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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-08-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-. - -- • • • • • • lf!ot#ier lf~ll11 al Her Anguish • ~ . ' • ' (l ' ' ~Qper111arkets Cry . For More Reef- --B~y.ers Snap It _Up r • n ..,.. Lifegµards Find .Bo~y On Bottom BY JOHN ZALLER Of .... ~" "'"' s;," A 2$-year~ld Duarte man drowned in Newport Harbor Sunday, after suffering an apparent epileptic seizure during a swimming race with a buddy, police said. One Newport Beach lifeguard aad a friend of the victim were Within 100 feet of Stephen Baroni at the time he.suffered his fataJ seizure. 1be incident occurred in the Bay Island chaMel, according to lifeguards. Baroni, however, apparently sank swiftly to the bottom .in 10 feet of water and searchers were unable to find him until 55 minutes ~ter. he varli@~. 'Baforu, j,ho had bappilf told friends be hadn't bad an epileptic seizure for 10 months·, was swimming at Montero Street Beach at the time of the tragic ac.. cident. · "He· bad gone about 50 ·yards in an 80-· yard race across the channel to Bay Island and back," one investigator said. "He was swimming sidestroke when he / just stopped, laid in the water" a serond and sank," the lifeguard spOkesman ex· I I Spent · $6 Million . \ . . ·On Nixon~s Do111es~ " ·Military Dis~loses - ... . . • • Ill 1es • ' W :l -fil ' -----;---·- ' Bayers Grubby ·Grocers Scream For More Meat By The Associated Press nation and planned a rally in Los Aiigeles Supermarkets hoped for new shipments to boost the boycott. · of beef today to replace merchandise The five-member 1..-0s Angeles Board or snapped up by weekend shoppers, but Supervisors has endorsed the boycott proposal, and two stores in the city, a many stores said th.;!y expected only a men's clothing shop and a sleep fraction of what th1ey needed. A 1 furni shings ouUit, said they planned to A spokesman or one Ll)s nge es close. / ~arket said be was fig~~g on Bee£ was the critical item for most probably a 60 percent cut ..,m the ~le over the weekend however. amount of beef he normally g~ts. . . ' , "You open the door and it's like n.e guy came m. here and filled UJn;e gangbusters," said a. s u p e r m a r k e t shopping ,1?"gs. with meat for his employe in Sacramento, as he looked at restaurant, sa1.d the meat ma?,a~er of the Jong line at the meat cotmter. , Ra1ph_s Market m _J..o;! ,;"'Dgeles. lt s not Meanwhile, the government was stick-fair to the custoll!ers. . , ing to its guns on the beef price freeze -The store later imposed a limit of two at least. for tfle time beiQg~: . steaks B-?d· t~o ~~els ~r ~ bee~ ~r Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz shopper -~ praeut:e. ai:topted by ABC tel · · ' "lss d supennarkets m many cities. on ,, evisio~ s ues a n Restaurant officials in the Santa Ans':"'ers Sun~ay said that the freeze 0~ Monica area said guards were being put retail beef pnces wotOd be . keP:~ until on delivery trucks by some meat sup- Sept. 12, the date set ~Y Pres!denl Nixon pliers because of the poE;Sibility of theft. last month when he lifted price controls "These trucks are worth a fortune from all other foods. . . .. . now/' said George Bennett, head of the Ho' ever •. he, also said it remains to Santa Monica area restaurant associa· ~ seen" whether th~ ~eeze might be tion. ~~fted ~ner, explawng there was In the San Francisco area, shoppers More Nixon Home Costs Disclosed WASHINGTON (AP) -'The Wblte House disclosed· today that the military has spent about $6 million for ccm- munications and security installations at President Nixon's home and office com~ plexes in California and Florida. This is in addition to about $2 million spent by the General S e r v i c e s Administratioo as well as undisclosed ainounts spent by tile Secret Service. In divulging for the first time the cost figures for sensitive presidential com- munications and security projects, Depuo ty Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren also said Nixon ordered a full accounting prepared on details of the purchase of .his homes. in San Clemente, and Key Bis- cayne; Fla. This accounting Will be made available w'ithin a month, Warren said. The spokesman would not divulge the amount spent by the GSA and Secret Service for Nixon's security and support. GSA officials scheduled a news con- (See EXPENSES, Page ZI Orange Coast plained. ·-· ... • · As Baroni was going down; he stuck one arm back out of the water as though reaching for help, but made no cry, lifeguards added. . recogrut1on of the .fa~t that lots of ques-emptied some supermarket shelves of · t1ons b~-~ raised" and lots of beef while other stores began rationing pressure lid teen put on. supplies for the firsl time. •• • • .• · By Jl)HN ·:VAt;TEllZA S!)9kesmen said today the youngster • • ot ""o.1w ,.,,.. 1tttt • lhlJ morning became' able to breathe on Jas<in . l\ta, ~· of Ciplllraoo Beicl!, his oWll', without ihe beW of a r~plrator CODlln'Ytl lo tnal<• nlark;d· lmpmenlellr, , which had been keeping him alive for In ,a i'JP.rtver~'hosPltal t¢ay, where _.,..than two·weeks. . _ ...,,.. havo ruled oot the pollilll~IY Mri. ,Rea, 29, bad.steeled llenelf !ale till! Ille ~ would be a polenllll 1ast wt10< 1o what then aeemed inevilable tumplanl dOoor undtr Pr t! I e n I -bet son would di.e at the Unlveriity of clrC1111111anceS. Colorado Medical Center and his kidneys But ' Utile """" of the crlli<ally m and liver would lie removed for implants Yll!IP«lter'• condition hal been Ovtll to lnlo three other dying yoongsters. hi\ !IJOlhl!r wbe Is awilUng -a on the' But 111 that chall§ed Friday when !ale •of her· """ ll'om her home on !he physicians determined that because of a southern orange Coast. alight Improvement in the coodltloo of ~.Linda Rea said today that lbe IHI the OOOl&tOBe )'OUllgsler, be could only be olll abe. rocelved froro Denv,,r was considered "a live patient." Satunlay ond tho wait "is n'*lllnf •· That Improvement -the .appl!renf WI-eek" out d mo." ' • tllee IMPllO\!E, Pace If ., If-·~~. Gi:l!I .. HW["~n , ~epo;,t"'!Ji' -ocmeiv""ed ~e sfnklng victim and raced out for Baroni. Within-four minutes, seven other lifeguard! were also in the area searching with Horman. However, underwater visibility was only 18 illcbes~Wi.th a.J'ace mask, making the search extremely difficult. SystemaUc sweeps of the area where Baroni vanished still failed to turn up the )>ody after 4S minutes, I which time scuba divers joined !lit hunt, finding. him 10 minutes later. hidden Jn dense, three- foot-deep eel grHa abeui 20 feet from the .. spol wbere he was seen to sink. · Baroni had earlier -rowing In the bay with a groop of frieftds hnd lold then) he waa ttred. However, he reportedly took medication about 30 minutes before going swimming and lold his eompanlona he felt good. A youth on a paddleboard who passed Baroni aboot a mlJ\ute before he wis stricken told police the victim did net ap- pear faUgued, .Or did he nollce anything ,unusual. • some 0C011S~er groups ~ged sur.port Fry's Supermarket in San Jose was for a Don t Buy Anything ~ay on sold out of beef, .and major appliance ~esday . to protest the soarmg food s.tores in the suburb reported a waiting ,p~~:r; Sheeti, a I~iider ~ Fiihtiilna---lis~,;~~·::~yf~7:~ that's .. ;h;" tlon T~et~er (Fl'.f-), said the group problem,'' said Al Franzi, general ffi1in- would distribute leafiets throughout the ager of Petrini's Butcher Shop in San Francisco. CLASSIFIED AD SELLS IT FAST You dOn't need a magic' wand to achieve results. Look whAt a Daily Pilol clasSified want ad can· do: · , ·~ Dart, very low mil eage, xlnt cond. r/h, auto, air cond .. V -8 eng. Will accept 11150 for quick sale. (Phone No.) (Name ). "Very, very pleased," says the ad· vertiser. "Fantastic resull"l!" Find out for yourself by dialing the direct line - 642-51178. In Walnut Creek the consumcr·ron- troUed Co-Op food market began ra- tioning meat at four steaks, one roast and two chickens per c;ustomer. Btu·glar Takes 'B}lnk' Front .Mesa Residence A burglar who ransacked the master bedroom of the Yuri Fenati residence in Cosl~ Mesa eseaped Sw>day night, taking only a "Pebbles Flintstone" bank con- taining $40 ln sliver coins. Fenati, of 1781 Oriole .Orlve, told Of- fi cer Ed Dryzmala that the intruder pried opc.n a window -brf:aklng it tn two placos -tq goin entry while lhe fRJl)ily was away • • • Weather ,. ll'll be 11¢1)'. sunny .Tu<sday,_ • }o11owing the usual low clo\tds and drizzle along the Orange. Coast.. Temperatures will range from 70 at the beaches to 80 inla,nd. Over- night lows in the 60s. I INSWE TODA 'l' 'No one likes to die outside tl~e country he loves,' said for- mer Cuban diCtator Fulgencio Batista last year. The tyrant~ who was ousted bv Fidel CastTo iii 1959. died at a Spani.sh resort today. See story Page 4. INlillf 11 l..M, In• 11 C•Mforlll• J Cl!Mkl!lf U• 11 '''''"'" .. ,. (Ol'l'll(• 11 '"°""'' lS 0..141 M .. l(M I ,,., ...... , ... " ' ~flltf'llll'M'fttflt ,, •1n1fl(t _,-1t-11 ...,,__ 11 Ill $tf"tltt I ""'" L.IMlf't ....... -Mllltnal N ... OfMl!M ,_.., .. " I .. ... tlle lttttrf ... Jvl•I• Ptl'9-r 1• ·-" 1 .. 11 ltotll Mlrllttl l•ll ,....,,...,. '' TllMttn lf WMl'"r 4 W ....... t MIWI IJ.11 Wtf'l<ll Htwt I • ... ' . ~ Monoay, A11gu\t b, t'-11.> U.S. Jets Bomb Ally's Refugee Camp Fro• Page 1 EXPENSES ...... ference to disclose ils total spending and the Secret Service was reported prcpar· ing its cost figures . Of nearly $6 miUion 5pent by the military, Ylarren said $640 000 or the communications equip- men't Is "recoverable" and will be removed when Ni.xon leaves office. ~ a0 PHNOM PENH (UPI ) -United Stales • planes accidentally bombed the Mekong • River town of Ntak Luong today, Ur fllctlng more than 300 casualties E>n the • refugee-swollen populace in the worst ~ -------------- CAMBOOIANS CITE VICTORY IN SKl_RMISHES-Pa91 4 mistake bombing of U1e entire Indochina wa.r, Cambodia Air t=-ort-e sources reported. A Cambodian air force officer who took part in rescue elforts said the toll n1ight rise to mort than 100 dead and up to 600 Vt'Ounded. ~ A survivor In a Phnom Penlt hospital saJd the bombing destroyed the Neale Luong city hall, a hospllal, ,an army and a navy base and scores of houses. There were conlllctlng reports whether the bombing raid was canied out by 852 heavy bombers which carry a 30-t.on bomb tood each, by swinging Fil t flgllter- bombers which carry an IS-ton bomb load each, or J>OSSibly by both. In Washington, a Pentagon SPokesman, Jerry W. Frledheim, said he did not have a full report on the incident but "the in- itial indications are that part of the bomb load or one B52 fell short ol the intended target." ~ Ile said the area hit appartn was a military camp area con.ta Cam- bodian trooos and dependents. He bad no statistics on casualties. More than 200 •·ounded persons were brought Into Phnom Penh, 31 miles northwest or Neak Luong, by helicopters and boats. There was no definite number of !hose killed, OOcause their bodies were left in the rubble of the town, a ferry-<:rossing point and strongpoint of the defense line southeast of the capital. An officer who helped evacuate the wounded said be counted at Jeast 50 dead sprawled in the town. "From the nolse I heard, t guess there were four planes," one victim in a hospital bed told a UPI reporter. '1At first, I thought it was harassment fire and we ran for cover." U.S. Air l'"or~ Gen. John Vogt, head of American air operations in Thailand, flew to Phnom Penh to discuss the in· cident with Cambodian President Lon Nol, and returned to Thailand today. lleavily bandaged women and children crying and pleading for help, reached Phnom Penh by boat late this afternoon. Helicopters were used to bring in the more .&eriously wounded who still had a chance for surv lval. Cambodian Air Foree sources said the planes unloaded their payloads -up to 180 tons of b<lmbs -over the sleeping town by mistake shorUy befo~ dawn , and that Neak Lilong. one <Jf the more strategic towns on the Mekong, was reduced to rubble. 852 bombers norn1ally ny so high there is no sound associated with 1hem unlil the explosion of their bo1nbs is he-ard. Early reports said Fills were in the area. Warren gave this breakdown of costs at each location: -Key Biscayne -One-time costs of $730,000, including $418,000 for a helicopter pad, $14.000 to: a. shark ~et and $300,000 for commun1cat1ons eqtup. ment. Rec urring costs anuuall y of $.130,000, or a four-year tot.;iJ of about $1.:1 1nllllo11. ~ 'Improper Thi1a9s' . . . -. . : : . ;: .. •.. . FNmlPagel -Bahamas -Commun ications equip- ment installed . at Grand Cay, Walker's Cay and Grand Bahamas Island totaled $100,000. ... ,. ' a Gray Says Nixon -CAMBODIA :.::{:·'.=~·:.; .' .• -..<;an Clemente -One-time costs ot $1,065,000 including $550,000 for com· deiection of some braiO wave activity in munications equipment and $515,000 the victim of a near drowning in Hun-spent at the Western White J{ouse. offi~ IMPROVE ... tington Beach two weeks ago -meant complex adja cen t to the Presidents ... ··:.: : ... .·: .. · . . . . that the delicate decision to allow the home. , • • .. Given~ 'Warning' . . . . . . • S(;·~-6 :.~:.~ ~~ - . -''"Q'l.tt ';°._:· ::::. :.:::-,:~. N!AKIUONG ----=-YOUJlgitte_F-lo-die..-eou!_i;l ·nOt. be m<1de bj' !'-. --;: . . ,..... . . . ~ special medical team. """"tn add1tl0fl, anrt6a1 "tg--utting costs at For Mrs. Rea , the agony appears only San Clemente ~r~ $677,000. or a four·year to have just begun. total of $2.7 1n1lhon. ~ "f'm just getting depressed about this (,, 'DION'T KNOW' -Fonner Al· torney General Richard Klein- dienst is prepared to testify this week that be gave Presi· dent Nixon all the fa cts in the Watergate investigation on April 15 and was convinced that Nixon did not know until then a bout lhe coverup. Bulgarians Find 'Cyclops' Bones SOFIA, Bulgarla (UPI) -Bulgarian archeoJogists have unearthed the skeleton of a "cyclops" while excavating near the tO"'ll of Raz.log in the sou thwest of the country, the Bulgarian news agen- cy BTA said, A brief report said the skeleton, which was found in a burial place, "'as fi ve feet., eight inches tall, and bad only one eye socket in the coron al bone above the nasal cavity. According to Greek mythology, the cyclops were a race of giants with single eyes in the middle of their foreheads. Tanaka Plays Golf SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka got In some golf bet~·een official receptions during a ll·••o.day stop here that climaxed a week-long U.S. visit. Tanaka, 55, departed for Tokyo ~·ith hi s entourage of 70 aboard a Japan Air Lines chartered jet Sunday. 1 OUN/ii COAST IT DAILY PILOT T~• Or•nll• CH1I OAILY PILOT, wlltl .... ICll II cemtimed• 11'11 Nt .... •l'ttU, II PVl!llV!td DY -O••lltt COtil Pvb! .... 1119 Compeny, $.,,e. n!t IMll!lon1 ••• P11bll11MO, MOndtf ltll'OllQll P'rWtl'. lt>r <!'Mlt M~, N-rl IHVI, •hmt!ng!Ofl 9••ct1/FOl.Wltoln 'lltllty, l•O...,.. ••tll. lrYIM/$9dd1M:IM:lt tl'ld kn C,..,._tel $tn J11111 c..1111"'"'· A 11111111 tt0ion.1 ..iltion II l'Ubl!llMO &.lul'IUIYI oncl Slll!OtYL fnt prlnc!SMI ~lli.lllflO p$9nl 11 t! :UO WQj 111' Strtifl, COllO Mtw. Ctt~i., tHN, Rolt1rt N. W1M 'rnldfftl t l'IO Pub!IU!tr J1ck R. Cvrl1y ~ Vk-e Prn ldtfll ll'IO G-tl Manoo.r Thofl'l•1 Koo•il l!'ClllO• l"On:Jef A. M11rpllino t111N1tfncl liCltror Ch•rlt t H. Looi .. lftcho~ ·r, N1U- .-..a1111111 MOlllOlnt '-•ltwt WASffiNGTON (AP) -Former acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray UI said h:>- day he thinks he gave President Nixon sufficient warning last year for him lo know that ,improper and illegal things were being done by his staff members. Gray called Nixon July 6, 1972, less than three weeks after the Watergate break-in, and told him that men on his staff were trying to wound him -by using tbe FB_l . and the Centra~ Intelligence Agency to confuse investigatOrs trying-tO' interview tWo. key witnesses, he said. "Do you lhink a reasonable and pru· dent man , on the basis of the warning you gave him at that time , would have .... ... ·::: [a J . -. . -.. . . :. ~ "-.. -ti3t : --. . . : ·.·i~':' ~·· .=;111 ...... . . .' . : . . . .. . . . . • ···.· .. :·. • L.:J n ···· C. •••• • ••• • C' • • • • l>:::. 0 ·.· •••• . ::·· -: .... . -.: 1 -.. . . . . . ,_ ··.·. . :·~·~.~··-·'"'. ···-:.:·: :.:-:-:.:-:.:-:·:·:-: TOWN OF NEAK LUONG-SCENE OF ACCIDENTAL U.S. BOMBING C1mbocU1n Offlcl1ls Report 300 Were Either Kiiled, Injured ~been alerted to the.fuc t that his Slaff.was·· ---· .--- engaged in something that was im-c proper, unlawful, Illegal?" asked Seo. -. ongressman Hennan Talm adge (D-Oa.) "I do," Gray said. Requests Testifying before the Senate Watergate committee, Gray 11.lso said that, contrary to Nixon's statement that be ordered Watergate invesUgators to begin reporting directly to him March 21, he received no such order Crom the Presi- dent, or anyone else. Probe Into Commissaries Gray said the President called him two days later, March 23, and told him he ~thought Gray was be ing attacked un- fairly at the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee, which eventually refused to en- dorse• Gray's nomination to become pennanent head of the FBI. Gray said Nixon told him there would be another day to get back at the Administration's enemies, and told him lbere would always be a place for him in the Nixon administration. Gray said Nix- on mentioned no renewed Watergate probe. Gray quit a Jtttle more than a month later, in the midst of the wire. tapping scandal. Gra y also testified th.at ousted White House Counsel John W. Dean Ilr falsely assured him last year that he was relay- ing information about _ tti_e F B l ' s Watergate investfgafioo directly to the President. Gray said be thought It was perfectly proper for him to give FBI report.! to Dean. Gray. who retired to join Nixon's 1960 campaign after a 20-year career in the Navy, said he was trained in the military service t.o say, "aye aye, sir," when given orders. He said he didn't question the authority of White House aides Dean and John D. Ehrlichman when they gave him what he took to be orders to destroy papers taken from the White H<Juse safe of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt Jr. Gray recounted again how he and Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters Jr., deputy director of the CIA, came to the con- clusion in the weeks after the Watergate raid that men on the White House stall were trying to confuse the investigation. He said he contacted Nixoo July 6, and said, "Dick Walters and I feel that peo- ple oo )'ottr sl~f are !tying to mortally '\\'OUlld you by wiing the CIA and FBI and by confusing the question of CIA Interest Jn, or not in, people the FBI wishe.s to in· terview." He said Nix-on. paused, and said, "Pat, you just continue to conduct you:r ag- gressive and thorough investigation." Nixon Favor Drops NEW YORK (AP) -A New York Times pole of 760 corporation presidents concluded today that President Nixon has lost considerable support from that tradi· tionally Republican group. While 91 per- l'eflt of the executives polled Jaat .faJl .said they planned lo vote for" Nixon, only ftl percent said they would give him their \lote now, the Times reported. Rep. Les Aspin (D-Wis.) bas charged that some of the 287 military ~m­ missaries in the United States may be operating illegally and he has requested an investigation into the matter. Aspin said Sunday a J952 law requires the def~ secretary to certify that food at reasonable prices and quantity is unavailable in a locale before a com- missary can operate there. However, Pentagon regulations defeat Ille purpose ol lhe law by allowi,. com- missaries to operate wherever there are stores with prices 2Q percent higher than commissary prices, Aspin asserted. Spokesmen at two Orange Coast miiltary bases, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendletm, have refus- ed to comment on the allegations, saying instead that the U.S. Department of Defense In Washington woula have to- answer the charges. "We're unauthorized to answer here," Banks in West Boost Lending Levels to 9% SAN FRANCISCO IAP ) -Major West Coast bank! raised their prime lending r&tes to 9 percent today, following the t;, percentage point increase initiated by Eastern banks. The rate hike was announced by Bank of America, the nation's largest com- mercial bank; Wells Fargo, The Bank of California, United California Bank and Security Pacific. · The prime rate is the minimum in~ terest banks charge large corporate bor· rowers for short-tenn loans. The prime rate has been raised 11 times since the beginning of this year when it stood at 6 percent. Several other major banks also raised their prime lending rate.!. today. The increases by New York's Chase Manhattan Bank, the country's third largest, and the othm brought the prime to an all-time high and virtually assured that the 9 percent level wou ld spread throughout the indll3try within the next few days. While it ls not directly linked to con· sumer installment loans or mortgage rates. a rise in the prime frequently signals a general boost in overall in~rest rates, which might occur some months later . Perfe~tly Clear Our President, Fashion Critic WASlflNGTON (Al') -President Nixon turned fashlon critic to<lay, commenting on the trend toward women wearing slacks. i\flcr a bill-signing ceremony Jn his Oval OWce, Nixon observed that a woman reporter was wearing slacks. This touched off a brief conversation In which he commented: "Slaclt.s can do something for some people, but it can't ... " The lasl of the President's observation was lost In the laughter of the of!lcials and reporters in the oWc:e. , The President then told the reporter. Helen Thomas of. United Press International, that "I think you do very well ••• ~rn around ." said Chief Warrant Officer William Ombahl of El Toro. "Every once in a \.\.'hile a story like this gets aroun d but since it doesn't name us specifically, you'll have to find the answers in Washington." At Cap Pendleton in Oceanside, Capt. I..wis Chitelle said he would have to "defer to Washington." '"Ibe charges were made at the Department of Defense, not Pendleton, so 1 can't answer for them ," he ex- plained. The Wisconsin congressman, a fre- quent critic of the Pentagon, said there are 278 military commissaries in the United States doing an annual business ol $2 billion and coS!ing ttietupapers "hun- dred s of milliom of d,ollars a year" in subsidies. Aspin said the Defense Department "'as seeking $17.9 million this year to build new commi.s.saries. He said he was asking the Gel.era! Accounting Office (GAO), the Investigatory arm o l Congress, to look into the operations. The GAO should find oot, Aspin said, whether the Department of Defense regu1ations and their enforcement "are '¥\'ithin the scope of the Jaw and how many stores should be closed down." He said a GAO study roOOucted in 1964 showed that halt the commissaries in the United States stxtuld be shut down. There was no immediate resPonse to Aspin's charges. However, individual servicemen reacted privately with ex- pressions ranging from indignation to ap- preciation of the savings whidi com· m.i.ssaries offer. "Every time they run out of other things to criticize, they start attacking the commissary system," one officer said. whole thing. My nerves are shot . . . I T A , just wish they could tell me ooe thing or ivo stron<luts another. "I had no idea if v;ould be this long," she srud. The boy was technically pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommuoity Hospital after he was fou nd lifeless at the bottom of a baby sit- Step Outside For -Excursion ter's pool. During the 45 minute period SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - thal his body feceived no fresh oxygen, T\\'o Skylab 2 astronauts stepped outside the yoµngster·s brain was severely their trouble.d sp.'lct!·station today .to l~d damaged, doctors said. . ' telescope fil m, unfurl a new awru~·hke Physicians at the ho5pita1. however , sunshade and search for leaks 1n the struggled stubbornly and won their battle craft's air conditioning system. to restore Jason's heart~at. .But since \Vea-ring bulky spuce suits attached to then, ~he boy_ h~ .r~ain~-'~~~e~ ~'61}.foot~ lifelines. Dr: Owe1t-·K..-GaRiott- confa. . . and .hi.ck R. Lousma exited through an The profound · decisions over the airlock hatch to start the plarmed 3'h· youngster's fate were mapped out early hou r excursion. Skylab was orbiting 271 last week when Mrs. Rea and he! fonner miles above the earth. husband -Jason's rather -decided that -, the · 500 could become a transplant Skylab 2 s commander, !J~n L. Bean, ll' monltored the walk tram tnstde the st.a- donor. . tlon, relaying Mission Control radio in- But many. fai:tors came mto pt~y-all strucUons and 'ready to assist in case ol based on cntena set by the medical pro-trouble fcssion in cases where hope!~ patients . · . berome candidates for transplant opera-FirSt task ror Gai:r1~tt and Lousma lions. was to erf!(t the sall·hke sunshade to The I ol pby · • has been-help keep the laboratory coot That was pane s1cians con-to take mor e than an hour ducting tests since late last week to · detennine if "life" (primarily brain ac-The air conditioning leak, which came tivity) was present or gone. . to light Sunday night, is the latest prob. And last Fridity the panel made an in· lem to beset the station, alre21dy e%- itial decision that the youngster ~·as periencing proptllsion leaks and electrical "alive" according to their criteria and difficulties. Nooe of the problems p01se a threat to the astronallts. they abandoned the initial 'Plan to shut Before they couJd suit up for the s.wce off the machines and allow the r-youngster's remaining functions lo cease. walk today, the spacemen had to restore "It would be nice to -know that he pressure lo a tank which is part of a would com~ out of it 100 percent • • . system that removes moisture from tbc even 50 percent. But right DOW he's not air. This has been a recurring trouble there," she said. spot. S<lt<ln Getting Some Overtime DETROIT (AP) -"I guess Satan is just as busy on Sunday as he is during the rest or the week," the Rev. T. E. Edmonson said after his congregation of 25 was robbed in their storefront chW'Ch. Mr. F.dmonson said that when he finished delivering his sermon, "On the Other Side of the River," in the Rose of Sharon Primltlve Baptist Church Sunday evening, he asked lf there were any questions .. "I have something to say," one man said as he walked from the back ol. the church, waving a gun. ''This is a stickup." • He and another man ordered the congregation to lay down on the Door, took about $70 from the col- leclioo plate, $10 from Mr. Edmonson, and $50 from two deacons. The men escaped on foot. Ground experts continued to study prob- lems that caused lea~s in two jet engines on the Apollo taxi ship. "'hich is docked with the space stalion . They still are hopeful the astronauts v.·ill be able to return to earth ln--1he_ craft SCp!. 2.5 after a record 59-day flight. In case they 'can·1, around·t.h&<:lock work went on at Cape Kennedy, Fla., to prepare the Skylab 3 rocket and Apcillo as poosible rescue vehicles that could be launched Sept. 10 or lat er. 1 Dies in Prison Riot in · Florida STARKE, Fla . (UPI ) -One prisoner was killed and 10 others injured Sunday night in what a state offici al called a "lit- tle race riot" at the Florida Slate Prison in Radford County. Rex Newman, a spokesman for the State Department or Health a n d Rehabilitative Services, said the trouble was quelled by prison guards in about a half hour . At the height o{ the trouble Newman said, about 300 inmates wer~ removed from the main prison In the state system. NOW AT PRICES START FROM ·-11/111 -5 'kar Parlt Guannfte Th9 ll'IO!Of, pump. tltMr, 111'11(,.. .. ..,. D11lrlbvllon t¥fltrn, hffltr •nd Pll ..... 11111ron1 ••• 11111""'"° lot & l"f"s on fl'IOOti1 SS/t1'. 581'111 •'Id 851111. W• P8'/ lot 1.,i1cornon1 ltbOr 0<;1lrig Int lltft l'Nf, 90 DAY CASH WITH AtrltOYID CllDIT I ' I - As Miss Thomas complied, the President l!ked: Do they cost less than gowns?1' "No," she replied . "Thep change," Nixon said, again w laughter. Phone 548-7788 -1 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Cesta • ...~··~··································~················~ I. . ' .. ·•· . • • ·. ..... ,. •••• , •• " •• '· •• , ' t •• It's a Little Too Late To Probe l(ent State By JAN WORTH 01 tl\1 01Uy PUot 51•11 THE U.S. ATTORNEY General has opened a nev,r investigation into the killing of four students at Kent State University on May 4, 1970. It seems a little late. And a little futile. For me, each new mention of that bloody event brings up old reminders of the week in which I belatedly began to learn all is not as it seems in Amcf-ica. · Three and one-half years later, living in quiet and lovely Laguna Beach where one forgets society has any serious problems, f may be running away. BUT JN rt1AV OF 1970, as a junior at Kent State, l felt betrayed, sick to my stomach, confused and scared. The Kent State shootings were my first direct exposure ' to the· American military system that I had. been taught protects me. Jt didn't add up. Maybe it's hard'for long-time \Vest Coast residents to realize. Here, where being hip to what's happening is re-- ligion, people have a head sl.art on being cynical. wo1tTH Jn Ohio, it is still possible to reach the age or 18 or 20 without learning that the friendly policeman on the corner -the one in your third grade reading book -sometimes kllls the wrong people. It's not all his fault. KENT WAS A QUIET paranoid little farm town. It was overwhelmed with a university that grew full of lazing longhairs before the townies could get used to them. People weren't relating to 'each other very well. The townspeople were known unlovingly as rednecks. The factory workers and farmers in and around the sleazy, gray-toned village of Ravenna resented the students who barely passed high school and yet somehow won the luxury of an education. The governor barely managed to refr~n from saying "Kill the hippies" Grt, public television and blasted the university administration roe;_ permissiveness intsead.. - THE KENT MAYOR asked for the National Guard, perhaps hoping that he'd g!?l either the archangels of heaven or the Green Berets instead. And we students, undeniably savoring in ,some perv~rse way the obVious combination-or~ d°l'"'aell}r ffiistaKes· 00 eVeryooay·s· -part~caine 'dfi::irtyrs~ the - ~illuSioned children of Howdy Doody-and Disneyland. Sooil after the killings -after the school was clcised and all of us had been sent home for the rest of !he quarter -I went to see "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." THE AUDIENCE, FILLED with Kent State students, got sickeningly quiet as lhe two heroes were riddled with bullets at the end. Last May they had the third memorial service at Kent. My girl friend drove over from the quiet upstate New York town where she too 1na.y be look-' ing for the placid America of third grade primers. "THEY'VE FORGO'ITEN it happened," she told me later. So they're reopening the investigation. Someone in a zealous drive for some kind of justice is trying to discover the truth. 1 know justice is supposed to be a good thing. But the truth is four young Americans are already buried. Alrilost a dozen more bear physical wounds. And who knows how many more ran away to California, New York, and points west, gritting their teeth and looking for America.' A better response is to make sure we do better next time -and get reality into our fairy tales. Florida Officials Set Drug Suspect Roundup BARTOW. Fla. (UPI) -Central Florida authorities have started rounding up 100 persons in a move a g a inst a narcotics ring that detectives said did more than $600,000 a month in drug sales _..-ovtr the last two years. Florida football star and now a Lakeland, Fla .. realtor; William \\1ilson Reed, 25. Orlando, son of former Polk County School superinterldent \V . \V. "Bill" Reed : and Jeanne Dunn, 20. daughter of Polk C.ounty Civil Defense Director \Vcs Dunn . The 100 warrants were issued Friday night and by midday Saturday, 35 to 40 persons had been taken into custody. said Polk C.ounty Sheriff's Capt. Melton Godwin, who beaded the investigation. Among thooc arrested "'·ere Jack Harper. 28. a former University of Irvine to "Felilae Bond for Harper and Reed "'as srt al $50,000. Miss Dunn's bond "'as set at $65,000. God\vin said officers seized i5 to JOO pounds of marijuana. 15.000 pills and an undeternlined amount of other drugs, in- cluding cocaine. Norman McQueen and Elizabeth Tudhope, both 17 and from Irvine. Scotla nd. left their new town for a month lo visit the peoRle and places of another new town, Irvine. Calif. On a visit lo I.ion Country Safari. the Irvinc;to-lrvine uair .met "Savage'' a t.wo·month·olcl lion cub. While the climate on the we st coast of Scotland is mild, there is no African wildlife reserve planned, the pair agreed . r ' ,-' ' " ... ---·-- • Mot1day, August&, 1q73 s DAIL V PILOT 3 ToJ11 ~s Cabin on Way Down? Hy MARCI DODSON Of trlt Oaltr Pllcll Slllt For t1r. and Mrs. Bruce Best that acre of vegetables, fruits , goats, hens and ducks called "Uncle Tom's Cabin" is paradise. It will be a paradise lost within the next two weeks. Nestled in the rolling hills or San Juan Irish setter, the only <inimal they are allowed to bring to their future residence in San Juan Capistrano. "And one of the goats is going to have probably two kids around Aug. 15, just about the time we're supposed to move oltt. I don't know what y.·e're going to do about her." Capistrano along Ortega Jlighway, the Besides having to relinquish their Bests make their hotne in a tiny, two-animals. th e Bests ara not pleased with their future quarters. room cottage. Outside are dor.ens or "It's a ticky-tack little house," Mrs. animals and rows of organically grown Best said disdainfully of tbe d'velling in a vegetables. It's the type of life they've conventional residential section of the ci- always wanted, said Mrs. Best. ly. The bubble burst last Tuesday. "I guess we'll have to move in there and join society." The couple received a letter ordering That is a task the Bests are not looking them o!f the land by mid-August. The forward to. Secluded from the rest of order culminated a month of legal developing San Juan Capi strano, the cou- hassles over possession of the property. pie has been thrilled \Yitb the oasis of The land . which the Bests have been plants. animals and each other. renting for $50 a month since March, has They were practically self-sufficient. changed hands. Acres of the entire Best works part time at 1¥1ission Com- hlllside originally belonged to the late munity Hospital and receives income Tom Pike. who built and named the cot-from the GI Bill while he attends Sad- tage and far1ned the land. dlebaek College. But "did Tom," explained Mrs. Best. Mrs. Best saiQ she rarely spends more was going blind and had many debts, so than '$15 a \veck for food and supplies he began to sell portions of the land to because she has "been harvesting more pay his debtors. Finally county social than th&couPre cin eat from the garden. workers took him away from his land "Our goal is to someday be totally self- and put him in a home wh ere he died, ac-sufficient. But that's impossible these cording to Mrs. Best. days. For a long time the house and land Jay "I'm really into planls. You have no fallow. Passing hitchhikers would use the idea how much joy you can get just being house for a night or two and would leave \Vith nature. I sometimes think that when it wrecked. Early this year the spot I passed lives that I was a farmer/' caught the interest of the Bests, who mused Mrs. Best. could no longer afford stiff rent on their Thus, it will be quite a change for the house in San Juan Capistrano. They ask-couple when they move into their new cd who owned the place. home with only a Jl)..foot square area for After a long hunt, they learned from a garden outside their back door. the public administrator that Pike had Yet , the Bests would nOt have been \villed the property to St. Luke's content to stay in "Uncle Tom's Cabin" Orthodox. Church of Orange County. But much . longer,-anyway. For the once- the church had since changed its name agrarian are.a surrounding their property and location, causing additional legal is rapidJy giving way to tracts of houses. problems. "We 'd stay here until that orange " • C. A. McCamman, deputy real prop-grove across the str~t turned into TTI BEST ANO FRIEND MUST SOON LEAVE NATURE ACRE .!._rlY .. l!lana;er with t_!le p.ihl!c ad~ __ _!J_ouses, an.d Iha~ ~ne .9_Y.er there ... " ~--==i:=::·.::ln::_:S.=no.1:· ::u.n==.C=-".·='':•:::•:o,:_:C:::il'<~. ::""'::.:::'::':•::••:•:•:.~:::h:•n::ge:'.:.·.:·•:_:·ki:':.:.f":::ty:.:.:I•:.· ___ ~~--min1slraTof sOffice. dec1000tofenrtfi'e «we<re really just slCJ( of this whole - property to the Bests on a month-to-society. Like, Yt'e don't want any kiQ s, ,, n1onth basis until the church had com-unless Wfl can raise them in a place like { pleted legal processes. this right here." L B h. w·n T k , The church did just that several "Bruce's dream -our dream -is to gun' a eac . 1 a e months ago, then sold the property have our own island, where we could Jive . ~ despite the Bests' repeated inquiries our lives the way we want without having t • about purchasing the land. society in our backyard," said Mrs. Best. "And this guy plans to level this entire "We'll conform when we have to move. B dg A • T d . rillside. including the house and all our But still, in our hearts, we'll koow what . U et ct1on ues ay plants in our garden. we really want. "All this nature ... going to kill it,'' "I just hope I'll never get into society said ll.1rs. Best. so much that I 'll be too rushed to enjoy a The Rev. Gabriel Ashie of St. Luke's bud opening, or an animaJ giving birth, Public bearing and adoPtion of a $4.8 elude teachers salaries, maintenance, Church said that, although the Bests had or apprecia~e a fresh egg." . . . million budget carrying a 34-<:ent tax rate summer school, adult education, teacher discussed purchasing the land from the But even m the face of their imrnment increase heads a Joog agenda for Tue&. retirement, regional ,occupatioqal pro-church. no prices or terms were lnen-move from a pastoral paradise to what tioncd. they consider to be a stifling spol in day night's meeting of tbe Laguna Beach gram and supplies. ·'And we were already making ar· ~iety. a glint of optimism manages to Board of Education. A:ppi'O'Val of the budget as proposed is rangements with someone else '' he ad-shine through. The hearing on lhe budget is scheduled recb~.mended by Supt. Don81d D. dcd. ' .. Everything happens for !he best." to begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Education Woodington. lie declined to IUJmt tbe purchaser and said fvl~s. Best. "Maybe t.~al's ~hy this is said he did not know what the new happening to 11s ~.to give us a break Center, 550 Blumont St. / UnPttr tenns of ·the plan, I.his .year's owner·s pJans for the land are. from· our work: give us a chance to . This year's spenlling prQgram is about school tax•rate of.$3.34 will jump to $3.68. ''But the rest of the area around there tr~;vel. ". . . . $600,000 greater than the $4.2 million Board members reserve the right to is being developed. There's a housing . An~, maybe \ve II Just find that little spent on Laguna's-five schools last year. make changes in the budget up until the tract being built right down the road island. Major accounts that h~ve jumped in-finjll adoption. r=,==:::=:===:~::::==~::::::=~~~~. ~--E" ~-~-~ While the Bests have been paying $50 a month rent for their four n1ontbs on the property, the church has bad to spend $150 for insurance. "That leaves us only $50. And that's not very much for four months' rent," noted Rev. Ashie. • "l don 't know what we're going to do about all tJie animals." said Mrs. Best. "W~'re trying lo sell the1n but we 've got so many." Their menagerie is forn1idable -two n1ilk goats. 30 chickens. two ducks, 12 rabbits. five cats, one parakeet and an Burglars Take $600 in Cash At R es tat1rant Burglars \vho pried OJ>f'.n the f~t door to gain entry to the business office took $600 from a Souf.h Laguna restaurant 'during the weekend, Orange Counly Sheriff's officers said. Deputies said intruders forced their "'ay into Ben Brown's Restaurant, 31106 s. Coast 1-tighway and then apparently used the same tools to break in lo the of- fice filing cabinet and remove $600 in cash. Deputies in the Sou!h Laguna area arc also investigating the weekend theft of jewelry valued at $~25 . fro."! a motel roorn occupied by a visitor from \Vashington. Company President John William McNaughton, 72. of Be 11 e vu e . Washington, reported the theft of ruby- studded Shriner's pins from his motel room at 903 Ronda Sevilla, Lag!!na ruus. l1isect Display Visits Lihrarv • Du1in g Au g ust ' .. An exhibition of insects from the United States, Mexico and Venezuela 'viii be on display during August at the Laguna Beach branch county library. The collection Is the work of Lagunan Alex Hllkevlt.ch and s~i mens have hecn collected over the past two years. llilkcvitch is n graduate student at Cal Stale Long Reach, Nearly 150 families of insects tire in- cluded in the collccUon which contains about 25 perceht ~f 1111--r:imllles found tn North America. Included in the exhibit arc several Ven<'zuelan long horn bet.tics, a scarab beatle, a Venezuelan katydid . Venezuelan dobsonflies and hcliconian butternies. l ·. .. ·~ . - YOU SHOULD HAVE ONE IN EVERY COLOR, DADI • Again by Popular Demand! Our GRIECO Twill Blet•r in Na vy, Green, Burgundy &nd Brown-$125.00. 8u99ywhip All Wool Trouier by Corbin-$37.SO. Silk Club Tie by Robert Talbott-$10.00 , ' PHELPS MEAGER ~ DVE115ciYEARSIWl'.IUl1lRH!A .... ~ NEWPORT BEACH Wilshire, Shermt'ln Oaks, Pasadena, Lakewood , V'f"est Covin a • .. ' ' • ' • .. ' ' -· ' •• 111 -• Cambodians Claim 'Victory' in Battles " :.:Getting There ~t.TRE~!!e ~~~:t's - hat the young people are calling It this ear, anyway. You can only guess what ight be causing thi5 to be their season r dlsoontent. The ' weather? The tack of ? The record jam of tourism? Figuring that possibly some of the matured residents of our region 'ght also feel this is a bummer sum- ' I set out on a great investigative le over the weekend to detennirie'now really are. Herein are some of the ts. . TooWng down Pacific Coast Highway •• Saturday amidst the throogs ol Eton, I discovend a leak. It seel!U!d to coming from the !ky. Somebody sug- it might be raining. Raining? In ugmt? t ! Ir' rr w ASN'T raining, it was reason-Jd, then ho"""'11e the'pavement waa get- ting ·au slic:1r and people have 'their windshield wipers flapping back and forth? From l\'lre Services PHNOM PENH -Cambodian troops supported by fieree American air !trikes pushed down embatUed Hlghway I today, reca ptured two towns held by guerrillas and beat them back In what field reports called a: confused and hasty retreat The Cambodian ·high comm and described the operaUoo as a "brilliant victory." " IT URGED THE lhousands of refugees streaming into the capital since the rebel offensive along the hghway ~an (ive days ago lo return to their homes. A command spokesman sa1d the highway, a vital lifeline to Phnom Penh, was now open to Dey Eth, 13 mll~s away. Field reports said government for~ that battled all day Sunday and into tc> day pushed the insurgents out of Veal Sbov, five miles southeast of Phnom Penh, and Prek Eng, two miles farther south. At one point, 1nswtents were reported within one mile or the southern edge ol Phnom Penh. U.S. warplanes again blasted insurgent posJtlons oo all sides of the capital today, bol witll Sunday llighl they had to ease up on bcmbing aloog Highway 1 for fear or hitting refugees moving up tbe road Ex-dictator Batista Dies At Resort ... MARSELLA, Spain (UPl) -Fulgencio Batista, 72, the ruthless dictator who rul· ed D..tba lf'or 11 years before lie was overthrown by Fidel Castro in 1959, died a "peaceful death" today in a golf resort on the Costa Del So~ his lamlly said. Ruben Batista, one of his five surviVing sons, said Batista died in his bed at 3 a.m. "of Sn apparent heart attack" and u•ill be buried in Madrid Tuesday. "IT WAS A peaceful death," Ruben said of the man who to many became the epttome of the aLtJn American right- \i:ing military strongman. . "Papa complai~ abput feeling ill after a late Sunday dinner ; •• It appears he died suddenly and W:ithouf feeling any pain." Batista's remains will be placed in a and government troopis Jnvolved in cl<>sc.. in combat with rebel soldiers. FIELD REPORTS said Ille only clooe- in ai r strikes Sunday night were nown by U.S. Fill jet fighter-bombers, which hit guerrillas as they retreated from a school at Prek Eng. The reports said the Communists fled In disarray from botti Prek Eng and Veal Sbov. UP'IT ...... " FORMER DICTATOR DEAD Futge-nclo S.tlsta, 72--- 'Ille high command issued a statemmt today "!nvitlng" the thousands d refugees wbo had ned <he fighllng "' return to their homes. •'Our~ have alr~ady reestablished order and assured K>eurlly," the high command statement said. In Saigon, truce violations increasH again and heavy fighting was reported In the Central ltighlands and along the Cen- tral Coast, government m i I i t a r Y spokesmen said. They said 79 persons were killed in the fighting. IN FOUR BA 'ITLES and two slleilings in Quang Ngai province, on the Central O>ast, 300 miles northeast of Saigon, 21 Conununists, nine civilians and si.a government soldiers were slain .~ 24 goverrunent soldiers and 2.0 ctvtUan..s wounded, Lt. Col. Le T.nmg Hien, spokesman for the Saigon command, reported. Mean\\ilile, the U.S. bombing in Cam· bodia, which survived an abbreviated Supreme Court "test over the weekend, will be in for further judicial review by a [ederal appeals court this week. On Saturday, Just.ice Thurgood Marshall overtlU1led a bombing ban issued hours earlier by fellow Justice William 0. Douglas. Marshall said he had consulted with and won the agreement of the seven other Supreme Court members in granting the Nixon administration's request to overturn DougJas•1action. DURING TIIE BRIEF period time that Douglas' ruling was in effect, the bombing continued uninterrupted. The Pentagon declared that "pending ap- propriate legal action on this matter, we will abide by the congressiooal mandate tp end 1he bombing on Aug...J.S.,!'.-the dale selected by Congress for cutting off funds for the air war over Cambodia. ~ Wel1 _~ .~ct_is_that it ~as!.~~'--_ Here we were driving along SWTOU11ded t by hordes of humanity who came tci our f:.- family mausoleum in Madrid and "not be r --raxen-lllJck'1o CUlialll!rd our c0illili'f1s -3 -Killeil 55-utirC---------- free again," Ruben said. He said the cof· ' coastline to elude the inland heat. And what did we give them? Rain already. This tended to support the youth theory that we might Indeed be suffering a bum- mer summer. Then, of course, there was the move- ment of traffic Itself. A little Saturday afternoon drive from Laguna Beach to Costa Mesa consumed one hour and 20 minutes. This included using the back streets of Corona del Mar in an effort to bypass the Coast Hlghway jam. • BUT I DON'T •SUPPOSE you should use the word bypass whm speaking to -corona de! Martians about ..lhe!r traffic situati00. A Jot of folks in Corona del Mar- don't figure they need a bypass !Dr traf- k Maybe, In \ruth, tllfl\' don't have irattlc through Corona del Mar. My idea of b'al- fie is when you have a whole lot of ears that are moving someplace. But autos do not move through. Corona del Mar. They just sort of ooze along ifhj generaldlon- movement. Therefore, no trafff9. I understand there was also a lot of non-traffic on the Newport-Balboa Peninsula over the weekend. I did not check this out personally since Corona del Mar is enough of an experience with non-traffic for one day. TUEY ALSO CONTINUE to debate about what to do in Newport Beach with the Upper Newport Bay Bridge on Cc:>ast Highway. So far they've done nothing. Why should they? If traffic can't move through Corona de! Mar, then it doesn't need to move across the bridge either. You could characterize this as progress through non-movement. Laguna Beach, on the other hand, has made valiant efforts to fix the traffic. They have banned left turns off Coast Highwa y and even outlawed some park- ing on weekends in an effort to make more room for traffic . All this has apparently succeeded beyond their wildest exP6QtaUons. Now, instead of having four Janes of non-move- ment, they have five. ON SUNDAY AF"l'ERNOON, our visiting tourists trying to motor upcoast got a real treat. 1'beir non-movement traffic backed up from Poppy Avenue in O>nma de! Mar southwanl to crystal Cove. I've ne\'er seen that happen before. Ob. well . Al least they had a nice view of the sunset \1'hile sitting there. UPI T ... Phetin Site of Killings Four persons were found bludgeoned to death in Romeoville, Ill. Sat - urday. The bodies of Robert Kloeckner. 36, his son Anthon)', 16, daughter Crystal, 13, and a friend, Tracy Richards, 13, were found iii the-home. Police are holding truck driver, Paul Lena, 36, in connec· tion with the deaths. Mrs. Kloeckner escaped without serious injuries. Bottom photo is of the girl's room. Detergent-Makers Okay Labeling of Phosphates WASHNGITON (AP) -The Federal Trade Commission announced today that virtually all of the nation's detergent manufacturers have agreed to label their household detergents with phosphate con- tent. Phosphates have been linked to ac- celerated "aging" of lakes because the chemicals stimulate the growth of aquatic plants which can choke oft other fonns of life. AT THE SAJllE time the FTC agreed to pennlt household detergents to bear labels declaring their ingredients to be biodegradable, in the sense that the in- gredients are broken down into simpler compounds by natural biological action. Raymond L. Rhine, the FTC attorney in charge of the phoophate plan, aaid the agency has received promises from 33 manufacturers to provide the labeling. He said the 33 represent "as cl<>R to 100 percent as you can expect" and includes Procter & Gamble, Lever Bros., and Colgate, which account for 80 percent of the market. The agreement is strictly voluntary with no legal standing. But Rhine said the FTC could attack any failure to label detergents as a violation of the laws against unfair or deceptive practices. "OUR EXPERIENCE in cases like this is they don't backslide," said Rhine. He said the FTC is still considering whether to require ingredient labeling and a warning agains t high phosphate detergents, two measures which the FTC proposed in 1971 and later discarded after hearings marked by stiff industry opposition. Meanwhile, said R h i n e , Proctor & Gamble has started labeling the in- gredients of its detergents and Colgate and Lever Bros. are reportedl on the verge of making a similar move. The pboophorus content statement is lo be on laundry, dishwashing and general household detergents and will generally read: "This formula averages ... percent phosphorus, in the form or phosphates, which is equivalent to ... grams per •.. cup use level." THE FTC WILL not tell consumers. however, what is a high or low level of phosphates, nor will it provide lists com- paring various brands. Rhine said fonnulaUons of brands vary from region to region and change so rapidly that any lisUng could be out of date by the time it got back from the printer. if Fair Skies Favor Nation Mississippi Vall.ey Has Rain; Wirids Whip Miclw.est ' • t ... 1H~h•OW' ,,.,..,., ....... ~·llOWfl' llOW !!on Toc11y, bu! llltrt ~ •• 1.11c11'1llont D1rtlcul1r!v In "" nor1n1rn MltslulpOf V1ll1y, When hNVy 1·11!n5 ll1"191T'ld ll'lto !hit 11rlv IT'IOl'n!ng l'l<lurs. Jnfl!'nllfOIWll F1u'L . Mlnn.1 "" d ... llO;illd wltfl 2.l l!ttll91 of fl ln. .•1'111 .,.. ... ~ ~Ol'l'M · ··~· ltlw Sulld1y lnlo Wflltrn IC<1nS.l. AIWOOd, In n.. norttrw11tern Ptrt 111 11!t 1!1!1, w11 ""1l11Ptd OY 7' milt l)fr llO"'r wllld1 wll!th Nlftl9'd Window$ Ind lrlllel. .&. ttw '"°"""'' 1nd 1~untter5110wt11 w1r1 wldtlY Klllle•IKI alono '"' Gutt Co91I. 111-9 C1rollnH 1nd the norllllfrTI •~ Clt'llrll Roekl11. Coor 11~ Otjlln t>ll\llifto inlc Mon••111, '"'° •I H•Yr•, Mont., 111-9 '!""~r•lll,. d'rOl)ll9d ff'Ol'l'I 1n '"""/IOOfl II ~h of '' to M 1f1tr mldn!Ofll. Ttll.,'t,,.fllfllTH bl"""• dOW" r&t>Qotd from 47 11 Cut 15•"-· Mont .• ro fl 11 Pflotnlx. Arll. c ..... tnl "'""'"~'" P1rnv 111n11y todty. LIOlll Yl1'1tlll• WIP!dl "IQht It'd mom!np hoYl°t *-11>9 Whttrty 10 to II -tlOt• In tlMr. llOOnl l~y tlld T"'"411y. HIOll I• day, n. co..1t11 Mmptr11V1"11 rt"!lf frlloM t1 to 10. l~l•rwl 11m~r1tu,.1 ''"" trorn 6J lo 71. W1t1H" 1tm1M•I· tur1 67. S1111, JtfnntJ, Tides MONDAY S«oni:I llloh 12:30 t .m, l.O IKCIM IO'W , 4~11 p.m. J.0 Tl.llSO,t,Y ,.,,,, "''"' "'""' low $t(Of'IO 10'# • Sun ,..., •:N '·"'· MODI! rlttl l :D D m. •• 10 ·•1 '·"'· ,, 7:11 '·"'· 3.2 l?>t 11,l'l'I. • •• 'ittt 7:SO p.rn. ftlt ll:U t .m. • fin 'will be covered with a Cuban flag. Batista. had been a force in Q.iban T • R • M poli~cs ror lhree decades and served .. eITOnStS emam um president from 1940-44 and agam from 1952. He fled into exile in Portugal after the advance of Castro's left-wing guer- rillas forced him to resign on Jan. l, ~9. HE HAO AMASSED a.fortune of rhany millions of dollars and sent it out of the country to a safe location. Batista will be buried in the same i\.1adrid cemetery "'here another Latin American exdictator, Rafael Leonides Trujillo, was laid to rest afler he was killed in an ambush that signaled the end of his famil y·s regime in the Dominican Republic . ' Another Latin American strongman, Juan D. Peron, has just returned from. Spain to Argentina after 18 years of ex· About Airport Attack ATIIENS. Greece (AP) -Two Arabs refused to answer questiOM today about their Athens Airport gunfire--and..grenade attack that killed thJ'"ee persons, in- cluding an American woman o n her honeymoon, police said. 'lbe three killed Sllllday were two Americans and an Austrian. Fifty.five recover fron1 the \\'Ollllds he received in lhc attack, said from a hr.6pital bed : ile. This leaves Marcos Perez Jimenez ol persons were wounded. "Nothing maiters now, I've~lost Jean- nie. We had passed through passport con- trol and \\'alked down to the transit lounge. At that moment. explosiom rock· ed the hall and I fell to the ground \\o'OUIK)ed by sharp objects. Jeannie tell prostrate and didn'I move. She ap- parently caught the blast directly in thlr chest and died instantly." Venezuela the I as t ex-dictator-in- residence in Spahi. Through the years of exile there were those critics of the Batista regime who suddenly praised him as a decidedly lesser of two evils, the other being Castro. But there were otben who retold stories of over-indulgence and the millions Batista allegedly took when he fled CUba. BUT FOR ALL the ruined plans - plans that included a sumptuous retire· ment m.8n!ion in Daytona Beach, Fla .. aBtista showed no bitterness in bis last years. In an interview in the spring of 1972 Bat ista said: "No one likes to die outside the country he loves. This is something you can't comprehend until it happens to you. It is difficult to spend the last years of your life away from the land ol your birth.'' Russians Launch Mars 6 Craft Toward Planet MOSCOW (AP) -Mars 8 was launch- ed Sunday niglit, the third Soviet spacecraft to be sent toward the red planet witrun three weeks, Ta!S an- nounced. The Soviet news agency said the spaceship, which should reach the vicini- ty of Mars early next March, is oarrying French equipment to test "the sun's radio emissions . • • solar plasma and cosmic ra'ys." "It is envi sioned that Mars 6 can carry out a part of its scienUfic exploration with the use of equipment of the Mars 4 staUon, '' Tass said but did not elaborate. Ttie Soviet government Jauncb8d Manr 4 on July 21 and Mm 5 on July 25. Tass said the trajectories of those two probes were success!uJly corrected last Monday and Tuesday. Four S..oviet research ships in the Atlantic OceAn have been tracking the Mars ships and radioing information to the Soviet Union th r o u g h com- munlcallon., sate?llltes, the report said . DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dttlvtr)' of U'lt D1i1J P11ot b 911111t1tffd ~.l'f .... I If .,.. ......... _. ,.. ..... .., J1• p.m., (Ill •1!4,.., ~ WJl'I " ~ .. .,.., cattt ,,. t-"""' 11•-·ll\. l llvrftY lllt 5-f..,-1 II Y" .. 1111 '"''" Y9¥• t•ttY '' ' '·""· 1a1w11•r· 1r • '·"'· S"'ftttV. t tll 1nCI t <6.., •IN h trwfllt " , .... ''"' '" '""' llftlll •• '·"'· T•lt pl!Ontt M ... Ort111t (tolll1' ..,,... ....... 40-thl H••lllwt1! M11tllllt'9• St•«i , ,,,. w.-11111111ter • .. • •• • ., • uo.n• Stft tltrMftlr, Cttlhl''"' Srldl. ,..~ '"'•n C:t"etrtM, 01111 "''"'· lfflll LltllM, l.llllflt Nltllll • . fft .. •Jt THE HONEYMOONER was Mrs. \Villiam Salaiicti, 23, of Highland Park., N.J. Her husband who is expected to Oklnhoma'-Pr.ison Officials Seek Missing Convict McALESTER, Okla. (UPI) -Prison officials et riot.gutted Oklahoma State Penitentiary said today a convicted murderer was missing from his cell and may have escaped. Rex Brinlee Jr., a former Tahlequah. OkJa ., night club operator coovi.cted of ('-_I_N_s_H_oR_T_ .• _. _,) lhe 1971 bomb slaying ol Brlstoo, Okla., school teacher Fern Boldhlg, was discovered missing after a 1 a.m. check o[ his cell. Ed Hardy, press secretary to Gov. David Hall, said In Oklahoma City Ulal prison o«lcials Wett utm&ble t 0 specllically locato him (Brtnl .. l by llllln· ber, and then sent some -'• In to check men In cellblocks 'llbo would have known him by sight. They couldn't locate hi .. m. e Big Mistake PRINCE'1'9N, N.J. (AP)-Tbe Gallup Poll aays two-thlnll ol the leadil1g for<!gn public olfictal1 and private citizens surveyed believe the United Slates' mililary Intervention In Vietnam WU 8 m.Wtake. A majority of the 1,363 pe!'1IOl1I qun. The other American killed was Iden- tified as Elbert. Kerscn, 53. a Union, N.J., plumbing contractor. Kersen's wife, Kate, -19, was injured. The Austrian was a 00.year-old at· torney named Ullhofen. IN ADDIT ION TO the t\\O men, two \\'Omen v.·ere being questioned. Police said they diYrmed a Ume bomb. which had not been set to go off, lhat was found Inside a letter box in the transit lounge four ·hours alter the at- tack. Witnesses told police they saw a man drop a IB<ge object In the box before Ille shooting began In the lounge. The t¥.•o Arabs surrendered Sunday • alter crouching with 35 hostages behind the lounge's marble bar for two boun while they tried to gel a plane to take them to the Atiddle East. It was not known "'hat promises, tt any. were made· to get them to sur- render. A police source said the two men ap-· parently had arrived earlier in the day from the Middle East and · sat tn the transit lounge, waltlng to make their at- Jack. PASSENGERS ARRIVING at Athens airport are not searched, bot a thomJ&h search is made of aJI departing passengers and their hand luggace. r ' Uoned In the poll, made public SundaY, also felt the U.S. JOit presU1e becalltle ol • the Vietnam wa< and should ~p ftbulld ~,, -Nortli Vietnam. • '• --. -e Hotel Probe NEW YORI( (UPi) -The city bulldJns dope-wlll begin an 1n ... u11Uon today ol the collapie at the Untvmity Hotel whlcb killed at leut. on pmm. Part ol the dilapidated botel, once Clll· ed the Broadw11 Central ml COl'llldered the dty'1 mOll elerant, oollapted Ft1da3. eru:Aqtt NEW YORK (UPI) -The Internal Revenue S.rvtoe lncreued anooplng ec- tlviU.S during the Nixon administration -and not always Jwl for Uui:.gatberlog purposes -1lme Magazine reporte<S Sunday. • " Time said an IRS apeclel lnve•Uc•Un( group wu IOI up In 11161 at the requett' ol the Wblto lfOUM and slnoe baa collected mes on 8,000 lndtvtduala and 8,000 groups. r Manlaunt Betun UllllfT ........ A naUonwide alert has been issued tor ex-convlc l Alvin Sea- groves, 26, who allegedly 1Un• ned down three persons Iii a Tenne1111ee pat}tJ.ng lot Salur- day. Seagroves was released from pr!aon over the obJecUons or his parole olficer. " 'I •, ..... I •"I••'''···'"·~~ . .. Bitter, He Bit Her I . SACRAMENTO (AP ) - lie said he would kiss her. but he bit off the end of her nose instead, a woman told police. Arlene Enas, 30, WM taken lo Sacramento Medical Center for t~at· n1eot of a wound three quarters of an inch in diameter. The entire tip of her nose was missing, of· ficers said. Carl Moore, 41 , was ar· rested Saturday for in· vestigation or mayhem, they added. The woman told in- vestigators she and Moore had an argument that ended with him saying, "I'll just kiss you." Then came the bite, she said. Commuters Renrrning To BAR1' OAKLANO (AP) -The first of some 35,000 East San Fran- cisco Bay commuters who bat- tled. freeways during the montt.-long Bay Area Rapid Transit strike boarded trains here. today as the system began its first full day of operation since J uly I. ' Tracking Poach~s Ranger Iillled At Point Reyes POINT REYES (AP) -The FBI has joined local officials investigating the fatal shooting or a park _ranger who was tracking deer poachers ·at Point Reyes National Seashore. The National Park Service said Kenneth. C . Patrick, 40, was killed early Sunday morning while patrol- ing in thick mist in a remote area or this western Marin County park. FBI agents and sheriff's deputies combed the · hilly grasslands 40 miles north of San Francisco seeking clues to the slaying. According to Patrick's widow, Tommie, he had left their home in the park housing area just be!ore dawn, armed and in uniform, to search for poachers rumored to be after deer on the seashore lands. engine still was running on Patrick's patrol car and the red police lights were ()fl. Sheriff Attacked; 12 Held SAN DIEGO (AP) -Twelve persons were arrested after a disturbance in the Sloan Can· yon area of Dehesa in which a sheriff's deputy was at- tacked, authorities said. A spokesmnn said those taken into custody Sunday in- who went looking for Patrick BRIEFS after his wile became worried NICE SMILE? Miss Nude World Bc1·nardino Gir] Wins Miss Nude Ranger Daniel Whittaker, ( ) about his failure to return, "---.,...------F'REELTON, Ont. (AP) - said he found PatMck's body eluded· hve juveniles. All 12 Dee Dee Nolet, an 18-year-old in wet brush off Mount Vision were booked for investigation typist Crom San Bernardino, Overlook roed. of charges ranging from won the Miss Nude World con· Patrick -who had been felony assault on a peace of-test SWlday as about 3,000 shot once in the wrist and fleer to dl!turbning the peace, spectators, many of them ·twice in the chest -lay 150 deputies said. · nude, looked on . feet from his patrol car, his Wearing only high-heels and service revolver strapped in • Red ThrOtml braces on her teeth , fo.liss its holster. \Vhittaker said the SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Nolet picked up the title in her A-UART spokestrrn"n-ssi td im---·---~grQUJl.of --Yandals...threw .a red..........second 1.1ttempt.. Sbc didn•t substance on the corporate place last year. trnublc '.'as .. rfported as the Reconstruction first trains rolled out at 6 a.nl., 35 dayS · after !he • walkout co_mp1e1e1y idled the Jobs Assigned -$l .8 ·b-1l!1on compu~ed -----_ _ __ systc1n. Capitol News Service The· spokesman sa,id t8 SACRAMENTO -C<>ntracts headquarters building of Ch a r y I Es c ar r a of Standard Oil or California PJltsburgh ,1:as second, and here early today, police re-Nadia Botlai of CollingY:ood , ported. Ont., placed third among the . " • • r;. Monda1. Augusl b, 11)73 OA.I LY PILOT Senator Takes Action Against Porno Movies LOS ANGELES (AP) -Political, social. artistic or of "The Devil in i'.1iss Jones:" Theaters Inc.; Topar F'lbn• lnc.; and 26 individuals. State Sen. John L. Hanner has scientific value. Gerard D a mi an o Film filed two Superior Court suits Productions Inc.; Pussycat "Devil " has been playing at two theaters in Hollywood, one in Santa Monica and a third in TarLana ... Throat" has been playing at a Hollywood theater seeking to close theaters INCLUDED AS defendants Theaters Inc.; A q u a r i us showing two sex films and are Vanguard Films lnc .. pro-Releasing Co. Inc.; \Valn ut seize the films and box office ducer of "Deep Throat" and J>roperties Inc.; ~1 ea t b a I t receipts as contraband. h1arvin Friedlander and his Productions Inc.: P i e r re since Nov. 30. Harmer and three other Marvin Films Inc., producers Productions Inc.; T o p a r men said in their civil suit fi)-jijjijii'jij!i!~Pi~jijfiiiiiPi!9!'9i"9i!i~P.iftP.!ii!tj~~~!P.iiiiiiiiiiiili ed Friday that the theaters. exhibiting "Deep Throat" and "The Devil in h1iss Jones," l'iolatc state Jaws against obscenity and are a public nuisance that should be abated. The Glendale Republican and the others said tfle movies attract criminal elements and "deviates," decrease property values, erode the p u b I i c morality, increase the prob- ability of sexual · promiscuity and divorce and i n v i t e ''similar unsavory" business into the area. The suit asks a court declaration that lhe films are obscene and that the theaters are a public nuisance. The June 21 U.S. Supreme Court decision on pornography put the films outside the pro- tection of the U.S. Coostitu· tion, Harmer said, because they appeal to prurient in- terest in sex, portray patently offensive sexual co n d u c t specificaHY deflnedoY'Sfife Jaw, and serve no l!terary, -.£,,..J~':EV.JJ!!N,..~4~ -POLLY WANT A-HICCUP PHARMACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE •••. ANYTIME -CHICK THESI SUPER SALE SPECIALS-su19. Rt1. , our R", Pric• 1 NOXZEMA AEROSOL Sh•"• Cr111m, I I or .•.•.• , , , $1.29 SI .09 BRECK SHAMPOOS. II 01 ••••••••••••••••••••• $1.b9 Sl .29 "PIZ BU IN" Sunt•n lt1mi ............. , ..•.•• , ••. $1.00 2.39 • J & J SHEER BAN DAIDS, "V•IYe P•ck" ............ $t.09 89c. Silt Prfct 79c 89c $1.69 73c 2700 E. Coast Hi!hway, at Fer~le~f. Corona del Mar AMPLE PAll:KING IN kEAR Hours -9:30 • 6:00 Dallr Closed S11ftdoyt; owd Holkhr't'I 644-7575 trains were being operated have been awarded f o r and all were running on time, reconstru.cUon or the ch~I leaving at 10 to 15 minute in· and commandant's house at tervals. Fort Ross •listoric Park in Sgt._Anlbony ~lzer ~id_a_32 contestants--_ citizen observed a small Mis Nolet is the first U.S. foreign car drive up to the winner in the four-year history building in the downtown area of the contest. Among her and hurl four cellophane bags prius was a trip to Florida. of a reddish liquid at the "l was really nervous and SAN YSIDRO (UPI) - building. didn •t expect I'd g e t Customs agents have two Inspection of the 58 miles of Sonoma County, the State track, cleaning of the sleek Department of Parks and -aluminum cars and repairs to Recreation reports. The vandalis m at stations v.•as chapel was destroyed In August completed last week after the 1970 by a fire of unknown disput e was settled. origin. e Brown Oarl? anywhe;e. I felt certain my dozen drunk parrots on SACRAMENTO (AP) gooS<; pn~p\es m~t have been their hands. The parrots Common Cause has invited showmg, she said. apparently were given te-quila to keep them quiet Secretary of State Edmund G. y,·hile they were smuggled Brown Jr. to drop out as a 2 M H }d into the U.S. fomial sponsor of a political en e Cu s. t Om S inspectors reform initiative. found the parrots, barred Brown could endanger the 0 p R from the United States nonpartisan stance of in-n ot ap because or the danger of itiative backers because he is disease, hidden in a box· a potential 1974 Democratic SAN· DIEGO (AP ) _ Two spring beneath a mattress candidate for governor, said San Diego men have· be.en ar· in a northbound van at Lawful Nudes~ u " ' Kenneth L. Smith, West Coast rested for invcstig~tion of this border po i nt. director of Common Cause. possessing 250 kilos of mari-Authorities said the par· e Craft Crashes juana for sa1e, aulhorities rots were worth about clause of the 14th Amendment. EDWARDS AFB (UPI) _ said. $2,400 on the pet store Mayer fu-gued Friday in The Boeing Compass C:Ope, a The San Diego sheriff's of-black market. municipal court ooedbehallf of remotely-piloted <lir'"perimental, fice sa id Frank A. Passiglia, The driver of the van, four persons arrest Ju Y 24 d J hn S Wood 23 Donald Milas Head, 51 , t L'ttl 8 ch · wingless vehicle, crashed 21, an o . s, , a 1 e ea m a new coun-ed 1 s d · Santa Susana, was charg· I. t th L -Saturday \Yhile attempting to y,·ere arrest ate un ay 1n ty po icy to arres ra er tu.i:tO h J b r th ed with smuggling. Rule V1ifair to Women? SAN RAFAEL (AP) -The American Civil L i b e r t i e s t..:nion says Marin County's Bll'- 1 i -nu d it y law is ur>- const.ltutiooal because nudity a)ready is regulated by state law. ACLU :ittomey David R. ?>.fayer also argued Friday the I a w i s u n c o nstitutional because it pennits naked male breasts but forbids exposure of female breasts, Uiereby violating the equal protection warn nude sunbathers. )and at this desert base, the t e ucum a area o c coun- Anolher ta\•:yer. pa u I Air Force reported. ty. ____ ._,..._~ l'.li\Jl.~~ Kay f etz, represented f i v e p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;:;._;;:_.;;;;;:;;.:;:;;:;;;;;.;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;., other persons arrested the same day near Solinas Bay. He argued that his clients were on private property and not subject to the county law. ARBY1 OFFERS ROAST BEEF DINNER Delicious Roast Beef Sandwich French Fries Salad ALL FOR :. . . 99( SERVED FROM •4 TO 9 P.M. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK . Goo4 0.ly 9t followli.t locCltlon 7942 EDINGER AVE. HUNTINGTON BEACH For California Residents Only GRUBB & ELLIS REALTY FUND IY Minimum Purchue-$5,000 A Real Estate Investment Opportunity A California limited Partnership Offering These Potential Benefits •Tax Savings in'73 •Tax Sheltered Cash Flow •Mortgage Reduction • Limited Liabilily • Potential Appreciation • Diversification of Prop~rties ONE HOUR INVESTMENT MEETING· Thuf$!1ay-August9 N!Wl'ORT WCH-7:30 p.11. Ntwl!Ortlr lu I J1111bortt Bltd. (714) .. 7'60 • Space is Limited Offering Circulars.)Vill be distributed at the semlnm. Call CollecHor Reservations E. F. Hutton & Co. Inc. . . nhi .... ..e ....... M tftiw '9 ..i&. TM .WW It ... '1 lhl .tfwl•t drnt.r 1111J, Tiii ... If tM •IM It 11 ....... ......... ·-........ <ff C.Hfilnl1, ... 1t11 ll Jll" tf •I' ... !If• 1 .. I ..tit. -lnl• tf ... Mf I• tMlr ml._,, ~ ii 11 I I ' I mau ' M.)ACQUes· ~~•l': Fu Til'r Since 1933 Cc~ehra i:in g Our 40 ~11 Ain1iversary ..l . ·•;or: Center • 044-4661 ~ . ,U, ,;CTURER OF THE 11._; •• IEST FURS • • ~ < ... :. ~o ~:30 p.m. Daily; . : , • 1 0 c •.r.1.~9:30 pm. ' I ""',,_ .....w" --.. fllOl'lrrta or._.._ .:.-:r-':l-."""'t:.."".....-... . ~~~:::=~~~~~~======-~= """hh'lrp, • ~ltr, ••I i.ut $20,000, ~,.... lrfl'fl ... I "'*I~ I~ .illl ,...._. H ~ h .-._. no.MO: • ,...,... • ,,.. ._ ....... -ttii 1 • .t i.nt i100,ooo, -.1n111 et ...i11 i. ,....._, ~ ...................... ' • ''POPS'' CERT TO IGHT 9:15 P .M. AT FASR·IO ISLAND .. • ,• •• • . I DAD,Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Crime-and Caution One out of every three Californians responding t.o a recent su rvey had either been the victirn of a crime, or knew so1neone who had been such a victim, within the past year. This is hardly suqirising , with nearly 800,000 felony crimes reported during the year - a 200 percent in· crease during the past de('ade. It also explains which public opinion polls sho~ that crime is the nurnber one concern of most people in the state. More than IO(t specific recomn1endations to strengthen state and local Jaws, speed up court proc~ed· 'ings and improve corre<.:t1onal programs are cont.a111ed in a report prepared by Gov. Ronald Reagan's Select. Committee on Law Enforcement f>roblems, released last week by the governor. 1i~any of the suggestions in the 164·page docurnei:i.t. the result of 10 months of study. are noncontroversial an_9. could be of great value in stemming the frightening crime.rate. But at least one of the proposals raises some seri- ous questions. This has to do with abolisl1n1ent of the "exclusion-- ary rule" which provides that evidence ?f a crime can· not be admitted in court if it was obtained by unrea· sonable search and seizure. . . The Reagan report. supposedly 1n the 1~terest of speeding up the wheel s of justice. woul~ permit th~ ~1se of evidence seized \vithout a warrant, with the prov1s1on that the ho1neowner or individual subjected to illegal search could later sue the law enforcement agency for damages, if he felt so inclined. Thi s would be a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment, which specifically bars ~earch .or seizure of any citizen's home, person or possessions without a war· rant which sets forth details of the proposed search. Reagan seems to feel that compliance with the let- ter of the Fourth A1nendment can result in suppression of needed evidence. But violation of the A1nendment can ----just as easily-lead-t04!ui)pression~of fre_ed~m-:--.---- The Bill of Rights wa s not an exercisl! 1n philosophy. • Its authors were well aware of the dangers of excessive government control and took pains to specify those areas in which the rights of the individual must be paramount. There is no doubt that many citizens h8ve lost con- fidence in the government's ability to protect ·their Hves and property, as the governor points out. But the answer Is not the abolition of the Bill of Rights. There is an ever-present danger to all citizens in the proliferation of authoritarian government. Demoeracy is a cumbersome affair, and often tediously slow in getting to the point, but it is easier to practice patience as a free citizen than within the confines of a police state. Welfare Alternativt1 • More than 50,000 Californians have moved from the state's welfare rolls into self-supporting jobs in the past year, reflecting an impressive 118 percent increase in job placements from the previous year. This is admirable evidence of the effectiveness of efforts tp ease the welfare burden on the ta~payer and help recipients of state aid to become contributing mem· hers of society. It results from intelHgent coordination of welfare programs and employment programs, whi ch formerly functioned without liaison. Persons who have rarely held regular jobs are being trained-or re-trained if jobs in their field are scarce; employers are encouraged by lax incentives to help -provide that training; and child care programs have been established for parents undergoing · job training, looking for work, or starting their new jobs. And for those who would rather just collect relief, the state now offers the choice of working 20 hours a week in a public service job or losing part of the welfare • grant. The "welfare cycle"-no training, no job, no money --ts being-broken -in California, as 51,196 new job- holders can proudly testify. 1' HOME I JAMES:." • Some-lnnovat-ions-Ki~Timahoe~-:;;­ Travels in For the Language New 'Security' Conflict The English language is pollinated in curious \l.'ays. The sudden and usuall:; transienl changes in usage and meaning .art usually instigated "at the lop; 1he permanenl changes usually come front fhe bottom. Changes of the first order can usually be called cant' of the sec<id order, slang. Both quite often de- rive from the desire to conceal something thought to be un- \\'ort hy or unfortun- ate, as ln thieves' cant or political die· lion. Thus far this year the t"'O great inner vators of language iu Atnerica have been distinctly dissin1i- lur men who have one thing in common. nn involvement in the Watergate obscrn- 11,\' Th~se men are Ronald Ziegler, v.'ho c<lm e out of Disneyland by \\·ay of the .J \Valler Thompson ad agency to be offiCial \Vhite House liar !or the Nixon udministralio11. and James W, McCord .Jr., the security chief of the Committee to Re-elect the President. \IR. l\lcCORD pr('SCJlled himsC'I{ to the SC'na tc \Vatergate con1mitt ce and the nu- tion's 1elevision audience as a Jcst:it prefect of discipline v.•ho had been caught slinking out or a cathouse. and \vas du!ifully penitent. If e punctiliously cicsign<il(·J <ill of his dcrelictlons. of \\'hich h~ bud usefu lly kept a full and coinpletc rQCord. He used the mjnd- numbing phr::ise ''al this point in time" or "at that poin1 in time." The usage he- came extrtm(dy nttractlve to the other White House burglars. Nearly all of tht'rn used it for The sn11p!c \\'Ords no\V anct then. The phrasl· scvrncd a healing ungu- ent to their souls. Mr. Ziegler's ('tlnlnhution was n1orc ~btle. It smelled or thr Wl~diS-On avenue lamp: The \Yord .. inopcrill1 vc'' doubtless originated in Otll' of lho~l' farncd ad agen· ~y skull sessions \\'hCrl· the Tall eyr<1nds (c HARLES McCABE) of that strange trade invent words lo conceal thought. To inoperatc means. if I get i~-rightly, to launder a lot of lies by a vast benign corporate sweep of the hand. \ll!>8( Mr. Ziegler did was-)o announce fhaf all the truths he had been announcing about \Vatergate and the \Vashington Post were actually bald lies and had been proven so. To blanket this interesting con~pt and give it corporate legllimacy, Mr. Ziegler said his previous lies \vere "inoperative." ANOTHER 1973 usage, which is rapidly becoming endemic among the telly an- nouncers and others who make a Jiving with thei r mouth, involves an omni- present Washington character called Present Nixon. The air waves are flooded \vilh , "The Present announced," "The Present yesterday denied." "The Present arrived in MoSCO\v," etc .. etc. Just \Vha t this huge elision 1neans I refer to those \\•ho worry about !his sort of thing. IT SEE~ts lhat people talk funny the rninutc they arc found with their fist in the ja:-n. They talk like a police report, or worse. A typical boobie of this soh, when found cooking lhe books of the Pismo Beach First Securily, "'ill start to babble about his da ys as an Eagle Scout. We recf'lltly had one of these lads in the \Vhite House. Could pcof)le \vi!h clear consciences in- flict on thei r fellO\V 1nen such barbarous usagei; ;is rneaningful dialogues, an1- biencc. viable, ambivalent, ethnic, rele· V<Jnt. vister:1l. rela te and input'! Not to speak of that ubiquitous horror "hopefully." These massive illiteracies arc alt part of the galloping J . \Vallcr Thcn111soni.sm that has become an ensign of tl1cse crooked times. ~\cantime I ain glad to report that the fa vored \\'Ord of 1hc ~'oung and the underground press rc- n1<1ins a four-letter cxplcli\'C for manure. Regal Style WASHINGTON -At the same time that President Nixon is appealing to motorists. to hold down their driving because or the gasoline shortage, a chauffeur-driven limousine regularly hauJs his handsome Irish setter, King Timahoe. between Camp David and the Wt\i,te House. The presidential pooch. perched in so litary splendor in the back scat of a blue Chrysler limousine, i.s accorded the same protocol as a five·star general or visiting foreign dignitary. FREQUENTLY, the d-Og rides in similar regal style on the last leg of the trip to the \Vestern White House in San Clemente, Calif.. while the President heliCopters in from the El •roro Marine base. As we reported t\\'O years ago, King Timahoe travels cross country in a lux- urious Air Force jet. On at least one oc· casion, a special plane \Vas wheeled out for the trip. WE WERE TOLD at first that the dog is chauffeured around because he is afraid of helicopters. But a White House spokesman denied this, saying King Timahoe often bounds straight for the presidential helicopter to greet his master. The dog is provided limousine service. acknowledged the spokesman. ,1·hen the helicopter is too crowded. Footnote: There's little evidence that the White House is paying any attention to President Nixon's appeal to save gas. The First family is chauffeured around in Cadillacs. Continentals and Chrys lers. No r do they seem inclined to switch to smaller rnodels, which save on gas. Ex- plained a Secret Service spokesman : "Large engines are neeessary to support the security equipment. on the cars." \\rASHINGTON -Off the main stage and in the relative obscurity of a Senate subcommittee the preliminary moves are being made in \vhat later will become a major struggle between the Nixon ad- ministration and the Democratically con- trolled Congress. The issue is the Pentagon and its plans for new multi· billion dollar \\'ea~ ons syste1ns \\•hich are backed by Pres· ident .Nixon as in· surance against du- plicity in his ne\v· found agreemen ts 111ith lhe Soviet Union and China. Diametrically opposed ideas are in- volved. It is the McGovern idea vs. the Nixon idea on what the nation'& security calls for. It is a connict between the con- cept that the new era with Russia redJces the necessity of new weapons, and the opposite view that the new era cannot be safely underwritten '~ithout them. SO FAR, a Senate armed services sub-. committee headed by Senator Thomas J. Mcintyre of New Hampshire has taken these actions: eliminated a $405 million acceleration or the development of the new missile-launching submarine called Dear Gloon1v Gus In his testimony last week, ~1r Haldeman elevated those on the enemies list to the Dean's list -B.H. GIOor>mY G111 c.,..'"'""' ire sirttrnftttf bl' ruir.r1 and do nol llKH•arlly ,..fltcl the vt.ws of 11\t ,,,_,.,.,.,, Stnd rour H I P-to Gloomy Gu., cn.nr Piiot, " (rucHARD WILSO~ Trident. each of '1·hich 1\•ili cost more than $1 billion : reduced by $1.2 billion various projects for research and development, inc;:luding new missiles demanded by t.he military as a hedge ;igainst nuclear arms control agreements \l'i~h Russia. Senator Mcintyre has explained that many of the weapons programs \\'ere no lon ger needed as bargainjpg chips in playing the game or nucle(!r disarma- ment and were a kinC:t of "overkill .. on lhc part or the military in the ir reaction to the agreements. The chipping away at the military demands by the subcommittee are only the tip of the iceberg and "'hen th e issues advance into the larger arena of the House and Senate. it will be Nixon against those who will be charged with trying to make America a second-rate military power. THE FULLER range or the reap- praisal now being demanded can be found in the analyses of the "center for defense infonnation'' of the "fund for peace'' 1vhose board of trustees em- braces a \l.•lde range of critics of tbe Pen- tagon. including a principal financial backer of the George S. McGovern cam- paign for the presidency, but -also others not so identified. The center for defense information criticized $9.6 billion in major 1veapons programs as of "marginal utility." This sum included $1.712 billion for the Tri· dent submarine and its missiles and the. new B-1 bomber as the successor of the B-52s so extensively used in Tndochlna. THE TRIDENT sub is a tru1y awesome successor of Polaris and Poseidon, the existing missile subs, and ·in its finnl development could hurl 24 salvoes of in· dependently targeted missiles 6,000 miles from the security oC its undersea loca- tions. It is CQnsidered to be virtullllY in· vulnerable to attack for many years to come. J'he proposed B-1 strategic bomber is a supersonic version or the B-52 intended to ;i ttack targets in Russia and China from bases in the L1nit ed States. Thl'se c:aµabilities which supplement 1he l.000 ~tinutem::in missiles in U"· dcrground silO<'s in !\ofontana, North and South Llakota. ~li ssouri and \Vyoming would give the United States R kllling rapacity straining credulity cntlrely outside the nuclear limitt1tion agreement \\'llh Ru ssia. TllAT AGREEfi.fEJ\11' limits t .h c nun1ber of missile firing submarines and - missiles that ma y be deployed on both sides. But it tl~s not proSl'ribc "qualitative" in1provements such 'as the Trident nor n\ul!iple independently targeted \varheads (~l!RVL 'fhe latter ::ire n1issiles containing \1·hat n1ight be called clusters of v.•arheads, each v.'arhead aimed at ;1 separate targl'I. One such missile !hus could \1·ipe out several So\'iet cities in one firing. One Trident sub could theoretically destrov at least 72 Soviet cities. if ihcre \~·e re three 11·a rheads in each missile, 11'hilc hidden 6,000 miles away. The l::iy mind has difficulty en- compassing sonic of the oth('r \veapons proposed. One ls called SCAD. It is :1 Subsonic Cruise Armed Decoy. The decoy will act like a B-52 in flight but actually v.•ill carry ::i nuclear 111arhcad to be fired at ranges up to 500 miles from the target. Then there is a short range attack missile. and a strategic cruise missile. ond an advanced ballistic reentry system 10 improve the accuracy of in- tercontinental ballistic missiles. This is lo say nothing of the advance airborne command post which is to put the Presi- dent and the strategic Air Force co1n- mander aloft during nuclear attack. 1rs the old question : how much is enough? Quotes George "Dad" J\tlllcr, Anaheim , 9f>. year-old Southern CalUorn!a Gas Co. retiree and go lfer -"Don't count your age by the number of years you've lived, but by what you've ucc(lmpHshed ... Ask yourself the qucsllon : 'What have I done to enrich the llves of others, as well as my O\vn?' ·· Femin ist Leaders Finding There~s~ Trouble. at the Top ~ \VASliJNGTON -A rccrnl i!'~uc of Es(iui re -"'the 1'1agaiinc (or :-Vlc11" - says! on its cover that "1'his ls~uc Is /\bout Woo1en.'' It's nQt half bJd dvs[lill' a t.'Ouplc of plcces wilh 1.ltlcs hkc "Jfl'l Women Who Arc Cute When They're \1ad" llnd ''What 1r ..• Gloria Sl.einen1 \Vere Mjss Amer· ~1:a ?" Insofar as the :1rtlcles deal '\\"ilh the 1 s s ues, viewPoiut ;1n~ objectives of !he wotnen's move· rnent, they tell us !it lle that hasn't been stud earlier, but w1e ·or them inadvertently, pct haps , sup. plies us with some fast looks at whnt l1's like to be a lt'ader Of such a n1ovcment. \\!bile-(or ~me, lc.'ldt'rship brou~ht 't11111y d&ys of salisf:1c!ion in ::.i< .. omplislvnenl, for a number nf others the experlt>nce has o(terr been trying, (!m~ bllterlng and ghastly pi1inful. Sara Davidson in the lead piece <!n· ll!led "Fore1nol&:rs," quo11:.5 AnsclJna dii•ll'Olio, the founder C'lf lh('. ~·t'mlrrt sr Rt'per\Ory Theater, es Sllyjng. "I lennll·d. • . that wocnen had always bcE!n di\ id· ed against one another ... and filled with irnpoten ~ rage. I thought the movement \l'Ould ('hangc all that. I never dreamed that I \\'Ould sec the day when this rage, masquerading as a pseudo-egalitarian rndicalisrn under the 'pro-1von1cn' ban· Jll'I', \\'OUltl • !urn into a frighteningly v(cJcus. Riiti·inte!lectual fascism of the left. and used \vithin the movement to ~1r1kc do\1111 sisters .... I am referring, of l'Ours1:, to the persona l attack to which \\;inicn ln !he movement. 111ho have llidn- fu!ly mRn11 gcd any degree of achlcve- n1i•nt , have been subjected." ANOTllER WO:\fAN is quoted as being thro"'l'I oul of her collective because, "Thry said I took up too much space." A th ird tt'ills Sara Davidson, •jwe got no tnovement. W~ got nothing but a bunch of i•nlpty n1ouths." For a fourth we have St:s:in Br(J1rnmillcr remarking that "the 11·1Jmt!n 11·11-0 fir,;t stood out be<:ause they "·('re JZOOtl s1 eakcrs, theoris ts or leaders got squaShed.'' ;\Jone nf lh<'sc have deserted the cause and :.1gncd up with Penthouse maga1Jnc, but !he aggr<'gate of their personal hl~torl s tt)(IVCr! Oavldson to write. "Most of the early feminists arc no longer \1ork1n,i: full ·tinic in lhe movement, but ( VON HOF~MAN J ""nre-setting their own lives in order. !Ind· ing careers in which they can npply feminist principles." In other words. they've cut themselves off from fcn1ini st organizations. The "'·on1en's groups are hardly the first se1ni-revolutionary groups l o decimate themselves knocking of! lheir own leadersblp. One Ol the reasons for the rise or the modern labor boss was ' a similar sorl of destructixe Jealou sy, but they never played King of the Mountain so hard that they not onJy pushed over the king but leveled the mountain. No matter how bitter lfhe po'ver struggles and the feuds. for the m0$l part the unions managed to rcm('mber that the opponent was lhe boss, the factory managemenl, not the union officers. AS THESE fonner feminist leaders tell their story, it appe11rs that rnany of them actively cooperated in their own political executions. When a leader would bcgtn to stand out, begin 10 develop a follo1ving 1 and attraci media attention as an im· portani spokeswoman for a particular point of view, i.the terror of elitism," as Davidson calls it, would excite tt}c seeon· dary figurl!!S around her to pull her down. The accusntion or becoming too big for your britches antedates the 'w\'otncn's movement by scvura l mjlJennla, but \\'hat's unusual is that the J(!adl'.!rs frL'- quently agreed with their followers and allo\V&d themselves to be deposed. Nor is this strange form of political vegetarianism eonrined to the women among modern radlcal groups. , Fred. c;ardoer, one-ot the found~s and early leaden of the . organil<atloo that estab- lished 11nti·war cofrec houses near lnanf mtlitaey bas:es. says he was a victim or lhe same thing. He remarks it was "a common tactic to try to remove a leader by attacking leadership per sc." lie recalls that his reaction to a slmUar kind or charge was to b!,loome "guUt.