mad~ little effort to ratUe the higher governmental cage for more support for the 2.8 million people in Los Angeles. And, Sam Yorty lost the faith and trust of the voters who, accordingly, turned him out of office last .~lay. Logically speaking, t h e mayor 6£ Los Angeles is the second strongest executive of· ficer in California -right after Gov. Ronald Reagan. He jumps in importance over the beads of such well-known mayors as Jooeph A. Alioto o! San FranciscO, alreidy a can- did8te for governor in 1974, and Pete WilJOn of San Diego, Who talu about running !or lieutenant governor nest yellP. ' . BRADLEY NOW rants just Mind Mayor John Lindsay of New York and Mayor.Richard Daley of Cb.icago. Beadley'1 voice will be _..beard in the hallowed halls of ~cramento and Washington ,because Los ' Angeles needs help. . In his inaugural address, Bradley hit hard on the pro- blems facing the city: .. -UnplaMed growth of the San Fernando Valle>: which "HarborDENTAL CENTER DENTllE$ • -• PENTOTHAL .. ....-. ... ...,.... ......... _.,..... " ... _..., ... ,..... ........ ·~ c.:-. -............ ,... -...... ~ ......... ,..,... ""' ........ ~.ww.--.•---~ ..... . ................ .,......,nn. ...... ·----.... , ........ . _,.,._.._......... I 27" HAlltlOR ILVO-COSTA MIU. ..... If ............ , . Phone 556-8013 1 ' TUFTED CHAISE PAD Kifffa !d;• 1tyli119. l i9 comlort1bl1 24x72 ". Coll'l&I ;" •Hothd fl or1I p•l· t.rn1: .Stock up now fo r JUlnfll•r thn• • outd.cror liv1"9· Juit 11y "ch•rf9 it". 2DAY50NLY , S<:reen-printed cott<in terry toweh Or9 351t65". , , Choo•• from mony bri9ht no¥elty prim1 . Get tet lor the sw im. I • Chorg• ~ ,, Featurin9 a regular long· point collar and ~':'.! pock. et. P.olyester/c 0 t ro n in ne w fashionables . S·M·L . Save! ----- ~_,.,, ... -........ =,..- 1 •ALLON MARGUERITE PH0!9 ALBUM . DAISY 2 !n0 67C I Reg . 3.77 Only , . 3-HP 22" ROTARY MOWER 2 DAYS ONLY 4 .4.00 ' . h' 1 "' Eo,,·~in, recoil ·~orting 1T1ower with Brlggs & Slrotton ~. 5 t, J . c t 9 11'' ~ Yo11r c oic• w •*• •• ye . P:, t f h L t ol nd . h h d" R d ~ mogne IC ·ring Snee~. X •) low deiiiti. Fait t rowin9, ~om.? •Cc o .. e, COl'I r o 51op·Jwrtc on an ... u9ge _, leflll for Photos .............. 97''-fr•• bloomi"'i· ••t., 1 polyethylene wheels, deep·treod tire i.Chorge it aftd--.. ' •lJ .,._ • -. .:.zl':_ I --. ,.., ;,, I): ~ ."'9' ,..,. -- OUTDOOR GYM SET 2 DAYS ONLY 20.00 e Pl11lic l 1wn Swin'i , 2 pl11f;c 1win'i1 · 1ir flil1 · 5 IL 1clu1I 1lid1 • 7.ft. v1rlic1I . I ' ~01i1ont1I • c1ndy t1r ip1d l19t • 11f1tv ' l t con1lruction. l ' . . . • • • 30-QT. PICNIC CHEST 2 DAYS ONLY 100 • Use Your K-MART CHARGE Roomy, 33-quart picnic chest has molded "end i grips" for easy carrying. and the lid doubles °'' BANKAMERICARD , a convenient serving tray. In white with green. • or MASTERCHARGE ~ ., • r1. ,....,.,_. ..... ~~ ~;..,u• 12 QT. -CHILD'S INFLA T ABU CflAIR Vinyl 1ntla1ablc chair .,.ith safery stem valve. Charae it at Kmart. c BOYS DENIM BUSH JEANS Sit11 12 to ti . Tou9h, 1 utdy for lo.g w•1r. -. 222 - • • ) • 1 POLY FOAM CHEST 77c 12 qu&fl 1i11 polyfo•m ch11t wit!-. lll•f1I h1ndl1 i1 I ptrf•cl , picnic c1rri1r. K•1p1 •vatyfhint • lr1 1~ 111cl col ~ lo• ho uri. l uy •. ~!IW l"d llYI, ICE FREEZER TRAY " 2 Ooys Only ~;gid aYOCado polyethylene. KHp• picnic chest <Old. So••· I 66c -• I • Jll 041LV PILOT s Monday, July '· 197) DESIGNER SKETCH -This black-and-while rend- ering affords a sneak preview of the 1974 r.iercury Cougar XR-7, to be introduced in Lincoln-Mer~ury 1dealerships in September, According to Gene Bor~i· In High Gear ·- nat, vi ce president oi design, the Cougar XR·7, thougq it was graduated to the personal luxury car field , takes many design cues from its Cougar tra· dltion. LilXury Cougar Make Debut t----1JyrCARC.--CARSTENSEN --Bordinat----believes -the ex...-performal'lCe-instrumentaUon as standard items.'' Penney's Shows Big S~l~ Jump -. , .. I °' .... ENltfy ''* 11'" perlence of Lincoln-Mercury The 1974 _..COUgar XR-7, designers with the first debuting this fall as the Cou'gar execulion was in- newes t domestic m i d • s i z e strumental in achieving the personal luxury car, will tnke appropriate mix of elegance many design cues from earlier and function in the 1974 model. models. According to Gene Bordinal, Ford Motor· Company. vice president of design, the new Cougar model combines "Uni· que elegance with roominess·, comfort a n d convenience items and ease of operation." "TUE ORIGINAL Cougar evolved from a theme car created in 196$ by the pre- production area Of the Lincoln· Mercury Design 0 f f I c e , ' ' Bordirtat explained. "The challenge at_ that time was A SECOND g e n e r a t Io n· similar to this year's -to Cwpr m e an .t a ~ble· produce a car ·with a higher chlllleoge foe designerl m the dqree ol styling more quality Llncoln-Men:ury clleslin of·_ ' fice. the Ford eXecutiVe said. -and more .standanl-..feetures "Ftnt, we ·were asked to than were available on· cars create • mid-sbe car -one already offered in Its field." that reflected the growing The ori · I ,,_,,..... .. had hid ~ Interest in ' h lg hi y gma "'"""" • persOnalized automobiles. den headlights, dual taillights and sequential tum signal "Second, vJe attempted to system. retain the distinctive Cougar "In 1968, we introduced the appearance which made the· first XR-7 model with full in· original version such a success strumentalion. larger engine in the sports. s P e c i a I t Y options , ahd plusher interior milrket." appo intments," he said. that yours may not ! 1 COMl'UTI o...- COUNTY CO~IA•I ...... 1: .i.,.... S-Clu 11 .. ,M ...... ... ,.... ....... . .._. ...... ~u. MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IASll .., MO DIPOSIT 119UIUD ON APPIOYD CllDrT ONLY SJf,IO PR MONT TOTAL COST I f..u.tt.4 ,..., 5 NIW COMPACT UNfT SID 111/••4•1/1) 6 tOICI MISU&I PAGllS ALSO .&II AVAIU.ILI 7 Mill FIR MAINTINANC ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SEHVJCE I"( 714 • llS·llOS .. 1 $0. SANTA ,E, SAJrtT.11 .llJrt.11 rwm llflHll ·-~. Mis.ion VI ... 111 ,.1111, 5111 Cft1M111f, S111 J1111 1,i1tt-, $.I T• .. , CIH 1 .. 1 f 4t6-Jm "We believe the 1974 Cougar is a logical development of the car's personality. The Cougar design theme of a long hood. short deck styling is more pronounced in the new model. Standard Co u g a r (eatures include a t!tree- quarter-vinyl roof. luxury wheel· criVen.). )Vilh X R • 7 ornamentation, a s t and • u p Cougar hood ornament and opera windows with t h e Coupr symbol.'' "THE IHl'ERIOR of the 1974 ·CotJ,rar also reflects the union J)f European and Americai,. tastes. "\Ve have· increased interior room," Bordinat said, "and in- cluded super soft v i n y I upholstery,• low-back seating, cut-pile carpeting, and re- t a'i n e d Cougar 's full Stater Bros. Sets Opening Slater Bros. Market at 2180 Newport Blvd. in Costa ~fesa. is scheduling a three day grand opening event following remodeling of the facility. All ney,• merchandising fix- tures have been designed into the modem interior and ex- terior decor. The three day grand opening celebrallon will be Thursday through Saturday'' and features free prizes, reCreshments and balloons for lhe kids. A,..,erllM-1 Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved l n man.v ca!'f's Prrp:ir:ilion H :;(iv cs prompt. lr n1por:iry rrtiC'( rrom such pain and itc:hini:;: :i nd artu:11l v h<'-li:IS shri nk ~wrll i n~ or l~C'morrhoidal till.· r;urs a:n1~ by inflrunrn:i l inn. 'f cst.1 by doclors on hun - SALES drt.'Cfs of patients showed I.his lo be true in many a1scs. In fn ct , many doctors, thcm- !'('lvcs. u!lc Preparation //® or rN'OmmC'nd it for !heir fnm- ilil'~. l'rcp:i ration H oi ntment nr ><up1~itor ics. WALL STREET Investment Firm * * * The LQs Angeles reg~onal qi· fice of Toyota Motor Sales, U.S., Inc .. has-moved into new offices at the Airport Center, 18622 litacArtJiur Blvd . Formerly located in Tor- rance, the Los Angeles Region coordinates vehicle and part distribution to 92 Toyota dealers in Southern California, Arizona and Nevada . FIFTY•FOVR sales and ad- . minlstrative personnel will oc- cupy _tQe .otfictS totaling 7,000 oquare IMI. Win H&&U, Los Angeles regional riianagtt, said the~ main reason for the move was the more central location in the'l'eglon, closer proxlmlly to the airport and the ideal con- ditions of the Irvine Industrial community. * * * The first quarter of . 1973 brought no change in the num- ber or retail outlets handling domestic makes of passenger can, the quarterly Automotive News census discloses. The outlet total or 25,427 on April 1 was down only 14 from the 2 5 , 4 4 4 I establisiunents doing business at t h e beginning or this year. It was the industry's best performance for the period in IZ years that Automotive News has' been compiling quarterly census reports. 'FROM AN I NDUSTRY s(andpoint, the m o s t en- couraging aspect,.pf this year 's stability was that It was shared b,V all 4 manufacturers. Ford Motor had ~ best record with a gain of 8 outlets for the quarter. General ?t-fotors and American Afotors wtre down 5 each, and Chrysler Corp. was off 12. Special to the Dally Pilot NEW YORK -J,C. Penney Co. Inc. has reported that June ·sales rose 14.5 percent over the 1972 month as favorabli! weather stimulated Father's Day business and ap- parel buying, Volume for the five-week period ended JWle 3 o amounted to a record 536.2 million compared with $468.2 million for the like year-ago period, according to Chairman William M. Batten a n d president Jack B. Jackson . 1be increase amounteil to '61 million. June was the ·123nf straight monthly reporting period of sales ·-· • Volume for lKe firtt five mmths of the flSCAI year, Jan. is.June 30, was 15.7 percent ahead d. last year. Sales for the 22 weeks totaled $2,265.7 million, a gain of $307.7 million over $1:951 nillUon last year. J.C. Penney operated 2.052 domestic and foreign retail units at the end. of the June period compared with 2,0·14 last year. Keystone's · In Viejo " ...... -Keystooe Savings and Loan Association )\a.s been granted permission to open an office in the nortjl-east area of Mission Viejo, , !Jonald W. Caspers. Keysto~ chairman, has ,·an- nounced: Caspers said the associa· lion's new office will · be located in a· shopping center at the intersection or Trabuco Road and Marguerite Park- way and that he expected the office to be fully opera- tiona l be.fore the end of the year. Money's Worth Good News--Balance In U.S .. Budget See11 By SYLVIA PORTER federal budget was in balance One rare piece of good news in only one year -fiscal 1969 crunlng out ·of Washington -which was half president which even 'Yatergate should Johnson's and half President not obscure is that the federal Nixon's year. Nixon entered budget is nearing balance. Jn the White House in January tact, in the 1974 fiscal year 1989, inherited J oh n s o n • 1 which began last week, the budRet and the 1968 boom federal government's income' began trying to curb the u,; well may appros:imate Its upnring, sent us instead into outgo ror the first time during the 1969-70 recession -and the Nixon tenure. · slump. trmnes fell, taxes on That means these inc<lmes fell, too -and that a key that WM the short life and force fueling deelh of the balanced budget today's gal-of the entire· decade. loping Inna-Bf!twecn fisc&l 1965, when lion "ill be lh'e Vietnam"war was escalated losing force. and fiscal 1973 the ac· Jt mean$ .cumulated • d e f I c i t ap- thn t. gover n· prnximated an' awesome S!Ofl ment fis~al billion. That·~ the deficit Po1tr11t ( s pend ing· 11lone. t&x) poficy \viii S\Ving from These dcricits poured money actually encouraging our des· into the economi c stream, tructlvc price spiral to helpin g boosted the toal of spending ·fight it. money in the hands o( con· _.th 1,..nch Office In New,.,t IMch Part Time Or Full Time IT MtANS '111AT govern- ment n\onetary ( c Ted i t ) policy, already on the antl-ln- natlon side, will become more so -for the simple reason that the federal re serve system will no longer be · compelled to pump credlt Into our banks on so grandkm: a scale In order to assist the Treasury in borrowing the money It needs. With federa l budget deficits averaging $23 billion annually in the past th ree years, "the only thine surprising about continuin g prTce inflaton," conunent.s Dr. Jules Backman, New York U nl v e r1 lt y economlct professor, "b: that so many ptnons are surprteed sumcrs and the cash registers of corpora9'15. This Is the fun- damental \reason "ie· are cursed by a demand-pull infla- tion today. For purchasinJI'. power has expended at a far faster rate than the suppty o' ~ and services cM9ed bv those havinr the purrhiulil'lf1 power. It has beeri · ex~11lv,. demand outllnir up P"ices - ''demand-pull inflRtlon." Generous Commissions if JIO N co n devote 3 1ptcific eve11i11Q1 a wee.le from 6:30 P,M. to 10 P.M. Call. 714 -675-4190 ........ 11:• A.M. & 6109 P.M. \ by lt.".~ •" . I DlililNG 111P! 11111, the • • ON TOP OF this. the Federal Reserve waa forced to pump up money in the bankinr ~stem more than It mlcht othe"'ise have done 10 that the Treasury could easJly sell Its obligations to the blnks. Again. to quote B a c k In , system more than It mig~ otherwise have done to ,that the Troasury oould e11lly .. 11 Its obllgallns to the b8nks . 1 ' Wall Street. 0 ~ . . . ··:lai/iu~i:~titilt:;li!-;;1olr?~:#e11$;.i.nef:;; . . , ... . . . .. . . .~,=· .. . . .1'.'tl" •• • • •• • • • • •• • •• ••• • • • • • ••••• Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. . We couldn't prove it,-of course,. but j it s~ e 111.s l~kely • that· the percentage is even greater here . in the Or- ange _Coast area ... and fr's growing every day. That's why the DAll!Y PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed wire services. We're-still doing it in · e~ery home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. Wall Street's computers "talk to" the computers in plant every trading day at the rate of DAILY PILOT more' than 1,000 words per minute. It takes· only 12 minutes to move-the entire New Yo,rk and Am~rican Stock Exchange reports from t~e canyons of Wall Street to the typesetting machines Qf the· DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. And when technology finds a way to beqt that speed record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the first to use it to· !:>ring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that m~ns business is the • I I • • I • ' -·-, t , ' • ' I I t I THE I f • I ' I I ' • • • - • I I I ' . . • I I I • ' COMING ' • ~ --. . . f -:, "(::July 18 through 21-South' Coast Pim ' ( . I ' t I • . I BUILD ,youR GARBENSTANGEL QUICK AND ENTER .,. ' . IT IN THE BUILD A BITTER GARBENSTANGEL . CONTEST AND INTERNATIONAL RALLYE I . I ' . - ), I . . . \ AGAIN ,! CUT-CORNERS ,11 ,, . . ,.······ ,' Yes, I , ,, will build a ,, ,, Garbensta119el ~ # . I ,, or launch a search 1 ## I ,, for one I can put into : # I 1 ,,' shape for exhibition at 1 # I ,, the ~allye. : ## , I # I · /N~I I . .· # I /~~W I # I # # CITY ZIP PHON! I , 11o11 to: · I '-# ,,._..._ Mlftl1w. DAILY ftlLOT, ftO ..... 1Sll . C0tt1 Met1 , Callf. t212f II ···--···············--------·--··· ' I - I • • I I • Invasion Fleet"/ · Actually, this is a fleet waiting for an invitation =-or 35,000 Boy Scouts. The . sco uts will come to Farragut State Park, Idaho from Aug. 1-7 !or Jamboree West. The national festival will draw boys ~rom all over the nation and cano- ing is only part of the fun ahead Silly Season Blooms . Garbe1istangle Mail: Put-ons With Class It happens every year about this time. As good garbenstangelers get together -or start to think about it -and as the date for the year's Build. a Better Garbenstangel Contest and International Rallye ap- proaches, the mall around the Daily Pilot office turns runny. Some of the letters fairly bloom with word bouquets. Sometimes, it's easy to spot a put~. Sometimes not. R. B. MUSIC of 16352 Gen- try Lane, Huntington Beach, sent along a note in answer to !he Daily Pilol's published challenge to build (or fmd and. put into condition) a garbemtangel for the greet rallye to be held July 11 through 21 at South· Coul Plaza. · "We were tmable to 'can• plete our production model . In time for yoUr splendid con. test," he wrote. . "We spent too mUch tim:e exi>loMng the export market. . .. I have enclosed, herewith, a description of the working fun· Odd 'Couple St. Bernard, Dachshund pgiT WALTON BEACH, -"Fla. (AP) -:;,;.A, fll!l-l>looded JJl.paimil.St. ...... and her Ol!lllllull complaicll. a abort, lrisky dad!slmnd, have be-conie proud po-a of nine ~-;,;,~ beard of ;t hap- pening before and neither has tbe vet," said the dogs' owner, Barbara Batchelder, about the mating of the two. Pat, the dachshund, is a 14- inch·tall 30-pounder "who is not quite full-blooded ," said Mrs. JJ.atchelder. Lies!, the St. Bernard and the new mother. gave birth at home to eight pups, but one died. "Three of them a re beautiful and St. Bernard-look· ing, with the black mask around the eyes a n d everything," Mrs. Batchelder said. •'The . ,..others are reddilh- brown ill ooklr, jlllt· lib PIL They're-abOat;ft'ye,-ar six in- ches Nag and It's really too early to tell what t,,,-te going ~ look like ... 1be Batchelder ramily didn't know Liest was prqnant imtil Monday. , "We were· so surprised, but the vet just laugh¢ and &Sid the puppies 1 would be smaller and the 'litter not as big as normal for a St. Bernard," Mrs. Batchelder said. "Pal and Lies! are constanOy logether In our yard, and there's no way anyone else could be the father." The veterinarian said he could not say who the father of the puppies ia, but said it is possible that it is the clachsbund. A Lot of Talk .: Sex Revolt Bunk, Expert Reports damentals of our unit. .•. " THE ENCLOSED sheet con- 1ains some of the best garbemtang<I pU""'1 material . recolvedtoclate. - OI ...-: !rs • put.a>, ~·t "? Here are ..ne e1-cerpts. Judge !or yoursell: "Far a , number of years now, -k hes been pro- ceeding in order to bring perfedlon lo the crudely con- ceived idea of a machiile that "'ould not only 1t1pPly inverse reactive current for use in unilateral ~ detract.ers, but would ablo be capable of a utomaUcally synchronizing cardinal 1ranuneters. "Such · a machine is the 'GARBENSTANGEL.' Basical- ly the mly principle.involved is that, .instead of power being generated. b . ~ relative mo- tion of condudori and Duxes, it is produced by the modial interraction of. mapejMel~ tance and capac~tive su,bRJ.syblnce.' ~ , "THE ONLY MACIDNE GI this type haa been ... with • ~!try-operated plddlebottom alld a base j>late of prefabull\ed annulite, aur- mounted by a malleable strob;- tianite casing. in such a way that the two spurning bearings were in a direct line with the pentamettic fan. 'lbe latter consisted 1imply of 1 i x bydrocOptlc rnanelvanes, so fitted to the ambifacleot ll.IDar waneshaft that side fumbling w1s effectively prevented .•• "Engineers will appreciate the dilflculty of n u b b i n g together at i g ht -b.a n de d zOenstift and a power dipoleck. Indeed, this proved lo be a stumbling block lo fw1her development until, in 1953 it was found that the me • of anhydrous naagllng p In 1 enabled the trytonutlc1 boll- ing! to become maffled •••• '"U'ndoubtedly, the 'G ARBENSTANGEI.' haa now reached 1 a very high level of technical development. It has been successfully used for operating ramo,, tnmnions. In addition, whenever barescent skor motion diagrams are necessary, It may be employed with a reciprocating . . spasle-arm to reduce INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) said -but lhe talk 1S mucli ainuaoldal deplenaraUon." -Reports oI a "sexual less Ukely than.formerly to be ___ - revolution " on campuses are bragging about sexual coo- probably exaggerated a n d quests. "It's no• 'Ho, ho, ho, did I student.!I entering college now ., may just as likely be virgins ever get here,' " she said. as studcnt.!I of a generation "1bat's declasse -that's ex- ho ploitaUon." ago, a psyc loglst says. PromiScuity, too, carries the WHY IE SHY ••• .... --""""-' CaD - 642-4104 But it's also probable there "exploitation" taint and is is· more premarital sex on frowned upon, sh~ said. campus now_ than cver ... al-She said a premarital rela· though that does not mean tionship no longer is as likely sludents favor promiscuous to be considered in terms of J91 1. 17" St. • , .... A•. behavior. said the psychologist, good and bad , but rather as Nut N • ..,.. Mlrt. - Elizabeth J\1ooncy. right or wrong for the persons c .... ,.... '42-4114 Mell. "'"' l'rl. t r. 6---Sll, t N J: Mrs. J\fooncy spoke In an in·,-~i~nv~o~lv~cd~·:::;::;;;;_;=;r=;;~~~~~~~~~11 terview about a study of adolescent:;exual behavior she conducted w i t h sociologist James. Elias, The team used tbc facilities of l n d I a n a Universitf's Institute for Sex Research, commonly known as the Kinsey Institute. ' MRS. MOONEY said there simply are a lot more 1tudenta in college than ever before, so tnore are likely not to be virgins. Still, she said, at least 90 percent or the freshmen probably are virgins. "At the beginning or tiny college yetir, there are more virgins than !here ere non- virgins on campus,.'' sbe sai4 "I don't believe there is a sexual rc\19lutlon on campus," Mrs. Moodty said, •• ' . . ' . ;. '. . ,.O..''< ' . ... . . '" ~·· -.. .. • .. -. • •• 4'!~ i..').. • • . • • ' c • • Triple exposure. Three ways to meke the most of your ton. Beoutifully bored, with cut-i>utvomps ond just• · few straps crossing between you 'and the sunshine. Beoutilully nolurol, with the snop of white le~ther. I A. By Miramonte, Busto, kidskin, 22.00 B. By Penaljo, Core free ; potent, 20,.00 C. By Naturalizer®, Morlowe, potent, 20.00 Women's Shoes 35 , SHO, ID A.M. h t 1JD '-M.~.MOHDA'v TH~OU$H FRID Y. SATU~DAY 10 A.M. to t '·"'"SUNDAY 12 NOON to I P.M. YOUNG PEOPLE nowaday1 are much more open In talking about sexualily, Mra. MCIOMY ••ANADA MILLS 18000 Ctllt~Ot1h St., fOIUNCIS@llul~td.1 IM lllll'llune w0ootAND Mtl,121!!00 V'ldory llW. l&lllWOODCll'&On SI. aotd P=• ... llf'llll•l3520 Tylet ''· IUINA PAtlC8tkll ttd Of' UMA "NA1JOO Sol~ iiiltol $t. OIAlie91GltNtl ~ 81'1( 1M M ... •NAH!IM NtwiOtiT HUNTIN$TON l!ACH ORAN$~ MALL 0, OAAN$! CllOtTOS ... ,.,. E11c.li4 {1141 lll·ll21 41 f•1hio11 ....... 1714) '44-12111111141 ... ,,A ... (1141 ltt.JJJIJJOON. l•th1St.1114) •••·l'll'l IOD Lo1C.rrltt1 M•ll lf!Jr uo.0411 I . I I .. I • • ::Computer Assists .. STORIES By ALLISON DEEfill ... °' .. Otill., ... .... ,, • Carolyn Kimme has plenty of motiva- Ht---ll<)D-lor-her-compuler work al UCI - saving Uves. Mrs. Kimme Is a member of a team of radiologists, engineering students and computer programmers d e v e I op i n g • • ... ., techniques which will help radiologists detect early cancer ol the breast. Rrl.ncipal investigators are Dr. Jack Sklansky ol 'hs UCl School ol Eni!ineer· ing aod Dr. n .J. \)'Loughlin, head of radiology Calilarnla College of Medicine, UCI. Through a National InsUtute ol Health grant, studies are being made in pattern .. , f' .~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor M111Ur,.Ju1., ,, lln .,._ " •·. ' . ' ·· Early Detection · Helps reeowtltion. The aim 1s to better delttt tumors of the lung from X-rays and lo distinguish normal from a b n o r m a I breasts in Xerograms. "Breast cancel"" 1s ·1he .... only type-of cancer \Yhiett 'has not-been reduced. Women normally discover the lump themselves, but by this time more than the breast is involved and mastectomy is required," she said. DETECTION "The only way to break this cycle is to find it earlier." She explained that the cu rrent methods of diagnosis include mammography, an X-ray of the breast ; thermography, which· registers !henna! patterns) and x. erography (or Xeroradiograptly which can reveal cancers that can't be felt. It is Xerography with v.·hich she is cur- rently working. The aim is to devise automated techniques which are less time-consuming and less expensive, thus making mas,, screening (ii it proves ef- fective ) more practical. "A Xerograph,'' she explained , "is like a Xerox machine, with a glass plate similar to that in any duplicating machine. First an X-ray is taken , then fed into the Xerograph which produces • :Sc-reening Saves ·Lives ~ Every 15 minutes, two American film mammography, tbermograpby, or women are diagnosed 'BS having breast Xeroradiography techniques, along with y,•ith. twnors appearing as .. hot spots" on the film. . cancer -an estimated 74,000 in 1973. medical histories and follow.up. DIAGNOSTIC TOOL !be Amertcan cancer Society pttdlcts Through the """"'illgs' the Cancer ·Jbat 7 oµt of every 100 women will Society 'hopes to answer several ques-XeroradiographY, 0>9v~ an x-ray into . deVelop the d~. tion~ while detecting early cancers. a readable ~ 1h blue tones. The • Bu( despite aitvanCes in diagnosis, What is the t>est combination of d<.rkest tones wOuld indicate possible l>ere ha8 not"been a significant reduc-diagnostic techniques? 1 · tumors. tion in the mortality rate in the past 35 How can they be made available to "Hqpefully," ACS literature states," yeprs. , , every woman at risk ? the wealth of statistical information com-'·Currently, approx'irnately 95 percent of How can· low income women. best be • · · f. ......... t cancer patienta di&cover the con-helped? ing !rom the projects \vill paint the .way r. "°" for identification of those women Who 4·~ion themselves through breast self'-ex-COSTS SOUGHT 8intnati00. But bY' this lime. however, 60 · have a high risk for 'devel~nt of What is the role of the allied health breast cancer:'' ---pe~ have cancer that has spread to professional? \tie auxiliary lymph nodes. Wlla .1 he be' \Vho are considered high risk? At this-point, ACS literature explains, t wi 1 t ~ts · . . American, Cancer Society explains that five-year ~urvival rate is only 40 tq 45 Can early detectlOfl make a significant most cases are found among \\'Omen over' percent. 1But if the cancer is detected difference in i~ting and curing women • .-40 or at ·111e 'onset ,of menopause. sooner, while localized in the breast, the the major vict\ms of .breut cancer? Daughters and s.iSters ~f patients with rate is 80 to 8S percent. Several current methods of ex-breast· cancer miy have a higher risk aminafion Will be used singly arx1 in com-thari those \1ith no such history tn the EARLY DETECTION / binaUon.' " ... faJiuJ).. ~ ,.,. •· · • 1be American Cancer Sociej9' )is laun-· ... ~mmography ·rs. ·an. ~x-ny · ot.' the · @ w ~ cbed a breast cancer mass screening .breast takfll f~m several angles. Thi risk is · . bat lower. for mar- ..U.~ ried "·omen than siiigle ..end lowest for JrOenlm, to be based eventually in ,.20 Altt:ieugh ~e):-~,wai ~.as earlyr \Vomen who have borne and nursed e<nters tllroughout the United Slates, A as 1913. salisla ....... techniques :we""1'1 center in Orqe County is being con· devel...--1 until! the 19~ ..... . children. But they Stressed, it can strike ..,....... any woman, and occasionally men, but sidered. Thermography'ls ·l;lased on the-fact the Supported by the AC) and lt\e National body broadcasts tiealth signals through rarely children. Cancer Institute, the center,s . w~ll Cach temperature clu!Jtges .. Taken in 8 cooled The society reeommends that every attempt to screen 5,000 wonlcn ayear for room, thermograr11s: can detect minute "'oman pr~ctice monthly breast self·ex- in the amination. Informative brochures are the next two years, ta}'get,~. aplOURt! of.heat given ~;by a cancer or 40 and over. ,~ ir.flammation :within the brtast. available through the Orange County Tbe free screenings will be done by The IJlcrmograph shows heat patterns, Unit, ACS, 83S-0510, in Tustin. l . - . , ' l • Cancer Research · , an cpaq~e picture, in tones o(btut. Light blue indicates skin 1ones,' dirker tones veins and arteries and Lhi.i darkest, calcifications or possible tumprs. . TRANSLATE!) I The ~tedica.J 'Jniage An a I y g i s Laboratory at oq, is equi~ to reduce photographi c nega\j,v~. including X-rays to a form which qin be read·~)',.~· com· put er. Then a small computer is used to test difrereilt techniques for distinguishing bel\\'een nonnal and abnormal breast X· erograms. "\\'e hope to find as simple a method as possible to isolaie the normal rrom the abnormal "'ithout missing any ab- normalities. nnd hopefully. the simplest method will also be the least expensive." Her .)ob, as a computer programmer, is to conver1 the v:isqal clues a f1ldiologist ~·ouJd use as diagnosis into mathemalical symbols sO lhey can be analyzed by the computer. For example, the lightest col· ors on !he. Xerogram would mean small numbers, the darkest large numbers. ' KNOWN STUDIED "I'm siartlng with a known sampl e. I know \Vhat is normal and abnormal. I SEE RELATED STORY ON PAGE 14 ' •• I I ' compare factors of each and see "'hat there is no lump, discomfon. . ' perhaps only a bttle cooclusions can be dray,•n. "'\\-'here the radiologist lookJ for ducts, vessels, texture, thickening-I take the same clues and look for t hac mathematical patterns ." If enough eal'IY breast cancers ~re di scol'ered in the moss screening studies l currently under \\'OY br. the American Cancer Society to justily the expense I and medical effort. an effort will be made to screen all women over 40. '"I think ol myself as a translAtor from medical science to c o m p u t e r mathematics. So1nellmes the \\'Ork i~ tedious. It btvolves a Jot of research. I spent hours and hours in a photo lab find· ing just the ·right developer for con· verting the X~graph bpaques'\\•htch are blue in to transparencies the computer can read.'' "This could not. be inexpensively or pra<.1jca lly d011e using current methods. A radiologist must lake time with each palient's diagnosis. He can only handle so many patients per day . "We need a device that can do the basic screening, based oo norms we set through our studies. and not miss any ab- normalities.·' From this "'ork, the tean1 hopes to develop a less expensive de\•ice 1vhich does \\'hat the computer does. Th is m>J.iliL Are tht long hours of someti mes be used in mass screening. . tedious "'ork \\'Orth it"." · It would allow screening to be dooe more quic kJy. Only those Y.'ilh signs-in· dicatinlf possibilit y of an abnor1nality would be seen by the radiol ogi st or physi- cian tor confinnation. ··1 feel y,·oml'n have been neglected. Breast cancer is almost exclusively a disease of "·omen. If• it ls not detected early, a \''onµn "'iU lose one ~ret1;st or both. It is a serious psychological. pro- blem as well as painful and di.sfigurtng. ANSWERS "Th'e question the NIH grant hopes to answer is 'Does this y,·oman 'heed to be examined by a physician?'" \'\Ve have to use whatever tools we haVe, and find more. so that more women can be saved from having to undergo this operation -or even worse, die from lnck of detection in time." ~1rs. Kimme explained that in some breast cancer it can be detected although '~uits Dr. 8. J. O'Loughlin, Dr, Morton Adler end Dr. Lowrence Brown discuss concer study with Corolyn Kimme, " UCI computer progrommer . Let Women • Get Back in -swim Swimming, sunning, just relaxing around a pool or at the beach are luxuries every woman should be able to afford. Yet many women who have undergone breast surgery have given up this type of leisure because they are unaware swimwear is available for them. Several manufacturers do recognize this special problem, though, and design more covered swimwear. The Reach to Recovery program of the American Cancer Society pub- lishes a yearly report on the latest styles available: The possibilities, in colors a nd prints rro1n the companies' regular stock, include tunic tops. playsui ts with cap sleeves or even regu- lar one-piece suits with separate swim bras. Getting back into the fashion swim is a milestone for women recovering from mastectomies. with swim and formal wear being the supreme test. Special tailoring at the sleeveholes usually is the only alteration needed lb make the condition undetectable in a· regular wardrobe. · Cop Sl eeves on this florol de~ign jumpsuit ' -(for left) end Chinese l11cquer print swim shirt moke these comfortable outfits for women wh~ "hove hod mostectomies. ,f j I • .. J,1 ...;D:.:Al:;l:.:Y..:P_::ll:.:D.:._T _______ _.:::cMondaJ JulJ 9 1971 ' ' An Important Check Lie down. Put one hand beh ind your head. With the other hand, fingers ·1- flattened, gently feel your breast. Press ev er so lightly . Now examine other breast. 2 This illustration shows you how to check each breast. Begin where you see the A and follow the arrows, • feeling gently for a lump or thickening .. Remember to feel ell parts of each breast. Now repeat the same procedure sitting up, wit~ • the hand still behind your head. Your Horoscope Tomorrow • Scorpio: Dilemma Is Resolved! . I I TUESDAY It lo all or ~'.I~ Ride with Ude. DeaL v._t, O'ldu•I_ flllfll!-1 promlle .-lbon can be With CU-person. Find ment of ambfllons. ~ JULY I 0 ' dellvmd. Turw, Llllra ii>-common area cl Interest. One may be slow but it Is steed1:1 ar~DNSYOMARll diYkluall play prominent who seems to lack confidence There is room for you at top, ARJES (Mar<112l·Aprll 19): n>les. Strive for .domestic merely need& encouragement. but red tape will have to bei Don't take for granted that harmony. . , Give JI llld you will be untangled. Aquarbu, Loo &!"! others are making reserva-VIRGO (Aug. 23&pt. 22 ): handJomely repaid. Scorpio persons could be in· lions, attending to travel Real estate, property values, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. volved. details or collecting needed additional security -these 18): Acetnt on desires, ability IF TODAY IS y OUR material. Protect your own in· are spotlighted. Be analytical. to win friends and sway ~ BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, terests. Insist o n con-Select quality. Don't fool pie. S ocia I l z e. Share firll\atlons. Chetk with in-yourself. No one intends to knowledge and Interests. Don't so mew h a l self-centered. dividual who is at a distance . give you something r or be satisfied with one path. Be basically independent, stub- TAURUS (April 26-P..tay 20): nothing. Pisces per50n could versatile. Valuable contacts born, capable of cut t Ing High.light fie1iblllty. Deal with whisper sweet nothings. can be made If you are open , through nonessentials and get- SqlUarlaa. Find out where UBRA (Se pt. 23-0ct..22): receptive. ting to heart of ma tte rs. This money comes from and where Money connected with relative PISCES (Feb. It-March~): month, July, should be your it goes. Be aware of commands attenUon. Assume s"poUight on c a r e e r ad-most significant of 1973. partnership Interests. Some l'espomibili ty but be sure ' matters, kept. hidden, should otheri e&IT)' their fair share. be e~ to ,,..... Ji&l!I. You need not be a doormal.Jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,;o;;;;;;;;;;_,;;;;;;;;;;;;""'i Ad. acoonllngly. Short trip Is featured. Past STIC ND H R~uoRKIN~ GEMINI (May 21.June 20): commitment is subject of WE HAVE ENTHUSIA A A u" Q Accent ls on pubHc relations, spirited negotiation. partnenhlp, close ties, in-SCORPIO (Oct. ~Nov. 21 ): eluding marriage. You may Money dilemma i:S resotvm if feel pace has slowed. You are you agree to "leL go" of the right. Not wise now to force past. Broaden horizons. Poten- lssues. Be a quiet, shrewd tlal ,is greal Know ii; act like observer. Details are more you are aware of it. Accent is import ant than usual. Wait ! · on valuables, p erso n a I CANCER (June 21.July 22): p:>Ssessions, finances. Aries is Work analysis is necessary. in picture. AVAILABLE AT MOST HOURS -fOR AS FEW AS THREE HOURS. OUR UNIVERSITY STUDENT EMPLOYEES ARE CARE- FULLY SCREENED, BONDED, INSU~ED AND ARE COVERED BY' SOI AND WORKMENS COMPENSATION. UNIVERSITY HOUSEKEEPING. CALL 636·1800, TU ES., WED. ONLY: HOURS 1'-teans time and mJtion study, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-perhaps in personal sense, Dec. 21): Lunar cycle is high; I A.M. to 12 AND I to 5. would prove benefic ial. You take initi'ative. You have1"==============;:;;:=:=:::;::;=:~ may be trying too hard in chance now to gain through m.t.: wrong direction. Key now ls to dependence, new contacts. find reasons for recent ba~ Strive to express original penlngs. ideas. Brighten surroundings. LEO (July 23-Aug. 23): Shal!e off lethargy. Trust your Home, children, affairs of own hunch, judgment. heart -these are emphasizod. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. Nothing now occurs halfway. 19): There could be general JULY SPECIAL DUPES 99-=. ............................. , • • .. C1111UJHllll ._Programs V.aried DEAR ANN LANDERS : If my memory serves me, last year you were at _ the head table at a dinner in Washington, D.C., given by the American Kidney Fund. 1 always believed you were on the level and I had a lot of respect for • information that might be useful for the woman Who was wondering if she should tell her European.born neighbor. a recent arriva l to thls country, to shave her hairy legs. Peering -ATaarrd- CIHnad and Fon Folded 20°/o OFF ALL HOUSEHOLDS , ......... s,,...,, .tel . By Clubs '1 Gorden Club you. ,That's all_ changed si nce I read today • paper. - - • '11Doe c:1-In flow<!' Ir· I see where the American Kidney Fund '-' are belntl """"ied rabed 1'199,434 In Ii. ftnt year of opera-__Jo~Nllll--......,.... ond tioo and..llJJ"ll only 5 pe!'CeDI on t!>.e pa-.w u a refrelher· coune llents. 'lbe rest went for "administration for advaaood ...,lpen wllD ond fund.raising." 'Ille United States • 119 pt.MIDI lo mter the fall Poet.al Service is now investigating the ! --· -ed bf Ibo organiJalloo for fraud. Onace O>unly DI st r I c t Before I write you olf compl etely I'd Glrden C1ub&. -like to gtve you a ~ to offer some The .-. l!pOlllOred bf nplanalloo -U you cM think ol one. NC!WJ*'t Beach Garden Club. That was you, wasn't lil·? "-Former wUl De from '10 a.m. to noon Admirer In· Ricbmood on W-y. July II, II and 25 in illand iloul< Fashion DEAR F.M.: Yes, tbet was L But tbe J.aiand. ' dluer ns for..&be~JOdney Fo1a1- DEAR ANN LANDERS :-! was-touched by the Jetter from the 14-year-Old girl wh;t signed her leUer "Born Loser." When I was a teenager I read the y.fe story ol Eleanor Roosevelt, "'Ille Ugly Duckling." One sentence made a tremen- dous impress.ion on me and I'd like to share It with "Bom Loser." "No one can insult you without your pennjssk>o." Whenem' I get the impression that someone js; slighting me, or if I shouJd be on t~ i<ceiving end or a petty or Jl9inlul remli1(l-1' tell myself, "Ignore the in4 , cldenl. as if It never happehed." I rema in pleasant and unperturbed and it works li ke a charm. When I was traveling in Italy ·and France last summer I noticed many at- tractive women on the beach-had hairy legs and armpits as well. Others, however. \\'ere clean-shaven. I inquired about. · it from a cultivated a n d sophisticated gentleman. He told me that women who removed the hair from their bodies were prostitutes. It was their unsPoken trademark -SMARTER NOW DEAR FRIEND: Tllat'a a llnOg renerallzalloa .... rd be •anfal about applying: It .ba every eue. Bwt .eoametic customs do vary from COUlltrJ' to eoc. try. Thanks for the cbte-la. SERVING A.S guest hostess on the Robert Q. lewis Sllow "·as Joan Brick ol .Huntington IF~~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;:;;;;;;~~ Beach. Among those s h e , in- terViewed during her five<lay sUnt were actttss Vera Miles, composer Sammy C a b n , screenwriter Mel Blanc, actor Lany Kert, sports figure Ro5ie Grier, actress Martha Scott and write Thom a s Tho_... Her duties included at- tending a theatrical production each ni ght, such as "Two Gentlemen of Verona," and reviewing it the next day on the Lewis show. ' I OVERWEIGHT?. 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Medical Supervision at the Omega Clinic ·. ! HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00 • CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT m: ' . COSTA-MESA ANAMl lM SANTA ANA 1'11t1trfM.uK11n : 1Uf ...... rt 1"4 W. Mwy. lmtTnlln.t.vt (714) 870-9347 646-1633 771-4141 547"329 (213) 697-1791 1H '#, LtHtkt 11\1111. 0ond11ctiu( -will datloa, Ii-OT die American Kklney Fund. be MrS Jlowarc1 Campbell Time . .re two leJllln&e artd distinct Jlldlon &nd. Mn. Jack s. Gates trpnbadom. I am la no way Involved wbo are accredited nower wltb tbe Kklney Fond; in fact I never show judges and who have even beard of It. Th'as ts a wonderful approach for another reason. When I stay a.round, in- stead of going o£f in a huff or feeling hurt; 1 often discover that the remark ca me out in a way the person did l)ot in- tend. J ust sign me -BENEFIT OF TilE DOUBT ls alcoholism ruining Your lire? Know the danger signala: a1)d what to do. Read the booklet, "AlcohOlism - Hope and Help," by Ann Landers. Enclose 35 cents;!--------''---====================:::' in coin with your request and a long,lr-----------------------------~ stamped, self-addressed envelope to the Daily Pilot.. llught n:tenslvely in Southern Your letter is an excellent example of California bow mlxeG-up people can do serious • damage because they d.Jdn 't get tbe facts las Clas ~!me Is very precious to me and I Mn. Velma Bolin will lead don't lend It to u y cause or organhatkln meumen of Lu 0 I a s that I have DOt lnves11gated thoroughly. Toastmis~s Club In im-Thank you for writing and giving: me tbe promptu speecbe3 during the opporta.D.lty to set; the record straight. next meeting at 7:30 p.m. DEAR BEN: Your letter wa s especially meaningful became I, loo, read '"Ille .Ugly Dockllnc" Bild loved IL Eleanor Roott:velt was one of my early berolnts. Thank you for your reference. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have some Wednesday, J uly 11, in the Mercury Savings and Loan, Htmtlngton Beach. Toastmistress will be l\1rs. will be conducted from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday 3nd Sun- day. July 14 and 15, at the Lucky Store parking lot, \Vestminster. District Adult Education pr~ --- gram . Gerald L a nd 11 ma n . and speakers will be the l\1mes. Mary Smith, Clarence Double and Elden Bainbridge. lington Beach co nt es t , ... , c•fMaft•t1t Winning the Little 1.!iss Hun-~&"'!:: sponsored by the Juniors, was IM ... ..,, C•M'' Don't flunk your chemistry test. Love is more than one set of glands calling to another. If you have trouble making a distinction Y.OU need Ann's booklet, "L<lve or Sex and How to Tell lhe Difference." Send a long, self-add.re~, stamped envelope with your request and 35 cents in coin to the Daily Pilot. Mesa Harbor Mrs. Mary Oenigan, a certified graphoanalyst \\'iii present a program for Mesa- Harbor Club following a luncheon meeting at 10 :~ 1.m.. 11wnday. July 12, in the Hamburger Hamlet, Costa . Mesa. Sponsor is the Small \Vorld Parent-Participation Nursery School, Garden Grove, and proceeds will be used to purchase s u ppl i es and materials for the school. Jo Ann DouIJ, daughter of Pt.tr. J '~ r, ,1 and l\1rs. Steven Doull of Hun--J tl Jl~JI , tington Beach. i'J"~' BALI Runners·up ~'e~e 'Yendy Sue ~ . Gradual~ Olson and Llsa Higgins. 1 ... _ . •• Corscllcrcs Each W<'re presented with · o "',. "" c'" crnorrs The speaker completed a course of t h e International Graphoanalysls Soclety I 11 Clllcago, and refers to her work as "a tool to bette r undentanding of )iOUTSCll." BSP A breakfast meeting is plan- ned by the Orange Coast california Cowtcil. Beta Sig.ma Phi Saturday, July 14. in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana . Speaker \\ill be Capt. Jim Farrel, a 2-year member of prizes and each rode in the 1,. •· 11t1t s1. c .. ,. Mtw '{ Hwttlngton Beach Fourth of c""' ... .._. .• M111.1 tia. July Parade. •a-1a1 ~l;-... SPORTSWEAll Wettc1ifr' 'P!ua. 17th aocf Jnofne. Newport k1ch,C.1Uornia92660 ABWA liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:-==---=i:~ Huntington Beach Chapter, American Business Women's Association will meel at 6:30 Thursday, July 12, in the Fisherman restaurant. COASTLINE- !he Orange Coast Division ofl-----------1' HEAL TH FOODS Gamma Tau Gamma Forestry. His . topi~ v.•il\ ~ Fire Prevenuon 1n Unin- corporated Areas of Orange SPECIALS FOR JULY 9 TO 14 I The Irvine home of "trs. County. HB Juniors Kenneth Cooli ng will be the selling for a swimming party and potluck luncheon or Gam- ma Tau Gamma Alumni CbaPler or Alpha Chi Oi'ncga. The group y,•ill meet at 10 a.m. Th ursday, July 12. Rummage Sale A rummage and bake sale Huntington Beach · Juniors has launched an 'artist-of·lhe- monlh series. Those chosen for J uly are from ciil painting classes conducted by the llun· tlngto~ Beach High School semi-annual clearance! great savings from every department! dresses-blouses-sweaters-pants.fon9 dresses--' panhuits-bodyshirts-sum mer wear· accessories- all 25°/0°50°/o off-nd MORE! PLUS .• , our (1mou1 bar9ain t•blel!! FANT ~snc REDUCTIONS 3467 YI• LU. ,..,.,.,, ...... 67)·4110 • IAMltAMI RICAllO • MAJTIR CMAROI e f!DWILL CMAllOa • • COASTLINE YEAST 5,00 I lb. 116 OL) SPECIAL 51 79 Rogulor $2. 19 .. .. .. • , ' ' . SUPREME B ·COMPLEX ~~~=·~~o ...... SPECIAL '2.79 .~:~:~~~s ...... SPECIAL '4.75 ~~;.:~~~" .... SPECIAL 1 '9.95 JUNIOR VITE-LIQUID VITAMIN FOR CHILDRIN ~;,.~,., s2.4' . . . . . . SPECIAL 51. 99 C • lllST ::.,!~~·~;." ...... SPECIAL 52.39 Coastline Health Foods Tllllo Mll.l•RIM SOt.IA•I llH IRVIRI II.YD, J1I I , 17TM ST, NIAii UV• M-fW .... ,. .. Lz1zua HAii llft IL,._ n, ....... LU.Piii ...... 1 1/2 OFF OUR SOFT .TOUCH CUT 'N PERM. REG , S30. NOW $15 COMPLET E. A GREAT HA IRCUT. A BEAUTIFUL. PERM, AN IND IVIDUAL. HAIRST'l'L.E BY CUA TALENTED HAIR SPEC1AL.ISTS. THAT1S IT ! CALL. FoR YOUR APPOINT~ENT NOW IN OUR BEAUTY SAL.O N, " . • ' ' l l • \ II • ' .,:,-._ ·--.. ''~· ... -...... TUMBLEWEEDS • ~::Z~~ I MUTI & JEFF 111ERE'S A STRAN6E ~EAlllY MOOT 'THE PESERT. .. ITS SHIMMf:Rit;\', VAST ANP 11MELE55 f')\51 .. :me CRWTIC MCIAN OF .ns. PAllCHEP flm:ATH l't\llSPERJNG MVsm!iES OF LONG SCCRITT PLACES ... ·ns "1AGNET!C1 'E0<DNIN6 !;Ol.ll!JPE ... ITS, .. 1·f ·. . ' by Tom K. Rya11 by Al Smith by Dale Hale DOOLEY'S WORCD SALLY BANANAS ~y THeRe. K1D, Ye CJ 5 eef\/ MY Ba D Go~a~Dll1€~ POIRTS? l>JO -BUr WE: WoJ-r" """"" '"'-FltCOfii?D 800l<S •• • , .Ofld-'Y, July 9, l<J73 0 .. 11 .. , J<lt.OT J by Charles Barsotti .. 1".S.N...;,.......J.o..(•if,Tr-• ....... ::.~ .... ~T~.:_ ___ :..__,,,, .. c_J t~addill::::i,,±:i..:::....:::'.;r" ~~~~4~[d GORDO .~ MOON . MULLINS by Gus Arriala l)~-- ;cooe:H~ "{E;S ! l)J.l \t-.. UJ-/··• A>'" WHA1''0 'O<Jr:'. JJM...,._, ~ --·-· NANCY IMAGINE HER TELLING- E\f.ERYBO:D'(-- ! j ' f • ; :,.· _.,·,..,._.,.4 TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE Saturday's Puzzle Sol~ed: ACROSS 62 Thevl!fYbeSt 1 Not nud9 63 Raphael·····: 5 Comp1rilltive U.S. painter word 64 .. Not by I -··· 9 Plant louse --···1" 14 Run 11sily 66 Pene1ra1e 15 Garment 67 Roberl • --~ 16 Greek isl1nd Noted 17 " ........ ,, 1 Virginian eonauered" lj8 River of 19 Heals Europe 20 Oral G9 Oen!sh uner1n«1 " apeech Law sounds 21 Dock work•r 70 Make1 a 23 lists of i;1i1gh candida111s -71 G1s 25 We11r away , 26 Ending with aim 1nd gard ' 28 Leguminous p1ent • 32 Entertain- ment forms · 37 Room ' 38 Equal: P1etix , 39 ----1ndgo 41 Chinese coin 42 Not relaxed 45 Good---·--·- 48 Ouantitv of freight 50 Cab11I 51 A11s1un11d name 54 Raise• the 'i;pir111 of 58 Mi1- adventu1111 OQWN 1 Football intrac1ions 2 Not general 3 Armadillo 4 Reduced iri """ ·5 A "T" of "TNT" 6 Dan Blocker ••• 1 R1ducein degree 8 More recent 9 Gives a1Hnt 10 Olsc111e1 11 Novel charactor 12 Roman rqad .• 13 "---, dem and do111" AP OR SPR A 'l' A OV Ilf• OR A 'J'B •I B•I'J' sonac I MA E J. A N 0 18 Turgenev heroine 22 Volcano: Abbr. 24 Emulate Paul Anlle V Top aviators 29 Goatee 30 Principle 3 1 "Nex1week, • East ---" 32 Treasury of a state JJ Am. Soc. of Trav. A9ents JC Bleck: French 35 Greek letter 36 Cesspool 40 Wan 43 Threshed 44 Ftler"a 1111celisi1ies '? 8 R JI' , 46 Parts played by actors 47 EuroPean 49 Unite 52 Mountain range 53 Banal 55 Clemenceau'• epithet 56 Race~ Pr1lix 57 Surgical 1hre1d 58 Monkeys 59 Mon111&1y 60 Ro man soldier· 61 Bird 65 New Engla11d J S1a1cs • by l;rnie BushmiDer PEANUTS JUDGE . PARKER 'JlAV11"6 TOLO 5/'M THAT ;HE tiAD &E£N . .MAA~lED, TO RICK LASSITER, BETSY NOW PROFESSES • HER \..OVE FOR SAM! MISS PEACH i..ET'S GO SOMEWJ.!EltE TOGETHER! 1 WANT TO GET AWAY FROM RICK LA55JlER, MY CAREER ••• EVERY- THlN6 ! MEL.LO, EJl6' ecHO CANY"""'! '" ANIMAL CRACKERS Hi. . ' by Charles M. Sc:hulz ~---~-~~-~ ..... -~ . .....;_,,,, 1-• ·-·--·-. I'M AN ATTORNEY AND I HAVE CLIENTS. WHO DEPEND ON ME, BETSY! I HAVE TO MAKE PLANS TO GET "AWAY EVEN FOR A DAY! 'THAT POOR CHICKEN 6AVE HIS LIFE FOR. NOT"HlN6 ! by Harold Le Doux by Mell by ROCJer Bollen I T"r~< OUR ~l.ATIOMs+-llP 15 Oil r...: U?S!Or•G ! THE GIRLS , P/f;~9 "I do n't know -musicians in string qu artets a l"'B)"S klok as If Ib ey wish they had la ken up something el1e." DENNIS THE MENACE ~ \ • Jrs. WA!'!Efll/. TO WA'TCH AN 0!.0 WCK·ANO· WHJTI: Neilf-~A CO/.OR TV .· '! i I • ~ .-•• • • ..... ..--. ...---·--~· • ~' , , , • , • T • • I ~ •-• • • •• • LA Braces for Cards • I Af te...__r Sweeping_Bucs LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tonuny John had pitched eight strong innings, allowing the heavy-hitting Pittsburgh Piratp just one nm on five hits. But he was removed in the eighth inning for a pinch hitter whlle le&din g ~-1. . "It's a sound baleball move," Lbe Los· Angeles lefthander said after Willie Davis' 12th inning homer provided the teen will opj.ooe Toin Mlll"phy ol lhe Cards. After the Pirates tied the game, it set· !Jed into a duel between the bullpens - Giusti againsl Jim Brewer and Pelt , Richert. Bretyer surrend~red the tying nJn in the niritb but nothing el&e. Richert picked up the win. · "I didn't feel too badly about going to the bullpen," manager Walter Alston Deqer• Si.te said, "because Brewer and Richert both .t.11 ._ ... 11J11 1•1 were rested. John pitched awfUUy well J111v 10 s1. Lwl• tt L• ....._ 7~$s P·"" but I lbou&ht be tired a little toward ~ J utv 11 I'· Loul• •' u. -"""in 1:U'p.m. end." J11tv It t. L.oula •I L• ""9itlfl 7:15 11.m. JUIV I) Cl'llc.t90 ., Lei ~ 7:• p.tn. After the Pirates scored in the top ol Dodge ·th •2 ·•~-the ., the first Inning, the Doctcen offered a . rs W1 a ,, • .,.....,.~ over· . .,., inOd threat to tte the pme tn the bcKtom Piratff, sweeping the serlH and I<eepmg · of the first Bill Buckner linilid with fir'st·place Los Anceles sin a:ames in ·one out but. was stnnded u Os.vis and ·front ot San Francisco In the w .. t~ Ron Cey ruecr ciut . Divlsk>t> !ii the National I.pgue. : · ·' 'Ille Dodaer> tted the game In the seo-"Sure. It's dlsapPolnUn(. 1 felt I potcb· ond and tltreatened to 80 ahead with ed \\'ell enough. But, heck, .we had a nmners still at first and third with only chance to get some runs. Against a club ooe out. But Ellis fanned John and like .;i~tsburgh you'd better get all you Dave Lopes grounded out. Pittsburgh can. twice had runners aboard, In the fourth The Dodgers didn't score in the eighth and fifth innings but failed to break the ~nd Pittsburgh tied the ga me in the top tie . ' of the. ninth on a sa~r!fice fly by. Manny . Zisk singled with one out in the fourth Sangudlen. But Davis homer, his 12th , but was erased when MaMy Sanguillen was the decider. _,,,. r'K".· It also marked the first lime Dave Glwti, the Bucs' relief ace, had Jost a regular sea9Clll game since May r1, um. grounded into a doubleplay. In the flnh Richie Hebner had a one-out sinale but was left at first when ReMle Stennett popped out and Ellis grOlllldtd out. "That six-game losing streak really helped us." Davis said later. "It prevented us from getting cocky. I think it'll be a big boost in the long run.'' L"~UI P ....... (IJ ... llrlll ., ...... a I OCll11t1, rf J 0 0 • '100"',:it. 52 20 ' I 1..011....,, cf S • I • I ll:Zltlr.,11 SOii O •l~lln.c •OO I I 0 O '"°""""' lb 5 • 0 O S 2 OHftntr, Jll I t I II S 20AlltV."Jb 1000 I I os~tt. .. s II I 0 4 I !El\111. p I ••• l I 051•""'4. pll 0 0 II I OOGkntf,11 1000 • • • I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -16 ,31D J Toll!' ... I I I TWo out w11ei1 wlnnl119 r1111 .corllll. · Pll!.Wf'tl'I 100 000 ~ "' -t LOS Angel~ OlU 100 Giii -J · E-eU11. OP-LOI A11911ts 2. lO -Pllhburfh 4, . L01 Arogll" 10. 28-Cill!, lt1t. H -. 0."11 12. Sl-L09f1, L•cy. S-Glu111. Sll-S. 11lttt n. " • • .. .. •• £Hit ' • ' ' • ' GIUlfl L, $-1 • 2/l ' ' ' ' ' """ • ' ' . ' ' I lrlWtr ' ' ' ' • ' RJd!orl W. 2·1 ' • • • ' ' T-J:S7. ''r21,lU. on DAVEY LOPES PROTECTS H!S HEAD UNDER PICKOFF TRY TO PITTSBURGH'S RENNIE STENNETT ..• Los Angeles, with three straight vie· tories after the sweep of the Pirates, will take today off, then host the resurgent St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday night in the start of a three-game series. Claude ()s. Angels Tackle • .r • UC~-Officials Pro~se-Major Investigation LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA officials say they plan an investigation into allegations of grade tampering and cheating by athletes rollowing disclosures 1 __ -'0unde=<r oath by a former UCLA wrestler a Yiiig f0Nil'iefnployment1nsuranee. ( The San Frand!co Euminer reported Sunday that.' the ex-wrestler, Peter J. Lutz, 21. revealed to the unemployment office on AprU 19 that he and several other UCLA athletes received preferen- tial treabnent in grading and academic credit, even when they railed to attend cla1st1. 'l:'he· dbelowres came when the unemplbyment office attempted 1 o detennine how a full ·time scholarship at.hlete could qoallfy for benefits, the paper said. A !lpOkesman for the Naliooal Collegiate Athletic Alloda'tion aaid that if Luti' charps were proved, it could lead to di9cipHnary ad.ion ranging from a private nprtmand to upulllon from the NCAA. UCU, albletlc director J. D. Morgan laid the university's findings woold be ropon.d -1n111a11y to the Pacff~ Coo- ference; of which UCLA is a member, be! ... they .,. 111bmitted to the NCAA. lloftver, Morgan Insisted that .the issue concerned indJvldual teacher-stu- dent f"lllatlonohlpo and did not Involve athletia. "We have nothing to do with the academic process," said Morgan. "Any swdent in the university could hive done this by m•klna special arrangements. "And , let me point out that Luiz was not an •lhlete at the lime ... he was an injured athJete who had only participated one year, and he remained on academic scholarship because ht was injured while wrestling." New Challenge ' To Riggs Given By Billie Jean )YIMBLEDON, England (AP) -The old lady of tennis. after 1'Tapping up the riflli Wimbledon singles title of her career and capturing l\\'O other CTO'ATIS at the prestigious even!. \\·ould now like to \vrap up Bobby Riggs. Billie Jean King of Long Beach. 'A'ho at the age of 29 calls herself the '.'old lady" of the sport she ctntinues to dominate. said Sunday after the L973 Wimbledon championships conclude.Cl, '·That's three more \Vimbledon titles ... and now for Bobby Riggs." The 55-year-old Rlggs, winner of the Wimbledon men's crown in l939, easily defeated Australian Margaret Court earlier U»s year in a $10,000 challenge . match. Mra. Kinc. who 1n addition to claiming the wcmen's singles for a poat.war· record ftfth time 81!t0 won a ninth women's doubles crown and recorded her third Wimbledon miied doubles cham· piensldp. said she is ready for Riggs whenever he gives the ·-"I've received tons of challenges from him, 1nd I've chlllqed him . too. Tlle ...,. the better." · Meanwhllc, Mrs. Klna's three victories tent ber soaring put Suzanne Lenglen, who won 15 Wlmbledm tllles. ~trs. King -llas 17. Siii completed her 1973 Wimbledon .....,, Sl!llday by wlMIOg the mixed ' iloubl .. with AuariJll'a 0w<n Davldloll. ThoJ -Reul Rlmlm of Mexico ond J-Ne..t>my of La Joll1. f..!, .. 2 In Ille flllll. ' ... LATER FRUSTRATED STENNETT IS AGAIN DENIED OU_T AS LEE LACY SKIDS UNDE R TAG. Stockton Seeks Win Streak MILWAUKEE (AP ) -A three-foot par putt -whi ch he said was a little bit discourteous -nailed down Dave Stockton's victory Sunday in the Grea ter ~1ilwaukee Open Golf Tournament. "The courteous thing," Stockton ex· plained or the putt. "would have been to let Homero Blancas putt first. And he was playing second. '.'.But it was my option . l can putt out any time I want to. And I \Vasn't of a mind to stand around and look at that ·· three-footer while somebody el~t lined up a putt. .. "f~·antcd to get it In the hole." He did . It preserved a one-stroke victory -the sixth of Stockton's career and first in two seasons -and was worth a $26,000 first prize in this event that was by·passed by 1 Open, which begins Wednesday in Troon, most or the game's glamor. names. Scotland. Stockton, who won the flfSt MUwaukee "This wu a big win for me," said Open in 1968 and took the PGA naUonal Stockton, the front.nJMing leader since title in 1970, won with a one-over.par 73 he fired a career·best, nine..und~ 63 4n the muggy heat of lhe r111a1 round and • In the second round. had a 276 total, 12 under par on the 7,010.. "And," h.e ~aid, "You expect another yard Tuckaway Country Oub course. one shortly'. Blancas -who made a five-footer on "It's like making birdies. You can 't the last hole after Stockton had dropped make the sec<Jnd until arter you've made his winner -and Hubert Green lied ror the first. I've got it going now and I've second. just one back at 277. Blancas and got to jump on it ." Grf'.'n ·each had .68.s, but It wasn't close· , &ockton, long noted as one of th; unlll Stockton bogeyed the 17th hole from · game's best scramblers, opened play a bunker. with a two-stroke lead and said he went Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Arnold 1 out with !ht plan ''lo blow 'em off the Pa lmer, Gary Player, U.S. Open champ golf cou rse. • • Johnny Miller and Masters titleholder "I like to look st the leader boards. J Tommy Aaron were among thbse who was gonna put up some numbers that bypassed this tournament to get ail early would be fun to look at. But it (lidn't start on preparations f?r the British work out that way." Orioles .- ' ... CLEVELAND (AP) -"You feel lucky for younell· 111d· sorry ior Aspro," said California Ancell' • mariager B o b by .Winkles after his club took a doubleheader from the Cleveland Jn. dians SundlJ. Winkles expressed his sympathies for Indians' manager Ken Aspromonte, whost club bas a firm hold OI). the American ·League East Division base- me11i. and has dropped six di>uble bills this season. The Angels clobbered the Tribe 10-4 in the opener and a 10th inning hom e run by Richie Sche.inblum with a man on clinch- ed it for the visitors 5-3 in the nightcap Sunday. "We had a very good day," Winkles said, "we're now >2 on thi5 trip and it's t~ to win on the toad." · . ~ victories put the Angels in second place in the Wesl Division behind the , Oakland's A's. In the first game Bnl Singer, 14-4. went the distance for the wilmerS. Milt Wilcox took his fourth loss of the season against fi Ve victories. · The Indians took i 3-t secood-hmlng C•llt9nli1 (II) Aklm9r, 211 0.V•llOl'I• 29 Plnsoll, <I Btrry, cl FRoblltn, 111'1 Epaloln, lb ROlfv..-, rt Scl'lflblm, rt Stinton, 11 ~ll•Oftor· 311 MIOll, u T0tbor9. < Singer, p Tol•I CiUklrnl1 CllVlll•nd -'"~ 4 O 11 O Bl.ti, '!Jib l I 0 O Ll!Wtftlfri. 211 4J 21~mblt.rt IOOO Elll1,c J t 1 o Splk111, dl'I S t t I Cl'lmbllst, lb 32llWWlllm..ll o II o O ltTorres. d I 0 I 1 C1rdorll1, 11 2 1 I 0 Wllcoil, p • 0 0 I Tl!Mfmn, p J 0 2 2 Keti.k:l'I. p 0 0 0 I .~,~,.. 5 I I 0 4 O 2 I 3 0 0 0 4 0 • 0 s 0 0 0 1 2 I 1 • 1 I 0 4 0 1 0 • 0 2 2 •• 0 0 I 0 D D 0 0 0 0 lol10IOIO Tot•I JS (l l )01 0$0 lllXI -10 OlD 0111 010 -• E-Alomollr, R. Ollv1r. OP-Cltftl•nd I. L08 -C•lllorlllt 7, Cl-I~ 10. t•-W. wmi.ms. F. Roeo. lnoon. HR-PllltOn ,, "· Oll~tr ,, Ch.lrt!llllH '· 58-PlnsOn. It. Torr•. S1"-S111110n, M .. oll, .. 51111Mr w, 1 ... , • 1 • • J 1 Wllto1tC.~' ' a f 1 J I Tif71trm•n 2/l 2 3 s 2 o l(eklch 1 1/l 2 0 0, 1 HBP_.., Slll9fl' 1!111.1. WP-IClklSI': T-2:4'. _ .. _ c.i ........ (JI Cl..,... Ill H r hrlll •~rhrM • ,., 0 18111.. 4 ,, • OOOO~tn.:lbJ 01 SOOOll:LDllcll.Ph 1 00 SOIOG1mblo,rl 2 11 Stt OWWlllms,Ph I 00 S t 2 I lt99l111d. :lb 0 II 0 5 l :I 1 Hf,no:lrlctl;, Ph l I 0 2011Elll .. dl! S 111 lOOO S(llklSf ll I 1 0 0 0 0 II Cl'lmblu, lb • I 1 11.00ltTorrts.d • 0 0 lfOOA1hb'(,c '00 2100DllflV,t• l 10 tl lll01m1n.11 o oo t I ' I II Hllgtl'ldrt, p O I o I I o I JJohnsor1, p O O I 0 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 II ... lea4, two of the rum being 'scored on a~':, Lei COrdenas single. A walk and a ldl" ·batsman put rrien on all of the blset widt,':. two outs but Charlie Spi kes ltft tbt:m ·.; stranded. ..: The Angels came back with a lour·nm ·, . fourth inning, \\'hich was hi~h11ghted by • three-run homer by Bob Obver. · .". IO the fifth inning the Angels put,_~i AltfJels Slate Alt G1m11 Oii ICM~ 1110) Jl.llv t C•lllof'llt1 •t ll1ttlmwe 4:1f 11.-. • Ju!v 10 C.Hfomllo •I a.111more •:H 11.m. Julv 11 C11Uornl• : l1ll1mor~ ~:21 p.m. ' together four hits. l\\'O walks and a sacrifice fly for five more and chased Wilcox. ·. Mike Kekich came on to relieve in ·tha ; first game. .: Tom Timmennan was knocked out in the fifth and Kekich finished up. ~ -ln-lhe nightcap, the Tribe held a 3-2· .J lead going into the ninth. But doublei by :· Lee Stanton and Winston Uenas tied iL •. up. Rookie Dick Lange started for the · Angels but WM replaced by Steve Barber- io the fifth . Barber was credited with bis:~ first victory of the· seasoo. He has CN;i- Joss. :. Dick Bosman started for the Tribe but · was lifted in the seventh after giVing up ~ an infield single. Tom Hilgendorf came in for two innings and gave up the Ueing _ run. Jerry Johnson took the defeat for the Tribe and is now 4·5. Scbeinblwn, who left the Indians in the 1968 expansion draft, put the ball ovtr the 400-foot mark in center right after Stantoo doubled to left. The Indians are off today but face U. Oakland A's Tuesday night and W~ day afternoon at home. The Angels travel to Baltimore for a three game series with the Orioles begil).ning tonight . Asher Routing = Bowling Foes TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) 0 -Barry Asher~ Cos!& Mesa , betian to pull away from tlifl field as play in the 147,500 Home Box OfOJ fice Open Bowling Toumament turned IO: match game t'Ompetltion. •• :I' s lt s TOlll Asher, 26, who owns seven Profes.slorJaf Bowlfl's Association titles, led a 24-mri; advance into the inan-agsinst·man phuf: &unday when he toppled 4183 for the 1~ game qualifier. When he captured siJ: ot,: N 3 1 3 ~ 001 1 _ 5 his eight matches, while spilling lioq ooa o _ 1 sticks, he went from t 58·pin advantaP.:'. ''£-•~. 11,111, Ql'-ci ... e1t11e1 2• LO•-c.HfcH't\11 ,, to a lead of 124 as the stml·rirla\s I~ 1etw1111d 1. 211-klltlftblm, st~ o,11M1r· · aWaited another 16 games today. • kwt1, Duffy, S(llkff, St11>10o1, Ll-s. Het1drlc.k. J&-' A.sher, Who shot linescores Of 235, ~J S!lnllln. Hit-Gtmtllt ll, kllt1..rolm 2. S-lirrry. 1 SF-LOwtMltlft. 192, 236, 246, 216, 213 and 224, ran his 010 100 "" ~· 1""••11 11 10 L11"191 4 1/l l2!20 O•rtlotr W, l·I 5 1/l 1 I I D 1 Stilt 1/Jll OI O O hl"'91' ' 1 t I 0 3 HI~ 2 2 1 1 I I J. Jltlfnlorl L. •$ 2 3 2 t 2 2 11...-....WI• L WP-H~. l-J:• A-12,10 • 0..,.1 SIOCkltft. Uf..«IO ~. l ll flCMt Sl2~5 Hv!Mt1 Gr"", •um ~ l(f'llldlOl'I. '16.110 BOii Golley, U..nti 11111 AlllA. J'~ ,,...,,,,.,,......,,. a1.n .11.-..1n M·J0.71 M-1n 71.11 ..... 1-111 .,.,, .... 7._,.,. '6>73-71•111-'2111 '1.ff.114'-1'0 M·11·11J.12-,&I ••·11·1' ... -211 11J.r.Mf..lt-2'1 J0.1J.1M1-211 10-n.11..,_-,., game pinfall to 6127, a 'total whldt Includes 30 bonus pins for each of his lri~ triumphs. Earl Anthony, Tacom• Wuts.;:. who trailed Asher at the 18-g..M ~ clwig to secood place when he ~ down 1728 while taking five ol etcI>t tiJl',ll. Didn~1 Dave Mueh_ on' Ball Says Bane{ Cl'llr9"' II"-'• .... 20 ltOV ,.au, SJ.67' Jorry HMrO, ,._,,..,, Jim FtfritJL, ti.no I Uly Zlobr .. SJ.no J im Wltctltrt, U.J'll 80b Lllfl"' 11.Jll JtrrV MeGff, U.JU Tff'll' l~IL. U.015 Miii• Moflff. tt,ou And• Hot111. si.ou HOwlf J~ 11.0IS &oll "•VM• $1,4f$ LtoMrd Tl'IOtl'IJI-, 11 ... J 0.11 S!kn, 11.ffJ 0.10 Dou91•U• Jl"'j 9oMY MllCMU, 11,IU 0.... '""*"• 11,IU OI .... OllNtt. t i,!" Jolwl ~"'"*'· .,,,,, "·"·"'*-'JtJ -... 71 .... 1s.-n. ... Jl.JJ.12-1tl 1 ..... ,,..,_,.. l').J1.1'Mf-tll 10-1'·1).J0.-411 11·1'-'7·111-1'J , ... Jl.Tl.]0-21j M·73:·1'47-11t 1f.10-1S.11-2U M•71•Jl.1'-"' )Hf.1).71-* 1Mf.11·111-2'a BLOOMINGTON. MiM. (AP ) -The ~1etropolltan Stadium scoreboard flashed this message to ihe 27.42$ spectttors and " New York Yankee: !litter RoY White in lhe lhlnl lnnini: - . "Twins pilchlna leaden -~rt Blyleven 1 11-8: F.ddJe Bane, 1.80 ERA." • The Minnesota Twins and Bane, their · bonus rookie in his second mejor leegue start, found the ,.....,. a b I t prtm•turc. Wtiiie slammed Bane·s next p tch for a two-run homer to start the Yankees to n 7.0 victory behind Mel Stotllemyrc's four· hltter. "I wasn 't trytni to .. rub It 1n or em· .bama Bane," said White. "I just· wanted to stand tht!n and enjoy it I've na...-hit mil Jn <l1it portr. I hit Ollly one othor -here llnce 1111 flrlt yur In .... ~. iiii>ed oll the Arl2one Sttte ca mpus for • ._-ted 116,oot, ran up only three hlll nd one ""' In seven Im· prealvo innlnl• Wedne.tdly nipt. against K ..... CUy In hit flrlt start. But the Eut DtvlaJoo leadlntl Yankee• taaed him lor eJtht hfll In I I/I innlno. five In lhe third. Slntlleo bJ FeUpe Ahl and Gene Michael, a aJrlkeout and lllatl)' • Alou"1 nm·ocorlng groundout pre<eded WhJle's blast. ' "Bane •• emllc," Mid White. "I wu Willing for tbe cum ud be pYe It to me. We &at blck ...i Wlllod lw hla ·• bnakJnc pitdlet. I think be sbould have mls_ed in lhe fulball more." ""Everytlltng I thrtw wu hip IDd I didn 't have much on the bUJ,'' 11ld But.· who wtU ... anothef otort later lhl• week. ""! wuft awed by their bitten. I )1111 dldtl"t pilcb ... u." Bane did not pitch ro. almoot 1,mot>th bef.,. otlt1lnc last week against the • -••• Royals Ind -Frank ~ thought 11111 hid on effect on the I left-hander •"ho r!llet more on · change IDd brttklng pitches than on Me: !7-~"'"'" ~ 1 · .. he WIS otrugJing," &aid Quit " · Is the flnt lime 11e's pitched only three days rest and I lhlnk Wa have had IOll'le effect on him." Bane agreed, • "I've got to learn Jo 1>itch with throii ' days mt," he said. "In collep It .,. f()Ur or five days between gamee.:' \ l Sports la B rief Aaro n Hits Two, • Just 18 To Go NEW YORK -Allanta's Hank Aaron pulled within 18 home runs or Babe Ruth's record 714 Sunday v;hen he hit his 695th and 6!l6th in lhe Braves' baseball game against the New York Mets. Aaron hit his 22nd of the season, a solo shot, in · the fourth inning and added a two-run shot in the sWh. Both came off lert- hander George Stone, 1 former teammate. It marked the third time this season and the 60tb time in his career Aaron has hit more than one homer in a game. The National League record is 63 by Willie ~tays of the Mets. Ruth holds the ma- jor league mark of 72 times. Foll.._ Rolls HIT TURF LAST ' Alamitos When you. h·ave finished an iron shot, ta.k:e a look at the divot muk. It sho.uld be ahead of the ball's 1 . ori.gplaI position, indicatinJ: that your clubbead struck GAINESVJILE, Ga. the ball before it touched the turf. -Gec?rge . Follmer, the · 1972 Hittina the b-11 first gives you good backspin. Entries senes wumer, stor:mOO past The clubhead moves downward into the ball, the ball the unlucky . favonte, Mark 1 rolls up the clubface taking on backspin' d r· all Dooohue and won the f75 000 . . f( h • • an in Y Carling CanAm Challege Cup r it JUmps ~ J c face as the clubhcad continues ,..,. ,,......, J111r '· ,.,., .. race.at Road Atlanta Sunday. down~ard into the .turf. The backspin will Jive the "'•sT •Acl! -"° r••d•. 3 r11r . Do .... ft \.1..1. th R ballhc1ghtandmalcc1tflystra; .. "t instcadofapi·n·; •• Olds ~ ,,.,,_ C••lmf111. P11ri.e suoo. no .. ,. .. ,, wivmg e oger h .d '6'' • ·-~ c111m11111 P•k • 11aoo, Pensky ·. p 0 r s °C'h e , had tQ t e l1 e. · 'LOUil'°" (Sml!PI) Ht tevtotn'• M•rk tP1911 in established a 72·second lead ~c""11.1.,.1..-...... .,. ,.. Al1mltos s 11p ID••re•I 122 du·o·ng the first 40 laps oflhe • ~-----------------------'"-~ Sleek &tr (Wrlgt'llJ 111 1 I o. Jvctve CG••1•1 11t 90-lap ra ce Saturday. But he Me 01vld (lle"kJ) l?l f-:""=;:::;::-:::;;,,.;::-,,,,:;:::-.,.;---:'7""".'-----'-c--~ Nlllh•• _aunnv c11:1c11••d1> 171 fell behind at the start or Sun· W•r Ch1e Two IMv111) 11t d ·, f I 1 d · l II "11/TT/iVG THE IRONS"-offer1 solid grip, 1tance and swin1 P•lleo'• !lar (TrM1ure1 119 ay s ina . eg an vir ua Y pointtr1 to boost i1on play and /oWer golf scores.I Stnd JOj and F•lr ''"'' ,,,,,.,, m went out of content1·on w1·1h d 1., d·' " a stu mpt , Jt 1-a wrtntd tll ~'t/Ope to Arnold Palmtr, <fo thil se:cOND RACE -110 v•rds. l year two ea rly pit stops forced by oldt & VJ>, Clalmln;. Purs1 $1900. h •:::'::'':':'::· ====================='-ClllMl11g '''°°· sloshing fuel in is cockpit. TIM Srnd!Cllt (Alct>erd1) 111 d · F1s1 Eddi• tTr111ur11 119 Follmer, a veteran river El Ar111 (G•n•I 11t from Arcadia. drove hi s M&llO Slny CBlcktl) 119 1 To Go CMorr111 122 Porsche into the lead at the 0 1""r1i.11 1w1rdl 122 tart f Sunda 's ct. a d Trl1 Fir• <Orey..-J 11t s O Y a ion n Fvn And Profit IMrlnJ lll went almost two laps in front TN111D RACI -«.11> y1rdl. l v-•• as Donohue fell into fourth olds. Clahnlng. Pvrw $1llOO. Cl•lml11g Prlc• s~. place with two pit stops cost- Dtn""' Mllo:1r IMrlesl 111 • him than 90 Third Image (TrH1vr1) 11' mg more Boid Ill.• (CH!n1l 111 seconds. Fleet A.ull•ll CSrnllll) 119 Cull Mool•h ICrosbJ) 122 Debrl l111 (Hiln) 111 Jqyou1 V1llntlnt (W..,.dl l'n Dupre Romps Lrvrn Doll IC•rck111l 111 CHATIANOOGA Tenn. Vlndlc•lor 2 {Dt"ey1rl 119 c111 Mil Kid <P10tl 119 Patrick Dupre of the Universi- l'Ot.1111.TH RACI! -3SO r•rdl. l r••r ty of California defeated col-01d1. Alkl'w•nai. PUr.M: s:uoct. N111t1 Fil :s.ato <Tr•••vrel 122 legip.te rival Jim Delaney Of C•rlll"'1 D1ndr fMrl•ll 119 St nf d S d l · t•-Free e1rr. IH•rtl 122 , a or un ay o wrn 1~ Jv1111o:1 P1 1c1n1ouJ 122 Men 's title in the . National Valve Addtd (5rnlllll 110 Cl Co l T scant 01 Llint (PllQtl 111 Amateur ay ur ourna· Ml11 Llmlt1 (M•twd•l 111 ment S!rong And llold .(Rlch•rd1) 110 • Trv1y 11oi P•nt1 (B•nk•l 111 Dupre, from Birmingham. Lr1t11 W1r Chic CAd1lr) 111 Ala., beat Delaney, o [ ll'll"TH llAC• -3.50 rards. 