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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-26 - Orange Coast PilotI • • • Nixon Holds Docunaents: Cox~ Panel Tahe Action Pa11el Acts To Obtain Nixon Tapes \Vj\SWNGTON (UPJ) -President Nixon ·refused todny to comply with sub- poenas for \Vhite House documents and tape recordings of conversations with aides about Watergate. . Both the Senate \Vatcrgate committee and speeial Watergate prose cu lo r Archibald Cox immediately started legal action to compel Nixon to comply. Nixon said he would not furnish tape iecordings of five meetings with John \V Oea'n III, his former counsel, who charg- ed in five days of testimony before !he committeee that in conversations Sept. JS, 1972 and in March, 1973, Nixon d.iscI,osed he know of the Watergate cover-up. The President said he would fumjsbJ· sOme papers sought by the subpoenas - ii more specific requests were made. "I cannot and will nol consent to give any·investigatory ·bod y private presiden- tial papers," Nixon wrote in a letter read at the start of Ole Senate committee's heiring. • •' . . ...... .. \ .~ <jl --· ' , DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 26, 1973 VOL ... , HO. 111, 4 S((TIOKS, 4f !"AGtl D1~ivii1g Ba11 Sl1ut s Dow11 2 Ag~ncies Dy GEORGE LEIDAL Of ~ Dlllf 'lllf S1.tt A five-county ban on driving by federal employes to ease a thrreitay smog crisis shut dO\\'n the two largest fl'<leral agen- cies operating in Orange County loday. The Social Security Adntinistration put on a phone recorded message telling or its closure due lo the smog ban: The Internal Revenue Service and il.S wage. price freeze information office in Orange si111ilarly \\'<lS closed. ~lean"•bile. operations al El Toro ~larine Corps Air Station continued normally with no evidence of the base's 10,000 employes failing Lo show for work, a spokesman said. ~lost of the civilian and military employes live off base. Additionally, jets continued to ny today, despite the state <ind fed eral go\·emmcnt su~gestions un- nl'cessary travel be lin1i!ed. \\'aves of bro.,..·n, cyc-huming smo~ smothered the Los An gl.'lt•s basin \'iednl.'sdar, prompting environmental of· llcifllS to put a fed eral s mog <'mer~ency plan ln!o effl1ct for !he first tln1e today. Fccll•ra l agencies 1n 11 ft\'C·county area v:ere asked 10 shut do"·n. ~lost refused. "To Ole extent that 1 have custody of other documents or information relevant to .the wo rk of the select committee, and that can properly be made public, I will ~ glad to make these available in rtfJX>nse to specific .requests." THIS IS BALBOA'S INFAMOUS WEDGE WHER E SURF NEXT TO NEWPORT HARBOR 'S WEST JETTY IS BREA1KiNG''A'{j'(, 11f:EiE'T Kotloltr Whe n You Surf the Dirty 01' Wedge on Days Like T hese, You Need Skill , Guts-and An Awful Lot of Luck The En vironmental Protection Agency put the Emergency Air Episode Plan into effect for the first lime. acting under the ::tuthority in a1nendments to the 1970 Clean Air Acl. :innouneftl ftordon E\liolt, thainnan of the federal exccut1vc board. here. . After Cox received a similar letter, he· ~.chie.LDistrict Court Judge ~ohn, f:J G Sirica to sign a show-ease order directing i•o llp the administration to tell why it should , of Eight Bathers Rescued ~ be compelled to comply with the ~b­ ~nas. Sirica did so, giVing Ole White ~e until Aug. 7 to reply. 153 Saved at Newport : .. 'The seven-member committee. , mean- tl01e, voted unanimously to instruct ~hief OOuosel Samuel Dash to carry the issue to court He will seek a declaratory judg- In San O emente From.Waves , Riptides j·!fOm-uie 1'1iarrasllrig-'fii-<11Mlrder-'-' ·' '·=' lfy-J6ilN-V AL TERLt '····' · · · ~ Nixon to comply. , 01 ~ P•llY ,11o1 s1•tt An Ontario man broke his neck and 152 ~th moves will laun ch a lega~ battle San Clemente lifeguards Wednesday other .bathers had to be pulled frorn the \vhieh legal experts expected ultimately performed what they termed .ijle • churning surf \Vednesday as Ne\\'J>Ort woqkt have to be settled. by the .~.S. roughest rescu~ so fa~ this year when Beach li feguards batlled eight to !().foot Supteme Court. ~m.e said a dec1s1on they plucked eight s':"1!l'ln-er~ from--the --strrrana-me-Slfonges1·rip!iCfCSSl> rar this coUfd be reached w1th1n three months. water near the mun1c1pal pler as the c6mmittee Cbairman..sam.J. Ervi11 (0· · group became battered by a set o( l().foot year. N.CX·) called Nixon's condition that the breakers. Curtis Pack, 34, ""'as listed in serious (See TAPES, Page 1) "It was by far the roughest one we've but stable condition at Hoag J\1cmorial had in a long time." said Capt. Phil Hospital loday \vilh broken ne c k ' ,, Stubbs. ""'ho ,during_ the resQle r~ivcd vertebrae, a damaged spine and almost ·.~d~p.~~~ ~barnacles~ the pl!-total paralysis. ' 1ngs or the'lit!r. . . ... ~ ,. "' ...... ~ifegua,¢.,J..t.,,.Logan. µickahf:y ~ Two: ol.. the eight victims required Pack u·as iojure'd 'aF a1¥>ut e·:~Ol fm . · ''See Y'ou Later;>·· I .. . .. . ' . • - J,t lligafor ! ,SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A lllC&n young crocodile is trapped in t6e men's roOm of the city lquarium after escaping from its tank. .. He's not overly friendly,·' said keeper Al Castro, .who explained ~ :tay that he "very gingcrl~' cor- raled the reptile in the meu•a room 1 ~ • and plans 10 keep hlm t~ until h~can find another home for ll r~scllatJon on the beach and one oC the when he ran out into the waves near .vi~t~J 20-year-01~ fr~n~~ Cythers or .... Jl!e~port Pier .. dove in, fl,nd hit the bot· R1ven1<1e, re<:elve<f hcispdal treatment tom. · · · -· after the harrowing.episode. Stubbs said the victims -all members of a group , which came to the b e a c h together from Riverside -entered the water before noon at the south side of t~ pier during a deceptively calm period whlt:b occUrred between sporadic sets of H . R. llALDEitlAI\' ON ST AND F R.IDA\'' hurricane-spawned surf. WASIIlNGTON !UPI) 11 . R. "By the lime they got to deeper water Haldeman. the fonner Whitt" Hoose chief the gr~,ddaddy se.t of . the day came of staff. probably will start his testimony th~gH, ~ captaiJl said. , , F riday before the Senate Watergate com- .,... ~ :l'hD..)'{hOle ~p started shouting 1100 mittee. "The surf really had nothing to do v:ith his injury," Lockabey said. ''It was ac· tually pretty calm in that sPot but he just dove in head first and nlisjudgcd the depth." Lockabey said an uni den~; fi c d beach goer pulled the unconscious 1nan 1 r. shore and called lifegua rds "ho ad - rninistered emergency first aid un til an an1bulancc arrived. · Lockabey said the surf around the pier \\·as probably about the only calm spot on the whole Ne\\·port Beach sho reline. · "\V~·had •!J4'.ltne 'Pretty rough surf and riptides al lthe way along." he said. ''I'd -..say they. \\1.ere.J.he.\\·or.st rips all year." ~lore than 78.000 people came to the beach despile dreary overcast and fog that hung on until mid-afternoon . Lockabl'y said the surf today \\'as.still high -up to sl:ii: feet -and very choi>- 1 See RIPTIDES, Pllge Z) 2 Ci ted fo r Fi re~ ..... .-1oi "'1!! si'l·foot cmc....._. )Dlk:eJ»il or his swampy sunken enclosure at Steinhart Aquarium in Golden Gate Park Monday, apparenl/y by climb- ing onto the back of a big turtle. s~Eff°mtn'"g lfc)( ~p1lltf4tl~fVJ;l.. wue.~fVi .. wbe,i J • .-~ 1-laldeman's attornt?y, hit. t ~'OUl~ say 11 was maybe nine or JO said fialdcmai;i wOOfd ~tail off bY rmctiftgt' feet h1gh:f ~ added. . . a 100-pa.gc sta tement. The reading is ex· R/\~10NA r AJ>) -T1,•:o men have. bcrn Issued misdemeanor citations after ac· cidentally Setting brush fires lhllt burned U acres. slate rort""stry spokesmen said tod<'l)f~ The "Titi.r ctesttoyed'"'<llershctl land easl of Rn1nona, along with some chickens . Stubbs said that the inshore dr1Cl was pccted to take about four hours. (See RESCUE, Page %1 • Lifeg uards Grid For Hec tic Tiin e At lluntington By JOA~!\'E RE Y~OLOS 01 lht DlilY Pllol 11111 llun!inglon Beach life guards are girding fo r a hectir \\'eekend 111 the face or the possible combinalion of a ~lexican hurricane surf and a Los Angeles heat and smog \\'a\e. llun·1cane f~milv. no\v cent<'red ahout 500 1ni1cs south of La Paz. has already generated some big but sporadic surf :ind it.~ attendant riptides 1and side currents. l.1fegu:ir<!s at ffun tington's state and rity tx>11ches S!lid they pulled 200 people fm1n the surf '\lednesda\' alone Lifeguards were ht'Sitant triday 10 prcdicl an onslaught of "killer surf'' for the ~·eekend ~ut both the state and city agencies arc planning to put extra guards on duty for lhe next three days . "If the \\'Cather gets crum1ny and the surf gOt'S down, that 'II be great.'' said l.t. P.lark Rodcnbender of the city's llarbnr~ and Beaches Department. "\\'e can al"''ays scod the ext ra men home ." He said the regular weekend contingent of guards at the city beach ~·111 be in- creased by ci~ht men to a total (If 6l. The a.J guard~ at the state run lfuntlngton nod llolsa Chica hcaches ~·ill be aidtd by ex- tra relic£ mt'n . ··on ,.,.,et>kcnds like tins one could he. the guards ure really bu!ly making rescues. so .,..r likl"" to be able to S('nd ;.i.round extrn relier men to give them 1Sec SURF, Pa ge !I Cndcr the plan. a ll fl'<leral agencies "·ere requec;ted to clo.c;e down if possible, urge essential \4-·orkcrs to use car pools and public transportafion, and limit of- ficial auto travel. Compliance is al the d1SCrC'tion of the tStt S~Jcx;, Pagr: 21 Orange Coast Weather The Orange Coast "ill have cloudy but warm \\'Cather to1nor· rO\\', extending through' the u·cek· end. There \1•ill be httle sunshine. but temperatures 11·ill be near 70 degrees. "ith inland :.irf'a lher· mometcrs clin1bing ·IG 80 degrees. L~SIDE TODAY T>espile tlie t1L te111io1t givrn. tllf' TJ1afra and Bau plades/1 slor1ej 1tt flee A1nf'r1con pres.~. /e111 1lfll1ccrl /a.~L yt.•a r wlltn 250.000 !j'('re killed i1t the 1i11y f:o~l Afru."on rn11ntr1J of H11r1111<li. DtHOils on Poae 20 todoy. L.M, llY• t (1lltln!M 1 c"'nlfltd •t.tt C:•mlc:• ,. c........ 111 Delfll NlflClt U, U l!•l'-1'1.. ..... ' E11ler11!11-' )t.ft PllYltc:I JJ-41 Ftr !tit lllK..,. U•U .,..,...,_ ,, ILSl!""k l H Allll l.•Nffn H MlviQ 1 JI-ii """"'·' """lh .. N1l!fl!IL N1w' 4·1. 1 o, .... , c-tv 1• 1¥1¥."i P'lr'lt'I" " '"'"" l).Jf Ii.di M1<llth ..... 1 T9!1v1ti.11 • TM.INP<' JMI W11tllltf • ...,_., Ht wt tS·M W9"11 Mm .. l.1 • I I ! • , ,,,_-.:Dl.;:::IL~Y_:Pl~L:D:T~~~-S~,~~~~~~T~h~"'~~~·~r,~J~'~ly~1~6~,~19~7l Ehrlichman 'Ignorant of Enemy List' FrofflPageJ SMOG •.. individual Jocnl agency ch1trs. WASlllNGTON (AP) -John D EhrUclunan tesUfied today that he neve; heard ot on ''eneml~s lirt" '~hile In the White House. 'I1:ie former chief president ial domestic adviser also said he knows ol no insta.n<:e in "1\lch White House stair members BYRNE DENIES INTEREST IN FBI POST-Story, Paga 7 received a citizen's indlvldual tai: return. although Internal Revenue S e r v i c e figures show that 915 "tax chec ks'' were sought by lhe WhJte J1ouljt last year alone. EhrUchman, in hls thtrd day of tclevis· ed test1mony before lhe S e n a t e \Vatt.11;ate committee. also said that former acting FBI Di.rector L. Patrick Gray lll was being investigated for near· Traps Us ed , Not Guns, On Coyotes Rangers and animal control officers have ruled out a mass coyote hunt at San Clemente State Park, and, instead, have setUed on a trapping program in an ef- fort to capture the animals alive. The effort. which has been continuing ror several da ys afltr A1onday's biling incident. invol ves lhe use o( humane traps in an effort to capture the animals. T1vo bites so far this month have caus- ed grave concern al the _park. Both youngsters involved in the unprovoked attacks are undergoing anli rabies in- jections as a precaution. "We have to emphasize that there ls no indication that rabies exists in animals at the park." said Pendleton Coast 1'1anager Ronald Hanschew this morning. Jfe said that he has ordered a resumir tion of last sumn1er 's program - established after a series or biting in- cidents blamed on foxes. "We're having signs brought out !o warn campers to sleep inside some type of enclousre -tents. campers or cars - instead of on the ground," 11anschew said. In aU the bites the animals have at- tacked persons either standlng quietly in dark arells or asleep in sleeping bags on the open ground. "We have been warning each camper as he enters the park ubout the problen1 as weJI,'' the manager said. A coyote hunt bad been contemplated for the park early this week, but was rul- ed out entirely because of the chance a stray shot could hit someone in or near th~ rugged facility. ''There's no reason to come in and eradicate the animals with firearms anyway," Hanschew said. "The coyotes are an integral part of the park wildlife and it would not be a good Idea to just come in and kllf them,'' Instead the animals would be trapped and placed in quarantine at the county animal shelter where orficials will study the canines for possible signs of N1bies. "Yt'e think we'll get our first one before the weekend," Hanschew said. One such animal -a coyote which has lost its fear of man -is being sought behind the San Clemente Inn where he has appeared almost daily for a handout of tablescraps. One aide at the Inn who has fed the animal often said he has been able to get the animal to ea t from his hand. NY Man Tumbles Jnto Vat of Bee r l\TEW YORK IUPI) -Herbert Rainer. ·~ 47, was cleaning a J6-by-3S-foot tank at J)iel's brewerv in Brooklyn Wednesday night. when he fell through an 18-inch hatch and into a huge \'at filled to about the. four-foot Je\·eJ "-'ith beer, authorities said. A police emergency squad removed the unconscious Rainer from the tank and 1oc:Ht him to a hospital. lfe was 1n fair condition today. OU.NGI COAST " -DAILY PILOT ri.. Ot•r'o• (OU! OAll.Y Pll.OT. wlf!o wl'llcll I• ,orl"Ol"td "'' H-ll't t$1, '' PUl>ll......, DY TM 0••"9• C~SI Pl>bll\11<"\I Cofnp.111y l ti>o "'"-"''''"'" •<t PUDl!afttlll, M<>ncl•Y 11\r""Oll ,.-,;,,.,, tot CO't!• M .... , N..._,rl •~•"· H1mt\n;tOl'I llt-Cfl FO\M!eln V1llfv, l.1o9....,.. IMQI, lrv,,,.1$.tOdl~ •"'Ill S.11 C~••I Stn J..,.n C10!1!r•"O. A, •"'vii "41-.ill ..iltilfl I• PU&l'lll«I S.1\11'11•1'1 tnd s..nu,._ fn1 p<"fM1Pll ~""'"'9 "''"' 1, II J)O Wn• 111 Sll'9ft, ,C0\11 MHt. Clrl~I•, ,,._. Rober! N. Wied P'ftoid...i 11'1d Pul:ot1.ri..- J•d1 1.. c ... r., Yk• 1"•11111..,1 t l'ld GtlMPtll Mena.v•et Tho,..11 K11wil fG"IO< l htfl!IA.I A, ~'II~'"' MIMf"'ll ""'°' Ch1,l11 H. Looi 1tieh1,id '· Nill ~ultlt~I M1 .... l119 t:d••• ""'"' C"ll ~: JJD WP!.• !Ur SI•._, H.-llO" 1191(:11: lUJ "'""'°' lowltwert L"9VM 1..0.· m Forin1 ,1,.,.,.,y, Hllf'llflti.!0 ll1«ll; 11171 11..0 llOll!t~trf ,,. .. c,_..,11i JOJ lllorlll rt C:.mlno .... T ....... 171_.1 MJ ... 121 Cl-"'M A.~ .. ''1·1671 '""' C-hl ,.,_ Mfli • L.t.-I NCll 4tJ-44JI ' -Mtrlfl er.._. C-'Y C.-11111 l-40-IUt c.,.,.•!tf"I, on. or....,. C.." l'IAoff"""" c ........ , Ht _, ,,...In, ll'hlllrl"-"'• fdlllrlel .... ""'" ., ........ ~ ~ ""'r .. ,.....,llC:fll' wl"-4 •PK'-1 _. l'llUIM • <OCl"l'l"llht 0-. -..... 1;19 ...... , ..... w ,, ,,_,, ~·. Ct11flllt"IMo. ~-. IPw tlfl'llf n ~ -i111y1 .,, _,. u 11 l!Wtllllll'fl "'"".,., •lflMn.rt. ti.~ 11*1 .. t,. ly two weeks before his resignn1ion v.as forced by public disclosure that he dt!Stroyed dOCWJl(!nls taken from tht sare of E. Howard llunt. :i Watergate tvn· spirator. And he snid lh!'.! "plumbers'' unit 1n· \•est1gut1on of O<tni{·l f:Usberg, \1 hich rcsultl>d rn the burglar.\• of h i s psychi(Hrist·s officl' by \Vlu!l' liousc agents, wus undertaken to s:itillfy ))resi- dent Nixon's demand that 1he Pt.'fttagon PapeNi leaki be plugged. Sen. JOS<'ph At A10111oya (D-N.1\1. ), a.sked Ehrlichman aOOut the S<Ka/led "('ncrnics list" which ousted White l~ouse roonstl John \V. Deaw I U said was kept in tht \Yhite !louse. Dean said tax audits and FBI invest igations were sought again.st some persons on the list to harass them. ~ New Bow Tie? "Could you throw some llght oo the gcncsl!s of the enemies list?" 1'1ontoya askl·d. "No sir," Ehrlichman replied. "I don't rt'{'<lll ever having heard l:lbout II ." lie snld be .spoke to former prtsldentlat ehicf of staff I(. It lla ldcman about the JluHter ~fter Dean's testimony, but said lhat wa.'I !he first time he heard of it. Ehrllchman also denit'tl hearing of any requests by \Vhite llouse stall 1nembers to see individual t.ax returns. Montoya then read [RS statistics showlng the \Vhile House asked for 477 ''tax checks" in the first half of la!t year and 438 ln the last half. "You 're talking about apples and oranges." Ehrlichman said. li e said a "tax check" is carried out by IRS staff members 'ol.'ho review in- Not this one. Todd 1i1orey of DeKalb, Ill, learned first-hand that a butterfly on the nose tickles. He raised butterflies this summer and was teaching this A1onarch to fly when it found its perch. Ah-choo. Frono Page 1 SURF ... more rest," a state lifeguard spok esman said. The uncertainty over weekend surr conditions hinges on Emily's next move. At the moment her winds have been me as ured in the 90 to 100 mph velocity \l'hich is a dec rease from the 120 to 140 rr.ph they were clocked at earlier this "'ee k. Weathermen say, however, that i£ she starts for land, her winds will pick up and if that happens . .the surf wiU likely get big and stay that way !Or a few days. Lifeguards said the surf this morning, like \\'ednesday 1norning, has been sporadic. with fi ve to eight-foot sets com- ing through ''about 15 minutes apart." \Vcdnesdav nfternoon. howcvcr. con- ditions stabi.lizcd and the big scl.S "'ere prefly consistent. "Even y,•ith the sporad ic conditions. \\'e hq\"e bad rip Hdes and side currents," Boclenbender i;aid. The guards speculated that if thr surf holds steady this afternoon and if it is big Friday morning, !hen tlwy're probably ln for .1 11·cekend !'i('l:(C. "\Ve ~ct this big surf and then a heat \\':'H'C \\"it h about 60.000 people on 1·hc beach and thal's y,·hen we really get bu~~ ... the city lifeguard said. "~or1nal!v mosl of them wouldn't go in \\"tth those kinds of conditions. but it gets hot and they wane to root off and that's y,·hJt keeps us busy." he added. ' ).{ ";,? Fron• Poge 1 RIPTIDES ... py dui> to ~ui;ty \Yinds out of the south . Ht" s;Jid the i;urf moot likely 1\·ill con- tinue to rise todav and last into the wi'.-ekC'nd because Or the sw('l!S being generated by Jlurlicane Emily off the Ba ja C11lifornia co:ist. '"\\'e <1r1• kind of ex!)('ct1ng n1ore h<'avy !lurf tod~y nnd I'm sure the bad rlptld<'S will Still be lht•rr ," l.ockabey said, 11arn· Ing y,·cak S1\•1mmrrs lo 5tay out of the \\'atcr. Senate Okays 0 11ina \\"AS~ll:"\GTO\ 1i\l11 -The Senate t<>- da~ l'Qnf1rmrd tile nomination of .John B. Ottin11 or 1..os: An~t>les. to be a rom- n1iss,oner of ('duca t1on Ollina 1s !o suc- c<.'f'd ~idney P. At:irl11nd Jr. a~ he-ad of th(' L S Office of Edu<:nlion Ice Pick Killer 01t Probation A "-'ornan booked on murder charges after using an ice pick to kill her husband in a New Year's Eve fracas at their Santa Ana home has been placed on three years probation in Orange County Superior Court . Judge Kenneth \Villiams ordered the probation lerm and no jail time after Effie Willcock Machandcr, 68. pleaded guilty to reduced charges of involuntary manslaughter in the slaying of her 71-year-old husband. Police said I\1rs. Machander told them that her actions were in self defense and that her husband \\'as an a!Coholic \\'ho t\ad rcpei1tcdly at· larked her over minor disputes. Fro111 Page 1 RESCUE ... sc1·ere at the liine -about s1:.. knots - and began carrying eiRhl v!ctirns and five lif('gu:irds \01\·ard !he pier pili ngs. All the \littims 1\·erc tnkcn through the pirr hazard during the set and theu brought lo shore on the north side. 1\l1ss Cyt hers and an unidentified co1n- pan1on both rl'Ct'ived rtsuscitatlon oo the bC'arh nnd a city fire department am· bulance took the young \\'Oman to San Clcn1cnte General Hospital. There. the ""·oman v.•as trealc<l for shock and !hen rc!C:tsed. ""She 1\·as all'fully upset ant.l had Sl''i:lllo"cd a heck of a lot of "'atcr. ·• <• nurse said. Stubbs said lhnt in a.II. the hea\)' surf \rednesday sparked t\\·o-dolf;!:n rescues find he forecast a stiffer slcgc. of suri to- day. "l.~1 ·s hope the su rf dies do1vn by lhe "l'f'kcnd or \\C 'll r~nlly have trouble .'' he S:tid. A combination of factors at mid""·cek is mukin.'[ the si tuation esp e c 1 n 11 _v dangerous Thick c<>11:11nl fog. 100 scvrrc crr,!iS- t1rifl and the unpred1clabl<' appearanre of 1tie large S<"ls all make for hozardou! bathing :inrl surfing. hf said. "The srls might 1101 show for ma)'bt 10 minu1e~ thf'fl they hit all of a sudden lnstt'ad nf 1hrec "'R\'l'S to a §ti. l'e'rc 1;ct11nR 11s much as 10 in a rapid !--<'- quencc. That means .th:it s"'1m1n1~rs i:un out of nir and strength \'Cf)' qulckly," !ubbs !ill1d. formation about the persoo in question lo "What 'ol.'lll there ' to in\•estlgate"?" see if they have any problems ..,.,·ith Welcker asked. federill tax colleclorll. EhrUdunan said Nixon dldo't want to act hastily. Ehrlichman said the reason this is done Wtlcker then said thal when Gray, a is tq insure that persons being considered a personal friend, told him about the mat- for presidentinl appclntments have no ter JO days later, on April "· he im· ongoing quarrel with the IRS. He said the n1t.-dlately leaked the !ilOry to new!! \Vhilt Hou5e receives only a repnrt on 1nedla. The story was front -page news y,·hether such problcots t!Xlsl, not the raw April 27. Gray resigned the same day, income·tax returns. citing the news reports. Sen. IA>Wl'll J>, Weicker Jr. (R-O>nn.), --.Llln no wise did it occur to me that thls asked Ehrlichmnn what Nixon did after ~·as something that could be left unat· he learned April 15 that acting FBf chief tended to ," Welcker said. Gray destroyed. papers taThn rrom He said it was obvious to him Gray had llunt's sa fe and gi\•cn to hlm by Dean to leave. and Ehrlichman. "The President notified the chief law Ehrlichman said Ni.ion immediately enforcement officer and you notified the ordered that then Ally. Gen. Jtichard G. newspapers," Ehrlichman said. "It's two Kleindienst and Asst. Atty. Gen. Henry different approaches lo the same prof>. E. Petersen investigate the matter. Jem." U.S. Vetoes Resolution On Israelis UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP ) -The United States cast its fifth velo in U.N, history today to kill a Security Council resolution strongly deploring Jsrael's failure to withdraw from territory won in lhe 1967 "'ar. The \"Ole "'as 13 to I in favor of the eight-power resolution that also ex- pressed "serious concern at Israel's lack of cooperation'~ with Gunnar V. Jarring of Sweden, the U.N. secretary-general's special representati ve on the Atidd!c East. . A negative vote by one of the five permanent members of the IS-m ember council nullifies a resolution approved by a majority of nine or more. China did not vote, saying it \YO uld not participate. The veto \\'35 Ambassador John A. S<:ali's third since he took over as hea d of the U.S. mi ssion la st February. It climaxed the council's first com- prehensive debate on the Middle East since the 1967 war. The debate, held at the request of Eg yp t, was spread over seven weeks with a break for the meeting bety,·een President Nixon aii.d Soviet leader Leonid J. Brezhnev. The resoluti!)ll was Introduced Wednes· day by the eight nonaligned countries on the council -Yugoslavia, India, Indonesia. Panama. Peru, Guinea, Kenya and Sudan -acting as a group for the first time.. The resolution asked Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who is planning avisit to Egypt, Israel and Jordan in late August, and JaITing to resume efforts for a h-iiddle East solution. Scali did not object to that. But be refused to accept parts of" the resolution (l) deploring Israel's conlin~g oc- cupation of the territories it seized in the 1967 war. (2) calling for "the rights and legitimate aspirations oE the Palestin- ians" to be an element in any set· Uement and (3) supporting a 1971 memorandwn from Jarring calling for an Israeli pledge to withdraw from all occupied territory. H.untingion Sued By Irate Woman A woman who claims an unidentified Huntington Beach policeman disclocaled her left shoulder when he allegedly grabbed her by the wrist and lhn:!w her to the floor wants $500,000 in damages from the city. Tumama ~oajliff'Jes the city of Hun- tington Beach and"Pblice Chief Earle \V. Robitaille as co-defendants in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit. She clai1ns the incident that lert her with serious injuri('S occurred last F'eb. 14 y,•hen she was arrested on shoplifting charges. Those charges were unjustified ;ind \Vere disn1issed last !\lay 9, she adds. Not Guilty Meyer Lansky, 71, reputed un- derworld financial wizard, has been acquitted in ~Iiami by a federal court jury on income tax evasion charges. (See story, Page 5.) 'Man Facing Trial For Having Room 1 With Girl, 16 SCARAll!ENTO (AP) -A Phoenix man has been ordered to return lo court next Wednesday to face charges of con- tributing to the deliquency of a "very young looking" 16-year-cld girl. the di s· trict. attorney's office said today. Jack Rufus Crawford, 32, who said he was the executive director of the Global Jntematlonal Employment Agency, Was released on ~15 bail Wednesday, ac- cording to William Muir. a consumer fraud attorney for the county. Crawford and the girl arrived here Ju- ly 19 and stayed for five days in the same motel room which was the basis for the delinquency charge, Muir said. "She looked 16. She was very yrung looking. They registered as Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crawford," Muir said. "This was supposedly done for con- venience's sake, but Crawford put himself in jeopardy" under the law by ob- taining the same room , MWr said. ' The girl \\'as pla ced Wednesday on a plane to Phoenix arter her mother COil· !acted Sacramento authorities. Muir said. Her identity was withheld because of her age. Crawford also faces two mlsdemeanor charges that he failed to obtain the necessary business license to interview job app!Jcants in Sacramento County and that he (ailed to register Global lnterna- lional's name \\ith the county clerk, l\tuir said. 'lbe federal plan covers Orange, Los Angeles, San Bernardino. JUvenkfe and Ventura counties, an area populated by 10 miUlon persons. Only the lntemal Revenue Service and Social Security Administration SA.id th~· would shut down the ir offices for the da} The FBI . Post Office. federal courts. U.S. Afarstwl"s office. and others said they would remain Op<.'n. The federal Drug Abuse Taak Force said agenl10 would work. but clerical personnel would be given th e day off. Gov. Ronald Reagan ordered all state agencies to halt use of stale owntd vehicles. except for emergency purposH. in dov.·ntown Los Angeles, eastern Los Angeles county and Riverside and San .Bernardino counties. The Los Angeles Air Pollution Control District called for ozone readings from .25 to .50 parts per million of air today . The .50 level is the point at which a firA;t stage alert is called. When reached all driving in the Los Angeles basin is sup· posed to be curtailed. Meanwhile, the higheSt smog readings in Orange Counly ""'ere .30 ppm in La Habra WedneSday. A .29 ozone reading \\•as Jogged in Anaheim. Causing the smog accumulation is a temperature inversion "lid '' over th e Los Angeles Basin \.\.'hich the national weather service sa)'S is not expected to break up until Frid:iy. Again today, inland cilles of Orange County were expected to experience the highest ozone readings. The county forecast is .25 parts per million oxidants, the APCD said. That's an expected level hig h enough 10 request industry to forego any burning of \\'astes and to urge i;votorists to curtail driving. the CoUntY APCD engineer repeated today. From Page .I TAPES ... panel spe<:ify exactly \\'hich documents it wants "an impossibility." "\Ve're not clairvoyants," he fumed. He said the committee did not know \\'hat papers Nixofl had, and therefore could not possibly ask for them in- dividually. Nixon, in hls Jetter to Erl'in. s;:iid. ··vou "'ill understand . I am sure, U1at it v.·ill si mply not be feasible for my staff and me to review thousands of documenls lo decide \\'hieh do and \\'hich do not fit \\'ilhin the sweeping but \'ague terms of the subpoena." The motion to send Dash lo eourt 'vas made by Republican Scn-.Ho1vard 11. Baker Jr. of ·rennessce, the \'JtC chairman. It carried on a vote of 6-0. Sen. Hennan E. Talmadge , {D-Ga.), at· tending a conference on the farm bill. later telephoned his affirmative vote to the committee to make it unanimous. At the \Vhite flousc, deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren told reporters: "The President 'is very COO· fident of his 'constitutional position as outlined in the letters and the President rully expects his position to be upheld in the courts. Of course the President, as in any other matter, would abide by H • definitive decision of the highest court." This carefully prepared statement in- dicated Nixon. loo , expected the issue lo reach the hig'.hest court. The subpoenas for the White House documents were the first issued Lo a President in 166 years. Tilomas Jefferson \\•as subpoenaed in 1809 to appear at the treason trial of Aaron Burr, his old political enemy. Jef- ferson did not appear, but satisfied the request by subn1itting letters he had v.Titten. Fire Burns Truck O!\KLAND (AP I -A Ure damaged a pickup truck parked on the strike-idled Bay Area Rapid Transit system tracks \Vednesday night, police said. Oakland firemen. \\'ho at first rePol;.ted the damaged vehicle \\'as a lest c'ar, said they \\·ere checking reports an explosion \vas heard seconds before the fire . NeW!Gen.al Beclric's i I I I I -----, General Electric s37991 BEST BUY DISH WASHER f!1 Phone 5~~-7788 1015 NE\'IPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA u \\'i an bo \\'e th in ho fo w pu fa cd \\'i .. tr so da kl H fa R IC to F a 0 r lh r F a s s h r I 0 W.L. White, Journalist, Dies at 73 ·Ef\IPORIA, Kan . IAP~ -\Villiam Undsay Vlhite, global reporter, author and publisher of the Emporia Gazette, died today at a local hospi tal v.•here he "'as being treatl"'d for cancer. lie \\'&S 73. \Vhite v.•as the son of \Villiam Allen \Vhite. lhe "Sage of Emporia." v.'ho v.·on a Puli12cr Prize in 1923 for editorials in the Gazelle. The school of joumalis1n ut the University of Kansas is named for the father. \V illiam L. \Vhile is survived by his \.\idow, the former Kathrine Klinkenberg. and daughter. 1\lrs. Paul David \Valker. both of Emporia . Funeral arrang:emcnls \\'ere incomplet<'. While learned in r\e\V York that he hall the disease just before his 72nd birthday in June 1972. Years before, he described how his famous fatber waited out death for three mont~ in 1944. \Villiam L. \Vhite had already chosen \Valker. his son-in-la\\'. as 'assistant publisher of the Gazette to preserve the family tradition. As the \\lilliu1n Allen \Vhile byline r;1d- ed Yiilh a disappearing generation. the Vlilliam L. While byline \\'Cnt around the y,·orld on wa r stories and broadcasts. lravel reports and a dozen books . The son gained fame as a broadcaster and dabbled· in politics -but preferred to be known as a newspapennan. for 10 rears after graduating froin H<irvard, \V. L. \Vhite y,·orked 'oVith his fathe r on the Gazette. He beca1ne counly ltepublican chairman and y,·on a ty,·o-year term as a state representative in 1930. In 1934, "Young Bill" left the Gazette to \\'Ork for the \Vashington Post and FortWle magazine in what he described as "five years of flounde ring." lie headed for Europe in 1939 at the outbreak of \Vorld \\1ar II. as cor- respondent for 40 daily ney,·spapers <1nd the Columbia Broadcasting System. His radio reports on Russia's invasion of Finland brought quick fa1ne and a broad· cast rrom the ro.tanncrheim line on Christtnas of 1939 was cited by the Na- tional lfeadliners Club as the best Euro- pean broadcast or the year. \Vhite's first book was a novel based on a Kansas bond scandal, "\\1hat People Said.'' published in 19.18. His fi rst best seller. in 1942. was "They Were Ex- pendable.'' concerning the P·T boat heroes of the early \Vorld \Var JJ fighting in the Philippines. It's 'Mission: l 1nprobable' LOS ANGELES IUPI) -All those references before the Senate \Vatergate Cominittee and elsewhere to the ac- tiv!lies of the \Vhite Hou se·s clandestine operatives as "~fission : Impossible·· operations ha ve provoked Bruce Geller. Geller was for four years exeCutive producer or the television series by the name. which featured intricate plots that suet.reeded by dint of meticulous planning. ~rnagination, skill and daring. "I object to the comparison of such a slipshod and apparently dubious 1.v rnotivotcd caper to the film s I made," Ge ller said. l1tdia1ts itt Protest American Indian Movement leaders Russell !\leans (left) and Dennis Banks (right, seated) clain1 that In- dians ca n not worship as they please after lawmen forced thc111 to rnove their s un dance fron1 ('r<11y l-lorse monun1ent back lo the reservalion. Divers Probe Andrea Doria Seeking $2 Million • Ul J'£1luables on Sunken Vessel FAIRHAVEN, !\'lass. <UPI ! -Their l2·1oot by 5-foot habit.al ":Mother" in place. t\\"O former Navy frogmen from San Diego hoped to descend to !he ocean liner Andrea Doria today and cut into lhe sunken vessel in a search for an estimated $2 million in cash and other valuables. The habitat, a living chamber 1rhich 1rill sustain !he divcrSt. for up to t110 1\·ceks. ~'as lo11•e red into place \\'cdncs- day and attochcd 10 the \"CSsel y,·hich sank 17 years ago lo the day. July 2.l. 1%5. The di\"crs. Donald H0<lockcr. 27. and Christopher Delucchi. 22. d es i g n c d "filothcr" so lhey could use a new le<'h· niquc of ··saturation diving'" and stay Nixon Appoii1ts Successo1~ To Ri1ckelsl1aus at EPA \\'ASHlNGTON 1A P 1 -President Nix- on announced today he is nominating Russell E. Train to be administrator of the Environrnent~1\ Protection Agency. He will succeed \\'il\iam D. Ruckclshaus \\"ho is being nominated to be de!Juty at· lOrncy general. Train. thairn1an of the Counc il on Evironn1ental Qul'lli1y, 11'ould take ovrr dirf<:tion of EPA from Rober! E. Fri '''ho hr.s held the pos1 on an acling basis since Huckclshaus t"C'Si~ncd April 30 !o become acting director of the federal Bureau of Jn1·esligation. . As rlcµuty a!torney g e fie r a ! . Ruckelshaus "·ould 'sueccP,.J Joseph T. Sneed. noininated \Vedncsday by Nixon to be a judge of the U.S. ~h Ci rcuit Court of Appeals. Ruckelshaus. 41. \1·as EPA nd- n1inistralor trom the agcncy·s founding in J9i0 until he n1ovcd tc1nporarily lo the FBI folloy,·ing the r<'signarion of :1cting director L. Patrick Gray Ill. Before going to EPA Ruckclshaus had been assi~:tant attorney general in charge or the Justice Dcpartn1cn\"s Ci\"il Division. Train. undersecretary of the Interior in the early years of the Nixon ad - 1ninistrotion. bcca1nc chainnan or he Council on Environmentnl Qu;ility when th at group was established early in 1970. Train. 53. 11"as associatC'd 1\·ith ("t)ll· s1·rvation causes before joining the Nixon <idminislratinn. Airport Homes Sot111<lproofin~ Asked by Board undcry,·atcr for days at a 111111-. eliminating previous dccornprcssion t1rnc Ji1nits. Crc1v mc1nbcrs 1\·erc to lo1rcr a sea rlevator today 11hich 11ill be ust!d to send food and other supplies to the habitat. l\1cmbers of the salvnge crew s1:1id 11011 that the habi!ol is in pince \\Cather should not be ;1 factor in recovery oµcra- lions. The habitat \\'as pul in place and !lie surface ship Narragansc!t nioorcd !u the 1\ndrea Doria during !ht' pasl !1111 Gays under \Vhat ere1rmcn described <1S µcrfl·CI '.leather and sea conditions. The habitat. 11·hich 11C'igh.<; It ions, 1~ attac;hcct to !he ship sonic 2~() h·1·! l>l'neath the surface. tt"s not kno"·n 1,1•hcn Rodocker and l>clucchi ll'ilt begin actual ~n lvagc ;!1- temp1s. although an uide said \Vednc~­ day. ··once they get do"'" 1hcrl' !he.v t:111 bci::in 11·ork imn1cdiarcly. rcg;1rdlcss tif 11hc1 her il·s day or night." The rcco\"try of money an<l valuablL·s 1s e:(p1.-c1cd 10 crl·atr si,rne legal tanglr~. Clnc attorney s;1id mari!nnc l:1w t'le;1r!y indica\es that the Italian line 11hich 011ns 1he ship. or the undcr11ritcr. has ull ·rights to the 1·cssel y,·hile t11le on tht.• trcnsurc remains 11·1th the oy,·ners and in- dividua l passengers. Ru1 lilt• ;lttorn1~1" ;iddt·d that c11ur1 s reN)g:nitl' ;1 ~nl\·age clu1rg1· ;1 n d sµL•e ul;11 c:d a fee could r11n 50 l>Cl"CC'nt or lllOri'. 'l'ht• lu.-.:ur~· lin<'r snnk af1cr rol!1cllng \11th 1hc S\\•cdish ship Slockholm in heavy fo~ about 45 r111les ofr Nantucket lslrind. Fift.l"--Onc pcr ... ons ditd and 1.661 11l"re rescuC"d. s OAJL V PILOT ;J Casi•ers' Co111u1ittee Recall Backers Await Results U) J ,\"\ \\OHTll 01 "'• 0•oty l'llal 11•11 ~11 .. l!111Jl \'111Jo pr11()11111·11tll f.,r !ht' n •1all ol Fifth ll1stn<·t S11111·r1L;-.•1r H1111;1!d {";1s1x:r .. d1•1·Hll'1l \\'i>tllll'll!la1 111 {'n11I ott ullltl !ht· rl'~u11,. o! ,1 11~·11 1011u111lh.'i· .su r'frit·t· (.:a!>l~'I";-. .111puu1ti·d ,1 111111· llll'1nl,.•1 ~n)1tp. <'h.11r1'(\ 111 ll.1 rt S1:11:11dlt11t•. 111111 distnl'I pl;u1111ng 1·1•llll1lh~1u111·r . tu 511H.I~ h:1rr1t"ad1ui,: 11! rhr1·1· :-lrl't·ts 111 ~l1;-. ... 1t1n V1c10 'l'hc 1111111!!1 u!cl t·lo:-urrs 11;11 ,. 1rl,,1·1I 1·1·s1d1·nt' 111 !111· ;1r1·a 11l1~J , la1111 .. d 1n- t:n:aS1.'ll ~llfl.'l~ 11 <1:-aL·l11c1 L'<I on the l·lc" 1•1t str1·1:'1:; al llil' (·ust of ht•1gl1h·n1·d 11·.11 fie 1iru blt•111' "n 1h1· rt·1u;11rung 01)t'n Olll'S 'rht·.\ ;11111ounl'L'1l 1h1·1r 1nlt'nl ~lond.:1~ t .. bt•i.:in r·t·tall pn1t•1·t•d1ni.: .. ;1ga1nst Casflt_'rs. 11·ho they s"<11d ·nu k111gl'r reprt'Senl~ lhl' lll"oplt·'· and ""(hll.'~n·! Sl'L'lll tu l'nn· II l~,lt happ1.•IL"i Ji(•rt• .. .. Ir 1h 1s g··~(Ul"l' ts tur n·~1I and 11 Cuspers rl'aH~ i .. going 1(1 do ... 1rnt•1lung for U.S. \It• 11111 hold Off tlll 1n1!1;1t1ng !ht• rec;ill. .. !)1anl' Sha11•r. u111: ot Ilic lcadcr:- of the r1•call 1>ush. said today un h;arnrng of the eQrnniiuec being: (nrn11'<L ·ruin Fu1•1Ht:s. cxt•t·ur1ve a~sist:1n1 1" l"a~pcrs. s.ud l1.1tlay h1· fell resldenl ' ha\"(' had !H;\n~· npportuniliL'S lo eo111- 1nuniC"i•lt.• "Ith thf' s111x.·1v1sor. Sornt lit· said 11·l.'rc 1nadcqu.1tel~ publ1e1zcd by 1h1· press T1\o public hcnr1ngs were held prior 111 t·rcct1un of !ht• blockades at 11·hich 50 t"l'SLdCnts urged closure of ro.1ontilla L;1n\" in Sl)l!Cific. TI1e~ said lhl·1r streets y,•crc being used as Spl<cd~·ays l.ly n1oturists seeking shorteuts In school-. and hus1nl'SSCS on [_.;1 1'n1. Hoad fron1 Jeronimo J{u:1(t. Fuentes ru.lcled that Caspers hall personally (•."1:;11n1ned thc strccl situation and sent his rcprcscntr1tivcs sev1•ral tunes to l<dk \\L1h both sides in the t.11:.:igrt•t·nll'n\. 1\ Caspers aide, .Jack Gwso. "ill ser\·c }i 011 Couul Be Circ11s Winner Tht· r:1re11~ 1s tn1n111:.? !o Orangl' (nun11 and 11h;it 1ha1 1nc;111s to so1nl" luckv 1);11lv 1'1!01 rl.'adrr.., 1~ frrt.· 1Lc~t·I~ for Oix•111ni; n1i.:h1. Cour!1·sy of !he Daily Pilot. In ?act. 1ou eou ld alreadr be a winnt·r. Srar11n~ 10da~·. 111nners arc hs!cd (and 1\1ll bl' h~trd Uiuly 1hrougl1 Aug fil 111 "fll'ci:1I .. ad~ .. sc11t1ered throughout !ht· class1f1t'd ;1clver1Ls1ng pagl'S of 1ht' nt.•\\spapt·t Look for ·.our 11arnr tod:11" and c1 "r1· rlay <•I th1• C:ontcst in'i1dc rhC IJ;U!) P1 1Ut Cl;1s~if1t•1! A<l1 ('r! i~lllf.: :..C<:lion AFB \!av llouor ;\cc IJ.>Cl\BOrn:-.:E A!H ronr~: BASr:. Ohio 1,\1'1 -(Jfficinls at LockOOurnl.' ,\fll ~;11 1ht·1 hal"(' bl.'cn a'k1·rl !o change th1.· h;•s'e·, rinnit 1o the Eddle Ritkl"n- h:1ek1'r 1\FB to honor thl.' \Vorld \\";ir I h,.1·0 :ind CAilun1bus. Ohio na!J\"1· 11ho died this week <ii the a_ge of 82. fltp San1 Devi ne i H-Ohiu1 introduced a hill calling lnr 1he n:unt (·h:111gC'. llll !he IU!lltllll!t't' ll\u t Hl/t"ll' "ll t'.:J/'h ,1d1· 11f rh,, 111 ... pu11 v.111 .1 h11 h .1µ1••11!11 rl~ .. u~h l•\u•i\lt·~ .'11 111 JI .\I·" 1111! \("1 1·1 ·1 l.1111 "hu lho'-t' 11oul U l11.· t llh1-r lllt'IUl)l t.. \\tit llH hut.· (";111 \1 ·]..,•11. 111u11\\ flo .. )(f t •in!r••l 111;.!l!h'l'f " tl·µrc,1•11!.1!111• 11f lh•· ~uldll•li.11·!,, \11 1 l"1~•rrlu1:111ng ( <•t1111 ·il ;11u! \I 11 r r ,1 \ S1on11 ;1;-.,1~!;1111 10.11! ln1u1111~,11·l1•,. 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Jlltlgt' rult'd \\"l'dn1·"1'.L1v that 4:1 nit·n1l11•1.<; of all «lt·n1(·n1ary graitu.11 111).! l'li1's 1n11<;t ~uhn111 lo l111i.:1·rpnn1111g 11 .. ·e;1u"· a c/;1:;" ring 11 :, .. f1~unrl at :1 n1<11'd1·r ~111· :\ grc1t1p nf p:1n·11t s ~11d !ht·1 11oultl ;1,k lhl' l·: ... ~1·\; <lountv puhtf.· dl'lt·nd1•r's of11t1· today ln ~hu·ld 1h1·1n Jr(ff'n 1ht• 11rt!1·r And. 111 tht' stah· ('Our1 .... .Jud~e Al:1n R llaudlt•r of !he ,\ppc·lt11,· ll1vi,11u1 Tu•'' day i"sued ;i rt·:-1ra1n1ng ord1·r !o !'lop !II•· (in~crpr11111ng or !.) lllf'mht·r .. of th·· gr:1duat1ng clai,s or ;\f11rt1n Lulh1·r l\inl! Jr EIL·n1tnl;iry !'lchoot L'.S D1 !>!rie1 .Jud~1· \"1ncc·nt I' B11111nr1 ~aid ht• 11outd l"Slll.' 11-0 r1·stra1n1ng ordrr to µre1ent lhl.' f1ng1·rpnn11ni.: ht'Cau~1· rh•· ;1ttornt"\' rc·prt"senllng the l"hddrcn frt1lf'1\ tu -'h<HI JI 11;1~ unr1•;1..;on:ihl1· 1·n1111t 1·1 u11111· tl1·!e1·r1 11·, 11l\'l'\11g.1r1r1:.! lh1· 1n11rtlt r of .Juhn (,;1l;1....sv. li.1. :iskerl for such an order and r1·cc11t'<f 1t from ~ ~1a1r cuurl. 1;ala<..so 11;,i, found 't:ihlx..'<l 10 deJth 111 E!11,;1hcth. r-: .J .runt· :!I ,\ el.1~~ r111g 1.f onr nf thv "111dl'lll~ rvpc1rlt·dl>' 11 :ls fou11d lll"!l t· lht• hod~ All)t·r1 1-'oH.1·"· 1,1hos{" I l·~i>:1r-o!d "Vil 1• :1 rnl'1n l1<..·r of thr l·l;1~'-,;11d 1hl' 1r1r1·n1~ of 2~ ch1ldr1·n m<'t :11 !he ~chool \\"r<lne<.· dfly :ind UllHl\UllOUSly dN:1dt•d lo ;1sk thc puhl1t· tl(•f1•nrl1·r"s olfh·~· t0<!:1\ 10 111- cluclt· ;ill thl' children und1..·r TUcsd;1 J , rt·,tr:ii111na ordl"r Orange County aiqx:irt com1nissiont'rS have rccomm('nded that a 1rac1 of ~67 single-family homes in El Toro be "ound attenuated and potential buyers be 11<irn- ert of noise problems. The dc\"clopn1cn1 at El ·rorn :ind Trabuco Roads is plnnncd by i\11-Crafl Homes of Irvine. luxurious S/Jri1ig· doivn and f ecitl1er sofas_ ... The commission. an advisory body to the countv Bo<ird of Sup<.'rvisors. rccom· rnCndcd the projrcl he approved. subject to the two conditions. The si tr. 2.:i miles southeast of ;\larinri Corps Air Stntion a1 El 1'oro. is subjecl to ovcrflii:i;hl s. although it is outside D 1najor noise i1npact zone . Con1n1iss1oncrs s aid construction should insu re interior noise in inh nbitnlilt.• roo1ns doesn ·1 exceed 45 dbn ~decibels 1. 1'hey also s:iid the Stair Real t:st<1h• Commission should inscr1 a \\'arning 111 lhc public su hdivision rt.•\)()r! 1hat ffi i;i:hl 1nay di sturb outdoor eon\crs:J11on"i Man Convittcd Of M1u·<ler Rap RED\\1000 CITY 1AP1 -Edward \\".I Posadn has been con\"icted of firsl-dcgrrc 1nurder in the sl;:iying of his es lranged l y,•ife's bos.'\ Inst 1\0\'embcr A San Mnteo County Superior Court I jury dclibcra1ed jus1 13 minutes \Vednes- day before handing ils verdiC1. I Posada, 36. was churgL"I 1vith 1nurdcr- in,r: Pellegrino J . Pellci:trini. an elec- tronics finn executive. Posada's formcr1 1 11 lf C\\"as Pcllegrini's secretary. Salc llitc LannC'hc d I • These h6ndsome sofas were designed to g;ve you the ultimdte in sedting comfort with down dnd fedther bdck pillows, deep spring \c"t cushions enveloped in down .ind feathers and two dacron· iitled "'m p illows. Choose from d wide selection of fine i,,brics ti nd si1es. .,.,,,..,,. ·'' 1·/(',; /11 1·/11111 s1• f r11111 II II ff 499. ~·}r.ii9l··· ';JV~ Frietad of 'Fai11,il11' ' The guest al Los Angeles hlayor Tom Bradley's S150·a-plate c.llnncr who·s cn1bracing the host (top) tun1s out to be Carroll O'Connor. who plays the bigoted Archie Bunker in TV'!i "All in the Family '' series Funds rro1n the dinner will be used to pay Bradley's campaign debts. f\.10SCO\V (API -The So\•irt Cnionj lnunchcd the Sii1h e11rth sa1rllitc in its top-sttrct Cosmos series \Vedncsd:1~·. !he ~vie! oeY.'ll sgenry Tas~ said Cosrnos l has been used A!i a co1·er name for a \\Ide rangr {Jf So\ 1et ~pa<:c 1n1ss1on'\. fron1 collection of routine \l t'l'llhrr dn1a.J 10 ecri11I sun ·clllanct. to ltsts of frac· tional orbital bombs PROFESSIONAL ODC!n i'Vton ~"'R=l=O=R=D=E=S::l::G::N=E=R=S==T00hu::r::s.=&=F=ri=E=v=r::' =--C..:O::ST=A=M::E::S.::~=, =C.:iAl:'.L(ll F ~~ ~~ ·~· Lee Marvin Rocl{ets Strike Heart of Phnom Penh 'Divorce' Epic Case LOS ANGELES (AP) -\\rht!n the case of Miehe.lie Marvin vs. Lee Manin com. & to trial this fall , It win r.w.l..e a pro- f.ocative legal ques tion posed by Miss Marvin's altomey --lhouki there be divorce without marrbge~ In the frec·\.\·hecling tilmland caphal of 1he "serial marriage syndrome ." lbe proposal doesn't Sttm outlandish. In Hol· lywood, divorce is a way d fil(' for many. But attorney f\1arvin ~·tltchclson, noted tor representing divorclag celebrities. OOpes to take the case h1rtber -to the U.S. Supreme Court. if possible -to make the divorce Y:ilhoot marriage con· ,-, cept the law of the land. IDS TIIEORY: a \\'Oman has the right t.o a good divorce and commanily prop- erty even if she never was ticer~ed to marry the man she loved and lived with. "It costs $3 lo get a marriage license." f!B id ~1itchelson. "I say that for a $3 license one should not have differe nt 1 eights than one who has the same rela· !Jonsltip but doesn't pa y the $3. I consider this unequal protection of the law." In fact , Mitchelson ~·ants to outlaw uiarriagc lice nses entirely. "The state has the right to license peo.. pie ror the protection of society," he con· ...... -----------------_..-._ ---~ Sho1dd l/1t're be divorce wiihout 11aarria9e? tends. ''They have a right to guarantee a skill. But what skill is required for peopl e to live together? They Call btl tv•o idiots~" IN THE CASE or Marvin vs . l\·Iarvin . ~1itchelson represents t.1ichellc Triola, "''ho changed her name legally to l\farvin during the six yea rs she lived \Vith the Academy A"·ard-winning actor. In 1970, the relationship cooled and suddenly Pl l !'\0~1 Pt-:~lf tliPI 1 -Ll'SS 1hnn 24 hours after Prl'Sl<lcnt Lon Nol \l'arned of nuw Co1nmw1ist prl•ssurrs on Jlhnon1 Penh . Insurgents fir(.'{! she-Us into cro.,.,·d- cd areas of the cily and kllled a reportl:d 18 persons. A1lhtary pohcc sour<.'<'S said another 26 persons were woundt.'<i, 1nany or thcn1 :seriously. 1\tlt:<1' th~ shelling \\l tidncsday. tOO i;ovcrnml'nl tigh tened S('<:W'hy pt't.'CflU· lions in the city and Americnn \\'arplanes flew heavy ~ncentratiorui of air strikes south, ·,.:est ;ind north of the cupit.al. llEA \IV FIGlmNG and U.S. bombing clearly visible to city rt.sldents. occurred nea r tbe marketpl ace area efttr Com· 1nuni1ts cut a road leading to an army camp at Prey Sar, six miles south of the capital. The Brhish and Aus1rallan embassies begun evacuating some dependents "ithln 12 hours of the rocket attack. Cambodian mi litary authorities said 40 roc~ets fell on the city. but did not list casualties. l\1ilitary police sources in· stead listed them . The !iOurces said that apparently 36 shells fell 01\ the road t<t the capital'! main airport west of the d ty i nd in and around a marketplace to the southwest. · l\1arvin turned up married to another woman , Pamela efeley, the childhood swee1hcar1 h• had known ior 20 ,.ars in Advei•saries Meet j)js home town of \\'oodstock. N.Y. Miss Marvin clalms that the actor con- linued to -support her until November 1971 and then refused to pay any more. She hired a la"'Yer and demanded all the benefits she would have had as a divorc- ed wile. She sued Marvin for half his assets which she estimated as $1 million. claiming this was her equitable share of their community property. llER SUIT, FILED by filitchelson. says that she and t.1arvin agreed orally that "they would combine their efforts and earnings and would share equally any and all property accumulated." The suit adds. "It was further agreed that during 1'le time the parties lh·ed together that plaintiff and defendant \\'ould hold themselves out to the general public as husband and wife and plaintiff 'vould further render her services as a com- panion, homemaker. housekeeper and cook." Marvin's attorney Davfd Kagon declin· ed comment on what position he will take on the issues, but indicated there would be no out--0f-eourt setUernent. "I have no reason to bclie\'e it v.·ilJ not go to trial ," he said. ~wever, the trial is not likely to be the end of the case which ~1itchelson a\n1ost ho~s to lose so he can tes t its issues on :ippeal. "I BELIEVE TJJE trend of the lay.· may and should move away from !he classic COflcept of marriage a n d divorce," he said. "Tl's ti1nc to have a na 1ional set of principles relative to mar· riage and divorce and to e1Ti phasize the relationships between people that produce obligations and responsibilities. rat her Lhan just licensing. , "I'm not talking abou! one-night (lands." he went on. "but about lasti ng relationships." Some states already recognize long-run relationships under common-law mar- riage. If t.li tehclson convinces lhe high court to hea r his case, he says it y;ou ld be the first ti me justices ha\'C considered a marriage Ja.w question. President Nixon and Sen. George J\1cGovern exchange social pleasant- ries at for1nal dinner part y hosted by the Shah or Iran. Connally Has Had It As Adviser to Nixo11 \\IASlll NGTON tU Pl l -John B. Con- nally is qui tting after t1ro ITIOnths as President Nixon's part-tim e advise r. but r..lelvin R. Laird plans to stick it out as long as he feels he is n1aking a con· tribulion. The veteran poli ticians joined the 'Vhite ltouse Staff after the \Vatergat£' scandal eru pted forcing an exod us of Nixon'! top lieutena nts. Connally, former treasury secrelary. joined the staff as an unpaid consultant to the President. \\hile Laird took 011 a fulltime post as the President's ch ief domestic adviser. But afte r giving some adv ice to Nixon to "clean hou se" and to shake off the DAILY PILOT- DELIVERY SERVICE DthYf'Y of l~t Oal!y Pilot 11 911,udnt~ed Mo"d•1·F"O"" u ••u d~ ""' """" ••u• """'DY J:JO ,.m .. <•II """ 1'91<• co11, ••II Dt ~•ll•flll !t yev. Cllll lro I•-·~ lltl!ol J:JO p.m. Sllurdl y •nd 511001y II veu d• "ft! r<<•••t YIU• <••1 Oy ' • m. 5i!11ro1,, •• I .... 511"d•Y. <•II 1ro • <•PJ w!ll ~· br•v•~' 11 vov. C•U• ••• 11~1" wnr.! 10 1 m. T eltpllo~t'> Mo1t Or1ntt (OllMJ Aro•• ftl•llll "'••1ftwn l "'""''"'''" BeHft ,,,. WHlm;,,.itr U~·U>t s ... , ........ , •. c .......... •••<ft, Sin Ju•fl Cio•1lr1.,., O•n• '"•I"'' SOlllft L19.,,,,, L•111•• l'lltu1t • • 1n.u 11 clique brought in by former aides I~. R. Haldem an and John D. Ehrliehma n, Con· na\ly bccan1e frustrated. He round the President \~as in no n1ood to change his O\Vll lifestyle or to broaden the chain or command. "'I'VE GfV EN ABOUT all lhc advice I ca TI give," Connally told a ney.·s con- fe rence on J une 20. which \\'as called to deny that he was disgruntled. But those \\'ho read bety.·een the lines agreed that Connally had had it. The former governor of Texas stayed around long en ough to help shape the llC\V Phase IV econom ic controls. He al so 1net privately a few times wit h Nixon in \\'ashington and San Clemente. then he. r<'lurned to his "Picosa" ranch at Floresville. Tex. Coru1ally and his \1•ife soon "'ill leave for a 11·orld trip v•hich he postponed 1rhen he joined the Presidential staff. Train J urup~ Tracks AUBREY. Tex. (U PI ) -T1\·cnty-five c1:1rs 0£ a Mi ssouri Pacific freigh t "tra in. 15. of which ,1·cre loaded 11·ith grain bound for the Soviet Union, jumped 1he\r tracks \Vednesday, sending five ca r:s crashing through the \\·alls of an e1Tipty peanut processing plant . The other ca.rs involved in the derailment ca rried ne11' automobiles and trucks. Lightning Kills Woman For Most Pllrt, Nntiou Enjoys Clenr Wentlier .. JOO~ • " 10 V'I WI •1Mtt FOIOC Ail Cl llll El Centro. 11 I /Id ,,,.IOW·D•ogt!T. 1" Jfn a1rn1rd!~o rt<:ll1"i:IP'd 10., \•nte An8 14 tnd ~·~·• MCl'!lt• 6' 11.S. Summar" Clt•r aide• J.Pl't" ow• ll'IOtt ;I tftf l l OIND----- •l •oN ~!NOW ~~"°""''~"""" ,70,,., "~loan IO!llV ¥"!11 ll'lt ••t•~lfo" O! lf!O"''' 111!;1 I !IM lllu-•110<"'1 1e~• ·~·~ l rl)tl\ ·~ (;yl! ft! MIJltO to 1111 G•a,t1t L••t• 1~111.cl 1t111n01"tmm1 to/Uf!I 011 m1 f-tltrfl •l-1 al lllt R"'~!11 boJI "11»1 01 111~ 1c!lvllv wa• conllntd from '"~•n1tl lO M!rl!iQl n. ~110111! 1moun11 'lllOt(J lrnm 1 111!11 mort Illa., an IMn 11 Mun1,vme. Alt .• to 1@u t111n 1>11! an '"(I! 11 l111t1!0\'IN, All , tnd l it V"AW. H,M , A vounq 1110"'1" 11111 1tru<~ •"d k1!1'1:1 l)y Uo1>1nl1111 II ,,,. Wll~td !•01'1 II•• .. _ 10 ,,., ,., II I 11crm IVJ1tm C11U1' -tit! et11•r11 llllflOh A.1 c1t1r tnd ctrv t !r l1nMd 11110 "'' m1ocon1!11tn1. 11u,,.ldl1 .. 11v11, o•~'­"~ IN tt"lrtl l"ltl"• to ,,,. n!)Ftl!t'f' Mi•!ill'ICfll V.slltV c~11 w••nlr!Oo ....,,~ "°''"' •! """' s1 (;tOror on 1111 t ••rtl'!'lt norlllertv C.•'I'~','" e.w\! T-.., ·r~nict-~t1!)Ft "~*~ r•'!Qofd trcm .CO ~· Art,111 C1llt lo 9' '' H-1~-(~11' Con•lnl W<'nlher •1ou1y 111nnv tod1y t lont v~tl1blf """"" ,.,;g111 1nd m!)t'n/nq l!Ou•t k · CO'l"lflQ wttlt•ly lo ioull!-lltfly I to 1& kl\Oh l" llltr-100"¥ 11'111 ~·I~~·· 111gn too:l•w. \IOD'I'• '°'" Cot1•11 i...,,ci.raturt, r1n111 from tl IO 13, '"' llfld ,.,,..,....,,ur•-,,..,,, trom IJ !d ''· Wt•t• ltfl'lfll•llurt ... .'i1111. "'"""· T ides "THllll!IOAY S•t~<I 111g11 ,·Up."1. JO Stto"<I low 1·)111.m, 11 Flr1I ~1911 F ''" law Stc""<I lllcll St<Ot"ll low FftlOAY Sii" t !MI .,O(I •. ,,._ ,,.._ ritH f•H I "1 ·~''•·"'· ~l ~·U 1 II\. ·L i I ~p,m I 1 1 J.111.m. I ' Jtlt ''SI p"' '"' ,,,. c "" Three persons died "'Ith another 22 wounded In the markttplace shelling. poUoe BOU.rCeS aaid. In line with Loo Nol't orders to the army to establish delell5e systems in and around Phnont Penh. Prime Minister In Tant moved tbe start of curfew from 10 p.m. to 9 p.m. and ordered government ofUces to stagger working hours. \.Yorkers are now undergoing army training during the morning hours. Field reports said heavy ground flghtlng OCCWTed south and north or Phnom Penh. The most critical area a~ patently was near Highway 2, where in- surgents reportedly advanced to within Appenl Slated On Bomb Ban NE\V YORK (AP) -The federal government has filed a notice .of appeal to overturn a court decision that calls the U.S. bombing of Cam- bodia unconstitutiona1 and orders it halted. Hours after~the ruling was an- nounced Wednesday, U.S. Atty. Robert• A. Morse said appeal papers 1vere being prepared and that he \vould seek a stay of the order that takes effect Friday. He said the case ·would be carried to the Supreme Court if necessary. The \\'hil e House had no im- mediate comment. R11ssians Launch 2nd Mars Probe, Aim for Landing MOSCOW IUPI ) -The Soviet Union said today it has launched Mars 5, its sec- ond unmanned Mars probe in five days, on a six-month journey to the planet The news agency Tass said Mars 5 blasted off Wednesday at 9:56 p.1n., or 12 :56 p.m. ! POT ). and began chaslng l\·lars 4, 1vhich "'as laun ched Sa turday. Tass gave no specific detail s of the joint mission, but indicated that the first Soviet Mars shots since 1971 would try to put life-seeking electronic gear on the planet's surface. ··simultaneous scient ific rese arch by the t\vo stations will make it possible to obtain fuller data about the planet and the dynamics of physical processes that occur in space." Tass said in announcing the l\1ars 5 launch. EARLIER, TASS said l\1ars 4 "'ould continue the scientific exploration of Alars and space near it that was started by launches of t"'o earlier vehicles, Mars 2 and Mars :t, launched in 1971. ~tars 3 successfully soft-landed an in- strun1 ent pa ckage that transmitted video and other signals for 20 seconds before falling silent. Tass said ~tars 4 y.·as 868,000 n1iles ahead of Mars 5. Both probes are scheduled to go into orbit around Mars in mid-February. 1 ·~1ars 5 is simil ar in design and purpose of Mars 4," Tass said. Peron llouors Wife BUENOS AIRES <UPI ) - Former President J uan D. Peron paid homage to- day to his po pular second "·ife Eva. mak- ing his second public appearance in more tha n a mon th on the anniversary of her dea th 21 years ago. 21, miles of the suburb of Takhma.u. The Ca1nbodlan hlgh command also sald Communisls Infiltrated tht village of Bek Chan. 10 miles from the. capital on Highway I. >'lcld .-.poou said a Com- munist rocket attack I.here killed five persons and briefly closed the highway . American warplanes conducted heavy air strikes near the capital during the night -the l*Oth day of consecuUve U.S. raids during the Intensified air w11.r that Prelident Nixon agreed to end by Aug. 15. t\teanwllile, lianol today accused the United States or sending a spy plane over North Vietnam and Saigon said 43 $42,GOO-·atad llp soldiers on both sidts dled In the worst battle since the second Vie11uun cease- fi re took effect June 15. Hanoi's Viomam News Agency (VNA), In a broadcut monitored in Sa lg<xl, ae-. t.'\lsed the United.1 States of viola.ting North Vietna1n 's air space la.!lt Sunday by sending a reconnaissance plane over Dong Hoi, 38 1nilcs north or the Demilitarized Zone sepnratlng the ll\'O Vletnams. The broadcast clain1ed the alleged flight was a violation of both the Jan. 2'I Paris agreement ending the war and the JlUle IS Paris accord reafllrntlng the C\:ase·fire. Senate Conducts 9 Votes, l(ills Freeze 011 Salai·y \VASHINGTON (UPI) -It started as a tlard freeze on pay raises for Congress. the Cablnet, and the Judiciary. But by the time the Senate finished putting the heat on it, the freeze had thawed and almo.st melted away. Sen. James B. Allen (D-Ala.) start~d a n a f l e r noon-long merry-g<>-round \Vcdnesday when he proposed a no-raise policy as an amendment to a campaign refonn bill. Nine votes later, the Senate, on behalf of itself. the House, the Cabinet. and the Judiciary decided a raise was all right as long as it did not exceed wage guidelines "'hile wag~price controls are in effeet. On a 49-43 vote, the Senate adopted a sense of the Congress resolution and put itself on record in opposition to any pay increase exceeding the cost-of-living rise since. the last raise in 1969, which put the .. salaries of Congressmen at $42 ,500 a year. AT FIRST, it appeared that the Allen an1endment was headed for victory until Sen. John 0. Pastore (0.R.l.) offered a rider which would have prevented those under the Allen proposal from accepting any speaking or writing honorariu1Tis. Pastore apparently offered the rider more in jest than in earnest and said he \~·ouid withdraw it. But Sen. Barry l\l. ·what Goldwater said no. \Vhen the vo le 1\•as over, the Pa.store rider was aboard, 56-37. Assis tant Senate Republican Robert p. 1 Griffin tried to kil l the package but failed 54-40. So. Sen. Henry ~t Jackson , (0-Wash.) applied some more heat. He offered an amendment that Y.'ould have prohibited acceptance of any earned income except salary. That carried 64-30. SEI<. EDWARD W. llROOKE (R· ~lass) tes ted the water and moved to kill the Allen-Pastore-Jackson package. That failed 55-39. Then Sen. Ted Stevens (R· Alaska l offered a substitute ·for the Allen-Pastore-Jackson package that pro- \'idcd for the sense of the Congress resolution . Allen tried to kill that and, he too, fail· ed, 48-43. 'l'hen the Senate adopted the Stevens substitute. · It was. as one senate aide explained. a case of ••making the jockey too heavy for the horse." Before the issue was set.tied, however, a number ot senators complained they "'"ere "hurting" on their salaries, that the public really didn 't know ho'v much it cost to be a senator. and that those op- posing a pay raise were "phonies" and afraid of the press. a Lia¥!' Inouye Soys He Cnn 't Remember WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Daniel K. Inouye of the Senate Watergate committee says he doesn't remember calling anyone a liar at the hearing Wednesday, even though his softly muttered remark was picked up by microphones and recorded. ~ After questioning former presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman lhe Hawaii Democrat was heard to say in a barely audible voice' "\Vhat a liar." ' . "I 0 CAN'T RECALL saying lhal," protested Inouye. "[( l did, 1t wasn t relative to what I had just gotten through." Inouye's final question to Ehrlichman had been whether the form_er presidential a.dviser was ignorant of the \Vatergate cover-up. Ehrl1chman had replied, "I had no part in any cover-up" and said he believed he would eventually be cleared. . Inouye then stated he hoped President Nixon \VOU!d release \Vh1te Hou se tapes the committee has subpoenaed. After a 20-second pause a tape recording of the testimony s howed Inouye muttered, "\Vhat a liar." 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RA CIT l'S Exquiai tt platinunt necklace uith 151 dinmo~d1t . /Jenr-!C/i f1 /'ltiri. tl1·111• (2.i!i kfl rnl.'(J 1·/i(l11ttlfl IJ11 .!i lt<1.yueltrJf, xx\1·il- l10 11 tx . tt11d dcli1·utt• 1·/11Jff1•rx '!f ~II '11a1·- 1111i~t'/ft din11111111f,,., 1l1t11/x 111•e1· 1.i kttratx. $ IN,IHHI l'al 11 e. Pri1-c red urcd tu $:-t. .'l!IJ. COSTA MESA JEWELRY 1838 Newport Bou levard, Costa Mesa , Cali forni a 92627 714 /646-7741 ' ol vi <R ·~ h· ~ q c c s ti 0 ,s t I it ! ~ •l ' t • i • t • ' Gambling Reviving in U.S. Churches Ur ged to Oppose Trend By GEORGE W. CORNELL 4.1" lltllei.. Writer tiny chance II 1n 1.000 ln ti1assachuscltsl of \\'inning anything at nll. NEW YORK -The United States. much of which in' the past sponsored ga1nbli11g Of r If i a 11 y and then outlawed it, is re· vivlng the practice again in many places. A "gambling ex-ploslon" ls on, says the 'f Rev. Dr. Paul M. Minus Jr., of Delaware, hk>. a professor of church history. A state lottery y,·ns instituted by ~e"' ll ampshire in 197~. ;ind since has bcfn authorized in ti1nssachusetts , Connccti,·ut. Nt\\' York, ~ew Jersey, Pcnnsyh·ani:i, ti-tichigan and tilaryland, ~·ith otht•rs con· sidering it. Although the churches generally have re- ·imained silent on fhe melter In recent limes. · he says they should take up the ethical issues involved in the "country's drift tov.•ard the ·questionable values of a gambling culture." THE CURREr..'T trend , however, is not the rirst time states have used lotteries. Between 1790 and 1870, accortling to •1arvard Unlversi- tv historian John S. Ezell, 24 of the then 26 s"tates sponsored lotteries to raise money. 11fE PARnC1JLAR target or hi s "criticisms, made in the ecumenical v.•eekly, 1 Chrl!!Uan Century, is the spreading pattern of 1 stale-run lotteries, legalized in eig ht states in the last nine years. Similar steps are being considered in 10 But cases of fraud and public protests against victimization of the poor started a reverse trend in which all of the state lot- teries of that period eventually y,·ere pro- hibited. They ''cost more than they brought in if their total impact on society is reckoned." Dr. Ezell concludes in his book. "Fortune's ?\.terry Wheel." <Y.her states. At least 10 states alsa arc con- , sidering following New York City 's lead into 'i the business of operating off-track betting }parlors on horse races. · i Al though moot Protestant church cs . particularly Methodists and Baptists. tradi· tionally have opposed gambling and hotly challenged \'lidespread moves 18 years ago fi'legalizing bingo games, there has been scant ~rellgious reaction to the present trend. The current nioves for state lotteries and other gambling activities are being pressed as a means of ra ising needed additional revenue "'ithout in1cnsifying the UP\\'ard spiral of already painfully high taxes. WHILE RO~tAN Catholicism does not con· i sider gambling sin ful in itself, many of its I.leaders lately have discouraged bing~ as a J means of fund raising, but have had little to lsay about the spread of state gambling opera· tioos. .. Dr. Minus. who teaches at Ohio's 1'1ethodist • Theological School , says that for the churche.s 10 ignore the expanding gambling pallern is \to deny their responsibility to the poor. f He says that while state lotteries attract t,,about the same proportion of part.ici~nts of each economic statum. rrom h1gh-1nco1ne ~people to the impoverished, it is the poor .,:1vho are victimized. "SURELY IT IS not the business -0r state -tgovernments to make the poor poorer," he :.says. . "Lo\v·income families are teased by shre11'd ·iadvertising of the lotttcry's jackpot into •parting \Vilh money they can ill aff~rd to put to nonproductive use," he says, with only a I HOWEVER, Dr. f.1inus contends that .. in spite of aggressive merchandising, stat~. lot· trries have not netted ris 1nuch revenue as predicterl -usually only a fraction of a per· cent of the state budget. Nor. he adds, h.~ve the~crippled operations of illegal gambiLng c~\~~s is chairman ot an Ohio Council of cbes task force which is opposing a pro-1 po constitutional amendment to pe~it state lotteries in Ohio. It goes before voLcrs. Jn r-.tay. · . " lie sa\·s state lotteries are the "ma)Or· srn1ptonis of a sickne~s·• in "'hich the "spi~it of selfishness receives respectable in- stitutional form ." THE "VlCT1~11ZATION of the poor \\'orks at cross-purposes wi!h the state'~ . ~m· 1nitment 10 provide relief and rehab1htat1on of disadvantaged citizens." he says. . He says that the lotteries "di\'ert attention from the development of adeq uate. cquittble system of financing" and "give public. sa~c· lion and encouragement to an explo1tat1vc and v>'asteful life stvte." The system "fefds upon and nourishes greed." he add s. Got His Ma11 Bogus POW Arrested Revenge Trip Pays Off From Wire Services \\l\len his son Julian and t11·0 other persons "'ere shot to death in Tijuana Dec. 14, 1970. Jesus Banuelos set 'out in pursuit of the youlh he blan1ed for the ir deaths. From Estacion Yngo, about 1,300 n1i1es south of the border, Banuelos doggedly trailed 19-year-ald Guillern1u •.;ord11 ·0 Duarte to Tijuana, \vhe re the teen-ager lived in a dovmto\'111 room. But Card era slipped across the border, and Banuelos' quest took him to Los Angeles. There, Banuelos had Cordero arrested as an illegal alien and sent back to Mexie<J, where he was held for trial in the Estacion Yago slayings. * The Treasury Department soon \YUi receive m-0re than ~l million, \\·i!led to the govern· (...__PE_O_P_L_E__,) ment by a 1nan who said he wanted lo show "my ap- preciation tv my country." A department spokesman said the money wa~ left lo U1e government by Robert HUDier l\1clotosb, of Winter Park. F"la., who died April 16, 1972 at age 72. The spo kesman said J1,1clntosh amassed a small fortune in securities and spent the last few years <Jf his life living in a boardinghouse. * Sen. Norris Cotton (R·N.H.) was released from Mary •litchcock H o spit al in llanover. five days after he \\'&s ndmittcd for fatigue and anemia. A hospital spokesman said Cotton is in good henllh and would rctw·n to \\rashington r-.1onday. Cotton. 73. has been placed on a special di et for en in· nammation of the diaphragm. Cotton announced rc':'ent ly he v•ould not seek re-e:e..:tivn in 1974. * What's in a name~ Very lit· tle for \\'llliam V. Donaldson, who's been city manager in Taoon1a, \Vasb. for two years. Nat one person was able to identify Donaldson's name in a Tacama NC\\'S·Tribune poll at a shopping center. Said he. cheerfull y: "This is a goal I've \\'o rked very hard to achieve - complete anonyinity -and I think il's just great. It proves l'\•e managed to stay out of the policy area. This proves r ve been a fantastic suceess." * Oregon Gov. Tom !\!~all's prostate gland v.'as removed by surgeons at lhe University -0f Oregon Medical School after pa thologists determined a glandular tumor was ma!ig· 11ant. Dr. Clarence Hodges. at- tending surgeon. said t-.·lcCall 's health appeared generally ex· cellent and that there is no evidence them a Ii g n a nc y spread. *· "He really got me," said Treasury Secretai:; Georii:e P. Shultz of his close frien d. AFL-CIO Prcsidenl George !\leany. Shultz said !\1 ea n y in· troduccd hi1n at a recent union gathering by decl aring: '·J bring you the g reate s t sC'\.-crtarv of the Treasury since John Conn;11lv.'' Shultz succeeded.Connally. * Gen. 01nar r\. Bradle y reti red as chairman of Bulova \Vatch Co. Inc.. ending 20 years affiliation y,·ith the con1· pany. Bradley said age and a desire to enjoy his ren1ainlng years pron1ptcd his decision to step down. Bradley is r.o. In Illi11oi s L'ROA:-;A. l\l. (AP) -A 27·' year-old Urbana man has been arrested and charged V.'ith posing as a former prisoner of \var to get a date. dinner and room from Playboy Clubs International. 'M10mas E. Pardick \Vas ar- rested by FBT agents after being named in a complaint filed with the U.S. magistrat~ in Chicaga. He 1vn s charged \\·ilh posing as a fictitious LL Thomas Johnson -supposedly a naval officer and forn1er POW. PLAY 8 0 Y OFFICIALS learned there was no PO'V named Tom Johnson only after a man using that nnmc asked for and recC'ived a I.late with a farmer P 1 a y b oy magazine Playmate of lhe Vea r. din ner and a room at the Playboy Chicago Club. Playmate Jo Collins said she thaught the whole aff:iir was ''kin<l of strange. . .I nie:in, here was this prisoner af v.•ar who \Vas supJ)Osed ta be ni.v dale and he was 6 foot 5 and 265 pounds. lie didn't took like he'd been in a prison can1p." 1'l JUST DON'T kno\V 1\•hv he did it ," said Pardick's father. Earl P:irdick, v.·ho recog11i1.ed a nf'\\'spnper pie· ture of his son v.·ith r.liss C-0Hins. The elder Pardick sa id his son had been in !he Navy for nine years, stationed in Hawail, but had ne1·cr been a PO\\'. Pardick could rccei\'e up to three yea rs in prison or Sl.000 fine if convicted. Don e by Dunn l\11 lJunn gc·i.~ lhin!.(s <lont>. Thro v.• her ~·our ch:i !lenge and S.Pe hnw i-ht' 1 .. .,1· I • 11 in her "At )'our Service" cul· umn, now appenrinr; C\'Cry Sunday, \Vcdnc sday and Fri· day in The DAILY Pl l.OT Fairview & Warner July 29, 1973 villa~c homct,city-closc Hughes' Vessel Sets Sail PHILADELPHIA (AP\ - The 36.000.too ship is shround- ed in th<> mystery of its 011.'ner. billlonnaire recluse llov.·ard llughcs. Na1ned the Hughes Glon1ar Explorer. it 11.·as bull! by the Sun ShipbulldinJl and Dry Dock Co. here for Hu!!hes' Sun1n1a Corp. 's ocC'an inining division, tT SET SAIL Tuesday to undergo sea trials, and then is experted 10 go to the.-\Vest Coast. via Cape Hom , for further outfitling . A su n spokesman said the vesse l is too v.·ide to fit through the Panama Canal. Al!hough officials of Summa Corp. sidestep questions about the ship, Paul Reeve. chief o( Summa ocean mining in Houston, Tex., said last year the vessel was to harvest mangane.se nodules off the ocean floor, possibly at dt'pths of up to 18,COO feet. THE SHIP is ou!fittcd \\'ith nlid-section 1\·ell t h r o u g h "'hich a mining derrick and pipe system to the bollom will operale, lhe Sun spokesman said. The ship is 618 feet long anrl has a beam or 11511 feet with an assigned draft of 46 feet. he said. lt will carry up to 125 crew members. ' • ..,,. • All She Owtts Ca rrying her belongi ngs on her head and nur~ing her baby. a refugee nears the Cambodian l'apital of Phno1n Penh 3"i fighting rages only seven n11les away. (S tory, Page 4.1 lh11r~rl.1y July b. IQ7J OAll. V PILO T i. Cri11ae Fig111•e Lru1sl{y Clea1·ecl •. 111 Tax Ev<1 sio11 • • :-011.,,\I! (,,Pl -I\ f1·d1•r;_i l rourt JI.IT\' ha~ fut1nd 11n· dt·r11or!rl fii;:urf' ~lrit·r J.nn~k\ uuu.i·enl nf l:ll\111\t' (;o. 1•1 a_,1,,11 rhnrgl·~ Tl11• :ithn~ l.!111"1..Y. 71, \l~S not 111 lh1· ~·\1urtnX1111 ;;s !hl· jtu')' returned lhl' 1 l'rci1t·1 \\f'rl nr~t!il' <1flt'r nc:irlv four hvur~ of dt•i1tM..·ra!1 u11 · l,\'\SKY. A ll'\)U\t'd f1nan 1·1al brain in l.lr~an111·d ,·r1n11·. v.:is fou nd not 1:1ulr .1 OH rill lhrct' l'OUnl.<i tn the J,!Ol CTH· n1t•nt 1nliu:tn1cu1 ;•l:l'll"i11~ h1111 of 1·rad1ng l:J.\f'':i vn 1:.unLhu;.. pruftls He "~s thar~t·d 11 t!h uUt' 1'\1unr uf ti111~1.11rar1 111 ('\ .1(k l :ixi'~ a11d tv.·o 11f f1!1111: f.tl ~r tc111rn~ in 1967 nnd 1!.'f.S The 11 1;11 , "luch l;1~ll'd (•11!l1t tL1\S, \135 l'OlldUtll'll 1u1ck·r ~hurh•111.·cl hi.urs ht'\',1\11'(' pf l.;111,;,, ' ht'<i llh 11 t' \Ill drr\\o •lll 11])\'!I ht•t1rr ~1Jr~«t'I 1 :11 ; ~ c;1r TllE KEY 1ssu1• 111 lh•· 11 1,11 11,1 ~.the t'rC'd1bility of st:ir pru~- 1•t·ution 11·ilne13 \ l!\C't•n1 "1~1~ \'1nn1t•" T1•res:1. H1·frir1~ h:indin~ the c:i"t' !" tl1c 1ury, I; S. Oi,trirt Cuurt .lu<lge JO<.' Eaton r•·11·c1r·1l :1 dc·le1ise n101ion for a 1111-.11·1[1! [),ifcnsc alln111e~ E \l;it 1d ' Ho~t·I! '~1d l.;1!),~\ llr\t rill'(' .. tr1.1I Ill l.:1-; \ ··~·;1,, \,., 111 !\t'111t·n1h•·r un r!1:1t ~,., ·~I 11<'.1\ Ill).: .1 !udd1·n Ullt'i'(''{ II\ llh· ~·L1!!llll1ill llOlt'l 1 .. 111,ky I' Fri·•• on bond J'll:n1!1ni: .1p1:11:;1I .. r a 1Jl1t' 1e;,1· 11111 "'rl!l'ill't• 1111 pv~ed 1h1~ ~r;lr 1,1r C'nf111n:tl 1·unh·111µl TEH ES \. \ :-l·H t!l''' 11t)('1I 111"h'tPr :-ind b.111~ r.ihtx-r !t"'!lf i~·d 1 .• ,! lll'l'k lh.1! ht• !ufnt·~! 1111·r pruhl " lru1•• r .. 1,·1i.;n ~:11nhli11i.: up1•r.111"n" 111 I.a n'!..\ .inti t• .. otk·fl'nd:111t 1110 • t'1•l\111i 111 IQC.'l I ·1·111111 I' :t f11~il1\1' fr••lll JU"!lll lo 1.1, 1 lo.~111~ 't.'.l1ru11·11r l:uv 11 lJJ!t'd up .. 11 t!w i.;1111•ru Tl1t"l1 p rn"1'l'U!1u, hl !:tl..l' ~II 1\·rt''·' htfOl'I' " J,!r.1nd JU! I :1nrl 111d1t't l11n1 f11r 1~·ri11r} ·• 111 H\1:i •• 1~· nns1-;'.\l l \1Pl.trn th.it 11i.· :1.1~11~1l1nd T1·1 ci-.t. ~<·r\ 111i,: ,• 1•d:·l·rl 111e1t•ar l••cler:t! ii 1"111 ~··nt.·i11·1· 1,,r ~1.i1·li •1·;1url. 11;,~ h111i.: he1 :111,~ h·· t•1111·red 11110 ·;, deal ll'l!h Ult: J;:D\'l'n1n1Pnt for f11r•thcr t t•llt·! nn hi:; 1\1111 .. ('1\l"U1·1· ..1'111 llHl ,;l~ltl~ I h I' I I ~Ill l't'lll})t'!l[ J;ll\~t'f' I fn!d hun to 1·01111• in ;ind 111· 1'111 unt i.:1111\~ !ti ~P•'l'Ul:llP II hy llL l1r<l 111 at h1· hr ht'd bl•ta11" 111· 111ad1' ;"I dc;"ll, .. Host'11 ''nd ---- Don't miss your Ford Dealer's Clearance Sale. /\II 1t 1:1\..c, i~ one \isit ta ~our F11rd l)ca!cr 10 di'L•J~i·r \\h} T,1ri110 i:.1\n1c ril.'a·s be'! ~el!1n;; 1nal·,1Lc L.1r. S111001h ritlc is nnc rca~o n. Anti t here arc 1nl1re. Standard f,.:aturcs anJ op11 1•n' th.1 1 ,;.:1\i: ~"u 1hc ~i nd of luxut) ~ou·u C\flCLI rro1n 111:,-h p11l·t•1l au1on1obiles. Right n1>V.', ~tlur I or<l Dealer ha , ;i h1;; selection 01·rt1rin~1,. Bci·;1u,t· thc <leaf, an: better 1h.ir1 ever. there 111ay nc·.er hi.' a bcuer t1111c hl fiu;.-. And \\hilc ~\lu·re there. l·hccl.. the T hundcrbnJ~. I 1>rd~. \1:1,criL·k~. ~1u~tan!.!' and 1'111111, he ha~ 111 ~\11LJ... Rc111cn1bcr. ~\1U r J·orJ l)ca ler·, pniz' ha1c b.::cn fro7c o. Th.it 111e,1n, chc) r:111'1 hl' r.1i..cd . Hut lhnt d11e,11·1 nic:in they l.1n'1 be lo1•crl·d~ Torino·s instrum('nl panel. AR g11u~l'~ Utl' eas~· 10 read. l'Ontrols 1'1ilhin ea,~· reach of dri\·tr. -5E'~o""1 y ,I! <)111i,,nal 1\.\1/f.r\-1 SICrffi r.1d i11 nith fronl aD4 r1·:1r du11I !>~akt'rs.' c;r:in 1·orino l-rJoor ) l:1rdt11p ttilh Lu\ury Ot•tur l':u.·ka gC". / ·.-:=--.;; I ---• --·-·- Surprising lu'.'<ury In• mid·~i1.t c•r. Sho"'n Is tht inl trior of lht Grtn Torioo wilb 1Axllf1 Dtror P1c.kact. •.• l, ~tccl·hfllt'd radi11I pl~ 11rl"\ 1rr 111'ail11bk on all 1nodrls. The closer you look, the better we look. Smart Time to see your Ford Deal er \Jaounl fron1 di'><' hr11l..l"o, 'lllnll;ird. 1'11v.1•r front di'c hr.il..l .... 11111u1n:.1I. The solid mid.;;ize FORD TORINO \ - 8 DARY PROT E DITORIAL PAGE - ·'-~ "'~ ''" l•· l~tt ... '" I~ .. . ' • I .. ' • Double Pay Standa-rd Behinnd tbe screen of \Vatergate, our distingui~hcli leaders on Capitol Hill are about to conclude a litlle maneuver that could bring them a speedy $10,000-a-ycar pay raise, with similar hikes for Supreme Court Justices, cabinet members and other top oCticials. Already through the Senate, t he legis lation to speed Congressional pay lncreases' --and bring them up, con· veniently, in non-election years -is on ils way to the House. Under existing law, the J>resident receives reco m· mendations from a special commission on June 30 and submits his reconl111endation to Congress with his budget message the following January. If the Senate an~ l·fouse do not specifically reject the ret:ommended increase within 30 days , it automatically goes into effect. The new bill would require the President to react to the commission's Ju.ne 30 recommendations by Aug, 1, with the same 30-dav "no action" procedure remaining in effect. This would handily spot the pay raise in a non· election year. Among th is yea r's proposed increa ses are: 1i1em- bers of Congress. $53 .125. up 25 percent from the pres- ent $42.500: Suore1ne Court iustices and Ca binet mem· hers. $70.000. uo from S60.000: other fed eral judges, $50.000, up from $40.000: federal bureau heads and other top officials. $45.000 up from 536 .000. The last Congressional pa,v raise wa s authorized four years ago, with a boost fron1 $301000 to the present $42,500. . . I . Proponents of the new increase argue that inf ation has taken its toll of Con,gressional Day che('ks too, and they're real Iv now w~rt.h onlv about $37 .00~. . This probably is true enou1;th -a~ ~t 1s for those whose pay increases are held to the off1c1al 5.5 f?ercent federal ,guideline. and who never hope to make 1t even half wav to the !50.000·a-vear level. . doesn't think It's right to go after a big pay boost in these days of inflation. Gross says he'll demand a de- bate on the floor of the House and a recorded vote, in· stead of tbe "sit on the hands" approach -ii President Nixon does go aloqg with the pay com1nission's recom· mcndation. The Co ngressman thinks Congress should set an ex· ample for the nation wh en it is imposing controls on other's ;,r,•ages. 'l'he Daily Pilot hea rtlly concurs. Money Well Spent Orange County Congressman And rew J. Hinshaw has introduced legislation to provide continued funding for SER, the manpower development and training pro- gra m for Spanish-speaking citizens whi ch. in a single year, provided training and found jobs for 5.435 ri.Texi· can-Americans. Almost half were placed in jobs never be(ore opened to citizens of lifexican background. The program is of particular interest to Orange County, with its 11 percent Spanish and Mexican·Ameri· can population. Rut SER's busy Santa Ana center has been threatened with closure as government funds dwindled. Now Hinshaw is promoting a bill which would pro- vide $18 million for continued SER funding through .June, 1974. The problem may seem remote to many legislators in Washington. but llinshaw's measure ap- pears to have administrat.i,on support and the outlook is optimistic. This will indeed be n1oney well spent. The SER pro- s::ram. seeking to meet the needs of the unemnloved and under-emoloved Soanish-sneakin~ ponulat.ion. incl udes a loe:ica l nroe:ression or bilingual vocational training, jo b nlacement. countieling and remedial education. Additionallv. of course, our elected leaders en1oy a wide ran,ge of orivileees. raneine from free nosta,ge to expense-paid trips home. and these can add more thousands to their actual annual revehue. The nooulation as a whole can onlv benefit when more Snanish-1:;oeakin(! ci tizens are given this oooor· tunitv to be financiallv self-sufficient and contributing members of thf\.economy. 'Now that I have your attentiQn I'd like you to,perfonn in At least one Congressman, Rep. JI. R. Gross of Iowa, Two l' ersimas of Cle1n.eiate Landscape Caper l Security WASHINGTON -Contrary to what the Secret Service has told the public abou t San Clemente, aides at the estern White House acknowledged in 1970 that the lnndscaping was designed to give the First Family an expansive view ~ the Pacific Ocean. ThLs admiS"Sion was made, of course, before the public found out thal the $700,000 renovation v.-as r~ by the taxpayers. Now the Secret Service claims that the land· sea.ping was ordered , . . strictly to provide pres1denl!al se<:unty, Quite a Qfferent story was told in late 70 however, When the Nixons decided to share theilllhome with the public. They invited Cleon T. Knapp, publisher of Architectural Digest. to take a guided tour of the San Clemente estate. THE PHOTOGRAPHER "''as selected by the White House and the story \\'~s carefully supervised by the President s personal attorney, Herbert ~Imbach. The final text was submitted to Kalmbach's office for approval The approved manuscript indicates that the landscaping had JitUe to do with the President's security. "The patio and the grounds outside the house," states the article "were landscaped in a natural ca~ual manner to maintain an o~ f~ling and to allow maximum views of the ocean." And agaln: "Oerue planting that had grown up around the old house \\-·as cleattd away to .create new vistas of the Q11otes 0 M8rie E. George, Fallbrook -"The reason for vandalism is the kids have never been taught to keep their hands off other people's property before the age of s." Bobby Riggs, veteran net star on t baUeoge1 (~lowing victory o,·er woman ace -"A rodeo girl challenged me to a ioet-tytng contest. I said I'll do anything t.:> get a y;oman's goat." or Ocean View? lawns and the ocean." Removal or the dense planting, presumably, would also give a potential assassin a better view of the President. Vt:r 11.lE Secret Servlri! solemnly in· sists that the grounds were laid out, at considerable expense to the taxpayers, wholly to protect the President. In May 1972, for exii mple, the Kirkham Tree Service was paid $1 ,950 to "prune trees." The official excuse : "Eliminate safety hazard caused by dead branche5." The firm of Buccola & Carlos was paid $8,810 to •·remove dry weeds to eliminate fire hazard." An-Other $750 went !Of' "replanting (alien tree." t¥1ost incredible of all, the taxpayers forked over $1 ,800 to "relo- cate a s o I i t a r y tree. A government spokesman explained the tree was moved tO give Secret Service agents a "clear line of sight zone, so they could see what was goin~ on." CONFIDENTIAL sources inside the Secret Service assure us that some of the landscaping, at leasl, was dictated by secUrity preca utions. When telephoto pictures of the presidential retreat \Ve re published. for example, the alarmed Secret Service concluded that the photOS?rapher could have been carrying a long-distance rifle. Result : Solid screen- ing was installed oo one side of the home. The Secret Service has also scattered the grounds with sound sensors. ad- ''anced models of those the Army inl- plan led in the forcsti'f of Vietnanl . Some are camouflaged to look like sticks and stones. and they are sensitive enough, in the words of one sou rce. in the words of one source. "lo hear a grasshopper burp." \\'E SOUGIIT co1'hment from Kalmbach y,•ho denied the tax money ''·as used lo pay for striclly personal im- provements. "Anything personal," he said. "we paid with the President's funds." Other sources eon!inned that, o( the $625,000 lhe President bon·owed from aerosol king Robert Abplanalp lo pur· chase the estate, $150,IXKI wc.s spent for renovations. Most of this money was used to refurbish the interior, but the Prcsi· dent paid for some outside improve- ments. including his o\vn swimming pool. Both the renovations and the ir financ· ing were supervised in the \Vhite House by former chief of staff Bob Haldeman. FOOTNOTE: Despite a law that re· qui res the federal government to buy American goods, much of the materi11I that went into Nixon's gazebos and garden walls "'as imported. Tbe nails in his boards and the foundation steel in his "perimeter wall" came from tile Far East. To cap the perimeter wall, the General Services Administration chose hand-made Mexican adobe tiles to main- tain the "architectural harmony." The Mexican bricks \\'e re ordered throu gh the Consolidated Supply Co. of San Juan Capistrano. The company was instructed , ho\vever. to deliver the bricks in "dom estic" trucks. "They didn 't want any Mexican trucks pulling into the pres- idential compoWld." the o\\·ner of th e company, Al Jimenez, told us. A GSA spokesman said the Buy American Act was waived "on the basis lhal the products we "·anted were not other\\·ise available in sufficient quantity or satisfactory quality." The agency, he admitted, did insist ''!hat American transportation be used.'' Dear Gloo1ny Gus Of course John Ehrlichman is tell- ing the truth. His name. in Ger- man, means "honest man," F.R.f.T.Z. G'"1rlY Gtn ~ '" WDmittlf •Y ........ .... .. "' ---""' r.flKt "" "'~ ., ~ -~. Send J'OM/t "' _..., N Gl-Y Gii.. DlllY ,.ilot. ls Sunstroke In Siberia Believable? ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Things I le11med while looking up other things : That more people have died of sWlsl roke in Siberia than of frostQite (.>\ character in ooe of Tolstoi's short stories perishes lhis way, and tbe editor of a British magazine asked him to change it because it \\'as ''unbelievable.'') • • • , That the "Sequoia" tree \v;iis named after an Indian \\'ho devised the Cherokee · alphabet. • • • Thal b)I far the great majority of Eskimoes have never even seen a real ig· loo, much less lived in one. • • • That "Sherlock Holmes" was at first called by another name v.·hen Doyle began writing the derective classics. . . ' That Bach never composed a single composition for the piano. • • • That Man o' War, although the most renowned stallion in the history of thoroughbred racing, never \\'on the Ken- tucky Derby. • • • That it is only within the last century that civil and ecclesiastical authorities decreed abortion to be a "crime.'' • • • That Damascus is the oldest ron- tinuously occupied city in the world, ex- isting sinre before lhe time of Abraham (and is mentioned in the very first book of the Bible.) • • • That a computer containing the In- telligence and response alternatives of a single human brain \.\'ould have to be con- structed on a scale as large as the entire world. (As all cybernetics experts agree, "a compol er is really very stupid.") the following manner.' J Vote Didn't Kill School Bus Issue You say you thought that Californians had dtcidcd the issue o< compulsory school integration and forced busing , once and for all? -That wben the people voted almost 2· to-1 for Prop. 21, last November, the question had been laid to rest? Well, think again. Apparently the \\'Ord has not reach- ed the members of I.he Equal Education- al Opportunity ·eom- mission, that gl"Ollp appointed by lhe Stale Board of Edu- cation. U tne word has reached them, the members of that commission don't seem to give a damn. Al the board's recent July meeting commission members "'ere there pushing for integration; urging the board to take steps to end "racial imbalance""in the pub lic schools. In its written presentation, •he rom· mission 's six·member Committee 0 11 Racial lmbalanct said it was making its recommendation so that the board "may use (them) at such lime as it is raced with the responsibility of formulating guidelines to eliminate racial segrega. lion.'' lN OTHER words, board, ''sooner or later you gott a do ii so you migh t as \\'ell get started ." Forget about Prop. 21 and those millions of voters. The committee urged the board to establish certain procedures and regula- lions to achieve racia l balance in the local schools. It said the 1x>ard should: -define racial and ethnic balance (such definitions should set that point at whi ch a school is "racially imbalanced " and "must institute a procedure for developing and reviewing corrective plans and measures"); -· apply such a plan, and the im· plementation of corrective measures. to "all grade leve ls and all programs in the school district"; -establish a definite timetable of local administrative proce<iures and state ( RUS WA LTON J regulations for ea ch step o( the "cor- rective process." and -set forth incentives for compliant1? and penalties for nonrompliance. Ah, lhc old carrot and stick trick! IF THE commission 's recom· mendations were foUowed and pul into .. effect, it would shove California back Under the s<H!alled Bagley busing Jaw and that was: what Prop. 21 was all about: it repealed the Bagley act. Fortunately, the board l'id 1he C.orn- mission's recommendations aside. Board members, at least, have some respect for the will of the S million Californians \\'hn said "Yes" to Prop. 21. But, the commission doesn't seem to give a damn aboot the voters. II flatly in· sists that "lntegration is a necessa ry in- gredient or quality education." EQUAL eduGBtional opportunity means making sure th.at each and every child. no matter where he lives or goes to school in California. has acce~ to quality schools, competent teachers, and ef- fective teaching methods; and materials. That's not a matter or race or ethnic background. that's a matter of good schools -in all neighborhoods. Equal educational opportunity does not mean forcing kids into buses to be carted around town to dist'ant schools and strar\ge environments. It's not a niatter of black or white or brown or yclki'W; it is a matter of common sense, con· venience and safety. ft is also a matter of economics. The people or Ca!ilomia made that abundantly clear on Nov. 7, 1972. "No public school student shall. because of his race, creed or color, be assigned to, or be required to altend, a particular school." It's high time the member5 of the so- called Equal Educat ional Opporlunily Commission got that through thei r oog· gins. Ehrlichman's Unsuccessful Try to Take Over CREEP \YASHINGTON -John D. Ehrlichman not only moved in to take over the Emment's internal security fun ction I.ht FBI with his infamous \Vhite se "plumbers" operation, but also o steal a large of the action year from the Jttee to Re- etect the President (CREEP). it~ Successful in 1ct- Ung up and running t h e "pZlm1bcrt.'' Elrllclunan stumbl· eel and fell -not once. but three limes -In hm sea et grab lor"IJlllJllcal power frnm CllE~P. The bizarre story or Ehrlichman. lhi:n Prell.dent M1on'1 White Houst dcmestic chie£, jockeying for partial command of CREEP'• ovmnanned polltical bal- tallont -and gelling his eomeupparn:e from CREEP's director. Clark Mac- Gregor -came to light only alter publl· Uoo or EhrUchm1n'1 outlandlsh ac· cusatlon against MacGregor last wee<. ON MAY 4. In his first lestimony to federal ptQ.lleC'Utors on the Watergate in- vesti e:ation. Ehrlichman charged that MacGregor has rejected r c p e a t c d Ehrlichman suggestions IG ··~el to the bollom" of the \VatergtHe scandal. A summary of Ehrllchman's 1nterview "'ith the investigators was published earlier. ~facCrt.•gor, the former 1\Iinn('."Ofa Congressman put In charge or CHEF.P July I, 1972. .,.,-llh the sudden post- \Va fergate ~esignalion ol John N. i\fitch- ell. natty denied t:hrlichman's ac· cosation. Moreover, ~1acGrcgor told ll s. 1hc onJy "repeated'' propollal.! he was ge uing from Ehrl.i,rtunan last summer "·ere proposals t~lf "Ehrtlchman's top lieutenants be given fllJ'jor campalgn roles. Thus. in those critical d a y s, Ehrlich.man was not conrmted with uncovering Watl!'rg°ate mbchicf but in ad- ding the ttelectlon campaign to his lm· meme pre5idential delegBtion of authori- ty over the domestic sJde of the U.S. govemmenL £11lU..tCll~1,~N·s pr~re npp.arently started whilr ~fltchell, n~vcr A n F.:hrtichman intimate. was still runnlns CREEP. f.hrlichmM want«! lo give his own tap aides, incltJdinR: Edwiird L. ~forg3n and John C. \Vh.ilaker of Jus ( EVANS·NOVAK J Domc~til' Affairs CouncH staff, overe[I control of key states he felt CllEEP \\'as l:iklng for granted : California. ~tichigan. Ohio. Illinois, Pennsylvania. Ne\\-· York and ~llssouri. Ehrlldunan began by a p p I y i n g pressure to ~'r~rick V. P..falek , top politic~ deputy jn CRf'.:EP. Malek "'ent to MacGregor in early August, complain· lng thRt Ehrlichmnn 's preuure was be-- coming in1olcrable And asking £or help In cooling off i\tr. Nixon 's powerful coo- fidant But f\1acGregor couldn't slop Ehrtichman either. Ehrlichman kept in- terposing himself between CREEP and local Republican organi1.atlons. Puttied by the pressure. ~tacGrcgor M't up n brcRk fa::;t in hi s ,_Uami Beach suite dur· 1ng the Republican naUona l convention. • AT TIIE brc11kfa.~1. E'hrlichman did most or the talking but ran into a stone ~all . MacGregor said no, t.l"H! help (lf F:hrlichn1an's personal staff was not needed. The matter seemed closed, It "·as far from closed. On ei ther Aug. 27 or 28. after h1r. Nixon left Miami Rc:ich to plot his fall cam paign in San Clcn1entc. f\iacGrei:t"or received another Jong distance cAll. this one from Ehrlich.man's patron and collaborator : file all·poll'erfut ff. ft Haldeman, who \\'as wit h the President. tL1ldeman said Ehrlichman felt his plan had not had a "fair hearing" and \1'as press ing lfaldeman to intervene. Furious at whal MacGregor later called Ehrlichman's "hammer and longs" pres.sure. PilacGregor never t he I e s s a'g recd to Oy lo San Clemente with Malek and eonlront EhrUCHman yet again. Wl'nl llAU>E~1AN Ii ste n in g. EhrUetunRn went through the oow famillar re r r a I n: under Malek 's field opcralioo, CREEP _was losing the biggest SIAtes to the Democrats. bul tbe: P..!acf)re~or·ritalf'k team couldn't knO\Y !I because of r>00r repaning from ifs Ueld $lnff Again. ~fncGregor and fi.falek rejected thr 11roµosal and ridiculed Ehrllchman's l'IOhririll 1n1eHigcnc,. The President. the y said . >A'Ould carry each state on EhrJichn'llln 's "losl" !isl. One hour later, Haldeman turned to Ehrli chman and said: "For heaven·s sake. John. drop It. Oark has made his decision and he 's acting \Vithiw his authority." That finally finished one of Ehrllchnian 's longest, most Cutile end runs. But F.hrUchman was also attacking in another pince. ~le personally ~lepboned ~1acGregor·s wife, Barbara. to critici.ie OU.N•l COAST DAILY PILOT Robnt N. Wted, Peiblillttr Thomas 'K4!etnl, Editor Barbara Kreibicli Editorial Poot EdUor Thu rsda y, July 26, 1973 her plan to send surrogate women cam· paigners around the country for Mr. Nix· on. Barbara M!tCGregor Ustened politely, but made no ~es. Contrary to his present claims before federal pr~tors, Ebrllchman was ei· erting no such energy in teylng to "get to tht bottom" of Watergate. l'f be had, JobJ!, D. FJirllchmao ml&flt today still be riding in that lmg black limousine and ruming the federal government, \mt~d ol battling desperately ror hls life. • Th@ ~toriaJ Pll:e of the Dally Pilat aetks to titlonn tnd •llmW•tc rudtn by prt:wnUns un this pqc diwrst c:oJTUtWnt.ary an 1oplcs of In. ftn'St by ~cared eolumnim. llOd ~ by JlfOridlnr a fc.inim tor t'!:adttc' views and by JJrcMtnt\ng this newspaper'• or>Won• and ldc111 on Cun'tnt tDpica. 1'lf ~ilofiaJ oplnJons ,y( the O.lly Pl.lot appear ot\ly In the tdboriaJ cdun111 •t r~ top of tht' page. Opl.n.lww opreut'd by th• ool- \lmnlm ...I canaonlt:i.. and ll'tttt> writtn ar. thtlr own •nd no ~ menc oc !Mir Ww• by u.., O..lly Pil ot diould be tnrerttd. Torch Caused Hope Fire PALM SPRINGS (AP) - Sparks trom 11 welder's torch coused the fi'l w h I c h destroyed Bob Hope's partially completed $3 miUion home in Palm Springs, the city fire department said. Four men, including the welder, were working in the structure wheft the blaze ( BRIEFS ) $500 Million NY-Colombia Narcotics Ring Destroyed NEW YORK (UPI) -Police "-'Orking under cover for 16 months have destroyed a half billion dollar drug rinet that used Y.'Omen to s m u g g I e narcotics into the country by hiding them .in their un- derwear. jXllice announced Wednesday. "This is the greatest smashing of a dope ring in the United States in that for the first time we have destroyed. an entire combine, including the foreign supplier, _ t h e couriers, distributors and the organizers." said District At- torney Mario Meroll1. He said the ring had ccr caine, hashish oil. marijuana and other illegal drugs flown to Mexico from C:Olombia and then walked across the border by the hired women, who Merola said ring operators referred to as "mules." Si:<ty-0ne ptrsons were ar- rested during t h e in- vestigation. Thirty-three were indicted Wednesday, including the accused ring l e a d e r Howard Z. Fuchs, 27, a 1968 graduate of Yeshiva Universi- ty who used to be a city welfare investigator. 4 'U NFORTUNATELY. Fuchs was a Horatio Alger or crime who went from a $10,000 city salary to being a multimillionaire in no time," Merola said. Fuchs lived in a luxury Manha.ttan apartment, main- tained a home in suburban Scarsdale. drove a $14,000 foreign car, and had a number of legitimate Wall Street in- terests, police said. UPIT.._... Ninth Survivor The list of survivors of the Ozark Air Lines turbo- prop crash In St Louis rose by one when workmen round • small beagle in the cockpit under the wreck· age. Belng shipped to a new owner In Texas, the dog may lose an eye from exposure to rue!, but other- wise will recover CUiiy, authorities said. Another defendant in the case identified as one or the ring leaders was Michael Arlen, a part time actor who played minor parts in dayt ime soap operas including "Secret Storm." Merola said. Merola said in the last twO years the ring annually smug- gled in fiOO pounds of cocaine and 4,000 pounds of hashish. The ring was also startin«i to smuggle hashish oil, selling for $300 an ounce on the street, Merola said. JORN FALLON, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administrator for New York, said it was an unusua l case because so many of the persons involved were midd l e c l ass n ative Americans. "These people are from a walk or lire that we've never dealt with .before," Fallon said. "Even the people in Colombia were Americans, not heavy Latin connections. "They put the money they were getting into legitimate business, and you can imagine who they were selling to: a lot of other white, middle class kids." Sex-torture Chamber Dismantled MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -As curious neigh bors watched. police di smantl ed the homemade torture chamber where they say Al bert Brust killed and dismembered an Ohio youth and repeatedly raped and tortured a J>year- old Kentucky girl. But offlcen said they un- covered no more b o d l e s Wedne!lday after they finished chiseling through i thick co~ crete wall at one end of the chamber. Police said Brust committed suicide last week, several davs after he shot and killed 16- year~ld Mark Matson of Washington Court H o u s e . Ohio. The youth's body was then hacked up and cemented into a shower stall of a spare bathroom near the chamber. PQUce al!JO dug up the yard around .the hou9e to see if any bndle• had been· burled th<re. Thty found none. • ftlur)(l11. Jul~ 2b, 1973 DAIL V PILOT (_ Byrne Denies He Showed Interest· • Ill FBI Position • ERRLICHMAN, In cont.acted by Ehrlichman at case on trial but did not dt'Jlver on a fat~to-face basb. President Nixon 's direction. specify thC' subject n1atter ." v.·hich I felt was owed to the Ehrlichman said Byrne "in· "Second, after learning in President's repre!W!nt.ative , my deeision Bfter renection. That dicated a very strong In-San Clernente on April 5 th:i t dt>cision confirrned n1y initial terest'' in the job, later the 111eetu11(s purpose in· reaction reject In It coo- telephoncd his secretary ask· \Olved li>nsideralion of rn v 'd 1 0 1 h be<-om1ng d1rertor of the FBf, si era 1 n ° any 8;uc pro- m. g to "talk a•am· " and then posal v.·hilc the trial was Ln e niy initial reat·tion was that I "he again evidenced very rtMJld not consider such a pro-pro1:ress . strong interest .. .I look this posal nl that linle hut \\'OUld "It should be pointed out," as an occasion v.·hen he rl'flt'fl upon the n1atter." Ryme addl'd. "that theM' v.·an ted to restate his very cf1sr11ssions took p!Jet• severil strong interest to me." "THIRD, ON April 7, I l"3!1-v.'efks before disclosure to th!! In a statement \Yednesday NI and inel 'Atlh '.\Ir · coun ~f the bre!lk ·in al Dr. the judge said he had been Ehrhch111;1n at a place or his Ellsberg's psychi<1tr1.St ·s uf summoned to the Western choosing ~ that I could fire." \\'bite House the fn-st time and -c:-.;, ____ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiil.;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil then initialed a s l' co n d Ill meeting in order to conr1rm his refusal to consider the post while in the nUdd\e of a case being prosecuted by t h e federal government. "RECENT PUBLIC state- ments about the meeting on April 5, 1973, to which I was summoned to the Westen1 White House. require clarifica· lion," t he judge said. "First, on April 4. l\1r. I"' JOIN us FOR I I ~ • SUNDAY ~) ,,.,,.,. BRUNCH j' hungry tiger . " RESTAURANT 1110 111,000 O•lfll 11• SUNDOWNER DINNER $2.95 ' ) discussioo or the break-in and the Pentagon papers trial in Los Angeles at the Watergate hearing in Washington. D.C. Ehrlichman called and stated that the President had asked him to talk to 1ne. l\lr . Ehrlichman advised that he and the President were le:iv· ing California Sunday. April 8. and requested a meeting a! San Clemente before that departure. He cited a need 10 discuss with me a matter in \ no way connet·ted Y.'ilh the Ehrlichman said Byrne had been eager to talk about the FBI post. Ehrlictunan said Bryne had brought up the subject the sec- ond time after initially being NEWPORT BEACH lSJ I . COAST HWY. e 67l·5SJ4 Skylah.2 Astronauts Go to Cape CAPE KENNEDY (AP ) - Their t r a i n i n g completed. Skylab 2's astronauts fly from Texas to Cape Kennedy today to make final preparations for their launch Saturday on a marathon 59-day s p a c e mission. Alan L. Bean. Dr. Owen K. (IN SHORT ... ) Garriott and Jack R. Lousma planned a midday flight in T38 jets from the Johnson Space Center near Houston. e Vletims Aided ATHENS (UPI) -The first of two Japan Air Lines relief planes flying the passengers and crew of a hijacked jumbo jet to Tokyo arrived here to- day from Benghazi, Libya, and the victims were treated to free shoes. cigarettes, whiskey and a buffet of Japanese food. ' e Otf~s Bullet LUCASVILLE. Ohio (AP) - Scioto County Coroner James Scott said Wednesday night an autQpsy had confirmed that one of two guards shot to death at the Luca svil \e penitentiary died of a bullet fired by a fellow officer. Scott said the bullet ex- tracted !rorr. the body of Gary T. Underwood. 24. of South Portsmouth, Ky.. was of a larger Caliber than the one taken from the body of the other slain guard, Arthur Sprouse, 41. of Lucasvtle. e Funlh Denied WASIIlNGTON (UPI\ The Whit e House may feel the effects of the Watergate scan- dal where it hurts the most- in the pocketbook. The House Appropriations Committee voted Wednesday to eliminate a Sl S million "1~al projects" fund tradl· Uonally given to Presidents Over the years because the White House refused to state whether any of the money went to the Watergate burglars. •. WINCHESTER SHOTGUN 12 gouge. 28 ' full a vent rib outomolit. 11400 no. lW" Ntas lfflCTIYI THIU SUNDAT, AUGUST 5 , 1973 HUNTING BIG SAVINGS? SHOP L & G! LSAVAGE SPRINGFIELD PUMP SHOTGUN full choke or modified. 28 ', ,., c.REMINGTON BOLT ACTION ' c. • J , -. ' . CENTER FIRE RIFLE REMINGTON HIGH POWER RIFLE 243 & 30.'06 colibe r. Moote Corio 'toc:k w/ ,ling strop & 'wivel,. ,f7008Dl lfG. lW' I 30/06 col1ber with 22·· bo,,.1 lengtt\. 1700ADl IEG. J.J9H REMINGTON HG. 13295 REMINGTON RfG. 14995 700 AOL· 1 MM ....... J.Sr" , 700 BDL · 7 MM ..... ~ ' ' MO.HAWK 12 GAUGE DOVE LOAD Whilil tMv lo\t ••. a1 lh~ 9'eat ptie9l SHOTGUN BUYS: ~~.~l~Gc~O~ ~o~o .... 14295 ~~m~.·~~J~~B S~~ ..... 101 95 ~?.S~~~~G,!~ 30 ,. r. ... 8999 ~~~0A~E ~~~ .......... 3799 RIFLE BUYS: MARLIN , J9D n Col ........... 8995 RUGER , 10 ,,. ................. 51 95 SAVAGE. n 10 o ... """"' ..... 6.1 9 5 IVIRYlHIHG FOi IVllY SPORT • , • ANO AT GllAT SAVINGS, IVIRYDATI · TH I ITEMS IN TH!$ AD ~RI JUST SAMPU Of TMI SAYINGS IN STORE FOR TOU • IN IVIRY DEPARTM!HT • lYHOl YOU SHOP AT L & GI L&OlAMllAOA L&OIANTAANA l&GORANGE l & G TUSTIN Nf.WPOIT AYI. ot fllST STRllT PHONl1132-51•8 LA MIRADA SHOPPING CINnR 1351 S. PISTOL ST. 1•.S.S AtlJo<•nt to Lutlty Oltcount C.nt• at Moc:AITHUI N. TUSTIN ll'H0Nft 521 .. 151 PMONlt S57-3317 Pt40Nl1637·1•10 STOii HOURS: MON.-FRI. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M., SAT & SUN. 10 A.M. -6 P.M. I . ·' I DAILY PILOT · fIJt Wi'h People' ' Maternity Leaves Face Challenge WASHINGTON (UPtJ -teachers ln regarding mateml· The U.S. Supreme Court will ty leave. accept brief! this summer in million member N a I i o n a I Education Assoc:latlon. · ,Places to Stay " 1 t• By ~M B~EY : tY.-o ca 1 es that challenge mE 11"0 CA.SES represent arbitrary, forced matemity a recent wave of challenges to leave for pregnant teachers. school board policies that re- "The .. mandatory I e a v e quire pregnant teachers to policy for pregnant teachera take unpaid leave for a wu born out of prejudice and specified period of time. Other l.gnorance," asserted M rs . cballen&es have been raised Susan Cohen, a ·soctat studies.. by teaclfera in Alabama, teacher in Chesterfield Coun-Callfornla, Con n e c t I c u t , ty, Va. in her appeal of a Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Jowei court ruling. Oklahoma and Washington "Support of teachers in these pending cases demOll!lrateJ N E A ' s com- mitment to equal employment lor women and itJ effortJ to eliminate discriminatory prac- tices against women i n employment, p e r s o n n e I policies, compensation and promotion,'' an NEA spokesman said. evidence presented support.I the t'xtended Pf:r\ods of man. datory maternity leave re- qulrOO by the rule both before ard aft er birth of the ch lid." THE COURT noted that tht policy was established two decades a~o fer instructional continuity., relief o f ad- minislraUve problems and because 'tteachers suffered many indl'°'lties as a result of pregnancy, which consisted of children pointing. giggling, laughing aod making snide remarks." . ' , i4J'T ,.. ll•ff ' 'lip' ·wull',People" ne<ds people to put them up. And San Clemente and llun- Ungton Beach are high on the list of Orange County rom~ munities being canvassed by the traveling songsters in a bid to turn up becl;ii.nd- breakfast acoommodation for members of the troupe. "We're putting on a .!how July 31 end Aug. t at Marina High School so Huntington Beach volw1tcers who 'JI put !,_~ the kid! up for four nights Ju- ly 30 through Aug . t are ~~ desperately needed,'' s a Id ' "People" spokesman Mike ~ II::~· CLEMENTK ., ho W H dates are Aug·. 3 and 4' at tho g high school gymnasium. So members of the troupe are ~.··... seeking overnight lodging in :t that area Aug. 2 through 5. ·'; "But that'.! not all," Hogan ''< said. "We have a show -t:: scheduled for Aug. 3 and 4 at Y Santa Ana Valley High School ~ and we need even more homes in that area for our ~ perfonners." ~ Homes In the Santa Ana. ~' Tustin, Villa Park and Orange ~ areas would be ideal for lo::· ' ' , .. . . . "People" performers who would need bed and breakfast from Aug. 2 through Aug. 6, Hogan S<dd . HOGAN SAID local· homeowner! have never disap- pointed the yo uthful performers since the non-pro- fit educational organization went on the road nearly a decade ago. Since that Ume, the troupe -it operates in three separate organizations under * * * the "People" ~er -has ap~ared in 35 states and 22 •nations. state. THE CLEVELAND policy SHE WAS the nation's first Generally, lawsuits ask the requirea a pregnant teacher to "The response from people who 've opened their honies to UJ has never been less lhan tremendous," Hogan s a I d . "Many, many resldents of the areas we've visited haven't been rontent just to offer one bed -very often they've in· sisted oo p r ov iding ac- commodation for two, three or four performers." teacher to carry her challenge courts to guarantee t h e take an unpaJd leave of of a mandatory matemUy teachers e q u a J protecllon absence five months before leave policy to the highest rights tmder the 14th Amend-the expected birth of a child 1----------- court meot in situations involving and to ronttnue on such status "In a very few Instances. it forced maternity leave. Joss of until the beginning of 'the first has been sustained u a mat-retirement and s a I a r y school term after the baby ter of ronvenlence," her pell-be f"• end ed 1 becomes three months old, HOGAN SAJD the "People" lion said of the maternity ne i~, anger enure NEA said. , organization is mulli·racial policy. "It must be viewed for and seniority rights and el In a decision th.al called the and multi-religious and neither what It truly is, an policies r atlng to re-employ- consideration enlers into any anachronism, and not h Ing ment after chlldbirth. policy ' 'a r bi 1 r a r Y and arrangement with lo ca I u,1 rt1wt1ot• more." unreason a bl e In its residents opening homes to y Olltlg W 'illtler Also pending before t~e PROVIDING LEGAL ex-overbreadth." the 6th Circuit performers. s Co I b penses and support to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Cin· fast, Thorough, Guorcnfl'!'d Real Estate Soles and or 8rokl'r li<cn~l' TRAINING Phone for free folder a ANTHONY' SCHOOLS H.t.1101 CINTll lMit "''"' (•"1'' Call• Meta, C1!1lo,..I• ""· 17141 tJt.JllJ "We just want to hear from upreme urt is an appea Y them ," he said. "We have Bradford Pattcrshall (9 1nonths) takes vi&ft>ry drink the Cleveland. Ohio school three teachers whose cirmatl said: "Under no con-1111 s .• ,..11"""'' s1. boys and girls , ages 17-25, after winning crawler division of diaper derby in board from the first appeals challenges have reached the struction or this record can ~·e ,..;nj~1;; ri64i'Oo who'd love to be their guests. -~Y~a~r~m~o~u~Jh~,'..M~a"'in'.'e':· ______________ _'.'"()l"~'~t~de'.'c".is~io[)/n~f~a'."vo[)/r:a_abo~J=e~to>_~S'.'_up".'r~em~e_'.Co;o_"_ur~t-"is~t~h'."_e_'.1.:2-:__"'°[)/"~c~lu~d~c_'.l~ha~t_'.l~hc:__':m'.'e<l".'_".k:a_aJ~~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'!!ll' for a night or two and we want I· to assure them that ii 's part of our campaign o I co1n- municatiori. "Many friendships have been forged in thls manner," · Hogan added. "Many of those people ¥lho've hel ped our 'People' boys and girls have come to recognize within their hoines the qUilines I know we project in our singing and dan- cing." "ONE , OF OUR thre e troupes i!" leaving on a tour that will take them to Italy, England, Belgium and Ireland right after lhis Orange County engagement." he a a i d . ''Another is leaving for Spain so a big Orange County response to our plea for ac· commodation would be a great send.off Cor our troupe." Hogan and his staff can be reached at 835-1764. * * Fashion Island -~ · .. • •• • "1 ,. :~ '; • '• • : -. .• . . · .-:: ·. • .• • Performance Set A special "Up With People" performance will be given Fri- day at 9: 15 p.m. on the Fashion Island Mall Jo thank local retidents for 1help during, lhe group'• iDiuaJ 1tagin'g' period. The free show will climax a month-long stay by the 34.0- member troupe as It prepares ne~ song and dance rou tines at Corona de! Mar High School for this year's road tour which begins next month. The cast has been Uving in homes of famllles in Irvine, Newport Beach and Tustin as well as the Park West Apartments in Irvine aod Costa ~fesa's Southern California College. This will be the first opportunity for the public to see the troupe perfonn. "THIS IS one way that Up \Vith People can thank all the local residents and organiza- tions who have given us such enthusiastic support," said the l(foui>•s public relillions dlrec· tor Robert Cook .. The show will be given by the 140-meqi.ber <;ast schedul- ed. to leave Aug. 11 for a 29- city tour of Europe. A secood , 120-member cast, will tour Spaln, and third cut of 40 will tour in the United States . ll.i_gq.[jg ht of the perforTnance wiU be a special arrangement of a Belgian folk song. The Up With People principle of "audience in- volvement" will be used as the cast will go out into the au- dience and some of the spec· tators will end up on stage. .f{~~'P~ REE 1111118· JULY 27-AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM .CONVENTION CENTER' ALL AIR -CONDITIONED SEE!. . .THE ONLY MAJOR FLOWER AND GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHERN CALIFOR· NIA FEATURING FOR !fHE FIRST TIME ANY· WHERE "FLOWER M A G I C 0 F T H· E TROPICS". . .A N ANI· MATED FLORAL SPEC· TACULAR. • SEE! ... THE VERY LASTEST INNOVA- TIONS FOR THE HOME AND GAR- DEN WITH OVER 135,000 SQ. FT. OF GLITTERING EXHIBITS. SHOW HOURS: 5·11 P.M. Weekdays • ·: Noon -11 P.M. Sa9urdays Noon -9 P.M. Sundays '· .• • •• ~· l • • ' NEWPORT BEACH , 3110 Newport Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH, 9791 Ad1m1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY , 16155 Harbor Blvd. ADUL-JS $2.00 e JUNIORS $1.00 (Children under 12 FREE with parents) SAVE soc with your discount ticket from your nearest: Alpha Beta Market, Thrifty Drug Store, Carl's Jr. family Restaurant, Buena Park Shopping Center, Westcliff Plaza, Harbor View Center, lido Shops, or visit lion Country Safari. J QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi '"If the paper shredder ever breaks down, let me know. My wife has a pretty big mouth." L. 1'1. Boyd Italian Tilers Lilie Piecework Tilemake~s in Italy are \uming out pornographic floors. Piea! by piece una~!Jlllled, the tiles doo'l show much. Fitted together in bathrooms, they portray -oll, ugh! -nude girls in erotic poses. West Germany is said to be the hottest market worldwide for such and all pornog- raphy. Police intermittently raid factories in Sassuolo, center of Italy's ceramic indu!ltry. They reportedly sift around In warm . wonderous little teams, working these giant jigsaw puzzles to gather evjdcnce. '·An airtight container of food sterilized by heat," that's hov.' the National Canners Association defines a can. Accordingly, a glass jar of baby food is a can, a tin of ground coffee isn't? Maybe you weren't aware you get I a new outer skin every 27 days. I QUERIES -Q. "Which screen star has been married most often?" A. Has to be tie between Lana Turner and Mickey Rooney, both seven times. Q. "How long has the average housewife -l mean the v.•ife not on any payroll -been married to her husband?" A. Just 22 years, say the statisticians . .. • Q. "\Vhat's a lamprey, an eel or a fl!b?" A. Neither. It's an oddball vertebrate which the good Lord apparently did not adore sufficiently to manufacture in any great variety ,of species, fortunately. True, the hag- fish is of similar ilk. As a parasite which bores into the bodies of fishes, it's none too lovable, either. Those two are in a single undergraduate class by themselves. BONDS -Just don't understand why the federal gov- ernment can't sell m'ore U.S. Savings Bonds. Nothing to it. Value them at $5 each. Jo-take them non-interest bearing. Number them nicely. Every week let a computer "Select several winners. Pay tax·free cash prizes of from $25 to $100,000 to these lucky souls. What, a national lottery, you say? Certainly. 'That's how Britain has done it for years. Attorneys are fond of saying they know of ooly one English law that has never been broken: King Henry IV decreed in 1404 that no subject could make a base metal into gold. ' Yes, the bingo pliiyers nationv.•ide outnumber the con- cert goers by 16 to 13, that's a fact. Probably no group of girls anywhere ever developed their me1nories to a finer degree than the telephone oper· ators in San Francisco's Chinatown back in the 1930s. Else\vhere by then, most people requested numbers. There, all ca llers still just asked for their parties by_ name. 'That Chinalo\vn's tel ephone operators were the last of the know· it-alls. Address 111ail to L. fll . Boyd , P.O. Box 1875, Ne w· port Beac/1, Ca lif. 92660. Class Will Last Til 1 in Morning Troubled with insomnia? As long as you're up. you might as well take a course at 3 Doctors Re-elected To Society A trio of flarbor Area medical doctors have qualified for cootlnue!d membership in the American Academy of Family Physicians by com- pleting mandat.ory continous studies in medicine. Doctors Charles II. Turner. Orange Coast College runs until l a.m. A new oourse e nt itled · 'Observational Astronomy" will be held Tuesdays from 10 p.m. until l a.m. during the fall se mester. Students v.ill study the con- stellations, and will do visual and photographic observa- tions. Half of tht time will be spent on campus and half at spots such as Irvine Park or Santa Arra Canyon . They will use three eight-inch and a 12· inch telescope. Instructor John Sanford said the course Is designed to teach students h o w a,tronome.rs gather data for scientific sludy. Polaroid cameru will be used for on-the ·spot photographic studies. tn cast: ol rain, he said, the class will be held In lhe 0 C C ThursdAY, Jul)' 2fi, 1~13 OAJLV PILOT < SAVE ON POPULAR SIZE SEALY MATTRESSES ~---- 'I Fi I I ' ' 1' C_REATE -,A ROOM WITH MORRIS • 49.95 05.00 v1lu •. Wh•t 1i1• m1ttre11 er• you 1l••pin9 on1 A twin, perh1ps a lu111 Why not take ad ... 1nta9e ol thi1 111• and get on • queen or kin9 1i1e l Thete'1 • great cho.ice of firmne11 to choote from 1ho pick from : bS .00.15.00 val. twins 4t.t5·6Z.OO e1 . p<. 70.00.,0,00 xtr1-lon91 St.tS-72.00 e1. pc.. 70.00.tO.OO vii. full1 St.tS-72.00 ••· pc. 200.00-250.00 val. qu11n1167.00-201.0011t 260.00-lJO.OO ,..1 . kit19t 207.00·152.00 tet ' Sl11p Shop, 6t. ' LINEAR COORDINATES 30.00 to 155.00 Conttmporary 1tyl• with p•c.•" v•n••r• •nd plastic top1 for •••Y cart. l ilt.ts t drlW•r dr••••r 115.10 120.t54dr1wtrdr••••r 111.11 ]4.t5 1J"xl1" mirrcr lO.H 144.tlS 5 drawar ch11t 1J4.ff•• t I .f!S l d ttw•r ch11t 16.0I 11 4.•5 1tud1nt d1 1k 104.00 71 . 95 c.orn•r datlr 61.00 ll.95 c.ht ir J1.00 Sl.95 lO" boohh,/I 47.00 70.tS •4" bookth•lf 66.00 55 .tS ni9ht 1tand Sl.00** 55 .95 twin, full , qu••n r·"·' hdbd., s2.10•• tl .95 king pant h11dbo1rd 11.00•• 16t.95 bun~ bad ..,jth ladd•t 150.00 14.C .95 trr.indl• b•d 1JS.OO Furnitura, t2. Allow l to 4 w••~• d1llv1f'.Y._ ••Not thown John P. Miller and ~rona Kagnoff finished a required 150 houn or studies, which must be done every thrtt yearS to maintain mem· bership. The AAFP. headquartered in Kansas City, Mo.. and formerly known as t h e Americnn Ac n d cm y of ~al Practice. is the second·largest U.S. -1edlcal 80Clety. planetarium. ~119. tl ttIID I1D Prerequl•i te for Ille class is l ---~ ~ an; ® . IP<ID an Introductory asttonomy cour&e. Studct1I~ mAy take the I•-----------------' '-1"-,,...,_., new course while enrolled ln the introductory co u rs e , Per'°""' wishing more In· formation should call 834-5733. ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON tUCH ORAN•E. MAll Of ORANGE CE•llTOS 44" N. Eu,li4 171 41 5J5·1lll 47 f11h1011 l ilt~ 1714 1 6'4 4·11 12 7171 E~iR9tr A•tllu• 171 '41 1•2·llJI 2JOO N. Tu1ti11 Strt•t 171 41 ,tl-1111100 Lai Ctttltt1 M.tll 1211) 160-G411 SHOP to ~oo A.M. to •:l o P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10;00 A.M. to 6.00 P,M, SU NDAY 11 NOON t• 1100 P.M. l " 11· "' ly he 27 •• ,.. ~· •lll 01· '" IC· lko nt ,_ • I • 'l -~10 DAILY PILOT ThurSday, July t'b, 1973 _Police Make Apologies 1llter11ate Calls C.RAFl=ITI' .,_ ' ... .,,.. . Policy on Towing Changed =:;.In Raid 011 Wrong Home .. ' ; ·'lft•' 0 X N ARD , ~A Pl · ii,1•.Ntrcolics orrtcera In Oxnard abd Los Angeles h a v e ~ . ~J)Ologlzed profusely to a preg- :nant woman and t~n-age · ~logists nfler lhey staged t1 ' n4>knock narcotics raid on the wrong home. "' Oxnard nar('tjtics delccti\·~ 1 P.obby Tubbs said \\'cdncsday ' • the raid "·as .. an entireh· ; legitimate mistake.. and ad- ded. "Take it easy on us. huh'!" l1· THE EPISODE began Tues- ,. day morning with Los Angeles narcotics officers, "M'orking in t'<I:~ ! ;1;.;;,·; :~ 11!t"1lA Hunts ' t8inatra i:F :· riend ~ . . . ,,: ~. •lNDIO tAP l ·r he $•Riverside County district al-l"~ tomey's office says it is trying ;i:: to k>cate a new "'ilncss in an :,.~ invesligatio.n of a purported •.. assault involving two rricnds of Frank Sinatra. ~ , .. ~=: .. : ... :~: ••• -·· ... • • :... . ••• •'. •, •• •. • .. •• ·.: •• • •• '· . . Dept Dist. Atty. Kart Lee said the man .sought was an acquaintance or Sinatra. lie "·ould not identify him. FRA!\'.K J . \\leinstock or Salt Lake City. Utah compl:iined lo police that Jilly-Rizzo and Jer· ry .. The C."Usher" Arvenitas pounced on hi m M.riy 5 at the Trinidad Hotel in Pa I m Springs a~r We ins to ck resisted advances by Sinatra tOward J\frs. "'einstock. Paln1 Springs police have questioned wilaesses. a n d turned over the rcsullS of their investigation to. the district at- torney's office last ~·eek. No 'charges have been filed . . conjunction with 0 x 11 a r 11 police, obtaining a searrh war· r:int lo raid a house Oil Bl•rnnrdo Cour1. They \\'ere !old by JOC':i l authoritiell that a nurn l)(·r of lookou ts "'ould he around the house. "'ht•rc drugs "'ere allc~ed!y sold. "But you see. Brmardn Court is horS1'shoe ~hapt•d and so it h:1s t·,1,·o nnr1hwe"I t11r- nt'r$. 1\nd ;tlf !ht: hotnt•" in that art•a are thl' saml' color ntul 1lcsign," Tubbs siiid. "\\'HEN THE LOS Angele-. ofriccrs llrrived, they sa Y; :i bunch of kidg, nu1vbe 15 or so. outside. So evcrylhing match- Nl up -l he location of the house. the color, thl' lookouts. 1·verything." He said otficcrs sprc<1rtea1JI· ed the teen-agers a~ainsl al \\'all and searched them . 1\vo ofriccrs ba!terL'(! dn1,1,•11 the door of !he ho1ne Wfth a bat- tering ram. onlv lo Find a prcgn<int house~\.'if11• "'horn thev did not irtcnt ii v. The teen-agers. · it turned out. \Vere mcn1hcrs of the Na- tional Youth Corps. 1,1,·orking 011 an ecology project. "'\'E APOLOGIZED -in fact. 11'e'rc still apol ogizing," said Tubbs. "The agents 1,1,•ere just un· f1rniliar with the area," said [)(ot. Sgt. Bill Lcv•is, con1- manrJcr of the Ox nard police departmenl'5 1·ice and narcotics detail. Pears Counted CapJtoJ News ~ice: SAN FRANCISCO -The California Canning Pe a r Associ ation reports that 4.05 million cases or pears were canned in the state the past season. as "'ell as 11 .8 million cases of fruit cocklail. :-In Suuday's Fa111il y Week ly : . - . -..., ·n... ... ,.,· ...... 1>.. \ .. .-... "'--l),.., 11·-..,·· \4011: .. , \u.,l •nlh· .. \I•••• I lfhl. 1-~ Dir ...... 1 ......... 1'olf,h1- : .• • • • . · :; .- :-:: ·: :: .•• r-,• . f'-"'le'• <-':" c.-\\ 11..:;;;;-11r1 .. , • __ ... , ~ .......... 1t1t .. f'ko ;. What's a Uttle Family War · ·when There's a Movie to Make?: Ryan O'Neal and His Child-Star Daughter Tatum •l :: .•! : .. , :>he had no di.scipfine whatsoever. Wh en 1t·e Jid ni{:,li t ': 1lwotin;;, she u1attled lo go to sleep .instend. J 'd tell her 1he coultln.