-ridden . _ , They called me a' loner, idosyncratlc, a male cl:Tauvinist, and I hair accepted the blame ... " . IN GROUP arter group the leadership was elaughtered oft, and a!Ways ii was done ir1 the name of t purer democracy • • • that \vlll nol allow one person to have eliminate ambition £rom Ule. hwhnn authority over another, no matter how heart, but disguises iJ and distorn it. Hiniled or ho\v circumscribed with Most of our contemporary radical safeguards. Jn the past. certalq monastic groups embra<'cd the more extravagant orders have bt-cn run this way, but forms of part1c1patory democracy out of ironlcaliy trorr:t-I.be moder.n .standpoint,.t ... a revulsion .. at the -.egotlstica1:-.nt~it the system onf)' ~orktd-by erecting st.arstyle or those s1tuated on the points a minute and iqO'icate systems of formal or our po\\'er pyramids . But ·they took it and inforn1al corvrols· over indivirtual l<:O far. and forgot ·that It Alpine behavior. Like the femin ists of today. the h1erarch1cal leadership bas an innate monks or tho past learned that perfect tendency to1vard tyranny, egalitarian· unrestrained egalitarianism doc s n 'l flatness inclines toward canniballsm. OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Weed, Publuher 1'11u1nfU Keevii, Editor lJarbara Krelbich Edltorlol Pooe Editor Monday, August 6, 1973 Th~ ('dlfotial Pl\il? of· tbto na'1y JJUot seeks to inform and l!illmulate fl'.'adcrs by preiwntinc on !his page diverse commrntnry on 1opics or in~ tenisr by syndicated columnillta IUld cartconhl/11, by pn:ividlng n forum ftn" readers' , .. 1ew11 and hy preM·nUng thht ll(lWKJMtper'1 C1Qlnlon1 8.ntt tdcas on rurrtnt topics. The C'tll!orlal Op0inion1 or the Dally Pllut appear anly In the r::lilorial f..'Qlumn at tht-top or lhc Jill.W!. Optniom expre.J1ed by the CQJ. urnnlst$ and c11.r1oon.hita and Jetter write~ are their own and no t•fldorte.. men! ol !hUir \'ICw1 by the Dolly Pi1ot i>hould be Jntcm!d. • •• . ' ' I r l I • I ' ' ) .. ' " ' . ' I . •• ' '[ . I 1 .. ·. ·. . " •" Reports from the Services r..·Jarinc Lance Corpora I 1'hon1as It Robertso n Jr.1 son of l\1r. and Mrs. Thomas R. Rolx>rtson Sr .. and husband of the for1ncr t-.'liss Barbara t"A. t-.1cdlock of 13621 Siskiyou of \Vest1ninster was con1mendecl by his cotnmanding officer for outstanding performance of duty with Headquarters and Maintenance Squadron 1 I ~t the Marine Corps Air Station. <it ~l Toro. Midshipman l\11chael \Y . ~1oran. son of Mr. and Mrs. E1nc-rsoo D. Moran of 6871 Spickard Dr .. Huntington licach, is training: for nuc lear p<nvcred frigate. policenwn course conducted by the Air Training Q;>mmand. The airman was lrained in secw-ity and law enforcement. Airman Joseph Pinkston, son of ~lr. and Mrs . Cleo 0 . Pinkston ol 4832 Scenario Drive, Huntington Beach, ha s graduated at Lowry AFB , Colo .. fron1 the U.S. Air F'orce precision meawring equip- 1ncn t specialist course con- QUEENIE . ducted by the Air Training Command. The airman, now trained to repair, calibrate and certify precision measuring equip- ment, is belng assigned to Kir!Jand AFB, N,M., for duty with. a unit or the Air Force Systems Command. fo.1arine Sgt. Glen M. Rawles, husband of the former Miss Patty A. Barker of 24112 Amurro Way, Mission Viejo, received the Good Conduct Medal award at Marine Corps Air Station at Kaneone Bay, Hawaii. James H. Delaney, son of Mr. and Mrs. John J, Delaney, 1531 Highland Ave., Newport Beach, has been promoted to major in the U.S. Air Force. ti.fajor Delaney, an ad- ministrative officer, is as- signed to the Air Force Mili· tary Personnel Center at Ran- dolph AFB, Tex. The n1ajor w a s com- missioned in 1962 upon com- pletion of Officer Training School, Lackland AFB, Tex. Marine Lance Corpora l Lawrence C. KrJcbner, son of fl.Ir. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Kirchner, of 8921 McFadden Ave., Westminster, has reported for duty at the lvlarine Corps Air Station at Iwakuni, Japan. Navy. Seaman Apprentice Steven D. Foster, son of Mrs. Mary B. Skarica of 16115 Shasta St., Fowttain Valley, is part\cipating in clearing minCj from North Vietnam's major h a rbo rs an d ·coas t al v.·atenvays as a Crfwmember aboard the USS Edson. Navy Radioman S e c o n d -· Class.-Larry-J .. ..Stapleton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion L.:. Air1nan First Class TimotJ\Y Stapleton of 1409 Toledo, San I. 1\1cLaugblin, son of Mrs. Clemente, is participating in \Viltna .J. McLaughlin of 1588· 8 -b ci.-..i:.-!b'.....,.,"'!'-l..._191i.w...w...,--. clearing mines fi-Orh North Monday, August 6, 1973 DAILY PILOT 7 Gloria Marshall figures don't lie. l .._ ..... ·----- O ur resul ts speak for themselves. We know we con help you lose those pounds an.:I inches. We know we can help you achieve a more atttactive figure this su mmer. And we guarantee .it in writing. So, do as thousands of figure-conscious firls before you have done; redlfce the Gloria Marshall way and finish the summer with a new you! B Coriander Dr ive Costa .. Vietnam's major harbors and ---l\if~a.~ has ·----gi·;rduaied a-r--1%ook-,l!.y~ad+3:-Dard-day-at-tb~~~~&l--weterways--as--·;.+-h~""'""'""'--"'-.• .;;:.~-1 Lackland AFB. Tex .. from the fourexecut1vesw1ththatsamelook1n their eyes. What ·· ., cr.ewmember aboard the USS ~.~.- U.S, Air Force se curity i~ it -a new kind of nu?'' . . t dson. '"'l::... . +C ~ """"'~~ ~ V·'·'~ Mazda Makes Hot Pursuit • Firm's Irvine Headqriariers Signals Progress By CHARLES E. DOLE Christian Science J'l.fonitor Service The Big Two' Japanese car-export em· pire is fast becoming the Big Three. For years in the United States when the car was Japanese, it was either a Toyota or a Datsun. Now, along comes the company wit h the funny-sounding name and the sit·ut>and-take-notice car, TOYO KOGYO has been selling its \\'ankel-po\\'ered Mazda in the U.S. on ly for 27 months. Yet, next year. predicts C.R. Brown. general manager of Mazda J\1otors of America, Inc., "we'll sell at liast 240,000 cars in the U.S. -or double \\'hat we'll sell in 1973." , And he will probably make it. Already the Mazda is in fifth place among the im· ports. \Vhat makes 1\fazda run is the Wankel engine beneath the hood. Although still an internal-combustion engine, it difrers from the standard up-and-down engine for regiooal offices and parts depots in Seattle, Jacksonville; Fla., and Houston. Shov.•ing the rapid growth of Mazda in the U.S., the company sold only 20,000 vehicles, including some standard piston~ engine cars.· .. in 1971 . Last year, it hit 60,000 as it enlarged its dealer netviork in some major :iales markets of the coun- try. This year, sales will mote than double, despite climbng costs that put the lowest . priced Mazda Well above the lowest-pric· ed models of many competitors. 11IE PRosPECTS ARE so bright, reports Bro\\'Il, that he says he expects ~1azda to begin assembling cars in the U.S. within the next few years. Risi ng costs in Japan, fluctuating currencies, Toyota, Mazda fort!ed to take notice. because it gels its po\vcr from t\vo whirl· and other considerations make the pros· ing rotors. pee ts of assembly in the U.S. brighter A thennal reactor cleans up the ex-by the year, he adds. haust. Toyo Kogyo already has stated ''It costs, for example, from $80 to $150 that its Mazda rotary, with thermal reac· just to ship a car from Japan to the tor, meets the original 1975 standarPs of U.S.," according to Brown. the Environmental Protection Agency The American arm of the Japanese and that it will also meet, ll/ith some auto manufacturer already is making a changes, !he far tougher 1976 standards. major input into what the American car buyer wants in an automobile, no matter TliE COMPANY ts so sure of its prod· whether the car is built in Japan. in uct that it has broken ground for a $6 Europe, or in Delroit. 111illion national headquarters d · · The Mazda is creating a product-develop-l>uilding and parts epot in Irvine. ment division in the U.S., declares building is expected to be completed a nd Brown, y;hich y;ill help to keep the parent operational by the end of the year. company in line \vith U.S. tastes and Mazda also has allotted another $10 demands. million for corporate expansions in other develoPment division to actual assembly may not be too large a atep sometime in the future. Obviously, the company would use almost all American components In the 11SSffnbly plant plus Americm work· ers. on the line, thus helping to cancel some Ci the critici.s~ now leveled at the importer$. - The Wanl:el, or rotary engine, Is Just one of a bundle of pow e r ·pl a nt alternatives being developed, tested, and oonsidered as more viable replacements for the ubiquitous piston engine in the light or anti-pollution directives being channeled toward the manufacturers. The rotary engine has an advantage because it now is in volume production and already Mazda has sold aboot a balf million in its cars. The manufacturer is planning to double its rotary output in the fall GENERAL rttOTO~ BY throwing its vast resources and engineering genius in· to rotary-engine development, has added a fresh.impetus to the industry's race to perfect and produce the engine. GM plans to introduce a rotary engine in its low-cost Vega next summer and may seli 100,000 or more or them in the 1975-model car year. Mazda's push to expand its dealer network and get the engine into all areas of the country by the summer of '74 in- dicates its alm to beat GM to the marketplace before the v.·orld's biggest automaker gets rolling. Meanwhile, at least 26 C4)mpanies have spent tens ol millions or dollars to ac- quire the rights to work on 'the rotary engine. Mazda plans to introduce a new line of roU.ries, the RX-4 , by the first of the year when its 1974 models hit the showrooms. parts of the U.S. during 1973-74,_notably J\10VING FROM AN active product· Donkeys Race ·1----,-H-E -U--L ,-, MMAT_E_l_N_C_A_R-PE_T_C_L_EA_N_IN_G ___ Capitol New Sertice SACRAMENTO T h e California State Fair will present its first an nu a 1 celebrity donkey race Set> tcn1ber 9, at 2 p.m. al Cal Ex· po. NIYll .............. '"""' II wh•n fO'I' Mll•I •<H ... wt TOILAFLIXe Toilet ~Plunger Uhllkr. otdln•ry pluncMt. 'Ibll•lleA doet nl)t Pftm\t comp1nttd •If Of muey W•1tt to tfll•th blielr Of eoic•PL With '?Oi11flu the full prr_t1Utt: plow1 throu1h the clo11ln1 m111 ind ••lthff It down. t IUCnOH·lt1M ITO" UU.IK-UC:lt • Cl:NTllll ITllL,, CAN'T 1100 Af!OtlHO • TAPllllO TAtl GIYCI Allt>TIQHt "' o.t the O.IMM 'T•lltftff' t26J AT HAIOWAll tTOleS STEAM MASTER JVIOlllL.9: CARPST CLaANl'Nll avllTBM 5 \VAYS BETTER THAN ORDINARY STEAM CLEAN 1 Cl.S:ANS DEEPlll I tfy<lre.St""' t.Jee11J>• puoo'llf .. o•u•l'!I .100 lb.. pn ""!~·· .. I"(\, Pio lo bl,.••• i.-by 111• hlsh p~•••~. o•n· ·•d ., .. ,, JOI II lo ... l\M ilool COft•I ni... •• .... '""'-~...U1 --'. ... Jl•f(o<l,,,, 2 DRIES f'ASTEJI! £11roe1lo• '"'"o•u ,,. • .,.~,to~1 lO IM. P"' oquuo i•rh •lilo ~ ,,111. 1'<1 .,f 1lr P•• ,.1 ..... U\11, flM>lotu,. o...! """"'PH r1o!duo IU•toll1 "hbtl~ ""' o! yo•• "''P•I. T~o plk io 1,11 •!•I~• ond cltol<t, From Steam Master The People Who 3 Brought You "STEAM CLEAN" We've Ntl lllAYY lQ\llPMlNT! N1 h•o•y •q•lp• -•• lo lor<1•Jl>t ;~1" ,.,.;, hom•. 011r .,)I. Mttltl••<I •tth ""'" ""ltl;I" '"'' t>f "'"' •oy, ••tr U.• duei.11 ••~d •~'"'" Y"•' ~ .. ,,,., taken the revolutionary principles of steam clean and refined' and improved 4 them to bring you a totally better pro• cess for cleaning wall to' wall carpet- HYORA CLEAN~t's better than steam! s -FRUESTIMATES _, 540·6011 lfO .tl.f:CTJllCJTY OJI 1'0T 'WATl:Jt ! °"' Mydtt•"Ytt> •q•IP"'"-' io •••1>l•10\1 ••II..:••· t1IMll o•d -11~. Til~l'O lo ~" t<i•d lo ... '6•• loot wotot ., .Jffuhl'J' a wn• ••~'"'' ""' ... , .... OHt.Y SOfT 'flATIR.I An••""' lo,, ... , •. .itk>•~~ Ot~ •llo• ... It t11 .. 16ole l!O#' WOid 1ul4.!w• •• , 1 .. ,~ ·~·~· - • 645-1313 ONE DAY SERVICE 1740 SUPERIOR AVE.-COSTA MESA (Newport llvd. & 11th St.) C'stabll•Md '1ns • '., . . :-~, -#':' ,,,,,..""'.':~ •••• ~ ••• :·.· And you're looking at the proof • ' ' '..•I MILDRED WALSH Librarian 11\ad always bttn averweighl 1nd suf. leied bac~ problems dlle ta '°°' pos· lure before t began my pfogram w1lh Gloria Marshill. In JljSI three months I lost 22 lSS. and 25 INCIJJS aMI weM from a site 16 ta 12. My postu1e and circulation !lave improved and l loo~ and feel years y~unger. . , . ·'I-. ... ' . \:. ' ~i: !:_I,; It• .... ·: i}. \"•. k-~' • KATHY GRISE Waitress It's fanta stic! It's changed ml lil!-my personality-my wo~d. Sil 2(1¥1 tot pefftct PETllE JO. I rast 56 lh'CHES and 60 POUNDS in five .months wilb you. Gloria Marshall! T!lank you and your stafl. THELMA ROY . HouSewife It realty works! It's the greatest! I have LOST \J V. pounds afld 28\IJ INCHES aiid nev!lf look!d or lelt beller in my life.' " ) KATHY PACKWOOD Housewife l've lost 23¥1 INCMES in JO llours arid am wearing a si1e 10 (was a size 14). J hild played the~ diet rame wilh no res~lts. Gloria Maish.all llas brourht the inches off arid d1tss si1es daw~J'm ready for summer! AFFIDAVITS OF AUTHENTICITY ARE ON FILE IN THE HOME OFFICE • • • FREE COURTESY TREAT· MENT. NO OBLIGATION. Come in !or your free demonstra· lion and sample treatment. A trained Gloria Marshall speciallsl will lhen analyze your ligure and dosigr'! a program jusl for you. -~?ii_;;;u g, FIGURE CONTROL SALONS • TH E MOST Plt::ASANT WAY TO REDUCE IN THE WORLD! Gloria Marshall Is not a gym 01 a spa so there is no disrobing. no strenuous exercises and no memberships. You take your lfeatmenls in comlo1table, cheer· lul, semi·priva1e surroundings. • YOUR RESULTS Your resulls are achieved through a program of nutrillonal guidance and individuil!ly designed firming and loning techniques. Because individual llgure problems differ. your res111ts may be different lhan !hose achieved by someone erse. ... . ' Call or visit the salon nearest you today for your FREE personalized figure analysis & treatment. There it no obligation. Master Charge • BanltAm.,icord ONLY $150 American Express _ per Yi hr, \reatment on any prog11m worlds leading figure conlrol S)'Stem Open daily9 to9, Saturday 9 to 4 NEWPORT BEACH 430 P•::~~Ji:i°0''1 Hwy. 'THE CITY' S9 Brazili a South Onnge -997.0211 DAILY 9.9, SAT. 9·S Try ~aturday's News Quiz I " ... ,. .. " '" 1 I •' ' ~I •I ' 1t ... •• r ff UAILV PILOr • . ,.;.,., Fo1· tl1[ Record D isso l11t ions Df Marriage 11'/led Julr 11 H1rri•, J•nlc. M. and ROM1d F. W11Um&". "''""CV C1rol """ Hfrberl l r111rlflnk, Lindi M. Ind Larrv Don ¥.cFeely, Chai,..,..,. •od June II:, E"'ll'ry, BU<k E. 11tld Kalhle,n Lindi Hu<lson. C1m!He Gtl'e l"CI llon~ld All~~ Richey, Larry D. and Sharon Le~ lrvn~. P1lrlcl1 Ar>n '\fld O<m1ld J11rne, Motller, L1wre11te E. •nd Doroth}' C, S1la11r. J,,.fohine and JOl'lnnle Loper Cray, Je!!rey LH and San<1ra Y•onne Clement,, Oorolhy IC, •net Hugo <inQ, Dile E. ana Pamela S. Gundfr5on, DoUQlll• A. •nd Ot•lt Lee 811l<er, ICurt Jeffrey •nd Vl<IOrla A"n ~obblnf, Amie Marie 1nd Gllk>erl Joe ';of!lnel, Dl•na OH and LIO'Yd Allen Oe Phll!lp,, ll:alph and MaOelln~ .Vlk;Ju•, James S!~1rt and VlrQlnla Mond3y, Au9u~1 6, 1973 City Siaubbed 1st Nixo11 Office No State Landmark ·:. Dy JACKIE LAPIN Auoc.lt!M ''''' Wl"ll1r LA llABRA -A group of I.a llabra citizens can't un- derstand \Vhy th e California ll ls tori ca l Landmarks Ad,·isoty Committee has snub- bed President Nixon In favor of Creek 1.corge, Ehtha Curni Donner \Vilder and Pc~ Leg Smith. other places, they will consent to ours." There· is a prevailing con- fide nce among board . membe1 lJ that the second at- tempt will be SU<'cessful. LOIS LUNDBERG, anothtr trustee, said, "You have to have a Httlc imagination to realize how it will be when we get it back the way it \Vas when the PrPtsident was here. Then I think they'll want it.'' • Dllt'I PUtl $11ff l'llei. Lel <;1n Glb$on. Marv H. ""d John s. Cole , Edl!h F, .ind RlcP!arcl Q:, The tru!';fees of the Nixon La\v Office Buildin g Preservlition, Inc. have asked the committee to name the site of Nixon's first law office an historical landmark', but the committee bas turned them down, saying the La Habra building "does not have statewide significance or irn· The structure looks like an y or the other small businesses in the ~ntral part of tovm. It is an unobtrusive stucco building on La 1-labra's main Fir Goodness' Sake .m1111, Fr1n(is Michael and Carolyn Ruin ?hll!i ps, Wiiiiam H. and Joy Anne l>lerct, Ralpl\ erw:t Carol LH 1Yrigh1, Ruth Anne and Paul Benlaml!\ \lotpe, Judllh Rae and Rooert L~r<l ~uccione, Ellen Louise Ind Roo1ld Vlncenl llshop, David Georg11 Ind Palrlcla Agne' street. Hendrl~. Siiiy G. 4nd Elll&be!h F. Hunter, Rita E. and Gregory A. Dag1on, (hllrles F, Jr. and Darlene t1. pact." The group, which bought the building last year for $25,0oo, is restoring it to the way it was when f\1ixon practiced ,----------.. there from 1939 to 1942, after he was grr!C:.uated Crom Duke University Law School. Dlcke"on, Grace '91\d Jo•el)ll D. THE GROUP ha J' d t!11igenorlh, Jeannetre M11rle and Reberl S reapp IC Lee to lhe committee and also sent Ca<ter. H11riv Lyne anti Charlo!le Ann l !ePh•nson, Rosemn•v onc1 Jonn c. letters to Gov. Ronald Reagan, <•t,aneves, Joseohlne and James ~·ho appointed the comn1ittee, IT llAS already completed Mlcllael •'-· Clooi;ih, Rober! G. and There'a M. noting that the graves O( WOfk Oil Ult: floors and the ifl· ~~=~t:~a Larry F. and Marv Jine Greek George, a camel driver, tcrior, but it plans to strip Vtin Dur.en, David c. 11ne1 C•1t.er1ne M. and Mrs.\Vilder, a survivor o ( away the stucco front to un-MIKeYlch. Le-e Mae o9nd Raymond Eu11ene the unfortunate Donner Party, cover the original white brick RawWl<!. Dorl$ L. I nd Charles F. as well as a monument to Peg r;no"sh. Miiier, C1rol Dee end v..-11111 Poul C.ooke, H11Jel Joyce Ind Joton Leon Leg Smith, "a spinner o( tall The La Habar C~mber or Stear, t11rold R. •nd CllhY A. tales." have all b-• ••J-ted Co b be (" ~enderson, c rium Ae 11nd Mlcllllel Lee l;;Q> ,.., ..... mmerce as en ren 1ng P••per, John F. 1n0 aar11.tra Lee historical~landmarks. the office as a headquarters Anion, Mar<I & R, .,Id Richard J . Porter. Thoma• T. 100 P11r1c11 A. "We think our office is more since December for $150 a ';.:;~!:::!;'· Davtd Carl a nd suianne worthy than some cattle month, which helps to pay the se-eie~. Lind• s. and Jeurey Allen rus __ tier _s!~~i.!1~ in some be~Jll9jjga.ge. __ ---~ • Br1..t;;MirMiA-A..-1~ o, ---.,,.... or·· F t w Mirier, stie11tv Lvnn and Jotoo Marh•all sa1u . orres arner, a Those payments are sup-. -· ORANGE t"OUNiY 1o:ii;·h, Toni and Ronald Fr«1erlck member Of the board, "We are p]emented by approximately Loht>erg, Atimts and Pau1 Rllt>e'r1 r£'all y annoyed. but we feel if $12.000 in donations solicited '-----------' 5ka11gs, W11Jlact l . and Ann C.. !I " th · ti 1· b b · t• · Si>~daforo. 1rene A. •n<1 Michael G. '11C ca w e.1r a en ton y t e orgaruza ion 1n a two- 2 Sue Racetrack for Ej ection HarborDENTAL CENTER PUBLIC NOTICE Decker, Chllrl•J F. and Alice M. they've approved all these . year campaign. · Bl~c~mao, RUDY M. and JamH E. -·---1,.~~.lh.J~b.DAY.lll.1nd8~11e .1.ffin _ _,_ __ 1!!._ __ ----·-··----__ _ H~rrold, 1(1ren Ann •nd Brltdley O. ___ _Jl __ .tJENTUR•l.'IE~---· CREDIT-•-PElfflJ.THAl--11--~punLlC-NOTtCE·--- \IJnSQn, Do11ald Wayne 11nd Meryl 'iitS®·I~ t:t:tl~--Mlrgaret " _., McCOrgl.IOCl.ele, M.tri" end JO$i!Slh M. lmltke, 01rlene Jr;,y end Frederick Otlier Tllurl Tro9cy, Llnd1 Jovce 1fld Rlchllrd Lee Bel'Wle, Jack Mert!n end Oorls Ml• MCK.trn1n, M1rl0fle 1nd dry1n1 Halt Slmrfloru, M'(f"lt l O>U and Gary Elill- Yan un~w. Dunn.. illlll Joun ~ Sciullo, Shlrley Ind Virgil Angtlo M...v""''"· Janos'""' en.. T,,..,.,. Elvin HlgOle, D. Clllldi~ 1nd Jon Mlrquil Drig11,rs, Jac11ue/lrre Ann and Jeromt Deaths • Francil · Rose, wah:lon A. •nd J•nel Looise Death l'll otices ANDERSEN .. .!rid S. Ancier&en. All• 85, ot 1274 "son Ave ..... 011e MHe. °'81e of Cleam, J!IUI! •, 191l SvrvlvlKI bY two <1auo1111r>, •rdl ~urney, Cot.Tl M.-1; EBI M. Jba. Huntington Be•ch; two IOl'IS, Gun· r, of Tusron; Holger AnderMn, soar~•. -.Ilda; sister, Mrs. J/ w. Newman, tr~s, Nev1d11 two brofl'lt"' Pele ,...reosen. s i n Fr111clKO• Hirlmar irqln..,n, Rtno, •J\le11ad11 our 1nctc11n<1reo; M!veo iir11l-9•andchl!dre11. lv11e l1mlly services wlll be Mid ~ne~Clav, 11 lvA. Sell 6 roadwav .. Del. lnlt-rmenl, ·.;iarbor Rest Memorial Irk. Bell Bro..dwoV Mortuary. DlreClors. COOf>ER ~nelY P , COOPW. Res.iderll of l.eilune '"r· dole ol /oe1tt1, Auo111t 4, l97l. 1r11 Wd by wlNt, TM!mt L. Cgoper end 10 ne~ Rowry, Tuead1y, f:lS PM, iqulem Ml'fo Wedlledl Y.t 10 AM, OOlh al " N1chol11/ C1!holk l.hurcll, Laguna 1Us. 1nterJYtenl, Ascension Cemelery. cCormlck lilDUl!I 8e1cll Mortu1rv • • rector•. KARGE 111 w /i(1rve. FOJmerlv cl Cor0111 oet 1r; d•J!! cl doth, July 27, 1913, In Sao '«JO. S!Jrvlv&d DI dough!ers. Mrs. JllMI 1,111110 '•nd Cons enc• J1ckton. Prlv111• mily 1nemorl11 $9rvkn, Tuescsay, l PM, .Kille View Cllllpel. lnurnmerrt, Pacific iew Memorial P•rk. F11mllv •uooests °'' wlshi~ 111 make memorl'9t con-;t>Vllons, 1>1e1i.e conirlb1111 ro 111e •ll!frens t1ome Sodetv. P1cllk View or1\f11ry, 01rec.:,0£RclER ,.,llh F'. Mercier. Alie 70, of '3D2 Win- -Dr .• HunllnQlon Beech.. Datt 01 ' 11th ,August •, 1913. Survived by wlfe, 'myi loor d1119h1'rl, Tllert!.11 Mfrcler, 1ne LeV IQM, Elllllbe1h Dun1lon, Piii al~ll o lwo 11hler1, Annlolnortle Aubin -.:1 Jane van Mlrwnlene; thirteen r11,.<1c111111ren; loor 11~1.grandch!ldrfl'll. niv~lde 5ervices, TueK11y, 2:l0 PM, ood Shepherd C~•ery, Huntlng!o" e1ch. Pefl F1mily Cotonlal Funtrill ome. Oirecton. Sl.HERRUEBLE 'llli11m G ~Clle"ueble. 1741 Pomona Yl',. Co~!a Mesa. Diie of de1lh, Augusr !013. SyrviYed bv wife. EYelvn; two 'to.on•. HC>W11rd Ptnllleberry, ltvlne; taniev Pendleberry, Thousand 011~s; ro!ller, Ja~~ Scllerrueble, Everen , lll•hlnaton; si•1er. Marv Ho9mmatt, Co1M \tw; love ll'""dchHdrero: two neohews fld -ni~e. Services, Tuesday, I P.M, ell Broadway Chapel. PrlYaT• ln!ermen1. awt1lle NIT•Ofll l C•mtltry. Vlsl1111lon, >e11v, Monda~. un!ll e:XI PM . Sell .fO<ldW'9V Mcr!!f8rv. Dl~IOl'1. WHEELANO 'ob<!rt l. Wheeland. Agt ~7, 1>1 1~~ a{alant Lani. Garden Grove, OaTe O! eaTn, AUQu$1 J, 1973 Survlv&d bv wife, ac<1velvn; so~. Larry: !wo claughlers, ~ot>eNa Ant~onv. Linda 1Cr11no; !a!htr. .aw~nce W~ .... J~nd; ""ctner. Mrs. Earl 111ves; two counsins, Carole Broo~e and :ai~tdl\I Emric~; lwo or~n~rnlld•en. ,\llmQflal servi{es were htld lodo9y, Mon· tav 11 AM, Episcogal (hvrch ol the ~,s'!lah. Sant~ f\na DT•~ci• ov Pee~ ;:amlly Colon•al Funeral Home ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St., Costa l\1esa 641>-1883 • BALTZ-BERGER0'1 FUNERAL HOMf; Corona del J\1ar 673-9450 Costa l\1esit G46-2424 • BELL BROAD\\l'A Y MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa !\lesa LI 8-3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. LOS ANGELES (AP ) ·Private services have been conducted for Dr. Orville L. Bandy. 56. professor of l{eological sciences at use for 25 yeJrs. who died Thursday of leukemia at Dan i e l Freeman Memorial Hospital. LOS ANGELES IAPJ Walter J. Escberich1 79, an ac- tive member of the Los A.ngelt's Chamber of Com- n1ercc for decades a n d chairman or the c i t y ' s Building Safety Commission from 1940 to 1948. died Sunday or ::1 heart condition in Hun- tington Memorial Hospital.. SAN MATEO (AP) Funeral services wiU be held for Lawrence CUnton Smith, 69, a Peninsula developer, paving contractor and polo player. who died Thursday at Stanford J{ospital. He was 69. SANTA CRUZ (APl Lloyd J.. Ring, 41. assistant chancellor for planniJJg and analys1s at UC Santa Cruz. died Thursday. He \Vas found slumped in his car, dead of carbon monoxide po ison in g. ALBUQUERQUE, N . M . (AP 1 -Funeral services \\'ere planned .today for Charles Winstead, one of the FBl agents who shot John Dil!ing£'r in Chi cago in 1934 . \\'instead, 82, died Friday at \1etcrans I·fospital. M ar1•i age Lire11se!f LAS VEGAS -'-larrlage llcen'e~ h~ued he'e 1ncl\ll!e : SAMSON-BALDWIN-June 12. James G .• 1•, and She~rl 27, bo!n of t1vr· t1ng1on Beach. RDGERS·(Dll -June 1J, Do91e L .. •7, of Htm!ln11!on 8efch, ilnd Deity Ruth, i~. of Hermosa Belich. TARASEN·BECt<MAN June 13, Cu1li~. 18. dnd Jennl!er Laura, 18, ll<>lh of Hvn1inoT011 ee~ch. f'llOSLER·A'l'COCK ·-J11ne H. Rober! A., ,1, ot Hvn!lnQton J!ea(h, and ll'.are11 J~n Hib~ch, \9, ot LakewOOd. PAYNE QUIGLEV -Joni lS, )'9Ck L~. 21, 11nd Ma111 .. en Anila, 70,f bcTt, ol ~ewvo•! 13ea(~. SALKRJSHNA·BROWN -June IS, Kar~vlf"' P., 11. of G~<den Grove. and H111t1er N11n,v. 71, of Co$1a Mes~ lU FT·EVA r~s June IS,J~m'' Rowe. 15, o! Tu1!ln, 11na ll~dll Dl&ne, 19. of we.lmln1!er, f,\(INlY RE-TRUELOVE -June )5, Micha'I Paul. 19, and Deor• Ann, 1T, bo!n 01 HuntlnQton Beach DA\llS.JDHNSON -Jvne 1.1. Pr~nl!•$ Miles, JO, and Oebr1 LY~n. n, IXl!h of Fovnt'9in 11&11py. PARl>:ER ·McC RllCl(EN -June lJ, Huntington Beach Mt-ml %44 Redondo A\•t , <LongJleach. .. , iJ3--l38-WS ·• l\1cCOR1\fTCK LAGUNA ll:ona!cl All•n. l7. and Rllo Maroe, 31, t>o!•• ~f HuntlnO":>" Beat~. BRAY.(OOAV -June •16, Joi~Pll Curio\., Yi of Sw1n Laiwn ... ind s.!!t: --(Ir.I !'~t. 1~. (II CQ,ia M,.,ii'. 1 BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-9'15 • PACIFIC VIEW ~IEMORIAL PARK Ce metery l\tortuary Chapel • 3500 Pacific View Driv~ Nf:wport Beach, catUordla 114-%700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1801 Boin Ave. \\1r:s tmlnstt:r 893-JS!S ' • s~nnts' MORTUARY . m Main SL llunUngton Stieb UMSlt RO\.ER-LOPEZ -Ju~ I~. ~llarl~s JQhn, 37, &nd RllontJ11 M•Y, 75, b01h ot Costa Mf1a CAMPION·l HEtSEN Rn '•MM Jonn. i~. M ( ~oi"' ~nc, and M11rl1n v·~na Jvrn:!lon, (olo. June 16, s~n Ju•ro a .. 41. 01 COSTANTINO.DAVIS Jvnt 16, Rolltrl Jaf'\t•. 11, ol 8ellllow~r, and J11ne1 R ~tl), 11. of W~tl"ln11er NIJl.WHIT£ -Jun• 1&, M•IYI ... t1 ' S/>. ot t:ono lletth, ond Eiken Ru1h, , •• "f We1tmln~Ter SPR INGER·GEflAUER -Jun• 16, Garald L .. 31, aNI H•atl\'~ J•n•. 31. t>olh tif W~lmlnl!tr, MADDOX MORTON Ju!'HI 1 6 , t1owar<1 Wllli•m. •7, '"d M•delloe Pearl, •I, bo1h l)f hv;flt, HOBLE·MeNA -Jun• 16, All•edo. )4, ana Chrilhne 1., 1r, t>O'n °' CMt• Ml'1ft SHOQPMllN·CARlER June 16, Joset1h Ow&n, )J. of llunt1n91on ll!•t h, and Ve1mn I<~~' ·~· of C.OrOfl&. WYP<N(!.C OU RTNEY Jvne Gtr~ld Oev;o, l,. of llu"•lnQt~fl Otllt/'O. a~(I Ell(ltnl1 C~•OI, JO, O! Sent& An•. WARD·W"!TCHEll -JUflt I&. Ron•ld f'dw1rd, )J, •nd 11.tvtrl\' '""' )), DOlh o1 Coll• M•11. OOlAN·W.'>.llOLE -JUM ·~· r ... rll"ICfl lllOl:lf11, lt), of C•not-,.,.,~, 1tr1t1 .Jvt/l!h •11.en, 30, o1 "11/f'tl"ll'°"' 8Mtfl, ' Huntington Couple Have Charges Cut 3 • on deposits of $100,000 for six month s to one year The num ber of th ese acco unts that we can accept is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SER V E YOU IN • Arc1di1 •cerriloi L• Crtsctnt• •of1n~ Btl! G!rd!IJ.S •c,osta M,•s• Los ~n11l1s (2) · •s111 B1rn1rdi110 •t1nog1 Park Downey (21. Mont1r1y P1rk Whittirr Five Additionill Offices in Northern California Pleasant Hill San 8runp Foster City f0penin1 Soon) Mountain View San Jose *OPEN NIGHT & DAY and Saturdays Call (213) 923 -9601 or see t11e' white pages for your nearest office /, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • We 1~11111, In "~non•! dtnlurH". Evetytlll1>9 c•n lie done wftll• you a re llilttp. Pirllcul1r illtnllan Is t lv"' IO c,.._ & llrldt• wort. W1 use tll• .flew po~flain ri.t~ed to gofCI Ill jlltkeh. I. brldgn. l"rlc~ l!UCIM 111 adv1nce. All pens10..er1, un~n Ind pencnel lnS11r1r1e1 ere w1lcoll'le. e No Contracts • No Exercise .• No IN Am phota • 40 mines DAYS UNDER MEDICAL SUPERVISION ... Welcome Unions and All Health Group In surances =· CALL FDR AN APPOINTMENT a • H°'!rs 9 a .m . to 7 p.m . : OMEGA CLINIC Costa M~sa ANAHEIM 1869 Newport SAHT~ ANA 1 J9U Tuttt. A"' 5474119 646-1633 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ., ... ~ . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . Mond1y, August b, 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 DAll.Y 10-10, SUN. 10.7 c H A R G E I T Whlle Quantities Ladl MENS SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 00 c H A R G E I T • • " " ., ' 2Days 1-r---11--~-_ __,,,o""nlyl ----·~~~-~~-i•h~~~-1 --.,'l•~+~ Polyeste•/colton blend• ;n a la•9• ••lecHon of •tyles & •. I-~· -~-- ~~olo~0i 11s S-XL_: Whi!~~~ la~t! -· I ·L.1;;;;~;;....;~;.;;._~;;;,;;,;;;;;;....;;;.,.........,_......;...,.J " MIN'S FLARE JEANS 2 Days ·oo Only! Many 1'1orfed styles e nd colors to choose from in sizes I . 28-)b. While qu1ntit ie1 lest! Shop early -11d 11vel I FLARE JEANS 00 PAIR Wide selection of styles and c..olors for your convenience -in sol ids or patterns. Slims •nd~9ul1r1, Six11 8-18. While quantities lest! I Similer to illu1tr1tion I. • BOYS POLYESTER WALK SHOR·TS .2P~IR 50~ Welk 1hort1 in 111orted 1olld1 •nd 1tripts -in 100 9/. Poly- ester. Sites 8-18. Whi le thev len1 -·......i..-• ..... 1~ • .. Kmart GRILL SPECIAL · TUESDAY ONLY ...... Use Your Kinart Cha•e Bank am ericarcl or Master Charge MENS POLYESTER SPORT COATS · · 2 Days Only .00 I 00 1. polyester sportcoats in broken sizes. Shop early-wh ile quantities last! MEN'S SHORT . SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 2 Days Only 00 F 0 R ·- Stock up now on thil terrific velue in men's solid & print dfess sh irts. Sites 141/1 to 17. Wh.ile qu•~n.tities le.1t. C~1rgt itl .... DELI SPECIAL ,., . MENS SHORT SLEEVE . POLYESTER SHIRTS 2Days Only! 00 < Many assorte_d solids and prints in button front or placket styl•s. I 00 % Polyester. While quantities last! ,, "' MEN 'S SHORT SWVE KNIT SHIRTS 2 Days Only SHORT SLEEVE 00 ~ A variety of styles & colors in short sl•eves -includin9 I \ . ' Jipper or lace-up front. Buy several at this low low price. While quantities la st. (simila r to illustration I Boys' Short Sleeve Sweatshirts ' 00 • Cotton/ acrylic short sleeve.crew neck sweatshirts is ••· sorted-c.,jort. Sta.esJ..O·lb. While quantities lastl Kmart GRILL SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ONLY • COMPLETE MEAT LOAF DINNER ALL THE FISH YOU CAN EAT! Tender-Delicious ' ' Includes Whipped PDta'-1 00 ,-Buttered Yeptable Jello or Ice Cream Choice of Large Soft Drink • · HAM SANDWICH ON A BUN TUES. I. WED. ONLY I French Fries Crisp Fresh . SI- Roll & Butter 1.00 2.200 HARBOR Bl.VD. ---Corner of Wilson and Harbor COST A MES • ' <' I . ' ' ~ ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' . • • ' . : • ' ' I · 1 !• f) OAll Y PlLOT S Monday, AOgust 6, }q73 Shak11 Ftrt11re Common-stock Investing? r T11;.s 1s the last of f ive art.1cles wltcther a person ca1i still tn.okc nioney 1.111 tl1e stock market. Tl1is one focuse.~ 011 po111ters for new tt1vestors.) By RICHARD NF.NNE:\IAN Cl!rlali•n Selene• Monli.r Str\'i~e BOSTON. l\1ASS. -~Ins something basic changed, 10 1na kc comn1on-stock investing Jess desirable than il was for the last 50 years. 1vith the ex- ception of the Depression and \l.'ar period? Something has ch an g ed. \Vhether it will be bad for co1nmon stocks in the long run, it is too early to tell . -Bul it is less possible lhan it ever \\•as to predict the future on the basis of the rciccnt past. J{cre are the most important changes: -INFLATION AND high in- terest rates. For a generation the public was told that com- mon-stock investing \Vas a good hedge against inflation: except for a few privileged stocks, it has proven a poor hedge in recent years. The public has been slowly shifting some of its financial assets from stocks lnto bonds and bank accounts. It olr vi9usly no longer believes the canard that bonds are no pro- tection against inflation. They do not offer protection, it is true. against South American-style innations. But the problem was, in the United States, that for a long while innalion was so lo\v - although it wa s always a fac- tor -that there was little "inflalion premium" in th e in- terest rate of the bond. NOW, WITll inflationary ex- pectalions a built-in factor. long-term interest rates have risen. I! one calculates the '"real" cost of money in America at belween 3 and 4 percent, then an interest rate of 8 percent includes an in- Cotnnaota • stoc k in ve stlng 11 as prf1v e1a '' poor l1edge ag(llHst 111· flat ion b1 r ece11t 11c ars. .... -----.-. ---.-. ..... --~-- nation factor of at least 4 per· cent. Two Studies of the stock market by University of Chicago professors Lorie and Fisher in the 1960s showed that a random investment in stocks yielded a return of 9 percent over a 30-year period. Unless one thinks he can do a good deal better than the average, then , he must admit that the nominal interest rate o~ long-term bonds is now ap- proaching what the nominal return (dividends plus capital gains) was for a 30-year period on common stocks. This was a period in which coping with inflation was not as n1ajor a problem for in- dustry as it is today. Accepting this argument is not to say that stocks could not do very well in the next year recove ring fron1 today's low levels. I l does say there may not be as much money chasing stocks to the p-e {price-earn- ings J ratios of yesteryear. -THE OIFFJCULTY o I 1naintaining a healthy equities n1arket in a co ntroll ed economy. Two freezes and tv.·o periods of various kinds of control have left businessmen confused. If Phase 4 leaves business thinking that the Administration is interested mainly in impressions, that it mainly wants to convince the voters it is "doing" something about inflation, the stock market will remain in deep trouble. Many analysts see the U.S. industrial plant as being too small for the nation's needs today. Ii the incentive for profit is further removed. necessary expansion will not take place. When even an avo,vedly con- servative administration finds it necessary to put so many MATADOR-NEW CAR ADDED TO AMERICAN MOTORS' 1974 OFFERINGS Coupe Will H•ve Standa rd~ Sporty and Premium Models Matador Lead Car American. Motors Led by New Coupe By CARL CARSTENSEN 01 Ill• Oellr Pilot Sl•lf Expected to lead the change for American Motors passen- ger cars in J974 is a sleekly styled all-nc1v in!ern1ediate. Matador coupe model. OUR PAGER RENTS FOR $1650 plu• tu PER MONTH !unlimited pages) HOW ABOUT YOURS? No Deposit Requi red On Approved Credit It is several inches lower and has a \\'hcelbase four inches shorter than other Matador models. n featurts a long tapering hood, fast slop- ing rear deck and roof line and exceptional inlerior roominess for this size car with coupe styling. ALL 1974 Al\1C cars will have ex t er i 0 r appearance changes, stron-ger b u m p e r systems for increased dam a g eability protection, three-point lap be!ts and shoulder harnesses for greater occupant protection. Three versions of the new !\1atador will be offered - Sfi'!ndard moclel. ''-8 po\vercd "X" model and a premium Brougham. .. The l\1atador coupe In- corporates the most inveeping l"han,gcs we have made in our lnterinediate line," WiJJiam V. !.uncburg, American Motors president, said. "We believe it \\'ill add plenty of fuel to the con1pany's drive to czip- ture a bigger share of the \rorld auton1otive market LUNEBURG SAID AMC's 1974 models are tar,geted for the subcompact. compact and intermediate market segments v.·herc the greatest growth Potential lies. BESIDE THE three new hardtop coupes, the Matador series includes a four-door sedan and two and three-seat station wagons with 118-inch "\\.'heelbase. The Ambassador line includes a four-door sedan and station wagon. Compact llornets are available as two- door an<:: four-door sedans, l\vo-door hatchback. a n d Sportabout wagon. 'I'he sulr compact Gremlin is offered in a single two-door sedan model, and the spc!°ty Javelin and Javelin AMX in two-door hardtop models. Exte n sive trim and ornamentation refinen1ents are evident throughout each line. American Motors' s i x - cylinder :1nd V-8 engines for 1974 are basically uncl1anged , but improvements include in- duction-hardening of exhaust valve seats 011 eights for greater service life and for use of regular, low-lead or unleaded gasoline -as in- troduced last year on AMC's six-cylinder engines. AMC's 1974 powerplants also in- corporate six emission control devices to further reduce air pollution. interests ahead or promoting vigorous, healthy industry, it is hard to resist using the word "socialism" about the American economy. T h e ownership has not changed hands, but a significant degree of the control has. Richard Scott-Ram, vice- president and chief economist of duPont Glore F'organ, lnl:., claims, "'Profits has become a dirty word in our society and legislators are tailoring their policies to regiment against profits." THE INTERNAL problems of the security industry. the reputation of 'Vall Street. and the f"act that Wall Street as an industry does not have a lender of last resort --~-----~--- T mo free:::es a11d tmo periods of eo11lrol l1ave l eft b1rsi11essn1 e 1a eota• fused. also appear lo Scott-flam as negative influences. -The w o r k e r revolut.ion itself is changing the nature of An1erican capitalism. Industry still needs huge sun1s to modernize and expand. N e v ertbeless, America's capitalism is shifting . by degrees fro1n_ del)fndence. oo physical ·pl<isit and resonrces to dependence on people, on brain power. Better-educated. higher-paid Workers. acting .... mot>e--incleflendently-.-m-a;t make it harder for clear lines or authority to exist within many companies. Decision making could becon1e fogged and efficiency suffer. -OUTSIDE THE p I an t itself, the American voter poses another conundrun1 for an investor in stocks. \Viii he see the nature of the system, reform its weak points, and appreciate its vital ones? Or will he continue to take more of his news from TV, omit the reflection that comes from reading the printed word. and become more easily manipulated on compl ex economic questions'! But whatever the ans\vcr to these last questions. the nt- tractiveness of high-intcrest- rate bonds, the stubbornness of inflation. and the Sh?rp turn toward government managc- n1ent of the economy -when there is little evidence to sup- port its competence in the task -are the most disheartening items on the list for future investors in equities. What remains to balance the picture? The hope that in- flation will be brought under better control and that con- trols themselves will be lifted. Also the probability that, once the international monetary svste1n can establish a nc\v e·quilibriu m. there \Vil\ be a lot of foreign money taking ad- vantage of low U.S. stock prices \Vilh de v a I u e d American dollars. IS THERE money to be made in stocks? Always. But it does seem to be getting harder. Caveat emptor applies in this marketplace as well as in buying old horses. You won 't do too badly if you remember your first goal is to protect what you already have. If investihg in stocks is new for you ... ' L You should first have a cushion of cash -savings ac- counts or bonds -and have no im1nediate financial needs. Investment funds should be considered as a long-term con1mitment, not money you n1ay want back next n1onth. 2. Spend soriie time selec- ting your investments. Don 't buy just because a broker tells you it's a good company to own. k ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE •NC ••Jt is in lhesc areas," he Saia. "lhat \1'c ar·e finding a •strong buyer preference for smaller, hut \veil equipped automobiles v.·ith the same comfort and convenience features as the h1rger cars.,. THE Zl2 CID six is standard on Gremlin, Hornet, Javelin and most Matador models, A · 2$ff CID six is optional on these cars, and standnrd on the Matador wagon. The 304 CID V-8. standard on the ne'v Matador coupe X model, AMX a nd Amb11ssador. ~ optional on Grc1nlin. Hornet, Javelin and all other Matadors. Other optional V-8's include a 360 CTD two and four-barrel, and the 401 CTD four·barrel. 3. Work with more than one broker, if possible. lf it isn't, try to read an investment ad· visory service or something that gives you divergent opin· ion. Read. some. of the, jn- vestmcnt publications such a!' Barron's and Forbes as well as the general economic nc\VS. I 401 SO. SANTA FE ST. SAN TA ANA 171 4) 935.3305 lrom l iqune Belch, Ml1tlo11 Viejo, D111;i Po!nl, S•11 Cltmt11t1, Sin .luin Cepi$lr1no, El TOt9, c.alr !tll lrff 496·J22J The 1974 AM C lineup or Cremlins, Hornets, Javelins. Matadors and Ambassadors offers 14 models. one more than a year ago. Tor menting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved 111 man:v ct~ l'N"p:"l ra tion l·I JZ1Vf'il prompt, lr•n1po1·:, ry rC'l i('f from ftt1ch pain :ind itcldng und t1ctually hf.lps shrink ~wMling or hen'()rrhoi<L'll lirt- &um etU!l('t) bv innnmrnation. T .... by dodot1 on hun- drcds or p.'ltir.ntl-' i:;howOO t.hi~ co he true in m11ny cases. Jn fuct, rn:Jny doctor~. them- ee:lves, USC! J'rt:porotion II" or recommmd it for their (nm. itieii. Prttmmlion' H ointment Qf IUIPS~it.ories, For the third consecutive model year, buyers o f Gremlin, llornct~ J a v c I in, Matador and Amoassador cars will ho covered by AMC's Buyer Protection Plan that covers 12 1nonths or 12,000 miles. The plan may be ex- tended to 24 months or 24,000 1nilcs. American Motors' 1974 cars will appear in de a I er showroon11 in early Scp- tc1nber. ., 4. Keep alert on the outlook for companies you already own. Even if you intend to keep them in your portfolio, don't go to sleep on them. Developrnents could disappoint you. 5. Set realistic goats for your investment p r o g r a m . Perhaps you can do better than 10 to J2 percent, but remember that it is consistent progress that makes money, not one banner year followed by several disasters. 6. Know yourself. Assess how you react to bad nu1rkct news, or to a recession. Try to ~ct up patterns of action that help you to behave rn.~ionally when it would be easier to be irrational. , ' . Wall Street • • • Fifteen out of every 100 American s We couldn 't prove it, of course, but that the percentage is even greater own stock. see 11"1 s likely the Or- today it here . 1n ange Coast area ... and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to br ing its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. in Wall Street's computers "talk to" computer~ DAILY PILOT plant every trad ing day at the rate the of 12 more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only move the entire New York and minutes to American Stock Exchange reports from the canyons of Wall DAILY PILOT Street to the typesetting machines of the right here on the Orange Coast. And when tech~ology finds a ·way to beat that speed l . th e Df._ILY PILOT,. no .doubt, will be amopg the rec;ord, first to When use it to • bring readers "today's action today." • • it come·s-...to...fi nancial news, the one that means business is the DAILY PILOT · . ., ' { I ' ' l I t I ' • I ' ' ' I ' ' I ' ' I ' • • • ' I • I I ... ' r I ' I I I . , . ' .. I I •'•#••1,.'' I 1 · i I )' I I I I I I I ,, . . • . I ' ... ' , 'O: • .. ... I ·• r ~. .... '· ,, • ... , . II ' l ' I I I . ' ' I I I ; I I t • - I . ' I ' ' Look around your house and garage and you'll prob· ably discover you have a mountain of merchandise you could sell -all kinds of goodies that you just don't use much any more. Woulc.an't you really rather have money? Okay. To move that mountain, just call a friendly ad-visor. at the DAILY PILOT. Use the direct line. • .. . . Don't · iust sit there on your small fortune ••• Ell IT! • · ..... t;;· • • • Thousands of ready-to-buy want ad r e a d e r s are "shopping" the ads in the DAILY PILOT every day. And· it may surprise you how mC!'ny of ·them are eager to buy just what you have to sell. Want to give it a try? Get with the Orange Coast area newspaper with "response ability" ••• the one that can move your: mount~in 9f l!'ercbandise. • Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper with Re$ponse Ability Classified Ad Line • , 64i~S6 ·7 .8 J . ' . • ,. .. • , I ' I 2 DAI). Y PILOT L . M .Boyd Drunken Fish Ea sy to Catch Young lady, do you have a pretty mouth ? lf so, you can now have it copied in a mold, then cast'in bronze, so said decorative lips can be worn as a brooch. Dress de- signer Y\•es S.t Laurent came up with tha t noticn. It's not altogether new, though. In 1925, Salvador Dali designed a couch in the shape of Mae \Vest's mouth. lrvi11e S tudent Honorecl A second-year student Crom Irvine led nine area students , recognized ror academic ex· cellence re~ently by Western State University College o( Law or Orange County in Anaheim. Mrs. Betty Scidmore, of 17831 Mann St., Irvine, \Vas a'varded the First American Title Insurance C o m p a n y A\\·a rd for academic ex- NOW OHM 7 PAYS ... • n.. JeWOll 1'W ••• ,._ ._ ..... ••• Her• a11lll Theta , •• T-.cflflfl ••• M 1Cf111"1 lklllfl .... f , . , wi.... c11 ..... c.u...,., 1Ek. • • • n.. Mlchea . . . o.t A-r •• , S...11dfly'1 S.11 , , • Wllhell· ....... S..,._. •• • "-"i'• Liii!• Swll111k111d ••• ......., .. Heft • , , ~ I -• A ' ·collection of quaint shops_ -.. South Cociat "°"' • • • ... .._ • • • .i-.. er••• Go11a,., • • • c.. ....., • ..,...... , , , c.llce C-1MH • , , S.11fkrw., ••• fya'1 M • • • lffty L.dy . , . '-T.,.... ... "• kn foctor/ ••. Oale'1 Miu Metlce ,_ w ... 1 •• , '"" MolK!il , •• Wltl•117 Hollo..: ••• WIYll MOil TO COMI. Am Advised that Australian dog <:a lied the dingo has ot be taught how to bark. cellenCi! and the Corpus Jurisr-::;iiMiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiii Secund um and Foundation Press awards for the highest accumulative g r a d e p o i n t average. J\>laybc you didn't realize that fish known as rhe guppy was pamed after Trinidad's l\1r. R. J. Lechmere Guppy who first gave speciments of the little beast to lh<: British Museum. POLITICS -Q. "\Vho said , 'Politics mu~es strange postmasters'? Kin Hubbard?" A .No, that was Frank Hubbard. Kin Hubbard said, "There's some folks standing behind the President that ought to get around where he can watch them." · Q. "\Vhich has more caffeine - a .cup of instant co f- fee or a cup Or brewed coffee the same strength?" A. The brewed. Theoretically, it should have tv.·icc as much. 1\1rs. Scidmorc was also honored for her work in torts and trusts. Corporation law awa rd s went to DeM is Bader, of 7000 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, and Irene Pasquini. of 16381 Woodstock La ne, Hun· tington Beach. Donald Arego, of 14637, Kazan St.. Irvine. and Dr. Ralph Blackwell, of 2135 Vista Estrada, Newport Beach, both \Vere honored for thei r work in criminal law, whil e Milton 'Vander Molen, 9472 Mo kihana Drive, Huntington Be a c h received a similar honor for stud y in criminal procedure, Besides Mrs. S c id mor e, three others were honored for their tort work. They were Eric Cohane. of 9165 El Tango _-Q:---~-'-What's-a 'set' of chit!kens?» --~,__,.-·-€iffie,--Founttrin \' n 11 e r. A. T\VO roosters and five hens. Jn the li ngo of the poul· Trudy Detrick, of 4 0 9 Panorama Dr., L ag un a ·try boys. Beach: and James Dunger, of More often than otherwise. it's the \Vife rather than the -11u·stmnd V.'tiO manages the-ram1Jy money"'." sUtveys show. But not on the farm. Exceedingly rare is the agriculturist's wife who handles the cash. EASY FISHING -At Stradclla in northern Italy is a vennouth distillery. Something broke there recently, -A whole batch of the sauce polluted Stradella 's creek. Fish therein got drunk. Swimmers downstream found they could catch said fish '\\'ilh their hands. Baskets full. \Vhat's more, even though fresh out of the frying pan. I understand they had a rather fancy flavor, those fish. As though marinated. It is customary in Japan for most all the 1nourners at a fun eral to chip in to pay the costs of same , , . Three. maybe four, out of every 100 deliveries a re breech births ... A wa itress of lengthy experience con tends the most difficult restaurtant customers are farmers and taxi driv• ers ... Only one out of every 10 widowed mothers·of mar· ried children live with said offspring ... In a pool where· in women 'vere asked what color dresses they prefer, that hue most often named by the redheads was green. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Neu;· port Beach, Calif. 92660. 2005 !\'liramar Drive, Balboa. .... --.. Adv1rlll.tmen1 , More Security Wtth FALSE TEETH Al Any Time MNld ,. tellt1I: .m d:rop at tbt ~ dme! A denture &d.heCft cu. help. PASTEETR• Powdl!I' cl~ dentv!M a Jonru. finner-, llteadiar hold. Wbybeem~TFormo..,. 11ecurity and comfort, u11e FAS• TEETH ~ntllfft Adhesive Powdtr0 Dent.ureio that flt me -mtlal te healtli. ~ yotll dentist rei:Wadw .. WHY BE SHY •.. ASK AIOUT PRESCRIPTION PRICES! Call ' 642-41'04 (ME:C7:ibor) lfll I . 17rfl St. ot Tntl11 A ... Next to Ralphs Mkt, - Costa Mesa 642-4104 MOii, ftlru Fri. t to "-Sil, I te 2 LOVABLE'S"' HALTER BRA .---·~--<II I I ' l Zippy little straps go eve ry switch way to give you non- stop, no-show support. A beautiful underplay for eve n your barest fashions. W.hite, nude, 32-36 A-B-C, 3.50. Mail \ .,\:~;~~~· ~'\~ ___.5lt9~ 81:1t1 ttilo.® ilDl1'CID800ilw'&»7 ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON I EACH 44'4 N. Eucli.I f7 I•) 6l5·1 t 21 4-1 F11lilo11 hl111d 17 J '4 ) 644.-1 2 12 7777 Edln9•r Av•r111• 1714) 192.JlJ I ORANGE, MAll OF ORANGE CERRITOS 1.)00 N. Tu1tl11 Street 1714.) 99•· 1 l 11 500 lo1 Cerrit•• M•ll ( 21 l I 160·04f I ' CRAYON SPORT PRINTS Delightful designs for the young, the· young at hea rt, f.eatured on natural backgorunds. REGULAR $1 .39 YD. '11'* _1JM::.•.,c_,",_'_"'_w_•_•_• ______ · : 44 .. /45" Wld• _ yd. Save To $1.08 A Yard Good selection of voile prints, solids, nov~ elties, cottons and cotton blends. VALUES TO $1.H.YARD MACHINI WASH . U!'/4i'" Wl4tM TARTAN- SutftftqS PLAIDS & CHECKS New fall Color Combos MACHINE WASH -TUMBLE DRY REG. $3.29 YD. 54''.Wfcle Acrylic SUN-TIME FABRICS DAN RIVER NUUY DAN PLAIDS DAN RIVER "SHENNANDOAH" SPORT STRIPES . SPORTSWEAR DENIM STRIPES MACHIN( WASH ...P-4yes:.r1'C•Hs11 44'"/45" Wide s 99~ .. cMArc~ • PlAIDS •SOLIDS •FANCIES Dacro n Polyester brushe d plaids, matchi"9 soli ds. MACHINE WASH -TUMILE DRY CAREFREE 70 Combl- Htions 54" Wide 44! MACHINE WASHABLE MIRACLE KNITS WOOL PLAIDS WOOL FLANNEL Wonderful range of color and design combinations in t.hese prest igious machine wash plaid.a . 30 COMllNATION5 70°/owool/ Jo•;. •yloto 54" Wide 15 COLORS Matching solid color flannels for co- ordinated sui ts, dresses and fine sp ortswear. 70 0/o wool/ 10•1. 1ylot1 54" Wide ~· W ide, wide range of smart kn it designs , many new novelty stitches an d lots of solid c.olors to choose. MULTI -smcu JACQUARDS H•~vy 11 • I 11/2 01. weights for dresses, suits, sporls. PlAIDS HOUNDSTDOTH MATCHING SOLIDS • MACHINE WASHABLE REGULAR $2.29 Yi> • Polyester/ Cotton 54"/56" wide METAL ZllPIRS . BAClf TO SCHOOL 'SPECIAL T r•mendous range of stitches MACHINE WASHAILE VALUES TO $5.'8 YD. Wldthi 29~ 250 YARD SPOOL .-.1HREAD NATIONALLY ADVERTISEO Klopmen'~."DACRON 8" MACHINE WASH -TUMBLE DRY T exturi1tcl 60"/62 " Wldlhl 54! CUTTING BOARD -. __..t. • .._, '! m•rkings in, all dired ions.:of-ite'aYy: ·· . laminated Kraft Board IACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL ·- 1''·· H'OUSE OF F~·:~~{{·BRICS So11t•· c.-"""' - 8,ltl•I •• Sen Dlt90 ,...,.,,.,. CosN M ... -14f..111' always first quality fabrics Ot•1•tr M ... - Or•111ethorpe •rid H•tiior ,.......,.._ 916·1JJ4 H•""' ,._ - 17th et lri1tol ....... -143•1111 H11Ml .. tt• c.,..., _ EJln9,er et l11th llvJ,. l:'untl111ton le•t h -197°101 J ..... ,... _ 121 11 l rookhur1t.(ne1tt to Ven'•l -I J .. 1'42 . . ....... Part Cffffr - l• P&lrn1 11 Stafllo11 ...... ,.,. -l ll0 6J2J • ' • • ' • sHOr 10 A.M. to f ;JO P.M, MONDAY THROU~H FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUND.A! 12 NOON tO 5 P.M, , . . t -~------... ------..""1!111 ------..--... ----·· 1: • I ' )'.:, . • • • ., ' ' ' • Daily P,Vot Photos By Lee Payne • ' ·, ''\_ ;J • . , . . . . . ' . • BEA ANDERSON, Editor MOMly, Au.wt 4 lm '°"' II As performed by Desiree, belly dancing is provocative, s.~nsual-definitely a feminine ·exercise. From a graceful stretch, she swirls with silk scarf in pursuit. Tinkling finger cymbals tap out the rhythm to which she performs a backbend. Once the specialty of harems, ·the exotic routines are .. now recom-mended '-for:::flefping---- ---~ bodies from 17 to '70 look young and beautiful. .. r----' ~~ .. B.e, ·.Y ..... Oancing Unveile,.. ·-,,~_,,.._· ~ ' ~~.)1)\·~ ' ...,,, • By CAROL~RE -4 Wlthout , .. deve1oping··the rq.asculine Of "'' o.nr l"'tW :''"' muscles as in jogging and calisthentics." Belty dancing is no longer shoved oU And she claims, you don't realize how into the comer of a caruiVal. long the routine is because of varied With rose veil swirling, Desiree was speeds and areas of concentration . Wldulating center stage as the luncheon Fast hip tbnlsts attract attention in the entertainmeot at Bahia Cor.inthian Yacht introducUcn 1ben comes the .taxin with Club. ,,. its snaky, slow stomach rolls. Another Suburban housewi..,, learn the exotic last poniori ·js followed by the bolero, body rhythms al the Yiy{:A lo "respark slow floor. wock.. . marriages.'' As Desiree gyrated gracefully for almost half ah hour,-she dispeUed many of the images of belly dancing. Spec!,ators were·reminded of forgotten muscles and· began to feel "exhausted" themselves, "The dances are sensual, provocative and graceful ; never sexy, crude or bla~ tant," she emphasized. "Dating back to EgypUans, it's t~ first feminine form of exercise. Women can tighten the stomach and thighs 'lbe fast ex.it -a ~ shimmy -is dohe to a drum solo when Performing. Dailcers also accompany themselves with tinkling finger cymbals, lending lo concentrate more 'on the musical rhythm than the physical exertioo. Plus the tempo depenm: m derivation. Egyptian belly dancing has more refined movements .and is · done in a smaller space. Turkish or Greek versions are bounder, Girls start dancing In the Afiddle East as early as age 7 and Desiree has slu· dents in their 70s. She prefers that gir:ls start in their late teens-"after the giggle stage, when they can truly appreciate the body beautiful." She was fascinated the minute she saw her first dance at 16 and has learned the art from Feiruz, developing the stamina and repertoire required foe 25-to 45- minute professional performances. "Dancing just depends on body condi- tioning," said Desiree·in one breath. In the next she enthused, "Love your body, whatever shape it's in. It's the only one you've got. Have fun \Vith it." "This t)rpe of dancing boosts feelings about yourself. It strengthens and relax- es the body," agrees Karoun Omarr or Huntington Beach who teaches in Corona del Mar. She recommends belly dancing for stimulating skin tone, retaining youthful posture. relieving Va ricose veins and snapping back after pregnancy. Having performed in New York, South America and Puerto Rico, she also believes the energetic ritual can be "one of the more soothing qualities to man's soul. "These dances are classic, not a bu.mp here and there. Originally they were perfonned in the purest, exotic temples before sultans, instead of bored night- club clientele." Both teachers encow-age their students to make proper costumes. Bare midriffs prove the correctness of movements and the spangled bra (halter), hip scarf and flowing skirt add mystique. Plus adornments denote locale. Egyp- tians prefer coins; Turkish dancers favor bugles and Newporters opt for seashells to trim cootwnes. ,, .... .i. ·--. I . ' 14 , " Widows Ta king Stock • 1n Sa ge Advice ;; Pl~ By JO OLSON Of tfle Dlll'I' Pllft Sl11f Though he claims he doesn't have a crystal ball , Les Jieter3en offers sa"ge ad vice to those who wish help witb financial af!airs. ' liis "clients" are widows in Leisure World who suddenly have found themselves with securi ties to manage or funds to invest. The Leisure \Vorld resident is not a stockbroker or salesman, a nd he emphasizes that he makes no profit on in- vestments his friends makP.. His only reward is satisfaction tha t he has helped someone. Ford, Edsel Ford, Mickey Rooney, Ava Gardner, HalTY Truman, J. Edgar Hoover, Clark Gable, Helen Hayes and Danny Thomas. There are others but the list \vould be too loog. He stood as best man for Mickey Rooney when he mar· ried Ava Gardner, lhcn went on their honeymoon with them. Bing Crosby made a special recording of "True Love" with Grace Kelly, prefaced by personal greeting s, for Petersen's parents' golden wedding anniversary, then had 300 copies pres!ed for guests at the anniversary party in San Jose. \Vhat is Les Petersen's claim to friendship with the famed? "He never tells us what to do," said Gladys R. Grove, widow of a Washin gton den- tist. "He thinks out loud. \Ve have to make up our own minds. \Ve examine the pros USHER FlRST and cons then decide. The former Newport Beach "He always says, 'This is resi~ent beg~ ~s career at a what I'm doing.' He stresses movie theater m San Jose salcly in investment rather ~ where he worked as an .~her than high yield. At our stage and doorman, then public1st. in life we don 't have to He moved to J:lollywood gamble v.•hcn several executives lrom · l\.1ef.ljo-Goldwyn-Mayer c a m e UNUSUAL PERSON to 5an Jose for the prentiere ''Le s is not only " of the movie. "'Mle Blg Parade," met him and offered him a job in MGM's publicity department ln hb work there he was responsible for the happine ss and safety of many of lhe stars, traveling more than S00,000 miles with Mickey Rooney as part of his job to serve as the liason between Rooney and the press. He also arranged publicity for the personalities and helped tbem negotiate con~ tracts. "The main thing was to make sure they trusted you ," Petersen said. "You had tQ be sure your relationship with them was good." He additionally arranged war bond drives during World War JI, taking groups of stars around the country for rallies. In reminJS'Ci.ng over his star· studded life, Petersen com- mented that his c a r e e r spanned an era in Hollywood that has gone forever. SET Sl'YLES "They would set the styles," he said ot the famous stars. "They had to have fantastic heaJth and energy." knowledgeable but he possesses that quality of being concerned with other people. Everyone truSt.1 his judgment and re spects him highly. He is Your Horoscope Tomorrow After moving to Newport Beach, Petersen became in· volved in several bus\r\eSs ventures, joined the Goofoffers Club and volunteered for Boy Scou t leadership. But the stock market has re- mained one of his great in· terests, aiid he visits his Leisure Worli!: broker each day to keep up with the mar- ket. .. With people I talk to in our age bracket I don't believe we should gamble," he said. "I try to have things that will take care of inflation without speculating day to day. "I don 't believe in buying stocks then a month or two later selling them. If It was a good buy and is doing well. don't let anyone talk you out of it. "If you want a secure in· come, don't worry about whether the market goes up or down." BONDS BEST · He added that he recently has not advised people to get into the market, but is leaning toward top corporate bonds and six-month treasury bonds, whleh are earrmlly 8.75 and Utl. He also recommendl prelel' red or cumulative preferred ttocks, especially in utilities. "U you're golng to be a gambler or speculator, you might as wall go to llDllywood Park.'' he said. ' "l'1n not an expert. A great deal has to do with timing. 1! you buy right, you'll sell right. I'm careful. There's no secret to it." He still holds bis first in- v e s t m e n t , Transamerica, which he bought in 1927. For "sentimental reasons" he has never sold it, he said. }low did Les Petersen get r:aught in the excitement ol Wall Street? "I've always been interested in financial arr airs." he said. .i1 always read Business Week and Newsweek, then I became Jntere~ in charting." He admits be doesn't have a crystal ball to see the future , but from all indications. his stock is up in Leisure World and his dividends are paid regularly in the form of many thanks. a very unusual type of person." As one looks through Les Pcterseu's scrapbook, on c does :eattze"""1hey"Hl'"e' Obilu1g::-.......:-- with an unsual person . Sagittarius: Be Conf iden l __ _ • . There are pictures or him TUESDA y obstacles _ recognize and wuh Gov. Reagan, Henry ~ AUG UST 7. m:a-1 with them. Ask questions. ---------· _· ...._8 ,.. G1v~ ~ull play to intellectual . ~,. ¥DN!jY ·OMARR--<Urn>S1ty:-Don'f ·he sati&£ied Checking the stock market are Les Petersen and Gladys R. Grove. 'He thinks out loud, but never tells us what to do.' AR~S (March 21-April 19): with hearsay. -1 ~ · i:r~vel plans .may ·need ad· LIBR.A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): d_1t1ona~ checking, some ~on-Reconciliation indicated in s1derat1on of health of one domestic area. Peace replaces close to you. Generous ap-animosity. Relatives are in-~~ach yields divi_d~_ds. You volved here -gesture is made ~1n1sh rather th~n 1n1hatc p_ro-to sOothe feelings. Be recep- Ject. You feel like ~ f acat1on tive. Accent diplomacy. Go out -and you may be right. of your way if necessary to T~URUS (April 20-May 20): help one ctos'e to you. ' \V.tshes and mon~y may con-SCORPIO (Oct 23-N 21). fhct. Means lifestyle un-. · . ov · · dergoes change in order to Deception cool~ exist where comply with what you want to money, expenditures are con- h' nee· · h cemed. Be on guard. Protect Pisces, Virgo persons could play significant roleS. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· -Dec. 21): You get-----rreeded backing -cycle is high aild circumstances tum in your favor. Push ~-Be con- fident. Go with"1ide and build momentum. Tbis is no time for ·pausing, doubling, renec- ting about what might be. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Examine concepts in light of kn owing that some in- formation could b c sup- pressed. Means plenty is oc- curring out of sight. You \viii be called to account for who accuses is m e r e 1 y "fishing.'' AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. · 18),-Some-hopeo, wisbleJH--+- be revised. _You develop neW or different interes ts -and this applies to romantic area, too. Leo migbt be in picture. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mareh ~); You haVe link to one in posi~ lion of authority, But you may have to make major con• cessions in order to reaJiU ga in. Aquarius, Leo and S c o r p i o persons figure i~ prominent \Vays. Accenl is ori achieven1cnt. ac ieve. ~ions ~ow s ould your interests. See in light of be based on creative reflec-1: E t,·00 Do h t · best 1 reauty. schew t e"n d e n c y . w a IS or you t rd .hful th ' k . -base actions on your own owa WIS 1 n 1 n g · desires, not some apparent altruistic notion . Grave Evidence Unearthed circumstances of the past.,----------- Maintain poise, aplomb. One LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK ' I I DEAR ANN LANOE;RS: Since you 1 receive about 1,000 rcttcrs a day I realize I my chances for seeing this in the pape r 1 are very sli m. But I must try. \ During our 3(}.years-p!us of marriage, I had complete confidence In my wi fe. She passed away a year ago. Since that timr r have evidence that she chased (and caught ) at least a dozen men 't•:e both : kneY.'. In fact, I would not hesitate to say : she was a nymphomaniac. or course the discovecy has had a devastating effect on me . I find myse lf .. ...-antin g to share this kno.,vledge with ~omeone. I believe it v;ou!d lighten my load. My daughter is married and has t\vo children. I think she ough t to know the tru!h about her mot her. I'm sure I would feel better if I told her. Should I? There isn't another soul in the world I would ask this question. Even OO\V I must sign myself - ANONYMOUS WIDOWER DEAR A,W.: If yon told your daughter, you might feel better, but she would feel \\'OfSe. You"\·e told me, That should be enough. If it isn't, tell yaur clergyman or a pro- fessional therapist. I don 't know "·hat vou consider "evidence" but I would not ·be so quick to accept as fact such destructive in· formation about a "·oman who Is no longer alive to defend herself. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A few weeks ago I heard a report on the radio tha't GOOd Investment News: every 32 seconds somebody in the United States steals a car. We all have been tOld to lock our cars and take the keys as a pr£'ventive measure. But how many do? To satisfy my curiosity I decided to find out for myself. l took a four-mile walk along the streets of this eastern metropolitan city and tried the doors of all the cars par ked along the way. Every fourth ca r was unloc ked. Experiencro buggy snatchers can turn on the igni tion U'i th a hairpin or a nail file. An unlocked car is the same as hanging a sign that says, "STEAL ME ." Please do your readers a favor and re- mind them again. Ann. to Jock their cars. Wh('n you say something, people listen. -CAUTIOUS o DEAR C.: They do? Thanks (or the Yotc (If confidence . You didn't say if you "·ere stopped by a policeman during your "research pro- ject." Nor did you say if you found any keys in the ignition . Write again and let U!I know. DEAR ANN LA NDERS : l s a 40-year- old woman too old to v.'ear a bikini? I told my husband I'd like to buy One and DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE .NOW. AVAILA.BLE -·Now available for the puhlic: fine jewel~ from several large cstat.t·s at C~osta Mesa ..J'S\iclry. · Savc503 . F:5talc je\\'t'lry pricc<i for immedfate sale_. Invest now for unhcli cvahlc !)0°/o savings . • -Wise iil't1c'Atmcn1 op)Jortonify. (" ollft'tion·inc ludc:i diam onds, r11hic·s ;1nd PnH·rald~. Bil.!; in vt'St- - ~ mcnt. dcn1 and h(•cau~c· uf irH'rl·a:.;inl.!; val ue and ,_..,1111rii Jimi l cd :-;u ppl,v. ' ~ nearly went through the roof. By the time he got ttrrough with his tirade I felt like Grandma Moses. He made it very clear that bikinis are ror young -girls and anyone else who wears one looks ridiculous. GEJlllNI (May 21.June 20): Absent yoursell from familiar ~<""!: surroundings, persons. Ma.iii-"'' C•lftl•rt•t1t tain low profile. Mate, partner '"' .... ..,., c11•1" may not know exactly what to I 'fa r, rf do. If jmpatient, you alienate )o o-tt t.Jt~JJ Love' those closest to you. Don't ~1j1~.!J Bras attempt to be your own at-~ . Graduate tomey. Wait for. additional in-, Con;ctl<'r<'s formation . o thni ,,. c11p1 CANCER (June 21.July 22): ,,, •· 11111 s1. C•t1• ,,.,..,, '( Proper rest, nutrition now lllt ll !ti •• ,,,.,. M~l.l \(. become essential. Nerve s "'2·f4M ~ Wcstclilf P1au, 17th arid Irvine, The Odllntx Pla~can help you •ttome the slim fli~$0n t/\al yo1.1 •011ld like to be. Odrintx his IM!en used successfully by thouSftlds 1U over th4• country IBr 14 y~ars.. Get rld ol eicess lat and live longer. Odrine• Is a 1iny tablet and e1si'Y swaUow'1!.Contains nod1nierous drugs,' ffo starving. No special exerdsts. Odrlflfx Plan costs S.l 25 and the large ecooomy size $5.25. You ~ust los t ugly lat or your ft'IOfley will be ltlund~. No Questions asked. Acctpt no substitutes. Sold with lh!s gu:11ante1 by: I'm 5 reet 2 inches tall, weigh 105 pounds, and my measurements are 35-25- 35. 1 've never had any children so I don't have thooe ugly stretch marks or varicose veins on my body. I told my husband I was writing lo you and he replied, "Go ahead. Ann will agree with me." ,... Newport Bcach,Califomia92660 could be on edge. You will find -----------~~~~~~~~~~~~__:_==========­yourself on the go, traveling THRIFTY ... ~i~~:~~o•« How about it ? I have promised to abide by your opinion. -FEELlNG ANCIENT DEAR FEELING: Age should not be tbe determining factor. Some 60-year-old women look better in a bikini than some 16-year-old girl!. It's the figure that counts -and nothing else. If, however, your husband doesn't want you to buy a bikini -don't. He'd hassle you every lime you \\"ore tbe thing and it wouldn 't be "·ortb it. \Vhat's prudish? What's OK? If you aren't sure, you need sOme help. 1t's avail able in the booklet: "Necking and Petting -What Are the Limits?" ~tail your request to Ann Landers in ca re of the Daily Pilot, enclosing 50 cents in coin and a Jong, stamped, . self-addressed envelope. and corresponding. SagU- tariUB, Gemini persons could be involved. You are straining having fun and also testing one who made promises in past. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your heart's desire may not take you along same path as would logic. Know it and realize you don't get anything wilhout paying a price. Sell~iscipline, control arc e s sential in- gredi ents now for your own u1elfare. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22): Tie loose ends in property set- tlement, agreement. Some factors require f u r t h e r clarification. There a r e . COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS SPEC IALS FOR AUG UST 6 TO AUGUST 18 "LETS EAT RI GHT TO KEEP FIT" By Adallt Davis SPECIAL ) 29 Regular 1.50 ........ _. • COASTL INE 96% PROTEI N with Ltclthln ond P1pi1n l Ab~0 6 ···~ --· .. SPECl'A'L 2 79 Regul.ar 3.49 ....... __ , H • COASTLINE CHEWAB LE CALCIUM With Vitamin 0 k°!~:1~'.;, . . . . . . . . . . SPECIAL 89~ 1.49 each is all you pay for . I color portraits of your child. Select either large 5x7~ or set of 4 wallet size, from several poses. •2cltiun~8!J>ed together-1A9 """' d>ld • Al portralJs deMred 1o }OJ al a.r- , • llQe liTit: 12 )'!!In ~-.... ----...-" --' L JJeauliful select ion of la1l i<'~ an d rnt'n':" ri ng-'.'i and watch<':". l~lcg-11111 nL"<:klacc!', hra1'l'lPts and pin s in ..:old or plat.iu urn. t'ricrd fron1 $200 to $10,000 .•. value' to $~0.00IJ. Out·of.P1wn jewelry-a great invcstn1cnt. J!undreds o{ pr.ccious and semi-precious items now available. Jlriccs low as $10. Make Som.One Happy with the pcrfoct gift f ro m Cost a M esa J('wt:lry. J\1a kc n 5ound financial investment too. Urgttl dinmond Ond ptaCinurri bra~ l•·I. Thr1·r 1narq11iMJ onlf 6-4 bn"lliat1I cid l/.111111n11/~ f11rm piJ't11rt11qu.t amttrpitttl. 1ltfd1h111111/ .17 brilfi'ant cni diamB>id~ ndnrn /J(l11tf. To/1118 .ti< CartU1. AppnJilJttl. HAIN SAFFLOWER OIL ~=~:.,I.JO '' SPECIAL 99~ I And we never charge for handling or delivery. Pixy is available . only through JCPenney . of 1;.8()1), Buy n(lw[Qr l :J.!JOO. • RACITl'S C O S T A MESA JEW ELRY '• 1838 .Newport Bou1cvar<1, Co!'La ,\1 c..ii,a, C!ulifornia 9"~27 714 164(;.774 L • ·coastline Health Foods Coste M ... HILLOlllN SQUAlll S1f I . 1nN ST. .... u Tustin l.at•M Hllh 2'11 SL TOllO JIO. HSAJI llALPN' ... ,... JC Penney FASHION ISLAND -NEWPORT BEACH ONLY A•tlltit 7·t•f•10.ll. Htt. Tutt. thr11 Sot.: 10 a1n • 1 P"' -1 P"' to 5:l0 P"' r ( .. ' AMBLER MUTT & JEFF 'I t>ON"T Tt\lNK YOU'RE N.Ul'S! rr's so CRAZY '11J l'UT A LITTLE CAR LIKE THIS ON Tf\E MARKET/ FIGMENTS NANCY NOrNOl'(l\IAAIAfl'YI! 60T TO TRIM AW!L~S HAii>, ANO -· """""our IN THE6VM I •• . ,. "' . ' • • ' ' by Doug Wildey Al«>WMAT'RE~ MAN61NGAROUllO ,FoR, E:X·M.ANA6ER~ by Tom K. Ryan II' YOUSE'LL PROMISE: ONLY 1' PR!35 DA swrrcwrf'l.AY MUM!IJ..'YPl'G! by Al Smith LOOl<llOW Cl.OSE You HAVETO SIT! by 1 Ernie Bushmiller __ ., ... ...._ ..... ,_ ··-------.. NOS ' r CAN'T BOTHER CRACKING YOUR '''°' '-WAilNUTS FOR YOU TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE PEANUTS "I've solved oorproblem,"' he so id. ~I've bought you a St.Bernard . It's name is Great Reluctance." ACROSS !umber 1 Nol dill1r1n1 58 Fu1nish 5 Yt!'llcle s1c1.n!I)' for g "Bl otr•" 62 In hermonyc Sling 2 word• 14 feds 63 Remove • 15 W ln;llkt clo11ir1 P•rt• 64 Pu1poa1 18 John _____ : 66 Ro ck Am1rlc1n 67 S!oltn writer goods 17 C1r111n co\1 ea This: 19 Not 11 tll Spt nilh 20 Mount1lri 69 Civil wrongs nymcih 70 Sti1 11911 21 Only 11· 7 1 RIPOii 2 word• 23 LOOkld lflt1nt1y 25 81ck1 ol nt Ckl 28 Ov1r111pply 28 Addl1on'a cowork1r 32 Pl1a11nt 31 Fr111Ch r1gion 38 -·· T1•· tung 311 Scotllll\ YIP •1 "--got 111" •:Z H11vy DOWN 1cc111ory 2 Lov• 111 G1no1 3 Vlolt nl lr11· lor-111 4 ll•Plnd S Crow'• cry 15 Actor __ L1dd 7 Synlhl tic 1••1111 llb1r 8 Hird seed b11ms CO ii •5 11 Uk• II C1rt11n •8 Strong odor po1m• 50 Eu1op11" 10 Fo1m1• 11nd1n Lo11dot1 51 Supportlv• borougn d1vlc• 11 Roa1 [ ~ A p II A 0 A N 0 12 Son of Ztus 13 God ol war 18 Glrl'a n1m• 22 -"' dow ns 24 Double '27 Sl••lmlll product 29 W!cktd 30 Devotion 31 Cyclo11• c •n\11• 32 Et.ctr1c11 unllt 33 Fashion of w1lklng 34 Function 35 F1111nood 38 Formerly <1 0 E~t1n1fv1 43 Slgntr· upp1r p y •• R~bl with pr111ur1 46 ttall1n city 4 7 E•plo1lv11 1•p•rt <19 Unclv1U11d p111on 52 Aurel cro11ov1r 53 Europ11n tl\11 55· Hubbub 58 Un Ill ol spetd 57 Fr111 ch upplr 110111• 5 8 Surg• 59 Towa1d eo Acidity 151 Engllsn town es Fren cn· ' 11110" I Though her husband often went on business trips, she hated to be left alone. JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH • YOU SAY YES! I THOU6HT HE YOU HAD YOUR Ml6KT BE AA.MED! GUN DRAWN, JERR'f? • . -- DICK TRACY •• Motlday, August 6, 19n DAILY PILOT IS DOOLEY'S WORLD GORDO a.JD ... f<lelle£ ... <JlliiT!5 ~'fcooe NilMe,RoaR· ING fal\kieo FteRY FtGHTtf\GT1GeR? by Roger Bradfield by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola MOON MULLINS by Ferd Jahnson '--"YJ,,,8Y ~.QJ-? .-VE~OD..,,_KNOWS~'#-­ Wi\NT A T~ING ~i; WELL-. ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schulz "Now, when l go away, you shall know that l am leaving you with Great Reluctance!" ~ ! ' ... She hit him with. a waffle iron. by Harold Le Doux MEANWHILE YOU MID I DON'T !<.NOW THAT Rte.K'S ff.EGAlr•u:o e.XACTL'f ! CONSCIOUSNESS! WHAT THEY'LL &E 010 HE TELl THE HERE 5KORTL'1! POLICE, SAM? HOW COM~ WE WEIZE L~a<Y ENOUGH NOT' 1'0 G-eT ~1'!.lCK WITH Gun~, Al<.THLUC? ' by Mell 'l'. tl:)N'T KNOW A~~T YOU., l!UT 'l'. ,.HINK IT'S MV 90.p .. y G1tcL COLLA!: .••. , ... OIQ.<.. l<\M.ws'. r I II I 'J', I~ 0 AN OFFSET . l<EY OEVICE FOR SAFEl.Y OPENlMG SUSPECT DOORS! ' I ' ~:;:_~. by Roger Bollen -A~D TO THINK, ri ~TAITTED OllT As ousr AllOT>IER tx)LL t<O~Ol>li l<\OR~lkiG .' et • ... ~-·-··-•• -···- THE GIRLS e-6 •"Louis lhe Flfteeolh squandered pubHc fu nds on his mis- tresses and came to be baled for the many scandals in bis Ufc' -Oh dear, I'm sorry now I have one or his chairs." .. DENNIS THE MENACE • 'Jr's Al.WA'/S 8EmR 10 ~'1 ~ 7J!LIJ)/ •. ' ' - 1 , I,· . ·1 Chile Bags 39-37 Set; U.S. Leads NORTI! LIITLE ROCK. Ark. -The Chi.Jean team of Jaime Fillo\ and Pat Cornejo woo the longest set in major ten· nis tournament history Sunday en route to a 2-l lead in sets over the Uniled States ·team or Stan Smith and Erik van Dillen in the American Zone finals of the Davis Cup befor.e darkness suspended play. Chile \\'On !he first set 9-7, and the United States won the third set 8·6. But in between, the second set lasted 76 games -three hours and 45 minutes - before Chile came av.•ay with a 31j-37 vic- tory. The United States held a decisive fr l lead in the fourth set. \Vhich "'as suspended because or darkness and will be continued Monday. The United States, having won two singles matches, leads 2--0 in the best~(. five com~tition. e Raiders Tie d FOXBORO, Mass. -The New England Patriots got rolling on newcomer Bill Bell's third-period field goal and added two fourth-quarter touchdowns in rallying for a 17-17 ti.e with the Oakland Raiders Sunday night in a National Football League exhibition game. I ' • Bonds Second-gue·sses Af te.r Lo .ss to Do.dger·s SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Bqbby Bonds, the San Francisco Giants' tx· traordlmuy leack>lt hitter, led off the ...,. ond guessing aimed at manager Charlie Fox after a painful loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers. "We had a guy on third base, nobody out and Willie McCovey on the bench. You've got to wonder why Mac didn't bat." Bonds said. He called the 4·3 set- back Sunday "Our worst loss of the year." The game, ,played before the biggest Candlestick Park crowd of the baseball Dodgers Slate All 0-.,. JC": (640) Aug. 6 L.OI Anoele• et 5•n Oleoo Auo. 7 Lo. A.noel" at 5en 01990 Avg. a t<tew York •' L.os Angeles Aw. v New York et Los Anltlelts 7:2.S p.m. 7:25 p.m. 7:SS p.m. 7:.SS 11.rn. season, 33,122, ended with the Giants' Dave Kingman, Bruce Miller and. Dave Rader being retired on the baffling screwballs thrown by Dodgers relief ace Jim· Brewer. Chris Speier had led off the Giants' ninth by going to third on a ball that got through third baseman Ron Cey and left fielder Bill Buckner for errors. "They tried to give the game away and we didn't take it," said Fox. The losing manager $<lid he didn't con~ sider using McCovey, with ·rust a fl y ball Bell, m@kiQg his first fie!d goal at· tempt at Schaerer Stadium since his 10- yard miss enabled the Patriots to defeat the Atlanta Falcons last season, came thr_ough on a 44·yard boot after NC\\' -~aml-mana~.to--cross mjdfield r the first time in the game. or grounder needed to tie the score. He rested the left-handed batting slugger a second straight day as the Dodgers went exclusi2:1y with southpaw pitching. But -he-use two etbw-Wt.Jianded piurhJill, __ · ters. -~· However, the Jlalriots were given a scare as veteran George Blanda \\'as 1011• , uPt T•leptioto and short with a 43-yard field goal at· tempt for the Raiders as the final gun . _. _ATJ.Alf(i\-:UIJ!!,__~!E!<RO 0!" WJ.'! TO NO·~~ --"l)lll\1le<!:' . ---------• -..• "I thought about'McCovey when I was walking in from the bullpen,'' said Brewer, whq saved the game for starter ommy Jtihn-;-tt:.O. ... rnr ·cl!rtainty-gtad· hi:! didn't come up there to hit ." • e Czechs Lead First in Atlan«a PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia ~lovakia moved to a 2·J lead over Italy Suriday in the European 7,one B Davis CUp tennis final when Jan Kodes and Frantiszek Pala teamed for a 6-2, 8-6, 6-4 doubles victory over Pietro 11ariano ahd Giqrdano MaiolL e Russians Lose BUCHAREST, Romania -!lie Nastase and Toma Ovici won bitterly contested singles matches Sunday and gave Romania a 3·2 victory over the Soviet Union in the European Zone A Davis Cup Niekro Upstages Aaron With No-hit Triumph Bonds rut his ·30\!l i>!w. ~ ibe season in the eighth inning, scoring two runs and · cutting the Los Angeles lead to 4-3. Buckner bad a t~nm homer for the Dodgers during a ~ee-run rally jn the third that finished off Giants' starter Juan MariChal, ~. Bonds is one of five major leaguers in history lo hit 30 homers and steal at least 30 bases in the same season, and he's done it twice. He has 3'l steals this year. "I'd give it all back in exchange for a \l'in." the Giants star said. "That game really \\'as two games for us. We!re 71h behind instead of 5\.!z." , UPIT ........ LA'S WILLIE CRAWFORD GETS HOME SAFELY. Halos Now 6·19 tennis final. · Nastase downed Wimbledon runncr·up Alex Metreveli 6-0, &-2. 6·4, and Ovici swept past Teimuraz Kakulia &-3, 6-3, &-1. Protests in both matches by players. spectators and captains left linesmen and the harried Italian referee bearing tbc · brunt of the anger. Romania will play the winner of the Vnited States·Chile American Zone final '1r an interzonc semifinal later this UlOfllh. e Ora11tes Wins • LOUISVILLE -Fourth-seeded l\ifanuel Qrantes of Spain, going to the net and using his drop shot well, outlasted No. 6 Seed John Ne\\'combe of Australia 3-6. 6- 3. 6-4 SW'lday and won the singles title in the $75.000 pro tennis classic. e Ki11g Rallies DENVEll. -Top-seeded Billie Jean King overcame a blazing start by Betty Slave of the Netherlands and beat her taller. stronger opponent 6-4, &-2 to \Vin the fl ,000 first prize in the Denver pro f.ennis meet. ATLANTA (AP) -It took a no-hitter to do it. but someone finally stole the show from Hank Aaron -at least for a day_ Phil Nickro. the Atlanta Braves' knock!ebal\ing righth.ander, was the star of the shovi Suh day, bewildering the San Diego Padres with his dancing serves and tossing the first no-hitter in eight years of Na tional League baseball at Atlanta Stadium. "\Ve kept thinking the next guy ·would get a hit," said San Diego manager Don Zirrune r. "But outside of one hard·hit ball, that was about it. He pitched a heck of a game." The Braves \~·on the ga1ne 9-0 with the Padres managing just five baserunners off the 34-ycar-old Niekro -three on 'valks and tv.·o on infield throwing errors by shortstop i\'larty Perez and third base man Darrell Evans. The game \\'as \\Tapped up by the sixth inning and the only e."<Citetnent left for the 8,748 fans on the hot. muggy af- ternoon was \l.'hcthcr Nickro could achieve his master piece. -The last no-hitter pitched by a Brave ~a ved lJ.y a Finge r f Polish goalie Jan T?m~~wskl .knoeks awa y a potential goal against i Mexico Sunday dunng tntemaUonal soccer play al th e ColJScum. A 'UOWd ol 191804 saw Poland win its 14th game in its las t 15. getting ! the only goll ol the day 16 m;lo~les into the last half. Mexico losl a I 'goal •he'q 111• refe~ rtJ led Olt$ide on the play . I + \vas 12 years ago -ironically by \Varren Spahn , who was inducted into the HaJI of Fame today. Spahn did it in Milwaukee, beating San Francisco 1.0. Bonds said he expected Fox to use McCovey as a batter for Miller, a rookie appearing in just his second big league game. Slumping Angels Bow ' '"I had never been through anything like this before," said Niekro, who upped his record to 11..S. "It probably happened at the-best time in my life. My father is ill in a hospital and maybe this will pick him up a bi t." ·'A rookie has got to feel a lot of pressure in a situation like that," said Bonds. "But I guess I'm not the manager." To Green's Grand Slam \ Niekro admitted to being nervous, "but I think my wife was in worse shape than J was. I could see her sitting in the stands and she just had a blank look on her face ." Niekro said he was aware of the lack of hits after the third innings. ''\Vhen they came up for the second time around, I knew they didn't have a hit. After that. no one on the bench spoke to me. That was the last time I looked at the scoreboard. too. '"Dave \Vinfield scared me in the eighth inning. I got behind him 3-1 and he hit the next pitch hard. Fortunately, it v.·as right at second baseman Chuck Goggin." That v.·as the hardest ball hit off Niekro, but it \Vent for an easy out as Goggin fielded the hard grounder and threw \Vinfield out by three steps. Rich 11orales reached in the third in· ning on Pe rez 's error ·when his throv.· Y.'as high to first. ''It could have gone either 1vay," Niekro said , ~·1 wouldn't have been sorry if it was ruled a hit. Marty made a heck of-a play." However. the official scorer ruled it an error as the ba!l had Morales beaten. Lat ""911" (4) Sn f'ruci-(II M rll tbl •rll,... Lope,, ?II $ I 0 0 ftlltldt, rf 3 I 1 2 Buckner, If 4 l 2 1 Futflttt. 2b • 0 1 0 W.(Mvl1, ct 2 1 1 O Meddoll. ct • O l O P~clCM"ftll, ct 2 0 0 0 M•tt""'9'1, If • l O O Gar~ey. lb 4 0 0 0 S111tltl'", II 4 0 ) 0 w.crewtord, rf 3 1 1 I Klntman, lb " o o o F~u$0rl, c • 0 I 0 BMllle.-, 3b 4 O I l Cey.311 JOOlS.oetr,c lDDD llussell, 11 o o D o Amold, ph 1 O o O Jonn,p J0100VR8d.,,c 21 10 ll!cherl, p D 0 0 0 Merlchel, p 0 0 0 0 J~hue, ph o o 0 o Ontiveros, ph I o o o B•ewer, p 0 0 0 0 61rr. p O 0 O 0 Tot&l• 33 • Los Al>QfltJ SM! Frenc:lsco Howerltl, ph l O O O Mott!tt. p O O O O Good-. ph l 0 0 0 SOu1,p 0000 ' 4 Toi.I :l<I J I J 013 000 000 -' ODO 010 OlO -3 1,-H Rlrll:•e So John {W,11·6) 7 Ill 7 l l 1 2 Rk~ert 1111 1 O t o I Brewer 1 000 0 1 Marlchel ( L, t-71 3 3 4 I I 1 B&rr 320 0 01 MollHT 2 10002 Sosa 100011 Save -Brewar 14. WP -John. T -2:27, • -33.122. In some cities around the American League. Dick: Green is typecast in that old baseball cliche: "Good field , no bit." Not in Anaheim. Green wenl into Sunday evening's game in the sixth inning as an Oakland defensive replacement. then prooeeded to pop a grand slam home run that pr~ pelled the A's to a 6-2 victory over the California Angels. The tie-breaking, eighth-inning hit allowed the Athletics to slip back into first place in the AL West by two percen- tage phints over Kansas City. And it made manager Dick \Villiams look: like a genius, because the ma n Green replaced, second baseman ~like Andrews, had already hit a single and double. "I haven't seen so many guys around my locker since the last time I was Mother Threatens Suit: Daughter C11t From Team Aaron had been getting all the headlines in Atlanta with his chase of Babe Ruth's all·time home run record BOCA RATON, Fla. (UPll - A miU-Mrs. Hamill met with an attorney Fri_., but the Braves slugger took the day off tant mother says she will sue the day to draw JIP a lawsuit against the Sunday. He wasn't needed as Niekro's trustees of the Boca Jets of a small fry trustees challenging their action on batterymate, Paul Casanova , slugged an football league unless they give her 12-of Id d h• ~---to · · l"'A grounds sex discriminaUnn. She also inside-the-park homer. Ralph Garr drill-year--o aug ~er a \,""1}(1.11\;e JOln lit: vc.• I.am as a Player DOI as a Cheerleader fired off letters to Gov. Reubm' Askew ed hits to touch off three scoring innings -and Dusty Baker and Frank Tepedino or water girl. and Secretary of State Richard Stone each drove in two runs. Mrs. Nancy Hamill lalD1ched a cam-asking that the operating license of the . ;'Casanova really helped ," said Niekro. paign of letters and legal action after the Jets be revoked . "He'd come out and tell me any time 1 trustees cut her daughter Susan from the "It's the same old story of people not was throwing too hard. The knuckler was team after four practices that consisted being given the right to make a choice,•· really doing a lot today." mainly of calisthenics. said Mrs. Hamill , a member of the Na- Casanova said Niekro threw 95 percent "We discussed the contact part of the tional Organization for Women (NOW). knucklers. ';My biggest problem was just sport and we decided there was more "They say every boy would be out to get catching. ii," he said. ';I'm just as ex-than a chance of 1her being hurt, a better her, but it seems to me that's the same cited as he (Niekro) is. It's tny first, chance than for mclst boys,". trustee argwnent they use~ . a,a:ainst • black too." Delbert \Valker said of the Thursday athletes. What kind or boy is it that Zimmer agreed. "It's pretty hard to hit night action. would go after a girl like that? a ball that Casanova can't even catch. "We also felt the boys on her team '"Ibey asked her what would happen if The ball Morales hit could have been would take a lot of ridicule," he said. a boy tackled her and the cartilage came scored cit~r ""'ay. but I don'~ want to. "Other terns would say, 'Hey, we're wt of her knee," the mother saJd. "But tak• anytljjn~ aw.,ay J1om Nt,e~. !le._ R]aying .1be girls-~e-lhis-week.' ,We_ .J.!.be jusl,asked.,!!lefllJl'hal. wwid-boppen, pt\Ched -a h'cll o1 n'gfimc-ar!'tl ac!crvca"h \vouJd like her to participate as a if she tackled a boy and the cartilage no-hitter. It must be~ big thrill for him .'' cheerleader or manager If slie wants to!'· came-out of-his knee."~ Weiskopf Angered; Ni~hols HARRISON, N. Y.' (AP) -Bobby Nichols went home to Ohio a wtMer again -for .the first time In a lQllg time. Tom Welskopt went home to Ohio unhappy and dlsgrunUed again -tor th< first time in a Jong Ume. "All I'm going to say is that I'm glad to be going horn• to Ohio. That'1.all I'll ,.y about it," th< obviously angry Welskopl said a!Ier another Incident wl lh a photographer led to a quadruple-bogey eighl and tho end ol his wlnnlng strtak. , Nichols. meanwJIUe, -was bubbling hap. py after his -dramatic triu:mpb in the 37· hole v.1ndup Sunda y In the rich \\1estchcster GoU Cl_.ssic. putl on tile 18th bole. It left blm with a 71 last roond and a 273 1otal -just one Ibo! oul of the plt!)'ofl and lied with veteran Dan Sikes. The $7-year-old veteran did it in tfirilling fashion. He came lrom nowhere with a bllzlng, ftve-1inder-par 31 on the final nine boles to tie Bob Murphy and then won tile e1111ulnf playoff by dropping a 26-foot birdie putt on the first w:~~w-,:r =-wi: 'VZ"~~ tr ho' pl•YOff): ex a e. 11·£,°""'Y HI~ uo,-000 Nichols, live mkos back "11en tho se<> l~ ~\ "'° ond of Sunday's two rolinds started, T.n ~a'k~:ij'fi, 11\ flr.,ik .. ,fl';. closed up with a 65, aev·en under par on Oflit u1t11t. .- the 6,614-yard Wes~htster Qountry Club g:; ~.='· ,1'.:,#f course and finished with a 2'12 total. . .11c11 Ni«-.. ...- Mu'l'hy bad a final round 117. 't:l <t;..ll'li' .. Weiskopf, meanwhlle, took a fat eight . J,"" !.):. """!!1!! on tho par .four fourth bole and his raUy ~,:: C 1.lii' fell Just short \f~n he misled an et.gle .;: ''°"· a.r,., ~ .. I f . here," said Green. The last Ume was May 17. when Green also hit a homer to give CaUish Hunter all be really needed in a 4-0 triumph. That was Green's last homer until Sunday's. "Not a bad job for a defe?Uive replace- ment, is it?" chortled Williams. Green admitted it was ''the first ball I've hit hard in a month." Sunday's defeat was the 19th in the Angels' last 25 games. Rudy May, 7-10, took the defeal Fingers, 4-6, gained credit for the triumph. 0.ldtfMI fll Cellfo'11tt 1!! •rllrttl •~r ll1111 C•mcaef'l«I,, u • l 1 0 •tPINlr, H ' 0 I 0 Nortl'I, cf ' o 1 1 Mc.Craw, pti 1 o I • 81ndo, Jb ) 0 I 0 (;jll!1911ef, Jb 1 O 2 O lt.JecQon, rf $ I I O Mtoll, Jb O 1 I 1 O..JOhNon, di'! 