3 year Md "2 o o o • 7 o old1 a. vp. Cl•!mlng. Pur11 $1500. Potomoc, .,.o--• .rv, O'""I, ""'· ct111Y11ng P<lc• s15,ooo, The women's final match ~~ ?::n~:1VllO 1:: between Jeanne Evert or Fort ::::;:~ 1~1':: l~~~~i~.) Jl; Lauderdale Fla., and Janice Mr. EU.Imo 1sm11t11 119 Metcalf of Claremont, was Sir Mvr (C.rGo1•1 119 ed Splll Tott fAd•lrl 119 poSlpoll · SIXTH 11AC1 -3.50 r•n11, 1 ye1r Miss Metcalf agreed to a okh &. up. Ct•fml11g, PurH s'l«IO. one day delay after Miss Cl•Jrnl11g prlca MOOO. Bid w11o IAd•lrl 119 Evert, younger sister o f Fish Report Landings Await Run of Albacore Fishing slowed somewhat out '<If Orange Coast landings over the WCilkend, but signs are leading to a pc1ssible albacore run at any lime, maybe this week. For the time being , however, fishermen were con- centrating on bass and bonito, and all area landings reported good catches over t h e. weekend. eight and a half pound calico bass was taken· out of · Art's Landing by Tony Stearns of J\.1onterey Park. The possibility of albacore fishing picking up was hinted by all landing operators , and a spokesman for Art's Landing said that a couple reported catches of{ the d u m p i n g grounds could be a sign of things to come. The... reports haven1t justified sending boats to the area yet, but a catch could break out at any time. Rustle1·s Setting Hot Pace The Senlk Rustlers scored four times tn the fourth inning to break open a close game And went on to hand Ure Sad· dleback Gauchos a 7-4 defeat in fl.1etropolltan Le a g u e baseball action Sl.lnday at Golden West College. It was the seventh win of the summer for Senik 3nd keeps the Rustlers within a game of I.he league's leaders. while Sadd.1eback suffered its ninth km in 10 games. A. run1>l'Oduclng single by Gary Rungo combined .with a Sa.ddleback. error allowed twe> Rustlers to score. the decisive runs tu the Senik foort.h inning uprising. A • waJk tG Curt Petersc>n, singles by Randy Eckles and Jim Sparks and a wild pitch scored the first t\\'G runs of the fnning. Senik jumped in front 2-0 \Vilh a tw0-0ul rally in the first hining as Rod Brown delivered a triple to score Mike Tessier and then came home ·himself on a hit by Gordon Blakeley. But Saddleback stayed close with a run in the bottom half of the inning on singles by Bob Moen. Larry Lak and Ernie Avalos. The Gauchos added single runs in the fourth and ftfth in- nings, the former on a ground out and the latter on singles by ~toen, Lak and John Springman. Sadd1eback t'\ll the lead to 6-4 with a nm Jn the eighth as the Rustlers turned over a double play. The Gauchos had the bases loaded with no one out in the eighth, and got two nmners on l in the ninth but netted on1y the one run for the two innings. s....it Rv111an C1l ilb r 1'1rDI R. ll rown, 'lb 3 l 1 ~ Whlteley, 7b ~ g ~ 1 ~l~l~S~I~'(; II i 0 0 0 P•'.,.'°"f 1>·lb 2, ', ' ' Eclr.111,f 1 0 Sp.trk1, 11>-rf J I l 1 J arown,c 2 1 O 0o KtnMd'v. cf 1 o o Rvnva. rf 3 D 2 0> P1rk.,, dh I I 1 Te~ler. d ·c 2 1 O O Et,,.,lil.P ::,:: To111•s........o ~ l'I Mrllrtil s 0 1 0 l•lo:, rf AVilkK, ]b 5Drlnom1n, '' w1n11rn1, c ' 0 1 I S I ! l ~'~· ~~1 ~~1~1 :~~ Wimbledon finalist Chris cri111er ITre1sur11 119 Evert, suffered hip bruises in '; Bass were especially plen- tiful on the eastern fringes of the kelp beds, with full limits being taken by m o S t passengers.· Arts L a n d i n g reported 408 bass taken Sun- day, while Davey·s Locker anglers took J ,024 and the 332 passengers out of Dana Point hooked into 868 bass. ~ ' g ~ ' 0 1 0 LONQ llEACM IPi.r..1111 Ll!ldl"'l -Mt.MIMIS, f?' 134 •nvl.,-s: 11 bGr!Uo1 611 c•llco Wis. Ptl'tlllld• lb Aockl! Mick (MltwdilJ 119 I ·d l Sal o.,~ N ID•nd'f CW••dl 119 a minor .au o acc1 en ur; & POrCll. f&llt-Pl ... 1 -HJ Miltlln. II -left: l yellowt•ll, 666 c•llco WH, 11 H~r1r, ~. l 0 0 1 l 0 l 0 ~ 0 0 0 HY • llorod IKnlglltJ 119 day night Apache P111um !ll•l'llr.0 119 ' bon(lo, 411 rock COd. I•-) -127 NOQIWI , "" •noltro: ll 1Mrr11Cvd1. 716 DOnlto, 9 Fl1hltr, dh I D D 0 FIJlllCI D1vld (MJlll) 119 s•VIMTH llACI -.00 rarcl1. 2 Yffr Hunt Dies aids. PvrM WOOO. h1liblll Moen, II Nl!W.PORf' llfACH fOt...,r'I LOC11.,.J M~lmQ•tn, P -111 ilnollrt; ll Wrr-cvd1, 1'1 Totals S(Ol'9 IY ~i~o,' 3~ ' 11 11111rnt1 r 11 • «JO 001-1 I I 110 010-4 11 3 A·Dlll Doll (Knlglll) 110 Llncoln'1 Sur. Bel fll1nt11 123 LD<I Oldie (Alcll1rd1) 111 Ml11 Pig Pig CMorrl1\ 111 DeU'1 Sl>Mow /Crosby] 118 A-Pon Del Bir (CH!ri1 ) 1'0 RoV•I Moon /Hirt) 111 Moon Flyer (Ad1lrl 123 L•ddl1 FilCil (MYllll 118 A-ltroV TW1gg1 &. Frtd or JUflltt't L•ncl entry. EIGNTff ltACt: -11'0 y11rdt. l ye11r oldl &. UP. Cl•!ml>19. Puroo $2200. Cl•lmlng Pl'kil S3000. MadltilVM (Smith} 119 Ole My1t.rY M111 !Adair) 119 Avll•ll Win {Tr11avrt) 119 Ml ~I (WrlgPlll 111 Pl)oltlliol Brve1 CMilttud•l 111 O'Dl1I {ll'il(ll) 122 Hof To Trvl' (G11111) 119 ProsjM!•OVS OVlll Clll.lch1rd1l 119 • NINTH RACI! -«IO rards. l YNr ol<b. ClillmlnO. Pvne tllOO. Ct1rm1~· 11rlc1 S2500. Cltkl..-o Toa CC•rllor•I S11r1 Isle Go {ICnl!ihl ) F1Y1 Joy CH•rtl HlgPI F1JH' ((rosbyl Miid Pv~r !Myl1U TPle Evnudi (Ad1lt l Monl1nn1 (Sml!Pll Cal• O•n (W1rdl Mist B•nnon !I•• !Trt1surtl Ruch N' Gell IT {AltPl••dS) m on '" '" m m "' "' "' '" DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS 'U Votk1w•gen 4-S,..., ANI Jl•fl• $677 ITl!Xtfl) '61 Mu1t•n1 v ... s s"", ltMI• $977 ... ., .. ) 7 1 ChrytlM' N..,,.,. ...,...,. ..,. tr-, .. , aNltftnlllt. ,..... ''"""'· ... V.ry c .... c .... Only 1977 .. (l140CS) '71 lukk ht ... w .... ' ,..,. ........-.,_ _.,. -''· ........................... °" 2777 .. ly "''''"'' 72 ow.,.,.. .. ITATMM WAOOft A ... , T-.. ,.._. $""1111 Air~··"'' $2777 'ffCM.1-,., ............. c., °""' 3277 .. tYOUIJI SANTA MONICA -Briggs Hunt , WTestling coach at UCLA for 30 years be.fore his retirement in 1965. has died st a Santa ~fonica hospi t a l following heart surlery. "bonllO, l.D61" blU, l Yl'llowl•U. II roclt .. cOd, 3 lllllbu1. l5! blVI Dl!'th, I R~!ler1 002 m1ek.,.1!. rArt'I Llndlng) -160 DOI Bonito were also rairl y plen· tiful especially on Saturday when the Arts Landing boat to San Clemente Jslaed-brought back nearly full limits, and on Sunday anglers out of Dana Wharf took 237 bonito about a mile off shore along the coast. •noltrs: 2 11Mr11tvd1, 9 bonlro, a CH111tl>05 Hunt's death camion Satur- day. He was 64. c1lko bf:ls. lSJ Dive Wu , s t>ellt>ut. DANA WftAltl" -lJ2 •11C1ltr1: Ml t •llco b1us. 101 bl•r•cuda, 237 bonllo. J Pl•libu1, '2 vettow1•lt, 1 Dlvelln !uni. SAN f'l!DRO (5,0<'tlfl1lll111I -ll"l• •nsrlers; 79 tionlro, 163 c•llco b1ss, 332 1&nd bin, » rock cod, 173 blue o•ss. (ZZl!d SI. Lillllllnt) -ll.S 1119!tn: J Ytllow!1JI, 743 CillltO blH, 7 111hbtJI, 350 wnd baJ1, t bonito, 10 rn•ckH'tl. Buffaloe Leads LAS VEGAS -Co s ta Mesa's Bobbie Buffak>e con· tinues to lead the Women's International Bowling Con g re s s championship tournament here after 95 days of the 107..<fay event. Live anchovies were the best bait for bass and bonito, and all landings reported no bait shortages as the number of anglers slackened from holi· day highs. Sl!Al. I IACH -30-' •fllllers: 7.760 Silnd bis.a, 12 berrll(lldil, 24 bonl!o, 6 M llbllf. Cllll"fl) -16.:l 1nql1rs: J b8r• r•cuda, Ml bonl!o, 11 ••nd blss. 2 """JI• Hil btsi, 29 lllllt>ut, 72 oe«:f\, REOOMDO -3Vl •llCI'-"' 31 yellowlilll, 2 White ... billl, 16 bet-rilQldil, 631 clllco bes.a, 169 bon!ro, 1,1.JO DIUI bei._ C••l"fll -2lol ill!gl.,t: U(I DOnlto. 19'3 miOCk~rel. f'AllAOISE COVE -1.S •1191tt'I' 112 t11lico Wu, ' lllUt>ut, 560 rock cod. IMll'E•IAL aEACN -61 •llCll.,.s. U wrr.cuo.. n bnlto, Sl ketp bis" 10 ·Unq ~. :U und IMH, 90 t>lve percri. SAM DlllGO -I" •noltn: t 't'ellOWl•ll, 19 Dlllefln IVl\I, '°6 c•llco blu, $'8 barrKl,ldl, «lS bonllO. II Pl•lotM.11. Bobbie's 706 3 ·ga m e average is 11 pins ahead of Shirley Sjostrom of Bloom- ington, l\finn.. in the open_ singles di\·islon. A smattering of barracuda were also taken Sunday, and l\VO yelJowtail were hooked orf Dana Wharf boats. A :li-pound yel lowtail \vas taken Friday off the Dana Wharf all..<fay boat. On that sa me day. an OCEANSIDE -J26 -tert: ll INor· ncudl , 922 bOnltro, "'6 kelp bilss. 6 wf\llt Mil OIH, 15 hlt!tM.ol, 1 .,.il-1111, VEMTURA -111 ll!g!!rt: sn c•llco bass, '°" Dive bil11, IU ''"" Nu. t ....... ~ ... , .. ,,., .. "' ·~· '~· 1 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Bosloo Baltimore Detroit "Milwaukee Cleveland Oakland Angels Kansas City ~linnesota Chicago Texas East Dlvklon W L 48 39 43 38 41 37 43 41 42 41 29 56 West Dtvlslon 48 38 44 38 47 41 13 38 4:1 40 29 53 Sullllll•r'• G•rnt1 Pct. .552 ~! .526 .512 .506 .341 .558 .537 .531 .531 .518 .354 GB 2 21\ 31\ 4 18 2 ' 212 31~ 17 A""'' 10.J, C11v11a1111 ,.J, 2nd 11•m1 10 lnnlne1 Mllwlukff 6-7, T1l1•1 6-J (lliCl90 6-2, ~!On 1·11. lnd elmt 10 lnn!11g1 ~ew York 7, MrnM'sol• a - Dttroll J, K1nuo1 CllY O O•kl•nd '· a.111~, s. 10 lnnln111 T•r'• a.-A-II (Wr11tll 7·10) ill l1Ulmor1 (Alt•lndlf' .. I T.-..11 (Dunnl119 0-SI iii o.lf'Otl {L61!Ch Ml llOlfon (L" 111-3) •I Ml-It IDlodr..-)-)) I(._ CllY {SOllttotff II.$) •I Ml1WN111 181111 1•11 Ntw Yol1t l~dl "'1 ill ClllcMo rwGtd lS-121 Onry ,_ IClltduMod. --"...... .. lillMll'IOl'e 80llllon tf Ml-.ott New Ytrti: ill Cllk-.O 1(-Cltr •I Mllwilllkll Ttt• 11 Dtlnlfl o.tl«Jd tt CloM!Md NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago SL Louis Mootreal Philadelphia Pittsburgh New York Dodgers . Eut Dlvlllou W L 49 37 43 40 40 41 39 15 37 44 34 16 West Division 54 33 San Francisco 49 39 Cincinnati !7 38 Houston 47 42 Atlanta 39 49 San Diego 31 54 S~llHY'~ Gill'llH Oollft'1 l. P!TTlt>ur~h 1. 12 lnlll1191 • ClllClnNili •, Pl'lilld1!t01'll• 0 / Altllllil '• NIW Yorio: 1 HOl.lllon 9, Montrt•I 1 Siii FrMCllCO S, 51. LOI.Ill' Sin 0 11!9G '-(Piie"° 2 T~'•O- Pct. .570 .51& .494 .458 .457 .425 .621 .557 .553 .528 .4~3 .~55 GB II\ 61\ 9\1 91\ 12 5'! 6 8 151z 22 AllMll1 (H1rrlS011 •·'! 11 Pllllildllpf!1-{Cilrl-...... Hoon.ton IWllMll •n ilt Nl'W Ytrl ISte'ltr ,..., C:lncll'ltlltl !H-41 J-4) tl MonffMI (SIOIWlll~ »I on1, 111mH ltltedllltd. n..,-....... St. ""'' •t ~ Cll'ICllll'ltll ill Monff' .. I HOvl"" 11 Haw Yort Afllftlil ft PlllltdtlOftilo P"'-rtfl 11 Sin OloJfe Cllk.-o ill ~ F1'911d- All-star Balloting TM 11test vota brottkdown bo¥' J!0$1tfon for IM 1T1rll11111 N1Tlon1I Le1gV1 All· 111r .ovad: F IA5T BASE -H•nlo: A1ro"· Attan11, 610..nt: Wlllll Sl1rgell, Plthbur9PI, 1"0.9111 : Wlll11 MtCovev, San FrlH'ICllCO. HO,l7l; Tony PtreL Cl1'1Clrw11tt, 111,231 ; Lee Mav, Hoon ton, 11).1,091 ; 1111 I VC'lllf'• Lii Al!llltl. 6',151. SECOND 11 .. se -Joe MOtlliln, Cln- clnnlll, 511,319; Gltnll !I t c k t r l , ChlclQO, no.11119 : TH IAO a .. se -A<lfl S1n10, CPllC~IJG­ '°2,Hf: Joa TD!'re, 51, louft. Ul.OI~; OGi.og llldfr, H...Ssron. 166,IU: lllcl'l11 Htbnt'r, Plltst>urof\, 11,.571: 01rr,11 Evans. Al+•nl•, 111.197: 11111 Cty, LM .,nt•lt•. '1,'-tt. SlolORTSTOP -Cl'lrlt Sl!eitr, S1n Ftanchco, OJ.111: Don ICen;,,.,.,, Crilc•go, 711.016: D~ve ConcfP<;.lon, Cl"<:l11n1!1, 'ltlA.19; 8Pd 1-l~rrel•on. New York. 1.ll.566: 1111 l usw!I, LOI An .. IH , 1?9,ttt1 Roger Meu11er, Hovston, 9S.m . CATCHER -Johnny 8.ncf1, Cln· (ln111!1, fl),110; M•nny S1n11unlen, Pllllbuf'!lll'I, in~; Ted SIMrnons, St. Lov!t. 11,4 ,, OUTFIELO -Pete Roso, Clnd11n11l, 52'"''s' emr wn1111rn1, Chlc1190. ,15,m; ,_, c.oeno. H D v' I 0 n ' 4'.l•J: llobbr 8ond1. San Fr•nel1eo, 3'1,1'<11 Lov Brock, St. LOU11, 211, ,..,, A!ck Morocler. CPllc11g11, 2SCl,105. NEWPORT LEASES J4f0 .... c:... "~ Leasing all Vehicles 645-2202 GREAT ARTISTS tilti WILL PERFORMS' I~~:~~~;~=~~~ TE PllUNTAI FRBDDY MARTll RID Bii'l'l'URS LOUIS BBl.LS8l TRI OBIGllAL 'COABTBBr' ' ' ~londar, Julr '· 1•13 OAILY PILOT Fountain Valle y; San Clemente Roll San Clemente B recorded its second American L ~ g i o n baseball victory of the season. :J.2. over the Fullerton Angels. but ~fission Viejo lost to visiting Saddleback in 10 irh ninga by a sin1ilar score in games Sunday. Fountain Valley, meanwhile, took the measure or Pacifica. 13-3 at Pacifica, and the San Clemente A team defeated visiting Santa Ana, 8-2, in a night game al San Clemente. Westminster was awarded a victory by forfeit 1'0hen Sonora failed to field a team for the sche duled ganle at '\'eslminster. Trailing 2-t after giving up a Fullerton run in the top of the seventh inning, A-1ike Stavro sparked the Sa'n Clemente rallY with a double. An error which allowed Keith f\1arr to go all the way to second broull;ht Stavro in with U1e Higgins .Dominates Master s tyi ng run. and arter a sacrifice me>ved i 11:1rr 10 third . Gates s1nglt'd . Gates had a t1and in !he first San Cle1nente run also. He singled in the second inning but ~·as erased on a fielder's chOice on a hit by Jerry Nel- son. After a ,vaJk to Pat Nel· son both runners moved up on a ground out. and Jerry came home on a single by Stavro. Dan Dodd and John Hayden pitched for San Clemente, liayden striking out four men. At Saddleback, however. ~1ission Viejo lost another in what is .becom ing a string of one-run games. Leading 2--0, ltlisston Viejo ~w Sad· d!Cback score t\\·ice in the fiflh iniiing lo lip th ings up and score the \\'inner with a one out triple and single in the 10th inning. Ste~·e Robinson and Oa \'e' Schrnidt delivered run p~ ducing singles in the third and four th innings to provide hlission Viejo with the lead. . John Densmore. who reached base on a fieldei''s choice £ollowing a walk 10 Kevin McGarry. scored the fjrst Mission Viejo run;-and Ton y Richardson singled and went to third on an error to set up the second score. Tim Taylor pitched nine in· SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ralph nings for P.fission Viejo, strik- Higgins. 71, or Corona del Mar ing out five men. captured the unofCicial over-70 Fountain Valley's game was title by winning his fifth event ~Ued after five innings when. Pacifica came up with a in l\\'O da ys and Englishman player shortage after one Laurie O'Hara set a ne\v mark player was thrown out of the .. in the S,000 meters fo~ the game and another was i1i'· o\•er-40 age group ito highlight · jured. By that time the out· the AAU Masters track and oome had been decided with field championships here. 1-·ountain Valley scoring in every inning. :_i_ tain Valley runs In lhe first , and the wlnntn licored tour tiJncs "'ilh only one hit in the filth. Rich Doualass hit a three- l'Un horner, and Terry Neilsen and Dan Fowler oombined to hold Santa Ana to three hits In the victory ror the San Clemente B team. Ml"*' Vil .. ltJ .. ' • ... AlclllroJ.On, •1 ' ' • • ~i1::tc11!f'J c • • ' • • • ! ' A0<nmel, ct • I • Molllll, Ill ' • • McG1rry, cl ' • • • srven. c1 ' • ' • Deo11 ...... lb ' ' ' • 1100.lllOl'I· ,, • • ' ' T1'(!0<', D • ' ' • S'l:rs, D ' ' • • Olillt " • ' • s~ 1, 1111111,... ... ODO 110 OOCI ._2 t t ' • 000 1UO 000 I~ 6 ' 1"6Vftlllll Viti~ 1121 • "l . ' ~:~~1.fJ . ., ! l ' ' ' HO<Sm-M. rt J 2 ' • 'Ae!Jl:l~r. lb i I ' ' M~ultr D I • ' Sh n·11 1I. tti l ' ' ' Bri1!11trd, c 2 , , Jorcl•n, lb J ~ ' I H•rdm•n, H t ' TDltlt 1.5 \J • • ·-.. , ... _ ' • • F-lilifi V•ll•r "' 1-13 ' • P•clllcil --~1 • ' Si111 C._.. A Ill .. ' .... I I I • • • 1 ; I I l l J ' ' ! l I ' I ! ... S•nll An• ooo 110 000-2 l l n Clemenll OCW cm llll-4! f • ·-"" c""""""' • f.1.1 ' ' ' I : . • l•riortl. ct ~r•wo. lb •IJ r h : T I "l • Mirr. c Dadd, I> H•vden. D Il l Sa11d0vi1I, 11 J111lon, 311 G•1•~. U Ntl!oOll. 111 ~ .1 I f t 0 ' ' ,I ' ·' ' •• .. ll ' ! " !I Higgins triple jumped 24 Sing les by Rick Case. and feet, 4 ~:: inches, clocked 31.& Ron Shimaji, a double by sc-1r 1~111,.. for a new meet record in the Chris Brainard a walk and an ,-119 lO ! 11 P, Nelson, rl SPl!~~le, rf Fl1her. d To11l1 " 220 and hurled the discus 74 Anoe11 010 ooo 1w-2 1 s feet on Saturday to add to his 1--"-'_o_c_a_c_co_u_n_1ed __ ro_c_f_i_ve_F_o_u_n_-_c'c••..c'c"c~.:c"'c'c'c"'--' .. "-""c' _ _,_,_, -'- victories in thc 100 and long jump on Friday. O'Hara. of Belgrave. lopped Sa[\7ie $1.96 on 27 seconds off the old meet record to win the 5,000 meters ~~~lI:gr,~:~l'~~ half.gallons of " • • • "g'a~,Jos.~~~~~ .~'.-.::Pc.rona J&B Ra·re Scotch de! hiar, set hts 'second ~ver-40 e meet record Oy clea ring 46 ii feet , 11 inches in the triple >.. jump. On Friday, he set a new. age-group mark in the long jump. •- Meet officials said 1Iiggins' marks in his five victories would have plac-ed him in con- tentioo in the over-60 age group. Baseball's Leaders AMERICAN LIA.GUI" BATTING (UD al b.1111 -lllombl•Q, N'I' •. J1t: C.•rew, Min, .1431 W. HO<ton, !tel •• Jai a vm11rr. !111, .lit; 11.UNS BATTED IN -M•voerrv. ICC. 71: A. Jtt k'IOI'\. <>ak, •s; Mvrter, N'I'. SI; O•rwin, Min. 16; Melton, CPll, 5'. STOLEN BAS£$ -ND!'IPI, Oil~. 2J, C1moat1etll, Oak, :Ml, 0 N111on. Te~. 10: Allmlr, C11, ltl H1r1>11r, lhn. 16: Pate~. ICC. 16. PITCHING !1 Dlc+sooros ! -1-iU<lt•r. R~518.95 NOW·- $}6.99 Oik, lJ-3, .In. l.19 Sl,,qtr, c 11. U...t, ·-----------•! .711. 1.l-1 LM, B~n. 10..3 •. 769, 7.,1 MtDanJ1I, NY, 1-1. .7!o0 2.&I Colbor11, ,.Ill, 1J ,4, .TlJ, 2.rl IC. WrlgM, l<C, S-2. .1ll, l.19 Pl111, Olk. 5-t. .71', 2.45 .. S't'~lc:tt&f~s s-_: ~~'-.i·!!: <••· ll"l; SI_, C.1, 1.Uj. !llvlt.....,, Mii'\, ll61 WO«/, Chi, 129; i... Ptorl"'f, Cle. 121. NATIONAL LIAOU• !IATTJNG {150 •I bil") -Mllil, LA. 00/ UnHr, PPll, .DI: Willson Hiii, .ll6; Good'°"' SF, .3U1 W, 111.0blnson, PPll, .l2l. AUN$ B ... TTED tN -!IMCf\, C!n, "I Save s3.so on JrB gallons Reg. s37,45 Nows3 3.95 Sllr11<1H, PgPI, 61; 8orlcll1 SI", 601 W•tloll. Hin, ff; Ev•ns. .-.11. 51; 01 ~-Ari. S1. with convenient pouring cradle STOLEN BA$ES -~iln. Cl", M; ,, _____________ ... C-, Hin, 2t1 L--. LA. :1$/ Brock, I' • au1LTtN I l"OUJlflll.~ ............. Slp\tt'i-i1~l7 s~1to...1 -11ret1. Phi, 1·1 •. nt: 1.i. l rvenl, SF, 1)..S . • 722. t WiH, St l. 10.'-.11'-t .9' OI· '"~-LA. 1M •. 7U, l .1' Park .... N'I',_~· 2, .71•, l.11 !llltl1111flilm, Cln, 12-~ .IOI!. l.JJ S11V1r. NY. 9--4 •. m , 7 °' P. N~-ro. All, t...t, .61"1, 2 ti. Limited Time Only M ""'°' 111..-c1 $Cotc:ri Wll\t.\r Cl 1913 '9dcl••rt1111 cew.,, N. '· STll.llUOOUTS -Slllton. LA. 1111 Se~"''· N'I', llS; C••tton, Ph!, 11s · •m•Beach: F1Y1to1•t11to San fl atKlsco ldmesa day on PSA. (Calfornia's 111toffld3' state bh d) )) PSA wants to go north (or sou th) with your money. Other U::';~lr.l Grinningbird s to San Diego ~., •• and Sacramento. Over 160 -'¥ flights a day connecting ,,_.,, all of northern and sotJlhern California. Call your travel agent or PSA and le!'s migrate . PSA slues you a lft. • .. ,. .. ; ' T • , l---'---r-...,,.--'~====~~================~1 . I • I ' - • • • ., \ I LNUL. 'f' ttlLDT . . TV IDGHLIGHTS KABC 8 8 p.m. -The Rookies. Rel red police- man fights proaress tbreateoing his ranch. CBS 8 9:30 p.m. -Doris Day Show. Doris near· Jy falll for old name with promptings from her bou. KNBC 0 11 :30. p.m. -Johnny Carson. Whlle -Johnny's t_Way, Sandy Duncan will play as guest boat. KCET ID 9 p.m. -Loud Family Ui-e. The all- American Loud Family return to updatC1t5 life. -' TV 'DAILY LOG Monday Evening JUL'f' 9 WllDDIDll!llDlll- .(J)-·-Ci)_....,," l.Ult'• , •• m 1ri1n1:t: C2111> .. ,. ., r1irr (d11) 'Jr-HumpllrtJ B1111n1 w.,. 111tt li11duy. l:JO m Metv Crif111 Slrllw a:>Newt1 ....... ~., .. Ill..., Ln .. llMWI Cont'd fJOftt 51"M. t.00 8 Cl) ltm'1 Llllf CR) To IOlw tlltlr IOl't1·sl1ndln1 dlfflcvttle:i, Lucy 1nd H•rlY 11111 lo 1tt1nd , 1roup·1ncount11 sttslon, but It onlr multiplies thtlr troubles wllen ltn1ions turn lnlo OPtn ho1tllltits. @ Clwltlutio• .... _ ...... , ... •iaT.im ID ••-•11d11 LNat m-- A Q1 P.) UC M911dlJ · Mwit: (Ziii) "Utlf llnrl" (com) 'St- De1n Msrtln, Jtrr)' L1wl1. Tiit Navy pis tllt 11t1dachts when tht corn· Id)' t11m dlcldn lo wear tllt "'"' blue 1M pld. l:JD (I) ....... Minn ·-,(tO)--(rMI) '51-KIR: Do111l11, .[lpnor t1J Mnil: (C) (lM) "lllrM luiu lw Tn11" (.n) '61 -flltwltlt Br1nd, Ptttr BroWn, M1rtl11 MHn11, Willl1m Smith. P.,._, WU1i1111 9tftdix. A Ml city dn.ctiw's •••w11ttd ldus ol f1chl Md WfOlll iloomert• lftd 1l!Mlt dtscr°' hlrn Pf0ftllion1J!r •ftd pnDMlly. l!IDnrwt .......... fJl) I IHClll I LM F11Mlr l il1. ''' 1nd cllildr1n 111 reunltM 11 KC£T to brine viewtrs up to Ott• on wtlif"hn ilap111ntd to llllrn sinc1 An Allletic:1n r1mi1y w11 first l1t1Wt. (I) ca ..... Wll!tt Ctonkit1 .ltM ... WllTFMI ·---... , .. n.a , .. ....... ..., llD•-.. --·--· 7'91.B CJ) D m -..... , ,., 111n.111 (JJ _, (C) """ .., '"' .... ,_.,. (drtl '6l-l1n1 T11r1111, °""' Zilllbllid Jr. ()) .... T1IMCrt ID:':,':!, u.r .... " ...... • ;' ••• llltltl __ . .., -·-- llJ LI CriMI 1111 Crildl .... ()) ..... .., -(R) " bits to rekindlt 1 1omlnct be- lwltrl Doris and 1n 1dorlt11 otd friend ol hlrs in an 1tlort to con Ille min into seflln1 some m11u:1111 rlahts. fJ .... • ...... 11 f.D'AI Allttlu11 F,.llr m lli1ichKtwl 1t111u1 ail L1 Unt Ill It lt•111 10:00 II(!) Mtllklf CMWr (R) Dean J111tr cuests 11 1 circus owner whou st11 111rlor1Mr, his 1r•nd· d1u(hler, is injured in 1 f1!1 i nd wants to quit. am•- ,. ... ...., ....... ..,-... @ TllllcfitZ.. 1 0--(lt) WtYM Ntwton IUll!J. CJ ..... Pltllbill T• T1 ••• i ............. l!!)VM' ..... Tiii .. ,.,.. It lllPt _, ... Dr ......... 111 1 lO:)O 8Ttl lect rmnt111 11'11. locll ttlmsion, llosl · @ Chi step..,_. Clwtn S,..fl Mlcomts 5 IUISb Q) Tiii ,........,. ll'Olll StllClwll Clllforrt11 cornmunl· . lltt Wllo wit! ... tilt YilWiflC 111· m Lii Aapll$ Ctlltctiwt dJnt for l'lllp In $Olvln1 1 prob· ail TY Mllllal ""' ttMr AM 1MW11!1r1d. Ei) ""'IS,.rta w ni.Tld •1 • :00uaa-m-a-•-'1C' 121wl""" "· · ---......,.. (Mt) '59-Yul Bryn111r, (f)(l)(ll llm -•••r. __ ..._ go.,,,,_ I= " ~=~Tmtllnt"(dre) "* t ..... (II) '64--Sllllrt Wllltmtft, C1rot Lrnley, DIM tsr• .Trd11CM1qIc1 .....;-II M1M: "Hltpl btr(' (dn) '49 • n...._. ,..., -How1nl Duff, M1rt1 TOl'ln, "'°"' Bml. ut•t 1t1 (R) Hany Mot1111 ll·-IJCIJ CIS ,_ -· C) • ..,. e .,&ft ......_, ttulflt up .-...... • I Al hi tunullM IWllb, llld .-11 Mtrlt111 ii Paris" {mus) '51 - ~· pnta u 1 killlf. G!lle l(etl}', Leslie C11on, Osclr Lt· De._ ""-' ...... Cln· v•nl. d11Mti lhds wt lilolrtfNI &,. 11 0 ll9 m >H1 Cir• S.nd1 D111t._, MeetrMI. u 11 Is 1uesl ho't. .... : (C) l2IM) ....... n..s Q Meo.ie: "lhUin1 Ht111t" (d11) '48 s-"' (cem) '67 _ Shirflf Mtc· -Nan Parker, Russell Ha)'Mn. Lllrlt, Mn M in. Mich1et Ctine. mO 1@1aJ11 ."'.',""', n httr Stlllrs, • t ,,,. rut D CJ) m TM ...... "A Vtl')' lt·•@ MarsMI Dilllll SPIClll Pleet ol CrDtll'ld" (R) .l . m Allrt4 Hltclicect Prtants pol1CI offlclr du1 to rttlrt to llis r1ncti flcllts off buttdonrt 1t 11111· 12::30 CD..,..: (C) -,'"''"' ol t111 point 11Mn Iii• ptoptrtJ Is con· hl9clt" (1ctw) '64-Georp M11ch1I, ...... far I frttw~. E1r1 ~lllnlll 1t1dlfll Allrl. -CIJ-s-""" ...... l"°CD DD (JJ -,...... OMl.-,hnl 1:-............. mn. M•dl••tt• IBL11N111.._ enc.111 lil!I-·-- Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:45 II M"": "Rllllt WllMI StMp" {dr1) '52 -Undt Dtrntll. GtlJ MllT'lll. J:IO 11 lll'lfl: ..._ .... (dfl) '47 -Victor M1!1i11. Ethel 81n1mor1. 1:00 OJ "Cu1p Dill" (dr1) 'l!-R1• ftolpll Scott, Holl! BetfJ Jr. l:lO a (CJ "Sltti11 lulr (wu) ·s.- D11t R.obtrtwn. M1rp Mutplry. l:OO (JI ~s.111t11 Trlfl'" Ptrt I (drt) '4S-Gtry Coo1111. lnfrid 81r1m1n. !lj "MIJll .. " Conclr ~) "DH11J1 M, ltt1rt" P1rt I (mus) '54-Jost ferrer, Mttl• Obero~. I Somme .. Hit a Problem ABC May /lave to Pull Regular Show LOS ANGELES (AP I - \Vhen can a hit show be a prob- lem to a telovlsion nct~·ork? \VAen It occurs In the sum· mertln1e ar~ !he hot weather replactn1cnl is due to go of.f in September to make room for the new fall season. "Love Thy Neighbor" Is nn i\merlcanlicd version of an Englifih i.how lh11t ABC ex· pet ted \.\"Ould run for six episodes and then be forgot· · ten . • UneX"pectcd ly, the premiere show plaei!d nu1nbcr four in the 70-city Nielsen ratinQs. The isccond week it was in eleventh place. lf it maintains its pace. ABC may have no choice but to shelve another slw'v and keep •·t.ove Thy rjcighbor. '' · "\Ve may have done the network a disservice," said wriler·producer Arthur Julia'n. "What we should have. been was a nice little success so it v.'Ould have encouraged ABC to bring us back in January. But a 39 to 41 percent share of !he audience is something they now have to deal with. You've got lo make room for that. You don't want to lose the momentum." That "LovC Thy Neighbor·• is a hit is surprising. The shows premise strikes me as IX!ing dated. The idea of blacks moving into a white neighborhood is something you, would have expected to be the basis of a comedy about four years ago. But as executive producer Herman Rush points out, no network v.'Ould have put" on such a stlow four years ago. The ·Friday night show is crisply \\Titlen, attractively· stagef\i and its stars are personable. Ron Masak and Joyce Bullfant are the white couple and Janet McLachlan and Harrison Page are the black couple. Fortunately, as much as the black-white differences , the show draws its laughs from the economic and cultural 'dif- ferences of the two couples. Page plays a well-educated m MANN THEATRES ALL THIATllS COOLID IY llFllGllATION OW Pl AYING Rl511Vlfi SEATS »' S1l1 "31 'Ill "30 MAR'LaN·eRANao· .ltL 'J'ii1s (X ~:!..':':r.." Un1I•~ attlll' 101-TU!S·lllllll. I P.I . IRIDU 1 I !.IS IEO I ~T l-l I US IUKOU Z.S I I A(l SIATS $4.00 ~-·· ' I 1MAND llTlllf l·•:AS -8:45 ''"" t+to low .nc11it•1 .... .. ., -"J'I"' -"'· .... AIMI tM ••t ,..... ._will. "'CAHILL UNITTD !TATIS MUSHAL'' ALSO DAILY 2:1}.6:1.S..10:30 11LE MANS" ENTERTAINMENT exeCutive and MMBk is a blue collar worker wbo works for the same company. "It's a good orchestration of Educationa'l Television Paying Off NEW YORK (UPI ) Mothers of youngsters in poverty areas have givrn "Sesame Street" good marks for helping to make their children's entry into the classroom easier. This \.\'35 one of the findings in a survey conducted for the Children 's T elevision \Vorkshop, producers or the J)OP.ular preschool series, by Daniel Yankelovich, Inc, in New York's East Harlem and Bedford S t u }' v e s a n t.com- mwlities .and in low inrome rommupitieS in Chicago and \Vashington. Mother§ were asked it they felt that the viewing or sesame Street by their children in the !our years since the ex· perimental series was launch· ed made any difference to their youngsters now in school. i\n overwhelming 92 percent of the mothers in East Harlem and_ Bedford Stuyvesant said yes. In Chicago the com- parable figure was 89 perccnl and. in \Vashington, DC. 84 percent. Typical reasons given by mothers included: ··it taught the children how lo count," "It helped them learn t h e alphabet and read" and "If helped to prepare them for school and made it easier." Spanish-speaking m others reported; "It helped the children to learn English .. , HELD OVER I.rt hpoldl "THE MAN WHO LOVED CAT DANCING" . ............ "JEREMIAH JOHNSON" . ... ••rt l9Y"Mllh "FUU" character•," said Julian. "The ~w against high. ~fanagement against labOr. Even if Page were white and living next door, it lrould still \\'Ork." Julian added that most or the stories turn on charac. lertzatlon rather than the black-white situation. "Love Thy Neighbor" is lln English Import. but on the Atlan1ic crossing it took on a disllnctly American look . Like previous imports-"All in the Family" and "Sanford and Son" for Imports -It bears as · little resemblance to the original as a Volkswagon to a Rolls Royce. The only thing left un- changed is that the black cou- ple moves next door to the white couple, Their ages economic s ta t u s, cu1tural .-backgrounds and just about everything else was changed. In the English versioil the blacks were Jamaicans so that in a'ddltlon to ~ing black they 'vere also foreigners. The comedic appl'03<'h also is too different to adjust it to American tastes. The abrasiveness of the English chiiracters was sanded do"n to make them "innocents or ·simply the product of their en· vironments. The \.\'hole process of aller· ing such shows makes you wonder \vhy the networks bolher. \Vhy not start 1vith a home.grown product to begin \\•ilh? l have the feeling that the networks display more courage with the imports. Not only arc they proved suc- cessful but the executives can tamper with the realism and sophistication to bring it down to tolerable levels. British Hit Russia11 Ban On Moyie ALSO WALT DISNEY'S "SONG OF THE SOUTH" CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 1 P.M, 50( 11 :.t& A.M. TO 2:00 P ,M. C:I NIMA I ............ Oltnf• J.tUIOll "A Twcll CINIMA I ''Tiit (ltlMff CtnlM<llet!" "<••11•01 ll1M•~" '"' Cl ... aJillA I J. Wlt"-tt "Ta. H•ff•I .. ,.,,_, .. "L."""' 6 0t!t-1r lirtlltff1'· , .. , , . Busy Bain . Conrad, Bain, right, who plays the role of the neigh· _bor in the hit CBS show "Maude" keeps busy dur. ing the su1nmer . He is playing in "Uncle Vanya" on Broadway opposite su.perstar George C. Scott. Frenchman • " Wows 'Em· At Fest NEW YORK (AP) -Michel Legrand c3me from France to bring a di(ferent evening to the Newport Jazz Festival. lie put together a JS.piece band, with a big string section, and invited soloists Stan Geti and Sarah Vaughan to join them in Carnegie Hall. Comments at the close - which was a standing ovation -ranged from "the best con- cert of the fcsli Val" to "he plays lhe kind of music }'OU hear in elevators." Personally, we thought ll was a grand 21h llours -Lcgrand's mixing with Ja.n his classical, in· t e 11 e ct u a I , light·hcarled, humorous and casual ,flavors. The band played several classically oriented things that Legrand said he wrote and ar· ranged "yesterday. last night and this afternoon.'' If so, the sight reading v.•as excellent. One "'as for si x saxophones and one trombone . Sax· T U S T l h ophonist Tom Scott and his . op, • , e et .on L.A. Exp<ess joined in for two numbers and our only im· pression was of loudness. T A • F v Getz, .,.,ho said he \.\'Ore his 0 .,,,. rom egas bifocals and shouldn't have, ,.,.as light and subtle. He NEW \'ORK fUPJ, -The annual Jerry Lewis J\1uscular D ys t ro ph y Labor Day WC<'kend Telethon "' i 11 orginate !his year from Las Vegas -the first lime in the seven·year history or the io.. hour super·show that it has not emanated from New York. MARJOE I!!!! Don't Miss This One! .. . -""' terweave nJ played solo on a tune in which best of New the musicinns babble, which York theater and concert origi nally was en ti t 1 e cl stage w i th the best of ·'Gossipy," then ' •Sing Je s Nashville's country/western Bar. then. to give it more music, plus top talent from class. "Communication's. He. Las Vegas and Hollywood. played an encore. "Whal Are The 1972 Lewis' Telethon en-You Doing the Rest of Vol.Ir ded with $9.2 million pledged Ufe?" .: to MDAA, of which 99 percentl---------- has bceo collected. *********** NBC Picks New Cl1ief "' HIVl-'N SU~I SWU Mimi 'IM. "°"" IAIUIMI. UTUIOAT .. IUllMT AU N\'t IAMI04PM ar HAtlOt ll'ID. • OtAMGI' ,, • ,, (PAil 1111INANllM11ADlllM IU"'D&l ONl.l • CIUNOI •t I t Jl " llLLY JACk !JrGI PLUS I llCIWO TllOMll RID 5K'f' AT MORNING l"I STADIUM• I :;,:;,, .......... l.Ll.11' :r.·• "Song Of The South" IGl -··· -..... STADIUM ·3 :: ... A.LJJ.1'U..L'.-l >I -· -., -... STADIUM·!:.: .. '.ll!.lu..i!..r!l:'"'.;'J "CAHILL-U.S. MARSHALL" ... "HANG 'EM HIGH" !PG> "FRIENDS OF EDDll COYLE" 'LADY SINGS THE ILUES" (R) llttfo hr n. ,,_... Of Tiie Apes" l&J • "THE LOST CONTINENT" U.A. CITY A"'O SOUTH COAST CIMl'MAS -TUESDAY Sk {LADIES ·~D GOLDEN AOlflSI .,.. OPIN •TfL tt• l'M. ltfll 111COMrl11111 Ou•r Orlm11 "CLASS 011 •tf" ''TAltl MONIY lo IUNq htJI 111 (OIOf"I 1'°41 ,..,. °"''' J •t•lt• • Niii 1'1r II.Oii ff_.,"WAftM O•CIM• II•" 1,0) "LOVllll I OTHllt ITltAlfOlltS" .. - I .. LIMel~ A ..... -•to!l(- !J27·?2lJ S•fll• An• f•••••• .,.., c11 • ...,,~ •••· l\Ml,IOJJ Passage Slowing Up Dwindling Winds Cut Chance of Record By ALMON LOCKABEY Of .. Delly ,.... ltetf A llZ.mUe doy In the Trampac yacht race ts not too shabby. But It wasn't enough Sunday for Mark Johnson's record holding 73-foot ketch Windward Pas.sage. Dwindling northerly wi.Qds one-third of the distance to Diatoond Head appeared to be walling ·away, WP 'S' chances of bettering her 1971 record of 9 days, 9 hours and 6 minutes. \Vlth t,516 mJles to go at the a a.m. Sunday posltk>n report she was 188 miles behind her 1971 position at the same time. The light winds were also tllreatening Passage's elapsed time lead. The 62.-foot New ZeaJand sloop 'Ragtime .. 'from Long Beach. had moVed to w.llhin. 16 miles; BOb Grant's Ayres Yacht Wins Fifth Series · Race Drumbeat , an Ericson 46 sloop skippered by Don Ayres Jr. of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the overall and Class . B winner in NHYC's Mbdiflcd Gold Cup Race Saturday. The evert was the fifth of the Ahmanson Series. Summary : OVERALL -(I) Drum- beat; (2) Tribute (Columbia· 52 ) Fred MacDonald, NHYC: Roborl rrom Newport Barbor Ylldlt Club WU U inllel batl; Huey Long's Ondine wu a mile belllnd Rdm, and KM DeMeuse's Blactfin was three miles farther back. Improbable, a f i -ro o t custom sloop in Class B had taken over the handicap lead. The red-bulled speedster ls skippered by Davkl AUen ol San Fraricisco with Skip Allen, a former Transpac winner from Newport aboard, as navigator. Orient, the previous day's handicap leader, either fell in a light-air hole or was the vic- tim of faulty navigation. She had dropped to 24th overall. Jn the claues,' Robon was holding the handicap lead in A, Improbable in B, Tenacity in Cand Moon Dey in Class D .• The fleet had not yet reach- ed the northeast trades which usually provide good reaching and running wiiids. A report from Honolulu Sunday said the ti-ades had been blowing 25-30 knots for the past week. Here are the handicap stand· ings with distances to Honolulu: OVERALL (t i Improbable, 1,630 : (2\ Robon , 1,542; (3) Tenacity, Rolfe C. Crocker, St. FYC, 1,655 ; (4} WorUlwWe -Ocean Trip (3) Wings (Ranger-37) Taylor/ :Pattison/Smyth, eevc; (I)• . At an Bullit (Ya nk ee-38) Jim End Leonard, 'eve. CLASS A -(I I TribuU.. CLASS B -(I) Drumbeat; (2) Trend, Jim Linderman, BYC; (3) Raider, Hooten/ Hart, BCYC. -CLASS e -(ll Wings; 12) jlulllt: (3) Counterpoint. Bill .{leadden, eve. ~ CLASS D -(I) Whitecap, Mike Eisenberg; {2) Primero, Phil Morgan, NHYC; (3) Antares, Alan Andrews, BYC; -· ·Kite Fleet PLYMOUTH, England • (UPI) -The sailing Sware family arTived Sunday at the end of its 26,000.mile cruise around the world in a 30-foot catamaran. The Swales, looking fit end happy, were met 'by many wellwishers and offi<:ials of the Royal Western Yacht Club. Colin Swale, 35, his wife Roseie,. 25, and their cbildren, 2-year-old James ·and 3-)'e81'· old Eve, set out in December 1971 despite newspaper Moon Day, G.A. Wollan!, KHYe, 1,1181; (5) Ragtime, LBYe Syndicate, 1,640; (SI Arlana, Georgt Thorson. eve, t,1188; (7) Woodwynd, George Baker, PMYe, 1,S'it; (8) Wsr- rior, A1 Cassel, BCYC, 1,636; (9) Llghtnlng, Theo SU.phens, St. FYe, l,llCl8; (IO) Wln<hvaro Passage, 1.518. . CLASS A -·(I) Robon; (%) Ragtime; (31 Warrior; (4) Lightn ing; (5) WI n d ward Passage. CLASS B -I t I Improbable: (2J Nalu IV, Harvey KUpatrlck, MPYe, 1,647 ; (3) Sanderling IV, Poole/John30fl, Bevc, t,6118; (4) Salacia, Joe DeMeter, Richmond Y C , 1,167:, (5) Sea Fever, Richard Phllbrltk, SeatUe Ye, l,6S9. _CLASS e -fl)' Tenacity; (2) Olympian,~ Peter SchmiCtt, Seattle YC, 1,683:· j 3) Blue Streak, Gary Myers, NHYC, 1,694; (4) Mamie, Milt Smith, eve, 1,111&; (Sl Sirocco. Tom Grettent;:ierg, BYC, 1,675. CLASS D -(I) Moon Day; (2) Arlina; (3) Woodwynd ; ( 41 Witchcraft. Art Biehl, St. FYC, 1,687; (5) Illusion, Ed McDowell. KHYC, l,697. • • HANDICAP LEADERS-David Allen's 42-foot Class B entry Improbable moved into the overall handi· cap lead in the 2,225-mile Transpac Yacht Race a·s' the 60-boat fleet neared the one·third mark. Leading Class. A on handicap is Bob Grant's It9bon of New· port Harbor Yacht Club, shown here being the first to pop a chute in heavy going at the start. ' - ' .:~Series Won criticism for taking such~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·-· By Daigh Sweet Honored young children on a hazardous jouriiey. Stepping ashore was a oovel NHYC!l experience for James, who has S spent most of his life at sea. •. John Daigh or Newport Mrs. Swale was helped briefly Harbor Yacht Club won the while she regained her land 1ocal Kite Fleet Championship legs. ,Sunday with a record of five a ww•1m;;;;;&Y:ift\WW¢\'liM Inducted iii An1iapolis Hall of Fame straight firsts in the best five of six series. Runner~up with ~4 points was Bob Kinney of NHYC; ·third was Kim Gage, BYC, 21; fourth was Bill Lapworth Jr., :".NffYC, 23, and Cifth was Brad '!>wan, NHYe 25. The chamhionship series was al.90 a tune-up for the Quunber of Commerce· sponsored Flight of the Kites which will be held next Sun· day. The Flight of the Kites, ~eld for the fint time last year, replaces the old Flight of the Snov.'birds, Newport's small boat classic for many years. HE'S OPEN SOMETIME SUTl'ER CREEK (AP) Life's pace is casual ln this tiny, historic Ca 1 if or n i a -Lode mming town, where guns mith D. Demerest's shop door sign an- no~ these hours: "Saturday-Sunday 10 a.m.·5 p.m., usually. "Sometimes Thursday.Fri· day. Not alv.,ays. I think. .. Or something." ' . . sHOwiNa, '~~~~ .. ¥~:".-\ 11'.ull•..a. . .-. .. . • . - ' . " •• " •• '•. • •' -· r ~ ,. ., . '· . '· .-• • ' I. ' .: " '• • WllU1 ?5lllCll PllllCftlll 1· "IVU ~ ...... Zij • ,"1.>.r..--w:.:R,lrol'(.~. PREMIER ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT THE ONLY WALK·IN'THIATRE ENGAGEMENT Richard B. "Dick" Sweet of sailor elected to the Hall of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was among 12 new members elected to the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association of North America's Hall of Fame, located at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. Sweet, who has a line racing record of his own. has spent 20 yean working with collegiate sailors and is responsible for the development of the sailing instructional program at UCL lie was a graduate or UC San- ta Barbara in 1948. ANOTHER \Vest Co a s t 'l?le PfOIP9Cifo4 owners of Maicy'I Car Wlt&h. l"itbbur;h. "° GENE HACIQVIA/11 r&;"b SC/Wf O~ WUMll l!DS.C) ~0 NIMlll D+OMIMIHf -~· ······ .... • • • • • • • • •• t l\l \I\< f\lfH • _, :..· A(JAV; ' I,\ •U II • )179 4141 EDWARDS • • • • • CINEMA VIEJO ~,.. I ,, ••• •• LA Pl/ n1• .. o" ~lo ~441\ 2nd AT \'UJO Richard Harrll "MAN IN THl ·WllDIRNISS" ' Fame was John A. "Jack" Taylor, UCLA 1956. lie found- ed the Southeastern Intercol· legiate Sailing Association. He is now Jiving in Nevada . Two Orange County sailors were seJected on this year"s All-American sailing team. They were Dan Thompson or UGI (Newport Beach), Allen Htighes, U.S. Coos! Guard Academy (Huntington Beach ). and Peter Wtlson, U S C (Newport Beach ). As members of the All· America sq uad the individuals selected v.·i\l be enshrined in ii.MIS OT&N I.CHAU COIUIN CAHNON llNJAMIN 2n• AT CIN #2 STEVE McQUEEN "LlMANS" the Hall of Fame. This year's selectloM were based on total · performance throughout the year and represent individuals who made outstanding records in their districts. 'Mlompson, one or the top PacirJc Coast collegiate skip. pers, is a Creshman at UCI. THE SfRONG """'Od place finishes In his division, both at the Pacific Coast and Nonh American championships, won him a berth on this year's· team. lie also has a top record in Finns and is a past winne r of the Flight of the Snowbirds. 18" RECORD . BREAKING WEEK • Ai (~) BILLY~CK ------·-eOi TOt/.UUGHLIN ·OELOll T.lYLOll IN THIATlll 'OUI i:·M··>?: •.. ii--·~;;.:1 • • • • • • • : ~ <)\I \I\< f\lf.H " I· • ,..\>tV~ Al ~''A~) , I TA ~!',A • "/714141 All NlW & 11.l IDWAIDS WESTBROOK ~!MlS w.-..-.. t1fi111Ho+llf 192-44•3 11 GllAT HIT IONOI •• •I I DAILY PILOT 104 In -Regatta Newpor~ Hobies Sweep at Malibu Led by John Ro!s ·Duggan, Newport Harbor Hobie Cat sailors swept the Hoble-14A division in Malibu Yacht Oub's 4th annual Invitational Regaua SundaY and placed high in the other divisions or both 1hr 14s and 16s. The event dre~· 10'4 llobie Cats in six divisions from .all o"·er Southern California . Tom Ot!adorfr or Oxnard woo the Hobie 14B division and Ron Coleman or Los Angeles was the wiMer in Class C. Ron At.,,·ood/Llnda Atwood. L:>ng Beach ; (4 ) Rell Sum· merville/J I m Summerville. Victorville; (5) J im Graham/ BOATING Glen Dcxt<'r, Hermosa Beach. '----------' BCYC's Pussycat Wins • 1st Smnmer Sun Race Pussyca t. skippered by.John 'Sialay of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club 'A'On ·the PHRF ' Nick Steele or Balbo:i lsland Class A division in the first won Vte A division of the race or BCYO's Summer Sun Hobie-16s. C1ass B winner was Series held eaCh Friday night Warren \Valkef. Marina del- throughout July and Aua:usl \Vinner of the Class B division was Will TemplWJn't \Vild Wind, BCYC. Trophy wlnnen: PHRF-A -(I I PUll)'ait; (2) Sequoia Jim Moore, SSSC: 3) American Beagle, Pat Dougan, BCVC ; 14) Cycona, Rolr Roth . BCYC; ( 5) Independence, Mike Dai g, BCYe. Rey, and Drake Simpson of Hermosa Beach won Class C. HOBIEI4A -(I ) John Ross· Duggan. Newport Beach; (2) Craig Barto, Newport Beach ; (3) Phil Burman , Newport Beach : 141 Eric Barto . Ne~·porl Beach; (5) Ben Rose . Newbury Park. HOBIE·l4B -(I) To1n Peadorff. Oxnard ; (2J Tom Bissell, !\falibu; (3) Norm Marchment. Malibu ; (4J Art Halenbeck. ~1alibu. HOBIE·14C -(I ) Ron Coleman, Los Angeles ; (2) Mike Higgens. T h o u s a n d Oaks; (3! Scott Blake. ~falibu; (4) Jerry Smith, Canoga Park. H08IE-16A -(I) Nick Steele/Scott Malhev;s, Balboa Island: (2) Russ Edington· Hiram Downard.Hou ston , f"ex.; (3) Mike Stauat lTom liartsock. Fontana ; (4 1 Jerry King/Rich ard Loufek. Newport Beach; (5) Dean Wickst rom/ Toni Lee. Newport Beach. HOBIE·16B -fl) \\T~rrcn \Valker/Kathy Smith . !\farina de! Rey; 12) Noble Wamim/ Laurie Dctloff. N e \\' p o r ! Beach: . 13) Byron \Yti tson/ Beverly Watson. Dana Point : (4) Gunter Hofmann/Carmen Hofmann. Los Angeles; 15! Russell Brov.11/Robin Ross- Ouggan. Newport Beach. HOBlE·16C -(l) Drake Simpson/Ed Forte. llermosa Beach; (2) Paul Hart/!\fary Jo Johnson. San Clement<"; \3) Yachter Moving Up ttfark Hughes of Balboa Yacht Club moved up on lhe ladder eliminations for the Prince of Wales Bov.•1. North American Yachl Ra c in g Union's match racing cham- pionship, Satu rd ay by defeating George Patterson of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club in two straight races. Hughes. with crewmen Rqn Holder and Tom Wiilson. had previously beaten G e o r g e Twist of NHYC. The eliminations are for the 1974 Prince of \Va)cs Bowl . The local eliminations are be· ing sailed in Etchells-22 sloops. OF THE Let Mar,;n ·Plus· NORTH Uta Hagen "THI OTHll11 ~""'~ - Al$0 (Ml 147..017 l~I L ... 200 Ready For Annual Kite Flite T"·o hundred entries are ex· peeled for the second annual "Flite of the Kit es"' sailboat race July JS sponsored by the Newport Harbor Clamber of Commerce Commodores Club. Entrants must sign up before July 13 at the Clamber office at 2166 E. Coast lligh~·ay, Newport Beach, or at !he Nev.·port •I a r b or . Balboa. Lido Isle. or Bahia Corinthian Yacht Clubs. There Is no a g e re· quircment. but ent rants under 21 must have waivers signed by their parents. The race starts at l :30 y,·ith tv.•o to thr<'C hours expected for each ent rant to cover th<' five n1ile course. topped off by a picnic al the end of the ''Flite.'" Pampl1lets ·Available Ca pitol Ne~·s Service SACRAl\1EN1'0 -F i v c p;imphlets are a v a i 1 a b I e designed to make you a "Safe Boating. Consumer.'' Th c Department or Consumer Af- fairs in conjunction \Yith the United States Coast Guard and the State Department of i'\aviga tion and O c ea n Development put the material together. Included arc : "Forget to Bring This Guy Along and Your Boat l\1ay Never Forgive You," a pamphlet on f ire ex· tinguishers: "You l\1ay On1y Need It Once," a booklet on life preservers: '"Towing Tips for lhe Trailer Sailor;" These pamphlet.! may be~ tained by sending a stamped . 5clf·addrf'S.Sed envelope I o SA F'E BOAT l :\G co~. SU~IER. P.O. Box 3 I 0 , Sacramento. 95802 . All NIW & llAUT"Ul IDWAIDI . CLASS B -(I) Wild Wind, \Viii Templeton. BCYC ; (2) Terry"s Teapot. ,_1ark Hughes, BYC : (3) Artist Flower, Ed Sawyer, BYC: (4) Fnm:y, Ken Eastman, BCYC . LASER -Raser, Bret Mason, BCYC; (2) Cach,.U., Marcia Bents. NHYC. UD0-14 -I ti Bequeath, Bob Smith... BCVC; (% ) Jiullablue, Terry Mulligan, BCYe. SABOT -m Primo, Bil Bilsborough , BCYC: No name, Gary Moon. BCYC ; CS) Yn- ned. Liz Denny, BCYC. Sabot Race Co1itests To Be HeUl Semi-eliminations for the Newport Junior Sabot Class V.'ill be held Tuesday and \Vednesday. Balboa Yachl Club will 00. an elimination series for BYC. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club and Balboa Island Yacht Oub on Tuesday. and ~ Harbor Yacht Club w\o con- du ct eliminations for NHYC aod Lido Isle Yacht Club. The eliminations w 11 l determine the local participants in the Junior Na~. tiona l championshipe wbich will be hosted by NHYC July 28-29. Airports Given Federal Funds WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho Federal Aviation Administration announced it approved $4 .1 million 1 n Airports receiving funds and 17 projects in 11 states. Airports receiving funds and the amounts included Long Beach, Airport, $61.778, and Santa l\1aria. public airport, $4.-481. WESTBROOK ~J!M1 Wtt11t1IH1M'r 11 0.U.llW911 ·· .................... ····· .,, ... u ll•tT All.A ~WING Wt•TMl .. ITlll Af'GOlOaJo W lfTWffNf!:~~:."•::~: lt1 •tt MATINllS DAILY 193·7Sl1 ARISTOCA1I TIC""1!COl..OA' i{f ,0. ..... _ .. <;;> WAIT .,., "'" .. ,., __ ., oe ""-' ·----ie!Y ~ .; .. "'~ ' • fl!CHNtCOLOFr C ALL WALT OISNIY SHOW , r KElllN FOLEY, 7, MISSION VIEJO, WITH HIS FATHER TED TYLER BELKA SETS' SAIL DOWN ICE. HE'S 6, FROM FOUNTAIN VALLEY I r ' ' They're All Very Puckish Coast Boys Forsake Beacli for Fun., Cool of the HockeyRink . ' By HOWARD L. llANDY even to a greater extent in this area \Yith maintenance mechanic to many other OI Ill• Dallf "lie! SIMI an ac1ive program at Klondike. ..-fields. Forget those balmy days al the beac& ~.if your son is amonr the yoUth of : Orange Coast area looking for a chance I to coOI. off during the hot summet months, don't give it a second thought if • tie dons heavy pads and helmet and takes up a etick. ' • j ~ • • • • The pads and helme1,'_\(I a must for his . c60sen advocation and the slick is part or the game to be played although it may be Strange In this area of swishinc and,fresh ocea.I1 breezes. "The 3rena bas no connection with our .. program other than renting us the ice," he explains. "But it is growing so fast. we exf>eCt a full complement of teams to participate in our program this fall ." " -' HOCKEY Cl..INlCS and instruction are sf;iged at Klondike at the following hours: Tuesday, 5:45-7:45 p.m.; Wed· D•ilY Pilot St•ff Photos by Pat O'Donnell In our midst is a nwn with a pe~t. ·. ncsday, 5:45-7:45 µ.1n.; Thursday, 5:45- for the cool er things in life and'he.tS.~r-7:45 p.m.; ~unday, 9-1!:30 a.m. and 5:lf>.. rently engaged in enticing youth to follow, 1:45 p.m. IUs pipings to the Klondike lee Arenit in Costa Mesa. ooN MATHE\\'S is one of II national directors ol the Amateur . Hockey- ~iation, the governing body for youth pfograms Including the U.S. Olympic team throughou_t the U.S. ll is a growing concern and Mathews is deeply involved in furthering the cause "\\'e are interested in new skaters of all ages," P.1athews expl ains. "The Orange Coast Hockey Associa. tion is a non-profit corporation and our coa"hes are former hockey players "'hose current professions range from a construction company president , a hospital administrator. a radio station engineer, a space engineer,· a planl "The clinics are open to the public and we hope to enter the first Orange County teams in a Greater Los A."lgeles Area league 'in the fall," P.fathews adds. AGE GROUPS are divided every tY.'O years. Youngsters 8 and under are called Mites ; those in the 10 and under bracket are Squirts; 12 and under are Peewees; 14 and unde r are Bantams; 16 and under .ire fl.fidgets; 18 ·and under are Junior B; and 20 and under are Junior A. Donations from various organizations have helped oulfit the boys with uniforms and hockey equipment. One of the more 1:enerous checks 'vas for $300. Donors were the Costa P.fesa Police AMociation and lhe Costa Mesa Optimist Club. The clinics being staged at Klondike in· elude all phases of the game -skating, stick handling, puck carry and control , use of the body and position play. Al the present time there are 30 boys from the national program playing in Eastern colleges on full ho c k e y scholarships and one, Mike Lampman (rrom Norwalk) is playing in the NHL with St. Louis. COACH BIU. Y REAY of the Chicago Black Hawks says of the youth program: "California and Texas Will Pf9duce the hockey players of the future more than any other places 'in the U.S." ... And if you think thE: sport isn't·grow· ing, just check the figures of the AHA over a IO-year period. In 1963 there were 1,613 teams in· volving 30.000 youngsters playing ice hockey across the nation. Today , in 1973, ·there are 9,112 teams \V ith n1orc than 165,000 players. The estimate for. 1975? Approximately 220,000 players. So don't take the temperature of your young son if he suddenly has a penchant for dOMing pads and helmet for a turn around the ice even though ~ tern· peratures outside may soar near 100 degrees. He will probably be much cooler than you are when he arrives at practice at Klondike Ice Arena. • COACH PITE PELfGRINO TEACHES SCOTT MC KAY OF NEWPORT BEACH HOW TO HIT PUCK 0 ' { j SHELLY LA POINTE, 10, COSTA MESA, CHEERS BROTHER GOR • (!AME'S SOMETIMES A PAIN. ltANDY BERLIE, DON MATHIWS::' . . ~ -;-: •• ••• ::: . ~ , • . . . Classified INDEX Advertising -..... l"lllllllMlll .. , INl!llf &eJtrftt --· .. c. ........... IMCll C .... P.-11 c ........ Mir ----. --........ ..... .............. --.............. ................... -·-IN ... 1"1119 Twnce u-'-<11 LetvM """ ..... "''"' ..... ... L,....I ... UMllll Nlllltl Lllles-_..,_ Meu,V .... MloftlY City M ...... v .. 11 ,........, ... ell 1 N.--f H.itllb .. .......,. hlMlll --.. _ .. _ ,_,_ S. ,_ CWlltr---""""bl ....... ,.,,,_ ..... .._ ....... 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JU C ...... 1111_ •fllnl. 111 C...... fwJI. ti' """'"'•· )U t ........ fWll. . .• nt T_,.,..M lilllfw>!. JU .......... clltlltlc..... . . : - ~~-"-..... , ""•'"" ~-·--,..,._ .. krwla/ E1111i,.JMM>1i. ,....,_ A"'"-INllr t Parll ~ttl .. • a.tfltw r•lr a nl111lt111no) ·~ SefYk• ..._ C•lllllltt....._ ,_ c ...... ~ "-,_ ~ ......... -.... ---...... ... .... _ . ....... , •-a •••vlfll _.., "*"" .... ·--Fllrnlhlr1 .,_,,, G-11 S.rvlCd ..... ""~ Hett111 Cll•t H ...... & Air "c.Milltnifll "_ ... """' ·-"'·· ·-·--·-.IMllwMI .. -.... --· M1!11h IROJ --.......... , ............. ·--·-__ ,,, ,,_..,, Ptldl, ••1rlr -.. f'MI I.vie. & "llflllltl111 _ . ..,.._" ·--· UWIMIA"-t"11llell1 ·--..... si.,.. ll:tNlr "'""" r1i.v1,._ 11t111lr TII• ,.,. 0011 T,.. 5-ICI r11tor•" UllMblfl'Y WllMll-CIM"lltl JM WiN!tMI, Mlle ..... ..,,,., F.m1119 J-wantnl, M a " ...... W'1ntH, M & P ·•· .. ... "' >A' "' .____M-_i••___,I~ Au~llM 1u1Wt.tt M•ltrlfh C•m...•1 & .... ...,, ... ........ ..._ ... .......... o.N •. ,,......,. ............ .. -~. --MMut11111u1 .... .., Mllllat IMl,_b OMq ,_,..,., ....... fl'l•.uor- Sewl119 MfcMll• ..• --s ..... ··""""· ..., Sw-.s .... . TY ....... Hlll'I, l,_11 ... "' ... .. ... "' ., '" ..... IU .. 116 . , Ill "' m n• G• n• "' "' "' .,. I* BALBOA PENIN, * Tht quiet f"harr.l of OWi 3 bdrm.. 2 btl.th home wUI l!nchan1 )'OU. CklM to beach, Lee. p;tllo; all 1 he amt'f\ltles. In tint rond!Oon? 179.500. Call: 673-366.1 673-&88 e\'eS * 6 UNITS* Nearly nc"· 2 BR ., 2 ba .• , deluxe unita: on oceanfront in Balboa!· Elce. trplcs .. J heclvy Ahag carp.. tiltn$; 1 tundeck> pt· balcooy w/each I unn: 7 cov'd. carports p}Us 1,-paridng space. $330,COJ. I Oill: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves. associated BROK ER S-REAL TOltS ~"l~ W Salhoe 67J·l6f.3 THE REllL ESTllTERS CUTE COTTAGE $21,500. 2BR, beamed ceiling home, on large comer lot. located in nice, older nbrhood, has breezeway & garage + separate storage. Ca11 to see REALTORS SINCE l941 673-4400 A Rare Find But \\'f' did it. This 11'0ndf'rful 4 bedroom home in Corona del l'll11r has greal vicv.· ol Catalina and lhc blue Pacific. lleavy shake roof, lots of v."OOd and glau to en. joy !he vlcv.• fron1 deck, liv-1 irtit room. dining area and kitchen. Roon1 for_pool table 1 and s!oragc for boat or I lt'l!.iler. Unbelievable a ( Newport II F1lrvltw 646-1811 (tnylim•) · S9S.!iXJ. Call _right 0011' to ON THE WATER "'ith boat slip. Nc\v 2BR. 21~ BA luxury, l'tll't'lree condo. Custom decor, l't'ady for oc- -cupancy. Pull-price SS7,000. Call 540-1151 Open Eves. .,,..-, HERITAGE . • REALTORS ""'· 67J.8550 OPEN TIL 9 • TT'S FUN 10 BE N!CF.• THE REllL ESTllTERS AIR CONDITIONED A ~al charmer \\•ith ''I bedroon1s, 2 ba!hs. con1- plctcly buillin k i t c h c n • covered patio, g r cat landscaping. $34,930. Try lo match it!~ "$16,50Q.OO TO ~ co:Ts DECORATE" WALLACE Thafs the amount or the REAL TORS price reduction on this fa bu I o us vie\\· hon1e -546-4141- overlooking thf> South Bay, (Open Evenings) high on a hluff. O\\'ner I l:ll:l:l:l:l:::::::::::::::l:l::::= wants in1n1ediarc s a I c ~ 1 ·----- ---· · 3Bdr .. 31 ~ baths. 2600 sq. rt. HURRY!! OPEN HOUSL Sunday 1-5, 204 Kingi: PlnCf' Rd.. NC\\•port Beach. Rl'<I Carpel, Renlto1·s &I.~ HUGE FAMILY ROOM! $29,590 I can't believe this price! The home is fantastic - LARK VILLAGE Extra nice 3BR & fnn1ily , scrviet' porch, 2~~ bilths, electric bllli~s. fireplflce . covered patio, new carpet . walC'rsoftcner. Sharp, ~harp -Ov.·ner n1oving. hurry. Askin!? $33,950. ~1151 Open Eves . ~HERITAGE REALTORS THE REllL ESTATE RS NEWPORT HEIGHTS Very lndividualislic Ty1X' Honie \\'here You can use )'OUr 111111.g i11ati o n: 2 Bedroonu1. 2-Ba thso DLrWig Room and Huge FaJl.lilY Room lhat could be divided tnlo 2 Additional Bedrooms. $18.j()(), Call 64&--0555. $17,000. NO MORE V£•1)' l'lcan 3 hr df'n & \l'Ol'k- shop i11 rear. Lots ~li\'a(·y 1\·ith l'hain-H.nk fence around lhis '"ham1ini;:: ho1nf'! Prire i;; firn1 -Easy finan<•ing. C wA LKER & LEE Realtors 546-0022 IMMACULATE CONDO Cl'!Oicf', choice 11untington Beach location. T h i s benu!Hul 2 BR. l Ba. condo is 1i>11dy for you lo mo1·c in. Pl"ICf"rl for immediatef.oj<ll e flt S24,950," beth'!° HUITY on !his r>nc. Call R,..cl Carp€'!, Reellor.~. 546-8&10 !Oj>cn 1'.:1·C'nings 1. MESA VERDE HIGHLANDS REALTOR 642-5200 IOKI \I L 01 \0\ N£A t TU N :, SPANISH VILLA TRI LEVEL • . ' . u. ,l, • , •1L() r Z-1 ------ OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience C•n P .. vlde VERY SHARP TRIPLEX This Cine investment property has 3 2·bdnn. apts .. each \vith 2 baths. The mstr. bdrm. bath is exceptionall y nice with its marble pullman . Close to 1najor shopping facilities. $68,000 . VERY SHARP DUPLEX New Ustin9 Located in a lus h. landscaped, established neighborhood. Ou tstandi ng 4 bdrm .. 3 ba .. family rm. Sensibly priced at $69, 750 . CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS C•ll Anytime 644-7662 Super sharp 4 bedroomJ'!'""""'!""""""""""'""~~""~!"""""""""""""'i Spanish tri-lcvel. One !Jf a G•n•r•I Gener1t kind v.·ith a tllc roof,::.::.==--~------------1 decorator de11iKnt>d. \Vrought i1T.1n throughout. DOG KENNEL T111Jy a Spanish cnslle. Tl\T.1 lal"gl"° lols on Orchard. I 111 f' re om JJ)' s It' rn. Santa Ana H{"ights, Good P rofessionut land~aplng. fa eilillf's. Best. of financing Too n1any.' c.-..:tr:is to li$1. r•nd 110\I' only S46.500. Priet'tl at only $3.i.900. e CALL · ANYTIME e 8-12-25.15. 646-3928 or Eve. 644-4543 f OP(N TIL 9 • !T'S FUN TO ec NICF • THE REllL ESTllTERS Lachenmyer Realtor Near The New Huntin9tan Bead! Park Site 3 BR. room. 2 Ba. 2 FAMILY FUN fireplares, con1plctcly 1"C-SHARP GI so 1w11r you c11n easily walk to the ll!ll'k and to Tal~r1 l..nk{'. This 2 ye11n )'t)Ung home has a l\'Ondt'rlul loc:a· lion on 11 quit'I t:ul-de--JJac slreeL The home il!cll ff'11!u•~~ 11n efficient kllchen \\'ith pa111ry and a Minny fa n1ily a1-ei1. Call nt)\V lo 1ric1" -it's only SJS,950. 8-17-6010. p.'lint<'rl & \\'allpapercd, plus AT ~\\' carpl'linc: 01\'nl'r 71, SADDLEBACK G.I. assun1mable. Rf'Quin.•s · totally upgraded and im- maculalt' '''ith the lovlicst pond and l\'8terfall in the l\'ell landscaped backyard. Located in a niee neighbor-hood , it absolutely "·on't last -so call right S8.<XX> to assun1e. 97~j7J or HIGH """"""""""""""""""""""" I 97>-2323. Go DIRECT ~~~-0---=~-I 3 "'· homo -beaunMly 4 BR & Family room v.'ilh large yard. fFairview k \VF1mer1 -newly painted & carpets -15 n1inutes to Newport Beach. 0 n I y $26,500 -early occupancy! -j IN\IES'T'ORS -Best buy In Pen·insula Poi'nt maintained \1ith lots of mir· H 8 2 38R "-· 1 lo T~ lwnl. "' ulltun ... HI D ..... lM flKll. . .MS o....... .......... 1H owi.•"· !uni . ., llllfur•. Ji.5 •. I ~"p1_r1_me_ .... t_"_'_ ... _R_•_•t__,l I¥ J .__Pe_1_•_and_s._pp1_ie_•__.ll ~ J I !4J~~o'° "I Thar's righl! Go direct to Red Carpet. Reallors. 2629 Harbor Blvd .. Costa i\lcst1. \\'e 1·an handl<' any Real Eslate needs you have \\'ilh our highly p1'0fcssional sale~ staff. \\e can save you hours of frustration in fin- dini,t your hon1e. lei a p1'0- fe11~lonal ser\'e you and call Red Carpet, Re a I l.,r s , 546-S&\O (0pt':'n Ev!!nings1 I rors. bookcases. !!:hullcrred · · -....... ses, on '· Perfection "'indO'A'lJ & a I j n i ~ h (' fl ~ ~~Imo. Only S32,91Xl. g :1 r a~ e . Prore~~10na1ly ~-~-'--~~---~-~~-----This one is in1maculate. lt'~ decnratf'd & a steal at Gener•I Gener•I a large 2 bedroom v.i lh 2 131 = ::..:.;.c;._.:c _______ ::..;.==-------1 balhs. The n1a.<:ter bedroom ··""'· is a delight. \"ou'!l be 1 ~ block to the ocean and l block to the bay. Oversize garage -mi11in111n1 care yru'fl. Priced at $72,:iJO. C WAll<EH & l ll ..,.,., turft, A•t. Ullhfnl, Atill., ll1ra. .,. 1111lur11. [.____Rent-als __,J~ ·-· .. ·-· ... ,. .. ---... , MMt. •• ---•11tt• ..... nutllill ........ ........ u.r. .. ....... ""ll:wf .... °""" ..... ............. '""""'"". ."""' ~= WMlftC ... "' '-" •• .. .as ... ... ... .. ..... Ml-"--ltfllfelt •• ... ..... ... ... Allllllllh...t• , , ,, , Jtt c.rt 9f ~RbflJt Mernttlwm .. Jts l .... ""'""' .. .. . .. • ,,. """ ..... .,.,...... ..... ' ~ ..._.. I .,/, •••• ,. .... c,... .. .. ...... .. ,.,..,.. .. ·--............. .. • .I.__ _Lott .... _-__,l[S] ...... ,"" ... ...... ... .. ._I _...:1ns_t'-'-ru_•t_1on _ __.l I 1 • J ~ ....... a:tcs ·-· ..... -"" ........ t Cf IS ti'' .. ... IM 1111 .......................... IJJ ·-... .... 151 l~_-_eoa_~_· -..JU~ ._,, ..... Maltlt.tltnkti .. "'..._. ......... . --.... "' .... ... ... fl, ..... ,CllWMr . .. •. -...... .... .... . ............ ,.. ...ta. s-.1~ .... "' ...... ......... ""' ... tll ......,........ t i) ! ,____Tronspor-tatio_n __,]. AlraMI t is c___.... iaM/111..... "' CYc ... 11111 .... sc..tttt .... H> e!Ktric c"' .. .•• ...... ..._ 1'U ~--.................. .. 'l'ftl""" Tnwlt . '. MS Trdlni. ""*' '' "' _.,.. Wmc. a Ptrtt . • . . . Ht • .__Autol_,..,_w-_ _.ll •I ..... . .. . - A........VCINlkt • • , "' lltM:,_t.MI Vltlkllt ......... f9' ........ -.... .. ,,,.., .. v-........................ JU ...... ....... .. "" ............. -· ... ........ , ....................... .m ........ .... .. ............ ... 1111 ..... .,. ••••••• ........... ... CALL 546-2313 EASTSIDE CUSTOM for a real opportunity . <I bdr, 3 bath custon1 builders NEWPORT Of'f.N Tll 9 • TTS FUN TO BE NICE• home. Only I l'' new •nd HEIGHTS, ·[ ~· ', I ~ Designed and huilt by Ivan \\'('\],; lor c~ecullvr f'n- tert11.in!ng and comforu1hlt' ran1 ily l11•i11g. five ix'clroon1s or use onf' a!I a conv<'rllble d<'n. 3 hallis. formal dining room for stat<' occasions, highly upgraded. Lovely Ri corner lot \viUl lx>at gate in , CHAKMER choice • Easl <.;osta ~Iesa. 1 Pei='!ectly decorated 3 bdr. 2 Ca,n Red Carpet, i:tealtory bath, formal dinin& rm. 546-S640 (Open Evenings/ lovely romer Io c a 1 io n . *BAY.FRONT 6 BR* Rea~y to 11e:ll at. '55.<XX> . l'lfost exclusil'e N'pL k>c. Don I you dare 1v11LI to call Comp. pr\\'acy. · BEACH. !led Carpet, Re a I to rs PATIO, PIER & FLOAT. ---~~==~=~=- You ov.TI the land. Priced NEWPORT BEACH below market, $175,000. ~Tarlne Contracting Firm BALBOA BAY PROP. Finest equipment & 'vater * 642·7491 * front locatKm. ~ yr. old PARK FOR SALE <OmP"•Y· SP"e< ovoll. '" bor\I 11&lc." & rcpAlrs. + POOL BILL GRUNDY RL TR. 675-6161 No tooling -lh1i; adorable home on-a cuF-de-snc ha~ th~ largest backyard. plus safe con1plclely fenced wai. Price: just $3<1·,950 - HURRY. HURRY, HURRY and Call 842-2535. THEREAi.l EST~ EXECUTIVE EASTSIDE DREAM HOME Imagine a 4 bdr. 3 bath, 2 11tory cus1om bul11 home nn a corntr loi with boat gate and ao many extraA. Built juat 10 months ago, Priced to 11el1 lful 81 $.\5,000, 0\\-nef 'A111 co~l&!r a lta(le. Let WI show you this bea.1o1llful home. Call Red Carpet, R.e11tOM1 at s~ -EASTBLUFF 3 Br., l~USI{ H0~1E. for Ml by o"'ner. F:~cellc:nt cond, qultl St. S651000. 64~-1601 ; Any day if;: the GEST DAY to run an adt Don't delay ••• .call today 642--5618. You'll Lov• This In bc>autlful l~lne. :i berlr001n1>. Central sir rood. OC'n with bullt..m b11r. Dream kitchen. B B Q . SliARP! $33,500. b r k 540--1720 . TARBELL 4.PLEX-NEW Super Sharp, \11-"Cll con· structed new +.plex in choice rental atta. Prfced to sell at $80,COJ. Ta.kt": ad- vanta~ of fint owner 1a.~ htneflts. CA.JI Red carpet, Realtors ~ (open E\.-eninas) P.S. \\'e J\ave many more) SE& USI 1-"or the right homt": for )''OU. Complete RIK!km of homes In the l>ench •~"'-HA•IO• YllW HOMIS l!ALTT 13U7'0 NEW LISTING lAvely 3 BR. 11,~ bnth plu!!: ff1mlly rm. located 11'1 mos1 desirable Erull Co11la l'lte1111. A ttal !llCBI nt $34.000. bet. 1er. hurry lo the p!)()nt!. Rctt Ctu·pet, Reallon MS-8640 !Optn Evcn/ngsl SHARP 4-PLEX 11·e1 bar In lhc family roon1. I f<'tonl courtyard patio with Brand ne1v, 3 BR. & 2 ba. heated pool. l'ore,·er view deluxe O\\'ller's quarters .t,, 3 of nil(hl lights and back bay. 2-Br. income units, Spani!ih Absolu1ely the hcst value In nlOtif. Eastside Costa i\lesa, this most soughl area at nr. N·pt. Hts. See this & 1137 500 invest toda)·; Sll0,000. ' · CALL .a .. ,.,,14 C. F. Colesworthy l/{d~ I RE~.L TORS 640-G020 REALTY SPLASH IN Nt1r Mc•porl Pot t Office THE SUN'' 'l'011 can do 111~t tht1 I 11ith thi!f 11park1ing 11 ~ ~T. old . 4 bdl'. 2'a balli pool )lonie, 1\i th fubulous 1·un1pu~ room, prlec<r right at $19.700. Call Red Cnrpcl, R r a I tor 5 6.l:i-8080 *.OCEANFRONT -Ba lboa. 3 &inns .. R.-1 2011e. S125.IXXl * PENINSULA Pt . 2 BR., den, 2 bnlM. Sharp! $67 ,500 * 4 BDR~IS.. Penin Pl., pat.lo decking, no malnL $79,900 LM'f.ly comer location . COAST PROPERTIES upgraded '4 BR + f&mily * 673-5410 *• rm, Jn cool Costa l'llesa. A real """' ptlc< too only BBQ & POOL S29.500. Call Red Carpet, ltt":allon 54&-8640, Nt":w listing! Super 2000 IQ. ---~-~~~-lb 2 ~tor)' honic, lge family MESA . VERDE 'm wllh !pl< .... bltn" ow. lmmac. 4 BR. fam rm, nr l!Clp. laundry rm. 4 BR, 3 goll COUl'M!. COUrt)'Rrd en-BA . 3 e&r gar, 3.'ix20 llA.F try. big; cor lot, rm tor fMXll, Pool. lots of e-x1nu. Only 4 ~-R V 1 ·' 6 5 o o l'rll old. f>rtctd to ae11 fest ....,.,{ or ' ' " ' ' S 900 C II B ~I~,-9.~14S_. __ ~i.' · " k r. HUNT. BCH. I ~~l""S"'P~L""A"'SH.,..,-1 -- 1\ VRES-EL CA.JON ~10DF:L. 400 \'ch to btfl.ch. Not fin. • · · In this 11pnrklln1t pool l.~ht'd ye1. llva.ll In All-'!-Takr with r.ant\nfl plu11 4 BR, ovrr my t>$Cl'O\V "300 F'u\I t lo!ie to sthools k shoppln1. J>W"Ch•8t pr Ice S52.::.00. Tmn1<'d. poss, O!"lt_ S42.SOO. Day•.: 833.9078 / Evu: •GINNY MORRISON• &1~80ll6. REAL TOR...:.557-4130 BAYSHORES-ON A QUIET STREET ... is a world of livin g in this 3 BR., 3 ha . charmer, remodeled last year. Low maint. ya rd. Just listed. A bargain today at '72,500 . Bo b Yorke ANYONE FOR A SWIM? See this delightful 3 BR . & family rm. home with pool & jacuzzi. \he price is righl, too! $79,500. Lavera Bu rns , . BEAUTIFUL LIOO ISLE Charming lrg. home w/3 bdrms., Cam. rm., dining rm.; superior corner location. 3 Lit· tie v.•ords ... lovely, lux urious & lasting. $129,500. Muriel Barr IT STEALS THE SHOW Enjoy bayfronl view from this two-slory 6 BR., 4 ba\!t nautically oriented hOmc wi th pier & slip. $325,000; Completely remodeled. Gary Knox LARGE LIOO ISLE HOME Excitin g home designed for family living . Children's area separate with own family rm., living&. din. rms. with parquet fl oors. Six . Bdrms. Two lots. $179,500. Charlene Whyte PRIME LIOO NORO LOCATION Pier & float will take 50' boal. 4 Bdrm., 4 ba . Expansion plans available. Immediate occupancy. $185,000. Ka.thryn Raulston EXECUTIVE ESTATE 4 Bedrooms. family room. sharp Deane Bros. Lake Forest, on huge lot. \Von 't last al $55,000. See it today! Pete Hallock 13).0700 ~ Coldwell.Banker ~ 644-2430 SSO Newport Centtr Dr., H.B. ' ' ...... • I ... ~ • OAILV PILOT • The Blmst Marketplace on the Oral"lle Coast ~ •••••. 500 •.Sl-4 Mobile "°"* lot w. ' . . r15 -Mt DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .Aufor• ~. 1 a ~ • • , , , • , , 9SO • 990 loon & Morine lquipment 900 • 9'4 (1~ •••••••. 100 ·"199 -· ......... >»·"" ""' ond s.,.w~ . . . . . . ISO -199 a.al fwte Genwal •••••• 150 • 199 finondol •.••• HoiMt IOI W. , ~ & found • Merchond1~ .. ' • 200 . 299 • tOO • 124 • S50 • 574 • 800 . 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval t.niol. , , , . . , . • . . 300 • M Schools ond IMlfuUioti • , • SlS • "' S.Oic" and R9poin • • . . 600 • tllf T,..,..,...llijion •.••..•• 91S • 949 ERRORS. Advertlnr1 should check their Ads daily & report errors lmrnediatej.y. The DAILY PILOl •••umes liability for the first Incorrect lnMrtlon only. ..._1orSM )~ Genera• - Hyoui.e~a fol~ Half g e in half a year a nd lhe rest will not last long. H\Jrry to see this distinctive Newport . ~ Beach devel9p~nt of con~omini.um homes, built·ln clusters around handsome courtya(ds. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury. comfort, convenience and quality · construction. S undecks1 fireplace. wet-ear. elega n~ Master S uite, Sun·Lite o kitchen. private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool. lighted tennis courts, sauna. therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiositrsee Newport Crest today! From Pacific Coesl Highway and Superior A11enue (Balboa· 81\ICI.), drive up Superior to Ticonderoga, and diredly to Newport Crest Information Centec T.elephone: (714) 645-6141 Sales Office op;.on dolly 10 a.m. to sunset ' General· ' ~ro-:r "A"4tiie-S.ltJ, ~ AlllASSOC:IATIS REALTORS 2121 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644·7270 e DELUXE CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Beautiful ... tree-lined street in Old Corona del Mar. BOTH DELUXE UN ITS HAVE 3 bedroon1s, den, fireplace. 2 baths, builtin kitchen. PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and. schools. Choice location ........... $98,500. e HARBOR VIEW HOME SOMERSET MODEL -Immaculate-just remodeled T\VO-STORY home. New carpet· ing, drapes and wall coverings. 5 Bedroom. 3 bath. FAM ILY ROOM with fi replace plus another fireplace in the living room, FORM- 1\L' DINING ROOM, sprinklers an.d fenced · yard. N~ar park. See to appreciate $89,500 . WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, Sf:U, OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION . AUSTIN·SMITli, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS -644-7270 General Gener•I _,,, .. _ ....... Gen•r•I _a_.1_boo __ 1_.1_._n11 ____ D_._ .. __ ,_.1_n_t _____ 1 ;H;u;;•;;";;·sto~~~;;;;lloo;;;c~h~;;;.)·1;;";;i;;;n~·~~;;;::;;~;;;;;;I SPANISH SUPREME ISLAND CHARM 2 BR, 2 bath flo"'., oow BIT OF THE OLD IN A HURRY Immaculate 3 bedroom with SleJ><!! to bay, 5 br, 2 ba, paint inside & out. $36,000 or WEST 1rs v11,·ant and yea.ming for 1'1.'d Ille root Nothing for small play room + rental offer. 499-3729 another nice family to come buyer to do but rnove in. unit. J..ar. sun deck, too! Fount1in Valley ... is stlll here! \\'c.•rt> !il!ill enjoy its cenlr-J.I a Ir . Quiet cul-<ie-sac, I o w Family home with old 'A"Orld I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;; !k'rving our Cl's, :it> oon1e upgrlided 8 p p t"i a n c e 5, n1alntenance yard. Liv rm, di.arm. First Ume ottered.11 on in and ask to S(.'(' 1his carpeting. tile and built in fain rn1 , lorml din rm. Lola ot wood, vaulted open HORSE RANCH beaut. 3 bedm1 2 bath homE' antenna tor excellent TV. $43,500. CALL &1>-7221 beam llv. nn. w/baloony. LOVELY that's almost new ·wilh all r onnal dlnln& room with BALBOA PENINSULA Mo~ ln Aug. ht. Recently HOME the xtras in; Lawns, car· wet bar and chino. cabhx!t. Cu.~tom, top quality hon1c N'n\Odelcd & in xhrt rood. NESTLED. ON A '.QUJE'r peis, drapes, and ail lhe Don't miss ou t on this one, plus •2 bedroom apt. above. $116,000 Owner. 675-76M. STREET you'll find this good things us \Vesterners $37.250 l\1any ooutanding featurc.s. [ oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&iiiiiiiiii""'• I charming, home <>n a fool· enjoy. Only $33,500. and Vi'si'on-Steps to ~an a.nd shop-LITTLE ISLAND ch o I c e ball field size lot v,:ltti pru1. any Cl can buy. C A L L pin&. 7% Joan. CALL now location with bay vie\\o. 4 dock,' 1tal111 .,for: S fiorses, 846-3377. 'for details, 64~Tl21 Br, Iott, prof. deeoratl!d. plus chain Unk dog' run, WESTERN LIVING e· ... ' red hi.II Ontu $92,000. Shown by appt. even sleeping qtrs for the ... at its ~. S1vim in your _,PM,;,;;'";;;•·;,•;;;";;,IYo;·•&n--;;;2191;;,;,, __ , 1 dogs. The house It's self will beaut. 12' x 36' pool, drive -amaze you with gigantic 5 minutes and surf or shop 21 ""lboa Peninsula whit e f Io or -to-celling at nearby lluntington Ccn· 1733 Westcllff Dr., N.B. RACQUET CLUB IN IRVINE 3 br, ft1 mily home In Irvine's planned <"Ommunity of fine homes. Excellenl freeway access for Tud -(but not too close! -out among the orange orchard or the Jrvlne Ranch. Plush decor- $46,500 fireplace Jn a 20' x 30' front tcr. This beaut. 4 bedrn1, 2 BR beach cottage $!>7,000 roon1. plllll 3BR &: forml din • 2 bath hotnc with hardly-no-1 1,~ BR beach oottage S55,000 rm. We're not going lo tell malnl, is a hold-up nt 4 BR, den, lg lot · $87,500 you any nlOrc, you'll Just $34.900. CALL 847·~4. Marshnll Realty 6'5-4600 havr 10 S{'C it. Tl's near THE FRIENDLY · Edinger & Newhopc next to Baycrest Fountain Vnill'y. Cnll to sC!e STREET REALTY A Company \Vlth Vision Univ. Park Cent er, Irvine Call Anytime, 552-7500 Office hours 8 Al\f to 8 PM Laguna Beach BAYCREST, by <>wner, Xlnt today. · .. fca1u1-es a 3 bcdrn1 2 - oond, 4BR, 3BA, forn\l dl n =========:I bath fa 1nily hon1r \Villi an BA y BEAUTY rm & tam rm, quick eal-in kih:hen. l\1om & D1ul • ~A 000 f 1 2-FAMI LY HOME 11·iH Mlj{>y the 110-11·ork-Pri\'nle co1n111unity 11• it h possessron . .,.,.., · a t pm, Ideal arrangt'n1en1 1l'ith JBR. needed a!mo.