~l .skep, .she'd have to do that during the day. ,· And she'd say, "Well, I caa't sleep during Ilic day be· cause it's light outside!' :Ind /"d Sn,1', 'l frr(•. tfrink some coffee. Th,,t'll keep you. nu;n~·r.' In an exclusive interview with Family Weekly's b Hollywood editor Pe er J . Oppe n heim~r. Ryan ' O'Neal, the handsome young actor vJho gr2duated from TV's "Peyton Place" to skyrocketing star· dom in "Love Story," and, more recently, "The .. •• • • ~ • ·."'.: '-Thiel Who~ Came to Dinner." candidly comments 1,on the problems that arose when he agreed to f share the screen and star billing with his preco· cious young daughter Tatum. t Look for this no·holds·barred exchange with a ._ tlti~ell·identified "brash and aggressive. sometimes ~ostile" celebrity who's been criticized by at least · '·, one reviewer as having ''too much confidence." • • BUY-YOUR-OWN -In a ~pecia! report. \rrilcr Rozantt l...c\\ inter zeroes in on the bu y-.rour- 0"·~1 apa.rt1nent boo1n l<tki ng place on the glit- ler1ng ~ lor1da "Gold ( uast." She rt-veals lhc staggering fncls behind tlus an1azing phe no- menon and rl'COrds inlcr•:ie\\ s \r!lh the retirce:i \vho have ditched sno~·bound horncto,vns for their places in the sun . • ALONE AGA IN? -lla rr1ct LeBarrc dra,,s on her own expe:ience!'l as<• '' !do1,· of seven yea r.~ 1 to sha~e her time-tested. co1nmon sense recipes ror buddin g a satisfying single life She savs. , ,. "You can live alone v.·ithout being lonely." • AU ·con1in g S11n1la y \Vith '!'he r DAILY . PILOT 1 I le said Ox na rd oft it'(' rs ~tav,·tl ubout u block n11•11v during lht1 r~ld ror /car the}' 11111y he ret.'C1gni:1.ed. ' Nl~\1•port Be a ch 1..>0unciln1en have thunt(cd the city 's callin~ tow trucks to accidl'flts even though Polk-e Chier B. J;.anl's Glavas objected to the d1<111gc . Councilmen. in u 4-3 l'Ote. this "l·eek s:iirt the police 1nust alternate to"ring coinpnnics on a ~r·catl basis. rather lhan every other month as had been the prac1ire and as (;lavas 1o1•anted, .• GLAV.\S co"·rENDED that Thirt y niinutL's later and 50 yards do11 n I he stn:ct, officers. finall,v got into tht> righ1 house. an·estinA" SU!i<Jn R(·nll·ria. 2~. for lnvcs!Lgation of IXlSSt·~.<1in::.: r11a riJua11:1 Off1<·1•rs said a 1nalc s us µ l' c t . ap1>an·11t]\ hc·ann~ the con11nutlon down the block, t•:.capcd. ... -o : aJl('rna11ni; to"inH St't\ices ~1i1h each in- .. :... : · . .a . ciden! 11 ould crc;1tc <ln adminislrati,·c The cars of today are gulping more gas lhan ever before and·the cost of gas today is gulping more of your budget than ever, In fact. the U.S. Department of Transportation says that it costs you around 1se to drive one mile. If you think that's expensive, you're right! It's getting to be a pain in the w allet. Bui there·s an alternative. The bus. For 25t-less than ii costs to drive two miles -you can ride the "Two· Bit'' Bus Line. Comfortabl y, economically and painlessly. Next lime. try the "Two·Bit" Bus Line. We'll make getting there a little easier to swallow. headat'he. Bul the four councilmen who approved the ordinance, Paul Hyckoff. Carl Kymla. A1ilan Dostal and Richard Croul. said they felt Glavas' sys1c1n stifled con1pe1ition. ···nle present system inhibits com- petition." Ryckoff said. "The existing S<>rvices have ano1her city lined up for allenwte months but it "'ould be difficult fo r another bidder to come along." ,\IA YOH DO:\.\LD A. ~lclnnis, 11·ho \ supported Glavas· position, said he saw "no reason to change the existing prac- tice of alternate months.•· He pointed out that "no two towing services can exist on city business alone. "And it would create a king·•dze headache to sort out several calls al one time," ?\1clMis added. Kyml11, however, in making the motion to approve the ordinance, s a i d "alternating calls would be: mom com- petili\'e and 1vou!d give lhe best service for the residents of our city." • ease your 9-.s pains ••• Ride the ''Two·Bit'' Bus Line • ORANGE COUNTY TRANSIT c1s7 For information, or bus schedules, write "The Two·Blt Bus Line .. at 1126 E. Washington Ave. • Santa Ana, California 9i7D1 or call (714) 547-IUl04 •tt1aoe19 Thur~.11)' July 2b, }q7) DAil y PI LOT 11 'Three Safe' -Minority Students Hit 21% Food Additive W11rst Yet to Co111e Epidemic Of Polio 11 'Possible' BERKELEY ( A P l Almost 11 percent of some 98,600 students in the nlne- campu.t Un iversit y of California s y s t e m are members of ethnic minori ties, a UC report says. The stud}r wu based on 1urveys submitted to students last fall, a.s'king them to volun- tarily list their e t ho i c background, the university said. Of the 113,420 graduate and undergraduate students attending the university, 96,624 replied , the report said. The university said the survey showed 5.2 percent of all replying students were black, 8.3 percent Oriental, 0.6 percent American Indian, 4.8 percent Mexican or Spanish· AmB"ican and t.a percent bek>nged lo other e t h n i c minority groups. The campils distributions of ethnic minority students were :•. Berkeley, %2.8 percent : DaviS) 16.3; Irvine, 15.6; IM Angeles, 26.2; Riverskle , 17.2; Sao Diego, 11.9, 5an Francisco all bealth sciences 31.8 : SanU.. Barbara. 12.1 and Sanla eniZ. 15.2. I • Curbs Propos ed WASHINGTON (UPI J - The Foo.d and D t u g Adminlstrati'OO s a 'I s it determined that three widely used food additives are safe for continued human use. but a fourt h additive should be placed wid er new controls. The announcement Wed- nesday was 1he first po:sitive result of a review the FDA bega n Dec. 8, 1970 of all rood additives generally recognized as safe. mAT REVIEW was ordered by President Nixon in his 1969 consumer message, partially in response to the contl"Qversy that rose after the artificial sweeteners cyclamates, pre- viously on t h e sare list, were tianned as po5Sible cancer caµsers. There aie 533.inl!l'edients on the generally recognized as safe list. 'lllat category was created in 1\)58 when a law covering foo4. additives ex- empted those Which had been approved for' Ille prior to enactment of the i'.al or which had been "generally rccoi;niz· ed as safe." THE FDA said Wednesday Its review determlned three wldely used food additives passed the test and should continue to be recognized as safe. 'Mley are propyl or methyl parabeM. ~idely used as preservatives: mannitol, used as a sweetener arid thickene r amon~ oth& thi ngs, and sorl>ltol, U3ed as a sweetentt. stabilizer. lubricant and for other oorposes. 'n>e FDA also proposed that labels of food products of which a consumer mijtlt eat more tha n 20 grams of man. nitol or 50 grams of sorbitol should warn the buyer that "excess consumption ma y have a laxative effect." Btrr THE AGENCY pro- poood a different treatment for a fourth additive -carob bean gum. also known as locust bean gum. The dried gum from tho bean has been used r or years as a atabilli.er and a thickener for food.. UPI T1lftlllot1 Last Photo New York police re- leased this photograph, showing Debbie Phem- ister just hours before she was fo und stabbe~ to death in her Brook· Jyn apartmen t. Many ~vers are. People who have kept their savings at the bank where they have their checking account are discovering how much more they can eam·at Western Federal Savings. Where aoes the 17% come from? That's the Oifference in the int erest you ~. with daily compounding, when you move to a harder working ' 5!4% Western rederal account from a bank passbook paying 4Yi3. On $3000, for example, this amounts to $23.55 per year. We will be happy to detennine the difference for your account. and arrange the tr~er for you quickly and efficiently. It's easy to give yoµr passbook a raise. The interest on Western rederal JiaSsbooks is paid from dat e o( depo sit to date of withdrawal. And deposits you make by the 10th o( the month earn from the lst. Western Federal also offers a broad range of higher yield ~ertificate ac- counts. with maturities ranging from 12 months to 4 years. Plus free services, including the Capital Club, to all acco unt holders with minimu m balance. ~ • BO~. Cumany (Al") - For Germans trying to )t)S(' weight, lbt V.'UrSt is yet to come. ' Doctors and heallh experts plead v.·ith them, ~ ~crmans find themselves unab~ to cool their ardor for their favorite food -the sausage. IT OFTEN PACKS more than 70 pero!f!l fat, the Health M.lnislry says. But "-ho lis tens to the llealth 1-linlstry! This nation wolfs do"'ll an estimatl'd one billion poun~ of sausage a year. ''Diet s..1usages" have been brought out, to accomp.'lny "diet beers." Neilher has got very fJr. Apparentl y nothi ng ca n compete \\'it h traditional \·arirties of s a usage.., temptingly na\Pored wi t h everything fron1 tomatoes and truffles lo honey and runi. Germany has 1.";,6 kinds ol sausage, and everyone has his fa vorite kind. KING FREDERICK th e Great of Prussia liked his mettwurst. a ground pork sausage. lt comes fr o m northern Germany and is spi~ ed with paprika, pepper, nutmeg and ginger, wi th red ~ Acc_ounts are Feder~y insured to $20,000. A family of 4 can keep up 'qJ}J to $280.000 fully insured at ~stem Fed. Assets over $340 million •Hugh Evans, Jr., Pr~sident a....ly Hills 0 t.. Halxa 0 Dd Amo 0 Noothndg< D s .. 1h & H.11 D USC D Panorama City O G ty of Orange O Larchmont O Corona Del Mar O Inglewood D Hollywood/Vennont. Corona Del Mar 2744 E. Coast Hwy. I Jim Park , Managt.r I Telephone: (714) 644 .7255 w ...! "ine sonlCt1n\eS thro"·n In for Good measure. In ll.:1\'11r1a, lkrlln nnd the north , ;i popular del1l'~e~ 1, b!Ut\\·ur sl, blood sau~;_igf•. It's as dark red fl, il, namesake and dolled with Ythlte specks of fat. l)opular behcf has 1t that eating a blood sausage before SWldo"'tl ls a sure "'ay to make n'IORf'y and a\'Oid catching fever for a ye.:ir. Anotht•r kind of sl\USRJl.l'. liverwu rst. \\'as prescribed for anemic children by Gcnn:in doctors in the ~fiddle Ages For some rt'<lson. possession of a tiverurst also ""8S a trad1. llonal sign of prosperity. For an e1otic touch . there ts something called a cur- rywurst. One type of smoked sausage gets a regal change of name • "hen paprika 1s added to It! other spaces. IT ST ARTS 01..!T n s Jagd"'Utst, hwll sa usage ; and 11s lngrodlents are lean pork , young beer. baron. mnrjoron1 . nutnlt'g, ground cara"·uy 5C('(i and pt'ppert."d Jeek.S. Add paprika to all that, and '\'l\u l looks like a glorified hot dog becomes cro"·ned with the 1 i t I e kaiserjagdwurst, em- J>l'ror's hWlt sausace. ·rhe fr::inkfurter is I h c snusage lwst kno"'" i n Arnerica and o r igina t e s. log1cally enough, fro111 the ciir of t'rankfurt. One f&rul} near Frankfurt has been in the frankfurter businese for 113 y~ars and claims to be the world's big· gest JrO(lucer of hot dogs, "·ith daily output of 50,000. SACRA~IENTO t Ar I Calilomta could have a:other polio epldcnlic bfcause the im· n1uniz.ation of children has dropped to'' po l e n t i 3ll y do ngeroos levels," say11 the. state health director. Dr. J.~1. Stubbleblnc salf 27 perl'ent of C al i for 11ia '1 ch ildren between I and 4 ht\'e not receh'ed adequate lrn- 1nuniu11 ion of Salk or Sabm \"accinc. To a<'hlc\'e a 90 pcrctnt ki1· mune 1~1. 221 ,00> c::hlldttn nl't'd at least t"·o doset of \11C· rint', he said. lie urged parents to tiJ.io ch1ldrton 10 health departmfnt cUnics or private physknans. 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA Hu)liuttts 546-5527 ·f"9illrrt-..... , .. ·~· --. ·u1 :i--i·· ti .... ~~.~. (.... "" """' • I '• \ OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6,00 , .. SUNDAYS 9 TO s,oo GREAT CALIF. FAVORITES ... 'Mysrc ry' GA RDE N IA Thi s pop u I a r Gardeni• is re•ll y no Mystery to Cali fo rnia gard ener1. Eesily grown and e d m i r e d for its sh iny evergreen leaves end fragra nce from creamy white f lowers. W ill bloom now t hru summe r. 1 Gal. Req. 2.25 ·-Dwa rf A vo cacl o 1.69 OLEAN DERS V1rv h•rdv with m•u•• of flower c:olor. You 1e 1 th1m •~•rvwht•e in full bloom "ow. HIBTSCUS w,11 lnown for l1r9• 1howv flow1r1. w,·,,, 1dopt1d Hibil(UI in • bi'i w1y in Celi( '";.~·"Now 1.49 ... -' •' J11t r;, h111 • ' • ,,.~d i lf1 Morilat'1 Deyl Gl•e • • ' 'CECILE BRUNNER' I Japan••• l ~ BLACK PI NE ! f1it b1,ominq • c~lil 1~~0•· ite, 'Littl1c1do' :1 perf1 ol for l1r9e or 1m 1ll g~rd1n1. 9.95 OKh Cli ,,.,bi119 ~ote ci ....... ,....,,.,595 llqht ph1l rflft • H~r• i1 ltyly an otd1irn1 f•~o•il• dimber. --SUMMER I • LAWN ~ -·· lnl1r11li119 foc1I point or l•nd t,•p• b•,~g round . F 9rowin9. R19. 2.50. ,,_,,, 1.69 ' I I Oiscouragt Weed Reta in Moisture I • by using ' • • !oEt\\\\~1\~ CARE DECORATIVE I l ; Use PAX to rid di· c BARY. chondra lawns of t'! BARK 1 '. ber muda & crab- grass. Easy to apply •nd GUARANTEED RE SUL TS. .SAVE $1.00. .. ... SI" NOW $§98 I • L.ARGI .... ,. -The easy.core, CJOO~..! ~ 'I ·~ lookin4J qrownd i , • ---cover. ' Nursery Specials Thru \\'fd .. Aug. l s! Be her fllvorite guy ... t•ke home • doz en Red RO SES 1.98 She'll love 1/iru Su11da11 you for it! • COME IN, LOOK AROU ND WE 'RE OPEN EVERY DAY' . .. I I l • ,l":..,,~_D_A_l_L V_;_P::IL::O~l--------__:.:ll'.'.".1ur~day , July i'f:i, lt)7J EPA Takes Tough Posture Jail Deleted From Plan, In Attack on Pollution Newport Acts to Hold Doivn Budget on Neiv Station liy TllOMAS O. ELIAS lf most Southern Califor· niJns had seen the forthcotn· i~ Environmeutal Protection >€ency schedule for im- IJ'OVing the region's air quali- ty a year ago. they'd 1110~1 J kt-ly have thou ght it .,.,,as l'C1ence fiction. r·nr from backing off fro1n l1l' l'Xplosivc gus rationing proposal it 1n::idc 1n lcn!alivc brm lnst January. the federal consc rvaiion agency is not on!v sticking by it, but •!rrng!hening it. (.i:1s rationing isn't :111 the l·:P.\ 's plan ror the Souihlnn:i \\jll 111vol\t• Also inl'luded \\'111 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS bl' a requ1rtn1cnt t ha l publ1cly-0wned or operated p:1rking spnces Ix• rrduced bv 5 percent tx<rore 1 he end of 1974 and by 20 percent as of April 30, 1975. There·<; alsc a schedule for reg u 1 a r 1n- Spt!t.1ions of s1nog control devices on all the region's c<irs. • IN ADDITION. Southern faJ~lornia's cities and cou111 ies will be required lo set up speci>i l bus and carpool lanes on major strec-ts and rrcc"'·ays bl:forl' December of thi s year. All I hes e requiremenls. \\'h1ch will likel.v be rough\ h~rd bv both state and local g&verni-nents, -are e\emC'nts of the Transportatioo Control Pia,, rhe EPA is scheduled to impose on lhc Southland Aug. 15. The specific deadlines. says Ronald ~1ueller. Southern Ca Ii (o r n i a air has1ns coordinator for the federa l agc1M:y. aren't yet firm. but the.v u·il! be once the final plan 1s announced next mouth. That ph1n will cover the SouS1 C.OOst Air Basi n. in- cluding Los An geles, Ventura. Orange. Santa Barbara and parts of San Bernardino and Rirerside count ies. A !'imilar plan will al.so be imposed on the Sun Di ego Air Basin . 'AND \VJIAT if 1he state. ciLh!s and coonties don't want 10 go along with such drastic measures as res lricf i ng gasoline sales tb June, 1972. levels after next July and e\•entually reducing gas con- sumptiCMl by as n1uch as 00 percent ? "\Ve think we can impose rhi.~ on the cllies and counties undt•r lht.• Clea n Air Al't ol 1!>70." Mul'ller s:iid in nn i11-· trrv1ew. "Our legal section back 111 \.\'ashington s;1~·s \l'C can." The principal tools for en- rorcc1nent, he S".iid, \VOU fd be fines and possible j;1i l scn- 1 ... nct'S f o r .. approprratc persons or govC'rnmcntnl ;1gencies." un{!cr terms of the Clean Air Aet fines "'ould r11ng<" up lo $"..5.0flO a day and Mueller s::1rd lh<-EPA y,·ould aUempl to us<' any fines levi(.'(f lo impleme11t its progr<1tn . provided the rnoncy if-TI'l funnele<J directly uno th<! go1 rrn1ncnrs general fund. But !he EPA hasn't given any 111rlicalion or who \1•ould be responsible for the nu1ssivc t•nforceine nt job 1\s plan v.·ould entJil. ALI~ Tll!S SOU1''0~ like :1 hair·braincd schen1e to 1nost Soulh~rn C'ri lifornians. and n1anv stale and local offici;:ils arc ~·onv1ncL'£l lhr h:ir~hncs.o:: of the plan 1s dclibt.·r;1t•·ly dc<;ign·I ('{j to fnrcc Congress to lakc l the teclh out of the Clean Airi l\C:l. EPA officials, hoy,• c v c r . deny this . Still. the agency's :icting adn,inistrator, llnbe rl Fri. has said th e reslr1clions hr'H h<1Vl' 10 im1xise under the lil W .'.Ire .. unrcasonablr" sinC"e thcv 111noun1 to a ban on much of 1he region's traffic. He added that he'll ask <.:ongress tu <imend the <ict. giving Southern California ::ind o 1 h e r s eve rcly-afflicled re gioos tnorc time to meet clean air standards. Fri 's :1gcncy \I' as n ' t originall.v even supposed to create the Sou!hland plan . Under the Clean Air Act. ihat 1vas up tu the slate. BUT LAST FALL. 1vhcn the Stare Air Resources Board hadn't CQme up 'A'ith any pro- gram to achieve comJlliancc. lhc ci ty or Riverside sued. olr taining a federal di str ict court order .in Nove1nbcr requ iring fhe EPA to formulate and en- lorcc a plan. Now there's eons iderublt· <p1csl ion \Yhcthcr the state \1•1ll comply with its portion of th1; EPA 's scheme, It's up to the slate. for instance, to outline by next October 1vhat steps ii will lake to enforce gas ra- tioning. first at Junt'. l!li2. Jev~ls and later in s1nallcr amounts. SINCE TJI E ~1a!c \\'otddn·1, acl on the overall pl:1n. \Vh y At ll' est11ai1aste1· Scl1ool to Have Food D~vere~ After a succcs~ful one-year r>"\pcrimcnt at llunlington Bt-ath lligh School, cnlcred Jood sC'rv1ces "'11! be usccl :it \\'t..,ln1i nster High School. (;Jenn Dy s inger . ad- miuistr:i tivc <1ss1stant to the supe-;·inrendcnt. explained that the all-day service provided by ,fay's Catering of Huntington Bc<1ch \\'as used last yc<1r because the s c h o o I ad· rninistra tivc offices had to hr n10vec:I into the tluntington Beach High School cafeteria cind the cafeteria v.•as shut down. TlllS Yt-:AR. bccaust• of thl· success of Lhc progra111 at Jiu n I i n_g I o n 8 ca c h • \Vestminster 11·111 1·o!untari!y shut rlo1vn its c;rfclcri<i service in favor of ca1cring. D ysi n).?Cr s aid the \\' c s I 111 i n s I c r cafeteria 11orkers \11ill hr u.;cd at the oth•·r can1pu~es in 1hc rhstrict. J\nd. he n•1t<'d. Oit• 11.~c ol <1 c.1tcring scr\·rce en,1h!cs a sr-hoo! to u.<:.c i!s cafelcrin for cla.s!iroom llUrposcs "'·hich. in lhc crO\\'dcd dist ric t. are at a prcmiun1. liNl)Elt THE cnn!ract. thl' catc rrr \1·ill 11i:1~e f 11 o d <iVai lal.llc fro111 fi :30 a.Ill. 10 3:30 p.n1 to ::1Ho11' s!udcn1s ro cat. bct1reen classes n n d during breaks. The food 1s prcpnrrd ofr c,1111pu.s. but D~·s 1ngt'r no!i•d the food i.~ healed JU.~! prinr to ~ing ser\ ('d. According 111 co 111 pa n 1 011•ncr Jay '.ll asrro1;111ni, 1ht• cost or a rornplcrc l11n"h 11l-1 eluding mitk 11·dl he :1IJOut 4.i l't'OIS. Tht~ price~ or n1c;lls ;ire I su1J1ccl !o dis1r ic l <ipproval. I See by Today's Want Ads \\ 111· ~ 1.-: .. ~ 1111 111•1' I find !l\4·111 "11 lit •. 'i I~ l..'11111•·1., hnf ~''. ;i) 'li.,111!11 l\1 ~ I l':t 111• .1 ''" .;101h1l11,,·. ,1, p•·t1<t,~h1!1I) • u1.t saf, ll•·s.; 111 r1d111.{. • nl.UJ.: \\ \tEr. (,.h1nll t1r ~k1111~ l'i \\ li:1! !h1i;: 21' f'11rav<'J1r l~1n1 ht 111111h• l•n· 11 h.iot fl r•ab1n I (I \l1 ·r 1·1111'1'1', II ail1'1'. ~;••lio. lull rnl "'' .Hiii I" l1k, 01·,1 .~!lould I! do 11nyth1ni:: now lo help 1n1pll'me11t lht• f<~f'A plan '' J\l u1•1!er h.~111•\t'" ;1 1•1,111. lnn:ition ol the hc;11.v penal!lcs 1hat 1nay bt• 11np0St.'<I 011 "al.,. propr1atc" ~t;Jtc offtcrals and public pressure wilt force the ~talc Iv tompl y. Uut the Air B c~rces Boord so l ~1r ha.'> s:11d 1l \.\'ot1 'l coopcr'alC . hut n1th1•r will i.:u ahead "-11h ii bc l:1 tf·d p!:\11 of 11s 01111 :1 p!a11 rl1.1r 11 1n'1 ~----------~ l'\t·IJ :11111 to Ill•'''' f4•d1·r<1! stand:trtb hy l'li7. "~ !!k· ];111• t'l'(JUll't•~ ARB r11t•1t1 u•i , h.1, ,. 11uhhcly !>C-Oftcd :11 iii,. l 1 t 111 1 1~ :1 I peJl<lltll''i llit• (/(•.111 ,\11' \('! Hl- l'IUflr>-~. ud1J1111.; rl1;11 1 :ihl• rn1a coul<ln 1 1nt·t•l 1h1• ]1177 ... ta nd- ard s C\'('11 11 1h · \ .S. g0Vj'm- n1l'nl ~It 1·1· .. 1~·d 1l1c· governor For jVcekcnllc r Advertising Phone 6424:tll and p111 !Ill· c1111tc Ll·gislature ._ __________ _, 111 J<B I Armstrong EXCELON FLOOR TIU ~::::;;:,~~ufi;:;; 143Ac Eo§y to inston. 12x12 in . SQ. rr. WAS 181. NOW . TUB ENCLOSURE OZITE SELF-STICK CARPET TrtE I, '•,• . ; Persons suspected of crhnes in Newport Be.ach rN:IY have to steel 1he1nselves to l.llcarceration in an old· fa shioned jail. At least the specifications for the ne\lf po lice station won't include a pokey when the bids are approved by COWlCilmen 11l'1tt "-'eek or early n~xt month . CITY ~IANAGER Robert L. \\lynn said he will ask councilmen to cut oot the facility's jail to bring costs back below the $1 million allocated for the building in thi!I year's budget. 1'he lowest bid received for the ne\V structure was $1.19 million -including jail -from John.son and Mape Construc- tion Company in Anaheim . Wynn estimated the cost at $904,000. "That jJ.Jil is one very expensive ite1n, ·• said \\1ynn, noting thal its ellm.inalion fron1 the bid package will save nearly 1200.000. HUT LEST HAPPY criminals get the Installs ..asify, mt> as big as your walls! ~ red tiles for fireplaces, patios, accent walls. WAS 791, NOW COPPER GLAZE· WALL TILE Tarnish·prnof brosfle:t copper surface en- riches, protects kitch- en w.aUs! ~.~75'~n A dura ble, c11 refree shine without waxing! 6 ft. widths. /IS 288 LOii /IS ·-·· . SQ. YO. Dek!xe 18 mch model wiltl easy surtace mounting! .'"'' )6.95.129 ... _. . ideu ure will be easy at tbe new police station, \Vynn said mooey for the jail 'A11\ be requested ln next year's budget. ..Our schedule is three months behind now and the building probably won 'l be ready until next September any"•ay ," \Vynn said. "By then, we 'll know if we have money to add on the jail before the building is occupied." If they can't, Wynn coneedes prisoners may have to be transparted to the exist- inging jail cells next to City flail. \Vynn said he wilJ meet with the con- tracl"or to \\'Ork out a deal whereby the city can have the option ol adding the jail at the cu rrent bid price once the budg1't picture for next year takes shape in December. A NU~lllER UF factors ca used lhc undcr estimalion of building costs. Wynn said. "The last four v.•eeks, steel prices have gone up 80 pe!'cent and there is a lot of steel in thnt buildlng," \Vynn said. '·Also . the lwo lowest bidders told Ill 1hat a lot of builders "'·ere unsure of "'hat Phase IV or the economic controls would bring." he added. "They bid in an- tlcip.<ilion of good price increases over 1he next 12 nlonths of construction." \Vynn said that a number of other car~ ncrs will be cut at the new facility which he cans "functional yet spartan ... BESIDES AU. THE jail equipment - ranging from iron bars 10 special epoxy paint on the ">1.·alls -carpeting, vi ny l til- ing and other such embcllishn1cnts will be elimin<itcd. \Vynn also said ~18 000 1viU be saved by reducinl! the lhic kncss of the parking lot pO\'C'lllf'lll 1ron1 three to two inches aod eUmi naling ;111 concrete curbing and stall markers. \\lyn11 sa id Lhe project vdthout the jail \1il! c.i1ne in at around $19 per square fool ll'hich he says. "isn 't loo bad for a public building.'' < ~ DECORATOR CERAMIC TILE ' fUdl 'feins of cokJr on a spark· ling white field! Easy to install: 6 l( lasts a lifetime! 4 ~ x4 I/4 inch tiles. SQ_ WAf> 791. NOW . ..•.... •. · SEU·STICIC VINYL ASllUTOS FLOOR Till OAK PARQUET nooa TILE Prt-fini~ -niedy . to .alt on! 6Y.z:ir61/z .. .. 16~ Choice, first·quality pat. terns for floorS, walls, counters! Approx. l sq._ 1L .sbeets. 1~59<.u GOODYEAR j;pUNTERTOP Supple, ,.tainproof vi!)yl -easy to iir'I· '" stall! .. 'w"'°'42t • sq . .,._ n . SOLID VINYL FLOOR TILE WAS 3le NOW . O'!lely ·•caprJ'• pattern! Easy to install, won'! hip or stain. 41,;.,,.4 1;. io. . Makn any .._., look Iara••. b<i1ht· er! 10!!10 i'lCh Ille$. -44'J:;. COLD Y£JN TILES WAS 24t ... 12~n DECORATOR CORK TILE t:;;;;~ SPACESAVER , 1~ VANITY SHAG CARPET TILE FREE~ ~ for bulletin boanfs or -entire walls.I Easy! . WIS $1.98 . 129 ...... 1K7W' ·.-.c "-n. -~ Easy to clean 1-pc. top C ::J: and bowl; white base with ;:old trim. l 7x23 9· -:~~2~ -~ T~ic~ nylon pi la '}M:I.~~ ll!m\1 E••y le, 'n1tall •• 11.,,;,~. ell-paddad r2tt2 ift , fi!ots. NOW FT. SEAL NO-SLIP TUB KIT .SILICONE l/~ -· -79< SEAi.ill; ---·l" 11~. .. . . PRINTED INSTRUCTIONS LOAN OF QUALITY TOOLS EXPERT DECORATOR ADVICE FULL RE FUND ON UNUSED TILE! GROUT WHITENER AND TILE CLEANER 198 I ·~-' NOW -· l'IN-...... Costa Mesa·· 2221 Harbor Blvd • ' STORE HOURS:, '· OPEN SUNDAY· -II •·'1" · 5 p.m. THURSDAY, FRIDAY -8 a.m.·9 p.m. 645 -1126 MON ., TUE$., WED,, SAT. -8 a.m.· 5,30 p.m. ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PA RKING • even1 You see, we have more services than other banks. Not t hat you'll use them all. You won't. But it's nice to know every banking need imaginable is covered. And under one roof. More likely, you'll be into things that make day-to-day li ving simpler. Like the services we describe below. Of course, of greatest importance is ho w we view the banking relationship. It colors everything we do. Courteous personal service: We fe el banking is a person -to -person matter. So we value the human touch. With us, your needs are as individual as yo u are. That's why perso nal se n ·ice has always been important at Bank of America. New high savings rates : We offer many different savings plans. And they pay you more than ever before in our hi story. Our new Certificate of Deposit pays a big 7% per annum for at least four years on a $1,000 minimum deposit. Our three new Investors Passbooks earn you , 6'!2'10 annuall y fo r a two and one-hrlf year account, 6o/o for one year, · 5'12o/o annual inte rest for 90 days. , $500 minimum deposit. And our regular passbook savings account offers in-and-out flexibility. Personal Choice Checkin~: We have four checking plans to choose from. Each fits an individuhl need, \vh ether you write few checks · or many. And our beautiful sc!enic checks will add some color to your life. Simplified monthly statement: This statement s implifies balancing your checking account. We call it the Timesaver® Statement. It can even include a summary of your savings accounts and other inform ation if you wish. You can tell at a glance where yo u stand. • • • e scissors ' Three wijs to finance ~ur car: Onl y Bank o~.America g ives you three differe1,t ways to finance your car:jAsk your auto dealer about ou r Auto-JV!agic Financing, the rock-bott~m monthly payment plan . Or abou leasing. ' Red Carpet Service: Our own special system to ser\'e you . promptly, save you time. And nobody peers over your :;bo ulder when you transact your bu si ness. Most of. our offices have it. Automatic Transfer Service: Then t here's ~ur regul ar auto loan. Makes regular sav ings deposits-or 'We've made ljlo re of them than any loan payments for you automatically, other bank in California. See your . ,_ .. from you r Bank of Ameri ca dealer or local\Bank of America. checking account. Saves time, Of co urse, we make loans for just about simpli fies things. Especially helpful anything e lse you can think of, too. when you're ill or out of tow1i .. I ' I:~~~~.-~~~----·:-1 1· I PAY ONLY A Si FEE 1· FORUPTO I SSOOO WORTH OF 1, TRAVILt RS CH~ES •. -. ' I ' ~ Buy any amount ol Bank ol America Travelers jS.000 of Trava1ar1 CMq_ues WOt.fd,bt ~;; t Chepue1 li!P to $5.000-pay no more than a $2,00 lee. lhfs coupon~goocl al 1ny Bank ol ~~.P.ff!Ce ft\ I _ 1 F~rexampte, the normal 1 % charge for purchasing Ca!llornla-you wo~ld save $4_8.op;, ·.~·,· ·. _). , I I 'l ; OFFER EXl'IRlS SEPTEMBER 29, 117, • , / ~ . '• . \ ' • . f I ' . ·~ , I I I I I I I I NA.ME {Pl EASE PRINT) . ) ---------- I I I I I I I I ' . More offices up and down the state : >lo other bank can sav that. \Vherever 1·(1U li1·e ur shop or work .. l'uu'll alw ays I ind u.s close by. So yo u can cash a check ll"heneve r you \\"ant. Al so, ll"e can tra nsfer ,·ou r checking-and savings (lCCOllll l..:. \\' J1er C\i'C I' )'OU 010\'e i11 the stale -:;ave you lime and red tape. BankAmericard : For everyday shopping convenience, special occasions or emergencies . Good throughout California, the Un ited Stales and around lhc world. One monthly bill helps yo u keep t rack of expenses. 3 great coupon offers: These coupons represent some real banking-values. • l~ig ::;c1\·ing:-:; 011 l3;t11k of :\111 crica Tra1·elers Cheques. • ..\. free Family Financial Planning !\it-first -rate help in planning family goals. · • Your fir :'t unkr of ~ill! :iCl'n ic 01· other I 1re111 i um checks -free. You can see 11·111· 11·e think you should bank ll"ilh U:'. :-1u1·e "cn ·ices mean greater sco pe Lo meet )·uu r needs. ,\s ~·ou g'l'O\\·. \\1c•'rc \\·ili1 ~·,iu. I:;1·e 1-.1· step ut" thc-\l"ay. Let\ ~el better ~:·~; ·m OF AMERICA for the business of living Bank of Amcr1c.i Qll1ccs Fountain Valley Costa MCS1l '' r South Coasl Town Center . '.' Harbo1 ·Adams If, ' . ' Irvine Camous ' . Irvine lndustroal " 1.· • . •• BatbOa ,,: l t 11 I fl ' . t N ewporl Bl!lltch '.' 1 ... . f,' .. ,, ri Newport Cenler t • ,, ,.,.r •1 .•:n!r>r Or , ,., WesrcliH Plaza ', • •Tj , Brook.hurst·Adams . . . /. I :· ,, i.• Beach-Atlanta ! ~ ' ' .. . Hun11ngton-Harbour .. . ,. . . ! ' ·' r_· I",,• Sonngdale-Ed1noer ·SI 1-'W"' ::; 11,_ och ~ • • ' . ' \ ' I ' I ,1._4'"--_0:_4:_1L:_Y..:P:_IL:_D:_T _______ _:T~Jwt=-:sd:::••::_:· Juli Zb. 1 '11.> $4.l Millio1a For tl1e Record ~ Cl1apman to Build Dissolution ·Of Marriage J'llft Jiii' u W1llel'", C1fol M1r~rtr and G1•1111 1t1v Jfrl!Chetf, P1mel1 M. 11\d J E. VOll""OMIPI, l!•"ftl 1'1. •nd Ad1lle M McQloN, l(,11he<1 ... (111111 1na Lton l'"• ..... lfk McC1nn, .. ego.,. '· and Mld!HI J. -'Mtlto. JOMPf! 1'. 111d JUOll" "'· EPP9"1tlm.,., JIM and Edw1rd F, lloittll"-• f:rtO W. Ind M1<V I(, Sherard, 0•1!111ne Nor-•nd Au1lln .,,,_ (llvlr., (ynl,,11 l . Ind Thom11 W, Ro11, lltrrv W. ''"' !<lorma L Hol11ncl, M1rgllrt l A.cltlt Incl JOl'ln P . W!I....,, Ll-t llyn M. Ind Mt•lt L. Mlllt. MICtlttl W, arid J1r.e M. Kllql, L1wr1nc1 and Belly (;trtwr'dl. ll:ubv v. '"" C.CVl!t> J. Dl>nctn, ll1•bar1 •nd R-1 E . (411111UIJO, AOMm1rl1 Ind Pasquai. F. ~. Jlldllh Ann 11'd J-• D11n Parli.M, Wendy AM 1!1d L1r,., Slevffl• llllno-<11\. M1rl1>n and HMoid J1m.l11d!M, ffMeY O'Detlt Mod S~U.11 llatlc COl"IOll, Btt~ f:. Ind ~e £. Schull!. Acib9<'1 1, Md Eltlel L. ~ CM rlel 0.. MW Oerotlly L, P'Jtflelcl, Ol.Jrtlll J. Ind le,,.,ty H, CDlllN, \llrolnla E. Md ltlc:N td o. K9Mlll(lll, Don.lld lM .... Jallke CMol :S~ H-WIYM I nd J\ldllll Alw! NM,,_, tlMfl ..-. Vtrnon Lfllllt, ·SlllaMt C ... • incl w..,,,. PWI T ... ,_, C.-L ..S ll:1i,tl A. LI a_.,,, ,.,.....,.... Johll Mii lt.0.Ckl ·~ C1rroll, W•11.H • LM and l•endl G1ylt ll:Md, Judlrh M•rl1 (llty1nl) •"II Oort> .... _ AA!PIOfty, J1nk 1 A. 11\d Panny C. ...... Jiiiy 17 Good. Lu•ll• IC. IQd Jonn 1-1. Hoc1v1r , Glrv M. Ind Roc:hal!• M. Lep;iik. M1rk RllPll i nd Tha("I E01el TIOd1r, Ml rcl• Crowt111r u 1d Clllford ,~, ICMfl, W1yn1 It. 1nd Ol;iin1 V, l rown, J Oll•Pll E. 1nd B11t1lell Jord111, Sylve111r LtoGt l 1n(I Wilfl'll °""" Glmtl'lll, RGIMrl Gr1dy en.d Bonni• """ lMIWly, LllllM H. nnd i heodOl'e C. POIM. J~~ Jr. Incl Wllfnell El1lnr INTllll:LOCllTOll:Y DECltEES lrrllrM Jlllr 1' H11'1"llOlll LI VonM Ind L""°" G. Olllnn, i mollly M, 11111 U11111 G. P rMlon. Iii Ja111 11111 J Ohll H. M!-r, G_.l"n J. Ind Rkhard A. l1ntomo,. Jahn J. £111111111 M. L ....... , K1rln Ann Incl Ktnnelll R Andt...,.., 0.-111 T1teM 111<1 S!-n Prank Ferout0n. C1!hv 011111 1nc1 Cn1rl11 WIYM Em., ,1lt1d1 Marie t nd J ahn Mtclt ,.,.,, ... , J lnvny Q. 11111 Donn• c. NMdh;fm, A_, Ind $coll KlfV'li"I', Oofotlly M. Incl Joftn A. OHR, J-1 Kii ll'ld Jt rrBd Wltll1m WllMl!I. Wt:ilofY H. Incl L1veme P•,_s. FrMki. 5119 Ind J 91;klt Wtyne Jle'llson. W1IH1m Andrew lrm• Dell MILlro, 51ndr• Elleoi Ind RIYrMft<I M"""' Geru1on, WllU•rTt c. 1nd Jenice l l11t, Ch1rlott. M. I nd C1rl F.A: Mltler, Cll1rlotl1 Ind !-l1ryey Frec:klelon, Elli1btlh i nd Wltlltm Cyru1 E1dit11 .... Ewfyn IAd DellOn R. SCNM.. DclrQtl'ly .V...tlld1 Ind P•ter ,..,, .. , Other Deaths FRESNO (AP) -Bishop Aloysius Joseph Willlager,-wbo headed Roman CathoJI C dioceses here and in Puerto Rico during 31 years as a bishop, died Wednesday. He was t:l. VIENNA, Austria (API - Adolf Hoffmeist e r , a Crecboslovak cultural figure \Vbo fell into disgrace after the Soviet-led invasion of that country, died Wednesday, the official Czechoslovak news agency CTK said. He was 71. Denfla Notices WARICK Jo!1n A. W1rlc~. 1'.i(t Peol>f'I'••~ Lf"'' Co111 Mt11, Date of ~11~. July ''· !,1l. Survived Dv wilt, Ell11t>etll; lwo <111111llltft, M•rlorte Arr<>yo, o! MOflle Serino, C~lll ; K••ffl (hit111Qftn, Pf.a<lena. brotMer, E. C. Warlc-. erown>11Ur11, In· Ol•n•. M9mber ol All~<l•n• Mt, Wll"'n M1tonle l'..oocle No. 79~. Vl1lt•Hon, today, Tnur1(11y, from 1J '"''-lo • f·•· Gr1 .. 1loH '..-vh;e,, Fr!d~Y. Julv 1 , 1 p.m,. lnalewood P•rlc. Cernelery. Fftmlly 111QQt:1!1 lfltlmorltl tOfllrlbllllon' rnev be ml<le !o Ill~ TuDerculosl1 8nd Re~plrSTo"' ~1::'u':ry~'O':f1:.'l;j;, b'fr";:'~ Cernelery ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY (%7 E. 17lb SI., Costa !\lesa llMll88 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL ROME Coroaa del ~tar &7J..94SO Cosio Me>0 6"-HH • BEIL BROADWAY MORTUARY llO Broad-.·ay. Co~ta~A·lesa LI 8-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES li911 Beach Blvd. lluotl~Beacb 84t-i771 14 ndo Ave. Long Beac %13-438-1145 . ' J\fcCORA-tlCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Lagu na Canyon ltd, IM·llll • PACl'f1C VIEW MEMORIAJ, PARK Cemetery l'fottaary Capel S$OG Pat ine View Drive Newport Beac.h. CalHornia M+flll • PEEK FA~ULV COLONIAL F\JNERAL !JOME 7101 Bolsa Ave. \Veictmlnster 89.'l-3525 • SMITHS' MORTUARY m J\1oln St Jhmllngton Bt•cb 536-Mll aots-1111. C•rot •nd 01~ R (trv, Ron1IC1 0. Incl CllVI F ..... ,.,..,, Fri~• l . ellCI JOllll 8 C•mpt)fll. LI-"" I nd lvnll• l:luflM!le P•ul Ln11, """ No•o'• Jt•n V•!tnd1, l:le•1111 1nd Jw•ll tiU•(nln1. Me<lt ,t,M •Piii Oonetd Vin Sl1M01, Tlmothv Jtrome 11111 °'"''''' Campus Complex Jt.tnM Flemlri.g, Jt m11 Mltlltel 11\0 JOyCI Ann 1fr<el, Cll•lt!IM lot "'" ND<'•>'l•n Ell· ... ,., kOMnt. O"'noS Allt<I IJ\11 PtUllP\I MD<t•e Grlletv1, (;l'Or!,11 ,t, 11111 O•v•ll• ,t, s1111r, M~•o••ll M. •"" ll••dlty w cn.1t1rllela, Ju1nit• •nd Ktf)Mlh 11av Surleo, Su.an M1•l1 1nd 01vld G9nlon W<io;.illl. Robert R, and N•n~y J. T1'/'10t. Pt1rl P 11111 Ew•••t R . Potlet k, Mlrllael H. 1"<1 Carl1n1 A. E111<!1mln. C.IO<ll 'J, 1nd Dal1 E Cllanlller, Elt\al II ~• 1nd Ronald Ltt Jones, Mlc:ll•el C.. """ C1!11<!rlne M. 8r41n1r<1, B•endl N. 1na 01vl<1 T1ll1fefro. 8everly 1P'ld c111rl11 LOiii \ Grlmmtll, R-rl l. 1nd Luclllt M C.rllfl1. KtV• Lvnn 111<1 JamH Leroy lH, Glorlt Jt1n 1110 Rog.or ,t,l1n Moo<•· C1rollnt Ann •llCI W1t!er A•Y Brown, Alvin Ltroy 1nd H1ltn F•an1 1(111ler, M1ru1rel l . and (h1rt1• 111 Pll,....,., 81rt>lrt Fl.,. lllCI Virgil OHANC.E -Chapman Colll'gc l\.1.!I announced a M.l 1nillion construction program to Include a fine arts depart- 1nc11t and t~a tcr. a residen- tial apc1rtment and community bulldini:: and a $500,000 campus rcnovation projeet. <'Ording to James Farley, vice president ror developrnent. The $2.6 million art complex will include the theater, an art -gallery and craft lnstructkm center. A Department of •leallh, EduoaUon and \Vcllare grant or 12.1 million will help flnanoe this project. ~lore than ~ in fede ral fll'nds have been granted to the <·o!lcgc at 333 N. Glasse\l St., Orange for the projects, ac- A $1 mllllon, 50-bed reslden- tlaJ apartment 8Ild oommunlty building will be financed !hrough a $911 ,000 loan from the U .s. Department of Hous- ing and Urban Development, Farley said. M-1 Sllt nn,., Ooiorltl P. aN Cllft!er 5. SwefllY, Slltrrv Lynn 111C1 ll•r Ntll Wld'lttr. (Ir.I J. ~ Jor.n A. S1nlol1,Klto. WINI"" Ind K1l11r11 J"l'I All .. , M.trv A. lfld Cll.,,_. T. 3 Students Honored r.1odemizaUon or o I d e r baildings on the !5-acrt cam- pus will cost an estimated $500,000. Col..,., Ullle L lfld JudltM A. Gr1"-tTI. P1trkl1 Ann Ind c ..... i.s ·-Jor.-E1t1 lllfldt;U Ind LWS. M1tl1 Tot>ltt, V1Uey J. 1M Jack I!. R ~ Carol Ann end Eltw1nl C, 81r&r10V, J_. 01•1-I nd Mlth•e1 PhJUlp H11vll1n<1, Ooro1n1 A. llfld MarlQfl 5. Morrli, RlcM•r<I L. Ind Fr1nc11o V. M~kef'. Joa11 M. ulll Darrell G. Mhldltb<'OQlr;, Tfl'e'' Ind AGnlld l'l ugll Nef'os, Oorotn1 J•nt and J~m11 'Ibree Orange Coast students were among tile 168 boooted f~ their aca demlc excellence recently at canromla Luthcran College in Tholllland' Oaks. In addition to the federal grant and loan the college hopes to rabe $1.l million from gifts to finance the tolal projects. Biile. ICl!Mry>'I M. l llCI C-oe w. Sl.c~, ltene l. 11nd Ger1ld T. 81rker, Gtorg• Ltwl• 1/ld Audry Fr1nce• Students n1ust maintain a 3.5 grade point average on a 4.0 scale to make the school's Deon's Honor Llst. Chapman C.Ollege was found- ed by the Disciples of Christ in 1861 in Los Angeles. In 1954 the campus waa moved to Orange. Coron1, RObert L. and Ctrol L. !11logll, E<1w1rd Arnold Intl Patrkl1 ........ Chenr,I, l re-en and W1l1•ce c. Gagnon, Judiltl Anni Ind Barrv P1vl Hunl. OorC111~ M. 11n<1 Glenn Leo RelnMan, Miry t1Utn ind Glllll<'I )lltnc.'$ Arca honorees were seniors James Elliott of Costa Mesa and John Kilpatri ck of Hun- !ington Beach, plus sophomore Theresa Gilchrest of Newport Beach. Farley said a groundbreak- ing ceremony for the new structures has b e e n ten- tatively set for late August or early September. the hroadway adventurers eluh ••alae·travel is w•at our tous are all about •first class and deluxe •porterage, tranfers, tips hotels •guaranteed emergenc.Y •all flights on scheduled return flights airl ines •bilingual esorts and •round trip airfare included city hosts •full sightseeing, • broadway charge many meals convenience* world-wide cruises •Caribbean· Cndses -featuring Sit- mar Cruises I Liberian Registry l Via Na- tiona l Air Lines. Includes all meals on ship, plus transfers and porterage. De- partures every Friday. e TSS Falrwincl, 8 dt11ys from Los An9eles, from $355. Calling •t S•n Juan, St. Thomas, S•nto Dom in90, Porl. Au-frince. .. ~ ¥11 COnllnental Alrllnet.. o.. u rtvres ,....,.., Sa!urd1y. Phn 1°'" !Ill, t1vrlc• .8 days, I Island 7 night~ Honol ulu, plus Pearl Harbo Cruise, sightse•ing . Up9rade available.: I night at Kauai is optional, plus 24.5~ ', • 8 days, 3 islands, I night Hilo, nights Kona , I ni9ht Kaua i, 3 ni9h Honolulu. Upgrad e availabl•: Fro '~ ... $329 I " e 15 days, 4 islands, I night Hilo, i nights Kona , 2 nights Maui, 2 nighti: Kaua i, 7 at Honolulu, Upgrade evei From $405 europe euro1tea11 advent11re I b days ,, ... 574 ' Lo ndon , Br us sels, Hei delberg, Innsbruck Ve nice, Fl orence, Rome, Stresa, Lao sann e, Lucerne and Paris . Full sight seein g, Rh ine Ste amer Cruise. Depar l tures throug h Octob er 5th, e 4 Capital Swinq I ond II, t S days Lo ndon, Lisbon, Rome or Madrid, Paris Thurs, th ru Dec. 20. From $637 e Ga I Jet Swin9, 15 days, 8 ci ties, from $53 e Pageant of Europe, 22 days, I 'f cities, from $851 1•acifie, orient 1!1 p rie•t plu1 5-,:. lu1 1"d 1ervie1. ori('ll11•, ntlventure 2 I dt11ys ~·~ $11&· Visit in cludes Tokyo, Kyoto, Taipef Bangkok, Singapore, Hon g Kong. partures throug h November. • kabuki Koper, 15 days, J ap•n only from $820 • South Pacific Adventure, 22 days fro"! $1 )49 e Circle Pacific Adventure, 23 fr om $1413 ftlff!'lb9nitl' h1cludatt rfto~thtv new1l1ttt'' quar!1,ly lr1¥tlotu1t e bo111n di1eou"+t o" r pe1t ho1:c1 • .,.1 a Frtt fll9hl h 19 p•i&r to d p •rlut1 e di1covnh O" lil111 ""d proct11in9. e Mexico -feeturing Sitmer Ctuisa1 ( Liberien Registry), Includes ell meals on ship. Dept11rts from September 21 st. • TSS Fairsea, 7 days from Los An- 9eles, from $210, callin9 on Puerto Val- larta, Mt11?:atalan. Spec~I 8 a nd 10 day cruis1s available. e TSS Falrwo_ 14 ciays from Los An - geles, from $560. Mexico •nd C•ntral America. 23 days available from $920. mazatlan gala I 8 days, '; n.1g•pi $}99 ·the gol.den eirele 2~ day• .. '$744 -Visitin9 London, Hollend, Bel9 ium, Ger- many, Austri~, Italy, Swit~erland I Lu- >c.m•l end Piris. Departures through Nov. 3. • The Grc.:I Tour, 29 days, 16 cities included in the 8 countries visited, from $951 . . • Spain, Pom9al, No. AfilcG, 22 day•, 13 cites, from $744 • ScaMIHYla. 15 days, 7 cities, from . $951 e ROAla & ScGodl-, 22 d•y•, 7 • -citi••· f"'"' •!065 ~,~:\_,~ ellp and a1ali ... '---·-·· ~-+•+• ........ Zip ....... . ..... D•pt. 611.oco,.1116 -.......................... . ·County Cash Given 2 Valley Youth Pro graf!tS Get · Support ORANGE COllCTY YMCAOffers SANTA ANA -Additional monetary support ror two )'Q!Jlh programs In Fountain Vallt!y bu been voted by the Board ol SUpervisor:ii. A $5.474 con1ract with Teen Help lnc. for the continued operation ot the Youth Service Center program will help ln lbe battle to reduce juvenile delinquency, according t o SupervOOr Ronald Caspers of Newport Buch. Ce.spers said the program provides l r e e conf idential counseling, crisis intervention. referral and general educ.a- tiooal and drug abuse preven- tion services to young people ::ind their parent s, ' The second <.'Ontract ap- proved is for continued opera· iton ot. tbe Fountain Valley Community Theatre. The fund for the coml.ng six months la 14,164. . "All county espenditures for this Commimity Services project are reimbursed with fed eral funds," CMs>ers said. The theater project has <JS objcftives reduction of you th- a d u It 1llenatlon, \llii;dlng socially 1CCtptable and m~ lngrul actlvltleo fot Y~Cli>«>­ ple and dJv~rtlng thcfn'ti'om the juvenile jusUce system. Both pro g r a m i.',~, are nlMitared by the~il County Proballoll De cnt. ' '" ., Bids Eyaj For Cen~ " Belly Dance Instruction SANTA ANA '-A swnnler Belly Dancing class !IX' begin- ners starts We~, Aug. 1 irt the Santa Ana-Tustin Young Men•s Christian Associatioa - County Airport Grows In Tljlffic, Air Cargo TUSTIN -Tustin cltY .Coun- cilmen will consider bi4sitor a new $1 million civic cel)t~r on Aug. 26. Coo tractors ~ ~ve been asked to submit lilds on the three-building complex by Aug. 16. , The civic center 'Yfl.~ ap- proved by voters a yeao ago and will be built M· the northwest corner of:b·Main Street and Centennial W.dy. faclllly. I The 7: 30 sessions of ~ struction in the ancient Middle Eastern art teaching poise and increased feminine beauty and charm is taught by Miss Sonia Rattay. To wom en.only, the YMCA stresses. Passenger traffic and air cargo shipments at Orange C.Ounty Airport conUnue to grow rapidly. The passengers in June totalled 116,452 which com- pares with 94,757 in June 1972. The yearly passenger log is up 33 percent with St? ,927 Jn the first six months of the year compared to 396,075 in 1972. Air Ca rgo was 11 tons In June up almost 10 tons ov er Ille previous year and the yearly figures show i82 .3 tons compared to 457 the year befOr~, an increase of 27.4 per- cent. Parking 1o.t business, a key to airline travel is up 21 per- cent over 1972. More th an 111,000 cars have been parked lo date contrasting with the figure of 92.000 last year. Councilmen said they , will use $100,000 in federa l revenue sharing funds in the prOject. Included is a new city hall, a police administratiori building and council chambers .. Spare on lhc site has _been reserved for a new ~aunty library. ··'' davis • ~ .. own JUL l r R .. _ " ' . • FRIGIDAIRE· MAYTAG FLOOR DEMOS! DISCONTINUED -. MODELS! •' " REFRIGERATORS! .. S~ ENDS JULY llST! .. WASHERS·· DRYERS!.: ., . MANY ONE·OF·A·KIND!~ BE HERE EA•IY FOR BES1 SELEC110N! . . ' "' • w . ,,...~~~~~~~----:....- PR IC 6 S' SlAS.H6' AT BOTH · , Davis • Brown Stares r Costa Mesa & El Toro! 4 DAYS ONLY Fri., Sat., Mon., Tues. Sale Ends July 31 HURRY! SAVE NOW! . .· ' . TOP NAME BRANDS NOW PRICED TO CLEAR ' We Must Move These Fine. Quality Appliances Stereos and TV's to Make Room for the New '74 Models Now Arriving Daily! BUY NOW AND SAVE! '· .. , . ' ' ' ·: PRICES SO LO~ . YOU MUS~ S~E ·JO BELIEVE < : ON TOP. QUAL~TY FRlGIDAIRE APPLIANCES! SAVE NOWI ; JULY CLE4RANCE OF RCA & SYL,VANIA TV PORTABLES! CONSOLES! • I DISCONTINUED MOISELS REDUCED! FLOOR DEMOS • ONE-OF-A-KIND AMPEX CASSEi IE TAt;tf RECORDERS our 1HIY GOI PllCID 10 CllARf ntegrl111 & De p endabilit11 COSTA MESA e HAUot AUA '411 East s1 .. 1ttatMll SfNtl . D•lly t .t, S1tutd•y 9., "+6·1614 EL TORO e SADDLEBACK VALLEY El To ro llotd •I freew•y ( Nt•I lo S•f•On I ' D1 ily t -t , S1h1tcl,.., t -6 11 7-l llO • '• • ' ' • • • J ' • I • ~~Wiii'!, ltADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUlHORIZID TV I. APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE Ml·l4l7 • • •, .. • 1 \\· Di ' '" ~f . '" ·> . •: :[~ •• • •: .: ' . ··-• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I =~ .~ • • :I • I " .~ • • ... • ' • l h .. r>fi"Y July /ti. )<1]} .. '"U"'"l"1"•8'•11"'"''~" .. "'""~ ...-. .. ,.!_..., 1 Vital St~tisti~s for tl1e Orange Coast Are a \~· Dissolution _.,,. 4).f Marriage ' Cl•l•HI• LI~ J•iw aNI Rent!dO .... 00 O N11ll 81rtwn 1 K•v 11'1<1 L1rrv P1rrlclr. ~111, Bilttwfl F Ind Fr«! Mlt11 Ft1Mrl(,I, 81rO.rl c; .. en l n<I Frln- Jo•en~ l!tn._...... Cl\ades V•c!or &nd Velma Jt•n G.ohf'<!O. M .. d1 R"•• ftnd Ftf11;noo M.••• 5u•~n .J'l<l 5•onlev Lo.111\l'fM•n, Shorl•v llonn •nel J1mr\ Jul'~" C•nhtld, Rot>sr! Wt\!~• ~no Gav1nnt F\11d Jul, s ~chw•be. Louil F an<1 Lv~•d L J<>ntl-1111•'-"lf GI.,. 1'1<1 Cvnlhia l(lm Fil1~1llr 1t,, Joti11 f rancll and l(rl11l1't Jt1n KmCftlO. Ca<Olvn t: Ind J()lln O~vi1 M~rton•· Rttiecc• Rull\ and Rlcn••d Ro~.Jltl l~yn I• lno .-~·•" I 11n<! ltOn I) '·""""'C•. N<'ll•t Re»t 11na Will••"' Dr Will (",•mbero\, l-<>Urde> ~na tit'""' !O G. a,,•-n, Ofo•t• L•n·' ~nd SvLl'!• E o-e .. on, Ml•Y Lou and Vern L:'<' B"n•1 Bt•l>a<• lvn~ •~d M•••<ll'11 Ronald Sl'Jb•ncter, Sn••<>n l(av •<>d Eowarll Lvle flul!rlM Q;dl'd Lvn ~nd JMn ~f'C Cur«e. Jen and K•rrv Aor!enM H"'"''· N•11cv L. •rid Tommr J . O!'fnllrrff, Luellen B. 1111d Edward W. Sliva Llnd<ev 5. ind Mkl\~I J. Marllr"ll• Aoel• and Fran~ "oam1, Oo11nn ltt """ Jtme• Hult Hen<1er....n, Su1An Margaret """ Toma, Lennie A!loccll. l(All\orlne 0 ""Cl F•~nd~ A I~•''""· Brv•n E""•n! <1nO P11ul• Di,.na "''"'!"'er, M"l<><lv l"" <1nll ltenM•n E"rvln 0 11b•n1on V<rnjn•> "' an<' Don,11n II S!over, l("'n11r0ne J•ck~n and Rav Mon<t M•,.,,~•! e nncock. R~l>erl Weslev Alld Ocronw '~" Alamo. P1!rlcl11 Tun1taU •nd Phillip r.a•cla 011nne•. E~Ward A and p,1r1c111 "'"' RI•~••" A Jr •nd ll••b•'" !"! J~""' e ren! VPrn1m •~II Bealrlce !"!"•~'"'' ~·•n••I<, '"""'rl s """ e~n~ J. H; ·•I" Herllfoet Lo·~ •n1 Lucdle p,,.,,,,. ~"'' n"•h f """ !-'•·~~ · L ~"" noun" K &nrl p,;,.,,,, •• N """'"<~-r.irori<1 Su•~"" and W•rren ,,,v T~,,..,., ("~""'' r.r>r'''•V P•"I E"W"~ "<>d rl•rf """ Pe···· P~"'" EudftdD .. nd JO"""" '"''1'"" '>''"<=" • ,, ........ ~ .. ··~ ~· r"" Jn·~~., l C•ou••~ ~an'l•a Lou•• II"" ••rrv 0'1• FINAL DECREES e 111tred Jun• l• f!d •"I H Par~~· nn·t J·'"" r 1ln,,n• Vnllma•, oavid J·•m•> aM S;ora E 1ton Y1 .. t1, """ M~d• """ '"'"" Ho•,....d <'•oa6i. Rul<v Ell•" """'Leman E~ward C.•lll'""· Nn<~ L•e J nct D,,,.,., A~v Wood•. Mil1icenl F. and•Tnamas A .. Jr Ri>o~olpt> Marv Ellen """ Ru<,cl; Ray Bu~ard, Jacczueline W•l!>f:lmina and D"v!d Arll1u• Mino. Pnillp H Gf"l(lre•u, Bcllv J~J" 11l1>er! and P1>v!li1 S. ~nd He<!Of B•ny, Cl\arles Wilh•m <1rld Su.an Cl<atlo!!e L,nn,ird, P.>t<k1~ A, .1n<' Jns•o~ PC. r""' .n. A~le Dianne and Da~·d Allen t>o"rv. Joan Vrr11nic.i ;ind Jan1~s M L,1nd1vark. Joseon Harold 11no Delia G·1u•Q•a11n.1 '>< h•.,Ole<, Palricof Long ana lcl,1nd 0. En!erod Ju1>e lS Oliveri, Annemirit F. ano Wilham S. Marcu~. Lawan'I R. and Orlvn J. Ba•er. S!\l'ila an<! Steven Heu!man /l,\cNei>I. Lonnoe Marlin ~nd Donna Ma"ll S•<>e" Oeb•" 11nd Tonv Ptle'l· Holly Doty <1nd Jon Raymond ll~Uerd. C1>11rlotte A. anol Norm•n f . weicl\, Do<otnv A. and Rollo N. Bre1sle<. Cl><1<1e• E . and Nancv Loui~e Slo~"· Dolore~ J. <1nd Aaron £ '""~'· An1t• end G•e<101y BY'"'~· Raio!> l~ and E'"'" France~ J.•v•. LOU""" ,,,,g Aobl!rt W C.arty. Virginia C. and Jilh" S Clar•. Su•anne end Jot:i~e l . S11lliv•n, Robert T a11<I Arhne M Ph1llios, Eoiwarct R. and Lillv C:111on, Lavonne K. and Williem B. Allen, Ann /l,\arie and Cl>•rle• f tancl• Fatren. Adr;•n Lvnn and Anthony Ou In n Hazen, Elilabelh and Jack A. Wh•lt, Lilli"" ~...t Tnom11• C. McGarr, K,1111erlr.e A. arid Larry G Lewi•, Kat1>leto11 Ma"e a"d Wo!llam Gfllroe Li.<1e. J.~uslo I>' ""o Mddrt>C McCo<mic~. SleUa OavgMne ind ""lcnael Will!a"' ~1n~er~. JAme1 R. ~nd Llooda Jovce r.,rne<, Karin S~ and Lernv Tnoma• r ~,,,•le•. J~•si~ J11a11 a110 cnervl Anne Gr,11\,1m, Pa!•lc•a Ann and lawrenc• Fro<1erlc~ Liee11ses M.wt end JuctUI\ Ly11. 25, Jll Cent.,. S!., Co.ta MtWI. WH ITZEll.-OICIC. -lttll MOl'9•n. 'H. 33J61 Vlolll LAttlern, Ot"" Poln• •~<I Judy Ly11t1, U, lJltl Vloll! Lanter,,, Dina Potf>I, KLEIN·PEDEltSON -l ll .¥re n c t ··G". 36. r.n H1!!e•••· H11nllng!o11 Buch •...t Davia sue. 111 16111 St . Hur!llfl\110!' 8eacll KIAB'I' RENA -RlcMl•d ll•ftdlora. l S. 1•0 W WU1on. C0111 Me11 anct 8 1r1n1 Gulkktrm!n1, 21, J.10 W. Wlbon. Cos1a Mei• DEAN·CARLSON -J•met R-r!, 1l. ''il Clowe<. Apl, I, Fountft•n V1ll•1 and Lori Cnrl1tlne. 21 . 12120 Gill>erl ~'. Aot. 6., Ga•dtlfl Grove. RDORIOUEZ · llNHDLf-' -AO<ll~ruo Jetw, n 2601 So11n1 W•v. Ap1 '· laQl'f\~ Stith Ind K•lll!r>e C1rol, :!&. 1(1(11 Sol<>na Wav, Ap! 1, Lt911"" 11~ .. , .. OSBDllM·WDELFLE ,_ -n , lW AnKll>e w1v. l19un1 k ..:h Ind Allot &owm111, "· 21-11, Avtnlaa C11.tl1l1. L19u111 Bffcll 'l'ELLIN·MOHTO'l'A RI c ~ 1 r d 1-•· 1S. lDO'l (ooOOu•. Apl. '· C~11 Maw 1fld Dtw ... M1rle, Jl, 1 IQS M!rlmtr. llQ\j'tlf BeKll HUTCH!~ON Ill-ADEN M<irtln Lu1~r, 11. lUSS v-. Gavlnt1, Minion Vla!P and SnarCH< Anrw. 11. 1""S Vl1 GtY•Oll , Mi>1lon V!C'lo HOOGE·WHITE -JOlln R•ndoipn, 1~. 10S Norlll (o;i•• H!Ol\wav, L1gun1 Oaacll 1t>e1 Oet>otah Aon. n. loJS N, (Ol•I HiQhW<1Y, L11gun• Bef(ll FERGUSDN-HARRl~N -Rt• EOwl,., ''· 64.5 P1r• Drive, COit<' MOJWI flld lllllY H<>ttman, "3, MS P•rt. Drive, Co.II Mtu HUMPliRE'l'S·MOUNT -Norl()tl, I J, 1008 ~lou• Rl~tr Clrtl1, Fo..n!1•11 Valley ~nd Lo<1ltl France1, J), ltMll !>•Lu• Rivi' Cl•cle. Founi.in v111ey MUA RAY·POLLOCK -Ger1ld J°"", • M000'1' AlLEl<I -W•ll••"' 8•tl(lfl }I, )107 VIII• Wf.,.. l<lc•"°'1 8••~11 '""' M!tlOl!i~ Jo, 11. 1101 v.1... W•v. Nf,.j)Qtf 8Nc" REOflElO. Jr .·8EJllfORO Jof\ro M611•\l"n, •I l hl V<• l•lll> \o><1 NewPOrt Beecll fnd L•noa Jlle~•ll• 'I Jll(t M•r11e ~I., l"llUI>~ 6~"'" 8A118ER•CAFARl:cl ll Jllnl•11 (•••n. 19. l /11 S Gorn..,v ~·"'~ An" ••·~ R""~ Ve•on>e.i It, 201 11 p.,..1 '"'" t1"'11111QIQn llt..cn (Alll<<AV•N•UGH 0 In n•' Mien.el, It, 111 11.e11 Lt>.>il t1,11n11n kt,.oort 8.-..;;n ·•n<I M"' •• And• '-· IXt J.,..nn SI., Cn"f M~'" Fll<IK·BR OWJll -Dole .\'"'·"'" 19, /I • E. VU••• LaeV1nwo<1n, """''"' .,.,, Cvn•n11 Le•, !I, ttn Jron,oru<~ '°'"'" t,nQtfoll Bt•c" 0 ('1'flE 0AV I) PCo•!" 'l"•n ll . ~ l'f ,.,~.,. O'"f (O>I• •.'•~~ ''"~ J,u, I Lv'ln 1'C' 9U Poul1r<n ~~"• \'<••• .YOllAIS lltLE'I' 8• •on Lto«I ~)f);. L.••tnn100··• ~ •. ,.,, "'"" •.i1"'•" Lou•.e 1\ •1•1 W•"·er /,_ •B ••u11••nut1.,. Beerr> VAN OALSlM laDDW:tlll'l I'. •""· '•! I '• .. (.<a•• •nJ Ju~y M•••u• l~ ·>. l'.•A ''"''' • I .... ,,,, ,,, •• , tH tsl\1>.lllJ t'Alllt TI II I ~ ""'"""' •.' '·~ .~-· D· ,,. lt•IU"H .. '"'' "' .1 '· I 1 • •"<• l .. '" I I"' "''" l .... , .• ...... f .. 1.111 ... •l ,, ... •• ·'' 1'•0/ A·••I~ 1,.n•., l'·'" , P .,,, .,~,~ ,•, • , I • "'"''""l•<>'•• "'P' ~ f',,,,.p "' 0'11 ... RRA "QR,.I\ >A in• ,\' ·1 "'' 11 t" "'<'.f 0' •.1 I'' ""·"" ~l>I flo •' "'LI II•• ,.. ., ' "'"''" r.. " t<O'l'('R ~COl T 1uno 1(1 1 "''" "~ •· <. •} ··' 1 ,•I " I \ ,..,,..,,, ..., ~· (,. '' . fH,. I Y l! ti " " ' ' . ... , ' ., ..... '" ,. DAILY PIL 01 I .'i RAFW:ITI AL\.. ME.N ARE .BORN EQUA.L1 BOT fHE i006H Jo~ ts. To ou-rGROW 1 IT Ever wonder if you're getting yo ur money's wo rth when it co mes to taste? Ever feel short,changed:on freshn ess? •• • • • THIS SUMMER LO SE I ., •' :~WEIGHT •• . : • • ••• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No UP TO Contracts 58 No lbs. Exercise IN No Ampheta-40 . mines DAYS UND ER MEDICAL SUPERVISION Welcome Unions Heolt h Group ond All lnsuronces =· CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT = Hours 9 a .m. to 7 p.m. • •1 • • • • ' :1 • .1 ' • • • •' • • • ·1 =1 ., • • • •' • • • • • • ;_OMEGA .CLINIC ~ ~ • Costa Mesa 1869 Newport 646-1633 • • L - SANT.\ ANA 1 JtZZ T110h1 "'"*· 541•>Zt F11llerto11-l11Hobr• 171() 110·9)47 121)) 6t7-17t1 • • • ' • Eve r question the way yo ur ciga rette was manu factured? If yo ur cigarette's Winston , we're sur e th e answer is "no." Because extraordin ary care is what's behind the we ll, know n -and abso lute ly factual statement: Winston tas tes go od lik e a ciga rett e shoul d . We care about our tobacco. That's why Winston seeks out costly Vintage Leaf, the most nearly perfect tobacco grown tod ay. And age it like fin e wine to bri ng our all its natural flavor and n1 ellow ncss . We care about our blend. It's absolute ly unique. Fact is, only a handful of 1nen know the secret of Winston's Fi lter-Blend rec ipe for specially process ing and prec isely comb ining the world's great tobaccos . We care about our filter. Winston's modem white filter does its job without getting in the way of all the rich taste 1nost smoke rs prefer. We care about our packing. Every cigan:;ttc bearing the Winston nan1 e is electronically checked for size, length anJ n101sture content . We care about our fres hness . When a cigarette lin gers on a shelf, it loses so n1e of its freshness and so me of its wste. But W inston's popul ari ty (lleans Winston n1ovcs fas t. So fast, it's lik ely to be the freshest cigarli!tte you can buy on any given Jay. t ll.TtR CIC/\RETTF.S In short, we care abo ut what Winston stands for. .. so we won't sta nd fo r any thing less than the best. Whi ch is why we've always been ab le to say Win ston tas tes-7r-.,...,~ .... - good like a cigarette should. Like )'l iur cigarette should ? Try a pack. AnJ think it over. c::: ..9 r/l c:: ·-~ Winston tastes good like a cigarette should • Warnin g The Surgeon General Has Oe1erm1ned Thal C1gare11e Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Healih. ' 20 mg "iar".14 mg.nico11ne av per t1gaie11c.flC Repon flB .73. • ANAHllM 1t64 w. ldwy 77114141 750 W L•H•bto l l•d. • I I I I I • a I •I • I • I I I I I I I •'[---------------------------------~~--------------~.- ' ' I , , •• J 6 DAILY PILOT Thur$dly, July 2b, 2q73 1st W onian lnte1·n Serving at UCI Or. Paulette French of the University of J\1aine will serve a year's internship in academic administration al UC Irvine beginning i n August. Dr. French is the first woman to come to UCI under the academic 3 dfnlnislrative internship program of the American Council on Educa- tion. The program has in· volved eight young educators in universlly decision-making processes. Dr. French, 32, is as.sis1ant professor of R o m a n c e languages and assistant to the vice president for academic Dffairs at the Univen1ity of ~111inc in Orono. She has scrv- rd us chalrn1an or the L;niversity of ~1aine Women's Association and the Com- mittee on Human Rights and ltesourers. A graduate of Colby College, t\lain., she re<"eived the mast- er's degree in French from the University of Maryland and the doctorate in comparative literature from the t;niversitv of Colorado. She also ~s rt.'Ct'ived a certificate as a pro- fessor of French fron1 the Sorbonne. R.ollitag A long Li·k e 60 ' . 2 JBS Errors ' • All She Wants ls $47.39 ORANGE -I n t e r n a I Revenue official! are hoping the third time is the charm In set tling the income tax claims of ~1rs. Teresa Myen of Orange. ttfrs. tt1ycrs , 18, flied her claim last spring expecting a return of $47.39. \Vhen it came back ln ~fay. !he return had increased a little, up to $4 ,729. She returned the check, pointed out the error and was 1old bv tax officials at the Oran gC County IRS office that a corrected check would reach her in eight weeks. July 18, she received another check, this time for .$9.3GJ. tt1rs. Myers again returned the check and filled oul another government form "'hich JRS of!icials say will finally gel the correct amount to r..trs. r..1yers. Assistant IRS Di strict Public AUa.irs Officer Ve! Baker says the gov~ agency is not sure just wkat.1. caused t h e mathematlcaJ foulup, but a milup at the 1RS Computer Service Center In Fresno seems probable. "The service center per.IOI.I;· nel are really e1nbamWed ~ with the mistake, but we did' make it and I guess we'll have •~ ju~t to admit it," Baker said. !I. The center v.·as recently built to handJe tax returns for both CalUomia and Hawaii and is just oompleting Its flrst'i year of serving Southern · California. Mrs. Myers' plight will not go unrewarded, how eve r 1! Baker says the government . \Vlll pay interest on the $47.39 . return because the return was not received at the proper ti1ne . ' T~affic Snag Postponed Highways to concede to cam-Motorists driving along San Diego Freeway between based on increased highway safety and· other !a$· SANTA ANA -Thousands of motorists daily u s i o g Fairview Road bordering San- ta Ana College got a reprieve from a major traffic snag this week when the co ll ege's leaders blocked efforts to get right.of-way for a widening p-oject. pus problemi. Fairview Road and its junction with Santa Ana Free-tors lead to increase from 65 miles per hour on cer- '• 10 Place on Honor List : Authoritles had plaMed t.o way junctjon further south may now travel at 70· tain California freeway section. take five to seven feet of ca m-_m __ ile_s...:·pc.e_r·_h_m_1r_ra_le_._Se_e_n_e_w_s_:ig::.n_al_1_ig:.h._l_. _C_ha_n..:gc.•'-------------------- pus property along 17th Street, requiring various alterations to existing expanision and building proj ects. Six Indicted .for Fraud The conunuters still tnu..!t contend with the exiting dally mass of traffic, much of it bound coas tward for Costa Mesa and !he South Coam Plaza area. By its action. the Rancho santiago Community College Distrid Board of Trustees fatted the city of Santa Ana and the. State Division of The state would pay up lo ~.000 !or the properly it needs -a price sdlool trustees do not find unat- tractive -but they want ad- ditional funds for curbs, gut- ters and other necessary items. The stretch of highway now in use carries 23.600 ca"! per day . making it one of the two busiest in terscctiCIQI iD Santa Ana. SANTA ANA-Six men who allegedly pocketed at least $40,000 from Investors who were proniised substantial profits in what turned out to be a non-existent fiberglass boot operation in Newport Beach i:ave bct'n indiclPd by the Orange County Grand Jw-y. Named in the indictment are Lyle,S1valford. 47, of 485 Costa Mesa St., Costa M e s a : William Smock, also known as A. J. Scarsbrough, 45, of Anaheim: John Robert Ford,. 47, of Tustin: John Freeman. 47, of Lakewood: Keith Ster· ling Carlson, 42, and Henry O'Brien, 40. Addresses for Carlson and . MARINERS HAsMQ O'Brien were not immediately available. Deputy District Attorney Eric Snethen said the in- dictment fol l owed in- vesligation of the activities ot all :;Ix , deferidants w h o operated through E n d u r a Recreation Products, n o 1v known as National Marine Industries. 4262 Campw: Drive. SERVICE FOR YOU ' 5~25 ' 6.50 ' 6.75 ' 7.50 ' REGULAR PASSBOOK ACCOUNT ANNUAL YIELD $1 ,000 MINIMUM BALANCE - 1 YEAR. CERTIFICATE ANNUAL YIELD $5,000 MINIMUM BALANCE - 30 MONTH CERTI FICATE ANNUAL YIELD S1 ,000 MINIMUM BALANCE - 4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ANNUAL YIELD 5.39 % 6.72 % 6.98 % 7.78 % ' FRIENDLY PERSO NALIZED SE RVICE @ FREE MONEY ORDERS @ FREE TRAVE LERS CHECKS @ FREE NOTARY SE RVICE @ FREE XEROX COPIES @ FREE TRUST DEED NOTE COLLECTION* ... ALSO AVAILABLE ... @ COMPLETE ESCR OW SE RVICE . .. Now two convenient locations in Newport Beach @ ·Bay side Center Branch 0 W estcliff at Dover •with $1 ,000 minimum balance FOUNDED 1953 MARI NE RS SAVINGS AN D LOAN ASSO CIAT ION A Subsidiary of Capital Alliance Corporation I 024 Bayside Drive • Ne,vport Beach • Californi:t 92660 (714) 6424000 • Hours 9 :un 10 4 pin. Frid:1yi; unlil 6 pm. MAIN OFFICE: WESTCLIFF AT DOVER . NEWPORT BEACH Lecture Se t SANTA ANA -A spedal briefing on the postopt.ra tive role of inhalation therapy for those who have had heart surgery -and especially for those facing it -is scheduled Wednesday, Aug. 11 by a specialist. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in Dining Room A of St. Josepb's Hospital in Orange. FULLERTON -Ten area students were placed on the recent Presidenfs Honor ,.,isl at Fullerton College alter at- taining a "B" grade or higher average while carrying 12' or more units. (.;h ief Elected SANTA ANA -John While cf Orange has been elected president of the goven1ing board of the Rancho Santiago Community College District. JCPenney ' Arca honor students were : Costa ritesa -Gary Steven Osgood and Cynthia Jane Sanders. Founta io Valley -SuzaM Jane Bennett and h1ichael Doug Christiansen. lluntlngton Beach -Louis Yiu-Chung Cheng, Jane Aniko Kling and Darlene ~1ae Ken- nedy. \\"eslmlnsler -Cary Masao Fukuoka, Carlos Ma n u e 1 !'\iartincz, and Douglas C. \Vride . The · CQ.mera industr-y' s Most Exciting Camera Demonstration The demonstration that the camera world has been raving about ••• JULY 26-27-28 KONICA!! The most advanced, most wanted camera. KONICA!! The SLR all other are trying to copy. During this d emonstration, you will actually be able t o use the new Kon ica , a nd se e the films developed in minutes. See the results before you buy! KONICA: THE FULLY AUTOMATED REFLEX. NO NEEDLES TO MATCH. FOCUS AND SHOOT! All photoch•mic•l1 by Townl•v IN PERSON JOHN FERL •nd ART TUCKER Th11n., 11 0111 to 7 p111 Frldoy, 11 0111 to 7 p111 S.t•rday, 11 0111 to 6 '"' n.. M"' Fro111 ltoako READ WHAT THE 'EXPERTS SAY ABOUT THIS DEMO: "Perhep1 the top joll done . , . I can't think of "The ln 1tant Photo Show is a revela- any type of demonstretion that is more effec-tion in eutomation . See it ... it's a tive., ." mu1t!" He1b1rl Keppler, Modern Phologr~phy Berl l•lkowih , lnd111lfi•I Pkolog•i pky ind Photo w.1~1'1' DEMO SPECIAL! Expand Your Cameras' Horizons! HEXANON LENS For Konica Owners 21mm to 300mm SPECIAL DEMO PRICES START AT $129'5• JCPenney We know what you're FASHION ISLA ND ONLY e looldng for NEWPORT BEACH B Jl'. s Fl \VOr Air not It's J<>lh< :thot 'e<l ' • Ni _rnar: ,and }leW '\\'ha ~Cfi ~OU! : Fl •"'"Cr "stru P>m ~re )>av1 1oa1 ~OaI ' P: par I terr Eula ~nd mat :and .E ~eni Cor pro! -tna( 'not != ~· ,trac ~cpl •• ' . ~por )Jtil 2>uil te•· ~·· pi al •'I' ' We[ l'or Not i>av but: ~~ In• Ill~ l T t1nrl (lev M• ' f£' :wi! ;Inc \'.;I )Ur I ! ~ I I JYarc J!.og , Discover s Narcotics ' SAN YSJDRO IAP) -U.S. customs agents have seized more than ooe million dangerous drugs since Sunday and ar- rested three persons, including a motorist who identified himself as 3 t,.1exican policeman, a spokesman said. The pills described Wednesday as "n'linibennics" \\'Cre found wrapped in plastic bags and hidden under the back sea~ of a car, he said. A NARCOTICS detection dog named Albert found 627 ,000 amphetamine pills a~ the U.S.-Mexico border station Tues- day. A U.S. official \\'ho identified himself only as a member of the Drug Enforce- ment Administration said the motorist was Manuel Vasquez Angulo, \Vho del1Cl'ibed hin1self as a Ti j u a n a p01iceman. Vasquez, 32, was ordered jailed in San Diego in lieu of $15,000 bond. Building Made Frorn Sturdy Cla ss FULLERTON -People v.•ho \Vork in a glass building at the Air Industrial Park here need nc.t be afraid to thrc.w stones. It's as sturdv as almost an.v :other kind of stricture cVPfl ;thouoh it is Jaroely CQ(lc;lru"t- ·ec1 nf r"CV"l"ri ,,J.:i<:~ ' Nine nPw buildi'lu m<>tPri<>ls .rnarle frflm N>C1.:iimPd bottles ,and jars h1ve heen use~! al the ,-iew industrial de v·elooment in .what may be their (irst com- rnercia\ application in this ~ountry .. : FIVE OF THE materials ;,vere introduced in ,.,..,_ "struction or th" third builrling tompleted at the p::irk. Thcv ~re construction brick, tile pavers, decorative g I a zed Joam, acoustical ceilings and a ~oam core for wall partitions. Products used earlier in the Park development v.·ere glass thrrazo floors, glass wool in- Sulation, ~lass cement blocks B.nd glasphalt, a street paving }naterial composed or asphalt :and 60 Percent crushed glass. : Edward D. ,G<Jldstein, presi- tlent c.r Glass Containers 'Corp., a rocleveloper of the project. says the products -made from waste glass are :not c.nly attractive and ~nomical but are technically JlS good or superior lo the .traditional materials · they ~eplace. : "AND PERHAPS most im- :portantly," he sa.vs. "the iltilization of waste glass as a ]Juildint; blN:k in ronstruction t eveals exciting new ways to jise soc i ety's reclaimable fllaterials ." • 'The title pavers and bricks :Were manufactured by the :Port Costa Brick Co. in ~orthern California. The :pavers, implanted on the t>utside entryway to t h e gilding. use about 10 percent aste glass. The brick is ade Y.'ith 50 percent waste ass. 1 The decorative glazed foa m ~nd acoustical ceilings v.·ere developed by Dr. John D. Mackenzie , professor of ~ngineering at the University iif California at Los An geles. ;with grants from the ppr, ;Industries Foundation and the t I ass Container Manufac- ~urers Institute. ~ TH E \\'AlL partitions were anufactured b:Y J\1ajor Parti- ions of South El J\1onle. Val ajors, president of the firm. ays the low density partitions rovide excellent sound and eat iruiulation, higher fire fesistance than ordinar)'. wall jnaterials and offer particular advantages in high-rise .con- iitruction governed by stricter rire codes. . Millions of reclain1ed bottles jnnd jars have been used in t_hc £lass-based p r o d u c t s in- corporated in the construction pr the park, \vhich has become p showplace for the develo~ ent of products fronl. waste aterials. "WE FEEL THAT what is ing accomplished at ullerton Air Industrial Park epresents a major s t e p orward in seeking new ways tc. utillze the reclaimable ,-naterials that are now part of pur nation's solid v.· as t e ~ream." says Goldstein. • " • j -- • • , . ~· T hurSday , Julc_Y .::2::b,:...:_l 9::1;.l _____ ·----·-•_ll_Y_P_t_LO_T_J,,...7'. Nelv Swi1n Class Sensiti·vity to Wat.er O·ve rcorne fly \\'ILi.i \\I sr unEIBEH 01 Tilt O•I" l'lltt $1111 To most pt.·oplr, "'aler ts fascinating and plt'asurablt• But for S()11ll'. the fasr1na11on 1s 11ngl'd \vith fear and the en1oyn1cut nevt•r t•onlt'S, Al Fitzpatrick of thi> ~e"i:iort Lll'it<.'h Parks. Bea(ties ;u1d llrcrc<1t1on Dt>11<1n- n1ent thinks that most adulls \1ho say they are unablt· to s"·im huve a ft•ar of the \\"Htt>r and it St'rves as a maJOr bar- f ier IG their ever learning ho"·. So r~itzpatrick started teaching a pilot class this su1nn1er U1at 1n11y be uniqur. lie calls it "'ah'r sensil1\·11y, or )Oga in an aqu<1 tic environinent. \"ot;A IS TIIE l''>Crcisc-orienled nr\ vf the Far r:ast dL"SiKllL'<i to rchcvc the tensions and anxieties of everyday life, r~itzp:itrick said. \\'.~ter they arc lac:king through fear ol 1!," he said. FITZPATRICK'S FlllS'r ~cns1tlv11}' <:la."-" is snu1JI -only half n d1Y1.rn pt'Oplc nulging 1n ugc rron1 uhout :!O to 40. 'l he young instrurtor :.t:1r!:. the seo;sioo U)' 1ak1ng his stud1-'nls 111!0 \\lU St·dt:\'!J \\J1l'1' at the 10th S1fl":l :\l·11-port lia)j bearh on Balboa l'en1n:.uJ;1 Hrrt• th!•y go through :.nulc h-.o:>t>ning~ up f'Xl•rc1s..•s to fam11inr11c-1tw1n5{!1\'1·:i w11h the sens.11ions or the wnter. Fnzpatnek :><Ud. In 11 tight C'1rele, th1•; t;ikt• turns f:illln!'? into c..ich olht·r's arn1s . 1'1t1.patri1·k sai d that gives them the ro1f1d<.'ncc of know• ing ~ll\C'Oll<.''S .:ilv.ll~s <1round . r\t'Xl ('0111':' ('Xt'rCl\l'" II\ noal1nt;. breathing. "porpotsing'' 'r;iv(J r!i ng 111 :hu .,..·at<.'r like dolphins 1 and fl n;_dly l.>asic S\1·imrntng strok.t-$ . -"\\'hen some <i<iults gel into the 0<."t111n . c1·cn if they kl101v the basics of s11·11n· ".\1-\\\' Al)l!l.TS \\'lllt think tiJ(•y " . ming. they may get hit by sc1·rral v.·a11'" ~.1n"t -.>11 111 rl·ally onl ~· lock l'Onfllll·llt't' 1a and pani c." he said. "They ~t·t all 1uml·d th l'.l'M'lvcs." Fitzpatrick s:1id. ··',\'h1 n around and can't tell 1vh~1t is up ur thl'\' ha \c that to!;1l t'On!tdt•nt·c·. l11l' d0\\11." l't"Ul1s are an1;izu1{.: .. Fit zpatri ck s.1id those rit~umstan<'t'S Fitzpatrick. po11l!l'd lo OHt• of tu~ :re the basis for ' nlany drO\\TIJng students. a midd lc-a~c<I hi.Jusl·11 ifn. 11 hor11 tragedies. hP :-,;ud l OUldn "t \111111 ;1 ~1 nJi..1• ;Jt tl11 "\\'at cr scnsitivit.\' is an <1 \tl"lnpt !o i::1·t first :sPs:.1011. 'flus \1et:l.. sh .. l..1·pt up 111!1 WATER SENSITIVITY HELPS ADULTS OVERCOME FEAR OF OCEAN these peopl e to totally rcl~ix in the 11;n,•r. the youngl'st nu·1nb1·rs of till· 1.·la~s u Newport Swim Class Uses Yoga To Let Students Enjoy Water to give tht•m the St·!f-confi d1·ncc in th" s111m111u1g, ~~~~~~~~~-=----~~~~--~~~~~-=----~~~~~~ "";·~fl/lark C. Bloome POLY & STER BRTS SIZE STEEL f 78/14 STEEL G78/14 STEEL H78/14 STEEL G78/1S G70/1S G70/1S !70/14 E70114 F70/14 F70/14 F60/IS F60/1 5 FITS: Ol•UOIJI l!lllll\110 011(11 195/14 $JJ" 205/14 •.. ~ (, ., .. .., ... PRICE ... 145/1 155/1 .S .60/13 165/13 5.60(13 1.44 1.52 1.71 More SAIETY Titan Corwentional TireJ! '"t/te 40,000 Mile Tire" ••• ........... 155 15 S.60/1 5 1.67 165/15 6 .00/15 1. 91 ..... ... .... i..:....:...::..:_..:__+.:...:.:..:.-=.:....:....:...+-=-=---!!!;.=::!!=== 6.15 15 1 75/13 6.50/13 1.86 7.00 13 165/14 S.90 14 \.82 0 ,. 215/14 205/15 $JS" 185 14 ER71/14 2.18 F ~ll~'le<I Tuoe·TVl'9 205/15 GR78/1S 215/15 215/15 HR78/1S 235/15 •o.. 40000..,11 Cu• .. ..-cU , __ .._.,,,. .... OOOOOoNt ........ -., __ ,_.._ ...... .;, -·" -· ..... d. ,,.,, __ ._ ................ , ........... -.. -· (.o-• ·-__ .,_.,_ .... -·-"'-• .. _. -· ... c--•" •. ,,,.,.., .......... ~ ......... _ ........ -.,.-... _~ ....... ,. ........ _, .. ___ ..... ·---· ··===· ............... ~·-····""~-·-·-··"-""'-·--.. --. 17S /14 19S/14 F78 /14 F78/15 160/15 5.20x14 5.60x 15 6.00x 12 5.60/5.90/6.00•13 HURR·Y! llMITED OFFER ! Wf Sfll ' U•YlC( SllOCl AISlttllS flt All llLUlS I lltOOflS llF 'lSSfNC!I WIS, UWflS. SHllOll WICO#S. ll,111 TlllClS & TWUIS... • ftl'I Millrflll u .. rt:lll tl•ll •1111 •,_nun •111 u111~ lNO~IHllU , • IN'llfll II II~ B Unl CJ• IJ11ir••yal Ori9. Equip. ,,,_,, El8·14 Fl 8 ·14 ,,,_,,, HlB-14 Gll·IS Hll./S~w Jl8·1S ·'WIDE TRACK •. 60 SERIES $28'N~ 5111 BELOW SIZE F60/14 6.45114 6.50113 7.35114 7.75/14 8.25/14 8.25/15 878/14 87$/13 1. 77 E78/14 1.Sl F78/14 iii ta·.t3 2 .09 G78/14 ii 1<1!•C: l.00 G78/1 S iii "1\' .t:J 2.22 F60/15 8.55/14 H78/14 • [.!;·l:l 2 .40 860/13 8.55/15 H78/1 S i1i [.~·l:l 2 .32 w1onw.1.u..s SJ.ti 11T11. 011r ''"''"'•'policy i1 to lttfftr 11nr ye11. If yo11 "'''• • 1t9ttlio11 ce11etrnin9 pro· 411cl1 or 11nict1 rt11tftr14 tor••, plte11 coll '"' Dirtclor of Co11111111•r .lffoir•, Mr. S. Aroltio11 121 J) 170·1737 '' Jtl · 1111. II wt 1llo11lcl 1111 111! of yovr 1i1t, o "lei11 Chttlir" wilf lit h 111t4 •t•11rin9 t lot1r Ctli,try et !ht o4,1rti1tC prit1. MO THBF. CHROMI WHEELS .,M ,,J1~020TH C$1N 3 TIA STYLI sins 11KLUl!IK ' 5 9 O PICIW' IQUS • ,..,r ''llUllf • • '"'" .. , llQ.Wt't 1• '1· CllaOMI 4 1 $4988 ....... . ,,, .... -EILS r ~!ri:1: New SAN BERNARDINO Store ••• GARDIN GAOVI I.A HAIRA 1.0~ •'"4illl11nr 7000 Wlll!Ut, a1v•. CO STA MESA IUGNA PAJ:I( FULLERTON 29'2 l lft<Oln ltv•. ltll Stull! lWllcl 1267 N. WATERMAN AYI. (714) 889·262b ORANG: (t0'''' OI WI> 'litr ~11 N. T111!1n Avt, tOf"~r c;I l i'TtOln 11 B1oc~ '°'O"" o' Full Siu U.S. Cars Rec. DRUM TYPE a '"'''ct ll•t~t ,,,,,.. •~d lltld dtwll ,,,.;.f' l ~ •• ,, D Arc f""' t ll llro~t .... ,. D ,,.,,.(, ,,,,., ,,,,,, {Ct,..,... Wftlmll'lltr '""' ••~C" o-ll K•o"l II. ~P<1'!lO "'""'~I 1roC1 1r-1111t1t !7141 5JO.JJOO ,, ... J66' I. 111 826-55i0 (7141 870-010.) • 3005 HARBOR BLVD. {corner of Baker and Harbor) (714) 557-8000 The building incorporalln~ e new waste glass products leased by the Paul L. Dodd eo., a manufacturer or metal fixtures fur restaurants and tic.res. It has an area of 82,348 "'1uare feet and will be used as l combined office building by bodd and the Hallmark carpet Co. "'"""''Ill l"j ... ,.,. .. Ttr • . ' • • ' ' I , • ' • • ' DAIL 1 PILOT Ul"I Ttl.-11011 Official WiteJa? A town with a long history of witches, Salem, Mass., is confronted with a woman who proclaims herself 'jresident witch." Laurie Cabot, who claims· she can aid the city by using "good" witchcraft, has asked the city to appoint her official witch. ,~..,....,.~c.-...-.. .... .-.... ....,..,.,..,.."""'..,.. For tl1e Record ---Dissolution Of Marriage Largest Class 65 From Coast Grads at UCSB Slxty·five Orange Coast students were among the largest graduating class in lhe history or UC-Sanla Barbara. The ~'Pring class numbered 3.736 degree winners, including 58:> master's deGrt-cs and 216 Six Frorn Coast Tops In Pomona Doctor or Philosophy degrees . Donald John Miiier o f Corona del fl.1ti.r and Eric Charles I.Jansen and ltonald Allan Rlmerman, both of Costa Mesa received their doctorates. Victor Yale • OCC Vets Get Help At Office PUBU C NOTICE • PUBUC NOTICE PUllUC, ... •• "' . .,. ~ ~ II"!'" .• -~ < ··~· ' I .• \ 1 -· . .... , • ~ . .. fl ... '" e -. f c ' l f _:;t • , .. ' ... ·-· "' M ... . " -"' ~~ ... tf " ' . " ' ·~ ... "i ~· ~ .. ~ ·~ " • b; cl o. i< f< " .,." y < .• " ~ . ~· •" . ,.t• ....... il ••• a 'I ..,, r..,: '"' Tl ~:-~s ... .. • c r ... •• R "I• I .... ~ :=,;;~ q ·"• n O'o< ~ ••.. ~p '·'' ~ ' -·~· ")1•1.·C ~. ':,.:L ,.,,,~ .• ~ -0 ' ti ti 11 .,r ii ••• ~··· . '"' t •• " . ...... :.·( . ,. t<o\" ,. '"' , ..... 1 "' .. . .... " If": <; .n ·:~n .. •'• ,. u " ,,..n .. c -·· ... .... ~ t ..... "''· • . ~ >-a .,_ .. . .. ~··· . • . 1 • ~ lt .. , ~1 ~· --.:..· ... c; ""'.1 n ~­·~ c .'! ... 0 ..... t ' 'ti ~ '" . <~J ~~~~~-~~~------------------------------.................. .. Russ Navy Makes 'Staggering Advances' OAIL V PILOT 19 -----------Hlly Fever Don gc rous? LONDON (AP) -One of the and other naval craft could in fotOORE SAID oI the Soviet Jane 's was foWlded by a ships less than 10 years old Navy ·s largely O\'t r-age fltt•t.'' wotld's ltacling authoritlcs on time restore the baJance in na\•y: "Three major cluse:s of naval enthusbsl , F'rt'd T. than an)' oth<>r major nect." he sakl. LONDO~ (Ul'l 1 -llay naval Pohw.er says the soviet world naval power, he adds. ships ba\•e appeartd, each Jane. in 1897. Since then , it f.tOORt.:. 110\\'E\'t.:R, ad· ~loort> d.,..·cl\t'<I al so.m,.e pre;~ d ~~l~r~ :t~e~l=1~~ navy wit 1tso"''ll air arm and 'toore pred•'" 1.,.1 ~'-·, 1 1 •-· 1 ,. 1 c d·" __ USA r 1 lengthoo ~two main rac11r •-£ bmarln " na u.w1<1 Severa caps ahead of its '""'>come OU r('gUwir Y t'\' ry ni: ' llM::' , ll\l,'Bre 0 IS J ' nrJ '""'' • Abrahams, but the cure la ueai.clhr range, 0 su r 1 es already building m Is s i I e predecessor. The Kiev alrcrafl summer. This year·s annual deficieocies. continues its pro--""' ies -ai)an s 11 "'111nn $, for it \o\'<lil even \\'orse. 8 now e mos power u navy destroyers, could soon make carrier -still under coo-has 670 pages and llsts 15,000 gram of massive carriers. the "HOTll Bt:LONG lo <.'Oun-PoUce said thal aft(•r In the world. nuclear submarines and take · II d naval vessels belonging to all I l · '"20 ·11 'ch "· Capt. Jnhn ~1oorc . editor of strunion -Is m a Iota y if· a est oost~ some -.. m1 100 tries wh1 mw.1 uc con. washing down nllerJ:y pills Jane's Fighting Ships, \\'rites its place a1nong the worlds' ferent t~alWt from th e the na\'ies in the "''or\d. pounds." 'This is about $1 sider~. for different re3so11s, with a drink. hl' lnsulted in his first fore.,..·ord as editor na\'al powers. previously illustrated Moskva Speaking or the new Soviet billion. as very 1najor po~·cn," ht passin!: nlOton~ts and rip· l .. h 1972 73 ed.t.. bl. I Moore, forn1er deputy dircc-class helicopter cruh;ers: lhe ships, fl1oore said: "These "A great deal or mon<'y ls Y.TO!t~ n1'(1 the ~hirt off a 0 hi\: • l uon pu IS l· r B . . ' I . 0 000 K I ul . hi ·'"'£ I So I t I nA:.· ... ,,, d•frrr·· ,.,,,, r ed \\'ednesd!!y _ the inost tor o r1ta1n s n.ava m· I , ton ara c ass er ser lS s ps t,.,. 'I I "le v e navy a so beinR spent b>' the USA i.x11. .. ~ v policcn\3n "'ho intrr\'('11cd. authorilalivc annual on the telligcnce and himself a' an improvement on any which in 17 years Wldcr on inno\'alions such ns but Lioth had dHfercnl ,JObs to A nl.'li;listriitt>'~ f'OUrt world's navies _ that the former submariner. bt.'<'amc pre\'ious cruisers, and the new Admiral Ccnhkov has become ho\'ercraft and hydro(o1I~. do, For Chum, defetlSt: Tllt'anl a~rt"{'d 11 roinhin:llion of So\•let navy made ''staggering editor of Jane's f'igh tini; Ships Delta class ballistic missile a pre-eminent force Yt'ilh its This ttigh Am l' r i can l')l· protecting thousand:s of nule11 drug5 and drink \\as 001 a advances .. in the last year. last year. succeeding Hay· submarine is similar in size to O\\TI air po"•er and wilh a penditure could "·!'!JI redress of roast. For Jap..'ln, it tn<"ant good enough rc:ison ror hi.~ 1nond V.B. Blacknu1n ~·ho lhc Yankee class. but will car· greater range of submarines the balance or p<>\\'Cr in the protttt1ng her 1n 11 r If I in e a cl i 0 11 s and filh.-d Btn' TnE: United States' retired after editing the en· ry the new 4.000-mile-rcUlge than any other. Above all, it future and O\'errome the rout~!f on which she depends Abrahanu; $50. .,... ·' '.fl high expenditure on "'arships nual since 19~9. SSN8 missiles." has a far grealer proportion of disadvantagcs of !he U.S. for her imports. '-----------1--~-~-----------------~~~~----~-~---~---------'-----~--~ ------- .. ' . .. .. . .. .,, ,..,,, ... "' ... ... t .. ~ . Proud Barone t A 59-year-old Den ve r electrician, Robert A. llardinge Jr., has sud- denl y become the sev- enth Baronet of Luran upon the death of his father. UCLA Study Violenc e Receives OK .... "' SACRAMENTO IA PI -A _. controversial UCLA study or ,,.... the causes of violence has :"· received a go-ahead recom- ...... mendation from the staff of ...,~' the California Council on ;'. Criminal Justice, ~ council . .:, ... _ "report says. The plan, which is supported by Gov. Ronald Reagan, in· eludes a study of violent sex offenders and an experiment in ''rewards or positive rein- forcements" intended t o reduce violence in California ~::.· Youth Authority camps. HOWEVER, the staff report says, "No experimentation on prisonen is planned," it was ""·'? reported Wednesday. ·-~" · The prospect of such ex· '":'~:-periments led to warnings this ;;_., .year before a legislative com· t ,· mittee that the UCLA study ;;1:, could turn into a "chamber of 1,:9~. ·horrors'' including such lhings :~ :as mind-altering surgery and :r... pre6SUl'eS on prisooe~ to sub-.:;.~:· mit toques ti on ab l e ex· !'.• .· periments. The staff recommendation ".': · ••. to approve the $1 million study •1 ..... is scheduled for a vote Friday " ·• at a meeting in Burlingame. ~· ., ... , l\.,, · THE LENGTHY staff report • ~ · recommends that the council ::;1;t!f0vide $750,<XXI for the first ·1 .,. ~ar of operation of the UCLA "'·' Center for the Study and ...... ·Reduction of Violence. ".;~. The university would be re· ::~· quired to provide the re- "··· maining $250,000. The entire ~!' .... program-proposed as a three- .. ..,.,, year study -would be re- ,. . viewed next year before a de· :;,:r··cision oo fwiding for the final ~''~·two years. Y..<'•o·· The staff report says lhe :':,. over·all concept of the UCLA Study is "acceptable" but that the council should Insist that the research be closely related to "impacting the criminal .,1 jµsticc system." ti '• -Seru·s Seeks <<;r • ... 'f _t.,4 70 Bad "" ;~;.Oven Ranges ,..~~ ' <"" CHICAGO fAP I -Scars. '''"~ Roebuck and Co. says it is ~~ : trying to locate t ,470 seli· '"(,-. cleaning double oven gas te ~ :r&nges that contain a possible ·:;;· fire hazard . • 7~.. A company spokesman said • 11· that in a few instances the gas ,, ,. Tine has touched an electrical .-;1 connection within the range, .';,"~which couki start a fire. 'I·•· ~1 TilE MODEL serie1 was ~ •• sold lxtth In the finn 's retan ., ·and catalog operatio.N . • ,,& "'" .. The model numbers ~-... are 1o.3.7as1100. u:a.7857120: • '•]03.7857140: and 103.78571!0: , .. 103.7S57219; 103 .785722 ; ,., and 100--· -103.7857240: ··~·~· :;:'. The company said the unlta ; • ~n bf Identified by the .,.._. num1ler located under the '!'~ cooking top. It urged ownen I!' •·of the models ln quesdon to Contact ,the company for a ~·1 free inspeciotn . -·~---'--------1 .'.~Kids Like To ... ~ . " .Ask Andy ', SAVl 25"7• BIG 20 INCH . FAN • Deluxe S blade model •full 1 year uncondilionol guarantee. 90POUND ROLL' ROOFING •Quality made by John Man1ville. •Your choice of three colors: Silver Gray, Green or Cedar Tone. ~~ ~~~ PRE-FINISHED IMPORTED MAHOGANY PANELING e full 4 ft . x 8 ft . 1i1e •Attractive finish. •V·g•o~ ~~ 6FOOT 1 "x2" COMBED CEDAR PALINGS • Blend1 w ith any styling •fast becoming a fencing favorite. ~~.••¢ 39• ~::IEA . 4FT.x8FT. PLYWOOD • \Ii Inch thic~. • U1Honded. •Ideal for fence roi\J, framing or bracing. •Surfaced four sides, r--. ·l:!(i-:r 1:, 2"x4"x8 FT . • • Ii DOUGLAS FIR 4 If 1 ~!~P~ .. _, ~ llMIT 30 PEI CUSTOMEI WITH THIS ,. I COUPON. EXP11ES JUl Y '29, 1973. I ~:f$J1Jlf:N:t@if$'/J~'fi . --------------------~ 80 18. BAG DECORATIVE SOFT FOAM CHAISE PAD WHITE ROCK e Attractive flo ra l vinyl patte rn. e For Flow .. bed1, wollt1, otc. e i,f" thick. WOOD DECOUPAGE PLAQUES •''•·sanded plywood • Severol 1i1e1 and shapes lo "choose from. INSIDE· OUTSIDE VINYL PLASTIC PAINT • Mo1onry fla t finish. •For 1t ucco, cinder block, concrete & brick . l'IU...' e Al10 for all inside wall1 IAJO ond cei lin91. [§;·;~;':1 1nn OUR REG. 2.qq GAL. ~ ~ - ALUMINUM PADDED CHAISE LOUNGE e Five po1itio n adiu•I· ment . • 2" foam fitl~c(.pad in beautiful patterns. J91NCH TOOL BOX OUR ~nn IEG . 5.99 EA . l4"o]lro • JO"rllro · • )0"148" 1 59 )f) '1)6". ]fl '142 • Jti ··•8" e ... ••• ! I V .. '('.~4·~" ' I · . .' .\ /' 3 CU . FT. BAG GARDEN BARK • U•e a rou nd plant•, 1hrub1 , bu1het, etc. •Your cl'loict of mediu m or coorse. ~. ·14n 2. 19 BAG 12260 I . O AIVIY I MO(lrl '"'' " •WOODLAND HILLS 21940 VICTOIY llVO. 2.S CU . FT . --·~ sierra SIERRA PEAT MOSS · LOC KING GAS CAPS ,.. • 'oSS I e Help• keep moi1ture In, cAf M •Ideal fo r la wn1, fl ower•, PL~ 1 1hrub1, and lrte1. e Heavy duty, die co if triple plated chrome: e Five tumbler cylinder lac~. i ~I ·~ .... 611L~AVl ~2E.u9G9'. 1nu.n. No. 4Mltl. 1 QO ... 46,ll • FlllStONI llVO. •tJ NO, MlllS )Jot SO. lllSYOl >M OIAMCfl \MOW 10. 10331 MAGNOllA ot STUOllAICll ""·"'"°"' ll&M'N00f NtwtlM JO I II • ~·'°'°"" Ml UI OI ~ IWl,_U .... IOUIM CO•\I ftAf,t. MIOAftOWMt,t.D 11'\lt MAU • GARDEN A •GARDIN GROVE • WHITTJIR HUNTI NGTON BIAC H LONG BIA CH lJJJJ 7100 IOINOll 2117 f SOUTH \1 11"' $0. Wl\111• IEllOIAPM 10 . llfJ110CM- Nit NO Of~ • • ' I I • ' 0 OAILV PILOT Thursdly, July 2b, 1973 .U.S. Rapped • Ill Slaughter Director of Project Attacks Stance on Burundi Q: Exactly ~·bat happened'! A: Although 85 percent of the people in Burundi ore members of the Hutu tribe, for years lhey have been dominated by the remaining 15 perce.nt who belong to the Tutsi tribe, world-renowned for their height. In the spring <>f 1972, the Tutsi- domlna led government C"laimed the 11utus v.•ere plarming a coup. By late ~1ay, mass slaughter of the Hutus was underway. Q: What e-0u\d the United States have done to stop lbe massacre'! A: It is not clear that anything our government might have done v.·ould have ended the ki lling. but we coold have ap- plied some lev erage against the Tutsi government. Burundi's only important export is coffee. and 80 percent of it is sold here, primarily to Folger's .. If the United States had declared a cof- fee boycott , il v.•ou ld have cut off 65 per- (Editor's Note: Despile lhe a1teut1a11 the t111terican presJ gave to !lie Biafra and Banola.d.esli stur1es. f11w t\1nerica11s noticed last year when 250,- 000 were killed In. the ti11y Ea st t\fricun cou11try of B1tru 11di, u slaughter tvhicli our State Vepar1111c Ht eue ntutJll!J tern1d genocide. A report by tlle Carnegie E11 ctown1e11t for /1iten1atio11a/ Peace bla111es tlle State Department for ref11si11g to take si111ple steps which nlight have nbbrevlated Oie tragedy. Rouer J\furris, tuho directed lhe Carnegie project. explains tire report's co11clusio11s to the editors of Tire \Vashh1gto11 Afonll!ly. J "- foreign policy. ~lcnry Kissing{'r like s to say that he lays all foreign 1>0hcy options before the President. In this case, neither Kissinger nor the State Department nor the \Vhite House really laid any of the possibilities out. Q: \\'hat "·ent wrong '! Q: \\'bat's '''rong "'Ith that~ A: It leads automaticaJly to letting one's ''alues be guided by the values of the client government. Jetting one's observa- lion of the la w ctepend on what the other country says. Q: \\'hen you Wik about the IB\V, what do you 1nean? A: A mrmorandu1n fro1n the State Depnrtment's legal office says that the ' lt1aprove l1~vi1ae Crossi11g Santa Fe Railroad intersection \vith Jeffrey Road in Irvine is being im pro\'ed with widened roadway and new, upgraded signals. Last December. bakery truck drive r was killed \vhen train st ruck truck is becoming heavily traveled north-south . route in new ci ty and is among fir:;t roa.dwa)'.S to be u:ipro~ed in city's share of co unty Arterial Highway f1na nc1ng Progran1. ( WHERE THEY J .._ __ ST_l\_N_D_~ A: 1bere was 11 na11,ed perception of \\"hal American interests \\'ere in Burundi and how they should be defended . Often, the Stole Department makes policy on the basis of ' 'cliency" -th at is, American di plomats arc more concerned Yi'ith pleasing the foreign gover1UT1ents than thinking out rational directions for U.S. policy. Their goal is to maintain cor- dia l relations \\•ilh a client regime -as they did with the client reg ime in Viet- nam. Of£iclals in the State Departmen t bui ld their careers, get their rewards an d m,ake their lives tolerable by avoiding controversy \1•ith foreig n go\'ernments. 'H'e <"IJllfd laave opplletl _w:h'..'.'.i:::ch'.'.__l.p'.:a:ss:::ed'.'.....'.l'.'.hr::o'..'.'.u_~gh'.'.__'.w'.'.i~g-:_:w::•~g_'.t,y_:Pc:e:_.:si~g1:::iac:I:_. :Je:::f:_:ft~·c:_Y ___________________ _ so 111 e le.,erffge ngalnsl the T11tsi gover11111e11t.' Cool Mh1isl{irt Stirs Storm h1 ls1~ael JERUSALEM (UPll -The great debate is on for the fnll, but until then the miniskirt is out in the Israeli Knesset (parliament). That was the \1·ord from p;1rlia1nent's arbiters of fashion. \Vho barred a secretary last \Vttk v.·hen she i:howed up in the Knesset din- ing room in a skirt eight inches above the knee. "I DECIDE the length or the skirts permill<'d in th c Knesset." he said. from improperly a t t i r e d v!s tors. "But \\'C don't \\':'l/11 people wearing anything in the Knesset that \1·ould offend some-one's feelings:' The Orthodox lav.•maker.1 comp:·is~ abc11t 15 percent or the n1embership ~Iiss Eliahu, who v.·orks for the Ma ki Communist faction. \\'hich has one seat in the 120- mcn1bcr cha mbe:-, fumed at * the rulin(J. 1 * ---------:-* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *~** lier clinging n1ini n1ay ha\'C * violated Knesset rules but was u•ithin the bounds of proper dress prescribed by I h c \Vomrn's Corps of the Arnicd J:<orccs. MERCURY SAVINGS "STATEMENT SAVINGS "·PRESTIGE Card * * * * * * * The smooth ride tire ~ith.a whoppirig _24 month guarantee ... our Rel1Ar1de~ .. - . ~ ·' . (, ReliAride Super Tires 700x13 blackwall lubeless g,~~~,2.3 .• 94 e Fnur ply nylon cord e 11 month 9u1r1nl11e 11 ith 4 m0flth1 100% 1llow1nc• e 5 to I month• 50"'• 1Uow1nce e 10 to 11month•25 ~~ 1llow1nc1 Sl111 100•,, 775 114 125114 125115 Prltl Fed. E•. T11 2 101 23.94 188 ~ !11t 2 lor 33.94 209~~,. 2 tor 33.94 2 ~4 Oflf !1'1! 2 lor 33.94 '?JO ?El' !ire Price• thoWn 1r1 lor two bl1ct- w1!1 l\lbllles1 llr••. plu1 F1d. £1. T11 •••flown. No trldt·in .,Hdtd. ildd 1u11 Sl 1or •l'lil1w1ll1. O"' fll11llit.rid1 ' s""'' 11 our ow" "'''" 1nd do..s not 111!1ct 1n1 n1Uonw1d' 1t1.,d1rd ol I . r , ' e 78 series styling e 4-ply polyesler cord conttruction e 24 month gu1rent•• wllh 6 monlh 100% replacement allowance period. With Ille p1,11ch1h OI Fh1Uilnd•• llrH '°" g•t 1. f'REE i.,1!11l1tiot1 ol 111111. Z. FA£E tit• rol11ton ""''' 5000 m1l•1. l!ELIAA!DE' TIAE ,AOTECTION GUAAAHTEE You1 A•hilridr' Ure prolection 9u11111nlt• co•1111 all R11HA1idt • 01~· ••no•r Urtt j111ctpt 19<'1;111 1pplic1tlon hrtt with 1ep11r1tt 9"1Uftn· 1ttt) 191in1t all ro1d 1'1;u 11d O• deltcl l111 .. rt1, Yo" art prot11c11d 101 it. 1ntl11 1t1t1d monlhs ol g111r1nte1. U 10"' ti •11 l~il• dvung !he 9 .. 1 r1n11• 1Milod, r1hHn n to 111 1nd we w•l1. at 0111 oplion 1ep1l1 ro"' 1111, 01 m1k11n 1Uow1nc1 b1111d on ll'!e 01i;lnal purcl'!t•e pnce. e acl,.dlng F1d11r11 E1cl11 T11. tow1rd IOI ~rthese of I ruew ti re. 'We w•ll allow 100•. ol !ht orf9in11 P"lt Mlt• p1ice. 111clud1n9 1oplic1ble Fed111t E•clu Ta•. d"rin.g lht lht 100~:. 1llow111t1 p11 riod, Thert· 1!1c1. we wftl •llow so•;, 01 25~ ol lhe ori9!111t pu•th1ue pnct . , •. cl11din9 eppllc1bl• 1"1d111I E,1c11t T••· toward the pu1cti.s.e ot t new fir•. FtHr1I E1cl11 T11 ed1u1tm11nl 1How1.,ce wllt be made on !ht b11l1 of th• 1Mrt•lll or 011 on9i111! l111d u1rn1ini.,9, This 911a ranlee it nol 111n1lt11bl•. 11 11 only tor pnf1te p11t11ng11 e111 01 pa1se.,911 •l•Uon '"''90"'· TREAD l lFf. ,ROT(CTION · We btl\ld inlo •~•rf RtllA1idt '' 1\11 111• lrac\1on inditajo11, T"'°J ~19- 1111 •hen your 1111 should H ••l>l •c•d. II 1our lire we1r1 OUI (f!l ttpl !or 1nco,,tcl 1U9nm1n1) w• will m•-• ,., altowanct b111d Ofl 0119111111 p.1rch1s1 p1lt1. ••th1dln9 11pplic1bl1 F1dtr1I E1cl11 f l (, 1ow1rd ltll! P"rch1W ol 1 "'"' 111•. We ,..,11 allow V. during tN lir11 nau er '• d11ri.,g Ille 1tt o.,d It.Ill ol U1t 1t11ed ,.,onlM o l 9"11111111. F1dt r1I £1cl1t T11 1tdlutlm11n\ t llow1nc1 will bl made Oii lfte h s.it ol 1111 ptrt•n4 ol lhl orl91n11l l1 Md r11111ini.,9. A71x13 plu1 1.13 Fed. £11. Tar. No !rade-in needed. Fed. ·~· Fll1 Price £1. Tu A7l1113 600113 13.97 1.1:11 C78x14 et5x14 16.97 2.08 E781114 735•1 4 17.97 2.22 F71114 77Sa14 18.97 2.37 078114 8251114 19.97 ~" G78115 815/825115 20.97 2.60 GRANADA HILLS: 18000 Chatsworth SI . I WOODLAND HILLS: 21500 Victory Blvd. I IUVlll:SIDI: 3520 Ty ler SI. t SANTA ANA: 3900 South Bris tol St. I TOllRANCt : Sep.;lveda and Hawthorne • LAKIWOOO; Carsoq St. and Paramount Blvd.• IUINA 'AIK• Beach and Orangel horpe • o•ANOI; Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchesfer •Open weekdays 9:30 1o 9:30. Sundays 10 10 7. • , "'" • J ' • OPEN DAILY 9:30-to 9:30 SUNDAY 10 to 7 MORE THAN 600 PAIR ! CLOSEOUTS -DISCONTINUED . SHOES • SANDALS t SANDALS t PUM PS $4 •CLOGS NOW t FLATS ORIGINAL 13.99 TO 5.88 GIRLS-INFANTS 90 ONLY BODY SUITS ............... ,, NOW 44 ONLY 3·6x 2·PC. PLAY SETS IJi:>!·~ I -~·. . .. NOW 51 ONLY GIRLS 7·14 DRESSES NOW 19 ONLY 7·16 LIGHT JACKETS Qi:>t1~.: ~91 IQ NOW 142 ONLY 7·16 PANTS & SHORTS 0 "'•G.:J<:,.J"~ NOW 1.88 1 .88 3.00 2 .99 1 .88 200 ONLY W 'NT TODDL ER 1.50 PLAYWEAR 0"'t(._ · 9??.9'" ..•..•....• NOW 46 ONLY "NT & TODDLER DRESSES !~;~~~~role Table Lamps. .. ... 2 FOR s 1 0 ~~ri~~~t{,~, r edspreads ···············-·-__ Now 9.88 ..................... Now 11 .88 300 Tier Curtains Gr Q l u J_~., . ..• . ................ .. 300 Terry Bath Towels \l"'' ,,,1 • Pr1•1!~ ...•••. ,,,, Now 1.00 Now 2 • s1 1.87 164 Super Beach Towels 11' c ,11 HOME ENTERTAINMENT 14 Only A.strez Stereos ........ Now 49.88 or;;i. 59.88 ~~,~~:r AM/FM Phonograph s 'Now 34•88 6 Only GE Portable Phonos Or lQ ~I Now 15.88 - 300 YARDS 100% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS Cnoo-~ ··n·· a ·c11r,•1 ~"!,ect:O" o' :Jr r•ts. s0 .;-1nc .,1,,. < :t.~t<.1•7"1'.1 1'«'~.~­ . ,15 ","IJ rl~·,oo'rJ<>"' r..r' ""RC'·"~ ... ·asn,,n P <'1.:· •. LOAD UP NOW AT THIS LOW LOW PRICE' Yard BRIGHT .ACRYLIC SCREEN PRINTS 1 22 ORIGINAL· S2 -1') Y.:i· • .NO\I./ • 6~?~,~~~~,~~.:;:,oN SCRE:~.~RI~~~ 1 .22 ~~~1~~g~sTQ~,~.1~;.~ ~~~S .............. NIJ\'I 1.22 66 ONLY 1 O" x 1 O" CAST IRON HIBACHI ORIGINAL 4.29 NOW SANTA 2ss ANA STO TWO BIG GROUPS OVER 225 WOMENS DRESSES c~oose Junio·. M:sses. anc Ha11 Size s in a wide <1ssonment oj styles <1n~ co·ors and at h.:i·d -10 -oe:1e'1e p11c!?f ORIGI NAL s5ss ·1.88 to ·16.99 NOW OR IGINAL -$888 '11.99 to '16.99 NOW · MENS-BOYS .,., · BOYS 345 ONLY SPORT & KNIT SHIRTS ce" . ,. '9; ........ ... ... . NOW 1.50 140 ONLY BOY·s WALK SHORTS OPIG.1.991(1 NOW 1.50 130 ONL y BOY·s SWIMWEAR Ol<I G 'q7.1 Q; NOW 1 .50 155 ONLY BOYS DUNE BUGGY BUSH JEAN 3.00 SEERSUCK ER 10 ONLY ORIC..J9.QI POLYESTERS 40 ONLY NOW No .J29.88 . Now525.00 100 ONLY BOY'S BRUSH JEANS 0"0 l.97 . .NOW s2,50 SPORTING GOODS Bill Y CASPER GOLF BALLS . ,, oo ()1,!IG. 1.11 ...... , .................................... NOW .:1 for 1 BOAT PENNANTS·FLAGS NOW 1.00 lhursd·'Y J11ty Zb. 1<173 OM LY PI LO T 21 the IJmil r.~9.§r~kr Y TWO BIG GROUPS ! WOMENS SWIMW·EAR 49 PIE CES MANY STYLES ORIG 6.99 -8 99 NOW 5ss 190 PIECE S OR IG. 11.99·13.99 NOW 7.88 ·SPORTSWEAR 69 ONLY KNIT TOPS & SWEATER S 1 ""' ,,. • '· NOW 3 .00 71 ONLY LACEY BU LKY SWEATERS ,, <· NOW 5 .00 18 ONLY ANGO RA LOOK SWEATER S OOI G "' NOW 7. 00 151 ONLY BOUCLE K~IT TO PS ORl<i , o, NOW 52 ONLY ASSORTED BL OUSES (•i;ou , 1 <;o 6 ~ NOW 33 ON LY BETIER BLOUSES Gf'I r. •1,, t ,,., NOW 20 ONLY LONG PL AID SKIRTS 'J1?1. (,,·<I', NOW 3 .00 3.00 5.00 3.00 MENS PANTS NOW , .. ,,, .... -.. ,,,, ... ,,,....... s499 r,_r1.r·. ,, ·,.,eer,~. ~ ' ,~ "'" ., ..... • ;-~ :o .;? •r:""' 1r ... ·,,,' .. . ORI GINA L SANTA ANA STORE ONLY ! 450 PIECES WOMEN'S SUMMER COSTUME .. JEWELRY :CLORFU. SUl,11.'E R PASTE.S A;,9 1 /. Y'GH S~i\DES 'f 2 PRICE ORIG .. 99 • 1.99 _ GIGANTIC CLEARANCE r 3000 TOYS ORI G. 97c to 1.97 ORIG .1.97 to 2.17 NOW SOC NOW 51 .50 · · cri=iJie Fur n1tLue • · T1·11s: N Turn Do!: ~as1) Ac-: 11 '. On11 S11:v Droopy As st Scri:'JOle1 Board Ba1anced Ba!M ",oo "'y r<a le1doscope B 0 Dune Buggies Pr11t1ra Se: l.11c<ev Mouse Purc•1 Ba l RJb·Ons Joc:or & ~~J·se ~1i -01en Snouloer Bags P1ast1c ans Asst J1r.rer Se: As~~ r ov F .as"i Ca.mer a ·a·)1', r.~a~e-uo Ass:. .:. :'.1( • Jac~·sar & Outhts · · 9a~y Angel Do'! __ 1:~e · Joi. ~ 8;1;-. Sroc.1 v :. Se.: . 1r· C",atr E ,::i·::1e Bes: Buv Fashions s· .1;e-:: Ben· A.Ss'. ~o or Fo,ms Sesame St 0 a.' De" Odd Kins Asst ORIG . 2.97 to 3.97 NOW $2.QQ ORIG .1.97 to 2.97 NOW $1 OO -... Tea's '2 Snooky 0011 -<o•dy Doody Puope! Hair Siting Mannea u1n S:u"ed Panda 48 ONLY BADMINTON SET S NOW 2.97 "==============!l 11 a l·.~1nu!e Refills ·ivr~ery Se; x'Ooll r.i1c· ey Hand Puope:s -o··. C;o'.h Pups Stuf;ea S1t11r~ Asst '1a·cn-A-Puzz!e • 24 ONLY PLAID GYM BAGS NOW 2 .99 29 ON LY BOWLING BAGS NOW 5 .88 7 ONLY GO LF STARTER SET S S1<1C J~ Q-NOW 39.97 34 ONLY VOIT SWIM MASKS NOW 2 .77 WAT ER SKI TOW ROPE S C•IO'IG.5.1 1 .......... " ........... . NO'lf 3 .99 COLEMAN SI NGLE MANTEL LANTERNS 88 :o o ,,.. NOW 7 . 246 DELUXE ADJUSTABLE TUBULAR PVC CHAISE LOUNGE t BRIGHT t COLORFUL t COM FORT ABLE NOW ORIG INAL 15.97 91s STORE ONLY! ~:,~~;,~,~.IS SY & JUNIOR PANTSNOW 5.oo 45 PAIR WOMENS JEANS NOW 3.00 21 ONLY 2 PC. PANT SET S NOW 15.00 ·i.~'_,,. .. , ...... '·; ~\' ' .. ·sHOES .. 400 ONLY MEN·s VINYL BOAT SHOES "~·'",J·X ~![\.'.irT• &•JI NOW 21300 2000 ONLY BOYS & YOUTH VINYL BO AT SHOES ..... NOW 2000 ONL y .BOYS & YOUTH FABRIC 1.99 BOAT SHOES NOW 21S300 .,111r •. ~~ 100 ONLY MEN·s KNIT KNICKERS ' . ,, NOW 3 .98 OVER 400 FINAL REDUCTION MENS SWIMWEAR t BOX ERS -KNI TS 199 ORIGINAL 3.97 NOW Ezee R1c::;s 7 C1c1es Tre Grr::Joer ~ \n ttie Faru 1y Ga'Tie .'/end) Weather Girl G1 art Tane Measu·e gompe· S1ompers :ii..z.:1.;. Bloc11 Ass: Sic s·r: A1'e ORIG . 5.97 to 9.97 ORIG . 3.97 to 5.99 NOW $300 NOW s5 oo 12 • . .:-~t Do1'. '2 Boo & Baoe·;e Asll P a',;tone Crea tions Snoop·1 Ge.·1e 1'v'h11: e Av1a1 Ou11a Bowe Game 0ao. 'J 01r5 'S"a..;~· ~.12 -1e· Ha1r-_1 Burch oa1d o Poo ~~IC , .,..-:.;i ';)n .. I G.1·0.: Looe ea"~er Ob e Holster set A.--:15'.s Ease 1800 PA IR MENS AND CHILDRENS BOAT SHOES H ~. • i.,·(, . ., i"•C.' ·1. ,,.. ""IE'<; If! Nit/Y \'./tllle R .. 1 r;.µ., .. a~ .. ? !'lA1• 101 .ll u" 1-1"1•. 3900 SOUTH BRISTOL -JUST NORTH OF SOUTH COAST PLAZA CH ARGE-IT • I i • I , .. , 22 DAIL V PILO f TUUfSd<'I)', July 20, l'l73 Morticians Disagree With. P•·oblem ·Big 1'een-age Alcoliolis1n I Inexpen sive, Fas~ Burials SAN FRANCISCO \U PI I ..-slogan "'a~. "Get your sobrie- B\• LOUIS CASSELS UllllM •'rK> lftlttMll ..... I A 1videsprcall can1p:ugn ag11lnst costly f11nl'ra ls \:,, hurling n1or!icians u1 1hr pocketbook. 1'h('ir anguish L-" refltC!t•d in an ad1•erti;.1ng l'<1111p;11An hy the National runeral r1in·t·t11rs Association, [\ Sf'1•k;, lo ;111,1\l'f some t'ritH'isrn... 11 h 1 (' 11 clergyn1t•n and 11rhrr~ li;n t' made of n1odcrn funl.'nd p1·:1c- tices. JUl>Gl;'/G Fll01'11 tl1e ;ul-.; - and !he frl>e brochurt·s 11·hich lhe association 1s i;lacl tv !'end to anyone req11csting thcrn - funeral clirl't'11f'"" ('specinlly are grie1'C'<I Ov thl' idea gi.iining ncL"t'ptunct• a1nong many Amerit·1u1s 1h11t a budy should b<' l'rl'llla1t•d or buru•d as quickly" quietly nnd u1- expcnsiyely as possible. Advocates of this idea arglJ(' that it has IY.'O i>dvanta~t'S. FlRST . JT IS casirr un tli.• bereavC'd f;unil,,.· than tu1 elaborate public· funeral \I 1lh such reaturcs as visiting hours in the funeral ho1nc. display of the corpse in tin 01>en casket, etc. Second, swift pr iv a I c disposition nf the body makes it possible to hold . at a con· vcnient tin1c later. a public me1norial S(•rvi<"C at \\'hich cit- tcntion can ht' focusl'd on the spirit of thC" dcpcir1ed and the hope or ett•rnal life, rather than morbidly ~cntcrl·<l on a caskrt and corpse. THE NA TIONAL Funeral [)1rcctors i\ssoc1a11on does not idh.'lll\ll Ill f'On !CSI tht>SC \'ll'll S un rcllg1uus grounds. I! ;it· NEWS ' ANALYSIS l11t·k' lla•n1 u1~1c11cl as bad p.-,)tholug~·· Arguing th<•t rh1· l'Orpsc ;.hould he prc~cnl and l'iSi blc at lht· funl'ral scrv1tc, the c1~~ocia11on says: .. It is ttlffil'Ult for n1an.v s 11 r I' 1 v o r s to disassociate th(<n1-;clv1•s 1n11ncd1ately frorn the 11rl·lcss bo<ly. The fini te n1111d l'cr1u1r1·~ evidenl'c that ~u e:irthlv C)l:1Stc11ce hiis {'lld· et!.. . C..'luding hllll' childrt•n JWnnie J>. was (irst arrested ty together." •·ron1µrl·hcnd the: real rnean-for public drunkenness \\'hen "I haven't had a rig h I 1ng ur denth." he \\'JS l!i. with the wile since I stopped," It :il~o creates "lhe proper h d said ltonnie. "\Ve used to fight chmnie for n1ournin~" so that "l\ly parents 3 to come u lot. J w:l:; a thrower." all \\"ho view the corpse can and get me," he said. "They •·Once I c~"fl tried to kill a fl'tl the loss and •·share the laughed it off. l \l'as just nlan 1,11iU1 a shotgun. ~ty wife sorro1v•· of the bercnvcd f.11.m1-another drunk kict ." ctldn't think n1uch of that." ly. Ronnie was already drink.in~ AA estimates that in the "G RIEJ-~ SIJARED is grief a lot Ylhcn he was 12. !·le used United Stfltes alone there are dirninlshcd . For the bereaved, to hang around pool halls in nine mlllion nlcobolic!:. or 1hc funeral can bC' that first, his hometo1vn of Ft. '\lorth. 11·hieh 650.000 arc "sober'' important step tovnird en10-Tex., and 11•inos would buy 1ncmbcrs of AA. tion~! adjustment to thei r him alcohol for an extra din1c. "The ilnportant thing to loss. l·le had eight liquor·relatc<l remember is that only lour AnnthC'r brochurr deals with auto accidents. }le wa s jailed percent of Lhe n a t i o n 's costs. 111hic:h funeral directors 17 times ror rowdy behavior alcoholics are on skid row,"~ feel critics have grossly ex-while drunk. s;i id John B. of Indianapolis. aggeraled. But no\\' l~oonic smiles and It says a 1971 sur\•ey in-says, '"Life sure is beautiful." AN ES1'11\IATED 30 1>ercent dil'alcd 1he '"average'' regular •le hasn't had a drink of li· of the alcoholics in AA have \ll f.\\"l~G Tll E body in au funeral cost 5983. Ho\\'C\•er, quor for 16 inonths. professional or busihcss job-;. oix·n tasket before or durin~ this figure -<lid not include :!O pcrcenl ;ire salesnwn. 25 Ille funeral makes lhosc v.·hu cemetery lot. vault. grave ALCOHOLICS Anon ymous percent arc skilled and tradfs su rvil"c inore aware of the charges such as honoraria for officials say the public niay bt: workers. 15 percent a r e re;ilily of death, the associa-the clprgyn1an. flowers, ad-11'·ild AHilltRI FllH shocked at reports of unskilled laborers and 10 per· t. dilionn l t r ans po r t n ti on you ngsters drinking liquor al C('nl are in "other" categories. ion say.~. h b 1 h" And if the deceased hud a c arges. uria clot in!( or Ku1nba. the first gorilla born at Ch ic.:aggo·s J .. incoln Park Zoo, plays with friend such an early age, but the AA Chuck R.. a 26-year-0Jd new8papcr notices .·· These 1. · 1 k · C isn't surpr ised ·1 f I d. 1· !on". Jinoerin.i dea1h. the ovaric l , seven-wee ··old Siberian ·r1ge r ub. Zoo party celebrated K11111ba's · ma1 m;u1 rom n 1anapo is. "' ,., o could add several hu11drcd •s· d 8 td t 1· h ··" h I 1· rarages uf disrasc can be lhird birthday. Both arc endangered s11ecics. ·. 1xtcen an l .year o s 11·as le 1g t....u ;it t e seec 1011 , dollars to the "average'' bill . h •-t AA f f h. · f •-' l rcniovcd b.v the niortician·s ave l.11.:en ro1n1non /> or o 1s city or Ii,.; group s nex nrts, ineluding ··the use of cos-TllE COST OF n funeral in· many ~'ears.·· said Norn1an convention, beginning July 5. inetics," so that the bereaved creases sharply "·hen a \V .• spokcsrnan at the 16th in-1974. \\"ill carry away "an ac. bereaved family believes - or than the funeral directors' family niust make for itself. burying the body quickly i.n ternational conference of •·\Ve have a good progra111 ceptable image for recalling is subtly persuaded -that association li kes to admit. the plainest JXISsi bl e container, Young People in AA, irhich there," said Chuck, who used the dec:easL'CI." selection of an oslentatiously \\'hethcr a full-dress, fancy-BUT A GitO\VING nu1nbcr so the one \\'ho has died 1nay met herf recently. to average 18 beers on a work· expensive casket is a "final casket, body-0n-view funera l is of Christians and secularists be remcn1bcrccl. loved and Ronnie \\'as one of 1.400 ing day -wh('n he was work - ··oF COURSE there is !)ain" ges ture of love and respect" worth \Yhat it costs the scen1 to be deciding !here is missed, not as u cosrnetici~d del cgatt>S from throughou t the ing. He said on his days off he fur survivors in viewing the to\v:ird lhc deceased. This bereaved, in n1oney :lnd emo-sornelhing to be s<1i<l for the corpse, but as a 11•arn1, Jiv ing, United States and Canada at put a\"'.3Y al least a case and a body, the funerul directors' happens rather more often lional drain is a decision each ancient Je\vish tradition of human J)t!rson. the annual 1necting \\•here the half of beer -36 bottles. ;1ssocia!ion ncknow\cdges in --"----·-------------------_:__:__:__:__:_ __ _:_.:::_:_:::.__:__:__:__::._:_ _______ ---------~---------------- une brochu re. ··But it is a hurt tl1at he lps to heal." The visible presence of the t'Orpsc helps the fan1ily -in- Flowered D1•ess eras Fa11rily Co11siclers " LeaviI1g Clifto11 CLfF'TON. Ariz. iAP l - The Ed~·ard Sta('v farn ilv has considerl'Cf morin-~ fron1. here because of L'Otnn1unitv rcnc· lion to a d;iu~hter being bar- red from cighth-f!rade gr1.1di.1a· lion because she· 1vorc "i a flowered drf!Ss. ~1rs. St:.rnr ~a id she and daughters Jlcbhil'. 16. and Eleanor. 13. \\·ould likl' to college scholarship to any school of Eleanor's choice. 1\IRS. STA CY said she 1 is 11·orr1l·d about t re a t n1 c n I Eleanor n1ay recei\'C in Clifton Hlr;h School \\"hrre she vd ll be a freshman in Scpte1nbC'r. ··To tell the truth. J 'm ready tu rnove to Africa or so1nc11·herr." :\lrs. Stat'I' said. · move to r'l'e;1rby J)uncan so the girl..'i could :iuend high school there. The f;in1ilv has fiied a SlOl.000 lnwsl1i1 ag<.1inst school princip:ll Billy ~lcDowell. \~ho \\"as upheld by the school ho:1rd !asl \vcek in his decision to send Eleanor home fron1 the gradua'tion ccren1ony. ~ BUT STACY, a cilrp1.•n11·r. said he int('nds to s1.1y in Clif- ton. "And ! guess that sr!llrs it.'' said 1'11rs. Stacy. ··1 t.lo 11·hatevt•r he sa1s because hl.'·,; head of th(' fa1l1ii v."" Publici tv aboui thl' drt•s-; cod e inc1di:nt brou~ht Sl'\ era\ hundrt'<i lrlfl'l'S 10 !hr S1;1c~ s and an oUC'r of a four·year Jud"e \a111cd ,.. SACRA~IF:\iTO 1 AP \ -r1-·. nard Superior Cour1 Jud~e Ed1\•in f. 11cach has bcf'n non1ina1ed bv Gov. Ronald Reagan 1:1 sp;·ve as as<:oc1all' justice of lhc ~nd District Courl of Appeal BC':1c·h . 4~1. a Republican 1rould rt· p I a<' e Justic,. Bov L. Hl•rnt.lun. ll'hn retH-ed rron1 th1• :1ppl'llate l'ourt \\"hl('h ~r·rlf'~ lh•· L'OUn· tics or Los Angelrs, Vcntt1ra. Santa Barbar<i :ind San Luis Obispo. ,------, i\lcOO\\'ELL recently \l'<lS a" ardL'<l a t1vo-ye:1r contracl as superintendent of Clifton schOu!:o:. ··\\'e'1·e bc<-n told that if \ll' Sul' Mr. ~lcDo11•el! :lnd \l'ill. 11l' ean e~pect thal Eleanor 11·ill ).!l't low grades. \'ou kno1v a ll.';11.:h1•r can rcallv do aln1ost <in~·1hin~ in a cl;lss and ~·ou ctin"t s:iy an)lhing.·· ~!rs. St;ll'\' snid. El~·jlnor ~•iicl she has nol ll•·t·idL'<l 11 h1·1hi.'r to accept thf' offer of n college cducailon. ··1 JCST really don"! kno11· cit.Jou\ it ret."" Elc11no1· s;:iid. '"I \l'<llll 10 go [11 c,.'Olll'gl' but 1 kt'('P :isking. ·should I so nr IH)j'l' ., ··nut the nian. Dn11 (;olton . Fa1rras. ,\\o .. h:;s Ileen rc:il 111("{' ;ihou1 ii and hr's given n1c :ill lhc tune I l\'<"lnl lo niake up 1ny n1inc1 .·· § 1000 ORDER \~./ Beautiful ' Stick-on YOURS . '' LABELS .v --.f"oNL~ TODAY! ..-: $125 'K" IHC~ Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yours.elf or a Friend May be used on envelopes .ii return addrei' labeli. Also very handy as identification labels for m.irking personal items suc h a1 books, records, photos, etc. Labels stic k on glass and may be used fo r marking home canned foc.d items. All labeli are printed with stylish Vogue type on fine quality white gummed paper: ·ARGUS COSINA STL -, I • ~e 2&90 SLIDE mPROJECTOR • 1/ 3.5 Pr1ci 1ion Le ns • 500 Witt &llli1nce • Pop·up Editor for Slide Prev iew • Canyin.1 Cai.e and GAF 100 51ide T11y • Re mote Control • fo1w1rd , Reverse, Foc us SINGLE LENS REFLEX WITH fl.8 LENS, CASE & ACCESSORY SHOE PR IC ES GOOD THRU MONDAY , JULY 30 83.95 OUR REG . PRICE 99 .95 ~· 2788Z DUAL 8 STL 1000 m MOVIE PROJECTOR • Prot,ssi on.s l Clack Finish lnterch.sn1t1blt Ptnla• Mount Cos inon l ens • • • Ooublt CdS Th1u·tllt·Ltns Meter Inc System with Mettr Lock Switc h Mtlal Cop1l Squ~rt Shut ler ·· l·l/1000 Sltutttr Spttds plu s '"0" • "Electronic Flai.h Sy11ch al 1/125 Sec. • F1e1onel G1ound Glass Spot Foc usinr • Oel.s ytd Action Shulltr Rtle.sse • M·X Synch Oull t!S on Sidt or CJmer.1 • Film in C.smt1.1 lnd1c~I 01 CR.1-\IG AM/FM I· TRACK STEREO SYSTEM e AM FM Sttreo R•dio t e Stp•r•le Volumt . D•lahce, Bass & Trtblt Slidt ContrGh • Ph ono lnl)llt 101 Rtco1d Pl1ye1 Of Ch•n1er • Aulomatic and Manual Pr o11•m Cha nger • 5t1reo lndica1or Limp e Front Pa nel Ste1eophGne JJck 99.95 MFG . LIST PRICE 139 .95 BAUER E161A ELECTRONIC STROBE-- with BUILT·IN Nl·CAD BATTERIES & AC AOAPTER ·RECHARGER • Compute1!11d l ilht Output • Gu ldt Number 45 fOf Kodachrome II ASA 25 • R1cycl ln1 Time: 81ttery 1·10 Ste., AC 15 Ste. 44.95 MFG. LIST PRICE 89 .95 APF MARK I CALCULATOR • I Dl1l1 Input and Olsp lay • srncl• Chip Al.11b1a1c Loli' • f"loalln1 01 Fl•td Dec l111a l Point ~ • Conil1nt Factor e Ove1l low lndlc alor \ • Minus lfldlcatot lor T1ut C1tdlt 8alanc1s e Ltadlnf lfld Tr1 llln1 Z110 Supprti1lon 7 MFG . LIST PRICE 249 .95 SOLIGOR LENSES T4 ·MOUNT 200M M F3.5 TELEPHOTO AUTOMATIC 97 ,~ • 4 Elem1nl Ttltphoto ~ e An1le 12 OUR REG. PR ICE 107.95 135MM F2.8 TELEPHOTO AUTOMATIC • 4 Eltment Te1epho!o 6950 e Antlt 18 ·1 OUR REG. PRICE 79.95 28M M F2.8 WIDE ANGLE AUTOMATIC 911a • 1 Ele ment Wide An1le • Anrte 74 T-4 MOUNT NOT INCLUOEO OUR REG . PRI CE 113.95 COLOR FILM PROCESSING WITH JUMBO COLOR PRINTS FROM KODACOLOR, GAF OR FUJICOLOR 12 EXPOSURE FILM ,. 229 SO. COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA - • New, Eaclu1 iv1 GAF Step Motion • Ultra 5harp 1/1.4 Precision Zoom Ltns • Quart? H1lore11 La mp • Automati c Fiim Tllfead inr and Automatic Rewindln1 e Shows bo1n Supe1 a an d Rt.111111 Imm Mowlt1 • Compl1te with Retractable Power Cord and Sell· Contained Ca11y in1 Case & 400' Re•! 98.50 OUR REG . PRICE 114 .95 BOWMAR MX50 CALCULATOR COMPLETE WITH DELUXE VINYL CASE ANO AC CHA RGER e A Ditit Display •Full Flo1tin1 Decimal •All New "Omni-Constant'" • The Filth Funcllon -'• Kty • Ni·Cad Oallerits 99.95 SEKONIC L28C STUDIO DELUXE EXPOSURE METER 42.73 OUR REG . PRICE 65.00 FIRST CHOICE Of PROFESSIONALS SOxSO SILVERLITE LENTICULAR SCREEN • Wrlnlll• f"rtt .. lclllft Area Ad julll to • Any l'o•IU011 011 lr1d • l'lcll·Ull T1t tor Quick 11Mt ·E.a1"1 011f1'1Uo11 25.95 OUR REG. PRICE 36 .95 llJSTOL AT SAN DIEGO FIWY. -,HON! tTt.J37l MON. • TUU, • Wl:D. • THURS. • SAT. -10 . ~ P.RI, tO·f; SUN . 12 tN0011I to S , • I st• Co "'I ca a ' of eli I we r Sw Ba ME Eli Ka Ch Ly• Su: jas K. Sm L. ~ An dru Ro Bn Da Cal Ca' Mii Dr; AH WANT TO TESTIFY ... ~ 107 on Dean's Honor List One hundred and seven students from the Orange Coast area made the recently released Dean 's Honors List at cat State Fullerton. A 3.5 grade point average on a 4.0 scale in at least 12 hour s of credit is required for eligibility on th e list. Area students on the list were: NEWPORT BE/lc;tl - Susan L. Andersori, Sharon L. Banks, Robert T. Bistagne, J\.fartin J . Byhower, Diane Elias, John P. Kreag, Kathleen A. Ccv c r c t t, Christine A. Lyon, Jean M. Lyon, Jorge B. Maradiegue, Susan L. Riely,, Eustacia Ro- jas, Marcia A. Vaiuso, Judith K. Wagner, Gl'.llgory A. Ward ~ Susan 1. Whecl~r, 11Jl~ Denise L. Workman. • 1 ' t:QSTA t<.tESA -Jane t S. Anthony, Margal"el J\.t Artncn- dariz, Robijan B. &ker. Robert E. Blake, Arthur E. Brown , Diana L. Bryant . David A. Bryson, Kathleen A. Callaghan, P al rick J . Callanan, Robert G. Clark, l\tark R. Davis, Christine S. Drath, Kathleen A. Ebright, / Richa rd R. Golden, Florence 1\1. Hagan. John R. Hanna, Janet D. Herschler, John C. Holt , Bruce M. Johnson, Ri chard L. Keith, Patrick W. Kelleher, David 0 . f<.IcCauley. t<.1arlcnc A. l\1eister, Charcl Morris. Th erese K. Poitevin. John P. Re.cg, Deborah C. Riley, Terrill L. Robinson. ConStantino S a I i o s and Willia m R. Vannote. ..DANA POINT -Bruce R. Cockrell, Frank T. Iles and Christian B. kleibacker. EL TORO -Patricia It Lupton and Barbara A. Paris. FOUNTAIN V AUEY - Kathleen D. Dempsey, Diana L. Griffith, Joyce A. Howard , bebbie L. Jones, Clayton C. Kyker and Thomas F. Miller. HUNTINGTON BEA'Cll - Judy Y. Barrasso, Timothy L. Bonwell, Sina Cahn, Gerald ii.I. Gaputo, Gr e tch e n V. · Champlin, Anthony DeJohn, Joanne M. Gass, l\1argo S. Marius. Theodore J. '-1ay, Barbara J . J\1cRae, Linda B. Neal. Barbara L. Petti!. J\lark C. Shelton. Paul \V. Stephens, Elaine L. Thomas and Jimmie D. Wild . IRVINE Kevin Edberg . l\lichele Pt-1. Hoover, Carol L. J\tarks and Wanda hloore. LAGUNA BEACJI -John 0 . Dufau . Dcvylcc A. Lloyd. '-lichael C. Storn1 and Clotilde E. \Vethe. LAGUNA JllLLS -l\t'rry D. Devries and Barbara A. Rieb. LAGUNA NIGUEL Giovanni B. Cupaiuol o. MISSION VIEJO -Karolyn L. Bcmoll, Robert E . Boehmer, Kenneth M. Davis and Cynthia M. Grant. SAN CLEJ\1ENTE -Craig H. Krah! and John F . J\'1cKinley. SOU111 LAGUNA Deborah C. Bennett, J{alph D. 11anson, !\!argot E. llartman, Karen M. J\1auro and Virginia L. Paul. WEST~UNSTER -James E. Bray, Nancy P. Davey, Toby J. Elder. James R. Jacob, Terry J\.1. Jeppesen, Richard II. Knox, Thomas L. La\\.'rence, \\'esley \V. Phillips and Ronald L. Thtmnan. il..l" \.& we.a.r ""9r- 1Tle.n.;. ~0..S.hlOO~ ~"°"" T\.\£ $\.\\R\ .S1'L£ :!>~3 e . 1'7 ~ p I e..o..si: j o~ u ~ cU:. noon iao\.\ 1 I\ L.1 le&. +\..t. d '1t.kre.nce. , I5~'DCRt:S 333 b~siclc. ~r. nc.v.>~rt b~o.c.\.. 4 Achieve Ho nor List --' .. A qu.rtet of Orange Coast area students were named to the Prtsidenl's llonor Jjst at Cypress College r«ently. The 160 students who were selectl'd bad lO maintain an A minus or above average in 12 units or more to be eligible for the honor. Area honor students are Karen Mundwiler of Cosla Mesa, Laurie Jean Rowe or Hunlington Beach , and Robert W. Melson and James L. Pir· tie, both of El Toro. 4-H Confab Se t Capitol Ne"'s Se.n•lce DAVIS -The J973 44 11 Leadership Conference will be he-Id Aug. &-10 for north state area members at UC Davis. A second conference for sooth state 4-H members is schcdul· ed Aug. 20-24 at UC Riverside. - I - Eeo110111ie Queries., Replies· By DICK 'llES1' WASHINGTON (UPI) \Vhenever Prri1lden1 Nixon's economic game plan enters a new phase, which Is fairl~ of1en, many newspaper s enlploy the catechism techn1· que to explain how it v•o1ks. A t y p I ca 1 queslio~and· answer expostUon r e a d s something like this: Q. What e.ffect will the new anti-Inflation program have on the average COO!Umer? A. The first effect or the new anti-inflatiOfl program is expected to be a sharp In- crease in food prices. Q. llOW \\'II\ rising rood prices hel p cornbat inna11on'? A. Ccinsumers v.'ill have lt•ss to spend for other \GHT!'# \> SIDE Q. \\'hat was wrong "'ith th~ pr('\'IOUS anti-inflation pr"" grarn wldcr which rood prices Wl'rl' frQU!n? A. The fn..>eZe '>''as cau ~1ng food short.ages, which tcndtod to be inflationary. Q. \Yhat Is tbe n1oin dif· ference belweE'n the tY.'V pro- grams? A. It's the d I r f e r c n c r between not ha\•ing str:iJ.. because it isn't available and not ha\'ing steak because ~uu can ·1 afford it. Q Did the President jli\'e :iny thought to a con1pro1111sr und('r y.•h.ich he \\'ou ld only rrt>t•1e the price of lro:tcn food ~ A. ,-.;o Frtel..Lnf.l lh<' vnce ol frozen fOCKI v.·ould nltrely lead grocer.s to start scllini:: frozen food al room temperature. Q Thnnk you . )'ou ore to br <"0111n11•nd\'d tor t-xpluinlng 11 t:u1nplt•x. 1.onfusini.t !litua\1011 in such a way lhllJ !he ti\ t•rui;t• reader can undcrstand It. A. lX>n't n\efltl(ln it It's :ill par! of lhc job. F.nd C3 tt.'<.i1isn1. Pt::RllAPS Tiii-.: a1·cra,i::e rt•ndcr hns noticed son1e1hini.: a hnle-strunge about this 1~·ix~ of t>luc1dat!on. Tht! odd !hmg you n111y h:1 \c r111111.'t'd is that "'hoever po.scs lht> ques11ons nt>1·er poS£>.'S a question that 1s too cliU1cutt for 11·ho<.>1·cr is supplying the 31\!i>Y.'CrS lo 111\SY.'('.(, \\'tut·h 1s scl dorn !he 11·;1~ SHOP 'TIL 9 TONIGHT • thtr\&!9 v.·ork out of rr..u.1 111._ SO NOW, '-tr. and f.frs A 1 er1J;:e RE'ider , 1 am gomi:: to explain 10 )OU the 1pparent omnL'ICience of !he cconom l(' f•iplai ncrs. ~lt!tt 's the inside <lope : The J:"ll~· 11 ho :i~J..s lh<' qurs· l i11ns nnd th<• gu~ 11h11 UJJS Wt ·~ 1ht•rn usually D!'i.! th£1 !)Un1r ;.:uy! AND. l\'EElll.F.SS to soy, a~ Jon~ :u:: he hns \"t'.llll f'Ql over lhi> qu estions hl' 1~ no! i.:ou1g lu :;\urnp tu111.st·lf. Tha! ·,,. nnil· huttla n n<llU rt.' ll t• 1' .:11i 11g tu fl'('tl h11n,1·!f ljll<'~!1 t1n, ht: r:•n knOl..·k uU ! 01f th\.' p.1rl I lllJPl' lh(' 1•run•llllll' t•\'. p\:uners \\ 111 f11rl!11 r 1111· fhl' gi1 in~ :111 ;1~ lh• 1r 11 1111~ 1r.ul1• ~£11'r1·r Rut I .. ;11 it's !11111• lht· j avrr:igr rt'Oult·r-; r1f .\r11cr1l':i 11 1r•· 11 1~1'<1 up BIG SAVINGS ON THE AMHERST A bft 1 t•• dl09onol nper KNell pk• ture lll • c••P'Kt ogral...cl Kesll,,.lr Wol11ttt Color Coblnot. Tito1 IOI choub -•-90% Solid Stete. Solld Stato Sup« Yrdeo Ro119e Tu .. r. C~•· ro"'lled t••l1t9. A•tomotlc lint Guo'd Control. S" I J" Sptolior. LAST FEW 1973 RCA's IN STOCK 18'' MOOIEl.. IEll.O> NEW FOR 1974 17" Zenith RC1''S BIG.SCREEN COLOR PORTABLE THAT'S EASY·TO·BUY • fa,,.11, ..... COIN •lewl'!MJ tlHlt'' portoble - • 0 H·Y• ¥Hf fig ... , .. $27995 e Two phMJ·I• Acc:uClrc1lt !f) "'oduln for _,., s.nlcl11og e Ylord color ft-0111 hlogh per· Ol•CJOnll Solid-State Chromac:olor II Mod~ ~ lllis venofile portoble hn on,wll•r• i11 tlM home. FHturn 1elld-ttcrte chosils, 91111.,.freo KrOfl, J60 de• qr-swlftl bos.o, 011d "'•"'ory fino tu"l11q. 111 1r,f .. l11og rtil•oro"'e a11d bloc:•. SONY RCA ZENITH JVC KOSS GARRARD PANASONIC B.A.S.F. CLARICON for,,.oiico color f1M -NOW IN STOCK ! ! A two-l11·•110 011tortoln"'°"' pocllooge 1!1or co,,.bltlQ a Mfnitl•• FM /AM rodio 011d a lllogll·porfor111t111ce c:a•wrt9 ,.. corder, R.oc:ord' ho111 radio or buill·I• co11deMer "'le. Ft>oturos tene.co11trol, •orloble 1ou11d 111011i1oi. 4 litc:h 1peo ... or o"d 2·wott1 of output. AC/or DC operollo". A A & D ''Electronics for the home'' CAii• Ster TYJ KV-5{JQQ T RINI TAO~J' l'OFHA(ll( COLOR TV •Tr n ''On O"t r, ,.,, ""' 'e'" ~~~le.., !or '""'P ti•'.)"! I '<!· •e LO:OC• • Qper1)"!. ""'AC o• DC .., 111 01·:·c.,a1 llr.e~-.~· ~. • r•11ci oo ... n 1,.~", r"""' ''" "1 d'J'e • i:tl1l1J•ra' • "" t .~ • ; dnO nue on O"e o~.· tOflftOl • :io1 Cl ~ra•e •e f>3• ,1 'I • ln\1an! c c•u•I! ano 5ound • Easy rd"' roe no~nieCl n1no e • Me1a1,: r,•a1 (tt .. nel SONY · Ask anyone. 9U1'LITT PRODUCTS PROFESSIONAL SERVICE 275 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 642-8882 .. Call For Sft'vlc• Hours: Daily 9·6 • Thur. 9-9 Sor•l11og The Horbor ArH Sine• 1956 "v 11·•1r; TH ..,,r;~oN · fllMOTE CO\ I AOL COlOfl rv - • 17 . ..,~., ~r,et"' ".ea~.l'eCl a d'JJ"'a·,f • Ti ., 110., e.,e ~~., '.:r-e lr.n~ 5 ,~·e,01 to• ~"a ro. t1 .;r r ..,,. I le •(l tO'O• •Sony flt"1C'e CO'l~'OI ComrnanCler • 5,..,11el ria~' !or v e" "'; from 11..,~ an9 e • UHf pre 11e1ecr cie1en1 8 cra .. ne1 tur rg ~ys·erri • .llu!c,,.,a• t '·"e t~n ng. 'r.'"' a'lo l°·•e n 0"'' p .. s'I tu"~'1 coni<ol •So: Cl s•a:e re t t 11 1 • Rete>>eV s ce moun•ej nan'.lle~ • Ro.ewood II'" ...... OO:l tao.ne1 Why Buy From AA&O • OllO yeor lobof og11ora11tff • One year perf1, worra•'Y • Fi•• yeor pkhH• rub. .. ,, ... ,.,. • Dlscou111 prices e Ote ,.., 1peot:or ••tll•ll'I• e 60 doy hllM'f ••c:ltanoge e Ft-IHdty, pHM•ol unlu - wo ICHOW o•r ftfodtctl Ofld Mell tfle"' wltfl SEIYICI FRoM }'ashion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR • , ··~ • ' I L I I I •• • • • .. , ... DAILY PILOT Fat11ll11 C lrr11~ Thursday, July 2EI, lt/73 b !I llll lie u11e "Aw! Do we hotto slop and get out ogoin, Daddy?" UCI Exte1Jsio11 Classes Listed During August The following is <• list f;f classes offered in August by the UC Irvine Extension pro- gram: WEOl'IESD.l.Y, A119. 1 "Sout11-1•ern Ar cneo""1Y: A Cullure Artl In Perspec!lve," Cl'lrlSIOPhe• E. Of'O\I.,., M.A .. lns•ruclor. AnthrapolGoy. (YP!'IU Colle{lt LKIU<H And '" e!11M· dey flelCI trip. (ltn ...e.ets Wednesd11v1, 1·10 p.m., s11rt1119 A119. 1, Rm. m, H11nWntles Hall. UC lrvlr>e camran. Fltld lrlp lo Soutl'l-s!frn SltlH, Al>CI. 1,_A119. )6. Ftt ll:IO. does no! lnrllld,. a.ceommodttlons, meals. or !ravel Of\ lleld lrlP. "TM Flntncl•I Wom•n." Vlrqlnl~ /.'• hit, Pll.O., vic•·P•!slden!, 1~• '"" ComJYnv. 51111 O\roo. Fl'11 or a llC frvtne E~!tnslon lec1ure wrl11. Five Wednf$day rvenin<n. Auq.,.1 1-1'1, Rm. 16G, Sl1lnh111• H<Jll, UC Irvine c1mpu1. FM: 1'1(1. "Ti. R•<Jll!v o 1 Al>!.lracilon,"' fFllm1: Tol•m Pol•, Non.et11ectlv1 ,t,rt, ,._ N9W YM1t Ari, J111Mr Johll•, WtYftt Thl1MllCI •nd P•lfr \loulkOIJ, Judith Hell Croolc, M.P. .• •••l1t1n! pr<>- le1101", Ari, G11nd1le Colleoe. end le« tur.r, Ari, C11T10,nl1 Ste•~ Unlv1r1ay. Norlhrldge: Judlth Betlel~lm, M.A., lechirer, Ethnic lid Hl1!orv, relltornl~ St1t1 Unlve.,nv. N"'tl\rldge. P1rt o! • UC trvl,,. E~1en•lon leo:•11r.,.111"' 1erie<, "Patterns ot Ari . . 5ocl1I Rllual and Ar1l11lc Production."' 7-10 cm .. Rm 171, Hum1nUle1 H•ll, UC lrvl,,. c•m- PVI. Sl119l1 l<f'lllH!on, ,J.50. lfl:IOAY, SATURDAY •ncl SUNDAY, A119. lot "Movement and P.w.:iren<u,' 'Andrew Atl9qt'rll!, M .P... pdrn:ipal, Burnen El1m1t1t~rv !>chool, Long 8eac:h, and Jlmfl Pugh. B.5, r..-.ou•ce te•cl><!r, S!1v1ni.on Elell'ltllary !>chool. Lon; llNt h. A lhr~,.r UC Irvine Ex· -Ion oroor•m. Fri .. 1·1J o.m · 5,.1. t 1.m.·11 noon. J.j 11.m .. 7-IO:lO p,m.: Sun., t 1.m .. JJ n_... 1·• o.m .. Room• '19 Incl no. Ur1lve.,nv Hi9h School, 071 Campu• D• .. lrvlt1e. Ftt: Will\ er wllhoul crtdl!, 5.'S. "Folk M111lc: P.nother View of HltlO('I.'' ICtl!l'I arid Ru11y McNeil, con· tulllln!•, Folk Mu•lc P. tl\ree-d11Y UC lrv1n1 Elten•lon weekend progr1m. l'rl. 1·10 p,m.; 5•1.• I 11.'ll.•6 p.m; Sun .. I 11.m.·1? noon, l·S o.m .. Rm. 161. Hvm1nl!l11 Hall, Ur. Irvin~ cempu1. l'N: wl!h or wl!hC11t er.all. 1ol8, In· ch.Id•• 10me m•!erl11ls. "Human Pclen!111ll!ie•."' Rcborl Daw. Ed.D., oresldent, ln1ll!ul1 tcr lh' DlvelOl)ITlenl of !-111m11n Rrscurct1. P. tl'lr--klfld UC Irvine E•ten1lcn progrtm, Fri .. Ay.g. J t nd 10, 1·10 o.m.; St! .. A\IO. • and 11, •:lO a.m.•S p.m.; Sun •• A\JO. ~ and 12. s·:io 11.m.·S p.n> .. Third Ftlor L~ G11tew11y Com· mon1. UC Irvine c•mDU•. Fl'I: wilncr wlll!cu! C•Kll!. SIS. MONDAY. TUESDAV. WEDNESDAY THURSDAV ulll FRIDAY All') . ._10 "Gulclanc• of The Ycun<1 ChUd." J•mfl L. Hvme1. Jr. Ed.D .. ci1nsul· llnl. le1;1ur1r. tu1hor; lor""r pr01e110r tf!d director. Unlv..-sltv NurKrY 5doool·IClnderg11rle11, Ut11ve'5ilY DI Mllryl1nd. P. tlve-dav UC lrvl..., E .. l9'11lon ff"''""'· 1.s r> m.. Auq. 6 tl'lrOUOh 10. Rm, 167. StrlnhBUI H.o l, UC lrvlr>1 c1mp1u. Fee: with or wllhoul credit, u s. WEDNESDAY, A119. I "Communlly 5vmb!!ll1m.'' CFllms; Art• POV•r•, s111vi.ro1: "El MH•lro"'J, Judllh H•ll Crook, M .A .. 1ul1t11nt pre>- lttlOI", Ari, Gl1nd11l1 Cof'~'OI 11/ld IK• lurer, Art, C•lllornl1 5l1!e Un!v•rllty, NorthrldQe; Jlldllh 8•11elhelm, M.A., tocturer, Ethnic Art HIS!Qry, C1litornia s1111 Unlv,.nlty, NortMI~. P•rl cl 11 UC !rvln1 Extension leciure.fllrn 1erlM. "'P11tern1 ot Art . Social Rl!ual and Arl!l!lc P rod11ctlon.'' 7·10 p.m .. Rm. 178, Hum11nlHn Hall, UC Irvine c•mpUI. Single edml11lcn, S].~. "Fundm1n!11I• ot Teaching tor Ille Ul'I T'"""91t J,oofl Alll<e• .John Drumm ond. ('hi· cago, wh o recc11t.ly won John Dillinger sin1ilari· ly conlcsl, holds de sk 1nask or gangster t 0 prove resemblance. He111ih Cere lnduslry." How11rd Wllsori, pre1ldenl. Adminl•lrallve R11eerth A1soci111ts, lrH:. A one-d•V UC lrvlne E.te~slon semln•r. 9:JO ~.m. ~:XI r.m., Orilf19il County Medlc~I llnOClltlCltl f\1<111 .. YXl -S Flov·•r ~I. Drdfl9e F~e ~J5., IMlude• Jns1rucrlon11I maleri1I, lut1cn .or>tl parklna Tl"IURSDAV, Aug. 9 "Ccunselil\Q E'llploye'-" How• rd Y11lson. pres 1 d t n I, Aomlnistrallve Re..earch P.uocia1es, Inc. A ont-dlY UC Irvine Exten•!Cltl Bu1lnns s•mln1r. t ·lO .t.m .. t:JO p,m .. Rm. ll'O, Soc:l•I Science Towtr, UC lr~lne c1m1111•. Fee: S.0, lnclud~ luncn, p1rklt19 I nd ln11ructlon•I m•1tr!•I. FRIDAY, SATURDAV •1111 SUNDAY, Aug. lt·l2 "Awar~en 1nd Educ•tlon.'' Allllrew 11 Allegrelll. MP. .. prlnclo1t. Lonq Beacn Unified Scl'>ool Dl~1ri~I arid Si.le ot C11illorn;a Licensed Marriage, Clllld m><I Family cc~n\ll!or. A t!\ree-d1y UC Irvine Ex1en•lon P•o0r11m, l'rl., 7·10 om : Sal .. 9 B.m.·12 noon, l·S p.m .. 1· 10,JO p.m.: Sun .• 9 a.m.·12 neon, 1·0 p m, Room• 219 and 110, Unlve11lty Hlg~ School. 