3 1 0 0 l.JeMs, Jb 2 0 0 0 T-c .. lb 3 1 I 1 F.lloblnson, all ' O • O J.Alov, II 3 1 0 0 R.Ollver, ltl ' 0 0 ' l"Olll , c J o o o Sdltlntohnn, rt 3 1 1 • Devellllo. Oii o o 0 o Berry, cl 3 o o o Cor!llll•ro. pl'I I 0 0 0 B.P•rll«, 2t) 3 I O • Heo-11,!b OOOOSl1nlon,lf •OOO Andr•ws, 2t) l o 2 o S!l'Pl\WlsO!I, c I o o o O.Grl'a'I, 211 l 1 1 • Gr&berll'wllt,phl O I O l(nowl .. , p O 0 0 0 51elmtsik, c I 0 0 I Fll'IO..,, p 0 0 0 0 R.M•y, p 0 • O I Totel1 0.l(lllld (tllloml• Mo!11Hllt.d0, p 0 0 0 I h rber,p 0001 ll t l t Totelt '2tJ1 00,1 001 O«I -' 000 100 100 -2 .,. " It '" •• so Know!tl t l 1 I ' ) Finoer1 (W,•·t l 3 o o o l 1 A.M•y (L.,1-101 1 1 ' 4 4 Monl•~llllCIO 1/3 0 I 1 I Berbtr 1·2/J I 1 1 e J Tim. -1:2l. •tttlld&nc:1 -\l,158. CLEMEN T E, SP AH N I N HALL OF FAME COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) . Roberto Clemente, the late Pittsbu11h Pirate star, and Warren Spahn, who won more games than any other left-handed pitcher. were formally inducted into baseball's Hall of Fame today along with four others. Oldtime players George "Highpockets" Kelly, a first baseman with the New York Giants in the 19208, and MJ~i Wt lch, who wcin 308 games before ibe. tum of the century, also were lndude4' along with Monte Irvin, a slugger ln both , lhe tNfll'-o...and.:majoc ... Ica«ues.1 aJ¥I BUt1 , Evans. former American League umplre- and -basebaU-uccutive. ..... Wins Iti • • .Me11after Spatrked NCAA Enlarges Playoff Format CHICAGO (AP) -The Na· tional C.Ollegiate A t h I e t i c Association, Jresh from an un· prec.dented· punishment of Southwestern Louisiana for basketball,. misdeeds, todaY was expected to approve an historic $plit ot its mem· bership into three 'autonomous divisions. On the eve of the NCAA's first special convention in its 67-year history, the group's powerful Council yesterday recommended expulsion of Southwestern Louisiana from Stewart. Outguns Prix Foes membership and banned the school from Jntereolleglate basketball for two years. AJso effective immediately, Sou t b western Louisiana's athletic teams, for four years, will be banned from all NCAA postseason championships and from participating in any NCAA national TV programs. The recommendations for expelling the southern school from NCAA membership will be considered at the next regular NCAA convention Jan. 7-9 at San Francisco with a two thirds· vote needed to car- ry, ' The day of reckoning came for Southwestern Louisiana after it had foreslalled Similar action at the NCAA convention here last January by cotirt in- junction and went on to finish fourth in the NCAA midwest ' regional ba:sketball tourna- ment last March. More than 100 violations · ADENAU. West Gennany were cited against (AP) -Scotland's Jackie Southwestern L-Oulsiana over Stewart regis~red his 27th 1971 .. 1972 apd 1973, i_nvolving Formula l victory Sunday, recruitment, financial aid and leading a 1-2 .Tyrrell-Ford academic nonns. fmish in the . Gennan Grand The Council also ordered Prix at the NQfburgring. Southwestern Louisiana to .. . ' ' ' ' • • • • • ' • • • • 4 ~ • • • • • ·, .... I • • ' .. .. . . Mondar. Augurt &, 1973 1 DAILY Pt LOT J 7.: ~ Stars Eleven Area 1 To Start for Soot~ By ROGER CARLSON Of .... Otlly Pll .. Stitt ·' Ron Uevanos (5-10, 165) at at linebacker. corner; Bolsa Crande's Whip Other Orange Coast area Eleven Orange C.Oast area Walton (fi.-3, 2 o s) at players ready to assist are 1 I I Estancia's Dan Princeotto and) ootball payers have been linebacker ; Saddleback's Don Laguna Beach's Dave Ma,..,1 named to start for the South in Mahany (6-1, 225) a t ~fiddle riner at running back, SaIL: Thursday's 14th aMuaJ North-linebacker; and Los Amigos' Clemente's Charles Dargan at~ South Orange County AU-star Rich Martin (5-3, 150) at safe-wide receiver, and ~larina's game ai Orange Coast Col--:'y=an~d;::::M:;a:r:k:S:lo:w:e:rs::(6-:3:,:20:5:):::Do:n::K:a:li:n:a:t:g:ua:r:d:, ::::::;;- lege. r South coach Dave Holland revealed his starting lineups at today's anqual pre-game luncheon. The Westminster High quarterback-receiver setup or Dan Accomando (180 ) and Gary Maddocks (180) will be ln the starting lineup, as will Westminster defensive ace Larry Grady (200) at an end, That trio led Westminster to the CJF AAAA semifinals against St. Paul after a second place finish to Western in the Sunset League. Arnold Palmer's STRATEGY OF GOLF THINK AilEAD TO NEXT SHOT One mark of a real duffer is his tendency to get • ' ,, 1 I J ,\ !. Holland selected two or his up there and whale away. at each shot as hard as he . i own players-defensive stand-can without thinking of the next shot that will follow. outs Tom Pole and Bob Golf is a. game of strategy. A good golfer will plan Jones. ahead to his second shot before he even picks a club Pole is a 6-4, 210-pounder for the f"U'St sllot. and Jones, who packs 180 The id.ea is to make your next shot as easy as: pounds on a 5-10 frame, will posst'ble. You want to land the ball on a level, open both be stationed among the place on the fiirway where you will hav;e a clear· shot I ,I " ' ~ The Flying Scot's team-return tlle trophies a n d mate, Franco.is Cevert of receipts, and erase _ j:>tacings France, was numerup .while from its play· in the -1973 and Jackie tckx of Belgium, wm: 1m .NeAA wiiversity-Da5ket4 ner of the 1972 German ball tournaments and the 1971 -front-four. ._t9 the m£.n._Y.QY. d_9n't wapL to be shoot!ng from • --- --__ classic, .. finished. J.bird Jn _Jl_ ~colle_ge division tournaments. McLaren about 30 seconds ~At todaf! Opeiling Si!SSifilfOt " «:. behind the two Tyrrells. -· -. the special convention, about "t • Carlos Pace, tlle young 400 vot!flg delegates. were ex-;$:_ Brazilian who established a pcctec;l. to end quickly the· lap record for the twisting sched~ed two-day conclave by 14.Z...mile Eifel Mo UJ\ ta in approving the proposed three- <.'OUrse, drove his Surtees to division reorganization. D11tr Piiot Sl•ff Phol9 br Rkhtrd Kotlli.r DAVE ELMENDORF CAVORTS AT A RAMS PRACTICE IN FULLl;RTON, fourth place. The plan will eliminate the The race was Stewart's NCAA's t~a~i:ional university- trom start to finish and the college d1v1s1ons and set up victory gave him. a com-Division I, including 12~ '!1~jor manding lead in tile world football powers, and DavlStons drivers' championship series 11 and llI for some 310 other with a total of 60 points. schools, depending on their Elmendorf Looks Stewart~s second-place finish preference._ ... moved him up to second in the A school m D1v1s1on U or 111 point standings with 45, while may se)ecl one sport other defending dri'1ing champion tllan feotball or basketball at Einerson Fittifaldi of Brazil. the Division I level. At Rams' Chances who finished sixth in a JPS Lotus behind his brother. Wiltoo, in a B~abhard, Sunday• dropPed· to third wllb 42 ·points. Aller winning lbe pole posi· tion Friday, Stewart roared into the lead Swlday, followed closely by the second-fastest qualifier, Ronnie' Peterson of Sweden. But Peterson dropped out with engine trouble midway through the first lap and Ickx, driving a McLaren after Fer- rari decided not to race at the Ring this year, moved into sec- ond place. He was overtaken later by Cevert who dueled with Stewart to the finish. Pace first broke the record oo the 12 lap wi'th a clock- ing ol 7 mln111<S, 13.2 seconds. On tbe neirt lap be bettered that mark with a clocking of 7:01.4 for an average speed of 118.3 miles per hour. lckx owned the previoUs record, a 7: 13.6 set last year in a Ferrari. DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO GAS SAVERS ''6 Nov• SS v... •l.llo·lr•ns,, lt/H, powi:r ln9. ()CQOJff) $977 '6t Coron• Coupt; s,vhnming Marks Fall BRISBANE, Australia (AP) -Stephen Holland, a 15-year- old Australians c ho o Ibo y. broke world records in lhe 156- and 800-meter s w i mm i n g events Sunday in final national trials for the world cham- pionships at Belgrade. In the 1500, Holland, who has never competed in in- ternational competition, swam the distance in 15 minutes, 37.8 seconds. That clocking bet· tered the previous mark by 14.7 seconds. Holland's lime . In the 800 was 8: 17.6, which took 6.2 seconds off the old world mark. Jly HOWARD L, HANDY 'of ""' Dallr PllW Sl•ff How much does emotion play in the progress of a pr~ fessional football playeJ' wbile enduring the rigors of training camp? Apparently it plays a great part in the final outcome although most of the players like to hide their feelings while on the practice field or in the presence of others -with the possible exception or their roommates. Dave Elmendorf started his third season with the Los Angeles-Rams Friday. night against the Dallas Cowboys in an exhibition game at the Coliseum and the Huntington Beach resident isn't the kind who Wants to s.it on the bench. "When we have a game, 1 like to play all of the time." Dave explains. "It doesn't make any difference to me if it is an exhibition game or a regular season one." The Rams defensive secon- dary has been somewhat maligned in the public print this month and a question mark has been placed on the future success of this unit. Dave, being a member of that cast at strong safety, doesn't concur. "We have the persoonE!I to have a very fine secondary. And we are using a different approach to the game this season," Ile adds. "\Ve have gone back to basics in training camp. It is a different approach than in my first two years. We are trying to. eliminate mistakes we made last season by working harder and longer on fun. damentals." How does he look at the up- coming season under a new ooaching staff? Baseball ~andings AMERICAN LEAGUE } NATIONAL LEAGUE · Baltimore Detroit Ne'v York Boston Milwaukee Cleveland Ckkland Kan sas City Minnesota Chicago Angels Texas East DlvisJoa East Division W L Pct. GB W L 58 48 .547 St. Louis 61 50 59 50 .541 ~t Chicago 56 55 61 52 .540 1h Pittsburgh 54 SS ,58 51 .532 1\i Montreal 53 56 52 57 .477 71h Philadelphia 52 60 42 70 .375 19 New York 48 60 West Division West Division 63 48 .568 Dodgers 69 42 64 49 ,566 Cincinnati 67 46 55 53 ,509 611 San Francisco 61 49 55 56 .495 8 Houston 57 57 51 57 .472 10\i Atlanta 52 64 41 68 .376 21, .. San ~ieg~ :ii ~ 73 t-.iY't OllMI Olkl111d f, A""lt 2 lundar"t OMMI Dod9trt •• g.., Frtnc:ISCO J Pct. .sso ,505 .495 ,4116 .464 ,444 .622 .593 ,555 ,5011 ,443 GB 5 6 7 91 ~ 111h 3 7\\ 13\\ 1911 J36 , Hll A•to. tr•nt .. """• •Ir eeM., heat- '' (YCllS211 Cl•vtltlld 6-4, MllW•ukH J.1 Chlc"° 7-$, To111 ,.... Detroit I, Ntw Ylll1l f $1. LOiii• J-4, New Yori! 2·1 Pttlabunh '-Phl1MH1lphl1 1 Montreel 3, O!\CffO t An1nt1 t , 5'n OllOO o Clnc1Mllt1 7, Houston 1 ~f14_17 '70 Coron• 4 "boor Aulo, trln.,, rMllto, lltlttr CMOAOOI $1277 '70 M•rk II 4 Door Auto. tr..il., ,MIO, lllttw (rfflQCl $1577 '70 Mark II Coupe Awlt. rrawt.. vlll~I ..,, Mtt-....... ., rHl•I f',_, tit' CitM.. r11C1ll l.mllLJ $1977 $2777 Mlrmnol1 7. IClll!Mt Cltr l , Bptlon, ), ltlll~ • " " Toctn'• O.m11 6D$IM.. {Moret A•lll-•L l•lllll'IOrL!Altx•nd•r 6·4) New York ($10!lllMYr1 12.01 at Dlh'ol l !Siren-' l11r •.Jl Clevel~n<:I (Perno 10.15) •I Cl'lkaoo ($!Ont ._tl Onlr ll""1U •clledultd. Tuttllff'l 01m11 8al!IMOl't at MlMl\ffOIL ! l •••• ti Ntw York 01kllnd •• Of:frolt ~ 11 KIMI& City AMiii 11 Mllw1ukH CltYtllnd '' c~ • 'L .TtlltY'I G ..... f , Cfl1tl90 (~Ofllltm •-2) ti MonlrH !MOor• S-101 Houston (RtiUf 11 .. ) ti Clnclnn1!1 IB l!11nt11Nm l~J).... ' St, Louis {Cleveltlld 11·$) ti New York. {Slon1 7.3) OOOttr1 (Down1"9 1'61 ~I S1t1 OltVo llCPl'I»' 7.11) Q11tr games sd11!dut~. Tl,lffdlf'• G1me• HO!lllOll 11 Plltsb\lf91'\ St. loull •I Nll'W YO(); (ll!Cltll(I •I Clll(llHllll Doclttrt ti S.n Olt90 MontrMI •I San Jl'r1n<IKO Only 91m11 K!Mduled. "We have the opportunity to become a championship ball club. "Of course, training camp is a great time to be optimistic when you haven't played many games. "But I think this team has great personnel. \Ve have a few weaknesses but they will be overcome. "One of the big differences, as 1 See it, is the enthusiastic Jeadersilip of our coaching staff. "We are living in a nicer facility and v•e have a curfew (11 o'clock ). a strict fine list and a much stricter overall atmosphere in camp.'' With Roman Gabriel gone and John Had! tbe lone ex- perienced quarterback i n camp, can he make a com- parison between the two signal callers? "I don't know how .to make such a comparison. I never raced either one of them.'' ·Who is the toughest quarterback he has faced ? "Probably Bob Griese of Miami or JGhn Brodie of San Francisco. I haven 't played against Joe Namath, Had! or Gabriel , h:>wever." During the off-season, Elmendorf spends time work4 ing with a real estate firm, plays a little gulf with team· mates Rich Saul, Jack Youngblood and Phil Olsen. all neighbors in the Huntington Beacb-Westmlnster area. He also hopes to watch his \vife perform with a pro- fessional Flamenco dance group in the near future but says he may not be able to leave camp. Yoo. .see, his .emotions are now with footba.II and the Los Angeles Rams and any outside distracllons will have to wait until the regular season or during the off-season and at that time Denise would prefer spemHng her ·time With D"'•· Time that is lost during the training season, l{cd Face RENTON, Wash. !UPI) Dr. James Furukawa had a sheepish look il8 he stood in tbe wlmer'• clrel• beside hill horse ,.Coco's Pa1" a t Longacres Race Track Sun- day, The reason : He got ml>ed up al the betting window and ' put hf.1 money on someone else's borse. Other offensive starters behind a tree: or in i saridtrap. ' ' from the area include Foun-For example, let's suppose that. you are faced -tam -va.11ey•s ROb-Sfo-n~e lS:.t~ -witlt-a-4ong..-par.-3;-like.the. one in..today~s.iilustr~ 190) and Newport Harbor'S You know from experience that you probably cannot W:µ-ren Ray (6-2, 220) at the .make the green in one shot. In fact, you have several I guards, 6-4, 210-pounder Vince times ended up in the creek running in front of the· Klees of Estru:icia at right green, and once or twice in the sandtrap. ObviousJy tackle and Huntmgton Beach's 't ff d d b f versatile back, Paul Fiskness you can -get o a goo secon s ot rom the creek (165) at halfuack or the sand trap. So your best strategy would be to • The balance 0f the starting use le~ club and play short of the hazards. Then you lineup consists of La Quinta's ~n chip up onto the green and (hopefully) get down 6-2, 205-pound Rick Curry at inoneputt'_foryour.par. ao tmMAn.,....~- running back, Santa Ana Val-<.I lcy's Rick Walker (6-3, 210) at · wide receiver, Santa Ana's "\{OW 10 IMPROVE YOUR PU111NG"I Her• ls Arhold Palmer's Dave Stevens (6-4, 200) at fully illustrated guide to putting stance, line-up, strokill. Send 20' 1 ' tight end, Saddleback's 6-5, along with 1 stamped, self-addressed envelope to Arno)~ Palmer, 2!5-pound Eric Heffner at left in e11re ol this newspaper. , ,, tackle and Pacifica's Bill McNulty (6-1 , 215) at center. That makes the starting of- fensive alignment check in at 198 pounds per player. Area nuggets on the defense, aside from Pole, Jones and Grady, are Mater Dei's Jim Poettgen (5-10, . 170 comer- back) and Edison's Mike Morando (5-8, 165 safety). Others on defense include Santa Ana's Richard Discher (6-2, 220) at linebacker and Bowle1·s In Action Tonight Just nine pins out ol. the No. 5 spot, Mission Viejo's Dwayne Hicks bids fa move up on the leaders as the West Coast Match Game Eliminations finals enters its second week tonight (9: 15) at Costa Mesa's Kona Lanes. Hicks has a total of 8,454 pins. including 150 bonus pins for defeating three Opponents last week. He is currently in the No: 7 spot, eight p_ins behind Anaheim's Dan Tschannen, nine in back of San Diego's Lee Taylor and 10 behind the fourth place bowler 1 -Gardena'• Benny Becker. Tustin's Fred Bernal is the leader with 8,644 pins, 87 ahead of Analleim's Bob Ramirez. tn third place is Azusa 's Dave Frame, 94 behind Bernat Hicks deieated Lomita's Art Jackson last week by a 190-140 nwginl then, knocked off Arcadia's Ed Hartnett, 227- 172. before falling to Long Beach'• Bob C!>lbum, 268-203. He then defeated Ron Dietl of La Habra, ·211>-191. ~ Becker and Tschamen were the, ooJy .bowlers 19 deleal a!! four opponents ta:st.week. And Buena .Park's Ron ~puto was ihe lone fOur-;:gamc Joset. lle's in the No. 16 spot. Two more Monday nights of match game play follow tonight's action with the top five returning for the cham- pionship round Aug, 27. Pot. Sl'#llf' Ctly Pi l. Frlld 81t'MI.-lwlln I !. too Ral'l'llrtr, A111nelm ·1.s . Oevt Fr1Mt, All/A J, • 8ennv 8.rttr, c;..,l"(lena t,.ttt l-Let Ttylor, hn 04!00 t ,463 •·Den TIC:hl',.,,...n, ~.,..~"'"" • ,,~ 1. OMynt: HJ(b. MIU(on Vl•lo USo4 I. ftot> rclbll"'• lonll 81Kh 1,412 , $1M SMrmtll. Ptrrls t,l1~ 10. GI"" Ntvlnt. l • A11mllo~ • ~ 0 11. Art J1<k'°'1. l.omll1 ti"' l, !fOfl 01111, ll Hibl',. I.VI'! \). C.oJ!i !llOl't, Pico Rlwr1 l.'H-1 •· t!d atlllt!' A"l: .. 11111 t "' lS. Ml 80WC\llt.1. Ctffllot J,161 ,,, lton 51PIJIO, DI.Nin• P ark 1,0"• NEWPORT LEASES 2400 Wnt Ceest ~lttl'"Y Le11ing 111 Vehicles fOllll#N It DOMISTIC 645-2202 Alamitos Entries I< " ) For Mondar Finl Post 7:'5 "' Flll:ST ll:ACli -400 'l'lltdS. 1 year olds. ClalmhlO-Pursa S\600. Claiming Twister Breer• (Rlch1rdsl EY1!1"tll't Whls CHIN) TOP'S Gal (l(Mlghl) Tee C"'s Cho!Cll (Garra) "~ " " 1WICI MIOO. light Lime {Ad1lrl Hectors' Pel (Smi11h!l Elmer Gllck (Wrf9h!I Shia>aoel' (Rfci\lrlll) Miss Go Rholla (Knlglll) M11s AZUre 81r (C•rlloi11) C1mlr Moon Jel tOre.,,.r) Sh•non (BRMl!s) Hel111n11tlve (Hirt\ St'1cked Deck (Tre1s.urel Alw Elltlbl1 Turnl!Df'I f6•nksl Rl1>11 ol Sliver {Wr!ghl) Rockln' Dot IBkk~ll Surgin Pas! (P•ge) 117 FIFTH RACE -JSO r•rd5. J W•I" 120 olds & up. Cl•lmlng, Purse SJ700. 120 Cl~mfng prk1 $1,0CO. The lonf 8IY<lflll 117 Hafrllreuer"s Guild. ·--. 117 Nl"'I' Note {66Ml(s) 111 117 Sir Mur (C,,rOOll) "" 117 Fleet COPY ITrr .. 111re1 1ttl 120 Rocket To Me IMrlesl llt1 120 Tl11r W1kfl 8ou11d (Adairl l l' 11 7 Split lie {Hatt) 12i 111 SIXTH RACE -.00 Yillr!ls. J Year' !17 clds & up. Cla iming. Pur5-s1eoo.i 117 Cllllml1>11 price 5?SOO. 120 Ch1rgl11 CIMrlle ( 81cke0 122 F lasl'I Atrrt {Knlqhl) nf Steve TM Vrl (Dreverl 122 Suited Up {R!charlls) 111 Rocket Mick fM1tsu<11J 11 Mid Pclse (Wltson} 1~ 121 Dr1w PllY {Htrll 12 SECOND RACI! -4""' Y11•d'I. l year olds & up. Clalmlng. PYrse $1700. Claiming pric1 $2000. Danit W1tcn (H•rO Dogl1CI Soy (W1rtll 5COOPfl' SPOrt <Knlgllll Wllll COllY (TrMsUte) Wl1ci'I Me Tr1vel (Drer•r) Jonny Boo (Smllll) 171 Rcv1t Top 81r (P191) 1tt. 119 LIMI P111er C(1rllo11J 122' ~:: Sl!VENTH RA.Ce -lSO y1rch. J .,...;, U2 okls & up. Allower>e:e. P11r11 '3500. I Counlrv Car<OUHI (Plgl) 111 Noor Ch11'911 {81nk1! 111 Uncle Chick (All1lrl 1'9 Grar D.lltl('llr (Tr111sure) 111 Sh! 81r Cougar CW1rd) l\J THIRD RA.Cl! -170 yar_d11. 3 Veillr olds & up. Clllmlrig. P11rse S2600. Clalmln; PrlC'll S.SOOO. lll MoT11111'1 Rocir.al (Garta) lU B•ttr'I H1lf Mo'1ll (Wright) Altrvlsllc t8ank1l Go Ofer Go CKnigM) G1berlno IBkk1IJ Llttle Min 8UK (Akhard1l Ooratttr'• Palleo CG1rt1l 119 -1 111 EIGHTH RACE -J.SO r1t"d1. 3 """ 119 olds. Cl1lmi1111. Purse SllOD, Ci.lmlJ!t 111 price $l500. Quick Cll!c fAll11lr) 118 Who«I Yurl!ot fSmlgllll 1J* Trl,ICll OOo (Knlgnll l"OURTH RACe. -4'I> varlll. 3 year Miss Goocl Brld CGl rtl ) lllf ollls. Allowanc1. Punt $2100, Oh Jay flat Jr. {Page) ft Chal'llln On (Dreyer) lT.I Miss Chuci111tt (Treas.urtl ,., The Moonshiner (Srniltl) 119 Nlok1 (Wrlohll l" Fai r's F•!r (Ad•lfl 111 fll1te11111 {Bk.kel) 1)1' Deep Sea Fish Report NINTM RACR -3511 yardl; 21 otlls. Allawane.. Pul'M $1600. • Ror1I Bir llld {Binks) 1 Guerra C1nlln1 (C1rdoul I R1stvs Doll CW.ti!) ~ Mlck1ys s..,,,nower CH•rll 1 K1!1f. Geld CMYlnl Rebll S!Mwn (Treasure) t C!M1'9edl1100 (All1lr) 111 NIWf"ORT (DIH'l''S lotkll') -J05 anulen: 8 111rr1e11<:11, 658 bon tlo, 7'2 H ild blss, 6 veltowtell , 1 while st'1 111!.11 2 h•Ubut, 1• ll'\IKkerel. {Ari's L•nolntl -169 1ngl1rs: 192 llOnllo, 13'1 calico bigs, l vellow!lll. 1 blrt'1C'Ud.ll, .st) rock cOCI. llllll Tin~ Go (Crosbvl 'i Oldll'1 Gem lKl'ltlltl 1 KiPtrmrlou (Or1ytr) I AISO Elitlblt Zip Rock•t !Bankll l A11nt MoMll1 (Tr .. sur•l ~" Qule"I A Honor IA111lr t 1a 1m1 AOblltr Two t~everl lll HUNTINGTON 81!ACK - 1 Or. •fllllllrl: 4'J bonito, 41~ Mild bl$$, 9l barr.c:uda, 1.so roc::k ~-Punt Returns l SEAL. •l!ACH -27S 1ngle•s: SIO bonito. 11 blrr1cvda, 1..6U uncl blu. 2.S rock cod, 14 macur11. Baroe -160 SAN FRANCISCO = •l'lfllH: • wrracuclt, seo bonito. 14 Mncl -r' bl•~· • 11111~·-t. • Jack Christiansen a De DANA WMARP -!l91 •no•m: us . . ' e1111co bl~"' JJ •~rr~c"''..:'..< • bOnlto, s Lion, defensive back, 1951 :i1~; ... ~1 YtiHow1111, IJ;J rock too. tJ truly a wonderful year. He=- ;i'. .. 0t1eo (M"*"" ,..,, -u1 a National Football Lea 1notet11 m yet1owt1U, 40 bh.1tffn tuna, cord f ' W11ti. ... 119u, 1 lillllWt, 1.ot• 11onno. one-season re or ret ::, ""''ICU!»• cs t•llto bin, m rock ing punts for toucbd= LbJtO 1eACH 11t1m1111 ,,.,.. -103 four including two s tflOltrt;., • IMfflCll'df1 "'· ... 1. ,Jf.2 ..... (I 11 .. ~ .. '"' . -~ bOlll!Yh so rod( ccid .. ••ro• .:... 13S' t;tl ops· .. acu against~ ... 111111er1: 1• bltrac1,1C11, • bl11.-"'° A .. o;..eles and G-en Bay bo!olto, 12 hellbul, ''-''6 1" • • ' l • • \ • t' • r 1 .. v1 1Lapworth Captures ~ ' . • ' • :--~:¥RU CRUISE WINNER -llill..Lapw_gi:!!!..J>f U,s_;\~geles Yac~fob'is_shown _ fi niShing o ne of the three races he won to pick up the· overall win tn (lie 22nd YRU Cruise. Sailing his Ca1·29 Merrydown, Lapwo rtb won the Robert M. Allan --lGabboon and-tho West trophies ior individual races, and.the Wiman.Trophy_fQr.. . . . :the overall cruise performance. • ,Uarbor Skippers Do Well \In Santa Monica ,Regatta ' ' 2 Trophies Sailor From Newport Grabs YRU Honors By ALMON LOCKABEY Of 1fle O•llY l"lklf Sltll Bill Lapworth of Newport Beach, sailing for Los Angeles Yacht Club, won the Homeward Bound race of the VRU cruise Sunday to pick up the West Trophy for that race and the Wiman Trophy for the overall cruise winner. Lapworth sailed his Cal-29 Merrydown to a second cor- rected time finish in the first Zapatero Triwnphs At Dana race last Wednesdly, but han- dily won the next three. The second race was I r o m Howland's L a n d i n g to Moonstone Cove , C a t a I in a Island on Thursday, Friday's race was from Empire Land- ing around the west end of the island to Cat Harbor and 1he windup r ace on Sunday '"as from the west end of the island to Long Beach. Saturday was a lay-day at Cat Harbor where several of the fleet engaged in some spectacular spinnaker riding, the latest fad a m o n g yachtsmen. plus rowing and saili ng dinghy r acing. TlfIS \VAS THE first time the cruise has included Cat 1-larbor in several years and it turned out to be an unpleasant stop for most of the fl eet. YRYU instructions said the Bill FO<lor's Zapatero was fleet would be the guests of the Class A winner Sunday in California Yacht CJub and Del Dana Point Yacht Club's Rey Yacht Club, both of which Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet have lease4 moorings in Cat r ace in the Dana Days Regat· Harbor. plus s ho r e s id e ta. facilities. Zapatero's victory came in But the fleet had hardly the Class A division with spin-secured on the moorings when a patrol boat vjsited each boat BOW-TO.BOW FINISH -The Pride of Pay'nPak an d Miss Budweiser almost finished in a dead heat Sunday in the $50,000 world championship_ race ro: un· limi ted hydroplanes at Seattle. "The Bud" won its heat but lost 1n the finale to Pay'nPak, Pay'n Pak Nips 'Bud' In Seatile nakers. and demanded a $10 fee for Ma11y Don't Prove Boat Ownerslrip Class A winner without spin-Ille lYl'O nights moorage. \Vhen \ ~ nakers was Dave li-1cMillan's YRU officials queried Dou g SEATI1..E (AP ) -'Ille Depertment o( M ot o r year; in addition, some 20,000 Endless Summer from PVC· Bombard, head of the Catalina Pay'nPak, in .the closest Vehicles Director R o b e rt new and used boats are traded Trophy winn<rs: nd Co Ag th C h •• ~ PHRF·A (with· ~innakers) Camp a ve ency, ey unlimited hydropla ne rac:e of ozens as expre~ concern every month. Zapatero, Bill FodOr, DPYC; were infonned that the charge the year, ·fought of.f a hard-al the number of boat owners Since J970, when b 0 a t (2) Chasqui, Dennis Oloate, is made.regardless oI the fact charging ~1iss Budweiser and "'ho don't confirm t be i r registration became 8 Depart· Seal Beach YC; (3) ~ Life, that t he moorings b ave won the Seafair World Cham-otawt~on'rshi.· ---~by ~oper docwn~n-inent of -Mot-Or Vehicles func- J icfl>a:Y, '81 BYC.. · alr$dy been -paid •foc on 8 pionship Regatta Sunday.· tion , the transfer ol boats 8.!I PHRF·A ( without spin· yearly lease. Driver Mickey <R e mund The nwnber of boats being property has been patterned End! s ed across the flnlsh registered ln California is 1 nak.ers) -(l) ess um-TRIBUTE, SKIPPERED by scream growing at the rate of 45,000 a after the 1r a n 51 '-' 0 mer, Dave McMillin, DPYC; Dick Blatteman of Balboa line in the Pak at more than au t o m ob i I es . Sfutilar Se F W It Claus 160 miles an hour 1n the final docu · · JI 12) a ox, a er ' Yacht Club, was the victim of mentat1on -espec1a Y a DP YC; (3) La Paloma, Don a b1"t or unfortunate advice heat. just as Dean Oicn\\'eth REFEREE boat "pink sJip" -is II VYC in the 1'.1iss Budweiser v.•as hi Cantoze a, · from the harbor palrol boat necessary to prove owners p, PHRF·B -(I) Sola Via, \\'ho told Blatt ennan to pick about to catch him. Cozens said. Karl Lassey. DPYC; (2) La up a certa1·n mooring. "Another 50 yards and ~ BANNED According to O:>zens, too G T Thom~n Budwe1.,.,,r "·ould have v.•on, ' "b " be t Pelite. ary · r--' Before Tribute r-eached the ""'"' many persons uy a a DPYC; (3) Skirr, Art Phelps, mooring she "·as ha r d one nd~~~~ 1~f~~ s a I d SEAm.E (AP )_ An assis-but don't asdk forh the p 1 ink slip. DPYC. aground. She "'as freed on seco s · "They fin t emse ves 1n PHRF .C -(I) T'he Vulgar high tide early Saturday mom· tant rereree was suspended financial deep water," he said. ' • Newport Harbor small boat l kippers trailered their craft to Marina del Rey over the / Weekend and brought home a goodly share of hardware trom the Association of Santa fi-1ooica Bay Yacht Clubs ~ 11ua l Midsummer Regatta. Newport Harixlr Yacht Cub dominated the Star class with Barton Beek winning fi rst place and Chuck Beek taking second. Boatman. Hugh C urr a n . . O IENOWETH WAS slightly late Sunday night after or~ "They have a boat they can't PMYCi 131 w tndtllll"M, H-•"' "v•n. DPYC; (2) Day Star, Ernie ing. lx>hind Re mund from the start ficials received d e I aye d prove !hey own. Without the cvc1 l•I TrC!ILop, D•n T1mrnt1•, White, PVC,· (3) Osprey, IOA: -n 1 "~errvdown, B i l l bu t fell more than ISO yards reports ofaposs:iblei)lfraction recri stration docwnents issued WYCJ CS! t11 b9tween AllQl'll II, Fri'<! Y-lhl LAV(; (2) ln•1c1,,,, H1.1111> i.~-be rossed Jh-•"" durl the cham , hJ be o· Lelchtf\lls. ,.MYC, •nd Medi.tu 11, Hilding Johnson, DPYC. Lim...... aYc. (3) T•lb<l!e. Oitk al•!· back W11C1 1 (' '""'6'' ng p1ons p at by o~rv they may have a cost· ) 1~rm1n, ave. \'' Gh<lst. John -n..k k I · the · be f d Cham Don AO•ms, SMYC. •·!ONTGOMERY-12 -(1 R""'nokh, u.vc; sl l •mhlll!Hatcti. the Pay'ur-ll wa e ate m in I Sea air Worl · Jy and d1'ff1'cult 1·1me ~abllsh P11RF·I -(1 1 Sclrl!, N1!1 Sm1ll, ;~ • 2) ., .,, • PMYC; ci i M.1n11I•, But Morris. CYC: Jerry Montgomery, VYC : ( cave. first lap. pionship regatta for unlimited ing they oy,·n it -much Jess "I V•wWlnd, Olli• M<:Cenn, SllYAC; B ., eve (3 1 J ry PMR F·A -(ll ""''';, JMn Caile<. ,..qrom thal po1"nt It was l1ydroplancs ha th 'ght t esell 't" Argyle Campbell of Balboa Yacht Club was the winner in the Tempest Class. (4 S•mo.1r1l,_J1 .... wens. s BYAC; tSI ret n ason, ; er ll YC; t71 B•llwe""'· lo,., P1c~<>rd, r · . ve en o r J . "'"'••v 11. Mike''-""'"· SMvc. Armstrong, VYC. L8p~i{F'.~ A~"(1~'· ;!~:. Jo;~·~i.~ffav catchup~at racing for the 3~ The suspension of Arnold Cozens 1,1•arned that many E IUCSON·2"3~ -en P1n11c11. Don SABOT A (I) Ti Full Wllco~. aYC; (21 Oeb••· Jim R1u!!, Id d . . k G f ···Jtl I bca d . 1•-Fr1nklln, OAYC; (21 011Cl11on. P•u• -m er. sssc: fl! Raze!, 8 111 w1;~1mp, cave. yror-o u Wei.Ser }OC ey. ree.n o ~ e was an-sto en ts en up 1n 1rc-t!;~Wv~~vc i (Jl Fr" Sprrr, H•rlin DPYC; (2) Bill Fodor, DPYC. HOM7WAR O BOUNO RACE !Sun-Remund 's victory put the nounced by PhH Cole, ex-hands of unwary customers t There were 254 boats in 25 t tasses in the regatta which turned out to be more of a Midwinter than a Midsummer t vent. On Saturday the fleets lailed in every.thing from rain lo cold winds to flat calms which caused several post· j,onements. Here are the trophy winners by class in t he various yacht club divisions: .' •• HA •••• YACHT C'"' SABOT B -(IJ Kevin Jef· d•v0•, 111 M , ,,, 0• 1 Pay'nPak back on top in na· ccutive secretary of the who later find themselves With L I -1rrv awn; .. os : WY",o,",,,-,',',' ,''°"',,,,·,,',',",' ~·.~ •. · fries, DPYC; (2) li-1 a r k fJ1 1nv1c1u1. tional standings for the season American Powerboat Associa-nothing to show for their !ride ck • •u PHAF·A -(1) At1rl; (1) Alr<lmitr; ..:wvc: 131 Plum H•U, ll••d GOCllr•v. Shoemaker, DPYC ; (3) U:iri, cl> s111weltier. \vilh 7,438 points to 7,088 for lion's wilimited racing com· money when the boat is CALlf'OllNIA YACHT CLUI IOA - l 1) X~n1ly~. BIXI Sll1nk, CYC ; !]) alll!O Mix, 81!1 Lt wl1, WYC; Ill Rit0m"~· Biii GuiiJcn, PMVC. l.:HYC. And DPVC PHRF-a -P! 01Dra1 11) A1 1e1 II ; the Budwe'1ser mt'ss·1on. t cd t ·is I g I ner c AL·70 _ (1) It's swell, a 1rrv Jone1. erson, · !J! c ohort. · re urn o 1 e a ow . 8\11 Wi lle. l(l1YC 1 {2) W1ndm1r, Lou ------------'""=--'--------------------------------------=----- The Beck Family o f ONE TON -0 ) Sting, l yk/Tlf'· ry Inell, CYC. DEL Rl!Y YACHT CLUI P MllF·A -(11 Oar/1, 01vld Aon , WYC; (2) Prt!IY L•dy, Bot> l(lng, West Germans Tcike W or~ld Racing Lead Hurm1n, $8Y"C. LI0 0·1•·A -Ill Wood Wind, H1rry Wood, AI YC; Il l C1p!1ln F1ncv, 11t r· rv J1l!tn1on1, MBYC; 131 PH Sovp, Torn AoMr!'°n' ABYC; 14) One For Tht ROIO', Jim Tyler, BYC; {!) Lowtv 11:orn1n. "ow11n11 Lollm1n. ave. LID0·14-ll -(1! Mot T11na, St1~e Salmon<I • .O:HYC ; (2) Vela. Max (•Oil~, WVC; ()) Golch1. Fred McKIDDln. SCCVC; (4) Ten1clou1, llelty Broolli., ll YC. COWES, England CAP) -staged bel\veen England and West Germany was unoffic ial France. Brazil's Saga, pursued leader in team standings Sun-closely by Am erican yachts Drag Boat Champ Top Speed 185 I r th Salty Goose and Charisma, day after the first eg o e had been first across the finish LONG BEACH (AP) -Mac Admiral's Clip, world cham· line. But all three craft wound Christensen of Norw a I k pionshlp of ocean racing. up down in the s tandings after rocketed his blown f u e I Provisional placings rollow· handicap times were worked hydroplane Shock Wave to a top speed of 185.94 miles an ing 'a 225-mile English Channel ou t. hour to win the top classifica· race that ended Sa turday Salty Goose was skippered tion SUnday at the loth Na· night had the Germans in first by Jesse Phillips of Dayton, tional Drag Bo at Cham· position. Holla nd second and Oh io, while Robert Director of pionships. Ital th. d The organizing Mamaroneck, N.Y., was at the Y ir · Oiristensen defeated Dennis committee announced. how· helm of Qiarisma. ever that official resulls "·ould Pollaccia of Torrance In the not be published before Tues-A THIRD U.S. yacht, final round of the $35,000 day because o{ a nwnber of J~ightnin '. piloted by Ted event at the Long Beach protests. Turner of Atl anta . \Vas object ~1arine Stadium. or a later-dismissed protest George Crowle of Santa TifE f1l ENCR y a c h l lodged by 1'.1orn ing Cloud, Rosa , won the unblown fuel Revolution \I/lits placed first O\\•ned by Pri1ne Minister hydro class in Last Chance. provision<Jlly with a corrected Edward Heath of England. His speed of 151.38 m.p.h. was lime of 30 hours, 55 minutes, Ligh!nin· y,·as third in the pro-faster than J oe Babe l of 51 seconds fo llowing the race. visional placings. Cas tro Valley. ' ~~--'--......::~~~~~~-'-~~~- '°'•Beach: FIYnorthto San Fra1iclsco ldmes a day on PSA. (callfOmiats unoffldal state bl.ll) t) PSA wants to go north (or south) with your money. Other ~' Grlnnlngbirds to 5an Diego ~"" .-and Sacramento. Over 200 .191r-;.o u J..~ flights a day connecting . ; all of northern and southern Califomla Gall your travel agent or PSA and let's migrate. \ LikeH aroun NITE Mon. thru Sat 7:45 On Katella Near 605 FWY. low thru Sept. 5 • 4 IXACTAS The Only Raclnit in the GREATER LA. AR.EA .<- • . . • I ' ' ·, ........ . . . . .. -, . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' .. . ' . . . . ' TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS Watergate Brings Mort Sahl Back By MARY CAMPBELL U N..wsfealw.t Wriffr The \\'1tlergate break·in Is KCET fJD 8:00 The Comll1; Asunder of Jimmy "' being investigated and the Bright. This drama centers on a young wellare voice of ?\fort Sa hl is once case work~~ who finds the frustration of his job again heard in the land . overwhelming. Sahl. now 46. has a new t.P KCOP aJ 9:30 -"Oklahoma Crude'' Premiere. out, his 11th, made and proc- Coverage of the Columbia picture with interviews essed in 17 days, called "Sing with stars George C. Scott, Faye Dunaway, John a Song of Watergate,'' on GNI' Mills and Jack Palance. Crescendo. KHJ l:J 11:00 -"All This and Heaven Too." Sahl talks fas t, skips quickly Bette Davis and Charles Boyer star in this old from one subject to another, says, "Because I \Vant to have a band ln what goes on In this country, good or bad. l 'm not Jack Paar. I don't retire. 1 want to be as active on as many fronts as possible until J'n1 dead. said. 'What a beautiful vie\\', Do the enlisted men have one, too?' and n1ndc a grim subjC<'t funny . I make people laugh al lhe government's blundering efforts to supress evidence. People are much more open to the truth when t h e y · r 1: laughing." Sahl says, '"Fifteen people '"'ere doing Watergate albums but none of them were political comedians. I knew there was plenty to say. One one side of toy,·n and they can stay on the otht.:r side But they know. They don't want to know so they don 't have to do unything about it. TllE CURTA IN went up 20 years ago. \vhen Sahl made the very first comedy albl1n\. Sahl has a follow-up LP in mind, "It's going lo be about when you train an agency to overthrow governnlents. ii is 'SLITHlillu & "SOYLEHT QAl!EN" (P'OI likely to rehearse here :it I ~~~~~~~~~~~~ hornc." I. drama from 1940. smil es engagingly, tells facts, 0-;::!:..:!:=:==:;!~~:.:_,:!:~:!:~~~~;;:;~~~111 opinions and one-line jokes, • shooting, as he says. at bl;lth sides. fie has thoroughly •·1 lean to the left to correct the drift in my country. U they continue to attack Nix.on I'll have to defend him lo restore the balance. You want to know my politics? I'm floating in orbit until I'm cleared for landing. I just have to keep attacking people, shoo t on both si des. 'Our job, as comedlo11s, is l<>. toke 11otlo11ol 11·0· 9ed11 ha A111eric."u 011d 111ake ii 111111111.' "JACK WEBB is a close rricnd or n1ine in L.A. You shake hands with him or Duke Wa yne and yott can put ii in the bank. Jark said. 'l believe in la\\' and order and Nixon and I don 't agree with anything you say but there is room for what you believe in.' I never heard liberals say, 'There is room for you.' I'll take George \Vallacc any day, He's also "T1tin~ his autobiography and will be in the rnovie, "'n1e ltend or Alfred GarciJ.'' "It's <1bout n bounty hunter. played by inc. \Ve start Sept. 3. 10 "'eeks in Mexico City. \\lc're n1aking it outside the country to help the balance of payments.'' l~ ,..., " -" ! ·~~ ~· .. .,. ,,. ·',~. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening AUGUST 6 WATEKAIT HEARINGS All prci1r1mn1lnt ll 10bjttt b dl1np without nottc1 lor coveu11 of tllt W1t.r1at1 Hearin11. ''"0001ll""' mme;im••n O lon1nz1 1:00 II (I) Ktrt'• Lacy (R} Lucy wtn- 1les a }ob 11 one of 111est Rip WI!· son's offitt 1lf1s so sht can bask in the gl11morou1 1tmosph1r1 of show businelS. @ Civtllutlo11 0 (II r;D AIC Mond'J Movie: (C) (Zhl) "M1roc 7" (R) (dra) '67- Gent B11TY. Elsa M1rtlneUi, Cyd Ch11iue. A secret 111nt uses hil s~ill 1s 1 stfecrtektr to loln an in· tem1tlon1I 1em smuuler tnd htr t11m on 111 expedition to Motocco for !ht theft of 111 1ncl1nt lewe1td mtdtllion, di ges t e d that day 's newspape rs, which provide him with material for com· 1nent. HE MADE the record , he "I've known Nixon 20 years. One time at a dinner In Los Angeles in 1964 he said, 'You have an epic chance to be Will Rogers. If you remember to keep a !ire under our behind as well as theirs, you ca n make us honest.' I doubt that: it's too late for that; but those were his words. I don't know what happens to Bob Iiope in that instance. "OUR JOB, as comedians, is to take national tragedy in America and make it funny. Example -World War II was not fuMy. Bi ll Mauld in drew a cartoon of two officers in Italy looking at the sunset and one (j) Courtship 11 Eddl1's F1thtf O Wanted Deld or Alive ®J M•lor Lu111• lasebla Cont'd fr11m SPM. 0 "'"" {C) (2lnj ""' ''" ""' THE Ille Ollt •ut tht Tt11tllll1 Salff. ~:.~;) '68 _ Phyllis ainer, 11,lli]=~£~.~=rn=0=. ~ffi~0~~£~·'-c@=o~ 1 m Tho nlntsbnt'I IDStll~TrH EE Los Tomt m Hoc1aepod11 Ltd1• m Thlff stD11u al~'~_;!~·:~.""'' E-XPERIMENT I 9:JO e (I) Doril Day Skw c,. hnnett Harrod c.oo.g._ .._....... I 1:30 Ci) Ho11n's Htroe1 O Movie: (C) (90) HA tountesa fro111 Hone Ken(' (com) '67-Mtr· Ion· Brand9, So$1hl1 l"ren, SycflM; Ch1plln. IMtS a ChlllCI 11 "Mtn ol 011 Yt1r" 5iberm.d reloUOi• whin he's arrested 11 a peepin1 b.tweenCIMd tom wlllla tryln1-io htlp Dori• on ·llt\idiNsati" (f) CIS Ntft W1Her Cronkite fJ HIYt Chin Wiii Tfl'lll 1 story. ~I ONtw1 m AnlfJ Grtffitll fE) Sul 'fu111 Yln1 TM [':) Llvlna: Easy fiE) loto Gutlerm ShO'll m Desiri Thea\rt (E Little R1sul1 ID Ott1holla Cr* PMlltrt Cot- 1r11t Diet Strout hosb this prt· iniert cov1r11• of tht Columbia pie. ' turt ''Okl1hom1 Crude" with ;tars George C. Stott, F1ye Ot.inn 1y, Jchn Mills i nd Jact P1l1ntt. Tht p10--i 1nm includes inltfVitws with ttMI stirs ind titm cltps cf \ht l11ture. 7:00 B rn D m News m Suell I l'l•c• (R) 0 lowlln1 hu Doll1r1 (E MlldlKlll 1t1H1111 (i) Movie: (Zt11) MC.st Siclt, West ail Y1rilly Shit " ''"l '50 -~YI Ctrdntr · io:OO O (l) Medical Cffttr (RI A hos· lamas M1son. (J) Wlldlift Tlwltt1a pita! tflici1ncy t lpert trie1 lo fOftt O Wlat's MJ line? the retirtmtnt ol an t ldtr1y Siii· m 1 Low Lucy reon •ho is trutin& lllt d1ufhtw ID I Drtam ti Jt1nlril ol lht womtn Dr. Loc:tiner ll'lr!l.I to ft) Slnrplt11tntt M1ll1 mirry. m Wllttls, llln• & t11J CIIO '°-""' ,_ ttl Munt~ n:'I s fi1 R ctr 0 htl• Plrlfllll Tia. Tt ••• ~ pt .• EE) Ytrito "tortlle Ctstlno" A 6oc· 7:JO IJ Tiit lam: Just ""' Ntw? umer1tt')' about Ifft In the slom on (]l Hop11's Herou !ht CHJtsklrts of Ptltrmo, Sicn1. The O Tiit New l'Tkt 11· lli(llt lllm ze1oes In en M1fi1 control of O Ht1p lh1 Ne l1hbo1 both ille11 t 1etivttln and such leli· (ll Tht Thrillw1k1rs tim1!11 endet'o'Ors IS !ht lunei1I O MlllklR S liloYit: (C) (Zht) "St· buiiness. crtl ln11s.iofl" {drl) '64-S!ewart Granger, Raf V1llon1, MicktJ ROOl'lll)'. lO:lO 0 Ta• lid: m "Bet ;Jr! (6) Ont Sttp kJonc1 m Dflrn•t Q) ,. ... ED Lot Mpl11 C.lledlwe .. Powtr ff) TV Mnkll to th1 Pl1'f1roup" EE NIWI/~ m Thi Mvutu11r 11:00 f..1 DD fE m GD Rm ail U1tt1l y 111 £strtll11 (3' ([) ~ &J Ntws El) Tllt Addi•• fallllf 0 Ont Sttp lepMi4I plus "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" 9:00 P·'"· with Git YoulMJ Coll l'tleatre for S11n. Sclteclule ~~~~~O~RANGE COUNTY 3459VU. Lido N•wportfNKh Pk>M: 613·1360 ·-· EXCLUSIVE ...... ~ .. ..-... ..,_ l:OOfJ ([l Cim...U ''T1lum" m) ~~~~'..';l~lldt ind tltMI plus:"BEAVERVALLEY" ~1:: !,~nsn!::';,'t!o '~1~11~;:0: TM" (dr1) '40 -Betit D1vls. l !ooo!""'"""""""""""""""""""'!'""""""!""'"""""""""'""!""'"""!""'"""""""""""""""~I 1nsry bear to save his f1mlty. Chartis Boytr. 0 m Major Lttcvt laseball New m Trvtll or C..111111111e11 York Ytnktes vs, Detroit TiEtrS. m Movie: "Tht Aah1111s"-A docll· 0 ilovlt: (C) (Zkl) "I.uni of the m1nt1ry on animals 1t ••r, wor• Wlldtrntst" (1dv) '52-Jean Pe-leis, i nd pll'f. Jeffrey Hiinter. tt·:SO IJ(l) CBS lite Mnlt: .. Kty ~ O CIJ G>Th• Rookies ''Th• In· ' 11m'" (du) '60 -J1ffr11 Hunltr, fcrm1nt" (R) A JOuth mikes . • Pit C1owley, Dennis Hopper. hllh speed ge!IWIJ att1mpl With Q l.§l (D )ollDll'f CirMll JO h I\ rookies T1rry Webster ind Wi11i~1 Davidson is .:uest host. Gilli! in pursuit Th1 th tst ands in g Movlt: "Lonlflorn" (wes) '52- a c11YI and 1 lttd to a fur 1mu1 Wild Bill Elliott. 11ing ring. I R 'Tl ~ Did: trntt @)News mTITelttht Trvth m Tht Ghost ind Mrs, Muil m Tiii Unlouth•bln 12:00 C6) M1rill1t Diiion EE Lt Sanor• lov1n m lllrtd Hltdtced: '"""b fD ! llliCrl\ I Com!n1 Asandtr of lt!>O m Movlt: -rM Ila llllff" (mys) Jlmmr lrlfht A drami ib~ 1 '55-Jchn Brornlitld M111h• Vick· JOUng wt!l111 usewo1ker who l1nds • !ht frustration ol his icb M l· ers. .. THIS JS CINERAl\IA .. .... "POSEIDON ADVENTURE" !GI "SOUND OF MUSIC .. . .. "DOl.!.A RS" !RI "LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE" ... .. BOSTON STRANGLER" <PGI "LIVI AND LET DIE" CPGI ... "THt: ,.ECHANIC" ~ track or my album i s \Vatergate and the rest is stuff I've been doing for the last 10 years. The CIA is in it. It's on- ly the CIA's latest plot. You've got to know what the origins or this are; it's not a gove rn- 1nent that suddenly went crazy. "I only made one track about Wa tergate because I like my albums to have a historical perspective. ''l KNOW a lot of the prin- cipals in the case, including the President, if he is in· volved ." Placing his tongue in his cheek, he addS , "I find it hard to believe that he knew. He has a quality o( in· nocence , rve found , over the years. "I said in Miami this ad· ministration would be more corrupt than Harding and not as rolorful. At least the British have som'e women in their scandals. "The liberals have no sense of humor. My following is never the liberals. They hate .me and I hate them. How do you think the countryigot this way -the indifference of the liberals. It is not that people don 't know. They hope the rat· infested ghetto will stay on MESA c~;~: 1 8 .:: "Jf'.'.'POllT BLVD ) .l (j 1 J '.o 2 not George l\olcGovern. 1-;;;;;:::;::;::;;;:-;;--:;;--;--;-;;--;;~;; I "But I have a natur.il affin- ity "'ith Eugene McCanhy. He introduced me to Catholic hu mor and Irish humor. 1'1n sick of Je\11ish humor." For the past six yea rs, Sahl WOODSTOCK hasn't cut an album and hasn't 1 ~:=="="=-="="=·~"='='°'":='=~='='='=':=~ been on TV very much. He cut l- one al bum while Lyndon Johnson was President bul it y,•asn't released b cc au s e Capitol Records feared that Johnson would sue. Sahl disap,rces. 2nd llG WEf!( ! "LICj)UID SPACE" by Dale Dovl1 A SURFING ODYSSEY 515 lS71 "~lf'"' I llo.I" l~N EMPEROR Of THE NORTH oc CHINISI CONNECTION (I: ~:1 .• 010 Ofl.l DllVl·IM ~llOWING! DAY Of THE JACKAL !Kl • wA.uu umu,u 1 CA.llOl 11111<11n PETE 'N TILLIE !l'GI "• : ..• ~o ~· -•"'!> l•l .. IU IAMB Cot~,;.,r-~-' PAT GARRETT & BILLY TH£ KID 111 ·CHINESE CONNECTION t•f ~ .. , ....... : ... ~~· .• : ll·· ... ~,~··: "' ,61·~~·1 A NU~fBER of. TV sho\11S haven·~ hired Sahl since he started talking a lot about 1 1 the CIA. "l have the reputa- tion of being an outlaw. But all I the shows I worked , I sub- mitted material t\\'O weeks OKLAHOMA CRUDE IKl 8:00 a11d 10:00 Heh nit• ahead to the legal staff. 1 saw 1~....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.~---''I ::;-,',";';'~··~·~·~""~r"~'~'~'"~'~'~"'~ no reason to penalize the peo· ~urti~' 111v<1 pie I \\'orked with. \Ve share a m !.!• ~~~~ .... common problem -libel. ~31.1111 "A man without his "'Ork is a.r 1uNG-111 ¥10U 1 really a eunuch. I nCver ~E,. wl\o -....iinom•1 1.~~1s•1. HAMMER Of GOO !I understood guys '"'ho "'ant to NOW PLAYING ,,.,f.~~-\ ·· IOOK Of. celice and play go\(. t wani 10 •· •··"~·· NUMB!l 1• RiSERVED SEATS be parl of lhe aclion. o~ s,11 S:JU 'Iii l:ll "l worked somchO\\', I -.. .....l •-u,~ .110 ., '"--ffl .. Sal. S~~· Noen m.,.__~-lll....,.O.S..--""' . -~ kids are very duH ::it ·the . 'ti'Jl!::Jt4.~-· schools now, now that there is t!.->:;:33:;., O no draft. I can make them 1 laugh. asap ro f es s i on a I the same perception. j.t~t comedian, but they don 't have ~HL· . "It is aJI going to turn around now, my acceptability. ~~ . ......,..,_ It's going to change because I ·r·=~~~•11•0No1neo \\'ailed. It is the third act now. I I didn 't accept the second act as the curtain.·' Another outstondlng cornblncrtlo•! EXCLUSIVE! GENE HACl<MAN f?ilb SC/\J?ECROW Mal. (HRU THURS. I P.i. fRlal! 7 I US Sl(URal! H I !,41 su•all 1.11 1 ALL SEATS $4.00 ti~a<,, u:1 :. , s.i. o! G•rl1<1~ c.~ ... ~'''~"'•l" ~··6112 NlWIU IQH(i .001 1111 IOGI• .00.1 LIYI AND LET DIE ll'fll THE MECHANIC 11'6! "'""=== NfWtSf IOHO .007 MIT IOGtl MC>Olf LIVE AND LET DIE !""l ·' THl MECHANIC !"'"I •1·oln ""'· ... •: <·i .. ""': TM! IOCl lllUSKAL JISUS CHRIST SUPU.STAI \fol + "Silent Ru111litg" CG) CNtb1uon Sat. & Sun. 2 p.ni. Shoppers Matinee Wed. 1 p.m. Paul Newm an "MACKINTOSH MAN ~'j ~= < ll:ts am Geo ro• Set•I GltoK11 J1ck10n "A TOUCH OF CLASS" ....... ~ ""' ,, .. ,~ .. ,", "LOCUSTS" loltl ln Colar! (PO) D.llll JT 2:4S.l;'5·11:4S "BULLET" TECHNICOLOR"' tc:·::..."" PLUS "SILVER FOX" Sf IONO .007 Ml tOGl I MOOI I LIVI AND LIT DIE (PO) · THI MECHANIC (l'GI -..nt. Cl'lll 6 I l.lf ' IUll. I Sunday is •lltlmin1l7 and tvtn \ually, self· 1:00 (fl 0 0 (j) Nm1 "THE MACKINTOSH ''"""''" 0 "'""'' •••• ... South Coast Plaza II FlllJ&AY • a:JEIComaMhl "IULLET" l•NOUr.G IWI U IU\lOI • S4'f-3lS2 in the j ,)Jiij~!(1}i m Mlfve11to Ytldtl Show 1:15 B MMlt: ..... , 911 lllOl'ld.,.. l ~~~~~~~~====~;;=====~~J_-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'..__~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~.!Jl,,,==;,;;;~·~··~ .. ~-~·~ .. ~·~-~ m Morit Classiu: (Ziii) Mfht Stir (dr1) '53 -Sir R1tph Rlcl'l11dson, Flnir (dra} '3 1-ldll'ud G. Rob· M1r11ret l1l1hton. ll).$Oll, Francis St1rr. J:lO IJ Movlr. "NlJ'lltlllln" (dr1) '64 1:30 m Mtl'I' Griffin Slow • Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES t:lO O "Until They Sall" (dra) '57- Jean Simmons, Ptul Newm1n, Join Fontaine, Piper Lturlt. 0:00 rn "Evtrylflinl lut tht TrlUl" (com) '56-Maurttn ~'H1ra,_John fcrsrtht. O "Mi n on • • rtyinf Traptrt" (com) '35-W,C. fi1ld1. Muy Brian. 2 ;00 D "Hll•tltd'' (utv) '!>Cl -Jim Divis, M1rsh1 lanes "Sal1rl" (alh) '40 -M1d1l11n1 Carroll, Oou1!1s ftirbtnU Jr. -01vid Knlaht, Mo1rt Redmond, 1:90 m "H111 a11d Ciy" (mys) '46 - Allsl•lr Sirn, V1lorit Whit•. 1:30 O "ColnttJ Clrf" (dr•) '51-Gratt lltlty, Blnt Crolby. Wl!ll1m Holden. l :OO (I) (C) "1ikl1, Clrts, Clrls" P1rt 1 (mus) •gz -Ehi1 Prt'3ey, Sl1Ut Stewns. tm (C) .. ll:ltl lttdl" (com) '61- rrankfe Av1lon, Allnett• runlct!llo. l:ld G (C) "W11 et 'tttt Wo1lds" (Sci· II) '53-Cine ,e1rry, Ann Robinson. 4:00 0 (C) "Wilt Tl11 HM S11n Shinn NeHlt" (dr•) '5Z -Jtan Petera, Dtvld W1yn1. l :lO l])Sa11111lOMl lblfq KOCE, CHANNEL 50 EORGE C. scon FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANCE Ul\L nUM<I i;RUUE ~.....,,,,_= ._... ... "JF.SUS CHRISf SUPERSIAR" ,,, mllWTlO•STUKI •• ~ •• ,. •OWA"'O• ···' 1: .. ,! '· ' :: . ... "........ ... ': ... •••·.11g2 .... . """"0" ••• ., ...... ~ ......... . _._,, ... , .......... ' -· I! ..... -,,_ lll JM ·-· --· . .. '"' • . ....... c;...... !:jt(d? ... ~·~~ ~A. WA .. DKIMl(t" 111 "IW90!! ,_llQ Cf~ll • f!': eoW1tttos ~ HARBOR,.'.':':.1 ..................... · ,•;.t\"'J::.i•:.,;: ~~1..9::.r ... ; ··~ .... -~ .... =j_~ JACK IN M t!l!llON Vll[..10 eowAROS CINEMA VIEJO ••• ~· .~ .... 4' " HJ ,..,...,,. ·~ ••to ' ' ' '' ' • , ' Mondar, August b, iq7:, Co111mode Cron eh PUBLIC N<mCE ,-K"trtlOlll •UllNUS N.AMI ITA'rlMINT Toilet Sliortage Holds Up Building nw fOllO'<'lfll •-.,, _,.,. 11u$IMHI): ICOt,L IUSINESS CE:NTERS 11AY AREA, 17'1S Sky 1'111!. Circle.. lr>tlM. c;1lllo<'nl1 '2"4 1. Dolllld M, kdl, 60!! \lie Lido $0ud, Nt'WJIOl"T l•Kll, C1lllornl1 '7..0 ' CHICAGO f A Pi -First gasoline, then betf. and now the loilct shortage 1s on America. afrairs (or Kohler Plumbing Fixlures. "The enlire plumbing induslry is faced with a trcmehdous demand caused by the recent housing coostruclion boom." he said, !. Rlcti.1111 C. Ellloll, .. l l...S. 1119, Mtwpotl 81.cfl, Ct rlfo<nlt 11..0 3. Ltt C. $+n'ltnla. t~ l ino. Ille, M"*"'°'I 91..:h, C1Ulornl1 92"0 4, D. P. Mldcllttn ... II H11f "'-Or., cor.,.... dtl ,,_.,, C1llrC1tl'll• tH2S The ~hortage may dclay Lhc occupancy of the upper' floors in 1hc OC\v Standard Oil Ruilding in Chicago. according to the L'On· tractor. Harff said lhe demand is the major factor in the toilet shortage. but a strike al Amerk:an Standard, Inc., one of the nation's largest suppliers of plumbing fixtures, docs not help ntatters. The strike is tv.·o months old and no new talks are scheduled. '· E"'rett Otvli. JIOt S111du,... LI,..., Coron• dll Mir, C1Ulornl1 m2' .. Tlmoll!V L Slr~r. lt:XI PCll'I Al· 1»11,, N1ww1 8e1ch, Cellfor11l1 ""° 7 G~t D. Glbton, Jr., 311 OloJ ~ Hond• RDad, Wood11d1, c.i11or1111 ANO llOMEBUlLDERS, too, arc feeling the c ommode crunch. •·A E Propertln Inc., 1S1 Ft r1¥1f'IQIOll A~!IUI, H1rll0f'd, Con11Ktlcul Oilll5 T~li bvlln1~1 Is CondlKltd tr( 1 llmllld pnrtnershlp, ''Toilets are impossible 10 get,., Lynn Krause, president of the Chicago llome Builders AssociatJon, said. "They're just not available." ALTHOUGH THE HOUSING boom is ex· peeled lo slow down in early 1974, llarff said a change in consumer attiludes to~'ard bathrooms will keep demand relalively hlgh. Ttmotlly l . Str-r TM1 st11emenl w•• flied wlt~ tr.. Coun· tv <;!erk of Or1rqe c-ty, C1Ufornl1 on Juty 71, 1913. . "''* Publlshecl Or•11g1 CC.SI C1l1y Pllor, Ju. 11 :JO ilnd A,;gltSr ,, ll. 20, 197' Jl-U-JJ A spokesman ror one toilrt manufacturer says his co1npany ls trying to keep up \\1th orders. "People \\•ant bigger bathrooms and more of them," he said. "A lot of men 1vant two sinks in the balhroom, one !or themselves and one for their wives." PUBLIC NOTICE ...,,, "\\1E'RE AT CAPACITY in both of our plants and plan to open a new pottery plant in Texas," said James llarff, director of public The bathroom is now considered a room in the house, he said. major NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUl"ERH»R COURT OJll THI! STATE OF CALIFORNIA JllOll Tffl COUNTY Of' OUNQI! Ht. A·7•n 4 Estala of ELMA VIRGINIA R08100UX. Oac:ea~. ' NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 11><! credllor1 ol lhe 1oov1 n1~ die.eden! ....i 11\111 111 persons h1v111g clalms a91lnS1 !he For the Reeord ~~~ Mid dtcedenl art r~ulred to fll1 1hom. wllh the necesuiry vou.:l\ers. In tlM ottlce of Ille clerk Ol ll>e 1bov. anlllled courl, or 10 pre~! tnem, will'I !ht noc11sarv ~oucller,, to 1111 underslgf'll!d al •he law 1:tlllce ol MARIAN PLUNKETT. Post 01· lice B•u 269, (12 Olive Avenue. Hunll11grun Beacll, C1lllC1111l1 91...a, which Is lhe place Birtlis HOACO MEMORIAL HOSPITAL JUI)' II, 1'1l Mr. Ind Mrs. t:.uwaru Huli.e. 211291 B"'"' San ... An• n••!IOh, ..,,r •. Mi. dnu Mrs. J1rw11 M"w1er, 1~)9 Wt•! .SI. uerif<llll f-1•~<', """'' An~. Q"I. Mt. anu Mr~. l::.owdtll 11 .. ,~1" loOo!i P11<1 we,.i;c.u, nt t'1dt c, ~•wwri lll'ac,,, oirt Mr1, an<i A-lrs. Mlcn•er Napier, 2!1SI C.t.9•1.,flllo LIM, H11nflngtllf'I Be•c11, -· Mr. ano Mr1. Edwlrd Drylmala. 21131 Whitt Hll•!e Line, H~n••f11111)n a1roK11, oo,. Mr. 11\d Mr1. ROMld Coop~r. ,932 GafnsPOl"I i..lrc••· lrv!r.-. oo~. Mr . .&nd Mr•. Geo1111 Harvev, (26S S.1on, lrvlnt. g.lrJ. Mr. 1nd Mr,, Harold Lamb, mi Wilr..!m Circle, Hun1/ng1on Beacll, oov. . Mr . .&nd Mrt. GJ1n11 Oonal11.>,, 23221 Via Reona. Miulon V1110, oov. July 2,, lt7J Mr. 11na Mrs. JOM!I P. SmBhllne, 8:19 Governor, COSll Me'><!, ooy .... ---....-..... 01 tlu$ln1!1;s ol ttle undlr$lgnHI In all mal· • ters 1>1rlalnlng 10 Ille 1s1111 of aald dee,. dent. wilhln rour m011th• •lter inc llrll publfe111on of ll'l!s nollc1. Mr. """ Mr,. Clinton W. Bower, 13911 SPETH·BLAKE Rolurt Laverne Dtled July 11, 1173. Stratton Wdy, Sant• Ano&, boy. J.I, lllU W. lt!h Sf., CllW• M~W trod JAME.S 0 , PLUNKEn Mr 8na Mrs. J ames H. Lange, 6031 Toni ""Y"· ~ •• li.o'ld '>•t!l L ..... ,..,.. El!ecUIQt ol Illa W!lt or Fenley Orlve, Hu11!1ng!on Beac~, boy. :i, FDUnlaln \/alley, !he abov11 Nlmtd Cltced!nf, Mr. <Jnd Mrl. Cwigh! L. Ma!l>ews, 1'4171 CHARlc'>·f'AR RY -N•ll'lln Ar!t1ur MARIAM PLUNKETT Ju~~rt,~a~Clrde, 1rvln1, 111r1. f~O/~e '" U'~o~~e·;,~o·:i:m'f'•s=~~i ~~'nt:~:,, A;!~ch':°c:i~1~ :::4• Mr. and M••· Melvin Rool, l?l4 Oregon, ROl!ICI, 81r1tow, San Bern.1rdlno. Tel: (714) Sll•JOJO c ... ra Mew, girl. YAL.t:J'ji..IA·vAlt:Ni..t.li -Hre1or AllorMY for E•K11ICll' Mr. ;>nd Mrs. John Rush, 1.sJ We$! 19111. k~n..c.i•. ••~! MOr1°ro.., We~1monso~r Pvttll•hed Or1nge C0.t•I Dally Piiot, Ju· Streer. Costa M .. 1, 11irl. '""' N!lf"lefl Ar11>ell1, JO. ~ISi MOn· Iv '" ,J, JO and A1J1111St 6, 1973 215S.13 Mr. and Mrs. Georoe AudlOd, 33'91 uOM. W•••1n•n•0•r , __ ,, •• Btl;a11llne Drive, L..tgun. M!Quel, g1rl. WELLS, JR.·MYERS "OO• ..... PUBLIC NOTICE Mr. and Mr•. Gran• McOon1ld, 11111 M.>C •,·•0M· ~~. 12~,~~nl 1"'M" '11","11---,,,=c,,,.,,,-,ccc ·----Goldf.nwest, Huntl""ton ......... -'rt. OS f ISi '"" ..., 11 ne ar a, , E · ...,...,,, '" 1812 Yor~ltllre Avt .. Slanton. FICTITIOUS IUSIM SS Mr Ind Mrt. Dllf(tl Hu!w. Mel He.on RITT ER, JR.·MC CLIMAN5 _ Robert • HA.ME STATEMEHT (lrtle, Hunl!nglon B'ac/\, boy, Jol'ln, JO. 9lJI Hlllrd. Wtslminstlr TM foUowi.-g ,DerlOll• 1r1 doing M•,· I~, Mrs. CMoses Ollzounlan, 180~ and K•rrn lte, 26, tlll Haiard, buslrteS• •s: owa ...,reer, Ollla Mew, boy. Westml!lster. CA PITOL SYSTEMS, n61 Gardin Mr •nd Mtt. Jer1ld Vlllerteuve, 172 RODRIGUEZ·MORENO -G111tlel, 11, Grove Blvd., Sullt F. Garden Grov•, 6'lnd. Streer. M.fWPOrt Beacn, girl. 1-081 Bow Ung Gr•en. we.iminsrer •Call I. 916'1 Juty 20. 1'7J 1na R~f1, 19, 202' Clvk Cenl1r, San l)t!nnis Joseph Hlb5hman, WI Mnrlon Mr. and Mr1. JCll'ge Ylcenle, 2:302 Wes! la Ana. Cr .. Westmlnite•, Cnllkl<nla 92613 Moore Aven~. S1n11 An1, boy. HALL lll·GALLAVAN -Cllarles Weil, Warren Ciryl M1uey, 111•2 Tim· Mr. ind Mrs. Michael Glve<;k, 1208 19. "'51 Cornw•ll Or!ve, Hunrington berlane. Voro. Llndft. C1lilor11la Someriel Lane. Newporr 81•cl'I. gtrl, Btacll •nd Juli;> ~tew1rt, 31, "'52 James T. Bakl$, 189~ Lucretia Ave .. July 20, lt1l Cornw•I! Orlv•. HunrlngtOll Bench. Lll'S A.-geles, Calllornln td026 Mr. and Mts. R~rl W•tkl11s, l9•J Porl JEWEll·HAROlSON -Sru;,rt Val, ~7• This 1>1151ness Is cond11tled Dy 1 119n1r1I Ram•glle, Newpor! 8e11th, girt. lO«I Garden lane, AP.I· A, Co~ta PtrrnersOlp. Mr. 11nd Mrl. Ga•v Moore, 'll~'l·A. 1----~0>••--te A~'"'-Oll.& Mffa....bfW..-Mr. ano Mrs. Jamts LO(~WOO<I, uni 81•ebum ROl!ld, Tustin. boy. M r. •"II Mrs, Louis Eener, 11119 Port M11a •"II Florence 'M" 51. 21'.MO James T. Bft kls -" - Nel"°" Pla~e, Newpoo't Beach, boY. ' Gard-tin Lant, Apt. A, Colla .\!esa Tl'lls statement was filed wllh 1111 CO<H'l- Mr. "<Ind -Mrs. CllHtl' 'R"omaro -7711<1'-0EAM-lEWTOM -Rlehard Gior>Je, It .., Clo<• ol O•••O• Cooo•• _ '"'" -. M W '' ' ' B9/1 Neoruna Clrct•, Wesrmlnsler ancr •• • -· • '" ISi ay, oro, git!. Mlthl!lt El•lna, II, 8971 Neptune Cir 197l. Mr, aM Mn . ROderlck Legnon, 18~15 elf, Westm'ns!fr, .. " Mr. and Mrs. P11ul H, KC>eh11ke, !llCll Delphinium, Foun11ln V1llev, Q1rt, July JJ, 1t73 Mr, and Mr1. ROiie• l . HUQ!les. 96SB Warr.-, Fou11U1ln vallav, DOV, Mr. Ind Mrs. (;tlarlev G•ll, 1:)0,S Soull! Ever11l1de S•reet, ~an11 Ana, boy. Mr. •nd Mrs. JeUrev Mlllln11•on. 18711 Damion Lane. Apt. O., Hun1 lng1on Beacb. D01. Mr. 11nd Mrs. Mlc"ael Wnal,n. !.II& Norlll Al~ambra Ro.ti!, San Gabriel, 00<. July JI, ltJJ' Mr at!CI Mr&, Paul A. 80f'Smlll1r, 1110'2 S&lud1 Clrcte, Hunli11Qton BNth. .... Mr. 1nd Mrs. ErnH! ICacneiurlan, '2102 Killer Avenue. S•nta Ana. DO~. Mr. and Mrs. Kenr11rh McNauonton. :184 LIPl'rle Plt<;t. Cost• Mew. boy Mr. •nd Mrs. Randy l . Trainor. 19S5 Anat>eim Slttel. Cos!1 Mesa. l>OY. Mr. 1n1:t Mrs. Char!fs M11clle!I, 11'86 Ash Tree lal'll, 1r .... l'\f', bov. Mr. and Mrs. James Ray. 182 The · Mns!er• Circl~. (ll'Stl Mtl il, plr!. July 2', lftJ Mr. and Mrs. Malll>ew G<>rry, 113' Mlr1m11r, Laouna Beach, gf•I. Mr. 11nd Mrs. 0.&vld lallQllle, 520 Sou!I) Ara1111M Orlva. Sarita ll.n1, bov Mr. 11nd Mr~. Lvle Phel1n. 1'69'2 Oon-c11sler RoAd. lrvh1e. olrt Mr. ;>nd /,Ir~ Arthu,.. L11wri• 10•! Sun!l<1ht Huntlnolon Beach. alrl. Mr ;>n<I Mro. l!Ol>l!r! O'Ro\lk~. JlrOI Par•vl~w L11111, f\11! ?58. lr•lnf, bcw. M•. ""cl IJ,. 011vod BranT, 2t652 S1!ud11, (lrtle, H1m!•11Q!on Beach. 111r1. M•. and M•1. Robert Over, 1100 So\lth Ros•W!>'\'1. Apt. C, Sa11!a Anll, 01rl , July 11. lt73 Mr. •nd Mr~. P~ul Wdfd, Fi11h!mB~'er, 11781 Calle dal Cid, Mission Vielo. M~~-M Mrs. Edw•rd Slubb" 1•70 S111· ta An• Av,. .. Co•" M'Sll I><'• Mr. 11nd Mrs W1vn• Canlrl 2~11 P••e<> C•rmel, Sin J\lal'I C11al1trano, olrl, Julv )) ltll M• and Mrs J ohn An•konv P•t••"~• ~' W ~.,,.;,,,,., S•n ,.., • ..,,...,,., ,,;., M• """ Mrs, J.w.n M•~ c; ... n~r. 16131 I.•• "'""'"' Ml11IM V\elo. t·ov. J•llV ,], l•TJ. M• ar .. '"' RO""' 0"~n• 'l•~n" ">?'.I? Ml V!~"' Or I ...,,,na ~""'" """ M• """ ,. •• F-~ .. ~ T, .. ~-· ,.,. .... ,111 Hll!erell Cr • •~""' """<"· 11ov JUIV lj, lt)] I/or. 1nd Mrs O..uata! B11rt~~h ?Jll Ft<t~n Avenue. Apl. ,, C1:t~ta "'l~•a, "" Mr •nd Mr•. J""'"' F•,.n~s. ~100? Dytan Avenue, El Toro. ol•I II<• •nd ,.,.,\. Jan,..• O•!oan 114 l"ran-lurr Avenue, Hunlinoron Beac/\, 00< ,.Ir 11nd Mfl. Jae A<1ufr re. li05 StalfOl"d 5.,.,.,,, S11nt• An1. bCY . \..Mr. and Mrs, O•nil'I J ElchlS<Jn, 301 Santl't !••Del Lan" rosla Me~~. DO" Mr. a<>d Mr' Pa ul ICIO!ltr, "6 Rlv,.rtide Avenue. Newp0r! Beach, girl. July 11, 1'71 A\r. and Mr1. Wll!i&m 5 Sml!h, 59'1 Par Circle, Huntlnoton Be•c~. olrl. Mr. an.:! Mrs. Mlcl!ael o,,o, 1653 Ne'I' uamo,hlre Odve. Co.ii., Mes•. !wi,... bovs. Mr. ~nd Mrs. Dougl•• ( Stelle. ?10~! S!r~thml>Qr lane, Hunllnglon Beach. !lid Mr. nnd Mrs. Robtrt S Till!, 3079 l"ernhenll!, Cost., M~•~ bov 'Mr, al\d Mrl St Ur>!l·ltf Van9, 811 Wetr Stevens Avfn""°' s .. nta Ane, boV Mr. •nd Mrl. Terrv Rich~rd9. 7~ Wave. L ~nuna l!t.1,1>. 0111 July 17, 1t7l Mr. and Mrs. StevPn Htl!n 21l'!I Con· ti11ent~t Avenue. CMt• N<e1a, (litl. "''· •nd Mri. Lewlt C Voufl'), 1l0 E.&st Utn Sire-cl, CM!• M611, bov Mr 1nd M..,, WJlll~m S Wlhrtn , 1011 Walnu! Avenue, 1'1)1. JI, Tustin. twin bOy & 9ltl. Mr, •!\Cl Mrs . Jonn ,. Coo~•~· IJl8 C•morldoe L•nl· Nt-<1Jl('tt B•acn, girt. Mr i nd Alrt. J>ldd F. O•!tn, .l60? South M1Jl. Irvine, gorl. Mr •nd Mrt . Rober! J Mo;10. 31 tl 5um1rr1 Pl1c•. Cost1 Mew, DOY. J111r u. 1t11 Mr. 1!'1>d Mrs, 08v1d M Dtttrtc~. ]115 Gotden WH• Stree!, S•nla ,..,~, bov Mr. .ll>d Mrt. C"tSl•r T1ul .JOo? M-<flton Avenue . Cosla "'"I"' ulrl Mr ... nd Mrl. Rk h•rd Cut1ln, Jlit Ogle, Apt, A, Cotlf Me,11, qiol , Mr. ind Mrt Slephen D. Nor !(in, 61J ll!Mi, Cos!• M•~I. girl F nnail!I Ch·c11~ .. . ... ~ ·-- Tahoe Clrde, f'ou1111!n V1ll1y, glr!, MASON·WOLF~ -Jlrtlfls Edward, «1 0 , July 21, UJJ 8JJ2 Gr•nl Orlvt, Huntln11ron Beac Mf, and Mrs. Jolln Sleal'lenson. ~1 and Hollv J1>11n. J2, Xl7'2 Calle F1,tU Published Orange Co.iii Dally Pl1ol July lJ, 30 • .Ind A.ugusl 4, JJ, 191l ttll-~ Cherry Tree Lane. Newport Be1c11, R~s~lendor, San Juan C1l)l>lr11no. PUBLIC NOTICE l>OY. DANK·ALTMAN -81rry MlchBel, 31. Mi'. and Mrs. Mltllael Flanagan, 2'111 (9!11 Hall Ave .. Aiit. 10.B, Huntlng:on1---=c==ccc-cc°"ccc----I Plaeerttl1, Apl. B, cosra Mesa, boy. Buch and .Seren1, :19, 49(11 Hell Ave.. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS J11Jr 22, lt7l A.pf. 10·~ Hunrl"!llcn lle1tn. NAME STATEMENT Mr. and Mr$. Joseph H. llOYH, 11202 OISBERR .CORBARI -Ted Eric, 70 Thi following c>erson Is doing bu$l!lfSS Richmond Clr!le Huntington Beich 11'n Amarillo Drive, Wtttml11srer .&s: BEL AIR CO .. 7111 Tt1 s k 00y ' ' and Catny Ann. 11. 6191 SoWi'lt, · w,s1ml11tter. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Y Boerner, '901 SNELL-CASTANEDA -Allen Robert. Hell Avenue, Apt, ).B, Huntlllglon \8, 8171 Sav1:tv Cl•cfe. Hunti1111ton Westminster, C•llf. 976&'l Bencn. DOy. Be&ch at>d Ma•!• C1t111rln1, 11. un Mt, Ind Mrs. J1me1. OlM1rl1, 9992 Savov Circle, HunHng!on Beacl'I. Rover E. Hultouls1. 7111 Trask. Weslmln1!er, Cal!!. 92683 Cornerl)roolc, Hunllngton Be1ch. boy. Van Houten.CRABTREE -Robert, Jl Mr. and Mrs. Oavkl R. Htynet, tlfl 2500 Hollv t...ane. NltWPOr1 Beach ana TMls b11Sines1 i• cDn<lucled by •n In· div>dual. lnalanopo.lit, HunrlnQIOll Betel!, girl. l l1'1111 Row. 76, 2SOO Holly Lane Mr. •nd Mrs. Oavld R. Hayn;,), 1191 Ntwl!Orl llNCh, 11.0Qfl' E. Hultoul~I Tltls Sllletnenl WIS filed wit~ the COUf>. ry Clfr11. of Or1nge COllJllY Oii July "JO, 1973. lndlanopolls, Hun!lni:tlo<l Beacn, girl. B LA~H-CONANT -Aon11d Leo, xi 0 , Mr. and Mf!. R.l)l)tr! Goodrlc~, 15,~ '°6 '> Ama1111Y•!, Balbol lslnna •n FUtl• Cqrl1nder Orl,.e, Apr. 8, Cosra Me1a, 'i.!:'1:f,~'d."· 2:1, :106\'i Amel/\y'1, Publ1sl'ltd O!'&t'l!lf COl!lsl 01lly PHo!, Ju· girl. BEEKMAN·JOHNSON -Oon1ld Oane ly 2J, 30 Ind Augusl 6, 13,. 1973 2267·11 J111y 2J, 1t7l ,2, usn Monroe, Midway Cllv andl--------------·I Mr. •nd Mri. Jot'!11 J'"""*Glnnl11 11191 JoA11n Anoes, 29, ttU L1srena, Foun Erwin Lane, Hunlin•ton""'!leac:h, OO'r . rain Vall1y. PUBUC NOTICE M•. lt>d Mtl. Tl'IOll'll1 A. Pewdo, 2'15~ MONGELLP.VrNCIGUERRA -Gen·1--------~,-,----Vfrde Str""t El Toro i:tlrl n1ro, 19, )062 T11m1n Drive, Hun '' E Mr. and Mr1..' David 'L. 0t-.-rvtierry, ll11Qlon B•a<:h and K1thlten Elisa, :xi FICTITIOUS •u N 51 13471 led• .._.,. 15. Girden Gr S081 T11man Orlv1, Huntlngt'Jll Bearh MAME STATEMENT girl ' ~" ave, MULLEN·MUSSEMAN -T h 0 m 11 s TM1 foli-ing person1 1r• doing · How1rd, :U. 'l1:l Cosll Mtsl! St. Co<la business as: Mr . and Mrs. Triom.as Norton, 1951 Port Me'n and Jannerre Ellrat1erh, 'lO LA CAJA REALITY, 220 YI• Palermo, Bish~ PrKt, Ntwoort Be1ch, girl. 1Je81 Esrnncla, L•gun1 Nl<1""'J. Newp(lf'I Beacl!. Carll. 9'2b60 M•6ar~':t ~~~e. c~!~~d F~!\~rbo:~s..1 C~E~~'~;";~NA;;;, MJ~r.'"'~~~~p,~~ NI::c;~'e!"c:~:~: :?°i.ti0v1a P1lermo, Air. Bnd Mrs. Ravmon<I (rump, 11211 B~~c~ and S~ndra Ann, 26, 6600 Eve11n Young, 220 Via Pllfrmo, Oak Lane, Apt, 7, Hunlir>glon 8t1ch, Warner, AP!. 253, HYn!inglon Belch Newpart Beach, C•llf. 1"1660 M~~·nd Mrs. Rober! Sidwell, SJll2 Blol• May 24, un Tlli> 1busl11e1s ls conducted tly an ln· Lane, Irvine. boY. DRTEG'\.COROOVA -Pablo Barre•• dlvtduaThom•s R, Youno Mr. and Mrs. JOhn McLe11n. 23"8 <Cl, '17 YOl'lctown .. HunH11gron S1ech Tills statement wa1 tlltd with !ht Coon· Rutger• Drive Costa Mes• ,r.r U\d Lvdl1 .S1nc1>er, Z1. 417 York!O\lln ' ' • Huntlog!an B11ch. ty Clerk of Or•noe County on July 20, July 24, 1t7J FRICKER.CROSSON -o e 11 n 1973, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J . Osu1c1, 766 Wllli1m, 25, ls.II s. Pomon1, A.or. A West Wll$011, Cos!a Meta boY. J8, FuUerlOfl 1nd Df.1ne Lff, 12. 31' 1'2•tll Publisllf<I Oranga C0.t1t 01f1y Pllol, Ju· Mr. nnd Mrs. Tlm01hy Hahne, ra .. c OQI• SI., Cosl1 Mes• E•sl 1111 . .Slrtet. C0<l1 MfW, boY. NAV€·KEYES -0 1vld Mlchaet, 26 IY :2J. ,JO, •nd A,;gust ,, 13, 1971 2265-13 Mr. 111<1 Mrs, f);anltl Perlmuner, 267'21 9'232 D•llOfl Cfrc1t, Westminster anal----=cc°"cc-cc::-~-:=::----1 Ci.1ent1, Ml$SIOll YleJo, boy. Pa!rlc!a Lyn,..., 22, 96.S! Ourham PUBLIC NcrJ'JCE Jr,1l y It Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bull, 41Jl Ffresloe Circle, lrvlOi', gtrr Mr. and Mrs. Orv!tle L. Oatton, 1:UU Chl!!srnur. Wellminsier, girl Mr, ana Mtt. Oon•!d L. T/tolson, 1S3J2 Me~fns, Irvine, girl • July U Mr. and Mrs, Ma"hi!ll! Q. Briggs, 9JOJ Nol. 1,, Wns rrnln•ler, 111r1 Marriage Licenses Mly 1,, 1t7J BR ECHA·RUlTA -N!chclat Conr11<:1, », 1565 1..11an111, La11unt1 Be•eh and Elaine, 12, 156.5 Cnr1lln1, Lavuna Beach ELLIS·SLETTLER S II er m • n Edw1rd. Sl. 1.cl1 N. Linwood, S11n•• Ana ,ana Pt911y M1rle, "6, llJll McKinley Clrcle, WeslmlnHM. GARCIA·HUERTA-Ces.ir A\11111510. If, 991 (l\eyennt ST .. Cosl1 Mett 1nc1 Joni Ann Mary, 18, J11 AVCICldo .SI., ,111)1 . .5, C0$11 Meli!. LA CARIA.·GLAW€ -Rontld Mkh11el. :xi. 96iil S11ffi1h Orlw., HunUnoton BffCll Ind J•cquellftl PHrl, ,,, f"2 s~1111~~ Otive, Hunrlnoton 81Kh. HENNlGH·MILlEll -Geqrqe Larry, lS, 1084'2 Surge Line. Hunlln11ton Be1cll and M1ry Ann, 21, 'l'ON2 Surp. L11ne, Hunll11gton Bt •cll. 0 EVOEN·80WRING -Christopher, 19. 1131 Loren10, Cos!'" MeM ar>d Clell11 Ju11nlt8, 19, Z!S Tula,... RO.tel, Cosr8 Meta. b y Bil K e a11 e Orl...e, Hunllr>11lon lle1c11 OSTRANOER-MORJllSON -Vaugnnl---------------1 R1 y, :xi, 14.ln Rosewoac1, Fount1ln ,,,,,T,OUS IUS>NESS Val!ev nnd P1m11a Sut. 10, 19112 Quiel B•v. Huntington Beac N.t.ME 'TAMEMENT JORDAN-OE LDOF -WHUam /Aili· Tile lollowil'IQ per~ 11 dolog bu1ine1!. jh!,1;h2t.~.w~'.nr~i1~0~~~!'~1:~ i s; FUN.IN·FLtGHT. 340 (ypn!U, Apl. s, Ga•Gen Grove Li!oguna 1!11ach. C1lll. 92651 ., ICRAMER·GRAY -Danie! Gr!!'QOry, 19 Belly Jean F1rrar, l-10 Cyprrss, Apt. 161"2 siirlngd•le, APT. 51. Hunringran s. L111un1 BeKh, Call!. 924.SI Belch Ind Miry Anr.-, :xi, 11191 Tfl lj business Is conducted tr( 1n In· Ser1w1re, Apt, ll, f1unting111n Beach d!vlaual. ALYAREZ·OLIPHANT -Robtrl Belly J e•n Flf'tlt Theodort, H, '° RIYe'l'llde Ave., This slalemenl wat Hied with lhe Coun-Portunovlh end J.1111 Lou, n. an vr1 Lido Nord, NiwpOrt 8eKh !y Clerk of Orenge County on July 20, WATSON·8LACKER -Hertiert Ma~ 1973. Olson. 11'1. 15'91 P1s1oen1 Ave .. Apt. 98. Tui!ln end Parr/d• Anne, .io, 10'6 Golden Glen, lrvlne F1't" Putlll•l'>ed Orange Cc.sr Dally Pllot, Ju. ly 11. :io. ancr A,;guu '-13, 1t73 2268·73 CARTER, JR.·Wll.SON -Sem~I O•v 40, 395J.G Birch St .. NfWPOrt Beachl---------·------1 aoo Berry Lou, ,1, mu Via Cerez1 PUBLIC NOTICE Mission Ylefo ARMSTRONG·TRA U -Oannv Alla11 1---------=cc,-~-,--I 'n, 2J151 LOI Aliso,, Apr, 127. MiHlon NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S 5Alf Vl•lo and Linde Susa.,, 2J, m 91 T.5, No. llJ W<>OdoTen Circle, El Toro On August 15, 197.l, 111 10:00 A.M .. ROSE·OUSEK -Franklin Fo~. 25,•:19!1 VEJIOUGO SERVICE COR.PORATION, (I Via S•n Jaclnlo, San Clemenre and Callfornla corpore!lan .Is duly apP01n!l'd ~!~'cfe~!nr~' 1911 YI• Sin Jiclnto. Tru11ea unde' and pur1\lan1 '" Oiied of SUlllVAN·tASSIOY -Stanley J4ne. Trusr recorded J1n11ary 11, 1965. <;l lnst. 28, 29035 Calla San!• Ynez, Sen Juen No. "88, In book 7J74, 1>1~ 8&5, of 01· C•plslrttlO and Leor>c>r Nar~s. 61. flclal Jlet0t'd1 In file office ot the Coun•v 11IOJ5 Calli Sanra Y...,z, Si n Ju1n Re<order of Or1.-ge County, Stale of C1pl1tra110 C1llrOl'ni1, W1Ll SELL AT PUBLIC AUC-MOSER·BOND -Kenneth Paul, :xi, :109 TION TO HIGHEST 8100ER FOii. CASH Baltlfn(ll't, Hunlln111:tln Bfith and IP•Vlble al llm1 of u!a In llw1UI money L1utel Belh, U, 101'4 LI Tl!fflll of t/\e UnUINI Sllllll •I the North front FouM1ln Ya!ltY. 5UTTON·HARRIS -ThomiJ, 2(, 12(11~ entr1nce lo ll>e Orange Counrv Courl 4J•d St .• NawPOf'I Beien and oonna Hou.e loc11ed 11 700 <;ivl~ Cenrer Orlve June, 11, 1&17 PIK1nll1 A...e .. Cott• West Cl-ormetlr We>! Ith Stteel) San•• M1e1 Ana, Call!Ol'nla, 111 rli:ihl, ll!lf and Interes t GILllN·ELllOTT -Donald Ford, 52. CO<IYfYed lo •nd now held tr( u Uftder Mid 10611 011111 llalbol lsl1nd Ind Juanell OHct of Trust In tl>e property sUualf(! In Coll ..... 310 Ftmando SI., BllbOI Maid County and Slltt described IS: PAR KS·OAYIS -Chltrln Arlllur, 24 Loi I In l lO(k W ot CCll'Olll Del Mir. 7~1 BIYIM Drvle, Apl. l?C • • Wei!mlnslirr 1nd RObfrTo lvnnt, 20 In IM c11y of Ne~I llCh, counly of 1241 G1rfleld A"'" Hun!lfllllon Beach Or111g1, sl1!1 of Calll{trnla, 11 l1lf" m•11 H~""IS·JENICINS -l(.,.ntlh Cav!d, 24 retCll'ded In 8ooll J Plll';teS 41 ~nd 41 ol 23! M:)nllrey, s~n Ctemenle •ncl Mlsc~r,neou1 Mall', •«0<1:ts ol 1ald Kathy Anne, It, JJl Monl1rey, Sin Orange Counly. Cltmenla The streel ldelress 1nd other tommon CUMMINS-OELSt -l•ldllY Rav, 20,. deslgM!lon, 11 111y, of lhe re1I prop1rl~ 1005' Stonevbroolt. Hunllntilttn 811c dncrlbed aoove 11 purported to be: 406 •n<I Ntt'Ky. 19. lfOI• E Wed~worlh Jllmi..... A.Ytnue, NeWPOl'I 11 ta' h. Drive, H~C!tndl Htl'lh!l, NFWHOUSE·WAlTMIRE -6 11 1 v C1lltornl1. Gen1. 11, 9119 senatt st .. cos11 Mt11 Tilt und•rilgned T•usttt dlsclllmt 1nv 11nd Olane G111t, 16, 1~7t Whllt Olk ll•blllty tor any IN:Cll'rfClness of tt.9 ~lreet St .. l'"nsl• Me11 ldllrts1 1nd Olher '11mmon d•1lgn11lon, II CllJIPEll..l'!lBFRG -"'ed•rlctt 51)8M• 1ny, shown her1ln, 1t, 7051 N1t1! Orlv1, Apt, "I S•ld u la 111111 be made, but 1111lhoul W,..,,...,,,.,,,. Ind l1•nn• nlMtn. 16, covenint or w•rr1n!y,·1•iir111. Cll' lmplltd, 70lll S•11•J1 lren1 l'".lrcl1. 8"en1 P1rk. ff!l•rdl~ title, pouasslon, or en-R"~O.Cl'!Tr" -S'""t.9" ll>nm•s, 3? <•m•••fKe1, 10 o•y Ille remalnl"' orln-110 N, El M'"!lno. P1sltden• 1M '""""' r.~n,•I••. 33, 15'11 Oolocllll cll)ll •um of !ht noteC•l $11CUred W Maid l)•I~• w .. •tmln.t"r Offd Of Trust. w!ll'I lnlerest flllrton, •1 ,...11R+.,.M~.., .. ~1,tcqn _ w J ' "1 r • ~ prov!d!NI In said notalsl, •dv1ne11, II any, 11~•u•o. J~. U6 H•mll!on. Cqc!ll M"•• \lnder !he lerms ot 1ald Deed of Trus1, '"n" !f'ne..,I ....... """'· 11. Sli~ IMS, d1arge1 Ind e~penws Of the Trull" H•mlnon. f"Ml11 Mtl'" and ol Tiit 1ru1tl cre1H1d by Mid Otld of M1y 1S. 1'7J Hl!'Wl £TT·J0Lt.V -T"Ol'llllt 'Hlll, st• 14362 Bvsh1rc1. An!, 7J, wesrfll ..... t•r Ind p4jiv "8", '6, lo.If BUJ .. ard Aor. 71. We1tmlnsler Dt'lMlill'>·NANCI ~ Thom1s J"""''' ]1 :¥5? Ora""• Avt1~ A11r. A. Cos!~ 1.\1\1, ~nd f"onn,. L... 71. 1651 C•lf'KH! Ave .• Apl. A, CM!t Mt11 J1 f)i.1.,1vr.s-M1N.t.OEO -Jl fl'IO• L•wll ,4, l'Jj l v .. r., Clrtll, Hu!lllf'loll!M Br"c" '""" JoYO:t J""""""""'"· )9, IUt V1•1t• (l•rr•. Huntll'!ltOfl ll'"itt h c.11 .. l''HIN.fl'll"'n~l(t -G't ~•"• Mlch•.i. 19. •too l:dlMlr, Ao! ''4 ... ..,.,,.....,., """t" •nd c .... ,, •~·n 1~ 79311 ll:OCl(MU Av1., Mldw1y Clly L"••-"'·'"""T" -~-t.-1\, 1~ lftl• G~...,I• ~""It'"'....,. lhtllC" """' Vic•• I'"'! .,.. '"' IC•llfr""' D•I"" ....... -~~ ... ! .... ,. ,., ..... ,... ~ ............. -o .... n .... -.. '" 111i .111••1-•. ....... • • ......... t .. '""'" ,..,. u •• 1h.., I•·~ '' ... t,, .. \01 ........ "'·... .. ... -111 .... ~~ .. ., .... .,.,., ... ,..,.............. .. .... ~ ...................... u .......... . 11~"' 11nlt Mitt.I• l 11n,., <I. 14""" ............... , .. '"" ,., ..... _, ...... . ........... v ........... .......... - -· ._ ............... I .............. . .... ........ "•·"-·· .. , ...... ' .. 'l••••I•• M•I"• I""'"•' .,1,.,.,., ., ............................ ,... . ' - ., • ., •• e ...... ' .... "" ........ . ,. ................... __ ........ ·-,, .. .,.... ..... . ............ . ('U••'""'""" ............... r .. .t••••••• r •• , -'' ...... , • ..,, ...... ,._, •f"" ""'°' I"-'••• I-~. 11 , ,.'1 .... , •·· n·•·"' ,.,..,,,. M.••• G•.\f"t'"•• 1 ,1,...ir. -f"'""tl .. wn• .... ''' 1 ~\J $1th!fJ'l\olO"WI, ("ml• MH" 11"'1 '""""'' An11, It, JlJ OthV St .. S•nt1 Trust. Tilt Ot!'lelldll'Y llllOef" .... Id OeM ~llf Trust herelolor• execu•td end dtllvtftd lo !he undtrslQflld 1 wflll1ln Oed1r1tlon of Otlaull al'ICll Oe"'ana ICll' Silt, •nd 1 wrlll"'1 Not!(' of Oelaull 1nd Eleclfon lo $ell, T"" ul'\Gerilg!lld tlUHd Mid NOHCt o1 0trraull 1nd e1ec11an lo Stlt to tie •Ko•ded in thf COlllll'Y wher• the tt•I l)rll!)frty Ii loc:11ed. oared: Juty 17, un. VERDUGO SERVICE CORPORAT ION a~ ulcl TrV!.IM, BY Pl! lloll•ncl Authorbed Slgn.1tur1 " mn P11bllsl'oed Nt'WOOfl Harber NIWI l"rtt1 com.blned wllll tPle Or1nge Cwd D1f1w l"llOI. NtwWI IMCl'I. Cl'lf0rnl1, Jvly 'IJ, :JG, Incl A\l(IUJI 6, lf7l tUs.11 For Weekender Advertising . Phone "Why ho~en't you cough! any fish, Doddy?" af!l:t( ... .1T!'l'S -,.lier J11Mt, ,.. H•~t C"'1d"ll l'\ll'f!, lnlln' 1nt1 !V<I"" 6424321 <1tfol. U. 1-1«! Gold111 G..,.., tl"'ll,... 'L--------------' WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 • • DAILY PIL OT WANT ADS _ ....... I~ I I~ 1.-I -_"'_w.__,J~ r -"'- G1n1r•I STEAL THI S ONE DECORATOR'S DELIGHT General VERMONT 1st TIME •OFFERED NEWPORT Cozy 3 BR & den borne, round brick $\\-edish fireplace, niCf' carpeting, separate l'l'Ork shOp & ~·ashroom. 2 pallos, double garage, NI this for only $26,500. Try 10'/~ do\\'!l. WONDROUS WEEPING WILLOW $32,500 In desirable Easts.Ide Costa Mesa, (:iant wtoeplng willow makes a tree s ha ll e d paradise ol a huge fenced ~ar yard \vilh your own ntini'"()rchard of lnrlt trees. Trees and prolific plantinga of shrub! a.nd floweni also b'?'RCC thl"' front or this iewtl box meticulously cared for 3 bedroom home. 0 w n e r bound for out or 11tate and will consider · serious offers and leaver e fr ig e r at Ol' behind too. An Idyllic restfUl retreat fOT one or tv.'O, a treehouse jungle for kids lo grow up or a pete' paradise for long legged poodle11. Come In or call for an ap. pointment. Red C a r p e t , Realtors, zn E. 17th St., C. M. M>-8080 FARM HOUSE .Ji ACRE · REDUCED $29,950 One owner, custom built 3 brdroom home. SpoUeu condition v.rlth new ~Int tn .t out. Large lot with boat stora.p 1uT11. &t room .for a pool. $69,500. CALL 642·1m 1st TIME $14,000-No More This hon1e Includes a house trailer -rented at $75. The home itself i's rented for $140. Home has new copper plun1bi11g, el£."etrical \Viring and stucco. R-2 lot too! Walker &Lee llAl IS11TI llEST RllYSI c L A s s BIG DADDY 4 BR + den + fantlly room with nearly 2000 sq. tr.. ol family living. Ne\\·Jy dero- rat.ed inside. Vacan1 & ready for occupancy. Adjacent to school .t parlc, $38,950 Newport •I F.1 irvi1w, 646-8111 -(onytlm•) "WANTED" SIX CHILDREN AND $4500 DOWN Super 111·0 story '1 BR/forn1al dining 1'0011\ ,i;, dC'n 111odel hon1e. T11·0 fireplaces -\\"t't har -panel. ing & tile floors. Great fan1ily home 15 rnonths old in good area! Walker &Lee llll l ,,,,,, A Home You'll Never Outgrow $52,500 Spacious and elegant, plan. ned for uncongesled family life and gracious en- tertaining. Just a few of the special feature!! i n c I u d e cathedral ceilings, huge family room. and big corner lot. And it's just 6 months new. Don't miss this one! 847-6010 OPEN 17L II. rrs FUN TO 8E NtCE/ Rolling green low"' and OFRRED &ta~ trees surround pie· lure s quo Vnmo"I HEIGHTS AREA tarmhouse. Old w or Id chann and architecture. 4 Bedrooms It 2 full Baths. Formal entry. Step do\\'O Cozy !l\mlly room with master suite with 5th bath. fireplace, bulltin electric 1.fan ~e dep with rugged kitchen, c«Ct>llent famlly beams. l\taids quarters. 23' floor plan. Quiel rtreet, near TAVERN KITCHEN \vith schools. $51,500. calhedrnl """"'" Banqoel PETE BARRETT formal dining. E I e g ant L'TOR French doors to secluded -REA - garden paradise. \Valled 642--5200 patio '"ith outdoor fireplar:e l:.....O:~~~~~:.....O:~..O:'j and B.B.Q. RED BARN 2nd ~ story in·law apar1n1ent, 2 guest cottages and covered dam.'C pavillion overlooking magnificent free form pool. ENTERTAINERS PARA· OISE, CAIL 645-0303, IOHl\l [ 01\0\ R C A i T O ll S 5 Bdrm + Office I Den Atrilllll Home $67,500 A quiet cul-de-sac stl'('et. giant house and a pool sized yard-nestled:.by ·tall fenrer, t.rees and shrubbery n1ake this Newport back bay hon1c an executives delight. 5 specious bedrooms, and a huge bean1ed ceiling, living area \\'ith yule log size dou· hie fireplace surround this red bricked n t r i u 1n t'OUrtyard graced I\' i I h ll'Opical plantings, ,\ sta.inlesg steel appliancl' kitchen lends convenienel' and glamour 1vhile a TV room or office separate fron1 !he main house offers soundproof tlclight. Dad 's alrcath; back cast _and rnont goes Muse hunting there this \\•eek. Call or oomc in for an appointn1ent OO\\". By appointment only, RI' d -Carpet, Realtors, 277 E. lith St., C.i\1. 64.>sa.'IO. * BALBOA PENIN. 'jl' TI1e qu1C't chartn or thii; 3 bdrn1., 2 bath hon1e 11·ill enl'hant you. Close lo beach. Lgl'. patio: all I ht> nmrniti('s. In fine oondition! Si9,500. Call: 673·3663 673-6688 e ves. * 6 UNITS* Nearly ne1v 2 BR., 2 ba .• deluxe units on oceanfront in Balboa! Elec. trplcs .. heavy shag carp.. bltns: sundeck or balcony 11•/each unit; 7 cov'd, carports plus 1-park· ing space. $330,000. Call: 673-3663, 642-2253' Eves. RARE MESA VERDE FOUR-PLEX Large 3 bedroom, 2 bath OWIX'rs unit wilh 3 • 2 bed.lw1n rentals. Faces a park in a real pride ol 0\\11t'rship area. First time ad\'erlised. $85,!t:,O. &J6.TI11. 'OPEN TIL 9 • rrs ~ 70 BE NICE/ [-I DUPLEX "DUTCH CLEAN" $35,500 Excellen1 rentals! Owned ·by a Dutchman & clean a.s a pin~ Both t"t'ntcd by long tl'l'nl !('nants a! $185 CA(·h. THI S JU~I \VIU.. NOT LAST! Walker &Lee ··-~ ,,,.,, 546--0022 H1rbor View Homes Pe11ect for small !antlly, 2 Bedroom & convertibl~ den -cathedral ceilings in living room, dining roon1 & n1aii:ter bt'(lroom -~unlit kitchen nJl('ns to rear patio & J!ard1•n for outdoor dining fun. Jn i;parklin, rondliion .i:.i convenienll y lotalcd to po.rk & pool -$65,950 C. F. Colesworthy Realtors 640.0020 2 Homes on 1 lot EASTSIDE on Broacf\\'ny. Near shopping. Onl' • 3 BR, 2 BA + One -2 BR. I BA, 4 ga.ragl'!I'. TOP RENTAL AREA. No vaC'Bncy. e ANYTIME e ~or Eve. 64M543 I F I E D I ~ . ~ associated BROKE R S-R EA lTO~S ?C1S W Bolbo<1 67J-]6tJ Lachenmyer' Re.:iltor 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 Giant Country Kitchen $39,950. On a cul-dc-Sflc in de&lrable Eastside Costa Mesa this lovely home ls graced by a gleaming brand 11panklng ne\.\1 country kitche n '"'Ith cooklng island and new electric appliances. Slll'- 1oondcd by 11\IO "'alls or glass and a large shaded patio designed for the ultimate in outdoor dining & living. An airy and light 3 bcdroo1n house for the discrin1inatin,g buyer. Red Carpet, Realtors 645-8080 STARTER ·s~P"A"N~~~i-s!!l'R~!!Vl~n~"A~ 1 ".'i!".:;.~,~~ =:;;i SPacious immaculate. neighOOrhood. Adjacent to Kingsiz~ bedrooms. Mai.tcr 400 acre park and proposed s uite. Huge living room. Jin· ffi/\Jine. Formal d I n in g mense family room \\'ith area. firepla~. family roon1 wet bar. Gourmet kl!chen. and much, much more, Ex· Double pool s ize yard on cellent invl'Stment polentlal, quiet cul-de-sac !of. Boat and just $31,500. Call Soon - nnd camper gate. If you 962-8851. hBve been looking for the best, this is it. Offered at ~ $48,900, Call .842-25.15. I OPEN Tit ~ • IT'S FUN TO BE NICf! ~ ~ * 4 .BEDROOM, 2 baths, . ~ dc>ublc garqe. $30,00J, Best ON THE RIVER-- NORTHERN CALIF. On A Cul-De-Sac of terms. * COM~tERCIAL ZONE -2 BR two story older home, comer lot. $24,500. 160 ACRES $39,900 Campground +++ l.Dvely East Costa l\1tM Will T rade for (,'\l.J-de-sac strut location. Roy McC•rdle Roollot' 18W NCWJl()rt Blvd., C.M. Beach P roperty You certainly v.-on't pass up $35,00 Eqyity thl~ 3 bdr, 2 ba hon1e "'i1h 541-7729 newly designed all electric I •""""::t'!"~~~~l'!!!!!!!!! 714: 646-2627 country kitchen. Like to live OLDIE BUT SHARP GI ouldoon? Call Red Oui><I. A GOODIEi Realtors 54G-fl&W ( o P e n Cute 2 hdr, l bR fran1e with 4 BR &. r~amlly roon1 \vlth l ••;;;';;'•;;;n;;;ln~g>iio) iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;; 10<\dS of paneling and r!Xl large yard. <Fairview & brick fireplace. Large R-2 Warner) -newly r,ainled & 20 ACRES lot In chOl cc. East Costa cerpcts -15 m nutl"!I to Young. m Bture cltnu1. Near Met1a p lu11 Riiey accCfls. NcWpOrt Beach. 0 n I Y 1'"resno. Model g r o v c . Close lo alt shopping you $26,500 -early occupancy! $100,000 or tracle tor unit$. won't need n car here. 5.7 ACRES Pl'rfecUy pr!(•ed at $30,<XXl. Walker&Lee 11 1AL1&1 r11 r.1 READY TO BUILDI WH ILE YOU LIVE A1ld thrte more unlit w.hlle you Jive In thl!I cutr 2 bdr. l'iome. \\f'hy not build with !' vie~· on thla choice Chila Mesa &lte? Call Rtd Cnrpe1, Re&.ltor. $4&-8640 ( o p e n evening11l No. Ca.ltf. on rlvc-r. S5400. this one will KO fast. Call $600. down. Full tmYt $-18. ~~ a.e~rpet, R c a I t o r s per ihonlb. ~~ ' " .PAlll F lc~· IMM~CUt:ATEr "" PROPERTIES MESA VERDE 6ia-6712 Or 54R-~700 rt(>r1utlrul 4 betlroom, 2 be.th NEW TRIPLEXES and DUPLEXES In (_OSTA MESA OPEN DAILY P lo<9ntl1 •I Wilton Onlnge County ApArtm•"" Exclu.dve N~l ~7-6791 . MARINE honll' In h1'CJntlnr lot in 11rlr1l<' ~1t:iw Ven.le location. A l~ly nlrlum to brh'tk the.> ;'i\USICl'c In. Prloo-1 to sell fn11t nt $1.5,!r.JO. Red Carpet, Rt>nlto1~ S~IO (o pen C\·cnlnpl SEASlD£ Cl re~lc! ·\ DORMS, 3 BA, family I 'I I' .. '· 1, 8 * Nowport Helghlt * Large ylil.l'd. l-Sty.' 3BR. :r bf!. Owner extremely •n.x• Iona. will talc1 2nd T.D.'!I . BALBOA BAY PROP. CQNTRACTING Newport Beach. F I n e i .t C!qUJpment le watt:rfront location. 35 Yr. old com· pe.ny. Sps.ct avalL for boat ~s .l 1'pairR • 'Gmitiiaa 00&""·nt.i . ' ' SAYE ~ASH? * '42'7491 * REDUCED AGAINll Fant.a.11lc 2 bdr. l ba AUJM:r ShRrp condo In prime llun. Ungton Btnch I oca 11 on , Owner needs 11 quick 1Rle and II'• ~rtalnly priced that way at $23,750. Plcue hulT)' on 1 his one Rtd Olrpet, Rtalton 546-8640 <open cvenlnal) BIL L GRUNDY RLTR 675-4161 QUICK CASH THROUGH A WANT AD Realtors 2863 E. Cl't. Hwy., CdM 675-7080 u ; ~G PRIVATE ESTATE . Large J BR., lnn1. mi. p1us 11epara.le den, 11\r((ti prlval~ lot tn super oolahborhood1 V• Cl I) I . I mme d I a'ler PQ811eulon. Reduced 10 1en -132,000. Ginny Morrlton', Rl tr. • ~7--030 .. "·' I • • . . " ' ;i ' __ 1 I ' I I I ,, I I 1 --•• " ' ' . .. . . • MondaJ, A119ust b, 1973 DAILY PILOI 2 1 ~ •••••• SOO ·S24 The-Biggest Marketplace on t,he Orange Coast Mobil. Ho<-'°'~Sole . Autor•~ • • • • • . . . 950 • 990 1oot1 I Mlwlne ~ 900 . 9M1 (mp6oyrnent . • • , rll"IOndol •••• Houlel l0t Sole • Lost & Found • Merchondls.e. . • .100 -m . 200 · 299 .100 • 124 . sso .·574 DAILY PILOT CLASSl·FIED ADS ,.,~ ... ' Pitts c.-0 Supplie\ . . R.eol Estate Gen.fol. Ritntol . . .12.S • ~ .SlS -~ .8S0 ·8" . ISO • 199 JOO -... . 57S • S99 . 600 -tn9 . 915 • 949 ' . 800 . 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval S<hooh oNI lnst1u<lloo Mfyic:es and R1po11\ • ERRORS. Advortl .. ra should check tholr 1d1 dilly & report •rror1 lmmtdiiftly. f f,e DAILY PILD1 oHumos lloblllty for the first Incorrect lnsertton onty. ~H forSIM: j I~ [ HOu•H f~S•• I ~ I _,.,,. I~[~·.... I~ [ _ ..... s •• J ~I [ H00>esf~S•I• J ~[ H~mf.,S•I• ]~ ~--~~~;.;.;;;..' Genera) General General -'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- General OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide * CHOICE VIEW PROPERTIES * *CAMEO HIGHLANDS. 3 Bdrm. & family rm. home. 2 Baths. View of ca nyo n & ocean. $69,500 *BROADMOOR BEAUTY. 4 Bdrms., for mal dining rm., 31h b~ths -view of mo.untains & ocean. Many extras. $122,500 *IRVINE TERRACE -Front row ""-·over· looking entire harbor. 2 Bdrms., dl!!llig rm. & den. Extensive use of fine \voods. -*-*-*-* * * * TAYLOR CO. * BIG CANYON -$199,500 Customized estate-like home on beautifully landsc grounds of large site. 3 Bdrms (incl 2 mstr stes), fain rm. formal DR & unusual pool w/lge jacuzzi. J~xpensive ·decor . Furni- ture included. Call to see . ''Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Generel j-G_o_ne_r•-'-------' 2 ·Bloc~s ·• H youle pbp\,ning a ~i~ Half 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 a round handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality. construction. S undecks, fireplace, wet·bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun·LiteO ·kitchen, private ef}closed double garage. Recreationa l faciliti es in clude heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pooL All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! $9,000- Price Reduction! To Beach, 1 Block F•om P1cif10Co0<1 H1ghw•y ~nd Superior Avenue (B31bO<l To Pool $49,900. Blvd.).drlve upSuperiorto This light and b r I g ht Ticonderoga, and directly lo spacious 3 bedroom honlc Newport Crest Information hAs wood beamed cathedral Center.Telephone:(714)645-6141 Gene r a I Gener a l LIVE IN IRVINE REDUCED $38,900 4 BR ''Pace~etter'' model..adjoias broad open spaces on "The Ranch'' ... Irvines finest family community. Same model sold al $39,500 this month. 10% down. Financing available! Owner needs quick sale! WALKER & LEE REALTOR 546-0022 Walker &lee REAL ESTATE General General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT 5 ~drm., 5 bath_family home with lge. lam: ·il y .rm. facing encl. patiO. Waterfrobt living rm. & formal dining. Lge. kitch. \V/family dining area. Pier & slip. $179,000. For Complete Information On All Hornes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 General General * BAYCREST * On a Budget '"ell located lot. Owner is leaving to"'" & has priced the home for quick sale. $69, 750. Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family home on a lge., CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Ca ll Anytime 644-7662 General General ceilings 1hroughout. A S ales Office open daily beautiful tree shaded yard, 10 a.m. to sunset FROG NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ge nera l CHARM + A VIEW \Vatch· the boats by day and harbor lights by night rron1 your own living roon1. The ULTIMATE in FEE o"·n lll rship, luxur y on-the-water living. 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath rondo in prestigious area. Po o l , sc>curily guard. boat slip available. C H ANNE L REED. CALL FOR ap- pointment $95,000. 644-7270 ~ ENJOY HAPPY DAYS and enjoy this lovely hon1e: ne1v carpC!ls and dl'apC!S, fan1ily roont or form"al din- ing room, but '>''hat a l'alue this 3 bedroom, 2\~ bath, fireplace hon1e is! Large patio· for your entertaining pleasures. All yours for only •$31,450. 644-7270 When you ltst with us, YOUR HOME is advertiMd in Home for Living maga- xine in more than 900 areas -and cus- tomers ire sent to yd u as referr1ls from our over 500 affiliates of NMLS. 2828 E. Coast Hiway Corona del Mar ---Don't Call Me A Duplex!! General General A Ullo/IVUf' ti()M f' ONE OF THE BE ST IN MESA VERDE Set on the golf course. 5 bedrooms. includ- ing n1aid 's <1uarters. ('lassie architecture, Sycamore trees, 3·car garage and exciting decor \Vith practical design. Exclusive at $125,000. UN J9UE HOMES OF MESA VER DE, 546.s••o A littlng of Martha Beynon lJ ~ l()U I: fi()MI:§ REALTORS Genera l Genera l Back Bay Bonanza HARBOR VIEW $57 ,850 Olllr En{:lish !Stylr llonit· i"el"Ch(.'(I on lhC' hill • Secludrd cul-d<'-saC pfopcrt~· Overlooki11g ti1 · prestige t'statt' area of The harbor entn1ncr finer homes. Drama Ii t' OVl'r 4500 sq. ft. of luxul'y cathl'rlral C'l'ilings in ii1·in~ \\'i!h :1 tX'CirOOn1s, pttnelcd roon1 \I' i t h l'raekl1ng den \\' o o d -burning firC!placf', large sundeck npC'n plan fainily 1wn1, Super f~ntily rootn '"pub" spaciou.,· ga1·rfcn · vi r i v ... Thl' vit'w is ra111asl ic! fo1·mal 1tining roorn. 4 l<1rg1' $296,500 bedroon1s, and go u r n1 c 1 kllchcn \\'ith hrcakrast ba1'. HARBOR Pel'k-a-boo ''ic>1v of Nc1vrort Bay. i\sk us ;il)()u! !he interesting possibilitil'S for future increasr.~ in l'alul'. Pl('aSe call today Cnr REAL TORS an appointment lo inspec1 SINCE 1944 this hi~hly desirahle pl'O[J· 6_73-4400 C'rly. Call 546-2313. I.,.,...,.....,.,,..,.,....,...,.,.; OPEN nL g . 1rs ruN ro BE NICE' 3-7-2-8-0C_E_A_N _ ·~ BLVD. OLD I ~ CORONA DEL < GROWING CHILDREN-OR GROWING PLANTS-- ROOJ\1 FOR BOTH. Larg-c lot with nice 5 Bcdroo111. fantily room homr & .. BaU1s. Newport Beach. -REALTOR- PETE BARRETT 642-5200 MAR GO BY! Braut1ru1 olri S11an1sh hon1c on douhle lot lar~e enough ror 1\t(' lu1~csl fan1ily. Spec- lncu lar viC\I' only slCTJ6 tn 1he tx>ac·h. Take a look at this [abulnus hon1c> Rlld then i.:ive us a call. 67'.~f>O. OPEN Tit Y • ir·s FUN TO 8E NICEI THE REAL ESTATER Best buv In Corona de! l\1nr for a · 4-hNiroom custom home for a large fnmily on fee land 9.'ilh a view! Every convenience for l\l o m : ¥."Orkshop, study and dark room tor Dad; fanlilY room, yard and beach for the children. Now $98 ,500 . 613-8500. secl~ and private as an CSLI No. 2666lt alpioo fo,,,,tgrovo opens AND PRINCE CAPE COD Big 2fil'Xl sq. ft. 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath home \Vith formal din· ing room. Large country kitchen with dining area PLUS BIG DEN. Only $5, 750 down. Imntediate possess ion. l'n1 a roon1y 3 Bedroon1 2· ~ Bath honte oil an npcn cor- ner lot 1'•ith manicured fronl yard and sheltl'red Patio. NEWPORT BEACH O/'EH TIL. p • fr3 FUN 70 EE MCEI THE REA L ESTl\TERS FRANCISCAN FOUNTAINS ! -lo a lo'''l·y • ' I d Gli:: "-'-'O.."" •~ol hdflitN.C.lne. • , f "" ~ r a a ~-R......,H,Gr.ntr-.-_c;.,. .. c--__ Re~e~tller lhc slOIJ'.· A t~r lc>ading lo community S'>'1m· --~'"'.' -painHng and ~lcruung th1ro; rrUng pool and recreational :=:::--=::::',.'.!::.:!::;::-:.*-'.::':..."'~~-=~':.~'P~";.~;:: super-frog, you'll have a an-a only a block away. Lov-___ .. .....,_-....,_..._..,_.,....,..___ prince of a home. You'll be lng care reflected in the 1\·e11 1-e,11ardcd for your time. =y :n:edandwa~ ..... ~::l·Gen,.--e-ra'l.-------.G,-e_n_e_r_a"l -------las 1he seller has agreed to ·~· 1";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:::::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 h<'IP pay your closirn: eos1s. "'oodWorks lhroughout.11 lt"s a 3 bedroorn _ 13~ h:i1h Vl..sils must be scheduled in· honie in a lovely nri.i;hbor- 1101 tho youdng children's na11p CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA hood. Full price is Sll.500. me, an arrangemen NEWPORT BEACH Call to inspect, 847-6010. made 1o park on ·""'-eekends \\·ith the secutity guards. OPEN TJL 9 • IT'S FVN TO 8£. NK;E r co: Ts WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- Spiral staircase to the 11ars. Pleas/! can· or come 1n so 4 Bedrooms, family retreat. that "'e n1ay make an ap- Must see this one! pointment ond schedule a 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 21> Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts. ~ (Open Evenings) THE REAL ESTl\TERS .~J I NEW_4-_P-LEX 6•/. VA ASSUMABLE visit. The O\vner must relocate no\v and will con-CENTURY 21, Id · ff R-" GREEN REALT'i.' 11 er any serious o ·er. '-""U Carpet, Realtors, m E . RESERVATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR FUTURE SALE OR LEASE SPECIAL PR ICES NOW I ! ! I'::'=':::=::=:=:=:=:=':" Just rom11letecl and ready lo SC'IJ. BuildC'r keeping proper- PLUS An easy lo rent incon1c uni! "'ith p1;vat~ entranct>, llO'>'' producing $200/mo. $89.500 CALL 644-7211 MESA VERDE 5 BEDROOM Sparkling clC!an \\'ilh nrw paint. !his 5 bedroon1, 2\i! bath homC! has formal din- ·BIG VALUE ON A QUIET CORNER Thl'('e bedrooms, one and a half hnlhs on a COITlf.'r lot make this an ideal star1er hon1e. Ncsllcd in a quie1 neighborhood ,this carpelNI and draped homC' is near schools. Its many plusses add up lo more 01an the $26,950 price. Cal 962-88.ll. OPE.N TIL 9 • ITS FUN TO BE NJtE• ! Sparush style custom bu!lt .1 8Pdroon1, JargC' S<'para le family room 11·i!h rcsrrul rireplacl'. For tht~ sccluclrd busy ramily. r or !lP· pointn1ent: 011 Irvine's Ranch, 4 bl', I ycat· old. An ofrcrin~ no one c;111 HEFUSE! $3900 do1,·n, i.'lllJ llO\\'. I ~"64"7-'·300W~, ,;:E;;.v;c"c.