~phl!l"C and security pa1rol, bcilch club 646-34()6 2% BA Condo -and a huge privacy of !his nil'e sizf' & Pl'C!ltige 11tmosphl'1"e, This Coron• del Mar guest house 1v I 1v a 1 k -i n master bcdrni. There's g i,e:antil', Spanish-modem t"l()S('f and separa1r hath. room to ga rden on lhis ranch home is the ultimate Jl.1odel cond., and fea1ures huge lot. $30,900. c ALL in luxury 1.iving. Freshly blHns. gold w/w 1;hag, 963·5621. det:."Orated, Wlth very prlvate OPEN DAILY custom drapes. mirrors and s11<im ming pool & 4 separate outdoor gas B-8-Q. Lazy, bdm1. suites, makes lhia a maint. -Free llvlng, near discriminating. $112,000 Mile Square Golf Course. home for the dl.scriminatine. ~I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;; I * 4 BEDROOP.!, 2 baths, Bright snd beautiful Lusk Harbor View 3 bedroom home . Beautiful landscaping and a peek ot the ocean. 1226 Seacrest -2-6 p.m. CALL 675-722.5 Low down and economically $112,IXKI. 1 priced at $31,900. ~ lorwin rHlty inc. :n 111 - • •• I P~ESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Linda Isle W•terfront Ne\v 5 bdrm., 4 baths, with 50 fl. dock. Beau tifully decorated,· 'v/marble mstr. bath, crys tal chandeliers, fine carpet & wallpaper. l~lt·in vacuun1, recirculaling hot water, dun1b waiter & many other extras. $285,000. For Complete lnform.tlon On All Homes &. Lots, PINse C•II: B'rLL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., G~neral Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 G:nerail QUALITY BUILT CORNER HOME -NORTH COSTA MESA 3 Bedrn1 2 bath with real hardwood floors, plaster \Valls and heavy shake roof. Great location close to everything. Vacant and ready for your inspection. Priced only $31,500. OL_D CHARMER NEWPORT HEIGHTS COTTAGE -Sharp 2 bedrm, 1 bath, with lots of paneling, large brick fireplace and hardwood floors. 127' deep R-2 lot \vith alley access. PS: Don't miss the unfinished guest house! double garage. $30 l'IOO. Best of terms. . * COMME'RCIAI~ ZONE • 2 BR t\vo story older home, t."Orner lot, $2-1,500. Roy McC•rdle Realtor 1810 Ne1\'PQrt Blvd ., C.~I. 548-7729 $42,500. Lu,..:uriou.~ 4 Bedrin & den or 5 bed.rm P.1~ Verde hon1c. Quiel tree li ned lot. Close to school~ & shopping. Deep slJag crpts, 2 11}>8rkling baths, 2 1nassive fireplaces, lrg manicured yard & fan. tastic sha~ lrtt!. Call 545-8424, SouthCo Realror.1. GI REP0-$25, 950 Spic and .span 3 bedroom, 2 bath "'·ith double car gatRge and Jarg:e: kit . \Valk to schools. 2 niiles 10 the beach. Ex ce l len t op. portunity. Only S9:i0 down payn1ent to itnyone. C WMl([H I\ I ll 968-4405 (24 hrs) vl-k-1~ REPO $750 DOWN 2 or 3 Bl't TOY.'nhousc, hge run1pus J'OOnl rlble gal', _ s11'in1 pool, fel\• IC'fl. f.luriy! DJ llR LARRY, a57-9144 or 8·12-4421 A new prop is being offered I First Pioneer Realty hr 'iarbor View I.Jomes tl\at : ..,..,.,...,,....,,...,.,.. has n1e \'f'l'Y interested! 3 'I VA-NO DOW,.-BR., !o~R, & fonnal din. rm. 4 b 1,. ba · >.n " I -val"ant & in1n1ac. -great ~ r, '' · in ~autuu padol! Open daily l-5. 1!A9 l'ountaln Valley. Priced at Pl. Ramsgate. only $31,950. BKR. C a I I $72,500 Agenfli75-0144 .c963-.,,-S61.-,-l_. ------ SOUTH OF HWY. Huntington Buch REAL ESTATE J 190 Glenneyre St. •IS.1-9473 549-0316 \\o"alk-i n closets. shag crpt, dlnlns, uJtra-1nodC"rn kit· MAGNIFICF:NT J\o10NARCH chcn. shake 1·00{ & ~arden-BA'{ TERRACE home with like t'Ol1\C'i lo! highlight spt:·~·racular ocean view. 5000 this •I hr. 2 ba, sensation~ sri . II.. 3 bdl'nl .. 3~~ bath. EagC't" 01\llC'I' asking S34~5fJO. ~ll l'!'C.l11'00d & gll\SS. ~I & • take over vet's Joan! Jacuzzi. Beautiful hillside Tcrn1s or tJ11dc in y0,u· sctiing. Offered al pt•esent home!! Call 645-8400 $310,000 ' ' . ., """""' GRUBB & ELLIS t<• \~ E. "°"-nrd & Co. Realtors -K..1 r..-............_ 2863 E. Cst. Hwy., Cdfl.f Old Corona del Mar charm! I BRING your 2 BR., 2 bath: oomer lot. POOLTABLE Elec. bit-Ins. Heavy shake tor this beaut. 2 BR condo. * HARD TO FIND * 675-7080 roo~ Beaut. Pa n e 11 n g . · Bonus rm is 20' x 20·. 2 Close in, 11•alk lo beach. 3 • · Jl.lany, l'l'IRny extras. Offered car encl. gar., bltins xtra &inns., 2 balhs: Laguna foMc 0$52R,GOOOAN REALTY ca binets. shag crpts. 'Adull charm. with dl"n & dining oc"'CUpied. Fronrs greenbel! rn1s.: lgc. frnc·!Xf yard with 67)..6642 67>6459 & S,leps lo pool. RED nice lf'f'rs! S59,500. LAST BARGAIN ~'llir REA LTOR S. ~~~ftwblfe .: R2 in old Corona that is! -...... 4 TW>n..-.. ~ l.Jouse rented for sm. mo COOL BEACH AREA -~!t:fOS.il:SSIONS ' . • ._...._ .... yet ''' ~ De"'""" .. _ Spacious 3 bedrm hoinc, 67~?fll"""'· ""' ~soc. ceran1ic tile entry. Xtra or lnfur111.:1tion a~rt location 494.511o71 499.2100 large yard with big patio nf tlj~SC 1'1!~ .~ IA homes, ---~ -- 2043 Westcl!tt Drive • e DUPLEX e • ar('a. $41.950. l·u. :act · * OPEN SUN. 1-5 * 646-7711 Open eves. Tii·o l·BR. \\'alk to beach QUIET CUL-DE-SAC SET· KASA :!AN 477 MYRTLE J * R•Z LOT * $59,500 Agent 673-8500 TlNG • FormC'r model, 4 Real Estate 962-664-4 Delighlful :J bdrn1., 2 bR. DUPLEX, Cozy corner oot· bedroom trilevel with par. --------'-''-'-'I home : lovely patio; great \Vlth small older house tage. 3 BR. 2 BA + nu lJOO quet floor and ll'Ct bar. BY ownC'r. Accepting pro-North end location! O"'ncr has plans sq. ft. unit. 2 BR. 1 BA & $53,950. motion, niust se ll. 4 to 5 WILLIAM WINTON for 2 mah' units trplc. S00 Poinsettia. J>J:."CKY PANELING! BR., din. & fam. rms. & REAL TOR 675-3331 $32,000 Costa MeH Enclosed outdoor p atio bonus rm . Your w.ork isl 229 11,farine, Bnl. Isla.nd RIVIERA REALTY room, 1 bedrooms in 1500 sq done: sprinkJers, patio -- - 149 Broadway, C.M. * NEWL y DECOR. * fl of space for $30,000. block wall; upgraded ali """: ~E'A"Nv·,~~1,. * ,.2-7007 ... 5609 Evos. <'AlL 968-4456 areas. 2 Months o Id . -o • .......... """ v. nn. ~ """""O..."•"citecte1PKllkN.C..Mc. •J -~ 3 BR, J\~ baths. Covered -r 963-2803 w/frpl; din area. 2 BR. den 1 ... xo ..._.H.Gr•C.......""'°""-<>w.-.a~ .. -..= lnvesters ''Stop'' patkl, fenced yard. On quiet 1~~='-------I + gu~t nn. w/w carp, _ _.,..,... ... -.. , .. u .. ,... .... w .... ., ... -......... ~ .......... J street. Near schools. A rood OWNER lhruout. Central kit . ""',s':'"" HERITAGE REALTORS ~SllO Open Eves. __ ... ._ ____ .. _.,._ ,.,. ...... p.,,..~c;..-.. ":;;~;;:'i"'"'""""'""'"'"""'"'l~!!!!"'\!"'""'"'""""'""'"'" Jf you've been looldng for an value at TRANSFERRED 11•/ranae oven. di-"wshr. _ .... _ .. ..._,.,... __ ......., ___ . ...--.. IG_.!!!!!:_~I ______ _.;!?!.;~!!~------·~ ., Investment that needs some $26,500 Assume 7% Apr. loan. O . .ly ~.this one! $53,500. fixing-up we just listed it. BALBOA BAY PROP. $5,000 doll·n 3 br, 1~ ha & Jl.hss1on Rt'fflly 494-0731 Tu·o houses on a lot. Front * 556 1800 * - * * * * * * is a 3 bdr, 1 bll., In good oon-pool. Large yd. BKR, Nr. Cl-IARJ.1ER, FIXER UP- Generail General 1 dition. RC'ar is 2 bdr, 2 ba OPPORTUNITY for property fl"eey,•ays & shopping & PER, $58,500. View, 3 BR. 2 J;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,;j and needs 11'0rk. Pri<:ro to acquls!Uon -t"""O beautiful schools. Call !l63-56ll. bas, frplc, hn:lwd firs, * TAYLOR Co * liCll at S·I0,000. prim e cottages on ltlJ"ge corner lot CAREFREE FR ES 1-1 L y pa i nt(' d Fi~f~ doors·i bli<;"k ~· * HARBOR VIEW HOMES * En$lSide location. Be:lt('r East Costa J\tesa, income lh1"0ughout. 3 BR, 15x20 den sm sty, c osc in. vwnocr 1718 PORT ABBEY PLACE OPEN DAILY 1-5 e eaJI 00\v .. Red _Carpct, U50 mo. ST':JO down . LIVING t41n BR1 +finished gar 497·1272 494-1021 Reallon 64:7-8080 &12-6889, $37,500 on sales In 1his aln1ost ne11• 3 brlrn1., (bonus rn1I I Blk fron; LAGUNA Canyon l\.1ini·Ranch ~nter through e garden courtyard enhanced HUNTINGTON BEACH-$36,500 p contract . 11 ~ bath condo, clo!!t' to Marina High Sehl. 5751 Cas· by o\vncr, J.3S hillside wiUt a Grecian fountain. to a charming Lo 1 1 "D G d ool, Pool, Pool. 1 BY OWNER ._.,,erythlng. $29,500 lie; avail now. S34,500. acres, Lge 2 BR. 2 ba, Prln Bren built home with 4 bedroo1ns, 21h baths; ve Y area 0 eane ar ens''. A real S I 5 I 5 · 8·16-1351 or .847-&l31 847-1905. onl y. 01\'ner finance 29o/~ opens to lighted. landscaped gardens design· drea1n ho1ne. Beaut. maintained inside & out. I w m, w m, w1m. 4 BR, 2 BA. t.'Orner Jot on -OCEAN b1'eeZ('!;, b ea c.h ' down. $9.1.IXKI or 11ubmlt. n-t ed for charm with mini inunl care, en-3 Bdr1ns, form . dining a rea & 2 baths. L.R. 1-l<'at<'<I & tiltcred 18'x30' cul-de'-sac, fonnal DR, lRun· schools, 3 Br. faniily rm -494-0568 aft 5 frpl , kitchen bit-ins. Cul-de-sac St. i:ool with 3 ~nu1,, 2 dry rm, play rm & office.• · 1 · 220-' closed with slumpst.onc 'va lls for privacy & bHths. Built-Ins, Cflrpets & Drive by 246 Sher.vood . • ~patio. 11 llula Cir. Laguna Niyuel security. This lovely honie lends beautifully "Our 28th Ya•r" dl'apes. Asking $32,500 Place, Cooa Me51. Then ~ _]:!~~~~~~-i'=="'--'-"'<O:"-.---- lo gracious living & fu1nily. May we show WESLEY N TAYLOR CO R CALL 64$.3503 fol' appt . $35 950 BY O\vt1. Vac. 4 Br,'-·:? Ba, 3 Br, g Ba on large th h od , , ., ealtors w.ooo. owner •<II earcy • 119.i!J d". r .o. FHA 71\'if 101. t19.9:;o. you roug t ay. 2111 San Joaiquln Hills Road 2nd. Prlnclpah only. 4 BR. Gl('n-Mar. Patio pymnts $276/mo 833-1103. 4!r.l-0552 ~GENT 645-2848 ''0... I k' BJ i682 Edinoer Ave. BIG HOUSE I "''/BBQ, l c n c e d yd. 5.52-9503. O\\'NER. 3 "'· 2 n ... l"•t t"""""'"'""'""""'"'"""'""'"~""'~""'""'""'""'"'""'"~[ er 00 1n9 19 Canyon Country Club" ·~ w/sprinklers. Shake roof. 2 ""' '' 1(;enerat Gener•I NEWPORT CENTER, N.8. 644-4910 84Z-4455 2600 ~ FT. Ba. Close to beach. Huntington Harbour ~~· cpts, dYps. S47,000. 1------------~----Genoral Gonorol EASTSIDE Tuts trl-l•wl ham< Is ollly --'GEM * WATERFRON H N ----.j ---------1 DOLL HOUSE 5~ yrs. 01~~ BR; 3etB~l 1610 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. 2400 ~· ft. ·4 Bci:'ttl. ~~I. L_;_dc.o_l"a'-'lo'------I j MACNAB IRVINE _______ .... ~------ JUST LISTED 3 Bf{. President home In 'J'urtlerock'. Ele· gant hon1e -excel.lent VIE \.V! Oversized lot \V/great landscaping ! Fine opportun- ity at $79.500. Luszlo Sharkany 644-6200. (Yl2) VIEW FROM THE TOP Spyglass Z.story "'/large yard. 48R.'s, FR, bonus room. Spcci<J I house w;unique lcr callon. $129,000. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (Y15 ) PLEASANT COOL BREEZES Relax In comfort Ori the warmest days. Wes tbluff 3BR home on quiet cuJ-dc·sDc. Close to shopping and school~. $42,500. Lois Egan 644-6200. 1Yl6) ewport Heights TAX SHELTER i.,., ~~~m•bl; wio:;,. S25i REALTORS 642-4623 boat sip. BY OWNER."'' RARE' CHARM This 11 the most ootstandlng 846-3711 With A View AND A HOME home that's como alo"" tor P'r •no. Ow"er will eacry e & · Eogi;,h Countcy I 11 Brand nc11• home: located in n1ot11 dC'sired neighborhood. 3 hugt' bt'<'iroom111 \11th "'alk !n closets, dining rootn, fan1ity roon1 and ntel'CAlion roon1. This C'U.~lnm built honit• is 11u11J11y bu 111 1h1'l'lugtl()uf. You 1\·lll C'njoy th(' n1any extras. C&,11 OO\V! II 1\·on'f IR ~t lonjl'. $1!'7.SOO. 646-7171 Tool awhile. 3 bdr, 11,~ bath, 2nd. Call Bkr. ~. in th~~U~~tige~r.~. Irvine home. 60 Ft . ioT. ~ family room "'ith open LRG. Park Like yrd. 3 BR. 2 ramity mi plus fonnlll din. TURTLEROCK H i 11 5 . Bdrm!l./b&ths. llUJIC tlv. beam, new plush ·carpet, BA. Newty ct'Ptd home on ing rm, 2~2 bath. $l!J,9ZIQ. hillside: vu lot overloo)-'--rn1 .. rtt. rm. & din. rm. CHESTNUT STREET fantastiC' yard. S 3 4 , o o o . quiet cul-de-Mc in i\leSll de\ UCI '"""14!> $152.500 DUPLEX (SHARP)-Seeing is bellvlng!! OPEN JI.tar. Outside to be painted • PATTI • campus, end of cul-de LIDO REALTY HOUSE S t -2 5 6 2 t d I ""' WALKlC sac, 4 br, 2 ba, den. liv rm. $31,000 _, un ·J, CO or · your lO ce. ,,.,.; firnlc, ft tr1un1, glas-.1 11·aJI 3377 Via Lldo, N'pl. BellC'h \\'c11tn1lns1cr. (Bctv.·een Del Miguel Ln. $35.500. 847-l!J()j • ''~111 ... 11 '" """ * 673-7300 PACIFIC STREET l\lar & l\lonte Vista! Call 1n11 Bench Blvd ., ll.B. ed In d(•n, llv t'lt1, lnteroo111. , * DUPLEX lo KI R~ C•u·t~t. "-alto"• •t BY Owner, lovely 4 BR. C'LL ,,2.1,1, •,lcct. ear d~-.• 1u10 spmklrs. Maso V•r•• • • -"'" "' '"" • 2BA1 blllns, trplc, shag crpt, " l.000 IKI· ft.. I hlk fron1 sch.1----'-=----BIRC~l~~EET t4~~ sprinklers, many xll'As. Nr f"OR SALE BY O\VNER by ov.•11(:1'. $68,000. 18791 Via PRIVATE purty Wa.n1.s hou1e •CYPRESS =t~inc~W~J~a:&-19Sr1s, No qunllfylng, nuun1e 6'fo. 4 V~1'011a tTakc Culver ex11 In l\1esa Verd(' 2400 II<! fl DUPLEX Country Kitchen Br, 1% ha: Best location. ort san D. J>Wy.) or + · ·I or ~orn bd~s: (GORGEOUS)-$33,500 Bubbling Wflt«irfall, covered B2300EAtrrll''U1L,BarB !ml~arbor. Lik(' new lnsido & out. MUST SELL! tf>rinc. only. 54<Hi099. TWO SEPARATE p11tlo, custom citrptt!' &: sq. t. r, · rm., Many xlraa. t714 ) 892-4578, By owner, ~ve on this Mission Vle;o HOMES (ON ONE drape1, shuH~ra. 2 Yrs. new game rm, 2 COV'nfj'iitki~. 6&12 Retherford Dr, HD beautltul 1nodcl home,! yr.I---'-'=.::... __ _ LOT)-$27,500 3 bcdrm. $37,MX!. ~~rkr~~ts fast IDEAL for Jrg fflmily, Im· 01arnld, 4 BmR,. 3 !A, •. "°,"•"'• r,m,r. Mislion Viejo · mflc. 3 BR, 15M20 den {4lh · " .,., ' *MESA VERDE* 11 your loeome "'" biU ·~• M •Arri M SUPER PRIVATE • $28.150. BRI + tlrush"' •"· 1"°""' eood. •Prl"klon. e o v · d 4·11edroom Villa over $1.000 last Yttr, 'TRY ... ~~!~ ... ~!~.~;, f'b~. e;;r~ rm) else to all schls & =~t:S~~ ;:; & t~1~r. A reduced beauty _ $41,500. PRICE O\\IN ING A DUPLEX • and 17171 "" eh Bi d H 8 -. _ .,_ ·~ 0 ,13 or Shppng, avajJ now. $34,500. s. ~·i E""ude-0 r. Relax, let the Club clean REDUCTION build "tquilks" inatetd! c:A~L w.-1,il · · 66--Bs"i .,....,.. ~ ~""''"·"1905=. ~~~~--~6 "" '"' • you1· poo1 end pla.n 80me tun BY Owoor -GI'" Mar 4 "'· i · port;as ar>d «cu"'°"' tor Dwnf1' Sf\VI, "Qu(ck ex:· REAL E-STAT~&£ELS -5· BY Owner. Nr. So. Cs.t. b&. trple. crpt, dra. crptd f"RANCIOCAJi FOUNTAINS )'Our famlly. The Mastu cupancy 8\'lllhible" on thl.11 _. ALE Plaza. Sharp 2 Br + l\i Ba kitchen w/blUns, cul-de-'' N' E \V 0 R LE ANS ' · Suite with Its Roman Bath tl('lt,ghtfu l J>llCC'!Cllt'r home --~="-~"°·""~--·I IF you feel st.ymicd In your $1200 dn. T.O. GI 7S"o 18 2 blk 1 hi ..,.,. t Jl.10DEL. 4 Br + perent'1 oUers rMxlmum stcluabi on 11 lovrl y IN'(' llncd •lre:el. P"Aenl offlct pymnts $2Se/per mo c, 0 sc · 1'"'1~ r,. suite, spiral ·g I a Ire a 11 e:, and a:~rdtn t'nlr)'. Crett 3 bcdroonts. llnd ramlly BEAUTIFUL a~ you feel )'OU have eblllty 833-llo.1, ~. · A PQli<, S33.SOO. 962-4 1 decorator drapes, etc , ylll"d for chlltlttn and en. room plus 12x24 llCl't:fntd In POOL HOME ~ ~n ~~reot°lh~~ ?>u!:~ BY °"'Tier. 3 BR. 2 BA. ~~~n·~EI;;m~. ~~ ·~~! oourtyard ~ntry. \Valk to lC'rta.lnlng. \Vhhln walkfrt& pnllo. Out~tantltna 4 BR. 21~ bath, C<'Jsful off\ct1 In 1 hr blUns. frple, qui~ lit. <130 from ocean on Bushard nr. ~~. llC~!ss u&m ~br"v~: ~~~f'ICf'Pl'~ ~::IAihC!~~ f lrvi I NOW ONLY hugr rumpus rm, plull love. Ntwport Beach pcnlnsulR. f-slhtr $32,500, S37.&4t7, No At1A mt. ~.900. Mak! <>fr. _8"2-7388 Phone Todayi 586-{lm ne 'Meonab·lrvlneReall)'ComP•'I)' $45,750 ly pool. 'l'hlll hOmt' 11 im· * 673-6210 * ~"":;:;::"'=~-~~--I Ownr/Prtncipals only , BEAUTl~""\JL tocntton ~1aculAIC nntl det.-oratM bet· a. k B SEU.ING Iiomc. By owner. 962-:t7~·t SOUTH LACUNA. 1 b"-'..k _ • CALL 644-nl I •<'r thnn a moOOI., All 1hl11o c •Y ExctpUOnal arefl. 4BR, 2 Ll\RGE 3 BR nlrium hcnno to beach. Ne:v.·ly remodelf!<ll -..-.:O. IOI DoverOt'lve 142·1231 for only S49.100. C(lll Red I nv£LY' RR 2 BA & t rull BA. $43,500. 54$-.Sm iv/pool, f&mlly + form11l 2 8drn1, f1t mll)• nn. 10..1..,.., Ct11"p('I, Rt•allors. 5~ ~n . Ne~ly p11'iniett l~sldc1;. 0.na P:•inf dinlna rm, low maint. yd, ck'ck w/ocean view. Guc';l 1"4 MuAntMtr M•·l200 IOJ)<'n Evt_nlngsJ. out, Nmv D V, ~tv & cpt11.1 ---..,~~-----S51.cn>. 842-105.i apt. $62.500 tirn1. By OWllC't', 2 !•• ~ Uo ._ 2 BR J lL BA 2 · I ....,..&0---.-:,n;,;.., 3 Call d.9-)-121)-1. \!i:luld" mn. Newport Inch, cellfOfnl• 121•' !i ltne:s, 5 days foi'S bUck5. • ..,cs1 ·~ ""' nnw , ."I • ~tory: c osc '-"4oo'"""Y 1c.Ol', Tmmnc. Br. I le i'Wilt: 1 1 "'.'!'!!~~~~~~~)·£··i~~··§"'~>~·t~··~K~~}l~ c 'ltu\lll(:n II: 62, '. 3'm . E. 1n m11rlna, cpt/drps, la llln ramlly rn1 , patio. By ownc-r. "c r 1111mmer nta 11 a so . .;.. .. ..,...;><;! J:..U •··· •• ~ ad. all 642-5678. 23rd St., ND 6 3192_ , -•-"-"~· _S3_7_.l00_._4_9_3-_!!0_29_. __ ,._1'_2_.900_._003-4 __ 3_4~1. ____ CLASSIFIED will 11ell II! 1-~======='- I 1 I • • . , -------· . --..... . • -.. • Monday, J11ly 9, 1973 OAU.'f PILOf ' _____ ,...-__,!~ l;m-__ ,.._;;;;.;;l~~;;--1 ;;--;;-;;,.. ... -;;;.I~;;;• [ ............... I ~ I 305 Apts. Furn. uo Apt. Unfuro. 365 Apt. Unfurn. I~ -,..... I~ I ~-I ~ _1 iiii ftllulon v1e1o , I._ P...,.rty "' Out~~of~S~ta!!te!..!P:.!:"'1'~·~171'.!I':==~==--:'-"' 305 Housn Unfvrn. .,.,.,,_ ...... ]~ Huntlntton hec:h _N_a_w_po_rt_B_oa_c_h ____ 1_c_o_s_I•--------Cor ona del Mir NEAR BEACH 3 Bedrm """ • u1i1 Pd. """' • """'· Casa de Oro VA REPO. BEAUTIFUL 10 ACRE UTAH 1----'0-1---- Ailyooe may buy th/1 S BR. 2 4-PLEXES RANCHETIE BA home with ordy 11500 to1aJ. oo....·n and ck»lng t'OM.! You'U be proud to uw tn 13 Assume Payments 9f $1'15. Total paymt.5. ot OR unit) & rent thi• 2 BR RENTALS l1()2. monthly Includes all uni11. ~10.k<' AND have a tax $4.700.-ortgtnaJ prict', 1wy be Apertrnenta Huntlft91on Beach NOW HADY! CASA TIEMl'O •'llll-to-walt irhna c r pt 1 llht>l1er. Take! n1lw1ntA.A;~ a&&U1nOO by ma1ti11.g 2 back .... ....._. thruou 1 now! J\.f r . Ml11eionc/2TI paymcnL' of $40.64 ilnd 1.111.-t, l'K ramlly u.rea. Phune 639-IS()l. assumi"" print"lpal balance Houeea CAU.. 837-9-100 vf $3.500, at 7'"1 h11crc11t. 21 .. ..i~-.;.:;;;;;. _ _.., e KATEUA REAJ.TY e l lrs N.W. ol Sall L..t&kc City , 433 \V. l9!h SI., Costa Me5a 23655 El Toro lld, El Toro Utah -Just of( Stfil~ li"'Y· ~ .. 1 S. Const IJIYy •• Uagun,<i Newport Be1ct\ No, :10 1ll!;ir UK°) f11mouit nun-_ 2 Bath, bltlns. CbiJd-s~r·.,~~ .. ~~t~I~. AU. VTll.ITlf·:S f',\llJ ren/pets OK. Alr--cond. yard -2 ·pat~. N~i-~ Con1pare ti.·fo~ you mrt '275:-mo. Ask-for Dale· Hffs~ Custom 1k'lllgntod, fct11unng: 9624471. Stj() • Perno. Pt, Chnrming • ~1t~ k1tti1cn wuh lu· 3 BR. fl'pl(•, oldr-r home. ~ 1tin:'('l hghtln,i.: t;XQUl.SJTE " an, 2 B.A, hall <"\'t'ry'thin+::. Avail. 7115. Sl25 Lease. 962~1 & 96S-<1Jj NU-VIEW RENTALS • Scparn1e-dtn i: an-a 673·4000 or <IM-324!1 • lloiuc-Uke atoragl! .,---,,-----1• Pl'h:llle-l1'~lio11 2 Bit l .• uxury Split lA'\.'r:I Carden "'1>11 Prlv. tt>ITllf'l'(I M'lli.rut. O\'Cr.Jookln,i;: l'An)IOCI & ba)•. 2 blks to bellt'h. Be11m ttll., tn>t>lca l Rlrlum. Stovt'J r .. trii::, d:ch~r. & h111n· i\'ou 1·1111 ~ !ht! CLOCK Ill)'. SJ95. 673-7Jrl9 or lroni the Si.in Oh."'° }'rwy. 613-9:;7U. Juli! No. of the SN1 Olcgo 2 BH. 2 BA, hltns, ~J\tlo, lrJil. l"rwy. 111 1'tas:-1KJ1ia,) I I d ·'·· DELUXE 1 & 2 BR.'s ('IOJICIS, rp r. A IS. 01~ • ting & rl11hlng areas or CO~'TA l\IESA OFTTCE San Clemente • 00t;efl g1ll'agr "' irtorage $26!> mo. 4:11 Goldenrod. \V/1'~1RJ-:J>t .,.\CF:S! 1h ACRE Ulnh,O\J}l! lhc r a Ill o us $150 . Un(.i11•lor, E/&idc, fum. 53,,vtonlh l\tounl!1inJ1 , CAU.. AU ulil J,d, Poot Avl 7/ti. 001.J..ECT FOR RON. i801J $165 • 2 Br. Duplex. F:11ide Irvine • t.fa.rbll" pullm:1n BRAND new tov.•nhou~ l Br, e Kini:•:r1.t Brlrn111 Cotti MeM • Private Patios ---------1 • Dishwa1her1 Approximately hnlt 1u1 <'ll'l'f' ol beauti ful gronds.11un'Qund lhl11 gracious rambllni:: four betlroon1 home. Wilh both n dl'n and a family 1'00n1 nnd three baths this Ii:; quill' A place foc u large active family. CALL 675-n2S S.'J2·~1.82. w/icar. l\ld!t lpet.slsrigls ok. Ranch••~ P:1rm1, S200 · 3 lilt Duplex. Pnrtially LAST CHANCE!! GrovH 110 "'"'· Klds/pc18/Sh!ll• of<. DELUXE 4-PLEXES -"'-''-"'"------'.;;;.IS&;· 3 Br. llooS(' in Colleg<' Our lender save he will hold FALL.BROOK, 10 Bc.'1n, a~ Ptuir:. Avl ijll. Yearly. ~~ lnnd \\'/ho1ne siKhl. virv.·s. CAIJ.. 645-0Ul JIJ>eh interest rate unlil July & capital gain (Xllcntitd, ;)I • SO HURRY! These S-'9Xlac. Owner, t er nl Ii , LAGUNA B1':ACJ.I OJ<~FICE deluxe unils have frplc's, 544-3037 $11D . Yearly in Laguna. 1''urn L>entral heat, dish\.\•ashen;, St··•· d-• · l · di · · I · Real Estato Wantod 114 ok~. 10• '"""· patJO, 5111 pet air con 11on1ng. b t-1ns, Ole balhs, rncloscd garages. · $140 1''u Stud. N 0cea Ideally located near shop. · t WILL ~ \'fl IO. r. n. plng, sehools, frwys. Only GUARANTEE Tb SELL $1~ard-m2at~~: 1~tt,~til~ts. I '1t~ H~~,,~~yj&· 10 i · YOUR HOME -drps. encl gar, Kids ok. ,,.. IN 30 DAYS. $295 -3 BR, 2 Ba. Homc. I -~;;;;:::;;,;;::;~=--I HOLIDAY GARD~'lS, 12132 . Cati11 adval1ccd. ' t-rplc. gar. Kids/...-;sncols.' S. Ha.ster, Ca rden Grove A ·' ~·-··• * BELATED 4TH * S I• go"' . , •........... 847..,,12 ALSO SUMMER RENTALS par 1ng Investment ~!!i!!i!!i!!i!ii!!!!!i~!!!! CALL 494.9491 4 Bang-up units, furn. & on 11hc oceanlront. Asking $125,000 BALBOA BAY PROP. * 673-7420 * Corp. 638-5662 f""'""'i.I 11 • 1 Ft.EL!~';f~~:.rc.: ,~~·~.!!~: ~~2 ho~?! liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill. iiiml LANDLORDS! r lp-t~ cond! Close 10 Business \Ve Specialize in Nl'.'\1·rxirt Broad1Yay Shopping cc11tcr Opportunity 200 Beach • Corona del l\ti.r • I II B 0 I & Laguna. Our Rental Ser-4 BR • 2700 SQ. IT. " · · · 11 Y $24,500. vice Is FREE to You~ Try $92,000. Forn1 din rnl-\YCt I' ~•-Bars-&.. Dinner Houses Nu-View! bar, l\\'O pulios, b I tin • HcRlth Food & Gf'n'l Store NU·VIEW RENTALS vacuum. 3 car gnr, c:r1.t. 96Z.4471 ( -·) 546 llOl • Children's Shop, Unique 673-4030 494.3248 3 BR. 2 hit Um • . . • . . . . $200 i BR. 2 ba ............. S:.:25 1 BR, 2 ba, d<'r'I, A/C ••. 5m J BR. 2 b.,, 11ir-t-ood ... $275 4 BR 2!.; 00, alr co1wt ••• 1425 .J BR ,. 2 ba ............. S·l50 \\'e Jlave Slimmer Rl'ntah1 Vision- 8red hill REALTY A Company With Vision Un iv. Park Center, l!viiie Call Anylimc, 552-'l:iOO Office. bours 8 AM to 8 PJ\it 2'.11 Ba, club flicll incl. tlJ e Pool • Be.rbec:ruN • 11ur- ~199-Zl6:? or aft 4, 599-3578. l"OU!klNI "ith plullh /:1nrl· San Juan Capistrano licn11111.:. ... ~-· Adult~. No Pr'"· V IL I~ AGE San Juan [.,,\RGF. I HR, S t~, Tol\•nhousc, l l~r. 2 Ha. 2 HF..:OH00:\1, $l!l:i fenced patio, buill-ins. shag 3f~) \\'. \Vilsnn 612·lfl;'l 1:arpc1. ,on str:ea"'! rwoar lak~. LOW WEE Kl y RATES grounds 1na1n1a1ned, $325. . per JW)nth. 4$-5259 Executive Suites Santa Ana 2080 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa \VELL lrepl 2 br fenct'd yd, &41-2611 frplc, refrlg, stov<>, \.\'alihc-r, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S gar. So. Santa Ana, nice • ncii:bhorhood, \\'ater pd. e !-"1l£E Linrns $200 + util. Call 54g...og.14 e J<~Ei': Ut1htn.'S Sunset Beach • l<Ull Kitrhrn '-'-----------1• lleatf'd r oo1 * OCEANFRONT * e Laundry ~·ac~li!!t'S Lge., like !'I('\\' family home.• TV & 111;ud .scrv nv1ul. Carp., drapes, ljtns. No • Phone Set-vice pets. 5j50 t.10. 213: 59'2·18S3. ~ WEEK 6. UP 5 Or 6 Bdrm~ .•.• • ...... 5375 Wo1tm"1nslor e s 1Udio & 1 BR Apts. 3 BR, 2~ ha .......... , S3i5 •BR 2\ •·· / 1125 ----------·1 •TV .ti: l\1ald &>avice Avail, " ., ¥ 1.Hil lS •''""' ' • l'hon• Sc-•1",.. .. /ltd. Poof ·I BR + den, LR. fnn1 r1n, .... , ~ ...... - din Rm, 2!' ba. incld~ • Children ·" PC'! Scc1ion gnrdener, $400 . 714: Z3i6 Nl'\\·(Xlrt Rlvd., Ca.t 5.16-4422. ;)4.~-!175..'l or 64.').3967 'l .l 11h'l 11'1ltl. ~ --rl ll'uil11r lites. 2•142 Windward Lnnc, . ••11• • • SMck Shop -Z..1arina or Newport Beach .. , e R.E. Sates Oppty NICE 4 BR 2 BA, crpts & "SINCE 1946" EA R L FUSS EL l\I AN DOCTORS & INVESTORS Holland Bus. Sales drps. 5'W! \V. Highland. 1st \\'l"Stern Bank Bldg. Condominiums Furn. $1'5/t.10 dlx !\lob. lln1, l'Ompl rum, htd 11 o o I • 315 i\1ature 11Cllts, no pers. 4 ----------1 Seasons, Zt'l9 Nc\vport. Newport Buch a.llWn.12. R.EfL_:rOR ATTENTION 645-4170 or 5-1(H)6()8 \Yest or Euclid north of University P ark, Irvine 64>-'1000 J Edinger. D 552 .__ N" h BAYFRONT ex.cc Jg. l br, f\'ITRAC .. fun1. crptd, 2 ~R. ~new unirs. Costa P.1esa. ~~ .,,....~-;;:-cc--.:---ays "'VVI#. 19 ts a ll el<>C newly dee Pool lrg puuo. garage, quH't, * OCEANFRONT * • miles to beach. Aettlerated EAJlTH\VORM GRO\VEH.S Balboa Peninsula ~""" • 1 673 _i 1 4 4 · clean. adlls, no pets. 5175. PARADISE de Pre<;lation _opportuni!.V· \VANTED! 4 BR. 2 Ba. trplc. builtirui, ...,.67,,., ~ se. · m l A llutgers Or. 7 000 Sched income $a:I cm Price Good-Pllying home Business! 2 BR, crpted. washer, dryer. fully carptd. d • n P e s. .i'""<)nUU • Sq. ft. of \\"ood & charm 538So00 F d ·j · 11 Guaranteed 1t1arkct! F'ter' relrig . stove, yearly. Avail d 2 BR, I BA, Furn. $220 'duplliD~320R~AL TY _ 6s ·RE;_L e~AC.:E information ! \Vrile Bonanza Aug. 1. 673-1934. ~~t.1~·or 11g;t~ur1s ok, Condominrums .,.. 0 1:>1 ;· ~ •• C.l\1. 3377 V. Lido N' .,,_ .548-1168, eves ?57-6244 Newton Bait ~~arms, Jnc., Corona del Mar UNIVERSITY Park -3 Br. 2 Unfurn. ~ .. 1a , pt °""'ach SIX . . h Elk G1uve, Calif. 95624 '-''-'--'-"~...;:.;:.;;_-"';:.;;_---2 HR UPPER -beam rcll, * 673-7300 * UNIT -apan.ment.!'.§·\Yll Ba. Sep. din rn1. Greenl>elt. H •-h ; 111 d Sl80 1 ocean breezes. Spacious 3 * ELEGAi~T BE AU TY LARGE 3 Br .. 2 ha.; dbl. Nr pool. untlngton D<S"•C w v.·, ) ns, rps, · poo . WALK TO B!ACH BR, 1.,._ BA, bltlns, crpl'd, SHOP, Newport B ea ch. gar. Walk to stores & beach. -S390/MO. 5.'l2-8l5.';, Adlt s, no pets. &12-9520. DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Co111I -Frpl •'s • 3 S"·hn- rnln~ l'ool!I; • llcollh Spn - Tt'nn 1s Courli; -(:yn1 and Uil11ard Room. l BH. 1-·rnn1 $\j() I UR & Ilt ·n rn,1n $190 2 HP. fn1m $210 :? BB. ')'y,•nhvit Fron1 $250 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2-l(XJ J·hu'bQr Blvd., C.l\l. i71~1 !""57.sc'lO • OJ~E."'N EVERYDA\' i1 C1urs: t'1i·l'u~ J~ \\lf't'l. J, Thurs. 10-7 More Room-Lest Money COME sre a rt'RI garden Apt! Like living In ft holl\t" for $162.50/1\fO. 2 BR. 11-i !\A . 2 prk'G places, priv r111tlos .t: rec nreas. \\lil:oon l::irdens, on \VU80n St .. \\'. or !!arbor. No child./pct. 2283 Fountain \\'ay East 646-2846 "11 1F: VICTORlAN .. 2 Rr \\'/gar. Arllts. <.."!'pis, drps, bl!ns, filed yr d \\'/patio. \\'Ir. pd. Call hl.'\l\'ll 1 & 5, 636-4120 f£7 "C" Victoria St. .. $160. APT ?.IGR.·l\fTN. DUTIES Li\'l' In $70 Off ~nt. 14·2 BR unll.!i. Pool. Adlts. no pcls. t.falurt' \l'Omnn p r e t . &12-oci20. ** 3BR., 1\li BA ** Largr, nf'\lo•Jy decor. encl. JM1lio. bltns, crpl, drps. Close 1h everything. $170 mo. 868 No. I Center SI , TENNIS POOLS CLUB dr p'd. 65' x 300", close to 0\Ylier-opcrat!Xf. Good $400. Yrly. Lease 3 BEORM. 2 bath. $230 SI'UNNING 2 Br. 2 Ba .. · V~ry clean j BR, ~ bathi;. grammar school. $1050. in· rlientcle -xlnt area -Boyd Realtors 675-5930 Laguna Beach pf r mo. includipg_ re-garden Apt, pool, rec. ar.ea, 2 BR. dupl<'X. \Val l In \1·aJi f"amily rnt., frplc., bltns. come. i\sklrig $ll5.000. but 1noney maker! I l·l n es i; Costa Men -· :J • frig. & dry er. CALL $175. no w, JSlh St. C'rp!s, drps. disposal'. gar, make an offe r. KINGAARD forces sale. 642--0596, or 5165 • 1 BR. tn Fourplex. 2 9G2-44?l, ask for Ross Dana Point patio, ~mt f('J'I('('(! yd. Adults, 'c""'AY .• wd"'oo""'D· $R4'E.500AL. TY n .E. 642-2222 eves 5118--0428 e MESA VERDE e blks beoach. SLovc, rcfrig. no f)Ms $155. 2047 Charles ' /\ CUTIE! Thrltt-D-Lux dry 3 Bcdrm, 2 bath, enclosed C::pts, rf~ps. Newport Beach 2 BR. Ocean view 11r l>f'fleh & St. &&2G:ll. * 544-1290 * J UNITS-$75,000 cleaners & laundry agcll(:y. patio, Snooker t a bl e, S2i::i . · Nirc 2 ~r. Bltns. 2 llnrbor $225 J K{ JOOO s l~RG 1 BR apt. $!Z'1. Pa rtJy ON THE WATER Days &l&-7'108. n I t e s Doughhoy Pool ·, gardener & patios. Oc!'llJl V1t•iv! • BRAND New l BR. 2~\,; · ::i.. 1 • • funi. $135. l\1atur<• \.l!OllUl.n. CHANNEL REEF _ 01,n Excellent starter or reti re-979-R·li4. "-alcr fur nis hed. $.~75. mo-"'1 -~ ain m. > !J'!s. A. · w/ a 1P· Lndry ,r.;,. gnr, Quiel. Nr. I "375 3 F' R Al/ I I B Condo Bo t SI" 2 Coasl, Ln~unn, 49-1-6848 your O\\'ll 2 Br, 2 ba. Condo. nlrnt unils, 1 hlock rium M t L 240 1yr or nKJre lease 5-16-5990 2 !rplc 5• gar, yn.rd, patio. :;!!rp,,~-U:irp•A/Sal 1~':f.,li~~~: Huntington e.1ch n1rk1!'I. 19Zl \Valla("(', Apt. ll. Marble, mlr ..... -. 1 •••. P·-I, Con.st lhvy. \Va 1 k in g-oney · o oan UN IQUE l.fOMES. _ . NU-VIEW RENTALS '-' ~ 5-liL..6518. •v•" ... ~ "" 673-4000 49-t-3248 213: 2S7-oo23 or 2 t 3 : BAOIELOR, l & 2 Dr. From boat slips, sec. guard. d islnnee to all schls & 1st TD Loans ·3 BR. College Park. or 287·S7Z3. R \ClfEL0~4~65 I BR Owner $1'1.'>.000. 61.">-li.15. shop'g • 1 Lrg yard. Kids & pets ClfARrtllNG 2 BR in ""~~=--c"'""c:c-~;-,-. i · .. $125. Stovr, rclriJ{, cpts, HARBOR VIE\V HOMES Sparling Investment I ok. $275/MO. Loose. Hlucbird Can)un. Adults. no FLAIR. Class + View. Nu 2 palios, rrplc'!li prh•. garage!'! drps. Adults, no pets. C 6'"5662 UP TO 95M pct> I I & •-t + """ Br, 2 Ba, Condo nr pool. -Divided bath & lot'{ of s•• ~· l>ORTOFINO on perimeter. I orp..-· · 70 49' •••1. · .s ..,s mo ..,...,. .1 ~. -a· new. -0 ny •.••-··, 3 2 d TD L -Cleaning fee. $295. 4.9-1-1941 lcnnis & sea. Ava1 Aug. cl()S('tS. Rec. ha.ti, pool & "°°"'""'"~°"'"°""""°""'=7'C"CC ~~ • ,,... ...~ ... """ TRIPLEX $40000 Costa n oans 1'."llh $<120/~10. 614-2117. pool tables, i;nuna baths. DI ... '=. 2 Brf2 Ba T\vnhousc. Br. 31,~ &. Bonus room. r.1esa E:ast;ide !~lion. I IM1\1Actl~ ~ BR. 2 ~· JAPANESE 1\1.oderne. 3 BR. S«o for your.lf'lf. 11301 Quiet. $285f$29j nio. leas<.· Fee. $89.500. O W NER 714. 65s-79ss or 646-6.108 screened-palio, beautiful 2 bas, dbl gar. \Vnlk to Duploxes Furn. 345 K~l50n Lu. (l blk \\". or l'i>W Santa Ana Av c 644-4448 for apptment · Loweit rates Orange Co. fenced backyard -on quiet beach. Adul!s, no pets. $375. &'6-;:.617. O f Uruts -Triplex $67,500 Sattler Mtg. Co. stroct in College Park. $325 LcaSC' 497_2923 1 -~---------Beach.1 blk N. of Slater). * J?RAND New :1 BR. 2~~ Duplex $38.000. 2 Hscs on l 642_2171 54• ~II mo. No "'"· children OK. Newport Belch 842-7848 $140 UP 2 Br. 3 Br, 2 Ba BA Condo wfBoal Slip 2 "' A......., .rvv 3BR, frplc, remodeled, 167 Pool, blt1ns, play yard. 1996 . . . lot Pl.CW. Agt. 64..,....~ Se'""'•• Harbor area 21 ~-642-5052. ch· . ,~. 287~34 , ...,,._,.. $140 -Ul~TRA NICI'.: Apl. 6 """381' 2212 car gar. All a ppliances. • .~06 J·~ 1qu1ta, ""'; ""' J l BR. l h blks 10 ocean.~"'"-"' Pools. 4 Ganlen!i. Sauna. ~1aplc A1:c. U"•-=-., Crlits & drps Sale or-Lcnse I d I p ty 168 f'OR Rt>nt Costa Mesa · Im· \Ykdays, avail J uly 15. ~ mo to Sc-p_L l•l , then $150 Tenn;,,, ~.-. 1, pa 1 ,. 0 • Collf'ge No. l, 64&-6132 213: 281...ocYn or 2 j 3;, n ustria roper CASlrlN /\ l !URRY! mac. 3 BR, dl"n. Cul-de-sac. $350 inclding gflrrlener. mo. 548-2152 Adult!. Ph:''i~. l c""i:N~l'~VL""'Y~.~D~EC;,;iO;:;;iRA'f'iTE""D' 2S7-8'123. Borro1Y on your home, paid Next lo college, schools. 2 Br I S14lJ \\'! CONDO -Vacant, treed gar- dens. pool, 3 BR, 2 BA $43,000. Lo"• dovm, or will rent w/opt. to buy. 673-5221, 642-300. 4. ACRES \Veil located corner. Present income $1400. per mo. Greal I potenrial -'''ilJ divide. Ap.. prox $1.25 sq, ft. for er not. Use funds lo con-Lease $325/MO. Jncl. waler l19una Hiiis Duplexes Unfurn. 350 BACHELOR apt, 1 mi. from pd. z;~~·'bry,o~nge · A\'c~ solidatc bills, improve your & gardener. Calf 1'1orning ----------bca(·h. Gfls & walrr pd. Cal l hl~rn 1 & 5, 6.~120 ho111c, buy nt"V property, or only, 645-5843. NE\\I 3 Br, 2 BR, cntrl A/C. Corona del Mer S!!9"MO. 213: 592·2977, for any good purpose. Con-. Rent flse opL $275 per mo. J),11\IAC 2 br. nt1w.crp\JI. rlra, Jidential rast 1*!1·vicc in NICE area -3 bi· 2 ha, irp!c, &13-1103: 5.12-9503. ~ Lida Isla hltin.s, no pels or children. your ~me or ~ur ofricc bltn stove. oven:. dish"T· 'L_a_g_u_n_a_,N~l~•-ue_,I ____ * "* * * * * 2BR. IBA, brtck frplc, dht Pre fer qui<>t n1nlun? rouplc•. SIGNAL '!ORTGAGE co: \\•asher & dryer. w/\Y c~t, • Del 3 BR " BA I'""" l\h-,,. I.eat. 2279 J\Iinor St. " dra fncd yd dhl gac patio uxe . " . ~-~ gur, winter r rntal $375 plus 47141 556--0106. $3j(j. 83.'J...-OlJ.i aft 5 ' ' NE\\I Sf'a TcJTace T1Ynh11e 01Yner's unit, in nc,~· 'du-iit ll. 213-193-0427 ' 2 Blt, Crpts, dl'fr.', bltns. • All .Hooting Pd. e Jacuu:I • Heated Pool e Recreation Bldg. e luxurious lndscpg ,\DUI.TS ONLY STOP A\r ,t; SF:F. tJS . DA\" 0 1t N1G11T . ron. faun CJ IOICB OJ-· AP,\ltT,\fF .. :.NT, 8912 Hail Avo. H.B. l\·1~-r. t.1r. & f.tl'l'I. Ellk!C.t 147-4912 Full HouM Now-Wiii accept applications for future vacancies. ll>r 1, 2or3 BR Apt a t the• VILLA YORBA lfuntington Beach (714) 142-9622 * DOG.RiJNS * S1m. :.! & 3 RR. $149 It $1 99, Kid1 ok . Pool. Keel~n Ln. (l blk \V. of Beach Blvd., ort Sln1er). 96..1-4029 or 847-n86. NEW 2 Hit. Tov.'llhouse. shag rugs, dl'p!!, dshwhr, priv. paUo. Pool & rec. rm. Nr !I.hops & beach. $220/mo.. t213J 373-1815. DELUXE lrg 2 BR, garage, bllln.s, shag crpts. d11>1, 8\\'l-<lish f.rplc. S 11 O. 847-J'lW. 1ti61 Garfield. ••2 BR, slove. 1 11tory, no pets, $145 mo. Laguna Beach LAGUN'A e!iilate ll•lng on ncres of m Bi nlaln e d gan:l<>ns .. Pool &. 1pa. Ocean views. Clos<' 10 bench & ~hoppin~. Lf:e. 2 BR., 2 ba. npt. "'/11mcnilic11. $350 Mo .. pnrlinlly fur11., incl. ut il. Mature ndulls. 494-4653 or your brok<'r . NE\V l-2 BR Apts. ~nn viev.', ~ l blk \Voods C.ove, S200 -$.100 mo. LM. 494-5561 Mesa Verde DLX 2 & 3 Br-.. 2 Ba. Encl gur. $16.l up. Renral o re .. 309.J i\fa('(' Ave. 516-10.14. Newport Buch DELUXI:: 3 Behm Apl. $3.;Q./~10. Ann. lease. 513 \V. Bay. Nl'>A'fl011 Beach 886-4832 dny1 or 8!t3-2943 ni~·"hls •San &rnardlool *•BAY.FRONT -pr i v . Beach & Pi1'r. New 3 Br , 2 Bt1. Yenrly $~50 /m o . !179--0631 . 644-4510 VISl'A rl<'I Lido luxury Bay- rrnn!. S1i:1r lous 1 llr, 1 Ba. Sf>{·ur bldg. Pool, si p a vail. Util pd. Yrly lsc. $475. 61:1'346-1. BAYSHORES Cozy Collage. 2 pri beaches, 2 BR. 1 ba, \Y/patio, yrd, boat stg. + room to expand. 2 5 9 5 Cn..'StviC\\' Dr. Duplexes near tlVJ ocean Miles La rson. Realtor Roy Mccardle Realtor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.i\1. 548-n29 Ocean VIC\\', 2 Br. 1¥.= Ba, p!f'x. beam l'lng, viC'IY. Near N h(';un Gt'iling. 5140. l child 2ND Trust Deeds 2 BR. Home $l40; also 3 Br drps. crpts, 2 car attach. beach, patios. fircplacl', no ewport 8e1ch ok. No pets. DUPLEX brand dclux ~ hr, 2~• Im. $.195 per n'Kl. 1 blk 10 DELUX1'~ 2 Br, 2 Ba. v.·/w O<'CIUl or bay, 822 \V. $180, has a ll, s I n g I es• ga"""'· patio. Pri. beach. $'25 \ ·1 hi SI &16-:17!16 • PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. famillcs, kidsfpcls. Ag!. ~t' tennis court. Privacy. JlCIS ... GE°G.<m vai a e -· BACH. \1·fkitchen, crptrd. Any Amount Fee 979-8430 Sc n·t •= L ~ * Adlt~. no pet~. pcrn1. Nr ~~· ~~~·~~~~~ cu y. """" e as e. * * * * 1t bench. util, sm n)(). 20~ 54a.-0760 * 673-8563 * OCEANFRONT Duplex, owner/agl'nt 673-9266 Newport tteights PRIME AREA Something nicer : a cozy 3 BR .. 2 ha., \vith used brick frplc.; kltchc>n bll-ins, lot~ or cupboard~ & pantry. Room for pool. Car. on allt'y. $44,500 SPIC & SPAN Son1ethig special: a 2 BR .. den, 2 ha. f,; ;i "'Alnur panel- ed playrn1. ln back: lovely tree shadl"CI yard. $13,500 CALL e '''·2414 111~~ N••r Newporl Po•I Office -- Mobile Homes For Sile I~ 125 P.fOBILE home. 20xfi0. 2 Br. 2 Ba, lndscpcl. fenced . many extras, local('{! Lnt No. 9, l2302 Alipaz, ~C. Adult park. pct ok, Pho n l" 493-4619. ~EWPORT BAY New 2 BR. J BA rlollhouM-. Adult purk, 11ri)'al.c l'w.>Ach . $1G,:JOO 510-3672 ON BCll &. 1.'0lr cse. Hnlgn. 20'x57" db:., fpl, dshw11hr, wshr/dryr. 536-4736 '73 BUOO'l l 2X40 1 lxhm fl.Im . .i}.dult park. $<12.j(). American 557~ Lots for Sale 170 VIEW LOT L...1guna Beach. \Vhite wa.ter view of Main Beach and Coast l ine . Good neighborhood topo map -in. {'ludt'd. Not in ?mp. "20", $19,500. By O\\•ncr. 494-4977 or 612-0010. R-4 LOT ~n Clerncnte. Large modt'rn 2 br horne \\'/roon1 for :) ad- 11i1ional uni1s. De-ran vil'"·· 2 hi cks to beach, S49,300. Xlnl 1f'rn1s. Q\\·ner il4: 6i:\.J!H7 or 213: 37G-2fl14 ------VIE\\r LOT Ne\\'port Beach vie1v of Bay .~ (){.'Can. 147,500. 97!}-319·1 Mountain, Desert Resort 174 HIDEAWAY IN BIG BEAR Sleep six or more at thi!I vacallon spot. Swim In Big Bear Lake just 2 blockll a\1•ay and think aboUt the winter fun! Ju"t $.q,fi()() • \Von'! last long al lhls price! Call us. 5P.G--0222 $308 mo .• r \\'hy rent? The t-quivolent of rir~t & laiil mon!h~ rent makes rio\Yl1 1>y1ncnt. & you take title lO thl1 new rustle vacanl 2 11ty, 3+2 In Lake Arrowhead. Crptl'I, drapc11, frpJc, bc1\m· 1·d C('il, bltlns. }{ u It fl I ~ pinetrtt, fantnstic view. "~!:te,' 213/9864611 colk!ct 1tfOn•F'rl. l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·.;miiii; I Lnkc G~ry OUllet -Lake fl vlrw 2 BR 1 \.it BA trfril Commercial turnl11hed m.soo 821-4142. 1-'P;..;rc..;•,;.P";;.;'.!l'-'----'51 Out of State Prop. 171 lit Tltlt E oUerTd N'pt. Blvd. 9.2';i> Rt1urn spend· •ble Income. R e 11 11 o r 6"f";M;100. Condominium• for aale 160 BLUFFS. X pll\n, $60.000 by owner. 3 DR. 3 BA. nu ):ufl $tpt. r.arpei•, dr11pe1, p&tlO, S:1Ql)O u~r 1Mr1!1~1. Avllll Aug. 64G-10!I) You don't need a gun to ''Draw FU1'' ~hen )'OU pt&c:e M ad In 1he Oa~ Pilot want Ads! Call now -GIY.>618. <O ACR€ COLORADO Rfu"CH 1\$.SUl\1 F. PA Y~iE~S Prln. bt\lanOt of $6,723.~ rnl\y ~ U!l!.lmed by making; 2 back pyn1n11 ot $69.7-1 At 6\~'; Interest. Orii. pril·c $.11,725. Trcmendo\rll; lnVt'iit.: wit able ror randrlria, .rrcn.•- 111\on, rlc. Nr. fa.¢.grow{ng l..o.Junla. BMut. rolling billl w 'trt-cs. gm~ & vie-A· af 3 mount. ra~t'S, 1-funtint, rtshlnr. A $kll.ng nrol'hy. No clown payment, no pre-po,y- men1 penally. CeU col.lcc1 ror Steve: <3031 38:4·$m. • * Cali 675-44M BKR. TO\VNHOUSE-4 BR. 2~~ BA. 644-1757. ~ ~h St. ~""'"""""""""'!""'""""''I Fam Rm. Pool. Xlnt schls. Newport Bffch C u---=~"7."-o-=-~=-o No points , no pen.all ies, frre Year be $.135. 640-1416. osta ,..._ $35 & Up. 1 BR., 2 BR & I I 0 . Bachelori;. Color TV. mairl 3ppraisa , low rntl?!'I, ast. •2 BR, 1 BA. crpt thru-out. HARB R VIEW 2BR, lba: lrg. patio, cnclsrl ~rv. pool. The Z..fe!la, 41J N. lnvcston ThrHt {i39.641l. No pets or No Child ren. -HOMES-garag~. no children. 2197 B Nev.·port Bl ., N.H. 64G-961n . Mortgages, Central loc. 548-2513· Pa lermo Model, 4 Bed-Amencan Ave. * BAClfF.LOR Apt · Balboa Trust Deeds 260 2 BR. Fned yard, gar, off-f ·1 itl;."'1 Newport S.•ch Bay Club, furn Is he d _ street, adult cple, no pets. rm., ami Y rm, .,........ \V kl l\1 hi y 1 PUT YOUR MONEY $180. S.~, 548-1405. per mo. lease. Agent \'EARLY $350. t blk ocean, s.r:1t78 0 ; 6~· ear Y· Dana Point 644-7270. 3BR. 2ba. C'pt, drape!!. ~ar. ------,,.,-,..-,7"" TO WORK FOR YOUI ---------patio. 4.900 Ri\•rr. &Q-4;154 GUf.ST houS(' w I b nth . ON the Poinl. \Valk lo bay or -'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij pr1\'ate. Hayshori·.~. N.B. Earn tn% inleresl un \Yell-1''1\BULOUS ocean harb \1.l. 4 hcai·h. 2 st.v Spnni~/J 3 Br, • Si ngle only. Call 54S-121 J. secw·ed 2nd Trust Deeds 011 Br. 3 B.i.. fan1 rn1, frpl, !tun,:; ha. dbl lot, has all + 1 I~ -h Orangf" r.ounty real esiAte. cptfdrps, $3!>:1/1110. gar. Kids. Ai,:1. Fl'e ~for'lltnt ., Newport Heig ts SIGNAL '.IORTGA(.,E CO. 67:....74.14 , 97"' 0 •30 --~-=.,,-----.,,......... · ' · Cl~F.i\N 1 or 2 Rr. Arlult.~. no l714l 556·0106 F" t J V 11 11\RBOR V II C 1 l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~m;;1 noo c 0 NB oun an a ey • -1 u ·ms, armf' pct..;. 1-'l'•' kll . Sll')..$150. i 121 ~~·~,~~"~'"~P~"~'~'~··!' !. ~·~'.l~~~~~~;~~f~~ Sharp 3 Br, fam, nr pool. A F 360 E. 16th St. NB 616-lROI. 3 BR, 21'1 BA. gigantic rum· inc. garde"ner, $4 :'>0. pts. urn. pus rm, all hltns. O\V S\1·im 644-1791. ~---------Apt. Unfurn. 365 I~ pool, kids OK. Only 5Z75 Balboa Peninsula TI IE BLUFFS Balboa Island' 11! mo. No fee. Agent 842-4421 4 BR. frple, greenbelt. 2 $35 WEEK & UP ~-------'· Huntington Beach patios, $450 mo. lease. • Sleeping Rooms YEARLY. l -Bdrn1. apl. Vrry roon1y & light. Avnil. Im· med. $200 Mo. incl. utll., stove, rerrig., carp. & rlrapes. Cple. pre f c r . 673--0812 Eves/v.·ke-nd~. 645-6500 M.r Olrich tlou ... Fur"t.1hod 300 2 BR, l BA. $215. Pl'r mo. ----------01ildrm and pet.s ok. New 8alboa Penin1ul1 carpets & drapes. ASK f'OR ----------I D1\LE, 962-44.71. • Housekeeping Rooms POOL. lovely garden, 3 br, 2 e Ocean Viev.• Apts ba, $375. + Sec. Deposll. BALBOA INN 2~ Univenity. 64.2-3645 100 l\Iain Street 67"';)-87·10 BALBOA PENIN Bayfront 5 BR. '1 BA. Pier, float. Avail J uly ]4 & Sept l. · \Veekly. 6~3)39 Sllri . Ulil Pd. Hach apt at hc>ach. Idenl !l';flJ(tents. Year- ly' $185 · Uul Pd . I Br. Ocran- fronL Deck, VIC'\1'. $210. Ulil 1'11. C111i• COllilgr. 2 blks bcaeh. Pool .i:r: 1>rl\. potio. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 • or 49-1-32'.\S 2 Bdr111, frplc, $220 per nio. \'a.rd, in Canyon, '197-2292 1x>rorc 8 om Newport Beach \VALK to \Vtr-Bach unit. $90 al.so 1-1.B. $110, ~i blk. &: Laguna 1 & 2 Br. Pvt hrns. Agt. Fl>e. 979-8430 tiousea Unfurn. 305 General 3 BR, 2 BA, bltins, crpls, drps. cul-de-sac s I r c e I • Children ok. $245. per mo. ASK FOR DALE, 962-4171. 7 BLKS to Beach. 2 Br older hon1e: also 3 Br, C.l\1. $180. Kidsfpcls ok. Agt. Ff'<'. m-84);) • NE\V BA YFRONT 3 bdrm. 2 B..i.th. $42511'10 . l'r- ly. 4.94-0615 or 673·5719. YEARLY l BR. 2 ba., 2 car gar., blt ns: $.1.'lO 4 RR .. fam rm, S450 Bia 548-1290 1800 .Kll\tBERL 'r". $450/mo. 3 Br Harbor View HnnK". i\1r. Beal~. 831}.!16!!6 -~--.~----,--,-1 e "YEARLY -t'legant 2 hr Shari>Redecoratad Y>'/gar. Nr sh ops I b c h . 3 BR, 2 BA, conv dl"l1, frplc, )ll')..34.17: eves & \\'knd!li. front porch & lrg rc11.r l<'J'o 646-1335 race. Nr ocean & be.y,l 'B"•-l"bo-.-.P~.-.~,-n-su-1~.--­ beaches. Adulls only. S375i ---------- per mo Yrly. May consider for July summer rental. OCEANrnONT-3 BR. 3 BA. 641>-8211 + Den. Upper. S675/n10. . Yt'nrly. Ph. 6i3-l729 $~\\.4~:r~ -~ "Btf S .. Capistrano Beach 3 UI{ u11pcr duplex. Ot"Can V11. ST::il n10. Opt'n \\'knd.-. 1()..2. 34 i,i:: Viii F:~plno1~i.. C'npLq1 rnno ('k·h. Sil--0600 That Intriguing Ward Gam e wifh a Chuckle -----~-ldit• .. •y CLAY I . 'O\LAN 0 rt.Orrono• fe tt ers of the • four scrol!'lbled wcwds be· low lo fo11n four Jimp1e word&. I IK i WI~ i El I I SITCO I ~ • I I I I' . ~-.--D .,,,u _,M ,_N -rO -11 I . I I' I I . Overheard rn 0 hospital lobby: "'Hfs doctor Is on a cu- pune1ure specialist. In other words, he'll be -here." .,._, Coron• del Mar ON TEN ACRES Apt1. rurn./unl\Jrn. t.caiie Firf!place I priv. pa1lo11. Pools Tennis Contnt'I Hkf~t. 900 sea Lan, Cdi\t &1"·261 I (t.lacArt.hur nr Coast ""'>') :mn. TownhouSll"', 1 1~b.1 . 2 C'o1r port, pool. 11,htlui to ht•ach, no t•hl!dr<·n, fl('ls. \'r least> $135, ~tl-~1 :i.'17 717, crpt, rrpl<". patio. encl sar. Ball)')a, Open Sun. 213: SlOCi/mo. 673-5629. 4'16-67R1 -Eastside lrg 2 Br's 2 RR. 1 ba. Frplc. Steps to bltn~. rrig, patio at poolsldc. ocean. ''early: S300 month "'2 =20 Ask for l\tlke $liJ. ,\dlts/no pets"" ·;rJ • JON1':<; REALTY 673-6210 E/SJDt: 2 Br, 1 Ba, crp1g, •Sublt.>ase _ l BR.• drps .. sl~l\'e: encl gar, priv A\'a.ll Ani;:. l11t. $1901~10. pntio. $160. 548--9695. · Call 645-460:). ~.:rni .. ~i!;~J. ~fid :tio· * YF:ARLY. 3 B~R~.-,,,-.. ~ .. .. ..~ new S-1.".5 nio. Near be11ch! 5.Jg...o;.l·I Properly JIOUlM' 642-3850 e :i BR, 2 SA. $26.')/1.TO. L_U_X_U_R)" bayrront apt. 2 e 2 BP.. 2 13A. S:nl/Z..fO. RR 2 b Boa II Dhl """ , .. ., .. ,, .. .....,, . a. I s p, pool. ""' · "· ~....,. $5.JO 1no., lcn11e. 67$-8074 UN1'1.JRN. 1 & 2 Br. Gilrden -- -- --A r r 1 Dl\V · 2 BR. Crpts,• drps, bltns, P .. ~. 1'P c. ~-· pnv. trr,tc. $1~1/l\.10. patio. $165-$190. a.17-2841 6,16-272:1 or G~T.Ul2. 2RH. 1 '~ ha, 2 sty apt, pri NewportH einhts 11<1lio. pool, no pets, SH>.l. 71'"1 l --~---~·---­ J rmnn St : fl·\&-1450 GARDEN Apt -2 BR, ncwl)' 2 BR, l BA. encl gar . Kids de<:. 11/?:lOI. Adulrs. No n1aybe. No ]lf'ts. Crpts. pets. SllG/1no. &12-2.')14. drp!ii, hl!ns. 8'l6-7t2'J. San c iemente 2 BR. 11 2 ba , xtra lrg 51urlio, pool. patio, $11.1 util pd, t9i8 l\1aptc, ~5--5647. $160. ~ 2 BR, 112 BA. pvt pnt., a.dull", 511\ pet OK, m c Cabrillo. 544-9681 I ~ Apt. Unfurn. 365 Huntington Beach HARBOR GREENS Furn. & Vntum. ~'r Sl:IO. R11ch, I, 2 t• ~ Bll"Jt:. l\1Qflf'lll OJK'O l@ 'ttl 7 pm. 2700 l'et1'1"lkln \ray, C:O.t. pr. Jfur· hot· Blvd. -" Arlflm$, 546-0370 D1n1 Point PANORAMIC C!Jb>'!ln View. t.J-g 3 nr Dpbc., him kit., 2 8't. l\l<hi: It'll~ tlttln 1 yr. old. Clol'C to ~11ch & harbor. Very rU:<. S300. 499·~. OCE.\N VIE\\', lge 2 Br, 2 B:1, crpls, d~. bllns. 11(1.lt'('lny, r-ncl. 11:arnge. $190. ltl7·3927 or 8.17-!>178. OCEA:i vlC\\."1, v.1k tn bch. 2 OR, rum or un lu rn 5:m-S2)(). n'IO. Bkr. I ·121 Fountain V11ley 2 BR. 2 BA. 1Yhl11• water w . ndulti;. S2?.5. 1539 Bu<>ne. Vliita, $.C .. San Juen Cepiatrano 3 BR upper 1luplex. Ocean Vu. SZ"iO mo. Opc>n \Vknd,, 10.2. M l-13 Vin Esplll01.11. C:iplstrano Bch. 871--0666 e\·t'e'·'--------· I Apts., Furn. or Un furn. 370 .1 BR,:.! ha, 1)(•1•110 vie1y, \YRlk to lll"at·h. S:tlO ,\'lo,' Call: 111.::.;m1 61'.!·m1 Ew..s. associated BR OKEAS -AEALT Oqs 101~ W 8olbo" i.' l 11>1 l 111E EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. l\ll'lt.n'F.S TO NPT. BCH. Bft.ch, I & 2 BR. from ~ Adults, No Pf:ta. 1561 l\tt•• Or. 15 blll• rrom Newport Blvd.) M&-9800 • CASA v1croRIA • UNIVERSITY PARK Attractive ~room, den. Clutnctllor hOmf' (prlv1u e dwtlllnJt) 2 bl\th~. double ri~place. Dlninc " r c fl • built-In.~ and IM!l'Vice porch. Rc1tr y11rd has covrred p.taOO, Slorat:f" ~l\f'd, fnilt 1 ~. Front yard M.11 com· pl~ff' pr\\"Aey. P o O I and tcnnlt couM pr!vllcg~. a°"" to shoppin!l ctnltr. $310 per 1non1h. Call cv rn l n~1' 6~ or 642-0'lOO oey lime. I MEPRET I i-,,-.-1 -.-1 -.-1 -.-1 -.-1 -t 0 c ... ,1;,. ''' ''"''I• qoo1od " • _ • by ldUn'll 111 ttie ,.,;,,,flO word ~~-~--~-~-yau develoo lrOM s11p No J below. lBH opl on Myh""Onl, $220 mo FOR Rl'nl, immro. ocrup. }rarly ll'a..~. :1 Blt. l"Ondo, lrplr, pool fA..:, I s, 7 BTt. Furn ~ Unrum . Ct'rJ1ch1, dntpcs, Df\V, TV ""'· Pool, ~tc. ~12:"1 \•lrtor1a St. Al lfa,rb1r, C~I. 6=12-891\). ~·0\1 don't ne«I a lifUJI lo "Orl\w Fu1" ~'hen you ~&ro nn 1d In the Doily l>Uo1 Want Ads! Call MW -&l:M618. • • 8 PRINT NU'¥'!El!CO LE l ffi( IN lHESE SOU1'RES • UNSCRAMBLE. ABOVE LE.rTERS. TO <jJT ANSWU • • • I I I I I . I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 1------------------------· fii.'t-nK:? !I am It) ~ Jim. Nr ~13 & 11 h p p n g , 2 Bil. rf;N1110VS1':. 7'/I'\\' 4~. rrfiht, (lr'f>ll. 1 Ba. JW J. ltunt1•~n~g~to"n=-0a'"•"•::<:;::h-­ S:.!6.lfmo, Pli : 673-3.'tloO l ·BR. 1\•l fr11I , & balt"Ony. • 2 BR, 2 ba. plush. elec~ 1-ktlow h\\')'. Sn'i l\ks1 l~. bllln r/o, crpt~. dr11ii, Adult II.al Plnch1n Riii'. lt'la-4392. only. $210. 53&-5192 ~-­ ALK TO BEACH \\' ANTF.D to buy llkt'--ncw r11rnit11rc It. lamps, nice & mA!Klnahl,., &14-4ti117 I Ir 2 HH . Crpt, drpi1:, bll·lns, .'(Ill'. 205 1511'1. R-17.3!)37. • Newf,o-;f 8Hct- S UMMER-WINTER YEAf!LY Anllo'11 Rr ntals. likr. 20!1.'i &lbon IJlvd. flf.J.~ 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. 2 BIL, 1 &-2 BA. Bltn 111>- p\i11..l'K"f!I,,. ~. &o!U'274 . ' DAILY PILOT Monday, July 9, 1973 -,,-I -I~ 1--..... l[j] I ---• ;I JP41t ILllJI ..... , .. E~;;:..=--_;::•::: Offlao~;~_..;,~~~440;~.,~ .. ;.._;-; .. ~ .. E~~~530;...., 555 1-...--1nt/All9'-:?'w-.M&l'nt 11o1,w-.M&P 1101to1p w.....,M &l'n ROOMs -ia 6 ap. ~-"11.l.Y UCD<SED REWARD E,!-~~JOt>o. ~":".; A'*•t~ Nir.y CAR SAL I S 11111 Hartmr-A Ocean.. ~ blk PRESTIH * SPIRmJALIST * Name .......... ....ttt: 3 pound ~. MRm. Nee-.,aeeurate. 20 ~exp. Expertmctd saltsman only w. ocun. 2500 StavV:w OFFICES Spiril\Ht.1 l"l.WHnel JO am-10 _11 ,~ "'"' al --..11 nttded in one of Orana:e OBI. ' Fount&ln Vall-, Beaut1· pm. Advice on all m&tten. ....vtr ll'IY m e ........... e. ELF.Cl'RJCAL. Conltadon County'1 leadin, Ford dttl- .COMFORTAB'r Jor lul J'lfW bu.lkUna. around , Judy Y-·-J.' No.-14, ••• -·1. o.......... f:•-..i•PI• Ex\.~lent comm1-_, 312 N. El Camino Real, San ~must have lnJWin ahots Re:s. Comm. Induat. Uc. _,_1 _, 1 -!Joor, 3,000 .m••-feet, CI em en I e. 492-9136, . l6GLI n-.,..~· Bl cl.._ .....,._ U'W""VoW O"lrv•.u aWna le bonus pl.an, ln111r-f'rnpioyed trW) ~ 30· .... --492-9034. ~)', °"'a"" v ' Gardenint and d plan P id ::---~ entrance. C. M . :iWces~v'tc tni::. -=~~ NEED crew for 6-8 mo. H.B. sc1.1Z16 or 842·~-:!:uon1. ~Don ci-ev1~. loot. lnciud,. carpeta, cruise 10 Caribbean •boan! LOST 715. vie. Baker & * GARDENER * Job W ~, p I 702 THEODORE ROBINS ROC>l"IS $3) wk up w/klt $30 drape1, all utllitie1, Jani-26' sailboat. Pref. !em fo'altview, black mlnlatuni Mow edge .l a;m'I a:atdt>n-•·~, 9m8 • FORD wk up ~·· Childm A pet I.or ~cc. Call Marilyn 21-30, send name, addn!ss & Doxie "Icky" Ndt. auraery. Ing 'care. Expert A depend. 3>60 Harbor Blvd. M!Cdon. 76 Newport mvd., Stovall (n4) 832-5440. phOne to Ptf. Gibbons, PO REWARD! 567..or.?2, l.'ws, able. a.tost areas. COMPANION, ·gd. cook & Costa Mesa 1..:CM=·..:5'M'ro6::;c::.;::•'-::::::-=:::..· -e!!!'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"!!!!'"'"•I Box 3303, Fullerton, 9263.1. 962-t854. P r ompt-Fr•• Est drh'er, free to travel by Guest Home •IS OJo"'FICE space in newly con-SWINGING SINGLES $100. REWARD, Black Cocker Pete 534-7117 hour or month, local ref. Auto Mechanic 11truct00 Contemporary bldg Spaniel Male, wearine flea 673-1586 BUS)' 1'o)«a. aeency In Hunt. VACANCY' tor elderly lady In lie. Gllet:t home. Good food served. 646-3.191 5-r R-011 420 SUMMER RENTALS Sleeps 4 -From $70/wk. ln July Sleeps 6 -From $$/wk. Sleeps 8 -From $115/wk . ALSO AUG ., SEPT. & WINTER RENTALS In So. Laguna from $175. Call tor info. 2-8 pm 530-1250. collar. Vic: Moe11 St le Coast Hurrl.cl SMppy Work Bch. nems class A line mo, 325 to 1600 sq ft. Oc<!Wl S 1 I Cl 535 J{ w Y · Lo• t 6 / 13 • II Not Whet I Doi NEED help at home? We mech. with aood import ex. views, cpt1, drps & 11.ir oc 1 ubt 494-4Tl9/979--2880. I CARE have aides; nu r 11 es, per. oond., Contact Gary Foster * INTRADATA * REWARD Expert mow It eda:e. Prompt ho u 1ekpn, companions. For a perm. job with the best ~-LlngoH' Bld4t;_ Jk'7Cli S. U>st dog, bl.k tenie-poo &Jiii. Free Eat. Before 5:30 pm_ Homemakers Upjohn, of benefits, call Mr. Smlth, .__.st n~ay, J:r QUA L l TY match e 1 to Maggy, Vic. E1 Toro Rd 497-21!3, anytime 534-11B7. 547...fi&11 847-8555. *WATERFRONT* ··t.a~~sl(1~11.. &: Mutrlands, 837-6599. E xp. SCHOOL teacbel' will ----,A'"'UT=~0~--• FEMALE minl·ature Ame I G rclne housesit. No charge. Prime location, Newport (Ca.U NOW for FREE sam-r can • r References furnished. Call WANTED ExperMnc.d Beach. Large suite. Good pie profile on 1 pn>specUve ~!1nauV~r lM~~. redV'~-11.faiQtenance, Qeanup, 613-6721 •-~:.. ... Mo~r for parking, S350 month. match. 24 ttrsJ uu, "': 1SSJOn • "'JO· Landsca.pin1 A Sprinkler ~ ... .... Biii Grundy, Re•ltor n4 · 541-3138 I LA 658-6283 830-"3648 Service. Call ~1930 ~;~tN= :::m~1at: Joc•I G .M. 0.• rlhlp. CIRCULATION TRAINEE MALE OR FEMALE The Daily Pilot has an opening in lhe cir- cuJaUon departme~t for a beginner to man· age a small district of boys and girls, deli- vering; collecting and selling newspapers. Full time, permanent. positions with regular raises and full fringes including personal use of company auto. Apply iJl person to Milan IA!avitt, Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay Street, Costa Mesa. 341 Bayside, N~t.. Beach l.ADI: J~y $pttial ! rr ~l~eF'::i~:c' vC:~I:: GARDENER of-5'lJ !d~ full tJme. 673-6403 , Good pay end percent• * 675-6161 * mem reh1p $5. Ca I R-·-~. 962 _2283 or per. seekll 4 .,.anctcer.Send re su. .1 'Partner' 8 S 6-12 7 1 or ... ~11..1u ma.lntenance jobs. George H I W ,_, M & F 110 'to Cl If'~ Ad ' ENJOY 2 monlhs of summer FINE oUlces. Newport 54,8-1479 979-12U, ext an. Wines • P •n _, me •11 -' . Bkr. 6T;>-58(l() --awimmlng1. ho r s e b a c.k Beach, on _\V. Coast flwy. * 549-2015 * A A A A A •50lc/o DAILY PILOT H.lp Wented, M&F 710 HefpW•nted, MI F 710 ridiOIF...A: ,11.uing. 3 Br, bllnl Good parking. Reasonable. * Cre•tive Gudeni-Ou'r office. burned_ ~·"n. will P .O. Box l5'0 Coi t• • ·DATA PROCESSING ~l~~.'"for$254'.lsloo~·n!,~ 838-M25 ~ i Exper Irishman Cl~~~ be back IJl business soon. Mese, Ca. 92626. CHECK. HERE -BUSINESS 586-5145 or 837~61. Busined Rental 4451 Lod and F...s lfn1 I llllttactkm llr-1 Main!, Landscapine, Sprlnk'. Watch for ~ ads. . 1 AUTO MECHANIC LAGUNA Beach, View, 1 Bl. .L:i.J . ten iniitalled/repair. 646-1072 Llz-Laurcl-Ruth·Karen & Lon Toyota or Jaguar. Lag. Sch. ~a:·~1:,D$135~8:. ~~ *TILROECCAETI~* found (fr" ads) .550 Schools & ~!rnt~~.1 Co~~·1~a1~~ T ifl J ls:Y~TT~~ !::'·Paid Sk~t=17ec1 SYSTEMS BCHlBD.duplx,lblocean ini tructions 575 res.id. Sprinklrs. clcan1.1p. 'nursery attendent 'r or No Depositor ANALYST $85 wk July. &12-1272 Succetsful FND. male white dog w/tan ~--·...,---645-6981. ..!:: ~ • church services. Olristlan Regli tr•tion Fee BEACH apt 1 br, turn, frpl, E•st 17th StrHt ears Pt-PckingcM', pt-cocker, SAILING LESSONS YARD Clean-up, main t . U Z ll~INDUS •~A-woman age 25 to 50. Call Mf!.chine operatoir $263 hr. opp:l61te Corona del Mar REALONOMICS Wearing a jeweled collar Learn fast with champion in Comm. -Res. Opening new .,. c-,.. IN .• N,.,,_, aHclt 842-1936 Shi ppffig clerk St $2.50 hr. Dte beach. Sec. aate. CORP .• BROKERS Vic. Springdale & Heil , H.B. Hobie Cat. 646-0389 route. Exp. Japa n e 11 e ,,,,_,.,..,. 0to11 c-yA/t"potf BABYSITTER _ Need sitter '.frne:i factory St $2.70 hr. Rents by wk or mo. * 67U700 * please call 84&-J583. PRIVATE SWIMMING & Gardener. SM-1622 Phou "46•21111 for S yr. old child, Z-3 days Ciass-2 driver $3.25. hr. 83J.-1691. FND. in May • Uny poodle, DMNG LESSONS TAUGHT Comptete Lawn &. Gardening. ACCOUNTING at a time. 646-4255 Ambulance Driver $124 wk. NEWPORT Island.. STORES femalewhitew/aprlcot,4'h; AT YOUR HOME-644-1976. Service-Hawtng•Cleanups. BABYSI'M'ER in my homeP-~&:delvry,Mi.+$2.00hr. waterfront apts. 1-BR $175 MaJn Street, Courtyard. and lb!. ~5 Yl'll· Fnd Lampson & I 5IO Jim S48o-OtOO This ls a responsible position 8-4: 30 eves aft 5 tor info. Janitor-Watchman $2.50 hr. WK"/HJR SD> wk. Monthly Oceanfront Stores available Lewis, Garden G r o v e , ThNtric• that requires a we 11 * 645-6182 * _ 10 ~ n•-............. at modest rents. TI4-527-3775. Gener•I Services uaJlfled "th 1,.., ..... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'"""""IRPG ~---"" ~. ~ BALBOA INN RECORDING STUDIO , q """°" "' "'" . ·~-·· .. ~ avail. GERMAN Shepherd • Ian, 24 ~-. $l5 . ._. hour. * BOAT WAXING * perience that i n cl udes BANKING S I: L to $1000 mo. LIOO ISLE, delux 4BR, 3BA, 105 Main SI. female, well trained. Murdy '"""" .,... wholesale or mfg. accts. Main. EI e c. bk g d. 2 sty, w/prde:n & patio. 675-8740 Parle area. Hntgn Beach, Block rates. I Exp., references, qUal. ma-receivable. Growtng savings & Joan St. $3.50 hr. Avail J I 14 Sept. 3 NEW SHOPS 842-4138 11.fastering Discs Cassettes terials used. Lie. #4719 association anticipates u Y 548.-scro ' yes ·, . 1 24..g..15 tracks available 9n.lifil Cambro Is a strong, well opening af Newport Beach Secret~ to $550 mo. 644-4895 or A few ho · ' shops Still FOUND % C.Olhe, 12 German call Stonehedge Reconls HOME I mp rove m e n t established company that is b---• 0u;,_ Au-••t .,,L Prr ...._...:ist to $2.50 hr. OCEANFRONT N t . c ice . · Shepherd puppy, 4 mos (?) w 9t St ~ M f he I •· · the •a.ia;u ....,. --oui. ,,.., e w P 0 r available at Village Fair, vie Tewlnkle School C 1'! m · 1 h ., ....,.,,a esa Services C&rpenlrY·Elec. one o t ea""'rs 1n . Assembly tme St, $1.90 hr. 3 BR. 2 BA duplex. $275 ""* 1100 South Coast Hwy. 545-6723 • · · 642-8983 Plbg. Window \Va s h l n g, manufacture of fiberglass & Openlngs currently exist for Ass:meblra St. $2.00 hr. July. $JX) wk Aug· Laguna. · 645-1457. plastic products for the food the following positions: AJP Oerk.-_ $500 mo. 5'4-3554/~7704 494 1111 FOUND tiny male-part Manx COLLEGE ud needs odd service industry. Please ap. Man Othe . BALBOA tuand next to kitten vicinity Vl1:toria St., ~ . 111 ent . ply at· -YEUERS/ Y " SHOP & OfrK"e space for Costa Mesa .. Needs loving I " I I jobs. P!ilnting, clenning, etc. cAMBRO MFG APEX =n~~e';iee:5i!.~~1;; lease In Missioli Viejo Auto care. Housebroken. 646-8498. ...,. _....,..... Call Richard. 646-7238 7601 Oay Ave., A'un~ Sch NEW ACCOUNTS Aug .. .l Sept. 673-7910. Plv.a. Good Fn\'y offramp. FND fml Jong hair cat. Tan C•rpet Cle•ning W. of Beach Blvd., just South J Avery Parkway. Call O\vncr w/blk streaks While paws Floor Care & Windows of Garfield Ave. Position will provide ex-EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Pertee, a leading manufac- turerer ol compulor peripheral products has lmmedia<e requirement for a 00.inen systems analyst to parfidpate in our design & doawientation of new systems & procedures. II 1 you enjoy the creative challenge associated with the design of _systems & pro- cedures & have a minimum of 4 years experience in 118me & are krm\·ledgeable in the areas of materlal rnntrol, accounting &. engineering administration with a BS Ot' BA degree or equlv8.lent, you may be the Individual v.'e seek. Please send resume with salary , history to: ~~t ~~ ~h Paul Brazeau. 831.-l<IOO. Vic. l~Wltinp;n }!arbour. Baby1itth19 Dutch 11.lalnt. Serv. 537-1508 847·3531 posure to new aco:runts as 38R, 2BA, all x t ra s. STORAGE/S~, 3 ~ x 3J.'' 592--1736 HaLtl ing A CC OUN TANT-Newport y,·elJ as regular teller duties. 181()..C Newport Blvd. BUSINESS SYSTEMS 645-4554. 0 .H. door. ,s;v '"'.· r, pt FOUND large black & white MOTHER wants babysitt~. Beach area-Generalist with 6 i:nod. teller expcriefl(."e re-Coflta Mesa 645-4320 ~ERTEC LOVELY 2 BR rum house, Post Ofc & Mariners Mile. rabbit' 1 floppy car. Vicini· My home, Brookhurst & GET' RID OF UNSIGHTLY supervisory capability -quire • 17ll2 Armstrong Avenue cloee to beach; CdM, J'u1y 15 $175/mo. A.gt. 646-2414. ty Virginia Place, Costa Slater) FV. Days, nites, TRASH & DEBRIS $12 analyis -statements . ex-LOAN Irvine~:;a~iaJCal&ri,p1ex to Aug l2, reliable people, 3 NEW SHOPS -OU:ices. 11.lesa. Call 548-2869 wkends, vacations. Yard. LOAD . COLLEGE per. can substitute for de-CLERK An equal opportunity 6"--1902. ~"tu~;!:. =I~lde FND-BH _ _._,, 11c.~ G""'1,11,'· dogw ·1 v"~ =:;k:.s_ ~8F:i1;5u rn~~tci STUDENT 548-6428 gree, . Immediate need. PROCESSOR . Employer m-f BAYFRONT & BOAT DOCK ........ • • "" d ht l & Call 32' Fl.TRNITURE Van for P.O. Box 2830, Newpol"f TYPIST DELIVERY M I I 4 Bdrm. 2 tia. pttvate bee.ch Industrial Rental 450 coll~ or 54S-129'l J:C't. ~~· up, local turn hauls & gen'! Beach, 92660 c/o Mrs. Jef!E .,.,.K To handle all phases of con. morning, part 8tlme~ a~~ 1300 wk., $575 2 wks. Avail. BABYSITITNG, day and hauling. 54S-l862. ACCOUNTING CL R -ventiona.J loan proce!!Sing & ha~ reliable car. CoS!i ·1-J~ 28-Sept. 8. 642-3331 . NOW LEASING DARLING b.lk It white ~.Dur home. Experi-MOVING, hauling, clean-ups. Assist bookkeeper in posting closing. ?.tin. 1 yr. con-PERTEC offers permanent Mesa area, good pay. S230 MO. Sublet Aug. Ir Sept.. Hunti_._ Beach cocker mix, curT'Cnt Glen-cnced am l'E'liable. Call Reas. rates-Coll. Stucte.nts. A·R, A·P & p a y r o 11 ventional loan e9Crow pro-employment, paid vacations 1 ~-=-;,'7o0"':;·,,:~:.:::..::::27.:;. __ _ Park Newport. Jr lBR Inc ,,.,_, dale tAgs. Fnd 7-4, 646-2414, 492-374& Free est. &12.-7581 journals. Salary to $500. cessing required. after 6 months, plus one DELIVERY OF DA 1 Ly pooh. te.nru.. spa. &W-o6al NEW M-.1 or 64&-113.1 Must identify.. LOCAL moving & hauling by Call Linda Ray, ~. , __ . week paid time off at PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY' TO I !NO Sq. Ft. & UP t'otANS RING Org. O:lest BABYSITI'JNG: Lie. ages 3 student. Large truck. o .... ~. Coastal Personnel Agency, ........,,.\ mtervlews will be held Chri.sbnas, company paid NEWSPAPER CARRIERS !JOO Isle :-Bayrront. enjoy Hamilton &: Newland College hand b a I I court. 10 12. Fun attention. Ph. 5M-l846 or 534-2164. '"'j'A" 2790 Harbor Blvd., C.M. at the Cerritos Branch or-life, hospital surgica1 med-IN SAN CLEMENTE ,I the vft ol the bot.ts. 2 BR. '46-0697 or f.33.0519 \\'eds. 7;4, catI 9fi&.73S8 and 968--0887 Brookhurst & fice ~fonday, July 16th. ical and dent.a! benefits. Ex· incl. color Iv. 675-46t6 kk!nh"'. Adams. SKIPLOADER & dump truck EPOXY Adhesive l\.1anufac-. cellent working conditions AREA. l\.1U~ LIVE IN 1 * BEAOIFfWNT, Newport. ....J BABYSITTING . in my Y.'Ork. Concrete, asphalt lurer net"ds experienced For f.urther information & m-and growth polential. ~AT~6~U~~ON UJ~ 1 3 BR. 1n-7J21.. .ome Aua. 1800 SQ, f1'· l\.1·1 space FOUND: l\lale, black poodle. house, day or night, loving sawing, breaking. 846-TilO. contpounder, full time days. te~ew appl. Call Person-DUTIES witt 'include typing 833-8350 or 5'8-4757 w/tron~ otfice, lrg rear Vic. Warner &: Goldcnwest, 64,. " CLEANUPS, remove dirt, Mature, high -school grad. net. Invoices and ... ....-.. ...... or· VAN AND VALID J door, ideal ff?r laboratory, Hunt. Bch. Ca11 &: identify. care, lrg. fncd yd. _;,299. . 548-5125 .,... ..... -= DRIVERS LICENSE. CON-j BAUJOA Peninsula Houe or "40. 1'"5 \Vh1ttier SL ~· 842-~. BABYSIITING in our' home trees, ivy, dnvewayg-grad-""""'"~-....,..==;:-c;::-(213 ) 625-7341 ders fCJt our pur~g and TACT llARRY SEELEY, , apl, sleeps 8. $110 WHk up. l:DJ SQ. Fr. USO. 1793 Whit· days and ni&hts. All ages ing. 847-3366. Lie. 240182. A1:!st:U in ~"phousoplem~ :: material control depan. 330 w. BAY ST., COSTA ; 962-8680. Uer St Days 646-5033 or BANDED pigeon, vi c • y,-elcomc. 962-7216 GEN Hauling. Tree/Shrub "" LOS ANGELES ment. One year clerical ex-MESA OR PHONE 4.92-4420 : LARGE 1 b:lrm hOme. patio, 64&-068i eves Edinger & Beach, Hun:. trim. Gar & Yd cleanup. come? It so the quickest & perience required. SO+ typ. or 60-4321 ' on J>Hinsula. $175. weekly *COSTA. MESA* tlngton Beach. S4T-5883. C1rpet Service Est. 531-6377, 557-6904., =~~'rfu::-fie\~ is n:shl~~ 'FEDERAL·-ing speed, aceuracy a must. DENTAL ASlllsta~t,\Cleanlng •1 1 6TJ..7412. 1600 .IQ. ft. 2 Offices, 3 ph. F=~ni~~ac~ic~~~ori~ JO~IN'S carpet & Upholstery HoUMCIHnlng merchandising. If you like SAVINGS Apply,atE' RTEC instn.iction, x-rays & some 1 BUILDING promotion. pew~. 1 yr old. Good loc., St C 1 M «• ,.79 Ori Shampoo free Scotch-fun & the opportunity to front olfice. Non-smoker, I Avail July 7th-Aug 4th. 3 nT Ohms Way, C.M. " 05 a l'fl8, .....,....;, • gUard (Soil Retardants) • .SUPER efficient CaJ..gtudent earn up to $100. wk ad-Equal Oppor. Employer m/f ' Pref under 30. 644--0611 ( br, 2 ba, $150. wk. 675-3531 646-1663 or 646-1201 FND at Eastbluf't. Tame " Degreasers & all coJor II e e ki' . N . S3B ·oo Cd M ditional income call Mr. I I'!!"~'"'"~!"'"'"'"'"'"'""' I BUSINESS SYSTEMS DENTAL Assistant. Ex· I Veatlon Rent•l• 425 4001 BIRCH, NB =t.ca~~~arked Sia-brighteners &: 10 minute ~ i!:~5".56'h. per ~~; 4:Tm.Phlllips. 1' Barbo D 1TI.l2 Armstrong Avenue perienced, chair 11 Ide. I 2000, 2000, 3600 tq.lt, or com· BLK F ,............. bleach for white carpets. Y· oorman Santa Ana, California X-Raya. Spanish helpful, I OCEANFRONT APT., sleept bo thereof. Avail. 1011/'73. . • part """"""r O>g. Save your money by saving DAYWORK Apply in Person Irvine Industrial Complex. fringe benefits. 835-238.l . I 5, avail. 7.7 to 7-21 $150/wk. Mt. Baumgardner, SU-5032 Brown collar wtth studs. me extra trips. Will clean EXPERIENCED. CAR. ASSEMBLERS ALLEY WEST An equal oppr. emp. M-F DENTAL Assistant. Exper. also 8-4 to 8-ll $175/wk, Shan! API' or HOUSE 839-Sl98 531·7853 living rm., dining rm, & • 646-1.234 • ELECTRO 2106NowpoW. Ocrt :'.."".chont CLERKS chairside to work 15 t<> 20 1 10! West Oceanfront, N.B. Otll 'HOME-PARTNER' S?i-tALL female Brown poodle hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, Janftori•I -MARKET BASKET ttrs. per .wk in Newport I 5'm-1930 .....,. ~~ .... 0., "~" 1479 • type dog In Corona de! couch SIO. Olair $5. 15 yrs. ---------. Beach practice. 646-2481 I 435 -_.,....u.;J'I ' '1'Wo-Mar, Thun eve. 64(1..1897. exp. Is what counts, not PEEBLES Janitorial It MECHANICAL Ask for Manager Gor-for Rent R I W _, ·~ method 1 do .-~---u •t . If _ n--ind 1 ,B~A~Rl~.~ .. ~ID=--ra-eu,_--1Have imm~iate openings DENTAL assist. 1 yr. ex· :::;c=..c::,..o:;:.....;=:.:...-= enta I •ntisu -GERMAN Shepherd puppy, · .,_,,,... ..... -· aiot. · om ............ "V' us-....... _ -m .Y ~ due to remodeling in the perience, full time, 1',oun- roR ho tr 11 l Good re(. 531·-0101. lti"al ,.._,,.,fr.a """' ... u .t bar 54$-9212 VI k k I s Q C I · Vall motor mes, a er, 1 1 fl'ma e. Pttesa Verde School, "-'~--.... "'or..~. ASSEMBLERS • range ounty area or ex-ta1n ,.uey. boat. l'tc. 1648 Newport 11.tATURE profess on a 548-4005. C1rpenter Landic•plng Lounge. 17911~ NeY.-port perienced· Call 839_9660 , Blvd. C?.1. 5'l8"'9166, e\"eli desires occupancy Lido Isle -~-----------'---"----Blvd .. CM · 644-1001. area dlo\o-elling starting Sept. Doberman Pinscher ' NEW. remodel, rrame & LANDSCAPE, 6 a rd e n Be•uty Operators e Grocery Clerks DESIGN DRAFTSMAN References pr 0 v Ide d ' 963·170R F.:vl'!I'. fin ish, Slorcs. offices & . • Work with -l-"tt paid. ho!tthanical pro-I SINGLE Garage fGr Rent. 213-823-Sl84 or 213-541-4210 Lost SSS homes etc. Custom Y.."Ork. ma.int., clean-up, s~rinklrs. <2_) No following nccess. Ne~ • Produce Clerks totypes. \Viii also y,·ork aF $20/r.to. 177 E. 2'lnd St .. __ Ll-n-~ -1961 Lie .. 133790. 646-6852 the. best! he. ok. Bus)' shop. 645-1050 •l-t~mc•h•o•·-a1 tc•ho"•· Costa t.1esa. &12-3645. WANTED 2 or 3 bedroon1 . . '"" _._.. ;::tlU"" • II.ion thru Sat. e Liquor Clerks "'" ,..,. .._ " ... ~~-~---~=I house in Costa ~lesa or WHERE. ls Elizabeth? Lite CABINETS/ M.sonry cian. Start $990 mo. Also fett , Office Rental 440 Newport Beach $175. Have grey Siam~se type female CARPENTRY BRICK Vencen, patios 8.: VaA~~;'1!~ft~A ~=Ef~ 1!~SioUJ;YioU~~t°CJas~~~~ •Part time Checkers ~~a~;fnPe!._row,.~1" BAYFRONT OFFICES ~~liable references. (!:~f ~bi.11~ 4~~~gun..,, all types SlG-1648 \\'Rlks, Slumpstonc & block Mini computer field has Coiffure, 01, 540-0550, aft Interviews y,ilJ be \Ved· ·~ '"' Presti&'e olfices1 _over Jooklng WANTED 2 bedroom house LOST, July 4th, In Laguna, l\11NOR home repairs, Plum-!il~c~ ~~1:1~3-~. & ~=;:F~~!~ 6. 54.0-8182. nesday, July 18th, 9 am thru ~··mo Harbor Blvd., Balboa Bay in Newport or duplex. Pets. Reliable. Small fem . Samoyed, Lthr bing -Carpentry -Painting & 2nd shifts. Required as a BE part of our famlly, room, 4 pm. DOMESTIC Help George Beach. Various size suites References av a 11 ab 1 e, collar w-Aspen, Colo. dog -Tile. can 540-5560 P1intingh & minimum or 6 mos. related =kee &ping~~ I i t e 2975 Harbor Blvd. Allen Byland Agency, 1(16.B as low aJ $12). per mon, Jn. 645-6TS4 tags. 497-1172, 495-5899 CARPENTRY Piper anglftl exper. in one of the follow-O:ieta Mesa E. 16th St., S.A. 547-0395 ~ud~. drap, .Cllt, ut.ll ltles, . LOST: t ,.e black Labrador AND GENERAL REPAIR COMPLETE H--Pain"••. fn ... areas: Compo n ent *BREAKFAST COOK 213· 685-1fl00 DRAl'T·SMAN I JMltotial service;. :P..1onth\y 2 OR 3 year lee. 3 Br. on wtr. dog na~ Jack, Vic. 2149 * * 675-52ll ** """"' '""'6 .... • 1 or lease. 3700 Newport Blvd.. trg rms for art collec. Old QceQn Way 1 n~•na Sat e 0,,-,..,-,.,...-..,,-.,.-~c:---CUstom Int., weather-proof P1 re~ation &blha11 ao.ldt::;i Exper. Good pay & hours. Equa:I Opportunity Employer Part time me ch an I ca 1 N.B. 6~1220. teer down ok. To $750. Ken June 30 •-'··a~~ ... ·2814 • ement, Concrete exterior. No job too 11mall. ng "" assem Y 0 pnn Must be clean & neat. Ap. ~~. Mr. Ad am. , Bll-d 12131 749-<581 · ~ =· -CERMAK PAINTEl\S drcult boanl•. O th e' ply in.......,, SUrf & s;n.;n, CLERKS NEEDED -FOR lease -250 -$80. Mll'J'E long hatred blue PATIOS. walks, drives. Saw, * M7.J296 * desired areas of exper. are 5930 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. 915'-$275, 1160' -$300. SMALL house or unfurn. apt. eyed cat found wk ~. vie break, ttrnQ\te' & replace cabling &: wire wrap. NOW Deluxe offices. C r p t . . l\.tust accept well behaved So Ola Vista A: Princess concrete. 548-8668 for est. HONEST Ch rt 11 t I an s. e Immediate openings! BOOKKEEPER, part ti.me. gentl'OOll parking. Ne11.-port pets. Under $200. mo. Sa~ Clemente. 492-9761 ' CEMENT & Block Woric:. Ext.~Int. Neal, low prices. e Excellent benefits! ~~~. pe;:;i ~a~~ Must have the following :.ach, Nr. Bay. 575-6700 S42-9283. REDDISH blond terrier, Red Wall, patios, si~-alks, etc. rJ.J~ n at ha p ainling :,,~'"y ~ w~r:,5~ or contact Blvd., Costa Mell:Bran equal ~lsbu, larygood• spellfigu~g ~l"•t•' · colllU' w/bells. Reward Vic: By hr. or job. 64&6915 .,.. opportunity employer. ~:... « "' « DESK space available $50 I[ iii') Anaheim Ave.-191.h st . PROFESSIONAL painting, Jay Fuller ,1 ., .. .,. mo. \Viii provide furn iture ~ 646-45"47. --Child C1re accous, cell int/ext. Uc. VDM BOOKKEEPER. asst., gen'I at $3 mo. Ansv.~ring 1er.1ce No. 236741 . t"'ree est , ledger & payroll cxper. Apply In The available. 178'15 Beach Bhid, DE1'."'P orange shorthair Cfft. CHILl>-earo..myJKlme. [le.. 645-5191 Small Orange Co. oompan,y. Personnel Department Hun"-on ""••h ••2 -'""" a lt. male, w/Oea collar. J)l'flablc, mature y,-oman. -,;IN'°'T"l"'~"·x-=-. -P"A"'"IN'l'l==N=G-~.,,"". & be n e Ir t s . ~fonday _Fri. 9 am-12 Noon ""';-.,.,_. '" · ,,.. -. ..... , Vic. 15th & Sanla Ana, N.B. Days or v.·eoeke nds. Call LO ~cos'' ""~ CUST. OE.51GN 1100 sq .fl. Auto Tran1port•t lon 525 RE\VARD! 642-l93S. \V T 1{ I G fl Vari•n Oa t • M •chine s PACIFIC MUTUAL corner. Suilahll' slon"/Of· 549-l88l. QUALITY BOOKKEEPER "F C ~ fices. Fronl.s on \Vestcllff NEED ridt> daily to Santa Ft" RE\VARD! Lost Collie, July CHILD Ca.re my Mme, nefU' FREE ESTl1\IATES 6Ta-5230 Irvine CPA office all phru;es of 700 Newport Center Dr. Or. NB. Ail· Concl. pl<'nty Springs, sha.tt cost 8-4:30 3, Bristol a.rea. South Coast Plaui.. Blrth _ 6 EXTERIOR $3?5. 2-11tory 2722 M ichelson Dr. bookkeeping, sales-payroll Newport Beach pkg. l~IS \Ve-stcl\11 MS-9586 job. ~ 546-4123 yrs, ref. avail. Uc. 557-8656 S475 11 Bo-• I I 13•2400 I 336 laxes. Thru trial he.Jenee. COST ACC N-T-A-NT .;36-3878 ;, • c. rKJ. ns. .,, ' ex knowledge or machine book-OU_ AIRPORT CENTER LOST 111• Amazon Parrol. Cont r•ctor * &12--2155 •· • "' 'keepin& helprul. 548-6733 Local diviR>n of narl mfg. Deluxe 1, 2 & 3 room offices ~ ~~~-Y~~..,,~~~a, Lrg PA l NT ING-Reas. clean, "!!!Eq!!!!!ual!!!!!,O!!!ppc'!!!!<.!!!!!E~m!!!p!!!!!>"!!!'" 1 -co. needs accounfilnt, exp. adjacent Airpor1cr Motel. I JACK Tn.ulane, repair . reliable, Llc'd, ln11, w/Rels. ~ Civil Engr Constr $18K In jGb costing. Prestige PG- 1..owest rales, full 1ervlces. Pwson.111 GRAY/white shaggy preg· remod, add, 20 yrs exp. Uc Free Est. 675-5740. A11i1tant Gen'I Acctng M'"' 10 $15K sllion. SaJ11.