0711 C•mDUI Drive, lrvlt1e. Fee: wl!h or without credit, MS. SATURDAY, Aut. 11 "Underst•ndlng .t n d Moliva1l n11 Emplcyes.'' HOWil'd Wll•on, pre!\llonl, Admini11rat!ve ll:e..e~rch Assocl1les, In<:. A one-day UC lr•lne E~tenslon 8usln!!S, l'lfflin~r. 9::16 ii m.-..:lO n.m., Gr•nd Hotel, Coe Hele! Wdy, A<1ah1lm Fee: S.0, l'>CIUde~ lurw:h, parking .ond Instructional materl1I•. "Tha Rllu11I Game 111d Archllaclur•I Environmenfl.'' (fllm!>: Appt•ll lo S1n1Jtgo, Jim 01111, Thi llrvc• N•u.,..n Story, Thi PYlllnt Mouth), Judllh Hiii (rook, /Ii.A., •Hl•lllnt l>'f"Die110r. Art, Glendale Cclleo' and IKturtr, Ari, C11llr0<nl• St••e Unlvt.,lly, Norlhrl<19e : Jud/th Bettell\!tm, M.P.., latlurer. Ethnic Art HIU"'y, CAlj/ornla ~!•te Un!¥1r1Hy, Norlhri"'OI. Pir! o! ' UC Irvin! E .. t,n•lon lrc!ure-lllm llflll "Pat1ern1 ot Art .•. Social Rllu•I and P.rti•tic Producllon.'' 7·10 o.m., Rm. 118, Hunwnllie• Hall. UC Irvine cam- pus. Single itdml1'1on, SJ.}(). THURSOAV, Aug. U "5alt• and P1rson11I Motlva!ion Semi11<tr .'' Jules P.. Marine. LL.8. A cne-dav UC trvll'll E•t1111!on )lfl'lln1r. 9.lO •.m.·•:'.11 p.'!I .. Rm. 17•, Computer Scie,.ce Bldg., UC Irvine campu1. Fee: MJ, lnclUdes lunch and p.erkln<;i. FJllDAY, SATURDAY 11\d SUNDAV, A119. 11·1t "The Br!ll&h Prlmdry Scl'lool: A Wor~•hop !How II Can · Work ""' Voul."' Erk Hike, M.A.. Ccuntv AdYl•o• !er Primary E d u t 1 I ! o n , Herolord, HPrllord•hlre, En<;118nd. A 11\re~dlV UC lrvl"e e .. ten1lon wre~tnd pr09r<tm, Fri., 1·10 p.m.; 561. •rid Sun., I 1.m .·~:JO p.m .. Rm. 178. Hum1nllltt Hall. UC +r~ln! campu1. fee: wl!h er wl•t>oul cred!I, S•J, MONDAY, All'). 20 "'Moderr1 J•o•nese l.lleril!ure tn Tran•l<tli0<>.'· Rlkullro Fukada, nro- le•-of En<;1ll11\, Amerlcen and Com· P<tr•nve Lltera:ure 1t Tokvo Unlver1lly ot Education. Flr•1 of a UC lrvlne E:x· tension lecture s.erlH. t 1.m.·1 2 noon, Rm. l~S. 5cclal Selene• Lib., UC l•vln1 tam1111s. Fee: will! or wlll'ICUI crl!clll, SSS. MONDAY, TUESDAV Ind WEDNESDAY, Aug. 2'0·H "The Brll"h Prlmary5cl'lool: A Workshop !How It C1n Work Fer Vcu ),"' Eric Hake, M.A, County Advisor lor Primary Ed u c 1 r lo n, Herllord, Hernoroshlre, En<;il•l>d. A !hree..:tay VC Irvine Extension pre.. gram. Mon. 11111 Tues .. I 1.m_.5,30 o.m,; Wed .. 9 1 .m.·ll noon. Rm. 171, Humenltlts H111, VC Irvine c1mpu1. Fee: wl!hor without rKll!, Sol!. "Earflwork& end Min." (Fllm1: Lind .4r1, E•rlh). Judllh Hall Crook. M.A~ as1l1!1nt prolessor, llr!, Glend1le Coll!>Qe and lectur,.,., P.rl. Ct ll!.,,.nl11 5!11re UnlverJlty, Northrid'"; Judith Bt!!elnelm, M.P.., lec!11rer, Ethnic Ar! Hi•lor~. Cal!rcrnia Stal• Unlvf'rsl!y, Norlhr!dge. Par1 o! a UC lr•lnt E:•· tension leclure·film strles, "'P111trns of P.r Socl~f Rllu11I and Arll\~ic Pr()(lutlicn," 7-10 p.m., R'll. 171, Hum~nltlf's H~ll. UC !rYlllil cempu•. Singlt 1<1m!Hion, '3.~. WEDNESDAY·TU ESDAV .4Ug. 72·11 '"Oc•~ncon1chv Work1hoo: Exploring Ca!11in11 and lhO' Cn•nnet hl~M1."' ll:C1t1al<1 Linsky, M.S . director, OUlce 111 Sta Gr<Jnl Progr1m1, USC I Ind Slllff Dnnald M1cLe11n, Ph.D.. dlrrc1or, Flo.1ling Ma•lllil l.atioralory Programs, Ot<Jnge Ccuflly ~P•rtment ot Educ•· lion: GP<>rge Hougnion. ecologl1t, dorector. Scitnce """ Envlronmeni.1 Educeiion. ICtrn ccun1y SchODfs. This ln!rnsive s.e .. n day learnlt19 adventure tr'\>i'lil to "TIM C1lflornla Nabcdy Kt"><JW\."' l!SIWH •I 9 •.m trom Pl•• B. Newport H¥bor, Nt..,porl Beach. Fett: wllh or w""°"' credit, 5710., Jncludt• 1r11ns110rtatlon. food 11111 IO(lgl119. 5end for l'IOur·OY·hour schedule ot lhls tcllon P•Ckwl e~~IUon. WEDNESDAY, THURSOAV Ind _· l'RIDAT.....Ayt,_U:l4 "loaMd11al.ttd Lurn11>9." Robert DAW. Ed,D., pteslcltnl, ln1lllu1e lor the De11el~pment ot Hum1n llesourcM, 11'\d· '" M"rV E. B. Clow, B.S., e!emenl•rv Tt>~thc<. Deean \111w School Dll!rlet, an..i·or Wllll•m W. Vdndrull, 9.A., ele'!ltnlary I 1 ache r, NewPOr!·MISa School Dlstfic!. A thr•-""ildy uc 1 .... 1n1 E>de,,sict1 prcuram, WKI., 1·10 o.m.J Thur,g_ ilfld Fri .. l :lO 1 .m.·S p.m .. /\'ulllp(lrPO~I Room {011cuaslori Rooms 9. 10 and 11), B•vvlew School, 2531 01 cto~r~ Drf~e. Jidl!!" An~. Fll:IOAY •"" SATURDAY •111. 1• '"" 15 "' ~·11erlat1 Wo rk s hop on 1en.vld11al111np: Gam1<1. Le a r fl 1 no Cen1c•s and lclt~s Which Wor~ K-4>J,'' Rc~rl Oaw, Ed.D., pntslden!. ln1UIUl1! tor t!'ll Oev1IOPm1n! of Human R-rces Ind-or AHOCl•le. A IWHIY UC lrvln1 E~t-lcn week~ pro- n•11m, Fri , 1-HI o.m ; S•I, ' 1.m ·S !> m.. MuUlpwPOSI R-.>, 91yvl1w ~cl'lool, ~SJ! Orchi!td Dr;ve. S•f\ll Atlll FM: wl!h or wllllcul cred!I. US . SATURDAY, A119. lS lmornvlng Suoervtsorw S -I 11 s, ' ' H o· e rd Wilson, 11 r1sldt11!, fl llminlslrallw• Res.e••cl! AJ<ocl•let. Inc. A onHllY UC lr~lne E•l111tlon Buslneu semln8r. t ,JO a m.-.1 lO p.m , Emolre Room, Gr1rld Hotel, D"" Hotel Wav. An.-l>lim. FH: UO.. lncludel luncn. P••kinci incl lnslruc l lo ntl m&11rl•I WEDNESDAY, Avt. '9 "PtrSf>nal Oiltoverlt\," JllCl,!11 Hal! C•oo~. M.A., AHlll•nl 11rc1vno•, ..,,,, r1rrd~lt (~lll'S(r ~'d lttturtr. A•I. {~111~•<11• ~!~Ir UnlverJ<lv, Nor!ll•~. J"<11!h l\~llfllt,.;m, M A.. t&ctur••· Ei'•flit Ari 1-1 .. 1ory, Cttllttrnll Slttt lln ~er,nv. Norlllrl(lq' L11I ol 1 UC lrv1'1tl E•ten•l('n kclur.-11111' )11111, "P1tll!rr11 of Ari , Sotlll tllt!lu•I ind A•!l•Hc P•OlllJCUll"I.'' , 10 11 rn .. tlltm. lrt. H""'•nlllts 1-11111, UC lr•lnt Clm pus. Slf\glt ld1'll111on. U 50. Clearance Sale! "Fantastic Savings on All Light Fixtures In • Here·~ the chance you've been waiting' for to buy new light fixtures for your home. • Styles for every decor-prices to please every pocketbook. ' ' • Orum shades, gloss fixtures, chandeliers, e\.en Tiffany style lights-all at 2So/• off! • Don 't miss out on this fantastic sale-hurry down while the selection is at it's best! • THURS. THRU SUN. ONLY ' ~ @' WALL P·AINT "Painting's Easier Than EV11r With Lucite (R)!" 1Goes from thick & creamy In the can to rich and smooth on the wall. 1Never needs stirring -exciting range of colors. IDries fast & has excellent covering power. ISoap and water clean-up. REG. '7 .25 l n ' .• , . .. .. Lucite ® HOUSE PAINT "Seals & Protects Woad & Stucco Homes!" tlets moisture out, won't let weather in. IProtects from cracking & peeling. IShown to last longer in a nationwide hundreds of homes. tBuilt-in primer, soap and water clean-up. REG. ss.99 $699 SA VE s2.00 Ga I. TJllJRS. THRU SUH. ONlY \ , Ch ild ren with a variety of learning deficits find help towai-d success at Kohn School, Huntington Be.,ch. Staff is guided by Gerhard and Irena Kohn, bottom right. BEA ANDERSON. Edito• ""fhwrtdt Y, July li, UJJ ~-- Daily Pilot Photos By Richard Koehler And Patric k O'Donnell P•t • ,lS ' Special Learni~g Gaps Bridged • ALLISON DEER R IM D1I.., Pl9t 11.tt Learnr.g Js a kind of grov. ing. Each cfitd. like each plant. has in- dividual needs. \Vhile a majority or children function well in a regular school setting, so1ne do not. Gerhard Kohn School. Huntington Beach, offers a specialized selling and sen·iCfS\l'or these children. "'We ·~ not see these children as rctarclcdi because they aren't." Or. c.erhard Kohn explained. "All are normal children v.·ith some basic Jags in tht'ir development. \\'e deal with these lags. cducalionally as y.·ell a s behaviorally.'' Students at the Kolm School have a variety of major and minor develop- n1cntal prob!e1ns -neurological, speech and languagl'. behavioral. physical han- dicaps or a 111ulti1llicily of handicaps. TEAM OF SPECIALl>"TS "These childrt•n." he said, "need a team of ll'achcrs and specialists skilled to teach children "'ilh these deficits. ,,.e \\'ork "ilh them in s1nall groups , a ooe- to-OOe ratio.'' The Kohn program is ' not as gener<:1J as that ol the public school. Rather. it is more specific. devising a progra1n to meet each child's specific ll<!eds. "All of these ctifldrcn are able to learn, some have very high JQs. but they ha\'C not learned bccall-;c of these difficulties.'' \Vhat does a special school offer that a public school cannot? ··\Ve offer a less regimented setting lhan the public school and a possibility to c:tpose the child to more specialists, where they can all "urk together closely \\'ith one child. ATTENTION GIVEN "Whenever a chlld needs 901Tlething. it can be taken care of immediate1y.-ln a public school setting, for example. \\ith so many students, a child might have to \\'ail till the next visit or the psyctnlogist. \\'e can do something immediately:• The school offers parental integration into the program. Although participation isn't required. Kohn feels, "We can make more dernands of parents than the public schools." There is a full program of parent education classes. ''\Ve can offer more flexible scll(."<.lul- ing, because v.·e are dealing with fewer children. We can make 1nore exceptions, adjust to the needs of the children," he added. Another raccl is bet1er nicdical si..:pcrvision. "Our students are visited re.l{ularly by their physicians at the- school, so they know ho\Y \Ve arc v.·orking l\'ith the child." He feels the school, .. can offer a better evalua1ive system. Each child is e\·aluated regularly, in one \1ay or another. CREATl\'E ACTIVITY ··we stress quite a b11 of creativity.'' he added. "~Jany or these children are frustrated by years of failure to live up 10. Other people's expectations. So \1·c of- fdr creative outlets such as arts and ""Crafts· and v.·oodv.'Orking. "Yle afso work with 1notor skills because there has been cstabUshed a r('lationship between the development of motor skills and a child's·abilily to lcan1 and read. "'ll has been de1nonstrated that the a'ft·kward child often is the one with learning problems." Emphasis also is placc<l on perceptual development and underlying readiness skills. "Too often a etflld is being tutored for reading v.1hcn he is not yet ready to learn to read, bt.>lorc he has developed readiness and perceptual skills. lt's like lrealing the symptom instead of the prof>. IMn.'' EX1llA ll ELP The Kohn &hool v.•as lnitially begun for children v.·ith handicaps y.•ho need ex- tra help. An after school program in Long &>ach grcv.· 10 the point where a second y.·as established in 1-lunUngton Beach. 1\s the need grc\\' obviously greater the day school v.·as planned and opened in 1966 to serve that area of the county. A new "'in~ is in the planning stages. A staff or 30 lnrludes four speech pathologists, three psycl\ologists and • faculty or credenlialed ant i certified special education teachers. ~re are 100 students in the full day program V.'ho attend Kohn School in lieu of public school. A group of 30 to 40 public school students attend the sup- plen1entary after school program. PRESCHOOLE RS A preschool program for children aged 2 years 9 months to 6, is designed to develop readiness s k i 11 s in physical nf.'Uf'OPhysiological, social language and emotiooal areas. There arc a f u t I summer progr.im, child evaluation, psychological testing, speech evalualion and therapy, percep- tual and sensory-motor c v a I u a l i o n , psychotherapy, group therapy, several reading progran1s anti parO'lll education classes. Dr. Kohn . v.•ho taught t6r many years before becoming a licensed clinical psychologist. feels he bridged the .gap v.'ith his school. Kohn uses An ecler:.1c. existential ap- proach to leaching, drav>ing upon several SOUrt'CS. "\Ve u.Se multi-sensor)' techniques. of- fering material visually and reinforcing it with auditory and kinesthetic (touch 1 tl'Chniques. PRESENT S'rn.ESSED "\Ve slrcss the here aoo now," hr <issertcd. "\\'c flon "t dwell on the pa s! ;ind ~·hat caused the problem. \\'e d!.!al with the current situation in as realistic :i 'ft'fl)' possible." The staff employ!I some behavior mod.ificatioo techniques, Gestalt theory and ideas rronl "Ganu:s People Pt'!ry" and 'I'm Okay, ''ou're Okay." William Classer's reality therapy is among other sources used. as v.•ell il!I technique~ developed by Grace Fernald. TI1e school has a warm. comfot1able feeling. C1asses are small, the staff relatively young and entpusiastic. •• There is a rtlaxe1I atn1osphere even !he casual visitor can sense. \Valehini;: a class of early cll'mcntary level studenls, you nole a~thusiasm about each lear11- ing success. I See SCHOOL, Page Z7 I " ' ---· .•• u. Defenses Are Whitewashed - ~ -c.mplettly 10 e\•oke lie exptcttd re.. 1poase. So wbtre's YOUR seme of bu· mw! • DEAR ANN LANDERS' Plense aok the glrls In you r read.In g audience Who have given up their virginity in exchan&e for a rew hours of sex to tell the truth ~""':~~~*~~~about it. How dld they feel when the ~~sr "love affair" was over? ' ~ " ' ·~ j DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My husband Is the world 's worst pack rat. He has checks and bank statements that go back 15 years and refuses to throw them out. He's afraid the Internal Revenue might c.all him one day and he wants to be "ready." My daughter Is 20 years old and very naive . She started to steep with a 19- year-old boy recently. Why? Because all her friends were doing it and after ll!ten- ing to them tell how glorioUJ and beautiful sex was, she began to believe she was missing something. I know thal sex between the young and Inexperienced is neither beautiful mr satisfying. I was there myself 20 yeara: ago. r remember how ashamed and ex· ploited I felt. l can't believe human nature has changed that much. widowed In 1967 and am the molher ol three chlldren. For the last year I have been going with a man who owns a landscaJ> ing business. La.st night was a special af- fair at his lodge. T bad my hair done pro- fessionally and bought a new dress and matching shoes for the dinner dance. When Bert came for me, he said, "l hope you won't mind riding in the d!Dllp truck. li1y neighbor asked if he could bor- row my sedan for a special occasion." I W8' shocked. After all, wasn't THIS a "special occasion"? I considered it so. Why didn't he? How far back does the IRS check? Please tell me 80 I can tell him. - NOTl!JNG TO lllDE JN JACKSON· VILLE DEAR JACK: A routine IRS review seldom '°" back more tban thrtt years. If they are cbecking for fraud , they may go back 1lx yean. So your husband can '°81 out everyWng befott lli7. LINDA MILLER I know the girls mean no harm. They are merely attempting to ratlonalite their guill and loneliness and trylng lo ;,i.t1'fsave face. Jt's too late to help my daughter ~ escape the hurt and bltlemes.s thal ls . bound to come her way, bu t perhaps •1 th.rough the anonymJty of your column , I am not stuck-up but I don't think a dump truck is suitable transportation for middJe-aged people wb> are dressed in formal clothes. I said nothing but it spoil· ed my evening. Should I say something to him now or is it too late? -A LADY WHO LIKES BEFIITING LIVERY Ann Landers discusses teenage drink· Ing -Its myths , Its realities. Learn the facts by reading, "Booze and You -FOi' Teenagers Only," by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents in coin and a long, stamped, self- addressed envelope to the Daily Pilot. October Date Set Picn ic A family picnic in Blue Bird Park, Laguna Beach is being planned by the Saddleback Mothers of Twins Club. The outing, including picnic fare and games will begin at 2 p.rn. Sunday, July 29. Ready to dig in are Eric and Craig while their moth- er, Mrs. Ronald Nelson and sister, Laura, wait their turn. To avoid disappointment', prospective brides are ren1inded to have their wedding •tories with black and white glossy photo-- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one \veek be!ore the wedding. ' Pictures r eceived alter that time wj.11 not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sul> mitted six weeks or more before the V(edding date; otherwise it will not be published. To help !ill requirements on both wed· d.in.g and engagement stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions \vill be answered by \Vomen's Section staff members at 642·4321 . CdM Rite In Offing ~fr. and Mrs. John \V. Watts of Corona de! fl.1ar have an- nounced lhe engagement of their daughter. Judy Ann Watts to Roy James Brod y, son of Mr. and fl.l rs. Roy E. Brady of Beverly Hills. The bride-to-be. who at· tended ucr ·and her fiance, who studied at UCLA, plan to be married Sept. IS in Lutheran Church of I he Master, Corona dcl ~1or . Day Care for Skin Disease SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\ - The only Day Care Treatment Center for psoriasis patients in the United States has been opcnE'd by the University of C a I i f ornia 's Dennato\ogy Serv ice. COll'F!DENTIAL TO FACT OR FIC. li1r. and Pt1rs. Clayton J. / Miller of H1D1tlngton Beach have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Linda ~Miller to Rorutie.Gene Ep- person .. son1e of the girls will come forward abd tell what really happens to their se{£. respect and self-image when they begin sleeping around so they won't feel left out. -NO'!" TOO OLD TO REMEMBER DEAR LADY: Your letter remhKled me fJf an uperience I had la. Parts several yean a go. An American gentleman of national prominence l.nvlted me l.o a formal receplion. I got au gussied up in a salln gown and silver shoes. I carried a whiie mink wrap. TION: It's a fact . The first-born tend to be achievers. Example: OC lhe first 23 astronauls to go on U.S. space mjssions, 21 were the eldest or only children. The betrothed are planning to marry Oct. 27 in the Com- munity United Methodist Church, HWltington Beach. DEAR NOT TOO OLD: llere's your letter and an open invitation to all tbe girls "'ho qualify. JIU print the best one. And U I ncelve a good letter with the op- pos.lte point of view, I'll prtat that, too. DEAR ANN : First I want to make it clear that I am not a teenager. I was He came lor me on a molorcycle-as a gag. 1 played It perfecUy straight, got on the back of the mo~rcycle and never said ooe word. The joke was, of courst:, on blm and not me because be bad failed Don't fluak your chemistry test. Love Is more than one set of glands calling to another. If you have trouble making a dlstlnctlon you need Ann's bookJet, "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Difference." SeDd a long, self-eddttssed, stamped envelope with your request and 35 cents In coin to the Daily Pilot. Miss Miller is a graduate of Pt1arina H.igh School, and her fiance, son of the Robert Ep.. persons of Westminster, is a graduate of Westminster Hi gh School. Memo From Home Sitter's Shorthanded By ERMA DOMBECK l am so envious of "'omen who work outside the home I can't stand it. Every morning I watch them go off to carpetland .. . to fresh bread for lunch ... to a phone that isn't "Sticky with grape jelly •• , to perfume behind each knee that spells madnes,, to stock boys. And I say to myself. "There but for the grace of a baby.sit- ter go I." I tried, you know. Inter· viewed sitters once for six months. One could only work until the children came home from school. Another believed in naps until age 35. And there was one who worked one day and quit saying, "Do you honestly expect me to stay in a home where the lid is always up in the bathroom?" I guess I'm not the only one with the problem. An RN from \Visconsin wrote that she left AT WIT'S END orange medicine in brown bot· Ile at 8 a.m. and at lunch. There's plenty of lunch meat, peanut butter, etc .. for lunch. "Paula has to be taken to the potty every 2-3 hours. There's a potty seat upstairs and a small cha.Jr in Rec. Room. "Don't lei dog in the che'o\'· ing gum. He craves it, but has lo be taken to vet to remove. He gets pill once a day (not birth control) for slight in- f cc lion. Get Frank (who is in and out all day) to hold him so he will not bite. "Take messages. Don't use toilet in utility room. It bub- bles. If you have questions, call me at . Tell them yo u are one ()f the nurses if they ask." When she arrived home, the door of the house was marked with lamb's blood and there \vas a large quarantine sign tacked on it. Granted, a stand-in for a - mother isn't the most thrilling job in the world. It's inheriting all the crud and the problems that only love can justify. But sometimes in the mom· ing as I watch them go by In their cars lo the city, I try to imagine v.•hat it 's like having a man lean over your shoulder who isn't cleaning your septic tank. . . or open letters with windows in the'm without becoming nauseated ... and I can't resist the impulse to yell out of the window, "I hope you find erasure droppings in your IBM Selectric." I need that. M•rJorl• St•mper uy1 ••• COME IN-HELP US CELEBRATE DURING OUR FIRST ANNIVERSARY SUPER SALE! ---- We've Really Reduced Prices en! e BLOUSES e PANTS • JACKETS·- e BLAZERS e SKIRTS e SWEATERS • TRAVEL COORDINATES • Sit.e~ 8 thru 18 LOOK FOR THE SALE TAGS! F~~~~utique 445 E. 17th St. Cti1r,1 C1...i1 Wl'lcaml'll Costa Mesa Thwl'1, llttu Sun. t 1,m. lo ' p.m, the following note with a new ·:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~~;;;~~6;;;;~~ si tter. I• "Greg gets 1 teaspoon of pink rnedicine in refrigeratcr at 8 and before lunch. He has im- petigo. so wash your hands good "·ith soap and water and don't Jet him use anyone else':!! glass. 0.1\? "Paura gets 1 teaspoon of seethe BIG NEW ''Freezer llftl/l' the Bottom'' l ,----- ANAHEIM Anaheim Center NEWPORT BEACH Fashion hlond refrigerator Amana put tfle fr'ezer on the bottom because you u1e It IMs, makes nnHI 1 l , ' ' ,. ,, ' ' ' ,_ ' Large Sizes SALE % OFF Of New Swimsuits. All -Famous - Names. Come Get Your Second Suit. Sizes 38-52 Sunday Shopptr? ' f\.lll•mtft ' H1o1ntlngton 1.ath ' . .,,... ..... ~lla Slt!tltlr f9 ~~ ffl ltld Nor's HALF-SIZE SHOP COSTA HUNTINGTON MESA BEACH 1111 NIWPOaT ILYD 14 HUNTINGTON CfNTIJ: (Herth ef 11rft ltrfft) IN••t r• htker lret.) PULLlaTON-224 0r_...,.,, M•ll, at o,.llt*tfiotP9 ' "•rb•r M .... n..,..M, 1 .. t-T--..w.;. ·'-'· 104 B111eltanierlcard • 1Ua11e rcharge I/II special 9roups of all our famous brand women's shoes 112 price. SIZES TO 10. 4A TO 8 • .A.JI S..11 fl1t•ll • H• hch.1t9etl • N• l9fw1tdsl IAHltAMlllCAlllD, MA.STiii CHAllGI, PAUL ALLAH CHAlllGl THE AMANA 20 • Big fam ily size 20.1 cu. ft. ' • Only 32 1/i" wide • Completely frost· free • Adjustable cantilever shelves • Meat tray with separate cold control • Ice maker optional extra s5299s EXTRA PROTECTION! DAVIS IROWH'S FREE~ 2 YEAR PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY! .. '----------· d avis~brown, .--7~ TEl.IVISION • snHo • A"'LIANCES • Sl\LES • SHYICE • SINCE 1947 ,I ~ 1--~~ .. i il6 l 'ear• of lnte9rll11 & Dependal>lllty ISBJ ~1 """'" =#~;;:"="""~"== COSTA MESA e HAUOR AHA IL TORO e SADDWACK YALLt1 -=~~~=~~ l " CJ 411 E•1t S1 .. •11t1111ril Str11t 14 Tore llo•d tt Frttwty INt1t tt $1 .. ·0n) ~ Dolly 9.9, S1turd1y 9·6 646·1614 Dilly t.t, S1turdey 9·6 1]7.JllO 1 1 """"'O''"· IADIO DISl'ATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV I A"'LIANCE SERVICE PHONE 548·34l7 . MEMORABLE -~1rs. Alexander Ca111eron admires artistry supplied by friends. Each square represents a men1orable occasion. Stitch of Time Memories Her Hang-up To other~ 1he \roill h:n1ging nlight look like a t;uneh of f<in· cy squari.!s. But to i\lrs. Alcx~ndcr Can1eron or Corona del 1\lar. !he perscnal ized ar t \\' o r k represents painstaking efforts of lon3tim e friends. '"c_H_AR_M_t_o_MU_S_I_C_B_O_X_E_S..,1 New Slllpr11111t of CoNitd M .. Jl t loin from E111ope Grf1t olf· ~eason burs in m11:;lc bO•ts .. t1rvo1<1 f,~urlnes from Cfl1rllf 6row11 10 E1110Pt"en 1notlh Swl1:; worllt. 1~ dltterl!flt 'iOllll~ ..• Qol) A:f Ml, Edelw•lu, Clo!.• '" You ... Tile l•nl>0'1lble Dream •.. I! I \Vtre A Rici! MMI . 11><1 m.l"Y morf. 'from 10.95 Olfl•r Muslt •0•11 from S.95 !Also good ~lox~ on Italian Inlay bo;lxt$ wolll $&-tOl'lt SwiH -··' .... t!HUHlul invellmoinl f) · ·5a111'na,;5 .. CARDS e GIFTS e CANDLES e J EWELRY 9049 Atlan+., Ave. '1t Magn?lia in Huntington Be<1ch Courtesy Gilt \'I/rap -968-0 111 -· Open Mon .• S111. 10-6 ladies and Men's Each square depicts a ver~· special 1ncmory of some phase in her Hfe or !hat of the friend 1vho created it. 1\ppropriately she nan1ed it. '"Thanks for the l\lemories." and carried out the title in the rhemc of a recent luncheon !.he hosted to personal!~· thank each contributor us she uu· veiled the hanging. '·J got the idea about four months ago," she explatned . So she sent each friend a blank needlepoint square and asked th:•n1 to crc;He snn1 c scene that 11·as meaningful. As the squares 1rere return· ed. she se"·ed 1hen1 on a blue clorh background. \Vith c<Jrh addition she beca n1c n1ore enthusi astic, SQ she decid1i.l to in\'ilc e\·eryone to a luncheon \.\'here she cc uld share the 1nt•1norv collection. The handhvtlrk ranges rro111 needlepoint. to einbroider.v, to patch1vork and appliqucs. The range of ideas dates back lo third grade and in· elude such highlights as surn· mer \·acations at the beach. her high school crest. an emblem of a high schoo l club. Christmas p a r t i e s and present-day trips. sport:l and club activities. For ~Trs. Can1eron. viewing the ::irt is an in<>tant reminder of fond memories shared \''ith 40 fri ends. And isn't it better to hare a memorv book "" vit\I' at all lin1cs father thnn in a scrap- book forgotten in <1 back closet? Po ison Paint NE\V l'OHK (UP!l -In J9i2 .:int: chi ld died of lead poisoning every 36 hours. The ,-ictims of lc:id-b:ised pain! poisonin g -if they surri\'e -often are left n1cn· t<1llv retarded or s11ffcr from ccrebr;il p a! s ~· . con\11lsive cliiiorders. blindness. learning defects. kidney disP ascs and other handicaps. SUJlffiWEAR ffiARKDOWN l•11kA1Mtic ard lrlllnt« Cllott• REDUCED 30% and 40% START~ THURS., JULY 26 NOW FURTHER REDUCTIONS Durin9 Our Re9ular Summer Sale Also-Further Redut!ions on SANDALS . - OEFJ ART M!N T STORI! 1816 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CMn.ilr loc•t•<ll At Hew1toff A..t H_.!Mf 11'14. j ,.,.,*' •• o .. ·--Deer OAJLV PIL OT 27 Horoscope: Librans Ride W ith Tide FRIDAY JULY 27 Uy S\'ONt:\' 0.\1ARH rlalltl") ge ts ~OU c\·cr' v.·lwre \I ith l.1.-0. The s 1•11e 1aclit·~ could !>UCl'l'l'd \\•Ith Li bra. <.:en1i ni v.·ill often !1l'llle (ur 1-:11111 ing pron1isc5. Aries is Rpt lo be.-too 1111- palient r 0 r n:i1tcry rv" pro1n- ises. AquariU! 1night 11ppt.1ilr to be a pu;,;ho\'t'r bu1 ;ip- pe arnnccs, in lhis case. al'l' dl'CCplivc. Taurus a11d Scorpio n1i~ht "·a nl cash on the line. C.:ancer and Capricorn are concen1'.'<1 \1'ith tn .. ck rt>cOrds. Eac·h <:ign is vulnerable and stron~ :11 dif(f'rent \\'ays. 11irgo \\':lnls an outline and Sagiltarius in~1sl s on a blueprint of future poten- tial. ARlES (~larch 21-April 1!11: Check lease.~. fax shc!tcr~. properly \'alue~. c:ct g:oinq nn plan to strenmli11c. 111>eratior11'. Leo. Aquarius persons could fi~un~ in in1por1nnt 1l':n·s . J\rouev of olher rx-<iole 11111st I}(' roncidered. Don't O\'C'l>lay hand . TALIJtUS !.\pril 2U-:\lay 20 •· You may be n.'nthing tuo lar. Gel proper n1111eri:i l. \"ou need infonnation. instnictions. One 11•!10 taught ~·ou in past can a5!;ain be ;;our all v. Rrfusc lo permit prictc lo stand in 1,·a.v of progress. Leo is in picture. GErtllNI ! .'\·l<iy 21-June 2111 : rl e1·ie11· bi I I s. obli gations. Don't spread yuurself too thin. :\leans handle one tnsk at a tin1e. Sa!!ittarlan pla~·s key role. \'ounJ? person n1ay l'l"akc urneasonablc demands. Know \\'hen to dr.!l\v line. Givin~ In ro e\1crything \1·oulrl he costly er- ror. L~ a nr1,, ~'11_1 1 h•1r11t1'-h ;ip proach brings benefit~ ~EO IJ"h ~I-.\"' 20o \\hut I 11t1 hil l l' l>o '\'tl l>ll~hllli! a:.1d1· d• rTl;ind., f' x Jl o s 11 r e . Sotiu• ,.h.ini.:ec: prf in .irder ...... t•h,1{1111~ !"Cl ISJOllS 111 .1 •.IUr thinking pro (' c ~ ~ <; .. , 111·1unl111"~ 1n uroer Y11u 1n:1y be cQllCt'r11illt! ~ l!lff ~t·l f n11•r 1n.ar1er th:it is uul of ·' uur ha rids \"IUGO tAug. 23-&•t'!. 2~•: Frit:nd lllll} he dl•pn•.:,.;1:d :111d 1~·<i11t tn li.lk al)out it lk rL'<'e]Jlh l' Stri\'t' 10~ hnrn1on~. One "'ho nl('rtns 111uch lo ~t•u is r;1rr~ illJ.: IO" 1n 11 <· h rr~pi-111.~1hi!11.1 . Yuu Ill H ]., t 1our1l·lf -11nd c!lll'I'~ -h:q)- i11 lJ:I" 1·u11cr din_:; so:nt• puints \'011 1rill ur"Klcrstand LOlHA cScpt. 23-0c1 ~!· Yoa may be blocked b\' lt>:,:a l r111nf'11v1•r. Hid<' 111!h thl' l1<lt• ~fenns don"I 1n;ike trnubll• r,1r ~ 1•ur~l'lf (lhlain l1111t 11·01n \ ir~<l n1f'..:)1:1'.!c. Go b.1('!; tn SIJ''fin '.! l.H1111t. AcC'epr 1· 11111..;c·I fro1n' f:i•ni ll' 111f.'n1hr r. Taur11 ~ i ~ in pic!ur ·..'. SC()Hl'l(t IQ("!. '.!."t·~OI . 21 1. IJ an cJ I e rl'SJl11nsibi li11· 111 in:iture n1:u1rer. \'ou 1vill l"l'I /'f'11ard . Hut 1011 ('~1n'I rush or .~ki1> essentials. 0 Id e r 111- dividunl is 11 illing !o lc•1d bPneri1 of t• x p e •· it· n t' l' . Capricorn, Cancer pcr"°n~ fi~1re in ilnporlant 11.1ys. SAG1TTAlllUS ~ \'uv 22· lh. 21 1: Cash flo\1· nun h" tenl1)()rari1~· affe t t{'(!. Find loophole. Corrccl rt' {' t' 11 I News Told I By Lucases · 111 1•1..,ki· Ftn1~h 11IL11 ~ •U 1j;lar1cd -lc;t \•1nc [005(' l'rr\ ... 11uultl 111· r-n or. Ther~· ,•rl· 'l'l!l'l' 1·Hil'1t•nl 1111•an~ 11 t (iii,l11 hut1un. Louk 101 1h\•n1 fi\l'H ICOH'O •l>i·t· :!=·J;.1n 1!11 l\tl't' nl:n' ;1p\)1:11r ,1 .. \1, hut yo11 ;u·c ~l'1!111~ 1·l,l:-1•r t i rn;d Kr1111\' it n11d !I(' <'Oil· fl it1·111 I.Mi. Aqu11rh" 1'('r•••'I" (i~ur1• pro1111nc>ntl~ I' a s 1 nhhgarion i;urfa1r-:. Fri,·nd ~11 lnp i11~1~1~ nn t't1 ll.1tt•r;1I p1t' I rt•ass11ranc1· Ai}li.\Hlt.:S 1.la11 2U F1·li lil t; Fo!lu11 u1~r111c·t" '1u1 kno11 11h:i1 ~tlt1uld t)(' 11,.nt· dt•spilt'-po!'SJblt' tib1'"r:1un..; h.1 llSSOC'i31('. ('0 • l\!)J ~('I' H i ~ I' ;;j)IJ\'1• llf'll.\' jl'lllflllYI 'ull \\'lll n •t'l"J\'t• 1'rt·di:. H1,t JT ,, nce<'ssary rio 11 fur .\OU 111 T1>1n- dll· b~1~1<." :1:.~1 ... 11·11t·n! l'ISCJo:S 1Fl·h. l~~ \111rtl1 ~I•· ()111' \1111 r1~•k 1, ... 1~r~11ll r>dl 111al.1 ·" t.11011 ·1 a 1u·ul1ll·n1 Y11•1 hnJ 1ha 1 ll'hrr• nr1• ~·••)\1111 • up -;1•1cl 1r111r app111;11•h 1•1'1"-'I bl." l'IH'lll'•·tl. Br f l t' A 1 h I ,.. . 1 t'r'111il1•. 1 '01-r1·~11oncl1•n\•f'1 n('crl~ Httt'n\1011. ~lesSnge 1·11·11 l'~n11rt'll l~Ju]cl Cftnlain 11~­ fur11 1.1t11111 of 1 ahll' IF TOii\\" IS YOL:I! lllllTllll.\ Y .1 CIU ;1n· cl tfl'l't arid 1f.1·11n111ic. 'Yo11 srldt)l!L ;l"e ... ;1!i .• fi t d lo n1cr1·lr li~ a $[ll'<.'- t:1lor \'nu usual!\· 1·1·t u!f 1h-..·1, ~it!eh11('~ and 1nrn !Ii!' i::a111e You nrc 11·herr th" :ic1io11 i· - .\11;.!U \( l'Oll ld ht• ~·uur !"O~I QUFFElt'~- uPHoLstERY Whe11 You Wo"t TM lest 1921 Harbor l lvd. Co1ra Mno -541·0i.5' :>l;!Ulil1·.1111 ft11111lh1•1 it1;;: \od .1111:11·1 p~·rl>I•''' l11r11 ond<'r ,\rh.·.!o ;.111d IJbr11 . \ o u ;11 \! l.1•1111:.iit-d 111th !;111·. 1nrdirlnr ::iud y (I u :•re somc1,•hat or lJl1 ,I! !I" [1 ~' Interlude llu· 1·1111 vf a 11111;! 11.1111 11.11 -\ 11.d.l"i" "'l 11t.-1lu1l.-" tJr- 515 HORTH MAIN, SANTA A.•A • 547.5151 FLOOR SAMPl£S AT PRICES YOU MUST S£E TO BELIEVE ' DINETTE & DINING FI XTU•ES f(om . 10.95 to $125 Crystil CHANDELIERS from 29.95 to $500 OUTOOOR LANTERNS from 6.50 to $65 ltili;1n Gold Leif WALL DECOR Hind Piinted $29.98 up POOL T ABLf LITES from 29 .9S to SlSO \ Wic ker·Cine SWAG LAMPS from 16.95 to 24.95 CAKCER I.June 2t-Juh· 22 1: \"italit\' is dcbilit:Jtcd if 1·uu <.!ori"t get p~oper rest. :\1>JlliPs now n1nre so 1 han in recent \Ir. and !\lrs. !lc11rv J;unes ._ ___________ , Powder Sith LIGH TING DECO!!, from ... 9.95 to SlO pasl. KnO\\' i!. Snd rl o so1nething a1'.out it. Be thorough. Awarenes!1 nf detail'> Lucas of Tustin h~1·e an-l nouncW the engagement of their daugt:ter. Lind::i Kay Lucas to frank Joseph Bro"11 Ill, son of ~Tr. and i\1rs. Frank .J. Brov.·11 Jr. of Co!'la .l\·lrsa. ~Ji.'>~ Lur-:is attended La f'nnad:i ll iJ'.(h School. Pa~adena I O~lN 6 OAYS A W(fl( Cl•••ll '"'" .. .., • Oo!ly, 10 o.m. lo 6 p.m. '•ldoyt, 10 •.nt. I• I II·"'· ~arbor Liles ~ I From Page 25 Ci t~· Colle~t>. Ch a p 1n an ·-----------------------------------. Cotle~c·s \\"orld Ca 111 p u s1 ~~ School Bv next i.11l. Dr. Kohn hopes to .lckl at leas! 111·0 new pro- grams. The firs! i<: on infant sti1n ulalion ;1nd rrainin!(· pro- gran1 inodelcd after a project al the Uni v e rs it y of \\rashington at Seattle. The sec· ond \\"ii] be a preschool pro- gram for 2-to-4-yea r-old Do"·ns S,\·ndro1nc children. Fund ing is being sought for a special project \\'hich \\'ould combine a day care sett in~ ,1·ith an cducntional prClgrarn. Targets "·ould be chi\dre•1 \rhose n1others are on the 11·elfare roles or training for j:ibs to get off \\'C!farc. "These children need the ex- tra help. and if "'e can gi1·e It. perhaps this is the g~ncration 11•here 11•e will break the cy- cle." Arloat 11nd earned a BA and elcmcntcu·.1· !('aching crcdcn· tial :it C1lifon1ia St alt• Unil'ersit.\', Fullerton. lier fian1·e :itrcndt·cl sc-hools in the ll arhor .\rc:1 and rec:cirt>d a DA tn en gineering 1 froni CSUF. They plan 10 1nnrr~· Aug. 2;. in 1hc A!dersgatc United \lethodisl Church, Tustin News Revealed ~1r. and fl.lrs. .1 c r r y Grubaul!h or !lli~~ion \'icjo hare announced the cogagc- n1ent of their dnughtcr. Ht idi Helene Gruhnugh to Ron;1ld E. Jones .Jr .. son of ~Ir . and ~Ir:;. Honc1 ld .Junt·~ of El Toro. 1"hc bctrotht·d are graclu11 1es of r>lission Viejo High School and she is attending a husiness school in Anahein1. Thev arl' planning to marry next ~\Iii~. SALE -·~~~ Fl~[ C.Jl lLIJH E'.\'S At'l',\!!EL . ll!;E:-<:-;\\·E.·\H-SPl..lHT S \\'E,\H......:S\\"l.\J\\'E:A!: "·' FLC~J;··;,\'CL EISE \I,\.\ • l'!('t'f 11.J'.\I I J\11' • p,\.\'Sh.IN • Jf'.11IJ • ELE.\.-\ \\J:..:s J)1 JJ.t...:.\ • .l t iJl .\:-:iTi •\ Fl~Cl!:·:l. •. nrTTT ~rr-:r:r:F:t.L t.:E U.. 1\l'.\S\\'t•J:Tll • li l'.LJ;J:Utlh .... ~ .... tras\1 iu11 J,,!u nd Un i)' THE RED BALLOON LTD Fashlon Island, Nev.port l:tnctt-1;1~1 111-8808 To-.a &: C.untry. Onng~li ll 1 f>.i8.!t~9i Jluollng\OD IJarbour-til"J 111-1'" , THOMASVILLE fur.niture REDUCED during ••• 19th Storew id e ................. ,..._..A nni •'£'1'.Sct '''J 1.1 .... -.u l:l•·.-..:.11 1t1 · !11,11 J ~t 'l•'l•ltlll ~ !111 -..111111 f1t1 l1t· I l1;,.!I ) l<1 ·11.t1~ .... 11u r· "'\I .,V CELLINI I' i 1 , • 0 • ,. t' ! ,, . . ' ' ' '. ' ' "' . .. ' . " , :r' ' ,. , .. •·' .. ,. ,.~ ~· -~~. I ~ ~' Or~ ,. ... ·' . , . ,,• ~~ J • I ....... ~ r " ' .. ~ '.,' I • • ·• r 1 l!'"' I • ' • , .• ~ .. j 1 • r n; .1! ·~.~f ,,1 --f" Ji,,.,,,,,.v.,/k ~--~-. • •.. ' ,o . ,, '1 ' CHINA SERVER ' ii' I 1 / '" At Sho•R Ma.11y pieces in \ '279 this collection: Bedroom and Dining room at Sale Prices 1865 HARBOR BLVD. OOW NTOW N COST A MESA 548·513! Opti• Dolly t ro S:lO - Frida'( ' to ' -Cl•M<ll S•"4•f • 28 DAILY PILOT ·* Thursd<Jy, July 26, 1q73 Cyclamates Get . Sweet Revenge? DTERY By BARBARA GIBBONS Cyclanl41te. lhe l 11 • r ale d sugar substitute of tht! 1960s. may be back on tJie shelves oe.1t year. The sa.lety rontrovcrsy is about to be reope.,ned by a n1a- jor American drug firm. New evidence from labs all over the \11orld s/iov.•s thal cyclamates are safc, claims Abbott Laboratories, th c Chicago-based drug firm. 4 He predicted the FDA will refer the nev.· data to the Net· tionat Acaden1y of Sci{'nces for review and that "It will get a falr evaluation and be ad· judged safe.'' DATA l''AULT "Legitimate scientific qucs· lions have been raised about the research that Jed to !he ban," said Craig. performed sln1llar st udi es with sacch~rin , again wltb negative finding!i . In a U.S. lllltdy, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute. rats and n1ice \vere fed doubl e that an'IOunt - equal to as much as 800 bot· ties a day, t\'ery day. Conducted at Bio-Research Coosultant.s Labs tn Ca n1· bridge; ti.1ass .. this study will be l'Omplcted next month, but preliminary reports show no tumors. said Craig. from Mrcharln, I.ht f''DA did not han saccha~ but referred the data to the National Academy of Scien~s for final reviel\'. STILL HURDLES Once the regulatory hurdles are passed. Craig predicts renewed publlc acceptance of cyclamate s\\•ccteners. "Consumers and industry aren't completely l'iatis!icd \\ith diet product:s t'Ontaining sugar or sacclwrln," he said. "Diabelics don't v.·anl sugar." He pointed out that sac· charln, the only remaining 1~teners," Craig said. Many food processors are v.•atehing current developments with great interest. sugar substitute, lacks the ·~~!!!!~iiiiiiiiiiiiiijjij!ijjjjiJ ( sugar fideli ty of cyclamates, and is not as stable in baked, ~rc:""~~t: 01..0 ouN• canned or other heat-proc-:I MANNING'S essed foods . Abbott Labs continues to CoLLECTORS receive letters from con-SHOP 9tKlt suniers seckin" "lhe old-style 2•2a N~ e1..vo. f> ~0.T~ M ....... CA,U,., 4542-92!11 Hll'e. 11-11:.ao OUR BIG SHOE SALE IS NOW IN PROGRESS ••• DON'T MISS IT! TERRIFI C VALUE·s THRUOUT THE STORE 225 E. 17th ST .-COSTA MESA 548 ·2 778 e l•Nl(AMfRIC:AltO . • MA\1£11 CfUUIGli . The comp1..1ny contends the i»-ealorie sweetener was banned prematurely due to ad· verse publicity and political pressure. current scientific feeling is that the tests "''ere nol :'a p- propriate" because I hey v.·ereu't designed for c a r cinogenity (cancer-pro. ducing1. Of all new studiel" since the,---------------------- ban, only one claims to con· Thomas Craig, head of pro- fessional relallons. ~'·ealed this week lhat Abbott has notified the federal Food and Drug Administration tF'DA) of il!I intention to file a formal petilion to resume marketing. Abbott has opened a "master file" with the r,DA to receive new data, and, if all The cvclamates were mi1ed with oiher substances, In- cluding saccharin, and the test animals v.•ere infested with cancer-promoting b I a d d e r parasites. Eight out of 80 rats fed 1nassive doses de\•eloped bladder tu1nors. ~C\V studies ha\'e involved many 111orc a11in1als, fed much higher doses. over much longer periods of 1in1e -all with negative findings , said Craig. In Heidelberg the Gennan Caneer Research Center has just concluded a study on 832 rats !hat u·ere given daily feedings of cyclamJte equal to 200 to 400 bottles of diet soda lhroogOout their entire lives. NEXT !\fOf\TH 1'he results. to be published next month. shov.·ed no tumors attributable to cyclnmates. The German researchers also ne<.i cyclamates with tumors. according to Craig, a study by the WlscoMin A I u m n i Research Fou n dation (WARFJ, which is supportC'd by the sugar industry. PUBLIC PRESSURE Back in 1959, Craig recalled, "the regula tory officials \\'ere under a great deal of pressure due to adverse publicity. There was llttle alternative but to do something Jin· mediately, and not wait for an objective evaluation.'' The climate is better now, said Craig. "The FDA has in· dicated -by it s actions. not Its words -that it Is going to take a much more scientific approach than it has in the past." lie cited the recent sac- charin scare. \Vhen the FDA w a s presenlt.'CI \\'ith a \VARF study lhat claimed to show tun10rs goes as expectt>d. Craig said, ----------------------I the petition would be filed before lhe end of the year a~ cyclamate • sweetened diet products could be back in Alnerican su1>crmarkcts as early as next su1nmcr. Dll.'T AJD Virtually indist inguishable from sugar, cyclamate was America's most popular diet sweetener Wllil it wa s banned in 1969, following studies that showed bladder tumors in rats fed massive doses. Hundreds of items -soft drinks, sv.·eetencrs, j a ms. dessert mixes. toppings and lee creams -\\"ere pulled from the shelves. But the majority of other nations did nol r 0 11 0 w America's lead. Craig said. Cyclamates are still used in France, Germany, Sv.•itzcrland and other countries, which has prompted the con tin u In g re.sea rch inlo ifs safety. The cyclamate petition will cite no fewer than 12 new scientific studies "which in· d..icate in all respects that cycle.ma te iS safe for use in U1e diet," Craig\ noted. Longer Life, Less Sight DALLAS (UPI ) -Diabete.s has replaced g!aUCf)ma as the No. 1 cause of blindness in the United States. a University of Texas Southwe.stem fl.1edical ScOOol professor says. "Bljndness from diabetes is delini~y oo the increase · simply because n1edicine is alive and functioning quite now able to keep the diabetic normally," said Dr. John R. Lynn, a professor of op- thalmology. "Years ago before i1 \l'HS learned hcl\V to conlrol the diS('/ISC' lh~se people \\'OU!d have died at an earlil'r age." Human Need One sq ua re ~·ard of cartl\ can support 100.000 insects. hut ii takes 21 acres to support one human . ~Santa Sez: A great look to cultivate for 'summer liv ing' ... the shirt shape that travels in easy-core pol yester ... fascinating prints. 6-14; specially priced at $30. Newport BHch • 3400 Vii Lido• 675·7810 ~Hurry, Hurry, Hurry, I Save up to 40°/o off during 'XMAS IN JULY ,. SALE 11 am·S pm ~Friday J Sat. & Sunday ~ and brou~ht to ~ you by the folks at: '-lill~JW~r@RW. j ~ MClrOl•QlllO ....... n« r:.NH'lff•~ ..... 425· ·30th ST. NEWPORT BEACH , Silt Endt Sunday 11 5 pm ~~~~~~~~ . ' It's the ultlmate sleeping experience. Float yoursel1 todreamtime on the billowy 1 !f.i • super-solHoam pillow that lops this magniliccnt mattress. Features hoavy-duty innerspring with Crown Flex center for extra support to back & hips. With Pillow· Top Mattress, 2 Bo11. Springs. Ori ho-Pak & Double Bonus' OUEEN SIZE Rog."'"·" M'"""· $21995 SAVE $110 BOJI:. Spnn9, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus TWIN or FULL Reg. S199.9s with s11905 SAVE $Bo Mattross. Bo11. Spring & Double Bonus ' .. • - I Ficldcresl No·lron Top Sheet, j ' F11ted Bouom Sheet & 2 Pillow· cases • 2 Bolster Pillows •Mattress P,:;d •Metal Frame on Easy-Aon Casters. & Double Bonus t<1ng or Queen: Padded Vinyl He;;idboard AND Quilted Bedspre;:id. 1 Twin or Full: Headboilrd AND ~ Metal Frame on Easy-Roll Casters. • ' '..). CHECK T~ESE REGULAR Orl!HO PRICES I OR'TliO EASE t<ing--$lte comfort. with al the sleeping room you've CYOr dreamed ol! Compllltc $ wilhMaUress.28011. 118 Spring•. Orlho-l'Bk & Dooble Bonusl Need more s!oeping room, butyoor bedroom's loo small !or a king? Here'• the per1ect-.&lze answer! s99 M altresa., Box Sp11ng. Ortho-Pak & ~ Bonus! ORTHO EASE Your choice of twin or tutl 1lz. Ortho mattress se1s - at one fant astic low pt"icel s59 Comp1oto with Manress. Box, Spring & Double Bonus• ' -·~··.· ., ' ORTHO FLEX Step up to a grei'.11 Ortho queen wnh quality louches like Scroll-Quilted cover. ~":1~~o~~:::::·:ox s13995 Double BonUll ORTHO FLEX Enjoy tornl•c support from Ortho'a !amous Tempered· Steel inneral)flng. Lots $ mo"' Comp'"'"'" 6995 Me1tro1s. Bo)I SPfino & Double Bonu11 '' ·'"'~ • True Ort ho luxury al an allordable price !or the complete set. TO\lches like tn1ck Urelhane padding, $7995 With Mauress, Bo1t Spring & Double Bonus' , 1' Ortho Products are manufactured by Ortho FREE DELIVERY and sold only through Ortho Factory Showrooms ' THE NATION 'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS ORANGE SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM LAK EWOOD 2445 N. Tustin Ave. l •c11u fr-0111141 M•lll rh•11 • 6JJ.0&11 FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor dlvd. l1.1r1111 1f fl!lit1t•rl N1•t to z,4~·, ,.,01111 11•-4110 1811 West Lincoln Ave. IJl•ttll E~tlitl •11d l•oo~hurol A•fllY•' J111t 1•11 ol Fell M11t 1'1!011• ''•-15•0 443l·C•ndlewood Ave. C"ndl•wood Shop• I 1cron lro"' lt~t .. 011d C•"i" I P!,o"•: •J4·26J I OPEN DAILY 10·9 ·SAT. 10·6 ·SUN. 12·6 •FREE DELIVERY· CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE• BANKAMERICARD ·MASTER CHARGE Helping Hand Flashing fin gers and lightning· llke electrical circuits have rev- olutionized Huntington Beach Police Department headquar- ters-to.fie ld communications. Ceremonies dedicating t h c $355,000 police con11nand and control system this week is re- portedly first of its kind west of the ~tississippi River. Device is designed to get police and firemen where they are needed much faster. Police began its use lbree weeks ago and fire- men will hook in by October. s DAILY PILOT 29 Drive-in Theater REFLE(,'TJONS ,, d M Reyn Battlegroun oves l,_She~ffer Remember ttlc proposed four-screen drive-in theater that spawned a cltl:ten upronr last year in Fountain Valley? It's back again, though not so close. This time, Syufy Enterprises. Inc., has mo\'ed it.9 theater proposal a<'ross lhe San \a Ana River lo the city of Santa Ana, but the big screens still "'-'OIT)' some Fountain Valley residents. ROBERT RUSOFF, the man \.\ho led a home.owners revolt agnins( Syufy. believe.s the 1-~ountain Valley PI an n i n g Co1nmission should hold a public hearing on the Santa 1\na proix>sat , "\\'e \\'ant a public hearing uii the environn1cntat impact rcporl ~Elll ) submitted lo Santa Ana for the tht!e.ler pro j· cct,' Rusoff said. "\\'e"d Uke to know how It affects our nctk of the ,.'Oods," he commented. A courtesy copy or Santa Ana's Ell\ has been sent to the Fountaln Valley pla.imlng de partnien t. A spokesman ror the plan- ning departmenl said residents can read the EIR at the planning department, but the oommissloo has schtduletl oo heal"ing on it. TIIE SYUFY TilEA TER is proposed on inriu11tria\ land next to the ri l'l"r , on the cast bank in Santa ,\na , near Harbor Boule\·ard and Segcrstrom Avenue. Water Officials O,kay Spending It \1·as nlso proposed 111;s1 I ~'t·;ir oc1 lnrlustrial lan<l 1n 1 r~ount.ain Valley, hut ilS loea·1 tlon near the Fount::iiu \'alley CoinnurnHy l\05pital a n d honit•s ulong \\'11rnE>r A\"l'tlUl'I t'RUst'<I the battle Y.1tlt•h C\"Cn·1 tually killed 1he prO)l'(.1 A spokt·s rnan for the S:inl :i Ana plnnning df'p11rln1t•nl Said th:i t c:1t~ ·~ plnnn111i.: C()nl· mission ~·Ill rc\"tc~· lhc \lTOjt>e t :it 7:30 p.nl., Aug JJ 111 ('it~'I eounc1l charnbers. lit• said the I planning st:iff has not ~ct de c1d1-d y.·hrtht>r to support ur oppose the thr.11 1·r prOJt'<'t. Hu!>Off said h(• be!ir,·l's 1 Fountain \"a!lt')' should be in· tt•restcd in thr theater -r\·r n though on the othl'r sid!" of th1· ri\"l'r ~ if lh11 city is con· sidrring rl'zonu1g its industrial lnnd along !he fL\"cr to hontt• t..'Onstru<:t1on. DRURY LANE ANTIQUES MOVED .. 120 A••· Doi Mor So11 CW-11t• "The 1r•at 1.c:ret ef h•,pl· net.• I• to H on 1ood term• wi th yeurtolf •.. " Morcut Aurellu• ;\l••St ,,f 11~ hn ~··· said 11.t :-olll<' ttrn1• ul' uth•T that all \\!' M'••k lll lift• I~ hEl!1>11lt'Sl'i, hut ho\\ 111;1111 11! H~ h1t~·1· tr1,,.t '" 11,n,d_1 ,,. j11'1 11 J1at ..... 11,11111\••$ IUll •l'in•·)>~ II h··n · \\l' uun.1•h t•i1 111'< 1·ont• rncd~ tSH€FF€R mo9'.TU.l.l.Y I 492·6014 976 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY T-ivo Computers To Test Blood At Saddleback ·After making one minor nry.· s1X'1Klini; proi::r:un. LAG UNA IEACH r ch:in~c. directors of t h c Ney.• projects and cquipmPnt Cl"" Mo 11. & r.... 494.1515 Laguna Beach County \\'atcr costs include thr follo11 i11~1 O'IN HOUSI SAN CLEMENTE T11'0 computers that can analyze blood tests in n1inutcs -jobs that took humans hours to do -will bfj. in operation at Sad- dleback Community Hospital when lt opens in September. The hospital is in fi na l stages of con- s!rucUon at 2356l Pasoo de Valencia, Laguna 11ills. The m~hines thal process and read data about blood samples are the Sr-.1A-12 and the Coulter Counter ~-fodel "S," a hospital officinl said. TIIEY .C(OST more than $100,00>, but, the official said, the _price is lo\v "rom- pared to \\'hat their 'brains' are capable of producing." SMA-12 doc s a biochtmical profile of blood -including tests for hepatitis, enzymes. uric acid, glucose, cholesterol. protein and other substances -in two minutes. The same work took hoW's for a Jab technician. ··ft eliminates time.consuming, error· prone sample sorting," the hospital of- ficial said, and "can result in early detection of unsuspected pathology." Another side-benefit of SMA-12 may in- terest patients. It does away \\1th multi- ple punctures to get blood samples. The second machine. Coulter Counter, reads white and red blood cell cou nt s. hemoglobin iron-compounds and four other ingredients in blood . Seven tests -\Vhich used to take a half-hour or more -are completed in ;ibout 20 seconds by the Coulter com- puter. Huntn1gton Higl1 School District Finds Relief tluntington Beach Union lfigh School Dislrict may not be in asJight a 1noney situation as a district officials thought. \Vhen school trustees began v•ork on the districl's proposed $30 million budget. they decided to trim $1 million off it to keep the district from going bankrupt in 1975 which was the projection n1ade by stafr members baseO. on incoinc and ex· pend.itures. Rut they only managed to lrin1 $358,000 after a grueling five-hour session. THIS WEEK district officials \\·ere notified that their income 11·ould he "'$300,000 higher than expected becAusc of a recently passed bill. AB 1267 y.•hich was signed by Gov. Reagan. According to Robert ~lartin. ass istant superintendent £or business, the new bill v.·ill bring -about $100.000 more to the district by increasing the allocation from the state from $65 per pupil to $i0 per pupil . J The ·r~Si of the fund s ,,·ill come from a lhrec ccnl tax-\\•hich the di strict \rill be nbte to levy to pay for community use of the schools. 1'1L\T TAX IL\S been levied 1n the p:lst, but the passage oI the school. finance reform law. SB 90. eliminated the tax in favo r of a different kind of alloca- tion from the state. ~1artin explained that the community services lax will mean that that money v:hich \vas going to have to pay for those scrrices can now be turned to the general fund. ··1 think AB 1267 "1\l help us meet the objective of the board to be financially solvent three yea rs doY.TI the road .'' ~lartin said. He noted that the million dollars that y.·as to be cut from the budget Y.'as to be elin1inated to keep future budgets from running in the red. "and this new finan- cing \l'iil do that for a coople of years." Boom Continues Direc tor}· Sl1ows 7LJ, J. Sn1iths In Construction Construction continued to boom in San Juan Capist rano early this summer with nearl y $1.5 million in new building;; erected in the month of June. the cha rts in June. Ty.·enty apartment permits were issued. during the month and the projects \\'ere valued at $938,00>. LOS ANGELES (AP t - If ii \vercn't for the Smiths, John sons. Brov.·ns. r-.1illers and Jo n'e s e s , delivering the new Los Angeles telephone direc- tory wouldn't be such an arm-breaking joh. But the Pa c i f i c Distrirt ha,·e t1Jl·l'n approva l itl'm.~: new hnc and prc~~urr ISJ) NORTH EL CAMINO llEAl '"' AUG. 4, 2 • 4 ,.111. 492·0100 to a $1.0frtOOO oper<itions and improvements. $76.200: line I~::::======:::::'.:'.:=:::;;::;;:::::::;::;;;:;~ ncw1 projec ts budget for tht..' rcpla('Cmenl.~. $46.200 : water II currt'nt fiscal year. svstrm st udies. $57,700: ney.· Con1m ittc:d reserve accounts pUmping equipn1l'nl, S75.000: tol1ll ing $767.500 also recei\"ed office equipment, $21l.OOO, and unanimou s support of the fieid equipn1enl , $24.000. I v.·:iter board. About ~2.000 in projec1 s j Thr onl v S\\'ltCh made in the budgeted last ~·e11 r will be car· budget y.·3:s to transfer SJ,000 ried into this fi scal ye:ir . tron1 the directors' fees and TIIE ' $167,500 in reserves cxix'nses fund to l he break.~ do\\·n a..'i fol\ov.·s: cmployes' benefits funds. gent•ral fund. s '! 5 , o o u : DAY TO DAY di str i c t operating fund. $7,500 ; prop-erty studies, $10,000: I.aguna operations y.•ill cost s7io.200. Canron transn1i ssion rnain . funded frotn the sale of water. · · r I ~.'i0.000: P a cl f i e Co.1st c:irr}Q\"er reserves i·oin a~t Highy.•ay main replac('mrnt, 1·ear and olhcr miscellaneous -fe<>s and lransl'ers. $200,000: Summit Reservoir, The ney.· projects portion or-SI00.000; ~foorhcad Resrr\"oir, SIS,000; Loma de A i; u a YOUR SUPPORTING GIFT GUARANTEES n 0 YOU MORE INCOME ~-;: ~ G Yo11 c:o11 .c:cr~...,. 11tMttlly hicolM, "V l'f Y •11loy 511b.intlel tu M.t"f' while Soetti Co.st Co111111••hy Ho1,ltol'1 11eW "Lh-l11t Tnttt ho1,.111." Write or coll fot lkto/11 tod:oy. CALL Ml. JIM HIMD 499-1311 Ext. 600 SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL the budgel amounts t 0 Reser v i o r , $1 OO ,000 : S432,400. \\·ith the niajority or catastrophe fund $150.000 and 11172 CHit Hlftrw..,, So11tll L .. 1H10, CelifeniJe 92677 the revenue coming from prop-~em~er2g~e~nc~)~' ~r~u~,d~ll60~.~000~ . ..;;;;;;;t:;:===;;:====:;::=iiii====::i:::::::::iii:::::;;! erlv taxes. r ---. ----- 10.lKl'.:\\'ISE. \\'ATER ralrs l v.•ill remain stable pendin~ com plelion th is fall of a districtwide rate survey . The 4il <.-crrt per $100 assess- ed valuation tax rate in effect this year iii retained in the 15,053 Aided Capllol 1"e""·5 Sen•icc SACRAMENTO -A rerord 15,0:MI physically and mentally handicapped Califomi~ns \vere rehabilitated into y.·ork by the State Department of Reh abilitation du ring the last fiscal year. Among those rehabililated were 4,486 han- dicapped y.·elfare recipients. COMFORT OF HOME Beverly M•nor believes • serene, homelike •fmoiphete ii os1onli•I to p•tient rocovery and well-bein q. Everything ha1 beon designed to cr••te • warm, in· vitin9 onvironmenf <11 nd d i1pel the insfitution•I look commonly associeted with medicel fecilto1. All woether clmate control provides a heelthful •nd comfort. eble environment. Petient room1 a re light, a iry, end plea1in9lr. docoreted. Oeco- retor furn i1hed livin g room /loung~i invite patients into a re e xed , comforteble etmosphero to vi ow color TV or viiit with f•mily •nd friends. Cozy conver1etion corn ers are 1peci•lly de1i9ned for quiot talk1 or reading. .... ,_ ... .. ~ ........ .. ..!<_• .. li.!nl••· • --'· Jf.i II ~::::: r -·· I .._,, ~.J:il't,..,-·"'""'~"'·' .... -.. Visitors Atwm Woke• 1 ... .,1y M•Hr Conelncettt H"Pltol l541D Co111l•o Cophtt-011e, Copktro•e a-Jr ~,.,,., TRANSFORM A ROOM WITH JUST ONE SOFA. PIZZAZZI Our AB original desig n 94" sola instantly adds plzzazz to any room in your house. It's high fa&hlon design and to tal lo unging comfort for your living room or den with the extra styling and convenience feature of cleverly designed side care wipe-clean fabr ic comes in a ,. The valua tion figure for the 89 bui lding permits issued wa!I three times higher 1han the sum for the same month las\ year. THE N I< X T mGllEST category y.·as offices. banks. restaurants or stores "'itil a total \"alue or $221.000. Sub- divisions registered $150.445. The department's monthly report shows that in J une or 1972 -\vith construction clip- ping along -the figure was $5R5,784, considerably I es s than this June's figure . Tele phone Co. lists 4,512 Smiths as custonlers - and 74 of them ha ve John £or their given name. The Johnsons in thP directory number almost 500 less, follo\\·C'd by 3.172 Browns. a shade better than the 3.125 ~1illers and 2,815 Joneses. FURNITURE pockets for magazines.The deluxe w. s a crinkle vinyl, a new durable easy- terrilicselectlon of colors.Free de-"" • livery, and the famous RB warranty • of quality goes home with you, too. SPOKESl\1EN for th e Orange County Department of Building and Safely -: which perfonns the funclions for the city -said th.at _apartrnent- type construction dominRted • CO\O• & Wlltf IKUeotlO ............. ,CUM • U <tftl.t. I OllHrtlf ..-OVll> o'"'l llf"TIO ... wtw lllU" • N()'l.(:HNllNO • NO II •I 5M OIUOIC 4. \ t • -· ""llWlll GOot& • l (OllOMl(AI WE REMOVE DIRT • NOT HIDE IT I WALL TO WALL SPECIALISTS • RESIOOOIAL • INDUSTRIAL • C•RCIAL • 105 CALLE AIRll CARPET STEAM CLEANING FREE ESTIMATES 496 ·0125 SAN CLEMENTE SM•~• NUUIW MJSl!DCl9 .,,, ... -----------------..... lOS AMClllS: 61 21 Wilshltt 8~. Mitaelt Mlle: ll040W. Pico Blvd.; M S. Wt~tetn ,l.'tt. AMAHllM: 1672 W. Li11::oln IAllRSftnD: lJlO Mine"'''· CKUU 'lSTA: •75 l roadw11 CLARlMONT/POlllONA: 13! [. foothil COVINA: 9't5 N Alu~ DOW11lf: 943~ [, fWtstone UCAJON: U! N, Johnson A~. 'lENDAlL: JJ3 N. C~nlral Av!. ,.AMADA Hl\.lS: 10100 81lboa Blvd. HUNTINQTON IUCH: 1~431 Stach Blvd. U. NAiil: 1710 W. 'Ntllttitr lDN8 l[ACH:"1 1"89 L~~t"M'.IOd BIYd. MONTEREY PAil: 415 S ,t.!lantic Blvi PASAO(Nl: 85 s. Rosemead •rvtRSIDl: 10,000 M••no11• SANTA AMAnustrN: 17GJ £. 171h SL SAJl llRNAROINO: 9'.19 s .. ['St. SAN Dl[GO: 1415 Cl1ir~mOT't Mesi Blvd. SOUTH IAY: 1~533 S Cre nshJw Blvd THOUSAND OAKS: 2'' lhou'.md Cab Blvd. VENTURA: 3409 Teltrra~h Rd. WOODLAND Hill$: '??23 Vtn!u11 Blvd. SWOfl 1 DAYS A W[[I(. WltKIMYS 10 UMTIL'' l"TUttOAY 10 UNl!t..' 'SUN!Mf J 2;>0 UH rll '. rtttt 'AJllUHQ. rlt[I. DtCOllATOlt SEllVICE . rlttt on'rvt•n" COfCV(Hlll'lf IANK l[lllllS Co ' ~ \ t•J tt uwl.,.trln I• '* i;'"ij";i' ii;"i"i"i"~';i"i;ii"i'iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • au DAILY PILOT Tlwrsdi1. July 2&, 1973 TV HIGHIJGHT S CBS fJ 9:00 -"The Moon is Blue." This com· edy, considered "risque" in 1953, features \VilUam Holden, ~faggie McNamara and David Niven in a romantic triangle. NBC 0 10:00 -Dean .l\1artin Presents 1i1usic Country. Tbe premiere of a new summer n1usical series from the Nashville area. Tonight Johnny Cash and June Ca rter headline the sho\Y. ADC 0 10:00 -Streets of San Francisco. Ed· ward .l\1ulhare and Stephanie J>owers are guest stars in tills episode about a 1niddle·aged 1nan trying to kill a beautiful young girl who has rejetted llin1. TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JULY 26 ffOIJOO !D!llCilal••., f])@l Nin 0 l on1n11 (6} Courtship t f [ddlt't fltllN 0 Wanted Dead 01 Atlft (2~r) "1111 MOOll 11 11111"' (R") (cam) 'SJ-Witham Holdtn, M1a111 MeNam1t•, Oiv1d Nivtn, Tom Tully, Dawn Addams. A yaun1 lidy, 11mtd 1111111 candor and 1ood sen11, stb out to outwil and bewilder 1 youn1 man . about -town bachelot who do~sn't believt In lhe Institution ol marriage, 0 ti.OJ i?':' lrons~t "The Best laid P!ans" (RJ Chief Ironside, wh1l1 v1s1ting his bank m1n11e1 on pcr- Joh1i11y's· Ft•iL.,ids ('uun!ry 111u ... 1c star Johnny Cash takes a flock of nei ghbor children on a jee p ride un hi s sprav.•ling 'J'cnncsscc ranch 1onighl on the prctnicre of his new show . "'l)ea n flfartin Prese nts ?llusir Country·· at 10 o"tloek on \1J~r·. Channel 4. m Tiie nlnbtOMS ID St.11 Trtk :ion~I businus, is UUihl 1n tht ------- middle of a robbery. Lagu11a lsstres C•st Call Original Drama ,Closing The latest in a series of v.'Orld premieres Cron\ South COast Repertory , the psychological drama "Adrien- ne's Sununer," comes to a close this week with final 1>erformantcs s c h e d u I e d tonight through Saturday. It ~potllghts a young actress \\'ho reccnlly graduated from UC h·vine and makes her SCll debut in the title role. Elizabeth Herbert identifies strongl y 1o1'ilh the "'t'j)le of Adrienne, a woman ~·ho. in h e r \VOrds, .. wants to be more than a ftecoration ln her hus· band's life. She wants to be. taken ser· iously, to be looked on as a p e r s o 11 ME1tll!1tT v.•ith opinion and va lues that ;ire her own. She wants her o"'n identity. and so do I." ~'liss Herbert observes that the rehearsal period, "'ith 1>l<1yv:right William Lang in a1 tcndnncc. \Vas instrumental in clarifying the issuts of the Intermission Tom Titus ptay. ·•1 was pleased lo be able to contribute my feelings and ideas to the final product," she snys. "'Adrienne's Summer" will be perionncd in its final three days at 8 o'clock in the repertolj' company's Third Step Theater, 1827 Ne"'p:>rt Blvd., Costa ~·lesa. Reser\l?A- lions 646-1363. ALW CLOSING a brief engagement is the Fountain Valley Community Theater production of "l)eter Pan," \vhich gives its f i n a I performances Friday through Sunday. Jay Conklin ls di rcC· ting the musical fantasy. Joe Strauss and David Lane arc double cast in the title role wilh" Johanna Anderson and Sharon Kennedy sharing ihc part of \Ve.ndy and Ch«rlcs O'COMOr as lhe evil Captain Hook. Performant'e ti mes arc 7:30 Friday, 2:30 and 7:30 Saturday and 2:30 SUnd ny afternoon at !he theater. 18200 fl1t Baldy Circle. Fountain Valley. RES UJ\.IING TONIGllT at the San Cle1nente Con1n1unity Theater is Thornton \Vilder's con1cdy "The ri1atchn1aker" with Richard Andersen at lhe directorial helm. Jan Gordon and Stanley Weissberg have Ille principal roles in the large.-cast show. lead lo tho. l.agU11a Moulton Playhouse Sunday afternoon "'hen the theater hOlds 1optn readings for its leadoff play, .. Ah, Wilderness," and also starts a brand new casting lilt for future reference. \\'hcthcr you're reading for "Wlldeme~" or not, manag- ing director Hap Graham \vould like to see your fact on the business end of a Polariod camera Sunday, beginning at I p.nl. Guest directors for !he nut lhree shows -Jan Arvan, Alex Koba and fllartr.clla Randall -will be on hand to check out lhf latent. Call 1hc playhouse at 4M--0743 for further details. * CALLBOARD -The San Clen1ente Community llleatcr 1\·ill ho ld auditions for it3 season opener, ''The Gingerbread Lady," '-londay and Tuesd:i y at 8 p.m. Tony Brandl "·ill direct the Neil Simon serioco111edy. EE Los T1rr1s fl3Htc111pM11 ...... Ell nfff St:Mtes @ lh1n !or Yt llf Ute 0 (])Ila llun1 f11 "T~ Stone"' (R) In 1 Western town thl! seem1 la h1Ye rone mad with 'liolenct and lnl1irue, Cain• receives in un- usual olfer from three innocent lookin1 chitdren-ttiey want to par him $4.08 lO kiU som.ont l<N them. Et) Hist11il1 dt M11111 J P1p1 Tl1 ey'r e Gani e f 0 1· TV Show s Slie Si1i gs For Suit Also featured arc Peter Case.' Joan Burt. Curt \Vellman. Ann Keenan, J\.fark Razor. Carol Gustafson and Ki p Conner. Curtain is 8:30 at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cab r i 11 o . San Clemente, tonight through Saturd<ly. Reservation s 4924465. A cast or three men and three \\'Omen is required for Sin1on's story of an alcoholic entertainer trying to set her life in order. The sho1v opens Sept. 20 for three weekends at the Cabritlo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cab r i I l o, San Clemente. * BACKSTAGE Ai i k e 1:30 C1J Mq11'1 Mtr"' 0 Mtvit: (C) (to) "'ff!pt Sims" (s111p) '10 -bmrs f11nciscus, lte Cr1nt. l•ilie Nielsen, Tislll SterHnr. Anchtw P1in1, Scott M11· .... (I) CIS N~ W1ltu Cronk1t1 0 Hnt Cun Will Trntl @)Merv 'rllli11 Sllow m .W,. CirlffiUI ml £l Sl'low de Altjalldt1 Su.irv !:30 0 News al MtKhacl\1 lt1ti1n1 mcomedy ED Slit Y11111 Yint Yn m l lwin1 [a., 10:00 0 rr0J er;) De1n Martin Presenb: 1$) Nm l1 l!E Dlstrt Thtlllt m utt1t b lUI• ,,,.it rn o m•-o lewlitf lw hit.rs 00 Morie: (Zllr) "Ulllts of tht fltld .. {com) '6J-Siclne1 ro11ie1, Ula st1l1, Stanlty Adams. ! 00 Wl~HI• TM1tr1 I 0 'Miit• Mr l.lMF m I LM Liley lb I Oftt•" Jt11111it EE Si111plt111Htt M1ri1 fD laMI aka• "Mlflvilll" (II) ail M•llftl Ci) Tn.l:Mhb M11llul 'fl s,.e4 ltlctr 7:JOIJY""I OJ. llild1rt ~ey lhis • Slan" (It) Kildare and Gi1lespi1 trtal 1 youn1 11rl lot Sligm1l1-bltedin nr the pa!ms and lorahead-lhal Music Cout1lry Hie p1emitrt or 1 new summer music sefies from 1n ~nd around the Nashville, Ttnnes5e t 11e1. Johnny Cash ind June Carte1 1lir loni&ht, Future s1a1s will in· elude !ht 1011 names in t~t Coun- try & Western field. Set Covtl C1!1Si1-Up slory. OQ)Q)Newt ct) Twili(tlt Zont Q tJ) '1) StJHb of San flwiK'I "Tower Beyond Tragedy" (R) A mid- dl•11ed man with 1 h1n1-up 1baut 1111 is sourflt b1 Mike 1nd Sim ta prev1nt his killin1 1 ~1utiful ,00111 Eir1 whtl has re jected him. Edward Mulhttt 1fld Stttanit Pow· ers &111$f. 0 Mtvk: (C) (lhr) "Evt" (~rt) '68--ttlflte Yirt1el1, Robert Wilker Jr., Fred ~II~. Eiil M11siul hll COl'l!Gunded doc:tOfl and p1iests 10:30 0 Tait; ltct tor a thousand years. (6) One Sttp hyoH rn tllpn'• ttmt., 0 1M Advtlttllflf "LCl'lt AIWl)'S. Q) TIN Advewtur~ Maret•" (R) A airl who nnce wilked ti) Yidu en c.nthdl out on Gen• Bradley 11·ante11 his €E Aco111111mi•1 life. Eiil News/Sportl 9 .... "1 "''""" 11,00 fJ 0 0 IE ill GI.,., Cf) P~lc• SU11111• (3; '})@'El) Newi 0 M1m111 $ M•: (C) (2hl) "01• g Ont Step Beyond prOlil D.,.. ef latwa JoMs;' ("'1!1) rJ) Pvry MISOll "66-Robtrt Korton, Di1n1 Baker, m Tiirttl or Constci uences Sii Mineo. Q) Movif: "Olltsid1 the LI•" (dra) ®J lrt'1 Milt I Dt1I '56-Rl1 Dantoo, Ltiah Srwwden, m nit Ch1 Glint Williams. Gl Dr1pd m 1111111' l l;lS eDCittllll S4 ti) TM Md11111 f••HJ · 11:30 Q (J"I CBS Litt Movit: (t) "llltJ 1:00 II (I) Thi Wtltoos (R) When Cody Rall for lhtir U.es" (adv) '65 - Nelson (£.d~rd F11nd, Olivia" John Pa)'ftt, lu1n1 Plfltn. hlshful uncle. comes to visit, the 0 l'ij m .loflnny Carso~ Je1ry W1rtons 111 him • dat1 •Ith di'l!!f· lewis ls 1uesl host. 1:111 Cordella Hunnicut (Danna Hen-0 Movie: "TM ''''' Jeu t b mn sen). Rtid" (wes) ·~ -Will1rd Parktf, 1J@] m The Helen llddy Show Tom Neal. Helen's auuts 111 Glnri1 Steinem, O (j) latt ''''Tonia;~! lhe Modern Jiu Qu1r11t ind B.B. m FestiYll ol Clwks: "Twtlvt Kinr. O'Ctod Hl1h"' (dta) 'SO--Gie1orr O Mnlt: (2trf") "Stven Thllvts" Peck, Df:on Jauer, Guy Meirlll. (mys) '60 -£dw1rd G. Rnbinson, R6<1 S!eiger, Eli W1Uach. 12:00 @) Mt rsht l Dillon 0 (}) G) Mod Sq utd '"Scion of 0 Movie: (C) "Hone~moon Hotel" Dlath" (R) Pile and line have (com) '&t -Rober! Moise, Robert ti;ouble on 1 kidnappin1 they wit· Goulet, Nancy Kwan, Jill St. John, ness when the vlcUm"s lather II· Juses t!I repnrt tile 1bduciion. Don t:00 m ooC1l Nt'll'S Porter, JuU1 Adams. Richud Row· 0 Hi1hwi1 Pttrot ley and Ross E!Untt RUesl m Ha111's HerMS ID lo1ln1 F1t111 tflt Olympic ti) LI Sena11 JOff11 fil W1ttr11t1 Hearilp (4 lo 6 '111) ID SUpe1 Sllow EI,;) El Show H I Moment• €f) Movit l:JO m MIR Cirfflin SllOW (l!) Dn1111 !:00 tJ (i) CIS Th11ud11 Mo.le: (C) Friday ' DAYTIME MOVIES 9:30 (I) "TM Mlrtdt" (dra) •59-t1,. 1011 B1klr. Ro1tr MOOft. D IC) "Attt.1111" (mui) 'S4-Jtn1 Powtll, Edmund Pu1dom, Debbie Rt)'llOlds, Vic D1n'Mln1. 10:00 0 ...,.._ LldJ'• Fre11 Ktlllld:(" (ldV) 'lt--Ellen D11w, GHllll Rift. 11:00 0 "SM11Mt" (tolll) '40-- 1:30 m MOYie: "Wol¥ts tf lhe Otep" (idv) '60 -Massimo G1101ti. 1:45 0 Morie: "I livt In 'ranenDI' Squirt" (d11}-Re.c H1nison, Annt Nu(1t. 2:45 m Alf..Hi&M ~w: (C) ..,.ht Hom .. strek~ ... ''TIM Va111pne'1 'host'' J;lO 0 MMe: "Tiie S.Crtt Mtn" (drl) '58-John Lodt1, ~hrshall Thomp· ~·. Cooper. Setty field. ~11111 11 thf Ninttits" (tom) '34-Met West. I 1:00 m "'Te Pltt H I Lti(" (dll) '50 ~1.11• G1ble, B1rbar1 SttnwyQ.. l:JO O "Al War Wit• U!e Atm'(' ('om) "51-Dean M1rtin . .leiry Uwis. l :OO (]) '1ubm11ine Com1111nd" (drl) '51-Wltliam Holden. Nancy Olson. ll..OJ "Ad One" Concl. N11111 01 tM Ca111e l :JO 0 "A1mo111ed Alt.tek" (dr1) '&4- Dana Andt1ws. Anne Bailer 4:00 e '"To11'11 ill Ult "'" ,.,.~ (com) '51-Gary Cooper, Edd11 Albert, lea """'" I KOCE. CllAl\tNEL ~ Orange County's UJIF television station. KOCE-TV". has 1chc-duled the (allowing specia l programs today, Oe1111lt.>d 1Jst11111 of Channel 50's programs arc carried in the D:uly Pilafs TY Week e.!lch Sund11y . il11111 )· l 'ontestauts Cal led; Fe1v Clio se1t In Court Hr JEBnY HUCK 1.0.S 1\i\GELES I AP I -The c;,-~ting (·alls are for people who are pcr~onahlc. ulln.H.:tive :1111! qt1h:l..-w il!C'd. Thousand~ of ocoplc shO'.'.' up for the :iutlilion~. bu! onl,\' a h;1rdft1l nrc s:.>ll'l'tcd. A h.•1v dnC!t:ed 1ndi\"irlun1s k 1· e p rC'lu111ir1g d11y af\e'" d:iy hoping /or a hrci1k. \\'hat rote <ire they looking for".' ron1estnnts for the 14 nclwork ga111c sho\\·s. This rnay be-the on(' area of sh1J1\' businc:.s \1·here kno1ving sornebotlv is 1110··~ or a han- rlican lh<in a be;icfit. Influence does1fl count. Everv n1cn1ber of Uic studio audie1ice has an t'QUlll chance IQ becon1c a con- lest:int . accordin~ to Art Alisi. \\"ho"s in c.•h:ir;::c of selecting the con!e<;t:int<; for the thrC'c II ea ! 1 c r -Quit:lc~· sho1\S. ""Hnlh·\1•ood Squa res" and ··Baffle"' on /\:UC and ··cj111- l11t" on CBS. "J-;\'Ell'l'ONE gets au aµ. plication and is inler\·ic\ved .. , said A!isi. ··J\·l.,st nf our in- tcrvic!\\'Crs are pC'uplc studying lo be 1>erfonncrs: and if thry frcl so1nrone h.'ls po!cntinl. he or she is auditioned. havl' that . ir usua!J~· n1cans !llev'r:;> ?.ttractive and b•·ighl. You f·,1n 1e!I if son1tbody has something on lhe ball. \Ve \\"ant a cross-section th:1t peo- p!c at hon1c c<in identify \\"i?h, ,. Of lhl' shows A I i s l rcprt;>scnts. '·Gambit'" is prob-- ably the easiest to get on . It. uses only n1arried couples and runs through about 24 con· tcs tanls a week ... !Iolly~·ood Squares" uses about 10 Pcorle a \Veck fnr its davtime \"Crsion and four fur the nighllin11? syndicated "hO\\'S. .. Raffle" is tougher to Act on. Not only does it use fe\1'cr contestants -six lo eight a week -but it is b.1scd on the game of blackjack and is hard to learn. Contestants must go through practice s e s s i on s , before going on the air. ALI S!, a fortnl'r actor \Vho ~Cl1 into the ganlc show business in 19G3. says. '"!\lost people \Vant the 1noney and the prizes, but some just \l':vJt to be on for the fun of it. The funny ~hing is, those who are on for the fun of it win the most pri1.cs bccnuse thry're re1~1x"1l. ·• !loll) \\"QO<i Squnrcs" gi\•1·s a\\·ay :1botll SJ0.000 on the •·\\·r i<l(lk fur pcn1>l:'! \Vilh oulaoing ptrsonalitie3. If they .:_~C--~~~~~~- ·~ "'DOLLARS" IRI "\.J:r,I "'• I -:-···1 .:-~ ... ::' R ~GER M ~ORE •r IS ~~~~s ~~~ l·1, . ~lj j ,., "LIVE f' AND LET DIE " t .... ' " . I \ , "' . ., -. .,-. .,., llfitod Art ... daytime sho"'s. ·'Gambit" and '·Baffle" each give a"'ay $10.000 to $15.000 a "·eek. A fe\v contestants come on to win prizes rw. a favorite 1'hnrity. After the show, other contestants often d o n a t e 1u11\•antcd prizes to charit.v. and a nun1ber get together to S\\"ap prizes. "IT'S Al\lAZING the things prople want." AHsi said. "The~' go al.lsolulely crazv O\"er p;iint. \Ve give a1vay a IOt nf paint." PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A 28-year-old soprano s a n g selections from liandel and Puccini as part of her testimony in U.S . District Court here. Opera singer Phyllis Bryn Julson Suthcrhind ~rformed Tuesday for Judge Clarence !\ev.·con1cr during a hearing on her suit against. Auch Inter· Borough Transit C.on1pany~ ritrs. Sutherland of Bethesda, ~hi., is claimin~ damages in excess of $500,000 for knee and hip injuries she suffered in 1968 when the chartered bus she "'as tra\•e\- ANOTlfER SHO\\' for the younger set is ' ' T h c Emperor's Ne "" Clothes." entering its second of three \veekends at the fluntington Beach Playhouse. Stuart Elliot is directing the production . A large cast of c!1ildren. ninny the offspri11::_: of pta~·housc actors and ac· tresses. is included in lhe show, which is staged Fridays at 7:30 and Satuday af(ernoons al 2 o·c!Ock at the pla,•lmusc. 2110 Main St.. llurillngton · Beach. Reservations 5364446. * ALL ROADS for local cont· n1unity theater actors \\·ill In the 1950s. quiz shows ac- quired a reputation for cheating, and lhe networks and the government cracked do1vn. 1\lisi said that. to insure the hon1•st.v of tJie shO\l"S, the con- lcstanl s a re shepherded around and kept as isolated fl<; a court room jury. They must v.·car badges and swea'" that the,v are telling the truth about then1selves. ing in "'aS involved in an ac-m cident in suburban Conshohocken. The injuries rendered her MANN THEATRES "unable to endure the various I p~ysical tria ls necessary to give grand opera performances." she clai1T1s. She savs she is unable to stand throughout an entire opera. M"l'S. Sutherland stood behind hC°r husband George, "'ho accompanied her on a baby grand piano that hnd been n1ovecl int<.1 t he I courtroom earlier Tuesday. Her auorne.v. Jan1es E. Beasley, said the performance \\·as to establlsh his clicnt"s singing ahility. Corona d•I Mar 673-6260 7:00 and 10:20 A1lo "'IROTH ER OF THE WIND" -l :SO Call Tlielll"*r for '111tday Sched11le ALL SEATS RESERVED $3 · $4 • $5 • $6 LONli IUCH AllHA Thurs. Au1. 9 thr11 Suo. Au1. 12 Thu1s. •• . . .. . .. . • . • .• 8·00PtA Fri. , • , •••••...•.. 3:00' 8:00PM Sat , .. , 11,00AM 3 00 & l·ooPM Sun .. 1:00 & S:OOPM SAYE SI.DO DN KIDS UNOEI 12 EXCEllT SAT. I SUN. 1 ICKETS ON SALE LONG BC"CM AR ENA. TICKETRON, MUTUAL I U8ERrY AGE NCl£S. TO 010£1 '' MAIL. ~£ND snr. .lODRESS£0, STAMPED CNVElDPE WITH CHECK ~ MONEY DROCR, PAYABLE 10 RINGLING BROS. CIR· Ct.IS, MAIL 10 ARENA DESIR.CO. AHA!!E!M CONV. CEl!Tfl Mon. EY1. Aar. 11-. T111. Anf. 21 tlon .....•••..•••.•• l :OOl'M l ut. . ........ 3:00 & l:OOPM \',td ....... , ••• ,3,()() & IJJOPM llt\w .......••. ,J·OO&l:OOPl.I r1i. 3,00 & l !OOPM Sil ...... 1J·OOAM3:00 &1:00PM Son ......... , • , .. I :OD & S:llOPM Mon ........ , , •.. l:OO I S:OOPM T1.1e .............. 3:00 & 8.00PM SAY! $1,DO ON KIDS UNOll II OC!1T flt Milt, SAT. l SUN. U•• your ll.11>kAm••lc•td 01 Ml'11r Ch••I"' TICKETS ON SALE CONV. CatTDI, ALL MUTUAL & llBllTY AGUK:lfS All THlATllS COOllO IT RHllGllATION -----,.-NOW PLAYING RESE RVED SEATS On Sal• 3,30 'Iii UD' Fri .. Sa.I., Sun. !loon MARLON BRANDO .irL 'j>ilis ~·DH THRU 1HURl. 8 P.M. FRIDAY 1 I 9,11 I SA!URDAY 1-1 & 9 JI ' SUNDAi 1-1 I 8 All SEATS 54.00 a:.11-ms I "IJVEAND lETDIE" J'fl,ca -- ' Ill.II llCK •lllWI ·VII IYKI TECHNICOLOR• ,q°'~ .. -.. -"".... -...: e--·- "" "SILVER FOX" SOlltfl Coast Plaza II $11111.IOIWf U 111n01 • jt • ..J)JJ '" Van Landingham. a Costa !\lrsan ""ho recently took a degree in drama from UC Irvine . is now leachini;i: at Cer· ritos College and "'ill direct the college's production of "Guys and Dolls," opening Aug. 3 ... an1ong the cast n1e1nbcrs are several local students Rick i\taher. ~haron Cr.'lbtree and Gretchen Van 11yper !1vho play Sky, SHr<ih and Adelaide. respec· tive\y), H<lrrict G2.rfinkle and a s s i s t a n t choreographer Cynthia Nakamura fr o m UCI ... BATILI FOi THE PLANET Of THE APES 151 "-1.15 •JOH"' WAYlrif 110 LOIO 1,51 l f.lH & YATIUll ()"J;f.l.l PAllEI MOON INI _+CHINESE CONNICTIOM 1•1 h~IM•••lb•tw"" ·~·~~ .... ,\ H••IMo 11•1 l71 -1Mi2 1 .... -..... "'"" •' ·-· ~,,.,,,) Another Woods tock? Rock Fans Flock To Watkins Glen WATKINS GLEN, N . Y. (AP ) -Joe Conley will take in the chaise lounges In front of his motel this Yicekt'nd. but will leave the An1crican rtag flying. pect. !l's an unkno "·n . Everybody is deeply con· cerned. but nobody is talking n1 ueh about it.'' Conley, the motrl o\\·nrr, spent Tuesday collecting the signatures of 37 businessmen on a petition sC'nt to Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. There is going to be a rock concert in this town of 3,000 people, probably the biggest since 1969 when more than 400,000 people assembled at Woodstock. N.Y., and an estimated 300.000 gathered al Altamont in California. "People in this comn1unity are willing to put up with nea rly anything, but they want it orderly," said Mayor Bill Simiele. ''We are sweating this one out. We don't want to become known as another Woods tock." Since the state has granted the permi t for the concert, said the petition. "the un-~j~~~~;~!~~~~~~l~~~!1::~::~~!! dersigned businessmen and ~ taxpayers do solen1nly and . ~--"4...,i respectively request that our property and well being be 1 preserved and protected." I THE CONCERT will be held Saturday at the Watkins Gle n Grand Prix race course, an automobile track a few miles outside of town. .. The petition speaks for itself," said Conley ... But I'll tell you this. I don 't expect all those kids to go 10 sleep Satur- day night \Yhen that concert is over.'' A vanguard of sever! hun- drC'd people v.·ith back packs and sleeping bags has arrived in to\Yll. Barefoot. cut-off jeans. long hair , it 's a sight that some residents find disturbing. • THIS WAS WHERE IT AL L STARTED FOR BANDLEADER STAN KENTON Balboa's Rendezvous Ball room He lped Americans Forget About War Memories of Balboa Ke1iton's Ren<lezvo us Records Rev ive<l DA.ILY PILOT ;Jf Bright Neiv Ser·ies 'Adam's Rib' for TV Uy JERK\' BUCK LOS ANC;l.-:1.ES 1AP 1 Remember those grent S<'rt'1.'l1 couples? William Pov.·ell 11nd ,\lyrna Loy . Hurnphrey &i.:ar! and Lauren Bucdll. Spt'n('l'r Tracy and Katharine llepbur11. There h:1\'1'n·1 bffn rnan\ \!ke that 1n 1t•lr v1s1on. hut '1 suggc:>t ~ou llO!c do11n 1li1· niuncs of l\l'll llov.'artl and Bl)lhC: Uanner. two To11y A v.·ard-winners fro111 Rn:inrlv.•fly. Thi·~ \\'111 star th is f:ill as tht· battling legal 1,.'0uple 111 an ARC scru-'s b;is('(f on thC' Tr:lry·flc1lburn 19~9 hit fllrn ··Adan1"s H1b ·· Producers ha1 e been Ir~ 111~ to gl't them tol!ether for year" She played the v.·1fe to his °(hom;Js Jefferson in t h~· musicnl "1776,"' but they 1\ ert• in different stcnes. '"\\'e keep corning up fur thinRS bul un1il now v.·c n1•1"1T seern to have got l ,. n toget her."' said ~I o wo rd. handsome. blond and 6-fOOt·fi. ltirnt•\' and 'ih1• L!l :i \,1\\ ~ l'I in 1ir1\ Jll' pr:iel!C'\' ,\ltllll\Ht h II 'i l.J.1SNf C1n \ht' \!l,\1 f1ht1 1l !l n1urt· uf a cas1• Hf Bro:1d1\,1\ eon11n.: to thf t1ll11• B1 •s 1do''i !llt' TOn\•\>."111· n1n~ llo\1,1rc! , .. t'htlri s l;k1\ ··1 and i),u1111•r 1 But11•rrth•' \r\' Frl·c·· 1. th1 ' pni\h11·1·~ 1, 1J1,• 1\•n.\ ·1>o 111n1ni.: din ... ·rvr of ·· ti76 ." l'•·h'r II Hu·11 Ill' •ilr1"t·1t•d th1· pilot frorn .1 script by thE' TOO\•\IHUlllJ•' 11n t1'r of "li76," i'1'll'r S10111· 110 \\'Al\0 SA IO. · Prub.1Uh :11 onC' point I looJ..C'd do11 n oii h·IC'\ision . but thl' 1norc I l)('{':lllH' lr\\"Oh 't't! Ill f1l111 !hi• l)('ltt>r 11 look('<I 1 rh:n k thL·ri· arf' rnor1· oppor(u1111 11•... 111 11~h·1·i~ion .. llo11 ard ~'!"I. nJ;1rrJ"d to ;1('· tr1·"s l.ouii;1' Svr1•I 111·· snn or:, :\"1•\1 '\'orl.. ~h ~c·!..!uu~1·r 111~1tl1• h1'i Bro:icl1.1·:i~· di·hu1 1 n '"l'rq1111~1·:-llru1 n 1:-1 ·~ It,• s:ud. "I did a bunch hl·forl' I st11rh•d p 1• r fur n1 1 11 g •II ,\rnh1·rst Colll·~i· ~ind thl'n 11·l'nt to the Yale !Jran1:1 ''A LOT OF music \\"as \1-rit· School. I \\'as in stock fo r lt•n for us for a stage \'ers1on thrt't' scasons. ·· of ·~1r. Smilh (~S To On opcninA night of "!77ti .. 111:11 ''ou Lov(' :ii\'.. Jun1f \IOl>l! uppos111· Liza ~1111u(•l11 lll" Jl!X1 ,1p1)1·;1r~'(l in "Such (;!)()(! Frh'nds" 1111d l°l'<·r1·.'.lll'd his rol1· 11f Thor n.is .l1·fft·rso11 1n thi> fll111 \t•f!)11111 vf · J7i6 " :\FTElt A j.l\!l'~\ role IS ~ ntll l,i.! S.1111111'1 l '\1'11\t'tlS tin · Jlr1nan1,a., last ~1 .. 1r llo11~rcl \11·nt to \\'11!1an1i.101111, \lr.;!i. lo ,1pp1•<1r in .1 stock J.!l"o· dlH ll\JI\ uf .. Ullt'I' l! a J.if, !Jilli' .. "l kno\\· this sound· li~l' ,, prt'?:oii rl•h·<LSI!, I.Jut 1n~ b1 ott11-r r lon:ild t•ame to 11sJ n11· and 0 111· nii;ht y,·c gut li>mi:' 1)('1.•r and sat do\\·11 io watch · \dJrn s ltib" onJ1·lc>\l,i11n . · h•· said "T"·o da)/ J;1t f'r PC!l'r I !uni st·111 inc ir sc·ript for '\darn's H1h · .. llh th1· ;u1d \1 ;i1t·hf'ff 11 ;1;::u11 l,11•·r to ·t lhl' .'i p1rit ol 1hl· 11101 ll' 1tou "t 11 :1111 h1 ~J}l\lk !or B ht·. bu! I think I l•·pl>un1 t:! t•r favor1!r ::11·· t1 ''"" and ' <1t1 JS ct'rt11in!y 11111\\' Three bands -the Grateful Dead, the All man Brothers and the Band -are scheduled to appear at the 12-hou r con- cert that begins at noon Satur- day. NORi\IA R<XiERS now sleeps at night in the food stand she manages since some· one broke in and cooked ha1n- burgers on the grill. By \\'ILl.li\i\1 :it.:"llRE!BER ct '"'-C•llV Pilat Si•ll any h:ill 1n its day. t\\"O orher albu1ns 1957 and 1958. \Vashington,' but it 1\· as 0110 P rt' rn i n i::" r c:un•• lie made never produced." he said. The backstage and offrrccl hi n1 his there, in '-n1usic v.as later incorpor<itcd first n10\•ie role, 111 "Tell \JI! ··1 don' do 1! 1nueh any 1notl' Le l'>l' 1"111 rnurL' surr uf 111\'SC but I llSl"d to l!l\· agu1 L; 1 ;1 p;1rllcu lar actor 11·!1Uld u1dlc ;_1 sct·nc. 1·racy "'~1s u a1l1 the onr bc.·causr he 1\·a sirri ple and direct." The co ncert promoters say ticket sales will stop at 150,000. State police will stop people without tickets 2Q miles down the road. But Sheriff Maurice Dean expects at least 200,000 people in the area. "Everyone in town is a little apprehensive," Dean said. "At the same time,the local people are aJI talking to me about how to get tickets for lhei r kids." Races at the track have often attracted more th11 n 100,000 people. It's a scene people in Watkins Glen have learned to c:ope witl. ''THIS IS different," said Simiele. ''It's something new and nobody knows what to ex- .. Ir it gets too bad. !"II just close up." she said. "The prob- lem is not the JX'Oplc. it's the nu1nber of people.·· The town is nestled on the shore of Seneca Lake and tourism is major business. Siemiele runs Ca pt. Bill's Boot Rides on the lake. '"I can't understand what good it is going to do for the IO\\'tl," said Sin1ielc. '"It is going to kill our regular lourist business. \Ve gain nothing fron1 it. It could ruin us But Simiele is hopeful. "Monday morning we will just sweep the streets and go on, I hope ," he said. An1ericans "'ere peacefully silting back \\'a!ching lhe Ai tording to ~trs. Coke. \\"Orld go up in the flames of n1ost 11f tht.' music on thC' rt'" \\'ar \\"hen Stan Kenton·s first rf'lt ased albun1 is OnC'-Of-a- band set fcct a·tapping in kind unles?:o some old t•op1rs nf Bal boa's old H c n d c z v o us the [)ect'<I ;ilbun1 arc still Ballroorn. ~ around. ll was !he balmy su1nmer of ~!rs. Co~said that although 1941 -still n1onths a\\·ay fro1n there are so e transcriptions the surprise allack t ha l and single so g recordings of laWlched America against the the first Kenton orchestra in Axis -when Kenton and his some private collections. "The Artistry in Rhythm orehcstra For1native Years" consists of wooed the dt1ncing cro11'd.l !11t very first K e n to n down at the beach . rei...11rdings at the ballroom. 1'he 11cndcZ\'Oll$ SUl1l!TH'r It \\'ilS thC'SC' f i r s t wi lh his 14·piccc cnsc1nblc rc·eordings. she said, lhnt \\·on marked J(enton's emergence Kenton·s new orcheslra its into the \\'Orld of big band fir st n11tion\\•idc lour climaxed n1usic. Jlis so unds that year in .January of 1942 with a week included "(;ambler 's Blues."' RECORDS REVIVED at the old Roseland Ballroom "Taboo'' and "Thl s Love of Stan Kenton in Ne\I; York City. into ··Seesa\\•." v.·hich st;lrrl'Cl 1j-,_ _______ ..,;;,,;;,_ ___ ~~======~ HU\\'ard. lie bc.>ars such a striking rrsemblance to r\<·w York \tayor John V. Lindsay ~ Jbuth Coast Repertory that one nigh! the mayor ap-''MA"o"R"1E' NN"E'~s" s1MMER:: peared in Ho\\·ard's role in the opening scene. . CLOSES SATURf°AY UJJ NEWflOllT. CO~TA MESA FOii RES lo'&f lClol~, CALL-6" IUI .. Then \Ve \\"Cr£' offered thf'll."""-.;..""""""--------+~--------.1 TV series ·~tc\lillan and \\'ifc,' '' he said ... , \\·as in 'Child's Play' at the tin1C' and Blythe was in 'Bullerflies 1\re Fn..-e.' \Ve turned it dov.11 and the series \\'as built into :1 star vehicle fur ll o ck Hudson ." If I we re a bctt1n~ man J"d put ;;II of my tnoney 011 "Ada1n's Rib" to be a hit. lt "s ~~~' ~~i:h~e::t ;~;!!~~g ~~~ in sight for the fall season. lie plays an assistant district l\1ine ." 'fhough Ne\\'JXlrl Beach \\·as Though !he Stan Kenton lit!lt< lllflrc than a sma ll resort i;,;•---------"il orchestra is still going strong ~ea r. she said 1fl \\!l 11hcn Kenton first ap- Writer Joins His Play On Vacation Fro111 Jail STOCKTON (AP) -Al the South Stockton Community Theater, the show mus t go on -even i( the play's autho.r has to get out or jail to direct it. , Tommy Lee Ware, serving a 12-month sentence for armed robbery, has been granted four days of freedom so he can direct the theater's pro- duction of "Brothers," a play he wrote while be hind bars. 416 N. lrottdway, ~onto A110 5424737 Ad11lh Only HELD OVER! "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" !XI Mick Jo9q•r "PERFORMANCE" Judge John B. Cechini of the San Joaquin County Superior Court granted Ware a \\'Ork furlough for \Ve d n cs d a y , Thursday. Friday and Sunday for his di recting chores. Ware·s ::ittorney. Hoss L. Sargent, said the staff of the community theater had re· quested that Ware be present at rehearsals and t w o performances. ''AJllSTOCATS" !GI ••• "Song qf th• South" !GI ·;ce4 .............. Wl•'""t "l!lllf.• AT j",(h l.)t "" Wt '1 11 l WE t frt: ~;::"; ~ ...... ·:·~¥: ~~l ••9) and Kenton , now 61. sldl lead' The rcrord 11-a._ resurrC'ctetl pc;ired at th<-Hendczvous. ·1 t"-bo 1-••·cnl ofl lo ti t"l"l' is ht!lc doubt that there L . 1Jt.:: ys w •v ard n·lc<!sed la!>t spring: h\ \\ar and the girls \\ho 1\·aited J rc nl;iny people around \\'ho remember those sound s of lhc ('11o;11ir1· \\"odd. a inad ordt·r rt•rnf'n1her that S\\'inging sum- su 1n1ner in Balbu:i. <· ul'p;::1~ in I.Ji~ Angf'l l's 11ndlr n1cr of !!I ll ,\\'hen \l'<lr had )Cl 1 .. By ch an cc. rl'C\lrdings the l;1U.:I ··The Forn1atl\e to <·on1e 1rere made of th e first \ t•:irs ., 1.---------------11. orchestra's bcst·lo,·cd Jlen-'fh<> oid Bf'nrlr~\"ous. \1 h1rh Ex ct u ~ 1 v f dezvous B;1ltroom songs 111 1".as !! ·srro,('d by fi re in l\166 1 1941. II 1\·asn't until son1f' 1i111e ;u1d rc;:ililccd b,v a con-1 JalC'r that l\lutual Broatl-1lJr11in1un1 building 1110 ~c:1rs casting began taking li\'C ~1gu. \r;1::; eonsiUercd by Kl·nton sho \\'S out of the Hendez\"ous1 ro ha1\· the best acoustics of and into the nation's hornes."·i---- saicl l\lrs. /\udrcy Coke. a member of Kenton 's staff. I 1'he first recordings "'ere put on an old 7R rpin record on Decca 's blue label in 1942 and nearly forgotten until th is ' ''LIQUID SPA.CE'' A SURFING ODYSSEY BY DALE DAVIS 8:00 & 10:00 fai:k Ee,ninq I MAGGIE ~MITH TIMOTHY 1o n OMS "LOVE & PAIN & THE WHOLE DAMN THING" pl11• .:ACK LEMMCU 'SAVE THE TIGER' llolh in Color ! RI Nobody did it like \l\ll\IGi\\ •.. he was the gangster's gangster. CIOrl• Lt1c~m111 2"d Feoturc--John Corrodl"• "'BOX CA R BERT HA" !RI MESA THEATRE 1 '1tll g. N•wport nu•-.. • ..... --Pllllti• Cont. Soi., Sun . l p.m. .. ' ... PLU'.> •·LFt" GUINNE S~ !>If/IO N lJARD IN '"Hlll[ll . THl LAST 10 DAYS" the most talked ..-:S:. ABOUT FILM OF OUR TIME! Ml1PGI ~~~A~?: -~~~y~ • 1NO JEAlURI ~ ... ,~ 'lN"Y'l~>mf'.11,, .. n\ '-Wi\R.;\f• ' ' 'tllJ\Ut;l" ut:I\./ c.: ~~)-TtO-C~l.l" ~ 22ND RECORD BREAKING WEEK Contl11uo111 Sundoy, 2 P·"'· ...... ,, ~1rri<i~rca1r~~I - . Htld Cv•I I lncl Wttl(! Wl rrtft O•IH -(ICtrit lNC~mlft .. OllLINOER .. I RI color "ICX CAR l l!:RTHA" /lltl Ctletr Ntw Mutl(flt Ctlf'\tf tlolm '"TOM SAWYER'" ..A -PIU~ V "WMO SAIO YOU C&lol 'T R10E A RAIN60W"' lor~ Ctletr !Cil IMI (•11 l~a"'l•G tl•lll • O'••Gl • M•h . 0•11• ••,t~IUl l l•U '~ •t• '""" Ul4!ll "TN MARii.AD EX ll:IMENT"' "EVE Tl41NG YOU WANT TO KNOW l UT ~EX" tot ~ Ctlor tR I 21111 w I New Mu.,<•I! ''T ~AW'l'Ell " "IR NEii D' T14E IND" tOJ RICHARD BENJAMIN· DYAN CAN~ON ·JAME IOAN HAC~Ell • !AMES MASON •IAN MtSHANE • IAO DURN W[LCH "PG -o 1NO TOP ATTI ACTION . ' ... ·~· ~V" .••• ,.. • • .... , ,,,.,., ~--..,.. :..v,... ... o ~ ... ·' . 2ND TOP AnRACTION A·","'•'=o-;;,,.,H-t:,;;M~A;;S:----, ~TAN O'NIAL • J&CQUlLINI ti~ "Bill Y" JACK "THE THIEF WHO CAMI TO :mll ;·~·1 ·p.'°"~~· . . . . . . •' U\I II\ t• VI Ul '1A•b01 AT -,OAlil\ f Q~TA -..f\A • 919 4141 IN THlATRl TWO TN> D'O'PK~ ~ OI lro'G•Y'' Car WOVI, ~gt\. fie GENE JIACl(J';'fAN fiic" SC/V?t:.CJWl"I. SHOWING O )t NOW . ' ' : . .. - ' . . . . . . . ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '"A'" •l•vt• ~I '"'' ~·· ···•~'""'' ................... . ... / .,,,., ... ,. ..... ., .. ,, .. , ... , ' -~··--; ' ... -.. ··1 • • • • • • • • • • . . Cl'iE~li\ tt:Sl ER HA~¥01. AT' ADAMS CO\lA t,t(SA, • 919 4141 &L\O t -'ll 1•1.11a1 0 MOW AT ~~: ~L~ou IAW WHIM 4 ·'., BOTH CINEMAS OU ll &Gf T(lLS c ... YOU H( LO'V l 5 a ra 1.·s YOU? Ur lllmann Grnr ~l'llr Edwilrd Alhrrl Rinnir R1irnrs IPGI l ND BIG FEATURE AT BOTH CINEM AS GOLOll HAWN llO'!''l'llRFLlfiS lllEE~ HECiARI i\118 FJlllll EOWARD AlBERT . I • • j • ) 3 1.1 DAJCV PILOT Thtil'Sdiy, July 26, 1JJ7J TV HIGHLIGHTS CBS B 9:00 -"1'he Moon Is lllue." This com· edy, considered ''risque" in 1953. features \Villiam Holden, Maggie ~JcNam:ira 3nd David Niven in a romantic triangle. NBC Q 10:00 -Dean ~1artin Presents titusic Country. TIJe 1>re1nicre of a new su111n1er musical series fro m the Nashville area . 1'onighf Johnny Cash and June Carter headline the show. ABC 0 10:00 -St reets of Saft f'rancisco. ~:d ­ , ward Mulhare and Steph:u1ie Powers are guest stars in Ulis episode about a n1iddle-aged n1an frying lo ' kill a beauliful young girl who has reje<-·tcd hin1. TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JULY 26 1:e11 iJ o o mm ail m , ... rn®i Jilt•1n 0 I0111n11 (Ol Courhlllp ., Eddl1'1 r1t11" 0 \Jta11ttd Ot1~ Of Alltt m Tllf fllltbtonts &J Stir Trek El.I Los Ttrus £:1 Htd11Ptd11 ltdat gJTllrH ...... 1:30 (I} •111'1 N11ttt 0 Mtwlt: (C) (90) "fllipt SIMS" (sus11J '10 -Jtm!S fnllciscus, lte G11nt Leslie Nitlsen. TISNI SlerHni. Amlltw Ptillf, ScaH Mt/· .... (Ii CIS Hen Witter Cr11.n•i!t 0 Hive C:111 Will Trt'ttl (19) Mtrw 'rilfi• Show m Aldr Crirlt~ EI) s.t Y11111 Tinf Ytt m llwln1 c.,, Ciii) Nottlt &I Ot1trt Tll11t11 ff) Llttlt R11t1l1 1:00 a mo m•m e lewll111 lot Dolllts (t) Movie: (2111) "Ll1llt1 or lbt Fttld" {com) '63--Sidney Poitier, Lila Sk111, Sllnley Adams. (I:] Wlldlilt The1tr1 0 '#Mf1 My Utltt m I loft L•cy ID I Drtt lll "Jttl!M fl) Si11pllmttltt Marit (ID A«* Qka" "M111vil11" (II) IE llh1MU al)T•ltrisb M•lkll m ""' R.K:tr (2br) "Tiit Mto11 II II~,. {RI (com) 'SJ-Wilham Holden, MtR81t M'1~amar•. D1v1d Ni'""· Tom Tully, Diwn Addlims. o\ young lidy, trmrd "'1\h candor and 1ood iens1, set~ out to nutwit ind bewilder a yo11n1 min -abollf · town bache!Of whn doPsn't brlievt 1n Uie insli1ution of m1rri1gt . 0 [Q) m lronsid1 "The Best laid P!1ns'' (RI Cll1d Ironside, wh111 v1s1ting hfs ba11k manaiei on prr· $0ll~I b11sines.s, is uughl in !he middle ol 1 robbery. (4) Run 111 ftur Ufc 0 CIJ tiD Kun1 r~ "Tiit Stone'' (RJ /JI 1 Western lawn lllJI seems In hive 1on1 mad w1lh violent• and Intrigue. Caint rectlves an un· usual offtl lrom tllree Innocent lool!inr child11n-ttley w1n1 ID PilJ him S4.08 to kilt someone lo1 them. fl) His1oriu di M11111 r j111p1 al U Show de Alej1ndr1 Suatrr 9:30 Q Newt ifl MucllKhl ltalian1 ai.)Cemedy 10:00 0 rfcl\ ID De1n M1rtin Presents: Music Country lhe premiere of 1 new summer music se11es from 111 ind around the Nash~1lle. Tennessea area. Johnny Cash 111d June C~r!er star toni1hl~ ruture 5b11 will in· elude Iha f!IJI n1mes in Ille ()11111- try & Western field. Ste Cove1 Clo!e·UP S!Oly, OIDIDNtws (ii T•triaht ZDllt 0 (]) GJ Sttaeb crl Sin f1111cist:t ''Tawer Beyond Tra11edy'' (R) A mid· cll•aztd man with 1 h1n11·up abnut IRt is sourht b, Mike and Slew lo prevent his ).illinr 1 beaulilul youn1 fir! who has rejected him. Eclw11d Mulh1r1 ind Stdanie Pow- ers rutst. Q McMt: (C) (2h') "[wt" (drt) 7:lO IJlHlll Dr. Kild1rt "By Thl5 'U--Ce!este Y1rnel\, Rober1 Walker • Si&n" (R) KHd11e incl Gil1"11i1 treat Jr .. frtd f.juk. f )'OUAI 1irl tor s\1Rmatt-hlttdln1 a!) M•sicil or lh• palms and tonhe1d-lhat his eonlound1d doctors ind priuts 10:30 O Ta* lie• for• thoUNnd ye1rs. ("61 One Step le10"' Cl) ..... .,. .... ,... ) . 0 '{M .W..1ttutt1 "LM Nw1~ Ql T1111 Advtlt~ri M•1td1" (R) A 1i1! who 011c1 wilk«I EE Vid11 en ConHictt out 1111 Gene 8t1dley rt·t nt1ni l!ls €E AcOlllptll.lme tile. m News/Spof1l 0 Help Thy Jkifllbor CJ) jllolic• Su111011 0 MilU111 $ M"it: (C) (Zh1) "0111· tt111n Dl)'t tf llow• Jonts" (wts) ·66-Robllrt lfornln,. Oi1nl Baier. 11:00 o o om mm,.., (I; (j] (@il £i) Ne•s s.r Mineo. (l"ij) left ...... Dell mtut C1r1 m °'•cntt 0 One St1p lfJ'lllld (6) f'erry Muo11 ID Trvtl! tf CtnSl-Utnces m Movie; NOutslclt tht Lal•r'' (dfl) '5&-Ray Danton, Lfirh Snowden. Grant Williams. Cl)Rltfffn' 11 :15€I)~e1111l4 EE TM Adcl11nt f ••llJ 11:30 tJ (J) CIS lalt MovH: (C) "Tfltr 1;00 0 ())TM Wattom (R) When Cody Raft for Tlleir Litts" (adv) '65 - Nilson (Edua1d F1a111), Olivit's John P1yn1, L111n1 P1t1en. blshlul 111'1Cle, comes ID vis ii, !he Q @) En JollnnJ C1rso1 Jetry W1l~ns aet l'lim • d1t1 with diWf· Lewis is rum )lost. ctl Cord1li1 Hunnicut (D1nna Hen· O Mollie: "Tht Creal }eue J1mu x n). R1id"' (wes) '5( -Willard P11ker, 0 t1I 6D The Htlln RtddJ Show lom Neal. H1!en's i!l•Sls art G10111 Steinem, O (j) Jack f'111 T011i2ht lht Modern Jau Qu1rtel tnd B.a. m fe1tiv1I of Classics: "Twtl~t Kint:. O'Clock Hit h" (dra) '5Q-G1e1ory O Mowlt: (2hr) "Stwn Thiev11" Pee~. Oean Jau;er, Gall Merrill, (mys) '60 -[dward G. Robinson, Rdd St1la1r, Eli Wallach. 12:00 00 M1111!1I Oiiton 0 (}) GJ Mod Squad "Scion of 0 Movie: (C) "HOlltymoon Hold" D1~th" (R) P1te and li11t ~ave {tom) '64 -Rober! Morse, Robert l{ouble on 1 ~idnappinr lhey w11. Goulet, Naocy II.win. Jill St. John. ness when tht ~H:tim's father re· J:OO @ O O (J1 Ntwt lusts In 11port the 1bduction. Oon Porter, Julit Ad1ms. Richard Ro·11. 0 Hi1h•»J Patrol 1er ind Rois Elliott 1ue1t m Ko11R'1 H11on Lag u 1aa l ss1res f:ast Call Original Drama ,Closing Jola11,11y's l'ountrv n1uslt star .rohnn\' Cash takes a flock of ucighbOr children on a jeep rid(' on hi s spr:iwliug 'J'c1111c.sscc ranl'h toni gh1 on the prc1nierc of his new show. "l)ean h•l:!rlin l1resents J\l usic ('ountry" a! 10 n'c·luck on ~'p,r·. l'hanncl 4. The latest in a series of \1•orld premieres from South Coust fl epcr t ory, the fJSychologica l drama "Adrit:n· ne's Summ er," comes to a <:lose 1his week with finnl performances s c h e d u l c d 1011/ghl lhrough Sulurday. It spotlights a young actress "'ho n~'Cently graduated from UC Irvine and makes her SCH debut In the li!le role. Elizabeth •1erbcrt identifies slrongly M•ith the role of AdrieMe. a woman \\'ho, in h c r words, ··v.·ants to be nwre than a <t<.'COralion in her hu s· band's life. She wants to \)C taken ser· iously, to 00 looked on as " p erson H11••E•T v.•lth opinion and values thnt ;ire he r own. She wants her ov.·n identity, and so do I." f\.·liss 1-!erbcrt observes that rbc rehearsal period, with pln,V\\•right \Villiant Lang in ;ittendancc. was instrumental 1n clarif) ing the issues of the Tl1ey're Gani e f 01· TV Sl1ows 1ll a 11'.\· l 'o1ttesta 1tls Ccilled; F etv Chose n Uy JERRY nUCK LOS A~GEL£S iAP1 -The t·:1,.1ing calls arc for people who <i re pcr'illnnhlr. nllr:'lclive ;uul quick-wil1l•d. 1'huusa111!" nr nc uplr show un f(H' !Ii(• ;1ucli tinn~. hut nnll' ;1 hn11 rl f11l !II'!' selrt·tctl. A ·,,,,~, d1lt:t:(•d incli\'idu;ils k l' c p rt1t11rning d:i,1· tif!< .... d:iy hoping /or ,1 bre<1k. ha\'t' that. 11 usuall\' nu':in.~ lhl'v 'r:o ;Jlfrac!ivt> ilnd lp·fght. You <";\n lf'll if son1ebody ha s sc·11t"1!1ing on !he b:'lll. \Ve \l'an! a cross-section lhHI peo. pl<• :it ho1nc ctin 1drntify 11i!h." Of the sho\vs A I 1 ~ i daytime sho\\'S. "Gambit " and "Baffle" each give a\\':lY $10.000 to $15.000 a week. A few contestants come on 10 win prizes for. a fa vorite ellarity. Aft~r the show, other enntcstants often don a t e u111\'antcd prizrs to charitv. :u1tl a nurnber get together t-0 sw.:ip prizes. Intermission Tom Titus play. "I was pleased to be able to rontribute my feelings and ideas to the final product.'' .she Sfl)'S. "Adrienne's Summer'' "'ill be performed in its final three days at 8 o'clock in the repertory company's Third Step Theater, 1827 NeY.'pDrt Blvd., Costa l\lesa. Reserva- tions 646-1363. ALSO CLOSING a brief engagement is th e 1'~ountain Valley Community Theater production of "Peter Pan," \vhich gives its ·r i 11 s l performances Friday through Sunda y. Jay Conklin Is direc- ting the musical fantasy. Joe Strauss and David Lane Slie Si11gs For Suit In Cour t PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A ZS.year-old soprano s a n g selections from Handel nnd Puccini as part of her testimony in U.S. District Court here. nre double cast in tile title rolr with Johanna Anderson :ind Sh~ron Kennedy sharing the 1:K.trl of \Vcndy and Chnrles O'Connor as the evil Captain Hook. Performan<.-e lin1c:; :irt' 7:30 Fridav. 2:30 and 7:30 Saturday iind 2:30 Sw1duy afternoon at the theater. 18200 l\1l. Baldy Circle, Fountain Valley. RESU~flNG TONIGllT al the San Clemente Con1n1unitv Theater is Thonlton \Vilder's comedy "The l\1.'.ltclnnaker" with Richard Andersen at th e directorial helm. Jan Gordon and Stanley Weissberg have the principal roles in the large-cast show. Also featured arc Peter Case, Joan Burt. Cu rt \Vellman. Ann Keenan. ~lark Razor. Carol Gustafson and Kip Conner. Curtain is 8:30 at the Cabril !o Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cab r i 11 o . San Clemente, tonight t h r o u g h Saturday. Reser v a Ii on s 492-0465. ANOTHER SHO\\' for the younger set is ' ' T J1 e Emperor's Ne"' Clothes," entering its second of three lveekcods at the llunti nglon Beach Playhouse. S!uarl Ell iot is directing the production. A large cilsl of children. 1nany the offsprin:,: 0 r pla.vhousc ~ctors anti ;1c- tresses, is included in the sh<1w, which is staged Fridays at 7:30 and s.,tutlay 'l_fternoons at 2 o·clock at the playhouse. lead to lht. liaguna ~loulton Playhouse Sunday s rtemoon when the t~al£r holds open reod1ngs tor itf" leadoff play, "Ah, Wilderness," and also suu·1.~ a brand new casting file for fu tW'e reference. \VOOthcr you're read1ng for ''Wiiderness" or not, manag· inS' director Hap Graham \vould like to see your face on the business end of a Polsriod ca1ncrp Sunday, beginning at I p .111. tuest directors for the next three shows -Jan 1\r1•nn, Alex Koba and J\lartt:ella Randall -will be on haud to check out the l<tlent. Call the playhouse al 4g.t.(17.f3 for further details. CA LLBOARt -The San Clen1ente Community Theater \\•ill hold auditions for iL., seas on opener, ''The Gingerbread Lad y," h1onday and Tuesd:iy at 8 p.m. Too y Brandt v.•ill direct the Neil Simon seriocornedy. A cast of three men and three v.·on1cn is required for Sin1on's story of an alcoholic entertainer trying to set her life in order. The shol\' opens · Sept. 20 for three weekends at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Ca b r i 11 o, San Clemente. . * BACKSTAGE 1'1 i k e Van Landingham. a Costa J\l~san "'ho recently took a degree in drama from UC Irvine. is now teaching: al Cer- ritos College and ~·ill direcl the coll ege's production of "Gu}·s and Dolls," opening Aug. 3 . . among the cast 1ne.inbers are several local students Rick J\taher, Sharon Cr=ibtree an d Gretchen Van RyJ>Cr 1who play Sky , S!i rah ;;nd AdelAide. respec- tively ), l·larriet Garfinkle and il s s i st a 11 t choreographer Cynthia Nakamura f rom ucr ... \\'h•1i role nrc the y looking fur':' C:on!cst;iuts for the 14 nrf1\'0rl, ga1nc sho1rs . This mny be the onr area ol i;huw hu~!ncss 11·herc knO\\ in~ son1ebndv is 1110•·1• ol 11 han- chctiu th~n :i bcncril. Influence dursu't rount. Evcrv n1cn1ber or the sludio at1dierice has an t'qttal chance !() becon1e a con· tc,;tant . accordi ng to Art Alisi. \1•ho's in charge or sclcclini:: rhr ronte<;l.'.ln'<; for !he !hrce JI ca I t c 1· -C,111i!!lc1 ::.ho11·s. .. Holl v11·nnd Squan•s" a n d "ll:ifflr .. on NliC and "G:Jtn· hil" 011 CBS. reprt•scnts. "(;;11nbit" is prob- :ib!y the easiest to get on. It uses only ni:irried couples <ind runs through about 24 con- !cslants a v.·cek. "llollyv.·oocl Squares" uses ::ihout 10 people a \VCCk re.!' its d;1\'time \'crsio11 :ind four fnr the nightli1nc s~·ndicatcd shows. "IT'S A~tAZJNG the things J>f'Ople want." A!isi said. "Thl'v go absolutely crazy 01 er r1:iint. \\le give :nvay a lot oJ paint." In lhe 1950s. quiz shov.·s ac- quLrcd a reputat ion fo r chealing. and lhc nel\vorks :ind the government cracked do\vn. Opera singer Phyllis Bryn Julson Sut herland pcrforrne<l Tu esday for Judge Clarence r\C\\·romer during a hearing on her suit against Auch Inter. Borough Transit Con1pany. l\frs. Sutherland of Belhesda, ~Id.. is claiming: dainagcs in excess of $500.000 for knee and hip injuries she suffered in 1968 when the chartered bus she was travel- Beach. Reservations 536-4446. 2110 Main St.. lluntington 1 .. ,Q:I!Q;~ \* "' AU.. ROADS for local co111-I n1unity theater actors \\·ill "Baffle'" is rougher 10 get un. 1\Jot only does it use fe11·cr contes tants -six to eight a \\'eek -but ii is bnscd on lhe game of blackjack arKI is hard to learn. Contestants must go through practicr s es s'i on s lx•frirl? going on 1he an'. Alisi said that. to insure the hOllPSIV of the shO\\'S, the C1ln- festanrs a re shepherded around and kept as isolated as R cour!room jury. They mus! 11·car bridges and swea.r that they arc telling the 1ru th about thc1nse lves. ing in v.•as involved in an ac-m cid ent in suburban Conshohocken. TI1e injuries rendeted her "unable to endure the variou:; MANN THEATRES "1':\1Ell\'Ol\1E j!CIS an :ip- plication :ind is inter' i~wctl." s;iid A!isi. ··r.lnst rif our in· 1cr\·ic11·crs nre people studying to IJj• 1~rforrncrs: ;ind if lhf'V fee! so1nN111e has potcn\i.:il. he u1· i;he is aut11riont~d. "\\'t' ll)ok f11r· pco plr with 1.1uf;,:oi11q rei·sonalitic:;. ff they ALJSI. a rorr11 cr al'!or 1vho gt.lt into the gan1c sho1v business 111 1963. says. "!\1ost people' 1\'ant !he money and the prizes. but some jus~ \l'anl Ida ~fat• !11cKenzie. a to be on for the fun of it. The character actress. acts RS den funn.v !h ing is. those 1vho ilre n1olher lo !he con!estants. on for the fun nr it M'in the They arc escorted to lunch 1 n1i~t prizes because th ey're and kepi ;J1vay from the stars l'l'lax"rl." 11·hn nlso n pp ca r on llo!l )l\\'IHX! Sc1uares .. g11·1•s "/-lollvwood Squares",, and av.·a.1· :1bnut $10.000 on the "Baff1e." One woman con· nightti1nc sho\v ilnd less 1111 !he !('slant couldn't r~st running 1 1:\'~•r to spPak to Edie Ad<tms a11tl 11·:is disq u:ilifled. "THIS IS CINERA MA" "SOUND OF MUSIC" 11 "FORTY CARATS" ·~ physical trials necessary 10 give grilnd op era performances," she claiin s. She says she is unable to stand throughout an entire oper.'.l. ~·Trs. §.uthcrland s tood behind her husband George, 1rho accompanied her on a b.<!by grand piano that h:id- bce n 1no1·ed into t h c courtroom carlirr Tuesday. •1cr attorne~·: J a1nes E. Beasley, said the perfonnance was to est:ihlish his clit.'nt's l singing ability. -----· "DOLLARS" !RI 7:00 a11d 10;20 .AJ10 "FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" ... 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES" (R ) "LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL" ••• "EVIL KNIEVEL" (f'GI I I "' CONCITl0~£D "l~OTHfR OF THE WtND" -8:50 Ccill Thtto"-" for '1111doy Scl!ed•le LONG BEACH ARENA THURS.AUG.9THRU SUN.AUG.12 270 SEASIDE BL\'D .. LONG BEACH 90802 I AOJACCff T ,ARM!~ AIR ADIAC£NT All THEATIES COOliO &Y RifllGilAllON ,..-NOW PLAYIN G RES ERVED SEATS On Sale UO 'Iii !,JO Fri .. Sill .. Sun. Hooit MARlON BRANDO .itL tj>ilis I X '"'C•l<•'-' I lt->!ll U IJn•ICci ~rll~1~ \ •'ON IHRU IHUR;. 8 P.M. / fRIOAY l ! 9,45 I SllUROAI 1-l ! 91' • SUNOIY 1-5 I 8 11 ...... d~ ~ .. ~ ... , •I I'"'"" ~I S1S.lS?6 l...C• ........ ....... Rn•n 111·•070 ONl' OllYI lfrl '*IWINGI DAY 0' JH[ JACKAl [l'G) • Wltl(I N nM4• I <AIOl l \llNIT'I PETE 'N' Tllllf: r"G! '" s • ., O•oto• '"" •• ••oo•hvnt 1Se / 961·1~11 •TAN I lllUM ctMAI PA,EI MOON !Ml .+CHINESE CONNECTIOM1•1 H.,H..lvol. I '1P•O .. <I ~-.... n '1)1-1111 (!) 80•!111 fr0/11 tht Olympit EE La Sl•or1 Joof•~ al W1ttr111t He1rin11 (4 lo 6 llrs) J:lO m Movie: "Wolttt tf !ht Deep'" tldv) '60 -Massimo G1rott1. l:4S e Mf'fit: "I livt i~ GrDSYlllDf $411111" (dr1J-Re:c HarriSOll, Anna Nettle. __ "'""~ ANAHEIM "'""' ... _,"·,.·. --.--·.,,,·._ .. · .... --11'!"'--... I ~ M~N. A~~~~~~JR~NIJ~~A~~~I~R &00 W. KATELLA AVE., ANAHEIM 9280? II) Supe1 Sllow ES a Sllow dtl Mon1tnt1 (i)Mnit l:JO m Merr lirttllfl Sllow Q'i)Dr11111 t :OO 0 (()CBS TI1111M1J Friday M~lt: (C) DAYTIME MOVIES t :lO CJ) "lilt Mlrtclt" (d11) '5~1f· roll B1k11, Ro11r Mooie. 0 (C) "Ath•~•" (mu1) '~Jant Powllt, Edmund Purdom, 0.b!>it R11nold1, Vic Damone. 10:00 D "TIM t..Nr'• F11111 a.11111t_.- 1tc1w) '39-f:lltn Onw, GMrfJI Rall. 1L1'IO 0 "kw'"'"" (~l '40-J 2:45 m All--Ni&llt Show: (CJ "'Tht 110111 .. strdtk, .. "The V1111plfl'1 lillost" J:10 O MO'tlt: "Tht Sft11t Man" (dr1) '58-Jol!n Lodtr, M1r5h1tl TMmp· "" Cooper, Bett1 field. "81!11 ol 1111 j Nirtttils" (com) '3'-M11 West. 1:00 m "le Plt1w 1 Udy" (drt) '50 -Clar~ Gable, B1rb111 Sl1rtWYcil. 1:30 O "Al W1r W'rth ttie Atmr'' (corn) '51-Dean M11tin. Jury ltwlt. l:OO CJ) "S~tlm1rln1 Comm1t'ld" (llri) '!it-Wilham Kolden, NtllCY Olson. @l "Att On•" Cond. Ntmt ol the .... 3:30 O "Annou1ed Attac~" (drl) '64- 0ana Andrews, Mne B1llt1 4:00 O "Yoll'f1 /ft tM N•YJ Now" (com) ·~1-CarJ Coope1, ldd11 Albtrt, let ...... I KOCE, C111NNEL 5' Orange County'!!: UJIF lelevisioo station. KOCE-TV. has 1cheduled the fol!Q.wlng specia l progrruns today. Detr11lt:.od list ings of ctw\nc1 50's programs are carried in the Daily Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. -- • II'." · 1 • ';Tl "" -'[ i i\1' I '' tn •· ··•-1 , .•• ,_. NEW! UNIQUE! UNPAllAUELID/ All SEATS RESERVED $3 · $4 • $5 • $6 L.QNG IUCH AllNA Thurs. Au1. 9 t~ru Su~ !bf. 12 Thats... ,, .. , ... 8100f>'I r1i ............. JOO & B:OOftM Sii. ·>J 11-00.AM 3-00l8·00PM Sun I DO & 5-00PM SAY[ $1,00 ON KIDS UNDER 12 EXCEPT SAT. l SUit TICKETS ON SALE LONG BEACH ARENA, TICK£TRON, MUllJAl lo LIBERTY AG£NCIES. TO D•Dll IY MA/l1 ~EHIJ snr. AODRESSED, STAMPED £NV£l0P( WllH CH£CI( Oii MOHEY ORDER. PAYABL( 10 RIHGU NG BROS. CIR· CUS, MAIL TO ARENA OESIR£0. ANAHEIM CONY. Cll!IQ Mott. En. A11. 1 J tW1 T111. Aa1. 21 l/c;n • • • •• , , , •..•.••• 8.00PM 11.1t ........ J;()()&8100PM \'•td , ••••..• 3-00 lll·DDf'M lll<JI' , ..... 3-00 & 8.00PM Fri • .. J:OO l 8:00PM ~ , , . 11 OOAM J:OO & l :ODPM Sun, .... , ........ l iOO & 5:00PM Mon. , .. , ........ 3:00 & 8iOCIPM l11e. , ............ 3!00 & 8·00PM SAYl 11.00 ON KIDS UND!l 12 !JC£.PT rll. NIT!, SAT. & SUN. U11 your tl•"tAm11lcerd or ~••!•• Ch.111 .. HC:~[TS ON Slil( co~v. C£N1£~. ALL MUllJAL & LIBERTY ~CHCllS A·!llB.M S M"l!I BINI ·lMANo 1£Tolr --.. '""-"" o . ..i e--~-•• "SILY!R FOX" Sooth COast Plaza II J.ill fil&O r.' U lldTOI • Stt-llSt Another \l'oodstoek? Rock Fans Flock To Watkins Glen WATKINS GLEN, N , Y , (AP) -Joe Conley will take in the chaise loW1ges in fronl of hls motel this \l.'Cekend , but will leave the American fla g flying, There is going to be n rock concert in this town of 3.000 people, probably the biggest since 1969 when more than 400,000 people assembled at Woodstock, N.Y.. and an estimated 300.000 gathered at Altamont in California. "People in this c:o1nn1unity are willing to put up \\'ith nearly anything, but they i,•:ant it orderly," said Mayor Bill Simiele. "We are sweating this one out. We don't want to becoi1ne known as another Woodstock ." THE COl\'CERT will be held Saturday at the \Vatkins Glen Grand Prix race course, an automobile track a few miles outside of tovtn. Three bands -1he Grateful Dead, the Allman Brothers and the Band -are scheduled to appear at the 12-hour con- cert that begins at noon Satur- day. The concert promoters say ticket sales will stop at 150,000. State police will stop people without tickets 20 miles down the road. But Sheriff Maurice Dean expects at least 200,000 people in the area. "Everyone in town is a little apprehensive," Deah said. "At the same time.the local people are a11 talking to me about how to get tickets for their kids." Races at lhe track have often attracted more th8n 100,000 people. It's a scene people in Watkins Glen have learned to cope wiih. 40'THIS IS different." said Simiele. "It 's somelhing new and nobody knows what to ex- pect. It's an unknov;n . Everybody is deeply con- cerned. but nobody is talking rnuch about ii " Conley, thr rno11·l ow ne r. spent Tuesday collt·ctin11 the signatures of 37 businessmen on a petition sent to Gov . Nelson A. Rockefeller. Since the stale has granted the permit for the concert, said the pt'tition. "the un- dersigned businessn1en and taxpayers do solen1 nly and respectively request that our property and v.•e l\ being be preser\'ed and protected ." "Th e petition speaks for itself.., said Conley. ''But I'll tell you this. I don't expect all those kids to go to sleep Satur- day night \\'hen th at conce rt is over." i\ vanguard of sever! hun- dred pt'ople "''ith back packs and sleeping bags has arrived in to\11n. Barefoot. cut-off jeans. long hair , it's a sight that so rn e residents find disturbing. NO!l~IA ROGERS now sleeps at night in the food stand she manages since some- one broke in and cooked ham- burge rs on the grill. "If it gets too bad. I'll just close up," she said. "The prob· lcm is not the people , it's the number of peopl e.·· The town is nestled on the shore of Seneca Lake and tourism is major business. Siemiele runs Capt. Bill's Boat Rides on the lake. "I can't understand wh at good it is going to do for the tO"'n," said Sin1ielc. "It is going to kill our regular tourist business. \\le gain nothing fron1 it. It could ruin us." But Simiele is hopeful. "~1onday morning we will just sweep th e streets and go on, J hope,'' he said. Writer Joins His Pla y On Vacation Fron1 Jail STOCKTON (AP) -At the South Stockton Community Theater, the show must go on -even if the play's author has to get out or jail to direct it. Tommy Lee Ware, serving a 12-month sentence for armed robbery, has been granted four days of freedom so he can direct the theater's pro- duction of "Brothers," a play he wrote while behind bars. 416 N. lroadwa-,. ~an'a Ana 542-4737 Ad11lt1 Onlr HELD OVERI "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" !XI Mick Jat9•r "PERFORMANCE" Judge John B. Cechini of the San Joaquin County Superior Court granted \Vare a \\'Ork furl ough for \Ve d n es d a y . Thursday. frid<1 y and Sunday for his directing chores. Ware's attornev. Ross L. Sargent. said the· staff of the community theater had re· quested that Ware be present at rehearsals and t w o performances. ••• "Song af tlle Souttl" fGJ ' THIS WAS WHERE IT ALL STARTED FOR BANDLEADER STAN KENTON Balboa's Rendeivous Ballroom Helped Americans Forget About War Me1nories of Balboa Kenton's R en<lezvous Records R evivetl By \\ll LLIA~1 5t:HR EIBER 01 Ille Dilly Pll~! ~lltt any hull in its day. !·le made f\\'O ot her albums there, in An1ericans v.·cre peacefully 1957 and 1958. si tt ing back \\'a tching the A'cordi ng to ~1rs. Coke . \\'orld go up in the fla mes of 1nos1 of the music on the rt'- \1·ar \vhen Stan Kenton's first rr!tasl'1'.I al bum is onc~f-a- band set fL'<'I a-tapping in kind unless sonic old ('O pie s of Balboa's old n e nd e z v o us the t:>rcca <i lbun1 are still Ballroom . around II v.·as the balmy su 1n1ner of ~!rs. Coke said that although 1941 -still months :nray from there are some transcriptions the surprise atlack th a t and single song recordings of launched America against the the first Kenton orchestra in Axis -when Kenton and his some private collections. "The Artistry in Rhythm or,·hestra F'orn1<1tive Years" consists of \\'oocd the d<tnci ng crO\\'d~ the very first K en ton dov.·n at the beach. rt·eord ings at the ballroom. The 11cndezvous sunimt•r I! was these f i rs t with his 14-piece ensetnblc rt"tordi ngs. she said. th<1t y:on marked Kenton's emergence Kenton·s new orchestra its into the \\'orld of big band first nation\lo•ide tour climaxed music. !·!is sounds that ye<1r in .Janu;i ry of 1942 with a week included "Gambler's Bh1cs." RECORDS REVIVED at the o!d Hoscland Ballroom "Taboo '' and "This Love of Stan Kenton in Nc\v York City. ft1ine." Thou uh Ne"''!Xlrt ~each v.·as Though the Stan Kenton lin!1· n1orc than a small resort orchestra is still going st rong ~enr. sht' sc;irl. lfll\11 \1ht•n Kenton first ap- and Kenton. now 61. still leads Tiic record \l':lS rcsurrctterl IX'ared al !he Hendczvous, · •-bo ho t Ir I r!-i•rt· is hnle doubt that there 1l. Inc ys w "''en o o ;u·d rl·le~sed ],1st s;1ring 1)1 "ar and the gi rls v.·ho \1·a itt•d arc n1<1n\' pt.'Qple around \\'ho rcm{'mber those sounds of the Cn•;1t111• \\"arid, a inail ordt•r ren1cn1bt:r that sv.·inging sum· summer in Balb"a. ,. )1 r pa:1~ 1n U1-. Angelt'S undtr rnt·r of I!'~\ \\'hen \1·a r had ~el l "By ch a n cc, recording., the !nix-I "The Forniatne to ron1e _ ~ _ 1rcrc 1nade or the fir~! \ t•:ir":· )1 .. ---...;;.. ____ .;._;;;: orchestra's best-loved !{en-The oi~l Ht•ncl('7.\'0ll". 11hich r: .'( c Lu ir; Iv 1 dezvous Ballroom soni;:<> 111 11;1<; di•<;!l'O' t•d b~· fire in Hl66 \ l!MI. It \\"asn't unti l sonl<' ti ml' ;ind re;:ilaeed Uy ;:r eon- latcr tl;lal l\1utual l:lroad-drir11iniun1 building l\\"11 years casting_,, began ta king-li\'C :ign, \\'11S ronsidl'red by Kt•nton shows out or the ll rndez\·ou'q 10 have 1hc best acoustics of nnd into the nation's horncs.''],--- said l\lrs. 1\Udrcy COkl'. a member or f\cnton's Staff. The fir~t recordings \\'ere put on an old i 8 rpm record on Decca·s blue label in 1942 and nearly forgotten un til th is ~~~'Eimr ''LIQUID SPACE'' A SURFING ODY~SEY BY DALE DAVIS 8:00 & 10:00 Eoch fcvMinq MAGGI£ ~MITH TIMOTHY BOTTOMS "LOVE & PAIN & THE WHOLE DAMN TH IN G" plus .:ACK LIMM CI~ 'S AVE THE TIGER' Soth in Color !RI Nobody did it like \l\ll\l&tl ... he was the gangster's gangster, 2nd tta1urc--John Carrodlne "B0X CAR llRTHA" I RI MESA THEATRE n&11 •IA.6.I. • ...... -PllllCJ ... lhur~day July 2b l'>7l DAILY PILOT 3J Briglat Netv Serie11 'Adam's Rib ' for TV Uy JElutY UUCK !.<JS Al'-iGF.LES 1AP 1 Re111ember tlM>Se grcnt scrt'i.'n couples? William Powell and ~1 yrnR Loy. Humphrey BoR:i rt :u1d Lauren Bnral! Spt>nt 1·r Traey and K11th11rine llepburn Th('re ha1'1•111 bcfn 111:1ny like that 1n 1,•h•\'L.:Sion . but l Sll).!Rt':s.t ~l)U ll!Jll' d01\I\ 1ll t' tlitrll<'S of l\t'n llO"-'Rfd n11d Ul)the \)annrr lwo Tor1v Aw a rd ·w i nnrr s fro111 Rroad"·Ry. Th··~ v.•Hl Sl.'.lf 1h1~ fall as th1· hat1!111i;: legal couvle 111 :u1 1\BC SC'ri1•s hiiSt'd on 1he Tr<tt'y-llephurn 19~9 hit fihn· ··1\dani's H1h ·· l'roduc1'rs h,l\ e been tr) 1111-( lo i;ct thl'n1 tog1•thrr for y<'11rs !'he 11h1yt"d thl.' v.·1fe to hl!'i Thon1:ts .!rffl'rson 1n th1• musical .. 1i76.'' but t~y v.cre in diffcrC'll1 !>ccnC>S. •·\\'e kl'cp l"Orn!ng uµ for th ings bu t un1d no1\' v.·c nt•\"1•r seem to ha \'c go t t ,. n together," said II o 1"' a r rt , hundsomc, blond and 6-foo t-6. 1vrnt·v nnd shr L~ a IJ11 YlT 111 prl\ JI(' pr:11'IH't' Al!h111oih 1t " b.1~1'<1 nn th•· ~h ;~t f1h11. it's 11101•· ilf ,1 <·.1-.;1• of Broad\\,ty t•11n11n<.1 111 !h• !tlb<· BC':!!lcil'S lhl· 'J'l)n~ 11111 111111; 11011.:ird 1 "("hdd'.; !'l.11" ;ind Da nn er 1··Bullt'1fl1, ... \11• ~'rt"<•"i. the pl'fHt11l'1': 1, 11111 Tuny-~·inn inj; dirl't·lur 11f .. 1776." l'ctt•r II 1111:11 !Iv 1l1n'L"l<'<I lh<> 11ilot frorn .i script by 1ht Tony-11111111111· 11 ntt•r of ·· 17i6," l'f'h·r :o;1on1• llO"'AHD SA IO, · l'11•h1h!I at Ofll' poi nt I lookNI dv11 II Ull 1t·IC'11sion. but thl.' 11101 t' I hcc;unr 1nvoh•f'd 111 !1!111 1h,· l.11..•Ht·r it looked J rh:n~ th1·r·· :1rt· n1or1· OPf'Hl1'run111 •'" ll'lcl'\Sion.·· '" llo\1·ard. :.'!'!. n1.ir·1••d In :u·- lrcss l.ou1s1• Sort'! 1111· !>On of :t 1..;C 1\' \'01j.. Slott!1111k,·r 111ad1· lus Broad11:1\ dl'hul 1 11 ··f'ronH!>t's 1'1 111111~"~· · 1!1· said, "I chd 11 I.lunch llt·for1'. I st11rted p 1• 1· f ur rn 1 11 g ;1\ ,\1nhLTSI CoHt•).:1' ;111d tht·11 11·rnt to tht• \·all· ]Jr ani;t 'l'hi•! You Love ~le. Junie \!.11.111 oppoSlll' l~iu. fttinnelll. ll•· .d:.u appeared in "Such f ,tJOd Fru·nds" ond ri'rr<·nt(.od h1:s role of Tho1n;1s J1'ff1•rso11 u1 thl.' flhn version of "1776. ·· ·\l'TE!t A gu1·.--t role Js )uun~ S.1111u('J l'll'rllt·ns 1)11 'J(l~11.1nL;• ·last l t'i11. 110111\ril "''111 111 \\"1lt1arnS1u11n, "l<.1.!>S. IL 10•1/t',LI Ill rt ,..;IO(k µr u- d1;1 • 1.i1 uf "Onl't' In a l.:J 'dllt• .. I kno\\ th1~ soun<ls like n 1111·~' rt•lt•ase, hut rn1 brotht•r J ~1n.1!d t'ame to 1 1~il n11• and 11111· nii;:ht ~·e ~01 some ~r ;u1d s~t do"·n 10 watch · \dJnfs R1h" on h·lr\Lsion.'' h1· said ... Tv.·o da1·s latrr Peter Jlunt st·nt inc 1h~ ~er1pt for '.\d;un·s llth ·. .. Blvtht• iUld r \\ .lli"hrd It a~;1111.latt•r to grt lht· -;p1r11 of tht· 111n\'i\'. I do11 ·1 11nnt to s1x·.1k for lllytla· but I think ll!'pburn 1~ her fa\ort!(' ac- tr1·ss nud 'l'r.icy 1s e1•rtainly 111 llll'. "A L(lT OF 1nusic v.·as \\'rit-School. I \1·:1s 111 stock (or h•n for us for a stage \'Cr~1on thrt'l' st';1~nns. · "I don 'r do 11 111u1·h any rnore bct.Hl:it' !"in 111orc surl' of tn)'St'lf but I ust..J to in1- :igu1c ho11 a p:1rt1culur actor \1·ould h;111tlll' .1 scene. Trnt'Y v.·as usuallv th1· onr· bN::aust· he "·as siniple and direct." of ·~tr. Sn1ith Goes To On 01wning nig!1t of ··tii6" \\':ishing ton.' but ii \\.as OHo P r 1· 111 i n i:: c r l'<Ull" never prod uced ," he said. Thl' b;1t'kslagc and offered hi111 tus n1usic "·as later incorporah.-d first n1ovic role, in "Tell ,\!e into "Scesa~'," v.·hich starrL"<1 1j-i---------;;;--........ ..O ............................... , llO\'"ard. lie bea rs such a st riking resemblance to !\;cw 'i'ork ~l ayor John V. Lindsay that one night the mayor np. peare<l in Ho\.rard"s role In !ht' ~ Jbuth Coast Repertory M'l'STCll'I! ORI.Ml.I EJtCITEMEll!Tt "ADRIENNE'S SUMMER" opening scene. CLOSES SATU RDAY 1111 "IEW!>Ollf, tOSTll MESll FOii: llESEll:V4TIOlllS, C4LL-•M·ll61 "Then \\'e \\'Cre offered th<'l l.--------------~--------' TV series ·~1 c~l illan and Wife .' " he said. "I ~·as in 'Child's Play' al the tin1r and Blythe was in 'Buncrfl ic~ Are Free.' \Ve turned it do"·n and the series v.·as built into a star vehicle for B o c k Hudson." If I were a betting man rr1 put all of my n1onr y on "Adarn's Rib" to be a hit. !!''.'! the brightest. funniest. most real and most appealing show in sight for th e f;itl season. lie plays an assistant district <J \· lPGI EXCLUSIVI I 'Island Holiday' Lcaue.s Balboa Pauilfon Dall)! at q•.m. Call (714) 67J•S24S m !-------"-o-: ~:~.~::~::.~~.'·.'-.-,E-,'.-:-~-.-.-_-,-~-~-.-,-,k---~ 4LUIH '"" Golclt'n•9"<•1 -Ope" 'lot 1:0. l'.M.. ~ UA !ta"!" Co•U n~ ·····~== "ltw Mt1•l<•I! CelHI• Holm "TOM SilWY£11" A -PIU>-v ''WlolO SAIO YOU (4"1'T lllOE il 11411fl0W" loll'I Colo< IG! Cl"•m•s t DlllV :t•t. Sijn '° ioiol I ''THE Hlllll ilD CllPCPtMClff .. "f.Vf:ltY1 i'lllllG YOU Wl."ITED TO IO<OW illOUT sr:x . 10111 '" Cofo, (II ) Contln110111 51111day, 2 p.111. , ~ :r .,, .. ·<at • ~~i ll :U lo 1:00 p.m •. 'I :00 ... : ::::: WHO DONf 1 nil I &119 Of -.,.w1 y •. SllUl.,t -.;if RICHARD BENJI.MIN· DYAN CAN~Oll ·JAME S COOUR' IOAN HACKE! I· J•MES MASON ·IAN McSHANE • I AQUll WELC" PG«» -~" ..... ~ ... r·~ 'f'" ;.,v ~ •. o ~ ... ,,,. ., -~--~~~~~~ 2ND TOP AnRACT/ON AT BOTH CINEMAS tTAN O'NIAl e JACOUlllNI 11~~(1 "THE THllf WHO CAMI TO DINNER" Cl \J \I:\ (;f."fl Ut HAlllOI Al ADAMi CO\TA M(SA • 9794141 •" ' '! ;: TlotlOP "Bill Y" JA<K ,,., .................... • •"'"'""•Vi' AO t \O l 'o • •• , .... ~· ............ u ........... .. ,, .. , ......... '''"''''"·"'" ...... . • STARTS WEDNESDAY _.EDWA,Rl!S CINEMA CENTER GEORGE c '.·COTT FAYE DUNAWAY "OKLAHOMA CRUDE" AUGUST 1 ' •HARIORATADAMS ,COSTAMISA IN >T"NLEY KRAMER s I"' IHl Wt '-'"'"N''' U' I N 1! A ((-:4 ·····•··•·•······• WlST""l .. '!11l.lt •y C"oOlUt .. ""'' '' I( TW( [If -~::u.: :,.",;:•:!.: ~O? '''l} a the most talked Ai1Pc1A~f~~!~~~E 22ND RECORD BREAKING WEEK· r EDWAR DS ~ HARB OR "~~;. 1 EDWARDS TWIN CINEMA IN THIATRl TWO 0.. pro~""-~ ol Mo•v' Cor ""'°"'· '1tkbufQl'I. iaa GENE 11/~Cl<MAJv rtV-"h SC/V?EOWVv SHOWING 0 ;Ri;n;. NOW • • • • • ·;;;~···~-,..! • o ' I • • I t t t . •, Cl:"iJ]IA tP'fl ER '"''·"''"''""" • ., t.01 r>• .. ...,, '' I ••no-. r.•o•• • ll{lW!l"••., •• ,., •••• 8'll ~t'l\ HA«tlOI AT AOAt.ILS C~lA "4(\A • 919 4141 Al \0 (All 10l -1Sll 4~ MOW AT :~~; ~.~ou IAW WHIN U BOTH CIN[MAS YOUR AGf l(llS ca ' YOU Hf iOV!~ c ra \. s YOU! I.ii l'llnrnnn t;1·11r ~r ll \' f:dwanl ,\l hrrl Binni(' Ba'rnr s 2ND SIG FIATURE AT BOTH CINEMAS GOLDIE HAWN lltl'l"l'llRFIJB8 [lt [lN HlC,.Rl ARB FRBE l OWARO AL B[Rl IPG) • • • • . ' :JZ _DAIL V PILOT Thursd.iy, J11ly 4!b, 1973 I THE PICK OF Punch I ~ ... 1'11.T_..lwS~ .. '""'~~·•, "" • .J/' ... ..-.... -.. ... . . . l ''"-""-"lt.f':C ~~ .. -,,,.,,.,....,.. ... IO<D'• ~ In the Service LOlo.1POC, Calif -!\,lchael T. J\1cNllJ, son of tctired Air Force Major and l\·11-s. \Villia1n P.M. McNiff of 1441, Clarissa Lane, Tustin, recently com· pleted a U.S. Air Force Reserve Officers T r a i n i n g Corps (AFROTC) r i e Id training encampment a t Vandenberg AFB, Calif. Marine Staff Sergeant Clarence T. !\feadows, hus- band of the former ti.liss Stephanie A. Clark o( 10406 Falcon Ave., Fountain Valley, was promoted to his present rank while serving at the Marine Corps Base in Camp Pendleton. Darrel J . Welsh, of 17411 Koledo Lane, H un tington BeaCl'I, has enlisted in tpe l\farine Corps· Air Reserve fl El Toro with the rank of sergeant. A former active duty l\1arine "'ho saw combat in Vietnam, Welsh has been aMigned to the aviation operations section of Marine Air Base Squadron- 441. Jack R. HaJI. son of ~tr. and ~trs. Leonard R. Hall of 1724 Antigua \\'ay. Newport Beach, has been promoted to major in the U.S. Air ForCe. ~1ajor Hall is a space systems staff officer with the 14th Aerospace Force head- quartered at Ent AFB. Colo. The 14th is part or the Aerospace Defense Command which protects the U . S • against hostile aircrart ancl missiles. f\1ajo r Nathaniel N. Reich, former deputy assistant chief of sta{f for Human AUairs, Third Marine Aircraft Wing CJdMA\VJ, is presented Ylith a certiCicate of commendation lor outstanding service by Brigadier General Albert C. Pommarenk, assistant \\'ing commander of 3df\lA\V, as his son. Bruce, looks on. f\1ajor · Reich retired fronl the ~1arine Corps after 22 years active service. He resides at 14102 Klee Dr .. Irvine. Na v y Construction Ap- prentice Oris Donovan, son of ~1r. and hilrs. John R. Donovan or 8539 Doremere Drive, HlPltington Be a ch , Calif.. has begun Seabt-e training at the basic Builder School in Port 1-lueneinc. A builder supervises and works on Seabee construction projects. Seabees are trained to work under combat situa- tions. Stephen II. Sto\ler. son of U.S. ~1arinc Corps Gunnery Sergeant and Mrs. Kenneth H. Stover of 17635 Redu·ood Tree Lane. Irvine. Calif .. recently completed a U.S. Air. F~rce Reserve Officers T r a 1 n t n g Corps (AFROTC) f I e Id training encampment a t Vandenberg AFB, Calif. , John J. Allavie, son of retired Air F'orce Lieutenant Colonel and Mrs. John E. Allavie or 26811 Via Grande, ~1 ission Viejo, Calif .. recently coinpleted a U.S. Air Poree Reserve Officers T r a i n i n g Q>rps (AFROTC~ field tra1n1ng encl'ln1pmcnt a t Lackland AFB. Tex. J1e is a 1971 graduate of San Chooses Deatli ROME (AP) -Vincenzo P.1alagonl. 71, complained while waiting in a clinic to have n tooth extracted that the paln was un. benrable. He jwnp«l out the third- floor window nnd phmged to his death, lhe police said. Clemente (Calif.J liigh School. Krrmit A. Simon s, son uf ~lr. Kermit T. Simons of 231 1 Elden Avenue, Costa Mesa, w a s commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant, U.S. li1arine ())rps Reserve at the lilarine Base in San Diego. He will be assigned IG flight training al the USN Training Station at Pef\sacol11 . Fla. He attended Newport Har· bor High School in Newporl Beach and C<Eta ri-Jesa High School in Costa ?-.lesa. Navy Seaman R e c r u i t Charles L. Young, son or Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Young of 10081 Davis Lane, Huntington Beach, 1,rraduated from recruit traini ng at the Naval Training Center here. A 1972 graduate of Marina High School, Hu nti n g ton Beach. and a Conner student of Golden \Vest College, there. he is scheduled to report to Dental Technician A School, San Diego. Navy Fireman R e c r u i t William A. Kidwell, son of Mrs. Leona Y. Laborde of 264 Rqchester. Costa l\1 e s a . graduated from r e c r u i t training at the Naval Training Center at Great La k e s , tllinOis. A former student o f Newport Harbor lligh School, Newport Beach, Cali f .. he is scheduled to report t o Machinist J\Iate "A" School. Navy Seaman ~tare A. Fret- ty, son of !