· -'64-"2'--4'-3'-3'<-' _ 1 l7th &.., C.M. &fa.BOO), General General Real Estate Consultants 1525 Superior -Suite 3 ty vacant for first buyer lax bent'flls. Super shai'p and excel.lent l'{'ntal area. Pric- ed to go at Sl!0,000. Call Red Carpet, Raltors 546-8640 (open eveningsJ. ing toon1 and large Jiving DUPLEX roont overlooking park-like BALBOA PENINSULA· Wa lker &Lee VIEW AND WALK TO BEACH Just 'h block to Little Co rona. Magnificent view of white water & rocks, hills & lights. Neat 2 BR. on lgc. lot. Only $85,000. Rich Wray FOUR EXCELLENT BUYS 2 Great homes, Emerald Bay -$275,000; · $350,000. Balboa -3 BR. remodeled home plus brand new apt. $145,000. 3 BR. collage -CdM $69,500. Pat Hug BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUM Three BR 's., three baths. Over 2.000 square feet. Complete privacy. $157,000 Full Price. E. M. Vreeland TllllS IS A MUST For the weekend athlete! Beautifully up- graded "X" pl an. Karastan carpets. No maintenance yard. 3 BR.. 2'h ba. Bluffs condo. $69,500 ' . QUICK OCCUPANCY 0.K. Jlarbor View Homes 4 Bdrm., family nn.; lacge kitchen. 2 Fri>lcs. & wet bar. 'h Blk. from community park & pool. $79,900. Howard Wells CAMEO SHORES 0 ean view. Very large living room & mas· te~ bdrm. w/bcautlful parquet floor&. Beamed ceilings. 4 Bdrms. & 3 baths. $1~,500. Carol Tatum f I I m-o100 644-2430 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. .Newport Beach (714) 645·323Q yard '>''ilh loads of fruit Custom quality 3 BR!2 Ba 111".l.L l"•T.l.TI Walker· & Lee ltlA~ l"ll -fl Realtors 2043 Wcstcliff Drive 646-7711 Opj.•n eves We've found a home for YoU In a fantMtl<' rt90l1 IO<'a· tlon. In fact, there nr~ iv.·o or these homtw: aide by 11ide and lhe prlcrt Rrc an unbelievable $11,500 Ii $12,N)O at 10% down thHC won't last! Sparll~o lnv1•tment Corp., 833-3544 Prestige 4 Bdrm Orluxo home. 3 bath111. FAntl· ly rn1, forn1nl dl11ln11t tn1. ("r0urrnct kitchen. t~J"'plnce. Only }_y~ar old. $4.1,000. bric 54<>-1720 TARBELL • -* $285,000 * Prestigiou~ Via Lido Nori! \Valer Cront home. 5 br, 5 ba, custom unique features thu-OUt, lg. U-slip w/land· ing, Principals only. frees and covered patio. Double attached g:1ragC' Beyond is OpC!n area. Call 7'/; assumablt' loan 71 I: ~lfi--0022 p~o"-o'°L-_=T"I ME~--1 Choitl' Eastsifle C•1sta J\le!lfl l()("<11Lo1i. 3 bo.-rlroon1 . 2 bath for1nal dinin~. fan1ily 1wn1 ,1 Ith brick firt•pla<'t.'. 11 x 28 pool 11·i1h lo:1d!; of d('t"k111g . Jinag1ne all this for $3.'"l.900 Call Rt.'11 Carpt.'I, Realtors :116-11640 lopl."n l'\Cllingsl 546-2313 to ~ !his grt'at Call 645-72'21 value todny. $.Xi,000 Open EV('S. ~HERITAGE 3 + Guest $25,950 OPENn<i•tr'SFUN108€MCEI ~" ,,, !~21 Private cirxular street of fi ne ho1ncs. Paint and save REALTORS EXECUTIVE Real Estate Investments 832-7353 I ho us a n d s , S\veepingl"-"-"--""-"-"''!!!!!""'"'" .. ""'""' itrounds \\"itt-ronm for boat. You'll Love This --,l~B"E~S~T~B~u=y~s~­ :::. bN"!roonl!il includingColorful landscapihg 3 JRVINE TERRACE -in h1de·a·1vay n1aster su~\C', bedroon1s, 2 baths. Forn1al COl'Ona dC!l l\'far. 3 + fami- SEE USI separaic gu .. l'St faclhry, dinin• rn1. E 1 cc tr i c 1 162 ~ A t 64~ ~00 I I h Id I -'-y, """" g ~ r C'n ~ 1 s 1 in~ g nss ,~r built-ins. Shag c n r pct s. LIDO ISLE -Spanish Ha- For the right home for you. Complete selection fJf hon1es in the beach area. HARBOR VIEW HOMES REALTY lo 2~ e~ll'.'t'la!nl'ts pall~. $30,900. brk 5-10-1720 ciencla, J block 10 beach, BreathtakJng v1e1\• ot Can· TARBELL 1 $73500 FEE AGT 6-15--03m 833-0780 yon and blue Pacific. BET-----'-' · ' TER H URRY! Lall 6-15-0303. IOHl\I LOl,11\ "' Ri ,4 t '01<"-" -A~MOST NEW.- NO WORK TO DOI Charn1Tn,q 2 1Jlory, ~ l.llh'. 3 balh cut1S0n1 hon1c on large rorner Int \Vllh bout gnlt>. UcauUful henvy 11hakt-roof p:u11 IOAdl' of used bride, OVf'r 11b.ecl ll;ati\{l;C nnd COil· cttlr chivt>wayl!. A rlrllght to lihow al $.f.'i,(XX). Call RL'<l Carpet, Rb11illon MG-8610 (npen ewnlna:1111 ~ , $©\\~~-LG13-~S " . T~at Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle Edited lsy CLAY l. POU.A.N O Reorronoe letters of thti lovr ~rambled "#Oreb b. "-kiw lo form lour simple word&. KULNIE I I I I I 1· . ~~P.,....E.,...w ........ o ..... ~ -ii i . I' I I I . I I L ATRA I! I I ~ I 'I ~ The.!'eosonwhycavlarisso . . . . expensive: It's a yeor's work for -.· N I SOGPEN I r.,-ilr-rJ--r.J';-r.J ',-,-J -t 0 C..,ploto the "'"'"' q.,.ted . . . . . . ~y fllllng In 1h11 mlulng word ~~-~~~~~~ you dewilop from ltep No. 3 below. fJ PRINT NUMSEREO lElTlRS IN SQUARES e UNIC•AM•lE tme•s I fOR ANSWER • SCRAM-LET S ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 1733 Westcliff Dr., N.B. General Gen8raf MACNAB IRVINE BIG PRICE REDUCT ION Spells value in this 4 BR Harbor \i'1e\v Montego ~ Super location near com1nunity pool. S69,900. Jor~e Edlund 642-8235 .. I Cl3) BAY FRDNT-DOVER SHORES Prin1e location on 1nain channel. O'''ncr moved east & \vants offers. 4 BR. 4 bath + PR. Refrig. & \vater softener incl. Custo1n built. l\'Tasle r suite ,,. FP. FR \V/1A•et bar. 4400 sq . ft . 3-car garage w/openers. Tom Tu~ner 642-8235. OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m . -505 Morning Star. iCl41 BIG CAN YON-VIEW LOT Superb homesitc overlooking ·t7th fair· way~ $80,000. Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. (C l7) ----'""?'"*" Irvine 101 Oov.rDrlv• ... 2·1235 1144 M1cA.nt1ur '4•·1200 Newport h•ctl, C.llf0tnl1 92111 _\ • • • • ... . - 22 DAILY PILOT PAINT BRUSH SPECIAL NO NO DN GI :ittll'r II 111 IJ11) :tll l'(ISIS . 3 laq.;o• Hl<, :? h:1lh,., plus·~".) fll't-pln('(' & a !•:'\1·1 ilf•n . !1"1111· ••n ~.iJXt ::.i (t . J,1\ :-..16-002:! ~----- "VERY PRIVATE" l,Weau!le of 11 f' a LI 1 t f u I lan<lscnpin~ nnrl lt1t·ati\JU . ;1 1,._•dnM'.lr'llS, l.~n1tly l'IO!ll, Ill!· fi11 ii-hi-d t;.111\1~ 1'f'li1111. Home is uppo•alini.:J.v 1IC'COrJ.ted, pt•rf«r!l.v n1;iln!:u11ed. A ho111r• for a liff'ti111e, S36,9j(), ;\Cl rlOIL ~12-Zl:~:J. O\.VNER 11'1'1"1.Sf. Clean 3 BR, 11 ~ ba. Xlnt ear pet. Nici' garden, large yard. Fortin Co.. Rltrs. 642-5000 Balboa lslana. ISLAND CHARM Steps 10 bay, ;, br,' 2 ba, sn1all play roo1n + rental unit. Lar. sun deck, too! Old world charm. First ti1ne of· fe!'e(l. Lots of \\'ood, vaulted open ·bcan1 liv. rm . w/balcony. Re cc nt 1 y re1nodclcd &. in xJnt cond. $116,0CKI. 0....'tler. 67;>-7604. 213 Topaz. ISLAND CHARM Steps to bay, 5 br. 2 ba, sn1. play room + rental unit. Lg. sun rfeck, too! Old v.'orld charn1. First tllne offered. Lots of wood, vaulti>d open IX!am Ii\'. rm. "'/halconv. ReCcntly remodeled &: in. xlnt cond. $116,0CKI. Owner. Gt;::.700{' .. 213 tOpiz. --~ ~ - College Park ' -• Mondily, August 6, 1973 .;';o;;;•t;•;;;;M;;,..;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;:: Huntington Be ach S'h'.~ FIXElt UPI 'EH. ot 1.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; IWdnot'lm, 2 J1uths, huJ;;•' THE BIG WHOPPER ~ 11nt C1trnt-r 01 1Jonnyli1'\..:1k Jdeai tor th!' fanuly \\i lh & J{akt·1·. (."nil fur apfl'I. li<t•n;~"f!I' 'four own swinl· 111111..: pool, U·B·Q out:-1!1!(! $~).~~ POO L -:i J~,..,IJ.,•>nl~. und1•r thC' larg(' rovC"rl'd :: Hit!hs. cus1nn1 frplt•., l!Ul•'1 Tl ""flO. ''< llO<ll" \\"lh •.····•· 110-lra!l1t' slri•i•I. 11113 Post ,,.. ' ~ ' " 1·-l{••hd, off Bllhh. l)i\ ner 11 ill r1rilT\· f(u·rnt1l <lining is n lari;:t•, lovely, s1nMlt> .!>101y 4 r:u'I)' J.,t T\) a! II'' h1'flroorn. Con1l' see it. 1111ninu1 n1 clo~ing l~JS\s. Cttll ~:}.:1621. l\JI' :qip'L Costa M esa Rea lty CRAMPED KITCHEN .. go! ynu dn\vn? If 50, !)(' * 548-771 1 * sun~ 10 ln!\p('CI !his roon1y hflitH'. You'll huve a roomy -ADULT -k1t•'l1rn Ullil livlni; l'oorn \\'Ith J1n:pl:1<·c, ;: bl-'droom11 and 2 OCCUPIED t1!t1'H•·li1•c hrtUis, <111 on .a . anr1 11tJ1"•lntL'lY ininl:J!'\l· d1•l'll luT, Prict'<i at S2ti,OOO. lal('! Jo'ul! (·ar·i)l:!l·d, ;dl Jlurr.v. C1\l.L !<i46-3377. huiliins, plush 11nd u1cuh·l'n. RANCH / POOL \\la.lk !11 lho·ulrf·~. 111;dor Ynur Vt'l'.Y O\\'!I 4 bedroon1 Sl){Jppini.: and r1~t11unuits. rlint·h style hon1e with a Beautiful :i i.1,·tn l()n1, 2 hath, larµ;<' sv.;mn1lng pool. This for only S:jj,l,9-~!. CALL hard lo fi nd, bul v.'Orth look. ~5-842·1. Sou1hCo Rrnllnr~. ing at hon1e , !s loc:atl'd O\\'NER an. ... tous. Lgc. 2 sty, 5 Br. huge Jo'R. $<18,500. Brokl'r. ;..i&-7739 Dana Poinr SACRI/o'ICE! 3 BR, 2 BA, fan1 rn1, vie11'. On<' 1nile fron1 Marina. 993-21~.I East Bluft ~·orlh Jluntington Bc>aeh in a popular area. Try $34,950. 847-3584. SUMMER FUN CAN BE YOUHS today in th is fantaslic vacant (X)Ol hon1c. 3 Brlrn1s. 2 baths, ronn1 fo r a boat and n1uch n1ore, and 1vould you believe only $29,900. Call quick! Ow'her anxious. C A L L /'>.!2-!1371. TRADE YOUR I,.OVELY large 4 Br. 2 Ba, EQUITY _separate__ Fa!ll. .rm... East EOR.-..11.llS gorgoous~ Bluff home, Je'asl',' Avair.-staircase Franciscan }'oun- Sept. 1, 833~80.) Days tafn -·i-101ne. LoRJS Or up. 833-2496 Evei:;. grading. CALL 842-9371. COLLEGE Park home by El Toro 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH owner, 3 Br. din rm & tam ;::.:...;c;:.;.::_ ______ llUGE LOT. Use your GI, rm combo lrg living rm. LAGUNA REAL sellers will help finance. w/rplc, l~ ba. nu CALL 842-9371. dishwasher, lrg patio \\· IBBQ, finished gar. \\'!bar. "Fresh paint in ,t out , fenced yard \\'Is prinkler front/rear, xlnt move-in rond, S37.900 Shown by appt on 1 y. ~0-48.17 · HI MARIE l\tarie Shcnnan is thl' bright and personable lady who managed 1-leritage Escrow in C.O.M. She has joined our grra1 team of good personalities as a saleslady. She brings her knov.•ledge of PscrovJ to 1he real estate business so we kno\v she will do very v.·ell. She plans to roncentrate on Jt..,.ine Terrace as \1·e\I as lhe Harbor area in general. \\'on·t you call Marie 675-7225 Dynamic: Duplex Sensational 3 BR, 2 BA 011·n· f'l'S unit plus roomy rental~ Cpr1g, drps, b!tns, walk to surf: l..O\\' maintenan<'I'. 01vncr n1ay finance. Asking $112,950. Sut)lnit dov.·n or \1·i U tradt for home or sn1aJJ irn'On1r. ca11 645·8400. 7 IF! -RV/N .YOUI OPfNTIL9 :;a V. E. llo.urd & Co. §ii Rt.J r ..... ~- BEAUTIFUL! ::: HH .• t fan1il.v rn1. Terrific ,.1('11· of Uc.:l•an~ Pool.size lot : pnrft'>!~. rll-'<'Orated, Nl'\\'ly 11Bin1l•d. F:lt-'e. h J t -ins, lornird dlfJ. r111: 2 frpl r.~. OrK· 11f llK' lx•sl IOl•al ions in 10\1·11. ?!love in hy school tin1t•. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 OPEN DAILY 1-4PM Br11nd N('l\I 'fn11·n h<1ust' at I ll Dll.hllfl, !II', !"t.•flVlt'\.\', 2 Udrn1, 2 Ba1hs, 2 l'u r g-ar. F•~· l;1n•I s:11.:,r~) Yogi.') Co. n .... 11 •• 1·~. :r1x ~IJ-l'i. Move your family into thl~ beautifll!J 4-BR hon1e with r·ornial Dining Roon1 and n Fan1ily Room. This hon1c i~ clesignt'd for easy living \vith. ·an the conveniencei; and located near the im· portant shopping centers. Now priced at only S41,900. Call today, we're ready to 'hN'EW&-OLlSTING! I Exciting 3-BR home in love· ly Lake Forest Village. Thi s is a \Veil-built home in ex· ccllent condition. CaU us for inforn1afion about U1c nH1.ny extras. Price? -on I y $43,:iXJ. :>86-{)222 Fountain Valley SOL VISTA SPECIAL $34,500 4 Bedroon1, 2 BAth Nrwpor! n1odel, largl' front roo1n & dining arl'a. 1'his \\/US th{' rastest seller when 1h{' trAel \\'as new. All electric kitchen ,i,, a backyard that is superb. Real good area near both grade & high schools. I' illage Real Estate 531-5800 ( ~:;i 531-5800 7% ASSUMABLE * :\1orll'I condition * 3 BR. 2l2 BA Condo * \Vallpapcr & fffi11eling *" ~p shag * \O\'f'fC'Cl pal iO (:rihs of gla1nour for SJ~.9';;o. larwin r«1alty inc. 968-4405 (24 hrs) GREEN .Vulley n~el honif!. ~ BR. $.16.00J, a.~sun1e 7'1 \",\ ln:u1, no qualifying. Ph. !)(.>~-R27.1 Rl\R Huntington Beach POOL ESTATE BEACH LOVERS POOL $47,500 BIG BUCCOLA SHERWOOD ESTATE. Used biick exter- ior \vith heavy shake roar. 16 x 36 H/F' sparkling pool. Loads of deeking. Poolside glass ki tchen v.·ith patio pass-!hn1 & bar. ·Custom (·e,ran1ic tile & jct age ap.. phancl's. Big family roo1n USf'd brick fin•placc. 4 hug~ BR's incl. hUgc dormi!ory /or playroon1 or ? Master sui1c has Roman sunk:C"n tub. P.oon1 for boat or catnper. ~Tus1 sell 1his 1veekend! ONLY $299 n10. \l'hen )IOU assume This great FliA loan. Hurry, it \\'On't last! Broker 962-5511. RUSTIC HONEYMOON COTTAGE 1 i\J·:.\R BEACH . SJ0,900 Dran1atic cathedral ceilings, n1a·1'01'et"l panels in liviJ1g roo111 retie~:! floor !o ceiling briC'k flreplace. Country style> eat-in kilchcn1fami1y roon1. 2 Bt>rlrooms with large \\'a.lk·iI1 closets. \Vork· shop in dci'ublc garage. Dog run on side yard unique rail road tie patio.' A n1ust see! Call The Heal Estate F'air, 536-2551. $23,000 3 Bedroon1 Condo, ndull <:om n1unlty, ideal location near shoppin!!. • 962-2456 • I' 1llage Real Esta te 8843 Adams, H.B. (at Magnolia) ABANDDNED- SPANISH FORTRESS +POOL l~I I~ 125 Huntington BMch Huntington Be•ch * $79,500 * Spanish .rty le homr oci Jnrge NEWPORT BAY lot. 3 BR. & den, open . boo.ms. lnteretting Jpl, Nl'tl.r New 2 Bit. I BA. hv\ng rni. Lido t•·nnis ct Adult park w/pr1vate beach LIDO REALTY St6.500 5<0-'672 ENTERTAINING? 3377 Via Udo. N'pt Beech l2X60 nwbile home. A11rnln~. * 673.-7300 * skil1lng, rooler, like nl'11', 1--i)v.·ner. Scacliff l\1ubl!e Mission Viejo Park. 890 w. 15th S1> G3, NE\V ll-ladrid Plan 640, pool NeWpOrt Beach. &12-2816 ~ \·('s II is · · · and \11hnt a WANT? & vu Tot, 4 BR, frplc's in 2 BR, 2 BA. By Owner. 20x50 J'1~fit"&1c1.'.\ .. y"'."0~,' ot&a k""1,~.r.· A 3 BR country kilchen? Fam Rn1 & Master BR. w/po1:ch, pa~io & sheds. In " .._.. " "' $238 parquet floor entire Baylildc Village, N . B . no interested hon1e buyer . pays a~~ If YoU assume downstairs. comp! lodscpd, $13,500. Ph: 639-2126. lck-al inside & out; 2 Yl'11 old. 4 l'\R, fonnal din. rm, fain. rn1, honus mi, 2 v.·et b6r5, toun1;u11ent pool tahle, lndscpg supren1e. 2 1i.'1l ios, v.·ater softciwr, gar 0~11rr, l.'UStom wall & window <.VV· erings. IT'S BY A LAKE should znlss trus one. 3 $25.000 VA 7 1,. Joan. Cypress. &Inn, 2 BA. patio kitchen • PATTI • "'177~·500=·-83=1=--0324='-----I frple, only 1 yr. young &. WALKER N•wport Bffch Real E1t1t1. 1~1 just 1.; block fron1 our ne\\' ;(Al jit.a.u Gentr•I 600 •=,park wta beaut1tu1 inn soarn a 1vd., tt.s. BEACH DUPLEX i 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:iiiiii~ !~k~ lor .:ioa~1ng, swunming, CAU .. 842-1418 2 & 3 Btlnn units, one blockllC ftsh1ni; & Just plain fun.I~"!"!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! from beach. Needs paint & ommerclal Call. 893-853':'1 MODEL Hon1e Landscaping, fix up. Best buy on the Property 158 $34,950 1500 square /o~t. 1 ml. to bch, beach. $69,500. --'-"-""----'-'-' 6% loan, $10,000 down. 1797 Orange, C.M, 642-lm .····~····. DUTCH HAVEN $36,000 (714) 968-3563 The 1nost sought after model Irvine -3 Bdrrn, 1;,I BA+ famlly·l----------- room V.'ith fireplace. Large HI RITA. kitchen 1\'ith breakfast bar ,t plen1y of cupboards. A great llttle gal, Ril~ Separate S('rvice r>arch with Snortland, .. has 1-eturrv:d. 0111sid<' entrance ~ 31 Bath She ha~ JOtncd our office lnca!ed on a quiet ci~le end and \\'tll .i.x-turfling: her street. Tl'<'nic.>ndous area for charm on 1n th: Turtlcrock t•hildt<'n & onlv 1 block t area and eisc-:where, 11:herc school. Onlv 1 fflile to Hu: n:iany <>!.her clients & friends tington l·Tilrbour Marina. hve. Rita ts do~e lo the Call 89J...&il1 $2.000,0CX) level lll 1\·LL.S. $31 500 sales and we are going to 1 help jl('r in her goal of $4,!XXl,OCX) in '74. Cali Rita - SUPER FASHION sr:rms Beautiful 4 Bedroom Fashion Shores y,.·ith an add on fami. ly room, 2 fireplaces, shag carpet, CQrner lot. Open house Sunday 1-5, 9192 ""Rhodesia, •HB. Call 968-44:'6 _ .... __ • BUILDERS LOSS • :· AMERICAN · .. :., HOME .. : ·., RtAlTU~ ,.· . ........ . Commercial Bldg. Site C-2 LDT w /INCDME 19,800 sq, ft. on Ne1vpor1: NEWPORT CREST Blvd., nr Fair Dr., Costa 2 BR Co do .,1 900 Ex Mesa. $3.25/sq. ft. Owner/ n · ~ • · Bkr. Other parcels avail. quisite appointments to your 642-0590. taste. Submlt exchange or,,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! buy direct from optionee r thru South Co Real Estate, Duplexes/Units !Mr!!!!!,'!D'!ay~"~54~!h<4>1~~~!!!!!·1-~l~a~le:_ ____ l62 ARE YOU A HORSE Counny! Shocp! B Large lot. Santa Ana EACH NUT? Helgh1'. $37,500. P>'<«C<pal' 1 mini block from the water. only. Appl. 540-2971 or P lus an income unit above1 ~64~2-:..::1280=~· ------- the large double g"dJ'age. 166 170 Income Ptoperty 166 Lots for 5•1• ::.;::::;;:.:_;_;..:J::::;:.!.._.= /\l .. t Jot CoRll\ l\·lei>a. corni!P. : 4 UNITS Heady to bul1". Ph ii ' Creal it lu1it for lht' lnvt'stor Sullivan Reallor, MS-6761 11111.1 1'toq1.1lrcs " tax sh<'!ter. Out of State P rop. 1,l! • '>l'llh cash Oow. D e I u x t' ~- unit.'! idi;ul 10 ll\'c ln. 1\!1'. J\Iiscione. No, tJ.1. l'hon\' ARIZONA 639·1501. LARGE I.£VEL. LOTS \\111lc1·, po11'('I', good 1'0t'ld.i $!+95 full priL'<!. Ea.l>y ten111» fl'E't' picllll'l"S, n1aps. \\Irk• · Elnicr Butler, Box 486, Kingnu1.n, Ariz. 86401 . _ ( Brand ne\\', Spanish motif, 3 BR. 2 ha. r!elu:<C' u11it LOOKING FOR a loc fll , \v/trplc., & :i 2-BR units ea. sC'Clud1'<'1 21,~ acre parCf'I w/patio or sun de cit. 1vith water, ~!('('. horses -& F.astside Cost:1 Mesa nr. uni1nnls 0.1\'..? Ii 4~~ nii. 011 , Ne11•por1 Hts. Buyer gets !st unpaved road doeim' •.' user 111:.: depreciation. Ask· ·bother you, call 8.U.-322!, , ing $UO,OOO $8.9'".JO And up, full price. ·• CAl,L (f) 446·1414 Real E1tat1Wanted1!! '·~ A.~ EXEC~ v.>lll pay in1med. ·caslJ 7'19t:A L TY for EasthluU Condo. Otdei1 . Nt•r Ntwport Post orrlr t section only. Call 64.0-1794:-~ By 01vnc1'. Bt'act1 duplex, hi).: apts, Sharp cond. Xln! 011T1C'1'S apt. Sh1Jl'f \\':JI!.: lo ocean. Rerh1cerlt o $87.~. 4 BE'ACl·I units, ju~1 a hop to the \rall-'1', Trf'n1endous rl'ntal history & good po1en· lial for increll.S<'. S<'l'iOUS consideration given reasonable cash-out offers. Good tc1ms also nvai.J. $1~.000. Grindle ll.E. !)68..6767 12-2 BR. FUllN. UNITS, IV/pool $190,000. Inc. $25.320 by owrK'r. Prine. only. 6-12-9520 aft 5 P.M. Finam:ial I~· Business Opportunity • • • Agnes M. Copeland 33554 Halyard Dr. Laguna Nlguel '{ ou ar(• !he 1vinlll'I' of - 2 tickets to thC' RINGLING BROS & BARNUM & BAI LE.Vo ' CIRCUS Priced at only $70,000. Hur-Income Property lj'. Call 646-7171 L f 5 1 170 a t the °"'"""" <e>F11tno.BEWCEi TWO _BEAUTlEUl. ots or a e ANAHEIM " $43,900 [IJ li~lilllll sri~~~~~B~~f?~:,~ ------Fo:c;ff~f~;~GH; - ---& frplc. C6vington,JluilL On-Plen~I-' call &12-567~. C'XI :~33 -TMMACULATE ---1y S-yrSOld.-1riVesr:-ncefb; ·kl·t-lai-n1 youl' ~Wke1s. 'N°'1.h . -MONTEGO---inol'e--tlUC sti811·w-,..wtia-t-00 ---- -_ ---1~·o'Un1.Y. lQIJ rt~-.: __ .m!J!IJ}£r-ia 4 Br, family nn, formal dln-you propase. ~ean View lot f:t.10·11:!0.J ing, creative decor . Priced Sparling Investment Beautiful North C'rxl Laguna __ _:*c__:*c__:*c_ _ _:;'•:r redut'ed for immediate sale. Corp. 833-3544 Beach; plans avail $44,750. MACHINE SHOP Harbor View Homes 10 UNITS Commerei•I Bldg. s;te ' • · 160' N C Snnl(' c11slon1ers, 17 yrars. Reatty antast1c . st H11')' u ........n el 833-01ll(I $130 000 l .. 'l!!:una Bch. G('n('ratcis .. uns ilscl!, ~""'' h p. ' !;Orl1l' income, suitable for ~10llC'.V makl'r, 1'C'rn1s 10 Privacy v.•lth C'!egance. OH! \Vhat a pleasw·e to sho1\:-: Newport 11 NICE COSTA MESA suit. Tire'\! O\\"ller v.·ill ff,· BIG 5 Harbor View Jlomes, l'l'~taurant, offif'c bldg, ru·t n;int·f•. niove ln for schOol. spacious AREA i:alleriC's, {-'\(". S:.'25.000. ED P.JDDLE RE,\LTY This home feah1res a large front li ving rocnn 1\'ilh a cha1·n1ing French alcove & niassive rock fireplace. ThC' s reirsaver kit che n & gracious fainily area are Fairview 646-8811 !an1. hon1e featuring 5 bdr, fn CQme SIG.O:Kl. .'175 N, Cst !!Ivy., Laguna Bt·h 646-&i\Jl 3 ,ba, tam mi wl<l1 rcpl•'. 9','v"e~7J;[?'.' .. ~. "· 0 " 494-1001 494-7513 f111'tKlly \\'et ... bar. eatin" --~""'==" ~~=~~, .. M.:.._ __ , 1 Sl\I ,\LL antique sho p , , "' "-~f)e<'ia_l_iz\ng in ~-:a 1· I y : : an'a in au eloc. bit-in kit. * • U~tTS * -~~~--~~~-Anll'r1t'Ufl furniture & -+ separate formal din. rm. HAPPY TENANTS DREAM LOT N.B. primili\'<'s, locatNI in hcav- 3 ear garage. r-;pt lease land OCEAN BREEZES l:iAVB you dream<'d o! a Hy Lraffick<'Cf Cosln l\lesa located poolside. Enjoy thelO-~~~iO \•ie\v of !he spa~k~ing bl ue TINY PRICE $86,500. 64()..00'lQ. -C. F. Coles-hon1c nestled an1ong ta!l area. Rl'ply to Classified ad \\'Qrthy & Co. RIVIE$110,0DO ln•cs \\'here you can l'Utdl No. 918 Daily Pilot, P.O. pool from your d1n1ng room table or your patio lounge. You can afford this one. It's You will feel ea.Im. cool & 2 bdrm., 2 ba. plus den, comfortable in this gracious Lovely green carpeting and home. Give us a call, it's access to the adjoining 1nuch less than you think~ greenbelt 1ron1 patio of 8'12-93Il well-l.and.scaped back yarrl. * HERE IT ISJ * RA ~EA~ TY fi~h from your front TXJreh? Box LJ60 Cosla Mesa. 9'.£lG... True pride of ownership 149 Broad1-1ay, C.l\1. BuHd it nO\v on t':<clus.ivc abow1ds in these carefree 642-7007 64,S..5609 Eves g';f1rTY646~~ ~~'J'lj.f~ * ELECTRONIC ~ystems' apts., 1 short blk. to beach. * 38 UNITS* 1-elail & industrial sales ''°& Lg Rcallors, 400 E. 17th St, C/1.1 · II · E bl ' •-'! ~ e. sundeck, dbl. gar. + $l95 OOO insla alions. sta 1s ....... ~ 1-ear park in~. $71 500 . . ' \'IE\V .LQT Y<'arS. $25.0CKI \\'Ork in pr1)ti BONUS BABY You too can live in Irvine for only $32,500. BALBOA BAY, PROP \\ell l~ted tn Costa !o.lesa. SJ>tttacular 11anorama day or es.~. Tcrn1s. * 673-7420 * • Llg~ ~~ALTY ,;.,,NB. 1-B.500. 079-'.;1 >!. Holland Bus. Sales Sol Vista's largest model -4 big BQrms + 18' x 30' play room/family room . 3 Baths, service porch. J Bdrm 'v/Bath separate !or that extra privacy, 3 car garage. Plenty of roon1 for the cars & \l'Ork:shop. \Ile believe it's the largest home ln Huntington Beach area & the nicest area for the least amount! Call 842-9371 Vision-68xl10 LOT. '16'11 Corn1.\'a!I, 645-4170 or !)4()-0608 DOVER SHORES 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. 8('a(.'h t\e1vporl Bea(·h Nr. shoP- -Bed 4 J~==~*'=6~7=J.=7=3~00==~jc~==~~p~i"lt~-~O~w~no;'·;•~~~'-"~29~3'.o=:o~~\~·o~u~·1~1~1~1od~l~t~m~c~'"~'~lfi~-ed~ (ired hill REALTY A Company With Vision Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime, 552-7500 Oillce hours R AM to 8 PM a roo.m. Bath, Jlving room, dining roon1 & den. Super pool, Automatic gar. age, sprinklers & lighting. $139,00'.l. 1315 Santiago Dr., N.B. By O\vner, 645-8273. PrinC'ipa!s only. A-FRAME 3BR, Lots of chann & only a short 1valk lo beach, pools, tennis. Laguna Beach i''an1i.Jy rn1 . \\' noor to C't'il. $30,950 !cpl. A buy at $46,500. $47,500. ll'o«lrl you bcUeve 3 B<tnn. BAY BEAUTY CAYWOOD REALTY * 543-1290 * 1·)6 .Ba + 1~·, x 32' added Private community with -STEPS TD THE fa~1ly room .. That much security patrol, beach club d~sired large ranch style & prestige atmosphere. This OCEAN kttchen,1chaupboards &edcl"'T'h!s gigantic. Spanish-modern 2 story A-Fr-.mle 3 BR., 2 BA. -more n you ne . is .... ., ... h ho · the ltl 1 S·-•eck lk 1 -•-h home is in a lovely'.'""'" me~. u mae uuu ,\•; Ou1t>ut"t1C' 1 ree-shaded neighborhood in luxury hvmg. ~hly Pools, !ennis. $46.500 \\'ith the nic-est neighbors you de':'Orate<l, wth very pnvate 1 ...... ~*'-543-i&i.ii2~63~3i.i*~ ..... J • SWJmm!ng pool & 4 separate could ask for. 84Z-44;il bdnn. suites, makes this a N\VPT.-SHORES BEAUTY S'LEVEL discriminating. N\VLY. dee 4 bdnn, 3 ba., home f o r the fam. & rec room, Walk to BASEMENT HOME dl.:rlmlnaHog, beach, pool & teno;,, Ph. BASEMENT? Unusual, hut . $l07,00l 548-4971. Open Sun l-5. 309 it's true. Prestige 2 story ~ I Cedar SL, Nwpt. Bch. hon1c & 5 separate levels v'TOe~~ """iou,ty appointed. 4 REAL EST~]'~.. TRADE 130' ON Bdrn1, king size fam ily ti"\ Ii \VATERFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba. roon1, formal dining roon1 U.90 Glenneyre St. fam rm. Has pier & tloat. P~US I.hat huge basement 494-9473 5<19-0JlG $129,500. Con1m. lol In \1'llh fireplace -enough --· ~~----~~°" Balboa. $49,500. Newport roon1 for a pool table & ping BIG OCEAN VIEW Pier Realty. 673-2058. pong table at the same ... 2 Brlrrn. O\vn your own BLUFFS ti1ne. En,ioy 1hat cool ocean apt, close to shopping & breeze in that just perfect beach. Lge. htd. pool & By Ovnier, X plan: end unlt. area you have ahvays recreation area. Beautifully Next to tennis. Upgraded + \\'anted. Asking price i.~ !hr lndscpd. HUJTy on this one $64,900. 640-0926. lowest in the area. \VANT at $28,000. BLUFFS TO TAKE A LOO!<? Call ··o··-. ·, *-"--c PLAN, ovcrlooki"g Back now, 842-4431 ' ~ .••, ~~· " . ....,. . -~,.q Bay, 4 BR, 3 BA, $73,500, In vestments I _:::BIIT::..;~,-:c~:ec:~~°"v~o=wN='El=,- 494·5671 499.2100 Harbor View Home NE\V CONSTRUCfION -llEAUTll'UL location _ PALERMO. 4 Br, 21./a Ba, 700% DE'P. SOUTl-1 LAGUNA. 1 block 1nany extras. l1n1nac . .Lge e 48 UNITS -IK'X t lo to beach. Ne\vty remodeled Jot, cul-de-sac. 644-7230. Coming SOUTH OF HIG_H_W_A_Y Ch.-ii•·t· .1~1· Joi. l!on1eo .~ in· {,'0111P. s:..:1 .. ·100 rirn1 Call ()(·n!son ,\s~<1c. ti7'.:·7::11. LRf:. 2 s1u1y :.; Br, l11J1ne, sunilcek. J)a1i ... bui11 -ln~. 11r shop, Sc'h & hrh. H,11 0\1·11rr, $72 .. ·l{K). I 'r!. 'lnl.v h!5-IJ19. s11r l;LA!\S Hill's Be~1 \'u Ne\I' 4BR, 211h:ei, S..•p, <lining R111. 2:i Cttrnwli~riy Dr. By o"'ner • !f11ngin~ plants, large oli \'<' tr1·l' & n111nit•urcrl rlia<'hon· <Ira ln11'n Af'! lhl' e1llrance to 1his i\loclcl l-/on1c in niint 1,.'()ndi!lon. F••rn1:il ha l 1 opens 11i!o rhr lrirge 1vood JKinc·led Ji\·1111::: room \\'ith flnor 10 1·f11i!ng b r i ck 11 r•'pla ce. The pie· IUl'C--)}Z'l'!ty kilo'hrn 1vith hn,'ukf11st har n\'i'rlook~ l!!I 0\1'/l pt1110 lll'Cil fillrd ""'i!h shtulf· lo\'inI.( 11lan1s. The hlg, hii.: 4 lkd1vion1s hflVC' l~!~ o( (;l{iJICl ~P.1.CC, '£1.lc. si·p;u·a!l' U1'11 could he nn of· ri<'I' (Ir l;>ri;t• t;('11·in)o: 1uom. Prnfl'~sionnlly I F1nd ~t·;_1Pf'd ,1'111·d M'ts 11f! the lnrgl' '10 x Z'i spttrkHn~ pool, \\'alk In sho11p1n~ & golf 1vJursc. Full nrit'C' S:'.x.~r,o. \\'Ill t;1k~ you1· 1-lf)('.JE HJ TRADE . SEY~10UH lll::ALTY & IN· 01\·n1•r trnns ftrre<J. 3000 sq. fl. 111 p1'C'stigious area. Gour- n1ct kitchen, formal dining n;ion1, billiard sizNI fan1ily rooin \\"ith st't'Olld fireplacl', 4 spt1c•ious bedrooms. central air conditioning, immediate posst'ssion. ·n1c Real Estate ~'air. 53ti-2551. hospital -contract sale -2 THIS h I k 4 O~ d Bclnn, family rm, large BEACH ou...iex, hard to find . on1e 1as nown l " n. .. d ck '' 11/\PPY YEARS! Attrartlve e ~2 UNITS_ Constract sale e \V/ocean vie1I'. Guest Oceanaire 4 BR, 2 BA, + 3 Mon., Aug. +· b6PLEX-C1rn•·r Lo1 Xln1 L'Ond. :'{Jilt. 2!iA . .i. !lf'11· 71:\R, lBA, :ii)'! Poinsettia, open J-:!. REPD $750 DOWN VEST~l~:NT !ot47-1221 2 or 3 BR Tov.•nhou~e. hge run1pus roon1 1lhll' ~11r, SV.'ini pool . fcv.· lcfi,Jiurry! "'2Mzt THE LARGEST First P ioneer RHlty BEDROOMS *OPEN HOUSE *-IN TOWN :~o YORKStttH>: 3 BR I 00 1')11. LJ\tl B\·uu!Uul hon1e, i 11mplefely " 111 'lhS . ...,,,. ..... , lljl~l'Hdrd. }·irl•p!Ul.i', hl-lu E..'l:t"tllr.ttl Ofl('nln..'= for !'a!'jll'"IS, l'USIOlll dl'fl li(•s, Top S1•lt'Sl1'l('n ltuilt1n l{Ar·l\-Q. fllu." f'lfl,v• BALBOA BAY PROP. 11011~· 11 rtal 1x-au1y at only * 55~800 * 1 '"""' "v::-. tit'\' ~ nr. z R.1. ramuy 1'!11Ul:l$1Gfnfi1 rn· frrlr. roveml patio. ··-·-----~' ~ 1,1(11 3Zi2 iofich(¥a11. ''2 11 ( :"::i J 546·11Dl :.-lb--0.122. \\'kda)'11, &/IM" 6. t "'""""""""""""""""""" professional landscaping _ . J09'o {In. apt. $62,500 firm. By own('r, BR, 2 BA, great loc. en!cr thn1 eourtyaro into e '.'\ DUPLEXES -3 hlocks Call 4~1204· Woulrl con· 1,;673-5569:::;:;;;.,,_~~~~~~ I d sider summer rent11ls also. garden ccorated ho1,1se. near ocean BLUFFS Condo $60,000. 3 Br, \\'/4 Br or 3 Br + parent e 1 TRrPL.EX • to be ,built * OCEAN VIEW* 21,S Ba. Owner. Walk to ten· ~1v('r rrtl'('a,t. Outside .e~ hy ocean Huge, ocean view liv. rm. I "n~l;•~c~lb~·-•~·t<).°"'!~!)00""----­JOYlJ'S!)~ for_ .Bll w/2 patios, 4-P.LE..."( -onl;r. 3 block.!! fl'Q1'9 wj!rpl~din area. 2 B~ den _ µuple~es .near. thCJ>Ct'Jl~ ga~ 11rcP1 t. 1 ·~tuuly ... lr&1J: ·ocenn --TtC:duCSI l.'"i00o ror + ~·gutst' rm. -;,vfw carp. Mfres t:tirson, mifffiF 1·hil<lrc11 '11 play area, on lite quick sale -01vncr lenvtng 1hruOtJt. Central k i t • •673-856.'l• cul.de-sue lot. ShOrl stroll ro .!Jtnle. v..·/ran,R;e oven. dlshwshr. ht'Ht'h, iutrk. sch oo 1 s . 16 UNITS -\VU\ !H~ll on con-Sec this one! $53.500. BAYF'RONT • large beach, S17.SOO. 962·6.'HL Prine. ortly. tr;H'I, -10?:-dn. tllission Realty 49-1-0731 ~~:5':'r.,...tQ2~e space $206. * 4-PLEX * $28,200 . Huntington llarhour COND0-2 'br. 2 ba. on golf ~~~~~~~~~~ ~ BR. 21,,. ba. owocr 'IJ Ap1. -Vacant lot . , crs & tenn!g <'lub. View. 11·/fpl, ·10:!() sq. ft .. big yd. & 84z..66.16 11Y'/o dwn, $37,500. R.11-0038. !)8t10 + !ht't'<' 2-bdrrn. BEAUTinJLOce:an View Lot w1its. $85,000. Only $13,900 --GEM O<eanvlew Rl\y, 6734!500 1610 \V. \.oa.st liwy., N.B. Lake Forest RJ·;AL. TORS 642-4623 REPO!:iSESSfONS : 'r.r lnforr11arlon anri local Ion .,; u-'".(' f''l1i\ .fc VA homes, ( II II'! • KASADIAN 962-6644 R11nl Estate j .. -- , Thru Aug . Tues., ~•'---~•-• .... ·t r -••<'~ "'' t' ,-, {--~- Anaheim Convention Center FIND YOUR NAME AND WIN FREE CIRCUS PASSES Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets Two $6 Value Tickets ·For Operiing-Night · Tho DAILY Pl LOT mak11 II Hsy. Jy1t chick tht'Ollllhout the classified section for "ad s" ll1tln9 w inne r•' n.tme1. If you find your n•m• just call 642·5678, Ext. 333 lo make arrangements to pick up your tickets at any con- venient DAILY PILOT office. • h I , I 4 -~··· Monday, August 6, 1973 DAIL V PILOT 2:1 --~·-~~~,1 -farW I~ I _ ... _ l~I _ ...... I~ I -· .. -l~ I~"'-I~ [ Apst-... -J~[ Aport.-nbfar0ont j~1 ;;;;' _~ ... _ .•• ;;;;;l~;m;~1 •Y to LOln 240 HoU1e1 Furnished 300 Hou••• Unfurn. 305 Houlft Unfurn. 305 Duplexes Unrurn. 350 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt1 Offi ce Rentar 440 ~~:,_;_ ___ ....;:....; Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Lagun1 Beach Coit• Mna Newport Beach Costa MHa Huntington Beach PRESTIGE UP TO 90% 'nd TD Loans $175 . UUl Pd. l Br. Ocean- front Apr. VltJW. Deck. ICjjojjrojjjjnjj•jjjjdjjojjljjMjjjj•jjrjjjjjjjjjji ----"-"-'-.;;....;.;.. __ ,Newport Beach l..ARGE 2 Br. duplex. Newly $160 • 2 BB, 1 hlk bt>o.i:h, NE\V 2 Slory, 3 Br. 1 1 ~ Bn, 11 VILLA YORBA OFFICES redec., curp, drpi;, dahwhr, l:Ja.lbo:t. New crpt.s & Redec. frplc, gar, 381,..B 161h Pl, l, 2 & J BR. Unfum, * 2, 3, 4 BR apts * Jo~ountain Va.11 ... y, Bf'nuti· lndry. lac. &. Car carport $350 • 3 BR, Watrrtront, Udo C.M. $~. 644-fi613 ""'.., Startin .. al $123. \lt blk to beach, yearly ful new building, grotmd S2SO -Uri! Pd. 1 Br. Victoria Beach. Olarming & Ntce! $350 • 3 BR, frp\c, garage, t t 0 C y1:11'CI, view. Winter rental. 'wes '" '1 range o.-NU-VIEW RENTALS 1-Chlld, no pet.s. $185 Mo+ Isle. 1''rplc, blt!ls, gar. D•na Point ~J v Refrig.-UTIL. INCL'D 67~ or 673-£370 t\onr, :1.000 ~llUilJ'l! f1,:t, deposit. MS-W, 54&-1858 $400 • Ntw Jrg 4 BR, hi>lc, 'll~ 'l'?_~~~f!.--101100 Villa Yorb1;t YEARLY. l to 4 BR. Ocean· \\1111 1H\'1rl1• fnlo .s1t11d!1·r El T gfll", dN"k, 1 blk beach! PANORAMIC OCEAN Vlf:\V /r..~_~ ~~~-tnr S.O. F"r.\-y ofh·amp) front and o!hers Call: of!iccs. !'ilt: J'l•;r !lquarc Sattler Mtg. Co. 67.1-4030 or 494-3248 2-2171 545-0611 LAGUNA fun farted oro NU-VIEW RENTALS Xtra lrg 3 Hr, less thm1 I yr _ 714/842-9622 _1~P~ro~pe~rt~y~H~ou~,~·~~64~2-~"851l~l f()()t, include!! carpets, FOR le&M! nr Lake Foreitt 2 6734030 or 494.3248 old, 27' living rn1. Ul tn T OWNHOUSE NE\V 8 Unl 1, 2 b\k5 fm1l1 ~~;1~:r..~~~. t~.1!:~it-;ia~~~~ 'Ning l!arbor ai:_ea 21 yrs. re 11pon'1 b l1 ::'' a~ ult ! DON'T BORROW PermanCJ1t. $170. avtl now Sty Colotilal Style house.' 3 * PLUSH * kitchen . Spectacular \•le\v ol ., B f' I I I t ~ Bil., 2 ftlll ba, lg liv rm, Newport Crest 2 bt', 2 oo , 4~dk3a rug 1 · mo. 1>aLlos, continental bl'C'U.k· shag c11rpt. drps, D/\\I, Rentals ,-1.,.,.. ______ ..,,,,,.I II ht l · It $300 • r, i.rep llCi.l, PQO. pr \'11 c ocean. 2 Bt', l Ba, bilns, , I & Stovall (71•11 &i2-5440. ~IL YOU CALL USI c'7.94-8~11;;,0·;,--,..,,-~- 1TOw on your h0n1e eqully L~GUNITA 1·2 yr. lease, fot'. uny good purpose. Serv-view apt gate/beach turn b~ Lot> Angeles County ror by mvn<>r, 494-1437. ' U:l.Jplc, crpt, ~· garden luxury town home, Tennis, fast. Spacious grounds, nl'ur cathedral (.'l.'illngs, $200.. NEW O J-"F ICES kit w/cov patio, all bllns, jacuzzi, etc. $>175. Avail. Newport Be1ch !>hopping & fine beach. r·ur-S210. lease. 310 191.h St.. AIRJ'()fl.'r fncd/ldscpd yard PI a Y Sept, 1. 979-1633 d•n .... , Eves. nis.hetl 01· wifu1·nisht.'{l, front H.B. Call alt 6 pn1 ,f,i wknds, Room• 400 · I ·-a clo•• lo hoof ' ~· NEWPORT I·' d 2 B" .'\o ll'nst• 7'\·11'•. full ~· lVI•' ..... • "" SC 8 111 557-9378 Dave ~an • • • S:MO. Corona del J\lar, 536--0828 ---------.;.,; 2,;,~0!!!H!!,_t:CoJ~J_!~11:!"!;!~°'~--1.;::c_;"';j~';i''il':m;v.:-l drp 1 blk heh $\90 -'C=c""~~-~~--d1·ps. l'j)IS, lHU,.,I!', :Ill' ll1Ud., • ~. crp • s, · · 6-11-2611. ;;:2 S'fOllv n-1"• 2 g,. apt. ROOM'S $20 1vk up w/kit s:~n I mE BLUFFS mon, YTIY. Mature adlt. 1-vc ..,,, • k :1 I u11I. 5Jn.ik• o(f10..:1·-. ln1111 ov(·r 20 years and NOW in Lido Isle Or;ulge County~ ---------Deni Point NEW 3 Br, pool & yard. 675--0115. Country a tmosphere. tlunt. ~t~n a~~6 ~~ildrcr; i~J 11;·1 $!:/,';. rnQ. 5,IGNAL MORTGAGE CO. i7l41 550-0106 ·4.~ Campus Olive, N.B. 4 BR, 31.i Ba, den, Sept thru .June, $500. Lldo Is I e, 6T:r7667 maintenance custom crpts, LIKE NEW Harbour area. Range ine. · _ .wpor. \'1 " l',\l .IS.\llf·;s C£~1·1:.1~ 2 ~R. de!_wc. apt. down & drps. $575. per mo. 1st & YEARLY-2 ' Br., 2 Ba • 2 Br, 1 Ba $200. or l child -$Z25c. (213) CM. 548-975;,, 6'15~3!)(.7. ::u72 s. J·;. u1•1..;1o11 stairs. Avail 8-1(}.73 $200 mo. last & deposit. 644-1846 Ne\vpOrt Shores. 1 ~l blk to Pool nv. no11· 592-5733. ROOMS $20 \vk up 11·/kit S:lO N1•11-1)c11·i Be11ch ;J.'li-,1110 831~034 Ing , knd beach. Ava 9/15, $265. 6~3850 k c Nawport Beach ~ND Trust Deeds --'---~'--­ '1lfV,\'fE Jo'UNDS AVATL. \VINTER rental -4 br, 2 ba, A A doc·k, Ne1vport Island. Avail -vo • even s""' w s. ~~ '"'" * DOG RUNS* "'' 1Jp apfs. Childrn .~· po.~t \ tt.n1pu~·l1·vlra> ln1C'r,.,,., 11nnl Fount1ln V•lley NEWPORT Beach. Se 11 · 2 BR Townhouse, 117 ba, Spac 2 & 3 BR, Sl>l9 & $199. secti0!1• 2:J7~-Ne1~P?n Blvd., ------:....---1 $72,500. or lease $575 mo. DELUXE near new, frplc, nr b<-·h, pool, no Kids ok. Pool. !<:eel.son Ln. CT\.1. 548-97."I.), fi•l;r..\967. 4 BR, 1~ BA, tarn rm, nr Spac Condo, 3 BR, pool & 3 Br, clQSed gar, yearly. C'hlldren. pets. Yr lease (l blk \V. of Beach Blvd, oU SLEEPING rooni nu1turc schools, choice area. Lea~ yard n1aint. Cust crpts & --'"'=2oco31=88"-o=r...c.14=2c..-1co9.c14c.·_ $233. 543-3043', 557--8717 Slater) 842-3346. adults, $6:1. IX'r n1011th pi·(v. OCEAN VIEW :;:p;u·iou~. c:>.e\'. 11H1i•+• lt1 Un1(1r1 Bank Bid~. !"1•1\'l)Ol'I (1'!11\'I' 1\'/l'C'C1'pt. t• I'(• ii , p!1on .. St•!'\'h'('. X•·t'O" & 11~111 l1n1C' S"<"';-.'. '.lit'. i\h;l•111•1;1n<I. ti 1-l-[1 I IJ) ny mount Sc1H 15 to J une 16th, Phone * Call 675-4494 BKR. 711, 635-1350 $330. Avail Aug 1st. Call drps. 1st & last. $200. dcp. WALK TO BEACH en'.ranec & bath. 2135 Elden LOVELY 4BR, ba1i, outside 'Q.point.s. no penalllcs, free i::ho\.\·er, Bayfronl, \Vint<'r allJn'nisal, low rates, fast. !'(•ntal , 400 38th St. Investors TI1rlft 639-641 I. ..:..;=:o..:==='---- 846-2881 ask for Mfll'b.-Je or TI4:833-8635. ~ 1 & 2 Bn, Crpt/di'f>S, b\1-A1c, Apt l,_C,l\I. 82l-8042. WALK to water Bach unit Apartmenb for Rent 1-~ -_,. lns, gar. 308 16th. 536-5086 ROOJ\.lS $:J.i. & up. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car gar, all S145. Also, Balboa, Hunt \iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~·~jj ,'17,, br:s . 205 J5th. 960•1749 Ovcrlookini:: flarbor .s,._ bll.ns, fpl c swim pool, kJds Bch, plus 2 Br Mobile from ... .. . Ocean. 1'11 b!k lo ocean. 2500 Business Rental 445 919es, tTrust Deeds 260 P.UT YOUR MONEY TO WORK FOR YOU! f,.nm 10% interest 1.on \vcll- f"CUl'f'd Znd Trust Deeds on OranlZ'e r:ounty real estate, SIGNAL MORTGAGE f':O. (714) 556-0106 4.;clO Campus Dr., N.B. Hous1s Unfurn. 30S General ·133 \V, 19th St., Costa Mesa 18;>1 S. Coast l-l\l.'Y.. Laguna OK. Like new. Only $255. windo to beach. Agt. Fee. 3BR, bluns, closed gal'. Sca\'iE'\\', Cdill. c:..:=-.:.:::.:...cc.:::.:..::.:.. __ :; n10. No fee Agent 842--4421 .91o;""""'7""''-:----,--,-'""',-= 1A.p<.t;.;•:;.·.;.F..;u:.;r.;.n:;.· ___ ..;.3.o:;60 ON TEN ACRES redecorated, wlk to ocean, . ;;; -cl'pts, drps, 536--6155 1 B~. Full ba .. lg closet. pr1 Huntington 8Hch NE\VLY decorated, 4 Br. 2¥.a General Apts. furn./unfurn. Lease Sl45-$165 palio & ent. 3 hlks, fl'Onl ¥·~·. R-··-a-Ba. built-ins, frplc., 2 -------Fireplace I prlv, patios. I oc=-"""0"7.cC'=,--,.-,.,,-1 bch & bay. 645--66&'\. $200 UP. 3 & 4Br. No le ... bk>cks to heh, yoarly •Ao:/\, Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst LRG - 2 Br, l ~~ Ba stud10,1=-~=-:c7-~~='-~= ........, 'h BLK from bch, 3 Br 2 Ba, 1 a 1 · f Guest Home 41S •--·•-•. Othe-avail. 1n 543-1290 or 645-3319 9c.O Sea Lan, CdJ\.t 64"·261~ enc s gar. coupe, in ant '-'-l\U.l"!-1 ... Sundeck, garage. \Vintel'. OK pet $151 >'.J/ drng Cly. Call Dept of 3 BR 1 blk to beach pvt $:\00. ava Sept 8. 127 44th St. '(l.tacArthur nr Coast Jtv.'Y) &li-0~ s. · mo. PRIVATE ROOM Tran .s P ortation, pool 1 BestWestNcwporiad· 675--01TI foreldcrly,ambu l ato ry 213/6~:sl10 from 9 -3 dres'.s. $425. mo. lse. Family 8albo1 Penln1ul• Costa Mesa WALK TO BEACH persoi:. Nice, quit:'t , ~ur- \\'kday5. only. 493-5768 1 & 2 BR Crpt/•-bit.' roundmgs. Good. nutJ•1uous EXECUTIVE 4 BR, 2 BA -3 BDRM., family rm, 2 Ba, $35 WEEK & UP DELUXE . ......,.,,., tns, meals Brand new pre s t i g e ;j'rd house from park & • Sleeping Rooms APARTMENTS gar. 308 16th, 536-5086. . . Call 548-4i53 11cighborhood -upgraded playground. $425. 644-7124. • llou.sekeeplng Rooms Air· Cond . Frp\c's -3 S\.\·im-.SP~C. ~~ 1 hr, frplc, pr1 . VACANCY for elderl~~ lady ~~~!·:i~~ ~ilc~:nio~ Westminster • Ocean Vie-.v Apts ming Pools • Health Spa • i~5 P5~W~· H.ntg Harbor, in lie. Guest home. Good FOR LEASE N<•11· ~IO!'l'll \'I' orfl1· .. s 1vlll h1.· a1;1 il;1!1!l' u1 abotll ~ n1011t hs. Iden) lluntin~lun I~ t' a(' h Jo1:atio11 1n s!1oppi11i: l'Prttl'I', l"nr inforn1alion c111! .J c1·ry Gillespie ' Vill1;1~" Real Es!al" 962-2.tSG 01· F.ves. '.\iiS-29i·l NEWPORT BLVO.- FltONTAcr.: I~ COSTA ~fESA OF1''ICE 11!. $8.? -~til paid furn bach, full ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;·;;~I krt, 1d-enl for student o 1 962-4471-BALBOA INN Tennis Courts • Gym and · food served. 646-3391 a e -• 4 BR, 2 ba, covered patio, 105 Main Street Billiard Room. Huntington Harbour Summer Rental.$ 4 BR, 2 B~, $295. mo. Crpts, fncd yd, crpt, drps, bltins, 675-8740 I BR. lo'rom $150 d11is. all bllns, walk to $305. 892-18>13 l__BR 1 milo from beach 1 BR & Den From $190 K>Ol, -2-Cftl' -gaPege;--near • ,... · " -2, tiR-tronr$Zl.O -- 420 FOR rent or lease, b~nd 3 BR. 2 Ba, hse. 2 blocks nc_w_26..R._ Townh<luse, swun--oeean;--poor.--ttn~one nung pool ~ rec., c!~ to furn., 'trplc, 'patio, W10. P. ocean, Patio & vel1'. private, Fenton 673-2110 or 5'15-41'19. Must see to apprec1ate, call ""'-=""""'-=7-'7.'"---C collect, 213: :n2-442i aft \VORKING girl 21, \\'ants Al!raclh'f', rlctorn(l'rl, ;; roon1_11 u!fiecs Ot' sl!u·~·s. C&rp1.:1s, Jl'ap1•s, utU turn, nir cond., 1st Uoor, 1>lf'll1y ul pArkinK. !<'urn or u11f1.1r11. McNASH REAL TY 642-1334; eves. 641--65~­ EAST 17th STREET 1135 -TBr, Wlsfv, new crpt, all shopping. Glen Mar Hou1es Furn.. or Gas & water paid. $1.2Q mo. 2 BR Twnhses Fro $250 Trsct. 962-<;9"'· Unfurn. 310 213' 5"" 2977 MEDITERRANEAN >I BDRM, 1%.BA, bltns, shag Corona del M•r drps, ncru· heh. H_o-".•-•_o_s_F_u_r_n_i• .• h_od __ 3oo_ $29-:"1 -2 Rr, nsc in CdM w/ lovely yd, lrplc, gar. ' Successful General $190 • 3 Br, appl tum. gar, crpts, Ige yard. patio. 3 yrs General -"',;;.:,.___ VILLAGE / new. Kids OK Mile to•l;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j BLK to ocean, $rocl weekly or 7pn1 same to shr 2BR apt in Costa J\1esa Lo<;-:1 11011 1130 Sq . fl. \.\'ith nddilional 400 sq.-ft. of storai;c. ltf'ta1l & at.Ttoinnfive us<'s. \liLY. LO\\'ER DuPLEX,-2 bd, 2 ba., S.150. 320 Alvarado flace. N\\'Pt Bch 1!4lbo1 lst.nd LG~1 Bay fn1l 1-v/picr. Avail tram Aug. 5th S5CNl. v.·k. 454.-2433 or 755-9569. Cott• Meu 2 BR. Nice paHo. Lge. stone frpl.. bit-Ins. $3!) Mo., )'early leasi• * 673-i079 * Huntingto'!_. Be~~c~h--~ z BR, \.\'alk to '"ittcr: Also M.B. Bach, $100. 2 BR hl'OC, S'JS5. C.J\1 . $70. 2 BR, $150 61.ngles Families. Agt. Fee. ~2.115. Kaf Profit is attained when •'QU sell through re1:ult--get· I~ Daily Pilot Classified Mil:.!"Z-5678 CLASSIFIED HOURS Advt>rtisers ms.y place !h('ir ads by tcl<'phon<- '8:00 a,m. to 5:30 p.111. ' i\tonday thru Friday S to noon Saturday COSTA iltESA OFFICE ~~30 \\I. Bay 642-5678 ~E\VPORT BEACH Nev.rport Blvd. j 642-5678 SAN CLEJ\1Ei'iTE N. El Camino Heal 492-4420 ORTH COUN1Y in! free 540-1220 ~ CLASSIFIED DEADLINES dline for copy & kills :30 p.m, th<' day be- 1,ublicatlon, cxce11t Sunday & MondQy Uons when deadline _-Sa.turday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED ~"llEGULATIONS 1~RS: Advertisers 'lhbi.ifd c heck I heir ads !1IJl)y & report errors iJl:lmcdiatcly. T ll E D.&JLY Pll.O'I' l\ssu1nes .lb'lb1Uty tor 1 he first ln· f Insertion only. LLATIONS' kJlling an · ad be o n1Ake a record •Of KILL NUMBER itfftn you by your ad ~r as receipt or your :~U.tlon. This kill ·~hlr must be J>l'e4 :~ed. by the advertiser , . n~c of a dl~putc. 'l.CELLATION 0 R : REC'nON OF Nf~-W ' BEFORE RUNNING : ;· tY c(t,p.rt 'Js. fUO.d~!f! , or COr1·1-c'f a nC!W ..nu -hA!I been ord<'red, ' w (' cannot uu1u·an- to do !lo untll th(' nd ' appc6~ In the r. t•nctsd yd'for kids & pets. C1\U. 645-0111 LAGUNA BEACH OFF1CE $ll5 • Util pa.id, tum bach, at b(>ach, i<k'al for student $.lfi.i • 1 Br, stove, refrig, patio, ull1 pd, sg1s OK yrly. $~ . 0CT'311 vu, 2 BR, built· 111s, carp, drops, pet ok. $330 -J Br, 2 Ba home, work shop vu, consider singles. CAIL 494-9491 -* LANDLORDS * FH..El:: RENTAL SERVICE LANDLORDS! \\'e Specialize in Newport Beach • Corona del Mt.r e &: Laguna, Our Rental Ser- vice Is FREE to You! Try i~u·Vle\v! . NU-VIEW RENTALS 613-4030 or 494-l248 BRAND NEW Spacious three bedroom, tv.'O story homes. South of High\1.11.Y locations. Also hnve very sharp two bedroom apartment -steps to beach for only $285. Bkr. 6~72'l5 beach. 963-5657 or (213)f' • less-monthly.--2-Br,-patio,--2400-1-farbor-Blvd.,-C.M •. 532--0616 , CdM-3 BR, 2 ba., view. Furn. lndry, 642-1276. ("TI.4) 557-8020 $500 M ·; \ OPEN EVERYDAY 3BR, 2 BA. w/f!bn./dln nn Penin ~ Y~~ 2 ba U"' SML bachl apt furn. $ll5 mo. 1-lours: f'ri·Tues 1(}.6 combo, trplc, covr'd J?8tio, · · • • ,...,. UtU pd_ No cooking . \Ved. &. Thurs. l0..7 bltns, nr. Edinger & Spring-$.3751'.Io/yearly. _6"1>-5'--'"-110"------- dale_ $265. Ask tar Dale. Cost• M... EXCITING -NL-W ADULT 962-4471 LIVING ! Rent Your Own L EE RATES Condominium Apartm<>nt. ALONE on lot l Br hse, gar. OW W KL y C<>nslsjlng ot1!ACHELOR & Also-\.\'alk to water 2 Br, Executive Suites -1 BR units w/Lofts, trplc's. $165. View of Ocean 3 Br, 2080 Newport Blvd. bean1 ceil., patio & pool. $235. Agt. Fee. 5..'{6..-2.575. Costa Mesa Featuring: bllins & refrig. LOVELY 4 BR, 2 BA. avail Newport h•ct! 642·2611 Priced fron1. $160 to $225. 8-15. Lease $290. Near Util. Paid. Office open Dai- Beach. 962-88S1 968-6215. LOVELY 3 br, 1 ba, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S ly 4-S pm, \Vknds 10-4 pm. 3 BR. Sp1mish,-$250;--!J-Block.s baysbo_res home. 2_5..45 •. FRFREEEEJ.,Ultinlens•ti·,,., :i93 Han1ilton. 0.1. from ocean paintl'd in-CresMew. Pvt heh. Wtnler ..... 645-4411 or 642-8520 side/out. (A.lg 15) 892-8490 ~· Yrly $450 mo. : ~t~t~~ El Puerto Mesa '·';;v;;i;;";;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $XJO INTER designer home, : !Nun&'~~c:~esavail. 1 & 2 BR Apts., Unfurn. • 4 Br, 2 ha, sepr dln rm, • Pho Servi $130. & Up, 3 BR., 1%. be. ........... $350 lanai, pvt heh, gardener. ne ce All Utilities Paid 3 Bit., 2 be ............. $375 Yrly lse. Owner, 548-5lll6. $30 WEEK & UP Pool & Recreation 5 BR., 2% baths ....... .,$375 S•n Clem.nte e Studio & 1 BR Apts. Gara.g'e for rent 4 BR, 2~1 ba, bonus rm. $400 -"·-··· _;;,;;.;;;____ • TV & Mald Service Avail. 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. 4 BR, 2~ baths ••••••• , $425 2 BR. top cone!, 2 Ba. Only • Phone Service -Hid. Pool 2 BR, 2 be, den, A/C •• $275 Mature Adults. Barcelona. e Children &: Pet Section HARBOR GREENS 3 BR. 2 ba., den •••••• $455 $250. 492--4944. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM Furn. & Untui-n. Fr $130. 4 BR, ~ ba. a/c ...... $425 Condominiums 548-9755 or 645-3967 Bach, l, 2 & 3 BR's. Model!! 4 BR., .2 t.i:· ~ ........... $500 Unfvm. 320 1 ~-=(A'=d'="'good"-"'-'(=or'-"'15'-on""-ren~-'t)-Open 10 'td 7 pm. 2700 Vision -_..;;.;;.;..;~-----1 BDRM. crpt, drps, bit-ins, Peterson Way, Ct-.J. nr. Har- l Adu! $~= bor Blvd. & Adams. i:--a·guna lteach -~~esa. ~ l...)'nu.A-S .. LAGUNA estate living on BEACH Apts 1 & 2 Br. Furn, acres: of ma i n t a I n e rl [rpl, opposite Corona del REALONOMICS CORP, BROKERS 675-6700 gardens. Pool & spa. Ocean Mar state beach. Sec. gate. OFFICE on Ne\\'port Bh:il. views. Close to beach & By \Vk or ?.-lo. 833-1691. Avail on lease, partially shopping. Lge .. 2 BR., 2 ba. AVAIL Aug. 4 to Sept, 15, fw·n, curpted, air t•ond. apt. w/amenttles. Also, $275 \Vk Sleeps 8 Bay Vic\v parking, Approx. 1000 sq. studio apt., SU!5-~350 mo .. Apt. giij \V, Balboa Blvd. F't. $250 mo \V1u·chnU.'il' a.!so partially furn., incl. utll. NB. Avail. Ideal for CotHJ\\Ctor ~1ature adults. 494-4653 Or .7.0'==~~~~-,-~-:l48-21'i16 your broker NE\VPORT beachfront, sips · 9, \Va.sh/dryer, 40' v.•i ndow, l<\5 E. 181h St. C.i\I . $u[1 ab!C' BRAND new, deluxe 2 le_vel July 28--Aug. 11 833-8350. for sh)rc or ofc. 362 sq. ft, apt. few feet from beautiful ~°'•""'-'-,=.,-'~'-;-.,...-., $1001 • 1~9 ,q rt Cove Beach. 2 upstairs t.·IINl-block . from heh , 2 ino. •"! w , · · Bdrms, 2 full bas., bit ins, Br. \v/pallo. Aug. 4-11 & S265 nio. C.J.S. R EAL spac. decks. $425. Le9.iie. 18-25. Sept. 1-8 67?.-6390 ESTA'fE, 548-1168 497-1617 l BR Dupl. sips 4, 1 blk CUTE ADOBE HOUSE, 1000 1100 k sq. fl., adjoining husy cor-CONOO for lease, 2 BR, l ocean. per wee nc1-. for business or office ba, pool, new carpet, no August. G42-lZ72 u se. Cost a Mes a , pets, ma1ure adultS, So. 6'15-202()/642-6560 Laguna. $250. yrly. 494-0076 V1c•tion Rent•'• 425 -"''-"=='-"=----"TIIE FACTORY" has shopl'I Laguna Niguel MA?ifMOTH Lakes Condo, 1 avail. front $90 mo. In Can· CONDO, New. 2 BR, 2 BA, Br, fully eqped, pool, sauna, nery Village, 425 30th St .. on golf course. Tennis club \V~k. month. Call AM {714) N.B. 673-9606 or 642-8.i20. & beach. $295 mo. 831-06.38. :c•c.15-84"-'-'008"-.-~~--~" 1600 sq. ft. lNDUST. shop. Mes. Vord. Rentals to Sh•re 430 $2'l5. r\lso 600 sg. ft. oflic(' \1•/liv'g qtrs, $155. Ci\1. DL.'C 2 & 3 Br. 2 Ba. Encl FEMALE roommate wanted 646-2l30 $165 'R ta] Of to share large apt SHOP SI'ORAGE 1350 Sil 11, g3095ru-. M Aup. 1::;,,n 1034 c., \v/female & 7 yr old son. in rear nr. Npt Post Offie~·. Cost1 Mesa poo. ts, no pets, '-JU. r•~o370 126 t-.Ionte Vista, mngr. #5 .,_.. Bayshores I •ed h1•11 ~!c.~ JD~:·+ B!t. ":!r.1 'LA"°64<H;35.'l~R~G=·~",'-. ~l~b-,-. -tw~ln-bed.~. C'OP".NER lot. t.rg. 2 Br, frpl. 1 1 clubhouM. $245. 545-52'6 ideal for bachelors. S/pool. patio, crpts, appl, gard. ~ REALTY El Toro Adults SLS0-$160. 548-9633, 2 Bn, studio + patio, newly decorated, shag cpt, ps..ncll· ing, lg, quiet. Adults only. Jmmed. occupy. Nr Baker/Bristol. Manager 557-7766 ace vc. V'l<r" • Furn pvt room & bath, nr. Newport Beach OCC. $125. mo incl util. Aft Sl'i;i. Agf'n1. 616-2 n !. 4, 545-1504 lGOO sq ft IND U):)i. shop, THE NEW STRAIGIIT & square ntale, SZ'.!i. Also 300 sq fl offil't' ~AYWOOD APARTMENTS 43, has nice 2 BR house Oil $95. C.NI. 646-2430. m Newport Beach. ai:e E. 19th to share. Lady OK. Industrial Rental yrly l<>ase. 64~17(W) 1993 Olurch St. A Company With Vis.ion 2 I 450 ready, The sales office is 645-1457 Corona d1I Mar Univ. Park Cente'I", Irvine 3 BR, ba, community poo • NEAT -Spacious bacb, tum, Call Anytime, 552-7500 crpt drps, $250 mo, 23366 util included Near O.C.C. 1 BDRM, carport, pvt patio, JlC\V crpts, drps, all elec. Resp. adults only. No children or pets. $130. 548-1322 eves. open daily from 10 AM to ' · . . 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. HAVE furniture, v;ould hkc & San Joaquin Hills Road. to share 2 Br apl or hon1 e. * * *' William Moen • • • • • • • • • I Office hoW"!l 8 AM to 8 P?.J Via San Miguel, 537-7393 $150. per mon. 644-1846 • • • I;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;:::; Huntington S..ch wkends & eve. · 644-5555 Cali 831·2365 leave phone 26415 Paseo Carmel S an Juan Capistrano You are the 1·:1nn~r or Nl~AH. BEACH, deluxe 3 BR. I' FURN 2 br apt, pool, close to 21:: BA. !luge owner's unit YES, \VE HAVE RENTALS BEAUTIF1.JL surf side 3 br, shops, adults. No pets. no. RELISTED Back Bay area. . in n<:1v {'USton1 duplex, bean1 May Wt> be Of service J>OO\, tinshd patio, club priv. From $165. mo. 19 41 clni;. vie1v, patios, fple, nr in aolving $250. 536-3777 Pomona, Costa Mesa. 2 BR, carpt, drps, bit-ins, Call 548-8196 or 615-6676 or see 2?..46-A CMyun Dr. Rent $150 nlo. 1st & last + $100. deposit req. No pets. 2 Bdrms, shag, drapes, WANTED 2 stra1gh~ ma.Jes Lo stove, garage, Jg. patio. share tiew home, 1n Laguna Mature adults only. No pets Beach 833-9627 499-4290 :.! tickets 111 lh<' RINGLING BROS & BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS shopping, no pets, $425 nio. Your housing needs? 3 BR Townhouse, patio, pool, •NJCE 1 & 2 BR Trailers, $80 675-6900 enc_losed PJ"., fplc, 847-4074 & up. Mature adults. 133 E. or trucks. Avail Sept. 3 $175. SHARE Apt or House Save$$ eves & weekends. 16th St., 6-12-1265. 642-2267 Call HOME PARTNER ~~~ • • • • • • 1 Irvine 2 BDRM, infant OK. 2267 Ca-2 BR, carpt, drps, btlins, Call 645-6135 or 6/:r{;676 or see 590-B Joann. Rent $150 n10. 1st & last + $100. deposit req. No Pets. NEW 2 BR condo, walk to 836-1LIJ4 or 548-1479 11t, the Huntington Center, pool RMi\fATE to shr 3 Br. B.I. ANAHEIM D/\V, play area, laundry. \v/same, fml 22-25. $100 010. CONVENTION HARBOR \'ic1v H 111 s, nYon Dr, Costa Mesa, Apt spacious, 5 Br/den/lam 2 BDRMS., 114 ba. Shag, .B:,:•,o833=~=:::·c_ ___ ~-$225 mo. 968-7975. 675-7111, (::i.vai'l mid Aug.) CENTER nn, nn.-.1, S""Ctacular vu. cust. drapes; gas bit-ins, 1c 1""' ,.... "SINCE 1946" dishwshr·, pool. $ 2 2 o. BR. 1 studio, newly redec., Avn nfter Aug 15th. for utils $13()-$115 TOP of To1\'ers on bayfrontt,G:;•:;r.;:•:;!9::•;,•_;f:;o:_r_;R::.•::n::t:__::4=1 FOR OPENING NIGHT 1non. to mon. rental. $850. 1st Western Bank Bldg. ;===-217""-1 -~~----· * 644-66oo * per mon. 644-2359 Unlvemry Pllrk, Irvine San Ju•n Capistr•no I c~~"-==;:,..;:._ __ Eastslde Lrg 2 Br's w/w, hlfns, frig, pool $160. Deluxe 2 Br. 2 Ba. View of1~ AUGUST 13 ocean. newly m:lec. $600. GARAGE Please call 642-567S. ('\1 3J3 NI-.:\V G!enbroolc h 0 me, Days 552 .. 7000 Nights 1:.:;;.:.:..:;;;;;..;::.::i:.;;;;;;.;;;;.;._ l BR, furnisht>d. •$145. + •""""""""""'"""""""""l'BR l BA -1~ bl•--utilities. 2039 Wallace, c.a.t. Adlts/no pets. &t.?·9520/646-1816 mo. 645--0934. For storage only $25. to clain1 your ti<"kcts, '.Xorth SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 2 br 2135 Elden Ave, Apt. 1. C.f..t. Coun1y toll ltee nun1lx.'r is H.anbton model. 3 Br 2 Ba. '\ • • "'"'...,.., ....... (714) 84~11. $385. monlhly. Cls to· new LOVELY Walnut Sq, conOO. dswshr, refrig, pool, $200., unfurn $165. I~lr ba, pool. Office Rental 440 540-12'20.) Bullock!. So. Coast Plaza. nr. UCI & Schls. 3 br, 2 ba, 496-7916. 992 Carnation, C.M. 0Wtlf.>r w/w crpt, gar. ext ra1'T=o~w~n,cho-u-,.~F""u_r_n--.3=30 ATI'RACT. ruRN. 2 BR. $180. Blt-ln.s w/w, pool, adults, no pets, 642-91520. Huntington h1ch LARGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, enclosed Ask about our discount plan. * * 11 patio, carp/drps, J\C a r 1525 Placentia Ave , 54&-2682 PRESTIGE 2 ROOM ...... ..i..i..iiiii..Oiiiiiiiiii 675-0m !>1orage area, dshwshr, air • O.C.C. $185. per month. NEW duplex 3 Br. 21i) Ba. Exec. office. adj. Airpo.rter NOW LEASING 557--0350. $375 per mo. 1 blk to ocean Hotel. _ Full gla5s . view, Huntington Beach cond, + extras. 1 blk from H ti ,.... Be h LAftGE 3 BR., 2 ba., dbl. community pool, no pets. 1 un n •• on IC i::ar. \Valk to stores &. beach yr, lease, $275. 552-9549 ON the wah:!r, 3 BR $140 up. 2 BR; 3 Br., 2 Ba. or bay. 822 \V Balboa. (Z13) paneled \.\'alls, ~II util., un· NEW M-1 BACHELOR & 1 BR patios pl996ool,MabplltinAs, play ,,~_rard38iJ 47H78.1. ~~e:-1 ~~·kinf. tJi~e2 940 Sq. Ft. ,~ UP --~-boa~l BOYD, Realtors 675-5930 4 BR, 2 BA, crpls, drps, Townhouse, w/'!f)' t 3l p. f I • " ' e ve ..... trU· \VATERFRONT Apt -2 br, 8J3..3223' . ' ' . llnn11tton & Ncv.·l<1nrl rp c 11 priv. garages -2Z12 College No. 1 • , G-16-6032 newly _,,.,..,ai-•. $27, •. ~"-"=·~--~~-~ l:Xtns, air cond. Children & 714: 536--1950 SPAC. home, old Corona, a.11 t k $285 3BR 3 BA, Fan1 Rm, frplc, 8.'1-su.ro: M3..i429 · mo. Townhoute Unfurn. Divided bath & Jots o[ '"" '-"U ORANGE c -p 3 646-0697 or 833-0519 " 5 closet5. Rec. hall, pool & NEWLY DECORATED Util. pd., Slip Av a 11. l.?unty Air. Ott: '""'""'""""""""'"".,.""'I 2 Br w/gar, wtr pd. Call 673-2182 or 641r-8<19G man law !inn has interior NOW RENTING-.vrd, patio, $o150mo. avail 9/1, 673--0754 2 Bil hOUSl'. 500 Orchid. R.cct•ntly rt'dcc. Crpts, drp&, bltlns, $275 mo. Call Mullan Realty, J40.--2960 2 BR ho1ne, walk to water. Also 3 Ur, J Ba. Brlng kids. Agt. Fee. 979-8430 2 BR. Nice patio. Lge. stone frplc., bit-ins. $325 Month yrly, 673·7079/673-2222 a.gt. Co1t1 Mesa LEA.SJ<:. 4 BK, Mm. rm., 2 BA. Dbl. irar. FuUy tlpt'd, fireplace, patio, neat 'scap- \ng. Prilne p~ Need JSe'Ulcr<oc<»,A1JJDl f~~ .:;A11va11. ·pt. 1-.,. •J. a~~ or 642-12'0. 3 UR -plu11 lrg fanl rm, new <'1i>t, drps, freshly painted ln111de and oot, lrg fnced ynnl, ava approx. 8/8. $275. 547-6791 NEWLY det..'l)rated, &!mi dct.achcU 2BR. lba. JatoSJt, no pets, Childttn Ok, 623 H1t.mllto1r St. pool tables, sauna baths. ff ' ·1 · 11 btwn l & 5, 63'6-4120 o ice <1vru , 1n ne\\' a r . Lagun• Beach Gener1I Sec for yourself. 17301 2176-E Placentia Ave. $145. NEAR 1-IOAG HOSPITAL. suite. for economy minded LAGUNA NIGUEL Keelson Ln, (1 blk W. of Lge. 2 BR, 2 BA twnh&e, ;young attorney. $225 mo. $105 ~ Util Pd. l BR. Bltns, IMMAC. 3 bd. 2 bl'l. patio, Beach. 1 blk N. of Slater). LARGE 2 Br, $165. Drive by dish\Vshr. bit-ins. gar. 1'~urn/unfurn. All scrvlci!s M -l clll'p()rt, deck, nr. tllgh sch!. shag, blt·in!f quiet adults -S>li.-7848 787 W. \Vilson, to see Call Adults. $210 mo. 642-4387 avail. 833-3622 2-IOO sq. fl & up. $2'l!"> • Lrg Ocean vie1v. 2 BR be.by QI{, $260 per mo. Pb. 1 BR FU.rn Luxury Adult 673-8193 BAYFRONT w/priv br;:ac_h & C'ttt , SERVICE On San Dlr•$::o l·'11'Y· ok ,,...., ~-•== r ul,Jj Call 831·1600 apt. Pet . ,,....-u10 NB Garden Apt. AcroSB from 2 BR $155--stove, refrig, pier. t;iew 3 BR, 2 BA ,_ ..,,"JI Westcliff Building $285 • Oiarmlng 2 Br. So. Duplexff Furn. 345 Lake Park. $140/mo. 1035 cpt.s/drps, htd pool. Adults, mo. Yrly. 979-0631. 644-4510. Corner \Vcstcliff Drive & 4 DELUXE 01''£-'ICES Lagunaj .,bl pr, yard. 12th St. 536-74~7 after 5 &: no pets. 645-8965 MAGNlFICENT view 1,....,c lrvlne Blvd., N. w p 0 l' f Carpeted, Illuminated Ceil-NU V EW RENTALS B Ibo p 11.·eekepd.s -• " lngs. Plus 400' \Vn1'C f1oust: • 1 • enln1ul1 · EASTSIDE. 2 BR., carp, rooms 2 frplcs, 2 baths, Beach. 1t1r. Ho1vard Space. 1370 0 Lo<-an, CM 673-4030 or 494-3248 l BR Furn. 2.,_ blocks from drapes, blt-lns. Encl. gar. garagc.s. $450. Near stores & 65-6101. 644-2'l28 " CU>SE in, privacy; 3 BR PLUSH 2 & 3 bdrm, winter. heh, couplet only. See mgr. Adlts. $175. 646-1509. schools. 642.-6889. cNC:E,O,\"VP=zO;,.R=r-=Be-ac~h--A~;-rpo-rt I -~==------- home on street level. Lgc 114 E. Balboa. $24.5. & $289. 405 7th St H.B. 2 ~· crpt, cJrim:, bltlns, 1 Apti area, office space. 4x S<I. 4001 BIRCH, NB au wood Uv rm "'·hi beam .mo. 879-6991. '· BEACH Condo studio, lrplc, child ok. No pets. $J45. mo. ,-:urn. or Unfurn. 370 ft. Full service. 3CK>-3,000 sq. 2000, 2000, 3600 sq. ft. or con1- ce.Ulng &. prloelesa view. YEARLY call (213) 596-9479 eves. & 646-3786 or $45.-0760. ft. Mullan Realty, 540--2960 bo. thereof. Avail. 10 1 73. \Valk to shop, bus & beach lower 2 Bd 2 Ba $200 v.·ke.nds, Days (714) 956-7700 lBR. $140, partly fuml!!hed, Ba lboa Peninsula 3400 Irvine, Ne1vport Heuett l'vtr. Baun1gnrdnt·1-. :t-U-;,{J.1'.!. $32:5 mo. 6 to 9 pm. 499-3933. 320 Alvara~ Pl, N~. Bcb $130 FURNISHED 2 Br. carpol't, else to Hoag. Avail. OFFICE Space for n•nt. 1300 sq. ft. J\J.1 8Jl.:t('•· LRG 3 Br, on -cp.nyoni w/ Newport Be1ch Near Storts. tlcan i1nm('d . 642~9772 2 Bedroom, Bayview Lease, s1;, 1110, nr Ne~-port "'/front offic<'. !...:. rt•ar ocean vie\\', prlvary, btln". Realonornic!I, am. 61~~@ 2.BR J'riplelf:.,J'rod, air h~ On bcac11 nr Balboa plcr. l!!,.~.;.,..!> •. 11 ~nd\l'AY~..f .. ti.·!_., door. $1.SO n)O. 1793 \\l11t1i'.;!' ,frple; -dbl -pr,. .... tncd yrd, OCEANF'TlON1'. W1nte'r ren· Nawp'.ort BNch bJt.{ns, patioiliwi.r. $160 m o. , Clian,~<!Utc, Upsti.\1rl -o•., ol 1u1 "St:-;-~ta Mto~ Rlr.-'ln.~, children pet" ok Avail ~t. tal.. I.ower 2 Br. Nicely •• .,r. _,. ..... ,, 3 Adlts, no pets LOVELY of(•·-·., W. n--sl Du.ys. Ews. ll-1&.f'(,.'-I 1 $400 mo lease 494--6514 .,.,,, ......... O'iV • 673-6372 or 981 t9RS ._, -~ """"" • • ' • · furn. Avail Stpt. 1 5 · $35 & Up 1 BR., 2 BR & 2 BR d · -' J-{\.\·y, N.B. nn lse req .. drps, ~toraae 455 2 BR 2 w : near new l....1ne 646-2830. Bachelo'"'"color TV, mal<I • 1'h BA, cpts, rps, Costa Mou 1 11 1·1 k s·--x b't f vi ~ t'!I"' bllns. '\'atcr paid. Quiet, crp :t. 11 u l • pr g, ::>J. up 1. o ocean ew. w~ nm OCEANFRONT, ,vinter ttn· 8Crv, pool. The Mc~. 415 N, niature adults, ~-.4S-I806 Ph . SJS-:\425, S'fORAGE lot. lo~'k•'•i ~.i1·d Bot11s, trlrs, l'ii-~i ·~1 Ill" Nt-ill Nt'On, 101•., .'U-1-.: :i I. ce1l, cptt, drpa. blt-lr18, tal. lOWC"r 3 BR, $:t25. Upper Nev.-port Bl., N.B. ~9681 . PRE-VIE~ OPENING l;D"E'°S'°'K-,p-u-co~· -.-v-ru"°'Jn'°'h"'Je"""l50"'- Avall. now. $.100. 494--4291 2 ~ $250, Avail 9-15. l, 2. 3 BEDROOM & Lrg. ~?io~~~·g5~~~·:ri~~~ Award 1vinn1°' 1, 2 & 3 br n10. \VUl provide furniture L1gun• Niguel 6 bachelor, 1 BR l-ic>u$e, Sept. \Vestcliff, StS5, 673-1155. 11pta w/fltlllily nns. No at $5 mo. Answering 11ervtcc WINTER rent11I, ntcely furn l~June. ~8. lcMc. ~rifl', no J>Cts. From avallllble. 17S75 Beach Blvd. * lMMAC. 3 BR. 2 BA, air 3 & 4 br, 2 ha. tteps to heh. San Clementi 2 BR, ne,wly painted, crpts, just $17a. OUR JQ\VN Huntington Beach. 642-4321 cond., lea11t, $325. Avail I.Owcr $300 upper $350 drps, pr & faund. fac., no r~amily Apts, 1200 Adan1s W S F NB Sept 1st.~ Avail Sept Sib. 548--6918 ' OCEANFRONT bachelor 1•2 pets, older cple. 548-9735. Ave. <Adams at fairviewl, 1617 E TCLIF - 2 C09ta Mesa. Phone 556-019>. 1980, 912, 756 A 540 Sq. Fl. Lido Isle _1 br a.pts. pool, view. ComeJ NTCE lg. 1 br, $140. br, THE EXCITING Ample parking. Utll. Baum. Rentals Wanted 460 BRAND·new 4 Br twnhome1. Pool 8ide. Peta &: kidlf O.K Avail ~IJ:l. UL $295. Call --Holly, m.1633. Dupluot Unfurn. 350 l'edecoraled, util pd, m;. $156. W"tslde, 64S--U71 PA'M-ME' SA APTS. g•mner, 5<1->'.J32, BEST location, la• l bdrm, ---Sl.95-.--No Children or petar ~ ~ or 642-2890 " trplc, pvt patio, dbl aar Corona dot Mir 492-3015. -BACK BAY VIEW MINUTES TO Nl"T'. self. O.C. Airport locnt.lon, 682 "I· \V ANTED 2 13torh'IYHll hou.'1£' or dupll'll'., .1 rl' 11.t U It', r cspon slhlr ~1 r1.,, Refcrenet!"~ rt\111lnhJ,-~~,1s (o $173. C11.s!11 ~h·sa tlr Nt'Wport Bc&.:.-h &l;,...fi'ift l UNJ•'URN h"us" .. 1· •1ri. \\ /f1•11tcd .11\1 Ila\,. ri:•rs. lf'ili;•' rn·f. Nr1 l~~h/F.. c.~1. $'.!'.!• 1ua-; r11; '.'i~t \\'k dnY~ hrfnl'1' 11 :111»r ,; DAILY PILOT re.. ATTRAC. 4 Br.~ Ba. +bonus ca the rl"hl lo clas-N 1 t ~ IT' a rm. u crp !It, n ..... ., , , edit, ccnJior or re-patio. $275 mo. ( 2 3) any odvertlscmcnt, 243--~149 . t.o chan.11:ri ltt rate11 rcgulatlons ,,.i1ho1,1 t r notice. NICE Large 2 Br, house, lflU'l:lgC, !need ynrd. 2029 Walin.-.;, C.M. !)60. &16-7223 OLD Bt:uch l)tpe 2~ Br $14Q. Plus 3 Br, 11\na:I~. fam\llc11. AglF<e.91MQ> 3 BR home, frplc, garnge, lrg tot, 139 Roch<ltcr St, M~n or ll62fl00· w/opener $300 yr I y Ap U I ,,. t Bach, t & 2 BR. from $ISO ft., 2 yll!lar leaioe, furnilurc 642-0306 • • ' 2 BR l Ba w/w lbag cpt11 t. n urn. "1WI 2 BR. HEA ED POOL $:n:J. Ariults, No P.ts. ava. $m. month. 833-3747. N . t h ft upst-.il'll wiiv A deck, bit: Balbo1 lsl1nd ~fn•tnc, CzM. 548---1729 1561 i1eaa Dr. F'OR lettxc. 2 tidjoining ofc~. iwpor ac ins, Vu, $250/mO, 720 \1: ROOMY l Br aP.t. Con-(5 bl ks from Ne"'l)Ort Bl\-'d. I view & pii(g, Jlarrlett It art StNGI...ES OR Families 2 Br, Orchid, 67J...7011. ~100ERN 2 br. Well loc:alf!od. \'<'-nic nt to schls & iihop?ill)I 54&-9860 Rlty, 49-1-0500 $150. A190, 3 Br, walk to 2 Bn., l l,W ba., carp, dJ'Rll, GAi', sun deck. $295 yrly. $l :U mo, fncld utll, S4:2-:l240 * CASA VICTORIA• U:ALBOA Bay Club Area. Of· IX'ach. Aa:t. F"ec. 079-8430. refrig, stove. Ua~. $275, &'t1'rM37, eves/wk n d ~ VERY NIC~: I BR, $140. l .~ 2 BR. r~um & Unfurn. !ice desk 1,pa~c. store lront. CO~ 3BR 2BA :f/ilc ,....., Adu\ls, 6Th-0145 Eves. 673--8-184 No childl'C'n or pets. Cnrpcts, drapes, O/\V, TV 642·3333 or ~'U44 t..i • • . • "''" 8..17-'J517 VI · ("'--'-,-"-""-""-,-=-II~ lft. In WeftcU t. $'350+ 2 BR, refrlg, J1tove Coron• del Mir · Sn~1"at'1f~ft~~c,C~ 6'1~~~ Vacanclet COit mon.iy ! Re111 deposit 646-.2389 Lease $2i5. Mature Mulls. 2 Bit, Adults, no ~t.,. BAY · • · your house, apt., stor" 3 Bit, 2 ha & f&m rm. Avail 64()..0747 2.nR, 1 BA, 2 CMJ>Orta, b1Un1. ?lotF..AOO,\VS AP'TS, 387 W. Aey day ts ttte BESJ' DAY to bldr., etc. thru a Dally Pilot Sc-pt. Uie. bltnl, crpt/drp5 UJre to tnde7 our Trader'• pool. ncwl}' pnlnted &." Bay St., CM 64&-0073 run an NI! Don't de1!: . . ClusJOt'd Ad. Sell Idle Hems 4gs..14.~0 .(21.3) m-7·181 Paradise column it tor )'OU! crpt~. Call~ eva. CL.ASSl'F'!EO i•·~·· 642-5618 CAU. DAlLY Pt15 now! Call M2~!'1878 Now!·- Rt-:i.1 \f\LF~· 11·~1~·n~lblc 111arr!l'it 1111ir1J1• .\-I" t n~·l 1 u1· 2 Br hf111••" .. 1 •!UJ>I<'~, 1u:i ,,,. t:. :-111, .• it t~t. m . ;i.)7-i:tl.l -- W\N1'1''l 1 11\11111•'< ••r 1 Bdrm h~nnt• 2 t{lrl~ 1?11! ~~=~fi.11)...,_\.':t\-..~· --- ("].; 4 '11"1~1) 'fl.'dl Cf"ll ll~ ' ' . j • ., • • • • I ! ( I ' ' ' I ' • • ' ' -.i .,,... ... , 1"11,.U I -------- l[Il] I Oo;pll11WMl l[Il] \.;;I ;;;[> ... ;;;''-;;;:;l(Il]~IJ Ht lp Wont~ M & F 7IO Htlp Wonttd, M & F 710 Help Wonttd, M&F 710 Htlp Wanttd, M & F 710 Htlp Wanttd, M & F 110 Help Wanttd, M & F 718 lllll I...__• 11 '-' •_,[Il]I ltt!.ftss lfttl I 1a.-, .... Rentals W1nted 460 Lost SSS General Services -"-c...;;;..;._.;,...;...,,,;.;;.~_;,:; ------~~~- AfATUltE cpl noo:ls 3 or4 br & fan1 11u. Npt heh. l\fu:;,r be good area. To $400. 646--6.):'17 Person~& l~ Personals 530 DEEP 01·nnge i.hort halJ•, nt·Utl'ft'il 111uh• 1·at \1 /fie._ C'Ollar. Lo .. 1;1 17th of J1.u1e, Vic or Santa Ana Ave .• ~ l~th Sr. NB. Any 111(01·. fJ!t•asc call &12-1983 Re\\'ttl'd. HE\\'AHD -Yorki>hi1•e ll'r· ricr, bile gold~·n paws, 1·hp .. l'f'fi "hnrt, nt·1'd:I 1111, Vlc. Adtt.)HSI i\h1!11 St, llB. S\\'l.i\ThflNG l"ool R('pairlt, 1;;nrry1ov;ty$ ln11te1lled . Lie. & Hooded Cont1·uctor. 548-1024 aft 5 P~1. SAN CLE1\1ENTE AREA Paint'g -Plumb'g -Repail'5, l\1ob. Hius & Apts. 4~717, 6'16--0977. Hauling 536·32·l1 !\.COVING, Hauling, r•ftOF'. man, 50, quiet h11bits, \\IEJ)fi\RANER, F., 10 yrs. clean-ups. H. ea so na b I(' p/C'USll.lll pt<rsonolity "'ants old, 200 IJlk 19th St. C.\f g1:;_ rutes, !-'rce est i rn at c< s. (1u:u·tcrs in house, llpt roin-642-36 13 or Off. 6-12-3840 ask Collegr Students. ( 7 14 ) pltx or boat in l'X<'h<uJJ:e for roi· ~1argarct 83:?-7581 life duties. 6 ·16 -2 2 8 s' G'.~,,-r-R-ID-~O~,.-u~N~S-IG_ll_TL_Y 64&-2:"-;S.j, TRASH & DEBRIS. $12 }'ULL\' LICJ::NSED )~ LOAD. COLLEGF; sru. '* SPIRITUALIST '* ~nstructlon ~ J>ENT 5-18-&128 Spil'ilual readings 10 a111-10 ';••·--·~~~> '~10""\~'~l ~N~G~'~&o--~h-a_u_J ~;n-g ~f!J ·N':(~i~a~1~n!1 ~{~;f1 ~~ ~Schools & any1vhl'r<'. Furniture, misc. ACCOUNTING CLERK Pre-vlou11 11ccountlng el!per. desirable, but \\'ill lrn.in in· dl\'lrlual w/good number 11ptitude. 'l'ypi11g 50 w.p.1n. electric typc\\'riter & 10 key adder. Call F'or Appt. lndustrial Relations (7141 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach Equal Oppor. Employer Clemente. 192-9136 492-9034 ~1f~~i61ci, .. Bill & Skeeter, no I' c instructions S75 ---------AD TAKER/F /t ime P BLEM regnancy. .On· ---------"-'I GEN H.aul1ng. ·i~e/Shrub If you enjoy working \V/lbe fi<lent. s Y 111 Pa 1 he 1 it' BEGINNING Guitar le'~"'"·'·, ir· G & Yd I public & are looking for a P1-e,.,.,u111r.v oounSl'Jin<>. Abo!'· • """'' H11. ar c eanup. I CIRCULATION TRAINEE MALE OR FEMALE The Daily Pilot has a n opening in the cir- c ulation department for a beginner to man· ag·e a stnall district of boys and girls, d~ livering, collecting and selling newspapers. Full time, permanent positions with reg ular rais'es" and full fringes including personal use of comp any a uto. Apply in p e rson to Milan Leavitt, Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay Street, Costa Mesa. An Equal Opportunity Employer b ' "" n1y hon1c Day ,t: eve. p,., E'i 531 "'77 557 °!1(14 Job '"' advancement, '>Ve arc tion & adoptions ref. · · ......., • '"'Q • APCARE G·t2-4-l36 les.wn~. 6.J2-127R. SKJPLOADER & dump truck looli ing for you, !\tust be'/~~~~1!111!1!!1!!!!!11~~~~ n1a1t11·e & resp. Sales esper'.t:- PREGNA.i'iT? Th \ n king ivor~. bConck~te, oA!1sp711h0ail hclpf!1I. Co. b0ncfirs. ~Help Wanted, M & F 710 D R AJiTSJ\tAN, junJor-lnt. Shopping center developet'. -Newpo11 Beach. 7 1 4 : 64+6440, 8-51>m "'l-F. Dr's Assistant Young lady (1.8-28) to asshd In health spa. \Viii train. no exp. nee. Apply In person any alt or eve, 2930 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. 001\IESTJC He.Ip George Allen Byland Agency, 106-B E. 16th St., S.A. 547--0395 DONUT Shop, afternoon & n1orning shift, fen1ale age 2"~5. Apply in person. !\'Ir. Donut, 1rJ E. 17th St ., C.M . DRAPERY Tabler needed, steady \~·oi:k, 11111 train. S.1-1-Z248 DRIVER for nur&ery school, n1atu1-e, respon., even tempered. Clean driving ttt.'Ord. Please do not apply under 21 yrs old. App1'0x. 2 hrs per day. \Vknds 675-1694, Wkdys 548-2550. abortion? J-\no1v all 1he facts sawing, rea ing. o-.o-• 11·01'k1ng conds. Apply 111,1'"-"''-':.::;c;,;°"°"':..;:c.;..,:.c~ first! Call Ll.f'E LlNE·2·1 I Services and Re.w... ]~ 32" FURNITURE Van for person, Pennysaver, 15-15 BABYSITTER, I i v e _i n, CLEANING Lady, Exp'd & DRIVER ll~ht :vehicle, CM hrs, 541-5522. ......... local furn hauls & gen·1 Newpo11 Blvd., CM. Mission Viejo area. Phone Particular, $2.50 hr. Hun· 11:rea. Semi-retired or re- food St'rvitt DIET AID 1 full tinlf', 1 pru1. time. ex· peri<>nt'('CI. AJljtll, r· O O d service Supervisor. Must be 11ble to \)'Ork weekends, ex- p er I enc ed. Pacifica Hospltlll, 18792 Delav;al'e, HB. 842-0611, ext 235 FOOD service worker, ex- perienced preterr~d . Rota.ting schedule. Good employe benefits, Cosltl Mesa l\temorlal Hospital, 301 Victoria, Costa Mesa FRY COOK P/Lln1e. Di~·k Oiurche51 Rest· aurant, 2698 Nt'wport Blvd., Costa Mesn. FULL Ti111e & Part Time Typeseners needed for locttl newspaper, Night shift only, l\'ill train. Call 831-2121 for further in!oromtion .. *GARDENER* Be your own Boss 1'Ull or p/titne in your O\vn area. 1-ligh inconH•. Guaranteed Customers No Ca1h Down Eai-n Now, Pay Luter 968-0812 LADIE'S July ~pccial 1 yr _h_a_"_H~n·~·-"'~"-~186_2. ____ ADM. SECRETARY 'ii58ii6-i;2liii;84i; . .,..,..,..,..,..,., 1 lington Harbour a rea. tired ·pre.f. 540-3280 membership SJ. Ca ! 1 LOCAL n1ovlng & hauling by F p ·d Ge 'I ti• 846-397::1. EXPER. Bookkeeper & Girl 'PaMner' $ 3 6 -l 2 7 1 01· Babysitting studt>nl. Large truck. Reas. :.p. a.i ~fc n nec"J~1~~i~. BANK COCKTAlL ,vaitress. Exper, Fri~ay for. retail wear store, GARDENING Supel'visor, S<IS-1479 534-1846 or 673-0017. iv/good skills i nc 1 u ding attractive. 21-26 yrs. See Irvine Office. 833-3622 experienced, needed to \\'Ol'k ALCOHOLICS A11onyn1ous. BABYSITTrNG -in n1y C"LEANUPS, remove dirt, n1arh background. Salary to Here Are Chuck, 12-3 pn1 , at The EXPER.. Cashier & Desk, in the Irvine area. \Vritc Phone 5'12-7217 or \\Tile house, day or nigh!. loving tl'ees, ivy, drivc\vays. gl'ad-S625. Also Fee Jobs. Call White Horse I11n, 3295 f/tinle. Apply Gene's, 2300 P.O. Box Y, Altadena, Cu. l·IOUSEKEEPER -cook. for 7'l )'1', old alml-invalid 1voman. l\1ust drive. CaU 499-llM, Ram to 4pm, aft. 4 call 499-1~ HOUSEKEEPER -.Babyllit· ter needed, 8 10 5 daJJ,Y, start Aug . 20th. Must lo've chlldren. Have cCIJ'. Mature,, exp'd, rels req'd. 963-3178 HOUSEKEEPER, l.i11e-bt, l\Jol)-f'n. Monthly. Infomta- tion 4~J060: 645-Tll6 HOUSEKEEPER, Laguna Niguel, 2 da~ a wk. Salary. open. 49&-0958 INSURANCE SALES No exp nee., rurn \Vhile you learn, part t\ole, eves & \vknds, full tinie when quali. fied, .Farmers Insurance Group · Ed Lani * 540-1834 JNTERVJE\VING Shampoo girls & asst's. I.Jc. only - apply in person Tues-Sat. I-lair \Vest 3305 Npt Blvd NB lnven. Control Clrk ~ 2nd Shill \Vei:..1clitr Pcrsoimel Agency ]65I E. Edinger, S.A. (Mark Ill Center) 542·8836 P.O.Bos 1223, Costa Mesa. ('at·e, Jrg. fncd yd, 642-5299 ing. 847-WOO, Lie. 240182. Glol'ia Gray, 5 4 0-6 0 5 5 . The Jobs·. Newport Blvd., Ne\vport Harbor Blvd, c.i1. or call ZI3: 681-9683 JULI from J\fissouri or BAB\'SIITING in n1y horne 1-IAULING, Hte in 0 vi n g, Coastal Personnel Agency, Beach. GENERAL oUice, part tin1e anyone \Vho can contac1 her, prefer a,l{e 2 lo 4 yi·s. $25 garage & yard cleanups. 2790 Harbor Blvd, Ci'\1 COUNTER \\'Oman. Apply at ELECTRONICS tnornings. Posting. lite typ- ll{ON \VOH.f\.'ER, EXP'[)' OH:NAJ\lENTAL 1 Call Rudolpho; 642·5S38. \\'k. Cul-de-sac, 54S-2147. !':HR-3129 or 5-JS.-0405, ASSEi\IBLERS tt;1 \vork tern-l"os1e1· Freeze, 899 W. 19th ing, filing & etc. Esp. C bl I. A 1 Proof n... ... rators st Costa Mesa SENIOR preferred. 1599 Superior, 1\- LAGUNA 494-6376 I~ arpenter Housecleaning pornry assem Y 1ne. PP y -t""' .. · C M ti'"' •• 1•.... •.-.,,. a \\l.D. Adams Co. 630, \V. 17th Te.llers, TECH. WRITER 5, osta eSfl.V' 'V ·w 'W N'E\V, 1·en1odr1. 1ran1e & Carpet Cleaning 1 iisii1.ii. iiciiMii . .0546..,·~ii'ii"ii· ... .,..,..1 Secretaries Commercial GIRL Friday needed by sales nn>~Mk~a fini~h. srores. offices & Floor Care & Windows I' RIAN DATA manager of young & gl'OIV· IRYINE rD\,,)\Jl""tl,._ .. "°""" "'· C"''""' "'°'~· ASSEMBLERS OPENINGS IN• VA fog giftware ro. Pl"sa'" cc"'nrrc••rntl"'V L.Ht and found Lil·. Bl-191801. 962-1961 Dutch !\Iain!. Serv. 537-1508 VAR,IAN • T II MACHINES co-\vorkers & surroundings. .JU'11\..1....1.,.~"'C\..I 1_F::o::u=n=d==(l::r::•=•-•::d::s::):::;:5::5::0 Carpet Service HOUSECLE:ANING: fast, Newport Beach e er .Roon1 to advance. Sh 80., Aflt't' 5 PM By Appointment 1_ de~ndable· _g__ood_£.Q o k ---l Good typing_!!~J!l!i!l._17~-_CwWz:/..CUst SelV---$UK _ FND. Fml""lIOg m1sei1 IJl'ec{r JOMN'S Carpet & Upholst('ry :ers:-m°S9SS":·-~,__,__., ---UEE111s· ·REc;>UfREMENTS. --E-.;pc~ P/time ~t1~r,.nr-tm!' mint 00"'-\Vplnl shoul(I L1\'e near control Engr BSEE 10 SUK 1'·1ed sz. Blk back 11,/11•ht Ori Shampoo frre $(.'otcli-HOUSE OF CJ..EAN A g, pute; induslry •. has .an im-Laguna• Niguel, 831-1611. Sec'y Stat Typist to $1111 und<."rsid<' .. Sonic broii•n 2 g uard (Soil Retardants!. S1can1 Cal'pet cleaning, .,...·in-YOU A variety of ,. skills UNITED me~ate. opening 111 our 8:30-4:30. · Exec. &>cretarics IQ $700 coll~s. Vi c. Brookl!_urst & Degreasers & all color do\1•s & Doors, free esl. could qualify You for CALIFORNIA BANK publications dept for 8 Girl Friday $625 {..(>g~l &>c.'yl Gen'I ~ 1-tanltlton HB 963-l7i 7 brigh1eners &· 10 minufc 642-6824. these positions. We SR. TECH Fee Paid.,Gl'l'at job that fits .&;t'.Y 'R:-1::./Lcgal !2) to~ LADIES -Ring found in bleach for \\'hite carpets. Insurance VARIAN· DATA wou. Id ~prefer-individ· 309 f.1ain Street \\'RITER you. Lots of variety. \Vork Girl Fri Constr to $6:l) • O<'eantrom · sand b ct 1v n Save your monl'y by saving· '-----------1-iufilington Beacl1 -....--for pre~. 0f '"gi'i>1vin& Hnn.-Secretaries -'lo ~ - Ne1\'pQ1't & Balboa Pit·rs, f!'<'. es1ra lriP,s·. Will clean AUTO Ins. by the month. MA"'HINES uals with at least 6 ~·8811 \Ve offer 12 days a year Also F"re .Johs. Csi.IJ Elly Jr Drafts p('rson to $600 548-0078 living •:_in., chn1ng rni., _ & !\'Jany tickets, cancelled or V' months experience in vacation + a Christmas to Eliis ~ c 0 n tr 0 1 Eleclro-~·lech Tech $600 hall $1l Any rm SF" I Lo ba k sav' & E1.1ual Oppor. En1ployer New Y<"ars shutdown, 6 C,",~r Em•lo'y. A<>""'''Y, Dirtnphone. Typist to $600 PART She""erd -fcn1ale -·· · . · -.'1\1, unt er age. \Ver rates. Has ifany Openi••s '°' eie'"· • n , in.gs ''""""'""'""'""'""'""'""""''"'' " <-T ,, c""~ 1'"' couch $10 Chair $5 lo yt's r:Ao AJJO -~ ,. I 1· da= a year sick time, protit 3,~ Irvine Blvd, NB Cr&Collcc11ons to $600 has !an fff't . Vic. Victoria, · · · · ......,....., u·o •ne-ltan•·-a1 ass--·bl•i·s oa n or 1nance com· J~ ...,.., esp. ls 1vhat counts. oot ~oc.;=-------"" ._ ,_,.., ._ COOKS helper, 2 positions sharing, stock purchase, NCH. Proof Opr to $600 hr. Brookhurst, 2580 Santa 1ne1hod. I do "·ork myself. Maintenance on 1st & 2nd Shilts. pany; however, there part & full time immediate xln't n1edical coverage, a GRllL L"OOK f.ll'ch . Draflsn1un $58fi Ana Ave .. C.Jlil. Good ref. 531--0101. are ma n y related operung xint benclits. Apply credit union on the premises l\1on·Sat., 11 am -S pni, Ri.>cep/Typist $500 \I.HITE Sh h d f'LOAT Main. Paint, e-try. Requires 6 mo's exper. in ba k d k'll h Pa~· Lido Fl·-••p ~val-& oth-~nel•'ts. starting $'2.75 pe< h, r Xlnl CALL TRIS!! HOP"INS . ' ep ev'· Nor STEVE'sRugDoctor.Cai·1)(.'t l'<"""i•·s,d-.,'Otclc.l·4•Y, ... oncofthefollowingarcas. c groun s I st at '" _,.,..., .........,, "'""' l " l\falen1uite puppy. 1c; r. StC"ani Clean. free Est. ,~ •J ,, Id be b t 't t d <'S<.>ent Center, Newport advancement potential, cal JlJlRI \VHITTE~IORE 16th & Pearon -i-1.H. 646_78U. 645-3695 rsJX'r. 997-3464 e C t cou SU S I U e Beach Experience nlust include Del Taco at Orange County <ISS E. 17th St. {at Irvine I CM !l6!H734 p · 1. & omponen for actual bank ex· COO"S. 8 re a k 1as 1 & digital comput"r \\Titing. Airport. 979-4030. Suite 224 642 .. 1471 DiBERNARDO and SONS ain ing ' ~' . knowled"" of ha1'dv.·arc & 8/3 Male Gemi. Shep, Blk/ carpet sales, installation & Paperhan9in9 Prep perience. Rro1lcrma.n, dayshift. Botti software""Usro w/ntini com-GUARDS ~ v.·hite 1vilh fl ea collar. Vic. repairs. Free Est. 963-263.q e Soldering & WE OFFER·. 1~·/cxper. in lrg busy opera-puters desirable. Full & P/time Positions~ Ji\NITORIAL l\len, WOtn('" \\'estcliff. 646-5&fll ·contractor PAINTING, honest work, lion Chef Fred 6-14-1700 I 0_,1 ,·, Orange co L 0 n ... n-d k nd • ' · · · · ,,~ " ·· · Couples. Cleaning olfice1 Germ. Short hair pup, 10 ----------r~stu~~ g;a:rli:,o 8:9441.& Assembty of Fine starting salaries, COOK-Dish Up, day shift. Quahli~ applicants. please Be-ach: Laguna Niguel in La. p/tin1e e.ves· in Nev"port:. 'vks? \Varner & BoL'>a Chica JACK Tau!ane, rep a 1 1., PC boards 11·ill train, must be mature apply in ~1erson or contaet guna & Compton art·as for S.A. arras. l\lust have <'Sr&: 8/4. 8474359 rcinocl, add. Lie. B-1 269072. C & A PAINTERS an excellent ne\v hen-& reliable, Sp a g he t t i · · · J . Fu er qualified applieants who cle-phone. Appl y 123 N. Olive. SHORT haired Blk l-\i!tcn tify \!Jay co. 517-0036 iGG-9443 e Wirewrap efits program, pleas-Be n de r . 7 l ~. sire steady empk>yment. 18 Ornnge. l-6 pin. • w r"" co ar · = s. ~" . ~ r1veway s . wa rovct"u1g state e C bl' COOK EXPER in person, 326 So. Lemon .x:rry I ~ II & c-11 ~d ' D • PROF II . ant contemporary 213-592-2606. v DM Yrs. or age or older. Apply JANITOR p/l•'mc. ...hffi of July 642-1938 lie. no. , 27!151•1, insur., all a lftCJ \VOrking environment -St .. Anaheini. bct\\'ll 9 8111 & r'l'tired. No exper. neces!L FND. Beaul. young Orange * DRn1E\'i'A\' * lyJ)Cs of paper. 714: 8-12-4386 and opportunity for Beverly llfaoor Conv Hosp 1 l\lr. Scane or i 1r. \\'illiAn1!(. male caL Vic. El Rancho, SEAL COATIN(; . p,\INTfNG by Color f{ing .Join us ,f, share in: advancement. Call 837·8000 .. \J:.'Sterllng Sec:wity Scivi<·t' Silvcl'v•oods, 45 l"ashiod Blufls 644-0139 Af1 6 Pi\f F'Rf>..:E EST. 645-3-153 avg. Stucco $135, Trim $115, • Xln't Salaries COST OF LIVING-2722 M ichelson Or. An Equal Oppor. Employer Island. Nf'wpt. Center. \ Lost S55 Drafting 40 yrs. exp. !sensed. & • Extensive Em.ployt Please Apply In Person GO!i\JG up you can increase Irvine, Celifornia GUARD JANITORIAL, part It u l l gu;ir. 5.16-4039. Benefits 8:30 AM to 4:00 PM ineome $600 per mo. For Sl3-2400, ext. 336 tin1e, local, eves. Exp'~ D£S1GN/dra!t. plans home No \Vasting e Modern Facilities SSO Newport Center Dr. appoint, 540-0928 Positions 00\V available ftill ad\dts only. $2.40 h r . •GENEROUS• •REWARD• &.. con1ml. additions, gar· * "'ALLPAPER * h 1,·mc 0, ~rt "me LA & ~ •~ " Newport Beac , Calif. DAY cocktail waitress. Ap-Equal Oppor. E1nployer ..--u • l;i"iii~iii~ ... .,..,..,..,..,.-1 ages, 842-3400. \\'hen you call "Mac" Pleas.e Apply ply In person Love's B-B-Q, Orange County are a, Gardening 548·14.t4 eves. fn Person SECURITY 3046 Bristol , Costa Mesa. EXECUTIVES International City Security, J C =-~--Or ContaC't: J. fuUcr Inc. 827-2020 or 213-430-7548 • • * Creative Gardening * PAINTING * · • DELIVERY r.tan over 23 $12,000 to $7S,000 For local intc1viev.' ap- For return or any info1111a· It pays to cal! professionals. VDM PACIFIC needed in l-1.B., F.V., for Send resume or call TODAY pointmrnt. n. I d. 1 1 f "Put life in your garden & a J-;or ft"'e es!. ,..,,,,.,-,,. LA Times, auto route. 21 ~. for conf•'dential NO COST --"'~:;::"":;c:-"",.,-::::~= on ea ing o l"f' urn o a <V>og ,·n ''""' he,·••'I," ._ ~ HAlR Siyl•';Js \""""' YO\ll' O'>'-"n gold four leat clovct pin, E-· Cl Pf'O>' · 1 h 1 k Hrs. per morning. $200 + executive intervh•\,.. . Boo. 1'.'1-1 Salo · . ~.>;per. lnsh111an, canup, ' . pain er, ones v.·or ·, ""I' mo. 8-\7-8979 EXECUTIVE SERVICES, station. u 1 u n in approx. 2 inches in di1.1n1erer, J\fain t, Lan rl s 1, 3 Pi 11 go, 1'C'as. Jnt •est. frN' est. BANK ,.... S.JC 49" 1011 v•ith jeweJNI horseshoe in s · kl · 1 II··' -Pf'fs 54" 2759 "'2 ""ll DENTAL Assistant, o ra I INC. · · . .-· I I pnn · crs 10s a r"'U1rr.pu11·. • · · .,. ·""' ·.i.~ • · 2n2 Mi'cholson Dr. ooo N. 'la•·n, "-·ta ,\n" HEALTH Food Store desit<'s center; also. go d ockP! ",,,_10-,2. surgery & x-ray esp. Im· ........., " ~· " · 1 u ~ Pla•ter Pater, Repa1'r (7t 'I ·.""7-!l6"". "J""ri"'ll!'ed 111u111r<' \1·0111<111 111·as on rhain . ~ppros. 1<' ! --~~-~=~~--' • Ir vine, California n1ediaLe 0J)C'ning. .. "' ~ "' ~ size of a nickel. irr.;rrihl'd MOW & EDGE Equal opporTunuy employer s.i4~161 for roll tin1e 11'0rk. Pl1011t in scrip•, FLA. The!K' arc EXPERT & * f'ATCi-1 PLASTERING * 833-2400~ ext. 336 i\l!F' Factory ~1r. Keller, 544-7134. ,\II i)·-s F-es••·mates •.,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,I DE NTA L ReC<"ptionisl. I' H deeply 1.reasw-erl fan11ly DEPENDABLE C"aii s.l~'i Equal Oppor. Employer 1· Orthodontic practice. 1Workers Hospita 1ty ostess n1en1entos & the loss is ir-c II F p Boat Carpenter S ·c replaceable. PLEASE, a or rompt, Plumbing outstanding oppo11'un ity for J\.latw·e '>'-'On1en. Pern1anent erv1 e PLEASE help it you have Fre• Estimate. ----''------\Vilh Fiberglas.~ experience qualified person. To ~700. positions. Lile n1achine St Ts looking for \\"01lleJI lo 5••7197 LR s PLU ASSEMBLERS lo \vork on 37' Tra11•Jer ty""' Send resume to .C!assd. led general ftroductions \\'E'lcomc & intcTViC"ll' ne\v any infonna1ion ... 642-35..'19 -· · OTI i\IBING .. ~ d -1 D 1 p I Sal dv ----=:.:..:..::::... ____ IR mod I R · yachts. A_ No. "" . ai y 1 ot, e Prof I Shori'ng residents. es or a er-Eves. & weekenck. c 0 p TE 1 nd e es & epairs. \Vater ...,",." 0 1 r ' .\1 LE a scape heaters. disposals, furnaces, Electronics finn nff'ds es-Pacific Tra.,...·lf'l' Corp. P .O. 13ox .wuv. osta Mesa; e Di b "llty Pia tising exper. he P ul. lust SM. F. kitten. Org. \\'1\~·hil(' maint. serv. Comm'!, ind, rt h ashrs 642-6263 ~1/C & . 547-6908 Ca. 92626, Replies strictly .s• I n have car & typc1vri!C'r. faee dlest & paws Dk ~sid. Spr!nklrs. cleanup. s iv · • · • penenced assemblers fori-~~-'~-=-7----confidential. e Major Medical Plan 547.3095, E~s & v.'knds, • ' · · 64, ~~. BIA. Complete Plu1nbing production dept. f'ull time Boat Repairman spot in middle or forehC'ad, .........,.,,,, Sciv. DENTAL Recept.-SecN>tary. • Retirement P lan .846-~;;!IOOI~ • ...,.-,--,--,,--..,.,.,. "·hite flea collar. Vic. Ba.v p ~'E G _,_ ice. employm<"nt & excellent \Vaterhtmt expcr. pret'd. El 11 e G Lii , JA Ai'\~ a • ..,,,ner, ex-PLUMBING REPAIR benefits. Just 15 n1in. from Perm. F"ll Hine. 1fust have Toro area, a phases roup e HOTEL desk clerk. Lile & Ora""7t>, ovmer heart bro· ""r Cie"""P< •-rd scrv n1astered Sal•~ open I -• I t 5a1,~ + api C"'I ken. s46'-0G31 8/1 or 8!2 ··-· ""' · · -" · :'Jo job l.oo small Santa Ana. short hair & clean record. · -" • nsura,"' n1a n. • '" . .u ~.~~ •.. t nea1. free est. * * &42-3128 ** Blackie's Boat Yard, Nt'\v· Replies con ride n ti a 1, e Paid Holidays for app't. 673-8800 WST, i\iale Sia1nese. collar v-oVV!""' Call For Appt. ,,,_ 1 SJO-JlJO e p 'd y 1 s~Ess f d 1· Sewing/Alterati?ns 1 d ·a1 n 1 · , ~po~1~·•-=::::•~,·~·~· ------. a1 acat ons l-10 , • or ecnr11 1ni; \\'/bell & barrel on it . EXPER. Japanese Gart.lener. 11 uslJ·i e auons 1· D ENTAL ·E :-.. e.c u ti ye 1987 Placentia Ave, C.M. i:tore. Neat npp('11rancc. Either Big Canyon or Easf CIL·anup!', yard S<'l'\'. Relia. Ali e ati' ns-642 5845 (714) •• ,9401 BOOKKEEPER secretary. esp 1n office . 2'77-<IO. CaU 642-8020. Bluff area. 644-66:-:7. & neat. Ft:t.'C est. 6~2-4:~~-N ' 0 20 • ~pt-D,1·Tian1ic Orangf' Co u n t y ma.nagement, insurance, ac· F~MALE, to dr1~e Van, "'· accurate. years exp. ,,.,.,,, nee".• a bookk""J~•· ,. Sal pickup' & d. I • v,., r y HOUSEKEEPER to 11·o rk in GER~fAN Shep, blark ,...._ r11n. GARfJE!\I!\G _ CLEA.'llUP TELONIC "·' ..... ,... eoun 1ng. ary o Pen· " ,. · convalcsc<."nt hosp. Gd. \\"U-8 11105, broi\-n roilur, i·ic. IU·asonahle Price_ Free Est. Television Repair \\•i!'h full charge manufaetur. 646-2481. Warehouse ,,,,ork. t'ull tin1e, . Cal 642 24 19th/Pon1ona, Jnl. 1 ~··· • -11 ~,3 • I------'----'INDUSTRIES ing esperiehce. Please call -~D~-1-1 -A~~.-1--1--1 6:3P am -3:00 pm, non gcs +benefits. I • 10 64;:-r.~ alt 5. ---''--''-"--~,~~-~---COWR TV Repair, expert, J\Irs. i-lanson at ( 7 .1 4 l en a SSll an smokE'r, interviews 3-5, or apply 1445 Superior. NB Crontple•e Lav.'TI S: Gardening reasonable, most in home. Laguna Beach 82S-5Lil or send a Jell.el' 01· P/timc. exper. prcfd, Ex· Windo\v Design, 3737 Birch, "Weed it & Reap'' SCHNAt.:ZER, nutle, salt A: !'ervk'" llauJing & r~ree estimate, H.B .. N.B. & resun1c of experience to i\tr. pf!ncled duties opportu nities. N.B. From treasures to trnsb pr'pPl'r, rhln~lonl" {'Oll;ir, Cleanups. 54"1-0405 C.lll Bct1 Gallemore, l~E~q~oai~.,o~p~po~'·~E~n~1pl~o~y~e~<~I Greene, P.O. Box 207, Stan-f714) 962-66TI. Need a "Pad"'!' .Prace an ad! Turn them inlo cash 645-2219 bolll(', off 1 CC'; i Cai'( rn<'a ~°" A A I CALL O 'J P'lo 'lo\\' ·' Etl-e. ~,pert & CIL'O ""°"· on, 10 . "'1UOIJ, n DENTAL SS s t ant r"'-" ,. .. ,, ...,...., a1y ' I 7iS.119J. $100 RE'\rn111. ,., "'· -~"""-""=N~. ------AUTO RTS CHAIN E I ~turn"' E lo , _.. v-u-o11>•0· rll"pendable. Call ror prompt Tile PA . qua "'t'I"'' '" n1p yer Chn.irside E~p req. S4~mo. Hel Wanted M & F 710 Help W anted, M & F 710 LOST: \\'alt0t bloc sued" rn'f· t"St. John, :146-34·11.i. Seeking mature CaJ'1X'r·n1\nd-1 ~E~o~t~pl~o~ye~'-=~~---Call Mrs. Bu;hop, 644-2485. ·~~~piji;i;i~iii;' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij w/fringt'. vi{' S .. \. l!1v~·r CERAT\·llC TILE NE\V & cd indiViduals for ndvan('(!-BOOKKEEPING /' lnleresr-IJENTAL Assistant, trail l~f>~\'ARD! 51~::.G!J.I l..it11'1'.h•n1ng & (.'lran·Ui)S SS4 0657 rcn1odel. Ff'ee est. Sm. jobs ment in fa st gl'O\ving corn· ing position in health care Orthodontic office, exp only, I:O'ST Lab. ?\e;,1· (Jrnn~ · 11·elcon1e. 5.16-2426, 8.iS9 pa,ny, Apply Chccl<er Auto field for F/C Bookkreper ... 8-"'12-~77~7~J.~---,..,.""""-- & 191h. Re"·ard. Cnll General Services Pruts, 111 E. 191h St., Costa hn1ned. opening. Dcln1a DESIRE housewife for part G46-R3!~J i•1·e.-.. Top Soil l\tesa. 668264. Corp. 847-1515 ror nppt. thn~ eniployment in local MALE Sia n1esc. 1; 1nr,s 11lr! f:l .'l:P.JSf·I hauling: 'fard. * QUi\LITY * AVON SAYS BUSBOY · experience tc· FY. area. 962-fi648 \o·ic. \\'ilson &. Plac{·ntia. 2 iara~P. irfll'1'h.~. el1.1an-b"P. TOP SOIL n n-Your Own Bos s" <1uired -S2.25 per hour, plus -'--"-"""7~""""=~-l,•·rn••\'1• tr'('t·s. s h r u s . * i\rULCH & * Pe 1 . DISHWASHER sm. boys sad. YIX-i!~li I 5&>-6.'l30 gratuities. App y in person u11<;ieh1ly !rk~h & debris of Earn an income of your 0\\'11, daily b<."fore u am. Big Can· Must be neat & clean. Over ~·EJ\'I. Blk. Lah, in ~·[11~1n. a.JI 1y1M"·~. i (lay!' a \1·~k. Tutoring right in your own neighbor-Cl b 21. Dependable. Apply, Surf weari ng choke chain, Vit'. I F11~1. rt'l1:ilile, t'r11s. South ___ ..;::._______ hood. 8(' an AVON Repre-Y011 Cowitzy u • 1 Big & Sirloin, 5933 w. Coa!t E. \Vilson, C~I. 812 613-6647 c(J<JS! llauling. li7:l-90~. l.J"Ol\1E TEACHING -in need sentative. Call now: 540.7041, _C~•"n~)!O=n~°'=·-'-N"'.B~-----I II NB \\'Y.. . . MEN· WOMEN EXECUTIVES • MANAGERS 1 OK, 1 SK, ZSK, SOK SALARIES-NEGOTIABLE PENNEY CO. 24 Fashion Island Newport Beach !las Openings For Full & P art·Time BEAUTY OPERATOR & COFFEE HOUSE COOK E.\<'t'llt•n\ \\'Orking roods Outslandlng bcne!i!s Apply in Peroon JO A!ll-4 PM Equal oppor. employer J 1-----1 JOBS ··! MEN· WOMEN Skilled-Un1kllled Shipping Clerk ......... $.3 hr I Pit PainteNpra.y $2.50 hr E.'Cp. Radiator man ••••• o~ ·1 Auto Sander E'Xp $2.25 bi; Exp drapery shop .•• to $3 bl\ Injection Opr •••..••• $185 br I of long term professional AUTOMOTIVE-NEED one CLERICAL D -"'1SH""'w""AS'-"HE"'-R-.--r-u_l_f--& priv instructlon for' your professional new ca r p/t.ime. Mesa. Verde c.onv. child? Call 646-2721 betwn 4-salesman to round out sales Hosp, 661 Center St, CM 11 ~6~P~M.~~~~~~I lore<?. F"ll company ASSISTANT Call betwn 9am & 3pm. .Trader's Paradise A re You Unemployed Now -Are You See king A Change -Worried About Your Age - Tired of Broken Promises -Undecided As To A Proper Course of Aciion - ! ARE YOU UNDER PAID1 If Yoa Ce• Aoswor lit• Fotlowlll\I Cat-lft I• Tito A~h<o, We'd Ukt An Int.mow Wiiii Yoo Sales Desk Oerk . to $500 mo I I Laondry "'""'"' ... $.~26 hr Assembly Tmes .. to $1.90 , Shutter factory •.•.•• $2.25 1• benefits. Excellent potential 548-5585., tor b;g money. Contact Jack l--"'-""'--'"_•_• __ · II I ~ J<elley Tom Stamp Ford. Pertee offers permanent em· Draftsman (mec)l · $585 _ 't San Clemente. ploymeot, paid . vacatiO!lS lJkkpr ~onstr · to ~ BABYSITTER. ,,,Y'l\Omc t"' aft'1' .Ji months, • plos.""" 'Mll•keilng 5et'y .$600 lines times dollars ~-.... _ ·-11 ....... -.. i '1'lllli•llli• PA.U.f ~.\lt:l't & Lakj· Btsirlore Lots plus ?'J Trade for double w~~e mobile home. 613-2128 Small Trust Deed · + {.'ASll \Vant <"lr11n Cactlllac"" Con· tin••ntal. 4!fll.2770. lfAVE 21' 1973 FirebaJJ n1tr I\'J~\VPOn1' Bt.AOI home on 1 T. Dodge cbsssis, Tnul<· nr S\\ ap niy v.·atrr· JSllJI under wan-. 7400 nil. hrd shop I bt'-ad.,.hlip for \Viii trd eql)' Jor car or ~ 1'l'10 or (·111nPf'r, <.':iii: SG-37001586-5&'.17. • iii:l-27~1 • \\'IU4 trade cquJty.14t vfc1v C·I l'rri1i. S!X)l)I) I• yr ni>I lul. H.an<:ho La Cost.a on IS .-.:,.1 2J ~,. 1~1· h:i+ k. HJ·11r1 ,,r Job W1nttd, Molo 700 Cl·IF.:f cook 30 yt11 exp, hotels club11 & goorn1c1 t."OOklng. Coor1 µct & fnn11ly man. Elefon-11 AM 121:li M9-3l·IB Job W1nted, Female 702 NEED hcl\1 at home? We have &Ires, nur11es, b o u • ckpr8, rompanktn11;. Jiomema.kfrt U p j o b a , 547-6681 Jobi W onttd, M & F 704 COING 11.way fOf' a while? JfOnt'.!11 rcliabt4!, oou plc will h>wlclit or bou!Alt tor yuu. S.1 i'OOl &Jt 6 pm. Holp W1nted, M & F 710 IK1lc< toll cne. for lnl'Ome C0N t;1 i\li'i.n .. J2 "~l<l111I Ii" f.ll'OIJC'l1)' 10 JO unita. Or '!' 1y pf' un & 11'!11. S!IO,l'lfMl f11T' ~ l':\lf'll.. &W·Ll78. ~1111111· .;r 1~1 TU 1;1r .. 11tJ"1 AAA Accountant 'J. &.Lt)' Vldel:1 Tape RC!COrd· TH ,\OV. :'~Kl \/A /•n,l1•11:r;;v I 'ln roirp In tM~frd •rs. C.m1~. ct • $.1000 A I.ah f.:(11Jlp 1n lfl'/i'ltf n'"1rl. /, "'1111-, rir'1:~ • 112100) \&l\lit, tS7,000 oow.• fill' cnn1n1· l~1J1t •1r ~•II 1,1111 l.lt Hrlntl('r. Ai:cncy Tratlc for bOAI. t.f.lf f<Pt!ttwirirf. \JIJ ti'~ 4111 \~'M11erty J'lacf.' ....... ~.;. ........ ~ ... °"' ... '""' ... ".'··"•'•u•.•c•.•"' .. "•L ~~ 5 mo. old, M 0 n-f" r i , 1vcek paid time of! u~ Chrii.1· Gen ~er B}c:kpr $5.50 7:?.0am-5pm, own trans. m1~i;. company paid J1fc, hO!!· Keypunch to $565 Sta.rt Scpl 10. 615-6579 P~;"'·su1·.l(lca! 1ncdlcai nnd ~crctnrtc~ lo $650 den1nl benefit~. Excellent Personal Sec'y $700 Bunking Note Teller Experienced lnstallrncnt Loan Clerk Part Time working conditions 11nd 1'e1Jcr, pl ! S.l hr growth poft.'lltlal. TeUl'r, (It $500 Bntneh Secretary Typin~. S-H req'd, SOO\Jrlty .Pacific Na.fl Sank, Laguna lleAch •94--0T71 BARTENDERS Oyater &r mM. WUI t"ln. Apply ln pcnon, Hungry Tiger, 1.641 Sunflower, SA BOAT TOOLING MEN NEEDED IMMED. \Viii JICrform a variety of clerical dutil'S Jncll.Kllng typ- ing varioos reportll and maintaining dcpQrtment fiJcs Md n'<.'Ord!f. A major por. tion of the time will be ~nt on data proce«sing ihput and oU1put. Rtquil"l'5 exccllent clerleoJ cxpcrlen(:e. Apply or contact: 1714) 54().8340 PERTEC BUSINESS SYSTEMS 17112 Armstrong Avenue J\Jv~ l>P "XJ,,..riMl1''f.,..f In muk· Santa Ani:t, CaJH. l11g \\'-OOd plugll Kt 1111 pluuii_'!! <Tt11·11 r:. on Allon nt Ue<lhill of looll'!.