-.i._ to 13K. Call . m..3223 1s.12 w~kdaysl ::::---~· ~:1;nan~t~poodl~~·~·;;·~·Pr1§nc~'"'~"=ls..~1~26~9lr;l;1~M~y~W;ay~Co~.I FIRST CLASS PAINTING &. THEATER MANAGER Elec. Teclmicia:· to $15K Gloria Gra,f."'540-6055.'Coast· S10RE OR OFFICE 646-7'l28 Reward &IT..()036 paperhanging Ext & lnl. Must be over 21, clean cut. Control Engr to$14-$15K al Per30Mel Agency, 2790 Newpprt It Bay Center Personils S30 Free estimates 979-5294 Prior thoo.rer experience Secretaries to S6501~Hiiarbor~i;ii;;Blvd;ii;"';iCMii;; • .,..,..., , :m2 Newport Blvd., CM. * PAINTING * pro('d., but net rcqulr<d. Audlt Sec'y, S.A. to 1625i· 525' ~r,al!~1.""o; !;!~ utll. PREGNANT? Th I nk t n. Trader's Parad1"se It -·· to call profcaaloMh. A-In """""' C"-"l<K--·'!!E;m to ~ • Crou -ry IJ'tl1-u.;)4 • U'f..-.._, abortion? l<oow at! the facts ......, SOUTH COAST PL•9 • · · .. .r.,,.......... ..,.,., Dr•-rs For fl'l!e est. 64&-!i178 . ,__. Ex..._. Teller SSOO ·-ruu. SERVICE first! Call LIFE LINE -24 No Watt.In~ THEATER 1'1 As.sl°Bkkpr S600 e Foremen Wntcllff Bulldift9 hn, 64l-5.l'2. 1. * WALLPAPER * 3410 S. Brlatol St. Med Claims Exam SaJO e Monogora t,,...., Wes\Clllf or1.. & A'ITRACTIVE mole, '3, own Ines c "-R ~-·~ -• ·-.. _ "frvtne Blvd., N e w po rt home & business seeks mar-When you call "1.1ac·· ost• ,...,. M':'F;.t•Or $500 • ~~~~rs BC!ach. ?tlr. Howard Natt minded attract t v e 548-1444 eves. AUTO · c. ~ 116-6Jat. •11m lady, '"" 23 -40. ti"mes P1 ...... Polch, R.,,.,, SALESMAN r1"""'""..l'tw~oitT $520 • 1._., CdM • 2700 E. C•l Hwy, 4000 ~2!Ml. 6-lOPl\t . • o.r R.-lrmen ft Ind It .....__ PROBL1'..~ Pl'f\a"-""""'· Con-* PAJ'OI PLASTERING * ForelJn and domestk. Fer· P ef'IOftftel Atenc't An 3 ShllU . Ill· . or . tu ti llVITI ·~"·-·v,,-All 1 rarl. BMC, used can. Ideal Ill Dover Or~ •• N N •• B, We Will -·-500-900 sq. ft. F'rom 37~ Air fldent, s y mp s I he I. i c d 11 typeg. Free nt malts working cond itions, ~ 1 ••tu1• cond. cpta, drps, pvt png P"'lnancy coonsellng. Ahor-0 ars Call 540-6825. experienced salesman '42·3170 MKGregor Y Kht Corp. lot, ~curlty, 6 7 3-41 ~ O lion &: adoritions ref. Plum bing 1.631 Pleeent1*. C.M. Chulot w. Masten, own«/ APCARE 642-1436 '----------------'1i--;:-;;--;:;;:;;;-;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;: CLERK-TYPIST 1.,..,..;,,~~~~!l"'.,... bkt. ALCO•IOUCS Anonymowi. L.R. OTIS PLUPtffilNG Type qootalions correspon.I' CUSTODIAN 1117 W E STCLIFF-NI Phonr 54l-1217 or \¥rite SHARP DUPLEX Ukc lo t'rAdc? Our Trader's Rcmodl'.ls .l ~palrw, \\later dcnce, open.le Telex mll· P 0 Box 12'l3, Coma ~lea will trade ror 3-4 b«troom Paradise column is for )"OU! healen1 dl1po511l1, tu.maces. chines It other aulgned $589..STIS Per 11.tonlh !980, 912, 756 A 540 Sq. Ft. ,.......,:_:._ - -_:___._ -'-Eq Jru 1tllt'oM ' 5 Un~ dN!Y."Unrs. 64~~ MIC & cl•~cal di•""· 1\~1,1-. Send Y.Titten 1'l':!Ntne to Sad· DRAPERY work room. Open for exper'd or trainee's In ' all positioos. Beach Drapery ' Servtce, 900 W. 17tti St Coeta Mesa .. DRAfERY -()pe_rators. Exp d. Top Pay. 3853 Birch s.t. N.B (Adj to o.c. atrp0rt) 54&-1431: or e\'l's 641Hl133 DRIVER & ~laln­ tenancen1an, full thne. !\lusl be mature & neat. H.B. area 962--7111. ELECTRICAL Assemblers. \Vire harn ess. Keco Industries, Inc. 1 7 3 3 5 Daimler, Irv. ENGINEER Pertee, A leading manufac- turer of computor peri,.,..... producta has an Immediate riqu!r'l!mtnt for an engineer to design, check out I maintain automatic & 1 eml-autornaUc e.ledronk test equipment l)'Stems. lf you have a QSEE degree or equivalent whh a mlnlmwn of 3 yean design experience \Ylth an empl\uls on anaJog &: digital clrcultry, 11ippty to Solid Stale E1ectron~ &. -..... knowJedoe .. mini computor pro. grammlng, )'OU may be the lndlvtd~ y,-e teek. Ple-.e tend rtsume 11.•l!h salary history to: PERTEC "=,!'°"'"•· UUJ, Baum· SWINGING COUP LES u v ~. n " ., ... • , 5tl"5032. call "lbh" U p.m. 1!_~ .. ~~I S d!U'Jt BIA Complete PlumblnG 1100 \V. Coast Jlwy,. N.B. mlnlmum oo~ typing. dlebadc Valley Un I !t e d ..,.0 "'""-~ .,,..,.........., for 5 bueka. Service, M2-M05 ~fut.tr S allies CO. School t>lsttict, Mr. Shinkle, BUSINESS sY~Js CORONA DI L MAR -J.llL l"-M vt CM 21618 . Chnsanta, Mtul<lo 11112 Arm t •• ~· Deluxe 425 tq. ft. omce SY!I NG~~G SINGLES ~~:e~:er-~~~-e:uJ b:u'!. ·~ ~!°:"'~~'. PL~~?oo ~:;J"R Aa5cfJff!"".1!'fa. ~te!1:i AnF,qu~"<>°~unlty ~~eJo12o.. ~75. DHdline trviM Indus~"'~Plrx BROKER ~ Call 'Ll!ah U pm 5.10--)250. take ctr or motorcy)or ror bl<f8. % Ac. on Hwy ,18. **· 642-3128 •* ftn' management. Couple Empkryt!r 1..:.:::>....,;;.·===.---I Santa Ana, CallL 92'1M wmt IOllboot -I :lll<40', P:amlly CounMlinl "'" ... all l"""cnL Call Runninfc Sprat, tor local TOT~L SERVICES (X), needed. $500. + 2 b< rum. ocn't .... up the ...,.. CUTTER Equal Opportunity l:mpio)'tr mil Coat Hwy., N pt. bch. · l brk, MS-l!H2 eves. bOMt '35,00> eq. 536-19(H. MlnDr Plumbln& k ltCJ>a.in apL + utll. Call Mr. "Lilt" it in claultled, Ship Sportswear mtg. NB .. S/lJIU')' M-F Jl75 Mo. m-4* &18-5060 or MS-3643 •llil•••••••. ••••••••-&4$.0011 or 646-1800 McAJlleter. ~-to Shore Retrult11 64W678. oprn • «(endy. 641·3412. cu.ssmm wlll 11ell 111 ' • • • ~ .. j I Mondq, J\11~ 9, 1 ~11 OAJLY PJLOT I~ ~I ;;;;·-;;;;· ;;::;~~\ Hllf W-, M 6 , 7101.'!'le Want.I, Mio, 7~ Help Wanted, M & , 7IO Halp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wan,_., M&F 710 Help Wenlocl, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & f' 7IO Ga,.go Sala 812 Planot/0.,.M 126 UH .__I _ ...... _ .. -·_.1111] 1 1 I H • t I cl) •• ][Il) l ml i 1fil1 [ Jliiiiii JIIlJ l 1rrn 1 I s';1 Llll ............ - GENERAL 0Wcoc11k-· KARATE · STENO TYPIST · Industry, posctns accounts · 00/GYN o~ niq4lrCf: R~7'PT~~1;r.f'1'Y1>:1 t ': SECRETARY Old tstabllWrl nrm. iOOd 1 tf' You'ni looktnc ror OllJl, Free ONU LISSlllS El~. tectlvable heavy pbonti INSTRUCTORS w•~o bat'k olt1« 11rl. 11lto rron1 url • ,1n n~.0 Great variet)' •pot. De In· bf:ncUt• oonlpall)' promott'• i-~. or Yi'alnut older '• WE 'RE ON some. typliw &ddrnllo£ra h •u~'"' oftlC'f' & i.ruuraoct airl. 1 nit: comPYJlY. "· USI ,,.,,-c vol''ed ln aU asl)t'(:ta of l'f',tl from wfthin. Sa.Jary ta $498. ~utitul l urn I t u re I 01' wOJ tntn: order wn~. No txper. M(., .. 1a:y to Pltll.M Rnd l't'SUllM! ta P.O. ~'ledtypi,, Uull~ frr1 (:llal• flt.Id. Sltlary ta $700. Cl.II Undo. Rb.)' ~ decorator Item!, Ila ht'tt. A• Long A l You Llkel I M~I llke A be able to han-ltart, must p u r c h a 1 e Boie 3$2, l.ooJt Beach. ~ ge 0 ~':j,"' &,·ct Ca.II Sall)' Hart, ~. CoaJ111.I Pt'l'!IOnMI Agency: Jtm br1f12 your huJbmd NOD-pi"vers & pla.>'ft"S Y.'tl· I THE QOI die de ta 11 e d work uniform. Call Mr. Lennon PART time ewnfng Yi'Ork, P urea. a icr Coastal Personnel Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., D I v.1th v.'allcl or v.111 l!\'t'n con-~ _ ........ lnt.erviflw1 a..12. 2113 ea: £38.)t81) ages n-40, o1vn lrllns. Cree AM« .• ~ 29-10 Rando I p h, 2790 HMrbor 81\•d. C.i\t. ~ 1 Ider t •ad e fo r come 10 llttie-nd Tu..,,..,.~ I , • eyuo Or. C.A1. LEO .L inovie privl. Apply In\ Costn 1lesa. SECRETARY TF.LEPHONE Anm-ering: what-ba.ve-)'OU!! 1205 So. niatit at 7:30 PJ\f. W~ want yartan 0111ta Machines hu GENERAL Offioe, 1 0 ea l A SECRETARY peNIOn. l\Jon, Tue$ or Fri an RICHARD'S TRAINEE ~~~~bl:·•::..:.P :~ra~~~ 'Birch. Santa AM _ar.,...1789 ~ant!o !~ni~t!~ ) 1n11:nedlate opcnlnp far 1n· Insurance olli·-. Part time, '!ru••~i."'°"Goodte 8 e18n,•1 '"•I 7:30 pm. No ph. (11.lls. Paulo MARKETS I" •-•-1tcr, Costa t."aa COLOR TV. , $6j, po\\~r ·• di d 1 ho lookl "" ..... '""' ., o I I The t c "·· Outslandlng grov.·1h Jl01cntinl <N '"'-"''A' .... furnlllhcd. VT ua s w are ng permanent. 546-9222 11horthand akllls n!QUlred. I' \'e-n a er, os1a Hi'f1ulrH Thc11e Jobs 10 11'; oa.ipo11unlly "'fc(>i•poral(' of· ' -n-.O\\l'r -Sl.i, laf'C' N'('(ln:kr ·ron1 Dlet('rid1 , in chnr&e· ro'r the opportunity ot GET INTO Xlnt salary. Call &Jl..9002 f\lesa F'illcd lmn1ed\a1cty. f!C<' or i·apid!y Rt'O\\'l.l'IR \'O. TEMPO'S $25. bum~r pool lab!<! $25. PhoM 642-2151 btcomlng ft part ol 1he CX· .. P'RT Tlo'!E ··oonan 1119 • GENERAL ACCT i~1. I I I r b I h I n·· Bf\\t TV Ji:et, beaut. s c c~lna:computor lntlustry. SHOW BUSINESS!!! LIQUOR cl<>-rk part t1n1c " "' ' -. "· l'lil:l''" spo or rg 1 11oralarrani;~men1 11 , COAST MU I \Ve ol'e 1n need of; Girls O\'Cr 18. attractlvt' .. C\•es, Tht'll. 1hru F'ri. Pl'r· lelc,~t:~. 5t!/~~ti~,·il=-~a7; (Women Welcome) bca!nncr \\'/gooct shrthnd & landkapP plants, carnper Nev.·pon Blvd. at ll&rbor •1KEYPUNCH !\'ecdl'd for Bo.'C Olflcc &: I tnanl!'llt position, n1ust be c 833-662 • NCR BKKP'G !yping likills. Star! $500. Co.ii 0·1al·A-Job! for '66-'67 1::1 Ca1.nino, 21832 Cbsl& J\fC!Sa I OPERATOR C"-"yCount•r. 21. Call ~ ...... n 7.9 p.m. ~rl:lor .. r.r. l' -MACH OPERATOR Gloria Grlly, ~t0-6055. ~ 1 Ill< 968~ ..,..... "'" m..3"12 PA RT-Tll.tE WORK . ~1et l'rl'$1')nfl(>I ~enc)', • ri't'I> • · · • """""· f\11t1. l yr. eicper. Ofl O'l9, 059. SOUTA.PJ>~01nA!:'T''°pn 4 * $J.OO per hr. * Sa&la.ry ~pcnilcof on abUuy 2700 11:1rhor Blvd., 01 .. ,01 , C BLOCK Sale. P.!t. Edttn ctr. ORGAN SALE J\1ust do ov.·n verifying &: H-1i0 .~ · LAZA LOAN OFFICER $800+ 97S-4508 t-A()(':neno:·. 1\p11<ly 111 u\lr --S EC -.~ \ 'OrunKe ounty's nX>St off Nttv.·IJoJlt' & \\'a~r. Ji'V. \Yurlitzer 1'~actOr:Y AtHhOri.ied !Jlake )'OUr own drum cards. THEATRE =1 Experh.·~ -------corp. offk.'e Ill RETARY p1~reuivc & Innovative F\1n1. Applia.IK'('s, clothini Sn.le oo many n\Odel1. Oiher e SECRETARIES 3410 S. Brlatol St. \\'estclll! PAYROLL CLERK 3-'3.1 Vla Udo Prl'\'l u u11 Sf'<'l~tarial <'X· Temporary Hel p &."'iV'11'f' br.i.by ltt'ni~. Sot-Sun. brit.ncbi aJliO on aalt, priced fwing 60 wpm, shrthnd SO, Costa Meta Penonncl Agency J\luAt have exper. lia:uruig j Newport S...-ach ~rience dcsin:!d. Sonw NI· 'doM it again: Tf:f\!PO CJ-tAJRS, beds, b 0 0 k 5 , from $295. •\least 3 yrs. eicper. 1651 E. Edinger: S.A. payroll thru quart l" r I y Equal 0ppor1\lnlt)' Employr1 <'G!' preren'«I. Sklllii. llhlhd nlrt>rs a truly unique It lothe 1 Ex Wallichs Music City ei SOFTWARE GIRL FRIDAY ll\hu·k III CenterJ ret\lms, ~ typillJ dulls & ISO \vpm, type 60 v.'Pm. ~ lin1c saving opponunit.Y for ::Ond. 5j ur!e_00 :j.z.~ 0glt , CONTROL CLERK Fee -id. Boss .~ -· M2-S836 handwrilil'l8. Salary to $525. ROUTE SALES f)'.'rsoruK'l Manager ~i!IM ..... , St A 1 C ~i· South COB..!lt Plaza 541).Q . , 11 ~ -, .. _,, Call Sally Hart, 540-""5, BALBOA BAY CLUB · P · · ~" • 2nd shift, Keypunch exper. a ty + Persl?" v.'ho. kives LVN SUPERVISOR Coastal Personnel Agency, 12'21 \\'. O>ast I-Iv.".\'., NB TYPISTS ~' !erred. challenge, typing A: lite ac· for Nun\n& home , Beach 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM L.a.rge NallonaJ Co. ls looking "* SECRETAR)·-~·""'EC BOOKKEEPERS Miacellaneous. ' Ju.,1.0R TECH counting. Up lo $700. A~ ......... 40 h-......... .:-•., n-•1 R I I bl I "'' K '" fee ""'""' Call El'" Ell.., ........ • ......... """"""" \;.4,1 PBX eceptionls.t or permanent 5 !l e poop c E···oti"" job ,., , ••• ,, .-·•·• EYPUNCH l ~LUSTRATOR 5s505.'' .Control Y ear;;t ~·8075 for details. , "re ~d-an exp'd person to . Excellent starting salary. ;i~. 'Loe. on ~terf';~I. \VM v.·ant di&niflcd & * AUCTION * 6 · rqos. ~xper. & ~lated Employ. Agc,v. 3400 Irvine MACHINE SOOP help wanted fill an opening created by a If interested Call: Slnlhnd ,·ntt. \\'/top ccn. s1imulatlng long or short Fine Furniture ~tklnl paste-up, Simple Blvd., NB,. Operator for lathe, mill!i1_g promotion. LI le typ· 714: n4-0330 of!'. skills'; ~1ust • be \{'nn a~gnments . few & AppliAnttS ink line orawing & operate machine or drill press. ing.Permanent position in S<'lf·n10tivuting & have d11.ys, couple! w<'ek.'I or few Auctk.ns Friday, 7:30 P'.n1. "stat'' camera. GIRLS-GIRLS 64Z..7391, 858 Production our bright offices in cool SALES p Ieng o. n t, out g 0 i 11 g 1nonths • you decide: Nov.· W indy's Auction Bern e INPROCESS Easy ftm Job. 0ay or night. Place, Newport Beach. Huntington Beach. SPLENDID SPARE personallty'. Please ~nd you can ... INSPECTOR No experience necessary, MACHINIST~Tool n1aker. Please apply at: TIME OPPORTUNITY 1'<!.i>tunc:. \\'1ite Oassificd APPLY BY PHONE 2075\,i Newport, Cli1 ~ 2nd shift, 2 yr11. exper. \viii train. You must be 18. Call for interview, 6 to 9 CAMBRO MFG. Nationally kno1vn 3A.1 r1HNI Ao nn 894. Dally Plto! P.O. APPLY BY PHONE lkhlnd Tony's Bldg l>f!lf'J, Inspect cables, e h a 11 s Is, Apply in pc.rson noon Ii i 6 PJ\f. !'>13-M3.i 7601 Clay Av£'., I-Iuntgn Bch conipany has opening fo1· Box 1560. Costa J\lesn, C;1lif. 3 HOT Pink & v.·hitl" shag clrcult boards, etc. pn1. 2112 H.arbor Blvd., fliA ID-M()TEL. W. of 13('aeh-81vd., just South civic nilnded person. Our 92ti2_n0=~~-----APPLY BY PHONE thrQw rugs, 1·9'\12: corner 118 CUU!RAi'iSEi"N Para&00 or- gan, s o I I d trensister, chimes, bl.t/ln IC!lllie draw ban, rhyttun Plano Sl .87l>. Pl;. party. 494-335.1, Gf.3606 Sawing M.chlno1 a1 *WANTED* SINGER TREAOLE rota.chine in J,'OOd \\'Orldllil" order. Call 6T.i·T~. Sw•p1 e RECEIVING C.Osta J\Iesa. Apply Executi\'e Suites, of Garfiel d Ave. !und raising line Includes SEEKING dirl'Cl sa lcsmPn Call TEfllPO'S Offi('(' At rupboard, frplc screen, gas INSPECTOR _ 2tJaO Newport BJvd., c .r.1. ·847·3531 e~~?Y· no,,.w11Ues.1 gl'C<!tlnio: for highly desired product. 5~-1"50 & Let u~ know ~~~.~~a~.· ~~~do:.:~. '~~~l~i\~·n~~n:e~~fn:sn to: 2. yrs. recent t"xpcr. in· G!llL Friday -ma!ure, full MAINTENANCE MAN PBX operator, exii pref for cw us, cri es, P us n1uth St1IC'sn1t"n "°''" earning OV<'r "'hat your sk!lls nre. No need ICa.'ICapc painling or an-speetlnc; circuit boards, etc. tune v.'Ork, Hunt 1 n gt on answering service. evening ntore. Ou!' comnilsidons I.he S~ (X'r dny. \\'on1en or n1rn 10 eo mc in personally . until N.B. · ~ e ELECTRO --Beach area. 962-7111 For small niodem office work" H.B. 536-8881 highest. no lnvcstn1ent, ,,.c full or part time. No ir~e 11.e ha\'C !he 'just right' spot ORIENTAL RUGS tlquea 1 GRO SMA building. Matw"e man w/ -tr.iin. Prt"stige posllion ('On· hn1i1. Call 714: 870-7881, for you! Collector-buyer v.·anu old TV, R•dlo, HIFi, i ASME5CEHMABNLIECARSL S589·$A:Np'!, mon~ niech. ability for 1nalnlen· PEOPLE ARE NICE tacring 11ehools, churches, Vita·Lean Reef Co., ll21 E. 'l"our tinir Is ,·aiuable. Don't Oriental rugs of all sizes Stereo 136 ance + gardening duti£'s. When you call on !hem as clubs, organl1AUons. \Vritc: Ash St., f'ull<'rton. iraslc ii. lnV('Sf tt v.•isely >A"l!h cspeclally lllll:e ones. Box 1-----------1 l~ &: 2nd shifts. All level GROUNDS LEADMAN Fringe be-nefils + pnid vaca· an AVON Represenla!ive. in~!uding telepho~ numlx-r 2 SFJl\!JCf; Station Attend. Tt'mJICI 111 hi hourly rales SS n.'16 Santa Barbara Ca. STEREOS: Sacrifice Stock positions e>pe:n wllh am.Jn. 6 $619-$154 Per month lion, holidays, med, & life You'll have. fun & n1ake lo. P.O. Box SJ, Canoga FWJ & Part time. Lite 9lIOCi. Phone (ll05) 91i7--40Il Red u et I 0 n s 11 I e ! mos. related exper. Send written resume to Sad· Ins. friends seUing our fa111ous Park, Cal 91304. mech. eX"per. Apply Laguna NEVER A f"EE AT TE1\IPO Rttei~Ml/80 wans $75. oo e DRAFTSMAN dleback Valley Uni tied Integrated Data Corp. products. To learn ho\1' easy S,\LESJ\iEN • l demonstra· chc,TOn. 604 So. Coast ll\.\'Y Tempo Temporary Help •;?,.~~t.F~: ;ime~fe~~~j \Vatls $95. Ga rrard 1 'yr. exper or related school· School DistJ;ict, Mr. ~~le, 2283 Fairview Rd., C.\f it is to start, call: 1ion sells our rubber photo l.ag. Sch. ' Pa.I1c. Good location. $l70. turntables $35. Sp e a It: e r tng Inc.I. logic drawing & an 24;61B Oinsanta, l\l1SSlOn fltALE Lifeguard, w-Sr. Life 546-5341 or 54(1.7()41 slon1 p 01_1 sight .. Earni~g~ SERVICE Station Attendant. WAITRESS EXPER. each, Includes tramfer fee. systems. 2 for the price of Interest in learning P.C. Viejo, .Ca. 92675. Det.dllne sav. cant 30 hr wk. 586-0860 PERl\fAi"IJENT part time, ~200 I? S5ll] per v.cck. 1' 01 f\11! & part time. Apply In Full & p/time. ?.lust be O'ller Phone SS8-S63i. Ask for one, from $5. ll<'ad phoM1 •Worl<PL. AHNER Jultlotpy 12· 1 II H Lake Forest _ lite boolc1 •1'0~·-&30 •Mhow 1ntcrviev.• 55S--7869. person, 900 E. Coast Hwy, 251.1 ?CJ.n;J..,,... hours. surf & ~tr. l\hJJer. • Fn;~ape$7S~Q~· ~~ la ly oste11 l\1A.i'i train for window tint· room saes. :"""oi: • on· .. Sales'~d"1es Newport Beach. ir ou1, .JV..:AI \V. Coast lhvy ... BA degree in B I S. i Fri, pref. lady :11>-45. eall _ Kil NB. ' ALL glass aquarium. 26 gal. $20. r.tany othe:r items at ~ AdminWiation with 1~; ';: rv ce ~:~~hi;~ J.~ h:; l\targe 645-4230 Experi<>need · \\'Omen f or ~~~ e5x~S\\p1'.':,~~:; lut11 \\"AITRF ..... '5. pa.rt t Im e. 1'how,-tncl. flo~scent light. ~I~! prlt"l'. Term.!I available:. (iroduc:;tion control exper. Is looking for \\'Omen to \\'ithin 1 yr. Over 25. Tall, PORTER-S WANTED Men's l'°urnishings & Sports ' ·"'" · ,., ·"""'· "3 · Nev.1>011 1-larbor Elk.!S Club, iiilcnt giant air pump, 11Ji· 1 •893-050ii0ii0~1;;·,..,..,...,. •• ~··I 1( you meet any of these :S~iJ'e;:. &Sa.li:er:e":i.~~~ neat. 6#-8494. f\fu~ be {'Xpt"'l'. F/time. Sec \V~:i1~t1~'fr. f'lt'IM·hei· ~~._0'fi~E a~~f.rm :~110be Zt ycan. Call ~{a~;,F~r;e;'.11;r;:a~i-!1."'!~~ quallticatioi;s & ~looking tising exper. helpfuJ. l\'Tust MARKET BASKET ~~fn1~11 i\~$~"c~bo.~1~~ HOELSCHER'S E. 17th Costa Mesa ~~~~~~---~ tras!! s.5Cl 963-1584. ;~~r1:;;•lh 6 rom ~;'.l,,,i." & typewriter. H;.u~y~~~~g o~nln~a~~ ;~~~UCTION CONTR~L So~~L~·;~~b~za ~~~ ,?,E~~~~~~1~~;~~ 1~~~~~~~a~~~:~tal Antiq~~~~;,~;i!L ~ma, benefits HOTEL Re,servation Clerk, Pertee orJers permanrnt l\latu re, expc:r;-unne~~sary, club. l\1ust 00 21 or older: \\'l·IO \VANTS TO \VORK? t"tc. Furniture. household ,! cxp'd, Alrporter Inn Hotel, SERVICE DELI ClE!tK en1ployment, paid vact1tions TH.E SHOW OFI-. Call 6.;.1.4.i!i.t for appt. Tues DRIVE A CAB! items, tools. 2525 Fordham C . . Irvine, contact Dick Han· \Ve ere seeking an individual afl l'r 6 months, plus on<' 22 Fashion Isla~._ I'!.!!._ tht1.1 S\ln. CHOOSE your hour.1, work Dr., Costa J\lesa. ~1034. • ompetitive nan, 833-27'10 \\'ho is familiar "'I th \\'eek paid lin1e off al * SALESMEN * TELEPHONE Sales. \\'ork for yourself. !)(' Your own GIRI-S • Stash lhc ca'>h for pay HO USEKEEPER. con· prepared foods. Cl!'. 01ristmas, co1npany paid .. from your l)\\'n home. boss. ~len Qr women. Can u~ apparel, ca s u a I s , valesceot hospital full time, Ufe, hospital. s u r g Ice I Do you,, takl'_ Salesmen Highest commissions. Ex· be slightly handicapped. COl"ktails, fun;, offlee wear. e Modem good benfits, call 642-2410, FRESH FJSH PERSON medical and dental benefits. "'anted ads with a grain ol N a t-CJ A E s lablished consignment ' 1"" Su rlor Ave N t An experienced fi!!.h person Ext~ll<'nt working con· 11• "-·1 I bl petirnce n ° t n<!~ssary. \'le •• ~~n "" Pf!ara1o""'10· O<hop, call for appl. Tu··· faculties . ...., pe ., wp to cut, fillet, and display d sa . .._..n say ame )'OU. 892-5184 s, rcun::u. .,..e ~ . """ Beach itions and growth pr>lcn· I fo1IO\\·ed up a few rnysclf Supplement ""'.''" income. Sat. 54·1-93ll. fish. l\1ost ln1portantly, v.·e r aJ TECHNICIAN .,~ ... Pl<'a.se Apply in person or co.ntaet B. Krafka VDM HOUSEKEEPER _ Udo Isle, kl ·nc1.· ld\lal ho 1 ~ -in the past. The job seldom ~ Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a BRICK Kl l N Gas-tired. live in or out. 5 days, ~ ':a1 r:~; wit~~ EXPEDITER· lived u11 to the claim in the PERTEC offers . perma~nt day. Apply in person, Ove r .18 ~· ft. cap. 4 new pi;vate rm.,· local ref' 1 ad. employment, paid vacation Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th Venturi burnerti. All plbg 6n-9Ul9 P e. Do yourseU a favor &. <'X· art_£'r ~ months plus ~ week St., Costa ?tfeaa. incl. Yoo move. Eve aft six Qualified U t 1 This job will entail pro-plore this one. If you'd li ke paid tune orr at Christn1u, . . ~ HOUSEKEEPER. Oriental \\'ednesd.;,PJw';'';s~h. ~~~ duction shortage follow up to make S250 a v.·eck hn· 1..'0n1pany paid life, hospital, \\'1G salesc1rls & wig styll.!lt 151. pref., very meticulous, ex· thru 1 pm. and parts expediting. Should mediately, v.·i th on eye to surgical. medical and d<'n-Large wig Co. ~11 key F'OR $ALE: Gas 1-1oelding per. Corona de.I Mar be familiar with electronics ntuch more In the rutur£', tal benefits, E.xc:ell<'nl v.'Ork· Copropl.e. Cal 966-4455 Ask for unit . all ne11·. Never used. V•ria,n Oat• Machines 675-0281 2975 Harbor Blvd. Pr o d u c l ion Con t.rol. I'd like to talk to )'Oll. If ing N?nditions and growth =~"~"~"c-,,,-,.-,'7",..---,-Cutting torch, 5 ti(JI!, etc. HOUSEKEEPER, 5 d8)'!I Colla ltleu. i\.linimum 1 year experil'nce your qualifications malch pal('tltial. \YOMAN. 21 to 50 to care for Ftnt $100. takes 558-5626. Irvine week, Middle age, 50me 714: 54!r3282 in production expediting· our requirements, this could • infant, In our home. Must be Aak tor fttr. ?.1iller. cooking, $100 .l£)c, (living Equal Opportunity Employer dispatching required. Apply be the earec.r you'v£' ~n SR TEST local l.:u.'"llna Beach resl· AUTOP.tATIC Garage Door 2722 Michelson ·Dr. 833-2400, ... 336 Equal Oppor. E.'mployer near Linda Isle) 2 ad!Ur , t<.tl\TURE lady to sit 3 chU· or suPbmElt "R '"TmeE toC; Jookln~ for. .• 1 dent. Salary open, Local Opener . Finest Brand. 673-5436 dren. Tues •• 'ThW'S.10.S:30. rntervie\\' dflppoint.zicn~ .. 1().4 TECHNICIAN refs .. 49-J...600j R<'~ $200. Special $129. $1 .00 hr. Olvn car. 545-4197. Pi\!, "·el'k 11ys. S•.,,..:11,.... Installed, 5 yr. gua r . INSURANCE SALES MEDICAL A""'""'· EKG. BUSINESS SYSTEMS SALESGIRLS 893-:<;n !NJ, venlpuncture, assist 17112 Armstrong Avt?nue E:-.per. f/tin1e for hi~h I ]!"'-I ESTATE SALE f S TABLIS~EtJ ... janitorial No exp nee., earn while you ,company ".ants good ni11.n )earn, part time, eves &: 1for full hmc permanent wknds full time when quall· ,employment. Experienced tied ' 1procterred, but not eseential. · G Will traln rlght man. Call F~~~~l8J4 roup . ~ EXEC SECRETARY _,,..... "¥-• 1f.>JllJ 6.ileng\ng Jmtt:ion f 0 T doctor. Sa1&1·y open, nppl)' Santa Ane, C81if. fashion co nt e 111 p o r a 1· y (THIS IS A llwe,_.. ;;, Unusual furniture. oriental in person 9-12 a.m, 400 Irvine Industrial Complex 11on1ens shop. Good op· CHALLENGING & . . rug, relrig. P.1ust sell. Newport Center Dr., Suite An eq1.1E1l opportunil )' pol'lunity. Call 5~7-773.1. INTERESTING JOB) 5:!2-3970ol·673-9582 411, Npt Sch employer m·f fil:CRE'TARY!Girl Friday. \\'IU. test, calibrate. trouble Antiques • IOO TRUNDLE bed, near ne1\.' r.1EDJCAL office in Hunt. Progr ammer An•lyt is J>!'YChologist: oftl re!cllnic. shoot and repair computer. $40. Range top I.: hood $20. Beh. Back office girl. Write 1'\Jlt responsibility for D.P. in Self·sta rte:r, o"'n trnnsporta· out1ru1 n1icro film systcn1s. ----------1 liand lawn mower $6. CIM11ilied Ad No. 889 Daily a rapidly gl"O\\'ing company. lion. HB. E. LB 962-3343 Backgro\llld In digital d r· SCRAM LETS 646-5417. Pilot P.O. eox l560 Costa Includes machine operator. --s eC_R_ET ARY cultry (prer~.bl)' Trl. in· • I :IN=o"IAN07.-,,.,..,.-,-,,JY,,-..,d,,-isp1,_,..,,-,.. ?<.les.a. Calif. 92626. program maintenance, & de· r.fajor NB firm 11 c e k ~ regrutl'd t·1rcmtsl, polV('r by Navajo ~ at the •• '!EN 21 _ needed in velopment in time sharing 1 1 5 supplies, CRT deftection cir· ANSWERS ~-Cotmty Fair at res· " ......, rnvironm<'nl . Cobol/1'~ortran secretary \.\" m n. yrs. ex· cuits, CltT control l"ircuits ..,,_•"' HB!FV for LA Tlnies auto per. to \\'Ork in executive of· nvation prices. RENT 1;0 OWN TV'S & STEREO $10 No Credit Check•No "oepottc tree Delivery . Free Repair l\lonthly Rentals Available Open E VH. 54' 4444 A PANASONIC llert!O tape recordl'r with automatic reverse. Uses AmllU 71,i l"ffis and tapes, Includes 3 speeds. 2 •terto speakeni, headphones, 15 pre·recorded tapes and blank l'ffls -all equipment Is brand new. Asking $250. ( 714) 8t6-6f94. * Summar Spacial * Rebullt-P lctura Tulle $17.~21'' or 25'' Cohir * 2 YEAR \\' ARRANTY InstallatiorJ Avallable Rk'e'K Tr:leviskln ~rv!ce !nrmerly P.lr.!!I North nlt r I Bick S. of Beker 546-6002 open 9-5 (6 day&) RCA, Zenl!h & Sylvania con· i;ole k component •~ drastlcal.ly reduced to clear. ABC Color TV, 19046 Br•~ khun~I. Huntington Beacfi; 96&-3329 ADP.flRAl 24" color TV . 1n~tnt play. UHF-VllF en~!. SlSO. 111us1 see to appr. 640-871l6 $90. Color TV anlenna, uaed 2 ""' $30. • SU-8109 * young personable secretary lllYIN£ PERSQNNB. with bookkeeping ex+ SERY1CE5-l"C~V'V perlence. GOod shorthand & -"""""f\.. a typing skills. Legal ex· Alter S PM By Appointment perlence desiiable but not Accotmtant·Degree to S15K required. bondable. Salary Control Ellgr. BSEE to Sl2K wide open. Call 835-6079 Sec/lite s:hrthnd to $62.;i route. 3 AI\f-6AM. Earn PIO experience. Send resume in· Ii~. Individual S<'lected and servo circuits helplul. \Vf"<lk<'n-Stoic -r.tound -SEARS de.luxe wuher and + per mo. Need dependable eluding salary, histt1ry & Tl'-mu~I have th<' ability to 2 f('ars ronnal training plus Temper -S'MJCK dryer $125 1'Ullt corner car. 847-8979 quirements to: J. Guthrie:. relate eUectively v.·ilh All l-5 years experience. Overheard In a hospital studio bed unit with table 1 li10DELS needed, will lnin. h~~~· c::1c~rson Rd., levels of personnel. Top TEST lobby: "His doctor i.!I an acu· ~"°c.=·~-'='~'~'"'=·--~--FrM l8 Yeu If' part time e~s. call 539--64911 ' · · skills required. Salary coni· puncture specialist. In other Pvr Pty 1 sell .-i ... aft 6pm REAL ESTATE mensurate \\'ith £'xper l£'n<'e. \\'OI"ds, he'll be S11JCK here." lllWI o.,.. ~;;;~-~~~-~~~! • EXPERIENCED . Contract bckgrnd. F·urn.Olst. AUTOMOTIVE CASHIER Ind/Comm Loan Proc $850 Exec. Secretary to $800 Sec'y to Controller to $750 SALES Xlnt company benefits. TECHNICIAN PiNl!SSO, Dali, ?\Ioli, Neiman TAKING applications for £'X· Send a complete rcsunte ivith * \\'ESTERN PAINTINGS, and other graphics. DeaJen perienced molderg .':: ex· FREE LICENSE salary roqulrrm<"nts & typ-bought and sold at la50 So. 1v~lcom('. ~ 3 Lines, 2 Tlm.1, $2.00 P<"rienced ca.rpcnters. Apply TRAINING lng & i;hnnd skills. REQUIRES .minimum of ~lllC: Cnasl HI.\')', Laguna. Bea.eh. COIN·OJ'('rated Bar PooJ tbl, Payroll·Constr to $150+ NEWPORT DATSUN Sec'y/RE Legal to $65ll in person 19131 Deere, SA \Vril<' Classifir.d Ad No. R9J yca1· ex~r1ence performing ANTIQUE settff c a r v e cl lik<' nu, J'h by 7. $350. 1\11~. ERICSON YACHTS r ree: P\acentent Servit"'<'. Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo.x JjOO f II n c t 1 on t cs t and \.\'ood fra1ne, l.ieau!iful fab-tbls chrs, ciJt. urns. nu ven· 1',REr: F'IU. DIP.T l.AGUNA 1111.LS Sec'y!Prop Mgmt to $600 ~000 Wrt c:mchH1z· ReceptGen'J Ofc to $550 ... ·-1 f°L"t'C Training Progranl. Costa J\legn, Cnllf. 92626 11.'0~IJlc~hooting or cl<'Clronir rir. 673-1616 ding l\lach. $10, 548--8121. _.._ 1-~arn \11\il<' you learn. Al d1g11al eq I t e 586-l7!n e I ~~~~-~~~ F"REE -l rlark Calico kj1.l lcn and yr. old n101hcr l Caliro. Laguna, 497·196 1. I BEAUT~ ait<>-rcd n111.Jr blJ<:I ca1. l><'~111tely n('('(ls Jov. tng ho1nt", 562·7•196 aft 6 p.m. Ca.11 ~ ~I~ Ste"clc Scc/Rccept to $600 NEWPORTER INN Sloan ITI4 l 832·5440. SECRETARY u pmen. Appliancet Fast gl'OY.'ing fir1n in lr1•111C" CUSTOMER 80'2 RAGGEDY ANN 'N 1\NDY'S -'-'--------"-' :> ft . $16: 20 inches, $6. • Jo".C. Bkpr/Constr. $800 Needs r.1iddle aged or older EXP ER 1 E NCE D a pt. Copy Typist $400 niale gardener for perm. manager, 1~ Coate Mesa I-~lle & ?>fall a erks $360 position. No phone calls , units, pleasant ·location. Girl Friday to $600 please. Apply In person. A11k 646-8059. 'J'yplst Legal/RE to $750 for Clay Ellis ( h e a d R.l::. sales opportunily Cn1"t'cr night, 7:30 p.n1 ., Tuesday, July 17 . .lfi:il E. l7lh. S.A. 547~51. VllleN EXPERlENCED v.•altress & Inventory Cntrl Chic $450+ gardener) ll07 Jatnborec cook wanted. Nlghl'I. 506 \V. Various P·T jobs to $3.00 hr. Rd., N.B. Rulty, Inc Balboa, Newport Beach.. CALI.. TRISJI HOPKINS R.E. SALESMEN Fire & C•tualty Int. 481l~~~\~~~~~fot NRN~, LVNa & Aldea \~not work in the hottest M1tture, y.'Oman, e~ Suite 224 642.1470 • ~chtfoun~ainn ~!1~e~·.' ~ . 5 days, 9-5 PM. .-V<? y m 4f' 1111 Create your own us train '"'Ou! Call P hil FORELADY ~ . ~ . -, JANITOR, lite maintenance, work week! l\lei"IJamee. VI LL AGE Sportswear mf.g. NB. Salary f/tlme. Over 2l. Apply In REAL ESTATE, 963-4567 open· steady. 642--3472. person Huntington Beach REAL ESTAT1'. SALES ruu. time CaJil. llcenttd Convalescent Hospital, 188ll Hosplt•I St•ff Relief • • ' SUCCES.S .CA REER RN In lalte pediatric group. Florida St., H.B 8.47-3315. Allov.·~ You To Work The Ne1v or cxperien~. Join the Many benefits:. 64&-0543. JACKili'S Exclusive Legat Days&. Shilts You Prefer \Vorld's largest and fastest t<.trs. Austen. -Pl1tcen1ent Agency needs A Variety Of "5!ignmenu growing resale organization FU .. ~ ...... Office Girl, to LEGAL SECRETARIES & Keep You Current w/NC\\' with a network of ovtr 300 ......, ,.... offices and becomt' n lake ne orders. type. & TR A IN EE S f o r Concepts &: Tec.•hnlqu~. No member ol our l\ltJJlonalre rnc. Call ~tr. Reynolds, PERJ\fi\NENT & .TEM· l ees or rebatel\ Gd. P3Y. Club. r.tulU-mlllion dollttr 642-7391 tor Interview bet 8 PORARY positk11l!!.. Come Hontcmakera-Upj(lhn advcrli~ing program. rree & 5. in It. !IC(' w ! 610 Ne\\'PC)rl i::uarantced lipensing srhool. * GARDENER * Ctr. DT ... Ne_wport Beach. 180;1 No. Bl'Olldwey, S.A. Excell<>-nt salea trainin1. •· Bo <7t4J 6'4-Ta50 547"'611 \Vhat ls !'Ollr ll!'cnsc 1~-ort11 -your own 11 ESMAN coinplcx needs self·startl'r 11·ho can nll.I kl' ud· SERVICE 1ninlslrative decisions. Sal· ru-y to $700. Call Gloria Gray,-· Co~••I Poe. TECHNICIAN sonncl Agency, 2790 Harlxlr Blvd., Cl\1. ~;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l11rE expnnsion of the pro- duct !1Upport dcpartmcn! ha11 f"T't"ated opmmgll for tcl"hnieians to p e r f o r m diognc111is and l"f'pair of data proceslllng systems a n d J:ub.syslcms .. MOOem l'.!quip- ment and !acilitics as well "' rompany paid lx>n<?fits a11·ait qualilied applicant!i. Ir you arr interrt;ted in a po.ctition lhiil off<'rs grO\\•th and dlvenoity <ind have 1 lo 2 year5 rli1.,ri1a.I l"Xporicnce please apply. SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK Spri"l!d•I• & Edl"ll•r Branch PART TIME \ •~Tellers • Credit Checkers Engineering TECHNICIAN 1''311 or p/tilnc In your JUNIOR SAL : !!!!~~~!"""'""."'~'!!"•I to you? €heck our month!) own •n:a. llltih 11\C!Omf?, Earn $~ per week NURSES Aide -orderly. Exp honus pl'OS(ranl whl{'h m<'l'ln! PLEASE CALL 1~1~fEDIA1'E openln(l'. for Guar•nteed Cuitomera "'orking after 1ehool and not nee. openings on days SSS 10 you! Please call 846•3321 tt'chnlclan \\'ith digital in· C h Do on Saturdays getting new 3-U, f\;t\dnlght 11-7, Good Virginia Jones 8354811. tcrgr11ted circuit hl'la r rl No as wn cualomen for the Dall,v benents, make appllcatlon.s RED CARPET h n ck IZ r ound . Pcrrnrrn E8h1 Now, P~ Later Pilot. Th.ls ls not a paper at 1445 Superior AW!, N.B. RHltora f..q11al Opportunity E1nploy<'t' Ul'l'•,t-hoorrllncr 11nd con1· AL 534-7117 roU!e a:nd dlx'I not Include , ,.::642-'=2;,;4:;:10'=-~=~--,.-., Pontnt-lcv('\ troubll!•hoo1in1: dcllver1et or collecting. 1 NunsE·s AIDES nt.'Cded, REAL ESTATE nnri cht-ck out mn1put~r GELCOATERS, exper , $3.00 \\'ehavecptnJna'llnSoulh· La(una Beach nur1ln1 SALES MANAGER e Secret•rie1 l""'rlphcral cquip n\en t . per hour & up. All three west c.o.ta Mesa and South homr., <'Oil .J94-80'Tl for ReWc Ofliee needs manager e T ypi1t1 l)ul!ea lncludro lab l c~ttng or ·~~Z:Crcrcor Yacht Corp. Huntlnaton ~h only.1 ,;d~.,.:;::,"~·~· ~~--~"""'"" \vlth 2 yenrs of Real F.Ata1c • PBX Oper•to rs ~~f1n~~~ P~ttol~~~m~~~ l~,;1!!63l~!;Pl~a~c<~n~llA~.C:""'='~l=_,l;lilAiipplilirylioow"""!;;968-964;;;;;;;;;!iL;;;;•I N\JRSES Aida . all ahlfts. 1'.!Xperience. N«WpOrt Beach • Keypunch IR!lon. Should hl\"t' ,,-orklnq Of S. $SOO Beverly Manor Con v fln'(I. Expandln; compa.ny. e Bookkffper1· knuwlcdi:re of TTL-D T t.. Generel c rv. KEYPUNCH 1~~11:1tal, Caplstnno Beach. Exall<'nt opportunity for VOLT loalc clrcull in uddition 10 Bc1c:h af't!a. Here It that 111· DAY SHIFT ~T!G. profH..OOnal growth. Apply lnitant P ersonnel ll"Jl('ral l'lectronk-s. R~· lie jewel ot a Job. Loads of NURSTh'C in confidt"nct. Send f'Cl!Untl' quirt'! at l('ast 2 )'ean; ol variety bu1 not too dtmand· 6 l\1o's actua.I 1,'0rk l!)lper. LVN f'OR RE.LIEF 10 Cla"ltled ad no. 638, c o TrmP'Jrnry St>n•11·e 1ppl.ic11blc l'XJ)Crif'nt"<' 11. n d Ina:. They \\-Ill train you for on keypunch, kC)'lape or key :;&..306l Dally Pilot, ~. O. Box ).560. 384' Cnm pu~ Dr., Suite 106 t"o ye11rs C(tucal i()ni.; "'""· back up on PBX. YftUk 1v.•1111 diac dcv1ce. 2 o ••icE GIRLS Cot ta ~re.a, Calif. 9262$. Nc..-'f'OM Bcoa1;h SJi..4741 'h"'l•nh1:'1_ .. ~1,._1c~nrl bf•yond type a bit. keep trac o o • Apply In The r r R E SALESMA t:qunl Oppor. Employer .u""' lice ~upplle1, e1c. \\<"ork In Per"IOTlllt'.I DcpA.rtmenl N I EDl&O • • 'N l ~'!!:"--......... ,..,..,..1 Apply Or Conla,·t lavtly officta. G re at Mond•u,f'r\, 9 ant·12 Noon It.': di h lnv(!:!l:t\gate UK' ne\\' llflPf(l{tCh • SECRETARY -tun. T. Knlaht btncifils + b'tC memberf.hlp '" RadiO tee ne spate • lnl'IO'l'1l"tve markctina J F 1114) 5¥).$340 to beautHul c:ountry club -PACIFIC MUTUAL J\tu1t be , able to drive !00hnlquct1 .of THE CoJ\t.· Ing, some shorthand. you pa,y onJy monthly ttue1. 700 Ne\\'port Center Or. Apply In Pt!t'90n LE'RY Of' HO~tES . .\"ou run errands •. Two open· PERT EC Aft6 l ¥tar. >"OU are en· NC\\'port Beacti YILLOW CAI CO. v.·111 bl'! a1t1d )'0!1 did: c~u ings-(1) 8:30 to 5:301 5 titled to• sood hulthy dl•!!I!'..-."'!"---~-"'!!... 1..16 E. \Ith, Colla Mtsa 963·5611 for a~ntment day$ a "'k. (2) 8 :30 to fJUSINo ESS S''ST1':'-IS -··ton a new l\ome, Com· LADll.-;S, lo \.\'Ork part lime Ol'f'ICE CLEANING LI --• I ·-• -· , I TH "' 1..-tn.'>\.·u or lln CCn1n:u \l'C !2•.30, 5 da~S B week. 17112 Armltl'O""' A\'f!nuc P'"Y rtlmburlel our rce.. on nt1\\ progrn.m or I'.. ·u 1rn· ·"' Aleo tee-iQbl. Abtgn!I Abbot ORUCOlST. 1'1c:icible v.wk· P/tJme CVH. Newport Bet;cti, _w.,.•c...~'".c•~~=---CALL 963-4 7. Slllnts AM. 011\f. Pl!rlOtlnel AatflQ'. 230 w, tng; hdura. Mutt have U5(! ot $3.00 per hr. Exp. over 21 RN• A LVNs ---------·! Irvine Industrial Complex Wamer Suite 209, S.A. car. Preftr ap 21-«l. c.n only, Prt.'fer co up I e •. fUU. le PART T1l-IE ""ou'll 1,~ 11 In ~ ••• 1.lled 11n equal op Po r t u n It Y '!i.'i7..fll2i 963-34:$2 for tntervlow •PE!:. 213: 927-0115. • ~1966 .L P"' '--f"mpfoyer I • ' KENl\IORE e u tom at I c Designer n1od<'l11. 642--6889. 1\·ashcr & go.~ dryer, both Sll1\G cnrpe1 roll11, roll ends, for $80. l\laytag automatic fro1n S2.99 a vard also rem· washer $65. Guarant<'Cd & nnnts. 642-7101 a~/eVe. ~~-Sl;l~li\'ery. s.&&-867? or I JIOT llOUSE l0xl5 redv.·ood · I & jllllll..'I. Henter, equip. lncld I 1B CU f"t. Coldspot Rcfrig., $._100. 673-1658 rroin rrtt. Xlnt Cond. . Moving -Need srnall<'r IRVTNE Coast q>untry Oub 'iiiiiiiiiiiii Refrig. Will trade or sell. Golf mei:nbenh1p lor sale. • 64.Z-Mll or 557-9678 SIOOO. Ph. ~~. 154 t'l'tlGJOAlRE -Le deluxe BABY CRADLE avocado. Xlnt. cond. CouOh Ul. \Vhite 642-5514 malu.•11 into bed. blue/gold BEAUT11'lJL ni:'W IK!lid Oftk Amer. F.ag1e pattern, v/g lnm ln11ll'd gtimr table lops. ron<I. ~·871).1 $50. Call ~82. FREIGl-IT O~ma.i;e Sol<" on GIRLS l"lolhc~. 10-12·14 like new llotpolnt I< \\'h\rlpool nl'Vo·, see to 3pprt"Ci&te Vt'ry f'<'frlg I wa!ihers I drye!"'ll, l'l'all'>Mhle. 846-5467. 545-0i80. Miscellaneous FREE l?ickup-Rc.>frig., any Wanted 1'20 appUanct.•, runnlni: .or not. 1 ----------- Any scr1tp mernl. 675--525R W a nted Orlent•I ~RU""I 11nytln1e. • Rintw'-.-,.h-.-,.-/'"D~r-y-or-1-prl ply net"d:. sevcr11I u11ed nws. 644-6326, 6T."r8773. $2. \\'k. J-"u.11 nialnt. \\I A:i"IJTF.IJ 10 buy, lik(' J'l<'I\' * 639-1202 * furniture & lamps, nice ~ REC 0 ND. APPLIANCES reasont1hlc 644-4687 Dl'llvcred -guar. Dunlap·.~ TOOLS WANTED 181:1 Newport, Cl\! S.18-7790 - Bulldtng: Meter i•lt 806 Picture frnming &. eqUl!)-ment. 6'73·3340. • Surplu1 .BuUdlng Mu1lca l ln1trument112'2 ~IATERlAl • J(fA)'11 Of New 1T£~1S! Doors, lun1beT, ply. \\~. alum shti!tini, mold· Ing, wlndow1 etc. BUILDERS SURPLUS UJ6 So. P.!aln St ., S.A. 1.ton thru Sat 10·3 i1.C: S48·10l2 Furniture 110 * SOfA & l..OVESEAT * nM.~r uacd. both for $160. Ue unlly home, ~7!110. JUNrOn-fk:d.S20-:-;·1lh -~e11 & ma11rcs1. 61+-4687. Garege S1 1e 112 2 ~JQUE ~thtu~ $43. ta. J antique h1'1hroom sink, \'ertlcal 11land $-IO., pr. an· llque braM dOOr lllltldlt1, $73. Jtx24 . carptt, Wear E\'t'r, $m. Q.1;,.25n ' Y A..\lAl-lA U strinr \.\"ilh ca1'1!', perlt"Ct roond, $90. C•ll after 5, 536-9618. \VANTED -C\lltar teae~r for IN!W:'n~ in my hon1e ont'C n \lo'etkl j.10-1006 (Nancy! Office F u rnlt ur•/ Equip. 124 IB;\1 F;)(ttu!lve mod<'l C lac· tory rebullt carbon rihbon never uJCd . Prl. Pty. WA). Ml,.,W)t EXEC:=,-.-"~' -<~ ... -.~$,~)I'S: Sec ekt11 s• ·2-1. Dtsks $20!90. Pierce Ent, 867 W 19 cri.1 64i..3o105. Planot/Or~1 826 HO\VARD Baby Grand. Xlnl lrond. 5ao11Jce st n.;o, ~ all 5 Or wktnds. e PUPPY WORLD e JOO 1'11XLO PUl"'S. Open F.\-e~. lrl!h !\e tt cr, DoOOMMn. Collkos S 5 O, I llti$kie, Bull Te1Tl1•r, T·Cup• Pood1r, (.,,ihuahua, t.ab .. Bo~rr. Cockupoo. S\VAP Shephrrd~ for 77 Stud &rv mo11t breeds. ;,.11-;:mr . AKC SILKY TERR IE R PL'PS Champ rllre<I. $130 To Sf Th Call : R-12--0076 AJo'CllAN Pups 1\KC. Xlnt • Prdign.'t·. l\1usl M'I' thi:se Jw11uflell, 1rnns n v a I l • 1.'t7-4Z.l0 \Vt:IM.ARANER G f' r n1 an Short Hair, 1n11le, nil brown, 9 mos. All ~hots. Uc'd. !'<o'eeds good home, I0\18 children. $25. Call ~~29. HELP! I need a home. 7 mo old male! m l xturl'l , Se.moyl'd I Ct>nnan •hrP. hPrd, $23. S42·973t BASSE.Tr PUPii. ,\ K C , ln•colot' Ir while.fan. $7l. ('V,, Pvt parly. 8.16-9-tW. ,\KC t;nsrtl!ih Pointer pups, Champ. 11lred. \Vhelped ?t1q 2lth. Call im.-8613. • • AFGllAN rVPS, pro- \'en 1how quollty, ~f)' rta.90nablt, 64S..223.\. fRrSJt Stlttr Pup, female, Al<C, 7G Champ prd., •hots. \\Wilted, niua1 se ll. 96&-2971 . DAOISllUNDS. mhtlalutt. Al<C. 1holl,, ttd; black & tan. 538-6111 • ' '1 -·-.,..,, "''' 9, 1973 11 --1~1--l~I --l~I -- 1;;.;;=.. ____ _:154:. -· Poww 906 -· Spood & Sid 911 Trel~, Ulllly HI A-. ..... "?' 9711 A-.,...,..,_ 9711 A-..... ,, ... SllEOOft AKC G e r m an MOTORCYQZ S ;Ji traUeT -----'----'--_;,.;,.:::: FORD ....,_, lleauL heollll)' C!.AS9C boat 1956 C.ntW')' 17 FT. lnbo<rd old boat 400 sm TOP DATSUN ' PANTERA YOLVO --Rare ....... -... 1811 Runabout, °"""""" Inch Oldo •notne. $1100 or 200 n ...... C.)L • DOLLAR ' , _____ .;;..;.;... __ 1.-......;......;;..:.;,.:;.;.;:;..;.;... ____ .;;..,;;;.;;;.;..;;:,___ ... >'Al"' ... E W•~ ·!-+.·H. 1 _ 52T-493l , ~1 ma boa any, nu best off•r. 962-9829. a .__..... ·I' •7f ·..__n '" nun.i~ -.·-•"'!'. Norw 156 u""°'~""· 6 ¢J!ll»der ....,., ~u1w .,...,.., -Ml · PAID ..,.._ '71 PANTERA THINI( Pi o. 1 owner, """'" 1 compl«dyrobuitt nu canvat . lnu'll • eng. VI, aood bJb' ' sking · llil l968-383 motor w/h! r1a ' W le Inter. Xlnt 2nd car tor TA!LY Ho furn., olfen ~· l2.000. T•w•1•*rll "•pdH"!'l.,..,,n111.";;· IMMIDIATELY <Spd ~ 75000RICJINALMILES ECONOMY 1urflrc wagon. IU,O. llnett In hunler &. Jumper THE CLASSIC BAY 80 T . 548-Ul37 : , , -R AU: · "'~YE Exc•llont Condition 644-6312 after 5 pm =I' <t~ ~k~ 28' double-ended Na: y VW Ena tttlli $WJ T J)81'tl. • "" ~ Fully LN ded 1970 LTD Country Squife. ll>dJre. we have beaut. new whale boat. Dependable Com-, Sor./Rlnt'tll Eog'o • 8a!<. BUT 6' Pata FOREIGN ' lfLL: MAXEY Coll Aft9r 6100 P.M. WHILE WE HAYE 40 Xblt cood. A/C, P/S, Pill. 12x'I2 bole ala1l1. Visit us at Gra.ymartne tight F~ ~· AutomotJv.!', '551~ . CAD$'·. 631-3471 :.£~!~ at whW ~ l"!l2 Newhope So. 0 r loboard ""'"'· R.,.dy f"' KING o The lloed. ea.._ ""f' TOYOTA NEW YOLYOS IN ~-wa,,,.r. Fouolalo Valley or )J<lUr "'"' cru1 ... 567-1126. 7', 8' A 9W inode!o. Stock •-, , W& ARE IN 1&lSI BEACH BL. 8<7-8555 PORSCHE • '67 FORD LTD, R&H, lllr, 2c~n::1~1nga, approx. 8 1:~~-~~ l~t h~fe~ :'m~':. aa~e.'!e aJ~: I ~~ Jf;;l. c;,s=~~~"/~D .....!'~IUNTI~S:!!N~SCTO~&~LEN!_;B~. E~SACl'!e_l!._J ,:;:55;-;::PO;::RSCH:;;:::;E:-:s-=::,-::-,er. ~a~k~~~."°4"!13-~ yn. old, $250 ea. One l'r'g. ~l extra!!. S 16 9 5. ~Jes, ~HarbOr, Costa · · ~ .FORl!lG~ ~RS A Xlnt cond, new Konl &hocks. • STOCK eve &: .,.,·knd1. ' Al>oY Geidl"" s yn 181! ~,m1. '"· • TOP DOLLAR-PAID DATSUNS 65.sc eng, !ale model tra•m •ro FORD Galaxie 500.' HI . gQOd dtspogltion, 'weli 17' flBERGLASS 110. V-8, 1972 AIR cond. 11el con-llec .... t'--1 r OI(' C · axle , $3500 firm . ·il>tM Lmu·· milea.Ke, sell cheap. ~u st.arted. good p I ea• u re trir, eon\'i!rt top, tarp, ski Awning, a.Jr cond, toilet. VehlclM 1 956 ' OR NOTI HE W -DEMOS 1973 114-867-21B6 See at 2'll9 -valves, brakes, good corid. hone, good polential show equlp.:-sharp. S 2 o o o , $1;150. Maey extnu. See at; Call or come In to tce us. SJ O's Vermont St.. Anaheim. YOLUft S14JO. 548-S852. horse. $800. Alto 8 yr old &t·\.-OUl. H u n t In ft ton-B)'-n,e.&,a. '71 YW ' NEWPORT PK:kup PORSCHE '72 -914, auto, tV '68 FORD Gnlaxie 500 4 dr TAorobred J11mpcr, iood in 17. 011I'BRD w/65 lJP Mere. Space 123 114) 531-8316 W '--'la IMPOm All Mod ~~s air, 16,IDI ml. Pri Pty, $4500 hrdtp, Air, p/s, d I 1 c. the fla! -xlnt jr. horse Nu bottom paint, nu OOYM". '11 % T . aiev. 'I'nJck + .. ,,... e ColoD to or best otfcr1 •• 966:::::..::H:::arc:bo::r.c • ..::C::.:.>:ol._6::46e:·:::9303oo brakes, New tires. $83). 16.l Hand.a. TALLY •IO Trlr w/nu paint, litC'I & 11%' Weeliendtt, &lps S, c 3100 W. Cout: Hwy., N.B. Choate f'rom. ~2597 -.96>-;:.;:3560~.=~~'""'°'"'°°'~ Fanns,, l'l262 New h 0 Pe • wiring. $1500. 6'1;;)-5289. booth &: Jacki incl'd, Priv cunper '42.... 'S9 PORSCHE 356.A, 1600 Auto., Used 990 1973 GRAND Torino Wagm, Ii'oun~tn Valley~ 979-9475. 15• PkBLGS nsh/skl boat. pty, 968-9007. complete with. tent (9TTDUD) AutOI Import& 970 sUper engine. Good shape! --loaded, rack &: gauges, 7700 C'Hll.D S Eng. ~ horse, All access. ibetud. radio. FORD Courier '72 low miles $2"9 ;:J:·.:;::!.' ..::.:;:i:;:;;..:;;;:...._:..:.; Best oUer. fil 528-7313 BUICK miles. $399'5 841-7627 Sorrel Mare, 15 hands, Botlom pa!nl lilt treller Exoellent rubbor _Gem top llLL MAXEY ALFA ROMEO •ro PORSCHE 911T. Sllwr. __ ..;:_;.;..;;.,;.; ___ 1971 TORINO 2 dr, air conil. :;r.'.,r,J'•posUloo, muat 1100. Eve• 6~. . cam~ Cail aner 5 • RAT Mago. Ap....,...... 43M. '69 luicli Electro Good oood. $1500. I APPY. ~-1••-w/pa-•--1~, Soll 909 p:m. . TQY,OTA '69 .Aa&..'Romeo ____ _;,:, ___ 11mmacui.te! 557,..... 225 C C , 008-<IU I s.n.t 5 ~~. 16 ,,,;-..;-,,_ New .......... ........,. 11881 BEACH SL.. S<l-1!555 ..,... •n FIA ·ro .PORSCHE s.or1o. 911T. ustom · -. '63 FORD Country sqwn,. ' yn. · '· LIKE NEW fl.campr, truck reblt from • HUNTINGTON BEACH 1750 BERLINA T 850 Lo mi am/fm meg whls Air ~· ,.-R...,nl val"" Job. l2'0 °' good Jumper. $450. w/tack. ~ u ·--~7 9117 , (-·nMUI K~ '494 2906 ' ' ......uu, Power Wln<trws, '--t ott·•. ·-•137 aft 6. ' 830-4737 21 fT. CLIPPER MARINE •"-p. -. ~ . Trudu • 962 --~ Sf'IDER ~· -. 6 way po''"' "''· tilt ....,._ -~ ~ SPtRITED pinto .,...lding, sailboat, Full set of sails, 8' CAMPERS, """!!.!!,. Ice $2299 200 . '63 S, New clutch, paint, ing wheel, cruise control, 'good looking, !IOllOO~· Rides including aux. power, Ute box, prop. atove, ~loffts '71 lnternatiollal BILL MAXEY 5 miles, Almost brand tires, etc. Must sell thlfl AM/FM Stereo, vinyt roof, GREMLIN westem &: English, jumpa jackets, etc. Llka new tan-3227 Broad N.B. 51&-Sl.ll • new, warranty transferable, week, Make offer. 494-5834 Excell:ent cond. (XJZ699). i--------- 4, .,.=.. l<Ao •n~" .. 6 dem ":heel trailer. This big C I Blk ~ TOYOTA wWte with black Interior '73 914 Po-~ I I $1995 ·~ GREMLIN 28 000 ·1 • ......,. '"°*>.;1JIJ &,,,er . I' 1 ~.. . 1 ye "' "• . . $2495 ,._,,c, ow 1n , '" , , nu es, THOROBRED, w I n n er, itt e .,.,..t I$ present y Scooters 925 4 wheel Ori Auto Trans, 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 Sliver. xlnt cond., sm. or $100 l !di 7 16 H .... docked at a sl!p, s-:> no l2,000 mil••, trail bl·-r , * &IZ..7521 * take over 11ymnt1 on OAC Ir: ~ ng,. yn, -. sou1ou, proble1n there J\1JJST SELL .. IU.<: HUNTI}l{GTON BEACH SO CAL be t "15 ~ .... $800. 541)-31'9. pl•ase -~-·0017873 e BICYCLE SALE e tire• w;th•Warn Hobs IMW TOYOTA • ' Ba'""'1 °, a!"~' , ' · .. ... ..... """ ...... . NEVI 10 SPEED ITALIAN $3195 1 NAT BK ilBM ·~~ * H·28 KE'fCll·wood '56, BICYCLES $59.95. Bcaoh St new Albin diese l '71. Dana Bicycles, 806 £. Balboa LEASE A 1973 171 TOYOTA MARK II LEASING I -.., ][ ... JR ) Pt. berth, owner. 54:'r-2311:' Blvd.. 675-7282. Authorized BAVARIA 4 01' Sedan, Auto Trans, Air 2001 MichelllOn Dr. IJll-W 1qii!fment 1'-STAN Miller Sabot, good llISHIKI dealer. Cond. Irvine rond, No. 5960, Nati.I champ Kawauki Thrff GOOD 3100 W. Coast Hwy .• N.B. 171 TOYOTA MARK II (714) 833-8620 (213> ,9244413 JEEP '65 JEEP \\'agoneu-. Rblt eng. & trans, 4 wh1 drtve, , clean, air cond, $1800. ~ O>evron, "'°· 494-0:505 350 '71 < ooo n 1 SELECTION OF ---642-"9405-'-'---1 Cpe &1at11 General • 900 14' HOBIE CAT a~an. ;l.-tarlc ~ f;..,.1m ~r: 171 TOYOTA MARK II '67 BUICK Special. "Blue. iOO-l'DN WHALm 1970 w/traller. Gall &G-not .. ~ y 1 ) USED BMW1 1 HONDA cPe. 4 spd. i!:Y mil:;mRa~il:~i~:: '73 TOYOTA Land ~ Hdtp, all extru. 6,IDI ml, 497-1071 before 11 am. • 13, 33 1 •IP J-......:._ ::.... +· Call &lS-3467 557·7461. llilO W. Coe.at Hwy., N.B. '73 BAVA'RJA Demo '71 HON BILL MAXEY previow; oWner. Excellent ~·~· mu 31' PC ··-•• All good ..,.,. '72 XI02 DA 600 stick Mitt, __ ... 114 E -· St A tr'' '!ull ----1•-ra~~ ~oop. 1971 SUZUKI 185. ~-. '71 -l9 000 miles •= ·-~·· TOYOTA ~-. · ~·· " pc a •• :_._, .,;::;::·-H· • N~B. ails + Spinnaker. S3600. l,100 ml. Xlnt cond. ~~·;, 1971 FORD n .. --XLT. . ,.,.. = ' ' _... . ...........,,..., 14, CM. 548-0291 aft 5 pm. ~ • _., ~. · · ......,;;,;s. otter. 114HISO ~,. ~ % "" truck·~~ll\l ft. •69 ja;J KA...,.RMS p.Am.NN GHIA 18881 BEACH BL. 847-11555 CADILLAC LINCOLN r ' * 1964 LINCOLN * l Boah/Mlrine 12" FIBERGLASS anytime wknds. Amerigo fi:berKlasa and •'67 20) HUNTINGTON BEACH Equip. 904 ~~ "1th trailer. ·~,:o~.,;. ='~ ~ .,a;;:er;,W .. = CREVIER IMW GOING"'""'°""' •12 ~ -5 0 EL DORADOS 14 TO CHOOSE COUPES-CONVERTIBLES l8 HP Chrysler, fwd ~rev. CAL-25 •.. 1969~ hllll-no. UT'l P.P.'a fut and nllable. tained. Uke new .condttion Siles · Senliee ·Leasing Rotar.y Wag.· Vinyl top; gean with tank like new Sparkling oohd. Suprr clean. cond.,. mlllt etll 5.W-m9 and hluft be seert to .be ap. 208 W. ht<st., Santa Ana :t7oi-t Air. Xlnt. $3300. 1145. 642-2'118. • owner, 64H048. '68 TRI. 250 Trophy $.'JOO, Trt· ~000 miles. Will, ___ 13_15-".'-11-"7_1 --- loats, Power 906 VE1.un· ".::'1". M~••t ea,.· '1·1 'noUweed, ~ CUb. '70 Honda SL iKt. "nJ e PhoDe .54!M348 e · ORANGE' COUNTY'S MAZDA • DE YILLES .... ..,. .,,..,.. Yamaha 125 St. $250 each. ,69 OLDEST 19' Q.ASSJC 155 OMC Buick or best oUer. 58&-7017. 979-33TI/548-0567. FORD Van; w/windows, V-6 full top. Tri, fine cond '70 KAWASAKJ lOOrcc Trail 6 cylinder ~!ck, xln t gas G * Mozdo .'73 Rotory * $66 •MONTH New Toyotas In Stock Beat Price Increases! 31 TO CHOOSE COUPES SEDANS CONVERTIBLES l\Iany excellentcolors Choice ol interiors MERCURY I "12 MERCURY Mar qui i brougham. 2 Or., gold. Alt & all extras. $3,450. 6'5-807~ Sac $3500. 644-1784 Boats, ~ & Ski 911 Boss, xlnt oond, must se11. ml., 4",00Q m i, V.000 or bst ;:c.::;:: make otter, 5.36-0887 or ollr. 5J6...t)27, 36 MONTIIS OPEN LEASE Will accept trade.ins CALL MR. FRY 842-6666 21' CHARACTER BOAT 17' WEIMAN SKI BbAT -'65 FORD 88.y fevorite. Many xtras. . 842-7388. P.U. ~ .. T. V-8. , MUSTANG * m.1445 * Beautiful, Berkeley Jet, 327 * •n HONDA CB 175 * Auto. 38' high shell with SAJ..ES.SERVJC&LEASING Ote\'y with extrai, llkis, Reuonable otter. bunk and lhelves $11)(1. OVERSEAS DELIVERY Hunt., Beach l ln.:t (Cloth & leather) '30 TROJAN, TS. FB, "II life Jadre•" fylly -equ;pped Call J;l5..08"l9 all. 6'30PM. 830-6562. • -ROY CARVER, In· c. cont. Mad, many xtra1. and ready to go, Will sell '71 HODAKA 1008. Super rat '56 CHEV IS' van, '63 eng. UlllO Factory air conditioning Y Full POIVer _ Oloice of~ '66 l\fUST ANG, a i r • co --OJA Stereo AM/Fl\1 radio dltioned, 289-VS, 3 on the MAZDA $9,500. Ml-1Kt$ for balance due. ·549-2625. 1st Reed val 2 Runs good, tandem whls 234 E.11th St. P ons. ves,. paneled Ac lmlilated $111(1'. Colrta Meu..-SM-4444 Cnnse control floor, radio and heater; 1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303 Th.Ink opener Ir: more-carefully mAlnlained · 9415 SIZES 34-"8 ,,,, -ur .... ._ 11f,..-r ... Saunler our on sulfny rla)'!J In a sllmnilni; pa.'nt:nrlt or princes., drl'.'ss ~'1th sn111r1 1ideinteres1 tub de I a I I. Th<'y 're perfect for poly- rl!llrn. Printed P11tt(·rn !! •11 j . \Vomcn 's Si1.e1 34, 36, 38, 40, J2t 4,1. 46, ,.8, Size 36 (bust 40J takes · 2~i yards 00.lnch fabric. ' 8E\1r:MT1 ·PtVI': CIENTS for each pattern • add 25 Cflltl for each ))8Uttn for Air Mall and Specla.l Hardi· fn2 • otherwl1e lhlrd-clua delivery will lake three weelm or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILO.T, 44.2, Psttem Dept., 2l2 wnt Uth St., New York. N.Y. 10011. Print K.41'G. ADDllEM with ZJP, SIZE and ITYl..E HtJMBER. SEE MORE Q uick Fuhlons 1nd chOo&o one Item bee from' our nc.SU,,,_ Cala!ofl. All :.ft! Orab' 51'.lc. l!<STANT SEWING BOOK a!'W today, wear tomo11vw. SlJitSTANT FASHION BOOIC -Hundred1 o I carb, 552-7902 557-J305. ·~ YAMAHA 250 &: 360, dirt '69 l'ORD VS. Em Suptt bikes. both xlnt oond. Mtmt Van Cam P/U -~ .ell. 536--0612. ~ ... -...:;-. * •n KAWASAKI * 350 Big Horn. $500. V am 963 673-86l& FORD '72 EconoH V LEASE A '73 BAVARIA Demo • Serial •3132993' for $166 . .U per month OEL or buy for' $8,299. Bolt Mclaren, BMW, Inc. (714) ltN624 All in immaculate 1.."0ndition local Forld dealer. $795.l l'il.11 Bcekh Bl. 842-6666 '68 Toyota Largest selection in ME>-8018 after 6 p.m. Private BOB LONGPRE Corona Sedan Na:",;· ccJn1ac :;:,S!'ANG. Very ..,.,;;. MAZDA Auto $999045' A~o=~~R E~.~r· '! ~~ -SERVICE FIRST-llLL MAXEY COS!'A MESA 1st Sbm at the Santa Ana 54()..9100 Open Sunday '67 MUSTANG Faatback, 289, 1st Street al the TOYOTA • spd, wide tlres/mag11, "10 H.USKY 360-8 ·spd. Xlnt long wheel hue, be:; d: concbtkm. Lo price·oL$500. sprirp, ivory in color, sd. 673'1658. tine, .... 32,000 ml. ""' •73 BULTACO. 3i6 _.,. v .. 11tust be sold, oo ring ___ C~A_f'!_,RI __ _ $895. ml 1-, Q>otj , T°"" •l·<!Hl·8'5'<1i11. 1960 - _ Santa Ana Frwy. 1966 CADILLAC Cpe deVIlle. real clean. $1295. 673-BSn Santa Ana ~ 558-'1811 18881 BEACH BL. 847-SSM Xlpt ahape. $1,ISO. See at l968 MUSTANG HUNTINGTON BEACii 47th St "Balboa Blvd., NB. V ~--n-bi MERCEDES-BENZ c.11 att s Pm. 673-1m. ..,, ~..s:&'M"' • '67 IUG • '67 EL Dorado. v...,i 1Dp, 1 ---~~=--- • 50 USED $750. Must s.11 rull oower. "1' """"· aint1m OLD. SMOllLE ~ reblt eng, $2-400. NOW OWN THE MERCEDES 557· 1975 Sa!OI " Service F •Bu ous 1-· ON . DISPLAY '68 ELDORADO, all powt, OLDSMOBILE ~ L "" ,1.,0 TOYOTA Corona 4 dr cruloe amtrol. 59,000 ml, CAPRI Sq New Car auto, radio, vory ' 1 0 .,; 12650. 551-2305, -· GMC TRUCKS With 2,000 4 cyllnder or v..s -Tfad•ins mileage, immac. Ort g. '70 CAD. DeV!lle, Loaded, HONDA CARS I •not,,., w;., er w1-t Coml"I In Ewry Doy owner. Make oiler. 536-'666 Xlol oood. Besl ol!er. Eveo. UNIVERSITY OLDS I decor group,·aoa\e y.ritl. sun Ask Abo\rt Ou:r Unique '65 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER 641Hi8!3/811-8850 dlys. 2850 Harbor Blvd. Mea CAt Hamilton) 16tl\ St. rfO.llUD NB. l2GI. '63 BSA °'°"6, clean A: ONO. . depmdable, lllce new, Rick 'TI. FORD Chatuu, lfue A 6'1l-5607 or 542-1-'81. white, xlnt cond., all '~. Motor Homea 29,~ ml. $3100 or tiiest of· S '-/R fer. ~. o~ ent MO '68 DODGE VaJi, lluDs good. e SALllS e Needo' paint, llliO, 6f2.0'm • SERVICE • ::: DODGE. 23,000 ml'a. • DnlTAl$ • Maga. e..t otter · -M<1S1 lll.nl, .ell. 536-1757. :;: or~az:11 :i~ ~ Used Mercedes Lease ~/FM~~ ~ CAMARO Costa Mesa 54().9640 1 EXPLORER wheel radial tires bucket Pl•n• ---------OLDS '72 Cutlass, 2 dr, PB I OF DISCOUNT """' lo.Marl< 10 .... L' ORDER . YOURS House of ,_ TRIUMPH '69 CAMARO SS ""'"""'bl•. PS, air, bucl<ets, vmyl ... : I HUNTINGTON BEACH "B" Ignition .,..terns"""' NOW 6862 M .. .,.-. •• 644-73o!O or otter 6 pm. ,.MJn.,t,..oood=-;' °"13;,·000=· ""-"""'~II 18801 lleach Blvd. mileage, """" polots, ;,,. GUSTAFSON on ~:!'~~""' RES!'ORED TJl..3, Xlnt rw> 673-<124. •ro OLDS CUtlus s w/air, 11 HlJNTJNGTON BEACH 1talla easify, &u-5893 533-7250 ning Cobdition. leaving states, must aell, . Uncoln-Mercury 541>-13'6 CHEVROLET SIOOO or ""''otter. 962-81!;& i MOTOR HOMES A-w.-_ 961 Im> Bcoch at Warner JIM SLEMONS VOLKSWAGEN '69 OLDS 9 ..... wgn. l1lll6. ~ Apollo, Paceeetltr, Baron, WE BUY Hunlin(ton Beach IMPORTS '73 MONTE Carlo, gold, firm. -Needs small amount ~ Jamboree, Robinhood • IMPORTED AtrroS 142""'44 * {213) 592-55" M white vlnyl roof, swivel ,o"f""wo'='rk"."6-"44'-'8585='---·li We've got 'cm al BEST PRICES PAID( "Homo of tM Vlkl"fl" ERCEDES · ll;NZ '71 YW bucket seats, am/fm, air, , KENDON ' Doon Lewts l-'1 AUTllOIUZEO W tphal' heau. rldmg & cond, must PL YMOllTH ' .. .,.... · DA T5UN SALES• SERVICE es 1a ... family"'"""'· ,,,,.,,,... --------11 MOTOR HOMES 1966 '!!!"""9303"· c.M. Jim Slemons Cam-r '69 CHEV 1mpa1a • dr. ITT. ·ss PLY. Sport Fury, 1 ... • 707 N Harhor S.A 1 ----'~==---1973 DATSUNS ,.-Pl<lisc brakes, pl •, air. :IOO engine. Makeottorforllll"', .554"""3. • TOP CASH Imports complete wllh tcm (9770UD) hp, 350 C.D.I., VS, turbo-part" m.>m. All "ODElS 30 $2899 hyd, 1 dr;vor, smce now. -==;P~O~NTl;:;;.A-=-c=--1 1973 Dtscovorer and Sundial !or clean late 'ri>odel cen M l 1 Quell Motor Hom es for rent, make rand trucks! IN STOCK Ne~~ach BIU MAXEY ·~9:-u Converfible, 1 white ---------1 reservotloo• for Summer Howard Chevrolet BARWICK IMPORTS ENTER >'ROM ""'ARTHUR TOYOTA wlhlue lop & ;nterior atmo•I LEASE OR BUY now. Phone !\flu Bennet at MacArthur and Jamboree 33375 Ca ino c lstrano nu tires, :dnt running cond. •n thru '73 Pontlaca Bob Longpre Pont 1 8 c • Newp0rt Beach San Ji!. ea¢:m.m 165 MERCEDES BENZ 1~t:.f;~~,.ci3;·BEfJH8555 $1250 or bst our. 9~1957 or DAVE ROSS 892-665l or 636-'500. 833-0565 493.J37S or 831-1375 eves 540-Jl&i PONTIAC IDEAL tor family fun. 1966 1.~ PAY TOP DO' 1 .1.n $tt5, -I OWNER '65 VW Cam)X"r new reblt .70 CHEV lmpa! -··t Commer ~totar Home. ro··~RTOPUSEOCA~RS •n 240Z. Auto, air, mag ~· 557-1975 motor. Wheel' bearings, Coupe .,., p/b a/, "':: 2480 Harbor Bhrtt .. at Fair Seml·sell-contained, lleep1 U · whl1, Becker AM IF M l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"I tires, battery, $700. Pair ot ..;_ ' 88:....f 8' Sau..,, Drive eo.ta Mesa ~7 , 5, &ood cu mileage w/4 ,..your., Qntcar ls extra clean. atereo, radio A: lten!O c.._, ....... '"'" ......__,_, s-•. n837u ""''!."'s, u.u., 1496. ' --....,, Burnt I MG ~ ..... ~ ~ ~--~· '12 PONTIAC LEMANS ' . I ~;~;~~)SI~ B.Auia BUIOC it-. -Xl~t cond.orrn 59 : era. $lOO. 546-tm. ESJ'ATE Sale, orig owner, ~HT. ~uto, air, AMtFM l /J~ A6ct. B...it ~~~· ~~~Colla 2:.t2!,!iarbor BJ~m" ~~. 1624 Antlaua Way, ·~~~ 'jfi~~e ~~· ~~J"' iJ~. ~~~ ~~~e&ir~ n~·u!~ EndW-a ~~-~~rill~d I "'I ~ 8 Sc mile j,n ty IMPORTS WANTED ='71="'.f240Z.=~,~.....,.--, -...,-Private party, Best otter'. frame, curtains incl'd. $1S50. brakes. $1950. 962-0834. w/white inter. Xlnt oood. '\'rap 'n' botton this pretty W:ui2. . p . Oranp:TOP I B~· radlals, map, am If m ~2932· 963-5353. '68 MALIBU Sport Cpe. $29251,.,· 8;:1437 .Prt· pl)'. top over pants, skirts. 25, EXECtmVE m 0 t 0 r 8llL MAXEY 1UYOTA ltaeo tape, auto. air, Jo 161 ·MG Mkleet '&,) VW 1500 sq bk xlnt mecb Auto. P/s, P/b. \rinyl roof. vRAND PRIX 1 1 This supple, surplice ts tone for rent. Nly .elf 11881 Beach Blv, mile&gT'. S3650. 642'-3392/ $500, * * 557--0145. cond nu tires reblt eng NC. Xlnt. $1150. 642-3980 Gold ,,,,/black vtnyt top SJ I ne\\~st for now and fall in conlah~. 6'2-21SO H. Beach ~. 1147-.m c615~;.3008~~· ------Uke to Trade:? Our Trader's need~ body work Sun '55 CHEVY. 3 spd, bQcket model • Fully equip. Pvt. 1hree colors. Knit of sport ~~---~---'"=-'=,=-,,--:'"==~= '67 DATSUN 1600. CJean. Paradise column is tor you! 1,=:550:7-.;9569:::=.~~~---IM!Rts. 327 cu. $200. or best party niwt .ell third car as yarn in easy stockinette RENT our new Luxury The "Yellow u..-.." of _..,, or Trade for Van. 5 Ii 5 d ' aJ '67 V\V BUG Xlnt cond oUer. 642-6395 betore 4 pm. !IOOn as pc>11slble! 552-rJ62. l t stitch with ribbing: Pattern Llf'ETI?t1E! sips 6, air, hn-classified ~'i. _... nes, 1~1 tor $5. C l . . . 1'l0l: size' 3-JG inciuded. ntac. Pvt. owner. 838--0900 • • • • '* Call "644,:1384. * today ... 642-3678 Orig. paint/lrrter. New q. '&I BELAIR Chevy Wag 9 '71 G~D Vllle convt, fa c. st::n-.Nri'.t"J\'C ct;Nft DELUXE "WINNEll'GO r-;:::t:;::::;;!!!-----;_-..;._...;_-,-.,.·-.., brks/tires~J~~ firm. pau., air~ ps, pb, runs rffI . alr, tape Pla.>-er, actual ml. \t·. ~:r "" ~ \\-ell. 537-5UO, 6«-4!)!14. Zl,000, ·beau.: cond. orig., for each pattern -add 25 Mtr linlc. rent 640.(M82 N.B. O\\Tier $2 600 839-6234 I cents for each pattem for ST' "' "m> • G.A:,,..E""D"IC ¥. 68 VW Bug. Ellglnc just '65 BEL Air \Vagon, V-8, , ' ' · Air ~·Jail and Special Handl· Tr1iler1, Tr1v11 945 .l'1~ .~ .A'-. '-tit reblt. w/guar. $'n5. Private auto R&H. Needs a litUe. 73. LEMANS Dclu.'" .4 door, l"g· 01•·-·'se third-'"M •ra.&:rl.l'OLLA'N • Pa.,.., 548-6178 •"~.oo. -2323. air, p/s, p/b, °''-nd", 1 de:livery'"'~il take lh~ 15' ARISTOCRAT. Beautiful At ,t.."i': )( Yowro.ly~""" 1'f u1u "ro ·~. Navy blue. Good .. lil\I CH••~RYSLER •,ooo, ...,.,ml~ .. ~. · ~1~ aft tveek.'I or nlOtt', Send tn condlUon * Refrigerator, :A.Ari,, -r A.«erJ;,., fo '"•$Ion. ...,.. Sl'!· 11 m condition. $1500, 673-8827 aft Ul.J""T..,., Allee Brooks, the DAILY !',_Range A51 Ovk en*•30Sle<Jl'aJ. 11..t.i. Tadewlopft'litlSOllt fOr T~, ,oc, r.u . , :06·-~-----~ '68 PONTlAC Catalina , 9 ·: ~ PILOT. Joa. Needlecraft »l.l'i, * n , a: . . ... ••13 .....J.,,.arid"""'to--t.....:.:.. 1-CLEAN '67 Olrysler New Pass w .......... A Jr c 0 n d. De"I., Box 163, Old Chelsea water Tanlc, • Lewi~ ~-T·uaus ~-·~-r ~,,,,;_• ~,. 1-67-70 '72 BUO, fact air, 22,000 Yorker, all air &. power. Pl • .~:--· ll100 '' E z LI .. ,...,....--· mtlcs 4 OCY.' radial tires, s,"" m"J\!I. -· 673--1498. • . Stnlion, Netv York, N.Y. J acki, '* · ft JTile m. » 1 ~ :n ~ '1'--' ' SCOl.'10 l900 · 645--03..., Below wholesa:Je, 837-1246. ,67 GRAND Prfx. F u I I 1oou. Print Name, A"9,..., * Trallc.r Movina: Dolly, .wAf • 2Niiw 32V-62~ ocr,u 1-"l =c.· =-""=-'•----CONTINENT L 7.lp. Patten Nmnber. tncluded. * MllTOf'll Jn· 3~ i!S•e ;llaha ~~ ,Jf, '65 VAN, reblt 1500 eng, Xlnt A J)O\\'Cr, air. Xlnt. cond.-. NEEOLF.CRA!'T ·121 duded. -GREAT FUN SSM ' 35=.,., 4.5~ 12.lS.1 mech. cond. Must scll '6JO Calls~ . Crochet, ktlit, etc. Tree CAMPING -EXCELLENT ,.... 34~ .. JN f!!:!:!!o!!~ l -"'"':...;::olC::fer,:;·;.:55::;7:,.C-015=7".~·--~l·73 CONTINENTAL MARK 1964 BONNEVIU..E O:.W '· direcUons, 5()c. CONDITJON -$1350. ~ ~=..-.,.,.~ IMfn'AIM '68 vw fastback. Gd. com. IV. Moon dust trlft.allk areit cond, $215. .. l!!iKtant Macn.me ~-'* 548-1395 '* ~-· ,,..,,.._ r,r•_ HO!• u ..t...a S700 or" begt otfn'. 84'1-0011 tinl1h, atetto I tape, speed 673.J.f:9f Bade, fancy knots, pal· EQUALIZER HITCH, brand -Ci!! =· 'Au-~-''.!! STUDEIA.,.R """· 11 .00. new r· • 2 .. J1.::00· hlldt.plat· ... ·•-, ...., "'°"' VOLVO --· ·-· ""' lfttlfant Crodld Book -f ''"-· ,....., v.. 4Zh 72Nid • equlp., lea.ae 36 mos. open Learn by plcturftf Pat· form or uu-w L>•.J It ~~ 1ll'licMe end Sl)6. + tu at can 'SI STUDE8AKER _ ••m• $1.llO. ~lh, ~ ~ jP., ::;t.:'! ~><::;· ·~· '68 VOLVO ~ $0050. Call -lion car. II ninal , ~ IMtut 0Ut 8'ot: ,_!!;.,.., ~.· 1 .. t, MUI! ,.Jj tU•' 'I .. ~ llltirttftt . -;..~.-. • 4 Dr, 4 Spd, Air Cond, low $'100. "'"·- -moni than 100 cttts -............ ~ · 11~ ~,1,_ DI~ JJlll.1t mlleaae,Excellentcon-167 CONTINENTAL ..u._. 11.00. • $60. Ph' 1162-1'167 fl=" #:.... nX.""' · "·7: ~ dilion, Ian with Ian """" Exc• I lo n t condition. Ex· ---,YE;;"'G"'A'a---OOm~le A_tpu Boole -FOR the !mall car A: light 20ShollU !Cl.. IOWor1hp . Interior ~lll'nl mileage. &fn•t ~u. s1.oo. Wf'iaht towlna: u· Papbo.e. 21,_. A!Nt9lfiol\ 110oa $1595 ~ :;;;---===:=;::;! I.I lilly R&( Boob • 50c. 13' I< 15' !!<Id I< stream. ,,..., '2V.-010f . · <92-mll. · • '71 Y£1!.A ftook ot U Prb:o A~a .. Mesa Camper Sake, 2036 2llt SlA 1-lGlt '71 CONT'L 1 OR. Air, w SOe. ll•rl#, C:C.la Me 1 a, 1::.-'1 ~t'" · f;lt'c.-,,io Arn-J.~M, tilt 'f!.'hl. Z!.000 ml. $1150. MU$T SILL r:•t -' -16 "''"""'1 -"-.~""-'====== 2•-,,...._ "°""'"' ~~,,..: S<too. ~'8 'v"; 557-1975 · .,;_... Qont -1 • OLD TI NT TRAIL I R ~~ ~:::.. :l~,: 1 -"541-=7988::;<:·-~~--50c. $100. Ce.11 ·96W766 2'~ '-"~ ., 1, •.. clean out the garage ~!"l:~~~!!!'~'!"~~) ritb f• T94IJ1•-Uvlnc • llIU..TOP TENT TRAILER -,... . ""' •wu -r· ~ -"''.> "'"' n , - " -.. ~ ~ "~talc• •-m ~or nftAA.." ,,,,_ v-A uambeck < ~ buutuu1P1tttrna.50e. Pandti • cte.lux. Sletpfl t.L---~~~~~~~~c~ .. ~~®-~~;~~~';'·~~~~~L ___ _i_~31:111~w::::. ~COA~1t~H~wyt"~N~.B:·~ ~ith ~Daw:'~~ &'1.!s~ ~-Un'~: "1T.s.~~ i.:, '•••••••••••••••••• Kltctim unit. tbl, !Ml-7817. M2·MOS i ..:•:::d·c:C::::•e:llc:&l::::~::::::e:o.· ---613-2988. i ..... fi!ict#.. JI. t ' • I . 7 ; I J .~-• • . . • ' San (;lemente • Today's Fl•al - (;apistrano • EDITION N.Y. Stoek.s VOL. 66, NO. 190, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES TEN CENTS 111 Peace Corps Workers Freed From Uganda . 7 J I NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI ) -The 111 American , Peace , Corps volunteers de· talned since S~turday by Uganda Presi- dent Jdi Amin left Kampala today aboard a charter Oight after Amin received assurances rrom .Zaire President P.1obutu Sese Seko that they were really Peace Corps workers and not U.S. mercenary tfoops. They left aboard an East African Airways VCIO at 7 p.m. (9 a.m. PDT) to continue the flight to Kinshasa, cnpital of the fonner Belgian Congo that chang- ' .. ed its name to Zaire. Their departure '"as delayed several hours when the VCIO did not leave Eotebbe on schedule. · ('l'w.o Orange Countlans were emong the detainees. 1ltey were C h e i y I Andersen aqd Beverly J . .oHart both of Fullerton. 'ftlere were nine other Calilw· nians on the plane), Uganda Radio today broadcast a speech by Amin thanking General Mobutu "for hls message which cleared up the situation." PRESIDENT NIXON PAT LEAVE EL TORO FOR KANSAS CITY S•n Clemente Sojourn May Be Followed by Repeat in August Nixon E11ds County Vi~it; Might Retu1~n in August Prtsident Nixon left Casa Pacifica to- day in brisk fasb}on after spending more than two .weeks ~long the South Orange Coast. And already there. arc reports the President plans another lengthy stay at his San Clemente estate starting nex~ month . Nixon, acoompanied by· his wife, Pat, strode through the gates I.leading to his house at about 8:15 a.m. and walked briskly to bis wa,iling helicopter which took the couple to the Spirit o( '76 waiUng at the El Toro h1CAS. The President waved several times to ' the two-dozen onlookers assembled at t~e edge of the helicopter pad, but said nothing as be left for the flight to the na· lion's capita1. At El Toro the scene Wa! the same as ·' Nii.on arxl members of the First Family 1tepptd down from the chopper, waved and then boarded the Presidential jet. There will be ooe stop aloog the Y"'Y - Kansas City, Mo. -wbere Nixon will at· tend ~ swearing-in ceremonies for 0arenCeM. KeUey, the new chief of the FBI. Nixon plaMed IQ speak brlcfiy at the artemoon ceremonies at the Federal Of· fice Buildlng in Kelley's hometown. CLASSIFIED ADS • MA.KE 'EM VA.NISH Daily Pilot classiOed ads can ;.n Just about anylhlna:. This advertiser certal~Jy bad no -problems-: • J101JND oak table wtslde- brd, 'Orawerc1tusr: round \ll table, anUq. chair, solid teak tlboes, 10.14 braided .... All 1""1$ in xln't cand. (Alldrea), (Phone No.) The odY!!rtlser 10ld all tl\e 11"119 he listed Uu'ougll this ad. Make a '!"le wit~ your milctUaneous items. The direct line -- It.was the President's first public ap- peararce since June 15, v.•hen he went to Pekin. Ill., for. the dedicaHon of a memorial congressional research center honoring the late Sen. Everett M. Dir,ksen. - A Public turnout was expected for the occasion, with Missouri Gov. Christopher S. Bond on hand and Clief Judge William H. Becker of U.S. District Court in Kansas City administering the oath. Kelley, 61, is a 26-year veteran of the FBI. He has be<n Kanas City police chief since 1961. 1'¥.'0 acting directors have been in the FBI post since the death of J. Edgar Hoover on ~1.ay 2, 1972. ~ Nixon's first choice for the job wai L. Patrick -Gray Ill, a Connecticut lawyer and Justice Department ofllcial. Gray resi'gned as acting FBI chief after senate Watergate hearing disclosures about the FBI'• handling of. the Watergate case: Kelley takes over from the CUl'Ttnt ac· ting director, William D. Ruckelsbaus, former bead of tbe Environmeolal Protection Agency. ~ • , In winning Senate oonf.irmatlon, Kelley promised he would cooperate in draftlng new legislation to bring lbe FBI under closer congressional IC(Uftny than it had during Hoover's service, which dated back to lhe lnceptiCll of the FBI In 19'14. Nixon wa.s returning ·to Washington a (Sea SOIOUBN, Pop %1 , ,/ Freezer's Bare l1i San ClemeJJ.te • Tools, bikes and surfboards have been the. llandanl laot for svar• thl<v!S In rt<ellt yean, but the high price or food meiy be cMa11aa all tblt. Jn San Clemente SUnclaY the pnge cape< was more like pwnd lbefl.pooery. M11. Erma Smith of 130 W. Mmlpooa wtnt to the I,..,.. Swlday to dilcoftr It was bare. Someone had cleaned oul $300 wor1h al meat.. and took alonl a slcft of canned goods ne1rby 11 well. The prap wa unlocl<ed ll\ltml&h~ . she told pollcO. Amin, already embroiled in several serlou.! diplomatic disputes with the United States, seized the Americans Saturday alter their Brltlah charter Olght landed in Uganda to refuel. They bad ta.l<en all to coatinue the IU&ht to Zaire, the fonn~ Belgian Congo, but he ordered It to" return and threatened to send up his tiny air force if the plane 'clid not land again.. The broadcast of Amin's speech said that "in the future,. East African Airways aulboritJes lhoukl make sure flights such as Saturday's are cleared." ~e Kampala radio broadcast said ,President JuJlus Kambarage ~yerere or Tanzania wouJd conduct an Investigation into the matter which was only cleared up when Mobutu intervened on behalf of the Americans. ' Afnin's •action in the U1anda capital of Kampala was llnnounced here by U.S. embassy spokesman Gary Morley. U.S. Qiplomats and the State pepartment had interceded in their behalf aince the mera.irial Amin forced them to land in Kampala on Sunday. "They do have clearance to leave," l\lorley said. "JI came through around 3 p.m. (8 a.m. EDTJ. They arc now looking for f!al\Spo rt. They don't know where they1i-t going and V.'On't kn6w until the 'transport is confirmed:" . Morley said the AmericaM probably v.wld go either lo Nairobi, v.•here hotel rooms have been booked for them . or lo their original plane transfer point In Newport Presses For Murderer of 15 Companies Sued -Flor-ida Cliiirges Oil ·Firm Scheme TALLAHASSEE, Fla . (AP) -The State of Florida filed suit today in federal --'iplaR.JI Jllljor U.S. oil com· ponies, charging them will[ COlllfllriJll to contrive the ..rem fuel .stiortage. The IS-page IUit calls for the com- * * * Top Official Rules Out Gas Ration WASJUNGTON (UPI) -D e p u t Y Treasury Secretary William E. Simon said emphatically today the ad· ministration has niled out any 'J)OSSibility of gasoline rationing to meet the current shortage. Simon's statement, his strongest on the subject. came amid reports that Presi· dent Nil on 's Phase IV economic action may include a rollback in prices for gasoline and other petroleum products. Asked about persistent nunors that the administration is considering a program of .gasoline rationing, Simon said "sbso1utely not." "I absolutely do not Consider rationlng even possible," he said. "We have a voluntary allocatioo system In place now thal .J believe is doin& the job." Sen. Beary M. Jacboo (().Wash.), said Congreas must take a "very hard look" at the possibility of breaking up functions of big oil companies. Jackson made the statement at a news conference following disclosure of a 1ovenunent report suggesUng tllat the structure ol the industry had a major role In creating the gasoline shortage. Jackson said a two.year study by the starf of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) .. indicates clearly that vertical in- WgraUon, concentration and market con· (Sft GASOLINE, I'll• Zl panies to rid themselves of all crude oil exploration aod development capabilities ll ...., stv ill u.. fttail ......... 11_., Florida Atty. Gen. Robert Shevin said. The 11111 1s ..,. or the biggtst trust. busting atlempb qainst oil componies since the St:andaJd. Oll Co. was broken up in the early ltoos, assistant Atty. Gen. Dan Dearing saki. "To this date we've round everybody talking about the crisis but nobody &Ing anything about it," said Shevin. "We felt it was time to do something." The suit alleges the on. companies have engaged in an illegal monopoly and unreasonable restraint of interstate lrade and commerce. ·Shevin charged that major oil com· panies should not be able to cootrol crude oil from the Ume it comes out of the ground until Jt is pumped at a gas sta- tion. .. The guoline wars are supported by' profits made at the crude oil level," said Dearing. "If we remove that section we can make the marketing truly com- petitive." The suit is a class action on behalf of all counties, cities and school boards in the state, Shevin said. · Named u defendant! ..-ere Exxon Corp. ol New Jersey, Texaco Inc. of (Ste OIL SUIT, Pllt %) Onofre Patrol Nabs 190 Aliens Border pa.trolmen at the San Ooo£re checkpoint, operating a 24-hour im- migration check, arrested nearly 190 il- legal aliens over the l\'eekend. Patrolmen' caught 11 ·aUens on Satur- day a11d another 100 on Sunday. In Id· dltion, 135 immigrants wtre anuted Fri· day. No drug traffic was reported. The increase in arrest• is attributed to the continuous operation of the: check· point, a patrolman aald. Bitter Capo Baff Feud ' Tricia Cox To Have-Baby WASHINGTON CAP ) -Tricia Nixon Cox, the older daughter or President and Mrs. Nixon, Is preg- nant, accordini to the Evening' Star-News. Mrs. Cox. "ll, was married to · F.d"!ant Jo'inch ---Cox, a young lawyer, in 1971. The child would be the [irst grandchild for the President and his wile. The . newspaper attributed Its " ~ le> "an authoritaUve aource." The N'mm bave one other child. Julie , who manied D a v i d !Isenhower in 1981. Cl1otiner Judge Goe.s Off Case Against Paper CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -U.S. Dist rict c.ourt Judge Hugh Downes has disquali- fied himself from hearing a Ubel .mit filed by formct presidential aide and Newport Beach la"'}'er Murray Chotiner against the Manchester Union Leader and report- er Arthur Egan. Bownes disqualified himself from the $3 miUion suit during the "'ekend after pub- lisher \\tilliam Loeb submitted a 13-pagc affidavit and more than 50 pa ges of ex- hibits. They contained Unk>n Leader edi- torials from the past 10 years "·hlch "'ere critical of Bownes. 