\1r. and J\1rs. Keith Pretty of 1848 Iowa St., Costa J\1esa. graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Center at San Diego. A 1972 graduate of Estancia fligh School. Costa Mesa. he is scheduled to report to Sonar Technician A School. San Diego. Navy Airmaa Rec r u i t Gordon R. King. son of ll.1r. and ll.1rs. Robert B. \\raschkeit of 315 Utica Ave., Huntington Beach. graduated from recruit training at the Nava l Training Center at San Diego. Sgt. Dennis J. !'i1auU of !\larlne Corps Air Station. El Toro·s Headquarters a nd Headquarters S q u a d r o 11 rH&HS). was named Station f\1arine of the Month for .ltme. 't'he 22-year-old ~·larinc resides at 2525 Elden, Costa !\lcsa. with his wife Cynthia. i\larine ?fc. Tony ~I . Bre~·er, son of !\fr. and 1\1rs. Homer C. Brown of 14632 Bromley St .. \\lestminster. has reported for duty at the Marine Corps Air Station at Cherry Point. N.C. Na\'y Scaman Jan ice !\I. Spur lock, daughter or i\·lr. and Mrs. David E. ?-.1ah'iile of 10062 Los Coyotes. Fountain Valley, graduated from recn1it trnining for women at the Naval Training Center al Orlando, Fla. Navy Ainnan it u A. Sch~·artz, da ter of ~1 rs. 11.lorris Schwartz or 20901 Balgair Circle. Huntington Beach . graduated r /" 0 m recruit training for women nt the Na\lal Training Cen1C'r here. Private Edwi n E. Field, son of 'lilr. and ltfrs. Robert L Field. 17211 Santa Isabel. FoWJtaln Valley. recent I y completed the first phase of training under the n1odem volunteer army program 111 Ft. Ord. Calir. U.S. Air force Sergeant Jamts T. Upscomh. son of Mr. and Mrs. W.L. Lipscomb, 1845 Anaheim, Costa t.1csa. h:is arrived for dut y al Vandcn.l:K'rg AFB. Sergeant LIJ>.'comb. a radio equipment repairman. 1 s assigned to a unit or the Strategic Air CommAnd. lie prcvlously ser\!ed with an Air Force unit in Greece. PRICES GOOD thru AUG. 1st CLEAR AL:L .... ---------·------· -- Clear-All Heavy Dllf.Y Drain Cleaner Extro·strong to unclog grease traps and drains\. quickly. Con also be used to unclog septic tonk s, ces· spools. ., FINAL CLEARANCE! 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Ideal for a variety of home projects, including home wiring jobs. Small and large. So..o.90 '""'·SANTA ANA COI TA Mll A Evidence Against Singer a Joke or ..ARLINGTON. Tex. (AP) -The CWlfornia Angels doo ol Nolan Ryan and BIG Singer, big hit> with National 14ii1uers In the All-star game, try toiaoe + ol their unwanted appeal when they r~ lhe T6as Rangers ln a ~ehea~er tonight. ~d Singer will probably be under a lit-~ extra scrutiny following charges that W.mted a spllball ln Tuesday night's ma- j~ league classic. •Qnclnnati's Pete Rose claimed Singer ~· threw him four straight spltters.. And Cinclnn.atl managu S pa rt y An<lerson said a jacket worn by Singer turned up in the National League All- Stars locker room in Kansas City with a tube of lubricating jelly and a toothbrush in one pocket. A National League batboy brought the jucket to the locker room -by accident or on purpose no one Is saying. But Anderson, whose charges won the game 7-1, said "I'm not malting any claims." H ousto1t Tes ts LA Cautious " As Play Resumes ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los ,ifleles Dodgers' youth is their own best ~ranee against becoming overconfident ~ rest of the seaS-On, says manager Walt Alston. • • 1 A young club is less likely to get com· plicent than a veteran club," Alston• Oi~- 1'.i:'Ibey're more likely to go out every day and bust their cans regardless of t~at the score is and v.•hat the standings ""'· • HAlso, I like the '"ay they bounced Dodgers Slate All 0-911 In•: ('411 JWN 1' Houston "' l"' A119etn 7:» p.m. Jftt 17 H-lon II Los Allqo!lft 3:25 p.m. JlllY 21 ~" F••Mltco •' Lat "'ng.tn •:5) p.m. J"!Y 29 51n Fr1ncltco •1 Los ~IH 1 :55 p.m. bick early in the season and again when we lost six games in a row ," the Dodgers ~nager said. ·Alston said playing 13 games in a ro\V just before the All·Slar break left his team a little tired. In addition, the time off may help shake the Dodgers out of a sight case of doldrwns that saw them 1oie three or their last five games. Despite the losses, the Dodgers still held a S ~ game lead over Cincinnati and are 61/a ahead of San Francisco as they open a l\vo-game set \vith Houston tulight ending the All.Star break. Andy Messersmith, Claude Osteen and Don Sutton have stayed in the starting Hneup but John and Al Downing have taken turns sliding in and out of tbe rota- tion occasionally . "Jl's a nice problem to have," con- ceded Alston. "Our pitching ls deep and there are not too many doubleheaders coming up . \Ve went most of the first half with five and they did pretty well. The only thing that makes it bad is to have ty.·o days off in a v.•eek, but we don't have too much of that." Alston said he did have some y,-orries, thoogh. "The thing that concerns me most is that some of our hitters who 1vere doing so \\'ell early have cooled off a little." But, he adds, "I think our bench Is such that when somebody goes into a tailspin y.·e've got somebody to replace hin1 ... everybody but at shortstop at least." Anderson said, "It miabt have been a joke, but I'm not touchlng Ibis th!ni with • to.foot pole." Singer, I S-5, has been aCCUJed of throwing the spitter or "grease ball previ<Jusly this 1;ea.son but if he did ac. hlally use it In Lhc A~.Star game the rffUlt.s were not what he wanted. Slnger and Ryan, the only Angela on the Afnerican League AJl-Slars, gave up five of the Nati()l'l(l.J Lea1.T\Je's seven runs and hall of lbe to hll.!. Johnny Bench ol CinCIMllli and San FrancJSCO's Bobby Bond\ bo1h touched Singer for homel"I and be yielded one A11gels Slale Al 0-• llM~ ITII) J11!y H C•IUor"I• 11 T•fti UI July 21 C1l"otni. 11 'l'n•• J ulv 7f C1lllor!'11 ••It•"' ... CllY July 1' C1Ulorr1l1 1t 1t1111•i Cl!~ (1! J )J II"'· J U p in. I I ?) 1 m, 11 l.S 1 m, other run y.•hiie Ryan gave up two runs, one 01\ Lhe Dodgers' Willie Davis solo hon1cr. lltala Red Out of tJae CJaute !lose said ··\\'hen I came up to the plate 1n the foorth 1ru11ng he threw n1e four spitballs In a ro\~· l tumed to wn· pt.tt: Nes1or Chylnk and said, 'lfcy, that's a spitball.' I heard Gene l\tn11<:h yell fron1 fir~\ base whcro he y.·;1s coaching 'he's got a btttcr spitball no"' than t~ used to have.' " Boston catcher Carlton Fisk "couldn't t'Vf'll get. 11 glovl' on I~ flr)t1. onll and It hit him on the kntt,'' said ft(tS('. lie look- L'<l up, rubbed his knee nnd said 'he didn 't --• "It's nice to have this lead , but I don't think there's any room for com- pfacency," Alston cautioned. Husband Says Billie Jean Shouldn't Play Joe Alexander of Cora, 'Vyo. on a bucki ng ride in bareback competition at the ?7th Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo. The annual event is one of the top competitions on the J{odeo Cowbo ys ,\ssn. ci rcuit. "First of all, we're not that far ahead. We 've played 101 games and we don't hive enough ol a lead to make anyone cemplacent with 61 games left,'' he said. "My ·wish is that everyone will play as \rell in the s~nd half as they did in the first. Then we'll take our chances in the .ttn<lings." i li Tt\e Dodgers send Tommy John, 9-5, tgainst Houston's Dave Roberts. 10..7, t()P,ight and John is part of the Dodgers' "il&gging" pitching problem. l'hat trouble is whether to have a live dr fouT-man starting rotation. Player Raps Wooden, Will ·Leave UCLA SAN DIEGO (AP) -Vince Carson, DCLA"s 6·foot-6'h forward, said today he Wfll transfer this fall to San Diego State, ~g out his senior year because he iliSlikes coach John Wooden"s methods. "Wooden has his favorites. and I'm not p_ of them, I guess," Carson said. . ~e former standout player at J\~u1r iligh in Pasadena averaged 13.1 points 8hd pulled down 154 rebounds as a Bruins treshi;nan. But as 11. sophomore he 4!eraged just 2.4 points with only oc- .casi6(lal duly and last .year ~as used even less, scoring 44 points with 38 re- ~n<ls. .. 'The discontent among Bruins \\'as teJ>eral. said Garson -"most of the 'ijtber guys not playing were upset about •t getting a fair chance, too. Some of llietn talked about leaving, but I don't J:'bow if they are serious or nol. ,. cru-son said UCLA recruited him l\tfore his junior year of high school and . I took everything they said at face •1ue. I had more than 100 offers from ~r places, but UCLA was close and i:ny folks liked that. Also there was the iflct of UCLA being the national cham· JiOns and that they wanted me and said I iould play a lot." . .f l Jn an interview Carson said of Wood~n, ,rfhe problem is he handled the team l.1ke a n1achine. Everybody had a function, bat he decided what each man would nn and that was it. It didn't matter I you thooght you coo Id do." Tbe transfer to San Diego State is "all ed up," said Carson. but the col· 1an said Wooden "told me I was m~k­ a mistake leaving." He was m- iewed by the San Diego Evening ibwle. CWJ>Ol'L Ne ller :Dun1ps Oppoueol , , ~LAKE BLUFF, JI\. -Pancho Gonzalez , t Cecil Powless. 6-0, 6--0 ln muggy 90-'!learee heat Wednesday 1nld adv;i.nc.ed in 'itte Unit~ State~ Lawn Tennis Associa· • Qi:in's Senior f\1en's singles cham- • l'i!>mhlps. : .. Gustavo Palafox of I..lttle Rock tl"Ql.lnc- ·ed Bob Borders of Shrevep0rt, Ut, M. 6- (. and will play Hugh Stewart of Newport 1 Ch today. Stewart be-at Tom Bartlett c( OainesvlUc, Fla. '-6, &-3. 6-1 • .. CLEVELAND (AP) - At least one perscn rooting for Billie Jean King \Vhen • she faces hustler Bobby Riggs in a SI00.000 fennis match this fall says she should have declined the challenge. That's l\1r. King -Billie Jean's .hus- band of eight years, Larry. "I don't think she should play Bobby, and I told her so," King said. He was in Cleveland to announc:e draft rounds in the newly formed World Team Tennis League, of '''hich he's a C(>.founder. Spinal Injury Cripples Minnesota Vikings Whiz "There's liltle to be gained from this from a y,·omen's tennis standpoint." King said. "The only argument this answers is fallacious. "This just clouds the issue . lt could be possible setback for women's tennis. it's a downright risk. It has nothing to do \\ilh winning or losing," he said. King said his wiie. this year's \\limbledon champ. even advised i\largaret Court against meeting the 55- ycar-0ld Riggs in a similar exhibition match earlier this year. Riggs \\'Oil that match easily. But King said A'trs. Court's defeat was part of 1'.1rs. King's determination to play Riggs. "If J\1argaret had played reasonably \1·ell. Billie Jean \vouldn't be playing Riggs no1v," he said. "'She became agitated 1vhen she saw how Riggs beat Margaret." •le said l\.1rs. King felt "women got such a black eye 11•hen Bobby beat t-.fargaret badly." King said he feels he 1vill be cheering with the majority vlhen the match takes place in Septe1Tiber. ''Bobby is a boorish person. and Billie Jean'is more of a crusader," he said. "I'd say 93 percent of the women will be for Billie Jean, and at least 60 percent of the men." J\tANKATO, l\1inn. (AP) -The l\·lin- nesola Vikings \Vent through their training can1p ritual of making rookies stand on chairs in the Mankato State College dinihg hall and belt out their alma mater fight songs. But the veterans' behavior was sub- dued compared with other years \\'hen the cackling laugh of strong safety Karl Kassulke could be heard above the raucous \'Oices of his teammates. The Vikings opened training camp \\'ednesday with the ne\\·s that Kassulke, a tO-year defensive standool with them. had slipped into very critical condition from injuries he suffered in a car· motorcycle crash Tuesday. A medical report released b y J\Iethodist Hospital said Kassulke is not expected to recover function in his legs because of spinal injuries. The 32-year-old J\'lilwaukee nalive suf- fered a head injury, a fractured spine at lhc seventh thoracic vertebra and frac- Basketball Swap OAKLAND -The Gtilden State \Var· riors sent Mahdi Abdul-Rahman to the Seattle SuperSonics Wednesday and ac- quired Butch Beard in a National Basket· ball Association trade of guards. tured right leg. Jclt \\Tist and right shoulder. Jlis tcamn1ate's at ~lankato quir>t!y re8d Ute medica l report posted in a dormitory hallway and inc1uired oflen of te~tn officials if there had been any change. As the team lined up for the e\·cning meal. many players grimly read ney.·spaper accounts "'hich said Kassulke \\'BS thrO\\'n 100 feet from the molorcyc!e he was riding after it collided \\'ith a car on Interstate 4!14 in the \'illage of l\llnnetonka. r The driver of the motorcycle, MCNlly Crizan, 29, was hospitalized in good con- dition. The car driver "·as treated al a hospital and released. ··our concern is not hO\'•' vie \\'tll repl~ce him but for his O\vn health.'' said coach Bud Grant. ''He is going to be miss- ed. He can't be \vilh the club as long as he was and not be missed . ··1r the \likings have a reputation as a defensive team for their rougtmess, n1g· gedn ess and readiness. Karl is one of the people who helped make that reputa- tion." The bc)\•·legged Kassulke intercepted 19 pas~s in his 10 seasons, and often overcame injuries to join in helping tfle Vikings lead the NFL" in defense in 1969, 1970 and 1971. Wooden Seeks Guards Lineup Nearly Set for Mighty UCLA LOS ANGELES (AP) -For lhe last decade. sports writers have done countless stories about the UCLA basketball team with the Iheme: "John \Vooden has problems: Too Much Material." Nine times in the last 10 years. the coach has solved the dubious problem of 100 many good player!, winning the national championship. ln that span the mighty Bruins have 2M victories and 15 defeats, this despite an 18-8 season one year. The story is just about the same this vear -\\1ooden ho s too much inatenal. But tbi..s year the situation is ridiculous. 1bc Bruins' serond five boggles the imagi.nation. The starting lineup Is n<ariy scl, Wooden says, with two-time Player of the Year BUI Walton at center, Keith Wilkes at one forw11.rd and rugged junior Dave l\1eyers of Fullerton at the other comfil' spot. \Voodeo can choose his guards from among stanen Greg Lee and Tommy Curtis or And.rt: McCarttr, a ttmhirt last year. Wooden says picking a guard to run his system will be his biggest dlore. "Guard spots are open right OO"" ."' he says. "I really can't say what will happen. The point position is a most difficult position to fill. "C..'u rtis Y.'35 our sparkplug last year, but the polnt man has to be a stea- dying inOueoce. Lee "'as that son of influence but he wasn't as explosive as Tommy. And Andre McCar1er may be more physically talented than either Tommy or Greg." Woodm said he may even use a freshman. 6-foot~n Gavin Smith of nearby Van Nuys, at guard in some in- stances. tu Walton's backup center, 7 root '°phomore Ralph Drollinger fills the bill. "He's not as agile, bot he's v.-ork- cd awfully bard,'' said a team spokesman. 1be reserve fonnrds include fi.6 Casey Co~lss, a soph and ooo of only 1wo freshmen on scholarship Wt year. ~There's also a freshman named Richard Washington. a Portland, Ore .. product who was the goal of hundrC'ds of recruiters. "llichard y.·Jll he a r eser v e fory,•ard." s:tid \\'oodcn of his r,..10 youngster. "An)'Onc who is S('C(llld in line at center probably won't play a lot l:>chind \Vallon and I Utink ltn.lph ha s earned the Ko 1 backup position. Richard Is tremendously equipped physically. hoy.·ever, and he can e<1sily play forward ." Another foN·ard possiblJity is Pete Trgovich, A 6-S speedster Y."ho was In· dlana plnyer ol the ye:ru-In high schoOI three years ago and 1he freshman le~am's leading scorer tY.:o seasom ago "ilh a 23.t a\·erage. "Yes, we have good depth," Wooden odmlu.d. 'lllo coocb also •id that com- placf.OCY may be a problem this year. bul ht added : "No positions on 1he team are linn except for possibly Walton's, to the competition for ctarUng spots should prevent too muth oomplacency." Norton, Wells, Gabriel: People In the News L\fiLE\\IOOD -1-lt~<lV)'\\'C1~t Ken '.\orton says former champion ~1uham­ mad Ali is lying in descriptions of the broken jaY.' he suffered the first lime the t\\'O battled . "'lie's a liar if he says his jaw \\"<ls brokm in the first or second round." said Korton . \\'hO outpointccl Ali in their initial meeting in San l)icgo and battles hi n1 again in a big 1noney rematch Sept. 12 at tlw Forun1 . ··People \\'ho think ahoul 11 logically could tell it "'asn"t !rue about the first or secood round. I lhink his ja"' Wa! broken in the 12th round . I connected y.•ith a right and af!er that one punch he didn't do <inything. ·· Norton and his trainer Eddie Futch showed movies uf the first fight last .\1arch 31 at a press gathe ring \\'ednes- day and answered newsmetfs <1uestions. Wells Freed OAKLAND -\\'arren \\'ells. once a top wide receJ\'er in the National Football League. has been c!carccl of charRes hlc<l against him after a c1uarrel 11i!h l\\O policemen at a Berkeley cafe last ~·lay 5. The former Oakland Raiders · star's prohation status w.1s rcslored \Vednesday by Alameda County Superior Coun. Judge \\ 1IH11m J. ~lcGuiness \\'ho had revoked it in June. \\'ells is on probation until January 1975 for a 1!169 conviction for at- tempted rape. An argwnent bcty.·ccn \\"ells and tilt· policemen resulted in charges against him or drunk driving. disturbing the peace and resisting arrest. plus the ten1· porary loss of his probation status. lie was found innocent of the drunk driving charge last month and a jury ;1c· quitted him of the resisting arrest charge Tuesday and split 1~2 for acquitting him on the disturbinfi: the peace oowit . The last charge then was droppi..od by the district auornty. Gabe Helps Out CHESTER, Pa. -The Philadelphia Eagles already are getting !Mt bonu!' they expected from the lloman Gabrif!I 1rade. Gabriel is rubbing off on John Rea\'CS, their quanerback of the future F'.agles coach ~tlke ~lcCormack said Y.'hen he nequ1rtd Gahr1t1 from the l..o5i Angeles II.ams lhat the \" e t r: r a n quartcrbilck would no1. only put some zip in the o4'fcnst', but a180 teach yotmit R~vcs the fine point'!. of National Foot4 ball LHgue qu11.rterb3Cklng. Rca\'CS and (Jabrlel art rooming together. and Ren\'M says it's like li\ing In a seminar. "Gabe is ab•~ help." Rca\·es said dur- n1g a lull in the Eagles' !raining grind at \Videner College, ''He's giving me an educa1Jon.'' DAIL V PILOT :J:J Real? e\'en Lei! 1ne the d.:unn 1lung was com- ing!" Ryan, 11·11 \\"1th t"'Q oo-hltll!!r:s and • close mlss. Is .sc..•hL'<iulC'd to pltch the first iznme torught wilh S1n~er going in the nightcap aga111~t thr Rangcr-s ' young Oa\'id Clyde. l·l The Angels . 48-48 and in fourth place In 1he AL \\'1•:51 seven ga1nes behind Oakland, piny thr~ ga nws against the It.angers flrushlng up the serie.s "'Ith a iungle game f'riday night. In Atlanta ATLANTA -Fflns a!ltndlng the home games of the Atlanla Bra ves \\ill get a shot at collecting niore rhan $700 on 15 different 0<.'Casions if they can retrieve nnd return home run balls hit by Hank Anron. n1e Braves announced the home run money v.iU be a"·arded only to rans returning: balls Aaron hits into the seats at home gan1es. 1be amount "ill cor- respond to !he Atlanta slugger's career IOtal -$701 for his 70lst honler, $702 ror his 702nd, etc. e Wilt to ~lore? LOS AJ'\GE LF.S -\\"ill Chamberlain's attorney says ''I'm surprised 1he story is out," but refuses to comment on a report the big Los Angeles Laker center is nl'gotiating a $500.000 one-year contract to play for the San Diego Conquistadore.s of the ri val American Basketball Al)sociatido . The San Francisco £xamincr said \\'ednesday it had le<irncd frOfn Southern C.11ifornia source~ that Chamberlain sho rtened a Europ<'an vacation lo talk wilh Dr. Leonard Bloom, owner of the San Diego team. A Lakers spokesman said the team knew '"absolutely no1hing '' about the reported ncgotialions and an official of the Conquistadors said Bloon1 was out or lO\-\'n. e Pullet11a11s Win• S'J'OCKllOl~~t -Belgium's Emile Put. temans recorded the second fastest two- mile time ever run and Americans domina_1ed shot put and high jump com- petition ar an 1nTci-national track meet \Vednesday. Puttemans' lime of 8: 16.32 missed the \\'Orld rl't'ord !Jmc of Lase Vireos or Finland by 2.4 .seconds. °""'ight Stones cleared 7.J1,'2 in the high jump to best a 7·1 ~; jump which gave Roar Falkum a Norwegian record. Al Feuerbach of San Jose captured the shot put \\'ith a toss of 68-3 1'1. For Puttemans ii \vas s"·cet revenge. I-le y.·as runnerup last year Y.'hcn Viren broke his fonner \\"orld record. This time \'iren finished sevenl h and the race was bet y.·een Puttemans. Kenya's Ben Jlpcho and H.on Dixon of Ne"' Zealand. JipCho, the "·orld 3 • O O O • met c r steeplechase record holder, \-\'as close most of the way, and \1·ith 100 n1eters lcfl he and Dixon drove to1\ard the lead but could hot hold off Puttcmans' fina l rush. Jipcho finished second in 8: 16.39, while Dixon \\'tlS third in 8:17.32. e tt'orld Cage Piny BILLINGS, l\1ont. -Representatives of the U.S. Olympic Basketball Com- mittee and several European countries are discussing the idea of forming a \-\Orld-wide baske tball league. . A final decision "'ill come at an Oct: S meeting in Europe. Proposed is a summer league for young players up to the age of 21 for the purpose of developing an Olympic team and giving them experience in ln- tcrnational competition. Basketb.-111 r1•prcsentalives from Canada . the United States, Spain, Italy, Sovi('t Union and Yugoslavia would participate in the league. The proposal call! for league game.s on :i. home-and-home basis, starting 1n July of 1974. e iU..Cormirk flrrit• HONOLL1.L: -~l ike ~lcCormick. who y.·on the Cy Young Ay.·ard y,·ith the San Francisco Giants in 1967. "·as given his unconditional release \Vednesday by the Ha"·Rii Islanders or the Pacific Co.1st League. ~tcCormick, 34. y.·tw1 led the Pacific Coast League ul 001npletc games la.st season had a 6-11 record this year with a 3.88 ERA . fie Jost nine of his last eleven decisions. and lasted only one out or the first inning in his Ja'l n1>pearance. e A Girl for Bill LOS A;-iGELES -All ·Star shortstop 8111 ft ussell bec3me a fathtt ror the sec. ond time \Vednesda y ""hen his wife ~lary Anne gnve birth to a 7·pound lt.. ounce girl at St. Jude'$ 110i5pital tn fullerton. e U1111t f'r t 'ract11rf' KANSAS CITY -Jim "Catfish" Hunter, !K'e righlhander of the Oakland A's, receiverl ta hairline fracture of the thumb on his pitching hand in Tuesday night's All.Star bruscball game and wnt miss some starting Ume. Hunter, (1>3) wrui the starting pitcher for the American League and had retired 1he fint four batters he fACed berore being struck by a line drive off the bal or Billy Williams of lhe Chicago Cubs In the second inning. Hunw probably will miu aeverll pllclllng starts. :•~"'"---~·~·~-~· ~-~l~LO~r __________ T~h="~"'=a,, J11I~ 26 1973 More Than Just a Big Name Sand Volleyball Needed • Ill CORONA DEL MAR'S EDDY AUSTIN BATTLES TOM CHAMALES :North . All-star Acosta . • . !Sees High-scoring Game \1i'hen \festem High &:hool's CJF ; AAAA Player ol the Year, quarterback : Bob Aco.sta, Teettlved his invitation ~ : play in the granddaddy of high school all- : ;tar games , the Shrine Contest, he : .vrote a nice note and returned it. • The note said than~, but no thanks. : "I had already made up my mind that ' : in my final game as a high school : representative: I wanted to play for my : coach in a game near my home," says ~ dle 6-0 and 185-pounder who will un- ; doubtedly start for the North in the )4th · annual North-South Orange CoWlty all· ; b.r game Aug. l l at Orange Coast ~College. : ''I've followed the Shrine game and ~'mew of its history, but since this is ~coach (Jim) Everett's fll'St all·star ~ 1ame. I simply malled back their ap- '.· plication.•· ' Acosta directed Western High into l"'O :. CIF AAAA championship games, running •:~he option Y:ith uncanny succes.5. He set :: !Choo\ records for single·season passing, :. 1,52.1 yards; total offense, 2.533 yards; ;·points scored, 130 in 1971; responsible for 35 touchdo\\1lS (1971 t, and rilrccr rushing, 2,o.tl yarQs. ··Bob's biggest attribute,'' s a y s Ererett. "is that he is a big·play quarterback. When you need JO yards, he'll get it. We loved to isolate him one on one with the other team's linebacker. "I'd have to say it makes things a lot easier to have Bob as the quarterback because he's a take-charge kind of player.'' Acosta admits he's had a fC\V early problenlS. The haUbacKs, players like Anahei m High's lloward c.arson \1•ho is a 9.8 sprinter. haye been a few steps ahead or where Acosta expects them to be on the option . "\Ve always joked about how it would be v.•ith a 10.0 sprinter." says Everett. "Now that we have players even faster than that. n·e'Jl have to adjust." "At first it really was a problem," says Acosta. ''But now y,·c're starting to get our timing doy,11 and one thing for su re. this team ls going to score some points. "I hear the South is going to run the \Vishbone. It might be a high·scoring game at this rate.'' Fast-action Sport Requii·es Ag ility Plus Quickness ... Wilt Chamberlain plays. So do Keith Erickson and . Corona del ~iar's John Vallely. • Only the ball is white and moves a lot faster than the baskelball one might normally associate with the three cage st.andouts. The sport is volleyball .... two-man sand volleyball played at the beach. Unlike its sister sport~ indoor volleyball where six players crowd a court, jll.!t two men must cover the same area in sand volleyball. Thus, the champions are players like Manhattan Beach's Buzz Schwartz and Bob Jack.son, Santa Monica's Ron Von llagen and Tom Chamales and C.Orona dcl Mar's Bill lmwalle and Matt Gage. ''Accuracy, quickness and agility are the most important factors in twi>man sand volleyball ," says Costa Mesa's Mark McKenzie, who puts o n tournaments for the Corona del Mar Parks and Recreation Departmedt. "In regular volleyball, poy,•er is a fac- tor," continues McKenzie, "and while it may help a little on the sand. if you sacrifice quickness or agility, you just "''on't be as good as the 01hers." l\1cKenUe says the best t"·irman teams are ones that have partners wi, have played together and have equal or com- patible abilities. "There is a change evolving in tbe pat- tern of strictly old-timers and veterans dominating the game,'' says McKenzie. "but you don't see someone come out or the stands and suddenly become a star. The men who spend most of their free hours on the beach, working out year- round in all kinds of weather, are the champions. "Perhaps players like Wilt, Keith and John could ~ cbanipion.s if they spent ull of their time working on it. "A player like Wilt has progressed fnn - tastically in the last four or five years . llul there's a big step to being a AAA or Open tournament player "'110 has a chance to y,•irl." Tournaments ill l\fanhattan Beach have drawn up to 6,000 spectators to see the fast-moving sport and the next Orange Coast area tourney will be held Saturday and Sunday in Laguna Beach. "The top players try to make all of the Open tournaments and this is an Open 1ournamC"Tlt." says McKenzie. "I expect they'll all be back." ~lcKenz.ie says the players who com- pete have to be in supurb condition. ' "Sure, there are short breaks,'' he says, "but the action is so fast and so in- tense. when you have a tw1rhot1r ganle between t\VO championship tea ms . cvcrvone is ready to drop. '"1:he players at\ have power serves. throw themselves at a ball trying to dig it out, have to jump higher than an eight-foot net hundreds or times to spike a ball and then must be ready for a fast return. Once that baU's in tile air, th ere's no stopping until it hits sand." Although an Open division tournamen t player himself after just five years of participation. he says the younger the better to start. \Vith that in mind he has a group of youngsters in an alter-school program at Rancho San Joaquin Junior lligh in Irvine where he teaches. DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standings • ' • GAS SAVERS '66 Nov• 55 V.C, ~u!o-tran~ .. lt/H, pl)'Wtr fnt, ()(QOJ4fl $977 '69 Coron• Coupe Aul•. 1r1n1., rHlo. 11r cond .. hHI· '' ~YCJU11) $1477 '70 Coranil 4 Door Avlo. lrlfll " r..t~, llHltr l:NOAGDl $1277 '70 M11rk 11 4 Door A11to. tr1n1 •• rNJo, ...... , 17"10CI $1577 $1977 '6t Cadlllac I I Dor1d1 ., ..... "''"' ..... 'ltr!lfl "'' Mt!MY .. , °"'tlMl11t1. •11111 lwll ,. ..... l'l'DLWI $3277 A.\JEfilCAN LEA<~liE r-.·e\v York Ball i more Boston Octro1l l\lih\aukre Cle\•ela nd Oakland Kansas City l\11nncsora An~els Chi cai;:o Texas East Division w L 57 44 51 41 52 .. 49 48 47 49 35 63 \\'esl . Dll•lsion 56 42 5!'! 46 49 47 48 48 4!l 49 34 61 TOCllY'I Otm11 Pet. .564 .554 .542 .505 .490 .357 .571 .545 .510 .500 .500 .358 GB 11s 2 1~ 6 7 1 ~ 20·~ Clev•land !Pe,,-y 1-U 1"11 Tldrow l·tl 11 81it1- mor1 (NcN1llY t -ll 1nd Cuellllr 1·tl An1111 !lh 11n 11·1? ana S"'ver U·JJ 81 le~11 IBlbbv J.• ~n<I Clvdf l·lf O•k18rt<I 1n1ue 9-5 '"" Hollrman IJ.f) el Min· "•"''~ !1(1~1 11·9 and o.rt1r ~·JI Clltca(l1'0 (WOOd 11 U ~nd 611hn1tn lJ.t\ M K.i<>- '"' (11v 0<M.O 119 ~nd So>llllO•ll ll 11 //dlw~u•ec lCo•D~rn ll-S 1 •I NPw Vero IDobMl n . " Bo.•lo<i l Tl4rH 11~) I! 0,1,,..1 (Lotl<h t·!DI ,r!(t,IV'I 01m11 o~• 11"11 a! M1nn1<011 Anetll •I TP••I (:rvl'ftn<I 11 Btll·">crr , 1 /,,,,.,,.,..,, Al Nrw v.,~ c~oi•oo" ll•n••• cuy, l ~t;;on at O•lrvlT NAT IONAL LEAGUE East Division w L SI. Louis 51 45 Chicago 51 46 Pitlsburgh 46 48 Philadelphia 46 51 l\lontreal 44 51 NC\\' York 42 51 \\'eiit Division Dodgers 63 37 Cincinnati 57 42 San Francisco 58 43 Houston 52 50 Atlanta 45 5T San Diego 33 f~ W.0flf5011'1 Glmts No v1me1 scheduled. Tocl•r'i Gani11 Pel. .531 .526 .489 .474 .463 .452 .630 .576 .566 .510 l44! .337 GB 'S 4 51:: 61!: 7'1 51\ 611, 12 19 29 Plrtsb11r9h (611ss l-6! a! ClllCffD (l'lcu1ch1I 10-11, 11rKeded bV como1e11on gf Aorll 21 5Ul~nded 01me. San 011110 1.-.r11n t-7 •rid KlrbV 6-101 11 Sin Fraochco lBrv1nt 1•·7 Ind W!llOl/VhbV l·JI A!l11nu tSCh11t1er S.5 1ni:1 Nle!Cr.i 9.JJ 1t Cl1t- c!nn11I iN01'mlln f.9 100 Grlm1!1Y 10-J) Mon!r,11 (lle<l~O 9., 8tM1 FIQll~I O-Ol 11 Phlll· lllPMI (Cllrl!on J.10 Ind llrtl! t·l) N-Vor~ IMllllC-7-U end Ko6am•n •·•) II SI lDUl1 (Glb$<111 10·9 lt'ld Fo•!1r 6-.Sf H0<.01t011 CROOtrh ltl-7) 11 Otclttn (John f-J ) FrllltY'I Gt'l>St Pllhburlth 1t (lliCHO Ali.ntt 11 Clnclnl'll:tl HDUll011 I I OolltWI Menlre11 •I F't1Ueo1101111 HNt V~r~ 11 SI. l0\111 ~In DI-It S•n F11nci>eo -· ~".IA ... MARK MACKENKIE (RIGHT! BLASTS BALL TO WAITING RON VON HAGEN OF SANTA MONICA. ' Seven Area Golfers Vie Tennis Results WASHINGTON !AP) -Ret.1111' ol' secood round metche.1 Weonno•y In rne S/5.000 W.Hhln11ton ln!•rnallonal t~nnls ch~'l>Ploo>hlo: Seven Orange Coast area players in- cluding a rather.son cornbination, have qualified for the final 36 holes of the Sou'thern California Golf Association championship tournament at El Niguel <:oootry Club in Laguna Niguel Saturday and Sunday,._ John Hichardson or E! f\'iguel had a 73- i6-149 lo tie for second place v.•hile his son Kemp posted n i&-7i-l53 to gain a spot in the fjnats. Tom O~~'r, N,1n,rlan<1s, de!e11led Jim McManu>, Ber~'l"y, 6-!. O·l. Gl'G11 M.isters, f•11sl r1ll~, defeaitd llarolo Solomon, Sliver Sprin~. Mii., 1>-l. 6-~ P~ul Ge•~en, E••t Norwalk. Conn .. clettaitd Bri•n T<JCl\er, Sin Oll!'Qo, 6·1, 6-0. Phil Cent, A"'lrnll1, clelr1!ed Aoscot 11nne" Lcol<out Mount•ln, Tflln., 6·7, 74'. 6-l. G11llle•mo VII••· .-.rgentlna, dele1t1d Frink Froel\!- ln<1, F<1rl L.iud~d•!J!, 6.J, 6-4. Jaime Filleol, Chile, cleelaied Eddie 0 1bbl, MINl'li 6-l, 6-1. The field "'as narro\l'ed by regional nc:· lion !\1onday and Tuesday 'M' this \\'eek "'ith 52 surviving In the championship flight and 24 in each of the other thrre (lights. Action will be O\'l'r 36 holes. Defending champion in the cham- pionship flight is Mark Pfeil oC Palos Verdes and runnerup is Craig Stadler of La Jolla. Both arc members of the use golf team. Others qual ifying for the final 36 holes or <.'Onlpctition at Big Canyon included Steve Thomson of Big Canyon CC t74- • 74-1'4!1 ); David \Villiams ~Navy GolfJ 174-74-149); Gary Singer representing lrvine Coast CC and a n1ember of the UC Irvine golf team 1179·74--153 ). ' So~~~"lir~~~~~'f. ~~~cago, oetea!t":f And•.,_w P1tlllO!I, Erk van Diiien. San MUeo, dtfNlled H1roon A~hlm, P.ik!•!an. 6-l. b-1. Rou Ca•e. Aus1r11!11. defe1111M1 Jim Drlanev, P~1omat, Md .. 6-1. 6-4. Nik~i Piiie, Y11golll vl1, oerea11il l fl r .-.1ver1;, Argenti...,, 6-J, 6-l. VIias Gerul1ili1. Howard Bellen, N.Y .. d!'lttted U.T. Thompson or Big Canyon CC posted a 69-75--144 score to gain medalist honors in regional play at Big Canyon thi~~·weck. •I I SPORTS SINCE 1924 .. SALE RODS ;JIEELS w • • Always spec:1al ~ :=:,"~ discounts on all rods and reels except thos• restricted by FISHING LURES company or fair trad•, OFF Bait and dry flies •xc•pted LEATHER JACKET SALE Prices in 1fftct for 1 Week • Finest mok....-connot mention mfg, nam• • Men's ond ladies' style 50°1o OFF EXERCISE CENTER • ISO Thenno reducing belr1-u111 body hut to rtduc:e w1i1t • Trim e11e h.1112 pc. conditioning suit • Doorw1y 9Y'" "" ........ . 595 1095 650 IART STAR UEll. GYM A compl1ft IY'" in 1 tiny N 1 I t l tr. 1ym. 21 95 (l\arltt O""e<lS. TuiClllO!l•I, Al11. 7-S, 6'. Tom Gorman. Seal!!~, de!~Med Patrick OuPre, Birmingham, Ala., '>-1, 74'. 1·.S. CllH Akhev. Sin An~10, Te• .. a1te1!11d Rav Moore. Soum Alfie~. 6-0, 6~. Okk Sloc:kl0<1, Porl We•~!""'°"· N.V .. oe111reo Clark Gr1ebner, New York Chy, ._,., H . 24 HR. SPQRT PHONE 675-2545 SEE THE NEW HEAD ·'XRI' TENNIS RACKET • Super tough alum, • Nylon throat • Nylon string proteclion Custom strurtg blue 1pir1I nylon ...•..... 3600 ~j~to;utst~~~~., ..••...... 3995 TENNIS DRESS SALE tS1nt1 An1 Store) 1 1roup w1lu11 to 30.00 s•s your ch11lc1 ....... . • Mi11ed com petition • Handicap game play • 6 Courts in play •Trophies and pri rts I SIGN UP AT AllY NEAL'S STOil Sal. & Sun. Sep!. 15th and 1"61h • Pf•ce: Santa An1 High School •Time: 7:00 1.m. to 7:00 p.m. both days I 14th NORTH-SOUTH ~-- ALL ST AR 711"Rs lllTE • ·•ooTBALL All(; TICKETS 8 :;.· •Con b• p11rd10114 01 ony NN1'1 Slofe •Orang• C01.111ty'1 llfl••I prep doui< cllodl)' b1nall1 1~1ortd by Ho111 Clwlt SKI SALE • S11ve 25% on park11 • S11v1 25 % on pol11 • Stve 25 % on gloves • Slv1 up to 80% on 1kl boots 1 ju p' ' Isl f rl • de • ch '· r· ,- .. ~ ,. •• "! " IC •! "' . ! 01 .-" h• b h ~ fi " ' n • k d • 1 • Robertson Te ll8 His Stor y Of Clash With HB Polic e The Huntingtoo Beach police blo11er gnvt just bare details of an alterc3tion in \•olvin g a pro football player on the night or ri.1ny 20. It reported Los Angeles Ram~ lincbarkcr ... • Isiah Robertson had been arrestl!d \\'ith ;a friend ror Dssault and resisting urrest. The detailed infonnalion noled that HObcrtson had • challenged an off!CC!r to a fight. •-Fit'e Y+'eeks hHcr charges v.·crc dismi s!rerl STEVE UH AN O >ind he 1rns del'llled innocent due lo !ack of Ul· tent to con1n1it har1n. Robertson says his side of the story ha s ~: never been tcld. The 6-3 and 2'.!5·pounder i,:ocs • : on to explain . "A friend 119-ycar-old J\tichael Laey 1 bor- , ro1\·ed by car and 11·hcn he retumed to 1ny hou se In lluntington Beach. he 111as all bloodied up. I asked him 11•hat ha p1>cncd and he said he was jun1ped by a group of Jtuys. ~ ''I \l,'ent back 11·ith hirn to the scene of 1hc fight to find out 11ha1 happened and 1he police ''ere talking to a group of 1nen. 6' "\Vhen 11·e drove up. the guys 11'hn beat up my friend started yelling 'that's him. 1hat one,' pointing 10 1ny friend . The next thing I kne11' the police handcuffed hin1 cu1d 1rhilc doing so, knocked him do11·n. "He had undergone knee .-.ur::;ery rccl'nlly so I asked the police 1rha1 11as happening. They said, ·you~rc unJci' arrest.' Gauclaos Eclgecl .. , SY+'ear, I dldn'I touch RO\'OOC. "\\°hen I l<(ot to the strillon. police therr ...,.ere very nice. r didn't socnd n n1lnute in jall nnd \\'ht:-n the c:1sc c:i.rn{' 10 court. it y,•ns throy,·n out because 11 \111!' nro,·ed I ll'<\SU'I th<'rc durinl{ the altercation." Hobcrtson ~avs so1ne scnrs ft'rnai n. "It rcaUy dldi1't mark 1ne as il troubtemak· er or anything." he says. "But ii tore dOY+'n 1ny mo1ives for being a friend. You try to help 11nd this ha r>f){'ns. R111 1 \\'On 't let rh:i 1 chnngc n1 c espl'C'Jally 11011' 11•1th lhe f:u1 club." Bobert.~on's faith \1·:is rekinrllcd :irtl·r coat·hin!;{ a Huntington &cnch Li ttle Lt!lgut• h:i.schal l tcnrn and 11·i!h the formalion of the f;in club, lsi.:ih's ln1·aders. Thr Rams train did all ii cou ld to help him [u1')!Ct rhc incident. "C.'oach Knox understood, hl''s :i \'ery fair i;uy.'' says Rober1 sor1. "\Vhen I told him 1ny side of lhe story he said he underi>lood h<l11• I r~·lt ;i nd win·. ··1 guess lhc thins lhat hurt n1e rnost \\'as that 1ny n<Jme 1ras sca ndalizc<l for something I didn't do ... He s:ivs 11hatevcr frustrations <1rc left hr'll takr cui on the opponents on the field of plav. "That's 11hafs great." he says. "I'll be able 10 unleash n1y frelings \\'ithout really hurtin;; :itryone. '• The CIF Southern ~ction bas broken "'Ith a lnnl!-stanrlin~ trudition in filling lhe ,·acaney ll'fl by publicist l'lllke Pcek's de)Klrlure. Instead Or hiring a media repre~eutatil·e, the CJF selected Kendall '\'ebb us an nd- minislrUti\•e assislant. \\'ebb. "·ho v.as vic~-principal al Santa Ana 's Foothill JUgh last year. "'ill handle puh/)~ity as "'ell as v.·ork v.·i1b lhe new girls SJ111rls progr:nns and troublc-shcol In any olher arl'a commi ssioner J. Kea.netb Fagan~ tlec11ts necessary. Blctckies Breezes MD Do,v11 s El Mod e11a Fi vc , 4.4-3 7 i\la!er lk-i Hif!h's .\lonarchs l c~1sed 11:.ist El :i.1 o t1 e n a Tl\u,,1My July :6 11'173 DAIL V PILOT :J5 Trot1t Ne'v Ne t Coat·h Dennis Trout bu !>ctn n:im- f:d 1:u·sily tennis ooach at Corono.i dtl !\tar lligh. suc- l'Ctodlng Tftndy GUiis. the Dail) l'ilot has ltamed er<clusivt'i~'. Ci llis 11 ill continue as \'<ir~1 · ty bil8ketb.i11 coach. 1'roul comes lo Coromi d1·I ,\l~r afl t'r !k'\'t"ral yc11rs nf tenn111 t>.'t:p<!rience follo~·ini;: hi s t>ducution ut El Cajon \'alley lliRh und Ca.I St<1tt>' ! 1.ong ~achl . 1'rou t 's tennis cxperiei1eto in· eludes a thrcL'-\'car stint at the El CJ )On Hec~eation Dept., .1 surntner as a teaching assist- anl al Cal State • l.11111? Beach 1. thrl'\' vcars as " recreation leader-at the IAnL: Beach Recreation l)ept.. <ind one ~ C:tt' lls an ori.i:ulizl'r and teacher ;:1t Lakl'""'OOd Recrca· lion IA-pt. Follo\\'in:.: thnt he 11as in the G:i rdrn r.ro1 ~· l'nrfii'tl Sthool Oistrlct as H ll'<ll'hl'r in th1· e cl u cationnll~ ha11dicapped are<.1 and physic:i l educ:itio11 ;II P:icifit:i lli;;11. Mesa Suffers Cage Loss • Ill c 0 s t a ~I (' !i a H I i.: h . s ~1u~t:111~s. ch:impion,1, I 11 reg ul ar iil'liSOll !)lay :11 l..al!un:i Hf'aC'h lli~h's sun1n11.•r busk1·t · bal l1•:ii.;tk'. "l'l'C st:i"~t'l'l'CI 111 th(· first rowttl of rh1• po!I!· season tourtlt•y \\\"<lnl'sdu~· ni!.!hl b\• ~l is.'iio11 \'11·10·~ t:oh1 I !ll'l'Olld.1 \HUI. of0.J8. :•nd :1r1· out of !h1• tourna n11·nt 'l'ht• stunnin!! 1urn:1b11ut ll'<l~ It'd bv ~IL~sion \'lt•Jo'i; ~l;1r11 i'.oi.:t: ·and Jn<! c.;ull1s 111th lfi and 1'.l co11n1t•rs. ~IL.s:.1011 \'icjo 11·011 11 1n !he fiual ~ ~··t'(•11d.~ II h l' II suh~li1 tl\t• rcfcf\.'C .lt'rry Fair ll·1l 1·d ;'. IL•t'h111cal foul 011 Co~t;• ~l c~11 l'U:lCh B ob Si.Jn·11s1·11. .\!is!liun \'1t'JO ('Olllll't'!t'll ;11 !ht• ll'l't' thro11 hilt' tu ~l1in ;1 ;;a.:11\ :.idv<111!;1_Hc and cn111rol 111 th•· hall . 'rh1· 111nntr.~ hit fro111 th1• fi1dd lo b<.1g :1 ·10·36 lt".L1I :ind \I '•;1 rna":1.:1o;l 11111' 111or1· baskl•t to cut the fuu1l r11:iri;::111 10 .W-38. Cos1<1 \!i•s,1 lo:-t a ~1 ::J 1h1nt q\l<irttr lf'ad 1n its 111>s1•t 10 .. :oi Arnoni:: thr nus.sin~ 111 1li1· lull'til111,1s Fj.J Juho ('1:11u111n' :l 1'1 ·turning st;1ft+·r 11 h u ~l'nt•rally etlnlrol~ th1· !)();~rd' 11 uh hii> hri~ht l otli r l,:1).;ut1.1 .~ I o u r n 1• 1 s~sh:111. \l1:-:'l1on \'it·jo (;o:(! , !h•· la•' pl; ... ,. tl' un t•l n·;.:11i:u S1';1~1J11 pl:1~ • i:;uns :1 b1·r ~1(111 d.11· ;111d :111a11s 1l:t> ll11;il~ \\ t~ln1 ·:-fl :11 r11~h1. Cos1,1 \Jt•i>, i~ 1•t11n1n. "~! nntl :'llond:1~ ·~ pl1t~ ftnds ~;111 l'h:1·11·11t1· nntl 1l1s,11\11 \'1 " H~·d Hll'\'t in~ 111 7.:io lul!f,w111:. thl' 6: lj !'las11 h .. :11 ·1·n L:.i.:L111,1 J:t•;1 c h ;ind 1 ·11111·1 s1t1 Tht• 11·111nvr <11 1i1 · S-:·1 Cll·llll'llh··,\li~ston \'i•·1u l"lPd t·lnsh plays illlssion \'1t·Ju (;Old Jur 111(' lit lc \\'t1.lnl·~da~ .\hSSIOtl \'11·10 l{c,J 111.1d,• i1 ....,.,ta Tire! Ge11eral-Jet v\ihite\Yall JV!tata Pnce! '!'his unique tire is bu ilt li ke no other in its price .field. s 1·,,·in tread tr:<ction. R25:x 14 825.1 15 ~21 '1 95 SIZES 775•14 77Sa1S Si1~ 855114 ----- Staggering Tournament to llw chrin1p1unship "11h a 6i-:ill I H'IUI~ I 11111·1!>1!1 \\'t-dtlt•Sd.11 St'ITllS Olt'r 11h1k S:111 C'll·n1~·1)fl· tlu1n1~·d 111,· hn.~r \1 h~t~ ul 1 ~1i.:un.1 Bt".tt·h !>I· " l)J\t' ll:in·1~ :'Ind \lurio (l H1 It'll II t'l't' Uh! sror111g !i'.11.l1•r, !ur \l 1~~u111 \·u·Jo l!N.I 111t h Ii' ,11 1d ltl 1·uuu1t•r'. \\-hilt• l 11111·r'l-1t,1 :. l1·.1llrni.: JSl'Or'l·r \\<I), (1\1) l':t'('h., \11th 23 pt)llll~ • .. "" ·.·" , '"• • . j 11 • • ' . . " " ' • • " M•ll•Oft "" > !;;O ~ l6'1l """'' ' ' ' ·""~ f, lo ,. Ip U 0 ~ D . , . , ' ' " " . S10"< b,· Ou11 l•n ., , I • 1' I 1 ' ~: • ' • ' . " '" • 1. '~ o""'""I 1.111 .. " (,·t>• I 0 • .. l 0 II• ' 1 ~~•r I .... 11 • ' u h " ti (I I> ,....,, ! 0 ' ... ' Q 0 • ..,, ' I ) !~··· 10 10 M IO •O'I \l•roo lt"'4 C•IJ ,. ,, ~ J ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' . 11 ~ ~ ., ,, ,, I I l i , ...... Ufl•"" P.11,. "" Ur I~• 1 0 1 • I 0 0 I• H ,111 '·'·•· Tolt• • • J j ' ' ;~ 11 ,, ... ~, °"'''~ .+• •" ·•1 11 I 1 ~ I\{ Re>.I If If 11 L•q1>11• l t l(• ''JI .. ' "·• .••!..••" ' I ~l;;-:,"1 : f W•I'"'' ' 0 OCoo•• •U I ] ., •.• ' • 0 I ~'I" It 1 . ··~,. I L' '"' "' '. ,1,., p ..... I>·...,, '••wn "·~·"· ''" Cit""'"" 161 ) .. " ' ' • ' ' • • • l~·· 1 1 In )I 1 S•~·• 1>r a ....... ,,. L .. lu"• f>1,.'> I 16 r '·'"'"°n •~'< I] I< It CAMPER TRUCK TIRES 800.116-5-875116-S 950116-S-l 0116-5 121 16-5 ' " • • . " ' ' " ., -; \: ' ' • . " ' > 11 I ) •' , . ' " . " ' . ' . ' " ' '" ' . ' . " .. 11 •) » .. To 73-51 Victory As expected. Blackies brc:!z- cd to its 10th 11•i11 in II starl.s \\'ednesday night at Estancia lfigh School \l'ilh a i3-5 1 triumph c1·cr th r Oran£c Coast C--Ol!ege t\h11nni. St'!1·e Sabins finished lhc runic as hi gh !'IO!nt !ll:tn for tht' 1rinners '' ith 16 points, \\'hilt' tnHl cs Bill GC'orge ( 151. Crai!; Childress ~ 12·1. Jeff Cun· 111 n~han1 J IO i anrl ,Jin1 Kc~cs 1 IU1 11(·rc also in doubl e \1.'t'tlncsdav C\'ening in the il-----------------------------'"".:----------------------------S:u1ta Ana College su1nmcr I hoskc<ball l"•guo. 44-37. to up GC:NERAL GRA BBER --3-~I NG WHITEW ALL The \ ictory 1110\'cd U!<lckiL'S I'·• g:i1nc ahead of idle 111K•iet E.c,arllle Cftl• Met1 Ope" .,uye ~!anding• A t C P•c1>er1i!' A•t.v" "'m" OCC Alumni l!t'<I Ca•1>et lle~lrv N1d~ w I gP " ' . , ' 6 • l' S S I '> ' . ' ' . ' J 1 ~·, S1ddletwck p D!lln ---- Escadrille in the Costa ?llcs:i open sumn1cr ha s k et b a I I league. The co1npanion r ca I u r c round Red Carpet Realt y turn- ing back Saddleback. 74.;1. It \\'as the" latter's 111h straight loss \Yithout a victory. Blackics took con1mand of the issue with the OCC Alun1ni at the outset !ind n1ade ii a team effort \\'ilh five diffcrt'nl players scoring six points or more on the 1\'ay to a 34·21 halftime bulge. Golf Tourney A membcr·gucst tournament is scheduled to start Thu1·sday and last through Sunday at Irvine Co:ist Country Club. It is a prelude lo the annu:1I Jack and Jill n1e1nb<>r-gucsl golf tournament scheduled Aug. 12 in v.·hich more than 300 entries are exix·cted. NEWPORT LEASES 2400 West Comst H~hwoy Leasing all Vehicles 645-2202 tig111·1•s. !);!\'c Hill and ~like Tu~ lor 1>c1·c the leading figures 1n Bed Caq>ct Hcal!y's 1·ictory over Saddlcback. Each scored 16 point s \\'hile n1;i tcs ~lei Sinis and Barry Panstcr <1dded 12 and 10 counters. Saddleback trailed from the ou1sct, but cut a 12-point cl rflcit eanV in the second half to mal:c ;1 gan1e of it. Leading Saddlcliack 1\'as forn1cr San Clen1ente 1-ligh player Danny Nau l\'ith 21 points. Tonight's action at Cost:i r-.1esa lligh features Nads and Arby 's Arn1y at 7: 15, follo\\·cd hy Escadrille and A & C l 'ro1>er1ics. Chilarrs1 c~''"in<1<um Fonllu\ c,or<1e P11rker ~al>•n• Kt Ye• loMll GI ea ion Jat~b":>n 1=11toner f't~IO>kV Built• (~•!»•~ l M.)IS occ .t.lumnr \51) l-IJIHlmt. BIJt~ies. l•·ll. IQ fl pt tp ~ 0 I 12 .> D l 10 • o 1 a 1 1 1 n l 0 D 2 7 2 l 10 i 2 J ID Jl5!11J fq II pl Ip • l (I 9 5 0 • 10 2 1 Q ~ II l } l t 0 I 18 l 0 l 6 1l S 1 ! Sl Heading north? Then head Beach ' their loop record to 8-3. Brendon ,\lcCaughcy led all 1 scorers 11•Jth 18 counters "ilhl nine fit~10 goals and he v•:1s also lhe pacesc!tcr in !he re-, bounding departtncnt 11·i!h nine! c;irotns. ' :\late Sieve :\I a r 1 i n cl a 1 c 1' assistL'<i' yf'ith sc1·t•n reboun<ls ;ind eight 1>0ints. 11·hilc Jinl 1 IJ(•an added nine points to the ~lona rchs total. !\later IJei cn1ployed full I court n1an-to-n1an pressure throughout and never trailed. I' M1ltr Dei (44) 14 tt pl tp M<C.au<>he~ 9 O 2 l! tJ.•rhno~I• l 7 l ii I Oeon ~12 9 Pr!lt" I I ' 51 owec cc c o Kr(!lr•u$ ? 0 l ~' L!elio>W.. O O l 01 Tot .. h 20 ~ 19 U Hill;me; Mattr Det, 19·17. I I Deep Sea Fish Re1Jort : SAN PEl.>,.J i.uo SI. L1nOi119) -61 '"""'''· v ., ... ,,a ...... a, l>J '""to ~J>•, ~ """"u;, 16 •<><!<> ""''• i., i,,,nuc.. WI "1dL~~<tl, 11 •t.cl. ti'<>. l•f Ill~ Ool». \)...,,,., ... 1n11l -~ ~n<t•et1; 7S ~ ••. r.icuda, lC6 bonito. IJO calico l>au, 21J """~"'''· , .... L IEAC.li -106 .. Igler;; ;s bll" I r.) •• v ... ••" !Nl>llO, •18 s~nJ ..Uh. loQ roe~ cod. lS mat~cr~I. ,..,,qe Ill n•N•••~. S ~1rr,1cuud, ~~ "'-"''~· ,, •allU DJIS, ;s lldl<llU1. ),.N)'A ,.,ONl .. A -76 ~n11ler1; ~I I ta1ko 11a .. , 1' nonuo. Bd•~e ~; dfl((l~f.: .;.i l>Ofll!~. Ii (<)lo( .. Dill$, .0 O roe~ (<XI, ISO mat~e<cl. OCEANS1 0E -1eJ <l~alers: IM bonil<>, 1;1 l>&5s, 6 Wlllle ;ca b·l!~. 611 r...c~ toa. 1 Ytlh:.-..1~11, 6 n·Mt•~·~I. I SAN DIEGO !Mvni<IPll f"e•) -i76 <ln<lll'rl: S/ yello..,1a1!, 16 l>IUI' +on 1un•.1 JOI wrr.ic1K11, 15l C•hco t>ass, 621 oonllc, JI nn11ouT, 11101 •oek coc.. HUNTINGTON I .t.CN -<5 af19ltn: 125 l:>Orl<IC, loll S«n<I DoUS, \ hJlibtll, O.t.NA WHAllF -171 nnol,•>: 7112 cnr.c~ oass, 1(19 1>arrnc11<1.i, 2>9 bOnllo, 11 ~nlleut, 9 mac ~ttel. S wnl1e s~• blss. 1 LONG llE.t.CH (lltlmonl Plff) -•1 1 ano1ors: ~Se t>onilo. 11 lla"•CYd,., ?• •• ,~~ b .. s... B~•n• -~• ~onilc, 6ln t>on llO, ID l>·"•&CU<I~. 1 S.ln<I NS., D r.1:!1N! (Pitrp.oinl L1ndil\ll) -~l anq1er~; 1;) b0nl1c, ~9 call<a bo·s, /IJ ~oc~ cod, '°6 moc~~rtl. NEWPOllT (Olvtl"S Lo<kft) -n1 cr•ltr· · 11 11.vracYd>. l I b.«>ilt. •'? ke1r 1>.>ss. 1 vell~wtoil. 110 TPt'< <;.<'. I I ral>oU.:, t.t.r1'1 Llndill!ll -lOt onQltr\' 2~1 t~lico I>•"· •9 WHICU~O. 101 "'"'Tr. l wM!~ ••• OJ>l. 16 •CC'< CQJ. 11 ~all!>u!. Y2 PRICE CLOSEOUT! 4·PL Y POLYESTER CORD -WHILE THEY LAST! SI" E7h14 $1795 Tubeless Whit1w11ll plus $2.22 Was $35.95 NOW Fed. E.1. T11. G 71115 900 '" s21"1 H 71alS $26" L 71a1 S ''SCRAMBLER'' W~IDE OVAL s25" s2a" TIRE s $2995FETS2" RAISED LETTERS G 70 x 14 WI SPECIAL DURA-JET " GENERAL 4 PLY NYLON CORD BODY SIZE s~o.1 J 590113 600.115 560•14 -:590 114 USED TIRES Lot1 of N on- Skid Tre1d on These Tires AS LOW AS $5~~ ... ALL FOR ONLY. .. $ 4-PL Y NYLON CORD UNIROYAL 800 ;( -, ; _'! t).; 650, I J BLACKWALL 650 , I J WHITE WALL 775, 15 BLA CKWALL 775, 15 W HITEWALL 825 x 14 BLACKWALL 825, 14 WHITEWALL 825, 15 BLACKWALL 825 1 15 WHITEWALL 855 x 14 BLACKWALL 855, 14 WHITEWALL !.JP~C:gAL PURCHASE! FOR TH AT "AROUND TOWN" CAR Di~continued Trud Dnl9n1. $AVE! , $11.95 $1 3.95 $1 2.95 $14.95 $12.95 $14.95 $ f2.95 $14.95 $14.95 $16.95 885 1 14-885 1 15 BLACKWALL 885 1 14-885 , 15 WHITEWALL $ IS.95 $19.95 95 MOST US. CAAS 1:0, ···~ .. l\Ol ll"HOdt~) FET 12.11 I<> S1.i;1 t$. (10(·0VTI Only ... WtJ correct C:is1er, Camber. Toe·in, Toe·out 10 you r car manutac!ure r's spe<:1l1cations ... Safety check and aojust your ~1ee1°r i 1 $3so ' u.s:. CoMpetl Con Don Swedlund COM,LETE CAR CARE SINCE 1959 COAST GENERAL TIRE 646-5033 540-5710 HOURS> 7:30 to 6:00 Doily " • 36 DAILY PILOT T1111rsday, July 2b, 1973 "AlllLCU: O• lttl DlCA.01'." USE "CLOCKFACE" TO DRAW OR FADE ... /'. ; ~ : . i . • To 1ntent1onally fade a shot from left to right, or draw ·it from right to left, imagine the ball as being a clockface. Now hit all of your shots with the clubface looking toward the "9·· Then, it you want to fade the shot, strike the ball at "2 o· clock." This will impart a slight clockwise spin to the ball and ·produce the fade. If you hit the ball at "4 o'clock," again with .. 1 " . -. .. " the clubface looking at the "9", you will apply a slight hook, or draw, spin to the ball. By strike· ing the ball at "3 o'clock," the shot will tend to fly straight. Lona Iron• From Tht Rouah, P1tthtng From l'Vood1, Upl\111 and Downhill l l11-1hes1 Rnd other shot• are detailed for you tn Arnold Palmer'• bookl1t, "Trouble Sholl." For you1 copy, 11nd 20c: and t 1t1mped, s1lf·1ddress1d 1nv1lop1 to Arnold Palmer, in c.r• of thl1 new1p1Ptr. Diver Sue Mill.er Fttn Competition Results in Win By llANK Wl!:SCl l Of "'-Dt!IY P'Uol Sl1lf SUe Miller didn't plan winning the Southern Pacific Association Junior Oly1npic diving championships I as t weekend. Bllt the 14-ye a r-o ld 1 freshman-to-be al University lligh did just that, and with a slnlilar victory in tbc Regiooal competition this weekend I'll Los Coyotes Country Club in Buem Park she could earn a trip to the National Junior Olympics Aug. 14-16 in Ann Arbor, '-1ictligan . Miss ti.tiller has had many . succes~ in age group com· petition, but hadn't finished higher than third place \n three previous tries in the Junior Olympic district meet. Prorpects weren't good this year either since she had been wor king 1nainly on tt).mel1!t to\ver diving this summer, and the meet \Vas to be off the one. meter board. "Her coach (former Cuban national champion Luis Viera\ has been concentralinl-? on her fundamentals. and her to"·er diving, but we felt it "'ould be good ror her to enter this meet to lx'eak up the grind of tralning,":"'5ays Sue's mother, Water Polo Camp L1u·es Top Players Seven Orange Coast area "'ater polo stars including three members of coach Cliff !looper's chan1pionship Corona del Mar High School team of 1969 are amon~ 18 players participating in a 1ryout ca1np at !he Newport-ri.lesa district pool this week. ' SUE MILLER flf rs. llobert fl'liller or-Irvine. ··She only trained fnr the meet about one day, and wcnl into it for the fun, so \VC \Vl're very surprised when she Y.'011. l\Uss h!illcr totaled 290.15 for the competition. to 284.70 for runner-up Kc-tly McCormick and 277.90 for Diane GrUfin, and the dfffercnce in the tlght- ll .Punched top trio was ~{isl 1\r1ller's 01·erall consistency. "She didn't have any panicularly great di\·es. but sht' didn·1 n1iss any either," r-.Irs . ~filler says. "Kelly ~leCorm ick had some very high scoring dircs. but she :ilso missed a couple which hurt her C'hanccs. "But even Sue thought Kelly \\'ould beat her going into the final fev.· rounds." The lop three dh·ers from each of the fi ve CalifornJa AAU districts \rill be in co1n- petition Friday. with the win- ner earnin,:t lhe trip to Arm Arbor for the nationals. Babe Rutl1 Stars Gain FV, Jtlesa \l'l11 Bizarre Victory For Edison Nine Bob Patison scattered four hits and slruck out 10 ln pitching Fountain Valley to u 7--0 victory over lluntlngton Bench In llarbor A r ca b11seball league nctlon ~~riday at HWllington Beach High. 1\1...Edison . me a n w h 11 t• , r~ison became a 7--0 winner HAlllOlll Allll.t, lf'"'OltlGl W L GI COl!t Mfl• 11 I EOllOn t l •' > ~!;'n':'!i~ ~!J1;r : t :. \ CGr......, Otl Mlt t f I r .111ncl• l 12 11 t<un!lng!WI ll•K~ l If · 11 W•Mll•Y'I lC1"1 ~ovnM1n v.o11tv I. Huntl""'"" II••<~ O c~1...,.. 7 n,·~r-wl If••!><.• G (1,.-l•ltl (11>1t1 Mw1• I. E.r111tl1 I ,,1-t1r'• o ..... , Et'I""" ~t +'<1nliMIQll BflC~ !S )Ill : •• '-r.o-1 v• E1UN:ll 11 C.c-11 ~JI P~•• 11 )I)~· c~•011• del 1.J.-r ~' (Ml• /'M ••I f ~\I· M• ... P1•k r.l. vin the forfeit route "'hen t\\'O N1~1.1'1>0rt 11arbor players \Vere in jured in the cour~e of the can1e and the Tnrs came up short-handed. In the night cap at Costa ~fe~a Park, lcaJ!ue·lcadln~ Co~ta r-.Iesn gained its 14th victorv :u::ainst one defea l, 7-S, in a slugfest \l'ilh Estancia. Fountain \1alley staked Patison to a 2-0 lead \\'ilh some timely hitting in the first inning. and the big rii;ht- hander never looked back in handing 11untington Beach its 12th lolls or the summer. A t1.1'0-0Ut single by Gary Jordan brought in Ron Shimaji \\·ith the first run of the game and a pair of walks loaded the bases before Jerr Church"·ell delivered an rbi single. The Barons siruck for fi ve more in the sixth on a walk Barons To11 Polo Rival Jim Davidson scored a goal \Vith just seven seconds in the game to propel Fountain Valley to its first water polo victory in the Wednesday night prep league at Es1ancia HJgh , a 4-3 deci sion over Long Beach '-1illikan. Trailing 3-1 entering the fin11l quarter. Andy f\Tiller scored t\l"O goals to tie it and set the stage for Davidson's winning score. !\'like Bara1nan had the BarQJlS ' first goal in the second quarter. The Fountain Valley defense \vas also instrumental in the game. holding ri.1i 11 i k an scoreless in the SeCQnd half. ln other games. Foothill !ripped Buena Park. 5-2: Long Bt>ach \\lilson downed Los An1igos. 8-4: and El Dorado remained Wldefeated \1•ith a 7- 4 decision over Chaffey. and four singles. Shima/i 1:tnd Jordan picked up an rb each and l\fark Garfield drove In a pair of runs with a single. Jlluitington Beach's o n 1 y threat can1e In the fourth \l'hen It got two runners on with one out. but a pair of i.rroond outs got Patison out of the jaJll. Ne\11>0rt Htt rbor had a S-0 lea d through the first three In- nings against Edison , but ""·hen one player went out \l•lth a i\l'isted ankle anf'I another "·as spikf'!d on an attenipled pickoff play the Tars didn 't have the replacement!! and "'t•re forced to forfeit. Harbor Area baseball com- missioner Roderick fl . J\1ac~1i!Jlan "'BS in(ormed of the situa1ion. and ruled that Newport Harbor would have to forfeit. 11nd the official score goes do\1·n 8!; 7-0 . Newport is appealing the decision. The tv.·o teams played on 1\'ith a pair or non-roster subs1itutes and N e w po r t Harbor's Don Pier hit 11 solo homer in the sixth inning. Estancia struck for six runs in the fifth iMing to take a one-run lead over Costa ~1esa onl y to see Don Tryon triple in t\l'O runs in the sixth to give the ri.1ustangs the Y.'in. Steve Ohlsen's bases-loaded triple Capped Estancia's six· run Mlly and the Eagles also See Edison, Page 3i Ce1ll Met~ 111 .. ' • ~· Trvon, lb o-v111~1. d 'l•t•ntlnf. cl O.l~n~. c ll•r.wn. 1f ~~:~.1t1~s Phel~t. 1b roi1ell01, P ~ p;•rn~1r<1r. ,., r). l'!ernh1rd!, ]b Cr'd'Y•11, rl Tl)lllS ' ' ' • , ' ' ' ' " ' • " • ' , " ' , ' • ' ' • ' ' ' • • ' • ' • ' ' " " • • . g • " • • ' • ' , l!!Jtl ~(l t t~) .. • • • ' • ~· LPSl1~. lb """""In~ 'b 1-l~vts. l'-P ""''""· " Oevtn. ]b I • -•oo, <' /.1"Ltw~t\n, r! I'"'''-II • ' •-1••tn. n "f•·•,..r·.on, ~' n Tclt's "° !c&re ~· lnnh••H ' ' , ' " • • ' ' " " " ' ' ' • • , " " • • ,.A•1• "••& •• ""''"~"-? • n E1ttn(le -0000~00 ~6 .' , ' • ' " " • • " • • W est111i11ster Dealt 6-3 Tour11ey Def eat \Ve s tn1inster·s American Legion baseball team returns 10 thr Fu11erton Invitational tournament Saturday night with ils bnck against the wall follo"•ing 'Vcdnesday night's 6- 3 defeat by AJta Lotna. \.\'hen Scott Bradley singled, stole second and scored on a pair of Alta L<>m a miscues. Westminster pared th c deficit to 5-3 in the fourth in- ning \rhen Curnal Rungo doubled. Bill '\'hitcley singled and f)ave Twiss walked to load the bflses. The Joss drops \\'eiiltninster Free passes to Ken Loomer into the loser's bracket and and Scott llradlcy plated a one more setback and pair of markers, bu l \Vestminster exits the double-\\·estminster \\'as unable 10 elimination tour n e Y at crime up v.'ith the key hit that Amerige Perk. rould ha\•e turned the issue Saturday's foe will not be around, determined until tonighrs ac· w111m111tt•• n1 lion 111 Fullerton is completed. S•e<llt v. ,1 ·~ ~ ~ ": The squad y,·111 be cut tu 11 by coach Ed Ney,·land on Saturday or Sunday \vith th11t group journeying lO Russia for 1he 'Vor!d Studenl Games beginning August 17 . They depart Aug. 9. The three members or !looper's squad cur re n t I y vying for a spot on the final roster or 1 l in two-n-day v.i:rkouts (8 a.m. nnd 3 p.m. t Include AU.CIF pl11ycr of the year Bruce Blnck. now a senior at UC lrvlne ; Scott l\ev.·co1nb of USC; nnd Brod Jackson or San Jose State . BRA \\'LE\' _ Dave ~lurlin but the g3me v.•ill be pla yed at ~:~~~1 <1 ~ 1 : _ i i singled in ritike Seh1·ood from B :~~neHdAy's loss \\'as !he 1t1ch1rds. • : Other UCI players involved tn the ca1np include graduated senior Jack Dickmann. :reniors .Jim Krust and Black: and sophomort s Cuy Antlty and Boyd Philpot. Newland I~ being assisted by retired San Jose! Stale coach l..ee Welton in selecting. tht• 1 team during the first "'eek orl cxttnslve v.i:wkouts. 'VBl!on will also make the Hussian trip a.s an assistant CORCh .st.'Cond hase to gil"e AnA· result of St'\'en frtt passes and S;,.~~o, ~.D ~ l f g Grove-Vulley a 3-2 victory In four singl~s b)' Allll Loma as ~~I(~", : ~ !1 i, 13-innings over \\°est Anahein1 the v.·lnners assunled a 5-1 ad· ~=~. ~ ~' ,! !n the Babe Huth seninr div is-vantage after t\1·0 innings . Le.:;;::rs 11 , '1 l ~ i ion sla te baseba_n tournament, \Vesl!ninsler scored i ts •c-.,, 1111••111• here. Tuesday night. 111in"le!on in the fi~t inning "'11e Lcme The trarn. niadc ui1 of _,., Wts1m111si.r player~ from Ann he i 111 ·) Garden C.rove aod Fountain DON'T DISCARD THOSE \'alley. meelS Cypress tonight. I OLD TENNIS SHOES!! Thu victory \\'BS An:i-Grovf'· · · Valley's third aj!ainsl 011c I W• ,,,.1, •llf '•"1"'"' 111 'Viti• et Afif•• •llf Trt,.m tllfft. dl!fcat in lhc double elimlna·1 ANTHONY'S SHOE SIRVIC~ lion tournament which got • W&ITCLU'J ,I.All. LIDO . l'A\MION 1\L.t,NO . coll:OHA DIL M•• under \\Ill)' Sa turday. !--------_ _ ____ . Thr \\'inn('r of the tourne\' n1lv~nccS to lhc \\"estern TURN ON TO TENNIS H e~ionuls <tl Carson City . Nrv. POOL TABLES up C!)OWLfNG CHUCK'i DtLLIAltOS J1M .. ..,._ ....... 1'11 Wt. tlftHfl (.Ml• MMof Ot ..... ,.,.., '"'"• During the Summer Program at th• COST A MESA TENNIS CLUB 10 LESSONS 5110 UNDla THI DlllCTION OP TINNIS PIOS • , • e RUSTY MOORE ind MIKE DUNN e RE~~!!~!!.~.~.~;.~~~!,, ze j e Morning e Afternoon e Bvenlng Cla11e1 e Be9lnnln9 • lntermtdl•t• ·Advanced JUNIORS and ADULTS ,_.. l!'lt.,rTMff111 Clll -COITA MllA T!JfHIS (\.UI -SJl_.,11 810 JUNIPERO DR., COSTA MESA ' • . I ;/ GIT YOUR FISHING AND HUNTING UC IN SE HER!! -/ '. ~··.: ""~ THE GRANT BOYS BACKPACKER'S HEADQUARTERS! r: (-J.-, ~ Great Buys in Backpacks and Accessories ·." From The Grant Boys! Latest Designs in Packs and Frames at Sale Prices. . ' I/ill : ;;,; BABY CARRIER • lrllllant orange snap·off seat . • Newly designed aluminum frame allows freedom for baby's legs WllOHT--Cemfwtellle 16 ''' DIMINSIONS-22" H • 111" W s9•• REG. $12.95. GRANT'S SPECIAL PRICE ....•.... '"·· t .• , : ,. ! ', ... .. \:. ., . ·. • \ r l ~ ; . ~ . ' COMMANDO JI I .:;.....:: • .~?.: . PUP TENTS • ll.LI...~ . -..... 41:· \~ \ .:11' -BACKPACK ACCESSORIES -·~~;~~";~;.'~';'.~'. ~, , . .. ,l· i~ TELESCOPE COTS ORAHT'I t4B1 ~' . ;\ •• '·.. 1 I. •a•• .. IC, . '? ~ A . . ' di N•. 19 .cor. Reg. $13.95 _.. .SALE D1Lua:1 •••· s13."· .. ~·· \ ', l·I No. S Duck Cot. Reg._$15.95 SALE t9aa G::~~·t ., 111 . :-,. '' -.....:<,.;. • . \:: ii l ***** ***** ***"*******"******* ******* **********•••************" l\\ ! '. COLEMAN SLEEPING BAGS VINYL AIR MATTRESSES 'i '· :/ I)' t I ' 1 :1 ' ' Great 011ign end Qu1llty Construction M1kt Thh Boat• Surt Winner for Fishing! 12' AND 14' SIZES GIAlff'S SPECIAL l'RICf s155oo TO s33900 ARMY STYLE 5-GAL. ·~ I GAS CANS GRANT'S . SPECIAL $6" PRICE CAMPIR's" TWO.MAN lllFLATAlll IOAT . GIANT'S s34•s SPECIAL ,.,Cl N1. Si13f -THI TUffiD REG. $6.99 Me1vy 11u11 vinyl 1lr m1t• GltANT'I tn11. FrtrKh c11n1tn1ttlon. SHCIAL ,.ICI l ulh.fn pillow. 21"x76". 2 j!1 $, .... l11k.,roef velY11 fer plllew 1nll llolly 1dju1tm111t. 2·1•,.. 1r1n11 1nl1 llllu1 umlllln•· tio"-Al Ulu1fr1t1l1. GIAHTS Sr!CIAL l'llCE HG. $1.9' $"688 GltANT'S Sl"ltlAL fltltl · HUNTERS -DEIR SEASON OPENS AUGUST 4th -IE PREPARED~ GIT YOUR DIER TAGS AT GRANTSI ; ,. ' ,\·. ;!' ... ''. ~ ~ .. . I.\ ' .. ... '1: Grant Boys Carry A Full Line of Biking Accessories 2 SENATOR 10 SPlED BIKE R ... $79.95 GIANT'S Sr!CIAL l'llCI $6995 SENATOR 5 SPEID BIKE .. , ...... , GIANT'S 5'KIAL l'llCI llkl C°'"bo Chol• Lock $5995 Rtt. $1 .99 Gr1nr'1 Spec:ill Price $1.59 llkt SfltHlmtttr 20'', 26", 21" Gr1nt's Spttlil Prict"' Rtt. $7.49 Gr1nt'1 Specltl Pritt $5.tf COSTA M fO l 4 • 1 ) f n n e: p ji c p I> a s I I g ' I ' c ' t i I I What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC No new developn\ents on the albacore fishing 10 date. The fish which were caugtu lasl 'A'cek off Coionet disap)X'ared and have not shown up. A single longfln was boaled this past week- end 0t1 the 29S spot. which is. 170 deg.recs some 70 niiles from Point Loma . Don Franklin's boat tho "Juba.lie" picked up the jig fish in y,·aters lhat "'ere just inches short of hurricane force. TI1e tropicsi l storn15 moYing Uf) from Baja California are causing swells to run in execs.~ of t·ti;ht feet on the outside. Skitr µcrs working the oult:r \Vater say lhUI ii is difficult to keep ones feet on the deck. \Vatcr conditions shoulJ improve this weekend and It's a good bet lhat lhe albia wlll show up and stay in one spot for a few days of good flshin"1:. l'ellom• 1111d.1Jh1eti11 1tl11h1 T11rgel• fltN I party bo"ls nre concentratlng their tfforts oa klt<il fishing "'hich is producing lair to good catches of yellowlall and bluefln tun a. San Diego based party boats are ah10 boasClng a good catch record on keepe r size barracuda "'Ith a few "·hlte sea bass mlit:d in "'lth 1he catches. Bait conditions are good al lhe border city and as soon as the longfins show you can bet chat boals "'ill be rilled "'ilh rneat hungry anglers. .Sr1rfc1ce At•tio11 £'011siste11t Locally, fishe rmen arc being rc\varded with fair to good tic· tion v.·hile riding th e party boa ts running out of Da\'cy's Lock er ~nd Art's Landing. Mixed catches of calico bass. bonito. barra· cuda and boltonl fi sh arc rnaking uµ the bulk of the catche:;, but an occasional yellow, bluefln and white sea bass are being brought to gaff. Action just outside the jetty is spotty for skiff fishermen as pressure from pleasure boats is holding fishing dov.'11. Bay fi.sh· ing is almost non-existent except for th~ very early morn~ng hours when some bass and croaker are being taken on cbang1ng tides. B11jo IJillfb/1 C11tc/1e1 Build Reports from BRja California indicated that this past "''eek showed a marked improvement in billfJsh action. Rancho Buena Vista reported fair lo good catches of sailfish and marlin with schools of dolphin-fish all over the Sea of Cortez. A number of roosterflsh and a.n oecaslonal wahoo were also tallied in the daily fish counts. . . . . Cro"'·ds are down al all resorts on BaJa and fishing is JUSl on the verge of breakln~ loose !1nuch later than usual), As re· ported In an earlier column, \'eteran Baja anglers predict a \'ery good August and Sc ptembtr for all ga me fish. Check "'ilh Anglers Center In Newport for a CiHnplete up- date on all fishin g conditions below the border. Whitey Ells"·orlh keeps In constant radio contact \\'ilb the major reso rts both on the mainland and Baja side or l\lexico. 1tl1u·li11 in (,"/101111el. There arc. reports of lots of marlin in the ch~nnel but very fev.· have been hooked up. It is only a matter of time before the spikebills settle do\1'11 and start feeding on jigs, live bait ~nd flyers. A good ' bet for this '~·ec kend Y.'ou\d be to wo~k the hnl' bC11~·een the 14 !\lile Bank and the East end of Catalina and an oulsidc shot al the 209. Commercial fishermen are hooking a few SV.'Ordfish nea~ San Clemente and indications are that a few lucky anglers v.·1.1\. be able to rod and reel a broadbill or two this weekend, prov1d1.ng seas calm dov•n enough to allow skippers to spot the large bill· fish . Tro11I S lou: Dow11 111 IJig 1Je11r Fishing in general took a tu rn for the ~·orse a t Big Bear Lake Ibis past ~·eekend, us con1pa red lo earhcr ~ell'.°rts In Jul~. But, operators of ll o\loy,·a::{s. indicated that hs~1ng (or this time of the year Is great. l5oth trollers and still fishermen are picking up nice stringers flf rainbow trout. An~lers trolling deep "·itb Dn \•e Davis rigs and y,·or1ns or shullow "·Jth Under ~ooders .and Fishbucks are picking up bo\\·s to 2 pound!I ~·ork1ng !he shorelines and bay channels. Sllll fishermen are flnd111g floating Zeke's cheese bait producth·e as tbe weed problem Is getting u·orse. f th Bass anglers are not doing anything at all. as most o e bass are running less !han 7 inches and should be relurned to the take to grow up to be 11dults. E,•en bluegill acl1o~ bas slowed 1 do"'a as the scrappy panflsh have completed tbe1r spawn for lhis yea r and have mo\'ed into deep "'aler. A v;et fly "·orked on 3 sinkin g fly line "·;11 produce lots of small sunfish, hlu egi ll a11d bass. all of thrO\¥ back variety. Snaflll Bass \Vork S l1allo1c• ~lost Jakes in the Southland report ooly limited largemouth bass action as hot water temperature is forcing the bass to d~p­ er \vater as soon as the sun hits the v.'ater. Bass anglers "'Ork1ng the shady side of the lake are pi cking up bass to 41~ pounds ~n SmithwiCk surface plugs and Rebel type lures. \Vo~ms fished in excess of 20 reel during the day are also producttve for small bassCatfish are shoy,·ing signs of slo\ving dov.TI as onl~ a f~''' limits v.'ere recorded this past \\'eek at such popu\~r \vh1skerf1sh lakes as : Vail. Irvine. \Voh\ford. Sherwood. Cas1tas, 11enshaw and the San Diego Lake s. Los A lantitos Results F~• Wednt.MlfY Cle.tr a "''I F.lllST ll&C:E -•00 vatd• old•. (l~lml,,~. PurSf SIBOO. l'l•v Off'"" II.I' ~00 l.10 l:'O "' l'"J~r!ll ""·~·"oori !,\\"•··· Pon Ott l!la• !l!llt-ell r 1.,...1 -?G91 .. ISO ''°" -~OJY Jtrt, ,;,,'O'S C:•u'~• I'•••·• BJr ""' c.~ N~•~ ('.r "•••• N Quick. Jr'J P1ye!I Ott, 81!!y Let Bid. <cr11cl>lld -Ill~ Jee, V&g.1$ C:a11- !Alfl. JJ .EJ ICll -J:a;;-ONC&ll l1r & ,. Wlli..-. Piii H0.10. SECONl:I •AC--119 v•·"• l ve1r nld' & ""· (111,...1119, Puri.I! SHOO c.·'d •noot i •ivleil '00 S)Q •?0 TJu!>\P• Bunn" ('"4r"~""I '•D I ot1 M• 1moort1n1 (81n-~l 5 . .0 Tim• • 11.6J AllO r1n l".:t" I\ CG f • 1.111r11v•l~m. B<>b~V Oo Lute. Oi1! Brandy. Olimlul1. No icr.ic~''· THl•O •At• -lSO V"•dl. l yel t ota1. All owAnct Purst j700D. Tne N~w lC)Q~ (MYl!•I B 00 l •O 7 .0 Wlnl>Jt!•Sm"~I JOO 7~ C:OPV Glrl lfl~dl 1.IO fl,.,., ,, 11 A!Ml ••n -Mii"" T~r•~•. Nolit ll.t T·.o '1 •voret•. No scrl !c"-'· l'OU•TH •AC:IE -!11 Y~'111 3 Yf l' o\cl1 & up Sll r1t'1 1!1cw1nc1 Purw Ul'llO Tri. Duo!• cruo o1 M011•0Yl1 Du1•!f OolM><VCll'I 11•11 !C1r00111 Joo.ny !loo iS"'""' (t!C11lll ! (Tr•tturtl •• 100 llG ! AO •IQ •• T!,,., -11.1' ... 1.0 .... -C~1rQl"O thltllt . 5111111''1 '"''G't· c ..... e °" o.c~. HI c.1111 '4'o Kft1dMJ, •t•TM aACI -lM Yl•dl l vtlr o!cl1 & 1111. Cla•1lllld 1\low1nc.t. """"' tlJOO. TM 0011..,111 •11a-l11t (lull of 1111'111 A111. ~Muc~"" ~f,....tu•tl •Ill ):0 11G )~ ... , ... Alollt ll1r IMTltSl l!lltr,t'l Pl1lol l ·'l~tl l l"" -lt.0... l"IM> ''" ()DI'! G.ut"O ll C>C-tl To Mill, N1v &!\!\, l1,11k1'1 1'1,IOI. Ho u;tt!Cll•"· <> 1•'·'''1 Pa•'• Or"llO". N~ !Ct•IC",I•. •l l!:•lc•1 -~·l"I,,.,,.., 11.1 .... rsldot !#old. f'1lo llt.50. SEVENTH RACE -BTU Yl f!I>. d Yflt , 1• & yp, Allflwif'IC~. P<1t1! i-.tr~ Tht Pe•rl Hl•DOr Sun1IYOfi, ASS'Kiatl,;n t;~Y•(miln 1-::1raoui) C.f.,1' "' lloy (H110 A Goin' Men !Tre.till•tl Tlm• -~5.IJ. I.I~ S.00 J 60 160 •<0 rn Al•o rM• -TtxlS Trice•. Olde Smoo11>lt. ll~t Flmt, Cl.tUY Rockrt. EIGHTH R&CE -l.)O v1rd1. l ¥tar r,'!1• & up. c1.,1mtno. Pu•ie 11100, J~iflr! (l{f\IO"ll 7!00 10~0 6'0 Oon Ba<·\ lm>Q~ (Ricn1rOil •-10 J.00 Ni•• FllOM ""'11'1 1 1 .0 r;me -la,u Ali.o ra" -Nile Tr1in. 0 1•-N Din· dy. Geronimo Moyor. O~ndy'\ Jf!, OO!'llJ 8e Coed, l'IY'"9 D1•id, Dlvloend's B~r. $tra10'>t<:l -Tiie (GUn• 1$ E1•cl• -4·Jel "••• I. •·Don •11"'1 lm1t1. l"l!d 1111.to. NIN TH •ACI . -170 Yltcll, 3 yt.a• O(<U & <IP· C:l~1"1illQ. P Utlf 11900, KlnQ'' RJit111 (ft,(l .. fdll l(h1l1 ,.,o {Tttdsurel Sunn "°'' (GMlll Time -... 18. ):IJ(l 11 M I )Q l.OQ 7 . .00 '~ l<hq ran -0f,fo\, Mldw1y Tor", T1111 .. n l ••· Co A•O<l"ll, 11!9 Spy, I J l!:J"l d .t -l ·klllf'I ll:llhit & 1· l(llai. ...... f''1tl t.lH.M, EDISON ... Continued from Page le had a doub.le, 1wo singles and lhrec walks in the inning to overcome a s.-0 Costa J\.frsa lead, Tryon drove 1n a run "'ith a single and rode home on a lri- plc by Ste vr: DeWilde for two runs in Costa ~tua:s ~ inning, And John Cllldwell" double accoUJ1ted ror two run.-; in a three-run thlrd inning for the winners. OAILY PILOT 37 Three Womeq's Golf Teams Tied Three. teams ti~ for first Also Loulse WUborf. Mory n.-571 and Bttte Gonya 19'2- place in the l\1esa Verde Coon-1\nn flolt, Lorraine! Jmpoy (El 35-57) lied tor net hooor!I. try Club won1en's guest dsy Niguel CCI and Jackie Wat!IOn Costa Jtle1n bt:'lt~r ball or r ou r s om e IEI Nit;uel CCI; and Georgia Fallyn Brooks and Margaret tournament with gross scores Farmer, Kelly Adams . Ka)'e> Kumagal lied tor flrst place in of 7fi. Ryer (Candlewood CC) and a criers tournament at Costa Ou one tea.m were Phyllis Lois Sn1lth (Cnndlev.'OOCI CCI. l\lesa Golf and Country Club in Sntilh and Mar&e Jlayes of the In 11n odd holes lournan1ent ::~:~n·s club action this host l'<>Urllc v.·lth t:onnie Klntre 31 l\1csa Verde, Bcue llnmrc The winners posted scorts of (Sant!!: AnA CC) and Nancy was the A flight winner with a 70 whi!e L..ucillc Wilson was Nev.·lund !lrvineCoast CCJ. 38'! follov.•C<l by Verda Shirley flurd nt 71. l39J. l::n1y Burkle \391 ~). Alice Other learns included Lucilll! Dcrbv t40) nnd Lucille Pad· 111 a crli.'rs tournament. lht• Paddock , Jean llally. Deane . dock 'i41 J. 111<1ycrs rc\crt thl' three y,·orst llelpen·n (Big canyon CCI and 1 R 11 · ht GI · llo d hole scores bock 10 par n tg , or1a Y.' to.n l\1aric \\'hll!Jlk er (Big Canyon \\'as the y,·inncr with 38 with In D 011.:!11 11 1,·as Pat \V1lsun Kelly Adanis 1391 ::). Bernice the v.•11111cr Y.'\th 63 fnllov.etl 1)1· CCI : \'irginia Visiica, Stella \'' Tl•c•.•>· 1i·i1h &5 and a 11e !or Johnston 140l, Lou ise .\lcrnam. Ann nbcll Pf e i I Robinson t.W l :ind Georgia tlurcl al 68 betY.ecn l)onua \Palos Verdes CC) and Betty Farmer ('4I J fullowing. Costello and A.lyt·c ll ubb:ir•!. HauSt'r <Patos Ve rdes CCI. Marion Voss V.'on C flight In the low net competition, The C night cornpetiliun 1~·as Y.ilh 62 'Ailh Beuy \\'althall three lean1s nlso tied for Cirst \\'On b,I' Hortense Carlin °1 J!)•: and J)Qris Rull tied for second ploice including: L 0 u is e ~·i1h .Jan Dov.'ers 1-IO 1. Grale ::ii 69 Robinson, Bett y Potts, Carol Hooker (-Il l. [)Qt Penzel 141 1 In :in lf 1011rna 1nent. Slosson !Virginia CC) and and !lot Joi\es t 41> followuig. :\laq:;aret l\un1agai y,·as the 1\ Sheila Rose (\Vcstern Hills In th e lhrcc-nionth ringer flight 11ctor 11·1th 66; Barbara CC ); llita LeDoux, Sylvia cornpetltion, A flight honurs Shcpardsoo \\Oil B fli~ht "'ith Pranauski, Vicky Gary (lrvine 1o;l're taken by Shirley Kind('r 73 and Carnell Kennedy co1>- Coast CC 1 and Phyllis Arnold \l'ith 65 followed by Betty pcd C honor s v.·ilh li9. i lr\'inc Coasl CCJ. Brctti ng with 68 in !he gross Also Mary Ann Dyer, Joan action. Lupe Sutton \l'U!'i tht• Scttf.'fifl Cha1nbcrlin , l'at Francis lEI net winner at 69·15-54 follo\\'-f\1('nlbcr~ of the 1\'ninrn·s Niguel CCl and Fa Y ed b\' Alice \l.'att s 171 ·15-561 ~oHi nj.? grnup at , l!un1ing1on Lenor \\1t\hrenbrock, 0 I ah :-Olorgan and Stu Ouc.Jley. In a low net tournament, Cuba Curl v.·a:i !ht first tlight winner \\'Hh a 71 fo\loy,·ed by Coru110 Lo nergan ( 73) and Rosemary J.:rickson, J lill<.' ~·1t. On. ~lanlyn Jones and Cheri Thornas at 7<1. In tlu: seco nd night it \va;: Lcnor \V nh renbrock first at 70 t1·ith Prit Ji()()(f (741. l.11 Hrandenburi: 1 7~ i and Freda S1(\(•rn1:in \ 78) follo1\ 1ni: 111 th~tt order. Norrr ... Pard \\'On the third flicht v.·1th 71 follu'ft·ed by Stu r>udley and tllah :\lu1~an \111h 7'. 1'fl•sio11 l'h>jo ~adtnc TllaJ.e c-npp(•d a 101,1 pun .; 1ournan1cnt at ~!\ .. si.111 \'ieio Golf Club 1111h :Ul 111 a1.:· 11on fur the 11unh·n·s ~olf 1.:lub th1S 11 C'e\.:. A tit-' resulted for SC(·on<l plaeC' at 33 '"'ith Cece C:;oury, J f'an Tlletc:i lf. r.lar J:C Cypert :ind Jean Lacovoni all po.!>llng th<it score. The y,·0111rn's grn1111 will stage a guest day cveot 111•-;t \11cck with scoring on u yross basis for nlnc holes. Rothacrmel (Hacienda CC). and En1y Burck le 1 i5-lS.-ai J. Seac!iff c 0 u n 1 r y Club Other scores included: Karie Jn B C!ight it 1\·as Phyllis challcn(:lcd pro Brian Wike in llt111••l1cJ SJ Oakmura, Dot Sato. La.Verne Leasure the gross winncr·with ;1 beat the pro cu1n~tition this 111 ;in <><fcl holes tournament Swan (Los Coyotes CC) and 7$ followed by Virginill Vistica week with Lake turnini;: in a for the v.·on1cn's golf ('lulJ ~It Peggy Pax.ton (Los Coyotes at 77. Rosie Uchizona ti!Xl 11·l1h sC<:irc of i6. Han<'ho San Joaquin 1:01r CC) at IU . Barbara Pegg for net llonors. !\!embers recording n ct Course, J al·kie Kroll v.as th~· J une r..1cConnell. l rm a ROsie posted a 78-24-5~ wh il':> scores of 75 or bettt;or included 1\ fhAht 11·11mcr w11h 37. Bendel. Jovce Paull (Virginia Barbara had a 7S-25--7.\J . ~ormn Pard. Pat Hood. Cuba Jeanne Griffin fuu shl'd ~t>· CC~ and ·~tarialice Johnson 1nCflightitwasB<lieGu11· Cu rl .. June F111 i11. Che r i •\Ind at J8•~ 1\ilh Ka) ~la1 (Virginia CC) tied with Sylvia the winner v.'ith 84 in gros<t at-Thonias. Ros'c1narv Erickson. third ;it 39 Campbell , Shirley Callaghan, tion v.'ith l\tichi Uematsu se-Connie Lonergan. ·\I a r i I y n ne\•erly C'orll"'C\J v.11" Jhl· B Joyce llein1back ll.a canada cond at 85. Grace Hooker (86-Jones. l,i z Brandenburg. fl1i,:ht 1vinner v.nh 38 foll0\1'ed CC) and Cina Donner ~=:..:.:...:::._:..:_:.:__:_:_:_: ____________ _::_ __ ~~ (ta Canada CC) at 62. Four teams tied at 63 in· eluding Celia Neth, Eloise Greschncr. Tillie Real (Alta Vista CC) and Lori Plond (Alt<i Vista CC l; 1'.tichi Ucmatsu. Peg l\1aull. Ca1111en F'i!nner t Annandale CC) and ~1arian Paris (Irvine Coast CC ): Ala111itos Raci110· e E11tries Clear & Fall. First Pitt 7:•S p.m. ,1.§T 11.At l! -3\0 .. ,.,,~. 1 Y<lt 0101 All"l'~HKt. Pvru 11.100 "' '" "' 111 1 Ovr P •tra<1.11I~• CS lr•~·.,•el M1l•"lt Noto ID. (er!l~l~l C:h:ir~td!""'O !II.. B•n>•\ 1(1Jvl Gold ID. Morrhl rnick,,~e (L WrleMl Red (hit! D-et~ (J . Ri(hafd~) ' G"I !'Yrpv lJ. W•r~\ O•OI> 0' Hl>n!VMOO!I (J, Oreyetl Rf'bt! K~y ('( H~•I) Prtttv Co1111uerre (0. K ni!l~ll AllO Eli1'lb!t rrvlY euu io. c1rao:11 Little Rodd H•" !IC t~\fl1 Moo" Coun! (S. Trea•urel E~•V 81; Girt (R ll~nkll '"I "' ;:; 1· " ' ") '" '" "' "' SEC:ONO lt&C:E -•Ml ~ .. ct : ;·~1r cldi. C:lalmln;. Purr.e 11 .IOll. (\1i,...il\Q '"''~ s~ ooo Ae~Cf\ 'N C.r.ll u IL. WrlnMl l'~"n l't~· (0 Kn:nl>ll P~n em ev IJ. W1r!ll Oulnn1 Allbl (M. 81tktll Klca~ Lv !E. Gana} Elqnrh Wgr1~r 111. llan~•l L'I Amlao ( K, Ha't) 1ma Olckif liar {J, Ricf\1•d•\ "' "' "' "' '" '" \)) "' THIRD lt&C:E -IOCl Y''dl 1 ''"" old1. C:l1!,,.lng, PurJe Sl.Y.11. Cl1l1T1\ng 4-Ply Polyester Cord Tire YoullMOST POPULAR SIZE! FOR MID-SIZE CARS: FJTS MANV MOOElSOf • Torino • Buick Special • Fury • Fairlane • Montego • F-85 • Impala • Monte Carlo • L TO by Peg Robtr1s 13811; iind 1.oln R.,nholonH''tl' 1391. Loo \Vil\c-y y,·ou C flip.ht \\ lth 42 v. ith Chnrlene Collini; tll'Xl 11t "211. 11 wns Grncc \\'t'he lhc \\liJ1nC'r !II \) flighl 1rith 38 follo\ved by L:lurla Tithna11.c at -121 :. .ll1•11do1rlnrl' \ll'rnht•r, of th1' .\!{'ad.JV. la1 k t:Puntr.1 Cluh 11·01nc11's ,Cull i.:r1•u11 !-l agecl :i ~11rp1 t.!>(' n1nt' U'i1ng half h11ndlct1p tourna- n1cnt Utis 11 t'<'k In A Oii:ht ll "·:is lla rr1et (ilan\1111· the \'i('tor \\'llh ~8 follo .... ·cd by Jane l)urrt !~ 1. llclcn ~lool lon 1:J~1~1 :u1d lll.in:i l\1)111)('r 1Jj1;.; In B f\lgh~ II 1\0I~ Jrnn Hu~ht nnc.J AlicP Geiger fle d fo_1r f 1r~1 pl al't' \l'Llh 30' 1"llu11.·rcl hy Kitty r.tu lle1L~ 1:121i; and Out· tle O'Ik!I 1331 . Jn C flight. ~!rs . J. Krrtl v.'a!I the v.·innrr v.·Hh 31 ft111ow- Pd hy Florence f~irhhom 011 ::2 • ~ El l\'l!fut•I II wui> a tvw gro'i'i ar\d ln11 lll'I 1ourn11n1cnl :u El !l:iguf'I C:o1111tr)' Club thi s 1•cek fOf' 1ncn11.M'r.~ of the y,·01ncn's golf club . In A fli.l!ht. EJaini.' Tull"Y "a.~ the gro~ v.·i111wr v.·Hh 87 lollo1\t•d by Anne Tt'cl .11 88 In ntt al'l!On l':lt Franc1~ .-ind Charlt'nc Cr:irnn1er lil'd fu r first "'ilh 73 ; Hr:t C0<·hr.1n ;ind Patty Sprig~ 11e1! ;11 78 and Nel Townsend v.'[1S nrxt [1\ ;q Pt'giy Cunningham 'il.'On 8 fl1i:ht ~ i!h gross SC()n! O( 97 lollo"t'd hy 1-.:iy !lorn at 98. In the nt:>t L"<1n11~1iU011 1\ y.·a~ li:l$a \\'1~~· .:1t 73. A 11 ct ~lcCrt·i11t' tit 'l!i, Beth Hen· dersun 111 1!'1 and Cnroline )oj\\arilry an(l t-.'nn<'Y Doughe r· 1)'~181 • On ro!hf !1:1 11k~ Wtlll C Oight i:ros' l1011r11, wi th a 91) y,·ith Bt'tll' l\1;1tl••!l lllXI :it 107. Jf Anni· \\'ooc./1\;ud 1\a~ the nel 1·u·1nr l\'llh 17 11·11h 13('1!)' lllm· 11n·l:;h.:1l·h t-l'('nnrl <1! 7 3 \1.1ri:11re t S1bht•rt \\':Is third a1 82 foltov.·M hv ~A:l1th \Vr&J 18:11 t111d Ju n 1'1ld1•n t&41 , t;rQ!>S honor!I in ll n1~h1 y,•C1'1t tu Ooroth\' I lurn\>hne.; 111 )Oi "11h \l.'.lXlll1• ,J11Jl1''t' Ill',\'\ al !11 H~·k·n Lt·•i.:h \1i>n lhc 1or 111.:I :ll\Uf<I 11•1th f,I) V.llh l.11u1.;1 Hu .... arr 182J. Pat Fn1rf1rlc :111<1 ,\),11'\ 1\ l.1·1111 1/JJJ :inc _\lar1,.1r1·t HroA '1841 tu\Jo"·ing ""'' ,, .. ,,. Th!' fllll!'1t1 :i11nu11J S..1uthcrn C;1 t1flJrni11 \11)ll1€'n·, ;utullcu1 cli.-111q11un~h1p v.·111 I)(• stagrd :11 Pon1un11 N:11lon11l 1:otf Club .Scµt. 2~1·27. ·rm· ~4·hole nlt•dal louma· rn erit 11 i11 ht> ro1npclcd ln four dh·islo11'i, ti1(' t han1pionship at S('r:llch and thrtt h .. 111dicap Oi,L!ht 5. 111e l•r1t11 fet' cf Sl'I SO in· clud~·!I ~rttn ft-t5 for flll thl'l"e rnu11d~. pr 17 l's, continenl nl IH"l·:1kf:i .. 1s :ind the nward pr1•s('ntntio11 lunchenn . For fu r1her information. 1·ontae1 Jl>tlnnc Colbert at ~95- 7441. Dr'•e IS.II'». W\llowcrttk 81r1ev !O. M0<rl~) M<1!11~I Fund !H. Pagel A/'C)Qn Ll11Menlno IJ. Rlch1rd11 HI'<.!~" Ptt (f Gari•) Suptr!On 10. KnlqM) '" ,., "' FOR SMALL CARS: l,M)Lll. \..:> , , FOR LARGE CARS: ""''"' 11Y;;'.l-~'> ')f • d 1 1~. . • OldS . i -B1r • R1v1efa sonne'V1lle l.•dd Tlge• (R e~~k•I Mr. A"OY1av rs. lrtt~\lreJ I\• Tn·-Sit'"' I( ~· .. \lnl Sh,•kf .,._, IJ1> fJ. Orevtrl American Gtnl (0. Ca•C:Olll "' ,. '" ,. ' " ,. ,. Jl'Ol.IRTH llACE -lSll yAt<I> J Y"" ola~. Allowance, PL1rs• Sl .tcO. The C•u!~ La~· na NIO"~' q~t•rY (lu~. Hal\t'~ Nere fJ. 'NA•dl '" '" 1111 lt Bo<t (S. GT rta<1ir~\ l>oc;k11!1 llmlt1 IJ. M!l>UIO I E! Toro p~,~·r H ~ l'llcte1) Co TWIQ c;o !L. WdQM) r.c 01<~·~ l!l~bY (0. Ca'<l~l•I Rvll~n Roady (R. 81nksl .. ~1 I" : ,: I ,lf'TH llAC:E -l'iO t~'a1. l v•~t 0101 & uo. C.l1lmin;. Puf"f 01,ilM, Clal"'i"Q price SI.SOD. I 'The OetrQll• Airer•!! (o Manooe..,tnt Clu~ °'"'~·· llt"" "•n• !H, Pag.el !"'1 Bold llld !J, Rlc~A'cl') 1\9 1 '"o"°"' Her, tr s ... ;1n1 • • "!IC-o" Ml" I"· l!l•n~I) lltl ~IHI c: ...... !~ T•ea·•·rol ... s1,11111 Min !J. Wtrdl 121 llXTH •AC:E -llD V•'d~. 3 Y~ar olo:IJ t. II"· (1•1mln;. PurH j}M)O c111..,;no p,fce 11,soo. TIM 81Utrower Ll<:IV Elks TOlllD Lll'-t (tt. P111•I Plulled tn (J. RlcharOtl Spee!IY SeY.., (L. WrlQMl Plulldet CD. 1Cni1'fl!l • Doll 1C1ar IE. Oar71l r111 1'0< •c11 IS. T•~«utol Ole My1trrv Ml" U! 81~~11 Mrd1c~11.H re: Sml•n l AISI lllllllllt I<• Don't !J. ward\ HO! To Trot {J. Rle'tl1rcl\-l Fonc" Wiiiow ll w,1qn11 ll<1e FtrN !It. Bl"~tl "' '" "' '" '" "' !l•• "'I ' " '" '" "' SllVllMTH llA(I( .00 y1rd1. l v••r old\ & ""· a.110.,~nc,, ""'~' \l 500. Tne LOI Alamllu Gtner1I H05pl111 Au~. ll<•rv '1• Rotn M1n IS. T rea•u•r~ 111 R "1:~.i 51111!0 (J, \'Jar!!) 'l~ Lottr!ei fJ, Onivtrl 1111 J~·1oui ~.~I I(. 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'M ll~ttlJ 11111,111 tO 1(11/0~11 lvt~r Mui /~ W~~tl '" '" '" "' '" ' " "' ". "' ,,, '" "' "' '" WHI TE SIDEWALLS $3.00 MORE EACH CUSTOM LONG MILER • tough 4-ply polyesler cord tor long wear and a smooth ride TRUCK -CAMPER MOTOR HOME SAVE 10.00 to 30.00 A TIRE 15 65 --·I U"Q_ ;~ 1ttl llloi. ::it}. ·_tJ;t... Sl?f • ,.u 700·1S 700·1• 710·1• l lG SlllC:TION 0' SIZI S PllC I llZf JI.ts 100.16.I .. 21.t! 11t-16.S .. .... it.ts ts1.1t.s .. • ... J6.11 1 ~1•.s 11-1 6.S 'E l J IO TO •tl , •• c. Jt.ts ., .. , 16.11 4t.IS ,, .. , LUBE & Oil CHANGE Wl'll ll,ll~IC •Tl YOlll (&I &>10 C>!lo>!Gl f!ol O•'lf O•~. 1'•1CI l>!Cll,IOIH I.II" TO I ov••fl 0' OU&llfl' 01~. WHEEL BAUN CE 411 1•9 l"lUt •a10MTt WHEEL 5ss All6NMENT •••1.1~at YI V•'f. 11 •I Fn s """"°vr • \fega . Pinto • Gr e m I~ k • Ou5\er • •La Sabre • uis • c entunan • Marq • Maver1c camera oart • Nova • • Mustang Ml.&'fl' DUTY SHO~S LINING AND LABOR ...... DELCO & W·~-.-.1, 2495 9-•W., HI JACKE~ •• ,1 ... -~, ·-AIR • ,._, .. ' le. Ptlc.et ti•. 0 1ICU SHOCKS •vau..r11 ltlO UUI Tiie .. ,...., w•• •• ._.. _....... •• .,.,, •• , .. , •• tt>H ,_ ...... 34~~ llilltft wHt! .... I• •••-Ci.I ,_ .. et', .. ~ •. U. .. 4 ,.._ Pel"' '"' er .,.. -...... ttih ,..i.4 • ...., •Jlt t.. ,.,1.,.M ·~ • , ... ,'"'41 ••k ............ u .. ,, __ ....,, 11•'"°4 " .......... ""' ,,.,, ,.,...,...., tt)fi..t MfTlu. ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ' • JONES TIRE SERVICE Phones -1 .,.,. .. 2049 HARBOR BLVD. , ··.·~'.ii:°l ::::::;~ ~,.,:·~,. COST1A .. MESA ··:~~}.~:~,~~ .. I -. ... _:...,~ ..... • '''l·'!*','f'''*d·X·f!M ;5•g.11 Mttt•fi' ·E\'24 t.1z4,,t4, .1 ·X§i#·i·t· ®· :- • •• • ' . ' .. ' • . • : ·, AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS AS I RE!CALI.., HILPl!GAllP HAMHOCKal, 'l'Oll SAii' 'lllU'Af GONNA 16NQ¥ME:l MUTT & JEFF ·--·-._ FIGMENTS NANCY ] ; ! . '-E TAt.l<'EOCf' ,M,NUA?VEAM, NOT~ aor ro l-IOHO Pe1ZE·FtfMfiN5 Mf'D SE ANO ~6 10 MAA.i:llfD Rt'TISiN MCWE At-IO RAISINS TO /'MRRV 9A8E '5 8Y MIS' 61RL ! TMt'J Tl~! lMJ!!N Ll'T 60 OF ME! I CAN'T DRAW NOWAV ""' .... TOt:rf>UT A6An<. ~~? uy Doug Wildey ~~El CO-l.O Bllf'C MIM t:ER LlfE. "·- ANGfL~ 1, .• 0M,.H, Ml'S~ MERE?' by Tom K. Ryan YOU VE SUFffRoD eNOUGH WKEl<ES CICERO? c-"""' ,...,.,,_ ., ._, ~ •'• __ _. "ff/J,J/ by Al Smith OK, Ke's Al..L RIGHT. l 'vE GOT HIM BY "l'He HANO/ by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller THERE'S A COUPLE OF NEW ROCK MUSICIANS AT TH E THEATER I DON'T LIKE ROCK MUSICIANS WHY NOT~ MUSTACHES F'~:::i::::==:::r:::=:r:::::c:::::r:;:'.:l TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE ACROSS 40 Su1>4rla11'1'• 1 Ten11r1· 1111111 • t Troub!• conc1rn1 01r1i1 1e11!ly I Br••k up 1 42 Swlllne11 ol 11nt1nc• ecllon 11 Deoelttul 43 P1111ed 14 Blockh11d •5 T111t1 15 G•orge 4 6 01cl1r11 fng ll1h 48 L1vantin11 kttch nov1U1t 49 Curbs 18 Ph lnlpln9 50 CllQUlll lslend tree 17 Wortriyol ~2 M1k111 i.ce 68 Alcoholic pr1l1• llQuor 19 Bu•. •bbr. 57 01 c•rt•lll 20 Th• o11ite dutle1 pltche1'1 60 Oo Th• ••m• pl•1• 61 Rubout 2 1 ~ower• 62 Slerr• __ 22 Ea!en•ove t1nn 63 For ••ch 21 French 6 4 Ventur•d l111v• 65 lmptor• 26 Ch••• plec• DOWN 27 R•9ul1r 1 Mu1cul1r cu•lomer I01•m1 30 Ally ol th• 2 Ot>lect or U.S.A WOrthlg 32 Cn1mlc11 3 Kind ol be1n compound I A Roy1I ll.J! •• rr • II A V ' ' ' ' t Pl! R E T 0 Ii "' ' " ' ' ' ' ' N I f' R 'll JA r< It N I II I L I S T A 'q S '•A ' ; •E O~ E ' ' N1" MA T T P1ACT '" j( ' ElJE S IMOH ~ I 0 T I N (j A S U T C L 11 A L I N £ ~ T A T [ U A " £ f E A 12 ··out to 4 2 E11t lndl1n till• ol 13 Pl•1sure re1pect Wll.51!1 .. C of'11um1d 18 Mldd1y 45 Group ol 13 Allill pe1lormer1 25 .. _ •• .,.,,.. 18 LOf'IO l'll lfOW 26 Burl Ill wood llf!p 27 Bodily " Sh1d• ol 0011tion brown 26 wwn group 29 H•••J lorge 46 Hori• Pitt: 2 50 C leaUI• 3 3 Arm ol the C1n1d11n words " P•1t1iftif'IO to ... 6 F1m1i. holy 34 Hebrew pe11on: 1e1eher Abbr. 30 s 111i:ied Into Ce111 . ,,, ... 63 __ de· " 0111 herb ON THEIR POST ERS PF..~NUTS NOW PLAYING THE GLOPP BROS. JUDGE PARKER SORRY, S!R ! NO HELLO! MY NAME '!ii ONE'S PERMITT ED TO LASSITER! I'VE COME DRIVE THROUGH TO P!CK. UP M ISS HERE TONIGHT! PREMONT! MISS PEACH DOOLEY'S WORLD MA'X1 au1r SUCK1N' YER. 1lltJMS ! rot: CRYtN ' OU'f I.DUO! SALLY BANANAS 11>1 a FRee1PNce f\<1Nce, t,JH~U 1s 5<>'\e 111earo. sweeTo JoB , 8oY. GORDO • MOON tSOOD!NoT ·p. CLOUD / ... THE Sl6'! MULLINS ®• ...... ----s ---I~ \ " ANIMAL CRACKERS THQSE ARE MY ORDERS! eACK UP YOUR CAR AND PULL. OUT ! 400 6QS61P 100 MOC H ! by Charles M. Schulz by Harold Le Doux NOW, W A IT A MINUTE! THE LEAST YOU CAN DO 15 CALL THE HOUSE AND LET MISS FREMONT KNO I'M HERE!A by Mell 37 Firm 6 Bicycle per! 33 Con11lner 1>ulldln9 7 Wln9hk• 36 Small e Te11e1. portable Sling oven 39 "•l!Y 9 Coln ol P11u m1ter!el: 10 Tlmete1a 35 Ef'lcou•age " T•ndo!f.s 38 W1ger1 39 Ghoa!ly " Brlf'llJing c1mo .. Sc1rlell O"Hara·e home 65 Luge 58 Eooch :iJtA, ~ Ca.\Pl.AIN TM# YOl.(11: PA"1iN~ CllON'T ... COYlrM• lOi.f "It> -T N MAKIN6 IMP<lf"TANT Fl>M/LV e>.c~/ONj, jW~iLY, IT'f ~ OF '>OL(lf .A<!<l I AH I~" ·11:•- l: DON'T MINO SQ MUCH •. -IT~ WHiN T.CV MAKI! SNIC>I! ltl!F~Jl'l!NC~ "It> MV ECONOMIC:: 5TATL(5 ... Pr•tla 11 Ce111111 ''Y' bhll ' • ' ~ . 1 I • • •.; . ., " " "' ' ,.;• ,. f.4,; " " ·~ " ,,. '" ,, JO JI " - :ti ll 59 Ei.cr. t.1nlt •• " " .. " 'i.~~ " ll " ~· ~ r' ' " " • t:I I I -• " ' -a DICK T~ACY • ' TM.AT 'S TME ADORES~ • by Chester Gould "'ACE CO P OEAO"f A W.. 'llUIMS fO'EN'IS /\ "'"""' H'ART! FoR 1~e,·1•11e eeeN P'RINclNG 8eot.IT TWo ("\oNTli~ /'Jof,J ,8ND No oNe fi,lls s H<><Je O "1" T>1e FWY tJtNDOiJ YeT. ORIS °THAT ~cotD /(MIDS MJiAN /\ WARM H£AAM' by Gus Arriola 'MICE AND~S Al<EN'T FAMOl.15 ~ VITAMIN Af • by Ferd Johnson by Roger Bollen WHAT MADE· QaJ COME UP \lllTH A THltJS IJKE TllllT i' I DID~T COME UP I ' WrJH THAT ... I Hel>.RD IT TH~ THE 6/?APEVll.l E . THE GIRLS ''What I hale about golf Is no matter \\'here you bit the ball, the boles are al\\'&ys someplace else." DENNIS THE MENACE -. " ~. JV " 'r'CKJ'RE IN TME ~~~s IM P MONING 8 ecAuSE Tl'EV ltxllC NN2-WAV. I CAN MAROL'f' WAIT TO MEAR lllAT SUUETIN. N " .. -I== --l•"' - ., ... - ti-;,'' - .. • " ~ O~ICE?? wE'v e GONe NUTS LOOKING FO<I "°" TWO. .• i 1 ' ' ' ' ' i r I ' I · ' I '· ' f i • l I i ! • ' . l j l I l PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI TO C•liDITOllS SUPERIOll COUllT OF THE STATI 01" CAl.ll"OIUUA 1"0~ TH• COUNTY OF ORANGE No. A·16J10 i·. E1t1l9 o1 JOHN 800ENOORFEA, De--', ru'llC!•Hd. ' NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN to 1111 ~~nori ot Illa ol>Ove named clK«lellt i tiat all per$0nl having c:l1l1•u --ln$t tlw ·"'lei deced'11t 1r1 r9qulrl'd to Ill• thlm. , •Ith the MC11U,...., VOUChetl, In ttwl oHI« 01 1111 clerk ol IM 1b0v1 ~n1111e<I «>urt, or ti prean1 ll11Jm, wlln the -ry ~ tOUChtn, to IM ull0tr1lgned 11 the offke ••\ ti 1111 11twMys. SISENW!:.IN AND STAN· TON, Attomey1 11 Law, 451 9ouOh ;;:_~no S!rHt. Ho. 2"· LH ..... .,. .-,".1ll tomla 90013, wlllcn 11 tt>e place of ,, wsl..u of 1tM unde~ll'Md In 111 m1ll'1'1 t~.*1•!111119 to 11W es1111 ol "'Id clKedfllt, ~ llllhln tour n'IOflll>I ,,,.,. 11\e Hr1t public:• ' HOO! o1 11111 .,000:1. SJ:~ o.1ed Juty 10. ,,n.. R. HENRY GORDO"i E-KU'lor ol 1M Wiii of TIM 1bav1 Mimed dKedtnt llSENWEIN ANO STANTON Altonle'fl -1 Law ua Sowtfl Sll'l"lnt Sln'lt No. 214 Loi Afttotlfl, C1Ulorlll1 toGU f91 , 121SJ ilW:!iM iltlorMy1 far l~ecwtar Publlsht'd Oreno-Coast O•llV Piiot, /Illy 11, 19, 26, end A\lq\ISI 2, 1t73 2US-7J PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI! TO CREDITORS SUP ERIOR COURT OF Tift! STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THI! COU NTY 01' ORANG& No. A·1•741 E1t•t1 ol WALTER H. SHRAKE. Oe-.:111i.ed. NOT ICE IS HElll!BY G IVE N to the ll't!dllorl ot tilt •boY'I n1mt!d d~I ~11 111 perM>ns hevll'IQ ctetm1 •oelMt tt.. seld decedefll i re requl~d lo flit! them. "'l!h the nKMllfY V041tlllr!., In llM ollltl :tf Ille cler~ ol the 1bow ..,lltled cwrt, or o oresen1 lllem, wllh 11141 necns.ry ¥OUCllt•s. lo Ille undersl9neO •I tr. otfke ll 1!!1 11torney, HARRY AIDES. AttorMy II Lew, 606 .SOUlh 041¥'1 5tree1. L• Allgelet. C1Htornl• MOU, wllld! ii Ille plKI of ~ ... u of '"" und..-sienecl In •II "•tter1 ~t1lnlng lo 1he "'"• ol uld l~ant, within t04lr months •"" ttw nrsl pUbllcaHon ot lh11 notice. O•IK J11ly 10. 1971. OOMALO RAY SHRAKE E~ecvtor ot tilt Wiii ol t1'11 I DOYI llllmed lilececleftl MARRY AIDES , At1or111y •t L- I II» SOllttr. OllY'I S!nel , LM Ant•ln. C11ltor11r1 M14 • Tlh (1UI 42'Hl41 I' ·, •ttOIMY for lil tclltor Publl1llld Ot'•no-Conl 01L1y Piiot, Ju. Iv 12, 19, 26, and A"9"1•1 2, 1973 21~·73 • PUBLIC NOTICE I I l • ••m SUPERIOR COURT OF TH• STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AHO FOR THI! COUNTY OF ORANGE Ne, A77H2 ORDl!R TO SHOW CAUSE FOi CHANGI! Of NAMI! In lhe M11tler ol lh• ,t,~t!c•tlon ol MARY ELIZABE"TH BOGART For Cn1nge ol N11M WHEREAS MARY ELI ZA BETH llOGA RT , l)elll!on1r, a PlfloO!\ o~r II y11r1 ol •!I'll· na1 flltd 1 pe1lnon wl!fl the Clerk ot tnlt CD41rl !or an orde• tl\a"!llno pctltloner'1 n1ms !ram MARY ELIZ.A· llETH BOGART 10 MARY ELIZABETH GLASSBl!:AG; IT IS OROEREO tn1! 111 pertonJ In· lert•ltd In ttw above en!l!lltd m•ller •Po P1'9r belorl !Ill• Court In Otpartmtnl l on Ille 11th di)' of August, 1'73, •I 2:0I o•clock p .M., ol $.'lid OIV lo show cause, ll any, wnv Ille peUt1on for cM...,. ol ,..,... 1hould not IHI 9r1nttd. IT ·1S FURTHER OROEREO ttlll • copy ol tr.ls Order be published In ll>e .paily Pllol. 1 n9W1.Plpet' ol 119Mrl l I .e •• ' d rculatlon. prlnlt!d In wllil tovnlV, 11t le111 •..-c;e e.clt wrelt for IOl.H" 1ucce11lve -lu : p'lor lo lh• oav ol llld 1>e11rlng. C•lld: July 18, 1971. • CLAUOE M. owerls, • Judlte of Ille Superior Coort OONAl.0 LEWIS McCARTY Pot ! OUic1 lo~ 1lU • :JU fllorlll N.wport loul1v1nl ,. Newport llt •<h, C•IUOl"nll nMi (714} '4S.nt2 • • AUornlf lor Aopllc•nt ~ MARY EL11AlllTH IOGART PubllMltd Orang• Co.11 Oallv Piiot, Ju. iv 19, 26 •ncl Auoust 2. t, 1973 n2f.7l PUBLIC NOTICE Thursday, July 26, lq73 DAILY PILOT 39 Develop er Says Sales Increase New Savings Rates Lendi ng OVE R THE COUNTER Law Is sue NASo Ll•tins• for wtc1neld•y. July 'l.5, 1973 Boon to Consumers In Se nate Sale$ and other operaUng rtvenues of the McCarthy Co. or Anaheim rose to $7.181,000 In the quarter ended June 30 from $4,376,000 ln the com· parable period of 1972, the company reported Wednesday. Net. income for the quarter was $158,000, or to ctnts a share, compared with $192,000, or 13 cents a share, ln the se<:· ond I quarter ol 1972, the rt.'Sidential developer reported. FOR mE SIX months end· ed JlUle 30, sales a n d operating revenues totaled $12,505,000, up from the $8,897 ,000 recorded in the first half of tm. Net income for the six months was $292.000 compared with $310,000 ln last year's first half. t.1cCarthy's backlog of bous· ing to be delivered in the sec- ond half stands at ap- proximately $11,270,000, up 167 percent from the backlog of $6,'130,000 at the end of Jwie 1972. Computer Product Announced CaJifornia Computer Products Inc. of Anaheim says BOSl'ON -The save< Is back in the saddle again, under new federal regulat,ions th.et permit banks to pay higher Interest rates w Ja\'· lngs accounts. "last ,...k I purcha>ed a etrtificate of deposit from a well·known California bank." an investment advi3er wrote cUents a few days ago. "The CD p<0v\ded a 9.25 perc<nt yield !'' Such yielcb are legal on certificates with terms of four years « more. ln fact, banks are not limited as to the rate of interest on CD's with distant maturity dates. Shorter·term deposits are not getting quite s u e b generous yi elds, but the new regulations are sweetening the savings cup across the lx>Ard. Large advertisements are being taken by co.mmercial as well as savings banks and sav· it has developed a "double ll'll'I. .. density" direct acces3 disk storage system compatible with the reee.ntly announced IBM double deqsity 3330 disk ~ subsystem. ~ Calcomp's double density model 1030 has the capacity to I..~' store 200 million bytes of com· ~"'\ puter data per desk drive "" spindJe or 1,600 million bytes ,. per system, the company said Wednesday. THE SYSTEM pennits the intermixing of double and single density disk drives with one controller. According to president Lester L. Kilpatrick, Calcomp's dot,;ble dens It y model 1030 has been operating in the development laboratory several months and t b e schedule calls for delivery of ~· production systems to begin in the lhinl calendar quarter o! 1974. Calromp is a leading pro- ducer of computer graphics systems and a leading in· dependent manufacturer of direct access memory storage equipment. lngs and loan aNOClaUons to proclaim the new rates. They generally show a movement to the maximum legal rates and point to both the no.mlnal rate and the ~alled "effecUve rate," whlch sounds: even higher. For example, a rrwtwil sav- 1"8' banlt In Massacbwetts, which used to be limited to a 5 percent rate on passbook ac- CQUnts, now can pay 5.25 per· cent. And, as advertised, thls amounts to 5.47 percent through daily compounding. Certificates ol deposit for fixed Umes ranging from !IO days to four years or more um progressively higher rates but are .subject to a penalty for premature withdrawal. This penalty Is not gelling so much publicity as the blgber rates. Some advertising does not even mention the penalty, which depo;!itors presumably ' ,, U,l T ....... t High Posted By Capital Get a Horse! Special to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES -Capital Alliance Corp., owner or ~Iariners Savings & Loan Association of Newport Beach, announced Wednesday the highest after-tax earnings for six months in its history. Who cares about gasoline wh~n on~ can .get about 20 miles to a bucket of oats, like this Amish wagon along Rt. 23 near Reading, Pa. Record Earnings Posted. by Smith ' w111 hear abiul wben they ap- ply for tbei. But some banU art frank, and some •re. f er than others. For eG :ple, one Boston savings b,arik includes a s:tnall· type lootnote: "Effective raoos earned only when sav· lngs and dividends are left on depoelt rol ono year." But the Union Di.me Savings Bank' of New York lays II on the Une : "f-OIC regulations permit wilhdrawals from time accounta before maturity pro- vided the rate ot interest on the amount wtthdrawn .Ls reduced. to the rah~ paid on gra<May and day ·of, withdrawal accounts, and up to three months' lnterest at that rate ls forfeited.'' The new rates reflect the concern of federal regulatory agencies that s a v i n gs deposltol°S might otherwise be tempted to take money out oJ. \heir ·accounts In pursuit of higheT yields elsewhere. In tbe J>Oll~ when Interest rates generally moved higher and faster outside the savings realm. banks specializing in savtngs activity suffertd. Sav· ings and loan associatiOM In particular, as weU as mutual savings banb, pointed out ·that their ability to serve the home mortgage market was hampered by the savings drain. Raising the interest rates that can be paid to attract savings may protect the com- petitiveness of savings in- stitutions, but spokesmen for the industry po.int out an at- lendant p<Oblem. That Is, many states have ceilings on the amount of interest that can be charged on mortgage loans. Being able (or being forced) to pay out more interest to depositors, while not being able to charge higher interest lo borrowers. is putting a squeeze on the mortgage- market lenders. "Mortgage lending rates are already at the 71h percent ceil- ing set by state law, and below the rates that prevail ln the mortgage m a r k e t s na- tionally," said Frederick H. Schnelder, president of the Savings Banks Association of New York State. Rossmoor Income Up In Quarter The Rossmoor C o r p . , developer of adult "Leisure World" planned communities, Wednesday announced earn· lngs and net income for the nine months ended June 30. Net inC1>me rose to $2,725.000 from $2,490.000 a year ago. On • per-share basts, earnings ol KT cents reflected a gain over the 77 cents reported for the like period last year , the Laguna HiUs firm reported. OPERATING REVENUES Increased from $42,036,000 a year ago to $47,094,000. For the ili months ended June 30, earnings were $638,608 compared w l t h $529,652 during the like period in 'i.972, an increase of 21 per· cent. Earnings per share or the period were 58 cents, up 21 percent from the 48 cents reported for the 1972 period. Srriith International lnc. of Newport Beach has reported that revenues and earnings for the second quarter ended June 30 were the highest ol. any sec- ond quart.er in the company's history. development areaS outside the United States. Backlog figures , the com· pany said, were also substan- tially ahe~d of those a year ago. Backlog on sales con· tracts June 30 was $61.4 million C1>mpared with $30.7 million June 30, 1972. Per·share earnings were computed on rommon shares, assuming full dilution , of t,095,960 and 1,105,614 shares for the six months ended June 3\1, 1973 and I9'12, respectively. Mercm·y's Branch Set Mercury savings & loan association ha! been granted penn1ss1on by the California savings & loan commissioner to open a branch In West COvina. Jt is planned that the office will be at or near the EasUand Sbopping Center. adjacent to the San Bernardino Freeway with opening plaMed in a new Mercury Saving! building by mld·l9'14. Smith lntemationa1, tnc. Is a worldwide manufacturer of drilling equipment designed for use in developing energy and other natural resources such as oil, gas, minerals and water, and for the con. struction and tunneling in- dustries. Second quarter net income rose to $1,623,000 or 25 cents per share on revenues of $30,194,000 as compared with ,----------. net lncome or $1 ,435,lm or 22 cents per share on revenue of 125,IO'l,OOO In the like quarter of 1972. SECOND QUARTER results brought net income for the first half to $3,317,000 or 51 cents per share, an increase of 31 percent, on revenues of $58,771,000 as compared with net income of $2,~99,000 or 39 cents per share on revenues of $47,874,000 for the first hall of t972. Del Webb Profit (Ip LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Del E. Webb Corp. reported Wednesday that earnings rose tO $2.07 million. or 24 cents a share, in the three months ended June 30 from $1.37 million1 at 16 cenb a share, a year earlier. Revenues declined to $72.54 million from $84.56 million. President Robert L. Flynne said the major part of the in· crease in revenues can be at- tributed to forei gn SOW"CeS, partlcuh1.rly from customers in the 1'-1iddle East and oil '-----------' Systron-Donner Get.s Sensor OK Sptdal to Ille Dally Piiot CONCORD -Systron-lloo- ner Corp. bu r-ecelved from the !'edtnil Aviation Ad- ministraUOn a supplemental type mtificate for lhe com- pany's new autopilot rate sensor. Approval permits use of the product by c omme r cial airlines .., Boeing 727 LIJld m aln:nf\, the -Jl'UIJ'\ said Tuesday. It U!tS a nuicUc sensing todmlque developed 1 n d patented by SyW<in·Donner that results in a unit wltb no moving mechanical perts. FAA APPROVALo! the rate aensor follows airline evalua- tion Md the culmination or rive years of c ompan y dcvolol""""l elforl. Tbe compony bopes to n· tend the applicaUoo o! the device to commercial, military and private alrtraft. First production units are lO be dellvcttd to major alrlln< customers In August. Tbe company's Northern caJlfornla plants are ln eon. cord. Berkeley, Sunnyvale, Dublln and S a era m e nto . Southern C..lifomla plants are In Burbank. Van Nuys, Olhter City, Loi Angtles, Costa fttsa and Moorov\a. Ne.w Orleans Hqtel Planned BURLINGAME (AP) Hyatt l:orp. said Tueaday h wtU opefate a 1,250-room hotel adjacent to the Louisiana Superdome ln New Orleam, with oonstructlon to begin this fall and completion scheduled In the Winier of I975. Agreement to operate the IUIW)' hotel in an 11-acre complex to be known as Poydras Plaza was made with the hotel ownt:rs a n d developera group which ifl.. eludes Ayrshire Corp. and LaSalle Properties Inc. of New Orleans. the Pritzker family lnt<resu of Chicago, and a realty corporation subskl.iary of Prudtnll.aJ I n s u r a n c e Corp. VTN Reports Quarter Loss VTN Corporallon ol Irvine has """""'1Ced that the com- paoy will ttpon a BUbstanlla1 opentine Ion tor the fourth quarter ending May 31, While c omp a ny officials beflevt that operations for the full O.C.I y.ar will be prof· \table, final operaling results will not be nollable until mi~ August. • -;; "t'., .... -That merchant s MUTU A~FUND S participating in bank credltq.,,...~,,..--::..,.--..,...,.,--,, • .,.. I!!" :::.. ·~T ~ card systems notify the bank Ntw Yor11 -"°" E.ciie G• / 30 1 ~ ,., .. n ,,. .. , • ·• •-· "'~'' 1 1111 prompUy if you return an item towlno 11 • "'' cf t:ATON & ·"~" ~·11 •,. Y.•> ·~·ec fQ o.•> 9 gh . ha bid ltfMI .. ~.., orl-HOWA'llO: ..... .. ·•'"' , • .., :..11h!1r :t.li l-boU ton a credit or c rge <n on Muh111 S•ln Fa •111o&J ,..,,,,.,;,.1: ~ •.. .,.~a 1.ro w, FUllCll •• ouotacr bV Gwtll f 1'.SI l!t2 ~"" ''" '"-~1 It ... ~""'' lo ~.20 1111 card so that the bank can 11\e NMO Inc. ll'C""' J '1 I!~ '""" "' .......... l<..UOOElt FO); refrain £rom billing you or can w ........ ¥ ~11 F~ itg 11:!.:i ::~: ~~ i.:: ~·;: ~n;r,,::• :!:~ :~., at least credit your account Jutw ~. ~U' AM ~rt~"" ~:~ ~l~ t~;; ~; ~ ~: ,!:'.: ~=•• ~:~ ~' P-mpUy AOMlllALTY: " c MGMT GI .. : ...... ~' " ••••.•• Soo Ltv •.&& ~ '" , Grwth IA/ l tO Eotv Ii<" j·M •. 1' '""" !>~ 1 • .,. 1.W Sl!CURITY FDS . lllCCll'l'I .)JO 1.11 E111V Pr .16 !.4S ...... ~ •• , ...... l:.<1"'1r 1.41 ., • -Tbat creditors disclo.se to..:=-~ia t~·f~1 "&i' 1~~, ~ ';;l"',•~11 •1• ~·1• '"...., •11 , · · • A-1M Fd 1.541 t .JI llun Ttt 11.N ,~. • 114 •·"' U1tr1 t' 1.12 l:i you your billing nghts at least .... ,f\41 In 11.SI u.n ,,,.., .97 •.lol ... n.c .. 11\ •. ,., ..... Sl!LICTID FDI· · II ·th ,t,fuh"• '"' '"' ...,.,v 11n11r.i """'"" , .... •·•Y "''" snr •>e i seffiJ·annua y, WI Y 0 Ur ,t,(;E Fd •:t1 S.O! F1lrlld Int'." i..num•• t..>t I lll CPO Fa t it 1 """-tat t ... usi.!f ll..12 14.32 Fm Burt t M 9 .. ....,,,. 'Cl ~ 11 S.JJ ~Ill sr,,, IJ o. ......... "es emen . Ator.• Fd 1l"9U .. F-.! RR~ t.n .. .:A c;kOUJo'; Santina! 9 n\i ~ ·~·~ ' •" /.3'1 f'IOEl.JTY '"" L~"1• t) 12 II I• ~ntrv F 1io.i l• THE LEGISLATION also 1'm vrs II) 1l o•oul': u'"'"' 1 11 111 IHA•IHLO ·G•,0 • Am <11V •6J J.10 ~ a.o '"' t,1'9 "~"" l••>>l•• tom\! l:rt J would prohibit banks from AM Kl'•EIS t l>ltl 1t~1).0.L·0•1 '" )>6 .... Enlrpr s:1. •' FUNOS; DP11•1 9.'.IC "''" lnlv •'' ¥1 • Fie! Fa ).fJ ' deducting credit card charges C•11"1 111 a.50 • ss.r.c 1 11 1 JO Lone. ..... 1.1v 1.41Q t<trbr l.sr : : tncom 1.11 J'"2 ' 'd .,,n;i ._n<I J .it; Lt"Otl L. 6 IS : from your checking account ~~11'" ~·}l 1f, E!~:. f/];1217 """"""''s.. P.c:a Fa ,,,. t: I they ha .ed 51oc~ 1121 .... FU11d 1~/Ul /5"''"''~•. .,.,..,RSUN F 01· lDl ess ve rece1v a Am Gr111 1.11 1:~ Puri1~ t 11 tc 2• ... " "' ll.41> 1 '·"' 1.i;.,,, lt.11 ,ii. COurt order and banks from Am lnlln 4.N s... !t<lllffl'I F 4 1'9 4.(19 " •• ~t' I '·" 14 oa "'<<Im 11.« " . " , Am '"vii ••• '.'~6 T•t'l'ld 2•?011.11 ""NO All&: 1n••" w.si 1., using the holder In due ""' Mui I le '·u FINANCIAL '"""" '6i I I• ••• ..,.," 12.l.t 12 : .. d ' AmN1 Cr 1,.0 2.41 PROGRAMS· '"" O'I~ ' •• J •• ~·O• l>o I Ill I i course octr1ne to protect ANCKOR Fin ov" (.l2 ,.n "'"" .. ro ~.,. 1~ '• ~'""""" F..,,.,o~.' th I · b·u· d. t eitour c Fin 1,.., ••~ '" .. ~ .. ,.,,, 1~,J ,, •• ... " ~r.r '·""' ~, emseVe5ln I Ing lSpU CS. C•olll 4.f\I ,.f4 f l" Int S69 s'6'1•V""' 1n v•1l11.i.:t Inv 10.Wtl ~< 0th nd t be. Fno tnv 7.n l.~1 ve111 •11 i11 1•" lff i er ame mens 1ng Grw111 . 1.u t.~, ••IFlil v. HJo 12· 1 ,.,A.,~A F111o10\, v•~hw i J1 1u ' pushed for the "package" ~=· ~:;~ i:i~ FIR\T . ·~~-,.; ... 'l ;~ ~;r·1~&G~ lf~ 10:} Id . ffect ba W• M•tl n.31 ll '1 IMVESTO•s= ""~"" •• ~ .... ~o (,•nF n' l.C wou , m e , n any "''...., l .12 ,:i, 01><: Fo s.~ 1.1• IV·•""'" •I• '~1 1~ .. u Inv 1 ~~11.: "mlrum' Um fma· nte Charge" Aud-~ F l.)'J t.Dt C.r11'1 Fd 1·l' l.2-1 ,.,..~~ 1,.Q. )""Inv C ... OO AKI! Sletk F 7 1 I.ti .. rM<n 1 O• I 10 ~., In · 1.t and outlaw the "previous HOUGMTON: i.1 M11111 1 lo6 1.s. 1nu" ~ • ~ 9 o. ~l>t(''•• 11.'<I,. '" F<llld A •.7l J.t•FO•UM GllOUI': N••U F ll 6;l•.l>o6.i> lnO i· Sv balance" billing s"..tem W1der Funo B 110 1n 100 FnO 11.1111.11 ,..,. •• FNCL: •TAt• •No.n 1, 1"' Slotk · J'7 t .•1 101 FnO I?••·'' Mll 11S6U6J ~"'" f Glll' ~·hich you are charged in· "'•• s.c1 •.21 •.S9 co1um •.ts 1.ts 1~1i.. 11111.~, 01,,.111 ~ '•'' 111 fllC Gl'fl 11.•1n.1s 2S Fund 6 11 I.II Ml[) !lWh /; 1>1 n S• terest based on your previous l''*"' 'l·~ 'k.!:! l&(iN°D••s • 10 s 14 ,..~o 11 >I ti~, sr ;:i•h, ! ~ s / bal ( f h•cb •vroc • •• GROUP ......_[) "1116.>J SI f'r I .-•I ance o w 1 you may l::C'! r:. \·r, \-~ Grwttt ' s 33 , 13 1o1~ t• Jv 2.1~ 1 ~ 11111 s';; . .-?: t l have paid a part) rilther then f!~ K 1\1: \1~ ~rc~•I 1~~~ \fft ~~~M;"" ·~:! •t:~ 'I~Ar,:--N3.09Ffl 00 the lD!pald amount fA your g;;_~, '·'2 • '3 F Spec:ol 10 9• 11 .. ~y ~: /! ~! ::-~ ~'Ml Fd 1· 1, 1 ~ . . 1onm1• 4,93 S.31 Fourso F •.ti t .IO fl G ... n.,..t l.42 1 bill at the end Of the bJJhng B°'I FO!'t t.l'Sllll)"ltANKLIN tlU n 1011111'5TEIN •o .. FOS·' 9,,,,..,, J l) l ~ GllOUI'· Ml r Fa 1 " l,lJ Bii•nt 21 .69 • period• IULLOClt .. ONl C. 105 ·1i "'.•f C.ro •~2 '"' (•Diii 1011 2,," FU"M' Cwttt Sr 111 I • uOm Ill • 9& S :rt !loc*; iS:.0 1 , Bun Fd 13.ll 14 6J Fr tncm l n ,. 6 MuOno In I 91 f IS SIS GROUI'· IS ... CONSmfERS ARE being c11n Fa n.112•·j' usGv s t1010.'-l ·•"','~,• 1~:1t 1sJt c;....,"' 61.1 ,, . OI• 111r 3 n • , u1111111 1 20 s 10 Mui " 1 1t 1 " •1KOt01 • 30 charged an extra $2DO million M11w11 10.0&11·.o.i 11" c•a •ti 1:2:1 ,.,1 1.,.,11 1c 1t10.1t smm11 t o;•,: • J bee f h l>IY Vtn 11.3111146 111.i Eo"1 I. l '"NAT SEC F05; T~ttnl · a year s1mp y a us e o t e B•n""' •.tt , "Fkl LtEo 11.?C ll.11 b1i.nc 1 •• • "15Ync•o " :·~ 1,-' · ba\ t !G FUO\d 10 111.]AFdMI do t ~ '66 80tlCI S• •IS ~n TMll A · ~ previous ance sys em or 10 T,111 11.n 1i.• 'uNBl 1Nc1> ur.111l! J°u •oo r...,,1>1 & :01 9• similar systems which charge .nt s~, 11.1• u.u co,1tou : _ ,.,., sri.. 1111 1 ,, r..,..r , il; t.1> t°HANNINO .,,,,.., t w f II '"'Om 4 11 ) 11 Tren c 111 i..., lntero•t on charges )'OU FUNDS· lmpa.c: I I• ! '' '!ilock Sr 6 .0 1.0 Tr• 1 E -U YOU ...., l1tncd. l0 ... 11.11 lndu•1r 1!1112P, (;1,.1n b'l'I It..! T~r ,, :~ft11 ... have already repaid Proxmire ~nd Fd '01 ! •1 .Pllol '0 • ~ NEW ENG LF: :'OIPI cc ,·"II I · omSlk 1.:13 .• s ... a!ewy 1e' 1.•I f <1ulrv 161111,tX1111cr "''• estimates. E\•en if retailers 1,,7"' l·:! ;~~~~ l!~: 61, Grwin 11 111i 1Junul1<1 l.;,~~ ded th, "hldd " I om ·'• "'o•ouP r;c· ~.ue llll11i• Unllulld 180 • ad lS en cost 0 ~~ j~ l.ll AOIJ F' 1'e• ..... NEA Ml Ot710.ll ll IHNOE1•Y1(J'·~= th. Pr\-· of goods he sai·s CKA1t! . 9•1 Fnd I .. I 11 '"'" c ... , '1J Ill O•OVI'· ... <;<> ' 'BOSTON c -s•-11.J71l4:3Ntullr!lt 9009 00ft·o~lv 1•11u · •·the system would at least be l'nc1 11~ 1.t:! ''?9"' F~"' ,·•,~61 ~:.W'i~., l~~J11~ ~~11c!~~ :·r: '~ ho t 0 -• b frO"t Co $ \] ~a '"'" nd 1.. ... N1w WIO 12 IS IJ tl W"tP\,tl I 0" more nes &Ill a o v e -Ill• es 1.,. 1.n Gu••d n., n •' "''t"••' ,, ,, ,, ,, •••·•• u ,11111 -i. -· t"' ~''HAMILTON GltP; · , ~UJf~ board '' )"-"' FO I ':n 12-16 Funo • \I • ~ Nt\I IV!r 11 Jl IJ 3J Aec111" , ,, • r Till~ II and 111 of th~ Truth lo~i~~AL . ~~ ! l! ! H ~~ 10 11 i~ ,! i~ ~:1, f,: ii:~ it: in Lending amendment! ~·ould ~:J~ ;JI 11~ ~::i"'~.. 1 ~ t: 1~f.1'1no "w111 1i !s "·'" tifb"' 11 ~ll ~ fill in gaps 1n the lending law. ~~ 1:.I 1 1.: =:a t·H 1 " 06.."'.~!'/''if!'n ,, ~= ? h ~~ F . '"-they Id e !ncorn '"' ""l'l .. !l(llc I ll'" ()I) ""Cl 1!o0 110U~AA Cit ll~l Ol" UlS1.a.11ct, WOU t · y~, l·" .14 HO•llC• 19,,-,:iotl ".""" '""' 120 1.J11U~ GvlS ,._ .. l " quire .t0me kltntlflcatlon of c: o 1 ·"' 11., lm!Wl CP t t 1 ia '' ':tTC S« 10 o> ie ti:J V•Lu• LINW' ,.'o~• ( ONW\.TH l!'NI ~ 7 );1 f 00 P.0•11"'1 rt) ~ 1\ VII L... ~l ~ Items VN1 have bought In bill· T ust1 inc 1d""' u u •• 41 Po.,1 R~ 1 •l • io v,1 int , " '"' ~v-A'I 1101 ri1nc~1 tl•tn"~""'"" \1l•nL-G!Tt 1'.Jo ' l"n Jtatements tO prolect YOU ( 1 Q l" lr>d l'llm l OI l Je p~ MYI 'j.I 1 U Vf! \b( lM rt! .... . loo_r •.•1 1si 111rtoc11 ~ ... 'H '"n" ~~ • ., , .. V.Nr l ...,, agamst mistakes: prohibit -co s0t '' 111 1_, '.Ill '' •1 -u• "" 'rt ,.. to\No ir1111 -Bd 1.u ' 11 111"""' G o 1S t ., ,.. s• 10 Cl '" •) tr.vat1 r.» tod I y '1 w I de • fl r e: a d omo Fd r.o 1.ll Inv csi,. 1ir,1•1 _,,, ,.,. "' 111 "s •om 1n ,'~• . • • ...c:•d 1.t' !"" GI.lid J IS '""''l.,l•lt JrO· SOK! J d1Senmination by lenders on ..,,, '"v 1 111t oc '"" 1no1C i.n Pl(ll'I F" 1 0t 1 '! v"""'" ,.:; • -o · f al ~~ o-J •t !"'1"" 11os 11..)l u.u -· .... ''" 1,~,1,..,v.,.,., . s ~ the bas!S 0 stl or merit Ofllo\I Ill , I• 1' lltVlST OIM• H I ~I t11 ~ '/•ft' 1"1 l n I 7l 11111•11! 7.J:l .16 UNSlt... '> .,_, 103 t.JI Vf•IM t'~ status. ontrv c 1-j" ! n ot1 o•o n 111•.ii v1~110 G, .Ml •.Tl •. r~1 Tr d Co ''!'1 ,.,. tQI lv ,. Ol ., •• ~t" llOW I • W~lfSP or tD L~ ,,.. ~·· a c m-~-0":11 •1 1 01 tpi' s11 .1' ·~ r:rwi" ,. 1111 ,, II" ...... ., ""11 1 -.,. miss.Ion chairman Lewis A. """ b1v -" j.11 IN llT OROUP! ..... fro ,, ,, 11 ·~· W.-!1'111 M 1 r. lt"" ~vl!M .ti .ti 121 Gift 6.a 1' "'°' loio• 10 111n >e • .,.I LltfO't'ON .lt Engman put It, In urging •• keJ~·· 11S'(,.,!"0 : v ! ., ~.~ r~ ~ ~' -.~ ~lfOU11'1 adoption of strong falr credit ~r-!' ~ :Illj:ft ~~·1 ,ii!if.~ :·:~~~· :~ ;;: ~..;1,"" ~r!ri t billing legialation, ''There are .,..~;:,. , '1i, ·r, ~~~K~.., ; r, ~ ;.; :::; .. 1 ~ 10 '1 ,, 1" ;·(~~ ', ~ ,, n f.w of us who h~e no\ <x· ~"' co l·!j s" 111~ "'' i 10 1 }i "';1"'0'' 1., ... , ''",,Ill •• • I I n 1 s I: • .,._ lO"l'wi W•t.iv Ht111'-e. perlenced the dissatisfaction !rll~,.ijs i:f ''' f: :i.t :J; ~.::.;irv ,;r,,:: :zt:::. 'i'!!'l~ o.r attempting co communicate I"""" 10 1~11o1 l"' = ~U ,........,.. '' "''• ._, 1nc1 ,,, '"1 . ~'! '° 1•1 1&1 tlf .ltll63 ••-• !~ •••"'"""'Gr )) 9_,. effectively wt th a oompoter " v Lw 1 :a. 11.J• 1"" " > tJ n • 1..v "01111.., ~ \.,... "12 Int'°" , d Ivy '""° 111 I 11 '1"0 ~ !"" 11 •~ .. I~~ '·'" 10.J: II Cent IO l l\ S ,. G,..-tM t ... ,,..,,. '"'''''' -..-·~ ......... ~ "" •• ·~-'"' ~f 11.. ' ·-J ,, '~"'·· ""' ' ..... -• • •• J ........ 40 DAILY PILOT s Inflation Complete New York Stock List lnsuran~e Cheape r · NfiW YOtl:I( (UPll -,Oli-1~ •rt ...... Ht! hltt Ntt prk•• on Ille ..... Yott. Slotk !;.o:(l\M\g9: .... e tlld1l MlOh l tw l•11 CllO l"·I !JIOtJ HlOll low l.Ql C:hU Future D.S. Bo1id May Prowct Investo r StLt• • NII C•v Com Cp J l1S • ll~ • + ~ E•~on l.fOD 11_m N~ f~ tllll+ \t •1~·11M,""'IH 1~ ji) 'f y.,., 1"' r--. P·E il!Oll HIO/I LO* Ltll Cl\O. 8 c I (Olp , 11) ''"' 71~ _,. ,....; " 1 . J = ft! I \4 SAN DIEGO (AJ') A11110111 .: -J-:~ 121~ . ~~!~ ~:t ~ 17\ *~~ i:tt ~~1~fi1trrrc.f~ ff 1~~l s'ri'" ~a .JltE1ll:fu'~!JI~ 1J ~1 '* S:-Pf't db R • f A,_,.JJ'ldt.•olnff 'll •J?-"tlo ,lt.:+11 .. 0111.20 11 B~1' lS\ll'lN+l<tF1rmll"_1liO f I \~Ji ~+'~111I TLT . .U k.. 1 T r<111.sit? By SYLVIA PORTER 'Vo.uld you like the v~ portunity to buy a U.S. government bond ¥.'ith a purchasing power guarantee -e.g., a bond with a dollar< \'alue which would rise as the cost of living index rQIJe? \Vquld you be wilHng to ac- cept a relatively low basic in· terest rate on this bond -say. only 3 or 4 percent -in return for the guarantee tl1at the dollars you invested would be protected aitainst the erosion of inflation? Would you or would you llQt jump at this chance t o boy "Infla- tion insur· ance" on U.S. govern· ment bond s? I'll bet )'Oil "·ould jump at it -:is '0•1r111 you should. What's more, there is a grow- ing possibility that a bond of this sort will be offered in the years directly ahead. In fnct. II this Republican administration does not get in· flation urder belier control than it nov.· is. a proposal for U.S. 1'ter1sun.· "purchasing power" bonds could beco.me 11n explosively po p u la r economic plank in t h e Democratic platforn1 during the next presidential cam. paign. This is not a new idea, ALTHOUGH \1RTUALLV unknown in the U.S .. bonds with-purchasing p ower guarantees ha\·e long been ramUiar in other inna1!or1· prone nations. Even in the U.S. w e hav~ been n1oving closer to trying , lo protect m a j o r segm e nts of our population against.' inflation by making adjustments to higher prices "automatic." As' one illustration. increases in Social Security benefits are automatically tied to increases in the consumer p rice iodex. As an o the i. e-0st-<1f·iivln g escafator clauses are com· monp!ace in ,.,,age e-0ntracts and they're sprea ding. An escalator provision fQ p rotect buyer s of bonds Is not so far r e moved. For example: -lo the surruner of 1971, serious proposals were made lo th'e Treas ury for a new U .S. savings bond with an interest rate fluctuating and tied to the cost o f , living. Study groups asked tq analyze the idea con· sld ered it unrealistic because o ( its potential cost -but 49 percent of c on s umers HAVE YOU HAD YOUR VITAMIN H TODAY? W, TlalJ Ga.ANT, l .,h Don't t £'11 u.~ you have n<'V· f'r he 1t rd <Jr Vitan1in Jl'r \Vhat about Vilan1in U! Or Vitamin P4? 1'he-!K' tic'<· sonic of the "ra.rc vlt1tn1ins" \vhit'h nevertheless play Rn import· ant ro!f' ln nutritio n . Vita· n1in U fo1· exan1plc ii: rnund in cabbt1i;:cs nnd 111 bclic-v('d l('l be an anti·tilt"f'r fnct'>r. Thf'n the re ar(' vilnmin$ Bl~. ~I <1nd 1'. ThC'si• n1ay 11()1 be availahlt· on 1hf' sht>\Vl'~ tu· day, but in tht' fnlur4' n111y piny a pfl.1'1 in dls{'fl..o;;C treut- ml"nt or ;1rf'ventlon. Thf'rf' is n1ort' tri vitamins lhtin ynu might think. Sn, do not take-vitamin prrpnra· tlot1~ indisc riminatC'ly. Rely on expert advi~. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US \!!hf'n you need, a d ellv.-ry. \Ve "·ill de· liver l)t(')mptly "'lthout extra chancc. A J!T('Rt n1any 1wxinle rely on us ror 1.h1•lr hf'Alth n r•e<.l'I. We "'"lcnmf'." rf'r1ui•.111~ for d t'llvcry !Ir. r v Ire t1.nd charJte n rcoun1~. PARK LIDO PHARMACY 351 Hotplt•I Road Ntwport l ••ch 642-1510 'r" O.llv•ry surveye Y the University o( cept;;i11ce could ri.l!Sl' the risk ohr Industries, builder o AcrNC•v ·'° , , l)\li u 1 _ 1o. ...,,,. ·°"' 16 s-.1 1 ..... 1514 11-n+ ~. "'l'"''F"' 1 i 1 1~ T&T pfH • " '' u t •1· h. f Sa F 1 , ""'"tneMkl 1 12 ~' uv. M • 2 +J~CtnHud 1 . .o , J 1;.i; r. 2'.2\4-'-1'1 $11tf er : l '" ~ • I n(:1 •Yll •. 5 ., '2'4 Wh+ 1-!1 1• 1c 1gan went on record ss or a perpC'tuot1on of lnflallon car! or n ranc sco s .... ir.A11 1.1»1.1 1j 1, 1~v. 1, -t-,,,. ,,., 1111,. '·'° 10 "' l'" l'' ~·11•1t1 10tt 1 ' 1J 1 ~ 1 + '4 ~l fl#J ~ " 1~{ !m J:~ 1in+1u. favorin" ii even then. ln ear Iv new Bav Area llnpid ,.... .,,,,1,, •• u !l ~ 1 ..,., ·~·1 ... 1. )11!! PS 1.10 11 12 ti.:. • ''' t v. F:~"" Mi"' l! 11~ 1~ ,,_ "'t !Ir~ri .. 131 •1* ' ~1 .. +"\.,. l'< • _ piJinu horror upon horror. "11ci•u• .611 21'1 !)~ l~l'I h11o-... ..,ue 1.1~ 12 IJ 21~ ,,,,.. i ni-lt , .fY 1d 1 • 1 1 '41 "'° u f.4 "" it' 1972. UnderSt-eretary of the ~ Trans it Sy~tl'tll( 3ays it's ""'"""1 1.11 ,. 11 ~J 11\llo 111-.... cnMPw 1.u 10 s !Th 11 1 ~ji~c: I' ! "ff lffi ~-• ,,.,DtU ·, 111~ +·u T P I A V 1 ... i. But unless and until "'e-find ... ~ · •• """'"~ .0'•11 .» 1'" 12.,.. 13 Ctnisw '·°' 12 -1~1 l'O\r ?01.• m.+ \• F 11oq • 1 ~ ~ "I 116(W(lll s .. a + ~ rl'BSury au . 0«.J\Cr auvUI to un11e1 a spec-.. ~ln•l..I I.It 11 1'(1. ''" 7•1'1 11'<11+11;,C11111SoY11 10 1(1$ »-i ~ ~ F NIIMI~ ~ m I llttn ptitOr .. «)' ltf 18 4 l \lt+Vo ll'•t•d a "fluctuut'1ng rt waystobr1·n"i11fta,11·011t1ackto tac u lar" new trans•'! ... ,n.1..11111 lJ.-, » )t.\li ... 1~contT•f .91,..lt21 21 .. ni..+1<FwP11»r 1 1 1 t~1nt,.,1 8rnct• 1 1y, 11.t 7"+1'1 ., " a c .. '<ll~lft• Colt j 91'• t \1 9<1+ \1 (1tro .tO I •• u~ , • .,, 111.+ Vt FdP~· 1· ' s I Ullt 15\li ... lnt51Pw 1.tt II 2t 11~ ,, .. I~'" bond '' among I h tl w llhin tolerable 11·nlll~ _ and system that could 00 bulll A.om1n .1 00 o 121 '' Uh 13•-111 C•r•n·•d .~ 7 '* 1"4 I• '' -~' FdP 111 • · 1100 U.\\ 1'~ 2'¥1 11"11rt1111 sir .. M: ti\ 2 2 -"'" . I Aolffn llKP 11 ltl ~ft 4\o 114+ ~ ~••l·ldpl ,90 I 3l 33 31.5'1 F..t Ion .3C f j ,. ~" ~~ \ onlr.lfte Un ' 31 114 ..,. 1\.\+ V. "possibilltics" sh 0 u Id run· the COUl':'J''e 10 adopt those for Ofle·fourth l 1e cost o r .. ,, PrQCI .20 :it 411~ "~'1 "'" 44••-r"" :.un.11 .tog 11.118 23 ,, .... 2l ""F9dDSt 1.0t 11 41 " i IOW• 8"1 p $ 29 2°" 20\lo ~+ \Ii d I ' "AR1' d Id f ...... (Ofl!C .ao IG 11i 12'1l n u ... + \4 Cl'MldDrn !fl( ~ '"" ·~· I FtrrOCP .PQ II 1 .r)l;, \\ ·-· £• 130 1 u 17'"' 17 11 a1nenta changes be n1ade itl ways -inflation JS a r e<ility u an "A'OU pay or ,. J1f!Gin111 ., 2, 2v. lit a>.+ \• :Mdbut" P' , 2,.. J\~ 2v. f'lt«Md .t• • 11 1~ 11 , 1171' 1 •ow•llG 1'.u 1 ... _. ••"-11\1 1n.-·v.; (•~ t t f th · lt••lf I f•r•s All.lone 1.1G 11 1~ 26\oo ts'4 u + .,., Cnml)l"t .M 7 '3J 11" 16'1i 11~1+ ij Fld/M l .74D • 31 ""• ~-' lft!tl iowaPi. 1 61 t 1 21~ tt"' i 11\'.' srucure o e savings of our lives. And trying to pro-~ n " .. · A1•CH11.11 1 4 1•1• 11• ... 1., •. c.n11r p1 1.10 u ~• ~" 20',.+"F•1~M1 1...0 I '\ft' Im •t•1owaPS ,;.., 10 • ttl4 1th 'J• :·'. bond Rohr chairman Burto n Ar1P1111.11 J.bOlD2 lO'l lOl .. c11 111 prs1<i 1201\1it 7IYJ1ll't Flou11a2.20 J Vt 1' v.peo HOt112l:k 4 ~ •» +14 · tec t buyers of our govern· A!••k• 1n1~r n 11' 31 21to ,. -1"" ChmosP ... 16 1tt0'l1\lo !' 11 +it :H~£0 :i: 1 1ll ~ lm + 1TE 11'1'1. '°" • 211 1"' 1114 11 +1\.'I -ln the Drmocratic plat· tnc<lt'o ohllg·.t•'o"" fron1 F. It.Hynes. however. AloerloC .ll' ~2 10.\11 lo i'"•+4'Ch•••Co .30 11 ~ ~ ·.'~ 2•''-~FnclFICI ~ ro 11;), 13 ftllo_t':nt11 CorPrln II llO 31~ 30\.\ ~-Vo , " " Id! . I d '] ! A011rr~ .latl 9 lt n~ 11\o 12~•+ V. ~hlrtr NY 2 I 4' ,...,, ~ o.+ \' lslCl'llc 112 16 ~ ~~ im '-'l't+I\\ in CS pf 4 lj to .. «I 10 i' rorin adopted by the 00.._ 1he fu!l in1pact of lnf!ation's ""'OU I I g ve etal s o Alc•n A1 .oo 1• 55l Ji ;, JI 31\\+ ~ c1w11Fno .n 11.19 91'1 tu tio 1111111.cs '.t0 20 .,, 4 \o:I •i.:.+ 1v. 1u 11111 .11 n l4 2S 14\\ ~ "" ,.. the plan at a San Diego Alto Std ,:If 1 '° R ·~ '"f ~ jh•wMan 2 10 1st ffl't '9 '"-+ ,. 1, M1 1.0~ I 1 lll't i lit 11\.'t-* 1u 11111 c11 A •• 1' .o ~ .o '"' .. , 111100 1 · 0 ~1i•mi· 1 · 11 July 191 •• erosion is no more than silnple 'Atcon 1..u .1• » n 37"4 l7 an• "" hlMo 3,)6u 11 60J 5!~~ 3ol0~ ~~+ v. F1N&o1 1. 1 " .(1\1. '3\1 ..,._~hi 1n11pf 114 •• 2 "" 40'• ..ctl,(,, i ¥ .. " Chan1ber of Co1nmerce Al•••" .10ti s2 '°' • s~ 1\ro 2 .._._ ·'° 6 ..... •• ..... F•INCilv ,_. '" .UYi im ~•11v. -J J--,. justice. A111ofl 2.n o 10 s 21>i1o nv. 21111 11o Ct>tmtln .IO 1 11, "~ ,'Mii !~,,..,+ v. F11NS 11nc 2 • f 29\ro 29'111 \lo J•m11 F .ll ' fl '"" • • -.,_ Lhe party propos1..1.I "lo deve lop rneeting 1'uesday. AUAm1..1 .u 22 11 uu 14'11 ''"~+ v. c11mNY 1.11 10 46•• 4t ..,., F1• N•1 s~• 11 1~ ™' ''"" v. J•ntllll ,.o • 11 171-'1 11 + ~ ( ' • l>>I '' I" E 1 I '"ffi" .IOD l~ 1 101/i 1040 10\11 "'C.h•1 (p l,60 l~ 2'Sl ~II ,"", 1»0~._ +~ f'\P1CP 1 3 ~ ml 40\'o (Qlit V. Jt!>PO 1.74b , I II~ 14\li 14~ Vo llUIOmHtiC instruments pro-__ .c.;°'c'c'c'c"c'------·--'-"-"-"c'_'_"_'_·_ AllO ud 1.20 7 1! 2i 24'141 U +4\Cl'lnP.d l,12 l1 •• f iPMI I 9 1 0~1 lt\1' J.tlPllDI ·" 24 UI :J4* ai 3'oi.+1llo '--·------------'1 .. uo udpt ) I ,,Vt 19\11 n~ .. Clle••• t.• D t. ,, 4i\~ 44'11 4S~ +1\ F11Cl\4rlr ) • I \lo 16'1 lj -'\ J CnPPI ',. tlO IOI lOll IGI tectln.-. the livelihood 0 f. ..1111 Pw l.U • 710 ~-"° :io -~·Ci.IE ltl ·~ I IQ 10'1o 10\~ 10\~ Fi!UR!E .96 IS u h: 1\l't + 11 J CnPpl 1·12 ". 1120 tf H .. • .• t> "'"•nGtp 5k 11 IO 1!'111 !:»\ ll'O+ ~ Chi Mllw CP 1 60 ~ l\i ,.,.._ .... F•Wlre 1.n ' Xl 3 )l\'o 3110 . Jtf' (Pl .Pf 4 . -t2D 50\/o 50\\ SOYI+ 'i.i. A . ho d nd Alllll Ch 1.l2 12 ... 34"" 35'• 36%i+ 1~. en MllCll pf ' 1S~ lS\i ISV. F• w:~ 3.0lb II u 4 \lo olO\I '°"'-..... Jew11 c 1. .. 10 40 )I.I;, ,, ... 3t!'l.+n~ ITierJC.UnS W epe Ofl Al!llM•n . .U 2( 21 ).I~\ lJ~ ).l~0+1\o1 Cn P"e~M 2 11 16 351'1 3S ltllo+ Vt Flsch•M .8' Ii 1 OV. 50\'f 50.,._ ""JlrnW6ll ·.. 1 If 11 \li 20I'-P.r ~ fixed itiCOtllCS, SUCh DS saving.s AUoProcl .61 6 16 16~ 11\'o lilt-•,;. l~1~\,c,t :t~ :-0 Jfh l~'\!o 1j:Z'.f t: ~I:::~~'~ 1: ;.J 'iv. I~ l~~ ~ JlmW•Upt' I !200 121'1 a\.'I' 1 \lo .,, AhledSI 1.olO I 176 1111\• 211• 2m.+ ~ (hOC:kf ltle 11 J SlOi S'Ai ~+ ~. l'IHtEnl .ll 11 m 13~ IJ 13 -;i,JlmWpf 1.60 29 ~ . -•.• bonds with purchasing pov.·er Allo ~upm1c1 13 1? 4~i 4h •l'I '""' ,;,11 1 11 .1,. •'t• •·~ F1omr,.,. .50 , u 101tt 10\.\ 10Yit ~ JlmW•lll)I 2 1 70\1.o Yi o~ .,, Alll1C~ .16b !O 171 10~ JO 10 -• ., JH11tSc 4'D 6-4 lttlii 19V. lt ll<+ Ill ~uarantees." Th.is \V8S a n Altrgh!A .so 1(1 1J 9~· 9V. ~·+ l 1 ~~~:::' :~ 6 IC; lI~ llr! aw +'lo ~!r:'11~o,11 1.~ 1} I~ IU: 11~ 1:1? +ll JHnl"V httb ·: 20 ,. ~ ,, +"" d . 'I · · II Alpha Pl .•I 1 11 U 15\'lt 1' +""chrvtlr '"° s 111 21'AI 26~ 11 -+''o Fl'ntll11f41'1 1200 ff 59 .st -VtJol\nMv 1.:0 I 95 ~ ~ n.. ... extraor 1n11r1 y 1mag1na ve A1co1 1.9, u "' tlVt an~ 6l -+2'Jlo Chml$' Wt 239 91.,1 rv. 91.\ F1ln11t P 214 .. : 2 3(1'4 ~ 30\ro-"" Jollnl.Jn .so i1 411 120 11'46 111v.+1t'• Pl "nk 1·n 111 .. 0 . A~ISw 1.60 8 ' , ..... 21\0 U\'+ "'C1Mlg 1 Hb • '° ,.,,., ,. IJ\o-,,. Fl• e Coe1t I ) 2""' 2' 1•~•+ ~ JOl'ln Svc .IO ' ll '°""' 201':t ~ ... " e e c n 0 m I c. AmDlc .50 • 3 1 t'lio 11Vo 1 1~+ v. Cln ll•H ·1.30 10 20 "°"" 20 10\!I+ ... Fl• G•• .6S 11 14-13 h •l'o+ Iii Joh" sv l)f 2 I :)fl':t Jt\., :Jt\lt . manal{t'ment'' platforni Amc:or .10b 1 511 •!1 4 ,,._,~c1nG1~ lM' •1 n\O 1n-. 21~11>-~iFl•Pwr i.ao 11 11 311\/f ,av. 111,1o Jonl..ogn .eo 11 1.u 39~ 311'1 ltv..+21.t. AmtrlC 1.20 6 11 lf'i ll•i Ill..._~ Cln GE J)I., Z?D Sl » Sl Flvor Cll Sii. t1 615 411\'i 'S iii i ll':t Jona L 1.35 I 40 11~ 11'14 II~+~ (although I still v.'ondcr ho1v Ame•P1 2.60 2 Jl'h 31y, 37~•+ ,,., c1"GEllf '" 110 61 61 62 -\l F1uorCPPI l 1 n n 76 ' JD<111n 1.JOll • 1• .u 1..._ 21 -+.,. I "'m Hen .JO 1t 3S<I 3' :mo 33~ -\Ii ClnMlll 1,40 16 "2 71 1S•O 16 -1 FlYTlgr .20tl1 4J 18\(i 211'1 '27... !'o Jostens .71 9 17 II 111A. 11 1nanv peoo e outside of lll)'i:C!f A H•l pl l'.~ 13' 7S~ 15 1S'W CIT Fl" 2 20 10 163 •l ... (l•• .,~ li FMC» .u • 61-4 ltv. lf'/o 11 11'1 JovMto l.IO '° " Dfii :nl'o ll*+I d ., AmAlrFI ,,, 21 5a 12 21\'t 22 + ... CIT cvol i'h I 101"" 10:1\ro 1om + ... FMC 2\lo . . · 11 :n11 32\t Jl\lt-1 --·-Cl'(•ll rCtl I }. Am Alrllnes 1123 lH• l°"'o 1GG-~!. ('!lfoSv 120 11 111 46l;, .4Sl\ '6~•-+~ F!Xld r .20ll 1) Ali 7'4 7>rl.+ l'l IC11JtrAI .XI 12 tl 1•~ 11\.'t 11\lo .. . Am8ak .10 . ll 6li<t 61'1 6\'J-~cin1So 2l1D 12 :w ,, ... 