~ for lllL' JJC'I'.' 3 hlkll N .ol MacArU1ur-Rcd· PMiflca ,,,,, l'tUI JntCl"llf'('!I01111 Tum r'"ht • Cont11 t • '8 Peclfica By Kipper (It Ann1rtrong). ~ "'· J7rl 1, !...~~'" ~111ll!ll 1.1n l>t1unl opport.unity ( fil'.i·\~~! !'n1plnyi>r m tf Sec'y, part-liml' $5 hr Exec. Secrt'tnry $700 Clerk Typ/stat $575 Brokerage Cashj~r to. $525 Mk1J\i $ec'y, no ~> IQJO exec Sec c..w lx:lcirntl IQJO Legal sec· . !650 NtWPORT Peroonnol Agency 133 Dover Dr., N.B. 642.WO TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642°5678 IF YOUR'. ANSWas ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU ;..,, Do you h•¥e 1tron9 ¥oc•tlon•I drlvt17 B. Do you hive 9ood n•tr.,.. intelli91nee 7 C. Do you feel tufflclentlv motiv•ted lo 1ch i1¥17 D. Do you hive th1 1bil:ly to m•li-• dethlo1117 E:. Are-yow r11dy tout • tt11i1tie c1r11r obj•cli~•1 f . If y~ll w1te convln~td +hit htlp w11 •~•il1b!1, wo11ld yo1,1 •ccept it without d•l•y7 YOU SHOULD KNOW e Tht b•tt•t job1 o1rt not 1dv•rti1o1G e Third perty p1of1i1ion1I influence i1 110m1tim•1 n1c••••rv e 61ttin9 th• rl9ht doo'• op•n, 11 th• rl9hf lt¥11 re• quire• tech11lq1,1e! e bec1,1flv1 po•ltion• •t• flllff #irou9ft 1x1c1ti~t In· tervl•w• e M.11• r11 um1 rnfllint. 11 not• tot1I •n•w•r EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC. May HoYO An Aoswor For Youl S111d R11um e Or C•ll Tocio1v -Foi- NO COST DICUTIYI INTl•YIEW EXECUTIVE SERVICES INCOU'OltATED 111 N, MAIN ST. -HOMI OP.•tCI -SANTA AN.A Securiiy l•nli-· lurldin9 -Su it• 702 PHONE: (714> 547-tUS Stenographer ..... to $52S · I ·· ·-,APEX ,, , ! , ' I EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 1 1810-C Newport Blvd. •' Cosla 11.fcsa G4f>...432() J ' JUNIOR S..\LESMAN/ l Earn $20·$40 per week 1 worklna-llft er school a '1 on Saturdll,)'1 gcUJ11a nc:er 1 customers for the OaiJ.>i i Pilot. Thi• ti not a pal)al • route and does not l11Clu j delivt1rlcs or coll~. , We hsve openings In C'Oeta • MllRll and South i.rummgfqin' 1 : Beach only. Apply nowt I 968-!'.1641 . ' t JR. SECRETARY I Flnt' locnt co. wlll tro.\n ,)I t~ng & sh llkllh1. S~µ 1 br ht beginner wl : typ niz " 3h skills. t I $525. Co. reimburses feb'. Af!IO fee Jobs. Cllll llclfn Muon, 540-«>55. Coa11lal Pcr1J0nn~l AgcllC)'. 2 7 9 O · Jfal'bor Bkrd. CM Tho Ia.stest draw in thu \'ltit. • .t1 Dally PIH?t Oa1t!et\ied I I -. Monday, Au9111l 6, 19'!} OAILY PILOT 2 5 .___ ..... _ .. -_ffiJ( -J[II] ~·-_, .... _J (Il] ( t--~...;..;;~--~~I l[Il]11:..I _._,_ .... ;;;;l[Il]~i + 1 I lflll ( __ .. !~! -I~ ;;;;;;;_...~, H•lo W•nted. M & F 710Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Holp W•nted, M&F 710 H•lp Wonted, M&F 710 Holp W1nted, M&F 71 0 Help Wantod, M .. F 710 Help Wantod, M & F 710 AntlquH 800 Furniture 110 MACHINISTS Top .pay & .liberal wage program. Paid health & dental insurance. 11 paid holidays a year. Long term security. Royal lnc1ustrles, a n1ajor manufacturer of nu· t lear ~·o.m'po~1ents , i.s no\v hiring experienced m~ch 1n1sts 1n lJ1e followi ng categories. All shifts. Jig Bore Machinist Profile Machinist NC Machinist Engine Lathe Machinist Grinder Machinist ID·OD Milling Machinist NURSE'S Aldcs -We are iJ1· creasing our slaJr & iw..<t.'<i (•xpcrlent'f.'d pt:-oplc. A I l shifts. Good bcncii!s & wage11. Aµply a.t l ·I 4 5 Superior Ave., N,B. NURSES Aides & Orck<rh~ll, full or p/titne. l!xpcl'. pref'd, hut not nee. Park Lido Conv, Hosp, '1 6 6 Fla~shi[I Hd, N.B. Nurses Aides- Orderlies Openings all shifts. Good starting \vagcs • >.!n 't hcn1·- fils. Trainees acl'cPlcd, ohl~·r 1vt>1nen prt-f'd. LVN Charge 11-7 shift. Relief J .. VN -AH shif1s. Bayvie-.1· Conv. Hospital [J.10-5690. NUltSES, ftN, par1 llrnc 11-7. Nurses Aides full lint<> ~ .. I part, 7-3 & 3-11. LVN, part !!me 7-3 & lJ-7. Mesa Verde ConvalCSl'l"nr Jlosp. ~ e ltEAL E&i'ATE SALES RN'S SAL>:S PERSONNEL SCRAM LETS T.:tp sulnry, Better wof'l11•11's TEMPO'S • \\'('a r expcr. hCC. Llllia,r1's DINI NG ~et, Drexel, ovs.I, Italian lrult,VOOO, &. server. 1.~ priet:' nt $650. 833-0933. :»l2 Soolhall Te r r a c e , Irvine OPENING FOR l«'lv or expcricnoed lit'<'nst'd Real t:s1a1c Salespeople. You r own private desk & phone, ~ \Valk-ins, fN'c n<h•C'ttl~ln~. Same \ocallon JS Yt'ari;. Call 101· inlcrviC\\', e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3928 or Eve. 673.-4577 South Coast Plaza, ~lfi.-O:lti9. ANSWERS SECRETARY: A chall"'"'"• o·ial·A·Job! SURGICAL FLOOR PEDS-EH. RELlEt' ICU-CCU 7an1.J:30pm l\tEO.SURG FL01\'f J.>QST J:>ARTU!'l'J NURSERY 3pm-U:30pm Jll)sition lor person 1vhQ llkes variety. Some pcrsonn.•l rxp. dt"s ire_d, S/11, ~!IOI Type )f,()l \VPl\f, S<ilary npcn. Compnny irl lr\'lni.• TntlustriaJ Coinplt';.;, F'or an- poinnnt'nl c al 1 5-J()-7G:-:.'i. Equal Opportun i t y E111ploycr SECRETARY Lachenmyer Rea ltor Labor & DELIVERY llpn1-7:30um Res pon sible Secrt>tnr·'1<d opening tor shar1J girl 1vith \Ve have i111n1cdia.li.i full !in1e good shorlhand, typi ng & 4 ~ openings Jor the above posi· y1-s. t'X!*r. full frlng" lions in our bu,<>y n1oclen1 l)('nrfil!I. Salary drpendcnt RED CARPET hospital. Xln't. benefits. Ap· upon qualilication. Cnll !\Ir. Realtors ply Pc rs on n e I depl Syh•est('J' £01· appl, S.10-2910 REAL ESTATE 9am-llam-lprn-3prn. l\.lon· or· 962·:,Mtl day thli.t Friday 1-"'-""-::..'.'-------SAL ES MANAGER Resale-Ofiice needs n1anagcr HUNTINGTON * SECRET ARY * Unllke -Power -Altar - Sponge -STUHCEON NfJ\\' o. ~ C . . Th~ reason 1vhy (·av11u· 1s l~nge 1J1111ty ~ 1n~>~I stJ <'Xpl'nsive: fl 's & y~ur·.~ P"1gr<'ss1ve .~· 1nnovat!1'c \\'Ork ff"lr STURC:E011\. f1'1npi11'a1y I I cl ti &>rvll'<' ----'dot's ll a~Hi11.' 'J'EMPO of· \VOULD the girl {Oia1u•1 1h:11 fl'rs n. tnl!y 11ntqu<-,f.: linie got a rompo Ket.vpic nn<I snv1ng 01,110nunirv tor skill-Patsyette doll from a s1·1J~r t!d • al t.hf' Rcgi.srer Anliryue Sflli• TYPISTS in l\tay, plea.sf' b11ng thl' BOOKKEEPERS doll~ back. They \\'l•rc not SECHE'J'AltY desk with 4' return, \\'ulnut finish. fm· n1aeulat1•! Al!!O 6' Couch. l\.Iake offer. 5-U-5W days; 496-T;,98 eves. * \IJ::LVET sofa & loveseat. Qucl'll Hide·a·bcd, only 4 ~ t)lr!. Also paintings. 1w1n bo'd". aree rug, 675-0869 FH.Uf1'\\'00D ovl\l tbl w/3 ]"aves, 6 ch;.1irs w/cane ha.cks, eiibinct. 644-0376. K EYPUNCH BEAUTIFUL l~JU1,; XIV 812 . SEC R~t:~R I ES <lini11~1'00n1 s<·t uu·t li tJ1air:t _G_a_r_•~g_•_S_•_l•------1 ~tid for. 545.236.'\. II ho 11·~1111 dtg111f1ed ,f, &-rniirlllc t11p Uuff<'l st•l'1'<'r. ~ R .· rz tt50 s!1rn 11la11ni::-. }l)ng or shor1 ltcspon<l 11" 1\lr, llu111· I G.I«:k '"11'"0' new 11-' -.;_,o· 1('rn1 ass1gnn1L'nts _ fciv h , PO Bo 6 .1 :.! Des . Dresser ~i . d;"'S, couple wt-eks or r.~1v Cp.re,'b' 1 -•~)~t·toox ' Couch $10, \Vork B_e nch $10. v .. arsn(, i-. • • ,., 1 B'OO •"' Tools 111011ths -you cleC'ide ! No11; • • {'r 1 in .'*"· . y111.1 t'an • . .. . . Appliances 802 1n1sc .• offers 111! so Id . Pers.onnel Department will be open for in4 ·· terv1ews 8 AM·6 f1M Mou-Fri. & 8·noon Sat. NURSES, P...N & LVN, (µII r part I in1e to work 'in a - rractiVt' con v i1 I c seen I hospital. Good 1vagcs & benefits. Ca.II 6'12-2410 Ask ror l\11'. Snyder or apply at 1445 Superior Ave., NB with 2 years of Real Estate I NT E RH<&~th~LU NI TY TO DEPT HEAD experience. Newport Beach area. Expanding company. 177i2 Beach Blvd Rapidly gi-011ing Orang(' Excellent opportunity for l.J:unLington Beach, Calif. County Co, is looking fnr APPL y BY PHONE ALr.10ST ne\\' (;fb.~-on 22· side '""'"'""o..::'"'=-------t APPLY BY PHONE hy·sid" rt•fi·iJ!. S:llG. GF: z·e· Jewelry 815 APPLY BY PHONE trig. SW. \\'ash"t" 18 !b ~l. =.:.....;._, _______ , Call Tl-:t.·lPO'f" {lffic<' ut $95. \\'shr 12 lb ~ilc s::.;;. e GENEROUS e ' Other intervie,ving times can be arranged , ROYAL INDUSTRIES 2040 E. Oyer Rd., (Redhill & Dyer) Santi'!I Ana, Ca. 540·3210 An Equal Opportunity Employer Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 NURSERY i FOREMAN pi·ofl•ssional growth. Apply "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I aggrc!;sive, (•11rerr n1indC>d in conridenC(', St>nd resume Sa1es Se<'. !\lust typl' 60+, short· 10 Classified ad no. 638, c/o hand 100+. Diversified Daily Pilot, P . 0. Box 1560, BUFFUMS duties. Co. pd benefits. Xlnt Costa l\·fesa, Cali[. 92626. advaneC'ment oppty. Sharp Laguna Hills junior Sec considered. Call. Apply or muil resume i\lon. day thru Sat. 7 ' an1·6 pin. TI'1·540·9172. 5'10-l·flll & Let us k1101v1 ~5-16-.::::026:::::'0... ______ _ 1vha1 your skills art•. No rRt:IGHT Damage Salf', 111'.'l'd to ronH.• in personally -\vashers dryct•s l'f't'.riii;s. uni11J 1ve hav0c the 'jt1st right' ne \\' ~·aii·anty.' Reh 1 t spo f?r yo_u. , 1vashe.rs. & dryers h'Onl Your t111.1e 1s vatua~le. £?on 1 1 ~!~39~.0~5~,~54~~~~07~'°0:..· ----. \\'USIC ti. Jnvcsl JI \\'ISC]y 11·ith T('nlpo at hi hourlY l\.l::Ni\.IORE \1'asher and rares $$ NEVER .A i--EE AT \Vh irlpool gAS dryer both for R.E. SALESMAN fnvei;1igate the new approach & lrlnova•ive n1arkellng tL·thniques of 1'1-/E GAL· LERY OF' l!Ol\fES. You will be glad you did: Call 96:l-5611 for appointment. Lil'enS('d or unlicensed v.·e 11·11\ train. 1'Ei\1PO SSO. 1Iaytag \Vasher $50. No'v intervie1•:ing at BuUums STARCREST OF 1'' d I' & Santa Ana. Through Friday CALIF Tempo Temporary Help ~72,c~~~'lis · guar. August 10th. lOlh & N. Main . •. . _ Qualified nien & .,.,·orncn full 3163 Redhill_. Cosra l\.11's.a TELEPHONE SALES Rent Washers/Dryers tlme, part lime & on call Corner Redhill & PaularuKl Pern1ant>nl or part tin1e $2. \Vk. Full maint. KELLY GIRL Thrr-e ycr>l: m i n i n1 u ni supc1viso;.yf cxperienc·c 111 .~hruhs Md on1an1ent al lrl'C production. Must be bi· \inguul (English/Spanish). t-:: .... 1·cllcnt satnry. benefit s and oppor1t111i!y for ad· MANAGER TRAINEE vancement. REAL ESTATE Ou1standing opportunity to posi1ions ~ work, n1ornings ,l!.c. CV<'S·l ---~*~°'~·'-=o''°"'°'-*'----1 e l\.fen & Boy's \Vear S~retarios $525·S7Z5 Guar. ,vages & co1nn1. For • \'ion1cn·s ,\ccess. Life Ins Girl to $~ details call: Building Materials 806 • \Vomens Ready-to-\Venr Payro!I to $650 LA TIMES • Lingerie Liz Reinders Agency 54Q..030l e Surplus. Building 11dvance to manu~crial posi· Ca lf Mrs, CaPece ~ SALES tlon in 30-60 days. Our cur· 979·6828 FREE LICENSE • RE\VARD • For return or any in· fo1mation leading to return of a gold four leal clover pin, approx'. 2 inches in diaineter, 11·ith j ewe I e d horseshoe in center; also, gold locket (v.•as on chain), approx. the si'le of a nickel, inscribl'd in script, 1'l...A. These are deeply treasured family mementos & the loss is irreplaceable. PLEASE. PLEASE help if you have any information -&12-3589 E\'es. & weekends. +Our cus1001rrs grt Ult! skilli1 1'<•n1 mn n ng c r s C'arn ING Lllf•y nl'NI, noc \Vhal's avtd\. S1000·$l511(1 nio. l\1u sl ht1vC' THE IRVINE TRAIN e Infants 4121 \Ves tcl'ly Pla<'e i\fATERIAL _ l<Y'.JO's of NE\V e Girls Ste 115, NB 833·8100 TYPIST, Sec'y to train a-; ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply. Miscellaneous 818 -ablr. \Vht>n you 're thi.' l('ad· door to door eanvassing ex. frt'I'.! l~laeement &:>rvie'C, e---1--.c+•~r in th~WJ'iU")(..hcJp -PCJ.~.--___ COMP-AJNl'Ylt--1'J:cc.......1'raiJUD.i:Jrog · fiCJd -you h1Jvc lo be bood. Call Mr. Nc1';1nan 979.5222 Eun1 11•hile you learn, Al • Cosn1e1ics _____ _p-~-~-~~-~-~E_lfi_[.i_j_~-i-~~-~-~~1 MTST opr. Del Webb s wood, alum sheeting; mold· TIRE" Shop . out o( business, ...a...Eoundat.ioJ.ts.~ 'VX'b _\\'PQrlel:.-filb.1700~_e,...:t. 'ing';-windows;~~---· ..... -r 100 tires + brake e Hair Stylists E '"'""y 533. SUR US v " ' ,, on1c in & n-·i::islt•r 10tlay in our n<."v olfiee l<X·1ltNJ in ' Nl>\.\.'f)Cll,'f Bl·ach by ihL· o.c. ·• _A!'rpon . .--.-Typists - " ' • Secretaries • Accaunting Clerks 1' • Receptionists • Lite Industrial Assemblers MANACER Pizza Rest. San Irvine Sloon t7141 832'·5440. REAL ESTAl'l'.. SALES Clcnicn!c, No exp. nee. Equal Opportunity Employo.· Over 21, 1narriecl, Top pay. SUCCESS CAREER " &JO-D:p~... :::::;::i:::::::::i::::: I Nev.• Qr experienced. jlin the \Vol'ld's· largest ·and· faste,lil ~M~1=1sr.-'-'"'"· _,,,,.. -NURSER-YMEN -"""•'"'"''•-orgaruttwon Hnn 's l\·t e n s Hairstyling with a network of over 300. Salon. 5-l&-917·1. .l\1inin1un1 I year nursery ex-offices and become a l\IATURE lady to i;it 3 chil· pt• 1· i e 11 c e ,. e q u j n.>d. member of our Millionaire rlt'C'n Tu C's. & Thurs. 9: 30-Pcrn1anc111 rositioti. l·:x. Club. Multi-million dollar :1:::0 Sl.2{! hr Pcrn1anent. cel!ent salary & benefii s. advertising program. Free :Y.15·~1~7 guaranteed licensing school. i\'l;\TURE v.·01nan to babys11, 111y home, •lays for my 2 t'h1ldn'n, 01\·11 I r n n s p, 91i~-fi(K)9 a!! 6 & 11·kC'nr\s Med. Front Ofc Cr\U.. MRS. CAPECr: E:oc:ceUent sales training. (714) 9i9-6828 \\/hat is yoor license \\'Ortll TH E IRVINE CO. to you? Check our monthly bonus progran1 v.·hich means COMPANY SS$ to you! Please call Virginia Jones 835-4811. e AltPrations Great opportun!ly for bank BUILDERS PL alignment macllinery lt NO APPNT NECESSARY cxpcr. secretary. Sh re<J'd . TOOL 2400 So. Main St., S.A. equip. Prefer to sell total lot. Interviews 10-4 Xln't salary & benefits. Mon thru Sat-J.0-.i.-1 _,•~7>-::._:556~-~''-----=~·1 Apply In Person Contact ?vlr. Gilber1 • TI4: 546·1032 NEW ORIENTAL RUG . An Equal Oppty E1n11loyer :For 'Appt. 547-7]9:1. DESIGN.ER ~ Furniture 81Q .Beautiful Bengali handmade -Bank of California vellow -&.. fvOry, IOX14'~ SiiJ'Bf: RED h .. -"I $1400 °-11 hol __ ,_ DO YOU WANT A JOB? Equal Oppor. Employer Leather c 11. 1 r , Reta1 s· . ~ w e:uln' OR SEC'Y . BKKPR LET'S TALK IF Nev""'" dining rm !able & $890. 615-3743. OO'YOU\V~1'ACAREER? Gro\ving Costa Mesa Co. 8 chairs. Pecan octagon AUTOMATIC Garage · floor A. career \\'Ith an Ini.crna-noo:ts sharp Cal Friday for • You are an exper tool cocktail tbl. 960-1780 or Opener. Reg. $200. Special Ilona! ~up of. companies. 1 gi rl office. Bookk~ping, n1aker ,1·ho is convinced hcl~-"".:~17~9~1~~~==~~ S\29.95. Installed w/5 yr. \VHO Of FE~S. . payroll typing shorthand has \\'hat il takes to succeed * COUCH ,i:i LOVESEA'r * guarantee. 893·3577. 2 1vk trng 1n Chicago exp. 642.sosO ' · as a tool designer. brand n('\v, both for $150. MOVING & STORAGE paid. $800. a 100. guaranrec ' • You are locked in 11•/your Usually home. ~·7'910 Lowest ratei;; in area 10 start, promotion b-ct.Sed on Secreta ry -Typ'ist present classification. -No NE\V Bentwood style dinette 963-4765 n1crit. excl fringe & rctlre· Part time. 4 hrs, 3 days 1vk. p!ac.e to ~· SC't. 2 ne'v bar stools. 1'.fust n1en1. Nr Orange Coun1y airport. • Its a b~g place & you arc sec, make offer. 646-l73S VIVIAN WOODARD COS. Tn1mN l iatc Plaef'n1cnt \\'i1!1 1 Orang<" Coun:y's Top f"irins Ft•<' NC'gn. Ncv.·por! J3t>a<·ll Irvine, CalUornia rloc:·1or 1~s 1nature inrHv. 10 handle busy fronl de~k & E:qual Oppor!unily llEAL BST ATE YOU 'RE TD BLAME fnr not succeeclini: \Vith Jlussc!l & Associates Real ~:,.;1nte. Eduealion by the l'X· elusive Russell Method. See our salf's executive library \\·ith the n1anagcr L. David ;.11 22311 Brookhur~I. !Tun· lington Beach 714-962-778.!_ ll.E. S.<\LESll1EN TO QUALIFY: Call 557-4281. computerized. l\otETICS 1h off sa1e, not all 21. ?r ove:,_ good rrf. am-SELL N a I u r a 1 FOOcl Need a "Pad"? Pl:.cc fill ad! items in stock. 831-0032 h111ous, 1~·1lllng to v.·ork, 011'1) Supplements & other Sh kl LET'S GET good car. , a ee 1401 Dove St. Newport Beach 833-1441 Employer p f' .i.: h Oil rd bookkc-epinf:. j "'""""""""";,,,;,,,..,..,..,,. 5sik1ry to $..'iOO. Also 1'\•c 2 OFFICE GIRLS Call for •ppt Pcod"<ts. 542-7077. TOGETHER IF GEO JACOVTDES SENIOR Steno & Clerk, part ,lol>s. Call K.iy \Vin s:, .I Bank of Calif. Bldg. ,, i,.. .................... ..... :,..10-GQ55, Coastal Personn!'I NEEDED Ai.cC'ncy, 2790 Harbor Blvd. Radio telephone dispatch (7141 557--8..160 lin1e, Nevvport Beach, caJl SALES b<twn 9 & s. 544-5644 KEYPUNCH I Ci\\ Mu.!t be 25, ;i.b!e lo drive J\tP.OJCAJ. &oe'y iv/previous Apply In Pi:rron ~ll)'s oUice c~{)l.'t'. Good YELLOW CAB CO. $1S5 Per Week Op!XJrtUnity. S~RVICE Stat~on Attendan_t. ca.1·n v.·hile learning. Can F ul~ & part hmc. ~pply tn '"Ou qualify showini.": elec· person, 990 E. Coast Hv.'Y .. irolux floor care equipment. Newport Beach. I ' OPERATOR trping s 11 e e d cs.~ntiaJ.1 ,..1~86ii.iE~.~l~6~th~,~C~o~'~'ai.iiM~<~'~aiii 213··121·8929. Long B. r.tEDICAL .transcriptionist· ORDER DEPT CLERK trnnl olficc girl for x-ray of· Manufacturer of the <'.'.:Citing f1tl', in ]\fission Viejo. Poly-Optica.!s & hohhy kits \\'hv not 1vork in the hottest Bt;a<'h/Fountain Valley. Lfot us train you~ Call Phil J\fcNan1et•, V I LL AC E REAL ESTATE. ~7 Gtn1ra11tce of pay \vhcUter SERV·ICE Sta. Graveyard you sell or not. Oppor. for Shift 10-7 am, Must be neat $12,000 or above, after you & exper. Apply 3190 Harbor have learned. Rapid ad.1,.-B~l~V<~t.~, ~C~.•~·~· ~~---­vanceme~t to management. 2 SERV1CE Station Attend. Ca!l 542-5479. Pttirne. Llte n1ech exper. SALES -Door to Door. \Ve Apply Laguna Chevron, 604 need 6 producers no\\'. _So. Coast Hwy, Lag. Bch. (;uarantee + commis~lon. SEWING .A>lachine operators Stu~ents v.·elcome. Silv,er Exp'd or qualified traine('S. Springs \yater. 96'1 No. Top Drawer Swimwear j I SWING SHIFT 4 PM . 12:30 49~700. has an imnicd. opening for 1'.1 l::DlC L a sharp aggN:'ssivr v.·on1an C' an• !;t!ekins:: an ('xpcr- l1·net'd Tab Puni:h Vrriflrr. Applirants l'XJ)('rl<'llC'l'd on 1 th(' lB?.t 129 and Unlv:t(' 1701/1710 equipmC'n! arr eligible to ~ train<'<!. l A Asst. -Urol~. in our sales order dept. Ae· hack office. Limited X-Ray cur. typing & a pleasant in~urance. :>48-2247. phone personality a n1ust. If MOTEL MAID you're a self starting, peo- NC'\1"f)[)rt Tr11v-cl Lodgl' pie oriented individual .,.,,ho RECEPTIONIST TYPIST OJJC'ra(e electronlc S\vit<'h· boarrl. AcC'urale typist. 1'.f in GO \l'.p.rn, electric type. llTi1t•1·. Batava1a, Or ange, PLl..:ASE C,\LL LA UH.A ~TcCOY fTI4 ) 547.7571 ext m 64:1·t!252 can hendle a varicly o( of· fire duties including h<'avy l\.-IOTEL n1fliri work, ·I hrs. a phone oontac1 w/cuslomers day In exchange for Apt. & l"('ps we want to talk to lnverviews l\.ton 1hru Fii 3760 Campus_ Dr .. N.B. 9·12 an1. 540-4;,ll . GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS 1·118 No. Main ~'l.nta Ana Equal Op~r. Em@oyt'r m/f KITCJ1EN 2:176 N11-pL l{l\·d. 54S·9755 you. f\!OTOR Route Driver for 1'01,V·OPTICS, l~f ' Dally Pilot in SouU1 Laguna. 1s1:-, E. Camegic 1\vc. {71 4) 494-9401 l\lust. Uv~ in area and have S.1nta Ana Ci\.11 J•or Appl. Industrial Re.lations \·alid drivers 1 i cc n s c. Equal Oppor. Entploy~· TELONIC IK'pcndable auto and cash bond required. Cull Tlarry ORDER di"SJ< elerk. S1nall INDUSTRIES Seeley, 6·12-1321 PAJ.Nt.E.R EquaJ Oppor, En1ployer Ne('(f CXPt'T. i•nantel painter Laguna Beach • _ , Sl-lAh.LEE Products -SALESGIRL. Neat & at11 . makers of organic cleaning Sonic e.ve~ ,11,, 8 o ni e products, food supplen1ents 11·e~kend~. tun shop. ,~.rcn· & beauty aids. Dist. avail. d1 p1ty, So. Const \ ill<ige, 546-5632 for info Sunflo1ver & Bear S t . · 3.17-2702. SHAMPOO Girl, 4 day week, SALESLADY sa!.ary. B~auly license re· qwrcd. 64:i-OZ12. Exper. unnecessary. SHOW OFF STREET SYIEEPER 22 Fashion Island. NB NEED an extra incom('? I11.in1e. See Personnel .!\Ian· Equal Oppor. Einployer Pf'rn1nnent part tinll.' help agC'r. &1.lcs DISHWASHER nN-'fl<'Ci. r~ves. only. incl. Balboa Bay Club TOY & GIFT PARTIES -CITY OF- 1,1·knds. Ch't'r 18. Male & 12'21 \V. Coast !·hey .. N.B. RECEPTIONIST HouSC\viVC's de1nonstrators, FOUNTAIN VALLEY Full time 9::l0-::i.?.O ,t,, ft•nialC'. Apply Paulo Drive· earn to $2.000 by Dec. I. No PaM-llm<' 11-~1:30, 5 days a ln Theatre artC"r 8 pin. 0 UT B 0 ARD l\I 0 t 0 r D1:1y or night, no 1•xp. nc-c.. delivery -no colleclion. \\'M'k. Monday thru Friday, -NO EXPERIENCE J\lechanic, Exp. 5 day \i'e<'k. l'usy, fun job. \V1ll train, no Free Hostess gifts. need $726 ~ $895 Per Mo. E'n'plo ... ....., t:ife1ct!n·Pr1cHl1· i\Iost .,.,.ork .,.,,knds. Ncivport 1,..-.111"' or shor1hand. etc. c"1r 523 54.S I Gifts 'n .. ~., Ck·h. 67:,..21111 '' " ' · · -· ' · Slh Grade education. 2 yrs l\1utuut. NECESSAR Y AJ>ply in person any a fl or Gadgets recent ex per.opera I in g PAINTER'S 1.lclper. l\Jliin's c·vc. at 2930 \rest Cst th1 y.. * SALESMEN * street sweeper. Calif. Class Sec J\·lr. Llflmns TRAINEE POSITION PAint & Body Shop. 788 \V. N.8. . II license. Apply ix-fore (1st Floor) NOW OPEN .lGlh St. CM. 646-6i51 or ..,..,_..,_""""'""'""'"""'·Do yuu take ''Salesmen Spm, August lO. !973. City PAC IFIC MUTUAL_ c:R In<lust rie11 ol So. Calif. 646-3717· RECEPTIONIST wanled" ads with a grain of Hall Personnel lkpt. 1oroo has inunetlialc n1>Cnin_1!s for PART-TIM E \VORK f"C'c P11id. Rapidly 2'.ro11'il•"' salt? Can't say l blame you. Slater Ave., r o u n 1 a i n 700 Nc1vporl Ccn1t·r Dr. · ~ "" r II _, f ti trainl'es in d is p I a y. Inserting in the n1ailroo1n at firn1 needs indlv. w/poise & I o OWL'\.! up a e1v myse Valley. Phone ( 7 J 4) ' Nc11'1Vlrl Beach · th t Th · b ldom ,...... n1arketing dis lril.iution ,l!.c. 1hc pleasant pcrson.ality to gret'l rn e pas· e JO se 962-2424. An Equal Op· I lf3J Scrretary TrninN-credlt 1ncrchandising. 6 ne\\' DAILY PILOT customers. Salary to $550. li\'ed up to the claim in the portunily Employer. b. __ , typin" skil!s, ~RO locations to open in i!ll· 330 \V. Bay St. Also Fef' Jobi;. Cell Sally tld. l~z::::::=~z::lz::l~z::lz::lz::l: ><ivu ~ n1edia1c future. !\·Jany posi· Co.s16 Mesa, Ca 92627 lia r!, 540-6055, Coa s l1L I Do yoursclf a favor & <'X·l ii .,.,•prnl: Lite ti i c 1ati 0 n · tions nQ1v open for full linic Apply in person to Gcot'g:e Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 O plore this onr. II you'd like 1'EX:HNICI1\NS ~2~~;, Ah·por! II r i' a. pern111.nenl peop!f'. Arauz, 9 Al\1-11:30 AM. I-lorbor Blvd, CJ\.1 lo make $250 a week iin· ELECTRONIC .... i.,.-....,., * XL.NT TRAINING PRO· F:qual Oppor. Employrr Restaurant n1&1iatf'ly, \\'!lh an eye to LVN or RN Supc1·visor. 11-7. CRAr.I l'/linie \Vork _ Enrn $50 pee UMS much more 1n the future. r,.;...,. '--r"'r,·1, "ood start· • CO'ill"N\' BEN• E"ITS BUFF I'd like to talk lo you. If ,. • -~e 11':... • ., " " -,. \1•eek . Cnr neccss. :Evc.s on. .in!! snl. S.10·5690. * S0!\1E PAlt1' Tll\1E POSJ. your qualifications match TIONS ALSO AVl\lLABLE ly. Call bet\i•n 1 & 5 pni, our rcquircn1ents, this t'Ould TECHNICIANS \ 1 MACHINIST FOR PERSONAL 963-1889. I.IC' the career you've been {lnl oppnr1unlry for 1nan 1vi!h 1~rrtME \Vork -Ean1 $j() L H.,, lookiJ1g for. \\' rod q , r' 11 ,l\tl·around nl(1('hi lll' shllp 1 NTERVI EW CALL : per 1veck. Car ncccss. F:V('S a gun a I s Interview appointn1ent 10-4 ·(' p ll_('l' ll. p('t r ie. rte on lffdckground to handle \1·1dc 536-2591 only. Call betwn 3 .~ 7 pni, Pi\·! l\'l~kda.vs 586-3182. n1.u·!t-ar 1nstru1n~n.t11bon lhat 'Va'riely or 11·(Jrk 111 stnatl Mon & Tues from 963-1889. Now lni t'IVlewing al BuHu nis 1 • • requires teehn1c1ans .,.,.;a 'io:l'lliop. Ulthc. n1ill, 8urlal'i> 10 AM . 7 PM l'RACTICAL nu-e 2 wk.s Snnta Ana lhrough Friduy, SALll~S la,'.1'nlnfor ·n n~m~~ !'ll'ong fl igital backg&rourid to inder .t: liOtne llrogrcssil'e l oiiiiiii.ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I '° August JOlh. lOlh & N. !\lain ga ry o,.~ g 1 eM' trouble shoot, test, de.bug. o I I C lJ o n I Y. I.. iv c i n. Bra<'h. f\-Ius! t;>e over 25 yrs ii le·exJ)('rlcncc l'l'QU re<· 11 NOTE TELLER r.1 on-\Vcd-Fri. 8At..1:-4Pl\1 f.OR -Of age & flttrnctlve. Stlll1ing If ~'Ou have 1·3 yrs expcr· l-'ll4l 642·8080. frt'e. Sa I a r y ncgoliabtc. sulnry $2.:l5 (X'r 11r \Vilh car· ien(·c & appropriate crluea- dili\.LE clean cul. good dri\'• E xperienced 1196-2722 Restaurant Employes ly advanccn1ent. Pcrsaiial tion•I background {milllary i.4g rf'l.'Ord, 1l1<'Ch. ahll.. PREPARATION PERSON interview at 1516 · So. Cs! ~hool$ arc fi rlC'\ 1ve 1vo11ld ·non-smoker. Shop & lnll'k -UNITED-~Aon-Sat. 6:31) am.)2. Startini• e Cooks ll\\y, Laguna Bca~h ·rhur~ like to discuss oprortunities .mafritenauci.t.-L:.dellvtu e'AL IFORNIA BANK .. $2,(M'l Jl(lr-11r~ OiJ1 Del Tacil e P11ntry lf('l p 11-:s -pm _,L ' -' '"'1th-YoQ. AblC' lo llft • full or r>.'1l1 at Orange County Airporl, • \Vuitrcsses llme -student OK • $1.75 6 1'.1onarrh Buy Plaza <17" 'O'lO • Buii Boy• )'Ir tO 11tart • Tues thru Sal. South t.egumt _c·:.:cr:;:•·:::;:.·-,--,.-,=--':-c--e Dish 11·11~hcrs ~ware Limitt"d, 3737 4!)6..IZ73 I' RE -Sc h ool Tenchcr. NO APPT 1 · ):.;t., N.B. Interviews ntnture, esper. p o rm . ~on thru l"rl 3·5. Equal Oppor. F~m ptoyc.r p/l ~111c. Cnll 6 7 3-i l 2 i . NECESSARY !l41\-o17'1R Appl.v in peri;ou o \VOrk in cxch11n~>e for ln!cn.·fe\i·s J" A 5 h d 2376 NURSF.RV MAN·I.f:ELPER 1r-o m. !'lll. ·, P<;'1 .. g,.~r. til\RDENt:R PURCHASE l\n Eryunl Oppty l:;n1plnyrr NMf'pon· B \I(.,,,, ,,_.11'"''· -,..,E· ."T'Ul-lANT".--\\ltt1l'I'. \Vt't'd, ('l)rc of plunlti, 1\ .... " '' ,M'ANAGER -COUPLE S2 per hr.-10 hr. week. ORDER TYPIST Oyster Bflr r11an. \\1ill !ruin. · tanllgc & rnalnlain In-J,cnn11nent, Call 673·2261, Exill'rlCnt'td. Long It• r 111 Apply in P"rson. J~ungry ual JJllll'agc fo cll!ty in Mon. & T111•s. onTy. 8:30 am-{\!!Sli:;:nnlont Tiger, 16'11 Sunfio1ver, &\ .~~t t~!1. ~C"'s~l~~n g11 11 :30an1. VOLT M<nt1&10--1s11 NURSE, Supervisors. RNr;: or Instant Personne'I I, l\.-IANAGER I.Vf.ls. all shifts. Increasing 'ff'nl(M'lr'llry Service 1...,; 0 MANAG;,· BUYE!l:, ~ta.ff to m(!('t rising censu!I. 31M,q Cum pu r;: Or., Suite 106 A~1 P~rm & p/Ume cha.Ut'nging NE>\\'JlOl1 Reuch 546-4741 'rti'-Mlnry, Bett W(lnien 5 po11lUon11. Xln't hcn•flls. 'K ~ Llll"·11 '11 ' Equul Oppot. Enlploytr 'tar exper-.· .. ... ' Top sato.t1cs. Park Udo ROUTE SALESMEN Ll1.rge National Co. lit' looking tar 1X'rtn<1t1cnt atnbll"' men. . Excellcnr !ftartlna saliuy. If interested Call: uth Coast Plaza, 549-0.~. Conv. I·lo!'q1, 466 Fhlg~blp ~MGR. TRA INEE Rd. N.B. &12-ll~t< R.E. t·n 1'et•r infom1alion: 71 4 : n 4-0330 •. Sf'cl'('tary SECRETARIES 1\lnjor l11nd r!l'vC'lnp1nt'11\ 111'111 has h11111ediatc opcnini:.:s for St'<Tf'1fl rirs 11·/un·hilt•ctun1I. engu1l'£'rlng ron.~lnu:tion. rcul estate & l c go I b;14•kground. i\lin. 2 yrs ex· per. in fl SIX'Clflf'!I lrrld n" quired. Sh SO •"-11 pn\, l)'l'I· inJ,t 70+\vpin. Kno1vledi::e & ex1><'r. \\'/10 key adding mnthine helpful. t\1u~I hU\'t' good publ ic & ttlephOt"K' l)CrSQnalhy. Xln'l v.·orking cond11 & bcnell111. THE 1RVINE CO. lnln1ediate lor-:1 !1on ii'! Harbor .~ ln1pcrinl, F'ulle1·ton, !\love to t1·l'i ne Tn<lus!rial Park C'flrly J9i•I. 1\pp!y 1n Prrwn or C.'nll ~71_,~q4..<;, ext 12'3-I BECKMAN INSTRUMENTS INC. ~ N. Harbor, Fullerton (N. of l n1vcri11J I ligh11·ay1 An Equal Opportunity Employer 5'irt a m1:10Rgc1nrnt rart.>e:r NURSF.$ Aldl"'lli, all shiflll, lfl 'l~ bt•anch of nn!lonnl~ xl nt trl111v• hnft11, Brv1·1·ly \COO,\'ft {'(I. St11rt S;,()IJ, D i I l\lanor Co11v$i)f'q•'f•nl 11011. '~' 'Volf. ~~. Cosll1I pllf1I, <'a111s1ran11 H t' n 1· h , 7:30 p.n1. Tui-s., Alllt. 14.1 ~..,,..,..-..,,,...,..,,.....,.., I 1x;io 1;~. 17th, SA. 111'01· nhout R OU TE SAL ES Ca I M rs. Fielder TELLER mnl'kC'ling progr11n111, Cttll 64+3389 n ~ ·1 1· F.'XPF:H.1 1.;NCED u•·euti 11 n'ltw::lern h n n k Bo.I( Smith, 547'"6151. c · k & Goorl opporh1nlty l<)r i·lg11t !lAM-12 NOO~ •1'\'Ul oo-11·<1r l.'1'11 !(OtJtl f '. 1 nncl Agcnry, :l i fl 0 :&OO,~.i1Cf.. .Ulvd, CJ\t j Realty, Inc. VlS\OM n1nn. lrnmctL ope 11 Ing . hen~(jt11.. &ahu·y to $51.Xl. Cnl1 Silvl•r Spring!!' \\1ntC'r. •!lli<I l..!;;~l~",."1,..o~l~'"°..,'"·°"'E~n~>l~'l~ny~<~''.,I Sn11y llnrt , 54().~!",.~. (\111~1al Nott h Ufll.nvla. Orn ngl'. Pl'rioonncl i\gt'n<'y, 27!'10 llllf'fV!c>W fl.TOTI thru f'rl 9-12 Uke f(l Trade? Ov.r Tr11rler; lhirbor Blvtl. ('i\l A good \Vllnt ad IS a l{OOd tn· -.--=:.:.:."-==---Ads have \'C51mrnt. Fo1· thnt 1trn' 11nrt1~r $501 lf'l' thr Penny rlnC'her. an1 PftmdiSI' rolumn i:i1 ror you: Need a "Piul"! Place n11 ail'. I 'fl l , - ' e Your expcr. has been in electronics . • You are creative, can ex- press yourself. .. • You want to be involve.ti - make a contribution. A COHVENIENT SHOPPING ANO SEWING GUIDE FOR THE CAL ON THE GO. APPLY IN PERSON DUNCAN 2865 Fairview Rd Costa Mesa Equal Oppor. Employer Underwriter Trainee MA finn oUers outstanding oppor. for college graduate. Accounting background a plus. Sala1y to $825. Call Helen Hayes, 5 40 -6 055, O>astal Personnel Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM URGENRY NEEDED Secretaries Typists, Keypunch PBX Oprs VOLT Instant Personnel T<'mpora:ry Service :IB48 Campus Dr .• Suite 106 Ne11-port Beach 546.4741 Equal Oppor. Employer -\VANTED, se1·eral n1cn over 21 for Janitorinl Co. Nile & day 1vork. 642--0530 for infor. WAITRESSES FOR ITAL I AN RESTAURANT CALL ~866 FDR APPOINTMENT I I For an ad In Call Mary B•th Slimming! WAITRESS EXPER. ru!J & p/tin1e. l\fu st IJe over 9166 21. Xln"1 hn\1rs. Surf & SIZES 10~20~ ~i~~oin. ;;930 \V. Coast lhvy., 1 '-i.:-1·~ -1(fi-' ""'i'"'" 1Tf 4'\~ ..... \VAITRESS ,i;: HOSTESS .,., Ful l tlme perm. employ. f:X. LUCKY YOU llnd!ng a per:. mnture individuol · dress as sli1n1ning ns this in e BLUE DOLPHIN e Hn1c for that in1portant 3.155 Via Lido, N.B. n1ceting or trip you've been \VHO WANTS TO WORK? planning. Note vertical no,v DRIVE A CAB! do11m front . 00 -• Printed Partcrn 9166 : 1-lalr CI! SE your houn;;, \VOrk Sizes lOl)i , 12\.1-. 14~2. 1612 . for , yourS;C~. ht! )):)~5,, 9~ 18~. 2G1i; •. Si:re·l411S lbusl 37l boss~ ~en hr Wo'tn~n. Ctln r;ik<'s 3 3/8 yard!! :ft.inch be shghlly hand1r.apped. fabrl(• No a t-<;le11.n Ap~arancc. sr::YEz...'T\.·PtVI': CESTS Vis, retired. Age ~ to 70. for each pattern _ add 2:) Su~plt.meut )"Our ineomt'!'. cents for •'Bch pattern for Drive a t'ab 6 hrs or more a Air 1'1ail and Special Handl· riny. Apply in person, tng· otherwise third-class Ye!IQ\\' Cab Co,. 186 E. 16th delivery wilt takf three St .. Coslf1 Mest.. weeks or more. SC'nd lo I~ M1u1a.n l\1Artln, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., 232 \Vest 18th Si.. Ne'\' York, N.Y. lOOU. Print NA.J\IE, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and ST\'l.E NUMBER. Antlqu.. 800 SEE MORE Q u t ck --''-------'-I Fashions &nd chOose one 1-.:vERY iten1 iii lo be ~d! pa.Uern tree l'rom our S!rle bonrd~. halt trees, Sprirra.SummC'f Cataloa"· AU nu1rbll' rop r om nt odes, •sizes! Only !50c. 1v111'rlf'l'lhf'!I. S1n11 in 500nl lNSTAN1' s.£WING OOOK 15:JO S, Csl 1-lwy, Laguna sew today, wtur tomorrow. l~~rh n. Vll 'NN ' .,_,,11,.ood & C INS'rANT FAS HION ',1 1 n U\." • nnc BOOK Hundreds o r Sf'ttN'. fAo:hlon fnC't~. $1 . 644-437!! 1,)1«' to trade? Our Trade:r'!O l':u'IJdtS•' <'Olumn \fl !or you! ~ Hn1·s. J dayA for 5 buck..~. Like lo Tr11lc? Our T'tader':, Piuodise column I~ for you! 5 linl'S, 5 days for $5. Call ,oo,"' ... 6fli5678 c Wom1n•1 World 642-5678, •xt. 330 Instant Crochet! Toss on this mruvelous cape fo 1· fashion an d 11·armth! Stanclup collar 1. op .s dn.unatic design or graduated shells! Crochet this slriking cape of knitting \VOl'Slcd: use a big hook. Patten1 TI52: directions sizes S.20 included. ~SEVF.NTV·l<1.\'~ CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for each pattern tor Air Mail _and S.Q!!~liµ Handl- ing; otherwise third-class delivery will take ~ \\'eeks or more. Se.nd to Alice Brooks, the DAIT. Y PILOT. 10.5. Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chel~11 Station, New York, N.Y. 10011:Prtn1 Nlllnftt. Address. Z,lp, Pattern N11rnhet. NEED l~E~ '72! Croehet, knll, etc. Frtt dlrect:Jon!I. !Wk. tnatant Macnm" Bo&1l:, Basic,. fancy knots. pat· tCMl!I. Sl.00. lnstaut CrootMlt Boot - Lellm by plctutts! Pat· terns. $1.00. Compl~e tn11tant Gift Book -"""" than ltl cUts -11.00. Com plete AJ1han Booli: - $1.00. IS Jlfl1 Rng Book• • !'iOc, Book ot I! l'ri~ Arp.u. SOc. Quill 8otl1l: I • l6 J)atten-.. Sile. J\lulfM!Um Qi!IH Boolr: I - il()c. Quut, tor Tn'lbi,.• Ll'T'lna • l~ boautilut p.ttcl't9. l!Oe. .. • ··-- -. 26 DAILY PILOT Campers, Sale/Rent 920 \VANTED: China cab & hutch , gold or yellow tone. '73 CLOSE-OUT in sofa, 10\'e seat-chrs, OBEDIENCE Clagg to start Lo"; prices • make your wicker chr. Ladles rlesk 979--0578 \\led., Aug 29, 7:30 p.m. in choice today. Call 839-lln. 947 NEWPORT IMPORTS . 1.IUST Sell '53 H u d so n BMW Hornet Classic to restore.1---------- \Vork started. Also vintage LEASE A 1973 chrome 548--7355, '29 i\10DEL A, high. c:ib BAVARIA P .U., Restored. '(ery izood W B U d cone!. Asking $1500 or offers e uy se the Irvine/NB area. SCOTT'S CAMPERS ORIENTAL RUGS priv. par· * 546-492'S * 1051 S. J~arbor, S.A. '52 P.A CK AP. D, r/h, Top Dollar Paid considered. 646-3478 BMW's !\Ing \\!het·l~. Stereo Tape, mlrrorli, 4200 miles. still un- tl<'r far.tory w:in·ruuy, IO:ld· ('(j \Vllh (~OOdlet; SAVE '71 DATSUN PICKUP $1795 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\I, Coa.st Hwy., N.B. 642-94-05 WE'RE MOVING BEG SAVJNCS ON 'i:: r~:mos 5J[l's Pi\·kups iii Q's NE\t1mf(r DATSUN 1000 I\'. Coast Hwy .• Nl'll'[Xlrt !3ch 6.15-6100 Opt'n Sunday L,\TE '71 2402. Red, auto., n1ags 1ur, an1/fn1ltape, nu radial tires, super clean. $3950. 837-3019 HONDA 1972 HONDA Sedan, niag 1\·hls P.a.dial tlr!'s. 16,CKMJ n1Jles, l\lake offer. 546-1630 '38 M E Ft CE DE S SL.. '72 l44E Sedan fuel lrl.I, l\ulO, lttm<iYublc hardlOp. Needs nlr cond, rudio. Mlchclin lill!e body wor~. Bc•t ()lfet tires. Xlnt Cond. Cu saver. or trade. 54.9--0SJO. P rl\I. pty. 492-1808 '69 MB ~ SI~ Rdstr, 4 ~pd. 1is, 1:1ir, Jo n1ilrs, $a-175, Autos, Used 673-5620, U6 Industrial \Vay, 990 C.1\1. PORS.CHE '&IC A Classic Car, ne1\I slate gray paint, xln'I cond. Gro\ving family forces sale. S2600. 847-7804. '65 SC Poa'Sche. Si.JvC'r. i\lags, rt'-blt eng. Nu Mich<!lins Koni's. Af\.'1/1"~1 stereo. 645-5.116 PORSCl-IE 1961 SOO conv. brand new eng, recent trans great car, $2000. 556-7461 aft 6 pm '61 PORSCHE w/reblt '&t eng. New uphol & tlres, f>48-Jl20 I '59 PORSCl-IE, super c:o1\d,, rl•blt t'.'ng., ril.dials.,$1900/of- fer. 673-8423 T&D ltlolors 2167 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA BRAND NEW INVENTORY FREE CREDIT CHECK CALL NOW WE CAN FINANCE YOU '56 PORSCHE. Reblt cng. E , . trans & lransaxlc. A Steal 2 & up, no credit, nt S1200. 673·6806. 7-9 pn1. b1nkrupt OK, new in '62 r:c>RSCHE Suj>c1'. Rebullt town, single, etc. engine & •rans. Nt'1v li!"f's, vc1y clean, 1noviog, 646-8.Xi9 SUNBEAM 646-0237 T .\ D :1-lolors • '66 \VJ.ltTI<~ 2 dr · Chn-,;.ler SCdnn. Perr. l.'Ond. 33,7!16 ml'•. pis, p/b. Sold 011 sealed bid, !O'Xl ort offe1• wlbid. Can be "°''11 5-8 v.·eekdays, 231 Tustin Ave; Newport Beach. CONTINENTAL '73 CONT. 4 Dr. "Town ! Cu r." Evt'T')' conCt:'ivable extt'1t. Only 6,600 mi. AB SOLUTELY IM· ?t1ACULATE! Blue Book $7,235. PrlcC'd at $6,450 Clrm for Immediate i;ale. Private party. 552-7000 or 828-4342 '69 CONT. Super clean, load- ed. Leath<'r. $2200. 673-326.1! COUGAR 1967 COUGAR XRT, tnagt 3 spd. Cleun & Shnrp. S90CJ. * * * 493-4689 1969 COUGAR C011\'Cl'lible, !:ood condition. C11ll 5-18-3123 CORVETTE '69 VET. 427. 4 spd, conVC'rl, nKlving. rnust sf'\l. Eves 714 : 847-3749, days 7L4: &16-9667 '62 SUNBEAt.t Alpioo Conv. DODGE good tires. $400. <--------------------1 Co ll 548--0267 BUICK 1008 Cl!ARGER, mag 1 , '69 SUNBEAl\t Alpine, GT. ---------stereo. vinyl top, pis, cng !IT, 4 pass, good.cond., $725. '72 BUICK Electra, CU8tom xlnt. $1295. 552--8526 Phone 586-5790 225, all po\\·er, tilt \\·heel "o"RA"'""N°'c°'Ec-.:'1::D-;:C1,-,."11",:-ng-,-::,,--1 air, A?lf/Fl\f, $3200, Con\-spd, mugs, $1300 or bci;t ol-TOYOTA pany fw11ishing nu Cal'. fer. Call bf'! 1 & 3. 546-2525 ---------1 {2l J) 634-3211 ~~<.; seve:I used ~00 COCKER Spaniel, 8 I a"C: k {4 miles N .. San Diego 1'\o.y.) !'.._eH~~.-~1~$600. -CREVIER BMW- ---l;,;:;==u"'•-•"c"•~;...,1n=s,;t::,ru=m~e.::n7t.sc.:8;.;l52;+-Ma· le----4--mos . .---shots -& CMtfPER. xlnt cona.-1.96!1. "'" V't.r-A""'-' mu• 11 • ,gr? om f' d. Ch a mpion 81,Ji', half caboyer, oven, Sports, Race, f<ods 959 S.'lI!'s · &rvice -Leasing JAGUAR IOYOTAS w=I~c-n=~rn-,"',.-rn-. eo~.-.,~1::- 1oaded. spotlbs. near nu ap- pearance & perforn1ance. FORD - . ' pedigree. SlJO. 6-l.J-4926 slo\le, relrig., $j25/offer I-'---'----'-----'-208 '\I. ls! Sr., San!a Ana BEAGLE. 5 nio. old Feniale. 675-4403 ·~ DUNEBUGGY, 1600 835-3171 '61 JAGUAR l\1K 10, Classic ' $1400. 6TJ-4477 SLINGERLANn d r u 111 s. Double set. Good .t'Ondition. S2:Xl/bt'st offer. 64[Hl16S aft 5 All sh<Ms. AXC Registered. Cycles, Bikes, chrome eng, street legal, top ORANGE COUNTY'S luxury sedan, fully resto1'ed $4(1. or trade for anything of & side cur tains. -l.96:&tt1-_ .L'l.l ..... EST-to mint cond. ~e1y Hhr, ~ae- al I 0 11 34 7 Scooters ~25 -vi;P" -qurr,-wooct ·~f.inish, cng. FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '70 ~1i\VJ.:RICK. 2 d1·, slk, R..t,H, air· concl. Xln'I cond. $1150. Dnvs 83:l-216t:'l'\les & '67 SKYLAR!..;:, 4 dr HT, air. ii·knds, tii~r-~83. 1 s.L~ _Pl_\T \\'Ind., tilt 11·hl. . equ \'a UC. _,... -1 . Trucks -962 -a ~-brakes, PirclH -tires.-S6000 MARTIN'Guitar' 028'1\,1923. OLD E s ---Xlnt cond. Or~ Hard case, ng. hccp dog, Male 2 * BICYCLE SALE * invested: !11ust sell, S3900. $400. 536-8781 , ~!'.L:t~~rl\J~~ must sell NEW JO SPEED ITALIAN 71 S O S 54S-6611. ~ -1,0:. -~--=- I-fl LUX CELI CA CORONA 1·11n.c;~s--some body '71 FORD \VAGON-dar-k - 1\·ork. $400. &-14-rt'l.'i · ltf'('en. ale; cruise control, ---,s°'u°'I~C°'K'"s"'P"'E"'C°"I"'_,.L--lug rack, p/s,' disc brakes, ~~ xln't cond. "700. 644--4;!.(!7 ''MAR=~K~Vl~T~e-00-,-Sax~o-p~hon-e l c07=-~""-=c:.::""'--BICYCLES $59.95. Beach P RT CUSTOM JAG. '70 XKE Cpe, ale. Like neiv. Make offer. IRISH Setters, AKC regis. Bicycles, 806 E . Balboa F-100 Super sharp 4 spd am/fm Chron1e. vtircs, :xlnt '67 Blue \'8. 29,000 rn). Radio. Air cond. 4 dr. $1100. '70 Cntry Sedan, p/s, afc. l 54s--0297 xlnt cond. ne1v ti.rel!, !TIT LAND CR UISER 645-133'1 nit Spni Xin't lines, 6 1vks old. $75 up. Blvd., 675:-12&2. Authorized rad & heat. New f2 x !6.5 SALES-SERVICE-LEASING cond. $3850 pli pty. 714: 968-8638. NISl-llKI dealer. tires plus orig tires & r ims OVERSEAS DELIVERY ~4~96--0956~~-~· ~==-,--- Office Furniture/ . 824 DALMATIAN P"P, AKC, * '73 PENTON MX. Xlnt * 892·1832 * ROY CARVER, Inc. MAZDA Equip. sh·ho ts, l male left . cond • 2"'.A E. 17th St. 1 anrlsome, 54.>-1701 Asking SSOIJ. c 1 ... 1:.t5 - "••• ewiA 1-=c.=:c""A~D-IL_L_"_C~-h;ieh. hvy dty air shocks, lUw.n. #oo\ lug rack, ~&98 $2200 NCR Regislel', 2 sec'y 67:>-S683 DODGE 1963, 4 spd. no spin OS n "'esa .r. 4441 Lease A Rotary Enqine chairs, Ohdner t'lcc. adding IRISl-l SET'TERS d'ff 'al Rill MAZDA 1966 Harbor, C.i\t. 646-9303 mach. i\1isc. filing, l'\C. AKC, 6 \\IEEKS, $75. '7(1 HONDA SL-360, dirt & 1 ert"!n_!i " • · 6 cyl, runs LEASE A ";3 BAVARIA J1-l-m7 * fi.18-1288 * street legal, new battery. ~v::; $50(). 495-5TJ9, \\'eC'k-Demo -Serial #l l:l.2993 TRIUMPH 3 YR old silver Ulasa Apso, $450. Ron 836--0589. · for $166.41 f)('r n1onth EXEC S\YVI chrs Sl5/2S Sec 1-familton line. Reas. to gd 'ti6 BM\V 669S 'fi() Gi\1C, V6 13051 l ton OEL Ol' buy !or S.~.29'J. Pi~~! ::~v ~~r ~~ home. Adults pref. ~3969 Eqptd !rgng & sad/bags Stake. 14 bed. i\fechanically Bob Mclaren BMW RX3 Station \Va,gon, our n1ost popular niodel! TR 4 ••~ * "" "150 good, $450 Firm, 645-8491 Inc.' ' Only $80.11 Monthly Co1nplrtely r eco nd. ,0 COUPES P. /0 826 * hliniature Schnauzer * Ja'IN ~ SEDANS 1anos rgans Stud Service ·n 1-IOND SL eves. (714) 879-5624 beautiful showroom con- 644-4300 perfect !'nd. ~· 1t~ ~~ '69 DATSUN PU. lleavy duty MIRACLE MAZDA dilion. :P.1R.ny new pans & CONVERTIBLES Free Organ Lessons As Long As You Like! Non-players & players 1\·el- come lo attend Tt1esd:iy night a l 7;30 p'~l. '"e \\'Uni everyone lo ll'ant to play the Ol'gan! All n1aterials furnished. Horses 856 F or sale, 8 yr old t.tarc, Xlnt riding h-Orsc, call 642-7113 REC . Quarter l\fare, 6 yrs, Show pt'OSpect, Lagw1a. 494-3397 ('\'CS. SJ\DDLI<: bred mart'. Call 194-.'l956 anytime da y s , 49.\-3644 aft 6:30 for info.- bumper, Gates tires, $115(). extras. Over $2000 put into ~fa~y e.'<~llen_t colors preclate, $500. 556-78T1 or best offer. 54~T22 after CAPRI Z130 Harbor Blvd. it. SUSO or besl offer. Oioiceof interiors * 1973 VESPA SCOOTER * 5 ---------644-5010 (Cloth & leather} 1800 miles. Xlnt cond. • pm. r? co-ta , • .,~... .. •. , o-,00 ~V=O~L~K~S~w=-~~~ Factory air conditioning $450. 646-6588 '56 CH-EVY PU. Air cond, " _.,,,...,... O'l .,, AGEN FullpoY.·er-Oloicepl; Xlnt condition. $430. • M d Stereo AM/FJ.1 radio '70 250 Ossa Stil11tto Call 586-0866 * az a '73 Rotary * * .59 BUG * Cruise control S600 or best offer ~"6 MONTH + 847-7988 alt 4 PJ.i * '73 CHEV % T.P.U. 8' bed. ~ 1 i\IUST SELL Ft\ST! Trunk opener & more 29Z cu, 4 spd. Hvy duty. NOW OWN THE 36 J\fONTIJS O?EN LEASE BEST OFFER! 549--0748, All in immaculate condit1on 'G9 BULTACO MX Ready. $3,000. 497-188-1 FABULOUS 1973 \\'ill ai.:e!'pt trade·ins 6-9Pi\1 Largest selection in Reblt engioo. neyer u~d . CAPRI CALL :P.IR. FRY 8-12-f.666 Orange C<>unty Xtr 5.16-8487 '66 CHEVY ~~ Ion. 4x<I. H 8 h '68 V\V Bug, Auto. Stick. N as. . Winch, Gates -tirei;. 1\fuch Sport {'OUfK' dec:ol'. ho(!y ~idl' u nt. eac Xlnt. New eng. Only 13,000 abers Cadillac * * '68 llONDA 3 0 5 mort.-. Asking $1750. 675-668:-1 mouldings, rl•("lining-fro111 mi. 494-0052 Ask for J im. AlITHORIZED DEALER Scrambler , Xlnt co n d., seat 1 J GREAT C\r! '13!1 ford Galaxic. XJnt. A/c, $1075 Call collect 493-7327 LINCOLN '72 i\tARK I V . \\'hile/burgundy i n t c r , 1rhile top, 1unffn1 stel'l"O, lilt "'hi, leather. $6850. 675-2879. Tom Diete11ch . in ('hargt" Phone 642-2851 COAST MUSIC Ne\vport Blvd. at 1-laJ'bor Costa 1.-fesa street or dirt. 968--0893 Vans 963 s. con ou1· .1·c_:ir SC'ats. . MAZDA '54 V\V. No engine. $50, 8JI is. 2600 HARBOR BL., ----------I SPi'ed transn111ss1on. po\ver Sat-Sun, 9AM-2PM. 2 3 4 COSTA MESA --------- 'TI KAWASAKI 100. Xlnt RU front disc brakes. s1y le steel F'I 5411-9100 o Su d 'IERC '72 Col PK 9- MERCURY PIANOS -ORGANS New & Used. Great selection. Competetive prices, Optn Eves. & Sundays. The besl deals a rl' always al: [~~1~ T CK & TRAILER I ower. Apt, A. CM 6t2-1696 pen n ay .. . . pa.a. ronditoon· 1!50. 1vhce s. bu•·kcl ..... ,,. -,,d,·,,J all 197, CHEV "" "'" •· ·70 ELDORADO 30 tv1n P\\'r, A/C, $3600. Pli Call 67$-62.IS · l ron 350 VS, 4 ply tires. (G AECN'i'l9i·12L 1972 V\V 411 Squareback • ,uuv ml. 714 55&-llBS '--;mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:;iiiiii;; / '72· HONDA 500, chopped, • plenty chrome, sacrifice Boats, Gener1I 900 SUOO, call aft 5:30, 962-2864 Wallichs Music City South Coasl Plaza 5-Kl-21GO * 10' GLASSPAR w/3 hp EvitU'Ude sm. Kite No. 722, $500. 548-2598. ·70 CL J.j() Honda, good cond. ~1ust sell immed. $350. firm, 4M-65l5 Tom TV, Radio, HiFI, Stereo 836 F'I.SHING boat 16' \\'1th trail- er & safety equipment. $100. '71 HONDA 350. fl.t:w engine. Xlnt oondition. !600 • 968-8124 Ca!! 545-6$1 B'°o-a~ts"f"M-ia"r'Oi-n-e----·110 SPEED Astra 24' '. Beautiful condition. Only SACRIFICE A Panasonic sl<'l'f'O tape l'C'- corder "'•ith auton1atic re- \'ersc. Uses An1pex 7~;; reels and tapes, includes 3 speeds, 2 stereo speakers. headphoo!'S, 15 pre-rcrordNI tapes and blank rN'ls _ nil Equip. 904 Sn\O. New. Cos t $140 new, 15' BOAT TRAILER BIG TIRES 3145 • 548-1768 • Boats, Power 906 &icririce for $75. 54S-8778 1972 SUZUKI TS-90, like new $300. Minibike 4 h.p . .$100. 548--0333. Motor Homes Salt/Rtnt 940 eql.lipment is brand nr11·. ·n LAS VEGAS 19' tit trlr Asking S275. OI' make ofJer. h;;iit lank, cover, 165 l\.1erc (TI4l 846.5494. 110 ++ Like nc1v, lo hrs. NEW 21 FT. * Summer Special * S3800 &16-9236 :cc-~='c-="'0--.-~--413 Engine. roof air & gcn-Rebu ilt.Picture Tube '.'1.l' O\\'ENS Sedan. Immuc, crato1'. corder yours today) $87.50-21'' or 25" Color lh1vc-a 1 -board. Galley, Salon, S.S29'5. * 2 YEAR \\'ARRANTY C'ar \\'lshoii•er. Sleeps 6· SCOTT'S CAMPERS Installa!lon Available Lnts of niahogany. 846-Sln. 1=1 s JI bo s uv . · ar r, .A. Rice's Television Ser\TiC''' 1 ~· IB. ('rOOd condition. 839-3.Jn formerly 1-itesa North Center \\)1railrr. $900. or best of-(4 miles N .. San Diego Fl\'Y.) 1 Bick S. of Baker 540-6002 fer. 979-!);-I~ or 837-8144. open 9-5 16 day•) 16. BOAT :fi hp. Johnsoo. * RENJALS * RCA, Zenith & Sylvania color Blt-1n ha it lank -till Litetlme, Superior, Open TV & 1tcrros. Largest lrnil<'r. SI.}(). ~lS-8174 Road, Landau, Overland ~ selection ift So. Clllif. Prioo::I ·;11 19' CJ-;XTUP.Y inboard \Vinnebago Motorhomc3 leiqi: lhan 1he discow1ters J\f 11 h 0 i.: ;_1 n y Run-a-bout, RECREATION w/3 yr pictu!'e tube, 2 YI' f'lf':in l'Onrl. $1,1'15(), 5-l-0-0295. RENTAL AND SERVICE parhs & 5l'1vlce. Anfe1u1tts 216 N. Clara, SA Jn st a 11 e d at cost 21' ('llr\R,\("fEll BOAT Ba \/ 714-836-8615 wlpurch11sc If r~ulrrrl. f;ivor11 e. J.lnny xtras. Cail Cash 90 Pla n or 1cr1ns to 36 lt0-1,145 • SALkS e mo. ABC Color TV. !1021 Boa)s, Rent/Chart'r 908 • SERVICE • At1an1a or 190<!6 Brookhurst. EN Huntlnglon Beach. 968-3329. lo:l' LUXL'R'' Yat·hl. Built • R JA~S • SJ'EJ{EO, AA15 HllQl.hki! for 1111' r\1nrriea's cup. An1p. jJfiO 'VRll!'il, dual 1209 Conip. saff'ly •'QtliP. \\'aler turn thl, Al1C'C. Lansing skiing, ~ ~tJ tl' rnis iv 'fuU ··'· 13\ • b 2· b baths. cnJ1)r TV P!c. 213: spe""erl'i, \ Y Y &'t">-2'2~ 11r 71~: 557--0:>l1 •ll tJ,.i'} $550. (714) 646--0434 alt , •• .,. 6 pm. !213• <!7.1-li-165. 1,:_. TEAC A·7010 1opo deck. Pro. CHARTER 57' KETC H I XL "TIOGA" quality, 1012" recs. nt cond. Ei.:tra reels. rrmote Coastal & Off~h•u'1• l!'tland ('()fltrOI unit. Ori1::. $7:11, 1vi/J Cn1_h;inA". X!111 ra!t'!il. Daily tell for $450. firni. I.>ennls Qr \'ll"l'k!:v. Ch1·1 ~tihsbury ~2000 JI. 675-8.1~~ or T101;d, Box Zenith Color TV 316, Balboa. l ~hinrt $50. Needs Ml\.11.ll amount (Ir \Y1\N1'ED to "h<i rt\'r 2i'-30' "'Orl<. s:J6..3433. 1'8il boat. fol' r:i1alina. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I l\'t'Ckend In Au I!: us I. 1• ~. I'--[ -''" .. _v ... ___,· )[I J Lints, 2 Tlmn, $2.00 Boats, Sall 909 CAJ.,..29, 6 nXI. 11ew, SIS. no~·. Xtru. $16,:l!O. PriY. ck'<:k, Bal Isle $!",() n10. 5..11-3374 or evea &l~t-T:l.54 F~ YOUR VERY OWN 20' VIKING $800. Complctt1 SNOOPY DOG! ,\·llh sail,. 714: 556-7563 afl 6pm 548-W F1tE'E ~le, blk, 16", 5 * 24' YAWL, Oaff rl~'l.~. EXPLORER O, HUNTINGTO N BEAGH igf(" •111 .. "' ": ''~··· ,_. 1NT1N( •Ut< r'IAC ~· 197J Dlsco\·erer And Sund.Jal Motor Homes for rent, make reservations for Summer now. Phone P.fln Bennet at Bob Longpre Pont i ac. 892-6651 or 636-2500. llAVE 21' 1973 Fireball motor home oo 1 Ion Dodie ch&Mls, &1111 under warr. 7,400 nil. \VIII trade equity for car or wh&.Hiave-you. 56-371;6, "86-0801 e Rent Luxury Lifetimes 23-25', Im mac. SlP.S 6 "Com- fortably", air, gen, stereo, pvt ownr, 838--0!K>O, Tustin MUST SEIL -24' f'actlr· row, xln'l cond. ll,000 mt'11. Loo.ded. Color tv. .$7695. S.52-7896 speed, 12 n stake. gd tires, OVERSTOCKED! 17331 Beach Bl. 842-r.6'.ifi Air CondltionirtK )IOUllg. showroom !ttsh, ~""~·--'-------1 xl_nt running cond., coupled IMMEDIATE BOB LONGPRE Call after 5pm. 492-86G8 ~r leaving C'ountry, '73 COLONY Park \Vagon, v.·1th 16 ft. lo\v boy heavy MAZDA .73 V\V Campmobile. X1nl 67:1-5669 like oow, all pwr, air oond .. duty . triple axle straight DELIVERY cond. ~1ust sell. Will sac. ~.n,.-,C"AD.,,-"Cd~v-.-."'ll-xtra-,-."'l"'lh-r I under 8,(0) ml. 64Z..2917 hi"h . electric bntl. ... 4 ft. GUSTAFSON j»"llY equip. 675-7459. & ""'°· 43.IXXJ mrs. 14195 MUSTANG ~-~id~~es~v~~v~~l~; Lincoln-Mercury -SERVICE FIRST-'65 V\V BUG, S600 ~~~ ofr. 833-1316 or vinyl tar .,.,IVV\ oAl' "~n.1 ,,~,,,., Isl S1reet ar the 1 Reblt eniz. Goocl Condition ""''-='="':'·::----,,,,.--;~,,---,.-'66 ~IUSTANG, 2.89, a uto, ps. -NVVV. "''o-;...,... loouu Beach at \'larocr Santa 1\na FI'\\)'. Call 6i3-!r~ eves BY owner -'TI El Dorado. disc brks, ronsole, gauges. 11.B. a ft '5 p.m. Huntlng1on Beach 200.1 E. lst $.tree! ,69 '"V ~-B 1 36,000 mi, loaded, Nu li~Ji., Cleun. $695. 494-0024 '71 DODGE Van, V-8, mags, 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 Santa Ana ~-7871 v' ...,.mper us, sunr • $5700. or best offer ~ =~""'~~c-o=~~ 'd · "H I h red, rcblt cn_g. · ·s.1 l\IUSfAi'lG, 6 cyl stick, s1 e pipes, panelled & ome o t e Viking" MERCEDES BENZ $1500. 548-0267. ·~ CAD. Lo mlleage, SlT';Xl. good condition. $550. Call car p eted , Lear Jet.I---------"--be r AM/Th! stereo tape deck, CORTINA ---------1973 VW Super Beetle, or 51 0 fer. 64()..1079 ·Hayden trans eoolcc. '"Y 50 USED sunroof. Ev<!nl""' Call -OLDSMOBILE lift _hitch. Set ~P for trailer .68 AUTO, inags ivh~ls, Jrg 968-4311 '67 CADILLAC Convert. 56M towing, 642·2785. rear !it'('s, pin striping, hood MERCEDES '65 V\V Bug. Radio, heater . miles. R/H. Air. Private 'TI 1'""0RD Van . Short \vheel flame, $400 cash. 962-462.l ON DISPLAY ne1v paint &: new brakes, party 646-8069 aft lP~f b.i.se. Paneled, carpeted, DATSUN X.lnt inter. S575. 960-1851 '68 SEDAN De Ville. 1 stero, lo mi. Xlnt condition. Sharp New Car .68 SUNROOF V\V ow_ne"r. 72,000 ml, Needs Eves 714: 846-1492 Trade-ins in1medlate sale! paint, $900. 675--1636 '72 DODGE Van, Cruisaire conversion, many extras. Low miles, xlnt cond, SJ900. 675-6342 1973 DATSUNS Coming In Every Day ca11 * 515-5035 CAMARO ALL MODELS Ask About Our Uniqut IN STOCK Used Mtrcedes LHu VOLVO '72 MONTE Carlo, air, win- Plans '69 FORD \'.an \v/v.·indows, 6 BARWICK IMPORTS cylinder shck. x1n1 gas rni 133-c . c . House of Imports E. CONOMY--"°''.'· vinyl IOP. rndi•I•, xtras, pr1v ply, $J.l50., 493-37:!0 .. 4400, $1500 or bst offr' i:i amino ~pistrano 6.%2 ~Janchester. Buena Park 536-40Z7 • San J uan Cap1s1rano • & '£8 CAMARO, VB, stick shill, gd. rond. 14' Sail Boat & trailer. $19-0204 , 493.3375 or 831-1275 vll Ute Santa Ana FI'\\')' 67 DODGE Van. Auto trans .. 70 ''"Z . . . 523-7250 SAFETY Good running condition "' · Air cond1hon, n1ag Paneled & uphol. inside: \\'heels, A'.l.f,_f'l\I, tuned ex. JIM SLEMONS PLUS CHEVROLET $650 644-4390 haust, lo miles, xlnl roncl. IM~ORTS Savings & Comfort .67 FO. RD Econol' Da:vs ~2571, eve 675-7800 I Ou R I I '65 EL camino reblt 327 4 inc mag ·~1 DAT ' MERCEDES BENZ n r ema n ng ,pd, nu -11-h Sh1r. XI"! whla & bucket seatS. ne"'' i .sU,'l 240Z, a .i r, 35 ... .._ " clutch-& 2 tires 642--0.S'l;I 4-spd, m11gr;:, t:1range, im· AlTlllORIZED NEW VOLVOS ~~.;.;;~. 892-Sl:J.}; nltes 494-9907 . ' macula!c!, $36JO, 842·8836, SALES & SERVICE _..,_.. eves. 548-l1!06 Jt'm Slemons Immediate 01llv1ry 'f.6 CHEVY Impala 4 dr. '72 OODGE Van, Can1per. . . h~ J XI"! -nd. Extra•. •--. 10 73 D1\TSUN 2.·107., _ ~1lvcr.. l1} l ,.,1 p. Rea nice -huJTY! " '" ~ 1 1 ,~ Imports Ult .,.:,· 96S-08•~. 93 Good d•al. 11 • .· a ppreciate. 545-1077 eves au o: ~ags. s~1_!'1', oJIJ\JIJ m1, -UlllO -' ~~"='""--'-"-"'"-="-,I sacnf!re. 6M-j8.J4 1301 Q11ail ·~rev;v Bus, good cond, good '67 DATSUN Jf.00 Roarlsh'r Newport Beach YQLYQ ·n CllEV Malibu 4-dr. IM· Can eves 6T;>-l6J2 Xl nt. cond. 549-2.ncJ afl 6Pi\1 833-9300 d1111 top, lo mileage, auto, and All rlriy wknds. ENTER FROM MacARTflUR 1966 Hnrhor, C.M. 616-93{13 air, R & H. Sharp! $2300. WANT better g<is mlleagc?l -;==-c="'==='-'===0:..:..=,:=:,:==:=:;:==:;=::=:c.:=::==:o:;::==::===-=1645--0'16'1 or 64G-8496 Hays Pointless lgnilion, :i60 'TI EL Camino, V-:B,. 4 11pd, ~. SSO. 645-0315. ~ 1t 7'. mugs, fm, tape deck, jui;t '59 DODGE Sportman Van. J,.1•';:,')( /T'i STAR GA'Z~R:1<~J ,..bJI. &!>5398 aft 4 o' A1,1to lrans, radio & beater. ~ .,,., ..py CLAY.A. POlLL.~ ,·,i·~ .,,. ... ., £ \vkendl} COda eond. $1950. ~1999. .~ M~~. ,, M Ycwr Doil)' .A.ctivily GuiJ• M }ln . 11 'X-h 1963 Corvair conv. Must sell. '63 CORVAJR Van, good 'A ' 'V' ),(cordfn9 to 1111 Start. ..,.. • (Jj/lJI ~fake Off~. cond. $700. -Ant '' To de\lelop message for Tuesday~ ocr. 22 1. * 673-8593 * * 645-2507 .. -~ 11-14-79 rco::IWOl'ds COl'r't!Sponding tonumbers ,1-0.51..SS •<'A Cl!EVELLE 'lalibu, ·-~ •B·~·7J rJf •Mur Zodiac birth sign. 1-67-70 O'!I " -.-.. 'Tl i""ORO Super Van, V-8, .1 • TAUkUS 11/.::;, -:u ....... 61 .. __ ~ at 578 \Veiit Wilson, Cocta aUI, 5600 mi. Ne\v 1·(1ndlllon. :i' • •• , Jo '~ ,,,..,. ~ M ... bcl 2pm. ~· •\. "' ; 2 You • 32 Mcifyrc 61 P«ip1e ~. s-1~. ! ~WAY 10 3 v-33 Mou<!" 6J DoHic...Jt * '72 MONTE CARLO * Autos W1nted 968 S'·~?-68-6 "'Pot~ 3• Should 64 !>uO!lei Very clean. many Xtras., 177-79-81 'llfll'IO'I 3SW11t. 65Qut111ont 49 •• - TOP CASH tor C'lean late model ca?"5 Md trucks! Howard Chevrolet llfacArthur and Jamboree Newport Beach 833-0555 IMPORTS WANTED Ornnge County's TOP l BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Btv :. 6 1ntuorr.. J6f..-11 MAI ·:r~•~v 7 Mlt'f 37 Bl!' t.7 °' '66 CHEVELLE, 4 dr ""'dan, 8 Md 38 Good 611 01 ""'-9 HfOrt 39 A 69 DttoU1 good OOnd • $350. 10Moo. A09-I\ 10Rev_.. 968-1m 11 F~ .. 1 V(ll.t 71 Thot019t 12 Rev-A2 R.wo/d 72 Block. 13 r... AJ'Tlw 73Awooch 1 • Go!,, .u Som. 7 • Today 15Port A5Cort 75Now 160. -46 WOl'fc 76\\'ht•I 171nt,ll«t "7~ 71~ 18C~r-<l...ctS "8Tn.. 78VM l 9 Fe--S A9 Good 79 Is 20 A~k.td SO IUgl'it 80 ~ 71 l'flt1al!lf 51 ~left 81 N~ 22 Poy 52 R.ody 12 YOI/" 2l Toke 63 Ac;t IJ Prihlt '70 EL Camino . Wfhomemadc c l mp c r . Good condlllon. 645-<019 ~HRYSLER Sales & Service OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa i·fe11a 540-H ·n OLDS 44'.! CUUass. Ukt new. 1 owner. -GD. luxury car. '69 98 Olcij: 4 dr. 1'1111 PY,'T, nu tires, pvt prty. 540-0028 PINTO '72 PINTO. Xlnt eond. Jo mi, wife's car. 4 !'Pd, movt.n.c, n1ust sell, 837-3fll PLYMOUTH '70 PLYMOUTI-1 Du ster, xln't cond. Crest econorey c11.r. Auto. fuld. Pis. p/b a /c. 548-2492 or 645-5.'l05, PONTIAC LEAS!! Oil BUY ' •n lhru '73 PonUacs DAVE ROSS -PONTIAC - 2480 11atbor Blvd., al f'alr Drive, Costa l\lcta 546-8017 '68 PONTIAC Flreblrd, DOI-IC 6, xlnt lnter!Qr, bo(\y & tires. Olue wlblUf', lat rcns. offer!! IW51 Jenny Lfl. H.B.~ apt 126, (Nr Ncwlarid i: Allflnta) PONTIAC CataMna '69 p~­ ly ycilo"·· blk vinyl fQJ), alr pov.'t!r, $100) or best oU~. 64().!7SJ ioo1 GTO. 4 Af)d, mogs, Mot/ FM, """ good. Sett oil .. ovcr$400. ~ T·BIRD YI"-Afa!e. St'• I )oYcr. dacrontt, cOOar hull. 2.l hp 96!·23M ' Gl"llJ', 12300. 827--049 2T \VINNEBAGO. I u l I y equlp, Alr6)Cln't mrch 1."0nd. Sip! 8. sW,io. 8.U-~11:.a. H. Bt1tch Ph.. 1147.1555 ,. 'OIClft ~· e. "'Fot 25 Nvmtl'CUS ~ N""'' as To Chonct of. Lift Tim• '(,G T·BIRD. l!ordtop. ,.In '70 CUAtom Chrysler ~ ortg1tu1.I. Low miles. Ex.l;d· "Hurwt" 2 yra/12,000 ml. re-Jent conrUtlon. Only $695. main oo warranty. Only 2 In Call !"IST-8799. lids area. SUpcrlor cood. 15.000. LL •lOOBEQ. Owner VEGA 11 ff(E.E Stalcl,y Mutt. Great 1f6BIE 14. Xlnt cond. ?i-1ust \\'41('fldol· \VIJI ~ SS to JIC:ll. Call •~·-i flr'Cf tAker. 6C2-J6'7 eYel. u17Mt« PRJ)10 pt.ipt;, A(J_han A Lai:: 11' ME1'CAl.Ji flberglatt<t rombo, cot1'14' pWc-)'Gtft OCJI 1ulboat 1v/a.oddolly. Xln1 ~h1lr fh<oy lAJ:t, 17"j..J+f1 1·nnd. $395. Ca1154S4"16fl ' WINNEBAGO '27 Oticf!on prl !>()' 640-0482 DELVXf.::: \\1NNEBAGO M.JI. RENT -.N.B. ' WE l.IUY IMPORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIDI D1•n Lewis Import• 1966 !{arbor. c.~1. G-16-9303 ' ' 26 Your !161.ook. 16 Oionofl 77 P1r.1lol 57 ,.,wot1 17 H~ 28 At1sshon ~Moy II Aooonr:el 19 ,, ~9 For 19 pi.. JO ll'e 60 Togf'Ttw fO Htcdoll ,.@Goo! @.w-()il:..i ~16-<680. 1~~~~~~~~:::1-1 Yf'IU don't need a gun to '7l VEOA ~"'Rf\ lftlo "Dntw Fa111" when you ml. Crad .,,1, nCC!d l1'IOntY ~·C() an ad in the Oal)y for colltKC. A1., '63 Ford Pll-Ot Want Adil Call now Oaliut!_c.1..1d. cond. tram car -642-5678. R ~I, ..,.1813 \ 7 7 San Clemente Capistrano EDITION Today's Final N. Y. St.ocks VOL. 66, NO. 218, 2._li@ONS, 26 PAGE \ _ORANGLCOUN!Y.,_CAUEORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 6,1973 TEN CENTS Capo Boy Breathes by Self By JOHN VALTERZA 01 die DtllY !"ft.I tteff Jason Rea, 3. of Caplstrano Beach, continued to make marked improvement in a Denver hospital today, where surgeons have ruled out the possl))Jllty that the youngster would be ~ potential transplant donor under p r e s e n t circumstances. But, little news o( the critically ill youngster's condition has been given to his mother who Is awaiting word on lhe • fate of her son from her borne on the southern Orange Coast. Mrs. I.J.nda Rea said Coday that the last call Jhe r~jved from Denver was Saturday and the wait "is making a wreck out of me." , Spokesmen said today the youngster this morning became able · to breathe on his own, without the help of a respirator which had been keeping him alive for more than two. weeks . · Mrs. Rea, 29, had steeled herself late last week to what then seemed inevitable -her son would die at the University of Colorado Medical Center and his kidneys and liver woold be removed for implants into three other dying youngsters. But all that changed Friday when physiciam determined that because of a slight imgrovement in the rondilion of the comatose youngster, he could only be considered "a live patient." That improvement -the apparent detection of some brain wave activity in IXOll ome .. the victim of a near drowning in Hun- tington Beach two weeks ago -meant that the delicate decision to allow the youngster to die could not be made by a special medical team.• For Mrs. Rea, the agony appears only to have just begun. "I'm just getting depressed about this whole thing. My neives are shot . • . I just WI.sh they could tell me one thing or another. "I had no idea it would be this long," sbe said. The boy was technically pronounced dead on arrival at Hunt i ngton Intereommunity Hospital after he was found Lifeless at the bottom of a baby sit· ler's pool. During the 45 minute period that his body received no fresh oxygen. the youngster's brain was severely damaged, doclors said. Physicians at tbc hospital, however, Struggled stubbornly and won their battle to restore Jason's heartbeat. But since enses then, the boy bas remained in a deep coma. The profound decisions over the youngster's rate were mapped out early last week when f.'Jrs. Rea and her former husband -Jason's father -decided that !heir son could become a traMJ)lant donor. But many factors came into play -all l;>ased ·on criteria set by the mediCal pro- fession in cases where hopeless patients (See IMPROVE, Page Z) oar -----·----~ ----ifi1fillfon ------. -. _ --~~--Supplies __ l)ow• Grocers Expect Cuts in Meat Shipments By The Alloclal<d Press Supermarket.s hoped for new shipments of beef today to replace merchandlu snapped up by weekend shoppen, but many stores said tb-ty expected on1y a fraction of What they needed. A spokesman for one Los Angeles market said he was figuring on "probably a 60 percent cut" in the amount or beef he normally gelll. "You open the door and it's like gangbusters,'' said a s u p e r m a r k e t employe in Sacramento, as be looked at the long line at the meat counter. Meanwhile, the government was stick· ing to Its guns on the beef price freeze - at least for the time bdng. Treasury Secretary GeOrge P. Shultz on ABC television's: .. Issues and Answers" Sunday said that the freeze on retail beef prices would be kept until Sept. 12. 1he date set by President Nixoo last month when he lifted price controls from all other foods. * * * * * * Congress~an·.RefWesl:S Probe Into Commissaries From Stoll, Wire Dlspalebel Rep. Les Aspin (l).Wis.) has charged that some of the 287 military com- missaries In the United States may be operating illegally and be has requested an investigation into the matter. Aspin said Sunday a 1952 law requires the defense secretary to certify that food it-ria!ooablt priCes ana-qifalitity 1s W1avaUable in a locale before a com. missary can operate there. However, Pentagon regulations defeat the pUJ1Xllle of the Jaw by alloWing com· missariet to operate wherever there are stores with prices 20 percent higher than commissary prices. Aspin asserted. Spokesmen at two Orange Coast military bases, El Toro Marine Coll>! Air Station and Camp Pendleton, have refus· ed to comment on the allegations, saying Instead that the U.S. Department of Defense in Washington would have to answer the char"s. ''We're unauthorized to answer heff,'' said Chief Warrant Officer William Ombahl of El Toro. "Every once In a while a story like this gets around but since it doesn't name us specificaJty, you'll have to find the answen in W ashingtoo." Al Camp Pendleton in Oceanside, Capt. Louis Chltelle said he would ba\le to "defer to Washington." "The charges were made at the Department of Defense, not Pendleton, so I can't answer ror them," he ex· plained. OrPge Cout lt11 be partly sunny Tuesday, following the usual low clouds and drizzle along the · Orange Coast. Temperatures will range from 70 at the beaches to 80 Inland. Over-- nJ5hl lows in )he 60s. INSIDE TODAY 'No ont Likes to dte out.side U1e countrv ht. louts/ #Cid fo,... tnQr Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista l<ut veer. Tho syranl, '°"° """ o"'C.d bv Fidel Cailrn in 1959, died at a Spantoh r11011 today. Sec 1tory Pao• 4. ... ""' .. A11•L ....... .. L.M, ...,. " -" " C1N'9tfllt • ·--• CJltct"'9 "" .. --I , ......... ..... Jtor .... •Httf &.M -.. .. ·--" , ........ .. ~:: Mtrtl"' , .. ,, .,.."' Ntlfctl I 1 .. 11 ••lt.rlal , ... • TtttwltMfl " =Mtrtt!MMl't .. ""'"" " -·· 1 .. 11 -• "' .... , ... .. ............... ,,., . -'" hmct • --• The Wisconsin congressman, a fre- quent critic of the Pentagon, said there are m mllllary commissaries In the United States doing an annual business 0£ 12 billion and costing the laxpapen "hun- dreds of millions of doUlrs: a year" in subsidies. A>pin sald the -oerense Department was seeldng 117.9 million this year to build new commissaries, He said he wu asking the Genera! Accounting Office (GAO), the investigatory arm of Coogress, to look Into the oi>eratlona. The GAO should find out, Aspin said, ~r the Department of Defense regulations and their enforcement "are withln the scope of the Jaw and how many stores should be closed down ." He said a GAO study rooducted in 1964 showed that half the commissaries in the United States .should be shut down. There was no immediate response to Aspin's charges. However, indlviduaJ servicemen reacted privately with ex· presslons ranglJig from Indignation to ap. predation of the savings which com· m.lssarie:s; offer. "Every time they run out of other things to crlti~ they start attocking. tbe· conuntsUrY 1ystem./' one officer said. : Another:~ce1nan·'8kl ~sarles llS<d to orrir a fe:gu1ar· !&-°percent dis- .count but now charge close to civillan supermarket prices on most Items aM often are lea:! well stocked than supermarkets. He pointed oul• that com- missaries in the Wublngton area were ratioolng meat, allowing. each customer only two packages per lrip. Last Tunnel •• .......... ... ...:>!; .- • In Texas Falls QUITAQUE, Tu. (UPI) -The last railroad tunn<.!..ln Texas collapeed on a train during the ~kend. Railroad ofOclals-said Sunday 11 million will be spent extr~cUng the wred<age and, probably, tumln1 the lun· net 'lnlo a gOf!!O. "We're going up there Mondoy and we got some big equipment ••• tome big Caterpillars," said C. J. May, district •upervt90r for the Fort Worth and Denver Railroad. Peron 'May Not Run' BUENOS Al.RES (UPO -Former president Juan D. Peron, considered a .shoo-In to regain power In elections next month, said Sunday he was not rure wheiher he would seek the presidency . /':!::, 77-y~d Peron sa1d he -Id make up 1111 mind ~ alter consulting -( '1 However, be also said it "remains to be seen" whether the freeze might be lifted sooner, explaining there was "recognition of the fact that lots of ques· tions have been raised and lots of pressure has been put on." Some consumer groups urged support £or a "Don't Buy Anything Day" on Tu esday to protest the soaring food prices. Joan Sheets, a leader of Fight lnfia· (See BEEF, Page ZI fJanners Set , Plant Hearing In Clemente A• long-delayed ' public hearing into variances which allow the operations of the Cresllite Aggregate Produds plant In San Clemente wiU come before city plan- ning: commlssioners Wednesd3y and re.sidents near the plant are eipected to lest~y. The embattled mining and production operation at the end o£ Camino de Los Mares has drawn fire for years because of asserted dust emissions and truck traffic -all affecting e x p e n s t v e nelghbo<hoods In the Sh>reclills North and Vista De.I Verde colonies. City plaMing aides . have conducted their own investigation of the plant operation to determine if any deviation from city and ~unty·imposed conditions existed. Dittctor of Bulldlng and Planning Richard AhlmM plans to make a final summary of the probe at Wednesday's 7:30 p.m. session of the commission. Initial reports to commissionmi last week slated that the final phase of the plant's effort to clean Up dust emissions from a large kiln which bakes shale Into pellets will be concluded at month's ~ncl. 1bat de\lice1 a repl.atement fo· an earlier version wWch was deemed not ef. ·fei!tl\(e by Cr1uq,·1s ~te<I to capture tons Of ripe, red dust before it can esCape into the l\tmosphere. Remdents for years have complained lhat Dlllittlme bree%es pick up the dust and a1IO'W it to setue over the neighborhoods. · COmplalnts al81> reached Ornnge coun- ty 's Air Pollution COntrol District and several court actlona have taken place o~r the dust matter. In rtcent moolhs ropl"""1tali~ of the finn have ......i a major effort to ....,_ tify. t!Je ,11<9blcms, clljl!l.-11re&t expenses in new components ln the kiln and Sa'Ub- blng operations. I Montana Judg~ ~~es .2 to Hang FORSYTH. Mont. (UPI) -Two men aro aentenced to hang Sept. 13 but • deputy obertll aays the counly doesn't own I Sallows~ l!un'I started building one. "We don't know all)'lhing." was lhe way Del>UtY Grllllam Makin summarized the legal slatus ol James M. Shields, ZI, and Wallal't L. Rllodel. • They were sentenced here lasl week by Judie AJired B. cOate to hang for the sbootlns · death last year of Donald Kalberg. II, a Hanlin, Mont., jeweler. No appeal bu Ileen filed but ooo is ex· peeled. •. ~·, " . . . -. : :: . . .... . . .. : : . -... : . ·.. . ···-· . : ... . ·.:. : .. ~~:·. ·~.:{· .-- .... ',. . .. .. ·.-;: l~ ... T ... . . . ... . . . . [~I ... ... . . . -. • . , . . -.. . . . . -----CA M.B "OD I A .. • ..... UPI,..._. ' TOWN OF NEAK LUONG-SCENE OF ACCIDENTAL U.S. BOMBING C.mbodlan Offlcl1b Report ~00 Were Either Kiiied, Injured Worst Mi,stake Bombing Levels Cambodia Town PHNOM PENH (UPI) -United Stoles planes accidentally bombed the Mekong River town of Neak Luong today, in- flicting more than 300 casualties on the refugee-swollen populace in the worst CAMBODIANS CITE VICTORY IN SKfRMISHES--Poge 4 mistake bombing of the entire Indochina war, Cambodia Air, Force sources reported. A Cambodian air force officer who took part In rescue efforts said the toll might rise to more than 100 dead and up to 600 wounded. A survivor in a Phnom Penh hospital said the bombing destroyed the Neok Luong city hall, a hospital, an army and a navy base and scores of houses. 1bere were confllotillg reports whether the bombing raid was carried out by B52 heavy bombers which carry a 30-ton bomb load each, by swinging Flll fighter· bombers_ which carry an 18-ton bomb load each, or possibly by both. rn Washington. a Pentagon spokesman, Jerry W. Frledheim, said be did not have a full report on the lncldent but "the in- iUal lndicaUons are that part of the bomb load of one 1152 fell short of the Intended target." He said the area hit apparenUy was a military camp area containing Cam· bodlan trooos and dependents. He bad no ·'Statistics on casulhies.- the rubble of the town. a ferry-=sslng point and strongpoint of the defeMe line southeast of the capital. An officer who helped evacuate the wounded said be counted at least 50 dead sprawled in the town. "From the noise I hearo, I guess there were four planes," one victim in a hospital bed told a UPI reporter. "At first, I thought it was harassment fire And we ran for cover." U.S. Air.Force Gen. John Vogt, head of American air operatioos in Thailand, flew to Phnom Penh to discuss the in· cident with Cambodian President IAn Nol, and returned to Thailand today. Heavily bandaged women and children crying and pleading for help, reached Phnom Penh by boat late this afternoon. Helicopters were used to bring in the more seriously wounded who still bad a chance for survlvaJ. Cambodian Air Force sources said the planes unloaded their payloads -up to 180 tons of bcunbs -over the sleeping town by mistake shortly before dawn, and that Neak Luong, one or the more strategic towns on the Mekong, was reduced to rubble. 852 bombers nonnally fly so high there is no sowid associated with them until the explosion of their bombs is heard. Early reports said Fllls were in the area. / -' . ... Tutal-Paid By Military \VASHINGTON (AP) -The White House disclosed today that the military has spent about $6 million for com· munications and security 'installations at President Nixon's home and office com- plexes in California and Florida. This is in addition to about $2 million spent by the General S e r v i c e s Administration as well as undiscloeed. amounts spent by the Secret Service.. In divulging for tbe first lime the coot figures for sensitive presidential com- munJcatioos and security projects, Depu- ty Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren also said Nixon ordered a full accounting prepared on details of lhe purchase of his homes in San Clemente, and Key Bis-- cayne, Fla. This accounting will be made available within a month, Warren said. The spokesman would not divulge 1he amount spent by the GSA and Secret Service for Nixon's security and support. GSA officiaJs scheduled a news con· ference to disclose Its total spending and the Secret Service was reported prepar- ing its cost figures. or nearly S6 million spent by the military, Warren said $640,000 of the communications equii:r ment is ''recoverable" and will be removed when Nixon leaves office. Warren gave this breakdown of costs at each location : -Key Biscayne -One-time costs oC IT.10.000, including $418,000 for a helicopter pad, $14,000 for a shark net and $300,000 £or communications equip- ment. Recurring costs annually of $330,000, or a £our.year total of about $1.J million. -Bahamas -Communications equip- ment installed at Grand Cay, Walker 's Cay and Grand Bahamas Island totaled $160,000. -san Clemente -One-time costs ot $1 ,065,000 including $550,000 · for com· munications equipment and $515.CXK> spent at the Western White House off'tce complex adjacent to the President's home. In addition, aMual recurring costs at San Clemente are $677 ,000, or a fouvyear totlll of $2.7 million. * -*-" More than 200 wounded persoM were brought Into Phnom Penh, 32 miles northwest of Neak Luong, by helicopters White Hous~ to ·Tell and boats. . There was no definite number of those killed, becai!se the ir bodies were left in CLASSIFIED A.D SELLS IT· FA.ST Vou don'I need a magic wand to a<hte .. .....ii.. Look wbat a Dally Pilot cl811i1Jed wanl ad can do: 168 Dart_, very low mileage, :alnt cond. r/h, auto, alrcond., V-3 eng. Wtn ace<pt 11150 for quick lftlo. (Phone No.) (Namo). ..Very, very p1eased," says the ad· verUICI'. 11Fantartlc results!" Find out fer )'OUJ1ell by dialing the dlr<ct line - Kl«!&. . {idditional Spending From Wire Serv&ces White Honse spokesmen In Washington loday disclosed they will announce ad- d!Uoaal securlly spending oo Presidenl Nixon's bomea In San Clemente and ·Key Bl!C8yne. including the 11106! costly oullay spent on lhc Lorsn Const Guard Station adjolnlng the Western White I louse. The lmpmding announcement goes be yond the $1.2 million spent on Nixon's Key Biscayne home and tho $703,000 spCnt for (.a Casa PacHlca In San Clemente. Further detail s of expenditures will be outlined by the General S e r v I c e .s AdmlnJstra!Jon (GSA). the housekeeping arm of the g~•rmenl which ovorsecs '· prtsldenUal eitpendltutt:s. Richard Vawter, GSA director, said "We will be releasing the ttat of our cosl• oo support and protection of Ille President and his family. ouwde of Washington.". ln addition to the funds spent in ~n Clemoote and Key Biscayne. Vawter said the expendilutts revealed will cover presiden tia l protection when Nixon \a visiting Grand Cay, the t..land In the Bahamas ov.ned by New Yorlc ln- duslrlnllst friend Robert H. Abplanalp. Jt will also include oull•ys [or the Mal')lland home ol Julie ancl Do•lll Eisenhower. which is '""'1ed by anotbd ol N1xon·:1 friends. C.G ''ll<be" Rel>No. ' 2 DAILY PJLO f sc~~~~~-M_,_..,_•~r._A_,~··~·~·~b~, _1•~13 'l111proper Thi••tts' !~ Gray Says Nixon Given 'Warning' \VASHINGTON (AP) -forme:r acting l<~Bl Director L.' Patrick c;ray Ill said to- day he thinks he gave President Nixon sufficient warning last year ror him to know that improper and illegal things were being done by his staff members. Gray called Nixon July 6, 1972. less than three weeks altet the \Vatergale break·in, and told him that men on his staff were lrylng to wound him by using the FBI and the Central Intelligef)ce Agency to confuse investigators trying to interview two key witnesses, he said. "Do you think a reasonable and pru· dent man , on the basis of the warning you gave him at that time, would }lave been alerted to the fact that his-:f111! was engaged in something that was im- proper. unlawful , illegal?" asked Sen. : Hennan Talmadge ([).Ga.} "I do," Gray said. Testifying before the Senate Watergate committee, Gray ~!so said that, ce>ntrary to Nixon's statement that he ordered -Watergate inv~stigators to b egi n · reporting directly to him March 21 , he ~ received no such order fr om the Pres!· : dent, or anyone else. : Gray said the President called him two ; days later, March 23, and told him he ; though} Gray was being . attacked Ufl- : fairly at the Senate Judiciary Com- ,. mittee, which eventually refused to en- Watergate President. • invcstigalion directly to the Gray said he thought lt was pcrCectly proper for him to give FBI reports to Dea n. Gray, \•:ho retired to join Nixon's 1960 campaign after a 2{1-year career in the Navy, said he v.·as trained in the military se rvice to -say, "aye aye, sir," when given orders. He said he didn't question the authority of Whi te Hoose aides Dean and John D. Ehrliebman when they gave him what he took to be orders to destroy papers taken from the White House safe of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt Jr. Gray recounted again how he and Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters Jr., deputy director of the CIA, came to the con- clusion In the weeks· after the \Vaterga te raid that men on lhe White House staff \~·ere trying to confuse the investigation. He said he contacted Nixon July 6, and said, "Dick Walte rs and I feel that peo- ple on your staff are trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and FBI and by confusing the question of CIA interest in, or not in, people the FBI wishes to in· terview." He said Nixon paused, and said, "Pat, you just continue to conduct your ag- gressive and thorough investigation." Perfeeily Clear Our President, Fashion. Critic • WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nixon turned fashion critic today, commenting on the trend toward women wearing slacks. After a bill-signing ceremony in his Oval Office, Nixon observed that a woman reporter was wearing slacks. This touched off a brief conversatiCJ n in which he commented: "Slacks can do something for some people, but it can't ... " , The last of the President's observation was lost in the la1Jghter o( Lhe officials and reporters in the office. The President then told the reporter, Helen Thomas of United Press International, thaL "I think you do very well ... Turn around." As Miss Thomas complied, the President asked: "Do they cost less than gowns?" "No," she replied. "Then change ,'' Nixon said, again to laughter. Auto Restriction Plans Ast1·onauts Commence Spacewalk SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Two Skylab 2 astronauts stepped outside their troubled space station today to load telescope film, unfurl a new awning·Uke sunshade and search for leaks ln the craft's air condHioning system. Wearing bulky space suits attached to 60-foot lifelines, Dr. Owen K. Garriotl and Jack R. Lousma exited through an airlock hatch to start the planned 31i1:· hour excursion. Skylab was orbiUng 271 miles above the earth. Sk)'lab 2's commander, Alan L. Bean, monitored the walk Crom inside the sta- tion, relaying Mission Control radio in· struclions and · ready to a.ssist in case of trouble. Get EPA Ea1· at Hearin First task for Garriott and Lousma l"\--iwas to erect the sail·like SWlsh3.de lo help keep the ·laboratory cool . That was to take more than an hour. The air conditioning leak , which came FRESNO (AP) -Proposed traffic pools and buses. to light Sunday night, is the latest prob- restrictions aimed at reducing air ~-Motorcyclists in the valley have been lem to beset the station, already ex· lution were debated by public offic1als urged in advertisements to attend periencing propulsion leaks and electrical and prvate citizens here today, today's hearings to protait a proposed difficulties. None of the problems pose a The federal Enviromnental Protection ban on two-stroke cycles from May to threat to the astronauts. Agency called the hearing to seek com· October and a freeze on motorcycles at he ments on its smog control proposaJs for the number registered at the end of this Before they could suit up for t space tthe San Joaquin VaJley. Later, bearings waJk today, the spacemen had to restore wUI consider ·similar rules suggested fe>r year· pressure to a tank which is part Of a A section restricting construction of system that removes moisture from the the San Francisco, Sacramento and San bl. k" f cil" I new pu 1c par mg a 1t es was attacked air. This has been a recurring trou ble Die.go areas. Hearings were. held in the by James K. Bamum, president of the t SADDLEBACK -AIDE Dan iel Armst;Ong News Director For Saddlehack College Named : dorse Gray 's nomination to becocne D.--I-~ !-W T ~~.a. -ad .. ol.Jbe.l:llL :;-:Httf:Ut1'-~---Gray said Nixon told him there woUtd - spring for a Los Angeles Basin smog con-Fresno County and City Chamber or spo · _Jr.nLpJWl..._ --. -~-. . -·• .. ,....~m.-erce; whQ-sa:id;-""Tht:reconomic im,.-Jimund_e_xpc:rts s_ontjnued 10 $JdY, oJ'Ob:- The p~posals .. au~ed. at meeting 1977 plications are staggering." terns that caused · leaks Pl t\\'O jet Daniel Armstrong, 25. a fonner editor of the Daily Southeast News in Do\vney, has been appointed di rector of public in· formation and communily services at Saddleback Community College i n Mission Viejo. ArlnSfronps-m1Mr:rrto·thc Orange County job, from Cerritos College in Norwalk, where he \\'as a public in· fonnation officer. His starting salary on the Mission Viejo campus is $1:360 per • be another day to get bac~ at the Administration's enemies, and told. hi~ Boo""" Lendi"ng there would always be a place for hun in , ~ !he Nixon administration. Gray said Niic-- on mentioned no renewed Watergate ~"" . .),... 9fd - ---pn&~Gray .. quifa litlfilniore than a· .LA;':',.e~ to 79 month later, in the ·midst of the wlre- ., tapping scandal . Gray also testified that ousted White House Counsel John W. Dean Ill falsely assured him last year that he was relay- ing information about the FBI 's School Tn1stees Ponder Budget, T~x Rate Hike • Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District wiU decide tonight whether to adopt a proposed $12 million budget calling for a 44-cent tax rate in- crease for the new f~l >:ear. . The budget, i£ adopted, will require a tax rate of $4.84 for every $100 of assess- ed va1uation. The tax rate for lhe past year was $4.40. The document to be considered by trustees at 7:30 at Serra School is a 1nodification or the publication budget they opposed last month. The new budget caUs for an additional $14,000 in ex- penditures and a major change in pro- jected income for the district occurred when officials could not retrieve as much money in back taxes as previously ex- pected. A slight decrease in income from the state bas also been figured into the budget. Under Senate BW 90, which freezes income to the districts, the new assessed valuation brought about a small decrease in state aid. Seagoing Burglar Gets Boat, T1·ailer Orange County Sheri ffs ofliccrs are in~ vestigating the theft in San Juan Capistrano during the weekend of a boat and trailer valued by their OWTI.!r at '3.500. Victim George Martin Erl. 28, of 2199 Maple SL, Costa ~1csa , said the boat and trailer v.•crc tO\\'Cd :11r 11y from the front of his business premises, Niguel Trailer Sales, 28162 Camino C api s t rano. Investigating offi cers said the thieves mu st have used <i heavy vehicle to remov e the equipment. " DAILY PILOT Thi 0.1n11t CCMlll 0Atl. Y I'll.OT, Wilfl ""'lc;fl SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Major West Coast banks raised their prime lending r<:tes lo 9 percent today, following the 11~ percentage point increase initiated by Eastern banks. The rate hike was annowiced by Bank of America, the nation's larges t com· merciaJ bank; Wells Fargo, The Bank of C3lifomia, United California Bank Se- curity Pacific and ~ker Banlc. ' The prime rate is the minimum in- terest banks charge large corporate bor- rowers for short·term loans. The prime rate has been raised 11 times since the beginning of this yea r when it stood at 6 perCent. Several other major banks also raised their prime lending rate& today. The increases by New York's Chase Manhattan Bank, the country's third · Lvgest, and the others brought the prime to an all-time high and virtually assured that the 9 percent level would spread· throughout the industry within the nex:t few days. While it is not directly linked to con- sumer installment Joans or mortgage rates, a rise in the prime frequently signals a general boost in overall interest rates, which might occur some months lale.r. From Pagel IMPROVE ..• become candidates Cor transplant opera- tions. The panel of physicians has been con- ducting tests since late last week to determine if "life" (primarily brain ac- tivity) was present or gone. And last Friday the panel made an in· ltial d~lon that the youngster was "alive" according to their criteria and they abandoned the initial plan to shut off the machines and allow the youngster's remaining functions to cease. "It would be nice to know that he would come out of it 100 percent ... even 50 percent. But right now he's not there," she said. Mrs. Rea's immediate concern today is the Jack of communication between the medical center and herself. She has ruled out flying to her son's bedside in Denver simply because it is financia lly im· po.-;sible. The two-week vigil at her son's side in J-luntington Beach caused her employers to fire her. She simply cannot find the money for the trip and expenses In Denver. Cedc.r'.11 alf poU~llon luruts, would res.trlct Parking facifities could not be built if engines on the Apoll o ta'x i ship, which is g"""iUle and diesel fuel sales to fiscal h docked with the space station. They still -t ey would cause an increase in ve.bicle 1972 levels. They also would cnoourage . are hOP,efuf the astronauts will be able to more use of mass transit by reducing traffte to the area. return to earth in the craft Sept. 25 after _ __p_ubli.c___parlUng _2D_per.teoL_~ n d _ ".I~ i~ obviQ.l;!S !!i~t__any suc_ll parking_, _a record 59"day flight. ~ _ establis~ exclusive road lanes for car fac11it~. w1Jl feaQ ~ a~ditional .vehicle Jn case they can't, around·th&clock · DlOlllh. . He began his duties A.ug. 1. replacing f\.felvin MllcheU who will teach social studies al Sa~d.lcback beginning faU term. · travel, ·Barnes said 1n a statement work went on at Cape Kennedy, Fla ., to prepar~ for the hearing. prepare the Skylab 3 rocket and Apollo Wild Chase Ends In Sinai Dese,.t TEL A VIV (UPI ) -Four suspected thieves escaped police in the shadow of Biblical Mt. Sinai toda y, took two Israeli soldiers hostage and ·fled through the Sinai Desert in a commandeered bus before surrendering to helicopter-borne troops who bad them surrounded. A military spokesman said the four - three Israeli men and an Israeli woman -released their hostages unhanned when they gave up to the soldiers who caught up with Ulem near Dabab, on the coast of the Gulf of Aqaba in southern Sinai. The spokesman said the chase began early Jn the day at Santa Caterina Monastery, a Sixth Century fortress at the foot of Mt. Sinai , where Mooes is said to have received the Ten Com- mandments. Observance Held For Hiroshima HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) -The 23th anniversary of the U.S. destruction of Hiroshima drew 20,000 people to the spot over which the American atomic bomb exploded Aug. 5, 1945. Mayor Set.so Yamadan called for '1no more Hiroshima destruction in the world," He also denounced the recent French nuclear tests in the South Paci!ic as anachronistic and demanded that the United States. the Soviet Union and China stop all nuclear tests. The names of 2.650 persons who died this year were dePoSited in a cenotaph in the park. This raised to 82,833 the roster or persons whose deaths were attributed to the noclear blast or to saases traced to radiation exposur.e-.W:»r! the blast. · Thieves Cart Off $1,500 in Loot A Dana Point woman's annual vacation p r o v e d to be -costly trip during the \\'eekend when burglars broke into her empty home and stripped it of stereo equipment, television set and an electric typewriter. Orange County Sheriff's of· ficers reported. Deputies said intruders smashed the front door wi ndow to gain en try to the home of Vanessa Mae Goldsberry, 19, of 33952 Chula Vista, Their haul was valued nt $1.500. Also under Investigation by sheritr,s or;, He said the rule would force a bait to as possible rescue vehicles that could be all commerciaJ conslruction here for at launched Sept. 10 or later. least one year until codes are revised to eliminate present rules requiring parking facilities in conjunction with new com. mercial and industrial construction. "In the Fresno area alone, this could amount to !he loss of as much as $200 million in capital investment, not to men- tion th e loss of potential jobs," Barnum said. He urged the EPA to delay adopting rules until local officials can "respond with a reasoned acceptance of the plan or can propose sound al ternatives" des igned specifically for the local com-munity. A member of EPA's legal office con- ducted the hearing, with help from techncal advisera David caWns and Ronald Mueller. Business Booms At Checkpoint; 200 Aliens Held Border patrolmen operating t he permanent immigration check at San Onorre continued to make large seizures of aliens attemptin g to enter the CO\Ullry over the weekend -logging more than 200 arrests over the past two days. The detentions of aliens also branched out in communities north of the roadblock, and San Clemente Police reported more than a dozen arrests over the same period. The migration is heavy this time oC year because of ripening crops ready for harvesting in California fields, patrolmen said. One reason for the high number o( weekend arrests, they added, is the at- tempt by smugglers to capitalize on heavy traffic in an effort to slip by oC- ficers . Unlike last week when one alien was killed while trying to cross the freeway to avoid arrest, no such incidents were logged in the area. FromPage·l BEEF ... lion Together (FIT), said the group would distribute leaflets throughout the nation and planned a rally in LOs Angeles to boost the boycott. The fivc·member Los Angeles Board of Supei'visors has endorsed the boycott proposa1, an d two stores in the city, a men's clothing shop · and a sleep furnishings outfit, said they planned to close. Beer was the critical item for most peop le over the weekend, however. Armstrong, a graduate ln <.'Om- munications from ca1 State Fullerton, "'ill direct the ooUege's in(onnatioo pro- gram, speakers bureau,' and other com- 1nunity services. He and his wife, Linda, and their 18- month old son are looking for a home In the Saddleback Valley. He has been active in civic, service and athletic organizations and served severa l times as statistician for state community college athletic ·playoffs. Co1mty Service~ Set for Marine J • l. • . .. . Killed in Crasl1 "One guy caffie in here and filled three shopping bags with meat for his restaurant," said the meat manager or Ralphs ~1arket in Los Angeles. "It's not Memorial services for a Laguna Niguel fair to the customers." Marine Corps officer, killed , in a The store later imposed a limit of two helicopter crash in Japan last week, were steaks and two pounds of ground beef per held at 3 p.m. today at the Santa. Ana.Air shopper -a practice adopted by Station chapel. supermarkets in many cities. First U. Lowell F. Van Wagenen, Restaurant ollicials in the Santa died Thursday when the CH 46 Sea Knight helicopter he copiloted crashed in moun-Monica area said guards were being put tains en route to a medical evacuation of on delivery trucks by some meat sup. 8 Marine injured during training. Three pliers because of lhe possibility of theft other men were killed in the crash. "These trucks are worth a fortune Lt. Van Wagenen was 26. He leave; a \ now," said George Bennett, head of the wife, Madeline, and S.year-old son, Van . Santa Monica area restaurant as.socia· Interment will be at Arlington National tion. Cemetery in Washington D.C. In the San Francisco area, shoppers Lt. Van Wagenen was graduated rrom emptied some supennarket shelves of the U.S. Naval Academy in J970. 11e beef while other stores began rationing resided at 25291 Via De Anza io Laguna supplies for the first time. Niguel. Fry's Superm arket in San Jose was ,_ Cause of the accident is under In- sold out or beef, and major appliance (vestigation. stores in the suburb reported a waiting list for freezers. "People are overbuying; tha t's the problem," said Al Franzi, general man- ager of Petrini 's Butcher Shop in San Francisco. Jn Walnut Creek the consumer-<:en- trolled Co-Op food market began ra- tioning meat at four steaks, one roast and two chickens per customer. Plane Crash-lands TAMARAC, F la. (UPI) -A private .four-engined Superconstellation that had i•~t dropped 56 . passengers In For• Lauderdale crash-la.Oded in a field with seven person., aboar'd Sunday ni'ght. No one was hurt. NOW AT ' ( ! 