1'le judge said earlier he was not preju- diced, but Loeb ma intained that "human nature being what it ls, a feeling of mu. tual dislike and distrust readily re- kindlesJ Bownes said Loeb's assumptions v.·ere y,·ere "at best. questionable." But he disqualified himself, saying "I do not think lt would be possible to convince him (Loeb) othcrv.·ise" and "since the appear- ance of impartiality is as important ... as its reality." He called Loeb's statemcnt "a boot- strap a ppr o a c b" that "can be used against any judge 'vho i.s assigned tbe case simply by pubiishlng critical editor· lals about that judge." Cl10tiner, a fonner aide to President • (Ste CH011~'ER, Paae Zl Recycling Center Pkiled 87 JORN VALTERZA Of .. Deltf "" ..... A bitler feud ha• erupted between the rOllndcr of the recycling centet """'ing the Capistrano Bay .,.. and the booftf or directorl wblcfl bu 1:\111 the "I""' atlon since Jut ran. . And both Oidel acree that the Mure of the ~ -is in the balonce. ..,.. battle -~· alm-mertna I« the f*I week.I - rewlvu around • OWi' who bu the rl&flta to the which operates avlc c.oter. • Lionel Burt, wb> mqre U,.. two ,.an .., bulll the ..., In San Clea!mte, hu Dlad claim to the operation . Ht allO has withdrawn his petition ror nonprollt -ru.cI with, the State of Calllonia. On the other side LI the boanl or direclm ol World Repair, Inc., the or· 1anizaUon· ael up last yeai to admin.lster the op!rallon. , S.,Ok<amcn foi: the boord -the group wblch dumped Burt a, a mem~ aever- al wee.ks ago -clalm that current t.f- rortt by the ousted foundtr are attempts to ac:utUe the operation. llurl, however, clalma that the center ls being mimana«ed aod that "too many people art cettinC flit" from the --· Burt'a iniltal claim wu !or fl ,IGO u his lntmlt In the oporallm. The """'" .. n>llv from the WRI boor<! has bttn 1bout •1.lOO. "1bey've been trying lo ny th.It all I want la the money: thal's their~" Burt aald . ., , "Well they can take !he money and s1uff it up their noses," he declared in a press gathering recently. The battle began MCe Burt returned from a winter job in June Lake. Before hr.. left Burt arran1ed for a grant from a consulting firm In La Jolla, and for donated quarten at the civic center. During Burt's abseoce the center v.·wt Into opcratkin and be1an processing about 10 tons ol newsprint a wtk. "When I came back !he first thing they did was vote me out. 1 RUeSS tbtir ~ were pu1<ly ptychlalric, I don'! kndw." Thtn the real balties began. Center operaUons manager SCOtt Sled.- man, cine of two m~n who receive1 a (Sft RECYCLING, Pase !) Bunmdi. They have been staying In a Kampala Hotel, comfortable but under armed guard . Morley did not give details on Amin's decision to release the Americans but President Joseph ~tobutu of ZSire in- terveaetl today to tell ·Arru,i they really \\'ere Peace Corps volwlleers ·and were en route to hi.s country a.s they said they v.·ere. Diplomatic 50Ul"CeS in Kampala said Mobutu sent a telegram today ask· lng for their release. Hunt Girl Policemen Baffled- No Motives By ARnlUR R. VINSEL Of ... 0•11Y ,.,,., !.'•ff The sad search for Linda Anne O'Keefe ended v.·ith the discovery of the strqled girl's body by a lonely roadside alooc Up- per Newport i!ay Saturday but the - bunl for her killtr continues toda7. One theory is that the ll-year-ald .tC. lim -lacking a ride home from 1Ummtt school -may have tried hitcbhikilc. She wu not sexually molested, hoW'eftt, and investigators said today there were no specific Indications that she fought her killer. This fact literally leaves police with no . motive as well as no suspect, "\\'e'rc working hard at it," Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Don Picker said of the hunt for the slayer. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today that no specific cause of death has been determined, although it was ap- parent the Lincoln Intermediate School pupil had been strangled. · Her mother -nearly hysterical during the l•·hour search for Linda Anne -i1 now stoic considering the circum!ltances "She was calm and composed · when i last talked to her." said Sgt. Picker. No f u n e r a I arrangements had been made this morning for the young victim v.·hose parents are members of the eom: munity Congregational Church of Corona del hfar. They were struck ironically by a dual tragedy over the v.·cekend. The tamily's church sustained SS 000 damage in a fire blamed on anonlsta: New Israel Command JERliSALE~f (AP),-A litUe-k:n&it-n Israeli army officer took over today as ~mmandcr of the \\'ar against Palest.in- 1an terrorists. Bril?. Yisrael Lior 52 a fonncr military aide to Premier' 0o'1cta ~feir and her late predecesaor Levi Eshkol, \Vas lo serve as a channel between Atrs. Meir and the military ex· perts fighting terrorism, government of. ficials said. or .. ge Weather The sun ~·Ill break through those low clouds .Tuesday -weakly. Slightly wanner temperatures, with 72 degree readin gs expected along the Orange Coast rising to 83 in- land. Overnight lows in the GOs. L~SIDE TODAY Atl expert OJl world food pro- ... 'auctlon sa11s A1ntrico.t1s may soon lla0t to ra1 ion fOOO in or· der to maintain trportl atid tl1e oolue of tht dollar a:br01d. See: SIO"JI, Page 4. ...11119 1t AMI ~ •t L.M. ...,, ' MW!• l .. tt Ctll~I I NlllOAfi Mtw1 t C9ttlllilf »H Of'Mlft C-h' t (-'u II IYMI '-W '9 C'"""' II tMtt. 16"11, 0..1111 MtOcn • T...,...._ 11 ••• ,.,.., ..... • Ttltlttn 1 .. 1. lllttft.a-t , .. ,. ......,. • 111-. 1•11 w_, Mtwl 11-1• -~ 14 Wtrlf ...... 4 • ' _ ...... r n.v• Mond11. July 9, 1973 Craft OB Rocks.- At Morro Cove By JACK CHAPPELL Of fllll 0.11'1' Pllet &IMf A 41.root Chris-Crall cruiser, h o I es punched in her starboard and stern, lay mired in sand today at El !'lforro Cove near Laguna Beach -the vestige of a disastrous SUnday tor a Riverside quar· tet. • Salvage operations v.•cre scheduled for high tide today, about 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in an attempt to pull the bis cruiser off lhe beach. F aceoff Vote ' ' \ Expected On Computers By JACK BROBACK Of t!M ClallY P'lllt Si.ff A showdown vote by the Orange Coun· ty Board of 54.lpervisors is expected Tuesday on who will handle the county's computer services. · A county report released over the weekend recommends that an El Scgun· do finn be given a contract to operate the computer facWties. The report by County Administra tive Officer Robert 'Mlomu recommends that the corltract go to the Computer Science Corporation. In February, Thomas, citing a six· morith study by a committee of county department heads assisted by a con- sultant. recomm ended the upgrading of the county's Data Services Department through. the purchase of new UrU vac equlpmenl This recommendation was sidetracked when Supervisor Ralph Diedrich or Fullerton suggested the hiring of an outside firm to manage tlJt computer wort. Three weeks ago, Thomas reversed '-hinue.lf and recommended an outside oontiactor. l:Ds decision was disputed by SuperviJor Davld Baker who sat on a apedal committee that had studied the problem at the request or thr board of supervisors. 1bomu sald the so-called blue ribbon committee Md reoommeoded an outside flim, but Baker and others who served ... Ille commlu.e cllsl.,...i. By a s.z vole or the board, Diedrich ond S!qlervllOl'9 Robert Battin ll1d Ralph Clut instructed Thomas to confer with two outside computer firms seekbul a coolrict. :rtie iJl.hiiuoi! Data Services Deplrtmeot .... shunted aside despite objections by Baktt and Supervilor Rooald Caspers. Baker and Caspers said IDday that they 'lt'UUld ast for a delay Tuesda;y tor further study or the problem. The Orange County Grand Jury also has called for further investigation. Tbe Thomas repott 9Cbeduled to go to the board says cOOiputer Science Cor· ponKion submJtted the best o f re r for managing the data services for the ne:ii:t seven years. Figures are CSC, $28.8 mllllon; Data Setvices Departmenl, $37.8 million and Electronic Data Systems (EDS) of Da~ las. $41. t million. The CSC and EDS bids are based on lhe use or IBM equipment rather lhan the Univac proposed by the department heads committee and the consultant aft- er an $85,000 study las t winter. The 174 employes of Data S e r v i c e s would be given the option of transfcring to the outside firm or resigning. 'l1le contract would be effective on Aug. 1. 1bomas said lbe bids from both. the ~u~i9e firms we_i:_e anal~ by a ~unty. team made up or bis staff, the county counsel's office, the auditor -controller's staff and an outside firm, Proprietary Computer Sysle~. Diedrich indicated three weekl!r ago that EDS of Dallas had the inside track. The firm is owned by H. Ross Perot. Diedrich had made a lrip to Teus to Jnspect the firm's equipment and capa- blUttes. OU.Itel COAIT IC DAILY PILOT r I I ' "TM Or111te C:O.•t DAILY P'ILOT. -W'llll;fl If '*'lblfled tM fro!...,..,., .... If fllltllltllef .... IM Of•• c .. 11 '"""4Wilolo co_.,.'-· ,..19 ... ., ........ ,.,... ....... ~ • ., Ill ...... l''llM'I• for Cet$e M ... , N-1 lftcll, Hvttll"f!CWI llNCll/~in \l•HIJJ, Latvnf a.ct!. Uvlne/._.lltlKll Mtd s.a.. Cltnh!A/ 19'\ )l*I ~tr-~.i..,.. .... ....... .Slllon " ,.,.i1t11• .. llll'N,. -ik.tndll"' TM 'oilM""I ~ ... Ill Iii •I Jll Wftl .. , Strett. C:O.•• ~. C.mon1i., ru, Rob.ti N. We.d P'rnldtttl •NI ~~ Jeck R. Cwrl.v Vke l"f'nlfMI IM ~I ~ The111•t kMril ..... Tll•111•t A. Mw,tll•• MtMI .... bHw Chttl•t H. L••• Rlclt•N P. Nell A11Fll•11I M ..... 1111 lt!tort .. Cle-•· OMec JOI N•rtt. El C1111/11t Rt1I, tt,71 --CM!• ...... I JJI Wet Ctt Slfttl ........., ttecA: UJI .......,, ......... e .............. CMdl1 11111 Steel'! lltuMYt nl 1-"""9 ~I 129 """ ... _ Teta,a "' ln41 MM!JI C'•IW .W1coth'n1 '41 .... 71 S. Cle ICIS All D1,o I 1111: ftf ,, I 4fl ..... Jt ~. 1911, Cir.... CMtt ,....~ ... ~ .... -........ '"'"'""-. .......... _...,.. ~,..,..... ~ "' • ......... .._. flMCi.I ...... .......................... ..... dim --""" .. c.. ....... ~ .......... .. °'""" llM _..,, -., ,..... II.IS """"'._,' Mlm.rt •-ili1i0µ1i0.,oia •M ....-.,. It wu hauled up on th e sand Sunday afternoon after striking rocks at Ab.a.Jone Point, just south of the El Morro trailer park area. Four persons aboard were identified by the Orange County Harbor Dtpart- menl as Hyma n Rose n, owner; Rose Ro- sen, Julius Laiken and l'"rances Lal):en mishap. · The harbor patrol first he~ ot the ac- cident when a distn!SS rad.Jo call was re- ceived from the Rosen craft. . The fi rst reports were confwlng, with one indicating that the craft had 1truct rocks off the Laguna Beach jetty. Harbor patrolmen were able to deter- mine the craft wiis off El ~1orrt:l and two boals we re dispat~ed. On 'thet'r arrival,. the floundering craft was found to be 2/3 full of waler. Laguna Beach lifeguards and patrol- men beached the craft after diven found a 6-lnch hole in the stern of the craft. During beaching operations two holes were ripped in the starboard. side of the craft and the Inside was smashed by surf. Amount of the IOIS is unknown. In sal- vaging the crart, operat«t plan on stuff- ing large innertubes into the boat and then tnnating them. But, today, the inside of the boat was covered with about two feet of sand and a foot of water. Salvlfgers estimated that lhou]d she float , the boat would be about 90 percent In the water said Skip Roeser, a marine biologist. Tbe area where the boat is beached ii ringed with rocks. 400 Units Ease House Shortage At Pendleton F<All' hundr.d new family bouslng units will be built at Camp Pmdleiton next year to ease the ....,., houllng shortage affecting the Marine base 's meu.-An oddltiooal 100 units will be built at the Marine base· in Twenty-Nine Palms, 'Ibe $10.5 million joint coatract, award- ed to Mom-Knudaoo, of Idaho, and EcoScience, Inc., was signed oo Jane 29 by the W-m Divlaloo Naval FacillU,. Engineering Command In San1Bnmo. Officers 81 well .. enlllted nMft ., Cam~ PelMlleton have difficulty finding hoasioB Ibey can afford ID the """' rounding communlti,., ~ new bouoiJlg will eue the ticht ailuatlon, a <Amp Pendletoo 11pOkesman said 'lbunctay, but wm · mt elimlnate all ol the bouaing problems. The 400 units at Camp Pendleton will be built In the vicinity of San Onofre, overlooldng the San Mateo Valley area. One.hundttd 9f the units will be for field and coinpany-grade officers, with the re- mainder being built for the married enlisted men and their famlliel. The boualng will be both alngle and two-story units, with some ·of the · apartments being duplexes. Exact dates have not been set for the beginning or completion of the con- struction project But Housing Officer J, R. Greenstone estimated that con- struction will begin during the aummer of 1974. The Marine base receive.cl ap- proval from Congress ill May, aulbori:z:- ing the funds. Council Approves Townhouse Plans For Palisades A major townhouse project planned for 50 acres of recently annei:ed Pallsadea land in San Clemente won approval from ctty councilmen Thursday. '11ie 350-unlt comple:ii: showing a density of about seven units to the acre will be built on the section of land bordered by the San Diego Freeway and a line a short distance inland of Camino Capistrano. Councilmen routinely heard the Ust ol. 18 conditions imlKIMd on the develop- ment as proposed by the Aliso Deve~ mcnt Company ol Costa Mesa . Included in the conditions is a provision lor park r.., ol 171,IOO, City P111nning Director Gene Schulte explained that the development woo)d fol!o"· the standard planne<l<0mmunity cluster concept with common grMnbells surrounding St'MJ(:tures. ~fore than two-thirds ol the land area in the project, be added, woold be classified as open space. The development features private streets, ex:ept for the main acttu route into the project along a 60--foot-wtde sec- tion of Camino Mira Costa. f'NMP .. el OIL SUIT ... Delaware, ·Gulr OU Corp. of PennsylvanlA, Mobil Ott Corp. of Delaware, Standard Oil Co. or catuomla, Standard Oil Co. or fndramt , Shel! Oil Co. or Delaware, AUantlc-Richlleld Co. or Pennsylvanl1 , Phillips Petroleum Co. of Delawaro, Continental • on Co. 0 f Delaware, Sun Oil Co. of Dellware, 'Union Oil Co. of Ca1tromi11 CIUos Service Co. ol Delaware, Standard Oil Co. or Ohio and Marathon Oil Co. of Dtlaware. • • " GREAT CIACU ROUTE • ······· ···•···· 250'3o'TAUE (A"UMBLINE) Transpac J,eaders 4t • One·third Point Windward ~assage (WP) had covered one-third of the 2,22S.mile course to Dlam_ond Head by Sunday's roll call in the 60.boat Transpacific Yacht Race. Others pushing the 7S.foot ketch are Ragtime (RA), -Robon (RO), Ondine (ON) and Blacklin (BF'). All are reporte~ within 20 miles of race leader Windward Passa~e. jmprobatile (IM) is the cor· reeled time leader, with about 1,630 miles to go as of Sunday's roll call For more on the Transpac, see Pag~ .. 19~ _ Mitchell, f'rotll p .. ,, l GASOLINE •.. Lawyers Talk E~-Attorney General PreJHlres for Senaw Probe trol had an im portant role in creating the shortage." Asked if he believed the industry was responsible for the gasoline shortage, Jackson said: . From Wire s.rvtcea W ASfUNGTON -Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell was in- terviewed by staff lawyers for the Senate Watera:ate committee today in prepaia- tlon for bll 1ang,.waited public lestlmGny atartlDI Tueoday. MJtcheO, .,.M was President Nina's re-election ·campaign manager until two weekl!r after the Wateraate bu""jging itT~ n;m June 17,· tm, appeared at mid- morning at the office of Fred D. Tbompeon, the committee'• Republican counsel. .. He appeorm in good 111lrits and cbat- ted freely with reporters, although be said lltUe of substance. Asked if hil wife Martha would ac- company bim to tbe hearingit Tueld:ay, 'Mit.cbell replied, "Well, we'll hive to wait and aee." Asked U Itta lellimooy would Implicate the President, be replied, "My testimony is tomorrow , not today.'' Informed. IOW'Ce!I said Mitchell would not tmpUcate Nixon, bis former law ' partner, ID New York and an uaociate and friend of the President for many years. bugging, was discussed but that he re- jected the plans each time. Other Watergate developments: -The Gallup Poll says 71 percent of Americans it questioned believe Presi- dent Nil'OO was involved in the bugging or cover.up but only 18 percent feel be ~ be compelled to leave office. -Fonner .U.S. House Speaker John \V. McCormack said Sunday that President Nixon ls justified in refusing to appear - before the Senate Watergate Committee. 'l don't think as Speaker of the House I would want to have the President « the United States summon me down to the White House when I'm head of the legislative branch ... " ' -Justice Department of£iclab: over· ruled an investigation ol the ~ing practices of a company owned by Robert H. Abptanalp, a millionaire friend of President Ni:ii:on, two New Y o r k newspapers reported today. -John Ehrlichman, former domestic affairs adviser to President Nixon, says the President discusSed but dismis..<J the question of executive clemency to the Watergate burglan, the Seattle Post-. IntelligCOct!r reported Sunday. -Besides the ·blacklist publicized in earlier Watergate testimony, ~lunmist Jack ·Anderson (whose column appears regularly in the Daily Pilot) reports that the White Hou.se also maintained a aecret list of Republican seoaton: who dis- pleesed tlie President. · Amonl tboae named in the column •as having made the iiJt from lime to time included Sens. Jacob K. Javlts of New Yl:>rk, Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon, Clif- ford P. Case of New Jersey, Charles McC. Mathias Jr. of Maryland, Richard S. SChweiker of Pennsylvania, Charles H. Percy of Jllinois and Lowell P. Weicker Jr. of Connecticut, and former Sen. Charles E. Goodell of New York. GOP Leader From CdM ··it believe there was a definite efCort on the part of the industry a year ago to create such a tight situation in the nw:ketplace and by linliting imports that it resulted in the primary, immediate shortage we have today." '!The report concludes." Jackson ea.id: "that it is essential that the nation must develap a program to iMure fair coml petition ; and lrilplies 'that this program may require divestiture of major oil , company pipelines and refineries.'' "The report also says that the major oil companies are inCl.eed using the shortage to eliminate compeUtiOn and to increase their relative shares in all three sectors of the industry -production, refining and markelj,ng." -- The FTC delivered the report to Jackson late last · week at" his request. The FTC did not, however, provide him with a legal section of the report which reportedly recommends anti-trust action be taken by the FTC against the eight biggest oil companies. • Ja"ckson said he was launching his own investigation into the situation. In meeting with the committee staff last May lo, Mitcbell ... laid to ha•• Executive Wife -led what be-had-told-the--:-.-.,.--.. -~ ..... ...--....--.--.-r11...----:-...------==-=-==-==:_.::.2_:_:._:::=._:::_ __ ~ grand jury April II-that be ,alleltded A k f t three meellnCI ID early 1971 at wblch s s or ac ICS Killed m· . Ohio ~ IDt811-plberinp, lnl'luding ,.,.._P,,.el RECYCLING. •• salary Imm the operaUoo, asserted that Burt bas atlempted to convince donors ol equ~t to take beck a la'I" baler used to pocl< nenprtnt as well as a fork- lift kft OVtt Imm Ille opeiation ID San Clemente. Bot Burt insisted ncently that his motivation "ii to take t.be center away from the prople wh> are getting rat on it "'Ille pice per tan for newsprint has g<>ne up flO In ,_.,t months and Ille =le< IS operating fa~" be aid. "I'm not looking for the money for nl)'l<tt, but Instead I want It to go back ID the cmununlty," be added. At present, the situation is tender becauoe San Juan city councilmen bold the tey to the operaUon. Under terms of the i.... the COUllcil can lennlnale uae ol the city property and couodlmen have agreed 10 give each side a few more weeb to hammer out a omnpn>ml&e. At a meetlni early in August, however, the council plans to decide ca the future or the operatloo at city hall. The t.ax-ei:empt, nonprofit carporation statlJI ii one requimnent set by the city status ii one requll'ement set by the city for the center. Burt claimed that the directors stalled the petition procedure ror many months. WR[ Director Walter Jobson said that the ataCus II being acllvely pursued, "Although we have problems we are~ timlltlc and .,. contimllng to operate u I dHado CUlJOl'ltlon and meeting our oblig1-wltile diltgently aeeklng to solve OID' problems '' be Aid. He added thot ~ the board and Burt can not strtlr:e a oomprom.lse, an arbitrator would be aoufl)lt to step in and resolve the dispute. , Arizona Blast Toll Reaches 8 KINGMAN. AriL CUP!J -The death toll rose to eight Sunday from a fireball that mushroomed through the center of town from a bumlng nllroed gas tanker. Richard Lee WUlllITIS, 47, a -I principal who surr.rec1 -and third dqree buma ...,.11$ percent of bla body, died at Good Slmarltan llolpltal In PboenJx, Arli. Bill -· U, WU buried Sunday In the flrst funoral ol a dlsuler vldlm. OI the 70 P<"""" injur<d, al• wtr• llaled In crlUcal condition at hotpltala 1n Phoenl:ii: and Las Vegas, Nev. Cauon was one of five voluntetr li,.men tiUed In the uptooloo. They ...,. fllbltnc a rite on a tant car of !"' -pa -the lanker mipted, ~ Ill( a 1D01111rOUs rtreblU bloomlnl tbroulhOut the area, • n 1 • tr I n g buol_.., a highway and a crqw1I or J><l)ple. > ' Dr. Arnold O. Beckman of Qlrooa del ft1ar, chainnan of the newly-formed Republican ''So 1 id a r it y Victory Program," Sunday issued a statement urging Republicans to • ' c o n d u c t ' themselves in an upright and ethical manner" during the 1974 campaigns. Beckman's statement was issued from Sacramento. In it, be said the committee wants "to assure that Republicans go in· to the general elecU... cooipletely Jewelry, Cash Stolen in Mesa Jewelry and ca.sh totalling m ore than $1,000 were ~ken from a Costa 1Men home over the weekend while the famUy was vacat.loning In Dana Point. . Police say they vanished from the home of Rlchard Louts Kimboll, 3036 Ceylon Road, sometime between Frk!ay ll1d Sunday, The burglary was discovered in- advertently by ·Nickl Louise Eick, the Kimballs' daughter, who joked with hv mother about leaving her bedroom drawers unlocked. unified so that all the party's ~s are brought to bear." Beckman also advised candidates to : -"Not speak ill or other Republicans. -"Maintain accurate financial records and file timely reports as required by law." -"Close ranks after the primary elec- tion and give full support to Republican party nominees." Beckman said his comm ittee would be a neutral force that would not involve itself in campaign fund raising. f'rom P119e l SOJOURN ... day before the Senate Watergate com- mittee r esumes its hearings after a Fourth or July holiday recess . The President notified the committee over the weekend that he would not testi fy before it nor tum over any presidential papers. Nixon has been at the Western White House !Or 17 days. He came here June 22 to continue his summit talks with Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev. CORTLAND, Ohio (UPI) -An elderly steel company Uecutive and his wife were found shot to death at their home in this· northeastern Ohio community &mo day. Killed were C. \Valter Holmquist, 78, and his wife, Dorothy, also in her 70s. Holmquist was former president of Coppenveld Steel Corp. and served on its board of directors. The Trumbull County sheriff's depart- ment said the two were found in the basement recreation room and had been hit by rounds fired from a shotgun at very close ranke. Holmquist hid been shot Ol1(!C in Ult' head and his wife had been shot twice in Uie head and che!lt. I f'rom P119e l CHOTINER ... Nixon. sued after the publication ot two stori" clahning Chotiner was linked to the Watergate case. He denied any in- volvement. Since Bownes is the only federal judge in the state, a judge from outside New Hampshire will be appointed to hear the case. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE • Adn1lral. NO-DEFROSTING RIFRIGIRATOR/FRIQIR Ad1nlrol. ALL 'THESE GREAT W••""•t.FE.f'. TURES • ru11 Width "8oolcc11M" P'l'Mi tr Door Shelf -for ln1t1n\ .v1Hal>lllty •• • Oi.111 Tempehtur. Control1- NIKI I.ht rllht '*"PW.WN for MCI'! MCtlon. -• • Twin Pofceleln Ots.ptn-kl9ps frvlt, W>Ptab'-""'-" rn.ti. • twa L1rp Rtfl11tt11t0f' Door SMIWl-holdl ewn &Ill q11111t ...... , ·M .... NT-IJJ4 Ho 4ll1fro•ll11t refrl9•r1t1r 1ecti111t with Atctic Air ftow Jy1 te111 for f11ll cy1I• clrc11ltlio1, SLIMLINE HEFRIGEHATlll M ... C11JJ • f llll WlOUI fi"Sllnr Ctlnt • Wl«M-R•"P T.mptt'at11rw Colltrd • RM Yltw1I Ot1roM .. tlm« lndltttof • Cxtrt OMp 0--Shelf • f ull Width F'rsae·M•rt Qllllr Omftr 15995 r"f'I' Mombor °' 90 DAY U C1lllornla'1 Lar..,1 CASH C-rallve luylne Group Wllh The WITH ..ho... Volume Buying c•nn 1oO•;&uO.oiooiii11AiAT9 hWtr ef 110 Stern! ..... ; ~ ---~ 1115 IOPORT II.VD. Dawnl11111 Costa Mesa--Phone 548-7788 ., • •I 1 . • 111 OAILV PILOT • --. ,. SC .. Mo.td1,., Jutr 9, 1973 - l -....... - U,mplete New York Stock List -~M ~L!U-:~ 'i*ll~: ;• . 'I rr ~\ ,~ t~+ v. Ml .Sloll :; , ...... .-...,. \' io;;·;,., ,. s > ~+"" ... t.:i: -... ..... ... 1'11'~1' " "ll r,"• !la If + .r.m:. ':!! l ''" 11': ft l~t ~= i~ 'I 't ~ ·~ I":;:--: ,,,__ l II 11/o l'to ':: ~ I ~ a \» .... IUl • ~· fJ 1.'» I 1i • lf\l l• ~m"~J1 •f ' ~ tt' ~·~ ~r .~: .! 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";ij t'\a ~ j=•1: 11: :· u ·' "' '"= ~ -~---Oii • l 1.150 • IJ ~ 6'1'11 I to I F>lll' • v 120 I '1 I H' '" l::=..:::::::::_~~===:......:=.....:::.~==--...:..;;.. _________________ ..;. _________ _,,,.I~ ·" 1• l)w 1 ..... :n=tt ~11~~ • l! ?f' ,,:.i. .t'=•"" .. ·~· • : N '"' ~ :c•..: ::·; n w IJ!t W--\· DESIGNER SKETCH -This black-and·white i'end· nat., vice president of .design, the Cougar XR-7, ~~1:f~~' 1:1~il1~ ~;+_.~~&m'"ui! !0 'T 1i~ ~ ~;.;-~'~lt~~:'1i: 1:J l!~ll 11~ 1~~~=-!rl·,. ~ 11~ ~~ a"+1 ering alfqrds a, sneak preview o! the 1974 Metcury though it-was graduated to the personal luxury car A 11 llw IM ' ~2• \OD\\ •• n \~ ~..;~i1 ~= i t ~ Ill"' 151~ 1i" ·:: ~:~,~~" '! I .! \\t) " t~t ~ ~ .... 1·~,: ' ffv.. n~ fl~~; Cougar XR·7 , to be introduced in Lincoln·Mercury field, takes many design cues from its Cougar tra· A~· •• ~ iJ 13; .U~ fi~ ~· ~~:.J'~ .•. 1f l ~ 1f.., 1r'-« ~::,.c:,.~• ,:U 1 a lh~ ~ ~l14 ~ J .. :1:1. 1...0 ~1k..!!4' 16'-,,,,,+' '• dealerships in September. According to Gerle Bordi· djtion. !11 !{f.2:~ i 1l r ~ ~I ~~ ~=·rl~ t JI Ml• ~~ J\la t ~t:P'Jh \·i; '\ '°'s v"' t~ ~ + : ~=1~: ·~ 1: n 'h~ 1f: 1m; :~ -------------l~l1f•cP# i.l 1¥ 1t1: l~ ,,'~i ~ ~~?·fi \ ~ Ii= la! lfrl ~ ~l[tt'·~ 'i 13 ~ ~ h~· 1~ ~~ ;: ·: ~ Ht? UF lf:+ it ~,~Pt .. , 6 ~A , it. ~l .. Gel 1.M 10 JJ t>h ""' or-~~FMC of 2•. , " 12\.'I , r "'£~, 1M;1 , If n-,,l! ?!".,., ~~ 1,·~ 12 , 1~1 n,~ jlll n~ ... ~t ~!~r. '::: li 11 ?1 1tl m! 1!~ ·~ ~:r::r. ~ 10 ~ ,,, ~ ;~ ti ~.:oJ~s1 •• 11: ·t~ ~ ~+ .: Penney's ""'DK .50 I "'i•' ~-·\?Clj Fin l70' o6'.»tt3' ::i.•o loFool9M"'" 'i 1,_,,, '"~"1•1110 ,111..i:s~•u1,_,, Ame..-IOb i. n m ~>rT Ct Pff S\.t I fO>~ ~ fO.... ..._ FoollMI" pf 2 I~ l t.., I " l"P\1 I 18 10 20 ,_. .. 2• 2'.lO+ ' A1n Hell0 .lO 2l ~ ~"4 h ' n '' c111et•v 2.ftl IZ 11' t1\'J ,, 11~· i \ Ford M 2-t'!, t ~ ffi: u~ tttz+ \'I 61y l'd.ilt I 11 '" 4n ~ ,, 1 In High Gear A"'! Ill ,..,, ' -,. 11\ • >,. c ll•So 1."511 II •12 U\O ll\lo "'"" ~ For McK .... l't isv.-l IC1w.., \... ' '-~V! 11(~ nL. AIO\A rFI ,, 11 lJ 19 1,',i' •-'"'+ .. 'l'V ....... ·"' 5 fl 1\\1 11 II ' "'""pr l.!9; ' "• 1·~ 1,s., u • K111tt;e, :12 It )01 134" 11!;li 2J>-.... L C M k D h Sh 'B•• Am AlrllnH . 20N 10'ito " "'"" C1v l11v wt1 . 31 1\.1 llo 1 ~1 FMIHPI ·•• ' '' ..,. • llilW«ll:;. 10 lJ 34 t \" !'~'• t Ows I,,.,, AMII•• .20 1\ ... ..!~, J • ... c Iv Inv of 2 )' 2' 21-. lllt ,, -·~ "°''"'w .ICI \J lS ,...~ .U\i ~~-t '•' IC•YMrlt :eo J 5 II~ I '' 1 " ... '• UXury Oug ar a e e U · ,._. ,.llr•l'd 2 A I ~ 3111 ~ ..., 1 'v Sf0tt1 ' s S s S Foolt'1Nr>I I • ' U • b """" ii IC-~ , ' >Ol't 11 lO>'+ L , ... ·,) • • • • 0 Am6«" .M U ""'' ~· ri"~·· '°'"'·'" U " "" ~-""!' '~'"" .., 'l .\: 1:~ u· m• 1: K-0. ":JI' S " •• "° ... " AM lllOQ .2$ 1 Ill 111;,, I -'I\ 11,k Oii ·" 10 1l II 11'111 Ulo '• Fr1n1JM .10 I ~ ll"°" ,11~ 1, ~""-I " 10 t~ ~)-~ Am(MI.. 2211 10 Jl6' lift 31\t n~ 1 ~ of_f.m f 41 6 S\1 ' t F,1,."1SI .4 II -ff lf'._·n--\o9-I • ""1 7• I.._~ llh IJ!o S I J ~c~p11~~_,~ ... r.tt-n~.-+1Ti 111\ ~1,-.rc~11t:~~\.~=::rt~"': .. ,. 2o"u +,: :::1e11 1:: ~ ~W"Viv.JJ"'+"' ~=:::;--.::;c:=:;--;;;:;-::--::::;:::=::::::--:::::: --~--a es-lmtp ,.f1111n \.~ I 1 11"" 2n'I 2'2h ··~!:~pf \..u . JIOO !00 IC» 100 -11'1 Fi,,qo,i1ll'CI .. • 1ll I~ ~ '°"+ '' 9_., 1 •• I 15t 2•~ 'U\'f ~+ ,,. -~c··-c·•,,~l'C.'ra:r--o~rd,·nat bcli"eves the c•-performa-instrumentat•"on Amevan n. 10 1» n\lo 21~• 23\lo , ci.vEPf 1.410 rno Kil 101 101 l' ---o ......._. ,.,, .., utll 1 ,. , is 1~ i•v. ti\ • .:. l ":I tuU.I . ruo.:>a""'"<n:4'1' DU "" ., .. ,. Am Dhllll 1 16 1 21 ~ t\ + V> Cloto•(1 .11 ti Ill l l tilt ~ §'bit ll'dll 1 l>'> "•" '•"" >~+ V: ~~ :.0 M 1.0 11\l »• !Ji!->l ........ '' ."" .'... ' ndard "t " < A01i1Tel '3 22 4li ll ll\'I ... Ch1ell II .t I $$ 11 I~ I~ ~ AC C_,. • 't -~ :! • >• " _ '' perlence of Lincoln-~tercury as s a I ems. 5-a .. 1 to tlte Daily PDot ,.mOu•I v.1 2 ~ si. s~e-'-' c1u.11P pl 1 ' n~ 12~ 12lo Ioli AF C• _. • 110 1ov, ~ 1 I" ~ 1 1 • "° • +1 Th Coo vn7 ~..... ADul pf .... s 12!-'t 11\.'I 11~+ " CMI ...... Cp 14 " XI .... 2'\ii .JOVI '"' GAF pl '·:II 7 ' ~~~ 1 ~ ln~ = Im I : ,. n lHti lrt• ~11."t-~~ e 1974 gar .uv , designe[s with the f irs t * * * NEW YORK _ J.C. Penney ~~ei;:Jl~'f .1a ~ U>J.: ,~t 217+1.11 ~~: :,1"1:t: ' ~ llt! lJU ll~~ t: G::...!t~ 1.n !l ",', ""•~ ~ •• tt mt tz 11::11! ~ ~ 1 2J 1~ 1nt ,:.1.,. debuting this fall as the Cougar cxecullon was in Co In ha ported that Am E•r>r p1 11:io 1111 ,.,., "'" coc:.co1 .10 u 2411•1 111~ 1.-0,.,+111 1r<10t11 .1fl '•" JNi+ .,.. L M Afr• ,... ,. 31~ 31i , h • T"· Los Angele·s -g,·onal 01• • c. s re ,. F1nsv 1.10 10 21 11 1~ 11 + v. coc:•11<:111 .lot 21 1.q 11•t 1ro 1no-h .,1oc~ .1o1,, • •,•, \"t \~ 1,_"" '"'"',. .21 1• •J ,12':41 ll\'111 I'~ m s rumen ac evmg e f" r T 1 'I 1 Sal "· rcen ,. c;,,8 1 120 : 1os uv. 2•11 ''"" . co1Ko1" ·°' 1' 1' u 10 10 -"' arcw1v 1 .. • • •·~ • • ,.. _ 'i.n 1 n' "" 3 11 ,.. newesl domestic mid·_$ 1· z ~ t tal. In hi · th ~ " June sales rose t' 5 pe t A Fin o1 1i.. i/O u 11 11 + co1<1w11~ .~ 1 i 13\li tJ 1iv. •• svc 1. • 1 • ~I,, ..,,. ,,. l u I " 17n J" " II Ill k f I ice o oyoa 1~oor es, over the 1972 moath asAGCvs.111;1 12 1t11o 11•. 1t\o-\l.co1011ft11m 24 1"21•1 21 ,,...,,+-. ,. c .. P11 ,"'"•~it ol .,.K01111,, s 1 ,\, ·~ "'1+'• persollj uxury car, w ta e appropriate mix o e egance u s Inc has moved into new Ac;,. 1m " ' •t 14 tJ>• 11;.-' cou .. A1' 56 • ,, 111\ 11•~ 11 -" "' Clo •• , 11 n "' •rttco 1 11 11 IJ!I 4 16 ••"' 41 ~ .., d · f · 11 · .. ., favorabl~ weather stimulated A_Grir>! 1.10 11 2s1o 2J\, JS\1.-' cooift1 1<0od 1 22 ~ 11. l\o-..., """' ~·~ ,, ,J, J I\ lln.,. • \Ii 11r-.ltl 13 m nu 1•v. n.. 1•. many es1gn cues rom ear er and function in the 1974 model. o!fices at the Airport Center, h . nd . ,.mKa111 ·'° 1 1 ll l't 111,. n n co111n 1t1dl• . . '' 11 111. 11 + » ~AOI . i.. -1" ..,_ t1.to0tr 1.10 11 12s ,.,. •1• 1~ 11.e· mod.I'. I·-MacArthur Blvd. Fat er's Day business a a~ AmHo"' .211 » "' 11 . 1'0~ lf(!~ i co1 p.,.,. :io 3' 111 ~ ..... ""',~-tt "',t1' •·,, 11 1 ~ ~ 1~+ ..,, kYllPl' I ..o. , 11 12t, IT\a 12 ... """"" I b · Aml11v11 .SO 6 IS I'• " .---~ CPlonSI 1.111 I 6 17\.:i 11 I -f, l!IC · 1 t '" •S ' Ito -t. L-1 t G "THE ORIGINAL Cou•ar Formerly located ·,n Tor-pare uymg. "''"lion\ 60 l6 Jll ~ ...,.,. '°l~-.r, co11 '"" .10 • 21 ''"' i.1• ''"-1 ' ..C•bl• ~ •' ••' , ... i~ ,m= '' tK+MI i~ , • '° ' 3(1 -u. According o ene Bordinat o . A~r>I 2 . lllCI 1111 1110 -.. co1u1101 ,..., l •<> 4 \l •'-l v. c;,.c1r 1.... :..• '" •"-+.,. 1m'"s.n 1 • 2 lN fi "" , ' evolv·ed from a theme car ranee. the Los Angeles Region Volume for the Ctve-weck AMldkl .12 • •1 1.,, ''" 1u.-,•c e s '·"' 11 :11 ~ >t~ u v. ~ G11 OtY••°" ,• ", •,• ,,• ,, _ v. LIM&r ·~ 11 ~ 20ltli -.+ ~ Ford Motor Company vice 'od ,. Me-dlcorp • _.. l\oi 1 c1n-'CPI G11 1 '° t ... 21•~ V'h a l~ G"" DVN'" I ~ 2 + ~ r:rMi 1 I ''I "'° ,__ ,. Pres'.dent of des•·gn. the new coordinates vehicle and part per1 ended June 3 0 A M•tc• 1in 11 ... 311' ~ 11 + ~ cor Plctui•s n 5\-1 P'I J~ 1 G,.Food "'(:1" i1 11: 11~ t:., 111, • 1trflr st 1 ...., •1' t'9i ~ created in 196~ .by the pre-mo ~ d ' -d '~ 2 ,.,V.IC pl 5~ 3 16t\ .. .. -CPISOll 1.t2 • .. uu. 2SV1 Uh GlnGra l4 ·~ ~\+ ~-.. ,s .• , HT "' .... "-"" Cougar model Combl·nes .... Uni· distril:iution to 92 Toyota a Uine o a re ... ur -· A ..... r MaTOI" • 221 1·~ ' rni • com11 E 1.J1 lt 11 IOVJ " 7'Vt+nr; Gn Host ~ 1• 1 1~~ 13~ 14v.+ _. Ltwt 214 .. 1t .. ._ ,.'°" 111~ ,. production area of the Lincoln· million rompared with $468 2 AmNG1 1.o111 ' xl.I 3*." >;1-"1 3r'~ CamSolv ·'° 11 11 n" 11 11"" g:;,1"~",', 1 ~ ~ 3~ """ L-•c .• ' 111 w. t tWi-'~ que elegance with roominess, Mercury Design 0 ff ice• , , dealers in Southern Califorriia, nullion for the like year-ago :: ~·; Ji 1, : lS'_; lf~ ll~t lo ~~Jf iJ 10 ~I j,\',., lj.'4 1~ ~~"''!I .1l 1it ~l '1:,,1: a~ !m!a\la ~=:= 1::1 ·: ;& ft'~ ~ I-~ comforl and convenience Arizona and Nevada. period, according to Chairman ~~!!,1:~ ', 1~ \\~ !~, 1,•,. •. ?:e::iPlj.,~ l = ti1~ l~-=:f'.o~ • '1l ~~ ~ t~ t~ t:':'ZN·~ ll 1l il1!1% 11.11· "' .~ '·•·ms and ease of operal"•on " Bordinat explained. "The Will" M 8 tt d Am51dPi ~• 4 5' ..... ,..,.. -.• c-Pf 1 '° 11 ""' :u.. 21i1>-" .J, .. ... .... ,. ,, + ~ llttQIW .• 1 1 1 t\ '" !'"'+ "' ~ · FIFTY 1am . a en a n Amsi...n .26 IS 11 l~ "" ,','.~++}",comwEd wt u 111\'t 10 lO ,•-·1 .J Jt111 f&r.i. ior.+\\ ""Pie ·'°• u 11-. ""' w+~ challenge at that time was ·FOUR sales and ad· .d t J k 8 J kson ,.mTt;T 1ao 11 7"J ~ w.. -• PrflWOll 2' j(I;) 13-4 100~ '"'~ 111111+ u. ort t. 20 l"" v.1 11'1111 . u ,.., 1\'I 1~ * 0 ·· mlnistrative personnel will OC· pres1 en ac . ac . Af T&.T pt 1 111 " sw. s11t1+"' w011p1 1 n • 21~ 11"' 21\\-1to P1111RU..'·"! 1~ 2:z '\l, 't s ·11 t11'"" 1 \~11 1u ,5,, l•'4 1.-._."' A SECON genera t 1 on similar to this year'!_ -to cupy the offices totaling 7•000 The increa~ amOWlled to $63 ~'"rf'tT 1~ : i~ ~~ ~ 5':tt' ~ ~=r s'ti 11 ~ '1~ ~ ~ 11o 1 .. s1a111i'~ 11 1s ,..,, 2'"' ~ ~ t:::::•J'" )I 1J ; ~ ""' .J:' _, Cougar meant a double produce a car with a higher million June was ·the l23rd AmW1lr ... 1 s 'I" ,',6.'r ',~! . COf!Aar .37b ' 11 12 11•• 11~" ... s,'"',t~ ,, 4f "'IZ l~ ii11o+ \\ t"" ~ c.. . lS .. m It~ h II f d · · · th square feet. · ,.w•r "' 1•1o i100 1 'il ..... ~ c°"'""' 1.oa • 10 1611 1•'"' 1'!i ... • · r. U ,. .., i11C .1s. . 2 11\.'i I ' . ca enge or esigners In e degree or_ styling, more quality \V" H II Lo A I straight monthly reparting AW lrpl 1.0 1.00 lJ lt~ iru-' Cori•ICC -60 • 12 UV. U V. U lt; l~,~ m ' is& r"' 11 u -\'t !_~SI, ••• t Tit IN ! if.',,: -· Lincoln-,hfercury .• Design or-_ . in u , s nge es .00 f 1 . A'"''!n u s ' 11i1 n ·o..r. c°" Ed 1.• 11 121 7.1\.\i nt. 11'-\+ 1to 1 , .. 5 s1 1~ 11 11111i+11o r.111 Fv•,. ' w iv, ... nd · t d d features regional manager, said the per1 o sa es gains. "''"'' 1 100 s 1 s..:. ~•:1 1/V.+ COfl1Ed .,. • .. 2 11'"' 16'h 1t1\-v. •• .;, 116 , 5 v. ~ '" ~ e · cor.,. 1~ 1, 111 i lice, the Ford executive said. a more ,.s an ar Volume for the first .five ~'~ i't: t1 1\\ 1ii~ 'n,1\"1 n,,;; "· ::~e:i Dj_J ' ,J ~"· ~\\ tf\ti-~ 111,!! ·-= r. ~ n~ n~ = + ~ Lb"r~ ',lf , =--:U.'t .~. "First, we were asked to than ·were available on cars mainreasonforthemovewas 1.R fth -1 AmtK ... 1 n 1"" 4 '"+"" ""'"" 1.» 10 "" 11'\6 " + ,.-,1.IO 11«10 1.,,_"""1 ·~tr'*' Mc,.,,. JO s "ll, s ... , ere-ate a mi"d·SW!· car _-0-nc ~ -t~ more central •··atlon ,·n montu~ o e fisca year, Jan. I-MP 1!1Corl1 42 "" 41M ~1.1: '~ i. onFdpf ·~ 6 n n 14 .....,, :PWP-1 n · z210 11.,.,. l4ltl.li 100,,. IOr!YC• JO , s lM 1.-~ ... already Off.-~ 1·n 1·ts l•"'d " ivo.: Am-P .lll • ' • .-.. ·--.. on Frot . , • 1m 11Yt 12'1!-~ · '' , , ,,. ,_ · ~Jbr1wL,. ... ' 11 ,,,~ • · i 1 ~ t:.1. b · J 28-June30,w~J5.7perccntAmP6 c11 ... T• 1'11 •"" .~1 ori1NG2. '.&11l"4i2tl\1ll~\+ °"'ili~a ~11~113\;11tt'.+i1't/111r1>11"' ''•!!.it + that reflected the growing· The Origfual Cougar had hid-:h: i::~~i ~~ u!":~~~lit~. ahead of last Vear. Sales for ~~:r Clor,g J n n'1: J~ 23~ ~ ~C:'*'m IO J& W' ~ L,11"t_:!:. -~of 1.:;, Jl ~ ~ .. ~t (.i !~ ~l ~: :z1' i: ffY! ' . buyer interest in big h I y den headli ghts, dual taillights ~itions of the Irvine Industrial the 22 weeks iotaled $2 265 7 """'''Pf ... 1 •~ .,."{' ,;"' ~· oriro °' 1 . .s i " "' " -1 ~F ~ ·1..o , ' 1'" 11•• '!tz:;: "" i111:.N1I t.Cll io » 2 ''"" ""-personalized automobiles. and S°"Uential turn Signal mllJ' g ' f ,..,,...., 7 '·n· . ~~r!r:,. 1~ 1: ~ 3:!'1 ,._z ~-roriri ri, 1 L~ 10 fir 1"" 1,,,i, 1~+1•4 Ill' Finl Sii J ,, '~' l•llo l \I ::' ror: ii 1l 'Ji~ ~ ~ ~ "•·--d, we attempted to ... "' t community. ion, a a1no ...,.,,, m1 ion ,.,..c°" .7sb' •1 ·1tv. 11'11 I""+~ nc•n 140 • 1• ff\\,..,.."•" lf!Hm~ i ~it' 1~t '~~ tlDll 2v.1 •-J.u '"' '""ti+ i ~vu system. over $1 951 mUlion last vear ArKhHc 1.0I • H 1t 11\0 1•~ '4 ori Copper 1 s ~ s + v IMllit ' _. 20 '°" .mti nil n'h-" cw.i 1 .. 1 1~ 11~ 1•~+ -•.ain...tbe distinclive_C.Ougar "In 1968.~-,·,·ntrodu-c··~'he .r * * ' · · AM1rc1 "' • , , trr. 11" ',Yf!++1~r°"11cp 1.11 1 40 """ :."' ~1 lrnblla: 1 11 ,. U 2'll• 11 i,, t•"'"'" "'"' 11 '1..., lli'I 1m .,11 .._~ "" eu l Jllf J C PeMey ope<ated 2 052 A~!k• .1a '' 2s •v. ,.., .... •• c .. 11co .n~ n ... ''"' °"+ ' '! 'l i ~ 11 1•• ' ~ •S Sl'I S49 ~ • appearance which mede the I od I · h full · · · · Am u1 co " 1 • Hl~ 11'-\ 11v.-\ ,. r°"1a 1vt > o •o, O \li 11vt+ v -l'IC:ar , l't 1 11i '·'' • a 2'11"1 """' DYt+ fe, original version such a success strumentau·on lar•er eng•"ne •• f he Al>Co on •It 1 '· . °""""'' 21 ' ?S ""' ,1~ "'\--"' ••-.., , •• ,, 1 ~ l J\ii.-"' """"" ,Jrg 1 '° '1\li •l••a;: • irst XR·7 m e wit in-The f1·-1 quarter of 1973 domestic and foreign retail Al)ldlt! .»o 1 ,.• •"",. lltt' lr"+ l c11111 1t1 .di io i' i~• 1.-. 1~-~ Gl:.:::t,..., ~ 1, n w; l~ ~ \'t ,,..,., i, .d!. 11, 511 111 .. '°" ~' • • & b h h W'llts at the end o t June ""'9cllCP 16 11 1~ ~~ }}{ R.,_ ~ conMi. .'1b ' •IM "' "" t'J.+ 11t GoldW:; Fe• • ,~u·~ l2* n \-'t-"" ~1 M"I 6 n 1~ 1m 1 • 'm.nartkheet."sports s pe c j· atty options .and plusher interior rOOg t no c ange in lhe num· period compared with 2,M4 !/LLpf~~ ' s1 ,",~ ,.,, •,•,F Ya ~::r3i'pf1~ ' io; ~ ~t'< !mt~ ~ ~ 6• in. 1'~i•~'9ri'°~+ v.l LM ';;;'o,"l,.111 ,/ i1/ ,l~ J~ .. :1, .ppo'.ntments .. he· .. ,·d ber or retail outlets handling 1 t Aoon1c1 Ma 12 11 ,,. 4, • . c°"' T•I • u 1(1 mt. 23 ,,,., ~,· ,., , ., '!" ,,. ,,.~ _, "' 10 n " ~ it SEVEN ADV ANTAGF.5 OUR PAGER OFFERS that yours may 1 COMPLm OIANGI COUNTY COYllAGI ........ ,-. s-c ......... J11111.1 ••• Vllf• D9H ,..., ...... Lo ._. ....... ML.A. JlllONTH TO MONTH • llNTAL IA.SIS NO Dll'O,lty lE9UllED ON APPIOYID CllDlt 4 ONLY Sl 7 .00 Pll MONT TOTAL COST lo11RM1114 ,_...) 5 NEW COMPAC;T UNIT SID 11 V1t41 1/1) 6 YOICI MDSAGI PAGllS A'-'0 Altl AYAILAILI 7 FULL Fiii MAINTINANC ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE 1,t · .,.. ' domes tic makes of passenger as year. AA• sv 1 n 11 '" 116 1nl.< n• -""roritr1 011• 1 , .. 31v.· lDl~ 21,.+ "'G 'idi · 1 1 ~ 11' 21"' 2rn +\la IL 1 ~ 1 13v, n~ .. "We believe the 197:4 Cougar !''~·~ M 1r ,; 2~:; 2r" ~~;.,. ~" cori~1 1,,., , i10 sl " " ~c• ..r 111 , 1\1 t1 ~ r. + ~t t:":r c."l's. 'f, 1fl• &J?>." ''~ 'l~+ Is a logical deve lopment or the cars, the quarterly Automotive !~f~,{r en;; #-a! to•,,, ,::;; ,~+ ~~ t::t'\J,. 1.;¥ • 1:il 2m 2;~ "~.tt: '::'u . ·• • t '11 ~"i ?I i~+ ·1,t t:L~:C~11c ': ~ i!.Q; l~ +-+'.-..; car's TV>rsonality News census discloses. K ' ,.M Ps Ii• • s2 20'Ai it•~ 'JO''•+ ,.,, COOP Ind '° • n • n v. 23\.'o ""' ......-ranlv l.'JO i • 21~ 21Vt 11111-v. LouGM '"° 11 lt1 l!l"' ~ +,,. -The r&ugar deSign thcme~of The outlet tot8f of 25.427 on eystone s ~~·~11~ie : .t 'J,~ '!:! 11~+:: c::rpf L~"i: tl J ~ 'l~ 'l~'"" ,:~~ 1.W 6. 1r .;~ 1l1\il H~t t~ t~·~:' $: • i ;;Y: ~ ~:~ I. April I was down only 14 fro1n ...,......,, CJ> 51 s •l• 6\11 •~*-14 c-Tr s.11 • • 11•• 1•v. 1.,, 1AM1 t.1511 11 2:11 ""' n »v, t~·tio1 ...o ts ,, ~ s. !Ft 'I> ·a long hood. short dec k sty 1ng Armcos 1 20 1 sa nu 191, •1,~ v. ClllWl..ct n 11 1 1Jto IN Ir\+ \Ii Gt Motl T•1 . " 1• 13" I>*-U ~' ,1 .s.i 11 11 IO'oli 1~ ~ lf . l·s more pronounced ,·, the new lhe 2 5, 4 4 4 I establishments Arm Pi 210 12 ,.~ 21•1, 21·.i.-v. COOP Rano-11 1•~ u•~ 1~+ Yo Gtt.110 1.2t11 tt • n tJ'tl 2l + t""'-t.OI 1 is ,,~ lJ: \ d . b . h I v· . ArmsC-010 13 IG1 :1'2\427'1 ~ COC>Wld 12' ' '' 23'-1)1.lo"" GIN Ir 1.10d n • IO'li IOI& ll'A .•. WktnSlt :.0 I '27 . od I Standard Co ugar 01ng us1ness at t e n · 1e10 Artrl$IR ,.60 ' 11 2' 'JjV. 1S"-VtCon1Ut"• Cp 1 J'O ·•'19 (\'t '"-\llGINNlll l.IO 11 1 .. " '° .. LVO c.... 13 .. Jh . + .. I m e. be . . f th" It Aro Cp 90ci ' I IS•~ IS"-lJ .... + w COnlGlt 1.1? 7S 13 to\(; """ JOl4tll~ GNN pl l .60 I :n'lo 21~ 11'1'111--l't LYk• .,.,,in 1• " 714. P-1 v.+· features include a three--ginnmg 0 15 year. was , ,.,.,,1111,.11 s2 H n• i.1• u•o 1•u-.,., c-•" 1.n11 11 JS uv. 24?°• 2R-v. GrW,~1 .. "° ' n1 ,..,..., 1Jl't 1• + \' L'/11 Pl J.12e 21 11v, u 4 ~ t h e i n d u s t r y • s b • ' t AS.t. Lid .50 w m~ S(l.0 SIMit-4\'• Cowl" Com 1? I 5\ti s s . Gt Wftl u.. • Jlj, ~ J~+ "' LVr>Ch .,. .• 1• Jj '"" '"" •l'f-' quarter vinyl roof. luxury AM>.! ou 1,,, , 111 is>r1o :lM '!S\(o+ .,. Co• 11n1 .35 n JS nl't '2\ti ""-"' GI ws1u .. r;: ' ''"' 11~ 1•~ \\ ---MM-·•eet -•ers .,,.,h XR -7 performanceforthepe.rTOO' in Keystone Savings and Loan MOrvG 130, )1 SI\~ Xll/o 31V.-\ilC PC111111.1110 .. 2'\'t 2rn.,27"'+~GrtW•"' n 'j s '"I~ '"'-Vo MICAI" .11tli -6 16 IO'A 10 j I :JI --'""' ' 12 years that Autombtive As,sociation ·has been granted ~:;r T1r~ • i 7? ·2l'" 2r"' : c~"' ~ I ~ 1f.., 1~ 1k, +i ~~-~ 1 ~ l:.,.. 1,;: l~ ~ =~1c1 30 1~ ' '~' ,,,. ~' ornamentation. a s ta n d ~ u P N h · lo 1 ff" . Athlone '° 5 11 11 1014 11 + •:. C1'1Kk•r 1.'6 1 1s ·11~ 11t~ 141.11-v. Gr9't1M wt .. 5' N "" '°" ···MM« Mii .10& • 1s! i'-U? ! + . Cougar hood ornament and ews as be,en compiling pernuss n o ooen an o ice 1n Ali<Mt 1 u.u, 1 " 11"' 11111 11v.+ ""'enim11 " ·'° 1 21 >111 12'ti ll -,.., Gr.fllr .to ' ss 1"" 10 10 -,. ecv • H 1 1 i.1•, "", 2111 '!ii+' t I the ··"'• ••·t"' f Miss .. ' Atlct E 01.i1 t 1' 21~ '1 11 -~~ Croo.i1t H..W 1' 1 lt .... lfVt 1,.,.,_ ~ G"""'""" . 1' l\!o t\lo ... • Mid l"d • .oOD •• ( ~· -' opera windows with t h e quar er Y census reports. . .'""'w~ area o 1011 ,., R~toi1ci 2 11 ri:1 ·~ ""' Ht,;+1~• c..,...,. c..-• 13 1s 211t 21\li 2111t . ou-s1 ... 1ft 1s J 111,a 1114 111Ai+" =klt111.;; • ]l lt'1 •111 t~ 1:. Cougar symbol." VKeieio,. Ronchaaldl W. Chaspers, ::i:::: l.:i :: ~ i~ U~? i~+ !'1 cfTS~~ i:: ,l ~ ti~ mt ~ ~ Gu11~1t!1~'°' • wl1YJ¥..,....9v.W:,,,.++"" M1<1111v All ii iti • f.: ;-'I~ FRO''! AN f N D U S T Ry ys one rman as an A11R,ti .... 1 1 1 uo1~ 1.-1~ 1601.~ .,,,, '111-~ ·"' n 1 11 1 .. 11 .-.~, '"' 10 ..s -"' tn<o 2'1~ "' M111....,. .H • ' 11t1o W'! 'Fl • " ' • ,.. lO 1 l~t He-.. C11m1"':.:' .UI 16 ll 36'~ ll''o lJ\'t-1"\o ""'l1 RMCll t :ti 7 11 nr,, . 1'11o+ "' Mll-H ·P. 14 ,! '""• I • 1 +'. standpoint, the m o st en· nounced. · :~~' h~c<llj; ': 20 '" ' 11<o + ,,, c11rtru wrt lD 216 21•.~ it"" 11111+1'1\ llAptt, .•Sc ~' 11•<o 13111 1•111 . Z"::=' ·;; ~ .. 1 ~ • 0 TRE INTERIOR of the 1974 · · . . Autom o.i11-11 lSJ " 311\ 31i.-V. CufllHW• A 11 1 1•'11 11·~ J4V, Gull$1U l,lf 17 ., :ID ltlti It!\+~ Ml,. H,. i's.i lt ,J 11\t lt •Iii f.i'<-Cougar also reflects the union couraging aspect of this year's Caspers sn1d the assoc1a-Automt '""' • 100 s 1"' s, +,+i: cun&rH 1.21 1 ,, 151? 1•v. Jjv,+J\ti Gu111.w, ... s .u n11o 11 1ti n 1-1ti MAftCo ·u is H ~ ~ +.,.. stability was that •"twas shared lion's new o!fice will he •,::a,, ~.~.· '. 127 ' '"' 1 '• Cyc1ctnCp 1 5 s 22 11 n -\lo Guil&.Wi .... ~ s ~ 5 ••· M•••"""" .M s :n ff" 6 . li:'*.·,=1~-of European and American "' .. , 1• '"" ,:~; 3r'4 + 1~ cv11•vs Mi 1 • 1 »~~ :ia•., :ic>'Ji+ '" G11w,"' ':" i ,, .. •·~ •'Ii MM ou 1 . .0 10 n l'r tastes. by all 4 manufacturers. Ford located Jn a shopping center ~~: :: ~ ~ · l; li ::win ~s1,,: ~~ D•mori ea 13-f:, ~ ., 171., ... 1 g~;~:.~"~ 12 : 1fi; 1m ~+ " ~=~~:..,·'I'.• 'J ~~ "'We have increased interior \\.fotor hacttbe best record with at the intersection~ Trabuco :~r.ri;~ :i ff ': ~H! ;Jr~ ;:,~+ ,~ 8:~!'i~r 1:~ 1: ~ J~ ,:1~ 2!~ ~ Hackw 2.3' ~.";;-:wi\ 1'~'>-.., ::;::r., ·/2 1: }f -ti! room •.. Bord'"al sa•"d, "and 'J""' a gain of 8 outlets for the Road and Marguerite Park-A'lntlll'IC • 1 •1 '"'' ,.., 1~,l~ 01tt 111 .:JOQ u $1 u J?\l ri••+ t1i 1-1111Pt1 .to. 1 ' i.u 1••4 ,.,~ '°"';JE' ·Ji TI ,. ..,, 1r AWWIPr 1.40 51 »I ll•'li Ill\\ !Ulli"' 01r!ll'>d pl ' t )6\~ l6 3'~1 H1lllltln 1.11 JI 7114"1lUV.1"41i+li\ """:m 1, It U Clu. ded super soft v i n y I quarter. General l\fotors and \vay and that he expected Aitec: 011 '*' JI ,1 u 1• u tJl;.+ ~. ~vc• 1.u , , 11•, ''"" "'-1to "''""'ftl .so n 11 1~ 1"" u..._"" M• "" ,, 1 \.-\ It .. , A . 'I l d S h ffi lo be I U -• a--oavllnln .14 • n 1''• 6\.ii 7 • H~1> .40 7 JO tYt llti 11-"1+ * Mlnrll ,-00 11 upholstery. lolv-back seating, mer1can "o ors ''•ere own I e o ice u y opera· e1bl.w11 .ICI n » 21•. 11" 21~+ * oiwionH .~ , 11 1,,,.. 1'1\ 16v, . Hlftdlem .u 1 _.. 1 ru ..u , ,y,.,..,., ~ ~ ., !Jli ,,. , each. and Chrysler Corp. was tional before the end of the BKM .1so ,, •1 "'" 1._ '""+·" 01wPLf '·" 11 • mto 12~ 21'•-'-\ H•lld'f H .n 11 " """ 1t 1t -1111 Mii'...,:!:!:, ·" , ! 21~ Cul P·,1e carpet"1ng and """"" ...._,,In .u u :JO 11 11 11 .... o. ... w11 .IO s 11 •1• ~ •'" 1-11111:1Co ·" , :u. 11~ 1u1i 11\'t ..... «t '~ . ' -ff 12 year 81~1f'Oll .31 n 51 1st'o 2S'li 2Yill-i.i,, Offt• I Cl I 212 31'i lli. :m"o+ lfo Htl!N 1.U 1'J 71 Sii •14> 50 +!"'-Mlt!Mf' 1.!l 2' IS!O 1ffl l ta j n e d C 0 U ga r ' S f ll 11 O , , ~.~\~O: 1'.ll : :: ~'ti ~l~ ~ltr-+I ~ g::P,!;, ::1~ : :~ at lilt l~?t n ~=:~tlll.1l 11 n lf" a .. lr't ~ ::..~: ·f t! n? ~1::: i' r.' "- llllG1.rl ..... J)OI """ ..... "• tl >L lllAlr .50 13 501 "3" j" :!\"+ \' N1r ..... 1.10 ' 7 tt>\ n •t. ,,~~+ .. Ml :m·· ' ··! lllnC 1.JI 10 1 231'1 1ll/t J • .-.. lltc lnln ( 11 1\1 V, \t H1rr1l!t .ft II I U\4 1•\.'o 11'111 ~~ • 22 r \.'I M ' w rth 81lldl0 l!IC J1 4l 26 25•1 li>4-lAi llMa Co 5 '3 11"• I ti I \0 +~ Hlrrblnl• I JO 11 t"' 'Jj ~ 1-lo Mi)~j; • JI w: " r,.._ Staler Bros. oney s 0 fll"llOI' Pll • I• 1'11o • 1"" ,...,_ l't Mil" .IO 1 ~1 21}l: 21 21~+ VI Hlfi.C:O lg • ,, lJ'~ ll'A u··~ ~ M.M~v lO j2 ~ :m\-\.W':J 111ngrP pl 2 , 2 Ul't n'h n'lt-V. nnlln Ill I l IT .. 11141 11"" · Hltl'SM.11 .II I U 1'-'\ ''"' 11'1! Ml 1111 t tt ----------------e .. k ot HV 1 • n .UI~ J.All l.ll'rT \Ii "'" ·°' 11 .. llm 10\li JO\~ . H.,..H lab 1 .. ·~ • • t' Nol m.i '1 uv.+ R•11~ v1 .1 1n 1 ll'l< 21""' ~..,. t1P1v "' 1 s 111"1 111.11 !....._"' " .... 1e1 ·1.5' 11 , m., ,,,. 11,.+ v. MAY cs 1.-·; U ~·~ ..!1' 4V..:. w S l 0 . , ..... TrV:lt l 10 ::w S6\'t SS\\ 56 +I [•111 ·60 g 11 Ill'~ lO, I ·~ "'-Alb 1 1 2 IN ll,6 IN+ It MIYw05 .65 I .1i i, r Ir':: I: e s pen1ng G d N B l ll•rblrOI ,.. 12 1At ,... 21\io+ " t CHI l·" I .~.l'lJ 1lt.~ 11:.._ 111re11in. II 11 I!\ Ai. ,.. Ml'f'IJW .JO • 6 r.a '* .. 00 ews a anc 11..-dClt .1• l$ J3'I lit 2•'111 211 ... ,v. pf J'U .. I ~.... 'i· He.A Mlf'tlt! '' 2 11io. , ..... l•V. -\·Ml " 1:11 'I .. ffi1 ,· ! ... •• e °''"" '·"" ' U M~ M» ,..._ » = i.<.I "". "\°oo"~ ':,'1. ij"::.. ~Hk"~ .U O U ,,_ "" ,,,._ • d U ... lll .. Stater Bros. Market at 2180 e111c 1n ·'° 1• s tlil A ~ .. 01 1ij\ .. s •111t ts + HotcllM<I t' n JJ1 20l4 It~ ,""_. 1• ""' 1.10 • '! ,,,,. "* 17"" "' 811ttMI .20 II 3 10 •!'I "'-· I pf ., l 7•"''17i\l' I Hllremto .4-1 6 11 lO l\.'I tl4-'11 ~ > 1 22 IS J114m'4 Jrui+t New port Blvd. in Co!!ta Mesa. R••nM 111 1 , 3 u ,, " . .,, IP .1~ h 'JO 1414 1 · I +v. H .. iu H 1.01 11 ,, ""' lN 31 -'4 ..,. d c p St '°'JI" 1 Jl'llo+.nt. I h d I. h da I u s B d s ll1lh Ind .JO 6 '' 1t ll'ii 19 + 11 F n .Sol ll 1 11V. D ll'h M1""11I .16 111 311 Jl\i J.tl't 25 + ~• Mc OllO Al 1 tll I "' •+i ., s SC e u 1ng a t ree y t f1111scllL . .n 16 111 22"• 21'~ 211'•+ 1ili01nH I ' •31 1'H~ \\ ~-... I~ H~ Curl I lVi lW• ll~-"" ""' ·~ I\\ 11 :!!"" 2.M4 ,...... • grand opemn"geventfoJIOW>"ng ,.. u ge ee1·1 B1~1trL Ull Jll4"1'11 '31'>4<1i.TV. 1m $1!m t 26 1;,o ' ~lt H111 .. 1nf .M1 5 523l•!r l1 Jl,,._l:,Mc• IA I tl I ~ ~"' Ii ... ,. "40 11 t 3:m 33\'lll 33\'t-"° '1Shmol 2 t 26"• 2~ ~'"+'lo l'lfl"*°• '° t U IS IS U MGC,lof I.JO · ' I I I[\• ln.'t-1~ remodeling or the facility. • • BNr Fos :,, n 211 21 20i-. 10'4+ ~ ~fh"' ·~ 11 1: \!\t Ii 1 '-+~Hit'" P1.'l0 1• • ,.,. u1ti Z..19+ "' =,~er., i • '": (. .I Jl'..t ~ h fi ~••fO "' 1 s 101\\ 102°" 1071+-7 • 0 IOli 10 2 13 4 • ....,.,.,P c10 J '~ ru 1"' ... 1K.. lSll t:i: 1 \.\ 20,,. Si\+ ' A\I new mere andising IX-• 11::mo -~ ll 1; n:: ~~ If'+~ IG!:n; ... I m ~ '"" Jtr °"' ~u·.:.1: 14 ll~ :t :1 ~ ·· &T rtff ' .. J1 ta • -w-lures have been designed into By SYLVIA PORTER federal budget was m balance fle1e°:.r ·.10 ' ,, 13'" i1 u~+ v. ml~ •:; tl "~,., 7:1? ~+~~ i.11 i1 n i•~ '6"" ''"' :· \TJl"•1~ . Ji:"' U"J ~+"' th od · t · and ex in only" one year ftscal 1Mft lltteh c RR . 1100 l 3 l + 'Ai l'lol!C ..loo u 1 l'.l" ""' "~"' HN111.in .n 10 111 •• «1\-'r •+ -. Ntc:L"" M ,0 1 S.'111 """ ,... ..... e m em m er1or -One rare piece of good news -· '711~ 11e1caP11 211: 1 n 1a1• 10 10""+ *' $ntvW .12 ss S60 'fl\ 1'"' flv..t.'~1 Htwttt P .10 11 ti 15'\ """ n\.'l+T"' Mc\.lwlll s11 , .., 'f in-. 1 ~·~ terior decor. The three day coming out of Washington -which· was half president== .\:: i~ 31 1m 1:\,, 1:,~ .. tt/~,·~-R, ~ 1~ ~l ;fl! 3t~ +ll =/C.n ~) 7; lf J:4 ~~ n'U-l'I =1~p ;a ,, ~ laU J'l~ lU: ... _ llOl-so. !!!;.'!~:1:::TA ANA grand openkig celcb~tlon will Wliich even \Vatei'O"a le-shoiild" Johnson's and half Pre~dent ~.~1~c": :tJ ~ ·~ ~ P,,, 1~L·v. :.:r lfu» ., '~ 1~~ 2~l~ ijr:++~ ~~: ~:.!,~ ~1 :~ 2j" ~ 2~,,,t ~ =:i \·J .. ll ~. ll·• U..-·w a h Ml "" 11111 be Thursday through Satllrday "" . , . a1nc11. , 40 t 10 nv. ntt ~JV•+ t.i. rlltoPt" • 12 131 ~ 'Pl + ~ H9MrlM '" 1s 10 '"" 2-ru. '""+ ""E 1 Corp ·; , 2" ~ ~ •· ·, "!:! ~rn~'s•n '1C1fme,.1!~ s. .. Jvt1~ an'd features free prizes, nGt obscu re Is that the federal Nixon s year. Nt.n1n entered aendl• pf. l • ,,.,., s2in sno, iM" t • " 2u 1 ,.., ',,; i,~~ HOt•M• ,,, ' 4 m. 1114 ~• * Mer si-.03 ,, 76 m. ,,_,,. 21 ~ .... " > b d · · hal he Wb ' • fleri Cp l.15 't 16S lOl~ 1t~ :ml!T ~ ' · ~ 'i s " 6:1\ ~~ i. ~ EIKln I U ~i .... 6111 Mtllltcci ._ 1 11 !YI I\' I~, •• •ptltr•111 • El r• ... t•H 11111 ,. refreshments and balloons for u get 1s nearing ancc. In t 1te House 1n January a...c Pf •.lO 1 11~ '' r1""+21~ ~.~ :!. u 2• ~: 1'l\~ _ l'I HPI 1,.,,. ·'° 1• :t.1t 1t\, 111~ ''""+' Min: str "° '' 1 5 s..Ya 55 .,.1• 49 '" 1221 h k'ds fact. in the 1974 fiscal year J969, inheritt'd John so n •I' ="' ~;: 1; '!! 1~~~ 1~ ,~tt_ 1ti c 1~ '• 12 17"" 11;" i! · -=-~ ,, .l :t -lm :~v. ~1ttt 1JI •J "i fr' Ti" fr+ ._ ~IJlllllJlllllJlllllJlllllJllll"!'lll!!'IJlllllJllll~~ 1 c -'-·----------i which began last week the budaet and the 1968 boom 11~111sr '·'°" • 102 ,..., '' ?r.-11. +~ .10 1 • s-. :flt 1w Ho..ywt 1.111 n "'JM"~ 1~ 1~+11& MlrPll L .a11 1 1a 1~ 1~ 121o.1..t4 : ---• "' • 8kt l '"" .n " ' ,...,~ i.v, ::W1'>-"" ,,....· 1 n m .;i·1 , n -·~ ._.,., 1.21 1 • 1~oU. ""' ll'lll-'' Mts1Pe1 .10 20 u 6'"' ""' ~· .... MY1rt11e"""t federa l government's income began trying to curb the thei 1111<:111.ok 1 ., •11G9U ior i... 1°'"'""'" r•w "" t ,, ,,,,.. ' lJ -''·HCN'lion c,, i '°' r~ '') ,.... ... "-M1Mt11 .~11 10 1oi t\11 •~ ""-+ '• T · t' Rectal Jtch · 1•r,1r Jn .4 • •' n;, 1\J '''+ "' PF \if 13 711i 6.\ '"•+ ·~ How1111 Air 1 1 ,,., 11• m ... .,. Ml'' M«t> . 2 11v. 111"1 1,,,.,..... '4 Ormen mg well may approxunate its upswing sent us instead into 111toh11ci' • 16 1ir. 1s·-·+"' rntet". 12 ml~»'• 31"+"', HoscoCP .nb • "1111o 1~ 1~--..~ M lf!C • 1 h"'o l•"o U lt-+, ... I I •the f" t" d I i.A ' • 81oc;kHR .l'1 I HO l'O 7'~ I' ~ rnol .l. , 6 l0'4 »'• .01~ -i.t~ HMI In!! ,l6 11 ?J 13 1'\'• lt't+ 14 .., N ..!iOt:I I 11 "U 16\.11 )6 +1'1-0U go or l!St tme Ur ng t1K: 1969-70 recesS!On -and 81\lf~etl .'3 S 61 l~ IJ•'o l:N rti pl ., . .U 0 a•1, th IO'i.t \' Houcl1i~ .40 ' lf 11 10 ;i 101._ \'o ,,_,~ l.l2 . . r10 11»'1 1~ l~·~ll,, Of He· morrhoidal Tissues the Nixon tenure. slump. Incomes fell , taxes on ==~car~ t~ '~ l~~ 1f.: 1~1. ~=ir LJ7tl .•. 1~.~'° 3f,~ nv.+ tt =~.i!l 1: ~ 1ii; 1l~ 1m_+ .... ~~~:",:IJ :g 'ft r-'"1~ ff.. ~': That means these income' fell too and eo1n c11C.d t ur 10~ ,,,, 10111+1111 .--v1~1cf 1 1i tt ~· ,g~ ~~"-""" ·" 10 10 rn. nl't 13v.+,,.. Mj<~ot .... s 11 1" 10tlo 11~+ \4) Prom. ptly Rel1"eved that a tty that was the s~rt llfe and 111 :"',,." ''1.~ 1o s: 2t~ ,::~ ,t:t ~t ':pf .fo · :.Jo~J.otU1:: lft""...: .. t=i:l ~~ · 1: !~:Z *\: !1:-:t1~ :i~'~j"~,. lJ 1~ i~¥; f~," r.tt+f ~ M• w 1.l5 I 36 1! 21'• 2•.._ ~ 101 '·D ·· "' ':it HaoutLP \.«I ll 1'11 .Ji~ l"\ 31>~.,. ~ MIOS.U l.!O 11 110 n•~ 2J 2:21'> '!'. force ft1el'~ death of the balanced budget llormitnl 1n 11 12 1v. 3t• 3l'• "Pi '· ·· u~ ;f" r, ti ':: 14 110UNr~ .l4 u J1 21~ 21 1IVI ..-~ MhlMf I.lib • l 1~ 1s•• lPi ~" In many L."ISCS Prt'""'rnt.ion Ii dmds or ()<1Lienl5 showed thig od ., f the tlr d :::1:i '·:: IO llM ,fr.? ,?1~ ,mt: \'t g:::,':d ~~ 7• IJ JI lJ~ :nu-11' ~NG Pl ]Vt • * u ... + \ti ~lf:n: i'~ ,: '; ~~I w~ llo.r. w; ,~ t ay s ga • o en e ecadc. '°"'"' •"'" , , 11..,, 1l 111.+ \ ~1111 CP 10 3 s~ 1\, J\i-v. Hciw•rdJ .20 'JO * 1,. 1p, " +1.._ Mu1or1 a.-.3' , •r 121~ ""' ff · .. 1tivesprompt,tcmporaryrelief to be true in many cases. In loping Jnfla. Between fiscal 1965, when rrr1,.11A1, 3r 11 1" ti~ , t+ 1 ~°"~1r1e u f:ltJ 1:~1t~~~11: 1; # :*!: :;y, l~"± ~ M111 .. ~,, 1 o. ..., ~; 111~ ~t1~ from such p.1i n and itching fflcl, many doctors, them·' tion wlll be the Vietnam war was escalated :~~v 1·1~V ~t 11? ~~ ~; ~l~+'"-P~ Pi 3v, 2 s2v. s1"' ,1~-"'Hudllav ·'·'° ,, 11 lflO :n 2114-h ~!~,.1 ::J. : ! 'i~ ln2 ~nt+ ti nd t lly helrw shrink tielvcs use p,.~..,...,.tion H® or · f nd fl 11r11 Mv pf , 1 ,.,, :till. :t1~0-10 OvoML 1.1! 10 n tl'AI Jl'• lll•+ \.\ H1101111H . .-1 1 6~• 6f• 6h ·•: ""'''"''" .14 11 11 s(6 is 1, ""' a ac ua ,~ · ,..,..... -losing orcc. a sea l 1973 the ac-!•HP•t .21b 71 ,, 11•1, '' I' _ \'• OuciLhl Pi 1\50 N-U 1\0 ,,~ ""°""' Tool 11 tJ 4'to 6 .. u.+ •• Miu Riv .to n l 1 • ..., 16~ 1.....,+ ·~ sweJling of hcmorrhoidal tis-r~mmend it for their ram. It· means cumulated d e ! i c i 1 ap-.~;'" ~r1 i''° u ~ 2rn ~.~ ~~+ .'.'" Dvmci 1 ... 'JO '-ll •1S~ 15 1~ -~ =~~:a:;:"E ~~ ~ 2l 1~ '!.,. 1~·"' ~~ ~.J : , g~ mt 11 . ., suescausedbyinRammation. ilics.PreparalionHointment h proi td ltoo 11r:tGf'1l ·i "~""" 1~,., Eeo1tP1 .t1 • 101•:i;,21·0 111tt t•HuyckCp.2•,.. 12110 JO lO . MoPllbs.w 10 31~11s1~rez+ • . . t at govern-. ~ma e an awescme . erunGt 1;11 10 ,, 1,i. fl"°i 1ir·.+ 1\ E•ieoC ·l'Jb ' 20 11 l~~ 11. , H10,orm .1• 1 u. 1•• / ''-'+ 1' ~~It! H ·:J 1 "° f\lo •1.<1 ""! ,, T.est.s by doctors on hu.n· or suppos1lor1cs. ment fiscal bllhpn. That'!! the de.f1cit t:1:~.cr.; l 11/ 2~tt ,: lll~+ ~:~lm",/fi n S: l~~ 1lli ,:·":: }? CN """"'" u 1~1 ),, ,...., no• "' ~": l;; ': i~ tt!! t;"' t= :! SALES ·WALL STREET lnwestment Firm wltft tran<h Offlca hi Newport l•ch Part Time Or Full Time Generous Commissions i/ 11ou cmt dtvott 3 1pedfic totnings a IDttk from 8•30 P.M. <o JO P.M. Call, 714-675-4,ltO ....... 10:• A.M. & •1• ,.M. ' - -. ' Sp ending• &Jone. !lrft SIW1o 20 IS 2 t1• l''o tloT U E•~IUlll 111 II ... • 11•111 •'"' ,•-,,. ~_.,_I' 1.16 10 U ~ JIV, 211.it ~,Moll-Ot TlO 4\l ,_ "il!t '• tax) poUcy will swing from Tbese defi cits poored money &rvnl""" :2, • 111 '"' U ,.t._ 1~ e,•ronc,, .'!. 1~! J ~ fr:? r,-.. '""' (l ~0 • rw ,,.• ,•, • ,~t• ,'" ,.!~~ ~~c-' 3 12•0 ,... 1 \-t '• \ • llrF..,rls '12 11 JS 1,,.,, 1"11 17'1+ "°EU K• 1.llh M ll«I 2' ~ij'"" .... lfll' .IO I If ll " 11'• 12"!. \o #,\ol'lwti Jtll I J J 1$1 1~ 1 +•;, Into the · 1 ero1nw o0 • 1 '!tl J 7\'4+ ~ '" 11... .... 5 1111 1. 2' .-Ii ~ "'"~ ,._,..,.._" .60 111 ' 1'\'f U''o 1,,, actually encouraging our des~ economic s ream , evcv E l.20 u u X1'1t+ .,.. Ec-d Jk .10 21 1Js 211'4 i' .. ~ 1\.\ IK•"t" '·'' • 210 'f• 11\o 11~ h MOl'IOOl"•m , 11 5,1 Ml! ,.... ,, truct.ive price sp.iral to heli)ing boosted the toal of spending ::=c~0DI'~ s ~ 11 ij~ 3"' · lg~,ic,i\ :~ 1 [~ i!~ IT'~ U :~~g/A31~ j 1~ h riU :l t1t~ :;:,"_:"',;~ :; 1?; lo~ ' ~! ~ f. ht it . money In the hands of con-:~ i1~ n 'l 1f~ ~ ~+ ~i l~it "'~ n " •\Ii ' '"+ v.~'l,C-01 i:f'i '' !38 ~~~ Jm J:~+ ~ =:ro~ i~ ' 1l litv, :,~ J,' -,. ig · sumers and the cash registers eu1d1v 1.;211 11 '6 " 27~ " +1~ o co .JSb '' ,~ 21,L m \ JO!ll:.t•-•1 ,flw of 1.12 1110 u~\ su~ » ... , ~tPr ~-11 11 1r~ lilt 11~ . , au1ov._w 60 1 l It\' It n -'4 "<:! 'fotfT!O ' •• J... l -. !ToolW .l6 70 • 21 lT . 11 + ·~ Mcin~1.\ . 'j " I"' ~-µ,~ · IT !\1EANS Tl:IAT -rn-of corporations. This ts the run-avntrtt ·1·00 • .c1 .,~ '" ..... , ~Lrpf Nso:i ·· 7! ~; h*t 1\ 14 _,., cri s » .... ''"' r.+ '' ""-J s ~"' . • m<!Ol monetary ( C r :-di t) damenta) reason "l? . are =~r·r 11~ '; 1!/ ~ a~ ~·2~ ~~f~J~ ·~ ff 1~;: l~ 1!~+ ! ~~ Jt!: ;~ la ~ ~~ ;t! n ~\I~~ 1J l:f h~ f\~ 1fV.i':.i policy, alre3.dy on the anti.Jn-cursed by f demand·pull ~la-i::!°ici .j 11 111, ~i 1f~ ~ ~:_-,c~, 1i'f~ ~ ,! W! i~'-ll tr.rt,,\~ ~~!:i fo111 , · 1f 1f,.,•~?11,"?,,.r.~1l. Z~ .. Sf\.;1'{ I 11 1f;~ 1::\ 11\! ... \, nation side wlll become mora tlon today. For purchasing 4'"'1'(111' · .. " 114 nm "n' 2lJa+>'' eme1 pl ,,. 4 ' SA'' s.·, s.,..,_, .• .,..,. oil '·"' • d 2511 1i"i rs• '• t:;'"'of. , '° • " 1~·~" 19' •• SO -for fhe Simple re4llOIJ powtr tUl5 expanded lit a fDr lllM Lll'llvr Jl-<J~ 1 -Vo ~=:11~ :~ 10 ~ 'm .M~t sr.:!:_•:,, ~"( r,1t t 1 U ~I r,111 ~u:' :~ Ml 'fw1' 1: 'I ~ 9":t ; ' fl1'+2~ f ~--I Iha the I r lllLT ,,,,b 1l u J~'t 1•1) 2•'\+ ~ .. Emti.'1 l.'IO ' 11 It\.~ lt'• It'~+•; 11\duNlll . • • 11 2r·. 2n ) ,,,,_ ,, ~1!11.i l. so~ ' ~~, ., that !he federal r eserve a.,'"°ra e n sup p yo •ricoi cci .IM• 13 ]']''l'~+1<>~MJLt .06b1s •'' 4 l!lt!•to 011 112,,1 n1 ,4_.1,Mil.'tl'dvs1 ' ,,,~~''9..-z rt sys tem will no longer bo 1toods and services chased by :::~ :cg l 1'! ~, ;1 r>-.~ E=W -1: 1.1. ~ 1~ 1fi.. 1~-:? f::11t"~ fJ I n 1~ 1ijJ:; J!i, ll~1:: ~~~'r." fft t 16 i~' l~ ~~ k compelled lo pump crcd.il into tho$c hnving the purch.as~ng :H~~n·1i ,: :· 1 t .t ,,~.·,,,, ~:::::1r.1"0.1 : 3i :~? .~ ;:r=; :, l::l.S:',,1ij •11 : 1•l ~i? •'It~-,.,$~~· J! 2f lJ ,; i' +it our banks-on so -granchose a power .• ~t ·ha~ been exe~111ve :~IL·~ J.& 11; ~u. ,,t: inr.!1nl:::r."=-tl 11 Jl~ ~f' »~~ ~~ +i~~m"r1"'c·.1& , !r 1~1• i:'! 10 ! ~~Mio... 1,\111) 0 'f t·r lt: 1r-i scale In order to assist the demand pulling up .prices -•mP s rn u tt ,,.. 21\'I '""-u ""'l Bt.11 "' • ,. J~.,,,,!• --r~ t JO I "" II\} 11'" Mvt<• L .ICI 12_ .. _,_ ' 1\T Trusury in borrowing tha "demand-pull •inOatlon." .... ,.~'.Vj .. 11 211· 111 'f\ 1fsi -:E:C'M 'J 2) 14~ fjE.i~' f.f~+ "'"~ ·~~ : i 1lY» 1~ '~ i... t:~:c.~ht~ U t! W" I=+~ money It needs. • . !,,"'i11~'.1 11 1 I IJ !11 s..._ '" 1 .. •,\• ,• .J "';~ ~ }'~;::.\·.a l n ~'.! n~ ~"" ~r,~·\.s :B tr• \1 ~\. "'1'1':-" With federal budgtl dt!iclta ON TOP OP' this. thfl d ' .. ~ ti, 3ll 11''!,, S:!:t: n 'fi111C 1.Jr,, i , .. H,"',.~ ..!~ il'J:: 14 1)11,\ C• ,, .. ,. m XISl't "'" '°'"1"11 Na1rl1'M, .JO • l" 1, l"I n llli + • • tft! I · l fi ~ ~·er.-~.,__ · ! ' ., ,,,.. . ....,._ "I'll"' .nt .. ill M\ .. IJ\li IM 11• NllA.V .OJll 4 1,!\\.,, 1)1.t, IP\ averaging l23 bllhon annually Federal a ... rve wa,, forced to :~~' °"~ ij' ' ll' Jl'-_ l::.\1:.'i :fl ~ ~ ,f,i 1l, t, :'"'" ,'~ ' ": n1• f,l\ tr.:+ tt ~I~' I';, ,-1/ .. ' ~" f' ~!.;' ~li:= lt In the past three years, "the pump up money ln the banking n;rt rt 1·5 ' , ,r.: ,l._ l,l l:l,t/'c" 1 ' ~. t• 1tfi 4'"".j: ·=• 'rn0 .. JO "' '" 1-" · i~ ~"· ·"° ,1 , ~,"" on)y.. tbJng !l\lrpr!Jlng lboU\ J}'StCm mOl'O than it miKht =~ J'rli ' Vt ml ~ t: :111v1~.MI \! n-.r ~\6 " I ~!:t:n :: it J ri" n ~ 16 I l!v't ;i • , Jf ':1 ~I ~ contlnulng price lnflatott," otherw!Je havt done IO that~~~G .... ·n 1; 2t r l4 14 rlt'o+ ,,:;f,i~,il ·j t• tf• im: 1r.-. l~:',...,\ll';r"t7' ''ff l:~ 1r~ , •.• _~ f~S .. 1~ lf 5{ if-'\~ ~/q , comments Or. Ju.les Backman, the TTeasury could easily stll =~~. 1; , ~ ,t~ 1fi. ,;:~+ \• !Q°" 1 • 1 1p -.11o •sYa "'~-~fl(.°1..! ,, ~U P.~ ~ ~· !! ~rt,.Gffl ~ I I,' ~ ~ 1 - New York u n l v e r s I I y Its obllgaUonJ to the banks. ~: !ti ~ I~ i~ u .. n,~-." F•~· ... IO 11n'ru "' 11 I~ f "~Ji'1~ IJ ,~ ,fU wt!: ),._, el tf.,';.1: ' ~'~ii 1:? .. economics professor, "ls that Again. to quote B a c Ir: 1 n g Sf"",.~ • I J!z '~1 lt·t· ::~ ~~n~ \ 1-l ·1: ii! + i. rr11 II! • ' ., 7 l7 . M p • \\ ~v 1::, .. 11 ~!,, ~· ~.i.. so many perauns are surprised system more thin it mJQht ~:.::: ci; t I~ uu ~'·· "'" .. h!151;1f , I~ .ii! ,a 1t I lfo~:Ji .. 1 n ~:-? ~ ~\ ... 1"0 Ntt~¥·rill~0• ,f • ~'~ .: ·tri•; by It." oih<'!rwlsc have done so that I I"""' 4il ~' \,, ff.~+ l~ ~·~r;,.1 • ' ~2 , •• 1~ 1 ~ 1n1.~ t • ,. tt'~ f~ .. tw1'i ... ~::1;nl ' ' 1lf ,, 1-. the Treasury could wUy Bell :=.1".6'b 1T ' J \6 ff' -1~,..:1111 Mi "I if.l ~ "-'~ n1C11ttG'•" d ' "• ·~··•1 "'""' S'1!'',.,., ll ll '" -\ii f o... ,,.Hu.i TAO 1 " ~ , Feddtn lj 11 I 1 1 ..-• ll'ltef"SI l'1'f '' , I 11'(1! , l . -t.I OORING TUE • ....., the Its obllgatln1 to the bin.a. 911 lilL '"'° 10 mM> ""Ffd,l(p I t\+ ,.. '"'"l'w ,.,, ' 1 ~ I • 1 t • -· ' 11 '1 u + • ~ . ' , . • . - • • • 'Why don't you retire from work now, Daddy, before you're too old to ploy wit~ us?" Of'l'N DAILY 10 TO 10 SUNDAY 10 TO 1 HANDY BROILER-FOIL Proble11as Huge -18"•25' K"morl b<ond olu· /·· ~F ··1· 00 minum broil•r foil In handy __ ,_T 01n Bradley Has J;=::;:::;:'';:~~~~:~.;.:;;~ """-.::· ..... _..,......, ......... Big Task Ahea~ Capitol Ne"'' Service SACRA~fENTO -How does one become an "activist'' mayor of a major city when he follows a man who spent 12 yean of virtual inactivity in the office? 1bls is the problem facing Tom Bradley who has taken over the reins or Los Angeles city government from Sam m-"--=-· Yorty. As a charter city, Los Angeles is rwt by the City Council which functions like a legislature, and by Jll()re than . "pays high taxes" yet has. "almost no public transporta- tion and is pockmarked with un!inl.sbed streets"; -Neglected areas like East Wilmington "which iS like a \Yasteland ," and East Los Angeles which needs jobs, playgrounds "but more than that. hope"; -And Veni~, where "vitali- ty bas.almlllt stopped." mE NEW MAYOR said he was interested in fihdlng ways to end duplication of govern- ment se"lces, protest the ~ high coat of food , upgrade and 1At91cGU11 ......... 11,., tJ1e lllUll/Or of IA• A•geles b tlle set!O•tl stron9est e.renotl1'e offleer clean.. the beaches of pollu- tion, develop a rap~ d transportation system and use "all its powers of persuasion and councillation" in the area o f labor-management pnr bl<ms~ _ _ He committed City Hall to ~ economic p ro gress by 100 municipal commissioners · e s t a b I i s h i n g a "full who are appointed by the partnership to stimulate, en- mayor. courage and coopefate with 'lbus, during Yorty's three the private sector of the com- --U. CaHfortd". munity." terms. the mayor turned the ·operation of the city over to .. _ _.._"' OF YOU ha .Ills commlalooen, blamed the · ~" ve City Couno.1 ror lack of action beard me say tbat I am In 8nd travelled around the worki love "".!_lh this city.'' Bradley making "foreign p 0 11 c y • ,-declartd. "and that's true,' but speeches and running for more tha~ lhat, I love the peo- govemor and President of the pie who bve here. .,,.;.,t.1~~~,~~.M ROCKER ' dlly b11ilt with dur1bl• pl11tic • "'" •• J•1': .. . •• DAILY PILOT TUESDAY & WIDNISDAY ONLY -. - Men's Wrl!Jlcle-lleslStpn.t NO-IRON SHIRTS ~ I • "-OG· EAOI Fei1turi.IMJ • r•gular long· point roller and on• pock. •t. Polye1ter/c o t ton in new fe1hioni1bles. S-M;L, s ..... 1 • • I CJALLON ,. i MARGUERITE • -- PHOTO ALBUft' 1 ~ DAISY • 3-HP 22" ROTARY MOWER 2 DAYS ONLY 44.00 ~'.':7 2 ·~~ 67c ~ Only I Eo51·spill, .-.cotl..;ort;ng rnower with ~Briggs & Stratton engine, 5 . J · h 9 l 11' Your 1;hoice white or yef· h h-"'· _, magnetic ·ring s eets, x • low deiii••· Fett 9rowln9, outomotic choke, control ond stop.,..;rc on uu--. Rugv-o ...S lefHI for Photos ........ , ..... 971 ft•• btoomi~9. with 7" ~h,.._.w~s. deep-tread tires, Charge it and~- I \ United States. "I intend to .repay the . chance you have given me by BRADLEY WANTS to giving this city a chance: a .. reverse this course. chance to meet and defeat erm• 111d 2 'Ii •• polypropyl1<11 webbln9. A¥0c1do or t11191 rin1. 1pecl1lly priced for +~;1 11le. 500 fl~~-~.J~; I ( •• Hidden in the body of his those ills we face, a chance tolll"'.._.- speech on Inauguration Day chance to mee~ and defeat ~-,....,·-~ ~ was the line, "We will keep those Ills we face , a chance to our sister cities program, but become one city in· America we shall add two new· sisters which mastered its di(· cities -Sacramento and ficulties ; a chance to become wasruhcton. I intend to go to the kind of city we might these cities to fight for our · leave to our children with fair share of our tax dollars." pride instead of apologies." Yorty visited Sacramento and Washington infrequently. He made little effort to rattle the higher governmental cage for more support for the 2.1 million people in Los Angeles. And, Sam Yorty lost the faith and trust of the voters who, accordingly, turned him out of office last May. Logically spcakiqg, t h e flllyor of Los Angeles is the second strongest executive of- ficer in California -right after Gov. Ronald Rea gan. He jumps in importance over the beads of such well·known mayors as Joseph A. Alioto of San Francisco, already a can- didate for governor in 1974, and Pete Wilson of San Diego, who talks about running for lieutenant governor next year. BRA9LEY NOW ranks just behind Mayor John Undsay of New York and l\tayor Richard Daley of Qllcago. Bradley·s voice will be heard in the hallowed halls Or Sacramento and Washington because Los Angeles needs help. tn bis inaugura~~address, ·Bradley hit hard on the pro- blems fa cing the city: -Unplanned growth of the San Fernando Valley which '1J.t · HarborDENTAL CENTER DENTURES ~ CREDIT ~ PENTOTHAL PILUNM • ll'FUCTIONI • RIMI WOll 1.UYI • llllTUlll • ••111 . JA.cans PlllTOTllAL • IOOT CANALS M .caowNS • WISDOM TDTH I MINOl Oil ODONnA 2706 HARBOR ILVD-COSTA MESA et A-. It.• Nntte"" I Phone 556-8013 ·'· . . TUFTED CHAISE PAD KnV• ed9e 1+yl in9. Bi9 comlar!ebl1 .3-00 ;j 241171'". Come1 in 111orted llor1I p•I· _ t1r111. Stock up now fo r 1umm1r time outdoor 1i .. in9. Ju1I 11y "ch1r9• if', 2 DAYS ONLY Scr11n·prlnt1d tollon terry h»Wett ore J'x6l". Choo1e from many bri9ht novellr print1. Get 1et for the awim. - OUTDOOR GYM 'SET 2 DAYS ONLY 20.00 e Pl11tic Lown Swin9, 2 ple1tic 1win91 • .... ir flit• · 5 fl . ectu1I 1tilie • 7·fl, .. 1rlic1I • I ' hori1onl1! · c.andy tltiped 1191 • tefety ., con1ln1clio11. j Use Your K·MART ~HARGE BANKAMERICARD or MASTERCHARGE CHILD'S INFLATAILE CHAIR Vinyl inflatable chair with ufety steal YaJve. Charac it at Kmart. c BOYS DENIM BUSH JEANS Slaet 12 to II. To119h, 1tllf'4y for l•n9 w•tr. .. 222 30-(i)T. PICNIC CHEST 2 DAYS ONLY 100 ; Roomy, 33-quart picnic chest has molded "end grips" for eosy carrying, ond the !Id doubles os a convenient serving troy. In white with green • to'IWtWi" rrr wa:e•?' nn _____ ....,...,,. U QT.° .""'1 , ~'' POLY FOAM t . J 34£('Q & I • CHEST . 12 quirt 1i1• Jiolyfo1m che1t wit+i '"•tel hen le i1 • perfect picitic c1rrier. Keep• •••rvthlnt freth end cold for ho11r•, l11y now •nd ••"•· ICE FRE~ZER TIA Y • 2 Doys Only Ri91d -odo polyoth,i.ne. lCHps plclllc ...... cold. s-. 66c ) I I --- • ....,, J111} '· 1913 Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock 'Exchange List .. Stocks · Up; Has It Hit Bottom? NEW YORI< (AP) -Sto,ck market prices moved higher Monday. and analysts tied it to some firming ol the dollar overseas as well u the possibility that the market mig,ht bavo bottomed· out. "I'm quite pleased the way !he market Is react· ing since f!!ally !JlO~t ot the news~ negative, bUt we : need hlgher;volume before I become really encour-.,. aged,'' siid La".)' Wachtel of Bache & Co. ''The market Is giving a reuonably good account o! itsell," said Martin L (foodtrtend of Bruns, Nord .. mann & Co. .. . . SC DAILY PILOT Jl Briefs r L Mondiy, July 9, 1973 ·--lnvasioaa Fleet? ' Actually, this is a fleet waiting for an irivitition -or 3~,000 Boy Scouts. The scouts will co1ne to Farragut State Park, Idaho from Aug. 1·7 for Jamboree \Vfst. The national festival will draw boys from all over the nation and cano- ing is only part of the fun ahead Silly Season Blooms Ga.rbe1istangle Mail: Put-ons Wit1i Class II happens every year about this: time. As good garbcns tange1ers gel together -or start to think about it -and as lhe date for the year's . .Build_a Beller Garbenstangel Contest .and lntematiooal Rallye. ap- proaches, the mail around lhe Daily Pilot office turns furiny. Some of the letters fairly bloom with word bouquets. Sometimes, it's easy to spot a put-on. Sometimes not. J\. B. MUSIC of 16352 Gen· try Lane, Huntington Beach, sent aloDg a note in answer to I~ Daily Pilot's published challenge to build (or find and put into conditio"n ) a garbenstangel for the great rallye to be held July 18 through 21 al South Coast Plaza. "We were unable to com- plete our production model in time for yOur splendid. con· test," he wrote. "We spent too much time exploring the export market. , . .I have enclosed, hereWith, a description of tb"e working fun· . Odd Couple St. Berriar~ Dac1ishuncl FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla-(AP) -A Juli-blooded l»pxmd st. Benard and her omtu* a>mpanioa, a short, bisky dachabund,' have be- c:ome proud parents ·of nine puppies. . "l've never heard of it hap- pening before and neilhcr has the vet," said the dogs' owner. Barbara Batchelder, about the mating of the two. Pat, the dachshund, is a 14· inch-tall 30-pounder "who is not quite full·blooded," said Mrs. Batchelder. Lies), the St. Bernard and the new mother, gave birth at home to eight pups, but one died. "Three o! them a re beautiful and St. Bernard-look· ing, with the black mask around the eyes a n d everything," l\1rs. Batchejder said . "The others are reddish· brown \n c:olor, just like Pat. They're a~ut five. or six in· ches long and.it's really too early to tell what they're going to look like." . The Batchelder family didn't know Liest was pregnant tmtll !