3'1'\ .Ullo+ ~~fDOl.C8 ,60 11 J 9\11 !Vt 9'.~ .. K•l$t rCI .50 1 u l \.lo I ... .. -A LT.S. government bond vd !h a purchasing power guarantee \Vas among the econ~ on1ic proposals of Democr atic candidate George Mc(:overn, but he never got a chance to pursue the concept. F rom the beginning, alm ost a ll 0 r f\.1cGovern 's economic ideas "'ere lost in lhe uproar over his unfor tunate redistribution· of-\1'eallh plan. But the ·purchasing power guarantee was well thougbt out. And not only small savers tA'ould have-had a chance to buy bonds w ith "inflation in· sura nce." Savings institutions, pensio n funds, insurance C<lm- panies, other institutions also "''ould h ave been offered, under f\.1cGovem ·s proposals, SJ)f'Cial U.S. obligations \Vith plJ.rC hasing po.,..·cr g u arantees. ~-fcGoven1, in s hort, was ready lo accept inflation a s a fact Or life and to go to. unprec('(lented lengths to try to insure you against this fac t .o[ life. -Recently,. Ya I e Univer- sity Professor Henry C. Wallich. also a consultant IQ the U.S. Treasury. s u hmittcd the idea a t a conference on federal debt management a nd made the point that the Treasury already is paying high coupons on ils securities "''hich "obvious ly contain an inflation premium ." Added Wa llich, "This time-heinored subject" of a purchasing powe-r bond "has been en-- d owed with powerful actuality Admittedly, too. this ac- hy our high r a te'of inflation." ADi\JITl'EDL \', purchasing j)'JWer bonds would reflect an acceptance of Wlation as a reality of U.S. economic life. PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOfl flEAl ESTATE LOANS lilt & 2nd TRUST OEEOS $1.500 Tei $2$0,000 UP TO 80% LOANS OH TRUST OEEO COl.LAT£AAL flrwl"O~ lOUCTY fl\IHDS N•wport C•"''' 6:00 Newport Ctn le< Orlvto Nt•po•I 6111el'I, Carn. {714) 6'...al24 1A fA$Hl()N $0\JAtf SANTA ANA • '47-6ll J ANNUAL SUMMIR Sale· Allrand 2.3!1 I 1:10 4£1'4 39\t 39'o+ l1 c,tv In• .60 • 217 13~ 13'.< lJ\ltt ~~ Fool1 Mlnrl $9 Ml! \t WI+ l'o KCI prl'f 1" 2 I~ 1"4t 1~ \'t Am8tGll .i.4 11 ll(I 2ra 26\11 2t.-U+ a .. Cltv Inv wh 196 111 \~· lti +• ... FooltMln pl .• 51 161':t 16\'o 1611•-.... Kt"eMll .lD 7 "' 14~ loAlt 14*+ YI Am 8100 .28 11 il 15'<1 15\'o 1$',~+ "'ClirltEQ 11.\ 13 4 .U'h ~fl< 41 +11; Fon:IM 3.l'O• 1099 .M'h $6 , $61,~l ~ K•CPl..1 2.1' 9 2i ~ Jll\. 2'"" AmCtn 2.20 9 92 31'\ 3Wo 31 Clarll.011 ."'3 J2 302 21 20'< 21 +1i;.ForMclC .14 1i4'1(1'1 ll'.• lll,O lit icC SO lnd • l• 21\~ )IV. :mt.+Vi A Ca" Pl 1"<1 3 7l11J lJlt 23~-"CLC ol Am ! 11 7 6'1 I~ FrM OI LIO 6 :1'. ™• 76 \lo IC611 GE l.J2 I 11 lO'ril :>0\'J 2<*1+ \'f ACnM l.7~b 't 20 19\• 18(1 It _ ClevCl1Ui 2 11 10 69 61 6t +2 For1HPI .:m.s I06 2611 16 W.'o l~KtnNeD 1.11 11 I \I 11 11 ... A Cnaln 1.10 1 31 l6b 2"1i 26-.+I~ Clrv e1 132 11 3 3,i1i 3:H• ll'io-•,;. Fot!or W.I011 0 2 Ool ~• :JIVt 3fi o 1 l(tnPl..t l" 10 33 1''1l 2A'4 Ulll AmCvan I'.• 11 409 14"1o 24\.'I 2('4+ V. crevEpl 7.«i .. 1110 "" 97 97 -2 Fo•bO•o .olO 31 :10 3S 3414 3'',_ V. l(•lv 1nc1U11 10 2J • !'4 5'" ·-· Am 01'1111 1 16 2 27 21~ n <iCl•v&Plt 8 rolO ,,.. 6\'o ,~......_lit Frank1M .20 14 431 13" 12'i• 13'4 K•lv P1 L* . 10 19 ll'IO 19 ... ADl~tTrl .41 2• Jt ..O•o •~• I014+ ~~ Clo<OJtCO ,!l 20 4'.!I 23 2nt ~'o+l~'o Fr•nklSt .olO 11 21l 27~· 21~• 2T>1t+ \'o 1Ca1ifa.8r .12 21 JtJ ~ Jll\'o ~+ v. "'m0111I Vst l ••• 6'" Wo+ ~. Clu•ll p 90 t 281 1<1 ·~ J!'-\'o Frep!Mn .10 22 92 241.o 2Plo. j'""+l\lo Kauf l pf I'\ l J' M 14 AOul Of .... '' 11 12\I 12~ 12\rt..., ((llt"P o!' I 10 IP.Ii 12v. U1'. Fr,,ehllf 1.10 II 202 27~ 11 ,,,.,_ ~· KawKk .2G 11 24 0 tlllo 9"'-'~ AmEIK' 1.llO DI 27 Uh 2~1 +'Mi CMI Inv (D 22 211 11\'J 41\l ,:V,.+A FUQUllnd II 6 17S 1111 11" 11" •• · IC6yMrR .60 ! If ljtt 12\1.o 11"1i+"" !~ ei~~ J, 'S..'' ,11t l~ll ·-CNA Fifi .5 I 7 216 141/o lll,) , ... to! .,., GoDI• lnd1I ~°'ii\; 11li19'' + Vt ICHDltr .111 1 II 2"" 21 21\\-Vll A FlnSv 1.10 12 228 21" 2l 21 •14 CNA pl 1.10 lf 19'1o \1'14 19'/o l':t GAC Coro lit l~ l'I ~+ 14 KHntCP .1Q I '°' S ~ S ··· AGfl81.12b a2U\.\:1' 26 -Coc:aColl.10 .U 14'.!1~•1.U 111\ro ""GAFC 41 ·7• 1llllt~l2~ll l~l(flttrll'l .40 S J:(7111Holl\4 lll'I ... AGnBOf\d I "6S L:. Coc:18ol1 l-C ,, 5(1( 73\'o ~ n:r,:.,-\lo II • 1 -KtHOOQ .Sol I ,, 141Ho 14\lo 14\lo-Vo A G ' 3-32 1·16 1·16-1 u (old Bk i t I 13 lll'I 13'i l:Y/o-'~ !(AF pl 1.20 21 1 llllt 9"'-\t Kol•V·H 1 30 I n 23 ~ 23 + '19 A o~1~: :~~ 't \~ 1:~ 11~ lf~ .\4 Coi:.,ln .06 11 56 13 17'9 1~ \) G:~~~I 11~ 5g ~~ Yt': ~~1 ~re.enc~ 1:--0 I "31 21"" 27\1.o 21"+1\'o I A Gn Df 1.80 .. 110 26\ro w... ,.,,.,t \'o Cokl•ll ..5A 7t 5n :U'4 ll\io 3•\.'lt ~ G•mSPI 1 60 l 21\'t 21 21\\ \'t !v Ulll 1.14 ' 31 2•V. ~ ,, -\'o II!. * AmHoht .60 1 l'O ll~ 13\.'I \!\Ii Coll&Alk .S6 11 6' 14 131'1 13~'1 4\ Ginnttt '25 ll i.1 ~ 31\lt 39>,1, 11'1 1rr Mc .60 2t 111 '-' 63\lo 1m +1 '.!. AmHorn .60 11 1$.J *"' .s'o •n;.+no Co!llnt Food 12 16 lll.J 1l1tt ll~i "" GerdDen ;,0 l• 11 Jtfo Ul'o 1,,.1 I'> 1rrMpt 4\'t .. 2111' 12*1'1 111' +2 AHornel)l 2 2 209Vt10WJ :iot\ltTl01/oCcllln 11:1010 6' 21\• lO\'o 20'it "G•rloc:k t• I \ 11 11 18 K1ydn .)Ob 7 3 IS IS U , • AmHo.D .21 43 lit "5'4 "11'1 ,5 + '°' Col Penn .2 ().Cl 436 59'('1 ~ SII'o 4 G•i Sv<: 1:12 t u l•I) 1 4~ l('Ji+ ''I Kidde W .IO 6 31 20\'o I.._ lO t ~ J Amlnvst .50 1 ll t >lo t t'lo+ 'Mi ColonSt l.Q.I I 10 16h 16'\lt lt.,t Gl!IWIY In I 9 714 1 1\'ti y; ICllld•W pl ' 1 #I ft ft .,., . .. 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""' "'TTpfA l.t.4 31 ~ 5!111. son '"cwo pr 1.90 .. 24 21~ 2• '' • 11 .,011 "I , 21 1~ lu'lli 1~ 14 L1msn Sn I I 11 14 13\/o I• I ~ Am Ta.T wt ... ~ CornwEd wt , 3 l°" 1~ \~ " I I , 1' L•ntllr .Mo 12 I 221Jo 22 2214 ,,_ Amw1rr ,6' -l \'I St~ µ:,,_ V. CcmEd ewt 9 10~~ 10"~ 101/o-,,.. "'" 1"11' 4 395 l~V. ll\io lt'lli+ ta L6•MI 1.llti ' 13 zw. 23'11 ,13Y• \It Amiron .6$ 7 1 lO'/o 1~ IO!it. · · CornwOll 111; l<ll 50' llA< lO''o l0Vo+1 ~·" ~ .11 20 • 22'1 ZH\ n:r,:,i \lo Lalto!M SU IS J m 1\li 1'/ 14 Ames•• ·'°" f •, 1''" 101 Utt CwOll~ l 12 " 22~ 22\.'I 22o;.+1~ .,en Molls I 21 SJ ~l'I S7\'lt 511:i. I Le•rSl•:i ll t 26' 7'1t 1 1•i :1 '·• <> • 2 ~I '"' 61/o-,,.. '" • , ·~"-"MIU pl I~ ~ 91 91 91 l \'lt t ,· 2 ~ ' ' Amttek .60 10, '"6 1sv. !l!'t ll + ~• Cornsal .61 lt 1% 5'" 11'4 a..-" .;nMot 2.0~ f .o;i 68w. •Rli 67,._ 1., Leer,, \It • 4 ru 27\• 27V. Vo AMf= In Id)$ 471 291/.o ~ 21 -+I Comwtr kl ' 11 4 3Vi :r:l'o ' <,;nMolpl l~ 3 s:i•J.: JJ )Jlf. v. LillKOC .-'O $ * 11-. 111'1 11\/o-\i Aml1t .M t 473 II~ ll'A llV.-y, (O"Aar .lib 1 3S2 14'11 1• 1' , ~ GtonMOI pf s 1 71 \; 71 71 \i, \-'> l..1111cJ)f 2.60 .. 111 221'1 22\'f 22H • AMP lt1ecrp 50 2.67 50 A7 it +w. CcneMI l.tf 1 lJ I~ ll'"i ll'"i "*" Porl IKI 'i 214 l?.\\ ll 12,4 \'o LI1111cpl 2.211 ·• II t7Vt 2""' 27 h UPC Teltclllrt Amr>coP .36 07 17 sr,\ 1-1.i 11,l+ Vo C"l'IMI 1.CD 14 '12 23\'o 2'J'Jo 22\/o--"'! G PubU 1·60 t 314 20',(o 20 20\.lo -i 14 l..e,swy .SOii IJ PD ny, ll~ 321'1 \.o Amoea Cp S1 S•A !\'f Sl'o C1111rlCC .60 10 19 11""° 1"" 11~ .-.n R•tr.ict 72 25 ll'I i\lt 6\li i,;o L.eeds.l.H .J& 19 'U 13 11'4 13 -'·~ •,mm•",,', C>M.rp 1 92 6\., liE 1><-'i,;o Con ii 1.JO 11 110 23 22',.. m1+ l'o GnSlgnal 6$ It 1"2 12'/. ,1 .... (211. 'Iii LffloOf\lt ·'° 11 21 15" let U'h+ ~i 1G 1 21 13\\ 23 23*"-:i. (ON J)f t . . I 76\.<r 761? 76'h+ l'i G Sr••I ii.ti 3' l~ ~ • .! l..•h Pl C .60 6 S 16\11 14'ilt l"li+ '4 At11rJ)f 2.6$ •1 31 31 -\oil Con1 d pf ! 5 62>ji 62 62'4-V. GnT E ) 60 ii t'll 31 ~ 3f" +Vt l..el'I VI I Ind 6 H'o l'l<:o lh+ ~ Aids Reftreling :~::~12.-: ·• 1l 4r~ 4fi: .f~ ~ l:'~:i 1;.~ 11 in liv. ri~ ~·t,~ 8Gt~1:,11 t~ .u~ ~~ l:~ f! ...... t'~~ 1~: ·; i: 1t l~~ l~i ,, R Cl . \" B (RR h s I F ) I fl Amlll lfl .20 10 I'] ~-. 514 n ·.+ ~Con Frot .51 • , ... 11"' 11'4 IP.lo .. ' ...... . ... _Ill JO II 22 "'·' 3' 3S" 1 .... ep. air ·v. urg ener • anc o , an a e , e , An1con .2.10 9 459 23 I'" 23 +i~ coniNG 2.03 9 ... 11,,. 2d'lo 11 .... + .,.. T1F1pt 1.30 .. 1210 16>t. 16.,, 16'11r+ 11o L•~ Fd C•P "* nr. ,\It ,~ ,,. tl t d P k H ·1· I · I · R AnchHc 1.111 1 • 9 ·1011., 91'1 lt\lo • Corum Pw 2 ' 119 24'11 lsi't 21 -.,.. Gen T11e lo • 91 11 ~ 21 + ""l.•v Inc .7Sa . l U'ilt 12 12 .,.. recen y o ure a r er· ann1 1n p ant 1n rv1ne. on Ander c 1 .60 , 11 ,,~ u •1o 19~ .. eonP Pf 4.16 t4ll "'" sn-. s1Y1 .. ~~~r .lol~ , 61~ ,t.. 1~, 1~~ }'." L ... 1 s1r1 .48 11 141 26 2:1 2.w.+1:i.:. H\lghes (r .gh l l hol d F 4 i·el refu Li g rece I I Anot1k1 .10 " 109 1!»9 10"• 1ov.-v. con P o1 1v. . i10 ,,,,.. 5' St -Vt . · ,.,, • ""'.------... 1..•vJu F11r11 12 s2A ' 11,0o ·~ v. I s · e n P ace An•vt co 41 • 'f 'l" 12~ 13"1+1\'o conP 19 1 11 12<11oov. 9' 9' -1 (:r."~c" ·" H ~!G1 ,'j{t ~1 ~1 -+1:1 LFE CorDl'I 19 • 5 4'ii 5 + v.. Pro duced b y the ,;r and fuel di'v 1·51·0 n as manager AT>Mh• ·"° 7 3 1 l':t 12:\11 ll Vt+ ""Conti Air L11 12 sti 91/o •'" "...._ 1t. .IOll -• .... "" ,. LlbtWO uo 1 1.s1 ~ ~ :am+~• .._. , f\<>eo OU '~ 1 ,, H ¥1 l(~'o l•o;.+ ~ Cn Con 1.60 1 112 26V. 15V• 2~ \lo" Gef'wJ)/ 1.iO l60100 IPO 100 -'"I.OF pt 4:it . 1 n .... n'4 72\~ Jack. Carr {center) a d uper1'ntendent Al Olgesb e Aoe,oeo .16 21 "!O 4'~ • •\lo con COP!'N 6<1 61\ n.. 6'.'•+ \~ G1r111r 1..JJ io M im 1•'111 itv.;. ..., Ll1>1.1v Mc"ll .. m ~ ""' '"+ v. n s e ' A p L Ccirp ' )l uh 11 llft+ '14 ContlCD 2.olO • •• (2 ., (11':t+ 'lo Geltv 1.2lb 7~ 12! 1201'1 I $l/} 111) +4"41 UbrlvCO .JO ' 2 IW. 11',.. 11"11 loo k on APL J)f8 .50 I 914 91,(,, '\• . r:llCP Pnl'I .. 12 .u "''°"" ,s .... + \\ Gt!IVlll 1.10 12 20 l'O lO . l.lbrlvLtl .llO 1 ! 9V. 9"j, ffio+"'" -llPLOIC 1.06 l •1s IS 15 (ppt8 2'h 2 '51,4 od'AI 4S'I•+ \'i Gt= 6UI .IOb ,., • 711 1 1 + \\ Llber pf 1'4 t:m 1:m 13'/J ------------------------IAt>0P11I 7.IO Z10 95\.'J 9!" 'Jl'l--1\IJ t111!R \,30b 11 9 19:\t lf\'o I,...._ IA GlantPC .llO ' 12"4 1~ 12~ \-1..11111 M1y 2~ 11 T1 ~ 3$\'o 3.S'.4-.'lt Ar>olllCI Mq 11 11 6'I\ t" 'ij:li \'I onll"VSI 21 I 1(1 6\.li S'/o R\ Glbt Flfll 511. ~ 72 16~ 16"'1 le>l< Llltv El .12 '3 '21 '2\.'I ~ tl*+l"' ARA Sv 1.n :it, 142 137 13 l:M 3\li onMIO .11D t 12 1o:i. 10 101.~ •• Gh:ld L.1w l1 -31 1'"' 7 IV•t \~ UncNll l.OI 12 210 Jtl'lr. 271'1 JT\ro \0 Arca!1N U " 7 71'1 lf.'" 7\.'I 4tt Conti Oil 1\.'I 9 51$ 31V. 29V. 31 '1•11~ GlffH IH .36D 7 1J1 l.W. II ,..,,.. 1 LlncN ll Pl l 3 11V. 77\.'I 77'M .. Areal~ C 2 >ti 23 23 E°"' OU pt 2 1 13~< ,,.,, >13'4 1\'lt Giiien• l..SO 21 15' 6~i 60 •1" 1.\11 LIO!itl Corp 12 ll ,,,. • , !~c,•11•,•o,,.so,, lj It 29~1i lJli 21'11-i-1 ont T•I .II 14 5n 2~v. 2' 2'11' '19 G!no1 lncor 14 3S 11\.\ 11";1 11 .. .., V. Litton 2 .... 1 t J.U M'o ~ ,,,.,_·i~ n W. 4"' ~\II onirl oa11 9 $93 39'\4 313.11 39 + '"Gltlton .41 14 12 17V. 161'1 16'11-4l 1..111n (¥ l)f 2 j lR• lllilt ll'N-v, Arl1llr .n 1 n 10'11 1ov. 10V. ... ConOlllf 4'12 .. UCO 5' 5' 5' + '" GIObll Mir 12 115 l'\'i 1~ 1311. LITTonln J)fA 11~ llVt ll'rllf ~ Ari1 PS 1.11 ,• 12 2<1'~·20"• 20'h • Conwd I.to ' I 17V. 271.io 17',1--\I• Gll>IJIUn .60 9 ]6 19_\t 1"* U>,'o + \'o 1..oc:kl'H!e<I 6 11, ~ ~ '" ~ Ar~ Btsl .IO 58 1Pr, 11\'o Tl~+~ Cook Un ,jl 6 12 7'1r. 1\o\ 1\0+ V. Goodrlcl'I I 6 2\1 21" 2(m. 21 -\~ 1..~""C 1.16 7 lfS :liof,(o ~ :r?'!'o to ~rle~ Rl10v 11 113 1¥' ')'-6ft\.._ Vo C-Ind .tO 12 111 32~ 30" 31"'-il~'i GoDclvrT .n I 120$ 2• 23 Z3"'-l':t Lom•1FI .32 13 16 13fli l)Mo 131'1+ '19 At mao1 (I) ,.. ·• ,,.,.. ~ \'o Cooorln J)f $ .. 6 \l<I 90 90 5 GordOl'IJ .24 9 lt ll'il lJ 13'1:t + y, LomM 2.JSb ll 101 13411 .O'Ai .cl~ v. 'Qua1·ter-pounde1·' A;~cgs, 'i.!So 1 112f 21~ 71 211'1+ \lo Coup\ J)f 2..., _ , l61'1 J6Vi sill! 3v, Govia Inc I 9 JJ :U 14\lt 21\l:t-h l..ondon Mio j ~ I,.. 1%'/o 12*+ v. II ll'" llV. 21" ·· C-4!r lib 16 156 lD!• 10 Ill\~-'" Gt6CI W 1V. t l37 'tt\.'t 22\\ 2'J\(,, I.-S Ind 1 156 5 14"" 1$ ~r~u?i! 4: 1, 't~ ~ii" SJ.,,. il+ • c-Tr .Solb 1 21 11 11-i. 1 ~ , Gr•no IJ "'° 9 2' 11.,. 11\11 114i+ \~ I.on S1G 1.'6 11 n 2~1 274'i 274\+ '1.1o Ar 1tR 1· 6 1 ll' ~ (-Ind .'2 1-4 90 21"41 ll't. 21... Gr•n!v 1.10 S 1' ~ 22"" 221,'o ... 1..-ILI l.46 t :111 20>,'o -. 21Wt-\'o A~i:1:o .J: I 51 lw.1;:" f1:.t:.~c-Rano• . 10 20'/• lf\lo 191'1.t-V.GrantW IY, 7 :l>2 2<l<t. 20 20 -V.l..IL111J 1.12 '' 11'<1107 107 107 +114 A•vlnlnd . 2 11 11! 1.W: 1!~ 1Sl11Ill'I ~CPWld 1.21 6 11 26 \4 2•Vll U'9+ '"C.r1vor 1.20 lG 46 ~ 12'11t 12"'-~ 1..-09 . .56 •2 •1 71411 19'11 11411+ \'t ~~:Cdif1~ , ~ ilt ~~ire 1""c:~: ,~, ~ ;;;1~11 105~,°'~.~g:~~2~= 11 111214 ~" ~i.;it:l::L~ndir~ ll & "~ ~ ~±,~ A1~IOllf '·'° ' S2 $1\11 52 1 Cou1ln l.7lb 11 21 "'' ""~ Ul>+ v. Gtl..kO 1.20t n 5 2'\4 23 23 ' L6 P•Clllc 10 1215 ll ~ 31\oif fltt A•Or"IG 1.413 ID l2 35 l4'Ar. 3'\'i ,,.,cowl&t Com 16 6 '""' ~ • ~. GIN N•k 1.61 11 "'"' """ ~~+l\.'t l.o\IGll 1.IO II IS 27\lt 2t"1o 2~ Not Y-11 to Name MINEOLA. N.f. (UPI J - In its advert~. ~1cDonald Corp. says it provides a quarter pound of n1eat in its • ' q u a r ter·pounder" han1- burgers. Hormel Co. Rationing Pork Sales FRESNO {APl The Ceor ge A. Hormel Packing Co. plant here is severely ra· tioning pork supplies to supemarkets. manager Scott .Johnson savs. Hormel ·elienls lhroughout lhe San .Joaquin V:lltey are gelling hulf a nd sometin1cs less of the amount of pork th('y "'ant _b ecause available supplies are s\in1, Johnson said Tuesday. lll S PLANT began cutting back supplies lo independent grocers from Stockton to Bakersfield this week. The federal price freeze 1vhich ended on pork Inst week "accrnted " the problem but wa~n't th1• nlain ca u se. Johnson said. The time to get the pigs to mRrket is, he added. • At 61>r 1.20g I 4 2~ 21y, 21\l:t-v; Cox 8rll .3$ 14 31 2S'lr. 73'111 2(~+1\.'t GN N Pl 1,60 I 211/J 21 1'1 21 1'1 +I\ Low•nst .l'O I 13 1£1 154t I ri + VI "Mello Id k b' A .. oc: Tr•ni 6 5"" 5\1 Wt! 1· CPClnll 1.77 lO 110 30\~ 30 30 +\'I GIW,Fln ."40 1 l.U 1~ 11\1. lfl'o-~-I.TV .Corp I l'3 ~ t\lo V. na ma es a 1g Athlone . .a s :)0 12.\oli 12\/o 12"" ~ Cr•neC IOo 6 l-C 11'1.1. II\~ 1114 Gt Wnt Un I 41.~ •'lo 'llo +\) LTV Corl) A .. 2 lOV. lDl'I ia:-" Pirch about a full four ounces AllcM• 1.0lti • 16 1a~~ u 1• 11si. ,,., Cr1<111 Fi' .•G 9 21 •VJ t 'h IVt GI w11un of . . 9 lb'IAr. 16,,. 164i.-"• L Tv Cc s 01 ' 35'ilo l.S\lo -v. llllC!vE 1.17 9 11 n~ 21 1'1 2,,., '.lo Crocker 1.66 • 59 26 ~ 25~--"~ Grl W•sh ln 7 J\'o 3V. l\'i +v. l..~brllCI ,4) 2t )ff IS\lt "31'1 .\\ of meat," Nassau Counly Al Rlthllo 2 n 611 1.1111o 12" t-Olo 21'f Crornp K .IO 1 u 11>.o 11 ... 11"'i '" Grn G1an1 1 l<I 11 21,. 21v. 21:w.-v. L11<kv s1 .54 ll 11' ll411 13 11 -\~ ff -A!Rc l)f 1.10 n $1\(o 5.l~i ~ lV. CrouMH .SI ,, 14 23 2'J\lt 23 v. Greyhd 1.0( • 26• 11\fo l:R'o II Lucll-1.0I • 71 13"4 13\llo l)Ya-v. Consumer A 8 Ir S Com-All11 Corp Sl 39 2 H-2 \.'I Crown Cor~ U 175 14'h 2•\I• 2•1/o ') Greyhnd wt . 165 3'\ J V• :Jl/• • Lu~enSU .IO 9 '5 ''"" J(\fo 2'111+ \4 · · J E p · k A TO Inc .16 I 102 a•~ r ,1 8 + '·• Crwn ll I.~ 10 2i'O 31 71'i 31 tl''-Grolier .90 1 139 l<l''I 10\.'t 10~•+ \0 I.. V 0 Ccrc:1 14 ~2 ~'i• (.1.i «Ii -V. rn1ss1oner ames .,, IC en Autom Dafft 39 1sa 51i, ss Soi•:.+2v. crs CD ·"° 1 11 171,;,, 16S!i 17"• 1"!' Grvmm1n 11 9V> 9'• t>'i ~vk1 Yo11" is t2 7~ A\ '""! " Sal'd Tuesday. "Let the m g l"C ,•~,·~, t )"d, ",o 5' s•o sv, s't cu11lo•n .30 u 1• 1'\' 13~ l•\'I+ ~. Gvardl•n 111 i1 11 2'~' 2J"' n~o-t t\ I.vii J)I 3.12c . 11 u ~ 141/lt •to ~ • .,,Q•ll' 1"3 111.'t IO'h 11 11>+ 1,'o Cuinlnl .U• 1l 11 38119 Jt 3t -'h GuMIO l .13b 9 1-1 38'Ai :l'N 31':...._"" LVllChSv .4G II 6 I"-'> IV. I'll! 'It an honest four ounces or else Avco co "" . . ,, 211 , 2•.. cun11 or1111 t 'II 6'"• s1·• 6 -''o Gull 1..111 .90 1 5!l 3-rv. 1fl'I Y + 1119 M AF 1 -M ~ Avco of ].10 16 33~!. 31~ lt•1J-i1~Curtltt Wtl '2& n6 2H• 21~i 211/.+l>iGul!Olt 1Vi t .560 2AI 2'1!..'h-V.Mac....._,~ID I 12 13 12~ 12~+\'o call their hamburgers the "not Av~rvPr .1S 31 111 •1~ 11~ 4'.!~+ V, CulletH 1.tt 9 J9 33~ 32 l3 +1'1• Gull Rel.Ch 12 107 9\'t 9 .... 9'° +1.t ''""'"" 12 lS 3''t m ~ ... . Avis Inc .ol(I JS 113 21"4 l 7'o 28''1+1\li (yCICOtCD 1 5 ~ 73"' 23;\ 23%i GllRplb ,6SC 9 1$ 1'1' IS + >4 M1ck1 _JD 6 12 114 I ... quite a quarter pounder." A,,n111nc .30 , 3'S 9 lllo l'i«-.,,, cvon"M' 1 10 103 3111> 3'~ 15'1)+ .,, i;unstu 1.11 12 s2 1N 191/o 19..._. v. ~~~M',' ·,'':!!:! 1 1.io. 7'/J lit n.+ 'I• Avn~I ol 1\o'J l •5 4S •s +1 -D 0-G SU J)f S.OI ' 110 61'4 11114 61•,i-•1 .. ,.,. II ..., -, 3 lJ!IJ 15 15 -·~ Avneunpf 1 1 19 19 11' +1'1> O•mon Co ]I 1li »14 ff'!. 49!t Gulf&Ws .6' 6 3U 2.sYo 'll\'o 25Vi'+t~ Mlc9'A H I 614 2(\\i n~ ~+j• . AvonPr 1.4G 52 •J9 121 1\5'.!. 11114-tM. 01nRlvr .IO 11 119 9'1r. &~ 9"'+ '4 Gulf&WI wJ , 4 U0 1 6\\ fl't '"Mcv PIA •\!. 110 55\'• \lo -WITIJ THAT, Picken an-A11ec 011 6k 46 s9 1610 5,~ 16 _ ~~ 011~•CP 1.36 1 a 3\"'-30"" lOl.!.-1'" G!IWs pl l\; o10 106\" 106 106''• +-• t:!3 "fqJSfl ~ 1011o 11o+ \!. . • -a a-oart In .JOQ n 116 ~··• J1~!. 3Jl•+111i GllWspf 3'i 3 S2'111 52~1 51't M lcCll rt · ... 7 '" •'4 ... that his inspectors a1b&W•I .10 ll 111 16~0 2sv. 26•.~+ ~ oar1111<1 p1 1 64 37'• 36'• l7 + 1• G!IW•of Si.Ir .. 2 72141 71"" 72'/.+11\ M!~0nav ·~ ' ~ 1~ ~ N-+ \lo h &acne .I~ 11 50 6'4 s:;0 6"•+ '17 oavco 1.u 1 ll 11•\ 1~ 1M..._ '• G~Uon lndsl I' 3.f 5~ 5'h ~'A Ma ory :l! 1~ ll l"'l ·-,~· l'I>-• more I a n I 5 0 6aker In .16 ]( 61 UV. 24\0 24~ "" Oavc J)I 4'.'< •• •1?<1 61 61 61 +2•\ -H H---. M " ' .,,. ... Im ... 8aktr011 .31 26 1211 30 "8'1• 291/•:j:IV. 01yllntn ,,, J 10.I I P~ p;~ H1ckW 2.36 9 I 341':t )6\~ 3'',11 M:n~nd 1: l~ 12.~~ll'.. + ~ 1i1cDonald hamburge 1 t"'-Bald OH .32 4 24 uv. 13" u 1~. oavtonH .S4 1 m im 1•1~ 1,,,.+ ,., H1llPr1 .to• r 3 u TMi 17 + --M :ff Jr" •• +,.. rs 3 I~ 9,,uGas 1.96 9 l•S 1•~ 16 16 -)A 01yPl..I J,66 11 16 12'111 21'11 21..,_ '4 HllllMn 1,12 (2 m 1~ 1511,,_ lMV.+4V, M:~~ 11J' I~ ~ ll' r.lm: !"'ii" • tlet · th Bl!Gl of (V,. J200 62 '2 42 OPl..old 7.•S l30 1POV. 1001,0, 1001'1-V, H1mP111 .!IO 13 V 15\lt llV. lJ\'o t"' MAPCO . II l'" •-• nounced checked con1pany s OU s rn e coun-e~nca1 1.~ 10 11 2l'• 21"' 23~+ ,,., oeanwtt . .o 1 1s ''' 13'i 1;-•• H1m<1C11 . .w 1 " 10 '" 10 lli M•r ll'lon ' .. 1 114 !!and~o l"c ,, 2(9 JS'"• 3' J5\~+1>t O<Jere 1.Cll 10 104 .,..., '61Ji •71-~i Handiem .61 9 3l1 l!Wo ldi'I 1~.t-1\) M1r1011 160 1j7 i:: ,t'Z 2t: J 1~ IY and found the product did 81111301 Pn s sl 10'1\i 9•• 10~-. ... ,,., oe1P&.L 1,h • l9 1~• 11'!11 1S'~ H•Mv H .12 11 5 1914 1t11i 1914->4 M•rcor '90 213 tl\'J '°"" .,. &an<1rf1 1"•. i 16 16 16 -+'•OelMnl 1.10 t 11019v. 11~• 1n-.+1f•Hane~CJ) .60 6 21 ll 1~ 1N+\\Mar(l>tot'2 .u .o 0¥1 ~" 1~ 11ot measure up to the ad· sn~ o NY 2 1 SB :u•i. 3l\l:t :u + ,,. oen1A1r .so 1 436 ST>• s.tl'I 56 +l H•11"1 l .ls 22 33 5!l "'"" ......... 11> M•r•m .l<lb ii "' .. 40~ lj1l ,. 6ank Va .It 11 lO 30 :19~'1 :JO + \' Oelltc IMn s 19 9'< e I -Iii H•rco"'"1a 1 I ~' 20'1\ 1tV. :20 -l'l MarMld 1.ao 1 '6 Ul.lo JloV. 2 ve•tt'sm· g Ban~Trusl 3 10 16 51" Sil'• SS,._. 'Iii O.llon• CP 6 112 ,,,, 131-1,111+ t o Hl<dfts .II 17 n "" 11Vo 1~ Merlonl.. .11 31 '3 4 \lo 41 · . Bett>e•OI 2k 69 33\11 31111 ll\~+2'' °'""I•" .IO I 117 25\" 25 2S'i'I+ h H1rn5fg l.l'O 1 20 1S'lo 1J :U"·+•r. Maritn 1.11 n 13 131'1 4* '3'hlrn The h amburgers ~-·d ',•rd CR .14 36 .10 """ 21\iJ 21~ \II Oennl$n pl l 5 11\li t 1\o\ 21v.+2 Harr•l'r• .n 11 12 19V. 11\$ 191.io +'lo Mtr11v .so 21 15 o" 42 4 ,,, 214 • Ile Sal , arne1 !.7'1b 9 9 11''• 21 11\' Oen"V! 06 l'O 1'6 13"' lJV• 1l\i+ () Harrl1lnll) 1 ll U 32.,.. 31~ 32\1 +l'I M••<ill Ctm IC lt I~\ •'Ar I"-1,' g 37li nd Ba•k 1n . .W ·l• 11 6~1. 6'tl 6•1+ \\ oenl•P!Y 't.1 1~ !Jl li''o 171/o ll"''o _,.,,Harsco lo 1 9 1' lW. 16 + \.t M1rlcn 2\li• (( '-37 31~ :)Cl 31\;,+1~ 81/era e • · OUnCeS, a SOllle 8allnpf 2 >~ JIOO ?&'•'> 26'> 16''1-'h OeSololn 6.0 ! 241 1\1) 1<1''1 11'1>+ ••HartSM~ .&t 9 61 11\o 16t'o 17 .t-\1 M1rshF IU 11 91 U'\lt :U\'f ~\llo· were one-quarter o u n c e B~1••M 01 1 .. 1 16\., 16V. la''>+ '"' eeiEdl~ 1 •1 io is it11 191\ 19•l H1rttH .1ou 11 n u~ 1~ 1~1"' M•rllnA: ·'° in 6J tl'I '"' , •,•!hll'ICI .:JO I 8~ 23la 21\.'t tllii+2 Gt!Epi' f.:n il0111 111 111 , HawaEI 1.J6 10 I] 27 16>t U'tJ+ i\MfrlMr 1,15 7 56 16141"' i'°"+'i4 underweight. •uschl.. ·'2 19 613 28"• 21'1• 21•.-'h OetE p1 7 61 lln 91\'I 96 % -\ll Have1 Alb 1 1 11 14\\ 1•,,. 1••.11 -1/f Md C~I) .so t 74 lt o j•+ , A f B~~ter L .iJ 60 566 S) ... 51 S1~i# De! E J)f i•'> 1 75 1S 1S Ha1ellln1 11 13 11• 6',) 6\~ Ml•~oCc .20 36 36 $111< !lli +~ " quarter o an ounce may s~v~~ca .50 e 1 1""" l!Wi 11)\6.-~ De•tr CP 15 16 s 17~ u11i 11·~+ •i. HCA Martin 15 1 20\'o 20 20 MtlOll!tt . .o 15 37 l'I :ti:\lo ,,, 1101 S•em 11·ke much ," Picken 61er1no• .60 1' 11 41\• Alli\ 'I Vt+H• o•al Fin ·u 11 " ~,, 2~'1 ~~ Htclo Inc 12 13 102 11 1f• '"1'•+l'I• Ml~nv .150 I 91 21"" 22 \It!'' ~ . 8•ol Fds .62 16 245 22o/o 22\\ 221'1-(' Dfl "'°ln!f· l 9 llS Jll'> ~ 31\lo +"• HtclaMn 1k d He 11 .... 2 21\•r MtCDI 1.070 I• lt>li lflo'I 1 . "" said II But multiply it by the 81c~mn .so 18 !75 11~ 27 11 -'. Ol1m Shm l • 61 19''1 19•~ lt$•+ v. Hehemn .(4 7 11 ,~ .. IO'l'I 1~+ 14 Ms lnlv .4fD Ji IQ) ll'-'.t ljl4 13'h Vf • • ~:~~ 1~ " ~{ ~lt ~ n~t 1 i; Ol1Shm DI 2 .. 4 111'/J 2S'h 211'1 + Heln1 H 1.08 11 20.I tS (l\t U\lo+2~ ~~'l!V 1,& n nt: 2 ~) 21'11-)~ billions (If ham bu r g er s BelcoP.i. 2k • 51 11\.'I 11!, ll'W;+ \o OlaShp! 1.10 l 15>\ ,,~ \!1't-•,:. HtlenaR .l6 1'1 '' "~ 4-l~ 16¥'+1 .. Ma!!fl ;inh • ls ll'o Wm. 1tt;+ 14 Mc Donald's sells, and j t 81IOen 1.20 • 3 11 201. 21 t ~. g:c1aphn 'I'!·'' !! 1~ 1,::~ ,,'(I"" 1.~~+1'"1 ~·11i:r~ntcv;: n ro 3~ :.:.. 3;J:;,,\: Ma~ OS 1.60 lo lf im ~\\+ \~ 8eld!IH .;IOCI 1' 71 l l• 8\1 8Vi el>old · " " • · l"' 16ll 160 +' M•v prt I.BO ~ 211'1+ ~ an1ounts to plent,v.'' &tit Hwl "' t 1Sl 30'• 29 2'I -'• 01Glor110 . 1 S6 •'• 9\~ t''i Hell•~! 4.01 1 "" MavtrOI .•s 1, t ,,. 2:t-1· ~, eemltCc .IO 1 26 1111) 17"" l8'h+ 1, Oroltal EQl)f '1 13' t1•0 t2 v2"+1·~ HetmePr .60 10 t i 16''o ll 1~. -1 M1vs.IW .SO ' 'lO '4 7\.li ~-I ,; Bendix 1.60 ' 106 :J.!'' lS'!io 36'•+1 O\lll119n .10 1J 35 1'i 7Vo 1Vi Htlm&P .?O 1' S1 21'4 217' 2, 1 M11'11q I.JO I( 5(1 ~ Pt , i! TN CHICAGO, a spokesman ::~"~"o ~1.1j 1 ,, ~~: ~~ ~~~i1i1 g:~1:'~·1.~ !~ 59: ~~ ~~; ~~+2~ =~111~ :~ , ~ 4~'(: .!~,;. .6.\4,~ ~~ ~gAo~:f t ! ! fl~ ZJ!m~ I'~ t! r 'I I , 'd BenCogl 1>~ 1100 31\~ 31\.4 31'~ OIHI•" 09b 10 ,, 16\l !Slit 16\\+l'-lo Herc~lu .61 17 'i1 ,,.,,.. "" ~ o,:..,.,. •• Mc rov 1.2D s 13 lf'\AJ t'4 Wt 01' 1•' CI)onB d S S31 the ham· B•nC pf 4.30 12 73\; n 131'1+1'' 0111115•~· .10 20 2l (1\'i ((ll\c 111'1+ IJo HW1~Y 1.10 12 U 1104 16 ,, -l'o MC ermot 1 "9 n· 73 n"1+2V> b . I • h h h 8e"C1>1>f 4' > il<I SS\.'t " JS -i,, Olvtr1l!d In "3 2\.lo 1 1''+ '~ HtvOl•ln .n 24 2'21 50 49V• (9'11+ ~ MCODl'lld Co j IS ~ .. 17'4+ \, u1 gers o.~e weig t W en t ey B<>n~1ie1 inc 11 61 ,,,, 4'• ~ .... ,,, olvMt 2.1sn a :io 73~; 23•11 13Ut-..., Hewtn P .20 41 231 I! ll''> •4'-!o+l Mc~ono AD 00 '"' 21'111 21J"o . are cooked Picken said they Bt•key Pno 9 B'I ll'o lJ'• H'•-'1 OrPtp~r .21 61 123 21~'o 211'1 71\lt-lo 11ljhVon En 21 12 S~ J\.'J S~ ... Vo MMe rE01 I\\ 1 11 \lo 21it JIV.-t,~ · Brln51 1.40e 1 &6• 111'• 11'.'• 2•"•-·'• ~Mn 11 29 73 95 t3'14 94~ I\ HI lenbr .4 16 rl-'Jll'o 21 7t + "I '' • H .41 10 'tj .._ t '4 •Vt+ \'• are weighed before they are 111031nd .s2 16 711 1n. :uv. J1e.+2~i OomFd .tsu S<> a n·, a -+ '-1 Hl1100H11 1 10 116 Jl1,l 211':: 2111+1~M.,•0:.,pf,1 .io 10 1 !!11, 11v. 11Yt .. 1 . e1ackO 1.oe .so 1Gl15 120•;12;•,+] oanLufJ 12 10 !~ 1 ~. 1 HN'.W lndu• 18 11 4 J!it 3'•-"' ':> · "'it,,.._, <:ooked, and the a d vertised e1a1• Jn .411 6 23 n;. 1'• 7'•-r1 0onn111y :. 11 1n 21 ""'° 14 + '"' HO!MtrtM .6' 1& 1s ltV• 21:r,r. 'li...,_,,,.. M~ki:•• 55~ ,,· 11"! "' ., u -1\"a . It ho Id b h I th 81/HLQhl lg 6 l'O 16 l!~• 16 Oorlc Cp 31 6 16 "~' 13,,.. u~+ ~-H~rner .97 10 69 29''t 71\lo 29'1'o +1Vt ..... . ,. l6h+ .,, v.•c1g I s u e t at ·o e e1oc~HR .J1 12 915 11•,,. 12v. nv.-,., 00,, o11Ver 10 11 '''" ,~, ,,,,,,+ v. Hort E1..:1n 1 u 111 114 •~+ v. ~t:rh ~'ti 11, 1J ',,' •1,1,~ 41 -'"° d I t ro<I I BlueBe!I .65 6 l\06 16'• IJ~ 1' -~• Ocotvt 10 s 61 6 J'41 S'irt-l~ Hol 1nn1 .10 11 2n 24 tl~ n~•+ '1'o •• "' :ZO:V.+l\.'o rea Y· o-ca p UC • Bob~• 8rk1 1 104 4~. A\~ ~-+ "• DovertD ·,, 11 lS Ill.Ii ,, 11 -•..:. Helin A .ISD I 35 " 35 + ~-Mc:Ntll .71 • 1(1$ 11'4 13'irt 1• + ·~ The firm "':is charged w 'lh aoeinoc ·'° • ;oa 1''" 1~ 19•i+ •i DQ..,CMm. 1 '1 "~ S<>l'i S<l'll sM\+ ·~ Homeste~ 1 lt 14 .,~ ,...., 4tV.+,,. ~cp .w ' 125 '""' 15il 1-P.1+ ~ . I llol~e ''"" 11 17~ IJ>.:. 1]\1113':.-l'ooPF lnc:p IOI! 7 6~~ lt'l-l•HonyW! l . .tD '/~ Jl1 11e'irt115't1\ll\.,..Sl'i Me611ril 2.IO ·-2 37 37 .11 t" eight counts of fa lse ad· e,~•. '""v• 1 11 ,•, s~ Y-1--1;-Dr1vo 1v. 1 u 27\\ 21v. 2114-\\ Hoov1r 1.11 • s ,,i, 16'• ~ =~ li~ 1 1'131 11:1~ ?~ ~~.~ •·, . . . , OOk o I.JI! 8 lSl'o 19 + I• Ort$11, 1 •O \4 305 tlV. ~· 41 +no Horlton Cp e IS t \1' l&lo ,..__ ~ ' • •~ "''" "" vertls1ng. If convicted , 1t could B0td~n 1,70 11 1011 n•1i 2l 2J'i) 0, .. o1 i:o 111 .. nt~ " +111 Hosp1t11 Afl 9 63 i1"" n v, n~•-v. ~ ~.1~ory, 11•, ~ ,~! 21.._ 1•1o+ 1.1o •• f' d . f BO•a w 1,3! I 61 11 16l~ 26\,_ '• Or-.str Df0 2 .• 3''0 311~ ~ .. +, ... HO,llCP Ub I] 1~l 1•·~ 1!'4 UVt-+1 •.;, • ..... 4 ~·· , ... 2S + 'l1o .,.,, inc a maximum o 11orma11.1n1~ 12 J~• ~i. l'•~"•0rex11 1 .wi:o 121''~1• 1t-V.Ha.t •M1.1t10 :io11••1' 11~1+•,-.Men•sco '' s 3" m •v. tv.f' 1•0 IJOO BOlt Ed 2.U 10 l3 31 30'• ~~II DrevluiCfi 1 I •4 ... fo'lo fo'i.-~; Hcudalle '.8<1 6 1J 1J"t Ul't 1]\lof \'o Mere ~Ir .IO 11 1 1•~\ 70Vt 14\.'I lli ' . llo1tEol t.tB '' 130111'\llll~ll\''l-1 o..o-eP l •O 11 l1S 20 ltV. 19-~ HoulthM 41 lO ,. 13~ 13"" 13\i .. Mlr(k 1.11 ~1 5'S 91"' '91'1 91.\oi 2"· 11wr111 tnc 11 30 11''1 161~ 16•it 1·, Ov~e Pl 1·10 t 160 IMl't 10911.i 108''•->,I HO•"• f'•iirl 15 4~ l ''J ,· ''• "'Mtrlellth .70 1 l'O 13\• 1~\;, 1)\~ ,. fh~n!IAlr 31 11 916 1)1\ 11 11\li . Oll~e J)f t'l'O r350 10ll4 l02" 101\">--V> Ho..lltl'" .u 10 343 2S"" 73-\6 '$\lo+ '!\; M1rrULI ·'°' 11 2J6 lt:.lo 1• 1~+1 -..-8'1®' L'XI• 17 105 61f·· 6014 ,1o;.+H'io11~1of 1'10 ltO" tt 91 t Vi HOUMJ)f 2'11 10 Jf " 51 +1 M11•Pf .10 n n 14 nl'I 14 +p;·, lld1 MV I :ri 23 3~~ 61 66•1 67 + I~ 1'unll•&d : •• ,, 1-'!0 -~·--)6"4 )'1.14 l Hou1Fpl 21/t l 'S'« 'S\4 d '.li Mu. Spl 2.:0 21J1 lSl lJl +13 flrls Mv Pl 1 10 42 42 4'l + ~I Ounl•n Cp 13 39 1"' .T 7 _ v, H 1..P I 4l3 U 103 IO'l i :Jlh :nl~+I Mnat>I .1Jb 11 4'l '"' "4o "'°+ '' P.·l!Pft .2~ 21 23 ,., U\i llV•-Ii "lnP""I 2'"1& 17 :!!C 171 1'11''11 70 + b H::.IGt '.JI 16 23 1Sll 1S 7S'4 Mist• .20b 21 ( 16\1 16'4 16Vll II rod H•I J'(I 11 •B .SS\4 n ]J -+ ~ QliPn J)I ,,~ 21 6SV. 6S 6S -·~ liONG l>f 2\1 2 sn~ " .u M G M Inc 2(1 1C lt II " +1''• 1!;1TWVHI "' 2 s 60'1 sav, 601'1""2\li O"P" J)f l~'I 3 ,, Jll'·\ Sllh--i. HowardJ )0 23 419 n 21 1\ 21"+'" Mttro ,JOo 1 "' ,,,. 121\ ll"+.;. l!r-ock GI ,lj J "111111111 ISl-l+l.llovo"•l.. l.12 10 cs 21'11 ?21'12"1>-V.H I 111' '11\\ 1 2~ ,,..,.:.,,..Me!Eof 1.3~ tl0 100;.,100VttOll\.'t llrUnG• 1,1 10 SO 20'1 'XI~ ~ l')uoLhl Pl 2 110D 16 2Slh 24 + \' owmt i:S 12 )(I lt\1 IS!'I. 19lli+ v, MGIC I" .10 ,$0 4$1 II~ 11\i 10 +2'' :•\JnG••, rt 1 11t~ 1·,'f t,'t ~·1116 Ovmo In .l'O lf 11 ltl\ 18'\ 1114--\~ ~=yl.I A 14 lS )lh 31 :~ 32\i+l\.1 MltnG\ 1,G4 10 1 11 It I• +;: Basket Rises Foo<l Costs Hit Record WAS HI NGTON !UPI! -The Agriculture De· partment's ''n1ar ket basket" -which shows how much it would cost to feed a typical family for a year -went up $24 to a record Sl,517 in June. This was $214 -or $4.14 a week higher than June, 1972. tO-om •• ' • -£ ·-H hnH :.a 1 2 '"" ~ '" Miens 11to I 1 II 111' ' ,. -\1 :rGS'l:'P 1·~ ,r 2~ i" ... ·~ ~~ t~:!:t ~ Etoi. Pl .t1 • 17 l'" 2••• 2•>.:.-Iii HVll~hts Tool 2J 15"1 JI!\ "' 51\11+3 Mlc•OdOl ·" • 47 1'14 n·.~ 1J"'+ '• rn ~o ·'° .. f!•KOC .l'llD 1 ,, ,.,. 1JI. 13\.'t+ \'! ' .. •• IS 9\li ll' •V•+ .... Mkrow1V11 1' • 2S\' " ;s• ... + I\ 8 rF1rrit .lf 1' ltl ''~ 231'1 '3'4>+1M. e111trn Alr 10St N t i;. t14-I~ Hu on · MIO C T'I ff 12 2 .. 11Vo 111 17• llru"'"'~ .'U 1<1 1410 711.'! l•"• 711)4-1" 1••tG6JI" 11 I) l•l ltl,. \" 1~•\+ '• H11y<ll.Cp ,Jl l6 IOI '2V. 3!.V. 3;~t1~MldJ.oV 1.'10 11 ll 2J') 2l': 7)':-\ llru•hW .IO. )0 2~'0 261.li i&1Ji-l4 ll !IJl!I !Vt 11 s lt\;o t'le tl•-·1o Hvoromt .16. )(I 9~ ·~' ,,,. "MdMI 1,J1D 9 21 Ii-lo I~\· IS•+•' "•oe vE 1,... 1l 500 3:1"4 ~tt 3' -I'"' 1tK 1Dl «I ntld 1'2,,,lU'\+' -I I-'">"R ll O 1 ' 0 0 ~ll<ld ro ·.o J 1" 11'" l•' lrl~ I 0 · 8 ~I 'ICN Pl1•t1'!'1 jl 2IO 1i1,1o 1'111 12'h "'" <Ill · i 1~'" IJ\'I 1.P-'• ""nn•I 1'~d u. ri I\; 1••••0 1tonC111'1 I 14 3\/o ).11,\ 3$ f '"1d1hO P 116 0 'l2 l911 it"' 2t.._l1MllnLb 1. 16 19' oll·1 'f\1 a •o+2•- ""' Ft.i 1 '° ,, , 1•'-' ''"" , • .! ... \4 ~r~~ :~ ;~ 1:: ll1, ~v. j~.~ ~~ ldeAIB•• :IO , ,,, 14\~ 13\'I , .... 1 ,, ~l~~M3~ ll 1J~ ~~:~ ~~ li'"+ •• "••ldlv '·''" 11 :n )I'; 'O'• :r"ll , Cid NC it lt U J•lo 11 21 \.\ ldfflllllf •lJi 1 111'• 10\o 10\11 \i Ml Pl.. 111 ~ '•+" .,ntnv~\V llJ t 111 lS'i'I h\~ 1tl~+I G & G '111 :ro 83 11 1•~ 1Clli--. ldr61 l'<W II 11 1l 6~• II\ 1\1 I\ Ml~:'., At 'tt. i ~ 1t \'"' 1th ll•on~rll: IOb t l>I lD'~ 1<1 1niAi.o. ·~ Elll'cl "''"°' I& 31 Sl.lo 5)0 ~+to !OS R,1 1.l5D 1J 2 1&'• 76'1 ~ 1·• ! ' t 1~ +" I "''"'""' 11• ,. '"' 11•:. 1 11:.-•~eo5CP .25nl6 116 "' 41·~ ,3,,.t 2' 111c,"1n 1.12 1 1112l'~21 11 -\11Ml••11,1~ ·?! lt 11 J21-t 11;.. 21•~-1· P.1••1 !n 1 00 l~ 161 ~1l'o ;11'1 31 '4•1•~ Elect Merroo n llO ·~• ••:. 1-.;, . !ilCtn PIA 6 S ff . t!'' 931,+1 Mitt • ·"' 10 70 •14 !Sil •ll• j\ ...... 1 "'" IV. • ", '"" l' l'"·-II e1 M J)f .soc. Jt ~· lllo .,,+ 1 ~ l~Cen OI 3', 10 ...... " U\.'I+ \\ Mo P•c "' 5 • • 7S\.'t 1~.. 1)1,,o ..... I: ll•••'N ef ,JJ ) 1" 1'\ 1,,.._" Ef<>lfl M111 2 IV! '11.-, 11) I Pwr 2.:0 11 2'111$1* 1S~ ffil ,>\P.tm l.60 I 3 j''' 21 1' ""•nctvl: .711 14 1 '"" '•~ ,.,,.., I~ Ell•lr Ind 4 10 MO 6" 61'1-Vo I Tf;1t/AW ."'3 n 111 12" »Vr+ I~ ""Pu!). ... 1 1. P t 'l',11 J\l-' 'l••..,<)hl .tfl lS 3'71.n111<»"1o l•'"-_..2,,, F.IPttoNG I 1 111 lS 14\.'t H 1 Vtl A(O 1.10. 9 !) iii "°14 l!WI+ I.lo Al.~[,1 li .)() ' Jt ''°' I l't 12 + \, 1!>111h u"l•r JJ ' 1i.a 1'"1 11.l.+ '4 r:nr11cl 1.21 t s ?&I.lo tll4i 21'0 ·~ 1NAfnS ~b ,, \\ 20 20 -\1 I .J 1,1.1 lQ t7' ll 6211; &) ., I -C G---F.mer I 1'• ll :Mi. ., fO''• 9f 1l4 tnCQ11'1t a~ lt t I TV. +VI .a •. l"O 10 )Q 1J , .2•• ~.,.., I "•bt T 1 nh 10 H 111 ; 21'1 ,,.,.__ ,, EmEI Cf ·'° 2 ., ~ 6l .. •; 1'1((1nc . ,it) 1 !~ '"' tl.i-10 a 01 ,,, •• I I .... f'"1bot r p 9'l 1 ., t6'1 11'• u 11 \.l)t ti:mrvAlr ,. J..I ·~ IJh .,,, t.3''•+ '• '"""'••" ·ll I JJ ,, I a" 1•·..-\ti ..... ltD 1 s I :1 . '"' 1JC ... r 10tfl(I Ind 4 us 4\\ ' •I~ Ernti,..,ln ;,, 10 lt • •r. t + 14 lfld G•• 1. • • 26U. .... ~ ..... • ~r" ' ~ 1~ i"111 lS\.t Starts Tomorrow Redu cti ons of up to 70 "/D on suits, sport coots1 slacks, shirts and other fine accessories The "1narket basket" calc ulation covers an as- s ort111ent of domestically-produced foods needed to feed a hypothetica l family of 3.2 person s. The Agricul lure Depa rt1nent's report, released Tuesday. said thal between May and June the "rnarket. basket" price pai d to farmers went up S37, I' but middlemen absorbed $13 of lhnl In c rease b y cuttin g profit margins , leaving 1he $24 increase paid by consumers. The price figures fnr June were collected dur- ing Lhc early part, when priC'e cejJings were in ef· feet for meat but had not taken effec t o n other foods. Cleta" Wd • 1:9 ' Jit 4 1-I~ i;rn1'11rl 11 7 10 'JCl'I ltlt \~ ln0P"W1. 1.U t 2j lfr1 I.lo U~i '' '"~~ .,lie • 2t • 1V; ?t.,+ Call! 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'• ~ lntM•Ciot ' I jl(ll' jOPo.;. ~t"" Mt•nt1t ~• ·• • •'\ • '- l9lJ DAllY I'll.IT W ednesd~'s CJosins Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Em~nings Reports Buoy Wall Street NEW YORK (AP) -The sta<k market soarect ahead for the eighth straight session Wednesday IUted by good corporate earnings reports and high-er dlVJdend payouts 'The markets having an explosion on the up- side• with lots of buying by institutions and foreign sources, said Eldon A Grimm of DuPon~ Walston & Co 6nmm and other analysts noted the market s six month decline this )ear depressed pnces to the polnt that many glamors and blue chips are avail able at bargain base1nent r,tes Some analysts however viewed the markets raJly as a temporary rebound from its long descent Kids Like To Ask Andy Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List l1'91 Ne1 ,-£ (flcn Hl•h lAw U1t t119 ' • • • • •• • I~ ji I~ ·' I ,., I . I 1 ~ -I " " I ' ·~ • ' l . .. I ' " - i'. ' I. l. .. 7 • ' , I 1~ I I !; ' , ' r i[ I ,. I. I · I.. I" ·' ' j,; 1: I .. ' ~ ,, < . I , • I . • i ' I . • 4 ~-.2iiiimD~ .. LViiPl~LD~Tiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;;~T~h·u~.d.oyi,mJiuljyi2bi,jli4/m> ................................................... ' .......................................... .... The Biggest Marketplace on ~he Orange Coast ~~kw SoJe ' •• 12$ ·M9 ._., &.Morine f qu1pment 900 • 914 "'"""°'"*"' ........ 100. m DAI LY Autornoblko\ • • . • ' • . . 9SO • 990 LOT CLASSIFIED ADS Penonols. • • • • • • • • • 515 • SC9 P,f\ and s.,,ppift . • 1 • • ' a.so -899 hal Eitot• '""*<JI, • , , . 150 • '99 ' RnonOo1 • • . . . . • • • 200 • m R.nfol, ' •• ' •• ''' .JOO -499 tbllft fot Sole . ' • • ' • 100 . 12• Ja:o.. ~. '' .... SX>-574 ' _,... .... ....., ••••••• '800 .... You Can Sell It , Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval Schook Ol'CI lmrroction . • , S7S • 599 *"~ ond hpoin . ' •. 600-699 Tramportotion. , • , • , . , 915 • 949 General General OLD CHARMER HoUin for Sale i :G~>~n~e=r•=1------\iGiiiienmemrm•m1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiGmemnmemr0m1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia \;G;•;n;;e;r:a;l;;;;;;;;;;::;;G:•:ne:r:•;I;;;;;;;;;;;; 14~ l _$/ldt4, ~ REALTORS OUR 24TH Yl;AR Offe ring Service Only Experience Can Provide NEWPORT HEI GHTS COTTAGE -sharp 2 br, 1 ba., w/lots of paneling. Lg. brick frplc. & Hardwood firs. 127' deep R·2 lot with alley access. P.S. Don't mi ss the un· finished guest house. CALL 546-5880 i ,,i •• ONE OF THE BEST IN CORONA DEL MAR. Within salt air sniffing distance oI the ocean ( 'h block!) This 45 ' R-2 lot has an ex- quisite Moorish architecture. 2 bedroom and den home that was recently rebuilt. Modem features in an old world location. A $108,500 investment. THE BLUFFS -CONDO Ideal for the busy family. Maintain your patio & the interior of your home & .the main· tenance crew does the rest. This 3 bdrm. &: 2 bath home is bri ght & cheerful & has an xlnt view of the greenbelt. Onl y $59 ,500 ' -I THREE BEDROOM + HOBBY l\OOM MESA VERDE'S BEST VALUE -at only $31,000. 3 Big bcdroon1s, large county style kitchen, dining room and added hobby room. Pride·of·ownership "area just one block from sc hools. CALL qui ck on this one - Just li sted. 546-5880. NEAR SOUTH COAST PLAZA MUST HAVE QUICK SALE -Adult OCCU· pted 3 bedroom, 2 bath, with a large kitchen, Huge cul·de-sac lot with maqy fruit trees and brick· fireplace and beautiful covered patio. room for your own garden. Owner leaving State. CALL 546-5880 . 546-5880 Open Eves. General ** ** ** *TAYLOR CO.* IRVIN.E TERRACE--$185,000 Fantastic view of bay, ocean & Catalina! Expensive new features in th.is elegant ho1ne w/3 lge bedrooms, fa m nn, formal DR & 3 batbs. New s3una in mstr bath: 3 fireplaces . Lovely pool in private frt cour tyd. i'Our 28th Year'' WESl.EY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hil ls Road ''Overlooki ng Big Canyon Ctiuntry Club" NEWPO~T CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 G'eneral . Genera l BA YCREST BEAUTY New Listing · Located in a lush, landscaped, esta blished neighborhood. Outstanding 4 bdrm., 3 ba., fa mily rm. Sensibly priced at $691 750. . CORBIN-MARTIN . INVESTOR'S DELIGHT 4-PLEX, NEWPORT BEAD!. 3 lkdroon1, 2 bath (exeeJ. lent owner unit) P L U S THREE 2 bednxlm, all beautifully maintained. Tf'r- rtfic rental area and CLOSE TO BF.ACH. $96,000. 644-7270 UNIQUE HOMES OF CORONA DEL MAR, 675°6000 A ll1tlng of Bert Reedy U!'llil()UI: liUMI:§ HARBOR VIEW HILLS If you like a view & need 4 bdrms., in a pres· tige location, you \Vill want to see this lovely home! Xlnt buy at $122,500 'Beu; E R. . flrz.c,. 2407 E COAST HWY· CORONA DEL MAR· 675-3000 H alf gone in. half a year an.cl the rest wi ll not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. SEE I NG Is BEL I EVIN G '"'!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!R!iiE!!!AiL T!!!O!!!Ri!SI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I and enjoy this lovely home: I!! G ena ral new carpets and drapes, General General I ;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;;::;;::;;;;;::;;::;;::;;;;;:I fan1ily room or formal din·l------------------ 1"' room. ""' wh'1 a "'1"' SWEATING OUT THE SUMMER?. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, . elegant Master Suite, Sun-Litec kitchen, private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maint enance provided. Satisfy your curi osity-see Newport Crest today! I Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes I from $62,995 ~:~\~:,::... ,..,,........... I ew rl i 1reat 1 CONDOMINIUMS I I From Pacific Coast Highway and Superior Avenue (Balboa Hlir.C?"'-1 BlYd.). drive up S uperior to Ticonderoga, and directly to Newpo1I C1est Informa tion ·Centet Telephone: (714) 045-6141 Sa.le.s Olfice open daily 10 a.m. to sunset CSLI No. 266639 thiS 3 bedroom, 2~ hath, fireplace home is! Large patio for Your entertaining plea:;ures. All yours [or onl y $31,450. 644-7270 SPARKLE PLENTY BLlJITS CONOOMtN1UM. Completely upgraded two ~1ory, ,I Bedrooms, 3 baths, brick Ureplace, large coun· tr.v kitchen. Close t o everything-· pool, tennis rlub. shopping -& schools. $54,950. 644-7270 When you I ist with us, YOUR HOME is advertised in Home for Li'ling maga· zine iri° more than 900 arpas . and cus- tomers are sent to you as referals from our over 500 ~ New,on c-11 .,..~o1 P..:ifk.N.c.inc. 1 affiliates of NMLS, ~.--Rolwrt H.G.ontCor.,..atioft, O......iContr11<1oc..-~ • 1 2828 East C.oast 1-l'igh\\'ay ,..... .... ..1 ..,,..".d ''"''''"'""ti..'J ............. ,."''"·"-'•"'·'"~'"..,.""""""• Corona del ~1ar ;:::,:·;::: ,:.;:;;:::'...:..°" ... "'.":.;;~';.':::!'.'!::'~;::..!':.~~c...""-I ----"'='°-'=-=-- Why <!on't you look into this cqzy :!-bedroom air.conditioned home in El Toro. It's only 11 months_old. · Sidewalks are in from the i arage-to the rear of the house where it joins a 12 x 20 patio. Carpeting is upgraded and beautiful draper- ies are included in the sale. Drive by 23291 Cavanaugh Road and ii you like wha t you see, call the_ owner at 58fr7307. Better still, the O\vner lives just around the corner at 24532 Bunbury Drive. We 'll be hap~ PY to show you the home. Gen&ral General A VIEW ? ? ? A view is a view when the view Is forever!! See this 4 bdrm., 2 bath home with pool, jacuzzi and VIE \"°'! $95,000, . OPEN SAT & SUN. 1·5 888 SANDCASTLE, CORONA DEL MAR Orange Coast 2600 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• del Mar REAL ESTATE 644 4848 General General CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT BEACH 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 2'h Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts. Ll'L OLE RED HOU SE ON BIG 71 'x140' LOT, R-2. Two bedrooms plus guest room, Eastside Costa Mesa. Better Hurry·Askin g only $23,950. CA~L 540-11SI. ' LOAN ASSUMABLE NO POINTS -NO WAITING. 3 Bedroom, large family room. Convenient Costa Mesa Jocation near schools & shopping. Full price .$29,500. CALL 540·1151. -<fl~ HERITAGE REALTORS General 12-APARTMENTS Many 11.!temative"> to finan. ting and 011·nership. ~lay Trade Do111n for Smaller Units. t.fay Trndc tor Land suitable for 3 to 5 Units. hfay Carry 2nrl Trust Deed. .\ll Units 1'~urnished, Good Rent Schedule. J-lented and Filtered PooL S172.SOO. Call anytime. 646-0:65. 540.1151 Open Eves. STOP and SEA This three bedroom home on a hill overlooks your own ocean. One and a haU b~ths; care~. compact living on a large Jot 1vith a llLxurious viey,·, Surprisingly $?..'l,500 ~ Call to d a y ! 962-8851. • OPEN r1L 9' • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE! [11 ~ TRIPLEX· PRIDE Super sharp tri-plex on pride <'f o .... ,nership street. Priced to go at $54,000. All units :'re 2 bedroom. 1 bath. Call Red Carpel, Realtors. ', ~'-' -·~'..c'"_'. ~-·'-"'-"'=.' "'"'-7,11 ,'c.4."i'-·'-8080"'"' ______ I General General REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 G =~,-00-,-.71------~G-en-.-,-.1------1 EASTSIDE CUSTOM MADE RESERVATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR FUTURE SALE OR LEASE SPECIAL PRICES NOWll I NPeO a "Parl"? 1~1ae,., nn ad' Cl..ASSlFIEO \vi» sell il! General "G9 neral I I I I IRREP LACEABLE TRIPLEX Bayfront -pier & float -sandy beach. 'fwo 3 BR., 2 ba. units & 2 BR., 2 ba unit . First owner depreciation. Close to Balboa shops & fun. $270,000. Bents. NEW OFF ER ING Sharply deco rated & clean. Lovely 3 bdrm. in Lusk H.V.11. I-l ard to believe price $75,500. Will go fast Jim Muller. ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORONA Just listed -custom home. Dra1na tic use of \vood, brick & glass. Fireplace in large living rm. 3 BR, den. $94,500. By app't. Dean Kring. DO YOU LIKE ROSES? Then you \Vill like thi!' lovely 3 BR. Lusk home. Large cozy fa niil y room overlooking rose garden. 3 car garage. Harriett Davies $77,500. 4 BEDROOM IN IRVINE TERRACE A lovely family ho1ne on a large pool sized .Jot that you O\Vn . 4 Bath. Pretty grounds. Near beach & yacht clubs. Now $89,500. Geo_. Grupe THIS IS A MUST For the \Veekend athlete~ Beautifully UJ> graded "X" plan. Karastan carpets. No maintenance yard. 3 BR., 21h ba. Bluffs condo. $69.500 Incl. land . T. Escobar. BAL BOA ISLAND BAY FRONT· L~e. home on 2 Jl)t~. Pier & float. 5 BR .. den. plus bonu s playrm. 5 boths. Sandy beach.. Move in for ~ummer fun. Xlnt finance. S317,000. Paul Quick . 833.0700 644-2430 ~ Coldwen, Banker t REALTORS .......,-1 ~ ... :_I_' 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B . . . . .. J..jn ,/a ..!J:1fe PRESTIGE WA TERFRONT HOMES Linda l ~le Waterfront Custom 4 bdrnt. 5 bath home with view of n1ain channel. Sofl colors, rich \vood panel- ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel· ing. \Vaterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath, sitting area, vie\V decks ......... $295,000. For Complete Information On All Hom es & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Builders hon1e, has Real Estate Consultants 1525 Superior -Suite 3 Newport Beach (7141 645-3230 everything~ 4 bedroom, 3 hath, raised heart h fireplace, gas barbecue; patios everywhere. huge l'OrnL•r lot 1vilh OOat gate.''I'"-"-".,...,,..,,..,,..,,..,,..,,,......,.,.....,...,...,,..,,..,,..,.. N('{'d I say nlore? Call im· General I General n1edlate!y! ! This one will go .... ~- "' $45.000. Call Red Ca.-pet. OCEAN VIEW "WANTED" ~"~l:~~J. 54&->l640 1 0 P'" FOUR CHILDREN OL1>1E BUT 3 +Guest $25,950 IN A GOODIE I Private circular s1reet of Cute 2 bdr I ba frame with fine homes. Paint and save GARDEN GROVE I loads or Paneling and red th 0 us a~ d s · Sweeping No No down GI! Seller to brick fireplace. Large R-2 grounds wilt-r:oom for ~at. pay all coslS. 3 large BR, 2 lot in choice East Costa 3 bedrooms I n c I u d I n g baths, plus cozy fireplace & t.1esa plu!> alley ac~s. hide-a-'.'.'ay master suite, a 9x14 den. Home on a Close to a.ii shopping you separate guest facility, 50xl35 ft. lot near Los won't need a car here. den ""'ilti sliding glass door Amigos Hi School! CAU.. Perfectly prl1.'ed at $30,()().'.l, to 25' entertainers patio. NO\\'. MACNAB IRVINE ·----~~'·---~--- EXC LUSIVE SHORECLIFFS 3BR/FR & formal dining. Heavy shake roof. Car efree yard. Many fine a ppoint- ments! $110,000. LeClaire F arnsworth 644-6200. (A32) MESA VERDE EXCLUSIVE Lg. 3 BR -spacious l<~R -built-in w /\v bookcases. 2 fireplaces. P ond & waterfall, boat & trailer access. $55,000. Lois Egan 644·6200. (A35) ' OFFICE AT HOME? this one will ~ fast. Call Breathtaking vie1v of can. Red Carpet, Re a J tors yon and blue Pacific. BET· @ 'I ~ fi (;;'.0 e1;,14 d 54&-8640 TER HURRY! Call i~--CIJ-•-'-!f __ .. _o_~·--~ _C!:_,_s_u .. _·u_e __ : CI.Assm Eo ..... """"" 64>-0.103. 0 WA Ll<ER & LEE 54&-0022 Spacious study & bath adjoining 3 BR, 2 bath. Beautifully appointed -Cameo High- lands. $78,500 . Ron Sherman 642-8235. (A24) General General General l l AH BOR VIEW . HO MES IMMACULATE MONTEGO 4 Br., family room & lots 1nore -will be open for your inspection Sunday 7/29, 1 to 5 p.m. 1955 Port Claridge Pl .. N.B. Come ready to move in ! PALE RMO MOD EL Like new 4 bedroom. family room, formal dining, we t bar; up-grnde carpets, floors. l'erfect for your family. CHARMING WATERF RONT HOME 3 Br., family room , Crplc. completely remodeled; Pier & float -!!ring your boat. IJ Altlit>R VIE W' llOi\'IES Rf'.AL'fY 833-0780 IOlll.\I L Ol\IJ\ " ""l'4 !()R.} EASTB L UF F condo, beautifully de co ra t eel . Balcony overlooking Back Bay. 4 BR, 3 BA, $73,500. Bkr. 546-5022 5 lines, 5 days for 5 bucks. acl. Call 642-5678. Gener~al REDUCED TO STEAL! [ I Lovely •ecora•ed 2 b<lr. 1 lrVl"ne Macna11-1ntno ••11,campo., bath locatro in cool Hun· • " tington Beach. P r i c e reduced below m a r k e t IOI Dover Drive 142·1231 val ue. seller very motivated t9 sell. A real steal at '"" M•cArthur M4·1200 $23, 'l"JO Call Red Carpet, ~rt S..th, Clllllornl• 12113 Realtors 546--8640 (o p en ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Evenings). _ ....,; ... General General G<?neral ou1 or Gas? Gl•oy JUST CONSERVING ENERGY ! Can sp end I 00°/0 of my time to benefi t client, with no more 9e 0/0 off ice admin istratio n. JUST CALL ME FOR AN APPOINTME NT, 557-41 30 GINNY MORRISON · . R•~h or M mb f M It• I LI ti" s . N1WPORT HAllllOlt-C:OSlA Ml•A e er o u 1p e s nCJ erv1c:es: """"".'°" .. "._...,.,.,. """ ' y ' ' I ··.l . '• '• :~ "• "· ... ... T~ -· .. Ii: , .. .,. ... ,. ... I" '~~ ::: • I~ '" ... . , . ... . ,. 1.- t f. .,. ~· (,. .. ... ... .. ' . ·: l : :· "· • ;.;, .. ~ . .. • *-.. .. .. . . . . .. . . .. ... ... ., . ... : : • Gmeral General EASTSIDE Don't Call Me Accent On BIG FAMILY . A Duplex!! Individuality HOUSE I n1 :i Mm\\ "{ U.·rlroom 21 E:<t't'ptionally \\'ann fet.>l!ng ~'alk to eler111·ntnry and Jt· i Ua h !1<.1Jh• 'n .i n nrcn L""Or· 10 Hvlni; roorn-dlnlnfri: a1"t•a higti trom !hls gen• tll.'t !Ot ' 1·1~ n1n .ll'lUl'fl fn1nt I with l'h&m1int: comer USt'l!- (arv ..... x .,...,~, ,,..1 11 0 ,~•-o:u~ ):lrrl tlP ! :<:l••I j'N'(\ PlltJO. brLL·k !11-,:•plni:.:-, ~·arn 1·cll• ,.....~ • 6..1\"' "' • • oi J PLU< I I I I bedroon\ <t bi\throom honie \ I ~ al'll. uvo Y IX't'an \'l('W, u•l\11 funiily l'!Y.)ni L'Oll\'C'r· · i: C'U1>.•' .. t: r .. ·.:, llil'on1e unit 1 3 l>ectroonu1 ant.I l'.'ncJo"°-d lible der1 : runnni duiini.:. ...,,1~~11~:1:~ar(1·.!,nt0•n'Rn<'t'.', 1M:>w' 110"111.I on IO\'l'iy hui;r I<~ Joe b_1ick µ.;.1110 v.•lrh .:!.Is fll'l' "(\1!\ .. f.:., o. 11•ilh p!entr of roon1 fc1r 11 nng and llll-gl' 60 x l:W 101 CALL . pool or e.'{panslon. Copf)l'r S'lht.tltxl on n 141\'•·l.Y ll'•'l: 644-7211 plun1hing. hai,-~uod nno1·~ lil'K'd cul-•$l<'S·l.~.,"soiJ!l'l'1.!I I~~!~~~ a1nd otht'r qu11.IHy ron~niK·· C I s to duplieah· today. $)(9,500 . • _ ~-~ 1 rn1 niakl.'ll th15 irn1io..-.;1bll'.' 1Ji&. c:~~;:;~I ~~~~"~::~::·::'. NEW 4-PLEX ! Looking for a 3 bedroom ~ I KITCHEN [~· , ~ : E.1stside hon1l', near Super sharp 4 pl('X 1n ehoi('f' 1 \\"t"!'l<·liff s.hnp;;. Gar-age on rental area. '\11 hl•t1e1· tax I alley "1lh l;oa1 or ti-ailt>r adva~tage. llurr) :incl hi.· i.;atc -Large lot. Call us h~ FOR the first 011·1K'I". Cal\ R1.,,.\ I da~. 1\"l'.' lt11·l' i!! 1'12,!:l."iO. FUN-MINDED Carpet, H~al101·• 5~6-$40 e ANY TIME e {open cvenini.:~). 646-3928 or Eve. 646-4543 FAMILY Beautiful -$33,SOO Central air l'Ond. 3 bcirn1s., den. Built-i ns. Pluish ln1l'r· ioi'. BBQ. Assun1ablc 7',( lowi. !Jrk. 540·1720. TARBELL DELUX T'R""1--=.p7=LE=x Pride or 011·1wrship on lovely street. All units 2 lx>droon1, I bath. a real huy ul $54 .000. Thi.! one \\'On'! last long. Call Red Carpet, Realtors M&-8640 fo1ien evenings1 . TtlE BLUFFS f'ront ro11'. Vil'.'IY. End unit 3 Br. 212 Ba. S:i>,000 lnl·. land. 422 Vis.ta Parada 6'!>-0687. ,., ..... II ti ST RllYS! c L ·A s s I F I E D 2 • 5 6 7 8 Lachenmyer Rea ltor 2 ON A LOT :\i(·ely furn., good n.•ntal !oc. \\";ilk lo Lido shops. T\\'O 1-BR. units. Sf>l.!l50. Cal1 : 67:1·3663 675-8531 F:\1es. CANNERY ROW One of a kind, 4 incomes from this valuable location. Call !01· details. Call; 6n·3563 673-00!!6 E\'es. associated IROKERS-AEALTOAS lOZ5 W Balboa 61l·l&6J OCEAN BREEZES I }'(.'(·J the cool oc:ean breeze fl'Otll this ~ bedrwni, 2 bath horne located on a quiet l'ul~ Je-sa.c street. Just look at 4 IX'Clroon1s, larnily roon1 for pin~ polijl'. or pool. St'para1r s1udy for hobbies or 1'1.'adini;::. Da1·k roon1. gn:at i n for n1 a l t'ntcrtainnicnt an•n. Sf'w\n~ roon1, \'iew of Ol'l'lill, RCCt'SS lo 11ri\'alr IK'11t·l1 and ft•e land. Priced at S98,500. 673-8550 Lachenmyer Realt r. . lhfl! hea\'y Spanish tile roor. .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii !C's u La Cuesta horn<.> anrl it's sharp for only $43,900. Call nu1v! 842-2:>35. OPfNTll 9 • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ THE REAL ESTATERS TREMENDOUS REDUCTION & VIEW Panoramic \·ie1v of bay. 3 bedroon1. :: bath over 25 f;(f. ft. 01 lh·inl!. l:S<"· y,•ur dL'!'Ql"dtin;; iden.; and lake ;irh·anta;:e oi ;1 1r(·n1••tlll911s pricl'.' l'l..'<luctio11. !\fl 11· available at $~.500. P.t•d Cru'J)(!!, Realtors f>-16-86-W BALBOA PENINSULA Custom, top quality hoine plus 2 bedroon1 apt. abov<.>. l\Ia'.ny outstanding fea!ures. Steps to ocNn ::inrt shop- ping. 7' ~ Joan. CALL JlOIY fur deta~s. 645-72Z1. ~21 li11 \\'e~tclift Di·., l\.B. SHARP GI 4 BR & family room \\"ith large yard. rrain-;ew & \Varnert -nel'l·ly painted & carpels -15 minutes to Ne\\·po11 Beach. 0 n I y $26,500 -early occupancy! C wAu<EH & Ul SHARP· MESA-VERDE &>autHul 4 bedroonf, 2 ba th ho1ne 11·i!h large 1rt'CglUur lot in prin1e !O!'ation. This home is just listed at $4.i,9'"..iO i111cl nr1·er s/1011•n before. Ut.Jn't 11ait !() call Red CArrf!t. Real!ors 546-S&IO lo!)Cn e1·f'ningsl. * 4 BEDfi.00!11, 2 baths, douhle gai·agc. $3(1 000. ~l of len11s. * CO:\L\1ERCIAL ZONE -2 HR llro story oider home, COl"lll'I" [ot. $2 J,;iJO. Roy McCardle R~altor ll!IO r-oe1vnor1 Bl\'d., C.:\-1. 548-n29 Three bathroon1!I plu!I J bedroom!! ran1ily t'OOtll, master bedroom has sunken IWn1an bath. KirrlK'n equip- ped for a queen. ,\ real s/1011·('R~t'. \\",\LKEI{ & LEE RE,U. ESTATE 7682 &linger, Ph\ 842-W;).J Open 'til 8:30 p.m. IRVINE BEAUTY \'ou 1111n't believe U1is! 4 Bedroom, 2'i bath!, ll\'O story ho11H1• IOC'ated in prin1e 1lf'V<'lo1w.'<I f'llmn1unity neitr A 11 N'('n•1Hion Cacilitic's. \',,\, 11pprai~d a• l-11,000 and n.•<1dy for that !ortunate 1·ttrran. Hurry nn !hi~ one. call Red C&rpet. Realtors ~ MAR INE CONTRACTING Newport &ca.ch. .~ I n e 5 t rqulpment le waterfront location. JS Yr. old con1· pany. Sp;ace av11ll for boat ~ &. repairs. Bill GRUNDY Rl TR 67~161 -*~N-.w-port Height• .f SJ'iflnbh :i Bil. 2 be. NL'WIY ~mod. Elltra lg. lot . ~ 1l('l""fi!<1 !()ra•k $58.500. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642·7491 * ---;;-Weed if /,r P I From IJ'C411!1nr trash Turn t~ • .o eiuh CALI JS Pilot NEW LISTING $21,950 Sharp 2 Br, ''DOLL HOCSE". t'1'C'shly 1iainted Inside and out, 111 u n \' FRUIT TI\EES. l:Wauliftil back yard. llURHY! ! CO~TS WALLACE REALTORS -5~141- (0pen Evenings) "THE PERFECT WIFE" Shr"s nn1 pr<.>U~, hu1 shl' 11u1·k~ hard. TI11s !ripll'x, located in N<.'\\"po11 Hcigh1s :trt:!a, h11s an in(:on1e of S\15 per nlOnth, and is p1·i(.-e<I at only ~..W.000. Call r\ow! 6-i&-71 ii. OPE.N TIL g • rT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ '.<.lit '™'l . ~. THE REAL ESTATE RS HARBOR HIGHLANDS GET SEITLED NO\\' -1k ready for si,:hool ~ Roomy J bedroom. farnily r oom hon1e. nice il<i.Tio and enclos- ed yw.il. Al'ailnble im- n1ediat('ly S58,.'i00. PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- . 642-5200 4 Bedroom Prestige $30,000 located in nice nl'ighborhood, shopping & fr~\·ay . 011ner is profl'.':;slonal plun1be r. All fixtures UJ'Jgl'aded. I las f,,'Ul"· grous patio 11ilh v.·ater foun · tains, oven.;izecl double gar- HJ!<' & \\"I' 1111! takl' a sn1aJI. !'r l10n1c trade! Walker & Lee r:.r..:AL ESTATE 7GS2 l::clillt'<.'I", ph. 8t2-4 J:)j {)pPn 'Iii ~:30 p.n1 . WATERFRONT ' $73,CXXI lkanu'<I r<eiling living morn o\1?rlooking sunset, \\'8ler & pa!io, 2 BR. 2 BA, with slip. For appointment, CAU.: NEWPORT HEIGHTS· DOLL Cha1·n1ing 2 bedroo1n doll house 11•ith unfinished guC'sl horne on pr1n1c ll·2 lot in Nev.'J)Ort Hench. \\'ill sell fa!!t at $34.!XXI. Red Carpet, ·Realtors 1277 F.ast 17th ,St..' Costa i\1ega) &lt>-8080 SEE USI For the right ho111e for you. C.Ompletl': .«!lec:tion eil homes In Ule beRch area. HAHOR VIEW HOMES REALTY IJJ-0780 -~=~ -c=-* MESA VERDE * 3 BR. t'1tmilv rm. 2 BAth11 $.15.500 • 10', do~ n S.le1m1n Needed BALBOA BAY PROP. * 5561100 * Assum; Sl/c•k.-+l '-oa-071-· Sharp -' b<lrnt. A.il'-<.'Ol"ld. Family m1. dining nn. Patio. Ni~ly loodM'tlpt'(i. Hu.Uo<l rct,1\nr drh.'t!. $29.9"'~. bkr 54()...1720 TARBELL ---C'.000 1tartC'r hon](", Clellll :: BR. l!s ha.: carpetl115 like tlCW. La. yartl. $27,j()(), I ronln Co., RJtni 642-5000 READ THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS. • from $30,490 A new concept in Home Own1r1hip by Ayres Conatruction Company You Own lh1 Land and the Home Not a Condominium or Co-op No Monthly Maintenance Fee 4 Beautiful Exteriors .. 1\ll \\'ith 3 BR,:! B.\, lge ram r1n, lovely livin g rn1 , kitrhen \vith range & oven, garbage disposal, rltsh'''asher, separate full 2 car garage. Models at corner of Adams & Florida 1 block W. of Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beech AYRES SINCE 1905 SJf>.1445 COMPANY REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 ROOM FOR THE WHOLE GANG I I I-~---I "HARBOR . VIEW I MONACO" • • • ~rk Bragg 15391 Columbia Lane Huntington !!each ··,. ' ,,- TWO FREE TICKETS O<ILY PILOT 43 :1 HH. '2 ft\. l r11ilf' ro b1:n1·h. !l:.'!1! i;.q . It. 1·ul-d1·-.-.f1•· lul.1 (,)dl: • l'ATTJ • I WALKE tr •\At Ulo\11 ! JTI71 Br:nt·h t:l\•1t., 1!.B. C,\l.L :<ll!·lll~ FOR ADULTS ONLY Lov.-1)' :: Bit 1.'1ndon11niun1 111 ,·t•>k·f• l•of"alir.n in llu11- lin~ton R<·11cl1, rl<'ar l'J~'i" p~. A'i!<Ufll•' •''<~tu~ l1101n • 962-2456 • 1llage Re al Esta te • • .. 11111rws.t~. JLllJ 20, 1-,1.,. _,.""' )~ [ """"f"'"* !~ ~' _~_!l"___.J[j]1 ;;;.l -·~-·-..:.l:iiii~ I _ ... _ l~I Laguna S..c.h Mount1ln, Desert Newport Be1m Newport BHch Ouplexe1/Unlft Resort 174 Housea Furnllhed Irvine -300 HouMs Unfurn. 305 HouMs Unfum. 305 I;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;; I sale 162 --------- CHIC I' WALK TD BEACH * 370 AC. * WESTCllfF .. 1"ENNIS, POOi.(), a.un 1'tESJ\ Ven!~ area. 2 BR & 3 Nr. R•ncho.C•lif. ~ 4 BR, 2 IL\, l.TJ)lll. th-pi1, TO\\'l'lhou~· lu linhl'1-:-l1y \'f'1)' clean 3 BR. Jll~ l.N1th.'I. nf! Cnll nft<-r 'S::w!Pf.T for * ' * • * * * • • IJllni;;, air t'Ond . Children & Corona del Mar Irvin• .......... ..... AMERICAN·· .•• Goner al Piu·k. ·I Sp.1t•low1 btlrn1~.. r iunily mi., trph'., t;l1nl$, ap1>t. J.l~I & \\'arn.·r !tot Springs, in Ray•I Stowe [}(>luxe 3 BR, 3 SA. llu~t.· ,,;mtill pets vk. $285. n:io. :. HOME .. : '?'1 bo.lt\8, dining un·a. BY OWNER 1·nrp., 111111>1'!1. S-MJ.500. -I --P ty 11.1. An~ll Bo.rn.•l(o S!Atc Park, 9425 W•rbler Ave. w ·ncr·1 untr. u1 new du· 1137-911.'1 or 51, 14~ '•,, R[Al TOR •• • flunily k1tchc11 111l<I c1trrfh.'(' NOT 11 ft.'\cr upix•r! All this CAYWOOD REALTY ncome roper -no, ot hwy 7'J .. f1'ff & Clear. F 1 • V II r ......... living with Io w rn.1lr~ h('flllhful hotr1<' 111'('({, 1.~ fl SAc11f\C't"-~l11.ke (>lier. Will oun ain a •Y plelC, 00-ani t·lng, \'it'\\'. N~·111· :: Bl<. hornc, 2 88. In 't'urtlt fatlt.IK"('. Adu!! !l«'Ujlil'd. Pii·"·n!l'I fint ... ,. Llx'tltion 1111 in~ fan11ty In llHl\'I' In h)' * 541-1290 * INTERESTED? l11kt: J)llJ1 trttdt'. 5~8-9710 You 81°" !ht \\'lllllCr <>I b...'t!..ch, pntk.l!I, tlrt>pluc-e, nn r.ock. SIOO/rno. Shov.·n by n1oll'f"-ln i'.0111tlt 1un, I u x 11 i·' I Ill'~ 1~-.i111., ttt'f•:111 ,f: c-l1y vu, ~tnrl •>f st·h<W'll "' tlt un11 .. r's. NEED SPACE? I. C .. D.~1. Tri1lll''( . only t'Yt>s & wknds or wttkday• TWO FREE TICKETS 1>1.•!.K, $425.,rnoOOOO, Ava.ilnblt• S.-1. appt. (Inly, Avail. Aui. l, carvctl, d 1· a p,. s llfl!I 1111~1· 101· 1~·:irl1 fi'l"lf1tui.::1'. Enl'IJ:n or N••woorWl1:h. 3 :"l'lll-5.i25 to the:: tiTh-prh·. 1w:1r1y R,33-2708 111d nJ r.11•1·1· t111t· hun'l"" <H..1 1!. Cut'C'ft"(>P llvlnit! Try th is 5~1.50'1. SOUTHLAND * • • • • • wallpapt'I'. Lo<·o11"! "n OCE AN VU LOT BR, '.I llA , !Wp "In rm, hu~" o•lt•i.:flnt:: Ar ron<lo w /pool~. ~. 1'il)J' ~·nu rplcx. asking SINGLE \l'Orking • won1an H • G d Sh _ .-.. __ .-. .-. ...., Laguna Be•ch f..'l"Cf•nlil'll nt•or fllll "k ,f;.· 1~11.11 "''' rm, new "11h001 111111~" pulling-,L,'l'\.'('fl.~ &. , privaty. $/'iJ.lll.O. v.•a.nts 1ml'tJ1(>r, 118.tne 11tutus, ome... •r en ow ~ ......... Hurry. S-19,!)(l(J. \,~ •·nd. l'lllrll! ftir~1!. $11.7:\ll carpctini::. 21))) µlul> 11q, ft. C)i\fno•r trnnii:. $45.000 Denhion 3. ~·ai•h iu~·u <iupl(•ll. • for l\CW Condo J'ttJn1 Dcscn . July 1'/lh lhru Aua;. 5th SO. of H11.')', Shal)l: 3 BR, 2 SlW. U1l! J.,rl. 1 BR. Bltns, Vl•S• Summer1Wi11ter Ront11ll ol the g<~YI 1111' 1n N™'P'll'I . As,t;I\('., 673.731 1. $90,COO. Sips 4, fully furn nev.', for 1tt UK! BA, cathedral ttihn~. frpl~, t·iu·poe1. d~"<:"k, n1'. fllgh sch!. IOO-1 4,9.,4_,1,0~0·111 't'••u4,.91'4-r~117,5.,,1,3 Oul•·I ~ 1 rt'" 1 · 11°11·1 BA\'SllOR >".S (."o'." r··••'"<" 2 1~~ :~~a'<'s .... is·, f100.ncinc . S<'ll80nal rt'ntttl, pcrsonul ANAHEIM tlbJ g&ar.d laund1-y rn1 .. D/\I , ~2'15 . l.11;" Ol't-an vic1v. l BR n t· Ill h ho r h u orl. SGS,OCCI • u .. ,. ..,,, ....,,, ug1· & ti\..'( re·li<'I. Reis 1'!'(J'd. CONVENTION c-pts · 11JS. Convcn1c111 lu apt. l'c-1 ok. tJl'l·;N llOU.SE SAT~ ,,\!N pri bcarh1·~. 2BR, IBA ~ N ·. c 0 \\I 1 'II $4000. 644-~70 days 'UI S C 'all shopping, easy "'aik 10 $2'-':i _ Chru·niins: 2 Br. So. d h•11 1~; f':N>€'x J.n fi4(;..•)159 Y./p11tKJ, yrrl, bont 51;: + 01$ioi ~~ · "· <UI ex -Jlb-J. ENT.ER . ~-J3Th yrly Ise. 421 lr!Jt. l..oii.:un:i. dbl gnr, yard. "8 f 1~111 '" r>:Jx•rwt. 2:,fl s,, .-'· ·, .. , -· "-=--------soo \V. Kntf'lJ,1, Annheim 67f>.-0633, 527-7713 NU-VIEW RENTALS I 1 Laquna Niyuel BEACH DUPLEX r, rcstview Dr. 011<'11 dally 1· "1· 1>'< .•• ~,".:, ... ''1111'"1f' 1""N ~tore· Ranches. F•rms. Plea<;(' e11.ll 642-5678 e . ..:!. 314 . ~ I IO lo cla.in1 )'OUr tic:k<'is. <North 2 BR house. 506 Oreh1d 573 .. too() or 494-3248 HF."AIJT\' A C'Qlll!J<tll) \Vhh \'1>o1011 Univ. P11rk C.t"ntc-r, hi:11 1l' Crill Any1in1t', j.)2-i -101 Offi(.'(' MlU'S )1 A~I to io: l''I Cfl\1>0~2 !11". :2 h<1. lln i;oH , i 3 Brl 1 bl k "· 1, ;>.:(·11r•)n ~yfron1 ltestau-Groves 1 C 1 be.> • Recently redec. Crpts. drps. 1 Lux 1 ,.., A 1r111n~ ... tuh. \'ir•\1'. ~ ·· ' mi un ts, Onf' nt• * BRAND New :l BR. 21 ~ 1i1n1 ~tifl 000 ounty 101 free num r 18 bllt11s, $275 mo. Call 1\lullan * Sn5 nio/year eru.e, · f1un1 hc;u·h, NC"><li; llltlnt & BA. Condo. v.•/&al Slip. 2 -·' ' • LOOKING f'OR a local, 540-l.ZJJ.) ReaHy "A" ........,. urlous oceanfront vtlla, pr I 1'~ · th,n. s::1.~,oo _ R.11..00:!8_, f1~ up. Br~1 huy 011 lilt' 8 "'"!, Lnits · 6 X h:1W1l -St'C'luded 2'li acre parcel • * * ' ~"'~ !Jeach/salt pool, 1nagnltl· • BY 0\l'Xl·.·lt * I h "'9 fllr) r:\r gl\I'. All npplian<:C!I. S,'l,fi.l IOO KIDS t I "l J\H I 1t·ac · .,.., " · f'n1:i1 1., rtrps. Sale or LA•11!<". c 11 i·--:..,.,. with \l,'l\tt·r. elN'. horses & Belbaa liland -1 • pe s V.'t' con1e. • . . ttnl artistic detal s, . 3 1 'i RH . !'i h11.: 11a1rrfrnn! !7!17 Ornru.;t', ('.:\! &t!-li71 2i::: 287-00'!3 or 21::: 11 '1·1•1--·1• a11hnal11 O.K.? If 4'~ mi. of 1-----------1 J blks. lo bc.>11.c:h . .$2'Ll tllo. frplC!I, lo1·1•lv garden, 1m- l'1·•1· .~!111 J'.!f',..;,ro1 6i?i·4212 2ll7-S~..l. u11p:1ve<I rm1d doesn't CHARMING & rozy furn. Hal J~irk'hin Rllr. 6i.)-.4~12 nled ocetip~!).1-3330 Ry---0 --1--l-k--F -Ontu -------l1t1thC'r \'OU, call 833-3223. 2RR f 1 L. I ""!boa C t M , · \\'rtt•r · Unl\'t'n; ty P1u·k., a e orest ~ I I ARBOR \'U POHTOFl;\'0 $8,95() Atld up, full priee. , rp c, lite °" UI a esa fo'ANTASTJC oc't.'an & city llarrl 1<1 fnxl Juli1u·.t uiorl"l 21 ;;+ Ur, bonux rin, ~·~ b:i ., I.,.[t1ntl. \Vinter N.'flllll. Sept. vll'I\', .1 BR, 2 ball. Lease ': nR. 2 H.\, l•111us rot)1H: l .\l\E 11,,ul l'lll'tu •r lrtt , -1 HI". ~ nurs1undini;! d <'I." 0 r. k J:,.Junc t;i. Call 11•kends. NE\VLY DecoratM -2 Br, 2 ~µl 1, $400. JUO. wkdays, ;.,'T't"'nl1t•!l. S.i'.l .. 'llO. !'1·111· :: Ba. 1('nni~ ,\· J{win1n1in11;. lnds<"prl. off('r. GIJ--6793 or 671-2195. Ba, dlx appl, <1.ll all clCt:. 5-ll·'.1990 wkends, 499-1805. 1•ip11l11 onl.v, 5.'.):l-10 1•1 ;d1 u1 111·11 c·l11h, 1loc·k .. \l"kin~ 'l60-l-o· II •I LG. "·•y fn•t "'"/pi· .......... 1 shag crpts, drps, shultl·r~. k STI I)).) "''--01T.i ·SG-m7 · 'J. ri....~'-' ,., " '' "~w wsh/d1"-', elec. 2 c:ar """' ... , L N" 1 nr "'CC erKI§. ~..,.lit, J or .)L • ----------•I Ji\·11\'IAC. honH! -~uperb p:Hl11 r ......... -lroin Aug. 5th $:)00. V.'k. adults, J no pets. s2.10."ls1 agun• igue i lido Isle "STEPS TO SURF" -prl\'ary -~ RR -formal 4.J4....243.'l or 75.'l-9-369. l.1agnolla, CM, 645--3363 -GARDEN ho1n(>. security Laguna Beach INVESTMENT •. Spc'<:lol~ P 1·\1111• S011!li-i..•1HI l.AJl;uua . 7 Uni1s, C-1 z1111f', i.:ross $17,.WO, 1-s1·uh1l1(111 lenst-. [l h ~ s i IJ I l' IH~h IP1·rn1gc. SHiO,OOJ. ~Ian REAL ESTATE 1190 Gleru1l'y11• St 191-9-173 ~.1~1-{)3 Ui CUSTOM BUil T Ckwse-ln \1·alk 10 1011·11 .~ loc>11C'h. Nc-11 I bJrni., 2 ha1h home v.ith lgr. y1u1!, roon1 for pool. lle11vy shake rool, shingle sidi~. Aslrirll{ $1i9,j(JQ ~flt~w 494-5671 4.9.1100 -SK1uded-Eleganc8!- Behind .':Uardc-d i.;alrs' •I lxlmls, lnn1ily mi, forn1al dining m1. Private bea<·h, tennis t•1·1.~. Chihh'l'11'.~ play area, $79,50(). brk 49-1-800.J. TARBELL SPECTACULAR ocean view v.•/whlte water. 2~; yr old spacious 4 br, 3 be., den. Elegant decor. By ov.1ier. 2',500. 669 Bo I sa na, 490-3967 OH -FR -vt1<·a11t. 1949 Pl . ON FT Cost• Mesa * $79,500 * illajt't"tic: 4 Br, :i B1-1.M•u<·h lt;un.">£;atc LY 1 LE ! Business JIONEYJ.IOON COTTAGE i.:atc. :-;-BR. 2 m~. new ept, Spa 111~h ~1, 11• lnni1<· u11 laiirP l1nu~r. !ltn11slve 111)(•11 b.·n111~. Gi~i.in 41 644.111!JO i\qt. D Opportunity 200 1 BR. furn, ii-Oil houNe, older Eastside. SpoUess 2 br, ery:is, rlrf'>S, hl~·ins. Dl'cor. yellov.• 1"1 ·i Bf{ ,(. ,11 .11, 01J(•ti rr.rully rn1, :l r111l1·s. r11n111 eluxe Fourplex euuplr., no c:hild, water pa.id, drps, stove & gar. &1ar:i-1ed i.:old \1·h11e. I. :t"· lease. sm. 1,..;iin~. iillri-.·..;un~ ltil .. \~·;u" f<)r lllltll/1·;1n1p1•r. f'rit•1•1I hy BLUf'FS ~ALE OR LEASJ-:: Ui;in i·oniniirnil·nl !l'l':i 1110 "'li"7361 C11I. only. No pt•ts. $200. tni·I. pet f)k. nv1ul Aui;:. 1st. L''I'' '' .,,,,·,.". ,.,. ~· 1111xi~Uli oWnt'r 11! S~l.950. ('0111!0, fine Gl't'cn Bf.It, * • * · · · ,,... water & gard. &1;:,-24z.; ·19J-1G7J .• ~ 1'n•ts i''rl<1:1y. Ch•"s F·a · • F · V 11 ' ~~~~------L 100 REAL TY GI n·s,oilrr IJorl"I \\Alt! Dolores Inn ~1odel. 3 Br. :!1; Tili'M' 111,111,,,. unir, have • 1 • 11e, ounta1n • ey 011,ner/agent. .. ::::7j \'ia 1.1du. N'11t P.caPh GRUBB & ELLIS Ba . h·g~.,9P~CJS6·-~277!. $.lOO frpl c-'s, ('<'t1l1'Ji.I hl':1t. dish· P.O. Box 1574 Cf ·->"OIJ'"TAIN VAi MESA VERDE, lease 3 BR,,.L~i~d~o-'l•~I~•------* 673·7300 * Realtors n10. or .,.,. "'""· i;,-,.. l\'11ShL•1-s, air i·onditionin~. Laguna Beach 4' BR.' 3 Ba·~ flee 1·111.' $3(Xi 2 BA, ?'\'tier's pride &. joy, 'a .IAR'1!NG L 1 BR -• --,,.,,.~ ,. ,. 11 Cl'! BLUFFS hit-ins, hie Oarh:'!, t'nrlosed You •l"I!' the y,·JMerof A .1 A SJ 8 on quiet cul-de-sac, xlnl " · rg . ,\REAL C'l rrJE! Bv (\\\nCr'. ;,oo,, r .. s1. wy., ln R"lll<1~1'!!". Ideally located TWO FREE TICKETS nio. vat ug ·an. · c:ond., new drps, w/\\' ept, Frpl, patio, db~_gar . ., steps 2 Bl~. 1' ~ 81\, ·1·11,·lr..~r.t 675-7080 Ry Ch1'T11'r. X plan. end uni!. ni•aJ' :<;hopplflg, s eh 11 0 ls, 10 !he Pool avail. 968-8680 fi>lc:, li;e fenced yard, nr to bch. Yrly. $.l.50 ut1I inc:!. ~~'.~~~·ui;;.\-1 1i uh!. SGS.9001 '""""" __ _,,_.,,.,._~_,..,.,.,.,._ ~~~~ J~~~pgraderi + fr"y.~. C)nly $6-1.JO<.t 11· 10·; SOUTHLAND Huntington Beach !jChCJoJs. $325. 540-3.168 642--0300. -------! JUST LISTED Duplexes nf'itr thr Ol'i'an °'0:i"·ri, 11 !) 10 6 Home & Garden Show 2 BR, v.'l\lk to y,•ater: AIM GREAT Pool -Eastside. 3 Newport Btsach Mission Vie1·o l"ll'n ou~,, aity tv July 27!h 1hru Au"' •. 51h N B n .... I, $!00 , "R 11~,, BR, 3 BA, + scp. upstiurs -~=c.c.....:.;.:;c:... ____ 15 Bdrm5 1ilu.~ farnilv. JY10n1. fltiles Wlrson, Realtor llOLIDA Y GARDEN:: '"""· · r. =-$ 60 2 BR t blk "--~ -·~ ar thl' s}85~ C.:\I.' $70 .. 2 -BR, s1 :;0 ofe or ~en. Frplc:. Nev.· crpls I . -, .' , . . R-"'• custom hornr. Ohl. brick •6t'rSJ63• 121.'!2 ·°'· llaslC'r. ANAHEIM Singles F'amilie!!. Agl. Fee. & parnt. $400 + pool ~\J00.-1. ,Nc11 .c1p1s J:. ed;c. SAN YALARDE SIX One• of lht• Jnri::t·~! funlllv ho11i.·11 111·.iilnb](> noi.I loc·:l!l·fl 111 bc.>st a1"l'a of i\1ission \'if'- JO. Slx Berl rooms priced u t $61,250. Call us today and (.'()nlC' see n!J !he extra5. :-~l!G--02'.!2. * BAYCREST * B'l' O\\'NEll. F.leganl eus1on1 b11i11 <I BB. + lrg. 1-"<1m Hn1, 2 )la>oll'1' BH + 2 fq,Ji·s. Jlu.ge I.rt. J-'orn1al Dr. Cu1n- 11IMcly pnvare :hi' l"vcn'(l outdorJr h\·init a1-c-u 1.ith tush 1lu1il'4·apin~. (k\'nl"l' \1·i][ tit1111i.·1• res1ioni;iblc buyl.'I'. Prilll'lfll\ls only Gl:>.7."J()(J -BLUFF-SC ONOO'S - rrpr.. 111t·ium he11n1~J o>il's. Santa Ana t;;ird(·n Grm·c CONVENTION J:,ti....2.7• scn ·1cc. 673-0797. $3::;o _ J !:.R, \!i ntcrfron1, Lldo :'t11>t·1 )lhnqi~ Q1111·t rul 1le Sp•rling Investment CENTER ""· SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA Condo. lsll'. Frpl1" bll11N, gar. ~tit'. S6~ ·.oo OIVNER. Nr. So. • 'Ola~t Corp. 63$..5662 800 \I,', Katell•, Anaheint Laguna Beach Pool. Rec: cntr. Dbl gar. S<NXI • Nr·w h-g 4 BR. frple, •<,: Plaza. Ne1v 2 Br, 1'3 Bi'1. _ Dshwhr. $24J/mo. 673-4891 ,i:::a1', <let.ii. l lllk hc-ach! 384 MEADOW LANE . S005 dn. Assun1r GI 10.1n -4 UNITS Pleru;t" call &12·5678, e . ...:t. 31.J $li5 . Util Pd. 1 Bi·. Ck"C>an-all 5. NU.VIEW RENTALS Open Sunday 1-5 11ymnl $262 1110. 8:°)"3--110::, to i.1alm your tickets. fr\or1h 67J...l030 494 3248 5.32-.1)503 Creal 4 unit for tht' investor County loll free number is Iron! A~!. Vic \i·. l)e(·~· . 2 BDRJo.I house, snmll yard & -Qr - COAST PROPERTIES 1hat t""•u1re11 a tax shelter, 540-t.m.1 $2:"1(). UU I Pd. 1 Br. \l1r.tor1a i:"a ragC' l ~hild OK no pets BLU1'~FS -4 br twnhse, end * 673.5410 * ~., • * • Beach. Charming & Nice! $165. ~T.JOO ' · unir, 213 b..1, 2 hlk!ii from \1·1111 rash 0011•. Dl·luse $'50 ~BR f SO-IT'S SMAL_L__ I~ units id£"al 1" 11·, ... in. 'It·. S'lALL 1 1 f .;. -". · .. rf>ll', garage, * 2 BR 1 BA 1·o ,,,,.,, .. o s1ore~. 1 ! blk from schools. " ' " " ll1ac11t1c ~\Op or ~-a.rd, l'll'll'. V.1r1ter rental. s~-p" 1 ·1. 11. ""· L1l'Cd in by u1vuer. \Vh ile ll'lt !r"s "nlv 1 !<h•i1t hlk 1u llCJbjteHomes fillllil i\t1.~i·ion1-. No. 2"17. Pho11l' sule by 011·nc1'. Costa l\fesa NU VIEW RENTALS ~r..' oo pa 10 "aragt! k ""'1•1111. n1.·11°k1'.t.·· & 'h""" ii"rl li;;!i-l.'101. ar~u. C"n1plctnJy oq,ip-d • dish~·asher' 833--891-1., ' C:L"fll, bl'ic · patio, inany ex· v-. .~ .,,.., " "' " ,,... 673·4000 or '19-~3248 · · IJ"as. l"l·l--0111 a;,k111~ onlv -( ,i:., ready to operate. Lo1v , Lnc; oh.I 2 BR, $14;) plus fn crl ---·"-"'-'-------t $.~n.:;.j~ l'l'nt. ,\Jl past accountM L.\GUN~ furn h.sc, sa!111·1c-d 3 BR, gill', $l80. Bring kids.J HAllBOR Vu Hon1e BALBOA BAY PROP. Mobile Homes avail. to new owner. Call 1·e!>p'.)n.~ibll' adult. PPrma-Agt. FN'. 979-8430. Sonier.set 5 Br. 3 Ba, 2 * 673-7420 * For Sale 125 for appt. 537·42'17. ncn1. S170. No /letl;. 494-8170. ~ . .~ t n r y. Ad .Ja c en I to l~t.trrrs. x 11l1ui. $GO,OOJ by c.11·ni.•r, :! RR, :I Bii. nu 111~1 S1•pl. carpets, 1h'1lflC'S, f'1t1i•1 .l.OflO unrli•r n1nrkct. Av111I Au:.:. 610--\~(J. l>l'PL~'.:\"-:-;:-"1t~H-. -,~cl':A-1 BB. '! Rt\ llfll){'f, ·I tl(ln:<I'~ f1~un !IO"'ai·h, i:-rrnt lrK·. Only 9 yr~ )'OU!lj~! ! 6i.':-:,U69 Country Greenbelt Tll<' Bluff:<. 3 RR.. 21~ ba, Ml•! uni!. r•olnl\><; J'l;111 plus. (h\·n· r . .S!ii . .',()(I. ri\0-0 11.~. l!l7J -24 x &l CU ST 0 t.I , urx,11·11d1'1'l un golf course, full a 11· n i n g-s. California roon1. Adult park, Pt•\ OK. Pahn Springs. 714--328-8469 LOVELY Cottage Type I•---------• home. ...,,.. ga"''"'. SIX PLUSH carpo11, patio, .t, 1·C'r_v SO""C!uded. Space rent $&1.~. UNITS 8-17-46&:> 0\\'Th."T:<i' unit over 2,00) sq fl. NEWPORT BAY Unrlcrg-roond parlcing plus 2 r\Mv 2 BH:, I BA livin~ r111. rar 1!111'. Oos." to Civic .\d11lr pai1' 11 /piivall' hr1u·h Cl'tltl.'"r, in lng}cwuod. su: . .-11:0 ;l10-:\fii2 2 RR. 2 BA. B_v 01vner. 2Qx:,O 11 /pnrch, patio .t-sh('<js, In R.1_v~ide Villn:.:c. N . n.. SIJ,;~•1. Ph : f>:!!l-2J2f.. illage Real Estate • Beer Bai·. Great Spot • Audio.Visual Systen1s • Book .~ !lobby Store • C.'hildn!n's Shop, Ex Loe Holland Bus. Sales 645-4170 or 54CHl6M Business Wanted 2t0 \VAi'IJT to buy be.rber shop 2 or 3 chair. Vic: N'pt. Bch to CrlJ.1. CASH 12131 19S-14b'9. Money to Loan 240 1st TD Loans UP TO 95% 2nd TD Loans , ., BDRl\1, 2 BA, fan11 ly rn1, greenbelt, pnrk & schls. Oc- L1do Isle dining rn1, \\'Bier paid. $280 cup. !J/1. $57.5/flio., 61-1-ZJ.12 1'-0R rent rurn, 2'1·1 Via Lido mo. 979--9nB for apcp~t. _______ 1 Norri. S2000 mo. can -12131 Dani Point 1 BH. 2 BA., n r \V l y 27G-l:>-17 or 934--0920. rr<ll'<.:oraled. \V al k to N NE\V c:ust 1 BR, 3 BA home, .\laril'lt:'rs SclJI , Hb1·ary & ewpart Beach l:un nn, f le, c:rptd, see ,r,, \Vcstl'liff :;:hopping, Avail. WALK to Water Ba.ch, $100: ~i·alk ~lo t.i ·a! $385. cA~'~'~~·~'~'S-4~,'~'~'-----t Also 2 Br hse, Sl&l: plus $70 :JS6...-023i THE BLUFf'S 1 BR, $15G-2 BR. Ct.I. .i:: Fount•Tn Va ey 4 Bdnns, 111>lc:, 2 patios, \Valk to \Yater 2 BP. JIB. Grel'nhelt. S 4 .j O. mo. Al;!. Fee. 9'ffi-S.130. 3 BIG bedrms, 2 ba, 2 car &.15-4J.i.I eves. \\'INTER I b 2 I gnr all bltns Sl\'ini pool, llARBOf' V H Sha.J 3 , 1-enta _ 4 r, ia. k' 1 · 01 . $26:> • N fN' .. u ins. 'P dock, Ne1\'port Island. 1\\"ail 11 ~11 'J '· nlo. 0 · Br. ra111, ~r pool, inc:. Sept 1:1 lo June: lG!h. Phone Aft ~·l.-4IZI g::rrlcnl'r, S·l."iO. 61 1-1191, 71·1: 6.1:°>-13.'il:I Huntington Beach _:11-_1~"'~'--------t Newport Island POOL. lovely J::ttrrlen. :l br, 2 S200 UP. 3 ~· 1Br. No lease I•:•. s::7:i. i S<>e. De1>0sit. NE'\\'PORT ISLF: -\\'inter required. 01.hel's avail. in 2·1li1 Universily. 642-3645- leMC. 2 Br. 1 hlk tu tx>ach, Orng Cry. Call Dept of E'STBI UFF' .1 3BR k P !' $100 6~-2'.'i l!l Tr a 11 s p orlation · ~ . (.'()nuo, _, par · 11 10· · •.r ·' · · l!''/G2()-.'·~.10 rroni 9 _ ~ ZB.\, 1~.01, ch1ldrrr1 ok. $385. Lowest rates Oran9 e Cc. Houses Unfurn. 305 ,vkdnys."" ". ~11--ISLl or 673-90()1 Settler Mtg. to. General '40oYARDS TO BEACH F'A~TILI ES v.·elcornr. New 3 642-2171 54$.0611 La!'~e. ne1v J BR, 2 BA, exec BR. Br. lush e;~r~. S550 ho1nc, all util & gard. paid. inonth, lease. 644-1&32 Bkr. Serving Hnrbo~a 21 yrs. B k --·--t..ca~c $~50. Call 0\\11er/ r · Newport Heights DON'T BORROW 547-.jl.j~ 01· evt's: l!3..q....m1 - FIND YOUR NAME WIN FREE SHOW PASSES 'Tit YOU CALL US! RENTALS :ilin .. , 2 BA, \1·/fiun./din rni 2 Rr:.. hou~e. drps. 1·1TJl!1i. Dbl &nu1v on your ho111c e11uity Apartments con1bo, f.rµlc, covr'd patio, ~a nt g l' • __ fenced yd. for any J::oorl purpose. Serv. Ou~ bl1ns nr Edinger & Spring-GardrncL". S2<.1. n10. Phone i.ng Los Angeles County for Houlea tl<1.le.' s265. A~ for Dale. _noon to 6 Pill 5-18-6241. o\•er 20 yf'llN and NO\\' in 962-4471 San Clement• Orange Cou111y! 43:1 \\', 19th SL, CostA ~lesa OIAR.t.\l~J\G 4 HR: 2 ~A. has LAR~E --~-'--ho'---4-B-R-I Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets Two $2 Value Tickets JULY 27·AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER All AIR CONDITIONED • SEEi. .. THE ONLY MAJOR FLOWER ANO GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FEATURING FOR THE FIRST TIME ANYWHERE "FLOWER MAGIC OF THE TROPICS " .... AN AN IMATED FLORAL SP.ECTACULAR SEEi. .. THE VERY LATEST INNOVATION S FOR THE HOME & GARDEN WITH OVER 135,000 SO. FT . OF GLITTERING EXHIBITS SHOW HOURS: 5 ·11 P. M. Weekdoys Noon-11 P. M. Sa1urday1 Noon·9 P. M. Sundays ADULTS s2.0D • JUNIORS 11.00 ( chlldr•n under r2 fre e with paren11) The DAILY PILOT makH It eosy. Just check throughout tho cla11ffi•d section for "ads" listln9 w tn"er1' "ames. If you fi"cl your nam~ just coll 642-5678, Ea:t . 314, b1tweeft t o .m . and l p .m. to make OrYCH1CJem1nts to pick up your ticket. at any convenionl DAILY PILOT ofllco. SIGNAL .illORTGAGE CO. l~ s. Coa.">t lhi-y., Lagwia cvcryth1n~. A,·a1l. 1n;in1ed. 2,., B.\ ~eb;; lf'R~· ror 1 0; <TI·O 5515-01~ __ Lease. $3JO. Sngls/ch1tdren 11 : • ,' P 111 furnished l~~•l;.;s-'-lo;.;'...:;S.;;a;.;te;._ __ .;.17;.;.0 1 ii4ii;oo ... iiciiii'"'iiiiP"',.™i;;i;°'ii"io·,.N,..B ... ,..1 COSTA i\tESA 0".l'~ICE ok. 962-8851 or ~215. s35CJ. ~;~ m:. 6_11 492.ij272 .. I' $85 . Includes Uni. F'um. 4 BR, 2 BA, c10$<' to sc:hools, ==-=:...::=..::::::...c;=-=;"'° BUILDERS Apartments For Sale 152 T It T PL E :\" San J ua11 C.'apis!rnnn. inco111e S69!11. !.ar:t:f' lot fnr ·I to fi 11d- 1lirio1111l un\1.~. llr s1oragc. 571. j(J(}_. ·192-S2&1 Business Property 154 SALE or lease. zoned off!cc, Prof. silt' '"/lrg t story r11~1om hon1c ·I Br. 3 B.:i . 16.'\' frnnl<t.J.:c on E. ('hap. 111;1n, Clr<u1J.:r. A1nt ten11s. 1ilu11s fnr off 1rr Cllnversiru1 or ldc-al for ho111e ,(· Prof. USC', Duy or 1•vei;:. ~>-11-!IS.'>I. Co1"mer cial Ea.~l s1d'"~ Cnsla !\feAA On" P<il'l.'cl, J'i{} x ::00, zoned for a to1aJ of 18 units. ~!!:"1,000 CALL CS> '4i·l414 ,..~ Nr1r Ntitpor1 Post O!fic1 R-2 Costa Mesa ZONl·:D fnr S UNIT.S. ti6 ~ 300. $27,500. Sparling Investment c.,p. 638-5662 6S.'1:l l0 LOT. 1607 Corn\VR.11 , 2ND Trust Deeds PRIVATF. FUNDS AVAU.. Any Amount * Call 675-4494 BKR. Bac:helo1· 1\·/kitchen. Ideal college, & shoppg, lg encl 2 BR. lop cond, 2 Ba. Only for studenL back yard, frnt patio. t..l~tu1..-.., Arlu1ts. Barcelona, SlZi . All uttl Pd. l Br. Furn. !142-1898 E.~··-~"~-~""~'~'~'·----­ Ni:. pn1'k & tO\vn. Vacunr. ALONE on lot 1 Br hse, gar. 4 BJ:, 2 B.\, blk to bch, $1~". · ~'~· 2 Bl~ hou~e. lnc:I. Al90 v.·atk to water 2 Br, !hyutf'; & plunge, $250. + _,g"J. Ya1d for kirk1pct. 1165_ View of Ocean :t Br, u111. No r.c:L~. 492·0139. NO points, no penalties, free $165 -Cute Co~c l BR + $2:\5. Agt. Fee. a.36-2575. Houses furn. or Appraisal, low rates, fast. den. + Pool. Pnv. )'I'd. Gar. . , U I 310 lrlVl!S!Ol'S Thrift 639--&111. c \LL 645-0111 LEASE, 4 BR, 2 BA. New n urn. ' illluse, Walk to bench $3(',:-1.l -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Mortgages, · I"' t t d I• 260 LAGUN1\ BEACll OFFICE inc: us \\'a er. n1n1e . occup. Clo!, BR 2 l • . ' ""' Trust Deeds 838--0462 ( j " • )tj •• VIC"ll. r .. rn. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; !$115 .. Util pd. Bachr1or al · , !i.-1()() i\'ln /yearly. • Bch. 'l rly. Ideal for lfl.uclen1. 2 STY 2 Br 2 Ba. Teahouse, ?rnin. Pt. '.I BR 2 ha. Unf. PUT YOUR MONEY $1/J · Nil'(' I Br fourp!C'x, $15.'i: A!:iO 11·alk to "'atf'r, s:i7.i :-.10, ~·early.' TO WORK FOR YOU! h!t11s, Cl'ptsidrps, child/pct fncd 2 sr·s, kids/pets. Ai;t. · E11rn 10"',o interest c.in ,vfl l-ok. Fer. 53&-2'5i5. associated $2S5 · Chan11ing 2 Br. 1''rplc. NE'V ] st\" T11·nh">C, 2 Br, SPCured 2nd Tp.isl Deeds on Dbl gar. Fncd ynl. So. Lu· Ba's, all 1:t'C. l·u•il. f\;r. heh. Orange rounty real estate. g-un<1. $2Kl lsc. 96'l·!Jl;4;1 eves & BROKERS -REALTORS 1015 W Balbor 671 lf.t.l SIGNA.1~ :\lORTGAGE r.o. $3.10 . Spa«lou~ 4 BR, 1'-i Bn. wkt""'' ((14) 5J6-0106 ""'~ii;;:-;;;;;;c--;:;:;;;;-;;;:;:;;l· ........ -..................... 1 Bllns, trp!c. Fnc:rl !or kirl:s/ llGO i\IO 2BR t ,._5 __ _ 4."•00 Can1pus Dr., N,B. iK"l. • • crp s, .... ., · Lido Isle C;\U.. 494--9491 s!o\"r. ~ni l yar'll, e11clsd _---------I 4 O ', DI SC $ 6 4 , o O O * LANDLORDS * garage, 53&-tq~7 aft 5· LIDO 1~1" Bavfront Pier, 4 Property Ke11'JIOrl &>Heh. !'\r. shop-"'""""'""""""""""""""~I pin~. Owner. 673--629~ 158 C·2 LOT w /INCOME I' \'.\ORA)t!C vic,1· 1 o t, 19.~ sq. Ct. oi1 r.;l'l\pl.'+n Kings Road, Ne1\•r1orl 131\·d., 11r ~·ai r Dr., Cosla -""='~'~"~· ~$'6=.00::::::0.~&l:.c.1-Q.=232:::.__ 11·ell-sec:urocl lsl APP I Y FREE llENTAL SERVICE Irvine Br. f:"ahulous i1'i<' ,i;, location, Valley pa_v!il $640. me. 1.01"/i; LANDLORDS' Aug r1•11.rl). 5.»077D. Bx 3 Apple Valley, (7l<il 2-l2--3t4I \re Specialize In Ne~~" i ~~:: ~'k~'.:::::::~:: ~ Con~~'fui~~~ms 320 1''0R ~ ... 1r Trust Deed $54,500 Beac:h •Corona del ftl&r • ~BR., 211 traU1s ........ S3i5 ----------1 ~1 .. ,1. ~3.:.1'3 .... ,. It. 011-11<'r .. \\'l'Crl ii & Reap" Hkr. Other pa.1i•rls ava1L ;.~rorn l rt'asure.~ to trnsh Yield 1:1.2a• ;., only $24,000 & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· ii RR 21~ ba bonus rn1. S-100 Huntington Beach 1'"1'.!Uil'<'d. 673--€756. vice i!ii FREE to \'ou! Try 4 UR, 21,: ba;hs , ....... $~25 ---'"-------1 6-12-0.'XIJ!J. Turn thein Into cash C.\l.L Daily Pilnl $©~4UlA.-l6"BtfS " That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle l"9.cl lioy C:tAY l. POUAN ------0 Reorronge lett1rs cf ftl• four scrambled word1 bo- lcw to form four .si,mol• wort!J. I FEKCIL I I It I I 11-...;:.t:....;U;..;1 L:..;r;...:0 ;..1 -1/ i • , r-r;H...;Y,..N;:_,:;0..:.P,..-tj r I I IJ j Beniomln Franklin wrote: '::::'.:=~===:::....., "In three days, guests, Ilk• r fis~, begin to-., ,..:, I NETNIT I f':";-rl.:....:,-1 '-1r--;.1-'-=1•-1 e c....1 ... "'· t1t .. k1 • ..-. . _ . . . by fl!l!ngo In th• mllll1"9 _.d• yov dr1'111op trom r;teo Na. 3 h.low. 8 PRINT NUMBEHl> lfl1£R~ IN THES~ SOU1'11.CS • • Nu-\'ie1v! 2 BR. 2 bu tlen A1C .• SZ"ITi LO\'EL \' 3 Rr 2 b a NU.VIEW RENTALS J J~R'. 2 ~ .• c1e;1 ...... S45:i to\\·nhousc. \Valk 10 bcnci1, GT.l-4030 M 494-3248 I UR. 21:1. ba, a r ...... $~2.i 11horis •"-sc:hl1. S2:2j mo NICE hon1e 1\•alklng diii:lancl' I BR., 2 ba ............. $500 lc-asr . Z>-%-3217, 642--l;oo:i '° •<""'''· , s,, 2 bu, '"' Vt'st"on-,,.in• cov'd patio & tnc:d ya.rd. ----------t Ct"Pt/drps. 968-1103. 2 BR, dls!11vashC'r, b\Hns. .Bilbo I I d e· red h1·11 ,,,·imm;n" """'· ""'"· dr" a S In sauna & extras. 5.l>-277·1 ---DR,\ND tlC'11· cus1on1 3 Br. Ne~rt 8!,~h :111 0.1 ho1nt.'. Huge fan1ily ·----·I nn "·/seWing M"nte:r. elCf'' ru:.ALTY * BltA.~D Now 3 HR. 2\• hlt11 .kllrhe11, hx-1, trAsh A Company \\i1th Vll"ion H,\. Condo. \\'/Boot Slip, 2 mn11>Actor, 11·alk-l11 piu11ry. Un11-. PIU'k Centf"!', lt'\·1ne c:ir Jm l'. All npplianc:es. f 11 ln li\'ing frn1 & niAst~r Cal! Any1h11.e. {l.)2.7j()() f'rpest-& drp!!. S11le or Lease. Ar suifc-. Sre 11.t 11.!i (;ru-net. Offil'C hour_. 8 1\~I to S P:\I 11.~: 287-oo2J or 2 l 3: 6iH918. ----~ --~1·:-17'll~··_;-~~--= LOVELY tx'w 3 br, 3 be v1-.:8, \\'F: HAVE RU-:T,\LS To-;,nhouse Unfurn. 335 11·frlr11 ho1ne. Yrly h.'nlal. ~lay 11·1· IX" of !>~·n.·icc - S630 n10. 673--0897. in ilOl\•ing: Corona del Mar Corona del Mar \'our houtlng fll"C<l!I ~ 3 81\, 7 BA. CrpL<i, drps, I:. bltru;. Near beach! No pets. Ph: 6i'J...T"J07. !BR. v.·fgar, stove, rerrig. rarpets. ,\\lllJI Aug 1st. S1 85. Jg! & last monllw. 6T."r-J.;s9 "I lnli"f \,lhL - --''11.ruilor "~INCE l!m" • • • * • • 1hi'\c :; HI\, J 8 .\, llUEC o,\111.'<"·~ uni!, In ne!W du· plc\. benin elna. vle11.·, Near b<•ih·h. pol\()(, ttn-pl111't'. no pct.11. $12J. n\O, A\':11l11ble 8-1. TIME FOR lot! \\'~i<tern Rllnk Bld;r. * Univerl"i•'Y PJ'lrk, h'Vhl\• • nti·b:IOO • • • • QUICK CASH D_'~2-1000 Night• I~~ THROUGH A UNIV PAR" '""'"°";r for 3 lledrm. 2 baths, built• • UNSCRAMBLE AIOVE l£J1US TO GET ANSwrt DAILY PILOT l•·a.M'. 2 sty. 3 nr. 2,, ba .11 er ·,g ashc• I I I J I I 1,1,.1 1,~. T'"'"" pool ns. r r .• w ,, ' WANT AD rrivp ,.._~72. !dryer, brand new crpt. ON 800 642•5678 ror thAt ll•m ""'"" SlO. try Children OK . $22.1 mo. SCRAM·LETS. ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATI th< Penny PIMrh<'r Ask for Dale. 962-+171 . I ====--~-------~~-'--...:....::....:....::.~___::....._____c____c____c~~--'-----~~-~-~.=-:..:.=..:..::::.;.::c:.:.__ . ' ( - 1_D_•-'""-•-•-•-•_F_u_m_. __ 34S-' AptL Furn. 3$) Apt. Unlvm. AptL, Furn. or Unfum. 370 I~ :;;! --.__~l~;;.~I~! ... ;;; ..... ;;;-~l~aJ I --··-1~1 ! ---ll5l ~ "R;;;•;.;n;.;l•;.;l'-•..;t..;•...;;Sha.:.:;cr..;•:........:.4;;.;30 Announcemenh 500 Fo1.1nd lfrM eds) SSO Carpet S.r-.lce 1Houucleanln9 • • * ;\lll>IL'~l .altt:'d llU\ or l:a\\n l)lttf-:~ .. "-:ARIJO 41l'J SONS C•rpet Clti•nl"SI ,. Newport 8.uch I :N;;;e;;;w;;po;;;r;;;t ;;;S.;::;•;ch;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Costa Meu QCE.ANl-"RONT. \\'Inter rt>n-f • "-'-"';...;.:.:;c:;:. ____ _ tal. Lo\11er 2 JJr. Nkely • BACllELOR, F'\JR~. SUO. More Room.Lesa Money S.lboo Island ClRL l1 \\&nt.s l'OOl1111uate fut 2 RR 11p1 on Bal l s~. &•r .. fU.r1l. ulll. fl.;(). mo., 9 to ~ ~11 : art 6, 499-2393. Lilli1n Cenedon fl'tn."llt rt\11'1~' 6 ~. olrl '*r~t ii.let. lni..1.aHatlun & Floor Care & Windows 984 El Camino .:::2 &or Oil l11rr \'h· Cl\'il' rt"pu.ln. r~EK•. 96J..26J9 Uu.t.·h ?.la tnt. Sf-I'\', M'T-1508 flJl'D, A\'tU Sept. 1 ;, . lk11ch & htattd pool t"OME ~ • tttl (tU'den 646--2830. Aduh" only, yrty le~. apt! Likf' livlni in a hoMfl SR.AND new 2 BR apt. bltn CMfe Mau Centtt, S.A. G-l·l-l!M1. Cem•nt, Cottc:r1t1 Rl"'itABl.E. r:o.•'"'r. h1.i..· v.>UI. kltdu .. 'Tl w1truh -pact-, f~·~·o 1 1 -~ ·~ ....... ., "" Garages for Rent 43S Yoo l!U'P ttw-'ol<\Mrr o( ·v v•• l!nlll" Gl"f'nl Otull" --c:l('UR b.) lhr day. 6'73--&J.i WATERFRONT • 88', Dock. St'cur\ty \'Ontrollcd new for $162.50/MO. 2 BR. 111 -1 y btuldirnr. &12.~.t'" BA. 2 pf'k'& placet, prlv lt~iy Ga.met. 673-6918. TWO FREE TICKETS p1.1p11.)'. \.'l('uut.) ,,f 20th ,\. Ct:.~11-:~'T & Block \\'ork. urter !:i f';\I! Costa Mesa \VM'TED-Slngte i~ fnr 10 the.> Onu\it . Coitf1t '1"..i•. (.\U I \\'ull, µ.itllo!I. Jl.ldf-"·alks, l't1-.l'Mci'"'-~-'-'-'------I 2 Br. Jo ' I' c. rly. SJ.:'A:I. .-. (*tlos & n.>c areas. \VllllOn * 673-7799 • Las Brisa• Apts. C•rdena, 011 \\'il!Kln St., Vi'. :.:.;.;:....:..::;::;.. _____ I 11oraat•. Nr'ol·pnrt Seaeh. SOUTHLAND ~352 By hr. ur ~1b. ~!11~ , _..;•..;•~on"-ry'-------I THE E.XCl"!'ll\G Refs & l"ellablc. &ft 6. 1.-F.,'S !1"J11od 1or 1,..,~1. \~~ C1..lld C:Are ___ ,. Duplexes Unturn. l50 ~l:J Rh·l!r Ave., NB of Harbor. No chUd./pet. 22S3 Fountain \\ray Eut PALM MESA APTS. 1-•~t<;.<K0 __ 1 _______ , Home & G•rden Show n RRICK. verlH!r~. 1 tep1, -JUl)~lhll l \'II :,llh St .. "\\•''' ~l'llllfl\1 11•i1 lk11·ny~.slu"1p&W.., AllNlITES TO NPI'. BCll. !''OR motor homes, trailer, ~• 111 ' l!f:. ;i 1 1Wft1il. on 0 ,. "11 n r 1· on 1 , Tl-:AC11E:RS only, 11 1n hlock and 11 1vw:;h t Iron Corona del Mar l BR, 1 block lo ooian, I hlk 646-2846 to ba~·. $175. IUO. {lfl) if, --~==-"'~-"'"'-'~--F"UR.i"I:. OR UN FURN. boti.t. etc. 1&18 Newp()rt at th(· 646-r.171. l'l11ldrt>11 or tHt.by Thus '~ 11 f,.t)C('ll. tile ""try w "'1'. 2 BR., ·1 t I ba., earp, retrlg, stove. LciiSl'. ;\dulls. 675-6145 t->.·c11. 6'1·1-1$48, eves 675--0172: 1121 HARBOR GREENS ~~~'. =l~V'-, 7a.::· l~boa,,,,_,,s,,1'~d·:____ t~um. & Unlurn. Fr $130. $35 & Up. l BR., 2 BR J.-Bac.:h, l. 2 & 3 BR'r;. ~f<>rif'I-' Bache\01'1i. Color TV, maid Open 10 'ul 7 pm. 2700 serv, pool. The l\{esa, 4W N. Petcno11 \\'1y, Of. nr, Har· Unbclltvably IL"ft' apts , Blvd. C~t. ~&-9766, t'\'t:S ANAHEIM ------h1)n1c nut A nUNet'Y S<·hOol. !l.i.'.1-1&.V hU,£c pool, Jacuz':I elt-ct hlt-644-1061. CONVENTION it"LiU~l> lihh'k f"••ll<' 1' 1111ly 2 chlld1-en 1u;ceJ'llt•rl. ---~=,.....,..~---I In• '"'• c~ts ol-•• sauna CENTER brov.11 Oox1e \'l<'lnlt) \'I•" ...... n.-1...-."•I• '· SI• I'',. . Brick-Block-Stone ' Adu! "" ' ',..,, SINGLf: Car G11ra gi-, nt"ll r . . torta .~· .\fflt1l'"\'i11. (".,,,a .... , .• u• .. 11"... "' etc. ts, no I>Cll. 12th St. &: HKlboa Bl\'d., In --01 \\ · hiitrl!a. 1\nll111·l11l \lo••"· :i 1~~lti. !)l&-!>l~ Gf5.,.-.ust; Huntlnglon 9Nch Nl'\\'J>Ort Bl., N.8. 646-9GSI. bor Blvd. It Adama:. NEW 3 BEDROOM Newport Helghh 54U370 Sl.NCLES Fiwn S150 N , rt SZ';i/mo 6~ P1t·11 ... t' •·ttll 1;11 :.tiil'. ,x1. 314 -: • -----C111LD CAfl.'. t'X'"'l"L'-'n.:.~I Peintin9 & LlltDR..\1. f'ront$165 t'~po · · 1 · 1,1 ,.1a1 n1 ,,,1,.,,_,,,1 ,,,1 ,1-;.10.\\111!<'t -Pho<'n1~1)1· "' I 2 BEOR..\1. From $185 Off• R t I ••• r II I ' !> •• ~u · JJ,· .t· !l<lllll' l!ll)•M'\. \I\\' lov111g car;:• frou1 I Y"a r Paperhanpl"! Ur\fu.ni Apts A·.-aU 1'"'rorn ,10 ice en 1 """" •• :~•n1~J ','' 11 ... • 11u111!J1•r 1~ ('d.\I, Ul;>o».IJ uf! 9 JO n rn. · T11.Jh,•r1 nrMI ll•'11.ci1 Sl2-:~I '.? balh, enclosed pt1v•le gar-NF.\l.'LY DECORATED age in duplex buiklln&'. S2ri0. l BR. Duplex. 1''\trnished. 2 Br Y•/i:ar, tried yrd per mo. Manaaer nt 313 \Vasher & dryer. $150/mo. w/patio -Wtr Pd. Call to $15 LES.5. --~ • • 6'B-m'l atl 9:~ 11 111·~· --Contractor * WALLPAPER * 'f .,..,.. , -~ ,. I 1'o \\'astiru;: Yoo're rtgh1, they're under· PRESTIGE 1 --------- °'wego, llun1 ingt011 llc:u~h. Z?il E. 15th, C)t. G&TI26. btwn l & 5: 636-4120 536-4152 ~C PlacenUa Ave. Sl4:> pri~! 156l Mesa Dr. "ND Bikl' In ~\1.s .. 1vu \'!1·J0 \\ hC"n you call "l\ti.c" {5 bllts tl.'Om ?\~-port Blvd.) OFFICES \ut month. :-:t:.v:. rl.'tnoJl'l, h"Bn".~ .i. .... :;..l +t-i e\~. 54&-SSGO Fountain Valley, Beauti· s:oo-r.::~1 llnlsh. sturt~. vlhtt~ ,\I p IN -1 '=---- lul bulldina d J~ l11..11ni''> t.'L•". C'l.ilitutll v.ork * A T NG * il"""'""'""'!"""'""'""'"'"~I Apt. Unfurn. 365 2176-F. Placentia Ave $145 Newport Beach ALL NEW 2 BR, studio + patio, J'le'A ly PRE·VIEW OPENING new,....,. ' eroun ,..... . LOii 555 1...it-en.st."'11 . ~-\!161 It 1H1>~ 10 i·a.11 pro!('§.~ Uoor, ,uuu square !eel, . I f r """ '"171! 1\\\·ard ~inning 1. 2 & 3 br "'Iii di\•lde Into s.rnal/er J.\Cr;-T-,,-Jlifl--;,---r~ !'.' p 11 1 r . -vr LW ~-· -'~c'cccc· __ Ca.rpet5, drapes & paint. decorated, shag cpl. panel1- WINTER RENTAL \o,·ely large 2 BR. 2 BA bltn ing, lg, quiet. Adults onh·. apts w/fantily mu;. 1'o ottlce1. 50c per liQ\la.TC •GENEROUS• 11•111vd, add. l.11· B-1 "..'ti:IOi:Z.\ '"\IXTE!t NEEDS \\'ORK lease. Sol'T')', oo pcu. Fron1 root, lncludei cu.rptlJI, PersonillS 530 :-Oly \\'11y Co. :>!7-0ni l~EASON A&.E A\·al\, Sept. 3 BR, den 2 BA ki1chen, 2 car clOtled gar. ln1med. occupy . Nr $315 mo. 2 BR 2 BA, S2'.!5 Adlts please. $250 nlO. Rltr Baker/Bristol, li1a na i er mo. See at 5000 Neptune. 642-435..'! 5..l7-7766 i~111J1~Pts,0Y~ 1~~ ~~:rvi8!. u~~~1C:iJ;:; SEARCl!J~G lor a jcv.el. e REWARD e Or•ftlng lllGl!l..Y ~I l-" 1 E O ~. 2 BDRM. 1 Ba upstairs, no garage, $183. yrly. Senior citizen only. !Near bc:>ach & shops. 675-()1, 5. San Clemente NE\V 2 BR, close to bfo11ch, l1e fncd patio. cpts/d111s b\tns, dshwshr, gnr. Adults. $190. mo. all util pd. 331 CabrlBo, 492-2496, eves. Duplexes, Furn. or Unfurn. 355 Newport Bti11ch Ave. lAdains at Failvi~·1, Stovall (714) 832·5440. ,\re yoti'? Exe..:. 5'1l'', 1:,.) l'ROJ." .___ -~ 2 New 3 Br., 2 sty garden Costa i\.teu.. Phone 556-0lfi6. 11.>s. Local IX'f. Sc-ck petite OE.SIGN /d111:tt. plaru. homf' · (lltt/\t<!r, nvnrst ~ ........ Coron1 del Mor ap\l!. Bath & ~ Frtilc gar unemeumtx-rt"d lady 1101 t\i-<l f'"or f'\'!llt'.' or 11ny lntorrn 11. 1-. t'Ol11n1J, ru:ld1uons, i:ar-l't'U. lni e\l. fttoe Ht- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii) nr schools lhpng s340 mo' * CASA VICTORLA * NEW OFFICES 10 a job. Reply "'l!h pil'lurc 00,1 lt•1:1din~ 10 l't'tlU'll (')f a !&Rl'li, !rl2·J-KX>. P.~·ll. S.1~·1T;.:i9, 6'1l·l91l. .J ON TEN ACRES Apt!. furn./unfurn. Lease Firep)ace / priv. patios. Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. 900 Sea Lan, Cd~1 64<!-2611 (l\1acArthur nr Coast H"'Y) NEED 1 BDR. APT. IN CdM 640-850,;, 64-1-6613 · · 1 & 2 BR. 1''\µ111 &. ·Unfum. AlRPOitT .~· p<'rtirn•nl ill'.'!!IHll. P.O. i.;t1ld !1,Mu· k'llf l'io~i·r p111, I'' ,.-., .J Pr1;;;i'mi.: i'f>N l1'f•. TI1e Cll,~Rl\lING 2 BR, 2 BA, I ~::e~~l,dJ~t.s52,;D~~~~to~l~ ~o lensc re<fd. ruu sen.·il'<'. Box 466.l, Jr\'itll', Ca. 9266-1 a111>1v,\. '1 ln"hc~ in d1arH1't< r, Electrlc•I l't•1'SOlllthly l'11lntf'r1 \\'/the S?l;, C.fl.s & t Id 1,4 dt'])ll, cpts, inusit·, air cond., v. uh jt~\l'<'!('fl hori1•·i-h<l(' 111 -P<'l'sonul Touch 640-Jl656 -· • '"a er pa . SI. t1l Harbor, C~f. &:12-8970. al\ ulil. Single otriccs !roni 1'1.11.LY LICE!'\.;;;EO El ~CTP.IC:\l Conir1:t(1or~ --Enst 20th St., ~8--0137 or ""' * SPIRfTITALIST * •·l'nt<'r: alro, f(old lo..·J\,r n',., Co.n1o'n .• l>>d"''· Uc. Ht"Y .\\.P .. l&h<>get h11nglng "~ •09,.. lBR .. lba, !,...,. balcony. new $1.:;a. 1110. t···•• on 1·"••nl ---ti • • II .........., I 1"ir I 2l20 PAL.ASADES CEN1'Flt Sptri111aJ N'llding11 10 am.JO " · " · tt,., .. vx. I<' N ;.);6ll4 Gl~l 3-l:l--OTJl v<1n!111ct in _ n1P ca . The NE\V 2 BR, drps, crpt'g, ~~na, 1'$f70.a~SJ an2" S. E. liri~ol ~ 11m. Advict' on all nu1.tters. l'it<' ot 11. nlo:kl•I, lnsM'ih<'<I _ 0· · • Jl;1ni:n1(•u 5-1.-~16 pool, BBQ._ gar. Adults, no N~'JIOM Beach :»7·7UIO 312 N. El Camino Real, Sa.n in lk"'r:pt, fl.A. TI1tse 11rt• G1rdening 1~.\INTING. Int /Ex.I. 35 yrs. pe1s. 376 \\. Bay, C.l\1. Sun11t Beach fC1LJJ1pua.lrvine lnten<'ctlon) CI e 1n I! n t e. 492·9136, deeply tre&11ui'Cd family MOW lo EDGE f'Xp. lx'tlut '-''oric. Reasor,. , "R Ad I I 49"1-90:!4. n1<'mt'ntoic & Th(' 1~!11 1,. ir-;1hl1• S-12-Q:237 a.QI for ~onn . ,n1E. uts, no pets ~BA'!' LUXURY apt tor lease 111 *WATERFRONT* rrplaccablr. PLEASl-:. EXPERT & " ,\DOWS APTS. 33 , \\. BR bltns sem.i-lurn cpts P rime loc11.tion Ne wporl P~!£)BL~~I Pt·r11nanry. Con· PLEASE hel1) !r >uu l11ivt> DEPENDABLE Bay St., C~J 646-0073 drp~. 213:592-2181 ' '!Beach. Lilll::l'' sul!e. Good f1dent, sym pathi-tl c any lnfonnutir.n . &12.:i589 Patios D.n. Point I I ..... ~kina. Sl50 month P.rrgnancy C?Ull!'Cling . Abor· f:\"l'I", & \\"l""kcnll!I c.11 For Prompt, 1'\TIO rt'l\'f'l"S, ~paccl IRl· ltl"\!. l:nlqt1e >A£'11 plllnnC(I . ~lnM>nry. Cone .. t-IC'. Quallly onl)' SI . J.h· /'\(). 180Q50. Rea 6-12-1770, Kt·n . .-... 11011 & adopt1oru. rel. . · Free Estimate, Biii Grundy, Realtor ,\PC.\H£ 6 l2-4~:'.6 1 sv.~.GF.111 lut~ blaC'k shu[:~Y 5,._7117 PANORAJ\llC Oce11n Vie"'· I J[ &j 341 Bal'flide, 1''1_>t. Beach 11.rR \C . ., Oo'I,., rn11 h:1-e~IY1od 1 yr. ___ _ Lrg 3 Br DpL'<., blt11 kH .. 2 Rlfttllt ,-[ * 67U161 * ' ' · ""1<'"'"" ~ ov.n old. No r-ol1ar<1. An!i t.1 E Sl]}.IlotElt. \Vlnter. yearly, 3 £: 'I BR, 2 BA , fplc, beam<'tl ~ilings, crpts, drps, 1 hick beach. balcony, OCf!an vie"" $325 up. 548--{;918. [ ----ll!J l t espon. adult male needs a 111ed-Lrg 1 bcl. unturn apt in Corona dt>l ~1ar. Prefer 1::11.rage unit, fireplace. $1 70- 185 n10. / prefer lease. Xln t ref.;. Net<d by &pt. 1. Ph. Mike. 6T;>-\527 after 6. Ba. Bldg lrs.111; than I )T. old. I . . l~nlt? & uicon.ie prop. JllN'I "Br<lno) ·· \"ic n Cd.\I on xp. d CIOEie to beach & harbor PRESTIGE Oft11.-eK -Nl'\\I :.~ngle . fun lo\·1ng rn.11n 1111 '? July Z2. Cnll rollect t2t:., American G•r ener Very dlx. SJOO 499-~ · professional bldi; .. FountHi n 6.5G.·G.\\nte P.O. Bo" 11 ~:-;. 2';.IL,:ltill -------:'\hunlt>n..'l.nt."t', Cl<'tu1up. OCEAN VI •• ·,-, ·wlk 10 .: •• 2 Rooms 400 Valley. Inclds receptionist 1-~ --Land.s1:a11if1': & Sprlnkte-r """ I roo1n: re ce p tionist & ~ 1 .. • · .OST !\!nil' Srl!\po l nl Servll·e. Call ti4>1~.;I) '* PATCll PUSTERJNG * BR, furn or u n (urn * * * <tllS\\'f'ring ser.'i«s: drapcos, ~RE?.NA.!'~· ! h 111 k 1 n a Sinmc!IE' \·Ir: Cold<'n \\'<'c;I , All l)'pe•. F'ree e11lmates $2'1!)-.$2j(I. mo. Bkr. 49&-5721 Keith Bliss c r pt '.. ,. an it 0 1' i a 1. a~1.11onc: l\'.llO\\ _a!I the rac,t~ \~'fttilt"f. 1!1>11, 8r t~lhnrtl. l.A\\':'I: & G11.1-den care, ffiOI\' Dtll 54Q..68Zi. . fhs.t._ -~~ Llfi:: LJ :-;E·21 \\"e;irinq flf'A col\11.r . t.>.dgc·vacuu111-!lo>A'Cr b....'<!J - Huntington Belch 15241 Chalon Circle Secretarial service avail. lu-s, Jll-;>522. Rrll·ai·<I i\~l-350S planl 111.od ~hnJb c;iri· 211 Plumbing '-- Irvine c"'~·'~-~J5.1~1._______ ---~----J!f2-.12a7 or 714 84T-:l'.171 '1----=------1 Pla:.l•r, Pateh, R~air 1 .. -------·· ISPACIOUS 2 ER, 2 BA, 1" 360 · u1ista1i·.& apt. Open beam~. A~p~l~•~·-F~u;;c.rn~.'----"-'O lrg priv. garage. Close to VILLA YORBA OCEAN VIEW L..U.HES. July ~~cial 1 ~r LQ:i;T Dlnck fr1n. toy .......... 11... I R OTIS PLU•m G • You are the winner or n1embc1shlp $J. C .a 11 i·i, Tustin fol lAth Si ··-;.·\1 CO~IPU,-r'~ I ands cape •· · ~ IN I, 2 & 3 BR. Unfurn. TWO FREE TICKETS 'Partnror' s 3 6 -1 '1 7 l or .. '. · · .. ' ' · ·· '-·· · 11111.lnt. i.erv. Co1uni'l, i1ul, Remodels "" Re(Ml.U'fl. Water Sltuiing RI $\2:\. to the Spnclous, exec. office in 54S-1479 S.'.1.brlua hu.~ nsnll• tu~. rcsid. Sprinklrs. cleanup. heaters, dlspo1al1, ~ Balboa Island beach. No pets. 675-4873. 2 BR. PENTIIOUSE. Ne\v Refrlg.-UTIL, INCL'D llnlon Bank Bldi. Newport -Picas<' call. 6 12 -311~1 &15--6987. <lsh\\'Mhri. ~2-6Jil 1'1/C' I SOUTHLAND Center. W/recpt, tr.f:lng, SWINGING COUPLES Ilrwarrl. BIA. Complete Plu.mbi"' (nr 1~ ~~~~~. !i~~mpl Home&. Garden Show xrrox. etc. l\1r. J\.1cFar and. Call "Leah" :l-8 p.n1.1'a_R_O_"-.-N-IS_>_l_b_lk ___ -.,-°'-.-n-~e l\10\V &b t;clgi:. t::.xpcrt. & _.S.:::,rvlc;o."'~·==~=~=-I DELUXE, beaut. & spacious 3 br, 2 ba, frp\c, close to N. Bay. ht fioor, con1er bldg. SXIO Apo!ena, $300 wkly Aug. $2JO wkly Se p t . 673-:1702, ov•ncr YEARLY 2 Br. apt. lrg, Mwly decorated, f u rn , modest rent for adults only, no pets. 673·2.i72. 3 BR, 2 Ba. Pier for boat. $300. Y.'k. from Aug. jlh. 454-2433' or Taf>-9569. carpets, drapes, l Ba. Pool. $265/nio. Ph; 673-3850 2 BR, I BA, ne\\' carpet & paint. So. of Hwy nr park. $241. Call A~ent 6T..Hl900 2 BR apt. 11f blks to bch & shopping. $250. Adults, 32(Pi Larkspur. 2BR, 112ba. r1111c. pool, "·lk to beach, $250 I e a s e , 6#-488a days only. Costa Mesil .r July 27th th.ru Aug. 5th 644-9440 638.Jj\J. lll'l-k.'1 leina!e. C••1 •·/0"'•' cl1•perxla I('. Call for prompt -PLU'!BI G 714/842-9622 .. ~ [rN est. John, 546-3446. 1• N • REPAIR at the I PRESTIGE 2 H.OOi\1 ALC'Ol!OLTC~ Anonyrnou!i. Ml~11.r. \'ic: l!t1n1lllon Vi c· -No job too sm1t ll * DOG RUNS* ANAHEIM Exec. olllce, adj. Airporter Phone 542-7217 or write[ \1)111•. P.r11·nrd. £.12·~ 11.n :i. Con1p!<'"1c l.,ay,·n &. Gardentni *'* Sl2--J128 ** Spac 2 & :1 BR, S149 & Sl9!l. CONVENTION Hotel. Full ~lass vk>1\', P .O. Box 1273, Cos!a !\TPsa . }'E~I. ~IA niese Lo~! Vii· Sl:rvlce -Haullfli: & Clt:!IUlup~. ,. -/Al Kids ok. Pool. Keelson Ln. CENTER paneled \\'al19, 11.IJ util., un-.Jirn ~l.ijHO~,~•w1ng ter•fi'>nl dtd k' 2 1 12 Family Counseltng l:k>Bch & \\-mi~r July 2ls1. fl blk \V. of Beach Blvd, oU 800 \\'. Katella, Anaheim <TO\l' par ing. 6.1G·50GO or .).l.~-.1G fl P. e 11· a 1· rl , ~ ;1 111 I l y 1:..:'PLRIF.'.\CED Ja1>anesel Alteratlons-642-5145 si;;~~~2~~6BEACH ~~d:i:1~ti~s:~~o~ ~~o;ii'. Rm. 8, Irvine. Sal!WltorNGllNG SINGLES ~;1:b!u~~~G~1~112~·ell0\I' ~i:~r::~~~-~~~enance & N='~"~1'-. ~·==c"c'~·~· ~'°'"'"''""="-'-= 1 & 2 BFt. Crpt/drps, bit-ins, County toll ~ nwnbu is FULL SERVICE C nfo. 2-8 pm 5.10-1250. Dl/l.()<'r bag. Vii'. Gleitll('yre Gardening & dean·ups 1_T_i_l•--------- gar. 308 16th. 536-5086. 5.-10-~) * * eo!:''\~~i~cl~~ilg;~~ &. SWINGING SINGLES A Anna St. L 11 g u. n a. 554-0657 CERAi\.llC TILt: NEW l 2 BR, 2 ba, upper. Hai bltin Irvine Blvd., Ne 1,, P 0 r 1 Call "Leah" :!-~ om m.12.."'iO. RE\\' ARD. 586-6919. General Service& mnodel. free t"11t. Sm. ~ el{'('t. ranS?;e, crpt1, drps. ROOi\J.S S20 "'k up w/kit $30 Beach. i\lr. Ho11•artl Soci•I Clubs 535 GER~IA~ Slv-p, blnr.k & tan, I----------v.f'lt'Omt'. ~2121i. 8589 DELUXE Sl<li mo. 892-4n2 11·k up apts. Children & pet 645--6101. ---------'..C:.1.8 mos, brol\'Tl ctiiiar. \'ic. • • * Tree Service Balboa Peninsula $35 WEEK & UP e Sleeplng Rooms APARTMENTS 3 BR, upf>l"r, golf course ~'.i0~2;~~~~7~lvd., 1 STOHt: OR o n•ice: * INTRADATA * i~:::1~n~.· Jul. 1 3: Edward Bonnett Air Cond _ Fi'Plc's • 3 S1'·im· view, Crpts, drps. $225/~10. Ne\\-port &..Ba C t Q U L 1 Ty 21921 Ocean View Ltne TREI:.: 1r1mm1ng lnch.Kiina; 1ni11g J'ools _ Health Spa _ Call 846-843-t BEAUT. Room. Pr iv ' 2052 Newport s1\·d.~n c~{i. A 14./PlloToa l ch e 11 S'.\l,\LL blk .t-"·ht fml Joni:: Huntington Beech paln1 tret'it nnd t r ee • Housekeeping Rooms • Ocean View Apts BALBOA INN l!fi Main Street 675-8740 Co1t1 Mel• Casa df Oro ALL UTJLJTIES PAID Compare befOl'e you rcrtl Custom designed, featuring: e Spacious kitchen \\"!th in- direct lighting • Separate din·g area • H'.ome-likc-!ltorage • Pt'ivate palios • Closed garage \\·/stornge • Marble pullman • King-sz Bdnns e Pool -Barbeques -sur- rounded ,~:i1h plush land· acaping. Adull'I . No Pets. LARGE l BR, $185 36S \\I. \\fil90n &12-19TI LOW WEEKLY RATES Executive Suites 2080 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-2611 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S e FREE Linens e 1'~E Utilities • JoUll Kitchen • J-feated Pool • Laundry F11cillties • 1'V &. nlald se1v avail. • Phone Service $30 WEEK & UP e Studlo & 1 BR Apts. • TV &: ~la.id Servit'e i\\•ail . • Phone Se1vl<'C -I !!ti. Pool • Children & Pet Section 2376 Ne \\ll011 Blvd., C~1 548-975.S or ft&-3967 (Ad good lot-$5 on rentl LA.RG. 1 hr, N1n bros, Ideal tor bachelors. S I po o I . Adult-. Stso. 5'18-963.1, 1993 Church St. BEAlITlFUL, con1pl furn, 1 BR apt. to qualified pen1on. No pel.s or -ch I I cl re 11, month.ly Sl7j, 6-IG-U923 NICE 1 & 2 BR Trailers. $.11.0 & up. t.fature adu\t1. 133 E. 18th St., 64Z-126j. Huntington Beach n<Hu;s BAClfELOR & l BR., patios, frplc'a prh1• prage~ -Dlvk!~ bath & lo~ of closets. Rec. h&..11, pool It pool tablet, 1ttUl\8. bulh!ll. See for younelf. 17l'.l1 KttllOfl t.n. (l blk \\!, ol Beach, 1 btk N, of Slater). &12--1818 $1«1 • ULntA NICE Apt. 6 Poola. 4 G1rdenl.. sauna. Ttnnls. Prtvllte .• Pat Io. Adu.Ill. Ph: 846-02.:i9. Lido 1•1• 2BR. 2BA. bl1ck (rplc, dbi aar, ~1nter n:t.tal, S.175 plu.t ulll. :n:i.lf.1.4127 Newport <h l Br nr. ocean fum11hL'CI $22l ->1'1y, At\t.g; ~' "'-e Adlllll M pet.A; ?r'l\P 128 1t 46th ~· ""1331. f"lt ProOt 1' an~1M!'d when )"OU Mll throu.ah 1'ttW1t-:gt"l: l!rv D•LlY Ptlot Cl&ailltd Ad•. 60-"A'iS Tt:nnis Cou11s -Gy1n and 2BR. Closed garage. Children b a I c on y \\'/magnificent 525' Aval! Aug. 1. Pkg. Util. "Large11t In Calif" ~al.red . dog ~·/defonl'\t!d You ~ •hf' winner of rcn1ovnl. G~~-clleitn up, Billiard R.oon1. &: small pet ok. $145. ~~e~i.e'Cd,~f blk heh. 2500 64G-1252 or 644-2'l'l8 <Call NO\V for rru:E sani· JS\\'. An1;, 10 Shll>" ~e\\'~T"ll . TWO FREE TICKETS n.•a.!i. & in"lu'"""· 84 •1791 1 BR. t'rom $150 847-8149 D~E~SKoC.,=-,.=.~ .. :..::~,",,a1""'1.=b~l,'-l50-.c pie profile on 1 prospective 9'J6 Seni.ne St., Doi. .ils--Ojlll. to lhe- 1 Br.. & Den Fron1 $1!1(1 Laguna Ba• h ROOMS $20 "1'; up w/kit $30 mo. \Viii provide furnitw"e 1uatch. 24 hrsJ l-.IALE Sian1f'!I<' !ytlf' ca1, SOUTHLAND 2 BR Jrom S210 c wk .up apts, Childrn & pet at fj mo. Ar1S>.1'erlng f!ervlce 714 54.I·JT.!S / Lii 658-6283 thin, It. n1arklni.:. kink in Home & Garden Show 2 DR. T\\11hires From S250 LAGUNA est11.te Uvlng on section. Z17G Newport Blvd., available. 17873 Beach Blvd. I ~~~~~~~~~~~I tail. Vii•. Golilf'n \\\>st -~ July 27111 thru Aug. ;,th MEDITERRANEAN acres of 1na in lain e d ,;C>,;'"'1."54s.:;;:;;9;o755;:'!..' :::M::e5-396'°"':::1:o··--\ Huntington Beach. 642-4321 \: ~l:in.~ion :JIJ-1352. at the ___ .. _-_,_-_,,_lit•) vi.C\\'S. Close to beach & ployed lady day \\"Ol'ker, ,, lost Md found •• 11 ? Job W1nted, Mlle 700 VILLAGE gardens. l'ool & spa . Ocea.n FURNISHED room, eni-1617 WESTCLIFF-NB !!SJ Reward, Collie male ANAHEIM 2400 H bor Bl d C ~1 shopping. Lge. 2 BR .• 2 ha. rt"l's. $20 wk. 646-19i9, 19SO, 9Lt:, 756 & :340 Sq. i'"t.1 ;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;:;;;~1~~~~-· _.'6____ CONVENTION ar v " ·•' · "•"s~,. •. An1ple pa1'king. Viii. Baun1-LOST: \rall,.,t h101e st1e.de CENTER * * * 1714) 5.l7-S020 apt. \\·/arn<'ni~s. Aloo, ll'W' •IJ.1 OPEN EVERYDAY studio apt., $185-$3.)() mo. BALBOA Peninsula. Pri ent gardncr. 5 11<i032. w/fnni:rr. \"LI" !-i .t\. nivrr ~JO\\'. Kale!l:i. ,\1ia.heLni Herold L. Lewis Jloui·s: Fri.Tues 10..s par1ially run1., Incl. util: & room + tam rm, TV. $90 OFFICE Space for rent. Fou.nd .(fr'ee' ids) s_SO l trail RE\\' ARD! j.l!t-311\..1. p1,,1~ .. <;(· i·na &l:l-:ii7l'l, ext. :n4 720 Heliotrope \.\-'ed. & Thurs. 10-7 l\lature adults. 494-4653 Or mo 673-4419 evf:9. 1..A?a.se, S7:> mo, n1· Newport }'OUND. N.\\. romer Srin to 1·h1.1m your 111•keta. 1Sorth1 Coron• del Mer EXCITING -t\EW ADULT your broker. Guest Home 415 Bl\•d. on Broadv.·ay. C.l\1. ~fatro & Slater in fl'Ont (')f I ~ c,,unt~· roll htt nuinbt-r I") \'ou 'IN' ihe v.·1nnt>r of LMNG? Rent Your 0\\'ll CONDO for leR..Se, 2 BR, 1 6T~878l. Post Ollice, F ountain IMtructlol'I' , ,_ ;;.WJ-IUli TWO FREE TICKETS Condominium Apartment. Ba. pool, new carpet, no PRIVATE ROOM FIRST flool' suite. Vici11l1y Valley, ~Ian's hla~·k v.·nllct,!;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~l~iiii;) * * '* to .ne Consistin~ ol BACHELOR & pets, mature adu.ll'I. So. for elderly, am bu 1 a to r y Orange Airport. Reception Soc. Sec. Card, dnve1"s , TOTAL Sl::RVICES CO. SOUTHLAND l BR units \V/Lofts, frplc's, cLa=""="'~·~""'"'-·c...o'"'-"·00=1'~.--I person. Nice, quiet sur-in :1' olfices ,,·ith storage. llC"C'nse. library canl. In gut· P11.int'g -Pturnh"i;: -P.e-J>!llr~. Home & Garden Show beam ceil., patio & pool. Laguno· Niguel roundin'"'. Good, nutritious 714/~ let'. pape~ s m t•a. r ('(1 . Schools & \!oh lln111 & Apt,,, 4~71 r, 1 1. l1Lh ••-· 5 h .. y ;).IJ-2SGO. 1·nstructlon• 575 t>.;&...OO'i7. I ' u ; """ Aua:. 1 Featuring:· bllins & rofrig. meals. ia t tht Priced from S160 to S225. CONDO. New. 2 BR, 2 BA, Call 548-4T:l3 Business Rent1I «S i'\lUND male "'·hl[c poodle. SPRINKLER liystem~ ln-, ANAHEIM Vt.ii. Paid. Offit-e open Dai· on golf course. Tennis club Black rollar l\ilh stones anrl J>IAXO teacher, e.i:penenced, 11a.llcd ~l~c.t auton1at"""l. 1 CONVENTION • be h I""" VACANCY !or elderly lady NEW SHOPS be·,. rl I -ly 4-8 pin, \\.eekends 12--6 • ac . .,.,..J mo. 831-0638. in lie. Guest home. Good flea disc. Vicinity San Ju:in yo!1ng, ~.nnen, a . u 1.~. nionual. f 1ee est1nw.te11, CE TE p111. 393 Ha111ilton, Ci\f. M V d Capistrano in ~hop p \ n.:: ch1ldrt'n. ad\·all("f'd. V.onh· 6'16-0864 N R 64.5-44ll Ill er e food served. 646-3391 Aav!f~·blech~~t-eVi~~ r~t1~~ center. 830-9:')$6 ..,hll<', ~a.sonable &l:;..Tllll HANDYl\IAN _ all kinds of l!OO \\'. Kii!Mla_. ~aheim SPACIOUS, cool 2 Br. Good DL'= 2 '= 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl Summer Rentals 420 1100 South COilllit l·i"·y. CAT -A·ht ~'/beige & gTeY or 968-6!M7. \\'Ork, small jobs a Plf>il"t.' rall &42-56i8, ext: 314 Joe .. 2 blks to harbor shop·g gar. $165 up. Rental ore., SUMMER· RENTALS Laguna. n1a.rkings (Calleo), in vie. specialtv. 9"7'9-4636, 54&--972:1. tu t·lalm )an" tickets. IXonh t·e nter. New paint. Sl-18.:..0. 3095 ?>.1ace Ave. 546-1034. SI 1• 494-8111 San J uan Capo. Se\·l're I ·~ ........ ,~ Hiuling. , ~~n220ty IOU frae nLU11ber Is Call Owner for appt. to SC<'. N B eeps 4 -rom $70/wk. in i.1.om11rh \\"OUnd. 493-~ or __ · ;:,..,-! .) ewport tech July "TIIE i'-ACTORY" has shops * * * 5.16-5114. · Sl••l>S S _From $'5/wk. .1 I s= I C 4:1~5377 after 6. ~IO\. J X G, 11au1 1 n t-:. ... a\'n1 . rum "" mo. n an-·1 .. :-.1o·r··1 ~·1-.1 A 11 ,.CR $1JO -t BR duplex, prefer THE NEW I Sleeps g _ from $ll:l/\vk. nery VIiiage, 425 30th St., F'OUND young nu1le Tom. l'k·a11--u~. l'. ea 11 o na h1 e · "'· "11 " U( !Of',,· married cpl, adults, non BAY\VOOD APARTl\1ENTS ALSO AUG., SEPT. & N.B. 673·9606 or 642-8520. Flea collar. Short hair r11!r11, fl'l'f' Cs I In) 11 t " s. 'llQO A: 200) Eicp. \Viii bf' smokers only. & no pets. in Newport Beach arc , \\IL'lTER RENTALS Black & bro\\·n. Vic . &~con a '.>ysltting Coll ege Student.s. <-;I ·I ~ !\\all nf! Aug, 2nd. Reply to IWQ. ref. & $80. deposit. 9:J4 ready. The sales office ts Bkr..i. 6Ta-5800 I~ sq.I ft.~'\DU . .;1;. ~~~c~~ & Santa Ana, Ne1\'por1 !\IATURr d rt hi I R;2-7~1 flul't'ilt:ci nd •921 , Dally \V. 17th St., ~S-0358. o.pcn daily from 10 Ai\! 10 E~. RA .~al 3 b•·, 2 •--. · A &O sq. f · llcigtits. 5-iS-1617. ' _ _, R_:• .. c,pton 11 e, ,.,f'!;c. GF:'l' RID Qt' UNS IGHTLY >iJo!. 1. O llox l;jlj(I, Cott.it 6 30 P'.\f i\I ·", ,..~~· "" w/liv",i: qtn, Sl :i:;. Ci\.!. •:u Ywu. i• y home. ·~fs. TRAS!l •. OEBlt!S 112 '.\ll"S!I , 9~. ~~:C~Rbl~~R·J~r:1i: f~i ~ S1111 • J~q~~1Anil~; ~~~: ~~i:· ~nl.ril~ ~~: 646-ruo F~i~ at~~ctl~nt~ed u ~ ~ C".ood lunches. :W7'-Hli7. J.t).\D. CoiJ...EGE sru-IJco-b~W~1~n~ted~.-F~•-,,,.--,.-7-0-21 location. S150 to l'C'iiponsible &14-5555 673-lliO P. Fenton. 5454159. lndustri1I Rental 450 Bayshore area. va·ccinatrd. Bu1iness S.rvlce l)E..1\T, :MS-G-128 1 d I' N •· R ! ' 11·-~ 'd f k Ph . -COJl.IPANION and Practical a u · 1 0 pe...,,. • e s · * OCEAN VIEW * BEACH Apt;('& 2 Br. Furn, ~11:zr-1 or \\-ee · : BOOKKEEPl1'G any or CLEA.i~UPS, remove dai. nurse, hitYe car. x Int 646-4224· Brand nev.· upper duplex [tpl, opposite Corona de! NOW LEASING ~ paii-thru financial stotc. ln'l?S, !vy, drii·c"''ayi, !O'lld· rcfrrencel'i, l\·ill Yo"Ork any Eastside Lrg 2 Br's 4 B<lnns. S375 Mo., year's JI.tar state beach. Sec. gate. Huntington Beach IXXJ~EP babies, mother mmts, f"IYT'Oll, A·R, A·P. Ing. Mi-2666. Ll('. 240182. hriurs. Call 842-0ll7 9 am .,... \\·, bltns, hig. poot $160. il'<lM:'. Sc:oe owner at By \Vk or l\lo. 833-1691. NEW M-1 :t kittens, 2537 Gt'@t'nbr\er Prcf<'r sn1s.JJ bu!lli~~«:. GEN Ilaullng. _Tre..,/Shruhl ll! 4 pm. AdlLi;/oo pets. 207 Colton, Newport Shores KIDS, pets ...,·elcome. 2 BR, 940 Sq. Jo"t. & LiP Ln. C.l\i. :.N&-6618 or 644-1~42 t~m. Gar & -~!I ("]eanup. c,~C~f.~.O=l~~~lp-.-,~ .. -m-,-,-w-, 6-'2·9;j20 l64S.1816 CHARMING 2 BR., 2 ba .. 2 Corona dcl i\.lar: 11,3 blks to Jl.'.1.nlllton .I: N<'wlanrl :'ilQ-3.~lO. Typing _l::sL_5.il-63l7, ,),}•-69C'il. i hav(' 11ld<'!. nu r .s es , $140 up. 2 BR; 3 Br., 2 Ba, car gar.: 110me aptr;. w/tpl beach. $150 "''eek. 646-0697 or Ul-0519 t"'OUNO 1\fgtlan \\-olfhound . ph<ml" 6&-2272 Sl':lPJ..OADER & dun1p truck ho u ?Ii ckpi"ft. compank)na , l)ool, hlrins, pla• )'ard. & bean1 cell's. Avail on ilal Pinchio Rltr 61"">-1392 J!!!!I!!'"'""""'"'""'""''"''"' Sroy,-n. \·ic. \Vilson & 11ll1i< Concrete a"ph11l t\ llomemAken; U p,. oh n ~ !Urbor. 73.) JoAnn St., No . Cerpef S.rv1c1 .. • · -' 19~ il!aple Ave."" 6-12-3813 ~~S~ To $300. 6\a-5930 BEAOI apt. 2BR, avail Aug. *COSTA MESA* 6, CoBta. i\1e~. ~a~g, hre!l.k1ng. 1Wr7ll~ ~:>10=1-<m=~--.,,.---~-I 2'.?12 College No. l .. 6~ 1.'I thru Sept 15. $.125. r-.10. 6(11 u. ft fl!" 10 ==~.::;::=.,,,--.,,.-·.IJOHN'S C..J'PC't & t:pholstery 32·· f'UR~'l1t.'RE \'11n fortEXPER. hou.~!lllt>r Avail. to DUPLEX, Sh<>,... 2 BR DELUXE 3 Bdnn Apt. :rttatutt couple only. No ~~,. · ... ' a per" · BRO\\o'"N &: white spotted Ori Shampoo lree Scolch· local lurn h.11u1!1 &: gen I) \\"Htch m1)r yoor ho~ ~.'hUe -· •Y~/'!0 A I 513 h Id ,-.,..,..., 1300 sq. ft, ••.. Sl!J5 per mo. B I l•mal• ., v nl "· I' .•• ,~ Easlside, crpts, drps, yrd. ~ n . nn. eaM. c i ren. 1:>--'~'~ 2500 sq. II .•... s324 Pf'r m(l. asse . · "esa e e guard t~tl Re1ardMts 1 .... u 1nii:. :>w-~. 1 >~ a_;-e abrolld. Xlnt ref'• A\·111\ lmmed. SliO. 646-2612 \\'. Bay. Newport Be11.ch, NEWPORT beachlront. gJpi; 10.00l sq. ft. new butldlng, area . Friday Jllly 20th. De~1"ea.ser.1 3' all colnr LOCAL nlovlng .~· hauling by fi,.Hll.Wc. ~~~---­ or 642-2516. 886-4832 days or 883-~3 $. wuh/dryer, 40• ••indo'ft·, ynrd 8'j)a("('. 91'S-4lol0. bt·is:h1t•rM•1·11 &· IO mlnutt-9tudcn1. Large tn11!k. Reas. PIV\Cl!C,\L 1'urse wants 2 BR modern, C/D, bltns, nlgllts (San Bemard\nol July 28o-Aug. 11 8J3-83;,(I__:_._ Rol)Prt ~a\lrl"Ss, Rlfr ti11·1·lilj FOl;ND: Sm. Chihuahua 01" bleach lor 1•,.hlle C8J1>1!1~. 534-IHS or 673-064i. ~horl hOUl'ft. Pn>fer nvirn- \\f/side nr Blu.ffs. Baby ok. BAYFRONT w/pr1v. beach BAL !SL VACANT ··ow RE T(ly rox Cream 11 1 nd Save your mont!y by savln~ r .\THER & 50,5, 11,,.,e l~!. L11.gun11 B" a ch. ~o pets. Sl50. Avl 8 1 "' pier. New 3 BR, 2 BA, · · •~ : NOW NTING quarters lriJured contliCI n1e extra trips. \\'UI clean i\ul'k, trash, yard ,r., i;ar.\ 4M-4Jli0. ~·-------~2222. $550/nto. Yrly. ALSO 2 BR, ~lodern 3 1_3r, 2 Ba. 130 LAGUNA NIGUEL .\nlmal Conti~. C.i\I. living nn., dlnlnt;: rm .. & 1 1. S'" 81,2 H IW --• M & F 710 ; BA, S495/n10 Yr 1 y. Pearl. 675"0158· M-1 r~'U: yng nlale k!lli-n dal'lt hall SIS. Any r m. $7.j(J, ~~~~!!!:-..!!.:.. I e p antm1, :H~~~i;.E~~sid!:1f~ ""7"-06:~~'~'~· ="°'=4-4.l'°"·~io'-~--ILl!rrt.Ed Bal lboa l~la.I 8nd/ll-lhBr 2"'10 sq. IL & up. grey -Pl Sian1ese"? \"ic. rouch ISIO;, Chahal Ir Sj, 11:1 Y~I. 1,Pk"•n:do1~r~f~n10n"1~. T>for"",'.o'u·~. ACCOMPANIST NE\\'PORT CREST -Condo. urn. up ex avai 1 rn On &in L1il"g0 f">Ay. Beach & Erker In H.B. CUI exp. 3 .. · CQun .s. no ... • 2 Bcdrm Unrurn. 9f8 $200 "'k, Sij....5612, Call ""l·J•= ""'6"° 1llt'lhocl. J do \\'tlrk myRelf. 5 lines. 5 day1 tnr ~-Call Rellable proflcl1·nt full rime rn E. 2'2nd St. CM 64~~1:, 3 br, 2') tm. [rplc, tennis -~="'=~N~~~""'=--,,..._ -"'· Good rt'f. S31..()IOI torlav ... 64~ Ill hlt:h -"'..'hool VOC'al & 1 BR. Duplex. Sl50/l\lo. crts, pool, spa, sauna. nr rr,~~1~~;ny ~!1~~: A~u~~~ 4001 BIRCH, NB SHOI~T Hair Blk kitten! ~;::::;;;:;:;;:;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;_;;:;;;:·;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;;:;;;:~I rhm?tl rnu-"i\·, v.'hlch ptt· ldcnl for older coup~. No; "~A=•~;~~'~c.;c~~7~i~~;;::.-A-t _2_8~R $25. \\'tek. 493-688S. 200>, m>, 3600 sq. ft. u1· ''OT· v.•/red l"Ol~1; f;,.,Jlla. fornt.!t ri~r/~~I ~~~e :\~T pet-'. 219 l\lngnolia, or 1 _.. P -, V 11 R 1 1 •25 bo. t.hen"Of. A\•nil, 111 1 13. · -. 1 tr,u ' • · A • £1;,..1)9!0 or su--0212. new y n::ueoonted. S285. 1ca on en. s ~ r-.tr. Bauma:ardner, 5'-ll-j{l32. FQt.,;;\'O k<'yil in Collt'S:C Park Trader's narad1'se SIGllT lti;:ADER. Prtfe:r "'~ ._~ Slip n.va.Jl. 673·2182 or ~l-l CORNER. !Z7' on l!lth llN'll. c .. JI and ldl"Tltity. r 1 I 1/ot..i'n1 accomp&ll)'1f1' cxper. 2 BR, Sl:M, sgl 9ty, ....,am ~ LA JOlLA shore.s. nr. bMl k S b =· 091 11, l9tl " &&-2SO'l Ch!llll'nglni ~Hon. Good N!ll, redeco1'Bted. et'J)t.s, tennta clu.b9. Eleganl 2 hr. 1 · '· Y :>\} • • 1 "t.· 1,;'7,~:;,,__,,--..,..-,,..-r ~ h Con drps. 64S-9243 or 6-16-8882 NE\\' duplex 3 Br, 2""2 &. ha, home like atmosphe~. C~t $2.JO, 612-3490 SlAi\IESE t{\, na.ll', Foun-1 • I nn~ ne ti! tact $375. per mo. 1 hlk to oet.lln . du! 460 lain \\'a)· & ,,.UJOn, Co1t1• Ines I ;\I n. Rryoolds b•w. 9 am&: LARGE 2 Br, encl gar&.i.':e or bB.y, 822 \\.', Btllboe, !213J qutet ~a. a ts, 1"10 pets. R1nt1ls Wanted -'~"c,,.;"·"";',-,':·1~171".'=-=== avail. 1 child. 4-6-6n13 August $750. ~700 ~tesa, 536-010. I• Call 842-9338. 1 • e BALBOA Beach Apt . NEED 1 CREY Persian cat, Ilea col· • l\CCOUNTING CL!RIC 3--8-n,-2::;BA=:..:.av=a"u=A~~-15~'~2 2bl~:; pl~ bap,.;.tlofW'Tl..!i trplc, Slp1 6, 180/>Ait .t: up or BDR. APT. lar \'le C11nallt It Onnite. ti mes ; year!\ min. ~_!~"'OO!"'jo•Jb • ' 1 · 21' ' · ' •u atta. Yearly $173/mo. 61~10; IN CdM Newport Shoro«, £~2'-3M7. ..x11. rrq, in .iU ........ • clrlklren. ooMlll. st P<"t" $293 ~ ,.,.., """"'". I 1)pl C.-t St No 0 $1.., ,,__ ,.,1112 · ' -I -1•'1111 mol --"• ~.• 'D -· '• Bo--.·•r 1· I< d 11 row!. ' "& mi. ' ' ' (N, ~~>V 2 BR. tum, 1lffpg 5, A van n'c;,...,,.. "' c ,..,._.., ''"' n1&1 ·' Jt'an :'\lanil\' f'T"I 11 64&o2'*91. 3 BR In 4-~lex. Nr ac.hl.s 1:. ilO'ft• to <Ith of Alli· I. froni l. Rent1ls to Sh1r1 430 11 ml'd·l~ I bd. w1tum 11pt Af\lhf'lm ;\lnnorlal llosp!ta\, 0 ars I CadJtlai:: Oonfn>b ~=~ Sle?tt+-=l. 10'21 &-pt. Iii?. 67>8726 ~tATURE rMlc w:.nted m r ~ ~~~~l~~r~~~e'.';;'ie; 838-23£6. I A unit ol i:)t<f•U·o Corp., II, · · Son Cle-~te Bil •·-H B $90 "I" COlLIE/Female, vlc: 19th '-----------------,;1 l.l:Qi \Vhlnlel\ OT. Equal VERY NICE 1 BR.. $140. .. ... , ,....,, . , per mo. + 18,"; n10. ' preftr leeM>. Xlnt &. Tustin. Ne\\1X)t1 BeACh. . upportunir,> e'fh.plo)~ N h.ildre 0 ... ts utll. Orll before: 6 pm, l"'!f1. Nf'f'rl by Sef)I . l. Ph. Day11 ~3. e\>tS 54.)...3)36 &l PO:'\'TIAC Grand Prb.. 12) t"'OUR-Pl,.E>."ES In Sac. ----;;;;:-_ ' 0 c n r ,... · 1'!11,\lL l BR. apt Mar l~t('I" ~-~:,,;;:,,· ,...,~----,-P.11ke, 675.1327 aft 6. f"Ull pr:>\ll"f, ph1i '70 Ka"11 rt.tnf'TIM t Wrtt '1otin Rd AIP \..tc1k. tn1>o t Or 8.17""'9517. o! tOIQ\, Nie \1~14· of o.....an STRAIGKT & 11quare male, \r,\l\'TF:D 2 Bedroom hr.u!><' BLACK mlxerl f!mal(' dog. llllki 250 t'"C'. \\'Ai.~T 4 \\bl.'o'I Aree.1 , ()l.,ll"r~lll lra.de up. m.1chlng pu_rchue anltts Back. B•y View 1 Br & hllli. See al l~S Granada •L'! haa niCI' 2 SR housc on or dllpln. 3 re 11•b1 c , _short halr. Call 5.;7-MfiS. tlr!vt \'ehll'lr . S-I0,000 eq1.111y. "'/p11c.klnK sh~ • auppl~ $200. 2-lil-Irvina ~S-1729 i\\IC!niioi~ C'lcmC1ltt. ,\rtr 11 !~·~ 1 1 9!!' 7 .to 1barc. Lady OK. r f' •P on 11; 1 b 1,. 11 r 1 1 • F'OlyliN.~ .. P.~n. Call & Iden· 968-99"".n 5'"'°'33 ~~~1~ ~ 1~1 anl5S()..~ 2 BJ\, $1!13 sl~ 1lory. beam V'W-'"'.:::_;;W::,:.-~---~~ R.cf('l"l'nct!I 1vailAble Peta. It . ~ F'Olt ll'lldt • 'j2 IJncoln LAS V'1f!•$, Nf'\! 21, /I C. fl\ll. 1...ocated in N.B. ac."l'tlN cttll. RedK'()ratcd. Cl"fll' A 1700 WESTCL I FF DR. \°VANTED, !ii'.irl to share H<:h. 10 Sl7?1. Co!ta 1'1tlA or FND Shf'ptwrm mix puppy -Conlil'IM'lta.I, loNted. lo mile· 1''"'"r· vlvw <71' "alley Sit.COO fron1 OC Airport. Send ,•=1.,,..i::·~~:c;:~~l)~·~&~l&-8382:...;:=~· ~· 1 2 Bit., 2 BA~ Bltn applil\nct:!I. apt., bNnd nu. SUE/mo tall N,wpon Beach. 64~64 fml. \'le. PalllMk!t M . age, nunt rond ror ~fin! \\"Mt property, in r om r n:·<i1me 1o CluslHed ad no. O.EAN 1 bt'. crptt, drps. Nr. P'l'.lol. &iU:m4. J1W...v. ~art 6. \\'AiVTtt> duplex or 2 Bclnn ~1496 n10tor borne of f'Ctl18-I va.luf.. p1'0JI, so. C&UI., m0h!lt> hm. 1 !.130, ,. (I I>ttUy Pilot, P.O. OCC. Adults Ml)', no pttts. Sell lhe old 1tuU 8'.U' the new Falt ruulu: are )Ult a phone tmne. 2 Jlrls. $1!"il. A aood w1.nt ad LS 11 aood l'"l-002~7.W or ! ~1073: -19'2-3349. Otl'C Ut)t), Crlall l\IC'SI., S1"2.:AI. 5.0-97'22 titurt. 1"811 any 60-M?I. ~'6...\103 \'eSlrrte:nt. ..-,. 9'D ri;• DAILY PILOT Thursday, July 26, 1'173 i~ ,.---_-..... ~1111 1 1 r• l!!J ILill !~· .... _.,., .. ,, Ifill( J[Il] I llllJ r~_. ....... -~l~[Il]~J.;I _., ..... _ .... _.. ~J[Il~J I~ [;;;-;;;;;;;;' ~J[DJ;;IJI ,. i~ Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W1nted, M & F 710 Help W•nlid, M & F 710 Help W1nted, M&F 710 Help Wonled, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 -~------__ .,..__ -·---·I ·-"'-----'-----·I cc;.;.:;.. ___ ..;. _____ , Help Wontod, M & F 710Help Wa ntod, M & F 71 0 Help Wonted, M & F 710 ARCIUTE'CTURAL { i 1 n\ need' de p ('t1du b I c i11:. . minislralh't' as.sli;tant, XJ111 t)'p\!il., b.'Ol'Xl n \1UlU.he1111>nt ~ qun lltles, \i t'll ~1'()1)n1t'd. it "'ru'lU J)Cl'~::uu1li!y. $:.ihtry -cpen . l1vu1(', 5-W.29JO Af1t·r I a, 831-216.) !ii As,..q:n1bly ' ' BECOME A . -VARIAN • . :. ASSEMBLER ', " '" ' VARIAN DATA :. :·~ •~ lur~-~:..~!~~1~nt~·nl I . " •1 assenib\(·•~ f<•i' 1 ~1 & :!11•1 : ' shifts. Rt.'f!Uh••d 1~ a : 1 1nu11nnnn "' 1, ll1'!U!h~ • rela!c1I ('Xl.l('l ICth" Ill Hill'. •1[ t the Jt..>llu111ni: "1111~. { otll· : · pone111 p1~p i;oh.ll•r111g .~ :•: o.ssrn1bly 0! P (, Bo:.nrls, 1'l i\lsio hrring u1 c111)J1ni.: s, ,. I l') \\'ll'C \\ l'l!;JJ, BAH 111AUJ, QlK''-'11 &c, LK1:.l Nel\flCU'I Bhd. Cu<Sla 1\l1•~;,i 016-!1.l'(J, Bf:<\U'ft(1,\:-; \\,UllL'tl l•rl' N.llOn lm:it.l<.'\I lu Su (.\ii.i~l l']rt:r.,1, l'\>11ll!l1.~SlVl1 ,'it. ~1[•11 ~ i,:11,11.1111t'<'\i J',iJiJ \,U'.l li\UL Call :1 1G-71SG H~: \UJ \' or;c.•1,t~-f.1kl· 01 1•1 1•lu.!11h•il· 111 li11~\' s"lon 11 i:,:lu·~I 1•1u 111111{~ \.16..~J, 1runruu.:ton Urut h -Boat-Repairmlln- ll.1h 11111n 1 •'IJ\'I Jlt••t'd. l'1 11n f11Jl tu1l1'. \\us! h.11'l' i.!1<11! h.11/ & 1 11 .in I'~ "HJ. 11!:11 !(11 " l,;r,•11 \ 111 rl, N, 11 - ~~1 h, --BOO~K~K~E~EPER l.!if' 01 hr.1\·~· ll!J t11.,1old(f'I p 111,.: Ufrli.:1 . F~p···· Ill puhllc ·l~'l'Ollll111\I{ )Jt t•ft I 1'1~! S,d,Hy vpr n, C.Jll \\\·~h'J'll i:>U.tlll< '" :0.\'I \'1<'1'~ 1111' ·~,; \\ l~Hh ~I. ('"Ill ,\I, -,,1 (1 1:.'U~!! J;'()(Jh 1, l·.Lt 't.J .--S!t•rlUJ!I t1 11;11•1' 1111 g1•n'I nl• 11,,rk 1':),,• /JC! t"ot lflf(•[\ICll, r,j,i-:./l(iO. BOOKI\ EJ..:P J NG JJ1111 ti u,1 J ICI I) l'~tl'lt !s/,1t'I UI". - EXECUTIVE SECRETARY EXPERIENCED Type, Steno, Dictation Call Helen Shinmachi (714'1 556-8110 Ricoh Electronics, Inc. 17482 Pullman Street Irvine, Calif. 92705 Help-Waltted, M &-F-710 t H~lp-Wanted, M &~F 7iO -I -·"--'""··--__...._._,. I ~;ll't'!l'rinks WE'RE ON THE GO! CONSUMER • CREDIT CLERK I ' I llOL'~l'.:l(EEPl·:r:. to \'IH't' fu r XU liteli 1: E. &\LES SAU:S -!lhtlv, fe1nl\le, nc'I'' l\Orllc i.11d :l ~n\Hll ththlr~n. KEYPUNCH OPTS RN.LVN·AIDE INVESTIGATE coillill'Ul.'llOll Audiu-lnlL't JS lllU!i, & I ) l'li ti l)ay~ !l 11·1 s.. olh(•f i;h1J1.11 Top /)\'! (.'<Jln·Alll\'1)1 s y 11 l e IU'' "" 0\\11 11r11's 'J'lu rlt• 1t0<.k URGENTLY NEEDED d1.1,ty llllY. lriuiu•d. pi•Y for, .. iht· 01)po11.un11y to •1.SS:k'• E;Htabh:;:hed t-larhor area. 1111 •11 8:£1-::517 \:f,) 1 'l;J><'J'Jt'rk'i' /loor d"ly. C .. u '' 1 , .. I 1 , lltlt' \\IJU t !tu'\\ 111 n'ally I\ hl'l'1• ru 111 &ilttry + L'OJnm1Si;:lon. II ViJH ,\L-L [(" n1.11l1-;;;. ,\LL ~Jil~"l'S lnlrV\lo';, .\1011.Jo'rr ~ 9s~ you1 C•tforl~ IU'c l'\'COJ{IJlt.(S_I i.i12-.\l\IO. lii<M..'•n lJI• r ahll' ~'' •~·1ul 1~;l~;~.o1:~~)::,'~~;, ~11co11He NurM..'j J!(l:1slt'Y: UJJd•l~\~~'.u~1e<l . an f•:<1:lt'I· S'7liT:$i\fAc_N_'._actt-o-nd0u-nct---.0,·I , h\dlaull. ~··hcn111111•s, li<Ud· TOFS IN TE~ll)()):AHI I::S .WI !lnspJ1td Jl!I., NJJ tl.olJ. ordm~i;r lxr s ~ ;,.. sta(l(U/, /lll llllC & eV(!JtlJW rl.1 1 ~ h,1ll1•1ll1 tuhh~ lilu~t NU Ft:t-.: t:Vl-:I~ by Purk L1dv Hldg 1 , Y nu. 111 sh.ti!. Jo:)(p & refs. 1& and /1,n'l' 1.11111 lf•1l11. Ask f111 ~2'.J9Jj, 510·~1'J;i l • "c~·l,"11'nuO"" o>>Onlloly n\i•r. Apply 2l60 Harbor, lh rh Duhe:, 'lllf ti.ili~8030 ·"" ~ '"'1 ----------+' NUitSEltY School Teacher imles and J1st111g l•111· .:i, '°'"'"""""c::CC"W:-:::;:;;:-·I j ·(.iIJ, (o r Fall ll B urea. ?<.h1tu1-e, !l•sl1:1 ~1\LE.SL.AIJY uver 30 w1U1 ' JNSURANCE SALES ,\} JIU °"'"t Dr. l'l.'8Jl()lt«!hll', l':>\l){'t illus! e L111!1ng r1.•fCITals ;.uld t':\P 111 1'('udy to 11ear, full I :"'iu f'\f'l II"'. .. ru111 11 h!h· you lt•nni, p,111 11111~" •'\•'~ & I 1vk111l' fuU 111111' \lht•n 11l1•1h· ~ hi... IJJ.JJtS hnvc ccrurice.tc Call Jor In-liu,)·i'r chcuts f1\li11 18 11n11• or 1m1·1. t:Dlif 6T'...-2!¥.MJ J-Man ...'.:!:_VJCY.', ~S-2jj(). J.u'\\ln 11t•11. ho111l• suu. * 2 OFFICE GIRLS 'llvlslons NEEDED e Con1pany µaut n111jur 11.:tl. Jo".11•n1r1 ~ lnsu1.1111 (' 1;1n1rp KEYPUNCH J{.'1:110 lt'lepbonc ri1spatch 0(>1'.'n!ngll tor 111.0 full 1 1tlH~ ' "'"'""' '""'"""'" SECRETARY lilus! bi.' 2:i, rtble to drive sulcllllll'll 1o·o1i A pp •r. ,\pply In Pcrston CA " LOU o , G"'l 11 YELLow cAs co. ~ ~N ·" '"'"""· To Contro er I l:d Uu11 11: :HO-lii:.:1 ·1 op $SS OO.S-4400 1r1011uugs. 186 E, J6!h, Cos!ll J\lrsa --------TlEAL ESTA1'rJ ,,ALES C di . ion ~~iiii::i:iii ,\It !1.l11fls a\'11il1.lblc ._ I 11-..·!Ju• a.io-1r.o I t 17802 Sky Park nspec ors 'E\'El{ A J'EE AT TEMPO f,•1npo T<'tilf'IOrary 1-Jclp Of'l"-Sl'T prC'ss operator. SUCCESS CAREER Orange ounty YIS $622 to ST:ii pei· run, Sf.nd New or expei·ienc.-etl. Jou1 the of stable NYSE firm of· 1:e~u1t)e tu Sll.dd l ,. hn 1.• k \Vurld 's lal"b't'sl and fastest fers a challenging poli· \inlll•) Un1h<'<l St'h.ool t,'1'01vlng l'esalc or~aniza11on · I h Va rian Data Machines 1 las unn1er! op;,'nln.t:s nu 1st & 2nd Shifts LAHOllEP. 11·anred, ~ii>:idy D1~11·r<·t. 2i172 L11 l'.tz Rd, "'•Ill a nctl\•Oi k o[ over 300 t10~ to a secre, o.ry W O J'•b l'.<10.r lluildt·r. cuhin~'I l ... lgunn J111ls, Cahf 9265:3. olliet~s und l>et!<>nie ,1 thrives on act1v1ty. and 1~111kl't'. 011n toot~ \\l()(HI Oeat:g1nc 1!:i!c Ju!y Z7th llll•1nber ..if uur i\J1llion,11retis able to comm_~ 1·.u~l~hC'r fo1· 111?tur IK>nies: OHlJElt t!l'sk el~·rk Sn111Jl (JuU. MuJ1l~n11Jhon dollur ~ffecrively at all levels, G1tl 1o ans11r-1 phones & "US aJ•plia11ce fir n riexl auve rtis1n'" "l'O"ran1 l-'1-ec R · • · f 3 '"'''. r1t1n" •·· 1 l' p 1 JI" "' · 1 c " ,. ,., equ1res m1n1mum o • , l'.I "" ·~ "'· ~harp .1;;g-n·ss1\C JX'l'SOn to i::uarunteetJ liC<?uSln{; schoot , 5.16-1 .f;O or 1281 pt'O<.'l'ss orders r1on1 phon(' 1..:xcl'Ue11t s1uC's 11auuuy. years .recent e.xper· ·-: •·Join a growing company 1yr,1st I i::irl ofc. E:>lfK'I'. J<:~Pt 11t nti•i! ~11j~·x;:; Cti· Engnii:: (Jlc. r, \\'I' '.\I l'~Jllll).( \ \HIAt-. UAJ'A M,\C/llNES ho1S M'Vl t'fll [ Ill 111 l•d hl ( e I ).'1\1• l l'i,'1.'il'Jll~ & fl) pm"C~S lfl~[J\'C'!.Ol ~ /I. !11111 o( :! ytS {':>\'/>£'1• IS pl'C'ft'l l'< <l f11 fll'Q• ct·~s lXJX'l sh<>uld !nclmle cables, cll'<·1111 h u .1 1 d ll.~~!'1llh1H.!~, rh,t~SIS 8 JJOll !'I' Sllll/)h('S He I'(' I\ in ); ill· ~/W'l'llOll P!\[)f'I' should !/)• c ludc shf'<•l 111ct<1 I pni I•, cu1;ull /!().tJds, ('()lllJk•llt•nls ~tc. "'/knowledr;e 111 th1' ust• of dc'.1111ng~. v c n rl o i & n1,ul $:17i llCI' 1110 , \\'hut IS )'OUI' license \\Or l1\ 1ence, figure .aptitude, ~ slal'llnc:. Please. send 11."0rk to you? Check 01u· n1o nthl:> good statistical typing rei u1111 10 P n U-Ox 9J7, b•lnus p1og1an1 \\hich n1e.tns and shorrhand skills. S.:1111.1 Anti, ~02 $$$ ro ;>ou' Please call C nial co-workers ,. ' .. •" I· • ! Excellent em· ploye benefits " " •Immediate nusP.f.iY-•. ;~-21, l';l;jll./'. UNITED (•/'('IHrtgs due lo 1·11prd t'\'". I rircf <l ll\ll \1111 11,1111 \\'11ulil CALIFORNIA BANK w111su111 \Ve ,ire l<X1k1ng fot· hk1• loJ IUt\l' ~vuu' lour! , l11d11 utu,ds t1111 t l'.'.1nt tu ktk111ll·d~l' J1 1•s 10 h•· 3141 E. Coa"t Hwy. 1 1 ~·L~•n1e a p111t ur 1h~· '''" !it:h•'tluJ('d. Sa la 1 y ('t.ltll• Corona del Mar 673·9240 I 1•11uig con1p11te1 uidusu·y, lllt!lll>lll~lt(' \t'/e:>.:p1 .. 't', \\ JIJ \\'o di o' ill 11C'l'ci ill !.lit• lak•· Spanish ur 1\1nc1. ]',11u.i\ Oppur. [n1J)!11y1 1· Jollo\1111g a1·cu~ r..tlalng:s, 1lll\TOlllClr1 s p,, T J I 11'.!l \\'esll'll\' Pl,\('l! f.i111te llj, N,\pi lil'h il 1:\ lll~'lO ot Ii:~ Sl92 IJP.TllOIXJ,c1.1c-rt--· --V11-g1n1a J onC's R35-4:!11 1 onge . ' • ., n 1<'C', exJ)L>1 · pleasant surr0l.lnd1ngs, only · cha1rsidc & recept. RED CARPET ·1 d Jo';Lshion Island, fi..t.1-14lCi excell.ent sa ary an Realtors benefits package. for Park Maintenance Coordinator , REAL ESTATE appointment call: {714) Npt.''tklll,.(, i\p11ly U! !ICI 1>!•11, ll:unlJu1g-1·1· lihnill'!, l5 1J couN·11::1: ,10111nn, ~·ns!er • Secretaries ! openings calipers I ...... -·-~--~~-.... -~-··-~~-·-~-~----~~-· I LYN or ltN SufK'l'\ 1so1, 11-7. l'ring:e benefits. ~ o od sl;u 11ng s11L J l0-.'•G90 __ I SALES MANAGER 540-4020 ext. 44 Resale OU.ice needs n1a11ager AVERY 1v1lh 2 years of Real Estate I.; . I· Please Ap11I~ In PCl':iOll Or Conl:lel B 1.;-1'.t~k.1 Atl~.111~ ,\It'. C.i\1 i\!>k fur FJet ~" •\ppl;> 8~ \\\!Sl 19th l)·p1n)! CQ, S/11 SO. Al least i\11 J!n;(,~n. SI . C11s1.1 i\lf'•ll 3-:i yr;; p t I' \I I 0 ti s (':'\• CAStlll~I' •. ".. ])('sk, Ccn1ale CPL!'..: !n n1an \~ un .it Ti'\ pe11(11t:r If ~ou n1rl'1 these quahhca· lions .I:: ,;t't' Jook1 n~ lol' a vu:s111ou 111lh a i.:ro111n~ Orau;.:1' C11w1!v t'O lhat of· fe:rs xln t p,1y ·,~ bcncf1\s - C'.\perience. Nc1\•po1 t Beach App!:; ar<-a. Expanding <."On1pru1y. PRODUCTS ,,, • ' :-;ntnt· 1x1K'1. 11e .. es:; f/1u1u·. \\ \\ il~ui. C\J 1.1,vel\ .! Bn. • ' ., j: VDM Aµp!y GC'nr's, 2::00 Hru bcJr u11fu1'n r x,.ho.:-s>'r\itt•:o 1 • Clerk-Typist t:l1d C ~I \\ ""-I 1 • . __ _ .1111• ·"'''I Jo11ai r 1107 1::ns1 f;>puu.c 6() 11•1lh a k t\O\\]C'd;::C' L1\..-,l ll}·!:)· l 'Xj)L>l' pre~ d Ai>· 1 ~·1111iu11, ~h\Ul~C of f1l111g sy~!!'tllS ...... 111 in-l'll'8S(' ApJJlJ-In l'el'S()tl Or Co11l1ul ". • i: 2722 Michelson Dr. Irvine, California 833·2400, ext.336 \ll). _111. ll1y;1ol. No.:11'Jlll1'1 j Data Processing tet·cs1 1n le111 ning-n pubhra· l:lch (N'Jt OC ,\1rpo111. S · tluns tkp1 Oill'Jill\On 1 ------uperv1sor B.KRAFKA • ' I .