11 comtllnfll:! 11>• Ne.,....Pr•u, 11 PJtlllllld by tl'le O••rt0t COi>! Pllllil1ll!ft0 COm.,."y· ~ r•'• ..iuiont ••• 1>11e11111ec1, Mond1y flll'OUfll Frid11, 10<" (01!1 Mn1, NtwPOrl 8u(ll, H1,1t1ll"(lton . 8t$tn '"ountlln Ytllty, Lavun• flM<l'I, lrvJnei$ellllletMot~ ~<Id s~n Cltlntnlt/ .JM! J111n ~pltlr-. A fl"°"' "9ior.«'·~ edlt;o., I~ IMlll•llOO 51!11f"111y1 •"II ~yo. fll• prlJ'iciiNI P1,1Cllfll<1>9 pi.n1 1, II »O w ... Illy SffHI, (till Mt w , C.lilot~l1, n.Ji. Motlier Declnred l1isarie iii T ee1i R<1pe Corispir.acy --fiCer's is the weekend theft or an ootboara mowr from a boat leCt by the owners in the parking lot of Dana Point Marina. Owners Embarcadero Marine value the 95 .,.~ _, - Rob1rl N, W11c! P1u1Cf•nl •1111 l'v~1,.11.,. J•ck R. Culler \ll(f Pt~ldMI •nd 0411et•• Mt~lllt' ~ Tho'"'' K .... a Editor Tholl'lt• A, M urp~i"• M1,..,I ... E4110r Ch•rl1t H. Looi Ridi1rd P. Ni ll Anl1ttnl "'-PllOll'll l!d•ll)o'1 S.. C,,,__ Office lOS No1th El C1mii10 ltel, •267l ~ Officft C1!$!t M*ll: UIS W"I l•Y S!IHI Ntwpo'1 l~tll: mJ N ... pgrt 8oult.,..1d 1>111111ff191°" ·~~ Ht1J •H<fl """"•rd L*Sf""t 8Mtfl < 222 ,.Ottll A,,_ t.i.,11e.,. l7T 4J '42o4JJ1 Cleuiflt.d Aflwtl .. j~J·l671 S. Cle••te All 0.11:11w..., , • ..,,.. .. 4fJo4420 '°""''""'· lt7l, O•~"ff Cotll Pllblltftll'IO ~."' Me ~-"°'""· !flvttr.1-.., N ftw,..1 ,,_.,'-' 0t ..r~t<llttmffl"-l'l+'tilt INr W ""P"OdUC"tlli wl1'floul •11«i.I '*" ll'llMIM tit (OPl'F/0111 *-· ...,, WM P01t-.r !14kl otf (&\ft Mn., C.1111"'''-· ~1~11on .,., umer a..u _,,,,..., *'r rtWH U !J l'tlOl'ltfll¥; '"""*"' ... ! .. ,..,,. u..u '""'1111\1', A Sa n Clemente woman accused on ti r· rest or encouraging a young Camp Pendleto n ~larine to rnpe her 14-year.:old daughter has been found insane and com· mitted to Patton State lfospital ror an indefinit e term. Judge William ~1urray ordered lb-~ comrnllmcnt of Mlldrcd Harmon, 60, of 403 Via Montcgo. HJs action suspends criminal proceedings on three counl1J of rape filed against the gray-ha.Jred defen- dan t. Mrs. I-Jarmon and Marine Robert Dean SmHh were arrested two years ngo shortly after the serviceman had com· mitled what poUce said was his third sex- ual as.t;ault on his young victim in a san CIPmente n1otel. 11e was sentenced 14 six months to 50 years in ·state prison for his role In the artalr aflel' the victim's sister told police her n1other enoouraged his actions m the belief th•t It wou ld "Cllim her (the Vic- tim I down " t motor at $3.85. Senate Confirms Fullerton Man WASffiNGTOr-1 (AP)-The Senate Fri- day confirmed James B. Gregory of Fullerton. 8.5 administrator of the Na- tional l·lighway Traffic S a f e t y Adminlstratfon. Gregory, a former Union Oil Co. ex- ecutive, succeeds Douglas W. Toms, who res igned. ...... •-11/111 90 DAY CASH · WtTH Alf•OnD CAIOrt . HEADQUARTERS. . ,· JO DAILY PILOT SC Mond(ty, Au9uu &, 1973 Shak.11 F11t11re Common-stock Investing? --··--------ll•lttt Oii IN New YOt'll. SIOCll. £lien.~: Jl•ll IMfl HW\ .... I.Mt C'hG f"•I {hdf} HIQfl Low Uirt Chll P·E~'fHIDll L.-LllfC~~ l\ll I'S 1·r. u 1111fr: ~ l!ftl ;: ::~;'.:ll 11 ':i ~~ lJ:': ~l:~'.ft•", ~·~·;'Iii+' ~~ ·~ l\ 11 J\\ ltl.1 M\ ·~~ l'~Mt .... i· 20 i.-11~ lilt , . 3! 11 I, ti• -A A-.nti W I. l! IO 1"-lM r•+ ._ fltUIU• .'6 l I 11'111 1\.,. l~ YI 1 1 1'~ •• ~ffl~t=tt 1,~ !l,_ ~ ~~~ ::•t:r.' ,, Z:lr'" JO\lo , :.!::'=:~·~11.1~ ', 'J 'J~11 ~ ~ll ::i: 1:.t• ,f le L~.~ Complete Ne~ York Stock List (This ts the /Qjt of five a.rtictes whether o person can still tnake moneu on tl1c stock tn.arkel. This 011e focuses 0 1t 1>ointe rs fo r ·new ·i11vtstors.) By filClfARO NENNEMAN Clrltll•• SClt11<1 ~llor k rvJC• BOSTON. MASS. -Has $>mething basic changed, to make common·slock investing less desirable !h::in it w::i s for the last 50 years, with !he ex- ception of the Depression and wa r period? Something has c h an ge d. \Vhether it will be bad for comnlon slocks in the long run, ii is too ea rl y to tell. But it Is less possible lhan it ever was to predict the future on the basis of the reei!nt past. Here arc the most important changes: -INFLATION AND high in· terest rates. For a generation the public was told that com· mon·Stock investing was a good hedge against inflation: except for a !ew pr ivil eged stocks, it has proven a poor hed ge in recent years. The public has been sl owly shifting some of its finan cial assets from stocks into bonds and bank accounts. It ob- viously no longer believes the canard that bonds are no pro- tection against inflation. They do not offer protecllon, it is tr ue. against Soulh A1nerican·style inflations. But the problem was, in the United States , that for a Jo.ng while inUation was so JDw although it was always a fac- lor -that there was little "lnf1ation premium'' in the in· tcrest rate of the bond. NOW, WITlt inflationary CJIC· pectation.s a built·in factor, Jong-term Interest rates have risen. 1 r ooe calculates the "real" cos t or money in America at between 3 and 4 percent, then an interest rate of 8 percent includes an in· Comnion • stock iHvesti11g ha" prove11 a poor hedge a9al11st ill• tlatlo11 ha rece11t !Jears. flation factor of at least 4 per- cent . 'IWo studies of the stoc k market by University or Chicago professors Lorie and Fisher in the 1960s showed that a random investment in stocks yielded a relurn or 9 percent over a 30-year period. Unless one thinks he can do a good deal better than the average, then, he must admit that t.h e nominal interest rate on long-term bonds is now ap- proachlng what the nominal return (dividends plus capital gainsJ was for a 36-year period on common stocks. This was a period In which coping with inflation was oot as major a problom for in· dustry as It Is toda·y. Acctpting this argument is not to say that stocks could not do very well in the next year recovering from loday's low levels. It does say there may not be as much money chasing stoc ks to the p-e (price-earn- ings) ratios of yesteryear. -THE DIFFICULTY o f maintaining a healthy equities market in a co ntroll e d economy. 1\vo freezes and two periods of various kinds of control have left bus.iness mcn confused. 1f Phase 4 leaves business thinkin g t h at th e Administration is interested mainly in impressions. that it mainly wants to convince the voters it is "doing" somelhing about inflation, the stock market will remain in deep trouble. Many analys ts see the U.S. industrial plant as being too small for the nation's needs today. If the incentive for profit is further removed, necessary expanc;lon wlll not take place. When even an avowedly con· servatlve admi.l,listration finds it necessary ~o put so man1 Acn'MK.t~ .u 9 1 1~~ \<&ft 1~ rt • !l IS'4 RU s ~ "'• w~ un. 11 20 j1 ,._,, 11 + 111 ~ int.crests ahead or promoting :~~11'·\~~s~ ~· :: ~ 11:! t~+ .~ ~ J! ~ n k~ lf"" ~f~ ~ F11c:M;-·" 1t ?J 1~~ fer~ fR:~: '<:'~rr':J ~ ~~ ~!1! ~ ~':" ;.~ ~ vig"""US heallhy industry ,·t Ao M11111 .10 13 ii 1i1 '" •~ "-"-Obrt1 ~ • i~ 1~ 1" ~>wEf(~ 1i is ·~· •V'I+ •Al ~tt . u:r ...... ,,.,. 41'tt "" "'" ' ' ACIClrtu .60 # 14'1'i I• 1'"" . , hmolnl ~· I 11l II IM. II +'v. E '12 11 h l 11 ~• lllli I~+" I Cl -~ 1 « N "' ,..1'1+ \> is hard to resist using the Aoml••• t11 l • I'~ 111• 11~+ -~ 1.20 31 i~ ,,,.. 1m+ Yi " "' o:.o 1 • 1ow 1ov. 10'..,_ "" • '"' m , iov. ; . . AOvltl~ ,02D 1 !1 Ill' llh-· ._ P Ao! lS 2' \/ !! ... I"'-V. Fieal ~ j ._ I! 1• 7'CI It~ U~~+ Vt ~ ,10 • '' IM I -i 't' word "Soelahsm" about the A•t,,.L1 1.1• 10 1 ~ 11v. 1111.1+ ~ o .JO 10 '' 2•'• Ji ,,"'+ v. Jl'tllltkot 1 °' 1 t2 11 171' 1~ ~ c;.t~ ~.ft • ,. • An1erican economy. T h e ::~r::~: 01c! )0 ,~ ~l: 5;t-ti. ::~v,.:v,,: 1 ~ ~ • .!: 2:':+-~~ ,,. E cm., ' s 11~ 11'1• 171.'o • • >~J:.11nd1 · 1 •* , IP -'t: AMI HID ,. R4 IJ~ IJ'h-\II h-t .. MM 2 10 113 ~41~'t 41~--" "'' 011 .U 1 M 4V.. I~ ll~-YI. l(~s:;fl'IJllpf 1 170 ~ 2'11 I .• ownership has not changed A•..: lnc:o 1' 'j '"" s... .n. . """" i lMI 11 u 5,.,.. " + ._ ,.,,,.,. 1.10 u ~ '' l6"-JI T -" "'',.GE 1.n ·1 r. ,,.... 1 \.ii hands, but a significant degree !:~~r~ ::3 fl :1 :;.~ 11!: ft~t ~ ~~r. ~ l' 1l1 '""' ~·~ ~~1 h :::""th :~ 'l 11f ~i. fl~ ~+. 14 ~~~ ~-U 1i ~ m: itt g _ . .,. of the control hns. !t1o!:'"~'.~ 1{ ! ~ ~ 11l': :·· c~ ... "2:: 1l n !s~ ll"'' !..5:.!1~ ~l:c'i:t ~ .. 'U ~~ ;k ;1~-.,.. ~=1~ ~J f 1J 1m ,!~ G~ ... lti~d Scolt·Ram, vice-~~:PG!~ ~:~ .1 «,,; 1l,3" ~ 1M1-~ ~=~ .1."16: ~ 1: J!:Z gu. ~~ \6 ~!;{~~~ ~. 1f 1s1 f1 ffl: ftf~ :: '6~r ''.h TI 21~ 1r'° ~ !i 1\ president and chief economist Al••ll• 1n1•j n 11) »• :io lD -;-,, CMnl i.1sr1 • 21 4J11o ·~ c:ni.+ 1,1, ,Mc pf 2..., 12 w, l2VI n .,....1 ;(,VMl"R :U j •l '"" 1214 l• A11>er10C ,J I 101 9 Ml4 9 -+ 11o Chi Mttw CP t 20, ,,"."• ,,"-• ,, ... _._, fF~!.'a .10o I• 21 ''·• .,_ 6" · 1Cettt11r .JG f ID 19~ lt'i t 'lo ol du Pont Glore J.'organ lnc. Albtrt1 .:i.o 10 1 11~ 111'2 lJ1~ .... 1-t °' Pnevm 2 10 11 ,. .... ,... ..o 2 flti "' '* t" K .. neeo ,10 j • ~i ~ '*-'"' I · " (" be ' ' AoC.11 Alll t II 451 l3\'• U 17 lJ T \I Cltlltl (I UP t 11 IOW. I~ 'H l'OO!t Mt11rl 41 1 '" 1 l-l 1Ct-1W In . .0 5 I 1111. 11 ll .... + '• c aims. Pro its has come a Alco s1a .Jo ' JI ,,.. 1v, l \'r cri Rici NW •1 11 1~ n + \\ FooWMlt1 pf 1S4 m~ :Z:l\ "" -1(111oH .!-6 t 100 14~ '' iAO + " di t d . . t d '"'""' l..u .II SU • l>l1 .b•o »•-.... cnoc~F IOe 16 '' j~~ ~ ~ ' FO"<IM ).~ t 2'9 ~~ S9.1 SJA..+ \.\ Kttiv·H 1 JO , I I 2•~ 2J~ ~ '' r y wor 1n our soc1e y an Alu•n .100 ,j 31 ·~· 6~• ''•-v. cnrl• cr.att • 11 4 ._ , _.,..For Mc .. ,ti • •I u 1 ~ 1210 K•rw:ori 1:.0 ' 10• JO n~ JO +1 I · I t J "I · th · All i.or> 2.i~o ~ 1~ 11\lo 21\0 21~ CllrOf?!& 10 t 32 lJ 1"' U FrM OI 1.90 .. I 21~ 2+1'1 261'>-V. Ky Ulll I '• 1 )-4 22-. 22!i. ~ ... eg1s a ors are a.1 or1ng e1r AHAm1..r .1• 19 1'j 1, '!'2 14 + -n cnr.,.,1, 1 ·40 4 :m ,. .... »>M 26 +\lo F0t1oa .no ,. 16t• 1""' 16i.r. +\, K•" IN. • "° ,, '" •Wi "" ......,._ "" nnrc·es tO r .,· nt against AlltogY, .100 9 I 10 l 10 -,,. Cllry$1.,-'wt 112 1\ii I\~ 1°"+ \' FortHP• .JZ 21 10 U YI ,,.,._. 26\'li -ICt<rMpf ~\'I ,. !OIJll>'r ljllo'r l,l\'1+2"" ,~I I eaime AUQLud 1·20 , 11 15 1•1'1 ,,,.+ .... C1M1 1 2'.lb 7 St '"" 16't. ,,,,,,_ ~ fOlltrW .to 1• ,, ~ ~ 3".4 t lo KtY11/I .>Ob • I 1•~ ·~ l•W.-,,.. Profits 11 ,,i.~ .. w M a 10~ I~ ttto 1¥l1 CJ" B~ll 1 lO 9 c 11-\i 11~ Ul'of "° foallllnl .40 27 194 ~ J$ ~\'oT l\'o KJ4d9 W to • .. JO 11\ .. Iii-t·o ' AlltnGro ~k 10 4 II~·. lit. l H-'tt Cl" Gil\ 1.M t II 21'11i 2H' 1\~l . Fr•nklM ,20 14 27 l:K;i 171'1 11'9 · ·· ICJ(kltpf f 20 I 43U. 43'/o .(I~-Vo AUKI \.ti l.ll 12 II~ ~1 JS'<o 36\o+ Yr clnG pf t.lO rtoo lllh Ill \ IJ -fi l'.-.otMn .AO 11 f'l ,,.,. llV, ,. + 11 ICjtn Cl 1:20 jj M Jl~"e llli> 3t"4 .. , TJIE INTERNAL problems AUGM•n ·" 20 16 JCK' Mot 2t-11t--1._.. c1nMlu1 1..t0 20 •7 l1~• "* Jn~+,,.. frve flllf 1.10 1 ,. U \IJ UVi ~\\+ v. te. ti0tOS .>0 1 1• 1v. N • + '•· AIKl ~tOll ... • Ill lt.b 16\4 ~~CIT Fiii 2.20 10 6) .. , .. cl ""+ "" Jl'UQ~llld .i ~~ II II,,_~-Kine!! c .n ' 11 l .... 11 ... I~ ·, of the security industry, the !::~t(l!~P),;~ 1~ ~i '!t;. ~~ •l'I +\l 111&1~~ 1.20 11 106 411, cl~ '1'111--•• G•OI• Ind,, , 29 21..., ~~ 21'4 t .\ol. ",,', "1.,AJ~ lt 1! :t;: = == ~ t t. I IV " s·-·t AU•• I.II 160 9 90 ~. ,~. 9\"11-.... Cltlr$o 2.?lb 12 ,. Jj>• » 31 -Ir. GAC Corp 29 l'* J•,'1 n... \' nl9'11 t., • 1 '"'" I._ l~ repu a ion O au u~, ..,11rgtirA '.i.o 9 11 9 ~!: 1~ 1-. Clly Inv .t.a i lit 11•0 171\ 13111 ... GAF co « , s~ 11~. 1111o 11"-+111 ~~ 1: ~ l~ ,:14 :nv. :It " and lhe fact thilt Wall Aloi>• Pl .i.o 1 11 14 13 1• + ~ .. Clly I/IV wit • 15 1 ... l'llo ,.,. ... GAF ot 1'20 7 It!/\ 11 11'i't +Vo •"::;cO", '1n .s It 5V. s·~ t i• . P.1coa l.9• Ii 1114J •91'1 11 t~lllTl.,.CllVll'IVJll 7. 211.Sl,, 21!0 21 · GlmSk \0 Jl:I "1 ,,' "r. 'r.'•~JlL ... -,,,,,. <.>> <l ... '1" \lo -"• Slreet as an wdustry does not Am•1s11 l.hll a 1 :z.n. ,,. :u"' c11v s1or1t1 u :ll SYI s s~._ ('• G•,,notlt ·25 ,, .. ,._ ,... .... rA+ ~ p. ooc .;MJ / 14 10,,_, lO lO l'J+ ·~ Cl•rkf_q IV. 11 111 42\~ 411.', 42'14 · · · Glido:.ti '.10 IS t>1 t 'h l 'lo \.,,.,T ~ ~,..II",_ .... 20 ~ t.62) f~ ff,4 l1'4-have a lender of last resort Ame°" .100 1 19 ·~ ''"' •I• Cl•rk ott ·'° 1 11 ~• ~ 20,,._ \\. g•r~k *' 1 13 11v. 11 1ti,r. ... rothi... 1 ., + . Amcr•c 1.111 • 19 11<'• 1,,.. 111-·v. LC of Am ~ ll 9-l ~' s.>< . .. ••Svc 1'12 1 13 1.w. 14'4 I•~• +" roo-r 1.JO 17 51 16"W 14 4Y• ""1 ------__ ... mtl,•1 .:W 1• .,i:;.. )J·,. ltto+ .,.cievClfNs 1 11 ••ta. 6M ff\•+ ~G(.A cO,p IS 46 .,._ ~,, ~ .. K'l"Ol'I .Mia ' 11J ll IJ "";t ~ A Hu Ill 3'h 31 16 JS 1S .. ' Cl•V El 2.n 10 ., :JO!' lO'Jo JO~+ ~'I Gemini C•P . . 1l 13 I 12\li -4. a.-1• -~-Am,.on--1 .•2 11 .W WV) I~~-l~'h ... Cloro.o1Co .S2 19 124 ZI~ 12\'o 221.lo-~OtnAm Lm1 ,, 14 1~ 1 , 1-A ... t-'\.')L.lcll«I• l Yt 1 l lt lt Two free~e• and Am A!rllM~ bl 11;1,, 11.t'!>I 111'•-\.\ Clu.lt P .l.o I UO 101 1111 1'1o .. Gii AOI D:J IS llt J)'\ :nV. 33'1+ \'J $.tlnlll $f1 I I 11 13'h U* IM-\1 .. " AmBak .10 .. '( I~ 7'12 '~--..... Ch.111llP Of 1 . It II!~ llV, l!l!o+ ~O«IATr '1.ao ll 21 47'A .. "" 47' .. , 1,..,.. • ..., .rt II 17 21 21\I ~I ~ t ri d I .. <>r;;nd 1 . .-I klJ 31'1 .. 3/ '' -'h CMI l"v Co 20 20l '4 401'1 '3'4+m GMT pf 2111 .-1 51 $1 $1 -"i t:rMr 1.~ I 23 ll\ll 22tlo ..,._ ~ I VO .._ 0 S 0 Amarc5r .64 11 311 ~~ ~• 2<1lili+ \It CNA Fin .51 • kl66 11V. l\"o ll'!4o-·~ GnCtbl• .so ·, II 9 1-\1& flO ll'VM 51! 11 6 1" 1\.to n.... r -h f-4-4 Am tJlog .:!Ii 10 9,13•,1 l~'tt 1~110 + \'1CNApl 1.10 tl 1'V. 14\4 16V.+ ~•Gn Cgr 120 t 1 14 " ti +~L.. .. rSf~ .29 f 61 1\'t 7 ,..._i COlttrol ftl'e -='I" Aml.•o 2.~ 9 6' JO'llo ~ ~V-V. Coc:acol 1.70 '4 I0 1'4~1U'2'\0l ... ~+l~Gn o.wiQci t S6 t ~IV. ~ Lff.1'$ l'to .. t m'I ~ ~ AL•nof 1.... i '.IJ\'o :.:i LI . _ Coc:1Bo1I ,31 2c 67 2o-:~ :1014 m<+ lr.c;.,, owuun 7 16 !J\i 21\.'I 21"" :.·l-M .S 14 l!Mj, I~ lCl'h+ IJ1rsine•smen C01l-A LnM I.No 9 17 ll~J II II -"" COICllO>Bk .• 7 5 14 ,. 14 ... Gii Elec l Cl 21 410 61 \11 ·~ .. LetKpf ,... .. 21 21 "°"' ........ ~ ' ALnt11n 1.20 I c 2•-. 241'1 1•~"" Coltco ln .06 19 ,. Ill,\ Ill'• )]~~ .. GnFOOd i 't0 II 112 2~ 11141 l'\ .... \'J LefKOI 2.10 •. I 211Mo,.... ,...._'9> f''sed Atn(.;von II• 10 143 :l.l\ll! 2J\'I 2l~·t \' Colg~le .54 '2! )0:5 ~ 3l .Jl',~+ '.Ii Get!Gro J3b 26 26 lf~ If t +14 lff$W'( ·113 J l4~ )4\.) '41/t+ \9o • AOisrlel .•J 24 61 401'! ~ ~-"•Coll&Alk .56 t J lt'n 12 121'1+V•GnHO!ll Cp J 11 f\11 t \il ,.,._~~-.a.N , lt 14 l2:W. 12 lm+~ AmOIHll Vl1 f 6'4 6'111 ttt-~-CoUL11s Food 10 II 10 9Vo 9-\io-~-Gen lni1r 2k 16 617 21"'4 lt~\ 11~1'1 l_, , 1 7 I.._ l4V. 1~+ ~ ... -....... -.... -...... -.... -....... -.......... 1Aou1 Pl .~.. .. 4 1i ... 12 12 -I.ti Collin Radio 49 11\'o 19!\ ~i+ ~· Geftlmr.:' J . J JI l6 :M -1 LHI V•I Incl " t lh llili l:\li-\.'---~------AmEI« l 90 9 1!~52 ~. ~ 1911+ ~ ColPtnn .20 M; 13l ~ 56 ~+ \i Gen M .12 11 lO 211• ~~ 21'4 +"\ 1...-11 V Of 1\ir I I•~ 16\11 1•111-lloii I Am txoo~I ~~ ""' Y·IO 'lloT •.r. ColbnSt 1.04 1 31 ,,,,.. .. 1S•!J 1-SJA-Gtn M ,,. I 20 90 $1 Sf+i S1~..,. utwM lhb .. ., 1~ .. l~ lW. .•• a so appear to Scott-Ram as Am Expr pl . 1880 3 11/"o. ,,,.._-.. c1111111c1 10 1 ,. U'ft IS~ ts>11-~. GMHI l!f vr. 1 97 tt '' ...4'1o Ltn11•r '"4J s 14 "' •l'I 9~ ... • · · fl A FIO)V I.Ill 11 ' 1&\• hi lil'.o+ II. Callin pf 4Vo 2 41 .... ...., ...... GnMOI 20:5'.b I WI '61i U\11 .. ...,__ Ul'IOX Jn .6 II 1 ;)-Alo )4lli >4'iio + "°' negative ln uenteS. A fin pl IY, .., J.10 II 11>4 \71,lr,-V. C 8 S \-'6 11 17 U Vt ll 33!,lo +v. ~I pl S . 11 7j ~ {I l...-Fd C•P ., II ti.. Rt •>~+ ~ -The work e r revolution i ~ .. J·1.~ . · ~ ~ tt~ tto..+1 •4 ~ $c!':":11,.\, 'i J l1 .,.. 2~ 1$2 ·;,;. ~~ 1:: ' ,f: 1Ut ll\t ·1W:: U t!:11~ri'~ Ti .~ 1~ 1~ llt= 'It itself is changing the nature of Ac;,, In• . .o 7 32 lt1._ l~l~ 111it!-v. ~ol Pltl11re1 «! sn ~v. s1."'.f "onSklMI .u 11 11t 43'4 •ti.• ~+ ~ tm" F11rn \2 2»• •YI 7"" IYli + IJ'' AGno11..10 ,..,.~ -.--\'o ol~Onl.92 t J42Sllo2i 2S • Gnsr .. 1t11c1 :10 3~ 31') • FE CorPtl I J ~ ~ .W..-'-American capitahsm. lodustry ArnHobt "'° 1 s 1n. 12'" 1 ~.+.,., ornb E LJI " 136 11:o.r. MIV. 1111o+1 1 e 1 n 11 ltl l!'l! 2tl~ +"' bb'tO 1.)11 v. ~.,.. i4V. Mv.t·" "m"om .64 «<! 102 (ra, 4~ ~+ "~mE pl 1,70 I 12\1 IP\ ""'+I .. TE pf :IYI . 4 ~ .. · tet'I' McHI U M ~ ~ 6:ir. " still needs huge sums to A Home 01 2 1 209 m 20t +s ornSolv AO 11 20 ~":· U''" ~""+ v. Gn Tic. 1 10 ' ~ ~ ~Vi • ..o , 2 11'.t. 11\.• 1110 "- modern ize and e'x:pand. ~~:;.°.,'ft ·~ 4~ I~ ~\ii 1 ~ ~ ';:::€f o~1 .~ ll~ ~ lS.,_ l Sv.t+ ~ &!.,~ ·~ '9 13{ 1!" 1!V, lt"t it t~: 21! 1l u}f J~ ~ ~-- N h I A rl , A Mtd ltl .12 1 69 JG>il 10~ l~,,.. wEdpf 142 t "' TJ ... 1~ . Gtl!uklP -" ,. 141 a 42 4J +1 1..ln\I Ell .12 a. M2 •n. u ~hi e v ert e ess, me ca s A MaOlc:orp s lOl s:i. 4~ · .fl~+ y, ""pr 1.to . ,' 'i .. w.,~ ",, .. + ~," 0, PK .t0o ,, 12 ,..,., w. ~ ~ ul!Cfi" 1.'1 11 300 3w., ~ ~"' II · 1 . b A Mete~ l!h 11 11209 J9'-. lS ffi'o+ '\O corned Bwt • ... •• ,.,_ 'G•Pwpt 1.12 i..o ts ts tJ . , u=n Df s1 1• 1• 16 + \lo capita sm 13 Shi ting y AMtC pf l\~ • ltl Pl~ 901,1. toY-'ft "°g'w.911 ~~ 24 lry 1tt? ~1~ ~1i! \.\ <artotr l 3$ II a21 111h li"\4tjj...,._ i.. u Corp 11 ,~ Ji.o. JV. J'h • ., degrees fr~ependence on Amer Mo10< s ~9' Pi. 1-h p, • .,, "" n .. , ..... ,; ld.<7 S2it J14il s I O.tN 1..i10 2l 5111JY.1ll n 11+l,,.. lv.I I DI •v. w fi'I+ w., AmNG1 2..0 I Ill l3\r. 32'11 XI\-.? ,.. M ~$c......_ J.1-ii+ Jill \II Gttlwt' \,-=j ' lQ_ 21 _ """ rtn.C't lf.....1_. .. ---.Jlo~lf-lf_.lfJ_..._, .. Physical -i>l nd"-r8CIQ~ ~~~-~~~ 20v., ""~o..Aqr .lib 1 12 1•~ 1$ 1~ _. 0~1~ :11"11 ~; ·;~"1'f" 1;::=>~ ~~,~~il'A-., J ':! l= 1::1 ~ ·to dependence on people on A sme11 1 10 • i1J1 11~ "°,,• ',,1~+ ~ C~M-'11 1 ·~b 112 4 ,171;,tt.'7'f,.,.17;';1711~ ~Ibo'" Fin• St-s JI 1sv. 1~ 11 -v. t:;_c 1.1• 1 '5 ,,,.. 2'V. 21v.+ ""-. ' Am $100 .50 I 26'.l 11,.. '4 ... + ,. C •60 t t 111/. 17 11'A+ Vo GI~ U"lla . ... 6119 6!Jo ~ \II l,.omt1FI ..U \1 ltS7 IJO,W l»'o 13 . brain power. Be tter-educated, AmSldOI 4'!<. 1 s1:~ ... ,,* 31~~.+,v. ''::~ f.t0 10 3'9 U..: 21v, 7!1+-""GINHlll .:i.o 1 .s 1s1r. 15 1s .. l""'1o\ 2.lSC> l 11 4l 42.,. .o + ~ h"ghe · . AmSterll .26 16 35 11.,-, 1 12.,-, .. i 1 1S\lo JSV. 7511. Glllettl I SO II 11S ~ .51"' 5'm+"" londatl MIO J 15 12 11~ II~ •. l r-pa1d workers, actmg AmT&.T ?IO JO Ul( "~ 48 .... ,_1'1 ::E~ ~ ~ .. 1 &c; 60'M aoil ·. GlllOfo 1McN-ll 27 ,,,... 16 l6i.-\') LMMS Incl l • Sf lSV. lW. l.Jlh+ u d ·-'·-u P.mT&.T Of ' 18111 ~ 5!'h U \'t-ti aoo.E..Df 4,6S . 111 .-S1 S1 • ~ ... 14 21 11'1!1 17'9 1m+ ,,.. Lon StG 1.44 to ,, 21 26~ ~~ __.more..-lll Cpeuw,:.u y...-m ~ ATI11M__, ~--410 ~ ""49~ l,i. i:0111Fd 1 '.Jo 't2 1 . ,.~ 371,<,;=' . GIOIJIJ -,..ipr n 1 '13 1fr•lnrl«t+IYt l6nlll1;;1 1:-.---.----1J1 ,,..,-lM""·-l~·w make 1t harder fOr clear lines ~.Z!1~ ,'Zc1 7 1 •~ ,~. 1~~~ 1~ ~ ConF~.sl>f, '~ 1 dJt 14~ tl~ fl:z+ ~ =''~ F'ti ; ~ ~!~ ~~ 1~! ' lt'°J>' ~ ft 1i ~ ~.,. 'i~'i.. of authority to exist within AWtr or H. · 1210 14\• 14._ 1•~ .. ~~? 1.a:J 1 " 2'-\9 ~ ~ ••. Goac1rlc11 1 • so 21:u. 21'111 21~ v. £~L· f.• l io lo. ~ """ ~+ lit . . . AWalf'of P.4 i t20 161'-16\~ ld\11+ ~ 0<1$m Pw 2 , •Cl 2Wt 2:5'.4 2:5\.'J Good'f'rT .92 . I 22' 'll'Ao 22'h 22,__ 'A t!l ·:I '! "j 17\'t ~ l7\4+1 many companies Dcc1s1on AWtr of 1.tJ 110 11~1 1't ''~""' 0011 Air ln 11 1'2 11n ,,_. • ..._\lo GDrGOnJ .2• 10 ' l>\i int ''~i.,. .. 1 1 U l(o " 2' •.• , , ' Amer(ltl .6$ 6 6 14 3-0 14 1.AI. -\~ n C•ll 1 60 f 11 "6V. Ulk 25>'1+ Vt Goulll Inc: I I 13 11'4 22\/o ~ ._.. -.1 .tO ' 'a I~ I' 16'11 + ~ makwg could become fogged Al'llt$St .10b ' 14 6\lo ,'. 6\lo+ ~ Oii c--:a • si~ ' ~ race w 1v. 10 •1 l3v. 2J 23\7+ .. a.TV c.ro , ts w1 Ai ""--"' . . Amele-JG 9 S 14 P.:. 14 + ,.. ,f1Co 2 411 I 41 "'4 31\la :W + Mid IJ .to t Jl:I 11~ 11.,., \IV....:-\.tv C.,, A . , ! I°"" lPlll> _.. .• and eff1c1ency su(£er. AMF In 1.oe 1 51 26 '~ 2S'lo • n!ICo p12v; • a~ °"' .m+ •nlv 1 20 s ,,11 I'* 2116 21,,._"' \.TV c. 1 Pf . . »\Ill »Iii :a.,.........."" P.m!K .M I 31 17~ lJYo 171h-1Jo lllllR l.JOb 10 31 17\to 1~ wi.-~ ran! W \\IJ 1 2" Ro l!Mll l•l•-t !,<, 1..ubrltolt ,"3 2' .. '44\lo .(Mli "4V.+ ho -OUTSIDE THE I t AMP Ir><: 27 115 2l 4™o "61-lr 41\1•+""" onllnVll 21 t 2' 5V. !,~ W7+ li"t GttYOf 1.7.0 ' ff ti .. 11\li 111'1 ... lll(ky&I .W 12 15 ll llV. 11119+ "'° p an AmpeoP .le 1 5 I\' .... IV.-"' """'~ .11b ' 160 914 ··~ N-• GIA.Ml 2.l~ 11 ll )ii ~ 34 .. ~ 1.0I I 21 11" I, ll -\II · f · Am~• Cp ol6 17 4!e 4\1 ·~ '!• o..tl II I~ I XIS.. 1N 7' 2'>oti+ GI .t.a.P Tet . . 55 12~ llV. 12 + .. ~tt .ICI t 21 2P.\ 2No i:Ml+ \'I: Jtsel , the American voter Amre1> Corp 6 :11 w.. ~ s.... • ont .i .ti 11 '" ZM ~ i!'tt+i~ GtL~D 1.:io.. 20 a11 21 111,1, j1'4-.-Ly o cwp 12 1' ~ ,,... •'h+ "'° poses another ~n.,•drum for Ams111r 1.JG 1 t """ 23 2:14t .. ontrl D•t• ' n.12 ,,"~ 23f'41' ff"",. GtN 1r 1.10d 12 1 100.. 1or.t ~+ ,,.. L~• Y11-1tn 12 lM '"" ~ ...... ,~ ... u _. Amslr pl 61 . 14 l 'h ,,,_.. I I/)-Ii conwd 1.90 9 , GINNt .. 1.60 ll 11 .. (W, 4' + 111 LYll M 1.121: . 217 2"tl JI 21v.-.2"/o an investor in stocks Ams1e<1 2.60 • 1 •1'4 •1111 o'lo:o + ~cook Un .'2 ' s,•, ,.,.• ,.,,., ,i.."!;r l~ Gtw1Fln .Cl 1 " 20-IN It._~ LvncAS"r A 11 10 '"' n •~+" ' Amie! In .20 9 • ~' ~. 51-V. ~ llld 80 11 ...,. GtWt~I un .. 11 4\4 4"' A\\-\Ii ___.. ~ Wtll he see the nature of the Anacon .2.sb ' 119 nv. » n•1o+,,.. -,r ~~ 1J ~ 1n~ 1~ 1:li-~orwstun r,' .. ,. ll'h l2"'1lv.+1 M•tOllNd 11 l ~ l'A JV. ... AncllHt l 01 6 :M 11¥. ll'tl llli • 000 r •-' ffi 1 t Grt W1llr n ' 3 l " M.1-tQ iO 4 I ..... ~ 6\'J . •• system, reform its weak Ancler c1 '° • 1 i1'h 11~ 11'11-v. ~OOPT~ 1~ ,, ~ y .• }a._ + 111 ~n G11111 1 10 1s 21.,., 21~ 1 ""'+ '"' MKMU .1ob 1 '° 1..., 1"1'1 7-141 .. . •ts . aJ Angelle. 10 ll I 9\'lo ~ ,.,.._\lo oot R • llO 20' 111. +I V. r/IGl:lf 1.7. " 10 lO XI JO -1 M•CY Ill: H I I 6f 251>11 2S ~!JO points and appre<:iate I Vlt An.Siii Co ··~ I lo 14:\lo ,, .... ,,...,_ \I, ,~J ·~ . • lS ~ ~ . r.vhd JM I 111 13 .... 1• llto!-\-'• Mn DIA ..... .. •10 56 w J6 ..... "o ·11 h t" t A~ l'lO 1 l Ill'!. I~ IJ'!lo n .......... ' Polo ' l v:a rtvllncl IWf • 20 ) 2~.. 2l• ... Mad Fd -. tJ H°• N ~ ~ ones . r WI e con 1nue o Apeo ou · -11. 1 16 1•~ l•tt. 1•:t.-1 .. ~°'a~j• 1~~ ~ ~ 1061, l()Wo '°"""' ~ ~ro11tr .to • "' 1ov. io1" iov.+ "'MH ~·r• 1z ii "" 4\4 ~ .. lake more of his news from !~~pcci~~ i: 1~ l~~ 1ti: 1~+ i-. ~~In 'i nb lli ?: ~~ 21~ 'm ~ ~a~T:in In ,, ;f ~i, =· ~+ •• ~~., ~ 1~ 169 m :~ .;:+ .~" TV, omit the reflection that !.i:t"l~ i'1 i~ ~~ 13m 11~\! 13~~+11~ ~~rd ~ ~~ ~ ~~ ~l; ~t ~ ~51~·1.~ ; 1lf ~~ tt ~~ ~ :=~·~ l' J fr' ~ fl'+~ comes from reading t h e Arc .. t;,N .14 • n 1\• •~ .,.__ 14 c~~t 1~ e 31 '""" 11 1n.+ '• S"'l:OI~~ 1: ·~l 2lt: 2r' -,t+ '• ~!...~~1:11 1~ f: l~ = =.t+~ . ., d nd i..~~ Arcnero .SO 11 91 11 lOlii 32 +ll'• ~II Fl .40 9 ll t I\~ '""' ... 11 l>k 14 lj~ 1, + \.,. ,._,, :mi,; pr1nt~v. wor . a .... '"vme A•cUc Enrp 9 ?S 6 ~ 6 + i.-. roclkr 1.66 1 22 'M>.t "4'h 14Y• • · ~fm~ ·112 h 2.d 19~ 1 v. 11'1.o .....,.'1~ "t, 1~ ~ lr"°'lo 1w. 1~::; more easily manipulated on A•lllar .r1 , 1• ion lGW ~" ,_11; .eo 7 7 1~ ~ l\"9 . Grta.l'o' -'-6 Sl Hft.uv. 2sr.+·-. Mt~.11~ '·'° ' 200 » ~ 2"'.:. +"' Artl PS 1.16 • SS 20 ll'rt 1912-, MH .54 16 6 23li ~it-l? Gvll .. ~. Wl lo.t .:v. ~ w+ ~ =: to 10 ,., Zl'9 II"' mo+ ~ com p]e).'. econOmlC QUeS!ions? ArkB@ll 00 9 flit.\ \Bo u,v..,...~ fO'<illl Corll ll ll,»,.-1 w .... GIM'•ot l "'. l10S\'al~)'lo \lli\'a!11 Nol~pf · 2 lA 6SVo 44',I, °"Vo+IV. Arlen AllDv ' 1Grl S~ S~ ~ •• ··"' n ti l.?D 10 ...r> U 'k+ .,. GlfW•., :Wt · · 1 »"'° )U'i ~-lb Moll"" !Ob 14 If 4S'i" ~ ~+I V. But whatever the answer to ~·~ 1~ 'l d: 2t ~ 20t·r: SfT' ~p •jg ' un tl ..... ti~ ISVI I GlfW•,,, ~ :· 1 12't'.:: n y, n n Vt MM"~ ·1.IO 7 l lA ~ ~ .... these last questions , the at·.,.;:;:::'"' i 10 ... 1 21\~ ?t'n 21 \'J ,., ~""~" .JD IJ 11 1~--1:P. 1~·~ Gvrton •nc191 1~1..!,_ s~ .S\._ !.I _._. ,i', i: 1• '-" =: ~ tt . . . . Artl'kl rpf •lo:o 110 ~s .u 55 .. , • .... 13 1s ~ ~ ~""hkltW 2,. , 1 u~ 3'l'o -~ ,.., • 30 ~ ~ MATADOR-NEW CAR ADDED TO AMERICAN MOTORS' 1974 OFFERINGS Coupe Will Have St•,.dard, Sporty 11nd Premium Models tract1veocss of IDgh-1nterest· Arms Ck ·"' 1• •51 11'4 , = ~1 -~. ~ $1' wr1 'M t111 ~r. JM !mi'""tf ti.illbtn i.1i 3f' m 1• "'"'""' +N ~" cl~ !~ tf ~ di: ,,'tt ~ rate boNb, the stubbornness !~~l~ 1;~ 1t J ?:~ 1~.1'.Jo .,.z: ~~ ~W'iJ 1; 11 :12\'J :n +1~ ~o ..so lj ~ 'it ~ '::!?; J: .Jsl 1s =-~ tr,: +tti 01 . fl t" n and th shar t ASA l!cl ..so lS2 .... .. ~ ,( I • It ~ :m. ... ...... .£ 1 .(J "" ' "'" IM .. lR a 10 ' e p um A•hl OH I lO .• 115 29 . 21\11 ,, ... .I I lOJl!'f!. » lJ\l ""H.. H '.li II II lf;\;i 19\lt 'ml'" =rtMI' 1jl : 1: l~ :~ ::-·~ toward government manage-Al~rvG ~ 1~ 111r, ~~ m: ~~·t: oimGll 0 3'a 51 "'"' .cM .uy.+1~ HMPICP1:f 2f 'l l.~ ~~ .l. :: ~ ..o 1' •u lJ'ot n ~+1~1 ment of the economy -when :-,ni~ 1 ' .~2 5 11 11i) 11~, 1:A11 \'i. &:~'::' i""*' ~ t; 21'r. ,I~ J~ tt"r:.t11jj • " ~ 1t 1 1.a ~~ 1·11: ~ '2 fJ~ 1~" T~"' _·v; h . 1. 1 .d to A•icM1 , OJt. • 35 11 , -11 + .. 0 i.;i. 13 Jr.SI :i.w. U¥o 3No+ ,. ...,..,.., w ,, 1.Mli 17!'1 u -~Ml._.,, a 37 ,,_ 1,.. ~'tit t ere 1s Jtt e ev1 ence sup-A11c1vE 1 •1 a 10 20 1..-1H11 .. o::;,~ ,;,~ 2 36v. ! J6¥.t-v. ~ 1 1 11 u~ z>ll 2'¥t-.. AMMftrtw 1~ ii 21 27• :Jt\O 21~ ~. port its competence in the ~k~~c;::id3J 2.1 x~ ~'a ri v. rit.!'t;g:f.i~1t11.J: ': .;z 'tv.~ Vt 1~,~ lt7rf:l~to.2f Ii ~5 /mv. ~~ ~ t ~~ ;A:.' ~ 2f"' ,.'°' ,11o-.~ task -are the mo s t A1A:c Pl 2.to •. •it, ,!~ .~~ 1,",~::!:1~ O.'l"lonH .S4 1 1• 1M 1 , 1•1-9+ -. ~rK9 lo '• ., ' ',J• ,•,sv. ..... Mn os IM , • 22'.lo JI" 32 ..• . . , AllRttl prt 3 . X ... ,,1 ""'T' '.'T -OtYPU 1,H lO Jl'112 21 20'4 ~"lo M•l'fSM.x ... --.-"'M•.,..0. ,IJ ll J ~ :DV. 22l4o • di sheartening uems on the hst Anoi corp • 1• 2 1,~. ~-:: ~ Dff11W1t .• 1 '1 m. ~-. .,,._"' tl•rtr",·,'~ 1: :!: ~ ~ m;:+ ~ ""'~ .JD ' 14 71'o 1 r.i+,... Matador Lead Car I f . . ATO lne .16 1 26 M .. 1 -r-... °" .. 1.0, II 5)1 " 4N ., + lllo ...... ,E ...,,.. ...... + M•Yl'H l.:JO ll 32 • 7N • -v. or uture investors 1 n Autorn 0•11 u 11 S¥~ 5"0 sttt+2"o ;P•L i.1• • <12 1~ lJ\.\ is,,._ 1.1o K.11 ... v..At~ 1 •'• ', 1~ 1• .. '!..+·;,; MCA inc ~ 10 sz u 2~ 25 -\lo "t' Aulaml I/Ids • ,. j ·~ 5 .• ... Miii 1.10 I a ,. 17* ,,...._:\lo ,UlllM .,.. -,.. =· .t:a • 12 16\'t I•~• 1••.:.+\oio equ1 1es. AW;a Clltll ~ u IO ,,. ,~.._,,. lltAlr ·'° I' .m Sll't JO 51\'J+~ ~ Marttn lS: 7 ,,..., 1,... 1Jt lt t.» s: I• IP'l ll'l'lo 11-ro + Vo What remainc; to balance the Av co Cp """ . , 11 21-S 2 2v.+ ~ ec-'"'" s 2• '" ' ' -\41 Hee•·~ :.l,3 .. " '.,' ~':: = L.._ + "'Mc ,,... 1 " 133 n "-104ii n l"\+ , .. Avco pf 3.20 . • 1 3' ~ ~ l'J ·-Co 6 :l't IJ 171"> 1l 1 16 Hefl _..n no. ~ to ""(.f""" 'A ~ C• JS 47' '1\11 41\4 ,,..,.._ \'1 pictu re? The hope that in· !~f:~~ ;~ ~ 2! ~~ U~ ~~+~ 8:=.S: '.~ 1S 11ll m: ?{~ tt~t ~it!~~ 11:: 11 -1\ ~ 4SVo :.,.+ v. ~ ~ 1~ 1t ~ ~'la = =-14 America1i Motors Led by New By CARL CARSTENSEN 04 111.t 0.HY P'il•T U•lf Expe-cted lo lead the c.hangc_ for American Motors µa ssen· ger cars in 1974 is a sleekly styled all·ne\V intermedi:uc Matador coupe model. OUR PAGER RENTS FOR $1650 plu• hx PER MONTH I unlimited P•9•' I HOW ABOUT YOURS? No Deposit Requ ired On Approved Credit ll is several inches lower and has a 1~·heelbase four inches shorter than other ~1atador models. II features a Jong tapering hood, fast slop- ing rear deck mid roof line aod ('Xceptional interi or roomi ness for this size car with coupe slyling. ALL 1974 AMC cars will have e x t e r i o r appearance changes, stroo ger b u m p e r systems for in c r ease d d a m a g eat>ility protection. three·point lap be!ts a:nd shoulder harnesses for greater occupant protect\on. Th ree versions of the new 11atador will be offered - standard model, \7-8 'J)Owered "X" model and a premium Brougham. ''The Matador coupe In- corporates the most sweeping changes we h11ve made In our intermediate line," William V. Luneburg, Ameri can Motors president. said. '4We believe it will add plenty of fu el to tile company's drive to cap- ture a bigger $hare of the world automotive market. BESIDE TlfE three new hardtop coupes. the Matador series includes a rour--door sedan and two and three-seat station wagons with 118-inch wheelbase. The Ambassador line includes a four-door sedan and station wagon. Compac t Hornets are available as two- door and four-<ioor sedans, two-door hatchback, a n d SPQ11obout wa gon. The sub- compact Gremlin is offered in a single two-door sedan model, and the -spc!ty Javelin and Javelin AMX in two-door hardtop models. Exten si v e trim and o r nan\entation refinements are evident throughout each line. nation will be brought under Avn•tl rn: .JO e f9 l lil 7h I -\lo 0.ntsiilv ,"8 IS :W 21 "lo 1 .... 11~1/ --•c:~ 16J u, '!!! '°",, --, 'Ai I A t 60 t'/1 9 t\lo--~ AvonPr !.«I 50 236 114* 113\lo 11,.,..,._ '·~ 0.r:n ,60 t '' ll 11'1\ 11,,._ ~ '"' ·· ~.. ~ 4 ' ··· 1.20 J 17VI lM 17\IJ-49 better control and that COn· AJ!ec OU 6k "6 10 16\IJ 161-< l,1'o ... 0.1 dis l,'5 ID ,. I ..... 11'1\ ll'AI+ YI. ~~I -= l{ r: fS ~..._ U __._ ..... MclC.M --a· fj 1 ~ 2S 2:5 . I ·u 1. -• a-0.1 °' '·" .. 1120 111v. 1111~ 111 v, .. ...,...., ...... , . 1Jl -l!!!T *~ 12 4 ..,.,,.. 44v. ... ....._ ~ trols tbemse ves w1 be 1fted. BeD&wn ·'° 11 31 2~ 24\'• ,,.,._ '4 o.i p1 1.61 .. 11>. 9S111 '"1o f4'f•t '"' !:!!~P ,·:! 14 "! • "":i: ~~+ ~ 1· a 1 20 1m 1t 19•• '+"' Al lh bab·1· lh t BKtle .ISb 11 119 '"' Sir. 6\-lo +'*. E Pl 7,CJ . ao ,,..... 92V. nv,....1111 ........... .. ' + .. JS 1 .OJ 13 1m 1 .... "' SO e pro 1 1ty a . once Ba~er 1n .16 23 n 2•w 2• u -E p1 SVJ . 2 Tl.., 13\\ non+ "' ~.1 .. n• -"" ,.,. .,. 1' M , n: 1~ I-PK 1oAl-v;, th ·I (" [ ta B1•erOU J.7 21 29 W.• :ltVI 2'\l--til ~trC11 .25 !( lS 1~ 1ff l•\.t . ""'..u .to -11 >0 .,. UI \ 36 M !if" c 1n ema 1ona mone ry 811aoH..n 1 1 1•:it.1.-.~1•'A-"'8i•I Fin .~11 2s n •1.1t 1t -1o1Htrt1111 1.1(1 ~1 1' .Mis..," "" 82 ... :· 3 !fli'"' .,. system can establish a new e.a11c;;,s '·'' ' IOJ ~ m;. ~ 11 •tnc11n11 2 ' SI )l)"Y; ,,l'J »V.+11-1o ='olotl~ ,~21..,m~1•l\ ~., M_+1 .. 111r ' '1 "" ·~ Bini.:" 1.l-1 ' '' n '4 ,,. ... ll"I\ g1•m Sllm I ' 3' lf?~ 19'!1 1flll .•• ""~,, eri 2 7¥:: it§ M Corp 9 ~ equili brium there will be a lot B•imo 1rw: •5 '°' i.•• ll Jm+ " /•Shm pf 1 ·· s 21"' ,.,,.. ll'-·· Hl'il~''" .. ,', •~, + .. ,, #19151* ..-:II) .sa 2S'lll ~ ~t • B•ngor Pn s 11 "' t '"" 0 tSllpf 1,20 . . • U\IJ: 1~ SI'>+ lit H\""'" -II ~ 41 J 2f t\lt N " of forei gn mon ey taking ad· e1ngrP of 2 . 2 241\ 2Al4 u"" .,, Ott••llM .... 11 10 11w. 11 11\.lo+ lt ~_.:W' ~~ 11 11 2;: ~~ 21 • ~" F 22 , r• .,. ,. ~11 I I US t k Bn-ol N'f' 2 ' 9 u ll'fll 3"' +~ gim=a ,40 2l 7 ~ 5(1~ ~ ••• Hoto91'W.: .n 16 -at ~ »v. ,I. 41 2XI tlM tt'4 ""'"--VI vantage o ow . . s oc eank \/• .11 12 J ~ JP.\ ~-"" 01 11~ M s 1~ ,,:" f? .. tsv.+i;,. HoWnw :,7 f 10 1'\'o 21 ""' _9Q rti • • • '» 12v. ~~ 11 ~ prices with d eval u e d ::~~r ,t 1~. 26, ~' 5~~ ~+;,.. orH1~ ~:.! 11 11' 2w. •~ ~ 1-1o J:::r1~-=J; 11 1f .J~ ~ +1' ...... , :ft }1 j ~!tt ltt.. }i!:: ~ American dollars. ::~~.~R, 9:: 3~ ~ ~~ ~r ~ ~it 8!~··.~ ~i 39• 197: l~ :R:i ~"' t!!'!W'~, 1 .... , ,•, Air.~~ ~ "=• := rl 1 , 1:"' 1Xtto i! .~ Bl I 1 '00 14 1 6" 6\lo 6~ .. ~11100 .09b 10 JI H'!J 151t !I"" .....,,,.J I fJ .., ,...,. ~~GM lite J) 40 lt\11 !Mii ,..,._y,; IS THERE JTl(lney to be a.!1~ ~ io,, JlOO 27 21 21 ·~ 0 ~i: ·-r: 11 ,t 'lv. 1 ,....,. 14 = :: ,, 1f I~~ 1g: 'ml-1 VI~~ a-9 • u 12'r'i 12YI I,._,, BllH Ml ..20 11 10 11~ ll 11 -"' Mt 11511 .• 70 2J~ tl"f! ~ I-lo Horli:otl Co S 40 1\11 nil '."n;:: M M;fJ;i m ·· Jlf '™' t~ ~ made in stocks ? Always. But : ~'f!i"' do · 1 la 1~ l~ ~tt?:: t or'Pew.,: .2• 112 1:1t ™' is"t; ~+1 Hotc111 .. Atf !' ll 1m: l .. ~ "E-, ~ ~2 :.; •: ':: m: + it does seem lo be getting uochL :.1 2• 1•11 33'" :ioio :gv.+210 =~ ~ 21 '? '~ ~ ·~ -211o H~~ ·1~ & 15 \216 Ii l \:., 1-' • 1 1~ 14Yli v.--~ hrd l&r \..l.S 59 175ll'o51 \'.I S1.\6-~0onl.."'IJ ·.1~1 j t ~~ 7'lo+'I.' .tO' lllll'o 1 -'ii I 24 12h~l2'Vt-..-a er. Be.a1 .611 :~ 1J = = =+ V. DoMellV A 15 41 11~ n 21YJ , . ,411 11 l2 l•n I .:. l'tf I 11 '1 W' 16&'. ~;.-'Y,, Caveal emptor appli es in :~k~~s . 1 is 15 11,. 24'\~ 2~i~ B:~'luw: i l! ,,. ',t: 1~ ~ =-" '.t1 1~1 1'.i,5 U: j'' _.,._ af:D' 1.1t Ii ,. :rm 21i.. 22 + h th is a k t I ll · Beot:lonO . S 11 19 3'14 37~ 3111'.lot l OorM 10 , :Jt , .WO , HOl.iM-01 2'11 . I U llo 54 --2 _ _t 1.1 '° " j.S l.fl!ll U .,, m r e pace as we as 1n B~""' .10c1 , 1oa 1,v. 1 ~ 1•~+1 Dov•r P :.4 11 2 ~ ~ ~·"iii ~FDt l'h . $ 6C1A .1 '4414-\4 Roil• ' 11 ~.,.. 1~ ll'h-" buy'". g old horses y0 .. won't ae1cof"e1 211 1 16 10"1 1oh 10.1 +~ 0awe11am 1 22 269 56 54111 JSl'.o+ _., H:ovd..P 1..o 1, 52 ~ "' ,,.. . 1..• 1 \' 111 ~ ""' ~:t ,., . " BtCllQH '°" 13 317 sv. ~ ,,, :tjl\ 8 p f Int 16 -• 5"' • i Vo HollN'IGI .M lJ • UYo 2411.-~ "" 1ar " ' 41 lfl'o 1.sb ~I do too badly if you remember Bell ww1 "'' 10 IS? ~~"" ~~ ~a_!~ r•vo 1 ~~ ·; :it 2' 2' 21 w HoHO o 2v. .. 1 S3'lt v. DY<+~~ 1 J 3t !fl r;t tr' u ~ . . BlmhCo .Ill J s l ' n °"5.lff 1 . .0 lS st 4l'\t <Q'Mio c~ .,.. How•rctJ .20 • nt1 2'0 I If -1"' "' . J I~ I "' jStL"'.: \' your fll'St goal IS to protect 11encua 1..0 ' ti :ie,, ~."" ""••t>--Orr• pf 2.20 .. •• .s ~ ~ ~ HCl'WfMt ,to ' u 1-m. 1 ..._ J:M--Mr''"'•' :ll4 1: "' 21 ' ~ ,~ .~ h d h Bencll11 Pf l •· 1 ..., 'l.' g,_, ct 2 .• · l 4Vio 1.11\lo <IOYI+ YJ HllOOcl 1,lSb 12 » It 11\'J IP.lo .• 1t1E4 • -w at you alrea y ave. Ben CP 1.n • l •5 :JO''~ ",,l1 ?n!+ .,. rextr l.41b . :It ''""° uy, 11.,._ 14 Hltdl•v 1.6' 12 f ~ •~ •'-. · ~ ,"-L" • , 1 \Jtt \J¥11 tlt 'tJ. If . t" . t k • BtnC'"'f 1'h J.2lO .,. ,. ~• ·¥; reYIU$Cr 1 s 11 ' II.lo 9 ... Hl/OtlftH .'8 6 2 tu. '"" •11o-mv lllbS lf < ·~ ti 1nves 1ng Ill s oc s IS new BenCOPI ...... rlO SS ~5 ss,~ -. ,. Outo• p . .0 II Tl I•~ lf\ta 1t\I, ... HllQh~T .I Ob 27 NA Ml• J9'1o .. "t3W Mllbllt -H •• 1,1 "' .. • .• ',"' .... ~ r Ben!lllel lll( 11 16' S •'·"o 4'1• Ollkl pf 1.70 . . UO jOl<\11 JQJ\11 lo.Ill+ \Ill Hl,lftl Cl! .JI 2S M 111 I~ ll'llo + \' M911110f .,. ~ .. 1411 ,. ' or you · · · -,> s erker Pho ' 6' 1:i-:o 13' .. lJ\li-, .. Duk• 01 1.20 .• 1150 oo 100 100 .. 11..,rto.. e: ·'° 10 10 t'Ao 1v0 w.l 'Ao Mot1ttc1 1 ' 14 20\• 20 2n.1" ~ eelt\S IAI 1 11:1 21 2tlii ™'-~ Dulle ot 11111 a>o ''"' ,. ff _, Hwckcr1 .l4 .11 / 2"tt ~ 1tw. v. Mottt\1111 •• lt 5~ m ~ ··· I. You should fi rst have a Bia J 1nc1 .n 11 124 •1~ .~ ,~1"'-+1'h 0111>Brtc1 :1c ;e 53 lt ~ " .. H'f(lrom1 ·'' 1 ''' '"' tli~ "" ~Re•,' '• ,,' ?!.,., ll~ Hl?± ~ h. ' f h · l'll&<;t o 1.0t so n 112,, .. 'j -g11ol•n Co JCI 11 y;. W. fllo--\II -l i--mll''w or 1 1.----,. American fl-1otors' s i x . cus ion o cas -savings ac-Bl•ir Jn ... As •5 1 1 +-''" uPonl 2VJb lt 216 161 l•Y!41w:.+" 1cN Pl'llrm n "' ll'" 1w. 1:m.+ ._ .. !"Ch • .o )I s i3v, lj\" IJO.~ '• .. bond d h BlluloM IQ ~ J 16\1! 16\11 l•YI+ \Ii DuPll Of 4\ls 27 ..m 64\lo ... " ldlllo~ ,... • !l "" ,,,,.,, 2'111 + ~ -•rn 6 a ... \lo 6"+'"' cyll.ndcr and V 8 eng1"nes for coun..,, or · s -an ave e1oc•HA .l2 12 ai. ll\\ 11v. 12 + "" ov..,. ot l llJo .. 1 50\'i ~ Jm+·~ ldtt1B•1 .., f l•'·• • 14 _ ,._ ""°""*' _... 1' :it is.. 2S'I• ~.,. V• . no immediate f"inancia\ needs 8h,1e&.il .65 1 10 lt!o lt\I. 1~ ' Ovclntl,. 1.12 10 H n~ 2114 Vo 14 ... IBIW ~ . I 72\.'i 12 72',\-tl\:i .\foOftMl'11• 3 ll -''4 »IN ~ » + ~~ 1974 are basically unchanged, · ec>01J1e en:, 6 tt1 •'• • ..._ 4,,._ ,... O\IQL~1 11t 1 ll20 1 is..-, s"' •G111 T•'! • 'l , .s,. ».. sit. ~~...fl! w. . 1(1 f1 •1 " + M but improvements include ID-lnve:itm ent funds should be ~:~nut,.:: 1~ ill: ~m 11· .. ·~::::t: l1 Ovmo ln .20 i~1~ ltlilo 1'14-·~ l~IU"· ·.'.\! 16 ff r.l: ~ f,"-·;., ~~1.A ,f ft= mt ri:z:: ~: duction-hardening of exhausl eonsidered as a long-term aonc1 1nc1us -J 5,,.,, 1,: 1~ ~ Eaai. Pl ·'' 1 s %5-1' 2J\oio :m ..... 11 pfA_f . 1 '° '° to ::: =:a 1ft 11 U f::: ::~ 2111-:+ P,(o. commitment·, rlot money you l=' l:~ ,: x1~ ri.,...,.,"" nt? n, •,,_+ ~ ~::;:~ ·f1' -~ .0: 1i 1~ 1ll:: ~ 11'11~ot t.~ '.'. ~ ~ f" ~"' ==•""',.., ,1 ,! "'' ffi:• ·11·~·· valve seats on eights for anl •· t lh Seto w l.36 1 66 1 ....... • .. + 1:•$tG11F JI 12 1o. 1ra t•%1o 11~+ .-t• w .» :11 112 zz ,,v, 3~ 11 """ -·· greater service life and for may w lklCk nex mon . Bor,,,.,,s 1n 11 1 .Mo1o ..!.~ -J~ ~ E111u111 1v. 10 • 11• f' 11 "·' """' .i co s -a w. • , _ ~ ,,..... •, l? ,',"" •,,,~ •1(1! 1 d . S051 EU if,U 11 21 ~ _.,, -r '"i" Ke 1.0$1 V 1'11£'4 I 1.0: +l"t IN.\Cp 2.10. t u = l \t ft':-\.\ r •• 1'4 .--. ,... ,I use of regular, low·lea or . 2. Spend . somo time selec--=:~~~ ~-~ ., ~ il~v. 1~~ 'rs'~ U :~ 1.80 J ~ ~ ...., ~*-.I\ i= r,: : P,! "'° "Ji;+ tt " , 1~ : 11 1~ 1 ~ 1~+ \• unleaded ga50Une -as In-bng .your mves t.m ents. Don't e~~~A\'.~ 12 1280 ~ ;o: 5f,!_·\4· l~:c1: ~~ ~ ri 1: ~~ Jj~ 5l~t ~ 11::~ ,·rtt= I ill 1.,,. 1~ l:m_7 1 , ~ ,S Al kntt ID: llt+·" troduced last year on AMC's buy Justbeeause abrokerteUs irls M~ 1.32 23 ff~~ 6.S\11 Eei\G .1011 )I ...... 1 .... r ... 111+llo 11'1dPwl.. I, • SS 2~ ll" ~+12.Mtf"' 1.M 2l n ~~II +J• I I. d g"1oes AMC's · • ood to Brls Mv 111 2 1 41?\ "°"' 11~+ EIKI Assoc JJ t SI'< i 11 -11 IMIPUlt • . j 111 U. tt -1 NttStT.i 1.• t ,. 20111 2i01 .. »~ l• s x-cy in er en . you 1t s a g company 8 ,11p,1 .21t1 10 2• ll"< 1~\l'i ll~ -lo\ fOS co .u11 11 ), 2"• »"' m.-" nch.IN•tt ~ lo ~ il fo -"'"""11ford "' 1 1 • .,. t \4 '"" .• LUNEBURG SAID AMC's 1974 powerplants also in· own. B~~i!t ''f ~~ 1l lt·.~ :J:Z l:v..! ~ E\~ ~';: ~~ Y :v. v,m :"-~ l::'llfm j·!; tt n ill: ~ pt~ :=.:'1 :: ·; 1J 1:~ ,;_ ,:~+ ~! od I ed f corporate six emission control . Brodi GI .15 5 11 U\4 l•:W. lS -YI Ellr lfl NtN 20 ' ll. • l ~ 1~~ pf .., , r I"" + 1.1, Ntltf#C• I.. • c 't-;. 16'-I~,,. 1974 m e s arc target or devl-s to further redu-air 3. Work with ll)(lre than one BrunGi 1 n • n 20"< '° 10,,~t ~ E1r.1r nc1 ·s 11 , ~• "'-.!J's•;" ", •. ,,,. "'~ .'4 !I 1ot 7o:w. ff ..._1 ~ II b • t ct nd " " b k "f ibl Jf ·1 · "t Bf'OW!I Com 1 II ll~'r 11"' ... .,. "EIPalONG I 6 101 1•~ lt'fo I~ \Ii 1,.... ..., :m ,. """" O ,.og 12 271,\ 7"" ~\la 1e su comp c. compa a 11 1. ro er. l poss e. 1 1sn , BrGro...o 1•1t 1 • 2•¥0 2••• 21\lo-\lr, Ettrae o 1,,. 1 u :ill 'It'll ,....,_ \~ timont ' Q ~ 7~+ '' M'°"' '·''° .. 20 1,.,. """' 11~ ~• BrF&rr\1 ·jl 2' 1S4 I • 11111+ mEI ol .to I •1'1. ·~ '2"'+ ""~"' ~ j ~ ~ "' · ,a.-M N- ORANGf COUNTY RADf07ELEl'HON t SERVICE '"" intermediate market segments po u ion. try to read an lnvcsuncnt ad· Bro Snro .10 • 2• , .... ,"',, 'l!-"• !rM' e 1 1,,. 31 2• t1'4 wv. ti \~:!1~~...£' 1~ 1 ! J, 1 1' lj·· + ""My.,., l .• lJ 1l l)'° 11~ 111o1a-\" where_ the greatest growth THE•" CTO 1 1 1 d d visory service or something ervnswk . '11 1tt 1,f~ 7ll; 24~1~ mrvA1r ·l• s1 ,., ~'' ...., .s,•+ , l:f 1~0:-74: ~ t tit( 1\v. 'i a -"' H•bl•<• 2.)f11 )1 41'.la olOVi nv.+ '' )()t · {I' .w-. S X SS an ar . Br\l,hW ·~ ' 4 ~ 1?~~ j! YI Eme<"vln iii t II "-7Vt 1i,_. Vo ll'lltOCln ·~ 11 lf ID~\ 10" 10 .... " H•l<to Cll ,4) 2t 44 321~ 321' 32:'4 -4-. • , • ~ .. en.Y_~ .-:!C_\;.._ .-..~ ... -.: ? _ -l'111"-("'f'l'Cmlin;. Horne~ .Ja\talin--~al~aives you .di..vera1Jnt OJ>!n: g~~6 1:;. '~ ~ ~~\: if'11-,~~:t:. v. ~s:l.~,.~r _:Jg 1t •# ," ll:J 1m-.~ i=::. t:a '*J 'J""1: ·~ ..n~+1: =:r1115;S :rt-ll 1L ~~~ ~W ~~ r. ...... It 1s 1n thCS(! area~. ne and most Matador models A ion. Re.ad some of the 111· BllCIOe• ,'!!! ,.. u ,m ~\' ,I"!~ EmPOt 1.:11 10 J 1• 1.si-'' .• , llM co •·• J:J JIJ Jfl~~11o lff _.., N•UA r;i ,;Cl 1 202 1611. u 1•v.+ '• 401 SO. SANTA FE ST. SANTA ANA (7141 835-llOS IAm L''""' •ucri. MIM'°11 vi., •• p.,.. fl'•lnl, Sfl'I Cl-I•• San JV.1111 C.'1hfflM. ., ,.... un Jotll IAI Id "lh I II d" n • . t t bll . h Bui ~rQ "" 6 • EmDpfB .$0 t1SO ·~ t V. 41~ . lrif'i.vr .33• .. '5 ~ t<ll;, f)\loT tiio H•IAY J.J.SO •• 12 lJ 144'11 IS + •• sn • a we are n tng • 258 CID six is optional on ves men pu c<itlons sue as e11klr~ ,,no 11 11 1'U nv. ~ "Emp Fin Sk 1 :io 1 7\lo 7\to--.. l"'H.11"' 1.40 1 :ru ,,~~ 30 + "'H•t c'" .AS 20 11 1~ lot'f strong buyer prcfercnc~ for these cars and stand a'rd on Barron'3 and Forbe3 ns well a~~111Aw .1~ : .1 I~ 1U~ ~ ...... ~~I~ ~3 1: J = ii,~ ~o:i..+ 5 ·S!~-:J.1 •r;l 1! lt~ tl'<T 'v. ~~fc"J'~ ~ ~ ~ DI,\ nt-11;! sma ller. but ~ell ~u1pped the Matack>r wagon. The ~ as th(' general economic news. B~~,11:.:i 1'.~ 11 11J ~~! ~~ ~\'I ~~~l~~·h F ,: ! ~~ Jt~ ~:; :i. n!I 11i~ " "l1 Ut: = iJ:+ ~ WJ.t~i.: r i.' ~ .... 17IAI ~ -:: automobiles with the snme CID V-8 stnndard on tbe new 4. Keep alerl on lhe oullook ~u'~:c:,.1'1_, 9 JO~ 3}~ '°,\': ~1,,.. Eo;:hm"*','U 1 I ~f:t li l '~ · 1n1 'L 1~ ; i 21 ~ U\41-'' N•1Dtrt1t ·'° f xn 134\ ~ ,,.,..,_ 1-. comfort a nd convenience h-iatador' coupe x model AM X for companies you already o~rn0vc .'~ l! 1~ ~ ~ .Ji(!+J: ~Q!L11:11 llb 1? 1 nl\ ih ~ · J~l1~fi1~ ,.~ 1'• 1 ;.• ~ ~\-~ ~~:..f' 1~ 1 "t ~'" ~ ~+··~ leatu es 9.S the larger ca.rs " · ' L' If · .... to l'l~rrohs · e--E. •1nc \,.o 1~ 2J 1' t~ ,,,.._" "' t<lff"r 1 .. ,. -,.,., G.ft .so i 112 11 ,;,.. ~ r · and Ambassador, Is optional own. 1:<Ven you Uh .•. ,.... •llL"t it211 11--c, '"' ,."' i4\ll-'ille...,.r1r .1s 1 ,, ~ . n"" 1~;r 1 . ..0 • • J.m. MtCn 1.os 1 "13•.~ 12 iJ The 1974 AMC lineup Of on Orcml\n, Hornet. Jav@lln keep them jn your portfolio, ~;o·I~ ! ,,, ,,~ ~ 2!~t\ .. ~:~1i' 2ji • ': ~ ~ ~+ .~\ ~~ ·: .~ F fl u !v. ~~::-. .: 1: 1;: ~ ~ ... r .! ~= Gre mlins , Hornets, Javclln s, and all other Matadors. Other don't go to sleep en them. :arVi w11 5 d 3h 3'\o\ r.:.... iit~~~ 1 1 ~ ,~' 3r~ ~ ,f~tl" E~ .: ,. ~ ~ =::!~ 1~A s 1•io1\lt ~ ~ offers 14 models, one more CJD two and fOlll'·barttl, and you. :~\ ·* tt ii 5' ~ 1M!.1tt ~~~..... 19 1 1m 1~" ~~ • AD a u: I~ ..,1-. Ml,,....,. .TS ,. 1 " ... ?l,, ,,~ \\ Matador'! and Ambassadors optional V-8's include a 360 Developments could disappoint :n,h1'1i, d 1i ~k: Ul: J.lli71U &~~~"' -i ·, ffit : y, ~t ~ f "'° l ·~ '1~ B~ ~ l:t ~ 1 411 tl:: .ft~ i3m than a ytar ago. the 401 CID four-barrel. 5. Set rcallstlc gonls for •=• s!·1f 3 ,~ Jf' " ~~ ~ E•xon lo ~~~ r-_ f v. n +1"' ~ra;.'w ·~ 0 17 1ht :W, 1 . S:~t:: ~ ~ 1T ~ b it~!: -~,,:....! For the third coMecutlve yourinvestmenl p r ogr am . :~P!c, {~ ,; 11" 1ho, ,~-.~ ;~c.~ \'I •f: 'j~ ~ ~~tzru:f: -c,'Z l : J:: • "".!v!lr .U' ·s Y 11: 11" 1r"=4\" • Rectal model year buyers of Perhaps you can do better 1:1 • •·x 12 2 111• 1)"'• i2,,, •arr 1nc1 .1.fb , 1i; f• 51\-" •ow...., " ,. '' -t "e~ .2S '' •11 w:11 4'l'f Ff Tormentmg Itch • •II 111'• 20 ll 411\ ... v. il~+ "'-F•lr""tF ,,jll 1 1 • Jow• •1 1.30 4 Im I~ "' ~ M 14 111 IM lM " Gremlin Hornet J a v e 11 n than JO to 12 percent. but • ~ . iO "" n"' j1 n "'•"''" fir d l" J-'li l't ow11ii> 1-" 1 !j l \' 1'1i ,,._ ~, ~ \.Js • JO '' ,.i .. n ia, • • • . •rb 0 ! ... 10 J$ Sl'h I 1Yi+" f' w rF SI<; • ~ I\~ 11,1,-It llWll•P\. 111 t • ·~ jl1'+ "Nf:nat l ... • 5' "" 21'4 t2 -' Of Hemorrhol'dal Tissues Matador and AmbaS!ador cars re.member that It Is consisten t •r~l .62 • & IM\ ''~" ,...,.._ l11 ,..:~1f'!' Mlt ' ir· • • -"' ,_,, . 1 ~ l\tt I ~ e'•T "t Le " ' 1:'' t #"""' ,, b AMC' th t k I' l .. Q!I J i U~ '3\.'J '31._ \II ,.__..,.. .iO ~I 10A t It\.-\ 1~1 !!Kt~ 1 tl Ill S "~ 4? \I II . 11 "' Vt ,.,_ .._ will ht covtred y s progress a ma es money. , Fr1 .40 ' 1 • • , Ftttr•co ,.,. 7 ,,1 31\1 1m,~• ITE 1m Mo ui 11~ W! u~t1"' 1 1, 1s ''f , ., . PromptlyD-I1'eved Bu}ltr Protection Plan that Ml one banner year rollowl'd :~rt~.;~ I 77 lf1': m-: n\.=~~~.~.1::z : ~=ID! mt'~ ltr1~~rs ~ .ru i~ ~a 11"-'ttm;r l~p .• "r... ~·· ~ i• lh 12 OOtl by sei•eral d"isast.... wrltrC ,,1 14 1u 11y, 21 21\•-v. Poto ,.,. 4 151 ~ is•: is• ... " u '"'"-c' A t \\ .. .,.. ..v.-t NY11!of :;; ,,.11; 1 101 ... Vi covers ~ mon s or , e.~. •rr~n 111 l 1i'> 1• u 1 1~ 11o F1111 51 · 1 • ••' 1~ .. ;" rv 1,.1~ 11~ . ~1 '° .o -\, ~r•:Nrt .r• • ,~ 1~ ,.,._ 'm-~ miles. The plan mfly be ex· 6. Know yourself. Assess =~.~,·~/ J 'f l\,.. !'l: \~,~li ~ :::or'1.: 1l ~ 411: iii 41~•+ 1! J1,,,., tr .x 1 1'T t:~ , + \\ \: sr i'ift ', 3\? ffi_; fh..-'~• Tn m:iny e'ISCS Prcp.'lmtion H 11ives prompt. temporary rel icC from sud t po.in and Itching and eduall1 ,.,J,,. Mrink .,..,lin« of hemcxrhoidal U. aWtt cuUflll'd by inJlammation.. :r-bydoc:lors..,hun-~ . ' d~I" of potients showed thi~ to he t.run in h\8n)' <:ase8. ln tacl, many doctors, them~ IJC)ves, ~ Preporolion fl* or recommend it kw thcir fa~ il ie&. Prepara/Jol\ H ointment or lJUPJ>OSitoricl. tended to 24 Ol<lnths or 24,000 how you react to ~d market ::~~~ 1~ II ,f, :::: J"" l1',1: .~: 'l~.1:: • u alit :,J ~+-~ j:;!ll"1 .1: I ~ J~,. I~ I~:: ~~~i ·>t I~ :: ~' ~ 'i.t+~~ 1nlles. news, or to a recession. Try lo l i°"t CP 4 II 1).; ~ ~ ;: ~1=~ t:= l ~ ,,,: 11~ r.::+ 1: if"'~)ol ,.3' l) '!Mj .~ l ..... ~ ll:~W· .o! I t ffi! ll" r American Molors' 11174 can: aet up patterns or actl~n that ::,.;~"t l U ~ .., tta+ ~ ~i::r~~ f 1J .i 1~ ~h: [~ ~ 1"~" ,II 1.J 111 )4 ~ t. ~Iii~ .. \ d! lf d rv. W' Will appear in dea le r help )"OU tO bcllaVC rflti0tla1ly .-:Git! .10 \, t» \,... l'' {S Tl:"'""'°" 1t: 'tt ~ ~~ ffit:1'JI 11 jl 6 lOI 9" ~ ~.t ~~,.\IT'' J 2! ~ r showrooms In early . Sep-. when ll would be CMicr to be ':~ ·r:i '~ JH ~~ j'I. ·,·~ ~' ~::l~~-11-lJ .. '"' ~--: j'= k tm .. g' n-.1! ) .' "" .• ; ~ i: lit " •·-~· lrraUoo·• ~ JllL '·'° 10 w... ,.. e-,.. ,,11Bk<t ,,, '!! , 1 , .~~ ., J1-tn1nw ,.,~ • "' + ""' ""' 1. , 'Jt \ 1 1 u:.tu~. ,-""" 11.ol 4\oi , ft . ,_111\tlt I.Oft "" ....-MlrflM• I.a I 1 •. ·r ... • I l ~I ' .. , \ . Monday, August 6, 197) DAILY PILOT 9 Whllit Quantities Last! MEN'S FLARE JEANS 2 Days Only! DO Many assorted styles and colors to choose from in siies 28-36. While quantities last! Sh op e•rly and save! BOYS' FLARE JEANS 00 PAIR Wiie selection of styles and colors for your convenience -in solids or patterns. Slims and regulars. Si1es 8~18. While quantities last! I Similar to illustration J. .. Kmart GRILL SPECIAL TUESDAY ONLY ' c H A R G E I T MENS' SHORT SLEEVE · SPORT SHIRTS 00 2 Days ~ . Onl ! ----~----=~·--- . ·~. ' I., ' ~ .. ,_, ' . . Polyester/cotton blends in a large selection of styles & c.olors ... Si1N.S-XL-While_ qu~ntities la.it! -Use Your Kmart Charge Bankam ericard or Master Charge MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS ' , 2 Days Only F 0 R 00 Stock up now on th is terrific: velue . in men1s sol id & print dress 1hirt1. Si zes 14 1/z to 17. •-Whjle.qu•ntiti•s lesf-.,Char-9•·ttl·· "'-~ .. '•' MENS POL VESTER SPORT COATS 2 Days Only • 00 DELI SPECIAL COMPLETE MEAT LOAF DINNER Tend-Delicious HAM • 4i·1.00 Includes Whipped Potatoes 1.00 SANDWICH -Buttered V99etable Jello or lce·Cream Choice of Large So~ Drink ON A BUN TUES. & WID. ONLY I • --, I I • .. , i ~ '' • MENS SHORT SLEEVE POLYESTER ~SHIRTS 2 Days Onfy! .. 00 ~ l Many essorte~ solids and prints in button front or placket r styles. 100 •/. Polyester. While quentitie1 lest! i SHORT SLEEVE MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS 2 Days Only 00 • i ~ ; ' ~~ A variety of .styles & colors in short sleeves -includingi ti zipper or lace-up front. Buy several at this low low price. ~ ~ WhHe q"e"li!ies l•sl. I similar lo ill"'trolio"I .. Boys' Short Sleeve I ' ,; Sweatshirts 'I 00 Cotton/ acrylic short sleeve-crew neck sweatshirt• is ••· ·1~rte1:1 'cblO"rs. Sfies t f 0-16.' While 4u1'ntit1t'f 11,tf"'·~--..... ' ~ • Kmart GRILL SPECIAL WEDNESDAY ONLY I I ' ' I ' ' ALL TftE FISH YOU CAN EAT! I I I , French Fries 1.00. ' ~ I Crisp Fresh Slaw Roll & Butter · . , , • Mol'lda:1, August 6, 1973 Monday's CJosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • Improved Dollar. Peps. Up Marl\:et ' NEW YORK (AP) - A sharply higher dollar In :' Europe offset the spread or the higher prime rate at home to produce a moderate rally in the stock rnarket M9nday afternoon. brokers said Despite mdlcat1ons of a business slowdown in purchasing decl1nos, and the spread of th4= 9 percent prime to most ma1or commerciaJ banks, investors apparently took heart in the strength of the dollar on European exchanges. . It rose more than 1 percent frcm•Fnday's d ose. Other positive factors, brokers said, were rec- ' ord auto sales and continued strong demand for steel. ' SC DAIL V "LOT J J Special to the DaUy Pilot LOS ANGELES -For the slx months ended June 30, Grelt Soulhwes.t. Corp. an· nounccd unaudited con· sohdated losses or $2,496,000 before prov1s1on for loss on foreign exchange. The company said that s1gn1f1caot adverse fluctuation 1n the Swiss franc exchange rate used to con vert tbe por- tion or the company's debt that 1s payable 1n S\vlss irancs to US dollars resulted in a charge against income of $3 500,000 based tm exchange rat.es prevailing on July 31. Si!Les Nel PE lhdsl HIOll L&W L11t Ch11 0 Empire Fhaan~e Special to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES - Empire Fmanctal Corp today reported eammgs or $1,736,201 or 83 cents per share for the first half of 1973 up from $1 663,877 or 77 cents per share for the hke period last year. Gross revenues w e r e $10,946,433, up from $9,299,421 0 Fluor Corp. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A $30 million cootract for con- struction of a sy n thetic natural gas plant near Tucson, Artz , has been awarded to Fluor Engineers and Q>nstruc- tors Inc of Leis Angelelr: Work on the project un· dertaken by Tucson Gas p.nd Electric Co , operatuig agent for a group or utility com· pan1es. 1s already tmder '''ay at Fluor's IAs An g e 1 e s d1v1s1on. O Drlcers Agree OAKl,AND (AP) A weekend agreement bet\veen strikmg beer truck drivers and distributors 1n two counties may set a pattern for 10 olher Northern Cahfornt..-. counties to end the ~ax·weck walkout, a union 0£f1c1~1 sriys Ori\ ers voted 436 to S.t on §aturday to accept an offer lrom Santn Clara and S'.ln Tv1ateo county d1str1butor-i. said Bob Bi(;(gins. $CCretar~ • treasure r of l.oc<i\ 888 or t h~ Teamsters' 13eer Drivers and Ssile~mP.n lJn1on e Lear S iegle r SANTA MONICA (AP) Lear Sl£,lcr. Tnc . r~r1C'd flilonday"'tJlat earnings fnr tl1C' three months ended .June 30 increased to $5 85 m11hon, or 35 ents s shnre. Crom $t 06 m1lhon . or 2l cents a share. a year earlier. Sales rose to Sl72 26 mUHnn from $153 76 m1Jl lon in the comp.1rablc im quarttr. I I • I I l \ J2 DAILY PILOT L. M. Boyd Drunken Fish Easy to Catch Young lady, do you have a pretty J"ll:2Uth! If so, you can now have it copied in a mold, then cast in bronze, so said decorative lips can be worn as a brooch. Dress de- signer Yves S.t Laurent came up with that notiort··Jt's not altogether new, though. In ltrlS , si!vador Dali designed a couch in the shape of Mae Wes t's mouth. Am Advised that Aus tralian dog called the dingo has ot be taught how to bark. lifaybe you didn't realize that fis h known as the guppy was named after Trinidad's Mr. R. J. Lechmere Guppy who fi rst gave speciments of the li ttle beast to the British Museum. No woman shotlld wear a \.\rig for more than three hours at a time. That's the counsel of the West German li-fedical Association, Doctors there contend numerous wig- ~earing women report scalp ailments which tepd to make them bald. POLITICS -Q. "\Vho said, 'Politics makes strange postmasters'? Kin Hubbard?'' A .No, that was Frank Hubbar/ Kin llubbard said, "There's some folks standing behind the President that ought to get around where he can watch them." Q. "Which has more caffeine -a cup of instant cof- fee or a cup of brewed co(fee the sa me strength?'' Irvine Student Honorecl A second-year student from Irvine led nine area students recognized ror academic ex· cellence recently by \Vestem State University College of Law of Orange County in Anaheim. !\!rs. Betty Scidmore, of 17831 Mann St., Irvine, was awarded the First American Title Insurance Com pa n y A \Va rd for academic ex· cellence and the Corpus Juris ,_--,= Secundum and FoWldat ion1 Press awards for the highest accumuJative g r a d e p o i n t average. f\irs. Sc idmore was also honored for her work\in torts and trus ts. CorporatioO Jaw a w a r d s went to Dennis Bader. of 7000 \V. Coast Hi ghway. Ne wport Beach, and Irene Pasquini. of 16381 Woodstock Lane, HWl- tington Beach. Donald Arego, of 14637, Kazan St.. Irvine, and Dr. Ralph Blackwell, of 2135 Vista Estrada, Newport Beach, both were honored for their work in cri minal law, while Milton Vander Molen , 9472 Mokihana ·- A collection of quai.nt .... -.. -.Coad l'Jaq shops_ ,__ ______________ _,_ NOW OrfH 7 DAYS • , • TM J.""4 TIHef • , • TIM .... W.. ••• ,..,. •14 ,,.., •.•• ,_ ....... r.n,·, ,.....,.,.,..., • • , W1111. Ctri-. C.11-y, 1h. ••• 'IM MkMk.e •.• Git A'""'f ... Sw11day'1 l.11 ••• Wldtoll-Horr.ft si..._,1 ••• HIWl't Liltl• Switi1Mo114 ••• MIHll H111 • , , S-.Mllf"ty CRAYON SPORT PRINTS Save To $1.00 A Yard Good selection of voile prints, solids, nov. elties, cottons end cottor, hlends. ••• It ..... -•• *" °""" o.111,., .•• c .. H-.d411~ • , • C.lkil C•1ift , • • ""'''--' • · • l)ol'1 M • •• lttt, lOlty , •• l..-TwfvtO •• , lti1 r.11 ~ ••• Dat.'1 Miu Mll'ke '-f Wer\t ••. ""' ~ •.• W'll'-111' ~ , , • Wl1M MOii JO C()Mf. SUN-TIME FAB RICS DAN RIVER NUBIY DAN PLAIDS Drive, lluntington B e a c h received a-similar honor £or study in criminal procedure. Delightful d e~igns for the you ng , the young at heart, feat ured on natural bac:kgorunds. VALUES T9 $1 .98 YARD DAN RIVER "SHENNANOOAH " SP.ORT STRIPES SPORTSWEAR DENIM STRIPES A. The brewed. Theoretically, it should have twice as much. Besides Mrs.Sc i d more , three others. were honored for their tort work. They were Eric Cobane, of 9165 El Tango Q. "What's a 'ser of chickens?" Circle, Fountain V a 11-e y; -->A-. TW0700sters ana five hlils":""fnlhe lfi"ngoor the""°i)o'Ul-'" ~ama . Dr., Lo~ g ~ ~: lEGUU.R Sl.l' YD. 97' MACH INE WASH _ . Cotto11 ·----- 44"}45 " Wide yd. MACHINI WASH l'"!-45"'----WWtk _ • '1~( MACHINE WASH • _ ~ __ 1 _,_~Po,~.L£otto• yd. '44 '/45~' w • .--............ -99!._-1-9---if M019 Sec,urily Wtth try bo~-· ---~ _ _ _ _ _ -. __ Beach; and .James D411ge[, of. , . ---200:tMira·m'a.r Drive, 'Balboa. - -More often than otherwise, it's-the-wife rather thap the-11 ----,..,-..,,.--.,.---~ Mvel"i1$emenJ husband who manages the family money, surveys show. But not on the fann. Exceedingly rare is the agriculturist's wife who liandles the cash. FALSE TEETH EASY· FISJ:llNG -At Stradella in northern Italy is a vennootb di stillery. Something broke there recently. A \.\'bole batch of the sauce polluted Stradella 's creek. Fish therein got drunk. Swimmers downstream toUnd they could catch said fish with their hands. Baskets full. \Vhat 's more, even though fresh ou t of the frying pan. I understand they had a rather Caney flavor, those fish. As though marinated. At Any Time .Attal4 ,.. tletla ..w drop at .. wront thnef A deaNre ~ eim help. P.ABTEETH• Po'"1er rhw denturft • loiicw, ~. tJteadler hold. Wh1beembarn9ed!Foi-m1:1!'9 !eeurit{ ind eonifort1 u1t1 FAS .. TEETI Dentlue .Adhesive Powder. Dentutefl tbat flt ire -nti.t t4 he.Jt.h. See your deiitist: rea:uJul&. WHY BE SHY •.. ASK AIOUT PRESCRIPTION PIJCES! Call , 642-4104 . It is customary in Japan for most all the mourners at a funeral to chip in to pa y the costs of same ... Three, maybe four, out of every 100 deliveries are breech births •.• A waitress of lengthy experience contends the most difficult restaurtant customers are farm ers and taxi driv- ers ••. Only one out of every 10 widowed mothers of mar- ried chi ldren Jive with said offspring ... In a pool where- in women were asked what color dresses they prefer, that hue most often named by the redheads was green. [ :..--. 1 M:1mc1x1 "3or ' l'O E. 17tfl St. at Tlllf'l1 An. N•n to Rolplls Mb. -Address mail to L . M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, NeU'- po rt Beach, Calif. 92660. Costo Melo •42-4104 _____ , __ _ \ ' -. ; Mon. thr11 Fri. ' 11 ,_Sat. ' "' 2 LOVABLE'S® HALTER BRA I Zippy lilt/e st raps go every switch way t o give you non- stop, no-show support. A . ... beautiful underplay for even your barest fashions. W.hite , nu de, 32-36 A-B-C, 3.50. Mail and phone orders invited. Street Floor Lingerie , 54 ~ . '(\IT"'\-.....;;~~ ~/ \l " ' ___.5U9~ 8{'.\lt t1DnC19 ilDIBID8D.CIIlw&:V ANAHE IM NEWPORT HUNflNGTON BEACH 4._. N. Evcllcl 171 4 1 SJS.lt21 47 f1,hio11 htand 171'1 6-44·1211 77'17 Edi1191,Aw111u1 171-41192·lll 1 ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE CERRITOS 2l00 N, T v1ti11 Sh1•I 171 -41 ,, •• f 1 I I 500 liH C1ni101 Mill C2 I l J 860 ·04 I I SHOI' 10 A.M. to 9:10 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH F-lil)A:t.-""TURO.a.Y 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. f SUNDAY 11 N00t4 '• \ 'M rf MIRACLE KNITS Wide, wide range of smart knit designs, many new novelty stitches and lots of solid colors to choose. MACHINE WASHABLE REGULAR $2.29 YD. Polyester/ Cotton 54"/56" wide 1--:t ...... METAL ZIPPERS 7" ind 9" lengths, white only TARTAN SUitt+iqs PLAIDS & CHECKS New fall Color Combos MACHINE WASH -TUMIU DRY REG. $3.29 YD. 54•• Wide Acrylic • s cMlrc~ • PlAIDS •SOLIDS •FANCIES Dec:ron Polyester brushed pleids, matching solids. MACHINE WASH -TUMIU DlY CAREFREE 70 C:-bl. _,_ 54" Wide MACHINE WASHABLE WOOL PLAIDS Wonderful range of color end design' combinations in thes!f prestigious m1c:_hin1 wash plaids. 30 COMBINATIONS 70o/owool/ 30°/o nylon 54" Wide MUL Tl • STITCH JACQUARDS H11•y 11 • 11 V1 oi:. weights for dresses, suits, sports. TreMendous range of stitches MACHINE WASHABLE VALUES TO $5.98 YD. 29~ 54"/601t Wld ... . .... ,,,. ...... +...:...-........... ,, ... ... 250 YARD SPOOL • THREAD WOOL FLANNEL 15 COLORS Matching solid color flannels for c:o- ordin1t.d suits, dresses and fine sportswear. 70% wool/ 30% oyloo 54" Wide PlAIDS HOUNDSTOOTH . MATCHING SOLIDS NA TIO NALLY ADVERTISED Klopmen's "OACRt>N 811 MACHINE WASH -TUMIU DRY 60"/62" 54~ ·cutt1No . aoaaD f ' I" 1J1aiking1 In ell directions 'of. heavy,\ 10 ! BACK TO SCHOOL SPEl:IAL l1min1t1d Kraft 8oe'rd \ , IACK TO SCHOOL 1 '7 ,1 SPECIAL •I • S•11ttl c .. , Piao - 9rhtal 1t s,11 Diego F""fv· C••t• M.,. -541•1116 , O'""'•• M.n -0 1•119ethorp• ind H•,bor ,. • .....,._116-2U4 ' . -· "...,"--17th •I l rbtol htthl A11e -14J.lll I Httlttl11ttff C....-E4/111•r·•f lt•4:h l lvd., H1.t11Hnt !o11 h•c.h -l f7•101J .,... _ 2 r o Vo11'1) -IJ0·114t _,_ IQflo lotk c..t.r - l• '•Im• •I 51111!011 l•fftl lorl -Ul·fJIJ •• ' • -~ ... ' ' • ' • . ' 1 1 Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ' VOL 66, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE.COUNTY, CAUFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1973 TEN CENTS Laguna Meters to Tick Off at Twice Amount ' By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ille Dal" Piiot ttalt C0me fall, the cost: Of parking in Laguna Beach is goi.ng up'. 'lbe Laguna Beach City Council agreed Saturday in a special session to double the meter rate, and to install 680 new meters. The conversion of old meters and in- stallation of the new ones will start sometime In October and the change over should bt complete by the end of the month. city officials said. Installation of new meters along . . . . ·. . : . Laguna canyon Road won't start until May. 'Mle colDlcil's action was taken over the objections of several merchants who wanted assurances the i n c r e a s e d revenues would be used directly for park- ing. They also disagreed wilh the timing of the ina'ease (a regional shopping center in Laguna Hills is due to open soon). They said that the increased fees would likely drive Laguna Beach customen to shopping centers with free parking. • About 40 persoM were present at the I:• • • ... .. . . -:.;"· '•: .. ·.·. .·.:.:. · .. CAMBODIA .. council meeting, The vote to increase the fees, to allocate the revenues to the general fund, and to place new meters at spots around town was unanimous. Vice Mayor Peter Ostrander was absent. Officially, the council merely held the first public )learing and reading of the enabling ordinance. · · A second reading and the expected passage of the law is scheduled Aug. 15. The ordinance will become law 30 days later. Bill Marriner, representing the Down tow a Bu~en's Associatoo (OBA) told tbe couneil be wanted an ac- counting of funds which be estimated to be $71),000 per year since 1969, which were to have been placed in a special parking fund. Marriner said the city had violated its ~own law and was placing the meter fees in the general fund without earmarking the monies for specific parking purposes. Finance Director Tom Meade advised the council that because city ordinances cau ror use of the fmds in a wide varelty of parking, street maintenance and traf- fic regulation programs, the money was 'The 'Lumber Yard' shifted to. the general fund two years ago. The additional funds produced by the meters v.·ould be used to make available additional parking, Mayor Roy llolm said. And he said it was bad practice to lock the monies up in a special trust. He ad· ded that the council viewed additional parking as a number one priority. Meter fees will be increased from ten cents to twenty cents an hour. New meters will be lnslalled along North Cpast Highway from Aster Street. to Myrtle Street, South Coast Highway from Legion St. to Brook Street plus half a block along intersecting streets; CliU Drive from Broadway to North Coast I lighway and La guna Canyon Road from Forest Avenue to Canyon Acres Drive. The Int ernal Revenue Serv i cc previously reported that , under the price freeze, neither t.he addition of new n1eters nor the increase in fees would be perinitted. But the city has received \VOrd that, by the time the installation starts, the freeze on meters will have ended. . Lao-una to !Act on Mall l ~--__ ·------------===--.::.=,=-=--:::::::...::-:-:-=:==·-=:·:..:·==-=-=-=-=-=-:_.:=-=-=-=--::::-_::::::;:;:-·-----· --· ~-------------. -. ,,,. __ .. ----· . .. : . 13) ... - ". ... " . . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . . ,· TOWN OF NEAK LUONG-SCENE OF ACCIDENTAL U.S. BOMBING C•mbodl•n Offltl•ls Report 300 W•ro Either Klllod, Injured Worst Mistake Bombing Levels CattCbodia Town PHNOM PENH (UPI) -United States planes accidentally bombed the Mekong River town or Neak Luong today, in- flicting more than 300 casualties on the rerugee-swollen populace ht the wont CAMBODIANS CITE VICTORY IN SKIRMISHE$-P•ge 4 mistake bombing or the entire lndochin& war, Cambodia Air Force sources reported. A Cambodian air force officer wbo took part tn rescue efforts said tbe tnll mlgbt rise to more than 100 dead and up to eoo wounded . A survivor in a Phnom Penh hospital said the bombing destroyed tbe Neak Luong city hall, a hospital, an army and a navy base and scores of houses. There were conflicting reports whether the bombing raid was carried out by B52 heavy bomben which carry a 30-ton bomb load each, by swinging Fl II !igbter- bombers which carry an 1&-ton bomb load each, or possibly by bOth. In Washingtonj a Pentagon spokesman, Jerry W. Friedhelm, said he did not have a full report on the ~!dent bul "the in- itial lndicaUons are that part of the bomb lood ol one B52 fell short o1 ihe intended target." He said the area hit apparently was a military camp area contalnJng ~m· bodlan trooos and dependents. Jle bad no stat1sttcs· on casualties. More than 200 wounded persona were or .. ge C:.ut Weailler. ~ ..... ~ :.• , It'll be partly IUMY Tuesday, 1 following the usual low clouds ~ drlnle along the Or.ange CoUl Temperatures w!.11 range from 70 at the beachea, to 80 inland. Over- nl&hl lows in the llOIJ. • INSIDE TODAY "No one like& to d'ie outside the countrv ht low1,: l(lkt for· ,,.., Cl!ban dictolc>r Fulgrncfo Batista 14#1 ~ear. The tvront, toho tool ousted bV Fidel Coatro In 1959, died •I a Spa.U.1' resort todav. See •IOTJI Po11< f.. -.. " ... ..-.. L,M,&M " ..... " C•fftnll• I " ........... • a...J• U• " Or8"t c....w I CllMIM ,.. .. "" ... ..,. ... c-. " ...... _ .. "·"-" ,_., , .. ,, --• ·--, .. ,, ....... , .. I ':::;'t." 11 •11tett.iMMl'I 11 ""' 11 ........ 1 .. 11 --• ~ .. ....._.. ...... lJ.14 ' --• brought intn Phnom Penh, 12 mil~ northwest of Neak Luong,, by helicopters and boats. There was no definite number of those kilted, because their bodies were left in the rubble of the town, a terry-crossing point and strongpoint of the defense line southeast of the capital. An officer who belped evacuate the woonded said be counted at least 50 dead sprawled in the town. "From the noise l heard, l guess there were four planes," one vicUm iri a hospll.al bed tnld a UPI reporter. "At fnt, I thought ti was harassment fire and we ran for cover." U.S. Air Force Gen. John Vogt. bead of American air operaliom in 'lbailand, flew to Phnom Penh to discuss the in- cident with Cambodian President L<ln Nol , and returned to Thailand today. Heavily bandaged women and children crying and pleading for help, reached Phnom Penh by boat late this afternoon. Helicopters were used to bring in the (See BOMBING, Poge l) 'Doomed' Boy, -. Breathes on Own · As Mom Waits , By JOHN VAi.TERZA Of ""' Dlltr ...... ,,.., Jason Rea, 3, o~ Capistrano Beach, continued 'to. make marted Improvement ln a Denver hOSpltal today. where surgeons have ruled out the possibility that the youngster would be a potential transplant donor under pr e 11 e n t circwnstanc:ea. . But lltUe news of . tbe critically ill )'Ollllgster's cOridlilod ll'IS be<il given to his 'mother who is awaiting word on the late ol her aon from her home on the southem Orllltl1l COOS!. Mrs. Linda Rea said today that the last call she received from Denver was Saturday and thf, wait "I> making a wreck out of me. ' Spokel!rilen nld today the youngstor thla: momlng became able to breathe on hll own, without the help of a respirator whlo;h had b«n keeping him alive for DMwe than two weeks. Mn. Ilea, 29, had ste<led..hersc!f lale tut .,...k to what then seemed inevitable .:.:1ior ""' -1d die at the Ul!lterslb' ol Colorado Medical Center and bil kidneys and liver would be removtd !or lmplanta tnto three olh<r dying younpters. But all' that changed • F~day when physicians determined that becau..e of • slight lmprovem<nt In the condition ol the comatooe youngster, he could only be considered' "a live poUenL" That Improvement -the apparent detcctlon ol aome bral• wave activity In ISet IMPIIOVS. P ... ll ., Plans for "The Lumber Yard," a two- OY£\ "2)1~11!.AJ:eSlaurant and bank on the downtown site of the Laguna Beach Lumber Company will be review- ed 'l'bttmay'lllg!lt by the Boord of Ad' ' justment. The historic lumber company office, smokestack and eucalyptus trees -the last of the original downtown grove - will be preserved, aceording to documents on file with the city plamting department. Design of the mall will closely rollow the Nonnandy .. tyle archilectw'e of the lumber COlllpOJly-ollke-building, con- ·structed in )91% by the · late Joseph Jahraus: · Parktng !0< 19 cars will he located on the ground level beneath the mall, with an additlonal 82 spaces 19 be provided on the old Canyon Lumber Company site across the street. Parking exceeds city requirements by 42 spaces . Of the 40,000 square feet of leaseable space, 27,900 will be devoted to shops, 6,300 to the bank and 5,600 to the restaufant built iii the lufuber Corripiny .. office. Cost of the project ls estimated at $2.5 million, including purchase price of the two acres or land . The sale was made through the estate of Joseph R. Jahraus. Plans for the project Blso will require approval from the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission estalr lished by Proposition 20. Development of the Lumber Yard may begin in early 1974:. Richard Jahraus, ~e~f .~~w.1· ~.~ .Q~-,yn ~ • ' I -Graters Ex~uts in Meat Shipmenf.s By Tiie Allocl•ted Press Supennarkels boped !0< ..,. shipmenls of beef today to replace mercllandlse snapped up by weekend shoppers, but many stores said th<!y expected only a fraction of what they needed. A spokesman for one Los Angeles market ~d be was figuring on "probably a 60 percent cut" in the amount of beef he oorma.Ily gets. "You open the door and it's like gangbusten," "fid a super mart e & Laguna1is Suffer 'Busy Weekend' Traffic Prob"lem Police described it as "just a normal congested weekend in Laguna." Ha11'8ssecf. residents claimed "nothing wrui moving." Not even muggy overcast weather diminished lhe horde of visiton and their machines much, although th,. pasl weekend was the first since estival season that a Sigalert was not broadcast by the local comtabulal')'. "Traffic saturday was averag~_ for a busy " summer weekend. When tbe rain started in the a'ftemoon we had a mass exodus from the beach and some con· gestlon," ·Sgt. Nonn Babcock said. Ten accidents wei-e lcf'gged over the weekend, none inwlvlllg serious lnjury. .. Sunday we didn't have a Sigalert and did not have the great back up we've had In the past," Babcock· said, noting tHe traffic on Laguna Conyon Road was only backed up to El Toro Road and not all the way to the San Diego Freeway as It has be<a'i..5unday'1 J'O'll ~ · · · "Everything was iust sort of back..t up. Just a normal congested beach city. 111.ere'a not much you Can do about it, ex· cept suffer," Sgt. Babcock said. CLASSIFIED AD SELLS IT FA.ST You don't need a magic wand lo achieve.results. Look what a Dally Pilot ctassHied want ad can do: .... om1, ""1 low mileage, :lint cond. r th, auto, alr .;ond., v.e eng. WJII occept $tu0 far quick 8alO. (Pllooe No.). (Name). 11Very, very pleased," 5811 the ad· verUser. "Fantastic resultal'" .Find out ~aeU by dialing the tUroct line - . '·/-' employ! in Sacramento, as he looked at the lqng lilll' at the meat counter. • .Meanwhile, the government was stick- ldg to its guns on the 'beef price freez:e - at least for tbe time being. Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz on ABC television's "Issues and Answers" Sund;iy said that the freeze on retail beef pricea would be kept until Sapt. 1%, the date set by President Nixon last mooth when he lifted price controls from all other food:I. However, he also said it "remains to be seen" whether the freeze mJght be lilted sooner, explainlng there was "recognition or the fact that lots of ques· lions have been raised and lots of pressure has been put on." Some consumer groups urged support for a "Don't Buy Anything Day" on Tuesday to prates~ the soaring food prices. Joan Sheets, a leader of Fight Infla- (See BEEF, Page II * * * * * * Congressman Requests Probe Into Commissaries From Staff, Wire Dlspatobet Rep. I.es Aspin (0.Wis.) has charged that some of the 287 military rom· missaries in the United States may be operating illegally and he has requested an investigation into the matter. A.spin said Sunday a 1952 law requires the def9e secretary to certify that food at reaSQnable prices and quantity is unavailable in a locale before a com- missary can operate there. However, Pentagon regulations defeat the purpose of the laW by allo,V'ing com- missaries to operate wherever there are stores with prices 20 percent higher than commj'58fY prices, Aspin asserted. Spokesmen . at two Orange Coast mliltary beaes, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendleton, have refus- ed to comment on the allegations, saying Instead that the U.S. Department o[ Defense in Washington would have to answer the charges. "We're unauthorized to _answer here.'' said Chief Warrant Officer William Ombahl of El To(O. ..Every .once in a while a story. like this gets around bu't since It doesn't name us specifically, you'll have to find the answen in Waahlngton.'' At Camp Pendleton tn Oceanside, Capl Looi! Chltelle said he would have to "defer to Washington." j''lbc charges were made at the Department of Defense, not Pendleton, so r CD.D't answer ror them,'' ht ei· plained. The Wiaoonsln congressman, a fre. quent critic of the Pentagon, 1ald there are 271 military commissaries In the United Slates doing an IMUal bulltneaa ol $2 bUilon and costing the taxpapers "bu"' dreds of millions of dollars a year" tn su\>Oldles. Aspln said the Defense Deportment w~ l!C<klng $17.9 million this year to bu!kl new conunl.uarlcs. Ue 8ald he WI! asidnf the Gtneral Accounting O!lice (GAO), the lnvestlptory ann of Con(ress, to look lntn the operations. • The GAO should find out, Aspin said, ·whether the Department of Defense regulations and their enforcement "are within the scope of the law and how many stores shouJd be closed down." He said a GAO study conducted in 1964 showed that half the commissaries in the United States should be shut down . There was no immediate response to Aspin's charges.' However, individual servicemen reacted privately with ex· pressions ranging from indignation to ap.. preciation of the savings which com· missaries offer. "Every ti.me they run out of other things to criticize, they start attacking the commissary system,'' one officer said. Another serviceman saJd commissaries used to offer a regular 20 percent dis· count but now charge close to civilian supermarket prices on most Items and often are less well stocked than supermarkets. He pointed out that com- miqaries in the Washington area were rationing meat, allowing each customer onlY'tWO 'Pftckages ¢r trip. · Ex-Mayor's Dad Stricken. . Leopold Goldberg, father of former Laguna Beach mayar Richard Goldberg, was strJcken with an apparent stroke Sunday at his .son's restaurant . The elder Goldberg was noshed tn South Coast Community Hospital by IU!lbulance. Aldo• reported the 74:-year-old man to be in C!'tisfac-- tory condltlon today . Dr. Vincent Carroll's ornce sakt today Goldberg was "doing well.'' He Is partially paralyied, however . Richard Goldberg said his lather has been visiting here ror about lhrte wteks. owner of Laguna Beach Lumber, said he plans + to transfer·-hfs operations ·lo Laguna Canyon, Various city departments have given the green light to the project. Re- quirements include an eight-inch sewer line, new sidewalks and curbs and un· dergrounding of utilities. Beach Construction, owned by James Schmitz, one of project principals, will serve as contractor for the Lumber Yard. Realtor William Lambourne, another principal is handling leasing ar- rangements. TOP LEGION HONORS Laguna's O.W. Price American Legion Bestows A 'vard On Laguna Man Lagunan O.\V. Price has been awarded the American Legion's top honor for ac· compllshments of an individual in com- munity services. The award is the second in a row for Price, and the third he has received . A plaque was presented to him by John W. Cleary or San Francisco, c.halnnan of the Legion Community Service Commission. In making tbe presentation at the Anaheim Convention of the American Legion, Cleary recognized Price's 54 years or service and "24 hours a day'' work for •eterans and tht!ir dependents. Price, a former official with Veterans Administration retired to Laguna Beach ln 1961. l-fowcver. he has continued to work for veterans 11nd in community servlc<. Ehrlichman Disputed WASH1NG1'0N (AP\ -Republican National Chairman Georg<!: Bu sh, dlsagreeing with former presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman, said today lie doesn't endorse the Idea or investlgatlng the drink.Ing habit! and sex lives IA political opponen.J,s. "Crawling around ln the gutter to find some weakness or a man, l don 't thlnk we need that," the GOP party chlel said tn a television In- terview. I I l 2 DAILY Pll01 LB Monday, Allgu st b, 1913 ·New Nixon Costs Disclosed "'ltnproper T hitags' Perfeetly Clear $5.9 Million < Gray Says Nixon Given 'Warning' Our President, Fashion Critic WASIUNGTON (AP) -President Nixon turned fashion critic today, commenting <ln the trend toward women wearing slacks. Total Spent By Military After a bill-signing ceremony in his Oval Office, Nixon observed that a woman reporter was wearing slacks. This touched off a brief conversation in which he commented: HSJacks can do something for some people, but it can't., ." \VASHINCTON (AP) -The Nixon ad· The last of the President's observation was lost in the laughter ministration disclosed today the federal of the officials and rep<>rters in the office. government bas spent about $10 million WASfITNGTON (AP) -Former acting conspirator E. Howard Hunt Jr. The President then told the reporter, Helen Thomas of United for security, communications and ad-FBI Director L. Patrick Gray 111 said ((). Gray recounted again how he and Lt. ministrative supoort at President Nixon's d b th. k h Pr 'd t N' Press International, that "I think you do very well ... Turn around." ay e m s e gave esi en ixon Gen. Vernon A. Walters Jr., deputy home-and.office complexes in catifornia suffkiient warning last year for him to As Miss Thomas complied, the President asked: "Do they cost and Florida. know that improper and illegal things director of the CIA, came to the COO• less than gowns?" . were being done by his staf£ members. clusion in the weeks after the Watergate "No," she replied. A presidential spokesman disclosed the o JI uJ J raid that men on the White House staff "Then change," Nixon said, again to laughter. military spent $5.9 million at San Gray ca ed Nixon J y 6, 1972, ess Clemente and Key Biscayne. : than three week s after the Watergate were trying to confuse the investigatiorl. .: brea k-in. and told him that men on his He said he contacted Nixon July 6, and The costs had been secret. ':staff were trying to wound him by using The secret Service then said it spent .; fhe FBI and the Central lnteltigence said, "Dick Walters and 1 feel that poo-less than $300,000 and the General ~Agency to confuse investigators trying to pie on your staff are trying to mortally Auto Restr1·c.n·o11 Plans Services Administration announced its • interview two key witnesses, he said. wound you by using the CIA and FBI and spending totalled $3.7 million for security ~= "Do you think a reasonable and pru· by confusing the question of CIA interest and support costs. ;dent man , on the basis of the warning in. or not in, people the FBI wishes to in-A Secret Service spokesman said that ~you gave him at that time, would have terview." his agency spent "less than $300,000 since SADDLEBACK AIDE Daniel Armstrong News Director For Saddlehack College Named ~been alerted to the tact that his sta£f was He said Nixon paused, and said "Pat G t EPA E t H • 1969 of appropriated funds on security .c;engaged in something that was im-you ~ust continue to conduct ydur ag: e ar a earmgs equipment" for the homes of the Presi· Daniel Armstrong, 25, a rormer editor !proper, un1aw£ul, illegal?'' asked Sen. gress1ve and thorough investigation." dent and hi,s two daughters. ol the Daily Southeast Nei,o,•s in Downey, ?Hennan Talmadge (D-Ga.) Much of the equipment is removable has been appointed dire ctor or public in-~ "I do.'·' Cray said. and reusable, the spokesman said. : Testifying before the Senate Watergate From Page 1 FRESNO (AP) -Proposed traffic travel," Barnes said in a statement The Secret Servce and military spend-£orf!1B;Uon and community services at ':committee, Gray ~Jso said that, contrary restrictions aimed at reducing air po!-prepared £or the hearing. ing totals do not in('!ude salaries or Saddleback Community COiiege i n ~to Nixon's statement that he ordered JMPROVE lulion were debated by public officials He said the rule would £orce a halt to related costs. They cover only equip-Mission Viejo. •w 1 1 · " 1 t b -and prvate .citizeqs here today, all commercial construction here for at · 11 · d · ·i ·• a erga e 1nves ... ga ors o e g 1 n •· • --• . . . . men!, 1nsta ~t1on an s1m1 ar expenses. . Armstrong is moving 16 the Orange "!reporting direc tly to him March 21 , he . . The federal Enwonn:iental Protection le~s~ one year until codes a:~ reVLSed. to In divulging for the first time the cost Coon . f . _ .:received no such order from the Presi-l!le v1ct1m of a near drowning in Hun-Agency ca.lled . the hearing to seek com-el~~.ate prese~ ru1~s req~1nng parkmg figure s for sensitive presidential com· ty JOb ronl Cerritos Colle~c .1n dent or anyone else. 1u1gton Beach t\vo \veeks ago _ meant ments on its sr,nog control proposals. £or fac1h~1es 1n ~nJun~t1on with n~\V com-munications al}d security piojects, Depu-Norwalk, where he was a pubhc 1n--c:-r'ay~Yal6e' P-Ven'd'ffiii~ill!iftww=th~l~ie:-dooisioo~UQt.="the:::, J....~~~~-hear-Ul&£-=;11erJl~ .. 11P.d.Jrui~ ~J 1ct1~0• --b'-Press. ~~!".&ld _ L. ~vei:e~mat~lieffl-Hi.-~E!_~g"SBbtry""on ,-days ·later, March 23, and told him he you~gster t~ d1~ col!ld l}Ot be made by a will consider s~nular T"iites suggestOOfor --in the1i're,mu area-alone!:-tiuS' cmrtd •atSOSa id N1xon ·orW a TulJ aecounlmg "'The Mission Viejo campus is $1,360 per J.12?ug~~ 2,ra:t _w~s . ~ing ~t!ack~ -un-spec1~ ~:dical team. _ _ ~ San Fran~sro •. Sacramento and San a~~t . to th~ lo~ of as much _ as $200_ p~epare?-~ _details_of ~ .. E.IJ!:cha~ £f his l!.IOnth:__ _ __ _ __ fairly at the senate-:Yudic1ary Com~ For Mis. Re·a; the agony appears only Di~ areas. Hearmp were_ held in the '!'1llio:n:i1 capital mv~t. n~ to"lllen-: homes-. in SAn Clemefile, ana--Xcy B°1£-_He_ began his duties _Aug. J, rcpl3c ing mitt~, which ·eventu ally refused to en-to have just begun. spnng for a U>s Angeles Basm smog con-ho.n e oss of potenUal JOtg, Barnum cayne, Fla. . Me1vin Mitchell who wlll teach social dorse Gray's nomination to become "I'm just getting dep ressed about this Lrol plan. , . sa~. ed th . This accoWJting will be made available studies at Saddleback 'beginning fall permanent head of the FBI. whole thing. My nerves are sho t 1 The Pf'!>posals .. a1"'!ed. at meetmg 11!77 e urg. e EPA .to delay ,?dopting \\'ithin a month, Warren said. term. Gray said Nixon told him there would just wish they could telI me ooe thin' ·0r Ceder~ alt poll~h~n lirruts, would restritt ~Jes until local officials can respond Warren gave this breakdown of costs Armstrong, a <f1'aduate tn com. be another day to get back at the another. g gasobne and diesel fuel sales to fiscal with a reasoned acceptance of the . plan at each location : e· Administration's enemies, and told him 1972 levels, They al!IQ. Wt_>Uld encour~ge or . can pro~ sound alternatives" rnunications from Cal State Fullerton, there \\'Ould always be a place for him ·in "I had no idea it would be this long," mo~ use or .mass transit by reducing desi~ed spec1ftcally for the local com--Key Biscayne -One-time costs or will direct the college's infonnallon pro- thc Nixon administration. Gray said Nix-she said. public .. parking . 20 percent an d muruty. , , $730,00>, including $418,000 £or a gram , speakers bureau, and other com- on mentioned no renewed Watergate The boy was technically pronounced establishing exclusive road lanes £or car A member of EPA s legal office con-helicopter pad, $14,000 for a shark net inunity services. probe. Cray quit a little more than a dead on arrival at Huntington pools and buses. ducted the hearing, with help from and $300,001 ror communications equip-He and his wife, Linda, and their 18-- month later in the midst of the wire-Intercommunity Hospital after he was Motorcyclists in the valley have been techncal advisers David CaJkins and ment. Recurring costs annually of month old son are looking for a home in tapping sca~dal found lifeless at the bottom of a baby sit· urged in adve rtisements to attend Ronald Mueller. $330,000, or a four-year total of about $1.J the Saddleback Valley. Gray also testified that ousted Whi te ter's pool. During the 45 minute period today's hearings to protest a propOOed million . He has been active in civic. servlce and Jiouse Counsel John \V. Dean I.II £alse\y that his body received no fresh oxygen, ban on two-stroke cycles from May to athletic organizations and served several assured him last year that he was relay-the youngster's brain was severely October and a freeze on motorcycles at , Thieves Cart 0££ 8 h Co . . . times as statistician for state community d d d he -a amas -mmun1cat10ns equ1p-ing information about the FBI 's amage , octors said. t number registered at the end of this college athletic playoffs. , rnent install ed at Grand Cay, Walker's Watergate investigation directly to the Physicians at the hospital, however, year. ' Cay and Grand Bahamas Island totaled President. struggled stubbornly and won their battle A section restricting construction of $} 500 • Lo $ 60 ooo Gray said he thought it was perfectly to restore Jason's heartbeat. But since new public parking facilities was attacked ' ID ot I ' ' proper for him to give FBI reparts to then, the boy has remained in a cleep by James K. Barnum, president of the -San Clemente _ One-time costs or Dean, coma. Fresno County and City Chamber of A Dana Point woman's annual vacation $1.065,00> including $550,000 for com- Gr.8y, who retired to join Nixon's 1960 'fhe profOWld decisions over the ~erce, who said, "~economic im-be cost.I · · h munications equipment and $515,(M)() campaign after a 20-year career in the youngster's fate were mapped out early phcati~ are ~~ggerlng. , . p r 0 v e d to Y trip durmg t e spent at the Western WJiite House olfioe Navy, said he was trained' in the military fa9t week when Mrs. Rea and her £ormer Parking facllilles ~uld not '?e bu1l.t if weekend when burglars broke jnto her complex adjacent to the Presidtot's servi ce to say, "aye aye, sir," when husband -Jason's father -decided that they wouJd cause an mcrease m vehicle empty home and stripped it of stereo ho given orders. their son could become a transplant tr~ffic. to the. area. . equipment, television set and an electric me . He said he didn't question the authority donor. .It 15 o~vious that any. such parl?ng typewriter, Orange County Sheriff's of-ln addition, annual recurring costs at of White Hou se aides Dean and John D. But many factors came into play -all facility will lead to additional vehicle ficers reported. San Clemente are '677,000, or a four-year Ehrlichman wheo they gave him what he based on criteria set by the medical pro-tot-al or $2.7 mil_lion. look to be Orders lo d Sir Y Paper •-•· Deputies said inlruders .smashed the Justice Hits.Scandal WASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S. Supreme COU!1 Justice Harry A. Blnckmurf.Simday called. *1a6irgate a "pall" ·that must be dispel1ea bY a rededication to the nation's id eals·. "The very glue of our ship or state seems to become unstuck." Blackman said ln an address to a prayer breakfast of the convention of the American Bar Association. Lagu1ia to H oW e. o s WJi.en_ fession-in cases where hopeless patients B -rrom the White House sale of Watergate become candidates for transplant opera· an:ks in w est £ront door window to gain entry to the tions. ..... home of Vanessa Mae Goldsberry, 19, o( The panel of physicians has been con-33952 Chula Vista. Their haul was valued ducting tests since late last week to Boost wnding al $1.500. determine if "life" (primarily brain ac-Also under investigation by sheriff's of· Skylab Pair Step Into Fi rst Trac k Me et On Saturday T~e Laguna Beach Recreation Depart- ment will hold its first city track meet beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday at the Laguna Beach lligh School track. The meet is open to boys and girls in grades one through eight who r(!slde \Vithin the Laguna school district. Events include the shot put, Jong jump, hi gh jump , 1320 yard run , 65 yard hurdJes and 5,100, and 220 yard dashes. Medals will be awarded to 1st place finishers "'ith ribbons given to finishers through sixth p1 ace. Par!icipants may not wc<1r spiked shoes or compete in bare feet. Entry forms are availabl e 11t the recreaiion departn1cnt 175 N. Coast -Highway. Entry fee is $1 for five events. OlAHGIE COAST DAILY PILOT Tit. 0..anDt Colill DAll1' P ilOI, wllh wllkfl Is combl"'«I ,,.. N~W•·P•~H. I• OUl>ll"'*' bY the Orano. Co.ttl P11t>llo~l"O Com1><1ny, S-· r.ole edl!IOllJ ••e PYt>ll11>ed, Monot•r tlll'OUllll F•id•y, 1*r Coo~ Mt••· Ntwport 11..Ch, M11nllf!91oft · l tac.,IF1111nt•I" va11,,, l•o- 8Hc;tl, lrvlMISolodl~bt(k •'IO I•" Clrmt11tel $11> Jwtn (tl'!lalrt<>o. A tln91e 't'O~I K l!lon It f!Ubll1hftr $etun1111 .olld S...ncltn. t h• p<-lr.(IJMt PUl>l1tn1no •• 1, •I »> Wtol· 9t)' Stl'ftl, CO.IA, M-, C.1~1.t, fM1-. Robed N. W etd Preldtn! 1n0 Pv111;,,,., Jtc• R. Curle• V•c• Pr"tdt<!I •!Id G.!ltt•I 1111 .... ll'tf" Tho'"'' k1tvil EclllOf' Thom•• A, Murphine Mt,...gl"° l!dJ'°' Ch1rl1a H. Loo; Rich1rJ '· N•ll AUl'1•nl Mt .... lft9 Edl!Orl lot• ....... Office 211 Fo•••f Av•nr.tt "11,fing l<dd,111r ,.,0, l o• 666, 9265? .,,... Offk .. Coll• Msu; .uo """' l•r Slf'ett NIWJIQrt 81tc11: lUJ N~ &ev!Htrll """'""'°" ll•tcn: !lltJ 8uc1> ao.ri.v.r11 ''" Ct-.mftli.: m hl0t111 lrt C.11tlnt lt .. 1 ,.,.,,.. ... 17141 '4J .. J2f q..Jfitd AdNf'thJet MJ.5671 l..tn• IHc• All D•af: ..... 1 1.i., ....• , •• ,.,. '°"""~'. 11/), 0••• ~t l"lblflh,,.,. t'.,..,o.tnt', No Mwt l!tl'les, l!h,.lr1r--. ed•l'Orl<ll """., " ecrvtni.