\.1onday. ' "We were so surprised, but the vet just laughed and said the puppies would be smaller and the litter not as big as normal for a St. Bernard." fl.frs. Batchelder said. "Pat and Lies! are constantly together In our yard, and there's no way anyone else could be the father." The veterin8.rian said he could not say wbo the father of the puppies is, but said It is possible that it is th e dachshund. A Lot of Talk Sex Revolt Bunk, Expert Reports damentals of our unit. ... " THE ENCLOSED sheet con- tains some or . the best garbenstangel put-on material received to date. Of course ; it's a put-on, jsn'l it? Here are some ex- cerpts. Judge for yourself: "For a number of years now, work hes been pro- ceeding In order • IO bring perfection to the crudely con- ceived idea of a machine that would not only supply inverse reactive current for use Jn unilateral phase detracters, but wou1d also be capable or a utomatic~ly synchronizing ca'1final grammcters. "Such a machine is the 'GARBENSTANGEL.' Basical- ly the only principle Involved is !hat, instead of power being generated by the relative mo- tion ·of conductors and fluxes. jt is produced by the modial interraction of magneto-reluc- tance and capacitive subse.lsyoance. ''THE ONLY MACHINE of um type has been one with 1 battery-operated piddlebottom and a base plate o f prefabulated annuUte, sur- mounted by a malleable stron· tianite casing in such a way that the two spurning bearings were in a direct line with the pcntametric fan. The latter consisted simply of s i x hydrocoplic manelvanes, so fitted to the ambifacient lunar waneshaft that side fumbling was effectively l!evented ... '',Engineers will appreciate the dJ[ficulty of n u b b i n g together a r igh l·h anded zoenstlft and a power dipoleck. Indeed, this proved to be a stumbling block to fw1ber development until, in 1963 it was found that the ~ o( anhydrous nangling p i n s enabled the krytonastic boil- ings to become snarned. •.. ''U ndou·btedly , the 'GARBENSTANGEI.' hu now reached a very high level or technical development. It has been successfully used for operating raffias trunnions. In addition, whenever barescent skor motion diagrams are necessary, it may be employed with a reciprocating JNDJANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI ) said -but the talk ts much 5.P a s.1 e ·arm to. r~uce -Reports of a "sexual less likely th3n formerly lo be ~~1dal deplenarat1o_n. __ revolution" on campuses are bragging about sexual con- probably exaggerated a n d quest$. students entering college now "It's not. 'Ho. ho, ho, did I may just as likely be virgins ever get here,' " she said. as students of a generation '·That's declasse -th at's ex- ago, a psychologist says. ploitaUon." But it's also probable there Promiscuity, too, carries the "exploitation" taint and is is· more premarital sex on frowned upon , she said. 1 campus now than ever. al· She said a premarital rela· though that docs not mean .tionship no longer is as likely students ravor promiscuous to be considered in terms of behavior. said the psychologist, good and bad, but rather as Elizabeth !\.1ooney. right or wrong ror the persons WHY BE SHY ••• ....._ .. --· Call 642-4104 JtO I. 17 .. St. et T_.. ""· Newt M ...,.. Mkt. - Colt. M... '41""4114 Mon, ll'IF" l"rt. t h ~I. t .. I Mrs. !\.1ooney spake in an in· involved. terview about a study of1-1=i~;:::jiiF=i~~~~~=~~===~~I =e:=t 5!x~~1h ~h~i~~:~~ I pr .. xi&t( i! 4f . t re "~·ey James. Elias. The team used ~-~,, 1 ·• 'the facili ties of I n d tan a , ) UrUversity's Institute for Sex EXPIRTLY .... ...,_ • • V ' Research, commonly known """"9P.,...s as the K;nsey lnstltule. CLEANED Pi11UID MRS. 1'100NEY said there simply are a lot more students In college than ever before. so more are likely not to be virgins. Slill, she said, at least 90 percent or the freshmen probably are virgins. 1• At the begi nning of any college year, there arc more virgins than there are non· virain8 on campus,'' 1he aa.kl. "I don't believe there ls a 1exu.aJ revolution on campus," Mfl. Mooney said, YOUNG PEOPLE nowadays are much more open ln talking about sexuality, Mrs. !\.fooncy MOST SUITS, COATS, 1·Pc.DRESSES 99¢ OIANADA MILLS 18000 Chatsw~ Stl tOllANCISff\ll~~· llld Krrit~ne WOODLAND MlllS?lSOO VitlMJ 81~ lAW:IWOODCmoti SI. an4 P»,MOMnt 81 ..... llVllSID13$20 lfl~r $1, IUINA , ..... B!:K~ •1111 Ortn~e!Mlpe IANtA .. HA 3900 Soult Busto! st. ~· NOi Gar*" Clow I/I'd. llld M111cllnl• ···:.. ·-···· -'· \ • • .. •• c '; • ~ -.,T-T • : ,>. •• , •o • • ..•. -'. tJ?I' z • ·• • ... A Triple exposure. Three way s to make the most of your tan. Beautifully bored, with cut-out Vamps end just a few-st-reps-crossing-between you an'd the sunshine . Beautifully natural, with the snap of white leather. . ' A. By Miramon+•, Busta, kidskin, 22.00 . B. By Peneljo, Carefree, paten/. 20.00 C. By Naturalizer®, Marlowe1 patent, . 20.00 Women's Shoes 35' .. SHOft 10 A.M. to t 1JO ,.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATUIDAY 10 A.M, lo • ,.M. S!JNDAY IJ NOON to 1 ,.M. ANAHEIM NEW,ORT HUNTIN!;.TON IEACH ORANGE MALL Of ORANGE CE8RITO 444 N. E~'litl 171.tl 111·1121 47 ft1hl•11 ''''~ .. 17141 •44-1212 7777 U 1119,, A"•· (7141 lfJ.Jlll2JOON. T~1ti11 St. 17141tfl·lll1 ·100 l•• C•rrllot M•tl 1 521111••····· • I I • •' . . • • ........ -.. ' r Lag1111a Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Stocks EDITION VOL. 6b, NO: 190, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 'I, 1'173 TEN CENTS I ·showdown Looms. on Future of Syca~ore Hills A decision on the future of Sycamore Jiills will be a key issue facing the J..,aguna Beach Planning Commission at .7~30 o'clock meeting tonight at city hall. ; r..ast week. commissioners agreed they could take ooe of three paths regarding the future.of the 522-acre parcel situated between .Lagqna Canyon and El Toro Road!. .-The optims are : -Preserve the land as open space. • -Maintain the present R-H (residential hillside) zoning on the property. -Formulate a specific plan to allow development of the property by Newport Jnvestimenta Inc., backers of a 2,01&.unit project that would leave 72 percent of the property ln open space. Ciiy Attorney Tully Serm00r last week told commissioners apPlicalion ol open .space zoning could plwige the city into ........... ru1ser , ''---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...... ~~ Girl Strang,led Newport Murder Baffles Police .By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI "'9 DllHY Pllel l l•ff , The sad search for Linda AMe O'Keefe ended with the discovery of the strangled 'girl's body by a lonely roadside along Up- Tricia Cox 'To Have Baby WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon Cox, the ol.der 'daughter of President and Mrs. Nixon, is preg· aant, according to the Evening Star·News. per Newport Bay Saturday but the man- hWlt for her killer c.ootinUN today. Ooe theory is that I.be 11-year~ld vic- tim -lacking a ride home Crom summer school -may have tried hitchhiking. She was not sexually molested, however, and investigators said today there were no specific indications that she fought her killer. . 'l'blSfact-~--,.U.. wllb m -!?l'ive as well as no'~ ·'"We're workiRg baN· •l it," Newport Beaclt ·Police DetecUve s,t. Don Picker said of the hunt for tlJe slayer. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today that no specific cause of deatb has been determined, although it was ap- parent the Lincoln Intermediate School pupil bad been strangled. • extensive courtroom litigation with -Newport Investments and O\\ner of the property, Great Lakes ~rbon, lnc. Representatives of the L a II: u n a' Greenbelt Jnc., seeking 10,000 acres ,of open space, including Sycamore Hills, around Laguna Beach, are expeded to be present at torught's meeting to protest any form of development. Standards in the R-H zone allow for l}'Pical tract style development, including substantial grading ond cut aiid fill. The plan forv.:arded by Nev.'J)Ort Invest· ment callS for 2,000 units boilt on level portions of the triangle-shaped parttl. Scenic .slopes, rock outcrOppings and archeologici l sites would .be preserved, according to the plan. A commercial-cultural complex y,·ould be located on Sycamore Flats, the .site occupied during Chrlst1nas of 1970 by 20,000 youths attending 11 freestyle "hap- pening," Ot~r items facing comn1issi0f'l('rs in· elude: -Second public .hearing anct possible approval of amendmciits to !he zoning ordinance to reduce density standards on R·2 (duplex) properly \vithin lhe city. The pn:iposcd amendmcnls also would Mrs. cox, Tl, was married to Edward Finch COx, a yoqng lawyer, in 1971. The child would be the· first grandchild for the President and - ltis wife. Her mother -nearly hysterical during the 14-hour search for Linda Anne -is now stoic considering the circumstances. "She was calm and composed .when I last talked to her," sald Sgt. Picker. 4l·FOOT CABIN CRUISER FLOUNDERS AT EL MORRO AFTER STRIKING ROCKS NEARBY Cr•ft W•• Be.c:hed After Four Occ"up1nt1 Were Removed; 5'1v•ge Attempt Scheduled Today The newspaper attributed it1 report to "an authoritaUve 90W'ce." The Nixona bave one other child, Julie, who ~married D a v i d Eisenhower in 1968. $10,00() Gem :Ring Stolen, 'In Laguna Beacli Loss of a tl0,000 3¥, carat diamond ring was rtiported Saturday to Laguna Beach police. Police Sgt. Nonnan Babcock said today .JeaMe L. Alden told officers she may have removed the ring Jn her sl eep be· C8U9e the stone was "so big it b>tbered ber." I hotrs. Alden, a Santa h-1onica resident, was staying at the Capri Laguna, 1441 S. Coast Highway at tht; time, Sgt. Babcock .said. A loose 1 \~ carat diamond valued at ,tl,400 wu appareoUy replaced with an artificial stone and stolen from Orcutt Decutt Designs, 3M N. c.oast Highway in a crime discovered Saturday. Poliee believe the switch may bav.e be made in mJchJune by a "custom'lt" who asked to see the loose stones, and then produced. a stone of his own which he asked to be apprai.sed. 1be theft was discovered only when a diamond broker arrived and found th at one of the stones was actually a YAK, an (Soe JllNGS, hp II CLASSIFIED ADS .MAKE 'EM J' ANIS'H Dally Pilot classified ads can self jwll abollt 1nythlni This adveitlstr.e<rta~ t • • • j bad no problems : ROUND oat table w/lllfe. bnl,IDnwerdr<nr • ...m kit. table, 1nUQ. choir, oolld teak tabk!I, 16x14 br•ided "'I· All ileml In xln'I <OOd. (Addrna), (PllOOe No.) 'lbe adverli..,. ook1 oll the lteml be JIS!td Jhrough this id. Make • Nie with your miscellaneous items. Tbe direct line :r &C-517L • ' 'No f u n e r a I arrangements had been made this morning for the young victim, whose parents are members of the COm- numity CoogregaUooal tlmrcb ol Corooa dtil Mar. They were. struck lronically by a dual tragedy over the ·weekend. The family's church sustained $5,000 damage Jn a fire blamed on 8J'90Dislll. Santa Barbara Airplane . Crash Debris Sighted SANTA BARBARA (AP ) -Searchers found a tire and charred paneling from a light plane th'at crashed in the Santa Barbara Channel with five persons aboard today, a Coast Guard spokesman said. A COast Guard cutter reported finding the debris 31,i miles west ol Goleta Point, about a mile offshore. Flori.du Sues Oil Companies Ove r Shortages TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -The State of Florida filed suit today in federal cOurt ·against 15 major U.S. ·oil com· panies, charging them with conspiring to contrive the current fuel shortage. 1be SI-page ·suit calls for the com· panies to rid themseJves of all crude oil exploration and development capabilities if they stay In the retail gas business, Florida Atty. Gen. Robert Shevin said. The suit Is one of the biggest trust. busting attempts against oil companies since lhe Standard Oil CO. was broken up in the early 1900s, assistant Atty. Gen. Dan Dearing said. "To this date we've fou nd everybody talking about the crisis but nobody doi ng anything about it,'' sakl Shevin. "We felt jt was time lo do something." The suit alleget the oil companies have (See OIL SUIT, l'aie %) Severely Battered Victim Found in Laguna Cove Laguna Beach Police today are in- vestigating a mysterious case of assault which left one man severely battered and unconscious on a beach cove and no other traces except bloody sand. The identity of the injured man still has not been confirmed. but police believe his name to be either Christopher Hall or Gerald Hall. His age and address are unknown, police said. An early morning beachgocr found the man crumpled in the sand just beJow ~1ountain Street. He was taken t1> South coast Con1- munity Hospital where doctors reported he had massive facial fractures including breaks to his nose, chin, cheek, and all other facial bones, Sgt. Norman Babcock said today. The man was unable to talk after being revived at South Coast. He was later sent to Orange County ~Jcdical Center and v.•as promounced in "satisfactory" con- dition today by aides. Sgt. Babcock aid the department received a call al about 3:40 a.m. from a man who identified himself as Ray Bible. Ile said a rriend who had been swimming at the early hour had found the man and carried him up the stairv.'ay at !\Jountain Road. Officers checked wlth the manager of the Hacienda Hotel. 1289 S. Coast llighway, where ii was believed Hall muy ha\'e lived , but the manager was not sure or the man·s first name. and said that he had moved out some time ago. Officers searched the beach scene but found on ly bloodstains. The Piper aircraft crashed in heavy fog whlle making a radar landing aproach to the Santa Barbara Municipal Airport, aulhoriliel said. The fog and low clouds hampered seorcb efforts. The pilot · was identified , by airport authoritln as H.R. Jones or Port .WashJnsloq, NY. ldenlilles . of .-Jhe passengers and the plane''s ultimate destination were not known. Bu~ a Coast Guard spokesman. F.cl Conlon, said the Uganda Ruler Frees Yanks- plane was believed to have set out from NAgtOBI, Kenya (UPI) -The 111 San F.rancisco. American Peace Corps volunteers dc- Fog and clouds cut visibility In the San-tained since Saturday by Uganda Presi· ta Barbara Channel to IOHllll yard!. A Coul Guard ~r 1tarch crew denl ldi Amin left Kampala today aboanl wu watting for 1be fog .and clouds to a charter night atter Amin received clear, Conlon said. assurances from 1.alre President l\lobutu The Coast Guard also sent two 82-foot Seae Seko that they were really Peace cutlers, a 40-foot petrol boat and an aux· Corp1 workers and not U.S. mercena ry Iii.try vessel to search for the downed troope. ~ ' plone. They lefl nboanl on East Afrll:a n Jn 'lddU.ioa • merchlnt tenkert •'com-i\irwa,)'! VCJO •t 7 p.m. (9 1.m. PDT! to merclal 1111 and a boa! from tbe _ ,~ tile f1iP1 to 1t-.a capital U"""':117 ot ~··· .fllln~iJ\iilllln 4il ~former~ Congo that chan1· e1mpa1 iofned lb -\he search. ed Its name to Zalre. Their departure Penons on the UC santa Barbara cam· wu delayed tevtral hours when the VCtO pus r.,.,n.d bearing Ille plane's engine did not leave'lllllfiibe on lclledulc. cut ool jull alt<t mldnlg!it, followed by a (,.,.., °'81111 1:ounllanl were cmong loud !plMb oil Ille log-l>olmd coul. the detain.t. '111<1 w<tt · q b e r y I Andmeo oqd -ly J. 8'11 'both of Diana Rigg Marries LONDON (UPI) -Actms llilna Rigg, 34, the shopely Mn. Emma Peel In "The Avengtf's", television Kries, mar· r'ed Mt naclaen Gueflen, an lsr.eU artist, I .. Friday, ohe ~ SUoday • FUllerton. Tllcft ·""'1' atne «her Califor- olant on U. ,tmol. ' U1anda Rodio today broadcast a .-:II by Amin lhanktng General ' 1-lobutu "for bls rneaaae wbich cleared up the. situation." Amin, already anbrt>ilcd in several serilM diplomatic dilputes wilb-the ( United States. seized the ·Americans Saturday after their British charter night ~ landed in Uganda to refuel. They had Avalanche Kills Man in &.lorado VAii,, Colo. (UPI J -An avalanche rumbled down a 14,000 root mountain Sunday bashing one mountain climber aga1nst the rocks and killing him and smashing the hip and • l<g of bis climJ>. Ing partner. The dtad man was ldentitled as Rlchonl Boos. 16, of UUJclon. Colo. His po11n<r, R<lnald Dillon, 17, of Colorado Springs, suffered a fractured htp and broken upper leg and was rescued eight hours aftec. the accldenl. DI'.. Thomas Steinberg, the Summit County coroner, said Boss died of head lnjurle.s. Ills body was found beneath four fttl ol hard-p1<ked inow. taken off lo continue the flight to 1.aire. the former Belgian Congo, but he ordered it lo return and threatened to send up his tiny air force if the plane did not land again. The broadcast of Amin's speech said that "in the future, East African Airway!! authorities should make sure tlights !;Uch as Saturday's are cleared." ~ The Kampala radio broadcast said President Julius Kambarage Nyerere of Tanzania would conduct an investigation into 1he matter which was onl y cleared up when A1obutu Intervened on behalf of the Americans. Amin's actJon ln the Uganda capltal of Kampala was annowlCtd here by U.S. cmbw:y spokesman Gary ~Jorley. U.S. dfplomats antf the State Department hod Interceded ln their behalf since the mercurial Amin forced them to land In Kampala on Sunday. "They do have clearance to lea.ve," fltorley said. "It came ·through around 3 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT). Thty am now looking for transport, The y don't know where they're going and won't kno\\' unti l the • · !SEE llGANDA, Page t i prohibit co mn1erci;:il parking lots in the zone. -Action on a requl'Sl from the Rockl<'clgl' Association to develop a specific pl:.in lo con trol future devclop- 1ne11t of <.'Oastal properly between AIO$S Point nnd Victoria f$each. -Review of a pl<111 b'y developer H81"f'.Y lfO\\'ard lo divide 1.7 acres of land bordering Temple llills Drive inlo seven single-family unit lo1s . orro Salvaging Scheduled Fo1· Today By JACK CHAPPELL Gt ltM D1il• '°1191 l'9fl' A 41-foot Chris-Cr.aft cruise r. ho I e 11 punched in her starboard and stern. lay 1nired in sand today at El l\1orr.o Cove near Laguna Beach -the vestige of a disastrou s Sunday for a Riverside quar· tel. Salvage operations were scheduled for high ti de today , about 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in an attempt to pull th e big cruiser off the beach. It was hauled up on the sand·.Sunday afternoon after striking rocks at Abalone Point, just'·south of the El ?iforro trailer park area. Four persons aboard were Identified ·fiy the Orange Coun11 ll<lrbor Depart- ment as Hyman Rosen, owner; Rose Ro· sen. Julius Laiken and Frances Laiken mishap. The harbor patrol first he"ard of the ac- cident when a distress radio call was re- ceived from the Rosen craft. The first reports were confusing, v.·ith one indicating that the craft had struck rocks off the Laguna Beach jetty. Harbor pa trolmen were able to deter· mine the craft was off El tl1orro and two boats were dispatched. On their arrival, the flounderi ng craft was found to be 213 full of waler. Laguna Beach lifeguards and patrol- nicn beached the craft after divers found a &-inch hole in the s tem of the craft. During beaching operations two holes '":ere ripped in the starboard side of the craft and the inside was smashed by surf. An1ount of the loss is unknown. In sal· vaging the craft, operators plan on stuff. ing large innertubes into the boat and then inflating them. But, loday, the inside of the boat was covered with about two feet of sand and a foot of water. Salvagers estimated that shou ld she float, the boat would be about 90 percent in the water said Skip Roeser, a marine biologist. The area where th e boat is beached is ringed v.·ith rocks. Bagley Will Speak PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -Califomla Assemblyman William T. Bagley, San ·Rafael, will be the keynote speaker at the opening session of the Arizona Tax Com mission's annual conference July 25. Orange Coast Weathe r The sun will break through those IO\Y clouds Tuesday -wea kly. Slightly v.·armer tcmperalurcs, with 72 degree readings expected along the Orange Coast ri sing to 83 in· land. 0 \'emighL lows in the 60s. INSWE TODAY A" expert 011 world food p ro- duction says A mericaru may 10011 llaue ro ration foorl ht or· dei: £0 matnraiii e:rµortt and the l.'Olue of tlie dollar ab road. Sec s toru, Page 4. •••ltftf " AMI LI _,. .. L.M. I ntl ' -lt-1• C11iltft1i1 ' N1TIMll ....... • ci.ffln.. »M °'•"" ,_,., • ,_, " IW1¥l1 ,..,,., " c,..,_,,. " '"'" , .. ,, Delflll Httlc•t • T ... vitl~ " ••a•ri.1 , ... • Tl'l .. ltrt 1,.,, •-nai-1 , .. ,, Wt1llltr • Plt111M:t , .. 11 "'"'*''' ,,. ... lJ.1• --" WtrN """' • .. .. -.... , --( I • !C: IJ-.JL'f PllOI LI MO!!UJ, J11(1 9, lm -------------~----' State Meetlllfl Chair~an Claims ······· ...... . Aliso Unit Alive The Aliso \Yater .?ttanngcmcnt Agency (AWM.A) is "very much alive." Carl Kymla, AW~1A chairman said !oUowing a meeting with .state wa1er resourC(! of· ficials in Sacramento Friday. · KymJa aaid approviili" for ronstructioo _____ oLnew... .eJYage treatment plants were received from the officials and that the prOjects will be funded in the 1973-74 Top Official Rules Out Gas Ration I WASHINGTON (UPI) -D e put Y Treasury Secretary 'Villiam E. Simon said emphatically today the ad- ministration has ruled out any possibility of gasoline rationing Lo meet the current shortage. Simon '.s statement, his strongest on the subject, came amid reports that Presi· dent NiJ.on's Phase IV economic action m8y include a rollback in prices for gasoline and Olher petroleum produds. Asked about persistent rumors that the administration is considering a program of gasoline rationing, Simon sajd "absolutely not." ··1 absolu tely do not consider rationing even ...possible,:.· he said. "We have a vo!Wltary allocation system in place now that ·J believe is doing the job." Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash.), said Congress must take-a "very hard look" at the possibility of breaking up functions · of big oil companies. Jackson made the statement at a news conference fol.lowing disclosure of a g~"'._ernment reporL_suggesling .~J .!~ structure of the Adustry had _a ma.}Or role in creating tbe gasoline shortage. Jackson said ·a two-year study by the staff of the 'Federil Trade Commission (FTC) "Jodicates clearly that vertical in· tegratlon, concentration and market con- trol bad an lmportant role in creating the shortage." A.sted Ir he believed the industry was responsible for the gasoline Shortage, Jacboo said: ''l believe there was a def'uUle effort on the part of the lndusfry a year ago to create such a light situation in the -ltetplace and by limiting imports that lt result!"f. in the Primary, inupedlate shottage we have today." "The report concludes.'' Jacksoa said , "that it is essential that the nation must develop a program to bl.sure fair com· petition; and implies that this program may require divestiture of major oil company pipelines and refineries." "The report also says that the major oil companies are indeed using the shortage to eliminate rompetitlon and to increase their relative shares in all three sectorS of the industry -production, , relining and marketing." $11,103 Awarded Firm to Replace School Windows Expenditure of $11 ,103.for replacement of windows at Laguna Beach High School has been approved by the Laguna Beach Board of E:clucation . Low bid for Installation or 36 windows on the south campus of the high school was submilted by Metal and Glass .. ~abricators or Downey. In a related action. the board approved spending $500 to employ a civil engineer to study the effects of noise on classroon1s fron ti ng on Park Avenue. Result s of the study vdll be used to determine what lype or window should be installed Jn those dassrooms. ' ( OUN•I COAIT '-• DAILY PILOT lM °'""" CHH DA.tl,Y I'll.OT, wllll ""l¢fl If <Ol'l'll>I'* • New.l'rn.. It llUOll"*I by 1l'le 0.•f!OI! •r P\ltltl1111n9 c.......,.,. s.oe ,.f, .,~''°"' •r• 0!.1&111...,, "'-•r '"'°"'" Frio.r, rw COii• Me.w, N.w110r1 l!lff(ll. ltllltti<11toro ' ltlCll/F°""'t&ln 'llillrf. L'9Utll 1-.d'I, lrvtow/iM!dletlKli W i.,. Cltnltllt.., $M1 J..... '""·"-· ... •lfltl• •to;lti!Mt lldllloft It M fllMll a.luNl'l'f Incl S....,,An, rM P•i...:11M1 ~bf> .... ~ 111 .i m w"r 111 $1•ftl, COiii M .... C.!!lorf'llf, "41t,. Ro~rt N. W1M l'rftlM<!I Md Plll>lfllll.I J•e• ~ c.,,,,., Vice l',_loll..., Incl "-"91 ~ Tho111•1 llC10-.a ..... ThM11t A, Mw,,hlf'lo 111111 .. tno 1t11iw Ch1rl11 H. L101 IUeh1'4 P. Nill AMlt1111! M.ttllOlfll (lltw1 ----212 Hr11t A.,111wo M1ili,.. ..,.,,,,,; P,O. l11Jt•• 92652 --· Co.le MMI: QI Wftt .. \'"llr._. H~ html ».u .. ....., ....,.....,. HIM!trie1'M IMCll: 1'*11 ._.. ............ "" CMfMl!toJ .. """" 11 C.11'111!1 •·1 ., ... , •••• 1714) '41~JJ1 QilllfW A .. •~ Ml·li11 &..tMM ........ ., ..... , T•pb In I 4H•f46' ""'°'""'· 1t1*. Otlllfl Co<ltl ,...,....,... (Ofoipofly. "'• ,.... ""'"'· '""'"'"""' M1iw1e1 !I'll"" er .,....,,,.,_" """"' ""'' llt ,.,~.. Wlll'IM -lef ,.,. 11'119iltn tot .,,.,"", ...... . ...... clog -i.tl ... 111 " C"'I MIM, Cllfftrlllo, 1uir.cr1.i1o11 llY terrier nu l!lllflllllr1 .... IMFI IJ.IJ -lfrllYI Miii,.,., ..,"-' ... "'" "*'"'"· 1 fiscal year, Thursday, Laguna Beach City Mlpaser Lawrence Rose had reported to the Laguna Beach Clty Council, that JOme A WMA plans had been denied, ~ lhl:t as a result, It was his personal opinion that the regional plan !or waste water collection, treatment and reclamation was !or all practical purposes dead. g Kymla said that his trip to Sacramento changed all that. The A WMA was designed as a regional approach to disposal of waste water. It includes the communities of Laguna Beach, Irvine, Saddleback V a I I e y , Laguna Niguel and South Laguna. Transpae Leaders at One·third Point Under lnJtlal plans, ·Laguna Beach ¥:ould cloee It! 1934-vintage sewage plant and ocean outfall. WindWard Passage (WP) had covered one-third of the 2,225-mile cQurse to Diamond Head by· Sunday's roll call in the 60-boat Transpacific -Yacht Race. Others pushing the'73-loot ketch are Ragtime (RA),'Robon (RO), Ondlne (ON) and Blacldln (BF). AU are reported within 20 miles ol WP. lmprobab!e·(IM) Is the corrected time leader, with about l ,630 miles to go as of Sunday's foll call. The fleet moved into the northeast trades today, but-winds were repQrted light. ''We've been drifting along behind the Class A fleet at about lour knots !or the past 48 hours," said a spokesman aboard th.e escort vessel Pegasus IL For more on the Transpac, see Page 19. The Art Colony's sewage would be piped through an Interceptor sewer line to a new plant to be built in the Aliso Creek area. A large OCf!an outfall would be constructed off Aliso Creek. Inland plants wou&d be expanded. Mitchell Asks Dismissal Prom Page l OIL SUIT ... The waste would be treated to a secon- dary emuent stage which makes it suitable for irrigation and non-contact recreation. Motions Claim U.S. Improprieties, Coercion engaged in an ii.legal monopoly and unreasonable restraint of interstate trade and commerce. Shevin charged -that major oil com; panies should not be able to control crude oil from the time it comes out of the greund until it is pumped at a gas sta- Rose had informed the city council that A W"-1A had received approval for the ouUall and the intercepLor sewerlines, but not for construction of the sewage plants. Kymla said the outfaJI and the sewerllnea were in 1972-73 fuodlng. The entire project is now valued at about •ta million, having been scaled down from earlier plana for a $23 mWlon facility. The AWMA plan will accommodate rrom 174,000 to 230,000 penons, Kymta saidc'!bat'a --lnxn the lirat fi8utta of 388,000. Gas _Statiuns l.irnit Hours In California The Automobile Club of Southern c.Ji!omia ..,,.ns fl pen:mt of ...,une service statioos in CaUfomia are limitine the~ boors ol operation. The number of atatiolll llmilinC boors is up lrom 57 perc:eot of ~ umpled the previous weet .• the club reported. Night-tline travelen 1n1 feeling tbe fl· lects of 1oeollne sborla(es the -: Gas stations ar< closln( earlier in the ewnlng and openlng later. or ,,.Hoos contacted by the club, only 31 percent are os>eratina: normal hours. That compares to 36 per cent the week before. Motorists leaving Orange C.ounty bound for San Diego will find very few gas sla· tk>ns open along Interstate 5 \\ith the only all-night station reported in the club survey being at Encinltu. Other stations continue to ration gas at eight or 12 gallon limits, the club reported. Freezer's Bare Iii San C'lementc Tools, bikes and surfboards have been the standard loot for garage thieves in recent years, but the high price of food may he changing all that. ID San C1emente Sunday the garage -caper was more like grand theft.grocery. Mrs . Enna Smith of 130 W. Mariposa went to the freezer ,Sunday to discover it was bare. Someone had cleaned out $300 worth of meat and took along a store of canned goods nearby as wen. The garage was unlocked overnight, she told poUcc. Cliurcli School Begins Today Community Presbyterian daily vacation church school will begin today al the church. 415 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. ChUrch school nleets from 9:30 a.m. lo noon ,._fonday through Friday •nd runs through July 20, although children are welcome to attend for only one week, a church spokesman saki. The school is !or children (rom three years of age through those in the sixth grade. Further information Is available by calling 494-7SSS. From Wire Servtcel NEW ·voruc -F o r m e r Attorney General John N. Mitchell, on the eve of his Watergate testimony, requested to- day his conspiracy and perjury in- dJctments be dismissed on grounds of government improprieties and prejudice. In motions filed jn Manhattan Federal Court, Mitchell, fonner Cornn:Jerce Secretary Maurice Stans and two other def~ts: alleged that the U.S. at· toniey's office coerced the grand jury In- to indicting them. -Mitchell-uta one-meina-of-coereton was to questioa him belore the grand Jury-aboirt the Wllerptn ICllldal. In a memo ffied by Mitchell'• lawyer, Peter Flem!lli, It wu alleged that the lormer-U.S.-Alt«Dey-Wbltney~orih Seymour. "having already prejudiced Mitchell aubs ... tially with refanl to the New York cue, ccmpounded bis im- proprleUes by preJuclicllll< Mltcheli'1 ability to properly defend bimaelf with regard to Watergate." Mitcbell ta·schedoled to testify Tuesday before the Senate com m 1 t t e e in- vestigating the Watergate ICllldol. Similar motions to 4itJniM the In· dictment were filed by · the two other delendan,. In the cue, !UglUve financier Ro1>ert L;VetCO and Harry L. Sean, a prominent New Jeney Republican. 'llie lour delendan .. _.. h>llcted May 10 on charges of conapjracy in an alleged scheme to influence a federal In· vestigaUon of Vesco'• aecrer con- tribuUom last year to President Nixon's re-e.Jection campaign. Chotiner Judge Goes Off Case • Against Paper CONOORD, N.H. (AP) ~ U.S. Dittrict Court Judge Hugh Bowne> has disquali· fled himselr from hearing a libel suit filed by former presidential aide and Newport Beach lawyer Murray Ox>tlner against the Mand>e,..r Union Leader ond """'1· er Arthur Egan. Bownes disqualified himself from the $3 mllllon suit during the wckend after pub- lisher William Loeb submitted a ~page affidavit and more than 50 pages of ex· hibits. They cmtained Union Leader edi- torials from the past 10 years which were critical al Bownes. The judge said earlier he was not preju· diced, but Loeb malntain<d that "human nature being what it is, a.feeling of mu- tual dJsHke and dlstrust readily re- kindles." Bowne& said Loeb's assumptions were were "at best, questionable.'' But he disqualified himseU, saylni "! do not think it would be possible to convince him (Loeb) otherwise" ond "since the appear- ance d. impartiality is as imPortant ... as its reaUty." He called Loeb's statement '1a boot· strap a p pro a c h" that "can be used against any judge \vho is assigned the case simply by pubiishing critical editor· ials about that judge." Cbotiner, a fonner aide to President Nixon, sued ifter the publlCaUon ob two stories claiming Chotlner was linked to the Watergate case. He denied any in· volvement. Since ll<>wnes ta the only ledera! Judi• In the state, a judge from outside New Hampsh~e will be appointed to hear the rase. Friendly ·Tub Letters Floated to Russians WALES, Alaska (UPI) -A Califomlo man sailed a bathtub five miles lnta the Bering Sea today and rele ... d 1,000 letlAlrs ol lrlend· ship from the American to the Russian people. The letters were re- leased In an Inner tube and wraJijlOd In walAlrtlght plastic. Leonard MOON!, 48, ol Oakland. said he got as close as he could "under the weather conditions" to the Jnternational Dtteline durinl the hour and a hail voyage. He said he battled rain ind waves stx reet high d~rlng the trip In the •1~ used bathtub. Moore orlglnally said he Intended to go to Siberia. However, Soviet authorities did not give him permispon to enter Russia. • f .In addition, Mitchell and Stans were actused of lyirig before the federal grand jury last March. All four have pleaded innocent and the trial is tentatively scheduled for Sept. 11. Vesco remains out of the country. Other Watergate developments: -lbe Gallup Poll s.iya 71 percent of Americans It questioned believe Presi· dent Ni%on was involved in the bugging or cover-up but only 18 percent feel he should be compelled to leave office, -Fonner U.S. House Speaker John W. McCormack said Sunday that President Nbon is justified in refusing to appear before the Senate Watergate Committee. 'I doo't think as Speaker of the House I would want to have the President of the United State. summon me down to the White House wbtm I'm head of the fegislaUve branch ... " -Jwitlce Department officials over- ndl)d an investigation of the pticlng practices of a company owned by Robert H. Abplanalp, a millionaire friend of President Nixon, two New Y o r k newspapers reported today. -John Ehrlicbman, former domestic affairs adviser to President Nixon, says the President discussed but dismissed the question or executive clemency to the Watergate burglars, the Seattle Post- lntelligencer reported Sunday. -Besides the blacklist publicized· in earlier Watergate testimony, columnist Jack Anderson ·(whole column appears regularly-in the Daily Pilot) reports that the White House also maintained a secret list of Republican senators who dis- pleased the President. Among those named ln the column as having made the list from Ume to time included Sens. Jacob K. Javits of New York, Mark o. Hatfield or Ortgon, Clif- ford P. case of New Jersey, Charles McC. Mathias Jt. of Maryland, Richard S. Sch"weiker or Pennsylvania, Charles H. Percy of Illinois and Lowell P. \_V~er Jr. of Connecticut, and fonner Sen. Charles E. Goodell ol New York. tion. . "The gasoline wars are rupported by profits made at the crude oil level," said Dearing. 11lf we remove that section we can make the marketing truly com- petitive." · The suit is a class action on behalf of all counties. cities 3nd school boards in the stale, Shevin ·said. Named as defendants were Exxon Corp. of New Jersey, Texaco Inc. of. Delaware, Gulf Oil C o r p . of Pennsylvania, Mobil Oil Corp. or Delaware, Standard Oil Co. of California; Standard Oil Co. 'of Indiana, Shell Oil Co. of Delaware, AUanUc-Rlchfield ·Co. of Pennsylvania, Phillips Petroleum Co. of Delaware, Continental Oil Co. o f Delaware. Sun Oil Co. of Delaware, Union Oit'Co. of Cali.fornia , Citi~ Service Co. of Delaware, Standard Oil Co. of Ohio and Marathon Oil Co. of Delaware. From Page l UGANDA •.. Fair Attendance Boom~ng As Weekend Sets Record transport is confirmed." Morley said the Americans probably \vould go either to Nairobi, where hotel rooms have bet'n. booked for them, or to their original plane !_ransfef point in Burundi. They have been staying in a Kampala Hotel, comfortable but under armed guard. Attendance is booming at the Orange County Fair in Costa Me1a w h e r e turnstiles counted &l,284 visitors over the weekend period from Friday through Sunday. The fair recorded the highest single day attendance in Us SG-year history Saturday when 21,283 persons streamed onto the grounds on the lair's second day. Fair Manager Jim Porterfield says at· tendance is up 35 to 40 percent when compared to last year arxt that he hopes .the tota l count will exceed 200,000 when the !air ends July 16. This weekend's three-day figure of &t.284 compares to 40,041 last year, and Sunday's 2S,254 to 16,636 in July 1972. Drawing the record-breaking crowm to the fair are nightly stage shows, motorcycle races, a rodeo, contests, ex- hibits:, parades and many other at- tractions. All entertairunent is included in the ad· mission price which is $1.75 for adults, $1 for children, and free for children under six. Among the exhibits at the !air is a chuckwagon kitchen on wheels which is serving authentic western food to ap- proxiniately 2,000 people dally. The chuckwagon is part of a covered .. wagon caravan stationed at the entrance of the fair. A collection of western attire is housed · in the caravan's cowboy museum. The historic relics are on loan Imm the National Cowboy Hall of fame and in- clude bronze sculptures and paintings by well-known western artists. A seven- mlnute film, ''The last of the Wild Mustangs," ls being shown along with a display including an antique California saddle and a variety of branding irons and spurs. Biggest attraction at the fair tonight is an 8 p.m. perfonnance in the am· phitheater by Dxieland jazz master Pete Fountain and his orchestra. Highlights of the fair on Tuesday are: -2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Swine Judging, livestock area. -Noon lo 10 p.m., Art Demonstrations, crafts center. -All Day Homemaking Suggestions California living building. -8 p.m. Red Buttons and his All-Star Band, amphitheater. -9 p.m. Charley Romero and the Dix· ieland All Stars, mall stage. Morley did not give details on Amin's decision to release the Americans bu\ President Joseph Mobutu of Zaire in· tervened today to tell Amin they really were Peace Corps volunteers and were en route to hiS country as they said they were. Diplomatic soorces in Kampala said Mobi.itu sent a telegram today ask· ing for their release. From Pagel RINGS ... artiflclal diamond. Theft of $69 worth of candy, baseballs and soda pop was reported Friday from the Laguna Beach Youth Association con- cession stand at the high school baseball diamond , police said. Entry was made by using some sor t of pry tool. Pact Denial Urged PALO ALTO (AP ) -A Teamsters Urilon leader negotiating contracts for 65,000 cannery workers aays he'll recom- mend rank-and-Cite rejection of the latest contract offer by cannery owners. LOW PRICES AR! BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE ' I .Adn1lrol. NO-DEFROSTING REFRIGE~TOR/FREEZER ALL THESE GREAT • Fua...,.FEATURES • ruN Width "loollcne" tMnr Door Sholl -tor in9t•nt ..,.JlebUlty. • Duol Ttmponitul'l Controls- ..+tct,."" r11M ~-tor Mttl toetlon. o T..in ~tin Cit...,. _ _,. fruit. wtpttlli. ptdtn rr.•h. • Eirm lltp ""r11trttor Door lhlhw-holdt 1¥111 lall quort - M ... NT llJ4 ~. '11frosti1t9 rofr1tor1tot t1ctlo111 with Arc.tie. Alt flew • .,, .. 111 for fi.iU tyclo cltt11IMl•11. SUMUNE REFRIGERATOR M.-r CllJ1 • F111I Wldil'I Fntttr Cttnt -1 Wll»lllll'llf TM,..,.""9 Col'ltrol THIS s2 5 99 5 • ~ Vltutl Dtltott-tJmor 1nc1a1or :~OVLY . : ~:~.:::~~:" · OIHllf Drtwtt . 15995 r"'2 Mtmhr e1 90 DAY U c.111ern11•1 La'IOlf CASH l1l c_,anvo luylnt · o,.., With Tho WtiM ........... Volume Buying nCRl""l._J M ,4 •tttllAN9 '9ww of 110 Ster" ••lllMI ~ ---t;;X2J 1115 llWPQRT llYl Dnntnn Cesta Mesi -Phone 548-7788 ' I ' .. I Saddlehaek • T oday's Final N.Y. Sto cks EDITION * * VOL. 66, NO. 190, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES TEN CENJS Irvine Resident·s Gird ' for Health Meeting ' About 50 Irvine residenU! met Sunday to prepare ror the Tuesday final hearing by the Orange County Health Planning Council In which a master plan of health services Is to be considered and adopted. Gary Dalzell, a TurUe Rock resid and Irvine city plannirig commissioner, said today he will present the views or the lielp Irvine Get llospitals ·(11101{) ad hoc committee.-' The group, chaiied by Paul Ellis of University Park, has been studying the 400.page master plan document w~lch will be forwarded to the sta"te and will govern health #racilllies and service5 planning for Orange County. Dalzell saJd the HIGH organization will approach the county health planning council in a ''positive, constructive man- ner." ''We re<..'Ognize the many. moolhs 'of el· fort that have gone into this plan. We seek only to make it more respoosive to the needs o fthe Irvine community," Dal- zell said today. '1. wtll present two basic recommendations or the committee,' 'he said. They are: -That a task force comprised of city staff ~or planners, COWlly represen- latlves Md resitlents of Irvine be set up to inventory the Irvine area population and health service needs. This group ~,·ould be charged with documenting the neec1·:to inerge .tbe health planning areas which now divide the city, Dalzell noted. -That at least one fully accredited, licensed hosplta be aut riz or con- struction in Irvine as soon as possible. Dalzell noted the committee is still ,.,.Qrking on current population statistics and projections for the rut~ which will indicate the growth the new city , is tx· periencing. The health planning t'OU!lcil report shows a north Irvine population of o_nly 61,00> in 1983. In lhe first master plan draft it was suggested no hospital be allowed until the city's population reach· t at po1nt -ten years net. Later, revisions were proposed by the facilities planning committee of the coun- ty health pldnning body. Those rcvisl()Jl.'I will be considered during the public hear- ing on the health master plan \o\'hich is set for 7:30 in Department One, Orange County Superior Court, 700 Civic Center ·Drive West, Santa Ana . Among the stfggested change! are ~ visisions for aMual updating of tbe plan; allowances for Irvine to eount popula- lions an ar1 1t1cs 0 a I three or its plan· ning areas whil(' pl:1nning for needed scr,·iccs <ind 11 removal or !he out right I~ rear ban on new hospital facilities . If approved as proposed. the change.." \\'OOld suggest thnl new · hospit4J..-beds only be licensed in the next five years in Orflnge County if au ('(jUlll nun1ber of beds are closed elsewhere in the hoSpilal ser\'ice attas. • , The concept is to bold hospital bed In- t See llEALTll, Page ZJ Manhunt Pressed Murder of Girl Baffles Police By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille D&llY f'llef Si.ff The sad search for Linda Anne O'Keefe ended with the discovery of the strangled girl's body by a lonely roadside along Up... per Newport Bay Saturday but the man- hunt for her killer Continues today. One theory is that the 11-year..old vie. tim -lacking a ride home from summer school -may .have tried hitchhiking. She was not ·sexually molested, however, and investigators said today there were Uganda Frees f I Peace Corps Detainees no specific indications that she fought her killer. This fact literally leaves police with no motive as well as no suspect. ""'e're y,·orking hard at ii." Ne\\'J)Ort Beach Police Det~tive Sgt. Don Picker said of the hunt for the slayer. Orange Cowity Coroner's depoliies said today that no specific cause of death has been determined, although it y,•as ap- parent the Lincoln Intermediate School pupil had been strangled. Her mother -nearly hysterical duri ng Tricia Cox T o Have Baby WASHINGTON (AP) -Tricia Nixon Cox, the older daughter of President and ~lrs. Nixon, is preg- nant, according tG the Evening FIREMAN BATTLES BLAZE ,SUNDAY THAT ll&IRNI D l!\ORE THAN ~~AND _,..1.._,*t;-e !• •• •?-', · -c-"'~ Located About One MHe F..ram Lion Country,S.f•ri, Fire Wi11 Started by Efedrocvt ·. -Niy.n-OlS, enya (UPI) -t1'ie Iii Mrs. Cox. 'l'I, wu married to Flaming Hawk Starts County's First Big Blaze •A ha\Yk which Oew into ~ high po\\·er line and fell flaming to the ground was blamed today for starting Orange C-Oun- tf's largest grass and brush (ire of the season Sunday in the city <lf Irvine. The blaze burned more than 200 acres of Irvine Ranch cattle grazing· range about a 1nile south and west of Lion Country Safari, the wild animal com- pound east of the Laguna Freeway and south of San Diego Freeway. Firemen said .no catOe were injured and no structures threatened by the fire which started about 3 p.m. and was con- trolled at 7 p.m. Smoke from the blaze was visible from Turtle Rock and other sections of Irvine. Seventy five Orange County firemen . with 12 pieces of equipment fought the stubborn blaze. A Costa t.iesa Police Department heliropter flew over the scene spotting hot spots for the firemen . The blaze started at the sout h end o( Slutd Canyon Road and spread north and west, away from tinder ·dry .brush, an Irvine Company spokesman said. ~hotiner Jttdge Goes Off Case Against ~aper . . CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -U.S. District Court Judge Hugh Bownes bas dlJ.Qu>lli- fled himself from hearing a libel ~l filed by former presidential aide and Newport Beach lawyer Murray Cbotiner against the Manchester Union Leader and report· · er Arthur Egan. Bownes disqualified himself from the $3 minion suit during the weekend after pu~ 1it1htr William Loeb submitted a 13-page alfidavit and more than 50 pages of ex· hibits. 'They contained Unkm Leader edi- torials from the past 10 ytars wtUch were critical of Bownes. The judge said earlier he was not preju-- dlctd, but Loeb maintained that "human nature being . what it is, a feeling of mu· tual dislike and distrust rcadlly re- kindles." · Downes said Loeb's ossumptlom were were •;at best. questionable." But he dlsquollfied hilNcll. 53ylng "I do not think It would be po$5ibi< to convince him (l.oeb) otherwise" and "since the appear- ance ol lmpartiaJity ls as impc>rtant ••• as Its reality." lie called Loeb's statemtnt "a boot- Alrap approach" that "can be used iJg.Aln t any judge Who IS assigned the IS.. CUOTINER, Pop ll ' ..; • ,. _ .. , American Peace Corps vohmteen de--Edward Finch Cox, a young ' : tained since Saturday by Uganda Presi-lawyer, in 1971. John Mitchell Seeks d t ldi Amin left Kampala today aboard The child would be . the first en . . . grandchild for the President and a charter night after Amm received his wire. assurances rrom Zaire President Mobutu The newspaper attributed its I Sese Seko that they were really Peace report to "an authoritai'tve source." . Dismissal of Charges Corps workers and not U.S. mercenary The Ni.tons have one othe r child, troops. Julie, who married. David They left aboard an East African Eisenhov.·er in 1968. Airv.'ays VCIO at 7 p.m. (9 a.m. PDT) to continue the· flight to Kinshasa, capital From \\'ke Services NEW YORK -Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell , on th.e eve of his Watergate testimony, requested to- day his conspiracy and petjury in- dictments be dismissed on grounds or government improprieties and prejudice. In motions filed in Manhattan Federal Court, Mitchell, 'ormer Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans and two other defendants alle ged that the U.S. at- torney's office coerced the grand jury in- to indicting them. Mitchell said ooe means of coercion was to question him before the grand jury about the Wa,tergate scandal. _ In a memo filed b'y Mitchell's lawyer, Peter Fleming, it was alleged that the (onner U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour, "having already prejudiced Mitchell substantially with regard to the New York case, compounded his im- proprieties by prejudicing Mitchell's ability to properly de£end himself Y.'ith regard lo Watergate." Mitchell ls scheduled to testify Tuesday before the Senate co m m i t t e e in- vesligating the \Vatergate scandal. Similar motions to dismiss the in· dictment were filed by the two other defendants in the case, fugitive financier Robert L. Vesco and llarry L. Sears, a prominent New Jersey Republican. The four defendants were indicted. ~1ay 10 on charges of conspiracy in an aueged scheme to influence a ' federal in- vestigation of Vesco's secret' con· -tributlbns last year to Presklent Nixon's re-election campaign. · In addition, Mitchell and St.tns were accµsed of lying before the federal grand jury last March. All four have pleaded innocent -and the trial is tentatively CLASS IFIED ADS MAKE 'EM VA.NISH Dail)' PUol clwlfled acls can sell just about anylhlng. nus •dvertlJer certainly had no problem!: ROUND oak table w/Sld .. brd, 6 °"-dmlr. round kit. table, antiq. chlir, solid t..i: tables, 1117.14 braided "'I· All llflll• In idn't cood. (Address), (Plme No.I The aclvertllcr sold all the Um11 he Iiitfid tbrou&b lhll ad. MAke • sale with yout miloellaoeouo Items. The direct line -11i-M11. scheduled for Sept. 11. Vesco remains out of the country. Other \Vatergate developments; -The Gallup Pon says 7t percent or Americans it questioned believe ·Presi- dent Nil.on was involved in the bugging or cover-up but only 18 percent feel he should be compelled to leave office. -Former U.S. House Speaker John W. ·McCormack said Sunday that President Nixon is justified in refusing to appear before the Senate \Vatergate CommHtee. 'I don't think as Speaker or the House I would want to have the President of the United Stale!! summon me down to the White House when I'm head of the legislative branch .•. " -Justice Department officials over· ruled an in_vestigation of the pricing practices or a company owned by Robert J~. Abplanalp, a millionaire frierxi of President Nixon, two New Y o r k newspapers reported today. of the former Belgian Congo that chang· ed its name to Zaire. Their departure was delayed several hours when the VClO did not leave Entebbe on schedule. (Two Orange Countians were emong the detainees. They were C h e r y I Andersen ancJ, Beverly J. Hart both or Fullerton. There were nine other Ca11for· niaris on the plane). Uganda Radio today broadcast a speech by Amin thanking General l\ilobutu •·for his message which cleared up the situation." Amin already embroiled in several serious' diplomatic disputes with the United States, seized the Americans Saturday after their British charter flight landed in Uganda to refuel. They had taken off to continue the flight to Zaire, the former Belgian Congo, but he ordered it to return and threatened to send up his tiny air force if the plane did not land again. The broadcast of Amin's speech said 1hat "in the future, Eruit African Airway! authorities should make sure [lights such as Saturday'! are cleared." The Kampala radio broadcast said President Julius Kambarage Nyerere of Tanzania would conduct an investigation -John Ehrlichman, fonner domestic affairs adviser lo President Nixon , says the President discussed but dismissed the question or executive clemency to the Watergate burglars, the Seattle Post· Inte lligencer reported Sunday. iJ1 into the matter which v.•as only cleared -Besides the blacklist publicized (See J\UTCHELL, Page %) (SEE UGANDA, Page I) Vlej,o Residents Revive ~treet Clo sing Protest By JAN W<IRTll 01 flle o.llY f'ltft Steff "\Ve get the impression Stlpervlsor Ronald Caspers thinks we're a bunch or weirdos who will cool ofr after awhile but he's got another think .cOmlng." That was the comment of 3 t.tission Vi<)? rnidtnl today, one ol about 200 who picketed Saturday morning for the second time in a week to protest cloaurts or three streets at Jeronimo Road two weeks 1go by the Orangt county Board ol Supervloors. Dlooe Shover, of 1414' &rquero, said Ille fell Sunday's porede U... Jeronimo lo the blo<:Dded ~Ions o I Carranzo, Mliatllla, IDd CordOIMI Driver, was "lhe best ot the two/' "1be whole thing luted -t throe and one-half houn," aald M'n. Shaver, "People bad to be entllJSlasllc to sUck With UI that Jong." 'Ille 1fOUP marched to El Dorado Part for a rilly and then lo lhe lntertM!Ctim I of Chrisanta and La Par. for another rally. County Road Commissioner T ed l'ifcConvUlc said today traffic counts In lhe area since erectk>n of the barricades should be complete thls week. When the tallies are in, he said ht would meet again with the residents. The blockades were put up following complaints from resldenta of sen Andres, San Roque, and Naccome Drives lhat their streets were bttng uted as speectwaji and a shortcut betwef:n the arterial roads of La Paz and Jeronimo. - F'Ulh Dlstri<:I 5upervl9or Caspers was out of his office today bul an aide said he would tnake a comment on the situation Tue!day. , A1n. Shaver Mild the group's next move wm be to go to the Mission Vi<Jo llomeowners Auoclatlon for aupport at ill regular meetlD( at 7:30 p.m. Wednes- day. Board to Make Coun ty Comp uter Se1'.Vice Choice By JACK BROBACK Of flle a.;1, f'ltel Sl•lf A showdown vote by !he Orange Coun· ty Bo.ard of Supervisors is expected Tuesday on who will handle the county's computer services. A county report released over the weekend recommends that an El Scgun· do llnn be given a contract to operate the computer facilities. The report by County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas recommends that the contraf.'t go to the Computer Science Corporation. In February, Tilomas, citing a si:c· month study by a committee of county department qeads assisted by a con- sultant, recommended the upgrading of the l'OWlty 's Data Services Department through the purchase of new Univac equipment. This recommendation was sidetracked when Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton suggested the hiring of an outside flnn to manage the computer work. Three weeks ago, TIK>mas reversed himself and recommended an outside contractor. His deci.sion was disputed by Supervisor David Baker who sat on a special committee that had studied the problem at the request of the board of Supervisors. 1'homas said the so.called blue ribbon committee had recommended an outside firm, but Baker and others who served on the oommlttee disagreed. By a 3.2 vote of the board, Diedrich and Supervisors Robert Battin and Ra lph Clark instructed Thomas to confer with two outside computer firms seeking a CS.. COMPUTER, Pase %) lJicycle Path P lan Discussed in Irvine The lrvlne bike trail! citizens advISQry comml1tce wlll meet at 7:JO o'clock tonight to discuss development of a ma ster plan of bicycle paths. Committee chalnnan cart ~lorrison or CU!verdale said 1he public me<tlng wUI be held at the home of member IJll! lle""'el1, 4646 Sierra Tree Lant, Unlvtrshy Park. the 14-hour search for Linda Anne -is no\v stoic consjdcring the ci rcumstances . "'She y.·as calm and composed "'hen I last tal ked to her,'' said Sgt. Picker. No f u n e r a I arrangements had been made this n1orning !or the young victim, whose parents are members of the Com- munity Congregational Church of Corona del l\iar. They were st ruck ironically by a dual tragedy over the weekend . ~ The fa1nily 's church sustained $5,000 damage in a fire blamed on arsonists. Oil Conce rns Face Florida Leg al Action TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (AP) -The State ol Florida filed suit today in federal court against IS n13jor U.S. oil com- panies, charging them ~·ith conspiring 10 contrive the current fuel shortage. The 68-pa ge suit calls for the com- panies to rid 1hemsclves of all crude oil exploration and development capabilities if lhC'y stny in the rC'tail gas business, 1-·1orida Atty. Gen. Hobert Shevin said . The sui t is one of the biggest trust- b..:sting attempts against oil companies sif'IC(' the Standard Oil Co. w<is broken up in the early 1900s, assistant Alfy. Gen. Dan Dearing said. ··ro this dat e we've found everybody talking about the crisis but nobody doing nnything about it.'' said Shevin. "\Ve felt il u·as time to do something." The suit alleges the oil companies have engaged in an illegal monopoly and unreasonable rcstr<iint of interstate trade and commerce. Shevin charged that major oil com· panics should not be able to control crude oil Ciom the time it comes out of the (See OlL SUIT, Page 2) Heliu 111 Blllloo11 Floats A-iva:y LINCKL1\E~. f\.Y. IUPll -A balloon nine stories tall being prepared for a trans-Atlantic !light broke loose-from its moorings and descended In earth 00 milC'S a~·ay Sunday in the hilly terrain of \vrstem Nev. York stare. Operators of the balloon were filling it v.•it h heliun1 for a t('St flight Saturday \\'hen four line.~ di .o;c onnected ac· cidentally. sending the SOO.pound nylon bag skyv.·flrd. The gondola was no( con· nected. so no pnssengcrs ~·ere launched. . , orange Coast Weather The ~un wiil brea k through those lov; f.'loucls Tuesday -weakly. Slightly \!.'Ormer temperatures, with 72 degree readings expected along lhe Orange Coast rising tu 8.1 in· land. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE T ODAY An expert on world Jood pre>- duction says Americans may 1oon have io ration food iu or· der to niahttahi e~ports 11.-.,d tltc val11e of the do/tar abrood~ Sec 1tory. Paoe 4. ... 11111 " !It"" "'"'"" ., L.M. Mt'f ' ·-, .. 1, C.Hw.I• • \Ntlfollll Nt-. • Clftull+H n.u OtlflM (flt!llY • (-i<• " ,,..,~ ,..,..., " (r.tl...nl " 1..,-11 u -11 Dulll Ntl\(M • ,. ....... leol " 1:•1i.ri.1 , •••. • ,.~,·~ , ... , l!ftrtrlfJ--1 , .. 1, W1111ter • lllflfN:I 11·11 w-·• "'" ,,.u Hlt'ete-" W .... Hewt • I •• • • f Gas Ration Ruled Out For Natio11 WASHINGTON CUPI) -Deputy TreasufY Secrct3ry \Vllilam E. Simon sai d emphaUcally today t h c od- ministration has ruled out any possibility of gasoline ralioo i11& to meet the current shortage. Simon's st.lltcment. his st rongest on the subject.~came amid rel)Orts that Jlrcsi· dent Nixon's Phase IV economic action may include a roUback in prices for gasoline and other petroleum products. A!ked abouf persistent rumors that' the administration is considering a program ol gasoline rationing,· Simon said "absolutely not." . "J absolutely do not con11ider rationing even possible," he said. '\\Ile have a vol'utitary allocation system in plhce ri'o\V that I believe is doing the }ob." Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-\Yash.). said Congress must take a "\•ery hard look " at the possibll ily of breaking up functions or big oil tomp.lnies. Jackson made the statement al a nc\\'s conference following disclosure of a government report suggesting that the structure ol the industry had a n1ajor role jn creating the gasoline shortage. Jackson said a two--year study by the staff of the Federal Trade Commission (n'C) "indicates clea.e:ly that vertical in· Legration, concentration and market con· trol had an important role in creating the shortage." Asked if he believed tbe industry was responsible for the gasoline shortage , Jackson said : "I believe there was a definite effort on the part of the "industry a year ago to create such a tight situation In the marketplace and by limitirig Imports that it resulted in the primary, immediate shortage we have tcxl.ay." "The report concludes," Jackson said. ""that it Is essential that the nation must develop a program to insure fair com- petition; and Implies that this program may require . divestiture of major oil compeny pipelines and refineries." ... 'Thel'epc>·rta tso -fays that the ma}Or oil companies are indeed using the shortage to eliminate competition and to increase their relative shares in all three sectors of lhe industry -production, rerlning and marketing." The~ FTC delivered the report to Jackson late laat week at his request. The FTC did not, however, provide him with a legal section of the report which npQrtedly recommends anti-trust action be laken by the FTC against the eight biggesl oil companies. Jackson said he was launching his O\\'n jnvesligation Into the si tuation. Freezer's Bare In Sari Clemente Tools, bikes and surfboards have been the standard loot for garage thieves in recent years, but the high price of food moy be changing all that. Jn San Clemente Sunday the garage caper was more like grand theft·grocery. Mrs. Erma Smith of 130 W. Ma riposa went to the freezer Sunday to discover it was · bare. Someone had cleaned out $300 worth or meat and took along a store of caMed goods nearby as well. The garage was unlocked overnight, she told police. · F rom Page l CHOTINE R. • • case simply b~ pubilshing critical editor· ials aboul that"judgc." Chotiner, a fonner aide to Pre3ldent Nixon. sued after the publication flf tl~·o stories claiming Chotiner was linked to the Watergate case. He denied any in- volvement. Since Bownes is the only federal judge in the state. a judge from outside New Hampshire will be appointl!d to hear the case. OllANGI COAST 11 DAILY PILOT l ... Otln\111 c-." DAtlY PllOl , wllh which 11 combined '"' ~t..,.Pr••• II P\lb!IM.-1 bY ,.., O-."Oe CO••I ~~blltfllfl!I COl"l~nr. $..,a. ''" ..i111Dn1 ••t •••"'""'· M_,r l"•o.,.11 Ftld..,. IOf Co.11 Mtw, N•wi:ioft llhMtl, H""ti....,.,... IHC:ll/FOlltlllln \/Iller. l ttllftl I .al. 1•'WIM 1$HllltbK> ..... s.~ c""""'"' Sin J...,. Ct&>bl•-. A 11n9"' r191-1 MlllDfl It illYllllsl'ltoll 511\1f'dt .. 1 '"" 1""6.o,•. '"' ll<•<><l!MI M tlllll"' P'-nt 11 et )JO \\o•il 111, StrH•, Colli M-. Ct!llO•n•~. •ltlt, llobt rt N. W•ed P•tliHlll 11\11 ~~bl"~" J.,~ I:. C1,1rlev VJ(f ~•ttlll"'I '"" ~II M.f"'''~ Tlio.,.•1 Ke1vil I l l,., The"l11 A. M...rphint M ..... 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U U,IJ mtMll,.,t 11'111114'¥ 1t1•l1•t1IO!lt·u .u """1'!'•· Olllr l'llet Sl•H 1'119f9 PRESIDENT NIXON, PAT LEAVE EL TORO FOR KANSAS CITY S.tn Clemente Soiou rn Mty Be Followed by Rt pe1t In Aug ust Nixon Ends Co11nty Visit; Might Retu1~n ii1 August · President Nixon left Casa Pacifica t~ day in brisk fa shion after spending more than twg_ w._eeks !}long_lfilL~uth. Orange "Coast. And already there are reports the President plans another lengthy stay at his San Clemente estate starting nex t month. Nixon, accompanied by his wife, Pat. strode through the gates leading to his house at about 6:15 a.m. and walked brisk!Y-to his waiting helicopter which took·tlie couple to the Spirit of '76 wai ting at tl;t! El Toro MCAS. The President waved several times to ·the two-dozen onlookers assembled at th e edge of the helicopter pad, but said. nothing as he left for the fli ght to the na· tion's capital. At El Toro the scene was the same as Nixon and n1embers of the First Family stepped down from the chopper, waved and then boarded the Presidential jet. There will be one stop along the way - Kans':ls City, ~10. -where Nixon ~·i» at· tend the swearing-in ceremonies for Clarence 1\1. Kelley, the new chief Of the FBI. Nixon planned to speak briefl;t at th e afternoon ceremonies at the Federal Of. flee Building in Kelley's hometown. It was the President's first public ap-- pearance since June 15, when he went to Pekin, Ill., !or the dedication or a n1emorial congressional research center honoring the late Sen. Everell M. Dirksen. A public turnout was expected for the oct·asion, wittl Missouri Gov. Oiristoph~r FBJ. He has been Kanas -City police chief si nce 1961. Two acting directors have been in the r-BT post s1nce-tfie dea th Of J. Edgar Hoover on ri1ay 2, 1972. Nixon's first choice for the job was L. Potrick Gray III, a c.ormeeticut lawyer .and Justice Department official. Gray rt.>Sig ned as acting FBI chlef after Senate \Vate rgale hearing disclosure.!! ~Dout the F'Brs handling of the Watergate cue. Kelley lakes over from the current ac· ting director, William D. Ruckelsha~. form er head of the Environmental Protection Agency. In winning Senate confirmation, Kelley promised ~e WoU1d -~perate in drafting new legislaticm to bring the F.81 under closer·congressiooal scrutiny than it bad 'during Hoover's service. which dated back to the inception of the FBI iD 1924. Nixon was returning to Washington a day before the Senate Watergate com· mlttee resumes its hearings after a Fourth of July holiday reces3. The President notified .the committee over the weekend that he would not testify before it nor turn over any presidential papers. · Nixon has been at the Westem White llouse for 17 days. He came here June 22 to continue his summit talks with Soviet leader Leonid J. Brezhnev. Santa Barbara Airplane Crash s. llond Oil hand and Chief Judge \Villian1 D h . s· h ed H. Becker ol lJ.S. D~lrict Court in e n S 1g t Kansas Gity adminislcring the oath. Kelley, 61, is a ~year veteran of the . ~ SANTA BARBARA (AP) _ Searchers . From Page l HEA LTH ... ventories al currenl levels until popula· lion of lhe county grows to le vels at \Vhich all licensed beds would be used al optimun1 levels. Critics of thi s approach to solving the county's overbcdding problem note thAt rnost of the beds are in north Orange County co1nmunillcs and not nll the beds ar(' in hospitals providing up to date services. Beck1na1i Ask s GOP Candidates To Act Ethically Or. Amold O. Beckman of Corona de! ri.ia r. chalnnan of the newly-formed Republican ·•So 11 d a r I l y Victory Program," Sunday \ssucd a stntcme:nt urging Republicans lo ' ' con d ll ct themselves in an upright and ethical manner" during t~ 1974 campaigns. Rccktnan'11 statement was Issued frotn Sacramento. In it. he said the committee ,.,,anl s "lo 11ssurc that Rcp;ublicans go in. to the general elections completely unified so that all the party's resou re£s arc brought to bear." Beckman alMI advised cnndidalt:A to: -"Not spcnk ill of o I h c r R.cpubllcans. -''Malnt11tn accurate hnanct1J records and file timely rt:poMs RS requlrtd· by In~·." -"Close ranks after the primary elec· tloo and give full support to Republican party nomlne<!s." Beckman sald his committee would be a nevrral force that would not Involve Itself ln can1pnlgn fund rnlsing. c found a lire and charred paneling from a light plane that crashed in the Santa Ba rbara Channel with five persons aboard today, a Coast Guard spokesman said. A Coast Guard cutter reported finding the debris 3\l miles west o( Goleta Point, about a mile offshore. The Piper aircraft crashed in heavy fog while l113klng a radar landing aproach to the Santa Barbara Municipal Airport, authorities said . The fog and low clouds ha mpered search efforts. The pilot was identified by airport authoriUes as H.R. Jones of Port Y.'ashington, NY. Identities of the passengers and the plane's ultimate destination \11ere not kno1vn. But a Coast Guard spokesman, Ed Conlon, said the plane was be lieved to have set out froin ~1n Francisco. Fog and clouds cut visibility in the~ ta Barbara Channel to 500-600 yards. 1\ Coasl Guard helicop ter search crew \\'as waiting for the fog and clouds tQ clear, Conlon sAid. The Coast Guard also sent lwo 82-foot cutters. a 4t}.foot patrol boat and an aux·· il iary vcs,,el to search for the downed plane. f'rom Page l MITCHELL ... earlitr Yt1atcrgate 'testimony, columnist Jack Anderson (whose column appean regulnrly In the Dally Pilot) reports that the White !louse also malntalnfld a secret list of Republican senator• who di• pleased the President. Among those named In the column as having fl\8:de the Ust from time to time Included Sens. Jacob K. Javltr of New York, f.far~ O. Hatfield ot Ore1011, Cllf· ford P. Case of New Jt.rsey, Char~s McC. Mathias Jr. ol Maryland, klchanl S. Schweiker of Pcrtnsylvanla, Qarles H. Percy of lllloois and Lowell P. Wetcker .Ir. of Connecticut. and forn1cr Sen. Charles E. Goodell of New York. \ \' -· Cruiser ires Mired .On Beach By JACK CHAPPELL Of .... 0.ltW' .. ,. '''" -. . A 41·foot (:hril.Craft cruiser, ho I es punched in her starboard and stem, lay mifed in sand today at El .Morro Cove near Lagun"a Beach -the vestige of a disastrous Sunday for a ruverside quar· tel. Salvage operations were scheduled for high tide today, about 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in an attempt lo pull the big cruiser o[f the beach.~ II Wa!I hauled up on the sand SUnday afternoon after striking rocks at Abalcoe Point, just south of the El"Morro trailer park area. ' Four persons aboard were identified by the Orange Colinty Harbor Depart· ment as Hyman Rosen , owner : Rose Ro- sen, Julius Laiken and Frances Laiken mishap. The harbor patrol first beard of the ac· cident when a ditltress radio call was re- ceived from the Rosen craft. 1be flrst reportS' were confusing, with one indicating that the craft. had struck rocks off the Lquna Beach jetty. Harbor patrolmen were able to deter· mine the craft was off El Morro anti two boat! were dispatched. On their a,rrival, the nowldering craft was round to be 2/3 full Of water. Lagwia Beach lifeguards and patrol· men beached the craft after divers fowxl a &-inch hole in the stern of the craft. During beaching operations two holes \!.'ere ripped in the starboard aide of the craft and the inside was smashed by surf. · ·1 Amount of the loss Is unknOwn. ID sal· vagil)C the craft, operalnn plan on stuff. ing large innertubel inlo the boat ind then inOating them. But, today, the lnslde of the boat was covered with about two feet of sand and a foot of water. Salvagera estimated that should she float, the boat would be about 90 percent in the water said Skip ~r. a mirlne -tiJOlogist. The area where the boat is beached is Tinged with rockJ. Fl'Otlt P .. e l UGANDA •.