\L 01,u1c;v t.:ons1 Collt..:~. 10 e Jr, Tech CLAIMS p!iu1 ~ ·ht~lu!e & ~up..;1·1·1i'>I.· 2722 Michelson Or Irvine Equal Oiip<•r. I·:n1plo;.1.•1 1 · .. 1 ......... -........... --!' EXAMINER ii i1 l J!l '-0• •'~:;u1~ op"1"1111nn:-; 1 Illustrator & P••!i./)ll!lll :'l ll!S/ h,1\'r ;,: \ 1·..i M1ptJ'\'!SOl f'X [lf'l lC'!lLC I"1ste·up of n1rinu,1l~, ~1n1plc 833-2400, ext 336 1.1-------1 EXPERIENCED !. 1·ts l"illl'I-:<' & <''.\P<'llCll''' Ink llfi<' dt:r'.'lflll('s & h.1 ve 01· lra1n111,;: 111 dal L pi'Ol'C'S'Si: flpt.•ratc!I "STAT" ~a1ncr,1 lt1~ l!rsun1., 1cq d Applli·a. e Sh' , r.: ASSEMBLERS :'ltui. I)( I )'I' l'C't.Clll C'XPt t'. { URGENTLY NEEDED 11 Caln /( \ S & lfll\llca1 :-lteglstrr today, \\'Ork tonK>r-11:111111wk~.::> I ro1\·1 I ,. NO FEE EVF.R I PACIFIC MUTUAL 7!A.: ,\C\\!JOI t ('(•rtl('1' U1· :'\e11 JXH'l Bt.af'h :" TOPS IN TEl\.lPOf!Al<ll :S I ,. ' 1 _ ~ Lqual Oppu1 . J:.1npl0)«'1 1.: 1-(jiJ:l ............. !==~:::::-~= I ' .•r 1 ' '' LJ ""' w.tm CLERK TYPIST r. ltJQJ1. \ s·i21 $1):)3 Pl'I i'll o. 1j, I )h1~1 t) Ill-r. \\' ,, n1 ~' I"'"""""""'""""".., __ ,..,... A1•1oly : ' ASSEMBLERS I , City of Irvin• : • i\tw:l ht• ahlt~ 1.1 flu pl ~'(:1~lo11 I 1201 t u111p•1s f)t ., l1 \'U11' ( sc!&1·1ng J\1111. J ) 1. l':>IPl'I'· 01· c.111 ~.:::..:.-. 111 , 1en<.~ r1,->quu erl Ii>· .'I: 211u 1--... -----..--- : &1nft opf•nln:;s. , IC L E It K -1 YPIST husY I Master Spcciahll!:'S Co. Jlhout, ~r1l<'rit l 0U1C<' 11ork. I ... lii40 ~lonrov1..1. eo~~<I !\JC'Sa SakU'Y open .. Bencflls. Apply 1 • Equal OpPCM1unltr En1pJo~"'r " 111 11 co ro an1 ti10l!Pl Gl.lss I • ASSNT. MANAGER 1 Co. 1~ Su11erior A\·e' c.r.1 . ,,.'",. '°"•I• ,. "'""""' 1-c· LERICAL ~!'i" a.dull . a pt l'Oll1ple-; i n • ·' Newport Ikach. No ~ts 01 " eh1ldrcn. !\fn\n1ennnr~ e.xp<•r ASSISTANT n'QUJred t\pt + sakn·\• \\"rite Clas.<>lf1e•l Ad No h77, ~ Daily Pilot, PU Box lJOO, Coi-ta l\lesn, Cal !l2fi26. ~ ASSN'T bkkpr & fronl d1'sk. ., Pa.yi'Oll exp nee. Con~tr. bkgrnd pref D,11ly Job c:~ .. 1- , 1ng, b1U1ng:, ete. S500 1110. :1" Slalt. -148--5511 ! ,. • t· . '' " ' • • ASSOCIATE ENGINEER Public· \\'oi'k" $l:!li>-$JOOJ 1 'er .\Jo ,\pply City of Irvine 4201 Can1pus Or , nvlnc Or. ·call S33-~10 l :, AUTO PARTS : CCJU:O.."fl::lt :\!,\:\ Pt'1 lt'c offe1 s IX'l111ancnl cnl· ploy111en1. p:url \,1,a11u11s a.flPi' ti 111011111.s, rtus one 1\Cf'k p.11d 111ni-r,ff nl Cl1r1sl· 11h1s ~u1)1 p.1ny 1~utl hfe. hos- pil.i!. iilll!'.:Ji ,11 111l>tl1cnl and dentti l b!.·nll1ti; F:xecllent 1101·k111..: 'dlldl11011~ .111d ;.1\J\1lli pott 11(1ul \I 1!\ p."'l'fOl'lll 1 l'rll'lC!V of 'lt•! 11:,d 1IUll! s 1nl:llld1ng' '' P· 1 1ng 1.1J J01Js 1eporls and 111.itn1.11n111g .1cprutn1ent flies I.Id I\'"!~/, 1\ 11\aj(ll' pol'· (\(>ll of till' 111111.' \I 111 bt• Spt"lll on d.1!:1 l>l'O! "s>1n1i; 1n1)lJC and uul1111! ](t1t/ll1!'t's l'X~'l'lll'.'n! l'l• 11t.d 1•\.IJl'J it n<.:1' ,\J>PI) 111 1 IJ!Jl ,11 ! T 1~1111.:111 i<1 !1 Jltl·~l-10 ~ Parts rlcpl 1'li:l'lt'1·h·nl"I' •~"' PERT EC I • qu\l"l'tJ. J-.lr<l C~P•'I il'fl\'I : ' prcf1•11·C'fl 11vt 110I n1~'Css111')•, I ' C.i.IJ l~h Sll•11 ;1r l !111 111llt'·I Bl '..,J '\! . .:~ .... YSl'Ei\IS ~. \'11•11 (i..11-0010 exr ·I I 1711:! \1n1s11,111.: ,\1'('!lll{' THEODORE ROBINS <::<.1n10 \1,,1, lul1f FORD 1111 l'ff11.11 n1·1~~1·H11111y 2000 Tfil.llx•t' B!\'d' •'lllJ•l"~' I Ill I Co!(1:t i\l~·,rt CLJ;,\.\'tNtO-l:idy~-n i!C7. " --cAcVc'ON-SAYS ___ i\lahn'l' ff•I fllfk P su1h•s. ~ B. IU 111• 1.k, !;\.Ptl' & • "Be Your Own Boss" ! 11011J11Uk: ull-<KiOG t t:::al'n an 111con11• •)f )t1u1· 11\111, -.~-C--k-.1-G.-I • rn:hl II) ~(IUJ 111111 IH'H.:111-h ·I oc ta1 Ir • hood. H1· 1111 ,\ \'l)\' H01Ji'1•· 1 e H t ~ l'it·t11 ... 1lvc Cull nu11· ;lfl.~li ll OS ess :· BAs·r~1TTEn, 1n1i1cr1eas••t1.J • Waitresses ~. for ;) nins uld. f{'f.~ , inv l'.u·I "1'11111• S Vull '1'•111<' ~ home or your hvl1l• , \'I<'. 1 \f1-,ultJ11 )·irk LuunJi \ ('luh ~ , 19111 St , C \I, B11s111ess J)h • l 1ii ~:? 1,;1 .11111111 H1;n\\11g l1.1n · 646-661~1 1)1 111 I 1 ' ' --· ~. BABYSirrt-:n for ~lllS \·I .v ~\r'.ll•b .\>ik f1t1• C.11011 '.'ill!l~ :~1; 8. Ca1 llf'•'C'-s,11') • 11! --COMMERCIAr-- ~. tl'rnoons f)(i1· 111., i: .. r~ TELLER ~· rct:l'd Gard\·n li t Q \' l'. I, 89-f..-0392 t~.' BA BYSITT.ER 1\'ith I' 11 r, seven ~1' nlrl boy, IJC!fl<'h area. Call 67:l~2J~'2. 675-ili70 evf'11/\\'k11d 11 ~~ BABYSITTER, .11·0111ari. J t'rlY horn.::. I 'O J c3-•~lt-'lc'<-""<'cOkcl-)'_'_"c'-'~_._°'_'_IJ :J:>t-:=2."?: J~ BA B)'SIT'Tf.:R In n1.1' fi,.r1<' tor I y1 old ~-irl. 6 111·~ ;, doy for leach1n~ n1•11h•'1 537-!''6-lS. •' Experienced Part Time CONSUMER LOAN CLERK Experienced Full Time UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 309 Main Street Huntingtori Beach 536-8811 BANl\ING UNION BANK I I .1pl11!_'.. !pp<Jl 11J 1J!f.>'.__~.1 1 1i1lfl,\ ·~ Cfl\!P1\;\'I[):'\' 1rir 'll'llii Jn, If~" a 1tn\q11(' (!Plteit1u111!y for 1 \' 111,1 lrt•h H11on1. lioord & 'f a .. , I ~'Ill•' ~.11.n'\, \11 L.11;11ua • ! PERSONNEL Heh u1'l"'11 1~1';-111 :ti COOi\ • :'olu,1 I•• ,rt,;;:-2f. ''''" deu!l!u1r-. Augus1 JOrh. 1pp1n9 & c.1n1u(1 i~rrsonnel, 1'.":-1 .i7!1":. Receiving Clerk Dt-.:;LJ\'El:Y 1na11 f;;-r 1!11t'ly ~lost IHt\" 11 1 111 t ent Cilllf. n10111111i; L A T1n1cs honH' d t iver's hcf'tlSt'. Pi'r\ ious del11·e1:v routC" O\r1· 21 stup/n.•c t' x 11 ,. I' 1c 11 \' p 1'(''11 ~ 0!11, 1nusr h ii v l' helpful. ~ -v--1#'tl " "' IRVINE PERSONNEL SERYICES"'AGENCY t'('Jl111e:il '.1r, 110 soht·11111.:. I 110 .c~·lll'1·r111·.:. \\ .. ~11111 11~1.r l WE OFFER: & (.1o'lfl'n Gru\ e ii) ca Call • C t't' .".'"""1 I ompe t 1ve DELIVEHY 111.tn [,1 r J ,, 1 pay nwi~ung Pu r1 111nr !\fust ~. M d f 'I' , ha\e ll"hablc r1-1r Costa I 0 ern ac1 1t1es :~~~127'1!'(!,, .-1.JG-1780 or J •Excellent f) l~N '/ .\I. J:lcep11onis' 01 rh11d01111i: pi· ,1 1· r 1 r ,. nnL-;11n<ltn"! oppoJ1 111ut1· frn 11u,1hf11'd 1x·1 ,.,011 'I •1 STOU Se1wl n •sun1<' 10 ('J11s~1f1trl Ail No !l01, ll:-iJll' Pilot I P.0 ,,.,~ \ "(,Q, cn~tri ;\/c~1: I Ca 92132£, P.eplics st1·1ct\y eonf1dent1al, Dfntal Office 0r1hodn111l·-t,1:1e1 1Pnccd on· Iv c11,111 s1clc & lci!J .~42·iii3. benefits Pl<•:isr ApJll\' tn Prr son ()r Crin1Hl!I J l''ullr1 YDM 2722 Michelson Or. • ,Irvine, California 833-2400, ext. 336 IJF:NT.\L l!ccephon1s1, El ! 1'01'0 are.1. ,11! 11 11.1 s e s I n1flSl{'r('1!, s;1t,u-:.· ope n. ei es E11u,d OpfYll". f-.n1plo~er call l!l l....ot1.12 -' · -----l F'/C J ~kko•t'fll'f Re~! iur1111 DE NTAL A ss1 s I nn t •1 1 c.xptt pi•1•f 1I Phnnc tor Chan-sH)f' V1~JI lune. :'11111 I upp1, 611-i()(;(J yr ex p 8-17-8:1(!1. ---·-··------ f'iber9(aSS Foreman 1\f1e1 j J~;'ll Dy .\ppo11111nc.11t Cun110J r:11:;1 i; ... 1 J:.: to Sl!J\ Acctng Sup{'l'\ iS<lr 10 Sil!\ UtJI fri ,\J1\ lu$SOO ~··(' To I OJ!!l'Ol!f'l to S7j(/ P:1.110Jl-Cons-!r 10 37511+ F\1'<' :'e1tc1.uy hJ SiOO Ll·~.d 11111 $ti.JU+ S.•"11:.1 ,. u.;;,1l ro ss:i0 ."4.'t:t cl111•1r~ tu ~G.'iO ,\l:t tg Ch:1 )ls 10 ~'.i.JO Llcct1,1-n1e1 h tri·h. $600 G11 l Fi ulay 10 SGOO (.',• & Co!k(·!1u11~ 10 $ti00 1'11~1.;h/Sl'i.:/no Sil to SU00 \ll'l:li D1 ufl.~n11ui $:i.'!5 Hetcpl/Typ1st S..150 ,1cc1ng Cu·k ·r1'll" 10 S500 l\l'!-PUJllh/C]{'] $<175 CALL 1 HISH 1101'!\!NS .JZ.:.:RP.J \\ 11/'irt:\IORt: 1.-sx·J:.: l'ilh S! (,ti l\·1•1111.>1 Ci\! Suite 224 642-1470 !li \'J :II I: U11111e-;J"-::.~100!0-;S­ t 1·1t·t ll•l\\ 11\l!l'IJl!np; ;1pp]H'<l- !1un~ lui 'l<1s,t1 1td J1<.1~1tion.~: P.E./School Ground5- man- 1.! 111 .. n1hs s11:.·i l 1 P. E. Equipment Man- 1.1 nHJ111 h~ SJ~·iti Utility Man/Air Condi- tioning - ).! JllOl11)J~ $6-JJ 7",'; Plant Foreman • High School- 12 n1•1tHhs $/fl{i fi12 Utility Man, General - !:.! l110l11h$ !&1~·78'1 .\Jipl1~,111011 furn1s .ind (]r. l111le•I Ji>l1(ll'1>C't1))1 liJllS :1 1 <1i]. 11lll1' 011111• ''I Pr1~11111•i 'i(•:1u" s, .JS(i l ,\!i,h~boll ~t1J,H!.__lr1't!lr '!:l!il\I. ---J \l'ITOJ UAI. lll'Iµ, 11u1'l tune 111 i; II 1 I) , l'.:xrx! II /1'•''a1t•d (' IJ u I J) 111 rn t • ;,.1s-J61l7 .lft .\11111 J \~!TR Ess-:"'r 'loo-,.-,, .. -.-,-<-,-., pl'l'Seutlv p.1rl 11Zllf', going full 11111!', C.\I a 1 ca _711:~1.!:'<-4:.\il.i. JOBS- THE E-Z WAY ,\SK liS \\"ll Y! \\'n1~hOUf;C'll),ll1 .• , hl $.1 hr 1'1 nl'b, I.IOU[ t'Cflllll'S & 1u.1IJ11 . ( h .in< 1Jt , ~I $'1 :1() hr '.\[11ny fllhc1i<: .~'l'I Clnr~r. lyJ•t' ;II) :vin11.• 1/11·1,ctlon , , , • $j20 n10 ('un1r 1,1 ,,~~nihlc1~ !)a1 11r ultc· , ..... 10 SI !10 h1· S!1'll"~1T111il1;;-r , , lo ~'i2;i tllt• A.-1"U1tr1nni: t'lc1k Sll:l 1\k APEX EMPLOYMENT AGENCY lli lfl (' :'\\'l\'flOJ I Bhtl. Cv.>1111 \lo'~n &J:>-4320 JUNIOR SALESMAN: MACHINISTS City of Irvine t::xceJlcnt opJX>rtunuy for 4201 (',\n1ptL<; Dr. Irvine profC'lls1onuJ g1-01vrh Apply Gt'lll'i •1( 1~·n1 k 011 la!!H·s. nulls" 01 Ca:.11 S:k't :::..-..iv u1 confu!enct"!, Send resun1c Consumer Division & rnctal rnaclunt.' cqn1 p1nent. ==~~~~=:'l=~~-=J Lo C!ass1f1l'{] ad no. 638 c10 2820 :.; Sus.tu I ,\1. 1n1111n1ur11 rXIJCllC'IH.:c. PI T ,1 J I 0 _ _. 'I"' I D,1i!y P1!01 , .P 0 Box 0 1560, <::.1111.1 Ana, C"lJf, ll \ I f 1 f't • ns , ... ,_,. Y .,. "" ir Costa ~1csa Cahf 92626 (~"n•· J l,,1'1~11· nnd \l'nl'ncrl o11 •· )'ia•1n;! ~ )! h. 1\lany Dr.1f!s1nan (111L'o;h1 $5.85 ' --·---·-' i.:(H11p Ul) h. 1ll.'f1 1~ Bkkpr Con~ir 00 .. ~~" R.E. SALESMAN an ~.ual opp o t' I u n 1 t Y ;1411-57.w ~ ""iv I l'll1f)loyer 111/f Sho11 1'00111 s.tlr~ $:1()() n~t.>shRale the new npp1'Q,11.:h ---'==='--='---- ROCKFORD l'1y!'olJ CJ1k $600 & nu10va'lvr n11u kctins1----------- AEROSPACE Ll').!'al s._'{:·\ RE 1u ~700 tl'Chn1ques of Tl!E G1\L· SFCl'l.:T.\ll\' l'i.;oo ltl d Hill Ave. ~/,1l'kl•r1ng Sc't''y ~liOO Ll::ltY OJ·· /10,\J.t::.S You ' ' ~alll•t An.1 (:1'11 Lcd~l'I Bkkpi :)jJQ ~1 1'.l-Uc ~lad )OU chcl: C,LlJ ADMINISTRATIVE Cqu.it Oppoti l:.'n1[1lu111 C !:T Opc1·atr11 , !.iG,.)l;[I l•)l ur;po1n1111t'nl ---MA(HINfST--\\JlJ hoin ~J7j L11.;cnSt.:d 01· Ullh..;en~rd wi SECRETARY Xlnl opportunity !01 n1an 1\1J11 Lnh Te<·il -tlh·i:h SG06 ~'U-•,07· '°"'"""'""--II K(·ypuu(h to s:ifij REAL ESTATE llyl;.ind Lallo1aro1·11:s has an .1 ·,u·ound n1<1<·l11111' shop L J s l~H ki.:rouud • 1() h,;ndle 111dt' rga ct· Sfi50 SALES n1HH{•d\a1c (1Jl('!Hn~ fat· an &l' Y H 1..: 10 $600 ,\ih111111sll'al1\e Scl'rCt.."l.ry to \ oll ll'ly Of \IOI k Ill SnlaJI '·'I S ' I L r1 t', up.;•r•·1so1· SJOOI FREE LICENSE 11 u1·k 1n us rp~rar('h rlcpa11. s1~0p. alhr, nnll, ~111 fal'l' s ~I UHlcr & SO!ll(' /llot!'l'i'SSL\'f' f.:1.'rc tarlCS to $1i50 TRAINING llll.'tl• c.u1dulatc Tilllsl be ilit••\iH'lwn1•e 1 L~IUll f'd Cilll lnhousc Cou.1scl ~'( y 1Y1·ce Pl·lcen1cn1 Se hi)!flh n1,r.1n1zL'<i<ind 1JOSscr;.s H.IE Ot Con:.11' bk•,l'tl SG"iO+ " r' . p l'\'JCC, ( \C•'ll~nl • lP11cal skills 80 •i141 641-SO.~O r, .. , ~I <;.'. "' '""~ I rl ('(• 1,1111111g !<Jg1ai11 I "" . ---!., j ..,'1 ,:£(') oNJ<1+ i:.:d! n II h1le Ull h:.;1 n \I II Jilli ~hOJ thand, UV \\'Pill i\1 \CllJNIST . i\c1v n1fg: bus· Cos! A\'1.0Unl!ir11 ~100 Sloan (Tl<ll ii'~2.54_10 / 1y1,1ng. 1\ppl1caJ1\s should lncss needs Y.Ork1ni::-fol'c-t\crtng ~c1 l'tat y SJ:J() c.: )J<ll'C previous e:-1per1('nee 1n,111 lo set up & Ofx..'rat.: • Con1 p1de1·1ze<l I 1101 kin• tor n1anagen1e111 lt'<'ll'lll,S n1a<.iur11·s for J1f•\V P a)l'OIJ c1 .. 1k ~j2;) RECEPTIONIST j)Cl'SOll;l~I P rior cxpcl'leLIC(' produet JJt"O<IU(;lJOll Ju1e Sal· A r p ,t; A 1J-t to S!i~ 111 IL'scmeh 110 not n1anda· ;u) llP<'ll + prof11 sh,u1ng ~ec'y Jt1,.:cp!10111!'>t SO:J() D:iy ot· n1ghl, no t•Xp. ilt'C., IOI) C.ill :"d0-5205 !or 1tppt } .,rsonn£1 ,'3(.'f' y $)()! ht"~'. lun JOIJ lli Ul 1rn1n, nu ~ flL\CHfi\'IST NEWPORT lyp1ug or sho1U1uJ1rl, eh· E\t'f'IJr nl 1101k111g 1vndrt.1.01,1~ .Journcyn11u1 Onlv Personnel Agency I ,\1,pl,v Ln pl'!¥Jn _n) alt 01 :u.\l f1 ur,.!t' benefits Apply 1n Tnuun Co. ;;,«'i-SG2\ 83l D D NB l'I•' .it 2",() \\t;~t -:;.,t !hi y . 1 p1·1.0011tlt'1·a1L • over r ., . • 1 N 8 lii,\IO 1101"1, 111 l.'\('h,u~ 642·3870 ! 1" ' !){)~,\ LEVERE1T 1'00111 5 lu·s per dav. 2376 , -" 1 !11 ~ !'110· -llJOO, ext :t.iO Ne1\ µoi t J:lvd , f~IS-97."J.l. Pi "--J{l-:N r ,\L n1anagct-ei;t,1bhsh· • 11n1c =r\. St.ition At-l'd ll't.IX'at1911al vchl l lt• H I d 1\11\LE Orlnut 1na k el', lrn<!1ul1 exper \\' / 1 r r s lCll!l'l' IS ilp!..•111ng llC11 JOC,\· y an p/t1n1e, 2A ... \l-6A.l\1, G 1lltci;; o \\ol'k c1cs &.wknds. AJIJ)ly llun 111 llunlington Beach, 111'ek. Apply ui pcl'son, ~ 111 pc.1son to Gerry P111hun1. August 1st. neq. ~e ! f L b t • 1\1lan1s .A\'t', 1-J B., ~T;s;i, Vl'rde Sht.•11 SC'l'\ICf',, starling, n1anagvl'. J\I a 1 J a ora or1es i\L\Nt\GEH, 11·a1·n1 , f\'1endlv ,:;J,,l llail~i", C.i\I · n.~i;unie P U Ho~ l2D7 .~ n1,11urt', Oltl!il be exp'(! P.\ YFlOL L Clerk. 11\\JSI have f.Iont'OVla, Ca 91016 :ra Hyland A1·e. scll ~ng du.•sses, spls\11-. to e:-.:(K'r. in cons1n.ict1on 111· H.ft'HAJfo~-~kc! Corp Co,,ra il1t'SU Calif !l2S26 l'un J 1101nan C;\I, h,df sz dust 1 Y il1us1'i. h<1\C h 1~ ,1 need for a pr-rson 11 1u11 An eQUal ?opportunity sthop Sio-4722 kno1\ lt·dgc fir r 1• p o't' t 1 11 !.: a Sll'llng: buekground 111 ' "niployer n1n!e-f~n1alr. MANAGEoR=-cT=RcA~IN=E'E= L't'l't1fi~~l payroll " Salary 'o111pu1e1 11.1,\ t'O!I, pt~·fer-J """"""""""""""..,;."""""-'I ()u!~!nrtdlt1J:: opportunity to S600-$6J-O. 8 ain·~ P n1 · tably a person \Vlth some Seel etary arh nnc" 10 1n.111ager1rir'poi;f. Located 111 NE . ..i,.l't'Oss k1101\lNlgL' u! UnJon eon DEPARTMENT l ion lll '.lO-ro days Our cur. fron1 OC A1l'pcnt. Send llat.1$. J\c cotn1l ~ 1:iayablr• l't•nr n1 ,\ n ,l g er s e11n1 l1·~un1c, Cl,o;.o;1fn.'r! ,ill 110 c·11.p helpful Only Z.:.:xp'd S100G-Sl500 1110. l\tus! lJ,n·c 9'.ll, ~/o f!ally Pilot. 1' 0. Need Appl;.• at our corporate rtu l'r! f'f1l1•s rx~·rH!nc1• ~1x I.JOO. Custa i\lcsa, Calif offtl't.', 3<1:;.; \1 1,1 L1dn, NU. -(!,JJ fill_ N<'\1'111:1n 979-5222 ~:!62fl An l::q u<1l Oppty Ernplo)•'r SEC TY'S -P LASTICS ln1111C'd1nl{' opc:n111gs for ~CC· illANAGE lt T1,11ncro, n1atu1e, D\'er 21 \\ould I 1 k (' r1•staurnnt !'X/X'l', but 111!1 1ra111 \\'111 hll\ r to undergu ,1 shoit Ir.tining: p£<rlod, P1 l![t'r soinc rollege .\ppty lf,unburg-cr lf.1n1lct. JJ4J ,\d11n1s, C.i\f Ask for i\11·. I hu;:an, bc:o!Y. t'l'n 2 :10-4 '.lo p.n1. Manager Trne OC.;:'l''f' l:t'ttllll(;! l\1>s"1cl1Tf $671 Pr1 ;;onnL·I Agcni v lf,.i l E Ed 11l~f'I <.: ,\ L\lark lrI l'cn1rr) J..i2.s~:;1; li'[,\TUH.E \\Un1an for sl;o;t prrlt'r l'onk. 3 hr d.1y, 4 d.1y 11'k, ex(>l•r p 1 e f c 1· r eo.\ ,; 18-99 l!'l, ' \TEN & \\'0111rn, to e:11 n SIOO to SlfJOO pt'r n10 ft'Olll \'Olli' ho111e G7;;....IS.Jf> • i\TOTOR Rout« D1·i,rr f•fl Da ily Pilot in South L:1J,.'\ln,1, J\lust hve in ,u'£'a a nd hnve 1 .11Ld 1lr1vers l 1 c ens e De/l<'11cl11bll' <J.Ulo nnd cnsh ho11't 1'N1uircd Call Hany SPeley, &12-1321 MOLD PRESS OPERATOR \\'orking l{'ad 10 p1.•rfonn 11101<1 Sl'lup~ •\lso pr·1101 n1 111•j11'QN';;~ 111SJ)t"t'1101l 10 rJC'- luJJ p,11·1 hhrPprinl~. 0f)M'll11' 1n1ni;fer ,f,-nr lllJl'l.'llOn !1)1)]du1~ C'tlt1Jp1ne11t. 549.3041 Equ:.1\ Oppor, En1plo~rr Nr:1·:n nu11tl!'r-s~1·rei:;;');" run 11111{', :; 1ln1· 11'l't'k: n.•:tl r 11tnt(• ''Xrx'ril'ncc.. LIDO RF.A LTY, 11\C, * srJ-r:ioo * ,~,0=11~• -""-,c,,~gc·fl,n:ing_h_p~l-.o-n--.-, t''.\P·lln~1on Nl't.'t'l 12-Li \1~ cxpcr rl11111h <:a b 1 ri r, 1 n1akt'~ ;,lfl.-2Sf"1 Nl.iHS&i;: RNs, LVNs & AIDEs MACHINE OPERATORS 1'tt,u!cs ro l\oi·k u1 f'ullr rton 'l'r,one•' & 1· x pc r 1 e li c L't.I ffOUJE SALESMEN 11•111 1( lhrn n10\e lo our n1nch111c operntor:1 necd~·d ll!V!NC: fd1•1li1y upon con1 on nit S"/Ufls 111 clea11, nei\ plc•l1on in f'ad) l~i"I' bu I hi! n g 7 ;\ l\.l -3Pi\l, Largl' 1~0llona\ Co. IS looking Sl'ei;r1al'lCS UJ'p nf'€t!N:J ror ~llPJ\.I. JlPJ\T-7AJ\.I Shirr l<ir 1w1111.u1Cnt stablt· !lll'll. !hl' :na111·1nl i\J.1n<i"('J' the IJ()nUs rirrniuun for s11.ing S.: · Excellt•n1 sta1llng salary. 1r1·hnical Su1)p<J1't J\1a~ag:e1 >:r.111.y.ii·rl Opportunuy for ll tnl('r('sted Cull & rJ1c JrisH11111e11t Refurbish ,1rh'Hlll:L'n1ent 11hil(' learnin* 714: 774·0330 111r nt illana~ei. All posihons •111 Jllh Top lx•nch ls .ind f{'(!Uitc shor 1h.111d & s la11si·i·· 1.icu.t1011 plr111 P!eas-l' risi!. * SALESMEN * i;.1[ 1~1>111:::-nb1J1t,1 do 1101 l:Ull I hll, Off [t1kc1 ,\p1 \ 111 P111(1'1n SI ,\} 1\'r11•1)C11'f F'l't'C!l'.llY Do ,\OU /llht• "S:11l•s1nl1J Cli\! CO \\'dnl~d" ud .. I\ 1th u gra111 of BECKMAN __:,"lf>O B1·1,1.:gs, Coslll "f\[(';;a salt" Croi ! say I hlRn1e ~ou. I folJO\\'etl up a fe11 n1yscl r POS ITIONS fbr Se Jl I 1n the past ThC' Jtlh seldon1 t ctt c h e 1 • Jl r C' s ('hoo I h\ed up 10 the rlaun 111 the l:C1 l1f1ca1c .~ 11x1w1· .. 1,~ 11111(' ad. INSTRUMENTS SCCl'Clary 1~ l1~1e SIX'lal Do }OUl'Srlf n f,t\OI & t•X· SCl'\ll'l' aid, :::; P an 1 sh plorc this one. If \OU'cl like INC. dcs11,11i!e, '~ t J 111 t' cust to n1akc S2."i0 a ii :<ek lrn- od1an Call ~Yl-1\·iSl Ap-nll'<lia\l'ly. 111 rh ant eye to pl1ca !io11~ r1ose Au~ust 7th niuch nlol r 111 the fotw·r, 2~ N H 11 l•ir, F'llll1'l'!On P I r I (N of 11111)1.'l k1l I l1,;h11"<•.Y' Hl·:SSi\!AN lifustt k 11o 1v r 1ke fiJ t 1lk f(l Jnu. IJ 11nilti ltiO & ,\ B f11c:k & ~our qunl10eAt1011s 111ntch ''11 1':(1 11 •1 (!pp•"Jl !llllll} st1·1pp1ng: Quality \Vo r k our 1 rqu11·1·n1l'n!s, rlus eould i.;;;;;;;;;1;'~"~".";"';";";;;;;;~j cssc11l1nl Ca1ncra kno\1·ho11· he thL' t:1-11ec1 you\••• bcen 1• helpful ~!us! be a self. looking for SECRET ARIES/ st.i111•r J1llr1 •·~red in gTO\Vth f111rrv1e'v 11ppo1otn1c11l 10-4 po1e nt1al !"or appl 979-2Stl Pi\.!, wrrk1lays, 5SG.:-:1il2. TYPISTS businrs.<1 lu'S. 6 IG-0163 -Sales-Mens Boutique URGENTLY NEEDED \\'knds. I i iiiiiOiii .. iiiiii"""""""'"I' 1c· nred 2 1iggrl·~~rvc girls Hf'g'1sh•r 1r~foy, \1or•k to . hJo1ok1n:::: fol' n f t1111e p1•11n Dlul rt•11' PRODUCTION po:-hion u1 !illlt'~ & rn1:n11 NO f'EF; EVER CONTROL CLERK 1r,un1111; 11 .1 11'1'\' 1"on1rn1. TOP,.; IN TE~ll'OHt\RJE:S. ltClll)s bluepnnts Good 11· (tgllt\'S Sonic !yp1n; ,\: 111- ilij,'. 549-3041 PROOF OPERATOR Experienced on bank proof/encoder. Apply· UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 222 Ocean Ave. Laguna Beach Po!\11·y n1cns boutiqu1·. ~lu~1 I,.-::"'."------... ;;;;,. h11 1·r ~.1!1•s C'Xl)('r Ntl sru-7 ' rk'n!~ 11:l'il.'IC'. Call for ,\ppt j ·(~ fhl' Lrl()k ,, J..1-NOO y s" 100 YOU REALL y 1Man 21a 0v '•• Dr. BELIEVE IN ECOLOGY? SECHl..lAR'i', la\\' offit.'t', 1\l' hn\r ti ifl\>tlnd rlool' OJI· ~e11.•port C1·11tci, pleasant J)llJ 11n11!y fo1 }Ou 111 the pc1'S011ahty, typ1n~ skills Li1nsu11l<'r Proriurls l11tlt11ilry ru1111d:1101')', Iii!• bkk:pg, $3.)(l l-3 rninute 1 nil is nil it per Ill() \Vtlh r:i.lses to tnkt'!>. s:~::-S.::J9. l.\lf!lf', Cl.Ulnc1• {I'll' bo:>~inncr SALl-:'\J\JE:'J ,,,11nted f 0 r to learn ll>gal procec.ltu-es Cnhlt' TV l)u•et:I &11c5 wurk &»--1011 fl.tr, Roush. "', ·~,11) -1 l'on1n1iss1on, Ap-Secretary/Recept. -~:1.1unl Qpport i.-:111ployr1· I J\ \n Pi•l'SQn. l"aJ<t .lll'Olllflg ntu'/ AAilboot Tclc·Pt'Ornp!t•1' Coble TV. m1ui~lf 1-Jt>ad ofc.. <'"i01.ld front RECREATION ASSISTANT 262'1 \\I Coa~t liwy olt• 11ppi-.•tH"flll(.'t', IBilf £xN' Nf'\\'JX1t1 Rc11ch 131plnK. GQ..70 W'pm no "" S ;\LES Representatives l'\'Q'd, Fl'lr info eall 0642-0.).12. Gi~\\'11\R cmmellr f I r 1n Equnl Opµ)r" F.1nplo\'er I SEC'Y \\'agt•s :u 1..,•1•ll11;: 10 c:-.po•r g.,,. mti;.c;t h11vr Jro(Xf sh .~ t\ppb in l)l'r~nn, ll1un))\11·1;1·r € lyping sk.ills &. enjoy nll'f1· 11.unk·t, 1"1[1 Ad11111"I At:c,. j .... peopl<!, Druik i....,. el(J)Cr ('oisf,1 :'111·!1:-L j\~k frir ,\Ii· l' ' ·~ bi ·~ II de'tdra 1'. Plt'tl~ ,\ppty In _ n~11 ~~~= -~---~ .. Pent>n to -· - r .11 n $20-$40 per 11 eek \l"Ork111jt nfl1'! ,('hool and (HJ So<lturda.1 s g1•ttlng Jl('\V l'U~1onu'r~ for Jill' Dally Pt!iJt ·n\I~ '" not a pn()('r 1\IUh• 11!\d dt11•5 111/I llJ('!Udt• 1l1•h1·(•ril'" or 1:ollf'l'lln(.:. \\ ,. hrt1 t' (1f)(•1111lj('I Ill C°.<>!'111 Z1T1'1:1n nn(\ :-:011111 lh1ntu~to11 llrru h •111!), ,\ppl)' 1)0\\ ~ !lb.'\ flt>.11. l l•A~pltnl Srntf Ho'l!c•r \\f)1•k-111<' D11v<1 & Shilts \'ou l)n.•f.,r. (iood Pa,1•, '1'(1 ~·N.."S Or ft1·IJAtt'~. Sj."'4·$1ii2 Pi·r illo .\Tu11t I) pe 4;; I\'.}) n1 .\p11ly City of rrvin• 4201 C:ut11.1us Pr, Ii'\ 111e Or Call RS3-.'JS.10 needs top nol('h prople 10 SECR.,....AR\' ID' I • dl"lno1111t11ttc In he 1 t <' 1• ' c.' ., . .i•l N. In s:hJJ'e~. ~Ian• ,. •'Olli· IK'_r!90t11K'l st't'Viet'~ S721)..$h'7G · · c 11 •• , ~11 per mo. St-i'lf'l n>!lu1111• lfl ~i;s1on. a ,1.,......, .. '· Saddlchn('k Valley U !Med SALt-:s CLERK. p.'lrl flnKl, S<·hool Otstrlc;t 25172 t~ai II-TIME FOR Drug sio1~ f'X )'I. l)l'Cfd. • Rd., La~'\11\ll HUI~ 926.\l. ;r Tdff..'l \\i'•IM.11 QUICK CASH ~" 610 NM""'" "'""' Or. l_~ N""""' 11eu<o THROUGH A F Equal Oppor, Emp>oyrr CLASSIFIED ADS l!!CL!!'!A~SS!"ll'!!!.,F.'!'!!.D'"·'" .. '" .. "" .... ~i.5618~ I 642·56 78 Dn1ly Pilol \\l:l nt ll!.1r:;111n<1 gn.lorc. -J R-:-SECRETARY- Rl).r1dly itJ'0\1111g firm !J1 Jr 1'i1)(> Co n1 p I c x 11. rU l11k-c !lhllrp ltalfk'C' 11. flOCWI ,ii;k lll~ . ~!fu I $:\2.), Call Ltndll lla.,1 , !;ll).6ft,,·1, COl\..-.:!11J Pt'l'8.lll11CI ;\l(Mry, 2i:Jo lln.rbor lih·d., r~r. 11£, SALEStllEN ~'lguna ~9'1--01.JJ Alln: ~tr. Shtnkic. Dcadllne I \\'hy not ~Ol k in the hottest SAL.ES • BOY!'. ll thru 1 ~ .Dlttt .July 27th. ............... --. ... ..,,.,,;.111 n 1· ;: 11. 11 u n t In~ ton Sl.:,50 hr )l\,$1on Vit•.IO lU"'l'!t StCJlETl\HY -)'l.'lrl tl~. Nl1HSEU.'l ,\lttnd fnr Infa nt!! Bt«it•h Foun1~u1 Vallt>y, l.d 491-12% Ton ~kllls. n-qulr'\!d, So dur11ur Su11, t>trvll'f' of C lil I us 1ruu1 you' Call r hil SALES Girl, f'Xj)l'r p/tln)!' S~lll'!_-ll'V~ area. Ca I l l'hlll"('h llcf5, M't(d. Call ~fcNmnee. v It LAGE k. ~·k:nd,. 21 Ol' O\'t'!f, No nltt 557-SjlO _•_r,_,_..,, __ ._11_•_•_•_lm_d_s ___ 1_«_~_1_1,"''~;'_'T~,~' T~E~-.~~=-"'·~ 1tl>rk. S.tS.-225.1. l<s.c:;;u~1~u~1,'-."~'"-,-,-.-. ~.,~2~-SG=rs I lonu•n1nkers· C pjnhn ISIJ;l ~n. H1'l'.l'"''""'Y S.A. 547-6681 - ThursdlJ, JUI)' 2fl, }q;73 DAIL V PILOT .1; • ( ][JJ ( l~I lllrdl I e ~( ·-· ]~ ( ....... "' Help Wented, M & F 71 0 ti•le W•nted, M & F 110 800 Furniture SFX:RE'TARY I R~~pUonlst A_n_ll_,q_""------'-"-' I Lines, 2 Tlme1, $2 .oO 110 G•rage Salo 112 Ml1col11neou1 111 8o•l1/Marlno Bo•I•, Speed & Sld 911 OON''T AU.SS THl.S O.~F.: ~ STEREO: 1''l.\\' l;.al'nl.rrt ' 0!;'!:i'rk~Te~.~~i':r. ~~. Equip. 90-4 •tJ C.1tf'-Srl.ISER, Mwlir "" """-'"'·· N.B. URGENnv • • • F/Unic. Pn!! Zl·30. For tn. tcrvk!"'· 5U~mJ. P. Pennington FURNITURE CLEARANCE! Suzuki 13), i-" um l l u 1-t , n~J. profo~ ta· 1' ". '\I \l.L 1 I l' ~l 17, 1'n-llull. ttu JI p '~·1-..... ol ····~· !'·I, lumtliblf', 2{'(1 ¥.-tt """'(If\ ...... , 11.:er. uo!llUI • .t IW>ithh). ~ ' ' ,.., . ·n~ ' i!Mnt' SECURITY GUARD NEEDED 4092 1~::~~1• Or. -Exper, f/llffi<', Contact ~fr \'ou 11rr-.. , '\nner or Nev.1x111 Bf'ach de\'tlo!)('r must wtl enrltt. lm'ff!100' of ~I home tumllh~. Solu, \o\·e ieaU, dltl la.hit•, lantpg, dln1n.a Kt•, brtdroom 11e1... ma1trr&1E"9 & ho." 11pnng11, knlck·knndt1 & lot s nhlte~ HI am ro 6 pm \\'ed· t'ti,i. Sat 9 1'1111 10 3 pm. ""'' •• iv... .... • .. ·~" ·-· ~1~1! 1uhd. "ni;-111(', Kreftl j,1r 1 ... -.~ ~lt>N.TUISf!t, V•nui Trailer, Sat Ir Sun, 1525 PIAL'\'lllla: air IUJJP.,-Miof\ Sl-"'i•k1·ni. ~-., 1:...tll! QT .iltJ.\_ ,..11 ;1"<~l:'6l m&Jl,V t' JI'. I rn ~ ~ NB SpcAkers ulon1,• Ii.fl for $200 PL\ \'Fl'l. k11tt'H~ 7 ·,1,-iu, -8o -•~U:r. >Ai.tcr a k I GARAG o "·I Sacnlk1: t"\........_1hi ...... for 1nA.ll", 2 f•11"1Rir, l·lu1·k ills, Power 906 1 1 dd lbrd, Se<"UTily !>.."" . TWO FREE TICKETS Balboa Bay c iub Secretaries 10 • .., .-J ..... 11: t'rt., Sat. & ~·" -.,. t't!t1•11rnrn. ll 1•r, (.'Orn-~m Ju'" 11 28 , ~h ,......, Sl!\:'i. Tt>rnu1. 1!'33-0:llt '>\'/whirr narklrur~. ult :i,1,_,, , • .,..,....U ••• l~'i!'5. <lrt' h-. t•I•·. s-- ""' ' Y • "'.....i • """~ .)S7-59LJ •· ..,P."-"'' Nc.1C ~lu,kl" '" ~ #AN - _.,.,, w."""' ll•y .. N.B. Typists, SOUTHLAND SERVICE Sta. Snlet1man Home & Garden Show Clifford Ori\'t', llunt. fkh., ~E\\' rortk'r Jet, l'\'d rlorul, l7, Tn-llull, )Gj 11 p bo•,t llfh•r. l'lc~ rail Vic. I n d I an a po I I 11 & 1Xlll.I or nm\!<, to n11.t•ti ,fo mi rnf;i;: '" &d. h1•n'<' J ~ r ol't 'l··n:rui*r , \"nrt•ln Triulrr. ~'!;~~.>.), nltc·r G PM, BuJJhard. hAnt:l1»-: I.imp. Sl30. A.I.so r,o , nwlt'. "1.h· .. r 1n1nl&lllT'l' Poo· 111,111y ,. , 1 r :1 i; llll ldli: w'"°"' ....... f/tlnle e\·c shift. Ali.o'. Keypunch July 21111 it.ru Aue. '"' p/tJn1e t•ve & \•:knds, 1 \'r PBX 0 at fhe GAft..\GE Sale & ~lisc. Y11ntulm. l't•h!t C'ng. fld),,, <Ut. ulJ i.h!Jts. ~r,'\1\ "'f"""!on1C'!~•r. v .. o11·r ), k I ~ ncn1s. A150 cafe Njlllpincnt. ch:I!' ,\.: l"t'jUlator $100.I Il:i\rf.AHl.1':'.hlnrk-rnxt11~": •·qu1p1nt'lll. l11ddo.:r. i".1n1· 14' SKIBOAT Ille mech. cxpcr. Neal ap. prs ANAHEIM pear. Apply ntorns. NJ VOLT $1-IE ~TER IXDUSTRIES lnc l.fS E. 19th St., C.~l. Tiiurs .. 1-"rl., Sat. ~"'3 Tustin, 64--231 -i Yl'll !lid, s.w..u;u 0i· ii.It ~ 1.i..~•-1•lt·t: hon1, "'I' $32\Xl or ~IP.RC" ..,. ii•~r 0 1 .... L...,. l\"B. 1971 T1\YWlt-Dunn 6 p.LS,o;. 4 67':"r819T IW!!I off~r PJ1•aSt.-J-rt!I • • '" • . l:..J r r;,.n. Ne\l:port Blvd. c.~t. Instant Personnel CONVENTION ISERVlCE s ta t I 0 n: 2 Tempora.ry Service CENTER ANTIQUE Fl"l!nch single door Armolr. L o v f' I y 1ealloped btvelt'd m1rror door front. Shtlvt-a & dra...,·er on the ln~ide . ~1alchlng carved t-'rcnch douhl<' ~ and beveled marble top C'1U'\'ed nlatit 1>tand. Beauliful condition $-100. Thrf't' piet.'t' M"I . or \\ill price 5eparately. 4S1-81ti. PATIO SA.le _ Oicst $,21'). \1hl_ .. , n.lOOt'I ~I. E:'.•'("\nc SE.ARS Todt!l<'r ~vlni: Sc-! V.('C'k1.fE1.\1> ullcr 6 l'~J SJl·Zll,01 nr ~ Baby lhl.n:s. Rnd and Rt. .. ~1-Ciurli v./hcadlnl'~, t111l/1\t-s. ··~· lo v.i.~ t"\l'r tAk.-.. 11 ~. • , ~ salea1nen &. l graveyard ~ Campu.s Dr., Suite 106 SOO \\'. Kalella, Ana.hein1 1nnn. Top pay. rrin11:e Ne11.~rt Beach 5-'6-4i4l Pk'B.k' call 642-5678, e.\;'f. 314 Picture ff"llm\·S. ~ 14 J h(Jnl, !I.Um')' lO{l & hit-in ll'>\1\_\, &D-{f(,.I 1!161 ~I' f,\lf{l.17\J:.J{, J1k1• 11' SKJUO,\"r, ~lerc 7:1. -----kr, ''"I•-. -.-,1 •• -~". c~er. C11ll v.ttkda)~. I "\"Alli 1.-, ~" ,,1, .. <"·--0 v ,, " Bt.•ill .. u,.r. bl'nefJts, f'XP pl'f'I. Full or Equal Oppor. r~niployer Lo rhi.im your ricke11. !Non.h part tln\e. Appl)• at Sheol\ County toll fret number lg ............... • ... ~ ~""' 11 .:U)-~1. 6J;)..21(..l(J_ I ,..,. ' ~. l'llUil•• \>OJ.Ill~, I -~ •• ····u•, .• ' 531-"'"' o~ ........... """. Jewelry 815 inn .~ oltl. C'0ot-kr.r Oil\ . .'>10\,, \\1n.ti. n·fn~. f'll_"l1 .~~~~u~~~~·~~~~~~~'.I Station, 17th & Ji-,·lnf', ~•.B. 'J YNG n1en \\'/truck earlv :Hl}.t.."20.\ m o rn In g nc v. s Pa p (' ·r -=·c-=~·~~~·==~ "l>rnpe1·y J.'ahn c Mir" I ~l'•"lq honif', :~11.'\.-I ('ll.rvt'I t111d 1111rr1or. i<1l'l"f<(!, ST"<l("I\ ftE'J)l'L"flOX' 111111 ?l.i, li.'ti! tank, SIO.i':'..O e GENEROUS e 11.:.00 Yortl>.;, lo;\)~ 011 ' ;<•k tor p,ul "1-'11< ••I 11•1 2 SERVICE Stallon Attend P/tlnKl. Lile mcch exper: Apply l..agunn Chevron (..O.I So. C.oasl lhvy, laig. Bch. SERVICE S1ation Attendant 1''\IJI tln1e, Exp desired, Ap.. ply BU I Rash Chevron. 2-tml El Toro Hd. Laguna l~iJIJi. SERVlCE S!Rlion AUendcnt full or pa.11 tln1c, exp. neat: ~~~2;~ .. 8101~1 & racls. SCRAM-LETS t:!IO ,\ ~:J~l J.;,Hn\;l'r, :0:.\ 1 I~ l1u~1n.-:-..~ 1A1.-'lnc l~~r.iJ \"Ir Tr..-.pot'Ut\on • REWARD • ~ll-N S.11 & ~\In l(r1:u.!11n1 ll't11 and $uppliet 'L.J ~l -l~jj -------~·~~~! SOLIU U.ras.'i Jlrnti.1l·l1! & ~ ('J.,\S.'\lt~.-cf~<>->-, ~,,~ ... -.-.. -=~· I WAITRESS EXPER. full & p11Jme. ~lust 1X> O\'er ANSWERS 21. Xln't hours. Sur! & Sirloin, 5930 \\'.Coast 11 .... y., l..,n1pass, polli..ht'd hrnss rlouhl.N-nd+-..t Sa'') .,. tuil·· Camp.r1, Sele/ Rent 920 '.\lurHu t;ha1r, '.\lr\lt'l\11 lp t Ge I SS hO.'\I . !)1•p1•nd;1h l" -~'--'--'----1 1·u~lfl'ITI C'tll'\~ l'ho•st., tt, neril 0 1;r,,~nlf1t·11 1t• l.1i;.ht . F·iur..(,~·~ C'l)l'l!lt:H -1;e1n 1op fRENCJtP 1uvinci11I bedroom Sl'l: \ranity, stool For t'eturn Or .1ny in- APPIY in person, JOO E. 17lh St .. c.~t. SEWING 1nachine operators Ladies Sports\\'eRr. steadY ll"Ork & top pay. Apply 890 ~-. 18th, CM. NB. \\f AITRESSES -01·cr 11 e~perienrt'd preferred. AP: pl)'. dally 11:30 an1 or :l prn. l\r1 CRsa ~lexican Restaurant, 296 E. lTth St .. Costa ~I~. WAITRESSES, exper. Cofll!@ shop N.B. Call btv.-n-11 & 4., 5'1&-m3. ~~~ , -·--and double canopy bed 1\1th lotmaUon leadinl to 1·eturn -....,,....., -Phony -.___ · f of 0 gold four ''·"•I ,1.,, .• ,. Jntt!.nt -STl~'K ~.... spnngs atK mr.tln'ss .. • Benjamin t~rankiln ..,,TOie: SQ. 6" la.JI "'alnul bookca.sc pin, approx. :.! lnclll'Ji 1n ''In thrtt days, guests, like -comnlOde uni!, custon1ized dla1neftt, ...,;th J {' w" I e d fish, begin to STINK,.. lor en1ertainmtnt Ct'nlf'r ho~shoe in «'lll{'r: alMi, $5.3. Pair of antique iron gold locket 111·as ui1 1·h11in1. l"irvate Pa.rty -MUST d('('Ol'l:llor l.i pc chairs $1j. appl"OX. the 11.izr. of a nlC'k••l, SELL! · Seoul old oak. eRch. ~5 inscribed lu !».•r11H, fl.t\ Ina h 0 g a II y • \\' R I n u t r """''-.,"""""-~~~~-~ I Theise are dt>Cpl)' fr('IL~ur't'd furniture, also l'lockli, ru~. OLD fashion t\\in beds. 2 fa1nl!y men1<'ntos & tht> ic,s" ~furphy bed, decorato r frames \\ilh head & foot · ls irreplal'eablC'. PLEA.SE. items & lots 1nore! ! 12ffi S. board. l St"l of tv.·in spring~ PLr:.ASE help if ynu hn,·e +;7,·,_:ll/'.r.! t>I'(•• TALJ..:1:-.r;r..: \ laton p I J11t~•:1nl 11<1\\t•r. SIU!IO nr 1·,u111• r. 11111'1\\~ lll'&r root labll" hj!hL. l~l\o•ly 1 \our~, t.1t~(·'-' hrautlfull0)\ :1:~dt• \l!>l' It•!' d•"'kRt:1•, b111111•"1' H 11. In\\· lllil"R!Jf' Cll!llu1n 111ad.-lora.~ dnul-11•· i v. hll lk>-t:-Sli~•. Ca l J ~11~ __ · .-.nr u\\/1rr ~~100. Xlnl l"llfl· shndc pcll'.I/ ltth)e IL'l:IUl'l'. J f.+l-{.001. :.11' ('.\llA\'Fl.l.F. v.·/rah111. ·h~l. :H~7 ,,..,-,,---I n1•>nths old. Sttcr1f l1~· lur fi.t\H\=Pr k ,1 $1 ,j(). I 0 '.\h•1'-"1'Ui°""1' 11 ,11lo•1', \\'I-: ~·H ,(: R1•11\ Cittn pt.'n;:. hr1lt prlt'<'. S.100. ,L£M4.1li I raNilts ~.,11 f'"'-" · ta . .\. 1u1!~J. full 1i~\1·r-., ~k1 ••r s.1111• r~·;1I 1{1.-... 1 11<'nl11 uu:c ru:-Bt.:IL'r SI)<'<'\] Qt~ • -~;T.oi • h}ut• l\'t\h'I' rii;lui:t:. lik<' II<"\\~ l\t'(•k' :o..1~~'iA C'Al\tl~l-~I: wastwr & Nori:i· dryer $\!ill, S.:filJO Uon 1-fil.1-1 101 F\a~t·:o. ,, ~Jti ll&l'l:or, 0.1 ·:A" Cl1cvy ll11: t·u~. tit·sf l'U),h 'Cats 852 ~7~1 ____ 6-16-:'100.. I _otrt'I'. !li:\Z.~. J'l:'.:asJ,\.\' kirri·n~ f"l'A n-..: 28 FT GRANDY '71 Tn."o~P~Ic~-.~"~"71-•• ~.~,~,..,-.,~6. TELEPHONE SALES \VIG salesgirls & \\'ii styli!n Perrnanent or pai1. !inie Large \\ig Co. needs key 11'0rlc, tnornirms & ev~. peopl<'. Cal 966--Ha;J Ask for .... Connie B. h s 00< 789 & mattress. 51.11 Tasinan I f · ire , .A . .,,,.,,...1 ,.._ f . any n 01inahon -&12-:i.~'.} ~=~"'-'~~7''-o---, I u1., I-unt1ngton Bea c h , E\·cs. & 11'l'<'kends. ',1:\ J.'.nr. Br1111nnil'H , 1."0ntpl. 1j ft,1111 l·l111n1p1oi1.· i;rr. 1·h. & -'1ovrTii f1111ht•n'na11. :.: l 'hry~. o.:h~'t '>\fltt•r, l•Vt'n ri111~. 11·f"J.rok of \'r" up In lL'l.lt•, 11d. fn'. (·h. ail!/ \'nt ol Y•~•r' l'H,i.:.~. f 11JJ.v •'<'IU!/l, fvr fl,h· U:..t'tl l\o,•lc:·~ ~~I SIJOO nu, CLOSING o u 1-0 r i en tR I after 5 & ""eek-t>nd s, Poreelians, Bn.m.t~s. Jad<'. 897-8174. Clocks, e1c. Before arrival of ne111 shlpm<'nl. Sat/Sun, Yankee Peddler, 2 I 3 ·I Newport Bl\'CJ., Costa !\fesa, OIZ-;m\ $100. Dill 3:!'"~ ~ )1.111. I anc1·~1t1n1. S\00 & Ull, i\l~o l~i;:. 1' .. ). ~~·1~ ,Undj;l', ~11.~. ~~"ll In~ $6!.t:i .• L6-.17·17 Miscelleneous 818 '* 8-11-6.ill * stud s;:ri.ie.-a\'1t\ll'lh!~'. I l\OOC' ~,J.2S,'!9 or 495-013ti .. A,\JPF.ll Sllf'lt ftti< S' bed, Guar. \\"fl8CW & con1n1. For 1----------dct11.i1:11 cal!: BEAUT. Formal dining 1·1n set, !able, 6 chairs. 2 pu!J-up chairs, 10xl5 lite green crptng. !\lodcm s 1n o k t'tl glsu dining ~f. balhroon1 spe.ce Sl\\'t'I'. Corner hed set, 6-1·1-liZI ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. • ~f!-'..~liO • 1~· \\'JlAR0tibt'r,:IH,<c, 4:; hp hk~ n1•w, S17::... , LA TIMES 540-0001 Telephone Ans. Service PART timt', 1ull time aJI llhifts. E>.:peril'llC'Cd 'pre. ferT'ed. \\llU tl'ain. 6-l;).T;i65 TEST Technician to tes! trouble shoot & calibrate commercial e I e c t r on i c systems. AA drgree plus 2 yrs l'f"lated exp required. Oise Instruments, 102 Ea11t Baker, C.'.\1. 919-5300 Equal Opportunity Employer. TJR~ sales & servll'(', Snlke & Allgn1nent serv ltt. Full or part time. Salarv Plus comm Issi on. Cail &«-&:m, Coast Auto SC'rvicc Center. TYPIST for Ne1\"1X>rt Center CPA ofc. Pi·ior finatl· clallatatistical typing ex\)("r desired. Salary op rn. &4"'-6156. \\'110 WANTS TO \\'ORK? DRIVE A CAB! CHOOSE your hours, \Vflrk for yourself, be your O\Vll boss. !\ten or \\'Omen. Can be slightly handicapped. Ne a t-<::Jcan Appearancf:>. \"ts. retired. ;\ge 25 lo 10. Supplement your incomC'. Dri\'e a cab 6 hrs or more a day. Apply in pel'50n, )'ell.:i11· Cab Co., iS6 E. 16th St .. Costa ~lesr.. \\'0:0.lAN, !ull lime, cashier & rc1xu1s girl. Some e:<p. nee. !\1usl bE' over 21. Con· tact !\Ir. Fleischer c 10 ll!X'lschers. South Coast Plaza, Cost.a !\lesa. \VO:'llfu~ \\'llllfed li\'C·in, care fo r el d erl y lady . References. Ca.!! 847-#U. 40 )'RS. or over, female, no exper. necess. Avail. varied hrs. & days. Take & gi\·e ..,,·ork assignn1ents by pho~. l\lin. wage. No sales. N.B. Cal! anytln1c, fA2-9'»i. 1 .\lagniliet'nt Antique Span. ish hi back chuini. hand t:IU'\"cd, £x1"t'l l'Otld. $100 ea. Cati C\'E'1J, -04·2429. SPINET DESK niakt> offer 979-«Mi7 BO\\' front chl'st of d:ra11'1.TS, rla.\\' f001 $400. \1anity chair, cla..,,· fcct S2.'i &-12-&184. T .DRESSER, 2 endsJs, Chest, drn·s. h\.J. 1>/111.J.lt. SJ 25. Grundlg s t e r <' o . records Ip /tape, S..'15. Sarouk Runner J.: crpt. $100. ........ OlD lashion l\\'in beds. 2 frames 1\·ith ht'ad & foot. *AUCTION* FRIDAY 1 PM JULY 27TH fk..ti'OOl11 Sct~. Uinl'il~"I. c.i1ina Cahinet, C n f f<' c Tables, Di\•an.•. O I f it· r 1Jc11ks, Cvlor T\''~. Con;;ole Str.rros, Stereo Con1]\IJ111•nt~. }{efrigen:1IOl"ll, \V a s h c 1· s , l>T)-cn: & '.\tUClf f\IOHE~ ~ WINDY'S AUCTION Appli•nces 802 hoard. 1 set of '"in !i.prin~s COi\tE BP.O\VSE AH()t;.'\D ~~--------' & ma\\rcss. 5ljl Ta!>;nan :li75': ;-,;, '<I purl Clvd, F"REIGllT DAIHAGED Dr., l luntlnglon Be a <' h · Ut>hlnd T !.'l)''li Bldg. '.\In!!'~. f'UX}R k \\',\REHOUSE after 5 & 1veeknrls, 897-817•1. ("u.~ta '.l.te~a * GIQ.~G CLEARANCE 6' gold/avoeado couch, looi-c I"'"''"'""'"''"'""'"''"''"'" r\V as h c I's , d ry C' r !i., cushions, good coo:cti1Jction, * refrigerators, f r e c z c I's , 3 mos. old, asking Sia. AUCTION * vacu u ms , T V ' s , Fomllca coffee tnblr. and lawnmowet:'S & carpet. slep enrl table, v.llOd grain Reducllon to SIOO. finish $12 for both. 963-21~7 Sears, Roebuck & Con\pany I S . . Ad..'l.ms al ~la&oo!la 01 ~LI•"?, Apt. Li\' 1111 1-funtington Beach 9&2-7iSl funuture, 21 .RCA ~lor K~f\!ORE auto '>\'aR!;er SG;i. ~faytag auto "-«Uher S.IO. Norge gas dryer, $.10. Jo"ree delivery/guar. S.17-Slli or s.l&-86i1. Fine Fum tture & Applinnces Auctioo! l''rlday. 7:30 p.n1. Windy's Auction Barn 20'ffi1 ~ Ne1.1'J)OI1, C)I &'6-Sri&; Behind Tony's Bldg ~rat'I. PRIVATt: pnrty mu -"' t sacrifice our per90na/ rol· lection of 14 Japlin('5(' \\'00t.! Blocked Print~ by th'-' famous artist "Hiro11.hi:;:e." Priced very rca!Ona.bl\·. Phon<' 89+-2982. 6182 Syd1Jt..'Y Or., 11.B. M iscellaneous I ... * • lll~IAl.i\Yf,\N i-;11. :'lh·rcury ou!bonn:t. ('\t'v. t."n\I 6·16-1'Cl l Wanted 820 ll'nll, sllO\\' Jtuck. Si5 t p. 111ar1 "'11! rontrul•. ur,. G~::\1 Top Shell tor ""'ltk> ho:o.: ----------~lso ~Turi !W'~·ice. 541-~_:_ Jackt>l!i, ti!'~ t'.:1>lllll."llUdll:rs ~1;kup S17!. ('1tll nner SPP.1, \\'ANTE:D: f,('(l\\'Ood lll'n-lll~TAL.A\'A:-0 KITIF.:NS _T~~~29-t:1, .!'1--02f» i·lK's. indoor f o u n r a u1, Hf:.\9J\'AUL~:! ·~o Lr UC):.ION \\lwJ,•r 4-0 -~n~-"·n"""~RA~~~Cl~f~l~:ft-o--~-,.-1-11 J .. '\tg\', lat't' clo(·k. ~~1 1 I JOh 1 RI l"'me for p('l rabhll, (',.\I. Call :-\11411·,-, 1p nlihn. 1> ("('. s!ar1. lop. al•k landnu w/Atidln; .-~l\"~ 1r.1llrr. li-Oo."11:1 .. 1n1I. Sl 1 1~. >A1ndows. Stl.). 71 I: X.16-3C6U .hr .... Oogt 854 536-6%'2 or !16:.!-31!'1. C I B l~-'-"-"''-'= Office. Furniture/ I e PUPPY :-0 --51~ \"Ir 0 .,.. 1 ye et, kts. WORLD e ' ''0 < "1 ' tn..tt>r, S t 925 Equip. R24 1 .. , •• 1.... Bull 11{'\1· 3:io h1-1)('1'f. o•n.;. big __ <_oo __ ._,. ____ -'.c;.;; ..., '''" 1n1x, rhihua-\lrre o/L) fa.~! $6500 c:ish EXEC S\l'\'I i-hrs $15/S2:l. I h~as. A1n •. •nt'Rll 1':...Xuno ~12-7560 ' ' ' 1~.10 11.\Rf.~:x u" v Id "0 n s.r,_. chr.s $.~ 24, l) .. i:k~ 1spiv.), l''it Bulla, T-C'up • • . Spr1r·11,11•r 16 r.t11r V.'llN'l, 6" S-?0/90. P it'rce Ent. 867 \\' 19 I PnnOl•'<I, c;rf'Ell f)RJIC', liull 16. _Gl.A."PAR \\'Ill~ IJ hp. t"Xl('llflt'd lm11t t'nd, Slllli) C:\1 &l2-3-KIS. ·r •. 11,,.1, t~o.·kai••' I o o l-~11nn1dl' <iron. l n RI n c l:i11r. x.lrll C'01KI. SISlll. or /!>f!~r POSTAGE m<'l('r marhinc :'llTXJ·:n PtJP~:: Stud ~·r· nct-ds v.urk. $00l. '>lier. Cnll nft<'r 7:30 <'Ve,,, O>a.'le l, du.pl icat'ion n1aelnnc. \'l«e J\l~f Br1<t..-.,:ls. OPt::N &JG-ffliS 49'!-8289, lt-l-1-!IOC>O ~:\'f':;.;: 5.~l-001i. Hi' l;lOAT _:i;, hµ. John.~n. BICYCLE SALE =p-1,-.-.-,/-0=,-9-,-.-.--~82~6 SNOWBALLS Rlt-m ~it lluik -Ult SE\\' l(l ~Pl-:EO IT1\IJIA.i\" , p I f ~ ,.._ ll"'dller, $450. 5'1!Hol174 HICYCL!'S m ~ "-h ., are Jrt'( "111 U\.·rman · ...... JJ. ·~:sc Free Organ Lessons ~phC'rd. 11 Pure Samoyf'd 2:f CABIN, on ttailf'r, sl~ 3. H!l')'l'lt~. 800 f: lialho1t 6 v.'ks okl. ,\ baryain at $10 Olni.•tte, clean, l'\lllS \\'ell, Bh·d., 6i:>.7W. Authocizcd f.'fl.. 673-8'2$. Sl'l'!Jj, 893-'.l>lt NISHIKJ 1ii•11lrr, As Long As You Llktl LJ::AVING for l11t'>\'1'li. muo;t Ut:Atrr. lS' Trojan, lift.hp, 1.971 i:.O \'A~1 AllA, 1-:\:. Non·p!nyers k pl:ty<'11i 1\'<'I · 5ell. Priced l't'du('('(I •I Silky lnboard \'-8 .. fa.<i.I, StZ!"ta. 1)11,11."1011 t'h:tmbcr, 2l" F/9.'. ron1e to &1'£'n1\ ·ruesday Terrier Pups. 831-911'! or :HS--O'l23 or &13-4375 n\llll~'. 1na11y f'Xlra.s J:Ot'.)11 night at 7:30 P'.\1. "'e '>\&Ill \ (;.1~178 '&I F"..C Trihull Jotuu1on f/0 <ll!°t h1k1'. ,\~k ,or J)on, day5 C'\'t"l)'Ci/l(' 10 l<'<ll'11 er; J?I&.\' ;--lf'G7ll 1 .. -. -,,1 Ii 1-1 ·k \"-S O'.\fC ~n bow full fi.11-6~. f'11:. !"~'8--0TM II al . . .~ · 11. nun1 . , al • ~.~ ---,,.-=---the . organ? ;\ llHllcrl s nia.o;k fl•nia!t• AKC . .\/us! ('()\•ers $3.'iOO. 61}..~ 'ii '• UI\\\'. 125. Nf.">~' MITii', ~umi~~· ri •1 ln ·h .,.. ~~1an\p. biood line. $100. 18' TRlllUU., fiberglrw. 100 u,·res. bftn1, ,o;hlft \\'Ork, pfp om e l'' • { ai,.r. 61.>-1~ hp Johnson, lrlr, top rond. endc'n, T It ~I cnit. lo plJ>C' Phone 642-2851 \FGJ1 \'.'i A''C ho szz:-,o 492-3024 !'uptr clcun. u:,o, 714· COAST MUSIC I' '· P"P· 0 • ' '" • • i;;i.;-iz:; · \\UOJll'd. e'<eelle111 {l('di,i:ret>. 1.1' TROPllY 3J II J> . ,, • F'RElGllT Damage Sa.le, washers. dryers, refrigs, nev.· \\'aJTanty. P.. e b I t \\'ashers, & dryers fi'Om $39.971, 56-0780. TV. lan1ps, chairs, rl'fng., small appliances, m i s c . items. lliO Rutland Rel, Apt 5, NB. &12-5131 or 646-j.116. NE\V Simmons 60" k1Yewat hide-a·becl. Beauty· rest mattress. Yello1\' & bro\l'TI Herculon fabric \\'/ extra side pllloo"S. 6+.J-5013 alt.6. :'\£'\\"port Hl\'d. Ut 1-larbor I \\'111 sacr1fl('(', Te rm ~ Evt>rtnKIC' f:'ll"("lric. FXlrn \\0:0.1,\N S :> JO?ff & ~fan's 1/J Co.~1a ~1csa availah1t" fl.Yi-42-K> ~harp l:>'D J'h(lllt" Glli-6298 11:pd Blke1 '>\1111 child'• ¥eatJO . STEREO: l\E\~ J9i:: Gar-I •oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.., .... iiiiiiii• [ . . . . . . . !\'E\\'! llufty'1. SIOO. fol' rard rnodt'I, full s i z<' ORGAN SALE 1 :'llAI~l:. l>or..Ue. ""'111 · I yr Bo•ts, R.ent/Chart'r 908 bi1th. 9M-50iil 1utntable, A:\t ~·'.\! i\IP.'i: old, 2 f<'m. blk to~ 2 n10 '!l ;---;c,.---,---,-,~-\\'u rlill('r 1-'aciQTY AuthoNed 1 hlk 111al(', '.\ nXl'S. 646--0112: \\'E llJ't' \'RC'Rtionuu;: In '.\~ITT !it-11 deS<'rt b i kt', For •n ad in Call Mary Bet~ Woman•t World 642-5678, •••. 330 \\'ANT.t1J-LEF'T I! I XG E. Re(rigJlree~r or Coldspot that convena. To SlOO. 592-254&. 2 DOOR Revco b I t in rctrig/Creer.er combination. Good cond. $100. 642-1012 days eves 646-6593 LRG. v.'hite Iron pedestal lahk?, Forn1k'a ! op 11·/j highback chn;. Also. v.·ht lta1. Prov. l>r St>I, i-·orntlca 1op. 673-7685. \VALNlIT end tbl!I, lamps & coffee tbl, rattan couch & round roffee tbl. ClrJ'g vani· ty 1bl, Emerson stereo. 833-1998. receiver, 1 suspcnskin sprl\k· Sale on man.v n\odcls. Other All --1,1,.,..,.., \ ttmlltrl YiJ l'tlX XI n, <'I'S. Sacririce S9a. ?.take into ;,, .I',.,_ u~•· Ne.,.,-port & ...,·ould lik<" lo ' • · • Quad system for $30 lllQ1•e. brands also on sale, priced ::.'7. BER."'<lARD PUPS find a Powt>r boat 21·-~· 10 ~nl~ t'Ond. &.1 offer, Tenns. 893-0501 hT>m S'.295. 6 v.·ks. shot.\, ST5. rent tron1 11ri ply fro1n Aui;: .• · !T.',-1·-"-,,,,-..-:=--- Fits Ughtly ! • ·" . ' ' • • F"R J G J DA I RE Auto di s h v.·ashcr, coppenone, \VROUGHT ll'On dining table, built·ln. Good Condition $25. 6 ntatchg chrs, fabri c !J6S-8238 cushions, 16" leaf, $250. 12.:, CU. FT. FTigidalre I~-----~----~~ R1.·frigft'reezer . 1\' hi I e, Gar•ge S.le 812 frost tree SSO. ~2-0012 --"'-------- REC 0 ND . APPLIA.\'CES 'i!~.I I Delivered -guar. Dunlap',s e'i::l 1815 Nev•pon, C~t 54&-7780 iJ Rent W•shen/Dryers • $2. \\'k. Full maint. ·~1m • ' FREE pickup N!lr\g running /: or no & appliances, scrap melal. Call 61.>-5258. J>ORTABLE ~laytag dl')'f'r, aJmost ne"" 552--0380. elec. s;:-;. ---------1 Building M•feri•I• I06 • Surplus. Building AIATERIAL · JOOO's Of NEW ITE'.\!S! Doors, lumber. ply- 1l"ll0d, o.Jum sheeling, mold· Ing, \\'i11d0\\'S, etc. '. BUILDERS SURPLUS 2406 So. Main St., S.A. Truly ''Snooty'' Garage Salt Antiques Only I Sf'!ltng pii,·ate act."!ll11ulation P.ound oolid oak pedcsra.I tahle v.·12 leaves • 4 oak bentv.-ood chairs. anfiq. sol.id 11aJnut din. table \v/pad, v.-ashstand 11·1marbl.e top. maplt> !adderback chair w/ original l·aning, oak dresser, satin :;lass vase, "under· laktt" occupatlonaJ sha\ing 1nug, coffee grinder, n1any prt'li of fine glass & ehina loo nwn<'l'OU.S to mpntion, antiq. maple dough mixing bo...,•J, old silve r &. goid coin.q. NO J UNK WHAT&:>EVER! Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun .. July ~h ttiru 2ftth. Phone 1:61·29!:!2. 6182 Sydney Dr. Huntington Beach Wt!llichs Music City Call 5.16-7879 11-25. Ple11se c11ll R11ger, 70 CI. l "w'J 11onda. gootl SACRIFICE ,.._ Pl .,_.,, ,..,,.,,. 21.1; 782-6662 during day. ('(Jflfl., lo n11, n1u1t aell, $350. A P South ...... ast ai.a ....--..u lilALi..:; Doberman pups, Ali:C 113: 61()..2419 eves. f' 1 r iH. 4S.' =141 •~1791 anas:mic stereo tape re-I ~~~'"'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"'!!!!"' l'l'g. Chainpion "lock, T ""' ~ · ' L'OT'dcr ""'!!h ~~.utomalic1 r:,-ORGAN Kimball No. 190, * 646-2311 • CHARTER 57' KETCH ,10°v"'1"..1. -'erse. _,pe..,.el'3, tcau-brand ne\I'. Sl.295 or ~t of· ''TIOGA" · •~ • n11u1t !N!ll 1iS Phones. lnis of lo-... ,1 •-. -,0, 1 ,9 U,,c_::'llSJ.I UNDS. n1iniaru1v, l'riiunpl< '.'"'. A.,,,;.1 • ron" .~~ 0 fer . .,.ji-:>.J01, eves on Y u-. A ~·c ho d hi k & c I • Of • .., .-,.._.. " otter. rn41 R-16-549-1. ,... • s ts, re ; ac onsta .:.: fMot'<' l!iland S>.10 i:>r offer 64• 2568 pin. Ian . .)..'J.'l-6771 Cruising. X!n1 rtlf1"". i)aiJy ~\.)i-:{.·_1;7 ' J-or OtDER l'tfahog 9 pc. dining JIA){?.10NO T-400.fhY!hn\ & U f'.AGL~:. ;i 1110. old rcnihlt•. or \4/PC'kl)'. Chet .Se li~bury "t'A~f\l/•\ llll tin b'k In m1 set, curved ~las;; in Leslie. like ne11·,~Mcrilicc, All shots. A.KC Rr.glstl'r<'d II. 6T~l nr Tt0ga, Bux f •1 .;. r 1 e x f China close!, also older 4%-6-15.1 S.50. S.l·l-~I? 316, BHlboa fsland. or Jt~n,~:~,~,2,lake otfer. mahog Spinet piano . I=~==""=="'"'~""'--~~· 5-IS-3757 523 Tustin A\•e., GULBRANSEN Spinet Organ * ?lllniatu~ &hnauzrr * ll'G' LlJXUR"t' ,-~c~t. Duill l ~-,, \"\\f\fl• ••• •fX I ' N.B. & Bench. llf'aut cab~. Sturl Sen•itt fnr thl' Amenl·a !'; <'Ufi. · ·~ ' · ' " J., ,. , o eves: &12-19-31 ' Gw.4390 O'>mp. saff>ty l'QUJP, ""'Hfrr mtle~,S;:", S700. call 645--0315 ~lcLi\.i\'.E ~·rt 0 NT +I ·T~V~R~d~. --H~'~F-. ---skt!ng, 5 state nn.'I v.• full or fi.12-968-c'=--,---,..-= THROW • I 10, I I, * * AKC Yorkshire Terrier , • LA\\'N ~lO"'ER $IOO. Stereo 836 Puppi<'!';. Stud sen.• &\'all. ba1hs. color TV elc. :!l:l: YA~l1\lfA 250, xln1 cond, 7!Xll e 53fr3&S5 e ----------Sl9-3.).ll or ;i:~4--00lfi 1135-?l'.H or 114: 35i-<&13 aft nH, U'JO. SACRIFICE 6 pm * 6.J&-1112 • \\'ROUGHT Iron fum, blr.k marble lop, 2 ~lass tops, Lady's diant ~·atch & ring. 6'73-37i1 1'\\'0 Pek·a·pot;r:.I need home, havr t'.l.·in cu.nopy IK'fls1•1. stc1'\.'0, blkr.s, misc ilcn1 •. CaJI -193-l+tl. MET AL "'ardrobe c I o s e t Sl5 .. '>\'orkbench Si , Ura.,.·rred cabinet S :; . 962-0j;jl SH,\\\ILS, capes h an cl ('l'Qcbcfed lo 01'\'JC'r. ~12 1-hLmil!on, C.~I. IN111Jsit rt'· qulred. .\ Panasonic sierro tape rC'-~!;~~1:;-\1 h~P5·1 11:KC2 Boats, S1;il 909 J!r.I) lfONOA Cl 3,j() In :\fi. C1Jrd<'r 11·i1h auto1natic !'<'· ho 2 ~ O"'lfl Cnnd. R '>:"• -or best \'Cl'SC. Llses ,\mpex 7•2 s v.·. Pf'IS. 9Ci l HOBIE 16, l yr ol•I. Tan~. & offrr. 1~li9l Afl<'r 5. . reel• and tapes, includes 3 Horstt 856 Gold hull,. \\'hill': yclln""' ·JuNJ-_;·;.~ Tri~nnphTnd"nr. 111XX"fl11, 2 stt>rro speaker~. HORSE SHOEING \C-'(1 parwlle<l AA.ti!!. 110 j ~p>I, •I!•<' hk• under 2 001 hearlphonrs J.) pre-r<'t'tlrded 1 Shud!IW!' lrir. Du~. trapt•1.t• rni, s1:lfl. a.1; •. 1'17-ro ' taJk"s and hlank rN'ls . tlll .I< lrlmnting. Call Gt.'·S29l ,\·Taylor M>als. Sail covrr. . • . --,..-~·=---\ rquipn1ent ls hrarxl ne..,,·. 1\ft G. CO!!! S2.l00 fll!\I", asking 72 K;\\\A<;AJ(J JOO, xlut A"idng SZi5. or niakc ofter. T 11 on o u c.; H BR f: D in St.7l0 <ir tJtff'1". Xlnt sh11pr. ronrl. ~1~~ ~ll. S6:iO or besl fi1 •11 ~-lli-5494. h"dinlng, 2 year old r·111y, :>1;~~0C1 aft 6 or j.IG-4195 .~ffrr .. fi.P-tl~«..,,llo~h-c-,---.,,~1 --~ial climber, ha\'e ~11 10 Dall). i,O JlllL."fACO. ~lalador l\fK * Summer Special * M!ll ·193-.1.175 ask !or Krn. S,\BQT no . j5JJ. Xlnt OJnd . 3, lo mi !I. $-1.j{) or make ol-$8Rl~5b"uil21·1~}eolrur2•S}Cuobolor BAY Gelding II ycer11 old, f11U racing rht. 2 sail~. ho~t fer. R93;196 alt 5pm. -qlr/TB. Lni:;llsl1 or \\'ri;fPn1 lit ~~flt <;O\•er.s. S -1 2 J · • 00 HONOA *' * 2 YF.,\R \\'ARRANTY intcnncdi11te rir[('r G41-1Zll _G~fi-l.liO ~r. $Z:-I(). lo m!IP.&1r., lnslallati-011 1\t·a.!111li!e -,-. , , . , -HOBIE ("111 1 t, 2 mo nJ1I, ,J.J•-'l'ilifl •. Ri('(•'" Television SE'rvirr. NIGHT fl!l?~-S FHO~t,h Tll; '.\lusl !'('II in11nt'tl. 4!\.l-l3&1 '71 K,\\\ASAKJ 100 ,., Mon thru Sat 11).5 114 : 546·1032 !\nJSfsell.unractit·""opt·n& form<'rly ~lf>Sa !"or1h Ccnti'r 8 Pl\I 1 UJ..5'. &. Jol.f. B\ 6-\2 1V1JQ k 1 C 1 11,_ 11,.r. · • .\:nt GARAGE Sale, }'riday l to :J c!os1.'d sign on br. slain 1 Bl k S f B k -.... ~ .. I \Pr~r '197 2910 ur .... "' a~ ~>r ar rorw 1 ,.,,1 ,,.,, C.m.r •• & '"I··~ 8 ood • I 1 c , o a ·er :>'IU-l)IJ(J<. , • , -. Hlitgs ('IJ!I 0--f>?J5 p.m., ~ wuay a.m. to \\' . 1'~" ))' 9" &f2·2.J26 open 9-J 16 day:-1 live stock 858 --.. '~ , ., ~=-""=~-Equipment 801 noon. Unusual Items. comer pm. • .. '.\l.\P.I;..;F.J • .,I. 6H, Ilbrr"J:"la.~~ '71 Honda CL 350 1 --~~-------of Calalina and An'o)'O PACKARD Bell. 21 color ~ . . . . . hull. driSC"I, tun ~ls & :;n. NIKON I 135 3 Sf Chico, Laguna Be a ch . TABLE, chairs, beds, 1V, T\', rt>mote cntl, folding BfEGl1'="'b'1 1.tS hdo flit', .}',.,h ul('(I c Je e 1 r n n Jc·". Pac.ific _ _!• ~'«1 2 f'lr 536451!7 1 , I 1001 f,A6a13~ l.t1' 9 69~_-, Let Ulls old .... -orld quilt "\{ 0 f capture you 11ith its C'harm. StzES lOYl-22 " Save your favorite . .9Cl'Bpl and turn them Into lhlS p&.tch f __ · 1lf Mt .... 11fc.,,.-r'....,. quill beauty. Pa.tit>!'" '1031: "'I Ea s y-lo-fo\lo'lv dll'l'Ction.s, yard~s. arrangement The LIGHTEST OF" J.,T for a pl1n L'l'SS shape that nAn>S Into soft Jileals l~]O'>\' • the hipllm. Tab derall Rdds ~· one--sklerl tntt>MHt I'> l'Ollar. " • Pfinted Pullem 9009: lialf !' Slzeis 10~2. 121.;, 14',J. 16,fi:, 1, 181Ar\ ~~. 2Jl~. Si1.e 1•11 ~ fbust 37J take• 2%. y(ls. ti--in. s£v~·r1\'r; CF.NTS (or each pattern -add 25 C'f'nt• for each p:ittrrn lor AIT ~la.II and Special Handl· lmr:: otherwille thlrd-<'iaAS del lW:ey v. UI ta.kt Lhrff weeks or more. Send 10 MWn )tut.In, the DAD..Y PILOT, 442. Pattern Dept, 2.12 Wflit 18th St., New York. N.Y. 10011. Prlnl ?\A'l.E. ADDRf'.88 "-'llh 'UP, SIZE and STYLE NUMJ)Dl. SEE MORE Q ulck FQ.hlona and cllOOl'I! one ttem ~ l'rom our llf(.SUmmft' CataJoA:. All ! Only !'iOc. INSTANT SEWING BOOK .,_ tGda.y, wear lcrrnon'OW. ft, JNSTANT l"AS tl l ON BOOK • ff•1r11trfd1 o f luhlon l>.U. rt. Any dl)' 11 the BEST DA\' lO l'\1n an ad! 0on•1 cklay. , .coll ...... 642-(,673, charts given, single, double size. SE\lt:NTV·Ylft; CE!\"TS for each patlern -add 25 cents for each pattern lor Air Mall and Special HaMI· lng; otherwise third-dass delivery will take thret v.·t>Cks or more-. Send to Alice Brooks. the DAJLY PILOT. 105. Needlecraft Ikpt .. Bo'.'t 16.1, Old Chelsea Station. New York, N.Y. IOOU. Print Name. A.ddrets, 7Jp, Patlttlll Numbor. NEE DLECRAFT '72! crochE'1. knll, etc. Free dlteC'Uonl, SOc. ln11la•t Macrame Boot. Balfe, fancy knolJI, pet. lt:nts. Sl.00. IMla•I Cr«bet Boot - Learn hy plctunos! Pat· tttn1. Sl.00. CCJmplete lltflfaJd Gift BcMl.t -""'" -lllO ail\s -fl.CO. CcimpSete Afrtau Boot • t\.00. II Jlf/f lltr( Rt~• • 50c. Bew* nl IS l'rtlfl Al1hanL !Cl<. 011111 '"'ol. 1 -16 f1!1ltcrns. !'I~ W11"4•t11n 't11IU RtMlk t .. oo.. Q11Uf,. t•w Tnda1'11 JJ t'l.ac • ~ beauliful pet\lms. 5Qc.: t $120 ~~. 14fm, s 'oo' Portable T\', Old doors. col· ehesf, 00.l>y c 10 ' he'· firs, J*rf ll'Ork'g cond $200. or s!a I tty, ef>Cnw'l lh!Y· F.nt<'l'prl"ll'" fi l'>-i'l:\O l!J'iO llONOA :i:..n SL. XL.~T 2!\m;,, J~m, ...,;~, XJ\ .I lector's items, SI u I fed playpen. ~ .... ing, mo r" . fi1:!--0.l38. & sa.fencS!l. In. ndln5:(. $1.10 --~--, -. --; ---1 COSD. J,n..,,· n11lr.1ce. ' .J • •L<N· · n Cl . . h 0 673-1071 . , Phooi1e 5'1a-11Jl Ask fl'/r Sat! boat, 12 l\.-.ralh•. C~ll ,,,..., .,,,.... 6-B-1842 1lllI'll \I'll ttoman, End Zl'..;.."ITll ronsoh• color T\'. IU!•·lenc r-a~I. A·l •">l1thl)l}11. 1 --~--c-~~~~-1 16 m1 le uf -II Tables, Corlee table. Beautilul ORIGINAL l\TAfO CIU'OlllCX"(Jl<lr z:r·. Beautiful I ··~. -.-.•. ""·'·' 1·71 YA.\IAJfA Titt'f' Erw:lu"1 ., ... , mov eq p, uu ro 5 G painting -Bikini Gtrl -Best nd \ I" """'-'"-· -.,., ,....,,, 'I 1 "-It t I ••~ of D.MOrled film, color, aJI HANNY'S ~IO'lLVG S.\LE offer this \\l'<'k only _ ct.> · )TO'" ~.,.,,.,..-,;.,1-1 COLLl~tHI.\ ~1-:-p,.. r k 1 11 ~ ", u11 ,._. · .1nv m ... 1,-1. sound, aft 6, fH6.-0395 Old things, new things, gocd 979-1S3S or 614-83.~ POR Sale • Sll'rro ron::iole· t lolls Md 11· * J dic!K'I pt.'<i•'l"l;i\ steerlnf.!, 9 _Xlnt amrf. &t:Z.-7118 e\'t11, Furniture 810 things & junk. Oak table & 6 i\f:iplr. · A~llf.~:'>I radio, Marinef.qYipmtnt lC. \\inrn, . ..-, !rm1t•"I ..,,·/x1r:1s. ·m HONDA CL 4.'/'I. a ~pi!, ----------·I chr's, nearly new \Vhirlpool C1-IEST type I re e 2 c r • SIOO. 612-0433 art ;; pin. . . rn,ih/. 9:1"i-ff~t cu.•t. pnr. Hrlmet. Xlnl. s.<n:; OAK table 4x4, Vt"~ ornate. ecl.~cL. dryt'r. 3i5 Broadway, \\'aAAf:orfriryrr, 81Cl'e0 {\', 0'"1~. I Oouhl• End .. -.... --:-.. jPff m-9722 9-6. •J .1• lum, hiq 1\\·ing set. :P.tuch ···•• .. .,, .. ... ..u -- ;i leaves, S350. Round glau 1nore. 968-50i8. li Boats, General 900 Sound !if'lt'>\'Qrth~'. y,'IJOClen '69 K,\\\'ASAK1 :l'J! i,.'f'eorn \lTOUgbl Iron table $.15, gold G•r•ge S.le [ I s hull, ~klr Miler. $600'). J. 11:tN>i1k llif'! bikl'. Jtuns 111. lOxl2 Orit@ carpet Sl5. 2076 Santft Ana Avt>., Fri Z'i, Dcroralor hns great buy free to You • • • ,l\fthini ;,.1)>..;,71;, or ~lt80l S2T.1. 9ilhlid0, alt j, '139-771+; ~. &G-1325-Sal~-9-5. l\E'W 15' GE l'f'· suptYr hl'a~-y n)'l<on sl~1;;: . -Ma W 8 k ------E-1 --. -C 930 ==""',.-.,-.~7--.--11lu!V1 "r'llt. (i·-·1d('n hil:ii•cus. X • 1 er :->Af~OT, no 4;:1,"i. l\k<.-l'lt:•w,I ectr1c ars DARK fiberglass hatch CQ\"er frig, St&;, piclun.>s, furni· ?ii) ydl!. 64.2-2".C-X> or 5'~kri4. 3 Lines, 2 T imes, $2.00 499 Magnoli• ro•ndy for mr1n1,;, l.'.lnwn -"----=..;:. __ _..:c:.:: din. table, 4'x7', S125. Slain-tu.re. bedding. Alise. Bar· Coi ta Meui Si•ll, S.::TJ. &H-1 ~.6. l.lJi l TAYIJJH.-Dunn 6 pas$. 1 ed pine gun cabinet SJ;,. gaim galore~ AITENT!Or\~ 1\ll Comic \' h i f -. "'hi, nin<li•I ,\I, Elecrr1r 67:Hr.l.87 ~10\'ING lo condo. Fun1., Book Co\lecton.! Old & new ~lAL.E Gold('n r. c I r I ev ('I I rw"o" F .. ,R .• E. E .. 'T" 1"c"'K'e"Ts 1Mi1. TI'llnk cat)ln._ £<i11~llP''d Ca.1"!'!1 ',\ !t1•a•lllt<'11, tRillltfii, PLUSH vel\'el sofa & LS, ref r i g' v:asher/dt')·er, nv1gs, ('Olle<'tor'a i1em:s. r11L\' ('.001!.I II r.ri·hdog. :'\!111 race ..,r irul.si.. S:l .. :.00. fnm 5Ul'J'{'Y fop &: blt·in tl)ls. chain, deep ._.__r. freezer, e1c. Even.·thl...,. S.18-lllS, :>.G pm. ""'/ki~"I. l\t1.'lls lg Y1t!'d, \Qt~ I to thi· ~\·ai~>v.nc_l>.:_l,~:.m -rnmrr. t'ill \\"l'f"lt;days 8:30-""~ "• o I TF. 1}f l·n·1" a-18.if(il. SOUTHLAND K!Tf' 1 1 1 ---Also queen hide-a·bed. Pri. goes. ~lust see to apprec. RE .l 9.'l I • S9J'l.'J~f)\' .. 'rt L..,n< • pnv. party •. 1, 6l)..,,..,.1, Pt ~ -• Fri/"·l/Sun 1•· 609 CRIB \\'JTII 1\1\.....,R''SS F'Rf'.E 10 ,~,·,,.,,,n :t', '' Hamt & Garden Show $-100 M--c~------->'· ~·;r-v<!<I.,. •;lil • •r:>. ...,~ • •• -:.:..._1.,;.1 •-. ~:.. • """""' • • -· • ,,.,._",", 1, • otor Homa~ Acacia. 011\f. in all<'>' ~ •.....-.:n... 'm. i>p&)'ed !Jll1·h·i1un.t c.ul Jui) ::.ih 1h1 i1 .\uw:, ~th ~. . I \VROUGIIT Iron d ining h ----Slilt/Rtnt 940 tabJe, 6 nlalchg chn, fabrlc ~--C~'\!Tl.'RE oUel'('(l Uy •QUAt.ti'I* ~il:i,j r.• 1 "' :"All. ~1.1l Lr•n(' S1;..r 1::i _. ft. -... ~. 16" I f ,.,...,,.. dC\"Ot'ator troni h .. r 0,,... •:'111,;LCll & TOP SO IL • U Es J) 1': H ,\Tl·:l.'I' ru .. ~r. ANAHE IM 1r-.11rl' N•!nplf•tt-1~1111 '~Jll!.J * RENTALS * ....... ......... e.a • ~-.. " CONVENTION 968-3600 hoine. \'en• ~. priCl'S. ~.O hon)('. \'cry fr1r-11dly l•1\'.'\hlt· I '.\h1.,• st"ll $4~. l\1';-1;177 BEAlTl1nil. Adl~ cabinet lle'Aing mach\ne, l'M.900able. V('!')' jj:ood condition. ~ "'erythlnc '""· &16-m;, 2 XTR.A lone" twin beds. S:-iO f"a. l.a\-cscat SSS. Blond Olik, chest ot dra'<le.rs S 15. S57~i81J \nblt>s, chairs. Jamps, ac· Ux24 DEEP Jo.:nd Liner ()Mlll(,,'l" t·.11f. ,!\.;:;.,.11i1 l)f)1ut 1 CENTER llll"'JRJF; CafTt-u.1 11~1\ll'r Lttrth1lf', .~p..·Tior. ()peon ~ss. etc. 2707 Wan"CT'est Dou2hhoy, bnnd new for S\1ART fun lnvin.:: tr'!alC kll· iii~ \\. K·1lt>JlR. A.11:.h•· 111 f.:Xl't·llrnt ronrt11i .. n t-:'<trJ. il<lltil, 1""'.nd.'lu, OVt'rland It 0. Cd.'I ~1006. $95. C&JI 714: 685-890.1 1en, 11ee~ poi<itl<ln i\l'I l'lrn~e rall 612 :-.r.';')I, 10.:;, :1 ~ rq111p. $800. 3.16-.13 1~ \\Lnn<'bc«o ~lotoctiouie•• • 11U!'i1ffi7S Treasures TE!\:-1IS -menibi>t1hip for family pc!. &11-16."'9. 1~ 1-l:i ini >1 .Yr 11~'1\l't,.,, •X"t :1 HOttti.::-i6 \\1tJ1 trailt'r:-xl nr ltECJt£,\TlON 1'rllSh Conv sofa bn tiq '>\'8.I p.\r. StOO. C!'.!~f. Tennill 3 TIGER k!!lcn"I. J rnonth C•.1tJ.t11y toll 11,'t' nuntbcr th '""n•I Sl<GO RE:\'J11~L .. AC\:-OD s:at51VICE bti!:h indr planlA books Clu b. GIQ-00.G ;;10.;_')) • · Ph ·~~!':'. 'ti '"· RN. • ' "/ 1V d old. CA.II ~:.'7 "r li-,1:\ • , • TI4.,'36-.'615 " '-'flrt illS t')'. etc. T Or C \I f " -:=""'::--c-~--c-:-,,.,J "'"Rf HOARD 6't'', lnhnit)' anagf'r " .. ·ii I• ~irn . ----Boal• Sl•'P•f !Jock1 910 •c Sun only. 1020 Amer. Pl C'f 'Ommond Tall. Cl'l't"n lz --Ct.TE. llL\LTII\'--\\A~ rt.:Ll !ti .• ,J' !'l·u ·kiJI ••r • 19iJ Di~t'O\Pl't-r and SUrHlial SOWD desk A. chair, nice 21" COLOR 1\', fij; reel " ~· • Call fiil-3-l~L1 . t-'.d.;."n1er. I)alhoa. Up' .to rl"to.~n'~l!on.'I for Sumin<'t 6~ yeUuw like nu. $91. !\.17..a350 KITTF'.'I~ I rkri). .-::1 111' al V'17 l-t ~t '.\lolnr Jloml'f for rent, makt sill!, otr white. 2 dnl.n, mower, $25, Baby tilll! ~·En' dn.ttlna: table & " \\'E•~:_J,.~'•JXt.I>. 8 1.,. '"J' 1 1 . int• Sl()I ...... 110\\. 1~oone Mlq Bennet al ~t&.M ,,..,, -. ....... _,,_,.,,, -~---~ . reh<I'" •qulpme.nt .,~ V"t..,.., .. ,_ o•ls ro .. rlne .. 01111. .,, ,~r "-!, •-... -"on·t• "' "'I' ...., .....,.....,.... \\ un:"M .,....,; dltJ('fte ,.... • "'"N· I E I 90A Jn() 1iJt• ~ITS3 "a\'ll, 0" _ ..... ,,.. ·~-,. • r • * COUCH&: LOVESF.AT M!t, $13: IJ'P('..,,'riter, ~ mi1e. \'llhie, $1'!"1• 646--ll0-1 Ct.IE A.tr\Pt'<I killl·n,, box qu p . "" t~l:I• 69;.J:r~ <>\t>!i. • ~~I or 6.16-2500. brand M'A'. ~h Mr Sl50. Sa1 & Sun aftt.rnoon. 6-122 POOL table & .11~~ri<'s J tnilnM. S \i·kJ old. L:1':ul.u1 _..., ---------_I -.--.... e '.'le\\' Luxury LI UAually home, 968-7910. Bellinger Or. 11D. S..JG..~711 . 100 old. :v., xi, i.'Old, S·lOO. r.;ipl. ·19$--:'>790. ---~ Bo•t1, Speed & Ski 91 11 23'.x;' hun\l\c s1j;; 6 "Qlrrn 49.t--~lll LO\"ABl'-' ' fr~· )'"I 11n· '".Ulhl( lo\ 11'\r -, . .. . • CJ{AlR SIS, Bkc..se $20. Cof· CAJ\.l\GE Sa.l~Klng 111: bed. 1 E ·~spa.de ~('Ill •'&ll '.\lnrrt11,."'1 ' 1~114nd!. Pl~Jo'.,\."it-'. 1·, 1r\'OH.O S-ilt sl<I t"11lt,l •IT'll\hly • olr. J::im, fl""'°• fee lb/ $8. Bed & 11'.Pnv::J $2j, Oii.ie dlnlng t.&bl~. quills, & i1fi:·~ clothe&, 11•·1.11· nl'\!o', ~' lllOklrl.![ f'.lr f~l'ndJ)' ~mt', i•Rll 1i1o• rr;1nk C'fnrr, II i-'BR. CL 5."JhJI. OB. ~ltt·t J1'1 '>"'1lr:... R.13-0900, Tt1stln ~Uac h!!ehold \t(!ms 8r>-1963. 1nl!r'. Sal le SW1, 613'• 42 !all. !Wits, jR''l<•·I~. blk ~~hln'l" -nit')· 67.r-1071 .... ill ~ '1n our niu!Ul\I ,,rl· llf:tr!, Trall,.r. ~. •19-1-i~I ~· EXECUTIVE n10 tor Uke to Tnd(!! Our Tn.der·1 Orchkl. Cd?.1-!WI elc. Pvt pl). m.mo ADORABLE T"rrier ntiJ(t'il \Mlagt & ln..,un· 11. pl"n.."llnt dys, ~764 nfl 6 hnml' tor nont. Fully 11elf Pandlte ~umn 11 tor )W! CAR;\GE StJe-F\U'n. & rn19C PRJMO \\'E'T8t:rr Muall pupp)', rn11JP>, frtt lo r«t•pfio'Jft tor )17U. 11"''" IOm4'1hlnk ~ want to contain!!<!. &U--21!ll 5 llnn. 5 day'I for S5. Call I 715 \V. 181h St. Cl, cad Exctllt-nl «mdltiOn S 2 0. JroOl;i home. 64&-14<M Gi.~2 or '.'"""-~?!Iii .,II'! ClauUlied Rda ~ II A i(Xld wMt •d 11 a IOOll ttw toda,y ••• 642-6671 64&-2'i37 Small. 1\!tt•r S call !6Z-SG23 1 N~'d • "Part'~ Pldi:.'t' <111 ad' ~~ nlJ • <'AIJ ~OW &t2-567S. Vnlmfnl. I DAIL~ PILOT Tlwt\day, Juty 24, 197) lril I 1ta '''tau .. l§J ,L-1 _ ..... _ ....... _,I§] I Au lo& tor Siii M .. ..,.. l§J I .., .. ..,.... I~ COUGARA ~u•,• .. •. •u...,;;;;;~990;;;1: i~I l~I l§JI Motw Hornes Sale/Roni "A:;:u:..;to:.:•_W=•;:;n.:;tlCl~--968:.;;; Autot, Imported ·~ -970 MAZDA Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Jmportmcr ·.;.;.;.'-"-'-'-'--"--I 970 Autos, Used e SALt:S e •SERVICE • e RfMTALS e EXPLORER OF HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 Beach Blvd. 8(1..sao.3 HUNTINGTON BEACH MOTOR HOMES ADOllo, Paceseuer. Baron. Jamboree, Roblnhood • We've &OI ·~ at KENDON MOTOR HOMES 107 N. lfarbor, S.A. 554-000'l GMC Motorhomes 23' k 26' 1M1\1EDJATE DELIVERY Orange Co.'s Exclusive Dealer Biii Barry Ponti•c GJ.fC RJ:':C. CENTER 2000 E. 1"1 St., Santa Ana 56S-IOOO Tr1iler1, Travel 945 '6 7 NIMROD TENT TRAILER, Good cond/all conveniences. $82:5. :'>41!·1822 15' CAMPING 'l'Tailer. Gd oond. $350. 545-00-tS or 546-»54 15' TRAVEL trailer 16<)(1. * 557~ * Auto Service, P1rt1 949 '68 VW trans-axle $7.i BcJJy 'pan w/ps $25. Sea~ doors back lid S1G-S20 64~ ][~] Antiques/Clanlc.s 953 COLLECTORS English Taxi rnlnt oond. Also '2t J\1odel T . Touring Sedan, perfect ~ Via Udo Nord NB. ( 5.i6--07'lO /' Rec:reation1I :I Vehicles 956 ' **DUNE BUGGY, .. ~r pov.-ercd. :street • legal, $&50. 545.-S~j C\'C~. '51 ClfE:vv CarryAH-Xlnl cond. $195. 1.28 Santa Isabel , •.c:CM~·~·_:64::.2::.-~l990.cc.. ____ _ ... 'Sports, Race, f<ods 959 '68 Al\1ARD-l57 CID, 4.10 HP. Bored, Blanc l!!d, Edelbrock-Holly Hookers, 1 lmmac. motor, nu trans. ·~ def. must see 10 apprec. ,1 __ ~s_u_1_M_~-~~~~ 'S5 CHEVY tull race but at reetable. profl'l!sionally bit. Sacrifice $1000 Urm. 64.l-3190. ' !-'"'-'="-------- Trucks 962 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID FOR OR NOTI Call ur ('QTill" in to :-!l-C us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 31~ \\1, Crta$' H~)'., N.B. 642-9405 TOP CASH BMW W;A.~t: A '73 lJ,\\',\HJ,\ 0t'1ll0 -~rhll •31:i~"JJ3 fur $166.41, IX'r n10111h 0 1-:L or bU)' f!)I' $8.29\1. Bob Mc l ar•n, BMW, Inc. (7141 879-5624 BORGWARD 1001 BORC,VARD S:f.i. u~ ls. 200,j Anaht'iru St., 1\pC. C, 01 G-ia.-flJ91 CA~P~R~I -- ~ NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI for l'lcan htte modl•l cars $po1't t'<JUl)o: dl'cOr, hotly side an(/ truck.,! rnould1ru.:s, l'Cl·llnln~ fn:inr H d Cha ol t St:•fllll, l-01l10Ur L"t:.:Ur :.COi~, 4 owar ~vr e ,p .. ro 1m11,sn1is.~ion . ...-1111•1· l\facArthur and Jamboree /ron1 Iii.«-br:1k1•s, 15lyle "!eel Newport i3('ach 1vhet"hi:, buckt•1 senh1, radial 833-055."i ply tin.'S, ({jAJ<::C."NS!l!J742/, ll'E PAY TOP DOLLAlt OVERSTOCKED! FOR TOP USF.O CA!lS IMMEDIATE If your car is extra clean. DELIVERY !U'e U$ first. BAUER BUICK GUSTAFSON 2925 Ha.boc Blvd. co.ta Me"" 979-2500 Lincoln-Mercury · If\.1PORTS \V Al\'TED 16800 Beach ut \Vnmcr Or:mge County's IJuntlngton Bcni'h TOP $ BUYER 842-8844 * (213) 592-S544 BILL f.IAXEY TOYOTA "Home of the Viking" 18881 Beach Blv :. H. Bt .. 1ch Ph. M7·8555 '72 CAPRI. V6, 4 spd, fully ('(!Uipped, undC'r lD,tro mi. Call 5'W-0342 \1.'E HUY Tl\-tPOR'rED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIDI Dean Lewis I mport1 1966 1-larbor, c.;.1. 646·9:J03 Autos, Imported 970 BEST AT THE BEACH CADILLAC '70 CONV'T, Full PO'l1·cr. Auto Climate Con- trol, Ai\1/F'i\·I. 912 BIV, S:25!15, 13EACff IMPORTS, 1200 \V. Coast 1-lhvay, N(.>y,•por!, 645-6400 SAAB AT THE BEACH DATSUN $ SALE$ DATSUNS NEW DEMOS 1973 :110's Pk·ku 11 6lO's All l\lodels & Colors tc, Choose F'ro1n. 1 :Xru;~111rt D;1t~;un ' ~ .., ~)ur, w ' '~"1 •t.pw 'Y -' ,..., ..... ~~-· [j, •• hi~ b.\CllJ BOB LONGPRE MAZDA -SERVICE FIRST- 1111 Slrt'i't ot 1hc .'\anta Ant~ !"•"")', ~l E . ls:t Str<.'\'t Sluun Ann »'i-1871 MERCEDES BENZ '70 MERCEDES BENZ bOO SEDAN Thl~ i~ a blic IUXUl')' mod('], 11 llh red leather l11tf'rior nntl lull hydraulic control lnclud- lng a ir hrukl/'s, #001529. PRICED TO SELL! $$$ Jim Slemons Imports 13()1 Quall NC11"po11 Beach f133.9300 ENTER }"'HOr--1 ~tarARTIIUR '72 Mercedes 280 SE SEDAN Faetory uir conditioning, toll po1\·er, and only 16.000 actual n1ilc11. (J.l7Fll.l. $$$ Priced lo SELL ! Jim Slemons Imports 13(11 Quail Newpart Beach s.11.9300 ENTER ffiOM J\lacARTIJUR 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car Trade.ins Coming In Every Day Ask About Our Unique Used Mercedes lease Plans House of Imports 6862 J\lanchestcr, Buena Park on U1e Santn Ana Frn·y 523.7250 SAAB 1973 DATSUNS JIM SLEMONS The wel-buit Swede Sales-Leas\ng. Service· Rentals ALFA ROMEO AT THE BEACH ALL MODELS IMPORTS . IN STOCK MERCEDES BENZ AlmiORIZED BARWICK IMPORTS SALES & SERVICE 3.1375 CRmino CapistraM Ji·m Slamons San Juan Capistran::> .. 493..1375 oc 831.1375 Imports 'il DATSUN 240Z, air, 1301 Quail kpd. mag:i;, orange, Int· Nei.vport Beach 111aculate! $3650, 842-8Sl6, 833-9300 e\'eS. 5~S-1800 ENTER F'ROl\1 J.tacARTlWR 'il iioz. 1 011·1\(.'r, nu radial!, '69 !ilerc<'des 2SO SE. Crl'a1n. ll\ai.:s, an11rn1 5ilC'JW tape, ,\JI p111., eXlta5, clean. 4 dr ~~:~/~~~.rni. $3650. Gtl cone!. 1 011'nt!r, 49-1-0-151 L4"!71 DATSUN 4 rtr 610 \\'agon, '69 MB 280 SL R.dstr, 4 spd, $li95. Nev.• tires. Ai\f/FJ\l Pfi, air, 101\' miles. s:>f73. radio. 847-9966 67~5620. eves. 673-0728. Sales·LeasJng. ·73 DATSUN 2~0Z, !!ilver, '59 300 SL R.oodsler, 11eeds 1971 FORD Ranger XLT. St-1vicc-Ren1aJs auto, m"•s, spollc•·, SOCK! mi, eng ti·ork. $299J. •,,' ton truck and u~.· ft. ~ ...... ,.,2 .,. _,,, ,,. ,~ sacrifice. 64-• "'""'·I ..., " ... · · "~ u1 • Amerigo fibe:l'glas.s and ~tF:RCEDES 230SL '65, Air/ c~~'!::_~~~~~'·'-----1---------alum. can1per. Both loaded Cond.. Both Tops, New FIAT MG 11ith extras. fully sell-con· Rad la 1 s. B l' c k e r •. lairM!d. Like nc1v condition AM/F~1/S\V. UJD560. --------- and must be JW<>n f() 1>e np-BEACH li\fl>QRTS, 121'.Xl '\', '71FIAT12-1 Spyder, 5 ~-peed. .....,.,.i"ted. 13,000 milcl'i. \Vilt Coast Hiy,·ay, N ~ v.• po r l, niagi::, new ni<lials, ex-.,.......... ~ cellcnt conrliOon, 1nust sell 9l'll separatl'. $5.800 or best · $2700. 842-9'178 offer. '71 JAGUAR XJ-6, Loo.tied, t;;;;;;;•iiiiPhoiiiineiiii54;;;;9.4:;;;;348iiiiiO•iiii• I 11"1TY toe th;, ooc. {532GBC) HONDA 1• CADILLAC '6.S Cpe. DeV, 71 SPORTS CUSTOM Aoto Climalc C.Ontrol, Lan· Super sharp, 4 l'ipd, rad & dau RO<'lf, Ai\1/F?-1/Stereo, DECEl\ffiER '71 Tfonrta , 31,000 n1ilf'11. $S9j. Cnll '3.1 M.G. T.0. cx('ellent con . dition. Rebuilt engine and !runs. $2500. ~1154. '6.l ~1C Rebuilt engine & trans. runs good, e.x cond. ~lust see $650. :>48-0736 OPEL. ... healtt. N~· 12 x 16.S tires. X55787, Sl89j, BEJ.\QI 11\t-673-500.i --------- : 1 $2700. or best otrer. POH.TS, 1200 '''· Coast • ~ • 892-1832 • 1-liv.·ay, Ne..,lpo11, 645-6-lCXi ALFA ROi\fEO at l he '68 FORD pk/up, BEACH '72 Serina Demos Rfh....ttk/&!t gd Nn cood. <2i Never Registered, $3795 fin problems! need to sell ('a. '71 XJ-6 Sedan Sable Bisqu irU{'rior, loaded, n1ile1, 1315IB\V). '70 OPEL 1':.t1\ley Cadette. 36,000 n1i, .xlnt. l\1ust sell, Desperate. Nt!'\·!y married, nl'ed money. $1350. or best lo1v offer. 846-8910 TOYOTA '68 TOYOTA CORONA COUPE Thi.~ t·ll·iu1 , irrcut •"l-onnn1y 11uh)mobil£> hRR an i1ut11° n1u1 i1· 11·un.~111l,1A;i11n, rlldk>, ht;{l\{'j', 1111d lo\1' 11\Jh:l\! Only $1195 {Vflll·l;)lf Jim Slemons Imports 1:Jl)J Quuil :"\ev;pc11i Bcttt:h S.13-9:100 !'.::'l.'1'ER FROM J'l.IRCARTllUR TOYOTAS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY J\1X HI LUX CELIC1\ CORONA l./\ND.CRUISE!l Dmlwii& -TOYOTA 1006 Harbor, C.~I. 616·9303 '72 TOYOTA Land Cruiser Station Wagon 3 specd, factory air condi1ion- ing, radio. v.·arn hul)s, l\\'O tone, 1-131''111. $3977 .,Pto1t lwii& -TOYOTA 1!166 IIarhor. C.i\Y. 616·93o.1 WE BUY USED TOYOTAS ALL 1973 MODELS IN STOCK ~llli1n11u!; lllulrn~; & JIQU -..iu1 ' wrrn ~-' ... , . .,,, ''.., . " -.. '68 TOYOTA Corona, 2 dr au10 42,000 olig miles, l 01vner, good cond. S97J. ;,,l8-I4S2 aft 6 '71 TOYOTA MARK II WAGON ,\u!o Trails, {903CQQJ $1999 . llfor11111•; lllutm~; ~·' 11111';1 i.tl.1; l 1111\lJ •• ''"" t '" • • .. ..... ,., 1969 Toyota for sa]{' As king ~50 or best offt'r 64:T-38:n VOLKSWAGEN 53l...J2lJ '66 CIULJ,\ SPRINT GT, 1965"'~-~~~, ~ro=N~Ch~ ..... -.~p~,,~.-u-p I Ai\1/1--"i\J Radio, TNE.J36, 11;/can1per shell. New V·S $1395. 86789 ..:.:='-"'p'="o=::.Rs"""c~H=E-'ii SUPER \'\\'. Xlnt cone!. N(.>11' th't's. R 11. r·aclory '72·911 T. Tan:a, warranty, air. $1600. 557-'1029 18,000 mi. sih·er, xrras, l.,068:;;.:Sc:"=b=k-=:c.,.=1'---.~k-I truck motor (heavy duty\, 'ti7 SPIDER. Rd s 1 er, ~a;gs 131aypunc1, r\e11' Rndlal:.,, • 1972 OODCE Cu$tom Plt·kup. 031AKU $16!15 • ~. ton 1~/aJr shocks, V-8, '69 SPTDl!:f\. }l d s 1 er. Ai'wf /}'i\I, rue! inJl'<:tion, 318 eng., runs xlnt, new """!'FR s~·· truck tires, $2'"a00. 673-2957 °"'' ~ · ,,.,,,;,, V\\''g at the BEACll, '68 CHEV, custom cah, ~~ Ion •67 Bccth-., Grabber orange, , 6 cylnder, 3-speM, xtra Rndiu, UUN99:i 1-('lean. call afl 5. 556-0567 ·~ SUNROOr BEETLE, V1ns 963 LcnlOn \'ello\\'. n.a d i o, TRUCK & TRAILER 19W 0-IEV. J ton 300 VS. 4 \V\\'l\lf®. '69 BEETLF:, G in g c r Metallic, Vinyl lnteriOt', XOA690 '70 BEE1"LE. G re en .1lfon11m; llluhn~. llNU l llQJ;ll ~ll 4 \lll'O .... ,, ' ... . .. . . '71 Jaguar Y-12 E Type Coupe R. R. i:,'l·f't'n, luadl'tl, IO!'al c:ir 10627B\\'l. $6666 ~llforq111!; ml1h11~; r(lltJIA l .iw.t \.It.II l 111",1;1 .. . .. ,,. ... ... .. . ... ~· • speed, 12 rt slake, gd tires, xlnt running cond., t·oupled with 16 fl. lov.· boy heavy duty • trip~ a.<o:le, straight hitch -electric bra.lcC!!l. 4 ff. 'pl)'\vood sides -rPhlOvable. Both lll[OCs roverN.I '''hh vi11)11 tarps. S.1<XX>. 8 '6-549-1. flB. alt '5 p.m. 1\-telallic, Radio, Vin y I .=~==~~~~~ Interior, 437 AVB '6"-1 JAGUAR MK JO, Classie BEACH ll\IPORTS. 1200 \V. luxury 11roa.n. fully restored Coast. f-lhi;ay, Newport, l(l mini cmtd. NCI\' llhr, lat"· 64.'.i-640), qucr, \11101! tinish, eni.-:. brakl's, J>h..,.111 1irc!ii. $6ClOO ln11es1c1I, ~1U5l M?ll, $3900. >IS-<Gll '67 DODGE Van. Auto trang, Good nmning condition. Paneled & uphol. ht!ide. $600. 644-4300 '72 OODGE Van, T1·adesman 300 PIS. PtB, nlr, 1uany .rtra.~. $3995. 645--0315 or 'iO Jai; AJ6 St'\lct.11. 30,000 1ni. Snin(' ntt't'ha11t(' for over yr, \V lll el'l'tify ... -ond. $6000. Ph. ALF A ROJ\1EO -SAAB in 67:'>-3735 ('V('s. 1\-kt'nds, NE\VPOH.T l.-=69=J::.A:;:C::.u""A"R"x"·1","c:.:2::..cc,c-, -.~ir' AUDI 11uto. Clean. Pti. P..t.rty. Call 657-76JG 64>-!1683 '72 AUDJ, fully !'quipped, lo '69 FORD long l ton, auto. rnlleuge, $3650 or best offer. air, mags, ins!. punl'd, ll~f Jl6--07:l-l/&'it-287?i nil. 673-5507 .;.c'-"="-"""'==---~1 FORD VAN BMW $390. David-Brown Co. 411E.171h St .. CM. LEASE A 1973 '63 DODGP. VAN BAVARIA VS. camper Inter, Sl200. Call "'""112 WeBuyUslCI '6:1 FORD Van, 6 cyllnde. BMW's Stiick. Runs good. $670. p 'd 998--32S5 Top Dollar a1 * *'611 DODGE v.. CREVIER BMW AJC, mn1plng equiped, 111~ Sales . Scrv1ct _ (.eaJ1in1; mitt, ntW' cnghle, Gr.>-8613 :.us \\'. 11".'1 St.. Sar11a Ana 'ST FORD Van, carpel. 83S.3171 f;W;,,. ":.f .. ~;~7 eond. ~O"RA=N~G~E COUNTY'S- ' ·n DODCE \Vlnctow Van. 318 OLDEST • 646-92S8. Cl'\'fl. Autos W1nted 961 • V.3 auto, xlnt cond., S:..'575, & JUNK cani Wllnll'l'f. tti Ml.f':S.~J-:1t\1C&l.EAS1r\G ~·log, tJ!lt' tltntanot, 2~ OV t:nSl>:AS L:fl.l\'ERY 1in. ·fs.r1ooa ext 608 O YER YOUNG m•rrl<d {, 0 up 1 • R Y CAR , inc. flftds tnul.'J~rta Ion car. "--In l\.~~ E. 17IJ'I St."'"'" •••• Ply up to $3.10. ~2399 .... ~ _,...._... • • , MAZDA MAZDA nx:: $tAtlon \Vfl !l<>n. our n1ost J'()(Nllu' model! Only $80.11 Monthly MIRACLE MAZDA Z1:iG llnrbor l)h1t C~la l\(M;;:I &Ll-:-i'iOO * M11d1 '73 Rotary * $'6 MONTH 36 1'-IONTI IS OPEN I.EA St: \Viii 11c:Ct'pt lrade·lru CALL. :\lit. FR\' S42·6i'tili Hunt. Beach MAZDA 8·12-<IOGt! • SS.-iOO, 673-9019 "I!· • air, ape uec , $119J. PH '70 911T coupe. 5 sp<l, • 67J-3:U7 * s/n1ags, gat4;'.Cs, clean, lo nilles. 71·1: 639-3793 ROLLS ROYCE 1969 ROLLS ROYCE Silver Shadow Bluf' leather interior and only 3(1,COO aetual n1ile11~ l'r1ecd 1., sell. $ $ $ (?XX9761 Jim Slemons Imports l30l Quail :\1"'1\•port Be1«,i1 .'(}3.9300 Et-.'TEn FROi\1 '.\Ju<'ARl'llUR -·-~ VOLKSWAGEN '71 COUGAI XR MERCURY BUICK V-8 -.......WC """"· __ P_A_Y_M_E_N'TS--?--1.·.,---.-u-1c_K_eon_'_""'_b1-,-, -ioo-.,-1 "'"'"°"· ladory "'' "''xii· 11r'OOd runs gooct auto OOn1na. l)O\''et steninQ:. l..ATE '70 Mercury MlJ"Q\dl " Sta W"1, A/C, fulJ pcl'JlllW, lugpa:*' rack A "-'f!U. Top cond. $3:j.50. J. fltllant. ~m or 67&--&!0J $65 DOWN US MO. plll/pb, 1.11 $3M. ~eta 11!° power tHtc brakes, AM/t"'&t i\loclcl Ull, No. 418$, 4!1 nm. M~ radio, heater, and low 101·1. tax, lk. & "'' ,.,.,.,,.. CADILLAC mu... $2795 ('hunu•s on app. rredlt. Dci<"o'o<d pm!, peice: <153.80 EL DORADOS (129CF0) '70 FORD Mercury Mont.ego 2 dr. Xlnt cood. Radio, a/o. 4,1,000 rnl. Good llrt$.. $1800, 644-1580 ln1·I. tu-.. & Ii\:. ANNUAL 1• F. R cc NTAGE R-1Ti; Jim Slemons 12.61';< 14 TO CHOOSE GARDEN l!iJ'A WEST w::J/ couPEs.coNvE11T1eLES Imports • L1(ll Quall DE VILLES """'"'" """"' 31 TO CHOOSE ENTER F':ti\fOOZ'<icARTHUR COUPES '72 ti-fEftCURY Monttgo, 40,000 ntile:s. 673.'l?.6 hi!!-. tween 5 Ii 8 pm only. 7600 We~m1Nt1..-Blvd. SEDANS DODGE \Veslrnilllller CONVER1'1BLES '73 COLONY Park Wagon, like ne1v, alJ pwr, air cond., under 8,000 mt. 642-2917 MUSTANG il9.J.-Ta5J or 638-7880 l\tany exceUcnt coloni '66 DODGE '69 V\V, extra clean, k>w C!10iceof1nterlor1 '66 AUTO, ps, vinYI toP, r/h, mileai::e. pvt party. 13l02 ~Cloth & leather) 1;4 Ton Pickup niags & new Urcs, xlnt G n 1 u t·n \II t: & 1 s 1 , • actocy alr cond!Uonl~ cond. A-1ust seU $ S 5 0 • \Vcstniinster lat Chevron Full power. tbolceof.. \Vmf CA?-lPER. VS, auto 557--0757 Srtt!lorn. $1150. CS~~ ~'11 radio ta·ans, radio, heater, TBBUB '''69::C--CM""ACHo,--;l-:-3'c;l-;-V;--.!;;-,-..,"1~1 .,,..~ ""''uv $1777 mileage. Ni!!W tlres. \VAY . • '70 V\\1 POPI"OP Camper, Trunk opener I: more UNDER lD BK, $1250 or lm1nac! Nu brakes & tires, All in in1maculate l'Ondition f1to1t lfW' • nlllke otter 67J.OCi07 rndlo. Getting ma r r i ed • Largest selection in MUST SELL!! 673-5193. Orange C.OUnty lioiUSfANG '69, 351, radio, DAUGHTER gone o\•erseas. Nabers Cadillac TOYOTA ~11e~~~ ~~i ~IT,~ · n1u11r sell '69 V.\\'. Bus, :i-:1111 AUTHORIZED DEALER aJt 5 ~ 6~1696 cond, nu radial lire s, 1966 Harbor C ?ii 646-9303 :...,, •.r 'i'.--1"16 2600 HARBOR BL., · . ' •65 l\1UST. Blu/Rd, V8 6 7: ~ COSfA litESA '64 OODGE Dart. l\1odel 170, lluto/cons, 2 mgs, 2 nu tn; 1969 V\V Camper, xlnl con.. 540-9100 Open Sunda)' a uto, 2 Dr, Good running. 2 d · s~ ~·• clitlon -n1ust sel\ lhls ..,,:eek! ,71 ELDORADO ,.,._ $!75. '194-7147. owner, C m1. •r•vw Cu.II for i n f o r n1a t i o n · ....... sperate . Cdl\1. $395. * 9'19-18311 or 644--8338 to sell, Have bought another 70 OODCE Challenger RT '66 l\1USI'ANG 289CT Fstbck ~-~--~~.~--1 car. Coco iv/tan fandau top, 440, 4 speed, XLNT P/S. Auto. t.r;i.ns. Di1e V\V '68 Sq back. 1'!00, c~. all P\Vl', ain/tm radio, nv. SJ-IAPE! &15-3190. brak $895 586-5429 !pl.ea! "~~a,g:>. Sac. $950. Pr1. st('('! bcl.tcd tire11, 30,000 '64 DODGE II'•-, ~ t -~~'~'·~=·~--~-I ty .,.,v-~ 11 n-1 11 "'"·"'19 ._v.. _, ........... '67 l\1USTANG very, clenn. · . m es. '""'s o er . .,...,...""' • cond. $-150 or best offer. G 6 1 c"~ '7l V\V Bus, Xlnt condlt1011, af\(.>r 6 pn1 6-14-0637 546---0rM or 831_2875 as saver. cy · -. ne"' cn!t"~~e. Extras! Private *CAD. 'J3 EL DORADO pa.int. $800. 644--6323. party, :1.11"'6367 EveI')'lhing ilicl. sunroof, FORD '70 li1USI'ANG. Extra clean, • '70 V\V Bug * Dav 642.3121 eves 673-ms. -----"----air, p/s, p/b. After 6 pm ... • •Ot".ll ~ FO GT.,...1071 Cll'an. good C011Uit10n. -· ·70 ELDORADO 30000 I 1971 RD Call 644-J7j7 v.-.nna, show~m' 1~1;h; '67 }~ORD l\1ustang, air, "•bi ,__ GALAXIE 500 auto, V-8, new tires. X1n't '69 V\V Bug. "'"' t eng, owner leaving c o un t r y , .,.,.., • rndial lirl's, chrome whls, 673-5569 2 Doot'"Hanltop cone!. SlOOO. uo,,.......574. !lint. 835-0202/552-8'181 '68 CAO. Ui mHcagc, 111""'1. 400 .vs '"""" OLDSMOBILE '66 V\V or best offer. Cru1~-0-mat1c trans, Sun1wf Must S<."11 call 846-68&1 Powi!!r steering $3.iO ' 67M769 Power disc b~es Sales & Sf'rvice OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS '70 VW BUS CAMARO TIR!ed wl.W.lticld • Air conditioning 'i pass. air, ~3900 AM radio VOLVO ECONOMY & SAFETY PLUS Savings & Comfort In Our Remaining 35 • NEW VOLVOS lmmediat• Delivery ~to1tlWIU W YOLYO 1900 Harbor, C.J.f. 646-9303 '70 VOLVO 164 SEDAN Auton1alic U'ansmission lull C'QUipmcnt. $2595 ru>d Jo'ully Equipped, (XlH324) $1678 ~ltlarmm; lllllhn" !MJl 111(1.U :J1~ & 1£rr10 .. ..._. ... "-~ .. ""'" -... '69 Cam. auto, radio, p/s, Vinyl roof p/b, air. Steel rad, $1699. \Vheel Covers 431-7403 I 536-0021 New 1vJ1ile\\·all tires 7011 Ck'tARO 4 spcl. 3j() VS. Very~ condition. Po1\·er disc brks. Low nil. 49,<XX) tniles. Top oond $1695. 5-16--8372 $1995 1967 CA.i'lARO D1\ll..Y PiiJ:r a~l\lPWYE J2T V·B, S7'"JO. PARKING LOT 673-8889, or wknds, 544--0776 330 West Bay, Costa Mesa CAJ\1ARO '67. 350 SS, or V8, 3 spd, sharp! Call Call J'l.1argaret Greenman 830-4815 aft b'pm 542-4321 '6 7 CA!\JARO. V -8. '69FORD Automatic. Air. Clean! New ""''· 54;.ssj4 eve•. RANCHERO CHEVROLET V8, outo trans., factory air, ---------pov.·er steering, 109'JEO. CONTINENTAL $1377 .Pm LI.IN W YOLYO '61 GALAXIE, Good rransportalio.n, 66,000 n1iJes, $75 or make o!fl!!r. 673-6686 UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 llai·bor Blvd. Costa .l\fesa 540-9640 '67 0 1..DS 98. Lux. Sl!!dan xlnt cond $950. '70 Dodge Custom Da11, air, $1995. 545-3516 '62 OLDS Starfire, 1 owmr gd, transpo. car * 642--1874 • '63 OLDS, 2 dr. hip, runs \\'t'll, Good body & interior. Abt, 14 mpg, $150. 646-1993. PLYMOUTH '71 PLYMOUTH SateUite Coupe Automatic transmission, fac- tory air condltioniiw, power steering, radio, heater, and only 16.000 actual mifes. $2695 66 RAMBLER 2 dr. llad blown head gasket. \'ou rcpalr. $150 firm. ~In. eludes repa.lr partll), • 543-.'ml • '67 1\MBASSAOOR, 4 door, factory air. Xlnt Coud. $900., 4!J2..9994. '69 RAMBLER y,·agon lo miles }.1nt oond .• auto, air Sl7(Kl or best offer. 64&-WJ:l. TORONADO '71 Continental Factory air"'""'"'""''" ••U __ _;:J.;::E.;::EP;.___ '71 TORONADO "°""· vlRYl lop, ahd i«th.,. ,72 JEEP CJS Coupe interior. Th.ia BELO\Y wf'lolc.-- g{l]c price ts oHCl'!d for 4 V8 ~ , rtcer\ng sperillll Factory air cond:ldonlng, •Bi DAYS QNLY!!! •. 1-••• tlrel!, ir>arl<•ni: full _,,$,2995 $5195 ye!klw. '19l>TI •. $3B77 (729DLM ) !170B?TI -"••M l••.:• Jim Slemons Jim Sl•mons tUWA """"' Imports Imports YOLYO i30t Quall 1301 Quan Nf'WJQ1 Bl!!ad\ N~-port Bef.di l966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 833-9300 833-9300 'f,6 JtEP station "-.gen· ENTER F'ROhit l\.tacAR'nllt"Ft E'.\'i'Eft FRO~ r-.tncARTJIUR .,.l\'hl'f'I drive. V...S. bf.It VEGA 1972 l\lat'k 1\', Xhlt COJl<I, kl lirN. C'Xlrrui. S650. 008-8238. l----·------1 1nlleu~. l.oad«I, S69 ~!i . MERCURY '11 VEGA w.gon, luarage 640-1300 bctwn ~:3'1 Ai\t--:):3() __ _ rtlck, -1 spetd &tick, r/b, Pr.:t ·ss tl'ICRCURr Colon,y Park, fl42:i, M-7019 1966 CONTINENTAL It.a ng .. · 1111 P\\T, hilly 'TI. VEGA GT, xlnt cond, dt:c Los!Md, $llll. !!!quipped, att to apptte. Int., new ttrea. MUtlt sen fl'll 31?-3107 alt 6pm 6~ 644-W9; 67S-.5507 • • . ' 17 17 • San Clemente Capistrano VOL. 66, NO. 207 , 4 SECTIONS, bO PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA Today's Final N.Y. Stooks THURSDAY, JULY 2b, 1973 TEN CENTS ! Clemente Rangers to Trap Prowling Coyotes n,,_gers and animal control officers have ruled out a mass coyote hunt at San Clemente State Park, and, instead, have settled oo a trapping program in an ef· fort to capture the animals alive. The elfort, which has been continuing for several days alter ~iooday's biting incident, involves the use of humane traps in an effort to capture the animals. Two bites so far this month have -cau.s- ed grave concern at the park. Both youngsters involved in the unprovoked attacks are undergoing anti rabies in· jeclions a.a a precaution. ""'e have to emphasize that there is no indication that rabies e~sts in animals at the park," said Pendleton Coast htanager Ronald Hanschew this morning. He said that he has ordered a resump- tion of last summer's program - ave Curbs Set At Trial Of Boy, 15 Testimony resumed today in the murder trial of a IS-year-old San Clemente boy with the press and public barred from the courtroom under a rul· ing issued by OraRge County J uvenile Court Judge Samuel Dreizen. . Superior C0ur1 Judge Raymond Vin- cent is on the bench in the Santa Ana county court.1:¥>use for the-trial of David W. P!foberly,r15, of 217 Avenida Rosa. Court officials were only allowed lo romment today that the trial is i{l its fourth day and is stiU in the pros~cution phase. They predict that the trial will take about two weeks. The Moberly boy is accused or the olaying last June 17 of George Twiddy. ~. of Newbury Park ·in a quarrel that reportedly erupted over .tlie placement of dirty clothes in the Moberly home. Police said Twiddy, described as a fre· quent visitor to the Avenida Rosa home was shot five times ln the chest and neck and was dead when they arrived at the premises. established after a series of biting in cidents blamed on foxes. ''\Ve're having signs brought out to "'arn campers to sleep inside some type of encloosre -tents, can1pcrs or cars - instead of on the ground ," ~lansche\' said. In all the bites the animals have at- tacked persons either standing quietly in dark area& or asleep in sleeping bags 011 • Ill the open ground. "We have been warning ~ach can1prr as he enters the park about !he p'roblen1 as well." the manager silid. A coyote hunt bad bt'Cn t:o11tcn1pl11trcl for the park early this ~·t~k. but ~·a.s rul· ed out entirely because of the chance a st ray shot could hit someone in or fll'<1r the rugged facility. "There's no reason to cuine in <Jnd ' '·· cradica1e the animals \\'ith rirearnis un~·~11y,'' llanschew sa id. "The coyotes are an Integral part of 1he pnrk \\'ildllfe and it "'Ould not be a good idea to Just con1e in and kill 1h('111," Instead tht> anim3ls "·ould ht> lrnppcd nnd plal'Vd 111 qUArwllino at the coun!y an1111;d sheltt>r "'hl•re officials "'ill sludy lhl' l'anines for possible signs of rabic· .... "\\fe 1h1nk "·e'll gt•t our first onC' before • • . 0.llY ,ilel 11•11 l"Mle •w •i(~l"ll 1(-lel' They said they responded to a telephone call from M~. ?t.foberly and ar- rested her 50n shortly after he called police Crom a public phone at the San Clemente pier. THIS IS BALBOA'S INFAMOUS WEDGE WHERE SURF NEXT TO NEWPORT HARBOR'S WEST JETTY IS BREAKING AT lO FEET When ¥ou Surf the Dirty 01' Wedge on Days Like The1e, You Need Skill, Guts -and An Awful Lot of Luck ~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Police have been under a "gag'' order lisued by presiding Judge Dreizen since Ranch Employe shortly after the boy's anest but they have revealed that Twiddy was shot with a .22-calibet.riOe he gave to the Moberly Will F C ::~· ... a·gi!;rm1r before the sho0tin1: · · • · ace · ourt Driving Halted By Smog Danger; :tfgencies Close By GEORGE LEID•L ot "'• Dilly l'llet Stiff A five-county ban on di.:iving by federal employes_ to ease a. three-day smog crisis shut down the two largest federal agen- cies operating in Orange County 'today. The Social Security Administration put on a phone recorded message telling of jts closure due to the smog ban. The Internal Revenue Service and its ~·age-­ price freeze information office in Orange slmilarly was closed. Meanwhile, operations at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station continued normally with no evidence of the base's 10,000 employes falling to show for work, a spokesman said. P..lost of the civilian and military tmpk>yes live off base. Additionally, jets continued to fly today. despite the state and federal government suggestions un- necessary travel be limitl'd.. Waves of brown, eye-burning smog smothered the Los Angeles basin Wednesday. prompting environmental of-fl:ciaJS to put a federal smog emergency plan into effect for the fU'St time today. Federal agencies in a liv~unty area 'fere asked to shut down. t.1ost refused. , The Envirorunental Protection Agency put tbe Emergehcy Air E!pisode Plan into jffect for the first time, acting under lhe authority in amendments to th6 1'70 Clean Air Act. announced Gordon Elliott, dl.ainnan ot the federal executive board. here. Under the plan, all federal agencies were requested to close down tf possible, urge essential workers to ute car pools 100 public traMport.>tloo, and limit\ of· fielal auto trav't. : Compliooct Is ot the di.ctttion of the Individual local agency cble/J. The federll plan coven Orange, Lo! Ange1'5, Iii" Bemardln0, Rl..nlde and Ventura <:Otmiles. an area populated by IS.. SMOG, Ptee ll Over Shooth1cr ~ A Starr Ranch employe '3Ccused of murder in the fatal shooting early !his mOnlb of a trespasser at the old San Juan Hot Springs is set to appear Friday morning for a preliminary hearing. Robert Carl "Whip" Slattf!fl, 41. J:as been accused in the shooting of a 21·year- old Los Angeles area man after an altercation at the off.Jimits springs along Ortega Highway July 11. Slatten, who authorities said was oot authorized to act as a security guard, allegedly soot Dennis Ra y Glahn in the chest after an argument {lver public use of the derelict spa. The court action in South Orange Coun- ty Municlal Court is set for 9:30 a.m. in the Division 2 court of Judge Richard HamlUon. Slatten has remained in custody at Orange County jail since the iocldent. S!atten originally was treated at the Orange County Medical Center J ail Sec- tion for treatment of minor hurts he received during his alleged flight from the shooting setne. · Offi<:ers said the ranch jeep J>eing used by the defendant went out of control and crashed as the man assertedly fled the shooting scene. SlaUen had already been set ror court action' on an<Kher hot springs incident when' 1he shooting took place, authorities said. Earller this year it is 3lleged the ranch hand beat a trespasser with a blackjack during a similar alt.ercaUon. The springs, for generations a mecca for bilthert and reveltn, Is on private property and \be public has been de- lemd from entering the area because of law enfn>eement probi<ms there. 1 Quadruplet Dies VERACRUZ. Mexico CAPl -One of lhe quadrupleta born to ~1aria Luisa Raacoo la.I weekend bas died. Mrs. R.ucoo. 1 •y,.Mld peasant. give birth to three boys Jnd a girl •t • remote ranch 111J11th of V el'ICrUt. One boy di«! Wednesday. I ' Super Surf Assaults Coast Lifeguards Battle Strongest Riptides of Year An Ontario man broke his neck and 152 other bathers had to be pulled from the churning surf Wednesday as Newport Beach lifeguards battled eight to IO-foot surf and the strongest riptides so far this year. Curtis Pack, 34. \\•as listed in serious but stable condition at Hoag i\lemorial Hospital today \vith broken n e c k vertebrae, a damaged spine and almost total paralysis. Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said Pack ~·as injured at about 6:40 p.m. ~·hen he ran out into the waves near 2 Cited for Fires RA~fONA (AP) -Two nien have been issued misdemeanor citations after ac- cidentally setting brush fires that burned 42 acres, state forestry spokesmen said today. The fires ·destroyed watershed land ea!lt or Ramona, along with some ch1ckens. Ne\\·port Pier, dove in, and hit the bot· loin. "The surf really had nothing to do \\'ith his injury," Lockabey said. "It u•as ac- tually pretty calm in that spot but he just dove in head first and misjudged the depth." Lockabey said an u n i d <' n ti f i e cl bcacbgoer pulled the unconscious man tri shore and called lifeguards \\ho ad· ministered emergency first aid until an ambulance arrived. Lockabey said the surf around the pier \vas probably about the only calm spoL on the whole Ne"•port Beach shoreline. ··\Ve had son1e pretty rou gh surf and riptides al !the way along," he said . ''I'd say they \\'e re the 'vorst rips all year." i\Iore than 78.000 people came to the beach despite dreary overcast and fog that hung on until mid-afternoon. Lockabey said the surf today \\'as still high -up to six feet -and very choi>- py due lo gusty winds out of the south. lie said the surf most likely will con- City Hall Wi11s ManMayHavetoBuyContpactCar SAN DIEGO (AP) -"The Great Carport Argument." as it be· came k11own1 finally ended this week when Fred Anderson gave in after three years. Anderson neglected to take out a building permit and built his carport too close 10 a neighbor's land. The truck driver spent a weekend In jail and spent thousands of dollars waging a legal "citizen's Mghts battle" that ended with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sustaining t,he city zoning laws. Anderson , with the help of friends and a city councilman, sawed off the offending lour feet of ca~rt Wednesday. "There's no point going to jail." Anderson said after the appeal, but told newsmen "I'd do it all again." "\Vhat he ended up doing Is what we asked him to do in I.ht! first place," reflected Lewis Cole, city prosecutor when the battle began in 1970. . ' I inue to rise today and last Into the \1-eekend because of the swells being ge nerated by Hurricane Emily off the Haja Calirornia coast. ''\\'e are kind of expecting more heavy surr today and I'm sure the bad riptides 1\·ilJ still be there," Lockabey said, warn· ing 1\·cak S\\•immers to stay out of the 11atcr, J u1tlor Lifeguard Tryouts Slated Tryouts for !he second session of !he Junior lifeguard program "'ill be held Sunday in the San Clemente municipal pool from 8 to JI a.m. Youngsters aged IO to 15 years are eligible to try out for the pro1ram, and lifeguards urge interested swimmers to pick up and complete application forms from the lifeguard headquarters before Su nday's tryouts. The lifesaving program "·ill be held from 8 to II a.m., f\tooday through \Vednesdays, Aug. fi through Sept. 5, next to the San Clemente pier. The program cosls $5. and S\11mmers \•:ill be enrolled in beginning, advanced or lieutenant classes. Addition:;! informalion may be ob- tained at ~92-0750. A(rent ' Arrest ~ . Close to Home SAN F'BANCISCO tAPI -Narcotic!( :1gcn1J say they have arrested a ~1cxitlln farmhand for alll"gedly attempting 10 sell 12 ouncts of htro1n ~orth St7,000 right in tht•1r O\\"TI offict's in the federal Building. Eduardo J, Bazua, 49. of ~fexlcall, ~·as C'hnrged \\'ednesday ~-ith smugglln~ and Intent to distribute drugs, federal ofOctn said. the 1\'Celie11d. '' Jlansche1v said. Ort<' su e"h animnl -a coyote "'hich bas lost its fear of 1nu n -is bt>ing sought behind the San t:k·n1en1c Inn y,•here he has appeared <1ln1ost doil y for a handout ol table scra~. Onr aide nt Int• Inn ~·ho hns f1,>d the anitnHI oftt•n said h'' has bt~cn al>le l<l get the anin1<.1l lo t'<ll fro1n hi~ hand . ur Lifeguards Say Rescue 'Roughest' By JOl{N VALTER7..A 01 1111 D•Uy ,li.t Sl•ff San ClemCnte lifeJ:uards \Vednesday performed \\'hat they termed the roughest rescue so far this year ~·hen they plucked eight swimmers from the \\aler near the municipal pier as the group became battered by a set of l~foot brea,keri; . "rt ~·as by far the roughcsl one y,·e've had In a long time," said Capt. Phil Stubbs, Y.'ho during the rescue received deep abrasions from barnacles on the pil- ings or lhe pier. Tu10 of the eight \'iCtimM required resuscitalion Ofl the beach and one of the victims. 20-year-old Frances Cythers of Riverside. received hospital treatment after the harrowing episode. Stubbs said the victims -all members of a group which came lo the b e a C' ti together froni Hiversidc -entered the ""ater before noon at the south side of the pie,r during a deceptively calm period 11·h1ch occurred be:ty,·een sporadic sets ol hurricane·spa~'nerl su rf. ''By lhe time they got to deeper y,·ater !he granddaddy set of the day came through." the captain said. "The .~·hole group started shouting and screaming for help when lhe first wa\"e hit. I ~·ould say it \Vas maybe nine or JO feet high," he added . Stubbs said lhat the inshore drift wa5 severe at the lin1e -about six knoLs - and began carrying eight victims and five lifeguards to\1'ard the pier pilings. AJI the victims ~·ere laken through the pier hazard during the set and lhen brought to shore on the north side. J.fiss Cythers and an unidentified con1· panion both received resuscitalion on lhe beach and a city fire department a~ bulance took the young "·oman to San Clemente General Hospilal. 'There, the "·oman \'i'as treated for shock and then released. "She \vas a"•fully upset and had s11·a1Joy,·ed a heck of a lot of water " a ' nurse said. Stubhs said that in all. the heavy surr \\'edncsday sparked l\\'O-do7.en rescues and he forl'Cast 8 stiffer siege or surf to-. day. ''Let's hope !he surf dies down by the ~See RESCUE, Page Z) Orange Cout Weather The Orange Coast will ha\·e cloud)• bot warm weather tomor- ro"·· extending through the wceli· end. There will be little sunshine. but lempera1ures v.ill be near 70 degree!(, wilh inland area ther- mometers climbing to 80. L~S IDE TODAY Despite Ille attention Qiven the Uiafra and Bangladesh 3torie1 itt f/ie Ameriro11 JJrrss, few noliced /a3 t year whe11 250.000 were killed 1n ll1e ti1111 Ea.st African ('Ollntry of Rururldi. DetaU,. on Pogt 20 today. L.M ... l'f t c.111.,.. .. 1. 1 c;i.,.il\W ,, .. c;~, • Cno"'"'41 )I 0.•Jll "~" 14, '' 1'""1eil ''" • fllltf'fei..-»JI l'JllMH 19-41 ,., t• ·---1•. II. U -" II hniq n .r DAJlY PllOT SC L·viI1e Plans All Suggest Half Millio11 Jr the city of Irvine finally adopts In December a general plan which con· forms to one or three calternat\ves presented \Ved.nesday night, Irvine will be a city of 500,<XXI people, give or take 10 percent. l.arry l\.forrison, director of the Clly of Jrvil'.le general plan consultants . team from the South Pasadena firm of \Yilsey 11nd fl am, said 1>0pulation estimates for three nltern;il c l11nd use plans studied \Vctlnesd11y are very similar. Plan A bun ches high density devclop- n~nt both on hillside ridgelines and in "'lley Ooor areas y,·hile preserving the l?J>SI open space. So1nething less than 4$).000 to 500,000 people would live in city •·A" by the ye:ir 2,000. :Pla n B was an unidentified version o! the Irvine Company general plan 111.nd use and c1rculalion elements. It was not Identified as such, because the 100 or triore participants in \VL>dnesday's To~·n }o'orum were asked to ral e features of each alternate they like best. Plan B cdncentrales high density development <ln the valley floors, controls hillside development and makes room for homes for from 480,000 to 500,000 by the yea r %,000. Plan C emphasizes hillside ridge development n1ore than does pl an B, and piojects similar populations. The chief differences between the three projected views of the future city citizens and city officials were asked to evaluate centered on the way the open space and transit corridors relate to villages. Each plan sho"·ed development of from 30 to 40 villages, a conce pt put forth In the Irvine Company land plan. Plan A linked the villages with a strongly visible north-south co rridor of high density residential, public uses, open space and transportation backbone for a citywide "personal rapid t r a n 11 i t ' ' system. Morri.soo urged lhe city to apply for demonstration grants for such a personalized rapid transit nciwork which will be available in "five to eight years." Only 2S..foot rights of way are needed, /\lorrison nott'd. From Page J SMOG ... 10 million persons. ()n]y the Internal Revenue Serviei! and Social Security Administration said they would shut a<>wn their offices for the day. 'The Fm, Post Office, federal courts, U S. Marshal's office, and others said they would remain open. The federal Drug Abuse Task Force said agents would work, but clerical personnel would be given the day off. Gov. Ronald Reagan ordered all state aaenctes to halt use of state owned vehicles, exti!pt for emergency purposes, In~ downU>Ytn Los Angeles, eastern Los Aiige:les county and Riverside and San Bernardino counties. ll'be Los Angeles Air Pollution Control District called for ozone readings from . ~'to .50 parts per mllliGn of air today. The .SO level is the point at which a first stage alert is called. When reached all driving in the Los Angeles basin is sup- posed to be curtailed. ~teanwhile, the highest smog readings in Orange County were .30 ppm in La Habra Wednesday. A .29 ozone reading was logged in Anaheim. Causing the smog accumulation is a temperature inversion "lid" over the Los Ahgeles Basin ""hich the national weather service says is not expected to break up until Friday. Again today, inland cities of Orange Co)..Lnty were expected to experience the highest 01..one readings. The county forecast is .25 parts per million oxidants. tbe APCD said. That's an expected level high enough to request industry to forego any burning or wastes and ta urge motorists to curtail driving, the county APCD engineer repeated today. OIAff&I COAIT K DAILY PILOT ,.,,. or.,.. CO.SI OAILV PILOT, wlltl '"lcfl I• tombiPM!O 1ri. N..,..·Preu. I• 11111Hl.,,ff b'f IM Ortr>Qt Co.11 Pll&lli.ll!no C-nf. S- rtll edillot>l ••e P\IDllll\td, M~y l't\""'Oft Frid•Y. IOr Cot!• Mtw. 111-.J lltlefl. H""llllOIOn lht<fl/F...,n11ln V•ll<ly, lf\IVl'lf llN(ll, INlf\11/S-lebtclt -'"" (...._,,It/ S..11 J.,.n C•o•"r•flll. A •l11Q!e , .. .....,, edll'°" It Pl/t>llSftf(I 5•1\WdlYI .... Svnc!itn . Tiit prlflc:JNI pUOllt llf"' Pllllt II •I 1lO W••t ll•r Sir"'' CO..t• ....,.,,., CllllorN1, tlil». kob1rt N. W1•d ''"idtl'll 11\d P11Dll•"'' J •ck R. Cwrl,, Viet ,Alldtl'll -Gtl'lttl l M_o., Tho,,,11 K11 .. il l.Clilfl< Tho,.,11 A. Mwrph i11t M•n•o•no l!cutor Ch1 rl11 H. Looi 1t:eh11d P'. N1U "'"'"""' M•n•oltio fdllon S.. c:i.-... Office 101 North El c .,,,1110 11 •• 1, '2672 OtW Offk" (.nl1 Mue: l)O w111 air ll•ltf H~ lltHlli l JH Mftl_. ...... ~••d Milnl'"""" e"""; li'f"lt 9Mdl &olilf-,.1r, ............ a"'"' m ,.,,,, """'"" , .. .,..... 17141 642-4111 C'-fflff A4wrtlal .. 642·1671 S.. a ••• ,_ All 0.,.1t-11tt1 T•~ 4,J-4420 C~t, 1'7L Or•• Coeu ,.llOlhllint °"'""""'· NI M'WI •let.... 111\111...-t'°"', -""""' .... ""' ... edwt'l"-'t '""'"' _, .... ....,,..\ICllll •l!Mvl ...... t ...... ""-• " cwrrltM •-. .._., Clttt ..,.,.,. ,..1111 11 Cftl• M ... , C•H•nt1. il.lb9Ctlll!loll ..,. Cl.,.llr t2..i IM!lllllY1 llw mt•! u n n.n111,.,1 mm,.,., Mff .. 15-a .d 1Nf111'11r. fhursdiy, Jul~ 2tl, 1971 'LOVE OR BE SICK' J•m•• E. Peterson 'ANGER NOT HEAL THY' Be•trlce Schiffman Speal\:ers Cite Importance For Aged to Love Livit1g By JOHN ZALLER QI 1111 Otllf "llOt Sltff As long as old people keep !heir Jove of livin g, they can expect lo stay healthy nnd well . When they lose it, they can ex· peel steady physical deterioration. This was the prime point made \\'ednesdby by the t"'O main speakers at lhe Orange County Conference on Aging in Anaheim. "Some say the biggest problem of <ild people is transportation." Beatrice Schiff. man of the National Conference on Ag· ing, told an audience of 200 in ~he Disneyland Hotel. "Others say that it's food and nutritilon. "But that's bunk," f\.trs. Schiffman declared. ''People say it because it's ac- ceptable, because there are federal funds available to fight lt." \Vhat old people need far more than material services, she said, ls a satis- fving routine of life. ·'"Sometimes you'll find an older person li ving in a house much larger than they need. They're always cleaning ~rs, dusting, and working in the garden t~1ng t.o keep It up, and you try to convmCi! them to give it up for a neat little three- room apartment. "'That can be a great mistake. You can -Assembly Aide Paid Filing F'ee For Sole Rival SACRAMENTO (AP) -Th< top aide for the Callfbrnla Assembly's Repubican leader Robert Beverly, paid the cam· paign 'filing fee for Beverly's sole op-.. ponent last year, the secretary of state's office reported today. Secretary of State Edmund Brown Jr. re.ported in a statement that Anita Stephens, a Peace and Freed_om can· didate, filed an amended ca1npa1gn state- ment that disclosed the fee payment. f\t.iss Stephens reported Tom P.lartin , Beverlv's administrative assistant, pr~ vided her with the $192 filing fee for the November 1972 race, Brown said. Ile quoted her as reporting that vlas her only can1paign expense. Bro\\'11. a Democrat who plans to run fo r governor next year, said : "This pay. ment was part of a immoral and sometimes illegal Republican scheme to se cretly flnanCi! ultraliberal candidates in the 1972 California election." Beverly is leader of the GOP minority in the Assembly, where his party has 31 of the 80 seats. His district centers in ~tanhattan Beach. Brown said that Martin and Richard Dugally, l~n a Beverly aide and now 3 S.ac.ramenlo lobbyist for the Ford f\101 or Co., have ad1nitted 1naking the payn1ent to Miss Martin. ~le added that both men "insist that Beverly was unaware of their rlnanclal dealini:is with Miss Stephens." Bc\'erly's office said he "'as out of the state and could not be reached im· mediately for comment. Fair Schedulecl Aug ust 24, 25 In Sa1i Clemente A summer fair SIM>nsored by the South Coast Chol'81e and Light Opera Associa· tion "'ill be held AU({. 24 and ~ on the San Clemente I Hgh School amphitheatre grounds. Crnfl!i, art, food tind t"ntert:iinnu'nt \viii rompose the farnll y-s tylc Jc s I I v a I . \\'anclering folk suii;ters and guitarisls 1\'ill entertain during the fai r ond stage shO"'S, inclurln1~ ~loists and group pcrfom1ers, will be present«!. A-six"<'ial srrtlon of !he fair wlll be reserved for .::hildrcn only, Thls privatt section "'Ill allow youngsters to admire and purthase piects of art created not only by lhelr peers but also by adul t artists. without the innuenct of groY.·n· Up!. Jlerson~ lntPrested in ptJrticlpating In the fair ~hould contnct the ntuslc asl!ocia· I.loo, Box '471, Snn Clcn1enre. tear apart the relationships of their Jives.·• Several studies have shown, J\otrs. Schiffman said, th at old people "very frequently" die within a few months after they have been forced to change their surroundings. P.1rs. Schiffman didn'! draw any iron clad rules about changes in old peoples' lives. "The thing that invariably kills us is isolation from a satisfying roUtlne of life." James Peterson, keynote speaker at the confereDce, outlined an even more direct relationship between m e n t a I outlook and a healthy life. Stressing the need of the elderly to en- joy the "tender loving care" that other age groups need, he said, "The rule is either you Jove or you become sick, If you become isolated, you can expect to become sick either physically or men· tally," 11-fn. Schiffman said that one of the most destructive mental attitudes in the elderly was a feeling of "anger" at lhe injustices they suffer. "lt is just not healthy lo be mad at everything," she said, "and it doesn't do any good, either, because you dissipate your energy withoUt accomplishing anything." She ~rged the elderly to take the edge off their anger, and then to channel it in a rational manner toward achieving a specllic goal. "Lei!fo to work with the people yo~'re angry at," she said, "and you'll ac- c~plish a lot more." From Page J RESCUE .•. Y.'etkend or we'll really have troubl e," he said. A combination of factors at midv.·eek is making the situation e s p e c i at I y dangerous. TI1ick coastal fog. the severe cross- drift and the unpredictable appearance of the large sets all make for hazardous bathing and surfing, he said. "The sels might not show for maybe 10 minutes then they hit all of a sudden. Instead of three wa ves to a set, we're getting as much as 10 in a rapid sc· quencc. Thal means that s~·immers run out of air and strength very quickly," Stubbs said. U.S. Uses Fiftl1 Veto on Israel Condemnatio11 UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. IAP ) -The United Stales cast its fifth veto in U.N. history today to kill a Security Council resolution strongly deploring Israel's failure to withdraw from territory "·on in the 1967 war. The vote v.•as 13 to 1 in favor of the eight-power resolution that also ex· pressed ''serious conccm at Israel's Jack or cooperation" "·ith Gunnar V. Jarring of Sweden. the U.N. secretary-general's special rcprE;sentaUve on the f\liddle E;ist. A negative vote by one of the five permanent members of the 1a.mcmbcr oouncil nullifies ;i resolution approved by a mfljority or nirie or more. China did not vote, sayi ng It \VOuld not participate. Sea Lio11 Friends To Hear Lecture Friends of the Sea Lions will mt.>et for 3 lectur by a noted marim> mam1nal physiologist at 7:30 p.nl. Friday at the l.aguna llcach Recreation hall, tiS N. Coas r lll~hway . GIC1rla Pallon, a scientist \Yith the San t:>lego Undersea Center. will sr ak on normal and :t b no rm a I diving metabolisms ln mArine animals. ~·r1ends or the Sea Lions is a nonprofit RrOup which attempts to aid beached or Injured merine llfe, educate the public about n1nrine animals and hopes IO t.'Oll· ~lrurl a t·t!nter for lrealmcnl and hu5bnndry of lhl". sea animal.If. Tips Give1i In Slaying Of Gir·~ 11 Circulars containing Information <ln the strangulation murder of Corona del Mar 's Linda Ann O'Kecfc today arc pro- viding a flood of llps fro1n throughout Southern California. The special poster-type bulletil\, In· el uding artist's com1>0!lite drawing! of the siaycr based on y,·ltnesses' descrip- tions. have been sent statewide. "We've got some that look good," NC\\']>Orl Beach Police Detective Capt. lJonald Oyaas said todoy . A showin g of the mug shots on Television's Channel 7 Eyewitness News \Vednesday night produced calls from El Segundo, Downey and even Victorville. The dozens of calls so far look best in cases y,·here they originated locally, Cnpt. Oyaas said this morning. A key clue in the case v.•hich occu1Ted July G is a turquoise van about the same w1usua l blue-green shade as that used on Sears service vans. Two people y,•ho realized they had seen the II-year-old girl getting inUl the vehi· cle came forward after seeing pictures of the victim in newspapers. She was reportedly doing so volun · tarily, although her family and friends have told police they didn't believe the girl found n1urdered the next day would go willingly v.•irh a stranger. The victim had started to ¥.'alk home from summer school classes at Lincoln lntern1ediate School to her home at 602 Orchid Ave., about one mile from the campus. Her stranglt'd body was found by chance. lying in a water-filled ditch ad· jacent to Back Bay Road by a group of nature walkers the !olloy,·ing day , y,·hile a task fo rce or volunteers had hunted overnight. ' IIundreds of bits and pi eces possibly relating to the unexplained murder have been sifted by police since then, including material from three clairvoyants claim- ing ESP powers. Sharp Reduction 0£ Deficit Told By Goyernment \YASHINGTON IAP) -The Nixon ad· ministration announced today it was suc- cessful in hold ing down government spending during the 1973 fiscal y~ar and said the budget deficit was $14.4 billion. The deficit was sharply reduced from the January forecast of $18 billion and resulted from high er tax receipts during the year plus reduced federal spending, the government said. At the same time , President Nixon Issued a statement reiterating his goal of achieving a balanced budget of $2fi9 billion for fiscal 1974. ''We held the budge t line in the year jusl passed without ra ising taxes," Nixon said. "I believe we can do so again - and in fact ac hieve a balanced budget - in fiscal year 1974." Total budget outlays for fiscal 1973 ,..,.ere. µlaced at $246.6 billion. $3.2 billion below earlier estimates. Hecci pts \\'Cre placed at $232.2 billion, an increase of ~7.2 billion over the January estimate. Pt1ajor reductions in 1973 ou tlays were made in public assistance grants by the Department of llca11h, Education and \Velfare and in benefit cl;'JimS for dis· abled coal-miners. Secretary of lhe Treasury George P. Shultz announced the hudget figures at a news briefing and pra ised Congress for its role in helping hold federal spending in check. even though he ackno y,·Jcdgcd there \\'erc differences on expenditures for indi vidual rograms. Schultz said restraint on federal spend· ing and a balanced budget helped create "the environment needed lo combat in· fl atlon." i\1ixo1a Refusal Panels to Press Subpoena Action \VA S!llNCTON (UPI) -President ?\lxon refused today to comply with sub- poenas for \Vltltc Jlouse documents and lapc recordings or conversations \\'Ith aides about Watergate. Uoth the Senate Yiatergatc committee and special Watergate pro sec utor Archibald Cox im1nediately started legal action to compel Nixon to comp ly. Nixon said he would not furnish tape recordings of five meetlngs with John W llean III, his former c.'ounsel, who charg- ed In five days of testimony before the t'Onunltteee that in conversations Sept. 15, 1972 and in ~1arch, 1973, Nixon disclosed he know of the Watergate roverup. * * * Ehrlich1rian: 'Not Aware Of Foe List' WASHINGTON (AP! -John D. Ehrlichman teslificd today thal he never heard of an "enemies list" \Vhile in the ' White House. The former chief presidential domestic adviser also said he knows of no instance in which White House staff members BYRNE DENIES INTEREST IN FBI POST-Story, Page 7 received a citizen's individual tax return, although Internal Revenue S e r v i c e figures show that 915 "tax checks" \\'ere sought by the \Vhite House last year alone . Ehrlichman, in his third day or televis- ed testimony before the Sen a t e Watergate committee, also said that former acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray III was being investigated for near- ly two weeks before his resigna tion y,·as forced by public disclosure that he destroyed documents taken from lhe safe or E. HO\\'ard Hunt, a \Vatergate con· spirator. And he said the "plumbers" unit in· vestigation of Daniel Ellsberg, y,·hich resulted in the burglary of h i s psychiatrist's office by White House agents, was undertaken to satisfy Presi· dent Nixon's demand that the Pentagon Papers leaks be plugged. Sen. Joseph M. Montoya (D-N.M.), asked Ehrlichman about the S<>-i:alled "enemies list" which ousted White House counsel John \V. Dean III said was kept in the \Vhite liouse. Dean said tax audits and FBI investigations were sought against some persons <ln the list to harass them. "Could you throw some light on the genesi s of the enemies list?" ~fontoya asked. "No sir," Ehrlichman replied. 111 don't recall ever having heard about it." He said he spoke to form er presidential chief of staff H. R. Haldeman about the maller after Dean's testimony, but said that y,·as the first time he heard of it. Ehrlichman also denied hearing of any requests by White House staff members to see individual tax returns. h-fontoya then read IRS statistics shpwing the White House asked for 477 "tax checks" in the first half of las t year and oL38 in the last half. "You 're talking about apples and oranges," Ehrlichman said. He said a "tax check" is carried out by IRS staff members who review in- forma tion about the person in queslion to sec if they have any problems with federal tax collectors. The President said he would furnish so me papers sought by !he subpoenas - if more specific requests wt.'re made. "l cannot and will not consent to give any Jnvcstig:Hory body private presiden- tial papers," Nixon wrote in a letter read :i.t the stdrl of the Scnute committee's hearing. ·"fo the e-.:tcnt that I have custody or other docu1ncnts or information relevant to the work of the select committee, and that can properly be made public, I y,·ill be glad to make these available in response to speci!ic requests." After Cox received a similar letter, M as ked Chier District Court Judge John J. Sirica to sign a show-case order directing the administration to tell why it should not be compelll'd to comply \\'ith the sub- poenas. Sirica did so, giving th e White lfouse until Aug. 7 to reply. The seven-member conuniltC'e. mean- time. voted wia11i1nously to instruct chief ('QUl)sel Samuel Dash to carry the issue to court, }le y,•ill seek a declaratory judg- ment from the court asking for an order telling Nixon to comply. Both moves will launch a legal battle which legal experts expcclcd ultimately would ha\'e to be settled by the U.S. Supreme Court. Some said a decision could be reached wilhin three months. CommiUce Chairman Sam J. Ervin (f).. N.C.) called Ni:ton's condition that th~ panel specify exactly v.·hich documents it wants "an itnpossi l>ility." "\Ve'rc not clairvoyants," he furned . lie said the committee did not know what papers Nixon had, and therefore could not possibly ask for them in· .dividually. Nixon, in his letter to Ervin, said, ''You \-Viii understand , l am sure, tha t it will si1nply nol IJe feasible for my staff and me to review thousands of documents lo decide which do and \\'hich do not fit ~·ithin the s~·ecping but vague terms of the subpoena.'' The motion to send Dash to court y,·as made by Republican Sen. Ho\vard _II. Baker Jr. of Tennessee. the vice chairman . It carried on a vote of 6-0. Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, (0.Ga.), at-- tending a conference on the farm bill, later telephoned his affirmative vote to the committee to make it unanimous. At the \Vhila House, deputy Press Secretary c:erald L. \Varren told reporters: "The President ls very con· fident of hi s constitutional position as outlined in the lellers and the President fully expects his position to be upheld in the courts. Of course the President, as in any <lther matter, would abide by a definitive decision or the highest court." Boat Explodes In Dana Harbor; Boater B1rrned A boater received second and third degree bums Wednesday afternoon when a fire erupted on·rus 2S..foot cabin cruiser anchored inside the east jelly of Dana Harbor . George Ada1ns of El f\1onte received bums on his hand s and fa ce when the engine or his boat became (Jooded and erupted into flames as the n1an at· tempted to start the motor. Adams and his wife, Drothy, both jumped overboard when the vessel ex- plocicd. Adams climbed back on board the vessel after the flames quickly subsided, patrohnen added. Harbor Patrolmen y,·ere called to the scene and wrapped the couple in blankets and treated them for shock. Adams was transported to San Clemente General Hospital where he was treated for bums of the face and hands. Damage to the boat was estimated at $150. Nevi General Bectric's i-., ----,· General Electric I I I I I I I I I I I Model l lF·?IDP I I I I 20.8 CU. FT. NO-FROST REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER I Only 301'." Wide. 66' Hl9h ••• '37997 I I I I L BEST BUY 19995 Mod1I SD·251 Delivery and front p1n1I included __ .... __ _ Phone ~~~ ·7788 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA j 7 .. I I • 7 I PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS •UllN•tt flilAMI STA.Tl.MINT TM fQllowlng 1111rt0n h llolng tl\ltllMU ••: GE llt'I, m Foret! ""-· ~ IHth. C•ll• '26.SI c;..1 E'I.•"' ~. ll!f 091otlln ,..,,ac., COt'Ol\t dtt ~,. c.111. t'UfS Tll!1 11<1•l11ni. 1• ~ond~tticr ov •n lfl. Mvldullt. GPIE,~ Tiii• llli.mfl'lt ""'' nlM with !IM Cou• 1Y C .. •k of Or•no-Counry on J111v t P, lf13 """ l'ul>l!lMll Or•l'll)I Co.11 O•lly Piiot. Ju• r It . 26. 1nd A1111u11 'L t. 1t7l n•h PUBLIC NOTICE I HOTICI! INVITINO a1os OCEAN VI EW SCHOOL. DISTIU CT. nn I Vtrner Av._, H1mllll';llon llt M:f'h Ce. ,.., NOTICE 1S HEll:eav GIVEN IN! IM 1.. lcNlrd ol T•u1tMt (II !lit Oc111> Vlt"" ~hool Ol11r1c1 ol Or1noe Countw, Hun< lnglon BucFI, C1llfl!rnl1, will r..:tlYt H• lo lt1M/pu1ctw1... 1 ... 0 12) " .. ,Nnll .... buMS. e1.n wm 11t .....ti* I.IP to 2:00 p.M .. 1 ... •UO«•I l. lf7l, 11 11>1 A.c1mlnlJ1r1tlOt1 Of· ice Cit ...id O!~trld, nn Warner A-. MttlP19'°'1 8Htll, C1Hfornl1, t?M,, 11 tt>lc:tl tltM wi. bids will tit °""'* ind -Md In 9C'C.ni.l'Kt wllll ~lflt.tllon1 -Oii n11 In IM offke of Mid Dlrtrlcl. Bus "'"'" be dtllY«MI to !hi Ol1lrkt ot 111.,. 11wn to d•'fl •f1•r rKltlpl ot tvrthaMt ... a.r. tlldi must ti. r1turntd In d..,pllut• on iur bid "°'"' '' pr .. en!ftl. Tri. ao.td of Tnnlllft r•~n IM 1QM to r•lKf '"" ~ 111 Dias. .m ro . ••Iv• 1ny lrrteullrllY therein. By: Rtll)ll H. 81111r, Ph.D. Clerll ot IM ea.rd ol Trutt .. 1 OCEAN VIEW r SCHOOL DISTRICT Publlllltd Or1119• Coast Dilly Piiot Jiiiy 19, 26, ltn _ V:U-73 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITOltS SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THI: COUNTY O' ORAHG& Ho. A·1•742 E$lllr of WALTER H. $HR.AKE, ~ttt•!.ed. NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN 10 ttM rl!'dllors ol Ille above t11med decedem ""' 111 persons having cl1lm1 against IM a,ld decedenl ''' reoulred 10 1119 !'Mm. ~llh !hi nt<;HSary VOUCl>erl . 111 lht offlai rl !hi tlark of the ltlOVI enU!kd tour!, or o P<tHnl !hem, with IN! necnsal'"f rouchtti. lo 1hl under1lgntd 11 thl office " his .. lorney, HARRY AlDE5, Attomt"I' rr law. 606 ~rn Ollw s1,..1, Los 'nvelH. C1llf'ornta fOOlo&. wfllth 11 the M•tt of ouslnn1 ot !hi u-rslgntd In all na111r1 Pl!'f'lalnl119 ro 11\e es11rt of "Id lecldent, wlltllt1 IOU• manltl• 11m thl ''" publlt1tlon of !his norlt t. 0111d July ID, 1971. DONALD RAY SHRAll;li E•ecutor ot the Will of tl\9 abovt n1me<1 oeceden! itARRY AIDES lllorMY II llW ..., Soulfl on-. stntt LM A..,-1 ... C1Htond1 90014 r1h 12111 •u-1u1 t.llorMY for ••.cwt.r PubllMMd Or•~ COll!lt Delly Pllof, Ju-rv 12, lt, 26, 1nd August 2. 197J ~1 U·1J PUBLIC NOTICE ~-'-.:._-'-~~~~-I • t.1nl SUPERIOR COUllT OF THB STATI! OF CALIFORNIA IN ANO FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE No. Antsz • l)RDER TO ~HOW CAUSI! FOR CHANGE OF NAME I In lhl M11!tr ol ll1t Apptlc•llon of 1 v.ARY ELIZABETH BOGART For '--rh1nge of Name WHEREAS MARY EL IZABETH IOGAllT, ptlltloner. • person over 11 y11r• gf 1;e, 1111 ti led I pellllon wllh the rltrk of 11111 Coo.irt lor •n order th~nq\ng; Pl'IJll-r'1 ,....,,. from MAltY ELIZA· i ETH 80GART :to MA't:Y ELIZABETH GLASSBERG; IT IS OROERED lhll an Pl!'f'IOllS 1(1-ll'fllled Jn 1'1111 above enrl!ltd metier •P. ""°r belorl 11111 Court In Department 3 on *"t 211tl di)' al A\IVU~t, 1m. 11 2:00 o'clock PP. .. of Wld day to lhOw c.&llff, U 1ny, why tr.. pt:tltton !or ch1ng1 of n1me 1110uld nol be 11r•nted. IT IS FURTH ER ORDEREO 1Mt 1 10PY ol lhfl Order be pUbUshed In IM .()Illy Pllol, 1 newspaper of gHerat !(lrtu l•llon, prlnled ln wld counlY. lit le11I ·~ eldl -k for tour successive WMks 1 prior to me oay ot lllld hearing. Datwd: Ju ly 11, 1'7J. CLAUDE M. OWEtlS, 1 Juoge of the Svpeorlar C011 rt DONALD ll!WIS McCARTY ;:.i~11N:~'•N:!~P ~aul•~••d •Newport 9Ntll, C•U!ornla f'JUJ 1714)~2 / • Anornr( fer ApoNcan .._,/ t MARY EllZA8ETtf 800ART ~. Publlsried Oror>ge Coa~t ~II~ Pl!o!, Ju· J , ty 19, 2• and August t. 9, 197J 2!26-73 '. ; PUBLIC NOTICE DAILY PILOT 39 Developer Says Sales Increase New Savings Rates Lending OVER THE COUNTER Law Issu e HAso L1s11ngs forw.ctneMl•r. J u1r 2s, 1913 Boon to Consumers S t ,,.,. QMOlll klN ~In~ 11'-)ll.. lt•ymd 11 '~ fj'• 11vlot W ss· 1 t l~fld bY lhot Na• ti• LrJ ,f• .... llUM P6< 111• 1 •11-CJfl ena e !lot* .l.MoQCl~IOn ot 1c1 ~D il ll .. f(K"l!Q .. ~ .. .J!•1UU•nv ~ur~ _, :::::; Gt\ ,.~/~ ,;: r,:~ ::ft 1:., fl~ j.;! 11= DC 1y\\ .-, =.~ o~1~""'t ~On ,c= lf'" "!~ ::;.n 6'' ,:,. J\1 T~i. r!j' j',(L lu, In Sales and other operating revenues of the McCarthy Co. or Anahelm rose to $7.161.000 ln the quarter ended JWle 30 from $4,376,000 In the com· parable period of 1972, lhe company reported Wednesday. Net Income for the quarter was $158.000, or 10 eents a share, compared with $192,000, or 13 cents a share., in the .sec- ond quarter ol 1972, the residential developer reported. FOR THE SIX months: end- ed JlUle 30, sales and operating revenues totaled $12,505,000, up from t h e $8,897 ,000 recorded in the firs t half of 1972. Net income for the six months was $292,000 compared with $310,000 in last year's first half. McCarthy's backlog of hous- lng to be delivered in the sec- ood ~U s tand s d a~ proximately $11,270,000. up 167 percent from the backlog of $6.730,000 at the end of June 1972. Computer Prod11ct Announced BOSTON -The saver is back in the saddle again, under new federal regulations that pennit banks to pay higher interest rates QD sa\t· ings accounts. "Last week I purchased a certificate of deposit from a well-known catlfomia bank," an investment adviser wrote clients a few days ago. "Thie CD provided a 9.2S percent yield !" Such yiekb are legal on certificates v.·ith tenns of four years or more. ln fact, banks are not limited as to the rate of intereit on CD's with distant maturity dates. Shorter-term deposits are not getting qU.ite s u c h generous yields. but the new regulations are sweetening tbe savings cup acr06S the board . Large advertisements are being taken by co.mmercial as well as savings banks and sav· Ca liforni a Compu ter Products Inc. of Anaheim says ·"" it has developed a "double ~ density" direct access disk storage system compatible with the recently announced IBM double density 3330 disk subsystem. Calcomp's double density model 1030 has the capacity to store 200 million bytes of com- puter data per desk drive spindle or 1,600 million bytes 1 ,,. per system. the company said Yr ~ Wednesday. THE SYSTE'-1 permits the 1 Intermixing of double and """" single density disk drives with one controller. According to president Lester L. Kilpatrick , Calcomp's dol.ible d e n s i t y model 1030 has been operating in the development laboratory several months and t h e schedule calls for delivery of prodUction systems to begin in the third calendar quarter of 1974. Calcomp is a leading pro- ducer o[ computer graphics systems and a leading in- dependent manufacturer of direct access memory storage equipment. • . • lngs and loan associ11tle>r'-' to proclaim the new rates. They generally show a movement t.o the maximwn legal rates and point to both the flOJllinal rate tlnd the so-called "effective rate," which sounds even higher. For example, a mutual sav- ings bank in Massachusetts, which used to be limited to a S percent rate on passbook ac- counts, now can pay 5.25 per- cent. And, as advertised, this amounl.S to 5.47 percent through daily compounding. Certificates of deposit for fixed times ranging from 90 days to four years o.r more earn progressively h I g h e r rates but are subject to a penalty for prematu r e withdrawal. This penalty Is not getting so much publicity as the higher rates. Some advertising does not even mention the penalty, wlrich depositors presumably Higl1 Posted By Capital Get a Horse: Special to the OaUy PUot LOS ANGELES -Capital Alliance Corp., owner of Mariners Savings & Loan Association of Newport Beach, annolllli;ed Wednesday t h e highest after-tax earnings for six months in its history. \Vho cares about gasoline when one can get about 20 miles to a bucket of oats, like this Amish wa gon along Rt. 23 near Reading, Pa. Record Earnings Posted by Smith development areas outside the United States . will hear about when they ap- ply for the CD's. But !IOnle banks are tnOrt' !rank. and some are franker than oi hers. For example, one Boston savings bank lncludl's a small- t y p e faotnote: "Effective rates ea.med only when sav- ings and dJvidends are le.ft oo dtpMlt for cme year." But the Union Dime Savings Bank of New York lays it on the line: "FDIC regulations permit withdrawals from time accounts before malurity pro- vided the rate of interest on the amount withdrawn is reduced to the rate paid oo grace-day and d a y · o f • withdrawal accounts, and up to three months' interest at that rate is forfeited." The new rates reflect the concern ol federal regulatory agencies that s a v i n g 1 depo61tors might otherwise be tempted to take money out of their accounts in pursuit of higher ·yields elsewhere. Jn the ~ when interest rates generally moved higher and faste r oul.Slde the savings realm. banks specializing in savings activity suffered. Sav· ings and loan associations ln particular. as v.·ell as mutual savings banks, pointed out that their ability to serve ,the home mortgage market was hampered by the savings drain. Raising the interest rates that can be paid to attract savings may protect the com- petiti\•eness of savings in· stitution.s. but spokesmen for the industry point out an at- tendant PfOblem. That is, many states have ceilings on the amount of interest that can be charged on mortgage loans. Being able (or being forctd ) to pay out more interest to depo.-titors. while not being able to charge higher interest to borrowers, is putting a squeeze on the mortgage- market lenders. "~tortgage lending rates are already at the 7'1 percent eeU- lng set by state law, and below the rates that prevail in the mortgage m a r k e t s na- tionally," said Frederick H. Schneider.~ pmident of the Savings Banks Association of New York State. , Rossmoor Income Up In Quarter The Rossmoor C o r p . , developer or adult "Leisure WOl'"ld" planned communities. Wednesday announced earn· tngs and net income for the nine months ended June 30. Net income rose to $2,725,000 from $2,490,000 a year ago. On a per-share basis. earnings: of 87 cents reflected a gain over the 77 cents reported for the like period last year, the. Laguna Hills: firm reported. OPERATING REVE NUES Increased from $42,036.000 a year ago to $47 ,094~000- By SYLVIA PORTER ~ Olftlr IE~~.~ ~~:;_ 'tt 1)\o 1 =lv•I ff'.' ~ "'1 1"1n ~ :;{ ,. Du the .. n 1 ·•-1 'M _.. • ~ 1!