-n '*"'"' ...,..,. ~ r-tlOIW.td wf"-t Ni09t'-1 "'" • l!lltllM ot ((19'"""' ·-· . ~ ell" il'Oll ... Mid .i C#tt Mat, C•ll•1>lt $~1ttiOll or U lr_, 12,..S "'Oflll'll¥! try ..... u u 1J ll'lll'lfflf'l'1 1'1111111,., IWlllntllf!lt U .tl ~lfl!r. livityl was present or gooe. ficers is the \veekend theft of an outboard And last Friday the panel made an in-wvels to 9% motor from a boat left by the OITTJers in itial decision that the youngster was the parking lot of Dana Point Marina. "alive" according to theJr criteria and SAN FRANCISCO (A P) -Major West 0\vners Embarcadero Marine value !:.he they abandoned the initial plan to shut Coa motor at ~ .85. off the machines and allow the st banks raised their prime lending 'f'.J youngster's remaining functions to cease. rt.tes to 9 percent today, following the 1/-1 "It would be nice to know that he percentage point increase initiated by would come out of it 100 percent . . . Eastern banks. even 50 percent. But right now he's not The rate bike was announced by Bank there," she said. of America, the nation's largest com- Mrs. Rea's immediate concern today is the lack or comtnunicalion between the medical center and herself. She has ruled out flying to her son's bedside in Denver simply because it is financially im· possible. The two-week vigil at her son's side in Huntington Beach caused her employers to fire her. She simply cannot find the 1noney for the trip and expenses in Denver. Front Page l BEEF ... mercial bank ; Wells Fargo, Th e Bank or California, United California Bank, Se- cufity Pacific and Crocker Bank. The prime rate is the minimum in· terest banks charge large corporate bor· rowers for short-term Joans. The prime rate has been raised 11 times since the beginning of this year when it stood at 6 percent. Several other major banks also raised their prime lending rat~ today. The increases by New York's Chase ?i-1anhattan Bank. the country's third large.st, and the others brought the prime to an all-time high and virtually assured that the 9 percent level wou1d spread throughout the industry within the next few days. While it is not directly linked to con-tion Together (FIT), said the group sumer installment Joans or mortgage would distribute leanets throughout th e rates, a rise in the prime frequently nation and planned a rally in Los Angeles ... signals a general boost in overall interest to boost the boycott., rates, which might occur some Dlonths The five-member Los Angeles Board of later. Supervisors ha.'i endorsed the boycott proposal, and two sto res in the city, a men's clothing shop and a sleep furnishings outfit, said they planned to close. Beef was the critical ite:m for most )X'Ople over the weekend, however. Lagima's July Permi ts Double County Services Set f of "Marine Killed in Crash MemoriaJ services for a Laguna Niguel Marine Corps officer, killed in a helicopter crash In Japan last week, were held at 3 p.m. today at the Santa Ana Air 'the estimated value of 5S building Station chapel. per mits issued by the city of Laguna First Lt. Lowell r"'. Van Wagenen, Beach in July is 1715,407, nearly double died Thursday when Jhe Cll 46 Sea Knight lhat of the san1e period one year ago. helicopter he coplloted crashed In moun· Total value of permits issued for . the tains en route to a medical "nvacuatlon of yenr to da te is $6.8 million for 1367 a Marine injured during training. Three permits compared to a valuation of $3.8 or.her men were killed in the crash. million for 356 pennits Issued for the Lt. Van \Vagenen wllS 26. He leave! a same period In 1972. Wife, ~1adeline, and 5-year~ld son, Van. Fifteen permits were Issued £or new Jntcrment will be at Arlington~ NatlonaJ From Pagel BOMBING ... niore seriously wounded who still had a chance for survival. Cambodian Air Force sources said the planes unloaded their payloads -up to 180 tons of bombs -over the sleeping town by mistake shortly before dawn, and that' Neak Luong, one of the more strategic towns on the Mekong, wa s reduced to rubble. Space, Take on Tasks SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Tu·o Skylab istronauts stepped into space today to load telescope £ilm, unfurl a new awning·like sunshade and inspect trouble areas on their orbiting laboratory. Bundled in bulky white space suits at- tached to oo-root lifelines. Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma exiled through an airlock hatch at 10:35 a.m. PDT to start a planned 311.i:-hour ex- cursion . Skylab 2 was traveling more than 17,000 miles an hour 271 miles above the Gu.Ir of Mexico. Garriott, the £irst to step outside, com- mented "what a view" as be gazed on the-panorama of earth, sun and stars surrounding the station . -Minor problems in checking out suits and the airlock depressurization system delayed the astronauts' departure from the station for about 90 minutes. Skylab 2's commander, Alan L. Bean. monitored the. wa lk from inside the station, relaying Mission Control's in· structions. He also wore a space suit , ready to assist in case of trouble. Bean remained relatively quiet during the early part of the walk , prompting Garriott to SE\)'~ "J believe that guf's in there eating hmch wh.ile we're out here working.'' · t NOW AT 95 ·- bdaolw 5 fur Parll Gunnfte Tiii lflO!Ot. pu,,., Umt•. tnlkt ••I• dlp11111111111n l\'lltm. hffjef •!Id p11~ wtlO!I• .,. 11,,1,.ntlld tor !> .,.,,. on modtl• SS/97t. 111111 •no ss111e. Wt l)tJ 1or itl)l•Cllllltnl lallOI ourrng ,,... '''" ,..,. 90 DAY CASH WI'" »PIOVID CllDrT HEADQUARTERS. single family residential construction C~etery In Washington D.C. valued at $637,883. Lt. Van Wagenen was graduated from I Phone 548·7788 Nrw construction otber than dwellings the U.S. Naval Academy in 1970. He 1 · acco unted for II ·permits and 112.179. N"'t.'gueided 1 . al 252111 Via De Am<• in Ltlguna • • ~815 NEWPORT BLVD, Dawntvwll Costa Mesa Alterations, addltions nnd mlscellancous - :'::J::'~%,._a_cco_un_tcd_f_or _211_p_erm_its_· .... ~~: of the accident Is under In-I ................................... . i+-__:============~~,===L~ ' • I 7 I ~ • Today's Flnill Saddlehaek N.Y. Stoek.L EDITIO N VOL. 66, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 19n TEN CENTS Markets Beefing About Beef They Haven'tGot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... o.llJ' POM Slaff Ordinary beef cattle today seemed to have joined the roster of extinct American animal species, or so It would seem to the aveiage grocery shopper surveying the average Orange Coast meat display counter. The beef throughout the coastal area is: no IJ«f. Supermarket managers able to capture even one-fourth of their ordinary Monday * * * Military's Food Shops Not Legal? .. order from jobbers and wholesalers bit by a major packing company shutdown Friday .considered themselves lucky to- day . And customers in many stores lined up early to get the best cuts· available, in light of the critical meat shortage brought about by Nixon Administration anti-inflation measures. ''lf people didn't panic so much, I think we'd be all right," declared Joe Phifer, butcher at the Balboa Market, 608 E. .. : . ·. : :::: .. ..... . : . . · ... =-'F,,,ro,,DLStail,._jVk.e Dlspatdte1 ~-+----,--· IJ£Ii~s -Asp.ill..lU:l!'is.LblLLlba'l!f'L--1- that some of the 287 military com· ....-.missarie~n-lhe-Uniled. States" may. b&. -- operating Illegally and he has reque sted an iDvesUgation into the matter. .. '. . . . Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. "Lamb and park are plentiful, although everything is expensive," remarked Phifer, whose counter has been clogged with shoppers buying meat in large quan· tities. "I'll know more tonight when I get my beef order," he added. The meat department men at other markets today knew · all they needed to know already, at least for the immediate future. ...... ·.· . :-. . ... CAMBODIA . . . . Aspin s:iid SUnday a 1952 la\v requires ·the defense secretary to certify that food at reasonable prices and quantity is unavailable in a locale before a com· missary can operate there. TOWN OF NEAK LUONG-SCENE OF ACCIDENTAL U.S. BOMBING C1mbodl1n Officl1 ls Report 300 Were Either Killed, Injured 7 "Our delivery for today is completely marked out. Canceled," said Larry Howard, meat manager at the Thrif- limart, 2501 Harbor Blvj!., Costa Mesa. "We won 't get anything in the fresh beef line.'' he predicted , adding that he anticipales getting perhaps 25 percent or hjs order of processed beef products. Safeway Stores' meat department supervisors declined comment on the scarcity of beef, referring all calls to corporate oflices. "All the beef items are very scarce. Nonexistent , in £act," declared Jim Dunlap, meat department manager at the El Rancho l\iarket, 2555 Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach. ''Don't have any," grumped John Bias, meat manager at the Market Basket, 16121 Brookhuist St., Fountain Valley, when asked about availability of beef. "All we've goJ. is just a little bit <1! grind," he conllnued, adding as did most other market men surveyed that chicken, Nixon Home Report • fi sh and pork are generally plentiful. The outlook today appeared dim tor any Swift improvement in the tieenes.s market's picture. Treasury Secretary George P. Schultz said Sunday on ABC-TV's "Issues and Answers" program that President Nix· oo's retail beef price freeze will remain in effect until its Sept. 12 cutoff date. He did hint that government officials are ,smarting a bit under consumer (See NO BEEF, Page Z) $10 Mill ion Sp ent A Secret Service spo~esman said that his ~ency spent "less than $300.000 since . 1969 of appropriated funds on security equipment" for the homes.of the Presi· denr aiid1iis ·two daughters. - l\1uch of the ·equipment is removable and reusable, the spokesman said. , The Secret Servce and military spend- ing totals do not include salaries or related costs. They cover only equip- ment, installation and similar expenses. Jn divulging for the first time the cost figures for sensitive presidential com· municatioos and security projects, Depu- ty Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren also said Nixon ordered a full accoonting prepared on details af the purchase of his homes ln San Clemente, and Key Bis- cay~ Fl(!. _ , This accounting wUI. be made available within a month, Warren said . . Warren gave this breakdown of costs at each location : -Key Biscayne -One-time costs of fll-0,000, including $4t8,QOO for a helicopter pad, $14,000 for a shark net and $300,000 for communications equi~ ment Recurring costs annually of $33f.l,OOO, or a lour.year total of about $1.S (See HOMES, Page Z) I A However, Pentagon regulations defeat the purpose of the law by allowing ·com· mLssaries to opernte wherever there are stores y.oith prices 20 percent higher than commissary priCes, Aspin asserted. Spokesmen at t'ft'O Orange Coast miiltary basts, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendleton, have refus- ed to. comment on the ~egations, saying instead that the U.S. Department of Defense in Washington would have l9 Worst Mistake Bf!'!"bi~g Ast~~~auts Go · ---· -· · "6ir8paee~ Private Fi1·m to Begin -.;. ~ ...-'·--...,... f ,.....__. ..,;:c: ._...... . Law C.lllsses in Irvine answer the charges. "We're 1m1Utborized to answer here." .said Chief Warrant Officer William Ombahl ol El Toro. "Every once in a while a story like this gets around but since it doesn •t name us specifically. you'll have to find the answers in \Y ashington." Levels Cambodia Town BegmTasks , PHNOM PENH (UPI) -United States planes accidentally bombed the Mekong River town of Neak Luong today, in· fllcting vxire than 300 casualties on the refugee-swollen populace in the worst mistake bombing or the entire Indochina war, Cambodia Air Fo.-ce sources reported. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Two Skylab astronauts stepped into space today to load telescope film, unfurl a new awning-like sunshade and inspect trouble areas on thelr o r b i t in g laboratory. A private, non profit, tax 'exempt educalionaJ rorporalion plapning~to open clas9es this fall leading to a law degree in three or four years has been formed. their students to take classes with us," Mittelman said. At Camp Pendleton in Oceanside, Capt. Louis Chitelle said he would have to "defer to Washington." "'The charges v.·ere made at the Department of Defense, not Pendleton , so I can 't answer for them," he ex· plained. The Wisconsin congressman, a fre· quent critic of the Pentagon, said there ere 278 military commissaries in the United States doing an annual busine~ of 52 billion and costing the taxpapers "hun- dreds of mUlions of dollars a year" in subsidies. Aspin said the Defense Department was seeking $17.9 million this year to build new commissaries. He said be was asking the General Accounting Office (GAO), the investigatory arm of Congress, to look into the operations. The GAO should find out, Aspin said, Whether the Department of Defense regulations and their enforcement "are Within the scope of the law and how anany stores should be closed down." He said a GAO s'11dy conducted in 1964 lllo•ed that half the commlwrtes in the ,United Stall!o should be shut down. 'J'liere was· no Immediate re~nse to AspJn's charges. However, individual Sfrvlcemen reacted privately with ex· presslons ranging .from lndlgnatloo to ap- proclatlon ol the savings wbleh com- missar! .. offer. "Evei)' time they run out or other things to criticize, I.hey start attacking lhe commiMar)' system." one officer said., . Another serviceman sald commissaries used to offer a regular 20 percent dis· count but now charge close to clvlllnn supermarket prices on most items aJ¥1 often are • less wcU stocked than' A~permarkots...Ue..polJ)ted Ol!t Jhal. com· J»issarles In the Washington area were ~rationing' meat. ·allowing. each customer OlllY two packages per trip. CLASSIFIED AD SELLS IT FA.ST You don't need a magic wand to achieve r,.ulls. Look what a Dally Pilot classllled want ad can do: '&8 Dart, very low mileage, xlnt COl'ld. r/h, auto, air cond., v.a eng. Wlll ae<:ept flllO for quick sale. (Pbon. No.) (Namt). "'Very, very pleaeed," 58)'! the ad· vertlser, 1'f'antasUc results!" Find out for yourself by dialing the direct line - ~a. ' EPA, Citizens In State Debate Antismog Ritles FRESNO (AP) -Proposed traffic restrictions aimed at reducing air pol- luUon were debated by public officials and prvate citizens here today. The federal Environmental Protection Agency caJled the hearing to seek com· ments on its smog control proJ>05als for tthe San Joaquin Valley. Later, hearings. will consider similar rules suggested for the San Francisco, Sacramento and San Diego areas. Hearings were held in the spring for a Los Angeles Basin smog con· trol plan. , The propasals, a.imed at meeting 1977 federal air pollution limits, would restrict gasoline and diesel lue.I sales to fiscal 1m levels. They a1so would encourage more use of row transit by reducing public parking 20 percent an d establishing exclusive road lanes for car pools and buses. Motorcyclists In the vall ey have been urged in advertisements to attend today's hearings to protest a proposed ban on tw~stroke cycles froin May to October and a freeze on motorcycles at the number registered at the end of this year. By JORN VALTERZA Of fllt DlllY l"llOI 11•11 Jason Rea, 3, of Capisb"•no Beach, continued to make marked lmprovemenl In a Denver hospital today, where surgeons have ruled out the possibility that the young>ter would be 1 potcollal transplant donor under p r e s e n t circumstances. But l\ttle news of the erIUeally Ill youngster) condiUon has been given to bis mother who ls awaiting worcl on the rate o! her SOil from her home on the soothem Oran(!e Coast. Mra. Linda Rea said today that the last call she received from Denver was Saturday and the wait "Is making a wreck out of me." Spokeomen said today the ~mgstcr tbl! morning bccJlme able to breathe on his own, wttbou\ .tho help ol a rcSJlirator which h&d -k .. plng bim alive for A Cambodian air force of!icer who took part in rescue efforts said the toll might rise to more than 100 dead and up to 600 wounded. ~ A survivor in a Phnom Penh hospital said the bombing destroyed the Neek Luong city hall, a hospital, an army and CAMBODIANS CITE VICTORY IN SKIRMISHES-Pago 4 a navy base and scores of houses. There were conflicting reports whether the bombing raid was carried out by B52 . heavy bombers which carry a ~ton bomb load each, by swinging Fill fighter· bombers which carry an IS.ton bomb load each, or J>OSSibly by both. Jn Washington , a Pentagon spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, said he did not have a full report on the incident but "the in- itial indicatM>ns are that part of the bomb load of one B52 fell short or the intended target." He said the area hit apparently was a military camp area containing Cam~ bodian trooos and dependents. He had no statistics on casualties. More than 200 wounded persons were brought into Phnom Penh, 32 miles northwest o( Neak Luong, by helicopters and boats. There was no definite number of those killed, because their bodies were left in the rubble of the town, a ferry-crossing point and strOngpoint of the defense Hne southeast of the capital. An officer who helped evacuate the \\'ounded said he counted at least 50 dead sprawled in the town. "From the noise I heard, I guess there were four planes," one victim in a hospital bed told a UPI reporter. ''At (See !JO~IBING, Page Z) Bundled in bulky white space suits at· tached to 61).foot lifelines, Dr. Owen _K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma exited through an airlock hatch at 10:35 a.m. PDT to start a planned 31f.i:·hour ex· cursion. Skylab 2 was traveling more than 17,<XXl miles an hour 271 miles above the Gulf of Mexico. Garriott, the fll'St to step outside, com· mented "what a view" as be g~ on the panorama of earth, sun and slars surrounding the station. Minor problems in checking out suit! and the airlock depressurization system delayed the astronauts' departure from tbe station for about 90 minutes. Skylab 2's commander, Alan L. Bean, monitored the walk from inside the station, relaying Mission Control 's in- structions. He aJso wore a space suit, ready to assist in case· of trouble, Bean remained relatively quiet during the early part of the walk, prompting Garriott to say: "I believe that guy's in there eating lunch while 'ft'e're out here working." The first task for Garriott and Lousma \Yas to erect the sail-like sunshade to help keep the laboratory cool. "Things are going smoothly," Garriott reported ·.as the spacewalkers started assembling tubes, poles, ropes and fabric for tbe job, Y;hich was expected to take more than two hours. While outside. Garriott and Lousma also were to examine three areas for possible clues to problems: two jet engines that have failed on the Apollo ferry ship, a bundle o( wires where a short circuit may have occurred, and a radiator that may be the source of a (See SKYLAB, Page 1) Irvine University School of Law ( IUSL) is the name of the institution headed by Egon Mittelman, self·ap- pointed founding dean. The school has no relation to UC Irvine, aJthougb Mittelman, a 32-year-old Beverly Hills attorney, hopes someday his Jaw school "might become a part of UCL" "We eventually hope to become a part ol UCI and are working out cooperative arrangements with them such as allow· ing our students to take classes there and ~t1dget Hearing For Saddlehack ·slated Tonight A public bearing on the prop:ised $16.1 million 1973--74 budget tor the Saddleback vaney Unified School District is ·set far 7:30 tonight at Los Alisos Intenned.ite School in . Mission Viejo. The budget, calling for a tax rate of $5.93 per $100 asseS2d. valuation, is the first for the district, which was created last yea.r in a divi.sion of the TusU~ High School District and the San Joaquin Elementary District. The tax rate will mean a bill of $59 to the owner ora house with' an assessed market value of $40,000, Major expenditures include $10~378,770 for instruction, including $7,532,953 for teachers who received a 9 percent pay hike after recent negollations. Other costs include $325,500 for student transportation and $1.1 million for plant operation. more than two weeks. whole thing. My nerves are shot . . . I their son could become a transplant ~trs. Rea. 29, hfld st~led herself late just wish they could tell me one thing or donor. last wetk to what then sctmed inevitable anolhcr. But many factors come Into play -all -her son would die at the University of "I had no idea It v.·ould be this long," Colorado Medical Center and bis kidneys she said. based on criteria set by the medlcaJ pr1>- and liver would be removed foNmplants The boy was technically pronounced fcssion in cllses where hopeless patlcnts Into three Other dyiDg younssters. dead en arrival at II u n ting ton become candidates for transplant opera· But all that chJRged fo'rlday when lntercommunlty Hospital after he was lions. . physicians detemtlned thRt because of a (ound llleleu 11t the bottom of a baby si t· The panel oC physicians has been COil· slight improvement In the condition of ter's pool. During the 45 minute period ducting tests since late last week to the comatOle yoµngstcr, he could only be thnt hts body received no rresh oxygen, detcnnlne if "life'' (primarily brain ac· considered 11a live ~tlent.•• the youngster's brain was severely Uvity) was present or gone. That tmrrovement -the apparent dama1t4, doctors said. And lnst Friday the pan«?I made an in- detection o aoma brain \fave 'ictlvity in PhystCtans at the 00,,pltal. however. ltial dcci.sion that the yOW'l~ster Wt1S the victim of a near dro""1na In Hoo-JU:ualed stubbornly and won their battle "alive" according to their rnteria and Ungton Beach·two weeks•,go --meant «>~ J¥son's heartbeat. But since they abandoned the Initial plan to shut that the dcllute decision to allow tbe llio!. 'tho boy has remained in a deep oil the machints and allow the youngster to die COUid not be made by a OObia... youngste:r's rehlainlng functions to cease. spOOal medical team. The. profound decisi ons over the "II ~·ould be nice to know that he For Mn. Rea, the igony appears only youngster's fate were mapped aut oorly "·ould come out of It 100 percent ... to have just begun. • , la st week when Mrs. Rea and her former t:ven 50 percent. But dghl oow he's not Meanwhile, the name Mittelman chose for his law school has caused some to do a dooJ>le take. Uci Otancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. wondered about the "confwiion" the "Irvine University School of Law" cree.tes in the minds ol some people who have noticed the brochures tacked t o billboards on campus and circulating through parking lots around tbc campuo. A check with UC legal counsel suggests there is nothing wrong with a private firm using the words "wUversity" or ''.Irvine" in the name of their organiza.. lion. "11tere is no question that the con- clusion that this law school is a part ol UCI is a conclusion being drawn ·by other.," Cllanc<llor Aldrich said. "If peo. pll! contlnue.t-0 draw this conclusion we'll have to overtly make a statement to whoever is confused." In the meanwhiie, Dr. Aldrich said, "I b~ve expressed a willingness to explore with them how we may cooperate with them as we do with every other i1J. stitution in this county." A brochure which suggests Irvine University law students may use the UCI library i.s not inaccurate. Dr. Aldrich noted, in that ''anyone who joins the Friends of the Library may use its facilities ." As for accreditation, Mittelman notes the school must first graduate a dm before it is eligible for accreditation. "That is three years away." Dr. Aldrich noted many have called the university asking if it was "accrediting" the new law school. "We are not an ac- (See LAW SCHOOL, Page Z) Oruge Coast Weailltt It'll be partly SUflllY Tuesday. following the usual low clouds and drizzle along the Orange Coast. T~peratures will range from 70 a{ the beaches to 80 inland. Over- night lows in the !Cs. INSIDE TODAY 'No one likes co die outside the coUtlt'll It~ loves/ said for- mer C·ubon dictator Fulgcndo Batista last year. The tyrant, wl10 1oo.s ousted bt1 Fidel Ca.ttro hi 1959, died at a Spanish resort toda11 . Set 1tory Page 4. ... tlllt " AMt L ..... ,. .. L.M. lt'rif " -.. C•IU.,ttl• • Mlli.11 Ntw1 • ,CMcllM UI " 0....... Cn111, • CltHUlff ,.,. ,., ""'._., ..• c-. .. ''""'',... " CN..-.. -· 1 .. ,, O." H9tlut • '"'" Mal't"ltl .... uo, .. 1 .. ""' • , ............ .. limrt .. -... .. --" ....... 1•11 WN,_ • -" W_.• ...... 1.M4 "' len1ce ' WWII """ • '"I'm just getting depressed about this_h~u~sba~n~d.::.;J~a~son!!!:!'•~l_!!!•t!!!hc!!r~-::..!!de~cl~dat!!!h;>!•lc_ __ ~tt...lll!U!llllY£.· l?a&Ul----1============:1"---- l-lf---1"-~~~~~-~~....,.~~~--~~~-r, ---~-;---~~~--,, : I > _, ' • Monda~1 Au9uu 6; 1973 Gray Says Nixon Given 'Warning' \ , • t UPI Ttl91111ol0 'SUFFICIENT WARNING' Former FBI Chief Gray ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Former acting I<"'BI Director L. Patrick Gray III said to· day he thinks he gave President Nixon sufficient warning last year for him to know that Improper and illegal things were being done by his staff members. Gray called Nixon July 6, 1972, Jess Perfe~tly Clear Our President, F ashio1i Critic WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nixon turned fashion critic today, comme~ti~g f?O the trend toward women wearing slacks. After a b1ll-s1gn1ng ceremony in his Oval Office, Nixon observed that a wo.ma~ repo_rter was wearing slacks. This touched off a brief conversation in which he cotnmented: "Slacks can do somethin g for some people, but it can't ... " The ~a~t ·of the President's observation was lost in the laughter of the off1ciils and reporters in the office. The President then told the reporter, J-lelen Thomas of United Press International, that "I think you do very \\'eiJ •.. Tum around." :--As Miss Thomas complied, the President asked: "Do they cost less than gOwns?11 t a "No,''. she replied. 11Tben .change1 11 Nixon said, again to laughter. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ' Business Brisk _Priests, Nuns ·Lift Steins ~t First Campus Tavern ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Priests, nuns and students are hoisting beers at the Jesuit·run J.Jniversity of San Fran- cisco which says it has opened the first public beer ball on a college campus in California. Summer business has been brisk in the old California-style pub which received a conditional beer license last May from the Alcoholic Beverage Commission. ~1uch of the trade in 30-<:ent brews came from 550 priests and nuns at· tending a symposium on spirituality at tbe coeducational 6,oOO-Student campus this summer. "Some of thost nuns looked real cute hefting those big steins of beer." said J ames Kelly Jr., a university spokesman. Steven Diener, food service manager, said state school are prohibited by the Slate Education Code from having alcoholic beverages on campus. He said privately owned schools may make limited arrangements for liquor sales, such as the private club which seUs beer to members at the University of Santa Clara. "Other colleges may have a long wait but they may have a chance no\v that \\'e've broken the ice," he said. The pub, called the Fog 'N' Grog, open· ed July 6 after five years of negotiation bet,veen the ABC and the university din· ing services. "We backed the license effort all the way." said John F. Marshall, USF vice president for student development who Senate Confirms Fttllerton Man WASHI NGTON (AP)-The Senate Fri· day confirmed James B. Gregory of Fullerton, as administrator of the Na· lional Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Gregory. a former Union Oil Co. ex- ecutive, succeeds Douglas \V. Toms, who resigned. Olt4HCJI CO.A.Sf IS DAILY PILOT Tn• Or•"!le CN1I DAILY PILOT, with wl!ictl h combined !ti~ Me...,.Prn1, 11 riubllllle<f n'I' 111• Or•~e C11•1I P11nli.,.lfl!I ComNny, 5-· fAle eOille>rr1 ••• Dub!lslled. MOrid•y ltl•OllQll f t'OtV. lor (¢1.!a M ... , MtWPo•I 8Hch, H1mtlfllllOh 8 ... Ch/FOllJltlin Valley, l•llUN llN<l'I, lr•!~•IS•Odl1N(• 11>11 Sa" Clemente/ s.,,., J11¥1 C1plt,,1no. A ll"ltlt t-Olon•I llllU~ !' P\ltl!IJl\ff Sllflfdtrt ....... l\mdt\I~ t .... ll'if'l{•~I t>11flU1lllnQ' Pl•f'll 11 11 UO 1'<•11 St y SlrH t, COS!t M-. CtlffOt,.,l•, tJ,l)t, Roh1rl N. w,,tl l'tt•ICI•"'' •rid l'yo1i.~1r J 1<lr It C<1dtv Ykt Prnlotnl efld Otflltll M1ntOff Thom1J kttvil Edl!o• l ho.,,11 A, M111phin1 M1n.101,,g Ed<IOI' Ch1r4•1 H. Looi Richtrd P. Ntll AM/Jlfn! M•""'Pl"lf CClllOfl Offkn t:o1t1 Me•• l JO W11t 91y Slrtt! h't-r• Bt•dl: 'lU """PD" llovlev1rcl l•Q~f'll! 8U(ll, m FOrrU Av1nut 11 .... 11ri910<1 lletcll : 1111.J 9••ell 9o~l•v~•CI Sin C1am1ni.;: lG$ Hll'lll Ill Ct"':...O lhtl ,.,.,, ••• (714) '42-4121 CICISllfJed A~111_, f42·S671 S. Cl•-•"-All O.,.rt-11"; ., ... ~ ... 4t2><t420 ~111111, 1t1l. Q•t"'llf to.H "~~.,... c.,,,...n,, Ht n1w1 •iorlta. l1l111tt11'°"'• H 110tO.I ...itlfff ~ tClvt•t•"""""ta ~trt!n ,....y IM '"rodWfll W<lf>oltt aH<i..I -· 11\111"1! of ~riotll II-•. k<W <II\! -·· M io •' (0111 M~11, tll•....,,11, S....OJVI"'"" ev «•rlt'r n U ,,..,u,,1,.1 "' "''" ll•l "'°""'"'' mll!ltr• etshfll.,.... OM fMllllllY. ' .. says nearly half the student body is over 21. He thinks the pub, which also provides food and entertainment. \viii attract com· muter students who usually leave the campus at night. "The pub will be an incentive for them to stick around and enjoy some of the ex- tras that go \Yith a good education - meeting more people, getting to know them better, a chance to get in on cam~ pus activities," Marshall said. The ABC license requires that the pub selt beer, not wine. No package sales are permitted. No one under 21 is admitted, <1nd two pieces of identification are re- quired to enter. Room Ransacked At Irvine Hotel A visiting Buckeye, Ariz., coople returned to their Irvine hotel room Sun· day after a scenic drive around the Harbor Area to find it ransacked and $700 worth of jewelry missing. Investigators said Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bonnes lost three pairs ol gold and diamond·sludded cufflinks at the Airporter Inn, 18700 MacArthur Blvd., in the burglary. Someone slit a screen and slipped open a sliding glass door to gain entry to their room, but Bonnes said the intruder at least overlooked another $100 tie tack in a suit coat pocket. 'Bogey Man' Steals Clubs During Match ~ebody took 10 golf clubs belonging to a San la Ana man Saturday, as he ,vas taking JO minutes' break for a cold drink v.·~ile playing 18 holes at the San Joaquin lfllls Country Club in Irvine. f{obert C. Larrabee. of 17802 Whitney Drive, complained to police after an WlSUccessful hunt for the $300 "'Orth of \Yood and iron clubs, inVfl;tigators said. The grand theft victim had left his golf gear sitting on the club house front p;irch and said neither he nor anyone had s'pot. ted any suspicious persons loitering around. Fro1n fage l BOMBING ... first. I thought it was harassment fire and we ran for cover." U.S, Alr F'orce Gen. John Vogt, head or Am erican air operations in Thailand, fl c1v to Phnom Penh to discuss the In· cidcnt with Cambodian President Lon Nol , nnd returned to Thail and today. Heavily bandaged women and children crying ~nd pleading for help, reached l'hnom Penh by boat late this afternoon. Jlclicopters were used to bring In the more seriously wowidcd who still had a chance for survival. Ciimbodian Alr rorcc sources said th e planes unloaded their payloads -up to 180 tons of bombs -over the sleeping tO\\'n by mistake shortly before dawn, and that Ncak Luong, one of the more str11tegic lowns on the h-fckong, was reduced to rubbl e. 852 bombers normall y fly so high there is no sound associated with them until the tx:plosion of th eir bombs Is heard. Early reports said Fl I ls were ln the area. than lhree weeks after the Watergate break-in, and told him that men on his staff were trying to wound him by using the FBI and the Central Intelligence Agency to confuse Investigators trying to intervie1y two key \Vitnesses, he said. "Do you think a reasona ble and pru- dent man, on the basis of the warning you ~ave him at that time, would have been alerted to the fact that his staff was engaged In something that was im· proper, unlawful; illegal?" asked Sen. Hennan Talmadge (0-Ga.) "I do," Gray said. Testifying before the Senate Watergate committee, Gray :i.lso said that, contrary lo Nixon's statement that he ordered Watergate investigators to begin reporting directly to him March 21, he received no such order from the Presi· dent, or anyone else. Gray said the President called him two days later, March 23, and told him he thought Gray was being attacked un· fairly at the Senate Judiciary Com· mittee, which eventually refused to err dorse Gray's nomination to beco111e permanent head of the FBI. Gray said Nixon told him there would be another day to get back at the Administration's enemies, and told him there V.'ould always be a place for him in the Nixon administration. Gray said Nix· on mentioned no renewed Watergate probe, Gray quit 'a· little more than a month later, in the midst of the wire- tapping scandal Gray also testilied that ousted Whlte House Counsel John W. Dean._JU falsely_ assured him last year that he was relay- ing .• information about the. FBI 's \Vatergate in vestigation directly to the President. Gray said be thought it was perfectly proper for him to give FBI reports to Dean. Gray, who retired to join Nixon's 1960 campaign after a 20-year career in the Navy, said he was trained in the military service to say, "aye aye, sir," when given orders. He said he didn't question the authority of White House aides Dean and John D. Ehrlictvnan when they gave him what he took to be orders to destroy papers taken from the White House safe of Watergate conspirator E. Howard llunt Jr. Gray recounted again how be and Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Waliers Jr., deputy director of the CIA, came to the COil· clusion in the weeks after the Watergate raid that men on the White House stall were trying to confuse the investigation. He said he contacted Nixon July 6, and said, "Dick Walters and I feel that peo. pie on your staff are trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and FBI and by confusing the question of CIA int erest in, or not in, people the FBI wishes to in· terview." He said Nixon paused, and said, "Pat. you just continue to conduct your ag· gressive and thorough investigation." Montana Judge Names 2 to Hang FORSYTH, Mont. {UPI) -Two men are sentenced to hang Sept. 13 but a deputy sheriff says the county doesn't own a gallows and hasn't started building one. "We don 't know anything,'' was the \vay Deputy Graham Makin swnmarized the legal status of James M. Shields, 21 , and Wallace L. Rhodes. They were sentenced here last week by Judge Alfred B. Coate to hang for the shooting death last year of Donald Kalberg, 58, a Hardin, Mont., jeweler. No appeal has been filed but one is ex· pected. From Pagel SKYLAB ... newly discovered leak in Skylab's air conditioning system. The air conditioning leak, 'vhich came lo light Sunday night, is the latest proJ:>. le1n to beset the station, already ex· periencing propulsion leaks and electrical difficulties. None-bf the problems po.se a threat to the astronauts. Before they could suit up for the space \Yalk today, the spacemen had to restore pres~ure to a tank which' is .Part of a · system thlit relnoves moisture from the ' air. This has been a recurring trouble spot. Ground experts continued to study prob- lems that caused leaks in two jct engines on the Apollo taxi ship, which is docked with the space statioo. They still are hopeful the astronauts will be able to return to earth in the craft Sept. 25 after a record 59·day fl ight. Jn case they can't, around-the-clock work went on at cape Kennedy, Fla., to prepare the Skylab 3 rocket and Apollo as possible rescue vehicles that could be launched Sept. 10 or later. Dad Held ill Slaying TUJUNGA (AP) -An electrical engineer who reported the shooting death of his~ !&-year-old son as an accident or suicide has been booked for investigation of murder. police said Sunday. Frederick Winslow, 47, was booked Swxlay morning afrer 111s son Bradley, 16, was found In the den·of the Winslow bomc. Teen Site Changes In Effect • Changes in the Irvine teen center operation approved by Irvine commilllity services commissioners take effect th is week. C.Ommissioners earlier approved use of the Irvine School center by both junior high and high school age youths all three nights it is open -Monday, \Vednesday and Friday. Other changes noted by Communty Services Director Paul Brady are: -Addition of one hour to the Friday night schedule, meaning the center will be open ·from 7 to 11 p.m. Monday and Wednesday hours are unchanged and the center is open from 7 to 10 p.m. -Scheduling of an additionaJ bus trip for all three nights. The bus begins its rounds of all Irvine villages leaving Tur· tie Rock at 6 o'clock and arri\ring at the center at 6:49. A second run \Yill begin at 7: 15 p.m. arriving at center at 8:04. Return bus runs take about 50 minutes and the bus leaves at the closing of the center. Con1munity Services Co n1 m is s ion Chairman Sally Miller said the city staff '•l'il\ be preparing a study of the center's effectiveness: Interest of teens in the eveni ng program "'ill be a part of thal study. "It is expected the study will include opinions of those teens who do not use the center as well as those who do,'"' Mrs. Miller .said, The sfudy results will help com· missioners advise city councilmen on next year's program, Brady explained, The teen center is part of the city sum- ,mer-recreation program · irr which-the- majority of expenditures go toward pro- viding daytime recreational, athletic and' arts and crafts actlvities for Irvine youth. A free bus service to the beach is part of the package available to adults and youth "'ho have paid the '4 registra-tion fee. From Pagel LAW SCHOOL • • crediting agency," Dr. Aldrich said. The chancellor confirmed that COil· versations ·with l\1ittelman were held several months Rgo. He also noted that "part of the long term plans for the Irvine campus v.'ere to include a la1v school." However, other campuses are in line ahead of UCI for Regents' funding, Chancellor Aldrich noted. The private law school has been authorized by the state Department of Education to confer degrees. The school "'ill run on a quarter system, Mittela said, with fulltime tuition of $240 per quarter being charged. By enrolling for three quarters per year, fulltime students may earn a law degree in three years. Parttime students are charged $25 per quarter class unit. It takes 130 units to complete degree requirements. Day classes are to be scheduled at Irvine Town Center from 8 to II a.m . and night classes from 7 lo JO p.m. three nigbts a week . Classes also will be held Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The school has applied for federal grants to private colleges for con- struction grants. Mittelman said. "A prominent" board of trustees is being formed for the coll ege and faculty are being recruited in time for the f:ill opening. The initial class will include 30 st udents. Mittelman said. J\1ittelman has been a member or th e California Bar Association since June l!.168. He earned both bachelor and law degrees at the University of Pittsburgh and did graduate work in la\v and public administration at Columbia Universit}'. He and his wife, Hanni , expect to move to Irvine from Beverly Hills. She pres· ently teaches German literature at UCLA , Mittelman said. ' SAOOLEBACK AIDE Daniel Armstrong N e\vs Director For Saddleback College Named Daniel Armstrong, 25, a former editor of the Daily Southeast Ne\YS in Downey, has been appointed director of public in· formation and community services at Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo. Armstrong is moving to the Orange County job .from Cerritos College . in Norwalk, where he was a public ln- fQrmation officer. His starting salary on the Mission Viejo cam pus is $1,360 per month . He began his duties Aug. I, replacing !l<tClvU1MitCliC11-Who Will reach social studies at Saddleback beginning fall term. Armstrong, a graduate in com- munications fron1 Cal State Fullerton, \viii direct the. college's information prC>- gram. speakers bureau, and other com- niunity services. 11e and his v.ife, Llnda, and their IS. 1nonth old son are looking for a home in the Saddleback Valley. He has been active in civic, service and athletic organizations and served several 1lmcs as statistician for state community college athletic playoffs. From Pqe J. IIOMES ••• miUion. -Bahamas -Communi("ations equip- ment installed at Grand Cay, Walker 's Cay and Grand Bahamas Island totaled $160,000. -San Clemente -One-time costs of $1.065.000 including $550,000 for com· munications equipment and $515,000 spent at the \Vestem White House office complex. adjacent to the President's home. Jn addition. annuaJ recurring costs at San Clemente are $677,000, or a four-year total of $2.7 million. From PageJ. IMPROVE • • • there,'' she said. ~'lrs. Reais immediate concern today is the lack of communication between the medical center and he,rself. She has ruled oul flying to her son's bedside in Denver simply because . it is financially im- possible. The two-week vigil at her son's side In Huntington Beach caused her employers to fire her. She simply cannot find the money for the tnp and expenses . in Denver. • Grocers C1·y For Meat- Buyers Grab By The Associated Press Supermarkets hoped for new shipments of beef today to replace merchandise snapped up by weekend aboppers, but many stores said th~y expected only a fraction of what they needed. A spokesman for one Los Angeles market said he was figuring on "probably a 60 percent cut" in the amount of beef he normally gets. "You open the door and it's like gangbusters," said as up er market employe in Sacramento, as he looked at the long line at the meal counter. "One guy Came in here and filled three shopping bags with meat for his restaurant," said the meat manager of Ralphs Market in 10$ Angeles. "It's not fair to the ·customers." The store later imposed a limit of two steaks and two pounds of gr0W1d beef per shopper - a practice adopted by supermarkets in m-any cities. Restaurant officials in the Santa Monica area said guards were being put on delivery trucks by some meat sup. pliers because of the possibility of theft. "These trucks are worth a fortune now," sai d George Bennett, head of the Santa Monica area restaurant associa· lion. In the San Francisco . area. shoppers emptied some su permarket sheJve.s or beef while other stores began rationing supplies for the first time. Fry's Supermarket in San Jose was sold out of beef, a~ major appliance stores in the suburb reported a waiting Ii.st for free:rers. "People are overbuying; that's the problem,'' said Al Franzi, general man· , ager of Petrini's Butcher Shop in San FfihCisco:----• ·· Jn Walnut Creek the consumer-con- lrolled C<r-Op food market began ra· tioning meat at four steaks, one roast and two chickens per customer. FromPflfJel NO BEEF .•. pressure tactics. Initial increases within recent months in the price of beef led certain consumer grou ps to designate Meatless Tuesday, on which they refused to purchase such prod· ucts. Joan Sheets. a leader of Fight InOation Together (FITJ today urged a new-pro- test tactic for this Tuesday: "Don't Buy Anythiog Day." Banks in West Boost Lending Levels to 9% SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Major West Coast banks raised their prime lending rctes to 9 percent today, following lhe ~~ . percentage point increase initiated by Eastern banks. The rate hike was announced by Bank of America, the nation's largest com- mercial bank; Wells Fargo, The Bank of California , United California Bank, Se- curity Pacific and Crocker Bank. The prime rate is the minimum in· terest banks charge large corporate bor· rowers for short·term loans. The prinie rate has been raised 11 times since th e beginning of this year when it stood at 6 percent. Several other major banks also raised their prime lending rate:. today. The increases by New York's Ch8.!le Manhattan Bank, the country's third largest, and the others brought the prime to an all·time high and virtually assured that the 9 percent level would spread throughout the industry within the next few days. NOW AT rrrrrr ;I),;': PRICES START FROM ·-1$/171 ExrlUll\'t S Year Paris C.uan1n1tt l~ mo111r, Plll'l'O, lllM•, ,ntift wrl~ 01Jtrlbution wstun. !letter •l'ld pulll> 1'111110.-.,. 011~r1mHd lor 5 ~tfl 011 molle!s SS/97~. SSl't)ll •lld SS/'''· W• lllY lot r91>l•t 1,,.,.,.t llbOt dYrlog ,,,. '"~ ~·"· 90 DAY CASH ., WITH An'IORD CAIDn' Phone 548· 7788 1815 NEWPORrlvo. oawntown Costa Mesi 7 " 7 untington Bea~h Fountain ·Valley VOL. 66 , NO. 218. 2 SECTIO NS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1973 Today's Final N.Y. Stooks TEN CENTS Marl{ets Beefing About Beef They Haven't Got By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 tti.. DlllY P'1'91 ll•ff Ordinary beef catUe today seemed to have joined the roster or extinct American animal species, or so It would seem to the average grocery shopper surveying the average Orange Coast meat display counter. The beef throughout the coastal area is: no beef. Supermarket managers able to capture even one-fourth of their ordinary Monday order from jobbers and wholesalers bit by a major packing company shutdown Friday considered themselves lucky te>- day. And cus.tomers in many stores lined up early to get the best cuts available, in light of the critics} meat shortage brought about by Nixon Administration anti-inflation measures. "If people didn't panic so mucb, I think \Ve'd be all right," declared Joe Phifer, ·butcher at the Balboa-f\.larket, 608 E. A Day of Bad Breaks De3nna Bafnard, 4, band-aid on forehead, Jimtny Barnard, 10. arm in cast. Billy Barnard, 5, leg in cast, and parents, !\tr. and ~frs. Jack Barnard of Portland. Ore., recuperate. Billy broke leg when he fell from playground slide. Jimmy broke hand falling from pile of inner tubes. Deanna fell on grandmother's steps and suffered puncture wound on forehead. Beacl1 Bicycle G1·ai1d P1·ix Not Lacliing £01· E11tries Four hundred to five hundred entries from the United St.:iles and around the \Vorld are expected to compete for $2,000 worth of prizes in the Huntington Beach Bicycle Grand Prix, Aug. 19. Race chairman Jim Mallard says 320 racers ha ve already signed up in all race classes with a s.ignup deadline set for Aug. 15. The second annual event fs free to the public. It is sponsored by the city's Parks and Recreation IRpartmimt, the Orange County Wheelmen and Raleigh Bicycles or America. Races start early with the Novices Races kicking orr the event at 8 a.m. Following the Novices in s~_~ssion will be the Jn termcdlatts, Midgets, Seniors PpeJ;t and Juniors. • • ~ Senior Open racers 'viii also be vying for paints for the Amat.cur Bicycle League of America. . Grand Prix points will ~ Included 1n CLASSIFIED AD SELLS IT FAST You don't need a magic wand to achieve results. Look \Vhtlt u Dally Pilot clas.slfled want ad can do : '68 Dart, very low mlleagc, xlnt cond. r/h, auto. air cond .. V-8 cng. Will accepl $1150 for quick sale. (Phone No.) (Name). ''Very, very pleased.'' says the ad·• \lertiser. "Fantastic results!" Find out ror yourself by dialing lhe dlreCI line - 1142·5678. the Bicycle League's selection of the Best AU·around racer in the Western United States. Points are tabulated from races around the western part or the country. Rich Hamlin oC 1tfontrose captured first place in last year's 12 lap. 100 kilometer or 60 mile Senior Open with a time or t\\'O hours. 22.03.6 minutes. A Mayor and Councilman's Cup Race wilt be held in front of the main viewing area, followed by the non-licensed riders' races. The event's start-finish line will be located at the corner of Ed,varcl,Street and Talbert Avenue. The main five-n1ilc course goes north on Edwards to Slater Avenue, east lo Gothard Stree~ ~ut~ to the tnter:.section (See BICYCLE, Page 2) • ... TI"nckel' Killed In VaHey CI"ash The young driver of a Santn Ana Register circulation truck is dead follow - ing the crash of his vehicle in Fountnln Valley. David A. Andersen , 19, of Santa Ana, was declared dead at the scene oC the ac- cident near the fntCrseclion of La Ha· cienda and Slater Avenues. Investigators said Andersen o. n d anolhcr Register ernploye, Craig Postll, 19. Orange, were maklhg their rounds about 4 p.m. Saturday when the truck: '!ent out or control as it rounded a cor· ner. Andersen was thrown from the swerving vchlcl<' which then fell on top of him. according to accident reports. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. "Lamb and pork are plentiful, although everything is expensi\le," remarked Phifer, whose counter bas beea clogged with shoppers buying meat in large quan- litics. "I'll know more tonight when I get my beef order," he added. The meat department men at other markets today knew all they needed to know already, at least for the immediate future. "Our delivery for today is completely m<irked out. Canceled," said Larry Howard. meat manager at the Thrif- timart, 2501 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. "We won't get anything in the fresh beef line," he predi"cted, adding that he anticipates getting perhaps 25 percent or his order or processed beef products. Safeway Stores' meat department supervisors declined comment on the scarcity of beef, referring all calls to corporate offices. Three Crucial Tasks "All the beef items are very scarce. Nonexistent, in fact," declared Jim Dunlap, meat department manager at the El Rancho f..1arket, 2555 Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach. "Don't have any," grumped John Bias, meat manager at the Market Basket, 16121 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley, when asked about availability of beef. "All we've got is just a little bit of. grind," he continued, adding as did most other market men surveyed that chicken, fish and porJ.: are generally plentiful. The outlook today appeared dim for any swift improvement in the beefless market's picture. Treasury Secretary George P. Schultz said Sunday on ABC·TY's "Issues and Answers" program that President Nix- on's retail beef price freeze will remain in effect until its Sept. 12 cutoff date. He did hint that government officials are sn1arting a bit under consumer (See NO BEEF, Page%) Skylab Pair Spacewalk · SPACE CENTER, Houston (·AP1 - 'fwo Skylab astronauts stepped into space today to load t~lescope film, unfurl a new .awning-like sunshade ~d.. inspect trouble areas on their o r b i t i n g laboratory. Bundled in bulky white space suits at· tached to 60-foot lifelines, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma exited through an airlock hatch at 10:3S a.m. PDT to start a planned 31h·hour ex- cursion. Skylab 2 was traveling more 'Last Ditrh' Salary Meet Called.Useless Both sides in the Ocean VieW' teachers salary fight have agreed that Friday's "last ditch" meeting 'vas "fruitless and accomplished nothing.'' Ocean View administrators said today the Huntington Beach school district y;ould start formal impasse procedures - using a three-man fact finding panel to mediate -this y,·eek. D\\·ight Bletscher, a spokesmen for the teachers. said. however. !hat teachers l\'ould make one last appeal before the board of trustees tonight in an effort to seltle the salary situation. At it stands now, the district has of. fered teachers a fi\·e percent salary in- crease (tot.al cost : $300,000), and teachers want a nine percent increase, plus fringe ,benefits (total cost about !840.0001. Bl('tscher claimed that spokesmen for the ~rd refused to alter the board's of- fer, while teachers were willing to adjust their stand. Ken Meberg. assistant superintendent for personnel. refuted that claim and said he was "surprised they made com~ ment to the press in violation or district policy and their agreement." "We were in mediation and our policy calls for complete confidentiality," ~ieberg said. This is the fourth year in a row that teachers and the district ha\le deadlocked over salary talks. and Bletscher said "we have zero faith in fact finding based on the past history or it and the current at- titude toward bargaining." "We'll ask the board tonight if it Is serious about wanting a settlement," Bletscher said. ''but in the past, after fact find ing, the board has made its own decision." Last year, the fact finding panel recommended no salary increase, but when the district learned its assessed valuation was higher than expected, the board granted a three percent increase. than 17,000 miles an hour 271 miles above the Gulf of Mexico. Garriott, the first to step outside, com· ·ment¢ "what a v.iew" as he g~cd .on the panorama of earth, sun and stars surrounding the station. Minor problems in checking out suits and t.he airlock depressurization system delayed the astrooauts' departure from the station for about 90 minutes. Skylab 2's commander, Alan L. Bean, monitored the walk from inside the . station, relaying Mission olntrol's .in~ structions. He also wore a space suit, ready to assist in case of trouble. Bean rem.ained relatively q~iet ~ring the early part of the walk, prompting - Garriott to say: "l believe that guy's in there eating lunch while we're out here working." The first task for Garriott and Lousma was to erect the sail-like sunshade to help keep the laboratory cool. "Things are going smoothly," Garriott Perfe~tly Clear Our Preside1it, Fashion Critic W,A.SHIJ'.'IGTO!'l .~l -. President Nix_on turn_ed fashion critic "fed!y, "<Ommenting"i>ll 1he trend toward 'Women wellil!IR' slacks. After a bill-signing cetemony in his Oval Office, Nixon observed · lbat .a woman reporter was wearing slacks. This touched of! a brief conversation' in which he commented: 0 Slacks can do something lot some people, but it can't ... " The last of the President's observation was lost in the laughter of tl1e officials and reporters in the office. The President then told the reporter, I-Jelen Thomas of United Press International, that "I think you do very well ... Turn around." • As l\.liss Thomas complied, the President asked: "Do they cost less than gowns?" "No," she replied. "Then change," Nixon said, again to laughter. Auto Restrictio11 Plans Get EPA Ear at Hearings FRESNO (AP) -Proposed traffic reslrictions aimed at reducing air pol- lution were debated by public officials and privale citizens here today. The federal Environmental Protection Agency called the hearing to seek com- ments on its smog control proposals for tthe San Joaquin Valley. Later, hearings will consider similar rules suggested for the San Francisco, Sacramento and San Diego areas. Hearings were held in the spring for a Los Ange1es Basin smog con- trol plan. ·The proposals, aimed at meeting 1977 [ederol air pollution limits, would restrict gasoline and diesel fuel sates to fiscal 1972 levels. They also would encourage more use or mass transit by reducing public parking 20 percent a n d establishing exclusive road lanes for car pools and buses. Motorcyclists in the valley have been urged in advertisements to attend today 's hearings to protest a proposed ban on two-stroke cycles from May to October and a freeze on motorcycles at the number registered at the end of this year. A section restricting construction of new public parking facilities was attacked by. James K. Barnum, president of the Fresno County and City Chamber of Commerce, y,·ho said, "The economic im- plications are staggering." Parking facilities could not be built if they would cause an increase in vehicle traffic to the area. "It is obvious that any such parking fa cility will lead to additional vehicle travel," Barnes said in a stattment prepared for the hearing. He said the rule would force a halt to all commercial construction here ror at least one year until codes are revised to eliminate present rules requiring parking facilities in conjunction with new com- mercial and industrial construction. "ln the Fresno area alone, this could (See Sl\.IOG, Page %) Beacla lltaificatiota Plata Independent;· -Stiidy-; Asked -By JOANNE REYNOLDS In his letter Mangers cited Palmer for lems of breaking up the high school 01 lfl• Otll'I' l"li.t Stiff the work he has done to establish the district Into smaller, unified districts. Dcnnls. ~tangers, a trustee of the Hun· · lh tington Beach Union High •-•--i comm1ttl'C and suggested at an elected "The problems. as you know, are quite .:xaNU official be named chairman. I Distrjct, has suggested that an in· comp ex and it ls felt it wouJd be Palmer is vacationing this week and dependent consultant be hired to prtpafe ~langers could not be reached for com-beneflclol to have an outside source tt unificatiOn plan lor the 52.-aquare mile mcnt on the proposals. prepare the plan ror complete ob- disltict. -Jack Roper. lhe high school super· jeclivlty."' Roper said. That proposal was made in a ltrtter lntendent who serves on the committee Unlllcntlon plan3 in the past have been Mangers sent to Charles Palmer. deputy with Mangers, today said the matter hAs marked by bitter feuding between the superintendent of lb!! ,Huntington Beach not been brougbt up betore the commit· elementary districts over proposed boun· City (Elementary) School District, and tee, alt.hough copies o! the letter were daries which affect tax bases and use of acting chairman of tho Joint Committee sent to committee members. exli>ting high schools. , on Onlflcatton. • He said the next mcclinR date hns not School officials -ncknowledge that it has. That committee, formed in June, con· been set but It will proba~ly be in late been the fallu re of such plans in the past sists of the superintendent~ of each of the August or early September. and the pressing need to unlfy in light ot five reeder elementary districts and the . Roper said he has dlscus5Cd Ydth overcrowding and the high school reported as the spacewalkers started assembling tubes, poles, ropes and fabric for the job, which was expected to take more than two hours. While outside, -camott-and -U:iisma also were to examine three areas for possible clues to problems: two jet engines that have failed on the Apollo ferry ship, a bundle of wires where a short. circuit may have occurred, and a radiator that may be the source o{ a (See SKYLAB, Page 2) City Charter Change Vote Decision Due By TERRY COVILLE 01 ftll D.tJr P'lllt ntft Huntington Beach councilmen wUl decide tonight if they 'vant to set an elec· tion for Nov. 6 to determine the future status o! the city attorney, city clerk and city treasurer. All three positions arc currently filled by municipal elections, but most coun- cilmen have expressed a desire to see all three offices made appointive. Such a move requires a change in the city charter which must be approved by a majority of the voters. A council-appointed citizens advisory committee has suggested Nov. 6 as the election date so the city election can be held in conjunction with the governor's statewide tax reform election. Councilmen will discuss what has been a bot political issue in the past during their 7 p.m. meeting in council cham· bers. The citizens committee has also recommended that each of the three posts be placed separately on the ballot so the failure of any one would not necessarily affect the others. A cla~e in the proposal also insures that the current elected incumbents will keep their jobs if and 1vhen those jobs become appointive. The incumbents arc: Don Bonfa, city attorney; \Varren Hall, treasurer; and Alicia \Ventworth. city clerk who was recently appointed by the council to fill the unexpired term of the. late Paul Jones. Some councilmen. including l\1ayor Jerry Matney, had originally not wanted to set an election for the attorney and treasurer posts because both men face re-election campaigns during the com· ing year. f\.1atney argued that it would be unfair !See CHAHTER, Page 21 Orange Coast W !!'Ii.Cher It'll be partly sunny Tuesday. TotTOwing the Usual low clouds and drizzle along the Orange Coast. Temperatures will range from 70 al the beaches to 80 inland. Over· night lows in the 60s. INSIDI> TODAY 'No one likes to die out.side the country lte loves,' said f or- 111er Cubaia dictator Fulge11cio Batista last vcar. The tyrant, who 1~as ousted bu Fidel Castro i" 1959, died at a Spauish resort todoy. Sec storv Paoe 4. • •0tt111t " Allfl Ltlllltrt .. L ,M , 11¥• .. M1¥11t ,, C1Mflnltt • NlllOMI Mt,,. • Cll1<kl" Ut .. Or•n•• c"""'" I Cl.lultlff ... M '°'" "'• Jlttord t.,. Ctml<t .. !l'l'lvlt l'Hlff " c .......... .. .. ~ , .. ,, DMtft N"ltn I StM"• M•.._th 1•11 •.iter••• "•" • T .. t 'l'hllfl .. llfltHlll-t .. TMllM"I .. l'llllftC• 111-11 w11111tr IM,..M_ .. w-11•1 N-. 1•u . .. ,.,.,k. • w ........... • .I I ' Poslil w:is not was not Injured In the crash. hl~h school district as \\'ell as n school Mangers the hlrlrig of "an outliide con-di.strict'~ lnablllty to pass bond issues board member of eacfl.district _____ '_"_1c_on_t_o_r_"""_~_·_· _'o,..wo_r_k_oo1 __ 'h_c_p_ro_b-__ 'h_•_t _h_.,_1_e<1_10_11ie_.coo_pe_r•=ll=ve:....:_•f=fort::_::· __ '.::============:!..-- • . I ' ' • .. • • .._....:D:..:Al::L:..:V:..:P:..:l:::LO~l---:..:H:_ ____ _".M'."on<Kd~"~·_'.'.A:".'ugust b, 197) Mi~i~ry's Food Sho ps ~ Not Legal? FrorD Staff, Wire Oispatcbe11 Rep. Les Aspin (0-Wis.) has char~ed. that some of the 287 military con1- missaries ii\ the United States rnay be operating ill~_gally and he has requested an in~tigation into the matter. Aspin said Sunday a 1952 law require,; the defense secretary to certify th at food 1-st reasonable prices and quantity is -:,. unavailable in a locale before a con1· 'i missary can operate there. , However, Pentagon regulations defeat • the purpose of the Jaw by al\owlng com· z: missaries to operate wherever there are stores with prices 20 percent higher than ~ commis.!;&rY prices, Aspin asserted. :\. SpokeSIJlCO at two Orange Coast • F miiltary bases, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp PendJeton, ha\.·e refus- ed to comment on the allegations. saying {. instead that the U.S. Department of ... Defense in Washington would have to .. • answer the charges. "We 're unauthorized to answer herf," said Chief Warrant Officer Willia1n ·~ Ombahl of El Toro. "Every once in a ~ while a story like this gets around but ·~since it doesn't name .us specifically, ., you'll have to find the answers in \Vashington." V· At Camp Pendleton in Oceanside, Capt. L<luis Chltelle said he would have to , l·defer to Washington." .~. "The charges were made at the ~·Department of Defense, not Pendleton, so l can't answer for them," he ex· .-, plained. ·~ -The Wisconsin. congressman. a . fre- ... , quent critic of the Pentagon, said there· ~.are 218 military commissaries in the ·~United States doing an annual business of : $2".billion and costing the taxpapers "hiin-~.dr:'e.d:;. ... _of millions. of dollars. a yea!" in · subsulies. · _ Aspin said the Defense Department •"was ~king $17.9 million this year to build new commissaries. He said he was :-asking the Ceneral Accounting Office (GAO), the investigatory arm of . Congress, to look into the operations. \1 The GAO should find out, Aspin said, .. : whether the Department or Defense ''·regulations and their enforcement "are .. , within the scope of the Jaw and how ... many stores should be closed do\.,,n." He said a GAO study conducted in 1964 showed that half the commissaries in the .J United States should be shut down. •: There was no immediate response to t'J"•Aspin's charges. However, individual servicemen reacted privately with ex· 'n pressions ranging from Indignation to ap. ~reciation of the savings which com· l'll\missaries '6ffer. ''Every time they run out of other things to criticize, they start attacking the commissary system," one ,officer • s&d. ., ''.:. Another serviceman said commissaries ... used to offer a reiular 20 percent dis· , count but now charge close to civilian ,a supermarket prices on most items and ! often are less ~·ell stocked than ! supermarkets. He pointed out that com· missaries in the Wa shington area were rationing meat, allowing each customer only two packages per trip. From Page 1 I :SKYLAB ... ' ; newly discovered leak in Skylab's air i conditioning system. ~ The air conditioning leak. which came : to light Sunday night, is the latest prob- : ]em to beset the station, already ex· : periencing propulsion leaks and electrical 1 difficulties. None of the problems pose a i threat to the astronauts. ! Before they could suit up for the space : walk today, the spacemen had lo restore ; pressure to a tank which is part Of a , system that removes moisture from the 1 air. This has been a recurring trouble spot. Ground experts continued to study prob- lems that caused leaks in two jet engines on the Apollo taxi ship, which )s docked with the space station. They still are hopeful !he astronauts will be able to return to earth in the craft Sept. 25 after a record 59--day flight. O•ANGI COAST M• DAILY PILOT Tiit Orano• Cols! OA!L "f ,.llOT wlll'I wl!k!I IJ comblnfd lt>e NtWl·PfO!U, I• P11Dli1ll~ Dy "'' Or•ngt Co•H P11Cli1~lng Com~ny, S~· r1t1 fdl!lo•" are 11VDll1he<1, M'11'111Y lfl~ugll F rld•I'. tor co111 Mn1, NewPOrt Be1cll. HU!'IU"Cl!Otl B1tch/FoUl"t.,n Valley. ltg- &udl, lrvlnel s.tcldlt~c• •nd S•n Clemtnte / $111 J11t11 (.1pl1tr1110. A 1lngl1 reviotwll edition II P11b!l.t1td S.!vrdif' tnd Sv"111Y" Thi prlMIPll pVbli&t.11'!9 plt n! i> t i )JO Wttl ll•Y Slrffl, co11t MtH, Catl!ornlt, '1tlt, Ro\.1rf N . W11d 1Prts-ldtnl 11"' Jlut11•1~tr J1ck R. C11•l1v V1<1 Prt1ietn! U>d Gtnortl Mint~ Thomt1 l<11vil ·• fGl!or Tho""''' A. M urp~;..,, M•n1111ln3 Ed•!Or Cht(l11 H. Looi Rit~trd '· N1H A11l1t1nt Mu11g1119 l41too 1 Tttty Coville Wnl bf-tnot C:-tr tdllo• H11: ....... leoc.,Offke I 7t1S l11ch l o11l1v1'11 M1Ulnf Adclr111 t ,.0. lo• 7'0, 92441 <>"" Offlc" LtOlllll ~~! m l'Orftt ,,...._ CMll Nlttt: :no Wn• o.t r '''"' NIWJIO!'I ... tl'I: 2W N.-.llOl"I IOlll""t'' ~it,........,"! llOJ Horlh e1 ''"''"° 111•1 , ........ 17141 ,,2"4Jt1 Cl-!fi.4 A4IY9f'thl119 64t·ll71 ,.,.,.. ,..,. Ort• c-tv ""'"""'""' M0.1220 eoeyr1gn1. lf1J. Dr"•'* Co-" Put>lltMf'>ll C.-N nY. Ht ,.... tlOt!tl, ,1t1u11r1tlona, H l!Wltl rntoltlr OI' tdvtrll•-11 11 .. 1111 -r i.. ~ wt!l'IOlll IPfC:ltl -"""lotl Of «Cl'l'l'lthl _,. .K ...... c:ltQ lllOIU.S HMI •! (O!>!t Mti.t. e.1~. Sllh(Yj"'*' W ttrr,.t IJ 6J """llllV' ..., -It Q,11 "'°n!hl"I'/ 11111111,., Ill' at.61 "'°"'lfl1Y. Ul"I TtltPllOtl 'S UFFICIENT WARNING' Former FBI Chief Gray President Got Sitff icient W arning-Gra)r \VASHI NGTON (AP) -Former acting F'BI Director L. Patrick Gray Ill said tcr day he thinks he gave President Nixon sufficient \varning last year for him to kno\V that improper and i!leeal things were bein g done by his staff members. Gray called Nixon July 6, 1972, less than three weeks af~er the Watergate break-in, and told him that men on his strtff were trying to wound him by using the FBI and the Central Intelligence Agency to confuse Investigators trying to interview two key witnesses, he said. "Do you think a reasonable and pru- dent man, on the basis of the waming you gave him at that time, \vould have been alerted to the fact that his staff \Vas engaged in something that was im· proper, unlawful , illegal?" asked Sen. lfermaa. 'I'alniadge~(Q.Ga.}: "1 do," Gray said. Testifying before the Senate Watergate committee, Gray ..,Jso said that, contrary to Nixon's statem.ent that he ordered Watergate investigators to begin reporting directly to him March 21, he received no such order from the Presi· dent, or anyone else. Gray said the President calle<l him t\vO days later, A-1arch 23, and told him he thought Gray \Vas being attacked un· fairly at the Senate Judiciary Com· mittee, which eventually refused to en· dorse Gray's nomination to become permanent head of the FBI. Gray said Nixon told him there would be another day to get back at the Administration's enemies, and told him there would al\vays be a place for him in the Nixon administration. Gray said Nix· on mentioned no renewed Watergate probe. Gray quit a little more than a .month later, in the midst or the wJre-- l"IOPng SCBlldal Gray also testified that ousted White House Counsel John W. Dean III falsely assured him last year that he was relay· ing information about the FBI ' s Watergate investigation directly to the President. Gray said he thouITTit it \Vas perfectly proper for him to give FBI reports to Dean. Gray, \Vho retired to join Nixon's 1960 campaign after a 20.year career in the Navy, said he was trained in the military service to say, •·aye aye, sir," Y.'hen given orders. l-le said he didn't question the authori!y of White House aides Dean and John D. Ehrlich.man when they gave him wh at he took to be orders to destroy papers taken from the White House safe of Watergate conspirator E. l-Io1vard 11unt Jr. From Pagel NO BEEF ... pressure tactics. Initial increases within recent months in the price or beer led certain consumer groups to designate Meatless Tuesday, on which they refused to purchase such prod- , ucts .. Joan Sheets, a leader of Fight Inflation Together (FIT) today urged a new pro- test tactic for this Tuesday: "Don 't Buy Anything Day." $30 Millio11 Budget Plan Faces Test The fluntington Beach Union High School Districr s proposed $30 million budget for fiscal 1973·74 faces its fi nal test when district trustees meet Tuesday night. Final adoption of the budget has been set for 7:30 in the band room at Hun- tir.gton Beach High School. As originally proposed, the 1973-74 budget \vould have been financed by a tax rate of $2.84 per $100 assessed valua· tion. But there may be some alteration in that as a last minute bill passed in Sacramento would give the district the ability to levy a five cent community services tax to finance community use or the schools. District officials have in· dicated that they will recommend only a three--<:ent levy for community serviCcs. Even with the addition of a community services tax. thi s year's tax rate is likely to be belO\V last year's $2.92 levy whi ch helped finance $28.3 million \vorth of ex· penditurcs. ' The district \Viii be able to finance a larger budget on a lower tax rate because of SB 90, the state's school finance reform law. The law is designed to equalize income for school districts throughout the state. This is done by giving addilional state· funds to districts where there is a high ratio of students to the tax base. The new budget has been the source of son1e debate on the school board . \Vhen it was originally presented, trusteCs refus- ed to approve it. They said it would lead the district to bankruptcy. in three years. Trustees set a goal of $1 million in cuts and managed to trim $358,000. Since that action in June, the district receiv.ed word !hat $100,000 more would be coming from the state and that they would be able to levy the community services tax. Trustee Ralph Bauer said today he does not foresee any major budget cuts at Tuesday's meeting since the additional funds fulfill some of the district's long- range financial needs . Budget Actio11 Slated Tonight In Ocean Vie,~· Trustees of Huntington Beach's Ocean View Schaol District are slated to take final action on a $13.2 million budget for fiscal tm-74 at their meeting tonight. The new budget, if approved, will re- quire a tax rate of about $2.67 per $100 assessed valuation, down from last year's rate of $3.75. This drop results, in spite of a $1 .3 million expenditure increase, because of SB 90, the state school finance reform law. The new law is designed to equalize in-- come among school districts by providing more state funds to districts like Ocean View that have a large number of students and a rel3tively small tax base. The budget which will be voted on tonight includes a fi ve percent pay· raise for teachers. From Pagel SMOG ••• amoWlt to the loss of as much as $200 million in capital investment, not to men· lion the loss of potential jobs," Barnum said . He urged the EPA to delay adopting rules until local officials tan "respond with a reasoned acceptance of the plan or can propose sound alternatives" designed specifically for the local com· munity. A member of EPA's legal office con- ducted the hearing, with help from techncal advisers David Calkins and Rona ld Mueller. • Ul"I Tt l ..... lt FIRST COLLEGE BEER HALL IN STATE, AT UNIVERSITY OF ,SAN FRANCISCO, SEEMS POPULAR After Five Years of Negotiations for Licll['ls•, 'Fog 'n' Grog' Replaces Table Tennis Room Busitiess Bt•isk Priests, Nt111s Lift Steins At First Can1pus Tavern SAN FRANCISCO tAP) -Priests. nuns and students are hoisting beers at the Jesuit-run University -of San r~ran­ cisco which says it has opened the first publi<! b£e.r hall Q:n. a colleje campus in California. Summer business ha s been brisk in the old California·style pub Y:hich received.a conditional beer license last Ma y from the Alcoholic Beverage Commission. Much of the trade in JO.cent bre,vs came from 550 priests and nuns at- tending a symposium on spirituality at the coeducational 6,000·student campus this summer. ··some of those nuns looked rC'al cute hefting those big steins of beer," said James Kelly Jr .. a university spokes1nan. Steven Diener. food service n1anagcr. said state school are prohibited by the Banks in West Boost Lending Levels to 9% SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Major Wost Coast banks raised their prime lending rr.tes to 9 percent today, following the 1.i percentage point increase initiated by Eastern banks. The rate hike was announced by Bank or America, the nation's largest con1- mercial bank ; Wells Fargo, The Bank of Califomia, United California Bank, Se· curity Pacific and Crocker Bank. The prirrie rate is the minimum in· terest banks charge large corporate bor· rowers for short-term loans. The prime rate has been raised ll times since the beginning of this year when it stood at 6 percent. Several other major banks also raised their pri1ne lending rate::. today. The increases by New York's ChaSl~ Manhattan Bank, the country's third largest. and the others brought the prime to an all-time high and virtually assured that the 9 percent level would spread throughout the industry within the nex t few days. \Vhile it is not directly linked to con· sumer installment loa ns or mortgage rates, a rise in the prime frequently signals a general boost in overall interest rates, wh ich might occur some months later. State Education Code from haVing alcoholic beverages on campus. He said privately owned schools may m ake limited arrangements for liquor sales. such as 1he private club which sells beer to fuembers· anbe-U-niversity of Santa Clara. "Other colleges may have a long wait but they may· have a cbance now that we 've broken the ice," he said. The pub, called the Fog 'n' Grog, open- ed July 6 afier five years of negotiation between the ABC and the university din- ing services. "\Ve backed the license effort all the \vay." said John F. f\.1arshall. USF vice president for student development who says nearly half the student body is over 21. He thinks the pub, u•hich also provides food and entertainment, will attract com· muter students v.1ho usually leave the campus at night. "The pub will be an incentive for them to stick around and enjoy some ot the ex· tras that go with a good educ8tion· - meeting more people, getting to know them better, a chance to get in on cam· pu!i activitles,u -Marshall"'8aid. ,. ..... The ABC license requires that the pub seli beer, not \\'ine. No package sales a re permitted. No one under 21 is admitted, and two pieces of identification are re· quired to enter. From Page 1 CHA RTER .... to saddle them l\'ith such an issue in the middle of can1paigns to retain their own positions. The majority of the council agreed, however. to order the citizens committee to develop poli cies for all three posts. Fro11a Page 1 BICYCLE ... of Main St reet and Garfield Avenue. y,·est on Ga rfield to Edwards, and north on l~d11:ards to the finish line on Talbert. A smaller course begins at 'Talbert {\venue and Edwards Street. goes east on 1'nlbert to Cliffview Lane, south to Lakev iew Drive, south\vest to Inlet Drive. v.'est lo Edwards and north to the finish line at Talbert. Beacli Cou1icil To Discuss Cat Tags, Neuteri1ig The possibility of a voluntary cat license and low eo6t spayjng and neuter- ing services f0r all animals will be dlScussed· tonight _by Huntingtort Beath city councilmen. Both proposals .from. Ca.lifornia Animal Control (CAC) will be discussed during a • S:SO study .session pr.ior. to-the...regula.r 7- o'clock council meeting. No a~tion is eipected, but CAC spokesman Dennis Smlth is expected to tell councilmen his agency can set up a low-cost, five-day a w~k spaying and neutering clinic which can support itself. The prices would range Crom· a low <lf $11 for male cats to a high of $44 for female dogs, aceording to city officials. The comparative prices for private services run about $20 for male cats to as high as $150 for female dogs. Councilmen have once again raised the cat licensing issue which raised such a furor. and died on a 3-3 vote, a few months ago. This Ume. however, CAC is reportedly considering a voluntary license rilther than a mandatory cat tag as originally proposed. The license would cost $5. Councilman , Al Coen' -who-urged the first issue,Jlas already indicated he isn't much interested in a voluntary license. Tonight's cat talks will take place in the city ball administrative armex. Coun- cilmen will shift to council chambers for their 7 o'clock meeting. The study session is open to the public. Police Arrest 4 VFW Pickets FRESNO (AP) -Four persons were arrested in southern Tulare County for investigation of throw· ing o b j e c t s at ttrs as United F'arm \Yorkers Union picketing of ;tn1ck fruit and grape ranches resu1ned today. Deputies reported about SOO pickets in the Richgrove area of Tulare County, site of several rock throwing incidents last week and the area in which a UFW picket was shot in the shoulder. More peaceful picketing was reported in both Kern and Fresno c.'Ounties. Lifeguards Pull Body The stainless steel dishwasher. ---,-----, ~4& . NOW AT Of Man, 25, From Bay ' By JOffN~Z-ALLER Of lllt O•llY l"flol Sltff A 2}y ar-old Duarte man drowned in Newport Harbor Sunday. after: suffering 3n apparent epiJeptic seizure during a swimming race with a buddy, police said. One Newport Beach lifeguard and a friend of the viclim .,.,.ere within 100 feet of Stephen 11..'l roni .at the time he suffered hls f:ital seizure. The incident occurred in the Bay Island channel, according to lifeguards. Baroni, however, apparently sank swiftly to the bottom in 10 feet of water and searchers \Vere unable to find him un til 55 minutes after he vanL!lhed . Baroili, who had happi(y told friends he hndn't had an epileptic seizure for JO months . wa11 swimming at Montero Street Beach at the time of the ttagie ac· cidcnt. • ''He hnd gone about 5() yards In an SO. ya rd race ucross the channel to fi3y lsland ·nnd back," one investigator said. ··~fe v.•as swimming sidestroke when he just stopped, laid in the water a second and sank." the lifeguard spokesman ex· I tuned. aron1 wa!) gong down . he stuck ' one arn1· back out of the water as though reaching for help, but made no cry, lifeguards added . · Li!eg1iard Greg Horman t eportedly observed the sinking victim and raced out for Baroni. Within four minutes, seven other lifeguards were also in the area searching with Horman. However , underwater visibility \\'BS only 18 inches with a face mask, making the search extremely difficult. Systematic sweeps of the area where Baroni vanished still failed to tum up the body after 45 minutes, at whicll time scuba divers joined the hunt, finding him 10 minutes later. hidden In dense, thrce- root-d eep eel grass about 20 feet from the spot where he was seen to sink. nrrr: 'I ,,' PRICES ' START FROM 95 + ·-..... 11/171 ·~""~ Extluslte S \'tar Paris Guaranlee lh• mo1or. pump, t""''· •nt111 w1ttt 11ost•lbult0n ft'•""' fl••!" •n<i push• ti..illo~• ••• 111111in1etd lo• & 't"••• on mQ<Jtlt SS/Sl19. ss11111 11'\d 11111e. We 1uy to• •tflllc.......,.t 11b0r du•lng IM ff"! yttt. 90 DAY CA$H Baroni had earlier been rowing ln the bay with a group of friends and told them he was tired: However, he reportedly WltH APPll:OYID took medication about 30 minute..' before CllDIT • I \ I ' I ~~i~~.:~:"'ing and fold his companions Phone 548·7788 A youlh on a p•ddleboard who pa"""1 + · EWPORT BLVD Oownt Cost U. , 1 Baroni about a minute before he wa< .. ' 1815 N • own a 11111$1 I stricken told police the vicllm did not ap-+ · . . ~ : Ull,;J:u ued, nor did he noUce 31\YJhtng 1 Hf tfftj.ttJ~tttHttttttttttffttttttOO•••······~·········' • I ' j -;- ,. -.- ' Mondar. August b, l~l H DAILY PILOT ,3 :Nixon Homes Expenses: $10 Million Breathing Dete~ted Capo Boy, 3, Improving in Denver Hospital By JOUN VALTERZA Of 111• 01!/y' l"llot Slllf Jason Rea, 3, of Capistrano Beach, continued to make marked improvement in a Denver hospital today, where surgeons have ruled out the possibility that the youngster would be a potential transplant donor under p r e s e n t circutnstances. But Uttle news or the critically Ill youngster's condition has been given to his mother who is awaiting word on the fate of her son from her home on the southern Orange Coast. Mrs. Linda Ru said today Jhat lhe last call she received from Denver was Saturday and the wait "is making a wreck out of me." Private Fi1·m w Begin Law Classes in Irvine A private, nonprofit, tax exempt have to overtly make a statement to educational corporation planning to open whoever ls confused." classes this fall leading to a law degree In the meanwhile, Dr. Aldrich said, "I in three or four years has been fonned. have expressed a Willingness to eiplore Irvine University School oC Law with them how we may cooperate with (IUSL) is the name of the institution them u we do with every other in· headed by Egon Mittelman, sell·ap. stitutlon in this county.'' pointed founding dean. A brochure which suggests Irvine The school has no relation lo UC University law students may use the Uct Irvine, although Mittelman, a 32-year"'())d library is not inaccurate, Dr. Aldrich Beverly Hills attorney, hopes someday neJed, .fn that "anyone who joins the his law school "might become a.. part of F.rieods of t.be Library may use its UCI." facilities." 1 ''We eventUally hope to become a part of UCI and are working out cooperative As for accredita.tion, Mittelman notes · Is ·Jh the uch a allow the school must first graduate a class arrangemen WI m S S • be( 't · eJ' 'bJ ( editat' inL our students to take classes there and .. ore . 1 JS igi e or _!ccr ton. tlle1r · sfudeilfS lo fake classes -With us,,.. -That· is-three-y~ars·away. -- Mittelman said. Dr. Aldrich noted many have called the Meanwhile the name Mittelman chose university asking if it was "accrediting" for his law ~hool has caused aome to do the new law school. "We are not an ac· a double take. a'ed.ittng agency," Dr. Aldrich said. UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. The chancellor confinned ·that ~- wondered about tbe "confusion" the versaUons "ith Mittelman were held "Irvine University School of Law" creates several months ago. He also noted that in the minds or some people who have "part of the long tenn plans for the not.iced the brochures tacked to Irvine campus were to Include . a Jaw billboards on campus and circulating school." However, other campuses are in through parking lots around the campus. line ahead of UCI for Regents' funding, A check .,.,;th UC legal counsel suggests Olancellor Aldrich noted. there is nothing wrong with a private The private law school has been firm ming the wof"ds "university" or authorized by the state Department of "lrvine" in the name of their organiza-Education to confer degrees. tion. 1be sdlool will run on a quarter "There is no question that the con-system, Mittela said, with fulltime tuition clusion that lb.is law school is a part of of $240 per quarter being charged. By UCJ is a conclusion being drawn by enrolling for three quarters per year, others," Chancellor Aldrich said. "If peo.. fulltime students may earn a law degree pl~ cmtinue to draw this cooc.lu,,lon we•n in three years. It's a Little Too Late To Probe l\.ent State By JAN WORTH Ot "" ~ l'li.t 11•11 THE U.S. ATTORNEY General has opened a new investigation into the killing o! four students at Kent State University on May 4, 1970. It seems a litUe late. And a litUe futile. For me, each new mention of that bloody event brings up old reminders or the week in which I belatedly began lo learn all is not as it seems in Amer· ica. Three and one-half years later, living in quiet and lovely Laguna Beach where one forgets society has any serious problems, I may be running away. BUT IN rtfAY OF 1970, as a junior at Kent State, I ,,. felt betrayed, sick to my stomach, confused and scared. The Kent State shootings were my first direct exposure to the American military system that I had been taught protects me. It didn't add up. Maybe it's hard for long-time \Ve st Coast residents to realize. Here, where being hip to what's happening is re- ligion, people have a head start on being cynical. wo11:TH In Ohio, It is still possible to reach the age of 18 or 20 without learning that the friendly policeman on the comer -the one Jn your third grade reading book -sometimes kills the wrong peop le. It's not all hJs fault KENT WAS A QUIET paranoid little farm. town. It WAS overwhelmed with a university that grew full of lazing longhairs ~fore the townies could get used to them. People weren't relating to each other very well. The townspeople were known unlovingly as rednecks. The factory workers and !armers in and aroWld the sleazy, gray-toned village of Ravenna resented the students who barely passed high school and yet somehow won the luxury of an education. The governor barely managed to refrain from aaylng "Kill the hippies" on public teleVislon and blasted the university administration for permissiveness instead. ..., • • ., TJIE KENT MAYOR asked for the National Guard, perhaps hoping that )le'd get either the archangels of heaven or the Green Berets instead. And ,.,,e students. undeniably savoring in some perverse way the obvious combination of deadly mistakes on everybody's part, became martyrs, the dlslllusloned children of Howdy Doody and Disneyland. Soon aflcr the killinp -afler lhe school was closed and all of us had boen scn.t home for the rest of the quarter -I went to see "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." THE AUDJENCE, nu.ED with Kent SUlte students, got sickeningly quiet as the two heroes were riddled with bldlets at the end. List Moy Ibey had lhe lhlnl memorial service at Kcnl. My girl friend drove over from lhe quiet upstate New York town where she too may be look· Ing for the placid America of Jhlnl grade primers. "THEY'VE FORGO'ITEN It happened," she told me lalcr. So they're reopening the invesUgatlon. Someone ln,a Zfllloul drive for some kind or justfce is trylf18 to dllcovcr the tru(h. I know Justice I• supJIC)Md to be a good thing. But the lruth is rour young Americans are already buried. Almost a dozen mm\. .... bear physical wounds. And who knows how many more ran away to CaUfornia, New York, and points west, gritting their teeth and looking for America. A better r~ponse Is to make sure we do better 001t lime L.... and 1et reality lnto our fairy tales. I . Spokestnen said today the youngster th.is morning be<:ame able to breathe on his own, without the help of a respirator which had been keeping him alive for more than two weeks. Mrs. Rea, 29, bad steeled herscU late last week to what then seemed inevitable -her son would die at the University of Colorado Medical Center and his kidneys and liver would be removed for implants into three other dying youngsters. But all that changed Friday when physicians determined that because of a slight improvement in the condition of the comatose youngster, he could only be considered "a live patient." That improvement -the apparent detection of some brain wave activity in the victim of a near drowning in Hun· tington Beach two weeks ago -meant tti,at the delicate decision to allow the youngster to die could not be made by a special medical team. For Mrs. Rea, the agony appears only to have just begun. 