• up when Mobutu intervened on behalf of the Americam. Amin'• action ln the Uganda capital of Kampala wu armotmeed, tie;re by U.S. tmbassy spokesman Gary 'Morley: U.S. diplomats and the State Department had intert'eded in their behalf sinCe the mercurial Am.in forced them to land in Kampala on SUnday. "They do have clearance to Jeave,'1 f\1orley said. "It came· through around 3 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT). They are now looking for transport. They don't know where they're going and won 't know until the transport is confirmed.'' Morley said the Americans probably ¥.'ould go either to Nairobi, where hotel rooms have been booked for them, or to their original plane transfer point in Burundi. They have been staying in a Kampala Hotel, comfortable but under anrrcd guard. f\forley did not give details on Amln's decision to release the Americans but Prtsident Joseph Mobutu of Zaire In· tervened today to tell Amin they really were Peace Corps volunteers and were en route to his country ~ they said they were. Diplomatic sources in Kampala said Mobutu senl a telegram today ask· ing for their release. Bagley Will Speak PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -C3llfomia Assemblyman William T. Bagley, San Rafael, will be the keynote speaker at the opening session of the Arizona Tax Commission's annual conference July 25. Suate Meetlq Chairman Claims Aliso Unit Alive ~ ~ 'The AlisO Water Management Agency (AWMA) '1s "very much alive," Carl Kymla, AWMA chairman sakS following a meeting with state water resource of· ficlals in Sacramento Friday; Kymla ~·id approvals for construction ol new sewage tri!atinent · plants were received from the officials and that the projects will be funded in the 197~74 fiscal year. 'Ibuaday, Laguna Beach City Manager Lawrence Rose had reported to the Laguna Beach City Council, that 110me AWMA plllll bid be<n denied, and that a• Ei result, ll WU hi! peraonal opinion that the regional plan for waste water Collection1 treatment and , reclamation Was for all _pra~ical purposes dead. Kymla.siid lhal his trip to Sacramento ch.aoged all that. The AWMA was designed as a regional approach to dispoul of waste wate r. ll includes the communities of Laguna Beach. Irvine, Saddleback Va 11 e y , Laguna Niguel and South Laguna. Fl'Otlt P911e l COMPUTER. ' ' • • contract. The in-house Data Services Department was shunted aside despite objections by Baker and Supervisor Ronald Caspers. Baker and Caspers said today that they would ask for a delay Tuesday for further study of the problem. The Orange County Grand Jury also has called for further investigation. The -Thomas feport scheduled to go to the board uys Computer Science Cor- poNt.ioo. submitted the best o t f e r for managing the data _....ices for the. next seven years. Figures are CSC, $26.8 million; Data Services llepartmeot, '37.8 million and Electronic Data Sylteml (EDS) of Dal- las, $41.1 million. The CSC and EDS bid! are based on the use of IBM equipment rather than the Univac proposed by ~ department heads committee and the ~ultant aft· er an '85,000 study last winter. The 174 employes of Data Services would be given tbe option of transfering to the outside firm or resigning. The contract would be effective oo Aug. 1. Thomas said the bids from both tile outside fimu were analyz.ed by a county team made up of hia staff, the county counsel's office, the auditor • controller's staff and an . outside firm, Proprietary Computer ,Systems. Diedrich indicated· three weekl ago that EDS of Dallas had the inside traCk. The firm is owned by H. Ross Perot. Diedrich, bad made a trip to Teias to inspect the firm's equipment and capa- bilities. 4 Democrats Ort Raft Ruri CISCO. Utah !AP) Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and ~ other con· gresslonal Democrats ran a portion of the Colorado River in rafts Sun· day in an outing of father"50n fellowshJp. Kennedy, 41, was t}Je senior member of the group. Othen were Utah .R<!>. Wayne °""'1JI, 38, the host: California Sen. John Tunney, 39; jmd Pennsylvanlii Rep. William J. Greeo, 35. Each man bad one JOl1 along. The six-hour trip covered 18 miles in Granite Canybn· b e t w e e n \Vestwater and Cisco in eastern Utah. • Under initia l plans, Laguna Beach would close its 1934·vintage sewage plan\ and ocean ou1fall. The Art Colony's sewage would be piped through an interceptor sewer line to a new plant to be built in the AliSO Cree.k area. A large ocean outfall would be constructed off Aliso Creek. Inland plants would be expanded. The waste would be treated to a s~~­ dary effluent stage which makes tt suitable for irrigation and non-contact recreaUon. Rose had informed the city collllcil l)iat A WMA had received approval for the outfall and the interceptor sewerlines, but not for conStruction of the sewag~ planta: Kymla said the outfall and tht sewerlines were in 1972·73 fund ing. The entire project is now valued at about $16 million. having been scaled down from earlier plans for a $23 million facility. , The AWMA plan will accommodat~ from 174,000 ·to 230,000 persons, Kymla said. That's down from the first figure:i of 368,000. · FremPqeJ OIL SUIT ... ground until it is pumped at a gas st&- tion. "The gasoline wars are supported by profits made at the crude oil level," said Dearing. "If we remove that section we can -.-make the marketing truly com· petltive." nae suit is a class act~ on ~ of all counties, cities end school boards in the state, Sbevln said. Named IS defendanU were Euon Corp. of New Jersey, Texaco Inc. of Delaware, Gulf Oil Co r p . of Pennsylvania, Mobil Oil Corp. of Delaware, Standard Oil Co. of California, Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, Shell Oil Co. of Delaware, Atlaotio.Richfield Co. Clf Pennsylvania, Phillips Petroleum Co. of Delaware, Continental Oil Co. o f Delaware, Sun Oil Co. of Delaware, Union Oil Co. of California, Cities Service Co. of Delaware, Standard Oil Co. of Ohio ·and Marathon Oil Co. of Delaware. Three Arreswd Ori Murder Rap Three Santa Ana men were arrested early SWlday Qn chrges of atternp_ted murder and conspiracy to . commit murder after a car cootainlng live men was peppered with gunfire, police reported. Officers said the shots smashed the car's headlights and put several holes in the body but none of the passengers were injured. Arrested were teroy \Vatts, 27, his brother John, 25 and Marshal Brown, 28. all of 6l7 S. Wood St., Santa Ana . Investigators 68id the brothers ha'.d previously ejected the five men ftom a party they were throwing and when they returned to the scene they allegedly opened fire. MIA Truth Sought COVINGTON, Ky. llJPI) -The na· tional commander of the American Legion says the United States sOOuld a~ ply military pressure to North Vietnam' i( necessary to get information en Americans still missing in action. ''If necessary, military pres.sure should be brought to bear to force the Noi:tb Vietnamese to let our investigation teams go In there (North Vietnam )," said Joe Matthews of Fort Worth, Tex. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • • • RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lrol. NO-DEFROSTING Adnrlral. . ' 5 r RIFRIGERATOR/PRllZER ALL THESE ·GREAT ... aaA .r_r:EA TUR!S • "'" Width "~' ,,..ltf Doot St111f - tor ll\1t1nt -··. • OV1I T1n1,.,ahlN Coftttol1-M*i th9 ,...~,.. fOf ..:h MCUon, ' -.. • Twin ~ C""9n-Mfpe. fNf\. ""' ........ ~ trwti. • bin """ flllfll ......... Door ~-f'loldl 'twa tlH Clutrt bott ... I ,. ' ., • r A.. ..... NT IJ M No 4efro•flftf refrit•r• .. , toc.t1111t .,Jth Arctlc Alr fl1w fl" .. 1111 fir full .-,cle clrc,l•tl•it. ' SLIMLINE HEmlGERATOlf ~=$25995 M•I Cl 1JJ • f\111 Width rreuet Chet • Wl•"•ntt lemptrltvf'I CO!iltol • 'lod Vl1u•I Defrcst•lilnll' lndie1tor • C1rtr1 ONp Door S1'11H • r-ull Wldtti FtMn•Mort Ctl!Hw 0'9Wlf ~ MetMor tr .... C•lllernl1'1 Lll'lftl 159'5 90 DAY rn ~·tlw luyl .. Group With TN WliM .,.lOYlt • Volume l uy1nt CllDn a .......... ,..Power of 110 Sfor"r1EI ~ .... 1ft191.... ~ CASH 1115 NEWPORT II.YD. Dawntawn Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7718 i ' I \ I 17 I • 1 7 • • I -' ··Bnnti•jton · Beaeh Fountain ·Valle,.- ED 11'1 O·N ~Ol. 6', NO. 190, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • I Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Valley May ·Add 300 Acres to Residential Use lly-JOA!jNE llEYNOLDS•---comm1Sik>O'clly <Olln<ll atlidy-oeslk>n °' .. o.1tr ..._ littl ~ night, but Sherrod said today it , •An ecmOmic report on the feuibllity of is incOmple&e. changing, more .than. 300 acra ln Foun-Acoordlng to Acting City Manager taln Valley fro m industrial to rtSidential Wayne Osborne, the report coocems the use is being· prepared by city PlaMln& economics of challging the master-plan- Direetor elintoo ~· ning of the nOW vacant" land that is The ·report, undertaken at the direction bounded by the San ta Ana River, warner of the city's' plan,ning commission, was Avenue, Euclid Stret and Talbert scheduled for presentation at a joint Avenue . • • e Ul * * *· ' . Huntingwn Settlement ... The peace agreement sigried between downtown Prwer!Y owners and the Hun· j tington · Beai;h City Council contains several. Points . itnportant to the area's future development. It's a comprehensive four.page docu- 'ment whlcb at.least temporarily ends thr: II miUltn: Ji'O(ietty olvners .Wt against the city. . . ' Os!JOrne Siid Ole repor"f"'Wi"Stakeno/£ the study sessioo agenda today because oo'uncllmen will not have an opportunity to read it before the special meting. He indicated that it \\'ill be presented at an unspecified later date. Sherrod declined to give any details of the study because it is incomplete, but Osborne said it.ta,.i.es into account the ef •• feet of tlieeliange of the master plan «1 the sales and gas lax monies returned to the city from the state as well as the ef· feet on lhe city's projected taz base. In the past. council members have io· dicated a strong support of the existing plan which caUs for development of the land into an industrial park. ~·o years ago COWlCilmen changed the masterplan which sho"·ed a rCW Pa rcels within the industrial arta thal "·ere earmarked for apartment development. Siqce tha t lime the entire 344-acre block has been master-planned for industrial development. At present the industiial construction in ttie clty is limited to the 152 acres sou\)1 of Talbert next.to the Santa Ana River. • GREAT CIRCLE ROUTE • D1llY Pll91 (.ll1rl ~y M1m Ctll'" · ) Th&iisuit Was ,filed in the fall of 1970 by Bob Terry's late mother, Irene. Bob has ·catrtecl the ·salt forward. enlarging it to a cl~ ac:t.kln ·suit for .an downtown ~ erty ownen. , . Trans~ Leflders ·at O..e.•third P~i!'t . . . , . But develop~cnt of lhat area is nearly comp\e1c und developers are beginning to consider prope rty north of Talbert. Osborne indicated that the report does not necessarily mark. a change in attitude on the part of the city t"OUncil. "It's just a good policy to ha\'e periodic reports like this one on any large parcels of \'Scant land," he said. · Consultant Will Fund Pla11 Work·-, By TERRV COVILLE 0 1 n.. Dally "llol lfllf An engineering firm v.1ill spend $300,000 to-'500.llOO of its cTu•n moneYlO deVc!Op a comprehensive master plan for the reconstruction of downtO"'n Huntington Beach. The mas1er plan -to be developed by Voorheis. Trindle and Nelson (VTN) of Irvine -is the key to a peace settlement between major downtown property O\vners and the city . I Terry said todaY. ~ was "elate:<t" wl,th the setllsnent reached Fr~ aad be ,.... -fel!lr ·It ~ a,....good · iilinprOmjse· for everybody. In brief, the qreeroent says : 'wm~i~ge <WP> hid covered. one-third Of t·~e.i,22!;ie coufse "°mile~ io.~O is of ·Sunda/s roll call. The fleet moved into the northeast lo Diamond Head "1 Sundoy's roll calf in the 60-boat cillc trades today, bu t winds were reported light "We've been drilling -Yacht Race. Others pushing the 73-foot ketch are Ragtime ), obon along behind the Class A fleet at about four knots for the past 48 (RO), Ondlne (ON) and Blacldin (BF). All ~ within 20 miles hours," sald a spokesman aboard the escort vessel Pegasus IL For The peace agreement \vas announced Friday as property owners. led by Hob Terry and li.1artha ~!oh, agreed to sec:!k no further action on an '8 milUm law- suit against the city while the master plan is developed. Kenneth Carlson, president of VTN, sa id today he expects it will take nine months to a yea r to finish the plan. .. -'lbe city 1rill ....,..ate'1rilh VTN In rui de~ of 'a master plan !H- down town reconstruction, but the plan of WP. Improbable ~(IM)'ls the corrected time leader, with about 1,630 more on the Transpac, see.l'age 19. 1rill .follow oonnal city procedures for . . ·1 ~111.cily will provide public parki•g-Beach P'"-L l1~c Work~ Chief aclllbes where required by the VTN Ull 0 plan. . • -'lbe ,city, .VTN, Martha Holt and Bob Terry will work out an implementation plan for the VTN project. -Property owaed downtown by the ci· ty will be sold as surplua In Individual parc]es to -VTN, Holt, Terry 8Dd George tngraham. Takes Joh 'In Paradise' -VTN will deVelop the city pier. . -U.a conveation Cent.er is part of the VTN plan, the city will encourage prlva"' <!<Vl!lopment of It .. If private development Is not feasible, the city will develop a cOnveaUon center if it Ls feasible. -'lbe city, will inslall underground lighllng'ln a ft~block area and 'pouibly all underground utilities if a private con- . vention center is built. -The city will use the cooununtty rodevelopmenl act to Implement the plin, 1111 ·ls needed. • -A moratOrium iB 'Placed on the $8 milliGn law3uit -After the planning commission and city council have approved the VTN plan, . the lawsuit will be dropped. -When the suit iJ dropped, the city will pay .all of the legal f-requtnd by TerT')''s attorney, Artb'ur Gay. -U at any time the agreement Is not lived up to, the partlOs In the laWIU~ may, lriittate cOurt action to oooUnue the sbit. The agreement was signed by Mayor Jerry Matney (for lhe clly) and property owners Te rry Holt •and Ingraham as well u VTN. Brown Autopsy Told I • LQS ANGELES (UPI) -COmeclmi Joe E. Brown, who died Frklay, suo- cumbed to paeumonla and heart falluro due to hardenJnll of the arteries, ., auloply discloled SUnday. • CLASSIFIED ADS MA.KE 'EM v A.r.¥ISH At tbe age of 51, Huntington Beach Public WorU Director Jim Wheeler believes paradise is near ·at hand. He has a new. job. •. · It's another public works directorship but he wbn 't be confined ·to a city with narrow boundaries and miles and miles of ospbalt streets. Starting Sept. 1, Wheeler will be public worts director for the U.S. Trust Ter- ritory of the Pacific Islands - Micronesia. He reports to Salpan, the headquarters. His territol)' covers !,000 small ialands, 100 of which are Inhabited. The total area Valley Council Will Make Stud y Of City Center The continued deveJcpment of a plan for Fountain Valley's city center will be the subj<ct of a study -Ion of the city coimctl •and planning commlpion Tue>- clay night. The Santa Ana an:bltectural firm of Grillias, Pirc1 ac.ier and Alves has pr<pared the lnitlal llUdles of the pro- posed obopping conter and office complex to be built on the 30 acres of vacant land betwecpi Wamer and Slaler avenues on the east skle of Brootbunt Street. 11 -decide to go ahead with the plan, they wW hive to wait for a reguJar bush>eSS meeting to order the . firm to prepare detailed architectural renderlnp of \he propoeed development. Those deslp will coot the city $12,llOO. ' Dolly Pllol claaified adl can 'sell Jus\ -Tha dty 1111 alftady poid · Ille !Inn ' Slt,IGO to popare the plads wldch call about anythlag. 'lllis advertller certainly for aa equal apportionment of Ille !lad no probl<llll! ~t ._ the batt<lorzen _. • • erty owners. ROUND oak table w/sid.. That plan ,,,_. that IS percent of the bnl, e, J?r••er drenr. round land w!U be tatm up with the ,,.... kit. ta011, anUq. chair, oollcl mer<lal development, • pment ..W be teak lll>let, to.ti braided °""' spoce ml landlcll>in& 'aad 10 per· "'I· All Items In aln't coad. -..W be pantns. i_ <->. <Pbone No.l ,.. JnPOMCI, the .-r would ~ olngle story batldlap -a -Tbe ad..rtloor oold all Ille lleml he pedatrlan mall. ,,,.... -Id be a lew lilted lhrvug(i Iha lld. Make a sale with lqe bulldlap to a c c o m m o d a I e )'our m""""'-Items. Tbe dlnCt 11ae supumor1<111 and departme!lt 111om u -MJ.lm. wen u clusten or omaller sho(>o and QI· nc.o. . • ' - ~ is as big as the U.S.,.Jhough ~tor it is salt ''a~r. "I think it's wonderful to have such an adventure at my age," Wheeler reflects, never losing his constant smJJe. He can thank his wife Betty, a secretary in the planning department, for the opportunity. On a brief trip north, she discovered an obscure ad in tbe San Francisco Chroni- cle anoouncing the job opening. Jim applied and won the post. His new job covers the Marshall. Caroline and Jl.lariana islands. He has been there before as a Marine island-bop- ping in World War 11. 1 "I've been out there before and il "s wonderfui to go back to llve in peace there. Tbe U.S. bas a mandate from 'the U.N. to develop the area in live years so Jt can become self-sufficient and aeJf. govenitng. "It will be interesting to help an emerging nation get prepared for self- rule." Mtetler says the public works job 'lt'ill be similar. to the wort be does in Hun- tlngloa Beach, though problems wilt be compounded by the great distances and the lack of skilled workers. · "Part of my job will be to train workers, so 1'11 jmt have to be patient.'·' be says. Wbeeler has helped lead the emergence of Huntington· Beach from a sleepy little farm community to a major city for the past 15 years, first as city engineer, then acquir'lng the newer title of public works dll<do<. "Molt of the things I wanted to do here have been done or are ln the works." He Ult.I such accomplishments as near completion of the city's mas5lve drainage ·system, development of all but one of the needed water storage tanks and con- atruction of the first part of the new city equipment yard. '"l'hil •W not only be a change or -1<, but a total change of ..,. "Vtromnent," he aa)'s. 0 1'm quite fond of 1111 _.. hen! and 111 -lbem to . beat Ille -. but -of the er· -cl -1·1 -....,, on litre . bu W'Ol'1l oft" . la Mtmnala. he 1ay1. the ell:\lem<nl wUI juol beCln ar the 1ru pr'lltret to capture IOme of the tourist tl'lde and buildl Jtlell as a new nation. • HEADING FDR PARADISE Huntington Buch'• Wheeler Four· year-old Dies When Hit By Car Sunday A four-year-old Fountain Valley boy was killed Sunday afternoon after he jumped from a ceoter divider and darted in front of a car on Brookhurst Street, Fountain Valley pvlice report. t.1ark Allen 1'1iller, son of lifary Anne flfiller, 10093 La Quinta Circle, \\'as pro- nounct'd dead at Fountain Valley C.Om· mwlity Hospital after the 4:20 p.m. ac· cldent. The boy and hJs 10-year~ld brother, John, were standing together on the me- diln strip wben the younger boy ran out in front of a car driven by Sandra Lee Hamor, 27. of Garden Grove, police a.aid. Witnesses told police the older boy yell- (ed "Stop!" to his brother momtnts '""ore the boy waJ knocked 50 feet ~hgh the •lr from the impact. 11te driver tokl police she was travel- g north on Brookbunt )U!t north of Slater Avenue and did not M!t' the boy un- til h6 ran In frool-of her car. She we.a not h<lcl I>)' Police. _ ~uneral Strvlcea are pcoding at Peck t-"111Y t.1ort~ary in Westml(\.'ler. U ga1ida Dictator Fre es 111 Y a1iks ; Not Really Spies NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -The 111 American Peace Corps volunteers de· tained since Saturday by Uganda Presi- den t !di Amin left Kampala today aboard a charter flight after Am in received assurances from Zaire Presidenl li1obutu Scse Seko that they were really Peace Corps workers and oot U.S. mercenary troops. They left aOOard an East African Airways VCIO at 7 p.m. (9 a.m. PDT) to t'Ontinue the Oight to Kinshasa , capital of the former Belgian Congo that chang- l'tl its name to Zaire. Their departure was delayed several hours wl1cn the VCIO did not leave Entebbe on scb~ule. At this point, Carlsdn said he does not know exactly how much area will be -covered in the VTN study, though ii vdll certainly cover fi ve lo seven ocean front bloc~and the city pier. VT is willing to ~peculate \Vith Its own y, because part of the city-prop- erty owners settlement gives VTN the engineering rights to an acceptable master plan. City officials, led by Jl.layor Jerry lilatney, ha".e agreed to provide "'hatever public parking is ne!eded for downto"·n redevelopment, as welJ as con- sider the city·backcd construction or a convention center, if necessary. Th e city has also agreed to use the state redevelopmen t act to insure that all properly in the project area becomes a part of the plan. City councilmen have. however. re- ta ined the right to deny any plan which VTN may develop, but if that occurs, the property owners' lawsuit might once again become active. In addition to general engineering rights. VTN will be given the opportunity to redevelop the cily pier on its own. (Two Orange Counlians were emong the detainees. They were C h e r y l Andersen and Beverly J. Hart both o( Fullerton. There were nine other Califor· ' ''The pier should have some wonderful restaurants, and some type or people nlOver, but we don 't have details ye!." Carlson said today, "We hope to create parking av.•ay fron1 the beach. but pro-· nians on the plane), Uganda Radio today broadcast a speech by Amin thanking General l\tobutu "for his message v.'bich t'learcd up the situation." Amin, already embroiled in several serious diplomatic disputes with the United States, seized the Americans Saturday· after their British charter Oight landed in Uganda to refuel. They had taken of! to continue lhe flight to Zaire, the former Belgian Congo, but he ordered it to return and threatened 10 send up his tiny air force tr the plane did not land again. The broadcast of Amin's speech said that "in the future, East African Airways authorities should make sure flights such as Saturday's are cleared." The Kampala radio broadcast said (~e UGANl:JA, Paa:e %) Heliu1n Ball.oon Float s Aivay LINCKLAE N. N.V. (UPI) -A balloon nine stori es tall being prepared for a lrans·Atlantic !light broke loose from Its moorings and descended to earth l!o miles away Sunday ln the hllly terrain of western New York state. Operators of the balloon were filling it with helium for a test night Saturday v.·hcn !our lines d isc onnected ac- cidenUtlly, sending the 500-pound nylon baa skyw•rd. The gondola. was not con- nected, 30 no passengers were launched, vide people movcr.i through town to the pier." carlson cn\'isions major hot e I s downtown as well as a series of io· ternatlonal restB uranL"l and some ··Disney-type'' entertainment attraction ISee PL.AN, Page%) Oran ge Coast Weather The sun will break through those lov.· clouds Tuesday -weakly. .Slightly "'armer temperatures, with ~ degr(.'C rcndings expected along Hie Orange Coast ri sing ~o 83 in· land. Overnight lows in the: 60s. INSIDE TODAY An crpert on world food pro- ductiou says A mericony 1nau soon ltave lo ration foOf'I In or· dcr to 1nait1taha t?Xports mid t/1c value of lite dollar abr01d. Sec 11ory, Page 4. ...... ,. l,M, ..... 1 C1Mflf'al1 J CNl~lltot ltoH C-1« II Cr _ _,,, 11 DMfll i..ilt" t •fll9t1tl ,... ' •flfwlt1........ 1 .. lt f'hlaitet • lf.11 """'"" 14 '"" LI""" •4 Mt'tl" , .. " ' Ma lkmoll N1wt 4 0.1,.. c_1, 1 S•trl• ,_,,.,. 11 '-h '"" Ttlt•hlt111 11 TllMle~ ll•lt Wttftltt 4 W-·· Htwl !Jolt W""' H"'t t . ' '· 16 UAIL't t'll01 • Policemen Baffled By Murder , By ARnlUR R. VINSEL Of ""' ""'"' "" ''"' The sad seardl lo< l.lnda Ann< O'Keele ended with the diJcomy ol the strangled girl'• body by a lonely roadside along Up. per Newport-Bay Saturday but the man- hunt for her killer continues today, .Ooe theory is that Ille II-year-old vic- tim -lacking a ride borne rrom summer school -may have tried hitchhiking. She wu not 1exually molested, however, and lnvestlgaton said today there were no specific indications that sfie fought berl killer. Thil fact literally leaves police with no motly.e -. well as no suspect. "We•re'·working hard at It," Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Don Picker said of the bunt ror the stayer. Orange Cowity Coroner's deputies said today that oo specific cause of death has been determined, although it Wu ap- pa"'1t Ille Lincoln Ihtermediate School pupil bad boeo otrangled. Her molber -nearly by1lerical during the lt-bour 1earch for Linda Anne -is now stoic considering the clrcwnstances. "She was calm and compoeed when I Jut talked lO her,'' said Sgt. Picker. No f u n e r i 1 arrangements had been tMde this morning for the young victim, whole parent.I are memben of the Com- munlly ~atiooal Chw'di ol Corona del Mar. They were struck Ironically by a dual tragedy over the weekend. The lamllf'• chun:b llUll•hied 15,000 ~ In a lln! blamed on l?Dli>u. Flaming Hawk . Sta:rts County's First-Big-Blaie- A hl.,.k which flew into a high power line and fell fiaming to the ground was blamed today for starting Orange Coun- ty's Iariest gr.,. ancHirush (In! of the te111011 Sundly in the city of Irvine. 'lbe blaze burned more than 200 acm of Intne Rancb CltUe grulng rana:e -t 8 mile IOUth and west ci Lion Comtry Safari, the wild animal com- pound east pl the Laguna Freeway and aoutb of Sad Diep Freeway. Firemen aaid oo cattle were injured and no ltrvctW'el threatened by the rire wbicb started about s p.m. and waa con- ~ al 7 p.m. smoke from Ille blaze Jl'U villble from Turtle Roel< and other -of Irvine. SeY<Oty ftve Orange County lln!mm with 12 pieces of •equipment loucht the elub®rJL!![•ze~ A CO.ta Meoa Police Department helicopter flew over the ~ spotting bot spots for the firemen . The blaze started at the IOUlb end of -Canyoo Rood and sprud nor1h and west, a~y from Under dry bntah, an Irvine Company spokesman aald. Executive, Wife Killed in Ohio CORTLAND, Ohio (UPI I -An elderly IC.eel company· execuUve and his wife were found shot to death at their home in this northeastern Oltio community Sun- day. Killed were C. Walter Holmquist, 78, and his wife, Dorothy, also in her 70s. Holmquist wu former president of Copperweld Steel Corp. and served on Its board or directors. The Trumbull County sheriffs depart· me.nt said the two were found in the basement recreation room and bad been hit by roundJ fired from a shotgun at vecy close range. Holmquist had been shot once in the bead and his wife had been shot twice in the bead and cbool. \ OIANSI COAST •• DAILY PILOT "ftlt Or•• COl•I DAIL'I' l'ILO"f w1!11 wltletl la <omllll>td·ftle N-l'ttU. II Dllbllllltll br "" Or.,,.. '""' l"Wlllfllnl '-"'· '-'" ••le •n-.. ••• ..,,...""*', ,,,,_., tll<Wllfl .. riNy, fOr (Mii MKt, H......, ltlldl. H""'t1no1.,, l •Klll,._t•lll Y1t1tr, i......- e..dt, 1 ..... w 1sMot111111C11 anc1 $•" ci.-111 $1!\ JN" C..-blf-A •lf'l91f '"ltrlal MlltlM " publlslltll .. ,.,,...,. trod ~ra, The ll'"lt.clNI jlUlll~ ~ II t i ill WHI ••tt 1""1. C.11 ""'-• C.lllort11'i, ttlH. Robert H. WtP l'rtilffrlf •rod ll'vllll'"'" Jtcli: It. C11rlty \lk• l'rtt•I W 0-.-•I MIMOlf Th-•t K"ll'il IOI~ 1"110""•• A. 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PRESIDENT NIXON, PAT LEAVE EL TORO FOR KANSAS CITY S.n Clemente Sojourn Mly Be Followed by Repe1t Jn August Nixon Ends Cou11ty Visit; Might Return in August Prnident Nixon left Casa Pacifica U>. day in brisk fashion after spending more than two weeks along the South Orange 'COul. And already there are reports the President plans another lengthy stay at his San Clemente estate starting next tnonth. Nixon, accompanied by his wile, Pat, strode through the gates leading to his house at about 8: 15 a.m. and walked bristly to his waiUng helicopter which look Ille couple to the Spirit ol ~6 waiting at the El Toro MCAS. '11le President waved several times to the two-dozen onlookers assembled at the edge ot the helicopter pad, but aaid nothing u be Ioft la< the fllgbt to the na-tion'• capital. At El Toro the scene was the same as Nixon and memben of the First Family stepped down ,from the chopper, waved and then tioard""ed tfie Presidential jct. There will be ooe stop along the way - · Kansas City, Mo. -where Nixon will at· tend the swearing-in ceremonies for Clarence M. Kelley, tbe new chief of the FBI. Nixon plaMed to speak briefly at the afternoon ceremorues at the Federal Of· nee ~ in Kelley '1 hometown. It was the President's rirst public ap- pearance since June 15, when he went to Pekin, Ill., for the dedication of a memorial congressiooal research center hooorin& the late Sen. Everett M. Dirksen. A public turnout was expected for the occasion, with Mlslourl Gov. Christopher s. Bond on band and Cliie!Judge William ff. Becker or U.S. District Court in Kansas City administering the oath. Kelley, 61, is a 20-year veteran of the fBI. lie bas been Kanas City police chief since .1961. • Two aCUng directors have been in the FBI post since the death of J. Edgar Hoover on May 2, 1972. Nixon's first choice for the job was L. Patrick Gray Ill, a Connecticut lawyer and Justice Department oUictaL Gray resigned as acting FBI chief after Senate Watergate hearing disclosurci about the FBl's handling of the Watergate case. Kelley takes over from the curreot ac- ting director, William D. Ruckelshaus, H u1itingto1i Sets f ariety Slioiv For Cliildre1i A free variety show for children 12 and under will be held at 2 p.m., Tuesd8y. in the admlnJstratlve annex of the Hun- tington Beach city hall, 523 Maln St. The variety showMwill be put on by Beth Fernandez ol the Im Angeles Guild of Puppetry. It's one or several sho"'·s sponsored this summer by the Hun· lington Beach public library. Youngsters in all grades through the sixth grade can sllll sign up for tM library's summer reading progr11m "itich will be capped Aug. 28 with a movie par- ty 11t Edwards lluntlngton Beach Cinema . Any youngster \\'ho visits the library five Umes this summer before Aug. 28 will be admitted free to .see "A Boy Named Charlie Brown." Other library activities include: a P,UP- pet ahow Aug. 14, free "creature" films each Satun!ay during Augus t, workshops to make fllin slrlps and casAetlcs. macrame and Origami (Japanese paper folding) workshops. For further lnlonnation phone the Ubrary al 536-54&'1. Youths may sign up for lhe summer program 11 the main library or any brlll1<h In the city, former head of the Environmental Protection Agency. In wiMing Senate confirmation, Kelley · promised.he would cooperate In drafting new legislation to bring the FBI under closer congressional scrutiny than it had during Hoover's service, which dated back to the inception of the FBI In 1924. Nixon was returning to Washington a day before the Senate Watergate com- mittee resumes its hearings · after a Fourth of July holiday recess. The President notified the committee over' the weekend that be would not testify before it nor turn over any presidential papers. Nixon has been at the Western White House for 17 days. He came here June Z2 to continue his swnmlt talks with Soviet leader Leookl I. Brezhnev. Santa Barbara Airplane Crash Debris Sighted SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Seorchen lound a !In! and charred paneling from a light plane that crashed in the Santa Barbara Channel with five ptt90ll.S aboard today, a Coast Guard spokesman said. A Coast Guard cutter reported fmding the debris 3'h. miles west of Goleta Point , about a mile offshore. The Plper alreralt crashed In heavy fog while making a radar landing aproacb to the Santa Barbara Municipal Airport, authorities •id. 'The fog and low clouds hampered search efforts. The pilot was identified by airport authoritJes as H.R.. Jones of Port Washington, NY. Identities of the passengers and the plane's ultimate destination were not known. But a Coast Guard spokesman, F.d Conlon, said the plane was believed to have set out from !ian Francisco. Fog and clouds cut visibility in the San- ta Barbara Channel to 500-600 yards. A Coast Guard helicopter search• crew \VllS waiting for the fog and clouds to clea r, Conlon SIUd. The Coast Guard also sent two 82-foot cl!Uers, a ~foot patrol boat and an aux· , iliary vessel to search for the downed plane. Mrs. Ft1nkhouser Services Slated Funeral se.rvices will be held Tuesday for Blodwen Fun~r, a resident of 11untinglon Beach for ~ years, who died Saturday. She was 86. Mrs . Funkhouser, who li\'ed at 904 Palm Ave., was the molher of Betty Funkhouser, assistant superintendent of Instruction at U1e Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District. Services will be held at 11 a.m. at Smilhs' ~tortuary in Huntington Beach. Burial will follow at • W!!tmlnster Meniorial Park. Other survlvon are sisters Gladys l\1cCluskey and Atauvle Reuss of SD.n-· nyvale: a son, George, of Portland, Ort.; two grandchlldren and a g:reat·gr•nd- cbild . Totie lu1proves NEW YORK (UPI ) -ToUe Fields' condition Improved Sunday and her agent pid he was hoperul the popular com· edlenne could leave Iii< hospital by F'rl· day. She was injured in an auto accident Th.,..day night. Mitchell Asks Dismissal Moti.ons Claim U.S .• lmpr:opi:ieties, C0ercion r ... wir. .... tem NEW YORK -Po rm er Attorney General JobD N. Mltdlell, on !he eve or hll Waterpte r..tlmony, requested 1 .. ~day his CCllllpiracy and perjury in- dictments be dlmlined on groundl of goveniment i_(Jlproprielies and prejudice. In moUons tiled in Manhattan Federal Court, Mitchell, former ~merce Secretary Maurice St.ans and · two. other defendants alleged that the U.S. at- torney's office coerced the grand jury in- to indicting them. Mitchell said one means of coercion was to que1Uon him before the grand jury about the Watergate scandal. Ill -UOD, llltdllll lad -..... accustd ot Jylna: before tbl federal crarid jury lul Marcli. All lour have pluded Innocent and the trial ta tenlaUveJy scheduled for Sej>t. ll. V.esco remalnl out of the country. 1 Oilier Watergate development<: -The Gallup Poll says 71 percent of Americans it quetttoned believ!-Presi- dent Nixon wu involved in the buatna; or cover-up but only 11 percent feel be should be co.,.,.lled to Ieove olli<e. .:...F;onner: U.S; Hquse Speaker John W. McCormack said Sunday that President Nixon is justified in refUslng to appear before tbc Senate Watergate Committee. 'I don 't think as Speaker of the House I would want-to have·the President of the United Statt1 summon me down to the White House when I'm heed of the leeislatlve branch ... " -Justice Department ofrtcials over- • ruled an investigation of the pricing practices of a company owned by Robert H. Abplanalp, a millionaire friend of -NlloD, two N .. Yor k .._pera ttportcd today. -John EhrlJcbman, former domestic affairs adviser to President Nixon, says the President 4llcuased but dismiuad the quatkin of executive clemency to the Walerfale burglars, Ille Seattle Post- lntelllgencer reported Sunday. -Besides-the blacklist p<>blicized Jn earlier Watergate testimony, columnist Jack Anderson (whose column appears regularly tn Ille 'Dally Pilot) reportl that the White House a1lo maintained a aecret list of Republican senators who dis- pleased the President. Among those named in the column as having made the list from Ume lO time included Sens. Jacob K. JavJJ~ of New York, Mark 0 . Hatfield of Oregon, Clif· ford P. Cue of New Jersey, Charies McC. Malblas Jr. of Maryland, l!lchard S. Schweiker of Pennsylvania, Charles H. P.ercy of Illloois ind Lowell P. Weicier Jr. of Connecticut, and fonper sen. Charles E. Goodell of New York. In a memo flied by Mitchell'• lawyer, Peter Fleming, it wu alleged lhlt the fonner U.S. Attorney Wllltney North Seymour, "having alreldy prejud1ced Mitchell substantially wllh regard·to the New York case, compounded bis im- proprieUes by prejudlclni Mltchell's ability tO prope.rlY defend "bimsell with regard to Watergate." Mitchell is scheduled to testify Tuesday before the Senate c o nt m i t t e e in- vestJgating the Watergat~ scandal. . Similar motions to dlSmlss the m· dictment were filed by the two other defendants in the case, fUgiUvt' financier Robert L. Vesco and Harry L. Seara, a prominent New Jersey Republican. Fair Attendance Boo1ning As ·Weekend Sets Record The four defendant.I were indicted.May IO on charges of conspiracy In' an alleged scheme to influence a federal in· vesUgation of Vesco's secret con- tributions last year to President Nixon 's re-election campaign. Abernathy Quits As Civil Rights Leader of SCLC ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -'111e Rev. Ralph David Abernathy announced today he ls resigning as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Con- ference, prlmarily because ot a lack of rmancial support. Abernathy headed SCLC for five ye.a.rs, since the assassination ol Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., in April 1968. He was frequently at King's side, and be went to jail with him 17 times. Abernathy was the second president of SCLC, and after be took over following King's death. he said, "They may kill the dreamer, but they can't kill the dream." He had demonstrated many times his lalth In the dream ol equality and justice artlculaled by Klng. Abernathy, 47, stood willlngly In the Attendance is booming at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa v.· h e r e turnstiles counted 61~ visi~s over the weekend periQd rrom Friday through Sunday. The fair recorded the highest single day attendance in its 80-year history Saturday when 21,283 persons streamed onto the groWlds .on the lair's second day. Fair Manager Jim Porterfield says at- , tendance is up 35 to 40 percent ·When compared to i3sf.year ancf that he hopes the total count will exceed 200,090 when 'the fair ends July 16. This weekend's three-day figure of 61,284 compares to 40,041 last year. and Sunday's 25,ZM to 16,636 in ·July 1972. Drawing the record-breaking crowds to the fair are nigbily stage shows, motorcycle races, a rodeo, contests, ex- hibits, parades and mariy othe~ al· tractions. • All entertainment is included in the ad· mission price which is $1. 75 for adulls, SI for children, and free for children under six. I From Pagel ' UGANDA •.. t.c~,wtil Kini WIS shot to death . I' on • motel balcony in Mempbil, Tenn. President Julius Kambarage Nyerere of Abernathy had aald be._bad no delire to Taozania would conduct an investigation lead the movement. OaJJinl King the into the matter which was ooly cleared s~ and the leader, be said, "I up when P.tobutu intervened on behalf of always wanted to stand with him and not the Americaos. ahead of him." Amin's action in the Uganda capital or Since Kine's slaying, hov.·ever, SCLC Kampala was announced here by U.S. has tJ:een beset with financial troubles. -embassy spokesman ·Gary Morley. U.S. Abtrna°!Y also s~ in ~be shadow of diplomats and the State Departi:neot had Coretta King, the civil rights leader's interceded in their behalf smce the v.idow, and much o( the financial support mercurial Amin forced them to land in which would have gone to the SCLC has· Kampala on SWlday. gone .to the Martin Luther King "They· do have clearance to leave,'' Afemonal Center. Morley said. "Jt came through around 3 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT). Tbey are now looking From Pagel PLAN ... such as David Holt's proposed "music ci- ty." A! to a convention center, Carlson says he isn't sure about the need for It yet. "lf the hotels are big enough, they might provide their own facilities, then n separate center wou1d be a waste of money." "This piece of property has the greatest potential in Orange County. If we accompll.sh what we are out to do, the City of Huntington Beach will have one of the best asset.5 in the county." for transport. They· don 't know where they're going and won't know .until the transport is confirmed." Morley said the Americans probably would go either to Nairobi, where hotel rooms have been booked for them, or to their original plane transfer point in Burundi. They have been staying in a Kampala Hotel, comfoitable but under anned guard. Morley did oot give details on Amin's decision to release the Americans but President Joseph Mobutu of Zaire in· ter\'ened today to tell Amin they really were Peace Corps volunteers and were en route to his country as they said they Were. Diplomatic sources in Kampala snid Mobutu sent a telegram today ask- ing for their release. Among the exhibits at the fair is a chuckwagon kitchen on wheels which is serving authentic western food to ap- proximately 2,000 people dally. The chuckwagon is part of a covered. wagon caravan stationed at the entrance of the fair. A collection of western atilre is housed in the caravan's cowboy museum. The historic relics are on loan from the National 9owboy Hall of fame and in- clude bronze 1Cu1ptures and paintings by well-known western artists. A seven- minute film, "The last of the Wtld Mustangs," is being shown along' with a display lncludlng an antique Callfumia seddle and a variety of branding Irons and spurs. Biggest attraction at the fair tonight is an 8 p.m. performance in the am· jlhltheater by Dxleland jau muter Pete FOWltaln and his orcllestra. Highlights of the fair on Tuesday are: -2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Swine Judging, livestock area. -Noon to 10 p.m., Art Demonstrations, crafts center. -All Day Homemaking Sugg..._ California living building. -8 p.m. Red Buttons and his AU-Star Band, amphltheater. -9 p.m. Charley Romero and the Dix- ieland All Stars, mall stage. Colo.Ilia Juarez Pact Renew~ The contract between the city of Foun- tain Vallei and the Coloiiia Juarez Com· munlty -Center has been renewed for another year by city councilmen. The contract is for $244 a month with Adelaide Luna to oversee• the oPeration of the center in the Mexican-American community'. Mrs. Luna has temporarily turned over control of the activities to her diughter Becky, 18, while she recuperates from a shooting last month in which she wes critically wounded. MW Luna is expected to continue in her role through the summer, co- ordinating the recreational activities, the bl-lingual pre-school, the tutorial project and well-baby clinic that operate in the center at 10251 Calle ~a. Bagley Will Speak PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -California /.SSemblyman William T. Bagley, San Rafael, wil1 be the keynote speaker at the opening session of the Ariwna Tax Commission's annual conference Ju.ly 15. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lrol NO-DEFROSTING RIPRIGIRATOR/PUEZIR Adntlrol. ALL THESE QREAT ,c · a alt tJ=EA TURES • Fun Width "loollc.MI'' fNNtr Door Shelf -for l"1t•nt "'Ii.bi~.' • Du-1 llmPtr•tutt Control1-ullct tN rl(ht·tetnptr,.lltt for~ •ICfl IKtlon, ·~PDrcfllln~ fruit.~ prden fl'l&l'I. • C1tr1 LATlt! "lfrlp 1to1 Door 1nt1we1-now. evtn tan crunrt ..... , M ... NT tJM Ho tllofro1tin9 ,.frlttreter 1•ctio"1 with Arcti" Air ntw rV1t.M ftr fwll •¥•1• 1ir"wltli011. ' UUNE llEFllDllATIBI ..... CtlJI ~ ·I I J . ' ' ' l l I . 1 I " ' , I I I .. Mor1,,11, July q, 1973 H DAILY PILOT :J Florida Charges. Conspiracy Oil ( \ Gas Ration Ruled.Out For Nation WASHINGTON (UPI) -De p u l y ''rr~'tal'J' William E. Simon said .emphatically ioday the ad- m tration \!as ruled out any (>Ollllbility of·a:aaoline rationing to meet the cwTent shortage. ,Simon's statement,. his strongest on the siibject, came a'mld r:eports tha Presi- dent Nixon's Phase JV economic.action .may include •a rollback in prices for guollne and other petrolewD producb. ~ Asked about persisten~ rumors tbat .. the adQlinf1tratlon is considering a program of gasoline rationing, Simon 1aid "absolulely not." "l absolutely do not consider rationing eve.n possible,'' he said. "We have a voluntary allocation system in place now that I believe is doing the job." ' Sen. Henry M. Jackson (0.Wash.), said •.Congress must take a "very hard look" 1 at the possibility of breaking up functtcm of big oil companies. Jacbon made the statement at a news ")conference following disclosure of a .government tl!port suggesting that the structure of the industry had a major role in creating the gasoline shortage. Jacbon said a two-year study by the .staff of the Federal Trade Commission (Fl'C) "lndlcat.es clearly that Vertical in- tegration, concentration and market con- ... trol had an important role in creating the shortage." • - Asked if be believed tbe Industry was · responsible for the guollne shortage, Jackson said: "f believe there was a definite effort on the part oC the industry a year aiO to create such a tight situation in the marketplace and by limiting imports that it resulted ih the primary, immediate shortage we have today." * * -tr Gas Stations Limit Hours In Cali(ornia Tricia Cox To Have Baby I . )llASIDNGTON ( •D) -Tricia NiJOn C.., tbO cililii diUifiier of . Pr-and Mn. NlXGO, is pref!· oant, -... to the Evening Stan-News. Mn. Cot:, ·'l'I, was married to EdWard Finch Cox, a youni lawY.,, In 1171. 'lbe dllld ~ be the lint granddiUd foe the Prellc!Ont and llis wile. 1be newspaper attributed ils repart to "an autboritaUve IOUl'Ce." 'lbe NIXCllUI have One other child, Julie, who married D a v i d Eiseohower in 1911. ' Dollar Gains, Then Loses In E1Irope LONDON (AP) -'lbe ~Dar recovered some grouod on European money markets today after the continent's cen- tral bankers hinted their governments might protect the American currency but fell agaJn when no intervention developed. 'Ibe doll.. opened in Frankfurt at 2.3250 marts, l 'h p(ennip above Fridly'1 cloee. Dealera reported "ex- tttmely small" dem.00.: and after an hour ol trading, the priee diopped back lo 2~2950 marb. - '"I'be "situation remains es:tremely unstable,'' aald one key foreign exchange banker. The rate opened nearly 2 percent up in Zurich at 2.75-2.77 Swiss francJ, then plunged bock to 2.m.2.71 by noon, below Friday's cloee or 2.'rUl-S.71. "Everyone had expected an in- tervention," said a Zurich banker. "That's why the dollar shot up in the morning. It did not come, 90 It came down-again.'' Tbe volume of trading In Zurich was reported relatively large and hectic. In a parallel development, gold opened at '125.25 an ounce in Zurich, down •t.50 from the close Frid&)', then ,... to $t26. 'lbe opening price ln London WU $\24 .50, -.1rom fl27, and dealen l8id marltet was "highly cauUoui and jumpy." The dollar al&o made a comeback in The Automobile Club or Southern Paris, buying 3.91-f.OO comm er c I 1 I California reports 66 percent of g~ine trancs in bent-u>-bank tnnsactk>ns, up service stations in California are llMiting from 3.86-3.19 Friday. Tradini there was their hours of operation. slow, bOwever. The number of stations limiting hours. 'lbe weak British pound slipped alightly ls up from 57 percent of those sampled against.the dollar, from $2.555 Friday to , the previous week, the club ·reported. '2:.SS25 at the opening today. But the -Night-Ume travelers are feeling the ef. poung__r:oae: against the mark, Europe's feCts of gasoline shortages the most. Gas strongest currency, from 5.73 marks Fri- stations are closing earlier in the evening day. to 5.98. and opening later. · In Tokyo, the dollar J"08t two yen at the · ()( statiOns contacted by the club,'only _ opening to -264, then was driven down to 31 percent are operating nonnal houn:_!_ 254 befQre tbe close by a false rumor that That compares to 36 per cent the week the European markets would be closed before. today. This afoused fears that the Motorists leaving Orange County bound Japanese goyermnent would be forced to for San Diego will find very few gas sta-clOH the Tokyo market also, and the de-- lions open along Interstate 5 with the mand for U.S. currency evaporated. . . ooly all-night station reported in the club Although. the European central bankm _ survey being at Encinitas. saJd they had agreed on a plan to support . Other stations continue to ration gas at the beieaguered dollar, France'• finance eight or 12 gallon limits, the club minister said it wu up to the United reporled. Slates to act flnt. Associate• to Testiffl Board Sets Key_ Vote On Setvice By JACK BROBACK .... hlff' ,, ......... A showdown vote by the Orange Coun- ty Boenl. ol Supervisors is eipected Tuesday on who will haodle the county's oompulel' services. A county report released over the weekend recommends that an El Segun- do firm be given a contract to operate the comput« facilities. 1bt report by Counly Administrative Officer Robert 'Jbomas recommends that the contraict go to the Computer ScM!nce Corporation. In February, Thomas, citing a aix· month study by a committee of county department heads assisted by a con- suJtant, recommended the upgrading of lhe county's Data Services Department through the purchase of new Univac equipment. This recommendation was sidetracked when Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton suggested the hiring or an outside firm to manage ·the computer work. Three Weeks · ago, 'lbomas reverstd himself and recommended an outside contractor. His decision was disputed by Supervisor David Baker who sat on a special committee that had studied the problem at the request of the board of Supervisors. Thomas said the so-called blue ribbon committee had recommended an outside firm, but Bater and others who served op tile coramftt~ ~greed By a 3-2 vote of the board, Diedrich an.d Supervisors Robert Battin and Ralph Clark instructed Thomas to confer with two outside computer firms seeking a contract. 'Ibe in-house Data Services Department was shunted aside despite objections by Baker and Supervisor Ronald Caspers . · Bakef and Caspers said today that they would ask for a delay Tuesday for further study of the problem. The Orange County Grand Jury also has called for further investigation. - The Thomas report sCheduled to iO to the board says Ccmputer Science Cor- poration submitted tbe best o I f e r for managing the data services for the next seven years. ·Figures are CSC, $26.6 millioo; Data Services Department, $37.1 mlllion and Electrooic Dola Systems (EDS) of DaJ. las, $41.1 million. ·1be CSC and EDS bids are based on the use of lBM equipment rather than the Univac proposed by the department heads committee and the consultant aft· er an $85,000 study last winter. The 174 employes of Data Services would ~~Ye!!. ~.e option of transfering to the outside~firm or resigning. The contract would be effective on Aug. I. Thomas said the bids from both the outside firms were analyzed by a coWlty team made up of his staff, the county cowtSel's office, the auditor • controller's ataff and an outside firm, Proprietary Computer Systems. · Diedrich indicated three weeks ago that EDS of Dallas had the inside track . 'the firm is owned by H. Ross Perot. Diedrich had made a trip to Texas to inspect the firm's equipment and capa- bilities. Suing 15 · Firms Over TALLAHASSEE. Flo. (A P) -The St.ate of Florida filed suit today in federal court against 15 major U.S. oil com- •;.,._. _ _;P";;;,"ies, charging them with conspiring to -ntrive-the--rorrcnHuel shortnge·-. ----.. The fi8..page suit calls for the com- panies to rid them~Jves of all crude oil exploration and development capabililies i( they stay in the retail gas business. i-1orida Atty. Gen. llobert Sbevin S3id. The suit Is one of the biggest trust· bi;sting attempts ag8inst oH compa(lies since the Standard Oil Co. v.•as broken up in the early l9f!Os, assistant Atty, Gen. Dan Dl'aring said. "To this date we've found everybody talking about the crisis but nobody doing anything about it." said Shevin . "We fell it Was time to do something." The suit alleges th'c oil companies have engaged in an illegal monopoly and unreasonable restraint of interstate trade and commerce. Shevin charged that major oil com- panies should not be able to control crude oil from the lime it co mes out of the. ground until it is pumped at a gas sta- tion. · "The gasoline wars are supported by profits made at the crude oil leve1," said Dearing. "If v.·e remove that section we cnn make the marketing truly com- petitive." The suit is a class action on behalf of all counties. cities :llld school boards in the state, Shevin said: Named as de!endants v.'erc Exton Corp. of New Jersey. Texaco Inc. of RANCHER JOEL BR!OGES SHOWS OFF '$MALLEST HORSE' 'Gumbl' W•ighs in at 14 Pounds and is 14 Inches Tall . Delaware, Gulf Oil C o r p . of Pennsylvania. Mobil Oil Corp. o( Delaware. Standard Oil Co. of Califom~a. Standard Oil Co. of Indiana. Shell Oil Co. of Delaware, Atlantic-Richfield Co. of PeMsylvania. Phillips Petroleum Co. of Delaware, Continental 011 Co. 0 f Delaware, Sun Oil Co. of Delaware, •Tiniest Horse' Rancher Bteeds One 14 /riches Tall NEWBE RRY, Fla. (UPI) -Rancher JOel Bridges, who bieeds miniature horses for backyard pets "like dogs," said Sunday he has bred the world's smallest perfect horse. ·The ~inch tall, 14-pound foal is named "Cumba,'' iatd Bridges; 50, a former mortician. Cumba was born June 3 and weighed llo/, pounds. "As far as l know, this is the smallest perfect horse in the world, excluding dwarfs and freaks," he said. Bridges said Gwnba will weigh on1y about 20 pounds at maturity in about 18 months. Bridges has been breeding miniature horses for the past fi ve years and has a herd of 141 American min.i.atur~ horses and a herd or miniature Sardinian donkeys on his 400-acre Komoko ranch. "'We have just about all kinds of people buying them. They want them for backyard pets. like dogs," Bridges said. ''I'm also • selling some as breeding stock ." I ·' Union Oil Co. o( California, Cities Service Co. of Delaware. Standard Oil Co. of Ohio and:Marathon Oil Co. of Delaware. MIA Truth Sought COVINGTON, Ky. iUPll -The na- tional commander o( the American Legion says the United Sta tes should al?" ply military pressure to North Vietnam 1f necessary to 'et information on Americans still missing in action. "If necessary, military pressure should . be brought to bear to force the North \'ietnamese to let our invesllialion teams go in there (North Vietnam )," said Joe Matthews of Fort Worth, Tei. ' " Probe Moving Near Nixon ' • By HELEN 1110MAS u .... ,,.. '""""'"-' J , The drama· d the' senate Watergate i bearings ~y be n,iore poignant than 1 ever for President Nixon In the next oou· . ' ' . 1 ple of weeks as his closest White House ,, associates -whom he has declined to prejudge -show up on the witDeu • atarid. . ~ Coming up will be John N. Mitdleif,l& . t: former 1ttomey general who ma.Dlied ai Ni.Ion's 1972 re-election campaj&n, and ~ ousli!d top presidential aides H. R. t . •Haldeman and John D. Ebrlldlman.,Tbe • White Houso says Nbton slaDdl by his 1 April 30 stalement that the !atler' ant J "two Of the finest publie servants" he f' has ever known. \ The testimony of thia trio may be ' climactic in determining Nixon's fate in t ·the Presidency. They must attest to his I lnlistence that he had no prior knoW!edge < ol the break-In and buging ol the I Democnlllc Parly heodquarten ot the : 'Watergate: no knowledee d. the eover-up l , and no involvement in luh:money or ex- ecutive clemency offers to'tbe c..'CJDvided : Watergate COMpirators .. 1 How is he facing the ordeal ol put I. revelations ind men to ccme -Utln&• : be clalma be was kept "in the dark" --i ai;o:1 hoar his Ciild-ailrioenOiiil ! memben ol the family lell I~ he 11 In a "good mood... ni.y -he la ~ I about "bullneu u UIU&l" and leela that f: only the p!'Ot<llt "cllmale" 11 lteeplng i: lllm from forslnl ahead . to more • ac- compllabmenll. I Member1 ol his family 1111! blame the I • ~ ( pf$ ~ the stress on th_e Watergate scandal in ·the nen. Ills dalJlhler, Julie Eisenhower, say. uie press ts "ObM6:sed" with Watergate, and' hiS' eon-in-law, David Eloenhower. claims the handling d the story by investigative reporters "~'t been enUrely fair." The picture • ol the President that repirt<n OOYer!ng the cantornla White Hoose ,.. -aided by no per>Ol18] in· 1igbis by Nbtcri hlm><lf -is a oecluded man, lonely, touibinc it out. and angry to be 'so besieged so early in· his second term. F1mlly and aides agree he faces the' worst crisis ol his life. They also believe be will ride out the storm. Only to bis .-lntlmale adV!aen does N"a:on display' utter frus\rati~ that so ~.,queatlons ttmain, vis a vis himself and watergate. One daf last week the President bang- ed his hand on the 'desk, exclalmlni "We d.id release the May 22 statement, didn't we?1' "Do people read It on May 22, file It on May ZS and eiqiect it to be lslued again and again?" bo ullod in uasperatl!>n. In that ~tlal llatement Nbton exonerated ldmlef from 111y lmolmnent In Watuple, but -tted that he had llmlled the Investigation ol t h e Democratic break-in on &round.I of na- tlonal oocurity. "' olher Wblte -llalefllentl, and = apailllmen, Ni-hN tndlcaled . "' •••• perm IDd lf'OUpl are out to ~ him. For NI-. thete ")at many - caaon!y -been the "bett cl Uma and the WWII ol ~." Illa lanclsllde elec:Uon, the endiD& ol the Vietnam War, and the ,.tum of prllOll<l'1 ol war ,..... the 11,_i -that th. presidential luck still was holding. l:lis secom inaugural was the high point of Nixon's personal triumph and he es:uded the joy or a man who had everything. BUt the sudden tum to catastrophic events has le!t Niten on the ropes, cling- ing to a conYictiCll that he will be vJn. dicated. His aides believe that his popularity nting -now at a low 45 per- cent in the polls -will rise again after the Watergate affair is over. :And con- 'fidence and respect of the nation will be restortd in his administration. He· has been moving gradually to pick up the pieces, replacing bis shattered staff with familiar faces -veterans in the waya of government -such as Melvin R. Laird, his new chief domestic ·advi!er and counsellor Bryce Harlow, a pro'in .dealing with Congress. But there is no evidence that Nixon has changed his lifestyle, or his method of · operation. He still sees only three aides reguJarly -Gen. Alexander M. Ha lg, Jr., his ctuef of staff: Presa Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler and foreign policy ad· Viser Henry R. Kissinger. His C?"manda are funneled to other staffers by Hal& and Ziegler. forming almost 1he same "Berlin Wall" that was typical of the Haldeman·Ehrllchrnan days. The President's Isolation w a s manifested during his 117-day sojourn in Califomil by the number of timea he Is -lo bo.. left bis OCOIDSide com-poomd -twice for outlnp. MOll!y be has -.. the beach. ·~ .. ~-~. . ~\ WE'LL LOOK SO NICE FOR SUMMER, DAD! The Evtr Populer Pincord Suit of Dacron & Cotton by Oean,gete -$80.00, Short Sleeve Button Down O xford by Eegle Shirtmtkers · ~12 .00 . Grenadine Tie by Robert Talbott • $8.50. .... Altbougll Ibey are in their callfomla homa nearby, N"""1 II., not been In touch with Haldeman, former personal lawyer Herbert Kalmbach Or fonntr Juatloe department ornctal Robert MM· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~========~==~ dlan, Vlllo llves In San Clemente. : • • 4 DAii. Y I'll.OT WORD GAMES DEPT. -Gasoline pr~s are atUl vexl!li a_ Jot f!l folks ·these days, parti<Ollarly lhaoe wllO -flnd a staUon 0p0n to sell the stuff. Ailyway Ulls :word has gotten to Washington and ap- pareatly the folks back there are going to ·do,.....u.;,,g about It. _ l\epo<U 1odly lndkata that when the o-~g oU!!O. antl-inllotlm pn>irom, fuel prices may be rolled bad<. 'nle Wmlngton Star, News ~ &hit. ~ new gasoline 1 ...... will -isb prices ""'"' they were mt ~1 15. ~ oftlcials "-ere quer;.. t.iooed on the dale repaned by the ~·"!'bey termed the May 15 date as belnc "ftry speeulatlve." YOU "WILL NOTE they didn't say it wall wnmg. 'Ibey' didn't ~ that a date ham.'t been set. They just sort ol left jt hlqing-e. Visititlfl Hoyalt11 wen. there are a lot of phrases like "very specu)ative" that come from goveroment oftlcials these days . ...?bus yoa are left in the poet.ion of havq to in- t.rprel inlo plain language what the -..... .... talking actually meant. Y04 Dtigbt go through the ex- ertW ;e this: !U.temeat: '"That &te is · v e r y speadetlve." Prince Charles of England (center) watches a week· end event at the Queen Elizabeth Sports Center-with Bahamas Prime Minister Lyden Plndling (right). The prince is representing Great Britain during the Bahaplas' independence celebration. Tonight at mid· night this archipelago of 700 islands becomes the world's newest nation: MEANING' "Boy. I wonder wllo leak- ed tl.t one? I'd better not say lh1s is un- tiw ai later my statement might Iraqi Troops ~~:t~-,.;n•mme Execuw 13 More Meaning: "We lied to you . I told them back in the inner office that you were asking this tenible questbt enc1 they told L · ked to Pl t _1)1e_\o_\!Y that ~_ ....... "!U"'"· in o You caught us at it. SO rw1fii" ftliive ~ --.-- make that one inoperative. Try this one. B __ ElRUT, Lebanon .(AP ) -· 'nle Iraqi See if it win operate • , • " government agnounced today that 13 Statement: "You quot~ me out ·c1. CQO-more men . were shot Sunday nJibt u text m tblt •.. " . plotters against the leftist government. MEANING : .. You jerk, yoo've really This brolight to 36 the number executed got me fn tnJable now. I gave you all that ror the attempted coup led by the coon· · blather -..rdcb was intended to cover up regime. -the main jiolat. lnotead or quoting it all . Baghad radio said die 13 men died you boiled ii riCht dowp to the main point befOl'e a firing squad and were the last and DOW' everybody is going to -un· group ol. plotters to be executed for the derstand IL 'Ibis is terrible ... " attempt June 30 on the Baa th Socialist Statement' "Lei me give you the regime. The 23 others, including Kauar. background on this." l\·ere executed 'Ib1nday but the news Mooning' "U just the plain facts get was not amoonced unUI Saturday. out m this cne, we're going to look All were convicted by a three;man ew!ully llJIY. Ir! cao pump enough revolutionary coon, and President bacqround into here, maybe it won't Ahmed ffusan al Bakr approved the Jocil: .,. bad. Ai.., If I can keep talking death seotences, the broadcast said. long eoougb. maybe you'll forget the A tlllal or 130 e1ecutloos now have been ]>Oint you llerO alt« In the first place." annooaced by the Iraqi govennent since SCMemerit: "In resp:me tQ )'tU" ques--tbe Baatb So<;aljsts seized power in July lion. I'll have to go olf the roconl .•. " 1 19611. n..y lncbJde 14 Jews in 1989 as MEANING : "No _,. can we let the spies -mi G Iraqis in January 1970 on publlc lmc!w ..i.t WI is all •boot .. we'll charges or attar¢..r a """!> bad<ed by have an aprtslnr 'Ol'li aur bands." Iran. sc.tement: "We bandied that matter in Baghdad radio said three..--other .-.. -: .. " memben or the Kasaan' plol were Meaning : "We met secretly. We had sentenced to prison: one to life Im· all Ult 4oor'I barred and the curtains prbonment, one to two years and one to pulled. We hod lbe CIA check the piece one y...-in jail. Twenty others were a<- Viet Cong ~dmit Holding· Canadian Pair Hostage SAIGON (UPI) -The Viet Cong ad- mitted today it.is holdinl-two Clnldian ofCicers who disappeclred 10 Clays ago, and the Canadian truce delegation said "we will not be satisfied until they are returned to us." It-. press oCficer for the Provisional Revolutionary Govenunent PRG, (the fonn81 name for the Viet Cong) said capt.s. Jan Patten of Toronto and Fletcher Thomson are alive and well. ed the location of the Viet Cong unit they vi.sited, s.ince their visit was followed by a heavy govenurieni attack. In Cfilnbodla, American warplanes pounded Conununist targets late Sunday and early today · on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, where government forces were reparted cut off at five points to the south, east and west of the capital. THE RAIDS WERE so heavy that the concussions of expJ~ions shook windows THE PRG AOCIJSED the South Viet-in the city center. na.mese government o( ordering all-day __ It marked the 124!? ~iv~ day of artillery fire m ereu where the two U.S. bombing in the iril<ilillied ·rlldS Canadians: were being searched f«. Of. that began· after tile Jan. 28 truce in ficials in Saigon tenned this a slander. nelghborinc South Vietnam. · But the painstaking llklay negotiations The strikes today, and the center of over the release ol. the two offtctrs af>-ground action, was reportedly 12 miles peared to be about to succeed. outside Phnom Penh on three sides of the C8nadians CUbC1!1ned fer the safety or city. No details of the fighting were an· the two officers have been close-mouthed nounced. · J about lbe delicali negoliatims with the In ... aharp skirmish -" today/ PRG. . on Highway 6, 11 miles north of. Phnom The agooizing ·-of the releose Peoh at the atrategic fe<ry Cl'068ing town negotlaUoos, u correspo1_tdents have of Prek Kdam, military sources said. four pieced the story together smce June 28 government llOldiers were woonded and when Pa_tten and 'Thomaon d.Lsappeattd, evacuated by ferry boat. 'Ibe fighting seemed to be caused by : itself stopped at dawn after 90 minutes. for bugs. II the public ever found out ,(iuitted, and Bakr conunuted the death -wlllt we were plotting in there, they'd-sentence of one man to Ute im--DISAGREEME~ over -~ was nm us oot of town on a rail . : . " , . . prisorunent. He was Abdulkhalek Samir· responsible. Canadian author1l!es have French Issue Final Warning Before Blast Statement: "Govemnient sources said rai a member of the Baath party's in-maintained the two officers were simply " te~ooal command in charge of ~ • touring their area of re.spomibility; the MEANING: "Oby, you'vo got me party's _.ailool ln 1lie Arab wlll1d. Viel Cong communique· said _today the trmpped and I told you tbe truth. But for ~ "" two •uwent along with two Vietnamese, heaftn's aake, don~ attribute tbe state-I .an sky Case Denied infiltrallng into the liberated area mmt to me." _ without a PRG llailoa officer. .and Statement' "No comment." MIAMI Fla: (AP) -n.. federal In-without advance nolificalion." -.mg, "If you tlllnlt you're going to come ~ °""'""" trial or Meyer Lansky -Some"""""" by lbe PRG orficen on get me to admit that, you're a candidate was delayed today peoding a heiring on the spot that 1be canadiara, on • for the funny farm. I'm locking the office "-hether U»e aging rackets fli'ft: is well previous vislt to the area where · the.y and going to Jund!." enough to stand trial were captured, bad lnadvertenily disc! ... U.S. Mostly Hot, Humid ·Food Rationing In U.S. Future? WASlllNGTON (UPI) -An e!pOrt on • poru and the value of the dollar abl'Qld. world rood Production be I le v e s Lester R. Brown, an eeanomill far the Americans aoon may be forced to riUoa nonprofit Oveneu Deveklpment Oodncil, the food _they .. 11n order JO igalnloin e_x-••id_ Surida_y domesilc loocl 111Uoning would be a better altemaUve tO Prell-- . Japan Keeps Tanaka-Also Communists TOKYO (UPI) -Prime Min!Jtar Kakuei ' Tanaka's ruling Li her a I Democratic party surged back to power today as the single largest forte in the prestiiious Tokyo Metro po 11 tan· Assembly. Tanaka's party captured 51 of the 125 seats available to retain the same posi· tion it occupied in the previou.S 3$Cmbly. But voters also gave a boost to the rapidly growing Japan ComnumLst party ( IN SHORT ..• ) -.,•:hose campaign .hil hard at such urban probfems as the wotsening urban en- vironment, a housing shortage, inflation, tiaffic congestion and garbage disposal. e Czeeh Aerord dent Ni:1on's proposed m:itrols oa a· ports. BROWN, WHO DIRECTED In- ternational agriculture development for the A8rlcU!ture ~t from 1116 and 1989, deocribed the elport cootrols u a ''sel'ioUlli mistake.'' He also predicted that dome&Uc rood prices will never return to the low levels of the 198Cls. lle said food woold. be in short supply around the world for the nei:t year. . . "Beyond that, we may be faced with ·chronic a1obal food scarcity for the foreseeable fUtuie;" hetsaid.. . · Brown made bis commefttl h1' an Jn.- terview' published by U.S. News and World Report mapzlne. HE WAS CRmCAL ot Nixon's order limiting soybean exports and the President's request to Congress for aulhority to impose broad con~la on other U.S. fann exports. , "'Illo&e export& are keeping UU. nation ecooomically anoat in a very real sense," Brown said. "A limit on U.S. farm exports wol!ld further woken the dollar. · "It woold certainly limit OUT ability to import the vast quantities of petrolewn !hat we must have from abroad to keep U.S. busineM and industry going." He said that as a result it may be PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) -necessary "to ration food in the United Secretary ol State William P. Rogers to-States "in ooe form or another." day signed the first direct """"1ar "We can't hold down farm exports agreement between the IJnltad States_ witboot endangering. the dollat. ,.. lrtg- and Czechoslovakia's Communist govern---geriog leriolJs r.nergy llbortagf!I," Brown merit. • said. "In such circumstances, it may Rogi;rs ~ the· . ~greement · "an very well be that Ameri~ns will have to · essential buildtng block 1n the "DeW l'ela· limit the intake of certain types of food, tionship we are constructlng between as some other countries are doing, in Czechoslovakia and the United States." order to export agrlcultural com· UnUl now, diplomatic relations modities." between Prague and W~ have Brown said the administratiOn ahou1d been governed by the Vierll)8. Conventjon, not impose price ceilings on beef, pork, lvhich . laid down broad basic rules for poultry or eggs under Phase IV or tht dealings between .states. economic program. He said reta.U price eFlood~at"8 GUADALAJARA, MOliCO (AP) -. Rescue workers searched today for bodies and survivors after a wall of water swamped. three fi~ to""15 on Lake Chapa.la. At least 30 persons were reported killed. - Thousands or retired Americans live around l~rnile-wide Chapala, Mexico's largest natural lake, but nme --were af. fected; authorities said. e Strflce Crt.ls S1'.N JUAN, P.R. (UPI) -Water service br.oke" dovm in San Juan, !!lpOll,d.iC power · failures were reported across Puerto Rico and the governmm mobilii· eel 1,000 more National Guard i._..., day to deal with a strlk~rby-nremen and electric company workers. Gov. Rafael· Hernandez Colon declared · a state of emergency Friday and ordered the mobilizaUon of National Guard troops to preserve essential services. e Belt-t Vletl111 BELFAST (UPI) - A woman who was badly burned when hijacbn set fire to a Belfast bus last week died in a hospital today, police aaid. 