~ i!t!' o,\ n'' l'l. 1~3: ~ ~':I: eon ~natt> oor lh s kloli 11o ~' 111C1...,; H:::, t': !1"',. Ollln. a 11 1 u c I , . ~l:~ week ls a packuge o f 111•H Jfl••IF.llo. ~ H•M w 6:;. ''" °""" c.o '~ 1 '•Un .. - nd =t· i.wi c:: n:t ..... j I\ .. ,'-l~(! -~ ... p"~ :~~~ ;..11 IJ~~! ··~ I ;:: ame menu to our lederal rtt1•tteni •(1u11 H•~n er ., 1-.., 11u~i sui• "II) 1 1h 1 , 1 1a:i. Truth In Lendlng law which 1111\Mc:llOt\1. EE'~;:. ~ ,... ~· 11111 1 . 11.ii hlv ~ 1• ltiOUltll\A\I II F '', m •m t o-•'• !.;, UIW 11-. could be of crucial lmporlllnCC ANO UTIL T ' ~ ... r!,.q ~ 1•. .. m'!<llr 1•'• IM.. VllG.M '° •.• to Am I Wlllnncl•v l••lllo •• ••• '' ,,....,, l•' J ~~\It "inc• 111 I "• every er can tonSumer. J111v u. 1111 ~ ••• 1°" 2) ... 2 n..11 1" l, v.n Ovit 1~\.o If th k b k .J b l ld lr.t~ H••(I! C u•1 111• ><•• Inn I.. I• Vpll !a.le~ t"9 C paC age, aC l'U Y Ac\IM\nl , •. , JSYt HOf""'d 91, !Dh )co111L (,, Io "• 'l•C~orl ·~· 14~ 11'' Sen. William Proxmlrt (0-~lt'o t~ 1 1.1 ,;!: ~~i'~t0 ?!:: it\;I~~.~: 7 1~.: ~•1 ~:=.'I: 111 lo Wis ) w-IO be .........,, In Au" e~v ., .. 1-<v•" c 11 . 1\. Cli wr1<1 jt • ~ vQI ~ I•!) IS • ' ' "'" ~ "U.O •I 11 .... ~. 1-hJ•t• C lJ T.1'1 )v M..,-dl ) tt Wltll NO ll1>4 !"' tact. tt woo.Id be a vital --•st lr.llYn • • .. >. In<!• Wit ... ""• i..n·11·•· M ''''" w .... Ml 21>.~ l~, ~ Am AOt•I \1nJ• N<H.I ~· , ts IS'v'" Uo )) • )11. W•~mn I .. I'• to the tens ol millions v.•ho •11 '• 11 +n!011J ~ 1 t ,$1\t'O• Co 1 • 1'1 WtoO It• I 11, • A Ar1C l"ll •'• a:i.. 1!'11f'l (•O i,.i 1'~·-fW 1 .. f' •:rir 1-ll f t• routinely buy thro•u•h depart· ,.,..11!1 LD J'• •. 1""'( en •. • •. )1"'0-10" 1 i.1w, ' Wt 14"-11 .. -o lr.M E~IM' 61"-'1"-lnlml C1 11 • 11 •1~ TOii '"st\., W..t ... M 11-. \)'• 1ncnt store charoe accounts 1r.m F1"'' 11 • 1: 1~• 1r.1~m s .._,, s1f\d Pto u •. l) •lw11,1t Pt .. , • and ban . ID Am Fiii'" • I., ... In ••w ,. I , .. So.<••• 111, ll'•~•TJI"° " Ill Ill )c credit tardS; the ""' G•ot '6'1 • 1n1f\t Cp 11, 11, !'ln~o~ I ll 1,1., Wtllt ,d )0 10'• ol ·11· 11.Mlt\ s. 16\o '"" llOl•A<I It • ' I . ld li follll ''l "'• U•mr I IM, ... tens m1 lOllS more who use ""' ,1,y l .. Jomnb 10 , ll • t•"' 1r.1, J? :n1, w ..... w I 11 " b • d · I Am Wa+G 1 ... 11'• Jfl AllFf :; , ' , S•~'4 Qr... I • t Noni "' '''-' I"' us1ness an commerc1a Anht>lu ....... '°'h~ M n•. 1~ ~'••• N • 10 . 10 .. w1" PLr 11• 1 ... endit of just about every :.~o Ln 13'~ 1!~ ~::!~~ ~t 1~~: 1~ ; ~:;.:, 'tf :i: :;~ 'Z:1o L~~ I~ 1~:~ d-~ptlon · and , •• mill'IOllS AP$ lflCO IS 19 "'''" ,, ..... I ~·n•• CD 1( ~ 11 1W•IQ1tl w ~· S'• ~· ' 1ro;: Anln My! t'• l t 111;.tllT: 1..._ '''• ~ ... oo i:o f, 1•1 x...,~ Co 1 t&o . of women the natiOll over Anew Hr 1',_ 11"' 1(011 ot>n n • 11 t .. u .. C•P .,, :r-.. v,uo '" ~ , ~ lr.•\IW.I ... • "'• ~'· 0. 6"' Tt ml)aA 11-.l~ Co '"' "· .._._"·-·Uy descriminated "no Col• l'~ n, "·~• Fb 1, ~ u "'"' 111>.0 ti.ris. "''" -.1~ n "°''6 U<l6".,' All 0. LI ~ 1} O:ey ("'! 6 o I•• -against in the terms of many Au16 Trn 1~, 1011 ""v" 1ni •• •~'-1,i,o Aro J' > Vo ICM~ 1no )'• • • credit deals. llrd Wr , ...... II'· l(n•nt \'! 1! 11 I 11~Fo li ij'-KOQ1r Pr )~' 1 11 , .10 JUost Artl1>e Tiiie l of the package ls the 8111 M~ 1~ u~ Kr..-r j. f.:1 ------- 1973 rair Credit Billing Act. It •:k• ai~ '11 •·(~~ ..... p~,1 '" J Nrw VOil ... !U PI ) -tn. 10 """' Is desl"nnM l!~~.R· ... '1~·· ~~·· Ll<>Cf\! n . 11'.lk"•• \toe:•' !•"II.cl"" TM OTC m1t••I ··--••:r,rt F • is lllfl<f ,.\, 79\o l'IM<lf..Uv •• IUPPlllKI Dy NA.~D. rel• , Law11c C ljt "" Vofulnl •Id Alll< .. (M, to le\'e Ut· Bl IS) ~ .... '. 3l •. )I""'"" Liit 111.IOO s 1". ··r. 8H\I"" .. 11, ,., L•lV SO>Y h'• IS'• ln l<!r\ Cl> 111.SOO n• .• ' .... ter frustra-l••n co 71• ,,.1;--.io,k_•1 Pl ,., •'•i""n" ou G•• 1 11.t00 s1.11 >1 .i1111~ . a ... u .. l l 1S'.1 161·'> ~ .,.,,¥ ... A ' I bono,crthe &Kl Prd ..:i 11•,Lll c"""' i•, ,., "' ,,, 'J,100 •~ 11•~.; 11, 9t!/ Lio Q \, 4l'• lint &<lot 11, ~ ll:tt11< l)r~n !t0,100 \1'• l)t•:t '' LIOI' (.15 i I •• Oelux ChK-tT.6116 16" 311 '• ever m o r e Cl:° 0~ ,r• 1i~ Loc:•••• • ,,,; ,3,, F••nu1n L• I0.200 1'li. ,.,... '• n Um erous fllrd Son.i f: )(l•·i lotw> Co }t SI'~ (Ol'r11> ln1 Am 11,100 13\0 II f. •• ' 8 otl Eum 1 21•0 MIO ~I U >) 11" Ann.u1 8in.c:11 lf,1-00 '''' '4 7\~ utterly er-100111 No 1v. 11 ,....I 11:1 • .,, i•• ,,. tiv•!! CP '6.000 n" 1~+-11. . ,.,ICO I l!''o 1l M~ ICI<! 4)'• "''• roneous bills 1•111~\ In 11•1 Ytrl• '"' I• • 191.o. NASO Voll.Hiit IDdif ·1.m.100, rown "' \'-" 1 Mtrv ic:v l'll'• '9'1 "-0•~"''" ,,.,. sent to you Bll<klll' 1 n1 I Mc Crnck l' I " Df'<:ll~ is' BIKk•~ ,, .. 6'• M<Ou1v I'.·~. l•fl(h1nqo.O 1n 1 0 v er and e~·no 51 ll,. J4 , M.O"n " , I•'· to••' ~ ... T I l\~111• M 4211 "3'1 Mloll•f<" P '• loll'• •R over aga n !'"' Y-o i-1, H'• ~•Id 1,, 1•. ~. by d •1>1 Soool J'• lo M .. •t• Fr 1a·0 1t•1 Go i11 e r s & Loser s e part men t store en v1Ps •1• • 14• •IMo111_. ~1 ~ I And ., . d . ed t"mp Pl nl.. IS'• ~·co11 Gt• n .. ZI'• compu ers. 1 is ~sign ""''' ,. 11•, " 1,...nn F11> 1 to help handle the rude dun· = ~OQ ]~:: ~·~ ~.~ ~~ !.;,: ~:: ~-•• -,-D ... IVPI) -TIMI toll-Int "'' ning letters and threats to hi Br tr 11 •• Moor• s. :biol 'Zfo\• ..,._, '"' ••«~• "'-' M.,.. 011ne<1 ""' 1 . • C!'lrlo S.C UI ''' Morrl\11 211.1 71\o mool •M '"'' !M mosl bu.ed on per(enf ones credit standing MMor Ct " 17\, DI cll!IAQ• Oii llW 0Wf'>IM-C-ltr • !1111 U A f~ :II'• M.51 O 1'4 '" rn•rlo.e! •• Quoled bv "" NASO. The Fair Credil Billing Act ..,.,... I 1Ht Joi•I Cn~~ ''• io N•t •NI Dtfn•nr1911 c ... nen •~ ,,.. low Cro 11 11 N•f l.it>ty 111-11 dlU•rtn<• bt<.,..HI Tit •ort~loin 111! bld would require: ocaC L• ltl' 111, •H Md!Cr lC 11 orlct •Ml IM current 1111 old prlc:1. oml Sh• 'lb'o 2110 IOI Pt!t!"I 10' 1\V m"'T1 P m 2• 14"'°""' 11 1 "• • 0111u!•i -That creditors mail their i~!11~~ P ,,');-t, ~f·~ Ntw11 co 10•. 11 'Gen Hooi>W• i '" 1'11 uo 419 I ~· NE"ll GE 1• It>\ 1 \•min ln<lu•r. p • ., '• Uo 15.0 bi[ S at least 14 da}'S before ~~II C& 1~~ ~ 1 NJ N•t G 11 11') J Iron Moun!lhl 1 I-'• Uo u·' th d I h'ch . Nlcol~I In 1 9 • L<l'tt~~··· s.c n • •• l UD .• e a e on w 1 payment 1s Cu•• Noll 19 20 N~i ... ll lP' • v~.c••• H1tn\ , • 1-•, ua .1 Da"I lf\H 'lt'-. :19 1'"11 »>, lll. 6 0..1.i t.Olw•~ 1 ,_,. 1 .... Up JO • due and before f.inance g:~Jv 0,~ 1:~ ,~~::;;;i,8 11•1 21 ICr•Plli~ Sci" t••~I', Up JO O charges may be levied. 8::·r 8:~ J ... f.: Nw• PH(; ~101. •<P· ; :l:~~.:'1.os~ ~-; L 1~ e: ~~ -That billing errors you B:! ?~ 15:: 1:·· ~~~r:1 ~: 'i··· ~;·, \~ f1~~··~~re':.c: 1j .!t 21; ~~ 'g_~ point out to a store or other R!~r t~~ ~,,.. s~ &:!:nd ri:. 5:'' S: Ji ~:iT., ~~0i:"ci 1;:~ 1~ e: fi·~ o;iux1 C 36'• J7'1 Oce•t1 E• 1'• I Ii f•t,,.,roc> c•fl •'-~· ~ Ug 11:4 merchant be acknowledged §11m C•• 1u. 12" Oc nq• Mt l l'1 1s EDS Nuclei• 11"'~ 2 uo :..s 11m Hd 11 111 , OU•I> Lo' l 'o o 10 Cw•le• coru 10•,..o 114 UD '!1).0 within 30 days and be resolved 1c11 A B 21•. 'lt'• 0qu.v /1o 11•l 20 1r o.n•OMPO 1rld 1•.-·~ u" 20.0 Wl'thi·n tWO bi'lli'ng cycles Or O !vfl S<I 11'• U'• 8: Fo•ro 1-. I'.> I~ Mft•l~e P'tl!en I'•.._''°' Uo 20.0 Docu!tl )9'1 •0'• ti Co•I II•, 11'> 1• Un!"1•1 Co•o 6 _.I VP 200 ' f 90 d (If Doll• C.., I • I), •t'f!O"t 1'> I 20 11•,.n• RLCoro I -1'• VP 11 5 ll>ftltlmUffi 0 3yS. n<>t, D~ldl '•'• 26l.o Ovr"'V' ~·• 610 11 l':t11t>"YOO! 10 16 -2'> Up US the sel\er would forfeit the ful\ 00.... Jon• ll'1 ll'< Ov••• Nlr. •'• •'~ 71 Don l!1<1cll(lrn J'~" ,, Uo 11 7 Dovl• D! 11" H 011!• C•I> 6 ..._,,,"'.I C•n Oe•• Cm 31, • ~, VP 112 amount of the alleged bi'llrn' g Dlln•ln o 1•1 l'-Pati.t Br Y'• 59 ,, NH<lh,..HS .~ 11 ... 1 UP ,, 1 Econ U D 41 41'> PM:Clr l/'" ll>'i·lS Toltcrl'dl! Int •lo\-.. Vo 17.9 error up to $51).) £1 P110 12\, 1J<, P1e Gam t ?1 vi El Nuc:ol 6'i I Pat Lum JI'• )I lOSEllS e,,.1gy c I', • PeSo 8•0 I '. ••• I W~O\F A'"QO WI ·-'. Ott n ' -That you, the shopper, be E<t\I ~l 11•011 P1n ~OI 14,• 11•. 1 ~,·~••<h "l'f'I 1•0-._ Ott 191 Inf ed bef ~~~~ In ~·~ ~ ~::" '; •lj,' 1• , R•elld •n•11I•! ~ -I Otl 16.1 orm ore your account ez P•lnt 6 , ,,~ Py111 C•\ 11: ,: • • E"vl'"" ~··' ,,,_ '" 011 1,., is classified as delinquent and ,.,1. L"• no ,., P1v N SY n~ u ·· } G11 eer"'"""" '-i.. O!I 12 1 Farlo<\ El ,..,30., PaG..&. w Ii' u•' A"'•" IVl-''1tN' s·-'· OU 11} that any collection action F••m er !?'• ll'•1Pe• 1-<&H 11•' ,,,'I' Anoit>M rOOC1 1•-~ 0t1 11 • • F••~ Orv ~'• "'-PtltO L"' ,.; t'~ ~ [IKl•t1lc l •t1~ 1'-\,. Ott 10 \ (sue~ .as dunn_1ng lt>~ters \ ~ ~~';"'':C:.," :::; ~:; ~]~~11~w J"" ~1~ ~:.11~··,0~;.~ ~ ~ gr, \~i prohibited unti l 8 dispute IS b l l•FI~ "' 1 )3 , PoOl'ler W IC'• !0 .. 11 P•rkwlew Gm 1'•-,.._ Oii 9 1 l.r W•1F /'• ,... Pl.,.., Ind 12\\ 1r.1'' "'~"''"" !n•"I ~· ....... '• 0 11 • ] cleared up. Fll<O Inc 11 I Pllnd NII. 20 :IO"' I) Wt·~~IWll .n 1~\o.-lllo 011 7.1 Fii T..i.o l~t:. 19•1 PODll lltQ '" 5'• '~ "O"~" M•v ~v 6' ?--t,.,, Off 11 . FllckQr 12'• ll PrO! Golt 7•, ]', 1\ ller,,.•M<I wh •'t-''I ~ '" -1llat creditors promptly Forttl O! 1'1,0 I .... Pr<>Q•PS ,~,. 16'1 1• .......... ~w. G~ , ..... lO '·1 .~· . b Frink. El ''• ,.,. PSM Cir 11<• 11•1 U U~I' lnvn Wl1 1'-1't t o.:.i~lt you Wit y 0 Ur Fr."1!1 1!\J 12 P\111111\t ''• ""11 OklltfDmn Cr! ,...,_ y, •·,' f d Fl'lenO le "''" l' Puln C•D •• •'. ",.,....,.,, Ooll( ''""'-1•<\ ' overpayments, re un such i:rlKh ll H ' OoMr co 1 '" 10 llld <ornrru'"• l"-"' rnr l I paymenl.1 ln cash lf you so re-~:W.,,Fd9 1;:; If R~~~ i~ R~; H~ ri ~~1t~d ~~ 1~ ' .. g:; 2·1 quest, rvwt all your paymenl.1 &:'~,1,-.v*c •,0:·, ',':'. r..;;,,','",;'mco •'.o '''•" .... ~ ... a.1r11ne ~ ~ on ,t r"' ·~ ~·~""""' SI I,...... l 0•1 • 0 promptly to your account and 1"''h 21·• 7n1o 210 2u 1$ o&wroe Cl>l'l'I"' t -"' °" '·' not apply any finance charge if your payment is received on or before the due dale. -That merchants -...... .. ·-·-· . MUTUAL FUNDS participating in bank cndlt '"' ~ card systems notify the bank Ne ... Yort -l'ol-E te Cr 1 Ml •to~n .i•n • u •·•> 1e1ntr 1 12.u promptly if you return an item Joorin<I 11 • U;1'1 a:\!oN .1. 1 · 10 ........ ~·~ • ,-r ..... ~·••t t:q ~ ~ ,11 . ~ld and iUkld • HOWAlt01 .... ~ ... ., ••·"' 2•·-~ltl•lllr 2.3' 1...li bought on a credit or charge ''' on 1 e11n Fd t12 10.'3 .. ~•~1ot.1c; :.c:'"" Fo ,19 901 ~ that '"· """k Funds •• QUll!td bv Gwth f u .s,11.n _.,., "' ••.tl lt,tl :.tnui ~P ~1010U6 C81u SO .,., ua11 CM lfM NA$0 Int;. il'ltme j·"' •~S ""~'' ,., "·"' ,,_., ~~UOOt:R FO!>. f ' f b'\I ' --So.<U F .4' 1.lt _.,., I>• •·•• '·"" lt11r In¥ 1110 11 10 rera1n rom ,I lllgyouorcan WIRllH:S, Srck Fc1 1~.10 u . .o ... u.r ,.., 1.•• ,., B•l•11C 16.6.$11 6s at least credit your aecount Jlllw zs. .ITJ Mii ~~"W~ h:U M:~ ... ~.. '" ~-·~ • •• <.om 11 ·Dl 11 w AOMll~TY· E C T GRP· '-~•• ~· ·•' ,._,. Xiecll JO.•tJO.w promptly. Grwhi .:,, 4.'° o•¥ Gr !.M ,;,, ~~:; ~~ ·~·:: ·:·: ifcu,",,', ~,0, '" lntom J.to '·'' [Ev Pr .16 1.•1 · · ' • , lnwr" t.34 t u Al'>I .67 1.31 _.,., ~• 4·•1 • -l::qulry l .41 J.IO -That creditors disclose to """"'"' '-20 ,:st l'1tt Gt iz.n 1 .tO """"'° •.1J l 1• tnwHf 6.n 1.'lt. ·11· · h I "•'I'll Fd I.ii f ll ~tun Tri 16.16 .. ~.~·• J./I 4·"' Ullr• F 111 1 M you your b1 mg rig ts al east A•"'• 1n 11.51 1i.n f"""' 1•1 ,..>4 "n"•'-1~ :·H '·"' SEL.licT•D Fos." semi-annually, with you r :ai~unFd !::t l:t F~•U 1 ~·11 ·~·-~ ~;:;;in:-=. ,:~ t~ ~ sz ; ~ ~ J6 charge statement "'1"'•'' llJ?l•.31 Fm 'il'tr11 •wt.ML"'" •d )Jf ).J• $01 s11., u·()o u e! . lr.11)11• F• n.at 1·" l'ed RR1 t.n LElt GllOUI': Stnllflll t n IQ ·~riF .... .3'I ,IOELITY ~" L"'°' u.n 11.19 :.entry ,. 1i031 sf THE LEGISLATION also Am rs 111 1) GROUP : (,'"'"' o 1• 1 JI SHAREHLD ~RP Am I'" 4.1' 5.10 Brod GHI I '6 t 19 "~~r<n IJ ·~I~ 1. (om1P J )9 l ii would prohibit banks from AM _Plll:S CIDfll ,, tJ ll 0.. L·DIY 1--d ).>6 ...... EntrDt" j,,, • 21 FUNDS. (Ol'ltr• t.30 ._,,. lnl~ • tf Y •• Flt! l'G J t2 ' deducting credit card charges f"'•1 1·3 '·"' ~ ~s..c 111 7.!oll L•nc;. Lio , .~ 1.1t1 H••l>r /si :·~! f . h k' I~~ :·1, ::~ E~J< i? ~ LonQ 1--n<I J .-;! Leq•l L ,:u •'n rom )DUT c ec ing accounl !""'1 1.1s 1 ,7 Everoi 11 ..n 12 31 ~vvMu P•~· Fd • o.. 1:1't unless they have received B tock 1.r.r t . .w. Fltnd 1•.0111.S6 ~"' .. "~' )l1c,.f(soN Fos, Am Grtn 6.12 ~.6'1' p..,,11n t JI 10 1• '-'U '-'• ll . .W. ll 40 ••u1>•c l•.IJ 41,1 41 court order and banks from Am '"•tn '·" s."' 111em F '·"' •"' •n ..... ~. 1 •·•• 1 •.~• "''"m 11 •• , ,1,116 • "hold • d "'" Jnv\I ·~ 4,'6 rtnd 24.90,111 l.0110 All8 : lnvo)! ~.)IJIJIO usmg the er 1n ue ~m,/Aut •~ •,·'''1NANCIAL '""'"' 661 1,1~ •· ...,,n <12.:..i1iJ~ " d lr. IO l t rn I Cr 1 . .0 .t.2 p•OGRAMS· ""' n .. , ,.,.. J;, ~.ot f-Q /.lu ll't COUrse 0C lne pro ec ANCHOR Fin Dvn .i.n • 31 """ v~u """ '" 10 ~fW.U, FUN DS·· For the six months ended June 30, earnings w ere $638.608 compared w I t h $529.652 during the like period in 1972, an increase of 21 per· cent. Earnings per share or the period were 58 cents, up 21 percent Crom the 48 cents reported for the 1972 period. Per-share earnings were computed on common shares, assuming full dilution. of 1,095,960 and 1,105,614 shares for the six months ended June 30, 1973 and 1972, respectively. Smith International Inc. of Newport Beach has reported that revenues and earnings for the second quarter ended June 30 were the highest of any sec· ond quarter in the company's history. Second quarter net income rose to $1 ,623.000 or 25 cents per share on revenues of $30.194,000 as compared with Smith lntematiooal, lnc. Is a worldwide manufacturer of drilling equipment designed for use in developing energy and other natural resources such as oil , gas. minerals and water. and for the con- struction and tUIUleling in- dustries. Backlog figures. the com· pany said, were also substan· tially ahead of those a year ago. Backlog on sales con- tracts June 30 was S61.4 m·illion compared with $30.7 million June 30, 1972. New Orleans themselves in billing d~pUteS. GC~~~' 4.t6 ..44 Fin lnG '·'9 i,•9 L""'~'n 1u oJ "·•~ ~na! :.llr 1.to i.11 , l'tld In 1.12 I S1 F n Inc S.M j,6'/~~·"" •n >•1111.~ l l06ill1.61 Other amendments being G'"*"" v J·n .:°' 1 ~t~' v 1t·M14·1J MAVNA 'vNoS: 11~~',ur ~·~ 11.12 bed f th u k ., lntorn . It 7.11 • · • """'~• J •Y • H ~ml•h I 1 · 0.21 pus or e paC age Ventur 1,11 t S)P'tltST lntom I.! 9.f>..I ~a It.Gr 1?·~.M kl In ff I b Wt Ntn 11lt US1 1NVESTOllS: ""VIM ~)I""' ~o GenF .o.J'11.0l wou , e ec • an any All•Ofl l .12 4,!I Dhc I'd ,,64 1.11 Mtnn•n • 11 •.)/ ~w11 Inv n.12 ll.J2 "minimum rtnanct charge" "'~I• .. l .lJ t()9 Gri~ Fd 1.51 I?•.....,>• l.01 )*'ll'lv G-l .ll f.~ " · ~~GHTIH4 · 1::oc~u1ii ~·~it! .r~':~ ~~ ::~ )o~· in 1 t:1~·~l and outlaw fhe previous"""" A .in J1,Fo1tuM GROUP : M•n 1= 11'"'1215 ~~1'1 l.]9 s:tT balance'' billing system under Fund 8 1.10 ] n 100 Ftld 11.111111 NI .. ~) FNCl ; I T"AT~"'i 1.21 1.22 Sfoc'lt. S.92 '·'' 101 Ff'ld 1.1• 1.14 MIT \I S611•l I.om I' ND GR .. • which you are charged in-s'rl ~J. 1t-£,;}; ~1°'~~ :·ti :ri M1G iJ/Sh.w 01v,,11c1 ~~h i terest based on your previous ll•bson 11's.11 .sa Fd" Gr •.10 '" ~~0o :~n::~lf'r'?._ s.11 f-~ , h 81yr« 7.ill I 91 FOUNO•RS MC.D U lJ l• )l r ....,. '·*' ,:., balance (of \\"hie you ma y ••v•-"" 6.01 '·"" o•ouP : M.1111 1,.. 11s 12i ,•, Fr •nc;. 9.lt , 10 Mercury's Branch Set Mercury savings & loan association has been granted permission by the California savings & loan commissioner to Open a branch in West Covina. It is planned that the office v.•i\I be at or near the Eastland Shopping Cen ter. adjacent to the San Bernardino Freeway with opening planned ln a new Mer<UrY Savings building by mid-1974. net income of $1,435,lm or 22 .-----------. cents per share oo revenue of $25,102,000 in the like quarter ol 1972. SEOOND QUARTER results brought net income for the first half to $3,377 .000 or 51 cents per share, an Increase of 31 percent, on revenues of $58,771,000 as compared with net income of $2,599,000 or 39 cents per share on revenues of $47,874,000 for the first hair or 1972. Del We~b Profit [Tp LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Del E. Webb Corp. reporred Wednesday that earnings rose to $2.07 million, or 24 cents a share. in the three: months ended June 30 from $1.37 million. or 16 cents a share, a year earlier. Rtvenues declined lo $72.M million from $84.56 million. President Robert L. F1ynne said the major part of the in· crease in revenues can be at· trlbuted to fort.lgn sources, particularly from customers ln the P.1idd1e East and oil ~----------' Systron-Donner Gets Sensor OK Sp<dal 10 the Dally Pilot CONCORD -SySlron-Doo- ner Corp. bas received from the Federal AvlaJlon Ad- ministration a supplemental type certillcate for the com- pany's new autopilot rate sensor. Approval permits use of the product by comrnerclal airline! oo Boeing m IJ1d m 1ircran, the mnpany said Tue!day. It uses a Ouidic stnslng technique developed a n d patentOO by Systron-Donner that results in 1 unH with no moving rncchanlcal perts. f' AA APPROVAL of tht rate sel\IOI' follows airline evalua· tinn and the culmination of five years of comp a ny development effort. The company hopes to ex· tend the appt1ca1ion of the device to commercl11l , military and private aircraft . Pint produe6on unil3 are to be delivered to major airline cu~tomers ln August. The comlltny's Northern California plants are in C.On- cord, Berkt.ley , Sunnyvalt, Dublin andS 1 c ra men to . Southern Ca Womla plant! are in Burbank, Van Nuys, Culver City, LM Angeles, Costa ~1esa and •1onrovla. Hotel Planned BURLll,GAME (AP! Hyatt Corp. said Tuesday It will operate a 't,25().room ho(el adjaCi!Tlt to the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. with construction to begin this fall and completion schedull'd in the winter of t97S. Agreement to operate the luxury hoteJ in an ll-acre compl ex to be known as Poydras Plaz.a was made with the hotel owners a n d developers group which in- cludes Ayrshire Corp. and L3Salle Properti~ tnc. of New Orleans, the Pritzker family interests of Chicago. and a realty corporation subsidiary of Prudential Ins urance Corp. VTN Reports Quarter Loss VTN Corporation ol Trvlne lw announced th.at the co~ pany will report a substantial opmling loss for the foor1h quarter ending 1-tay 31. While: c o m pa n y offld.als believe that operations for the full fiscal year will be prof· itable, final optrating results will not be available 1111UI mid· Augu~I. . &.ten HI '·" '"' Grwlh s 31 !.&l M II'] 11" .,. Str .. 14 ce" have ruud a part) rather then BNton \L'" 11 ,1 tnc:ll'TI 11,11 12111 ••ht• · .tJ stur>11U.11t · , ·~ r-8•rotr tc; I )611.)6 F M""°I t 2110 10 M•ll ''"' Ju ) ~l .&.m Ind DI. (11 the unpaJd amount of your e..-t.111r 1°"1 4 u F ipec:U 10.94 II 96 ;~v ~~ I!~ l! ~ Auo f'.cl tf: ~ r. , . 8onobtt ( t3 l.311 F°""" F l.tl '·'°1 t> -lnVW'SI 1· J · bill at the end of the b1\hng ta.Mt Fdn '" 10 Ill ,llANICLlllt MU BrC 10.11 11 "STEIN 1101 ·i l.Q ,_ J.J] JM GROU .. : Mir f"O 1,, 1.42 81lanc: DS: period. IVllOCI( DNTC 10! lt2•1"1• C.•o 1 e1 <W Clollt ~&f 21,jt FU NOS; (;*'Th Sr 1 ~I I&) .,.;n. tll l 9" S.39 Sloe~ · • 10,I~ CONSUlllERS ARE ... _. 111111 Fd 1!,36 "~ Fr 111('.f'I I 91 '1&iM1Nn1 1n I'' t JS llS GRouJ~·'° IS . .o Ul!tng con ,d n .11 1•.21 us Gv s 1n 10 &J , "'"' ~"'' U l9 B .:Jt e;,,,.1h 'li ed -'\II OlvS11r !t •11 u11111Jt ~JO 1•n,Murl Tr~ I.It lff lncom · •.tt charg an extra .,_, ml 00 NJ!wd I .ct 11 IN It .. (lo •.11 S ,Jll•OI lno., 10 lt IC.It jrnmlt e:} t.tO I I bee fth NYVtn11.Jlll o16 1tSE01v •l l••MA.TSfiCFDS : ~llnl • t.t4 a year smpy ause o e arnt.m '·" 1.f9 F~1 Ll&<i 12.1011311 e.11"' •~• 9,1•»ncro,, ~-:; 1.11 P-vious bala-system or 1· ....... 10. l \l.36 FdMI G~ 964 , .. I Bond Sr 'IS ,,19 TMR Ap .. I.ti •~ "'-"'" 1G Trln l,42 11A FUNDS lllt'C~ Dl•oOn l~ •OO Tt<npj G ·2': 9.U similar systems which charge ll'I'• Sh1 14,1, is.•1 011ouP : P•tt st~ 6 20 6,11 r ow., c •·,, ,.., CMAlltNllltO Comm t 00 t I • lll<<lrl • fl .I 21 Tran C I you interest on charges you ,u111os· tmp•c 11• ~·· s1oc:• ~· &BO io t ' a11 •.u •JO e1tt1Cd. 10.t.111.•1 1ndu1 tr 111111'1 r.·1111 tt'i 1·,.. 1r•v Eq 10.'9 11:S<t have already repaid. Proxmire. Jfld F<J t 01 ,91 ~PltOI I •I I ''!HEW IE HG •1 . 10t~(;H 11 .U 11.J,5 '(;om St-1.33 1.u .. ~'-l ., l.l4 l.•I f ·•vl!v 16111159 '0th ~·611 2tt estimates. Even if retailers .~O: l:: ; ;; g;n ~-~ ll-~1 • 1, r.r ~ 1~ 11 n 12.23 vn111iJ ,.~ ,~::, -··ed lb' "h'dd n" cost to !OKI 1"•s 1"1 OROUP lRC · ~1" 11 )l ll.I• Uni"'"" ··eo .i. ~ . IS I e Ventur I~ ,.23 Ape• F ,·19 6 ,4 '4 ·A Mr t,9110.ll l.J INNOl!SllVl("J·U !he prices of goods he say• "YE e11 Ft1d itt •. ,., ~::;....~n• •11J s1.1i G1tou,: ' ' 10\ 01111 (om ~t• 11 311?,q 00 .00 Brd S 'v 141l IS, "the sys I em would JI least be ,.. 100. • 11 •.•s c"' ,.. ,.,... 'n 1 41 ~:.W1r."..-, 1;·:1111 f'o "''" '"" 1:11 '~ l'"tl"I Co $ \l ~ O• (;111'1 lf\d 21-"' 11. ... H · · Un Cl-Pl t .14 . more honest and J b o v e • S11T1 B• '"' '" Gv1n:1 .1l ~· 7161 Nk';,1~10 JJJ7 lf~ ,r'1'1t111 11:.0 1~·:: ...... _...I " ~ SPl<I ,.Dt ... MAMJLtOllt GR,: ,. I '"' u 1s"31 ¥NIT•o """°' IN(l1u. c"""' ~o I ,2212.'6 Funi:! ~.11 j·Hrx... r "1l -'«vm 7-30 1 ~ Titles II and 111 or the Truth ~i'N~\Al f.,(0:::: 6:ll , .. ,, ,, ''": ,_H t:~ ~=-Fe 1,1$ .:,,., · ndl nd Id C011v•• • • 10" H~ 11.lol 1114 0~1 1't:I 11.91 11 •! l>r'lf f: lo.cs 11.01 in Le ngame menuv.·ou Eov11v !·~ !,1DM.ttt Lv 11• 11t~0 writ 1••s1t.1s ooamnc It,"•''f"' f'll In '" th 1-·· I Fund ' 0\ l ;..;:; HN-IS • tl PPiMMM ,D: klf'n( 1. .,.. I gaps ll' e ~:uulRg 3W , c...,,. 6.21 , ... tte«it S 71 On •Im 10 ~ 11 .11 v11111c1 :.1]• n F · •• , th w Id ra... lncom , !ti 1C \o Ht•llot 1 ,, ' " Oo FMd ii.JO !·" U!JA.A:~ '· ' ,,,, or 1,.., anct, ey ou .. -v ... ,..,, l ,1 ~ 74 -•c• ,, ., 20 •1 o-i r ,.. '·'° ,1 us 11 11.., n..., quire some identification of (Oh-"" c; , fl: 11 t1 1-1 CP 9 ti 10 IJ OTC * '°·°' 10 ~ VALU• ,lf,04J0.11 (01'1/olONWLtfi IMO Gt '-» 1.00 "'•••m• 117 I SS VJ! l"9 DI: Items you have bought In bill-TRUST• inc tt1M'I "ts u,. "'•v• tt av t.41 •.10 v.1 Inc "" ... , "~ A•• II• 1231"<. "°"' IU ·~0n•111'1P' sn It.I ~G ..... lng stlltementJ to protect you s_ 1 'f ~ '~ :~ li! l :! ~ '·" t.u '-'11 ~: l-: ~H agalnlt mistakes: prohibit I"'"' ?'o 1·~ :P, Jtt '"""'' ,.,·i··~ ,.,s,~ Fd ti; i·;: ~:~=•s to d a y • 1 w I d t sp r e ad := lg '!1 ::1' I~:'~~ ~ 1} ~ 11 ~i :1::-s.;~f 1~f3 ~r~ ~T"' 1 l.lD '·" , ~ , b I nd O«•O 1.14 •.J• In~ (O.uld >I 7.S ••'lNlt'"lt '0' ' "°"' ,,1 ti d1scr1mlna1ton y e l!rs on °"I. 1~" 115111001,,. tfldl( l.32 •loo! En ra. ;1~ ::C' M the •--•· f I I ftt 11 o... s u i" 1... a01 11.J1 u "' ,.1..,, ~o 11 ,, 1 . ..,. lll•ti.tt ._., ll<lO~ o sex or mar la °"M' '" r.r• .n IMVt:lT Plonr 11 o'~ 1n'n v •• ._ 'I (Wl!r•ll Ill it COUNSll ,., · ""' '"° f: " SUltW. onlr• t" c-"' 1.41 j·lt -~~ffO 1~ 1 1~.I~ V•r!M I m M Federal Trade Com· f:n o.n "1! !l 1}~ ~~l F l~ ,;tt ·~,~ ·~~ 1;00 ~~t ~ : · mission chairman Lewis A. o~otv -~ fi;1"'is!E1o1hGR:,~P~ :.'.'M "'"" "''"''Wo.1,.Mu~l ,,11• I o~<\l_;,A•I HO • 1 • n ..... +•or '" •• 1~ ·~ '"•; (.1 .. ;.a.: t • Engman put II, in urg ng 0~p, 1 SP• , ,_.,. ~-..... • ~' ''' .,~ou , "'" adoption of strona fflir credit •w' r : ~ lt !f ~~·· .J.Jd ;y_;. ::~:t''",. ; ~ ; ;: i=t"' f:""'..,. blllln I '"I U "Th •• r 111.l s.,, S>o•ec• 'Jt 10 •n ....... t•• •~ n 11,.. '""-.1~ 1j1'• g egua on, ere arc~ ... h t.iP•\11 Vflf P•• 9.11 ,.s ~:· .. ·~ Ttlln!• ~'~'"' (ew of us who have not ex-'"<' CP l°' s:o in:~" $•~ tJ~ ·."''"t • .,,., · n:,, -PAenctd the dissatisfaction '"'''1~11: lo ~lo,!'G..!\,. •.H •M .r,:;;,;; 1:,.;;1;: ~~~ : ,,{; o-• ~IY,Ot O•' 11'i\1" •.M ~Jt n,.., 'l''' t•~ IWIV m of au•m.,.ting to rornmunlcatt M ~d 10 .. 12.0~ t,• v• l·', ""W'l'I 1 ·g''t..71 ..,, '"" M ' ........ oi~ ~o 1 •1 'n1 " "' I ~ ''"ff ,..,. 1'ie 1........,. i effectlv"J ,_'ith a oomputer. 1' "' I.• 1 °' 11 )• 10~1 F'ld n.6J" 1..V ie' "'-"' ~ . • S. Ill(""' Cl •c 1'V f'l<llO 111 11 .,,,. fEC 111 ,,,_..-.,,.1 •"• )•d Cf!'! 10 It II ft(;.,.•~ tC't t M ""'"'" l"-" n" ._:.:,.._! \ti """"""'wn ""'• l....,..,f_, •"' <'"~F • It• I l~n• • r.1 ••I '" r • .. '"' , • ,;·.;,>,--:- -' • RETAIL SUPERMARKET PRICES· ~ CITIES BREAD EGGS MILK CHICKEN (11111) (per.dor. U) U/2 p l.) (WIClll JULY 11th 2s11rr. JULY 111h 21th JULY llrti 2Slh 1J"'Y tltfrl 2Sth WAlH.DC .25 .30 .& 9 .)9 .55 ,55 .as .u ATLANTA .29 .34 64 .71 .50 .51 .59 .67 aonoN .21 .25 .73 15 .u .&2 .63 .It ,.T,TSIUltOH 34 .34 .69 .74 .59 .u .55 .65 COL UM I US 39 .39 JO .70 .so -.& 1 .59 JI DALLAS .39 .31 75 .74 .52 .l 4 .51 .55 CHICAGO .39 .35 . J 5 .86 61 .'3 .63 .55 S.fltANCISCO .44 .36 .64 .72 .51 .51 .45 .52 NIW YOlt.K ' 35 .29 .75 .91 .JO .14 .59 .61 LOS ANOILIS .25 .25 .63 .71 .56 .56 .49 .51 COST OF EATING -Superm<trkel price differences on food ltems are shown In 10 major cities si nce Phai:::c JV took effect July 18. Full-scale 'Buyers Spooky' Reactor On Boards CHICAGO (AP\ The Atomic Energy Con\misslon and the power industry ha ve signed an agreement to con- struct the nation's first full· sea.It nuclear breeder reactor. If successful, the conC1?pl .. could lead to abunclanl and economical energy for cen- turies" the AEC said in a statement Wednesday. TRE REACTOR derives its name from the fact lhal it produces more nuclear fuel than it consumes. The $700-million facility wUI be built beside the Clinch ruver at Oak: Ridge, Tenn. More than 350 electrical com· panles will provide nbout one- lhird of the cost, with tbe government rest. paying for the The new liquid m e t a I breeder reactor i.s able to con· verl the unused uranium into plutonium, a useful reactor fuel. DR. 'GLENN T. Seaborg, former A.EC chairman, has estimated that the breeder technology could increase the amount of avail!blc nuclear fuel threefold . Similar breeder reactors arc being used or under con· strudion in the Soviet Union, West Germany, Fran Ct!, Belgium and Scolland.- Tbe AEC claim! the facility will have "little or no en- vironmental impact." HAYE YOU HAD YOUR VITAMIN H TODAY? ~ . . :.Ji. "• .. lty mlT GIANT, l .P'tl Don't tf>ll us you hllv~ ncv· er h l'I\ rd ur Vilomin !·!? \Vhat ubo11l Vi1An1l.n U7 <.lr Vltn.n1in Pl? Tht•!lc or1· ~11rnc ur the "ruro vitu1nlns" \l'hlrh ru•vrr thclf·ss pltiy 1111 hnJMlrt· ant roli• In nulr!linn. VllA· min V for rxnmpll' ill rnunrt h1 cabba~t:'S 11ud is lx·liPVl'll to be Rn antl-11ICl't' fne1nr. Thl'n fho·rr art' vit an1l11s Bl;!. t.1 and 1', 'fhl.'Sr m11y nnt ~ availahl1· 11n lhe !1hl'lv1·i; lo· dny, but in thr rutUI'{' mAy Jilay a part in dis1'1lS(' tr.-nl· mtnl or prrventlon. Thrre ls mort to \'Hflmln, lh1\n yo11 ml~ht think. Soi, rlo nnt Ul k" vtlnmln prC'J~'tt11· llon!I lndiscrlminntcly. Bl'ly on cxprl't advlcl'. YOU OR YQtJR DOCI'OR C\N PHONE US l\'hC'n you need I df'llVPt'}'. \VF> \\•Ill d i'· liver promptly "'lthQttl •·:oilrn ('hnrge. A ~rnt mnny fl"OPIC' rely on 11 ~ for lhrir h"l'll!h n~J. \\'r y.·clcnml" n"QUNt\!1 for dellvcry s e r v I r l' :tnd ch•l'Kt acrountJJ. PARK LIDO PHARMACY 3S1 Hotplt•I Rud N•wpart l••th 642· 1510 Frff O.llvtry Southland Food Prices Gyrate LOS ANCELES (AP) Crocer and shopper Urt- certainty :i.bout food costs con- linued Thursday as prices gyrated crazily throughout Sou1hern California in the wake ot the Nixon ad· ministration's week~Id Phase 4 announcement. ;;OtJr btiyers are ve ry .spooky right now," an executive for Vori's Croet'ry Co. s a id Wednesday. "They hear a lot of speculation. They think there is going lo be an in- crease in this or thaL But they doo't know." llOUSEWIVES FOUND lt just as difficult ·to guess tomorrow's food pricM while making out today's shopping list. The reason for their un· certainty was indicated in several price patterns. Some produce items -like bananas and pinea pples - went down in price for seem· ingly inexplicable reasons. Lettuce, object of a United Farm \Vorkers Union boycott, wa s marked down in many supermarkets and up In others. lTE~tS LIKE pork and ew have C(lnlinued to rise sharply almost each day a n d housewives wonder Jf the in- creases will Continue. Pork. eggs and poultry emerged as the widisputed leaders in the food price race one \\'eek afler the end of ,the price lreeze on everything but beef. Bread and many canned FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS !al & 21111 Tl'l.UST OEEDS $1.~ To '250,000 UP TO 90% LOAHS OH TAUST 0££0 OOlLAT£AAL Ne.WPO'"° EQUITY FUllDS N1wp0f1 C1n11r fl2C N1wpo1t Ce~11r Drl'9 N1wport BIK~. C1lit. (7141 M4-8Cl1<t AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE ORANGE COUNTIES VOLUME DISTRllUTOR LOWEST PRICES! lnJtollotion &. Sor•ic.e 1#11ra;o Door Hordworo Reploc.«I 642-3490 Sea Coast Builders Supply 1651 Placontin, Costa Mesa goods held .steady as did milk, , which (alla under state con- trols in California. RALPHS GROCERY Co. executi ve Ralph Liebman said rggs had become "one of the more noticeable Items In tbe upward spiral." He said the company had received increases of eight and seven cents a dozen on large double grade A eggs wh.ich would mean an Increase of 15 cents a dozen in the chain's stores since the start of Phase 4. Ralphs di s continued southem grown out-of-state frying chicken.! when the wholesale price reached 42 cents a pourld. The market had sold southern fryers to customers for nearly two years at about 29 cents a pound. lN ANOTHER increase, Safeway reported that pota· toes went up four cents Wednesday to 83 cents for rive pounds. The price of cakes also rose as cakf!: ingredients -eggs, flour, shortening and milk - all spurted up for the com- mercial baker. U.S. Trade Improves WASlfiNGTON (AP) -U.S. foreign trade almost \\'as in balance during JW1e and there also was a sharp improvement during the second quarter of the yea r, the Commerce Department reported Thurs· day. The Administration has said a favorable lrade picture is vital to helping stabilize the U.S. dollar in world financial centers. TllE TRADE deficit for June was $15.S million, a big in1provement over the May deficit of $157.9 nlillion. For the second quarter, the Census Bureau said I t s seasonally adjusted figures show .a surplus for April, Moy and June of $22.9 million of exporlS over imports. the first quarterl y surplus since th e first quarter of 197t. Bul by another measure· men!, the so-called U . S . merchandise trade balance. the U.S. recorded a second quarter deficit o( $300 million, which also was a subst.1ntial improvement over the first quarter deficit of $1 billion. THE TRAOE figures rencct the value of all trade, while the merchandlse trade balance is computed on a balance of payments. 1111111111 Guy Livingston The Co1nmercc Department said ltnports during June tolaled S5,793.6 mllll on and tX· ports totaled $5,778.I mi!Uon. II was the second month In a row that the country set records both for exports and for lmport5. fA •• , .. •UOM sou••C SANTA AHA • W..U.S ANNUAL SUMMll Sale Starts Tomon-ow Reductions of up to 70•/, on suits, sport coots, stocks, sh irts ond other fine OC.ClllOJllS During '-loy. exports totaled $5,602.8 n1lllion and lmporu $5.760.7 million. The Unit~ States recorded a t r a d t! surplus in ApMI of $196.3 million, the first monthly surplus since Seplembcr 1971. THE COMMERCE Department said the bulk of improvement In U.S. tnldc during the second quarter wu with Japan. II said Japan 4uxounted for about $400 million of tbe over· all $77 million In trade Im· pro\•ements ln the Quart.tr Md said J a pa n e,. e ltockplllng purch...a or U.S. product.! "'''' a major factor. Railroad Earnings Hit High «-/.,KIJVc .,.STOCK Complete New York Stock List , ....... """ -··-.. l"ll!Cll!I ON THI lkW VOit SIOO.~ .. NJ '11n1nc profit prices . "1 gains I \\lacbU TI say th• earnin1 Al as well o! 30 i gen en Ill! Ind ASe NII lot8 1\lo NPrtt Ii!: "' .... ~:·,t~ :R N~11rell .6' NI flMI l ift N1~ Tll (1 NtlUnEI ·n N1IOMI• .2 ~=~i: 1:tt ~!::l'I rn N1wn111 .lO NWl"!nl 1.114 NYSiG :l.16 NY5 pf l~ Nl:tF 1,14 HI pf I.ts N~ 1.n ,,.t·1~i11t ~LTCkt .'» N~ t S NDl'l~.Jt NOti• I• NA Olf .61 HAmPfll I NA Ml lint NCMlr . Sll ~~·\,;; NlllCnlGl AO ciN0Ce11 llY NolnGs 1.'2 MllGl!M' 1.tO Nolnf'S l..M NDNffis U0 NoNGot .S.90 NoSt~ l.t.1 N.SPol' l.tct t0tll'llt1!1 E orlhrOOC 1 tlWSIAlrl .IS f.l.,..B1nc !Vi NW11 Ind AS Hwt! Ind .,. ~wst In Dt 5 \ wsttol' 4.)11 Wiii~ N""Mu I Now~U .71 ~Drl 0 lV. 11<lnSI .ltb 1r.s1 pf 1.60 t Ua>r .05b -!VF Co 2ok Olk Ind .n OCtld Petri ()c(,dPI J)f ( OC'CPtPi l.60 OC'CPIPI l.1.& a.;lenCp ·'° Ot<;ln pf 1.17 0.1lo l:d l..tll Oii E pf 4..AO 011 E,J; 7.36 01\f' l!I 7.• 0nP CiC7.6 1>1111 ! 1.n &tleNG 1.:12 0 nCorp •• Ollll,..•~ .20 Ollldl!L. ,,, ~ltt.M I lttkl 1.21 El C1 2 liN1bdM J.lll O\>frTr11 .61 Pwt«:F .II 0-111 1.• °"'"u pf '"' Oifnllnd AO JK.Am .Vb f(Gft. 1.11 kl..11 IM PtcP.irl .511 Ptcf:t 1.60 Pt &T 1.20 Pt1MW .22b Ptj11tpf I.JO ''::!'"·ts Pim d1 lllC Pan Am Air """'' .. ~ Ptiie•trt .tO P1r;1t ,JO P1::;:Hn 1.04 Pt rl"n .~ P1:re, llK f'IJ flS .27 '••O Gtllotl f'111 n C•nlr ~IAM'Y 1.li t11nOI• ,20 l'!ll1 Frull •nt1PL I ... f'L ct l..CO I '!:' llf i ~Lot '·"° L rrt •.50 .... '" ''""""rrt 11'> P-1 111 J,60 t•nn.zoll .IO IN.OH pf I P..,.U11f l ,jJ f'f<IOI Or .20 P~I 2:• "'"'\!i" I.OS P1rtr; £1 .Tl ~:\~Jill l'rltrPI 1.20 P~SI ,.0 P IW .36 £rlrlC 2.IDD "Ei ... l'h 1>D2,20 Jiii i.e1 Lu 'M'"' .• Ph IOI 1AS Ph I Pl •.C ~II I Pl f·"' Sun .2111 ~ Ii'"' ,.., ~ ~IH'I 20 I nd Pl I P IP1t I.JO Pnuvntt ,., p~,11. \"" NG .21 Pll'J, ·~ p fl 3 .52 PanN 1 .U P ,,..~a it P !Foro .I P !llton ·= ·~ " Pin R~ P IYboY . Plf!MfY _.1tl P011roid .:!) ·-l'tlDI T -"°" ~°''"' .14 DNGE !A Pot111cn 1 hi Ell" I.GI PQIEI DI •'h POIEIDI •.OC PPGlfld 1.71; Pr-lfld ~ Proc&G 1, Pr'IOlit:fl ,10 PSA Inc. PllSCol 1.10 f'$E"G 1.IJ ~Eg111 •.Ot P'E pl 5.0! Net N!W T .,. -· Ii bcn1r1111 ,. ,. -•kl ,,... I H"" "' 1:~ ~ -4 ~llOIGr $ l)llFl'QI t l!IM•k Ulllal'I~ I "'"' "~" L V ( n Adlfl rtl• 11 Hla~oll , r ~· I' tloto ,, " '"""' ~~~\":'~ :t :.i"fri• to tlbtrr ~ II f!llU u W" c IMll1Ml1 "l:i: ...... • ~·~ Y( u ... llOC: 11tt: E:xcr -e ,,;.-r: ... ~:r-1 •• u EGA"" ·-. --::. Thllr'411 JulJ 26 l'J73 Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Market Re sists P1·ofit Tal<lng NEW YORK (AP) -The market was rruxed 'Ibunday ending a session of see-sawing prices as profit takers moved in after e1gbt da)s oC higher prices 0 This 1s not too unexpected cons1denng all the gains the market has made recently, said Larry Wachtel of Bache & Co The market has been bolstered in recent days, say the analysts by stron g seco nd quarter corpor::i.to earnings as well as increased corporate d1v1dends Allhough the market did not perform nearly as well as Wednesday when the Dow Jones a'ierage ot 30 1ndustna1s closed up 14 30, the analysts were generally optimistic New Yori~ llps a1td Downs Co1nplete Closing Prices-American Stoel\: Exchange List DAILY rlLOT 4J, l l~ I .. 1 ~ ' I 1. '• I I, I ' I I. I. ' I· I 1. , • r I, I I I · I r ' I I 1= I I - I :• ,, " " ·' " ' -.. " " " 'I I " I , '• t t· • ,, .I • - l~~, .. ·.~., .. ·.";"•'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~":;j ·-"·'""'iii'i'•J'•"--'"•'•19i7i1 .. ll!!!!!!!!lll ...... ~~~~~~~~~ .. ~ .. ~ .......... "'."" .. ~ ........ '.'."" ................................ I\ ,,,. .................. """' Marketplace on the Orange Coast Moblii HorT* lot ~ . . . 12S .. M9 Announc::emcntl . , , , , }()() • Sl• AufaniobiW . . . . . . . . 950 -990 IOot.. & Mot iM (qoipn°lt'nl 900 • 914 • L1.n1C111t .••..... 100 -799 finoocial . • . . . • • . • 200 • m tb.MI for Sde' , • . . . . 100 -124 LOii • Po..n:l . • • . • . ' sso . $7'4 Merchondiwi . • • . -. . . 800 -849 DAILY if CLASSIFIED ADS '9ncwdJ, • • . • • . ' . • S2S • )4P .... """""""'· ......... ... Rta1 fUOfl GeMt-al. • . • • ISO .. 199 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval a.wor . ' • • . • . . . . • 300 • 49'9 Schoon ond lmlMtion • • • S1S • 599 s.,...;c., end ~ • . • • 600 • WI Tron~totiori. . , • • • • • 91S • 9f9 General OLD CHAllMiiR NEWPORT HEIGHTS COTTAGE -sharp 2 br, l ba .. w/lols of paneling. Lg . brick frptc. & Hardwood Ors. 127' deep R·2 lot with alley accec.:s. P.S. Don't nii ss the un- 1finished guest hou~e. CALL 546-5880 / THREE BEDROOM + HOBBY ROOM MESA VEROE'S BEST VALUE -at only $31,000. 3 Big bedroon1s, large county style kitchen, dini ng room and added hobby roo1n. Pride-of-owner~hip·area just one block from schools. CALL quick on this one -Ju~t listed. S46-5880. NEAR SOUTH COAST PLAZA MUST HAVE QUICK SALE -Adult oCCU· pied 3 bedroo1n. 2 bath. wi th a large kitchen. Huge cul-de-sac lot \Vi th n1any fruit trees and brick fireplace and beautiful covered patio. room for your O\vn garden. 0\\1ner leaving State. CALL 546-5880. General 546-5880 Open Eves. General * * * * * * *TAYLOR CO.* IRVINE TERRACE-$185,000 Fantastj.c view of bay, ocean&. Catalina ! Expensive new features in this elegant home w/3 Jge bedrooms, fam rm. forinal DR & 3 baths. New sauna in in str bath. 3 fireplaces. Lovely pool in private frt courtyd . "Our 28th Year" J WESLEY N. TAY LOR CO., Realtors / 2111 San "'Jcraquhi Hills Road "Overlooking Big Canyon Cc.untry Club" • NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General Ganer al BAYCREST BEAUTY New Listing Located in a lush. lar;idscaped, estabJjsbed neighborhood . Outstanding 4 bdrm., 3 ha., family rm. Sens ibly priced at $69, 750 . CORBIN· MARTIN H yot(re phµ\_ning a l'{ewpOrt Beach 'move. lturry folyou;.~! H alf gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built-in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxur~ comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-Liteo 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 curiosity-see Newport Crest today!. I Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes 1 from $62,995 t::.\W,:1,,.. '"'""'-' ew ort g From PaciRc Coast Highway and Superior Avenue (Balboa Blvd.), drive up Superior to Ticonclerog<1, and directly 10 Newporl Cr.e.sr Information Center. Tek>phone: (714) 645'6141 Sales Office open daity 10 a.m. to sun.set 1rest · CONDOMINIUMS I I CSLI No. 266639 ';;;~;:!~~ii:]~ ~ N.o.._tC-lo•llO'oloKlofJ'..:lfl<N.C..lno::. I ~:::::.:=:-II...., H. Gr'""tC.-p0<..,1on, Genn.iC-..:1 .. --=. ""··-·· ..... •loo ......... -" ..... y ....... _ .................. -· .... t..;.!od •.• _,,.....,......,._,,,. ..... -. ....... or-1 •• -.. ~-"'~"''" 1,...., ... , ,..,, ~i.:.i.-__ ...,,..,_,._,...,......_. __ ,_._~--""' t w-•ea 'C 3 a Htdft INVESTOR'S DELIGHT 4-PLf:X. Nf.\VPORT BEACl-1, J Ilcdroo111. 2 halh (cxccl- ll'nt own('r unid PLUS '!'!-!REF: :l bl-'droon1, all tx•autHutJy maintained. TC'r- rific rentnl 1u-e-a and CLOSE TO BEACI I. $96.000. 644-7270 ONE OF THE BEST IN CORONA DEL MAR. \Vith in salt air sniffing distance of the ocean ( 1h block!) This 45' R·2 Jot has an ex· quisite Moorish architecture. 2 bedroom and den home that was recently rebuilt. Modern features it1 an old world location. A $108,500 in vestment. UNIQUE HOMES OF CORONA DEL MAR, 675-6000 A litting of Bert JlHdr' U~l()UI: fi()Mt=§ OUR l4TH YEAR Offering Servlc• Only Experi911ce Can Provide THE BLUFFS -CONDO Ideal for the busy family. Maintain your patio & the interior of your home & the main- tenance crew does the rest 'fhis 3 bdrm. Ii 2 bath home is bri~ht & cheerful & has an xlnt view of the greenbelt. Only $59,500 HARBOR VIEW HILLS If you like a view & need 4 bdrms., in a pres· ti ge location, you will want to see this lovely home! Xlnt buy at $122,500 SEEING IS BELIEVING REAL TORS and enjoy this lovely home: [!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!i!i!!!!!!i!!!!!!il!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .;G;;•:";•:r•;l;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;:G;;e;;n;•:';•';;:;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;I ne11· carpets and dra pes, General G eneral fan1ily room or formal din-1_::..:...cc.c;_ _____ _::.=c..:::._ ____ _ :~:, 3"b;,.,b::.:,;:~·;-: v,,~:;,'. SWEATING OUT THE SUMMER? U'I. OLE RED HOUSE ON BIG 7l'xl40' LOT, R·2. Two bedrooms plus guest room, Eastside Costa 11esa. Better Hurry-Asking only $23,950. CALL 540-1151 , fireplace home is! W ge patio for your entertaining pleasures. All yours for only '$31 ,450. 644-7270 · SPARKLE PLENTY BLUF'FS CONDOMINIUM. Con1plMcly U!)h"Tad1..>d \WQ s!oty, 4 Bcdroon1s. 3 l>ntt1s:, hrick fireplace, lnrb't' l."OUn· lry kilC"hl'n. Clusr ! o t•vrrything -pool, tennis ••11 h. i;hf)ppinr, .~. ~chools. S5t95r 644-7270 When you li st with us, YOUR HOME is advertised in Home for Living maga- i ine in more than 900 areas -and cus- tomers are se nt to you as referals from -our over 500 affiliates of NMLS. 2R~ I-:a!!I Coa.-.1 lli~hll'BY Corona clC'l ~lar \Vhy don't you look into this cozy 3--bedroom air·conditioned home in El Toro. It's only 11 months old_ Sidewalks are in from the garage to the rear of the house where it joins a 12 x 20 patio. Carpeting is upgraded and beautiful draper· ies are included in the sale. L AtJ A5SUMA CLE NO POINTS _ •. NO WAITING, 3 Bedroom, large family roo111. Co nvenient Costa Mesa location·:near schools & shopping. Full price $29,500. CALL 540-1151. Drive by 23291 Cavanaugh Road and if you like 'vhat you see, call the owner at 58&-7307. Better stiJJ , the owner lives just around the 540-1151 ~HERITAGE co rner at 24532 Bunbury Drive. \'Ve'U be hap-Open Eves . . ,.; REALTORS py to sbo\v you the home"'.;;;;;~------[~ ..... """::"""'""""'"""""""~'"!!""'"'""':""""'""""'""'""[ General General G;neral-~ ---G:!neral A VIEW ? ? ? A view is a view when the view is forever!! See this 4 lxlrm., 2 bath i")ome with pool, jacuzzi and VJE\V ! 595,000. ' OPEN SAT & SUN . 1-5 888 SANDCASTLE, CORONA DE~ MAR ct Orange Coast 2600 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del M•r REAL ESTATE 644 4848 General CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT BEACH 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 2'h. Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool, SatUta & Tennis Courts. 1 --~~--~~- 12-APARTMENTS I 5TOP and SEA r-.1any alfrm ative• !o finan-This three bedroon1 home on eing a.nd O\Vncrship. a hill overlooks your own ~lay Trade Down for Smaller ocean. One and a half Unit!!. h:i.lhs: carefree, compact 1.lay Trarle for Land suitable living on n largl' Jot 11.ith a for~ In 5 Units. lu.xurious vie1v. Surprisingly 1.lay Carry 2nd Trusl Deed. S29,500 -Cal! today ! Afi Unil!; Furnished, Good 962--8851. P.ent St:hedule. l lcated and Fdtere<l Pool. $1'11.800. Call any ti n1 e. 646-0555. TRIPLEX· PRIDE Super sharp tri-plex on pride of 01vnership street. Priced to go al $54.000. All units are 2 bedroom. 1 bath. Cal! Red Carpet, Rea ltors . .-.· '".::"..:'.::" '::." -"-' '::.' "::.' .c· .c·.o·..:'""""=';1' I "'~"s-_l\0_8tl~-----Gene r a 1 General REALTORS call Anytime 644-7662 l ;G~,~n~er~a'l ~~~~~~G~e-ne-,~,1~~~~~ EASTSIDE CUSTOM MADE RESERVATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR FUTURE SALE OR LEASE SPECIAL PRICES NOWll I .'lttd a "l'i!d"~ i· .. u·r nn a.r Cl.ASSI1'~1 ED will sen it' General General J..}n,fa !J~fe PRESTIGE WATE RFRONT HOMES Linda Isle Waterfront Bui lrl c r s honie, has Real Estate Consultants 1525 Superior -Suite 3 Newport Beach (714) 64S.32JO cverythinr.;! 4 bc<lroom. 3 bath, rai!W!d he 11. rt h fireplace, gas barbecue. palios every\vhere, huge 1.."0rn£'r lot \\•ith boat gatc.'/~!!!!"'""'!""'""'""'""'"'"'""'_""' ___ ~,,_ __ ., __ N('{>rl I s11y more? Call im-General I General n1cdiatC'l\''.: This one ,,~1il! b't> .......... _ at $45.ooO. Call HNI CMpcl, OCEAN VIEW "WANTED" lte:Utors 546-8640 1 open "'""'"'-FOUR CHILDREN MACNAB IRVINE , _____ .... _ ------ t... Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of I], niain channel. Soft colors. rich \vood panel· .... lllllllA.W ... ~~ ing & 3 frplcs .. give a warm intimate feel· OLDIE BUT 3 +Guest $25,950 IN A GOODIE I Private circular street of Cu!e 2 bdr, 1 ba frarne \Vilh line homes. Paint and save GARDEN GROVE EXCLU SIVE SHOREC LIFFS 38R/FR & formal dining. He<.ivy shake roof. Carefree yard. M.any fine appoint· ments! $110.000. Leclaire Farnsworth 644-6200. (A32) IRREPLACEABLE TRIPLEX Bayfront -pier & fl oat -sandy beach. 'J\vo 3 !~It, 2 ba. units & 2 BR., 2 ba unit. J<""i rsL owner depreciation . Close to Balboa shops & fun. $270,000. Bents. NEW OFFERING Sharply decorated & clean. Lovely 3 bdrn1. in Lusk 11.V.11. !lard to believe price 875.500. \Vilt go fast. Jim l\1uller. ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORONA .Just li sted -custom home. Dra1natic use or·,voo<i. brick & glass. Fireplace in large living rm . 3 Bil .. den. $94.500. By app't. Dean Kr ing. DO YOU LIKE ROSES? Then vo u \\'ill like thi c;; lovcl v 3 BR. l.usk hon1e .' 1,..1rt?e ~·nz.v fam il v ronri1 overlooking rn!'e garden . 3 C'ar garage. !·Jarriett Davies $77.500. 4 BEOROOM IN 'IRVINE TERRACE A lovely family ho1ne on a large pool sized lot that you ov•n . 4 Bath. J>retty grounds. Near beach & yacht clubs. Now $89.500. Geo. Grupe TH IS IS A MUST For the \\'cckend athlete! Beautifully up- graded "X'' plan. Karastan carpets. No maintenan("e y:'\rd. 3 RR .. 21~.z ba . Bluffs con'do. $69,500 Incl. land. T. Esco bar. BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT l,ge. home on 2 loLc;;, Pier & float. 5 BR .. • den. plu ~ bonu~ playrn1 ~ haths. Sandy bea~h .. A1ove in fnr !'1tm mPr fun . Xlnt finance. ~317,000. Paul Quirk. llJ-0700 ~l4JO 550 NEWPORT CENTER OR., N.B. ing. \V aterfront instr. s uite has dbl. bath, sitting area, vie \v decks ......... $295,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: I loads o( paneling nnd red l ho u s: a !1 d s · S•1-eeping No No dOl-Vll GI! Seller to brick fireplace. Large R-2 g:rou nds: ivitt-i::oom for boat. p.1y all costs. 3 large BR 2 lot in choice F~ast C,osta 3 bedrooms l n c 1 u d Ing baths, plus cozy Hreplnce' & ~ll'Sa ])Jui. alley flccess. hide-a-way master suite, a 9xl4 di'n, Home on 11 Close to ail shopping you scpara_ce ~est faciliiy, I 50xl3fi ft. Joi near LJ::>s won't need a car here. den 1vtth sliding glass door Amigos Hi School! CALL PerfecUy prlt'«i at $30.000. lo 25' entertainers patio. NO \\". BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 lhis one will WJ f11s1. Call lireathtaking view o! can- Rcd Carpet, R ~al lo r s yon and bl ue Pacific. BET- '·""''·~· f~, •o~. , '~~.". o::i?-.,~~-" , S'6-8640 TE R HURRY! Ca 11 ,,...._ ... _""~·-".o.•_'_ ... __ u _~_"'_"~----•_•..,._li" __ 1CLASSIFJED ..... 642-56i8 645-0303. General General General ,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;===;;;;;~===;;;;;;;;;;;;~==;;;,I llARBOH VIEW 1101\fES IMMACULATE MONTEGO ~ Br .. f~mi.l y roon1 & lots 111ore -will be open tor your lnspect1on Sunday 7 /1!J, 1 to 5 p.m . 1955 Port Claridge Pl., N.8. Come ready lo move in ! PALERMO MODEL l.ike new 4 bedroo1n, ra1nil y room. formal dining. wet bar; up-grade carpels. floors. Perfect for your family . IOKl\I LOl\O\ 'flA1TLJ/ilC, EASTBLUFF condo, bea utifully de c o ra t ed . Balcony overlooking Back Bay. 4 BR, 3 BA, $73,500. Bkt. 546-5022 5 lines, 5 dl\ys for 5 bucks. ad. Cnll 642-5678. C WA Ll(ER & LEE REDUCED TO STEAL! Lovely decorated 2 bdr. 1 bath located in cool Hun- tinJ;1on Beach. P r I c e reduct>d below m a r k e t value, seller very motivated lo sell. A real steal at $23.750 Call Red Carpel, Realtors 546--8640 ( o p e n Evenings). General MESA VEROE EXCLUSIVE Lg. 3 BR - spacious FR -built·in w/w bookcases. 2 fireplaces. Pond & waterfall boat & trailer access. $55,000. Lois Ega~ 644-6200. [A35) OFFICE AT HOME? Spacious study & bath adjoining 3 BR 2 bath. Beautifully appointed -Cameo High. lands. $78,500 . Ron Sherman 642-8235. (A24) [Irvine I Mocna•·kvOM"-Hy-p~ I "'"'·· General IOI Dover Drive 142·1235 1144 M•cArthur "4·1200 NftJ)Orl ltffch, C.llfornl1 92183 G.!neral -CHARMING WATERFRONT HOME JUST CONSERVING ENERGY! 3 Br .. family room. Crplc. comple1ely. remodeled ; Pier & float -Bring .rour boat. H AHt;<H~ YIE \V 1101\I ES J' A 1;rr C33 -0780 Can spend I 00"/0 of my tim e to benefit client, with no m,,re 98 ~/l n·',.:I'"" a ~m:nistration. JUST CALL ME FOR AN APPO N-MENT, 557-4130 GINN ' MO~USON !l or M b f M II• I L' ti' s . NlWl'ORT HAlllOR-(.0$TA Ml"S.\ em er o u 1p e 1s ng erv1ces: MuMrt .. oro" .,.,,._,ouMT•'" v.til.1..11 7 c spa tent tele balh Ri Soul bird Th in a " • .. •) _ _. ' , f.'. --.:-· , • • ' 'v •• • • • • - Lagu11a B~a~h EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 207, <\ SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNI THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1973 I TEN CENTS -. Teepee Springs lf p • ID South Laguna By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ot lfl• D.i/1' P'lltt lllft Campers today trundle off to wide open spa<:t!s vdth water repellent umbrella tents, catalytic healers, battery·po\vered television sets and even portable bathtubs. Rick Palazzolo and Bill Valencia of South LagWl8 figure that jazz is for the birds. They plan to do their sun1mer campinc in a teepee. Each chipped in $250 toward the $500 rost of the teepee purchased fron1 Laguna's Indian Territory, O\\'ned by Leonard \Vood . Palazzolo and Valencia erected the teepee Wednesday on vaca,nt land behind the South Laguna home of ri.1argic 1'1artin, 31838 Virginia Vt'ay. "\Ve were just practicing putting it up and taking ii down," explained the 26- year-old· Palazzolo. After four trials. they got the set-up time down to 30 minutes. They used \Vood's directions and a gulde on teepee construction to erect the "'ood and can· \185 structure. After finding a level location, three of the long support poles \Vere lashed together to for1n a giant tripod . The rc- 1naining poles y,·ere then la.id against the tripod and the can\'as put in place. S1nall wooden dowels were used to hold the seam of the canvas. · The t\110 South Lagunans plan to use the teepee for camping in J\lexico. but said their hrst trip y,•ill be to the northy,·est to purchase rustically authen- tic lodgepole pines to replace !he milled poles in use noy,•. "\\'e just couldn't afford to pay for: the poles 10 be shipped to Laguna and "'c Y.'Ould have had to \\'ait three month," Palazzolo explained. Later in the sumn1cr the pair hope to get together \\•ilh olher local teepee iSee TEEPEE, Page !) Laguna Lifeguards Pull 118 From Super ·Surf " '< -. •· • ' ;-. . ' ~....: . ·: ~"· ' ..... • OfllY Pllfl Stiff PMlo BIG SURF SPAWNED BY HURRICANE EMILY BOOMS AGAINST THE SHORE OF LAGUNA BEACH Lifeguard Jim Stauffer Keeps Wary Eye on Youngsters in Froth As Big Wave Sets Pound Sand -Lo¥e-of . -Living Stressed Speakers Say Quality Prirne l1nportance to Aged Bv JOllN ZALLER 0°t th1 DlllY PIHi! S!lll As long as old'peoplc keep their love of living, they can expect to stay healthy and well. When they lose it, they can ex- pect steady physical deterioration. This \Yes the prime point made \Vednesday by the l\vo main speakers at the Orange· County Conference on Aging in Anaheim . "Some say· the biggest problem of old people is transportation," Beatrice Schiff. man of the National Conference on Ag- ing told an audience or 200 in the Di~eyland Hotel . "Others say that it's food 'and nutritiion. ''But that's bunk," ?ifrs. Schiffman declared. "People say it because it's ac- ceptable, because there are federal funds available to fight it." What old people need far more than material · services, she said, is a satis- fying routine or life. 3 Irvine Plans Have Populations Of Half Million lf the city of Irvine rinally adopts in December a general plan which con- fohns to one of three altematives presented Wednesday night. Irvine wUI be a city of 500,000 people, give or take 10 percent. Larry f!1orrison, director of lhe City of trvine general plan consultants team from the South Pasadena firm or Wilsey and Ham . said population estimates for three alternate land use plans studied \Vedne!day are very similar. Plan A bunches high dClllity develop- ment both on hillside ridgelines alld in valley floor areas while preserving the mqst open space. Something Jess than 480,000 to 500,000'"j>eoplC would.live in city "A" by the year 2,<nl. "Sometimes you!ll find an older person living in a house much larger than they need. They're always cleaning floors. dusting, and working in the garden !rying to keep it up, and you try to convince them to give it up tor a neat litllc three- room apartment. "That can be a great mistake. You can tear apart the relationships of their lives." Several studies have shown, fi1rs. Schiffman said, that old people "very frequently" die within a few months after they have been forced to change their surroundings. Mrs. Schiffman didn't draw any iron -'L?~.E o~ a, S[~;~'~' ~ James 'E. Pe erson 1' • clad rules about changes in old peoples' lives. "The thing that invariably kills us is isolation from a satisfying routine or lif r.. '' .Jan1cs Peterson, keynote speaker at the conference. outlined an even more direct relationshi p between m c n ta l outlook and a healthy life. Stressing the need of the elderly to en- joy !he "tender loving care" that other age groups need. he said, ';The rule is either you love or you become sick. If you become isolated, you can expect to become sick either physically or men· tally." Mrs. Schiffman said that one of the (See AGING, Page !) • • 'ANGER NOT HEALTHY' BNtrice S(hlffm1n l{ids Swept Off Feet On Beacl1 By .JACK CHAPPELL Of Irle D1itr PllOI Slit! Laguna Beach lifeguards rescu!'d 118 persons from big surf and Jogged more than 3JO preventive actions \\1cdncsday as eight-foot high "''aves boomed in on Art Colony beaches. The surf subsided somewhat today . •·Almost anyone 1rho goes out is goi ng to end up being rescued. unless he's got tv10 fins and is pretly checked out,'' said Laguna Beach Lifeguard .Jim Stauffer. The big surf was espe<'ially "dangerous to small children "''ading at "''ater's edge because of the cuta\\o'ay beach line leav- ing a high berm between the water and safety, Stauffer said. ''Little kids are gelling swept off their feet and into a rip tide. They just don't know what happens. The waves just suck those sman kids off their feet and a\\"ay. Those to 1ne are 1he scariest." Stauffer said. •le explained that the hJgh herms create a back"•ash "''hich can "''ash tl\\·ay the un,1·ary. Beaches at Victoria. Crcs- rent Bay. Picnic and ~lain !kach "'ere most affected 11•ith the back"'·ash. Stauf- fer said. \\"cdnesd<ly. an estimated 1 o. O O fl persons 11·ere on the beaches. One of them, rilikc lfoldman. 12, ,·isiting in Emerald Bay "·as rhc subject or a cliff rescue by Stauffer and Lifeguard Capta111 Bruce Baird. Holdman apparently became pinned in by a high tide and big surf "'hile in !he Sout h Emerald Bay beach area. The youngster climbed about half "'ay up Sn1i1h's Cliff lo escape. "Ile certainly wasn't going to go do11·n. and he couldn't go up any furiher so lie stayed there and yelled."' Stauffer said. noting the lad "kept his cool pretty v.·i:ll." Capt. Baird ran along the rocks at the !See WAVES, Page 21 Lagunans Chafe As Cable TV Cut Dm·ing Hearings An intern1ption in Storer Cable Television service this morning during the televised \Vatergate hearings pro- duced an unexpected flood of calls from annoyed Lagunans. "Do you mean to tell me that Nixon also controls the cables," quipped one caller, said Jetta Lennon of the Laguna Beach Storer office . "\Ve recci\'cd many calls, particularly from the people "''ho are so interested in the \Vatcrgate." ~!rs . Lennon said. The interruption in scn'icc v.·as due to an equipment change over at the antenna site. The "''Ork had IX'Cn scheduled early so as not to interfere wilh the normal day's programming, but the early \Vatergate hearings were cul off by the 'A"ork, said John Romania, district manager. Romania said full service ""'as restored shortly after 8 a.m. for the 5,000 Laguna Beach subscribe.rs on the cable system. Romania said lhc company had not ad- \'iscd its customers of the shutdO\li'Tl in cable service because it had no way of doing so. In addition to calls to the cable com- pany. resident.'! called the l,,aguna Reach Poliec Departnient and the Daily Pilot 10 compla in about tile scr\.'\ce outage. IN THE WILDS OF SOUTH LAGUNA, TEEPEE SPRINGS UP "We'r• Jusi Practicing Putting It Up, Taking It Down" Ne\¥ Legal Action -!J -:gu11 To Get Nixo11 Complia11ce \\'ASllINGTO~ <UP I) -President Nixon refused today to comply "''ith sub- poenas for \\'hilc House documents and tape recordings of conversations with :iidcs about \Vatcrgale. Both the Senate \\"atergate committee and special \\'atcrgate pros cc u to r Archibald Cox imn1ediatcly started Jeg31 action to compel 1\ixon to comply. Nixon said he "'·ould not furn ish tape recordings of fire meelings "'"ilh .John \\' fkan Ill. his former counsel. who charg. ecl in five days of testi mony before the con1mit1ecc that 111 convers:i11ons Sept. 15. 1972 and in :tlarch , 1973, Nixon disclosed he kno1\' of the . \\"atergatc coverup. The President said he 11·ould furnish some papers sought hy the subpoenas - if rnorc specific rcquc:.ls 1\cre made. Driving Hulte£l By Smog Danger; Agencies Close By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 "'• 01;1, ~1101 s1111 A five-counly ban on dri\'ing by federal employcs lo case a rhrce-day smog crisis s~ut do"''" the l\\'O largest fl'dera\ agen- cies operating in Orange County toda y. The Soci31 Security Adm1nist ralion put ?n a phone recorded 1nessage telling or 1ts closure due to !he smog ban . The Internal Revenue Service and its wage- pr1cc freeze infor1nation office in Orange similarly was closed. Prospects for rriday relief from the thl'Ct'-<lay old smog \\'ave are gloomy. TI1e National Weather Scrviee predicts an "casing'' of the !empcralure inver- sion which traps auro exhaust producing s1nog near the ground. Ho\Vl"l \'er. not enough air movement 1s expected to brea~ tpe cycle co1npletely meaning eye bum1ng smog u·il\ continue. illean"'·hile . operations at El Toro :'llarine Corps Air Station continued normally with no evidence of the base·s 10.000 en1ployes fathn g to show for v.·ork, a spokesman said. :\lost or the r1vihan and military employes li\'C off base. Additionally, jets continued to ny today. despite lhe state and federal government suggestions un- necessary !ravel be hmited. \Vaves of bro"''n. eye-Ouming smog smothered lhe IM Angeles b:u1n \'i'ednesday, prompling environmental of- ficials to put a federal .smog emergency plan into effect tor the first time today. Federal a11;f'nCiC! in a five-county area v:ere asked to shut do"'Tl. ~1ost refused. The Environmt.'fltal Protcclion Agency put the. En1cri;:ency Air Episode Pinn into effcet tOr the first time , acting under the ISt:e SMOG, P•ge %) "l cannot and 11·111 no! conscnl lo give any investigatory body pri\;utc pr<'siden- tial papers." Nixon \\'rote in a Jetter read al the start of the Senate commiUcc's hearing. "To the extent that I h<ivf' cu.:stody or other docun1ents or informatio n rele\',1nt to The \\'Ork of tile select com1n1ttcc. and that can prOperly be .-nadc pubf1C'. I \1•ill be glad to make these available in resJXlnse to spt.-ci!ic requests." After Cox received a similar lcth•r, he asked Chief District Court Judge John J. Sirica to slgn a sho\\'-Case order dir(.'{:fing the ad1ninistra11on to tell why it should not be compellL'd 10 comply "''ilh the sub- poenas. Sirica did so. giving the \\1hitc ffou se until 1\ug. 7 to rrply. The seven-mernlx•r con1miuee. mea n- time, \"Oted unanimously to instruct chief C.'QUllS('i S.1muel lJash to carry !he issue !o court. lie ''ill seek a declaratory judg- mt•nt fr om the court 3sk.ing for an order telling i'ixon to co1nply. l~oth mo\'es \1"ill launch a Jcg,1 1 hllttle 1\·h1ch legal cxpf'rts expected ultimatclv "ll"Ould h11vc to bl' s1·ttlecl by lhe US. Suprerll(' Court. Some said a decision could be reached 11'1thin three months. Commillce Chairman Sam .I. Er\'in 1 IJ- N.C.) called Nixon 's condition that th'!. pt1nel spct·ify cxaclly .,.,·h1ch documents it 11ants "an unposs1b1lity." "\\'c·rc not clairvoyanL">,'' he fumed . lie said the committee did not knQ\1 \.\hell pupcrs :\ixon had, and therefo1c !See TAPF..s, Page?~ Orange Coast Weather The Orange Coast will have cloudy but warm weather tomor- rov." extending through the "''eek- end. There will be little sunshine, but lemper;itures '"ill be near 70 degrees. "'ith inland area ther- mometers climbing to 80. INSIDE TODA V Despi!e L!ie otte11ciotl given the Blllfra a11d Bangladesh stories in 1Jte A111e ncan press, few 11oticed last year wl1ell 250.000 1cere killed in !lie iiny East African country of Rurund1. Details 011 Page 20 today. LM . ...,, t C•IUor1111 1 Clllttlllelll 12-411 C-k• JI ,,...,..,., . DH"' Nollc:n 14. 16 '"Jlol'lll ~-' E1t"11l11_. lll·Jl ,lllff!CI Jt<41 '°" !ht 111<•• It, IJ. tt ""MC-11 111 l1t'tl'• n Allfl t.1......_ M ,,......... •11 M_.llltl l"lltMft .. N1tl1t1fl Ntwe l ·S, 1 Or•-Ct1111fT '' SY1¥11 ~lrlltf' if s-h ai.n Sttek Mfrtlll *41 ,........... ,. 'fllelilof1 ~I WHffl9r I w._., ,.. .... JI.II Worlil ,,... .. •• , .._ ______ t, I ' DAll Y PilOl lB Tt111rsd11, J1,1/y Cb, 1973 ----;:Smog or No ' Smog, Toro .. Operating El Toro Marine Corps Air S1ation con· tlnued Opcrutions today despite its !\VQWals it \\•Ill l'Omply with the (~era! Einvironmcnlal Protection Ageni:y !l.lnog ban req uirements. ' ' " 'Word did not get to the station that pvillao or 1nilit11ry employes v.·rre to stay home today, a spokesman sajd, and nu>St f\1CAS emp!oyes showed up for work. , -··traffic at the gates. today however, ;w.as down lr11m the usual pattern," the -spokesman noted. 1 El Toro ofllcials have for some time ;been urging baSe en1ployes to take ad· .vantage of car pools and plans are Under way to provid(' on base bus service ;to cu t down on vehicle trips .. '. In compliance v.•ith the Orange County Wr Pollution Control District ban on iopen burning today, none was authorized ~y Marine brass. D•llY P'llol $1111 Photo : The spokesman noted that the J\tarine P>rps is working with the Environmenta l :Protection Agency on long range plans f or reaction to air pollution crises. 1 As a practical matter however, it is ~unlUtely the base will close down for :Smog alert... 1 "There are ongoing programs re- lqu.iring the dally presence of both our jCivilian and military v.'Ork forces,'' the !Spokesman said. CHILLY JOB -Laguna Beach lifeguard Rob Potter, 16, attempts to warm up as he keeps his vigil ove r roiled waters. "It's cold up here," he said from his Main Beach perch. Potter had been in the water sev- en ti.mes as H urricane Emily continued to act like a woman scorned. ; One or the ongoing programs is, of 1 ~course, national defense. ·-From Pagel SMOG ••. authority in amendments lo the 1970 Cl~ Air Act, announced Gordon Elliott, chauman of the federal executive board. here. Under the plan, all federal agencies were requetted to close do wn ii possible urge essential workefs to use car pool~ Jmd public transportation, and llmlt of· 1idal auto travel. ···Com pliance Is at the discretion of the indLvidual local agency chiefs. The federal plan covers Orange, Los ·Angeles, San Bernardino, Ri verside and -Ventura countie1, an area populated by 10 million persons. · • Only the Internal Revenue Service and ~al Security Administration said they .~ould shut down their offices lor the day. , • 'The FBT, Post Office, fed eral courL!I, U.S. Marshal's office, and others &aid they would remain open. The federal 11'rug Abuse Task: Force said agents . \.!?uld work, but clerical personnel would be given the day off, • •. Gov. Ronald Reagan ordered all state ·•~es to halt use of state owned ~ehicles, ncept lor emergency purposes, jp. downtown Los Angeles, eastern Loa :Angeles county and R1verslde and San ' :-&p-nardino counties. The Los Angeles Air Pollution Control :~trict called for ozone readings from ;25 lo .SO parU per million of air today. .'.l'tie .50 level is the point at which a first stage aJert is called. When reached all driving in lhe Los Angeles basin is sup+ posed lo be curtailed. ... -Meanwhile. the highest smog readings in Orange County were .30 ppm in La Habra Wednesday. A .29 ozone reading was logged in Anaheim. Causing the smog accumulation is a tE!"mperalure inversion "lid" over lhe Los ,'Angeles Basin which the national Weather service says is not expected to 'break up until Friday. Again loday, inland cities of Orange Cow1 ty v.·ere expected to experience the bighcst ozone readings. The county forecasl is .25 parts per million oxidants, the APCD said. • That's an expected level high enough to :tequest industry lo forego any burning of ·Wastes and to urge motorists to curtail :driving, the county APCD engineer .repeated today. ;i OUNa1 COASt DAILY PILOT " Ti. Ori,.,. eo.,1 041l'I' PILOl, wll!I ...,lc:lo M ~ tr._ "-P•ftJ, II lllM!*"H .-, tl'le Or1,.,. CMll Pvbllllo!nt c.,,,...ny, J.ffl• r1'9 edl!klnl 1rt "*II..,,., .,,_,, lhrOuOl'I l'"•lll1r, t'Or Col!1 Mtw, H._-i 1._, Hunllrlf'lan · luctvl'-!11'0 V1llty, '-""""' .. fdl. '"''""'S...Wlebtdi --. .. ci,..,..,1.1 S.., Ju.n C'1!>11tr-. A 1/119(1 •.OIOl'wol •111or1 ~ 11U111111oM 11/vt""ll•r• ,..., .....,..,.. Thi Pl"lllCljlAI ~ll1fllnt !Jlt nl 11 t i lllJ Wu ! ~r .a1rfff, '""' M .... , Ca!Hornllo, t>tJt, ' .. :1 ' " " •I ltob1rf N, We.J ~rftlffrll Ind P1/bll"'9r J1ck R. C11rt1., Vlu ~tt'lldtnl &nd ~1! IMMt lf ,...,,,.,, "'''ii E•ltor Tktm11 A. M11r•hln1 Mt Mt lftt f,I,., Ck1rl11 H. l 101 Rich1r.4 '· N1tl A11l\!111I MIMI .... ldl'9t1 ........... OMc.e JJJ "•r•tt ""'""' M1lll!tf A44r1111 ,.,0, ••• ttt, t2,11 ..__ 0.11 Mftl1 1• W"t a.y ... ..., ~ l <t<tdl : UJJ H.....-i IOlllntrtl Nllnt~ 111<11· 11,tJ IMCll ~ .. ~ """"'CNfNrlltl JU Nlflfl •• C.fftlM lllMI ......... f714J H l -<4Jll ca , in.; Mrottt111ct ,,., ... ,, L.,... .._. Al Dtp-11 ...... 1 , • .., ... 4f4·f46t "-"'""t· 1971. °'"'" C-t Pllblltll~ ~,.. Ht IWWI ,.,.,., tffwll'tl.,., .. ....,.... INtNr W tdttrti.-1t ,,.,_.,. -r ..... ~ wtlflWI •.-cit• ,... ,.. .... ..., lllS'Y!"llM -· .._. (I ....... i ... N ill t i Colli MIH, Call,.,,.19. ~,,,.... .,. Cirri...-H.U """"'"' "' ,,.11 U,IJ -•h1Y1 ll'IHlt1r,-.... llMt #M -fftrr. 153 Saved at Newport From Waves , Riptides An On tario man broke his neck and 152 other ba thers had to be pulled from the churning surf Wednesday as Newport Beach lifeguaros battled eight to 10.foot surf and the strongest riptides so far this year. Curtis Pack, 34 , was listed in serious but stable condition at Hoag Melll<lrial Hospital today wHh bro ken n eck vertebrae, a damaged spine and almost total paralysis. Fram Pagel WAVES ... base of the cliff and then climbed up lo Holdman. Stauffer lowered o rope from the top of the cliff and Holdman was lifted up, followed by Baird. The boy was not injured in the in· cident. Lifeguards also logged 45 first aids. Of lhe JI8 pelSOOS rescued, 102 l''ere lrom out of town. Ranch Employe Will Face Court Over Shooting A Starr Ranch employe accused of murder in the fatal shooting early this month of a trespasser at the old San Juan Hot Springs is set to appear Friday morning for a preliminary hearing. Robert Carl "Whip" Slatten, 41, tid1s been accused in the shooting of a 2l·year· old Los Angeles area man after an alte rcation at the off.limits springs along Ortega lfighway July 11. Slatten. v.•ho authorities said \Vas not authorized to act as a security guard. allegedly shot Dennis Ray Glahn in lhc chest after an arg ument over public use of the derelict spa. The court action in South Orange Coun· ty ~tunicial Court is set for 9:30 a.m. in the Division 2 court of Judge Richard lla1ni!lon. Slatten has remained in custody at Orange County jail since the incident. Slatten originally was treated at tlie Orange County J\1edica l Center Jail Sec· tion for lreatment of minor hurls he received during hi.9 alleged night from lhe shooting scene. Officers said the ranch jeep being used bv the defendant went out of control and ci-ashed as the man asscrtedly fled !he shooting scent. SleUen had already been set for court action on another hot springs incident when the shooting took place, authorities said . Earlier this year it is :illegcd !he ranch hand beat a trespasser \\'Ith a blackjack during a sim ilar altercation. The springs, for generation~ a mecca for b:ithers and revelers, is on private property and the public has been de· terred from entering !he area because of l11w cnfrocement problems there. From Page l TE EPEE ... owners Md hold a joint aimpout. Nomadic Indians learned to COMtruct teepees to withstand winds of hulTl~ane force, yet used materials Ugh! enough to be carried on the backs ol dogs before horses were introductd 10 !he North American continent. A special lining lnskl.e the teepee allows for temperature control ~ II Is warm in winter and cool in iiummcr. The center ol the Ooor of the teepee Is reserved for a Cire ring. Smoke esca1>es from adjustable flaps al the lop. Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said Pack 'vas injured at about 6:40 p.m . when he ran out into the waves near ~cwport Pier, dove in, and hit the bot· tom. "The surf really had nothing to do \l+'ith his injury," Lockabey said. "It was ac· tualJy pretty calm in that spot but he just dove in head first and misjudged the depth." Lockabey said an u n id en I i fie d bcachgoer pulled the unconscious man to shore and called lifeguards y,·ho ad- ministered emergency first aid until an ambulance arrived. Lockabey said the surf around fhc pier WM probably about the only calm spot on the whole Newport Beach shoreline. "We had some pretty rough surf and riptides al lthe Y.'ay along," he said. ''I'd say they were the worst rips all year." Mo~ than 78,000 people came to the beach despite dreary overcast and fog that hung on until mid-afternoon. Lockabey said the surf today was still high -up to six feet -and very chop+ py due to gusty winds out of the soulh. He said the surf most likely will con· linue to rise today and last in to the \Veekend because of the sv.·ells being generated by Hurricane Emily off the Baja California coast. "\Ve are kind of expecting more heavy surf today and l 'm su re the bad riptides will still be there," Lockabey said, v.•arn· ing weak swinuners to stay out of the water. · * * * Group of Eight Bathers Resc ued 111 Sa11 Clen1ente By .JOHN VALTERZA Df lflt O•ity Piiot Sltrf San Clemente li feguards \\l'ednesday pcrforn1cd y,·hat they .termed the roughest rescue so far this year 'vhcn !hey plucked eight 5y,.·immers from the v.·ater near the municipal pier as the group became battered by a set of 10.foot breakers. "It \ras by far the roughest one \\"i:"vc had iu a long time." said Capt. Phil Stubbs. \\'ho during the rescue received deep abrasions from b.1rnacles on the pi!· ings or the pier. T\\'O of the eight victims rC'quirl'd resuscilolion on the beach and one of the victims, 2(1..year~td Frances Cy1hers of Riverside, rcceh•ed hospl!al trcntment after the harro1\'ing episode. Stubbs said the victims -all members of a group \\'hich came to the b e a 'c h together from Riverside -entered the water before noon at the south !Jide of !he pier during a deceptively cal m period which occurred between sporadic sets of hurricnne+spawned surf. "By the time they got to deeper 1\'Dtcr the granddaddy set of the day came through ," the captain said. Sea Lion F.rie11ds To H ear Lec ture Friends of lhe Sea Lions will meet for a lecturt by II noted marine mammal phy11iologls1 1t 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Laguna Beach Recreation hall, 175 N . Coast lllghway. Gloria Patton. a scientlst with the San Diego Undersea Center, "'Ill !ipellk on normol and a b norm a 1 diving melabollsms In marine 11nimals. F'rlenrls of !he Sea Llonii is a nonprofit group wh!('h a1ten1pts to aid lwached or injured marine life. educate the pub\lc nbout mAr\ne animals and hopes to con· sln1ct a ctnter for treatment and husbandry of ll'tf ~II animals. Tips Giv en. In Slaying Of Gir.l, 11 Circulars C1)nlaining inforn1ation on the str1111nulation murder of Corona d1.:l ~lru"s :.intla Ann O'Kecfc today arc pro· vi<ll11g a OOOd of tips frorn throughout SQuthcrn California. 1'he special postcr·t)'pe bulletin, In· eluding artist's con1posi te drawings oC !he slayer bas<'d on v.·itncsses' descrii;r !Jons. have been senl statewide. "\Vc've i;:ot some thal look good," Nev.·port Beach Police Detective Capt. Donald Oyaas said today . A showing of the mug shots on Television 's Channel 7 Eyewitness News \Vednesclay night produced calls from El Segundo, Downey and even Victorville. The dozens of calls so far look best In cases where they originated. locally, Capt. Oyaas said this n1orning. A key clue in the case which occurred July 6 is a turquoise van about the same unusual blue.green shade as that used on Sears service \'ans. Two people who realized !hey had seen .the J l·ycar-0\d ~irl getting into the vchi· clc came forward aflcr seeing pictures of ... the victim In newspapers. She was reportedly doing so volun· tarily, although her fam ily and friends have told police they didn't believe the girl found murdered the next day would go willingly with a stranger. The viclim had started to walk home fron1 summer school classes at LlnC{)ln lnterml!diate School to her home at 602 Orchid Ave., about one mile from the campus. Her strangled body v.·as found by chance. lying in a \\·atcr·filled ditch ad· jaccnt to Back Bay Road by a group of nature walkers the following day . while a task force of volunteers had hunted overnight. Hundreds of bits and pieces possibly relating to lhe unexplained murder have been sifted by police since then, including material from three clairvoyants claim· Ing ESP powers. Fram Pagel AGING ... most destructive mental attitudes in the elderly was a feeling of "anger" at the injustices they suffer. "It is just not healthy to be mad at everything," she said, "and it doesn't do any good, either, because you dissipate your energy without accomplishing anything.'' She urged the elderly to take the edge oH their anger, and then to channel it in a rational manner toward achieving a specific goal. "Learn to work with the people you're angry at," she said, "and you'll ac· complish a lot more." Busiuess .Machine Worth $600 Stolen A business machine valued by Avco Community Developers at more than S600 was stolen \\'ednesday night by burg!nrs v.·ho entered the company's of· fit'C-\. at fllonarch Bay Plaza. South L.agllna . Orange County Sheriff's offices said. Deputies said they have not yet cle1cr1nined ho1v the intruders effected l'nlry lo the office suite. The late model calculator was taken from an office desk , lhry said. So ftJJa ll Ga1n c Slated Laguna Bc>ach lifegunrd.s and the city Beach maintenance crew will meet in the second annual beach cre\\l·!ifeguard softb..1!! game i"lt 7:30 p.m. Friday at Jliddle Field in LaguJJa Beach's Boat Canyon park. The first annual game last year y,·as y,·on by the beach creY.', 16-3. Model llF-?!DP Ehrlichman: 'Not Aware ··()f List' \VASHJNG'rQN (1\1'1 -John D. J<:hrlichman te!ltifil'd today that he never ht>ard o( an "enemies list" 11•hilc in the \\'hlte !louse. The fonntr chief pres.idenlial do1nc stic adviser abo said he know!I oI no instance in which While HouSt! staff 1nembers BYRNE DENIES INTEREST IN FB I POST-Sto•y, P•g• 7 rccei\'ed a citizen's individual tax relum, although Internal Revenue Ser" ice figures show that 915 "lax checks" were sought by the \Vhite House last year alone. Ehr!ichman, in his third day of telc\'is· ed leslimony before the Sen a t e \Valergate committee, also said that former acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray Ill was being Investigated for near· ly two weeks before his resignation was forced by public disclo sure that he destroyed documents tnken from the safe of E. Howard JJunl, a \Vaterg111c con· spirator. Traps Used , Not Guns . / On Coyotes Rangers and animal control officers ha ve ruled out a mass royo!e hunt at San Clemente State Park, and, instead, have settled on a trapping program in an ef· fort to capture lhe animals alive. The effort, which has been continuing for several days after Monday's biting incident, involves the use of humane traps in an effort to capture the animals. Two bites so far this month have caus· ed grave concern at the park. Both youngsters involved in the unprovoked attacks are undergoing anli rabies in· jections as a precaution. "\Ve ha1•e to emphasize that there is no indication that rabies exists in anima1s at the park," said Pendleton Coast Manage r Ronald Hanschew this mornin'g. He said !hat he has ordered a resump+ lion of last summer's program - established after a series of biting in- cidents blan\ed on foxes. "We"re having signs brought out to warn campers to sleep inside some type of encJousre -tents, campers or cars - instead of on the ground,'' Hanschew said. In all the bites the animals have at· tacked persons either standing quietly in dark areas or asleep in sleeping bags on the open ground. "We have been warning each camper as he enters the park about the problem as well," the manager said. A coyote hunt had been contemplated for the park early this week, but was rul· ed oi.lt enlirely because of lhe chance a stray shot could hit someone in or near the rugged facility . "There's no reason to come in and eradicate the animals with" firearms anyway," •lanschew said. ·'The coyotl's arc an integral par! of th e park wild life and it v.·ould not be a good idea to just come in and kill them:· Instead the animals would be trapped and placed in quarantine at the county animal shelter \\'here officials will study the canines for po5Sible signs of rabies. "\Ve think we'll gC'I our firs1 one before tbe weekend," Hanschew said. One such anin1al - a coyote \~hich has lost its fear of man -is being sought behind the San Clemente Inn 1vhere he has appeared almos t daily for a handout of table scraps. One aide at the Inn who has fed the animal often said he has been able to get the animal to eat from his hand. GIANT 6.96 C... ff. FRQZtl( HOWS IA' ro 243 POINlS- PROVllES ~MORE fRE"ER CAfllCITY THAN N« GE TOP-f!MnR MOOS. MR MADS s37997 • And he said the "plun1bers" unit in· vcstlgation of Daniel Ellsberg, \l'hich resulted in· the burglary of hi ~ psychiatrist's o(fice by \Vhite !louse agents, was undertaken to satisfy Presl· dent Nixon's dem1Jnd that tilt! l~1ago11 Paper3 lc..1ks be plugged. Sen. Joseph M. J\lontoya ({)..N.1\1.i. ns ked Ehrlichman about the S{rcalled "enemies list" which ousted White Hous1· counsel John \V. Dean III said 1vas kepi in the While House. Dean said tax audit s and FBI in\'csligations "'ere sought against some persons on the list to ha rass the1n. "Could you thro1v some light on lhc' genesis of the enemies list~" J\lontoy~ asked. "No sir," F.hrlil'hman rc>pHed. "I don '! recall e"er having heard about it." He said he spoke to former presidential chief of staff If. R. i1a!de1nan about lhe 1111:11ter after Dean's !estln1ony . bul said 1hat n·as the first lime he heard of it. Ehrlichmru1 also denied hearing of an.v requests by \Vhite House staff members to see individual tax re turns. Montoya then read IRS statistics showing the \\lhite House asked for 477 "tax checks" in the first half of last year and 438 in the last half. "You're talking about apples and oranges," Ehrlichman said. ' He said a "tax check" is carried out by IRS staff members \\'ho review in· forma1ion about the person in question to see if they have auy problems 'vith federal tax collectors. Ehrlichman said the reason this is done is to insure that persons being considered for presidential appointments have no ongoing quarrel with the IRS. He said the \Vhite House receives only a report on whether such problems exist, not the raw income-tax returns. Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. (R·Conn.), asked Ehrlichman what Nixon did after he learned April 15 that actiilg FBl chief Gray destroyed pape rs taken fron1 Hunt's safe and given to him by Dean and Ehrlichman. EJirlichman said Nixon immediately ordered that then Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst and Asst. Atty. Gen . Henry E. Petersen investigate the matter. "What \vas there lo investigate?'· \\'eicker asked. Ehrlichman said Nixon didn't want to act hastily. Weicker then said that when Gray, a a personal friend, told him about the mat. ter 10 days later, on April 25, he im- mediately leaked. the story to new3 n1edia. Tiie story was rront-page news April 27.t Gray resigned the same day, citing the news reports. * * * Fram Pagel TAPES. could not possibly dividually. • • ask Jor lhem In· Nixon, in his letter to Ervin, said, "You \viii understand. J am sure, lhal il \viii simply not be feasible for my staff and me to review thousands of documents ln dc>cide v.•hich do and which do not fit \l'ilhin the S\l'etping but vague terms of the subpoen,1." The motion !o send Dash to court was made by Republican Sen. Howard JI. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, the vice chairman. It carried on a vote of S.O. ~n. Hern111:n E. Talmadge. (0-Ga. ). al· tending a conference on the farm bill , later telephoned his affirmative ,·ole to lhe committee lo make it unanimous. At the White House, deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. \Varrcn !old reporters: "The President is vl'ry con- fiden~ of his constitutional position as outlined in the lette'rs and the President fully expects his position lo be \Jpheld in the courts. Of ('.{)Urse the President, as in any other matter. would abide by ;i definitive decision of the highest court·' Phone 5~~-7788 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA 7 7 -• Saddlebaek • • Today's Final ~.Y. Stoeu EDITION VOL. 66, NO. 2<>7, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES TEN CENTS ''Gifted,' 'Slow' Segregation May Be Halted The policy of segregating slow.learning children into classrooms by them!lelves will end in the Irvine Unified School District next year if district officials get their "'ay. Similarly, classes for the mootall y giIJe may be brought into an open class-- room area rather than kept separate from the non.gifted students. The idea behind the new approach \$'hich was presented formally to the ' Smog Shuts 2 County U.S. Offices By GEORGE LElDAL 01 It!~ Dlll'f l"llol Sl•ll A five-count y ban on driving by federal employes to ease a three-Oay smog crisis shut down the two largest federal agen- eies operating in Orange County tod ay. The Social Security Administration put on a phone recorded message telling of its closure due to tbe smog ban. Ttlc JnternaJ Revenue Seiyice and its \Vage. price freeze information office in Orange similarly ,.,,as closed. • Prospects for Friday relief from the three-<lay (l]d smog wave are gloomy. The National \\leather Service predict!! an "easing" of· the temperature inver- sion u·h:lch traps auto exhaust producing smog near the ground. H°"·ever, not enough air movement is expected to break the cycle completely meaning eye burning smog will continue. ~teanwhile, operations at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station continued normally with no evidence of the base's 10,000 employes failing to sho\v for work. a spokesntan said. 1'1ost or the civilian and military employes Jive o[f base. Additionally, jets continued to fly today, despite the state and federal government suggestions un· necessary !ravel be limited. \Vaves of brown, eye-burning smog smothered the Los Angeles basin school board Yt'Mnesday ni~hl, is that all children, even those classified educable mentally retarded, wUI profit by mixing freely together and learning about each other's differences. The integration concept, \\·hich y.·ould have its most important implications for elementary 'school age children, marks a major change from the policies of the old San Joaquin School district. 'Hie stat~ Department of Education ~,~ ' still has not ronna!Jy ratifit'.'d lhe changl'. but Superintendent Stan Con.>v said ht· is "95 percent sure v;e'll get it." As outlined by ~tarilyn llarr1 s, ild· ministrator of educational services. the integration concept h'-s the follo"·ing ad· vantages: -IOI educationally h a ndi cap 1> c cl students And 17 educable Tnentnlty retarded students ...,·oold no longer be bused away from their neighborhood • :o;chool ton spt'C1:1l ('ducat1m1 ct.·1ller This \\OUld rhtninale a 11r111g bus ride, allo.v tht>m to attt•nd school \\'ith their ncighbo~. and 53\'C !he d ist r 1 ct transpor!:ltion c:osts. -lntcj:r<1te<I into the r cg u 1 a r C'lassroon1. till' ~lo11'·lc.1rni ng children 11ould ha1e 11or1-handt(·;:11>pcd children ;.1..; rn oc.h:ls of i;oOO bt.•ha1•111r 'l'h1s is hn· ponan1, /)(·cau;.,<' £0n1c11nu•s hand11;apped children develop abnorn1al or ··...,c1rd" behavior p.attems by as.sociatlng only vtith eDch othe r, or do not work up to capacily because !hey arc surrounded only by slo1v-Jeaming children llkt thc111S('hCS. -The special education t.e-achers, more hi~hly skilled than most teachers, i;i,-ould bt' assigned to all schools in !he district, rather than to a few special education cenlers. This dislribuUon \\'OU.Id make rv1ne .........ens us • f ' .. -t ., I • , 0111y l"llot "'" 1'1111•• r, •ldlerlll ICMl!ler THIS IS BALBOA'S INFAMOUS WEDGE WHERE SURF NE XT fO NEWPt>RT HARBOR 'S WEST JETTY IS BREAKING AT 10 FEET When You Surf the Di rty 01' Wedge on Days Like These, You Need Skill, Guts -and An Awful Lot of Luck - Wednesday, prompting environmental of-L f Le e St d ~1~i~ri1:,~1~;~:1fi':::·~~::.:r.;'Y . --· ····--OVe O· IVIllg ress_e Federa l agencies in a five-rounty area y;ere asked to shut down. h1ost refused. 1.)3 Pulled From Nc,vport's Surf, Strong Riptides The Environmental Protection Agency put the Emergency Air Episode Plan into effect for the first time, acting under the authority in amendments to the 1970 Clean Air Act. announced Gordon Elliott, (Sec .Sli.10G, Page %) * * * El Toro Action Continues Today Despite Smog El Toro Marine Corps Air Station con-- tinucd operations today despite its avowals it will comply with the federal F;nvironmental Protection Ai::ency smog ban requirements. Word did nol get to the station that civilian or military employes were to stay home 1oday, a spokesman said, and most li.1CAS employes showed up for Work. ;•'Traffic at the gates, today however. • "Was do1,•n fr(lm the usual pattern," the spokesman noted. El Tor(] officials have for some time been urging base employts to take ad· v:antage of car pools and plans art" l.U'lder way to provide on base bus service to cut down on vehicle trips. In compliance \\"ith the Orange Counry Alr Pollution Control District ban on QPe1l burning today, none was aulhoriJed izy Marine brass. ·The spokesman noted that the ~1arine Corps Is working \\'ith the Environmental J?rotectlon Agency on long raJ'lge plans fwvreaclion to air poUution crises. As a practical n1atter however, It is oolikely the base will c~ down for smog alcm. A-There are ongoing programs rt- qWring the daily presence of ~ our civilian and military \vork force s. ' the s~kesman &ald. One of the oogolng progrMts is, of courte, national defen.-;e. Speakers Say Quality Pri1ne lni1Jor tance to _,.f ge d By JOHN ZALLER Of Ill• OlllY l"llot 11111 As long as old people keep thei r love of living, they can expect to stay hea lthy and well. When they lose it, they can ex· pect steady physical deterioration. This was the prime point made Wednesday by the two main speakers et the Orange County Conference on Aging in Anaheim. "Some say the biggest problem of old people is transportation." Beatrice Schiff- man of the National Conference on Ag· ing , told an •udience 9f 200 in the Disneyland Hotel. "Others say that it's food and nutritilon. "But thafs bunk," Mrs. Schiffman declared. "People say it because it's ac· ceptable, because there arc federal funds available to fight it." What old people need far more than material 'services, she said, is a satis- fying routine of life. "Sometimes you'll fmd an older person living in a house much larger than they need. They're always cleaning floors, dusting, and working in the garden trying to keep It up, and you try to convince them to give it up for a neat little three- room apartment. "That can be a great mistake. You can tear apart the relationshlps o! the\r life&." Several studies have shown, ~frs. Schiffman said, that old people "very frequently" die within a few months after they have been forced to change their surroundings. a.trs. Schiffman didn'! dra,.,, any iron clad naJts a bout changes in old peoples• Quadruplet Dies VERACRUZ. Mexico (API -One of the quadnrplets bom to ti.faria Luisa Rascofl last weekend hns died. ~in. Rascon, a 31).yeer-old pewnt, give birth 10 three boys and a girl at a remote ranch JOUth of Vertten1z. One: boy ditd Wednesday. lives. "The thing that invariably kills uc; is isolation from a sat isfying routine of life." James Peterson , keynote! spe::iker at the conference. outlined an even 1nore direct relationship bel\\'ecn n1 en la I outlook and a healthy Hf!!. Stressing the need of the elderly 10 en- joy the "tender loving care" that other age groups need, he ~id. "The rule 1s either you love or you bcrome sick. If you become isolated, }OU can expect to become sick either physically or men- tally." Mrs. Schiffman sa id that one of the 'LOVE OR BE SICK' J1m11 E. Peterson most destructl\'t' n1cnt;1l attitudes u1 the elderly "'as a feeling or "anger"' at the 1ajustices they suffl•r. ""It is just not hi.'<i!thy tu b(' n1ad nt f'\'cry1hing."' she sa id. ··:ind 1\ doesn"t do any good, either. because you d1ssipa1e ~ou•· energy without ac:co1np!ishing an_whing. ·• She urged the cJ<lcr!y to t;1ke the cdgl' of/ lhl'Jr anger. and then to channel 1t in a rational manner 1oward achie\ 1ng a specific goal. ··Learn to ...,ork \Vi!h the ~i!e ~·ou"rc ;;ingr~· at," she said. '"<ind yoti'H ac· complish a Jot more 'ANGER NOT HEAL THY' S.ttrice Schiff man \ An Ontdrio 1nan broke his neck and 152 o!her ha!hers had to be pulled from the churning ~urf \\lednesday ~as Newport Beach lifeguards battled eii::ht to 10.foot ~urf :ind the st rongest riptides so far this yc·:ir Cunis Pack. 34. "·as listed in serious but stable condition at Hoag J\femorial llo~pi!al today wi th broken n e c k \frlebrae. a damaged spine and almost loTa! paralysis. Lifeguard Lt Logan Lockabe.y said Pack 1\·as injured at about 6:40 p.m. u hen he ran out into the \Vaves near Nc11,port Pier, dove in, and hit the bot· tom. "The surf really had nothing to do\\ ith his inju ry," Lockabcy said. "It was ac· tu;illy 1>rcrty calm in !hal spot but he just do\·e in head first and misjudged the drµth ." Lockabcy o;ai« an unid e ntified ~achgoer pulled the unconscious man tn .~hore <ind co11lcd lifeguard!! "'ho ad· m1n1s!l·rcd en1crgency first aid until an ambula nce ~rrived. Lock:tbey said the surf around !he pirr 1\·as probably about the only calm spot on the "hole Nc1,'port Beach shoreline . ';\\'c had some prt'll}' rough surf and riptkies al llhe "''ay along." he said. "I'd say they "ere the u'Orst rips all year." i\lorc than 78 ,000 people cante to the !)(>;ich despite dreary ovcrca!lt and fog lh~t hung on until mid·affemoon. 1 ... 11.:k::ibcy said the surf today was still hi gh -up to six fee t -and very cho~ P.\ clur to gusty winds out of tbc south . He sa id the surf most likely \\'ill con- llnuc to rise today and last Into the \\ ('('kend because of the swells being J::t'nrraled by Hurricane Emily off the Bai11 California coasL "\\ c arc kind of expecti ng more hea\•y 'urf u1day and I'm sure the bad riptides \1111 sllll be there." Locbbey 88id, "'·am- 1ng "'cak su·hruners to .lta.y out ot I.he "ittcr. t!ltm a\·a1lable lo help other teaclltts. or other s1udents "1th particular learning: problctns. The i.nlegra11on of the .!llO\\'-learning children \\'OUld not mean the end ot special progran111 10 !1clp them. Each of Irvine's eight schools \1<1uld be required 10 set aside a "s~eial l·ducation center " "''hert cerU!i ed speci:il e ducation (Ste STUDEr\TS, Page !) een 3 P1·oposed City Plans Seen Alike 1r the city of Irvine fin3lly adopts In December a general plan "''hich con· forms to one of three altematlve!I presented \Vednesday night , Irvine will be a city of 500,000 people , give or take 10 percent. Larry li.forrison. director of the City of Irvine general plan consultant.!! team from the South Pasadena lirm of \\'ilsey and Ham, said population f!ltimates for three allernate land use plans studied Wednesday are very simil<lr. Plan A bunches high density develop- ment both on hillside ridgellnes and in valley floor areas while preserving the most open space. Something less than 480.000 to 500.000 people would live in city "'A" by the: year 2,000. Plan 8 was an unidentified venioo of the Irvine Company general plan land use and circulation elements. It was not identified as such, because the 100 or more participanU in \Vednesday·s Town Forum were asked to rate features of eac:h alternate they like best. Plan B concentrates high density deve lopment on the valley floors. controls hillside development and makes roo1n for homes for from ~.ooo to 500,000 by the year 2.000. Plan C emphasizes hillside ridge development more than does plan B, and projects similar populations. The chief differences between the three projected views of the future city citiz~ and city officials W(>T"e asked to evaluate centered on the way the open space and transit corridors relate to villages. Each plan showed development of from 30 to 40 villages, a concept put forth in (Sff CENSUS, Page %) Agents' Arrest Close to Home SAN FRANCI SCO (AP I -.Narcoti c.'1 agents say they have arrested a ttiexlcan farmhand for allegedly attempting to sell 12 ounces of heroin "'orth $17 ,00) right in their o"n offices in the Federal Building. Eduardo J. B:izua, -49. of li.fexicali, was charged \Vednesday Ytith smuggling and inlent to distribute drug.s, federal officer.s said. Orange Coast Weather The Orange Coast \lt"i\I have cloudy but ~·arm weather tomor· ro"'·· extending through the week· end. There will be little sunshine. bul temperatures will be near 70 degrees. with inland area ther· mometers climbing to 80. L"SIDE TODAY Dcspi&t tht attention givtn the l11afra and Banglades/1 stori~s in the Am~riC(l11 ~ess, few noticed lflst vear wl1en 250.000 were killed in the tin11 East African cou1~try of Burundi. Details on Page 20 today. \..M. ....... f C..Hflif"'• 1 Cleulllell U.... (~ JI (N.-.1 • DMlll Neflttt 14. It l:•tl<wl•l I"-' !.11""1•""""-1 ....... ''-• JMI "« IN •tun It. U, 11 --" '" kt'ria Jt AMI \.e...,. 111 -..,, Moittll.. ..,,,,.. .. lt•tlt<Mt '""" w. 1 Or-("""' u ••""-f"wter " -.... S~ Mart.etl a -U ,_ . n.*' ..,, ·-. ·-·· Newl ,,.. Wwllll ,._ W .1 ' . I ,! DAILY PILOT IS Tips Give1i In Slaying 01Girl,11 Circulars contalning information on Ull.• slrangula!IOll murder or Corona dt·I l\tar's :.luda Ann O'Keefc today are pro· viding a nood of tips from Uiroughout Southern California. The specl.1tl poat.er--type bulletin, 111· eluding artist's comf)O.'Jlte drawing! or lhe slayer based on ~nesses' descrt1>- lions. have been 5l'nt stall'wlde. ··\ve·ve got sonll' that look good,'' NcY.'porl Beach Police Oetec:tive Capt. Donald Oyaas said today. A showlng of the n1ug shol.5 on Ttltvislon's Channel 7 Eye witnE>ss News Wednesday night prOdu~ <'alls from El Segundo, Downey and even Victor\'1lle. The dozens of calls so far look best in cases where they orig1n11ted locally, Capt Oynas said thls n1oming. A key clue in the c<j)e which occurred July 6 is a turquoise van about tht> san1e unusual blue-green shade as that usrd on Sears service vans. -Tu·o people who realized lhcy had scrn the ll-yea r--0ld girl gelling into the vehi- cle came forward after SL-e1ng pictures of the victim in newsp:.ipers. She ww.s reportedly doing ao volun- t.arlly, although her family and friend!! have told police they dldn'l believe the girl round murdered th e next day would go willingly with a stran~cr. Tbe victim had started to "'alk home !rom summer school clusses at Lincoln Intermediate School to her ho1ne at li02 Orchid Ave., about one rnile from the campus. Her strangled body was found l>y chance, lying in a water-filled ditch ad- jacent to Back Bay Road by a group or nature walkers the followin g day, whllc u task force of volunteers had bunted overnight. Hundrt'ds o! bits 11nd pieees possibly relaling to the unexplained murder ha\'e been sifted by police since then, including n1aterial from three clairvoyants clalm- ing ESP powers. Suspect Admits 01ie 'Piggy Bank Burglary Cou1it A M.la'°n Viejo man who became known to Orange County Sheriff's of. leers as the "piggy bank burglar·~ today halted his Superior Court trial to plead guilty to one oC eight felony charges. J udge Byron K. ~fcMlllan abandoned his plans to hear the opinion of a psy.chlatrilt on the mental state of Louis E. Morttz Jr., 38, of 2688l Granvla Drive, sentenced him to state prison on the burglary conviction and immediately suspended that sentence. Morlt:r: was then placed on five years probation under a num~r of conditions. One of them Is his pledge lhat he wlll repay the losses suffered by a numbe r or .local homeowners. Sheriff's orfietrs who said their arTest oE Moriti last ~larch ended a wave or piggy bank robberies et homes In the Mission Viejo area said Moritz also pocketed blank checks at a nun1ber of homes and cashed them at local supermarkets. A probation department report that recommended a jail tenn and probation for the former communicatlonll executive ooted that he admitted IS burglaries and passing 19 forged checks. Business Machine Worth ~600 Stolen A business macttlne valued by Avco Community Developers at more than S600 \\'SS stolen \\'rdne!!day night by burglars "'ho entered the compru1y's of· flee 1lt ~tonarch Bay Plaza, South Laguna. Orange Coun!y Sheriff 's offices said. Deputies s.aid they ha\·e not yet determined how the Intruders effected entry to the office sultr. The late model calculator was taken from an office desk, they said. O•ANGI COAIT II DAILY PILOT Tiie O••""• (NII D"ILY PI LOT, ... 1111 ... 111c11 lt (O">blftop<j "'t HtWl>Prn1. I• ou&11.-I>• ll'lt 0••"11• Co1u Pvblloll.,,. (om~ftf ~Pf>.O ttl• N ll.0111 ••t ""'61l1M01, M-~· tllro..;11 Fddff, lot Cott• M .. t , Htwpofl lle..cll. Hu.1ll"11!itll ltKlllF-1ti11 V1ll•f, LIOUll• ... di. 1 ... 1 ... /lldd!tbt<JI lllld 3•• ('9-111~/ i... Jv-o CIQl•ltt""· A 11"91P teQl()!'fl tell! ..... <I pUOlll.lled S.twt<l~yt Ind 5\lndlVI, f"' •ln¢tllel PY611olllf'IO 1!1<1! It t t JJO W•o! a.r llr .. t, Cttra M-. C1111or111<r. t)l>t, Robt rf N. w,.,j Pr .. ld.ill t"41 l'wOllt"I' J1c~ It C11rl1y Vkt Pr .. ldtfll 11'4 IO•,,.rtl Mt~tOff Tho111•• IC11•il t:•lto• Thom11 A. M111phi111 MtMOlllO l1G1• .. Ch1P"l11 H. l101 ll:i,h1 rd P. N1U AMtlltl\I Mt,..tl"ll E•1ior1 om. .. (;fit~ M.u· UD Wfl! ••r $1'"°' H-•t lt.tefl! lJJJ Htwp1tl ltui<rvl•f llfll'lt lttcll : 17' "°'"' •• .,...,. Huntlnoo<on lut11: 11111 ll••VI l <111ln1•d ft" C .. rP19Mt1 JOS Ner"' t:I c,,.,1,,_ ~ttl , .. .,,. .... t n4t 14J-4JZ1 Ci...111" A'-tttlllf M Z.1171 s-ca. ..... A lt ..,~; ,...,.. ... 4'2-4420 Cfl~fr~I, lffl. 0-•1111• CM•! l" ... lt~l"t (oMl>oll'l'f, Mo l'lf'*t tltl'lft, lll~tltttlfflt, ~ltor!1I me!ltr tr .o-.... lltt-h btrtW. _, If r...-..Ktd Wflllll\ll 'lllfi.t -· !fl~ -' UIVrlrl!lt -•· """"" ti<r" ,,.. .... Mid II (Rlt lltnl. C..llflorfllf.. ~--l•llfl .., r•rrlu a.N ""'"""'' "" "Miii U,lf '""'"""'' "'IH!I,., .. .,.,..,, .... ., .... -••11,, _ Thundlly, July 2&, 1'911 Teart1il Cfnaf essio11 t:athy S11nson , as !i'l<iry \Varrcn, e1notionally tell s her cn1ployers, Elizabeth and John Proctor th at she has been accused of being a witch. in " scene fro1n Arthur l\1illcr's ··1'he Crucible,'' being per· forn1cd al !\fission \.'iejo lrigh School at a p.111 . Friday and Saturday and 7 p.1n . Sunday. Robyn Strom and Bob Koehler portray the Pro1:tors in the drama about Salem witch hunts. 'fickets for the mulli- purpose roo1n show are $1.25, adults, and 75 cents, students. ---- l1·vine District Rejects Low Bid for Bus Service The Irvine L'nlfied School Board decid- ed \Vcdnesdey to pay an extra $8,000 per year for its bus service in the hope that it \11!1 mean belier quality of service. The board unanimously rejected !he lo\v bid from the controversial Com- munity Enterprise Charter Service, 'vhich sen>ed the lrvlne area last year uudcr the old San Joaquin school district. Instead, the board awarded a five·year contract to the Educational and Recrea- tional Bus Service, a nalloo~·lde charter ~ervice with which the district has no ex- jX'rience. Its bid was the aecond lowest of the four submitted, Board members dldn't elnborate on Ranch Employe Will Face Court Over Shooting A Starr Ranch emplo\'e accused of murder Jn the fatal shcxl!ing early this month of a trespasser at the old San . Juan Hot Springs is set lo appear Friday 1norning for a preliminary hearing. Roben Carl "Whip" Slatten, 41, !"'.as bc>en accused in the shooting of a 21-ycar- old Los Angeles area 1nan after an altercation al the off-limits springs along Ortega Highway July 11. Slatten, \vho authori!ics said v:as not authorized to act .is a SL'CUrity guard. allegedly shot Denni s Hay Glahn in lhe ch!!sl :iftcr an argument O\·cr public use of. the tlere!lct spa. The court action In South Orange C.oun- I\' t-.lunicial Court is set for 9:30 a,m. in the Division 2 court of Judge J{ichard lla1nilton. Slatten ha.~ remained in custody ::it Orange County jail since the incident. Slatten originally was treated at the Orange Coun ty f\1edic.il Center J:iil Sec- tion for treatment of minor hurts he received during his alleged flight fro1n the !!hooting scene. Officers said the r.inch jeep being used by the defendant \Yent out of control and crashed as the man asserted!y fled the shoo! ing seen('. SlaUen had already bctn set for court action on another hol springs lncldenl "''hen the shooting took place , authorities said. Earlier th is year it Is 3llcged the ranch hand heal a trespasser \vllh a blackjack during a similar altercation . The springs. for generations a 1nccca for b~thers and revelers, Is on priv:ile property and the public has been de- 1rrrcd from cnirring the area because or la1v cnfroccmcnt problen1s there. Mesa Man Hurt Whil e Collectin g Trash in Irvine . ti, 2Q.year-0\d rubbish collector from ~ta Mr.!la w<15 Injured \\1ednesd3y \\'hen he sllished his ~rtt!ry on the right forf'ann "·hile picking up an e1npty tn .. -e C"OOlaincr tn lrytne. licnc Lee l)uly JI. S30 \\1, \Vilson St.. \.\'3S rushed to Tustin Comn1un11y llospital wht"!re doctors laced up !hf.' \\'ound with 1-i stitchc,. Hr. wns released 11ftcr receiving emr.rgcn<..-y treatment. Daty , an employc of [)(o"ey's Hubbl!!h Service In Costa l\lcsa. wa s taken lo the hospita l in lh<: squad car of Irvine pollcc officer lfarry Ehrllch because he thouihl "''l'llling for an an1 bulancc 1night have CO!ll Dat~ 's IHc. When poll~ nrrived Ill lhe scene of tht accident , 1~842 Bel Aire SI. in tilt Grttn- trce lrAct , Daty wns s:l id to ~ blef'd\nJI: profusely ev~n thou~h 50meonc hnd aµ. plied ;i toun1iqu1~t to his arm . their reasons for rejecting the low bid ol the Community Charter Service. except to say that they "already had ex· perience" y,·ith its service quality. Last December, the San Joaquin board placed the Community Charter Service on probation for allegedly poor service. However, the probation was removed 30 days later ~·hen the bus company reportedly improved. Later in the spring, there were further complaints. "Cost Is Important,'' said Board Presi- dent Charles Boulanger, "but so is quali- ty of service." Superintendent Stan Corey said that based on the rates quoted by the t'vo companlell, the probable cost difference "''Ould be $8,200 per year, or $42,000 over the five year contract. \V. C. Spinks, president of the Com· munlty Charter Service, pleaded with the board to consider his company's low bid . '·There are high requirements set forth in the bid and performance bonds to ensure "'e meet those standards, '1 he said. "U we fail to live up to the standards, we will expect to pay the penalty." Splnks also complalned that "if \Ile 11·eren·t going to get the contract no mat- ter how Joy,• y,·e bid, y,•hy did you ask us to bid? "The bid specifications didn't say anything about performance record under the old San Joaquin district," he pointed out. Trustee Dean Olson asked, "How do "·c know tl'Ult service from the second lo\V bidder \\:Ill be any better than we got from U1e low bidder?" Supl. Corey replied that he had not made an investigation Into the quality of service offered bv the second lo"·est bid- der. but he said-that many other school districts u·erc continuing to buy their service. Plam1ers Revie'v Irvine Townl1om e Proposal Tonig ht Irvine planning commissioners tonight "''iii revie"' the Smokelrce planned com- munity zoning "hi<'h provides townhomes for as many as 413 persons on 13 acres or a 25 acre par~l adjacent to the Ran ch dcvclopn1ent in central Irvine. The commission meets et 7:30 in' City 11<111, 4201 Can1pus Dri\•e. City Associate Planner f\tlke Harris "'ill present the planned commllllity pro- posal "'hich includes a larger, relocated city park of 2.5 acres and a 9.4 acre clcn1cntary school site. Density on lhe residential acreage is increased from eight to 10 units per acre. Harris Is expected to recommend that commissioners open the public hearing tonight, but continue it to August 9 for completion of the environmental lmpact report. llarris said a meeting \\'Ith coocerned cltlzrns and representatives of Warm· ington Development company ended on a ·•positive'' note, pending city lldjustmcnt of porlions of the proposal, notably loca- tion of the school parking lot . Woman Injured 111 Stait·s Fall A woman from Irvine \\'ho s.'lld the contact leru 11uddenly fell out of her left eye follo"'NI It dO\\'Tl lhe stalrll of a Ne"''J)Ort Beach nighl club early today, suffering a 11evere cut In the fall . Elol!t P. Harman of 3900 P11rkvlcw Lane went to Hoag Memorial Ho,pltal v.•htre 20 11titche1 were taken to close the laclnl laeerAtioo. She itod her husband "C'rl' just lea\·in g lhe Alley \l,'eSt. 2106 ,V, Ocean f°ront , ~lrs. flBrman told police. "'hen she lost her lens and took a !umblr a~ " rc::ult From Page 1 CENSUS ••. the rrvlnt Company land pilln. Ptun A linked the villages with a strongly vlslble north«>uth corTldor of high density rt1ldtntlal, plblic use!, open space and trwportatiOri bacttxqi: for a d~lde ••personal rapid t r an 11 t ' ' oyot;m. Monilon W'led lbe city lo opp y lor demonltraUoo lf&nlS for such a· penona)lzed rapid trlnllt network which wlU'be·•vailable 1n "flve to clght years.'' Only U.foot rights of \\'llY arc nttclt:.'CJ, 1t1on1son noted. Froin Page J SMOG ... chairman of the federal executive booircl. here. Under the plan, all federal agencle1 were requested to close down if possible, urge mentlal workers to use car poohi: and public transporteUon. and llmlt of- ficial •uto travel. Co111pliance is at I.he discretion of the individual local agency chlefs. The fed eral plan covers Orange, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Riverside and Ventura counties, an area populated by JO rnillion persons. .1 Only the Internal llcvcnue Service and Social Sccurily Adrni nistration said they 1\·ould shut do~'n their offices for the day. The f' Bl, Post Office, federal courts, li.S. J\olarshal's ofrtce, and others said they 'vould remain open. The federal Drug Abuse Task f<~orcc said agents \\'ould "·ork, but clerica1 personnel ~·ould I.Jc given lhe duy off. Gov. Ronald Rragan ordered all state agencies to halt use of state owned \"Chicles, except for emergency purposes, in downtown Los Angeles, eastern Los Angele! county and Riverside and San Bernardino counlles. The Los Angeles Air Pollution Control District called for ozone readings from .25 to .50 parts per mllllon of air today. The .50 level ill the point at which a first stage alert Is called. When reached all driving in the Los Angeles basin is sup- posed to be curtailed. ?11eanwhlle, the blghe11t smog readingll in Orange County were .30 ppm in La Habra Wedneaday. A .29 ozone reading was l~ged In Anaheim. Causing the smog accumulation ill a temperature inversion "lid" over the Los Angeles Basin which the national \\'eather service says Is not expected to break up until Friday. Again today, inland cl ti ell of Orange County were expected to experience the highest ozone readings. The county forecast is .25 parts per million oxidants, the APCD said. That 's an expected level high enough to request industry to forego any bumlng of wastes and to urge motorists to curtail driving, the county APCD engineer repeated today. El Toro Youth, 'f;if ted Child, Dies at Age 10 Funeral services for l 0 ·ye a r -o 1 d Gregory Starr of El Toro were held this morning at t~ Laguna l-1.ills Church or Jesus Chrisl of Latter-Day Saints. The child, a fourth grade student at Olivewood School in El Toro, died Tues.- dav at l\lission Comn1unity Hospital of a kidney failure . He lived at 23601 Duryea Drive . 11e i111 survived by his parents, Gerald .. and f\tarcla Starr; brothers, Rick, Jef- frey and Bradley: sisters, Christine and Becky: grandparents, l\lr. and l\frs. L. Roland Brian and l\lr. and l\lrs. Allan II. \Vaglcy . During his short life, Gregory Starr had received a"•ards for citizenship and art activities. He was active in the Cub Scouts and in the gifted children 's pro- gram at Ne~·port-r.1esa School District. Intrm1cnt will be in Salt L.ake City. Fuueral director is Pacific VI e w Memorial Park. Nl~on Refusal Panels to Press S'uhpoena Action WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon refused today to comply with sub- poenas for Whlte House documents and tape recordings or conversations with aides about Watergate. Both the Senate Watergate com1nilteti and special Wattrgale prose cu to r Archibald Cox immediately started legal action to compel Nixon l.o comply. Nlxon said he would IJOl furnish tape rtcordlng11 of five meetln.gs with John W Dean I ll, his former COllllstl, who charg- ed In five days or testimony before the conunlttece that in conversations Sept. 15, 1972 and in l\farch, f973, Nixon disclosed he know of the Watergate coverup. The President said he would furnish some papers sought by 1he subpoenas - ii more specific requests were made. ''I cannot and will not consent to give any investigatory body private presiden- tial papers," Nixon wrote in a letter read at the start of the Senate committee's hearing . "To the extent that I have custody o,. other documents or inforniation relevant to the work of the seleet committee. and that can properly be made public, I 11•lll be glad to make these available in resjXlnse to specific requests." After Cox received a similar letter. he asked Chlef District Court Judge John J. Si.rice to sign a show-case order directing th e administration to tell why it should not be compelled lo compl y with the sub- poenas. Slrica did so, giving the \Vhite House until Aug. 7 to reply. The seven-member committee, mran· time, voted unanimously to instruct chief counsel Samuel Dash to carry the issue to court. He will seek a decl8ratory judg- ment from the court asking !or an order telling Nixon to comply. Both moves will launch a legal battle "'hich legal expertll expected ultimately u·ould have to be settled by !he U.S. Supreme Court .. Some said a decision couJd be reached within three months. Committee Chalnnan Sam J. Ervin (1)- N.C.) called Nixon's condltkm that the panel specify exactly which documents it wants "an impossibility." "We're not clairvoyants," he fumed . lie said the committee did not know \\'hat papers Nixon had, and therefore could not possibly ask for them in- dividually. Nixon, in his letter to Ervin, said, "You \\ill under11tand, l am mge, that it "'ill simply not be feasible fQf my staff and me to review thousands of documents 10 decide which do and y,·hlch do not fit \\'ithin the sweePlng but vague terms of the subpoena." The motion to send Duh to court was made by Republican Sen. Howard 11. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, the vice chairman. It carried oo a vote of 6--0 . Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, (D-Oa.), Pl· tending a conference on ti;le fann bill. later telephoned his affirmative vote to the committee to make it unanimous. At the White House, deputy Prrss Secretary · Gerald L. \Varren told reporters: ''The· ·President Is very con- fident of his constitutional position as outlined in the letters and the President fully expects his position lo be upheld in the courts. Of rourse the President, as in any other matter, \Yould abide by a definitive decision of the highest court" Fh·c Burns Truck OAKLAND (AP) -A fire damaged a pickup truck parked on the strike-idled Bay Area Rapid Transit system tracks \\1ednesday night, police sald. Oakland firemen. v.•ho at first reported the damaged vehicle y,·as a test car, said they were checking reports an explosion \\·as heard seconds before the fire. Tbls ca1·efuUy prepared statemc11t in· dlcated Nixon , too, expected the Issue to reach the hig~SI court. The subpoenas !or the While House docwnents were tht first 1ssuea to 11 President In 166 years. t'homas Jefferson "'as subpoenaed lu llMMI to appear at the treason trial of Aaron Burr. his old political enemy. Jel · ferson did not appear, but satisfied the requesl by submilling letters he had written. Nixon Taxes On Cleme11t e House 'Low' SACRA~1ENTO (AP) -The chairrnan of the California properly tax agency says it appears the \\restem \Vhite 11ousc at San Clemente is under·assessed and an investigation should be underlaken. In a letter to fellow members of the State Board of Equali1.ation , made public today, \Villiam Bencntt said. ''It appears that the San Clemente prop- erties, by \Vhomsoever O\\'ned. are underassessed. A formHI impar1ial in· vestigation should be undertaken by the staff of this agency. I rcrommend that \1'e do so. If you COR<:ur, please let me knO\\'. "To date l have made brief. infor1nnl inquiries about thr value of the land and improven1ents. Noy,• the matter has beco1ue of sufficient importance to \Var- rant further action by the board." Board 1nembcrs currently arc vaca- tioning and their next meeting is schedul- ed for July 30, with other meetings scheduJed almostly constantly throughout August. Bennett's office said. The four board members elecled by district. including Bennett . ;i r 1• Democrats. The fifth is Hcpublican Con- tro11er ~louston I. Flournoy , an ex officio board member. Bennett, "'ho rrsides in the ri1arin County corrununity of Kentfield, has been board chairman since January. Frotn Pug~ J STUDENTS. • • teacher! ""OUld continue to meet v.•ith the slow-learning children. Typically, a slow-learning child y,·ould study reading and math in the "special ed center," and would return to his regular c\assrootn for art, social science, and physical educarton. In addition, the special education center \\'ould be used for administering programs to the district's 500 mentally gifted studrnts, according lO Mrs. Harris. ''No student \vould be likely to spend 1nore than hair his day in the special education center,'' r.-trs. Harris said , "and most of them "·ould probably spend much less time than that .'' Up to IS percent or students who usert resources of the special ed center could be students not legally eligible as either slo"' learners or mentally gifted. Thus. she pointed out. the integration concept increases the educational opportunities available lo the average students. But Mrs. Harris laid special stress on the &oeial benefits or the program lo all student3. "The children need to learn that there are other children who arc different. ll is a very Important lesson for their lives, and this ls an ideal way to learn it." ~1rs. Harris said there were only nin1• other school Pistricts in Califon1ia usinr: the intrg:ration concept. but she predicll·d there would be more because of the gucd results the idea has produced. New/General Bectrics i •1 I I ----- General Electric BEST BUY DISH Moclel Tlfl.J I 0' '37997 I I Phone 5~8-7788 18l5 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA I I 7 7 Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley VOL. 66, NO. 207, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1973 Today's Fl11al N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS County Smog Siege Expected Through Friday By GEORGE LEIDAL Of JM Dlllr ~Ii.I Sllll A five-county ban on driving by federal employes to ease a three-day smog crisis shut down the two largest federal agen· cles operating in Orange County today. The Social Security Administration put on a phone recorded 1nessage telling of its closure due to the smog ban. The Internal Revenue Service and its wage- price freeze information office in Orange similarly was closed. Prospects for t .. riday relief from the lhree-day old smog wave are gloomy. The Natiooal \\feather Service predicts an "easing " of the temperature inver- sion \vhich traps auto exhaust producing smog near the ground. However, not enough air movement is expected to break the c.xcle completely meaning eye burning smog will continue. A1eanwhile, operations at El Toro ~larine Corps Air Station continued normally with no evidence of the base's 10,000 employes falling to show for work1 a spokesman said. • i\1ost of the civilian and military employ~ live off base. Additionally , jets continued to Oy today, ~spite the stale and federal govemmenl suggestions un- necessary tra\'el be limited. \\'aves o! brown . eye-burning smog, smothered the Los Angeles basin Wednesday, prompting environmental of- ficials to put a federal smog emergency R!an into effect for the first time today. Federal agencies in a five-county are<1 v:ere asked to shut down. ~1ost refused. The Environmental Protection Agency ec 1c eac Panel Acts To Obtain Nixon Tapes \\IASHTNGTON (UPI J -President Nixon refused today to comply with sub- ·Jioenas for \\lhite House documents and tape recordings of conversations vl'ith aides about \Valergate. Both the Senate \Vatergate co1nmittee and speCial \Vatergate prosecutor· Archibald Cox immediately started legal action to compel Nixon to comply . Nixon said he \Yould not furnish tape recordings of five meetings with John \V Dean ·,_11, bis former counsel, who charg· ed in five days of testimoriy before the committeec that in conversations Sept. 15, 1972 and in March, 1973, Nixon disclosed he know of the \Vatergate coverup. The President said he would furnish some papers sought by the subpoenas - if more specifi c requests were made. •j ' + • " put the Emergency Air Episode Plan inlo clfecl for th e lint time. acting under the authority in amendments lo the 19'70 Clean Air Act. announced Gordon Elliott. cha irman of the federal executi\'C board. here. Under the plan, all ft.>deral agencies \.\'ere requested to close down if possible. urge essential workers to use car pools and public transportation, and limit of· ficial aulo tra\'l'L Compliance IS at the discretion O( the individual local agl'ncy chiefs. ee 4?' • The federal plan covers Orange, Los An&eles; San Bernardino, Riverside and Vcnlu ra counties. an area populated by 10 million persons. ~ Only the Internal ncvt-nuc Ser\•ice and Socia l Security Adtninistration s.1 id lh<'Y \.\'Outd shu1 do\.\·n their offices for the day. The FBI , Post Orfice . federal courts. U.S. lilarshal's office. and others said they would remain oix:,n. The federal Drug Abu se Task Force said agents \.\"Ould work, but clerical pcrsoMel would be given the day off. D1Up ~i .. I U1tl ~1'11111 '' flldl1rll l(Mftl9• "I cannot and \Viii not consent to give any investigatory body private presiden- tial papers," Nixon wrote in a letter read at the start of the Senate committee's hearing. "To the extent that I have custody of '*er-documents or information .relevant . :1&:1.he work or the select committee, and that can pro~rly be made public, I will be glad to inake these available in response to specific requests." THIS IS BALBOA'S INFAMOUS WEDGE WHERE SURF NEXT TO NEWPORT HARBOR'S WEST JETTY IS BREAKING AT 10 FEET When You Surf the Dirty 01' Wedge on Days Like These, You Need Skill, Guts-and An Awful Lot of Luc k After Cox received a si inilar letter, he asked Chief District Court Judge .John_ J . Sirica to sign a show-case order ~1rect 1ng the administration to tell why it should not be compelled to compl y 'vith the s~b­ poenas. Sirica did so. giving the White House until Aug. 7 to reply. The seven-member committee, mean· (See TAPES, Page Z) Second Surnrner Session Slatecl At T'lvo Schools Studenls at two campuses in the Hun-- 1ington Beach Union !·tigh School District Will get a second summer this year for additional classes. Mini -su mmer schools \\'ill open their doors Monday at Fountain Valley and Marin a hi~h schools. Three weeks or classes. wilh a tota l possible credit or six Wiits. will ~o(fered through Aug. 17. Summer s hool principal George Davis e:aid the Fou tain Valley campus expects about 200 to 00 students for the district's f\.rst "second summ er" effort A similar Dumber is expected at h1arina l!igh School. -~~~~~~~~--~~~- Jury Won't Act In Police Killing Of Valley Y outl1 The Orange County Grand Jury, after reviewing additional evidence; has reaf- firmed its original position or taking no action in the April 13 death of Miguel Ronquillo in Fountain Valley. Ronquillo, an 18-yeAr-old Santa Ana youth was shot by a Westminster police ofricer after he and four others had fled from Fountain Valley police \.\"ho had stopped a car on drunken driving charges. Ronquillo was killed by a single shot fired from the.gun of Westminster office r Timothy ~1iller. Miller testified that he and A F0W1tain Valley officer were searching Ronquillo when the suspect made a sudden move-- men! causing ti.filler's gun to accidentally discharge. The Orange County ltumAn Relations Council also investigated the case but took no action. Retarded Center Bids Solicited No Cull range oJ courses will be offered. put students can ta.k~ _such sho_rt-coursc subjects as scuba d1,·1ng. surfing. pre-Bids are being sought for construction alg ebra. various math classes, personal of a Sfi60,000 center to house mentally typing and others. retarded. and special student.s of the Hun- Any student can register by simply al· tington Beach Union High School tending class on Monday. Davis said. District. Copies o( class schl'dules are available in District trustee! authorized advertising the ca mpus o!fice. for bids for the project at lheir meeting This is the first time the dl.1tlict has Tuesday. offered two summer school 5e.55lons, and The center. which will be.built on the the first time the sta te has agreed 10 Wintersburg Campus site·at Golden West reimburse a di strict for students at· Slrett and Slater Avenue. will ac- tendlng such a mlnl·summer school. commodate more than 1,000 student.I The enrollment will be small thls time, with special needs that are anticipated In normal summer school d~w L,SOO the district by t.975. •llludcnts al Foontai,n Valley. Davis ex-The 615 spcci4ll students the district ~ peels It to grow the. next r~w summers currently has ore housed Jn temporary until it may eventuf'lly haVc '8n lmpsct structures at Wlnte:rsburg and 1t dif· on class loods in the winter. fercnt locations throughout lhe district. \ DlllW ~1"4 Sl•ff l"tltfM "° RldYMI IC9'tll« AT BALBOA'S WEDGE, BOARD SURFER MA TC HES BODY SURFER ff They're Both Going Left, They Better Do It Togethe r Agents' Arrest Close 1 to Home SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Ntrcotics ag:enl.'I say they have arrested a lilc1ican farmhand tor ~legedly attempting to sell 12 euoces o{ heroin worth $17,000 righl in their o"'" offices in\fhe federal BuildinJ::. l-:duardo J. Batu~. 