11I'm just getting depressed about this whole thing. My nerves are shot .. : I just Wish they could tell me one thing or another. "J had no idea it would be this Jong," she said. The boy was technically pronounced dead on arrival at , Hu.n ting ton lntercommunity Hospital after he was found lifeles.5 atJ.hc bottom of a baby sit· ter's pool. During the 45 minute period that his body-received no fresh oxygen, the ·-YOungster!s brain was---severely damaged, doctors said. Physicians at the hospital, however. struggled stubbornly and won their battle to rest9re Jason's heartbeat. But since then, the boy has remained in a deep coma. The profound decisions over the youngster's fate were mapped out early last week when Mrs. Rea and her former husband -Jason's father -decided that their son could become a transplant donor. But many !actors came into play -all based on criteria set by the medical pro-- fession in cases where hope.less patients become candidates for transplant opera- tions. The panel of physicians has been con· ducting tests since late last week· to determine if ''life" (primarily brain l!.C· tivity) was present or gone. And last l<~riday the panel made an in· itial decision that the younpter was .. alive" according to their C!"iteria and they abandoned the initial plan to shut off the machines and allow the youngster's remaining functions to cease. "It u·oij.ld be nice to know that he u'ould come out of it 100 percent ... even SO pert"Cllt. But right now he's not there.'' she said. Mrs. Rea's immediate concern today is the Jack of communication between the medical center and herself. She has ruled out a ying to her son's bedside in Denver simply because it is financially im- possible. The '"'O-V.'eek vigil at her son's side in J~untington Beach caused her employers to fire her. She simply cannot find the money for the trip and expenses in Denver. Business Booms At Checkpoint; 200 Aliens Held Border patrolmen operating t he pern1anent immigration check at San Onofre continued to make large seizures of aliens atten1pting to enter the country . over the weekend -logging more than 200 arrests over the past two days. The detentions or aliens also branched out in communities north of the roadblock, and San Clemente police reported more than a dozen arrests over the same period. The migration is heavy this time of year because of ripening crops ready for harvesting in Cali£ornla fields, patrolmen said. One reason for the high number or weekend arrests, they added, is the at- tempt by smugglers to capitalize on heavy traffic in an effort to slip by of· ficers. Unlike last week when one alien was killt;d w)tile , tcyiug to CC05S-the freeway lo avoid arrest, no such Incidents were logged In the area . Montana Judge Names 2 to Hang FORSY'nl, Monl. (llPI) -Two men arc sentenced to hang Sept. 13 but a deputy sh<rilf says the county doesn't own a gallows and hasn't started building one. • "We don't know anything," was the way Deputy Craham Makin swnn1arlzcd the legal status of James M. Shlelds1 21, and \Vallnce L. Rhodes. They were sentenced here last week by Judge Alfred B. Coate to hang for the ~hooting death last ytar or Donald Kalberg, 58, a fl nrdin, f¥1onl., jeweler. No appeal has t>een filed but one is ex· pected. TOWN OF NEAK LUONG-SCENE OF ACCIDENTAL U.S. BOMB ING Cambodian Officials Report 300 Were Either Killed, Injured Worst Mistake Bombing Levels Cambodia TO'Wn PHNOM PENH (UPI) -United Slales ptaries accidentally bombed tbe Mekong River town o"r Neak Luong tod<1:y, ift.. flicting more tfian 300 casualties on the rerfug~~olle~ J?Opl.llace in the wor.st mistake· bombing_ of the entire Indochina war, Cambodia Air Force sources reported. A Cambodian air force officer who took part ln rescue efforts said the toll might rise to more than 100 dead and up to f,()(I wowtded. A survivor in a Phnom Penh hospital said the bombing destroyed the Neak Luong city hall, a hospital, an army and CAMBODIANS CITE VICTORY IN SKIRMISHES-Page 4 a navy base and scores or houses. There were conflicting reports whether the bombing raid was carried out by 852 heavy-bombers which carry a 30-ton bomb load each, by swinging Flll fighter- bombcrs which carry an 18-ton bomb load each, or possibly by both. Jn Washington, a Pentagon spokesman . Jerry W. Friedheim, said he did not have a full report on the incident but ''the in· itial Indications are that part of lhe bomb load of one 852 fell ·short of· the intended target." He. said the area hit apparently was a military camp area conta~ing cam· i>odian trooos and dependents. lie had·oo staiistics on casualties. More than 200 wounded, persons were brought into Phnom Penh, 32 miles northwest of Neak Luong, by helicopters and boats. There was no definite number of tho!e killed, because their bod,ies were left in the rubble of the town, a ferry.crossing point and strongpoint of the defense line southeast of the capital. An officer who helped evacuate the wounded said he counted at least 50 dead sprawled in the town. "From the noise I heard, I guess there were four planes," one victim in a 'hospital bed told a UPI reporter. "At first, 1 thought it was harassment fire and we ran for cover." U.S. Air Force Gen. John Vogt, head of American air operations in 'Illailand, flew to Phnom Penh to discuss the· In- cident with CambOdian President Lon Nol, and returned to Thailand today, . ' YOU SHOULD HAVE ONE IN EVERY COLOR, DAD! $5.9 Million Total Spent By Military WASHINGTON (AP) -The N'lllon ad· ministration disclosed today the federal government has spent about •10 million for security, communications and 00. ministratiYe supoort at President Nixon's home-and-office complexes in California and Florida. A presidential spokesman disclosed the military spent $5.9 million at San Clemente and Key Biscayne. The costs bad been secret. The secret Service then said it spent less than $300,000 and the ~al Services Administration announced.. its spending totalled $3.7 million for security and support costs. A Secret Service spokesman said that his agency spent "lw than $300,000 since 1969 of appropriated funds on security equipment" for the homes of the Presi· dent and his two daughters. Much of the ·equipment is removabfe and reusable, the spokesman Said. The Secret Servce and military spend- ing totals do not include salaries or related costs. They cover only equip- ment, installation and similar expenses. In divulging for the first time the cost figures for sensitive presidential . com- munications age! l!<'c:utilY.·Jlr'Ojecla, Depu- ty Press Secretary Gerald L. WarrtD also said Nixon ordered a foll accounting prepared on details of the purchase al his twmes in San Clemente, .@<I_ Key Bis· C~)'lle:, Fla. This a<counting will be made available within a month, Warren said. Warren gave thi,s breakdown of cortS at each location: -Key Biscayne -One-time cost.s Of $730,000, including $418,000 for a helicopter pad, $14,<0> for a shark net and $300,000 for oommuntcatlon.s equlp-- ment. Recurring costs annuaJly of_ ~.000, or a !Olll'year Jotal ol about $1.3 million. -Bahamas -Communications equi~ ment installed at Grand Cay, Walter's Cay and Grand Bahamas Island totaled $160,000. -San Clemente -One-lime cost.s ol $1,065,ooo includlng $550,000 !Or """!· municetions equipment and .$515,009 spent at the Western White House. office complex adjacent to the Presklent's borne. · ' ln additloq, annual recurring coats at San Clemente·are $671,000, or a fom.year totaJ of $2.7 million. Agein by Popular Demand! Our GRIECO Twill Bl•t•r in Navy, Green, Burqundy end Brown-$125.00. 8u99ywhip All Wool Trou•er by Corbin-$37.50. Silk Club Tie by Robt rt T tlboll-$10.00 • ,. .... PHELPS MEAGER ~ OVEll50TEARSllie.11JP01tHu .... ~ NEWPORT HACH . . ,- - , ., U...JLV PlLOT Cambodians Claim 'Victory' in Battles with T om urphine •; . ··:~-... .. " 'Getting There '1alf _the Fun? ~THE BUMMER SUMMER: That's ~bat the young people are calling It this , anyway. You can only guess what gbt be causing thtS to be their season discontent. The weather? The lack of ? The record jam of tourism? guring that possibly some of the matured residents of our region ight also feel this is a bmnmer sum- • I set out on a great investigative e over the weekend to determine how "ings really are. Herein are some of the Its. • Tootling down Pacific Coast Highway Saturday amidst the throngs or l&iton, I discovered a leak. It seemed to coming from the sky. Somebody sug- it might be raining. Raining? In I? , IT WASN'T raining, it was reason- ' then howcome the pavement was get- ting all 'slick and poople have their windshield wipers flapping back and forth? Well, the fact is that it was raining. Here we were driving. along surrounded by1i0ftles of humarilfy who Caffie to our · coastline to elude the. !nland heal And what did we give them? Rain already. 'Ibis tended to support the youth theory that we might indeed be suffering a bum- mer swnmer. 1ben,. of course, there was the move- ment of traffic itself. A little Saturday afternoon drive from Laguna Beach to Costa Mesa consumed ooe hour and 20 minutes. This included using the back streets of O>rona det Mar tq an effort to - bypass the Coast Highway j3l!r.-, BUT I DON'T SUPPOSE you should use the word bypass when speaking to • Corona de! Martians about their traffic situation. A lot of folks in.Corona del Mar doo't figure they need a b-·· for traf-11& -~ Maybe, in truth, tbey doo\ bave traffic through Corona de! Mar. My idea of traf. fie is when you have a whole lot of ccs that are moving someplace. But autos do not move through Corona de! Mar. They just sort o,f ooze along in a gen~ral non· movement. Therefore, no traffiC. I tmderstand there was also a Jot of non-traffic on the Newport-Balboa Peninsula over the weekend. I did not check this out personftlly since Corona del Mar is enough of an experience with non,.traffic for one day. ' THEY AL'lO CONTINUE to debal< about what to do in Newport Beach with the Upper Newport Bay Bridge on Coast Highway. So far they've done nothing. Why should they? U traffic can't move through Corona de! Mar, then it doesn't need to move across the bridge either. You could characterize this as progress through non-movement. Laguna Beach, on the other hand, has made valiant efforts to fix the traffic. 'Ibey have baMed left turns oU O>ast . Highway and even outlawed some park- ing on weekends in an effort to make more room for traffic. All this has apparently succeeded beyond their wildest expectations. Now, instead of having four lanes of non-move-- ment, they have five. ON SUNDAY AFTERNOON, our visiting tourists trying to motor upcoast got a real treat. Their non-movement traffic backed up from Poppy Avenue in Olrnna de! Mar southward to Crystal Cove. I've never seen that happen before. Oh, well. At least they had a nice view of the sunset while sitting there. From \\1ire Services PliNOM PENH -Cambodian troops Supported by fierce American air strikes pushed down embattled Highway 1 today, recaptw-ed two towns held by guerrillas and beat them back in what field reports called a confused and hasty retreat. The Cambodian high c o mm a n d dcscri~ the operation as a "brilliant victory." Site of Killings IT URGED THE thousands of refugees streaming into the capital since the rebel offensive a1oog the hghway began five days ago to return to their homes. A command spokesman said th< highway, a vital lire line to Phnom Penh, was now open to Dey Eth, 13 mlles away. Field reports said government roroes that battled all day Sunday and into to- day pushed the insurgents out of Veal Sbov, five miles southeast of Phnofn Four persons were found bludgeoned to death in Romeoville, Ill. Sat- urday. The bodies of ,Robert Kloeckner, 36, hls son Anthony, 16, daughter Crystal, 13, and a friend , Tracy Richards, 13, were found in the home. Police are holding truck driver, Paul Lena, 36, in connec- tion with the deaths. Mrs. Kloeckner escaped without serious injuries. Bottom photo is of the girl's r oom. Iletergent Makers Okay Labeling of Phosphates WASllNGlTON (AP) -The Federal Trade Commission annpunced ·today that virtually all of the nation's detergent manufacturers have agreed to label their household del<rgents with phospbal< con- tent. Phosphates have been linked to ac- celerated "aging" of Jakes tlicause the chemicals stimulate the growth of aquatic plants which can choke off other fonns of life. AT THE SAME Ume the FTC agreed to pennit household detergents to bear labels declaring their ingredients to be biodegradable, in the sense that the in- gredients are broken down into simpler compounds by natural biological acUoo. Raymond L. Rhine, the FTC attorney in charge of the phosphate plan, said the agency baa: received pro from 33 manufacturers to provide e Jabeling. He said the 33 represent .c close to 100 percent as you can t" d includes Procter & Gamble, Lever Bros., and Colgate, which acoount for 80 percent or the marlrel The agreement Is strictly voluntary with no JegaJ standing. But Rhine said the FTC could attack any failure to label detergents as a violation of the laws against unfair or deceptive practices. "OUR EXPERIENCE in cases like this is they don't backslide," said Rhine. He said the FTC is still considering whether to require ingredient labeling and a warning against high phosphate detergents, two measures which the FTC proposed in 1971 and later discarded after bearings marked by stiff industry opposition. Meanwhile, said R b i n e , Proctor &: Gamble has started labeling the ifl.. gredients of its detergents and Colgate and Lever Bros. are reported on the verge of m~ a similar move. The phosphorus content statement is to be on laundry, dishwashing and general household detergents and will generally read: "This formuJa averages ... percent pbos:phorus, in the form of phosphates, which is equivalent to . , . grams per ••• cup use level." THE Fl'C WILL not tell consumers, however, what is a high or low level of phosphates, nor will it provide lists com· paring various brands. Rhine said formulatioo.s of brands vary from region to region and change so rapidly that any listing could be out or date by the time it got back from the printer. Fair Skies Favor Nation • , Penh, and Prek EnJ, two miles farther south. At one point, insurg"'ts were reported within one mile of tbe IOllthern edge of Pbnom Penh. U.S. wa~ apln lllasted insurgent poslt!OM on aD sides of tfie capital tOOay, but until Sunday nlgbt they had to ease up on bombing aloo& Highway 1 lor fear or hitting refugees movJoc up the road Ex-dictator Batista Dies At Resort ... MARBElLA, Spain (UPI) -Fulgenclo Batista, 72, tbe rutblm dictator who rul- ed Cl.Iba tor 11 years be.fore he was overthrown by Fidel C.stro in 11159, died a "peaceful death" today in a golf resort on the Costa Del So~ his family Mid. Ruben Batista, ooe of lib five surviving sons, said Batista dled In his bed at 3 a.m. "of an apparent heart attack" and will be buried in Madrid 'l\Jesday. c4JT WAS A peaceru1 death," Ruben said of the man who to many became the epltome of the aLtin American rfght- wing military stroogman. "Papa complained about feeling m after • late Sunday dinner •••. jt _.-a he died su~denly and without feeling any pain." Batista's remain! will be placed ln a family mausoleum in Madrid and "not be taken back to Cuba until our country Is free again," Ruben said. He said tlie cof'. fin will be covered° with a Cubaij flai. Batimi bed been a IOl'CO Jn CU1Jon po1itics for three decades: and served as president from l!HH4 and agabl from 1952. He fled into exile in Portugal after the advance of Ca:stro's left-wing guer- rillas forced him to resign on Jan. I, 1959. HE HAD AMASSED a fortune of many millions of dollars and sent it out or the country to a safe location. Batista will be buried in the same Madrid cemetery where another Latin American exdictator, Rafael Leonides Trujillo, was laid to rest after he was killed in an ambush that signaled the end or his family's regime in the Dominican ~ic. Anotber Latin American strongman, Juan D. Peron, Im just r-...i from Spain to Argentina after 18 years of ex- ile. This leaves Marcos Perez nmenez d. Venezuela the la 1 t ex-d.ictator-in- resideooe In Spain. Through the years of exile there were those critics of t.he Batista regime who suddenly praised him as a decidedly lesser or two evils, the other being castro. But there were others who retold stories of over-indulgence and the millions Batisla allegedly took when he fled Cuba. BUT FOR AIL the ruined plans - plans that included a sumptuous retire- ment mansion in Daytona Beach. Fla.. aBti:sta showed no btttemess Jn his last years. In an interview fu the spring of tm Batista said: ''Noone likes to die outside the country he loves. 'I1tis is something you can't comprehend Wltil it happens to you. It is dif!icu1t to spend the last years of your life away from the land of your birth." Russians Latmch Mars 6 Craft Toward Planet .( DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtll'ftt)' of t~t Dall)' Pl!ot · Is t111tanlftd TtltplWIMI Mttl Or•Ntt '""''" Art11 ••••• 1 • HMHl flltffl!wtal ..... ,.... •••di '"' ... ,MfMtiot .... •• •···· .... ,,. and governm<nt troops involved In el05e- in combat with rebel soldiers. FlEID REPORTS said the ooly cl_. In alr strikes SUoday nil!ll wse flown by U.S. Fill jet!~ wtilch bit guerrlllz.<l as they retroated from a scMol at Prek Ens-The reports said the Communists fled in disarray from both Prek Eng jllld Veal Sbov. The hlgh.Jil)lllmalld issued a stal<moot today .l"'lilviting" tbe thousands of refu&eeo who bad fled the figbllng to return to their homos. uaur troops have already reestablished Older and assur<d se<ur!Jy," the hlgb command statement said. Jn Saigon, truce violations increased again and heavy.fighting was.reported in tbe Central ffigblands and along the Gen· traJ Coast, government m i I i tar y apokesmen said. They said 79 pe(S0!1S were kllled in tbe fighting. IN FOUR BATl"LES and two shelling:! in Quang Ngai province,. on tbe Central Coast. 300 miles northeast of Saigon, 21 Communists, nine civilians and sU: govenunent soldiers were slain and 26 government soldiers and 20 civilians WOODded, Lt. Col Le Trung Hien, spokesman for the Saigon command, reported. Meanwhile, the U.S. bombing in C8m· bodia, which survived an abbreviated Supreme CoW1 test over the weekend, will be in for further judicial review by a federal appeals oourt this week. On Saturday, Justice Thurgood Marshall overtWlled a bombing ban Wued hours earlier by fellow Justice William 0 . Douglas. Marshall said he had consulted with and won the agreement of the seven other Supreme Court members in, granting the Nixon administration's request to overturn Douglas' action. DURING THE BRIEF period time that Douglas' ruling was in ef1ect, tbe bombing continued uninterrupted. The Pentagon declared that "pending ap- propriate legal action On this matter, y:e "'"' 1..._... will abide by the congressional mandate to end tbe bombing on Aug. IS," the dale fORMER QICTATOR ,DEAD . selected by.<;oogress lo< cutting off f\Uld.5 FulgenCIO S.tista, 72 • ,. ... ~~ · tot'the air war over Cambodia. 3 Killed, $a B14rt Terrorists Remain Mum About Airport Attack ATHENS. Greece (AP) -Two Arabs refused to answer questioos today about their Athe!ls Airport gooflre-and-grenalle attack that killed three penoo.s, in- cluding an American wc:rnan o n her hooeymooo, polioe aaid. The three kllled Sunday """' two Arnerlcall!J and an Austrian. Filly.five persons were wounded. mE HONEYMOONER was Mrs. William Salandi, 23, or Righland Park, N.J. Her husband who is eipected IO Oklalioma Priso1i Official,s Seek Missing Convict McALESTER, Olda. (UPI) -Prison officials at riot-gutted Oklahoma State Penitentiary said today a convicted murderer was missing from his cell and may have escaped. Rex Brinlee Jr., a former Tahlequah, Okla .. night club operator convicted or ( IN SHORT ..• ) the 1!171 bomb slaying of Briston, Okla., school teacher Fem Boldlng, was discovered missing after a J a.m. check of his cell. Ed Hardy, press secM!taly to Gov. David Hall. Mid in Oklahoma Oty that prison officials were "unable t o specifically locate him (Brinlee) by J1U1Do ber. and tben sent some -'e 1n 1o check men ln cellblockl who WOUid have known him by slgbt. Tbey oou!dn't locate him." e Big Jtlutake PRINCETON, N.J. CAP) -The Gallup Poll says two-lbtrdtl of tbe leading foreign pibllc olflclall and prjvate cttlztno surveyed belleve the United Slate..' mlllta?y inlervenilon in Vlelnam was a mistake. A majority of tbe 1,363 -q""'" .-..Jn the poll,.-public .&ltday,,,. also felt tbe U.S. lot!! p.restJr• becauie of the Vi.tnam war and should help rebuild North. Vietnam. ' euotelPro~ NEW YORK (UPI) -Tbe city l>ullding dcparlmmt wtll begin an lnmtlpUon today ol the collapee at the Un!vmlty Hotel which kllled at loaat on penlM. Part ol the dllapldated bOttl, once call- ed tbe Broadway Central and COlllid.ted the dty's moat •lepnt, oollapoed 1'rlday. e .J'11.s AIUllt NEW YORK (UP!) -The Intemal ~ Serv!ce Jncreued lllDO!llnl·ac- tlviU.S during tile Nixon admlnlstrilUOll -and nol alw•Y• just for tax-ptherJn8 purposes -"Time · M1p%1ne feported Sunday. Time llld an ms ..,.aa1 1nve1upUn& grot11> WU set up in 11169 ti tbe req-11! the \Vblta Houaa and sinoa bu ccilltckd files on 8,000 IndMdtlall and 3,000 ll'O"JIB· recover fron1 the v.'OWlds he received in the attack, said from a hospital bed: •·Nothing matters now, I've lost Jean- nie. We bad passed through passport""" trol and walked down to tbe transit lounge. At that moment, explosioos rock- ed the ball and I fell to the ground womded by sharp objects. Jeannie fell prostrate and didn't move. She air parenUy caught the blast directly in th< dlest and died lnstanUy." The other American killed was Iden· tified as Elbert Kenen, 53, a Union, N .• J .• plwnbing cootrador. Kenen's wife, Kate. 49, was injured. T1le Austrian was a 50-year-old at· torney named Ullhoren. IN ADDITION TO the tv•o men, two women were being questioned. Police said they disanned a time bomb, which had not been set to go olf, that was found in.side a letter box in the tramit lounge four hours after the at- tack. Witnesses told police they saw a man drop a large object in tbe Im b<lor-e tbe shooting began In the lounge. The two Arabs surrendered Sunday afl<r crouching with 35 hostages behind the lounge 's marble bar for two bol.O"s while they tried to get a plane to take them to the Middle East. It was not known what promises, lt any, were made to get them to sur· render- A police source said the two men ap- pareo.Uy had arrived earlier in the day from the Middle East and sat In tile transit lounge, waiting to make their at- tacit. PASSENGERS ARRIVING at Athen. airj>ort are not searched, but a thorough search is made of au departing passengers and their hand luggage. Ul"IT ........ 191-llHHt BequH A nationwide alert has been lssiled for ex-convict Alvin Sea· groves, 26, who allegedJ.y gun· nee! down three pe111ons ln a Tennessee parking lot Satur- day. Seagroves was releaseq fl'om prison over the objections ot his parol~ officer. ., .. ', ' ' ' .. ~ Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1973 N TEN CENTS Markets Beefing About Beef They Haven't Got By ARTHU R R. VINSEL 01 1M D1)tr 'llol Stiff Ordinary beef cattle today seemed to have joined the roster of extinct American ·animal species, or so it would seem to the average grocery shopper surveying the average Orange Coast meat display countei:. The beef throughout the coastal area is: no beef. Supermarket managers able to capture even one·fourth of their ordinary Mo nday order Crom jobbers and wholesalers hit by a major packing company shutdown Friday considered themselves lucky to- day. And customers in many stores lined up early ·to get the best cuts available, in light of the critical meat shortage brought about by Nixon Administration anti-inflation measures. "ll people didn't panic so much , I think we'd be all right," declared Joe Phifer, butcher at the Balboa Market, WI E. Divers Find Body • Balboa Blvd., Newport~ach. "Lamb and pork are~tiful, although everything is expensive," remarked Phifer, whose counter has been clogged with shoppers buying meat ln large quan- tities. "rn know more tonight when r get my beef order," he added. The meat department men at other markets today knew all they needed to know already, at least for the immediate future. "Our delivery for today is completely mnrked out. Canceled," said Larry Howard, meat manager at the Thrif- timart, 2501 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. "We won 't get anything~· ~ fresh beef line," he predicted, · g that he anticipates getting perhaps.-percent of his order of processed ti6f products. Safeway Stores' meat department supervisors declh,Jed comment on the scarcity of beef, referring a ll calls to corporate of(ices. "All the beef items are very scarce. Nonexistentt in fact," declared Jim Dunlap, meat department manager at the El Rancho Market, 2555 Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach. "Don't have any," grumped John Bias, meat manager at the ~1arket Basket, 16121 Bl'Ookhurst St., Fountain Valley, when asked about availability of· beef. "All we've got is just a little bit or grind," he continued, adding as did most other market men surveyed that chicken, Man Dies Ill Bay By JOHN ZALLER Of ltlt DallY l"fWI lttff A 25-year-old Duarte man -drowned in r{ewport Harbor Sunday,. after suffering an apparent epileptic seizure during a swimming race with a buddy, police said. One Newport Beach lifeguard and a friend o( the victim were within 100 feet of Stephen Baroni al the time he suffered his fatal seizure. The incident occurred in the Bay Island channel. according to lifeguards. '1J'laat a View' Baroni, however, apparently sank swiftly to the bottom-in 10 feet of water and searchers were unable to find him until 55 minqtCSi,.after be_v~i_s_hed. Jlaroni, who bad happily told friends he hadp't bad an epileptic seirilre for 10 months, was swimming at Montero Street Beach at the time of the tragic ac- cident. "He had gone about 50 yards in an 80- yard race across the channel to Bay Island and back," one investigator said. • I Skylab Astronauts Take Delayed Walk in Space SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Two Skylab astronauts stepped tnto space today to load telescope film, unfurl a new awning-like sunshade and inspect trouble areas on their orb i ting laboratory. Bundled in bulky while space suits al· tached to 60-foot lifelines. Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma exiled through an airlock hatch at 10:3S a.m. PDT to start a planned 3~'z-bour ex· cursion. Skylab 2 was traveling more than 17.000 miles an hour 271 miles above the Gulf of ~lexico. Garriott, the fir st to step outside, corn· Bicycw Trails Group Reviewing Newport's Plan The Newport Beach Bicycle Trails Committee tonight will begin a full review of the city's master plan of. bike trails in preparation ror a public hearing on the plan later this month. The committee "·ill also receive a preliminary estimate on the oost of building a bicycle bridge across the Pacific Coast Highway at Newport Boulevard. . In reviewing the city master plan for trails the committee can take actioo on any ~gle trail. Mary Blake, chairman of the committee, saJd she expects at least the Balboa Island bayfront trail to be dl!cussed, and possibly other as well. "ti will be a very important aieeting," ~!rs. Blake said, Hbecause we'll be taking a second look at all lhe work lhal has been done on bicycle trails to dat~ Mayor Don 11c1nnis said he wifrattend the meeting fu explain details of the public hearing process to the committee. But be said he would not discuss actual trails planned because that would com· promloe ht.I poolllon when the maatAlr plan <.'Omts up for a public hearlng before the city council on August '11. ' The Bicycles Trails C.Ommittee will meet et 7:30 p.m. at lifeguard head- qi..arters at Newport Pier. CLASSIFIED AD SELLS IT FAST You don't nted a magic wand to achieve resu1ts. Look what a Daily Pilot classified want ad can do: '68 Dart, very low m!lcage, t int «>nd. r/h, auto. air cond., V-8 eng. Will aCC<lpl 11150 for quick sale. • {Phone No.) (Name). "Very , very silcascd." says lbe ad- vertiser. "~~antnstlc results!" Find out tor yourself by dialing the direct line - 642·56'18. " ' mented .. what a view" as he gazed on tHe panorama ol earth, sun and stars surrounding the station. Minor problems in checltin~ ·out suits and tbe airlock depres.surizahon system delayed the astronauts' departure from the station for about 90 minutes. Skylab 2's commander, Alan L. Bean, monitored the walk from inside the station, relaying Mission Control's in· structions. He also wore a space suit, ready to assist in case of trouble. Bean remained relatively quiet during the early part of the walk, prompting GarrioU to say: "I believe that guy's in there eating lunch while we're out here \\'Orting." The first task for Garriott and Lousma was to erect the sail-like sunshade to help keep the laboratory cool. "Things are going smoothly," Garriott reported as the spacewalkers started assembling tubes, poles, ~ ropes and fabric for the job, which was expected to take more than two hours. While ou tside, Garriott and Lousma also were to examine three areas for possible clues to problems: two jet engines that have failed on the Apollo ferry ship, a bundle or wires where a short circuit may have occurred and a radiator that may be the !Ou~ of a newly discovered leak in Skylab's air conditioning system. The air cooditioning leak, which came to light Sunday night, is the latest prob- (See SKYLAB, Page Z) Banks in West Boost Lending Levels to 9% SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Major Wesl Coast banks raised their prime lending rttes to 9 percent today, following the '~ pel"Clhlage point ln~ase lnlU.l<d by Eastern banks. 'nie rate hike was 8J1Jl0\l1'ced by Bank of America, the naUon'• largest com- mE¥"cial bank; Welb Fargo, The Bank of Cillfomia, Urilted C&llfomia Bank, Sc-- curlty Pacific and Crocker Bank. • The prime rate Is the mlnimum in· terest banks charge large corporate bor· rowers for short-term Joans. 'Ibo prime rate bu been raised 11 um,. sin<e the beginning of this year when It stood at 6 percent. Several other major banks also raised their prime lending rate> today. The increases by New York's Chase Minhatfan Bank, the -oountry's third large1t, and the others brought the prime lo an all-time high and vlrlually a,.ured that the 9 percent level would spread • throughoul the Industry wllhln lhc nexl few days. While It b not dtrecUy linked to con- sumer in'tallmtnt Joens or mortgage rates, a rise In the prime frequently. lignala a general boost In ovenll lnteres~ ratOI, which might OCOIV some monllls laler. ... "He was. swimming sidestroke when he just stopped, laid in the water a second and sank /' the lifeguard spokesman ex· plained. As Baroni was going down, he stuck one ann back out of the water as though reaching for help, but made no cry, lifeguards added. Lifeguard Greg Horman reportedly observed the sinking victim and raced out for Baroni. Within four minutes, seven other lifeguards were also in the area searching with Horman. However, underwater visibility was only 18 inches with a face mask, making the search extremely difficult. Systematic sweeps of the area where Baroni vanished still failed to tum up the body after 45 minutes, at which time scuba div~ =.=.~l!Dl, !indlng l!im to rn1ftlltM ta , bl de~~ fool-deep eel Jll'lliS aboul 20 feet from the • spot~ be wa seen to sink. Baroni had earlier been rowing 1n the bay With a grOup of friends and told them he was tired. However, he reportedly took medication about 30 minutes beforo going swimming and told his companions he felt good. o•llV P11c1t ""°'° by nr.nn ,.,rMr A youth on a paddleboard who passed Baroni about a minute before he was stricken told police the victim did not ap- pear fatigued, nor did he notice anything unusual. FATHER DENNIS MURPHY ADMINISTERS LAST RITES '25·year-old Duarte Man Drowns in Newport H•rbor Groins Spawning Riptides Hazards From Loose Rocks Also Cited l1i Ne-wport By WILLIAM L. SCHREIBER 01 t~• C•llY 1"119' SI_,, Powerful riptides spawned by \Vest Newport's eight erosion·control groins are causing critical safety hazards to swimmers and surfers, Newport Beach !\1arine Safety Director Robert Reed reported today. And he said a second problem, possibly as serious as the riptides, "'as discovered recently after heavy surf. Some of U1e ttig rocks on the groins have been dislodged and washed into swimming areas. creating :Sn unseen danger to bathers. "There has been a marked increase in riptides around the groins. particularly the old ones at 40th and 44th Streets that were rebuilt with rocks," Reed said. "The whole groin system is presenting a serious problem in marine safety," he added. ''The beneifts may exceed the safety factor but how the hell do you weigh something like that." Besides the two rebuilt groins, the U.S. Army C.Orps of Engineers built two new rubble groins this spring at 32nd and 28th • Streets. There are 'also rock groins at 36th. 48th, 52nd and 56th Streets which Reed said have been experiencing powerful undertow. The groin system was installed to pre· vent a repeat of huge storm surf in the late J950s and middle 1960s that cut nar- row West Newport beach all the way back to the houses along Ocean Front. Reed said the completed groin system has never really been tested under critical storm conditions and he is (See RIPTIDES, Page %) Olltr ltl}M Sl•ff l"ftti. ' WITH SWIMMER IN ·TOW, NEWPORT LIFEGUARD Bj\TTLES RIPTIDE AND RIPRAP Wnt Newport Groins Pr;1Hnt Added H1urd to Swimmers C•ught In Riptlde1, Lifegu•rds W•rn i ) 1 fish and pork are generally plentiful. The outlook today appeared dim for any swift improvement in the beefless market's picture. Treasury Secretary George P. Schultz said Sunday on ABC-TV's ''Issues and Answers" program that President Nix- on's retail beef price freeze will remain in effect until its Sept. 12 cutoff date. He did hint that government officials are smarting a bit under consumer (See NO BEEF, Page 2) Military's Food Shops Not Legal? .From Staff, Wire Dispatches Rep. Les Aspln (0.Wis.) has charge~ that some Of tber -287 military cpm· mlssaties in the United States may be operating illegally and he has requested an investigation into the matter. Aspin said Sunday a 1952 law requires the defense secretary to certify that food at reasonable prices and quantity is tmavailable in a locale before a com- missary can operate there. However, Pentagon regulations defeat the purpose of the law by allowing com- missaries to operate wherever there are stores with prices 20 percent higher than commissary prices, Aspin anerted. SpQkesmen at two Orange Coast miil tary ba!eS, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp PendJeton, have reeu. ed to comment on lbe allegatic:m, saying instead lhal .lhe U.S. Department of Defense in Washington would have to answer the charges. "We're unautliorized to anrirer here,'" said Chief Warrant ·Officer Willlam Ombahl of El Toro. "Every ance In a while a/ story like this gels ar'ound but since it doesn't name us specifically, you'll have . to find the answers in Washington. '1 At Camp Pendleton ln Oceanside, Capt. Louis Chitelle said he would have to "defer to Washington." "The charges were made at the Deparbnent of Defense, not Pendleton, so I can't answer ror them," he ex- plained. 1be Wisconsin congressman, a rre- quent critic of the Pentagon, said there are 278 military commissaries in the Uni ted States doing an annual business or $2 billion and costing the tupapers "hun- dreds of millions of dollars a year" in s ubsidies. .~ Aspln said lhe Defense Depariment was seeking $17 .9 million this year to build new commissaries. He said he was asking the General Accounting Office (GAO), the investigatory a rm of Congress, to look Into the operati~. The GAO should find out, Aspin said, whether the Department of Defense regu1ations and their enforcement "are within the scope of the law and how many stores should be closed down." He said a GAO study conducted in 19&1 showed that half the commissaries in the United States should be shut down . There was no immediate response to Aspin's charges. However, individual servicemen reacted privately with ex- pr~iO!'JS ranging from indignation to ap- preciation of the savings which com- missaries offer. "Every time they run out of other things to criticize, they start attacking the commissary .systtm," one officer said. Another serviceman said commissaries (See MllJTARY, Page I ) Orange Cout Weather . It'll be partly sunny Tuesday. following the usual low ckluds and drizzle along the Orange Coast. Temperatures will range from 70 al the beaches to 80 inland. Ove~ nia:ht lows ln the fiOs. INSWE TODA. Y 'No ont likts to die outside tht countrt1 ht love1,' sotd for· mer Cuban dictator rulgeneio Batista last ytar. The tyrant, 1Dho was ousted bu Fldtl Coatro it1 1959, died at a Spanish re sort today. See 3tory eoge 4. I Mlln1 1• Anft LlllMMD 14 1..M. •••d lt Mevln It C•llltml• S H•llllflfll ..... 4 Clltelll"'-U• It Ot'•rtt• c .... ,,., • Ci.1111Ulff ,.14 ......... •t(WC ... (M!lf:I li l•NI• ,..,,., •t CrM•wt111 II 0.-ttl M.tkff ' SHrlt 1"11 SMU Mar11t ft 1•11 l~lli.tl•I lf•M • T ..... ltitfl It Et1ltrltl-MI It Tltt•ttn 1t l'!ftlMt , .. " WMIMf' "-f"MC'#f 14 ... s.,.,.(, , ............ """,,.,. ---. I ., • -- .. • -.. =-·-•_1L_Y_Pl_L_o1 ____ •:.:_ ____ _:M:=Ofta,ay, AL19U)l 6 tq73 .. • Ex-N ewpo1·t Office1· Hit In Reno Job Form.tr Newport Beach police captain James Parker continues to find his IS.- month-old job as Reno , Nev., chief or poliei! shrouded in conlroversy. The Washoe County Grand Jury has public ly cr1Ucized Parker for accept ing gratuities and has recommended the dismissal of a pol.ice captain for allegedly ' displaying questionable ethics. Parker "'as appointed to lhe Rt>no post in December 1971, replacing a chief who had resigned after a critical Grand Jury report. Parker immediately stirred a furor by ordering his men to diSC<lntinue moonlighting as security police at gambl- ~· ing casinos. Shortly after the most recent Grand Jury report on Parker and Pol.ice Capt. Don McKilUp was released, however, the Washoe County District Attorney rose to Parker's defense. Burtied Out , . ln a special report the district attorney cited several examples of CQm mendable and innovative techniques and policies implemented by Parker. Criticism by the Grand Jury stemmed from Parker 's acceptance of free Newport Beach restauranteur and antique dealer Sid Soffer stands a1nid charred items cleared out of his antique store after the establishment, along with a home and drapery firm, burned early Saturday. Fire investigators are still looking Ior the cau se or t he $48.000 blaze. It apparently started in the antique store at 481 N. Newport Blvd. and spread to the home and drapery shop. \Veekends at an Idaho retreat operated by Harrah's Club, a casino. It also cited . "low morale" in the department, lack of communication with his men and allega- tions of favoritism. "There is evidence that certain actions by Chief Parker may have adversel] af- fected the morale either by the nature of -the actiori taken or the manner in which Beef Supplies Down Grocers Expect Cuts in Meat Shipments • it was accompUsbed." PersOnnel . problems, including recent By The Associated Press lateral transfers-made ,within the depart· Supei-markets hoped for new shipm ents A spokesman for one Los Angeles ~ket . said he was fi guring on "probably a 60 percent cut" in the amount of beef>-he--nonnally gets;- "ment and the handling of the case of an of beef today. to replace merchandise olficer who was fired for alleged. OOQ"_,.,.,-• .,,,..a·ppe¢"""11p' by weekend '"shippers ... but . duct unbecoming an officer, m·ay have many stores sAld th~y expected only a created the morale problems, the report fraction of what they needed. . . . ,, . "You open the door and it's like gangbusters," said as up er market ·aay.s. Patker is on vacation this week and wa.s not availa ble for comment. The Grand J ury report was more critical of Capt. McKillip, however, He has refused to resign and the Grand Jury that made the report has been dismissed and the issue is now a\\·aiting fonnation of a new Grand J ury. Mother Declared ,,lnsa1ie iii Teeri ' ' "Rape Conspiracy A San Clemente woman accused on ar· ·st of encouraging a young , C~p ndleton Marine to ra~ her 1.t.year-old ughter has been found msane and com· mltted to Patton State Hospital for an ,indefinite term. 1 Judge William Murray ordered the commitment of Mildred Harmon, 60, of 403 Via ?.tontego. His action suspends criminal proceedings on three counts of rape filed against the gray-haired defen· idant. Mrs. Hannon and Marine Robert Dean '$milh were arrested two years ago ishortly after the serviceman had com· ntttted what police said w8! his third sex· )Jal assau1t on his young victim in a San ,:Jemente motel. He was sentenced to six months to 50 fears in state prison for his role in the 11.ffalr after the victim's sister told police her mother encouraged his actions in the belief that it would "calm her (the vic- Um) down." MILITARY ... used to offer a regular 20 percent dis- coWlt but now charge close to civilian supennarket prices on most items and often are less well stocked than supermarkets. He pointed out that com· missaries in the Washington area were ralioning meat, allowing each rustomer only tv"o packages per trip. OIANGI CO.All H DAILY PILOT A Th• Or•no• coau O"IL'I' PILOT, with WMcfl I• comblMd th• NtWl•P•eu, II publitlled ov tt>t Or•1111t Coa1t Pvltll1hl119 Cam~nv $~. tilt MIU!\\tl1 •rt P\lt!llll>lcl, MONllV lhro"9h 1"rld1y, lflr Cosl1 Mt11, "'""119" 61.&<11, Hllfll(f111IOll flMt.h/l"OU!lltln Vtlltv. LIQ\1111 •H(.11, lrvl111/llddl.e.c-Mid 1111 Ck:mtnlt/ a.n J~ c.t11!1lr1no A 1tf111lr •t9~•1 Miiiion It CIUOll1JMll a.turdtyl t r.cl ~u'H:t1y1. Tht prlllCIHt P11bll1hllltl p1t11t 11 t1.>JO Wt1l l•r SfTfff, Cotll MA1, C.lllornll, tl!L2L lltob1rl N. W11d ,rttldllftt tNI il"\lbll!Mr J•tk It. Curl1y va ''""""' ,,. G«ltt•• ~,....., Tho11111 K••wll l:dl!Ot Tiio11111 A. Murphin1 Ml .... 1119 Elllltr ' L '•*•• 1Cri1, N.wpw1 lffd'I (Hy l!d1IOI" ... .,.,. ...... Offlu JJJJ Nt w,ori l 111l1v1rd M11ll119 A4ch11u ,,0 . 11• 1175, •266J .,..,. Offk• ~t Mtll! U0 Wtl! llY ttrttl i,..ollM 8fftll; m ill0,.11 ""tftllt I """"''"'""' ••k": 11•1s •••'" 9o111..,.11'11 J.ltn C"""'"": JU Hort~ Iii C:.mlno 11 .. 1 , .. .,.... 171•1 ••Z-4)21 FromP09el NEWPORT RIPTIDES • • • reserving judgment until then. •·So far, I'm oot sure if the benefits of erosion control outweigh the safety hazards we have," he said. "We haven't seen lhe groins really tested yet." The second problem -dislodged groin rocks -bas Reed particularly CQn· cerned. because it is unpredictable. "The big surf we've had recently has knocked som~ of the rocks out of posi· lion," he said. "At this paint , I don't '" From Page I SKYLAB ... !em to beset the station, already ex- periencing propulsion leaks and electrical difficulties. None of the problems pose a threat to the astronauts. Before they could suit up for the space walk today. the spacemen had lo restore pressure to a tank which is part of a system that removes moisture from the air. This has been a recurring trouble spot. Ground experts continued to study prob- lems that caused leak s in two jet engines on the Apollo tax i ship . which is docked ""'ith the space station. They still are hopeful the astronauts will be able to return to earth in the craft Sept. 25 after a record 59--day flight . In case they can't. around-th~lock work went on at Cape Kennedy, Fla., to prepare the Skylab 3 rocket and Apollo as possible rescue vehicles that could be launched Sept. 10 or later. Nixon Okays La,v Enforcement Aid WASHI NG TON (UPI) -Presidcnl Nixon signed a Jaw today which extends for three more years the federa l Law Enforcement AssistanCi! Administration, with less cost and more flexibility for states. The federal cost will be $3 .2 blllion. To qualify for fWlds, states will need to put up only 10 percent matching money, compared to t~e old rllte of 25 percent They also will have wider autho ri ty on how to use the money for crime fighting. TI>e measure maintains six separate block grant and categorical grant pro- grams fe>r the states. know the full ex.tent of the problem but I suspect there \\ill be more .·• Reed said he has intensified training reviews with the lifeguards who cover West Newport by sending them into the water wit~ face masks to spot the un· derwater rocks that might endanger swimmers. "If they can spot the rocks beforehand and know where they are, it will make the job a little better," he said. "And they damri well better know where those rocks are." Reed said he will have to wait until an extreme Jow tide to determine just how critic.al the falling rock probLem is. If jt is a serious one, Reed sa15 the Corps of Engineers will have to come in and correct it. A spokesman for the Corps of Engineers said this morning his first notification of either problem came to- day. He said the C.Orps will study the situation immediately. The riptides and falling rocks arc the latest in a series of problems caused by the groins, including a re<:ent massive buildup of sand at the mouth of the Santa Ana River that trapped a large pOol of stagnant water between the beach and the ocean . Critics of the groins, including Newport Beach geologist George 1.ebal, claim the only safe "'ay to prevent beach erosion is by installing artificial offshore reefs. Zcbal and others are pressing for con· struction of a model testing basin to prove it. In the nleantime, Reed say s he is bat- tling lhe rocks and riptides as best he can. He says bullhorn systems ars used to warn off bathers in dangerous areas and some portable signs are put up. Reed said bathers caught in the riir I ides should relax and flow "'ith the cur- rent until help comes. "Above ail, never climb up on the groins even if they are the nearest land," he said. "Another set of waves could drive you right into the rocks and the results "'ould be spe<:tacular.'' The closer swimmers get to the rocks, the harder rescues become. Reed said several guards have been slightly injured on the rocks already this year. Reed said the problems created by the groins have made him uncom rortable - even at home. "I guess once you've been a lifeguard you're 11Jways one." said Reed, who lives on the \Vest Newport ocean front. "It's a shame when you can't enjoy your front yard because or riptides. "When I retire, I'm going to move away from the ocean and come back only to visit," he ad ded, Perfe~tly Clear Our Preside1it, Fashion Critic WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nixon tur!\ed fashion Clitic today, commenting on the trend toward women wearing slacks. Aller a bill-signing ceremony in his Oval Office, Nixon observed thal a wom an reporter was wearing slacks. Thls touc hed oil ,a brief conversation in which he commented; "Sl acks can do someth ing for some people, but it can't ... " The last or the President 's observation was Jost in the laughter of the officials and reporters In the ornce. , The President then told lhe reporter, Helen Thomas o[ United Press International, that ~·1 think you do very well ... Turn around." cmploye in Sacramento. as he looked. at the long line at the meat counter. "One guy CJIJTie in here and filled Jhree shopping bags with meat ror· his rcstaur8.nt ," ·said the meat m2flage.r of Ralphs Market in Los Angeles. "It's not fair to the customers." · · The store later imposed a limit of two steaks and two pounds of ground beef per shopper -a practice adopted by supermarkets in many cities. Restaurant officials in the Santa Monica area said guards \\'ere being put on delivery trucks by some meat suir pliers because of the possibility of theft. "These trucks are worth a fortune novl," said George Bennett, head of the Santa Monica area restaurant associa- tion. In the San Francisco area, shoppers emptied some supermarket shelves of beef while other stores began rationing supplies for the fll"St time. Fry's Supermarket in San Jose was sold out of beef, and major appliance stores in the suburb reported a waiting list for freezers. "People are overbuying; that's the problem," said Al Franzi, general man- ager of Petrini's Butcher Shop in San Francisco. In Walnut Creek the consumer-eon-- trolled Co-Op food market began ra· tioning meat at four steaks, one roast and two chickens per customer. Cultural Cen,ter Pla1is on KOCE The proposed Ne"'port Beach cultural center and the people trying to make ii a reality will be featured tonight at 6:30 on "Focus Orange County" on KOC'E Chan- nel 50. The program, whic h will be repeated Tuesday at 3 p.m., Thursday at 8 p.m., Sa turday at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 9:30 p.m., will cover lhe project planned for a $1.5 million site near Fashion Island donated by the Irvine Company. The cultural center would provide a museum, two theaters and rehearsal and \\IOrkshop areas for the performing am. Members of tbe Newport Harbor Foun- dation will be interviewed by host Jim Cooper. 'ltnproper Tlaiag1' Gray Says Nixon Given 'Warning' WASHINGTON (AP) -Fonner acting F'BI Director L. Patrick Gray III said to-- day he thlnk.s he gave President Niion sufficient warning last year for him lo kno'v that improper and llleeal lhings Restrictions On Traffi.c Aired by EPA were being done by his starr mem~rs. Gray called Nixon July 6, 1972, lcs5 than tnree weeks afte r the Watcrgatr break·in, and told him that men on his staff were trying lo wound him by using the FBI and the Central Intelligence Agency to confuse investigators trying ID intervie\\I l\\IO key "'ilnesscs, he sa id . "Do you think a reasonable and pru· dent man, on !he basis of the warning you gave him a~ lho.t time. would have been alerted to lhe fact that his staff was engaged in S01nething that was im· proper, unlawful , illegal?" asked Sen . Herman Talmadge lD-Ga .). "I do," Gray said. Testifying before lhe Senate Watergate committee, Gray ~lso said that, contrary FRESNO (AP) -Proposed traffic to Nixon's statement that he ordered restrictions aimed at reducing air pol-Watergate inve stigator5 to b e g i n lution were debated by public officials reparting directly to him March 21. h~ and private citizens here today. received no such orde~rom the Pre~i· The federal Environmental Protection dent; or anyone else. Agency called the hearing to seek corn· Gray said lhe Preside nt called hin1 two days later, March 23, and told him he 1nent.s on its smog control proposals for thought Grny was being attacked un· tthe San Joaquin Valley. Later, hearings fairly at the Senate Judiciary Com- 1vill consider similar rules suggested for mil tee, u•hi ch eventually refused to en- lhe San Francisco, Sacramento and San dorse Gray 's nomination to become Diego areas. Hearings \\·ere held in the permanent head of the FBJ. spring for a Los Angeles Basin smog con· , Gray said Nixon told him there would trol plan. be another day to ger back at the The proposals. aimed at meeting 1977 Administration's enemies. and told him federal air pollution limit!, would restrict there would always be a place for him in gasoline and diesel fuel sales to fiscal the Nixon administration. Gray said Nix- 1972 -levels. They also would encourage on mentioned no renewed Watergate more use of mas,, trans.it by reducing probe. Gi-ay quit a little more than a public parking 20 percent afi d-mooth later, in the midst of the wire- establishinr exclusive road lanes for car tapping scandal pools and &ise.. Gray 81!0 testified that ollsted White Motor.cycliats In · the valley -have been ----House .O>unsel-John "W. -Dean Ill falsely urged in a4verll!emenls to attend assured him last year 'tha t he Wa.! relay· today's hearing! lo protest a proposed ing information about the F BI • s ban on t_w<>-stroke cycles from May to Watergate investigation directly to the October and a freeze on motorcycles at President. the number regi stered at the end of tb1s Gray said he thought it was perfectly year. proper for him to give FBI reports to A section restricting construction ol Dean. new public parking facilities was attacked Gray, who retired to join Nixon's 1960 by James K. Barnum, president of the campaign after a 20-ycar career in the Fresno County and City Chamber of Navy. said he was trained in the military Commerce, who said , "Tile economic im-service to say, "aye aye, sir," whe n plications are staggering." given orders. Parking facill!ies could not be built If He said be didn't question the authorily they would cause an increase in vehicle of White House aides Dean and John D. traffic to the ar,a. Ehrlldlnan when they gave him what he "It is obvious that any such parking loo.k fo be orders to destroy papers taken facility will lead to additional vehicle from the White House safe o{ Watergate travel," Barnes said in a statement conspirator E. Howard Hunt Jr. prepared for the bearing. Gray ~led again how be and Lt. He said the rule woWd force a halt to Gen. Vernon A. Walters Jr., deput y all commercial comtructlon here lot at director of the CJA, came to the coo· least one year until codes are revised to clll3lon In the weeks after the Watergat,. ellmlnale p~t rules .. ~ parklui raid that men on the White House stall faciJiUes m conjunction with new com-were trying to confuae the investigaUon. merclal and industrial construction. He said he contacted Ni100 July 6, and "Jn the Fresno area alone, this could said, "Dick Walters and I feel t.hat peo- amount to the Joas of u much as $200 pie on your 1taff are trying to mortally million in capital investment, not to ~ wound you by using the CIA and FBI and tion the loss of potenUal jobl," Barnum by confusing the question of CIA interest said. in, or not in, people the FBI wtshes to in- He urged the EPA to delay adopting terview." rules until local officials can "respond He sald N11on paused, and said, "Pat, with a reasoned acceptance of the plan yoo just continue to conduct your ag· or can propcse sound alternatives" gressive and thorough investigation." designed specifically for the local com- mWlity. A member of EPA's legal offict con· ducted the bearing, with help from techncal advisers David Calkins and Ronald Mueller. Frot11P .. eJ NO BEEF ..• pressure tactics. lnilial increases within recent months in the price ol beef led certain consumer groups to designate Meat.less TUesday, on which they reru,...i to purchase such prod- ucts. Joan Sheets, a leader of Fight Inflation Together (FIT) today ur1ed a new pro- test tactic ror thls Tuesday: "Doo't Buy Anything Day." Bulgarians Find ~cyclops' Bones SOFIA, Bulgaria (UPI} -Bulgarian archeologlsl.!I have unearthed t b e skeleton of a "cyck>ps" whil e excavating near the town of Razlog in the southwest of the country, the Bulgarian news a gen· cy BTA said. A brief report said the skeleton, which was found In a bur1al place, was five fee t, eight inches tau, and had only one eye socket· in the coronal bone above the nasal cavity. According to Greek mythology, the cyclops were a race of giants with single eyes ln the middle of their foreheads. NOW AT ·- 90 DAY CASH WITH.unCIQf CIDfT -@l 'l'llADl-IN 5All $35. HEADQUARTERS . Cl.-HW A4¥1'rtb,I .. 64J·J671 C~ll"I, Ull,. Ott llf ...... M PutlllaPllJ'lf """""'1. Ht IMWI , .. rift, llhttlr•lltlll, .. ltwllt fMlltr If oodYt rlh1mt11ll ~-•lt1 _, iot ,.,.llC..:I .,,._, .,. •• 1 ,,., '"4f•llll " ''""""' .,_,_ ...... ~H ...... N ld •I CMll ,,.,...,., C•lttrwM. ~""'ltfl IW t1rr .. , "ll ~I .. -II 0 11 -..41111'1 Mllllll'Y .... lfMt .......... rllMlllt•. As Miss Th omas complied, lhe President asked: "Do they cosl less than gowns?" "No," she replied. Pllone 548· 7788 i . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mui ................................. _~tt••••········· "1"hen change," Nixo n said, again to lau ghter . t • I I ' I I ' • • Orange ·c~!!t - . . . . • . ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1973 c TEN CENTS Markets Beefing About Beef They Haven't Got By ARTIWR R. VINSEL 01 lflt O•l'Y .. llot Sttll Ordinary beef cattle today seemed to have joined the roster of extinct American animal species, or so it would seem to lhe average grocery shopper surveying the average Orange Coast meat display counter. The beef throughout the coastal area is: no beef. Supermarket managers able to capture even one-fourth of their ordinary Monday order from jobbers and wholesalers hit by a major packing company shutdown Friday considered themselves lucky to- day .. And customers in many stores lined up early to get the best cuts available, in light of the critical meat shortage brought about by Nixon Administration anti·inflaUon measures. ~·· "If people didn't panic so much, r think we'd be all right," declared Joe Phifer, butcher at the Balboa Market, 608 E. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach . ''Lamb and pork are plentiful. all.hough everything is expensive," remarked PhUer, whose 'counter has been clogged with shoppers buying meat in large quan~ ti ties. "I'll know more .tonight whep. I get my beef order," he added. The meat department men at other markets today knew aJI they needed to know already, at least for the immediate future. "Our delivery for today is completely marked out. Canceled," said Larry Howard, ineat manager at the Thrif· timart, 2501 Harbor Blvd., Costa MeSa. "We won't get anything in the fresh beef line," he predicted, adding that he anticipates getting perhaps 25 percent of his order of processed beef products. 5afewaY Stores' mea:t department supervisors declined comment on the ·scarcity of beef, referring all calls to corporate offices. Crucial Tasks "All the beef items are very scarce. Nonexistent, in fact," declared Jinl Dunlap, meat department manager at the El Rancho Market, 2555 Eastblurf Drive, Newport Beach. "Don't have any," grumped John Bias, meat manager at the Market Basket, 16121 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley, when asked about availability of beef. "All we've got is just a little bit of grind," he continued, adding as did most other market men surveyed that chicken, •• fish and porY. are generally plentiful. The outlook today appeared dim for any S\vift in1provement in the beefless market's picture . Treas1;1ry St!cretary George P. Schultt. said Sunday on ABC·TV 's "Issues and Answers'' progra1n that President Nix~ on's retail beef price freeze \vill remain in effect until it s Sept. 12 cutoff date. He did hint that government official s are smarting a bit under consunle r (See NO BEEF, Page Z) Military's Food Shops 2 Wall{ • Ill Space Not -Legal? From Staff, Wire Dlspattbes Rep. Les..Aspin, .(O,Wis.) )las charg~d­ that some of the 287 , pillitary com- missaries in the United States may be operating illegally and he has requested an investigation into the matter. Aspin said Sunday a 1952 law requires the defense secretary to certify that food at reasonable prices and quantity is urlavailable in a locale before a com· missary can operate there. HoY<1ever, Pentagon regulations defeat the purpose of the la\V by allowing com· missaries to operate wherever there are stores with prices 20 percent higher than commissary prices, Aspin asserted. Spokesmen at two Orange ~st mliltary bases, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendlet"'1, bave refus-- ed to comment on t~all~at.ions, sayina: instead that the U.S. Departmes\t o1 Def~ in Washington wouJ.4 ia.te to answer the charges. "We're unauthorized to answer here," said Chief \\'arrant Officer \Villiam Ombahl of El Toro. "Every once in a y,•hile a story like this gets around but since it doesn't name us specifically, you'll have 10 find the :ins .... ·ers in Washington." At Camp Pendleton in Oceanside. Capt. I..ouis Chitelle S<\id he v.·ould have. to "defer to \Vashington." "The charges were made at the Department of Defense, not Peodleton, so I can't answer for them," be ex~ plained. The Wiscon sin congressman. a fre• quent critic of tbc Pentagon, said. there are 278 military commissaries in the United States doing an annual business of $2 billion and costing the taxpapers "hun· dreds of millions of dollars a year" in subsidies. Aspin said the Defense Department \\'as seeking $17.9 million this year to build new commissaries. He said he was asking _the Genecal Accounting Office (GAO), lhe investigatory • arm of Congress, to look into the operations. The GAO should find out, Aspin said, .. 1,.hether the Department of Defense regulations and their enforcement "are within the scope of the law and how many stores should be closed down." He said a GAO study conducted !n 1004 showed that half tl}e commissaries in the United States should be shut down. There was no immediate response to Aspln's charges. How~ver, in~ividual servicemen reacted privately with ex- pressions ranging from indignat~on to ap- preciation of the savlngs which com- missaries offer. "Every time they rwi out cf ot~cr things to criticize, they start attacking the ct1mmissary system," one officer said. Another serviceman said commissaries used to offer a regular 20 percent dis· count but now charge close to civilian sUpcrmarket prices on most items and often are less well stocke'tl than supermarkets. lie pointed out that com· missaries in the Washington area were rationing meat; allowing each customer only two packages per trip. · CLASS IFIED AD SELLS IT FAS T You don't need a magic wand to achieve resWts. Look what a Dally Pilot classified want ad can do: '68 Dart. very low ' mileigc, xlnt.(ll)f}d, 1r/h1 auto, aif eood.;-- V-8 eng. Wiil a"""pt $11!0 for quick sale. (Phone No.) (Name). i•very, very please<\." says the ·ad- ve rti ser. "f'antastlc results!'' Find out ror yourself by dialing the dlltlCI line - 642-5678. .Sl'ACE CENTER, Hous ton (AP) - Tv.'o Skylab astronauts. stepped into space today to load telescope fUm, unfurl ·a new awning-like.sunshade and inspect trouble areas · on their o r b I t i n g 1 laboratory. Dtillr Piiot Pll•hl by TIMNn111 P•lmer FATHER DENNIS MURPHY ADMINISTERS LAST RITES 25-year-old Duaf'te Man Drowns in Newport Harbor Lifeguards Pull Body Of Man, 25 , From Bay By JOHN ZALLER Of .... O.llr Piiot Sl•ff A ·25--yellr..old Duarte man drowned in Newport Harbor Sunday, after suffering an apparent epileptic seizure during a swlnnriing race with a buddy, police said. One Newport ·Beach lifeguard and a friend of "the victim were within 100 feet of Stephen Baionl at the time he suffered his fatal seizure. 'Ibe Incident occurred in the Bay Island channel; aC<JOrding to lifeguards. Baroni, however, apparently sank swiftly to the bottom In lO'f(?et of water and searchers were uga~1 to find him until 55 minutes after he variisbed. Baroni, who had happily told friends he hadn't had an epilepUc seizure for 10 month.s. was swimming at Montero Street Beach at the time of the tragic ac- cident. .. He had gone about 50 yards in an 80- yard race across the channel to Bay Island and back," one investigator said. "He was swimming sidestroke when he just stopped, laid tn the water a second and sank," the lifeguard spokesman ex· . plained; Aa Boron! was going do)l'll, be stupk one arm baCk out of the water as though I reaching for help, but made no cry. lifeguards added. Lifeguard Greg Horman reportedly observed the sinking victim and raced out for Baroni. Within four minutes, seven other lifeguards were also in the area searching with Horman . However, underwater visibility was only 18 inches with a face mask, making the search extremely difficult. Systematic sweeps or the area where Baroni vanished. still failed to turn up the body after 45 minutes; at which time scuba divers joined the hunt, finding him 10 minutes later, hidden in dense, three- foot-deep eel graSs about 20 feet from the s~t where he was seen to sink. Baroni had earlier been rowing in the bay with a group of friends and told them he was tired. However. he reportedly took medication about 30 minutes before ghing swimming and told his companions he felt good A youth on a paddleboard who passed Baroni about a minute before he was stricken·told police the victim did not ap- pear fatigued, nor did he notice anything unusual. Bundled in bulky white space suits at· tached to 60-foot lifelines, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma exited through an airlock hatch at 10:35 a.m. POT to start their delayed ex· cu rsion. Skylab 2 was traveling more than 17,000 miles an hour 271 miles above the Gulf of Mexico. Garriott, the first to step outside, coin· mented "what a view" as he gazed on the panorama . of earth, sun and stars surrotP\ding the station. Minor problems in checking out suits ~·r.Jt~=='= the 1taUon for about 90 minutes. ~:Ji• -.wider, Alan L..Bean, monitored the walk from Inside the statio'n, relaying Mission Control's in- structions. He also wore a space suit, reach' to .assist in case of trouble. Bean remained relatively quiet during the early part of the walk, prompting Garriott to say: "I believe that guy's in there eating lunch while we're out here working." Once outside, the two space rookies also fell behind schedule for their first task of erecting the sunshade. As a re- sult, mission conb;ol estimated the space walk might last oilf.r: to 5 hours. During a pass over the western United States, the astronauts mounted a tele- vision camera outside to record their ac- tivity. The first pictures received at mis. sioil oootrol showed Lousma hanging up- side down in foot restraints, gazing back at the earth. "Looks like we're whistling down the West Coast," he reported. "I can see Los Angeles and the Imperial Valley and the Salton Sea and we're coming up on Baja. Yeah, that must be San Clemente down there. "The curvature of the earth is very, very apparent up here and the earth is truly round," Wusma said. While outside, Garriott and Lousma also were to examine three areas for possible clues to problems: two jet engines that have failed on the Apollo ferry ship, a hwldle of wires where a Mesa Planning Hearing Set A public hearing is schedu led tonight before Costa Mesa city councilmen on three elements pro. posed as amendments to the municipal general plan. During the session beginning at 6:30 at city hall, councilmen will ronsider n e w Environmental Management System COnservation; Open Space, and Sceni~ Highway general plan sections. Groins Spawning Riptides Ha zards Fro1n Lo,os e Rock s i(l,so Ci t.ed In New port By WIWAM L. SCHREIBER Of IM Diiiy Pu.t St.,. Powerful riptides spawned by West NcW20rt'_t_ elgh~ Cr:?SiOtl-QXltrol groins :ire causing critical safety hazards to sy.rlmrrierS and surfers1 Newport Beach Marine Safety Director Robert Reed reponed today. areas. creating an unseen danger> to bathers. . "There has been· a nmrked incr ease In riptides around the groins, particularly the old onas'.at.40th and~4Urlltreet• .that were rebuilt 1yllh r~kl(' !l<ed soid. "The whol• groin •Ystetn 11 prfsenling a serious problem in marine saftty," he added. "The hencifts rnay exceed th!> safety !actor but how the hell do you weigh something like that." Strtets. There are also rock groins Ht 36th. 48tb. S2nd and ~th Streets which Rce4 said have been experiencing pc~rful undertow. The groin system wrui installed to pre· vent a repeat of huge !itorm surf In the late J950s and nliddle 1960s thl!l_~ut nAr· row We.st Newport bench all the \\~ back to the houses along Oce;ih-Jqon>. And he said a seconil"'!troblem, P•,,.lbly as se'rious 1s the rlptldcs, was discovered """'1tly alter boavy surf. Some ol the big .rocks cm lhe groins have been -----------· dlslodgcd and waahed Into swimming · Besides the two "'built groins, the U.S. Ami;' Corps of Engineers built two new rubbl• groins this spring at 32nd and 18t1! Reed said the completed .groin system hM never really been tested under critical storm conditiOM and he is (S.. RIPTIDES, Page !\ , I • I short circuit may have occurred, and a radiator that may be the sOurce of a newly discovered leak in Skylab's air conditioning system. .. · The air conditioning leak, ~whiCh cam~ to light Sunday night, is the latest prob- lem to beset the station, already ex- periencing propulsion leaks and electrical difficulties. None of the problems pose a threat to the astronauts. Before they'could suit up for the space \\1alk today, the spacemen had to res tore pressure to a tank which is part of a system r.hat removes moisture from the F air. This has beeti ll-recurr.ing trquble spot. . Ground experts continued to study prob.· Jems that caused Teaks in two jet engines on the ·Apollo taxi ship, which is doCked with the space station. They still are hopeful the astronauts will be able to return to earth in the craft Sept. 25 after a record 5!k:!ay flight. In case they c~n't , around·th~clock '"ork went on at Cape Kennedy, Fla .. to prepare the Skylab 3 rocket and Apollo as possible rescue vehicles that could be launched Sept. 10 or later. Perfe~tly Clear .Our President, Fashion Critic WASJilNGWN--~)-President Nixort turned fashlon critic today, ·commenting on the fllR tO\fal'd women wearing slacks. After a bill-signing cere'inony in his Oval Office, Nixon observed that a woman reporter ·was wearing slacks. This touched off a brief conversation in which he commented: "Slacks can· do something for some people, but it can't ... " The last ot the President's observation was lost in the laughter of the officials and Teporters in the office. The President then told the reporter, Helen Thomas of United Press International, that "I think you do very well ... Turn around." As Miss Thomas complied, the President asked: "Do they cost less than gowns?" 11No," she replied, "Then change,'' Nixon said, again to laughter. Gray Says He Gave Nixon Fair Warning of Mi sdee ds WASHINGTON (AP) -Former acting FBl Director L. Patrick Gray III said to- day he thinks he gave President Nixon sufficient warning last year for him to know tbat improper and illegal things were being done by his staff members. Gray called Nixon July 6, 1972, less than tllree weeks after the Watergate break·in, and told him tbat men on his staff were trying to wound him by using the FBI and the Central lnteWgetrce- Agency to confuse investigators trying to interview two key 'vitnesses, he said. "Do you think a reasonable and pru· dent man, on ~he basis of the warning you gave him a! thal time, would have 1>een alerted to the fact that his staff was engaged in something that was im· proper, unlawful, illegal?" asked Sen. Herman Talmadge ([)..Ga,). "I do," Gray said. Testifying before the Senate Watergate committee, Gray "tlso said that, contrary to Nixon's statement that he ordered \\'atergate investigators to b eg i n reporting dlre_ctly to him '1.atch 21_, he received no such order from the Presi~ dent, or anyone-else. Gray said the President called him l\\'O days later, March 23, and told him he thought Gray was being attacked un- fairly at the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee, which eventually reJused to en· dorse Gray's nomination to become permanent bead ol tho FBI. Gray said Nixon told him there would be another day to get bectc at the Administration's enemies, and told him there would always be a place for him in the Nixon administration. Gray said Nix· on 1nentloned no renew~ Watergate probc.-.. Gray quit a litlle more than a n1onth later, in the mi&t of the wlr~ tapping scandal Gray also testified tbat ousted \Vhite House Counsel John W, Dean Ill falsely assured· him last yaar that he was relay· inc inrormalion about the F B t ' s \Vatergale investigation directly to the PresideJI!. Gray said he thought It was perfectly proper for him to give FBI reports to Dc11n. Gray, who retired to join Nixon·s 1960 c<Qnpaign after a 2Q..year career in the Navy, said he was trained in the military service to say, ",aye aye, sir," \Yhen given orders. He said he didn't question the au thority of White House aides Dean and John D. Ehrlichman when they gave him what he took to be orders to destroy papers taken from the White House safe of \Vatergate conspirator E. lioward Hunt Jr. Gray recounted again ho\v he and Lt. Gen. Vernon A. \\<'alters Jr .. deputy director of the CIA , came to the con- clusion in the weeks after the \YatcrgJ!c raid tha t men on the \Vhite Hou se staff were trying to confuse the investigation. Or ange Coast Weather lL'll be partly sunny 'fuesday, following the usual IO\Y clouds and drizzle along the Orange Coast. Temperatures will range from 70 at the beaches to 80 inland. Over· night lows in the 60s. INSm E TODAY 'No one likes to die ou tside the country he lo ves,' su1•t /or- rtu~r Cuban die to tor F1agentio Batista Last year. The tyrn nt. tvho wos ousted by Fidct Castro 111 1959. die<! at a Spo11 isl~ re.sort today . See story Page .; •0•!1111 11 1..M, RMd If Cllll-1• I QIOl(1ClfHI o. 1t C*-••illttl 10-,~ Cemfu II C"t•wor• 11 DNth Hellen • ldiftrl•I PIH I IR!trlllfl"''"'· It P'h!l.tfl(.I l .. 11 fftr.M-14 IR lt,.,fC• t .,. .. Lulbt• u ~·" ,, H1tlo<1ll lr(tW• Ot1n11 COVfllr I ,or Ill• lKOtd I, 10 S1'1¥1• Petitt 11 SIO'll 1 .. 17 ltock IMl'll•tl l .. 11 T•l•¥1tlo<i It ,..,.,,'" '' w •• ,.,., W-11'• HN11 lJ..1• Wor111 N...,.. t .,· . ~ . -----------·-I -'• 2 DAIL V PILOT c Monday, August 6 1~73 B eef Supplies Dow•• Grocers Ex11ect Cuts in Meat Shipnients By 'Ibe Alsoclated Press Supermarkets hoped for new shipments of beef today to replace merchandise snapped up by weekend shoppers, but many stores said th~y expected only a fraction of what they needed. Business B risk A spokesman for one Los Angeles_ market said he was figuring on '·probably a 60 percent cut" in the amount of bee( he nonnally gets. •·vou open the door and it's like gangbusters," saJd a au perm ark et employe ln Sacramento, as he looked at the tong llne at the meat eowiter. ''One guy came ln here and filled three shopping bags with meat for his restaurant," said the meat manager of Ralphs Market in Los Angeles. "It's not Lair to the customers." The store later imposed a limit of tv.·o steaks and two pounds of ground beef per shopper -a practice adopted by supennarkets in many cities. Pries t s, Nuns Lift Steins Restaurant officials in the Santa Mo~nica area said guards were being put on delivery trucks by some meat sup- pliers because of I.he possibility of theft. At First Campu s Tavern "These trucks are worth a fortune now," said George Bennett, head of the Santa Monica area restaurant associa- tion. Jn the San Francisco area, shoppers emptied some supermarket she.Ives of beef while other stores began rationing supplies for the first time. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Priests. nuns and students are hoisting beers at the Jesuit-run University of San Fran- cisco which says it has opened the first public beer hall on a college campus in California. Summer bu siness has been brisk in the EPA, Citizens 1 11 State Debate Antismo g Rules FRESNO (AP) -Proposed traffic restrictions aimed at reducing air pol- lulion were debated _by public officials ·and private citizens here today. · The federal Envirrulmental Protection -:Agency called the hearing to seek com- ments on its smog control proposals for -t'the San· Joaquin Valley. Later, hearings will consider -similar ru1es &iggesled for the san Francisco, Sacramento and San Diego areas. Hearings were held in the spring for a Los Angeles Basin.smog con· trol plan. The proposals, aimed at meeting 1977 federal air pollution limits, would restrict gasoline and diesel fuel sales to fiscal 1972 levels. They also would encourage more use or mass transit by reducing public parking 20 percent a n d establishing exclusive road lanes for car pools and buses. Motorcyclists in the valley have been 'urged in advertisements to attend loday's hearings to protest a proposed ban on two.stroke cycles from 1'-fay to October and a freeze on motorcycles at "the number registered at the end of this ')'ear. A section restricting construction of new public parking facilities was attack.ed t>Y James K Barnum, president of the Fresno County and City Chamber of Commerce, who said, "Tile economic im- plications are staggering." Parking facilities could not be built if they would cause an increase in vehicle traffic to the area. · ''It is obvious that any such parking facility "-'ill lead to additional vehicle travel,'' Barnes said in a statement prepared for the hearing. He said the rule would force a halt to all commercial construction here for at least one year until codes are revised lo eliminate present rules requiring parking facilities in conjWlction with new com- 1nercial and industrial construction. "Jn the Fresno area alone. this could amount to the loss of as much as $200 million in capital investment . not lo men- 1 ion the loss of potential jobs,'' Barnum said . • He urged the EPA to delay adopting rules until local officials can "respond with a reasoned acceptance o{ the plan or c.an propose sound alternatives'' designed specifically for the local com- munity. A men1ber or EPA's legal office con· ducted the hearing, with help from techncal ad visers David Calkins and Ronald Mueller, OIANG-1 COAIT CM DAILY PILOT ,.,.. Or•no• (Oll•I DAILY PILOT, w•lt! ..... tell i'1 ~l"ld thf N• .. ·f'•111, 11 jJU!llllllllCI ..,. It!• Of1noe co111 P..01•,,,1,,g c.,..,~,,v. lePA· r111 tdll!Of'• 1c1 oubl!Jlled, Mono1y 1rirovo11 F rllllf, !Ot Co.ti MtSI, NtwlJ(lrt llfltll, M1111ll"11!C>n llt~~/F0\11'111•/'I VIiify, l .gl.MI SHVI, trvl~t!S•d<t!fti.C~ flld Stn c i. .... nttf "-" .J..,.., C.ohtrt ..... A 1lno11 '"'-I 'tdllkHI I• PVl>Htlled kl~f'Cl•YI tnd S\ll'ldlyt.. Tiit prlt>e.ipel PVll!hlliog pl•nl 1J 11 )llO Wt•I ll'f SlrMI, (ot!I MtM, CllltoMli., f2'M, Robed N, Wetd PtH lllt nt •flO Puoiiol\fr J1cl1 R. CurJ1y V~f l'raalcltnl 11111 04-nff•I M<Jn19ff T~o11111 ktevU Elll!Of l llom11 A. Mutp)iint M1n111no ••1ior Cfi11l 11 M. Looi Rlt~1 .. f P. Ntll ,.,_tll!lnl Mt ..... lno fdllorl c"'• ..... Offtc.e JJO W11t l1y Stt11I Mtilin9 Addt111t·P.O. loJ1 1560, fli2l OfMf Offkn HtwPOrl 911t io: »ll NIW!Mt! 911Vltv1td l lOUN l•ICll: m JIOl'ltl Av ... .... lolllfl'ffllf'Otl '""'"' 11t1J 9tldt ........... ... '~"CJ•-••: :IQJ l<tOrtll I.I Cimino ltt1f T ........ 17141 641-4JJ1 Cl_... A...,.I .... 642·1671 ("'1tlf!'ll. 1'11. 0.<o,... Gou! P...otltll"'9 C.m1M1t1'f, lit ,,..,.. t1-M1, 1!1111tt1lklfol, H lllH'lll "'4111ff' ff' ldvlrtll-h 1111'<111! INf l>t ....,..,UC" Wlflloltll IP'Cllll 11'1"• rnlUIOn OI (#'(l'ltfll O-, Sffflld Clllf ~tit ,..111 t i C'Olll Mft,t, C..1'oltrfll1. ~OKf"i,.tiool h" Cttf~ U.61 INiJl"'IV1 .... ~ft U If .-111rv1 l'l'llllllrf wu1 ... 111M llM -111i.o, \ old California-style pub which received a conditional beer license last May from 1he Alcoholic Beverage Commi"lon. Much of the trade in 30-cent brews came from 550 priests and nuns at- tending . a symposium on spirituality at the coeducational 6,()00.student campus this summer. "Some of those nuns looked real cute hefting those big steins of beer," said James Kelly Jr., a university spokesman. Steven Diener. food se rvice manager, said state school are prohibited by the State Education Code from having alcoholic beverages on campus. ~le said privately o\lllled schools may make limited arrangements for liquor sales, such as the private club which sells beer to members at the University Fry's Supennarket ln San Jose was sold out of beef, and major appli8llce stores in the suburb reported a waiting list for freezers. "People are overbuying: that's the problem," said Al Franzi, general man- ager of Petrini's Butrher Shop in San Francisco. In Walnut Creek the consumer-con- trolled Co-Op food market began ra4 lioning meat at four steaks, one roast and two chickens per customer. Banks in West of Santa Clara. B • "Other colleges ma y. have a Jong wa.it ... • oost· Lendmg but they may have a chance now that '''e've broken the ice," he said. The pub, called the Fog 'n' Grog, open- ed JuJy & after five years of negotiation bet\\·een lhe ABC and Lhe university din· --mg Sfrvices. - "We backed the license effort a11 the way." said John F. Marshall, USF vice president for student development who says nearly half the student lx>dy is over 21. He thinks the pub, which also provides food and entertainment, wil l attract com- muter students who usually leave the campus at nig ht. ,;The pub will be an incentive for them to stick around and enjoy some o{ the ex- tra s that go with a good education - meeting more people, getting to know them better, a chance to get in on cam- pu!:i activities," Marshall said. The ABC li cense requires that the pub sell beer, not wine. No package sales are permitted. No one under 21 is admitted. and two pieces o! identification are re· quired to enter. Husband Held In Wife Beating A teenaged married couple were tcm· porarily separated by Costa Mesa police Sunday when they hauled the husband to jail and sent the wife to a hospital for treatment of a broken nose. Officer Tim Holbrook arrested and booked the husband, 19, on suspicion of felony wife beating after arri\ing at their eastside apartment, where neighbors reported a woman screaming and ccying. "The nose of the victim was bent to the left," Officer Holbook noted in his report , add ing that the 17-year-old woman's teenaged husband admitted a fight with his blood-spattered spouse. "She hit me first," he was quoted as saying. Passerby Halts R11naway A11to A passerby stopped an apparent runaway sedan with a woman slumped at the wheel as it wobbled down the wrong side of a Costa 1\Iesa street Sunday by leaping onto the careening car and lean- ing in to tum off the ignition. Paul L. White of 21661 Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach, told police he wa3 afr aid the woman driver was extremely ill or may have suffered some sort of seizure. However, 'investigators who showed up after the I p.m. incident on Monrovia Avenue at \Vest 19th Street could find no evidence of illnesl'l. They arrested the driver, 52, on suspi- rion of drunken drivtng and booked her in to Orange County Jail. Sena te Confirms Fullerton Man WASHJNGTON (APl-111e Senate Fri· d11y confirmed James 8. Gregory of l-~ullerton. as administrator of the Na· tiona l ltlghway Traffic Sa f et y Administration. Gregory, a former Union 011 Co. ex- ecuti ve. succeeds Douglas W. Toms, who resigned. Nixou Favor Drops NEW YORK !AP) -A New York Times poll of 760 corporati on presidents concluded today that President Nixon has lost considerable support from th11t tradl· tionally Republlcan group. While 91 per· cent of the executives polJOO last fall said they plaMed to vote for· Nixon, only 67 per<ent said Ibey wculd give him jlleir vote now, the T'11nes reported. ,• Levels to 9% ' · SAN FRANC!SGO (AP) -Major West Coast banks raised their prime lending rt tes to 9 percent today., following the y, percentage point increase initiated by Eastern banks. The rate hike was announced by Bank or America. the nation's largest com- mercial bank ; Wells Fargo, The Bank of CaUfomia, United Californla Bank, Se- curity Pacific and Crocker Bank. The prime rate is the minimum in- lerest banks charge large corporate bor· rowers for short-term loans. The prime rate has been raised l l limes since the begimling of this year when it stocd at 6 percent. Several other major banks aho raised their prime lending rat~ today. The increases by New York's Chase Manhattan Bank, the counuy's third largest, and the othera brought the prime to an all•time high and virtually' ilssuttd that the 9 percent level would spread throughout the Industry within the next few days. \\'bile it is not directly linked to con- sumer installment Joans or mortgage rates, a rise in the prime frequen tly signals a general boost in ovefall interest rates, which might occur some months later. Bulgarians Fincl 'Cyclops' Bones SOFIA, Bulgaria (UPI) -Bulgarian archeologists have unearthed the skeleton of a "cyclops" while excavating near the town of Razlog in the southwest of the country, the BWgarian news agen4 cy BTA said, A brief report said the skeleton, which \Vas found in a burial place, was five feet., eight inches tall, and had only one eye socket in the coronal bone above the nasal cavity. According lo Greek mythology, the cyclops were a race of giants with single eyes in the middle of their foreheads. F rom Page l NO BEEF ... pressure tactics. Initial increases within recent months in the price of beef led certain consumer groups to designate Meatle ss Tuesday, on v.·hich they refused to purchase such prod- ucts. Joan Sheets. a leader or Fight Jnllation Together (FIT) today urged a new pro- test tact ic for this Tuesday: "Don't Buy Anything Day." Sata 11 Getti1ig So me Ove rti me DETROIT (AP) -"I guess Satan Is just as busy on Sunday as he ls during the rest of the week," the Rev. T. E. Edmonson said arter his congregation of 25 was robbed in their storefront church. Mr. Edmonson said that when he finished delivering his 11ermon, "On the Other Side of the River,'' in the Rose of Sharon Primitive Baptist Church Sunday evening, he asked if there were any questions. "f have something to say," one man said as he walked from the back l)f the church, waving a gun . "Th~ Is a stickup ." He and another man ordered the congregation to lay down on the floor, look about 110 from the COi· lecilon piste, !IO from Mr . Edmonson, 11nd '50 from two deacons. The men escaped on foot .. I , - r ----WI TH SWIMMER IN TOW, NEWPORT LIFEGUARD BATTLES RIPTIDE AND RIPRAP West Newport Groins Pr•sent Addltd H•urd to Swimmers C1u9ht in Riptides, Lifegu1rds Warn ' Ex-Newport Policeman From Page l RIPTIDES ... Criticized in Reno Job reserving judgment until then. · "So Car, rm not sure i( the benefits of erosion control outweigh the safety hazards we have," he ssid. "We haven't seen the groins-really tested yet.'' Former Newport Beach police· captain James Parker continues to find his 18'- month-otd· 'job as Reno, Nev., chief of police shrouded in controversy. ·The ·Washoe c.unw ·Gfanil · Jurio-hai publlcli criticized Parker for accepting· gratuiUes and has recommended the dismissal of a police captain for allegedly displaying questionable ethics. Parker was appointed to the Reno post in Decetftber 1971, replacing a chief who had resigned af ter a critical Grand Jury report. Parker immediately stirred a furor by ordering his men to discontinue moonlighting as security police at gambl· ing casinos. Shortly after the most recent Grand Jury report on Parker and Police Capt. Don McKillip was released, however, the Washoe County District Attorney rose to Parker's defense. In a special report the district attorney cited several examples of commendable and innovative techniques and policies implemented by Parker. Criticism by tlie Grafid Jury stemmed from Parker's acceptance of free weekends at an Idaho retreat operated by Harrah's Club, a casino. It also cited "low morale" in the d.epartrnent, lack of TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL Regular meeling, City Hall, 6:30 p.m. "\\1EST SIDE STORY'' -Costa Mesa l{igh Lyceum, 8:30 p.m. Also Aug. 8, 10 and 11. TUESDAY, AUG. 7 SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com· munity Recreation Center, 11 a.m. · 3 p.m. NEW PORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD - RC'gular meeting , Costa 1t1esa City Coun- ci l Chambers, 7:30 p.m. "FANTASTICKS" -Costa Mesa High Lyceum. 8:30 p.m. Also, Aug. 9 and 12. communlcaUon with bis men and allq a. t!ODA of favor!Usm. "There Is evidence that cttta1ri act1om by Ollef Parker mty have advenely af- fected.the morale e11Mr·b11be-nafllre·ol- the action taken or the manner In which it was accomplished." Mother Declared Insane in Teen Rape Conspiracy A San Clemente woman accused on ar- rest of encouraging a young Camp Pendleton Marine to rape her 14-year-old daughter has been found insane and com- mitted to Patton State Hoe:pital for an indefinite term. . Judge William Mumy ordered tht commitment of Miidred Hannon, 60, of 403 Via Montego. His action wspt.nds criminal proceedinp. OO· thre& oountl ol. rape med against the gray·balred defen· dant. Mrs. Hannon and Marine Robert Dean Smith were arrested two years ago shortly after the serviceman had com- mitted what police sakl was his third RX· ual assault on his young victim In a San Clemente motel. He was sentenced to six months to 50 years in state prjson for his role in the affair after the victim's sister told police her mOther encouraged his actions in the belief that it wouJd "calm her (the ViC4 tim) down." Seagoing Burgla r Gets Boat, Trailer Orange County Sheriff's officers are in- ''estigating the theft in San Juan Capistrano during lhe weekend of a boat and trailer valued by their own!l' at $3.500. Victim George Martin Erl. 28, of 2199 ftfaple St., Costa Mesa, said the boat and trailer were towed away from the front of his business premises, Niguel Trailer Sales, 28162 camlno C a p i s t r an o . Investigating officers said the thieves must have used a heavy vehlcle to remove the equipment. The secood problem -dislodged groin rocks -has Reed particularly con- oerned·becau.se it is unpredictable. "The big surf we've' had recently has -knocked some of the rocks out-of pom. tlon." be said. "At this point, I don't know the full extent of the problem but I suspect there will be more." Reed said he has intensified training reviews with the lifeguards who cover West Newport by sending them into the water with race masks lo spot the un- derwater rocks that might endanger swimmers. "If they can spot the rocks beforehand and know where they are, it will make the job a little better," he said. "And they damn well better know v•hcre those rocks are." Reed said he will have to "-'ait until an extreme low tide to determine just how critical the {ailing rock problem is. U il is a serious one, Reed ~s the Corps of Engineers will have to come in and COIT'e<:t It. A spokesr:nan ror the Corps or Engineers said this morning his firsl noUf~of either problem ' came to- day. He said the Corps will study the situation immediately. The riptides and falling rocks are the latest in a series of problems cauS:'ed by the groins, including a recent massive buildup ol sand at the mouth of the Santa Ana River that trapped a large paoJ of stagnant water bet\\·cen the beach and the ocean. Ctitics of the groins, including Newport Beach geologist George Zebal. claim the only sale way lo prevent beach erosion is by installing artificial olfshore reefs, Zebal and othe.rs are pressing for con4 structlon or a model testing basin to prove it. Jn the meantime, Reed says he is bat· lling the rocks and riptides as best he can. He says bullhorn systems ars used lo warn off bathers In dangerous areas and some portable signs are put up. Reed said bathers caught in the ri~ tides should relax and flow with the cur~ rent until help comes. "Above ail. never climb up on the groins even if they are the nearest land ," he said. "Anolher set or wa ves could dri ve you right into the rocks and the results would be spectacular." The closer swimmers get to the rocks. the harder rescues become. Reed said several guards have been slightly Injured on the rocks already this year. • NOW AT ·r PRI CES 1· START Fl!Of\\ 95 ·-l!-11/111 Exelulhe ' 5 Year l'llrts Gua,.nlff 111e nio1or. purno. timer. «illtt wai.r dttt•ibuoon IY'i""· l'IN!ll' alld P\1111· tivtlon• tr• 9U11111!9ld for & P'" on tMf•I• ssttrt. 1s,..11 1no s&1•1•. w~ p.., tor rtiol•C-.nl l1bot durl119 '"" ll•fl ,...., 90 DAY CASH WITM Alf'IOYID C~IDtf DISltlJISHER ' HEADQUARTERS . . ' I . I 1 Phone 548· 7788 t , 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown COsta Mm +++••············••tttt••················ .. ················~ ) ' ' j ! ' I