'Ibo-death or Mrs. Dorothy Lym, 47, raised the fotality toll in almost four years of violence amc:mg Northern Ireland's majority Protestants, minority Roman Catholics and security forces to 843. .. W. Berliners Tear Up Wall BERLIN (AP) -A crowd or several hWldred West llel'linen, crying ''criminals'' and "murderers" at Communist border guards, ripped a sl1-fool hole Jn the Berlin wall Sunday mornllltl- The "'ll1Y mab tore out the wall aft« East Gennan giwds, firl111 several machine-gun bursts, foi1ed an attem~ escape to the West by lhree East Germans. '!'he ansrY West llel'lin resldeoU streamed out of_ a nearby apart. ment comple:1 and ripped a wire frame fence out of the Communist· 1iuµt ""11. Westem·police vrivod to push the group back and even- tually. tbe bole was rewired by the Cornnlunlsts. cellinga coupled with the lilgh price or feed would force many productrl out ol business. . Rhode8ians Seek Fleeing African Black Guerrillas SALISBURY, Rhodesia (UPI) - Rbodesian troops, big game 1'1nters and trackers searched heavy jwigle near the Moiarnbique border today for African guefrillas fleeing with 13 hootag .. they kidnaped thrree days ago from a Roman catholic missionary school. . TUE GUERIUILAS originally aoiZed 292 African students and school t.mployee from the remote school late Tlmnday, hilt most of the hostages ou1-q...aly escaped during cia.bes between punulog troops and guerrillas. A government spookesman said tro:ipa lost contact with lbe guenillas, bul - they hoped to piclt .... the lrail qain to- day. The Rev. Egon ltojek, bead or lbe st. Albert's mission, which is n11. by-West German Jesuits, said the guerrUt.s toid teachers they wanted to train 1be students and the mission's African \\'Orkers to fight the white supremist regime of Prime Minister Ian Smith. · Rbodesia declared Itself~ ol Britain in 1965. Its white population is ~vlly outnumbered by blaclta. ~ . uSTED BY ROJEK as still millq In the jungles in lbe north or Rhodesia to- day were sevln primary school students, three teachers arid three kitdien maids. DAJLT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtli'ttr)' of the D1l17 PllOt is 911111ntftd --.,..,-rJll,,, 11 ,... .. Mt IM•t ,..,.. ~ .., I:• J."'-• r.111 .... JWf" •9'1Y WMI lie tlfW9ld .. ,... Cllll •r1 IMM ltlltll ,,. J.M.. ,........, .... ........,, " ,.. .... -'" .,.... ~ ., ····"'· ~ .......... . '-"'''· wl ..i • cen ..... .,...... " Yff, Ctlk 1•1 t•M ""'II tt •·"'· ' . Ttlfpllonn MMf Ori ... C.ty A,_ , ..•. ,. '411o411'1 . ......._. ............. ... ................ ............... , ... ... c ....... c • .....--.-... I• l_C ....... IMM ........ ..... UfitM, """9 " ........ ....... ''POPS'' CO CERT TO IGHT 9:15 P. • AT FASHIO llLA ,_ , ' .. I • 7 I , 7 ,. ., -· OJ.. ~ •. NO< 190~ 2_SECTIONS, 26 PAct.ES 9RANGE-.COUNTY, CALIFORNIA --MONDAY, Jl)L)'. 9, I ~73- • 0 ues Ill ·Mayor's Plea • 'Leave Newport Alone' By CANDACE PEARSON ot lfM ~llY Pllft S'9tf .. Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis today asked the South C.O.st Regional 1.onc Conservation Commission to leave redevelopment in West Newport alone. The mayor appeared before the com- -mission created by Proposition 20 at its 111eetlng in 1-Beach. •1 The oomntission hu denled•or delayed -actfciii oh a number ofjili>pol<d duplexes in Newport Beach, citing coocerm ol ID-~idequte partlog and increued densi- ties. 1be city ol NewPort Beach requires one parking space per dwelling Wlit. The commission -which has permit juris- diction 1,000 yards inland of mean high tide lines -has favored 2 to l parking. "It is not my intent to appear here to.. day in an adversary coodition," Mcinnis told the commission. Contrary to what the commission has been told, he said, "down zoning R-2 (multi-f&mUy) to something less in the West Newport Beach area was never ad· vocatecl, su~ or propoeed. 11 "One of your commissioners," Mclnnls said, referring to the absent Judy Ros-...,., ''re«Dlly called tbe city ridlculoos and asinine. If. the city asinine it must follow that the public bearing proc- ess is asinine." • Commiaioner Rosener, a Newport Beach resident , is vacationing in Spain. In addition to claiming a number or public hearings have already studied the West Newport.area, Mcinnis said it is 75 percent developed in multi-family units and added the duplexes actually create less density not_ more. He claimed that tlle older single-family residences attract large numbers of youoc actylts Jiving in groups. They own lots of can be said, in contrast to "the new or near new units that usually at- tract families. " The cOmJ!iisslon has suggested-tandem parking as a solution but Mcinnis ar- gued against it. He said parking cars be- hind each other could be dangerous. • * * * * * * "In our old part of town," Mcinnis con- tinued, "If two parking spaces per unit becomes the standard below grade park- ing is the inevitable result. This in turn will allow more living space and more people density-the very thing we are all trying to prevent." Coastal Panel Approves 6 Duplexes in Newport The Mayor also claimed that public ac- cess to the ~an in Newport Beach "surpasses that provided b yany· other· city of I~ size." He said· e.ight million people visit Newpbrt beaches each year. Si1 West Newport Beach duplexes were approved in anon order today by tht Soulh COut ftelkml" Zane ea-fltiGo ~ -Unc in Looc Jleach. 11le commlaloo >"'1ld 7· lo 3 an <levekiper Dana Smilh'• prvjecls follow· ing a speech by Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis. -Smith promi.aed the commission he 'would provide two.to.one parking on all six duplexes. Voting took lesa than 10 minutes. The Chotiner Judge Goes Off Case f.lgainst Paper CONCX>RD, N.H. (AP) -U.S. District Court Judge Hugh Bowoes has di!quali· lied himself from bearing a Ube! suit filed . by former presidential ajde and Newport Beach la~er Murray Cbotiner against the Manchester Union Leader and:report· er Artb1.a Egan. Bownes disqualified himself rrom the $3 ~IUon suit during the weekend after pub- lisher William Loeb submitted a 13-page affidavit and more than 50 pages of ex· hibits. They contained Union Leader edi· torials from the past 10 years which were critical or Bownes. ' The judge said earlier he was not preju- diced, but Loeb maintained that "human nature being what It is, a feeling of mu. tual dislike and distrust readily re. kindles." Bownes said Loeb's asswnpticm were were "at best, questiOMble." But he • disqualified himaelf, saying "I do not thihk lt """1d be poaible lo convince him (Loeb) olbenrise" and "since tbe appear- . aoce ol Impartiallly Is as Important • , • 81 its r'eallty." He called Loeb's statement "a boot- strap a ppr o a c h" that "can be" used against any jud1e who is assigned the -case simply by pubiishing critical editor- iall a boot that Judge." .. O,OUner, a lomer aide M -President Nbi:on, sued after the publication of two stories claiming Chotiner was .Jinked to the Watergate case. He denied any in- volvement. Since Downes is the only federal judge in the state,_ a judge from outside New Hampobire will be appoillled In bear tbe ..... CLASSIFIED ADS MA.KE 'EM VANISH only . commisaioners opposing t h e He ~gge~ted ';he commissioo. s?!°uld developments were-Robert Rooney of •!low Jow mtens1ty redevelopm~t ~ ~-. -·-ol La .~c911&1"4 ... llla.~lnfi¥~ Habra and. Rimmon Fay of Marina del addtUOna1 putliil-u.f a trimway • Ref.· · system to the tbeach. Deopile tbe promla11e("1llolfe parklnc i:llllo ~ ..... commissicm sboald DOI am Mcinrus'. earlier prwotation in take ~ti~ steps ~ cbange \be polioes favor of the ~. Comminioo Ex· of the ~ty, Mclmus concluded. ecutive rnrectOrTMelvin carpenter AJ90 1n the ~udJence from Ne~ recomnie.nded denial of Smith's requests. B_each ~ere Richard Ho~an, planntn~ "We have been doing a lot of·work in director, ~ W~, aty manager. that area and feel duple:ies are too much and ~is 0 Nelli , Cl~ attorney._ . an increase in density " Carpenter told D u r 1 n g ques~1onmg, Comrruss1oncr the cOmmission. ' Ronald Caspers said he thought-the same Carpenter added that within 250 yards (See MAYOR, Page ll of the bejlcb nothing ,shqU!d be approved that is more thlin 10 units per acre in density. The duplexes in question were about 25 d~·elling 1D'lits per acre. Carpenter contended that the density and traffic problems in the area dllninisbed public access to the beach. After . the first two approvals, voting became so routine and so speedy that Rooney uled Carpenter al Ciiio point "are we goirig too fast for yoU?" Carpenler, who-was writing down tbe vote, said yes. Smith, standing at the podi1D11 intemipted, "It's not too fast for me.'' 'Jbe commiMi.m then approved four other ol Smith's duplexes without asking him how he ~·ould provide the extra parking. Smith said later that he would take 285 square feet out of the bottom noor of the duplexes, push the garage back into the property and park the can in the extra setback. That reduction lli"Ou)d leave 850 square feet in the downstairs Wlits, Smith said, and 1,500 sqllare feet in the upstairs Lil.its. . Smith duplexes are pnipoeed at 210 3.lrd St.; 212 33rd St.. 3tm Seashore Drive, 111 Clst St., 2M 36th St., and 30I 35111 "St.• 11le coaatline -cruled by Proposition 20 last November still had · other ~ Newport "Beach dupleies to consider on Its agenda later today. Beckman Asks GOP Candidates To Act Ethically vr. Arnold 0. Beckman of O>rooa de! Mar, chairman of the newly-tormed Republican • • So 1 i d a r i t y Victory Program," SUnday issued a statement urging Republicans to ' ' c o n d u c l themselves in an upright and ethical maMer" during the 1974 campaigns. Beckman's statement was issued from Sacramento. Jn it, he said the committee "·ants "to assure that Republicans go in- to the general elections completely unified so that all the party's resources are brought to bear." Beckman also advised candidates to : -"Not speak ill of other Republicans. -"Maintain accurate financial records and file timely reporlt as required by Jaw.'' -"Close ranks after the primary elec- ticm. and give full support to Republican party nominees ... Beckman1said his committee would be a neutral twee that would not involve itself in campaign fund raising. Daily Pilot cl-Wed Ids can .. n just about anything. This -~ certainly~ • had DO prt>blemt: . ROU~D oot table w/lide- brd, • Drewer dl'Mll', round kit. taDI<, 111Uq. chair, IO!id teak tables. lb.IC braided • Ir· a INlltr ,. ..... .,. ,... PRESIDENT NIXON, PAT LEAVE EL TORO. FOR KANSAS CITY Son Clomeftlo Sojourn May Bo FotlawOd by Ropo<1l In August Nixon Ends C911nty Visit; Might Retin·n in August President Nixon left Casa Pacifica to- day in brisk fashion after spending more than two weeks along the South Orange Coast. And already there are reports the President plans another lengthy stay at his San Clemente estate starting next month. Nixon. accompanied by his wife. Pat. strode through the gates leading to his house at about 8: 15 a.m. and walked NETWOl(KS SHARE QUIZ COVERAGE NE \V YORK (AP J -'The three television networks will prol'ide live coverage of this . week,s Sen at e Watergate committee hearings on a rotating basis. ABC will cover the resumed hearings at 10 a.m. EDT Tuesday, when former 'Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell is scheduled tQ begin testifying. Live coverage will shift to NBC on Wednesday and to CBS on Thursday. briskly to ·his waiting helicopter which took the couple to the Spirit of '76 waiting at the El Toro P.1CAS. The President waved several times to the two-dozen onlookers assembled at the edge of the helicopter p{d, but said nothing as he left for the Oight to the na· tion's capital. At El Toro th e scene was the same as Nixon and members of the First Family stepped down from the chopper, waved and then boarded the Pre!idential jet. There ~·ill be one stop along the way - Kansas Cily, J\fo. -~here Nixon will at· tend the SYtea ring·in ce remonies for Clarence M. Kelley. the new chief cf the FBI. Nixon planned to speak briefly at the afternoon ceremonies at the Federal Of- fice Building in Kelley'! hometown. It was the President's fi rst public ap- pearance since June 15, when he went to Pekin, Ill., for the dedication of a memorial congressional research center honoring the late Sen. Everett fi.1. Dirksen. A public turnout was expected for the occa!ion, with fi..1issouri Gov. Cbriltophcr S. Bond on hand and Olief Judge William (See SOJOURN, Page Z) GREAT CIRCLE ROUTE "'I· All Hems In lln't cood. (Addms), (POOoe No.) Transpae LeUef's at Oae·tfaird Point 1b< ldvertiaer IOld 10 tbe ilemt be listed through thll ad. Mike a aafe wun your mlsctlfaneoos Hems. Tbe dir.ct lino -- j • t Windward Passage (WP) had covered on .. thlnt of llie ·2,225-mlle "°"""' to Diomond Hud· by Sond1y'1 roll call in the &Q.boat Transpaciric Yacht Race. Others pushing the 73-loot ketch are Ragtime (RA), Robon (RO), Ondine (ON) and Blacklln (BF). All 1rt reported within 20 miles ol WP. Improbable (lM) ls the comcted time leader, with •bou t 1,830 ' miles to go as or Sunday's roll call . The neet moved into the northeast trades toda.y, but winds were reported li ght. "We've been drifling along behind the Class A neet at about rour knoto for the past 48 hours," said a-spokesman aboard the escort vessel Pegasus n. For more on the Transpac, see Page 19. · ' . ' .._.. -...... Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks N TEN CENTS • Ill , . Polic~ Say . No Struggle Apparent By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "'-Dell~ Pil•t St ... The sad scnrch for Linda Anne O'Keere ended Y.'ith the disco\'ery of the strangled girl's body lzy a lonel y roadside along Up. per Newport Bay Saturday but the man- hunt for her killer continues today. One theory is that the II-year-old vie· tim ..... lackin·g a ride home from summer school -may have tried hitchhiking. She was not sexually-molested, however, and invesli1ators said today there were no specific indicatkm that she fotigbt her killer. Tbb fact literally leaves police with ne motive as well as no suspect. "\Ve're working hard at it." Ney,-port . Beach Police Detective Sgt. Don· Pieter said of the hunt for the slayer. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today !hat no specific cause of death has been determined, although it was ap. parent the Linco ln Intermediate School l?"Pil bad been strangled. Her mother -nearly hysterical during the 14-hour search for Linda Anne -is now stoic cons idering the circum~~. "She was calm and composed when I last talked to her," said Sgt. Picker. Ne. f u n e r a I airangements had bet11 made this morning for the young victim. 1 whole parents are members of .lhe Com - munity Coogrogalional 0.,,ch ol Corona dcl Mar. 'Ibey were struck ltonically by a dual trapdy over the weekend. The -family's church sustained $5,000 damage in a f1te blamed on aruiltts. Westmoreland Favored 'Draft LQS Ai'JGELES IAPJ -Retired Gen. '\'l.lliam Westmoreland. foriner Army chief er s1aff. says the United States: "moved too fast in eliminating the draft." ... Writing in the Sunday edition or ttw Los Angeles Times, Westmoreland said 1 lottery system draft should be main- tained to permit quick mobilization and to ensure that service perlOOMI will represent all levels of American society. Westmoreland added: •·1 depk>re the. prospect of our military forces not representing a cross-section of our !Oeie- ty. Without the draft. for example, few representatives or arnuen t families will serve in uniform." Soviet Wheat Deal Scored \VASH INGTON (UPI) -Congressional investigators today blamed the massive sale of U.S. wheat to the Soviet Un.ton last yea r for the current high price ot food for Americans, but excused the ad· ministration for makin g the deal. The General Accounting Office (GAO), the investigalive ann of Congress, said tha t the Agriculture Department did a poor job of arranging the sale. that large companies made excessive profits from it and that the government paid $300 million in unnectssary subsidies. Orange Coast Weather The sun \li'ill break through those low clouds Tuesday -weakly. Slightly warmer temperatUrf\.', with 72 degree readings expected ak>n.1 the Orange Coast rising to 83 ln~ land. Overnight lows in tbc 60r. INSIDE TODAY An e.tpert 01t world food pro. duction sou• Americam ma11 soon have to ration food iu or· der to mnintaht exports aitd cite val ue of the dollar abrO'Jd. Set 1tory, Page 4. •Htlft.li It L.M. ..... ' C•llltnlll I Cll•tll!M ,..,. Ctfl\k.ti IS Cr.--N II 0..rtl Nflkn I ..... ,... ,.... . •llflrfll-1 , .. " ,.l_t 1 .. H Mr-.... 14 • t ' \ • • • • % DAILY PILOf • M9ftd.ly, Ally 9, 1973 Peace Corps Worke~s uganda Frees Ill NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -The Ill Amerlcan Peace Corps volunteers de- tained slnce Saturday by Uganda Prest· dent IdJ Amln left Kampala today aboard a charter fli ght after Amin received assurances rron1 Zaire Pres ident ~lobutu Sese Seko that they were really Peace Corps wOrkC:rs and not U.S. mercenary troops. They lefl ·aboard an East African Airways VCtO at 7 p.m. (9 a.m. Pl!f). to continue the flight to Kinshasa, capital of the former &Iilu C9nlO 11111 dloac· ed its name to Zolre. Tbelr d.,,.nure v .. as delayed several hours when lhe VC10 did not leave Entebbe on schedule. (Two Orange Couritlans were emoog the detainees. They were C h e r y I Andersen and Beverly J. Hart tsoth of Fullerton . There were nine other Califor- nians on the plane ). Uganda Rad io ioo.y broadcast a spee<h by Amin lhanlting General Mobutu "for hlJ message whlcb cleared Prejudice, Coercim• Mitchell Asks Diemissal \ Of Charges Aga~st Him . From Wire Services .NEW YORK -Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell, on the eve o( his Wat ergate testimony, requested to- day his conspiracy and perjury in· dicttnents be dism issed on grounds of government improprieties and prejudice.· In motions flied in Manhattan Federal Court, Mitchell, former Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans and two other defendants alleged that the U.S. at· torney'a office coerced the grand jury in- to indicting them. Mltc.btll said one means of coercion 1'81 to question him before the grand • 35th Government Since'-'43 Takes Reins in ,Italy ROME (UPI) -A new ceote,.Jefl coalitioo led by Premier MarianO Rumor. took office Sunday as the 35th govem· ment of Italy since t!M3,Jts prospeets for longterm. survival haWlted by inflation, rts!ng crime and a laltering e<onOmY· Rumor, a bacholor onetime high ochool teacher said after taking tM oath of of· flee u.a't he would lttk parliament's ap- prcwal ot a program concentrating on deolfnc wit~ -· problems, the -SS of !he lira and rising rlgbtwing violplce. A Ch'!flilln Oemocral who becaqle premier for the fourth time in five years, Rumor took the oa,lh of office from Prtsldent Giovanni IAone 2' days after the collapse of a center-right coalition led by outa;olng Premier Giuli9 Andreotti. Rumor leads a •member cablnet composed of Christian D e m o c r a t s , · Socialists, Social -Democrats an d Republicans. The dominant Christian ,Democrats re<:elved 16 cabinet posta, I.he . Socialists six, the Social Democrats four and the Republicans two. ChriaUan Democrats retained the key ministries ol foreign affairs, finance and the interior. 1 Amoog the cabinet positions was the newly~eated ministry or environment. The Socialists were returning to the government arter an interrpution that saw the moderately rightwiog Uberals take their place in the AndreoUi govermnent 1be main effect of the Socialist return was a slight ideological shift to the left. From Pagel MAYOR ... number oC young adults with cars could move in to a new duplex as those who lived in the older unit s. He told ,_,1cJMis he couldn't W1derstand the reasoning that duplexes ~'Ould decrease population. Commissioners Donald Bright and Rimmon C. Fay said they were still con· cemed about the need for parklng by the beach. jury about the Watergate scandal. Jn a memo filed by Mitchell'• lawyer, Peter Fleming, it wu alleged that the fonner U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour, "having already pre:judlced Mitchell substantlllly with regard to the New York cue, compounded bis im- proprieties by prejudlcllll Mltebell'a ability to properly defend nimlell - regard to Watergate." Mitchell Is acbeduled to lel1ily 'IUeoday be'fcft the Senate c o m m l t t e • in- vestigating the Watergate IClnclal Similar motli>ftl to dismlsl Illa b> dlctment were filed by the two other defendanta In the cue, fUclti,. 1111ander Robert L. Vetc:o and Harry L. Sean, a pl]>lTIJnent N~w Jeraey Ropublican. Tile four defendants·_.. indJcted May 10 on charges of COMplr1cy in an alleged scheme to Influence a federal tn- vestlgaUon of Vesco'• secret con- tribuUons Jut year to President Nb:oa's re-election campaign. In addition, Mitchell and Stana were accu.wd or lying before the federal crand jury last March. AU four have pleaded innocent and the trial is tentltively scheduled for Sept. 11. Vesco remalnl out ~ of the country. Three Arreswd On Murder Rap Three Santa Ana men were arrested early Sunday oe chargrs ol attempted miader and conspiraty to commit murder after a c8r containing ftve men .... peppered with gunfire, police reported. Officers said the shots smashed the car's headlights and pt.It several holes in the body but none of the pemen1era were infured. Arrested were Leroy Watts, 27,, hiis brother John, 25 and Marshal Brown, 28, all of 617 S. Wood St., Santa Ana. 1nvest1gators aakt the brothers had previously ejected the five men from a party they were throwing and when they returned to the scene they allegedly opened fire. Mesa Police Seeking Pervert Costa t.lesa police today are on the lookout for a man in hls early 30's who forced a 17-year-old girl into an act of se x perversi on over the weekend and then paid her 11. . The girl a student from Cypress, said she was picked up while hitchhiking in Westminster and driven lo a Harbor Boulevard parking Jot where the man reportedly forced his arfectloos on her. She was subsequently taken to Newport Beach where the man gave her the money to "buy a Coke or sometbinl" and told her to wait for one-half hour until he returned with his car. C I up Illa 1111MllM " Amin, alreody embroiled In ,....aJ aertous diplomatic dispul" with ·die Unlted Sta .. s, seized the Amerlc ... Satunlay aft<r their Britiab chart<r O!Pt landed in Uganda to refuel. They had ta.i<en oll to continue the Olgllt to Zaire, the. former Belgilln Congo, but he ordered ll to return arid_ threatenC!d to BeDd up bia 1tiny air rorce if t.be plane dkl not land again. The broadcast of Amin'• speech aald lhlt "in the future, East African Airways authorities lbOuld make sure flights such as Saturday'• are cleared." The Kampala radio broadcast aaid Presklen* JuUWI Kambarlge Nyerere of Tanzania wou!d conduct an tnveatipUon into the. matter which wu only cleared up when Mobutu intervened on behall of ilie Americana. Amin'• action In the Uganda capital of Kampala WU announced 'here by U.S. em-, spolteJman Gary Morley. U.S. diplomats and the Sta" Oepamnent had Inten:eded In their behall since the mercurial Amin loreed them to land in Kampala on Sunday. ''They do have clearance to leave," Morley said • .,It came throuch around 3 p.m. (I a.m. EDT). They are now k>oklng ror transport. They don't know where they're 1oing and woo't know until the transport is confirmed." . . . Morley said the Americans probably would ao either to Nairobi, where hotel rooms have been booked for j.btm, or to their orl&Jnal plane transfer point In Bunmdl. They have beee staylnf in a Kampala l!ol<I, comfortable but under anned guard. Morley dJd not give details oo Amin's diClilon to nieue the Americans but President Jooeph Mobutu of Zaire in- terveoed today to .. n Amin they really were Pe.ace Corps wlunteen and were en ""'" to bis country a they said they were. Diplomatic IOlU'Cel in Kampt.la said Mobutu sent a lelegram today ask- ing for their rel..,.. Frot11P .. eJ· SOJOURN ••• H .. Bec:lter ol U.S. District Court In .Kansas Cty admJnisterlng the oath. Kelley, g1, la a 20-year veteran of the FBL lie bas.beee Kanai City police cl!ief since !Ill Two acting dJrecton ha'" beee ·In the FBI pool since tht death ol. J. Bdpr Hoover oo May t; 1'72. Nlxm's fint c;boi,ce for the. jqb wa L Patrick Gray III, ·a Conoe((tcut J1wyer and J..Uoe Oepartmeot official. Gray resigned u ·~ FBI dUef after Senate Watergate bearing dlsclMUttS about the FBI's handling of the Watergate case. Kelley takes over rrOm the current ac- ting director, William D. Ruckelsbaus, former bead of the Environmental Protection Agency. Jn winning Senate confirmation,. Kelley promised he would cooperate In drafting new JeglslaUoo to bring the FBI under closer congressional scrutiny than It had during Hoover's service, which ·dated back to the inception of the FBI in 1924. Nllon was returning to Washington a day before the Senate Watergate com- miltee remrnalts-heartnp after a Fourth of July holiday recess. Onofre Patrol Nabs 190 Aliens Bocyier patrolmen at the San Onorre cheekpoirit, · operating a 24-hour im· migration check, arrested nearly 190 ii· legal aliens over the weekend. Patrolmen caught ~ aliens on Satur- day and 1nother 100 on Sunday. Jn ad- dlUon, 135 immigrants were arrested Fri· day. No drug traffic wu reported. The increase in arrests is attributed to the continuous operation of . the check· point, a patrolman said. At least 12 pro~ duplexes in Newport Beach await commission action later today. OIAQI COAn • • DAILY PILOT The O••no• Co.111 Dilll,.Y l'ILOI. wl!ll Wllltll .. C-lntd l'M ........ JlrtU, II PUMlll'>fO ~y IM Oft"" CN1t PllOl1'11"'9 Com~nv. k!M- •11• fdlllon• ••• puo1it-. M°"'ll•Y ll"Oll9" F• .. •Y· for Cesi. Mil•, ,,.._, It~. Himll ... 100! llt~ll/l"ou111f/11 Vtllt y. Lqll'\e 8t•tl\. lt .. IM /Sotdclltl:MIC-t"CI Stn [-nit/ 5..., Jw" CtPillrtno ,. 1lnglt •evlOMt lldltlDn i. 1>11bll1,.. S.turotr• •nd '""°•Y•· The P'lnc!MI Pllbli.hlne Pltll! h I t UO ....... , ti.1 S!rttl, C:Hll M••• C:1!l10rnl10 t?O•, Fair Attendance Booming As Weekend Sets Record lteb11f N. W11d Jlttlllll!ll IM l"l,ltl1..,.tr Jtc.lr It. Curley Vice Jlrwld...,t •Ml 0.-rt l M6f11tff Th•'""' x .... a .... Th•m•1 A. Murphlft• Mat11tlnt l•llOr L '•ltr Kriet H'"'"" l•ICfl City ~·llff __ .,.... JJJJ Newitert l•ult .. t td M•illrtt A4'rttt1 11'.0 . It• 1111, •1461 ............. (.o1lt M"tl J• Wfll l lY l~t Ltf-IHCllJ m l'-1 A-H...,,lffttfM lfl(.l'IJ tlllJ htcll llivlf¥-&.11 Clttnefli.1 )fJ Hwlfl II C.mlM 11.ffl T .. .,..._ f7141 '4J-4JJI c...,,... ..... , ..... 641-1671 COPY•ltflt, lt1J, Or111111 Cotti ""41 ... ll'!t c°'""'""· Ho ,..... 1i.ri.t. llhn l•Ultflt, efl!Wltl ""'"' ~ ..,_,!._,, "'""' _., .. ~ "'l'IOll' '*"' "" "'IHIOll 9' ewyr..,,I -r. ~ ........... ""' If Coll• #MU, C..!lfOrll l•. """"'!"left "' tt l"f'ltf' "·" Mtf'ltl'llfl l¥ -11 U,11 metotfll'f'l ""lltr.r( -llMlllM .... ......ifll't'. • Attendance is booming at !he Orange county }'air jn Costa ~fesa w h e r c turnstiles counted 61 ,284 visitors over the weekend period ' from Friday through Sunday. '11le fair recorded the highest single day attendance ~n its 80-year history Saturday whtn 2l,213 penons streamed onto the grounds on the ralr'1 second day. .. Fair M1nagtr Jim Porterfield 11ys al· tendance is up 3S to 40 percent when <0mpared to last year and that he hopes the total count will ezceed 200,000 when !he falrends July 16. This weekend's three-<iay rtgure of 61 .~ compares to 40.04l last year, and Sunday's 25.254 to 18,&36 In July 1972. Orawin& the ~rd·bre•klng crowds to the fair are nfahtly stage shows, motorcycle r1ce1, 1 rodeo, contests, ex· hibits, parades and many otht:r •I· traclions. All entertainment Is Included in the ad- mlllloo prJCI! wbich 11 fl .'IS for ldults, 11 for children, 1Dd tree for chUdrtn under aix. Among the exhibit• st the r11r ls 1 chuckwagon kitchen on wheels which ls t ' serving authentic v.'eslem food to ap- proximately 2,000 people daily. The chuckwagon is part or a covered- wa£on e1rav1n stationed at the entrance of the fair. A collectlon of western attire i• housed in the caravan's cowboy muaeum. The historic reties are on loan from the Notional Cowboy Hall ol fame and Ir> elude bronze ICUlptures and paintings by wetl-tnown western 1rt.lsts. A aeven- mlnule film, "The last of the Wild Mustanp," lo being shown slong with a display Including •n antique Cliilomla Siddle and a variety of brandln;: lrons and spun. Biggest at1r1ction at the folr tonicht ~ ·an a p.m. performance In the am- phitheater by Dxleland Jou master Pete Fountain and his orthestra. Highlight.I of I.he fair on Tuesdny are: -2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Swlne Judgblg, livestock •rea. -NllOn to 10 p.m .. Art Demonatr1Uons, cralt1 center. -All Day Homemaking SU1&estiooo Cllifomia Jlvln1 bulldlng. -t p.m. Roel Butlona and hi• AU,S,.r Band, amphitheater. -t p.m. O>arley Romero ind the Dix· !eland All Stan, mall 1t11e. • -. 41·FOOT CABIN CRUISER FLOUNDERS AT EL MORRO AFTER STRIKING ROCKS NEARBY Craft W11 Beached ~fter Four Occupents Were Removed; S.lv1ge Attempt Scheduled Tod1iy . -~~~~ $419.4 Miiiion Valuation of Newport More Than Estimated By JOHN SCHADE or 1M Dell'I' "JIM lt•tf Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn says the city's 1973-74 assessed valuation will be slightly above the original $419 million estimate. · Wynn said the assesSed evaluation should be about $419.4 million, pending final county assessments of public uUliUes later this month. Wynn said he will recommend to the city council that any ezcess be put iilto the council's stabllir.a.Uon fund. The fund wu set up last year as a reserve fund to be used when the city runs out ot ready Flaming Hawk Starts County.'s. First Big Blaze A hawk which fieW~into a high power line and fell flaming to the ground was blamed today for starting: Orange Coun- ty's largest grass and brush fire of the season Sunday In the city of Irvine. The blaze burned more than 200 acres of Irvine Ranch cattle grazing range aboot a mile south and west or Lion Country Safari, the wild animal com· pound east of the Laguna Freeway and· south_ of San Diego Freeway. Firemen said no catUe were inJure<l and no structures threatened by the fire which started about l p.m. and was con· trolled at 7 ~ Smoke from the blaze was visible from"Tort~Rock and other sections of Irvine. Seventy five Orange ounty riremen with 12 pieces of equip ent fought the stubborn blaze. A Costa Mesa Police Department helicopter Oew over the scene spotting hot spots for the firemen . The blaze started at the south end of Sand Canyon Hoed and sptead north and west, away from tinder dry brush, an Irvine Company spokesman said. cash or when revenues do not come in on time. 'The city manager does not expect the slight increase in assessed value to affect the city's present $1.20 per $100 property tax. · Th e Orange County Assessor's office has placed a $398.9 million figure on the city's worth, excluding the usessment of the Upper Newport Bay area. Wynn adds that when the public utilities assessment is completed, an ad· ditional f8.5 million will be added to the county weament. That would make the normal a!RS3ed total $409.4 million or 7.9 percent Increase over {be $379.3 million figure of last year.· 'lbe city will benefit from-a homeo'fD:NS' res1denUal . property ex- emption Which went into' effect 'for' th'e first ti~ thl.s year. Under the rule, ~.meo'flltlrs }\tet1.gtven a '150 es:empt!.Ori on thelr pr;opttey. Wynn said the state y.'ill credit the city with an addltional $t0 mt11ion'in assessed value ID making JJ.P the rnoru:y ~t under the exen\ption. niat amount will push the city's assessed value to the $419.4. million mark. 4 Democrats On Raft Run CISCO, Utsh (AP) Massachusetts -sen. Edward M. Kennedy and three other con- gressional Democrats ran a portion of the Colorado River in rafts Sun- day in an ouUng of father-son fellowship. Kennedy, 41 , was the senior-- member of the group. Others were Utah Rep. Wayne OWena, 36, the host ; California Sen. John Tunney, 39 : and Pennsylvania Rep. William J. Green, 35. Each man had one son along. The six-hour trip covered 18 miles in Granite Canyon between Westwater and Cisco in eastern Utah. 4I~foot Vessel Mired in Sand Off El Morro By JACK CHAPPELL Of ... Delt'I' "li.t Staff A 4.l·(oot Chris-Craft cruiser, ho I e 1 punched in her starboard and stem, lay mired lo sand today at El Morro Cove near Laguna Beach -the vesUge. of a disastrous Sunday for a Riverside quar-,. .. Salvage operations were scheduled for high tide today, about 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in an attempt to pull the big cruiser off the beach. It wu hauled up on the sand Sunday ·afternoon after striking rocks at Abalone Point, just south of the El Morro trailer park arfJ8. Fq.ur Persons aboard were ld'entlf1ed by the Orange County Barbor Depart- ment as Hyman Rosen, owner; Rose Ro- sen, -Julius Laiken and Frances Laiken mishap. Tile harbor patrol first heard of the ac- cident when a distress radio call was re- ceived. from t~ JWsen craft. The first reports were confusing, with one indicaling that the craft had struck rocks off the Laguna Beach Jetty. Harbor patrolmen were able to deter· mine the craft was orr El Morro and two tioats were dlspatched. On their arrival, the Ooundering craft was found to be 213 fullOf water. · Laguna Beach lifeguards and patr6f- men beached the craft after divers round a 6-inch hole in the stern of the craft. During beaching operations two holes were ripped in the stllfboard side of the craft and the inside was smashed by surf. · Amount of the Joss is unknown. In sat· Yaging the crafl, operators plan on stuff-· ing large iooertubes into the boat and then inflating them. But, today, the Wide of the boat w8s covered with about two feet or sand and a foot of water. Salvageni estimated that sbou1d she Ooat, the boat would be about 90 percent in the water said Skip Roeser, a marine biologist. Tbe area where the boat is beached is ringed with rocks. Totie Improves NEW YORK (UPI) -Totie Fields' condition improved Sunday and her agent said he was hopeful the popular com- edienne could leave the hospital by Fri· day'. She was injured in an auto accident Thursday night. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE \ f. Adn1lroL NO-DEF.OSTING REFRIGIRAlOR/FRIUIR ALL THESE GREAT e F•"' ••.FEATURES • f i.tll WKltfl "Boo)\CIH .. frMJer Door Stltlf -for ln1l1nt awtllM ilit;y. • Dual T1mper1turt Controlt-MIKI tti. li&l'lt t1m~r1tur. ror etcl'I 1tcUon, • Twin l'ofl:9!11n Cfllfltf'l-• .. PI frvlt. ~-pnten fl'ftfl. • Utr1 Uflt fttfripntllf Door SMfoM-tllMI ftlfl tll qwtlt ""'!!" ...... NT IJJ4 , ... ,.;,.."'"' ,..,.,.,_. .. , ....... , wltli Att.M• Air flew ,.,...._ ~ li,,ll •1cle clrcul•lle11. ALL THis $25995 FOR ONLY 1115 NEWPORT Bl VD. lllllltm Costa Mm I Ad.nlral. SLIMLINE REFRIGERATill M ... •Cf1J2 • '"H Wldttl F'fWIZllf Olllt • Wide-ft .... T""'*'hl"' CDntrd • ft9d Vltutl ~'"" ,,..... • [rtnl t>Mp Door lhelf , fllll Width ,,_..,M1rt Ctllillr Dl'twlf 159'5 90 DAY CASH • ' . • I 7 J. • • 1' • • • ·-· ·-• . . . . I - Orange C~!!i -Today's Final • vor.:. 66, NO. 190, 2 SECllONS, 21> PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 9, 1973 c TEN CENTS , Atiendance Records BrOken at . County Fair ~,'Attendance ii booming at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa w b e r e ll'lnstllea coWited 61,214 vtsltora over the weekend period from Friday tbrouCh S<inday. • Fair Manqti" Jim Porterfield saya ·~· tendlnce ls up S5 to 40 percent wben compered to Jut yoar ancMllat be hopes Ibo tolal· """'I will noeed lllQ,000 ... Ibo Wt -July 11.: . motorcycle races, a rodeo, contei;ts, ex~ hibltl1 parades and many other at- tractlOns. All entertainment is included in the ad· missloa.prlce'wblcb ts ft.75 for adulll, 11 · tor children, 'and free for children under sts. pro~imately 2.000 people daily. The chuckwagon Is part of a CO\'tred· wagon canvan ltaUoned at the entrance of the fatr. A collectkln of western attire is ~ in the caravan's cowboy m...um. minute film , '"l"be last of the Wild Mustangs," is being shown along With · a display Including an antique California saddle and a variety of branding irons and spurs. , -2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Swine Judging, ll\•estock area . -Noon to 10 p.m., Art Demonstration!, cr:afts center. -All Day Homemaking SuggesUons CalUomla living building. The fair 'recorded Ibo blghest llillgle day ' att.lldance ·in tu IO-yoar blstory Saiuicfay when %1,213 penoo1 llrelmed oato tlie ll'Olmds on lbe lair's tee:Ol>d day. nu. -·· .three<lay figure of 11,214 rom"°"' to 40,IHl lut l"°!• and &mday'• 25,354 to 11,1.11111 July tm- Drawlllg Ibo ,...nl-lneklng crowds to lhe lair are •tly stage shows, Among the elhlblta at the fair is a chuckwagon kitchen on wbeeb which is servint autbettic western food to a~ The historic reliCJ are on ~·frorn.Jbe • National Cowboy Hall of fame and In· elude brome sculptures and palntiJl&S by well-known western artists, A teVtn- Biggest attraclion at the fa ir tonight is an I p.m. performance in the am· phllheater by Dxleland Jm master Pete FOuntaln and his orchestra. '· ~ Highlights of the' fair on Tuesday are: -a p,m. Red Buttons and his· All·Star Band, amphitheater. ~ -9 p.m. Charley Romero and the Dix- ieland All Stars: mall stage. ' 0 Americans · Released In Uganda NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) -The 111 Am~rican Peace Corps volunteers de- tained since Saturday by Uganda Pres!· dent !di Amin left Kampala today aboard a charter fiight after Amlil received usurances from Zaire President Mobutu 5eae Seto lhal they were really Peace Corps workers and Ml u.s: mercenary ues • ... ····· ········ • • Ill •• Ir I GR!AT CIRCLE ROUTE i I a Police Say N·o Struggle Apparent By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of lf'lt Dallr l'llet Stitt The sad search for Linda Anne O'Keefe ended Y.ith !he disco\'ery or the strangled girl 's body by a lonely roadside along. Up- per Newport Bay Saturday but the man· hunt for her killer continues !oday. One theory is that the Il•year-<1ld vic- tim -lacking a ride hOme from summer school -may have tried hitchhiking. She wu not !f!xually molested, however, lroopl. ' . They left aboard an !:pt African Airways VCIO at 7 p.m. (9 a.m. PDT) lo ...,tin,. Ibo 8'gbl lo Klnsbasa. c:apllol of the former Belgian Coago lbat chang- ed ita name to.. Zaire. Their departure was delayed several hours w:1en the VCIO did not leave Entebbe on schedule. _,,....,..~~·~· fit ~~illirft Point and 19vestlgators said today there were no sptcllic indications !hat she fouabt her killer. This fact lltHally leaves police with no motive I! well u no tu3pect. ' (Two Orange Countians were emong the.-detainees. They were C h e r y I Andersen and Beverly J. Hart both of Fuller.ton. There were nine other Califor- nians on the plane). Uganda Radio today broadcast a speech by Amin thanking General Mobutu "for bls message whlcb cleared up the situation." .. Amin, already embroiled in several serious diplomatic disputes with the Unlled States, 1eized Ibo Amerlcam Saturday alter their British charter filgbt landed in Uganda to refuel. They bad taken off to cootinue the flisht to Zaire, ti_ie former Belgian C:Ongo, but be ordered it to return and threatened to send up his tiny air force if the plane did not land again. The broadcast of Amin's speech said that "in the future, East Africa~ Airways authorities should make sure flights such as Saturday's are cleared.'' The Kampala radio broadcast sfild President Julius Kambarage Nyerere of IJ'anzania would conduct an investigation into the matter which was only cleared up when Mobutu intervened on behalf of ·tbe- Amin'i adl011 In Ibo Uganda capital of .Xampola was announced here by U.S. -y opokes!nan Gary Morley. U.S. ,diplomats and tJie Slolo Deportment bad • ,Jnler<eded Ill lhelr behalf slllce the mercurial Amin forced lhem to land In .Jtampa)a on Sonday. ,, •"J1ley do have clearance to )eave, .Morley said. "It came through a~ 3 p.m. {I a.m. EDT). They are now looking for transport. They don 't know ,.-here they're going and won 't know unm the tran5p0rt Is coo.finned." Windward Puaag~'cWP> had coverec!"on6.lhird of the 2,225-mile course to Diamond Head by 'Sunday's roll c1U in the 8().boat TranspacrfJC Yacht Race. Otliers pushing the 73.root ketch are Ragtime (RA), Robon (RO). Ondine (ON) 1nd Blackfin (BF). All.are reported within 20 miles of WP. lmprobible (IM) is the corrected time leader, with about 1,630 Nixon DepartS Casa Pacifica For Kansas City President Nixon left ca.a Padlica to- day In brtsk fasbloo alter spending more than two weeks along Ibo South Ol'allge Coast And already there are reports the President plans another lengthy stay at his San Clemente estate &tarting next month. Nixon, accompanied by _his wife, Pat, ·strode through the gates leading to his house at about 8:15 a.m. and walked briskly to his waiting helicopter which took the couple to the Spirit of '76 waiting at the El Toro MCAS. The President waved several times to the two-dozen onlookers a§embled at the edge of the helicopter pad, but said nolblng as he left for the flight to the na· tioo's capital. At El Toro the aceoe was the aame u Ntson and 'l""!ben GI Ibo First Famlly stepped -lroin Ibo chopper, waved and lhen boonled Ibo Presideotial jet. Tbeno will be -atop atone die way -Kansas City, Mo. -where NlllOO will at- tend the swearing-in ceremonies for Clarence M. Kelley, tbe new cblef of 'the FBI. Nixon planned to 1peak briefly at the afternoon ceremonies at the Federal Of. fice Building In Kelley's hometown. It was the Prelident's first public ap- pearance since Juoe JS, when he v.·ent to Pekin, lit., for the dedication of a memorial congressiooal research center honoring' the late Sen. Everett M. Dirksen. Baby Arrives; Wrong Name RICHARDSON, Tex. (UPI) - Barbara Bower got a $350 materni- ty bill from a doctor last week and she dicl· no& even know she had been .,...nant. -An 1S-year-o1d woman registered 1everal weeks ago falsely giving Mrs. Bower's name and address. She told the doctor her h\1!1baod worked at Tens ln!itrwnents in the Dallas suburb. 1 1 The woman eventually gave birth to a child and left the hospital with her baby. Afrs. Bower, 29, said she would be happy to pay the bill if the doctor would "send us a baby girl." -Chotiner Judge Goes Off Case~ Against Paper CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -U.S. District Court Judge Hugh Downes has disquali· fied himseU from hearing a libel suit filed by formtr presidential aide and Newport Beach lawyer Murray Chotiner against the Manchester Urilon'Leader and report· er Arthur Egan. Morley said the Americans probably \\'Ollld go either to Nairobi, where hotel rooms have been booked for them, or to their original plane trarwfer poin~ in Burundi. They have been staying U1 a ,. Kampala Hotel, comlortable but under armed guard. . A public turnout was eipected for the occasion, with M-..; Gov. Chriatopber S. Bond on bind and Chlo! Judge Wiiiiam ~========~~~~~~~~a;-llledttrleel..,.,GI UA. ~ Court m Bawnes disqualified himself from the $3 million suit during the weekend after pulr Usher William Loeb submitted a 13-page affldivil and more than $0 J>l(les of ex- hibits. They eoolobied uruoo Leader edi· torlals !run Ibo put 10 years which were critical ol -. The judge said Mrller be WU not Pl'i"' dlced. bat Loeb mallltalned that "lunan nature be1n1 what H II, a leellnt GI m"' bW dialib IDd -reodilT ..... . CLASSIFIED ADS 'MAKE 'EM VA.NISH Dally Pilot clanilled ads can 1tll Just · about anything. 1bts advertiser certaltjly had no problems: ROUND oak table w/1ide- brd, I Drlwer dressr, round kit. table. antiq. chair, !l()Jld teak tables, 10114 braided rug, Alt items 1n xln"t cood. (Alldms), (!'bone No.) 1be advertlaer sold all Ibo ltema he listed th~ tl\!S ad. Make a sale with your ml~ 1tern1. The direct line -tlUl?L l • KJllau City admblilterin( Ibo oath. J(olley, 11, II a •year -... of the FBI. He bu been Kanas City polJco dllel sillce lllL ' Two actinC din!dGr1 have been Ill the FBI poot flllce die death of J, Edpr Hoover on Mly 2, tm. Nixon'• flrlt choice for the job was L. Patrick Gray lll, 1 Coootctlcut lawyer and J~ice Deplrtmtnl o«idal. Gray Teligned aa acting FBI chlel after Senate Watergate Marine dllcfoRares about the FBl's handling GI Ibo Watergate cue. Kelley takes over Crom the current ac- ting director. William D. Ruckellbaua, former head of the Environmental Protection Agency, , In wlonlng Senate confirmalion, K<lley promised he -M cooperate In drifting new lql•lotlon to lldnc Ibo FBI uncltr (Sae llOJj)IJllN, Pap I) kindles." . Bownes 11ld Loeti'• aaumptians were were "at belt, queatianlble." But he dfoqualified himlell,. ·aaying "I do not think It would be· passlble to convince him (Loeb) otherwise" and "since tbe appear. ance ol impartiality Is as important ... 11 Ill rullty." ... He Cllled Loeb's statemtnt "a boot· str.p approach" lbat "can be uJed against any judge who is a'8igned the case almply by pulliilbinc critical edltor- itl1 aboollhat Judie.'' a.otmer, a lonnet aide to Pttsident Ni..n, aued after the publlcatloo of two slorlea dalmllll Cbotlntr wH linked to tile Waterpte cue. He denied · any 111-YO!v-. ,) miles to go u of Sunday's roll call. The Deel mo...! inlo the northelSt· lrades today, but wind! were reported lighl "We've been drifting along behind the Cla" A fleet at about four knots for the past 48 hours," said a spokesman aboard the escort vessel Pegasus n. For more on the Transpac, see Page 19. Mitchell Asks Dismissal Of Charges Agairist Him ''We're working hard at It," Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Don Picker said of lbe hunt for the slayer. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today that no specific cause of dea th has been det ermined. although it y.·as ap- parent the Lincol n Jntermediate SChool pupil had been strangled. Her mother -nearly hysterical during the 14-hour search for Linda Anne -is now stoic considering the circumstances. "She y.•as calm and composed when I last talked to hec,'' said Sgt. ficklr. From... Wire Senicel_ No I u n e r a I arrangements had been made this morning for the young victim, wbose parents are membera of the Com- munity Coogregatlooal Church of Corona . de! Mar. scheduledlot..SepUl.:..Vaco rmw.ns: out--They were strucHrontcallrbra dua:l- NEW YORK ·-Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell, on the eve cf his Watergate testimony, requested to- day his conspiracy and perjury in- dictments be disnUssed on ground! of government improprieties and prejudice. In motions filed in ~1anhattan Federal Court, J\lltchell, fonner Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans and two other defendants alleged that the U.S. al· torney's office coerced the grand jury in- tG indicting them. • Mitchell said one means cf coercion was to question him before the grand jury about the Watergate scandal. In a memo filed by Mite.bell's lawyer, Peter Fleming, It was alleged that lhe fonner U.S. Attorney Whitney North Seymour, .. having already prejudiced Mitcbell 1Ubstanttally with r<gard to Ibo New York cue., cmtpounded bis Im· proprieties by prejudlclllg Mitcbell '• ability to properly defe!Jd blmself witb regard to Watergate." _ Mitchell ls scheduled to testify Tuesday be!ore the Senate c om m i t t e e in· vesllgatlng U--Watergate scandal. Similar motions to dbmis! the in· dictment were filed by the two other defendanla in the case; fugitive fin ancier Robert L. Vesco and Harry L. Sears, a prominent New Jersey Republican. The four defendanl3 were indicted J\:tay 10 on charges of conspiracy in an alleged scheme to inOuence a {ede.ral in· vestigation of Ve900's secret con- tribuUon.s last year to President Nixon's re-election campaign. In addltioo, Mlldlell aod stans WV• accmed of lying before lhe-federal grand JW7 last Mri. All lour hive pleaded W-nt and Ibo irlal it ltnloUvelJ NETWORKS SHA.RE QUIZ COVERAGE NEW YORK {AP) -The three .televtslon networb will provide live ' covera(e ·or th!J week's S en ate \Vatergate committee t.earings· on a rotating basts. ABC will covtr the ruumed hearings at 7 a.m. PDT T\lesday, wbtn formtr Atty. c.n. Jol>n N. Mitchell ls scheduled to bep tesUfylng. Uve coverage wlll shift lo liBC on Wednelday and to CBS on. 'l'hunday. of the country. tragedy over the wetkend. Other Watergate developments: 1be family 's church sustained $5,000 -~ Gal~up Poll. says 71 percent ~f damage in a fire blamed on a · t Americans it questioned believe Pres1-rwn15 s. dent Nixon was involved in the bugging or cover-up but only 18 percent feel he should be compelled to leave office. -Former U.S. House Speaker John \V. J\fcCormack said Sunday that President Nixon is justified In refusing to appear before the Senate Watergate Committee. 'I don't thlnk as Speaker cf the House 1 y.·ould want to have the President of the United Slate!I' summan me down to the White House when I'm head of the legislative branch ... " -Justice Department officials over· ruled an investigation of the pricing practices of a company owned by Robert H. Abpianalp, a milUonaire friend of President Nlmn, two New Y o r t newspapers ttporl<d today. ....Jolm Ebrllchmall. former domestic a(faira adviser to Prealdent Nixon, says tbe Pttsldent dilcuaed but dlsmlued (See MITCllEU., Pa1e I I Beckman. Asks GOP Candi{lates f;o Act Etliically Dr. Arnold O; Beckman of eor.n. del Mar, cbai:n»lri of the newly•fonned RAlpublican · .. S o l I d a r 11 y Victory Program,'' Sunday issued a statement urctng Republicans to • I C 0 Q d Q C t -in .. uprlcht and etbical manner"' during Ibo 1'71 compolcN. -~· 11ateintat --!run Sacramento. In tt, he. said the committee wantl "to assort that RepubUcans go in-\o the general elect.ions completely unified IO that all the party's relOUl'cts a.re-. brou1ht to bear." . Beckman also advised andldates to: -"Not speak ill of · o th er Republloans. -"J\:laintain accurate financial records and file timely rtports as required by low.•· '-"C.,. r>nu alltt lbe primary tl«- tlon and give full 1U]>pOrt to llepubllcan party horninees.'' Beckman said his oommhlce _.id be a nelllrll fon:e thet would not Involve ilsel/ In campaign Jund 1'1111111, • . ·--- Westmoreland Favored Draft LOS. ANGELES (AP ) -Retired Gen 1Villiam \l/estmoreland, former Armf chle! cf staff, says the United St8tes "moved too fast in eliminating the draft." Writing in the Sunday edition of the Los Angele3 Tunes, Westmoreland said a lottery system dralt should be main- tained to pennit quick mobilization and to ensure that service personnel will represent all levels of American society. Westmcreland added: 1'1 deplore the prospect of our military forces not representing ·a cross-sect.ion of our 90cie- ly. Without. the draft. for example, few representatives of affluent families will serve In uniform." or ... ge Coast Weadler 1be sun wtll break through those low cloudJ Tuesday --weakly. Slightly warmer temperatures, with 72 degree readings expE!(ted •lone the Oran~ Coast rising to 83 in- land. Overnight lows In Ibo f()s, J'NSWE. TODAY An txpert 01& world food pro- duct/01l .so11.s A·merica·ll.! may 10011 l1ove lo ration f ood in or· der to maft~loln exports oud I.lie value cf tht dollar ab rO?d. See .storu, Page 4. .... .. l.M •• .,. (tflflnl• Cintlffell (Mftltt ,, ... _.. DNfll flltfkn ·~·, ... ·--·-· - 1' A1111 LllMll9" '• I Mt'll•t 1 .. 1, s flla11t11t1 "'"" r Jt.tl °'"-C-ty I IJ lrlwMI 1'"1... II IS SMr!t 1 .. 11 I ""''"*~ 11 ' TllMffrt \ lt-11 , .. ,, ........ ~ lf.11 WMl'ltifl ... Newt 11-14 It • W.,1111 fMWt t ' 'Fakes Over In Italy 4Democrau 01i Raft Run C IS CO, Ul4h !AP) lttasaachusetts Sen. Edward P.1. 'Kennedy and three olbtr COft. treaslonal Democrat.I ran I porUon of ·the Colorado River in rati. Sun- day In an outlaa ol lllhoMon rellowshlp. • ROME (UPI) -A new O?nter·left '>"--coalition led by Premier Mariano Rwnor- Kennedy, 41, was the eeoior member of the group. Others were Utah Rep. \Vayne Owens, 36, the host: California ~n. John Tunney, 39; and Pennsylvania Rep. Wllllam · J. Green, 35. Each mlln had one ton ( • • took .office Sunday as the 3Sth govern· mcnt of Italy since 1943, its .prospects for k>niterm survival haunted by jnflatiori, riling crime and a faltering economy. Rumor, a bachelor onetime high school tee.cher, said' arter taking !he oath of of. flee tl\at he would seeK parliament's arr proval of a program concentraling on dealing "'ith economic problems, the weakness of the lira and rising rlghtwing violence, A Christian Democrat who beeamc premier for the fourth lime in five years, Rumor took the oath of office from President GiovBMi Leone 26 days after the collapse of a cent.er;rlght coallUon led by outgoing Premier Giulio Andreotti. Rumor leads a 28-member cabinet comPosed of Christian D e m o c r a t s , Socialists, Social Democrats and Republicans. The · dominant Christian Democrats received 16 cabinet posts, the Socialists six, the Social Democrats four and the Republicans two. Christian D!lmocrats retained the key minislr.ies of foreign affairs, finance and the interior. Among the cablnel positions was the newly-created ministry of environment. ·The Socia!lsts were retuming to the government after an interrputlon that saw the moderately rightwing Liberals take their place in the Andreotti government The main effect of the Socialist retum was a slight Jdeologlcal shift to the left. The new government includes some of the most important names in recent Italian politics, among them former premiers Emilio Colombo, the new filwlce minister, and Aldo Moro, return- ing as lorejgn minister. · Rumor, 58, headed three previous center-left coalition!; [rom late 1968 until mid-1970. ·His last government fell after only 100 days. Jn announcing agreement on a coalition program last week , Rumor said he would press for rcfonns that political sources sajd helped to bring about Androotli 's fall. "There is need to deal inunediately with the ecooomic situation, blocking the inllatipnary spiral," Rumor said. "1be . primary conditions to do this are the coo· -solldalion ol. democratic order at all levels against any Fucist lnsurgence and qainst any violence." M the que or live cit y to the Watergite-if@.rs, the Se tile Post- lnttlligencer repor,tl!Cf..Sun9 . alcing. · 'n>e six-hour trip covered 18 miles in Granite Canyon b e t w e e n \Vestwater and Cisco in eastern Utah. 200 in Viejo Ag8in Protest Closed Roads By JAN WORTH 0. ... 0.lff' PKet' Sllff • "We get tile impression Supervisor. Ronald Caspets thinks we're a bunch or weirdos who will cool off after awhile but he's got another think coming." That wu the comment of a Mission Viejo resident today, one or about 200 ::Jficketed Saturday momiq for tbe time in a week to protest closures of three streets at Jeronimo Road two weeks ago by the Orange County Board ol Supervisors. Diane Shaver. of 241'6 Barquero, said she·felt Sunday's parade along Jeronimo lo the blockaded intersections o f Carranza, Montilla. and Cordillera Drives, was "the best of the tw.o." "The whole thing lasted about three and one-half hours," said Mrs. Shaver. "People had to be enthusiastic. to stick with us that long." • The group marched to El Dorado Park for a rally and then to the interesectlon of Chrisanta and La Paz for another rllly. County Road -Ciomm.imoncr T e d (McConville said today traffic counts in the area since erectk>n of the barricades should be ·complete this week. When the tallies are in, he said he would meet again with the residents. The blockades were put up foUowing complalflts from residents of San Andres, Saft f Roque, and Naccoine Drives that their streets were being used as speed.ways and a shortcut between the arterial roads ol La Paz and Jeronimo. Fifth District Supervisor Caspers was out of his office today but an aide said he would make a conunent on the situation Tuesday. -Besides the blackliit publici:ed in earlier Watergate testimony, columnist Jack Anderson (whose column appears repllarly Jn the Dally Pilot) reports that 'r----Oit "Whlte-House also maintained a secret list of Republican senators who dis- pleased the President. Airs. Shaver said the group's next move will be to go to the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association for support at its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednes- day. ..., Coastal Panel Approves 6 Duplexes in Newport Six \Vest Ne"1>0rt Beach duplexes "-ere and ?ifclnnis' earlier presentation in approved in short order today by the favor of !he duplexes. Commission Ex- South Coast Regional Zone Conservation eeutive Director Melvin Carpen ter Commission meeting in Long Beach. The cominission voted 7 10 3 on recommended denial of Smith's requests. developer Dann Smith's projects follow-.. We have been doing a lot of work in ing a speech by Newpor ach Mayor that area and feel duplexes are too much Oooald Mcinnis. ',__..,;;;-~'.'.'.:'increase in density,'' carpenter told $mith promised the commi~« e the mission. would provide two-tt>Onc parking on all ter added that within 250 yards she duplexes. of the beach nothing should be approved Voting took less than 10 minutes. The only commissioners opposing t h e that is more than IQ units per acre in developments were Robert Rooney of density. The duplexes In question were Huntington Beach, Donald Bright of La about 25 dwelling Wlits per acre. Habra and Rimmon Fay of 111arina de! Carpente~ contended that the density Rey. and traffic problems in the area Despite the promise or more parking . diminished public access to the. beach. • DAILY PILOT Tiit 0.•fltl' CH•I OAll..'I' .. ,LOT, wlm '""IC" '' romlllNd tfltl MWl·l'rKa, b lllollllltMot 11'1' IM Ore~ CO.I! .. ulllllfllrl!I C-llY. ~· , ... tdlllOrtt 11"11 IOUlll!,......, M .... fY m ....... l"•kl••· ,.. Coll• Me... Mt-• 1u~, t111rillftllell ltKllll"-11111 VII...,, l~ llH<fl, lr~IM/S_I_ ""' 1111 Cltmenlt/ S.11 J ... 11 Clj1{1,t1•11t. A tlntle •f9lo<tll tdlllon ,to 'poib!h.l'ltd lalllnl1ys ...... SllNllY ... f~t prlnC!Clllt Plllllltl\1111 Pltll' i. 11 lJO Wtll .. l' $tr1Mt. C•t• MllW, C.llfotftlt, tMM. lto~•tt N. We.4 JOrnlllenl ,.,. J0\611-.Mt Jeck II.. Curley \lk t "rftlllfl'll ..... 0.-lt M•,...... Tho111•1 IC••1Jt ld)IW '1 The'"'' A. Mll!'~lne M ..... lllt ldlHor Cll11let H. Lee1 11.!ch••' "· Nill AH!tlent Mt,...;,,, l!flMA c..t. M ... OMc. JJO Witt l1y Str-.1t ¥1illnt Air1ir1rtu:'P',0 , lo• I 5•0, •1•J• .._ ....... Mt"'llOl'I hKll: SW H""'Plf1 hultvttf l.flVN IMdll m ,., .. , A- !'l~lfto .... h«Jill 1111J ·-" hull'Y••d I_. Cl-"; JOI Mom II C.111 .... 11 .. 1 ,.,.,.... 17141 '41-4111 C~ A4'Wlthil•t Ml·U7t CIM'rltol'>I, lt7h Or•.... C...•1 l'..-lltfllflol ~v. "" -11w1t1, m .... tr1111M. .. llltltl l'lfttw ... .. .. .,. ....... ,. l!otnlft '""' .., r.,._.. •I....., t91tltl "'• lllltlllft " ctrl'tlfrtl -· .... CleM ........ Niii Ill C"'I ~l C.Hflrftle,. ~ill*I ... fMt~ .... "*"'ll~J ..,. "'911 tl.11 "*"""'' llllltflr\' •lf••lllM ..... ~"· ' After the first two approvals, voting became so routlne and so speedy that Rooney asked Carpenter at ooe point "are 111'e going too fast for you?'' Carpenter. "'ho was "Tiling dOY.'n the vote. said yes. Smu tt: standing at !he podium interrupted, "It's not too fast for me." The commission then approved four other of Smith's duplexes wilhout askJng him how he would provide the extra ~p:1rking. ~-- ..... i . ca\end• TONIGHT COSTA MESA P!>,\NNING COM· ~11SSION -Regular m~tlng, City }lall, 6:30 p.m. COUNTY FAIR HIGHLI GHTS .Pacific Union Pioneers Variety Show, 2 and 7 p.m. Pete Fountaln Orchestra 8 p.m. TUESDAY, JULY 10 SENIOR CITIZE NS TUESDA V CLUB -Community Reocreatlon Center, JI a.m.-3 p.m. ·· COUNTY FAIR lllOHWCHTS -39en Kltclten Band 2 and 8 p.m. Charley Romero and Dixieland All Stars 9 p.m. Craft on Rocks At Mo_rro Cove By JACK CHAPPELL Of .... ll•llY """-'''" A •hfoot Chris-Craft cruiser, ho I es punched in her starboard and stern, lay mired in sand today at El 'P..1orro Cove near Laguna Beach -the vestige of a disastrous Sunday for 1 Riverside quar- tet. Salvage operations were scheduled for high tide today, about 4 p.m. lo 6 p.m. i"n an attempt to pull the big cruiaer off the beach. It wu hauled up on the sand Sunday afternoon after striking rock• at Abak>De Point, just IOUth of the El Aforro trailer park area. Abernatliy Quits As Civil Rights Leader of SCLC ATLA NTA, Ga. (AP) -The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy annowiced toda y he is resigning . as presldeat of the Southern Christian Leadership Con· ference, primarily because of a lack of financial support. Abernathy headed SCLC for five years, since the assassination of Dr. P..1artin Luther King Jr., in April 1963. He was frequenUy at King's side, and he went to jail with him 17 times. Abernathy was the second president of SCLC, and after he took over following King 's death, he said, "They may kill the tirea,iner. but. they can't kill the dream.'.' · He had demonstrated many times his faith in the dream of equality and justice articulated by King. Abernathy, 47. stood willingly in the background until King was shot. to death on a motel balcony in Memphis, Tenn. Abernathy had said be had no desire to lead the movement. Calling King the symbol and the leader, he said. "I always wanted to stand with him and not ahead of him." Since King 's slaying, however, SCLC has been beset with flDBnCia l troubles. Abernathy also stood in the shadow of Coretta King, the civil rights leader"s widow, and. much of the fmancial support which would have gone to the SCLC has gone to the; _Martin Luther King Memorial Center. Santa Bru·hara 'Airplane .Crash Debris Sighted SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Seorcbers found a 'tire and chaITed paneling from a light plane that crashed in the Santa Barbara Channel with five persons aboard today, a Coast Guard spokesman said. A Coast Guard cutter reJX>rted find ing the debris 3"2 miles west ol Goleta Point, about a mlle offshore. The Piper aircraft crashed in heavy rog while making a radar landing: aproach to the Santa Barbara Municipal Airport, authorities said. The fog and low clouds hampered search efforts. The pilot wasKtenuned -?iy atrport authorities as H.R. Jones of Port Washington, NY. Identities of the passengers and the plane's ultimate destination were not known. But a Coast Guard spokesman, Ed Conlon, said the plane was believed to have set out from &an Francisco. Fog and clouds cut visibility in the San- ta Barbara Otanocl to 500-600 yards. A Coast Guard helicopter search crew was waiting for the fog and clouds to clear, Conlon Wd. The Coast Guard also sent two 82-foqt cutten, a -.root patrol boat and an aux- iliary v~l to search for the downed plane. Mesa Police Seeking Peryert Costa l\lesa police today arc on the lookout for a man in his early 30's \\'ho forced a 17-ycar"ld girl into an act of sex perversion over lhe Y:cekend and then paid her $1. 'IJ1e girl a student from Cypress, said she was picked up while hitchhiking in \Vestminster and driven to a HarbOr Boulevard parking Jot where the man reportedly forced his affections on her. She was subsequently taken to Newport Beach where Ui e man gave her the money to "buy a Coke or something" and told her to wait for ·one.half hour until he relumed with his ear. Onofl'e Patrol Nabs 190 Aliens · Border patrolmen at the San Onofre chttkix>lnt, operating a 24·hour lm· nllgr1tion check, arrt'sttd nf!arly 190 ii· legal aliens over lhe weekend. V1trolmen caught 87 aliens on Satur· dRy and another 100 on Sunday. ln ad· ditlon , t3S lmmlS!"•nt.s were arrested Fri· day. No drug trar~ w11 rtpor!ed. ' The lncrtase in arrests ls Attributed lo the contlnuou.~ operation of the check· point. a patrolman said. ) • .- Four per~~ aboard were idCQtified __ by the Orange County Harbor Depart· mcnt as Hyman Rosen, owner; Rose Ro- sen, Juljus Lalken and Frances Laiken mishap. The harbor patrol first heard of the ac- cident when a distress radio call was re- ceived from the Rosen craft. The rlrst reports were confusing, with ooe indic~ting that the craft had struck rocks off the Laguna Beach jetty. Harbor patrolmen were able ti> deter· mine the craft was off El Morro and two ~ boatl were dJspafChed.· On their arrival, the floundering craft wu found to be 2/3 full or water. · Lag1111$ Beach IUegiwds and patrol· men beached the craft after divers found . a &-Inch 1hole in the stern of the craft. During beactrlng .operations two holes \\'ere ripped in !he starboard side of the cra ft and the inside \vas .smashed by .surf. Amount of the Joss is unknown. In sal- vaging the craft, operators plan on stuff· ing large innertubes into the boat and , then inflating them. . Bui, today , the inside of the boat was cove red with about two feet of sand and a foot of water. Salvagers estimated that should she float , the boat would be about 90 percent in the water said Skip Roeser, a marine biologist. The area where the boat is beached is ringed with rocks . PRESIDENT NIXON, PAT LEAVE EL TORO FOR KANSAS CITY S.n Cl1m1nt1 Sojourn Mey Be Follo'wed by R•pe•t in Augu1t · Commission Speech ,,,...... P .. e I , Th P -1 SOJOURN ..• Mcinnis Asks at ane ·c1.sercongre .. ionalscrutlnytbanl thad 1 during· Hoover's service, which dated back to the inception of the FBI in 1924. Leave W. Newport Alone ' Nixon was returning to WashiRgton a day before the Senate Watergate com· 1nittee resumes its hearings after a Fourth of July holiday recess. -By CANDACE PEARSON ot tfll DeilY Piii! Sl1ff Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis today asked the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission to leave redevelopment in West Newport alooe. The mayor appeared before the Com· mission created by Proposition 20 at its meeting in Long Beach. The commission has denied or delayed action on a nwnber of proposed duplexes in Newport Beach, clting coocems of in· adequate parking and increased densi· lies. The city of Newport Beach requires ooe parking space per dwelling unit. The commission -which has permit juris· diction 1,000 yards inland of mean high tide lines -has faVored 2 to 1 parking. "It is not my intent to appear here to- day In an adversary condition," MClnnis told the commission. Contrary to what the commission has · been told, he said, "down zoning R·2 (multl·famlly) to aomething Jess in lha West Newport Beach area was never ad· vocated, supported or proposed." "One of your commis.\ioners," Mclnnis Soviet Wheat Deal Scored WASHINGTON (UP I) -Congressional investigato rs today blamed the massive sale of U.S. wheat to the Soviet Unkon last year for the current high price of food for Americans. but excused the ad· ministration for making the deal. 1be General Accounting Office flGAO ), the investigative arm of Congress, said that the Agriculture Department did a poor job ol arranging the sale, that large companies made excessive profits from it and that the government paid $300 million in UMecessary subsidies. said, referring to the absent Judy Ros· ener, 11recenUy called the city ridiculous and asinine. If the city asinine it must follow that the public hearing proc- ess is asinine." Commissioner R o s e n e r, a Newport ·Beach resident, is vacationing in Spain. In addition to claiming a nUmber of public hearings have already studied the West Newport .area, ?.1clnnis said it is 75 percent developed in multi-family uqits and added the d'uplexeS actually create Jess density .not more. He claimed that the older single-family residences attract ·large numbers of young adults Jiving in groups. They own. lots of cars he said, in contrast to "the new or near new units that usually at· tract fai;nilies." The commission has suggested tandem parking as a solution but Mclnnls ar· gued against it. He said parking cars iJe.. hind each other could be dangerous. "In our old part of town ," Mcln!lls con· tinued, "if two parking spaces per unit becomes the standard below grade park· ing is the inevitable result. 'lbls in Wm will allow more living space and more people density-the very thing we are all trying to prevent." The hfayOl' also claimed that public ac- cess to the ocean in Newport Beach "surpasses that provided b yany other city-of its size." He said eight million people visit Newport beaches each year . He suggested the commission should allow "low intensity redevelopment" the city wants and help the city in financing additional parking and a tramway system to the beach. "We believe the commission shou1d not lake negative steps to change the policies or the city," 1'1clnnis concluded. Also in the audience from Newport Beach were Richard Hogan., planning director; Robert Wynn, city manager; and Dennis O'Neill, city attorney. The President notified the oommittel! over the weekend that he would not testify before it' nor tum over any presidential papers. Nixon has been at the Westem Whlte Houie fOr 17 days. He came here June 22 to continue his summit talks with Soviet leader .Leonid J. Brezhnev. Flaming Hawk Starts County's First Big Blaze A hawk which flew Into a high power line-and fell-tlaming_Jg_ the ground was blamed tod.ay for starting Orange Coun- ty's largest grass and brush fire ~ the seasoo Sunday in the city of Irvine. The blaze burned more than 200 acres or Irvine Ranch cattle grazing range about 8 mile south and west of. Uon cOuntry Safari , the wild an1ma1 com· pound east of the Laguna Freeway and south of San Diego Freeway. Firemen said no cattle were injured and no structures threatened ·by the fire wtrlch started about 3 p.m. and was con· trolled at 7 p.m. Smoke from the blaze "·as visible from Turtle Rock and other sections of Irvine. Seventy fl,·e Orange County firemen with 12 pieces of equipment fought the stubbom blaze. A Costa Mesa Police Department helicopter flew over the scene spotting hot spots for lbe firemen . The blaze started at the IOUth end of Sand Canyoo Road and spreld north end "·est, away from tinder dry bnllb, an Irvine Company spokesman said. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lrol. NO-DEFROSTING Adntlro1. I REFRIGIRATOR/RIUIR ALL THESE GREAT • .......,_,.FEATURES • full Widtl'I "loollct&e" fl'ltfff" Door $1'1111 -for l"lt•nt enll1bllll)'. • 01111 Ttmptrtture Co"trolt- Mltct the rllllt t9'T!Ptf-'Utl for •ICl'I Mellon. • r.i" f'ofu11rn c111,.....-Mtp1 trvlt, wtttMlel 11rc111n ff'lln. e btn Larlt fttfripmor Oocw ----Jtoldl ....., tlll qull't ...... M ... NT 1114 Ne ir1.1fre1tlnt ,.friprttet" 1Ktien1 with Arctic Air fl-..,..,M f.r. hill •r•I• clrculatiol\,, ALL THIS $25995 FOR ONLY SLIMLINE REfR&llATlll M ... CllJI , e fllllWkftnf,...0..t • Wldt-ltante Ttm,.11""9 Cof'ltrell • lttd Vltutl Otfl"Olt·tlll'llt lndicet.' e btt9 DMp Door IMll' • fuH Width ,,_.,Mm t CNllet DrlMr 159'5 "'2. 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