49. or lifexicali . Wff!i charged Wednesday with smuggling and Intent to distribute drugs, federnl ofJicers said. 153 Pulled From New1>ort's Surf, Strong Riptides An Ontario man broke his neck and 152 othrr balhers had lo be pulled from the , churning surf \Vednesday as Ne~·port Beach lifeguards battled eight to 1()..!oot su rf and the str011gcst riptides so far this year. Curti.~ Pack. J.1. u·as listed in ~erious but stable cond ition at Hoag lilemorial Jlosp11a\ today \.\'ilh broken ne ck vertebrae. a da maged. spine and almost total paralysis. Lifeguard Lt. T.,ogan Lockabcy said Pack '''as Injured at about 6:40 p.m. \\'hen he ran out into lhe waves near Newport Pier, dove in, and hit the bot· tom. "The surf really had nothing to do ~·ilh his injury," Lockabcy said. "It was ac· tually pretty calm in thal spot but he just dove in head first and misjudged the .(lc11th .. , Lockabey said an un ide ntifi ed beachg~r pulled the unconscious man lo shore and called Jifeguards \\'ho ad· ministered emergency first aid until an ambula ncC' arrived. Lockabcy said the surf around the pier was probabl y about the only calm spot on the \.\'hole Newport Beach shoreli ne. "'\\'e had some pretty rough surr and riptides all the way along," he said. "I'd SllY they \\'Cre the ~-orst rips all year." lilore than 78.000 people came to the besch despite dreary overcast and log that hung on until mid-afternoon. L«kabey said the 1urf torufy was still high -up lo six feet -and very ehop- py due to gusty "''ind'§ out o{ lhe sooth. fie said the surf moi1t likely wlll con- tinue to rise today and last into lhe ''eckcnd b«au8e: of the s'11tells being generated by Hurricane Emily off the Baja Cntifomia coast. "\Ve are kind of ~cling more henvy surf !()day and I'm ~ure the bad riptidts \.\'ill sti ll be there," Lockabey said, \\'&Ml· ing weak swimmers to stay out or the \.\"aler, • Gov . Hona.!d H1•ai.;.1n 01dcrcd .di SIJlt' a~ench:S 10 halt u .. ,. of ~Tate O\\fll'd \'ch1clcs. t ~tcpt fur 1·1nl'l'~1·ncy purpose:-. 111 du\.\'lll01\0 Los .\IU.!l"ll'S. eastern l ..u~ Angele,; t.'Ollnt~ nntJ Hi11•r:iad1• :..nd !>i,111 UcrnardLno eount1l·~ .n u.• Los An~rll·s Au·. l'ollutLon Control L>istrict l':JIJ1'CI for 01.0th' 1 radu1.:s tro11 1 .25 tu .SO µarls p1·r n11ll1011 of :11r tutlav. Titc .50 li'\l·! i.> th1· !NLnl al 11h1l·h ;1 fu-,! sta~e :1k·rl LS cullrd \\'ht•n rt•ncht•ll :ill drivini; Ln the I.us Angeles b:t-;in 1:1 sup \See S~IOG, l'age 21 een Sm·f, Heat May B1·i11g Hectic Days By JOANNE fl EY!\'OLOS 0 1 "'' 0111 , l'llel ill-It lf untington Be;ich hfri;u:1rd<> a r" girding for a hl'Ctic wcekC'nd in !ht• f;1 Cl' of the po~ible romhin<1tion nf ;i li11·xir:111 hurricane surf and a Lo~ Ang('ll's h1•:i.1 and smog \.\'ave. lfurricane Unilv, now cent'red aht •ul 500 miles south of l..<i P:i.z. has al readv genera ted some biR hul sporadic surf and its attendant riptides and side currents. Lifeguards at lluntington's state :uld city beaches said they pulled 200 people from !he surf Yt1ednesd.ny alone. Lifeguards were hesi tant todav to predict an onslaught of '•killer surf·• for the weekend but both the slale and ci!v agencies are p!;inning to put ('>:trr1 guards on duly for the nl'xt thrl't! d11ys ''If the wealher gets crumn1y and thi· surf goes down , th;it'l l be great." snid LL ti.lark Bodenbendcr or the city's ll!trbors and Beaches f)('partm ent. "W(• c:in al\.\•ays send lhe extra n1C'n home." He said the regular weekend contingent of guards at the 1:1ty beach "'111 bl' 111- creased by eight men to a 101::il of 6-1 Tht· 34 guards at the state r11n lluntington CL1wl Bolsa Chica beaches \.\'i ll be aided by C'X· tra relief men. "On \.\·eekend~ hke tluc; one could lw. the guards are re;ill y hu<;y mak1n .! rescues, so we like lo be able to !'i<•n,J around ex:tra rel1rf mi•n !o ~1\e lhcn1 more rest,'; a state lifeguard spokesm,1n said. The uncertaintv ove r \\'t'l'kcnd surf conditions hinges "on Emily\ next mnv~· Al the moment her \1·1nd~ havr Jxirn measu red in the 90 to 100 r11ph velocir ,. which is a decrease froin the 120 10 1411 mph they \\'ere clocked :it earlier this week \\'cathermen say. ho\1·e1·er, thnt if shr starts for lnnd. her ""ind" will pick ur ;ind if that hnrpcn..;, the surf \.\'ill likclv get big and stny Iha! way for u few dars. Lifegunrcls said the surf thi<; nmn1ing. like '''Cdllf'sday morn1n~. has bcc11 spor:ldic. "'ith fi1·e ll'l eight-foot set<; <'nm- in!! th rough ";ibf)ut I~ minutl's ap;irt ·· \Vednesdav 1litf'rnoon. howe\·er, con· dilions st<ibilized and !he big sci.~ 11·er1· prt•lly con~Jstent. .. E1·en with the sporadic rondttionc:, \.\•' ha\'e bad rip tides And side rurrf'nl" · !See llECTIC. J'age 2J Orange Coast Weather The Orange Coast "i I l h;i 1 t cloudy bul warm weather 101nor· row. extending through the ·wtek· (•nd. There \.\'111 be litt le sun~h1nc. but temperatures v.111 be near 70 degrees. with inland arc;1 thc·r· mometers: climbing to 80. l~S IDE T ODA\' Vcspire tl1e aftcnr iun !/ll'l'll tlir P.111frn uuil ko11uladesh sfnr11's 1u 1/te 1\ml'ricou press. few 11ot1ct•d la.~t ueor wlleil 250000 u·c11· J.-il/ed 111 !lie rtttfJ Ea.~t 11/trcan counlr11 of Burundi. Delalf.i on Page 20 t0<iau. ~M. ·~ <1llltnti1 1 Clft,illell _, .... C..n"' )I c,..._, • °""' Mt"<« u. '' Elll""11I ~••t t ~·terl•lfl .... 111 JD.!\ FINIMt 19.U ,Wit. llMll'll u, 11, 11 "'°"--,, I• '4r"l'kt Jt """ l111Mn ... "'"''" Jt-n ''"'"" •11~ If N~ll•n.I New1 4-b 1 Or•-Cwlltr 1• iPlvll fi•rlW 1' i-h ,,.,, ,l'M. Mer11.tll .... , Ttl'"""'" JI TtlNMn JIJl w ... ~., 4 We"'llft'I Nnrt JS-M W...W N-4·1., ~ _!>A.!~ Y PILOT °"' __ _:H_:_ _____ Th::u_:".:.''::':_· _:J":.:'Yc...:;2~::_•..:l.:.•7:::.l Fifth ita IJ.N. U .S: Casts Veto Ott ·Israel Issue UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -The United Slates cast Its fiflh veto in U.N. history today to kill a Security Council resolution strongly deploring Israel's failW'e to Yiilhdraw from territory won in the 1967 war. The vote "'as 13 to 1 In favor of the eight-power resolution that also ex- pressed "serious c.onccrn at Israel's l~ck or cooperation" with Gunnar V. Jarring ol S"•eden, the U.N. secretary-general's special representative on tbe Middle East. A negative vote by one of the five pennanent members of the 15-member council nullifies a resolution approved by a majority of nine or more. China did not vote, saying it "·ould not participate. The veto was Ambassador John A. Tips Arrive In Slaying Of CdM Girl Circulars containing information on the slrangulation murder of Corona del ?\-1ar's :.inda Ann O'Keefe today are pro- viding a Oood of tips from throughout Southern California. 'The .special poster-type bu11etin, in- cluding artist's composite drawings of the slayer based on witnesses' descrip- tions, have been sent statewide. "We've got some that look good,'' Newport Beach Police Detective Capt. Donald Oyaas .said today. A showing or the mug shots on Television ·s Chann el 7 Eyewitness News Wednesday night prod uced calls from El Segundo, Downey and even Victorville. 11'1e dozens of calls so far look best in cases where they originated locally, Capt. Oyaas said tfiis morning. A key clue in the case which occurred July 6 is a turquoise van about the same wiusual blue-green shade as that used on Sears service vans. Two people who realized they had seen the 11-year~ld girl getting into the vehi- cle came forward after seeing pictW'es of the victim in newspapers. She was reportedly doing so volun· tarily, although her family and friends have told police they didn 't believe the girl found murdered the next day would go wlllingly with a stranger. 'Ibe vicUm had 1tarted to walk home from summer school classes at Lincoln Intermediate School to her home at 602 Orchid Ave., about one mile from the campus. Her strangled body was found by chance, lying in a water-filled ditch ad- jacent to Back Bay Road by a group of nature walkers the following day, while a task force of volunteers had bunted overnight. Hundreds of bits and pieces possibly relating to the unexplained murder have been sifted by police since then, including material from three clairvoyants claim- ing ESP powers. Huntington Sued By Irate Woman A woman who claims an unidentified Huntington Beach policeman disclocated her left shoulder when he &llegedly grabbed her by the wri st and threw her to the floor wants $500.000 in damages from the city. Tumama Asifoa names the city of llw1· · tington Beach and Police Chief Earle \V. Robitaille as co-defendants in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit. She claims the incident that left her with serious injuries occurred last Feb. 14 when she "'as arrested on shoplifting charges. Those charges \\.'er~ unjustified and were dismissed last ~1ay 9, she adds. OU.Neil COAST M• DAILY PILOT Tht O<tnot CMll 0 11.tl Y PllOT "'l!fo ,..,,le,, Is c-lntd , ... Nl"'I P•n1. !• llUbll-.,. !flt 0••11~ C01•! Pubt1J1'l"l1 COMPll"V S-- rllf ..inio.-1 ''" Pl/lll<>h«I "'"''"'•Y !h•Otl9h Frlllty, !Or Cot!I M~1•, N•,.1Xl•I &t1ch, Hllflll"9'°" BtK/111'-tll" V~•ley. l"9U"t affdl, 1rv1rie1SHdl11M<1t 1/ld 5111 c1o ...... 1e1 1 .. 1 J.,.n CIP•fl•tno. A 1lnvl• rtgoon.I edlllOn 11 publll"ed Sal,,...d•\'1-tr.cl S""°tl'1. TM prlnclp.tl Pllbll•~•<>O pltn• II ti UI Wnl a.1 )trMI, Ctttt Mt.-, Ct llhlrnl1, f:ltll. lh1b1•t N. W1td Prn'l01nt •"" P\fl>l,.~u J•c• 11:. Curley Vl~t Prn..,..,I tnc! Gtr•"'" Mtllt~llr Th°"''' Ktt•il IEdlto• Tho1•111 A. Mwrphi~t Mtowtl<I~ 1idoto• C1i1rltt H. Looi Rlcl11rtl P. Nall Attlfll M MtNltlnt IE01tor1 y,,,_, co.1111 w"1 Or•"'ll'I '-'' £olior ... .m ........ OHk• 17171 lttth lewl1w1r4 M1lll"t Atltlr1111 ,,0 . 111 7,0, '1l41 .,_ °'"'" L•~ atl(fl: m ,.., .. , Aw- CMI• MtM: »II Wnt a1y ll•MI HIWl'll" aMdU »)J H.,..,..., ~nl "" C""""'•: m N«ftl 11 C•llllM ... 1 T .. .,.... 1714J 642-4111 c~ • .......,. ...... MZ.1&11 ,.,_ Nwtl!I or..,.. Ce.fr~ 14t-1JJI Cwyrlfl!f, lf7J, ()ff.... CoHI P*illfl"" C ......... r '"' lllWI 110rlft, t"Wlrll ..... , olll!Ol'ltl 't'fltfllf fl/( tdYtrli.-tt i'ltrW\ _., .. rweiNttd "''""°"' 6"tltl -- rn111lt!I flf '°""'""'' •-. ll<n tit• flOMlffl Ni.I II CMll Mftl, (1M1>i"'il1. ~ltlltll W urrltf' tl,d "'°'"lflh''j 0<r ..,..11 U.U ll*'!Pl't'I 1!1111,.,., .... 111111*'-U.61 """"'IT. • Scali's third since he took over as head of the U.S. mission last February. ll climaxed the council's rirst com- prehensive debate on lhc t.1iddle East since the 1967 war. The debate, held at the request or Egypt, was spread over seven weeks 'ol'ilh a break for the n1eeting between President Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid I . Brezhnev. The resolution was introduced Wednes- day by the eight nonaligned countries on the council -Yugoslavia, India, Indonesia, Panama, Peru, Guin ea, Kenya ~ Sudan -acting as a group for the first time . The resolution asked Secretary-General Kurt \Valdheim, who is planning avisit to Egypt. Israel and Jordan in late August, and Jarring to resume efforts fo r a Middle East solution. Scali did not object ta that. But he refused to accept purls of the resolution t I) deploring Israel's continuing oc- cupation of the territories it se ized in the 1967 war, (2) calling for "1he rights and legitimate aspirations of the Patcslin- ians'' to be an element in any set· tlement and (3) supporting a 1971 1nemorandum from Jarring calling for an Israeli pledge to wilhdraw fr om all occupied territory. The debate struck many observers as an outgrowth of an Egyptian policy of alternating threats to appease home- front ha'!'.•ks and diplomacy to muster i.11- ternational pressure on Israel. El Toro Action Continues Today Despite Smog El Toro Marine Cotps Air Station con· tir.ued operations today despite its avowals It will comply with the federal En\'ironmental Protection Agency smog ban requirements. \Vord did not get to the station that civilian or military employes were to stay home today, a spokesman said, and most MCAS employes showed up for Y>Otk. "Traffic at the gates, today however, "·as down from the usual pattern ," lhe spokesman noted. El Toro officials have for some time been urging base employes to take ad- vantage of car pools and plans are under "'ay to provide on base bus service to cut down on vehlcle trips. ln com pliance with the Orange County Air Pollution Control District ban on , open burning today, none was authorized by 1.1arine brass. The spokesman noted that the Marine Corps is working with the Environmental Protection Agency on long range plans for reaction to air pollution crises. As a practical maltef)however. ii is unlikely the base will close do\\n for smog alerts. "TI1ere are ongoing programs re- qui ring the daily presence of both our civilian and military "·ork forces," the spokesman said. One of the ongoing programs is. of course. national defense. New B&av Tie? l'iot G11ilty Meyer Lansky, 71 . reputed un- derworld financial wizard. has been acquitted in Miami by a federal court jury on income la.x. evasion charges. tSee story, Page 5.) Fro1n 1•nge 1 TAPES ... time, voted unanimously to instruct chief counsel Samuel Dash to carry the issue to criurt. I-le \Viii seek a declaralory judg- ment Crom the court asking for· an order telling Nixon to crimply. Both moves will launch a legal hall\e \1•hich legal experts expected ultimately woold have to be settled by the U.S. Supreme Court. Some said a decision could be reached within three months. Committee Chairman Sam J. ErYin (D- N.C.) called Nixon's condition that the panel specify exactly which documents it \Vanis "an impossibility." "\Ve're not clairvoyants," he fumed. He said the CQmmittee did not know what papers Nixon had, and therefore could not possibly ask for them in- dividually, Nixon. in his letter to Ervin, said, "You will understand, 1 am sure, that it will simply oot be feasible for my staff and me to review .. thousands of documents to decide which do and which do not fit "·ithin the sweeping but vague tenns or the subpoena." The motion lo send Dash lo court "'as made by Republican Sen. Ho,vard II. Baker Jr. of Tennessee. the vice chairman. It carried on a vote of 6--0. Sen. Hennan E. Talmadge (J>.Ga.) at- tending a conference on the fann bill , later telephoned hls affinnative vole to the committee to make it unanimous . At the White House, deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Wanen told reporters: "The President js very con· fident of his crinstitutional position as outlined in the lettiirs and the President fully expects his position lo be upheld in the courts. Of course the President, as in any other matter, would abide by a definitive decision of the highes t court." This carefully prepared statement in· dicated Nixon. too, expected the issue to reach the highest court. The subpoenas for the \Vhite House documents "'ere vie first issued to a President in 166 years. Thomas Jefferson "'as subpoenaed in 1809 to appear at the treason trial of Aaron Burr, his old ~Utica! enemy. Jef- ferson did not appear. but satisfied the request by sub1n itting letters he had "Titten. U"I ftltt4lolt Nol lhi• one. Todd More y of DeKalb. Ill., learned firsl·hand lhnl a butterfly on the nose tickles. lie ra ised butterflies this summer and "'as tcachi n ~ lhis ~-tonarrh to fly \•:hen it found it'> perch Ah-e hoo. · Nixon Tax On House ' • Saw 'Low' SACllAMENTO (AP) -The chairman of lhe California property tax agency says it appears the \Vcstern White House at San Clemente is under-assessed and an investigation should be widertaken. Jn a letter to fellow members of the St.ate Board of Equalization. made public today. \\liUiam Benentt said. "II appears that the San Clemente prop- erties, by "'horn.soever O\\'lled. are underassesscd. A formal impartial in· vcstigation should be undertaken by the staff of this agency. I recommend that 'l'.'e do so. Ir you concur, please let me know. "To dale I have made brief. infonnal inquiries about the value of the land and in1proveinents. Now the matter has become of sufficient Importance to \var- rant further action by the board." Board 1nembcrs currently are vaca· tioning and their next meeting is schedul- ed for July 3{), with other meetings scheduled a\mostly constantly throughout Augu st. BerulCtl's office said. The four board members elected by di strict. including Bennett, are Democrats. The fifth is Republican Con· !roller Houston I. Flournoy, an ex officio board member. Bennett , "·ho resides in the ritarin County community of Kentfie1d, has been board chairman since January. U,I Ttl1pho«I Uo1neumrl~ P1·obleJH$ Lori Paton. 16, of Chester, N,.J., has high school homework problems. She sought informa- tion on Socialist Labor Party for a civics report. 'fhe FBI found out and began investigat- ing her. The ACLU found out and began investigating the FBI. The ACLU has now filed suit against the fBI. City Dl311 Wins Ma1t May Have to Buy Small Car SAN DIEGO (AP) -"The Great Carport Argument." as it be· came known, finally ended this week when Fred Anderson gave in after three years. Anderson neglected to take out a building permit and built his carport too close to a neighbor's land. The truck driver spent a weekend in jail and spent thousands of dollars waging a legal "citizen's rights battle" that ended with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sustaining the city zoning laws. Anderson, with the help of friends and a city councilman sawed off the offending four feet of carport '\'ednesday. ' "There's no point going to jail," Anderson said after the appeal. but told newsmen "I'd d o it all again." "What he ended up doing is what we asked him to do in the first place," reflected Lewis Cole, city prosecutor when the battle began in 1970. I From Pagel ' SMOG HITS BASIN ... oosed to be curtailed. ~1eanwhile . the highest smog readings in Orange County \\!ere .30 ppm in La Valley Tn1stees Weigh Funding ~tembers of the Fountain Valley Elc111entary School District Board of Trustees \\'ill meet ton ight to consider a proposal for fWlding of school con- struction. Jack ~1ahnken, assistant superin- tendent for administrative services. said the staff is seekjng approval to file an apelicalion with the state allocation board for construction of Pope School. The school site is located south of Ellis A venu e and \\'esl of 1i-1agnolia Street. Trustees "·ill meet al 6 o'clock in district offices al I Lighthouse Lane, Habra Wednesday. A .29 ozone reading '!'.'as logged in Anaheim. Causing the smog accumulation is a temperature inversion "lid" over the Los Angeles Basin \Vhich the national weather service says is not expected to break up until Friday. Fro1n Page 1 HECTIC ... Bodenbender said. The guards speculated that if the surf holds steady this afternoon and il it is big Friday morning, then they're probably in for a 'l'.'eekend siege. "'Ve get this big surf and then a heat wave with about 60.000 people on the beach and that's when we really get busy," the city lifegua rd said . 20.8 CU. Ft NO-FROST W.L. White, .. Journalist, Dies at 73 EMPORIA, Kon. (APi -William . . ' Lindsay ~ile, global repOrl er. author and publisber of the Emporia Gazette, died today at a local hospital where. ~ was being treated for cancer. lie was 7'. White was the son of William Allen \Vtu1e, the "Slge of Emporia," ~ won a Pulitzer Prize in 1923 for editorials in the Gllette. The school of journalism al the University of Kansas is named for lhe falher. William L. \Vhile Is S\lrvived by his widow, the former Kathrine Klinkenberg, and daughter, Mrs.. Paul David Walker, both of Emporia, Funeral an-angementl!i "'ere incomplete. White learned in N'w York th.lit he hiid the disease just before his 72nd birthday in JWle. 1972. Years before, he de scribed how his famous lather waited out death for three mont hs in 1944. William L. White had already chosen \Valker, his son-in-law, as assistarit publisher of the Gazette to preserve the family tradition. As the William Allen While byline lad- ed with a disappearing generation, the \Villiam L. \Vhite byline went arounq. the "'Orld on "'ar stories and broadcastsJ travel reports and a dozen books. The son gained fame as a broadcaster and dabbled in politics -but preferred to be known as a ne"·s pape rman. For IO years after graduating from Harvard, W. L. 'Vhite worked with his fathe r on the Gazette. He became county ncpublican chairman and won a t\\•o--year term as a state representative in 1930. In 1934, "Young Bill" left the Gazette lo work for the Washington Post and Forttme magazine in what he <lescribtd as "five years of floundering." He head ed for Europe in 1939 at the outbreak or World War JI. as cor- respondent for 40 dally newspapers and the Columbia Broadcasting System. llis radio reports on Russia's invasion of Finland brought quick fame and a broad- cast from the Mannerheim line on Christmas of 1939 was cited by the Na- tional Headliners Club as the best Euro-- pean broadcast of the year. \Vhite's fi rst hook was a novel based on a Kansas bond scandal. "\llhat People Said," published in 1938. liis first hest seller. in 19-12 , was ''They Were Ex- pendable," concerning the P-T boal. heroes of the early \Vorid War JI fightini in the Philippines. Szimmer Surfing Co1itest Entries .. Noiv Being Take1i Entries are now open for the summer surfing championships Aug. 11 ·and 12 sponsored by the Huntington Beach Recreation Department. Any surfer living within the boundaries of the Huntington Beach Union High School District -cities of Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and \Vest minster are included -may enter the crintest. . Competition will be held for rated and non-rated surfers in several divisions from seniors to juniors. The entry fe e is $3.25 and .trophies "·ill be awarded the \\'inners. Entry fees and forms must be returned to the recreation department, 1706 Orange A\'e., no later than 5 p.m .. \Vednesda y. Entry blanks are available at local surf shops and at the recreation departments in liuntingtan Beach, Fountain Valley and \Vestininstcr . -----, General Electric I BEST BUY DISH I I I I I RB'RIGERATOR-FREEZER I O..ly 30W' ~ 66' High ••• I I 9WIT 6.96 C... Ft FREEZER I 19995 I tlOl.DS UP 10 243 POIN)S- PROVIPES ~MORE I I FREE'ER CAIW:ITY THAN Nl'I GE TOP-FREEZER I Mod•! S0-251 I MODEL EVER MADE! Delivery and s37997 L front p1nel included I ------- Phone ~~~-7788 Modtl TIF·21DP 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA J I l ) ' \ l I \ I I I I ' I \ l I Ehrlichman: Tt•agedy iti Texas Dallas Pollceman D. L. Cain, 30, today is suspended from the force and free on $5 ,000 bail, charged with first degree murder in shooting death of I2-year-0ld Santos Rodriguez wh o was sitting handcuffed in Cain's patrol car while being questioned, about burglary. llis killer clain1s he only placed his revolver to the boy 's head lo frighten him . Story Page 7. ~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~ 118 Rescued From Big • Surf at Lag1tna Beach Bv JACK Cl~APPELL ·Of It!~ 011tr l"llol 51111 Laguna Beach lifegual'ds rescued 118 persons from big surf and logged more than 330 preventive actions \\lednesday as eight-foot high "'aves boome<I in on It's 'Mission: I in probable' LOS· ANGELES (UPI ) -All those references before the Senate Watergate Commiltee and elsewhere to the ac- tivities of the \Vhite House's clandestine operatives as "Mission: Impossible'' operations have provoked Bruce Geller. Geller was for four ytars executi\'e producer of the television series by the name, ~·hich featured intricate plots that succeeded by dint of meticulous planning, imagination. skill and daring. "I object to the comparison of such a slipshod and apparenlly dubious I y motivated caper lo the films I made,'' GeUer said. Art Colony beaches. The surf subsided some~·hat today. •·Almost anyone \\'ho goes out is going to end up being rescued, unless he's gol '"'O fins and is pretty checked out." said Laguna Beach Lifeguard Jim Stauffer. The big surf was espcci.:illy dangcrou!'. to small children "'ading at \.\'Bier's edge because of the cutawav beach line lea\'· ing a high berm bclY/Ccn the \.\'ater and sa.fety, Stauffer said. "Little kids are getting !'\.\'CPI off their feet and into a rip tide. They just don't know what happens . The waves just suck those small kids off their feet and away. Those to me arc lhe scariest,'' Stauffer said. lie explained that the high berms create a backwash \Yhich can wash an•ay the unwary. Beaches at Victoria. Cr<'s- ccnt Bay, Picnic and Main Beach v.·ere most affected vi'ith the back"·ash. Stauf- fer said. \Vednesday. an estimated I O, O 0 0 persons v.•ere on the beaches. One of them. /\like •1oldnlan. 12. visiting in E1nerald Bay y,·as the subject of a cliff rescue by Stauffer and Lifeguard Captain Bruce Baird. Nixo11 Appoints . Successo1· To Ruckelsl1aus at EPA \VASH INGTON ! AP) -President Nix· on announced today he is nominating Russell E. 'frain to be administrator or the Environinen!nl Protection Agency. He will succeed William D. Ruckrlshaus who is being nominated to be deputy nt- torney gcncr<il. Train. chainnnn of the Council on Evironmental Quality. \.\'OUld take o\'er direction of EPA from Robert E. Fri \\'ho has held the post on an acting basis since Ruckelshaus resigned April 30 to become acting director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation . As deputy attorney g e n e r a I , Ruckelsha115 \\'Ould succeed Joseph T. Sneed. nominated Wednesday by Nixon to be a judge of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals . Ruckelshaus. 41 , \\'as EPA ad· ministrntor from the agency's founding in 1970 until he 1no\'ed ten1porarily to the FBI fo1\01ring the resignation of acting director L. Patrick (i ra y III. Before going to EPA Ruckelshaus had bc<?n a!=si."lant attorney general in charge of th" Justice Department's Ci \'i\ Di,·ision. Train, underS<'cretary of lhe Interior in the early ~ears of the Ni:.:on ad- ministration. became chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality \\'hen 1hat grou1> was established early in 1970. Train, ~3. \\'as a.'!SOCiated with con- servation causes before joining the Nixon administration . H DAIL V P!t OT ;J t Unaware of 'En.emies' h·vine Plans All Suggest \ Half Million If the city of Jr\•ine fin ally adopts In December a general pl11n ...,·hieh con- forms to ooe of three allrrnalives presented \\tednesday night, Irvine \.\'ill be a city of 500,000 people, gi\'e or take 10 percent. Larry ~lorrison. director of the City of Irvine general plan consultanls li":Ull from the South Pasadena firm or \.\'ilsl'y and Ham. said population estinu1tes for three allcmate land use plans studied \\'ednesday are very sirnilar. Pl an A bunches high density develop- n1cnt both on hillside ridgelines and in valley floor areas "'hilc llrcs<'rving the most open space. Something i<'ss than 480.000 to 500,000 people ~·ould li\'c in city "A" by the year 2.000. Plan B was an unidentified version or the Irvine Company general plan land use and circulation elements. II v.·as not identified as such. because the 100 or n1ore participants in \\'ednesday's To...,·n Forum y,.·ere asked to rate features of each alternate they like best. Plan B c:oocentrates high density development on the valley floors. controls hillside development and makes room for homes for from 480,000 to 500,000 by 1he year 2,000. Plan C emphasizes hillside rid ge development more than.does plan B. and projects similar populations .. The chief differences bCtn·ecn the three projected views of the future city citizens and city officials were asked to evaluate centered on the way the open space and transit corridors relate to villages. Each plan showed development of f ron1 30 to 40 villages. a COllcept put forth in the Irvine Company land plan. Plan A linked the villages \\'llh a strongly visible north-south corridor of high density residential. public uses. ojl<'n space and transportation backbone for a cityv.-ide "personal rapid t rans i 1 • ' system. l>.torrison urged the city to apply for demonstration grants for such a personalized rapid transit network which \\·ill be._ available in ''five to eight years." Only 25-foot rights of way are needed. i\lorrison noted . Press, Public Barred at Trial Of ¥ Oltth, 15 Testimony resumed today in the murder trial of a J5-vear-0ld San Clemente boy with the pniss and public barred from the courtroo1n under a rul - ing issued by Orange County Ju\'enile Court Judge Samuel Oreizen. Superior Court Judge Raymond \'in· c<'nl is on lhe bench in the Santa Ana countv courthouse for the trial of David \V. ~tOberly, J ~. of 217 Avenida Rosa . 'LOVE OR BE SIC K' James E. Peterson 'ANGER NOT HEALTHY' Beatric• Schiffman Fo1· Agecl to I.Jove Livi11g By JOHN ZALLER Of ltlt D•llY P'lloll j!flf As long as old people keep their IO\'l' of livi ng. they can expect to stay healthy and \1'ell. \Vhen they lose it, they can tx- pect steady physical deterioration . This was the prilne point 1nade \Vednesday by the lwo main speJkcr:-; at the Orange County Conference on Agi ng in Anaheim. ''Some say the biggest problerTI of 1°ld people is transportatioo.'' BeatricC' Seh1ff· man of the National Conference oa A~­ ing. 1old an audi ence nf 200 111 the Disneyland Hotel. ''Olh<'rS s:ty that it's Ice Pick Killer On Probation A 1\'oman hooked on munll'r charges af!er using an icr pick to kill her husband in ;i i\'c1v Ytar·s E\·e fracas at !heir Santa Ana hon1c has Jx.cn plncC'd on 1hrc1• year~ probation in Orange County Superior Court. .Judge Kenneth \\lil!ia1n~ ordered the probation ter1n and no jail lirnl! after Effie \\'illcock i'.lachandrr. 611. ptcaclt-d guilty to reduced charg1·s of involunlary manslaugh!er in the slaying of her 71 -year-0ld hu."banrl. Police ~1id ~trs. ~lachander 1o!rl them that her aclions v.·erc in .«<'!f d<'fen<;e and that her hu sband 11:i:-. ;in alcoholic who had Tl'fX'<tlt·dly :ti· t:ickrd her over nlinor dispiues. IOI.Id and nu1ntuon .. Bttt th:1 !'s bunk " \Ir~. Srh1ff1n:111 dcl·J;u·cd. "l'l'Ople say 11 because it 's ac· ('cptahlr. because 1hf'r(' ;Jrc federal rund~ al'ai!ahll:' 10 fight ii ·· \\'ha! 11ld 1.wopl1• lll'C'd far 111orc thnn 111.-i!erlnl st·rv1t·t·s. she s;.1id, is a sc11is- fyi11g routine of lifr. "Somc1in1l·S )ou 'll find an older person lil'illg in a house rnuch larger than thry nt•i·d. Th('y'rr :il11a}·~ t:ll'<111ini.: floor.~. dusting. and 1~ork111g 111 rhe g;1rtlrn tr~ 111g to keep 11 up. and .\nu try to cunvinct: lhrrn lo gJ\'(' 1t 11p for a IH'.1\ l111lc three· roorn apartrnt•n! "That c:in '"' a gr1·:1t 1111 \tnke. \'ou can le;u· ;1part 1h(' rclalionships uf their Ii\,.~ " - Sc1crnl sludJl'S h.11e :-110 .... n. !\trs. SI. hiffn1a11 snirl, 1h:·11 old proplc "\{'ry fr('quentl~" die l\'ithin n frw 1nonlhs ;1ft£>r they ha\'e Ileen forced 10 chan~c 1h£>1r surrou11e.hngs. :\!rs. S<:h1fh11an t!idn'l draw :tll\' iron eh1d rules Jbout changes in old pl'Oplcs' Ii\ es "The thing that ,in\ aria bly kills n~ is isnl.'i!ivn frorn ;1 :-;a lisfying routine of 1t r c .. Jarnrs Pttrrson. kr)T1ote spcak<'r ;11 the conference. C1U\!1ncd nn even morl' d1rt•ct rt·lat1on shq> b('\y,•c('n n1 c n ta J outlook <ind a heallhv life. S1rrssi11g the 11rl'd 'or the 1·ld1,rl" 10 Crl· joy the ··1endl'r lO\'llll! t:jrc" !h1i1 other age ~roups OC'l'd . hl' s<1irl. "The nil(' J!'l t>ilh ... r ~ou !o\·t· or ~nu ht'eorne sirk. If ~ uu IK't11m<' i~ol<1h·d. y1iu <an l'xpec1 to IX't'01nc ~ll'k t't!htr phy·s1t·:1ll.v or ni~~n. t;i lh .. .\ir, Srhiffn11111 !-;ur! lh,1t one of the n10~1 d1·,n·111!1\1• n11•n1;1I :i1111udt•s 111 1h1• cldcrt.1 11,1 ... n f1•rl 1n~ 01 ":1n;::er" al th•· '===========,.-----=__ 111Jtr"'llri·' 111\'~ ,uff1 ·r Aicle De11ies l(11ow le<l ge \\ \SlllX1~·ro"' 1 \1'1-.lohn 1• . .,;hrH1·h- n1:1n hiht lht• :-0<'11at1• \\;1h·ri.:·111• ('On1n1i1- lrl' lhi, afll·rnr1on lh;i\ tht•rc· .... 11~ annlht•r \\'hilt' ltuu"t' "Olu1nl11•n." 11nit in11'"tir:a tion in 19;1 th:11 1·a11not ht' rnutlr puhtlr b('cau~1· it "oultl 1on1pr••rni.,1· 11:i1lonal ,f'1·urh~. \\' \:0-11 l \(;T~ l\ t \I '+ 0 Ehrl11 hn1.1'1 11·•t.f1t·d 1 .. d;i~ th;11 h1· nt·l'l'r lh':1rd ul .1:1 1111111•" l1~r· 11h1\.' 111 th•· \\ tii1~· H11!1'<I' Th1· fonn1·1' t'h11 f pr1•,1d1·1111:"t! d111111•,!'< .11!1 i-1•1' ;11-t• :-..i1rl h,, hnu11~ 11! 110 11i.-!;1tll·r 111 111\u·ll \\h111• llu1h1· ,,1.1tf 11tc·11lbc·r BYRNE DENIES INTEREST IN FBI POST-Story, Page· 7 n ·t·t'+ll'll a 1'1 t1lcn :-. 1ndl\ 11!u;1l Ll"' r1·11u·n .1\thou~h l111t·rn;1 l lh·\1·11111· :-. ,. I'\' 1 c· r hgun·.; ,/M111 1h<ll ~IJ.i "1;1 \ 1·heck," \11'fl' !'<tJU~ht by thi: \\hilt' llu11~,. 1.1~! )'<':tr :1l()nr }';hrl1rh1nan . 1n hi ~ 1h1rd r!a\' of lt•lrv1:-.· t"I lt•stu11011y bef1irc the· St' n a t t \\nt1 ·rg:1r t· 1.:om1n1!lf't~. at .. u ~au! that fur1 n1'r :tt'ling FBI D1ret'lor I. Patrick 1:r.1~ Ill \\;1s lx·ing 1n\'e~l1l:a!cd lor 1u·:.ir 11 111,1 \',l"-'ks lx•fort· tu .; r1·'iij.!nal1on \\,,,. fnr1·1•d hy public d1 stlosur1• th:it h1· 1h·~!r11~1·tl dotu1111•111.; 1aken fro1n th1.• s:il1· nf E l!u11ard Hu111. ;1 \\':11crg:.itc 1·vn- ~p1r;1tr•r ,\nd hl· :':11d thr "plurnbt'rs" u111l 111 \'f',t1i.:at 1t111 of ();11111·1 .. :11:-;bcrg . \\•hich rc·sultt.'d 111 Ill•· burglary of h 1 ~ psych111trist's 0H1c1· by \\lt11!c llOLJ$(' agents. \\'as und<'rt<ikt•11 lu sat isfy Prcsi· d1·nt r\1xon·s <l1·1n:ind !lint thl' P<'nla~on f'apt'r~ lt·ak~ be p!ug~l·d Sen. Jo~l'ph ,\I ~lon!o~a tlJ-N .~11. asked Ehrlirhrn.1n about 1hc. so-callt·d "l'nrmies h:.t" .... hith ou~1ed \\'hitc llou~· cnunSC'I John \\' Ot.·nn 111 :-.:1id \\as krpt i11 fht• \\'hitC' llou"l' !)(>an :-.a1cf t:ix nur!il :-. :ind FBI 1nvrsligation~ 111•rf' ~ought :tl!llinst !-ornt• person' on thr hsr to h:ira!'>" 1hcrn "Could ,\OU throw s11n1r l11!ht on thC' i::tnrsis of 1he cnem1('S l1 sl'1" '.\lnnto~a askl·d. · ~o s1r." Ehrli<·hrn<in replied. "I don·1 rt•t:ill e\er l1<1v111g hc:1 rd <i bout it " Ill• s<11d hl' spoke to for rnt·r prcs1d<'nt1:il t'ha.'f of st:iH II. H. ll<tld<'man ;ibout thr 11Ud lc>r aft er lh';in'.s tf•Sli rnon.\', but said rh:ll 1r;1,, th e fir:-.1 !Im(• hl' /1c:ird of 11. E!id1thn1a11 11lso dcni r<l hc11nng of an} n.•quc"1s ·h.v \Vhitc llouS<• .~1uff n1cmbcr.~ 111 ~Ct• 1nrli\'idual 1:1x J'C'1urns. ~lontoya th(•n r<·nd IRS slntistif'~ shoy,·lng lhr· \\'h11c llou.~e a~kC'd fur 477 "tax 1·hccks" 1·1 th(' fir•I! h:tlf uf las! yrar and o\38 in the 1.1~1 h.11r .a. ··rnu 'rr t:i lking :1bout apples and 1.ra ngt' ..... r:hrlichman ~aid. lie :-.tu d a "tax cheek" i~ e;irnl'd out by t HS ~t:t H rnembrrs "ho re\ 1c1\• 111· fr11·111:l!ion :1ho11t the prr'-0!1 1n qul'Sllon to ~··1· 1f th1·y h;1\1' any pruble1ns \\Ith f! 11• 1 ;d tax 1·11llettors Court officials "·ere on]\• allowed to ron1ment today that the I.rial is in its fourth day and is still in the prosecution phase . They pr<'dict th.'.'.lt the lrial \\'il\I .-,en take about two \\'eeks. 1 V'.I The ~1oberly boy is accused of the .:.p lu x urious SJJri1ig doivn and f eat11.er sofas ... slaying last June 17 of George T\\'iddy. 30, of Ne\\'bury Park in a quarrel that reportedly erupted over the placc1nenl of dirty clothes in the Moherly hon1e. Police said Twiddy, descri bed as a frc· quent visitor to the. Avenida Rosa home .... ·as shot five times in the chest a11d neck and was dead .,.,·hen tbey arri\'ed at the premises. They said they responded to a telephone call fron1 l\·trs. f\1 obcrly and ar· rested her son shortly after he called police from a public phone at the S.1n Clemente pier. Police have ~n under a "gag " order issued by presiding Judge Dreizen since shortly after the boy's arrest but they have revealed that Tn·iddy was shot with a .22-cali~r rifle he gave' lo the ~loberly boy as a gift shortly b<'fore the shooting. These handiome 11ofas were designed to q;ve you ihe ul timate in 11e a ting comfort with down and feather back pillow1i, deep 11pring ~".t t/c.us~1ions enveloped in down and feathers and two dacron- filted arm pillows. Choose from ,, wid e srloction of fine labric, dnd si ze s. Divers Probe Andrea Doria T /11·1·r sl 1-/c" /11 1·!111t1.<1' l r11111 See ki1i g $2 ~f illion in J' aluables 01t Sunken J1 essel f'AIRHA\'EN. ~lass. !UPI~ -Their 12.foot by S-foot habitat "~fothcr" in plae<>. t...,o former Navy frogmen from San Diego b1JX-d 10 descend to the ocean tincr Andrea l)Qrin today and cut into the sunken \'esstl in a search ror an t stim:il cd $2 million 1n cash :lnd othf>r \nluablcs. The habitat. a li\•1ng chamber \\'hich "'ill sustain the divers for up to t'\\·o .... "eeks. was Jo"·ercd into place Wednf!· day and attached to 1hc vessel whi ch sank 17 yci\rs l'lgo to the c!Jy, July 2$, l96S. The divers. Oonnld Rodocker. 27. and Chri!llophcr Delucchi. 22. d e Ji i g n e d .. ,.,1othcr" so they rould u!ie a new tech- nique of "!Ql turaliOfl di\'ing" and stay unrlcr"·a\fr for dn)'-' al n limt'!, eliminaling previous decompression time limits. Cr<'""' mcmbcrs \\'ere to lo"'er a M'a t'lcvator today 1\·hich v.·ill be US('d to send rood and other supplies lo the h:ibitat. ~lrn1bers of the s.ah·agc Cr('w said now· 1hnt the habitat is in pla ce weather should not be a factor in recovery opera· 11ons. The habilal was 11u1 in pince 11ncf the !iUrfacc !'hi~ /\'arragansctt inoored to the Andrea Doriit during the past t\l•O days under what crc.,.,·men described as perfect v.·ealhc.r and ~a conditions. The habitat, \\'hlch welgh.s 11 tons. ii; auached to the ship some 240 feet beneath the surface. It's not known ~·hen ftooocker and f>clucchi y,·ill begin nctuHI snlvage at· tempts . although an Alde said \Vednes· da y. "Once th<'y ti:el d01l·n there thty can begin "·ork immediately. regardless of "'·hc1her it 's day or ntght.'' The reco\·ery of money and valunbles is expected to create some l<'gal tangles. One allorll('y said maritin1e la"' clea rl y in dicates that 1he llalian lin<' .... 11ich O\l'n" !he ship, or the under\1·ri1er, has a1\, righ ts to the \'esscl ...,·hne title on !he I 1reasurt remains \.\'ith 1he o .... ·ners and in· dh•idual passengers. But the allorn<'y added Iha\ courts recognize a salvage charge a 11 d speculated a fee could run 50 percent or more. The luxury liner sank after colliding nith thP Swedish ship Stockholm in heD\')' fog about 45 mJ!cs off Nan1ueket Island. Fifty-one persons died and 1.66 1 11 crt". resc ued. PROFESSIONAL INTERI OR DESIGNER S ' Oncri Mon Thurs. & Fri EvPS llUll' 499. ' ' \ ueMarvin Ro .cl{ets Stril{e Heart of Phnom Penh 'Divorce' Epic Case LOS ANGELES (AP J -When the case of f\Uchelle f\1orvin vs. Lee ~1arvin com· ei; lo lrlul lhis f11ll , il \\'ill raise a pn;. vocative legal question posed by ~1iss 1.1urvin's attorney -should there be divorce \•:ithout marriage? ln the free·\l·heeling filmland capita! of tlk "serial marriage syndrome," the propo581 doesn't sttm ouUandlsh. Jn Ho!· lywood, divorce is a way of life for many. But auorney ~farvln Mltchelson, no1ed for representing divorcing celebrilie!, hopes lo take the case further -to lhe V.S. Supreme Court. if possible -lu make the divorce v:lthout marriage con· cept the law of the land. HIS TllEORY: a \\"On1an ha~ the right to a good divorce and community prop- erty even if she ncvcr was licensed to marry the man she loved ind lived with. "It costs $3 to get a rnurriage license-." ·said 1\lit.chelson. "I say !hat for a $3 'license on e should not ·have different rights than one who has the same rela· tlonship but doesn't pay the $3. I consider :this unequal protection of the law," ' In fact. Mifchelson wants lo outlaw marriage licenses enti rely. "The state has the right to license peo- ple for lhe protection or society," he COil· Should there be dhlorce wlt.ho11t 111arriage? tends. "They have a right lo guarantee a skill. But \\'hat skill is required for people to live togelher1 They can be two idiols!" JN THE CASE OF ~far\'in vs. !llarvin, !\fitchclson represen ts J\lichellc Triola, who changed her name legally to !\farvin during the six ycurs she lived \1ri.th the Academy Award-\\·inning actor. In 1970, the re!alionship cooled and suddenly l\1arvin turned up married to another woman, Pamela eFeley, the childhood Pll:~O~I P~:\H 1UJ'l 1 -Les.-; lhan 2~ J1ours aflt•r Pres1dt>n t Lmi ~ol n•anled of ne11 l'Or'l'lmUJHSI prt.>~ures on Phnon1 Penh, insurgents firt.'d shells into cro.,.,·d- cd areas of the city and killed a reportl'<i 18 pet$011S. ~fiJJ11try polJce sourc.i:5 said another 26 persons .,..·ere 11•ounded, many oC them ~riousl)•. After the shelling \Vednesday. the uovernn1en1 lightened se<:urity precau- tions in the city and American witrplanes nc.,.., hcf1vy coi11.-entratiON of air strikes souih, wes1 and north of the capital. HEAVY >"IGHTING and U.S. bombing clearly vis"ible to city rcsidrnt.!. occurred lkar 1ht marketplace area alter Com· 1nunists cut a road leading to ::111 army camp at Prey Sar. six miles &OU th of the capl~at. 1be Britlsh and Australhtn e.rnba.ules btian evacuating some dependents within 12 hours of the rocket attack. Cambodian military au1horllies said •o rockets fell on the city, but did not list casualties. Military police sources In- stead listed them. The SOW"ces said that apparently 36 shell:'! fell on the road to the capital's main airport \.\'est ol the city and in and around a markec.place to the southwest. •wee1heart h• had kn•·~ tor 20 i·ears in Adv. ersar:es Meet his home town of \Voodstock. N.Y. • !\1i!s !\1arvin claims that lhe actor con- tinued to support her untll November 1971 and then refused to pay any more-. She hired a la\l'}'er and demanded all the benefits sbc M"ould have bad as a di1•orc· ed wife. She sued A-farvin for half his assets which she estimated as $1 million. claiming thiS \\1as her equitable share of lheir community property. HER SUIT, FILED by ?1.fitchclson. says that she and Marvin agreed orally that "they would combine thclr efforts and earnings and \YOUld share equally any and all property accumulated." The suit adds, ';It was further agreed that during the Ume the parties lived together that plaintUf and defendant 1vould hold themselves out to the general public as husband and wife and plaintiff y;ould further render her services as a com- panion, homemaker, housekeeper and cook." • i\1arl'in's attorne y David Kagon dec!in· ed comment on \11hat position he will take on the i.ssues, but indicated there \\.'OUld . be no out-<if~ourt settlement. "l have no reason to believe it 1vill not go to trial." he said. Ho111·evcr. the trial is not likel y to be the end of the case \1.-hicb a.rilchelson almost hopes lo lose so he can lest its issues on appeal. "I BELIEVE TllE trend of the la w may and should move-a"'·ay from 1he classic concept of marriage a n d divorce.'' he sa id. •·rt's time to have a national set of pri11ri1>les relative 111 mar· riage and divorce and 10 c-1npha sizc thr relationships lx>l1\·t..1?11 people !hat produce oblignlion s and responsibilities. rather than just \icrnsing ··rm not l::ilking C1bout one.ni ght stands:· he 11·ent on, "but abou t lostini: relationships.'' Sonic states already rrcognize long-run relationships unde r rommon·la\Y mar- riage. If i\Utchelson convinces the high court to hear his case. he aays ii 'l\·ould be the fi rst time justirrs hal'e considered a marriage la\\' question. President Nixon and Sen. George J\.JcGovern exchange sociJI pleasant· ries at formal dinner parly hosted by the Shah of Jran. " Connally Has Had It As Adviser to Nixon \YASATNGTON tt:PJ) -John 8. Con· nanr is quilting after t\\"O months as President Nixon's part·tin1e adviser. but ~Ielvi11 R. La ird plans to slick it oul as long as he feels he is making a con· trih1.11ion . Tbe vet('ran politicians joined the \\'hitc House Staff after the \\"atergatc sca ndril erupted forcing an exodus of f.;ixo11·s top lieutenants. Connally, rormrr treasury secret ary, joined the staff as an unpaid consultant to the President, "'hilc Laird took 11n a fulllin1c post as !he President's chief dome stic adviser. But af\er giving so1ne advir(' to Nixon to "clean house .. and to shake off the DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otl1vtry Gf thf Daily Pilot IS 9Uilr~n tttd Mo"O••·"""d•• II rov do not "••• ••u• ••IN• oy S:M p.m., <•It ""d ••w• co~r ,.,11 IH O•Owtlll to you. COlll •rt 1•-1n Wftlol 7.Jo 1.m. S••urdly Ind \~nd•• II '"" Cle nol •«•'•• '""' <oPr Pl' • • "'· S11urd1y. or t •"' Su~G•r <•II ••d • ••Pr wlll 01 tflught !• '"" C'llS ••• f1~1n """' 1t • m . TclPPMllnf\ Ml>! O••n9c (Ollftlr ., •• , HJ·4ll! Nt•tt.wnr """""''"" lt•tfl ••t Wnl '"~'"' UD-11,. s ... ''-''"••!t, c., ......... , •• h, ~"' J~I• C•Jltlro.,., O•n• Pt!"'· S...!~ La,~••. l••""• 11;,-otl·UM clique brought in by former aides H. R. Halde1nan and John D. Ehrlichn1an, Con· nnl!y beca1ne frustrated. He found tN! President was in no mood to change hi~ O\vn lifestyle or to broaden the chain of co1nm.and. "l'\'E GIVEN ABOUT all \ht! advice I can give," Connally told a ne .... ·s con- ference on June 20. "'hiCh \\'as called to <ieny that he \\'as disgruntled. But those who read bel\veen the lines agreed that Connally had had it. The former governor of Texas stayed around long enough to help shape the r1c\\' Phase l\' economic controls. He also 1nrt privately a few times "·ith Nixon in \\"ushington and San Clemente, then he. returned to hi s "Picosa" ranch at Floresville, Tex . Connatlv and his 1\·ifc soon \\-"ill leave for a \rorid trip \l"hich he postponed 11•hen he joined lhe Presiden1ial staff. Train J u111ps 'fracks AUBREY . Tex. 1U Pl l -T\l'i!lllY·five ca rs of a Mi ssouri Pacific freighl train, IS. of which 11'ere loaded 11"i1h grain bound for the Soviet Union, jumpcd rhei r tracks \Vednesday. sending five ca rs crashing through the \1·alls of an empty peanut processing plant. The olher cars ln \'olved In the derailment carried nc\I· automobiles and trucks. Lightning Kills Woman For il1ost Part, Nation Enjoy·s Clear Weather " " I.If! "w/ •l>a:l IOIOC •ii e IU: El Ctntro, 11 e1111 l itr•!O'fl.Ot;(lt't, !~ ~" llt1"r>.)r,Yl110 ·~>•Otd !!H. itn•1 "'"'If tn(I )•nU ,..onlt~ ~' (} .S. Summnry Cle.,. P it• -•t(I o-..r mott Of ,.,. 1 /UIHO ----~ -f~IH~~NQW CL:23 ~"0WI IS .... 1:~w """or. tOO•v '''°' !ht t •~tt>'>fl~ r •"~""'I ~"" • It" lllU'f'<"'""''"" ,.,, •~•~a Item 1111 bull ~,t /\6"!' •o !h• "''"' l••tt lW'll~!.., '""""''''"""' .,.1119"11 "' '"" -1\ltr~ 1loot1 Of 11'f lt<K~1e1 DV' "'11•1 of ll•f 1ttlvi1v "~l co11to<1!<1 !ram At~•n1t1 lo Mlcnl~a". ,ltatn/111 •mt>u"'• 'a~ tr~"' I 1111le mo•• "'"" an !ntl'o ,, ~ ..... ts'li!l1 ......... '" ..., llM<I 11•11 ... rn,tt •• luJ~aloo.., "'", '"" Lt• \lf'll••· N.M t, Y°""4 woman wt1 1t•1.1t~ •n<I ~111..., o" liOl"lnlno '' •l>e wtl~t'd lroM ll•c "',,.,.. to lier t•• a1 1 110'"' •v•""' IM\IHI 0Vff •11i r.nt••I 11r .. ,1. "' (!ti• ""° <l•Y •Ir lllltU!'rl Into '"-ml<!C~Mlnenr twmtditv t1vt111 ~-~­ !•om It'll ttntr•I Pl•ln1 to ttt1 "°''""'" ~"·•'ukn1 v~1,..,. l';~I• ~ •r•lllO• ~.,.,. «O•"'<I "' P0'\1 S• Gec--01 on l!'lt •l',.'"' -ll'llrlV l•'>'•·"·• ~l>jl\! •."'t•rA •1,,•• ~•IOrt .,,.,.. ••~o.d "f -"O •' A•cttA. C•lll to ... , N,..,.,,, Cati• Contittnl 11'Pfffhfl'_. M('\lty '"""Y '~•Y 1.10111 vArlebl• wind• niOh! t nd "°'°'"'<IO !lours M CO'l'llf'IO .. n!ff1y !o !DUlllWH!t•IY I 10 !t ~"ch Jn 1ttefo\OOl\t !od•v ~"° rrl(l•Y Hla11 •Od••· Uftflt• '°' CGtJl•I '"'"PH•t~•·~ nlnM f""O""I t3 ta '3 t ~ 1•"" l.mllf'•ttlo1r~1 rl "O• from '3 111 ,._ WU" !'°"llf'llu•t U. S1111 . '""""· Tltlr• TKUttSO•Y ~"1'.<>"<l ~·~n 1\111 .... 1~ S~o<w! 10.. l:M o.m. , ) r:1r,1 !'lt'h ""'' low iM:?<ltl ~·~n ~'<O)!la 10,, l'IUD•Y s~" "''' • oo .• "'· MOOf! tlHI 1 U 4 "" ,,, ..... •l 11l1 m ·I• t.•t II... 1 I l 1' 11.M, 1 I S-11 F·U D "' Stll )·)• 11111 Three persons <Ned "'1lh another 22 .,..·oundcd in lhe n1arketpl1:1ct shelling, policti IOUrces .uid. In line with Lon Nol'1 orders to the army to establish defense systems: in and tlround Ph.nom Penh, Prime f\'l inisler In Tam movt.>d the start of curfew from 10 p.1n. to 9 p.m. and ordered government ofrlces lo stagger working hours. \\'orkers nre now undergoing tlrmy Training during the morning how·s. f"ield n::p<>rts said hea vy ground fighting occurred sooth and north or Phnom Penh. nie most critical area ap. parentJy was near Highway 2, l''h<'rc In· surgc111s rrportl'dly advanced to within Appeal Slated On Bo1nb Bcut NE\V VOllK 1 AP ' -The federal government has filed a notice of appeal to overturn a CflUrt decision that calls the U.S. bombing of Can1- bodia unconsiltutional and orders it halted. I-lours after th{' ruling \!.•as an· nounced Wednesday, U.S. Atty. lloberl A. f\'lorsc said appeal papers "'ere being prepared and lhat he "'ou!d seek a stay or the order that takes effect Friday. He said the case would be carried to the Supreme Court if necessary. The \\'hite House had no im- 1ncdiate comment. l{ussians Launch 211d Mars Probe, Ain1 for Landing J\10SCO\V (UPI J -The Soviet t:nion said today it ha s launched Mars 5, its sec· ond unmanned Mars probe in five days, on a six-n1onlh journey to the planet. The news agency Tass said ~Jars 5 blasted off \Vednesday at 9:56 p.m .. or !2 :56 p.m. (PDTJ, and began chasing l\1ars 4, which was launched Saturday. Tass gave no specific details of the JOint mission . but Indicated that the first Soviet Mars shots since 1971 would try to put life.seeking electronic gear on the planet's surface. "Simullancous SC'icntific researc-h bv the l\,·o stations \\.'ill make it possible 10 obtain fuller data about the planet and the dynan1ics of physical processes that occur in space." Tass said in announcing the P.1ars 5 launch. EARLIER , TASS said Mars 4 \VOU)tl continue the scientifiC exploration of i\tars and space near it that was started by launches of t1vo earlier vehicles, i\1ars 2 and i\1ars 3, launched in 1971 . i\1ars 3 successfully soft-landed an in- strument package that transmitted video and other signals for 20 seconds before falhng silent. Tass said Mars 4 v.•as BGS.000 miles ahead of ~1ars 5. Both probes are sc heduled to go into orbit around Mars u1 111id·February. "i\1ars 5 is similar in ·design and purpose of Mars 4.'' Tass said. Peron flonors Wife BUENOS AIRES <L"Pi l -Former President Juan 0 . Peron paid homage to· day to his popular second wife Er.i. mak- ing his second public appearance in more than a month on the anniversary of her death 21 years ago. ,--- 21x miles or the suburb of Takhmau. The Qunbodlan high 00111ma.nd also said Comrnuni!lli inflltroled the village of Bc:k Chan, 10 miles from the capital on Highway 4. Field reports said a Com- munist rocket altaek there kWed live persons and briefly cloHd Ille hJ&bw•y. American warplanes conducted heavy air strikes near the capHal during the night -the 14oth day ol con!ecutive U.S. raids durin& the llltenalfled air war that President Nixon agreed to end by Aug. 15. Meanwhile, Hanoi today accused the United States ol sending a spy plane ovu North Vietnam and Saigon said '8 $42,500-·and llp soldiers on both Sides died in the wors~ baulc slnce. the iiecond VietlUlm ceaae-- fire took effect June 15. Hanoi'! Vietnam Newis Agency (VNAl. in a broadcast monitored ln Saigon, ac- cused U:ie United States or violating r.iorth Vietnam's air &pt.ce last Sunday' by sending a recoonalsaanot plane over Dong Hoi, 33 miles rurth or the Oemilitarl7.ed Zone separating the ll''O Vietnams. The broadcast claimed the alleled fight was a violation of both the Jan. rr Paris agreement endina the war and tht June 15 Paris accord reaffirmin& the ct:ase-fire, Senate Conducts 9 Votes, I\.ills Freeze on Salary \1lASl!fNG.TON (UPI) -Tt started as a hard freeze on pay raises for Congress. 1he Cabinet , and the Judiciary. Uut by the time the Senate finished putting the heat on it, the freeze had thawed and almost melted away. Sen. James B. Allen (D-Ala.) started an art er noon-long merry-go-round \\1cdnesday ~·hen he proposed a no-raise policy as an amendment to a campaign reform bill. Nine votes later, the Senate, on behalf of Itself, the House, the Cabinet, and the Judiciary decided a raise was all right as long as it did not exceed wage guidelines \l"hile wage-price controls are in effect. On a 49-43 vote. the Senate adopted a sense of the Congress resolution and put i!self on record in opposition to any pay increase exceeding the cost-of-living rise since the last raise in 1969, \\'hich put the sa laries of Congressmen at $42,500 a year. AT FIRST, it appeared that the Allen a111endment \\'as headed lor victory until Sen. John O. Pastore tO-R.l.) offered a rider which \l'Ould have prevented those under lhe Allen proposal from accepting ;my speaking or wrlling honorariums. Pastore apparently offered the rider more in jest than in earnest and said he 11·ould \1·ithdra1v il. But Sen. Barry l\I. "'What Goldwater said no. When the vote wa s over, the Pastore rider was aboard, 56-37. Assistant Senate Republican Robert P. Griffin tried to kill the package but failed 54-40. So, Sen. Henry ?1.1. Jack.son , (0-Waah.) applied some more heat. He offered an amendment that woold have prohibited acceptance of an.v earned incon1e except salary. That carried 64-30. SEN. ED\\'ARD W. HROOKE CR.- Mass) tested the \l'ater and moved to kill the Allen·Pastore-Jackson package. That failed 55-39. Then Sen. Ted Stevens (R· AJaska ) offered a substitute for the Allen·Pastore-Jackson package that pro- vided for the sense of the Congress resolution. Allen tried to kill that and. he loo, fail - t'd, 48·43. Then the Senate adopted I.he Stevens substitute. , It was, as one senate aide explained, a case of "making the jockey too heavy for the horse." Before the issue was settled. however, a nu1nber of senators complained they 'A'cre "hurting" on their salaries, that the publlc really didn't koow how much it cost to be a senalor, and that those op-- posing a pay raise were "phonics'' and afraid of the press. a Liar~ . Inouye Says He Ca.1i 't Re1ne1nber WASHINGTON (AP1 -Sen. Daniel K. Inouye of the Senate Watergate com1nittee says he doesn't remember calling anyone a liar at the hearing Wednesday. even though his softly muttered remark WilS picked up by microphones and recorded. AJter questioning former presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman, the Hawaii Democrat was heard to say in a barely audible voice, "\Vhat a liar." "I CAN·r RECALL saying that," protested Inouye. "If I did, il \Va sn't relative to what I had just gotten through." lnouye's final question to EhrUchman had been whether the former presidential adviser was ignorant of the \Va tergate cover-up. Ehrlichn1an had replied, "I had no part in any cover.up" and said he believed he would eventually be cleared. Inouye then stated he hoped President Nixon would release \\'hite House tapes the committee has subpoenaed. After a 20.second pau.;;e a tape recording of the testimony sho1ved Inouye n1utt~red, ''\Vhal a liar." Good Investment News: BUY DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE, SAVE A FORTUNE Now available for the public: fine jewelry from several large estates at Costa Mesa Jewelry. Save 50%. Estate jewel ry priced for immediate sale. In vest now for unbelievable 50% savi ngs. \Vise investment opportunity. 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RACITJ'S E'xquixi l t plali11u1P1 11ec·kla re u·ith J.i6 dia111ondH. l'rn1·-.~f1a1wrl tlr1111 (.! .• i.i krrr11f.~1 1-f1(1i11f'lf /,!/ .!/ fHlfJlll'llex, ii,.,/J,-if - /11111/x, 111111 1/1/11·fl/t 1·/11.~1c•1·x 11( /r1 u1r:rr- 1111iXfr11I din 1111111 rl.~. 1i1(n fx 111'1:1" /.) /,·111'(lflf. .s 18,IN~I rnl111'. /'ri1"t rt'1l111t!tl t11 'f,,, •1~1.!.1 COSTA MESA JEWELRY 18:18 Newport Bouleva rd , Costa Mesa, California 92H27 7 14 /646-7741 N DAIL V PILOT 29 •ordinar-v Night~ Tnr·ns Into Night1nare By BOP ~10.'1ROE :\E\\' YOllK •AP1 -F1nnlly th\! "look· aJlke'' nightmare of William Schrager Is over -ended, ironically , in the sanu,• grand jury bureau "'here he was 1\'0rkin~ \1hen it all st<irted. f'or nea rly five months. Schrager lived in limbo. suspended rrom h.l.!i job as n Queens assistant dist rict attorney alter being nccuscd or sexualJy accosting several worncn. Last Thursday. a Queens grand j ury exonerated the 30..year-<>ld bachelor in the lasl '"'O cases. Aftcr"·ard, he sipped champagne Y:ith his family and con· fessed to "a mixture of relief .and hap- piness." "I WAS SURE I'd be vindicated tn the end." he said. ··r11 be glad to be ~etting back lo work and leading a normal life." His life has been anything but normal since the cold Febn1ary evening when he left the house to pick up the ne\\-'S papcr and mail some lcuers for his mother on the way. "It started out to be a very ordinary night." he recalled. He left the neat stucco home in Queens \\'here he lives with his parents about 9: 15 p.m. and slopped the car at a mailbox a block away. The c:old car engine stalled as he dropped the lelter~. ~le restarted it and !'at idling to let the nlolor warn1. 1-lea dlights came up behind him on the deserted stceel and a police car passed. He waited another motnent and headed for the ne'"'sstand. "ABOUT TllREE blocks later. a squad ., • c:1r pullt'd :i\on~:i11dt' uf n1c \ l)lllrolman ~tuned •1 spotli~hl into Ill) Ince. I pulll'd O\'Cr ~mmedilllt'ly," he .!i:IYS-'The) a_kl-<l n1e to gel out of the car. "They frisked me. They ast ed n1~ 10 !':it in 1he back ol the patrol ca1 ·• \\'lu lc thl!y St.·o re:ht'd his car. Schrager identified himself as an assist· ant dlstrlct attorney In Queens , hut harl 1ak£'11 office only·-.·iAhl \\ctks curlier <1nd h<.td no p<1pers to prove the clu1111. A sergeant arri\'cd. Schrugcr u.!iked \1'hat \1·as happenin g. r '"You fit a description."' 1hty said und '\'011 fit a de•<"rlplion.' they s11ld 11nd told him to eo11tc to the st.1at.io11 ho111e. told him to come to the station hooS('. "I sa id. 'I'll conle. I'll be glad to help out!'" Schrager said. BEFORE !\ilDNIGHT, he had been identified hy two yow1g \\'omen in a lineup-. By Ii J.m .. he had been bookL'd on charges of sexual abuse and menacing. When he arrived in court ln handcufr!>. the story was already in lhe newspaper::!. Schragcr's ni~ht1n:1re had regun. Before the end of the WL-ek. he had been charged in sin1ilar cases in Brooklyn and Long Island. Nearly three \\'eeks passed before police arrested a n1an they called a '"look-alike" who they said confessed to i'ioC\'t>rul crirnes charged to Schr11gtr anti '" th ·r 111.111 ll rrt'Slai ,·;•rlll·r lhargt>~ \>'('ft dropp:!tl rirst 1n BrUOli.l\"n and ~oon aftt>l"\\ilrd 111 \n..sau 1.:ount) Ru' the 11•0 \\n1ne11 in Quttru: stuck lo •h<'i r Ident ification. and l\\O ~~.'cial pn>5e· cutors "·ere appointed to present the ca'>l' to a l!l'alld jury tlUH eventu111\y l'l · oncrated him. TltE F IRST TtlREF. \\'tekri especially , says Schrager. were ''just a totall y uni - que cxperien .... 1', something that someone has lo go through to kM\\' '""hat it's reully like. At first , it \\'RS dishelief. I figured l\ was just 11 mista kr. I \\'Ould bl' let go . J f('h partially atlll!Sed. "Then. as I neared my arraignnlent in Qt1eens <'OUl'l. I ft>ll etnbarrossed. L..iter on, I felt anger and that tumtd to fear itnd just fina lly Iola! disgust," he said 1n an intervie\\. There \1·as police pressure, fan 1ily con- cern and public harassment Schrager says he 1vas unawan> of it \\"ht>n he left the house that night of F'eb. 25 but residents in the upper middle cl.ass Far Rocka'"·ay neighborhood \\'err highly disturbe<.I ahoot a recent series of SClC UAI ottacks ar.1:ainst young girls. At a commu nity meetlng. police cirl- \"iscd \\·orried parents to !ell !ht·ir daughters to run to the nenrtst hot1s1• if 11 man got out of a car and asked dirl'C· lions. SClfRAGER \VAS stopped because lhc officers had seen him alone in a car idl - ing on a deserled street and he roughly filled the description of a suspect S tC<'t PHYLLIS SMITH -ONLY PERSON IN COUNTY TRAINED TO USE MEDLINE SYSTEM Information Analyst Types Out Messages on Library's Computer Terminal DOCTOR CHECKS OUT INFORMATION IN MINUTES First of Its Kind In County ind One of 20 in Callfo~~ I Tandem Parking OK'd Building 'controls thal allow tandem parking (or the first lime in any section of the city hnve been approved for th(' Newport Shores area by Ne .... 1Xl"t Beach city cooncilmcn. Councilmen adopted a "Spe<:lfic :-i rea plan" for the West Nt'"rport area between Newpor t Shores Or1\•e nnd \Vrst COllst Highway over the l'Jbjection.1 of a new busincssn'IC'n's ti;roup that \\Rnt<'d lh~ _pJan dela yed. )layor Donald A. Mcinnis pushed for approvol. saying the plan had been sturlicd Jong enough. 11 cil'sic:nal.es tha t most of lhe com· n1crciill strip aloog tht Coast •H11:h\1·ay will revert lo resid ent ial u,,e when ex· isrtng ~ are termlnattd. However. It \\'ould alto"' future commcrcieJ usl'S l':ilh ~JX'\1111 per1ni !t"iion from 1h1• r1t~ Floating Market Given Newport Cotmcil ApproYal noy Pearson can kce1> on sellinA seafood and li\'e bait from his barge al the cntr3nce of Upper Newport Bay - unless the Orani:(c County Harbor Dcpartn1cnt has objections . Nt>w port Beach councihnen r.1onday night gave tenta ti ve approval 10 a business license for Pearson's Port. 300 E. Coast lligh\\'ay. pending rcvie\\' of the business use by the Joint I-larbor Co1n- mi1tce and the County Harbors. Beaches and Parkri Comrr:ission. Pearson had ope ned his floa ting fish market several \\'Cf'ks ago without any formal approvals although he told coun- cilmen Monday night. he had under the w1lchful eye of Harbor Patrolmen "v.·ho took photographs" as he built a roof for his barge. Cou ncilman ~Ulan Dostal spoke up in suppo rt of Pearson. saying he had observed his operation on tv.·o sepa rate weekends and found it to ~ upstanding. Final Swimn1ing Signups Slated Re gistration for the fina l Orange Coa st College summtr s"'in1 progra1ll for lol s ri ght on up through advanced adult students "'ill be Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 noon in the OCC Gym. • The tv.o-\~~k sessions Y.ill run ~1ondny throu~h Friday at 43-m inuic inter\ als. rcqwruig a 54 fee for all but the Tiny Tot 1n.struction, an $8 class. Students may enter eight spccUic clasl'Cs ba sed on capabilities and mwt pro\•1de their own to\\·ets. bathing suits and c.aps. \\'hHe lockers ar' not offered. UCB Robber Sought SAN BERNARDINO (AP ) -Police to. day "'tre looking for a gunman "'ho took $1.500 fron1 a United Cahfornla B:ink branch. They s.1ld he n1ay be the mnn who rOObed another branch of 18,00CI la~t 1V('ek !lnd WR~ in A $25.0fllt rol>~rv 111 ,,\'est Covina J unt 1'1. 4. ~c:ir1n~ hom·11mtnL'd gla~t·~ u11d "1th rt.'ft"dlng dark hair Tl~ hair 111w;t height fit Sc..'hragl'r but he do<!s not 11.1!.&r glasSt.'S arid hl' I!! about ~I) pounds Jight£>r than Ste\'(• lh:cht . 29. 1hr "look-alike" later arrl'sted In 1hc crunes. Leon11rd c:ordon. Schrnger's la\\·ye r. ~d the first linPup was the k.cy to the misidcnlificallon . Schrager \\'as inadc 10 "'ear glasses and "as seated "·ith live detec1 i1·es. none close' to hini in Heii;ht or weight. •'()n('C thl-y 1dllltify. from that pou1 t on 11 sno"·balls. •· suic1 Gordon. a for1ll1·r pohct> heutcnant "Evl•ryonl' is bolSlt'rl'd by bcinJ: !old son1rone else made an Hien· tifical1011." ALTllOl,;G ll POLICE h<1\"C denJL'd their procedures n·e re faulty 111 the case, Schragcr's father , a pron1inc 11 t negligence Ja\\')'Cr, said he heard one gul in strut1t..'Ci : "Tr\I us n·hich one oJ Wm 1s the man." Aft l'r he 11·as iden11fied. Schrai;rr <>aid . 1he dc!ecl!\.l'S told him : '"Look. \\e do11't put l)('Oph• likr this 1n j11il If ~·ou tt•l! 11~ at this s1:ig1• and g1'\ it off your rnind v.·e'll treat yo11 111 a prope r 11 ;1y ., Still 'protcslin:.: his inn0Ct'nr1·. St'l1r:iger \\·as OOokNI. fin~1•111nn1f't!. ndtt•\·ed Gf his s-hoclaces and brlt ;111d taken to ~1 cell. In lhe n1urru11g. he \1a~ h;iorlcuffl'd 10 another pr1son1·r •ind 1;1kC'11 tn ;1 pnddy wagon to tourt 1'1 1\as so po~11l\'t' :it m~· :1rr<i1gnnlt·nl thht \1'hcn !he t11·0 ~iris c:.1n1e up <ind s;;11 me \1ithout gt·1;.St·~-tht·~·'d say, 'Ht·'s not !ht' guy " and lhC) 't! It·! Tlll' ~o ri~ht then and there. "Ul'T TllAT \"E\"t;H h:-tpjX·nNI " lie plc>aded innocent nod '"ll'fl th(' court hou.sc throoi,:h a bfi('k door tu avoid 11t\\ti.lnt·n. I rt',1111 trh 11\..t· .1 !tttlc cnm1n~I." · Wllf'r 111 11K• \11••·\.. t"o \a....sau Count) rlt>lt'Cll\'t'JIL 11'1•nt to h1 ' ht.11nt' and ~:i1d ht"d bt.'C'n idcntifi{'(I at tht· <~ueczl"' ar-- ru11(11n1en t by a Loni. l ~l .1 nd i.:1rl lie snid thl•y. too, urg('(I h1nl 10 ("'Onf1·~o;. !!ay111~. "Look Bill. 11e \1·nnt tu ht•lp ~·011 •\'1111·1·e 1l1f• 11et•f1~..-t. 91111 11·ho 11·-111111 f'flltltt1it. t.l11•1CP 1•ri1111•s.' t.l1t• polfi-e 10111 ''""· ------------------- \\'e're not likl' QuN>n~ \\"f''rt' not ~oini;: lo put 11 in !hf' nc·"·spapcrs I t'~ going to be '.'mbarr.,~1ng for tlu' girl 10 ll•!.11fy ·· !'t ~r:i::i·r <JllOll'd a detrria·e a' s:i~'1ng. "''oii"re not marriNt. \'QU 11\·e \li!h \TIUr par('ll!:-. \"Hu ha\t• ·.1 "ht'llerl'<I ·lifr . Ynu'ri, fill' f)f'r fN·t gu} 11ho \1·.1uld £'(),Ill· tnit tht'Sl' crimc·i; " SC llltAf;t:H HEC.\l.LEI> th:11 11hr n group" of tlt'!t'\'tl\"t·~ <1ut'st1oncd hiin . •·1 ... t;:irtt'<I !u ~t·t n·d and l"d look 1111·a1·. 1 aln10_.:t l:M·g:1n 111 ft•t'I ~ui!1y. c·\'Cll !hough I kne11 I tlidn't do 11 " Brooklyn delt"(:ll\"t•S ca lll'd next, Ht ~nid one rffircr 1olrl him. ··r.1u kno"' Bill. ~\'111'\·e bef.n iden11f1ffi bf.fore. If you do bt'at ont'. you 'll gt•t hit in anorher case." But Brooklyn also brolJ.&ht !he firrt bri"uk. One attack WR!L alleged to t\a\le ta\..cn plat'I· a 111ght St'hr1UfH" knew he hud bo1-1 lt•d. Iii! .iot )111-orn al atcments 11"0!11 lt'3nl 11ll'Olber8. ' l'hc fu n11l)1 h1rf'tl 11 pravl\tc 1nves1Jg3tor to try nnd break lh<' ca.st-r.teanwhlle, S.:hrngcr \\'flS tnld. "."Jr1•rr ))f' alone." I-le ~t:iyr'd 111 home or \\ith frif'nd~ so he 11nt1lc1 ha\t' ;1n ahbi 1f another 111tal'k oc .. 1·urrl'd . 1111,\tE \\"At<'· \:llT n1'l"t'""1rlly pl easant . · \\ h1·n 1111~ fir.;t :-.l:irl<"<I, \\"C got lh rt'l\\l'rUn~ phOlll' 1·a1Js. l 'ars 11-ould dr1Vl' up tht· billC'k and ~·<'II oh~·1·n1tl~ at !he hnu51• Thry'd honk tht'1r hom and drl\•t off (a!.t." .\t n1i:,ht h'· ··"ok1· up ;1 re\1· llmPs. r 1hough! I \1a~ 111 p.1h1·1· cu~tody. They \\('ff' lookin;: form<·. r thought th ty \~ere ut.dfr rn' heft I h:1d drt•a1ns I \1rnt out of I0\111 3nr! 11a .... ;trrC':.lt'<l theri" and de- \alnt'd for 01h1·r l'l'in1e~ ... hr .o;ttid ~1o"I d1~trit·t attorne~s ai:r('(' that f')'C\\Lt!K's..; trl<·n11fi1·:-it1on alone i~ ofll'll unrl'tlnblr hu! n1au11;un that thcrr are f1'11' ar lunl ('ll·"''" of tni sta kcn ld<'llllty. Ht T ()\I.}.' 111Ht-:E 1noot h~ rarht'r 111 (~uer·u ~. ii f\)l!t•~l' stud1·nt 11·:is arrci:IN.l oo r:lJk' eharc:e<; an<l h~·ld for 11 wet•k unlil a "lonk·al:k1•" 1\·as npprehcndrd . Alfrt'd 1l1f(·ht'()(•k's fihn "The \Vronit ~l<in" \\":!!> bast'C! on thl' 1953 case of Chri.~topht'r llal<'.~lrrr11 \1ho was held for 1hree 111.,111hs 1n a Qu eens holdu1> before beini:; l'il'ared Computer Aids Physicians 'Mt>dline ' Provides l11stf111t Research at lloag Hos1)iu1l .. i\l:'\\'JlCJrt Beach·,. lloag ~1t'm11ria l I !ospilal is n111-11 using a con1putcr rf'fe rente systein to keep itself abreast of 11'hlt's going on in n1f'aicin<'. 1'hc svstcn1 is called "~·1edlint"' ri nd is tied intO the Nation:il r.tcdica! Library In Washington. D.C. It can give the latest bibliographical n1atcrial for fi ndin~ ans11·ers tn n1ost of the questions doctors or hospital personnel might ha\'f'. THE SYSTf.:'11 is the first or its kind for :in Oran !!" Count~· hospital and is on!\.' 1,dl' of 20 111 tht· entire state. lt \\'as a gi ft 0f (,"h:irle.~ Hl'sler. of 2711 i:: Coos! ll igh\lav. NC1-1·port Beach. The systen1 is really quite simple 10 use. A doctor needs information un thl' diagnosis and treatment allcrnati\'('S for a problem. He simply goes to the hospital 's medical library and presents the problcn1 and possible alternatives to th<> hospital's Infor mation analyst and librarian Phyllis Smilh . He W<rnted M<rscot Job INDlAN L'AKE . Pa. (AP) -A lion interrupted a Luthe r a 11 women's group during its di~cussion on Africa Al a la \..c~ide church reln>at here . The church group"s leader has just brought up a 1rt'r11iog to '"take care of our OWTI bac kyards beforl' criticizi ng others" "'hen the lion trotted into the yard. \\'hen calm 1vas restored. it n·as Jc<i rned that the predator \\"a s one of ~ever:1! ham1lcss cubs bein~ raised by a neighbor. The \1·01ncn v.·erc from the Xl1llcrsct County parish o( SL '.\l:irk's Lu!h1•ra11 Church, 11hich ias a lion as its emblem . .\[1...,, SnHth i~ prc .... tntly the on\~· person on an Oranµt· Cou niv huspital ~10H train- l'd ro LISL' 1hc sy~1cn1. and one of only 45 11cst of 1h1· r.1iss1ss1ppi Hh·er. ~tlSS S~ll'flf types out 1hc mrssage on lhc library's eo n1 1>ulrr tcrn1inal. The ITit'S~ag(' pas.<;es thrn11gh a Tymshare Corporation li ne anrl on to the main rf'fer<'nC(' compulf'r h;1nk :-it !he Na tional ~1rdic11I Library in \\'ashington, 0.C. Tymsh11rr rnn in1:ii11<; <Hl offi ce at 4630 Can1bcrs f)ril'e iri ~e11·port Beach for tcu1net·1111~ ins!Ltutions w11h da1a bases. TllF: 11 0 .\G QlJ E.~'1'10,'\S 11•ould tx- an<;~·i'red \"ia t'Ompulcr in a matter of :;t•eonds. g1\·ing 1ht' asker a i:ro~<;-rt·fl'ren· c·rd h1hl1ni;raphy of the latest medica l in- formation frnm 1200 medical journals as far hack as 1970. Before Medlin<'. ;1\l medi cal 111· formation had to be thoroughly research- ed in monthly mcdi('nl indexes. The index <"O\'t>r<'d only material publishl'd durini::- the proceerlin,R" monrh ;ind 011.1· under a <;pel'ifi c rirle \\'i lh no cross re t•rencing. Such 11 search could talie davs especially if referral had to}}(' made ·10 t.:CL1\'s regional reference lif>{ary. The l·loag sys1em offers throe lines for 1he questioners nl'eds. There's the r.ledlinf' 11·ith its 1200 rlledica! sou rces. plus the SDI line \\'hieh is a full indexing of all medical publica- tions for one m<1nth. Eve ry Tuesday , the hospital has access to a Compfile line. a complete jndex of ;ill published medical iournals. A con1- puter prinlOOt of the needed journals is made at the main Compfile center and mailed to the inquiring pa rty. PHYSlaANS \\'110 use the S\'Stem have found it to be a great aid tO their practice. "~1edline is a great bencrit because th e doctor can quickl y put his finger on in- formation for the diagnosis and treat- ment of a disease,'· Dr . John Skinner of :-.;rv.·port A<'ach says "Olll'C' \\·e hn ve Lhis reference analysis. \\C can better sea rch for pertinent in - fnmiation , :ind thus J!11·e better care to our-pat11·nts, .. hi• added . Dr Skinnt·r \\:l~ u~ing the i:ys tem to 1·het·k u•Jt .~ome mt'diclne a diabetic pa- tient "·ns 1ak1ng. lie \\'8nted to make sure the mcdi<·tn<' \\'a5 not affecting th' hlood rind gi\·ing a falsely positi ve di agnosis. The patient \\'M being treated by Skin· ner and ano!her docto r in Ne\1• York. To ma ke sure of his diagnosis before his eonsultatioo \\'ith lhe New York physl· t i:-in. Skinner consulted the ~fedline ror rcfcr1•nN' sources ··1 \'OT O\'L'\' \1·antt'd to kno,,.,. 11hat thf' p11 .... 1 ('ffc<'I~ \1erc, hut also "·hat 111e curr,•nt tn·:ilm<'nts might be," Skinn<'r points out . "Ti•xt books arc out ·dated quickly in medictnc...w_J 1~c the ?.1edline to fi nd an immediate gullie to the most recf'rl articles. articles "'hlch nlight otherv11sc take a long time to find.'' he adds. ~1f'dline «f'n1('r~ are also scheduled for Sr. Jos<'ph llo~pi rnl in Orange and lhl' OranllC' Counl,l' Alerl1cfl! Cent er ooce their rcftr<'nce librarians finish the req uired 1raining courS<' al Li<.:LA se t for this October. Partners l11dictcd LOS A:\{;f::l.ES fAPl -An insurance company here ha.; bt.oen accused by the county grand 1ury ~·i th bilkin g hundred.'I of liquor store df'aler~ s1ate"ide by pad· ding insuranC<' policy premiums. The <'\'.Ira charg<'S amounled to "more lhan $200.!61 Ol"er a »month period," Deputy Dist. Atty. ~1ich..1el l\1arcus tol d the grand jury Tuesday. Indicted "·ere thrcf' partnc~ 111 OK-rno\'l'·R<'ndcr Inc.. "'ilh offices on \\'ilsh1r<' Doule\·ard. Thcv are Roher! Chc·rno\'e , 51'l. nc1·erly !fills; \'it'e presi- dent ~l1cha1·l Bentler. J;!, and atton1cy Ara llo\·,1111:s1an, Jtl. Bilbo 011d Go1tdolf In 'Hobbit' Habits Robed Hand~ llol!and 1lcrt 1 feather-h alted F:llen \\'e b.~1er porlray l';-andcilr the \Vi 1a rcl fllld fl1lllo Rag}!1n~ in upco1n1n~ ~('rtes of ~ewporl-T\l c:sa lJnt· f1e d School il>str1rt and c·oa.st Comn'l11n 11y ('ollc~e youth rlran1a prndu cuon~ Shown is acst of "The llobbil." by .J. R. It. Tolkien. r·o ur shows are sched· 11 h'd currl'ntly throu~h 1\ug. 11 , with complete tn· for1nat1on by Staff \Vriter Tom Barley in Friday ·~ \\'cekend er . DAILY PILOT TV HIGHLIGHTS • CBS I.I 9:00 -41The frfoon is Blue." This con1- edy, considered ''risque" in 1953, features \Villiam Holden, Maggie llfcNamara and Uavid Niven in a romantic triangle. NBC D 10:00 -Dean ?l .. fartin J>resents Pttusic Country. The premiere of a new sutnmer 1nusic11l series fro1n the Nashville area. Tonight Johnny Cash and June Carter headline the show. ABC 0 10:00 -St reets ol San Fi:i.nclsco. Ed· ward Pttulhare and Stephanie Powers are guest stars in this episode about a middle-aged man lryi ng lo kill a beautiful young girl who has rejecled hin1. • TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JULY 26 .. llOO!D!DIJilC!JM• .. @®JNt•l OIMlllU (2111) "Tiit MOOll 11 llue" (R) (com) '!il-Willi•m Holden, M1u11 Al,Nl /1111', DIY1d N1...en, Tam Tu11r. Dawn Md3111S. A youn1 lady, 1rmtd w1lll tando1 ind 1oocl :M!ll$e, sets out lo out•it and b1w1lder 1 YOURI man · 11>out · lown bachelor who d()f$n'I believt in the 1nstltutit"in of m1ni1je . 0 (fOJ a;) lrtasldt ''Tht Bes! L1ld Pl1n1" {R! Chit/ Ironside, white visit1n1 his b1nk m1n1a:tr on ptr· Joh1111y's F1·ie11ds Country music star Johnny Cash takes a flock of neighbor children on· a jeep ride on hi s sprawling Tennessee ranch tonight on the premiere of hi s new show. "Dean ~lartin Presents Music Country" at JO o'clock on NBC, Channel 4. @ to11rtsll1, ,, Eddi•'• r1tti• 0 W1nte4 Dt&d Of All" Q)Tlltfll~ mSta Trt• sorut .busineu, is uu1ht In Ille -------- m1dd(t of 1 robbery. -•--r-'!'--- • Laguna lssa1e1 Cast Call Origimrl Drama Closing The Ja~st in a series of Y."Orld premieres from South Coast Repertor y, lhe psycllological drama "Adrien· ne's SUmmer," OOl:'l'M!S to a close this week wJth final perlormances s c h e d u I e d tonight through Saturday. It spot.lights a young actress who recently graduated from UC tr vine . anci· makes her SCR debut Iii the title role. Eli1.1.~h Herbert identifies strongly with the role of Adrienne, a woman wbo, ln her words, "wants to be more than a decoration in her hUS· band's life. She wants to be taken ser· iously, to be looked on as a person He.tt11a.r \1·ith opinion and values that are her own. She wants her 01vn identily, and so do I." J\Uss Herbert observes that !he rehearsal period, "'ith playwright \Villiam Lang in attendance, was instrumenlal ln clarifying the issues of the Intermission Tom Titus play. •1r "'as pleased to be able 10 contribute my feelings and ideas to the final product,'' she says. ''Adrienne's Summer'' will be perfonned in Us fjnaJ three days at 8 o'clock in the repertory company's Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., C.Osta i\1esa. Rcserva· lions 646.1363. AL.SO CLOSL'IG a brief engagement is the Fountain \ialley Community Theater pl"oduction of "Peter Pan," which gives its f i n a I performances Friday through Sunday. Jay Conklin ~ direc- ting the musical fantasy. Joe Strauss and David Lane arl.' double cast in the title role with Johanna Anderson und Sharon Kennedy sharing tht part of Wendy and Charles O'Connor as the evil Captain Hook. Perforn1ance times arc 7:30 Friday, 2:30 and 7:311 Saturday and 2:30 Sunday afternoon at the theater. 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, Fountain Valley. RESU!UING TONIGHT al the San Clemente Comnn1nity Theater is Thornton \Vilder's comedy "The ~1alchn1aker" with Richard Andersen at lhl! directorial helm. Jan Gordon and Stanley \Vcissbcrg have the principel/ roles in the large.cast show. lead to tru. Laguna Moulton Playhouse Sunday afternoon when the theater holds open readlngl! for its leadoff play. "Ah, Wildernci;s," and al.so star1s a brand new easting file for future reference. \Vhether you 're reading for '·\Vildemess" or Ml, manag- ing director llap Graham would like to see your face oo !he btlsin!'ss end of a Polariod can1era Sunday , beginning at l p.n1. Guest directors for the next three shows -Jan Arvan. Alex Koba and li-1arthella Randall -will be on hand to check out the talent. Call the playhouse at 494--07-U for further details. CALLBOAR;t -The San Clemente Community Theater will hold auditions for ils seaso n opener, ''The Gingerbread Lady," l\1onday and TuesdJy at 8 p.m. Tony Brandt \viii direct the Neil Simon scriocomedy. EE 1.ol Torm: m """""" """ fl1 TlltH StDtps U (IJ Hf11n'• Htt1M1 @ Run tor To111 Ult fJ rn m lllinl f• "The Slane" (R) In • Wnt«n town lllft seems to havt a:ont mad wilh viOkint• 1nct intri1u1, Ct!nt receivtt an Un· usual offer from lhrH innocent lookin1 thlldre~they w1nl lo paf him S4.08 to kill ximtont for lhtm. Tl1ey'1·e Game for TV Shows Slie Sings For Suit Also featured arc Peter Case, Joan Burt, C u r t \Vellman, Ann Keenan , Mark Razor , Carol Gustafson and Kip Conner. Curtain is 8:30 a l lhc Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cab r i 11 o , San Clemente, tonight through Saturday. Re se rvation s 492-0!65. A cast of three men and three ·women is requlred for Simon's story of an alcoholic entertainer trying to set her life in order. The show opens • Sept. 20 for three weekend! at the ~brillo Plarhouse. 202 Aven1da Ca br 1 l Jo, San Clemente. * 0 Mowlt: (t) (90) "fl iaht Sl1ws" (wsp) '70 -J1mn franciscut. lM Gr1nt. ltsllt Nielstn, Tisha StartlftL Alldrrw Print, Scott M1r- lowo. fl) KINrl•s ;. '""'' r r111• €D El Sllow dt Aki1!1d11 S111ru CV CIS ft~1 Walter Cronki!t 0 MIYt C1111 Will Tt1vtl l1g} Mrrw liriffi11 SMw m Alldf Critttt• flll Sat fu111 fine Ttt etJLMn1UIJ' '1l) Novel1 m Dt1trt n •• 11. W Uttll l1sul1 1..,u rn om• ... I) lowlin1 IDf Dolll11 9;JO Qi NtWI (I) MllCllKlll 1111111• a!) Co111tdJ 10:00 0 (\OJ m Dea~ M11tl1 P11st11ta: @ Merrie: (2111) "Ullin 11 the field" (com) '63-Sidnty Polllcr, Ul1 Skll1, Stanlt)' Ad1ms. Mink Co111t11 Tiit JHtmit11 of 1 n1w summtr music serlt5 trom In and around the Ntshvlne. Tenntsse1 1rra. Joilnny Ctsh tnd June C.ultr star toni1h1. Future slan will in- clude the fol) n1mts in tht Colin· try & Western litld. Ste Covet CklSt·UP story. omm• ... ({) Twlli1h1 Ztnt ()) WlldUtt JN.tre 0 Whr• ,., Uittl m I LM luCJ m I Dre1111 of h1nnie EE Slmpltmtnlt M1ri1 ED AcciM C/\iu111 "M1n1v11la" (R) iIIM1111ec1 '1l) Ttlt·Rnbta MM1k1I m Sttfff beer 7:30tJ f111111 DI. 1Uk111t '"BJ Tflis Sip" (R) Klld111 ind Gillupi1 t1t1! 1 younz fir! tor sll1m1lt-Oltedln1 ol tl>I palms 1rwf lorrheld-lhll 0 (I) CI) Sbffb of S111 fulld1t11 "Tower Brrolld Trared(' (If) A milf.. dfe.1g1d m~n wi1h 1 11tin1·11P tboul agt is sou1M by Miki and Sieve to prevent h•s kiHin& 1 bt1111Hul younii ~ul who h11 rtietlrd him. Ed'l!'lld Mulhare ind S!tl1nit l'flw· e1s zuest. D W.Wit: (C) (2111) •Ett" (dr1) ·68--Ctlrste 'f'trf!llll, Robert W1!lt1 Jr., Fred Cl1rt. fl!) Nuskll hn c:onloc;nded doctors tnd pritsts 10:30 g Ttll 11ct ltH 1 lhollund Yt•rs. (i) Ont Stt11 l tJtM (})Heft•'• ....... Cl 1111 Alwtrtltttr "lOYI Nwayi, aJ Tn11 Adwtblrt M111fa" (RJ A 1frl who once 'l'l'el~td fD rldas "' Conllidlt out on Gent Brrlllty n ·tnttra his til Acoflp.1u1111 lift. EE) NnsfSports 0 Htlo Thy HtlpbO< lt:OO D 0 0 III!!) CD''" (I) Pol~ Sllrseci~ (1) (!) ®"J fD News 0 Mlllioll S MO'llt: (C) (2hr} '1111• 0 Ont S\tp lt,on~ rennn D171 et ~ow• )Mu" (we$) (j) r~..-ry MUOfl '6~obert Hotton, Diane 81k1r, m ·1ruth oi Con1t1:1utnct1 Sal Mineo. m Mnie: "OUbidt 1111 Llw" (d11) ®J lers ~·•• e Dt•I '56-llay D•nton, Leith Sno'wdtn, m Tiii! Cn1 Grtnl Williams. m l>r•1Mt m Rollin' 11:15 Im Ci11tm1 ~ m Tiit Addams family 11:30 l) (jJ CIS lalt Mt'rit: (C) "Thq 1:00 0 00 TIM Waltou (R) When Cody R1" lar lhelr LNtt' (ltd~) '65 - NelJGn (Edu11d f11nz), Ollvia's k!hn Payne. lu1n1 Pttten. bnhtu1 uncle. comts to visit, Ille 0 ®.! m JoflnllJ C1tJM Je/f'J Wattons at! him 1 d1t1 with dMlr· Lewis is 111es1 host. ce1 Cordelia Hunnicut (01nn1 Hen· O Movie: "Tiit Cretl Ina .1t111n stn). Rtlll" (wu) '54 -Will1rd P1r~er. O ®l fDTht Htll11 •eclif Sin Tom Neal.- He!en·s guests art Glor!t Steinem, O (]) IKk P11r Tonlcht the Modtrn nu Qutrtr:t •nd 8.8. m Ftsti••t tf C11s1k1: "Twt!vt lllnf. l'Clod Hi1ll" (dra) '51}-{ll'!fO(J 0 M0¥1t: (Zhf} "Sntll TI!len:s" Ptd, Otan Japtr, Gary Merril~ (m,-s) '60 -Edward G. Robinson, Rod Ste(gtr, Eli Wallath. IZ:OO (i) M111llll Dillon O Cl) a> Mod Squid "Scion al D Mowlt: (C} "HontJll'ltoll Hoter De1tllM (R) Pete 1nd Li11c have (com) ·~ -Robert Morse, Robert trouble on 1 ~idnappint they wit· Goulet. Nancy Kwan, Jill St. John. nus wlltn tf\e vie.l im's hlhei re· l:OO (j) O O Cf' Nm fusu IO ieport the 1bd11ttion. Don f"Orler, Jull1 Adams, Ritlt11d Row· 0 Kisftw•J Pitre! Jq end Rou EUJott 1wst. GI 1ttp11'1 Kerott OJ lotiq: Fro• die OIJ!npic m La Stlttr• Joottll ED Wdtrptt Ht1rfftp (4 to 6 hrs) ID-""" ml 0 Show dtl Mo11111t1 EE Mo•lt l :JO m Mtn Crfflift SMw a;)Dr11111 t:Oll 0 (I) CIS Thundtf Mowic: (C) Friday DAYTIME MOVIES ~30 Cl) '1\t lllirldl" (dll) ~~I· roll Blktr, Ro1r1 Moore. O (CJ "AtlltnJ" (mus) 'S4-.lt111 Powell, fl!muMt Pvr6om, Debbie J!tyt!OldS, Vic O.mo111. 10:00 B "'111• lM1'• r,. lentll(tr" (Idol) 'l9--£llfn Or1w, CtOf&I Rill. U:otll "Sntllew ... <co1t1J '-40-Jackle 2:45 m AH·Nitht Stlow: (C) "Tiit ffomt- 1tteltfl." "Tiit Y1111pl11'1 GMrt" 3:10 0 McMe: "The Stael Mtn" (dr1) '58--John Loder. Marshal! Thom11· "" Cooper, ~tty field. "l•llr ti tlte Jillnetits" (Con!) '3.f-M!t West. 1:00 m "l• "'"" ' llcty" (dra) '50 ~!1r~ G1ble, Bubar• Stlnwyd. 1:30 O "Al W1r Wltfl tht Arm(' (com) '5l-Oean M1rtin, .lt:rry lewis. J ;OQ (j) ''S11b11111lnt ClftlMlllC!'' (dfl) 'St-William Holden, Hiney OllOll. Qj) "Act Ont" Conti. Namt 11 the Ct mt 3:30 O "Atmturtd Attadi~ Cd1') '64- 0tn1 Am:l1e1¥S, An11t Bixler. .. :OD El "foll're 111 tllt NIWJ Now" (corn) 'Sl-G11y Coo9tr, (ddil Albtrt, LH ..... KOC£, Cl lA!"SEL 50 Orange County'• Uftf" ~evlsion station. KOC'-'.:·TV, ha~ sche:!uled the foilo.,..·lng sptti:il program~ todlly. D.!tailed JistlnlJS or Channel rio·s programs 11:re 1:arrled in the Daily Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. Many Contestants Called; Few Cliose1i 111 Court .~Y JERRY BUCK LOS A1\'f:ELES IAP1 -The c;1:;ting calls are for people v.·ho are personable, allractivc and (Juick·\Vilted. 1'housands o( people sho1v up for lhc auditions. bul onlv a hand ful are selec!ed. A ·re,v dogged individuals keep returning day after day hoping !or a break, \Vhat role are they looking for? Contestants for the 14 nef\'.'ork game sho"'-'S. Th is may be the one area of :<ho\v business \.\'here kno.,..·ing somebody is mo"(' of a han· r!ic:1p th;1n a benefit. Jnnuenc<' doeo;n 'I count. f:\"('ry 1ncmbcr of the sludio aud1cnce has an equi1I chance to bcconh.! a con· lt•81ant. according lo Ari Alisi . "'ho 's in charge of selcclinl'.l" the contestants for the three H e a t t e r · Quigley shows, "l{olly,vood Squares'' and .. Barne" on NBC and "Gain· bit" on CBS. "EVERYONE gets an ap- µlicalion mid is inter,·iev.·cd." ~:iid Alisi. "J\fl)St of 001" in- 1e.-vie111ers are people studyin~ to be performers: nnd if lhry feel someone has potential. he or she is auditioned. '·\Ve look for people \l'ith outgoing personalities. If they ha \"e that. it. usuall.v means lhcy're attractive and b!'ight. You 1:an !el! if somebody has son1e1hing on !he ball. \Ve \\'ant a Cl"OSS·SCCtion that j")C()o pie at home can identify with." or u1e sho,vs A 1 i s i represents. "Gambit" is prob. ably the easiest to get on. It uses only married couples and runs through about 24 con- testants a ~·eek. "Hollywood Squares'' uses about to people a week fnr its daytime version and four for the nighttime syndicated shows. "Baffie " is .-tougher to get on. Not only does it use fe\\·er contet1tanls -six to eight a \l"ctk -but it is based on lhe ga1ne of blackjack and is hard lo learn. Contestants nlUSI go through practice s e s s i on s before going on the air. ALISI. a former actor "'ho gut into the game sh-Ow business in 1963, says. "'-lost people want the money and the priies. but some just want lo be on for the fun of it. The funny thing is, those who are on for the fun of it v.'in lhc most prizes because lhey're rehixed. ·• Holly\\·ood Squares'' gi\"('S a\\'av about $10.000 on the nighttime show and less on the --------------- "-' -u1.-."a; $ fAOIUM • ! ~·~ .. ..-w .... ,,. ROGER MORE fl .,,,- II "FORTY CARATS., '"' "DOLLARS" t RJ "LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE" '"' "BOSTON STRANGLER" IPGI "FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" '"' 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES" (R) "lfT THE GOOD TIME$ lOLL" '" "(Vil KNIEVEL" 1rG1 ~ u -JAMES \<f'". BOND _\ . 11' • '.Ill ~ r=. "LIVE AND ~ LETDtE" '· .. • ,.. ~ ~-I 1 I • Y:lf' ·IT !.:I iO· · .:.,;,, _ .. , • ' •_.. I • . -.(i. • .ui~~ daytime Sho\VS. "Gambit" and "Baftle" each give away $10,000 to $15.000 a week. A few contestants come on to win prizes fcv. a favorite charity. After the show, other contest'9Jts often d on a t e unwanted prizes to charity, and a number get together to swap prizes. "IT'S Al\tAZJNG the things people want.'' Alisi said. ;'They go. absolutely crazy over paint. We give away a lot of paint." In the 1950s, quiz shows ac· quired a reputation for cheating. and the net.,1:orks and the government cracked dO\\'n. Alisi said !hat. lo insure the honesty of the shows, the con- testants a r e shepherded arOund and kept as isolated as a courtroom jury. They must v.·ear badges and swear that they are telling the truth about themselves. Jda A1ae A1cKenzie, a character actress, acts as den mother • to the contestants. They are escorted to lunch and kept away from the stars who also appear on '·Holl.v"·ood Squares" and "Baffle ." One woman con· 1estant couldn't resist running O\·er to speak to Edie Adams and \l'as disqualified. APC>RI ~,,A ' ~ !. 1 I •< ' • ' '< PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A 28-year-old soprano s a n g selections from Handel and Puccini as part of her testimony in U.S. District Court hel"e. Opera singer Phyllis Bryn Julson Sutherland performed Tuesday for Judge Clarence Newcomer during a hearing on her suH against Auch Inter· Borough Transit Company. lo.1rs.· Sutherland of Belhesda; J\ld.. is claiming damages in excess of $SOO,OOO for knee and hip injuries she suffered in 1968 "'hen the chartered bus she was travel· ing in \vas involved in :111 ac· cident in suburban Conshohocken. The injuries rendered her "unable to endure the various physical trials necessary to give grand opera performances," she claims. She says she is unable to stand throughout an entire opera. Mrs. Sutherland s tood behind her husband George, ''°ho acoompartied her on a baby grand piano that had been inoved into t h e courtroom earlier Tuesday. ~!er attorney, James E. Beasley, said the performance was to establish his clienrs singing ability. Corona del Mar 673-6260 Dt..<tders · . · ~~-~ ••~A.._ .. 1'\:Digest.. '"'JhSil. .~ .lltlld'o , .. P•n•~ll U..-q bi.&~J. t ;,: .... Z(.\l' tlntted ~l'f1111 , " , l. ~ff~""@ fQl 7:00 a11G 10:20 Also "IROTHElt Of THE WIND" -1:50 Coll Tlteater for S1nday Sched11le "' COl<IDITION£0 LONG BEACH ARENA AOJ~CCNT PAAICIN(; THURS. AUG. 9 THRU SUN. AUG. 12 210 SEASIDE BLVD., LONG BEACH 90&02 AIA AllJACEWT ,,,,,~,,M~n~:f~1'o" CENTER ...... MON. AUG. 13 THRU TUES . AUG. 21 800 W. KA.TELL.A AVE .. ANAHCIM 92802 NEW! UNIQUE! UNPARAUEIEO! All SEATS RESERVED $3 • $4 • $S • $6 LONG BlAt H ARENA Thurs, Aue. 9 thru Sun. A111. 12 Thu1, ............... , 8·00PM Fri .••... , •••...•. 3:00 & l :OOPM S.!, ,, .•• ll100AM 3:00 &8:00PM Sun, . . ......... 1:00 & 5-00f'M SAVI: $1.00 O" RIDS U"DER 12 UClPI SAT. l SUN. TICKETS ON SALE lOHG BEACH AR£NA, TICl(ETRON, MUTUAL & LIBERTY ACUIC1£S. T1 OIDCI IY MArL St"D SU.f. AODRlSSED, STAMPED ["VtLOP[ Wilk CHECK OR MONCV ORDER, PAYABLE 10 RINGlH+C 81HlS. CtR· COS, MAIL TO AJIEHA DESIRED. \ ANAHEIM CONY. CENT!l Mon. (ve. Aua:. 13 tbru TUI. Au&. 21 l.bn . . . .•. , •......... ll;OOPM lue,. .., ••.. 3.00 &8,QOPM Y/td, ......• , •• , .3.·00 & 8.-ooPM T•1111. . ..••.•• , •. 3·00 & 8:00f'M Fri. ......•...• , . J.00 & 8:()()ftM Stt. ...... I l :~M J:OO & B:OOPM s.n .. _ ........... 1100 I S:OOPM Moo. •••••••••••• l:OO & 8;()(1f'lil TM .............. l:OO& 8:00PM IA'll $1.00 O" KIOS UMOU 12 IJCUT f111. Miit, SAT. & SU". Ut• 10111 l•ntA.m1rl(:•rll or M•Uor Cl't•ra• TICKtTS ON SAL[ CONY. COO"E". Ill MUTUAL & llSERTY AGENCIES BACKSTAGE -J\.t i k e Van Landingham, a Costa Mesan who recently took a degree in drama from UC ANOTllER SJJO'V for the Irvine, is now teaching at Cer- younger set is ' • T h e ritos College and will direct Emperor's New Clothes,'' the college's production or entering its second of three "Guys and Dolls," opening \\'ec kcnd s at the Huntington Aug. 3 ... among the cast Beach Playhouse. Sfua11 Elliot 1nembers arc several local is directing the production. s1udents Ric k Maher, .~ large cast of children. Sharon CrabtJ"ce and Gretchen many the offspring 0 f Van itypfr (who play Sky, playhouse actors and ac· Sarah and Adelaide. respec- tresses, is included in th e Hvely), llarriet Garfinkle· and show v.•hich is staged Fridays ass is tan t £'horeographer at 7:3o and Satuday afternoons Cynthia Nakamura ( r om at 2 o'clock at the pla.vhousc, .Y~ · · 2110 Main St., Huntin$!ton --------- Beach. Reservations 5364448. * ALL ROADS for local coin · n1unily thcalcr actors \viii m MANN THEATRES All TKEATllS COOLED IT lfFllGfl .. TION NOW PLAYING RESERVED SEATS Dn S•I• s,Jo ·1;1 uo Fri .. Sat .. Sun. llaon MARLON BRANDO .itL 'j>ifis X l<'.'00.(U~l;t~ • I • 11<1..,,n,,, li~"•J ~r••1l <I f,'QH THRU iHUR~ 8 P.M , fRIDIV 1 ! !.41 SAIUROOY 1· 1 ! g 41 SUNDAY 1-1 ! 8 All SIATS S4.00 l ~fl·IJS ·L1VEAN01IJolr -"'SILVER FOX" Soo1h coas1 Plaza 11 U•tlf'-Ofl'!'T 11 t•"TOI • Sl4 )Jj) R•vo•.,6- <re~w•r •1 L~'""" S1 ~?!;·l~?fi "' ~.no,~gor••· Mft•-"u"I !So 1 961·1•&1 1 • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 207, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSOA Y, JULY 26, 1973 c TEN CENTS . . County Smog Siege Expected Through Friday By GEORGE LEIDAL Of MM DtlllY P'lllt St.ff A five-county ban on driving by federal employes to ease a three-day smog crisis sllut down the t~·o largest federal agen· cles operating in Orange C.Ounty today. The Social Security Administration put on a phone recorded 1nessage telling of it.s closure due to the smog ban. The Internal Revenue Service and its wage- price freeie informalion office in Orange similarly was closed. Prospects for Friday relief from the Indictments Reportedly Delayed \VASHINGTON (UPI! -John D. Ehrlichman indicated this afternoon that the Justice Department knew who would be indicted for the Watergate bugging as early as last July 31 -six weeks before the indictments actually were returned. (kelated story, Page 3) If Ehrllchman's account is accurate, it would appear that the explosive case, in· volving two officials of President Nixon's re-election campaign among the seven original defendants, could have gone to trial before the presidential election in November. As it "'as, the men were not indicted until Sept. 15 and the trial did not get under way until Jan. 8. Five of lbe defen- dants pleaded guilty shortly thereafter and the other two were convicted Jan. 30. The testimony or Ehrlichrnan, until April 30 one of Nixon's closest advisers, slipped by ahnost unnoticed as he sought to explain to the Senate Watergate C.Om- niittee how thorough the Watergate in- vfsligaUon by the Justice Department had been. "In point of. f'act on four different oc- casims, lhe Presldcut of ~-United siates had lull-scale r<Pliti liW/'lbe at· torney general about the efforta of the entire Department of Justice in this," Ehrlichman said. "That included not only the FBI; it included the prosecutors, it included everybody who was involved in this investigation. "It was followed very closely by those of us in the White House who had an in- terest in this matter •.. "[ had a meeting, for instance, with the attorney general, Richard G. Klein· dle.nst, on the 31st of July in the year of the break-in and got a full-scale report from him in which he said that the in· vestigation was not yet completed, but it was very clear to the entire Department ~~Justice that !he.seven people who w~re litdic~ were in fact the only ones un· plicated." At that time, only five men \Vere pUblicly known to have been involved - tbose arrested at the Democratic Na· tional Committee headquarters at the Watergate on June 17, 1972. It was not until the indictments came down six weeks later that the olher two -G. Gordon Liddy atid E. Howard Hunl ~ were identified anrl formally charged ,Vith conspiracy, burglary, bugging and wiretapping. Jn his testimony, Ehrlichman insisted that Nixon ordered the FBI to investigate !See INDICTMENTS, Page I) Mesa Man Hurt While Collecting Trash in Irvine A 20-year-old rubbish collector from Costa J\1csa was injured Wednesday when he slashed his artery on the right loreann ·while picking up an empty tree container in Irvine. ·Gene Lee Daty II. 530 W. Wilson St .. was rushed to Tustin Community Hospital where doCtors laced up the wound with 14 stitches. He was released after receiving emergency .treatment. • Daty. an employe of Dewey's Rubbish Service In Costa Mesa. was taken to the hospital in the squad car or Irvine poUce officer Harry Ehrlich because he thought 'i'e.iting for an ambulance might have ~ Daly's life. When police arrived at the scene of the accident, 14642 Bel Aire St. in the Green- tree tract, Daty wM said to be bleeding profusely even though someone bad ap- plied a toum1quet to his arm. Senate Okays -Otlina WASHTNGTDN (AP) -'Ill< S<nale to- day confirmed I.he nomination of Jotm R. Ottlna ol LOs Angeles, to be a com· missioner or ed~ll<>n. Ottinf ls to "'" ··tted Sidne)' P. Marlil>d Jr1"5·11o"'1oE Ille U.S. OIOoe or Uucallon. three-day old smog wave are gloomy. The National Weather Service predicts an "easing'' ot the temperature inver- sion which traps auto exhaust producing smog near the ground. However, not enough air movement is expected to break the cycle completely meaning eye burning smog will continue. A1eanwhile, operations at El Toro 1'1arloe Corps Air Station t'Onlinued normally with no evidence of the base's 10,000 employes failing to show for work a spokesman said. ' "lost ot the civilian and military employes live off base. Additionally, jets continued to fly today, despite the state and federal government suggestions un· necessary travel be limited. Waves of brown, eye-burning smog smothered the Los Angeles basin \Vednesd ay, prompting environmental of- ficials to put !l federal smog emergency plan into effect fort.be first time today. Federal agencies in a five-cowtty area v:ere asked to shut down. Atost refused. The Enviro001ental Protection Agency put the Emergency Air Epi.90de Plan into e:Uect for the first time, acting under lhe authority in amendments to the 1970 Clean Air Act. announced Gordon Elliott, chainnan of the federal executive board. here. Under the plan, all federaJ agencies were requested lO close down if possible, urge essential workers to we car pools nod public transportation, and limit of· ficial auto travel. Compliance is at the discretion of the loctlvidual local ageocy chiefs. The fed eral plan covers Oran ge, Lo:; Angeles, San Bernardino. R1vmidc and Ventura copnties, an area populated by 10 million persons. Only lhe Internal Revenue Servict and Social Security Adn1inis1ralion said they \\.ouJd shut do"'" their offices for the dar. The FBI. Post Office, federal rourtS, U.S. fllarshal's office. ;utd othr.rs sn id they Y:ould rcina in open. The fl'deral Drug 1\buse Task r·orcc s11id agents "·ould "·ork , but clerical personnel would be given the day off. Costa Mesa S peecli (;o" Bo11alll ltC'ai.;11n 01dl·rl'<I all 11t:i1t· agenc1l'S lo ha lt 11:-1· of stnte O"'ned \'l•hit.:ll'S. r:<cept fur l·1111·rj.!1'lll'} purpost'S. in dO\\lllo\\n Ins ,\11L:1·ll'S, 1•ns!\•m l.os 1\Jlgelcs l'tlunty Jntl H1\ ers1dl' and San Ben1ardino cu11111 1~·~ The Los A11g1.>!1•s Au· i'o!lotion Control District <.'Jl!1'tl for (!ton\• r1 •ndi11~s rront .'.!$ to .::io 1J<1rts p~:r 1111111011 of air 1odny. The .50 lt·1l·I ls lhl' point ;11 1\hich a first sta ge i1lcr1 1s callL'd. \\'ht•n reached all dn\'ing in !hr I.Os Arlgl·ll'S basin is sup- !Stc S.\ltH.i, l'u gc t i Expert on Gas Crisis Blames Oil Companies D•llr-P'ltlt Shift he!• Tower of Power By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tfM 0.llY P'llOt Sttff If you have trouble filling up, you can blame the nation's major oil companies for part or your problem. That was the essence af a talk lo Costa i\1esa service station dealers \Vednesday by Lindsey ·-N. Miller. one of the state's leading students or the gasotine crisis. P.1iller. senior consultant for the Assembly Committee on Transportation. conceded that the country faces a major Tips Arrive ln.SUiying Of CdM Gir,l Circulcira containing information/ on the strangulation murder of Corona dcl Mar's :.inda Ann O'Kecfe today arc pro-. Viding a flood or tips from thro ughout Southern California. ., The special poster-type bulletin, in- cluding artist's composite draw ings of the slayer base:d on witnesses' descrip- tions , have been sent statewide. Leisure Services Director Keith Van Holt (left) and l\1ayor Jack llam- mett examine one of eight BO-foot high light poles just installed at Costa Mesa's TeWinkle Park. The lights, put in at a cost of $118,000, illuminate the park's ba seball diamond. Van Holt aitd Hammett threw the switch \Vednesday night for the first official game under the lights between Costa J.1esa and Estancia High SChool. "We've got some that look good," Ne\vporl Beach Police Detective Capt. Dona ld Oyaas said today. A showing of the mug allots on Television's Channel 7 Eyewitness News Wednesday night produced calls from El Segundo, Downey and even Victorville. New Legal Action Begun . The dorens of calls so far look best in case! where they originated locally, Capt. Oyaa.s said this morning. A key clue In the case which occurred July 6 is a tw·quoise van about th e same w1usual blue-green shade as that used on Sears service vans. To Get Nixon Compliance Two people who realized they had seen the l l·year-old girl getting into the vehi· cle came fo~·ard after seeing pictures of the victim in newspapers. WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon reftised today to comply with sub- poenas for White House documents and tape recordings of conversations with aides about \Vatergate. Both the Senate Watergate committee and special Watergate prosecutor Archibald C.Ox immediately started.legal action to compel Nil:on to comply. Nixon said he would not furnish tape recordings of five meetings with John W Dean ill, his former COWlse:I, who charg- ed in five days of testimony before the committeee · that in conversations Sept. IS, 1972 and in March, 1973, Nixon disclosed he know' of the \Vatergate coverup. The President said he would furnish some papers sought by the subpoenas - iL more specilfc requests were made. l,aird Says He Ordered Raids WASlllNGTDN (UPI ) -Fonner De- Cen1e Sec:retaq lllelvin R. Laird said tblJ allmlooD that lie ordered -.,.,d President Nixon &ptl<OVed -Ille 196>- 19711 Cland81lbe bcmlb!ng or Cambodl•. Laird told a White House news confer· enct that NlllOn approved the 852 raids over a 14-mcmth period and the NaUonal Security C.Uncll "was )lJlalllmous"' that Ibey shQuld not be made public at the tijj>e'beca.,. •CJI. P•••tl•I• dljllomaUe em· ''I cannot and will not consent to give any investigatory body private presiden· tial papers," Nixon wrote in o/letter read at the start of the Senate/committee's hearing. "To the extent that I have custody or other documents or information relevant to the work of the select committee, and !hat can properly be made publlc, I will be glad to make these available in response to specific requests." After Cox received a similar le(.ter, be asked Chief District C.ourt Judge-<John J. Sirici to sign a ~how;case order directing tSee TAPES, Page II She was reportedly doing so vo\uw tarily, although her family and friends have told police they didn't believe the girl found murdered the next day v.·ou.Jd go willingly with a stranger. The victim had started to walk home from sununer school classes at Lincoln Intermediate School to her home at 602 Orchid Ave., about one mile from the campus. Her strangled body was found by (See O'KEEFE, Pag< ll City Dall Wins Mcut May Have to Buy Srnall Car SAN DIEGO IAP) -"The Great Carport ArgumenV as it be· came known, finally ended this week when Fred Anderson gave in after thte years . Anderson neglected to take out a building pennit and built his carport too close lo a neighbor's land. The truck driver spent a weekend in jail and spent thousands of dollars waging a legal "citizen's right. battle" that ended with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sustaining the city zoning Jaws. Anderson, with the help of friends and a city councilman. sawed o!C the offending four reel of ca'l"'rt Wednesday. "There's no point going to jail," Anderson said after the appeal, but told newsmen ul'd do It all again." "What he ended up doing Is what we asked him lo do In the llrst placel" reflected. Lewis Colt, dty pl'O<eClllot when lbt battle began1n•l'70. ~t. I />.-, ' .-J,l...; __ .;•;_;• _________ _;. ____________ _J , \ I \ ' I , . • rrudc oi l supply crisis hu! said thal in- dust ry clai1ns the rxisling shortage at the gas pun1p level "'as caused by erratic government policies and environmental restrictions arc not supported by the facts. It v.·as the oil industry it self which dur· ing the Eisenhower Admlnistfation asked ror t.hc oil import quota Ja\v that pre\·rnted the in1pona1ion or cheap foreign oil and hurled the Uniled States into 1\·ha1 some termed a "Drain UP'I Tdfffl•lt llo111e 1vorl.:-1•robl.e1t1s Lori Paton. 16, of Chester. N.J .• has high sc hool homework problems. She sought informa- tion on Socialist Labor Party for a civics report. 'l'he FBI found ou t and began in vestigat- ing her. The ACLU found out and began investigating the FBI. The ACLU has now filed suit against the FBI . Ma11 F aci11g 1'rial For Having Room Witl1 Girl , 16 SCARA ~f E~1'0 <AP 1 -A Phoeni:< 1nan has been ordered to rc>lum to court next \Yednesday to face char~e.s of con- tributing to the deliquency of a "\1ery young lookin~" 16-yeaf-(l!d girt. 1he d1:1· trict attorneys olfice ~id today. Jack Rufull Cra¥i1ord. S2. who ~aid hl' was tht cxeculi \"e di rector of lhe Global International Employment Agency. was releasro on $315 bell Wednesday, ac· cording 10 \\.'llham A1uir, a consumer fraud attorney for the county. Cl'a\.\'ford and the girl arrived here Ju. ly 19 and stayed for five days in the sanle motel room \\'hlch wa!I the basis for tlle del inquency charge. fl.tu ir said . "She looked 16. Sl\f was. very young looking. They regi stered as Mr. and ~1n. Jack Cra wford," A1ulr said. AmC'nca Fir~\' Polu.y. nt't"'Orrhn& lo i'.tiller. ~l1 ller s;.ud Pn·."<lt•nt Nixon's Cabinet Tas k Force in 19i0 dl'll'rnuncd the quota to be "a great n1ls111ke" ;ind sugges ted that the rc>strirt1011s be li fted ln order to consi.'rve domestic rC'St•r \'CS for th e futu re. .. The 011 industry 1mmerl111\ely branded thr task fo rce ;is oit·:.idemic vigi lantes." said ~t illC'r. and 11;1s sul'Cl'Sshil tn pressinl': ror a ~tud~· l>y ;u1other pr('sidcn· t1al cmnmittf'e 11·h1rh came up 11·ith th<" opposite rtwmmcndation, tu lcav~ the quora law unchanged_ The qoota \\as recently hf1t•d by Presi· dcnl Nixon. ' ~liller su~cstcd the rrrat1c policies "'ere caused by the oil companies them sel\"es and that environmental con· siderations have slowed rerin ery con- struction are not factual. , "\Ve kno1\' that in Los Angeles <'Ollnty there hAs not bt.'Cn one single rcqul'st for a n~w oil refinery in five ycnrs. The (!JI t:on1pun11"S !Ill)' lhcy've Ix-tu turned down. 1\nd \\>(''re asking thein. •\\'here did y0ti apply~· But they're not telling us." One or the biggest problems en- countered in .\!illcr's 1nvcstii.-:ation of the ISee GASOLINE, Page ?1 * ~-·} Mesa Chamber WiIJ Investi g ate Ga s Situation A!J Costa i\trsa gas s1a t1011 011'ncrs 1v11l soon rC"CCl \'f' ;1 ciucst1onnairC' on n sub;eet aOOut 1rhich they h3 \'l' considerable ex- pertise : The gasoline shorla~c. The .~u n·cy \\'JS mailed out to some 80 dralers !o<lay by lht' Cll:unbl·r of Com- 1n~'rce stn·i ce sl;1tio11 ;ind g;1r;1gc com- m11tec. Cammittcc Chu1rni:111 Phil E\'an~ sn11 I 1hc ciuc;,1to11na1rt <Hn1s tu il!'~:s., the ef· fi>t l of 1h•· 011 cri~i;, on .1 c1t1·-111Jc basis. 1'he in forrnnt1on front Jt 11i!i be u"-Cd fo r a rrport to l " S llcp. Ancl r('v. f ltnsha1~' 1R·.\cv.por1 Be:.i ch1. Among !he !JUl?l-lion!i ar1' v.hclher dealers h31 c t·11oui:h i:a~ohnl' 11hethcr rh<-y think ~ll:?>Ohn.-!>Uppl1r~ :o.houtd hr tontrollcd h~· gO\'L'rlln)l'll!. :1nrl \lh"ther 1111.•y ti11nk ttx· 011 co1np..i111r:. have too n1uch control over prof11. Orange Coast Weather • The Or:.inge C.:oasL v.dl have cloudy bul warrn 11·cathc r 1omor· row, t>xtend ing through the w«k· en<l. There will be lil!I<" sunshin<:. hut tcn1pcratures \~111 be near 70 degrees, l\Jlh 1nk1ud area lhcr- mometcrs chmlJ1ng to 60. 1.\"s111 i-; 1·on.\ y lJt'lij)I{(' lilf' (lflrllll(Jll gJUl'ti.!1•1· D111fra aacl 1Jr111r1/n1lt•sli ~l11r1ey 111 11ir An1eru.·n11 prrll~. fl'lt' tHJl1cf1I In.it 111•ar 1rlle11 250.0011 1r1·r,· ktllc1I in t/1r tlll !J f;n~t 1\fr1cat1 rortntry of B11r1111cl1. llt•tcrls uu f'ogr 20 today. 1..111. "'" ' (Jtl1lotNJt 1 ci.,.11~ o.q (-!CJ )I C• ... •w"11 » CM•fll Mo!lttt U , It Elltot1tl P'tt1 t E1111fllhllMfll .. 11 Fllll"l:t 1'-U ,,., "" llW.tf'tl 1•. n. 11 ".n..c-" 111 hf¥1C.t IJ l.ftlt l.•llllff• 'M ......,,,,, ••. u Mu!INI ltwM• .. Nl'l! ... •I N.-t W . 1 O•t ... t C""M' !I """'' ,..,,,, ,. ~.. )J.ll II.CC-M1r~tlt ft·tl ,,,,...,,.... Jt '""''"" ... , w.,lllff 4 w-·• H•wt , .. ,. WtrW Mt .. f4. J • ,. • c ThurR!4'y, J11ly 2b, lq73 ' .!_EAILY PILOT ----~---- TONIGHT "ADRIENNE'S SUMM Ell" -Sooth Coll!:it ltepertory Theater, through Sun, 8 P·ll\, t"'RlDAY, JULY 27 MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY n,1c1NG -Fairground, 8: IS p.m. CONCERTS IN 'l'HE PARK -El Bekal Shrine &nd, Costa ?.1eh City Park, 8 p.1n. Ji'rona Page l GA SOLI NE ... gasoline shortage is that no lndependenl source! of lnfonnatlon exist aboul the oil industry. Government has to take the word of industry. ~fiUer said it had always been assumed that the gap between consumption and production blamed !or the existing shortage was between three percent and four percent. Those were the figures given by the Industry. Now the l\1obll Corporation claims it is only l.2 percent, according to ~liller. The disparity between figures is causing a lot of confusion and some questions over why a simple 1.2 percent shortage could not be managed without resorting to purchase limits and thousands of gas sta- tions going out of business 1hroughout the United States. Other questions the Committee on Transportation is asking Is "how this gas shortage was able to appear so miracu1ously and simultaneously all over the country." M.iller said. The pattern of an industry-wide shortage appearing overnight does not follow logic. It would have bet?n more reasooabTe for one company to feel the pinch first and then another and another, according to Miller. Rationing is not expected in Callfornia but the committee aide said that a bill baa been introduced as a result of public hearings held In Los Angeles and sin Francisco. Assembly Bill 1848 wouJd11uarantee a supply of fuel to California cities, public transportation agencies, and emergency service agencies, he said. A second blll would force slate agen· cies to restrict purcha3e of new vehicles to compact types. • FromPqel INDICTMENTS. the case thoroughly 1'with no strings &t- tacbed" after being auured in early July that an Jn-depth probe ""'uld oo< cx>m· promise secret intelligence activities abroad. "And they didn't find out enough to in· diet anybody except the original seven mec, notwithstanding the fact that the tracks of the burglary led right straight from the Walergate to the Committee to Re-Elect the President," ob-served Chainnan Sam J, Ervin (lJ.N.C.). "Well, that certainly bn't the President's fault ,'' Ehrllchman aald. "He turned the FBI loose." From Page J O'KE EFE ... chance. lying in a \\'ater·filled ditch ad- jacent to Back Bay Road by a group of nature walkers the following day, while a task force of volunteers had hunted overnight. Hundreds of bits and pieces possibly relating to the unexplained murder have been sifted by police since th en, including material from three clairvoyants claim- ing ESP powers. 2 Cited for Fires RAMONA <APJ -Tv.·o men have been issued misdemeanor cilations after ac· cldental\y setting brush fires that burned 42 acres, state forestry spokesmen said today. The fires destroyed watershed l&nd east of Ramona, along \vith some chickens. DAILY PILOT ~er.,... eo.11 OAU ... V PILOT, will! Wflldl IJ -""" "'-,._P1n1, II P\lllll-.., lfte Orl"'19 C.0.11 l'.-il~1"' Comp.on•. S.O.- r1,_ _.llloni •r• Mt\flltd, Mon111, lll•0119ft Fr.IN,, fir CO.II Ml.,, N .... llOtl 9eec~. H...,1!1>11ton •t«ft/l'-11'" Vt!I~, l "I...,. aMeti, ltylntJINdlHecli Ind ~n ClfmMfll ~" Ju1n C1pi1tt1no. A tl"IJI' r1111oM1 •1tlorl 11 pUbllloMcl "'"'"'•1• 11'111 1-~·­ T ... "'lllc!Potl .-u1.t!l1ftl119 pl1nt 11 11 l• W..t l1r Sll'ftl. (011' Mu1, C.llf'IHll•, tHit. -•lt1rt N. W114 l'rftlllftll "Ill i-11t1u11111 J•cli: R:. Curit\' ~ l'rnlll1111 .,,. 0•119••1 MtM••r Tlio,..•1 k••w ll •titor Tlu .... 11 A. Murphln1 MtM91"9 •di! ... Cfi,,1,, H, l•ot lllch1r4 '· N•U Aulll•11I MtMtlrtt l!tllou C.... "-C>Moo JJO W11t l•v Strt•I Molll111A44r11u",,O,101 1160, tl616 --Ntwf0'1 hocll! *»I N......-f lllu\IYI,.. u.-•Hdli m "-' ... _ l'tv!ltlrll*i IMCll: UWJ •Mell ~•rf '",.._ .. ~ •1 NOl1ll 11 Cf"''"'~ .. , , .. .,.... 17141 642-4)11 ClimlW A~tljr 1 t4J:•l l 71 ~...... ltn. o..,.. C..61 l'\l'tll"'"" °"""9rlf. Ht """ '"''"· Hllll"''""" ,.II.,,.. nwttw w Mw ... 111_.. ,..,...,. ""'. .. rl!"WIKW "l'lffllllt ltlCltl ,., • ... .,, "'1rlfM --· ~ CJiltl .wl ... Nit .. (9'1• MtM, Cf.lffrWtilL· ~IM IW .. rrlw ..... "*""'~' w -n u .11 _.,,., 1'111~ ....,!If,.., q ... ~. Sharp Cut In Federal Co sts Told WASHINGTON (APJ -The Nixon ad· ministration announced today it was suc- C('Ssful in holding doy,·n government spending during the l!Y13 fikal year end said the .budget deficit was $J'6,4 billion. The deficit v.·as sharply reduced from the January forecast or $25 billion and resulted from hig her tax receipts during the year plus reduced federal spending . the government said. At the same llme. President Nixon issued a statement reiterating bis goal of achieving a balanced budget of $ai9 billion for fiscal 1974. ··we held the budget Jlne in the year just passed without raising Wi:es," Nixon said. "I believe v.•e can do so again ~ and in fact 'achieve a balanced budget - in fiscal year 1974." Tolal budget ouUays for fiscal 1973 Y>ere placed at $246.6 billion, $3.2 blllioo below earlier estimates. Receipts were plac('(f at $232.2 billion. <in increase of $7.2 billion over tile J a11uary estilnate. THIS IS BALBOA'S INFAMOUS WEDGE WHERE SURF NEXT TO NEWPORT HARBOR'S WEST JETTY IS BREAKING AT 10 FEET When You Surf the Dirty 0 1' Wedge on D1y1 Like These, You NHd Skill, Guts - and An Awful Lot of Luck ?lfajor reduction s in 1973 outlays v.•ere made in public assistance grants by the Department of Health, Education and \Ve!Care and in benefit claims for diJ- abled coal miners. ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Ran ch En1plo ye Will Face Court Ove r Shooting A Starr Ranch employe accused of murder iq the fatal shooting early this month or a trespasser al the old San Juan Hot Springs is set to appear Friday morning for a preliminary hearing. Robert Carl "Whip" Slatten, 41, ti.as been accused in the shooting of a 2l·ycar· old Los Angeles area man after an altercation at the off-limits springs along Ortega Highway July 11. Slatten, who authorities said was not authorized to act as a security guard, allegedly shot Dennis Ray Glahn in the chest after an argument over public use of the derelict spa. The court action in South Orange Coun- ty !\1unicial Court is set for 9:30 a.m. in the Division 2 court o( Judge Richard Hamilton. Slatten has remained in custody al Orange County jail since the incident. Slatten orlgtnally was treated at the Orange County Medical Center Jail Sec- tion for treatment of minor hurts he received during hJJ aUeged lllght from the shooting acene. Offlcera aald the l'anch jeep being used by the defendant wtnt out of control and era.shed as the man assertedly fled the shooting scene. SlaUen had already been set for court action on another bot springs lncklent when lhe ahootlng took place, autborllle5 '8.ld. EarUer this year U is alleged the ranch hand beat a trespasser with a blackjack during a similar altercation. The springs, for generations a mecca for b4thers and revelers, Is on private property and the public has been de- terred from entering the area because of law eofrocement problems there. Son of Newport Dentist Killed In Auto Crash A Harbor Area dentist's teenage aon was killed late Wednesday night in a t-.tono County traffic accident while en route to a backpacking expedition in the !l.1ammoth Lake area. The California Hlghw'y Pa trol at Bridgeport said Todd Stringer, 16, o( 700 S. Bayfron t, Balboa Island . suffered fat al injuries when the car left the road and he "·as throYi'n out. Investigators tod ay were attempting lo determine a cause or the accident , while Dr. Daniel Stringer and his wife were en route to make arrangements for return of their son's body. Young Stringer was reportedly headed for the family's cabin In the scenic recreational area \\•hen !he acc ident occurrt.>d near the settlement or Ton1·s Place. tnforma tlon \\'as not lmmedlRtely available Joday on whether the victim v.·as riding alone or, if not, whether anyone else was injured. Victi rn Carved By l ris lt Gro up BEi.FAST (UPI) -Memb<n of the extremist Prolestant group called the \Jstttr Freedom Fighters carved the In· itial~ "UFI'"" on the body or 11. Rom11.n Catholic man before he e.!ICaped thMl, police said todAy. A police SPokesman said the man "'ns the firsl person taken pr\!.Ql1er by the UFF -which has claimed responslbllity for six murders In recent weeks -to eKape and de~lbe kidnapers. A total of 8.'i5 per&onS ha\le died In four years of violence 11.mong Northern Ireland's majority Protest.ants, Roman Catholics and l':ecurlty forces. 153 Saved at Newport From Waves , Rip(ides An Ontario man broke hi s neck and 152 other bathers had to be pulled fron1 the churning sur! \\1ednesday as Nevq)()rt Beach lifeguards battled eight to IO-fool surf and the strongest riptides so far th is year. (Related story, Page 3.) Curtis Pack, 34, was listed in serious but stable condition at Hoag Memorial Hospital today with broken n e c k vertebrae, a damaged spine and almost total paralysis. Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said Pack was injured at about 6:40 p.m. when he ran out into the waves near Newport Pier, dove in, and bit the bot· tom. "The surf really had nothing to do with his inj ury." Lockabey said. •·Jt was ac-- tually pretty calm In that spot but he just dove in head first and misjudged the depth." Lockabey said an unidentified beacbgoer pulled the UDCXNCioua man to * * * Lifeguards Gird ' For Hectic Time At Huntington By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ~ °''" ,,i., l l•ff I Huntington Beach lifeguards are girding for a hectic weekend in the face of the possible combination of a ifexlcan hurricane surf and a Los Angeles heat and smog wave. HWTicane Emily, now centered about 500 milea south of La Paz, has already generated some big but sporadic surf and its attendant riptides and side currents. Lifeguards at Huntington's state and city beache.s said they pulled 200 people from the surf Wednesday alone. Lifeguards were hesitant today IG predict an onslaught of "killer surf" for the weekend but both the state nnd city agencies are pfanning to put extra guards on duty for the next three days. shore and caUed lifeguards \''ho ad- ministered emergency first aid until an ambulance arrived. Lockabey said the surf around the pier \vas probably about the only calm spot on the whole Newport Beach shoreline. "\Ve had some pretty rough surf and riptides all the way along," he said. "I'd say they were the worst rips all year." More than 78,000 people came to the beach despite dreary overcast and fog thaUlung on until mid-afternoon. Lockabey said the surf today was still high -up to six feet -·and very chop- py due to gusty winds out of the south . He said the surf most likely v.·iil con- tinue to rise today and last into the weekend because or the swells being generated by Hurricane Emily off the Baja California coast. "We are kind of expecting mere hea\'Y surf today and I'm sure the bad riptides will still be there," Lockabey said. warn- ing week swimmers to stay out of the v.·ater. I . \ From Pagel TAPES ... the administration to tell why it shou ld not be compelled to comply with the su~ poenas. Slrica did so, giving the \Vhlte House until Aug. 7 to repl y. Tile seven--member committee, mean- tin1e, voted unanimously to instruct chief counsel Samuel Dash to carry the issue to court. He will seek a declaratory judg- n1ent from the court asking for an order telling Nixon to comply. Both moves will launch a legal battle which legal experts expected ultimately v.·ould have to be settled by the U.S. Supreme Court. Some said a decision could be reached \Yilhin three months. Committee Chairman Sam J. Ervin (D- N.C.) called Nlxon's condition that the panel specify exactly which documents it \vants ··an impossibility." "\\'e're not clairvoyants." he fumed. •le said the committee did not kno\v what papers Nixon had, and therefore could not possibly ask for them in- dividually. 3 Camps Offered For Mesa Youth Hiking, swimming, cookouts and ex· cursions are part of the run planned for Costa hfesa children this summer by the Department of Leisure Services. Three day camp sessions are being of- fered for boys and girls in grades one.to six with the first week-long ' session scheduled . .to begin on Monday. Additional sessions are scheduled to begin Aug. 6 and Aug. 13, at a cost or $10 per session. :_ For infonnation about day camp registration. contact the city Department of Leisure Services, 834--5300. Se<:retary of the Treasury George P. Shultz announced the budget figures at a ne1\·s briefing and praised Congress foi' its role in helping hold federal spending in check, even though he acknowledged there v.·ere differences on expendi1w-es for individual rograms. NY l\'la u T wuhles Into Vat of Beer NEW YORK (UPI) -Herbert Rainer, 47. was cleaning a lS.by-~foot tank at Piel's brewery in Brooklyn Wednesday night, when he fell through an 18--lnch hatch and into a huge vat flUed to about the four-foot level with beer, authorities said. A police emergency squad removed the u,nconscious Rai ner from the tank and took him to a hospital. He was in fair condition toda)'. Mesa Officer pf Month Specializes in Training The Qlsta Mesa O'ime Prevention Commlltee's July Officer of the Month has a chief duly in the area of planning, research and training. This is because, at 33, Sgt. Jack W. Calnon has worked virtually every other area of local police work and can tell the rookies how a ~eteran would handle situation!. During his career which began as a reserve officer in Janu3ry, 1961, Sgt. Calnon has been a ptraolman, traffic of. ficer. and detective specializing in narcotics investigation. He headed the vice and intelllgencc detail at one time and his office wall was decorated with a chart showing various in_terlinklng gangland ~tafia families. Raised in Newport Beach, Sgt. Calnan attended Horace Ensign School and Newport Harbor Hig h School. shifting to Orange Coos! College, v.•here he earned his AA deg ree. He is a top marksman on OOth rifle and pistol ranges and competes with the C-Osta Mesa Poli ce Department's priz~ \Vinning pistol team, plus 1he tactical squ.:id and honor guard. Off-duty recreation -as in the case of many local officers -i3 virtually any type or motorcycle riding. OFFICER FOR J UL Y Sgt. Jack Calnon "If the weather gets crummy and the surf goes down, that'll be great/' said Lt . t.1ark Bodenbender of the city's Harbor! and Bcachts Department. · "\Ye C:l.n always send the extra men home.'' He said the regular weekend contingent of guards at the city beach will be In- creased by eight men to a total or 63. The 34 guards at the state run Huntington and Bolsa Chica beach's will be aided by ex- tra relief men. NeW! General Beclric's i •1 -----, General Electric I "On weekends like thl1 one could be, the guards are really busy making rescues, so we like to be able to send around extra relier men to glve them n1ore rest," a stale lifeguard spokesman said. The uncertainty over weekend surf conditioos hinges on Emily's nei:t move. At the moment her \Vinds have been measured in the 90 to 100 mph velocity -\.\·hich Is a decrease from the 120 to 140 1r.ph they were clocked at earller thi!: \\'eek. \Veathermen say. however, that if she starts for land, her winds will pick up and If that happens, the surf will Ukely get blg and stay that way for a Cew dnys, Lifeguards said the surf this morning, like W~sday morning, has been SJXl radlc, with five to eight-foot sets C()m- lng through "about IS minutes apart.·· Wednesday afternoon. however, con- ditions stabilized and the big sets Yi·ere pretty consistent. "Even with the 1poradlo conditions, wa have bad rip tides and side currenta," Bodenbender Mid . The guards speculated that if the surf hold1 1teady lhi1 afternoon and if It Is big f'riday morning, then they're probably in for a weekend siege. "We get this big surf and then a heat wnve wlth about fl0.000 people on the beach nnd 1hnt's whtn we really IJC'I busy," the ci1y lifeguard said. I I I 2o.8 CU. FT. 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